{"@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":"1940-08-31","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0415071\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Britlih Again Accuied of Raiding\nNon-Military Tarjeta. Paga 7.\nRuiila Awaits Aniwer to Proteits;\nNavy Manoeuvre!. Paga 7.\nSoldien Celebrate ai Pint Mill\nCeti to Iceland. Pag* 5.\nVOLUME 39\n.\n12 mm*\nnee Board. Paga 8.\nDominion! Rally Mm' and Suppliei 1 f A,7\nto Aid Britain. Paga 10. l,<\nThinks U. S. Can Ba Greater Help\nby Staying Neutral. P aft 8.\nNELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-SATURDAY MORNING. AUO. 81. 1940\nNUMBER\n113  i\nFORM DEFE\nas Berlin Raided;\n62 Nazis Downed\nBERLIN,  Aug. 31   (Saturday)-?\n(AP), \u2014 British bombers raided\nBerlin   this   morning,   dropping\nbombs which started at least one\nlarge fire.\nThe fire, In the Southeastern\nsection of the German capital,\nwas visible for many blocks. It\nwaa the Southeastern section that\nalso waa bombed on Thursday\nmorning.\nHalf an hour after the fire\nitarted there wn a big explosion which sent sparks flying high\nInto the sky.\nThe air raid alarm lasted an hour\nand 37 minutes, from 1:38 a.m.\nuntil 3:16 a.m.\nA business building housing a\nprint shop and other industries was\nreported nit\nThe raiders oame ln waves, pos\nBy HAROLD FAIR\nCanadian Pren Staff Writer\nLONDON, Aug. 31 (Saturday)\n(CP)\u2014Germany, \"peit patrol,\"\nsingly or in small groups, last\nnight and today subjected the\nEmpire capital to its second longest air raid since the war began\nalmost a year ago, (Also see\n\u2022Wave\", page 7.)\nThe raiders looted salvos of\nbomba on the suburban areas and\nwere given a surprise when they\nfound British Spitfire fighters\nwaiting to en'age them in the\nweb of searchlights aa they Bought\nto penetrate the heart of the city.\nThere were no reports of bombs\nfalling tn the mld-clfy.\nThe alarm was in effect six houn\nand 39 minutes.\nThe four alarms in one day set a\nrecord for such a period but Lon\n___.' ir_r.,7_i:\u00bb.' (___;don went ^-^\u00bb\u00b0\u00bbiBrni *^\u00b0-\nitbly ln severe   groups. At   eaat of seven hours and 10 minutes Wed-\none was caught in searchlight\nbeams flying at comparatively low\naltitude. Another machine appeared\nheaded tor the Southeast district\nlighted by the firat fire.\nAnti - aircraft batteries opened\nwith a terrific fire and shell splinters rained over,ihe city. Tracer bul-\nleta lanced the air.\nLONDON, Aug. 30 (CP). \u2014 The\nRoyal Air Force's long-distance\nbomben last night and early today subjected tht great Krupp\narmamenti works In Qermany to\nbombardment\nThe fighter planei pounced on the\nGerman bombers caught like flies\nIn a web spun by searchlight beams.\nAt least two bombers, prowling\nsingly over London, were believed\nto have been crippled so badly they\nwould be unable to return to their\nbases, presumably in German-occupied France.\nThe Krupp works st Essen have\nbeen attacked repeatedly in the\nlystematic night raids being carried out by Britain's bombers.\nThe Air Ministry said convoys\nand shipping along the Netherlands coast likewise had been attacked. Wednesday and early on\nThursday aircraft of the Fleet Air\nArm attacked similar shipping objectives off Norway's coast.\nBesides the Krupp works, \"various military objectives in the Ruhr\"\nwere attacked, but the Air Ministry\ndid   not   elaborate.  Tha   bulletin .\nMi4 #mnim\u00abmi***en0ti*;ma ^r*^%t\\-V*_^yM\nWasteland   that   the   important*'  . tlttfob *t ablatd.\nFrench  port  of St  Nazaire,  now\nheld by the Germans, wai raided.\nOther famillle, objectives for the\nR. A. F. wer* the freight yards\nat Hamm and Soest which have\nbeen attacked two or three times\na week with unfailing regularity in\nerder to tie up movement af German supplies.\nAirdromes in Belgium, Holland,\nGermany and German-beld France\nwere also bombed.\nThe Air Ministry said three British bombers failed to return.\nFour Men Drown\nCEDARS, Que, Aug. 30 (CP)-\nFour men were drowned in the\nSt. Lawrence River opposite .this\nvillage early tonight when their\nrowboat capsized about 100 yards\nfrom shore. Four others escaped\na similar fate.\n,    ARCHBISHOP \"FEEBLE\"\nMONTREAL, Aug. 30 (CP) \u2014\nHospital authorities reported late\ntoday that Mgr. Georges Gauthier,\n68, Roman Catholic Archbishop of\nMontreal, was \"very, very feeble.\"\nThe aged Archbishop was taken\nto hospital two days ago after suffering a paralytic stroke.\nof seven houn and 10 minutei Wednesday night and Thursday morn\nIng. Three earlier attempts yesterday to penetrate the city s inner defences had been beaten off.\nThe extent of the damage wai\nnot known immediately. Some tirei\nwere observed, however.\nThe ralden prowled over a wide\narea,- their drones being heard ln\n13 towns ln England and one ln\nWales.\nEarly today the Air Mlniitry\nannounced the Germani had lost\n62 planes to 19 for the Royal Air\nForce during Friday's fighting in\nwhich hundreds of manes attempted an assault on British targets\naround the capital.\nThis brought to more than 1000\nthe number of Nazi raiders downed this month, the Air Ministry\nsaid. Ten RAJ*, pilots balled out\nto safety.\ntails of casualties were not immtd\nlately available.\nHardly a passenger moved on\nLondon subvay trains when guards\ntold them there had been an alarm\nand they could take shelter if they\nwished at the next station.\nAn R.AF. pilot going on leave\nafter fighting in Friday morning's\nraid said: \"This Is too thick. Tht\nblighters ran too fast for me tb\nhave a crack at them in the morning and now they're interfering\nwith my leave.\"\nI. was in Hyde Park when thc\nthird raid alarm sounded. Some\npeople ran for shelter; omen stood\nnear shelters. Many lounged on the\ngrass as if nothing more than a\nfactory whistle had sounded.\nThe Ministries of Air and Home\nSecurity declared last night that\nno serious damage had been suffered by British airdromes, but that\nat one town \"industrial premises\"\nwere damaged and that a number\nof persons had been killed there\nand elsewhere.\nSSfRAtSTW\nSWIFT ACTION\n$10,000,000 WAR CONTRACTS\nOTTAWA, Aug. 30 (CP). - Munitions Minister C. D. Howe announced tonight contracts awarded\nduring the pest week numbered\n1273 and totalled $10,725,123.\nIncreased Water Storage for Power\nPurposes Is Discussed Informally\nBefore Joint Commission af Kelson\nTemporary Increase\nMay Be Needed as\nResult Weather\nPossibility of temporarily Increasing Kootenay Lake storage\nfor power purposes, to guard\nagainst low water levels which\nmight be the result of a dry aea-\naon, was discussed by members\nof the International Joint Commission and representatives of\nthe Kootenay take Board of Con*\ntrol, of Creston district dyking\nareas, and of the West Kootenay\nPower _, Light Company Ltd,\nat an Informal conference In Nelson Friday.\nNo decisions were made, alnce\nthere had been no actual application\nupon which to act. The conference\nresulted from a recent inquiry by\nthe power company as to the attitude which might be taken by the\nControl Board should an application\nbe made. It was pointed out that\nin the event of an application for\nincreased storage, all persons interested would be notified and the\nCommission would hear their\nrepresentations.\nINTERESTS RELATED\nThe opinion that interests of the\ndyking districts and the power com-\nfiany were in many respects rested, and that the Creston Dyking\nDistrict was prepared to cooperate,\nparticularly if storage for power became essential to the national war\n'effort, was given by Guy Constable\nof Creston, Chairman of the Board\nof Trustees of the Creston Dyking\nDistrict and representatives of Creston Reclamation Company. Willingness to cooperate was also expressed by Dr. C. P. Bruner.\nMr. Constable said he understood\nthat if the power company should\nmake an application for increased\ntemporary storage, the situation\nwould be thoroughly canvassed beforehand, and a hurried decision\nwould be avoided.\nMembers of the Commission attending were Hon. Charles Stewart,\nP. C, Chairman of the Canadian\nsection; Hon. A. 0. Stanley, Chair\nman of the American section; Commissioner Roger B. McWhorter of\nthe American section; and the two\nSecretaries, Lawrence J. Burpee,\nLL.D, of the Canadian section and\nJesse B. Ellis ot the American\nsection\nThe Board of Control was represented by E. J. Peuse of the United\nStates Corps of Engineers and C.\n\u2022E. Webb, District Engineer at Vancouver, of the Dominion Water and\nPower Bureau.\nLome A. Campbell, President and\nManaging Director of tlu West Kootenay Power & Light Company Ltd..\nheaded the power company\nrepresentatives.\nOther's besides Mr. Constable and\nDr. Bruner attending  included C.\nB. Garland, acting for Dr. Bruner;\nC, H. Hamilton, representing J. S.\nSalter, trustee for the Kootenay\nValley Power Ic Development Company; and Mrs. L. J. Montgomery,\nSecretary to Mr. Stewart.\nNew, Higher Level for CJPJU. Tracks at Brilliant\nCessions of Area]\nto Hungary Rouses\nTransylvania City\nThousands in Capital Back Maniu Protest;!\nCalling, Cessions Traitorous; Germany . 1\nto \"Protect\" Remainder of Land\n* .\u25a0 *i*\\\nBUCHAREST. Aug. 31 (Saturday) (AP). \u2014 While\npolice guarded their Palace session .with sawed-off shotgum,'\nthe Rumanian Crown Council which gave up half of TransyU\nvania to Hungary, conferred into the early morning hours on\n\"new problems or exceptional importance.\"\nAside from this vague explanation, official quarters i\ndeclined to disclose the new issues facing King Carol and\nhis advisers as a result of thet\"\nNew track Is being laid at higher levet for C.P.R. near Brilliant where at some time In future West Kootensy Power tt light Co.\nwill build additional Kootenay River power plant Preaent track ia between new track and river. \u25a0 \u2014Daily News Photo.\nTwo More Nazi Prisoners\nFree; To Investigate Camps\nCourt  of   Inquiry\nProbe Latest\nEscapes\nto\nInternment officials aald they\ntrict of Ontario, where another\nprisoner had escaped two weeks\nThis  investigation,  the Minister\nsaid..is to be carrkd out by Col.\nP. A: Pluze, newlf-appolntea officer commanding the Canadian Provost Corps, and associated with him\nwill be T. Dann of Ottawa, former\nDeputy Commissioner of the Royal\nOTTAWA, Aut 30 (CP)\u2014De-' Canadian Mounted Police, and War-\nfence Minister Ralston announced  den Goad of Dorchester Peniten-\ntonight he had directed a \"thor-  tiary.\nough and complete\" investigation I At the same time the Minister an-\nlnto the entire organization and itounced the setting up a court of\nadministration of all internment | inquiry to investigate the latest\ncamps in Canada.\nThe Minister's statement came\nclosely on the announcement that\ntwo more German prisoners of\nwar had escaped from an Internment camp in the Muskoka Dls-\nescapes. It will be under Chairmanship of Maj.-Gen. E. C. Ashton,\nformer Inspector-General for Central Canada, and associated with\nhim will be two senior officers of\nthe Non-Permanent Active Militia.\nThe court will convene at fhe\nearliest possible moment al the internment camp from which the two\nprisoners made a daring escape today, It will Inquire into and report on the escape*., and circumstances surrounding them.\n\"It Is a difficult problem to\nheld In Custody, In campi, which\nha_ to ba quickly organized,\nthouaanda cf min who- have 24\nhours a day In which te plen their\nescape, but I am determined to\nleave no stone un'urned to tee\nthese people are held In aafe\nkeeping,\" said Mr, Ralston,\nInternment operations headquar-\ntera had announced earller'that the\ntwo German prisoners of war had\nescaped late today from an Internment camp in. the Muskoka District \"of Ontario.\nwere Fritz Pietsch, a petty officer\nin the submarine service; tnd Herbert Naumann, an army sergeant-\nmajor.\nInternment officlall said a widespread search was on tonight for,\nthe prisoners, who escaped In a\nclever manner. They said the prisoners placed two planks under the\nchassis of a dump truck, climbed\nin on top of them and left the camp\nwith the truck, unnoticed.\nHowever, when the truck reached\nthe dump the driver noticed two\n\"suspicious looking\" figures dash\naway torn the vehicle. The driver\ngave chase but he was not fast\nenough tor them and they got away.\nThe driver returned to the camp\nand^ reported the incident. A roll\nwas immediately called among the\nprisoners and as a result it was discovered two were missing.\nCanadian Fliers Down Dozen Planes\nThousands Gain\nWork, War Plants\nOTTAWA, Aug. 30 (CP)\u2014Con-\nstruction work began during the\npast week on several additional\nmajor plants in the Government's\nindustrial development program\nwhich now involves expenditures\nand commitments totalling more\nthan J165,O0O,O00, Munitions Minister C. D. Howe said tonight in a\nstatement summarizing the extent\nand some of the effects of purchases\non his department.\nReferring to the plant construction program for erection or enlargement of more than 100 plants,\nMr. Howe said some of the Government-owned plants are already ln\noperation. A large proportion of\nthem are scheduled to be in production within the next six months\nwhile still others will enter production in the second quarter of next\nyear.\nThe effects of this program on\nour economy can hardly be estimated at present\" said Mr. Howe.\n\"For Instance, in one city of moderate size some 19,000 more men\nwill be employed; in another municipality one new plant will alone employ a staf fof more than 7000.\"\nLate Flashes\nTOKYO, Aug. 31 (Saturday) (AP)\n\u2014Germany never Will be able to\nland troops in England while the\nBritiah command the sea\u2014and the\nGerman alrpower is Insufficient to\nwin that command\u2014asserts Masan-\norl Ito, one of Japan's best known\nnaval commentators, ln a series of\nnewspaper articles and lectures.\nTACOMA, Wash.. Aug. 30 (AP)-\nA militant protest by the International Longshoremen's Association\n(AFL) against a 1038 National Labor Board decision In favor of Its\nrival CIO Union closed the ports\nof Tacoma and Port Angeles today\nNEW YORK, Aug. SI (Saturday) (AP)-MaeKay Radio Marine reported today that the 88\n8eatraln Texas, a new S2.50O.000\nfreighter, had tent out en 808\ncall after a collision with an unknown shin.\nNazi Raiders Fall in One Hour in Bitter\nBottle; Canadians Suffer No Losses\nin Busy, Successful Day\nLONDON, Aug. 31 (Saturday) (CP Cable)\u2014The Royal Air Force's\nall-Canadian squadron polished off an even dozen Qerman raiders\nIn one hour during a bitter afternoon air battle over Britain, the\nAir Ministry announced today. *****\t\nNeither pilots nor their Hurricane\nfighters suffered any casualtiea.\nThe R.A.F, Canadian squadron's\nbag was announced after it was re-\nSorted the lat Fighter Squadron of\nie Royal Canadian Air Force, In\nvarious engagements with Nazi\nraiders during the last week, had\ndowned 12 planes.\nThe Air Ministry's news servloe\nannounced early Saturday.\n\"The Royal Air Force. all-Canadian squadron put ln a useful hour's\nwork yesterday afternoon.\n\"In a single patrol they destroyed eight Messerschmitt (110a) and\nthree Helnkel (111) bombers as\nwell aa finishing off a fourth\nHelnkel which already had been\nattacked by another squadron.\n\"They suffered no casualtiea eith\ner to their pilots or their Hurricane\nfightera.\"\nThe 1st Fighter Squadron of thc\nR.CAJ. in turn fought a bitter\nbattle with a large force of raiders\nmiles over a London suburb Friday.\nUnder Sqdn. Lrd. Ernest McNab\nof Regina the Canadian aviators\nwere said to have swept Into action\nwhen the Nazis attempted to strike\nat a factory situated only a few\nminutes, as a Hurricane flies, from\ntheir air base.\nA hot series of dog fights ensued,\nas the bomber formations were\nquickly broken up. Three German\nbombers were understood to have\ncrashed within a few miles of the\nsuburb.\nThe R.C.A.F. squadron flew Canadian-made Hurricanes.\nM. Kotyk of South Slocan Dies From\nInjuries Received in Attack by Bear\nPILOT BAILS OUT TO\nBE KILLED IN\nAIR .\nLONDON, Aug. \u00bb (CP.-\nCable) \u2014 The Air Minister said\nthat three Messerschmitts attacked a Royal Air Force pilot\nafter he had balled out, and riddled his body with bullets.\nThe Incident took place during a battle this afternoon.\n\"The British pilot had jumped\nby parachute from -15.000 feet,\"\nthe Minister said. \"As he was\nfloating down three Messerschmitts swooped on him and\nopened fire at his swaying\nfigure.\n\"His body was riddled with\nbullets.\"\nBadly mauled by a bear Tuesday,\nMichael Kotyk, M-year-old South\nSlocan resident succumbed to his\ninjuries in Kootenay Lake General Hospital Friday afternoon. His\ndeath' wu from Internal injuries\nan autopsy showed.\nMr. Kotyk -was apparently attacked by the bear below the road\nat South Slocan, and was rendered\nunconscious by his Injuries and lay\nundiscovered until Wednesday\nWhile details ara .not known, it was\nbelieved he then regained consciousness and gathered atrength\nenough to crawl to the road, where\nhe was found and taken to tbe\nHospital.\nBorn in Austria, Mr. Kotyk came\nto Canada 38 years ago, 23 of which\nhe has spjnt la this area and al\nSouth Slocan. He was a rancher.\nHla, widow and children survive.\nNazi Red Cross\nShips Suspicious\nLONDON, Aug. 31 (Saturday)\n(CP). \u2014 Britain announced today\nshe would refuse to recognize as\nRed Cross ships Immune from attack German vessels which the\nNazis claim are used to rescue\nNazi airmen shot down at sea.\nA German note announcing the\nNazis intend to mark 64 ships\nwith the Red Cross for such a purpose was countered by Britain with\nthe assertion the \"character and\nfunctions\" of so many vessels were\nopen to \"the gravest suspicions.\"\nGermans have attacked British\nvessels engaged in saving both British and German airmen, officials\nsaid, and have \"repeatedly and flagrantly\" attacked bona fide hospital ships.\nThe reply to the German note was\nsent via Switzerland, through whom\nthe original German announcement\nwas made.\nIt said the claim of Red Cross\nprivileges tor such vtssels was\n\"wholly inadmissible.\"\nWater Level\nNelson water level Friday, J.80.\nEast Kootenay\nMen to Be Token\nfor Forestry Corps\nVICTORIA. Aug. 30 (CP).-Au-\nthority for the mobilization of another company of Canadian Forestry Corps was received at military headquarten here today.\nThe new unit will be known as\nNo. 18 company, C. F. C, CA.S.F.,\nand will be commanded by Major G.\nR. Hanbury of Vancouver, who\ncame here yesterday to complete\ndetails for the organization.\nAlthough the company ls to be\norganized ln Victoria, recruits will\nbe drawn largely from the East\nKootenay area, a district where\nonly a few- recruits wer? taken\nfrom ln earlier campaigns to get\nmen in the Foreitry Corps. ,\nMajor Hanbury needs aix officers and 187 other ranks.\nlatest partitioning of his country, enforced by an Axis ultimatum.\nBut in sacrificing Transylvania,\n\"defence corps\" were being formed\nby unreconciled Rumanians. From\ndluj, Ita capital, came a petition\nbearing thouaanda of signatures\nlauding Juliu Maniu, Rumanian\npeasant party leader, for his-opposition to the cession, and calling those\nwho agreed to it \"traitors.\nChurch bells of Transylvania\nwere ordered to ring Incessantly\nas a protest\nManiu, although not a member\nof the Government or the Crown\nCouncil, put In a aurprlse appearance at the session.\nRumania, obeying the orders of\nGermany and Italy,.gave up between 17,000 and 21,000 square miles\nof her territory ln the swift drama\nof power politics that will permit\nNazi soldiers to occupy her Eastern\nfrontier and face the restless armies\nof Russia.\nThe seven-point arbitration\nagreed upon In Vienna to accom-\npj&h'this major operation upon\nRumania's geographical body provided In essence:\npu\\'tffi_S?kfti%^\u00bb\u00abSwwi-\ninto Hungarian hands, but leaving\nthe detail! to a Rumanian-Hungarian commiasion, Exact estimates of\nthe territory Involved could not be\nmade.\n2. Rumanian soldiers to move out\nof the ceded territory within two\nweeks; to imA \" over \"ln order'y\ncondition.\" ,, ,    ,\n3. Rumanian citizens now living In\nthe ceded area to become Hungarians \"automatically,\" but with the\nprovision that they be given six\nmonths to select one citizenship or\nthe other. If they decide to remain\nas Rumanians they must leave the\nnew Hungarian Transylvania state\nwithin an additional period of 12\nmonths,' taking all their movable\nproperty and \"liquidating\" that\nwhich cannot be moved. For this\n\"liquidation\" they are to be compensated by Hungary.\n4. Hungariana who now are Rumanian citizens may go back to\nHungarian citizenship under the\nsame conditions.\n5. Hungary is to give to Rumanians becoming Hungarian citizens\n\"the same rights\" aa Hungarian citizens, Rumania to do likewise for\nthose going the other way around.\nt. Questions arising under the\nterms to be negotiated between Rumania and Hungary.\n7. If settlements cannot thus be\nmade, the issues will be settled by\nGermany and Italy.\nBy DANIEL. DE LUCE\nAssociated Press Staff Writer\nBUDAPEST, Hungary, Aug. 30\n(AP)\u2014Hungary's army, fully mobilized and eager to march, awaited impatiently tonight the signal\nto advance to the summit of th .\nCarpathians and there to take up\nits new assignment as a military\nbuffer for Germany on Soviet\nRussia's Western frontier.\nVIENNA, Aug. 30  (AP)-Ger.\nmany and Italy, self -proclaimed;\nauthora of a \"new Europe,\" gave\nHungary approximately halt of*\nRumania's Transylvania territory\nln an arbitration award handed\ndown here today and reserved tori\nthemselves the final decision id\nany argument arising from thai\nsettlement\nIn the same post-Munich setting-'\nof 1938 In which they settled in I\nHungary's favor the iatter'a terri-j\ntorial dispute with Czecho-Slovakia,\nForeign Ministers Ribbentrop an*.\nCiano of Germany and Italy reach-j\ned today's decision.\nNelson, Rossland\nMen on Casually\nLisl of Air Fore\nLONDON, Aug. 80 (CP Cable)-^\nThe Air Ministry's 4th casualty list,\nissued tonight contained the names\nof 13 Canadians.\nThey are:\nKilled in action: Po, J. T. John-J\naton, Brandon, M\u00bbft,;,Io._.P; Sweat!\nsen. Brooke, Alta.; Sgt. R. A. W.l\nTait, Empress, Alta.\nPreviously reported missing, now !\nreported killed in action: Flt-Lt,)\nJoseph Simon Torgalson, CalgarnJ\nPo. w. O. D. Tweddell, Toronto.\nDied of wounds or injuries in ac\u00abj\ntion: Pilot Officer R. W. G. Beley,\nRossland, B. C; Po. W, M. L. Flsksi,\nMontreal.\nMissing: Po. E. R. Hale, Lems*\nford, Sask.; Po. J. E. P. Larichelie_V;\nMontreal.\nKilled on active service\u2014on non-\noperational flying duty or on thai\nS'ound due to enemy action\u2014Pilot!\nfficer H. G. Ballantyne, Nelson,!\nB.C.; Sqdn.-Ldr. W. G. A. Coulson,'\nWinnipeg; Po. F. ft A. Lambert^\nOttawa.\nGreek Officers\nfo Report Sept. It\nATHENS, Aug. 30 (AP).\u2014Prae\u00abJ\ntically all of Greece's reserve offlea\ncers tonight were ordered to re- 1\nport for service September 11.   \u25a0    ','\nMilitary obsrvers said the scope\nof the summons will make it.poa\u00bb.j\nsible to put the nation completely j\nunder arms within a few hours.\nThe move was taken as informed I\nquarters predicted Italy might use^\na session of the Albanian Parlia-,\nment tomorrow as a sounding-^\nboard for new oral attacks on I\nGreece.\nGreek officials said the meeting\nwould be watched anxiously fof.j\nsome sign of Italy's intentions to-.\nward this Kingdom.\nThe Fascist Press has carried oa\na violent press campaign against\nGreece, alleging that the Greeks\nnow hold territory rightfully belonging to Albania. That countty\nwas invaded by Italy last year.\nBarracks for 100 Men and Officers\nlo Be Built for Home Guard al Tral\nGirls Turn Wiles\non Company Head in\nEffort to Win Boost\nJACKSONVILLE, fla., Aug. 30\n(AP).\u2014Girl cigar plant strikers,\njitterbugglng to company-furnished\nmusic, today turned womanly wiles\non a Vice-President in an effort to\nwin concessions which two days of\nformal negotiation had,failed to get.\n{Several hundred young women\nemployees of the John Swisher &\nSon cigar factory \u2014 one of the biggest in the world \u2014 are demanding\nIncreased pay and reinstatement of\na Plant Manager.\nStrike Leader Otto Nolle said at\nleast 2000 of the 3000 Swisher employees would not return to work\nuntil J. C. McCorkhlll, former Vice-\nPresident and Assistant General\nManager, had been reinstated and\nwage scales increased.\nCompany \u2022officials said McCorkhlll resigned. McCorkhlll told reporters he had been \"fired\".\nCricket   Grounds   in\nTadanac Will Be\nthe Site      . |\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 30\u2014Construction of a regulation army barracks\nat the Tadanac cricket pitch oik\"\nAldridge Avenue for No. 1 and No.\n3 platoons of the Veterans' Homa\nGuard will begin Immediately, announced Capt. A. H. Hugill, Officer Commanding, at noon Friday.\nStaff-Sergt. Roberts and Staff-\nSergt. McMillan of the Royal Canadian Engineers, have arrived here\nfrom Victoria to supervise construction of the barracks which will.\naccommodate some J00 men and\nfive officers.\n\"We expect to have the rien un*.\nder cover in from four to six\nweeks.\" said Captain  Hugill.\nFull facilities of a modern bar*\nracks will be provided, and stan*j\ndard barracks equipment will be\nInstalled.\nThe ground for the barracks has\nbeen leased from the C. M. It _\n\u2022Co.\n__.,        .\u2022..   -_.\u201e_-____.___a.aV.,..^_,.l____a^_.,..---_^_-:--m|i.|-M|  ,,.\n':'! ''-:j >\u25a0\u25a0\"\"-\u25a0\"\"\u25a0 n_if_t__ift_____\niMd^l^fc^ffik^^tJM^^.^ .;..__'\u2022._\u25a0 \u00bb_\u25a0_\u25a0 .-'h,K-.-j&_.\\\u201e\n il  TWO\nfftrat (Eljm'il} nf\n209 BAKER STREET\nJ Branch of The Mother Church\nThe First Church of Chrlit\nScientist In Boiton, Mass.\nSunday School 9:45 a.m.\nSunday Service ll t.m. -\nSubject  LtMon-Strmon\n\"CHRISf JESUS\"\nisday Testimonial Meeting\n8 p.m.\nPREI READING ROOM IN\nCHURCH  BUILDING-\nAll Cordially Welcome\nSt. Raul's\nOlrinttxj flnttrti\nUnion Services In St. Paul'i\nChurch\nm 11*0 aJA.-Rev. J. A. Donnell\nwill preach.\n7:_0 pxn.-Rev. F. Hilliard will\nireach. \u2022\nSpecial lololsts.\nrUESDAY:\n3 pm\u2014WA. meets In vestry.\n[   7:30 p.m.\u2014Stewarda and Ses-\nttion meet.\nI  8:18  p.m. \u2014 Quarterly   board\nmeets.\nffii.%1 Sahmtarlf\nPentecoital\n708 Baker St\nRev. and Mra. C. A. C. Story\nSaturday, 2:30 pjn.-<:hlldren'8\nChurch.\nSunday, 10:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday\nSchool; 11 a.m.\u2014Preaching; 7:80\np.m.-Miu LePen, Mlailonary\nfrom Liberia. Weat Africa.\nTuesday \u2014 \"Greateit Blackout\nof All Times\", Miss LePers.\nFriday\u2014Lantern illdai, \"Native Life in Liberia.\"\nfirst\n8 ajrtiBt (Mmrr^\nRev. Gerald M. Ward\u2014Minister\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014\"Powerlen Christianity\".\n3:00 p.m.\u2014Shirley Hall Service\n7:30 p.m.\u2014\"The Challenge of\nPentecost'!.\n\"O Worship the King\"\nApostolir (Eljurdj\nrull Gospel\nSunday 7:10 Evangelistic   '\nTuesday, Wednesday\nand Friday at 8:00 p.m.\nPastor C. E. Kingifield\nIrown Point Takes Softball Title\nat Trail by Beating Warfield 72\nI TRAIL, B. C. Aug. 30\u2014The Crown\n\"nte waltzed away with the\nr City League softbail chara-\n,\u201ejip Friday night reglitering a\nJ win over the Warfield Aces and\nkrinnlng the seriei three games to\n\u25a0ne.\nI Joe Benoit Saved the day for the\nLee* when hit homer ln the sixth\ntalon, with one man on, regii-\ni_the total number of'Warfield\n\u25a0xrkers.\nBenoit'! circuit clout wai the only\nJWmer hit during the game, but Ab\nJronle connected for a three-base\nlit, bringing a man in. Cronie alio\nlammed out two two-baggen while\nis team mates, Casey Jones and\nWAalrn, each collected a dou-\nIt, Graham and M. Angerilli\nhilked up a double apiece for\nWarfield.\nTwirler Parkhunt for the Crown\nPoints .fanned aix and walked One,\nwhile Graham, pitching for the vanquished, itruck out two and allowed two hits.\nLineups.\nAcei \u2014 Scodellaro cf, Benoit lb,\nGraham p, Burger c, Burrows 2b,\nWeaver rf, Magee ss, M. Angerilli\n3b, Jarrett If.\nCrown Pointi \u2014 Anselmo c, Morrli cf, Jonea 2b, Cronle lb, N. Angerilli If, Parkhurst p, . Martin sa,\nFairbairn rf, S. Martin 3b.\nUmpire* \u2014 Al Hall and Wish\nMilbum.\nThe Crown Points take on tha\nCastlegar Millionaires, next Wednesday at Victoria Park, In the first\nround ot the West Kootenay men'i\nsenior softbail playoff.\n1941 Road Program Uncertain Leary\nTells Nelson Board; No Ottawa Aid\n**l can't iay anything of the future. . . we will do a little road\nwork thli Fall, but road improvement program in B. C. during 1941\ntrill depend on war conditions,\"\naid Hon. Capt. C. S. Leary, Minis-\ner Of Public Works, when he met\nhe Nelion Board of Trade informally Friday morning.\n'The attitude at Ottawa was to\ncurtail all major road programs as\n[tnuch as possible, the Minister de-\nJclared, and little aid could be looked\nfor from that source. A great force\not public opinion would be. the only\nJJneans of getting \\aid from the Do-\nminion   Government  at  this  time,\n[although after the war great im\nprovement and fine rotd building\nprograms could be expected.\nSEEK WINTER ROUTE\nMeanwhile with travel conditions\nthrough the United Stttei difficult\nbecauie of war regulations, the De-\neartment wai now atudylng the\nest way ot maintaining in open\nSouthern tranaprovincial route during the Winter. The difficulty would\nbe In keeping open the Monaihee\nPass or the Cascade lection of\ntravel.\nImprovement and repair work\nstarted thia year would be continued\nin the Fall, and necesiary and iome\namall works would be carried out.\nHume Hotel Nelson, B.C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS       EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nI HUME\u2014D. F. Brindley, Charles\nI Cllffe, A. W. Sadler, Dr. P. C. Brun-\nHer and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. P.\n[_M. Forrest, W. G. Mclntyre, Mrs.\nt\/Templeton, Vancouver; H. C. Olson\nand family, Mr, and Mrs, Robert\nAshman, Spokane; Mr. and Mn. C.\nP. Wood, Seattle; W. S. Ellis, Reno\nMine; H, D. Sinclair, Cranb-'ook;\nW. H. Ahler, Procter; Lewla Leir,\nWinnipeg; T. A. Burns, R. Steed-\nman, Medicine Hat; W. L. Cadman,\nCourtland, Onl,\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nMR, AND MRS. PETER KAPAK, PROPS.\nIn our new wing you miy enjoy the finest\nrooms In the Interior - Bath or Shower.\nROOMg St UP-SPECIAL MONTHLY OR WEEKLY RATES\nOUTLET HOTEL\nCABINS. BOATINC. FISHING\nf..        10 tnllei from Nelson.\nTake the Harrop Ferry.\nProcter, B. C.\nRatei reasonable.\nADVERTISE YOUR HOTEL,\nLODGE OR TOURIST CAMP\nIn  This Space\nWhtrt Thouiandi Will Read It\nCAMP PARADISE\n4 miles North of Kaslo, B.C\nModern   cabins,   electricity.\ngas. running water. Inner\nIprlng mattresses, bedding, linen, cooking utensils furnished meals\nfurnished\nCabins for 2 to 6 People: Wk.   $12 to $18\nPhone or Write Camp Paradise, Kailo, B.C.\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"       Newly renovated through-\n0111161*111   H0t6l    A    PATTERSON,   late   ot\nW0 Seymour St.        yiH?8\".*. _ B.C. Coleman, Alls., Proprietor,\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nHOTEL RIDPATH\nW. 514 FIRST AVE., SPOKANE\nThe Hotel Canadlani Like to Call Home\n190  Outside  Roomi and  Apartmenti\nALL AT MODERATE RATES\n-NILSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C.-SATUPDAY MORNINO. AUG. 31, 1940-\nRedmen Advance Against\nBruins by Finishing Off\nNelson in Two Straight\nbluett\nit Civic\nSam Saprunoff Is the\nMan of the Hour\nfor Victors\nFINALS TO START\nTRAIL THURSDAY\nTht triumphant rumble of tht\nhigh-geared Rowland lacrotie midline grew mon omlnoui thin\ntvtr Friday night ftr the Trail\nGolden Bean ai tht Redmen completed t two-itnight trimming of\ntht ox-champion Nelion  Leaft.\nIn I display of the gutted itlck\npastime thtt hid the\ncrowd ef thl naion In tha\nArena marvelling at the visitors\ndespite thtlr ptrpttull vocil ai-\nuult on Rafereat Brennen tnd\nWllion, tht Redmen rattled out a\n16-11 deciiion, that combined with\nt 18-10 vlttory two nlghti befort\nto nnd them Into a best of flvt\nfinal nrlei tgiinit Trill. That\nleriei, which will decldi tht \u00ab!\u00ab\u25a0\ncetior to tht twice-ohamplon\nLeafi, itarti In Trail Thunday\nnight\nThe lion'i ihare ot the semi-final\nlaurel! go without a doubt to illm\nSammy Saprunoff, 10-year-o 1 d\nrookie netmlnder of the Redmen.\nSaprunoff, the same fellow who\nhas been covering acres ot aecond\nbase for the Trail Cardinals this\nSummer, was carried off the floor\non the shoulders ot hia happy teammates atter it was all over and Dave\nGibbons, King of Kootenay goalies\nIn other diys, came up to centra\nfloor to congratulate h'.s young\nrival.\nSAPRUNOFF\nSENSATIONAL\nSaprunoff brokt the Leafs' hearts\nall the way through. They'd march\nright through the Redmen defence\nUme end again, and Sammy somehow would get ln front of the\ndrive. On one occasion in the third\nperiod, he stopped thre* hot shots\nIn a row from Art Hill, who can\nreally rifle them in. And two or\nthree times he itopped Jock Walmiley when the greying Nelion\nCoach had only him to beat.\nTba teams stepped through tht\nbest first period of the aeaaon with\nepeedy, well-organized playi, and\nthe fam figured on a really classy\ndisplay. The Redmen took the lead\nfrom the start and hung on grimly\nto a 9-3 margin at the quarter.\nIn tht second session the Lake-\nilders did most of their work, and\nthe Braves did the scoring. Desperate to keep from letting tne deficit get out ot shouting distance,\nWalmsley had his boys up the floor\ncontinuously and they hammered\nan even dozen shots at Saprunoff,\nbut nary a one got by him. On the\nother hand, the Redmen, specializing as opportunists, flashed the red\nlight five times. ,\nTheir first half performance put\nthe Leafs seven goals down and apparently out of the running. However, they held their closer-checking opponents to an even break In\nthe third quarter, and in the final\nperiod their rousing show had the\nfans on their feet despite the fact\nthat  Pop   Time   would   obviously er Walt.\nnever allow their favorites to even\nltup.\nFLASHY FINISH\nThe Leafi finlihed the game with\ntout tuccessive goals, ana they had\nthe Redmen definitely on th\u00ab run.\nThe Rouland hero wsi Saprun-\n. off, who played in Trail junior\ncompany thia season, and Nelson\nhad Jackie Biihop. Biihop continued his sparkling late-season\nform to keep the Leafi ln the\nrace, and picked off five paints.\nIan Dingwall waa one ot the better Leafs.\nPENALTIES TAKE TOLL\n. Penalties played a Big part ln the\nRama, and Nelson's flock of penai-\nes had the fans screaming at the\nrtfs. Mickey Brennen replaced\nJohnny Gidinski ot Rouland, who\nwaa originally chosen to work the\nsemis with Len Wilion.\nBill founaend apd Ron Saundry\niet oft the ipark for the thrilling\nfinish with a real tiff behind the\nRouland goal. They were given\nmajors tor their fist-flinging, and\nthat waa the signal for speedy and\nhectic end-to-end rushes that had\nplayers ending up everywhere\nsprawled on the floor,   '\nFreddy Graves, red-headed defenceman, made an unexpected appearance tn the game. Now a resident of Vancouver, he came up for\nthe holiday weekend, and transferred at Cutlegar from the train\nto Manager Harold Long's car. He\narrived in time to\nn the last\nand from\nminute Of the first ha!\nthen on. <\nBOX SCORE\nRowland G A Pt Pe\nSaprunoff,  g _   0  0  0  0\nSimcock, d   2\nCarkner, d _  1\nJim Scott, d  1\nRalph Scott, d   2\nStundry, r  \u201e 2\nMcDonald,  r     1\nAnderson,   c     1\nJoe Laiece, c  0\nMcGuire, w   1\nCox, w  2\nRay Scott, w  1\nEzart, w  2\nTotela -  . 18   8 24 27\nNelion\nGibbons,   g  ..\nMiller, d \t\nCooper, d \t\nKuhn, d \t\nGraves, d \t\nWalmsley, r ..\nTownsend, r\nBishop, c\t\nBonneville.\nG A Pt Pe\n0   0   0   0\nDingwall, w  _ 2\nMayo, w  2\nTapanila, w   0\n  1\napan\nllll, i\n2 4\n3 0\n0   0\n0 0\n1 2\n2 12\n5   4\n1 12\n2 0\n2 0\n1 0\n1   2\nTotala     11   9 20\nScore by per)ods:\nRossland j 5   5   3   3\u201416\nNelaon ' _... .7303   5\u201411\nStops by goalies:\nSaprunoff   8 12   9   7\u201436\nGibbona       5   6   7   S-2H\nReferee \u2014 Len Wilson. Judge ol\nPlay \u2014 Mickey Brennen. Timekeepers \u2014 T. R. Wilson, Rene Morln and R. E. Crerar. Scorer \u2014 Walt-\nThe demand for better Toads.\nb_tter bridges, and better ferries\nwas heavy in this Province, .but\nwith so little money available and\nno promise of aid from Ottawa it\nwas impossible to say what deft\nnitely could be done.\nE. A. Mann, President, expressed\nthe Board's appreciation ot Mr.\nLeary'i frank outline of the iltuation, and stated that a report of the\nRoad and Bridges Committee, of\nsmall works necessary in this District, would be forwarded to the\nMinister shortly.\nJohn Learmonth, Chairman of the\nRoads and Bridges Committee, was\nChairman of the meeting.\nFATHER AT 74\nCUMBERLAND, Md\u201e Aug. 30\n(AP)-At 74, Charles H. Grubb is\npaaslng out cigars again for the lecond time In 15 monthi. Hii wife,\n38, haa given birth to a iecond\ndaughter, Their first baby was borr\nIn May, 1939.\nALCAZAR\nHOTEL\nCOR. DUNSMUIR A HOMER 8T8.\nVancouver, B. C.\n1 Block From Bui Terminal.\nMODERN-CENTRAL\u2014QUIET\nLargest Family Hotel ln the West.\n200 ROOMS\n8lagle tnd Eniultt\nwith Prlvttt Bath.\nR.itcj from $1.00 psr day\nCAFE IN CONNECTION\nCall at Ntlion Dally Newi office\nfor folders.\nBreakfast Nooks\nBUILT TO ORDER\nKootenay Sash & Door Works\nM. E. OBAL Opp. City Hall\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\nSunditrand Adding Machinei\nOFFICE SUPPLIES\nUnderwooa Elliott Filhtr Ltd.\n531 Wird St , Phont 0t\nPLUMBING\nREPAIRS - ALTERATIONS\nSHEET METAL WORK\nB. C. Plumbing & Heating\nComptny,  Limited\n37 of Comp Koolaree\nFraternity to Spend\n3 Days in Cleanup\nThirty-seven members of the\nCamp Koolaree Fraternity will\napend three dayi at the Camp this\nweekend, cleaning up and closing\nthe camp for the season. The Fraternity is made up of boys over 14\nwho have attended at least three\ncamp sessions.\nFourteen boys will come from\nTrail, 15 from Nelson, aix from\nRosiland, one from Creston and\none from Cranbrook. Fred Robins\nof Trail will be in charge.\nThe boyi will enter today and\nbreak camp Monday afternoon.\nTrail-Nelson Men's\nSoftball Here Today\nRev. Edward Doyle laid Friday\nnight that the Colombos-Eagles who\ndefeated the Nelson Junior rep team\nin  West  Kootenay   boys'   loftball\n& layoffs would play the Senior\n. V. O. team of Nelson at 5:30 this\nevening In an exhibition at the\nRecreation Grounds.\nNEWPORT, Mon., (CP).-Lillian\nMorgan, 18, was dancing in the\nY. If. C. A. here when a rifle bullet\nwounded her In the leg. It came\nfrom the' baiement where a aoldier\nwaa demonstrating gun handling to\nBoy Scouts.\nCalgary Wallops\nBlue Bombers 12-1\nCALOARV, Aug. SO (CP). - Calgary Bronks, taking advantage ot\nevery opportunity that came their\nway, smashed the Dominion champion Winnipeg Blue Bombers 12-1\nat Mewata Stadium tonight, conceding only a first-minute single\npoint to the great Manitoba grid\nmachine that has dominated Watt-\nem Canadlait football lor many\nseasons.\n36 Beginners and\nNew Students for\nCentral Examined\nThirty-six pupils, all but threa of\nthem beginners ahd the remainder\ntransfer! from other schools, were\nexamined by Dr. W. M. Toone, Acting School Doctor, at a pre-ichool\nclinic at Central School Friday\nafternoon, Miu Nancy Dunn, School\nNune, assisted. . .\u2022 -\nA clinic will be held at the Hume\nSchool this morning.\nAmong tha 99 children the examiners found 38 defects and made\nrecommendation! tor rectifying\nthem. The mothers ot all puplli\nexamined were consulted In thli\nregard. It waa alio found that of\nthe 38, three had been Inoculated\nor vaccinated for protection againit\nsmallpox or diphtheria.\nTourist Traffic\nIs al High level\nOne ot the heaviest tourist lea-\nsons in years li reaching toward\nita peak ai ichool Opening near*.\nThroughout the Summer monthi\ntraffic on trains and buses hai\nbeen at high levels, largely due to\ndiversion ot traffic through Brltiih\nColumbia following paiiport restrictions by American! and exchange restriction! by the Canadian Foreign Exchange Control\nBoard.\nNow, with achool soon to open,\nthe traffic it Increaied by district\nreaidenti returning from holiday!\nand by teachen travelling to their\npotts at varioui centrei throughout the Southern interior.\nADANACS WIN\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C, Aug.\n30 (CF). - The Canadian champion New Westminster Adanacs tonight trounced Richmond Farmers\n21-11. ln the fifth and final game\nof the semi-final series in the Inter-\nCity Box Lacrosse League.\nOn Running Board\nReckless Driving\nTrail Man Fined\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 30\u2014Climaxing\nrepeated warnings which hava been\nIssued by tho City Police against\nthe practice of riding on the running boards ot cars and trucks.\nKriitian L. Thomsen of Ttall,\npleaded guilty to a charge of reckless driving, and was fined $13\nand costs.\nThe case arose from an accident\nlast Friday when Henry Schellen-\nburg of Trail fell from Kriitlan's\ntruck while delivering milk, and\nthe truck ran over him, breaking\nhis ankle.\nAccording to the police, milk\ntruck driven have been the chief\noffenden ln such a practice.\nHome Guard Has\nVacancies lor\nAdditional^\nPlacei are available for an addM\ntional seven or eight men ln Koo\u00ab\ntthay platooni of the Vetersns\nHome Guard, stated Capt A. H.\nHughlll ot Trail, In NeUon Friday.\nCaptain Hughlll tl In charge of\nWest Kootenay recruiting ilnce the\ntransfer of Major A. C. Sutton, D. S.\nO. to Vernon to command the training camp being established there.\nHe stated thert wert ilso several\nv cancies still for truck drivers in\nthe Canadian Active Service Force.\nHeadquarten and staff ot the\nHome Guards In the Kootenay are\ntt Cranbrook. Two (ilatooht are at\nWail, ont tt Nelson ihd ont at\nFernle.\nCanada Defence\nNot Infringed\nby John Doubinin\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 30\u2014The caie\nagalnat John Doubinln, ot Pass\nCreel!, charged with a violation of\nthe Defence of Canada Regulations\nAct, was dismissed by Magistrate\nParker Williami In City Police\nCourt Fri44y afternoon. Doubinin\nwaa accuied of making statements\nintended, qr likely, to be prejudicial\nto the safety of the State.\nThe charge wai laid by a local\nitorekeeper who teitlfied that Doubinln had made certain itatements\nduring an argument over the price\nof a pair of ihoei.\n\"I believe the evidence ot the\nProsecution, but 1 cannot believe\nthat iuch a itatement, made under\nsuch clrcumatanctl, was intended\nor waa likely to be prejudicial to\nthe safety of the SUte.\n\"I believe it meant no more.to\nany ot the partiei than It would\nmean were the accused to iwear,\nupon being disappointed In his\nbargaining.\n\"f cannot compare tha accused\nwith tha penon in the Rex vs.\nCoffin caae,\" concluded the Magistrate, referring to a recent Defence\nof Canada Vfolatlqni caie, quoted\nby Donald McDonald, Proiecutlng\nCouniel.\nE. P. Dawson, of Nelion, appeared\nfor the accused.\nNITE BALL\nWESTERN INTERNATIONAL\nVancouver    2  I   1\nVaklma      8 11   4\nHolmes, Goldman, Smith and\nLloyd; Schanz and Evans.\nTacoma    -    6 115\nSpokane        11 M   5\nKoupal   and   Brenner;   Windior\nand McNamee.\nPACIFIC COAST\nSan Diego I, Setttle 8.\nLos Angeles 4, Oakland 1.\nSacramento 8, Portland 3.      ,\nTrail Car Is Badly\nDamaged, Over Bank;\nPassengers Escape\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 30-Golng eft\nthe Nelson-South Slocan Highway\nabout 10 p.m. Thursday night, a\ncar driven by Samuel J. Meredith,\n1345 Thorn Street, was badly damaged. Both Meredith and his pas\nsenger, Mn. R. D. McAdam, escaped\nserious injury. Tt\nIng to Trail.\nfhe car was return-\nWi Record Entry Holiday Geli\nTourney Opens In Nelson Today\nThe Labor Day weekend^ tourm\nment on the Nelson Golf Ji'Country\nClub course with a record entry of\nKootenay golfen geti under way\nthli afternoon when the ladiei play\ntheir flnt round matchei in the\nKootenay Breweries  competition.\nThe odd number of entries in the\nladies' event necessitates an extra\nmatch, which will be played by\nMrs. Robert Wation and Mn. Don\nClark at 9:30 a.m. The winner will\nmove into the flrtt round matches\nir the afternoon.\nMen'i play for the Leith Cup\nwon't start until Sunday morning,\nbut golfen may arrange their first\ngames with their specified opponents thli afternoon, thereby avoiding a match Sunday morning. Thoie\nlosing their tint round matchei wUl\nbe drawn by the match committee\nfor placei ln the second flight.\nIn addition to the Nelion players,\ngolfers have entered from lumber-\nWest Kootenay Open Tennis Tourney\nal Trail Will Start This Morning\nAug. 80\u2014Opening\nKootenay open\ntennis tournament thli weekend at\nTRAIL, B. C,\ndrawi for the Weit .\nthe Trail and Tadanac courti, are\naa followi:\n10:30 a.m,\u2014\nTadanac Courti\u2014Men'i tingles:\nClyde Knox, Proiier, Waih., vi M.\nStuart, Laurier; A. M) Chesier, Tadanac, va H. P. Ritchie, Cascade.\nLadiei' linglei: Mn. G. L. Murray,\nTadanac, vs Mill Mary Stubbs, Kelowna; Mm E. Bernot, Spokane, vt\nMn. H. Whitmore, Kelowna.\n1:30 p ma-\nTrail courta\u2014Mixed doublei: Ned\nRhodei, Trail, and Mlai Betty\nWright, Tadanac, vi O. Halley,\nCranbrook, and MIU E. Bernot,\nSpokane; H. P. Ritchie, Cascade;\nand Mri. P. Halllwell, Tadanac, vi\n\" eman, Rouland, and Mn\num, Beaver Bend; Tony\n_\u201ed Mill Joyce Haverfleld,\nKelowna, vi Stan Angus, Trail, tnd\nLewis Freeman, Rossland, and Mrs.\nW. McCallum, Biavl   \u25a0\nI MUl Jm\n'\u25a0 Stan Angu.. .\nMill Loretta McDonell, Rossland\nTadanac courta\u2014Mixed doubles:\nWoellmir and Mlu Beverly Weber,\nSpokane, va A. M. Chesier and Mlu\nK Blhliy. Tldanic; W. 0. William,\nTrail, and Mri. T. H. Weldon. Tadanac, vi C. L. Knoweli and Mri\nW. Brown, Tadanac; M. Stuart,\nLaurier, and Mlu M. Elmore, Kelowna, vi S. McCatty, Tadanac, and\nMn. W. Elsdon, Bonnington; Dick\nStubbs and Mn. Whitmore, Kelowna, vs Mr. and Mn. 0. G. Mclntyre, Sheep Creek; Jtck Neil and\nMiss Marjorie McDonell, Rouland,\nvi Mr. and Mra. Geoffrey Barwis,\nWillow Point.\n2:30 p.ih.\u2014\nTrail Courts\u2014Mixed doublei: Teddy Romano, Nelaon, and Mn. Clifford, Lethbridge, vi winner of\nStubbs and Whitmore-Mr. and Mis.\nMclntyre; Bob Schwengers and\nMiu Doreen Dunnett, Nelion, vi\nwihntr of stubbs and Haverfield-\nAngui and McDonell; Maurice Major, Willow Point, and Mlu Kay\nNlibet, Nelion, vl winner of Ritchie\nand Halliwell-Freeman and McCallum match,\nTadanac courta\u2014Mixed doubles:\nMr. and Mrs. Lemarquand, Victoria, vi winner ot Ntal and Mc-\nDonell-Mr. and Mri. Barwii; E.\nEdgecumb. Chapman Camp, and\nMn. Mowbray, Rouland, vt R. L.\nHannay, Chapmin Camp, and Mill\nJohn Hannay, Tadanac; Mr. and\nMri. Kwasnle, Coltman, Alta.. vs\nHarold Sinclair, Cranbrook. and\nMisi Mary Bull, Kelowna; Mri. G.\nI a. Murray, Tadanac, and E. S. Atwood, Grand Forks, vi Mr. and Mri.\nK. Plncott, Orand Forki; Mn. 0. L.\nMurriy, Tadanac, and Miu Mary\nStubbs, Kelownt, va winner of Wllliama and Weldon-Knowlei and\nBrowr\nley, Creiton and Trail. Privileges\nof the course are extended to all\nviiiting playen who are entered\nin the tournament\nThe draw followi:\nTODAY\u2014\n0:30 a.m.-Mn. Robert Wation vs\nMri. Don Clark.\n1:30 p.m.\u2014Mn. B. Townihend vi\nMn. R. L. McBride.\n1:33 p.m.\u2014Mn. Jack Fingland vi\nMlu Connie Smith.\n1:40 p.m.\u2014Mn. Harold Lakei vi\nMn. Jerman Hunt.\n1:45 p.m.\u2014Mn. John Cartmel vs\nwinner Watson-Clark.\nSUNDAY-\n9:00 a.m.\u2014Carl Carlion va J. S,\nMitchell.\n9:03 a.m.\u2014Gordon Allan vi Jas.\nAllan.\n9:06 a.m.\u2014Ron Andrewi vi T. R.\nWilson.\n9:09 a.m.\u2014S. B. Alexander vj L.\nM. McBride.\n9:12 a.m.\u2014Roy Stone vi E. Car-\nrotheri.\n9:15 a.m.\u2014T. H. Bourque vi R,\nNlibet.\n9:18 a.m.\u2014R. Packhurst vi K. McBride.\n9:21 a.m.\u2014B. Townihend vi II\nDonaldson.\n9:24 a.m.\u2014H. Lakea vi Roy Pollard.\n9:27 a.m.\u2014Vic Owen vi 0. G. Gallaher.\n9:30 a.m.-Syd Ellis vi R. B. Allan.\n9:31 a.m.\u2014John Cartmel vi J. A.\nWright\n9:38 a.m.\u2014W. R. Orubbt vi M\nWelykochy.\n9:39 a.m.\u2014W. Bltne vi J. B. Stark.\n9:42 a.m.\u2014Don Clark vi C. B.\nGarland.\n9:45 a.m.\u2014M. Sawyeri tn R. E\nHorton.\n9:48 a.m.\u2014John Fraier vs A. H.\nAllan.\n9:50 a.m.\u2014Chai Bothimley vi Dr.\nM. Toone.\n9:03 \u00bb.m.-W. S. ROM V! Ted\nBaldwin.\n9:M i.m.\u2014Herb Blnnie vi Jack\nFingland.\nFINK'S\nBURNS\nBLOCK\nFOOTWEAR\n3. New Fires in Week Boost ,\nDistrkl Season Total to 879\nThirty-four new forett tlrta\nbreaking out in the Nelaon Foreit\nDiitrlct during the week ending\nThundiy, lifted the total flrtt to\ndate thli season to 879. Ot this total\nonly 55 were still burning.\nIn the Wett Kootenay, where 24\nfirei were itill burning Thunday,\n17 outbreaks were reported in the\nweek; 13 new fires were reported In\nthe East Kootenay and four ln the\nBoundary, Twenty-aeven flrea were\nitill burning ln the Eaat Kootenay\nFriday and Mr ln the Boundary.\nTo date thia season 535 blazes have\nbeen reported In the Weit Kootenay, 275 In the Eait Kootenay and\n89 In the Boundary.\nForest fire conditions were good\nthroughout the Southern Interior,\nall flrei being held. It waa expected\nmore men would be tent in off Eut\nKootenay and other firea today.\naoioeootieitstostoomMtostsssoits\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nmottstiit^immwmttttmtmsi\nFOR BALI - ONE HEAVY DtjTY\ntrailer, complete with bunks\nreach, overload springs, air\nbrakes. 32 x t dual tlrta, licensed\nBargain. McPhenon Gartge Comptny Ltd., Grand Forki, B. C.\nTwo Trail Drivers\nFined for Driving\nOver Lines of Hose\nTRAIL. B C A_B SO-Tbe fir*\nwhich broke out In the Doukhobor\nBlock, Eldortdo Street, TraU, o\u00bb\nAugust 22, had a sequel, with a\nPolice Court setting Friday afternoon when R. Grimm, and Raymond\nRedstone, both of Trail, appeared\nbefore Magiitrate Parker Williams,\ncharged with driving over the fire\nbose during the time the Doukhobor\nBlock fire waa being fought.\nGrimm pleaded not guilty, atat-\nlng that, as he did not notice the\nfire and law no crowd, he con-\neluded it waa a contractor's hose\/He\nwas fined $2.90 and coiti.\nRedstone pleaded guilty and wai\nfined 810 and coati.\nBoth fines were pitd.\nU. S. Bomber Crashes\nKALAMA. Wash, Aug. 30 (AP)\u2014\nClaude Wright, Kalama farmer, reported today a United States army\nBomber crashed near his home.\nWright iaid one ot eight occupants of the plane parachuted to\nsafety and requested him to notify\narmy authorities.\nThe aviator told Wright he believed all eight occupants ot the\nbomber parachuted to ufety.\nCANADIAN FLYER KILLED\nOTTAWA, Aug. 30 (CP)-Royal\nCanadian Air Force Headquarten\ntoday announced It had received\nword from oversea! that F.O. Robert Lesley Edwardi of Coburg,\nOnt., hai been killed In action. The\nstatement said he waa the tint\nR.C.A.F. pilot to be killed ln the\naerial defence of the United Kingdom.\nthai iimn-.r feeling ti irei\nCONSTIPATION\nU AO Very often It la the GAS\nformed by accumulated waste in the\nIntestines that accounts for the\nbloating, griping ud cramps in\ntemporary constipation. Relief from\neach distress cornea only from a\nlaxative that, besides Inducing a\nsmooth, thorough bowel action, alao\nreliavea thia gas. Beechama Pilli\ndo both these things, pleasantly and\nthoroughly. Try them tonight ud\naee for yourself how helpful\nBeechama Pills cu be. Bay at your\ndruggist\u2014101, _\u00ab, t04.\nSAND\nAND\nGRAVEL\nFor All Building\nPurposes\nPHONE 701\nFairview\nFuel Co.\nIhis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n------'\n wwt^w1. y.^K^'j.jiysypitwjiL..; 'wnw^i\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nmm---*~^aamm^mmmi_tm-Pi-y*A--mmm^ 11        in mi      'Ifi, _.\"\":.' ',' '   ...        .'   ' \u2014\"\u2014 \u25a0     \u25a0'.\u00bb ' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0fniaasiiiiniiiiiian\nSBrimmers and Divert in Action at Nelson Aquatic Meet\n~NEL>ON DAILY tiVHt, NELSON. S. Ca-SATURDAY MORNINO. AUO. Si. WO- '\n?^****^**r9*****l*i**rT\nPttt* thki\n\u2022\nJacknife diva\u2014Robert Smith\nROBERT SMITH\ncreated t new record in the open\ncross-lake swim. The new record\nis 7:10. He was also first to boys\n17 and under free style race, and\nhad two leconds in diving events.\nOops! He'a trying to dodge the mountain.\nJEAN HAMMER\nwinner of girls' cross-lake swlht\nand five other  events\u2014girls  15\nand 17 and under free style races,\nfill:,' back itroke, and girls 14 and\nS and under diving.\nExpected on\nLeave\nPrivate Douglas A. Griffin, ion\nof Mn. A. Blais, 803'i Victoria\nStreet, ia expected to arrive in\nNelson on leave shortly. Enlisting at Calgary, he has been stationed lately at Dundern, Sask.\nHe is active In lacrosse, softbail\nand so on with his unit.\nTrailite at\nTrenton\nm!ss Martha Rogers, iwimming teacher, watchei two memberi of her lite saving clan. Rose\nBeattie tnd Katherint Witoon, give a demonstration.\ndouglas Mcdonald\nformerly of the Tadanac machine\nshop of the C. M. Sc S. Co, with\nthe R.C.A.F. at Trenton, Onl. The\nphoto was taken in St. Thomai\nwhile he wu on leave.,\n, ';   -'7\nPREPARE FOR\n\u2014\u2014\u25a0J\n1\nNew Fall Frocks\nLadles attractive sfternoon dresses of rayon crepe, festurlng the new swing\nskirts and slim \\\\aistlines. Lovely shades of Brook green,'^mt mm\nEarthen rust, Pastoral plum. Arbor rouge, Valley green, Ha.- $ \u25a0 _y^\nvest wine,'British navy and black. Each\nKIDDIES' OVERALLS\n\"Skippy\" bib. overalls msde from\nsturdy denim, fully cut for longer\nwear. Two front pockets, stripe\ntrim. Navy, brown, royal and green.\nSizes 2 to 8 years. t_Qn\nEach  \"OC\nSUCKS FOR THE HOLIDAY\n\"London Town\" styled slacks of the new Alpine cloth.\nNeatly tailored with one pleat front, two slash side j\npockets, zipper fastening. Navy, brown and\nwine. Sizes 12 to 20, each\t\nHOME FROCKS\nThe latest styles in house dresses,\nPrincess lines or full skirts. Dainty\nprints, fully cut and well finished\"\nfor longer wear. This Is an exceptional value as these usually sell at\n$1.95. Sizes 14 to 44.\nEach\t\n\"SCARLETT O'HARA\" SWEATERS\n| Cay sweaters knit from pure botany wool. Frill finished yoke, sleeves and band. Latest shades In Pressed\n\"rose, Mignon blue, Haze turquoise, Saltwater djl QP\nj blue, maize and white. Sizes 14 to 20. Each\u00ab])l.jD\nLook a. This Great\nSUIT\nBARGAIN\nTwo Pant Suits\nHere's your big opportunity to buy a genuine wool worsted suit at a saving. Medium\nand dark shades in the most popular new\nFall patterns. Models for men and young\nmen. Sizes are from 35 to 46.\n$19-50\nMEN'S WOOL SWEATERS\nOur new Fall sweater is a knockout. Cood\nquality brushed wool in new shades of\ngreen, brown and blue. Full zippef front\nwith slant pockets. 'tf O QP\nSizes 36 to 44 $L.V0\nBETTER GRADE\nSHIRTS\n200 of them specially priced for this event.\nFused collar shirts from better grade broadcloth, offering a wide choice of plaids,\nchecks, stripes. In this lot\nare some English woven!\nbroadcloths. Sizes 14 to 17\nns*\nBOYS'TWEED LONGS\nBoys! If you are going back to school here's\na good looking hard wearing play pant. Grey\"\nand brown cotton tweeds, with high waist\nbands and zipper pockets. (J>1   JA\nSizes 6 to 16 year $1.4?\nBOYS' BROADCLOTH SHIRTS\nHere's a fine selection of boys' broadcloth\nshirts. Included in this lot are shirts tailored\nfrom materials usually found in higher\npriced shirts. *jf_\\\nSizes IlVi to 14Vi lUC\nMEN'S JOCKEY SHORTS\nMen's cotton jockey shorts, flat knit, all.\naround elastic waist band; \u00a3___\u00bb\nSizes 30 to 40 OUC\nVests to match OA\nMe\n40c\n40c\nMATHEMATICAL SETS. A smart set of mathematical instruments. Complete set\t\nREEVE'S PAINTS. The popular set of secondary\nlight water colors. Priced at\t\nBlack Leatherette Scribblers. 116 pages, each .. 10<\nWire O' Scribblers. 76 pages, 2 for  25<,\nThe Factor Scribblers. 52 pages, 3 for  101\nThe Beacon Scribblers. 76 pages, 2 for  15f\nThe Sunrise Scribblers. 68 pages  5\u00a3\nMammoth Pencil Scribblers. 112 pages  (ty\nPencil Scribblers. Ruled and unruled, 3 for .... 104\nSPECIAL. Ink Scribblers, 10 for  25*\nSPECIAL. Cood quality Ink Scribblers, 6 for ... 25*\nMucilage with Rubber Top Spreader  1 ._<*\nLibrary Paste   10*\n12-inch Ruler. Bevelled edge   5*\n12-inch ruler with brass edge In inches and metric lfl<*\nCombination Pencil and Ink Erasers  5*\nLarge H B C Erasers  5*\nArt Erasers for Drawing  g^\nPERFECT CREPE\nHOSIERY\nCirls!  You'll   be   thrilled  with   this\nstocking. It's a sheer dull crepe in the\nseason's smartest ass0ft-^> *m\nment of shades. Sizes S'iMQC\nto lOVi. Shop early -forW^\nyours. Pair\t\nCHILDREN'S % HOSE\nIdeal for school wear. Popular rib hose,\nknee length with lastex cuffs. Fawn,\nblue or grey heathers. Oft .\nPair  JjC\nBoy's School\nOxfords\nDressy black calf oxfords\nfor school or dress wear.\nSolid soles and with rubber heels. Boys', M OP\nsizes   1   to 'V:_$J.LO\nBoys' School Boots\nHeavy Elk black school boots. Sturdy soles, rubber heels.\nBoys' sizes M OC   Youths' sizes       ffO *]C\n1 to 5V_ yd.Ld   11 to 13'\/z ....<P-_.lt)\nSchool Shoes for Girls\nSturdy sport oxfords In attractive styles for thi\nschool miss. Light brown calf, brown alligator and\nblack oxfords with composition soles for tfO'CQ\nlong wear. Sizes 3 to 7 <J)__.Ut.\nGrowing Girls' School Shoes\nBlack and brown calf oxfords. Brogue and\nlace to the toe styles. Leather soles, medium\nheels with rubber lifts. -ffO OQ\nSizes 3'\/_ toV\/i tP__._\u00abF\nAnklets\nSturdy short socks in every color\nand size you'll want.  Every pair\nwith lastex tops.\nPair  \t\n19c\nnhtm^if^ (tamp* itf.\nINCORPORATES   27? MAY. 10,70.\n\u25a0 -_M__ti__. \u25a0\n____\n^\u25a0'\u25a0^ii\n_\u25a0______*\u25a0,  _   ia ,-___!\n FOUR\n\u2014NILION DAILY NIWI. NILSON. i. fe-MTURDAY, MORNINO. AUO. 11. .MO-\nOMAN TEACHES MEN TO FLY IN PHILADELPHIA\nl Marriage\u00ab...\nifor Thought\nFrom Divorcing\nCAROLINE CHATFIELD\nkr Miss Chatfield:\nI have always had supreme con-\nmpt for the wife who strayed\nK the straight and narrow. I\nBe always adhorred divorce. I\nive always criticized women who\nnldn't make happy homes for\nilr husbands and children. But\nper agan. A year ago my lius,-\ntnd began to show too much input in his secretary. She was a\n(wrcee. I tried to do all the things\nicommended to wives under these\nmditions and to leave otf any\nlention of the matter. In this I\nicceeded pretty well. Then our\nBy ion werit off to college and I\nas left alone day and night I be-\nime HI with worry and foolishly\ntided in my doctor who was\nling to see me regularly. He was\nridower, lonely and unhappy and\n| can guess the rest. My husband\nare polite strangers living un-\nJ the lame roof. I don't know\nIch of us is most miserable. Is\nfee any way out but divorce and\nharrlage for both of us7\nLT.\n(oourse there are two ways out,\ndear woman, and the first de-\non, about the matter must rest\nBth you. I'd suggest several ques-\nfeni to be answered before you\nBee the radical step. Is there a\nIlia for hope that you and your\nlusband, each of you offenders\njainst the other, might come to an\npderstanding, patch up your re-\nBtonship and face the future to-\nIdler? Would this be the thing\npur son would want most?\n: Naturally you and your husband\nplieve that you are experiencing\nhe grand passion for widower and\nhe divorcee respectively and II\nBil remain together it would en-\nBl great sacrifice for both. Would\nkh a sacrifice yield you a satls-\nIctlon comparable to the selfish\n\u25a0_sure of divorce and remarriage?\nfet Is often pointed out that many\nnan who hears a siren voice with\nIn ear, listens with the other ear\nBhe echo of another voice lhat ne\ngesn't want to lose. Certainly a\nBtiely woman is easy prey to the\nbmfortlng presence of a physician\n\u25a0M* curing her ills while he re-\ntaives her confidence, At that, nel-\nner may be experiencing anything\nbt a temporary aberration, an es-\njape to the land of make-believe.\nInd there's no such place.\nf When a man and woman have\nlived together long enough to have\na ion in college there must be some\nbends between them that cannot be\nbroken even by extra-mural affairs.\nAt least some who have tried di-\nWrce and re-marriage say this is\ntrue.\n^LOCAN PARK\n[ SLOCAN PARK, B.C.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. Richard Storbo left for the\nCoast.\n[ Mr. Wilkinson and Mr. Lindsay\nof Vancouver and Mr. Woodrow- of-\nCastlegar spent a week at Slocan\npark.\ni Mrs. Longdon, Albert Longdon,\nWd Miss Ruby Longdon visited\nMrs. A. D. Crebbin.\n: Mr. and Mrs. J. Causey and Mrs.\nGraham of Trail visited Mrs. S-\nletd.\nI Miss Joyce Crombie has returned\nto Trail.\n[Miss-Effie Reid has returned from\nITrail.\n*_ Mrs. S. Conkin and family. Mrs.\ng. Evins and family, Mr. and Mrs.\nSE. H. Greavison and family visited\n\u25a0felson.\n; Miss Polly Polonikift has returned after spending a few days in\nBossland.\nf George Polonikift is spending two\nweeks with his f._mily before returning to Sheep Creek.\nI   Miss Joyce Greavison has gone to\nNelson to attend High School.\nPASSMORE\nPASSMORE, B.C. - Mrs. D. K.\nJones and daughter Margo have\nlett for A-hcrait to visit relatives.\nMits B. Ferry was a guest ot Mr.\nand Mrs. A. H. Noakes of Balfour.\nMisa M. Forbes has returned from\nVancouver where she attended\nSummer school.\nW. Shukin haa returned from\nRossland.\nFrank Flynn attended the Liberal\nconvention and banquet at Kaslo,\ncomplimenting Hon. C. S. Leary,\nMinister of Public Works.\nMiss E. Hird of Slocan City visited here.\nMr.' and Mrs. W. H. Saunders of\nTrail visited Mr. and Mn, Harley\nBreeie.\nMrs. R. A. Hird, Mr*. W. R. Perry\nand Miss B. Perry motored to South\nSlocan.\nTime..,\nLet Finger Wave\nBe Properly Sel\nBy DONNA ORAM\nThe desire to make each finger-\nwave long-lasting may be commendable from the point ot economy but unless one use* good\nJudgment In this thrifty urge, the\nresult will be lat trom satisfactory. For instance, leaving the ahop\nwithout first having the wave\ncombed out and properly arranged.\nCurls are set principally to make\nthe hair more attractive in the finished arrangement and each curl\nhas Its own special line and ahould\nbe combed and placed according to\ndesign before one attempt! to do tt\nat home. Many tine hairdreiaei are\nruined by trying to finish the operator's work at home.\nThe way to avoid disappointment\nis to have plenty of time for all the\nwork. Those who are able should\nmake appointments in the forenoon\nor when the operators are not busy.\nIn thii way everyone will be\nsatisfied.\nWe believe every good operator\nknows the Importance of thorough\nrinsing, but should they overlook\nthis final gesture, call their attention to it. The shampoo and wave\nwill be just a waite of time lt the\nrinsing is not well done.\nMiss J. King Becomes\nBride of K. Guthrie at\nCranbrook Ceremony\nCRANBROOK, B.C.\u2014A wedding\nof interest to Fernie, Kimberley and\nCranbrook took place Sunday at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank\nBridges when Joan Phyllis King\nof 'Cranbrook became the wife of\nKenneth Gordon Guthrie of Maryi-\nville.\nThe living room of the Bridges\nhome was a profusion of flowers\nwith an arih twined with flowers\nand a white wedding bell. The couple entered the room to the Wedding March played by Miss Laura\nHall. The bride made a lovely picture in a Princess cut gown of white\nDuch.ss satin with as mall train,\nfull sleeves shirred from wrist to\nelbow and V-neck outlined with\nnet ruchlng. Her bridal veil, fastened with orange Wossom, was\nshoulder length, her gloves were\nwhite lace and her pumps white.\nShe carried a sheath bouquet of\npale pink gladioli.\nHer attendant was Mias Ethel\nLewis, who wore a floor length\nfrock of Alice Blue with rose doll\nhat, white shoes and lace glovei,\nand she carried a bouquet of pink\nsweet peas and fern. T. Hagen of\nKimberley was groomsman, and\nRev. Frank Patch wai officiating\nclergyman.\nA wedding breakfast followed,\nwhen the table, covered with white\nlace was centred with a three-tiered\nwedding cake. The breakfast was\nbuffet style and Mrs. Harold Bridges\npoured.\nThe couple left soon afterward on\na wedding trip to Regina. The\nbride's going-away costume waa a\ngray silk jersey frock with matching short coat, white doll hat, white\nshoes, gloves and purse, on their\nreturn from Regina they will make\ntheir home at Marysvilie.\n1*HMljoi\ndiouMwwuL\nBy BITIY NEWMAN\nTODAY'S MENU\n[Swiss Steak Creole Squash\nMixed Vegetable Salad\nFresh Peach Whip\nIced Coffee\nCREOLE SQUASH\nThree cups crookneck squash, one\nand one-quarter cups cooked \u25a0 tomatoei, one teaspoon salt, one chopped\nonion, quarter teaspoon of pepper,\nhalf teaspoon sugar.\nCombine ingredients and cook in\nheavy,  tightly  covered  pan very\nslowly for from 48 to 80 mlnutea, or\nuntil tender.\nFRESH PEACH WHIP\nOne cup fresh peach pulp, five\ntablespoons sugar, one teaspoon of\nlemon juice, two egg whltea.\nMash fresh peacnea to a pulp\n(you can use canned peaches, ln\nwhich case put through sieve),\nbeet egg whites partly stiff, add\nsugar and beat in thoroughly,\nBeat for five minutes, then fold\nin peach pulp to which lemon Jules\nhas been added. Chill and serve\nwith cream.\n.RESTON Social...\nCRESTON, B. C. \u2014 Mr. and Mrs.\nBsham,and Mr. and Mrs. Warner\n_ Blairmore, Alta.. were guests of\nRev. A. S. and Mrs. Partington\/\nRobert Cheyne of Kelowna visited Creston.\nRMr. and Mrs.  Wcsternholme of\nllairmore, Alta., were guesls of thc\natter's   brother   and   sister-in-law,\nZtAEMZHCY!\nit ready at all times with thla famous\nhousehold ointment for cuts, bums,\nI \u2014 and for common\na ailments iuch *\u2022 tores, tun.\ni, rath, bad lep, poiion ivy.\nDr. and Mrs. W. N. Fraser.\nH. A. C. Thicke returned from\nVancouver, where he h\u00bbd been attending Summer School at the University ot B. C. He was accompanied\nby Mrs. Thicke and children.\nMr. and Mrs. Syd Rogers are\nhome from their wedding trip to\nBanff and Lake Louise.\nMiss Evelyn Williams has returned to Lulu Island, after visiting her aunt, Mrs. Stapleton.\nGuy Conitable viaited at Nelson\nR B. Staple* of Kelowna wai a\ngueit of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Palmer.\nCliff Carne ot Sunahine Bay ha\u00bb\narrived at Creiton and will be In\ncharge ot apple shipping inspection\nwork at the Co-operative Fruit\nExchange warehouse.\nFrank Putnam, M_*A., viaited\nKaslo.\n\u25a0 H. Bredln is visiting Trail and\nNelson.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Humphries of\nCalgary, are guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nH.& Legg.\nSight...\nFew Eye Faults\nAre Hereditary\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.\nAt birth the baby can probably\ndistinguish between bright light\nand complete darkneaa; little else.\nThe function of the eye developi\nrather ilowly. The macula 1a not\nformed until about three montha of\nage. The macula la the point of\nclearest vlilon of the retina. Until\nlta function is developed the move\nmenti ot the eyes will be more br\nleas purposeless. Ocular movements\ndepend upon fixation of vision, and\nuntil the macula is developed the\neyes of an infant cannot be directed at an object\nCROSS-EVES IN INFANCY\nDuring the firat three months, of\nlife, therefore, it la hot uncommon\nto find children's eyes divergent or\ncross-eyed, not because ot any organic defect of the eyei, but be\ncause of immaturity.\nIt is doubtful whether at this\ntime further development of the\neyes can be Influenced save by actual tissue injury. In later months,\nhowever, up to three or tour years,\nthe function of the eye becomei\nmore highly specialized. It would\nseem prudent during this period to\npermit seeing to develop in a natu\nral manner rather than to encourage close application of the eyes\nthrough the use of small toy*, perusal of pictures and other means\nof close application.\nThese are a few disorders and\ndiseases ot the eyes that ere con\nsldered to be hereditary, that ll,\nthey appear in several members of\nthe aame family, not only siblings,\nbut ln succeeding generations. However, all hereditary diseases are not\ncongenital\u2014do not appear at birth,\nVITAMIN  DEFICIENCY\nDuring adolescence the development of systematic disease may affect the eyes and is a frequent\ncause of eye diiorders. Tuberculosis,\nrheumatism, endrovine disease are\nlikely to make their first appearance at this time and their effects\ncan often be seen in the eye. Focal\nInfection is also a cause of ocular\ndisorder at this period.\nAmong college students the ocular hygcnlst must consider the role\nof vitamin deficiency. The college\n\u00abtudent ls not supposed to be rich\nand to be able to afford a luxurious diet Nor does he have the inestimable advantage of home cooking. All the conditions of his life\nmake *or a tendency toward vitamin\ndeficiency. A rAyslcisn who has a\nlong experience in observing college student* writes: \"I am convinced that in the past 28 years the tendency ha* been towards inadequate\nrather than more adequate nourishment among a large proportion of\nthe student population of our larger\nlnstitutlohs.\"\nQUESTIONS AND ANSWERS\nM, O.-JWhat Is the cause of poor\nblood circulation? What can I do\nfor it and ia it curable\nAni\u2014 Poor blood circulation Is a\nrather Indefinite term. It fnay mean\nlack of strength on the part ot thc\nheart It may mean anemia, and it\nmay mean * subjective sense of\nchilliness or numbness of the fingers which might be due to disturbance of thyroid secretion. In any\ncase, lt is subject to treatment after\nthe proper diagnosis.has been made.\nSLOCAN CITY\nSLOCAN CITY, B. C. - Ralph\nBruin and Harold Russell left for\nthe Bralorne mine.\nMiss P. Barclay of Trail is a gueit\nof Mrs. B. E. O'Neeil. Miss Barclay\nls on the Trail teaching staff.\nMrs. L. Hanna, Miss A. Hanna,\nand Mrs. W. C. Kettlewell of Nelson visited Mrs. B. E. O'Neail.\nMr. and Mrs. W. E. Graham, the\nMisses Enid, and Barbara Graham\nwho are visiting relatives here from\nTrail visited Trail.\nMurray McNeish visited Nelson\nSmoother Shoulder Cut Harks New For Coots\nLift, beaver daytime coat; centre, red fox three-quartere model;\nright, wrlit-lenath whit* fox-dyed lynx\nTh* main difference between last year'i model* and the new fur\ncoats la In the cut of tha shoulders, which is smoother without laat\nyear's pufflneae. At the left i* Fay Wray wearing a atreet-length\nco\u00abt In beaw with back fullness introduced on the yoke and small\natandup collar. Lucille Ball, centre, has chosen a red fox three-\nquarter-length coat, and Virginia Vale, right, ihowa a wrljt-length\nwhite fox-dyed lynx, which ia ideal both for evening and dressy afternoon parties.\nSerial Story \u2022 - - By Helen Welshlmer\nLOVE WITHOUT MUSIC\nCHAPTER THIRTY-ONE\nAl Sarah Markley asked Linda\nwhere Ronald was, her voice waa\nso startled In Its fright that it did\nnot try to disguise thc love which\nSarah bore for Ronald.\nUntil now Linda nad believed\nthat Sarah had gone in gay pursuit of him because she could not\nhave him. She had credited the girl\nwith using audacity at first, wut-\nful resignation at the last\nBut Sarah's voice was stripped of\nall synthetic qualities now. The\nman she loved waa in danger and\nshe wanted to help him. He might\nlove her, he might not. That did\nnot matter. All this Linda sensed.\nBecause she did, her voice wis\ngentle as she answered, \"Ronnie\nwas Uken to the police station,\nSarah. It's a ghastly mistake, but\neveryone is being questioned, and\nit seems there was part of an hour\nwhen he wasn't at the theatre this\nevening. He will get an alibi, of\ncourse. It's too impossible...\"\nIt's too impossible that he ihould\nhave tried to kill me io he could\nhave you. . . that was what she\nwas thinking, and she knew the\nwords were in Sarah's mind, too.\nSarah spoke quickly. \"He has an\nalibi. He was with me. In the alley\nback of the stage entrance, smoking\nhis pipe.\" _\n\"Oh-h-h! That's good. Then you\ncan tell the police, can't you?\"\n\"Of course. I'll go down right\naway. I wonder why he didn't mention it I made him come out He\ndidn't want to.\"\nSarah hung up, but Linda did\nnot go to bed. If Sarah really loved\nRonald, then she became an evan\nmore formidable rival, for he would\ntense the reality in her part\nBut Sarah was defenseless now.\nShe had let the bars down, as dawn\nbroke. She could not pretend to\nmake love a gay pursuit any more.\nLinda climbed Into bed. The room\nBrown far Beauty\nBy ALICE ALDEN\nYou'll be In t brown study thla Autumn tt you listen to the\ndictates of faahlon and wear brown. For this lovely deep shade, lo\nrich ln bold and subtle tones, la topi on the fashion card sharing\nhonora with black. Brown for evening hu long been favored by a\nfew imart women, who combine the color with pink or light blue\nfor a charming color effect\nDestined to shine at galas thla Winter ia a magnificent gown of\nlatin back silk and metal lame In a rich shade ot copper. The itatu-\nesque frock haa a molded bodice and torio line coming to a point at\nthe aide-with fullness releaied below. To carry out the symphony\nin brown Is a rich brown Alaska seal-skin wrap lined with satin back\nallk andjmetal lame to match the gown.\nwaa cool now and the sky was\ngrowing light Sh* waa wide-eyed.\nShe wondered how soon onald\nwould be able to call. Almost In\nanswer to her thoughts her telephone rang again, and ha spoke\nher name,\n\"Deareat, may I come up?\" he\nasked. \"I need some coffee.\"\n\"Of courie you may. Hurry. By\nthe way. bu Sarah reached you?\"\n\"No, what did ahe want?\"\n\"She heard about everything and\nsaid ahe could establish an alibi\nfor you.\"\n\"Sarah's all right It'a not needed\nthough. The doorman at the theatre\nand two of the saxophone players\ndid lt See you ln a few minutes.\"\nCaroline sat up and rubbed her\neyes sleepily. \"I'll get dressed\nquickly,\" she said. \"Did I dream\nthat Terry lett two note\u00bb-or did\nhe?\"\n\"He did,\" Linda answered, slipping into a dark blue printed dress\nthat wu trilled with infinite minute tuckings and putting on navy\nsandals that matched. She might as\nwell get ready for the office now,\nlhe decided.\nBy the time Ronald, taxicab\nitopped in front of the old red brick\nhouse ahe and Caroline had a table\niet by the balcony windows, with\ncrisp yellow cloth and napkins,\nand cream colored plates and cups\nand saucers.\nThere were yellow roses in a low\nblue bowl and tall glasses of iced\norange juice at the three places.\n\u2022The odor of coffee and frying bacon\ncame from the kitchenette and\nCaroline wai atirring up pop-overs.\n\"It's nearly half-past six,\" Linda\nsaid in amazement. \"I haven't had\nany sleep at all.\"\nYet her eyes were u wide as\nthough lhe had gone to bed at nine\no'clock. Her body felt tired,\nthough. She knew ihe would be\nglad when thli day ended. She\ndreaded, too, to enter the office and\nsit down at the desk wher* Clarabell had been shot\nNo ont had been able to offer\nany cluu u to the gun which had\nkilled the girl. One bullet wu lodged in her cheat and the other had\nentered her temple and come out.\nIt had'not been In the room. Ap-\nlt up and taken lt awaj\nWaiting for Ronnie, Linda realized that the girl's body would be\nexamined and the men would probe\nfor the bullet An Identification of\nlt would lead to the type of revolver from which it had been fired.\nThen the atorea would be checked\nfor past salea. She wu glad she\ndid not know how to shoot\nDown below a cab was stopping.\nRonald got out looked up. waved.\nHe turned to assist someone. She\nnoticed Sarah.\nSo Sarah had arrived Just u\nRonald was leaving, and out of\nkindness he had invited her. The\nalUy, adorable nlt-wlt! Didn't he\nknow that thii was a ipecial morning and Sarah had no part in It?\nBecause ahe felt lorry, though, for\nany girl who loved Konald and\ncould not hav* him, she wai gracious and hospital to Sarah.\nSarah did not remove the thin\nblack silk jacket ahe wore over her\nwhile itlk frock or take off the\nsilly, one-sided scrap of black straw\nthat made her hat She held out\nher hand Instead.\n\"You win,\" she laid to Linda.\n\"And I apologize. It im't lomething I do very often and I guess\nI do lt badly. I uked Ronnie to let\nme come down for a minute, and\nnow. good luck and goodby. Goodby. Ronnie.\"\nHer tmile wai glowing, warm,\nihining. and her head was high.\nHer voice had not faltered. She\nturned and went toward the itain\nAt the door lhe lo6ked back, waved\nalljrtitly.\nRonald gazed at her, hla face\nperplexed. '\"What'i the Idle, Sarah?\nSit down. The poo-overs look like\npoo-overs ihould look.\"\nS_.-ah didn't answer. Sh* wai going out of the door, down the stairway', end Linda heard her steps\ngrowing fainter and fainter.\n\"Was this a grandstand gesture?\"\nCaroline asked, her eyes a little\naerloui. \"It lounded genuine to me.\"\n\"It was teal enough, I guess,\"\nRonald laid. \"The coroner's Investigation is lo be al two o'eltck and\nHelen Richey Has Endurance Record,\nWas Co-Pilot Wilh Amelia Earhari\nPfflLADEtflPIA,, (CP)\u2014Out near\nthe Northeut bord*r of Philadelphia, beyond ita factories ud office\nbuildings, a trim young brown-\nhaired \"schoolmarm\" in ankle socks\nis teaching men to fly. Her \"primer\"\nis a little lemon-yellow monoplane\nand her 23 pupils range from 'teen\nage boys to middle-aged business-\nShe ii Helen Rlchey, on* of the\nUnited Statei' moit experienced pilots. Employed by the Northaaatern\nAirport here, Miss Richey il the 28-\nyear-old daughter of a former sup-\nerintendent of ichools In McKees-\nport Pa\u201e and had \"my mind mad*\nup to be a filer before I even learned how\" In Pittaburgh nine year*\nago,\nMiu Rlchey wu co-pilot fot Uie\nlate Amelia Earhart ln the Bendlx\nAir Races of Saptemer, 1938, They\nflew the same plane which Mis*\nEarhart used on her ill-fated attempt to circle the globe.\nWith the late Frances Marsalls,\nMisi Richey iet a women's endurance record above Miami, Fla., seven years ago. She hai never cracked up a plane or been In ( crash.\nwe all arc to be there, Linda. Must\nyou go to the office thla morning'\nShe nodded. \"I'd rather. I have\nto face it some time.'Mr. Bagley\nmay want to talk to me.\"\nAs she went to the office ln the\ntaxicab which Ronald insisted on\ncalling, ihe Watched people buying\nnewspapers at corner stands. She\nwondered what they woul dsay\nabout her. She uked Ronald, who\nwas accompanying her, but he only\nshook hia head.\n\"It will be a three-day wonder,\nand then lt will die,\" he uid. \"And\nsomehow the girl's real murderer\nwill be found. Don't worry about\nit Linda darling. Please!\"\nHe took her hand and held it ln\nhts firm, hard, tanned ones until\nsome of his courage flowed into\nher.\nAt the door of the building a\ncurious crowd watched her. She\nwas glad that the big white cartwheel of a hat that she had worn\ncovered her face. She began to pull\notf ber white gloves before she\nreached the elevator.\nJoe, the operator of the night\nbefore, wu running the car that\nshe took.\n\"Been put back on day service\nagain,\" he said. \"Say, how do the\npapers find out so much so soon?\nAll about that emerald you found\nin your room and Miss Nevins hating^ you and everything?\"\nThe house party guests must have\nbeen interviewed and apparently\naome of them had talked.\nTbe papers said little, though.\nInformation wu meagre and scanty. The afternoon papers, which she\nreceived u ahe left the coroner'a\ntrial, had much more to tell. Most\nof them treated the itory circumspectly. One, though, had drug into\nthe triangle which connected her\nwith Ronald and Sarah, and balanced tt against the other more\ndangerous one ln which she and\nBob and Mina were featured.\nOne atatement brought her to\nsudden swift attention.\n(To be continued).\nCreston Hospital\nBusiness Praised\nCRESTON, B. C. \u2014 General aat-\nisfaction with the books and accounting, u well aa the general\nconduct of Creston Hospital wu\nexpressed by Percy Ward of Vancouver, Provincial inspector of Hospitals, here on an official visit and\nwas accompanied by H. McLean,\nSecretary of the North Vancouver.\nSecretary H. A. Powell was\ncomplimented on his efficiency with\nboqkkeeping and other records,\nwhich were checked by Mr. McLean, and equal commendation wu\naccorded the nursing staff for the\ngeneral hospital management\nFor the firat aix months of the\nyear business at the hospital has\nbeen below the standard of 1939,\nThe Matron) Miss M. Dixon, and\nMiss Morrison ot the nursing staff,\nare due back at the end of the\nweek from their month's vacation,\na week of which Mis* Dixon spent\nattending a Summer course In hospital management at Vancouver\nGeneral Hospital, arranged by the\nB. C. Nurser Association.\nMiss E. Price Wed at\nPretty Ceremony to\nE. Kuhnert, Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B.C-The marriage took place Sunday at high\nnoon of Edith May Price only\ndaughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.\nSamuel Price of Wolverhampton,\nStaffordshire, England, to Bmil\nCharles Kuhnert of Cranbrook at\nthe Baptist Church.\nThe church wai decorated with\nlate Summer flowen of all colors.\nMrs. Eric Freeman played the Wedding March.\nThe bride wai attractive ln a\nfrock of dusty pink fine wool with\na coat of the same material Ih\nmauve with dusty pink trimmings.\nHer hat wu navy felt doll's hat\ntrimmed with dusty pink georgette\nwhich fell In streamers ln the back.\nShe carried a bridal bouquet of pale\npink roses with maidenhair fern,\nand her only jewelry wu a gold\nwriit watch, the gift of the .groom.\nHer attendant wai Miu Uly Griffith* of Lumberton who wore a\ntwo piece iult of duity blue. Her\nhat wu white and she carried a\ncolonial bouquet of pink sweet\npen and fern. Leilie Kuhnert attended, the groom.\nThe bride wu given in marriage\nby her, brother, Jack Price of Lumberton. The soloist wu Mri. G. E.\nMacDonald, with \"Still Ii the Night\"\nFollowing the ceremony Mr. and\nMrs. Alan Graham had a reception\nln their home. The roomi were decorated with a multitude of flowers.\nWith the fireplace banked with\nflowen as a background for the\ncouple who were assisted by Mr,\nand Mrs. Graham tn receiving.\nA buffet lunch wu ierved from\na long table covered with a white\ncloth and centred with a magnificent three-tiered wedding cake iet\nin a bed ot tulle, and topped with\na silver vase and rosebuds. Mrs.\nN. Hogarth poured coffee and Miss\nKay Ward poured tea, while Miss\nLuella Kelly, Mlu Laura Hall, Mill\nKathrlne Jones, Mlu Anne Graham, Mlu Ruth Veeberg and Miss\nPatricia Jones assisted with the\nserving.\nThe couple left on a wedding\ntrip to Jasper and Banff and on\ntheir return will make their home\non Pooley Avenue in Cranbrook.\nThe bride came to-Lumberton from\nEngland ten years ago with her\nbrother, and has made her home\nin Cranbrook for the pait six years.\nTh* gift of the bride ot the groom\nwas a tie pin, clips and cufflinks.\nThe groom's gift to the bridesmaid\nwai a compact and to the beit man\ntie pin and clips.\nSlocan City Branch\nHas Canning Plans\nSLOCAN CITY, BjC.-The Slocan City ranch of the Red Crou'\nSociety met in the Orange Hall with\nthe President Mr. Graham ln the\nchair.\nThe sum of $10.75 wu received\nfrom Mrs. J. Taylor and Miss N. E.\nAylwin of New Denver, eing proceeds of a card party.\nAnother donation earned and sent\nln y nine and- 10-year-old Harris\nand Jane Rose of New Denver wu\nreceived.\nMrs. J. Avis of Perry Siding made\na donation of $1.\nAfter the meeting adjourned, a\ncommittee from the local Women's\nInstitute consisting of Mrs. F. Stor-\ngard, Mrs. A. Rae and Mrs. J.\nMarclu came to discuss the canning project being taken up by\nthese two organizations. It wu\ndecided to ask for donation! of lugar, and also for helj. In preparation of frujts, snd vegetables for\ncanning.\nThis surplui food will be collected from Slocan Park to Rosebery, and the canning will be done\nat New Denver and Slocan City.\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Rest roomi\nwhere people may go to pull themielves together\" If their homei are\nbombed are being organized. Victims will rceive free refreihmenta\nwhile they make arrangements to\ngo elsewhere.\nLearning...\nUrges Adults lo\nStudy at Home\nBy Garry Cleveland Myen, Ph.D.\nRepeatedly tn thla column I hav*\nurged youth and their parenta to\nkeep on learning, entreating those\nwho are not within access to a day\nor night High School or a day\nor night college, or unable to find\ntha coune* they desire in these\nschools, to consider the opportunities offered by corrapondenc*\nschools. It is amazing how many\nhave been able to further their education by puraulng home-study\ncourses.\nBut inasmuch u there are unfortunately, some correspondence\nschools which might be classified u\nrackets, every person considering\nthe taking ot a course by mail\nshould be aura he hu reliable information about the correspondence\nichool he la considering. The High\nSchoql Principal ln your neighborhood ia a good person from whom\nto leek counsel on such matten.\nUsually he 'hu the facta and i*\nglad to be at your service.\nINVESTIGATE SCHOOL\nFIRST\nAgent* ot reputable schools ds\nnot promise Jobs nor rata* in pay\nor th* like u a result ot completion ot any course In Instruction,\n\"Those that do ahould be investigated. When pressed to enroll, b*\n\u25a0ure to get the agent's name, address, telephone number and nam*\nand address of tha achool he represents. Haste ln signing should\nbe avoided... .\"\nFor reliable Information about\neducational- opportunities through\nself-directed study, uk your High\nSchool Principal, or write to \u00bb\nunivenity,\nSOLVING PARINT\nPROBLEMS\nQ.: Should a boy wash dishes?\nA. To be sure, he should, Juit\nas a girl should. It will help make\nhim a good home citizen and *\ngood husband and father by and by.\nSHEEP CREEK\nSHEEP CREEK, B. C\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. Tonkin and family spent a\nweekend in Nelson.\nBill Tonkin visited Kulo. Mrs. E.\n3. Tonkin returned with him to\nvisit Mr. and Mrs. J. Tonkin.\nBud Lang ii back at work after\nbeing on the sick list\nMrs. J. Morrison and family returned to Nelson alter ipending th*\nSummer camping here.\nBBCKENHAM, England <CP).-\nA button which stuck ln her gullet caused the death ot Miss Dorothy Brown, 40, it wu stated at\nher inquest She bad swallowed\nalso two safety pins, a pen-holder\nand a metal pencil. Miss Brown told\nthe doctor her brother had been\ncalled up and ahe did not want to\nbe called up u well.\nThe Most! The Best\nWhen you want\nuniform fine pur-\n\"ty and high qual-\nty ln malt \u2014 ask\nyour grocer for\nBlue Ribbon \u2014\nSacked   a   full\niree pounds.\nAt Your\n,   Qrocer\nDOES ^e aPProach \u00b0* Fall\nmean printing problems for you?\nBusiness forms are printed forms that require careful\nhandling. Take your payroll.. .is it up-to-date? Have you\nmade ample room for the new taxes that have to be\ndeducted? This is where we step into the picture ... We\nknow that we can help'you revamp that old payroll form,\nmoderrtiie It and take the worries off your shoulders when\nthe tax inspector calls around ... \"See Us First\"\n.    Phone 144\nMmxx lattg tas\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPT.\n266 Baker Street\nNelson, B. C.\n_________\n  -^-\n I\t\n \u2022m\n*mm4m*w**MWUWVlif'-l]l ^W-W\n^_pgp\n_Fj\njTV^\n^Sturdy Footwear\nWith shoes that fit growing feet properly\nHurlbut Shoes\nAre known the country over as\nthe best for children. Remember, shoes must fit well if they\nare going to wear well,\ntreat your boy or girl to\nHurlbut  Made  Shoes.\nThe higher price is low\nfor   the   extra   wear.\nR* Andrew & Co,\nLeaders in Footfashion\n\u2022NELSON DAILY NIWS. NELSON. B. C-j-SATURDAY MORNINO. AUQ. II, 1Mft\u2014\nFOR HEALTH - USE\nPASTEURIZED MILK\nKootenay Valley Dairy\nPHONE III\nt&OSSSSSi&XS&OX&XSOOiOOSOSSi\nNEW FALL COATS\nAND MILLINERY\nFashion First Shop\nOverwaitea\nLimited\nMONTH END\nSPECIALS\nSUGAR\nB.  C. GRANULATED\n100 LB. SACK\nYEAST: Lallemand'a, 1 C\n2 cakes free, 2 pkts. UC\nPEACHES: Free-\natone, local, crate\n$1.29\nFLOUR\nOGILVIE'S GLENORA\n98 Ib. sock $2.69\n49 Ib. sack $1.39\nSudan Missionary\nStation Bombed\nCAIRO, Aug. 30 (AP)-The British High Command issued the following communique Friday:\n\"Western Front: On Aug. 29, Mat-\nruh was raided twice by enemy aircraft, causing a few casualties.\n\"One enemy aircraft ls reported\nto have been destroyed by anti-aircraft fire.\n\"Sudan: In the Gallabat area yesterday our troops fought a successful action against the enemy preparing defences.\n\"On Aug. 2J. enemy aircraft\nbombed and machine-gunned a Sudan missionary station at Boing,\nSouthwest of Kurmuk. One missionary and hia wife were killed\nby machine gun fire as they ran out\nwaving American flags. Two missionaries were wounded. All were\nAmerican citizens.\n\"The mission, which Is known to\nthe Italians, Is quite isolated, unprotected and near no military objectives of any sort\n\"On other fronts\u2014nothing to report.\"\n\"Not Goering but\nMaybe a Balloon\"\nLONDON, Aug. 30 (CP). - Re\nports that a high-ranking Nazi flier\nbig enough to be Goerlng\" had\nbeen brought down in Britain,\nbrought this comment from air circles today:\n\"The report la highly Improbable.\nWhat was seen probably was one\nof the barrage balloons shot down.\"\nA REAL BUY\n6 CU. FT. G. E.\nREFRIGERATOR\n1209.00\nNelson Electric Co.\n674 Baker St. Phone 260\nNow Is the Time to\nOpen Your Account at\nThe Butcherteria\n\"The Home of Tender Meats\"\nToday's Idea\nBacon Hamburger Rolls\n12 slices bacon\n1 pound hamburger\n4 tomatoes\ngarllo salt\naalt\npepper\nDivide hamburger Into\n12 patties. Wrap each pat-\ntie Into a slice of bacon\nand skewer with toothpicks. Seaaon with garlic\nsalt, aalt and pepper. Place\non broiler rack and when\ndone on one side turn over.\nRepeat, and when alniost\ndone place tomato slice cut\nthick on each patty. Dot\nwith butter and continue\nbroiling until tomato is\ndone.\nBacon: Lb 35^\nHamburger: Lb. . 15c>\nOpen your charge account at tha\nButcherteria now and enjoy the\nconvenience of phoning for your\nmeats and having them delivered\npromptly. \u2022\nGood Rump Roaiti\nSteer: Lb\t\nLamb Shoulders:\nRolled, Ib\t\nCood Oven Veal   OA. OC -\nRoaiti: Lb. ...   LM*- LO\\i\n25c\n25c\nSpecial Hamburger and Sau-\n:rMea,.: 12c\nSpararibi: Freih,\n2 Ibi\t\nGood Round Steak:\nMinced, Ib\t\nReal Nippy Cheeie:\nLb\t\n25c\n25c\n40c\nPork Tenderloins:\nLb\t\n28c\nlellied Chicken: Individual Molds, 2 for ..\n25c\nIf the meat coune disappoints the family then the whole\nmeal li ruined. That'a why you're alwaya aafe in buying\nyour meats at the Butcherteria. They're the beit in town.\nSECOND DRAFT\nWITHINAWEEK\nLEAVES NELSON\nNelson bade farewell to the aecond draft of recrulti to leave the\nDistrict for the Coast within a week\nFriday morning. Ten men, eight\ntruck drivers and two motorcyclists,\nwere Included ln the draft which\nleft by the morning train.\nThree of the 10 were from Nelson, three from Slocan City, and\none each trom Needles, Gray Creek.\nVallican  and Perry Siding.\nNelson Kiltie B: nd and the Veterans' Home Guard paraded the\nrecruits to the station from the armories, where a amall crowd waited to send them on their way. Candles and cigarettes were distributed\nby Nelson patriotic organization!.\nThe draft included:\nNelson\u2014L. F. Cote, G. J. Spiers,\nand W. J. Wilson.\nSlocan Clty-C. T. Russell and C.\nNlelson.\nNeedles\u2014H. M. Fox.\nGray Creek-G. T. Oliver.\nVallican\u2014G. S. Strong.\nPerry Siding\u2014W. R. Anderson.\nSchool Equipment\nRush Soon Starts\nNow ls the time for all good\nscholars to start preparing for the\nreopening of Nelson's various institutions of learning Tuesday morning, but youngsters, being what\nthey are, the majority of them will\nrely on frenzied searches through\ntheir homes for necessary classroom equipment along about 8 a. m.\nor later Tuesday. This will be the\nlast weekend of the long Summer\nholidays.\nDrug stores now have a full stock\nof school supplies on display and\nthe rush will soon begin. Some nf\nthe pupils with more foresight and\nthrift are already lining up pur\nchases of books from last year's\ngraduates of classes they are entering, but at any rate their teachers\nwill give the pupils their Instructions Tuesday morning. The after'\nnoon will be devoted to rounding\nup of the required books and equipment.\nThere will be five new teachers\non the staffs of Nelson's schools.\nMias M. Cottlngham will teach at\nthe High School, Bruce Clark, Miss\nC. Ferguson and Miss *\\ E. Robinson are newcomers to the Junior\nHigh, and Miss Elizabeth Fleck has\nloined the Central staff. The Hume\nSchool alone has needed no changes.\nMrs. M. Riqets. cernie\nOld Timer, Is Buried\nFERNIE. B. C\u2014Funeral services\nfor Mrs. Mary Rigets, aged 77, were\nheld on Thursday. Mrs. Rigets, who\ndied late Monday night was one of\nFernie's old timers, having come\nhere In 1904. Requiem mass at the\nHoly Family Church was sung by\nthe Rev. Father Andruslewlcz while\nthe graveside service was read by\nthe Rev. Father J. Morelli. Surviving are two sons, George and Peter\nof'Fernle and fdur daughters. Mrs.\nL. A. Doree of Natal, Mrs. J. Sweeney. Mrs. M. Beniski, and Mrs. J.\nRoberts of Fernie. The nail-bearers\nwere M. Baran, G. Wasnnck, L.\nBeale, Sr\u201e M. George, Sr., F. Mat-\ntersdorfer, J. Stfopky.\nKimberley Doctor's\nr.-nJm(,t|,ar Pontes\nMrs. Mary Morrow, grandmother\nof Dr. H. C. McWillians of Kimberley, died at her home in Vancouver Thursday. She was 77 years\nold.\nFuneral services will be held at\nVancouver today.\nU.B.C. ACREES TO ENFORCE\nMILITARY TRAINING\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 30 (CP) -\nThe Board of Governors of the\nUniversity of British 'Columbia\nwent on record today as having\nagreed to compulsory military\ntraining for all physically fit male\nstudents.\nA statement issued today by Dr.\nL. S. Klinck, President of the University, after a special board meeting last night, said that the board\nhad decided to cooperate with the\nDepartment of National Defence In\nthe matter of military training.\nCommenting on an announcement\nat Ottawa by the Department of\nWar Services that all Canadian\nUniversity students over 17 would\nbe required to take military training, Dr. Klinck earlier had said\nthat UjB.C, student* under 21\nwould be exempt.\nPttt  \u00bbIWf.\nWarn C.A.S.F. Against\nWriting to Strangers\nOTTAWA, Aug. W \u00ab?>)\u2014A warning to officeri and man ot the\nCanadian Active Service Force not\nto correspond with strangers was\nIssued today at NaUonal Detence\nHeadquarters.\nSimilar to an order iisued in\nApril, tha notice pointed out that\nwhile many of the requests made in\nnewspapers and through other such\nsources tor correspondents might\nbe bona fide, \"such correspondence might provide a means for obtaining military information of\nvalue to tba enemy, or ot instituting enemy propaganda.\nM. J. Bonner Dies\nAfter 40 Years In\nIhe East Kootenay\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, Aug. 30 -\nFuneral services for Michael James\nBonner, for over 40 years a resident\nof the East Kootenay, were held at\nSacred Heart Church, Kimberley,\nWednesday. Rev. F. Monaghan officiated.\nMr. Bonner was one of the District's best known and respected\noldtimcrs, having resided at Moyie\nabout 21 yeara and in Kimberley\nsince 1921. For 10 yeara he operated\na hotel ln the then-flourishing mining centre ot Moyie and after moving to Kimberley was an employee\nof the C. M. & S. Company. He was\npensioned from the Company service January 1, 1940, after several\nyears as mine shift boss.\nBorn in Ireland June 2, 1877, he\nwent to the United States at the age\nof 21 and resided in Butte. Mont.,\nuntil he moved to Moyie ln 1900.\nHis widow and four sons, James\not Klngsgate, Jack, Albert and\nGeorge of Kimberley; two daughters, Mrs. A. Rinehardt and Mrs. J.\nKemp of Kimberley; a brother in\nIreland, and several other brothers\nln the Western States, survive.\nTabernacle Folk\nto Hear Missionary\nGleanings frfom 14 yeari of missionary experience in West Africa\nwill be unfolded to Bethel Tabernacle congregational members Sunday and at meetings during the\ncoming week by Miss Ruth LePers,\nPentecostal missionary. Miss LePers\nhas been speaking across Canada\nwhile on furlough since December,\n1938. She plana to return to Liberia\nin Africa shortly.\nSecond Straight Day\nof 11 Hours Sunshine\n\"Slmmery Summer\" weather has\nreturned to Nelson and vicinity. The\nsun beamed for over 11 houra Friday for the aecond day in succession since the rain of the early week.\nThe mercury climbed to the 80\nmark again, while the minimum\ntemperature was 49 degrees.    ,\nLLOYD'S SAYS BOMB\nDEATH CHANCES I TO 1000\nLONDON (CP) - A Briton's\nchance of getting killed or injured\nby a Nazi bomb is 1 to 1000, Lloyd's\ninsurance brokers have decided in\noffering policies to civilians. The\npremier rate will be one shilling\n(about 20 centa) per month for\nevery \u00a350 (approximately $225) of\ninsurance.\nHighlanders Get Oul the Bagpipes\nto Celebrate First Mail In Iceland\nREYKJAVIK,   Iceland,' Aug.  80\n(CP),\u2014Glad shouts of Canadian soldiers echoed across the volcanic\nhills and mountains girding Iceland's Fjords today when mail bags\narrived heavy with thouaanda ot\nletters and parcels from home.\nTo many Canadian! serving in this\nNorthern outpost it was their firat\nnews from home since they arrived\nhere last June. No lettera to loved\nones ever got a mora Joylul\nreception.\nOne Canadian Highland Regiment,\natter letters bad been read, got out\nthe bagpipes and let loose with\nwild music which waa ln perfect\nharmony with the wildness of the\nlava-scared Icelandic Highlands.\nAlthough bagpipes are new to\nthla country the people seem to\ntake to them and Scotch pipers seem\nvery much at home in thli land\nwhere the scenery ia like the\nScottish Highland! mti ltl plied\ngigantically.\nFour auxiliary officeri arrived\nwith equipment for sports and rec\nreatlon, tilling a long-felt want\namong the Canadian encampments\nand lightening the burden of Captain Spencer of Morden, Man., ot\nthe Auxiliary Service.\nThe new arrival! of C. B. Burden\nDEATHS\nNANAIMO- John Henry Richardson, 73, veteran Vancouver Island coal miner.\nCHICAGO-Dr. William Allen\nPusey, 74, noted Chicago dermatologist, educator and author, and\npresident in 1924 of the American\nMedical Association.\nCAMBRIDGE, England\u2014Sir Joseph John Thomson, 83, Nobel prize\nwinner for physics in 1906. He was\nHonorary Professor of Physics at\nCambridge University and had been\nMaster of Trinity College since\n1918.\nBy FRANCIS STEVENS\nof tha French lection, Canadian\nLegion Servicei, 15 yeari coach of\nthe Univenity of New Brunswick\nfootball team; Charlei Box ot the\nToronto _. M. C. A., captain of the\n1938 University ot Weitern Ontario football team and teacher at\nMalvern Collegiate, Toronto; Claude\nTiemey, Ottawa Knights of Columbus, and Fred Howlett, Toronto\nSalvation Army.\nThese officer! have been assigned to different regiments but\nthey are pooling their services and\nhave furnished the troopi with a\nlarge quantity ot bueball bats,\nsoft balla, soccer balls, gramophones,\nradios and volley ball outfits.\nThe soldiers crave chocolate bars\nand fruit which are slow In ar\nriving. To provide the necessary\nvitamin content food In a country\nwhere green vegetable suppliei are\nscarce, the soldier! are given antiscorbutic pills to prevent scurvy.\nGeneral appearance ot the men\nIndicates excellent health and good\nspirits but the majority were disappointed when, after setting sail\nthey were told they were going to\nthis Isolated base instead ot participating in the more exciting opera'\ntions in the British Isles.\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\nRAISE FOR MICKEY\nLOS ANGELES, (AP)-Nineteen\nyear old Mickey Rooney's movie\nsalary will take a big jump under\na new contract he has signed with\nM.G.M. Studio. Submitted for Superior Court approval the contract\nsays he will be paid $1000 a week\nfor 40 weeks each year plus a bonus\nof $25,000 for each film. Mickey has\nbeen averaging five pictures a year.\nHis old salary was $750 a week,\nLONDON (CP). - Under an order Issued by the Ministry of Aircraft Production magnesium and\nmagnesium alloys may not be sold,\nbought or used except under\nlicence. <\nHon. Vincent Massey Sees Hospital\nGo Inlo Action When Raiders Arrive\nBy EDWIN JOHN80N\n(Canadian Press Staff Writer)\nSOMEWHERE IN SOUTHERN\nENGLAND, Aug. 30 (CP Cable)-\nNazl air raiders droned high overhead and bombs crashed in the distance today while Hon. Vincent\nMassey, Canadian high commissioner, and Mrs. Massey, were paying a\ncall to No. 15 Canadian General\nHospital from Toronto.\nThe high commissioner had Just\nInspected a guard of honor and was\nchatting with a group of bedridden\nsoldiers when the alarm sounded.\nThe emergency organization\npromptly went Into action and gave\nthe distinguished visitors a realistic\ndemonstration of what the efficient\nhospital staff does when the raiders come.\nDoctors, nurses and orderlies,\nwearing steel helmets and their gas\nmasks at the alert, rushed to action\nstations. Bed patients were quickly\nmarshalled Into special splinter-\nproof wards while walking patients,\nin blue hospital garb, were hoarded\nInto nearby shelters. Off-duty nurses filed Into shelters of their own.\nThe hostile plane! hovered mom-\nALWAYS DELICIOUS\n4X CAKES\nAT YOUR GROCERS\nentarlly above the huge red cross\nmarking the hospital aite and then\nsped off. They dropped bombs several miles away.\nWhile the raid was on Mr. and\nMrs. Massey continued to tour the\nhospital.\nThey stopped for a while ln an\nemergency operating theatre where\nPrivate R. Mlllman of New Westminster, B.C., lay stretched out on\na table having his right leg placed\nin a plaster cast by Capts. A. W.\nWhite and A. G. Shaw, both of Toronto.\nMlllman, a dispatch rider, had\nbeen knocked off his motorcycle a\nTuesday evening Mrs. F. P.\nSpark!, Fifth Street, Fairview, entertained at a cup and saucer shower for her slater, Mrs. G. F. Whitfield, nee Doretta Norris. Guests\nincluded Mrs. C. W. House, Mrs. S.\nFawcett, Miss Dorothy Fawcett,\nMies Gladys Teague, Miss Ethel\nCameron, Mlu Mae Macfarlane,\nMiss Alice McDougall, Miss Frances\nChapman, Mrs. J. A. Fraser, Mrs.\nJ. Alwyn and Mr\u00ab. Kenneth Rees.\na Dr. A. B. Lockard ot Spokane,\nwho ipent a week with hli eon-in-\nlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge H. Gelinas, Victoria Street,\nleaves today for hi! home.\ne Mr. and Mre. V. Hoskins of\nBalfour ipent yesterday in town.\ne Mrs. S. C. Squirei and her\nslater, Miaa Ruth McDianriid, were\nln the city from Robsbn yesterday.\ne Mr. and Mra. Max M. Etten-\nborough of Spokane and their son\nGerald are weekend guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. A. G. Gelinas.\ne Mrs. R. L. Gutteridge of Penticton, who has been a guest of\nMr. and Mrs. P. T. Andrews, High\nStreet, has returned.\ne Miss Margaret Madden, Hall\nStreet, returned Thursday night\nfrom Balfour where she visited Miss\nNorah Hartridge for a couple of\nweeks.\ne Rev. and Mrs. T. J. S. Fergu\nson have at guests at their Summer\nplace, Nickawa Beach, Mrs. Fergu\nson's brother and sister, Arthur\nSpence and Mrs. Charles Hills of\nOakland, Calif.\ne H. Engen of Sheep Creek visited Nelson Thursday.\ne John Notman, Fairview, pioneer reetdent of Nelson, leaves to.\nday for Trail to reside with his\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. A. W. McMillan.\ne Mrs. W. Martin of Bonnington visited town yesterday.\ne Mrs. Alex Ewing of Slocan\nCity shopped in town yesterday.\ne Charles McGuigan, ex-resident\nof Nelson, now of San Francisco,\nis a city visitor.\ne Captain P. Hartridge of Bal\nfour apent yesterday in Nelson.\ne Mr. and Mrs. Collingwood\nGray of Bonnington visited the city\nyesterdaj.\ne Mrs. C. A. Cawley and her\nfamily of Salmo shopped in Nelson\nyesterday.\ne Mrs. M. J. Varseveld, Hall\nMines Road, entertained members\nof the sewing circle of the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate Thursday\nafternoon when those attending\nwere Mrs. M. Bachynskl, Mrs. G\nF. Stevens, Mrs. Henri Gagnon\nMrs. Arthur Perrier. Mrs. Harry\nKorolak, Mrs. V. Doyle. Mrs. Apos-\ntolulk, Mrs. Joseph Sturgeon, Mrs.\nM. J. Vigneux, Mrs. H. D. Thompson, Mrs. A. T. Noxon, Mrs. F. Boy,\nMiss W. Kinahan, Mrs. L. W. Smith,\nMiss Mary McDonald, Mrs. J. H.\nVivian, Mrs. John Muraro and Mrs,\nA. G. Gelinas,\ne Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Talbot\nand family of Grand Forks, who recently visited Mrs. Talbot's father,\nJohn Notman, Fairview, have left\nfor Golden, where Mr. Talbot has-\nbeen transferred.\ne Mr. and Mrs. Peerless and\nbaby are holidaying at the Coast.\n\u2022 Mrs. John Harlow left yesterday to reside In Kelowna.\n\u2022 Miss Jean Wallach, who spent\na fortnight with her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Wallach, 908 Latimer\nStreet, and who previously attended\nSummer session at the University of\nBritish Columbia, In Vancouver, left\nby bus yesterday to resume her duties as teacher at Matsqui, In the\nFraser Valley district She was accompanied by her nephew, Gordie\nWallace, son of Mf, and Mrs. Bert\nWallach of Seattle, who had spent\nthe holidays with his grandparents.\ne Mrs. W. E. Lowell and daughter Joanne, Kerr Apartment':, re'\nturned last night from Salmo, where\ntbey visited friends.\ne Miss Mary Mclnnls ot Kaslo,\nwho spent some weeks with her\nuncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. J. T.\nLawrle, Vernon Street, returned\nyesterday. She wai accompanied by\nMrs. Lawrle.\ne   Mrs. Cobb wai In town from\ncycle\niring\nfew   minutes   before,  suffer!\ncompound fracture.\nThe visitors called at every ward,\nshal Ing the men's hands and wish,\ning them a quick recovery.\nThey halted several minutes at\nthe bedside of two chums, Privates\nO. W. Chester of Sinclair, Man.,\nand D. Eby of Winnipeg, injured a\nfew days ago white working ln the\nfield.\nBefore leaving, Mr. and Mrs.\nMassey were conducted around the\nadministrate buildings, the laboratories, clinics, and kitchens, and\nlater mingled Informally with the\nsisters and doctors in the smartly\nfurnished drawing room of the\nnurses' quarters.\nSirens signalled a brief warning\nIn the London area while this dis\npatch was being dictated over the\ntelephone to the Canadan Press olfice in London.\nSouth Slocan Thursday.\ne N. Nystad ot Sheep Creek\nshopped in Nelson.\ne Mrs. George W. Steele, Silica\nStreet, accompanied by her son-in\nlaw and grandson, Earle Morris and\nGeorge W. Steele of Lethbridge,\nmotored to Trail yesterday to visit\nMr. and Mn. Fred Steele.\ne Harold M. Hansen wai tn\ntown from Sheep Creek Thursday.\n\u2022 Mrs. K. Birkbeck and daugh\nter Patricia have returned from Victoria, where Mri. Birkbeck attended\nSummer ichool.\ne N. L. Cortield of the Bank of\nMontreal staff leaves today to holiday at the Coast.\ne Mra, Fred Fletcher and baby\ndaughter of Roasland are visiting\nMrs. George Fletcher, (Jore Street\na A farewell party was held\nThursday evening at the home of\nMrs. Arthur Singleton, Silica Sired,\nhonoring Misa Joanne Mclnnls, who\nIs leaving shartly for Belllngham.\nMany useful gifts were presented\nto Miss Mclnnis by Mrs. Singleton\nlon behalf ot the gueits, who w.ere\nTo See the New\nFall Hats\nUnusual new hats with\nexpensive details.\nSmart high\ncrowns, tilt-\ni n g berets,\nrakish felts\nin black and\nAutumn\ncolors\nMn. L. Freno, Mri. T. Bell, Mrs.\nMax Kaspar, Mrs. A. Ross, Mrs. V.\nRomano, Mrs. D. Aurelio, Mrs. F.\nRomano, Mrs. H. Godwin, Mrs. B.\nMonteleone, Mrs; B. Arcure, Mrs. C.\nArcure, Mrs. J. Ball, Mrs. H. Swing-\nler, Mn. E. Stangherlin, Mrs. D. Mclnnis, Mrs. A. Singleton, Miss Margaret Louise Singleton, Miu Catherine Mclnnis, Miss Annie Bell, Miss\nEvelyn Ball, Miss Mary Singleton.\nMn. B. Johnstone, Mn. P. Halllwell\nand Mrs. A. Olsen.\nDr. Dolman, chief of the Public Health Laboratories, Vancouver,\naccompanied by Dr. Ranta, spent\nThursday in Nelaon.\n\u2022 Miss Linda Reynolds of Slocan City Bpent yesterday In town.\ne Mn. Norman Major of Longbeach shopped in Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. T. S. Shorthouse and\nchildren, Tommy and Sylvia, 904\nMill Street, have returned from a\nvisit to relatives in Fernie and Cranbrook.\nW. T. Wickham, merchant of\nRobson, spent yesterday ln town.\n\u2022 Mrs. Frank Brooki waa in the\ncity from Appledale yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Ash_by and\ndaughter Joan of Harrop are city\nvisitors.\ne Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bland\nof Bonnington shopped in town\nyesterday.\nMrs. Smith of Bradner is\nvisiting her son and daughter-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Smith, Fair\nview.\n\u2022 Mrs. M. M. Gibbs, Carbonate\nStreet, visited Mrs. J. McKay\nyesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. Mclntyre of\nSheep Creek, who have been holidaying at Willow Point, were in\nthe city yesterday en route home.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Shlel of\nVancouver visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. A. Waters of Sheep Creek\nvisited Nelson yesterday.\ne Herbert Chapman, C. P. R.\nTravelling Freight Agent, who has\nbeen relieving J. Alwyn in the\ndistrict office, left yesterday for\nVancouver.\n\u2022 Mrs. Duncan Carter wai in\ntown from Robson yesterday.\ne Mrs. Sullivan and children of\nKaalo shopped in town yesterday.\ne Mn. L. T. Davis of Ewing's\nLanding returned home yesterday\nafter visiting her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. E. H. H. Applewhaite, Willow\nPoint. She was accompanied home\nby her daughter Judy, who spent\nthe Summer with her grandparents,\nwhile Denny, her brother, who also\nspent Summer at the Point, is remaining indefinitely,\ne Mr. and Mn. J. W. McLachlan of Winnipeg are spending a\nbrief holiday with friends at Willow\nPoint. Mr. McLachlan, who is Manager of the Canadian Car Service\nBureau, Is an old time resident of\nNelson.\n\u2022 Miss Veda Smith of Trail Is\na guest of Miss Margaret Madden,\nHall Street.\n\u2022 H. E. Cooper of Balfour spent\nyesterday in town.\n\u2022 William (Bill) Kapak, aon of\nMr. and Mn. P. Kapak, Vernon\nStreet, who has been holidaying in\nNelson, plans on leaving via C.P.R.\ntomorrow for the East to attend\nDalhousie University in Halifax,\ntaking his first year on Law.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. W. E. Shaw and\nMr. and Mrs. J. D. Foggo returned\nfrom a motor trip to Banff and, the\nWindermere.\ne Mn. C. Glendinning and her\ndaughter, Miss Jean Glendinning,\nhave returned to Cranbrook, where\nMiss Glendinning will resume her\nduties as teacher.\ne J. Edgar of Vallican visited\nNelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Bert Dodde lett yesterday to reside in Salmo.\ne D. Grice of Trail was ln town\nyesterday and leaves via C. P. R.\nthis morning for Toronto.\n\u2022 David Halcrow of Penticton,\nex-resident of Nelson, spent Thunday in the city.\n\u2022 Rev. John Lambert, C. Ss. R. ot\nthe staff ot the Blessed Sacrament\nParish in Fairview, has returned\nfrom a couple of weeks on the\nPrairie.\n\u2022 R. White of Salmo visited In\nNelson yesterday.\ne Mrs. A. N. Wlnlaw and her\ndaughter, Mn. Stewart Ruaaell, returned Thursday from a motor trip\nto the Coast.\ne Mn. C. S. Price and ion\nMichael of Harrop viiited ln Nelson\nyesterday.\n\u2022 Miss -Kay McPhenon, Kerr\nApartments, left yeaterday for\nGrand Forki to ipend the weekend with her parents, Mr and Mra.\nD, McPherson.\n\u2022 Mrs. Howe was In town from\nWillow Point yeeterday.\n\u2022 Col. Good of - Bonnington\nshopped In town yeiterday.\n\u2022 Mlu Helen Ferguson, who\nhas been a guest ot her parents, Rev.\nand Mn. T. J. S. Ferguson during\nthe holidays, leavei thla morning\n$2.25\n$495\n\u2022rman\nTtunt\nPhone 200\nBaker St.\nfor Vancouver to reaume her dutlci\nas teacher In King George High\nSchool.\ne Rev. Father T. P. Freney ot\nFernle visited town yesterday.\na An evening was enjoyed at\nthe home of Mr. and Mn. Alex\nJohnston, 232 Anderson Street in\nhonor of Pat Johnston on his 22nd\nbirthday. Prize wlnnen on Bingo\nwere Miss Dora Dyck and Bob HaU.\nMusic was enjoyed, those taking\npart being Miss Myrtle Leet, Miss\nRuby Kline, Stirling Manuel. Master Jimmy Johnston, Pat Johnston\nand Elmer Dyck. A aolo was sung\nby Miss Dora Dyck. Other guests\nwere Miss Alva Sorge, Miss Evelyn\nLa Rue, Miss Mary Turnbull, Miss\nJean Turnbull, Miss Elizabeth Wase-\nllnko, Mrs. E. Kline, Earl Kline,\nJoe Lang, A]ex Turnbull, Joe Bachynskl, Elon Domeij, Mike Juri-\nloff and Mr. Manuel.\nLONDON, Aug. 30 (CP Cable). -\nThe Admiralty announced today\nthat five officers and SO ratings are\nmissing and presumed killed from\nH. M. S. Orpheus.\nLoss of the patrol submarine Orpheus was announced Aug. 18.\nDIAMOND RINCS STOLEN\nEDMONTON, Aug. 30 (CP). -\nDiamond rings with a total value-:\nof $700 were itolen from the store\nof Bert Knowles, watchmaker, early\ntoday by thieve! who gained entry\nthrough a skylight in an adjoining\ncafe then cutting a hole through\na beaverboard wall.\nWATCHES, DIAMONDS,\nWEDDINC RINGS\nH. H. Sutherland\n346 Baker St\ngBWB-__n_-B_-____-_B-afl\nSPECIAL TODAY\nTillie Cotton Frocks, ffl QO\nPriced at ipl.TO\nBETTY ANN SHOP\"^\nPh. 1047    Opp. Capitol Theatre  |\nNEW FALL HATS\nMilady's Fashion Shoppe\n449 Baker St Phone 874\nSPECIALS\nSalt: Vk lb. bags 12c\nRice: No. 1,3 lbs. lie\nBacon: Premium, Vi lb. pkg.,2 for \u2014 39c\nMatches: Red Bird, pkg. 29c\nQuick Oats: Pkg  22c\nCrackers: Ormonds, pkg. 22c\nCoffee: Nabob, Ib 52e\nPure Vanilla: 2 oz. bottles 23c\nCorned Beef: l's , 19c\nPork and Beans: 28 oz. tins 21c\nKetchup: Heinz 8 oz., 2 for 25c\nToffee: Gaiety wrapped, Ib. 27c\nBakeasy: 2 lbs 23c\nSpaghetti and Meat Balls: Tin  18c\nTea: Our own. Really good, Ib. __, 68c\nPastry Flour: 7 Ib. bag 33e\nTOMATOES\u2014 tte* BANANAS-Rlpel eU\n4 lbs  ***** 3 lbs. _.__ ******\nCUCUMBERS- QA INDIVIDUAL f*A\n4 for -..    ~V SQUASH-8 for ___._ *****\nSQUASH  AND MAR.        AA PEARS- f\u00a3A\nROW-Lb. - \u2014    \u2022* Basket  *****\nLETTUCE- 0\u00abt GREEN PEPPERS-       *iMA\nHead .\u201e-. **\\* 3 lbs. *****\nGREEN   CABBAGE-\"\"\"   A* GREEN ONIONS- ZA\nLb **** 2 tor     -*V,\nGRAPEFRUIT- **AA BLACKBERRIES\u2014 -JtA\n6 for  \u201e  ***> 3 for  -***>\nHorswill Bros.\nPHONE 235\n.\ns BRADLEY'S \"it\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nSATURDAY BARGAIN\nPORK TENDERLOIN: Lb 28?\nSAUSACE MEAT:\nLb\t\nCORNED BEEF:\nLb\t\nHAMBURG:\nI Ibi\t\n10c\n19c\n25c\nPOT ROASTS:\nLb.\t\n15c\nLINK SAUSACE:\n2 Ib\t\nVEAL STEAKS:\n2 Ibi\t\nSIRLOIN STEAK:\nLb\t\n25c\n35c\n25c\n20c\nRUMP\nROASTS: Lb.\nPORK ROAST:\nLb\t\nVEAL OVEN ROAST:\nLb\t\nMUTTON LECSt\nLb\t\nMUTTON CHOPS:\nLb\t\nHADDIE FILLETS:\nLb\t\nBUTTER: No. 1,\n3 Ibi\t\n.___._____\u25a0 ___^~.m,,\u00bb^^:,<*J^ML!^iJ*____*\n^jg^y\nla _a. _^___fj_..v.._.__.;-\n;    J   . :',\n',\nj\nilfi'ii i ______ hi [ _f__iit____l_H__r___ __\nniW**'\" \u2022\"-**'-\n rT^^^p^SP*\u00bbv'\n'WJfpnrw-\nPAOI SIX\nSfctam BaHtj Jfattra\nEstablished April 22. 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newipaper\nPubllihed avert morning except Sundty by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street Nelion Britlih Columbia.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS.\nSATURDAY, AUGUST 31, 1940\nFRENCH COLONIES START TO SHIFT\nALLEGIANCE\nPortions of the French Colonial Empire have detached\nthemselves from the areas yielding administrative alleg-\ngiance to the futile Vichy Government headed by Marshal\nPetain, and have formerly adhered to the cause of General\nCharles De Gaulle, who heads the free French forces fighting for the liberation of France, beside Britain.\nIn Equatorial Africa these embrace a great stretch\nof territory, extending from the great bend in the West\nCoast, diagonally in a Northerly and Easterly direction up\nthe map, made up of the French Congo, the Cameroons,\nand the Territory of Tchad.\nIn the South Seas, two groups of islands, the New\nHebrides, and New Caledonia, have renounced allegiance\nto the Vichy Government, and have adhered to De Gaulle.\nThe Vichy Government, maintaining its attitude of\nservility to Germany, bemoans \"the rebellions inspired by\nBritain,\" and removes\u2014in their absence\u2014some of the administrators concerned.\nHowever, it is evident that the \"Free Frenchmen\" in\nthe parts of the French Colonial Empire not close geographically to France are thinking for themselves, and are\nconcluding that French liberty will be won only by fighting, not by supineness, and that the only way they can\n\"strike a blow for France\" is by joining De Gaulle and\naiding the British.\nThe two territories most strongly defended by France\nprior to the surrender, and the ones containing powerful\n| armies\u2014Mandated Syria, and Tunis-Algeria\u2014have thus\nfar been adherents of the surrender policy, and only recently a considerable number of French planes in Northern\nAfrican were flown to France, to be handed over to the\nGermans,\nBut the break-up of the Petain control of the far-flung\nand now highly vulnerable French Colonial Empire has\nstarted, and what the end will be, no one can predict.\nIn the meantime, the joining of French Equatorial\nAfrica to the British territories North and East gives\n'\u2022complete control and passage to British arms from the\nWest Coast through to the Gulf of Aden South of Suez,\non the East, and through to the Mediterranean, on the\nNorth.\nNELSON SWIMMING NOT YET\nORGANIZED\nWith the great number of swimmers of all ages that\nNelson boasts, from boys and girls of tender years up to\nhundreds of youths and other hundreds of adulta, it is\nregrettable that local initiative, which is one of Nelson'3\nprides, and for which Nelson can give credit for nearly\neverything it has, has not yet got around to organizing\na swimming club.\nWednesday's fine swimming gala, under the auspices\nof the Civic Parks Committee, and growing out of the fact\nthat the City maintains an instructional and lifeguard\nservice at Lakeside Park, was excellent in every way, but\nthis event comes but once a year.\nSwimming clubs and facilities are now.general in the\nlarger centres of the Kootenay, and have the official blessing of the Provincial Department of Health.\nBut no Kootenay centre, and no British Columbia\ncentre, has the bathing facilities that Nelson has, with\nalmost unlimited extent of beaches, and the special recreational facilities of Lakeside Park. There have been individual days when in hot seasons when close to or quite\n1000 Nelson people must have gone into the lake water.\nIt is safe to say that no other centre in the interior could\napproach such a record.\nIn the last decade, Seattle has had at least three national swimming champions, two of them Olympic champions.\nSpokane's swimming pools have produced Mary Lott\nPetty, a little gtrl who has risen to national fame.\nNelson undoubtedly has three or four, or even a larger\nproportion, of regular swimmers to each one that any\nother Interior centre has.\nIt should have a wonderful Speed Swimming and Diving Club. It should have monthly water 'galas. It should\nbe producing British Columbia champions at least.\nIt would be making a showing of this kind if organization were effected.\nLOOKING BACKWARD\n\u2014NELSON DAILY NIWI. NILION. B. (J.-8ATURDAY MORNINQ. AUO. tl\nCONTRACT...\nHONOBS ON THE SIDE\nCLEAR \u25a0 observer! ot rtaulta\nknow that high honor carda usually art more valuable It thty an\nln aide suits than if they art In\ntht ault you bid. Thty afford you\nmuch better defensive valuta It\nyou wind up playing against tha\nopponents' contract, aa thty art\nlett likely to be ruffed. Thty build\na better sltuaUon for No Trump\nplay if your partner bids the suit\nthat plugs up your weak apot\nAnd they lure many a later double from the defender at your left\nIf your partner supports your\n. iult, tht opponent expecting hla\nhonora to alt ovtr yours, whereat\nthoie held by your partner are\nover him.\n\u2666 Q J 10 T _\nf A8S2\n+ 64\n*J4\n\"Keeping you out? Not a bit! I'm only here to keep the boys in.\"\n\u2014Humorist\nliioissmmsoosstesossomestessetoitsitOMSSmmmsitsimsttsttettasisot\n10 YEARS AOO\nTroir Daily News of Aug. 31, 1930\nAid. J. B. Gray defeated Mayor\nR. D. Barnes in a match which\nopened the new miniature golf\ncourse on Baker Street\u2014Harold\nLakes has returned to Nelson from\nthe Reeves McDonald mine In thc\nPend d'Orellle district where he is\nManager.\u2014F. C. Stockdale wis elected President of the Lake Windermere District Curling Club, wilh\nE. Tunnicliffe, Vice-Preiidenl, and\nA. Ashworth, Secretary-Treasurer.\n\u20143. H. McQuald, Manager of the\nCranbrook Bank of Commerce, has\nretired, and will reside in Toronto.\n28 YEARS AGO\nFrom Daily News of Aug. 31, 1915\nH. W. Power, Editor of the Kaslo\nKootenaian, SDent yesterday In Nelaon\u2014L. \". DeVebcr, Manager of\nItfte \\Nelson branch of the drive,\nthlel that $324 was raised here in\na tag day Saturday for the equipment of Ihe B.C. volunteer base\nhospital.\u2014J. S. Deschamps will reopen his sawmill at Castlegar after\na shutdown of some months.\u2014Miss\nJ. . Jeffrey of Greenwood has accepts' a Wardner teaching post.\n40 YEARS AQO\nFrom Daily News of Aug. 31, 1900\nConstruction is in full swing for\na mattress factory which 3. W.\nHolmei, G. R. Ntgle tnd R. Win-\ncheiter. Ire erecting on Front Street\nbetween 0. 0. Buchtnan'i office\nind the railroad track\u2014Ernest\nMansfield has left for Kaslo to inspect hii mining properties there\nand arrange for resumption of work.\n\u2014Thomas Howell has sold his residence on Hall Street between Mill\nand Carbonate to C. H. Brown of\nthe Kootenay Steam Laundry.\u2014W.\nT. Doyle and H. 0. Keefer are ap-\nolying for a licenie at the Chapleau\nHotel, Lemon Creek.\nWHAT DO YOU THINK.'\nLetter! mty be published over a nom dt plume, but the actual\nnamt of the writer must be given to the editor tt evidence of\ngood  faith.  Anonymous letter! go  In tht waste piper basket.\nC&&><XXSX&SXZ&\u00bbXi#^^\nKingsgate Man Charmed by Trip to\nWest Kootenay Excepf for Roads\nTo the Editor of\nThe Dally News:\nSir\u2014There ore a number of ut\nhere now who know why the tourists so condemn the Canadian roads,\nand why Canadians prefer to travel\nby U.S. routes. Harry Hogg, Bill\nDunbar, Joe Brogan and Gust Williams had passports, but no visas, so\narranged to go to Trail to see Mr.\nCory, the U.S. Consul there. John\nMauldin, ot the U.S. Service in East-\nport, Wash,, desirous ot meeting his\ncountry's representative in Trail,\nused up his weekly day of leisure\nto take the gang over there.\nThey headed out about 8:15 a.m.\nleaving themselves a couple of\nhours to catch the Main Lake ferry,\nwhich under ordinary cases would\nhave been ter more than ample for\n70 miles, but let me say now that if\nthftre had not been a lot of can getting on to the boat and holding it\nthere, they would have been very\nnearly late.\nNothing could have been more\ndelightful than the drive by Creston to the Ferry, Once one left this\nvalley of rocks, Christmas trees, and\nstump ranches, the Creston Valley\nis a revelation of beauty. The apple\ntrees breaking down under the burden of their fruit. The clean well\nbuilt prosperous looking homes, set\nmostly amid trees, and the busy\nlittle growing town of Creston itself were delightful, but the bumps\nand the holes and the ruts and lhe\ncorners. As Gust said, \"There are\nno corners on this road, they are\nall right turns.\"\nLIKE THE HIGHLANDS\nBeyond Creston the flats stretched out glowing in the sun with their\nf.arvest of grain, and in some places\ncombines were working. Here there\nwere stretches of real good road,\nand many beautiful little ranches,\nwhile the scenery along the lake\nshore was most picturesque, and it\nwouldn't have taken much imagination to have thought that it was a\nroad somewhere in the West Highlands on \"The Road to the Isles,\"\nbut one missed the sharp tang of\nthe sea and the smell of the kelp\n|nd tangle.\nThe Nasookin with its gleaming\nwhite paint and brasswork did not\nhelp the nostaglia any, but it was\na beautiful trip up the lake. Bill\nDunbnr enjoyed it especially as he\nhad never been on a boat before.\nThere are some lovely homes and\nbeaches along the lake. John Mauldin also had an extra thrill out of\nthe boat journey as the \"thump\nthump\" of the stern-wheeler\nbrought back memories of the South\nand \"01' Man River.\" The road from\nthe ferry landing in Nekon ferry is\none of the most delightful one could\nwish. Winding and undulating, each\nturn reveals a new vista of gorgeou_\ngardens and lovely homes, of all\ntypes of architecture from Chinese\npagodes lo stately English homes on\ntheir wide-spread lawns 'mid shady\ntrees.\nThen Nelson! What' a wonderful\nSummer resort Nelson might be if\n\u2022here w_re only really good roads\ninto it! It has everything\u2014the lake,\nparks, fine buildings, stores and\nstreets, and most hospitable people.\nKOOTENAY RIVER\nUNSURPASSED\nThe road from then on to Trail\nwas really good, although of course\nvery winding, and high above the\nriver. But tne scenery would be\nhard to surpass anywhere. The rush\nand roar of the Kootenay as seen\nfrom above Bonnington, and the\ncold green depths of the Columbia\nfrom Castlegar on. The thriving\ncommunity of Brilliant. What a pity\nthat the Doukhobors are not as good\ncitizens as they are farmers and\npioneers!\nThen the long drop down Into\nTrail, and the Smelter lying like a\ngreat smoking volcano above the\ntown. One does not only see Trail\n\u2014one smells and tastes it. But Trail\nis a bang-up-to-date modern'city,\nand we had' a swell dinner theie.\nMr. Cory, the U.S. Vice Consul, was\nmost courteous, and gave us our\npapers in quick order. He reminds\none of a U.S. representative out ot\nsome story-book, tall, loose jointed\nand bespectacled, of serious mien.\nOne felt like looking around for\nthc blond svelte slinky female spy,\nwho should have been in the story,\n.out instead there was just an auburn\nhaired Trail girl as stenographer,\ndoing her Job most efficiently.\nCOLUMBIA GARDENS CLIMB\nBut we didn't know anything\nabout thrills of the road until we\nleft Trail, heading for Fruitvale and\nSalmo. The road out of the Smelter\ntown looks just like those pictures\nof the Rock of Gibraltar published\nby a well-known insurance company, and it was along the face of\nthat rock that we climbed and\nclimbed and clung, with the rocki\nclose into our left, and the co)d\ngreen river away below, long\nlong way below, while the loose\ngravel kicked out behind us, and\nthe radiator began to boll before\nwe reached the top. Gust said, \"It's\nfunny it's always on my side of the\ncar that it is such a long way down.\"\nbut Bill Dunbar took a look at one\ntime, and didn't look any more.\nThrough Fruitvale, and on to\nSalmo and Nelway.\nWhat a really splendid scenic\ndrive if the road surface were only\nbetter! Beautiful little peaceful valley and farms. Fruit is plenty, and\ndeep green pastures, and then every\nso often great deep silent cedar\nforests, with the tall trees and their\nsweeping branches, and the silence\nof the almost primeaval woods.\nIt was dark now. and the Nelway\nU. S. Customs Office made a great\nblaze among the trees. Here we had\nan opportunity to use our newly\nacquired passports and visas for the\nfirst time, and also to visit with\nMr. and Mrs. Clupher, well known\nto Eastport and Kingsgate residents.\nHere also we heard that Don Stewart, another old Eastporter, was\nspending the evening at Metaline\nFalls, so contact was made by phone,\nand on arriving at the Falls found\nDon awaiting us. We had a very\npleasant reunion for an hour. Don\nis looking extremely well, and we\nalso met son, Sandy, who is a regular husky young giant, and by the\nway of becoming a tennis champion.\nFrom then on the journey was\nquite uneventful; the good roads, th;\npurr of the tires bn the pavement,\nand the effects of the long day\nbrought silence and sleepiness to the\ncrowd, and the lights of Eastport\nwere very welcome in the fint\nsmall hour of the dawn.\nH. J. HOCK!.\nKlngsgate, B. C, Aug. 28, 1940.\nBombay Hindu Writes to Nelson Friend\nThat Allies Will Save Civilization\nTo the Editor of\nThe Daily News:\nSir\u2014From a letter received from\nIndia the other day I would like to\nquote a passage which both pleased\nand interested me, and which may\nalao interest others, particularly\nthose Of us who have wondered as\nto the reaction of the people of\nIndia towards Britain in this dark\nhour of her struggle. This letter was\nwritten by a prominent Hindu in\nBombay, and reflects, I sincerely\nbelieve, the attitude of all thinking\npeople of India, more so because it\nwas not written to please the public\nopinion but merely as an honest\nobservation from one friend to another.\nThus he writes:\n\"Events in Europe arid the rest\nof the world have been moving so\nfast and so desperately that by thc\ntime our letters reach their destination the discussion of the latest\nevents are bound to be somewhat\nantiquated and out of date. By the\ntime we got around to the wtr in\nFinland It was nearly over and\nother sinister events hid usurped\nUie throne. After Norway there\ncame Denmark, then Holland, then\nBelgium, and now tha latest stunt\nof the Italian Duce, at a time when\nthe Allies were In such a difficult\nposition, making tht outlook grave\nto iay the least. We do hope the\nU.S.A. will move quickly now and\nthrow all its resources on the side\nof the Allies.\nWhatever we Indians may have\nto say on small and particular Issues, there can be no two opinions\namong the liberty-loving peoples of\nthe world as to which ilde ll in the\nright, in this titanic struggle, the\nfiercest and most desperate in the\nhistory of our race.\n\"It may be wishful thinking, but\nsomehow I feel convinced that\nwhatever setbacks they may suffer\nin the Immediate future, the Allies\nwill come through succesfully in\nthe end. I cannot believe that civilization and the values It haa created\nare to be demolished once and for\nall at the bidding of one, two or\nthree dictators. There ls a certain\nelement of mystery in the affairs\nof our little planet, and whether we\nbelieve In God and Divine intervention or not, it Is significant that:\n\"The best laid schemes of men\nand mice all gang astray.\"\n\"Yes, it is not impossible, and it\nis quite probable, that the best laid\nDlans of the dictators, which appear\nto be conceived and executed with\nalmost diabolic precision efficiency,\nmav yet gang astray.\"\nThis may not be of anv value to\nyour paper, but I forward it in any\ncase,\nA Hopeful Thiuker.\nNelson, B.C., Aug. J9, 1940.\nPlane Loses \"Nose\"\nLONDON, Aug. 30 (CP) - The\ntransparent nose of a Lockheed\nbomber was shot off by an antiaircraft shell over Denmark, an air\nministry newi bulletin reported to-\ndav. but the ihip came home safely.\nThe nilot waa knocked out by\nthe explosion lt said, and the navigator revived him and helped to\nbring the plane under control ai It\ndived almost Into the tea.\n\u2666 A98\n\u00a5.63\n\u2666 K32\n+ Q 8 5 3\nA*.\n__\n4.668\n\u00a597\n\u2666 J 10 7 5\n* 10962\n*K2\nIKJIO.\n\u2666 AQ98\n*AK7\n(Dealer: South. East-West vulnerable.)\nSouth     West North Salt\nIV        Paaa 2\u00bb Paaa\n4 NT      Pm fi+ Paaa\n5NT      Paaa 6+ Paaa\nIV         Dbl\nWest had visions of a aure let,\nwith hit ipade A and hla doubly\nguarded trump Q, with hla diamond K and club Q thrown In for\ngood measure. South made hla\ncontract, however, like rolling off\nBy Shepard Barclay\na log. The double told him to\nflneet agalnat Watt for tht heart\nQ and not to finisie tht dltmondi.\nWeat ltd tht ipade A, thtn (he I,\nand tha thow wu over. Three\nhtarta settled that job. Then (Mir\napadea furnished diicardi of thru\ndiamonds, and a trump wu lett ln\ndummy to ruff tht laat dub.\nAt another table ot the aame\nduplicate game, both North and\nSouth refused to Ud hearta without a trick and a halt tt tha top\nof tht iult. 8o South opened with\n1-Dlamond. North Ud l-Spade,\nSouth-2-No Trumpa, North 3-No\nTrumpa, than tha Blackwood convention wu uaed u hy the heart\nbidden and tht side wound up at\n6-No Trumpi. Witt alao doubled\nthat, so the hearta again ware\nplayed right, but tha contract wu\nImpossible because at No Trumps\nyou can't ruff a club. Tha diamond\nfinesse had to bl tried. It (ailed\nand tht contract wu down.\n\u00bb  t  \u2022\nYour Week-End Lesson\ntt Weat leada the heart K, how\nihould South plan hla play (or\n4-Spades, with each of tht four\nnumbered handa below u dummy T\n1. 4 A 10 5      TAA1084      '\nfl '      913S\nt,A6432       4864\n(.7432 +973\n8. 4A10848 4. 4.42\nVT5 VT\nA8648 4KQ76842\n*J6 *QJ\nSouth'i Hand\n4KQJB6\nVA648\n\u2666 \u00bb\n*A85\n&0$SSOOtSSKSCe#0&tSSSOSSXS&tSt.\nV* Questions V,\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader.  Namei ef\nperions liking questions will net\nbt publlihed.\nR. M., Ainaworth-What dayi did\nJune 4, 1909,i February 11, 1019\nand September 10, 1809 fall on?\nJune 4,1909 was a Friday; February 11,1919 was a Tuesday; Septem-\nb?r 10, 1899 was a Friday.\nD. K, Nelson-What ls the diameter\nof the earth at the equator and\nat the Poles; what ls the average\nelevation   of  the   earth   surface\nabove sea level and what il the\nweight of the earth?\nThe diameter ot the earth at the\nequator is 7926.677 miles and between the Poles, 7809.988 miles. The\ndifference between these two diameters is 26.660 miles, and the ratio\nfor  the  earth's flattening  it  tht\nPoles is thus one part of 287. The\naverage elevation of the land level\nabove sea level Is approximately\n2800 feet. The weight of the earth\nhas been estimated at about ilx\nsextillion, 600 quintillion, short tons,\nwhich does hot Include the atmosphere, which has been estimated at\nmore  than  five quadrillion short\ntons. In figures, theie weighti are\n6.600.000,000,000,000,000,000    and   5,-\n000,000,000,000,000 short tons respectively.\nJ.J.S.. Nelson\u2014Can you tell me how\nto make mortar?\nMortar ls composed of quicklime\nand sand reduced to a paite with\nwater. The lime ought to be pure,\ncompletely free from carbonic acid,\nand in the state of a very powder;\nthe sand should be free from city,\npartly ln the state of gravel; the\nwater ihould be pure; and If previously saturated with lime io much\nthe better. The best proportion! are\nthree parts ot fine and tour parti\nof coarse sand, one part of quicklime, recently slaked, and as little\nwater  as  possible.\nR. T., Edgewood\u2014How car. a person judge whether a table cloth\nis all linen?\nLinen absorbs water immediately,\nand feels heavier than cotton. Linen, if freed from dressing, becomes\ntranslucent when treated with olive\noil; cotton remains opaque. If torn\nquickly, linen threads will be\nsmooth, cotton threads curl.\nH. M., Trail\u2014What wai the name\nof the first vessel in the British\nNavy?\nThe first war vessel ln the British\nNavy wai, the Grett Harry, a three\nmasted vessel built in 1909 at t cost\not $72,414, the first double decker\nto be built ln England. _\nW. T., Kaalo\u2014What wai the date of\nthe Kingston earthquake?\nJanuary 14, 1807.\nJsiAt yojmdfm\nONE-MINUTE TE8T\n1. How tut do the wings of a\nfly move?\n2. When were union labeli tint\nuied?\n3. What is the meaning of Lhe\nword \"amen\"?\nWORDS OF WISDOM\nIt Is the guilt, not the scaffold,\nwhich constitutes the ihame. -\nCornellle.\nTODAY'S HOROSCOPE\nYou will forge ahead in both\nbusiness and penonal attain dur\ning the next year, It your birthday\nis today. You ihould, however,\navoid changes, and exercise a little\nextra care when travelliifr. If born\non thli date a child will be somewhat over-confident, self-assertive,\ndogmatic and quick tempered. H:s\nor her emotional and desire nature\nwill be itrong. Success will come\nto such a personality through ar!\ncommerce or literature, it i.\nindicated.\nHINTS OM ETIQUETTE\nA girl ihould not expect her ee\ncort to put her compact, lipstick\nand other penonal articles in his\npocket when they are out on a date\nHOROSCOPE FOR SUNDAY\nA year of great activity and\nmuch good fortune lies ahead of\nthose who are fortunate enough to\nbe celebrating birthdays on this\ndate. If they are young, there ls\na probability of t happy romance.\nThey should, however, exercise care\nconcerning documents, and keep\ntheir own counsel. If your child is\nborn on thii date, you may look fot\na strong, forceful character, ective,\nenterprising, courageous, original\nand successful in most of its undertakings\u2014especially ln business.\nONE-MINUTI TEST ANSWERS\n1. It hu been calculated that a\nfly makes 330 wing strokes per\nlecond.\n2. By the cigarmaken of San\nFrancisco in 1896, In their con\nfllct with Chinese labor.\n3. \"So be It.\"\nChrist in Flanders\nNote\u2014This poem was written In\nthe trenches during the World\nWar The initial! L. W. are attached to lt, but the name of the\nauthor ls unknown. It employs\nthe principle of repetition-with\nvariation: the iecond and fiftn\nlinei alwayi add lomething; they\ndo not merely echo. The poem ii\none of the most arreitina that\ncame out of the great conflict. It\nsincerity has cauied it to be framed by miny people and hung upon\ntheir walls. Al an inspiration and\nreminder. It is taken from \"Poems\nof Inspiration,\" collected by Joseph Morris and St. Clair Adams.\nWe  had   forgotten   You,   or  very\nnearly\u2014\nYou did not seem to touch us ver\/\nnearly\u2014\nOf coune we thought about You\nnow and then;\nEspecially in any kind of trouble,\nWe knew that You were good ln\ntime of trouble-\nBut we were very ordinary men.\nAnd there were alwayi other thingi\nto think of\u2014\nThere'i loti of things a man has got\nto think of-\nHit work, his home, hit pleuuri,\nand his wife;\nAnd so we only thought of You on\nSunday\u2014\nSometimei. perhapi, not even on \u2022\nBecause there's alwayi lott to fill\none't lltt.\nAnd, all tht while, ln street or Itnt\nor byway-\u00bb\nIn country lane, or dty itretL or\nbyway\u2014\nYou walked tmong us, and wt did\nnot iee\nYour feet were bleeding  u  You\nwalked our pavements\u2014\nHow did we misi Your footstep!\non our ptvemtnts?\nCan thtrt bl other folks ai blind\nas we?\nNow we remember; over here ln\nFlanders\u2014\n(It Isn't strange to think ot You\nin Fltndert)\u2014\nThis hideout warfare seems to make\nthings clear,\nWe never thought about You much\nin England\u2014\nNow that we are far away from\nEngland\u2014\nWe havt no doubts, we know that\nYou ire here.\nYou helped, ui pais the jtst tlong\ntht trenehei\u2014\nWhere, ln cold blood, we waited in\ntht trenehei\u2014\nYou touched Its ribaldry tnd made\nIt fine.\nYou stood beside us in our pain and\nweakness\u2014\nWe're gltd to think You understand\nour weakness\u2014\nBomehow It seems to help us not\nto whine.\nWe think about You kneeling In\nthe Garden\u2014\nAhl God! the agony of that dread\nGardtn\u2014\nWt know You prayed for us upon\nthe Crou.\nIf mything could make us glad to\nbur It-\nTwould be the knowledge that You\nwilled to heir It-\nPaln. death, the uttermost of human\nlon\nThough wt forgot You, You will not\nforgtt u\u00bb-\nWe fetl so lurt thtt You will not\nforgtt ut\u2014\nBut atty with us until thli dream Is\npast\nAnd io we aik (or courage, itrength\nind pardon-\nEspecially.   I   think,   we   uk   for\npardon-\nhat Yo\nthe list.\npardo\nAna th^t You'll stand beside us 'o\nAnonynioui.\nOn Jhn fivt\nSATURDAY, AUGUST 31. 1940\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNING\n6:37\u20140 Cinada\n7:00\u2014Toast and Coffee Club\n(CKLN)\n8-.00-BUC Newa\n8:30-AI Gilbert'i Trio\n8:45-The Newi\n\u00bb:00-\"Undtr tht Big Top\"\n9:16\u2014Clonng Stocks\n9:30\u2014McFirland Twini\n9:46\u2014Eleinor Sherry\n10:00\u2014Riy Kinney's Orch.\n10:3O-World's Fair Band\n10:45~Tht News\n11:00\u2014London Calling\n12:00\u2014Club Matinee\nAFTERNOON\n1:00-The Newi\n1:15\u2014Tommy Dorsey'i Orch.\nL45-BBC Newi\n2:16\u2014Jerry Blane's Orch.\n2:30\u2014Yella Pessil\u2014Harpsicord.\n2:46\u2014The Story Behind the Song\n3:00\u2014Noveltiei in Music\n3:30\u2014Bob Hannon\u2014Baritone\n3:45\u2014Canadians in Iceland\n4:00\u2014Radio Guild\n4:30-Sevlllana\n5:00\u2014Hollywood Band  (CKLN)\n5:15\u2014Evening Prelude\n5:25\u2014News Bulletin\n5:30\u2014London After Dark\nEVENINC\n6:00\u2014Let's Go to the Music Hall\n6:30-BBC Newi\n7:00-The News\n7:15\u2014Britain Speaks\n7:30-Muiica) Mirror\n8:0O\u2014Concert Trio\n8:30\u2014Red River Barn Danct\n9:30\u2014\"1 Cover the Waterfront\"\n9:45\u2014Songs ot tht Yttn\n10:15-The Newi\n10:30\u2014Dal Richard'i Orch.\n11:00   Paul Carton\nU:15-Newi  Round-Up tod Ttlka\nRebroadcasts\n12:0C\u2014God Save Tht King\nCJAT^-TRAIL\nMORNING\n7:00\u2014Church in the Wildwood\n7:15\u2014Breakfait Club\n8:30- Wake Up and Stng\n11:00\u2014Concert Hall of the Air\nU:30-Popular Vocal\n11:45\u2014Dance Music\nAFTERNOON\n12:45\u2014Three-Quarter Time\n4:00\u2014Theatre Newa\n4:13\u2014Dance Music\n4:30-Melody Time\nEVENING\n6:00\u2014Dance Music\n12:0C\u2014Sign Off\nOther periodi\u2014CBC progrtmmae\nSUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1940\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNING\n7:57-0 Canada\n8:00\u2014BBC   News\n8:30\u2014Salt  Laka  City   Tabernacle\nChoir\n8:55\u2014Newt Bulletin\n9:00\u2014\"Just Mary\"\n9:15-01d Country Mall\n9:30 Spiritual Issues of the War\n9:45\u2014Silver String!\n10:00 Sandy's Canadian HaU Hour\n10:30\u2014 Religious Period\n10:57-News Bulletin\n11:00\u2014Columbia Broadcasting Symphony.\nAFTERNOON\n12:45\u2014Fun With the Reviewers\nl:00-Church of the Air\n1:30\u2014 Band Music\nL45-BBC News\n2:15-Treasure Chest (CKLN)\n2:30-World Today\n2:45\u2014The News\n3:00-CBC String Orchestra\n3:30\u2014Talk\n3:35\u2014Canadian Grenadier Guard's\nBand.\n4:00\u2014Chase & Sanborn Program\n4:30\u2014Romance of Sacred Musit\n5:00\u2014Newt Bulletin\n5:03\u2014Carry On Canada\n5:30-Concert Music (CKLN)\nEVENING\n6:00\u2014Let's Face lhe Facli\n6:15-Organ Recital\n6:30\u2014BBC Newi\n7:00\u2014The Newi\n7:15 -Britain Speaks\n7:30\u2014Rocky Mountain Melody\nTime\n8:00\u2014Favorite Hymm\n8:30\u2014Organ Recital\n:00\u2014For Friendi of Music\n;30\u2014Sanctuary\n00\u2014Queer Quirki\n15\u2014The News\n30\u2014Bridge to Dreamland\n:00\u2014To Be Announced.\n:30\u2014News   Roundup  and   Talki\nRebroadcasts\n:00\u2014God Save tht King\nC|AT - TRAIL\n8:00\u2014Evening Vesper Hour\n11:00\u2014Sign olf.\nOther Periods\u2014CBC Programmel\n11:00\u2014To Be .Announced\nWAR - 25 YEARS\nAGO TODAY\nBy Tht Canadltn Pren\nAua 31, 1915\u2014Reported 21,581\nCanadian soldiers in France, 46,195\nin England and 61,777 in Canada.\nRussians captured 3000 German\nprisoners and 30 cannon in counterattack in Galicia. Italiani capture\nAustrian positions Southeast of\nTrenL\nSept 1, 1915 \u2014 Auitro-German\nforcei captured Luttk, fortified\ntown just North of the Gallclan\nfrontier. French marines landed on\nthe Island of Ruad. Syria. United\nStates Secretary of State Robert\nLansing assured by Germany that\npassenger liners will be warned be-\nFore attack by submarines.\nMen to Hope for\nBest to join R.C.N.\nAfter Training\nOTTAWA, Aug. 30 (CP)-Men\nwho want to join the navy but are\ncalled up for 30 days military training should lake their training and\nthen \"hope for the best, which is.\nOf course, to join the navy,\" Navy\nMinister Macdonald said at a press\nconference today.\nThe minister said the navy had\na waiting list of 15,000. Some 4,000\nmen were in training at Halifax and\na smaller number at Esquimau, B.C.\nThe minister said the 30-day\ntraining lo be given in militia encampments would do no harm to\npotential seamen. On the contrary,\nthe exercises in basic military principles would be of value If they\nwere fortunate enough later to get\nInto the navy.\nDiscussing Ihe personnel of the\nnavy, Mr. Macdonald said tne\nstandard of physical fitness for\nentry into the permanent force,\nRoyal Canadian Navy, had not been\nlowered but there had been slight\nalterations made in the standard of\nvision for those who have entered\nfor hostilities only.\n\"This was found necessary,\" he\nsaid, \"in order to gain the experienced deep sea fishermen many\nof whom are reaching middle age\nand whose changing vision is greatly outweighed by their value to\nthe service through experience.\"\nIAPANESE PREVENT\nCERMAN SHIP FROM\nLANDING AT KUAOTAO\nSHANGHAI, Aug. 30 (AP).-The\n1040-ton German coastal steamship\nHanna, with some 20 missionaries\n\u2022board, including Americana, returned to Shanghai today after having been stopped three times by\nJapanese warships in trying to\nreach the port of Kuaotao, South\nof Chekiang;\nPolice Watch Fifth\nColumnists in Raid\nLONDON, Aug. 30 (CP)-British\npolice have started a new drive\nagainst suspected fifth column activity during Nazi night air raids.\nOn recent nights, thtre have been\nspotted fires which police believe\nwtre  set  by  fifth   columnists   to\nfluidt German bombers to their ob-\neetives.\nIn the London arte, police observ.\ned tlashei of lights from a large\nblock of apartments. They raided\nthe apartments and took a man In\ncustody for ouestionlng.\nScotland Yard daily has received\nscores of calls from persons reporting what they believe to be signal\nlights. In moit etui, theie (lathes\nof light proved to be accidental.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"Maybe all thia trouble la\nProvidential. Easy llvin' has\nmade us soft and spoiled, and\nnothm' will make ut grow up\nexcept hardship and plenty of\nSatisfaction\nIt Auured With\nCorrect lelection of fixtures.\nCorrect selection of accessories.\nCorrect selection of materials.\nCorrect method of installation by\nmen skilled in their line of work.\nPlace    your    requirements\nwith us and we assure you\nultimate  satisfaction.\nPhone 666\nKootenay Plumbing\n& Heatinq Co., Ltd.\n357 Biker St.\n___________\n^**^im**-\n\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab_\u00bbSS\u00bbKS$SK\u00ab$M$S.\n\"Build B. C. Payrolls\"\nFOR\nICE\nCREAM H\n\"It is the very best of\nmilks for ice cream and\nother iced desserts, as it\nblends so well with the\nother ingredients, and\nfreezes so smoothly.\" \u2014\nMrs. P. |. Q., in a letter,\nwriting of Pacific Milk.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated and Vacuum Packed\n\u25a0&J)OSfOSi\u00bbiOS3!S&iSSSSSSSa-\n___\n_____;\u25a0\u25a0!\n Wave Upon Wave\nof German Planes\nRoar Over Britain\nLondon Streets Crowded When Third Alarm\nSounded; Sailor Smothers Bomb\nWith Hospital Blankets\nBy PAT USSHER\nCanadian Pren Staff Writer\nLONDON, Aug. 30 (CP.-Cable.-\nLondon'i third air raid warning cf\ntht day lounded late thla afternoon\nai waves ot Nui aircraft roared\nover Southeast England\u2014tbe United\nKlngdom'a air front line\u2014ln a series ot thrusts at the metropolitan\narea.\nA formation ot 20 bomben flying\nat great height was broken up by a\nswarm of British tighten during the\nhour-long raid. One was sent spinning' to earth with smoke pouring\nfrom its tail tnd two othen were\nlorced from the formation and flew\nfrom light with tighten following\nclose behind.\nThe Luftwaffe'! bomben unloaded their bombi in earlier attack! aimed at airdromes in the vicinity of the metropolis and the\nhome ciuntlei. The iky battles were\nfought at tremendous heights both\nmorning tnd afternoon over varioui parti of the Southeastern front\nline.\nThe thud of bombi wai heard ln\nauburban sections during the tint\nraid. The aecond. lasting less than\n20 minutes, sounded when the raiden again approached the capital.\nFighten intercepted and chaiea\nthem off.\nStreets ot the suburbs were\ncrowded with shoppers when the\nbomba were dropped. Mtn and women who had gone out after the\naecond warning ended bad to take\nshelter again.\nReports from a Southeait town\naaid that while London's iecond\nwarning was in progreis 12 high\nexplosive bombi tnd t few incendi-\nariei were dropped In outlying dli-\ntrlcti, and aeveral persons were injured and one nun died from ihock.\nSome houies were badly damaged.\nThe day'i iecond alarm lounded\nabout 3:30 p.m. (6:30 a.m. PST) but\nthe all clear lignal came ilx minutei\nlater.\nAn hour before the afternoon\nalarm sounded air battlei were reported over Southeastern England,\nwhere the ralden were trying to\ncross over mother section.\n\"Reports received up to 2 p.m.\n(5 a.m. MST) ihow that 10 enemy\naircraft are known to have been\nahot down. Six of our own aircraft\nhave been loit but the pilot of one\nll safe.\"\nUndeterred by their louei, the\nGermani apparently returned to\nthe attack by another route after\nonly a few noun, trying to force\ntheir way through the city'a defence! from the Southeast.\nDuring the flnt raid battlea raged\nfrom tht outskirts of th* London\ntrea all the way to the coast.\nA \"second communique, issued by\nthe Air and Home Security Minis-\ntries, iaid the German! came over\nln three lucceuive wtvei tnd were\n\"scattered tnd driven bick.\"\nThe Air Ministry communique\nannounced the results of the morning raid wu issued from the Ministry of Information'! ipecial deep\nshelter press room during the second raid.\nThe great Northwestern Industrial\ntrea of England wu the object of\nadditional night and dty German\nraids, described li iome of the\nheavieat of the war.\nA mother and two children were\nreported killed at Mancheiter and\na number of cottages wrecked. Reicue squads worked frantically to\nget out a number of persons trapped\nln the wreckage.\nSix personi were reported killed\nand many Injured ln another West\ncoast area.\nManchester Is one of the largest\nand most important industrial cities\nof England. It hai a population of\n760,000 and is 31 milei Eait ot Liverpool, to which it ia connected by\na large canal accommodating tea-\ngoing vessels.\nStill more raldi were aimed at\nSoutheaat England during the night\nThe home of the late Henry James,\nthe author, wu reported destroyed\nat Rye, an ancient Southeastern\ntown sitting on a high rock promontory crowned by an ancient caitle\nand fortress.\nBombs were dropped ln South-\neutern England while Nazi raiders\nalso were reported over two towns\nIn the industrial Midland!.\nAt tlmei u miny ai half a\ndozen dogfights were going on 25,-\n000 to 30,000 feet up in a cloudleii\nsky.\nAnti-aircraft gum gave the ralden their fint hot reception and\naaemed to have found the range, for\nthey continued firing for aeveral\nminutei before R. A. F. Spitfires\nand Hurricane! raced Into action.\nDuring the fint 19 minutei ot\nthe London alarm there wu ne\ntsuni ot Plane moton. Waffle\ncontinued and was, if anything,\nheavier than normal.\nFriday la London'! traditional\npay day and banka were crowded.\nA faw people took to air raid\nehelten but moat itood in doorways looking at the aky.\nA few momenta before the sirens\nsounded ambulances raced down\nthe streets to take their posts ai n\nusual during a preliminary warning.\nOne group ot three German planei\nappeared to have turned back toward the coait after tighten dived\non them.\nThe ralderi took full advantage ot\nany wisps of clouds there were.\nThree raiden which tried to take\ncover were followed by one Spitfire fighter while two more waited\noutside. As soon as Uie three came\nout the two Spitfires attacked them\nand the Germans headed for the\ncoast\nA Northwest England area was\nraided heavily several houra before\ndawn.\nThere were two known dead in a\nLondon residential section, where\ntwo scream bombs fell. There were\nat leut three killeed In an inland\ntown In the Northwest which reported its heaviest raids of the war.\nOtherwise there was only sporadic activity, and the Britlih capital came through the night with\nonly a \"stand-by\" warning. The air\nraid slreni were silent; anti-aircraft gum, except tot those In\none luburb, held their fire, and\nmillions of Londoners had their first\ngood night't ileep ln neirly a week.\nThe British Press Association said\nthe raiders which flew repeatedly\nover a Northwest England town,\n\"dropped their bombs st random,\nand some fell near a railway\nstation.\"\nThe Southeut ooestal area had\nthree raids during the night but thc\nonly definite damage reported wai\na leaside entertainment nail set on\nfire. An Anoclated Press correspondent on the Southwest cout reported one raider there wai believed to have been downed by\nanti-aircraft tire.\nAbout 20 high exploiive and Incendiary bombs fell on a Northeut\ncout town, trapping a family ot\nthree in the rulni of their house.\nA rescue iquad got out the parents\nand continued to search for their\nson. The bombi fell In a residential\narea, leaving a number of perions\nhomeless.\nElsewhere ln the Northeut, German planes dropped flares and in\nrural district! a number of water\nmains were ihattered.       ,\nLondon'i \"itand-by\" warning\nwu an innovation introduced in\norder that factory work need not\nbe halted each time a lingle German bomber or a few approacn-\ning ralden were reported. In the\nfuture, a \"purple\" light warning\nin munitioni and othen planti, as\nwell u hospitals and public lervice stations, .will indicate Nazi\nwarplanes are near, to be followed\nby the \"red\" lignal equivalent to\nthe sounding of sirens.\nThe London Preu, while acknowledging the 'unavoidable risks'\nentailed by the new policy, approved. Newipapera' pointed out\nthat sounding the sirens for only a\nfew ralden interfered with Britaln'i war effort and cited a Government itatement that \"everyone\nis in the front line at this time\"\nand \"must be prepared as a citizen', duty to take a rlik.\"\nThe resident of one London suburban district said he wai awakened by a \"terrific explosion.\" He\nadded \"everything seemed to sway\nu if in an earthquake.\"\n\"A lone raider had dropped its\nbomb and bolted,\" he said.\n\"Two houses were demolished,\nand other houses over a large area\nsuffered iome damage from the\nWait, which left a large crater.\"\nAt least five persons were killed\nduring attack on one Northeastern\ntown. A few others were reported\ninjured severely.\nA number of the cuualties\nwere caused when one ot the\nraiders, apparently hard hit, Jettisoned its bombs on a large\nhousing development, all but demolishing three houses and badly\ndamaging several others on three\nroads.\nIn another Northeastern area,\niome 30 incendiary bomba fell\naround an isolation hospital,\nOne fell through the roof of a\nward from which all except two\npatients had been removed to a\nshelter. One was a convalescent\nsailor who smothered the bomb\nwith blankets.\nA matron In the hospital, where\nthere are some 40 patients, said\nthat except for the hole ln thc\nroof \"there was no damage.\" The\nhospital lies some distance from\nthe ntarest town and ls surrounded by fields.\nOne or two personi were killed\nand some 30 Injured during a nlgnt\nAccuse British Again of Raiding\nNon-Military Targets in Germany\nBERLIN, Aug. 30 (AP).-The Oerman High Command Issued the following communique Friday morning:\n\"The tlr force's activity yeiterday\nwas limited to armed reconnaissance, in the course of which several air tights developed over South\neaitern England.\n\"During The night of Aug. 29\u201480,\nfighting plane units attacked several\nairportt in the counties of Lincoln\nand Suffolk, industrial planti at\nFellxtowe. airplane planti it Wey\nbridge and Langlejr-South WelU,\nand port facilities at Dundee, Leith,\nHartlepool and Liverpool. Exteni-\nive firei in the attacked regions,\nparticularly ln Liverpool port,\nahowed the success of the raids.\nBritiih port! again were mined.\n(The Brltiih communique, dealing\nwith the Northweit where Liverpool ls located, said \"flrei which\nbroke out. were soon brought under\ncontrol \" There wu damage to com\nmercial property in thla region.)\n\"Lait night Brltiih planei again\ndropped bombi on non-military target! in Weitern Germany. In the\nRuhr region aeveral residential sec-\ntlom were hit. Firei, however, were\nquickly quenched by air-protection\n\u2022quads. Other property damage was\nImmaterial. During the nocturnal\nflights into the Ruhr region, two\nenemy planet were ahot down by\nanti-aircraft.\n\"In the airtight! during the day\nIt enemy planei were bagged and\napt barrage ballooni destroyed. Seven of our own plaihes failed lo\nreturn.\n(A British statement laid nine\nGerman planei were shot down yesterday as against three British.)\n\"One submarine at night sank\nthree enemy merchant ships totalling 21,000 tons from a strongly protected convoy.\"\n(There was no confirmation of\nthii claim.)\nNILION DAILY NIWS, NILION. B. C_*ATURDAY MORNINQ. AUO. 11,' 1MO-\nt\/U\nraid'of aeveral houn over a Northwest coutal district.\nA children'! hospital -wu hit.\nHeavy anti-aircraft tire met planei\nwhich swept low in successive\nattacki.\nSlight damage to scattered bits ot\nproperty wu reported from Wales,\nwhere the cruh of bombi io frightened an elderly woman ahe died of\nshock.\nA man wai killed and ble brother\nInjured ln Northeutern town which\nwu itruck by 16 high explosive and\na number ot Incendiary bomba.\nIn a Northeut coutal town, .\nnumber of persons were trapped ln\nan air raid shelter under a fiih ihop\nln a working clui diitrlct. A bomb\n\u25a0cored a direct hit on the shop.\nRescuers reported they could\nhear voices shouting to them from\ndeep down beneath a great pile Of\nrubble.\nIn a Northweat country diitrlct,\nthere were believed to be teveral\ncasualties when a bomb bunt near\na public air raid shelter, which\ncollapsed.\nIn the hardest-hit Northwut cout\narea a number of people In a working clasa diitrlct were trapped under debris of ihattered dwelling!.\nCmdr. Beech Heads\nPacific Coast R.C.N.\nOTTAWA, Aug. 30 (CP).-Cmdr.\nJ. R. Beech hu been appointed\nCommanding Officer, Pacific cout,\nof the Royal Canadian Navy, with\nthe rank of Commodore firat class,\nNavy Minister Macdonald announced today.\nAppointment of Capt. Harold Taylor Wood Grant, H.CN., ot Halifax,\nu Director of the Naval Personnel\nat naval headquarters here was announced at the aame time by the\nMiniiter.\nCommander Beech's appointment\nwill take effect from Sept. 4 when\nhe officially relieve! Commodore V.\nG. Brodeur who has been appointed\nnaval attache to the Canadian Legation, Waihington, D.C.\nCommander Beech waa born ln\nSussex, son of Lt-Col. Beech, Indian Medical Service. He wu educated ln India, Univenity school,\nVictoria, B.C.. and Royal Naval\nCollege of Canada. He saw service\nIn varioua ships of the Roytl Navy\nduring the war and hu been ou\nactive service since.\nFour French Ships\nAre Requisitioned\nby Canada Gov't.\nOTTAWA, Aug. SO (CP)\u2014Four\nFrench merchant ships which\nwere ln Canadian barton when\nFrance sued tor tn annlitlce have\nbeen requisitioned by tbt Dominion Government tnd turned\nover to tha Canadian Government\nMerchant Marina, Naval Minister\nMacdonald announced in t preu\nconference today.\nTilt ships have a tottl tonntge of\n13,879 to be added to Canada'a Mer.\nchant Marine, already augmented\nby 21.184 tone ot Danish shipping\ntaken over when Denmark wu\ninvaded.\nTbe French ahipa taken over are\nthe Saint Malo, Maurlenne, Llsleux\nand Limoges.\nBoth the Maurlenne and tbe Saint\nMalo will be particularly valuable\nto the Allied Merchant Fleet,., the\nMinister uid. \"The former la a 3253-\nton veuel rated at 16 knots, capable of 16 knots. She wu constructed by one of the world's mott\nfamous builders of dlesel-engined\ncraft at Copenhagen, Denmark, in\n1039. The Saint Malo, 5770 toni, wu\nbuilt during tba lut war In Ka\nwasaki, Japan.\n\"The other two ships wert ao\nquired by Franoe during recent\nmonthi from U.S. ownen. The Llal-\neux, 2694 toni, wu morarly the\nMumani, the Limoges, 2256 tons,\nwas known as tht Wallingford.\"\nTbe four ships requliltiontd wtrt\nowned by private shipping companies ln France. It wu emphuized\ntheir ownen would be reimbursed\nln due coune, which probably will\nmean at the end ot the war.\nWhile a few of the unmarried\nmembers of the crewi ln theie\nships have preferred to remain in\nthem under Canadian ownership,\nmost of the crews have been repatriated to France. Canadian\ncrewi are taking, their placu.\n\"The four vessels, u Canadian\nGovernment requisitioned ahipa,\nwill fly the blue ensign,\" tbt Minister aald. \"Merchant ships, privately owned, are only afforded this\nboner by compliance with certain\nregulation! iuch u having tha\nCommtnding Officer and a certain\nnumber ot the ihlp'i company on\nRussia Awaits Answer lo Protests;\nArmy and Navy Begin Manoeuvres\nMOSCOW, Aug. 30 (AP)- The\nSoviet Russian Army began manoeuvres today in a region described u \"the Western special military\ndistrict\" as Moscow awaited an\nearly and satisfactory\" reply to\ntwo proteita to Rumania naval\nmaneuveri also were under way in\nan undisclosed locale.\nThe Red Attny troopi practlied\nIn offemive tactics under obscrva'\ntion by Marshal Semen Timoshen-\nko, Commissar of Defence. (There\nwai no indication that the \"Weitern\" District wu near the troubled\nRumanian border).\nRuaiia'i two protest! to Bucharest charged Rumanian troops with\n\"provocative actions\" on the Russian-Rumanian frontier and warned\nof possible \"grave\" conaequences\nof any further incidents.\nTass, Soviet News Agency, disclosed the protests this morning.\nRussia stated in a note of August\n19 that \"Firing upon Soviet frontier troops by Rumanian troops\ncould not be tolerated\" and protested tn a iecond note yeiterday\nagainst \"new hostile actiona\" by\nRumanian frontier troops and\nagainst \"a number of cases of violation   of   the  Soviet  frontier  by\nRumanian military aircraft\".\nIn some cases, Soviet frontier\nguard! \"were compelled to return\nthe fire,\" Tau uid. The Russian\nprotest of yeiterdiy itated \"Tht\nSoviet tide u yet bad had no casualties, but ihould caiualtiei occur\nmatten would take a grave turn,''\nThe Soviet Government placed\nupon toe Rumanian Government\n\"the entire responsibility for pout\nble consequences of the above\nmentioned actions \"bf Rumanian\ntroopi and military aircraft,\" Tas\u00ab\nsaid.\nRumania replied to tha firet pro\nteat on Auguit 26, Tass nld, contesting the Soviet charges and declaring Rumanian frontier detachment! had. been fired upon, and\nthat the Soviet aircraft had croued\nthe Rumanian frontier.\nRuula'i Aniwer aaid tha Rumanian ehargei would be investigated,\nbut reiterated that \"The Soviet\nGovernment needs an early and satisfactory aniwer\" to Its own charges\nand stated that despite Rumanian\nassurances itep! were being taken\nto evoid Incident!, \"vlolttiont of\ntht Soviet frontier by Rtspinlan\ntroops continued up to the pruent\nday.\nthe retired or emergency lltt of Hit\nMijesty'i Naval or Naval Rwervt\nForcu.\"\nIt waa explained at tha Tramport\nDepartment that although all tht\nahipa owned by the Canadian Government Merchant Marine befort\ntht war, vera sold, tht company,\nwhich   wu   entirely  Government\nowned, wu ntvtr wound up. When\nCanada entered tbt war and began\ntaking over ahipa it wu decided to\nplace them under thia corporation\nnther than tbe Canadian National\nWut Indies Steamship Company\nwhich operated the service between\nCanada and the Weat Indies.\nR. C. Vaughan ia tha directing\nPAOI  8IVIN\nVice-President of both companies\nand they have the stmt Boards ot\nDlrecton.\nLONDON Aug. \u00bb (AP)-The Air\nMinistry announced today that of   |\nnine British planu ahot down ln\nyeiterday'a fighting,  aeven  piloti\nwera saved.\nCanada's Land, Sea and Air High!\nGreatly Increased in First Year of War\nBy C.  R.  BLACKBURN\nCanadian Preu Staff Writer\nCanada, a land of peace, hu now\ntransformed itself Into a determined\nbelligerent spending almost $2,000,-\n000 a day in a grim war effort\nagainst Germany and Italy. Day by\nday the war effort and the costs\ngrow.\nGROWTH OF FORCES\nTwelve months ago when Nail\nGermany hurled its strength on\nPoland and Canada followed Great\nBritain and France into the conflict\nthe Dominion had a small standing\narmy, an insignificant air force, a\ntiny navy. It had great capacity for\nproduction of war materials, but\nfew orders.\nToday the strength of the Canadian Active Service Force is 153,842,\nof which 39,839 men are in England\nguarding the island fortress beside\ntroops from other parts of the Empire.\nSpectacularly, the Royal Canadian\nAir Force hu grown into a great\nstriking force and continues to expand in size and strength. Its enlisted personnel on July 24 wu announced as 19,433 and now probably\nexceeds 21,000. on the basis of a\nweekly enlistment of 400. At the\noutbreak of war R.C.A.F. itrength\nwas 4061.\nEqually spectacular hu been the\ngrowth ot the Royal Canadian Navy\n\u2014in ships from J5 to 21 Inside a\nyear and in men from 1700 to 10,-\n000. For the first time In her history Canada has sent warships to\nGreat Britain to fight with the Royal Navy.\nCHANGES IN CAPITAL\nOttawa, nerve centre of Canada's\nunprecedented war effort, has undergone great transformation since\nlut September. From this capital\nis directed the administrative and\norganizing force which hu sent 60,-\n000 soldiers, sailors and airmen\noverseas, created the nucleus of a\ngreat home defense army, built up\na navy from the smallest beginning,\nand established an air force.\nThii hu meant to Ottawa the addition ot thousands ot worken to\nthe public service, appropriation of\nevery foot of available office ipace,\nconitructlon of two large temporary\noffice structures and creation of\nnew  departments  of  government.\nAfter the Initial ytar of tha flnt\nGreit War Canada had more mtn\noverseas than in the pruent instance but conditions were far different, although the aame enemy\nthreatened.\nThen the main effort wu to put\nmanpower on the front line to hold\nthe enemy or drive him back from\nhis entrenchments. Now the call on\nCanada Is for men but alio tor materials ln staggering quantities, for\nair tighten and tor assistance ln\nkeeping the Atlantic lanes open.\nTo meet thli responsibility tha\nGovernment has iet up Ministries\nfor Air and Naval Services within\nthe Defence Department, a new Department ot Munitions and Supply,\nand a new Department of National\nWar Services.\nAIR DEVELOPMENT\nMost impreuive of all phases of\nthe war effort is the air development. In addition to building the\nRoytl Canadian Air Forct Into a\npowerful unit which hu bten on\nactive lervlce defending Eaitern\nand Weitern shores alnce the war\nbegan, Canada hu given leadership\nand administration for the gigantic\nAir Training Plan, which la deiigned to turn out an endless flood of\ntrained air penonnel from all parta\nof the Empire.\nIn July and Auguit, 1915, after\na year of conflict, Canada wu mobilizing men for service oveneai as\na chief war responsibility. Indui-\ntrial development for war purposes\nwai practically nil\u2014lt wai to come\nlater. There wu little or no thought\nof the possibility of the Dominion\nbeing Invaded.\nAfter a year of war ln the present\nstruggle Canada hu not only aent\ntwo diviiioni to England but hai\nprovided garrisons for certain of\nthe Britiih Weit lndiei, Iceland,\nNewfoundland, and the strategic Atlantic and Pacific fortification!.\nNaval and air units operating on\nboth coasts, particularly on the Atlantic, convoying merchant fleets,\npatrolling against possible attack!\nby air or water and aulltlng tba\nnaval blockade of Europe,\nPrime Minister Mackenzie King,\nalwaya a man of peace and criticized by his political opponents tor\nfailure to cooperate fully with tha\nBritish Government In dofence mat-\nten, was in office with a record-\nbreaking majority when war broke\nout\nCALLED PARLIAMENT\nHe immediately called Parliament\nand obtained almoit unanimous approval f6r a declaration ot wtr on\nGermany. Within seven monthi after wtr itarted he want to tbe\ncountry in a general election and\nobtained an tven greater majority\nof supporters in tbt House of Commoni.\nDiplomatically, the mott Important war development tor Canada\noccurred at Ogdemburgh, N. P.,\nwhere the Prime Mlniiter and Preiident Rooievelt recently met and\nagreed on a plan to establish a Joint\ndefence board for Canadi and the\nUnittd Statei.\nPrepare for th<\nNew Fall Termi\nWhat Will Your Daughter Do?\nLet Ua Give Her a Training ln Dress-Design, Pattern Cutting and\nDreu Making\u2014A Coune That Will Be Useful to Her tor the Rett\nof Her Uie.\nSPECIAL RATH NOW\nWe Ctn Arrange Board and Room ln Homea In Return for Services\ntor Out-of-Town Students\nACADEMY OF USEFUL ARTS\n187 Savanteanth Avanua Weat, Calgary, Alta.\nThe following select-];\ned private schools and\ncolleges offer training\nin practically every\nbranch of education.\njKootenay parents can\nconsult this directory\nto advantage in making their plans for the\n194041 term.\nQueen Margaret's School\nDuncan, Vancouvtr Iiland, B. C.\nCountry Boarding School for Girls, Beginners to Matriculation. Own chapel, swimming pool, farm, ponies.\nPrincipals\nMISS N. C. DENNY, A.R.R.C.     MISS D.R. GEOGHEGAN, B.A,\nTRAIL BUSINESS COLLEGE\nFALL TERM\nOpens September 3rd\nFRANCES  I. COOK,  B.A.,   Principal\n648 Weir St. Trail, B, C.\nNorth Shore College\nNorth Vancouver, B.C.\nBOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL FOR BOYS\nJunior Grades to Matriculation\nOpening September 10\nP. T. DALE and L. C. STORR\nWrltt for Full Ptrtlcultn\nSt* Joseph's Academy\n523 Mill Street, Nelion, B. C.\nBoarding School for Girls and Young Ladies\nDay School for Girls and Boys\nPrimiry,  Elementary tnd High School   Department!. Puplli\nprepired   for   Matriculation   Examinations.   Complete   Coune\nIn Muiic leading to London College tnd Toronto Conservatory\nef Muiic Examination\nCOMPLETE COMMERCIAL COURSE\nTermi Moderate\nAddrett\u2014Siiter Superior\nVANCOUVER BOARD OF SCHOOL TRUSTEES\n-**_______)_______\n)\nDiploma Counea, Day\nand Evening Claim\nin Drawing and Painting, Deiign, Commercial Art, Modelling,\nPottery, Craft*. Int.\nDecoration.\nVANCOUVER\nSCHOOL OF ART\nCaml.lt and Dunimulr Streeti\nI        OPENING\njtrI. 7in\nSchool\n1185 Burnaby 8t.,\nVancouver, B. C.\nBOARDING AND DAY\nSCHOOL FOR GIRLS\nKindergarten to Matriculation.\nTelephone Marine 9016\nPrincipal\nMISS M. L. SEYMOUR\npitman!\nVANCOUVER'S LEADING\nBUSINESS COLLEGE\nOffers You a BETTER BUSINESS TRAINING\nGranville at Broadway VANCOUVER, B.C.   I\ni i\nBrentwood College\nRESIDENTIAL SCHOOL FOR BOYS\nAgei 12-18\nBURSARY FUND AVAILABLE\nFor Further Information Apply to the Headmaster\nA. C. PRIVETT, M.A.  (Cantab)\nVICTORIA, B. C.\nDUFFUS\nSCHOOL OF BUSINESS\nFall Term Opens September\nBookkeeping - Stenography\nCivilService\nThe School That Gets Results\nDAY AND NIGHT CLASSES\nSeymour and Pender   Vancouver, B. C.\nWrite for Catalogue\nA Government School of Repute...\nThe Provincial Institute\nof Technology and Art\nIN  CALCARY\nAnnounces Opening Dates\nfor the 1940 Term\nSEPTEMBER 3\nFor Aviation\nSEPTEMBER 30\nFor Ragular Term\nNote New Location! for Boyi' and Girli' Claim\nCLASSES FOR BOYS CLASSES FOR GIRLS\n_r..hantr_l s_rvii__ will Ba       ^xt, Dressmaking and Mlllln-\nMechanical Servloei will Be wm -e -_ ^ &f\nTaught    in    Victoria   Park      Tam_t coate Reiidence,\nExhibition Groundi, Calgary.       Amherst   Avenue,    Calgary.\nAdditional Subjects to Be Taught During the Fall Term\nShort Courses are available in Tractor, Farm Mechanics. Forging,\nDleiel Engines,' Acetylene Welding and Electric Welding, etc\nAviation Mechanics, Electricity, Motor Mechanics.\nThe Building Program Courses are alao offered either ln Day\nor Evening classes.\nWRITE  TO  THE  INSTITUTE  IN  CALGARY  FOR   FREE\nBOOKLET OUTLINING DETAILS.\nHON WILLIAM ABERHART,\nMinister ot Education.\nW. O. CARPENTER\nPrincipal.\nHENDERSON\nSECRETARIAL\nSCHOOL LTD.\nCalgary,   Alta.\nTHI\nHENDERSON WAY\nCROWD\nFor   Information   v\/rlte \u2014\nHENDERSON SECRETARIAL SCHOOL LTD. 509-8th\nAve.  W.   CALGARY,\nALBERTA.\n_     .__\n\u25a0      \u25a0\n'\"_*\u2022 _\u25a0' '\u25a0_ _aV' i__riV__i *\u25a0\"' -ttt\n__\n MfWIlflPf..-. J. ^SP|\u00abPiPPip\n\"\u25a0'\nw\u00bb^nwm*'i* ]i .iiijyiiijiiiiii|miwiijpi.ni  .mn\nPADS   EIOHT\n-NEL80N DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B, C.-SATURDAY MORNINQ, AUG. S . 1M0-\n^*?,\"'_______v___________m_______r^___i_____i''    t* _____ \u25a0'    '\u25a0'\u25a0 \u2022\u25a0\u25a0MwL^fl\n-_________*______\u25a0     WstM ______ \"____Mn\n_t*tti\nMrs. J E. Holt, Willow Point, Assistant Quartermaster; Miss D. lllingworth,\n\u00a7uartermaster; Mrs. W. C. Motley ot South Slocan, District Commissioner and\namp Advisor; Mrs. W A. MacCabe of South Slocan, Division Commissioner;\nMiss Paula Gansner of Nelson, Camp Nurse; Miss M. Hannah, Camp Commandant; and Mr.s H. Plank, Cook.\nMiss Betty Holt, Willow Point; Mrs. J. L. Syddall, Shutty Bench, Kaslo;\nMiss Mae MacFarlane, Nelson; Mrs. J. D. Lang, Kimberley; Mrs. J. E. Holt,\nWillow Point; Miss H. Miller of Cranbrook, Swimming Instructress; Miss Lily\nEdwards,  South  Slocan; and  Misa  Mildred Horrigan, Willow   Point,  Games\nMistress ''\/'\u2022\/\u25a0'\nAT\nGIRL\nGUIDE\nCAMP-\nKOKANEE\nKimberley\nCranbrook\nGray Creek\nCrawford Bay\nKaslo\nShutty Bench\nWillow Point\nNelson\nSouth Slocan\nThere's no need for second call when dinner gong sounds. Here Guides line\nup st dining halL\nWith' over 60 girls of East and West Kootenay attending, and with'two Old Country Guiders \u2014 Miss M. Hannah and Miss D. lllingworth \u2014 directing it,\nthe Girl Guide 1940 camp at Camp Busk, Kokanee, has been an outstanding success. Pictured here are the Guides who gathered from Kimberley, Cranbrook, Cray Creek, Crawford Bay, Kaslo, Shutty Bench, Willow Point, Nelson and South Slocan; Camp Officers; and District and Divisional Commissioners who made an inspection of the camp on the day that the Nelson Daily News Staff Photographer visited Camp Bisk; and some of the camp training.\nGuides demonstrate artificial respiration while In\nspecting officials watch their work.\nBetty Holt, Mildred Horrigan, Joyce Denny, Edith\nHeddle, Catherine Hamilton, Marjorie Learmonth and\nMrs. J. E. Holt\nPauline Abbot, Doris Hutchison, Mary Honeyman,\nLucile Fontaine, Edith Angove, Mabel Glen and Mrs.\nJ. D. Lang.\nTo rescue bather who ls In difficulties, rescuer must\nknow how to tow her in water. Here Guides are instructed in one method.\na:W.*\u00ab?_a^_h_iJ&a\u00ab__Sl\nNot least Important In camp life Is erecting tents-\nand keeping them trim.\nGwen Jones, Mae Bowkett, Miss Lily Edwards, Dc I-\nothy James, Florence Nixon, Barbara-Cunningham and\nNora Tomich. Bernice Lister, kneeling.\nBack row\u2014June Jesty,'Joyce Palmer and Mrs. J. L.\nSyddall. Front row\u2014Shirley McHardy, Winnie Palmer,\nMarjorie Meeres and Naomi Allsebrook. In front-\nMaureen Syddall.\nMary Donaldson, Joyce Rees, Miss Mae MacFarlane,\nMargaret Donaldson and Effie Small. Bernice Burgess, Debbie\nKneeling. and Janie\nWaldie, Mary York, Nancy York, Alma Ob. _\nWaldle.\nCatherine Hincks, Alice Lymbery, Betty Holt and\nJudy Davis.\nBarbara Ashe, Connie Harrison, Ellen Bidder, Bron-\nwen Preston and Alice Fredrikson\nGertrude Foster, Judith  Olson, Evelyn  Shannon,\nJessie Munroe and Bernice Littler.\nU.S. Ammunition\nDepot to Be Built\non Indian Island\nSEATTLE, Aug. SO (API-Norman Littell, Assistant Attorney-\nGeneral in charge of thi Lands\nDivision of the Department o!\nJustice, announced today the completion ot legal arrangements (or\nthe Immediate acquisition by the\nUnited Statu Navy Department\nfor Iti air forcei of two Islands\nnear Port Towniend, Wash.\nA naval ammunition depot will\nbs built on Indian Island at a cost\not $1,340,000. The island has an\narea of 2600 acres.\nProtection Island, which covert\n394 acres, li not to be developed\nImmediately, but will eventually\nbe uied ln conjunction with the\nammunition depot\nNewfoundland Is\nVisited by Canada\nI) _$. Defence Body\nHALIFAX, Aug. 30 (CP) - A\ngroup ot United States and Canadian Service officers took off ln\na Royal Canadian Air Force bomber from here today for Ottawa\nafter a swift survey of the Dominion's Atlantic defences.\nThe party, Including three US.\nand two Canadian members of the\npermanent Joint Defence Board of\nthe two nations, arrived here Wednesday from the capital. It was announced today that they spent yesterday on a flight to Newfoundland.\nEn route to Newfoundland, they\nsurveyed from their bomber the\nNova Scotia coastline and the island\nas well. At Newfoundland Airport,\nthe group studied defence facilities\nand inspected Canadian forces stationed there. Other departments of\nthe Eastern Command also were\nvisited by the group before their\ndeparture outside of the visit to\nNewfoundland, lt was not disclosed\njust where they went or what they\nsaw. But It was believed that they\nviewed tiie Royal Canadian Air\nForce setup ln tills area.\nThe party arrived a day after the\nopening two-day meeting of the\nnewly created Joint Defence Board\nconcluded at Ottawa. Information\nthey gathered in this region will\nb* presented to the Board at Washington September 9.\nIt is In the Eastern Command\narea, which Includes Newfoundland, that any possible U.S. air or\nnavel bases on British soil are expected to be established if such\naction Is decided on.\nReport Alaska Highway\nIs Being Considered by\nCan.-U. S. Defence Board\n2 U.J. Missionaries\nKilled In Sudan\nCAIRO, Aug. 30 (AP.-The Governor General of the Sudan announced today that two American\nmissionaries were killed and two\nwounded by \"deliberate\" Italian\nmachine-gunning ot an Isolated missionary post in the Sudan.\nThe Governor-General of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan is a British officer appointed by Egypt with British assent. Administration, however,\nis carried out through British district commissioners.\nThe large territory, Just South of\nEgypt, has been under repeated\nItalian attacks, particularly on the\nEastern frontier near Gallabat, opposite Ethiopia, and Kassala, opposite Eritrea.\nThe Governor's report said that\ntwo Italian planes attacked Doro,\nan Isolated station of the Sudan\nInterior Mission, in Upper Nile\nProvince about 55 miles Southwest\nof Kurkuk, Aug. 23.\nAt least 30 bombs were dropped\nand then the Italian fliers used their\nmachine guns, the report said.\nOf the staff of five persons, It\nsaid, Dr. and Mrs. Robert Grieve\nwere killed and Rev. and Mrs. Kenneth Oglesby were wounded. All\nare Americans.\nA Miss Walsh, an Australian, was\nunhurt.\nThe Grieves were said to have run\nout of the mission station waving a\nlarge American flag but this failed\nto ward off the machine-gun attack\nby the Italians.\nTORONTO. Aug. 30 (CP)-Offic-\nials of the Sudan Interior Mission\nhere said today they had received\na cable confirming the death of Dr.\nand Mrs. Robert Grieve in the\nbombing by Italian planes of an\nisolated Sudan Interior Mission at'\nDoro Aug. 23.\nAlthough Dr. Grieve and his wife\nhad been born in the United States\nthey were well known in Canadian\nmissionary circles. Dr. Grlevc's\nfather was a native of Ontario. He\nnow lives in Spokane, Wash.\nBUMBLETT NAMED HEAD\nO. DOMINION FIRE CHIEFS\nBRANTFORD, Ont., Aug. 30 (CP)\n\u2014Chief George Bimblett of the\nPeterborough, Ont., Fire Deoart-\nment was elected President of the\nDominion Association of Fire Chiefs\nat the closing session of that organisation's annual four-day convention\nhere today.\nProvincial Vice Presidents elected\ninclude: Alberta, Chief R. Lindsay,\nLethbridge; British Columbia, C. W.\nThompson, Vancouver; Saskatchewan, Chief P. T. Smith, Swift Current\nNew \"War Paint\"\nPuzzles Germans\nBERLIN, Aug. 30 (AP) - Same-\nthing \"resembling rough black soot\"\nsmeared on some British planes\nmaking them difficult to see at\nnight. Is giving German chemists\nsomething to analyze informed\nsources said today. This new \"war\npaint\" absorbs the rays of German\nsearchlights.\"\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 30 (API-\nDevelopment of a paint which so\nreduced the visibility of an airplane that it was able to run a\ngauntlet of searchlights without\nbeing detected was reported by\nUnited Statei Army Air Corps officers today.\nCommenting on reports from Ber-\nlis. that the Royal Air Force is using a sooty coating to b'ick out\ntheir bombers, the officers said the\nU. S. Army has been using a special buff paint which absorbs light\nso that when subjected to the glare\nof \u2022 searchlight lt reflects few rays\nthat can be seen by observers.\nBy ROM MUNRO\n(Canadian Press Staff Writer).\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 30 (CP). -\nThe proposal to build a military\nhighway from the United States to\nAlaska through British Columbia\nprobably is one of the questions before the joint Canada-United States\nDefence Board, it was indicated today.\nAnthony J. Dimond, Democratic\ndelegate to the House of Representatives from Alaska and a strong supporter of the highway plan, said in\nan interview that such a road would\nbe essential to any Joint defence\nagreement between Canada and the\nUnited States.\nHe stated that he believed the\nmatter had been discussed at the\nOgdensburg, N. Y\u201e meeting between\nPrime Minister Mackenzie King and\nPresident Roosevelt and that il was\nalso on the agenda of the Defence\nBoard considerations.\nBefore Mr. Roosevelt went to Og-\ndensburgh, Mr. Dimond sent him a\ntelegram reminding him of the importance of the highway North\nAmerican detence.\nA reliable official source aaid \"It\nis reasonable to assume\" that the\nhighway plan is among the questions before the Defence Board, although East coast defence would\nlikely be considered before any\nWest Coast program,\nThe cost nas been a stumbling\nblock so far. It has been estimated\nby different authorities here at anywhere from $15,000,000 to about\n$125,000,000. Mr. Dimond said cost\nwould not exceed (25,000,000 and\nthe highway could be completed ln\n18 months, and possibly ln a year.\nThe Alaskan representative has\nbeen ln Congress since 1932 md\nhas lived in Alaska, moit of hli\nlife working aa a prospector and\npracticing law.\nHe said that If the United States\nfleet was forced to move from the\nPacific to the Atlantic it would leave\nAlaska totally undefended and\n\"with Alaska in possession ot an\nenemy the United Statei Is ln\nJeonardy.\"\n\"In my opinion the building ot\nthis road In order .to ensure the\ncontinuous supply of our military\nposts snd bases ln Alaska ls not\nonly of great but of outstanding\nimportance,\" he added.\n\"I think it is absolutely vital to\nstart the construction of the road\nright away and to rush lt to completion. Otherwise we may some\nday find ourselves with some perfectly good defence works, by tha\nway of air bases, in Alaska but\nwithout adequate means of supply*\ning them.\"\nMr. Dimond declared he had every confidence In the Canadian\nspirit ot cooperation on this matter\nfor it means, he laid, as much to\nthe Defence of Canada aa it does to\nthe Defence of the United States.\n\"The dense population and tha\nEastern seaboard will almost Inevitably act as a magnet to draw tht\nneat wealth concentrated on our\nfleet to the Atlantic in the case ot\nserious trouble,\" he said.\n\"I ask how the military ami\nnaval forces and the civilian population ln Alaska are to be supplied\nunless we build, and build fmme-\ndiately, the highway to Alaska?\"\nCromwell Thinks U.S. Can Be Greater\nHelp by Slaying a Benevolent Neutral\nTORONTO, Aug. 80 (CP)\u2014James\nH. R. Cromwell, former United\nStates Minister to Canada, today\ndeclared his conviction that the United States \"can do more to assist\nthe Empire's cause\" by remaining r\nbenevolent neutral rather than taking an active part in the war.\nAddressing the press dsy luncheon at the Canadian National Exhibition, Mr. Cromwell coupled his\ndeclaration with an expression of\nopinion that the average American\nis turning away from isolationism\nThe American, he said, has begun\nto question the validity of the doctrine that the ruthless destruction\nof Christian ethics beyond the frontiers of our own continent is no\naffair of his.\"\nMr. Cromwell reiterated his belief that the United States should\ntransfer 60 over-age destroyers to\nthe Royal Navy\u201410 more than the\n50 usually mentioned in discussions\nin this matter\u2014and urged strong\ncooperation in defensive efforti on\nthe part of Canada and the United\nStates.\nHe devoted much of his speech\nto a castigation of \"that noisy but\nIneffectual little group of men with\nlittle minds, our professional Isolationists,\" whom he called \"Trojan\njackasses\" with \"loud and futile\nbrays.\"\nSentiment In the United States,\nhe told his Canadian audience, is\nstrongly against participation in the\nwar but at the same time the vast\nmajority is strongly in favor of aiding Britain.\nHe said he ls convinced that the\nUnited States should remain a benevolent neutral because \"it is obvious that the longer my country\nremains out of war, the longer time\nwe have to prepare our defences.\nThe stronger our fleet and land\nforces becqme, the greater will be\nour restraining influence on the dictator powers.'\nIt was Mr. Cromwell's first major\nspeech in Canada since March 19\nwhen he said in Toronto that no\ncitizen of a neutral country could\nbe indifferent to the war in which\nhe believed the Allies were fighting for the perpetuation of individual freedom and liberty.\n\"You may remember the veritable\nstorm of abuse and contumely which\nmet that speech across the border,\nhe said. \"And you all know how\ncompletely my contention and my\nwarning b my fellow countrymen\nhas been justified by the course at\nevents.\n\"Yet despite all that has occurred\nsince May 10 (when Germany in-\nvided Holland and Belgium) wa\nfind these same groups .,, continuing their campaign of abuse and\ncalumny against any official who\nhas the courage and abnegation to\npoint out to his people the dangers\nnow so imminent. ;..\n\"You have witnessed, only recently, the threats, insults and petty\nsarcasms heaped upon the head of\nAmbassador Bullitt for his... courageous speech delivered at Independence Square in Philadelphia.\nYou have heard one isolationist\nSenator go so far aa to term Mr.\nBullitt a traitor; the same Senator,\nin fact, who last March accused ma\nof treason.\"\nMr. Bullitt has been vindicated.\nhe said, by the vote in the Senite\nlast week ln which approval waa\ngiven to the United Statea peacetime conscription bill.\n\"The enactment of the conscription bill shows that in the states\npublic sentiment has been aroused,\"\nne said. \"My country is aware of\nthe danger which threatens It from\nabroad . . . and from within.\"\nHe said the United States has\ncome to the realization that President Roosevelt was \"advocating thi\nChristian way when, ln 1937, with\nextraordinary courage and foresight, he suggested that America\nJoin with other nations ln quarantining aggressors.\"\nWithout naming him, Mr. Cromwell criticized Col. Charles A. Lindbergh for his recent isolationist\nspeeches, saying:\n\"But a great aviator, who Is far\nmore a credit to. his country ln the\nair than on the air, professes to\nview with equanimity the spectacle\npf America isolated in a totalitarian\nworld. Now if our aviators are\nhenceforth to assume the ralmenti\nof statesmanship and shape our foreign policies, I hope that \u2022 coucga\nln political economics will be ln^\neluded in the air training curriculum.\"\nPearl River Again\nClosed to Shipping\nHONG KONG, Aug. 30 <AP).-\nJapanese authorities today closed\nthe Pearl River at Canton to all\ncommercial shipping for unexplained \"military reasons.\"\nInformed quarters here said Japanese troop movements were under way frpm Formosa to Canton.\nThe Japanese have closed the\nriver several times in the past to\nscreen troop movements.\nToday's order necessitated postponement of the scheduled departure for Canton of the United States\nSouth China patrol flagship Mindanao and also of a Standard Oil\nCompany tanker..\nEXCELLENT PROGRESS\nIN DEFENCE TALKS\nWITH BRITAIN, SAYS F.D.R\nHYDE PARK, Aug. 30 (AP) -\nPresident Roosevelt, at his pren\nconference today said in response\nto \u2022 question thit very excellent\nprogress ls being mide tn conversations with Britain on United States\nacquisition of naval and air bases\non Briitsh soil ln the New-World.\nHe said, however, h\u00ab could not\nforecast when a definite announcement of some sort of action might\nbe made, and could not enter Into a\ndiscussion of it\ns.R. 120\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Llquot\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia\n_______\n.\u25a0\u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0 e: ,_\u25a0\/..___>. ____^l||\n, <!_____________\u25a0\u25a0*.   .\n__________________ i_____iiH____'l        11       ______\nI 1   _____\n \u25a0*rmvm\n.   \u2022\nVTa^W^J\nI\"\nSPORTS\nThird Base Star\nTOMMY MelNNES\n\"Two atralght? No air, it's not\ngoing to be that easy tor those\nCards,\" snaps Tommy Mclnnes,\nNelion third base star, u he contemplate! what he and the Nelson\nSenion plan on doing to the Trail\nCardinala here Sunday afternoon\nin the aecond game of the West\nKootenay League semi-final*,\n'Since coming to Nelaon from\nLethbridge. Mclnnes hu been\ncovering \u00bb whol* lot of third baa*,\nand In the lut halt of the cutrent\naeason, his bat hu been poking\nout a lot ot baae hlta.\nBlairmore Beats\nNatal in Playoff\nNATAL, B. C. \u2014 Coming from\nbehind to score three runs tn two\nhits, a walk and an error, the Blairmore Columbui Club Cardinal! defeated the Natal-Michel Buffaloes\n8-8 in a sudden-death baseball game\nplayed at the Natal Ball Park on\nWednuday to win possession of the\nGoddard Cup. The defunct Elk Valley Senaton were previous holden\nof the playoff cup.\nThe Buffaloes, playing without\nthe services of three of their regular players ln Sadlish, Chlsraar and\nChala, outhit their opponent! 11-9\nbut made no fewer than aix errors\npaving tbe way for many unearned\nruns. Blairmore committed but three\nerrors.\nR. Halko pitched for the Buffaloes\n\u25a0nd wu opposed by John Dobek,\nboth pitchers, although being hli\nhard, going the distance.\nThe Buffaloes led (-5 in the third\nand 8-6 In the eighth Inning.\nIncluded In the 11 Buffalo hits\nwere three triples, by Peten, Krall\nand Gergel, and young K. Galla\nhad three safe hits. Blairmore making but nine hits, mtde good use of\nfive walki and the aix erron. The\ngame wu umpired by C. Decoux\not Blairmore and A. Koshman' of\nNatal.\nScore by Innlnga:\nR H E\nNatal-Michel .. 213 020 000-fl 11 t\nBlairmore    320 100 03x-\u00bb  t  1\nBRITISH\nEMPIRE\nWINES\nA tasty table Wine-\nCocktail Ingredient\nMUSCATEL\nPAARL\nTAWNY\nA PORT Wine\nof delicious Havoi\n_.'.\u25a0.,..\n%. ri.-npu.ATiit' ^\n>.   ^SiMIAHO**\nThii advcniatmni il act publiibtd\nI 01 diipliycd by the Liquor Control\n| Board or by the Govtrnnunt ci British\n| Columbia-\nNelson (Iub Has\nlo Win Sunday lo\nSlay In Running\nCardinals Play Second\nof West Kootenay\nSemi-Finals\nNelion Seniors am up agalnit\nIt\nThey matt th* Trail Cardinal*\nat th* Raoreatlon Qreundi gun-\nday aft\u00abrno\u00abn In th* iecond game\nof th* Wut Kootenay Bawball\nLeague MmWInali, and a defiat\nwill mean tha and ef thalr championihip hopes. They loat the flrtt\ngam* In Trail 8-6, afttr leading\nuntil th* lait ef th* eighth, and\nthat game climaxed a itrlng'of\nheart-breaking lone* for tht Nil-\nton club.\nThty lost six gamea in the League\nschedule, and all were by one run,\nmoat ot them low scores.\n> Louia Demore, Trail Cards' Coach,\nconfidently looks for the league\nfinals to open September 8 against\ntheir fellow-townsmen, the Indians.\nHe will pit hla reliable Veteran\nSouthpaw, Cliff Bogstie, against tht\nbest Nelson hu to offer. It la not\nknown definitely whether Coach\nRay Humble will be In trom Salmo\nto handle the club trom the bench,\nand the Nelson management dots\nnot know for sure who will be the\nitarting pitcher.\nHUMBLE ONLY ABSENTEE\nWith the exception of HUmble,\nout tor the leuon with a bad knee,\nthe Nelion iquad will be at full\nstrength. Gordon Rlchardion will\ncatch at any rata, and \"Lefty\" Mydaniky, Jack Carpenter or perhaos\nTommy Mclnnes will gtt th* hurling assignment.\n\"Doc\" Chodorcoff comes la from\nthe outfield to handle first bast In\nplan of Humble, and the rut ot the\nWl*14 will comprlie tithe Al Xuer-\nby or Erni* Beland at second, Carl\nLocatelll at short and Tommy Mc-\nInnes at third, tht outfielders will\nbe chosen from Jack Fisher, Steve\nSmith, Jesse Saaby, Art Ron, Steve\nSeott and Mydinsky.\ntf Nelaon wins flit game, a coin\nwill be tossed to decide where the\nthird and deciding game will be\nplayed tht following Sunday.\nTo round out Ut* holiday baseball fart for tht Nelaon fani. tht\nIndians com* to town for an exhibition gam* with th* Nelsonites.\nProceed* of the gate will go toward paying Coach Humble'i hospital bill. Sunday'! playoff game\nItarti at 1:90 and Monday'a exhibition at 1:30.\nNATIONAL\nBrooklyn   * 11 0\nCincinnati      1 10   8\nHamlin and Franks; Thomson,\nBeggs and Lombardi.\nPhlladelphla-Pitttburgh, poitpon-\ned.\nAMERICAN\nBoaton 111 2\nPhilidelphlt   IM\nOstermueller, Heving and Foxx,\nPeacock; Beckman, Heusser, Babich\nand Hayei.\nWtihlngton-New York, Postponed.\nINTERNATIONAL\nNewark   \u2014 -  B 11 0\nBaltimore _    2  0   I\nBranch and Padden; Hughei tnd\nRedmond.\nSBOONrt-\nNewtrk ,  \u00ab 11 1\nBaltimore  S 7 2\nPeek, Johnion *nd Wtrren; Col-\nliar, Jonu and Redmond.\nCleveland     4  8   1\nChicago     2 12   2\nFellir and Hemtley; Lee and\nTresh.\nAMER. ASSOC'N\nKansu City i, Milwaukee 1.\nLouisville 1, Indianapolis 0.\nToledo I, Columbui 4.\nRUGBY STAR JOINS C.A.S.F.\nCALGARY. Aug. 80 (OP) .-Paul\nRowe, star backflelder of tha Calgary Bronks rugby turn and fullback of the All-West grid team, hu\nioined the Canadian Active Service\nTorce. He enlisted with the new\nanti-aircraft battery being formed\nher*.\nRftw* uid he hopes to ba lbl* tc\ncontinue to play tor the Bronki U\nlong aa he is stationed here.\n--NILION DAILY NIWI, NILION, B. C-IATURDAY MORNING. AUG. 81.\nladybird Tuning Up\nL. T- Gilbert, ipeedboat, the Ladybird, tuning\nup lh preparation tor the Kootenay Lake 20-mile\nchampionihip at the Klnimen \"Win the War\" wattr\ncarnival Labor Day.'\n\u2666-Daily Newa Photo.\nrm-\nWar Revives Britons Jays Scribe;\nHomes Broken Up, Future Uncertainr\nBut Happier Than Were Year Ago\ntmtmtmmmftmWtsottottoemtotttptmttsm\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nLetten may bl publlihed ovtr \u2022 nam de plume, but th* actual\nnam* of th* writer muit ba glvtn to th* editor aa evidence of\ngood faith. Anonymoua letten go In th* waita piper bukit\ni.Mrm^ifii..i.<WM'-M'J1^^^^\nUrquhart Couldn't\nGet Nelson to Act\nTo Th* WMor of tht Dally Newa:\nSir-\nReferring to your article in Friday  morning's  paper re  lacrotse\nplayoMs:\nThe President hu been trying\ntor three .weeka to gtt a referee\nappointed by Nelion. Thli matter\nwu taken up with the Nelson Club\nManagement u soon u Mr. DesBrisay told me he wu moving to\nTrail. Last. week the President\nphoned Ne)son twice to get aome\naction but without results.\nAt the annual meeting the ques\ntlon ot the West Kootenay finals\nwu discussed and it wu decided\nthat the semi-finals would be \u25a0\ntwo out of three aerlea and that\nthe finals wouM b* a'three out of\nfive series, and the mlnutu of thia\nmeeting were sent to Mr. Stibbs u\nVice-President, but the League\nnever received a reply. There was\nnot a Nelson representative at the\nannual meeting, of which they were\nduly notified, and to *!l correspondence with the Nelson Club since\nthe beginning ot the seuon I have\nonly received ona reply.\nIn order to give the Nelaon Club\nno grounds for-complaint, the\nPresident made arrangements with\nMr. Brennen on Thursday evening\nto act In Friday's game.\nIt ia only (air of the Nelaon New*\nu a reputable newspaper to at\nleut ascertain the facta from the\nLeague official! and not apy one\nclub before making rash apd Unfounded statements.\nJ. F, Cooper,\nRoisland, B. C, Aug. 30, 1M0.\nSarazen Defeat\nTakes Color Out\nof P.G.A.Tourney\n\u25a0y OAYLI TALBOT\nAnoclated Prtu Iporti Wrlttr\nHERSHEY, Pa, Aug. 30 <AF)-\nMoat of the color and the commotion\nwant out of the Profeulonal Golf-\nera Association championship today\nwhen Gene .Sarazen wu beaten by\nSun Snead on the 36th green,.but\nfour powerful young golfen lurviv\ned to battle in the lemi-finala tomorrow.\nBealdei Inud, thou remaining\nIn tha match play elastic ware\nRalph Guldahl, national ope*\nchampion In 1937 and 1938; Byron\nNelion, open king In 1939, and\nHarold (Jug) McSpaden, who recently loit hit Canadian open title\nto Snaad In a play-off.\nGuldahl trimmed Ben Hogan,\nyear'i biggeit money winner, 3\nand 2.\nNelion, who meets Guldahl tomorrow, icored an easy 8 and 3\nvictory over Eddie Kirk of Farming-\nton, Mich.\nMcSpaden gave Paul Runyan the\nday's wont shellacking, 8 and 8.\nSaraien shot a great 88 ln the\nmorning to take a two-up lead over\nthe Canadian champion. He shot a\niteady par 38 on the fint nine ln\nthe afternoon to itand three up at\nthe 27th hole.\nThere waa no hint of the impending disaster when Snead holed a\ngood putt for a birdie on the 29th\n> cut hla deficit to two holes. They\nhalved the next, and the veteran\nitill wu two to the good with lix\nto play.\nThtn Saraien'i gtmt finally\nwtnt te pot On tht 31it hole, a\nlong ent, ht drove Into tht rough,\nput hit itcond behind t wide-\nipreading buih and wound up\nwith a ilx, ena up.\nCame the 33rd and he sprayed his\ndrive Into the rough again, flailed\nhla recovery beyond the green, and\nthe match wai square. On the next\nhole, the 34th, Snead studied a 12-\nfooter for a long time and knocked\nit In tor a birdie to Uke the lead\nfor the fint time In the match. They\nshot para on the final two holei.\nBear Become Available to Kootenay\nNlmrods Sunday; Ducks September 21\nNelaon and district nlmrods art\nbeginning to plan thtlr weekend\nhunting expeditions, tor itarting\ntomorrow the ban are let down on\nbatr, for a 10-month* aeuon.\nSunday.ii alao opening date for\nmountain goat in the Kootenay, except ln the Grand Forki-Green-\nWood electoral district, and for\nmountain iheep in the Fernle, Cranbrook and Columbia electoral dis-\nWets. The goat season terminates\nDecember 15 and the sheep seuon\nOctober 31.\nTht seuon for bull mooie In the\nFernle and Columbia districts, except for thtt portion bf tht latter\nregion South of Toby Creek and\nWeat of the Columbia River, is\nSeptember 18 to October II.\nSeptember 15 will tee deer-bucki\nonly\u2014 available throughout the diitrlct for three monthi except ln\nGrand Forks-Greenwood electoral\ndistrict West of Boundary Creek.\nOn fhe ume date elk, bulls over one\nyear old, may be abot In the elec-\nGuttapercha Tires\nFor Perfect Crip and Salt Driving\nShorty's Repair Shop\n714 Biker Ntlion. B.C\ntoral diitrlct! ot Fernie and Columbia, except the portion of the Columbia diitrlct weit of the Columbia River. The elk season is two\nmonths..\nGAMI BIRD!\nFor upland game birds, the earliest opening date is September 15.\nBlue and Franklin grouse then become available tor a month. The\nRuffed or Willow grouse closes at\nthe end of September.\nOpen 'season for pheasants, cock\nbirds only, is October 8 to 18 In\nthe portion of the Nelson-Creston\nelectoral district South of a line\ndrawn East and West through Kootenay Landing and in the electoral\ndistricts of Columbia and Cranbrook; and October 13 to 31 in the\nportion of the Grand Forks-Greenwood electoral district East of a\nline drawn North and South through\nthe Kettle Valley Railway station\nof Eholt\nThe season for European partridge, in the Grand Forks-Greenwood electoral district Eut of a\nline drawn North and South through\nEholt, is October 13 to 31.\nDucks and other migratory game\nbirds u Wilson snipe, coots and\ngeese, will have to beware Ihe\nhunters from September 21 until\nDecember 5. Wood snd Eider ducks\nUe protected.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\nBy Tha Canadian\nGene Kunei, 28-year-old Nerrli-\ntown, Pa, professional, fired * two-\nundet>par 88 in the final round for\na 72-hole total of 280 to win the,\nCanadian open golf championship at\nMontreal, five years ago today. Vic\nGhezzl of Deal, N. J., placed iecond, two strokes behind Kunei.\nCAPE TOWN (CP)- Owing 'to\nthe number of table tennii playen\nbeingcalled up for active lervlce,\nthe Weitern Province Association\ndecided to abandon the Men's competitions. The women'i league will\nbe carried on.\nGarrosslno Wins\nT Class Skeet\nShoot, Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, Aug. 30 -\nTwenty-seven shooters participated\nin a special akeet event, held ovet\nfrom the. big elephant shoot a week\nago, between Cranbrook and Kimberley marksmen ln the Kimberley\nRod and Gun Club'i weekly ahoot\nWednesday. The contestants wert\nclusifled according to their seuon's\naverage.\nThe honora were shared equally\nbetween the two towni, C. Oarroe-\nlino and C. Stewart of Kimberley\nwinning classes as did H. McLaughlin and Dr. Green ot Cranbrook.\nWinners and the aeores follow:\n\"A\" claw-C. Garrosslno 22, B.\nBramall 21, T. Hogarth 10, J. Dean\n20, and R. Armitrong 20.\n'\u2022B\" clase-H. McLaughlin IB, W.\nWhiting 18, O. Martin 18, V. John-\naon 17, F. Bate 17, F. Shannon 17,\nJ. Atcheton 12 and P. Johnion 12.\n\"C\" data \u2014 Dr, Green and S.\nMurtman 11.\n\"D\" elaaa-C. Stewart 17, S. Doi\naim 18, W. Douglua 14, F. Skribe 14,\nJ. Handley 18, J. MacFarlane 12,\nA. Richardson 10, B. Stewart 10, tnd\nJ. Riddell 9.\nVisitors who did not enter th*\ncompetition were L. Scott of Lethbridge with 22, B. Murray of Kimberley with 17 and A. Sinclair of\nInvermere with 11.\nJOCKEY RBTIr.lt\n\"Brownie\" Carslake of London,\nEngland, one ot the moit successful\njockeyi for nearly 40 yean, hu\nretired on account ot ill-health and\nwill devote himself to training. An\nAustralian, 54 years old, he rod*\nseveral classic winners, being first\nin the St. Leger three times.\n(BDJTOR8 NOTE: A Britiah view-\npoint after nearly a year ot war\nwith Germany is presented in th*\nfollowing article written by Evelyn\nA. Montague ot The Manchester\nGuardian. Mr. Montague ierved with\nthe Britlih Expeditionary Force as\na war correspondent. He ia a aon\not the late C. E. Montague, the essayist and novelist).\nBy IVELYN A. MONTAGUE\nLONDON, Aug. 30 (CP)-Brlt-\nain today ia a happy country; Thtt\nia the strangest thing that has happened to ui in all this strange year.\nI am a happy manl My home hai\nbeen broken up, my child la ln on*\npart ot the country, my possessions\nin another. My wife and I ar* In a\nthird, living in a stranger's house,\novertaxed, overworked, uncertain of\nthe future, cut off from moat ot our\nsmall pleasures, restricted ln our\nmovements , threatened with\ninvulon..\nBut we are happier than vje wera\n11 month! ago.\nTwenty-two yeara of unnatural\nliving are behind the change. They\nbegan ln 1918 when a million or\ntwo ot our aoldiers came home vowing that there ahould be no more\nwar tor any reaion whatever.\nAa time went on, ignoring all tha\nevidence, we deluded ourselves\nthat a tough, revengeful people\ncould be won away from their pur-\npose by our disarmament.\nOur more amiable qualities \u2014\nreadiness to believe other men's\nword, friendliness toward a beaten\nenemy \u2014 helped to foater the\ndelusion.\nWe upheld the League of Nations\nwith promises which we could not\nperform. We tried to periuade our-\nselves that we could tame the Italian lion by letting him run about\nloose, but keeping hla food away\ntorn him.\nDisillusion was slow and painful.\nIt began for us in China. It went\non in Abyssinia, Spain, Austria and\nCzechoslovakia.\nAt lut came Munich. Happy or\nbitter, all ol ua knew them \u2014 or\nvery loon afterwards \u2014 that the\ndream was over.\nWe took stock of our armaments\nand set to work to make good tbe\nyean that the locust had eaten.\nAnd all through the year that\nfollowed, u we tuned up our armament factories, built our air raid\nshelters and trained our civilian\narmy, we grew more bitter u we\nrealized more fully how we had\nbean fooled.\nWhen we went to war, and over\n(hapman (amp Aquatic Stars Capture\nFirst Annual Kootenay Swim Meet\nmwm__<________*_________\n .\t\n_____m_\nCHAPMAN CAMP, B.C.-Deepite\nchilly weather, the flrtt annual Kootenay Swimming Aiiociation meet\nheld Friday at the Chapman Camp\nswiming pool drew the largeit entry In the history ot Chapman\nCamp aquatic iports. The meet wai\nheld under the auspice! of the\nChapman Camp Swimming Club,\nand next year will be held in Trail.\nChapman Camp aquatic atari kept\n.\"\u2022and aggregate championship honors at home, with Kimberley iecond in the running and Cranbrook\nthird.\nThe individual aggregate winner!\nfollow:\nJunior girls\u2014B. J. Stanton. Kim-\nbtrley, first; R. Masi, Kimberley,\nsecond. \u2022\nJunior boys\u2014D. Gallpen, Chapman Camp, first; A. Topliff, Ron-\nland, second.\nLadiei\u2014V. Eberleln, Cranbrook,\nfirst; L. Conrade, Chapman Camp,\nsecond.\nMen\u2014Lome Tognotti, Trail, tint;\nCarl Baillle, Trail, second.\nFollowing the gala a banquet was\nheld for competitors and officials\nin the Oughtred Sail, and prizes\nwere presented by H. R. Banks.\nRE8ULT8\nResults follow:\nBoyi, 8 and under-B. Clark,\nKimberley, firit\nGirls, 8 and under\u2014E. Entwlsle,\nChapman Camp, first; L. Schulli,\nChapman Camp, second; C. Stanton,\nKimberley, third.\nMen, 100 yards\u2014W. Johnion,\nChipman, first; Carl Baillie, Trail,\nsecond; Alan Toghottl, Trail, third.\n1:02.\nLadies, 100 yards\u2014L. Conrade,\nChapman Camp, first; M. Conrade,\nChapman' Camp, second. 1:22.\nBoys, 12 snd under, 29 yards\u2014A.\nBurrows, Chapman Camp, first; B.\nIrvine, Chapman Camp, second; K.\nMorrison, Chapman Camp, third.\nGirls, 12 and under, 25 yards\u2014I.\nBentley, Chapman Camp, first; L\nMassie, Chapman Camp, second; F.\nBarrett, Chapman Camp, third.\nBoys, four styles, 100 yard*\u2014D.\nGallpen, Chapman Camp, first; E.\nRalph. Moyie, second; B. Herkimer,\nChapman Camp, third. 1:22.\nGirls, four styles, 100 yards\u2014B.\nStanton, Kimberley, first; B, Irwin,\nChapman Camp, second; A, Young,\nChapman Camp, third. 1:37.\nSenior medley, three styles, 79\nyards\u2014P. Gallpen, Chapman Camp,\nfirst; J. Sjursen, Trail, second; w.\nJohnson, Chapman Camp, third. :94.\nLadiei, 90 yardi\u2014V. Eberleln,\nCranbrook, first; L. Conrade, Chapman Camp, second; M. Conrade,\nChapman Camp, third. :31.\nBoyi, 10 and under \u2014 S. Files,\nCranbrook, flnt; R. Stanton, Kimberley, iecond; Schulti and Banki,\nChapman Camp, third.\nGirls, 10 and under\u2014A. Evani,\nChapman Camp, tint; E. Entwlsle,\nChapman Camp, second.\nBoys, 14 and under, 90 yards\u2014B.\nFord, Kimberley, flnt; B. Herkimer,\nChapman Camp, second; B. Conrade, Chapman Camp, third.\nGirls, 14 and under, 90 yards\u2014R.\nMaul, Kimberley, tint; B. J. Stanton, Kimberley, aecond; G. Barrett,\nChapman Camp, third. :32.\nJunior boyi, 100 y*fd\u00bb-E. Top-\n.\t\nlltf, Rosiland, fint; B. Turner,\nRossland, iecond; D. Gallpen, Chapman Camp, third. 1:08.\nJunior girls, 100 yards-P. Buzan\nKimberley, first: E. Mann, Cranbrook, second; P. Farquar, Chapman Camp, third. 1:21.\nLadies' medley \u2014 V. Eberlein,\nCranbrook, fint; L. Conrade, Chapman, Camp, second; M- Deltz, Kimberley, third. 1:02.\nMen, 100 yards\u2014S. Bone, Fernle,\nflnt; Lome Tognotti, Trail, iecond;\nJ. SJunen, Trail, third. 1:03.\nJunior boys' relay, Rossland, flnt;\nKimberley, second; Chapman Camp,\nthird. :53.\nJunior girls medley\u2014P. Buzan\nKimberley, firat; B. Irwin, Chapman\nCamp, lecond; P. Farquar, Chapman Camp, third. 1:11.\nLadiei, backstroke, 29 yards\u2014V,\nEberlein, Cranbrook, fint; B. J-\nStanton, Kimberley, iecond; R\nMassi, Kimberley, third. :18.\nMen's breast-stroke, 90 yard! -\nLome Tofcotti, Trail, fint; B. Gallpen, Chapman Camp, iecond; H.\nRobertion, Kimberley, third. :32.\nJunior glrli' relay, 100 yardi \u2014\nKimberley, first; Chapman Camp,\niecond; Roasland, third. 1:09.\nJunior boya, diving\u2014E. Ecdeston,\nChapman Camp, fint; B. Leaman,\nChapman Camp, iecond; T, Ham,\nRossland, third. 88 points.\nSenior men, diving\u2014Carl Baillle,\nTrail, firit; S. Stone, Chapman\nCamp, lecond; T. Ham, Rossland,\nthird. 88.8 points.\nSenior ladles, diving \u2014 P. Reid,\nCranbrook, first; L. Conrade, Chapman Camp, second; A. Young, Chapman Camp, third. 43.8 points.\nJunior hoys, medley\u2014D. Gallpen,\nChapman Camp, first; B. Conrade,\nChapman Camp, second; A. Bell,\nKimberley, third. 1:07.\nLadies' relay, 100 yarda-Cran-\nbrook, firat; Chapman Camp, second; Kimberley, third. 1:04.\nMen's relay, MO yardi \u2014 Trail,\nfirst; Chapman Camp, second; Kimberley, third. 1:92.\nThe composition of the relay\nteams follow:\nJUNIOR ROYS-\nRoHltnd Junior boyt-E. Topliff.\nJ. Hamilton, J. Wright and B. Turner.\nKimberley junior boyi\u2014W. Swan\nA. Bell, G. Smith tnd B. Ford.\nChapman Ctmp\u2014B. Conrade, D.\nGallpen, B. McKenzle and B. Herki\nmer;\nJUNIOR GIRLS-\n, Kimberley \u2014 B. J. Stanton, P.\nBuzan, M. Dtitx and R. Massi.\nChapman Camp\u2014Pa Farquar, G.\nBarrett, A. Young, and B. Irwin.\nRoisland\u2014Wright, smith, Conroy\nahd Wright\nLADIES-\nCranbrook\u2014V. Eberleln, P. Reid\nand E. Mann.\nChapman Camp\u2014L. Conrade, B\nIrwin. A. Young and M. Conrad*.\nKimberley\u2014B. J. Stanton, R\nMusi, M. Deltz and P. Buzan.\nMEN-\nTrall-Carl Baillle, Lorn Tognotti,\nAlan Tognotti and J. SJunen.\nChapman Camp\u2014D. Gallpen, S,\nStone, P. Gallpen and W. Johnson.\nlllcX\nMat NINE\nall of ua hung the certainty ot lou\nand destruction of hopes, we wtr*\nhappy at lut\nWe have had bad times since then.\nWe were distressed and worried by\nthe Aphony war\" and angered by\ntha retreat from Norway. There\nwere black days when Leopold laid\ndown hla arms with a suddenness\nthat invited a harder nam*, when\nour troopa teemed inescapably trapped at \u2022 Dunkerque, when Petain\nwithdrew France from tha struggle\nand left us to tight alone.\nWhen France surrendered lt\nseemed tor the fint and lut time\nthat we might not win.\nBut the good times have outweighed the bad.\nThe rapturous ecitasy ot the\nwhole British ptoplt ovtr the reicue of the B. E. F. from Dunkerque wu not wholly, or even\nmainly, joy at th* laving of huibandt tnd ton*.\nIt was tha happiness ot recovering\nour faith ln ounelvei, upped by\nyeara of unnatural, meekneas in\nthe face ot insolent injustice. When\nthe heroic atory ot Dunkerque became known, every Briton aald ta\nhimself exultantly: \"By God, we\nare a great people still. We are the\ngreat lighters and adventurers of\nthe world. What other army and\nnavy could have done it?\"\nFrom that moment thia nation\nwai twice u formidable u It had\nbeen before.\nWt htve had other rapturous\nmoments, when Narvik or Oran or\nthe River Plata showed that we had\nrecovered our ancient knack ol\nstriking hard and quick, without\nwaiting to apologize beforehand,\nwhen we knew that right wu on\nour ilde.\nThis year of war has been for us\na proceu ot discovering that we\nstill have the barbaric virtues which\nwe haye been to busy condemning\ntor 21 yean-\nOur young men are itill capable\nof being ilfliple-hearted and heroic.\nThe boy* who a ftw yetn tgo aa\nstudents it Oxford were announcing\nthat they would not fight tor King\nand Country, htve fought the Germans ln the sky with such a fantastic daring that the outside world\nfinds It hard to believe the stories\nof their vlctorlet.\nWe have no exaggerated respect\nfor one of our enemies and the\nmoit complete contempt tor the\nother.\nWe tre buay, pleued with what\nwe have done to far, delighted to\nfind that we can atlll enjoy discomfort tnd danger adventurously.\nFreeman Furniture\n.    Company\nIht Bout* at Furniturt Values\nEagle Blk.    Nelion   Phont 111\nTrade In Your\nOLD FURNITURE\nAl Part Payment on Youi\nNEW FURNITURE\nGolf Champion\nJIMMY ALLAN\n\"I'll .be in the groove,\" uya Jimmy Allan confidently u he prepares for defence of his Nelson\nopen golf title he won for the second time lut year. He ia the one\not only two players who have won\nth* Leith Cup two yean who will\nbe competing the annual LaMr\nDay tourney at Nelson Golf le\nCountry Club, opening rdunds of\nwhich will be played Sunday. The\ntournament will be brought down\nto the finals Monday noon.\nCarlCarlson won the trophy in\naucceuive yetn\u2014\"37 and '38, and\nAllan won lt previously ln '36.\n164 Shotguns, 236\nRifles Registered\nin Nelson in Week\nNelson City Police lince August\n13 have registered 238 rifles and 184\nshotguns, totalling 400 firearms, the\nproperty ot citizens. Besides these\na large number of small arms have\nbeen registered.\nThe registration of firearms Is a\nprecautionary war measure being\ncarried out throughout Canada.\nRegistrant! are required to give\ntheir age. country of birth, origin,\nand whether a British subject or\nnot; the type of gun, manufacturer'!\nnam* the gauge or ctllbre tctlon\nand reglltratlon number.\nCHINESE  MURDER CHARGE\nHEARING SET SEPT. 3\nRBOINA, Aug. 30 (CP). - Hearing of two charge* of murder laid\nagainit Toy Ying, Chlnele, will\ncommence ln King's Bench Jury\nCourt at Shauntvon on Sept 3. Toy\nYing Is accused of hevlng murdered Mah Hop, prlprletor of the\nGrand Hotel at Shauntvon, and\nMah Sal, In the hotel list May 3.\nBrooklyn Beats\nReds; Boston Upr\nBeating Athletics\nBy Tht Canadian Praaa\nBrooklyn Dodgers defeated Cincinnati Redi 8-3 yeiterday, cutting\nthe National League Champions'\nlead to 714 gamei, before heading\nfor home.\nFr-nK MoCormlek hit hit 18th\nhome run and the only other time\nthe Redi were able to icore wu in\nthe ilxth when Ernie Lombardi and\nJim Ripple hit successive doubles.\nPete Reiser and Dolph Camilll\nhit home runa ln the sixth Inning,\nCamilll'* being hla 18th.\nBoston Red Sox gained a half\ngame on the idle third-place New\nYork Yankees by beating the Athletics 5-4 In the Amerlcin League,\nDoc Cramer's double and Ted Williams' triple, scoring Cramer, broke\na 4-4 deadlock in the aeventh.\nBobby Feller, pitching Kir tight\nball ln the pinches, racked up his\n33rd victory as Cleveland Indians\ndefeated Chicago White Sox, 44\nbefore 44.877 spectators ln a night\ngame at Cleveland.\nFeller wu hit freely but wu almost untouchable with men on the\nbues. He left 11 runners stranded\nand atruck out 10 batten.\nThe victory wai Cleveland'i aecond ln ilx gamei and stretched\ntheir American League lead to 114\ngamei over Detroit and five gamei\nahead of the third-place Yankees.\nU.S. Air Training\nPlan Resembles\nEmpire Scheme\nBy ROSS MUNRO '\nWASHINGTON, Aug. 30 (CP)-\nA* a major feature of the preparedness, drive, the United States ia\nswiftly developing an air training\nplan to turn out 7000 r'lot* a year\nfor the army air cropi. The scheme\nis somewhat similar to the British\nCommonwealth Air Training plan\nand it was intimated in official military circles here that the two plans\ncould be coordinated lt the necessity\narose.\nIn addition to the pilot training\nprogram, the United State* also\nwill train 3600 gunner-bombardieri\nand navigators annually, it was\nlearned at the War Department.\nThis development ii to provide\nairmen for the 10,000 combat and\ntraining planes being built tor\nthe United States army and navy\nat present and for the steadily\nIncreasing production of aircraft\nplanned for the next two years.\nIt ls expected by the administration that a productive capacity of\n30,000 planes a year will be reached during 1942.\nWaihington looke on President\nRoosevelt as \"a navy man\" but he\nshows a particularly keen Interest\nin the progress of the army air corps\nthe principal air arm in the United States which has no separate air\nforct. The navy has planes of ita\nown but the air situation ls dominated by the army.\nAt a press conference thia week, '\nMr. Roosevelt took most of the 45-\nminute parley with newwnen to discuss plane production and air training. He knew all the answers and\ntalked with enthusiasm of progress made. Down at the War De-\nreali_M_ and sympathizes with, the\npartment they say the President\nproblems of building up the air\ncorps. The military men feel they\nare getting real support from the\nWhite House, which il the propeil-.\nIng force In Washington today on\nmany weighty Issues.\nitattinA\nHS\nAMERICAN\nW L\nCleveland     73 80\nDetroit      71 83\nNew York    87 84\nBoston     88 86'\nChlctgo  \u2014....   68 50\nWashington   62 70\n71\nPet Bhd\n.803-\n.573   214\n.554   444\n.540   6\n.516   7V_\n.426 30\n.405 33\n.400 34\nSt. Louts    81\nPhilidelphlt    48\nNATIONAL\nCincinnati     76 it   MS -\n98   52   .567   7 '4\nSt.\" Loul*     63   56   AM 1214\n\"   .511 1314\n.517 14\n.496 1614\n48   72   .406 2714\n.333 3814\n62 57\n68 58\n62   63\nBrooklyn\nSt. Louis\nNew York\nPittabutgh\nChicago   ..\nBoston\t\nPhiladelphia     30  78\nSOLDIER MANSLAUGHTER\nCASE RIMANDED SEPT. 4\nBRANDON, Man., Aug. 30 (CP).\n\u2014John H_ber*tock, Brandon, faced\na charge of manslaughter in City\nPolice Court today fn connection\nwith the death Aug. 10 of Bombardier Kenneth Robert Fleetwood, of\nCamp Shilo, who died as a result\nof Injurlei received in a collision\nwith a motorcycle driven by Hab-\nentock.\nHaberitock wai remanded without plea to Sept. 4 and released\non J500Q ball. .    '\nedsi...ivest...UDi s best\nThis advertisement Is noi; publlihed or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nBy Tha Anoclated Pren\nBatting (three leaden ln each\nleague)\n' G AB R H Pet.\nRadcliff, Browni 132473 67166.350\nWilliami, R Sox 116447112154:345\nAppling, W. Sox W 441 70151.343\nRoweU, Beei ....101365 39120.329\nF. McCormick, R 122488 78155.320\nWalker, Dodgers 112428 58137.320\nHome runa: American League\u2014\nFoxx, Red Sox, 34. National League\n\u2014Mize, Cardinals, 37.\nRuns batted in: American League.\n-Greenberg, Tigers, 111. National\nLeague\u2014F. McCormick, Reds, 103,\nThis advertisement is not published\nor displayed by thc Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of\nBritish Columbia. -\nI\n_ti_iff_1____ ll'ilfllAfraHtll fir^---^''i'\u2022 '\u25a0 'A\nI\n PAU TIN\n-NELSON DAILY NIWS. NILION. B. C-SATURDAY MORNINQ. AUO. Si. 1940\u2014\nDominions\nMen and\nto Help Britain in War\nRallying\nSupplies\nBy H. M. PETERS\nCinadian Preaa Staff Writer\nAtter a year of war Hitler sprawls\nover Europe, behind him a itrlng of\nmilitary triumphs over weaker nations. Before him, rising to greater\nmilitary strength than ever before,\nstand Great Britain and the Empire. That's the picture\u2014after a\nyear of war. Britain haa been fight-\ning for 12 months\u2014in Belgium and\nFrance and Norway and Africa\u2014\naqd has yet to achieve her maximum itrength. She li Juat itarting\nmatt production of airplanes, to\nshow Germany what she is capable\nof doing ln the air. The Royal Navy\nis stronger than lt was in September, 1839.\nBACKED BY DOMINIONS\nBehind her, contributing a never-\nending stream of men and war materials, are Canada, Australia, New\nZealand and other nations of the\nEmpire. Like Britain, they also are\njust starting to mass-produce the\ninstruments of war that will stop\nHitler.\nAfter a year of wtr Hitler finds\nhit grettett enemy \u2014 Britain \u2014 far\nmore formidable than the Britain\nof 1939 or indeed, the Britain of\nthe First Great War. He hai little\ntime to review his luccesses against\nthe weak nations because British\nbombing planes, steadily becoming\nmore and more numeroui, are dropping bombs on Germany every\n-  night.\nA year of war, itarted Sept. I\n1939, when Germany invaded Poland, divided itself into four main\nphase*:\n1. The Eutern campaign ln which\nGermany and Russia defeated tnd\ndivided Poland, and Russia attacked\nFinland.\n1 2. The Winter of defensive behind\nthe Maginot Line and the Westwall,\nof naval blockade and conflict it\ntea.\n.. Land war in the West, the German overrunning of five nations\nfrom Norway South to France.\n4. The Battle of Britain and the\n' attendant Anglo-Italian war in Africa. '\nPoland wat fighting atubbornly\nwhen the Russians invaded her\nSept 17, from the East Then the\nfight was over. Russia aoon fumed\nupon little Finland, and finally,\nafter a hard struggle, penetrated\nthe Karelian Isthmus defences (VI-\nborg) and other concessions.\nThe Polish campaign gave the\nfirst real hint that this war was\n.not to be fought as other wars. The\nGermans threw mechanized troops\nout far ahead of the main troops\nto disrupt communications, always\nin cloie cooperation with the air\nforce. Subsequently in other campaigns the weapons of espionage,\nof fifth columns, ideological propaganda and of parachute troops further emphasized the difference be;\ntween the Second Great War and Its\npredecessor of 1914-18.\nWINTER CAMPAIGNS\nThrough the Winter wai waged a\nwar of position. It was the stage of\nthe defensive behind the Maginot\nLine, the naval blockade of Germany and the examination of ships\ngoing to neutral countries surrounding the Reich.\nIn this period came the Winter's\nbrightest spot, the flashing of naval\nguns off Montevideo ln the 14-hour\nrunning lea-fight in which three\nBritish cruisers\u2014the Exeter, Achilles and Ajax\u2014disabled and drove\nthe pocket battleship Admiral Graf\nEast on Alert\nfor Defence\nof America\nBy JOHN LaBLANC\nCanadltn Prtu Stiff Writer\nAt Canada'a first line of defence\nm this continent, the Maritime provinces tfter a year of war stand\nu yet untouched by actual battle\nbristling with defences enlarged\nand strengthened in the months of\nconflict\nJust at the transition from peace\nto war did to 1914-15, the year has\ndone much to change the face of\nthese Eastern provinces. Now the\nwar dominates their life, and always in the background is the certainty if an invtsion ever comes,\n\u25a0the Maritimes will be the striking\npoint\nKey cities tre ready for that eventuality. An elaborate air-raid precautions setup ia in full swing, with\neven mobile dressing stations ready\nin some places. The navy takes care\nof the threat by water, with big\ngunt, too, guarding the shores.\nIndustrially and economically also\nthe war haa left Its stamp on the\nMaritimes. Factories that used to\nturn out materials of peace are\ngrinding out shells by the tens of\nthouiands. Coal mining production\nis up. Farmers are striving to produce more, with the Empire's needs\nin view.\nThe recent appointment of Major'\nGeneral W.H.P. Elkins to Canada's\nnew Eastern Military Command is\ndirect evidence of the Marltime's\nimportance In the defence of the\nDominlbn. General Elkins is responsible for guarding thousands of\nmllet of coastline.\nLONG COASTLINE\nThe shores of Nova Scotia. New\n. Brunswick and Prince Edward Island are ln General Elkins' com-\nmand as well as the coasts of Newfoundland, the Gaspe Peninsula and\nthe North shore of the Gulf of St.\nLawrence.\nOrganization of thii new command reminded the people of the\nMaritimes and adjacent territory\nthey were not only in thtt pirt of\nCanada closest to the Empire's enemies in Europe, but also a vital\nlink ln the Empire's war organization.\nHarbor traffic ls booming in \"Eut\ncout Canadian ports\". The . long\nconvoys come and go, preceded by\n.mineiweeper! and flanked by the\nwatchdogs of the navy.\nSpee Into the Uruguayan capital,\nending t threat to Allied and neutral shipping in the South Atlantic.\nThe flnt contingent ot the Canadian Active Service Force landed\nin the United Kingdom Dec. IT and\nothers followed during the Winter\nuntil a atrength of two divisions in\nthe United Kingdom wu attained.\nLater on Australian! and New Zeal-\nanderi joined In the defence of Britain.\nThe third stage\u2014war of movement\u2014opened with dramatic iud-\ndennets April 9 when Germany Invaded and then overran Denmark\nand Southern Norway. Denmark\naccepted the rule of force from the\nstart, but the Norwegians fought\nbravely and welcomed the British\nand French troops in an effort to\ndrive out the Invaders.\nBut although the Allies landed\nin some strength at Namsos and Andalsnes In mid-Norway and around\nNarvik in the far North, the Germans were too securely based, to be\nousted. Their air force commanded\nthe Skagerrak, across which they\nferried troops ln great numbers.\nThe Allied troops had to be withdrawn from' Central Norway on\nMay 1. Subsequent events in the\nLow Countries and France compelled withdrawal of the Allied forces from Narvik for other duties.\nCHAMBERLAIN   RESIGNATION\nThe Norwegian campaign brought\nabout the resignation of Prime. Minister Chamberlain and the choice\nof Winston Churchill, First Lord of\nthe Admiralty, to succeed him. Mr.\nChurchill, declaring to the country\nthat he had nothing to offer but\n\"blood and tears, toil and aweat,\"\nformed a truly national government, with ministers ranging from\nL. S. Amery, the Tory diehard, on\nthe extreme right, icross the\nbreadth of British political life to\nErnest Bevin, trades union executive, on the left.\nMr. Churchill's acceeslon to office\nto oppose Hitler whose policies he\nhad fought for five yeara came on\nthe very day that Germany smashed\ninto the Netherlands and Belgium.\nIn their determination to remain\nneutral, King Leopold of Belgium\nand Queen Wilhelmint of the Netherlands had refused to discuss defense measures with the Allies.\nThis refusal wu fatal. The British and French troops moved into\nthe Lbw Countries from behind the\n\"Little\" Maginot Line on the\nFrench-Belgian border but no proper cooperation could be set up to\nweld the Allied troops into a unified\nfighting force.\nAt the psychological moment the\nermam smashed with their mechanized forces at the hinge, near historic Sedan, where the advancing\nFrench troops pivoted from the permanent Maginot Line.\nTiie Germans broke through, and\ncrossed the Meuse River and split\noff the British Expeditionary Force\nfrom the main French Army. The\nNetherlands had already surren-\nderedxand on May 26 King Leopold\nordered, the Belgian Army to lay\ndown its aims.\nThe defeat of France followed\nquickly. While Britain made an\namazing rescue of more than 300,-\n000 British and French troops from\nDunkerque, Itily entered the war\non Germany's side and struck at\nFrance. The French sued for peace.\nThe war's fourth stage opened\nwith Hitler's declaration that Britain must \"capitulate\" or he would\ndestroy the Empire, Britain fights.\nDESTROYER ESCORT\nEXAMPLE OF UNITY\nOTTAWA, Aug. 30 (CP). - The\ninterlocking cooperation of the\nBritish Commonwealtha in the war\nis demonstrated by another successful operation of Canadian destroyers. Navy Minister Macdonald\nsaid at a Preu conference today.\n\"During June it wu announced\nthat an exceptionally large contingent of Australian troops had arrived safely in England,\" the Minister said.\n\"An example of Empire unity\nand cooperation ll provided by the\nfact that the destroyer escort was\ncomposed of H. M. C. S. Fraser,\nRestigouche, St. Laurent and\nSkeena.\"\nMinister to Speak\non Canada's Effort\non War Anniversary\nOTTAWA, Aug. 30 (CP) - At\nleast 11 cabinet ministers will tell\nthe story of Canada's war effort at\nsimultaneous luncheon meetings of\nservice snd Canadian clubs from\nHslifax to Vancouver next Wednesday, it was announced today by\nLt.-Col. James Mess, President of\nthe Association of Canadian Clubs.\nConservative Leader Manion,\nthree provincial premiers, a number of senators and distinguished\nwar veterans will also take part in\nthe Evies of 19 patriotic luncheons\nwhich will mark the first anniversary of the outbreak of war.\nSell What You Don't Want Through The Classified Ad$\nNrlnmt Eatly Npwu\nTelephone 144\nTraU: K. Lowdon. 718-Y\nRoasland: T. E. Piper\nClassified Advertising Rates\nUc par Una per lniertion.\n44c per line per week (6 consecutive insertions for coit of 4)\n$1.43 per line t month (26 timet)\n(Minimum t lints per insertion)\nBox numben lie extra. Thia\ncovers any number of times.\nLEGAL NOTICES\n18c per line, tint lniertion tnd\nltc etch lubsequent lniertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES' LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSPECIAL  LOW RATES\nNon-commercial  811 u a 11 a n a\nWanted lor 25o  for' any  required number ot llnai for ilx\ndtyt, ptytblt In advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle copy  __._ S  JOS\nBy carrier, per week .\nBy carrier, per year -\nBy Mail:\nOne month ,\nThree montha ______\nSix monthi\nOne ytar\n.25\n13.00\n$.75\n,   2.00\n4.00\n.   8.00\nAbove ratea apply ln Canada,\nUnited States, and United Kingdom, to subscribers living outside regular carrier treat.\nElsewhere and ln Canada where\nextra postage li required, one\nmonth $1.50, three monthi S4.00,\nsix months $8.00, one year $15.00.\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED - LOGGING CONTRAC-\ntor. Man with logging outfit to\ncontract taking out cedar poles.\nMust be able to finance monthly\noperation. Roads and camps already built. Five mile truck haul.\nApproximately twenty thousand\npoles. Twenty-five miles from\nNelson by highway. Box 3903,\nDally News.\t\nWANTED - TWO GANGS LOU\nSawyers, mostly spruce, good timber. To cut by the thousand. Chu.\nO. Rodgers Ltd., Creston, B. C.\nWANTED - IMMEDIATELY. A\nFourth Class B. C. Engineer, high\nest wages paid. Apply to Box\n3880 Daily News. \u25a0\nWANTED - A YOUNG WOMAN\nable to milk and do odd\nchores. Box 3837 Daily Newi.\nWANTED. GIRL FOR HSWHK\nFond of children. Write immedi-\nately to P. O. Box 130, Nelson.\nWIDOW, 45-50 FOR RANCH HOME\nsmall remuneration to start. Ap-\nply Box 3839 Dally News.\nWANTED -'QUALIFIED HAIR'\ndresser for part time. Apply to\nBox 3845 Daily Newi.\nTAXI DRIVER WANTED. APPLY\n517 Ward Street.\nAGENTS AND 8ALE8MEN\nLADIES WANTED\nA FEW MORE LADIES WANTED:\nMust be convincing talkers to\nclearly explain advantages our\nhousehold necessities known u\nFamilex Products offer to buyen.\nAlready selling in immense quantities. Door to door canvassing\nnecessary to show .articles and\ntake orderi for same. Good commission. Unlimited earnings possible. Friends, neighbors, anyone\nwill be glad to order. For free\ncatalogue and details write\nFamilex, 570 St. Clement, Montreal\nPERSONAL\na AND i BURNER GUARANTEED\nelectric range. Al condition. J.\nChess, 2nd.Hand Store, Vernon St,\n25c\nI'\nhu__ PRiStfib WStAU-\nld. Reprints 3c. Lions Photo\nO. Box 484, Vancouver, B. C,\nttiSLtoa dim, CBRSIft'OP\nCambie ihd Cordova, Vancouvtr.\n75c night, weekly ratet.\nt_.L_A.t6M AJt_f_ - V VOU\nhave old clothing, footwear, furniture to iptrt ploaae Ph. ut 81BL-\nwhen mwn>_Wn_ STOP Al\nAimer Hotel. Opp\n_ URC'HA.S_ HP\nC. P.\nvegetables at The Star Groc. Always treih ln modern refrigeration\nA pdftHuVi* B_ McttftMOR ti\na Portrait ot Distinction. Phone\n224, 577 Ward Street   .   .\nI_AVEY6tUI._ANriC.U_S}\nRT\",\nTop pricei paid tbr antiquei at\nThe Home lu\numlture, 413 HaU St,\nCH6<4i)Krt_. RR6S. 'MOTHS*'!!\nBread\" helps build healthier boyi\nand girls. Ph. 258 tor daily dlvry.\nYOU CAN RUN A HOME KIN\ndergarten with our help. The\nCanadian Kindergarten Institute,\nWinnipeg, Manitoba.   \t\nHAIRQOOD8\nLADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S\nwiga and toupees\u2014fit and shading guaranteed. Free catalogue.\nHanson Company, P. O. Box 601,\nVancouver, B. C.\n______ \"_*tl<_ SuNt>SlE_. SEND\n$1.00 tor 12 samples, plain wrapped. Teited, guaranteed and prepaid. Free Novelty price lilt.\nPrinceton Distributors, P. O. Box\n61, Princeton, B. C,\nMEN-REGAIN VITALITY, VIG-\nor, pep. Try Vltex 25 tableU Sim\n60 tablets $2.00. Guaranteed 24\npenonal \"Drug S u n dr i ea\" $1.00\nFree price list ot drug sundries. J.\nJensen, Box 324 Vancouver, B. C.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Ratea lor noncommercial advertisement under thla classification to assist\npeople seeking employment.\nOnly 25c for one week (8 daya)\ncovert any number of required\nlinea. Payabla tn advance.\nGENTLEMAN, BRITISH, CULTUR-\ned and well educated, desires any\nkind ot work. Good cook.. Hu\nmanaged. boarding house, cared\nfor invalid. Teach backward boy.\nWill do any housework. Scrupulously clean. Temperate. Quiet,\nagreeable manner. Please give full\nparticulars and wagea offered to\nBox 8900 Daily Newa.\n__JERGETIC YOUNG MAN OF 17\nrequirea an opening u an apprentice in any line of business\nWiU be genuinely ambitious if\nprospect of advancement aeems\ngood. P. O. Box 312, Nelson.\nHlGlt SCHOOL STUDlilMf SBC\ndesires room and board for help.\nA willing worker. Write to Box\n3748 Daily Newi.\n6lRL EXP. lit H6U-B WORK.\nplain cooking, care ot children,\nwanti work. Box 3807 Daily News\nStrong, Willing youth of I.\nwith over two years' experience\nin general farm and dairy work,\ngood milker, requires a position on\nranch or dairy, near Nelaon preferred. P. O. Box 312, Nelson\nReliable high school gihl\nwill look after children afternoons\nand evenings. Phone 231X1\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nHYGIENE AND SANITARY SUP-\nplies. Write for free price list, or\nsend $1 for special sample assortment of 25 best quality latex,\npostpaid under plain aealed cover.\nWestern Supply Agency, Box 667\nVancouver, B, C\nMEN - HEALTH - REGAIN\nvigor\u2014pep, try Dupree-whea.\nperlei 25 for $1.00 postpaid. Send\n$1.00 for 30 samples of drug specialties \u2014 teited - guaranteed 5\nyeara against deterioration. Paris\nNovelty Co., Dept \"N\" 24 Aikint\nBuilding, Winnipeg, Man.\t\nANY SIZE 6 OR 8 EXPOSURE\nroll films developed and printed\n25c. We have installed the very\nlatest model Projection machine\nand will tend t 5 by 7 enlargement, free with each film developed. Include 5c for postage and\npacking. Krystal Photoi, Wilkie.\nSaskatchewan.\nTODAY PERSONS WHO HAVb\nluffered from rheumatic and arthritic pains for yeara art 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\ndrug stores.\nMEN OF 30, 40, 50! HEALTH (VIM,\nPEP) subnormal? Try Ostrex tablet! of tonlci, itlmulants. oyiter\nelements to aid recovery of normal pep. If not delighted with re-\nsuits first package, maker refunds\nits low price. Call write. Mann,\nRutherford Company and all\nother good drug storei..\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GI\/EN that\nI- will bold a sale of the Penonal\nProperty of the Weetern Canada\nTimber Co, Ltd, at my Office in\nthe Government Building at Kaslo.\nB.C. on Wedneiday, September 25,\n1840, at the hour ot 2:00 o'clock in\nthe afternoon. Copy of Inventory\nmay be secured from my office, and\npersonal property may be humected\nat Gerrard, B.C. Terma of Sale\u2014\nCASH.\nCLAUDE MACDONALD.\nProvincial Collector.    .\nKaslo, B.C, Aug   24, 1940.\nFOR and WANTED TO RENT\nLIVE DOWNTOWN Ic SAVE CAR\nfare. You'll enjoy living in our\ncosy furnished suites. Drop in and\naee the attractively unfurnished\nfront apartment, if you are looking tor something especially nice\nWhen you live at the Kerr you\nenjoy the personal supervision, and\nunexcelled comfort- of Nelson's\nmoit popular apartment house.\nSee KERR AP-WMENTS First\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nYOUR MONEY REALLY\nGOES FURTHER\nIf You Buy Ona of These\nGOOD USED CARS\n'34 Olds. Special Sedan\n'34 Olds. Special Coupe\n'37 Chev. Master Sedan\n'37 DeLuxe Sadan\nEye 'Em\u2014Try 'Em\u2014Buy  \"Em\nNelson Transfer\nCompany Limited\nFOR SALI MISCELLANEOUS\nPIPE, TUBES. FITTING\nNEW AND USED\nLarge itock tor immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\nbt Avtnut tnd Main St.\nVancouver, B. C,\nw>ft bau -. M.M. Rasgqccft\ncondlUon. 12 ga. single barrel\ntwo shot gun, alio WlncheiterJOJO\nrifle, fine condition. H. R. Kitto.\nis Tttsi PtaLCO CABIN*. HA.\ndio, long and ihort wive, for*\nmerly $800, now one only 8125.\nMcKay * Stretton. _,\nPIPE _ i_tiM<__. tOBJS -\"\"6PS.\ncial low pricei Active Trading Co.\n816 PoweU St, Vancouver, B. C.\nSNAP. LATfe MODEL  OLDSMO>\nbile 4 psngr. coupe, low mileage,\nnew tires. Ph. 253L or 285Y.\n^\nFOR RENT, 2 LIGHT HOUSE-\nkeeping rooms. Private home,\nclose to Senior High School. Fine\nfor students to batch. Ph.\nSCH00L8\nCIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYMENT\nExamination for Clerks announced. Open to all. Applications to reach Ottawa by Sept. 15.\nOur advice has helped hundreds\nobtain Civil Service positions as\nClerks, Postmen, Customs Examiners, etc. Free booklet on request. M. C. C. Schools Ltd., Winnipeg. Oldest in Canada. No agents\nBROKER SENTENCED\n18 MOS., FINED $5000\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 30 (CP) \u2014\nJ. W. R. McLeod, Vancouver stockbroker and former Managing Director of the Freehold Oil Corporation\nwas sentenced to 18 months imprisonment and a $5000 fine today\nwhen found guilty in county court\nhere of concurilng in falsification\nof the Company'i balance sheet. In\ndefault of payment of the fine an\nadditional nine months imprisonment must be served.\nPRINCE CEORCE DEATH\nFOUND SELF-INFLICTED\nPRINCE GEORGE, B. C, Aug30\n(CP)\u2014A verdict ot death from ef-\nfecta of carbon monoxide poisoning\nself-administered in tn automobile\nwu returned laat night by coroner's Jury Inquiring inlo the death\nof Robert Chatter Mitchell of Vancouver. The body wu tound Wednesday and Identity was established\nfrom personal papers in the car.\nItalians Bomb\nMalta Naval Base\nROME, Aug. 30 (AP)-The following communique wu Issued Friday morning by the Italian High\nCommand:\n\"The naval base of Mlkabba In\nMalta was subjected to accurate\nbombing action by our air formations. Enemy pursuit planes which\nwere in flight attempted to escape\nthe action, .not wishing to engage in\ncombat with our escorting chaser\nplanes. Our chasers, however, succeeded in damaging three enemy\nplanes.\n(Damage to civilian property wis\ncaused in this raid. No British\nplane was lost, British sources\nstated).\n\"In North Africa military warehouses and barracks and a railroad\nplatform at Mersa Matruh were\nbombed repeatedly and intensively\nIn successive waves by our form*'\ntions. Several hundred bombs.were\ndropped on their objectives wiAh\naccurate fire.\n\"In East Afrla, troop concentra.\ntions and motorized columns were\nbombed by our planes at Arbo Bl'\nbhai and near Garlssa in Kenya.\nThe flying field at Buna also wu\nbombed with one plane destroyed\non Ihe ground and two others damaged.\n\"Although some planes which\ntook part in the above operations\nwere hit. all returned to their bases\nwith their crews uninjured.\n\"Duvak bands carried out an attack In the direction of Buna. A\nBritish lorry was destroyed and\nheavy losses Inflicted on the enemy.\n\"British planes three times raided\nMogadisnio, killing two and injuring six persons. The material damage wu insignificant.\"\n(There were no report* from\nBritish sources on any of tht above\nactions).\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find anything, telephone\nThe Daily News. A \"Found' Ad.\nwill be inserted without coit to\nyou. Wt will collect from the\nowner.\nLOST - GLASSES IN A LIGHT\nbrown silver trimmed cue. Ph.\n450L. Box 3829 Dtily News.\nNEW SUBDIVISION RESIDENT\nill lota, 6 milei Iron., ferry many\nwith lake frontage, somt with\norchard, some near lake, ample\nwater record, also one with 10\nacres in hay and potatoea. Also\norchard of size to luit witn buildingi and tour acres potatoes. J. J\nCampbell, R. R No 1, Ph 482L3\nFURNISHED BUNGALOW FOR\nlale. 5 room Jjungalow, concrete\nfoundations, full basement all\nmodern, good level lots. Fully\nfurnished, ready to move in.\nPrice with furniture $3200. Cash\nrequired\u2014$1000. Balance arranged\nRobertson Realty Company Ltd.\nGOOD RESIDENTLAL PROPER.V\nit a tangible uset Buy t home-\nsite on Fairview properties, Nel\nton's belt residential lots. All city\nservices. Euiest of terms R W\nDawson, < sole agent, Hippenon\nBlock, Phone 197.\nCHEAP FOR QUICK SALE SMALL\nmodern ranch, 2 itorey frame\nhouie. Water rights, electric light,\ntelephone, Vi mile from itreet car.\nCow, calf, chickens included.\nPrice $1950. Box 67, Nelson, B.C.\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy termi in Alberta tnd\nSukatchewan. Writt for full information to 908. Dept ot Natural\nResources, C. P. R\u201e Calgary, Alta\nCHOICE, LEVEL ACRE LOTS,\nfrom $200 up, water available,\nlight toon, low taxes, good schools\nW. R. Nelems, Real Estate Agent,\nCastlegar, B. C.\nPRODUCTIVE 12 ACRE FARM, 10\ncult. Water piped for Irrigation.\nOrchard, hay, etc, 5 rm. house,\noutbuilding, Main Highway $1100.\nH. E. Dill.\t\nHOUSES FOR SALE. BEST BUYS\nin town, euy terms Car. Life\ntnd Fire Insurance. C. W Apple-\nyard, Established 28 years.\nFOR SALE - SIX ROOMED MOD-\nern house on Victoria Street, in\nfirst class condition. Price $2300\nC. F. McHardy, Nelson.\t\nLake frontage opposite\nNelson. Terms  Johnstone Eitate.\nBox 198, Nelson, B. C.\t\nCLASSIFIED MAIL ORDERS\ntrom out-of-town residents given\nprompt attention\nFOR RENT 2 CHARMING DUPLEX\nhouses. 4 rms. each. Elect, equipped, open fireplaces, central\nheating.   Phone  542R \t\nHOUSES FOR RENT MONEY ON\nhand for Mortgages, Yorkshire\nPlan or private funds. C. W\nAppleyard.\nFOR RENT - FURNISHED AND\nunfurnished suites in Medical'Arts\nBlack. Chu. F. McHardy.\nFOR RENT, 3 RM. FLAT, BATH,\npantry, furn. Olson, 618 Victoria\nStreet. 8 a.m. to 7 p.m.\t\nFOR RENT - FURN. COTTAGE,\nLight, water, garage. Phone 328L3,\nONE AND TWO ROOM FURR.\nsuites. 617 Ward Street. Ph  940.\nFOR RENT 2 RM. FURN. SUITE.\nReasonable, 910  Edgewood Ave.\nREDECRTD. HSKEEPING ROOMS\nfor rent. 686 Baker SI. Ph. 852L.\n1936 PACKARD CONVERTIBLE\nCoupe, model one twenty, run\nonly 19,500 miles. Extra good tires,\nfine condition. '34 Chevrolet Coach\nlooks and runi fine $465. '30 Pontiac Coupe, the tlret are nearly\nnew, good body, and upholstery $185. Butorac Motors, 1225\nPine Ave., Trail, B. C. Hudson,\nPackard, Pontiac, Buick, LaSalle.\nCadillac, GMC and White Sales\nand Service.\nPICK\nOF  THE\nMARKET\nNOW\n1939 Dodge Custom Coupe, Radio, Heater and Defrosters, good\ntires, at a laving of $430.\nSOWERBY-CUTHBERT LTD.\nDodge, DeSoto Dealera\nOpp. Post Office Sc Hume Hotel\nFARM FOR RENT. THREE COWb\nfor sale Mn. A. Jeffreys, Ph. 576L1\nFOR RENT NEW 6 RM. HOUSE.\nGd. location. D. Maglio, Ph. 808L.\nJOHNSTONE BLDG.. MODERN\nGen. Electric equipped suites.\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.\nFOR RENT FURN. SINGLE HSKP.\nrooms. Strathcona Hotel.\nFOR RENT\u20143  ROOM FURNISH-\ned flat. Phone 752R.\t\nHOUSE FOR  RENT. APPLY TO\n614 Kootenay StreeL\t\nTWO ROOM FURNISHED SUITE.\nStirling Hotel.\nHOUSE   FOR  RENT.  APPLY TO\nPhone 606L1.\nROOM AND BOARD\nHIGH SCHOOL GIRL WOULD\nlike place to room and board in\nreturn for light lervicea. Apply\nJoyce Riley, Blewett, B. C.\nNICE COMFORTABLE R OOM\nwith board for gentleman Ph. 467R\nROOM AND BOARD, CLOSE IN\nRates reasonable 805 Victoria St\nWANTED HIGH SCHOOL PUPILS\nClose to schools. Phone 981R.\nSUMMER  RESORTS\nHOLIDAY AT CEDAR CABINS,\nAppledale. Rates by day week\nor month. Fully furnished Apply\nAppledale General Store.\t\nFOR WANT AD SERVICE\nPHONE 144\n1937 Nash LaFayette Coupe De-\nLuxe. Cruising gear, beater and\nlicensed.-Good rubber; perfect\nln every reipect\u2014$695.00.\nINTERIOR MOTORS FINANCE\nCORP.\n554 Ward St.    Nelion.\nFOR SALE - 1935, 7 TASSENGER\nPlymouth $600. New engine and\nDuco paint Job. Apply Blakley's\nGara'ge, Radium Hot Springs, B.C\nFOR SALE OR RENT, 25 H. P.\nDiesel engine and pulleyi. Like\nnew. Central Truck Ic Equipment\nCo, 801 Baker Street, Nelson.\t\n.7 OLDSMOBILE COUPE, $750,\nprivately owned. Or take motorcycle or light, truck in trade. 305\nNelson Avenue:\nSPECIALIZING IN ELECTRIC St\nacetylene welding. Stevemon's\nMachine Shop, Nelson, Phone 98.\nFOR SALE, STAR MARINE CON-\nverted engine and marine\nclutch. Phone 353R.\nSINGLE BAR 20\" x 18\" BIClfCLE,\nalso single bar His lop $15.\nH. R. Kitto.  -\nCITY AUTO WRECKERS, TIRES.\nBARBER    CHAIR   AND ^PEIB\nKing hair dryer. Apply to Box\n3865 Daily Newi.\nMASON Sc RISCH PIANO, GOOD\nCond, quick sale, bargain. Ph. MO.\nNEW COOK STOVE. APPLY TO\n620 Robson Street ^^\nWANTED  MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor lr6n Any quantity. Top pricea\npaid A c 11 v e Trading Company,\n918 Powell St, Vancouver, B. C,\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAS8AYER9\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer, Sampling Agents fot\nTrail Smelter. 304-305 Jotephint\nStreet, Nelson, B. C.\t\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincitl Assayer and Chemist. 420\nFall StreeL P O. Box 9. Nelaon,\nB. C. Representing shipper!1\nInterest at Trail, B. C.    \u25a0\nHAROLD S. ELMES. ROSSLAND,\nB. C. Provincial Assayer, Chemist.\nIndividual representative for ahlp\u00bb\npen at Trail Smelter.\nCHIROPRACTORS\nglass, parts. 180 Baker St. Ph. 447\n1935 FORD TRANSMISSION. NEL-\nson Auto Wrecking, Phone 946.\nFOR  SALE,  BICYCLE,  B.  S. A.\nAl shape. Phone 508R3.  \u2022\u25a0\t\nYOU SAW IT IN THE DAILY NEWS\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nand SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR LEGHORN PULLETS THAI\nwill give every satisfaction and\nwill be layers of large numbers\nof eggs order from New Siberia\nFarm stock first. Different ages\navailable. A. Balakshin, Chilliwack\nSOL-MIN. MINERAL RATION FOR\ncattle  and  poultry;\nOilcake Meal;\nFlax  Meal\nBag Ointment; Veterinary   Liniment;   Pratt's   Cow\nTonic; Stable-Pho6 for the gutters.\nThe Brackman-Ker Millg. Co. Ltd.\nWANTED, HEREFORD BULL, 4-J\nmonths old, prefer registered\natock. State price In first letter.\nGust Andenon, Salmo, B. C.\nWANTED - HORSE FOR FAHM\nwork, 1400 lbs, must be quiet and\n;ood worker. State age. Apply\nlox 3871 Daily News.\nj il McMillan, d. c, neuro.\ncalometer, X-ray. McCulIoch Bill.\nDR WILBERT BROCK D. C,\n542 Baker Street Phone 989.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nR. W. HAGGEN, Mining & Clvi*\nEngineer; E C. Land Surveyor.\nRossland and Grand Forka.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvtlt, B.C\nSurveyor and Engineer. Phon \u2022\n\"Beaver Falli\".\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nC D. BLACKWOOD, lniurance of\nevery description. Real Eat Ph. W\nCHAS. F. McHARDY. INSURANCE\nReal Estate. Phone 135.\nR. W. DAWSON, Rea' Estate, In\u00bb\nsurance. Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker SL Pl.one 197.\n- \u25a0     \"\u25a0'\u00ab\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and electrlt\nwelding,   motor   rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 324 Vernon St\nPATENT ATTORNEYS\nW. ST. J. MILLER. A. M. E. I. C.\nRegistered Patent Attorney, Canada and U. S. A. 710 3rd St W,\nCalgary. Advice free, confidential^\n8A8H FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTORt\nhardwood merchant 273 Baker St.\nSECOND HAND STORES\nWE  BUY.  SELL  It  EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc Ark Store, Ph. 684\nI'M SORRY,eLENNY,THE7r YEAH-CM\nBOYS GOT TO GIVING \/NEVER GOING\nYOU NICKNAMES,BUT\nI WAS ONLY TRYING\nTO\nIWOUDBR P MW3GIE WILL\nWOWSER -ILL TAKE T}JB\nCHANCE AN'ASK HER-\nUO-YOU CAUT GO OUT- WHY CAl\/T\nVCU STAY HOME AJIJD ENJOY VOUR\nHOME Llk^ I DO . I JUST CAWT\nUUD6RSTAND WHY MX) DO NOT\nAPPRECIATE VCUR UCH\/ELY HOME\nLIKE I DO- kJOTHIMG CAW TAKE\nTVE PLAr~\nSAV-WO MOR6-\naVAASGlE OMJLIM'-\nYER BREAKING\nME HEART-\nMRS JICK SUWSPADES\nJUST 'PHOHJED-SHE'D\nLIKE VOU TO JOIN  HER\nAT MRS.  HUGH\nKECDECKS   HOUSE\nv\u2014FOR  BRIDGE\nJAR^\/IS- GET MY\nFUR JACKET\nAND TELL JAMES\nTO GET THE CAR\nOUT-I'LL LEAVE\nIMMEDIATELY -\nKIII1IIIIIIII.I.S\nBritish Ship Sunk\nPUNTA DELGADA, Aaorei,\nAug. 30 CAP)- The Britiih iteam-\nship Ilvlngton Court, 5187 tons, was\ntorpedoed and sunk by an unidentified submarine 150 miles off Santa\nMarie, lt was disclosed today.\nThe crew of 39 escaped in lifeboats. One man was slightly injured..\nf\n\u25a0iillrtliir iir __iriiTr._ti' }fl\u201ei_'i_tftifflf_i_ > _iii'j______j__1__ii\n_<W___itiini\n- V iili-iUlii\n. ....__.'_-.. ;.     . j\n__________________ .\n_____\n.\n *<*-mm\niWiwnilPPiwiui, mm w.p\nNew French Plan\nto Cultivate Ml\nAbandoned Land\n[ VICHY, France, Aug. 30 (AP>.-\nThe French Government embarked\non a sweeping land reclamation pro-\n?ram today by ordering prefects ot\n11 departments to place under cultivation immediately all arable property which haa been abandoned\nmore than two years.\n' A decree published ln the official\nJournal stipulated property owners\nwho had abandoned the land would\nI be given one month in which to\n| return to cultivate their farms be-\nI lore the prefects would appoint new\nr tenants.\nI AU Frenchmen \"having sufficient\nmeans and technical knowledge\"\ncan be accorded nine years tenants'\nrights over such land, with priority going to farmers living nearest\nthe property and to fathers having\nthe most children.\nThe prefect-appointed tenants\n%ill pay no rent to the owners of\n' the property the first three years\nand thereafter will pay only half\nthe normal rent.\nThe property reclamation decree\nvas backed up by another ordering\neonstltution of groups of agricultural apprentices between the ages\not 14 and 17, who will be hired out\nto any farmer approved by a committee of local officials.\nThe farmer will be obliged to pay\nthe apprentice's board and lodging, as well as a salary to be fixed\nby the government. In turn, the\nfarmer will receive a 900-franc\n(nominally between $15 and $21)\nIndemnity trom the state.\nCommodity Exchange\nWill Be Closed Today\n. MONTREAL, Aug. 30 (CP).-Of-\nflclals of Canadian Commodity Exchange announced today the market\nWill remain closed tomorrow as well\nas Sept. 2, Labor Day.\nThe Montreal Stock Exchange and\nthe curb market will remain open\ntomorrow but will be closed Monday.\t\nECONOMIC INDEX OFF\nOTTAWA, Aug. 30 (CP). - Canada's economic index dropped to\n104,1 In the week ended Aug. 24\nfrom 104.4 the previous week, the\nDominion Bureau of Statistics reported today. It was 10S.2 the corresponding week last year.\t\nMETAL  MARKETS\nLONDON, Auf. 80 (CP) -, Bar\nsilver 28%d, off 1-16 (Equivalent\n42.39 cents) Bar Cold 160s, unchanged. (Equivalent $33.89.) Exchange\n$4.03.\nTin barely steady; spot \u00a3257 10s\nbid, \u00a3288 asked; future \u00a3298 10s\nbid, \u00a3298 15s asked.\nMONTREAL\n- -Bar gold in London waa unchanged at $37.54 an ounce In Canadian\nfunds; 163i ln British representing\nthe Bank of England's buying price.\nThe fixed $35 Washington price\namounted to $38.50 ln Canadian.\nSpot Copper, electrolytic, 12.75;\ntin 61.45; lead 5.50; zinc 5.65; antimony 15.25.\nSilver futures closed unchanged\ntoday. Bid: Sept. 37.73.\nNEW YORK\nCopper steady: electrolytic spot,\nConn. Valley 11.00; export f.a.s. N.Y.\n9.90.\nTin barely steady; spot and nearby 50.50;. forward 80.12%.\nLead steady: spot New York\n4.90-99; East St. Louis 4.79.\nZinc steady; East St. Louis spot\nand forward 6.50.\nBar silver 34%, unchanged.\nWar Industry\nRises to Need\nCanada's Industrial plant, accelerating and expanding from day to\nday under the drive of war, has\ntaken governmental war orders estimated at approximately $300,000,-\n000 in the first year of the war.\nThe almost daily publication of\nwar orders means that Canadian\nIndustry ls rising to the needs ot\nwar on a grand scale. Air training depots are to be built and to be\nequipped, army camps enlarged and\nequipped for Winter occupation, naval craft are to be built, the enlisted forces to be clothed and armed.\nThe result will be that Canada\nts producing war material as never\nbefore. Plant building is lergely accounted for by three categories of\nneed: explosives, arms and commodities for manufacture of metals and\nchemicals.\nOf war orders placed, the largest\nls for aircraft and aircraft supplies.\nIt ls worth about $75,000,000. Mechanical transport, shipbuilding and\nconstruction run this figure a close\nsecond. A large item is for clothing\nfor the armed forces and in anticipation of the general military\ntraining plan.\n-NELSON DAILY NIWS   NILSON. B. C-SATURDAY MORNINQ. AUG. 31   1940\u2014\nTORONTO  STOCK\nAldermac Copper ....\nAmm Gold.\n.14*4\n.01%\n1.75\n.06\n.0214\nAnglo-Huronian  \t\nArntfield Gold  .....\nAstoria Rouyn Mines \u2014\nAunor -  \u00bb*\u2022\nBagamac Boq>..   \u2022\";'\u00bb\nBanktield Gold    .09%\nBate Metals Mining   .07.4\nBeattie Gold Mines  .95\nBidgood Kirkland  - .14\nBig Missouri - - .05\nBob.o Mines   - -04%\nBralorne Mines    9.75\nBuffalo Ankerite  _ 3.35\nBunker Hill Extension \u2014, .01'A\nCanadian Malartic    .43\n! Cariboo Gold Quarts   2.05\nI Castle-Trethewey - .58\nCentral Patricia    183\nI Chromium M lc S - 17\nr Coast Copper  - 1-00\ni Coniaurum Mines   1.38\nI Consolidated M It S -  39.25\nI pome Mines -  22.00\n^prval-Siacoe     .01%\ntst Malartic    3.05\nSdo. :.do Gold  .34\niMconbridg.   Nickel    2.95\nt Federal Klrkland  .03\n'Francoeur Gold   - .33*4\nGillies Lake  M\nGod's Lake Gold _.... 34*4\nGold Belt   20\nGrandoro Mines _ \u2014 .04*4\nGunnar Geld       .38\nHard Rock Gold  .83\nHarker Gold   .04\nHollinger  11.90\nHudson Bay M Sc S  25.00   ,\nInternational Nickel  37.00\n3 M Consolidated _ .00%\nJack Waite   12\nJacola Gold  ..._ _ .02\nKerr-Addison     2.25\nKirWand Lake _ .96\nLeitch Gold   M\nLebel Oro Mines  _.\u201e .01*4\nLittle Long Lac  , 2.25\nMacassa Mines  3.50\nMacLeod Cockshutt  2.00\nMadsen Red Lake Gold 40\nMandy  .06\nMclntyre-Porcuplne    43.00\nMcKenzie Red Lal:e  1.02\nMcVittie-Graham      JOS\nMcWatters Gold    .30\nMining Corporation   .72\nMoneta Porcupine   .49\nMorrls-Kirkland 02*4\nNiplssing Mining  .86\nNoranda   58.50\nI Normeiil\n, O'Brien Gold\nOmega Gold\nI Pamour Porcupine \t\nPend Oreille _..\nPerron Gold\t\nPickle Crow Oold\t\nPioneer Gold     2.20\nPremier Gold\t\n25\n72\n.14*4\n.25*4\n1.36\n1.65\n2.80\nQUOTATIONS\nPowell Rouyn Gold  .80\nPreston East Dome   189\nReno Gold Mines  19\nRoche Long Lac _ _ .03\nSan Antonio Gold  2.09\nShawkey Gold _ 01*4\nSheep Creek Gold   .90\nSherritt Gordon _ .99\nSladen Malartic _ .34\nSt. Anthony   .09\nSudbury Basin _._ 1.12\nSullivan Consolidated  62*4\nSylvanite       _ 2 35\nTeck-Hughes Gold  3.15\nToburn Gold Mines ...   __ 1,06\nTowagmac ._ _ .15\nVentures   3,50\nWaite.Amulet      3.30\nWright Hargreaves  6.15\nYmir Yankee Girl  .09\nOILS\nAlax  ,11\nBrit American  18.10\nChemical Research    .20\nImperal  10.79\nInter Petroleum ...  15.00\nTexas Canadian   1.10\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power 79\nBell Telephone    152V4\nBrazilian T L St P _ 4%\nBrewers Sc Distillers  ft,\nBrewing Corp   1.30\nB c Power \"A\"  24*4\nB C Powej \"B\"  '1*4\nBuilding Products _  16\nCanada Bread      _ 2^4\nCan Bud Malting   SV4\nCan \"sr Sc Foundry  8*1\nCan Cement  _ 4%\nCan' Dredge   13%\nCan Malting _ \u201e. 34\nCan Pacific Rly _  5*4\nCan Ind Alcohol  1.85\nCons Bakeries     13%\nCosmos    24'4\nDominion Bridge  26\nDominion Stores  4\nDom Tar Sc Chem  84*4\nDistillers Seagrams  _ 24%\nFanny Farmer   _. 24\nFord of Canada   17%\nGen Steel Wares .'.  6\nGoodyear Tire     68**\nGypsum L 4 A    3%\nHamilton Bridge _.  4*4\nHiram Walker  363\/4\nImperial Tobacco  _ 13\nLoblaw \"A\"  _  24\nLoblaw \"B\"   22\nKelvinator        1\nMaple Leaf Milling   2*4\nMassey Harris _.  3*4\nMontreal Power  28\nMoore Corp  _  42\nNat Steel Car  4414\nPage Hersey   99y,\nPower Corp _  6*4\nPressed Metals  8*4\nSteel of Can    67\nStandard Paving 48\nTh.\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany ol Canada. Limited\nManufacturers of\nElephant\nBrand\nChemicals and\nChemical Fertilizers\nAmmonium Phosphate\nSulphate of Ammonia\nSuperphosphates\nMonocalclum Phosphate\nProducers and Refiners ot\nTadanac\nBrand\nMetals\nLEAD-ZINC\nGOLD-SILVER\nCADMIUM-BISMUTH\nANTIMONY\nZINC DUST\nAlio Sulphuric Add and Sulphur\nGeneral Office and Works, Trail, B. C.\nFertilizer Salei\u2014Murine  Bldg., Vancouver,  B.C.\nMetal ind Fertilixer Sales\u2014215 St, limes St., Montreal\nWar Sleeks Take\na Quick Rally\non Wall SI Exch.\nNEW YORK. Aug. 80 (AP)-The\nstock market, pulled a surprise rallying rabbit out ot the hat today.\nThe list wu mildly Improved at\nthe start but subsequently slowed\nand prices wavered. Buying In rails\nthen touched off > -unup Tn steels,\nmotors and other Industrial leaders.\nGains for favorites ranged from 1\nto more than 2 points, with dealings\nfaster than in the past two weeks.\nDespite intermittent sluggishness,\nvolume stepped up to eround 850,000\nshares, or about double that of the\npreceding aesaion. Quotations were\nshaved in many cases at the close\nby a little profit taking on the\nbulge.\nBullishness, brokers said, apparently was bolstered by the brightening domestic buslne-: picture. Hopefulness for quick congressional action on conscription and taxes also\nwere said to have in spired a better\nattitude toward the stock department.\nCanadian Pacific and Hiram\nWalker gained fractions. Dome\nMines and Mclntyre 1 :re unchanged. In the bond market Canada 4s\nheld unchanged.\nNew Grader to Handle\nCreston Apple Crop\nCRESTON, B. C.-To cope with\nthe enlarged 1940 apple crop, Long.\nAllan Sc Long, Ltd., have stepped up\npacking capacity to 2200 boxes per\nday, with the installation of a new\n8-section Cutler grader at their\nwarehouse at Erickson, which is\nnow ready for operation.\nThe new machine, with eight bins\non either side, was Installed to facilitate the more economical operation of the firm's main Cutler grader\nby taking care of the shorter runs\nof 100 and 200 boxes which are frequent with light plantings in some\nof the varieties, and which cannot\nbe handled to advantage on the\nlarger machine.\nThe additional grader will require\na crew of nine, and with both machines running to capacity the firm\nwill employ 34 sorters, packers,\ntruckers, etc. aAs In former years the\nwarehouse staff will be in charge\nof Fred Hale with A. E. Towson as\nreceiver.\nFARM LABOR SURPLUS\nCAUSED BY WHEAT CRISIS\nEDMONTON, Aug. 30 (CP). -\nAlberta Is experiencing a surplus\nof farm labor because of the current wheat crisis, M. W. Robertson, General Superintendent of the\nEmployment Service In Canada,\nsaid here today. Many farmers are\nassisting each other with cutting,\nhe said. Also contributing to the\nsurplus was the growing number of\nsmall combines and their elimination of a lot of hand labor.\nEXCHANCE MARKETS\nMONTREAL, Aug. 90 (CP). -\nBritish and foreign exchange, nominal rates between banks only,\nArgentina, peso, .2514.\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, 2511.\nIndia, rupee, .8384.\nJapan, van, .2005.\nSwitzerland, franc, .2880.\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank ef\nCanada.)\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal: Pound, buying at\n4.43, selling at 4.47; U. 8. dollar\nbuying at 1.10, selling at 1.11.\nAt New York: Pound 4.03%; Canadian dollar .87 11-16.\nNEW YORK, Aug. 30 (AP). -\nThe pound sterling gained Vt cent\nto $4.03% in relation to the United\nStates dollar in \"free\" foreign exchange dealings today.\nAt the same time, the Canadian\ndollar slipped .08Vi of a cent to a\ndiscount of 12 9-18 centa.\nThe Swiss franc and the Shanghai dollar each lifted .01 of a cent\nwhile the Hong Kong dollar declined a similar traction.\nKrupp Works In\nU.S. are Indicted\non Fixing Charges\nNBW YORK, Aug. 90 (AP) -\nIn what Federal prosecutors termed the most important national defence indictment yet returned, a\nspecial United States grand Jury\ntoday indicted the General Electric\nCompany and the Krupp Company\nof Essen, Germany, on charges of\nconspiracy to fix prices and restrain interstate and foreign commerce In hard metal composition\ntools and dies.\nNamed with General Electric and\nKrupp were Walter M. Stearns, of\nSchenectady, Manager of Trade Relations and special contracts for\nGeneral Electric; the Carboloy\nCompany, of Detroit; wholly-owned\nsubsidiary of General Electric; W.\nG. Robblns, President, and Zay Jefferies, of Cleveland, Chairman of\nCarboloy.\nThe Government charged that\nthe Krupp Corporation, famous for\nmany years as Germany's chief\nsource of war materials, held a\nveto power over the Issuance of\npatent licences to American firms\nin the manufacture of hard metal\ncompositions used in machine cutting tools.\nCalaary Oils Uneven\nCALGARY, Aug. 30 (CP)-Galns\nand losses In oils on Calgary Stock\nExchange today broke about even.\nTransfers 5,000 shar\\s.\nArrow, heaviest trader today, was\nfractions up at 26; Royal Canada\nat 1-1% added Vt. Suhset at 18 was\ntwo down, and United at 33% was\noff a point from previous bid.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\nHigh    Low\n30 industrials -    12J-1J\n20 rails\n27,78\n15 utilities' ! :     22.42\n126.98\n27.29\n22.19\nClose Change\n126.88 up  2.01\n27.71 up    .67\n11.38 up    .19\nQUOTATIONS   ON   WALL  STREET\nOpen Close\nAm Smelt Sc Ref\nAmer Tel   161\nAnaconda     20%\nBaldwin     14%\nBait Sc Ohio        3%\nBendix   Avi     29%\nBeth   Steel     78%\nCan   Pac         2V,\nChrysler   74%\nC Wright Pfd        7\nDupont          186%\nEast Kod     131\nGen  Elec     23Vi\nGen  Mot     47Vi\nHowe   Sound        30\nInternational   Nick   .. 28%\nOpen Close\n38%     39\n161\n21V_\n14 \"4\n3%\n3m\n79=..\n8H\n75\",\n7%\n166%\n131\n33%\n48\n30\n27%\nKenn Copper   27% 28%\nMont Ward   40% 40%\nN Y Central   11% 12%\nPenn R R   10% 20%\nPhillips  Pete  82% 8214\nPullman     19% 19%\nRadio   Corp     4%     4%\nStan Oil of N J  M% Wt\nStudebaker    \u2014 7%      7%\nTex Corp   85% 35%\nUn Carbide  _... 72% 72%\nUnited Air    38% 40\nU S Rubber   18% 18%\nU S Steel  62% 64%\nWoolworth     32% 32%\nYel Truck  13% 14%\nMONTREAL  STOCK   QUOTATIONS\nINDUSTRIALS\nAssoc Brew of Can   17\nBathurst P Sc P A   12%\nCanadian Bronze   34\nCan Car &: Fdy pfd - 18\nCan Celanese   31\nCan Celanese pfd   127\nCan North Power   12\nCan  Steamship           i*A\nCan Steamship pfd  _  15%\nCockshutt Plow      5%\nCon Min 6c Smelting   36\nDominion Coal pfd   20\nDom Steel Sc Coal B       8%\nDominion   Textile     83\nDryden  Paper  -      6\nFoundation C of C  -  11\nGatineau Power   10%\nGatineau Power pfd  90\nGurd  Charles             4%\nHoward Smith Paper  15\nH Smith Paper pfd - 100\nImperial Oil   10%\nInter Petroleum   15\nInter Nickel of Can  36%\nLake of the Woods  16%\nMcColl  Frontenac   _.    8\nNational   Brew Ltd   _  28\nNat Brew pfd    36\nOgilvie Flour New  _  24%\nPrice Bros -  13%\nQuebec Power   14\nShawnigan W le P     19%\nSt. Lawrence Corp      3\nSt. Law Corp pfd  \u201e    15%\nSouth Can Power     12\nWestern Grocers -   84\nBANKS\nCommerce  \u201e __ 147%\nDominion     180\nImperial    165\nMontreal  \u201e  184\nNova Scotia    \u201e 275\nRoyal  155\nToronto  _. 212\nCURB\nAbitibi pfd  _  .80\nBathurst P Sc P B       3\nBeauharnois Corp  \u201e     5\nBritish American Oil     18\nB C Packers     12\nCan Industries B  1.85\nCan Vickere  \u201e.._      3\nCons Paper Corp        4%\nFairchild Aircraft       2%\nFraser Co Ltd   11%\nInter Utilities B   20\nLake Sulphite -  _     2\nMacLaren P St P     17%\nMcColl Frontenac pfd     93\nMitchell Robt    10%\nRoyalite Oil _..\u201e   23\nWalker Good St W .._ \u201e  37\nWalker Good pfd    18%\nVANCOUVER  STOCK  QUOTATIONS\nBid\nAsk\nMINES:\nBig  Missouri  \t\n.05%\n.07\nBralorne\t\n9.60\n10.00\nBridge Riv Con ....\n\u2014\n.01\nCariboo Gold \t\n205\n\u2014\nDentonia _\n\u2014a\n.01\nFairview Amal .\u2014\nj00%\n.00\" 4\n.05\n_-\nGolconda   \t\nal\n.03\".\nGold   Belt  \t\nao\n.22\n.12%\n.14\nGrull Wihksne \t\n.02,4\n.03\nHedley Mascot \t\n.43\n.46\nHome   Gold   \t\n.00%\n.00'A\n.00%\n\u2014\nInter Coal     \t\nXI\n\u2014\nIsland Mount\t\n.74\n\u2014\nKoot  Belle  \t\n.28\n.30\nMinto   Gold   \t\n.01\n.01%\nMcGillivray   \t\n.16\n\u2014\nNicola M Sc M\t\n.01%\n\u2014\nPac Nickel  \t\n\u2014\n.08\nPend Oreille \t\n125\n140\nPioneer   Gold  \t\n2.20\n2.40\nPorter  Idaho  \t\n.01%\n.01%\nPremier Border ....\n.01\n.01 Vs\nPremier  Gold \t\n.83\n.88\nPrivateer      \t\n.39\n.40\nReeves MacD\t\n\u2014\n.25\nRelief   Arl   \t\n.07%\n.08\nReno Gold    \u2014\n.14\n.19\nSalmon Gold \t\n.04  '\n.09\nSheep Creek \t\n.92\n\u2014\n\u2014\n.00%\nTaylor Bridge \t\nWellington\n02\n\u2014\n\u2014\n.01\nWesko Mines \t\n\u2014\u25a0\n.00%\nVhitewater  \t\n.01\n\u2014\n.00%\n.03%\n.55\n.08%\n.05\n-07%\n1.31\n.21\n.20\n.22\nYmir Yank Girl .\nOILS:\nAmalgamated  \t\nAnaconda \t\nAnglo Cart \u201e _\nA P Con\t\nBrit Dom \t\nBrown Corp \t\nCalgary 61 Edm .\nCalmont\t\nComoil    _.\nCommonwealth   ...\nDalhousie \t\nDavies Pete \t\nExtension  \t\nFirestone  Pete   ...\nFour Star Pete \t\nHighwood Sarcee .\nHome    \t\nMadison   \t\nMar Jon \t\nMcDoug Sag \t\nMill City  \t\nNational Pete \t\nNordon   _\nPac Pete  \t\nPrairie Roy  \t\nRoyal .Can  \u201e\nRoyal Creit Pete .,\nRoyalite   .. _..\t\nSoooner \t\nUnited  \t\nVanalta \t\nVulcan\nINDUSTRIALS:\nCapital Est \t\nCoast Brew       1.18\nGrowers Wine       \u2014\nUnited Dist         .70\n.04%     .05%\n.00%\nj04\n.21\n- JO\n11\n.17\n.06\n.10%\n.08\n1.63\n.02\n.01%\n.05%\n.04\n.18%\n.12\n.04\n\u2014\nJO\n.27\n.11\n.12%\n.11%\n.12\n.07%\n.09\n.00\n\u2014\n.02\n\u2014\n_    4t    - -\n1.90\n1.10\n1.30\n1.25\nMotherlode Hine\nCarries the Reno\nSays Ellis Report\nAnnual report of W. S. Ellis, General Superintendent ot the Reno\nGold Mines Ltd, operations at\nSheep Creek, covering 10 months\nending April 30\u2014new fiscal yeer\nend 01 the Company\u2014followa:\nSheep Creek, B.C,\nTo the President and\nBoard ot Directors,\nReno'Gold Mines Ltd.\nGentlemen:\nHerewith operating report of\nReno Gold Mines, Ltd, for the ten\nmonths ending April 30th, 1940:\nOre porduced from the Motherlode Mine with small amounts from\nthe Bluestone and Reno mlnea have\nsufficed for the operation ot the\nmill at about 76 per cent capacity\nsince October 10, 1939. Exploration\nand development have been continuous in the Motherlode and Blue-\nstone mines while the 4900 tunnel\nhas been stopped after Intersecting\nthe Nugget vein at 640 feet of depth\nbelow tne old workings. A small\namount of lateral development was\ndone on the .Nugget vein, at .thia\nnew horizon. Moderately successful\nresults have been' obtained in the\noperation of the. Motherlode mine\nbut work, ln the Bluestone haa been\ndisappointing.\t\nMILLING      \t\nA tonnage of 21,394 was milled\nduring the aix.and one-half months\nthat the mill was ln operation. Ot\nthis total the Motherlode supplied\n18,361 tons, the Bluestone 1766 tons\nwhile salvaging operations at the\nold Reno furnished 1267 tons. Average tonnage per day was 104.87 and\nthe average per operating day was\n108.64. Average tailings losa per ton\nof ore milled waa .007 ounces of\ngold. Percentage extraction waa\n98.23, Mill performance haa been\nsatisfactory except for excessive\nsliming at times caused by argillaceous wall-rock.\nProduction for the aix and one-\nhalf montha that the mill operated\nwas $310,247.78. Total production to\nApril 30,1940, is $5,028,932.17.\nMOTHERLODE MINE\nTotal development ln the Motherlode mine for then ten months\nJuly 1, 1939, to April 30, 1940, ls\ntabulated as follows:\nFeet\nDrifting : .1,360.0\nCross-cutting  181.5\nRaising       423.0\nSinking   88.0\nTotal     2\/163.1\nThe development of this mine\nfrom the 4900 level has shown the\nfailure ot the ore-shoots disclosed at\nthis lower horizon to have continuity upwards to the ore-shoots\nof the old workings. Commercial\nore la in the form of lenses with\nbarren intervals In an ore zone. By\nmeans ot a small two-compartment\nwinze the No. 11 level haa been\npartly driven 129 feet below the 4900\nlevel. Results to date on this new\nlevel indicate that exploration to\nfurther depth Is Justified.\nWith practically the full burden\nof supplying the mill falling On the\nMotherlode and with only medium\nsized ore-shoots discovered to date,\nblocked out ore in.tbls_n_ne has\nbeen continuously meagre.\nReserves of positive ore available\nIn the Motherlode as at April 30,\n1940, amounted to 4000 tons containing an average of 0.30 ounces\nof gold per ton. Reasonably assured ore at the present date\namounts to 95O0 tons, averaging 0.30\nounces of gold per ton. Reasonably\nassured ore at the present date\namounts to 5500 tons averaging 0.30\nounces of gold per ton. This tonnage is principally ore disclosed in\nthe work on the new No. 11 leveL\nNUQQET MINE ,\nTotal development In the Nugget\nmine for the year was as follows:\nFeet\nDrifting   S\u2014.. 435.9\nCross-cutting 1,1975\nTotal ....  1,633.1\nThe greater portion of the above\namount of crou-cutting waa In the\n4900 tunnel. This tunnel was stopped when the Nugget vein waa\nintersected. The vein aa disclosed\nat this new horizon la non-commercial.\nBLUESTONE MINE\nTotal development ln the Blue-\nstone tor the year was aa follows:\nFeet\nDrifting  1,105.5\nCross-cutting  169.5\nRaising ...... \u201e .     40.5\nSinking P  154.5\nTotal   1,470.0\nDiamond drilling 1-244.7\nResulta obtained In the exploration of this vein have been disappointing. The disclosure of a\nlength of 50 feet of good values on\nthe 5600 level Induced the sinking\nof a winze to the No. 3 level. While\nthe vein on the new level is structurally strong gold values are low.\nThe ore on the 9600 level proved\nto be a pocket extending 50 feet\nupward and 29 .feet below the level.\nAt April 30, 1940, there  was no\nBostlve ore.  At the  present  date\nlere are 300 tons reasonably assured.\nPROGRAM  POR YEAR\nAHEAD      .\nThe 4900 tunnel will not be advanced under the Fawn Basin until\nsufficient encouragement la found\nIn that area to justify the expense.\nA prospect tunnel has been started\nopposite the Fawn workings to explore the possibility that the Fawn\nveins have corresponding veins in\nthe Reno Quartiites. Thla prospect\ntunnel will be driven until It is in\nthe favorable formation and diamond drilling done both to the North\nand to the South. Surface drilling\ntn this section ls not advantageous\nas the favorable formation has overlying argillltles and deep overburden. Diamond drilling will also\nbe done from the Bluestone for\nparallel veins.\nIn the vertical range of 1000 feet\nln the old Nugget workings there\nwere two ore-shoots with a barren\nhprizon intervening. Although the\nvein at the 4900 level ia non-commercial it is felt that a raise from\nthe 4900 level ls Justified to explore\nthe possibilities of the 840 feet to\nthe bottom Of the old workings.\nWith little help from other sources\nthe continuous drain of mill-feed\ntrom the Motherlode mine at a higher rate than it can comfortably produce has kept the ore reserves at a\nprecariously low level. Ore-shoots\nat the deep level are smaller than\nIn the old mine and do not follow\na regular pattern but mining costs\nhave been considerably lower than\nIn the Reno and thla mine even\nafter carrying development charges\nOf other sections Of the properly\nhas provided a moderate monthly\noperating profit. Results obtained in I\n33%\n33%\n34%\n134%\n132%\n136%\n42%\n43%\n48\nWINNING GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 90 (CP)-Grain\nfutures quotations:\nOpen  High  Low  Cloie\nWHZAT\u2014\nOct      73%    -       -      79K\nDec    74%    \u00ab.       -      Tl*\nOATS-\nOct.   ....   28%    29%    18%\nDec    18%    17%    26%\nMay    28%    28%    18%\nBARLEY\u2014\nOcL   .....   33%    34       93%\nDec   93%    83%    33%\nMay      34%    34%    34%\nFLAX-\nOct  134%    -       -\nDec.   ....   \u2014       \u2014       \u2014\nMay  ..-  -       -      -\nRYE-\nOCL    42       42%    41  .\nDec    42%    43%    42%\nMay     -       -       -\nCash prices'.\nWheat-No. 1 hard 72%; No. 1\nNor. 72%: No. 2 Nor. 70%; No. 3\nNor. 66%; No. 4 Nor. 62%; No. 9\nwheat 98%; No. 6 wheat 96%; teed\nwheat 52%; No. 1 Garnet 04%; No.\n1 hard tough 70%; N\u00ab. 1 amber\nDurum 64%: -No. 4 special 62%; Ko,\n5 special 58%; No. 8 soeclal 56%:\nNo. 1 mixed wheat 87%; track,\nbasis No. 1 Nor. 73; screenings, per\nton .25.\nOats-No. 2 C. W, 28%: Ex. 3\nC. W. 27%; No. 3 C. W. 27%; Ex. 1\nfeed 27%; No. 1 feed 26%; No. 2\nfeed 23%.\nBarley-No. 1 feed 32%; No. 2\nfeed 32%; No. 3 feed 31%; track\n33%\nFlax-No. 1 C. W. 134: No. 2\nC. W. 128%: No. 3 C. W. 120%; No.\n4 C. W. 109%; track 193%.\nRye-No. 2 C. W. 41%.\nSharp Kaffirs Gain\n-   at London Close\nLONDON, Aug. 30 (AP).\u2014Sharp\ngains ln leading kaffirs high-lighted\ntrade in a firm securities market\ntoday. Demand for the jgold waa\nbased in part on favorable aspects\nof the South African supplementary budget Britiah Government\nbonds edged up again and most industrial stock leaders added a few\npence. Mexican Eagle was an outstanding spot in a narrow oil list.\nRubbers, base metals and domestic\nrails coasted along with only minor\nvariations.\nStock closings, ln sterling: Austin\nA 14s; Babcock 6c Wilcox 31s 6d;\nCent Mining \u00a310; Consol Gold\nFields 28a 9d; Crown \u00a312%; De\nBeers dfd. \u00a34; East Geduld \u00a39%;\nMetal Box 62s 6d; Mex Eagle 4s\n10%d; Mining Trust ls l%d; Rand\n\u00a35V\u00bb; Springe 20s 7%d.\nBonds: British 2% per cent Consols \u00a374%; British 3% per cent War\nLoan \u00a3101%; British Funding 4s\n1980-90 \u00a3112%.\t\nT.C.A. Emergency\nField at Creston\nCRESTON, B. C. \u2014 An emergency landing field for Trans Canada Alrwayi planes has been arranged for at Creston, with a visit\nduring the week of Capt. McGregor\nof Vsncouver, Western General Superintendent, accompanied by Engineer H. Proudfoot 0! Winnipeg,\nand D, Weir of Lethbridge, who\nis associated with the company s\nground operations, and recently\ntransferred to the Coast The party\nwas travelling by car and were\nlooking for similar fields between\nLethbridge and Vancouver.\nAt Creston they were shown\naround by M. R. Joyce, President\nof the Board of Trade, and had a\nlook over the three dyked areas,\nfinally deciding on a tract of about\n80 acres on the holdings of A. F.\nRudd and D. K. Archibald in Creston Dyking District three miles\nWest of Creston, and about 500\nyards off the main East and West\nhighway.\t\nChicago Wheat Up\nNearly Two Cents\nCHICAGO, Aug. 30 (AP)-Wheat\nprices shot up almost two cents a\nbushel today at the best level ln\nmore than two weeks.\nBuying stimulated by strength In\nsecurities and aome purchasing of\nmills helped to atart\" the upward\nmovement which gained momentum as previous,short sellers covered accounts. , \t\nWheat cloaed 1%-1% higher\nthan yesterday, September 73\u201478%,\nDecember 75%-%; corn unchanged\nto % higher, September 61%-%,\nDecember 57% - %; oata %-%\nhigher.\t\nRails Hold Gains\nMONTREAL, Aug. 30 (CP) -\nRalls continued to feature the stock\nmarket In today's late dealings.\nCanadian Car was up a point\nwhile the preferred gained more\nthan a point as did National Steei\nCar.\nNickel retained an early fractional advance.\nIndustrials Gain\nNEW YORK, Aug. 30 (AP).-In-\ndustrials and utilities Joined with\nrails today ln a general advance to\nthe bond market.    \u2022\nOf chief Interest in the foreign\ngovernment lilt were Uruguayan\nloans, which advanced for the third\nday.  ^^\nDIVIDENDS\nLamaque Gold Mines Limited, 10\n\"nts. .    . _,\nBurlington Steel Company limited, 15 centa. __     , _\nCanadian Westinghouse Company\nLimited, 37% cents.\nBritish Columbia Power Corporation Limited, clasa \"A\", quarterly,\n50 centa. _,._.__\nDominion Coal Company Limited,\nquarterly preferred, 37 centa.\nNorth American Elevators Ltd.,\n81.75 on aeven per cent cumulative\npreferred.\nCARLOADINCS GAIN\nOTTAWA, Aug. 30 (CP).-Car-\nloadings in Canada rose to 59,400\ncars ln the week ended August 24\nfrom 57.121 the previous week and\n54,884 the same week last year,\nthe Dominion Bureau of Statistics\nreported today.\nMONTREAL PRODUCI\nMONTREAL, Aug. 30  (CP). \u2014\nSoot: Butter, Qua. 21%; Western\n21%. Eggs, Eastern A-large 37\u201437%;\nA.oullete 26-27.\n' Butter futurea: Nov. 23-18%.\n'\/ihb\nPAOI   ELEVEN\n\t\nthe new low level will be the factor\nthat decldea whether the preient\nimall wlnte will be uied for further sinking or it a vertical shaft\nls Justified.\nYburs very truly,\nW. E. ELLIS.\nGeneral Supt.\nI\nKootenay-Boundary Takes to Mineral\nPrizes at the Vancouver Exhibition;\nSpecial Award Slocan City Antimony\nMines Chamber Gives\nFine Show; Femie\nCoal Second\nMlnea of the Kootenay-Boundary\n\u2014all but two In the West Kootenay\n\u2014took 10 out of 36 possible first and\naecond prizes for metallic ores, in\naddition to a second tor coal and a\nspecial for antimony, at the Canada\nPacific Exhibition at Vancouver.\nOver 2000 samples of ores were\nexamined by the Judges.\nFirat prizes were taken by Beaverdell Wellington Syndicate Ltd.,\nBeaverdell, silver ore; Lucky Buy\nmine, Kaslo, lead or lead-silver\nore; Sheep Creek Gold Mlnea Ltd.,\nSheep Creek, gold ore (base type;;\nSullivan mine, Consolidated Mining le Smelting Company, Kimberley, zinc-lead ore; Manganese\nGroup, Kaalo, manganese ore; Lily\nMine, Salmo, zinc ore,\nWinners of seconds were: King\nSolomon mine, Alpine Basin, near\nNelson, gold ore (tree);' Silver\nRidge Mining Company Ltd. Sandon, lead or lead-eilver ore; Kootenay Belle Gold Minea Ltd., Sheep\nCreek, gold ore (base type); Venango Gold Mine Ltd., Nelson, tungiten ore.\nSPECIAL ANTIMONY\nPRIZE\nThe ipecial prize won by the district wu for antimony ore, from\nthe St Jamea Anthony group at\nSlocan City; and the non-metallic\naecond prize waa tor coal from the\nCrow'i Nest Paaa Coal Company,\nLtd., Femie.\nIn taking second for tree gold\nore, the Alpine placed behind the\nPrivateer Mine Ltd, at Zeballos,\nwhich entered a ipectacular sample.\nThe Kootenay cleaned up in gold\nore, base tape, with Sheep Creek\nGold and Kootenay Belle, both of\nSheep Creek, taking flnt and iecond respectively: and in lead or\nlead-silver ore with the Lucky Boy\nof Kaalo first and the Silver Ridge\nof Sandon aecond. The Consoli-\ndated's Sullivan mine won the only\nzinc-lead place; and the Lily of\nSalmo the only award for zinc ore.\nThe gold quartz exhibit from the\nAlpine waa sent in by A. D. Papazian of Nelson, President of the\nTwilight Extension Mines, which. 11\ndeveloping the property.\nCHAMBER MINE*\nDISPLAY\nA fine display arranged by Miss\nEdythe Thomson, Secretary of the\nChamber of Mlnea of Eastern British' Columbia at Nelson includes:\nAntimony ore from the Antimony\nGroup, Slocan City, owned by\nNichol and Elliott; molybdenum ore\nfrom the Little Keene Group,\nSalmo, owned by J. Sapples, Salmo;\nmanganese ore from the Manganese Group, Kaslo, owned by A. J.\nCurie, Kaslo; zinc ore from the\nLily mine, Salmo, owned by P. F.\nHorton, Victoria; t new find of\n$80 gold and silver ore from the\nBachelor mine, Slocan City, owned\nby R. H. Kline; silver-lead ore\nfrom the Lucky Boy, Kailo, owned\nby Charlea Lind, Kaslo; and four\nsamples of acheelite\u2014tungsten ore\n\u2014from the Venango Gold Mines Ltd.\nof Nelson. E. W. Wlddowson of Nelson, veteran assayer had charge of\nthe exhibit\nKootenay Belle, Sheep Creek\nGold and Gold Belt of the Sheep\nCreek district each submitted attractive samples of gold ore.\nSilver, lead, zinc ore from the\nSullivan, and various products of\nthe extensive Consolidated operations at the Trail reduction plants,\ncomprised a large dliplay in the\nmines section.\nGreenwood area sent in \u2022 fine display of ores; and J. T. Lauthera of\nRevelstoke submitted asbestos and\nmanganese ore trom a new\ndiacoyery.\nHave You Read the Classified?\nModerate Buying\nof Northern Wheat\nWINNIPEG, Aug. 30 (CP).-Sale\not 790,000 bushels of Canadian wheat\nfor deferred shipment to the United\nKingdom was confirmed at tha\nWinnipeg Grain Exchange today,\nbut thc business had no apparent\nreaction on pit dealings, Pricei cloaed at government fixed minimum\nlevels of 73% centa a bushel tor\nthe October future and 74% centa\nfor December.\nMills purchased moderate amounts\nof Nos. 3 and 4 Northern ln tb*\ncash wheat market and shippers\nwere looking for fair quantities of\nNo. 2 Durum. There was a demand\nfor moat grades.\nApproximately 200,000 bushels ot\nbarley were traded In the coarse\ngrain pit and a fair amount of oats\nalso changed bands. Eastern inter*\nests supported rye but flax was neglected. The price range waa narrow.\nToronto Slocks in\nRallying Move\nTORONTO, Aug. 30 (CP)-Tha\nstock market climbed out of the\nrut today and registered a strong\nadvance on rising prices. The market is closed tomorrow and Monday.\nA report that buyers v,ere In the\nmarket from the United States helped sentiment for the rise.\nMassey Harris pfd. advanced\nnearly 3 to 33%. Western Canada\nFlour pfd. and Alberta Pacific\n\u25a0Graih pfd. also were strong.\nMacLcod-Cockshutt Gold gained\nabout 30. The close was up 10 to 15\nfor Little Long Lac, Macana, Sylvanite, Wright-Hargreaves, East\nMalartlc, Coniaurum, Aunor, San\nAntonio and Powell Rouyn,.\nGains were posted for Calgary\nand Edmonton, Home Oil and Calmont Royalite was a little stronger\nfor broken lots and the bids were\nfirm for the other Western oils.\nFew Changes at Coast\nVANCOUVER, Aug. 30 (CP). -\nFew changes were registered during fairly active trading on Vancouver Stock Exchange today.\nTransactions totalled 37,980 share*.\nPremier Gold waa up 2 at 86 and\nHedley Mascot advanced 1 to 48.\nBig Missouri closed fractionally\nhigher at 9% while Relief Arlington eased a fraction to .8.\nRoyal Canadian Oil finned a cant\nat 11% and Madison finished fraa-\ntionally higher at 2.\nCALCARY LIVESTOCK\nCALGARY,   Auf.   80   (CP)\nCattle' market light with auj\ncleaning up at steady price*.\nGood to medium steers 6.6M.\nMedium heifers 5.50-6; common\ndown to JO. Good cow* .25-4.50:\ncommon to medium 3-4. Medium to\ngood stocker steers 9.79-8.25. Gooa\nIambi yesterday 126.\nLast bacons 8-8.10.\nNEW AND USED I\nPORTABLE COMPRESSOR!\nAND ROCK DRILLS\nJACK ANNABLE\nRUSTPROOFING\nSCREWS, NAILS, BOLTS, Eta.\nAt Low Coat\nL.C.M. Electroplating\nLaurltx Bldg.        704 Nelion Ave.\nTo\nPrairie\nPoints\nTICKETS ON SALE FOR THC COJNO TRIP\nSEPT. 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th\nReturn Limit 30 Days From Date of Sal*\nSAMPLE ROUND TRIP FARES FROM NELSON TO\nBanff  $11.20\nCalgiry  11.20\nEdmonton     15.85\nMaeleod     8.60\nLethbridge     9.35\nMedicine Hat  12.05\nSaskatoon  ........ 20.55\nMoose Jaw  18.25\nRogina    19.25\nBrandon   24.55\nYorkton      22.30\nWinnipeg   24.95\nAll Ticket* May B* Routed VI* Bantf.Wlndermere Hlghwiy\nAt No Additional Charge\nCorresponding Low Fares to All Other Prairie Points\n STOP OVERS ALLOWED\t\nLABOR DAY\nRound Trip Excursions\nAT FARE AND ONE QUARTER\nTlcketi on Sale Aug. 3lit, Sept. lit, 2nd\nReturn Limit Sept. 9rd\nFare* and Schedulei Subjeet to Change Without Notice\nGREWOUND\n.....    *\n---t-M-A\n M3tL\nIVIC\nffi TODAY\nMATINEE AT 2:00\nComplete Shows 2, 7, 8:58\nHURRY\u2014HURRY\u2014Nothing they've ever done before\ncan compare with this\u2014\nyeaftefl. \u25a0\nMuDONAlD\nNEUON EDDY\nAt 2:25-7:10-9:20\nPLUS \"Cat College\" and \"Unlverial Newi\"\nGRAND LABOR DAY PROGRAM STARTS MONDAY AT 2:00\n\"Another Thin Man\" With William Powell, Myrna U\u00bby\nMarch of Time's \"THI PHILLIPINES\"\nWalt Disney's \"BONE TROUBLE\"\nYou Saw It ln the DAILY NEWS\nFINANCIAL SECURITY\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nMonthly Savings Plan\nR. W. DAWSON\nBonded Representative\nBox 11      Hlpperson Blk.      Ph. 197\n1929 Chrysler Sedan\nLicence and Running Order\nFull Price $85\nQueen City Motors\n561 Joitahlnt St   Limited    Ph. 48\nSugar Bowl\nGrocery\nCorner )eiephlne, Ward St.\nFancy Groceries at Special\nPrices for the  Month-End\nto Tueiday, Sept. 3rd\n25<\n$1.05\nPOTATOES\u2014The Flneit\nQutllty; 10 Ibi.\t\nCOFFEE\u2014Ntbob\n2 lbl. tor \t\nCOFFEE\u2014Ntbob; Dtluxt QCA\nIn bulk; _ Ibi. tor ******\nTEA\u2014Ntbob;\n2 Ibi. tor\t\nSUGAR\u2014Qrtnultted;\nSO Ibi.  .\t\nCERTO\u2014\n2 bottlei\t\n$1.25\n$155\nmm   5K\nECONOMY LIDS-\n2 doien tor \t\nJARS-Wlde  Mouth      6j M\nMason; plnti, per dot. *?*.'**+\ntTi *UJ\nORANGES-Tht Flneit     CQA\nQutllty: 2 dot. ******\nGRAPEFRUIT-Tht Fin\nest Qutllty; 6 for\nMlLK-Canncd, till tint\n10 tor \t\n_nt\n85<\n45*\n\u2022ty\nBACON-Swlft'i Premium, freih illced; Lb. \u2014\nHAM\u2014Delicioui Tenderized, illced; Lb.\t\nFRESH CORN\u2014Large\nGolden; Per dot.\t\nEGGS\u2014Local Freih large CCtfi\nGrtdt A; 2 dot ******\nPEACHES\u2014Elberta  Na.  1   Preserving; $1.29\nPer crttt *?*\u2022***\nMIRACLE WHIP-Urgt   AQA\ntlze; Per Jir ********\nKRAFT 8ALAD\u2014Ltrgt     ABA\ntlze; Per Jir ******\nJAM\u2014Striwberry tnd       AEA\nApple; 4 lb. tin _ '*-***\nMARMALADE\u2014Pure\nOrtnge; 4 lb. tin \t\n451\nPHONE 110\nFor the Bert for the Leait\nFreih   Vegetablei,   Fruiti,   Milk,\nCream, Ict Creim, Revels, etc.\n-NILSON DAILY NI'\nREFRIGERATORS, WASHERS.\nRADIOS, RANGES\non Sale it tht\nStandard Electric\n433 Joiephlne St Phone SSS\nmonttetmttsitmmimitsstt\nLET   US   REFRESH\nYour Dance Duds\nPhone 1042\nMaowwjgessowasMSilwswiawseWi\nFURNACES\nInstalled and Repaired\nR. H. Maber\nPhont 665        610 Kootenty\nFRIED CHICKEN\nSaturday and Sunday .. 50\u00a3\nQrenfell's Cafe\nLambert's\nfor\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\nThere's a Big Difference\nBetween a Crease Job and a\nGuaranteed Lubrication\nSKT CHIEF AUTO\n206 Biker St  SERVICE   Phont 122\n\u25a0___L__.t_.t_**. \u00ab    t   -___ __.l.   I   ______   -    t   __\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0____\nTTvi l*T .  IfW I r??? I 1'IVIf\nREAL ESTATE\nSPECIALIZED SERVICE\nend\nBuilnett Management\nRtnttli ind Salei\nFrank A. Stuart\nExperienced Licenced Agent\n677 Btktr St  Nelion, B.C.  Ph. 980\n,t____ ; A,!.'.,..____,'. __...\u25a0!.__\u25a0 __.1.\u25a0!.__,_ .!,,!\u25a0,_ ____\nfff *w*W I I \"WWW t *~**w***W I l\u2122v* I  TOTT\nlots Stw It In the DAILY NEWS\nFire Sale\nof Builders Supplies\nSTARTS TUESDAY \u2014 SEPTEMBER 3rd\nNelson Sash & Door\nCompany Limited\n701 Front St. Phone 292\nMcGlafy\nRANGES\nBake Like a\nMaster. Keep\nthe Home Cozy\nBURNS   ALL   TYPES\nOF COAL WITH THE\nUTMOST   ECONOMY\nAND   EFFICIENCY\nCall and Let Us Show You. the Range That You Will\nBe Proud to Own\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nGET READYF0R SCHOOL\nN. \u25a0. 9\u2014SATURDAY MORNINQ. AUO. S\nINCENDIARY BOMBS\nCONTAIN CRUDI OlL\nLONDON, Aug. 30 (CPl-Germin\nlncendliry bombi dropped lo the\nLondon area were tound to be a\nnew kind consisting of a lightly\nconstructed container ot crude oil.\nWhether this new type turns out In\ntbe long run to be more effective\nlt undoubtedly will give tht fire\nfighters  i  fresh   problem.   Small\nSumpi trt useless tgtlnit tht bltz-\nig oil, ind more tend will have to\nba uied.\nAnd Once Again\nMann, Rutherford\nIs the Headquarters for\nTEXT BOOKS and\nSCHOOL SUPPLIES\nFrench Review Crammar  ?1.40\nLatin for Today, Second Courta $1.25\nDominion French Reader, Book I  75^\nModern French Short Stories  75t.\nHealth Essentials  ?l-35\nA Book of Modern Prose  90f\nThe Engliih Apprentice  \u25a0\u2022 65\u00ab\\\nAnd all other text books required by the various schools\nstww\nSpecial\u2014Cirteri..  15c.  Fountain\nPtn Ink f Of}\nFor          *_\n10c Exerolit Booki\u2014       QQA\nDoien  \u2014  ****Y\n_.uc_ER8i & io<- m\nPENCILS-\n2 for _\t\nSCRIBBLERS- \u00a3\u00a3 |Qj}\nSet \u2022owrplji lOt. W\n_\u00abhK,!rr. ***** w w\nSCHOOL BAGS\u2014Eich\nSOU $1.35 $2.25\nSCHOOL SATCHELS\u2014Eich\n$1.35 $2.00 $2.25\n20c Extrelie Booki\u2014       ' JQ\/J\nMf\nm\nITt-tZ^  iH   VrM\nMCLEAN'S PENS- fflgt\netch  \u2014. *\"*\niff1\u2122*- \u00bb m\nLOOSE LEAF BOOKS\nLOOSE LEAF REFILLS\n3 for\n39c Snow Whlt_e School\nCompendiumi\u2014For \t\nCOMPASSES\u2014\nEaoh  \t\nMann, Rutherford Drug Co.\n1140-\n498 Baker St.\nPhone 81\nNorwegians Join\n(anadian Marine\nHALIFAX, Aug. SO (CP)-Hun-\ndreds of men of the Norwegian\nMerchant Marine have donned naval uniforms here to take up the\nfight against the Naii invaders who\ngovern their country.\nThe Norwegians, in groups of\nabout 200, are being sent to another\nEast Coast Canadian Port for training under officers of the Norwegian\nnavy who escaped to this country\nafter Hitler invaded their homeland.\nAbout 1200 men are expected to\nbe enrolled before long. An estimated 800 already are in uniform. The\nNorwegians are expected to engage\nin coastal patrol duties after their\nperiod of training ls ooncluded.\nThe great majority of them have\ncome from' whaling fleets which\nput into this port in the last few\nweeks, unwilling to return to a\nGerman-dominated Norway after\nthe whaling season. As many as 200\nmen have joined from one of the\nhuge mother ships. The little killer\nvessels, about the slie of trawlers,\ncontribute fewer numbers.    \"\n\"India Will Throw\nWeight With Britain\"\nBOMBAY, Aug. 30   (OP)-India\nwith all her vast millions in man'\npower will throw her full weight\ninto the struggle with Britain\nagainst the Axis powers only if\nIndia'i independence is acknowledged, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru\nformer president of the Indian National  Congress, declared today.\nNehru said the Aug. 8 statement\nby Lord Linlithgow, Viceroy of\nIndia, reiterating promises ot \"Empire partnership\" between India\nand Britain at the end of tbe war\nas actually a continuation of the\nentire British policy of creating and\naggravating disruptive tendencies,\ncrushing nationalism and advance\nelements in favor of feudal and\nrecationary croups so as to consolidate Britiah Imperialism.\"\nFined $10 for\nTrail Speeding\nTRAIL B. C August 30\u2014Plead-\ning guilty to a charge of exceeding\nthe 20-mlle speed limit, John Lazareff. Jr., of Trail, was fined $10\nand costs by Magistrate Parker Williams, in City Police Court Friday\nafternoon.\nLOUISIANA CELEBRATES\nHUEY LONG'S BIRTHDAY\nBATON ROUGE, La, Aug. 30\n(AP). \u2014 Louisiana celebrated the\nlate Huey P. Long's birth anniversary with a holiday today as the\ncourts continued to grind out in\ndlctments against the heirs who\ntook over his political empire in\n1935.\nFormer Governor Richard W,\nLeche, already under conviction for\nmail fraud, headed a list of six persons indicted yesterday by the New\nOrleans Grand Jury on charges\nranging from \"bribery to \"eonil-\ndence\" games.\nCOOL OFF ON HOT DAYS\nVisit the\nPERCOLATOR\nFOUNTAIN\nPHONE 815\nfor better and prompter lervlce In plumbing repain and\nalteration!\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nNow li the tlmt to fumigate\nWith SMYTHE'S BLACK DEATH\nTo Bed Bugt\nSnufihiL\nPrescription Druggist Phont 1\nMACO CLEANERS\nI\nWe Specialize on\nVelvet Dreiiei\nPhont ttt\n327 Biker\nI\n'Over 550 Vessels\nal See Every Day'\nOTTAWA, Aug. 80 (CP)\u2014 Con.\ntlnued successful watch and ward\nof Hii Majesty's ships, Including the\nHS ships cf tbe Koyal Canadian\nNavy, over the sea lanes that link\nthe Empire, waa illustrated by ity\nfigures preiented to a preu conference today by Navy Minister\nMacdonald.\nThe Minister noted that \"over\n690 vessels ot the British naviei\nare at tea every day.\" Since the\nwtr broke out more than 82,000\nmerchant ships have been escorted\nin convoy with a Ion ot 80.\nGreat Britain continues to receive tood and fighting material\ndespatched In thousandi of tons of\nshipping, much of it convoyed from\nCanadian porta by Canadian ships,\nthe Mlniiter said.\nDuring tht IQ weeks ended Aug.\n3 total import! to the United Kingdom were 9,930,545 toni ot which 2,-\n676,223 tons were food, 2,880,022\ntons oil, and 2,212,716 minerals.\nUp to Aug. 17, he pointed out,\nenemy mercantile losses totalled\n1,212,000 tons, British total shipping\nlossei were 1,348,565 tons. The British, plus Allied and neutral losses\ntotalled 2.558,335 tons.\nMerchant vessels to tht number\nof 179, totalling 1,300,000 tons are\nunder construction in tile United\nKingdom alope, with numeroui\nother vessels being built throughout the Empire. Mr. Macdonald\n\u2022aid merchant marine vessels as\nwell ai naval craft were under\nconstruction In Cinadian shipyards.\nThe total allied merchant marine\ntonnage, he said, la between ilx\nand seven millions exclusive of\n800,000 toni of Danish and French\nshipping, and 750,000 tons of neutral shipping ln Allied service.\nFrench Prisoners\nMay Go to Germany\nLES VHRREBRES, French-Swiss\nFrontier, Aug. 80 (AP)\u2014Informed\nsources declared today the German Army of occupation la considering taking all French war\nprisoners from the occupied zone\nto Germany because of a growing\nconviction the war will continue\nat least through the Winter.\nMore than 1,000,000 prisoners are\nInvolved, it wai said.\nThe Germani would free these\nmen in occupied territory but the\nfear of sabotage and disorders, it\nwas said, and the Vichy Government, is unequipped to care for\nthem in the French zone not under\noccupation.\nFurthermore, these sources said\niome supplies earmarked for German occupying forcei and troops\npreparing for the battle of Britain\nare being used for war prisoners\nbecause of the inability of French\nauthorities to feed them properly.\nCanada's Aid\nCheers Britain\n\u25a0y EDWIN S. JOHNSON\n(Canadian Pren staff Wrlttr)\nLONDON, Aug. II (CP)-At the\ncloie of the first yttr of war, Canada stands by tht side of the\nMother Country ln the Battle of\nBritain. Residents of thU embattled\nIsland have ever the cheery word\ntor tht youngest Dominion tnd ita\nmounting aid In men md munitions.\nWhen the First Diviiion ctmt to\nEngland in chill December, the\ncountry'i hospitality warmed tht\nhearts of tbe shivering Canadians.\n\"Canada'' on broad khaki shoulders\npromised aid to tbe Allies ln a battle really not begun.\nAnnouncement of the Commonwealth Air Training scheme ln December and lta development, tfter\ntarly delays, to wider scope thin\nplanned wai accepted ln official\ncircle! as one of the war's heaviest\nmoril itrokei agalnit Hitler. Soon\nCanida will be producing highly\ntrained ilrmen ln iuch numbers n\nto turn the tide of battle In tht\ntkiei.\nCanada's own fliers, who aaw\nlittle action until the \"baby blltz-\nkrelg\" of August, swept into the\nbattle to ready British cheers. Recalling the daredevil Canadians of\nthe First Great War, the public\nwatched the tallies of potential Canadian \"acei\" almost more eagerly\nthan ot the battle-tried English pilots who fight through the war's\nflnt year,-\nCanida's defence Halaon with the\nUnited Statei meant to England a\nguarantee of the utmost aid from\nAmerica's Indispensable arsenal. It\nwas realized the lease to the United\nStates ot naval bases in the Western\nHemisphere could never be possible\nfailing the century-old co-operation\nbetween Canada and the Statei.\nThe steady flow of food supplies\nfrom Canada and the promise of\nincreased war material gave confidence ln the months when United\nStates aid was not too certain.\nIn the riling tempo of the war\nfor' freedom, Canada kept itep with\nBritain. Tbe trrival In Auguit of\nthe crack Second Dlviilon, giving\nBritain the forcei for a Canadian\ncorps of two divisions tnd ancillary\nforces under Lt.-Gen. A. G. L McNaughton, wai the final, unnecessary assurance that Canada ls as\ndetermined aa tht truest Briton that\nthis war must be fought \"on to the\nend.\"\nHOUDAY\nNEEDS\nFRESH FILMS\nFISHING TACKLE\nPICNIC SUPPLIES\nCity Drug Co.\nPhone 34 Box 480\nMrs. Popoff W.I.\nVice-President\nVANCOUVER, Aug 30 (CP). -\nMri. B. F. Gununow of Peachland,\nB. O, was elected President of thl\nBritish Columbia Womcni Institutes at the concluding sessions of\nthe sixth biennial convention in\nHotel .Vancouver todty. Others selected to the executive Were Mn.\nK. Popoff, Slocin City, Second\nVice-President.\nThe retiring Preiident, Mn. H.\nMcGregor, of Penticton, made an\nappeal tor the 78,000 member! of\nthe Institute! in the Dominion to\neach contribute five centa for a\nnitionil gift to be presented to\nthe Government to use where moat\nnecessary.\nMn. McGregor appealed alio to\nmemben of the Britiah Columbia\nInstitutes to contribute SO centt\neach, to be given to the Government at a separate gift of British\nColumbia.\nFall Hats,\nTour new Fall Hat li hen.\nBrims art wider, crowm lit\nlower ind tapered, colon aba\ndarker.\nKensington ?4.00\nBiltmore |4.00\nIrock fS.00\nStation ?6.00\nEMORY'S LTD.\nFriendly Service\nFor (vary Motorlat\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpp. Pott Offlet and Hume Hotel\nAT YOUR, PALM DEALERS\nDCVI. Y    CHOCOLATE\nH__.YI_.-Ll SUNDAE\nB bulk Ice Cream\nLOTS FOR SAfcf\n1% acre lott at Balfour 100 teet\nreal land Detch. tnd trees for shade.\n$250 each  Easy termi\nRobertion Realty Co., Ltd.\nCABINET MEETS\nOTTAWA, Aug. 30 (CP), -,Cab-\nMt Council wai in union two\nhoun today handling an accumulation ot routine business mainly\nasiociated with war contracti for\nconstruction and supply. No announcements wera mtdt.\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSUITE 205 MEDICAL ARTS BLDG\nNAVY MINISTER TO\nATTEND SHIP LAUNCHING\nOTTAWA, Aug. 30 (CP). - Ntvy\nMinister Macdonald will be preient at the launching of a new antisubmarine vetiel of the Corvette\ntype at Kingston, Ont, tomorrow, It\nwas snnounced today.\nImmediately after the vessel has\nbeen launched the Miniiter will\nlay the keel ot another Corvette.\nNext Tuesday Mr. Macdonald will\nfly to Vancouver to make an address. He will not attempt any Inspection on thia occasion, returning Immediately to the capital.\nHOOD'S\nGold Cake\nYOUR HOME BAKERY\n1931 OLDSMOBILE\nSEDAN\u2014$265\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nBaktr St   . Limited     Phont 111\nFleury s Pharmacy\nMed. Art! Blk.\nPHONE 25\nPreicriptioni\nLl NJ4\/_\"1'     Compounded\nAccurately\nAuction Sale\n2 P. M.\nTodiy, Aug. 31\n311 Union St.\nFairview, Juit Off Douglu Rotd\nUnder Initructloni trom Mrs. C\nH. Erickson I will offer the following: Iron Wheelbarrow, Hall\nStand, Settee, 2 Rockers, Boya1\nCrown Bicycle, Utensils, Crosscut Saw, Dishes, Glassware,\nCrocks, Cushions, 3 Camera!,\n7x13  Truck  Body,   (subject to\nSrior sale), Waah Tubs, 5 tube\nleneral Electric Radio, Small\nTable Radio, and fine collection\nof planta consisting ot cacti, geranium!, oleanders, begonia a,\ntools, drill iteel, etc; etc, etc\nGoodi on View Morning of Salt\nTermi: Caih O.Hontead,\nAuctioneer.\nTrail Man Lacked\nBusiness Licence\nTRAIL, B. C, Aug. 30\u2014Irving J.\nTrembath of Trail wai convicted\nof carrying on a business aa an\naccountant in the City of Trail without holding a subsisting licence, before Magistrate Parker Williams, In\nCity Police Court Friday afternoon,\nand fined $3 and costs.\nNEW FIGHTER FOR\nNAVAL AIR SERVICE\nLONDON, Aug. 80 (CP).\u2014A new\ntwo-seater fighter, described as a\nbetter performer than the Skua\ndive-bomber used by the fleet air\narm, ls being commissioned for\nnaval air service, it wat disclosed\ntoday. It ls named the Fulmar after\nthe swift sea bird of tbe Petrel\nfamily.\nALBERTA UNIVERSITY\nTO TRAIN STUDENTS\nEDMONTON, Aug. 30 (CP) -\nAll male students, not lust those\nover Jl\u2014will receive military training at the University of Alberta,\nduring the coming term, LleuL-Col.\nP. S. Warren, Ofticer'Commandlng\nthe U. of A. contingent ot the\nCanadian Officers Training Corps,\nsaid today.\nFILM MAGNATE INDICTED\nON BRIBERY CHARGE\nNEW YORK, Aug. 30 (AP) -\nGeorge P. Skouras, part owner of\nthe largest chain of independent\nmotion picture theatres In the country wti Indicted today by i Federtl\nGrand Jury for conspiring to brige\nforme* United StatA Circuit Court\nJudge Martin T. Manton, now in\nprison.\nREICHSMARK GOES\nINTO LUXEMBOURG\nBERLIN, Aug. 30 (AP) - The\nreiebsmark has been introduced ai\nlegal tender in German-occupied\nLuxembourg as a further step toward incorporation of the Duchy\nInto the Reich's economy, lt wai\ndisclosed today.\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nFOR SALE \u2014 PURE BRED BOS-\nton Bui! pupa. Males $10, females\ntt. Miss 1. McKay, Balfour, B. C.\neWWWvVWv^\nJtt3\u00bb339S3$$SS9fi*333Segg3SS\nNEWS OF THE DAY\n\u00abs\u00bb\nmiitmmststitttssm\nGolf Club Dance Tonight;\nAug. 31, 8* pjn.\nSenior Bueball iemi-final. Trail\nCardinali vi. Ntlion, Sundiy, 2:30.\nBig Weekend Dance at Willow\nPoint tonight.\nSmythe's Drug Store la optn all\nday Sundiy. Phone 1.\nFor sale \u2014 20 cords of seasoned\npoplar. Phone 289Y3.\nGet your fllmi, alto developing\ndont it Valentine'!.\n'TWO WARS TO WIN\"\nPLYMOUTH; Engladd, Aug. 30\n(CP Cable)\u2014Britain hai two wan\nto win, Capt Htrry Crookihank*,\nFinancial Secretary to the Treasury,\ntold a luncheon meeting here today. He aaid the two were \"the war\nagainst the Nazis and the war\nagalnit Inflation which mean! the\nloia of money's value.\" He urgtd\neveryone to save to the point of\nself-denltL\nSYDNEY, Amtrtlla (CP).-Sat.\nIsfactlon ii expreiied here with\nthe announcement that the United\nStates Defence Commission ll negotiating with Great Britain foi\nAustralian wool\nHarold Foulds - Electrician\nLighting planta. Hat. wiring. Ph. 644\nWanted plums and early apples at\nonce. McDonald Jam Company Ltd\nPlm for the gala Midnight Frolic\nat Willow Point Sunday night.\nWant to keep cool? Drop' ln to\nGRAY'S lor a cold drink. 680 Baker.\nSEE A. TERRILL FOR UPHOL8-\nTERINO and DRAPERIES. 120\nHIQH STRgr..\t\nTonight\u2014Tonight\u2014Tonight\nMtntttr pte-Holldty Dtnee. gaglt't\nHill.\u2014Troubidour Orcheitra.\nExhibition Baseball. League leaden. Trail Indiana va. Nelaon, 1:30\np.m., Monday.\nDancing \u00bb p.m. till 1 T f t Mon.\nnight, Civic Centre Hill. Mirgtrtt\nGraham'i Orehettrt.\nSPEED! THRILLS! SPILLS! CHILLS!\nYou'll Experience Thtm All for rho Nominal Charge of ZSf ti tha\nNELSON KINSMEN CLUB'S\n\"WIN THE WAR\"\nWATER CARNIVAL\nNELSON CITY WHARF - LABOR DAY - 3 P.M.\nPROCEEDS to go to tha\nNelson and District BOMBER FUND\nBoat Races \u2014 Rowing Races \u2014 Canoe Races \u2014 Swimming\nEvents \u2014 Aquaplaning\nDally Norrli, L. R. S. M., teicher\nof Violin, Pltnofortt tnd Thtory.\nStudio\u2014711 SIMM Strttt\nt \u25a0\u2014 '\nSpecial Auguit Silel Bread boxei\nSl.lt. Aluminum dripolitor \u00bbl.lt.\nBiamel preiervtng kettlea $1.48.\nHipperson Htrdwtrt Company.\nAU surplus fruit suitable for Jam\nurgently needed by Red Groti.\nPleaie leave at Civic Centre East\nside entrance September J.\nSHIRLEY'S LUNCH BAR\nOpp. Dally News. Specializing ln\ntasty snacks and business men'i lun-\nchti. Optn 6:30 a.m. to 12 midnight\nPRESERVING! PEACHI8\nNO, 1 ILBIRTAS   $1JS\nNO. 1  ROCHESTERS $1.19\nPhont 10 or 11. Htvt thtm delivered\ntodty>-Tht STAR QROC1RY.\nChurch ot tht Redeemer\nSun., Sept. 1. Annlvtntry of Wir\nDay ol Priytr tnd Interceition.\nRegulir lervlctt it 8:00 t.m, 11:00\nt.m. and 7:30 p.m.\nNELSON BUSINESS COLLEGE\nThe College Mth a Provincial Reputation\nINDIVIDUAL TUITION      COMMENCE ANY TIME\nTho demand for competent stenographers will be very\ngreat during the coming year.\u2014Prepare yourself now.\nComplete COMMERCIAL COURSE\n107\nBAKER ST.\nNew Term Commences\nTueiday, Sept. 3, 1940\nPHONE\n603\nNothing So Cooling as a Tall\nGlass of Columbia  Lager\nThe man who finds this hot\nweather a bit overbearing will\nfind real refreshment and\ntongue-tingling good taste ir\na tall, chilled glass of Columbia\nLager. It's the favorite with\neveryone everywhere.\nKOOTENAY BREWERIES LIMITED\n.talis\nThii tdvt it not publlihed or diipltyed\nLiquor Control Boird or by\nof British Columbia.\n:_. _\u25a0___..,_,<\u25a0_);:-_-,,,- y, g,-ij||T , flfflgjfr\nO^y^^^^^^U^\n;_^\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1940_08_31","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0415071","@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":"1940-08-31 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1940-08-31 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\/1.0415071"}