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Lancasters, the\nAir Ministry announced tonight.\nAttacking out of the Arctic mists, it took the R.A.F. airmen only a few minutes to finish oft this great potential killer\nwhich never had engaged in a1\"\nsingle surface battle, and\nwhich the Germans were five\nyears in building at a cost of\n$50,000,000,\nThe wet to the R.A.F. wu one\nbomber, out of an attacking force ot\n29, an Air Ministry communique\nlaid.\nThree bombs landed on the deck\nof the Tlrplti, which blew up inside,\nkeeled over and sank slowly, ending\na three-year chase by Britain and\nIlussla.\nThe Lancasters itruck at 10:30\na.m., from a height of 5000 feet, and\nIS minutes later the ship burst into\ntlemes and turned over. Reconnaissance showed the\/hip had capsized,\nwith 790 feet of her keeling sticking\nout of the water.\nThe slster.ship of the ill-fated\nBismarck went to her grave just a\nlew days after reports from neutral\ncountries had speculated on an Imminent Invasion of Norway by the\nAllies.\nThi Tlrplti, already crippled by\nprevious air and midget submarine\nassaults, had been a threat to the\nArctic supply lines to Russia, and a\npotential menace to any landing In\nNorway.\nThe successful mission of the big\nbombers, carrying the new streamlined, armor-piercing 12,000 pound\nearthquake bombs, was led by Wing\nCmdr. J. B. Tait and Sqdn. Ldr A.\nG. Williams. Taking off from Britain, the planes \"landed away from\nbase\" presumably in Russia.\nRoaring ln before the Germans\ncould throw up their usual protective smoke screen, the Lancaster!\ncaught the ship in an explosive vile\nand the three direct hits were registered ln quick succession.\n\"Her guns had been firing Uke\nblazes, when wt tint arrived,\" said\ntn Australian pilot. Fit Lt B. A.\nliuckham ot Sydney. \"The guns\nstopped alter tbt first bomb. Not a\n_ lot came up after that Smoke began to pour up.\n\"Afterwards there were several\nii plosions. On* et them wm very\nbig and one at my crew shouted out\nover the lnter-com, \"she's en tire,\nskipper, she's on fire.\"\n\"The fire did not seem to laat\nvery long, not more than two or\nthree minutea\u2014I should say. It was\ndifficult to aee exactly what was\nhappening.\"\n\"The ship wu already on Its side\nwhen we came off our run,\" his tail\ngunner said.\nThe Tirpitz, one of the most powerful warships In the world, bristled with eight 15-inch guns in two\nturrets, II six-inch and 16 four-inch\nguns, carried four planes, and a normal crew of 1600 men.\nThe Germans' only other ship of\nthla class, the Bismarck, was sunk\nby the Royal Navy May 27, 1M1,\nfollowing a 1700 mile chase alter\nthe Bismarck had sunk the British\n. battlecrulser Hood between Greenland and Iceland.\nTwo other ships of the Tirpitz\nclass were under construction when\nthe war started, but they were never completed.\nNow Hitler has left only two pocket battleships, the Scheer, and the\nLutzow, two eight-Inch cruisers, the\nHipper and the Prince Eugen, and\nfour alx-lnch cruisers.\nINCREASING SIGNS\nHIMMLER HAS\nTAKEN OVER\nLONDON, Nov. 13 (CP) - There\nwere increasing signs tonight that\nHelnrlch Himmler had.taken over\nas Nazi No. 1\u2014possibly even mill.\ntarily.\nThe Moscow radio said orders\ngiven German officers in East Prussia to \"fight to the last man\" were\nsigned by Himmler and not Hitler.\nThe Berlin radio spokesman, Dr.\nRudolf Semmler, said Himmler ln\nbroadcasting Hitler's proclamation\nyesterday, acted as the Fuehrer's\nclosest collaborator. Semmler claimed the worlds were Hitler's but he\nraid the German people \"will follow\ntheir leaders\"\u2014using the plural\nFRANCETOBE\nGIVEN CONTROL\nOf SAAR MINES\nAssassination Report\nLaughed\nOff as Propaganda\nPARIS, Nov. 11 (AP) - Agree.\nmenu tor the demilitarization ef\nthe Saar\u2014with France In control\nof the' mines as was done efter the\nlast World War-full participation\nIn the post-war development ef\nEurope, and the speedy rearmament ef the French Army, were\nreached during fhe weekend conferences between Prime Minister\nChurchill and Oen. de Gaulle, It\nwas reliably reported tonight.\nOerman radio reporti of an Armistice Day attempt to assassinate Mr.\nChurchill and Gen. de Gaulle as\nthey were riding along the Champa\nElysees were laughed off here as\na propaganda attempt to make the\nGerman home front believe life in\nParis was worse than life ln Ber-\nIln.\nAlthough almost 1,000,000 persons\nturned out during the weekend and\ncheered the two leaders, only one\nIsolated case of violence wu reported.\nIn addition to giving France a\nseat on the European Advisory Commission, Mr. Churchill end Qen. de\nGaulle were reported agreed that\na itrong French fighting force\nshould be equipped u quickly aa\npossible and that tbe French ihould\nparticipate In the military occupation of Germany along with British,\nRussian and American forcea.\nThe exact tree to be assigned.) |\nleft to the 'European Commission I\nto decide. In the flnt deliberations of thla queitlon the Commlulon assigned Eastern Germany to Ruula; the Southern\narea to the United Statu end\nNorthwestern Qermany te England.\nMr. Churchill and Oen. de Gaulle\nwere reported to have shelved such\nspecific problems as the Italian Levant question and Spain to concentrate on general principles for\nCommon action.\nThe afternoon preaa\u2014there are\nitlll no morning newipapere-s\u00bbn-\ntlnued to sound an exultant note.\nLiberation Soir laid that by\nTrance's admission to the European\nCommission \"an Intolerable Injustice is righted\" and Trance haa\nregained her place among the great\npowers.\"\nNEUON, BRITI8H COLUMBIA. CANADA-TUE8DAY MORNING. NOVEMBER 14. 1944\nProvide Double Depreciation\nto Aid Reconstruction.\u2014Page\nRedevelopment ef\nDamaged Areas.\u2014Page I.\nHundredi Return\non Hospital Ship.\u2014Pag* 3.\n^\nKing to Ask (or\nAirman Named to\nSask. Legislature\nLONDON, Nov. IS (CP Cable)-\nKlertlon of Lac. D. S. Valleau of\nAyhhim, Sask., to represent European theatre servicemen tn the Saskatchewan legislature was announced today by Lt-Col. T. W. G.\nMiles, European returning officer.\nAlio announced was the election\nof Lt-Col Alan W Embury of Regina and Saskatoon ai serviceman\nmember for the Mediterranean. (\n(MIJ. Malcolm Doble of Payh-\nton, Sask., has been returned as\nmember for Saskatchewan servicemen ln Canada).\nJap Drive to Cut\nChina Appears\nNear Completion\nCHUNGKING, Nov. 13 (AP) -\nThe Japanese drive to cut China in\nhalt and establish a land route trom\nManchuria into extreme South\nChina appeared near completion tonight with the Chinese High Command reporting only localized street\nfighting In Liuchow.\nAlso near completion with this\nsetback was the enemy strategy of\neliminating American air bases ln\nSoutheastern China.\nLiuchow was the former site of\nthe last main United States air base\nln the area\n(An Associated Press dispatch\nfrom Kunming said that with the\nloss of Liuchow \"Southeastern China\nfor a long time to come, if not forever, thus hu been eliminated aa a\npossible rone of Inland offensive\nagainst the Japanese armies.\")\nH.M.C.S. \"UGANDA\" CANADA'S FIRST CRUISER: During 1\nbrief but Imprssslve ceremony, held reoently at an Eastern U. 8. Htny\nYard, the powerful 8000 ten cruiser \"Uganda\" wai officially transferred from the Royal Navy te the Royal Canadian Navy. The first of\ntwo cruisers for Canada'i fast-growing Navy, H.M.C.S. \"Uganda\",\nshown here, ll 549 feet In length, mounts 9 six-Inch guns, I twenty-\none Inch torpedo tubes and li equipped with the very latest antl-alr\u2022\neraft armament. \"Uganda\" hae a speed of more than 30 knots, carries\nI complement ef some M0 men. and Is entirely Canadian manned.\nCompleted and originally commissioned for thi Royal Navy late In\n1942, \"Uganda\" played an Important role In the Invasion ef Sicily and\nItaly. Later she moved up the Italian coast In support ef the landing! at Salerno where ihe wai damaged by enemy aircraft. Shi subsequently made her way to thi United Statei for refit Inset at upper\nleft Is Capt. O. R. Mainguy, O.B.E., R.C.N., of Chemalnus, B.C., commanding officer ef Canada's new 8000-ton cruiser, H.M.C.S. Uganda.\nRCN Photo.\nRefuse to Consider\ner Kent Case\nTyl\n\"WASHINGTON, Nov. 11 (AP) -\nThe United States Supreme Court\nrefused today for the second time to\nconsider the case of Tyler Kent, convicted In a British court of violating\nthe British Official War Secrets Act\nKent, a code clerk In the American\nEmbassy tn London, was sentenced\nto seven years' Imprisonment His\nmother, Mrs. Ann H. P. Kent of Washington, isked the Supreme Court\nto intervene ln thi cue.\nKootenay's Bond Scores\nSEVENTH VICTORY LOAN, GENERAL CANVASS:\nDay's Sales     Total     Percentage     Quota\nTrail Unit  .       $24,500   $1,114,750    109.     $1,025,000\nEoit Kootenay _ 21,550      1,218,150    121.8      1,000,000\nNelion Unit '       1,043,250    126.5        825,000\nHi\nQUEBEC UNITS\n4 French Canadian\nRegiments Answer\nLaFleche's Appeal\nMONTREAL, Nov. fS (tP> -\n' Maj.-Gen. L. R, LaFleche, Minister of National War Services, In e\nstatement Issued hire tonight\n\u2022aid that he, aa a Quebec Minister, \"hu assumed the responsibility of arranging to find the\nmen needed for French-Canadian\nunits now In action.\"\n\u00bb Hi added that over the weekend he had obtained formal often from the commanding offlcen ef four Province of Quebec\nregiments new on the battlefront!\nand he confidently awaited a similar response from another regiment \"There will be others as\nsoon as I have tha opportunity to\nput the matter up to ths regiments.\"\nMaj.-Gen. LaFleche, >\u2022 native of\nSorcl, Que., who wu himself seriously wounded while serving with\nthe French-speaking Royal 22nd\nRegiment in the Tint Great War and\nwu decorated with the D.S.O. and\nFrench Legion of Honor, said that\nIt wu only three weeka ago tbt\nhe learned \"for the first time,\" w\nthe reinforcement situation.\n\"I wu convinced,\" the statement\ncontinued, 'thlt men of Quebec\nwould, if the situation were placed\nbefore them with complete frankness and on the basis ot equal privilege for equal sacrifice, make lt\ntheir patriotic duty to Iniure that\nnever would thelr'compatrioti overieu be threatened with a shortage\not reinforcements. Accordingly, I\nvolunteered to take the affair in\nhand and virtually to guarantee the\nProvince of Quebec's answer to the\ncall for more men for French-Canadian regiments.\n\"My proposal wu not taken up.\n\"A change tn the Ministry of National Defence followed and I was\nthen uked to find the volunteers.\n\"I am now in receipt of an official offer from the commanding\nofficer of the Fusiliers Mont-Royal\nto raise a reinforcing battalion for\nthe 1st Battalion of that regiment at\npresent ln action against the Germans on the Western front\n\"I hold a similar offer from the\ncommanding officer of the Regiment de Malasonneuve, the first\nregiment in Canada to reach full\nmobilization after tha war broke\nout In 1919.\n\"The commanding officer of the\nRegiment de Jollette and of the\nRegiment de Chateauguay have given me similar assurances.\n\"I await the offers of reinforce\nments from a fifth Quebec regl\nment\n\"In each cue Pie home regiment\noffering a reinforcing battalion will\nMetz's Forts Fall\nOther Forces Wheel Southeast of City\nto Within 13Va Miles of German Border\nBy HOWARD COWAN\nAiiociated Preu Staff Writer\nLONDON, Nov. 13 (AP) \u2014 The first three of Metz's 22\nforts fill today to United Stotes 3rd Army infantry as their\ncpmrades pressed on more than four miles through the snow\nand bitter cold in a wheeling movement Southeast of (the\nfortress city to within 13 Vi miles of the German border.\nTh? surprising capture of these ogtward defences of the\ncitadel came as the 3rd Army^\nBy R. K. CARNEGII\nCanadian Pren Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, Nov. 13 (CP) \u2014 Prime Minister Mackenzie\nKing tonight announced House of Commons will meet Nov. 22\nand' it was learned later on reliable authority that he will ask\nfor a vote of confidence on the Government's stand to continue\nthe voluntary system of sup-'\nplying reinforcements for over-\nplunged ahead all along a 40\nmile front South and Southeast\nof Metz, overrunning at least\n15 more towns.\nThe main prize was Fort L'Alane,\nactually a series of under-ground\nfortresses Joined together much, as\nat bloody Fort Driant, back across\nthe Moselle to the Wut\nThe second wu at Verny, South\nof Metz, and the third close by.\nFort Vsrny, one of the smaller\nnetworks 6'\/_ miles South of Metz,\nwas captured without a shot\nDespite the mud, which for a\ntime tlowed the Srd Army on this\nsixth day of Its new offensive,\nAmerican tank! In an advance of\nup to four miles drove Into many\nand Thlcourt, 16 miles South of\nthe Bur frontier.\nDeepening their Bridgehead across\nthe Nied River Southeast of Metz,\nto at least four miles, the Americans were fighting within four mllfa\nof the enemy bue at Faulquemont,\n19 miles Eut and slightly South of\nMetz.\nA second Nied bridgehead a few\nmiles West was consolidated u the\nlut of the enemy wu cleared from\nAncervllle, 10 miles Southeast of\nMetz. These latest successes increased to 17 miles the penetration of\nMetz' Eastern defences since the\nattack broke Nov. 8.\nOns United Statu division In a\ngain of ons to two miles entered\nMarthllla, 2D miles Southeast of\nMetz, and three miles West of\nMorhange, where the big opening\nbattle of tha First Great War was\nfought\nAs the American forces driving\nhave the privilege of selecting the\nunit It will reinforce. The first appeal to 'go active' will be mide\nto N RM.A. men.\n\"As I have alwayi been, I am\nextremely proud of my compatriots and hava every confidence in\nthem.\n\"I hive been very happy to Inform the Rt H6n. W. L. Mackenzie King of theie offers. He also\nln the hour of crisis had tilth ln\nhis fellow Canadians.\"\nhead-on agalnit Metz reached a\npoint five miles to the South, the\nbig guns of the outer forts opened\nup for the first time.\nThe new bridgehead across the\nMoselle\u2014most formidable of all the\nwater barriers guarding Met*\u2014was\nthrown across near Uckange, four\nmiles South of Thionville, and was\nsteadily being reinforced.\nThis crossing wu eight miles\nSouthwest of the first bridgehead\naround Koeiflgsmacher, where the\nAmericans drove the Germans back\nover all the ground the enemy gained in yesterday's counter-attack.    .\nThe' German communique said the\nAmericans striking from the Koen-\nigsmacher bridgehead had fought\ninto the Eut half of Thionville, one\nof the strongpolnta guarding Metz'\nNorthern approaches. The Americans already hold the West half on\nthe opposite bank of the Moselle.\nSupreme headquarters discounted\nreports the Germans were pilling\nout of Metz, a fortified city which\nin modern timet never hu fallen to\nfrontal asuult\nPlan to Reorganize\nBelgian Army\nLONDON, Nov, 18 (CP Reuter)\n\u2014Allied experts will melt this\nweek to arrange for tha reorganiz.\natlon and equipping of ths Belgian Army so that it may tike Its\nshare In the war against Qermany\nand In the occupation of that coun-\ntry, Henri Speak, Belgian Foreign\nMinister, announced today.\nEthel Barrymore III\nNEW YORK, Nov. 11 (AP) -\nActreu Ethel Barrymore, who suffered an attack of Influenza during\nthe weekend, took a sudden turn\nfor the worse last night and was\nremoved today from the home of a\ndaughter to hospital.\nMiss Barrymore, 115 years old\nwas forced to cancel her engagement ln \"Embezzled Heaven\" Frl\nday night when she suffered in attack of influenza. It was' the first\ntime ln nearly ,10 years that she\nhad misted a New York performance.\nm\ntwt\nON BUDAPEST\nNazis Report Break\nInto Jaszbereny,\nBig Railway Centre\nLONDON, Nov. 13 (AP)\u2014Mardftl\nRodion Y. Mallnovsky's 2nd Ukrainian Army closed its steel arc tighter\naround the Southeastern approaches\nto Budapest today, capturing the\nrailway town of Jaszapati and, according to I German report, breaking into the important communications centre of Jaaibereny.\nThe day's advance carried 13 miles\nNorthward and brought Mallnovsky's Southern and Eastern columns within 20 miles of a junction.\nGerman commentators said the\nRussians were attempting to encircle\nBudapest, with Red Army troops in\nCzecho-Slovakia likely to join Mallnovsky's forces in a vast manoeuvre.\nThe German communique said\nSoviet troops had penetraled into\nJaszbereny, 28 miles Southwest of\nFuzesabony, a Junction of the Budapest-Miskolc railway, but claimed\nthe attackers had been thrown back-\nMoscow did not mention Jaiz-\nbereny in its broadcast communique, but announced the capture of\nthe suburb ot Jasztelek, five miles\nSoutheast. It was probable, therefore, that forward units already\nwere battling Inside Jaszbereny, a\ncity of more than 30,000 population,\nfrom which highways and railways\nradiate in several directions.\nThe objective of both the Southern and Eastern wings of Mallnovsky's Army appeared to be Hatvan,\na big rail centre 14 miles Northeast\nof Jaszbereny and 27 milet Northeut of Budapest. From Hatvan i\nrail line extends , Northward\nthrough the mountains to Czeeho-\nSlovakla, 34 mllu beyond.\nJaszapati, biggest of the prizes\nwon today by the Russians, Is 11\nmiles due East of Jaszebereny and\n43 miles East of Budapest.\nLONDON, Nov. 13 (CP) \u2014 Marshall Tito announced In a communique today that his Yugoslav\nPartlson forces had broken Into\nSkoplje on the railway escape\nroute for German forcea fleeing\nfrom Greece toward the homeland.\nIt wu not clear whether any Germans remained South of Skopje, a\ncity of 03,000, which lies 120 mllea\nNorthwest ot Salonika and about\n200 miles Southeast of Belgrade. But\ncontrol of the city would block\nthrough rail traffic trom the South.\nWASHINGTON, Nov. II (AP)\nPresident Roosevelt today accepted\n\"with great personal reluctance\" the\nresignation ot James Lawrence Fly\nu Chairman of the Federal Communications Commission.\nseas forces.\nWhen the Commons adjourned\nAug. 13, the date for reassembly\nwaa.given u Jan. 31, 1(43, unless\nsojne emergency Intervened.\nMr. King said that Speaker J. A.\nGlen was satisfied that lt wu in\nthe public Interest that tbe House\nshould meet \"at thli time and had\ninformed the Prime Minister he\nwu notifying the memben to meet\nNov. aa at 2 pjn. C.D.T.\nThe calling of the House followed\na itatement yesterday by Col. J, L.\nRaliton, wbo resigned u Defence\nMinister Nov. 1 efter recommending that conscription of overieu\n[be enforced. He wu succeeded by\nGen. McNaughton.\nThi Prima Minister Is understood to havi eeme te the decision that nothing eould be gained\nby any further ixehenge of statements and thit the whole dispute\n\u2022hould ba feught eut en the floor\nef the Commoni.\nOne sourcs uld there wu no\nquestion of Mr. King changing\nhli opinion In support ef voluntary urvloe. It wu expected he\nwould make a statement outlining\nthli. position whin the House\nopens and thin ask for a vote ef\nconfidence.\n. If this course Is followed H will\nthrow the question et reinforcements open to \u2022 full-dress debate\nand whether or not the govern\nment goat to the oountry Infime\ndletely In a general election will\ndepend on how united the Liberal\nparty Is behind thi administration.\nMr. King's announcement calling Parliament wu submitted to\nthe Cabinet at a meeting lata this\nafternoon and lt is understood it\nhad the support of all Ministers\npresent.\nDefence Minister McNaughton\nattended the brief Cabinet sitting\nthis afternoon and like Mr. King,\nhe supports the voluntary service\npolicy.\nGen. McNaughton will not have a\nseat in the House when It opens, lt\nis learned Mr. King will offer to\ngive members an opportunity of\ncalling the Defence Minister before\na secret session. Gen. McNaughton\nwill be In a position to place before\nmembers his complete plans for\ncontinuing the support of the overseas torces on a voluntary basis.\nThe meeting of Parliament will be\na continuation of the present session so there will be no formalities\nat the opening and no speech from\nthe throne,\nGovernment supporters may meet\nin caucus before the House opens\nand private members then will have\nan opportunity to present their\nviews.\nThe Cabinet meeting tonight lasted about an hour and the very\nbrevity of the session Indicated the\nMinisters were in agreement with\nthe Primq Minister's announcement that the House should meet.\nSpeaker Glen was not ln the city\ntonight but there was sufficient\ntime for all members to Je Informed and be in Ottawa for the opening sitting.\nWhen the Prime Minister innounced the resignation of Col.\nRalston - and the appointment of\nGen. McNaughton on Nov. 1 he\naaid he could see no reason for\nCalling Parliament before Jan. 31.\nSince then there have been recurring reporti that other Min-\nllten might leive the Cabinet In\nprotest igalnst continuance of the\nvoluntary lervice policy, but It was\nevident that a majority support Mr.\nKings' position.\nM. J. Coldwell, C.C.F. national\nleader, today asked that Parliament be summoned Immediately to\ndiscuss reinforcements, and last\nweek John Bracken, National Progressive Conservative leader, said\nafter Mr. King's broadcast speech\nthat the Prime Minister had \"betrayed his trust and deceived both\nthe Army overseas and the people\n\u2022t home.\"\nThe Liberals have a large House\nmajority\u2014161 members against 73\nfor all other parties and Independents. Eleven seats are vacant.\nMr. King's brief statement today\nmade no reference to the discussion\nof relnforcementa ln the Cabinet.\nWINNIPEG, Nov. II (CP) - A\nProgressive Conservative Party\nspokesman said tonight that John\nBracken, the National Leader,\nwould have no official comment to\nmake on the announcement by\nPrime Minister Mackenzie King that\nthe Houie of Commoni will u-\nsemble Nov. 22 Instead of Jan. II, as\noriginally intended.\nMr. Bracken la ln Winnipeg attending a meeting of the National\nCommittee of the Party and the\nspokesman uld a statement probably would be Issued by Gordon\nGraydon, Progressive Conservative\nHome Leader, who la expected to\narrive tomorrow.\nSASKATOON, Nov. II (CP) \u2014\n\"That'i whit I have been suggesting,\" National Leader M J. Cold-\nwell ot the C. C. F. said tonight\nwhen he learned the House of Commons had been summoned to meet\nNov. 21. \"It ia the only way,\" he\nadded, \"ln which the situation oen\nbe fully understood. by the Houie\nof Commoni, which muat take the\nresponsibility and by the people of\nCanada.\"\nChurchill\nw\nQnw$ .\nto the End\nON THE VESGES FRONT, Not.\n13 (CP Reuter) - Prime Miniiter ,\nChurchill and Gen. De Gaulle today\nflirted with death in a 100-mlle\ndrive In a blizzard over tortuoug\nice and snow-bound roads tn the\nJura mountains in inspect unite of\nthe French Army.\nThirty cars originally set out wit**-,\nthe Prime Minister's convoy, but\nonly 10 finished the course, the remainder being either ditched or\nsnowbound or gave up.\nOne press Jeep somersaulted from\nthe road down a 12-foot enbank-\nment into a field.\nDespite tbe rugged ride the Prime\nMinister kept going right to the\nend, when he admitted he felt tiled.\nMr. Churchill's car was the tBtst\nto have trouble when its tire chains -\nsnapped, causing a hold-up. They\nsnapped a second time during the\ntour.\nGen. De Gaulle wu in the Prime\nMinister's car and sharing the rigors\nof the tour was Mr. Churchill's\ndaughter, Mary Churchill.\nAt Valdahon, near Bessncon, one\nof the biggest training camps ln\nFrance and famous u a shooting\nschool, Mr. Churchill stood up ln in\nopen car and drove through the light\nsnow to inspect troops.\nFor the rest of the time the Prime\nMinister travelled In i big black\nsaloon and at the end of the Journey he shook hands with his French\ndriver who had taken him ufely\nalong treacherous roads where a\nskid might have plunged the car\nInto steep valleys.\nAt one point of his tour Mr. Churchill was within five miles of the\nSwiss border.\nA\nOTTAWA, Nov. 18 (CD-Standing of the House of Commons: Liberals HI; Prog-Con. 39; C.CF. 10;\nSocial Credit 10; others 14; vacant\n11; total Ml.\nU.S. Sub Destroyed\nby Crew to\nPrevent Capture\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 11 (AP)\n\u2014The United States Navy announced today the submarine\nDarter was dsstroyed by Its crew\nto prevent capture by ths enemy\nafter It had run aground In in undisclosed area. All tha compliment of 36 officers and men survived unharmed and escaped to an\nadvanced nival base. The year-\nold 1,526-ton vessel was ths tlrd\nsubmarine lost by the United\nStates since It entered ths war.\nB.C. Construction\nTotals $20,885,299\nVANCOUVER, Nov. IS (CP) -\nBritish Columbia Civilian construction Ui the end of October totalled\n120,885,299 against 38.704.923 for the\ncorresponding period a year RRn, It\nwas revealed today (ollnwlng a survey.\nTemperatures\nMln. 249 Max 418\n1\n'\u25a0-'    W--\u2014-'-.^-.^.*-..-. .\n\t\n 1 ' \u2022\"\u2022\u25a0\"'\u25a0\nmem\n********-*\n-uwmrm\nW DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14,1944\nRinks Drawn lor Pre-Season\nMsplel Opening In Trail today\n\u25a0\nTRAIL, B.C, Nov. II - The Pre-\nBonipiel ot the Trail Curl-\nClub openi Tuesday wltb 50\ngaged. Tbe Bonipiel will\nInto three events u play\nea\u2014Primary, Secondary and\nTint round wlnnera will\n.lion ln the Primary, while those\nated wiU enter the Secondary,\nknocked out ot the Secon-\nJdary will go Into the* Tertiary.\ni for the tint four dayi, nine tine\naheets of ice will be available, mak-\nStng 27 games possible each day.\n| Gamep after Friday will be run oft\n'on the Club'i regular four sheets.\nI Following ll the personnel of the\n; SO rlnjts u drawn (or thla Bonipiel,\ni in Older of skip, third, aecond and\nami\n.   A. C. Alllion, D. Duffui, W. McKay and J. Hardy.\nJ. Belli J. McCunn, W. Irvine, lead\nyet unnamed.\nAl Calrna, E. Player, A. Snowball,\nQ. Richards.\nI   tf Cameron, L. Moyne, P. B. Pul-\nI linger, D. Walker.\n3   E. W. Campbell, J. Ink, A. Crlch-\njion, G. W. Wilson.\n!   A. M. Cheaser, M. DeBriuy. 0\n\u25a0Willlicroft, J. Haight\nA. B. Qark, A. Vance, R. R. Tay-\n|ior, C. Thompson.\n|   A. Crichton, T. Nixon, R. Heard,\niO. Morrison.\nI   J. Derby, W. Bush, S. LangUl, Lei.\nReid.\n\\ R. P. DockeriU, L. Fortin, K. Chaplin, R Blanco.\nt P. M. Elliott, C. M. Spencer, W.\n.McCuIIoch, J. Melvln.\nj    0. K.  Falrburn,  J.  McPeek,  J.\nj Shearer, H, Chaddock.\n|   V. Ferguson, L. Cadden, L. Dunne,\ntf. A. Ttobinson.\nf M.   Gibion,   A.   Robertson,   tm-\n| Bamed, E. Chamberlain.\nj    R. E. Hill, G. Faulkner, O. Me-\ntLeoi G. Rudel.\nj   W. Hunter, R. Stuart, R Mathe-\nJgon, C. Salslccioli.\nJ   J. Kitchen, M. Brennan, 0. Woods,\nj tm-naraed.\nI   E. Jonei, A. E. Harrison, K. Fry,\nHi. Tywn.\nt   L. Landuccl, H.  Hargreaves,  C.\nI Bogstie, C. Martin.\nI    J. LePage, A. Benedet, M. Flagel,\nJO. Buao.\nI    H. Manhall, M. Spowart, Al Bush,\n5K. Harrod.\nj, \u2022 A. W. McDonald. J. Woytella, C\nKlIcMahon, C G. Mills.\n[,   D.   McDonald,   K.   Broman,   W.\nRheeni, B. W. Carter.\nR. McGhle, J. Cameron, C. Glo-\nH. Murphy.\nP. F. Mclntyre, R. J. MacKinnon,\nS. Matovlch, R. G. MacKinnon.\nH. A. McLaren, V. Breuaunette,\nR. Woodford, J. E. White\nt>. MacLennan, F. Keith, A. Tlt-\ntley, A. Illot.\n; D. McLeod, Ian McLeod, T. Weir,\nX. Klngwell.\nB. Merlo, P. Fantln, A. Merlo, M\nMolina.\nH. H. Miller, W. S. Douglaai, F.\nSteele, G. Holllngton.\nToast Tea\nfor  ft long time tht Italian*\nhtve proved themselves better\nfttfatm &\u25a0 Individuals than *m\n*Vmi\u00ab. Particularly ln thl* war\nthey showed little heart when th*\n\u2022fatal got tough. Thli may hava\n\"veen becauw even before Italy\nleft the war u a partner of tbe\nAxle the Italians had realised that\nthey bad little to fight for, and\nfelt eten greater enmity toward\nthe Nasla who had overrun thetr\noountry than for the Britiah who\nwere pushing them out their African empire. It ls uri-M by a returned correspondent that the\nUfc-fest planes for carrying parachute troops which the Italians\nhad dealgned had ln the end a\ncrew of M. There wu the pilot,\nand there wa* the parachutist;\nand there were also 20 other\nItalians to push him off to make\ncertain that he Jumped.\n'^COODFRHAM-'WORTS\n\u201e' Limited\n^TORONTO, ONTARIO\nD. Mlnto, t. W. Milburn, J. W.\nFish, T. Rout-edge.\nE. A. Mitchell, H. Jordan, E.\nCrowder, Al Wooda.\n0. Ortner, 0. GUI, J. Salter, M\nDouglai.\nG. Pringle, A. 0. Cheyne, C.\nMelrose, P, Murphy.\nW. Rae, J. t). Hartley, T. Sadler,\nW. Williamson.\nG. F. Relmann, R. Angus, 1. Cook,\nT. Lund.\nT. A. Rice, A. B. Anderton, R\nTavaroll, J. ThleL\nW. P. Robertion, Max Gordon,\nG. Robertson, A. Socco.\nW. S. Ross, A. Slmonson, 0. Donaldson, R W. Rosa.\nJ. P. Schofield, R. B. Bradshaw,\nD. Holton, E. Moore.\nW. H. Sheppard, JT. Currie, W.\nThompson, J. Woogman.\nS. W. Smillie, W. Slddall, J. H.\nArmstrong, J. Holland.\nReg. Stone, Roy Stone, A. Cronle,\nJ. Morrli.\nF. Strachap, T. J. Parry, R. E\nRoss, J. P. Doyle.\nC. D. Stuart, W. W. McKay, J.\nBurrows, G. Tognotti.\nC. D. Stuart, W. W. McKay, J.\nBurrows, G. Tognotti.\nD. Sutherland, E. S. Shannon, D.\nCampbell, K. L. Parkhurst\nV. Vance, C. W. McBey, J. D. Rap,\nW. Lyons.\nR. Varcoe, B. Burwaih, W. Robertson, J. Cameron.\nF. Wendell, A. Robb, J. Campbell. J. L. JakelL\nA. H. Woolf, C. Anderson, H. Van-\nderburg, C. Loebllck.\nTrade Policy\nOpens Rift\nal Conference\nRYE, N.Y., Nov. U (AP) \u2014 The\nfirst sign of disagreement at the\nInternational Buslneu Conference\narose today when British delegates\nmade lt clear that Great Britain has\nno intention of abandoning her program of Empire preference for an\nIndefinite period after the war.\nThe point was made after Henry\nF. Grady, Chairman of the United\nStatei delegation, spoke forcefully\nagainst bilateral trade agreements\nas leading to economic warfare\namong nations.\nSir Peter Bennett, representing\nthe British delegation, replied that\nBritain favored the complete lifting\nof all trade restrictions and controls,\nexcept for the Imperial Preference\nagreement under which members of\nthe British Commonwealth receive\nfavored treatment regarding tariffs\nand other controls.\nAsserting that Britain wanted to\n\"get rid of controls as soon as possible,\" he added that nevertheless she\nwas bound by the preference agreement and \"we Intend to honor it.\"\nHe said that eventually it wu\nhoped Empire preference could be\nabolished but lt would be some\nyears after the war before my\nmove in thii direction could be\nmade. He added, also, that the end\nof preferential treatment for the\nEmpire nations would be a matter\nfor they themselves to decide.\nSir Chunilel B. Mehta, Chairman\nof the delegation from India, said:\n\"At present citizens of the United\nStates have full rights and privileges to come to India, to stay ln\nIndia and to trade ln India as freely\nas they would like to. On the other\nhand, Indians do not enjoy at present any such rights or privileges\nto come and stay and trade In the\nUnited States. The absence of such\na treaty ls bound to hamper the\ngrowth of economic and commercial\nrelations between the two countries.\"\n$300 FINE FOR\nKEEPING\nBEER FOR SALE\nA fine of MOO wu Imposed against\nMuriel Brent by Magistrate WUlteii\nBrown In Olty Police Court MonSay\nwhen ahe pleaded guilty to unlawfully\nkeeping bwr for sale In premises\nknown as 908 Lake Street on Nov. 11.\nInformation wai laid by Bgt. R. a\nHOUM.\nTo Slarl Work\nalOnceon\nRossland \"(uf\nROSSLAND, BC, Nor, lS-Wortc on\nthe rock eut on tbe Boaland-Pataraon\nhighway will be started at once and\na 40-foot highway constructed, Hon.\nH. Anscomb, Minister of Public Works,\nstated ln a letter to the Olty Council\ntonight.\nWork on the Black Bear portion of\nthe highway to the Ooaat. lust South\nof Rouland. will be left ln abeyance,\nthe letter continued.\nA letter of thanks wu ordered to\nbe aent to tbe Minister.\nOfficers Gather\nin Ottawa fo\nSee McNaughton\nOTTAWA, Nov. 18 (CP.-Com\nmandlng offlcen from every military district and command ln Canada were assembling in the capital tonight for a conference\u2014beginning tomorrow \u2014 with Defence\nMinister McNaughton.\nThe meeting hu been deicribed\nas a \"normal procedure under iuch\ncircumstances\" and saves Gen, McNaughton the neceulty of making\na trans-Canada tour.. It also ls\nknown he will not make a battle-\nfront tour until he \"cleani up\" hli\npresent recruiting campaign.\nIt was reliably learned he will\noutline to the commanding officers\nhis views on voluntary recruiting\nand issue a new directive on the\nmatter of encouraging recruiting\u2014\nespecially as to the method of handling Home Defence drafteei.\nThe conference will itart amid\nrumors that there has been a widespread ' response to Gen. McNaugh-\nton's appeal to drafteei to volunteer.\nHowever, no official figures\nwere available to support the reports which said as many as 1500\nmen had \"gone active\" since he\nspoke at Arnprior, Ont, Nov. B.\nIt wai indicated in army circles\nthat recruiting figures might be\nIssued bi-weekly beginning tomorrow or Wednesday. These figures\nhad previously been withheld\nthrough security regulations.\nOne source, commenting on Col.\nRalston's statement that untrained\nmen enlisted now would not be\navailable for combat until June\nand that men were'heeded next\nmonth, said Gen. McNaughton apparently was trying to get a flood of\nsufficiently trained draftees to volunteer for Immediate use as reinforcements.\nBRACKEN (WIS\nFOR GOVT\nTOniMLDUTY\n\"Are We, or Are We\nNot Going to Back\nOur Fighting Men?\"\nWINNIPEG, NOV. 11 (OP) \u2014\nJohn Breeken, netlonel leader of\nthe Progroulvo Conservative\nparty, \"In the name of the Canadian people and for the protection\nof our men overseas,\" called to-\nnight upon tho Dominion Government to \"fulfil Ita duty\" by making the Home Defence Army\navailable Immediately to reinforce tho Cenadlan Army overseas.\nIn a itatement on the \"gravest\nIssue now facing thli country,\" and\nIn which he commented upon the\ndeclaration laat night by tbe former Defence Miniiter, Col. J. L.\nRaliton, that the need for reinforce'\nmenti oveneu wu \"urgent and\nImmediate,\" Mr. Bracken aaid:\n\"The issue li now clear, are we,\nor are wo not to back our fighting\nmen to the limit by the only certain\nmeans available to ua, namely\u2014to\nput immediately Into effect en or-\ndcr-in-council making the Home\nDefence Army available for relnforcementa oveneai.\"\nThe itatement wu issued with\nthe endorsement of the party's national committee, now ln session ln\nWinnipeg. It uid the need for relnforcementa wu urgent and that\nthey could be found only in Canada, where there wu a large army\ndrafted by the present government.\nMr. Bracken uld it was \"common knowledge\" that the Dominion Cabinet wu \"still divided and\nIn a state of uncertainty.\" He challenged every member of the government to state publicly where\npersonally be stands ln this crisis.\nTbl itatement concluded:\n\"In the name of the Canadian\npeople and for the protection ot the\nmen oveneaa, after due consideration ot the gravity of tbe situation\nand with the endorsatlon of the national committee ot tbe Progressive\nConservative party\u2014I call upon\nthe government to fulfil Its duty to\nour men oveneu an dto carry out\nthe will of the people u expressed\nln the plebiscite by passing the\nneceisary order-ln-councll and\nsendlhg the available men ln the\nHome Army u reinforcements\nforthwith.\"\nAngo.t Retires\nWASHINGTON. Pa.. Nov. IS (AP)\u2014\nSammy Angott. former light-weight\nboring champion of the world, tonight announced his retirement from\nthe ring\u2014the aecond Urns b* has\nmade such a decision.\nMother Not to Blame\nthe Children's Colds\n7*        DwpiU all the mother can do tbe kiddie* will mn\n\u00bb\u00bb\u25a0 <wt of doori not properly wrapped up; have on too\nmuch clothing; met overheated and cool off too iro-\n denly; get their (eet wet; kick off the bed clothe*, and\n_do a down thing* the mother cannot help.\nHalf the battle in treating children's oolda ia to pre them something\nthev will like* something they will Uke without any fuaa, and thia the mother\nwill find in Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, a remedy used by Caadian\nmothers, for the past 48 yeara.\nPrice 35o a bottle; the large family slse, about 8 times aa puch, 60e, ai\nall drug counter*.\nIm T. Milburn Co., Limit*!, Toronto, Oni\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\u2022YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"\nDuf ferin Hotel\nfteymour 81. Vancouvtr, B. C.\nNewly renovated through-\nout   Phonei   and   elevator.\nA    PATTERSON,   late   ot\nColeman, Alta.. Proprietor\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger and Freight\nNelson - Trail\nRossland Freight\nJ. C. MUIR\nPhones: Nelson 77; Rossland JUL) Trail 1180\nConnections Fori\nSALMO   -   KASLO   \u2014   CRESTON   \u2014   NAKUSP\nAccidents, Suicides\nTake Eight\nLives at Coast\nVANCOUVER, Nov. IS (CP) -\nTraffic and boating accidents and\nsuicides took a toll of eight lives\nin Vancouver, Lower Mainland and\non'Vancouver Island during the Re-\nmembrance Day weekend.\nTour persons died ln traffic accidents; two were drowned in boating accidents, and bodies of two\nmen, believed to be victims of suicide, were found In Stanley Park at\nVancouver.\nA United States soldier, Elvln L\nEngleson, Bellvue, Wash., has been\ncharged with manslaughter in connection with one of the traffic\ndeaths.\n(old Dip Marks\nWinter's Advent\nKEEPING BUR\nFOR SALE\nCOSTS $300 FINE\nUnlawfully keeping bwr for salt at\n\u2022It Uk* Street aa Nov. ll, cost Befly\nBarry a 1300 fine when aha appeared\nbefore Mallatnt* William Brown\nMonday ta City polloe Court, aha\npleaded guilty. Information wu\nlaid by Sgt. R. R. House.\nNo Mention\nof Senate\nBeing (ailed\nOTTAWA, Not. IS (CP) - Prima\nMinister Mackeniie King's announcement tonight assembling ttt*\nHouse ot Commoni on Nor, 13 made\nno mention of tha Senate which wu\ninterpreted as **\"\u00ab\"\u00ab*\u00bbt tha only\nthing to come before th* Commons\nwill ba the vote ot confidence on\nth* Government's policy to continue\nvoluntary enlistments tor overseas.\nBoth Houses itand adjourned and\ndo not necessarily reassemble tt\nthe tame time, but alter a long recess tha uiual procedure hu been\nto have tha two Chamber! resume\nsimultaneously.\n. It il probable tha Government\nplans to have the Commons meet tor\na week or so and discuss compulsory\nservice versus voluntary service. It\nthe debate develops into a wide\nopen breach which would cause the\nPrime Miniiter to dissolve the\nHome, he could do so without assembling the Senate,\nIt on the other hand, the Government la substantially sustained,\nthe House could then adjourn until\nJan. 31 u prevlouily planned. However, no laws could be passed nor\ncould Parliament be prorogued\nwithout the presence ot the Senate.\nAccuses Press\nof (ommenf\nUnfair to Trial\nVANCOUVER, Nov. II (CP)-\nGordon Wismer, counsel tor Gul-\nseppe (Joe) Esposito, at the open\ning of the supreme court trial today\not his client on a murder charge,\naccused Vancouver newspaper! and\nthe Vancouver Ministerial Association of comment \"certainly detrimental to a fair trial for the accused man\"\nEsposito wai charged In connection with the shooting ot Kevin\nThompson at Esposlto's home Sept\n20. Esposito pleaded not guilty.\nDemands Keep Pate With Neu\nHigh Record Lumber Output\nOTTAWA. Nor,Ml (CP) - Can-\nIda's 1844 lumbar production il going to ba near u all-time record\nbut war-expanded demands continue at an even higher rate, Munitions\nDepartment officials said today.\nLatest estimate ot the 1944 eut te\n4,700,000,000 board feet, 100,000,000\n(eet more than lut year and not far\nunder the all-time record ot 4,041,-\n000,000 established in 1941.\nOt the 1944 production 2,100,000,-\n000 ta earmarked tor uie tn Canada\nwith 1,000,000,000 going to the United\nKingdom, 900,000,000 to the United\nStatea and 200,000,000 to other countries.\nDemands trom the United Kingdom continue at a high rate, largely tor thejteplacement ol bombed-\nln Nelson, with the current cold dip.\nwhich took the mercury down to 24 y\ndegrees early Monday, for the first\ntime this season. The warmest temperature ot the day wu only 41.8 degrees.\nThe dip really started Baturday\nmorning, when the mercury read\n33.4 degrees, low enough to have produced ground frost on tha Baker\nStreet altitude had there not been\na little rain.\nSunday morning saw more froet.\nafter a starry night, with the mer.\ncury ranging between 38.5 and ..fl\ndegrees during the 34 houra ending at\n- p m.\nBoth Sunday and Monday were\nclear days, and Monday night, with\nthe stars out again, there was every\nindication of an imminent further\ndrop ln temperature.\nThe snow line is still along the\nshoulders of the mountains, and Nel\naon has yet to have ita flrat anow\nfluny of ths Winter.\nVancouver Airport\nManager Resigns\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 13 (CP1-\nAlrport Manager William Temple-\nton of Vancouver today tendered\nhis resignation from the City Council's Aviation Commission on the\nground that he could contribute\nnothing to the committee at the\npresent time owing to the fact that\nthe Dominion Government had not\nannounced its post-war policy with\nregard to air services.\nLast week nine representatives\nof airilnes sent in their resignations\nfrom the commission saying they\nfelt the time inopportune for such\na body.\nTwo Airmen Killed\nin Flying\nBoat Crash, Coast\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 18 (CP)\nTwo airmen were killed and five\nseriously Injured when an HCAF\nfylng boat crashed last night while\nlanding at a Patricia Bay air station\nnear Victoria, Western Air Command announced today.\nAll  are  members of  the  Royal\nAir Force.\nArrest Pretender\nto French Throne\nPARI8, Nov. 13 (CP-Reuter)\nThe Comte de Parts, pretender to\nthe French throne, has been. ar\nrested at Perplgnan Just Inside the\nFrench-Spanish border, according\nto the newspaper Llberstlon Solr.\nThe newspaper added \"the pretender to the French throne waa\nwounded ln the shoulder while be\ning srrested.\"\nTo Repair Rossland\nEntrance Arch\nROSSLAND. B.O , Nov. IS\u2014A latter\nfrom the Junior Board of Trade suing repair of lbs arch at ths Went\nentrance to the City wu received by\nthe City Council tonight. The Publl .\nWorks Department wu instructed to\ncarry out the repairs.\n172 CIVILIANS KILLED\nBY AIR RAIDS\nLONDON, Nov. II (CP-Reuter)-\nThe Ministry of Home Security announced today that 173 civilians\nwere killed in air raids in the United\nKingdom during October. Injured\nand detained in hospital were listed\nu 419\nMayor Gordon to\nAttend Coast Meet\nROSSLAND, B.C.. Nov. 1J- Mayor\nJohn I. Oordon wu given leave of\nebeenre to attend the Iiecutlve\nmeeting of the Union of Britlih Oo-\nlumiiia Municipalities, and Alderman\nWilliam Cunningham srtt appointed\nto be Acting Mayor In his place, by\ntbe city Council tonight.\nC If .on suffer MONTHLY \"\\\nFEMALE PAIN\nTon who suffer such pain Mth tired,\nnervous IrriubL wask teelln|\u00bb\u2014due\nto functional monthly dltlumBMI\n\u2014 should try Lydla I. Pinkham's\nvegetable Compound lo relieve tntb\nsymptoms. Pinkham's Compound\nume. utrvn. Thousands upon\ntlxniMndi hava reported benedt.\nPollow    label   dlrecUona.\nVLYDHE.FINKHWSSS8S<\nNAME MILITIA\nREGIMENTS\nOVERSEAS\nOTTAWA, Nov. IS (CP) - The\nnames of seven Canadian mllltla\nregiment* represented In the Can\nadlan Army overseas but not pre\nvlously Identified in field dispatches\nare disclosed In the October issue nf\n\"Csnada at War,\" booklet luued\nmonthly by the Wartime Information Board.\nListed as serving In the Franee-\nBelglum-Netherlands theatre are\nthe 13th Manitoba Dragoons, the\nPrince Edward Light Horn snd tha\nNew Brunswick Rangers.\nTha Royal Canadian Dragoons, a\nPermanent Force unit, and the\nLome Scots (Pell, Dufferln and Hal-\nton Regiment) were lifted aa serving In Italy.\nThere was only one pawnbroker\nIn all Scotland In the early part of\nthe 19th century.\nVANCOUVER, Nov. IS (CP)\nJames Cloy MInton, a neighbor ot\nJoe Esposito of Vancouver, collapsed after taking the witness stand\ntoday at Esposlto's trial for the fatal\nshooting of Kevin Thompson Sept\n20. The court was Informed that\nMinto was subject to heart ..Hacks.\nEsposlto's 14-year-old son, Robert,\ntold of being awakened by the\ncrash of glsss and sounds of a fight\nin the downstairs psrt of the Esposito home. His father came upstairs and asked him to telephone\nthe police, but just as the boy left\nthe telephone he hesrd a shot. His\nfather appeared with a shotgun\nwhich he asked the boy to put\nunder   his   bed.\nEsposito broke down when the\nboy testified he had been well\ntreated by his psrente.\nEight Sailors Face\n81 Chargei, Coast\nVANCOUVER, Nov. IS \/CP) -\nFaced with a total ot 81 charges,\n79 of which were for violation ot\nthe Canadian Shipping Act, involving absence without leave and disobedience of orders, eight crew\nmembers of a Park Steamships\nfreighter appeared In police court\ntoday.\nThe men are: Albert Ferguson,\n30; John H. Beck, 31; James Walker, 50; Peter Sarota, M; Wilfred La-\nbodi. 50; John William Mennle, all\nof no fixed address, and Norman\nSondrell, JS, and Cliff Mahone, 33,\nboth of Vancouver.\nThe men were remanded to\nThursday for prelimlnsry hearing\non the charges.\nJaps Have Five\nDivisions on Leyte\nMacARTHUR'S HEADQUARTERS, Philippines, Nov. 14 (Tuesday)\u2014 (AP.-The Amerlcsn otfen\nslve on Leyte Island, which made\nshort new gains today, has dislocated Japaneee prepsrstlons for s\ncounter-attack with the tlve dlvi\nainns they are known to hsve com\nmltted to this pivotal Philippine\nbattle.\nToday's communique reported\nfive Japanese divisions had been\nIdentified, without specifying\nwhether they were estlmsted st\ntheir full itrength, which would\nmean   probsbly   more   than   60,000\nCoward's Remarks\n\"Boin\" Brooklyn\nNEW YORK, Nov. 13 (AP) -The\nSociety for the prevention of dls\npsraglng remarks about Brooklyn\nis so botned- beg pardon, burned\u2014\nat the famous British actor-author\nthat it has a good mind to form\nsub-society for ths prevention of\nNoel Coward.\nJust when the Society felt tt wu\ngetting somewhere ln Its educational mission, along came Mr. Coward's\nnew book, \"Middle East Diary\",\nwith a reference to \"mournful little\nBrooklyn boys (soldiers) In teare\u2014\nwith nothing worse than a bullet\nwound ln the leg or a fractured\narm.\"\nThe expurgated reaction of one\nsergeant: \"I'd Uka to have had that ,\nCoward In my outfit, rd have bllr\ntered Ihe blanking lace right off his\nshorts.\"\nout buildings. It la exacted thli and\ntha requirements of occupied countries as they are liberated will maintain export markets at a high level\ntor some considerable time.\nFigures compiled by the Department show that domestic consumption, which accounts for about half\nthe cut, has, under wartime controls,\nkept pace with Increued output.\nProduction figures for the war yeara\nhave increased about 43 per cent\nwhile Canadian consumption shows\nan increase of 44 per cent\nIn the 10 yeara ended 1038 production averaged 3,173,447,000 board\nfeet a year while for the six war\nyears, 1939-1044, production averaged 4,625,380,000\u2014an increue ot 1,-\n451,013,000 board feet a year.\n,\u00bb umus\nEvents Leading\nlo Calling\nof Parliament\nBy The Oanadlan Preaa\nOct 14 - Defence Minister Raliton returned trom out ot battle-\nfronts.\nOct 24\u2014CoL Raliton reported to\nCabinet on reinforcement position\nand recommended that compulsory\noveneu aervice be Imposed.\nNov. 1\u2014Col. Raliton resigned u\nDefence Miniiter after Cabinet turned down hit proposals.\nNov. J\u2014Gen. McNaughton appont-\ned Defence Miniiter.\nNov. S \u2014 Gen. McNaughton in a\nipeech at Arnprior, Ont, declared\nhil faith In voluntary enlistment\nfor overieu.\nNov. t \u2014 At a noisy meeting of a\nCanadian Legion branch In Ottawa,\nGen. McNaughton faced vigorous\nquestioning trom an audience who\nIndicated support tor conscription.\nNov. 8 \u2014 Prime Minister Macken-\nrle King in a broadcast address let\nforth hli support ot the voluntary\npolicy, with encouragement to\ndraftees to enlist for service anywhere.\nNov. t \u2014 The Dominion Council\nof the Canadian Legion presented a\nbrief to Mr. King uking tor conscription.\nNov. U \u2014 Col. Raliton, explaining\nhla demand for conscription, uld he\nhad found the reinforcement pools\n\"so depleted u not to ensure the\nprompt replacement of caiualtlei.\"\nNov. IS \u2014 Mr. King announced\nthe Commoni would assemble Nov.\nJJ.\nCigaret Shortage\nSpreads to Europe\nPARIS, Nov. IS (AP) - The American cigaret shortage hu ipread\nto the European war theatre. Soldiers in Paria were informed today\nthey would get no clgareti thia\nweek. Cigaret supplies at the front\nalso were low, with soldiers reported cut to two packs weekly in sonje\nlectors.\nTwin Coats\nButton ond zipper Injinlng.\nSizes 14 to 40.\n\u202243*\" ^'52\nFINK'S\nMADY-TO-WEAR\n.80\nmmMmtt%a%m*\\s*mmmmms m \u2022____\u00bb\nFind Mr. Leaver\nDied From\nInjuries Jn Fall\nErnest William Leaver, aged 14,\ncame to bu deatb last Sunday u a\nresult of injuries sustained In a fall\nNov. 5 in tbe execution of hla duties\nu night watchman at ths Paterson\nLumber Company planing mill m\nftlrvlew, a ooroser'a Jury found at an\nInquest held here Monday.\nWhile cause of deatb oould noi be\nstrictly determined. Injuries to vertebrae In tbe region of his neck and\nsevere bruises to the top part of his\nbead causing concussion ware contributory causes. Dr. a. R. Barrett.\nwho performed a post mortem, tee-\nMi ed.\nTbe aged watchman wu injured\nwhen he fell down a rooky embankment on to the planing mill railway\nsiding, evidence revealed. Bis wife\nat fil- Anderson Street, survlvs.\nDr. N. X. Morrlaon, attending phy-\nLaPlanto'i Wife\nSeeks Divorce\nVANCOUVER, Nov. IS (CP) -\nMinnie LaPlante, wife of Alfred\nJoseph Henry LaPlante, who wu\nsentenced to life Imprisonment for\nassaulting women, filed a petition\ntor divorce ln Supreme Court today. They were married In Vancouver nine years ago and hsve three\nchildren.\nI.W.A. fo Ask Full\nCitizenship for\nCanadian Indians\nALERT BAY, B, C, Nov. IS (CP)\n\u2014Full citizenship rights and parliamentary representation for Canadian Indiana without interference\nwith treaty rights will be requested\nfrom the Federal Government, Nigel\nMorgan, C a nadlan International\nBoard member ot the International\nWoodworkers of America (CLO.)\ntold the opening session of the native brotherhood of British Columbia at their fifteenth annual convention here today.\nMorgan said the plan It ilmllar to\nthat in effect for the Maoris of New\nZealand.\nMorgan pledged full support of hii\nunion toward achievement of a program ot social reform and elimination of discrimination, More than\n300 memben ot the brotherhood are\nemployed in the B. C. logging industry, he iaid. Labor would work\nfor equal rights for native lervlcemen ln the matter of rehabilitation\nand pension privileges.\nAustin Smith of Vancouver, Canadian International representative of\nthe International Longshoremen Aid\nSidney Hillman, Chairman of tha\nspoke on the value of trade unionism in helping to achieve the brotherhoods aims.\nChief Joe Harris of the Nlmpklih\nTribe, hoit branch, extended greetings at an informal reception.\nBy Wedneiday 100* natives from\n_7 branches of the organization representing 120 Indian vlllagei and\nmore than half of B. C.'s Indian population of 35,000, will be here bo\ndeal with matters pertaining to a\nproposed revision of the Indian Act\nWorld Congress\nof Labor\nEssential -Murray\nBy 0. R. BLACKBURN\nCanadian Preaa tuff Writer\nWASHINGTON, Nov. IS (CP) -\nOrganization ot a world Congreu\not Labor, open to all bona Ode unloni, il euential to ensure labor's\nproper function In peace-making,\nPhilip Murray, President of the Congreu ot Industrial Organizations,\n\u25a0aid here today.\nMr. Murray made the itatement\nat a preu conference where he announced that the C.I.O. would be\nwell represented at a world trade\nunion conference, scheduled to be\nheld next February In London, England.\nSldey Hillman, Chairman of the\nCLO, Political Action Committee,\nwill head a delegation to the pre-\nconference gathering of leading\ntrades unloni opening ln London\nDec 4.\nMr. Murray, however, forecast the\nAmerican Federation of Labor\nwould refute to participate ln the\nFebruary Tradu Union Conference,\nHe laid he anticipated the A. F. of L.\nwould be reluctant to enter Into any\nactivity u a co-worker ot the C.I.O.\n(William Green, A. F. of L. Preiident hii lecretary laid, wu too\nbusy to be disturbed, when a reporter sought hit views on Mr. Murray's\ncomments.)\nTo Attend Meeting\nat Trail of\nMunicipalities Assoc.\nB088LAWD, B.C., Nov. IS\u2014A letter\nfrom W. ___. B. Monypenny, Trail Olty\nClerk, stating that the meeting of\nthe Aiaoclatlon of Kootenay Municipalities would be held at Trail Noi.\n39, wu read at the City Council\nmeeting tonight. Election of officers\nwill be held, the letter stated. City\nClerk John McLeod wu Instructed to\nnotify Mr. Monypenny that tbe Roas-\nslclan, told tbe Jury that on\" being \u2666 land Council would attend,\ncalled to the scene at tbe time Mr.\nLeaver wu Injured, be found htm in\na state of severe pain and shock. After\nx-Rays had been taken it Kootenay\nLake Oeneral Hoapltal. treatment for\na fracture of the neck and for bead\nInjuries were given.\nH. A. Mackenzie, Superintendent of\nthe Mill, testified that Mr. Leaver wu\nemployed by the Pateraon company\nand had been on duty on the date\nbe wu injured.\nFor over a year th. leaver had made\na regular trip at hourly Intervals from\nths planing mill across the tracks\nto the burner and back to tbe mill.\nHe oould not explain why the watchman had left the road be usually\ntook. However, there had been two\ncara drawn up on the mill siding the\nday before, necessitating a slightly\ndifferent route, and It wu possible\nthat be had become confuted, and\nbelieving the cara to be still there,\nhad taken a wrong turning and stepped off the bank.\nHEABD CRY Kilt HELP\nJohn Zarlooff, mill man. told of\nbearing a faint call for help, and of\ntelling the foreman. Bill Ubentaoff,\nabout It. They went out In the direction of the cry and found Mr. Leaver\nlying beelde the track. He had fallen about five or all feet down a rocky\nbank.\nUbenteofT testified that on finding Mr. Leaver thty had tried to lift\nhim. but he uld the pain wu too\ngreat ao they made him u -on-fort-\nable u poulble while Dr. Morrison\nand an ambulance were called.\nThey found hla flMhlliht ta hla\nDocket. He thought that walking Into the da-knees from the lighted mill\nwithout wains his flashlight might\nhave caused Mr. Learer to make a\nwrong turning.\nOn the Jury were L. O Peerlese. H\nF. Boetoek. S R Manuel. 1' r. Poulln. r. J. Preeton and W R. Chrlahop.\nWash. Servicemen\nFollowed General\nVoting Trend\nSEATTLJ_, Nov. 13 (AP) - Servicemen balloting in lut Tuesday's\nelection followed generally the\nchoices of their civilian compatriots\nin the election boothi, returni from\nboth sides of the state showed tonight\nApprdilmately half of the 18,000\nsoldiers ballots here have been counted tonight. County Clerk Robert A.\nMorris, reported with the lervlcemen generally favoring Rooievelt\nfor President and Rep. Magnuson for\nSenator.\n106 YEAR OLD\nNEGRESS DIES\nVICTORIA, Nov. IS (CP)\u2014Mrs.\nSylvia Stark, 104-year-old Negreu\nand oldest resident ef Salt Spring\nIsland ln the Gulf of Georgia, died\nhere last Tuesday and wu burled\nThuriday, It was learned todiy.\nBorn In Missouri, Mrs. Stark\nwas one of 600 Negroes who came\nto Vancouver Island In IBM on the\nInvitation of Governor Jamu\nDouglas.\nRossland Council\nto Meet\nRehabilitation Body\nBMSUHD, B.C., Nov. 11\u2014A litter\ntrom the Rehabilitation Committee\nasking the | Council to appoint two\nmembers to work with two members\nof the Rehabilitation Committee to\nInvestigate Its town planning and\naonlng aoheme for Rowland, wu received by the Olty Oounoll tonight   \u25a0\nIt wu decided that the Council\nwould attend tbe next Rehabilitation\nCommittee meeting and dlacuaa fully\nall data now ln tha hands of the Com.\nmlttee.\nRoad Tax Must Be\nPaid by Dec. 8\nSays Rossland Council\nROB8LAI-D, BO, Nov. 1\u00bb\u2014 Final\nnotices will be given to cltlrena owing\nroad tax, it wu decided by tha City\nCouncil tonight, prosecution will foi.\nlow If the U.X It not paid by Deo. \u00ab.\nit wu decided.\nt>iaeseet&&ms&&tamt\u00bbaa0\nMOLASSES\nFOR\nDAIRY CATTLI\nFlow of milk has Increasad\n5 to 20 per cent by spraying molasses over roughogt.\nMolasses for health, prevention of milk fever ond oc\u00bb-\ntomenla and aids digestion,\nalso prevents bloating. \u2014\nPlace your order with\nIke\nBrackman-Kw W_!hi|\nntaea&tmtatataaaiaaaat\nYour Dog Is Your\nBest Friend.\nHI DESERVES THI BUT\nDR. BALLARD'S\nObtainable at your local\nLocal Grocers\nBLACKHEADS\nMwUkb k\u00bb a mmoM matUI tkai \u00a3_-\n9ns lieu, del Ms umm* el mrtthm\nouaatr trom raar 'neitrt. \u00bbep*T \u00bb\"tll a\nmm. tm aleU. wo.ll, m, Um U..__\u00ab4_\n.ta rot wUI sroausa uou. laat kare io**.\nWatch out\nfor sniffy\nWarning-\nHead Colds!\nHead colds can cause modi i\nIng. TO promptly relieve tbe\nmlflly, meeiy, Huffy \"\nput a little Va-tro-nol u\nbll. Va-tro-nol worka\ntrouble ia to aoothe\nreduce sweUlng-mekt\neasier. T7 ltl Al\u00bbh_-per\u00ab\u00ab\nmany colde from developing\nuardln time, follow\n\"* ^VKMVATROIIQl\n.\t\n Consolidated HighSchool for\nDistrict and Junior College\nSeen as Needs for Future by Irwin\nFounding of a consolidated high\nichool.tor Nelson and Its large rur-\nI al area, and a Junior college for the\n|  Interior wai preiented Monday by\nI   Floyd L. Irwin, Junior High School\nI    Principal, as a lolution, If the educational lyitem was to fulfill Its im-\n\/   mediate future responsibilities.\nA progrim of educational development on a broad scale so that the\nichool   could   educate,   train   and\nequip the atudent and carry  him\nright to the door of industry  or\ncommerce, was a necessity, he declared in  an  address,  \"Post  War\nClaimi on   Hlgit Schools,\"  to  the\nNelson Rotary Club.    Such a program must have the support of citizens and organizations, he said, if\nthe students were \"to receive the\neducation to which they were entitled to prepare themselves to fit\nInto life in our country.\"\nSOME SUPPORT FOR\nPROPOSAL\n, The District adjacent to Nelson,\nMr. Irwin disclosed, had already\nbeen sounded out on the proposal\nof establishing a consolidated high\nschool, providing education on\nbroad lines, for students of the\narea. Some encouragement had\nbeen received, but as yet, not\nlufflclent encouragement to warrant Its undertaking.\nThe cost of such an undertaking\nwould be high, and the problems\nlarge, he admitted. The tax rate,\nvarying frpm five to 25 mills in various aecUoni, would probably have\nto be equalized. It would be required that support come from all\nthose benefitting. Provision would\nhave to be made for students from\nthe rural area, probably through\nthe construction of dormitories, and\ndevelopment of a students transportation system.\nROOM FOR COLLEGE\nThere was room for a Junior college ln the Interior, he aserted. lt\ncould provide courses of first and\nlecond year university. The advantage he law ln such an institution\nwu that District students could be\ntrained for roles in the Industries of\nthe District, forestry, mining, agriculture, and many others.\nThe founding of a consolidated\nichool and of a Junior college was\nan ambitious program, and one that\nwould Involve high finance, he admitted. Nevertheless, he felt, the\ntwo such institutions were of the\nutmost importance if the District\nwas to play Its full part in the\ntuture.\n\"We've overcome such difficulties\nbefore,\" Mr. Irwin said. If the people wanted a broader, more bene-\nflclll educational opportunities for\ntheir youth, and support was given by public organizations such a\nprogram could be brought about\nTremendous problems were ahead\nIn the demobilization and reconstruction period, Mr. Irwin felt: Returning service men and women\nmuat be re-instated in positions\nequal to those they left, positions\nmust be found for those who enlisted in temporary war work myst\nbe provided with work, and a place\nmust be found for the normal output ot graduating students.\nENTERED  PERIOD\nOF TRAINING\nIf the period of education of stu-\nt dents could be extended perhaps\ntwo years, he felt that would be a\ngreat aid. Most importantly, when\nthey did graduate after longer and\nbroader training they would be better fitted for places ln industry and\ncommerce.    Secondly, it would re\ntard somewhat the flood onto the\nlabor market. An increase in the\ncompulsory education age from 15\nyears was coming, he felt.\nIf such a course was adopted, Mr.\nIrwin foresaw the, necessity of educational courses being made more\napplicable to industry. There wu\nmuch room for extension of practical arts, home economic and cultural training. Schools should be\nable to offer more extensive courses\nin woodworking, metal work, electrical work, mechanical training\nand other divisions. They should\nprovide students with training to\n\"carry them to the doors of Industry,\" he said.\nCultural courses, for those so adapted, should be extended. Courses\nof five periods weekly for five or\nsix years in music, art in ita various branches, home decoration,\nlandscaping and others, should be\noffered.\nMr. Irwin's talk was in line with\nvarious Education Week activities,\njust concluded throughout Canada\nand United States. John E.b was\nprogram chairman.\nMust Clear Metz\nBefore All\nOut Offensive\nLONDON, Nov, 13 (CP-Heuter)-\nIt is perfectly clear nuw that before\nGen. Eisenhower, Allied Supreme\nCommander, could contemplate the\nall-out offensive he had to clear up\ntwo points at his front: Antwerp\nand the fortress city of Metz. Antwerp, it has been announced, will\nbe in use within a week; the neutralizing, if not the capture, of the\nworld's reputed strongest fortress\ntherefore has become urgent\nMetz is a real fortress at the\ncross-roads; 12 main roads radiate\nin all four directions under the\ncontrol of Its guns and 14 bridges\nspan the Moselle inside the city. It\nis therefore perfectly designed to\npresent a threat to any army rash\nenough to by-pass it and leaving\ninsufficient protection on its flank.\nGen. Eisenhower has to settle\nMetz one way or another; also he\nneeds the roads to give Gen. Patton elbow-room for his deployment\nagainst the Moselle Gap.\nThe German garrison is substaru\ntial. The peacetime strength of the\nMetz garrison was 25,000. Now its\ndefences reach North as far as Thionville. Gen. Patton is coming up\nfrom the South, using the main\nroads that intersect the approaches\nto Metz.\nThe Germans are probably staying to fight.\nMetz therefore may take longer\nto reduce than will the clearing of\nAntwerp.\nFormer Trail Man\nto Serve 2 Months\non Bad Check Charge\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 13 ' (CP) -\nWilliam Henderson, 40, of Trail, B.C.\nwas sentenced to two months in\njail when convicted in police court\nFriday of using a fireman's badge to\nenable Jiin. to cash a worthless $20\ncheck in a Vancouver department\nstore. His sentence will be concurrent with a similar sentence imposed on a check charge in New West-\nSays Ching-Wci\nDied a Traitor\nCHUNGKING, Nov. 13 (AP)\nChinese newspapers commenting today on the death of Wang Ching'\nWei, Quisling Premier of the Japan-\nanese puppet government of China,\nsaid his death \"did not redeem his\ncrimes and he died a traitor to his\ncountry, dishonored  and despised.\"\nTHIS dutgnm show* how Gruen\nOirvex'i ndially different construction ii itretmlined from tbt tnwit out\nto pre jroo big witch accuracy tn\nwrimrMch convenience tnd beauty.\nIn itd, let-ding fuhioa designer*\ncbooM this thmneit, most bctutiful\nof til vroiwitcha m \"Woridi\nhcM styled watch\". 0*r\u00ab^r-*\u2022-!\u00bb\u00bb\nSee the GRUEN  DEALER h. hat them\nThis Arm\n''Anybody here (rom Calgary?\"\nMobile X-Ray Unit May Operate in\nNelson 1945; Starts Trail Next Week\nLikelihood that a mobile X-Ray\nunit would be available and would\noperate in the Nelson area in 1945\nwai expressed Monday by Dr. W.\nK. Massey, Medical Health Officer.\nIt ls the aim to eventually, through\nthe use o( such units, make X-Ray\nexaminations of every man, woman\nand child in British Columbia at\nregular Intervals as an anti-tuberculosis measure.\nA mobile unit would be brought\nInto use next week at Trail, and for\nthe first time in history the X-Ray\nexamination of every person in a\ncity and district of $20,000 will be\nundertaken, he said.\nDr. Massey was reporting to the\nRotary Club at its luncheon meeting on the use to which money\nraised through the sale of Christmas seals was devoted. The B, C.\nTuberculosis Society promoted the\nsale of the seals, he said. The So\nciety pushed advertising and publicity in anti-tuberculosis educational work.\nThree Rotary Clubs ln the Kootenay were cooperating in the sale\nof the seals this year. At Fernie,\nKimberley and Nelson, Rotarians\nwere conducting the distribution,\nwhile at Trail the work was ln the\nhands of the I.O.D.E. Local organizations taking a hand in the distribution had resulted ln greatly\nwidened coverage. Dr. Mass_y stated.\nNelson Rotarlam will gather at\nthe Hume tonight to prepare the\nseals for mailing. The seals will be\nmailed to over 1500 families here\nPublicity for the sales campaign\nhad been arranged. Secretary J. H\nCoventry reported. One supporting\nprogram had already been broadcast, while Mayor N. C. Stibbs\nwould be heard in a radio address\nover CKLN next week.\nInterpreting\nThe War News\nCM. Employees\nIn B. (. Reached\n120 P. (.of Quota\nVANCOUVER, B.C., Nov. IS -\nReturns were still pouring ln when\nthe Cantdlan Pacific Railway emr\nployees Victory Loan campaign\nwent over the top in every way.\nIn British Columbia, the employees invested $900,000,.reached 120\nper cent of their objective and had\n06 per cent employee participation.\nVictory flags were won by the the\nDistrict, by the Esquimau and Nanaimo Railway, by the Vancouver,\nRevelstoke, Kootenay and Kettle\nValley divisions, and by Canadian\nPacific Air Lines. A larfle number\nof group pennants and ccorea of\nhonor certificates were also won.\nThe Employees1 national objective was also greatly exceeded, investment being irt the neighborhood of $10,000,000. This combined\nwith the investment of $17,500,030\nby company and pension funds to\nboost the total for company and\nemployees in seven loans to more\nthan $144,000,000.\nNELSON DAILY NIWS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14,1\nBy KIRKE  L. SIMPSON\nAiiociated .Preu War Analyst\nFirst reports of Nazi evacuation of\nthe Metz-Thionville bastion guarding the Lorraine gateway to Germany and the middle Rhine appear\npremature, but no more than that.\nBoth anchorages, of the last enemy\nfoothold in France, however, are\nclose to encirclement by United\nStates 3rd Army element* and due\nfor capture or complete isolation\nsoon.\nIn each case twin bridgeheads\nthreaten to cut the last communications and escape routes from both\ntowns. Thionville at the North end\nof the 16-mile Moselle span between\nit and Metz seems certainly doomed.\nIt has been cut off by American\nforces from direct contact with\nMetz and Nancy. A single highway\nand rail system leading Southeastward to Germany are all that remain ln German hands.\nMetz ii in little better case. Two\nrailroads and four highways center\ning there from the East are still\nopen, but gravely menaced by the\nAmerican crossing of the Moselle\nNorth of the city and the fbr'elflg of\nthe Nied line to the Southeast. These\ntwo inner prongs of the American\nattack, at last accounts, were within roughly 10 miles of joining hands\nto complete the encirclements of\nthe ancient but powerful Metz fas-\ntified zone.\nIt looks on the maps, however,\nas though the 3rd Army drive with\nflanking support bv the Franco-American 7th Army *o the South has\neven broader objectives than forcing open the Lorraine gateway to\nthe German frontier. An armored\nflying column which has already\ncut the Metz-Sarresbourg railroad\nWest of Benestroff, some 30 miles\nSoutheast of Metz, is unofficially reported swinging Northeastward and\nto have reached the village of Ber-\nmering. That way lies the most direct and open road to Saarbrucken\njust within the German frontier on\nthe Saar.\nHundreds Return\non Hospital Ship\nBy JOHN LEBLANC\nCanadian Pren Staff Writer\nHALIFAX, Nov. '13 (CP)\u2014Survivors of land fighting in France\nand Italy and the air war over\nEurope, hundreds of wounded Canadian servicemen returned to the\nDominion today aboard the British\nhospital ship Aba.\nTheir experiences of the battlefields temporarily thrust aside\/the\ndisabled fighters showed keenest\nInterest, as they came home, in Canada's army manpower crisis. Newsmen going aboard the ship were\nbombarded with questions on the\ndevelopments leading up to Defence Minlnster Ralston's resignation issue.\nMen of the army, most of them\nveterans of France, made up the\nbulk of the arrivals, with a small\ngroup of R.C.A.F. personnel rounding out the contingent.\nA bombing error Incident in\nItaly was described by L.-Bdr. Roy\n(Chesty) Green, R.C.A., of Victoria\nwho despite a fractured spine was\nthe life of the party down in his\nward.\n\"This one was really a pip,\" he\nsaid. \"I was attached to the West\nNova Scotia regiment at tht time,\nnear Campobasso. \"We were going\ninto a town and called for air support at 4 p.m.\n\"Our bombers came over it four\no'clock all right, but they bombed\nus. They decided to try again. At\nfour o'clock, the bomberi gave it to\nus again.\n\"We got set for one more try,\nat four in the afternoon. So at four\nin the afternon\u2014yeah, you guessed it, That was enough for the O.\nC He sent a message back: \"OK,\nwe capitulate.\"\nRossland Social\n\u25a0y MRS   F   0. BRAY\nROflSLAND. B.C.. Nov. 13\u2014W_wn Bt.\nUtry'i Circle of Sacred Heart Catholic Church met Thuraday evening at\nthe home of lira. O. W. Mara, Red\nCroaa knitting waa done. Refreahmenta\nwere aerved by the hoateaa aaalated\nby Mra K. Leduc. Thoe attending were\nMrs. Cullinane, Mra. E. Kambls. Mra.\nNicholson, Mra. Uwrle, Mrs. H. Bailey,\nMra. E  Leduc and Mra. Mara.\nMra. Robert Roae entertain ad her\nbridge club Thuraday evening. Mra\nLeo Nlmaick won flrat prize and Mr*.\nKnut-Haard the oonaolatlon. Dainty\nrefreshment* were served by the hoa-\nteas. Those present included Mrs.\nFred Hawklna. Mra. J. Milllgan. Mra. J.\nBooth, Mr*. Oua Bpiller, Mrs. C. Olmstesd. Mrs Knutsgsard snd Mrs. Leo\nNlmaick.\nDorca* Circle of Bt. Andrew'a United Church met st the home of Mra.\nJ. Upsett Thursday evening. The pattern tor s quilt was worked on. Refreshments were served by tha hostess assisted by Mra. W. Blackwell\nThose attending Included also Mra D.\nMartin, Mra. E. Seccombe, Mra. 8.\nChurchill. Mrs. A. O. Jensen. Mri J\nRosoorla, Mra. A H ' Kef fer and a\ngueat, Mrs. W. P. Lane.\nMr*.  Leo Nlmaick  and  family  havP\nreturned from visiting relative* ln\nVancouver,\nMra. Edwin Johnson, wUo vlalted relatives ln town last week, returned\nhome to Klmberley. She wa* accompanied by Mra. H. Kearney of Everett,\nWash.\nMra J. C Blight and daughter, who\nhave been holidaying In Vancouver,\nreturned home Wedneaday.\nWren Charlotte Ferguson waa ln the\ncity visiting Mri. C. Cox.\nMr. and Mra. Fred White had a*\ntheir gueat, Mlaa Betty White, or Nakuap.\nUw. Jean Bulck, RCAF. (WD.),\nwho ha* been vial ting her parent*, Mr\nand Mra. William Bulck, has returned\nto her atstlon In Alberta.\nJack Cox, who haa been visiting at\nthe Coast, returned home Baturday.\nMr. and Mra. L. Riley are holidaying\nln the United States thla week.\nPO. Albert LePage. R.C.A.F., stationed in the Eaat, la visiting his wife\nand family.\nTelegrapher Alee Turner, R.C.N.,\nwho has been visiting hla parenta.\n.Mr. and Mra E E. Turner, left Thuriday to re)oln hla unit In Eaatern Can-\nid*.\nConfidence\nK11 joyiikiiI of work or play, and\nthe assurance of feeling in top\nform may depend on your eyes.\nHave them examined regularly.\n\/m yoiin\nRotary Club to\nBoost Xmas Seals\nFormal opening of the 1844 Christmas Seal campaign for the prevention of tuberculosis has been set\nfor November 20, President W. G.\nHarold of the Nelson Rotary Club,\nannounced in a radio address Saturday night.\nFor some weeks the Rotary Christmas Seal Committee has been hard\nat work preparing the envelopes\nthat will carry into nearly every\nhome in this district a supply of\nthe cheerfully colored seals that\nare by this time so intimately associated with the anti-tuberculosis\nmovement.\nMany thousands of these seals\nwill go into the mails Just before\nthe official opening of the campaign on Nov. 20. Citizens of thia\ndistrict are asked to purchase\u2014and\nuse\u2014as many seals as they can. The\nneed for the work supported by\nChristmas Seals ls more Important\nthis year than ever before. During\n1943 Canada suffered an increase in\nthe death rate from this disease.\nIf the ground thus lost is to be\nrecovered, every citizen will need\nto do his part to bring up the Sehl\nsale total.\nFind Footprints\nof Missing Airman\nLAKE COWICHAN, B.C., Nov. 13\n(CP).\u2014B.C. police officers directing\nthe search for Lac. Leslie Heal, M,\nairrnan missing since Nov. 5 in the\nwoods near here, said today footprints which they were satisfied\nwere those of Heal had been found\nnear Dymple Lake.\nCpl. J. Henry, B.C. Police officer\nat Duncan, said he dispatched eight\nexperienced woodsmen, who will\nfollow Lens Creek, from ita headwaters In Dymple Lake to the San\nJuan River and the Pacific Ocean.\nWhile hopes of the searchers were\nraised by finding of the footprints,\nthere Is little chance now of finding\nhim alive. While he carried a rifle\nand ammunition and matches with\nhim, he had no axe It is felt It\nwould br impossible for a person to\nexist eight days In the woods without food and shelter at this time of\nyear\nLuc. Heal was stationed at Patricia Bay. Hii wife lives st Saan-\nich.\nI^WOOL ACCESS0RIE\nFOR WINTER SPORTS\nIf you're skating, skiing or\novtr thm* jtemi and make your\nItockl art complete.\nHeavy Sport Socks       .\nAll-Wool Ribbed Socks \u2014 Ideal for skating or curl' '\u00bb'\ning. Colors, Blue, Scarlet, Green, Gold and White.\"\nSizes: Small, Medium and Large. d*| AA1,\nBadminton Socks\nThese All-Wool Socks by Penman's are ideal if you're\nplaying badminton.    Fancy-knit in the foot and cuffs. \u25a0\nColors: Brown, Scarlet and White.    Sizes 9 to mJQi\nlO'\/j.   Pair \/ m*\nWomen's Wool Gloves\nPlain or fancy knit in all-wool gloves with neat fitting\ncuffs.   Select yours from White, Wine, Navy, Scarlet or\nBuff. Sizes: Small, Medium or Large.\nPair\t\n$1.00\nWool Scarves\nPastel shades in these finely-woven Wool Scarves, with\nfringe ends.  Colors: Maize, Blue, Corol and i\nGreen.    Each\t\n$149\nTOMORROW IS LAST DAY OF\nFUR COAT PROMOTION\nfytatotfr$_tQ (Uattqwuu\nINCORPORATED  2?? MAY 1670.\nCoast Naval Men\nWin Awards\nOTTAWA, Nov. 1! (CP)-Nivy\nMiniiter Macdonald announced tonight a list of 57 operational awards\nto members ot the Royal Canadian\nNavy .Jor \"good service\" in various\nduties.\nThe Conspicuous Gallantry Medal, second only to the Victoria Cross\namong medals which can be earned\nby naval ratings, was awarded to\nAB. Michael Kerwin ot Billings'\nBridge, Ont., near Ottawa, for rescuing a shipmate, LS. John D. Burnett ot Penticton, B. C, from a biasing gun turret, though wounded\nand blinded himself.\nTwo separate awards art made\nto LS. Albert George Stubbins ot\nHumberstone, Ont., who received\nthe Distinguished Service Medal\n\"for good service ln action with\nlight forces of the enemy, July 26-\n27,\" and mention In dispatches \"for\ngood service in the invasion of Normandy.\"\nThe awards included:\nFor good service in action with\nlight forces of the enemy, July M-\n27\u2014\nLieut. Cornelius Burke, D.S.C., of\nVictoria, Commander of the motor\ntorpedo boat third flotilla.\nFor good service in tht invasion\nof Normandy\u2014\nD.S.C.-\nLieut. John Chapman Davie of\nDuncan, B. C.\nMention in despatches\u2014\nCapt. V. S Godfrey of Victoria,\nCommanding Officer of H.M.C.S.\nPrinct Henry.\nLt.-Cmdr. Lome Samuel Kylt of\nVancouver, flotilla officer, third\nCanadian Infantry Landing Craft\nflotilla.\nPO. Motor Mechanic Ramon\nBruce McCarthy, Wlngham, B. C.\nFor good servict ln attacks on enemy's sea communications\u2014\nBar to the D.C.M.\u2014\nChiet Stoker Harold Douglas\nRichards of Victoria.\nD.S.M.\u2014\nCPO. William Merrill Montgomery of'Victoria.\nChief Ordnance Artificer Leslie\nFrancis Gill of Victorli.\nMention ln Despatches\u2014\nLt.-Cmdr. David Walter Grots.\nVictoria, commanding officer, H. M.\nC. S. Restigoucht: previously mentioned  ln  despatches.\nGunner Geoffrey Herbert Bar-\nrlck. Victoria.\nCPO. W. H. Aveling of Burnaby,\nB   C\nCPO. Clement Cecil Wallact Man,\nof Victoria.\nChief Ytoraan of Signals Cyril\nHerbert Gordon Wilson of Victoria.\nPO. Thomas Edward Moorcraft\nof Vancouver.\nThe \"Bay's\" Food Specials\nSelling Today, Wednesday, Thuriday \u2014 Phonal 193-194 s. ft\n:dcn Returns\n\u2022rom Paris\nLONDON, Nov. IS (CP-Rtuttr)\n\u2014Fortlgn Secretary Eden today rt-\nturned tt England from Paris. Ht\naccompanied Prime Minister\nChurchill to tht French capita!\non Friday night.\nFLOUR-Purlty, \u00ab|   CO\n4Mb. wckt; tach   ...... \u2022P' *\"Ji'\nCHEESE   HUNTER*- JA\nVt-\\b. pkgs.; atch r*\n80UP\u2014Aylmtr, to-oi. tint, Qa\nTomato or Vegtttble; tin     \"r-\nCOFFEE\u2014Fort Otrry,       AJrj.\nMb. pkgs.; tach ^' t\nSOUP   MIX\u2014hltbltint;     \u2022>*\u00bb-*\nI  pkgs. \u00a3W\nSPORK or PREM\u2014 OQj.\n12-o_. tint; tteh    '**'>'\nPRUNE PLUWS-\nAyl_r.tr; _0-o_. tin\n141\nBAKING  POWDER-        etiy.\nCalumet, 1S-OI. tint; tioh *\u00bb**T\nPASTRY FLOUR- \u00abJk\nRoytl; 7-tta. tick   ***\"\u00bb\u2022\n8TUFFED OLIVES- J\u00ab*U\nMcLtrtnt; J-oi. Jtr ,*\u00bbt\"\nOXO   FLUID\u20141.-OI.     tl   |A\nbottltt; each   -JlalW\nMARMALADE\u2014Aylmtr,    Ka\n24-oi. jtrt; tach    \u2022_>\u00ab*>\nFLOOR  WAX-Old 4QA\nEnglish; Mb. tin ,ar\nCASTILE   SOAP\u2014Purt,    23^\nlong  bars;  atch     atiis}.\nINOOftPOft-KTID  IW MAY H\u00bbm\nFirst Two Deaths\nby Military\nCourt in Brussels\nBRUSSELS, Nov. 13 (CP Reuter)\n\u2014The first two death sentences to\nbe passed by the Military Court at\nBrussels since the country's liberation were carried out today.\nOne^wat Joseph Hoogeveen, a\nchauffeur convicted ot betraying to\ntht Gestapo t young patriot and the\nyouth's friends wanted by the Germans for killing a traitor Journalist.\nPaul Herten, collaborator and the\nchief editor of the pro-German news\npaper Nouveau Journal was the\nother. Herten was accused of Inspiring Hoogeveen's crime.\nTht two men wert shot In the\nSaint Glllea prison.\n4 FRENCH CANADIANS\nFINEP AT POWELL RIVER\nPOWELL RIVER, B. C Nov. U\n(CP) \u2014 Four rrtnch-Onidltn employee, of tht PowtU Rlvtr Company's mill here, wtrt fined \u2022 tottl\not W_0 plus costs In nolle* oourt todty whtn convicted of crtttlng t\npublic disturbance, tnd intuiting\n\u25a0 police-officer,\nJoseph ind Maurice Comcau, brothers, were fined \u00bb25 each, Wilfred\nDebons was fined (100 and Henry\nGtrtcpy 1200.\nV\nSays Sulfa Drugs\nBeing \"Grossly\nAbused\" by Doctors\nST. LOUIS, Nov. IS (AP) - Ute\nof sulfa drugs ln treatment of ikin\ndiseases lt being \"grossly abused\"\nby doctors trying to compensate for\ntrfelr own \"shortcomings\" In the\nfield of skin Infections, Dr. Norman\nTobias of St. Louis University said\ntoday.\nDeclaring that the layman alto\nwas erroneously using the drugs ln\ncertain instances, be asserted:\n\"Not only do we (lnd fathers using\ntheir babies' Jnr of sultathiazole\nointment for real and imagined dermatoses (skin Infections! but babiet\nare getting smeared with sulfa olnt-\nmenta thtt wert originally prescribed for their pirents.\"\nWhile ht decltrtd thit the sulfa-\nnomidet undoubtedly wire ont ot\ntht grettett blessings ln the world\nof medicine, ht uld thty had definite limitations tnd ihould thert\nfort not be employed willy nllly.\nSnyliiii that the chief danger of\nsylfonamidei tpplled to the akin\nconsists of local or general sensltiz\nation (an allergic reaction) which\nmay be Incapacitating.     ,\nRotary Invited to\nSt. Paul's\nChurch Service\nAn Invitation for Nelson Rotary\nClub members to attend as a body\na service of worshlo at St. Paul's\nUnited Church was extended Monday by Rev. H. Stewart Forbes. Tht'\ninvitation was received and, on the\nmotion by Mr. Forbes, was referred\nto the board of directors.\nWeather Forecast\nKOOTENAY-Llght to moderate\nwinds, cold Tuesday, seven frosts\nat night.\nOut-of-Town\nCustomers\nWrit* for Our Samples ol\n(Eljrtfittmta\nSold in 2-Dozen lots only,\nprinted with your nam* and\naddress\nPrices\n|2 up fo *4.50\nPROMPT SERVICE\nNelson Daily Newe\nChriitmoi Card Dtpt.\nnelson, a c.\n.\n ********\nBPPP\nmm\n'.\niN\u00abw Cream\ni' Deodorant\nSafely blips\nSlop Perspiration\n1. Does not lot drcixi ot men'i\n1    shim. Does not inittte ikin,\n2. No willing to dry. On be uk.1\nright tfter iht.ing.\n3. Pteventi under-ttm odor,\nhelps itop perspintion itttly,\n4. A pure, white, antiseptic,\nlumlesj vanishing ctesm.\n5. Awarded Approval Seal of\nAnicricanlnlututeofUutuler-\ning\u2014harmless to fabric Un\nFor years tnd rears the average\nclergyman bu bten urging tbe parents ol his parish to restore the\nwidely-passing .practice ot family\nprayers and other religious ceremo-\nmles ln the home. The Impact ot the\nwar has brought more of this urging from the pulpit and religioui\npress. It appears that a good many\nparents are seipondlng favorably.\nIndeed, a great many mothers have\nwritten me lately to tell me of their\nhome practices ln this direction.\nMany who read this column grew\nup ln homes where grace was said\nat meals and the Bible read aloud\nin the family circle. Most will admit that they are glad to have bad\nsuch upbringing even though they\nare not carrying on these practices\nwith their own children.\nIt ls apparent, of course, that ln\nmany homes today, with til tbe\nhaste and interruptions from outside\u2014radio, telephone and varying\nprograms by different members of\nthe family, with fewer opportunities\nfor this family to be all together at\nregular times ln a leisurely, quiet\natmoiphere\u2014family religious ceremonies are harder to cultivate now\nthan ln earlier days.\nNevertheless, many religious parents who sense deep values ln such\nTens mide by a ftmoas Itborttorr\u2014\n\u2022\u2022epcatcdly wishing rtyon Mot kings, then stretching them\njust it in tctutl weiring\u2014prove thtt wtihingin Loa cuts\ndown rum over 5(1%. Loi gives ttockings much longer\nWear thin if you use strong\nsoaps or rub with cake soip.\nGet Lui in the new, bigger     X     *A|| leading\npickige. The large ihe is an      ^        (locking\ntven better buy. Join the Lnx     *f   manufacturers\nMATTHIW HALTON: British Columbia Is the home of famed\nCBC War Correipondent Matthew Hilton, above, whs mtdt t nation\nwide tour on behalf of the Seventh Victory Loin cimptlgn. During\n'   nt\nthe patt ytar he hat bean reporting from Italy tnd the Weitern front,\nbrt\n6n...\n-Day when ht twam aihore from a landing barge, ha\n\u25a0ly ant\nHilton has brotdciit regularly on tht CBC Newt Roundup heard\ndally In thlt provlnot at 4:45 and 10:16 p.m.\nhit betn reporting the Allied advance through tht Low Countrlei for\nCBC llitentit, and plant to return to thtt front ntxt month.\nWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\n7:30\u20140 Canada\n7:31\u2014Toast and Oofftt (OKLN)\n8:00\u2014CBO Ntwt\n8:15\u2014Front Lint Family\n8:80\u2014Musical Programme (CKLN)\n8:45\u2014Morning Concert\n9:00\u2014BBO Ntwt\n9:15\u2014SmlUn' Jack (OKLN)\n9:33\u2014Volet of Memory (CKLN)\n9:30\u2014Marching to Victory (CKLN)\n9:45\u2014Muilc While You Work\n9:59\u2014Tlr*. Signal i\n10:00\u2014Morning Vltit l\n10:15\u2014Tin Pan Alley Oott to Town\n(CKLN)\n10:30\u2014Organ Maglo (CKLN)\n10:46\u2014fltream-Llned Melodies\n11:00\u2014Music ln Wllte Tlmt\n11:16\u2014Sing A Bong (CKLN)\n11:28\u2014 Gay Nlnetlei  (CKLN)\n11:45\u2014Dancing Till Noon\n13:00\u2014B.O. Farm Broadcut\nAFTERNOON\n13:80\u2014CBO Newi\n12:45\u2014Matinee Memories\n1:00\u2014Old F\u00bbvourlt\u00bbt  (CKLN)\n1:15\u2014Old Fivourltet\n1:80\u2014 Modern Mutlclant\n1:45\u2014Artlatt of Tomorrow\n2:00\u2014B.O Sphool Broidcut\n2:30\u2014Listen to London\n2:45\u2014Listeners' Favoritet\n3:0n\u2014Wttttrn Flvt\n3:15\u2014Headline History\n8:80\u2014Curtain Echoes\n8:45\u2014BBC Newi\n4:00\u2014Wendell Hall (OKLN)\n4:08\u2014Volet of Memorlet (CKLN)\n4:15\u2014Ann Watt Sings\n4:30\u2014CBR Preientt\n4:45\u2014OBO Newt Round-Dp\n6:00\u2014Varieties In Modem Rhythm\n(CKLN)\n5:80\u2014Men of Muilo\nEVENING .\n8:00\u2014Clinical Moment! (CKLN)\n8:15-Service Men's tjlllr, Box\n(OKLN)\n8:30\u2014Birthday tnd Anniversary\nTime  (OKLN)\n6:45\u2014Cavalcade of Melody  (CKLN)\n7:00\u2014CBC Newt\n7:15\u2014Booki of tbl Tlmei\n7:80\u2014Songt of Empire\n8-00\u2014Of Tnlngt to Comt\n8:15\u2014Song Recital\n8:30\u2014CBR symphony orohtttra\n9:00\u2014BBO Ntwt.\n9:15\u2014Peerless Present! (CKLN)\n9:30\u2014Three Sunt Trio\n9:46\u2014Lee Sims and Interlude\n8:55\u2014Interlude\n10:00\u2014CBC Newt\n10:11\u2014080 Newi Roundup\n10:30\u2014Ood  Savt   tbe  Kins\nCredit Rossland\nConsumer Body\nWith Good Work\nROSSLAND, B.O., Nor. IS\u2014Tht Women's Consumer council met on\nThuraday afternoon tn tbt Red Croat\nrooms at tbt Oourt House, when Roy\nL. rotter and Mr. Erdthl of tht Wartime Prlcea tnd Trtdt Board were\npretent.\nMr. foster told tht Council that a\ncuitomer could demand t fully detailed sales slip from tbt merchant\nahowtng weight, etc.\nHe alto told of various Illicit practices, whloh he personally had to inquire Into. These enquiries dealt with\naale of radios, fuel truckers. Chinese\nvegetable merchants, rentals He also\ntpokt of tht assistance given by tbt\nWomen'i council In keeping prices\ndown.\nflaying thtt chlldrni'i clothing\nmanufacturing wat up, he tald thtrt\nwu t better quality of shoes being\nmade, but merchants wert hesitant\nln stocking them, ll prices well\nhigher. Mr. Foster felt tbt scarcity of\nchildren's clothing wu due to tht\npeople having larger Incomes, tnd,\nInstead ot buying ont garment, purchasing two or three.\nHe alto read a Hit of prices of articles told ln Newfoundland, whloh\nhat no prict board, Tht prlcea of Newfoundland being two tnd three timet\nhigher than those ln Canada.\nThe report ot the year's activities\nwas reld.\nMembera present were Mrt. p. L.\nSwift, Mrs. P. O. Palmer, Mre. W. O,\nMara, Mrs. J. R. Bryan, Mra. T. R\nDavit and Mrs. W. O Brooks.\nPIVI GENERATIONS: Reore-\nitntatlvet of flvt generation!\n(lathered at tht homt of Mrt. McMillan, Erlckion, July 17 to honor\nMri, Donaldion on htr 94th birthday.\nTht memben of thl family,\nrepresenting the flvt generation!,\nart ihown, Mn. Donaldion, sett-\ned, Mrs. A. McMillan, Mrt.\nCharlei Godwin, Mrt. E. Perry,\nand ion, Donald.\nHULL, England (CP) - Of the\n92,660 pre-war houses ln Hull, 86,-\n722 have been destroyed or damaged in 82 afr raids, it has been\ndisclosed.\nRemembrance\nService Held\nat Grand forks\nGrand Forks. B.C.\u2014Observance ot\nRemembrance Day wu carried with\nalike solemnity and rejoicing under\nauaploea of tha Orand Forka Canadian Legion.\nThe ceremonial took place at the\nCenotaph at the poat office aquare,\nwhere there waa a program of sacred\nflinging led by the band, a brief discourse on Remembrance by the Rev\nCyril Sylva-Whlte, laying of wreaths\nat ths baae of the Cenotaph, and the\nsounding of The Laat Poat.\nMore than a dozen wreathe were\nplaced At the Cenota.pl., and Included those from the City of Grand Forks,\nfrom ths Legion, the Masons, the Odd\nFellows, the Knights of Pythias, the\nGyros, the Rebekaha, the Eastern Star,\nthe Pythian Slaters, and several private wreaths.\nGrand FVjrks Band of twenty membera led th* parade from the Canadian\nLegion Hall and were followed by veterans of the last war under command\nof Sergeant-Major Richard Scott; then\ncame mothers or wives of veterans and\nof members of the present expeditionary force. Then the local company of\nPacific Coast Mountain Rangeri in\nuniform, numbering about 50. and\nafter them came Boy Scouts in uniform and Olrl Guides tn uniform,\nnumbering nearly 100. They paraded\nalong seVeral City streets en route to\nand from thm Cenotaph.\nThe Legion had preceded their Ar\nmlatice Day celebration with a dance\nln the Bonthron Hall Friday evening,\nwhich wu 1 antly attended, follow*\nIng the ceremonial at ll a.m. Saturday morning all those on Dtraae and\na number of other Invited mends repaired to the Legion HaU. The young\nor basement with luncheon, music ana\nor basement with lunchou, mualo and\ndancing, while the veterans and other\nfriends enjoyed luncheon and their\nannuel \"get-together\" on the mala\nfloor of the Legion.\nMlllllM|l!llltll|IMIIMItlllMIMIIIIIIIIIII\n\"BUILD B.C. PAYROLLS\"\n'PACIFIC\nMILK IS\nGOOD'\nA letter from a fisherman's\nwife living up the coast tells\nof the quantity of milk they\nuse-_-two cases per month.\nShe says, \"I can make only\none simple statement and\nthat is, 'Pacific Milk it\ngood'.\"\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated and Vacuum Packed\nillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllt\nceremonies, may find wayi to carry\nthem on.\nThe beat time to begin li when\nthe first child is very young. Not\nmany families with children of\nschool age, particularly if they are\nadolescents, will be able to win the\nwholehearted cooperation from the\nchildren In auch an undertaking.\nunless these children have for years\nbeen used to the family practice.\nNot only may theie olde^ children feel hampered by the procedure\nbut alio may feel embarraiied leit\nlome playmate or pal ihould drop\nln during the ceremony. Thli Inner\nresponse from the children 'ii not\nso likely to happen where the practice has been the constant usual way\nof the family, and where there alio\nobtain, a fine relationship between\nthe children and their parenti, who\nreligion leemi to cause them to be\nmore lovely to live with.\nMoreover, theie children wltneii\nno ilgn of embarrassment ln the\nparents or Indication by them that\nthey consider the ceremony a mere\nperfunctory matter; provided the\nparents don't brag about their pieyt\nor make lt a burden to other adults\nand the children's young frlendi.\nSurely it ls a great and noble\nachievement of parenti to have kept\nthe   growing   child   from   feeling\naahamed of any of the family\"! religioui practice! but instead, proud\nof them.\nA good time in most families for\nBible reading is at a regular meal\nwhen all are together. Tnough the\nyoungster of four or five might not\nunderstand, it, he can learn to wait,\nbe quiet and liiten, to enjoy the\nrhythm of the words, if the .election li ihort and choien with a view\nto music, aa illustrated by some of\nthe Psalms. Some families repeat a\ntew choice lelectlom over and over\nagain, io that growing children come\nto know them by heart and enjoy\nsaying them ln concert. The more\nthe children participate, of course,\nthe better.\nDEATHS\nVANCOUVER, Nov. IS. (CP)-\nWllliam Hodion, 83, former city\npolice commissioner. Born In Liverpool, he came to Canada 60 yeari\nago, and has lived ln Vancouver for\n50 yeara.\nThe number of honei ln Canada\nin 1941 wu 2,789391, valued at\napproximately $185,000,000. ' The\nnumber of tracton wu 158,844,\nwhich at a value of (750 each would\napproximate- (120,000,000.\n'll_MIIMIHMHIMI|l\"i'iil-||||..IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHMIIIIIIIIIII 1MIIII1I\t\n*ft*\nm\\.m.\/.\ncKaWUfoA\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIiiilillll   , ,\nWhile aplnach hu been put ln ltl     Plcklee\n\"proper place\" among the vegetables that are good for ui and dethroned from Its top rating u the\none having the most iron, it li itlll\nan excellent food and ihould be\nfrequently included in our menus\nTry lt with tomato and bacon for\ns change, as in the menu lubmitted\nfor today.\nTODAY'S MENU\nPotted Veal Shoulder\nSpinach with Tomato and Bacon\nCelery\nBRAN\nMUFFINS\n1'^ cup, bran, I   cup poitry flour, * tM.\n... ...in    baking    b_-_\u00abr,   Vi   cup   brown\nsugar,  I   ogg,  '.  cup milk, I   toblnpoon\natllal   burttr,   1   labloipoont   SOYHAKT\nsntsD.\ntogi.li\nmilk \u00bb\nadd bran and brown ngar, nil milk with\n-talon ogg, mtlttd bailor ana! JOYHAUT\nIfllAD   and  odd   lo ilr,  Ingndlinll.\nFill (..and muffin tin. \", fall, lakt at\nJT5- lo 400*   F, for 20 lo 25 mlnulM.\nA Recipe on tach Labtl.\nSOYHART\nJ.l.T_IOMBULL_TD.,-ii..o_.e_,B.C\nCustard Pie\nCoffee\nPOTTED VEAL SHOULDER\n2 poundi veal ihoulder, 1 onion.\n1 quart water, 2 tablespoons salt, 1\nteupoon pepper, 2 cupi diced potatoes, 6 carrots, 4 tablespoon! flour.\nRemove fat and cut meat Into 1-\nInch cubes. Simmer veal and sliced\nonion in water for one hour, add\nsalt, pepper, potatoes and sliced car-\nrota, and continue cooking for 15\nminutes. Thicken mixture with\nflour and water which have been\nblended together. Prepare dumpling! and drop by teupoonfuli on\ntop of meat. Cover closely and\ni__am 12 minutes   Servei ilx.\nSPINACH WITH TOMATO\nAND BACON\n1 pound iplnach, 2 tomatoei. 2\nslices bacon.\nClean iplnach and wt uide. Remove thin illce from top and bot\ntorn of tomatoei, cut In half ami\ncover with bacon cut ln tiny pieces\nStart spinach cooking and at thr\nlame time broil tomitoei until they\nare soft and bacon ls crisp. Spinach\nand tomatoei Vlll be done at the\nsame time. Serve with buttered\niplnach in center, surrounded with\ntomatoes.   Servei 2 or 3.\nCUSTARD PIE\nPie pastry, 2 cupi scalded milk, 3\nrugs, V, teaspoon lait, dash nutmeg,\n1-3 cup sugar.\nUne pic tin with pastry and\nflute edge. Beat 2 eggi ilightly, add\nlugar and salt, add scilded milk\nand pour Into pie shell. Place ln\n450 degree F. oven and bake 10\nminutei, then reduce heat to 350\nand bake 40 to 50 minutei altogether. . For chocolate cuitard pie add\n2 iquarel of grated chocolate to\ncustard before baking. The chocolate will rise to the top and make\na dark crust over top.\nSAFEWAY\ntaRcw\nI SERVE CoFFEF EVERY  MEAL-EVERY  DAY\n* Edwards Coffee     _,,*\u00ab\u201e 4QC\n* Airway Coffee\n* Nabob Coffee \u00bb. *\nGround\nFresh \t\nb bag 30C\nlb bag 40C\n* SANBORN Coffee Regular  lb bag 45C\n* Sanka Coffee\nCoffee\nRegular\nMAXWELL\nNOISE\nAll-\nPurpose\nlb bag DOC\nlb bag 45C\nPEAS\nMEAT SPREADS\n.21 c\nRoyal City, Sieve 4,                  1 J C\n20-oz.  can  \t\nHedlund'i assorted, 7-oi. (\nTOMATO JUICE\nj-r\/v.\"-     2.0.9^\nSALT                        \u2022\nWindior, pliln or           Q fnr    | Of\nlodliod. Mb. pkt.  __  \u2022*-  'VI    171.\nTOMATO SOUP\nTEA\n65c\n-as\u00bbs?        3 for 27c\nCanterbury, 1-lb. pkg. __\nSHORTENING    0(   -*-,-,\nDomestic, lib. carton Z 'Of J \/ C\nBAKING POWDER\nCalumet, 16-oa. can _.. __\n23c\nMARMALADE            no\nOrango,   EraproM   Utvlllt,              V fl T\nH-rid.   oi.   (Inn          iUv\nCOCOA\nFry'i Breakfast, 18-oz. ean\n,31c\nCAKE FLOUR             qq\nSwansdown, 44-oz. pkg. _.   t-sC\nIVORY SNOW\nLarge package  _\n23c\nPASTRY FLOUR          a a\nWild Rose, 7-lb. aack .  T* 1 C\nCHIPSO\nRegular package\t\n23c\nPrices Effective Nov. 14th to Nov. 18th\n<:_ Plain facts\niboot really\ngood coffee\nCOFPII that'* wlwly purchaawj \"^ ca^fully\nbrewed will be really good coffee. Hen tn tome\nplain (ecu tbout buying and brewing it.\nIUYINO COI-HI\nOiooie the blend thtt you ftnd moet eatlsfto*\ntory to your taste. Some an smooth tnd mild\u2014.\ntome tn rich tnd robust. But if you like it, t tint V\nthe blend for you, no matter what the price teg\neayt.\nIvy freih coffee, whether it comee already\npound or packed under vacuum, or il ground to\nyour order it the itore.\nOet tht grind that it beet tulted to your coffee\nmaker. (\"Regular find,\" in vacuum-pecked\ncoffees, it suitable for all coffee makers; \"drip\ngrind\" is favored for drip or vacuum makers\u2014\nstore-ground coffee can be specified for percola--\ntor, vacuum, drip or coffee pot.)\nUIWINO COFFE1\nClean containers and coffee makers an rt*\nquired, If you want really good coffee. Keep\nvacuum \u2022 peeked coffee in Its own container.\nBefore transferring store-ground coffee to your\npantry'container, make sun that all the old\ncoffee has been removed (a thorough washing\nwith aoap and hot water, followed by thorough\ndrying, insures the right result. Even a Uttle old\ncoffee can spoil the new). Thoroughly wash and\ndry the coffee maker similarly, every day; once a\nmonth, boil it out in aoepy water to freshen it.\nUit enough coffee tn your coffee maker. As a\ngeneral rule, for average strength, 1 rounding\ntablespoon or 2 level Ubleeptona for each standard 8-ounce cup of water.\nfor itronger coffee, ute mort ground coffee\u2014\nlonger brewing simply spoilt tht flavor.\nHtvt tht wattr boiling briskly.\nMeaiure both tht coffee tnd w*im% eanAifly,\neech time, te avoid disappointment\nNtvtr uie grounds twice-arid never rtheai.\nSafeway\nUomtmaken' Hurt am\nJU.U L\u00a3I \"RIGHT. DimM\nmSH PRODUCE\nCauliflower: local lb.\nCelery:\nApples\nOranges:\nGrapefruit:\nTomatoes\nOKANAGAN,   UTAH.\nHOUSEHOLD  MAC'S\nCAL. VAIENC A3.\nTEXAS PINK9.\nHOT   HOUSE\nIb\n8 lbs. 25c\n5 lbs. 53c\n3 lbs. 31c\nIb. 25c\nSAFEWAY\n <-.\u2014.-\n f;\nMPu.uu||HiviiiiiitJpi\u00bbi,;\"W.iiu\u00abwiw ^iinwy,ijwipi_^_iw^wi\n'^fr,:\nPPPPPW\nTheReoMMwhy\nCORRECT\nPOSTUREj\nCOMFORT\nWALKING\ns^sriststsu!\nRtmtmbtf, ft* mettei bow\n\u25a0mart yom ehoee uwy look\noutside, unless Uu Ustt oa\nwhich they an beat, suit <W-\n\u00bb_C\u00abd to fhre yws vroptr support \u00bbnd weltbt dUtribution.\nyou win net be conlort-ibU,\nKteesrch bwts an designed to\nciv* you complete support aad\nMichel Boy\nRecognized for\nFirst Aid Work\nNATAL, B. C- The St. John\n_ mbulancet Association and Red\nCross of Michel sponsored an enjoyable banquet and dance at the\nLegion Hall, Michel, recently during which time the presentation of a\n185 members and their friends attended during which the presentation of a record of 68 first aid certificates were made by W. Chapman,\nsuperintendent of the Michel colliery to the different members of\nthe Cadets, Home Nursing and Public classes, Dr. Kydd of Michel acted as chairman during the presentation. W. Chapman, Michel and\nW. Whlttaker, General Superintendent of the Crow's Nest Pass Coal\nCompany of Fernie, spoke on the\ngood work and the large membership of the Michel St. John Ambulance Association. Others present\nwere H. Miard,, Fernle; Inspector of\nMines; J. Littler, Coal Creek Superintendent along with the officials\nof the coal company.\nOne of the highlights during the\npresentation was the reading of a\nletter from Brigade Headquarters\nof Ottawa regarding the efficiency\nof rendering first aid by youthful\nNeale Pennington of Michel, a 10-\nyear-old boy who a shojt while ago\nwent wading in . pool tbove Michel\nwith some friends. One of the boys\ncut his foot very badly, severing an\nartery,and through the knowledge\nof first aid he was able to stop the\n\u25a0Acme smoi MANUfMnuw co\u201e\nUP, TORONTO\nSold by\nR* Andrew\n& Co.\nLeaders in Footfoshlon\nHUIJU England (CP)\u2014Bombed\nt_ tlmei ind subjected to 815 alerts,\nHull suffered 3,000 ilr raid casual-\ntics ilnce the war began.\nMrs. Thea. A Gibson\nNelson ind District Representative\nfor\nSpencer Corsets and\nHealth Garments\n110 Kerr Apartments\nTAILORED AND DRESSY\nBLOUSES\nIn white and colors.\nSizes 12 to 40.\n$1.95 to $6.95\nFASHION FIRST LTD.\nFor Reliable Watch Repair*\nConsult\u2014 -      #\n\"Stiaum**\nm***\" 4.1 IAKIR 81\nVITA-VIM MULTIPLE\nCAPSULES\nSold  only at your Nyil Drug\nStore ln Nelion.\nMann-Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nuiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini\nMALCOLM'S FURS\nRepairs \u2014 Alterations\nStorage\n639 Baker St.      Phone 960\niiiimiiiiiiiiiiimiimiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiii\nFOR A\nCOmPLETE 1\nPHONE 106\nMOV INC\nWhen you employ Williams' Transfer to\ndo your light or heavy moving, you can\nbe absolutely sure of beipg taken care\nof efficiently and economically\n4 VANS\nfViM.M'H\nTwo large fireproof storage warehouses\nfor your protection when you have your\ngoods stored with Williams'  Transfer.\nPHONE 106\nWailulLDUf^\nTune to Radio Station\nCKLN\nMONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY AT   1   P.M)\nSATURDAY AT 2 P.M.\nSUNDAY  AT 3 P.M.\nWalk Down Memory Lane\nWith Your\nGHft jfotwrika\nBrought to you by the courtoiy of\nDr.\/David C. Cowen of Spokane\nNELSON SOCIAL!1\"1\"^18!!10*1\nM 'Holds Armistice\nBy MR*. M. J. VIONIUX\nChirge fer Infagtmiltt Announctmtnti on thii past li ll.no\n\u2022 Mlu Edna McKenzIe, \u2022 popular bride-elect ot this month, was\ngueit of honor it \u25a0 surprise party\nat the home of Mri. H. J. Wilton,\n4th Street, Fairview, who with Mrs.\nE. H. Paterson and Mri. Theo A.\nGibson ll co-hostesses, entertained\n\u2022 number of intimate frlendi ol the\nhonor guest. Games ind i quiz Interspersed with humorous readings\nfilled the evening with merriment.\nA gift of linen was presented to\nMlsi McKenzIe with (ood wishes\nfor her future happiness. Thi guest\nlist included Mrs. E. A. Ryley, Mri.\nF. A. Jewett, Mrs. B. Bastion, Mri.\nK. G. Sargent, Mrs. A. R. Robertson, Miss Betty Robertson, Mrs. P.\nH. Bush, Miss Edna Bus)!, Mn. J. E.\nGranberg, Mrs. J. F. Gamble, Mrs.\nA. A. Pitchford, Mrs. H. C. Hughes,\nMrs. H. A. Parker, Mrs. A. B. Ball-\nlie, Mrs. T. Bate, Mrs. C. A. Nellls,\nMiss Jean Harvey, Mrs. A. Foster,\nMiss Frances Jones, Miss Jean Best-\nwick, Miss Bunty Paterson, Miss\nJessie Paterson, Miss F. Maude\nRichards, .Mrs. R. McKenzIe, Mrs.\nJ. E. McKenzIe, Mrs. G. S. Reel,\nMrs. A. T. Horswill, Mrs. H. B.\nMorrjson, Miss Margaret Mclnnis,\nMrs. E. R. Armstrong, MIm Margaret Arthur, Mrs. A. S. Read, Mra.\nMcQueen, Mrs. M. M. Brenllson Ind\nMiss Marie Williamson.\nO Mrs. Butcher ot Salmo visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 J. Johnson, RCN, visited his\nfamily at the weekend.\n\u2022 George Rinnard is ipendlng\na few days ln Kaslo.\n\u2022 Billy Gray ot Silmo visited\nNelson yesterdiy.\n\u2022 Colllngwood Gray of Bonnington visited town yesterdiy.\nO Mr. md Mrs. J. B. Gray,\nBaker Street, had as guesta yester-\nJay, Mr. and Mrs. Dickson of Swift\nCurrent and their daughter, Mill\nHelen Dickson who has been 1 missionary in Alrlci for i number of\n[.years ind who leave todty for the\nCout .\n0 Mr. ind Mn. J. F. Donaldson,\nCarbonate Street, visited frlendi ln\nSalmo Siturdiy.\n\u2022 Mlsi Neva Orlando of Trill\nwu weekend guest of Miss Mary\nMagllo, Latimer Street.\n\u2022 Min Miry Kubak, Latimer\nStreet visited ln TraU at the weekend.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. Fisher of HaU spent\nyesterday in the city.\nO Mrs. J. N. Hunt, Johnstone\nBlock,) spent Sunday at Balfour,\nguest ot Captain tnd Mrs. P. Hartridge.\n\u2022 Miss Betty Klrkpatrick of the\nstaff of the Trail-Tadanac Hospital\nwis in the city yesterday en route\nto Trail from Willow Point where\nshe has been spending a short holiday.\nft Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bush ot\nTrail were weekend vislton at the\nhome of Mrs. Bush's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. W. R. Dunwoody, Fair-\nview.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Hanshaw\nof Spokane were weekend visitors\nln town.\nO W. E. B. Monypenny, city\nclerk of Trail visited Nelson Sunday.\n\u2022 Mr. md Mn. Archie Reld are\nvisiting ln TraU.\n\u2022 Mrs. Paul Larson md two\ndaughters Ruth md Miy were visitors in the city yeiterdiy from Silmo.\n\u2022 Mrs. E. James of Edmonton\nli a city visitor.\n\u2022 Shoppen ln the city yeiterday included Commmder Burrird\nA. Smith of Longbeach.\n\u00a7 Mlsi Mary Feeney, Fairview,\n\u2022pent the weekend it the home of\nher parents in. Salmo.\nbleeding md in thi doctor's opinion lived the boy'i lift.\nMn. E. Bernirdo ilso ipoke on\nth* need of home nursing, especially throughout Natal ind Michel\nThe banquet ind presentation wu\nthen foUowed by * dance. A lot of\ncredit to the splendid work ot the\nMichel SL John Ambulance Association goes to Instructor Bermrd\nKeeling, Secretary-Treasurer ot the\nAssociation ot Natal along with Mrs.\nT. Slee of Michel, who ii the Preiident of the Auociation md looked\nafter the Home Nursing classes.\nBRILLIANT\nBRILLIANT, B.C,\u2014 Frtd JUokor-\ntott wu I vliltor to Wlnlsw it tht\nweekend.\nBill Pooktchotf, injured it tht\nKooteniy Engineering Oo. tomt tlmt\nago hu hid toother opmtlou in\nVancouver. Ht It recovering ilowly.\nBill Konkln tpent th* weekend it\nhit homt.\nPew AMttkoff. now working it Futon, wu homt tot Um unkind.\nFlorence uherninkoff hu irrtvtd\nhomt trom Oliver.\nSeveral ptrtont from tht Dun attended tht Armistice Dance tt Clftlt-\ngu.\nPett Lebedeff hu returned to Trill.\nMist Johnion spent thl wttktnd tn\nNeiton.\nMr. Woodrow hu returned trom\nWut BummwUnd to Cutltgir tnd\nwu i Brilliant vliltor Friday.\nNick Nuaxott returned horn* for\nthe weekend.\nMlu Androtoff hu trrlved back In\nBrilliant from Kelowna.\nPete Cheveldavt visited Trill.\nWillow Point\nWILLOW POINT, B.C. - Mri, B\nShannon and b\u00bbby, Owenyth, h*rm\nreturned from m two w-tk-i' Ytilt to\nCranbrook. ths gu\u00ab*t\u00ab of Mri. Shannon'* mother, Mri. K. H. UtPht*.\nA. Etter haa left for Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs, H. C. Carne hava gone\nto Nelion for the Winter.\nK. Mlddleton, C. Shannon, M. Bed-\ndie and S Shannon ipent & week'i\nhunting ln Eaat Kootenay.\nMri. C. Blunt and ion, John, from\nMoyie are vliltlng Mri. Blunt'a iliter\nMra. T. W*it\nMrs. J. Tawea hu u her gueit, )ti*\n7*ld of Kdgewood.\nPte. Ben Surina hae returned to\nVancouver after ipendlng hie leave\nwith hit brother and el iter-In-law, Mr.\nand Mn. J. Surina.\nCrawford Bay\nCRAWrOBD BAT, BC \u2014 tin. A.\nNeiton tnd daughter, Mn. U. Bolton,\nhtvt returned from Tnll.\nCapt. H. Hlncks tnd ton, Henry, of\nNelaon were vlaltora to tht Bay.\nRoy Jaeohaon hu rtturntd to Trill\nafter a couple of daya' vititing with\nMr. and Mra A. Neiton.\n' Mr. and Mrs. Henry Whltt returned from a vlalt with thtlr aon-in-Iaw\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil\nBaldwin of Cranbrook.\nMra. _L Ptlmtr tnd Oeortlnt htv*\nreturned to their homa here from\nPort Moody.\nMlat Sylvia King wu t weekend\nvlaltor to Twin Btyt-\nW. Gladwin atttndtd tht Tttchtn'\nConvention In Tnll. \u00ab\nLittle Anne Oladwln enttrUlntd it\nUa tnd gamei on tht occasion of htr\nI fifth birthday.\n|    Hallowe'en  meant partita for tht\nichool children. Tb* older puplli wen\nenttrttlned by Mr. ind Mra. Olidwln.\nTraditional Hallowe'en (unit were\nplayed ind dellcioui refreshment! en-\nJoyed, tin. Willy (tv* * party for\ntht younger children.\ntbt. Henry Whit* wu it homa to\nher frttndt tt I tt* recently, tht occasion btlng her birthday. Among\nthose calling wen Mn, McLachlln,\nMri. Moonty, Mn. Pilmer, Mrt. King,\nMn. Neil, tin. Petersen ind Mtu\nLytle.\nDay Services\nKIMBERLEY, B.C\u2014An lmpreaslve\nRemembrance Day ceremony wae held\nln Klmberley on Armistice Day under\nthe auoplcea of the- Klmberley branch\nof the Canadian Legion. The chairman of the Branch, Percy Lye, opened\nthe ceremony by dedicating the service to the memory of the elxty\nthousand valiant men who gave their\nlives for Canada during the war of\n1014-1918 and the men ln the servicer\nwho have paid the supreme sacrifice\nln the preeent oonfllct. I\nAfter the eoundlng The Laat Poat\nby Bandmaster J. Pearaon the two\nminute alienee and The Long Reveille\nhe read the names ot the fifteen men\nfrom thla District who since 1939 have\nglvtn their lives in the fight for freedom. Mayor Swan epoke briefly building a word picture ot the gradual rise\nto power of dictatorship and expreas-\ned the hope that with victory will\ncome peace.\nRev. S. T. Galbralth waft the Scriptures from Hebrew llth Chapter 1 to\n0, 83 to 40, the reading particularly\nfitting for the occasion. Rev. B. A,\nReaker gave the address and commenced by speaking about the\ntomb of the unknown soldier who gave\nhis life that his son might enjoy life\nln freedom, his son who perhaps haa\nalso given his life for the same cause.\nHe pointed out that the peoples of\nthe world had not (.allied peace nor\nvictory over greed and selfishness In\nthe Intervening years since the last\nsacrifice of bloodshed and the present war.\nNAKUSP\nNAKUSP, B.C.\u2014J. H. Clark and Mrt.\nEdglngton left Saturday for Nelson\ntp attend the marriage of Mrs. Edg-\nin^ton's brother, J. T. Moon, to Miss\nThelma Heddle.\nAlbert Leverlngton, R.C.N., arrived\nhome Saturday on extended leave.\nH. W. Herridge, M.L.A., for Rossland-\nTrail, Is visiting at his home here.\nMrs. Prank Yurie entertained at the\ntea hour Friday afternoon. Pall\nflowers were used aa decoratloni and\nnasturtiums made a dainty table\ncentre. Guests were Mrs. J. Parent\nSt., Mrs. Milton Davla of Warm\nSprints. Ore., Mra. T. Harvey, Misa\nN. Harvey, Mrs. N. Ratcllffe, Mra. Fred\nJohnion, Mra. E. c. Johnson. Mrs. A.\nLldberg and Mrs. J. Parent Jr.\nRobert WcCulloch, who has apent\nfive monthi visiting friends ln Ro\u00bbe-\ntown, Bask,, returned Wednesday.\nW. Vlnall and C. Horry were Burton\nvisitors.\nMrs.   T.  Bteenhoff   and   daughter,\n.5H;\nNILSON DAILY NIWS, TU ISO AY, NOVEMBER 14,1944\u20148\nI\nFREEMAN FURNITURE CO\nThe House of Furniture Values\nPHONE 115\ni i\nONLY 35 MORE SHOPPING DAYS TILL CHRI\n3-PIECE LOUNGE SUITES \u2014 Lounge has bedding\nbox and full sping construction.       -\t\nLOUNGES ONLY \u2014 Choice of colors in good hard-\nwearing fabrics  \t\nA Deposit holds till Christmas\n$54.50\nTrade in your Old Furniture\nBlUon of Trail, trt guettt ot I    NEWPORT, Monmouthshire (CP) I $4,500 ln penlnej for the Red Cross '\nL. ott. I \u2014Miu A. Algar collected more than | penny-a-week fund ln nine months.\nCANADA'S VETERANS\nThis It tht tenth of \u00ab Mriet of ad verti** menti fo inform the\npeople of Canada of plana to re-establish men and women\nof the armed force*. To gtt the full -detail* save and read\n\u2022very advertisement.\nJ\nPot canpkf infomatton \u00abri\u00bb for\nA mthwMe Worklcr A\/\/Canadians\nTHE COMMUNITY'S SHARE IN RE-ESTABLISHMENT\nThis is the final advertisement in the series dealing with Canada'* plana for the re-establishment of\nita men and women in the armed forces. Previous statements have told of the Canadian legislation, and have outlined the opportunities open after discharge to the men and women in uniform.\nCash grants paid on discharge have been reviewed and service men and women have been advised\nhow they may take advantage of the post-discharge program.   It is important that these things be\nunderstood fully, not only by those in the Navy, Army and Air Force, but also by all citizens of\nCanada,\nThere'i mort to food froomlni\nthan clothei. Keep your hair net!\nwith an eaty to tntnagt\nPERMANENT WAVE\nFAIRVIEW BEAUTY SHOPPE\nPHONE 389\ntotaoeeweeoimoatatateitataae\nFin** selection of\nFALL AND WINTIR HATS\nFelts ond Velvets\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPS\nttattatataamam\nFOR  lOLlC-TRY\nK. V. D.\nPHONE 111\nILL UME A RESPONSIBILITY\nThe problem of re-establishment, however, can cot be solved\nalone by Parliament providing machinery and financing. Neither\ncan it be solved wrely by the men and women in uniform taking\nadvantage of that machinery and that financing. To be fully\nsuccessful the Canadian plan for returning its fighting forces to\ncivilian life needs and must have the full support of all. It needs\nsupport from employers, and the help of organised labour, skilled\ntrade* snd other workers. It needs, above all, the help of the\nctmmvmities from which these men and women come,\nPUIS ME WIDESPREAD\nAs his been outlined, the Canadian plan for re-establishment is so\nall-embracing that it has been describ-ed as the mo6t complete of\nany of the United Nations. There are ash grants at discharge,\ncoupled with the war service gratuity and re*stabli_hment credit.\nThere is protection again6t illness and unemployment, and pensions\nfor those disabled as a result of service. Wide opportunity is provided for'state financed training cither on the vocational t,t\nuniversity level, with assistance in financing a business or in\nreturning to farms and commercial fishing. The home owning\nprovisions are generous\u2014and because Canada throughout the\nwar, has guarded against inflation and has financed soundly, all\nthis monetary assistance is worth one hundred cents on the\ndollar. Canadians who have served will return to a nation sound\nfinancially.\ntions are doing excellent work. Several hundred communities\nacross Canada have formed volunteer committees to aid with the\ncommunity problems of re-_6tabli_hment, but there is need for\nmany of these.\nTHE FUNCTIONS OF VOLUNTEER COMMITTEES\nVolunteer Citiaens Committees ate set up under a government\norder-in-council. They are an official part of the Canadian re-\nestablishment machinery. In a broad sense their function is to\nassist in the community re-establishment problems. These vary in\ndifferent centres, but in a general sense the committees:\n1. Organise home coming receptions for veterans.\n2. Give local publicity to the re-establishment program.\n3. Give advice and counsel to veterans on their re-establishtnent\nproblems.\n4. Assist in securing employment\n5. Advise the government on policies and on local problems.\nThese, however, are only highlights of the work which an be\ndone, for the field is wide and the work is well worthwhile.\nHOW TO ORGANIZE\nIn many communities where Volunteer Citizens' Committees\nhave been formed, initial leadership has been provided by municipal\nauthorities and veterans' org^ations. Usually service dubs,\nMANY  ARE HELPING NOW business men and other community bodies have been invited to\nHUM.   tltt. nturinn  nun ^.^ --^ oyorxntian and aid of government authorities is\nAkeady government authorities are receiving a great deal of available, for the problem of community re-establishment is\nvoluntary assistance. Veterans' organizations, such as the Canadian regarded as a most important part of the work. If your community\nLegion, the Canadian Corps Association, the Wt Amputations of has not already formed a volunteer citizens' committee, full details\nCanada, the Army and Navy Veterans, and others are rendering and assistance may be secured by writing to the Department of\nmagnificent service. Canadian service clubs, and women's organia*        Veterans' Aflairs.\nVETERANS' WELFARE OFFICERS ARE STATIONED IN KBV CENTRBS THROUGHOUT CANADA. THEY ARE\nTHE FRIENDS OF EX-SERVICE MEN AND WOMHN. IT IS THEIR DUTY TO ADVISB AND ASSIST ALL\nEX-SERVICB PERSONNEL WITH THEIR REESTABLISHMENT PROBLEMS. IF THERE IS ANYTHING ABOUT\nTHE REHABILITATION PROGRAM WHICH YOU DO NOT UNDERSTAND CONSULT YOUR NEAREST\nVBTBRANS' WELFARE OFFICER.\nPublished, under the authority 0\/ Hon. Ian A. Mddpuie, Minuter 0\/\nVETERANS' AFFAIRS\n\u2014 \u2014~...v, av-m_j<AS.\n\u25a0\n* BEND THIS ADVTOTBEMENl\n*   11   TT***\n.'.. + -.\u25a0\u25a0 At*'-**.' iarista. U\n Warm laily Sfatua\nEstablished April 32   1901.\nBritish Columbio'l\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning *xc*pt Sundiy bj\n|   tht NEWS  PUBLISHING  COMPANY   LIMITED, 266 Baker St. Nelion. British Columbii\nMEMBER Or THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\n,     , i  \u201e\u2014___-\nTUESDAY, NOV. 14, 1944.\nBritish Columbia Needs the\nBest Brains It Can Attract\nThat indefinable something for\nwhich Canadians have been fighting\nIn foreign lands, waters and skies for\nfive years is strongly hinted at by Col.\nGeorge S. Clarke in a letter to his former \"learned friends\" of the Vancou-\nver Bar in the October issue of the Advocate.\nThe Vancouver Sun ln an editorial\njoins this fighting Vancouver lawyer\nin asking if it is worthy of our fighting\nmen for those at home to place a tariff\nagainst brains entering this province\nfrom other parts of Canada.\nCoL Clarke deals with a suggestion\nadvanced at the last B. C. Law Society\nconvention that fees for barristers from\nother provinces wishing to practice in\nBritish Columbia be raised from $750\nto $1500.\n\"We must be just before we are\njfenerous and we have 120 of our members overseas,\" said one prominent\nK.C. in support of the suggestion. Said\nanother: \"We should take steps to see\nthat when they come back they won't\nfind British Columbia the happy hunting ground for lawyers from all over\nCanada.\"\nBut those members overseas appear\nto take a broader view. We quote Col.\nClarke in part:\n\"My own feelings on this subject\nare somewhat confused, but frankly\nI can not believe that a financial barrier against members of the profession from other provinces is a good\nthing, either from the point of view of\nthe B. C. bar, the public, or those of us\nover here.\n\"After all, the function of the lawyer is to serve the community. If in\ndoing so he can earn a livelihood, so\nmuch the better\u2014I should be most unhappy to think that the B. C. public\nshould be deprived of the services of\ncapable barristers from elsewhere\nmerely in order that I, with my very\nlimited talents, should be thereby assisted towards earning a livelihood to\nwhich, on my talents and merits in\ncompetition with such others, I might\nnot be entitled.\n\"It goes without saying that the efforts of those at home towards assisting in a pecuniary way those of us over\nhere is fully appreciated. But I do think\nthat the answer to the problem does\nnot consist in an attempt to exclude\nbrains on financial grounds or, for\nthat matter, on any other grounds.\"\nIf men overseas are against any\ntariff on brains entering this province\nfrom other parts of Canada, is it not\n,time that British Columbians generally\nprepared themselves to meet whatever competition comes?\nThe Vancouver paper deals with\nthe barriers placed by the legal profession against admission of lawyers\nfrom other parts of Canada. Its argument is equally strong if applied to\nany other profession or business which\nmight attempt to featherbed it_e(_\nagainst competition from other provinces. The more brains and talent we\ncan attract to British Columbia the\nbetter for this province and, in the\nlong run, for the professions or other\nvocations concerned.\nand wage controls after tht war until\nthat danger hu passed.\nOne* the danger of post-war Inflation has disappeared, controls\nshould be immediately abolished. Con*\ntrols during peacetime conditions, once\nwe have settled down from the war,\nwould be as detrimental to the people\nand to economy of the country as they\nhave been beneficial during the war\nand will continue to be beneficial for\nthe transition period after Germany\nand Japan have surrendered.\nLetters to the\nEditor\nLetters miy be published ever \u25a0 nom de\nplume, but the eetuil nimt ef the writer\nmust be given to the Editor n evidence ef\ngood filth. Anonymous letters go In the\nwests pipsr btskst\nGovernment Control of\nIndustry Harris'\nRemedy for Ills\nTo the Editor:\nSir-Quite \u2022 lot of people who hive reed\nmy letters ire \"still bewildered\". They sey,\n\"This fellow Harris seems to hive got hold of\nsome good Idess, md certiinly does some first\nclass cussing, but we think that his schemes\nfor making everybody do useful work are\nabsurd. Why even now In peace time, the\nfarmers have been unable to sell their crops,\nand Trail Itself ,ln spite of Its grand management, has been compelled to pile up great\nquantities of good minerals ln times before the\nwar. Now Harris comes along and tells us that\nwe all ought to work hard: which of course\nwould only make matters far worse.\"\nHarris has never said that we all ought to\nwork hard. He has said, and he repeats, we all\nought to work sufficiently to pay our way\nthrough life, and end up with our accounts it\nleast square with humanity. How hard we\nhave to work should be our own decision. Tor\nan old hayseed like myself, with fairly simple\nwants, ind to whom possessions ire generilly\na nuisance, only e very onill amount of well-\nmmiged work would be necessary to corer\nevery expense. But our modern youngsters,\nwho will probably require e swift motor-eir\nsnd sn airplane, ilso swinkey surroundings,\nmay need to work quite hard to pay for such\nmagnificence. To whom much Is given, of him\nmuch shall be required.\nUnder our Bedbug system, too often we\nget the very opposite results. The men who\nmake our roads by hard work sre despised by\nthe careless herds of idle rich, who swank\npast In luxurious cars \u2014 \"Fat and greasy citizens\" as the Immortal William described\nthem. My good friend, Mr. Kershaw, pointed\nthis out ln his very able letter which you\npublished very recently. He Bhowed how badly\nCanada has treater her farmers, and he suggests price fixing as the remedy for the farmer's troubles. Think again, Brother Kershaw.\nHow can you fix the prices of produce or\nwages or salaries ln the face of inflation? If\nyou could get s fixed value for currency\n(which you can't), and with all the crops fixed\nat profitable prices, there would be a wild\nrush to the land. The price ot land would Uke\nan enormous jump, as it did sfter the last war.\nThose who held land would sell out and the\nnewcomers would find themselves under a\nload of debt, or mortgages, and would be Just\nas hard up as ever. We should have raised s\nnew crnp of parasites.\nLet us get after our parasites systematically, and by the only means that will bring\nresults, conscription for peace. Make every\nCanadian attemp to do useful work. \"What\nIs useful work?\" \"many will exclaim.\nProviding the goods and services that Canadians ask for is useful work. To put lt neatly, \"Every time that you make a purchase,\nyou cast a vote for the thing purchased, to be\nproduced.\" Under conscription you would be\nable to win your small election, perhaps 20\ntimes a day. How's that for politics?\nBut some people will ask for stupid or\neven harmful things. Well, lots do now. And\nlots more spend vast energy ln trying to persuade people to buy most Injurious things-\neven the most dangerous drugs, or filthy literature, or obscene photographs. Some women\ntry to sell themselves even, ind sometimes\nthey arc driven by awful necessity to do so.\nTake control of our Industries once and\nfor all. It is not kindness to hsve your little\ndog's tall cut off, inch by Inch. Treat all former owners decently, you well afford this,\nand we all are partly to blame for breaking\nGod's laws and allowing such Injustice. No\nsingle person need be made to suffer, though\nplenty will think that they are hardly used.\nWithin six months of applying conscription\nfor peace, Canada would be going right ahead\n^happier, safer, saner, than ever before. And\ntrue religion and undefiled will become far\nmore possible, and Peace on Earth less like a\nwild dream.\nCourage Canadians You must lead the way\nBy honest work into a brighter day.\nGone are Ihe times when lt has seemed to\npay\nTo sneak your living, and Christ disobey\nJ. C. HARRIS.\nNew Denver, B. C, Nov, 2. 1&44\n? ? Questions S5 ?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reider. Namee ef persons\nasking questions will not be published.\nThere li no charge for this servloe. Questions will not be answered by mall except\nwhen there le obvious neceulty for privacy.\nT. D. M, North Bittleford, Sask.-Is a 1942.\n12-sided nickel showing a beaver on one\nside and the head of the king on the other\nof any value?\nWe suggesj you write to Col. R. A. Wilson,\n385 La Tijen Station, Los Angeles, Calif.,\nsending a aelf-addressed stamped envelope\nfor the Information you require. Make sure\nyou use an American stamp.\nA. K., Nelson\u2014Cin you tell me when the\ndriwlng took place for Trail's Civic Centre\nprizes? Tickets were sold at $1 each this\nSummer. I wrote to the President of the\nJunior Chamber of Commerce, Trail, but\nreceived no reply.\nThe  tickets  are  stIU  on  sile  md  the\ndrawing date his not been set.\nJust Wondering\u2014Is lt true that i person applying for the old age pension must do so\nsix months before he reaches the age of\n70? How does he go about it, and whom\nshould he write to when applying for the\nold age pension?\nNo, a person does not have to make an\napplication till three months before he reaches\nthe age of 70, and it can be made any time\nfollowing that time. If the application Is made\nbefore the 90 days the papers would have to\nbe re-sworn. In making application write to\nthe Old Age Pensions Board, 411 Dunsmuir\nStreet, Vancouver, or to the Social Assistance\nBranch Office, Nelson.\nPress Comment\nTHAT WATH JUTH WHAT HE THAID\nWhen a midweittrn reporter turner! In \u2022>\nitory ibout a farmer's Ions of 3025 pigs bv\ntheft, in alert copyrender thought the flgurt\nwas pretty high nnd phoned the farmer to\ncheck up on lt. \"Did you \\o*m 3035 pi*\"''\" h*\nasked. And, when the distraught firmer in-\niwered, \"Yeth,\" the newspaper thanked him\nand changed the copy to make the low two\nsows and 25 pigs. -Your Life.\nONI  THINO   OMITTID\nA coniiderihle percenUgt of voters ln tht\ndeep  South   fight   the   D\u00abmocriUr  pirty   in\nevery   wiy   possible   except   with   i   polling\nbooth pencil -Reno Evening Giiett\u00ab.\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS AQO\n(From Dally News, Nov. 14, 1934)\nWith the delivery of power from the\nWest Kootenay Power and Light Company,\nLtd., the Hardinge Hadsed mill at at the Kootenay I-elle Gold Mines, Ltd., has tuned up\nand Is ready for operation.\nAnnouncement waa made yesterday by\nthe Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company, of the appointment of k. C. Crowe of\nTrail as Its general counsel.\nThe C. P. R. Flats wu again the scene of a\nbig blaze Monday, when the rail company\ndestroyed more old box cars and passenger\ncars, that were thrown Into disuse.\n26 YEARS AQO\n(From Dally News, Nov. 14, 1919)\nWith two days to go. the Victory Loan\ncampaign sees Nelson canvassing district over\nthe $500,000 mark and now aspiring for a\nfourth crest to ita already much decorated\nPrince of Wales honor flag.\nAinsworth district shows up strong ln the\nore receipts at fhe Trail imelter for the week\nending November 1.\nNurse Stoddart of Balfour, who recently\nreturned frpm overseas, was a visitor to Nelson.\nMrs. Edith Cavanaugh of Spokane, formerly of Nelson, is a guest at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. Roy Sharp.\n40 YEARS  AQO\n(From Dally News, Nov. 14 1904)\nFoot racing is in the air as a result of the\nRenwlk-Mltchell affairs. There was a large\ncrowd of sprinters on the Recreation grounds\nyesterday afternoon _yid a couple of amusing\ncontests  came  off.\nF. W. Holland, president of the Kettle\nValley Railways of Grand Forks, ls a Nelson\nvisitor.\nDuring the past week 375 boxes of apples,\nImported from Washington, were condemned\nln Nelson by Fred Adle of Wancta.\nToday's Horoscope\nIf this Is your birthday you Judge hastily\nand lose your temper easily, although you do\nnot give way to fits of passion. You do not\nharbor any resentment, and although you are\nlikely to speak hastily, you are sorry afterwards. You are magnetic and people follow\nyou readily. Your finances will greatly increase In your next year, but guard against\nextravagance, excesses and Imposition. Conserve resources and do not Indulge In \"Bohem-\nlanlsm.\" Concentrate on business expansion. A\nchild bflrn on this date will successfully\novercome all obstacles and struggles which\nmay beset life's path. Courage, determination\nsnd business acumen will be forthcoming.\nWar - 4 Years Ago\nBy Ths Canadian Press\nNov. 14. 1840-R. A. F. staged one of the\nwar's heaviest raids on Berlin and other objectives. Greeks counter-attacked In Albania.\nItalians withdrew from Yugoslav frontier.\nNail airmen made concentrated raid on Coventry, killing 400, wounding 800.\nTest Yourself\n1. With whit two American cnlonlei were\nOpt. John Smith and Miles Standlsh auo-\nelittd?\n2. The colors In the flig of the city of New\nYork are blue, white ind orange. Where did\nthe city get  these colors*\n3   Who were thr Rough Riders\"\nTEST  ANSWERS\n1. Capt. John Smith, the Virginia colony;\nOpt. Miles Standi*.., Plymouth colony.\n2. From the Dutch, who founded the city.\n!_. Two rrglments of volunteer cavilry In\nthe Spanish-A mer lean w*t, in lflOfl, raised hy\nTheodore   Roosevelt\nEtiquette Hints\nHard cheese Is eaten with the finjsjts, so\narc small pickles. Mixed, especially sliced\npickles, ara usually eaten with t totk.\nWords of Wisdom\nAll men are by nature equal, made, all, of\nthe same earth hy Ihe same Creator, snd however we deceive ourselves, as dear to Ood Is\nthe poor pessant ss the might prince\u2014Plato.\nNEW ALmSKA HIGHWAY PROPOSAL; A\nhighway route to Alaaka described In an article by\nDewey Bullock In the Mining World, Seattle publication, \"superior to any other route advocated,\" Is\nshown above. He says the route le materially ihort-\ner, with low grades, minimum snowfall, traversing\nthe central portion of the mineral belt and lends\nItself to laterals tapping the major districts on the\nCoast and In the Interior of British Columbia\nand Alaska.\nCreston lions\nSuggest Widening\nof Main Street\nCRXBTON, BO.\u2014The matter af Interviewing merchants oo Ihe main\nstreet as to thalr attitude IB moving\nthetr establishments back ten feet\non sscb sids of the load, ilong with\nths proposed elt* of th* clvlo centre\ntook tbe major part ol the earnl-\nmonthly meeting of the Creston Lions\nClub, with President A. Speers Is the\nohalr, VI Horn present and two visitors. Ted Mitchell snd W. Qrtlngir\npresent.\nTown Advisory Lions representative,\nJ. D'Appolonia, told the Lion* of a\nmeeting of ths oounoll and oommlt.ee\nwith the litter agreeing In principal\nto levy 8 mills tor three years on ths\ntaxpayers to bring In an engineer to\nmake s survey of creston. Be farther\npointed out that th* council recognized the Board of Trade, Llona and\nLegion representatives aa the official\ntown planning sdvlsary council.\nPrank Staples will be tbe lions representative to interview the merchsnt*\nin regard to moving baok tbo ten feet.\nIt enough of the merchant, favor the\nIdea of moving back, a general meeting will be called and definite plana\nestablished.\nThe club re-aftimwd John D'Appo-\nIonia as their representative on tbe\ntown planning tdvlstry oommlttee.\nChairman Frank Staples reported to\nthe club on the clvlo centre and tug-\ngested that It be called the Lions Memorial Park. H* felt that ln between\nthe first and third meeting! all Llona\nnumber ot athletic departments tbe\nnumber o (athletic departments the\nclvlo centre ahould contain, tha location and methods of finance.\nIn answer to 6. J. Graham's question\nol civic centre dimensions, J. D'Appolonia stated that an area of SOO feet\nby 300 test would tak* In a awlmmlng\npool, skating and curling rinks, tennis court, bowling men and still offer a 75 foot by 300 toot parking\nspacs.\nThe skating rink would take a U9\n.oot by 10S foot building with tbe\nswimming pool and curling risk bordering each aide of the skating rink.\nThere la a possibility that extra\nground,for baseball will bi bought and\nthe suggestion of a 11 acre golf\ncourss will come under discussion.\nVeteran oi 36\nBombing Trips\nHome on Leave\nEnjoying part ot hla 30-day leave\nin Nelson after completing 38 tripa\nin Halifax heavy bombers is To.\nNorman Emmott, son ot Mr. and\nMrs. T. N. Emmott of Nelson.\nFlying Officer Emmot hai seen\nseven yean of service ln the R.C.A.F., for he Joined up in 1837. He\nremustered to aircrew ln 1942 and\nwent overseai ln June, 1843 aa a\nnavigator.\nHis brother, E1L Lt Allan Emmott, has completed one tout with\nthe Pathfinder Squadron and, now\nhas a total of 40 tripa behind him.\n\"Stan Horswill (Flying Officer\nT. S. Horswill, D.F.C.) was on my\nstation,\" Emmott said Sunday. \"He\nflew for the Tiger Squadron while\n1 was with Ihe Porcupine Squadron.\nWe had a visit one day from Fo.\nStuart Mcintosh, who is in Radar\nwork.\"\nEmmot also recalled that Phil\nMarchlldon, Philadelphia Athletic\npitcher of former years, was also\non his station arid was now a prisoner of war following a raid on\nKiel.\nLac. Weir of Trail, an engine mechanic had often worked on Em-\nmott's aircraft, he said.\nHe said his brother Allan had be-\nKun flying with an English airman\nwho had 90 bombing trips to his\ncredit and waa working for an even\n100 trips.\nCity Telephone\nServices Up 58\nNumber of telephone services in\nNelson at SepL 1, were 2128, sn increase of 58 from Jan. 1, the B.C.\nTelephone Company statement ol\ndevelopment ln the current lseue of\nTelephone Talk shows. Services-*1\nincreased by 42 at Cranbrook to a\ntotal of 535 and by 27 at Creston to\n280. Trail showed a decrease of\nthree with a total of 2641.\nThe statement follows:\nJan 1      Sept 1\n19-4 1944\nBalfour        13 14\nGrand Forka   284 268\nGreenwood    48 49\nInvermere       80 92\nKaslo       85 87\nNakusp        32 35\nNelson        '2068 2126\nNew Denver       82 83\nRock Creek      ...   27 30\nRossland .      ....    448 452\nTrail . 2641 2638\nKootenay Telephone Co.:\nCranbrook . 493 535\nCreston   233 2\u00ab0\nTernle  214 2S4\nKlmberley  . ..       218 231\nMichel .. 55 M\nINVERMERE\nINVERMER-.. B.O. \u2014 FO. Ralph\nJohnson, son of Mr. md Mrs. J. S.\nJohnson, Invermere, returned to his\nstation Saturday after spending bis\nfurlough with hla parent*.\nJack SherMes of Canal Flats haa\nbeen discharged trom tbe hospital at\nInvermere,\nMre. Margaret Fuller, who has spent\ntbe paat three weeka ln the Lady Elizabeth Bruoe Memorial Hospital, hu\nreturned to ber borne at Invermere.\nLieut. Jrayne of Lethbridge Is on a\nhunting trip ln the valley.\nMrs. Malbere of Brlsoo ls a patient\nin the hospital at Invermere.\nCecil Goodwin of Invermere waa a\nhoapltal patient this week.\nMr. and Mrs. Scolier, formerly of\nOolden, have moved to Windermere\nwhere they Intend to realde. They are\nthe parenta ot Mra. J. Roesch ot Windermere.\nDr. and Mra. A. J. Tripp of Invermere hav* aa their guests Mrs. Tripp's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Martin, of Brandon.\nThe November meeting of the Ladlea\nAid to tha Windermere District Hoapltal waa held on Thursday afternoon\nSeveral purchases for the hospital were\napproved and bills voted paid. Ths\nLadles Aid ls asala-.lng with the financing of three new mattresses for the,\nwards. Mrs. T. D. Proctor waa host-as1\nto the meeting.\nChristmas parcel* for the bora overseas were packed and dispatched recently by the Ladles of the Invermere\nunit of Windermere District Red\nCross. Forty.three parcels were sent\noff contaln^ig a variety of useful articles. They were consigned for boys\nserving overseas who com* from Invermere, Windermere, Athalmer and\nWilmer.\nLONDON (CP) - Rev. Arthur\nSewell, oldest clergyman of the\nChurch of England and oldest member of Oxford University, has entered hla 104th year.\n\"Immortality\" Is\nChurch Theme\n\"Mortals and Immortals\" waa tin\nsubject ot the Lesson-Sermon Is all\nChurohee of Christ, Scientist, \u00abun-\ndsy.\nThe Golden Text waa: \"A* la the\nearthy, such ar* they also (hat are\nearthy: and te la the heavenly, such\nare they also that are heavenly' (I Corinthians lt: 48).\nAmong th* citation* which oomprls.\ned the Leeson-Sermon wu th* following from tbe Bible: \"Loot unto me,\nand be ye saved, all th* ends of ths\nearth: for I am Ood, and there n\nnone else\" (Isaiah 45: 32).\nThe Leeson-Sermon alao Included\nthe following passage from the Christian Science textbook, \"Sclenoe and\nHealth with Key to th* Scriptures\" by\nMary Baker Eddy: \"Jesus beheld In\nScience the perfect man, who appeared to him whre sinning mortal man\nappears to mortals. In this perfect\nman the Savloua saw Ood's own likeness, and this ooTTect view of man\nhealed the sick.\"\nGod has commanded time to console the\nunhappy--Joubeil-.\t\nNakusp Church\nGroup Meets\nNAKUSP. B.C.- Tlrt Young Women's\nItvenlng Auxiliary ot the United\nrhurrh mn Monday evening at the\nhome of Mrs. L. Embrs*. Mrs. X. J\noxenham presiding. Mrs. Olsnham led\nthe devotional period, her subject\n\"Leadership'. A report wu given of the\nsupplies fnr tne Bums Laks Hoapl-\nul and these were to be shipped\nabout Nov. 18.\nArrangement* were mad* for th*\nSunday School Chrtstms* trt* treat.\nMrs Larry Ward conducted an Interesting contest which w\u00bb* won by\nUtt. A. URU* and Mill M. Ktfshtw.\nMra tmbret md MIm Kershaw served\nrefrMhment*.\nLONDON (CP) - Chteuny\ndrawing up to 170 a week, er* Mm\nIng four times u much money al\nbefore the war. So many sweeps\nwar* called up tor war servlc* that\nthose still ln Uu trad* work M hoore\na week tod have waiting lists six\n-*-\nThis\nChristmas\nOur Selection of\nCHRISTMAS CARDS\nAre Now on Display\nThese Cards are from the leading manufacturers in\nCanada.   They include all latest designs \u2014 Snow\nscenes, religious, floral and modern. The price range\nis from\n$2.25 up to $4.50\nSold in Lots of Two Dozen Only\nPRINTED WITH  YOUR  NAME AND ADDRESS\nSend For Samples\nChristmas Card Dept.\nNelson, B. C. k\n mtmerrr\njuble Depreciation Provided .,.\no Encourage\nReconstruction\nOTTAWA, Nov. IS (CP)-Fln-\nnce Minister Ililey announced to-\nay that a double depreciation pro-\nillon on new capital Investments\na encourage reconstruction pro\nKti became effective on Novem-\n\u00abr 10 and will continue until De-\nember 11, IMS or until two yean\nIter the cessation of hostilities\nrith Germany, whichever is the\nirlier.\n- Th* taxation concession was\npromised in thli year'i budget\nA condition of abtalnlng the\ndouble depreciation benefits Is\n1 thlt a certificate must ba luued\n\u25a0 by the reconstruction Minister\nHowe certifying that, having regard te wtr er reconstruction\nneeds. It ll desirable in his opinion thlt tha project be allowed\ndouble depreciation,\nHr. Ilsey uld the meuure was\nling Implemented immediately to\n\u25a0lit certain projects which would\n\u2022uit ln increased war production\nid which also would later have\npoit-war uie and contribute to\naintalnlng employment when war\ninduction falls oft.\n.RLY PLANS\nMt. Ilsley said the measure was\ni taken to meet the problem of\nnversion to peace time production\nfori tbl actual cessation of hos-\nitlei In Europe. Plans must be\nide and much preparatory work\nme. It Industry was to be ready\ni proceed with reconvenion of\n(pension projects immediately on\nissatlon of active hostilities in\nuwpe.\nThere were lnitancei \"where pro-\nicon ihould be allowed to pre-\nare In advance to meet the basic\nsmands which will arise when in-\nlarty generally ii able to under-\nike a complete change-over to full\nucetlme operations,\" he s.iid.\nTor example, there will undoubt\nedly be a very heavy demand for\nvarious kinds of building materials\nwhen peacetime construction gets\nunder way.\n\"Unless the supplies of certain\nbuilding materials are allowed to\nprepare now for this situation unfortunate delays are bound to arise\nlater on. The conversion program\nwould be seriously hampered if industry generally were held up\nthrough lack ot capital facilities on\nthe part of certain basic Industries.\n\"The announcement of the coming Into force of the double depreciation section with the requirement\nof a certificate from the Minister of\nReconstruction recognizes the on-\nvlous need for carefully synchronizing certain activities ln our economy If transition front war' to\npeace ls to be effected smoothly.\"\nThe order-in-council proclaiming\nthe effective period makes provision for details connected with the\nadministration of the measure.\nIt provides that the double depreciation ln respect of those assets which qualify will continue\nannually until 80 per cent of the\nusets in question have been written off.\nThus, if normal depreciation of\nan asset is at the rate of 10 per cent\nper year, the double depreciation\nwill be allowed to continue for four\nyears.\nSOME EXCLUDED\nCertain kinds of new Investment\nare excluded, at leaBt for the present, from the benefits of double\ndepreciation. Among these ara\nbuildings used for commercial or\nfinancial purposes. Including stores,\nhotels, tourist accommodation and\noffice buildings; dwelling houses,\nincluding apartment houses; automobiles, trucks, buses and railway\nrolling stock.\nMore   detailed   regulations   with\nM\nTHIS CHICKEN DIDNT MAKE IT: Thm boys didn't mlu whin\nthe chicken crossed thi road and It's I mighty nice change, they'll\ntell you, from bully ind M, md V. Getting their dinner ready ara\nTore. Johnny Cunningham, Toronto, and Bill Watson, Oakvllle.\n(Canidian Army Oveneai photo.)\nregard to the administration ot the\ndouble depreciation provision will\nbe -issued by the Minister ot National Revenue.\nHardest Fighting\nU.S. Pilot It\nReported Mining   .\nSOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND,\nNov. 13 (AP)CoL Hubert Zemke\nof Missoula, Mont., known u the\nhardest fighting American tighter\npilot commander ln Europe, Is missing in action, it waa announced\ntoday.\nThe boylih-looklng Sl-year-old\ncolonel, who turned down deik Jobi\nand possible promotion to general\nto keep on flying, wu ihot down\ninside Germany October 30 while\nleading hli fighter group on a\nbomber eicort mission.\nZemke wai leading American\nfighter pilots ln Western Europe at\nthat time with IS planes deitroyed\n\u201433 in the air and alx on the\nground.\nFirt Destroys\nAnglican Church\nin Winnipeg\nWINNIPEG, Nov. IS (CP)\u2014Fire\nbelieved to have itarted in the\nboiler room early today destroyed\nSt Mathew'i Anglican Church at\nSL Mathew'i Avenue and Maryland Strait ln Weit Winnipeg.\nDamage wu estimated at $78,000.\nHindered by \u25a0 itrong wind, firemen fought the blaze tor mora than\nthree houn before bringing It under control. Only the charTed walls\nof the building remained standing.\nThe fire started just nine houn\nafter the largest \"Anglican congregation in the city celebrated the\n48th anniversary of founding of\ntbe parish.\nClear Afmosphere\nAlter Churchill,\nDe Gaulle Talk\nPARIS, Nov. 11 (CP-Reuter) .-A\ncommunique (wild today by'thl\nFrench Government oh the termination ot thl Anglo-French talk!\nstrewed thl cordial atmosphere and\ncomplete concordance of viewi between thl two Governments on the\nlarge number of questions reviewed.\nTbl communique, taken la conjunction with Prime Miniiter Win\nston Churchlll'i speech yesterday\nat thi Hotel dl Villi, gives i clear\nindication of both the iplrlt and\nthi mala themes ot the conversation!.\nRearming of thi French army will\nbi given urgent British priority.\nTrain Non-Nazi\nGermans as\nFuture Policemen\nLONDON, Nov. IS (CP)-Nlnety\nnon-Nazi Germani ara being train-\nid ln democracy at a school within\noccupied Germany to become policemen under military government\nofficial!.\nTheie SO Germani are thl flnt\not many who will be trainea, i,\nwu itated. They an being taught\nEnglish ind the laws and proclamation! by which Germany will be\ngoverned. .\nAustralian Ships\nTak* Part in\nBattle in Leyte\nMELBOURNE, Auitralla, Nov.\n13 (CP).\u2014M. C Warren, war correipondent for the Melbourne Herald, reported today that the Australian .heavy cruiser Shropshire\nand destroyer Arunta played a gallant part with United States warships in the Oct 25 battle ln Southern Leyte Gulf In which a Japanese force consisting of nearly a\nicore of warships wu wiped out.\nWEARS NAVIGATOR'S\nBADGE: Sgt Frank.I. Rauket, 34,\nwho graduated recently as an air\nnavigator from No. 10 A.O.8.,\nChatham, The ion of A. Rauket\nof Nelson, he was \u2022 student at the\nUniversity of Toronto, and enlisted from Toronto.\nProduction at\nPremier Mint\nUp to $40,517\nTORONTO, Nov. IS <C_>). -flll-\nbak-Premier Mines Limited. Premier, B.C., today reported October\nproduction of 340,917. This com\npared with $36,304 ln September.\nNELSON DAILY NIWS, TUISDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 19*4-7\nRemoval of Isolationists\nDispense Fears in ll.Sa\nBy C. R. BLACKBURN\nCanadian Preaa Staff Writer\nWASHINGTON, Nov. IS (CPl.-\nRemoval of some of the molt obstructive Isolationists In lut week's\ncongressional election and approval\nof President Rooievelt tor another\nfour-year terra hai dissipated much\nof the fear that (he peace to come\nwould be lost through a repetition\nof the Senate action which deitroyed the hopes ot thl Leagqe ot\nNations ln 1920.\nThis is tbe conclusion of foremost\nAmerican analysts trom itudy of\nthe resulta ot the voting, and they\ntoreiee iwlft and harmonious action by Great Britain, the United\nStates and Russia now that the\nPresident1! luthority to ipeak.hu\nbeen ao strongly supported by his\npeople.\nTwo conclusions an drawn\nfrom the election results:\n1. That Preiident Rooievelt may\ngo to hli next International conference with reasonable assurance that his commitments will\nbe approved by Congress.\nt. That the fear el Senate re\nfusel te approve Amsrlcsn participation In a world organization\nlor peace now miy bl dismissed.\nThl first of then conclusions\nmeans that the Rooievelt prestige\nIt future conference!, always greal.\nwill be greater, and hil luthority\nto speak unquestioned.\nAnd the second li expected lo en\ncourage ail the United Natloni, tu\nenter wholeheartedly Into the (nul\nnegotiation! on the league for pen.\nand security which are expected lo\nopen somewhere in the United\nStates early in 194S.\nMining when the 79th Congress\nmeet! lor thi tint sitting next January will be such Isolationists a_\nSenators Robert Reynol (Dem-\nN.C.) who did not seek re-election,\nand Gerald P. Nye (Rep.-N.D.l defeated fjaat Tuesday.\nAlio absent will be representatives Hamilton Fish (Rep -NY ) and\nStephen Day (Rep-Ill.), both ot\nwhom were defeated, the latter by\na woman and by a big majority.\n,_Jj\nPROGRESS through 75Years\n1869\u2014A small shop ln the village oi Enniskillen, Ont.,\nwith a sound reputation for fashioning carriages and wagons\nwith craftsmanship and integrity.\n1944\u2014A great Canadian industry, a vital national asset\nfamous for skilfully designed, truly-built civilian cars and\ntrucks, and powerful front-line fighting weapons.\nThe years between tell a story of achievement ... of\nhonest endeavour ... of imagination expressed in action...\nof initiative constructively applied.\nIn this Anniversary year, General Motors salutes a\nCanada peopled by men and women who have built a\nnation where the small carriage works of Robert McLaughlin\ncould expand into an enterprise contributing so vitally to\nthat nation's past, present, and future progress.\nMOTORS\nMORE AND BETTER\nTHINGS FOR\nCHEVR8LET \u2022 PONTIAC \u2022 OLDSMOBILE \u2022 McLAUGHLIN-BUICK -CADILLAC \u2022 CHEVROLET and GMC TRUCKS\n-\n \u2022-NILSON DAILY NIWS, TUESDAY, NOVIMMR 14, 1944\nWeathers Inter-Party Stotms...\nRedevelopment\nof Damaged Areas\nLONDON, Nov. 13 (CP). - The\nwartime coalition government hat\nweathered one of Its most serious\nInter-party storms by piloting safely through the Commons its con.\ntentlous bill to provide machinery\nfor the redevelopment of war-damaged areas and slum clearance.\nThe fight was not over the principle of \"The Town and Country\nPlanning Bill,\" a $2,500,000,000\nmeasure, but over three specific\nclauses setting out the amount ot\ncompensation to be paid the owners\nof land and buildings compulsorily\nacquired by local planning authorities. \u00ab\nAt one stage an open revolt\nagainst the Government by private\nmembers of all parties threatened.\nEven the Cabinet itself disagreed\nfor a time over the compensation\npolicy. On a formal division, 54\nback-benchers \u2014 mostly Conserva-\ntivetr-voted against the Government and in favor of an Increase ln\ncompensation rates.\nProvision for the right use of land\nhas been termed \"an essential requirement of the Government's\nprogram of post-war reconstruc\ntlon.\" In a White Paper on the subject the administration spoke particularly of waste of good agVlcul-\ntural land, traffic congestion in\nlarge cities, and Impairment of\nhealth standards as tome of the\nthings to be overcome.\nEarly in 1943 a Town and Country Planning Ministry was set up\nunder Rt. Hon. W, S, Morrison, a\nmember of the Cabinet sine* 1938\nwho haa held aueesslvely portollos\nof Agriculture and Fisheries, Food\nand Post Office. Compaiable duties\nwere given to the Secretary for\nScotland.\nThen this Spring the Town and\nCountry Planning Bill was Introduced. In it the planning Job ls\ndivided Into two parts.\nIn the \"blitzed areas\" local\nplanning authorities will make\napplication to the Government for\ndetermination of complete areas\nover which they will have powers of purchase for redevelopment; a public Inquiry will be\nheld Into their proposed redevelopment schemes; and then they\nwill be empowered to buy the\nwhole or any part of the designated area for replanning purposes.\nSince replanning and development will almost always Involve\nrelief of congestion in urban areas\nthrough clearing slums and setting\nup of parks, local authorities will\nalso be permitted to acquire land\noutside the designated areas to care\nfor the overflow.\nIn the so-called \"blighted areas\"\n\u2014rones which need redevelopment\nbecause they are full of old buildings, overcrowded and run down\u2014\nthe expectation ls for longer-term\noperations. In this case acquisition\nof land by local authorities will be\nauthorized An small blocks rather\nthan for entire areas.\nFAM0U8 CANADIAN ARMY CARTOONI8T DRAW8 ANOTHER\nGEM: Sgt. W. G. \"Blng\" Coughlin, of Ottawa, 32-year-old artist, whose\nnow famous cartoons \"Thlt Army,\" are serviced to more than 60\nCanadian dally newspapers, through the Directorate of Public Relatione (Army), it shown designing for his readers another humorous\nsidelight in the life of the Canadian soldier. Hit 64-page album of\ncartoont printed In Italy promise! to become a Mediterranean best\nteller. More than 80,000 copies are now In circulation. (Canadian\nArmy photo.)\nSay Russia Must\nHave Post-War\nPeace to Rebuild\nTORONTO, Nov. 13 (CP) \u2014 In\norder to rebuild their country, Rus-.\nsians must have post   war   peace\n\"more than anything else in the\nworld,\" Raymond Arthur Davies,\nCanadian correspondent just returned from the Soviet Union today, told\nthe Canadian Club here.\nMr. Davies estimated Russia could\npay for from $150,000,000 to $200.-\n000,000 of Canadian products annually in post war years.\n(or respondents\nlo Be Admitted\nto Legion\nOTTAWA, Nov. U (CP) - Canadian\nwar correspondents who hav* served ln a theatre ot war will be admitted to the Canadian Legion aa honorary members until the next Dominion convention when ttipt will be\ntaken to grant them full active\nmembership, Legion headquarters\nannounced here today.\nThis action was taken last week\nat a meeting of the Dominion Executive Council. War Correspondents previously were not eligible\nand it wu explained that a change\nIn Legion constitution will be necessary before they can be admitted\nto active membership.\nDefence headquarters aaid that\nsince war itarted about 30 Canadian war correspondents have served in a theatre of war.\nThese men have performed a\nwonderful, service to Canada,\" tald\nI Alex Walker, Legion President.\n\"They have shared the dangers and\nhardships of our fighting men. They\n| have gone Into battle time and\nagain. The Legion will be proud\nto have them as members.\"\nThe correspondents win be Invited to join the branch of their choice\nbut also will be accepted as mem-\nbers-at-large. >\n\"Their work within the Legion\ncan be most useful,\" said Jack\nMoore, Dominion Chairman. \"They\nare brilliant men who have been\nable to see and appreciate the service men better than any other\ngroup,\"\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 The bacon ration, recently cut from alx to four\nounces weekly, now has been reduced ln quality by including fat\nbelly bacon. Previously this Inferior grade was sold off the ration.\nBelieve Falling\nMeleorShakes\nNorthern Ontario\nOTTAWA, Nov. IS (CP) -Dominion obaervatory officials today\nsaid that reporta ot a blinding flash\nin the North Bay, Ont., district early\nthla morning pointed to a meteor\nand not to some bomb device as suggested by persona recalling German robot weapons.\nDr. R. Meldrum Stewart, Dominion Astronomer, said lt was possible\nthat a meteor flash would be so\nbright that it would be seen for\n200 miles. The flash was seen at\nOttawa, nearly that distance from\nNorth Bay.\nThe explosion of the meteor entering the earth atmosphere, and white\nhot with the friction of air, could\nbe heard for a considerable 'distance, on the basis of reports of similar occurrences in the past. Meteors\ntravel at several miles a second, and\nusually disintegrate before they\nstrike the earth.\nDr. Stewart said the available information' on the North Bay occurrence indicated the meteor was one\ndt the largest seen recently.\nHundreds of tiny meteors strike\nthe earth dally, ranging upwards\nfrom the size of a pinhead. There\nwas the possibility that the Nqrth\nBay meteor had completely disintegrated and never reached the earth,\nalthough meteorites may have done\nso.\nThere also waa the possibility that\nIt had continued on its course, as\nthere had been a case some years\nago df a meteor crossing over Ontario and the New England states and\nspeeding out to sea.\nOttawa residents who saw the\nlight said they had the impression\nit was moving through the sky with\na trail of red. They thought for a\nmoment that it was a burning airplane.\nName Two More\nOntario Units\nin Schelde Battle\nWITH THE 1ST CANADIAN\nARMY, Nov. 13 (CP Cable) .-Two\nmore Ontario units\u2014the Toronto\nScottish and the Stormont, Dundas\nand Glengarry Highlanders from\nCornwall, Ont\u2014have been named\nas taking a full part in the recent\nbattle, of  the Schelde,  it Was re\nvealed today.\nTb* Scottiih\u2014* macnine-gun i\nheavy mortar regiment of th*\nCanadian Division\u2014fought in ttl\nadvance North from Antwerp am\nalong South Beveland Island, tup\nporting Infantry with their Vlck\u00abp\nand 4.2 mortars.\nAfter South Beveland was clear*\nup, the Scottish alao went acrosi tl\nNorth Beveland with the 8th R*\nconnalssance Regiment, from Swlf\nCurrent, Sask., In a private lav*\nsioii and overran that Island.\nMining Companies\nWe would like you to write\nus should you be needing\nany of the following:\nSAMPLE SHEETS - TIME CARDS \u2014 ASSAY\nFORMS \u2014 MINE RECORDS \u2014 PAYROLL\nCHEQUES - LETTERHEADS \u2014 RULED\nFORMS - DEDUCTION SLIPS \u2014 INVENTORY SHEETS \u2014 RUBBER STAMPS.\nWe will send samples of\nany of the above when\nrequested,\nPHONE 144\nNelson laily faa\nPRINTING DEPARTMENT\nNelson, B.C.\nThe worst inflation' came AFTER the war the last time ... to be followed by disastrous\ndeflation, unemployment and confusion. For Canada to manage successfully the change\nback to peace, maintain employment, and meet the world's competition ... we must\ncontinue to have stable economic conditions. To protect the individual from rising costs of\nliving and later unemployment we must continue to prevent inflation.\ni\nTo prevent a repetition of the conditions following the latt war\nPRICE CONTROL MUST BE MAINTAINED\nAS LONG AS INFLATION THREATENS US.\nThis can only be done if production is efficient and economical, costs are  kept down\nand consumers refuse to pay more than ceiling prices.\nmis is out or a suits issued by the oovirnmint or Canada ro emphasize im importance\nOF   PtlVtNTING   A   fVRTHtt   RISl   IN   THf   COST   OF   UVINO   NOW,   AND   DOTATION   LATIR\n w\njsped Hitler\n(her\nck or Dead\n\u2014 : ...  ,- ,     .1,\n -\u2014 *^-\u00bb\nmtmrnwrnwrnm.\nmmt*Mm*ymmmr*aWr*\\^^\n.9-*n\nBy JOHN   F. CHESTER\nAiiociated Prtu Staff Writer\n\u25a0ONDON, Nov. 13 (AP).\u2014A re*-\nft was received In London today\nn a person whose Information\nreliable that Hitler was under\n[care of four doctors last week\nI that his strange proclamation\n[yesterday commemorating the\nnich beer cellar putsch may\nW been written by somebody\ni.\nfhe doctors were named as Pro-\nlor  Morrell,  Hitler's  permanent\ndlcal adviser. Doctor Zabel, the\nending   physician   regularly   at-\nhed to his staff, Professor Hor-\nan outstanding brain special-\nwho treated Field Marshal Horn-\nbefore he died, and Professor\nlerbrurh, one of Germany's most\nmlnent surgeons,\nauerbrucb   operated   on   Hitler\nut eight years ago for what he\ned  a  non-malignant growth   in\nFuehrer's throat. A person close\nGerman affairs said Sauerbruch\nme time, and possibly even to-\nwas  known  among  his  intim-\nas strongly anti-Nazi.  Ite ex-\nised  surprise  that  the  surgeon\nbeen called in.\nhe same source said he had\n;ted six passages in Hitler's\nht to death\" proclamation yes-\nay that had been taken from\nFuehrer's book, Metn Kampf,\nOthers that clearly came from\ni of his old speeches. He ex-\nised belief the proclamation had\ni written by someone other than\nman who gave the excuse that\nwas \"too busy\" to come to the\nrophone.\nhe proclamation yesterday was\nby Heinrlch Himmler, Ges-\nchlef.\nfficial British sources, however,\nch have always been cautious\nUt commenting nn Hitler rumors\nthe past, asserted flatly that the\nclamation had a \"phoney ring.\"\nhe most widely accepted belief\nwas that the proclamation,\nich carried the solemn overtones\nlast-ditch appeal, was a ghost-\ntten effort by Himmler and\nebbels to curb rumors within\nmany of Hitler's illness or death.\nermaiiR have not heard a broad-\nt by Hitler since July 21, when\nvoice purporting to his spoke\nthe radio to announce that a\nt against his life the preceding\nhad been thwarted.\n\u25a0ONDON, Nnv. 13 fCP).-The\n\u25a0man overseas radio service,\nnsoccan, which Is beamed for\nctly non-German consumption,\nI today:\nIn reply to rumors circulating\noad, authoritative circles in\nlin state that the Fuehrer is in\nellent hearth.\"\n\"ransocean argued that his fall-\nto read yesterday's proclama-\nwas not proof of illness, since\n(tier has never read proclama-\nls himself.\" The proclamation, it\nImed, \"g;ivp orders in his own\norous manner.\"\nTie magpie belongs to the crow\nily and is scientifically termed\ni Pica.\nNo One Injured\nWhen Slide\nHits Train\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 13 (CP). -\nPassengers aboard a Westbound\nKettle Valley Canadian Pacific\nRailway train escaped injury last\nnight when a rock slide struck the\ntrain near Lakevale, 73 miles East\nof Penticton No serious damage\nwas reported although the train was\ndelayed 10 hour*.\nNinc-Year-Old Girl\nKills Moose\nFRANCOIS LAKE, B.C., Nov. 13\n(CP)-When Yusta Mollice's nine-\nyear-old daughter told her father\nshe had shot a moose her father\nthought she was telling stories\u2014\nuntil he followed her into the woods\nand found the moose dead with two\nbullet holes. The little Indian girl\nhas her own rifle for shooting\nweasles. Francios Lake is 60 miles\nSouth of Smlthers.\nNEW DENVER\nh\na^;*1\nNEW DENVER, B.C.-The Women's\nAuxiliary of Lhe Canadian Legion\nBranch of No. 101 held a meeting\nThursday afternoon al the home of\nMra. Ueorse Burkett to make lUial\narrangements ior their Armistice card\nparty. Nine members were present.\nAU-tr the meeting closed refreshments\nwere served by the hostess. Mrs.\nGeorge Burkett assisted hy her daughter, Misa Frances Burkett.\nMisa Dora M. Clever and her bio-\nther. Ted Clever, were visitors ln Nelson Thursday.\nGrand Chief of the Pythian Blsteri,\nMrs. Nellie Ratcllffe of Vancouver and\nGrand District Deputy Mrs. J. A. Hipperson of Nelson were visitors ln town\nThursday for the Grand Chief's official visit to Lucern Temple No. 17.\nThey left Friday for Nakusp,\nMrs. Bodnarchuk and two children\nof fiandon were vlaltors ln town Friday.\nMre. W. J. Turner of Zincton waa a\nshopper ln town Friday.\nMrs. Oeorge Graham and her two\ndaughters. Mrs. Thomas Leask and\nMrs. James Falrhurst, Mrs. Robert\nFalrhurst, seaman Dewls and Oordon\nNelson of Silverton were visitors\nThursday.\nW. H. Grey, who wm on the staff of\ntbe B.CS.C. left during the week lor\nthe Coast.\nMisa Hide Hyodo returned from a\ntrip to Montreal, Toronto and Hamilton.\nJack Taylor was a visitor ln Edge-\nwood Friday.\nMri. A. Greenlaw, who teaches\nschool at Perry Siding apent the weekend with her husband, Archie Greenlaw.\nMr. and Mra. D. McAakill of Three\nForks were visiting friends in town\nFriday en route to Nelaon for a few\ndays.\nDr. and Mra. P, Kumagal were recent visitors In Nakusp.\nMIm Hazel Flint of Slocan City\ntpent the weekend guest of her parents, Mr, and Mrs. T. R. Flint.\nMiss Norma Erlckson and Mlas Margaret Timmoni were recent visitors in\nNakusp.\nThe weekly Red Croea Bee waa held\nin the Legion Hall Friday with Mra.\nGeorge Burkett aa hostess.\nMrs. Jamea Draper was a visitor In\nNakusp.\nMra. U. R. Kitchener on the staff\nof ths BC-S.C. spent the weekend ln\nSlocan Cltv, guest of her parents, Mr,\nand Mrs. K. Popoff.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Joy and family of\nRosebery were visitors during the\nweek.\nMrs David Powell of Nakuap apent\nthr weekend with friends.\nMr and Mrs. Marc DuMont of Hunters Hiding were shoppers ln town Stturday.\nMisa 8. ikegaml la a patient ln the\nSlocan Community Hoapltal.\nMr. and Mrs, E. J. Leveque of Rosebery were visitors In town Thursday.\nW. Tinkess of Kaslo wu a -rlsltor\nSaturday.\nL.-Cpl. McNevtn of TraU wu a rial-\ntor here.\nMrs. Mable Lagebokoff of Rotebery\nli a patient in the Slocan Community\nHospital.\nHarry L. Taylor of Slocan City spent\nthe weekend with hla parenta, Mr, and\nMri. J   Taylor.\nBert Powell of Nakusp spent the\nweekend, fpieat of Tommy Parson.\nMrs. A. Yomasakl is a patient In\nthe Sl-van Community Hospital.\nCharlie Aylwln of Slocan City spent\nthe weekend with hla mother', Mrs. M\nE. Aylwln.\nW. Bums of the B.CJB.C., Slocan\nCty. waa a visitor during the week.\nMiss J. Anderson visited frlendi ln\nNakusp Saturday.\nJ. Laurent of the Standard Mtno,\nSilverton. spent the weekend at hli\nborne.\nJoe Zambone of Slocan City spent\nthe weekend with his family.\nMlaa Tiny Driver of Nelson wu a\nrecent visitor ln town.\nHarry lye of Slocan City ls a patient In the Slocan Community Hoipital.\nPat LaundrevlUe of the Mammoth\nMine, Silverton, apent the weekend\nit hli home\nJ. H Hewett. who spent twn w**ek\u00ab\nhere with hli family, returned during\nthe wrek  to Butedale. B C.\nMm H. Inouye la a patient In the\nSlocan Community Hospital.\nPte. David Crellln of Saskatoon, who\nwu th*\u00bb guest of Mr. and Mri. S\nChrlitofferi-on and their eon, Pte. Robert, for the paat week, left Sunday\nfor Trait where he will ipend tb* remainder of his furlough with his mother and slater, Mri Miy Crellln and\nMiss H.Ida Crellln\nGeorge and A   T-   Avison nf Zincton\nwere willing with relatives Saturday.\nErnest Dnney Sr. left Saturday  for\nth* Victor Mine   Sandon.\nMlas Tlllr McKinnon of Rllverton\nwas a visitor during the week.\nW T. Graham of Slnran City wm a\nTlaltor in town Trlday.\nW. McDonald of Sandon was a visitor during the we-fk\nMn    Booth    of    Vancouver   was   a\nChurchill and\nDe Gaulle Agree\non Future Plans\nPARIS, Nov. 13 (AP)\u2014Sweeping\nagreement* giving France a key\nrole in post-war Europe and looking toward her future security were\nquickly reached in talks between\nPrime Minister Churchill and Gen.\nDe Gaulle during the Britiah Prime\nMlnister'i visit to Paris, it waa reported today.\nConcurrent with France's admission to a scat on -the European advisory commission the British and\nFrench statesmen agreed that\nFrench torces should participate lithe military occupation of a refeat-\ned Germany alongside British\nAmerican and Russian contingents.\nThe exact area of occupation to\nbe assigned France was left to the\nCommission to decide.\nFrenchmen have from Prime\nMinister Churchill the assurance\nthat Great Britain desires to see\nFrance possessed of a powerful\narmy and united under the government of Gen. De Gaulle.\nNORTHAMPTON. England (CP)\n\u2014Women on civilian war jobs who\nwish to train to become teachers\nwill be released immediately, Education Minister Butler announced in\nan address heie.\n1944,\nJ_1Nr[BMflR(PRWfJUNJULflJC5[PDCTNDVD[D\n111 Hi\n11\n'\nil\nmm\n__*_**_ BV\nYHNQUVH. STOCK EX-HUNK\n      ll-Wlllta araatattt\t\nFirst Civil\nAir Service\nin Four Years\nLONDON, Nov. 13 (CPReuter)\n\u2014Flnt civil air service out of\nLondon ii more than four yean\noperated from Croydon today,\nwhen a railway air lervlcei aircraft left for Liverpool and Belfast.\n60,000 \"Await\nJustice\", Belgium   .\nLONDON, Nov. 13 (CP). - The\nBelgian news agency said today\nthat about 60,000 persons are being\nheld In prisons and Internment\ncamps in Belgium to \"await justice.\" Forty-five commissions have\nbeen appointed.^- advise the Minister of Justice oh the possible release or trial of the prisoners.\nShould Replenish\nForest\nResources In B.C.\nVANCOUVER,, Nov. 13 (CP) -\nSine, the Dominion Government\nextracts $100,000,000 annually ln Indirect taxation from forest Industry\nand personnel lt should expect to\nreplace and renew the perishable\nresource that supplies the cash,\nRobson Black of Montreal, President and General-Manager o( the\nCanadian Forestry Association,\ntold the Vancouver Board of Trade\ntoday.\n\"If Ottawa can afford $9,000,000\na year to Md a self-exhausting industry such as mining, lt surely\ncan afford $S,000;000 to sustain the\nself-regenerating and expanding\ntreasure of the forest.\"\nMr. Black expressed the belief\nthat British Columbia would soon\nbe the first province in .Canada to\nreturn to forest \u25a0 firotection and\nmaintenance the total of all revenues taken from forest taxation by\nthe Provincial Government.\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, TUHDAY, NOVtMHR 14, 1944-\u00bb\nLONDON (CP) - If took 15\nyears ln the R.A.F. to win it, but\nSqdn. Ldr. S. H. Bell, 35, of Ford-\nin^bridge. Hampshire who has been\nconstantly on flying duty has just\nbeen awarded the military cross.\nOffer Bona venture\nRiding\n.(rMcNaughton\nBONA VENTURE. Que.. Nov. 13\n(CP)\u2014The Lower St. Lawrence riding of Bonaventure has offered Defence Minister McNaughton the Liberal nomination for the riding, Dr.\nAlvarei St. Lament, president ol\nthe Bonaventure Liberal Association, announced today.\nThe riding was represented by\nLiberal Alphee Poirler ln the House\nof Commons until his death two\nmonths ago. Mr. St. Laurent said\nhe had written Prime Minister Mackenzie King Informing htm of the\noffer.\n\"Bonaventure County had registered a high percentage of voluntary enlistments In the armed forces,\" he added.\nIndia to Enter\nMutual Agreement\nWith Canada\nNEW DELHI, Nov. 13 (CP Reuter)\n\u2014Sir Jeremy Raisman. financial\nmember of the Governor-General's\nExecutive Council, said in th\ndian Legislative Assembly today\nthat India has agreed to enter into\na mutual aid agreement with Canada.\nHe said capital goods such as locomotives and cars would be provided under the agreement.\nSays French\nCanadians Willing\nfo Work Together\nLONDON, Ont,, Nov. 13 (CP>-\nSenator T. D. Bouchard said ln a\nluncheon address here today that\n\"French Canadians are In transition,\" and added that \"it will be\ngood if the English-speafttng population wm find those who are wholeheartedly for unity and are willing\nto work sincerely with them for a\ngreater Canada.\"\nIn an address prepared for delivery before the London Rotary\nClub, the Senator said:\n\"In the Province of Quebec there\nis a large\u2014a very large\u2014part of\nthe French people which has a progressive mind, which Is willing to\nwork hand in hand in everything\nnot strictly confessional in religion\nwith the citizens of any other race\nand creed.\"\nA large part of the address was\ndevoted to quotations from Senator Bouchard's memoirs, ln which\nhe spoke of his early life aa a\nwater-carrier In St. Hyaclnthe.\nLONDON (CP) - Russian is the\nsecond most popular language\ncourse in Britain, with French the\nfavorite.\nHEN  QUALITY AND\nii are of Firsr\nMP0R1ANCE, WEll\n.RESSEO MEN WEAR\nStan fields\nUn\\A,ini\\ui'U\nJnoerwear\nv.**1\nor in town\ntrwyer   of   fllortti   C'ty   epent\nkenl et hU home\nAnn I>:- Mlu Berber* Thorn-\nllnaon. Miee Ii-.\/ Mrl-eori mid MIm\nNorm* ThnmUn_u.ii wtrt fUiton 'n\nRowtxry.   %t\\et\\\u00bb of MIm  Audrey   I \u2666-\nLarry\nMi\nn\n\u25a0Iln\nIt-M with )\u25a0'\u25a0 !\u00bbmllv nmii\nM-.m     Fntr!   :-.     PuM\u00ab i:\nipent  the  weekend RUeet\n.cton villi up vrtk\nif NHf.n\ntier uncle\nDm Mont,\nMn   M\nHunt*\u2122 Aiding\nMr end Mn Min- DiiMni.t of Hunter* Aiding hu ee their gueit for eev\n\u2022ril rtitTi their inn-ln-lew, (-.enrgi\nWurr ot KrrennK-i\nMn F Methewi of Wlvgrton ere*\nt -Alitor  In I'twn Sunday\nMn M T H\u00bbrrli. M'_m Nntmi Irlrk-\ntrm enr\\ MIm Mirgiret Tlmmmn returned flituMiy from Trill where\nthey   attended   the Torh\u00abV  Co.iv\u00abn-\nUon\nMlu t, T-einernle relumed AundM\nto Neli. mi\nfl'eler At Hepher I end fllit'r At\nRite ratume-d frrnn Trill where they\nett-pnde.1  the Te**-- lier\u00ab Om.ei._lmi\n.1 Purine end eon of FUverUn. were\nv-lilt-nTe here Hundev.\n:?\nabout th things you buy in wartime\n1,300,000 MORE PAIRS\nOF  CHILDREN'S  SHOES  LAST YEAR\nIn the latt twelve monthi Canadian manufacturer*\nmade for Canadian children about U% mor* thou\nthan In 1939\u2014a fine |ob-done by the oraanlia-\ntlon and direction of production by thli Board'i\nFootwear Administration and the co-operation of\nmanufadureri. And thlt wai accompllihed while\nthey were making many more euential type ihoei\nfor war workeri, who wear out their ihoei faiter\nthan they do In their normal employment.\nNow you see It,\nTHE    DISAPPEARING    ACT\nOF     RUBBER-SOLE    SHOES\n%\nf In normal times most young Canadians got at least one\npair of rubber soled, canvas-top shoes a year. But natural\nrubber supplies fell into enemy hands, and the manufacture of rubber footwear was drastically curtailed.\nWe're now using reclaimed and synthetic rubber in these\nshoes\u2014there have been more of them this year and there\nwill be more next year. Leather-soled shoes have had to be\nused in place of this rubber-soled footwear but shoes made\nof leather need more care than running shoes. When they\ndon't get it they wear out more quickly; when they get\nwet they must be dried slowly, away from direct heat -and\nthey should be greased also. It's not always a case of poor\nquality; it's poor care.\nNow you dont\/\nLEATHER  GOES  TO  WAR\nYou've got to have good strong\nleather for children's shoes but the\nsoldiers are taking most of ours for\ntheir boots. For these leathers, a\nsubstantial portion of the hides came\nfrom South America and other countries. War cut down these imports\nand there have Ix-cn difficulties in\ngetting enough of these and our own\nhides tanned into leather due to\nshortage of workers. The production\nof  high   grade  leather  shoes  has,\nhowever, been maintained at the\nhighest level consistent with the\nlabour and materials available. While\nshoe factories have been working\novertime, factory capacity for\ncivilian shoes cannot lie expanded in\nwartime and it's not possible to\nchange plants from the manufacture\nof one type of shoe to another,\u2014 for\ninstance, from women's to children's.\nThe processes, the machines and the\nlasts are different.\nTURNING  HIDES  INTO  SHOES\nThere are very large wat uses of\nleather (or instance, in footwear. A\nsoldier requires four pairs of shoes in\nthe first year of his service and about\nthree pairs per year thereafter. But\nwhat is more important, he needs to\nhave his shoes re-snled four or five\ntimes a year. His shot* are of the\nhighest quality leathers obtainable, having the other grades of\nleather for civilian use. Airmen need\nleather for jackets and mitts. War\nfactories need leather for belting and\nfarmers need leather for harness,\nleather \u2014 the liest leathers \u2014 lias\ngone to war.\nTHIS IS ONE OF A\nTHE   WARTIME   PRICES   AND   TRADE   BOARD\nSERIES OF ADVERTISEMENTS OIVINO THE FACTS ABOUT THE SUPPLY SITUATION OF VARIOUS WIDELY USED COMMODITIES.\n \u25a0\u2014\u2014-\n\u2014_-\u2014\nmem.\ni 1,1.1,1 mn\n10 - NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, NOV. 14, 1944\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nCANUCKS  ARE  WELCOMED   BY   DUTCH       cltlzeni of the Netherlands city of Bergen op zoom\nCHILDREN: Welcome visitors to their home town,       Ri the Canadlani occupied the town on Oct. 27.\nCtnadian soldiers greeted enthusiastically by young\nMEN OF PEACE AND WAR: Pte. Paul Gabriel, of Bridgeport,\nConn,, with an aged monk of the Trapplst order tn the famous XIII\ncentury Trappist monastery at Rochefort, Belgium, home of the\nfamous cheese  of  that  name.  So secluded  a   life  do theee  Trapplsta\nlead that they had no knowlerin--- m th*. nr-  -.f \"-    .-    \u25a0\nAllies showed  up. The monk ifccwn  here was given  ipelcat  permie-\nlion to break hii vow of silence in order to converse with the soldier.\nPLACES FL0WER8 ON HER0'8 GRAVE: As Ctntdlan soldiers look on, a little Belgian girl stoops to place a bouquet of fiowera\non the flag decked grave of a Canadian soldier who fell In the heavy\nfighting on the Dutch, Belgian border.\nHer*  is a typical  Perls taxi  of\nnjoylng  a  tnoore   Inside  ts  ha\nKtVEALS \"TRICK\": Gaston\nMadru, photographer for \"News\nof the Day Newsreel\" demonstrates the trick he used during\nthe German occupation of France\nas he went about taking pictures\nof Germans without being discovered. Madru concealed hli camera\nIn a market baiket on the front\nof hli bike, the trigger attached\nto a black itring running around\nto hli hand. To concesl any possible glitter from the sun on his\nlens, he filled the rest of the basket with bottles, sli of which glittered ' dlitractlngly. Madru illustrates here his procedure of putting bottlei and jars in the baske*.\nto ceanceal hii camera.\nCANADA'S TOP ACE: Tlt-Lt\nDon Laubman, D.F.C, and Bar,\nof Edmonton, Alts., who ll now\nCtnada'i top ace, ilnce D-Dsy,\nhiving got 15 enemy planes In ths\nair and damaged three.\nOFFICIAL RETIRES: Joseph P.\nKelly, diitrict matter mechanic\nfor British Columbia, has retired\nfrom the Cantdlsn Pacific Rail\nway for health reasons. His 36\nyeiri with the C.P.R. took him\nall over the West, including itopa\nat Field and Revelstoke. He wai\nworks manager of the Ogden\nShopi at Calgary before moving\nto Vancouver two and a half years\ne_go.\n^^\u25a0wTJSce\/a\nFOR TEENS OR TOTS: For\nteemters tnd toti\u2014these cro\ncheted capi with eye-appeal as\nwell ai ear-comfort. Cost little:\nthey'll make her wish for cold\nweather.\nCaps, eruihable and for hard\nwear\u2014tail ly croclyted In colorful worsted. Pattern 717 contains\ndirections for caps; stitches.\nSend 20 cents for true paitern to\nThe NeUon Daily Newa, Needle\ncraft Dept., Nelson. Write plainly\npattern number, your name and\naddress. Patterni will be mailed\nto your home In about 16 days.\nThere may be some further delay In delivery becauie of the\nlarge Increase In orders during the\npresent seaion,\nAUNT   HET\nBt ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"I rrckop we're all mobs When\nwe say a tfirl married well, we never\nmean that she married a fine, well-\nbehaved poor man.\"\n>-\nz\nBRIDLE\nPATH\nPOR\nRIDERS\nONLY\n-WyTj\u2014\ni\nH\n-JL\n\u2014\u2022\nWtCUeMafX WleVdtllL O\n\/ DOLL WARDROBE: The mod-\nam doll muit be ai well dreiied\nas her \"mama.\" Pattern 9166 provide! a complete doll wardrobe\nyou oan make from scraps.\nPatttrn 9165 is available for\ndolls that are 12, 14, 16, 18, 20 and\n22 Inches tall. For Individual\nyardages tee pattern.\nSend 20 cents for tnn pattern to\nThe Nelion Daily Newi, Needle\neraft Dept, Nelion. Write plainly\npattern number, .your name and\naddress. Patterns will be mailed\nto your home in about 15 days.\nThert may be tomt further delay In delivery because of the\nlarge increase In orders during the\npresent seaion.\nGREMUNS, M^\nW. voimc\nTAKt TMESC E*R- \\   v\u20147 HEMUN&\nPHONES, SACGE. SOME    \\\/}    i. GREMLINS.\nGUTS IW *\\ JftP PLAHE-   V)\nCLAIMS HE'S   AMERICAN-  Jf, [*t   <)\nThe flour I bought here yeater-\nday wu tough. I made a pie with\n<1 and my huaband could hardly\nMt It!\"\nNazis Burn 22\nVillages, Poland\nNFW YORK, Nnv IS \u25a0(*_') The\ntowns \"f Zmtgmd nnd Tnrnnwier\nand 22 mil rounding villages In South\nmitral Poland have been burnt\nto the ground by the Germani-., the\n.'nli-.li Telegraph Agrnry repoi ted\nW1\u00aby in s London dispatch.\nJ GREAT SCOTT\nl'\n1        CORRlGAN'fr   M4 TUE\n1      'SPEED-P.OAT! HC-Ht'4\n1      60U-3  TO TRY TO\nV      STOP   KfTuPptR !     J\n\u25a0fe^nr'Tl*\n*%m b-AJr\nmmu\\*^r\\u\\T^Su\\'^\n___r_a__.<d_9\u00bbu\u00bb\nm\n%\n\\\/\n \u25a0\nn\n.LASSIFIED\nPHONE 144\nHELP WANTID\ntoS^VANTB- FOR JDNIOH\nBi girls' Physical and Grade 7\nfftteSatlc. \u00bbPPl> with quaim-.a-\nm. and references to Fred L. tt-\n^^J^J|J^t5|liSS__:\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nt^sT^sT^ataTlot aon-\n\u25a0nmercial advertisement, under\n\u00a3 claseltlcatlon to assist people\nekina emplojment Only 28c for\nu week 16 dajsl cover, an?\nmrHTit required Une. P\u00bby\u00bbol<>\nAdvance Add lOo U ws num-\n*t\"do sewing and mewdino.\n^Mr.  Walker, \u00bbo8 Edgewood\nBUSINESS AND\nOFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAVKKb ANU MINK\nBEPKKSliNTA,iVtS____\nSB-g^SwSO-*.  PROVINCIAL\n* raoLW____-5i-3)^\n\"h_mB iwaauAND, bc\njt Chemist. Minejep-i-j-u-J-*.\n*i^i5rl001KNAV' ASiiAV OF\n\/uSKoOteimy St., NelBOJL B\nguiK WdepeodeuTh-Jn. Rep\"'\nfcttll^WxJ^I^J--.,,,-\n\u25a0^TTcon1kacTjTk\u00bb__^\n\u25a0boh BrniSlNolioN^Acrofu\nTb. too .mall or U\u00bb is g*\nOi,530 BOT front. 8t_\nMACHINERY\nAUT0M0T1VI,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nCHIKOI-HATIUK-'\t\n3i33nKDS__roo.. cHiso-\nictlc  X-raf  \"*\neatre Bldg\nte^^AMr^UStBl^!*'\nriDtaoEN^EImt-UANr. civil\nX-raj  SplnbgraphJ   Btrauu\nfrail. BC  Phone 828\nLAWRENCE FLUID\nDRIVE\n85 H P. Power Units\nHeaps   Engineering\n2 saw all steel edgers.\nSpear and Jackson\nInserted Tooth Sows, Trimmer Saws, Cordwood Saws,\nEdger Saws, Sawbits and\nholders, and\nThe\nFamous Challenger\nPOWER CHAIN SAWS.\nNelson Machinery\nEquipment Co.\nNELSON, B C.\nHow Long Is it\nsince you had your\nTires Switched, Inside\nWalls Examined?\n(To distribute wear evenly, lessen danger from blowouts.)\nSpark Plugs Tested,\nCleaned?\n(To Increase gasoline mileage\nper coupon.)\nWe specialize in these services\nSee us today.\nPeebles Motors\nLimited\nPhone 119   \u2014   151 Baker St.\nPERSONAL\nWHJN IH VANCOUVKt BTOP Al\nAlmw Hotel. Opp 0 P B Depot-\nOf- SUBS MSLljr WITH LLOYD'S\nCorn Is Calloua Salve 60c at Fleury'.\nPharmacy.\nJ. CHM8\nSecond Hand Dealer\nPhone 1081\n6_- Vemon St\nLOtttBOUEt READ CUPID DESTINY\nmagaalne. Copy Nov.-Dec. Issue with\naddreeKS, 25c. Mailed plain, .ealed.\nBos 367. Chapman Camp. B.C\n25c L,0NS PHOTO 25c\nF O. Bos 434. Vancouver\nAny a-exp roil developed and printed\naie Reprints 8c Free ia. coupon\nKODAK FINISHING 3 CENTS PRINT\nMagaalnea, back number. fiOc doe.\nSlav. Bohu, \u2022 Doukhobor history\n13.71. all po.tp.td, eatlitactton\nguaranteed. Macdonald, Po.tm_.tcr,\nBrilliant. B.C. \t\n314 Hall SI\nDrawer 330\n\u25a0*\u25a0*-\"*-' and Orand P_IU>_____.\nJlJ*OOHE  BT\n\u2022aland\n-B^^BC^rmo^*^^\nJ5haS^^^_I--_H|^\nHi Estate  Phone 136\nSaThTMS\u2122\nBKNNffi*TTXudTTKD\nbin. Shop. acetyl\", and electric\n\u25a0\"wldlng.  motor  rewinding\n^ommsrclal i-rtgj.*-\nW\n334 Vernon J*^\nirafiNB  shop-7\"\nmill\nand   heavy\n5E_*_='-  \u25a0\u25a0\nSSS-fit.\nFOR SALE - ONE INTERNATIONA!\nTD-14 caterpillar euulpped with\nBucyrua Erie Anale dozer and Hy-\nster skidding winch. One Lawrence\n10-10 Donkey equipped with Chrja-\nler fluid drive power unit, oomplete\nwith block. and equipment tor high\nlead logilng. Roger. Lumber Company Ltd., sprucevllle P.O., Rogera\nfltn.. British Columbia,\nLondon Concrete Mixers\nSl_e. 3V4-C. It, 8(4-cu. tt.. 8-cu. tt\nTlmken heirlnl, pneumaUc - tired\nwheels, gasoline driven.\nImmediate delivery from stock\nPurves E. Ritchie & Son Ltd.\n858 Hornby Vanoouver, B.O.\nNelson\nW  E. MAK6HALL\nOptometrist*\n.ve.'Trail PhoneJT7\nCSH fACTUBlED\n|j~Jjmerchant       223 Ha_er__^_\n=-jf^^ifjrAsuj|TmiIEZI\u2014\n-Sur-sKlA   AND   EXCHANGE\n^;.jSu**Jh_JMJl*lS!g^\n\/ESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC\nTHE WHICH \u00ab;\u201e\u2022\u00ab\nFOR SALE-WAREHOUSE ELEVATOR\noperated by band with weight drum\n\u00abnd rope complete. Can be seen st\nThe W H Malkln Oo . Nelson\nTimken Bits Resharpened.\nAir Equipment Service Ltd.\n858 Hornby    Vancouver, B.C\n1929 MODEL A\nSEDAN\nHeated and Licence\n1935 FORD DELUXE\nSEDAN\nHeater and Radio\nKootenay\nMotors\n(Nelson) Ltd.\nH.  HARROP\nflLMS DEVELOPED AND PRDJTBD\n(8 or 8 KPoeure roll! 38c Reprints\n3c each Por your snapshots, chooe.\nKrystal Finlah Guaranteed non-tad*\nprint. Kryital Photo.. Wilkle, Ba.-\nkatch.wan.    Established    over    10\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nINDlSTRlAU\nAssoc Brew ol Can .....\nCan Car & My Prd ....\nCan Steamship  _.\nCon Min & -Smelting\nDom Steel & Coal B\t\nMrColl Pront*nac \t\nNational Brew Ltd \t\nQuebec  Power  \t\nShawnlgfin W & P \t\nSt Lawrenoe Corp \t\nBANKS\nComraerot   \t\nDominion   \t\nImperial  \u2014\nMontreal  _-_.._.\nNov* Scotl* \u2014 \t\nRoyal\ni?a\n34\n\u25a0It V,\n10'\n5:\n8\nIV,\n37 Vi\nl\u00ab14\n14'.\nHIV,\nIB\n16\n211\n14'\/,\nToronto        37\nN\u00a3W   YORK   STOCKS\nAmerican O.n        81*-_\nAm Smelt & Ret  ,      40\nAmer Telephone   1*3*-\nAn.cond.       21\nSTOP SUPF-KINO \u2022\"\u2022ROM rOLLOW-\ning .tom.cb Dl_order.. Acid atom-\nch. Indlge.tlon, Heartburn, Coat-\nid tongue. Bad Breath Sick Headaches, etc Um Bilk', stomact powder No 3. prepared by eiperlenced\nPh>rm.cl.t It must give Immediate\nresult, or money back. 41 00. MOO\nEllk's Medietas company. D.pt 43\nSaskatoon   Sask.\nSTOP     1TCHINQ\n\u2022taenia,   psorlasli\nBeth Steel\nCanadian   P.clflc\nDupont \t\n0\u00bbn Electric \t\nGen Motor. .\nInternational  Nickel  _.\t\nInter Tel St Tel\t\nKenn Copper -\t\nBtan Oil ot N J -_\t\nUnion   Pacific   \t\nUS   Rubber   \t\nUS Steel       M\n_tn;\n10\n158V4\n3-1,\n43%\n_!>',\u00bb\n1-H\n38\n65 Vi\n1111)1,\n411\",\nTORTURES OF\nringworm, athlete', toot and other rtln Irrlt.-\nUon. with Ellk'e Ointment No. 6.\npreemption ot noted \u00bbkln .pec-\nlallit Itch relieved promptly\nskin healed quickly or money refunded II00, S3 00 Hall order.\nfilled promptly order today from\nenik'a Medicine Co. Dept. 43. 8\"*-\nRtoon, ..ask\nTHE CIGARETTE DIAGNOSED\"\nBy scientists, doctors, teachers,\nJudge-. In a pamphlet every boy,\ngirl and parent should, read. People\nihould know the unvarnished truth\nabout this Intrusive, consequential,\npomiwus. uns.voury, yet moat popular character In the community, his\nhonor, Judas Cigarette. Sample copy\n10c. 8 for 25c. 40 for S1.00. Wm.\nCarter, 546 W 12th Ave.. Vancouver.\nBC. \t\nNBW AND USED AUTO PARTS. NEL-\n\u00bbn Auto Wrecking and Oar.ge.\nTOR AUTOMOBILE PARTS\nCity Auto Wrec.er.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nHICKS GIVE\nPOUl.TK.   HA18\u2122\"',,\ntut1 VOIR 1M8 'Oh..\u2122\nOPERATIONS NOW I\nOOD poultry flock Is ALWAYS a\nKir. source of revenue.\nhtve been supplying our customers\n'qOOD chicks tor a quarter cl\na century,\nyours NOW for  1M8  and\nremember\u2014\nTi KSl'LTS THAT COUNT-\nWrlte tor prlcei\nft*jmp&,Seolat)\nsjottt: uiusic! Praun   u  0.\nFor Sale\nLarge House, 4 bedrooms, very\nsuitable lor smfll tt J \"Cnrt\nsuites. PBrt caah J>jJ\\J\\J\nor might accept a small house\nas part payment.\nTw.-storey house, S bedrooms,\ngood location. ClOOCn\nPriced at f_L_LjU\n$250 cash and balance as rent,\nAn old house, close ln, needs\nsome  repairs, 11500  on  terms\nCash  price\nls\nList your properties with us, we\ncan often get you cash, as we have\na number of clients with cash to\nInvest.\nrHONE Mt\nC. W. Appleyard\n&Co.\n$1300\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST\u2014POINTER DOO. UOHT WITH\nlarge brown marking, on right \u00ablde;\nBn.llei brown marking, on left\naide; bead has white centre strip\nadd brown side.. Round brown leather cellar with licence 188. Phone\n832-R3 or return to 158 Reaervolr\n8t., Tr_H, B.C.\nLOST-BLACK CLUB BAD WITH\ncanvas cover. Nam. on bag\u2014Paul J.\nFuller. Abbey. Sask. Person finding\nplease return to Stirling Hotel.\nLOST - DARK GRAY GELDING,\nwhite mane. On right hip brand\nT.E. Jamea Popow, Shoreacres.\nLOST-WALLPT. REO. CARD, NOTES\n.nd keys near Hood's. Ph. woods.\n838-X3\t\nFOR SALE, MISCELUNEOUS\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG. Nov. 18 (CP) \u2014 Or.ln\nquotation.:\nOpen   High   Low Clo..\nRYE:\nDec.            111\u00ab4    IHH    HI1*\" H3*\nMay   109%    110%    1M% HO'4\nJuly    107        107%     106% 107%\nOATS:\nNOV     6 IVi      \u2014          \u2014 \u2014\nDee.      61%      -         \u2014 \u2014\nMay       51%     \u2014         \u2014 \u2014%\nJuly     50       \u2014        \u2014 \u2014\nBARLEY:\nNov     64%     \u2014         \u2014 \u2014\nDec     64%     \u2014         \u2014 \u2014\nMay      64%     \u2014        \u2014 \u2014\nJuly     62        \u2014        \u2014 \u2014\nCASH PRICES:\nOats: 2 feed 81: 8 feed 49; other\ngrade. 81%.\nRye- 1 C.W. 1.12%; 2 C.W. 1.12%;\n8   C.W    1.07%:   rej.  3   C.W.   1.00%;   4\nC.W. 1 06%: track 1.12%\nBarley: All\n64%.\nMore Than 200,000\nPrisoners\nSince D-Day\nAT 31st ARMY OROUP HEADQUARTERS, Nov. II (AP)-Field\nMarshal Montgomery's British and\nCanadian armies hare captured a\ngrand total of 189,926 prisoners since\nD-day last June 0, it Waa disclosed\ntoday by a 21st army group spokesman.\nIn addition, it was announced\nthat French Maquis hava taken\nmore than 20,900 prisoners, swelling the bag to considerably more\nthan 200,000.\nLt.-Gen. Crerar's First Canadian\narmy held a slight edge ot Li-Gen.\nDempsey's Britiah Second army,\nwith a total ot 1,897 officers and\n93,275 other ranka captured, compared with 1,278 officers and 93,279\nother ranka seized by the Britiah\narmy.\nBetween November 8 and No-\nvemberlO the Canadians captured\n2,822 prisoners and the British 987,\nthe spokesman said.\nNBUON DAILY N!WJ, TUISDAY, NOV. 14, 1944 - It\niiiiiiiiiiiimitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nB.C'S ROLL\nOF HONOR\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIK llllllllllllll\nOFFICER* '\nKilled In action\nWllllama, Horace Palmer, Major,\nVictoria.\nWarrant Officers, N.C.O.'s and Men\nKilled In action\nHogan, William Walter, Cpl., North\nKamloops.\nDied '\nJack, Horton Cameron, Cadet, Victoria.\nSeverely wounded\nBylyk, William, Pte., Grindrod.\nWounded\nBrown,   Maurice   Donald,   Onr.,\nChUllwack.\nWounded\nBaker, Gordon Harold, Cpl., Chase.\nSilvey, Stanley Telford, Pte., Eg-\nmont\nCalgary Livestock\nOALQART, Not. t\u00ab (CP)\u2014Weekend\nreceipts: 1239 cattle, 154 calve., 71\nhogs, 629 sheep.\nHoga sold last week at H6.36 for\nGrade A at 'yards and pjanta. Sows\nt9.10-C9.2S.llva weight at yard, and\nplanta.       *\nOoqd lambs 111.26; oommon tc medium 6.80-9.00.\nOood to choice butoher steers 10.60-\n11.00; oommon to medium 9.00-10IS\nOood to choice butcher heifers 9.00-\n9.75; common to medium 8.00-B.50.\nOood oows 7.26-7.80; oommon to\nmedium 6.00-7.00.\nOood bulls 8.78-6.00; common to\nmedium 9.00-9.65.\nCannera and cutter. 2.76-6.00.\nSlightly Wounded\nHenschke, Gordon Victor, Tpr.,\nVernon.\nDuffy, John James, Pte., North\nVancouver.\nVeterans Out\natNakusp\nService\nNAKUSP, B. C\u2014 JUmembrmnca\nDay service waa held on Saturday\nmorning ln the Legion HaU. Rev. F.\nM.B. Gilbert of the Anglican Church\nand Rev. W. K. O. Dovey were ln\ncharge. The Rev. Gilbert spoke ot\nthe courage and devotion of the\nmen who had sacrificed their Uvea\nthat the people might have peace.\nThe veterans were out ln thl]\nforce and the local boys brigade also\nmarched from the Legion Hall to\nthe Cenotaph where wreaths were\nplaced. Two minutes' silence was observed, the Last Post sounded, and\nthe names of the 1814-18 fallen were\nread trom the cenotaph aa follows:\nFrank Benton, Marvin Bowes, Peter Bofrant, William Cleas, E. Mer-\nvln Edwards, Charles T. Gregory,\nErnest Hall, Walter Hoare, John\nIon, Alec James, Charles Jeffries, C.\nRamsden, Frank Le Barge, William\nMarsland, Alfred Moul, Eric Stokes,\nFred Swires, Hugh Taylor, Horace\nWaterfleld, Alfred Mosely, Samuel\nReld, Robert Stobo, Joseph Robinson, Frank Chatfield Howett\u2014 and\nthose In 1944\u2014John H. Benton, Robert Steenhoff, Frank Green and Ernest Shelling.\nWE HAVE\nSAWDUST\nSLABWOOD\nind\nPLANER ENDS\nALL LENGTHS\nImmediate Delivery\nPHONE 185 or 537L1\nR. A. PATERSON\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nBH1P OS TOUR SCRAP METALS OR\nIron Any quantity Top prloe. paid\nActlre Trading Company. 916 Pow\n.11 St.. VareouTer. B C.\t\nWANTED - GOOD CLEAN COT-\nton rass, oot lea. than 13 inches\nsquare. Bc lb. F03_, Nelson Dally\nNew. \t\nOur\nCHRISTMAS CARDS\nare now ready We were fortun-if\nIn our purchases and have a varied\nselection to choose from. Sold in\nlets of 2 dozen only, printed with\nyuur name and address Rejaonaol-\nprlce. Write lor samples to Nelson\nDally News, Christmas Card Dept.\nNelaon. B C.\nNorwegian waters provide good\nfishing for cod, herring, mackerel,\np-.de.\"at celling price. I \u00abP\u2122t, flat-fish, trout, salmon, perch,\npike, grayling and minnow.\nWjaJikd, jAmdL . . .\nWounded, remaining on duty\nGuselle, John Harold Worley, Sgm.\nVancouver.\nCf so, Gordon Joieph, Pte., Van-\ncouver.\n.....  u, Robert Earl, Pte., Victoria.\nMechalskl, David, Pte., Vernon.\nRobinson, freeman Keith, Sgt.,\nVancouver.\nSeverely wounded\nThorarinson, William Maxwell,\nCpl., New Westminster.\nMcGunlgal, Wilfred Laroy, Sgt.,\nSteveston.\nInjured\nGibbons, Leonard Eric, Pte., Victoria.\nLOST \u2014 CHILD'S RED WHEELBAR-\nrow. Fas on. broken leg. Phone\n31S-R. \t\nWANTI0-A RADIO IN OOOD CON-\ndltlon. I. Rouller, 30\u00ab Morgan^\nUSED  FRENCH   SEAL  OR   HUDBON\nSeal fur coats. Phone 960\nPhone 269\n392 Baker St.\ni SALB-OOOU WORKING, WE-L\nThed mare and gelding,  land*\n.   old    Weight   1300   each.   Any\nnubia   otler   accepted. Apply\n1  Boollnolf,  RnbaomJJ-C;\t\njXle^sTx milk cows and\nheifer.   William   Boiling.   10-\nlit Ranch  Silverton.\t\n\"TOWS   fOR\"~SAI__.   HAMP\nJii\" Elwyn St., Nelson\t\njJTKD-Al MOS   LEGHORN 1\"\"-\nPhnne 364-I-!\ni 11 AL5\n\u20144 ROOM HOUSJ\ntth modern convenience\", hy re-\n,ble tenants. Boi BOMD.IIy New.\n^fgnSlMEDIAITLV BV ADULTS\nor 8 room bouse or .ulte. APl'IJ\nII S8-0 Dally Ne_we_\t\njnro__ToK 4 ROOM HOUSE OR\nig.low. Apply\nSEE t'S IP YOU NEED A OOOD Accident or slr_n_sa Policy. C. W\nAppleyard   383 Baker St.\t\n^SPECIALIZE IN FARM LANDS\n8e. our list\u2014 Rob\u00abrt_on Re.lty Oo\nLtd    121 Wtrd 3t\t\nTHREE LOTS\" AND BASEMENT FO-l\nsale. Phone 827-L.\nWILL PAY CASH FOR OOOD PIANO\nBox 2S13 Dallv New '\nSHIP YOUR HIDES TO J. P. MOROAN\nNelson. B.O.\nROOM AND BOARD\nLONDON. Nov. 13 (CP-Router)\u2014Argentine rails were firm today, reflected an Argentine Government\nspokesman's statement concerning an\nagreement tor th better-working of\nthe British-owned railways In that\ncountry.\nNEW YORK\u2014Led by Alrcrafta and\nMotors, the stock market today suffered its first average stumble \u00ablnce\nNov. 3.\nCanadian Issue, were easier but\nLake Shore gained H. C-P-R eased V,\nand Seaerams and Hiram Walker lost\ny,. Dome wa. unchanged.\nCHICAOO-The grain futures market was fairly itesdy. showing fractionally higher In all pits at the\nclose. Whety .nd oats showed the\ngreatest advsnee.\nAt the opening corn was weak dropping ott m much as % cent from Friday's close, but moderate buying by\ncommission houses on the break, held\nthe m.rket fairly steady.\nWheat was steady during tbe dafi\ntr.de. Thar, wm wiling ol th. Decern-\nber contract against buying of Msy.\nbut the trade was of smsll volume.\nRye was fairly active and prtCM\nheld near the day's high point, and\n(rs'tlonslly higher than Fridays\nclo ie Traders said It wss \u00bb case \u00b0' m\nselling presaurr rather than any great\ndemand for the grain,\nMONTREAL - Papers moved down\nfrom the Metier levels established In\nthe brisk trading ln the section at the\nend of laat week  Tinds ln other dlvl-\n, slons were miked. ....\nFOR SALE-MASON RISCH PIANO, Nnr,nd, did better in Metal, and\ndark oak Mission Cabinet, price I HudMn Bav Mining poeted a decrease\n13.5 00. A beautiful and high class ! \u201e__,, -.\u201e, ahsad In Western Oils and\nInstrument. Apply Boi 3030 Dally\nNews\nFOH SALE-ONE BAR MIRROR AND\nCabinet. 19 ft 0 In. I 16 ft ; S It.\n10 Inch., high, with 6 drawers, and\n6 cupboards. Mirror hu two side\npanels 21 i 31 lnche., the centre\nglass I. 8 ft. x 4 ft. 6 ln. Bar Is maple\nhardwood In eioellent condition.\nUndoubtedly one of the most beautiful bar c.blnets ln B.C. Price\nrea-sonable. Mrs. A. Calgaro, 1213\nHall Mines Rd , Nelson, B.C.\nTORONTO\u2014In dull trading the Toronto Stock market netted a margin\not losses over gains today. A slight\nfirming tendency waa ln evldenoe In\nthe final hour. Turnover was comp_r-\natlvely small at about 328,000 shares.\nThe bright spots ln gold list Included Wright - Hargrea.es, Dome,\nCochenour Wlllana, Conlarum, Preston, Negus and Transcontinental Resources.\nFinal prloes were down for several\nBass Metals, Including Smelters and\nFalconbrldge while chromium, No-\nrand, and Labrador Improved narrowly.\nWINNIPBO\u2014United state, buyers\nwere active, taking 500,000 buahela of\nCanadian Ilax and 136,000 bushel, of\nmalting grade, barley.\nDenllngs were Inclined to he light,\nchiefly confined to locals and commission houses but American Interest, were on both side, of the msrket\nIn a minor way.\nVANCOUVER\u2014Both Mine, and Oils\nrn.de . few Mattered gain.. Total\nturnover amounted to 68,395 share..\nMissing\nBowles, John William, Pte., Mre.\nGrace N. Bowles (wife), Balfour.\nSmillie, McKelvey Verdun, Pte.,\nMilner.\nStlnson, Harry Handera, R.8.M,\nMrs. Dorothy L. Stlnson (wife), Box\n2, Rossland.\nAustralia Stops\nSending Men for\nTraining in Canada\nOTTAWA, Nov. 15 (CP)-Aus-\ntralla has stopped sending men to\nthe Commonwealth Air Training\nstream in Canada and her 2,000 men\natlU In training will eventually go\nto operations ln Europe and the\nSouthwest Pacific, Sir William Glas\ngow, Australian High Commissioner\nsaid today.\nThe.majorlty would probably return to Australia for eventual service In the Pacific.\nTry New Secret\nof Keeping\nEggs Fresh\nSfRATHROY, Ont., Nov. 13 (CP)\n\u2014Three men who believe they have\ndiscovered \"the secret by which\nthe Scandinavian countries were\nable to supply Britain with fresher\neggs than Canada's are at work in\nnearby Melbourne trying to prove\nthat eggs dipped In wax stay fresh.\nThis week a test batch of 330\ncases Is being dipped at St. Marys.\nThe eggs will be shipped to Britain\nwhere they will be subjected to rigorous tests.\nMelbourne's three experimenters\nsaid that of eggs J6-days-old which\nhave been kept unprotected in room\ntemperatures ranging from 55 tn\n75 degrees, some not given the wax\ntreatment show big air cells and\ndarkening yolks when candled. In\nthe eggs that have been treated,\nevaporation has not occurred and,\nor so says Stewart Campbell, one\nof the trio, the eggs taste Just as\ngood as newly-laid ones.\nBurglars Escape\nWith $1,839\nFrom Coast Store\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 13 (CP) -\nBurglars escaped with. $1839 in cash\nand C-fecks when they blew the safe\nat Kidd Brothers Ltd., over the\nweekend, police reported today.\nPhotographs\nWANTED \u2014 ROOM AND BOARD BY\nHigh School girl In return tor work\nBox 4*67 Daily New.\t\nROOM  AND  BOAHD CI_OHE   IN.  PH\n653-R. \t\nFARM, GARDEN & NURSERY\nBULBS. NARCISSI, PAPERWHITE.\nOrandlffora. for Indoor growing 8\nUrge bulb, po.tp.ld for 11.00 Kuyper's Bulbs H.talc, B.C. W. grow\nthe bust only.\nPIPE - FITTINOS - TUBES SPECIAL\nlow price. Active Trading Co. \u2022!\u2022 j\nPowrll St    Vancouver.  B C\nA~ QUANTITY OF HEN MANURE\nfor sale. Apply A. Bsrne., Willow\nPoint\t\nPORTABLE REUINOTON TYP--\nwrlter for s\u00bble Box 3911 Dally Nrwi\nRUt-UK-l \"STAMPS FOR MARKINU\nFruit Boxes   Neiton D.lly News\t\nSEWING MACHINE IN OOOD OR-\nder  Pay le\u00bbs at the Ark Store.\n,JU1C     iv|___    \u00bb__\"\u2022\u2022 -\nMines, both Blscc* .nd J. M. Consolidated rhalked up lo_.ee.        \t\nTORONTO STOCKS\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n_\u25a0 TIM\nBox   _\u00bb1-   D\u00ab\"J\n-jilXM APARTMENT MilTABtJS\nbachelor   Apply Club Hotel\t\nflflntt Saily ftpttia\nTslepbon. 1M\nhossified Advertising Rote\nI He p\u00abr Mb. Ott tnarrUon\nI 44c per lln\u00ab P\" week  '8 crrfc-\ni insertions lor o\u00abl of 41\nl|l 43 . line \u00ab month  i-\u00ab times)\n[Minimum 2 line, p\" Insertion\n\u25a0 Box   number,   lie   \u00ab>\"    l\"**\ni .ny numb-r of time*.\nPUBLIC ILEOAD NOTICES.\nTENDrllS.   EIT\n|t\u00abo per lib' 'I\"1 meert.on. and\n! ..rh sul_wiu.nl Insertion\nIaLL ABOVE RATES I.TUB 10\"t\nPR PROMPT PAYMENT\ngrrriAi. i.ow ratib\ni-rommerrlel . 11 n . t I o n s\nHint  foe ISf lor  .nr  rr<l\"U'd\nvl,_\u25a0_ of line, for six dejs. p\"7-\nf In a'hanif.\ngUB-CRtPTlON RATES\noopy  _  \u2022     0\u00bb\ncarrier, pen- we\u00abk\nad\u00bbsnc.     \u2014\ncirrlet, per ye_r \u2014\n_ olllilrle N.ISOn!\nmonth     \u2022    \"N*\nmonth.        200\nmonth.     * (w\nTttt *<*<\nbor* t.ir. .pply  In  r.ned*\nfed St.Its end  UnlUd   Klnf-\nto subecrl-.re Uelng outside\nltt rtrtltr  area\nhere end u, Csnede wher.\nI    postage    ll    required\nlh #1 AO    three\nIKinthe MOO,\nACROSS\n1. Leaps\n6 Escapes\nI slang)\n0 Verbal\n10 Ostrich-like\nbird (vsr )\n11 Arrange in\na line\n12 Panla\nlt Shut\n1\u00bb Likely\n17 Weight\n18 Cornea!..\n3 Kettles\n4. Tired\n6 Support\n\u00ab Wine receptacle\n7 Flat-topped\nhill\n8 Preaume\n11 Dtvtelonof\na play\n13 Scatter\nIV June bug\n19 Negative\nreply\nJl Cold i Her I   20 River\nlEur.)\n27 Little\nchildren\ntt. Erbium\n(sym.)\n24. Office r*.\naulatanta\n15. Sundial\nIndicate re\n2\u00ab Part of\n\"to be\"\n2- Close to\n30 Old horsa\n11. Cowardly\nIt. Bewitches\nK. Not moving\n16. Male adult\n\u25a1\u25a1ao ..aaaaa\ni-juuiauu   _\u00a3]__\u25a0__]\nt'jjmiii-tu\nMijaUt! __-_!!-____\ntea '.I0.--J ana\nami- u*_):*->].,-i__\n[wnigr-ui r..__uu\nidi must :<j..h__uu\n83110. E3H_1\nREEO ORGAN IN OOOD CONDITIO\nApply Box 28in D.lly New..\n(TOOD USED PIANO FOR SALE. AP- j Falconbrldge  Nlcke\nMINES\nAnglo-Huronl.n   \t\nBase  Metal. Mining\nBtaltle Gold Mine.\t\nBldgo-.d  Klrkland   ....\nBufialo Ankerlte \t\nCas'.le-Tre'.heway   \t\nCentral Patricia \t\nChromium M __ S     .\nConMlldated 11*1\n[>3me Mine. \t\nE_st  M.UrUc\n!:;;\nBox 280-  D.lly New.\nFOR  SAI-E\u2014BOYS  BKATES.  SIZE  \u00ab\n1110 B\"_ttv Ave \t\nLADIES'    S1VER    FOX    FUR.    NEW\nPhone IU1-L.\t\nHard Rock  Oold .\nHolllnger\nHurts.'!! Bay M A 8\nOpternat Nickel .   ...\nKrrr-Addlron  \t\nKlrkland Uke    \t\nUke Shore Mines\nI-am.que  Oontac  ...\n .  - i Little I<ong L*c\t\nCAPAnlJ.   MDY   WILL  DO  DRK*8-   M.cl. Cockehutt\nmaking   alteration,   .nd   children's ' Madsen  Red Lake\nsewing    Excellent   r.Ierencee.   Mre\nWilliam Waring, Bl5 Observatory 8t\nPhone 761-Y.\nBUSINESS  OPPORTUNITIES\nWill Be\nBsterS.y'e Aeewet\n58. Strike\n40. Exist\n42. Girls name\n43.1'lsce\nVANCOUVER\nMINf*.\nB-.V-i.i-*\nSTOCKS\nHid        A\u00abk\n111\nIS OO\n. inntilli.   S< oo\none ye.aJllMX)\n22 Native of\nTyrol\n14 Exchangl\npremium\n17 Concoct\n28 Example\n32 First not*\nof srsle\n33 Asterisk\n34 Masrnlin.\npronoun\n17 Resort town\nIPrus I\n19 Native lead\nsulphide\n41 Fishes\n44  Femsle (ox\n43 Part of a\nchurch\nIS Alw.yi\n47 Petty\n!juar!el\n48 Sel ot boxes,\netc\nIKlVt'N\n1 Shout to\nI Constellation\nrRYPTOqrOTT^A cryptogT-n giwtstloi\nC rVWVIT* RPDVD TAD Q J C M V TW\nr V T W Q A P P B N M L MNfRTDLVZ M V J-\nV*  V T R R V.\nR,ltird.y'. rr)Tt'><l\u00bb<,,''l C.FNHI8 DOES WHAT IT M't'bT,\nTALENT   It,**  WHAT  IT CAN    LTTTON.\nMalartlc  Oold\nMclntyrs-Porctipln.\nMcKen.le  Red lske\nMining Corp\nHlplMlng   Mining\nSor.nd. \t\nNornietal       \t\nOmega  (Md\nPaoioor P(\u00bbrcuyne ..\nperron O >ld\npickle  Crow  Cl. Id  . .\nPowell Kan Oold\nPre.ion T.s.,: I>':i.e\nSen Antor.o Cold .\ntherrltt  CV'rdon .    ..\nBlscof   Oolrt\nHleden  Melartlc\ngulllesn Cnn,\nflvlvenlte\nWtlxh:  lUrgresvi\nAunor\nr. >id\nOlen\nervlll.\nn Oste\nT   K\nI 30\nU'eej.   Ro\nrrens C\nnil -J\ntmt\nel Re\nr,\\\nIMH sritHI e\nCipltel   Fat\ni ai\nISO\n<\u00bb\u00ab\ni ,i\ni tti\n10W JONES AVERAGES\nin lnd I4S-7\n,fflll J'\"\nft    .10   r,,_.f\ntl     21    ..frl\nInter  rntrolenm   .\nR.'vsllte\nreus  Cimillsn\nVermllsts\nIMII *<rKIM   .\nBell Telepho,,e\nft-rwers   A-   Ill.tlllers\nBC  Power  \"*,'\n(\"en   Car  *   FrmndrT\nI'sn   Malting\nlien  Peclflr Rli\nOomlelon  TU'dge\nDlltlllere  tseegreme\nFord   -I  Censde   \"A'1\nHemllton   Br'dee\nImperlel   Tobecco   .\nM Tt-esl    l',\"~r -\nltl\n.14\n1.81\nIT*\n5 50\n1.08\n1 08\n12,0\n81 .5\n'_!\u2022! I I)\n1 47\n(90\n.1)1\n10 28\n31 00\nS3 \u00ab5\n1 I '15\nI 0S\nn u\n8 35\n1 35\n1 H.I\n1 M\n3 55\n88 00\n1 74\n3 10\n3 30\n57 0(1\n83\n.28\n1 30\n1 IS\n3 no\nl nn\n3 55\ni ' \u00ab*l\n.70\ntl\",\nIS'7\n1 47\n1 58\n? m\n10 75\n4 85\n5 an\nI as\nS3\nI 15\nI ss\n13%\n7 80\nI 18\n' I J\n3 SS\n1 70\n87\nI\"\nIS .15\n\u25a0i: s^\n10 00\nI 35\nIU,\n181\nSli\n10\nWelcomed\nFor the Nelson Daily News\nAnnual Pictorial Edition\nI eel    C'l\nU  Clll\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-'-.\n10\nass\nirt\nThis Interesting edition of ths Nelson Daily News, which\nbecomes more popular and is more widely distributed even\/\nyear, will be published as usual at the end of January next.\nPages of photographs are now being prepared for it. Pictures that are illustrative of life In Kootenay help to make the\nedition a great force in advertising this district. Consequently,\nthose who send them in perform a real service for Kootenay.\nPictures of Summer Life\u2014Gardens, fruit orchards, bathing,\nswimming, fishing; Pictures of Winter Sports\u2014Skiing, Skating,\nsnow scenes; Pictures' of happy outdoor scenes; anything, in\nfact, that will give outsider? a good Idea cf the attractive conditions under which we live in this part of British Columbia will\nbe enioyed by the thousands of readers of this Annual Pictorial\nEdition.\nPlease send In pictures early. Preparatory work prior to\npublication involves considerable time.\nAll  photos or  negatives\nreturned to the sender.\nbe carefully  handled  and\nAddress pictures, with descriptive matter, to\nPhoto Editor\nDaily News Annual Pictorial Edition\nNelson, B.C.\n-  .\u2022\n ip,ii,WM.li*f\u00bbl^w\u00ablf\u00abl,.l^\n18 \u2014 NEUON DAILY NIWS, TUESDAY, NOV. 14, 1944\n^m?*\u00a3\nANDY HARDY'S,\nBLONDE TROUBLE\nmm lata STONE \u2022 Md* MONEY\nfa, HOIDEH \u2022 Sit* HADEN\nlt.lt. tURVHU \u2022 Htriwt WARSHAIJ.\nON THB \u00abAMI PROGRAM\nPETE SMITH'S \"MOVIE\nPESTS.\"\nLatest World Newt.\nComplete Showi\n7:00 \u2022 M7\nCIVIC\nAl Least 18 Canadian Infantry\nRegiments in Schelde Action\nLONDON, Nov. IS (CP) - At\nleast 18 Canadian infantry regiments\ni reconnaissance regiment, and some\ntanks of a Western Canada unit participated in the campaign to drive\nthe Germans from the Schelde approaches to Antwerp, a recapituat-\ntion showed tonight.\nThe units included the following\ninfantry battalions, all of the 2nd\nCanadian Division:\nThe South Saskatchewan Regiment, of Weyburn, Sask.\nHoyal Hamilton Light Infantry.\nThe Essex Scottish of Windsor,\nOnt.\nThe Royal Regiment of Canada, of\nToronto.\nThe Toronto Scottish.   \u25a0\nThe Calgary Highlanders.\nThe Black Watch, of Montreal.\nLe Regiment de Maisonneuve.\nLeg Fusiliers Mont-Royal.\nThese Third Division Infantry battalions were engaged.\nThe Highland Light Infantry of\nGait, Ont.\nThe Canadian Scottish, of Victoria\nThe Royal Winnipeg Rifles.\nThe Reglna Rifles.\nThe North Nova Scotia Highlanders of Amherst, N. S.\nThe North Shore New Brunswick\nRegiment of Newcastle. N. B.\nThe Queen's Own Rifles of Can-\nads, of Toronto.\nLe Regiment de la Chaudlere, of\nLake Megantic, Que.\nThe Stormont, Dundas and Glen-\nHive Hie Job Done Ri_E.it\nSee\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER   PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nUt Ui Winterize Your Car\nAntifreeze, Lubrication,\nTune-up for Winter Starting\nAll work guaranteed.\nKOKANEE SERVICE\nE. A. CAMPBELL & Co.\nChartered Accountant!\nAuditors\nMl Baker St Phone JSS\nEMPIRE CLEANERS & DYERS\nWe Call For and Deliver\nPHONE 288\nMen's and ladiei CI OC\nWinter Coats *__.-_<_\nMen's, ladies' vu:':, ladies' Qflf-\nDresses, plain     '\"V\nKEEP   YOUR\nftJS.'m        ELECTRICAL\nAPPLIANCES\nIN GOOD REPA_R\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO.\nPhone 260 S74 Baker It\n*K5\u00abSSK5S$KSSSSa5_S^'i5-iM\u00bbKS\nROSCOE\nAND\nFOURNI ER\nOARAQEMIN\nSK*. CiliET AUTO SERVICl\nPhon. 123 Nelion. B C\nLarsons Lunch\n(Close to Greyhound Depot)\nOpen 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.\nHome Cooked Meals\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nMed Arts Blk\nPHONE 25\ngarry Highlanders, of Cornwall, Ont.\nIn addition, tht 8th Reconnaissance Regiment, ot Swift Current,\nSask., was engaged and one company of the Royal Montreal Regiment The Western unit which contributed some tanks to the operations on South Beveland so far\nhas not been Identified.\nRoss Munro, Canadian Press War\nCorrespondent, reported in a field\ndispatch last week that every Canadian combat unit on the Western\nfront saw action In the campaign,\nbut added lt was principally an infantry show.\nThe Schelde eampalgn covered\nthree sectors\u2014the German-held pocket South of the Schelde Estuary,\nbounded on the South by the Leopold Canal; the Mainland sector ex\ntending Northward from Antwerp's\ndock area to Bergen Op Zoom; and\nthe Schelde Estuary islands of the\nSouth Beveland, North Beveland\nand Walcheren.\nSome of the units named fought\nin more than one of these sectors.\nIn the Schelde pocket sector the\nRoyal Winnipeg Rifles, the Regina\nRifles, The Canadian Scottish and\nthe Company from the Royal Mon\ntreal Regiment fought their way\nacross the Leopold Canal. The Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry Highlanders, the North Nova Scotia\nHighlanders and the Highland Light\nInfantry made the original seaborne landings ln the pocket near\nHoofdplaat, and fought in the pocket\nuntil the last resistance by the German 64th Division was eliminated\nThe Queen's Own Rifles, Le Regi.\nment de la Chaudiere and the North\nNew Brunswick Regiment also\nfought in this region.\nIn the country North of Antwerp\nthe R.H.L.I., the Black Watch, the\nEssex Scottsih, the Toronto Scottish,\nI_e Regiment de Maisonneuve, the\nSouth Saskatchewan Regiment and\nthe Calgary Highlanders were engaged.\nIn the fighting through the estuary Islands the Toronto Scottish,\nthe Royal Regiment of Canada, the\nR.H.L.I., the Essex Scottish, the\nBlack Watch, I* Regiment de Mais\nsoneuve, Les Fusiliers Mont-Royal\nthe 8th Reconnaissance Regiment,\nthe South Saskatchewans and the\nCalgary Highlanders took part. The\nBlack Watch led the initial attack\nin which a foothold was gained on\nthe Eastern end of Walcheren Island and the South Saskatchewans\nled the way across a canal which\nbisects South Beveland from North\nto South. The Toronto Scottish and\nthe 8th \"Recce\" unit In an unsched\nuied operation occupied North Beve\nland Island.\nLuson. with an area of 40,814\nsquare miles ls the largest of the\nPhilippine Islands.\nPRANK A. STUART\nwill be abient from the\ncity for a few days attending a directors' meeting in\nVancouver.\nFor General Contracting,\nBuilding and Repairs.\nN. H. NELSON\n80S Cherry St.\nVITA-MINERAL\nOVALS\nContaining Vitamins A, B, D\naril G wltn essential minerals.\nX splendid food supplement and\ntonic.\n100 Tablets $2.50\nMann, Rutherford\nDRUG CO.\nFit. Lt. Halcrow\nWins D.F.C.\nF. H. SMITH\nIf lt'i Electric\nPhone 666 151 Biker St\ntaaam\\A\\mm\u00bb*%*%mmt%e%*%maamaatkm\\aas,\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL     HOME\nAMBU1.ANCI URVICI\n\"Dlitlnctlva   runeral   Senrlct\"\n515  Kootenay  St Phone Ml\nPro Rec Classes\nNELSON ARMORIES, 315 Victoria Street\nCOMMENCING TODAY\nWOMEN\u2014Tuesdays, 7:30 to 10 pm.\nMEN\u2014Wednesdays, 7:30 to 10 a m,\nSaturdays, 2 to 4 p.m.\nBOYS\u2014Mondays, 4 to 6 p.m.\nGIRLS -Wednesdays, 4 to (. pm,\nFIX LT. HALCROW\nVANCOUVER, NOT. 18 (CP)\u2014Fit,\nLt. A. F. Halcrow of Penticton, B.C.,\nhaa been awarded the Distinguished\nPlying Cross for meritorious service\noverseas, Western Air Command announced today. Pit. Lt. Halcrow now\nIs on leave at his home ln Penticton,\nPit. Lt. \"(Bandy) Halcrow Is a son\nof Sgt. and Mrs. David Halcrow of\nPenticton and was a Nelson High\nSchool student during the period his\nfather was with the Provincial Police\nhere.\nIn July dispatches from R.C.A.F.\nHeadquarters In London told how\nPit. Lt Halcrow contributed to \"one\nof the moot brilliant achievements of\nthe R.C.A.F. ln the history of ths war\nln a day-lontr raid over Normandy\nJune 23\" when he shared ln destroying a Pocke Wulf near Bayeujt. Hr\nwas flying with a Spitfire squadron.\nEarlier In the month he was credited with shooting down an \u00abnemy\nplane on a day when Canadian airmen\naccounted for 26 Narls In one day.\nHe was a member of the Nejson\nKilties pipe band while in Nelson.\nAfter graduating from High School he\nwon a scholarship In engineering at\na Colorado university. He came here\nwith h!s family from Cranbrook.\nTwo brothers, David and Gordon,\nwere also Nelson High School students and both are In the services.\nPro-Rec (lasses\nGet Under Way\nat Armory Today\nPro Rec classes, popular health-\nbuilding recreation centres, will get\nunder way at the Nelioh Armory\ntonight. Courses for women, men,\ngirls and boys will be held.\nThe women will lead off with a\nclaaa starting tonight at 7:30 o'clock.\nMen's classes will be held each Wednesday evening and Saturday afternoon, while the boys will have\nclasses each Monday after school\nhours, and the girls each Wedijes-\nday.\nEd Kelter, Pro Rec Drrector, will\nhandle the m\"en's and boys' classes\nassisted in boxing instruction by\nRoss Young. Louis Hanic, Leader,\nwill aid with the boys' course. Mrs.\nFrank Phillips will conduct the women's and girls' classes.\nPro Rec activities, lt is expected,\nwill be moved shortly to the Recreation Hall at the Civic Centre, now\noccupied by Boeings Aircraft of\nCanada.\n\"I'll Be There\",\nSays Raliton\nOTTAWA, Nov. IS (CP) - Col.\nJ. L. Ralston, who resigned as Defence Minister Nov. 1, said tonight\nhe will attend the Commons session\nstarting Nov. 22.\nCol. Ralston had planned to start\na vacation at the end of this week,\nbut decided to attend the sitting after announcement by Prime Minister Mackenzie King tonight that\nthe House would resume its session\non Nov. 22, instead of Jan. 31.\n\"Yes, I'll be there; I'm the Liberal\nMember for Prince (Prince Edward\nIsland) Constituency am I not?\" said\nCol. Ralston, answering a reporter's\ninquiry.\nThere are about 2500 specie* of\nlizards.\n-Iimillllllllll-IUIMIHIIIHIHII.Milium\nNEWS OFTHE DAY\nRates: 22c line, 27c line black face\ntype, larger type rates on request\nMinimum two llnei 10% dli-\ncount for  prompt payment\niiiimiiiuitiiiiiiiiimiiiiiMiiiiii.iiiiin\nMany new titles ln 2fic books now\nat Walt's News.\nLO.DJI. monthly meeting 2 30 p.m\nLegion today.\nH.   A.   Saunders.   Chimney   Bweop\nPhont 8^)7.\nPurnlshed house for rent 420 Mill\nSt. Phone 339-L.\nClubman   grand  old  rich  smoking\ntobacco 19c a pouch at Valentines.\nKINSMEN MEETING\nTonight Hume Hotel. 6:15 sharp.\nLet   u*   change   the   oil   In   your\nwasher. Beattye Service, Phone Bl.\nJunior Rod and Oun Club meeting\nit Nelson Transfer tonight at 7:30.\nDon't   wait   until   after   tht   fire\nINSURE  NOW.   Blackwood   Agency\nPor J. R. Watklns quality product*,\ncall Spencer C. Oilman, 230 Buker St\nArlada Cheese ls free from all adulteration, and Is made from full cream\nmilk.\nfor Bale: Beatty Vacuum Cleaner.\nPhone 957-Y or call 810 Observatory\nStreet\nNakusp Institute\nContributes to\nOthoa Scott Fund   \u2022\nNAKUSP, B. C-The Nakusp Women's Institute met Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. C, S\nLeary. Ten members were present,\nMrs. A. B, S. Stanley presiding and\nMrs. M. Embree as Secretary Treas\nured. The sum of $5 was voted to\nbe sent to the Salvation Army fund\nat Vancouver.\nA raffle is to be held for the annual Christmas W. I, fund, those in\ncharge of this effort are Mrs. A. E.\nFowler, Mrs. P. Jugg and Mrs. L,\nMorton.\nMrs. Parent, Sr., reported for the\nCemetery Committee and said cleaning up work was being done and\nthe levelling of the new part of\ngrounds was being undertaken under supervision of J. Taylor.\nIt was reported that the Othoa\nScott Fund total is over $8000 and\nthe interest for the past year is to\nbe used to help a boy from Burton,\nIt has been suggested to the Institute that each Institute should endeavor to give $17 to the fund so\nas to complete the objective of $10,-\n000. The Arrow Lakes District.\u2014\nArrow Park, New Denver, Nakusp,\nand Silverton have all made their\ncontributions.\nThe Vancouver report of V-Bun-\ndles was of great interest to Institute workers\u2014-6120 garments were\nshipped to Polish Relief, 11,385 to\nBritain in September and 26 garments were given to the Merchant\nNavy, Mrs, M. Embree, Secretary of\nthe W. I., gave her report of the\nyear's work. The sum of $519.89 had\nbeen raised while the expenditure\nshowed $476.58.\nMrs. C. S. Leary assisted by Mrs.\nFrank Yurik served tea. The program for the next meeting will be in\ncharge of Mrs O. Harper when the\nchildren of the members will do\nthe entertaining at a pre-Christmas\nconcert in the Parish Hall. Mrs. P,\nJupp reported for the local V-Bun-\ndles and said many bundles of\nclothing had been sent in for shipment.\nLONDON (CP) - The London\nGazette records that A.J.V.E.RC.\nM.A.T.D.   Camilleri   of   Eastleigh,\nHampshire, is to assume the name\nof Aurelius Joseph Cnmillin. Small\nCOMPLETES TOUB: Fit. Lt. Gordon Smith of Nelson has finished\nhis first tour ns a fighter pilot with\na score of three enemy planes destroyed and three damaged, m news\nrelease from an R.C.A.F. fighter\nwin j 1p Holland reports. He li\namong a gT**>\"P posted to non-operational duties atter fighting from\nfrom bases in England, Franct, Bel-\nglum and Holland under the command of Group Captain W. B. MacBrlen of Ottawa, the story said.\nFit. Lt. Smith, son of Mr. and Mra.\nB. B. Smith, Third street, was a\n\"Red Indian\" squadron pilot.\nHe won his wings and commission\nat the age of 19. His brother, Sgt.\nBob Smith, recently graduated aa a\npilot.\nI.W.A. Firm in\nStand Against\nCommunists\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 18 (CP)\u2014Members of the International Woodworker\nof America stand firm ln oppoaltlon\nto Communists, Fascists and Nazis ln\ntheir organization, E. B. Benedict of\nPortland, Financial Secretary, said In\nan Interview today.\n\"I came here to explain the posl.\ntlon of the International Union, and\nto reiterate the strong opposition to\nCommunists, Fascists and Nazis ln the\nUnion,\" said Mr. Benedict.\n\"It Is deplorable that members of\nour organization who obviously do\nnot represent the rank and file, are\nInsisting on dragging this Issue Into\nour local unions, ln Canada and the\nU.S.A. at a time when all our efforts should be devoted to winning\nthe war, and concentrated on improving hours, working conditions and\nwages for the Woodworkers.\n\"The International officers are not\nmembers of any political party, and\nfeel that our obligations Is to effectuate the program of our Union as\nenunciated ln convention, and the\nprogram of the C.I.O. and the Canadian Congress of Labor.\n\"The convention ratified an Interpretation of the International Woodworkers constitution that the Communist Political Association waa, In\nfact, the same organization aa the\nCommunist Party.\n\"Any member of the I,W_A. oharg-\ned with being a member of the Communist Party must be tried on those\ncharges and If found guilty then that\nmemher must be given an opportunity to withdraw from the Communist\nParty,\n\"Failure to withdraw from the\nCommunist Party forfeits their mem-\nI ben-hip ln the I.W.A,\"\nA petition has been made to head\nI office of International Woodworkers\nj of America at Portland, ore., calling\nfor a referendum vote to declda,lf the\nI membership will remove from the con-\nI stltutlon, the clauses which bar Communist.1.. Fascists and Nazis from the\norgan Ira tlon.\nHarold Prltchett, BC District President, snld that the way the constitution stands now, It could be abused\nby an officer who might brand a\nmember of one of the three parties\nand have him removed from the\nmembership rolls.\n\"We want a constitution adopted\nwhereby a certain process will be car-\nrled out If a person ls believed to be\ncausing disruption In the Union: the\nprocess to be, charges, trial by Jury\nand If guilty, expulsion\"\nAt the recent International convention of the I.W.A , here two member*\nof the Union In Washington were ex-\npelled as being members of the Communist Political Association ln the\nU-SA. At the same time the membership reaffirmed Its stand thit\nCommunists, Fascists and Natls not\nbe permitted membership in the\nUnion.\nCommerk Puck\nLeague Play\nOpens Tonight\nCommercial hockey opens at the\nCivic Centre anna tonight with tha\njuvenile aggregation tangling with\ntha \"Scott\" lineup. The teams were\nlined up Monday night and ara as\nyet unnamed. Until names are chosen they will be known aa the Juveniles, Scott and Malahoff teams.\nThursday Soott and Malahoff wiy\nclash and Nov. 31 Malahoff will meet\nJuveniles. The lineups:\nJuveniles\u2014J. Oeaby, J. Waldle, W.\nLudlow, D. Buchanan, J. Bone, R.\nWaaslck, J. Prestley. F. Boyer, L. Grlmwood, D. Morris, fl. Fisher, a. Avis,\nJ. Perrier, R. MacDonald, L. Choquette,\nD. Ross, J. Longden and MacMullln.\nSoott\u2014D. Scott, J. Kilpatrick, o.\nMacdonald, Conroy, F. Romano, N\nHucal. Hooper, R, French, D. Boomer.\nK. DeGlrolmo, J. Boyle and H. Potter.\nMalahoff\u2014W. Malahoff, Ty Culley.\nH. Haines. P. Hlelscher. 8. Lelnweber,\nR. Nash, K. Doyle, T. Romano, J.\nMilne, Bud Whitfield and J. Morrl-\naon.\nTrail Athlete\nBelieved Killed\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 18\u2014It has been\nofficially reported that Set. Air Gunner Howard (Brick) Edmund* Is believed killed, according to word received this morning by his parenta.\nMr. and Mrs. Fred Edmunds.\nSgt. Edmunds received his schooling\ntn Trait, where he was well-known\nfor his participation ln sports, especially hockey and baseball. When\nhe left school he worked for the\nCM AS. Co., of Canada, Ltd., hers before going to the Coast where he worked until he enlisted In the Air Force.\nSgt. Edmunds enlisted In the\nSpring of 1943 and went overseas last\nFall.\nAl Morris Buys\nNu-Woy Cofe\nin Creston\nKIMBERLEY, B. C. - A promin*\nent resident here for 15 years, active in all community enterprises,\nAl Morris has bought the Nu-Way\nCafe, in Creston and transferred his\nfamily to that point where they will\nmake their home in future.\nMr. Morris came here from Alberta in 1929 to join the staff of the\nMark Creek Store, with whom he\nhas been employed here ever since,\nin charge of display, window decorations, advertising and as a department manager.\nTime to start taking your\nHAUVER  OIL\nCAPSULES\nBach capsule equal to 4 tea-\nspoonfuls Cod Liver Oil.\nProtect  yourself against  coughs\nand colas.\n50 cap 95c\u2014100 cap $1.50\nSold only at vour l-.xnll Store\nCity Drug Co.\nBox 4-0\nPhona 84\nDraws lor Trail\nCurling Today\nTRAIL, B.C. Nov. 13\u2014 Pre-Seaaon\nBonBplel of the Trail Curling Club\nopens Tuesday, with 27 games scheduled, ln three draws, respectively at\n4, 6 and 8 p.m. As there are 60 rinks\nin the event, Tuesday's play will see\nevery rink engaged at least once. The\ndraws are as follows:\n4 p.m.\u2014E. L. Jones vs W. Rae. 0. K,\nFalrbum vs A. H. WooU. W. Robinson\nvs D.Mlnts, H, Marshall vs J. Der.\nby, A. Crichton \\s J. Bell, R. McQhle\nvs F. Wendell. E. Mitchell va B. Merlo, H. H. Miller vs V. Vance, Q.\nPrlngle vs A. C. Allison.\nfl p.m.\u2014P. F, Mclntyre vs W. Q\nRosa, O. F. Relmann vs D. MacDonald. 8. G. Smillie vs P. Elliott, D. Mc-\nLennon vs W. B. Hunter, E. W, Campbell vs A. M. Chesser, J. Le Page va\nL. Landuccl, R. P. Dockerlll vs D,\nMcLeod, R. Vance vs R. t. Hill, R.\nStone vs W. Cameron.\n8 p.m.\u2014V. Ferguson vs A. B. Clark,\nO. Ortner vs A, M. Gibson. F. Strachan vs J. Kitchen, D. Sutherland va\nW. H. Sheppard, T. A. Rice vs A. H.\nMcLaren, J. P. Schofleld vs A, W. McDonald, C, D. Stuart vs Al Cavlns;\nwinner Falrburn-Woolf vs winner\nJones-Rac; winner McLennan-Hunter\nvs winner Relmann-McDonald.\nHunter Siding\nChildren Busy\non War Work\nNEW DENVER, B.C.\u2014The children\nof Hunters Aiding School collected\n18.40 for the Kinsmen Milk for Britain Fund and at a Hallowe'en party\non Friday November 3rd ln aid of Junior Red cross $5.35 was realized\nfrom sale of work such as toys, garments etc, A further $5.15 from chtl-\ndreni' own self denial or earning\ncapacities brought takings of $1050,\nThis ls an IndependenV Doukhobor\ncommunity and the results of the\nchildren's work from 13 pupils only\ncompare most favourably with any\nrural settlement.\nThe  Lapps  keep  large herds of\nUme reindeer.\nflt<\u00bbT\u00bbW\u00bbW\u00bb?ft\u00bb\u00bb*tfft\nSOMERS' FUNERAL\nSERVICE\n703 Baker St Phona J5J\nOpen Day and Night\nCrematorium Ambulance\n' \"around\nfor Children in\nCentral Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY, B. C\u2014Substantial\nprogress on construction of the\nplayground for children of the main\nsection of Klmberley has been made\npossible through proceeds of a recent carnival sponsored by the Rotary Club here who have made this\none of their principal projects. The\nnet profit from the two-day carnival\nwas $2400.\nSeveral acres flanking the highway below the high school on the\nSouth side have already been purchased, cleared, levelled and a substantial stone wall built. The additional funds are directed at planting\nof lawns and putting in play facilities such as swings, teeter-totters\nand merry-go-rounds, and the addition of trees.\nChildren in the main section of\nthis city have never had easy access\nto the recreation facilities available\nto children of the McDougall Height\nand Chapman Camp residential sections. For this reason the Rotary\nClub has taken on this project on\nbehalf of the cit\u00bb\nHeadword That\nCounts.\n9LHaigh TrwArt\nui. Phone 327\n7    Johnstone Block\nReliable Watch Repairing . . .\nPrompt Service\nHARVEY'S\nJ\nTHE NEW HATS.\nARE BRIMFULL\nOF STYLE\nThe hew Fall styles permit\nthe choice of a style to fit\nevery face at a price to\nfit every pocketbook.\n$8.00 to $10.00\nEMORY'S |\nLIMITED\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nWasson Takes\n181 Pounder\nAn 18 pound, four mince Kamloci\ntrout was hooked and boated br W.f\nWasson of Nelson Nov. 9 fishing L\n\u25a0 Irvine Creek. The trout wu tan\nt>n a Roy Self lure. It was weighed f\n1 J. Philpot, Balfour.\nEntries for two other fish were al\nreceived by the Oyro Club Kootexfl\nLake Trout Derby statistician UdJ\nday. Frank Hansen of Kaalo cauj\na IB pound, 8 ounce trout on a CBq\nStewart No. 4 off Kaslo; whllt'\"\nHam Thompson of Trail took\npound, 13 ounce fish, also off Ki\n!llll!llltlllllllllllllllHMMMI!IIIHIU_|\nWa  Now  Have  \u25a0  Supply ef\nENGLISH CHAMOll\nCUTHBERT MOTORS\niiiiiiiiiiinu.iiiiiiniiiuinnii.iti.itj\n4-Piece Walnut  .\nBEDROOM SUITEI\n$79.00 and up\nHOMI FURNITURI\nJ. P Walgren\nGeneral Contractor\n301 Carbonate St.]\nJ. A. C. Laughtonj\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMedical Art* Building\nA\nA popular place (or\nAFTERNOON TEA\nthe\n\u2666Melon Dewej\nICE CREAM PARLOH\nDON'T SAY BREAD\nSay Hood's\nKeep your dollars st home working\nfor all of us, by asking your grocer for\nArlada Cheese.\nInsurance\u2014our Business. Oet our\nrates We csn save you money. Robertson Realty, 533 Ward Bt.\nLedger and Synoptic Bheets, all\nruling!, si-ws, etc. D. W. McDerby.\n\"The Stationer snd Typewriter Man\"\nAM Baker Street, Nelson, B.C.\nWs think those who gav\u00ab \u00abii support for our Victory I\/ian Window snd\nrequest you to call for your souvenirs\nas early as possible. Wood. Vallsnce\nHardware Co. Ltd.\nRe-serve Wednesday night, Ncrvem\nher 22nd for Oyro Hoedown. strlrth\nInformal, eo come as yon afe am!\nHoe'er Down till 2:00 a.m. Margaret\nOraham'\u25a0 Orchestra. _ ,\u25a0.(-> If nil.\nUK AT IN (1  IJ.f_f.ON..\nCipert Instruction in figure aksting given by Mr chatte. fsmoua professional For appointment phone Mi\nChatte, Hume Hotel, or Civic Centre\noffice.\nPOULTRYMEN\nThe Annual Meeting of the Kootenay I'milirv Cooperative Amoc. will\n1* held at lhe City Hall. Nelson. But\nNov. 35th st 1 p.m.\nSave up to 13 per rent fuel hills\nwith Red Devil Boot Remover Cleans\nfrom fire-pot to chimney-top by\nchemically destroying all soot, carbon\nor wood cre.---v.te  flonld only at -\nHippraeoN'a\nn NF.RAL BERVICE\nFuneral services for the late Ernest\nWilliam I\u00abeaver Will be held from the\nThompson Ptineral Home Wednesday\nst 3 p.m.. Rev. W J Bllverwood officiating Interment will bs tn Nelson Memorial Park.\nBOSTON. England (CP) - Mrs\nMary Smith. 95, received Instructions to report for work of national\nimportance hut it w;yi Just a mis-\nDi Aurtenus ju3t.pi. \"-ttinmin. oinau importance oui u w^g jusi a mis-\nwonder\u2014 those initials stand for : take. The papers were meant for\nAurelius, Joseph, Vincent, Emman- i the wife of an army officer hy the\nuel, Pius, C-irmet, Marianus, Ar- ' same name who lodged in her home\nnettus, Thomas, Aloysis, Dominic.    | long ago.\nTrail Dislricl Reaches New V-Loan\nMark With $1,114,750\nTRAIL, BC, Nov, 18\u2014Trail District subscription to the 7th Victory\nLoan, according to latest figures reported Monday, was 124,000 above the\nrecord subscription to the Spring\nloan. Seventh loan purchases by Monday amounted to 11,114,750, nearly\n100 per cent of Ita quota. Record* will\nbe complete bv Wednesday.\nWith the exception of (.rand F-orkt,\nall unit* went over their quota* ln\nthe campaign, and all unit*, with tlic\nexception of Grand Fnrluf and Fruitvale, which was only 1100 abort of Its\nlast loan total, exceeded the records\nthev had net In the Sixth Loan campaign\nThe district subscribed 183SO mor*\nthan In the 1ns'. campaign while Trail\nCity went exactly thli amount oVi-i\nita last loan total, Rossland went\n\u2022 14.000 over, Castlegar 15450 and\nOreen wood-Boitidary   13800\nAdditional sale* reported Monday\nsnd cumulative totals to date were\nTrail\n1 snon\n1   772,701\nHoMl\/intl\n1.000\n173...-\nGrand Pnrlti \t\n18,050\nM.-5n\nOrp\u00abnwi>o<l.\nBoundary\n1J05O\n44 550\nf'aatlrirar\n1 \u00bbO0\nJRWKi\nFTultval*   \t\n\u25a0    - -      \"\n37.70(1\nTotal\nW'.IWXl\n11,114,750\nEast Kootenay 7th Victory loan\nInvestment Up lo $1,218,150\nCRANBROOK.   BC,   Nov,   11\u2014But\nKootenay Victory Loan Unit continued\nto Increase It* ovrr-mibscrlptlon mar-\nKin today to 131 fl per cent, fltandlngs\nof the sub-units, all of which have\nmet objectvlse. are Creston 146 7 i*r\ncent ot Its 1175.OOt) quota. Cranbrook\n183 4 per cent ot It* 1310.000 quota.\nWindermere 133 4 per cent of Its\n\u202253.000 quota, Klmberley 113 per rent\nof Its \u2022350,000 quota, Fernls 1088\nper cenl of He \u2022330.000 quota; and\nMichel-Natal    103 J   per   cant   of   |U\n173,000 qlK)U.\nOf   thf   total\n4(110  apjill.atlona  for\nEaat    Kootfnnj\n,  Klinlx-rlf)\naccount*\nlor   1743,   and\nCranbrook\nfor    1027\nToday'\" official\nflgurei foil.\n,'..\nCranbrook\n\u2022 9000\nI   304.800\nCr_iton\nB.5O0\n355.000\nF\u00bbrnl#\n750\nJin   1. o\nKlmh-rlay\n4*50\n380.060\nMIch.l-NaUl  .\n\t\n73.700\nWlnd-ntwra  ,\n4,4J0\n88.450\nTotal \t\n..     131.580\ntl   JHI  IM\nThe\nHEAT\nOF SUMMER\nThe\nCHILI\nOF WINTER\nHold No Terrors for the Home With\nGYPROC WOOL  THICK\nINSULATION\nInexpensive\nWhen you consider the comfort, economy\nand protection that Gyproc Wool Thick Insulation affords, you'll quickly renlire that\nit is Indeed inexpensive to install. In fact, the\ntow cost will probably surprise you.\nHealthful\nUneven temperatures In a house cause drafts.\nDrafts cause Illness as well as discomfort\nWith Gyproc Wool Insulation, sli rooms nrt\nkept at a more uniform temperature; draft*\nare eliminated and the home is definitely\nmore  healthful.\nFuel Saving Permanent\nBecause heBt does nnt escape through the Gyproc Wool Thick Insulation ti a processed\nharrier of Gyproc Wool Insulation, you re ruck it dees nnt deteriorate nor lose Iti inquire LESS fuel to properly heat your house       minting   property    It   lasts   the   life   of   tht\nbuilding giving the same complete protection year in and year out First cost ii last\ncost.\n2\" Paper Backed Barts \u2014 15\" x 24\" and 15\" x 48\"\n$7.00 per 100 sq.ft.\n'LUMBER \u00a3, COAL CO.\ni.-VtlrtlvrM^Ohthi. %U&d\u00a3h\nl\\\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1944_11_14","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0416965","@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":"1944-11-14 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1944-11-14 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\/1.0416965"}