{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2022-07-05","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1944-11-03","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0416973\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" wmmmetm\nkmmemmmmmtlsmmmm\npppsppjpp\nCanada Air Plan\nStands in Middle\nU.S. Would Limit Authority to\nRegulate Technical Matters Only\nCHICAGO, Nov. 2 (CP) \u2014 Three different propositions\non the order of international air transport were advanced today\nat the International Conference on Civil Aviation with Canada's\nplan for an international air authority standing in the middle.\nFor the United States, Adolf A. Berle proposed an authority to regulate technical matters but with only consultative\npowers on such economic ond|\npolitical matters as allocating\n' routes, frequencies of service\nand rates.\nFor Canada, Munitions Minister\nHowe advanced the Canadian draft\nconvention made public last March\nwhich would give an international\nauthority the same powers roughly\nas the Civil Aeronautics Board ex*\nerciset In the United States.\nFor New Zealand, whose views\nare shared by Australia, Hon. D, G.\nSullivan came out for an international authority to own and operate\nservices on international trunk\nroutes.\nThe second plenary session disclosed that the Canadian delegation\nwon a point in the Executive Committee when the order of the draft\nagenda presented by the United\nStates was changed. The first item\nwas discussion of provisional air\nroutes to which the United States\ndelegation attaches importance.\nIt was dropped to third place and\nfirst place given to consideration\nof multilateral convention and creation of an international body.\nMr. Berle drew a retort from Mr.\nHowe when he referred to the proposal for an international body with\neconomic and powers as \" a splendid dream\" proposed by \"some\nbrave spirits\" but \"neither statesmanship nor practical\" in the present\"\n\"Surely Idealism should not be\ndebarred from the building of the\nnew world order,\" said Mr. Howe.\n\"We appreciate that idealism must\nbave practical application and we\nsuggest that ours is not merely a\nstatement of broad principles but\nrather a practical proposal in which\neach of the nations represented here\ncan realize its national aspirations\nto have a part in international aviation.\"\nStatements ln accord with the\nCanadian position but not directly\nreferring to U were made by Viscount Swlnton for the United Kingdom and Sir Glrja Bajpai for India.\nLord Swinton stressed the Importance of sn authority in order to\nassure esch country a share in international aviation and avoid subsidies.\nThe India delegate said his Government Is prepared to endorse s\ngeneral grant of freedom of landing for commercial purposes on a\nuniversal snd reciprocal basis rather than by bilateral agreements.\nSpeaking for his Government Mr.\nBerle shied away from the \"boldness\" of the proposal that an international body be granted powers\nto regulate economic and commercial ss well as technical aspects of\nflying between nations. He expressed respect for the \"brilliance\nand sincerity\" with which it had\nbeen urged.\nLord Swinton, British Minister of\nCivil Aviation, submitted the recently issued British Government\nwhite paper which is similar in\nterms to the Canadian proposals as\n' its contribution to the conference\ndiscussions.\nThe key to the difference between the Canadian and British\nproposals on the one hand and\ntha United Statei proposals on\ntha other Is that Canada and the\nUnited Kingdom would give an\nInternational board power to fix\nrates of chargei, decide who\nshould fly over a given commercial route and how often while\nthe United States would not trust\nany of these things to an International  body.\nMr. Berle'a argument was that\nthe world wai not ready for iuch\na venture Into Intematlonallim\nalthough It might come about over\nthe yean by a proceti of evolution.\nMr. Howe said the alternative to\nthe Canadian plan or something\nsimilar is reversion to \"pre-war\nrivalry in air transport\" which\nwould mean excessive subsidies,\nserious international friction and\nfailure to meet genuine transport\nneeds.\n\"We want to encourage enterprise\nand initiative and the development\nand application of all that science\nand craftsmanship and industry can\ngive us,\" said Lord Swinton in\nhis statement of the British position.\n\"But we want to avoid disorderly\n| competition with the waste of effort\nand money and loss of goodwill that\nI Such competition involves. We want\n1 to discourage and, when possible,\n| to end subsidies, open or concealed.\"\nTha British Minister said nr. system which did not give every country a fair share of International\ntraffic could endure\nJap Bullet Hits\nWall a Foot\nAbove MacArthur\nGENERAL MacARTHUR'S\nHEADQUARTER8, Philippine!,\nNov. 3 (Frdlay)\u2014(AP) \u2014 Otn.\nDouglas MacArthur had one of\nhii cloeit eicapei from death\nwhen a Japaneie ttraflng attack\nput a ,50-callbre buleltlnto a wall\nJuat a foot from hli head.\nHearing the bullet hit, Col.\nLloyd Lehbrai, the Qeneral'i aid,\nruihed Into the room to find the\nCommander examining  the  hole.\nUnconcernedly nodding to the\nhole Juit above hit head, Gen.\nMacArthur tald:\n\"Well, not yetl\"\n\u25a0mm\nrmmemMimmmmirtmmrmm^\nQen. McNaughton\nSuccttdi Ralifon.\u2014Pag* 7.\nCanada te Stand\nby Air Propoial.\u2014Pag* 11.\nMcNaughton for\nVolunteer! Only.\u2014Pag* I.\nVOLUME 43\n,NTt PIR COPY\nNELION. BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA\u2014FRIDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER- 3. 1*44\nNUMBER 158\nYANKS HIT IN HURTGEN FOREST\n3 AUSTRALIAN\nSHIPS CARRYU.S.\nLANDINGTROOPS\nCruisers Take Part\nin Naval Battles\nOff the Philippines\nSYDNEY, Australia, Nov. 5 (CP\nCable)\u2014Three Australian infantry\nlanding ships \u2014 formerly interstate passenger liners \u2014 helped to\ncarry American troops ashore for\nthe invasion of the Philippines, it\nwas disclosed tonight.\nAt the same time it was made\nknown that the Australian cruisers\nShropshire, as well as the cruiser\nAustralia, took part in the naval\nbattles off the Philippines last week\nwhich cost the Japanese more than\n\u202250 ships sunk or damaged.\nAustralian warships played a\nprominent part in the naval and\nalr'bombardment that preceded the\nlandings on Leyte Island but their\nnames and the number engaged\ncannot yet be disclosed.\nAlexander Cann, a Netherlands\ngovernment official photographer\nJust back from the Philippines, said\nAustralian Imperial force dock-operating troops went ashore with the\nfirst waves and within five hours\nthey handled astonishing amounts\nof ammunition, vehicles and general\nsupplies. Cann also paid tribute to\nthe work of Royal Australian Air\nForce airborne construction and\nrepair units which landed on Leyte.\nHe said 19 men were killed and\nM wounded when a crippled Japanese plane struck the cruiser Australia.\nAn official publication said Royal\nAustralian navy ships were In the\nforefront of the whole series of successful attacks which carried Allied troops along the New Guinea\ncoart to the Moluccas. Australian\ndestroyers and smaller craft also\nare striking at the Japanese with\nthe  British Eastern Fleet.\nAustralian naval casualties to the\nend of June numbered 1224 killed\nor died, 538 missing, 333 prisoners\nof  war   and  232  wounded.\n200HUN PLANES\nDESTROYED\nATMERSEBURG\nLuftwaffe Sends\nUp Stiff Force\nto Save Oil Plant\nOCTOBER COUNT\nLONDON, Nov. 2 (AP)\u2014Mora\nthan 200 German planes were destroyed today In an air battle In\nwhich 2400 American and German planes were fighting at one\ntime   over   Merseburg,   Qermany.\nUnited States Air Force losses\nwere reported to be 44 bombers of\na force of 1100 and 28 fighters of\n900  escorting  planes.\nThe fighters, smashing their previous record set Sept. 11 of 117\nkills in aerial combat, downed 130\nGermans. Bomber crews shot down\n53 more and 25 planes were destroyed on the ground.\nThe Luftwaffe sent up swarms of\nJet-propelled craft, Messerschmitts\nand Focke-Wulfs as the United\nStates fighters and bombers headed\nfor the large Leuna synthetic oil\nplant at Mersburg and rallyard\ncentres at Bielefield and Rheine.\nThe Americans, apparently anticipating fierce opposition, sent out\nthe second largest fighter escort\never dispatched by the 8th Air\nForce to shepherd the bombers to\ntheir targets. The Germans, making\na major attempt to save the synthetic oil plant at Merseburg, ordered up their biggest force of interceptors against the Americans over\nthat sector.\nReturning bomber crew members reported that the Jet-propelled planes employed new tactics,\nrising from the ground and attacking the heavy planes from\nunderneath, where the bombers\nhave the least fire power. Previously, the Jets only had swooped\ndown from above or In from the\nsides.\nMeanwhile, RAT. Lancasters\nbeaded for Homberg this afternoon\nand blasted \u00ab synthetic oil plant\nthere. This oil centre had a prewar monthly production figure of\n16,000 tons but recent raids have\nlowered this figure about 75 per\ncent, air officials uld.\nSumming up its October raids by\nLancasters and Halifaxet, the R.A.F.\nannounced today it had plastered\nGerman targets with 131,000,000\npounds of explosives during the last\nmonth, an average of 3000 pounds a\nminute night and day.\nThe 2nd British Tactical XTr\nForce, based on the continent, flew\n23,930 sorties during October. This\ngroup launched 17,618 rockets,\ndropped 16,797 bombs, shot up more\nthan 80 German aircraft, destroyed\n445 motor transport vehicles and\n13 tanks.\nDEWEY \"MOPPING\nUP\" IN PENN.\nEN ROUTE WITH DEWEY, Nov,\n2 (AP) \u2014 Gov. Thomas E. Dewey\ntravelled through Pennsylvania tonight in what some of his aides described as a \"mopping up\" campaign\nfor that state's 35 electoral votes after a reception in Maryland.\nGov. Dewey, declaring President\nRoosevelt's New Deal regime had\n\"failed miserably for eight peacetime years,\" told a.Baltimore theatre audience that the President, \"in\nhis desperate desire for 16 years in\nthe White House, is straining every\nconceivable effort, including offering to sell our government for $1000\nto any man.\"\nALLIED PLANE8 DESTROY 916 JAP\nPLANES AT FORMOSA: Tall columns of smoke\nare mirrored In the calm water of a southwest Formosa Bay, marking the funeral pyres of Japanese\nseaplanes destroyed by. attacking Grumman Hellcats and Curtln Helldlveri of the U. S. Paclflo\nFleet aircraft carriers.\nMINING MEETING AT\nICOAST NOV. 15-17\n, VANCOUVER,   Nov.   2    (CP)    -\nI The annual Western meeting of the\nCanadian Institute nf Mining nnd\nMetallurgy will be held here Nov\n15-17, Institute officials revealed today\nChurchill and Eden\nto Visit France\nLONDON, Nov. 2 (CP>\u2014Prlmt\nMinister Churchill ind Foreign\nSecretary Eden will vlilt France\nit the invitation of Gen. de Giulle\nthe Foreign Office innounced tonight.\nThe date of the vlilt wilt be\narranged  liter.\nExcept for Mr. Churchill's vlilte\nilnce D-Day to Normandy, this\nwill he the flnt time that he haa\nvlilted France ilnce the tragic\ndayi of 1940, when he flew to tha\nheadquarter! of the French Government and sought to persuade\nthe French to remain In the fight.\nThere wai a strong possibility\nMr. Churchill and Mr. Eden would\nbe In Franct at the tlma of the\nFirst Great War Armistice Day\ncelebrations Nov. 11.\nMackenzie King\nWill Try lo\nAvoid Election\nOTTAWA, Nov. 1 (CP)-Prime\nMinister Mackenzie Ring reiterated\nin a prepared statement tonight that\nhe would do everythnlg in his power to avoid callin ga general election in wartime if this could be\ndone without denying the people\nthe right of choosin gtheir representatives ln the House of Commons every five years.\n\"I notice that the question Is being asked: 'Have I in mind a general election at an early date,'\" Mr\nKing said in the statement. He added:\n'To prevent any miiunderitand-\ning as to any Intention on my pert\nof holding a general election In\nwartime, I wish to repeat definitely what I have said consistently\nfor more than a year, that I will\ndo everything ln my power to avoid\na general election until the war Is\nover, subject to one condition which\nI have also consistently stated-\nthat the people will not be denied\nthe right the constitution gives\nthem of choosing their representatives in the House of Commons\nevery five years.\"\nThe mandate of tht government\nexpires next April.\nNAZI DEFENCE\nOF ITALY\nIS PUZZLING\nAllies Liberate\n51.000 Sq. Miles\nof Italy in 14 Mos.\nROME, Nov, 2 (AP) - More than\n51,000 square miles of Italy have\nbeen liberated by Allied armies during the last 14 months, but there\nstill ie no sign that the Germans are\npulling out of the country, Gen. Sir\nHarold Alexander said today.\nDuring this period, the Allied 5th\nand 8th Armies advanced North 500\nmiles from Regglo Calabria m the\ntoe of Italy to the outskirts ft Bologna.\nAcknowledging that the Allied assault on the enemy's Gothic line\nhad come to an almost complete halt\nin the mud of the Po Valley and\nthe peaks of the Apennlne Moun-\ntainf, the Italian ground commander said \"I can't tell how long it will\nUke to drive them out, but it will be\ndone.\"\nHe said the Gothic line was broken by the \"double-handed punch\"\ntechnique\u2014secretly switching the\n8th Army to hit the Germans'.weak\nAdriatic flank, then punching\nthrough ln the centre with the Sth\nArmy when the Germans drew off\nsome strength from that mountain\nsector.\nHe said Americsn troops alone\nhad suffered at least 00,000 casualties during the campaign.\nThe Germans have continued to\n\u25a0end reinforcements into Italy despite their reverses on the Eastern\nand Western fronts, Gen. Alexander disclosed. He admitted puzzlement at this enemy itrategy, pointing out that the enemy already had\nsuffered  194,000 casualties in   Italy, i \u25a0._-\u201e.   l .   , \u201e .\nIncluding  34,000   killed  .nd   104.000 ! \u00a3 \"'!\"' ,%\"   ^,T \"\"i\/'T\n\u2022 I trie   i.\\h,   niter   a   forced   14-mile\nmarch,   broke   one   of   the   fiercest\nYANK FORCES\nMAKE JUNCTURE\nIN CARIGARA\nRemnants of Jap\nForces Being\nDriven Into Ormoc\nGENERAL MacARTHUR'S\nHEADQUARTERS, Philippines,\nNov. 3 (Friday)\u2014(AP)\u2014American\nforces have made a juncture in Carigara, coastal town on Leyte's\nNorthwest coast, and are driving\nenemy remnants West and South\ntoward Ormoc, Gen. MacArthur\nannounced today,\nThe \"end of the Leyte-Samar\ncampaign is in sight,\" the communique reported, and Japanese casualties have risen to more than\n30,000.\nBe'mwfs of the 24th Dlvlilon\ncrushed final Japanese delaying\nforces in Northwestern Leyte Valley to effect the juncture with elements of the First Cavalry Division.\nMeanwhile, advance forces of the\n7th Division cut entirely across the\nlower portion of Leyte, reaching\nthe West coast, 26 miles South of\nOrmoc.\n\"Final remnants or me enemy's\nforces.\" said the communique, \"are\nnow being driven into the small\nand confined Ormoc sector where\nthey are enveloped on all three\nland sides by our ground forces.\"\nThe 24th division was \"rapidly\ncovering\" the last six miles into\nCarigara, after punching up the\nNorthwestern arm of Leyte Valley\nagainst Japanese rear-guard action\nThe 1st Cavalry, which landed\non Carigara Bay several days ago\nin a shore-to-shore movement, applied a squeeze from the East along\nthe coast. The juncture of the two\nEntire Front\nBegins Stirring\nVital Drive for Antwerp Nears Climax;\n* Flushing Cleared of All Bur Snipers\nLONDON, Nov. 2 (CP)\u2014British troops of the 1st Canadian Army cleared Vlissingen (Flushing) of all but snipers\ntoday, seized big gun batteries on the sand dunes to the North,\nand more reinforcements poured onto this flooded Walcheren\nIsland for the final mop-up of Antwerp's seaward approaches.\nWhile the final\/hour of reckoning neared for. the 7,000 to\n10,000 Germans holding out on Walcheren Island, enemy defences across the Schelde Es-j>\nROAR OF RUSS\nGUNS HEARD\nIN BUDAPEST\nResistance Appears\nto Be Crumbling.\nBefore Big Drive\n23 MILES AWAY\nLONDON, Nov. 2 (AP) \u2014 Rui-\n\u25a0 Ian troopi iwept to 'within 23\nmllei of thi Hungarian capital of\nBudapeit today, oapturlng 60\ntowm and vlllagei between the\nDanube and Tliu riven In a iwlft\noffemlve aimed at knocking out\nthe lait big Axle war latelllte,\nA Moicow communique announced capture ot Doimad, on the Danube's Eut bant 23 milei South of\nthe great prize city; Kunszentmlk-\nlos, 27 miles South and slightly Eut\nof Budapeit; and Tatarizentgyorgy,\n26 miles Southeast of the capital.\nThe roar of Russian gum could\nbe heard in Che imperilled capital.\nGerman and Hungarian resistance appeared to be crumbling u\nthe Russians smashed through thick\nminefields and whittled down a\nstaggering Axis defence of anti-tank\nguns.\nAmong prisoners taken by the\nRussians wai the former chief of\nthe Hungarian General Staff, Col.-\nGen. Janus Veresz.\nIn Northeastern Hungary, where\nother units of Marshal Rodlon Y.\ntuary to the South collapsed\nbefore a determined Canadian\nonslaught.\nThe Germani laat three atrong-\nholdi, the Belgian leailde towni\nOf Knocke and Heyat and the\nNetherlandi frontier village of\nSliuk, five mllei Eut, fell In\niwlft luocesilon, and 1792 more\nprlioneri swelled the Canadian\ntotal of captlvei In tha Schelde\npocket te 11,700.\nAmong the captlvei wu MaJ,-\nOen. Eberdlng, Commander of the\nnow-destroyed 64th Dlvlilon, who\nadmitted the German'! day wai\ndone on the swampy Southern\nbanki of the Schelde.\nAi thli vital drive for one of\nthe world'i finest port! neared a\ntriumphant ellmax, the entire\nfront began itlrrlng,\nBritish troopa, hammering away\nat German rearguards battered\nagainst the Maas, drove a mile nearer the two vital bridges across the\nstream of Moerdljk, widened their\nhold on the South bank to four\nmiles, and smashed into the enemy\ncitadel of Geertrludenberg.\nThe long-dormant U. I. 1st\nArmy sprang Into action Iniide\nGermany Southeait of Aachen,\ndriving ahead one to two mllei In\n* strong attack through Hurtgen\nForeit\nTti\u00bb puiH, preceded by i bar-\nMalinovskyi 2nd Ukraine Army\nwere pushing Westward just South\nof the Czechoslovak border, the\nRussians hurled the Germans across\nthe river on a widening 25-mile\ntrout\nCompletely clearing the enemy\nfrom the East bank of the river, the\nRussians seized Folgar only 93 miles\nNortheut of Budapest.\nNeither Berlin nor Moscow re\nported any Important action on the\nGerman East Prussian front where a\nlull has existed sli week after the\nRussians hsd stabbed 20 miles ln\nside Reich territory.\nrage that exploded with bewildering abruptness from hidden\nbatterlei, overran the town of\nVouenack, 12 mllei Southeast of\nAachen, and carried to the edge\nof the itronghold cf Hurtgen Itself, two mllei to the North.\nSupreme Headquarters reported\ngratifying progress ln the mop-up\nof Walcheren Island, and said rein-\nforcements were being landed to\nbolster the British bridgeheads at\nVlissingen and at Westkapelle to\nthe West\nAssault troops, fanning out over\nthe flooded island, seized many big\ngun positions on the dunes northeast of Westkapelle, while air attacks and flooding have silenced\nmost of the batteries of the interior,\nfront dispatches said.\nThe Germans were savagely defending Mlddelburg, their main\nbase near the centre of the Island,\npouring in such heavy fire that Canadians yesterday were forced from\ntheir slender bridgehead near th\u00ab\ncauseway to South Beveland Island\nto the East, but they put in a new\nattack today and regained a foothold on Walcheren.\nIn their Eastern Holland drlv*\nfrom Lieseel, British Tommies recaptured the villages of Heitrak and\nwere within Hi miles of Meijel,\nfive miles South of Lieseel.\nIn Northern France, the German\ncommunique assart-to, tbe U. !_.,\n3rd Army was attacking on a broad\nfront between Metz and Nancy and\ngained  ground.\nA field dispatch mentioned only\nthat the 3rd had driven the last\nGerman from the Seille River bend,\n13 miles Northeast of Nancy, to put\nan end to further infiltration attacks.\nThe U. S. 7th Army, pushing units\nof Hitler's \"peoples' army\" before\nIt hammered out substantial gains\nand pulled up to within three to\neight miles of six fog-shrouded\npassed which lead through the formidable barrier of the Vosges\nMountains to the Rhine and Germany.\nBRACKEN SAYS\nPeople Should Know Truth\nwounded.\n\"At no Ume during the Italian\ncampaign have we had any but a\nilightly  superiority in numbers.\"\nGen. Alexander said he could not\nimagine the war in Europe continuing beyond 1945.\nJapanese   stands   at   Jaro\nBritain's New Navy\nCarrier Hardest\nHitting Fighter\nhighway centre on the mad to the\nbay.\nOn the Southern end of the Allied\nsweep. Uie 7th Division was pursuing \"disorganized onr my parties\"\ninto the mountains, the coxnmun-\nIque   said.\nOTTAWA.   Nov.   I   (CP)-  John\nBracken,      National      Progressive\n3,1   key 1 Conservative leader, uid tonight In\nNearly 11 Million\n: Tons of Food for\nItalian People\nLONDON, Nov. 2 (CP Reuter) \u2014\nBritain's neweit naval aircraft I\nthe hardeit hitting carrier-born\nfighter In the world. With a specially long range for Pacific oper\natloni, the Fairey Aviation Company's Firefly, releaied from the\n\u25a0ecret Hit tonight, li a low-winged\n\u2022 Ingle-englned flghterreconnati-\n\u25a0anoe plane, packing four 20 mil-\nllmelre c.nnc   guns, wlth.i cr.w , 'WJ*  reported  tonight  that  by  the I |' inite.? possible\"\"term.\" by  one or\nof  two.   A   powerful   Rolls   Royce ,Art *\"\"   '     ~     *\n|     WASHINGTON.  Nov\n;The Allied Military Cm\n'AP.   -\nission  In\na statement that there wai a \"clear\nobligation\" on Hon. J. L. Ralston\nor Prime Minister Mackenzie King\nto \"tell the Canadian people the\ntruth about the reinforcement situation.\"\nCommenting on Col. Ralston's\nresignation as Defence Minister, Mr.\nBracken said;\n\"Following the trip (overseas)\nwhich Mr. Ralston took for the\npurpose of getting all the facts,\nthere is a clear obliffttlon on one or\nother of these men to tell the Cantdlan pt'ople the truth about the reinforcement   situation.\n\"The urgency for giving the Information has only been emphas-\niied by Mr. Ralston's resignation. .\n'The people of Canada are deeply\nconcerned and desire to be told the\nruth- be   it   good   or   bad\u2014in   the\nstatement tonight  that he  wai  Cabinet said thtt men wwe needed\nKootenay's Bond Scores\n1IVINTH VICTORY LOAN, GENERAL CANVASS.\nfrail  Unit\np\u00ab\u00abt Kootenay\n.elion Unit ....\nDay's Sal_-\n$32,450\n  38,350\n_ 82,700\nTotal\n$818,250\n459,600\n434,350\nQuota\n$1,025,000\n1,000,000\n825,000\nNelson Ordered\nto Reorganize\nChina War Plants\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 2 (AP)-\nA United Itatel million under\nDonald M. Nation waa ordared tn\nChina today to undar-axe a wa.\nreorganliatlon of that country'!\nwar Induitrlal.\nMr. Nelion wai aiked to proceed at \"tha aarlleat poulbla\ndate,** tha White Houaa announced\nafter a conference batwaan Preiident Rooeevelt and tha former\nWar  Production   Board   chairman\nHa la \u00ab\u00bbp.rt\u00abd to leave aoma time\nnut weak.\nGriffon engine powen thii aircraft, which hai folding wlngi, for\neconomic itorage In carrier..\n200 SOLDIERS WORK\nON TRACK MAINTENANCE\nTORONTO, Nov. 1 (CP) - W\nDavidson of the National Selective\nService office here aaid tonight 200\nmembera of the home defence army\nnow are working at track maintenance on the railway llnea In and\nWest of Toronto.\nThe men are the first of more\nthan M)0 French- speaking membera railed up under the National\nResources Mobilization Art, who,\nmilitary authorities here said earlier\ntoday, would be brought tn thli\ndistrict to work on the railways and\non construction projects\nend  of  this  year  3.300,000  toni  of I other'or boUl  of these  men.\nfood  nnd  other  supplies  will   have ' _________\nbeen furnished to war-stricken civ- l COLDWELL   FAVORS  CHOICE\n\u2022\u25a0\u25a0an\" |    OTTAWA.   Nov    2   (CP)\u2014C.CT.\nThe reported estimated an expen- ' leader Coldwell laid  tonight In  a\nditure of more than $200,000,000 wu   statement the appointment of Gen.\nrepresented\nBrig -Gen William\nVIre-PresMrnt In charge of the Economic Section of the Aflled Cnm-\nmluinn. placed at f1ft3.2OS.OO0 the\nvalue of supplies shipped hf lh>\nUnited Nations to Italy up tn .Inly 1\nMcNaughton as Defence Minister\nO'Dwyer, \" seems to be a good choice,\" and\nadded tha* his party would support\n\"every metfsure shown lo he necessary to assist and reinforce our\narmiei in  the field.\"\n\"The   General's   intimate   knowl-\nof thii year    In the first year of Al-    rdge of military  affairs and of the\nWim D.F.C.\nOTTAWA.   Nov,\n1    (CP-\nAir\nForr* Headquarters announced  thr   McNaughton,   RolstOP\naward   of  one  George   NJedal.   two   f L    . Tonpfrkpr\nDistinguished   Flying   Crosses   and   ^-\"Ul    'Uy tiller\nled occupation Including shipping,\nthis represented a coit of IIM.000,-\n00O\nGen O Dwyer said that, in addition, the United Nations Relief and\nRehabilitation Administration (U\nN R R A \u25a0 had budgeted f.Vl.000.000\nfor ila separate operations in Italy,\nprincipally for welfare work among\nchildren and mothers and medical try hy placing the preclie situation\nlupplle*. I frankly   before   Parliament   or   by\n ___,  I making   a   complete   statement   to\n! the Canadian people immediately \"\nnerds of Ihe army will enable him\nto do a worthy job In his new post,\"\nMr    Coldwell   added   .\nExpressing belief there had been\n\"far too much rumor and loose talk\nbased on inadequate information,\"\nMr.  Coldwell   said:\nThe Government should end the\nuneasiness and rumors in the coun-\nDistinguished Flying Medal tr\nmembers of the RCAF serving oversea!.\nThe recipient* Included:\n.   .DF.C-\nL& FO. J. S. Welsh of Vtncouver,\nOTTAWA. Nov 3 <CP) - Oen\nMcNaughton, the Incoming Defence\nMinister, and Hon J I. Ralston, the\nnutgdlng minister, met today In iht\ndefence headquarter! building tnd\nchatted toftthtr,\nHOPE OTHERS WILL\nFOLLOW RALITON\nQUEBEC, Nov 3 iCP>- Frederic\nDorlnn. Independent member of\nParliament for Charlevotx-Sague-\nnay who recently waa choaen by\nQutbe-c Independent at organiier\nof tht In depend tote' Group, aid lo\nvery happy\" over the retlgnation\nof Defence Mlnitttr Ralston, \"tnd\nI hope thtt lt will bt followed by\nmany othen so that the Ottawa\nCabinet t>ecomei once more t truly\nCanadian Cabinet.\"\n\"Undoubtedly, registrar* offices\nwill be closed soon and all the con-\ntcrlptt lent back home, especially\nthe thousands now serving jail sentences for reporting late in answer\nto their call-up notice*\"\nLIVELY SPECULATION  ON\nPARLIAMENT  HILL\nOTTAWA. Nov. 2 (CP)-Possl-\nbillty oi further resignations from\nthe Cabinet was the subject of lively speculation on Parliament Hill\ntonight' after announcement that\nGen, McNaughton has succeeded\nCol. J. L. Ralston, who resigned as\nDefence Minister.\nPrime Minister Mackenzie King\ntold newspapermen at a conference\nthat he knew of no resignations and\nsome of hli colleagues expressed\nsimilar views. Others were not so\nsure.\nSome Ministers who had support-\nad Col. Ralston's stand that call-up\ntroopi bt sent overseai as reinforcements were disappointed when\nthe proposal wai turned down. It\nwas undentood, however, they\nwould not go to the extent of resigning because times were too critical.\nFinance Minister Ilsley, frequently mentioned as lining up with the\nformer Defence Minister during\nCabinet discussions, was said to\nhave taken that view. Others feeling similarly, it was understood, included State Secretary McLarty,\nLabor Minister Mitchell and Revenue Minister Gibson.\nOTTAWA, Nov. 2 (CP) \u2014 The\nFederal Cabinet did not have a\nclear outline of the Canadian Army\nreinforcement situation overseas\nuntil Hon J L. Ralston, outgoing\nDefence Minuter, returned from a\ntour of the battlefronts a few weeks\nago and made a report on his trip,\nIt was learned reliably tonight.\nA source close to government affairs said that during Col Ralston's\ntour ht got t firtt hand view mt the\naitviUoa \u00abnd In hit report to Um\noverseas. He waa said to have urged that Home Defence troopi b-a\nsent overseas.\nBy  ROSS  MUNRO\nCanadian Pren War Correipondent\nTROOPS   PLEASED\n\"THE   GENERAL\"   IS   BACK\nWITH THE 1ST CANADIAN\nARMY ON THE SCHELDE. Nov. 2\n(CP Cable) \u2014 Over field wireless\nsets on this cold and foggy Schelde\nfront officers and men of the 1st\nCanadian Army tonight heard tht\nnews that their old chief, Gen. McNaughton, had become Canada's\nDefence Minister in succession to\nCol.   Ralston.\nIt wis the biggest newi on tht\nfront, topping even battle reports. The first reaction of tht\ntroops waa titan lih ment, and\nthen delight that \"The General,\"\nai he Is known to thousands of\nCanada's fighting men, had returned to active participation In\nthe war.\nThe BBC broadcast a brief Item\non Its Forces network and soon\nal 11 he troopi knew about It. Speculation on the reaioni behind tht\nCabinet change wai rampant\nwith most of It revolving around\nthe reinforcement situation.\nFew Canadians here had. the\nslightest knowledge that Col. Ralston was at odds with the Prlmt\nMinister or that Gen. McNaughton\nwould enter public life. Many had\nbeen wondering what \"Tbe General\" had been doing lately and\nthey could not envisage him being\nidle lung.\nIt was a and blow to the troopi\nwhen Gen. McNaughton was forced\nto leave his command last Christmas. For the troops. Mi-Naught nn\nwas the creator of the Canadian\nArmy He developed it and directed\niLs training from thr days of the lit\nDivision until five divisions were\nready for battle\nFew army commander., in this war\nhave been held in such affection\nby their troops \u25a0 __. tin*; c.en McNaughton. They feci they a I way |\ngot a square deal fiom him and\nthey were sorrowful when he left.\nNow they are delighted that i_ tht\nonly word for it.       ;k\n  \u2014-\nlr-. NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOVIMIIR S, 1944\nIcFadyen, Former Kootenay Man,\nJmong CP.R. Officials Retired;\nowell, Ex-Kool.r Back lo B.C\n(WINNIPEG, Nov. 2 - Changes affecting the Manitoba, Saskatchewan,\nAlberta and British Columbia districts of the Canadian Pacific Rail-\n\u25a0 way In the mechanical department\nraulting from the retirements of\ndiptrlct master mechanics J. P. Kelly; Vancouver; and A. J. Pentland,\nWinnipeg; and Division Master Mechanic J. H. McFadyen, Vancouver, are announced by E. G. Bowie,\nSuperintendent of Motivp Power for\nttie Railway's Western lines. In all,\nit men are affected in retirements,\ntransfers and promotions.\n.'Mr. Kelly, Mr. Pentland and Mr.\nMcFadyen are retiring for health\nMasons, G. H. Nowell, District Master Mechanic for Saskatchewan with\nheadquarters at Moose .law, li\ntransferred to Vancouver, for Brl-\ntfch Columbia, William Stewart now\nSupervisor of Water Treatment,\n\\flnnipeg, ls promoted to the position of District Master Mechanic,\nManitoba District, at Winnipeg; and\nDavid Beath, Division Master Mechanic, Calgary, is promoted to be\nMaster Mechanic, Saskatchewan district, with headquarters at Moose\nJaw.\n(Following these changes, promotion comes to Millwright Foreman\nQeorge D. Foreman, Ogden Shops\nCalgary, who will be Division Master Mechanic at Vancouver, and the\nfallowing division master mechanics\naVe transferred: A. A. Langdon, of\nBrandon, to Calgary; Harold Gell,\nRegina to Brandon; R. C Thom, Ke-\nnora, to Saskatoon; and L. M. Abbey, Saskatoon to Kenora.\n' Locomotive Foreman J. J. P-aby,\nitegina, is raised to the position of\nDivision Master Mechanic, Reglna;\nand Shop Foreman William Silver,\nFort William, promoted to the work\nof locomotive foreman, Regina.\nThe chang are effective immediately.\nTeas? Tea\ni.v.M'-ftHEi:\nIn the Atlantic Monthly a aeries of reminiscences 1* running\n' about Mark Twain aa a business\n; man.    The    author    U   Samuel\n' Charles Webster, a collateral <Je-\ni acendant. whose lather seems to\nhave   been  the   humorist's  business manager, prom them lt appears that while Mark, had a proper appreciation of hla own work,\nhe   waa  subject  to  the  dehulon\ni that  there   were  other   ways   in\n\u25a0 which   he   oould   make   money\nfaster than by hln pen. 80 we hrar\nof his backing all kinds of enter -\npriiea that failed,  and spending\n.time he ought to have devoted* 10\n, 'writing  to the  patenting of hi*\nown Idea* There waa a card game\nthat he patented and hoped would\nmake him rich. He collaborated ln\n,   m play at t*ie same time that he\nwaa writing Huckleberry Finn and\nactually wrote hla manager to any\nthat the novel wag of far lea* importance   at   the   moment   than\nbeing able to Ret a certain actor\nto play a part in the play which,\nIf ever it waa produced, wm a failure and hu long slnea been lor-\n. \u25a0 gotten.\nGooderham.'Worts\nLimited\nTORONTO, ONTARIO\nMr. Pentland bu been with tha\nCanadian Pacific for 44 yean, ill ln\nSaskatchewan and Manitoba Dlitrlcts, except for a brief period ai a\nfitter at Kamloopi ln 1908. Beginning as a machinist apprentice at\nWinnipeg in September, 1900, he\nrose through the mechanical gradei\nr.itil he became tint, back-shop\nforeman at Mooie Jaw, night foreman, and locomotive foreman at\nSwitt Current, Ignace, Sourls, and\nNorth Transcona, Winnipeg, Reglna\nand Kenora.\nIn August, 1927, he wai promoted\nto the more reiponilble poiltlon ot\nDivision Master Mechanic at Win-\nnipeg, and in 1929 at Kenora, where\nhe remained until October, 1937,\nwhen he was promoted to the post ot\nDistrict Master Mechanic for Saskatchewan, at Mooie Jaw, and _t.il>-\nsequently, in 1942, for Manitoba, at\nWinnipeg.\nMr. Kelly Joined tha C.P.H. ai a\nfitter in the mechanical department in Auguit, 1906. He became\nlocomotive foreman at Field ln 1912,\nand he had a period ai acting division Master Mechanic at Revelstoke, Field, Kenora and Saskatoon.\nIn April 1934, he'was appointed Division Master Mechanic at Calgary,\nMid ln 1935, at Moose Jaw. His promotion as Works Manager at Ogden\nShops, Calgary, came in 1937, and\nin June, 1942, he was made District\nMaster Mechanic at Vancouver.\nAT CRANBROOK\nAND NELSON\nMr. McFayden hai had 43 yean\nwith the company, beginning In\nWinnipeg, where he worked aa wiper and fireman. After a time as locomotive angineer at Fort William,\nhe became road foreman at Kenora,\nin 1916, and in 1919 was promoted\nto the work of dlvlilon Master Mechanic and Trainmaster at Cranbrook, following the lame work lp\nsuccession at Nelson and Vancouver.\nMr. Stewart wu an experienced\nboilermaker with the company at\nOgden and Weston Shops, and in\n1930 became Foreman Boilermaker\nat Fort William. He wai later Boiler\nMaker at Kenora and Moose Jaw\nand in 1941 wai promoted to the\nSupervision of Water Treatment at\nWinr.ipeg.\nAT NELSON\nAND  REVEL8TOKI\nMr. Nowell hai been with the\nC.P.R. since 1908, when he was a\nchargchand at Angus Shops, Montreal, and moved to the British Columbia district in 1915, u Locomotive Foreman at Cranbrook. By 1913\nha wai erecting ihop foreman at\nAngua. Ai District and Division\nMaster Mechanic he has worked at\nNelson, Revelstoke, Lethbridge, Regina, Moose Jaw and Vancouver.\nMr. Beath's record dates back 43\nyears, beginning at North Bay, Ont,\nai a fitter. Usual promotions followed until In 1919 he was made\nnight foreman at Regina. By 1927 he\n\u2022as Locomotive Foreman and located at Hardisty, Regina, Brandon,\nand Alyth. In 1937 he was appointed Division Master Mechanic at\nKenora, and served ln thst work\nsuccessfully at Winnipeg, Moose\nJaw, and Calgary.\nJapi Uie Human\nTorpedoes Against\nAmerican Fleet\nLONDON, Nov, 2 (CP Reuter)\n\u2014Tht Japintii an uilng \"human\nV-li\"\u2014tlr torpedoes with \u2022 pilot\nagalnit the American fleet In tha\nPhilippine!, according to Japanese military olrclei quoted today\nby tha German D.N.B, agency.\nTha   Chinese   wear   white   for\nmourning. . r\nHelps Check Colds Quickly\nDenies CCF.\nTrying lo\nControl Unions\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 1 (CP) -\nChargei made by the Labor Progressive Party that the C.C.F. ln\nBritish Columbia la attempting to\ngain control of trade unions were\ndenied tonight in a statement luued\nby F. J. McKenzIe, Provincial C.CF.\nSecretary.\nTha chargei are \"part of the current campaign to dlicredlt the\nC.C.F.,\" Mr. McKenzIe uld.\n\"The C.C.F. is oppoied to any\npolitical group, including the C.CF,\ncontrolling trade unloni, but we\nwish to point out that for yean\nit hai been the policy, flnt of the\nCommuniit Party and later of the\nLabor Progreulve Party to gain\ncontrol of large mass trade unloni,\"\nthe itatement continued. \"Al an\nexample we point out that practically every paid official of both\nthe International Woodworkers of\nAmerica (C.I.O.) and the Boilermakers' Union, Local Number one,\nis a member of the Labor Progrea-\nilve Party.\n\"This policy hai caused discontent within these unions for honest\ntrade unionists relent control by\npolitical minorities of any stripe.\"\nThe C.C.F. itatement denied\ncharges that any attempt was made\nby Party memben to Influence delegatei to the recent I.W.A. convention here. The Labor Progreisive\nParty had charged the C.C.F. with\nengineering through party supporters a resolution passed by the convention supporting an I.W.A. constitution clause which would exclude from I.W.A. membership any\nperson who also holds membership\nin a Communist, Fascist or Nazi\norganization.\n\"The C.C.F. ii opposed to any\ntrade union member being expelled\nfrom hla union because of political\naffiliation*,\" the C.C.F. itatement\ncountered.\nTha statement alio denied a\ncharge of using the the Political\nAction Committee of the Canadian\nCongress of Labor for \"vote-catching purposes.\"\n\"We are oppoied to any domination of trade unions, but welcome\nsupport for the C.C.F. on the record\nof our party.\"\nC.C.F. leadership was charged\nwith \"deliberately planning organized disruption of B C. Trade Union\nlocal meetings, with the purpose of\nmaking the conduct of buslneu at\nthese meetings impossible to embar-\nass and discredit the leadership ln I\norder to pave the way of members\nof the CCF. to gain control.\"\nDuring the past year or so, C.C.F.\nmembers of Vancouver unions. In\nline with the policy of the C.C.F,\nhave been instrumental ln securing '\nthe expulsion from their unions of\nat least six members of the Labor-'\nProgreuive Party, all of whom\nwere leading members of their re-!\nspectlve unions,\" the Labor-Progressive Party charged.\n251 Invest $59r250 In Holiday\nDrive lo Boosl Loan Over Half Way\nMark; District Sales 52 Per Cent\nTwo hundred and ftfty-on* investors\nsigned their names to 7th Victory Loan\nbond applications ln Nelaon'a Civic\nholiday drl,ve Wedneada; and on\nThuraday morning. Their purohasea\namounted to }5lt,260, enough to Jump\nth* clty'a sales to date to $434,350,\nW 17,400 or 60.83 per cent ol the\nIMO.OOO required.\nFour other Dlatrlct polnta, making\nup the unit, contributed another\n113,460 to the victory pot, and brought\nthe District subscription to 63,0 per\noent of Ita 1825,000 commitment. Application* received Thursday totalled\n271.\nREDS THREATEN LEADERS\nRed Group waa drawing cloaer to the\nleading Blues ln the City selling competition. Service club salesmen ot the\nRed Group wrote 12S applications\nboosting their sales to 127,100; 121 ap\nplications were received by Blue Group\ncanvaaiers and A3 by the Whites. The\nleaders have aold 136,050 ln bonds, the\ntrailing White Group 110,400.\nThree additional departments reached their objective tn the Internal can-\nvaaa among Provincial Government\nemployees; while the itaff of F. W.\nWoolworth & Company Ltd. here went\nover the top. Employees In the Water\nBights, Mines and Land Registry offices were successful ln attaining their\nobjectives.\nThe sales reported Thursday and cumulative totals were:\nNakusp     $ 1,200   $ 58,800\nNew Denver -       6,800       21,300\nKaslo          0,300       25,600\nSalmo  , _  160       9.M0\nNelson ...- -_. -     59,250     317,400\nTotal  _    $83,700   1434,350\nTrail District Nears 80 Per cent\nol Goal; Sell $818,250 In Bonds\nTrail District neared the 80 per\ncent mark ln ltl Victory Loan drive\nThuraday. Application, totalling\n$818,250 have been written against\nan objective of $1,025,000. The day's\naalea were $32,450, boosting the subscription to 79.2 per cent ol the\nquota.\nSales reported Thursday and cumulative totals were:\nDay's Sales Total\nTrail   $18,750 $026,800\nRossland       MOO 113,150\nGrand Forks         \u2014 15,100\nGreenwood-Bound.     7,450 19,750\nCastlegar         200 20,900\nFruitvale        1,850 22,500\nTotal\n$32,450   $818,2-0\nV-Pennant Flies\nOverNakusp\nNAKUSP, B. C, Nov 3 - The\n7th Victory Loan flag haa been\nawarded to Nakusp and ls flying\nover Nakusp\u2014a lymbift that Nakusp District has topped Its $55,000\nquota.\nThe flag was raised without ceremony or show.\n90S Youngsters\nat Shellout Show\nNelson kids, who gave up their\nHallowe'en fun and pranks to aid\ntheir cousins in Britain won their\nreward Thursday. They crowded\nthe Civic Theatre as guests of the\nKinsmen Club for a grand show. A\ncapacity house of 905 was seated.\nGrand prize for the most Shellout\ntickets collected Hallowe'en night\nwent to Jean Hamilton of Willow\nPoint Other winners, in order\nwere Gilbert Johnson, John Les-\nchuk, Dawn Spencer and Jaunita\nSmiley. Chairman T. S. Short-\nhouse of the Shellout Drive in Nelson presented the awards.\nAppreciation to the help of Nelaon principals and teacheri, especially of the Junior High School, and\nto members of the Junior High Cadet Corps and Red Cross was expressed by Chairman Shorthouse.\nProceeds of the drive went tn\nthe Kinsmen Milk for Britain Fund.\nRETURNS FROM OVERSEAS:\nAble Seaman Douglai A, Dunn,\nR.C.N.V.R., formerly of Nelson,\nwho li back  from oveneai after\nleelng action off the coait of\nFrance, when hli ahlp wai hit\nby a glider bomb. Me Is now\nipendlng hli lurvlvori leave with\nhii iliter, Mn. C. Woolli of Departure Bay, Nanaimo, and hli\nparenti, Mr. and Mn. F. J. Dunn,\nat Fanny Bay, B. C.\nAir Minister Power\nUndergoes\nEmergency Operation\nQUEBEC, Nov. 2 (CP) --Air\nMiniiter C. G. Power It resting\nafter a \"luccenful\" appendectomy\nand \"It icemi that everything will\nbe all right,\" Dr. Andre Slmard,\nwho performed the emergency operation late thla afternoon, told\ntht Canadian Pren t     jht.\nTha Miniiter entered Hotel Oiau\nHospital early thli afternoon.\nNeed Great Effort\nto Put Nelson\nOver Top In Loan\nGreat efforts muat yet be made to\nput Nelson over the top In lte greatest Vlctoy Unm tti.sk, lt wai realized\nat a meeting of Group Leaders ant.\nTeam Cabins of tho Red, White and\nBlue campaign Thur-jday night. Mayor\nN. C. Sttbba, Chairman, presided.\nGood returns were coming in from\nsalesmen. There waa still territory to\ncover, and with service club salesmen\nkeen, It was expected the next few\ndaya would greatly improve the standing.\nAlready a number, who have bought\namall bonds, have given increased *u inscriptions, particularly women. It was\nfelt that many others, on giving th-i\nmatter second thought, would apply\nfor further amounts.\nMerchant Seamen\nShortage Serious\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 2 (CP) -\nA critical shortage of merchant officers and seamen threatens to delay\nshipment of supplies to the European and Paclfi war theatres and\nthe United States shipping and manpower administrations are combining in a drive to recruit 5,000 additional men a month.\nClosing of the Great Lakes shipping season Is expected to help relieve the shortage but Vice Admiral\nEmory S. Land, head of the War\nShipping Administration, and Paul\nMcNutt, Chairman of the War Manpower Commission, are taking a\ngrim view of the situation.\nA statement from the Office of\nWar Information forecast that repatriation of some 6,000,000 United\nStates Service personnel and the\nmovement of relief and other supplies will occupy the bulk of the\nUnited States Merchant Marine from\nsix months to three years after the\nend of all hostilities.\nThe O.W.I, forecast that iea transport in the war against Japan alone\nmay require three times the shipping involved ln the European war.\nSPECIALS\nLOAFERS AND OXFORDS,\nSpecial, pair\t\n$3.95\nLADIES' DRESS SHOES\nLow, cuban, high heels, $3.95 to $4.45\nMEN'S BOOTS AND OXFORDS\nSpecial, from $3.95 to $5.50 pair.\nLOW RUBBERS FOR CHILDREN, WOMEN, MEN,\nALSO OVERSHOES.\nJ. Mcrgens to\nHead Cranbrook\nBadminton Club\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-New members are still being accepted in the\nCity Badminton Club which began\nits Beason of Monday and Thursday evenings of play in the City Auditorium this week, Twenty-five\nadult members have signed up, and\nseveral high school students will be\naccepted. Membership will close\nwhen 40 players have joined. Play\nwill continue until late Spring.\nElected President at the annual\nmeeting waa Joe Megana, with Art\nBouchard chosen Vice-President,\nMrs. Colin Andrews Secretary-\nTreasurer, and Miss Dorothy Hay-\nden, Mrs. Ray Hill, Lloyd White-\nford, Frank Bridges and William\nPritchard executive committee\nmembers. Refreshment committee\nconvener la Mrs. Lloyd Whiteford,\nwhile supply committee chairmen\nare Mr. Pritchard and E. W. Sjol-\ndin.\nYnu rj_n oft-cn rh-rk a cold quickly\nif you follow thnv Instructions.\nJust a**\" soon as you feol thf cold row-\n,ing mi an<l rxpenenne hfAdarhp, pairu\n'in tho hack or limln\", sorenfm through\nthe body, Ukr: a Paradot tablet, a good\nTlig drink of hot lemonade or ginger U*\n\u2022nd go tn h-M.\nIV Paradnl affords almrwt imrwti-\nUt*\u00ab relief from the [lainnand nrliM. and\nhell* you to nrt off to slcfp. The {lone\n\u25a0may t\u00ab* rrpcatc-l, if n_-r-.-vt.vv, acoord-\n\u25a0nig to the di-T'-tions If there is aore-\nOew of the throat, garble with two\nPar*'lnl tshWfl dissolved in water Just\ntry I'uradol the next time you hurt, a\ncold and we believe that you will he\nwell pleAsr-d. Paradol does not du\u00bbp-\n'point.\nDr. Chase's Paradol\nMrs. Farrell, 70,\nof Moyie, Dies\nMOYIE, B.C.-Moyle hai lost one\nof iU oldest cltuens In the death\nof Mrs. Sadie Farrell at the St.\nEugene Hospital at Cranbrook on\nMonday evening after many years\noff Illness, Mrs. Farrell was born\non July 24, 1874 In Lowell, Mass,\nand was married in that city in ,\n1900 to J. P. Farrell who passed\naway some 25 years ago.\nFuneral services will be held in\nCranbrook from St. Mary's Catholic\nChurch Thursday.\nSgt. Meyers of\nWynndel\nKilled in Action\nWYNNDEL, BC.-Word was received last week of the death of\nSgt. R. Meyers, RCAF. in Belgium. His wife is the former Miss\nLeah Abbott of Wynndel.\nMrs. (.Scott\nLaid lo Rest\n27 Qualify for\nVoters' List\nFourteen householders or lloenoei\"?\ntook the dpcls-fctlon qualifying them\nfor the city voters' Hut at ths Clt.\nHall Tuesday, the final day on which\ndeclaration could be made to brum\nthe total of those who have done so\nrecently to 27.\nSaturday Will Be\nPoppy Day\nSaturday will tee ln Nelson the\nannual Poppy Day tag, conducted\nfor the Canadian Legion by the Women's Auxiliary to the Active Forces, with the proceeds designated to\nthe Legion's Velief fund, the poppies\n\u25a0old to be worn on? week later, on\nArmistice Day.\nMore volunteer taggers are desired, Mrs. A. D. Oliver, of the\nWomen's Auxiliary, stated Thursday\nnight. The night tagging assignment will be taken over by men of\nthe Legion.\nROSSLAND, B C, Nov. 3 -Funeral service for Mrs. Charlei Scott\nwas held Thursday afternoon from\nSt, Andrew's United Church, Rev\nH. K. Johnston officiating.\nHymns were \"Lead Kindly Light,\"\nand \"father of Peace and God of\nLove.\" Mrs. K, Jamieson prAided at\nLhe organ. There were many beautiful floral tributes.\nThe pallbearers were T. R. Davis,\nW. O. Scon, W. Bulck, James Milli-\nken, Gilbert Hunt and W. R. Stephens. Interment was ln Mountain\nView Cemetery.\nYoungest Stowaway\nGets Plane Ride\nROME, Nov. 2 (CP Reuter) - The\nyoung.st plane stowaway in hu-\nL\"ry, three-year-old Cartletto Camp-\nill ia, Arrived back here today by\nplane from I_*cce Apula airfield after hr had climbed unprrreived Into\na plane at it Rome airfield Saturday\nThe latter machine Immediately af\nter tonk off for Lecca.\nRequiem Mass\nlor Mrs. Leckie\nROSSLAND. B.C., Not. 3\u2014Requiem\nmaaa was aaid at the Sacred Heart\nCatholic Church Thursday morning by\nRt. Rev. A. K Maclntyre. V O., DP.\nfor the late Mra. Marjorle beckle, wife\nof Harry Leckie.\nThe attendance at the church waa\nlarge, and there wm a wealth of b\u00abau-\ntlful flowera. Interment wa_. In Mountain View Ornet-ery.\nPall-bearers were Tom Weir, Frank\nLavaratto, Al fllttun. Bruce Vermlere,\nR. Blythe and Ed Walters,\nTemperatures\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\u25a0YOUR  VANCOUVER  HOME*\nDufSerin Hotel\nNewly  r\u00a7novat\u00abd  throughout.   Phones   and   elevator,\nA     PATTERSON,   lata   of\nleymour 8t. Vancouver, B. C.     Coleman,   Alia..  Proprietor\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON DAILY\nAt 10:30 n.m.     Encrpt Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nM.  H   MclVOR,  frop.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135       Nelion\u2014Phone 35\nNelson temperatures Thursday\nwere nn thp lnwest level ol the\nthree-day period ot cloud \u00abnrt riln,\nbut were within the typically nar- j\nrow ranRp ot other two rlnys a range\n! which was eight degrees Thursday,1\n7.8 degrees Wednesday, and 7 7 de-'\ngreea Thursday. The extremes tor\nthe 24 hours ending al 5 pm Thursday were 40 2 and 47 9 d;J*Tees The\nprecipitation was II Inch, bringing\nthe three-day total lo 52 Inch The\nsun came out lute In the afternoon,\nand the sky cleared at njght, perhaps forecasting frost There was\nIndications of n little snow high\non the mountsins\nThe population of Switzerland  la\nabout   4,2fiO,_00\nGet Relief From Your\nTIRED FEELINGS\nNERVOUS SPELLS\nUrmn Up \u2014 F-m.1 Younpr\nTfcc-tiMn.U !>\u2022\u00bb\u2022 Urn (rrtrWed tt Iht ***\u00bb\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0'it ft HitU tMppInf ap with Pr. WlllUm*\nTLnk P.Uft ft-rwMfTtsh. C-onUIn* gantral\n\u2022-r,\\ra   oft-ifl   .<<_*-U-1   t.r   n .n\n-    --......    .._\u2014-.\u00bb..    ..,    man    _ing    \u25a0 n\n\u00abh<> '\"l old \u2022-:\u25a0_ * .\u25a0.\u25a0!. twwIiM >T. |,cU,,|\nIn   Mr-Old    ...-\u25a0\u25a0tUli    Vltft]   t\u00bb   \u2022-*.*\u25a0*(\u00bb    .rl\n\u00bblf\u00bbr, 8Urt on \/our vtr to {\u2022\u2022llni t*ppl\u00abr\ne*4 llr.lWT aim D-\u00a3#imt\u00bb lUtYttt\nUto rart taj. At jr\u00abw 4ra\u00ab|_rt_   ,\nDickinson Speaks\non 8 Subjects\nto Gov't Employees\nNelson members of the B.C. Government Employeei Association\ntested the public speaking skill ot\nT. S. Dlcklnion ot Nelson Thuriday night at their meeting at the\nCanadian   Legion.\nEight subjects picked out at random by the memben were dealt\nwith by Mr. Dickinson, who spoke\non each subject, ranging over the\nAssociation, office filing, the human\nbeing, plastics, photography, a penknife, the Queen bee, and blood\ndonors.\nRefreshments  were Served.\nLoan Over the\nHalfway Mark\nOTTAWA, Nov. J (CP) - All sections ot Canadian industry are\nlending \"good\" support to Canada's\nSeventh Victory Loan, which now\nhaj a national total of $661,097,750,\nLoan Headquarter! announced tonight.\nThe $661,0.7,750 figure, announced today and including $295,938,100\nfrom individual Canadians, means\nthat more than half the minimum\nobjective of $1,300,000,000 has been\nreached but that individuals are t\nlittle below their minimum of $600,-\n000,000.\nHeadquarters said typical of ths\nIndustrial support was thst of\nthe mining Industry which up to\nnow has purchased approximately\n$23,000,000 In bonds. Canadian\noil Industries also were In the\nloan news with purchases by two\ncompanies totalling $1,000,000,\nAll three Armed Services now\nare over the top with the RC.A.F.\nreporting $15,290,150 for 103 per\ncent of ita $15,000,000 quota. Army\nand Navy both have 105 per cent\nCombined total of the three services is $42,369,150. It Include!\n$5,060,300 from the Navy snd $22,-\n018,700 from the Army.\nKimberley Leads\nEast Kootenay;\n$161,850 lo 1151\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., Nov. J-Klm-\nberley Victory Loan over-subscribed all other tub-units on unofficial\nfigurei on today's lalei to reach\n66.14 per cent of ltl 1290,000 quota.\nThe 110 applications were for a total\not $13,050. Application! amount to\n1151 for an average of $149 and a\ngrand total of $187,890.\nMoyie Bond\nSales $2950\nMOTH, B.C.\u2014The Bond aale In the\nIth Victory Loan ln Mojle up to daw\nil 1-950. It Is expected sales will be\nover the $3000 mark before the season\nIs over.\nTAKE NO CHANCES\nWITH\nBABY'S COLD\nDONT LET yoor t\u00bbby'i Uttle oold dtTek\u00bb\nInto toBMthii-f wone. Ut Mrt. GflO. McBrlde\nof Sarborougn tell yon wh\u00bbt to do. **Mt btby\nof 14 monthi caught t niily cold, to I tried\nBaby'* Own Tibleti and the tivtrw thl\u00ab cold\noff quicker than ever before. I certainly am foe\nBaby'i Own Tablet* from now on.\"\nBaby'i Own Tablet! help la Um treatment\nnf coldi by their laxative action. They are\nnreet-taatlng, eaiy to take\u2014and may be cruabed\nto a powder If dealred. Effective in teething\ntrouble*, con*tipatton, simple feveri, Op-ttt\natoroach. turnmer complaint, diarrhoea and\nother minor allmettu. No \"ileepr\" ttuff\u2014no\ndulling cflect.\nGet a package today. Stckneei eo often strike*\nIn the night. 25 centi. Your money back U you\nare not Mtij-ied.\nMajor A. M. Porker,\nFormerly of\n111th, Now at Coast\nMajor Arthur M, Parker, former\nmember of the 11 ith (Nelson) T\\rU\\\nBattery haa h<^n tv*.M to Vanr-ouver\nafter aervlng 4't je\\m overaeaa with\nthe Canadian Army Major Parker wa*\nwell known in Nrlaon where fur -mine\nyrari he reprr*ented the Northern\nEe-rtrlc Ontipany He waa n pint president of the Avf-clstrd Canadian Traveler*, and waa an active [fol.e. He 1-\ne tr*. ot the late Capt. f M ParkT,\niklpi>er for Union Steamahlpa.\nDewey Has Edge\nin Last Gallup Poll\nNEW YORK. Nov. 2 (CP)-Thr\nUnlt<Kl SUtf\u00ab pre-ildfritlAl rare between President Roosevelt Ami Gov\nThomii E. Dewey of New York is\ntoo close to warrant trying to pick\ni winner, four nationwide polls\n\u25a0 jreed-- ia   of   today.\nThre-e nf the four nplnion-a.imp-\nlingi gave the President a slight\nlead but the fourth, lhe It-en. Gallup poll, Indicated Gov. Dewey h.id\nthr edge All four, however, wre\ncareful to eipUin that the marKim\nwere   not   conclusive.\nHirabayashi Up\non Charge of\nFailing to Report\nSPOKANE, Nov. 2 (AP)\u2014Gordon K. Hirabayashi, Japanese-\nAmerican who received considerable publicity when he lost in Seattle \u25a0 suit challenging the United\nStatei Government order evacuating Americans (rom the Pacific\ncoastal region, was indicted In Federal district court today on a charge\nof failing to report for work ai a\nconscientious objector.\nOUT WITH\nNo need to let cheK coldi gri\nyou down thli fall aad winter.\nYour -__.i-.tr bottle of dependable\nPumon'i with Iti quick action,\ntwo-mi nut*   relief  will   ch\u00abk\ntbcm from the Matt. At\n\u2022U Drug Stunt,\nThe \"Bay's\" Food Values\nSELLING TODAY, SATURDAY AND MONDAY\n. _       PEACHES   IN  8YRUP:      ftgt\n1 Itf.   Orchird City, 20 ot tlm   *'r\nNEW BABIES\nMany trained nun*t um Itlll 1\nrtllobl* old tot flitv-ngjg |\nDIAPER RASH\nCUTICURA HRS\nwhm-m jv^w f*ft w\nn_.nl n.q* tauru _._-_\u00ab 1 Cnon    do lamrtMluP\nCORN:    Aylmtr,   Q.B.,\n20 as. tlm, eich\nSOUP:    Tomito   or   Vegetibl*.\nPEAS:  Sin 5,  Columbii-,   *} I a,   Aylmtr\n_0 oi.,  -  tim \u00b0 \"r*\nGREEN  CUT  BEANS\n10 oi. tin    . \"f\nGREEN  CUT  BEANS:         1 O   90UP   MIX.   HlblUnt,        *)**J.\nAylmtr, M ol. tin., e.ch     '\"V   2 pkgi.   *t**,V*\nCOFFEE\u2014Hostess LB. 44c\nGround to order\nTEA\u2014Nabob\nLb. 73c\nA cholct blend.\nBPOHK  OR  PREMi\n12 oi. tlni, eich\n2q>.   SOAP:  Pilmollvi, IQ.A\nNUT PIECES: For biking, Mi IVORY   8NOW1  Lirgi Iter-\nLb. J0V pkg., eich ,     Z\u00b0V\n$1   *)f| FLOOR WAX: Old Eng-     B***>\n\u25a0\u2022\u2022''J II.h, 2 Ib. tlm 0DV*\n$1    IA OLA88 CLEANER: 1C>\n'\u2022'\" A.romlit.  2.   oz.         ****)*?-\nJOHDAN   ALMONDS:\nShelled,   Ib.\nOXO   FLUID:\nIt oi. bottlei\nFRUITS AND VEGETABLES\nORANGES:  2__'i, *> 1 j.   CAULIFLOWER:\nDoi. d,V-    Lh.\nGRAPEFRUIT:\n8   for\nm\n20t\u00a3   0nAPE8:   lm0etet, 24(f\nmCOHPORATlO tr* may i\u00ab7a     I\ntttmtaatattaattttttttttttsm\n mam\n^atmm\nIftl\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1944 \u2014 S J\nFRIDAY - SATURDAY - MONDAY - THREE BIG\nFeaturing New Merchandise and Special Values in All Departments\nMen's Suits\nYes,'men, these suits are ideal for all\noccasions. Dressy Worsteds that will\ngive you that well dressed air wherever\nyou are. Models for men and young men.\nSizes 36-46.\n$27.50\nFor Outdoor Men...\nStag Shirts\nHeavy pure wool checked Shirts that are\nmade for warmth and comfort on the\njob. Double yoke, two breast pockets and\nbutton front.\n$11.50\nHeavy\nTweed Trousers\nTailored from Humphrey Tweed. Thesf\nwill give you warmth and long service\nthis Winter. Tailored with 5 pockets and\nplain bottoms. Sizes 32 42.\nPair   \t\n$6.25\nWinter Coats\nBeat the cold this yeor in a warm\nWool Overcoat from the \"Bay\". Tailored in the popular Raglan model\nwith slash pockets.  Sizes 37-42.\n$1995\nMen's\nTopcoats\nLight warm Velour Topcoats \u2014\nSwagger style \u2014 that are needed\nnow for the cooler weather Browns,\nBlues or Greys. Sizes 35 to 44.\n$21-50\nMen's - Boys' Windbreakers\nFor the workman or fhe sportsman.\nLight, yet warm Melton tailored in\nwaist length with full zipper front,\ntwo leather bound pockets and\nod|ustable straps\nEach       ..\n$5.95\nTailored of warm Melton for young\nlads of 6 to 18 years ond patterned\nafter the men's windbreakers-\nDark Navy Blue.\nEach\t\n$4.95\n66-Piec.\nDinner Sets\nWoods  Ivory Ware  in  two smart\ndesigns     Service for 8 persons\n^5.\n00\nEnamelware\nOpportunity day for Enamelware.\nWhite with Red Trim\nCovered Pots, Reg. $2 25, f 1.7\u00bb\nCovered Pots, Reg   $1 75, $1.3*\nCovered Saucepan, Reg\n$1.39, for   eet\nSTORE HOURS:\nMon.-Tu-n.-T.iur_.-Pri.\n9 a.m.-5 p.m.\nWednesday: 9 I.m.-12 noon\nSaturday: 9 a.m. J p.m.\nLady Pepperell Sheets\nFine quality Percale\nSheets from this famous American mill.\nAnd they're big sheets,\n81x99. Plain hemmed\nand ready to use. Opportunity Days, pair:\n$5.75\nSpecial Wool Filled\nComforters\ni\nCovers of good - wearing floral\nChintz with Satin panel all around.\nShades of Blue, Rose, Orchid, Gold\nor Green. A big value. Note size,\n66x72.   Each:\nDown\nComforters\nFine down filling. Covers of down-\nproof English Sateen in Rose, Blue,\nGreen or Gold. A quality comforter at a moderate price. Size 60x72.\nEach:\n$25.00.\n$4.50\nChildren's Crib \"Special\"\nStrongly made of Eastern hardwood, and\nfinished in Natural shade .with decorations in juvenile designs. Standard\nsize 27x51. Just 5 at this special price.\nReg. $25.00.   Opportunity Days, each:\n$17-95\nSTUDIO LOUNGES\nJust arrived \u2014 3 only extra soft\nLounges. Back rest and loose cushions. Quickly converted into a\nvery comfortable double bed. \u2014\u2022\nSpace for bedding in base. Opportunity Days, eqch:\n$59.50\nAXMINSTER RUGS\nOne size only 6'9\" x 9'. A lovely\nfloral design in \"Princess\" quality. Shades of Wine and Green.\nOpportunity Days, each:\n$49.\n50\nLady Hudson Shoes\nGraceful shoes that will give your\nfoot that well-groomed look. Dressy\npumps or ties in a host of snappy new\nstyles to choose from. Sizes 5-9 in\nwidths AA-C.\n$5.75\nWOMEN'S SHOES\nDr. O'Dell's Arch-preserver Shoes\nfor women who need arch support\nyet want a dressy shoe. Sizes 5-9,\nwidths A-EE.\nBOYS' OXFORDS\nDesigned for school boys to giv\u00bb\nthem foot comfort and wear \u2014\nSturdily constructed with heavy\nleather sole and leather heel\nSizes 1 to 5\n$3.49\n$3.75\n|m#m#\nAll Weather\nTweed\nCoats\nSmartness and practicability\n\u2014perfectly tailored Tweeds,\ntopper for any costume,\nwarm and wearable. Choose\nyour from our selection. \u2014\nSizes 14 to 40.\n$1995\nOthers at\n$25.00\nGirls Winter\nCoats\nThis Casual Wool Tweed Coat\nwill   keep   you   looking   we\ndressed for school.   Single and\ndouble breasted styles. Brown,\nGreen and Grey. Sizes 7 to 14.\n$9-95\nNew Crepe\nDresses\nNew Crepe Casuals that are smart for your\nafter-five date. Figure-flatering, softly-\ndraped with exciting trim\u2014Choose yours\nfor every hour of your busy day. Newest\nand smartest shades. Sizes 14 to 44.\n$4.95\nOthers at\n$6.95 and $8.95\nWOOL SNUGGIES AND VESTS\n100 per cent pure wool in White and Tea-\nrose     Sizes Small, Medium and Large.\u2014\nLimit 2 to a customer\nEach     \t\nWOOL BLANKETS\n95*\nAll-Wool Blankets for baby's crib. They're\na light Fawn color and have whipped edges.\nSize 56x39.\nPrice  \t\n$2.50\nWool \"Scoop\"!\n4-ply Wool Yarn in Airforce only \u2014 An\nideal yarn for a heavier-type garment.\nPut up in 2-oz. skeins.   Per skein:\n19c\nRAYON HOSE\nAll full-fashioned hose in good shades for\nFall\u2014Sheers or Semi-service weights,\n.ires 8V_ to IOVj.\nPair  \t\nHANDBAGS\n79'\nClever  styles   in  Black,   Brown,   Tan  or\nNavy \u2014 Some with zipper fastenings. \u2014\nYour choice, tax included,\nEach   -   ..\n$3.95\ndtttjwnf\n=fc\n\t\nINCORPORATED 2\"? MAY 1670.\n\t\nPHONES;\nReady-tw-Waar\nDrygoods   \t\nGroceries    \t\nHositry       \t\nMen'i Wear  ...\n49\n49\n193\n52\n29\n \u2014\nup\n_\u2014\n,_ NELSON DAILY NIWS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1944\njlescence...\niuse of Acne\nid Treatment\nUscussed\nBy UOQAN CLENDENIMQ, M. 0.\nIvery P\u00bbrt of the body end every\nttt In Ute hu Its own peculiar kind\not ikin trouble.\n- Tbe dlietae ipeclal and peculiar\nto the period of youth and adolet-\neeoc\u00ab li acne, or plmplei. And that\ntact muit certainly be taken Into account In any theory of the cause and\ntrSattgent of lhl\u00bb peculiar disorder.\n\"It* -J** It differently at the very period '-\u00bbhen the ductless gland sys-\ntan ll maturing and rising to a lather of activity of secretion, trying\nto adjust Itself, sometimei producing\ntoo much of this and sometimes too\nUttle, the skin respondi In thli un-\nalghtly manner.\nOf course, that it li a condition of\nadolescence Is of fundamental Importance In the underlying of the\npiychology and handling of these\npatients. In the Springtime of life\n^rhen the frog he would a-woolng\ngo. thii ii the very accursed time\nwhen the face ls covered with this\nred, iplotchy, pimply breaking out\ntfhat Is repulsive even in the victim\nJ>WiL\nSent on\nApproval\nTermi In accordance with\nW.P.T.D. Regulation!.\nf\nwok\nMain at Sixth\nand in Hotel Vancouver\n39'\n30'\nR. R. Horner\nR & R GROCERY\nHAALKIN'S nr-t\nPUDDINGS, 3 for Lj\nMALKIN'S DATED\nCOFFEE, Ib _._.\nBISCUITS, Plain,\nPer Ib\t\nMIRACLE   WHIP   SALAD\nDRESSING,\n8 ox. __\nCORN, Prairie\nMoid, 20 or., 2 tins\nTOMATOES, Field,\n,3.lbi.  \t\nSWEET POTATOES,\n2 lbs.\nCAULIFLOWER,\n?tt Ib.\nCARROTS, BEETS,\nfty bunch \t\nLETTUCE,\nHjad \t\nCELERY,\nPtr Ib\t\nSPINACH, Freih,\nPe. Ib.    \t\nPARSNIPS,\nPer lb \t\nTurnips, Squash, Onions,\netc.\nPHONI 161 \u2014 We Deliver\n20*\n29'\n29*\n25'\n10'\n6'\n15'\n10'\n10'\n5'\nown mirror, let atone to the only\ngirl or boy, as the case may be, ill\nthe world. No wonder the poor kids\nare plunged Into dark despair and\nhtve to be handled very gently and\nsympathetically.\nBasic change ls an Increase ln the\nhorny cells at the opening of the\ngrease glands of the skin.\nThli change, lt hu been observed,\nll Identical with the changes that\noccur ln tha ikin In Vitamin A ce-\ntlclency. Since every aspect of the\ncondition Indicates lome underlying disturbance of nutrition it may\nbe that something like a difficulty\nln abiorbing or utilizing Vitamin A\nli preient.\nOn this theory a leriei of 1(100\ncases of acne were treated by supplementing the diet with a daily addition of 100,000 units of vitamin A.\nFollowing treatment for six months\nit Is reported that 79 became free,\nor nearly frei, of acne, and only\nthree patlenti were unimproved.\nGeneral measure! for tbe treatment of acne are always Indicated.\nThe diet should be regulated but not\nto the point where lt is Inadequate.\nThe general health should not suffer in trying to get rid of the unsightly eruption because ln the\ncourse of time it will go away anyhow. Many of the patients are found\nto be drinking too much milk under\nthe impression that is wholesome.\nChocolate milk, peanut butter and\nnuts have a reputation for making\nthe condition worse.\nThe care of the scalp is essential\nln the successful management of\nacne. This applies equally to the\ntreatment of seborrheic dermatitis\nof the face, Most of the patients are\nbeset with dandruff accompanied\nby itching.\nWashing the face twice or three\ntlmea daily with a neutral soap\nwhich the patients have learned will\nnot irritate their skins ls Indicated.\nDo not Irritate the skin of the face\nby vigorous rubbing with a wash\ncloth.\nCreiton Church ro\nTaki Part in\nPeace Offering\nCRJC8TON, B.C.\u2014The Review vu\nInformed by Rev. F-olkmm, that the\nat. Paul'l Lutheran Church had vstetl\nto take part In the 18000.00 Peace-\nTh ink-Ottering luneited by the general lynod of Lutheran Churches, on\nthe Sunday following the cesmtton ot\nEuropean hoBtlllttw. This fund It li\nunderstood In to be uaed for the\n\"immenee task of iplrltual rehabilitation In Europe and Asia and lor\nmlaalon expansion.\"\nPROCTER\nPROCTER. B.C. \u2014 Mr. Boddlnrton\nhad ai hla weekend gueiU, Mr. and\nMn. Q. Stewart and daughter, Mar-\nlene. of Trail.\nMra, fl. Bonacci wm a visitor to Nelaon Monday,\nA. W. Idleni of Nelson and H. R.\nBoard of Howser were vial tori \u00abt tha\nHoliday Inn during the weekend.\n|     Mra.    A.    MacKinnon    and    Uttle\n1 daughter Joan, of Blewett spent several days here with Cnpt. and Mrs\nM. MacKinnon.\nThe Missed Betty and Dollv Shkwarok apent several days In Nelson,\nMrs. MscDougsl shopped in Nelson\nI Wednesday.\nI     J. W. E. Aleiander of Lardo wa# a\n1 guest  at Holiday  Inn  at the  veml-\nj end.\n!    Mri, Swannell of Nel_\u00bbon spent Sun-\ni dny with her mother, Mr*. A. Aylwin,\nand sister, Mlia >, Aylwln, here.'\nI H. MacKinnon wu a visitor to Nelson laat week\nj    Onr, Gilbert McMullln of Sydney,\nI N-S., Is spending leave here with hla\n| parents, Mr. and Mrs  J. McMullln.\nI Mr. and Mn. Paul Soleckl and llttli\nson, David, of Tyr spent Friday With\ni Mr. and Mrs. H. Soleckl.\n1     W. M. Young nnd O. Mulr of Nelson\n, werr rtvent guests nt Holiday Inn.\n! Mr, nnd Mrs 8. Mslahoff nnd children. Vera nnd Patrick, and Mrs. O\nI Donaldson were visitors to Gray creak\nI Sunday. \\\n\u25a0    Mr. snd Mrs J. R#nt!e shopped In\n' Nelson Thursday,\nI     The   Misses   Jean   fluthrrinncl   and\n| Jean Underwood of Nelaon spent the\n1 weekend In Proc*_er\nLt. nnd Mrs   Ward of Great falli,\n| Mont., were recent holld-iyers nt the\nI Holiday Inn\nMr. and Mrs. W. Malahoff were rill.\nI tors to Ntlion Saturdsy.\nI      8. Evini of Boaworth wm a visiter\n:, In town recently.\ni     Mlsi Pally Smith of Nelson spent\nI the weekend at her home here\n|     Mri. N. Shkwarok wm a shopper in\n| NiMboti   Wednesday\n|     The Mlasei Anne Smith and Helen\ni Oretrhln visited Gray Creek Sunday\nDon Ure of Nelson was a recent tIs-\nI I tor In Procter.\nMiss Carol DitIi spent iemt.1 dayi\n[ at her home In Riondel.\nMis* G Orlwlle nnd Mlas K Aylwln, teachers of Proct-v. attended thf\nTeacheri' Con Ten tlon. held at Trail\nT T Griffith wss a vlaltor \\o Nelson during the wrrk.\nMr. nnd Mrs Ham ere and Mr and\nMri Stevens of Nelson wert guest.\nat HnllrlnT Inn at the weekend.\nLake Superior is the wnrld'i largest Inland body of fresh water.\nQverwaiteA\nLIMITED\nGIANT RINSO,       QQC\n2 pk9-. \u00bb\nMAGIC BAKING POWDER,\n5 Ib. tint,\nEach\n17'\n$1.19\n$1.19\nSARDINES,\n;   Bmmwlck, 2 tint\nCLAMS, Clover        \/JT*\nLot, Vi, _ tin.      Oj\nKRAFT CHEESI\n3 Ib. bo\u00ab\nVEGETABLE SOUP, -yet\nCon. Flnt, 5 tlm    *-J\n98'\nKLIM   POWDERED   MILK,\nMb.\nHn  .._\n69*\nOVALTINE,\n1 Ib. |ar\nAYLMER SOUPS,     <*JQt\ntini-___^\/\nCHICKEN HADDIE, JQC\nBrunswick, tin atma*\nPIAS, Groin Delta,\nNo. I'i, 6 tlm\n83*\nVeg. or Tom., 3\nMRS. STEWART'S\nBLUE, bottle\nVAN    CAMP'S   TOMATO\nJUICE,\n48-01. tin\nVANILLA,   Monarch   Pure,\nli-oi.\nbottle\n25*\nJMATO\n29'\n\\   Pure,\n$1.35\nPHONE 707\nFREE DELIVERY\nDiscipline..,\nChildren Should\nCome Home al\nRegular Hours\nBy Garry Cleveland Myeri, I'hrD.\n\"Dear Dr. Myeri; 1 have three children-\u2014a boy 16, girl 13, and another\nboy 10, The proolem ls, what tlmo\nnhould they be in the houte and to\nbed The rule hai alwaya been until\nthli past summer that they come\nhome, in their own yard when the\nstreet lights come on, and in the\nhouse by 8:00 or a Uttle alter.\n\"Now it seem* that the parenti ol\nthe children who do live around here,\naren't particular what time their\nchildren get In oil the street. 1 am alwaya the one to get mine ln first,\nniter which the rest alwaya go home\ntoo.\n\"My children, and eapeclally the\noldest hoy thinks that he should stay\nout until 10:00 o'clock at least, and 1\ncontend that he should be ln bed by\n10.\nYour desire to protect your children\nIs good, but you err, I think, In two\ndirections: You don't take Into account the wide range of age-dlller.\nencei and you don't enforce the rules\nyou have made. I suggest you let the\neldest boy have at least one evening a week when he may go out until\nten and, in case you know where he\nIs and the event \/seems reasonable,\nuntil eleven occasionally at a weekend, On practically all other nigh is.\nespecially those before school, he\nshould he In the house after dark.\nOf course, you would not expect the\nyounger children to be outside after\ndark unless accompanied by a responsible older person. Even then their\nbeing out at night should be definitely limited. But neither you nor the\nfather ahould have to go out to call\nthem. Let the appearance of the lights\ndo this. Merely iet penalties, other\nthan scolding, severe enough that they\nwon't venture to violate the rule after\none Infraction. As each child proves\nresponsible for observing certain regulations, he should gradually have more\nprivileges.\nYou might work out a plan whereby, especially on Winter nights, other\nchildren come to your home for an\nhour or io after dark and your children go to their homes, provided they\nlive reasonably near and their homes\nare well supervised.\nKASLO\nPresent Four Trail Principals\nWith Pennants al Trail Convention\nNavy Bond Plays Hero Monday\nShown above is the Royal Canadian Naval Band from H.M.C.S. Naden, Esquimalt, which\nwill visit Nelson Monday and stage afternoon and evening concerts at the Capitol Theatre\non behalf of the Seventh Victory Loan Drive.\nAt right Is Lieut. R. I. Freeman, R.C.N.V.R., who is travelling with the Band as a speaker.\nThe Band is led by Warrant Officer Stanley Sutherland.\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014After spending the\nSummer at Howser, Misa Nellie Batea\nhas returned to her home at Walla\nWalla, Wash.\nUT*. Charlea Bowker left for Macleod on Thursday, having received\nword ol the serious Illness of her father. A radio message was received\nlater Thuraday night saying he h-^d\ndied.\nRfn. F. fl. Chun has returned to hli\nbace after spending leave with his\nparent* ln Kaalo.\nFred Aydon of the D.CJ5.C at Nelson\n\u25a0spent the wwkend at his home in\nKaalo.\nT. Ainsworth of Howier; was In\nKaslo en route to Nelson.\nMrs. M. Baker and Mrs J. B\nFletcher of Nelson were guests ln\nKailo at the weekend.\nMri. J. Little has had ai a guest\nher son Ab J. R. Little, R.C.N.V_R.\nof Vancouver,\nMr. and Mrs. W. Wadeson of South\nSlocan and daughters, Sheila and Mar.\ngot. spent the weekend with Mrs\nWarieson'a father, Herbert Ext-er in\nKulo.\nMra. E. Osier, Mrs. R. Patterson anJ\nMrs. J. Russel were guests in the city\nfrom Riondel at the weekend.\nMrs. W. Hendren has returned home\nafter a two months' vlilt at Alert\nBay and flqusmlsh, B.C.\nLac. Carl McLanders of TaUma-\nlouche, Nfl., has returned to Clarei-\nholm after a short leave spent with\nhli grandfather, D. A. McKenzIe it\nKaslo.\nBill Ludlow of Nelson was a weekend guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nFred Aydon.\nMra. W. F MrNlrol, Mri, A Broken-\nshlre, Bru<r McNicol and PO. J. W\nMcNicol were here from Johneon'i\nLanding at the weekend.\nMri. j. L. Syddall and daughter,\nMaureen, w<re visitors to Nelson.\nBert Clark has returned to Kaslo\nafter several months*residence st Fernle.\nMr. and Mra F. H Abey and son\nRoy and Bob West man were shoppen\nIn Nelson at the weekend from Mirror\nUke.\nMra. A. BmKfnshlre and small !\ndaughter of Vancouver are spending j\na month at Johnson's landing. !\nguilts of Mrs   W   F   McNicol,\nMra A J MrOillivray and grandim, |\nAlan fl-plers. Wt on Wednesday to\nvisit Mr. and Mrs Chester flplera In\nKlmberley after whl<-h thev will leav-\nto ipind \u2666he Winter with relatives In\nNovi fl**ot!a.\nFigure-Fixing...\nLose 10 Pounds\nin Eight Weeks\nBY UM JEAN KA1N\nMaybe It's the season, but there\nseems to be an up-trend ln figure Ilx-\nIng. Women are asking for a prescription for slimming\u2014a complete overhauling, one young lady expressed >t.\nShe complins that thp Is twenty\npounds overweight and all ln the\nmiddlet If this slimming flu In with\nyour day dreams, here we go . . .\nIt isn't difficult to lose twenty\npoundi In eight weeka. which Is two\nand one-half pounda per week. The\npounds may not come off exactly at\nthat rate. You might lose three to\nfdur pounds the first week and that\nmany the second, If the fat la the eoft\nwatery kind that Is easily lost. But\nwhen the flesh Is the too, too eaUJ\nkind, tt might take a couple of weeki\nto make a good start. Also, those\nplagued with water retention might\nnot show any weight loss for 10 days\nto two weeks, then suddenly lose five\nor six pounds overnight. But anyone\nwho follows a good diet restricted to\n1000 to 120*0 calories a day can be\nslimmer by 20 pounds In eight to 10\nweeks.\nLet's see exactly how to go about\nlosing these 88,420 calories or twenty poundi The average woman ln sedentary work requires around 2100\ncalories a day to keep going. Excess\nweight means she haa overstepped\nthis number and the extra have been\nstored\u2014In thli case, mostly around\nthe middle. These stored calories represent surplui fuel material which is\non tap to he uied for energy anytime\nIt's needed,\nTo chuck the twenty poundi then,\nthe calories must be lowered to the\npoint where stored calories will be\nburned for part of the energy need-..\nIt,has been proved that it Is perfectly\naafe to lesien the calorlea by one-\nthird to one-half the dally requirement. For the sedentary worker the\nreducing diet can be 100 to 1200 ca.\nlories a day and for the average woman 1200 a day.\nIn making up a reducing diet, the\nmain trick la to Include the essentials without going out of bounds on\ncalories. In a diet as low as 1000 calories, e*very food used must provide\nlt'i full ahare of nutrition. If the following nutrition essentials form the\nbasla of your reducing diet, you can\nlose the twenty poundi and Improve\nyour health on thli abundant diet.\nFormer Nelson\nGirl, in C.W.A.C,\nWeds in Britain\nA former Nelion girl ln the CW\nA.C., Mlu Betty Irene Doodson. has\nb\u00abn married ln England to William\nMurray Black ot the Royal Canadian\nArtHlerv.\nMiss Doodeon li the only daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. Frank Doodson who\nfor \u00bbome years resided in Nelson. Mr.\nDoodson was employed by the Canadian Pacific Railway.\nThe bridegroom <s a son of Mr, and\nMrs  W. Black of Bstevan, Bask.\nBoth bride and bridejrroom are\nserving at Canadian Military Headquarter!,\nThe marriage took place at Christ\nChurch Coekfonters In Torkihlre Mr.\nsnd Mrs. I>>oclson are living at Scarborough.\nAnta have a great variety of food\npreference!\u2014-mme are carnivorous,\nothers feed upon nectar and honey-\ndew, nthera gather seed nnd some\nlive on fungi which they cultivate.\nItltllltllltllllllll rut Hill him...\n'\u25a0un.mini\" iiiiiiiiiiiiin\ndiinh(oh\ndioi\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nIHlMinillIlllllll|||||!lll|||||1||IIIIIIIIIIMIIIMIII|Mini1l|||||l|||(ilMM1111ltll\nSTUFFED HADDOCK FILETS\nTODAY'S -MENU\nStuffed Filets nf Haddock.\nTrench  Fried  Potatoes\nSalad\nButtered  Beeti\nLemon Pie Coffee\n4 filets of haddock, flounder or\nsole. 1 cup bread crumbs, S tablespoons melted shortening. 1 teaspoon lemon Juice, milk to moisten,\n1 teaspoon finely chopped parsley,\nU teaspoon grated lemon rind, 1\nPsiii, bit of sage, salt and pepper\nto taste.\nIf filets are frozen, let stand nt\nroom temperature, until thnwrd.\nWipe well, rub with salt and pepper, dot over one ilde with bieon\nfat Prepare bread dressing by combining h rend-crumbs, melted fat,\n\u25a0eaaoningi, beaten egg and milk to\nmotiten; mix lightly. Place spoonful of drenlng on each filet and\nroll, itarflng at broad end of filet,\nrolling toward the tail. Have ready\nstrips of greaspd paper or cook inn\npnrrhment, rut fhe slrr of the rolls,\nroll each ftlet In atrip of paper and\ntie in plaee wtth itring Place in\nwrll-greiied baking dish and bake\nfrom 30 to 3a minutes in hot oven\nMOO degrees F i Take rolls from\noven and remove paper Plnrp on\nhot plater and airve plain or ac-\nroinpanir.i with a well aenioned tomato or creamed ihrin.p sauce.\nServe* 4\nCASTLEGAR .\nCASTLEGAR, B.C. \u2014 Mra. Layton\nWilson of Trail ittended the Wanlesa-\nSommera nuptials here.\nL. Grunerod returned to hla home\nhere from Roderick, Sask., where he\nattended his father's funeral.\nMrs, L. Prlorle and ion, David, are\nvisiting relatives in Trail.\nGeorge Koochln, BUI Kerleff, Mike\nKoochln and Andy fllakoff were visitors to Nelson.\nMlas Phoebe Flynn, who ittendi\nbusiness college in Nelson, spint thl\nweekend with her parents, Mr. md\nMri. B. Flynn.\nMrs. Jones of Trail returned to her\nhome after spending a week with her\nparents, Mr, and Mrs. c. Fraier.\nSam Relko of Trail vlalted here it\nthe weekend.\nJ. Rohb, who hu been vliltlng hli\ndaughter, Mra. L. Morey, returned to\nhis home in Nelion.\nhaw. Jean Bulck of Lethbridge H\nspending a furlough with Mr. \u00bbnd\nMrs. J. Killough.\nPete  Sallkan   of Trail apent  the\nweekend here.\nMn. J. Koslincl.\nMn. M, Coula of Trill ls a guest A\nMr. and Mn. Powell of South Slo-\noan were vliltori to Castlegar,\nMr, and Mri. Adrian Coutnolr, Miss\nEunice Maber and Frank and Bernard Spring of Rossland were Castlegar vis i ton.\nMiss Kay Suk of Trail spent the\nweekend with her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. J. Zuk-\nvisitors to Trill Saturday wire Mri.\nA. Lelnai, Mlas Hizel Saunders, Mlas\nYvonne Parent, Miss Annie Slakoff.\nMiss Annie Fomenoff. J_fr. and Mrs\nHenry Adle, Mn. I Carlson, Mri. A.\nSchlavon, Mrs. A. Zuckerburg, Miss\nIrene ITyck, Mr. and Mrs. P. Semlnoff,\nMn, J, Hanson, Mr. \u00bbnd Mn, O. Walker, John Dvck, Dr. J, Wright. John\nMakarroff. Bill Saunders, Pete Obed-\nkoff and Nick Horcoff.\nMiss Elsie Lazareff of Trail visited\nCastlegar Friday.\nMr. jnd Mrs. Don Wallace and children, Ellen, Fwan and Donnle spent\nthe weekend ln Trail,\nMiss Evelvn Ssls'ccloll and Miss\nGlna Chrlatlanl of Trail were guests\nof Mrs. A. Saunders.\nPete Konkln and Sam Konkln of\nTarrv's visited Castlegar.\nMrs. M, Motobro speht Saturday In\nNelson. \"\nM'm Norma feterson spent Monday\nIn Trail.\nMrs. John Semlnoff and ohlldren\nwere Trail visitors.\nKINGSGATE\nKING30ATE, B-O^-Mr. and Mri. I.\nSanatoria have arrived In town to\ntake up residence. Mr. Sinatorm is the\nnew patrolman hare md hai been\ntransferred from New Mexico.\nFrom now until the end of April the\nCustoms Houses both U.S. mo Canadian will be on their Winter .schedule\nof hours 8 a.m.-8* p.m. instead of\n7 a.m.-9 p.m, aa has been for the\npast six montha,\nIt Is now definitely established that\nDr. Doust ls to be with us permanently, his appointment as Government\nDoctor on the Ui.. side having been\nconfirmed.\nThe IMcnoohls Club meets every -second and fourth Monday of the\nmonth at the various members\nhouses. Mra. M. Douglas la President\nand Mrs. L. Hill, Secretary.\nThe Ladles Study Club with Mrs,\nL, Anderson and Mrs. Harry Hogg as\nhoetesies met in the HaU recently to\nhear Mra. W. Baskervllle'a book review on \"The Latch String Out,\" It\nwas most Interesting, ths main points\nIn the story being well brought out\nand vividly portrayed. The rest of the\nevening was spent In games of a IV-\nlarlous description which were much\nenjoyed.\nHulowe'en was spent in the more\nor le.w traditional fashion, the smill\nfry running around with masks and\nsheets looking lor \"Trlcka or treats'\nThe Half and Halfi had a most enjoyable party in ths hall sponsored\nby Mrs. O'Conner and Mra. Hill.\nProfessions...\nYoung Graduate\nCan't Decide\non Her Career\nBy BIATRICE FAIRFAX\nDear Miss Fairfax:\n1 will graduate from high school\nbefore long, and cannot make up\nmy mind as to what to do afterward.\nI would like to become a trained\nnurse, but my friends and some relatives advise against lt, saying it is\nhard work. But I am strong and\ndependable enough to tackle anything. \/\nMy parents want me to go to\ncollege, but I don't want to go to\ncollege and then take up nurse's\ntraining I've always had a great\nimagination and want to write, and\nwould be glad to go to college for\nfour years if I can take up writing\nthere.\nI feel that ta nursing I will be\nhelping someone and doing something useful. On the other hand, I\nfeel Uke writing. I've also thought\nof becoming a doctor.\nCan you give me any help as to\nwhat I should take up after high\nschool?\n-P. T.\nYou seem drawn In several directions. But if writing appeals to\nyou more than the other professions, why not go to college and\nspecialize in English and Journalism? On the other hand nursing\noffers a wide field it the present\ntime.\nYou're very fortunate to be able\nto follow your own Inclinations as\nto your life work. So many girls\nhave to become self-supporting after\nleaving high school.\nIndia's railway worKSuops hive\nproduced millions of dollars worth\nof munitions and other war materials.\nTRAIL, B. C. Nov. _ - J. L.\nCrowe, Ch\u00bblrm\u00bbn of the Trall-Tad-\n\u2022nto School Boird presented principals ot the tour Trail elementary\nschools with Victory Loin certificate!-end pennant for hiving niched 100 per cent of their objective In\nthe current Loan drive, it the opening business session of the wer'\nKootenay-Boundary Tiichen' convention here today.\nMr. Crowe wu Introduced by T.\nMayne, Preiident of the TraU Teachers' Association.\nMiss Birbira Lang ot Nelion,\nWest Kooteniy District Councillor,\nfor the 11. C. Teachers' Federation,\npresided over the buslneu meeting\nwhich followed. She welcomed Mr.\nTurner of Rossland, who represented the B. C. Trustees Association.\nMr. Turner stressed t)ie need tor\ncloser cooperation between teachers and trustees.\nB. C. Gillie of Oak Bay, First Vice\nPresident of the B.C.T.F., dealt with\nthe many difficulties faced by the\nFederation. He urged all teachers to\nexpress   themselves   fully   through\nSIRDAR\nSIRDAR, B.C. - Percy Mackay cf\nBoswell, who Is spending a leave with\nhis parenti, was a vliltor heie th'i\nweek.\nMr. md Mri. John flhkw&rok and\nfamily visited Creston Saturday.\nMichael Hayi.es of Lakevlew ranch\nwas a shopping vis.tor in town Thuraday.\nMri Sim Bysouth of Kuskanook\nwaa in Sirdar on Wednesday.\nJack Johnson of Kuakanoott was a\nshopping visitor here Wednesday.\nlast,. Nelion was a visitor to Creston during the week.\nMr. Langlols of Trail, who Is on a\nvisit with friends at Kitchener, was a\nhunting visitor on Friday.\nCf. Oranstrom and son, along with\nriny Thompson of Trail, spent tho\ngreater part of two weeka here hunting over the Wynndil ind Atbara\nflat*.\nS. Oftner of Wynndel was hers at\nthe weekend.\nQua Bejiedettl and Art Brett of\nWynndel were vlilton here at the\nweekend.\nMr. md Ht* Jamei Fimoubzo and\nfamily of craobrook ipent i week at\ntheir Summer home here, returning\nhome Sundiy.\nOtto Rollog of Wynndel was i visitor here Thursday.\nRohby Armstrong was a visitor to\nCreston on Thursday.\nRoy Ibbltson and son were flshlnn\nIn this vicinity during'the week,\nMrs. Pat Woods ind diught-er from\nTye were visiting with h\u00bbr mother.\nMn. S, PaiscUzzo.\nMn. Arnold wm a visitor to Creston at the weekend.\nMr. and Mrs. Pat Woods were visitors to Wynndel ind Creston on Si.\nturday.\nMike Cherbo wu it Creiton on Saturdiy,\nrrank Pelle was i visitor to Creston\non Thuriday.\ntht Diitrict representatives as that\nwai tha only means by which the\nexecutive could leirn the desires ot\nthe rank and file.\nPart of Mr. Gillie's address dealt\nwith post war planning, the slogan\nadopted by the Public Relation*\nCommittee being: \"More Money for\nEducation.\" A breakdown of the\npreient cost of education showed\nthat It amounted to 91 per month per\nperson ln the entire Dominion.\nHe advised the teachers that the\nB.C.T.F. and B.C. Association had\nagreed to hold discussions on the\n\u2022advisability of approaching the\nGovernment relative to increased\ngrants where assessment was low\nor mill rate high.\nMr. Gillie paid tribute to the late\nIarvey Charlesworth, Who served\nthe Federation as Secretary for\nmany years. Mr. Charlesworth had\nguided the Federation through its\nformative years and his loss would\nbe felt by all.\nIn closing, he urged all teachen\nto become members of the Federation, a body which commanded the\nr^ipect of the general public.\nDuring the afternoon Misses Joan\nAllison and Betiy Cumming entertained the gathering with two piano\nduets.\nHere Is Your\nLONDON (CP) - Tlve distinguished Indian scientists have arrived ln Britain as guests of the\nGovernment to acquaint themselves\nat first hand with scientific progress ln Britain. They will visit\nmany laboratories and research institutions during a seven-week stay.\nWEEKLY\nRECIPE\nPRIN.H  TOAIT\nSweet end High Nourlihrnent\n2 eggi; 2-3 cup milk! '\/< l,Pn>\nuit; I illeee day-old 4X Breed.\n1. Beet eggi ilightly.\n2. Add mil< end \"It.\n1, Dip breed In egg mixture.\n4. Fry on both ildee In imill\nemount of hot fat until brown,\n8. lerve hot with miple syrup\nor heney, cr iprlnkled with\npowdered tugir.\n4 lervlngi.\nCanadian Bakeries\nNelion, B.C\n^mmmme^\nYon Never Saw Such Snowy Washes! OXYDOL'S\n\"Hustle-Bubble\" Suds Are So Lively They LIFT\nDirt Out! Even Biggest Washes Come So Clean\nThey're White Without Bleaching!\n8C\n\u2022 The largest force nf Canadian\nheavy bombers ever to Uke the\nair, attacked France in invasion\nsupport.\nhnf_*\\   1   eup\ncup   Qbopprd\nIALAD\nI   cup  ihreddid  ci\n\u25a01ic**d  r\u00bbw nrroti,  1\ncelery, 2 cupi diced tomati, H nip\nillo-td tweet pickle, ulnd dreulng\nCnmWn# Ingredients, mn it\u00abn wtft.\nJ Trench   nr   cooked   latnd   drrssfng\n\u2022 LlllffWU t(4*MflimVW<M), and isrve on lettuce cupi.   EUrves\n llii.\n-.^u^Md-m^, . _      \\\nBOOKS\nBOOKS\nBOOKS\nLISTIN TONIGHT\nat 6:30\nto Weekly Review of \"Books\nand Authors\" by Joan Orr.\nSpomored by\nMann-Ruthevfoixl\nOv\u00abr\nCKLN\nNELSON\n\t\nYOU'U BE SURPRISED how cully the higgat\nwuh comes sparkling white and clean this\nmodern Oxydol way! You ice, Oxydol'i \"Huitlo-\nBubble\" suds are so lively they lift dirt out! All\nyour white thlngi, except of coune for unuiual\nstains, come white without bleaching.\nSAVE CLOTHES IN WARTIME I\nWith Oxydol there's no need for hard rubbing\nor harsh bleaching\u2014so naturally clothes last\nlongerl Oxydol is 10 lafe, too\u2014safe for washable colors, rayons ami your own precious\nhands! Economical, you'll be surprised how\nmuchdothe* of dlihei a tingle hoi of Oxydol will\nwash! Uie Oxydol oext wuhday and see!\nxydqlWashes\nWHITE\nWITHOUT BLEACHING\n\"\u25a0'. \"   '***\u25a0*\u25a0\"\u25a0     .\"    ..imwifti'ii\n P-r\u2014.\n\u25a0^inRipip!qpipniiiP\u00abmw>'i>|w|w\n^\"\u25a0-\u25a0\"\"IF\n.iiii.piwiiiipii.id jy..|.ui|iy.\nFRESH ARRIVALS\nTODAY\n4 New On*** From\nSCOTT McHALE\nPriced from\n\u00ab9.so to f ia\nR. Andrew\n& Co.\nLeaders In Footfoshlon\ni\u00ab$\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab3\u00ab\u00ab\u00a3SS-\u00ab$$S\u00abS:\nMore than 1,000 Canadian fliers\nwere with the Bomber Group that\nhit Hamburg on the night of July\nFAIR VIE\nRave an  Individual\nPermanent Wave\nto suit your type\nat\nBEAUTY SHOPPE\nPhone 389\nPresbyterian\nRoll Dedicated\nby Moderator\nRt. Rev. A. C. Stewart, M.A., Moder-\nitor of the Oeneral Assembly ol the\nPresbyterian Church In Canada, dedicated the honor roll jf the Nelson\ncongregation ln an Impressive ceremony at the First Presbyterian Church\nhere Wednesday evening.\nThe names of 30 men and women of\nthe Nelaon congregation were Inscribed on the roll, and of these, three\nhave paid the supreme sacrifice.\nRev. Mr. Stewart was introduced to\nthe congregation by Rev. T. E. Roulston, Clerk of the Kootenay Presbytery. The Moderator delivered a deeply Inspiring address.\nAt the close of the service, a social hour was spent with the distinguished guest ln the Church Parlors. The Presbyterian Young Women's Guild arranged the social and\nmembers acted as hostesses.\nSLOCAN  CITY\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C.\u2014Mrs. E. Adams.\nMra. W. t- Graham, Mrs. M. Rlndler.\nMrs. Z. Klnoshltannd Mrs. K. popoff\nwere visitors to Nelson,\nMr. and Mrs. E. A. Clough and Miss\nM. Morrison were visitors to Nelson\nduring the week.\nMr. and Mra. J. Howard and two\nchildren, Joan and Jack, were weekend visitors to Trail.\nMiss E. Welbe of Winnipeg, who hns\nbeen the guest of her brother and\nslster-ln-law, Mr._and Mrs. C. R. Welbe\nfor several weeks left for her home\nThursday. She was accompanied by\nMn. Welbe, who will visit relatives\nat Qlentworth, Bask.\nSAIABA\n\"J__\" -E _A_\nButcherteria News\nMilk Fed Roosting Chicken, Ib 38c\nBoiling Fowl, Ib 30c\nSPECIAL SALE OF BABY BEEF\nCommercial Grade\nRound Bone and Blade Roasts, Ib.    24c\nSirloin and T-Bone Steaks, Ib 40c\nBoiling Beef, lean, Ib 13c\nPicnic Shoulders, Tenderized, Ib.._ 25c\nLegs of Lamb, Ib.\n40c\nCorned Beef, Rolled and Boned, Ib. ... 26c\nCOMMERCIAL SAUSAGE, Ib 15c\nPHONES 527-528\nFREE DELIVERY\nNELSON SOCIAL TeadienUnedlo Almlor\nFurther Education of Everybody\n\u25a0y MM, M. J. VIQNIU-i4-\nCharm (or enjagiment AnnouncaminU tn thli page It 11.50\n\u2022 Tha Beta Slfmt Phi Sorority\nentertained at tht tea hour Sunday\nat the home of Mri. Norman Faw\ncett, 820 Fourth Street. It wu the\noccasion ol the annual Preferential\nVI* and formal invitation to became\nmemben of the local chapter w-u\naccepted by Mix Betty Emory, Miss\nIngeborg Martin, Mill Margaret\nMaclnnes, Mrs. Reeve Harper and\nMrs. E. A. Mann. The traditional\ncolors ot black and gold were very\neffectively used in the floral decorations and table appointments.\nMrs. Fawcett invited the guesta to\ntea. The Chapter's sponsor, Mrs. Walter Elmes presided at the tea table\nand the Director, Mrs. Elva Kettiewell, cut the beautifully decorated\nfruit cake donated by one of the\nmembers. Those present were Mrs.\nKettiewell, Mrs. Elmes, Mist Tillle\nOlson, Miss Lillian Dickinson, Mrs.\nH. F. Chapman, Mrs. Walter Walt,\nMrs. Margaret Harrop, Miss Vera\nHolllday, Mrs, Fawcett, Miss Emory,\nMiss Maclnnes, Miss Martin, Mrs.\nHarper Mrs. E. A. Mann, Miss Mary\nJarvis, Miss Carol Proudfoot, and\nMiss Edna MacKenzie.\n\u2022 Mrs. T. S. Shorthouse and her\nInfant son have left the Kootenay\nLake General Hospital for their\nhome, 904 Mill Street\n\u2022 Mrs. Robert Main was a visitor from Bonnington yesterday.\n\u2022 Jack Thompson ot Willow\nPoint visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Norman Murray, Maple\nStreet, has returhed from six weeks\nspent in Vancouver, Victoria and\nSeattle.\n\u2022 C. B. Sharp and his daughter\nMiss Beatrice Sharp were visitors\nfrom Bonnington yesterday.\n\u2022 Thomas Heise of Balfour spent\nyesterday in town.\n\u2022 Mrs. Jack Annable returned\nyesterdiy from t lew days spent at\nTyt.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. I. F. Morehouse\nof Nakusp wert recent viiiton ln\nNtlion.\n\u2022 Sgt James Kinahan returned\nWedneiday night from tlve yean\nspent oveneu and Is a gueit it the\nKinahan home, Silica Street.\n\u2022 Henry Hayes wu a visitor\nfrom Creicent Bay yelterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. Charles M. Belt-\nner, Stanley Street have returned\nfrorn Graham'i Landing, where they\nwere called by the sudden death of\nMn. Beltner'i father, John Wltl-\nfcms.\n\u2022 Mn. John Stenion of Winlaw\nvlilted town recently.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. Gilford Hearn\nwere ihoppen from Salmo yelterday.\n\u2022 Mn. W. Martin tnd daughter\nof Bonnington visited Nelion yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. J. Bird of Crescent Bay tpent yesterday in town.\n\u2022 Mrs. O. G. Cuthbert, Medical\nArtt Apartments, leaves this morning for Vancouver where ihe will\nmeet her mother, who il arriving\nfrom Winnipeg. Mrs. Cuthbert will\nvisit her daughter end other relatives while tway.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Smith of\nthe Alpine mine were ihoppen in\ntown yesterday\n\u2022 Mrs. James Fair and her Infant daughter have left the Kootenay Lake General Hospital for their\nhome in Salmo.\n\u2022 Miss Constance Manahan, Carbonate Street, left yesterday to\nspend the weekend at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. E. Creed Johnson.\n\u2022 Mrs. C. Gay returned to Creston after visiting Mrs. Nedelec and\nother friends in Nelson.\nOn, Jfm CWl\nFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\n7:39\u20140 Canada\n7:30\u2014Eveready Barlyhlrda (CKLN)\n8:00\u2014OBO Newi\n8:1J\u2014Front Una Family\n8:30\u2014Musical Momenta (CKLN)\n8:46\u2014Morning Concert\n9:00\u2014BBO Newa\n9:15\u2014Melody Inoorp (CKLN)\n9:30\u2014Morning Melodies (CKLN)\n9:45\u2014Latin Americana\n9:59\u2014 Tims Signal\n10:00\u2014Mualc for Modemi\n10:15\u2014Tin Pan Alley Ooes to Town\n(CKLN)\n10:30\u2014Singers Corner\n10:46\u2014Organ Muslo\n11:00\u2014Hits of Today\n11:16\u2014Dsn Barry (CKLN)\n11:23\u2014Song Shop\n11:30\u2014Soldier's Wife\n11:45\u2014Muslo from the Shows\nAFTERNOON\n13:00\u2014B O Turn Broadcast\n13:25\u2014Tho Notice Board  (CKLN)\n12:30\u2014CBC Newi\n12:45\u2014Kate Altken\nl.OO-OldreToritee\n1:30\u2014Modern Mualcltna\n1.4&\u2014Hecital\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcaat\n2:30\u2014tyes Front\n3,00\u2014Don Meseer and Islander!\n3:15\u2014Prairie Opinion\n3:80\u2014Curtain Bchoea\n3:45\u2014BBC Newer eel\n4:00\u2014Musical  Maglo   (CKLN)\n4:08\u2014Voice of Memory (CKLN)\n4:16\u2014Headquarters Report\n4:30\u2014Carolyn  Oilbert\n4:46\u2014CBO News Roundup\n6:00\u2014Concert Muter (CKLN)\n6:30\u2014Musical Programme   (CKLN)\nEVENING\n8:00\u2014The People Ask (CKUO\n\u00ab:16\u2014Rehabilitation (CKLN)\n8:30\u2014CaTalCads of Melody (CKLN)\n7:00\u2014CBO News\n7:16\u2014Talk\n7:30\u2014Seventh Victory Loin\n8:0O\u2014Soliloquy\n8:30\u2014Vanoouver Playhouse\n9:0O\u2014BBO Ne wired\n8.1*--Peerless Preaenta (CKLN)\n9:30\u2014Three \"Suna Trio\n9:46\u2014Lee S.'ma\n9:56\u2014Interlude\n10:00\u2014CBO News\n10:16\u2014CBC News Roundup\n10:30\u2014Voice of the Victory Loan\n10:35\u2014Ood Sa'e the King\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. 2\u2014Two hundred tnd seventy-five teacheri\nfrom Crawford Bay on tht East.\nto Osoyoos on tht Wtlt and North\nto Nakuip registered at Trail today\nfor the Weft Kootenay-Boundary\nTBachen' convention.\nThe teachen were entertained at\na luncheon where Miss E. Waller\nof Vancouver, Director of School\nWar Savings, outlined the war savings being collected in the schools\nthroughout British Columbia and\nthe rest of Canada. She asked the\nteacheri to consider whether they\nthought this program of teaching\nthrift ihould be continued after the\nwar.\nIn an excellent address, Dr. Henrietta Anderson of the Provincial\nNormal School ln Victoria, pointed\nout that although the schools were\ndoing an excellent Job of teaching\nthe children to enter life with extremely high moral principles,\nwhen they were thrust into the\nworld they did not wish to be different from the persons they were\nin contact with. For this reason un\ntil such time as there ls an adequate\nprogram for adult education much\nof the education dont ln the ichool\nwas of no great consequence.\nShe pointed out that learning\nwas what largely tikes place In the\nschool, but that education begins\nwlth-.the slap on the back at birth\nto the time life is finished. If teachers would keep this long range vision in mind and ln every way,\nwhen the opportunity presents Itself, try to combat Ignorance and\nwork towards the idea of a peoples'\nschool or a peoples' university to\nfurther the education of everybody.\nMany of the answers to the problems of present day society were\nto be found ln the Bible and all\nproblems were going to remain\n\u25a0problems until such time as people\nwere educated' to the point that\nthey knew where to turn for the\nsolution. Many persons have the\nidea that \"society owes ua a living.\"\nbut very often forget that they have\nno moral right to expect more than\nthey have put towajds making the\nworld a better place ln which to\nlive.\nRossland Social \u2666 \u2666 \u2666\nBy MRS. F. 0. BRAY\nRC68LAND, B.C., Not. 3\u2014R. __. Tot\nhu returned from Vancouver whore\nhe visited hli ion and daughter-in-\nlaw. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Fox.\nMrs. Leo Orlmard and finally, who\nhave been living ln New Wei-mlnster,\nhave arrived In the city and have\ntaken up residence on Flrit Avenue\nMra. Leo Nlmalck and children are\nvisiting at the CoMt.\nMra    J.   C.   Blight   li   vliltlng   ln\n**%%\n\u2022f-l-l-M\n-'f; Mm\/Mr it in\nMW PONDER FORM\/ r\nt*f\nVancouver.\nMrs. York left Roulind to reside it\nCoast.\nTelegrapher Aleo Turner, RCN., li\nvliltlng his parenta, Mr. snd Mrs. E,\nK. Turner. U Rol Avenue.\nMri. M. York of Vancouver ls renewing icqualntsnce in Rowland\nMri. Yorko left Roaaland to reside at\nthe Cou*. aome yeiri ago.\nLac. T. Z. Piper, R.CA P, who hu\nbeen visiting his will and family, hu\nreturned to his itatlon.\nThe Pirent-Teacher Association\nhold its Second Annual Hallowe'en\nptrty for the children of Rossland\nMonday evening it the Armory. Hallowe'en decorations made a pretty\naettlng. Mrs. R. W. Haggen wu convener of the Decoration Committee\nMra. J. B. Mowitt convened the Refreshment Committee, Mra. R. Morin\nprepared tho entertainment, while R\nMorin wu the Muter ot Ceremonies\nMlu Jean Hedley wu the planlit. All\ncommltteei were well aulated by parents of the children. Following wu\nthe program: Bong. Grade VI glrla, recitation, Mlaa Evelyn Bourchler: magic\ntricks, Keith Jirnleton; Halloween\nstory dramatlned by Orade VI glrli\nSong. L A. Road: Song. Negro Blngera.\nportrayed by Mlu Shirley. Scatchard\nand Mlu V. McKensle u nigger mam-\nmlea. Mrs L. A. Read acting Preeldent\nof the P.T.A., wu general convenor nl\ntho evening. About 500 children In\nooitumej attended.\nNEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER, BC\u2014Pte. Ivan Flint\nhu* left for Vancouver after a ten-\nday furlough with hla parents, Mr.\nand Mra. P. R. Flint.\nMr*. H. B. Yonge of Nakuap waa a\nvisitor Id. town.\nWilliam Rutherford had aa a gueat\nfor the weekend hla aon-ln-law,\ndaughter and grandaon, Mr. and Mrs!\nF. 8. Willis and eon, Frank, alao Mr.\nand Mr\u00bb, E. Shannon and Mra. wil-\nlUma of Trail.\nDenla Yonge of Nakuap la a patient in the Slocan Community Hoapltal.\nMrs. T. R. Flint accompanied her\naon, Pte. Ivan Flint, as far aa Nelson\nreturning home on Friday.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Jupp of Nakuap\nw\u00abre vlaltora at the home of the latter's father and aunt, J. W. Butlin\nand Miss M. H. Butlin en route to\nKaalo.\nMlaa Norman Broughton la & patient In the Blocan Community Hospital. J\nMrs. George Beattle of Zincton was\na vlaltor in town.\nMrs. J. M. Harris of Sandon wad a\nvluitor In town.\nF. R. Thompson of Zincton was a\nvluitor here.\nMlia M. Omoto is & patient in the\nSlocan Community Hoapltal.\nMlas Hazel Flint ar Slocan City wns\na weekend guest of her parenta, Mr\nand Mrs. T. R. Flint.\nMlaa Dora M. Clever and Mra. F\nI*o Beggs were visitors in Nelson attending the official visit ot the Grain\nChief. Slater Nellie Ratcllffe, at Neleon Pythian Slaters Temple,\nLarry Dwyer, Harry L. Taylor, Char-\nlit Aylwln and Joe Zambone of Blocnn\nCity apent the weekend at their\nhomes.\nAlvln Sanderson of Trail was a guest\nof his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. A.\nSartderson.\nF. A. Jewett of Nelson was a visitor in town.\nJohn Taylor returned on Saturday\nfrom Abbbtaford.\nMlas W, Bennett of Silverton is a\npatient In the Slocan Community\nHospital,\nMrs. Jamea Draper was a vlaltor\nIn Nelson.\nMr. and Mra. A. E. Avison of Zincton visited the former's mother, Mrs.\nT, Avison,\nF. R. Flngland of Silverton waa a\nvbltor here.\nPat McOurle of Slocan City is a\npatient ln the Slocan Community\nHoipital.\nJohn McLeod of Rosebery waa a\nvictor here.\nMr. and Mrs. Arthur Him of Silverton were visitors in town.\nDr. M. Uchlda waa a visitor In Nakusp.\nPat Uundrevllle of the Mammoth\nMine, Silverton, apent the weekend at\nhis home.\nStanley Thomllnson of Zincton vis.\nHtd hla family at the weekend,\nMr and Mrs. E. J. Leveque and\ndaughter, Mlas Audrey Leveque of\nR-osebery were visitors In town.\nMiss S. Harnd.i of Slocan City is a\npatient In the Slocan Community\nHospital.\nMiss J. Anderson waa a visitor In\nNakusp.\nJack Huntly was a vlaltor in Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. Andy Schnaeble returned from Trail and were accompanied by the former's brother, Ous\nflchnaebele of Vancouver, who wlli\nspend several days here.\nRev. Father MrSherry of Nelaon\nwns in town at the weekend,\nMrs, E. Mathewa of Silverton was a\nvliltor here Sunday,\nMr. and Mrs. Ed Munn of Nakusp\nwi're visitors in town.\nJ Surina and Aiiku* McDonald ot\nSilverton were visitors in town on\nSunday\nW. Young of Zincton wss a visitor\nhirr.\nLovely Autumn\nWedding for\nWindermere Bride\nINVERMERE, B.C. \u2014 An Autumn\nwedding of interest throughout the\nWindermere dlatrlct and Klmoerley\nwaa solemnized at St. Peter's Anglican\nChurch, Windermere, October 38,\nwhen Margaret Eleanor, elder daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Stoddart,\nWindermere, became the bride of\nStephen Joaeph tihymko, youngw'.\neon of Mr. and Mrs. Shymko of Manitoba. Canon T. D. Proctor of Invermere officiated at the ceremony.\nEntering the church under an archway of fragrant white clover and Autumn flowers, the bride waa lovely Ui\na floor length gown of white sheer\nwith an embroidered bodice and.full\nsleeves to the wrist. Her veil *ww\ngathered to her heal with a coronet\nof orange blossoms. The bridal bouquet was of red roses and fern, fiha\nwas given ln marriage by her father.\nMaid of honor was Mlaa Bcrnlco\nPendrlck of Klmberley, attractive in\na floor length dress cf pink sheer with\na matching lace yolk. She carried u\nbouquet of pink and white carnations. Mies Pauline Abbott of Klmberley waa brldesmiild, She wore a\nlong blue aheer skirt with a tailored\neyelet embroidered bodice to patch\nHer bouquet waa aleo of pink carna-\ntlona and fern. Mlas Bernlce Stoddart,\nyounger sister of the bride, wai\n[lowerglrl, demure In an ankle-length\ndress of yeliow silk crepe. She carried yellow button chrysanthemum?.\nAll three jiUendanM wore headvella\nto match flielr dresses. Thomas Bend\nof Kimberley supported the groom.\nA reception waa held at The White\nHouse, Windermere, where Mr. and\nMrs. Stoddart assisted the bridal\nparty to receive the guesta.\nMrs. Stoddart had chosen a becoming drew of delphinium blue sheer\nwith a matching hat. She wore a ccr-\ns_iRe of red roses and fern.\nBoth   grandmothers   of   the   bride,\nMr?. J. Stoddart of Windermere and\nMrs, Thomas Brearley of Clovcrdal\nB.C. were present.\nSALMO\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1944 \u2014 I\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nThe House ot Furniture Values\nPhone 115\nALL FELT MATTRESSES \u2014 Sixes\n4'and 3'3\". Regular $11.50. Sale\nor.  $3 25\nDINETTE TABLE AND 4 CHAIRS\n\u2014 White enamel trimmed with\nblack.   Special, set\t\n$29.50\nA DEPOSIT HOLDS ANY ARTICLE IN OUR STORE\nTILL CHRISTMAS\nJohnny's 100% rlghtl KLIM 11 put-uri-cd-pure\nwhole milk\u2014-in handy powder form.\nOnly the natural tvntrr has bren removed. All tha\ncream, all the nourishing food value, vitamins ahd\nminerals of fresh fluid milk are retained.\nSo hy simply mixing KLIM with water, you ran\nhave plenty of creamy milk\u2014any time\u2014for cooking\nnnd drinking, or to add to tea, toffee, cereals anil\ndesserts.\nKeep KLIM in your cupboard. Stays fresh In its\nvamumsealed container. It's economical, tool\nTh* Bordkm Company liuitid\nDry Milk Diviiion\u2014Toronto 4, Ontario\nKLIM\nCREAMY MILK\n*'IN HANDY P0WDERE0 FORM*\nWYNNDEL\nWYNNDEL, B.C.\u2014Mr. and Mrs\nE, W. Davli and family of Canyon\nvlilted the formfr'i parents, Mr. and\nMrt. L, A. Davli here.\nUc. and Mn. L. S. Davli nf lethbridge vlalted the former'i parents,\nMr. and Mn I.. A, Davit. They were\naccompanied by R. Hanlln of the\nRCAF.. Lethbridge.\nMlu Kate Payne of tha R C A F\ni WD.) at Macleod, vijlted her brother and iiiter-ln-law; Mr. and Mrs.\nW. T\u201e Payne.\nMr. and Mn. J, C. Mcrarland\nreturned to their home at Rom-\nland after vliltlng th# latter'i parents. Mr, and Mn. L. A. Davis.\nMn. H. Bathie of Vancouver was\n,1 visitor In the diitrict lait week.\nMn. Roop\u00ab and family of Creiton\nur* vliltlng Mr. and Mn. D. Tiylor\nand family here.\nMn. M. ToxmW lift on Thursday\nfor an extended visit to N#Uon,\nwhere ihe wiU reside with her ion\nmid daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nR. foxall.\nSALMO, ii.C .\u2014 Mri. Marshall Mc\nDeornuU ana Mra. Paul i_ar_K.ii were\nquests of their parents, Mr. mid Mrs.\nrt. K, Olson, NeiBon. WnUt. there tuty\natU'iidod the Pythian Bister iiaiiyutt\nA tiheldrup v.da a visitor to Neisou\nat the weekend.\nLaw. Audrey Peters of the K.C.A.K\n(WiJ.j wtiu is at-.ui._iuU at Calgary,\n.\\ii:*... Is spending a leave with her\nparents, Mr, mid -virs. P. N, Peters,\nR Leddicoat waa a Nelson visitor\nat the weekend.\nMiss Annie Humberj-;, who spent the\nweekend visiting her parents, Mr\nand Mrs. V. Hiunoeri:, hme returned to\n'frail.\nMr. and Mrs. Rex MoCameron and\ndaughttr, Jane, and Mrs. O. Johnson\nBal-ita oi Nelway wisr\u00ab gurtta ol the\nletter's brother-in-law and sister, Mr.\nand Mrs. Pranl; LUtiis.\nMr. and Mrs. Tony iitard, daughter,\nAnnie and sons, Tony and Mike, were\nvlaltora to Nelson -Saturday. \u2022\nK. Mcintosh, was a,city vialtor.\nMr. and Mra Jack Benfon ol Meadows were Trail vIsIvotb at the weekend.\nPaul Koochln waa a vlaltor to Nelion.\nMiss Joan Curwen was a visitor to\nNelson at the week_nd,\nMrs. Fred Regsr of Sheep Creek wai\na visitor Ui the city.\nMr. and Mrs, p. N. Peters, daughter\nAudrey, and mm flkylar, were visitors\nto'Ncl-.on.\nChrli. Hansen was a Nelson visitor.\nBill heagliy, who ls with the RO.\nNavy ship H, H. Natob. arrived home\nfrom Vancouver, and la visiting uls\nwife nnd baby son, and Mrs. Lettjihy ,1\nparents,  Mr.  nnd  Mis.  Fred  Regnr of\nINVERMERE\nINVERMERE, B.C.\u2014Mr. and Mrs. o.\nA. McOulness, Mrs. Q, R. Ooggin and\naon, John, motored to Cranbrook\nSunday where they were the guesta ol\nMr. and Mrs. R. H. Harrison for a\nday or two. Mr, McOulnness attended the meetings of the Forestry Commission ln Cranbrook.\nFO. Ralph Johnston, son of Mr. and\nMrs. J. 6. Johnston. Invermere, is\nspending furlough at the home of his\nparents.\nN. S. Jennie Weir of Uie R.C.A.F.\narrived In* Invermere Saturday tj\nspend a brief leave with her parents,\nMr. and Mn. W. Weir.\nDr. Mary Crawford has returned to\nInvermere from Calgary where she\nBpent a ahort holiday.\nR. 8. Bavin has returned to Victoria after a brief holiday ln Invermere\nwhere he visited his mother. Mrs. C,\nA. Bavin, and sister, Mrs, W. O.\nJones.\nMn. Thomas Brearley of Cloverdale is visiting her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. w. Stoddart\nat Windermere.\nMr. and Mrs. G. R. Clement of\nWindermere were cranbrook visitors\ntills week.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Aahworth have received cabled word that their son,\nPO James Ashworth, has arrived\nsafely in England from India where\nhe served for the past two years. He\nexpects to return to Canada on leave\nshortly.\nRev. and Mrs. B, 8, Hartley returned to Invermere from Creston where\nthey attended the United Church con-\nference. They were accompanied by\nMrs, A. Blake who represented Trinity United Church as lay delegate.\nH. W. Cottlngham, R. Chatwln and\nHenry Morgan of Vancouver visited\nInvermere this week.\nMrs. Cork and Infant son have returned to their home at Canal Flu*.\nfrom the Lady Elizabeth Bruce Memorial Hospital at Invermere.\nJack Chernos3 of Canal Flat ls a\npatient In the hospital at Invermere.\nWalter Williamson of Athalmer has\nbeen a hospital patient,\nMrs. T. Hynes of Torrent has lift\nthe hospital at Invermere,\nMrs. Fenton Smith of Windermere\nspent a week visiting friends ln Klmberley.\nCANYON\nCANYON, B.C.\u2014Ray Humble of th\u00ab\nR.C.A.F. haa returned to his station\nafter spending harvest leave with hli\nparents.\nMlas Leona Browell has returned\nfrom Cranbrook.\nJ. C. McFarland of Rossland apent\nthe weekend visiting Mr. and Mrs. E.\nW. Davis.\nGene Moore of the R.C.A.F. ta\nspending his furlough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. W. C. Moore.\nMr. and Mrs. J. 8hannon and\ndaughter of Klmberley were weekend\nguests of Mr, and Mrs. W. E. Searle.\nW. H. Kolthammer was a visitor to\nFernie where he attended the Teachers' Convention.\nMr..and Mrs. j. L. Cartwright were\nvisitors to Cranbrook and Klmberley.\nThey were accompanied by Mr. and\nMrs. E. E. Cartwright of Erlckson.\nMrs. Thea. A Gibson\nNelson and District  Representative\nfor\nSpencer Corsets and\nHealth Garments\nI 10 Kerr Apartments\nJ. E Kennett and son W. P. Ken- ! ShrfI} ^''^ ,llwi Ma father. J. LeaKhy\nnrtt of Mill Creek spent thf wcrken-J I *P(1 hls !>1*t'\"r. Mra. U. Watcrstreet of\nst thrlr home.\nTailored ind Drsiiy\nBLOUSES\nIn white and colors.\nSliM 12 to 40\n$1.95 to $6.95\nFASHION FIRST LTD,\nJame*. Msrjt Boates of Sandon was\na vi<;t.,r here.\nMr. nnd Mrs. Marc Dumont and\ninns. Carl and Paul, of Hunter* S:d-\nliift were visitors In town nn Runday.\nMr*, p ZPfbln of Hills Siding Ls a\npit>nt In the Slocan Community\nHospital,\nTh\" weekly Red Orois Bee met In\nthe I^Rjon Hall Frirtny. Mri J. Tav-\nlo: provided the refreshment.-, which\nwiire nerved by the Fled cross Cominl*.-\ntee.\nJ. Imirent of the Standard Mine,\nSllTcrton. \u00ab;>enr the weekend at his\nhome\nHarr-f Woollev. Jump*, Draper and\nHorsrc Dewis were visitors at Lum-\nbi\nPr A Francis attended the Mrdl-\nral Convention in Rossland\nMIm Mnr*;srrt Nelwm. MIm Porfrn\nD\u00bb'ttn, MKi 1\\ct]i> Klamore, Mlu Verls\nn<T((iTi\u00bbn mid Gordon Nelonn of Sli-\nrertiii** ve'* victors In town.\nMir* Nanrv Hnward \u00ab'i* a vliltor\n\u25a0 t 'IT-ill. guest nf Mr. snd Mm. J, I!\nAnders-Mi.\nMn r IVttj. and rfsUBh'T. Marl-\n!e*n and Mr*, (ieorge Omenhuvwm <'f\nBUvfrtnn we> visitor* in tnwn.\nMrt II. B Yonire mid eon. Denis,\nwvre  rlolt'ira   at  Trail.\nMlu I-nla Bnyd mid MIm OUdr\u00ab\nL Re-mold* were diiej.j. of Mr *n1\nMrs   M   A,  (Sandy) Martin st Trail.\nS.\\lmo\nMrs. w. OrutcI.ri.ild was a visitor\nto Nelson st the weenend.\nMrs. Oscar Mf.kln-.ri waa a Nelson\nvisitor.\nMrii Jark Sapples and daughter,\nMrs RviMell Binning, were Nelson\nKhnpprr.1 Monday.\nK. Hender-to-1 was a visitor to Nel-\n\u25a0ton  st the weekend\nMlu Marie lirorde visited Nelson\nMnndav.\nMisa Nancy Ola-en has as her (pieat\nher nvither, Mm OLsen, from Arrow\n:tr;id, Arrow Lakes.\nIMhlan Rlttir-e from Salmo attend-\nIn^ the tutKiiiet In Nelaon wern Mra\nLie* Lar_\u00bben. Mrs. F-dlth Lund, Mn\nIva Lindow. Mrs. Allrn Hearn. Mrs. I.\nButcher and Mm. Olidys Jenaen.\nLONDON iCP) \u2014 Housewives\nand children soon will be wearing\nblackout material no one will buy\nsince lighting modifications were\nintroduced throughout the country.\nAt ieast 1,000,000 yards of the material lying unsold in shops and warehouses will be re-serviced and sold\nfor making into such articles as\noveralls, aprons and rompers. Dyers\nwill dip existing raw stocks in bright\nattractive colors.\nimillllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIi-Mllllll\nMALCOLM'S FURS\nRepaln \u2014  Alterations\nStorage\n659 Baker St.       Phon* 960\nhiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiii.in.miii-iiii-iiMi.\nFairview\nCash Market\n25\u00ab\n25\u00ab\nSHOULDER ROAST\nVEAL, lb...\nRIB VEAL, Stewing,\n2 lbs \t\nCORNED BEEF,        *j *\"c\nBonelcji Rolled, lb.Z_D\nBABY BEEF LIVER,\nPer lb.  .._\nPORK\nTENDERLOINS, Ib\n25'\n45*\n\u2014 Commerciol  Beef \u2014\n25'\n13'\n15'\n35'\nROUND BONE POT\nROASTS, Ib.\nBRISKET BOILING\nBEEF, Ib.\nHAMBURGER,\nPer Ib.\nCHEESE, Alberto,\nPer Ib.\nFresh Fruits and Vegetables\nDaily.\nwwwwwwwwwwmwwmarmt\nPASTEURIZED\nMILK\nIS SAFE FOR CHILDREN\nfALLKY   UaII\n^OOTENAY    fALLKY   l\/AIRY\n>''*.***V\"\"\"'\"\"\"*'a'\nFor Reliable Watch Repairs\nConsult\u2014\n243 Ration Books\nDistributed\nat Camp Lister\nCAMP UHTHl, HC_ T\u00bbn Mind***!\n_rrt forty thrtf No, I ration honk.\nsm* ImOtA nt Gump LliUr Th- book.\nwit* cTntrihut-'fl by Mr. \u00bbn_ Mrn John\nBird nt  tb\u00ab  Muter ntnro.\nMore than one-fifth of the human\n(lOt If i\n.   .\n*\u00ab\u00bb9\u00abft\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab*S\u00bb\u00ab\u00bbSW5S\u00bb\u00bbK\nFine selection of\nFALL AND WINTER HATS\nFelts ond Velvets\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\n '--\nBRADLEYS\nHZHEEHMJ\nBREAST VEAL,\nPer Ib\t\nVEAL SHOULDER\nSTEAK, Ib.\nVEAL SHOULDER\nROASTS, Ib.\nPORK SHOULDER\nROASTS, Ib.\nMUTTON\nSHOULDERS, Ib.\nMUTTON LOIN\nCHOPS, Ib\t\n1C\u00ab   FOWL, Freih\n\u2022 J       dressed, Ib.\n30'\nmtf-t   CHICKEN, Fresh       TQc\nLj    '   dressed, Ib. 30\n15'\n\u00bbrc  HAMBURG,\n2. j   r*<|b*\nPOT ROASTS, Round Bone,\nJl       Commerciol,\nPer Ib.\n1C*  RUMP ROASTS,       3Q\u00ab\n'J        Commerciol, Ib.       30\n3 re   BOILING BEEF,\nJ J    |   Leon, Ib.\n25*\n38'\n15'\n \t\nl||ipj.j_.H..UU\nnil | imuni i ffipinf p\nI U*lamt laily Unua   Letters to thre\n__.slat-lul.-_d April 22  1003.\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPubllihed every morning except Sundiy by\ntht NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED. 266 Biker St.. Nelson. British Columbia\nMEMBER <bT THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nEditor\nFRIDAY, NOV. 3, 1944.\nBritish Navy Prepares for\nAction in*the Orient\nA. V. Alexander, First Lord of the\nAdmiralty, told an audience at Bromley, Kent that \"We hope to place in\nthe Pacific a fleet capable in itself of\nfighting a general action with the Japanese Navy \u2014 the movement, at least\nin part, of that vast fleet and its mighty\nattendant trains, is already under\nway.\"\nIn British and American naval\ncircles there has been a good deal of\ndiscussion over the practical and technical difficulties foreseen in making\nfull use of British naval power in the\nPacific. It has been pointed out that\nmany British naval ships were built\nfor operating in European waters,\nwhere distances between naval bases\n,are relatively short. Thus their accommodation and equipment are not\nparticularly well designed for the long\ncruises, far from bases, imposed by\nthe vast distances of the Pacific.\nWhile this is largely true, the fact\nis that many British naval ships in the\nwar have remained at sea for remarkably long cruises in both time and distance. For example, the cruiser H.M.S.\nBirmingham was once at sea for 50\ndays continuously.\nBesides this, the problem is also being met with the characteristic ingenuity which ,created the \"synthetic\nports\" and made the invasion of Normandy possible. Just as the Allied Expeditionary Force \"took their harbors\nwith them\" so the Royal Navy in the\nEast is \"taking its naval bases with it.\"\nThese \"synthetic naval bases\" are\nthe \"attendant trains\" that Mr. Alexander mentioned and- which Mr.\nChurchill, in his speech to the House\nof Commons on Sept. 28, described. The\nPrime Minister said:\n\"For the year past, bur modern\nbattleships have been undergoing a\nfurther measure of modernization and\ntropicalization to meet the rapid wartime changes in technical apparatus.\nWe already nine months ago had begun the creation of an immense fleet\ntrain, comprising many vessels, large\nand medium, specially fitted as repair\nships, recreational ships for personnel,\nmunition and provision ships and many\nmodern variants in order that our fleet\nmay have a degree of mobility which\nfor several months together will make\nit largely independent of main shore\nbases.\"\nThere thus seems small ground for\nany fear that the British Navy will\nnot be able to be used to the full in the\nEast. There are difficulties, certainly,\nbut much more formidable ones have\nbeen overcome by the inventiveness,\nadaptability and determination of the\nBritish Navy before now.\nPress Comment\nLITTLE BUSINESS HOLDS\nListen*.*; tn the CCF. politicians and\nother reformers, the ordinary Canndian is likely tn Imagine that all Canadian business has\ncome under tho rnntrol nf a few giant monopolies The statistics of thr Bank nf Canada,\nis quoted iti the Financial Post, show on the\nrontrary, th.it little business Is holding iti\nown in this country\nThe bank's figures analyze ihe profits of\n827 typical Cinadian companies, selected so as\nto form a cmss-.seotinn nf nil business, larcf\nand small From them It is clear that during\nthe war the small companies have made three\ntimes the progress of the large ones in profit*\nearned an! in reserve esliblished\nAs thr Financial Tost says: \"This study\ndeserves the widest dissemination at this particular !in> T)irre Is a widespread conception fanned feverishly by radical politicians,\nthat big business pets all the brinks, that it is\nrapidly squeezing 'he life out of the. little\nfellnw and that onlv s'ate ownership nf all Industry and tvVr.r*.- r..n 'ive \u25a0\u25a0:\u2022 There i\u00ab.\nnn'hing n thr <\u25a0\u2022- [. ink nf Cir.ida figures tn\nsubstantiate in ,w dr^ee such v_:M rl.i!m\u00ab''\nVanrnuvrr Sun\nTOMORROWS   HISTORY\nWhat\nof the fu!\n? ? Questions ? ?\nANSWERS\nL.tton mty b\u00ab publlihed ovtr \u2022 nom do\nplume, but thi actual n*mt of tho writer\nmuit bo given to the Editor >\u25a0 evidence ol\ngood fiTlth. Anonymoui lettere go In tht\nwaits peptr bttktt\nThinks Peace-Time\nPrice Board Needed\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014\"What?\" and \"How?\" are the million\ndollar questions o( the hour to regard to assuring a stable and vigorous trade economy in\nCanada alter the war. \"  \u2022\nWe have pasted through a period of depression, known as \"the period In which poverty reigned In the midst of plenty.\" That is,\nwe had an abundance of civilian goods, but\nno power to buy these goods or social services.\nWe are emerging now from another ptriod of abundance of money but no power to\npurchase civilian foods because they are being1\ndestroyed by war ln war areas.\nHence there have arisen the magician, the\nstar-gazer, the crystal ball expert, al\" port-\ntraylng to us what the future will be, somn\noptimistic, tome pessimistic. Despite \"these\nfantastic concepts of cause and these mythological remedies, there are beside cold, logical\nfacts well known to the youngest child that\ncan scramble its way to the candy counter.\nThat is, this child knows it can't buy any\ncandy unless It has the power to buy. That Is\ncommon knowledge.\nDuring the depression years the Tolmie\ngovernment of B. C. created a commission to\ninvestigate the financial situation of B. C.\nAfter a long and careful research they made\ntheir findings known. The King Government\nof Canada also created a commission, whose\nfindings were known at the Report on Dominion and Provincial relations. The report\nnaturally was food for silver-tongued politicians to exploit th\u00bb people by trying to\ngain power by fantastic remedies.\nIn 1929 the Saskatchewan wheat fanner\nraised 1000 bushels of wheat for which he\nreceived $1280. Of this wheat, 10 per cent, or\n100 bushels, was paid for transportation; 10\nper cent was given to church and charity; 30\nper censor 300 bushels, was paid for fuel and\nmachinery; 20 per cent or 200 bushels for\ntaxes and social service; and 30 per cent or\n300 bushels, for necessities of life not produced on the farm.\nIn 1932 this same Saskatchewan farmer\nraised 1000 bushels of wheat, for which he\nreceived only $420. He could have paid ln\nwheat the same amount as was possible ln\n1929.\nBut ln 1932 he could not pay In dollars\nand cents the same as he did in 1929.\nIn the year 1929 he paid $125 to put the\nwheat on the market, $125 to church and\ncharity, $375 for machinery and fuel, $250 for\ntaxes and social service: $375 for necessities\nof life not raised on the farm.\nIt Is Just common sense that an individual\nearning $420 cannot buy foods and services\nto the value of $1250. We pride ourselves of\nour natur\u00bbl resources, but \u00bblf these have no\nvalue, why spend time securing them?\nIn 1929 the per capita income of Saskatchewan was $478. In 1933 it was only $135. We\ndo not need to be experts In finance to know\nwe cannot pay $100 per year for food, $12 lor\neducation; and $50 for medical attention out\nof $135. Even this leaves nothing for other\nservices which are essentia] for their well\nbeing.\nThe million dollar question Is how can a\nProvincial, Federal government, control international   markets.\nWhen Johnny comes home, he wil] find\nthe two systems in operation.\nCommunism in economics Is that the Individuals believe that the community should\nprovide them lhe means whereby they may\nearn their livelihood, whether it be a legislative hall, office, car, machinery, and a fixed\nsalary, and If the taxpayer fails tp pay taxei\nthey can create power to punish him, either\nby confiscation of property or other means.\nEvel-y politician therefore believes In communism because it offers the bolt tecurity for\nhim because It offers him a saltrj lt.re_p.c-v\ntlve of his ability to earn that salary. Individualism is defined as the individual signs on\nthe dotted line, purchases the means by which\nhe must earn his livelihood, taking what h.\nran acquire hy his effort, as his Income, irrespective both are controlled by that unalterable law\u2014unless the taxpayer can earn from\nthe sale of his goods, the taxgntherer can not\ncollect.\nUnless there is a vigorous buying of civilian goods, there can not be a vigorous system\nnf employment creating those goods. If there\nls vigorous buying, naturally there will be a\nhigher standard of living.\nTherefore It becomes essential that thert\nhe a peace-time priees and trade board to\ncontrol these price and wage levels, to prohibit Inflation of prices because of Increased\ndemands\n. We have traffic control, without which we\ncould not travel. We have health control, with-\nnut which we could not be healthy.\nTherefore we must have price control, to\ncause business to function successfully.\nNo pollcitian ran make us buy advisedly\nThere must be a will on our part to progress.\nH. KERSHAW\nNnkusp, D   C. Oct. 2.1. 1944.\nOpen to any reader. Ntmti of penom\n\u2022iking quutloni will not bt publlihed.\nThere li no chirgt for thlt tirvlot, Quutloni will not bt tniwirtd by mill except\nwhin there It obvloui neceulty for privacy.\nE. H, Trill\u2014Will you pltiie till mo whert\nI should write to obtain Information at to\ntht whereabouts of a friend In the Royal\nAir Force, stationed somewhere ln England?\nIf he ls a Canadian attached to the R.A.F.\nyou would write to the Recordi Department\nof the R.C.A.F. at Ottawa, but If hi It a Brit-\nlsher write to the Records Department of the\nR.A.F. at London, giving any Information you\nhave.\nE. L. N., Rosaland-What is thi highest rink\nfor t cook In the R.C.A.F.? Can he become\na Flight Sergeant and still be cooking?\nThe highest rank listed for a cook ln the\nR.C.A.F. ls a Sergeant First Class.\nE. L. K., Chapman Camp\u2014What Income tax\ndeductions are allowable from the piece\nwork earnings of a man over the age of\n65 years?\nIt depends on the amount of Income and\nmarital status. It you will give us the figures we will be glad to tell you the amount\nof tax.\nCurious, Nelson\u2014Could you tell mt tht address of a nearby factory where you can\nget your old woollens made Into blankets?\nSend your woollens to Falrflelds and Sons,\nManufacturers of Woollens, Winnipeg.\n: ol comment will Ihe historian\nnuke nr. the conduct nf Amerl-\nc,.;ur !ri fhnr Kre.ilnt war when he romes\n__rri.ni lhe e.lloiale Uul no less than ?.500,0O0\ngallon, of Mark nmrkrl gasoline was consumed dallv li thl< rounlry al lhe height nf the\nronnirf-Rlrhir.nnd   <Va)  Timei-Dlipatrh\nPRIORITIH\nII !. ss'il that even housewives in German. ..re now iiibject to forced work in\nmunitions plants II la believed, however, thai\ndue lo All od air r..ids. houiewives without\nhouse, will tei the first call Washlnglon\n(JD. C.) Star.\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS AQO\n(From Dally Newi, Nov. 3, 1934)\nAnother group of men arrived on the\nWestbound train Thursday morning from Calgary to work during the Winter ln the t)o-\nminion Relief Camps ln the district. They\nwere sent to the Nelway and Salmo camps.\nMiss Gladys Prestly, who has been spending the past couple of weeks ln Nelson, at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Gallagher, Silica\nStreet, has left for her hdme at Rossland.\nMel Snowdon and Ab Cronle, who crt-\nated such an impression on New York American hockey team scouts, will be visiting Trail\nnext week. \u2022\n26 YEARS AQO\n(From Dally Newi, Nov. 8, 1919)\n\u25a0 Nelson Is beginning to hit her real Victory Loan stride and between Wednesday and\nlast night, $66,000 had been subscribed to the\nloan, which with the $80,000 subscribed by\nthe munlclpalitly ot Nelson last night, brings\nthe grand total to $271,000.\nSix Inches of clean galena which had *\ngood width of milling ore was struck in No. 1\ntunnel of the Granville property at Sandon,\nlast we?k.\nFire, originating In the workshop, gutted\nthe big frame garage building of the Nelson\nTransfer company, yesterday afternoon.\n40 YEARS AGO\n(From Dally Newi, Nov. 3, 1904)\nJames H. Kennedy, chief engineer of thl\nV. V. and E. extension of the Great Northern\nfrom Grand Forks to Phoenix, was In the\ncity yesterday on a trip of inspection along\nthe line of construction.\nThe explosion of over a ton of dynamite\nunder the bridge at Mount Vernon, yesterday\nafternoon shook the city and the surrounding\ncountry for five miles.\nJames Johnson and J. E. Annable have\nreturned from a trip to Creston and the country around the head of Kootenay Lake.\nGems of Thought\nINDIVIDUAL  ACTION\n\"Your  sole  contribution  to  the  mm   of\nthings  is  yourself'.\u2014Frank  Crane.\n\"God has endowed man with inalienable\nrights, among which are self-government, reason,   and   conscience.\"\u2014Mary   Baker   Eddy.\n\"Man's primary allegiance ls to his vlilon\nof truth, and he ls under obligation to affirm\nit.\"\u2014Jane Addams.\n\"Moral courage li obeying one's conscience\nand doing what one believes to be right In the\nface of a hostile majority.\"\u2014Dr. John Watson.\n\"If a man has acted right, he hai done\nwell, though alone; if wrong, the sanction of\nall mankind will not justify him.\"--Fielding.\nWar    4 Years Ago\nBy The Canidian Praia\nNov. 1, 19-.0-First Lord of The Admiralty\nAlexander announced landing of British troops\nin Greek territory. Canadian naval headquarters announced auxiliary minesweeper\nBras D'Or overdue and presumed lost. German air raiders- made scattered attacks on\nI\/ondon\nToday's Horoscope    Words of Wisdom\nImpulsive and subject to moods, you will\nlove with strength nnd ardor nnd demand the\nsame from your mate. You love travel and\nrhange of \"-rrne, and ran readily adapt your-\nKrlf to any environment You are generous\nnnd kind. It gives you a great deal of real\npleasure tn help others. In the next 12 months\ndo not play with fire in love affairs, however\nInnocent and Inconsequential they may seem,\n('onrcntrate on business rxpansinn and fntrl-\nlectual mutters which will prove highly successful Born today a child will be very clever\nand go far In life, but monetary loss, in some\nway connected with the affections, is threatened\nWATCH YOUR STIP\nDon't have anything to do with Malhergs\nGuldsmeasnktlcboldiig Sydprodukter or For-\nsakringsbolagest Bor Forlags, as both firms\nhave been ndded to the list of Swedish concerns blacklisted by thli country.\u2014IndlAiap-\n\"UNDER NEW. MANAGEMENT\"\nThere can be but a single goal of edura-Mon.\nand that -education to courage---Dr. Alfred\nAdler.\nEtiquette Hints\nIf you nre at a dance, don't talk to other\npeople over your partner's shoulder, to show\nyour popularity. It Is rude io him.\noils Nc\nws.\n____. ,.\n\u2014 ' -\u2014\u25a0-\nTest Yourself\n1 What nationality wss the rompasir\nTKhilkoviky'\n2. Whst wis the nationality of Cntr\nFrank, the composer*\n3   Wherf wis the compofir Chopin horn1\nTEST  ANSWERS\n1   Russian.\n2. Frtnch.\n3. In Poland.\nThe famous gondolas of Venice\nare flat-bottomed and about 30 feet\nlong.\nProvince Should\nHave Percentage\nof Taxes-Hart\nPENTICTON, B. G, Nov. 2 (CP)\n\u2014Premier John Hart of British Columbia told the Penticton Board of\nTrade lut night that Federal Government authorities are \"constantly\nseeking\" to centralize Control ol taxation and public expenditures.\nDeclaring he would cooperate In\nany Dominion-Provincial conference, Premier Hart asserted the Province should reserve at least the\nright to a percentage of the income\nand corporation taxes It surrenders under any arrangement that\nmay be worked out\n\"What is the kernel of the whole\nthing? A bureaucracy at Ottawa, r.o\nmatter what stripe of government it\nserves under, is constantly seeking\nto get control of the financing of\nthe nation as a whole.\"\nThe Premier said that in 1W3\nBritish Columbia paid $150,000,000 in\nincome and corporation taxes b\\\\\nonly $12,500,000 was given to the\nProvincial Government under the\nwartime taxation agreement with\nthe Dominion Government.\n\"I want to be helpful and cooperative. I am willing to continue some\nagreement, for the double income\ntax arrangements has always been\na nuisance to business. But I have\na great responsibility to B. C, and\nthe expanding future of its people.\n'A B.C. administration could easily\nfall Into a trap, and that I assure\nyou I shall not do.\"\nOf hydro-electric development,\ntha Premier had this to say \"it is\nour ambition to develop all the power and sell it at a rate that will be of\ngreatest assistance to all the people\nof the Province.\n\"But where a city or district now\nsells such hydro electric service, I\nwould like to see it continue such\na practice under government policy.\nI would prefer to see the government develop that power and wholesale the service.\"\nHe states that he did not think\nthe government would insist on a\n| certain rate structure for munlcjp-\nI alities retailing the service.\nON THRESHOLD OF AACHEN: Two Allied soldiers plod\nthrough a debris-Uttered street of Aachen-Font, about 150 yards from\nth* fortreia city of Aachen, where American artillery and alrpower\nare carrying out the systematic destruction of ail German poiitloni.\nThla photo gives a graphic Idea of whit Aachen Itself will look Uka\nwhen the battle It ended.\nBritainWorriedOver Post War\nShipping; Increase in U. S. Fleet\nThis Army\nLONDON. Nov, 2 fCP CabTe) - ,\nA statement in the House of Com-\nmom yesterday by A. V. Alexander,\nFirst Lord of the Admiralty, that\nI the  post-war shipping situation  is,\nI not being overlooked in the midst t\nj of war responsibilities pressing upon |\n! the British cabinet is welcome re- I\ni assurance to an Industry which nee-1\n! eesarily must face its moat difficult\ndays when peace is restored.\nBriefly, this is the picture which\nresulted from yesterday's Commons\ndebate.\n1. Britain no longer has the\nworld's biggest Navy. Her pre-war\ntonnage is cut In half by war losses\n-from 18,000,000 tons to perhaps 9.-\n000,000, although exact figures remain a secret. United States tonnage in the meantime has risen\nfrom about 12,000,000 to an esttmat-:\ned 3(1,000.000 tons after the war,\n2. Replacement of wartime losses\nwith 19,000-ton utility ships left I\nBritain with a surplus of these slow,\nlarge freight-carriers and a lack of\nsmaller craft wfllch carried out j\nman.- pre-war services,\n3. Wartime restrictions have meant\nvirtually no passenger ship* have\nbeen built In British yards since the\nwar began, and it now la considered\nimpossible to get Britiih ships back\non nil passenger routes immediately the war ends.\n4. Despite air transport advances,\nshipping still ls the main factor in\nmaintaining Britain's living standards, since ahe relies largely on export trades for external revenue,\nand Import* huge quantities of raw\nmate rials and foodstuffs,\nf> The Merrhant Navy and ship-\nhull dmg indmtry have been providing fmplnyment directly and Indirectly for about 2.0O0.O0Q men and\nwomen and much unemployment\nwill result unless this industry remains active.\nIt was learned most shipyards\nwere making plans to switch to\nlarge-scale pfncf production and It\nwas indicated production of standardized ihipi may be ended sooner\nthan was at first expected*.\nBut wartime controls can only he\nrelaxed gradually, tnd it may be\nsome tjme before construction of\npassenger linen again li possible.\nBritiah shipping int*re*t* are worried most by the increase of the\nUnited Statei merchant fleet, and\narc afraid that even If tht United\nStates does not nperaU utility ships\naKrr the war they will ba sold to\nvarious United Natloni and stilt\noffer lerloui competition- parlicn-\nlarl\/ If countries UM Qrtect reiume\ncut-throat ratea of the pre-war period.\nEASTERN STAR\nGRAND MATRON\nAT KIMBERLEY\nKIMBERLEY, B C-The members of Harmony Chapter, N'o. 45, of\nthe Order nf the Eastern Star, hon- I\nored Mrs. Elizabeth Bentley, Provincial Worthy Grand Matron of\nthe order on Oct. 23 at the Masonic\nHall. The occasion was her official\nvisit to the Chapter. Seventy members were present. Visiters from\nother Chapters were, Mrs, J. R.\nNorthey, P.W.G.M. and Mr. Northey,\nW. Patron of Princess Chapter, No\n9 of Vancouver; Mrs J. Fniser,\nGrand Organist of Creston; Mrs. J.\nLegg of Calgary; Mrs. J. Bobir.son,\nMrs. D. Langston. Mrs. L. Hendren,\nMrs. A. Kirk, Mrs. .1. Putman, Mrs.\nE. Telford, Mrs. S. Wler, Mr. S.\nWeir, all of Creston. Mrs. L. Tagnert\nof Windermere, and Mrs Graham of\nSilverton.\nAfter the banquet, Mrs   Bentlfy\nwas presented with a lovely gift  A !\ndonation was presented to her also I\nfor the Crippled Childrens Fun-l      !\nBREAK UP MENU MONOTONY\n, .^\u2022u\u00aby.\u00abo-s_w\u00bbif\"*'\"\nMai to* ,\u201e.?*\u00ab*\" (\"cop steslemtt\n\u00abw*i,\u00b0*i\/.^T*_5^nK\u00b0St\nbl* ****  '\u201e l-l**** J1 povit '\"',\u00b0\u201e .\u00abh\n-\"\u25a0'\u2022.(\u201e<. \u00ab'* S. c'\u00bb- sCsi* \u2022 \u00b0_i\n\u2022** * SwT-rt\"1-*     We*6 b    hr-tO*1**\nWW\nBudapest is  a  three-ln-one  ctty,\nmade  up  of   the   fnrmer   towns   of ;\nBuda. O-Buda and Pest\nMAGIC CU1S FOOD COSTS\nARE THERE ANY BIRTHDAYS OR ANNIVERSARYS\nCOMING UP THIS WEEK?\nIf io, land YOUR Greeting and a Muticol\nNumber Through*\np    JahinL!\n.a-0\nStation CKLN\nBIRTHDAY and GREETINGS PROGRAMME Every TUESDAY\n.AT 6 30 THROUGH THE COURTESY OF THE..\nEmpire Dry Cleaners\nWrite In your request to Box 250, foi some loved one. We will send the message over\nthe air with a musical selection of your own choice, bety Tueiday of 6:30, ovei CKLN.\n=====   '\u25a0'       i,    .      ., '.life\n-    -\n W*faWetWm^j\\iMmn. r....tmm*mw*w^\nwfaem^wmmi^mjtmmim-\nj^S^**}\nw-iiwmm\ni9X>l :\n' Cabinet Crisis Over?,\nGen. McNaughton\nSucceeds Ralston\nBy JAMES MCCOOK\nCinidiin Pren Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, Nov. 2 (CP) - Gen.\nA. G. L. McNaughton, 57, former\nCanadian Army Commander overseas, today was sworn In as Minis\nter of National Defence succeeding Hon. J. L. Ralston, who tendered his resignation at a cabinet meeting last night.\nAt a large press conference, Mr.\nKing shed no light on the cablne)\ndiscussions whiclr led to Col. Ralston leaving the post he had held\nsince 1940. He refused to discuss\npolicies ln respect to reinforcements\nfor men overseas or the status of\nthe home defence army of men call-\nc' for compulsory military training. He said he could see no need\nfor changing plans to call parliament together un Jan. 31, and had no\ncomment on general election possibilities.\nConjecture on the nearness of a\ngeneral' election was heightened by\n, the cabinet change. It was believed that Mr. King had seriously eonildered going to the country almost\n, Immediately.\nThe surprising entry Into the\npicture of Gen. McNaughton, however, was Interpreted as probably\nmeaning delay In the election with\nthe government standing pat on Its\ndraftee policy and leaving to the\nOeneral the problem of fitting the\nmuch-crltlclzed manpower policy\nInto the military picture.\nMr. King has the solid backing of\na large majority of the 20 cabinet\nministers who remain following the\nresignation of Col. Ralston. Some\nwho p.*vjnally might favor con-\nicrlptlon for overseas remain loyal\nto his leadership, and Mr. King still\nll not convinced that an emergency\nlufflclently great, exists to warrant\na further step being taken.\nIt was understood Col. Ralston\nhad said callups should be available for service anywhere, his position having been strengthened by\nopinions expressed by frontline\ntroops he met during a tour of\nEuropean battlefront. he completed\nthree weeks ago.\nGen. McNaughton made a brief\n; Itatement to the reporters saying he\nhad taken thi new poit ln order to\nservt Canidi ind to ensure the army\noverseai received ln fullest measure\nthe support it needed.\nMr. King said he had no statement\nto n ake on the reason for Crt. Ralston's resignation.\n\"Everything speaks for Itself,\" Mr.\nKing said.\nHe said he had no knowledge of'\nany other resignations forthcoming.\nCol.   Ralstori   obviously   would\nnot have resigned had he not felt\n'thst  he should  retain a position\nhe had taken \"right along,\" uld\nMr. King without elaboration.\nHe said It was not for him to make\nany statement except to state that\nall who knew Col. Ralston knew him\nas a man of the highest integrity.\nPersonally he could say that h\u00ab\nheld Col. Ralston In the highest affectionate rftard and he regretted\nthat the Defence Minister had found\nit necessary to resign.\nMr. King said he wu grateful\nthat Gen. McNaughton had accepted\nthe ministeria' post at a time when\nall must consider not their personal\nfeelings but their obligation to the\nState. They must seek every way\nof furthering the war effort, and\nkeep it In the high place lt had in\nthe world today.\n\"Anything which hu appeared In\nthe press thus far wai unauthorized,\" said the Prime Minister, evidently referring to newspaper items\no.. the division of opinion wlthin\nthe cabinet.\n\"1 hope the public realliei that no\nofficial statement hu coma !r\u00bbm\nthe government. Policiei will be innounced as is thought advliable.\"\n\"In inviting Gen. McNaughton to\ncome into the cabinet and assume\ngreat responsibilities, I wai seeking to get the one man whom I felt\nat this time In that position could\nbring the greatest measure of confidence to the men overseM,\" he\ncontinued.\n\"I also had in mind the confidence his appointment would bring\nto the fathers, mothers, relitivu\nand other friends of the men overseas that every step would be taken\nto support them and that nothing\nwould come before that support 61\nthe men oversew.\n\"I also hid in mind that the people of Canada had the fullest confidence ln Gen. McNaughton and\nwill feel that this is the beit ip-\npolntment which could be made at\nthis time in filling the post made\nvacant by the resignation of Col.\nRalston.\"\nis for Calcium\nKjALCWM builds the bona\nand teeth. Babies and growing\nchildren need lots of it One of tha\nbest ways to get it is in Irradidted\n(jrtuiion MUk. Carnation Milk is\nnot only rich in cilcium-lt also hu\n\u2022o txirs amount of \"sunshine\"\nvitamin D which helps the calcium\ndo a fint-clasa job. And Carnation\nsupplies all the other essential milk\nnu-rientj. For baby's bottle, consult your doctor for a Carnation\nMilk formula. Carnation is grand\nfor cooking, for drinking, and for\ncr aming Coffee and cereals. Write\nfor free book \"Your Contented\nUn by\". Carnation Co. Limited,\n470 Granville St., Vancouver, B.C.\n0k%    (MMJOfATfO %\nCarnation\ntre 11 K  G>*ttntedCoifs'\nA CANADIAN   PRODUCT\nILSLEY AND\nMcLARTY ALSO?\nTORONTO, Nov, 2 (CP) -The\nGlobe and Mall says today In an\nOttawa dispatch that three mora\nFederal Cabinet Ministers are almost certain to follow Defence\nMinister Ralston and reilgn from\nthe Government when the Seventh Victory Loan campaign li\nconcluded.\nTha three are Navy Minister\nMacdonald, ''who has buttressed\nhis senior's recommendations on\nArmy policy from the beginning,\"\nFinance Minister Ilsley and State\nSecretary McLarty.\nFAKE IT EASY LAD-TAKE IT EASY:'It around while  his corporal, 8.  Kormendy,  Clyde,\nli no Joke when a soldier goes scouting In enemy Alta,, covers hla movements ready to fire on sight.\noccupied territory* Here tt Soout Sergeant H. A. Thii  picture  wat  taken   In   Belgium.\u2014Canadian\nMarshall,   Calgary,   advancing   Into   enemy   held Army Oveneai Photo,\nU.S. to Celebrate\nNov. 23 as\nThanksgiving Day\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 2 (CP) -\nPresident Roosevelt today proclaimed Nov. 23 as Thanksgiving Day in\nthe United States. Five States plan\nto observe Nov. 30, the last Thursday, through local choice.\nIn his annual proclamation, the\nPresident called on the nation to\nread the holy scrlptureg from\nThanksgiving until Christmas in\nthanking God for restoring freedom\nto many millions in \"this year of\nliberation\" and for the \"promise of\nan enduring peace.\"\nNanaimo Pilot\nKilled in Crash\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2 (CP) -\nFlying Officer John Edgar Thomson,\nson of Mrs. J. E. Thomson of\nNanaimo, B. C, was the pilot killed\nwhen a Royal Canadian Air Force\nKitty hawk fighter plane crashed\ninto the ocean yesterday near White\nRock. B. C, it was reported today\nhy Western Air Command.\nLU AND YOUR FAMILY\nfill ENJOY\nft\nCOFF\u00a3E   4^V      1\nt'BOOoCT Of HUDSON'S BAY COMPANY - AVAILABLE AT YOUR CROCER!\niiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimiiiiiiin.il.mimini\nB.C.S ROLL\nOF HONOR\niiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiii\nCANADIAN ARMY\nOFFICERS\nKilled In iction\nCooke, Hugh Archibald, Lieut,\nVancouver, B.C.\nPaterson, Herbert William John,\nMajor, Penticton, B.C.\nSerlouily wounded\nAlberta Regiment:\nWoods, Jamei Sutherland, Lieut,\nVancouver, B.C.\nWARANT OFFICERS, N.C.O*\nAND MEN\nPreviously  reported   mining,  now\nreported killed In action\nBartee, Royal Edwin, Pte., Eburne,\nBC.\nKilled In Aotlon\nEleenbraun, Joseph, Tpr., Eburne,\nB.C.\nCrawford, Donald Tranki, CpL,\nNew Westminster, B.C.\nrillon, Donald Edward, Pte., Duncan, B.C.\nDied\nCanadian Women's Army Corps:\nConnor, Evelyn Cecelia, Pte, Esquimau, B.C.\nEllis, Ernest Edwin, Cpl, Vancouver, B.C.\nDie.  ef woundi\nReni, Albert, Pte, Chilliwack,\nB.C.\nSeverely wounded\nBenson, Henry William, Rfn, New\nWestminster, B.C.\nGood, Oeorge Louli, Pte., New\nWestminster, B.C.\nSerlouily Wounded\nEngland, Frank, Pte, Vancouver.\nWou..did\nAustad, Stanley Edmund, Spr.,\nK08663, Mrs. J. N. Lannllle (sister),\n280 Halg St, Trail, B.C.\nSt. Cyr, Henry, Pte, Vancouver,\nB.C.\nLafleche, Robert, Pte, Vancouver,\nB.C. .\nNlsbet, John Robert, Pte, Ladner,\nBJ_.\nNordln, Ross Rudolph, Pte, Steveston, B.C.\nShute, Albert Murry, L.-Cpl, En-\nderby, B.C.\nWoods, Wilfred Yates, Pte, Vancouver, B.C.\nSlightly wounded\nBrown, Douglas Burton, Pte, Cloverdale, B.C.\nFerguson, Bertram James, Cpl,\nFalkland, B.C.\nSimpson, John Alexander, Pte,\nVancouver, B.C.\nBailey, Sidney, Pte, Esqulmalt\nB.C.\nInjured\nNewton, Jack, Pte, Lulu Island,\nB.C.\nMissing\nLeggatt, Alexander Dundai, Pte,\nPlnchi Lake, B.C.\nPrisoner ef war\nFlalg, Abed, Ptt, L22233, Mrt\nFreda Cave (sister), 1401 Columbia Ave, Trail, B.C,\nROYAL CANADIAN AIR FORCE\nKilled on active service\nI-ee, William John, Fo, North Vancouver, B.C.\nNew Denver Aid\nHolds Successful\nBazaar and Tea\nTOW DENVER, B.C.-The Kndx\nPresbyterian Church Ladlea Aid held\ntheir annual Fall bazaar and tea In\nthe Legion HaU on Wednesday, The\nHall waa decorated In Hallowe'en colors and the tea tables were centred\nwith orange marigolds. The follow\ning ladlea were ln charge: kitchen,\nMrs. E. Oeorge, Mrs. W. O. Balber-\nnle, Mrs. Herman Oliver and Mrs.\nJohn Nyman; bake table, Mrs. F. L.\nBeggs, Miss Dora Clever; touch and\ntake table, Mrs. J. B. Smith, Mrs. M.\nDoyle; servlteurs, Mlas Merle Tattrie,\nMisa Patricia Oreer, Mlas Inez McLeod and Mlas Barbara Jean McLeod;\ncashier, the President, Mrs. O. W.\nNelaon. The ladl_a reported a very\nsuccessful afternoon both socially and\nfinancially.\nMen Overseas\nPut Their (ase\ntb Ralston\nOTTAWA, Nov. 2 (CP) - Col\nJ, I_ Ralston, reported to have resigned lut night as Defence Minister, recently returned from a tour\nof the Europeon battlefronts wtth a\nnotebook filled with questions showing what the Canadian troops overseas were thinking about\nIn Italy ln particular, Col. Ralston faced a barrage ot questions\nabout home defence troopi and demobilization, about the Pacific war\nand about such things as beer, mall\nand leave.\nHli resignation wai reported to\nhave come on the question of reinforcements and on the use of home\ndefence troopi.\nIt was reported In parliamentary\ncircles that CoL Ralston favored\nthe sending of the home defence\ntroops oveneaa aa reinforcements\nwhile some of the other cabinet\nministers favored continuance of the\nvoluntary enlistment system tor\noveneaa lervice and the gradual\ndemobilization ot the non-volunteers Into euential lnduitry, subject to recall ln case of emergency.\nNILSON DAILY NIWS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1944 \u2014 T\nRALSTON GOES\nBACK TO UW\nOTTAWA, Nov. t (CP) - Col.\nJ, L. Ralston, who resigned aa\nPofenco Minister, li understood to\nhave deolded to leave the oapltal\nalmoit Immediately to resume hli\nlaw practice and buslneu Interests In Montreal.\nWcathtr Forecast\nKOOTENAY - Partly cloudy Friday, coot few inowen, winds light\nto moderate. '\n*wst*m%w*mw*rtW*mwM\nThe \"Seventh Victory Loan\"\nTonight at 6:05\nSpeaker will be\nBiihop Martin M. Johnion.\nC.KX.N.\n^T^m^^s%mt\\s%mmmt%mt%ms%mm\\mMMMt%.\nWIN YOUR FAMILY'S PRAISE\/\nLONDON (CP).-The New Zlon-\n1st organization haa asked the colonial secretary. Col. Oliver Stanley,\nfor an Interview to \"demonstrate\nthe unjustness and wrongness of\nlinking up the organization\" with\nrecent outbreaks of violence ln Palestine.\n\u00bbA\nINVIST IN^. ICTOHY \u2014 IUY VICTORY BONDS\nCastlegar I.O.D.E.\nHolds Successful\nHallowe'en Dance\nCASTLEGAR, B.O. \u2014 The Lillian\nKillough Chapter ICDA held a successful Hallowe'en danoe In the Community Hall Oct. 37. Ths Judges for\ncostumes were Mra. Dalgu. Mr. Burte\nand Mr. Powell. Winners were Mrs. E.\nMartin. Misa Lola Hkrooakln, Miss\nAudrey Thorpe, Mrs. J. Martin, Miss\nBernlre Price, Mrs. Pauline Romalne.\nBill Byers and Jamea Toogood. The\nspot dance was won by Mr. and Mrs\nVictor JenKs and the Jitterbug dancs\nby Mlu Mary and Sophie Gull. The\noonteet for guessing the weight oi s\npumpkin wu won by Hrs. W. Jensen. Refreshment* were eerved Mrs.\nDave Muse, Recent, wu general convenor assisted by Mrs. N. Donslee, Mrs\nH. Sommers. Mrs. O- (I. ...mri. Mra. C.\nrri-wr. Mrs. J. Martin, Mra. W. Houston, Mrs B. Truaeler. Mra. R Devltt,\nMrs. W O. Davit-. Mrs O. Wallace and\nMrs. Thorpe.\nLIVERPOOL, England (CP) \u2014 The\n200 English brides of Norwegians\nliving here are going back to school.\nFrom the English wife of a Norwegian sailor they are going to learn\nhow to ahop ln Norway, how to behave In the home and how to cook\n\u2022\u2022\nVICTORY AHEAD\nThe clouds are breaking! How\nsoon we herald the shining dawn of\npeace depends on us.\nNow is the time to put forth every\neffort for complete Victory!\nEvery dollar you   lend   to\nCanada now means the sooner the\nwar will be victoriously over...the\nsooner our men will come home.\nInvest all you can in Canada's Victory\nBonds. This time \u2014buy one\nmore than before.\nBUY VICTORY BONDS\nSponsored by\nWest Kootenay Power & Light Co* Ltd,\nTRAIL, ROSSLAND AND CRESTON, B.C\n=\nI\n\u00a3\n \u2122' \"'  ' *\u25a0'\nm*mmmrm*mmmvw!!\\)M 1,1.111 n\nmemmmm\n* _ NILSON daily Niws, FRIDAY novimbm J. 1944 Coast Steel Company\nCloture\nZombies Safe?.\nMcNaughton (or\nVolunteers Only\nOTTAWA, Nov. 2 (CP)-The man\nwho built the Canadian army and\nwaa called away from It suddenly\non the eve ol Its greatest test, Gen.\nA. G. L. McNaughton, 57, came back\nInto the public eye today as succes-\naor to Defence Minister Ralston\nwith whom disagreement la believed to have led to retirement as\narmy commander overseas.\nHe came back as suddenly and\nunexpectedly as he left the army\nand under circumstances as enigmatic.\nCol. Ralston, Just back from a\nbattlefield lour, is believed to have\nquit on grounds the Home Defence\ndraftees should be pressed into active service overseas.\nThe General on Oct. 21 ln a\nspejeh to a Queen's University convocation at Kingston, Ont., aaid\ncompulsion should hold no place in\nCanadian policy.\n\"When you come, as you will, to\nplaces of authority and Influence,\nand you face the acute Issues which\nmay divide our country part from\npart, may 1 commend this principle\not action to your best thought and\nInterest \u2014 compulsion ls ruled out;\nwe proceed by agreement, or for a\ntime we rest content to not proceed\nIt all.\"\nHis comments on compulsion are\nbelieved to indicate he was going\nto take the stand that national unity\nwas already threatened and should\nnot be sacrified in exchange for\nwhatever of the 70,000 Home Defence draftees are tit for overseas.\nAugust army casualties \u2014 numbering 10,257 \u2014 were by tar the\nhighest monthly total tor the war.\nGen. McNaughton has not been\nactive In politics but before the\nwar he was looked on as a supporter of the Conservative party.\nHe was a close acquaintance ot\nViscount Bennett, former Con.\n\u2022ervatlve Prime Minister and he\nwas appointed President of the\nNational Research Council when\nthe Bennett administration was In\noffice.\nGen. McNaughton cannot enter\nthe House'of Commons until he has\nbeen elected in some constituency.\nIt will be for Mr. King to d*cide\nwhether the Defence Minister\nahould immediately contest a riding\nor wait for the general election.\nThere is nothing to prevent Gen.\nMcNaughton (rom performing the\nduties of Minister in the meantime.\nHli homecoming from Europe\nafter taking leave of hli command\nitirred Parliamentary debate and\nnewipaper comment. He arrived\nIn February and told newimen\nthat a general Imprenlon icemed\nto have got about that he wai a\n\"confirmed cripple\".\nHe had a levere attack of Influenza and thli had been foi lowed by a low blood preilure condition. *Phyilclani told him there\nwai nothing organically wrong\nwith him and after a period of\nreit he would be \"ai good ai\nnew.\"\nWhile the General rested at the\nSeigniory Club, Que, the Prime\nMinister hailed a debate in lhe\nCommons on the General's leave\nby calling Opposition party leaders\nto see documents which he said)\nwere of \"great concern\" not only I\nto Canada but to other United Nations.\nOn his resignation, an exchange !\nof letters was publishen In which I\nthe General told  Col. Ralston \"we\nhave not alwayi been ot the lame\nopinion aa to the course to tie follower, but I have never doubted\nyour sincerity of purpose, nor, I believe have you doubted mine. Any\ndifferences of view belong to the\npast.\"\nGen. McNaughton has been deicribed as the parent end designer\nof the modern Canadian mechanized army. Much experience and\nmany achlevementa lay back of hla\ncontribution to thla war. He wu\nmajor of artillery ln the first Great\nWar at the age of 28 and a. brigadier-general at 31. He was three\ntimes mentioned in dispatches and\nwas severely wounded.\nHe had gone to the army after\nan education at McGill Univeralty\nand an early upbringing In his native Moosomln, Sask. McGill later\ngave him an honorary degree ln\nrecognition of hla development of\nnew artillery methodi which proved an Important factor ln tht success of the Canadian Corps.\nAfter the war he served ln various high army offlcea until he was\nmade chief of the general staff Jan.\n1, 1929, and reappointed for a second time ln 1932. In May, 1935, he\nwas seconded to the National Research Council, as President\nIt was In 1932 whlla supervising\nrelief project! that he realized\nCanada wai Insufficiently provided With airfields. He tent thouMndi of men Into the buih with\nihoveli and axei, billeting them\nIn more than MO camps from\ncoast to coast.\nThis action drew iuch a vigorous\nprotest from Parliament that he la\nbelieved to have been aiked in 1935\nnot to apply for renewal of hli post\nas chief of the general staff.\nAfter 1939 his alrfielda were extended and made the training\nground for thousands of aircrew\nwho passed through the Commonwealth Training Plan.\nHe once remarked in an interview \"if I am known for anything,\nlt Is for the urgent insistence ot\nusing guns rather than the live*\nof our troops and for the proper coordination of all arms.\"\nThen General has lost a son in\nthis war, Sqdn. Ldr. Ian McNaugh-\nton of the R.C.A.F. was killed in\naction in June, 1942.\nExpected in Month\nVANCOUVER, Nov. } (CP) -\nAbout 880 employees ot the Weitern Steel Company here bave been\nlayed off ln recent weeka lt waa\nlearned todty and complete cloture\no' the aircraft division ln tbe plant\nll expected ln about t month's time.\nThe plant bu been working on a\nsub-contract with Boeings.\nP. Styan, plant manager, uld that\nhe had heard rumors that new contracts might permit reopening of the\naircraft division but there was nothing definite.\nTo Demobilize\nCanadian Fire\nFighters Overseas\nOTTAWA, Nov. I (CP) - National War Services Department today announced plans to demobilize\ntbe Civilian Corps of Canadian Fire\nfighters overseas.\nPresent strength of the Corps is\n342. The first group will leave the\nUnited Kingdom shortly and others\nwill fellow at brief Intervals u\nstations are cloied.\nThe announcement said condltloni no longer made lt neceuary\nto maintain the Corps u protection\nagainst enemy attacks and while\nlome had volunteered for service\nwith a ipeclal contingent to serve\non the continent there wm Insufficient ground for them to remain\noveneu.\nLONDON (CP) - Main Une railway and London Traniport staffs\nhave been awarded three George\nCrosses, \\38 George Medals, nine\nmemberships In the Order of, tho\nBritish Empire, 766 British Empire\nMedals and 127 commendations.\n\"Serious Threat\nlo Organized\nLabor in B.C.\"\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2 (CP) -\nAction of Stewart Alsbury and other\nCCF. members and supporters ln\ncall|ng for expulsion of'all members of the Labor-Progreisive party\nfrom International Woodworker! of\nAmerica \"constitutes the most serious threat to organized labor in\nB. C, ln many yean,\" the Provtn-\nclal LPP executive charged ln a\nstatement luued today.\nThe party itatement also charged\nthat the CCF leadership flans either to dominate or wreck major trade\nunions ln this Province.\n(Four ot 42 B. C. delegates \"to\nIWA's international convention here\nlast week supported a clause in the\nunion's constitution barring members of the Fascist, Nazi and Communist (f.uties. Two ot the four.\nStewart Alsbury and George Mitchell, denied CCF membership.)\nMr. Alsbury, the LPP statement\nsaid, \"Is a brother of the Provincial\nCCF President, Tom Alsbury, who\nhimself has gained entry Into fwA\nby working part-time in the Eburne\nsawmill while employed as a sellout\nteacher, and who haa bean leading\na campaign ln the Vancouver Local to discredit the Union's district\nleadership.\nSINUS NIK\nRelieved Fast This Easy Way!\nPut a few drape ot Vleks Va-tro-nol\nup each nostril and \/eel lt go to work\nbringing quick. a^r**\\\nfrom mUerable VICKS    jJ\"\nVMM-MI\nt\nf THIS CERTAINLY IS\nWONDERFUL\nBREAD\/\n'ROYAL IS CERTAINLY\nWONDERFUL\n-**\u00ab  YEAST\/\nRalston Rose\nto Top in\nThree Professions\nOTTAWA, Nov. 2 (CP) - Col.\nJ. L. Ralston, who has resigned as\nDefence Minister, is a solcier, lawyer and public servant who rose to\nthe top in all three professions and\nin the 1940 war session cf Parliament heard opposition members\nurge his promotion to the post of\nPrime Minister.\nWith the outbreak of war, Col.\n! Ralston forewent his 1935 decision\nI to abandon politics and offered his\n\\ services in any capacity, preferably\nI on active service such as he had ex-\nI perienced in the First Great War,\n\\ when he rose from a captaincy to\n; command his battalion as Lieuten-\n\\ ant-Colonel and was wounded and\ni flecorated.\nMe accepted the post of Finance\nMinister Sept 7. 1939. and when\nHon. Norman Rogers, was killed in\nan airplane crash June 10, 1940, Mr.\nKing chose Mr. Ralston a.i the successor.\nWhen Mr, King formed hli new\ngovernment ln 1926, he chow Col\nRalston as his Defence Minister and\nhe was elected by acclamation in\nShelburne-Yarmouth. He was reelected In 1930 but retired to his\nlaw practice when Parliament waa\ndissolved in  1935.\nAfter he became Finance Minister\nin 1940 he was elected to lh* Commons as a member for Princt Edward Island and was reelected at\nthe Dominion elections ot 1940,\nOf United Empire Loyalist stock,\nhe nt.ended school in h ^*.\u00abtive Am- (\nherst, N. S, and took his law degre\nat Dalhousie University.\nA.\n\/'...'\"\nJust 2C a day\nensures sweet,\ntasty bread\nWPAPPID AIRTIGHT\nJO PROTECT SWNf-TH\nPUPf. DFPtNDAfilf'\nCAMP LISTER\nCAMP LLBTER. BC\u2014HIm WIllM\nnnd Mlu Anne H**\u00ablh\u00bbn wtfe vLaltoti\ntn Fernle to ittend lhe Teechere\nConvention.\nMre stun Tay.er of Huicroft ti vla-\nMa-c.wxl. wm e vlaltor et thi horn**\n. t h<*r parent*. Mr. and Wt. C. Hui-\ni ro_.\nAfter apandmj two month* at th*\n' oiwt with hli parent*. Mr. \u00bbnd Mri\nPet*- Rylan, Of-orga Rj-Ian r*turned to\nHu aero ft whrn\u00ab he ii rraldlni with hli\nuncle, David Rylan\nMr    and   Mra    T    Uehcn   and   two\ni rhHdran   irTlvwI   from   Antrlod. Baa*\nand will rt*l'l\u00ab> !n [.titer\nJaniM Hik'-ra in a patient In th'\n, (':*\u25a0*.;,m   Valla*   Mmrp'.Ul\nMra h T Winner returned from a\nvlatt In Trail\nHav   MrOillneh   ot   HilirToft   waa   a\n\u25a0\"\u25a0\"HT..1   rla'.MT   1\"   Wynndal   at   th\u00bb\n\u25a0nr   nf   Mi   par-\".-'.*,   Mr.   and   Mri\nMt-  MrCui: <--h\n1        ('hurlce   Hua-Tort   wai   hunting   hl|\n1    name in the Wind-arm*\u2122 r-ountry lait\nMra  D  .1   Mr Km \u00bbnd Kl. Jimmy oi\nCTtttAin er* vlattlni th* formtr'a parent*. Mr  and Mra Jo* Wtrkntt*\nMr and Mra Pat Holland and\ndaugl.t*r. Marl* wtrt waekend vial.\ntort with r*latlvi*i In I-llWr and Hua-\nrt-nft\nMr. man Taylor rf Huar-orlf li vt*-\nItln-f In CT\u00bbat'-:i a gut***, nt her ila-\ntar   Mri   Hap-id K-dfar\nCol r I lator and D J MrK*# were\nVllltnra   to  CT-Mton\nfVih Huarrnft and Jw* R_*-*a nf\nKI-VW-CT war- wtttent] vlaltora at\nthair  hnmaa In  HiuktoM\nK1m\u00bbr H\u25a0.let-oft left on Monday trtr\n\\ ar-.r-onvar (._ altand th# w-Mdtng of\n| hla alitor. Mia* Ir*-n# Huarrofi\nMr\u00ab   Maud Roa* of HvyKroft wnj a\nweekend rUltor to Bonntr* rvrj\nm\nCanadian troops be done\n\"MONTY!\"\nThe name strikes a chord of admiration in the\nheart of every man and woman in the British\nEmpire i i : in all United Nations. It spells\ndefeat and disaster for the German people.\nFor Monty knows how to win\u2014if he has enough\ngood men, enough good planes, guns and tanks\nand shells.\n\"Today,\" Monty has said, \"a battle must be won\nbijore it is fought.\" And in the pages of history, the\nterm, \"Monty Barrage\" will be used to describe\nhis essential preliminary to attack ;;; thousands\nof guns pouring destruction on the enemy. And\nif our Allied Commanders are to keep mounting a\nsuccession of offensives, supplies of planes, tanks,\nguns and shells must never slacken.\nCanada's Victory Loans are essential to provide\nthe money to build these weapons. The 7th\nVictory Loan will soon commence. To make\nit a success, every Canadian must play a part on\nthe home front worthy of the heroic efforts of the\nmen and women bearing the brunt of battle.\nBuy One Mora Bond Than Btfort\nBy.doing this you will create a nest-egg of savings\nfor the future. And remember, now that Compulsory Savings have been relinquished . : : an\nadditional 70 million dollars must be raised in\nCanada through Voluntary Savings In Victory\nBonds. Since the war is now in its most intensive\nstage, Canada's over-all borrowing must increase\nby some 320 million dollars. Plan now to buy\nat least one more bond than before.\nnaW marshal\nSir Barnard taw Mo nf go-nary,\nCB, D5.0.\nThe idol of hi^troopi Is this keety\neyed man in the black beret whom\nall the world knows as \"Monty.''\n\u2022'A good gentril must never lose,''\nhe say*. That il why he never\nlaunches a campaign until he ii cer\u00bb\ntain of victory. Then it's attack,\nattack, attack! Reform and attack\nagain. \"But don't forget!\" warns\nMonty in characteristic language,\n\"auppliei muit come __\/>.._ ssp,.,upr\nrMALKINSl\nBEST\nTHE W. H. MALKIN CO. LIMITED\nNELSON, B. C.\n\"malkimsi\nBEST\n \t\npijpip.ii .hi-ppu\n1^3\nnglersTake51 Kamloops on Main\nLake; Rosslander in Third Place\nFifty-one   trout   ditches -one   a\nIn second place entry\u2014 were recorded by the Oyro Club Kootenay\nLake  Trout Derby  statistician  ln\nthe past week. It was the bluest\nitry received th . season.\nC. Butcher of Roaaland is the new\nicond place entrant. His 22 pound,\nme  ounce  Kamloops  displaced  a\nfO-pounder   taken   by   Miss   Betty\n'ewton of Calgury.  He also took\niver fifth place with a IB pound, IV,\nbunce catch.\nAmerican and East Kootenay anglers had real luck the Big Lake,\nird caught most of the 51.\nThe 51 entries were:\nC. Butcher, Rossland, 22 pounds\none ounce on Olbba No, 8 off Pilot\nBay, Oct, 27; 19 pounds iV, ounces,\nG:bbs No. 5 off Painted Rockl, Oct.\nW; 11 pounds, one ounce, Martin\nPlug, off Irvine Creek, Oct. 28; and\nline pounds 11 ounces, Gibbs Merlin, off Irvine Creek, Oct. 27; welgh-\n!d by Tom Heise, Balfour.\nClarence Christenson, Crestnn, 19\nHV'nds, five ounces, on Roy Self,\nmldlake off Goat Creek, Oct. 22;\n1 pounds eight ounces, Ruby Eye,\ntelegraph Bay, Oct. 20; 10 pounds,\nour ounces, Roy Self, off Drewry,\n)ct. 20; eight pounds four ounces,\nlure, off Drewry, Oct. 22: five\nlUnds 14 ounces. Roy Self, off Goat\n!reek, Oct   22:  five  pounrls eight\nunces. Ruby Eve, off Goat Creek,\nid. 22: weighed by Ray Cnmmings,\noswell.\nDr. Oeorge W. Peters, Spokane,\nYOU   NEED\nWhen you need comfort at well ai warmth,\nbuy Stanfield's.\nSTANFIELD'S  LIMITED\nTRURO, Ni.\nL?_\nIB poundi four ounces on Bear Villey oft Blue Point, Oct. 19; weighed\nby Ray Cummlngi, Boswell.\nW. Keirn, Creston, 18 poundi thrte\nounces, Bear Valley No. 1, Twin\nBays, Oct. 18; eight pound! 12\nounces, on Len Thompion, Twin\nBays, Oct. 18; weighed by W. L.\nWllion. Sanca.\nPercy Boffey, Creston, 17 pounds\n12 ounces, Roy Self, off Blue Point,\nOct. 20; eight poundi three ouncei,\non Bear Villey off Blue Point,\nOct. 17; seven pounds three ouncei.\nRoy Self, Telegraph Bay, Oct. 26;\nwelKhed by Ray Cummlngi, Boswell; 11 pounds, Glbbi Stewart No,\n5, off Sanca, Aug. 28; weighed by\nW. L. Wilion, Sanca.\nJames O'Brien, Creston, 17 pounds\nfive ounceB, Gibbs Stewart No, 4,\noff Drewry, 12 pounds, two ouncei,\nGibbs No. 4, off Blue Point, Oct.\n20; 11 pounds. Olbbs Stewart, off\nDrewry, Oct. 29; weighed by R.\nCummings, Boswell.\nEd Osier, Riondel, 14 pounds eight\nounces, Stewart No. 4, between Ainsworth and Riondel, July 20, weighed\nby Mrs. J. W. Burni, Ainsworth.\nJames W. Hunter, Rossland, 14\npounds five ounces, Gibbs Martin,\noff Pilot Lighthouse, Oct. 29, weighed by Tom Heise, Balfour.\nGordon Bowker. Kaslo, 14 pounds,\nGibbs Mirror, off Kaslo, Sept, 10,\nweighed by T. O. Albrecht, Kaslo.\nMrs. Charles Barrett, Nelson, 18\npounds 14 ounces, Gibbs No. 5,\nQueen's Bay, Oct. 29; weighed by\nJoe Philpot, Balfour.\nTed Baldwin, Creston, 13 pounds\nfive ounces, Roy Self, off Drewry,\nOct. 29, weighed by Ray Cummings,\nBoswell.\nC. L. Wallmark, Spokane, 13\npounds four ounces, Roy Self, Ooat\nCreek, Oct. 21; 12 pounds three\nounces, Roy Self, Blue Point, Oct.\n20; 10 pounds seven ounces, Roy\nSelf, Blue Point, Oct. 21; weighed\nby  R. Cummings, Boswell.\nC. Rogers, Farragut, Idaho, 11\npounda 12 ouncaa, Roy Self, off\nDrewry, Oct 18, weighed by R.\nCummings, Boswell.\nHarry Chrlstensen, Creiton, 11\npounds six ounces, Ruby Eye, off\nSnowshed, Oct. 29; five pounds 10\nounces, Ruby Eye, off Drewry, Oct.\n26, weighed by R. Cummings, Boswell.\nE. O. Holen, Spokane, 11 pounds\nsix ounces, eight pounds IS ouncei,\nseven pounds 12 ouncei, 'seven\npounds nine ounces, six pounds 14\nounces, all on Roy Self off Blue\nPoint, Oct. 19 to 22; seven pounds,\nRoy Self, off Goat Creek, all weighed by R. Cummings, Boswell.\nDr. W. O. Green, Cranbrook, 11\npounds, Gibbs Stewart No, 6, off\nKaslo, July, B. Albrecht, Kailo.\nMrs. F. O. O'Brien, Creston, 10\npounds 10 ounces ind eight poundi,\nboth on Bear Valley off Blue Point\nOct. 22 and 26; weighed by R.\nCummings, Boswell.\nR. G. Boyle, R_uland, 10 pounds\nsix ounces on Gibbs No. 5, Pilot Bay,\nOtt. 29, weighed by Tom Helse,\nBalfour.\nR. Ibbotson, Creiton, 10 pounds,\nGlbbi Stewart No. 4 off Sanca, Oct.\n22; eight pounds two ouncei, Glbbi\nNo. 4, Twin Bays, Oct 15;' five\npoundi nine ounces on Double X,\nTwin Bays Oct. 16; weighed by\nW. L. Wilson, Sanca.\nWilliam Thomion, Trail, nine\npounds 12 ouncei off Kaalo, July 30,\nweighed by B. Albncht.\nH. Curtis, Creston, seven poundi\nfive ounces on a Bear Valley Rainbow No. 4 off Twin Bays Oct. 19;\nfive pounds 11 ouncei, Gibbi Stewart No. 4 off Twin Bayi, Oct. 20;\nweighed by W. L. Wilion, Sanci.\nW. H. Saunders, Balfour, seven\npounds, Gibbs No. 4, Outlet, Oct.\n25, weighed by Tom Helse, Balfour.\nH. Boffey, Creiton, six pounds\nthree ounces, Jack Lloyd, off Sanca,\nAug. 20; five pounds leven ounces,\nGibbi Stewart No. 5, off Sanca,\nAug. 29; weighed by W. L. Wilion.\nSinci.\nNAZI DEATH WATCH ON THE RHINE: Nazis who died\nfutile attempt at stemming the Allied advance across the Waal Rhine\nIn Holland lie on the roadway of a bridge over the river. Past the ,\nbodies rumbles one of the Allied tanks headed for Qermany.\nLeafs Win Slugging Match From\nCanucks; Wings Take Rangers 10-3\ni\nMONTREAL, Nov. 3 (CP)\u2014 Toron-\nto Mapla I.rats, who ylnned the onl)\nhome-Ice defeat  of  the tewon un\n('.inatlleiiH    Inst    spring, guie  (he\nC-tnucki thetr first whipping of the\nuiung National Hockey League sea-\nton tonight by a 4-1 count,\nA   capacity    crowd of mora than\n13,000 aaw a game that wai a alugglng\nmatch all the way, with both toami\nteaalnu Into each other throughout,\nand with the penalty parade reaching\nsuch proportions ln tha third period\nthat the taami were seldom both at\nfull strength.\nToronto\u2014 McCool, Pratt, Morrl\u00ab;\nBodnar; Carr, Schrlner.\nMontreal \u2014 Durnan; Harmon, Ed-\ndolls: Lach; Richard, Blake.\nToronto tuba\u2014Hamilton, Davldaon,\nHill. Kennedy, Mete, Erlnlcki, O'Neill,\nBackor.\nMontreal auba\u2014Bouchard, Lnmour-\neux. HUler, O'Connor, Getliffe, Cham-\noerlaln, Plllon, Qauthter.\nReferee\u2014Clancy;  linesmen\u2014Murray\nand Mulllna.\nSl'MMARY\nFlrrt period\u2014I. Toronto, Met?, 10:40.\nPenalties\u2014Lach (3), Morris.\nSecond  period\u20143   Montreal,   Blake\n13:24.\nPena1tl\u00ab#\u2014Chamberlain (2), Lach,\nOetiUfe. Metz.\nThird period\u20143. Toronto, Schrlner,\n(Carr) :*fl: 4. Toronto, Bodnar, Scbrl-\nnar, Backor) 3.37; 5. Toronto, Carr\n(Schrlner) 9:45.\nPenalties\u2014Lamoureux, .major and\n10-mlnute mlaoonduct). Kzhilckl (major). Oetllffa .(mlnof and 10-mlnute\nmisconduct), Davldaon (2), Lach,\nBouchard, Itlchard.\nm.TROlT,   Nov.  t   (AD\u2014Detroit\nRed Winn-* poured In 10 Roali here\nTo Nationalize\nGreek Banks\nATHENS, Nov. 2 (AP) - The\nGreek government li expected to\nnationalize leading banki Sunday\nIn an effort to combat inflation\nsnd itabtltze the drachma, which\nhai  iunk  to  fantastic  levels.\nThree Hills\nCOAL\nTHE IDEAL COAL\nFOR FURNACES\nIf you heat by furnace . . .\nthere is no better coal for this\npurpose . . .\nvVe suggest filling your coal bin\nnow and be assured of a warm\nhome this coming Winter.\nPhone 33\nLady Curlers\nOpen Season in\nScratch Games\nFair follower! of the roarln' game !\nthrew and iwept their fint rocki ln\ntht 1044-45 aeason Thursday atter- j\nnoon. Several newcomers turned out |\nand members were on hand to give '\nthe tyros aome help. Scratch gamei\nwere the order.\nOpen house will continue until\nNov 13 when competition curling\nwill get under way. The icratch\ngames will continue toduy and four\nafternoons next week. A welcome\nhas been extendrd by the Nelson j\nLadles' Curling Club tn prospective\nmemben to turn nut and try the Ice.\nBasketball Starts\nat Creston\nORMTON, BC\u2014According to Tr*A\nMartello. the recreational prouram of\nthe school will continue thla year,\nmora or less on thi same plan ai that I\nof put years It 1\u00ab understood that\nbasketball will begin on Friday, Nov |\nAny nn? wishing lo p_irtlc1r._i._i In '\nthla program, or Join uny ol the clubi\nfunctioning are in contact Mr. Mir- I\ntello or fj J Oraham. A definite pro- ;\nfrtm of the act'.vltlei or ithlltt-8 will j\nDe available from tbe above mentioned\nir.an.\ntonight before a crowd of 72JS In\nhanding Nr-v York Bangers their\nthird atraljht detest, 10-3, In the\nNational Hockey League.\nBy losing tonight, tha Hanger, el.\ntended n ]ln\u00ab tinder whloh they hadn't\nwon a game on Detroit Ice alnce\nOhrtitmii night, 1B4J.\nTonljht'i triumph was D\u00abtrolt'a aecond without defeat In league play\nthis aeaaon.\nLIMEIPS\nNew York\u2014' McAuley; Heller, Gold.\nup; Thurler; Kunt, K MacDonald.\nDetrolt^-Dlon; Quackenhuah, Jack-\neon; Howe; Bruneteau, McAtee.\nEanger auba\u2014Dili, B. McDonald,\nWarwick, Atanaa, Cooper, Demarco,\nScherza, dhack.\nRed Wing auba\u2014Simon, Armitroni,\nHollett, Llecombe, Oroaao, Carveth.\nLindsay. Wochy.\nReferee\u2014BUI Chadwlck. Llneajjjen\u2014\nDoug Young and Stan McCabe.\nSVMMARY\nFirst period\u20141. Detroit. McAtee\n(Howe, Bruneteau) 1.38: 2. New York\nK. MacDonald (Hunt. Goldtip) 3:011;\n3, New York, Shack (D-Marco. Wal-\nwlcki 14 05; . Detroit. qu\u00bbckenhujh\n[Howe. Bruneteau) 18:80.\nPenalties\u2014Hollett, Cooper, Oroeso,\nDill.\nSecond period\u20148. Detroit, Bruneteau (Howe. Simon) -31; J. Detroit.\nWochy (Uscombe. 7:81; 1. Detroit.\nQuackenhuah (Carveth, Armstrong)\n13:18; _ Detroit. McAtee 19:24.\nPenalties\u2014None,\nThird perlod-9. Detroit, Llscombe\n(Oroeso) 218: 10. New York, Atanas\n4:82; 11. Detroit. McAtee iHowel\n7 \u00abB 13. Detroit. Lindsay (Carveth,\nArmstrong) 8:42; 13. Detroit, Wochy,\n(Quackenhuah)   19:41.\nPenaltlei\u2014None.\nHockey Schedule\nWith the 7-9 period Saturday\nmorning cancelled due to Ice conditions and the Dodgeri given instead a 3-8 period in the afternoon,\nthe Ice schedule of the Nelson Amateur Hockey Association from Saturday to next Wednesday ls as follows:\nSaturday\u2014\n9-10 a m \u2014 M. R. K. Bantams and\nMidgets.\n10-11 a.m - Panther Bantams and\nMidgets\n11-12 m\u2014 Bantam Pool.\n5-8 p.m.\u2014Dodger Bantams and\nMidgets.\n8-7 p.m.\u2014Midget Rep practice,\nMonday:\n4:30-5:50 p.m.\u2014F. A. C. Bantams\n8:30-7 p.m.\u2014F. A. C. Midgets.\nTueaday\u2014\n7-8 pm\u2014Midget Rep practice\n8-10 p m. \u2014 Commercial League\npractice.\n\\Vednesday\u2014\n5-6 pm.\u2014Dodger Bantams and\nMidgets.\n6-7 p.m.\u2014Panther Bantams and\nMidgets.\nF.D.R. (alls lor Continuation\nof National Team Work\nI NILSON DAILY NIWS, FRIDAY, NOVIMIIR 3, 1944 \u2014 \u2022\nWABHINOTON, Nov. J (AP) -\nPresident Roosevelt declared tonight aiiertlons that Congreu will\ncooperate 'only with \u2022 Republican\nPrreident constitute \"a threat to\nbuild t party spite fence between\ntu and tha peace.\"\nIn a ipeech prepared for radio\ndelivery under sponsorship of the\nDemocratic National Committee, the\nPretldent propoied \"continuance ot\nthe teamwork that we have demon-\nitrated ln thli war.\" He said that by\ncarrying forward plani already\nmade, Uie United Statei can:\n\"Provide employment for our veterani and our war workeri\u2014 we\ncan achieve an orderly reconversion.\n\"Above all, we can avoid another\nfalse boom like that which bunt In\n1993, and a dismal collapse like that\nof 1930 to 1983.\"\nThe Preiident said the presiden\nUal campaign hu been \"marred by\neven .more than the uiual crop of\nwhliperingi and rumoring!\" and\ndeclared \"I do not propoie to answer\nln kind.\"\n\"Hysterical, lait-mlnute accuse-\ntlimi or leniatlonal revelation! are\ntrumped up ln an attempt to panic\nthe people on election day.\n\"But the American people are not\npanicked easily. Pearl Harbor proved that\n\"Thli election will not be decided\non a baili of malignant murmuring!\nor shouts. It will be settled on the\nbasii of thl record,\"\nThe Preiident, ipeaklng from the\nWhite Houie before hli departure\nlater thli week on the lait political\ntrip of the campaign, reviewed\nbriefly the military development!\nOf recent dayi and laid \"our success hu been the reiult ot planning\nand organization and building.\"\nNavy Band Visits Nelson Monday;\nto Play Two Concerts\nTwo concerts will be enjoyed by Nel-\n\u2022onltea Monday when the Royal Oanadlan Naval Band Irom H.M.C.B. Naden,\nEequlmalt, vlslte the Olty.\nThe 88-pleoe band HTlvee from Trail\nby train at noon on Monday, and lt\nla hoped to have selection* played on\nBaker Street then, and alao at 8:30\np.m. The first concert will be ht_arcl at\nthe Capitol Theatre at 4:15 p.m.. tha\naeoond, aleo at the Capitol, at B pm.\nA collection will be taken at both\nconcert*. The band return* to Vancouver Tueaday morning.\nAt each concert Lieut. R. I. Preo-\nman, R.C.N.V.R., will addresa the audience. Bandmaater 1* Warrant Officer\nStanley Sunderland, who haa vlalted\nthe Kootenays on other occasion* with\nthe original Etqulmalt band, now itatloned at H.M.Cfl, Nlobe, naval bait\nin the British ilu.\nLieut. Freeman bu had almoit four\nyear* lervloe on corvettes in the Mediterranean and Atlantic, He U a\nVancouver man who enlisted In 1N1-\nlie wu on loan to the Royal Navy,\nhaving gone directly oversea* where\nhe served as gunnery officer on a corvette for two years In the Mediterranean.\nLieut. Freeman took part In actions\nat Tobruk, Bangui, Sldt Baranl ind\nCypress. Hi* ship captured a German\nsubmarine and lt* crew.\nIn 1943 he returned to .England\nwhere he served on corvettes until a\nshort tlrnc ago. He has now been posted to a West Coast Canadian port.\nCamera Club\nFormation to Be\nMeeting Subject\nOrganlutlon of a Camera Olub\namong Nelson Dlatrlct photomphy\nenthualuta will be dlicuwed at a\nmeeting at the Olty Hall tonight.\nIt hu been found that there are\nquite a number of accomplished devotee! of photography In tha Olty and\nDlatrlct anxious to form a 'l\u00bbe and\nbeneficial club. It la proposed that\nanlitanoe will be given lo members In\ndark room procedure and uie of latent\nmethod! and materials. With film and\nmaterial! so scares thli ihould be\nattractive, especially to beginners.\nSpecial Intereit will be taken ln thoie\nof sohool age ,\nInvestigations an being made with\na view to providing permanent headquarter! with dark room facilities\nand space for exhibitions. It hu been\nsuggested that a unified effort be\nmade by the photographers to publish\na comprehensive booklet extolling the\n_eautlea of thli District.\nBruins Sign Two\nAmateur Forwards\nBOSTON, Hot. 2 (AP)\u2014Boiton\nBruins today announced the signing\nof two amateur forward!, Qlno Ron-\nilnl, a left winger, and Armind\nOsudreault, a right wln|\u00bbr. Both weri\nmemberi of the Allan Cup championship Quebec Aces lait season. They\nwill Join tbe Bruins here neat Tues-\nFrom Toronto Manager Art Rom\nreported thit Harvey (Buiher) Jack.\nson, veteran wlnger-dctencenisn. Imt\npractised with the club and Indicated\nthat he might change his mind about\nretiring from hockey.\nMELBOURNE (CP).-An Auitralian Beauflghter pilot flew low to\nfire through the open door of a\nJapaneie hut ln a New Guinea clearing. When he got home a length of\nwire wai trailing from hli till, and\non lt were a pair of Japaneie trous-\neri and a singlet.\nVictory Loan In East Kootenay\nReaches 51.5 Per (ent Mark\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Nov. J\u2014In spite\not three rainy days, report of thi Victory Loan ln laat Kootenay hit the\n51.5 per oent mark on schedule according to official flgurei Iseued today.\ncranbrook extended Its lead at .5 2\nper oent of Ita M30,000 quota. Fernie\nedged pist \"10.7 per cent of Its 1220-\nooo quoti. Croeton lagged further and\nhas only 3S.J per cent of Its 1175,000\nguota. Both Michel-Natal and Windermere were barely pait the 30 per cent\nmargin.\nThe unit In general had 3-34 appli\ncation!. 360 more than for tha same\nperiod ln the Sixth Loan, and has\nsubscribed $40,000 mors ln total sub.\nscriptloni.\nOfficial figures were:\nToday   To Date\nCranbrook  _     6.M0   141,050\nCreston  - \u2014    8,000      6,960\nFernle     8,760   188300\nKlmberley    -     6,800   139,800\nMichel-Natal       1,150    31,850\nWindermere     8,800     16,150\nToUl    88,860   469,600\nLONDON (CP>.\u2014Alone in London\nand with only his old-age pension\nto live on, William Bfyant, 74,\n...liked into the side of a bus and\nwai killed. leaving a note which Indicated he had a premonition of\ndeath. The note laid \"my six xlrls\nemigrated to Cinadi 30 yeirs ..go.\"\nWest Transfer Co.\nEttablnhtd in  1899\n J\t\nSOO Out for\nFirst Day\non Arena Ice\nOver 500 skaters \u2014 probably the\nbiggeet opening diy crowd since\nthe Arena opened\u2014were out Wed-\nneidiy to try their blidei on the\nCivic Centre's big Ice sheet. Three\nhundred youngiteri crowded the\nice ln the afternoon, while ibout\n200 adulti enjoyed the evening ki-\nsion. These eitfmitei were regarded\nai \"conservative\" by Secretary-\nManager Ed Kelter.\nMany District youngiters and\nadults were in for a ikate. All were\ngueiti of the City, which ii providing five dayi of free ikating and\ncurling ii a grind lendoff to the\nseason. Curling sheet! were busy\nafternoon and evening with scratch\ngamei.\nMel Hill Signs;\n\"Had Me Over\na Barrel\" He Says\nTORONTO, Nov. 2 (CP)\u2014Coach Clar-\nence (Hep) Day announced lait night\nthat Mel (Sudden Death) Hill had\nsigned hie contract for the 1044-45\nsea-ton, ending all epeculatlon the 30-\nyear-old winger might be traded or\nsold to another club.\n\"They had me over a barrel,\" said\nHill, \"and I took a IB-00 salary cut,\neven If I didn't like It,\"\n\"Now I'm going back to work on the\n$inoo bonue.\"\nHill, a former iter with Boston\nBrulni and the now-dlebanded Brooklyn American, had balked at a $451)0\ncontract with a $1000 bonue clause\nHe drew $6000 laet aeaeon.\nSecond Growth\nof Applet at\nCreiton Orchard\nCRESTON. B.C.\u2014R- J. Long, one of\nthe oldest ploneeri In Creiton exhibited to the Review lait Saturday, a\nsecond growth of apples on hli tree*\nIn hli ErtcUon orchard.\nThe vari\u00abrty ti a anowapple and according to Mr, Long, it li the first\ntime in hli experience that audi a\nmarvel of nature hu beep observed.\nThe ipplei are about the ilee of a\nwalnut, and are oolorlng nicely. On\ntajtei very sour, the apple li perfectly\nformed and, poeelbly if the climate\nfavorable would grot\/ to quite a e\\v\nAleo in the realm of itrange happening! li the carrot grown by Mr\nwooeman, now on dleplay in Creiton\nAfinrlM wind owe which !\u25a0 the long-\neet ln the hiitory booki of Creiton.\nGov't Depoiiti Gain\n$10,279,000\nOTTAWA, Nov. 2 (CP) - Domln-\nion Government depostti Increued\n$10,270,000 to $65,248,000 ai at Nov. 1,\nthe B^nk ot Canada reported today\nI    Ita weekly financial itatement.\nChartered bank depoiiti increued\n$27,388,000 to $4.0,583,000 while notei\nin circulation Increased $8,422,000 to\n$1,014,675,000.\nQuality\nTackle\nIS DEFINITELY THE MOST\nPOPULAR TACKLE USED ON\nKOOTENAY LAKE\nIf you have a good selection of Gibbs\nlures in your tackle box you'll have a\nbetter chance of catching the Derby\nwinner.\nArt the\nAnaler.\nHe Knowi\nArt the\nDeiler\nWho Sella\nGibbs Tool & Stamping Works\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nTHESE THREE...\nBATTLt FRONT HUMOR-BY KICKY\nAnyone lee a mobile airfield pan tnll way?\n-Cartoon bf Ricky, RCAf, France,\nPenicillin Uied\nfor Fint Timi\nat Creston Hospital\nCRXSTON, B.C.-The flr.t UM of tbe\nnew diui. Penicillin, for living human Uvea wai uied it thi creiton Villey HnnplUl ln_! week, it wu m-\nnounoed Jointly by Dr, J. V. Murrey\n\u00bbnd Secretary It. A. Powell. Dr. Mur-\nnV, In nied nf iuch drui, wired Ottawa who ln turn notified Cilfiry.\nand It wu ihtpped ln by thi followmi\nDrain.\nUr. rowell itetad that all hoipltiU\nln Canada had loom to the drui now,\nand lt wu pointed out the pouibillty\nthat mt A cltlaeni mlfht uie the\ndrui In the local hoapltal.\nIn 1943 more thnn 18,000.000 acrei\nof loybeam were plinted ln the\nUnited Statei.\nThis little group was standing by the\nroadside when our troops fought\ntheir way into Caen. They had lived\nin caves all through the battle.\nThey had lived through years\nof German tyranny... years\nof hunger and fear. Now,\nunbelievably, it was over ...\nMILLIONS MORI RIMAIN\nOnly when the day of liberation\ndawns for all the enslaved peoples\nof Europe, China and the Islands\nof the Pacific can we count our\nvictory complete. Only then can we\nmake our own future fully secure.\nA M1.S9AGE to oar nutomen\nWe urge ill our customeri to buy\nVictory Bondj. There is no better investment. Victory Bonds tre u good\nas cash\u2014the best security you can\nhave for a bank loan when needed\u2014\nand they cam interest. We have no\nhesitation in suggesting that ouf customers withdraw money from their\naavings accounts to invest still more\nIn Victory Bonds.\n0\notf\nTHE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA\n\t\n tmmmm\nwmmwi^'mmw\n10 \u2014 NILSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1944\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nWSMBI4MJ\n.--...\u25a0..-,. \u25a0\u25a0.\u00a5 \u25a0'.'\u25a0\u25a0       Wk 'IM' ^mmaMui  g|M|\n.ftwi-flfi\u00a78GP\nST. ROCH AFTER RECORD TRIP ACROSS\nNORTHWEST PA88AGE: The Royal Canadian\nMounted Police motorshlp St. Roch (at right) Is\nshown after arriving at Vancouver. B. C. completing Its record-breaking 86-day voyage through the\nNorthwest Passage from Halifax. Sergt. Henry A.\nLarsen, master of the St. Roch, Is shown at left as\nht wis greeted by his wife at the end of tha his\ntoric trip around the top of tha North American\ncontinent. This unprecedentedly swift Journsy of\nthe stout little vessel opens up vast post-war possibilities for the fabled Northwest Passage, Ths St.\nRoch's previous eastward voyage across the same\nroute took 28 months because of the poorly charted\nwaters of the northern regions.\nDEFEAT* JAP FLEET: Vlee-\nAdmiral Thomas C, Klncsld,\nCommander of the 7th U. S, Fleet\nwhich accompanied bv an Australian squadron scored a decisive\nnaval battle of the war, whipping the Jap navy off the Philippines.\nVtcvdofL\nDUCHESS GOES UNDERGROUND: Weiring i protective helmet, the Duchess of Kent, is ihown about to go down a coal mine In\nDurham, Eng., during a visit to the coal country. With the Duchess\nli 8ir A. Lambert, regional commissioner.\nTODAY'S PATTERN: Intriguing new yoke neckline on that indispensable dress, the classic\nshlrtwalster; Pattern 9308. Simple\ngood  taste, tailored   lines.\nPattern 9308 comes In sizes 32.\n34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48 and 50.\nSize 36 takes 2% yards 35-Inch\nfabric, % yerd conrtast\nSend 20 cents Tor thii pattern to\nThe Nelson Daily News, Needle-\ncraft Dept, Nelson. Write plainly\npattern number, your name and\naddress. Patterns will be mailed\nto your home In about 15 days-\nThere may be some further delay In delivery because of the\nlarge Increase In orders during the\npreient season.\nAUNT   HET\nBt ROBERT QUOJ-JW\nYOU LOO* LIKE AN\nINTILUOENT YOUNQ\nMAN. ttU-ME**\/*-\nWHAT.IN VOU\u00ab\n*    WU.\nHAPPEH TO LI'L\nABNEUVtJKUM\nIf-TMEftADie.\nHAWKINS ****\u00bb.\u2022-\u25a0\u201e\nRACE?\nCABLE 8TITCH SET: Whether\nthey're teensters or \"over 21\" this\nflattering pill-box will go with\nso many things. The bag Is one to\ncarry with  pride,  It's  so  lovely.\nThis set In cable stitch (easy to\ndo) matches the mittens shown\nrecently. Pattern 521 has directions for hat, purse; stitches.\nSend 20 cents tor tnis pattern to\nThe Nelson Dally News, Needle-\ncraft Dept., Nelson. Write plainly\npattern number, your name and\naddress. Patterns will be mailed\nto your home In about 15 days.\nThere may be some further delay in delivery because of the\nlarge Increase In orders during the\npresent season.\n, ORMER SPEAKER DIES:\nWilliam David Black, 76, Conservative, former Speaker of ths\nOntsrlo House who died In Ot-\ntawa.\nPRINCE88 BEATRICE DIES: Aged Princes. B-alrlef. i-\u00abt\nliving daughter of Queen Victoria, great-aunt of the King, Is dead. She\nll pictured here sfter she hsd Just laid a wreath on the cenotaan in\nLondon  during an  Ypres  League  anniversary.\n0__\nI taJ\n\"It ain't hard lo cur. wild radicals ' ^\nTlm wu like that till he lnl.rrl_t._l >\n.  Uttle  tann.  and  now  ha'.  sRHin.t I *{\nsny l.w that would hurt property.'\nNAKUSP\nH\n\"\nTHE CANADIAN YOUTH COMMISSION: Memben of the Canadian Youth Commlulon now investigating the problems of young\npeople between th\u00bb ages of ._> and 24. Reading from left to right\u2014\nR. t. G Davli. Director; Hugh L. Keenleyslde, Department of External Affair*. Ottawa, chairman nf the Administrative Committee;\nTaylor Statten, General Secretary. Y, M.C.A.; Dr. G. F. McNally,\nDeputy Minister of E-tucition, Albert*,\nINVADE NORWAYi With Red\nforces entering Norway and capturing the prize Arctic port Of\nKirkenes (A. Nail ilr and U-boat\nbaae, as well aa many other oorn-\nmunltlei at the northern and of\ntht front, a pueh to drive th\u00ab\nNazis from Norway and liberate\nthat nation appears to be about to\nbegin. While other Russian forces\nmoved north In Finland, tha\nsmaah into Eait Prussia (!)\nthreat** TllslL\nNAKUSP. B C\u2014-Mlaa M flt-inHor.n\nend Mr* A. Howell were vlaltora to\nArrow Park\nMn. J Parent vlalted South Sin-\ncan\nMra Jark By.tin and young daughter have return*\".! tn their home in\nVancouver\nI. W. Somen it e gueat ot hli brother-in-law and sinter, Mr and Mis\nWalter Maxwell\nMrs R. Dtxnry of rerguaon wm a\nweekend vlaltor in Nakuap en route\nto visit her daughter In Slocan Cit^r\nA, Slater of tdgewixxi waa a weekend vlaltor In Nakuap\nRoy Bradley <*f Trail waa a weekend  vlaltor In  Nakuap\nMr and Mra I** nf Arrow Par* w*rr\nvlaltor*   tn   Naku-sp\n(.' A Per gu ao n of Kdgew_v\u00bbd waa \u00bb\nvlaltor in town-\nRev W E O \u25a0 IVi vey returned fr-nn\nCrealon.\nMlaa M T-romrms and Mlaa N ftlr*\naon of New Denver were weekend vlaltora In Nakuap\nt> M Urhlda of New Denver wai\na vlaltor in Nakuap\nDr ancj Mn Paul Knmagal of New\nDenver were vlalton In Nakuap\nMr and Mra B Ctebert and family\nwere  weekend   vlaltora  at   Fauqul*r\nMra T Hlrharda and young daughter, ShlMey, of Brtgewood, were Na*\nkusu vlaltora\nMri Ralph Iallp haa returnrd from\nVenoouver\nW. C. Hughee left (Sunday for f\\m-\nun\nMra. e WausUll vlalted Arrow Head\n mmmmmm\nemseeewmm\n^^-\nm\ni^3'\nLASSIFIED\nPHONE 144\nBIRTHS\nPRESTON\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. James\nJreaton. SOI Carbonate Street, at Kou.\ntei-ny Lake General Hoapltal. Nov. 1,\n* ion\nEUERDAHI-\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Mor.\nria Egerdahl, 014 Mill Street, at Kou-\ntanuy Lake General Hoapltal. Oct. 31.\nii daughtei\nJOHNSON\u2014To Mr. and Mra. David\nJohnson. 6-4 Dell-ruck street, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Oct. SO,\na ion.\nHALL\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Stanley\nBall. 418 Robson Street, at Kootenay\n.Lake Oeneral Hospital. Oct. 30. a _>m.\n' RUSmTiCK^To Mr. and Mra. William Huamack, RR. No. 1, at Koo'e-\nB>y Lnke Oeneral Hoipital, Oct. 28.\n|| daughter. __\t\nANDERSON \u2014 To Mr and Mrs\nWoodrow Anderson. 806 Sixth Streot.\nKootenay Lake General Hospital.\n>0t. 39. a eon.\nCALABfiESE\u2014To Mr. and Mra\nCharles Calabrese. M3 Baker Street,\nit Kootenay Lake Oeneral Hoapltal,\nDct. 29  a daughter.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nA1SAVKR-  AND MINI    '\n RKPRKSENTATIVEt\nE   W   WIDDOWSON   PROVINCIAL\nAaaayer. 801  Josephine at., NeUon\nII     S     ELMES     ROflSLAND.    BO\nAssayer. Qheiniat, Mine repreaen've\nTHE WEST  KOOTENAY  A-S8A.  OT\nlice, 410 Kootenay St., Neleon, B  O\nA J   BU1E  Independent Mine Representative  Box 64  Trail. BC\nKLEIN\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Fred Klein,\n102 Second Street, at Kootenay Lake\n3-iyeral Hoapltal, Oct  28, a aon.\t\nWISEMAN\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Jam \"J\nTlaeman. 87 High Street. Oct 20. at\nEootenay Lake General Hospital, >\nlaughter.\t\nHELP WANTED\nA Lineman-Meter Reader aa Assis-\nant Electrician tor the City of Cra:i-\nrook. B.O.\nMuat he experienced ln Primary ana\nicondary wiring and general elec-\nrlcal work and military exempt.\nPermanent position and eligible to\njme under Superannuation provl-\nlona U under 35\nApply nearest Employment and Be\nectlve aarvloe Olllce, refer number\nW-_--4.\t\nfAMTED\u2014 2 WOMEN POR PART\ntime work. No experience necessary.\nPlewant. prolltable work. Apply\nImmediately  to  National selective\nService. NeUon, B.C.\t\nl\/ANTED \u2014 HIOH-CLASS SALESMAN\nto Mil the World's finest Calendar\nLine tn B.C. Interior. Write statlnj\neiperlence, education and marital\natatua. Box 8914 Nebon News\nBUH.I.I.Ntl t'ONTKAl'-OIHI\nNEL30N   BUILDINO   CONTRACTORS\nNo Jobs too small or too large\nPhone 530 907 Front St\nCHIKOPKAt'lOKS\nCHIRO-\npractic  X-ray splnography   Strand\nTheatre Bldg   -   \u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0\nCOUN   MCLAREN.   DC.\nX-ray\n. Trail, B.C  Phone 828\nBNOINEtHtt AM) StKVISVOK-\nK W HAGGEN MINING AND CIVIL\nEngineer. BC. Land Surveyor\nRossland and Grand Form. B.O\nAFFLECK,  218  QOHE  Bt\nBO-U  C\nNelson.\nB C Surveyor and Engineer\nIN.SUKANCK ANU KL-lTt-TATf\nOH AS    F    MCHARDY.   INSURANCE,\nIleal  Estate   Phone  135\nMACHINIST-\nBENNETT8   LIMITED\nMachine Shop, aoetylene and eleotrlo\nwelding,  motor  rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 324 Vernon 8t.\nPERSONAL\nWHEN   IN   VANCOUVER    STOP   Al\nAimer Hotel Opp O P \u00bb Depot.\nJ. CHESS\nSecoud Hand Dealer\nPhone 1081        134 Vernon St.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\narr sube'rhkf with LLdicB\nCom A Callous Salve 80c kt Fleury \u25a0\nPharmacy.\n25c LI0NS PHOTO~25c\nP  O  Boi 494, Vancouver\nAny 8-exp roil developed and printed\n25c Reprlnta 9c   free 5x7 coupon\nKODAK PRINTS        I\n\u2014Refunds on failure*\u2014\nIn Today\u2014Out Tomorrow\nFilm   Exchange.  Castlegar,  or\nPostmaster. Brilliant.\t\nfllMB DEVELOPED AND PRINTSD\n(fl or 6 exposure roll) '26c Reprlnta\n9c each Por your snapshots, choiwe\nKryital Finish Guaranteed non-fade\nprints Krystal Photos, wilkle, Saskatchewan. Established over 90\nvoara\nSTOP SUPPIRINO THOU  FOLLOW-\nIng stomach Disorders: Acid Stem\nch. Indigestion. Heartburn. Coated tongue. Bad Breath Sick Headaches, etc Use Ellk's stomact powder No 2. prepared by experienced\nPharmacist It must give Immediate\nresults or money back. II 00, 12 00\nEllk'a Medicine Company. Dept  42\nSaakatoon   Sask.\t\nSTOP ITCHING TORTURES 5?\neczema, psoriasis, ringworm, athlete's (oot and other skin irritations with Ellk's Ointment No 6.\nprescription of noted skin specialist Itch relieved promptly\nskin healed quickly or money refunded II00, 13 00 Mall orders\nfilled promptly Order today from\nEllk's Medicine Co. Dept 42 Saakatoon  Saak\nS'ANTED - OIRL FOR GENERA L\nhomework tor oouple. Box 5313\nDally Newa\nExperienced girl for house\nwork\nNewa\nGood wages. Boi 5851 Dally\nPanted \u2014 housekeeper. 905\nEdgewod Ave.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Ratea for non-\nfommerclal advertisements under\ntitle classification to aaalst people\ngeeking employment Only 25c for\none week (8 days) oovers any\nnumber of required lines Payable\nIn advance  Add 100 U box num-\nber desired\t\nIAN OVER 60, CANADIAN. DESIRES\nfull time employment as caretaker\nor other chores as dish washing In\ncamp. Handy Inside or outside or\nWhat have you? Write or apply National Selective Service Otflce, Nelaon.\t\n_P. YOUNG WOMAN WITH 15\nmontha old boy wanU homework\nOt hotel work where she can keep\ntbe baby with her. Write Box 6147\nDally News.\t\nAPABLK LADY WILL DO DRESS\nmaking alterations and children's\ntewing. Exoellent references Mrs\nWm. Waring. 918 Observatory 8t\nPhone 7.3-Y.\t\nSTEVENSON'S MACHINE SHOP -\nSpecialists ln mine and mill work\nMachine work, light and heavy\nElectric and Aoetylene welding.\n708  Vernon  8t. Nelson        Phone 9_\nOPTOMETHWTs\nW  E. MARSHALL\nOptometrists\n1458 Bay Ave.. Trail PI\nHASH  FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S 8A8H FACTORY \t\nrlardwood merchant       273 Baker St\nSECOND HANI) (.TORUS\nWE    BUY.    SELL   AND   EXCHANGE\nWhat have vou? Ph   534   Ark Store\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED \u2014 A GOOD USED 8TAN-\ndard office typewriter as well as\nportable one, also a listing adding\nmachine. Will pay cash. What have\nyou? Box No. 5777 Dally News.\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS OR\nIron Any quantity Top prloes paid\nActlvt Trading Company. 919 Powell St.. Vancouver. B  0\nWANTED - OOOD CLEAN COT-\nton rags, not laas than 12 tnchet\naquare. 9o lb. F.O-B.. Nelaon Dally\nNews.\nWANTED TO BUY\u2014MAHOGANY OR\nwalnut motronome with bell. In\ngood condition M Mclnnea, PO. Box\n93, Creston.\nWANTED\u2014DINING ROOM GATELEG\nextension   table   and   four  chairs\nPhone 1034-Y.\nUSED   FRENCH   SEAL   OR   HUDSON\nSeal fur coats Phone P80.\nWANTED\u2014ONE PIPELE8S FURNACE.\nlarge sl_e. Bum Lumber & Ooal 03.\nWANTED\u2014OIRL'S FIGURE SKATES.\nslM rive   Phone 908L.\nSHIP   YOUR  HIDES TO J.  P. MOR-\ngan. Neleon   B  C.\t\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nARM, GARDEN & NURSERY\nULB6 POR PALL PLANTING, Darwin Tulips, large size bulbs, any\ncolour, per doe. 81.35. Daffodils,\nlarge bulbe. colour yellow. Per dor..\n#1.00. Peonies, fine varieties, 3 for\n$1.00. Post Paid. Kuyper's Bulbs.\nHatelc, RO. We grow the best only\nLOYD GEOROETNDTlKfN'd RASP-\nherry canea. 75c per doi. Large\nbearing black currants 50c each.\nOory thornless blackberries 11 00 per\ndoz. T. Royrion. VJew_st.\t\niUUBS FOR INDOOR GROWING, 3\nlarge Dutch Hyacinths, fl Roman\nHyacinths. 0 Crocua, fl large Tulips\nPostpaid for 12 00 Kuyper's Bulbs\nHatalc. B.O. We grow the best only\nMum. Satly Nrroa\nTelephone 14 _\nClassified Advertising Rata\nllo per llni per lmertlon\n\u2022Ho per Um per week (8 coniec-\nBtWe Insertion! (or coet ol 4)\n\u00ab1.43 m llni a month (38 time*.\nMinimum 8 lines per ln\u00bbertion.\nBox   numben   lie  extri.  TliU\nmorett \u00bbny number ot tlmea.\nPUBUO   .LKOAI-. NOTICES.\nTTNDEH-S, rrc.\n18o per Une Tint inaertlon, md\n14c each subsequent Inaertlon\n\u2022ALL ABOVE HATES LESS 10%\n| FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.\nSPECIAL LOW KATES\nNon--rommrrr.il iltmtlflni\nI Win led  for \u00abSc for anj required\nI nnmber o< Une* fnr lit dajn, pay-\n| stile In advance.\nBUBBCRIPTION RATE6\n(Blngla copy   \u2022   -08\nI By carrier, ptr week\nIn   advance     \u2014      53\nI By  carrier,  per yrnr    13 00\nr nulla nutalde NrUon:\nfont  month    -  \u2022    T5\nJThraa month*  _-  3 00\nlull monthi __*  \u00ab 00\n|on\" year   * \u00b0\u00b0\nAbove rate* apply In Canada,\nItTnlted flutes and United Klng-\nIdom to subscriber* living outlldl\nI tegular carrier area\nHaewhera and to Canada where\nIntra   p<-_ate|e   la   required:   One\n|month 81.60; thrre months. \u00bb4 00;\n\u25a0!i montha. |R 00; one yenr. \u00bb1B 00\nFOR   SALE\u2014 MOTOR   BOAT,\n623 Vernon St.\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nOur\nCHRISTMAS CARDS\nare now ready. Wt were fortuimH\nIn our purchaiei and have a varied\n\u25a0election to chooie from. Sold in\nlots ol 2 down only, printed with\nyour name ind iddreai. Reaaonablo\nprlcea. Write for aamplea to Nelson\nDally News, Christmas Card Dept\nNelion, B.C.\nROUND OAK COOK STOVE, BABY\nplay pen, chest of drawers, Uno,\ntubstand, utensils, mirrors, treadle\n\u2022ewlng machine ln first clasi condition, small linen cabinet. Call\n10-2, 5-7, flll Kootenay Street.\nTHt which \u201e\u201e,\u201e.<\nCHIM GIVE mm\nPOM-TRY   K.-INEK..\nPLAN  TOUB 1M8 PODLTBT\nOPERATIONS NOW!\nA OOOD poultry flock la ALWAYS \u2022\naura source ol revenue.\nWa bave bean supplying our cuatomara\nwith OOOD ciilcka tor a quarter ol\na century.\nOrder youra NOW tor  18.5 and\nremember-\u2014\n\"IT'S RESULTS THAT COUNT-\nWrlte (or prloes\nl-_umpB.S-n.fatJ\nBoi n. Unuley Prairie. U  O.\nROUND OAK COOK STOVE, BABJ\nplay pen, cheat of drawera. lino,\ntubstand. utensils, mirrors. Call\n10-3. 5-7. 811 Kootenay Street\nPIPE - FTTTINaS \u2022 TUBES SPECIAL\nlow prlcea Active Trading Co.. 018\n\"nwell St.   Vancouver. B c.\nFOR SALE\u2014BOY'S SKATES, SIZE I,\nalso Connor tuba on atand. Pbone\n_30-L.\nFOR \"SALE \u2014 DAVENPORT. DESK,\nheater and other furniture. Pbone\n728-X.\nFOR SALE\u2014BOY'S SKATES. SIZE 4\nand 4%, also Connor tuba on atand.\nPhone aSO-L.\nRUBBER   STAMPS   FOR   UARKINn\nFruit Bones Nelaon Dally News\nCOAL HEATER CHEAP AT 16.00.\nHall, 818 Oordon Rd., Nelson.\nPAIR  OF  OIRL'S  PIOURE   SKATES\nBlack, alze 6%. Ph. 808-R.\t\nYOU PAY LESS AT THE ARK STORE\nStock Reducing Sale now on.\nFOR  SALE\u2014BOYS SKATES,\n1110 Beatty Ave.\nROOM AND BOARD\nWANTED\u2014ROOM AND BOARD FOR\nmother and 2V, year old child wlt.i\ncare of child during day while mo-\nthdr worka. Box 5805 Dally News,\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n0 Bachelor of\nMedicine\n(ibbr.l\nt Bh\u00bbk)f\n1 Image\nt Apportion\nACROSS\n1 Stele of tn\narrow\n6 Bordera, \u25a0_\nof hate\nll.Chocol\u00bbt\u00bb\ndrink\n12. Faahion        14 Money\n13. Reitleajnen      drawer\n15 Pljeon coop 18 Cl\u00bbw\n16. Golf mound   19 Color ai\n17 Sounded, u       cloth\nsmall belli    -0. Ancient\n19 Po-tpone      _l.Cruih!n\u00bb\n20. Comply nuke\n23 Coin (Chin I 12 Ovum\n24. Maxim 24 MlnenJ\naprinf\n28 yueatlon\n29. Tiny\n28 Not Arm\n30 Solemn\nwonder\nIS HUM\n27 Theater\nstilt\n29 To let slip\n31. Loose hanf-\n, Ing point\n32. From\n34. Track ot\na vessel\n88. On Ore\n37. A amall lid\nded opening\n40. Conatellatlop\n43 Wooded WU\n(ArchAlc)\n44. Mold for\ncasting\n49. Colna (India]\n48. Type of c\u00bbr\n49. Core of \u2022 trw\n60. Dwellings\nDOWN\n1. Tail of i\nrabbit\n2. Sharpen\n1. Meaaure of\nland\n4. Enemy\n8. Flavor\n10 Snow vehicle 35 Oil of row\npatali\n88 Extend\n17 Ruler\n(Peril*)\n18 Shell for\nIcecream\nII Forearm\nbone\n90 Genua of\ncuckooplnt\n41 Mature\nHUGH   HMQI3\nQamna acaua\nansna nnnsn\nHHH     Ein  UEE\nUL.   HUE   ZTSn'J\nixku nan ao\n\u25a1an an   hqb\nnaaEa cnnHH\nima:-.a onnrm\nbejeh Er__._3\nTeit-rdty'i Anww\n42 Hewing tooU\n45 Also\nW Btreet\n(abbr.)\nCKYlTOqCOTE\u2014 A eryptocnm i\u00bbMM\ni-b op jottru q w iiQiiirpf qi\n'bvep   rojw  rcr   mqbjiipt-iitki\nYeaterdey'a Crypto^wtoi (TRENOTHEN Ui BT SYMPA.\nTIUZINO WITH MT STRENOTH NOT MT WEAlt_\u00ab6\u00bb\u00bb\nALCOTT.\nS3R SALE-SIX MILK COWS AND\none heifer. William Boiling, 10-\nMil\u00ab Ranoli. silverton.\t\n48 HEAD MIXED OATTL1 FOR 8A-S.\nOowa, calv9a, yearltnga, etc., Oeorge\nAtwood. Cranbrook, B.C.\nCOWS FOR SALE. HAMPSHIRE, EL-\nwyn St.. Nelaon.\t\nMACHINERY\nNelson Machinery\nEquipment Co.\nNELSON, B C.\nJ14 Hall St. Drawer 290\nMlnlni,\nMilling    and\nMachinery\nSawmill\nLawrence Induatrlal Power Unit*\nHeapa   Engineering   Co.   SawmlU\nMachinery #\nSpear and Jackaon, \"The World'a\nOldeit Makera of Saws.\" Saw\nBlta, Holdera. Circular Sawa,\nPower Sawa. Gasoline and Else,\ntrio \"The Saw Without a Flaw.\"\nVANCOUVER\n8IO\nCM\nMINES\nma\nAak\nSayoniva ______\nm\n.08\n14.80\n.490\nCariboo Oold -.___\n2.09\n1.18\n.09\n.08\nOruU Wlhkane\t\n.09 tt\n.09*\nHedley Maacot\t\nRoot Belle\t\n,09\n.89\n.29\n.29\n?\u00bbnd Oreille\t\nISO\n1.39\nPioneer Oold\t\nS.70\n8.80\nPremier Oold\t\n1.19\n\u2014\nPrivateer \t\n.37\n.89\nReevea M\u00bboD\t\nJl\n31\nReno Oold  \t\n,09\n.05 H\n105\n1.10\nWhitewater \t\ntil %\n.03%\nYmlr Yankee Olrl....\n.03 H\n\u2014\nOILS\nAnaconda \t\n.0.\n.06\nAnglo Can  ._\n.98   ,\n.99\nAP Conoolldated\t\n.11\n\u2014\nCal 9a Edmonton ....\n1.72\n1.79\nCommoll  \t\n\u25a019H\n\u2014\nCommonwealth\t\n.21\n.33\nMcD Sagur Exp .\nNational Pete\t\n001.\n\u202209*4\n.11\n\u2014.\nPacific Pete\t\n,80\n.83\nRoyal Can ._ __\n.08 H\n.0314\nRoyallte \t\n18.00\n\u2014\nSouthwest pete\t\n.18\n.25\nVanalta \u2014\nm '\n.09'\/i\nVulcan  \t\n.19\n\u2014\nINDUSTRIAL*\nCapital Bet \t\n990\n4.25\nOoast Brewerlea _.\n190\n188\nUnited Distill\n9.00\n8.76\nKS\nMONTREAL 8TOC\nINDUSTRIALS\nAaaoo Brew of Can ..\nIII\nCan Oar Ss Fdy Pfd ..\nCan Steanuhlp\t\n   .\nion\nCon Min Si Smelting\n .\t\n8114\nDom Steel 3E Ooal B ..\n  \t\n61V4\nMoColl Frontenac.....\n  \u201e...\n0%\nQuebec Power \t\n\u201e .\t\n13\nSbawnlgan VI ts T .\n  \u201e...\n15\nSt Lawrence Oorp\t\nSYs\nSt Lawrence Oorp Pfd\n\u201e \t\n1914\nBANKS\nCommaroe   _.\n14H\nDominion  -\t\n18*\n10'\/,\nMontreal \u201e\t\nNova Scotia _.\n\t\n28 H\n14*\n28*\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 lnd \t\n...    1473\nup 80\n20 rails - i...\n.     41.99\nup  .29\nWINNIPEG BRAIN\n,   WI**miP\u00bb0, tot. 1   (CP)' \u2014 Oraln\nquota tlona:\nOpen   High   Low   Cloee\nRYE:\nDec  105*    107*    105*    107*\nMay   104*    108       104       108*\nJuly   103*    108*    101*    108*\nOaU: All futurea at celling prlcea of\n31*B.\nBarley: All tuturae at celling prlcee\nof 84*B.\nCASH PRICES:\nOata: 2 O.W. II*: ex. 8 O.W. 61*:\nex. 1 feed 81*: 1 feed 81*: 2 feed 81;\n3 feed 49; track 91*; screenings 10.00.\nRye: 1 C.W. 1.07*: 2 C.W. 1.0-*:\n9 C.W. 1.02*: 9 O.W. 1.02*; re). 2\nO.W. 85*; 4 O.W. 1.01H; traok 1.00*.\nBarley: All grades at celling prloes\n94*.\nCalgary Livtitock\nOALOABT. Nov. I (OF)\u2014Wednesdays receipts: 407 cattle, 99 oelves,\n918 bogs, 99 sheep. Today: 117 cattle,\n272 hoga, 120 sheep.\nHogs sold Wednesday at 81836 for\nA'a at yards and plants. Sows 99.10-\n9.26 live weight at yarda and plants.\nOood handywelght lambs 91039-\n911.19.\nOood butcher steers 10.S5-11; common to medium 9.90-10. Oood butcher\nheifers 9-8.60; oommon to medium\n7.80-1.90.\nOood oowa 8-6.90; oommon 90 medium 4.90-9.90. Oood stocker and\nfeeder steers 9-8.90; oommon to medium 7-8.80.\nNEW   YORK  STOCKS\nLondon Concret* Mixers\nLondon Pumps.        Air Oompresaora\nCompletely overhauled.\nAir Equipment Service Ltd.\n868 Hornby vanoouver, B.C.\nFOR SALB\u2014WAREHOUSE: ELEVATOR\noperated by hand wltb weight drum\nand rope complete. Can be aeen at\nThe W. H Malkln Co.. Nelaon.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nGood\nInvestment\n1.\n2.\n3.\nTwo  imall  houses  on  4\nClose to car line up hill.\nlots\nJoth\nhouses  rented.  Net  return   15\nper    cent.    Hall    cash    will\nhandle.\nPrice   \t\nGood home, close ln, hot water\nheat. 3 bedrooms etc. One lot,\nHalf cash.\nPrice   ...\nHouse with S bedroomi, large\nliving   room,   etc.   $250   Cash\nBalance as rent,\nPrice \t\n$1650\n! in, hot water\nj etc. One lot,\n$2750\nedroomi, large\n:c.   $250   Cash.\n$2250\nSee us for good accident Insurance, life Insurance and the most\nup to date ALL RISK Insurance\npolicies These policies protect\nyou against loss from fire, theft\nand many other hazards and the\ncost is about $3.00 per $1000 of\nprotection a year more than the\nold fashioned fire insurance\npolicy.\nC. W. Appleyard\nReal Estate and Insurance\nPhone 269 392 Baker St.\nAmerican Oan -\nAm Smelt et Ref ....\nAmer Telephone ....\nAmerican Tobacco\nAnaconda\t\nBeth Steel \t\nCanadian Pacific ....\nOupont  \t\nOen lleetrlo \t\nOen Motors\n\u2014 87*\n  89 S\n  194\n.\u2014 9*7*\n  STH\n  84 H\n  10\u00abi\n  167\n  89\n  8314\nInternational Nickel _ 90\nInter Tel _r, Tal  _   89\nKenn Copper   35ti\nUnion Paclflo   _   110\nUS Rubber  49\nUS steel   B9Tt\nThe Chinese Invented or dlacoV'\nered silk, porcelain, tea, printing and\ngun powder.\nVyiaAksL JhmdA,\nLOI-TDON, Nov. a (CP-R\u00abut\u00abr)\u2014 Interest In the atock market* tod\u00bb7\ncentred Dhl\u00abfly on Industrial! lor\nwhich demand wu fairly widespread.\nMotors displayed a firm trend ln\nunison with rover Motora which was\naround a shilling higher at 36 shillings, following an announcement of\nIncreased distribution at 20 per cent\nagainst 17^.\nNEW TORK\u2014The stock mirket\nagain was forc*d to oontend with considerable Investment Indecision today.\nProm the start some o_ the recently bulging Aircraft* ran into profit\ncashing. Volume was around 700,000\nshares.\nCanadian Issues were slightly lower.\nDome gained % but C.P.R., Seagrams\nand Lake Shore slipped that fraction.\nCHICAOO\u2014A three-day decline In\ngrain futurea prlcea was halted today\nwhen corn resisted early selling pressure and limited offerings Indicated\nan oversold condition In other markets.\nCommission house offering* of\nwheat were absorbed quickly and retting orders to buy Just under the market provided some support, The trade\nwas light.\nAt the close wheat wu : to % higher\nthan yesterday's finish, Deoember\n\u2022 1.93H-%. Corn wu up Vt to l1*, December 91.0B ft. Oats were \u25a0* to S\nhigher, December 63H--H. Rye was\nup \u2022% to 1'S. December U-Oltt-Vt.\nBarley waa Ve lower to Vi higher, December 91.02%.\nMONTREAL\u2014Pluses were ahead of\nmin usee ln light transferi up to 'he\nfinal hour today on the itock exchange and curb market.\nStronger Mlnea were Holllnger, Pato,\nO'Brien. Sullivan and Aubelle while\nBulolo, Jollet and Quebec Oold moved\nlower.\nTORONTO\u2014A margin of gains over\nloawR wu  compiled by  the Toronto\n3tock    Exchange    In todiy'i trading\nwhich  reached   a  share  turnover  of\nabout 550,000.\nThe gold group had an Index gain\nof a half-point at noon but this was\ntrimmed a bit In the afternoon sea\nslon. Senior golds showed Uttle net\nchange.\nAside from a strong market for L*ke\nDufault and Ventures, the Base Metal\nstocks were a bit heavy. Stronger\ngroups In the Industrial section were\nthe Utilities, Poods, Steels and the\nFinancial Institutions.\nWINNIPBO-\u2014United States Interests purchwed about 1,000,000 buah-\nel\u00ab of Canadian wheat today on the\nWinnipeg Oraln Exchange. Other American buyers were credited with taking around 300,000 buaheli of Ctnadian barley.\nRye futures advanced u mucn u\ntwo cents during the session ln fairly active trade. Gains at Chicago aided In the upturns.\nPrices at the close showed slight recessions from the day'a highs but\nwere \\\\-\\to higher than yeet*rdty.\nOctober rye eloeed at \u20221.01%.\nVANCOUVTR\u2014Both Minn and Oils\nwere steady on Vanoouver Stock Exchange today, Total turnover amount,\ned to 23.300 shares.\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1944 \u2014 11\n\"Four Freedoms of the Air\" ...\nCanada to Stand\nby Air Proposal\nCHICAGO, Nov. 1 (CP)\u2014Munitions Minister Howt todty told the\nInternatlontl Conference on Civil\nAviation thtt Canada is standing\nby her propottl for t competitive\nlystem of poit-war civil aviation\nadministered by an international\nair authority.\nThe plan, pltced befort Ptrlia-\nment last March 17, include* what\nMr. Howe described in t prepared\nspeech u \"four freedoms of the\ntlr\" for airlintt operating under\nthe authority of tht international\nbody.\nThty tit-\nla Tht right ef tlr tnntH\nt. Tht right to land for itrvlc-\nIng.\n3. Tht right to carry ptiaengtn,\nfreight and mails from tha country or origin to any plact in tht\nworld,\n4. Tht right to bring patsengert,\nfreight and malls btck to the\noountry of origin from any place\nIn the world.\nSolution of the problems of international cooperation in tlr transport might well pave the way to a\nlasting peace, Mr. Howe suggested.\n\"An enlightened settlement of the\nproblem of International air transport will mean that the nations of\nthe world have gone a long way toward establishing a lasting peace\nand a new order of security,\" he\nsaid.\nHt outlined Canada's position\nthis wty:\n\"Wt tre firm believers in healthy\ncompetition. We are convinced that\nlt will develop most fruitfully under  an  international  authority.\n\"We want to see free choice for\nthe traveller between competing\nairlines, competition in service but\nnot in subsidies, a guaranteed minimum of routes and frequencies to\nthe airline companies of all nations\n\u2014large or small, the most frequen*\ncles where need exists, whether of\nnations large or small, the substitution of international regulation\nfor national restrictions and the\ncomplete absence of discriminations,\npreferences, exclusive rights and\narbitrary landing fees and charges.\n\"We also seek control of subsidies, not through any impractical\nmethods of direct control, but\nthrough control of the uneconomical consequences of subsidies, such\nas rate cutting, and the maintenance of services at levels greater\nthan traffic warrants.\"\nThe international authority Can-\nassembly, t board and a numbei\nof regional councils. All member\nstates would have representation\non the assembly while the boarc?\nwould be composed of 12 members\nEach of tht eight major statei\nwould elect one member tnd the\nother four would be appointed by\nthe assembly.\nThe regtontl councils would have\nauthority to issue certificates to air<\nline companies in their region\nWhere more than one region was\ninvolved, this authority would rest\nwith the Board. Member tsates\nwould be required to provide and\nmaintain airports and other ground\nfacilities. To ensure service in\nthinly-populated areas, the international authority might apportion\ncosts between states Interested.\nMr. Howe cited seven purposes\nof the Internationa-) Air Authority:\n1. To avert misuse of civil aviation creating a threat to tht security of nttions.\n2. To avert conflicts ctpablt of\ncreating friction among governments tnd peoples.\n3. To tvold the development of\neconomically wasteful competitive  practices.\n4. To ensure equitable distribution of International air routes\nand to give every member state\nopportunity to participate In International airline operations In\naccordance with Its needs and resources.\n5. To enoouragt tht continued\ndevelopment of tlrcrtft design\ntnd operation.\n6. To discourage discrimination\nIn operations, the use of bases,\ndefinition of prohibited areas and\ncustoms regulations.\n7. To offer safe, convenient tnd\neconomical services, t fret choice\nof alternative services and \"generally to meet the needs of tht\npeople of the world for efflolent\ntnd economical tlr trtnsport.\"\n\"From our study of the problems,\nwe believe that a selection must be\nmade between the kind of proposals we have made and a continuance of that dangerous and unsatisfactory pre-war system,\" he said.\n\"Today, if an airline company\nwants to fly a route passing over\nsix countries, it is possible for any\none of these six countries to say,\n'No, your airline cannot operate on\nthat route because we refuse it permission to cross our territory,' or\n'your airline companies can only\noperate so many services a day, or\nada proposed would consist of an so many a week, on that route\nWHY NOT REFINANCE YOUR MORl-\nKAge on tbe Yorkshire Savings and\nLoan Monthly Reduction plan ai\n8 ncr cent    C   W   Appleyard\nWE SPECIALIZE IN FARM LANDS\n8m our list\u2014 Robertson Realty Oo\nLtd   532 Ward 8t \t\nFOH SALE\u2014LARGE HOUSE, i LOTS,\ngaa furnace. S3500.00, good terms\nPhone 73R-X.\nRENTALS\nWANTED TO RENT\u20143  OR -4 ROOM\nhouse,   would   buy   any   furniture.\nBoi 5770 Dally News.\nFOH RENT - MODERN 3-ROOM\ncabin, furnished,  Winter ratea,  by\n_month onlv   Phon*- \"1fi8-X_\nTWO RO-OM'aPARTMENT SUITABLE\nfor bachelor^Apply club Hotel _^\nFOR RENT \u2014\" ONE iroUSEKBEPINO\nroom, at 621 Josephine 8t.\t\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nron SALB - INTERNATIONAL IH-\nton truck, good mecl-anlcal condition \u00bb3.X.OO Central Truck and\nEquipment Company.\t\nNEW AND USED HATTKRUS. NEL-\naon Auto Wrecking and Oarage\nFOR AUTOHOBIIJ- P-VBT8\nCUT Auto Wruckara\nPETS. CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nFOR BALE \u2014 FURF-BRED AIREDAI-I\npope,   niBleB   only    Registered   135,\nltt. pupen., $1S   K   H   Hlrd, Slocan\nTORONTO   STOCKS\nMINES\nAnglo-Huronlan  ...,  -      13S\nU_M Metals MlnlM  - UW\nBeattle Oold Mints         1 50\nBldgood Klrkland  30\nBulfalo Ankerlt.        J J3\nCaatle-Tretheway   _        1.06\nChromium M Ss S         136\nConlarum Mlnea         1 _8\nConsolidated M 4 8       SI.50\nDome Mlnea       .3 00\nEast Malartlc        2 30\nFalcnnbrl-ta   Nickel           i B0\nHard Ruck Oold 8_\nHolMnger       10 .6\nHudson Bay MAS      3138\nInternat Nickel\nKerr-Addlaon \t\nKlrkland Lake \t\nLake Bhore Mlnea ...\nLamsque Contac \t\nLittle Long Lac \t\nMarl. Cockahutt    \t\nMadsen Red Lake ....\nMRlartlc  Oold\nMclntyre-Porcuplne .\nMcKeurle Red L\u00abk\u00ab\nMining Corp\nNoranda \t\nNormetal        \t\nOmega Oold \t\nPamour Porcupine ...\nperron Oold\nPickle Crow Oold .\nPowell Rouyn Oold .\nPreston East Dome ....\n..sn Antonio Oold ...\n.Sherrltt Oordon\nSlscoe Oold \t\nBladen  Mnlartlc \t\nflulllTan   Cons  \t\nSylvanlte\nTeck-Hughes Oold\nToburn Oold Mines\nVentures\nWslte Amulet\nWright Hargresves\nAunor\nAumsiiue     \t\nCochenour \t\n(-.eetervllle   \t\nOolden  (late  \t\nrilanl V K     \t\nWeep   R.>ck\nTYsna C H\nUpper Can   \t\nOil..*\nChemical Research\nIm[>erlsl\nInter ivtroleum \t\nRoyallte      \t\nTexes Canadian  \t\nVernillHta       \t\nINDUSTRIAL.-\nBell Telephone\nBrewers A- Distillers\nBC Power \"A\"\nBuilding   Product*\nCan Car <_ FViundry\nCan Msltlng\nCan Pacific Rly   \t\nDominion Bridge\nDistillers flesgrsnu .\nHamilton Bridge \t\nMontreal   Power  \t\nNat Steal Cat \t\nTouet Corp .\n33 75\n11 -15\n1 fl.\n11.18\n5 JO\n1 S<\n1 80\n3 30\n3 .3\nWOI\n1.71\n1 OJ\n5(1 (XI\ntl\n17\nI no\nI 08\n3 80\n\u00bb8\n3 V\n3 95\n80\nf,\n.11\nlie\n3 SO\n8 55\n1 08\n10 OO\n4 70\n3 48\n3 78\n80\n3 83\n1 31\n10\n7 70\n1  '!'.'\n38\n3 115\n80\n18 85\n31 80\nID 00\nI 33\n.I1W\n183\n101.,\n18\nIH.\n48\n11U,\n.      _\u00bb',\n- 881,\n- \u00bb-.\n_ 1\u00bbV|\n.     17'i\nRemember\nYt\nour\nFrienas\nids\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\nSold\nin\n$2.25\nLots\nup to   $4.50\nof Two Dozen Only\nPRINTED  WITH  YOUR  NAME  AND  ADDRESS\nSend For Samples\nNtlfiutt laily Nrntii\nChristmas Card Dept.\nNelson, B. C.\n pp\nmmamtemt m> mmmmwy\n r^.\nfo - NILSON DAILY NIWS, FRIDAY, NOVBM\u00bbK 3,1944\nFROSST\nNEO CHEMICAL FOOD\n24 day size $1.15\n72 day size $2.43\n144 day size $4.45\nMann, Rutherford\nDRUG CO.\nON THI SAME PROGRAM\n\"SPRINGTIME FOR PLUTO\"   \u2014    Loteit World New.\nTONIGHT        f^l^FB^   Complete ihowi\n\u2022UTURDAY        mtPm \\%tu       7;00-8:52\n5AIUKUAI --||||.|||\u00ab|H||IM|IH1||M\nSgt. Ruault of\nCranbrook\nKilled in Action\nCRANBROOK, B.C. \u2014 Mrs. Severe\nRuault In at. Eugene Hospital here\nhan received word Irom the Canadian\nArmy Casualty Branch that her husband. Sergeant Severe Ruault, waa\nkilled ln action ln Belgium a lew\ndaya before the birth or their first\ndaughter.\nSergeant Ruault waa the second son\nof Mr. and Mrs, A. Ruault of this\ncity to be Silled ln action within the\npast three months. Pte. Ernest Ruault\nwas killed In the Normandy campaign\nln August.\nSergeant Rualt was 36 yeara old, and\ngrew up here, engaging In farming\nbefore he entered Army aervice three\nyears ago. He nerved with the Army\nln the Kteka occupation laat year,\nand went overseas this Spring. He was\nwounded ln the Normandy campaign\nIn August and on his recovery and\nre:urn to action he continued his\naervice In Western Europe.\nBesides his wife and new daughter,\nan Infant son, Bobby, survives him,\nand his parents, all in Cranbrook, a\nbrother, Maurice In the Windermere\nValley and a sister, Mrs. Estelle\nStroud In High River.\nCIVIC BOOKINGS FOR NOVEMBER\nNov. 67\n\"TAKI IT OR LEAVE IT\"\n\"FALCON OUT WEST\"\nNov. \u00bb-\u00bb\u2014Bank Nlte Wed.\n\"MAKE YOUR OWN BED\"\n\"WILD BILL HICKOCK\nRIDES\"\n\"TOM SAWYER\"\nIn Technicolor\nNov. 1S-14\u2014Bank Nlte Wed.\n\"ANDY HARDY'S BLONDE\nTROUBLE\"\nNov. 18-14-16\u2014 Bank  Nlta Wed\nBETTY  ORABLE   In\n\"PINUP GIRL\"\nNov. tO-21-22\u2014Bank Nlta Wad.\n\"DOUBLE INDEMNITY\"\nwith\nT.  MacMurray-B.  Stanwyck\nNov. 23-24 25\n\"GASLIGHT\"\nNov. 27-2S\n\"SWEET AND LOW\nDOWN\"\n'THE IRON MAJOR\"\nNov. 29-30\n\"ONCE UPON A TIME\"\n'GILDERSLEEVE'S GHOST\"\nDec.  1-2\n\"BROADWAY RHYTHM\"\n\u25a0with\nQeorge   Murphy-Jinny  Slmma.\nSubject to Change\u2014Cut for  Refertnc*.\nINVASION LEADERS: Maj.-\nGen. James L. Bradley, commanding general of 96th Infantry Division, Is one of the men who Is\nleading the American ground\nforces In the Invasion of the Philippine   Islands.\nInterpreting\nThe War News\nFirst Cars ol\nTurnips\nShipped, Nakusp\nThe production of vegetables\nthroughout the West Kootenay appears to be sufficient to meet local\ndemands, and some car-lot shipments\nluve been made from Nakusp, according to H. c. Came, representative of\nUie Interior Vegetable Marketing\nBoard.\nThe shipment of two cars ol turnips, one to Nelson wholesalera and\nanother to Victoria, from the Nakuflp\ndistrict, Is a new development. Mr.\nCarne states there have been larne\ncrops of turnips In the Nakusp area In\nformer years but that these are the\nfirst car-lot shipments on record from\nthere, The bulk of the turnips shipped were from the farms of C. Ehl\nand KaM Neubrand. Mr. Carne Is\nhopeful exports of turnips will lucre BM.\nThe potato crop, while lighter ln\nnma parts, such as the Slocan Valley\nand Thrums districts, will be ample.\nShortages In these areas were made\nup by good crops In Irrigated areas.\nTTiere is not much movement of potatoes, carrots, etc. yet, as much of the\ndomestic supply Is coming from the\nVictory gardens. These home gardens\nhave been a big factor In supplying\nthe tablen of Kootenay with vegetables. The quality of Kootenay crops\ngenerally Is good\nFurther shipment* of turnlpa are\n(txpected from the Arrow Creek district near Creston where there will\nbe better than 70 tons available for\nmarketing.\nGordon Allan Succeeds Ballantyne\nas Prices Board Representative\nMember of the Nelaon office of tha\nWartime Prlcaa and Trada Board ilnce\nApril. 1942, Oordon F. Allan aaaumad\nthe dutlea of Local Hep.-.Mutative\nWedneaday, succeeding J. A. Ballantyne. who la returning to private\nbuslneaa.\nMr. Allan Joined the Board aa In-\nveatlgator and alnca July, 1942, haa\nbeen Tins Rationing Repreaentatlvo.\nHo came to Nelaon in July, 1937 tor\nthe Maple Leaf Milling Company A\nmember of the accounting department and aalea ataff, he had aerved the\nmilling company prevloualy for 11\nyeara at Medicine Hat. He la active\nIn the Klnamen Club.\nWhile Tire Rationing Officer, he\nalso did a conatderable amount of\nBoard work, gaining familiarity with\nregulations and routine.\nMr. Ballantyne. who la to be branch\nmanager for the Induatrlal Acceptance\nCorporation at Nelaon. Joined the\nBoard In March. 19*3, and opened the\nNelson office. He waa In Nelson three\nyeara prior to this, ln financial buslneaa.\nIn announcing the changea at the\nNelson ofllcc. W. R. Dowrey. Prlcea\nand Supply Representative tor British Columbia, aaid ln a telegram to\nthe Nelson Dally News Thursday:\n\"Mr. Ballantyne has glve\u00bb the Board\nsplendid aervice. He came to us when\nthe Board's operations were getting\nunder wav and did an excellent Job\nIn  administering  and handling  the\niJSggU**-\" ,     '    -;  '\nMaj.-Gen. John Reed Hodge,\ncommanding genera! of the 24th\narmy corps, li one of the men\nleading the American ground\nforcea In the Invasion of the Philippine Islands.\nREXALL 1c SALE\nCONTINUIS   TODAY\nAND SATURDAY\nGet your Christmas Cards\nWhile They Last.\nVour Rexall Store.\nCity Drug Co.\nBox 4M Phone 34\nimmememeeeemwmMm \u2022 mem\nGORDON ALLAN\n\u2014McGregor Photo.\nmany difficult situations which naturally arise from wartime legislature\nEveryone In the Regional Office\nwishes him well and asks that people\nof the Nelson District give Mr. Allan,\nhis successor, the same fine cooperation.*'\nBy K1RKE L. 81MPSON\nAssociated Pren War Analyst\nAllied success in clearing Schelde\nEituary approaches to Antwerp of\nall    substantial    enemy    resistance\ntoupltd with tht forward mrge of\ni^.\nF. H. SMITH\nIf lt'i Electric\nPhon. 664 151 Baktr It.\ntn\u00bbinf*ytttwf**t*\u00bbfttf\nSOMERS' FUNERAL\nSERVICE\ntM Baker St Phona Ml\nOpen Day and Night\nQrematorlum Ambulanca\n[\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0SiHSll-.-**-\"-.\nDON'T SAY BREAD\nSay Hood's\nSUPREME MILK BREAD\n_cs\u00abK\u00abe95sss5s-s...__\u00ab._..'--;.-;\u00bb\nKEEP   YOUH\nELECTRICAL\nAPPLIANCES\nm GOOD REPAIR\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO.\nPhon* 2M Hi R-ker St\n^vi^'-^-siv_\u00bbjrf \/a\"'\/ _- its, rjtrrt-r^JJ-tj.\nSee the Selection nf\nOccasional Chairs\nat\nHOMI FURNITURE\nW. W. Powell\nCompany, Limited\nTh$ Horn* of Good Lumber\nTelephonff 176\nWholr-uls \u00bbnd  Retail\nFoot of Stanley Street\nUnited States 1st Army troops in\nHurtgen Forest Southeast of captured Aachen could herald the opening of the next major phase of the\nbattle of the Siegfried Line.\nThere was no definite Indication\nof that in preliminary accounts from\nthe front. They told of American\nseizure ln surprise operationi of\nvillages close to tht Eastern edge\nnf the forest.\nAt that point, in Hurtgen Woods,\nAllied troops stand closer to the\nRhine that at any other except ln\nthe Nimegen-Arnhem sector to the\nNorth. The span of the River between Cologne and Bonn to the\nSouth, flanked on both sides hy an\nintricate network of railroads, highways and power lines, is less than\n30 miles from American positions\nin th \u2022 Forest,\nThe scene of operations suggests\nImpending 1st Army efforts to outflank from the South the Important\nroad junction town of Duren, guarding the direct approach to Cologne\nfrom the Southwest. Flnt Army advance lines havt been poised for\nmany days In the Northeastern edge\nof Hurtgen Forest directly West of\nt' e town.\nDuren's capture or Investment\nwould seem to bt the next imperative step if any Immediate advance\nnn bomb-blasted Cologne is in prospect. Isolating Duren and the whole\nNorthern end of tht Siegfried line\nfrom river and riverside communications would be another step in\npreparation for a major Rrttlih-Am-\nerlcan offensive from Holland.\n4,151 Ration Books\nIssued in\nCreston District\nCKJCfiTON. BC. \u2014 ngur* for th\"\nfifth rntlon Ixxik _\u25a0\u25a0-*\u25a0,- for ths tntlrs\nl*retton Valley wer* announced by A\n\u25a0A' Dlrklnwin. of ths local ration board\nand show from ths ten dl*tnbuUon\npoint* an inrreaa* In the number of\nNvika distributed with thr eiceptlon\nof Camp I,later and Kin gag at* whl-'li\nahowrt. * drop The comparison wa*\nmail*\" with the fourth ration book riU-\nLrthntUin.\nTotal number of ration book* dU-\ntrltiut*d thl* month an.miiitM to 4161,\nand fnr the fourth ration distribution 3RM3 The Individual dlaulbutlon\nla ai follows: iflrat flgurs u for th\"\n4th distribution and tha last flfurt\nfor thr fifth distribution by dlatrlrUl\nCreaton. 3213 3.144, ..later 24(1. 343,\nPan-mii. 303, 3ftfl. Krlrkaon. 303, JI7R.\nKing-mat* Ai). 4(1, Kitchener 04, 104,\nHirdar 74, 04, Wynndel 3(_0, 394. Tahk\nill, 337,  Arrow cYetk 33, 63\nPi leps rose twice n* fast after\nMir Armistice In 10It) ss they did\nduring (he  First Great Wsr.\nLAPLANTE GETS\nLIFE TERM\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2 (CP)\u2014Alfred Joseph LaPlante, 73-year-nld\ndriller in a Vancouver shipyard, was\nsentenced to life imprisonment by\nMr. Justice J. M. Coady in British\nColumbia Supreme Court today.\nLaPlante pleaded guilty to three\nrape charges, was convicted of a similar charge relating to a fourth\nwomen and of an attempt to commit\nthe offence in respect to a fifth\nwoman. One of the victims was a 14-\nyear-old girl.\nIn addition to the convictions on\nassault charges LaPlante had been\nconvicted or pleaded guilty to four\ncharges of breaking nnd entering,\ntwo of armed robbery, and one for\npossession of a loaded revolver and\none for possession of housebreaking\nInstruments. On these charges, Mr,\nJustice Coady imposed a total of\n92 years. The maximum was 15\nyears and the minimum five years\nwith the sentences to run concurrently.\nCall Ups for\nMilitary\nTraining Lagging\nOTTAWA, Nov. 2 (CP)-Call-ups\nfor compulsory military service are\nlagging behind quotas set by the\nDefence Department, it was learned today.\nWhile no official figures have\nbeen made public lt is known that\nthe quota of 5000 men a month, set\nfor the present fiscal year, is not\nbeing met. Some relief has been\nprovided by the action of the RCAF\nin releasing 4200 men, most of\nwhom are expected to go Into the\narmy, but It is understood that this\nwill still leave the totals short of the\ntarget Col. J. L. Ralston, who has\nresigned as Defence Minister, set\nlast February.\nAt that time he said that of the\n60,000 men the army would require\nthis year 48,000 would be needed\nfor service anywhere, the remainder wouid be used for home defence.\nWhile quotas are set by the Defence Department the actual calling\nis handled by the Labor Department through Selective Service.\nEligible age groups \u2014 single men\nborn in the years 1906 to 1926 and\nmarried men born in the years 1933\nto 1928 \u2014 have been practically exhausted and the main source of men\nls those just coming of age for military service.\nMcNaughton to\nBroadcast\nPoppy Day Appeal\nOTTAWA, Nov. 2 (CP)-In possibly his first public speech following his appointment as Defence\nMinister, Gen. McNaughton will\nbroadcast the annual Canadian Legion Poppy Day appeal over a national network Nov. 6.\nHe will be heard on the CBC\ntrans-Canada network at 6:30 p.m.,\nC.D.T., and will be heard in a re-\nbroadcast for the West at 11:15\nC.D.T.\nMrs. H. Hulten\nLaid af Rest\nFuneral services for the late Mrs\nHannah Hulten, Kootenay resideht\nfor 40 years, were conducted by\nD. N. Ericson Thursday afternoon\nat the Thompson Funeral Home.\nMrs. Hulten died at New Westminster Oct. 28.\nA vocal solo, \"Some Day the Silver Cord Will Break\" was rendered\nby Mr. Ericson. Congregational\nhymns were \"Rock of Ages\" and\n\"My Faith Looks Up to Thee\". Miss\nMargaret Graham was organist.\nPallbearers were James Bird,\nJake Haines. Robert Riesterer and\nJack Morrison. Interment was at\nNelson Memorial Park.\nHEADLIGHT\nWork\nClothes\nBacked by the guarantee\n\u2014Your money's worth or\nyour money back.\nOverall*\nSmocki\nCarpenters' Overall!\nShirts.\nPontt\nEMORY'S\nLIMITED\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nINVERNESS, Scotland (CP) - A\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 The world'!\nbusiest railway Junction Is Clapham,\non the Southern railway, with 2..00\ntrains in 24 hours, says the book\nFacta and Figures.\n|-I.i..iiiiii_ii_.i_ii.iiii.i_i.iimii.mum\nWa  Now  Have  \u25a0  Supply  of  Beil\nENGLISH CHAMOIS\nCUTHBERT MOTORS\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMedical  Arti Building\nE. A. CAMPBELL & Co.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\nM2 Baker St Phone 235\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nMed Arts Blk\nPHONE 25\nI'm going to have my\nhair fixed differently\nat\nHoiAh Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327\nJohnstone Block\nS\u00abS\u00abSS5S5SSSJ-\"KSS*K\u00abS-\u00ab-SM\u00bbJ9j_|\nbid of more than $14,000 for \u2022 four-\nyear-old Shorthorn bull waa reject*\ned by the owner at a cattle sale\nhere.\nKOKANEE\n8ERVICE 8TATI0N\n295 Baker St\n\"Adam\" and \"Arnold\"\nComplete  Union Service\nMotor Tuneup and Brakes\nour Specialty.\n\u2022l25$222222f2'20CC22QC22222222f22X$225C55G055G$\u00a7tl\nHave the |ob Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER   PLUI..BER\nPHONE 115\n- _\u00a325>33S339Q9fS\nDAILY FLASH\n844 persons out of every 1000 suffers\nfrom sickness during the year. Do\nyou carry one of our hospital and\nmedical plans?\n8TUART AGENCIES\n577 Baker Street Nelson. B. ft\nPhone 980\nmururwsrumum\nFOR A\nGOOD MEAL IN A HURRY\nEAT AT THE\nMelon Dew\nReliable Watch Repairing .,,\nPrompt ServTca\nHARVEY'S\nEMPIRE CLEANERS & DYERS\nWe Call For and Deliver\nPHONE 288\nMen's and ladiei CI *ts\\\nWinter Coats . -?*\u25a0<_\u25a0\u2022\nMen's, ladies' suits, ladies' QAjt\nDresses, plain     mtay\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiii\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nRatei: 22c line, 27c Una black face\ntype, larger type ratei on requeit\nMinimum two lines. 10% dli-\ncouht lor prompt payment\nMiiii-ii-i-immiiNiiiiiiiiii-iiitii-iiiiii\nH.   A.   Baundert,   Chimney   Bweop.\nUte trie   motors   repaired   and   rewound. Beany Service. Ph. 81.\nSILVER  SLIPPER   CUB\nM*w  Year'i Eve  Frolic  a*  usual.\nVictoria Cleanest\nSeaport in World\nVICTORIA, Nov. 2 (CP) \u2014 \"As\na seaport town, Victoria ls without\ndoubt the cleanest and most moral\nin the ... world,\" Aid, W. H, Davies said in the Finance Committee\ntoday in replying to a sermon by\nRev. Hugh McLeod a week ago.\nAid. Davies said that the city had\nsufferer! extensively from the wide\npublicity given the sermon.. \"This\ndenunciation from the pulpit* is the\nworst black eye the city has evei\nreceived,\"  he said.\n\"If Dr. McLeod and Dean Spencer Elliott (who supported Dr. Mc-\nLeod's statements) are sincere, they\nshould offer themailves as candidates for the Police Commission at\nthe coming election and help clean\nup a house they say needs cleaning.\"\nBond   Strc-et   womstlc   pips   tobacco. 85c a pouch nt Valentlnei.\nCribbage tonight, Eagle Hall, fl p.ra\nsharp. Adm. 25c. Kefrenhmenta.\nInsure   that   bicycle.   It's   valuable\nBLACKWOOD AGENCY for rat\u00aba,\nTor J. R Watklnj. quality products,\n:all Bpeiicer C. Colman, 230 Baiter Bt\nNow li the time to order your\nChrlitmu gift subscription. Walt's\nNews.\nMaritime Club Dinner Hume Hotel\nTuesday. Nov. 7, 0 1ft p.m. Speaker:\nChief Juitlce W. B   Farrlj.\nCircle No 3 of Trinity United\nChurch will hold s rummage nale at\nthe m#rket tomorrow morning.\nBuyeri lor houses In every day wltb\ncmih. We need listings, If you want\nto sell, tei us Robertson Realty, f_3_]\nWard  Street.\nGreatest variety of writing pads In\nNelwui D W. McDerby, \"The Stationer\nand Typewriter Man.\" (Wi Baiter Ht ,\nNeleon, BC.\nThe Men! rake for J-Vl clean-npa\nYou can save time snd trouble with\none of ihw-S wire rake* 75c each\nHtppersoii s\nATTF.N HON PHOTOUH IPHEKH\nMeeting tonight in City Hall 0 o'rlork\ntn rilaciuw organIrntlon of camera club\nEveryone Invited. Bring your troubles\nind vour friends\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nWANTED\u2014CYLINDER HEAD\nfor 1934 or later Chevrolet\nApply Kootenay Motors.\nnm _a.i.i_ 3 cum rn.R_.ii wmi\n-hid  eait. I  hrlteri.  SI   duett.  Pti\nHit C B\u00abc_\u00abr, 1-18 Vnnrouver Bt.\nJ. P. Walqren\nGeneral Contractoi\n301 Carbonate St.\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL     HOME\nAMBULANCE SERVICl\n\"Distinctive   Funeral   Service\"\n51} Kootenai St. Phont Mt\nLarsons Lunch\n(Close to Greyhound Depot)\nOpen 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.\nHome Cooked Meals\nROSCOE\nAND\nFOURNIER\nGAIIACE MEN\nSKY CHIEF AUTO SERV.C*\nPhone 1?2 Nelion   B C\nFor General Contracting,\nBuilding and Repairs.\nPhone 647L\nN. H. NELSON\nWatch  (01  tht\nSUGAR  BOWL\nSPECIALS\nIn  Tomorrow't Piper\nvhrough Faith to ffetory\n\"I tald to \u25a0 man who s<ood at the gate of the year,\n'Give me a light that I may tread nafelv into the\nunknown.' And he replied, 'Go out into the dark-\nneM and put your hand Into the hand of God ...'\"\nDo yon remember when His Majesty, King George VI URed this quiu.     .,!\n\"Go ont into the darkne-u and pnt your hand into\nthe hand of God. That shall be to you better than\nlight and safer than the known way.\"\nIt was Christmas, 1939, when ho made those lines immortal ... on the\neve of the darkest year of the war. In a few months we were to experience\nDunkerqtie, and for years we knew no victory. Today, the faith of the\nfaithful\u2014the Thanksgiving of all of us\u2014is justified. We have come to the\ntime when we may continue that quotation:\n\"So I went forth, and finding the hand of God, trod\ngladly Into the night. And He led me toward the\nhills and tho breaking of the day in the lone I'.mt.\"\nWhen we could see no light ahead, we bought Victory Bonds to \"furnish\nthe tools.\" We \"carried on\" with more Victory Bonds in the second Victory\nLoan. With the Third Victory Loan we declared that, \"Nothing matters\nnow but Victory.\" Dawn began to gray the night, and we \"Backed the\nAttack\" with more Victory Bonds. Success in Sicily brought a feeling of\ncomplacency that bad to be overcome to make the Fifth Victory Loan the\nsuccess that it was. Last spring we met the Sixth Victory Loan in an\nattitude of tense expectation of the invasion of Europe from the West\nOur guide has not failed us. Our past efforts have been rewarded with\nluccesa. Would you falter now, and \"turn back into the darkness?\" Or will\nyou follow on to the daybreak?    Buy one more Victory Bond than before.\nInvest in Victory\nBUY VICTORY BONDS\nSponsored by\nWood Vallance Hardware\nCOMPANY LIMITED\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1944_11_03","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0416973","@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":"1944-11-03 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1944-11-03 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\/1.0416973"}