{"@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":"1944-11-02","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0416986\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" me>mmMfm!miirWmymmiwm*m\nCommandos Land\non Walcheren\nCanucks Fight Through Nazi Wall\nof Steel to Gain Foothold in East\nBy HOWARD COWAN\nAssociated Preit Staff Writer\nLONDON, Nov. 1 (AP) \u2014 British and Canadian shock\ntroops, including British Commandos thrown ashore under\ncover of a blazing Royal Navy bombardment, smashed onto\nWalcheren Island at the entrance of the Schelde Estuary in\nHolland from the East, West and South today in a strong assault to knock out the last German batteries barring Antwerp\nto Allied shipping.\nTroops of the British 2nd Army broadened their foothold\nSouth\nWj*9t \u00ab4\u00bb\n*W\no\u00bb 5>\u00bbfe\nNary Contingent for\nPacific to Be Re-Voluntary\n634 War Ven.li\nBuilt in Britain.\u2014Page 6.\nLarge Program to\nAllllt T.B. Patients.\u2014Page 3.\n\u2014Page 3.       ^\nVOLUME 43\nPER COPY\nNELSON,   BRITISH   COLUMBIA,  CANADA-THURSDAY   MORNING.  NOV.  2.   1944\nNUMBER 157\nEast of the recaptured town of Lie\nseel nnd advanced another two miles\nSoutheast down a road to Meijel\nSlowly grinding the Germans back\nover bogs and marshes, the British\nTommies took 180 prisoners during\nthe day.\nWeather again Vunded Allied\nfighter planes unti* late afternoon,\nand the troops fought under drizzling skies. Massed Allied artillery\nhelped push the Nazis hack toward\nthe German border.\non the Maas  Rive\nCentral Holland to more than\na mile and maintained relentless pressure against German\nrearguards.\nA spokesman for Lt. Gen. Dempsey, Commander of the British 2nd\nArmy, tacitly admitted that a skilful withdrawal from the Breda\npocket had saved the bulk of some\n40,000 German troops who for several days were threatened with entrapment. He said only enemy rearguards were left South of the Maas\nand that the main German 15th\ni Army now was fortifying a new Hot-\nI terdam-Arnhem defence line.\nBritlih   Commandos  of  the  lit\nCanadian  Army  swarmed  ashore\non  the   Southern   and   Western\ncoasts of Walcheren Island\u2014which\nmeasures only 8 by 10 miles square\n\u2014In the early dawn and were reported making good  progress to-\nnlvht. Canadian troops at ihe same\ntime fought their way through a\nvirtual wall of Nazi steel in storming across a causeway from South\nBeveland  Island on the East and\nestablishing   a   firm   foothold   on\nWalcheren.\nOne Commando force made a direct assault on the harbor and town\nof Vlissingen (Flushing) in 50 or 60\nlanding boats. British infantry followed the Commandos ashore, Ross\nMunro, Canadian Press war correspondent reported, and \"practically\nlanded in the streets of Flushing.\"\nCommandos and infantry penetrated\ndeep into the town and although it\nwas not entirely captured by tonight\nmany portions of the port were in\nthe hands of the Tommies, he added,\nThe German radio said a \"heavy\nbattle\"  was  raging   for  the\nwhich sits at the Southern\nWalcheren and commands\nmiles\nthe North Sea.\nA second landing was made at\nWestkapelle at the extreme Western\ntip of Walcheren and eight miles\nNorthwest of Vlissingen. A heavy\nfog obscured the landing boats from\nshore batteries. When the I M.L.A.Vtor the purpose of contett-\n\u25a0' ing a Federal seat. This n\/ai also tht\nRALSTON RESIGNS FROM CABINET\nSplit on Overseas\nArmy Policy\nWinch Defends\nExecutive Policy\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 1 (CP). -\nHarold Winch, CCF. leader ln the\nBritish Columbia Legislature, said\nj today that party members in six ridings have been interested in considering nominating members of the\nLegislature for the forthcoming Federal elections.\nMr. Winch cited this as a reason\nfor the need of party executive consideration of the nomination of H.\nW. Herridge in Kootenay West Federal riding. Mr. Herridge now is\nM.L.A. for Rossland-Trail, The provincial executive has refused to approve the constituency association's\nnomination of Mr. Herridge.\nHe defended the authority, vested\nin the executive to exercise this\npower.\n\"The CCF.  provincial executive\nis elected annually by rank and file\nconvention and its primary respon-\ntown, 1 sfbility is to implement policies as\ntip of 1 laicl down by the convention.    On\nthe three  matters   not   covered   by   previous\nentrance to'ttwSchelde from | Policy    statement    the    provincial\ncouncil ls the ruling body between\nconventions.\n\"In 1943, long before a Federal\n\u25a0election was contemplated, the executive declared itself in opposition\nto   the   resignation   of   provincial\n108-PASSENGER TRAN8PORT IS BID FOR\nP08T-WAR TRAVEL: Here Is the new Douglas sky\ngiant, a 108 passenger transport carrying a crew of\n13 at better than 300 mites an hour with a range of\n&0O0 miles. Contracts for 26 of the huge sub-strato\nsphere, super-clippers were signed several weeks\nago with Pan American World Airways. Costing\napproximately $1,500,000 these Leviathans of the air\nare Pan American's bid for pott-war air travel for\nthe every day citizen st low rates.\n, German  _.\n; eather cleared  after  noon Allied ,    _\nbombers' unanimous  view of CCF,  elected\nj representatives at a policy meeting\nmedium   and   fighter\nswarmed over the island and battered   every   enemy   position   they\ncould locate.\nHeavy naval gunfire supported\nthe seaborne landing. Berlin said\nthat Nazi filers had seen a British\nbattleship of the King George (36.-\n000 ton) class, four cruisers and\nnumerous landing vessals standing offshore, \"which indicates thst\nother attempts on Walcheren are\nto.follow.\"\nFrontline dispatches tonight said\n\u25a0tl   German   guns   on   Walcheren\nYANKS SMASH\nHEAVY\nJAP ATTACKS\nCavalry Pushing\nWest Toward\nCarigara Stronghold\nGeneral MacArthur's Headquarters, Philippines, Nov. 2 (Thursday)\n(AP).-\u2014Smashing heavy Japanese\ncounter-attacks, the United States\n24th Division crashed Northward\ntwo miles and the 1st Cavalry Division progressed West toward heavily\ndefended Carigara on the Northwest\ncoast ot Leyte, headquarters reported today.\n, Today's con.muni.Tue said the\nfighting around Carigara was Intended by tht Japanese to hold open\nan escape route South toward Ormoc.\nThis would indicate the Japanese\nhave written off Leyte Island as lost\nSays Labor Won't\nLet Gov't Use\nZombies to Cut Wages\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 1 (CP)-\nCharles Caron, secretary of Local\n7 Boilermakers' Union (C.C.L.),\nsaid in an Interview today that\n\"Labor will not let the Government use the draftees (Home Defence Army) to lower wages In\nIndustry.\"\nMr. Caron was referring to the\nFederal Government's proposal\nto use Home Defence men In industry on army pay and allowances.\nheld in February of this year.\n\"It whs strongly felt that it would\nset a bad precedent for a provincial\nmember to resign his legislative seat, \"\"Pt for the usual delaying actions\nthereby endangering constituency Tht Japanese, however, kept up\na  session  of  the  reinforcement of Ormoc,\nCavalry units, which a few days I\nago entered Carigara from Barugo\nand then withdrew, were once j\nmore approaching the stronghold.\nrepresentation  at\nLegislature and placing an unwar- j\nranted financial burden on prnvin-\nrial finances through the necessity\nfor hyelectlons,\n\"It must be obvious that political I\nconfusion would be the result and j\nthat     democratic     representation\nv   uld become a farce, if the practice i\nwere silent, perhaps knocked out   of M L A ., r\u201etgn|ng jn or(j<r to tn,\nby naval gunfire. | u?r ibe Federal field became gen\nApproximately six miles nf large-' eraL\nly-flooded    terrain    separated    the        riv\u00ab   CCF\nBritish force fighting for Vhuingen\nML A's, when approached to stand for Federal nomination, explained this to the constituencies concerned and stood by\nthe policy enunciated both by the\ncaucus and the executive and which\nwas felt to be one that was ln the\nbest interests of the people.\"\nand the Canadians who fought across\nth. 1100-yard causeway (rom South\nBeveland against withering mortar\nand small arms fire.\nSince they opened their campaign\nOct. 6 to clear the Schelde the Canadians had captured 18.000 prisoners\nand liberated more than 8^0 square\nmllei,.\nBoggy terrain and scarcity of good\nroads held back the surge of British,\nCanadian, American, Polish and\nNetherlands troops to the M a a s\nNorth of Antwerp a* much as German resistance One Allied column\nstriking   Northwest   from   captured\nRumidonk (ought Into' th-^uUklrti rhrl>tm\u201e -,_\u201e,, ,nt) \u201e ,h,\nof Geertruideiiberg, where \u00ab bridge\ncrosses the Maas, but there was no\nreport of important progress from\nthat point West to the cast Stiff\nfighting was In progress along the\nMark over, four to five miles South\nof the Maas\nOn the F.astern Hank of the Neth-\nerlinds corridor British Tommies\nreached  a canal   nearly  two  miles\nCigaret Shortage\nDue to Heavy\n.Christmas Buying\nOTTAWA.  Nov.   1   'CP)   -  The\npreient   cigaret   scarcity   ls   a   temporary  one  brought  on by  the  abnormal     purchases    for    overseas\npol\nTo the South the erasure of holdout Japanese at Catmon Hill Northwest of Dulag was reported\nFighter planes based on Leyte and\nspeedy patrol torpedo boats constantly disrupted the enemy reinforcement activities at Ormoc, blasting barges and also blowing up a\nbig ammunition dump In that area.\nA small freighter and lugger were\nsunk.\nThe weakened enemy air force\ntried more harassing attacks Six\nwere shot down by fighters, a seventh by anti-aircraft fire at a cost of\none American fighter.\nSays \"Churchill\nDangerous Leader\nin Peace Time\"\nMONTREAL, Nov 1 'CP, -David\nL-wii, National Secretary of the\nCCF, Mid here lust night that the\nBritlih Labor Party views Prime\nMinister Churchill as a great war\nleader,  but   a   dangfrnus   leader   ln\nSomerville \"Hopes\" R.N.\nBe in on Blows Againit Japan\nIcy of building up a pool of 'nnokei'\noverseas   for   the   troopa   on   active j time of peace\nservice. David Sim. tobacco admin-      Mr  ...v. is. one of the CCF  Party\nIstrator  for   the  Prices  Board.  Mid   Laden   who   attended   the   recent\ntonight Lonc.on conference of the Common-\nThe   cigaret   pool   now   had   been I wealth Labor Parties, told  a CCF\nbuilt up and the deadline for over-   Club (Uurler-Outremont) that La-\nseas parcel mailings had passed and' bor   leaders   supported   a   coalition\nas   a   result   the   civilian   cigaiett. ' government In Great Britain because\nsupply  would  return  to  normal       ] they law In Churchill the one man\nwho could have brought the country\nthrough the war But. he added, they\nwere determined the coalition must\ntrue as soon as the war permitted\nWASHINGTON, Nov 1 im -\n| Admiral Sir Jamel Somerville new\nj representative of Britain's First Sen\nLord on the Combined Chiefs of\nStaff Committee, 1, Id correspondent! here today that he 'hoped\"\ntha Boyal Navy would be in on thl\ndecisive   blows   to   driest   Japan\nAt his fust conference foil -a ing\nhil lltlvV, to iu< < ed Admiral M:\nPercy Noble as head \u25a0 f the [li.tiah\nAdmiralty delegation in WaO.it g\nton. the veteran nf a_ seats in trie\nRoyal Navy said that if he were 111\nthe position of Admirals Nimits or\nHalicy in the Far Fast he would\nwelcome any addition to his fleet\nHe said he did riot know of anv\nofficial reluctance on the part of\nthe United Statei to keep the Ht it\nlih forces from sharing In the nt\nfenslve against Japan but had read\nOf   such   opposition    in   tlie   newspa\npers\nTwo   hours   flflrr    h r   a 11.v ed    in\n|Wa*hingien e few daw ago   Admir\n|ll Somerville iaid   he heard an Am\nTiran   broadcast   referring   tr   his\n. opwauoni la comfaiud of Um\nconflict\nal    \\A'T(\\\nEastern Fleet, suggesting\nbetween him and Adml\nUrns M.iii-.tbatteii. Allied Commander in Southeast Aula and sug-\nKesting that his departure fnr Washington V-niM mean a speeding up\nif   nper.tw.ns\nHe ta.d his operations in the East\n'. <f1 bren in complete accord with\n\\i\\r. ;?,*_! M'Hinthattrni planning and\nrt- ; baaufd that in PI? die In\nhravv demands elite.-here, his fleet\nhad been weak\n\"II was nnt a rjuestlon nf what\nIhr hell ii ihr Eastern Fleet doing\nhut what thr hell is the F.astern\nFl-*et, hr said\nNow thr situation -* as entirely\ni hanged, thf Admiral said, and but\n.lap warihip venturing into the\nSt mt .a of Malarra. In sav rvihlng of\nIhr Indian i tcean had little hope\nnf   irm hifig   Its  destination\nA V Alexander, First [_nrd nf\nthr Admiralty, said recently tlmi\npart of a vast British T^rrV \u25a0\nfit ft big enough to ta- kl*- the entire\nJspantte Niv> wai on the \u00bbay to\n< _Usta:i_ -a iten )\nRelax Restrictions\non Paperboard for\nShipping Containers\nOTTAWA. Nov. 1 (CP) ~ The\nPrices Board today announced r_\nlarfttlnn of riuntil *nd prohlbltior\non thr use of paperh-iard for shir\nping rontalneri The Hoard said th*\narl'on had been made possible by\nincreased paperhoard shipments\nand a reduction In some district*\nin the demand fnr shipping rase*\nfnr war goods The Rnard's order\nletting production priorities tn enure shipping case* for essential\nwar and civilian ui*i remain* In\neffect\nStrike Holds Up\nLar.ca-.ter Output\nLONDON. Nov 1 (CTReuter) -\nProduction nf I^sncaster bomberi is\naffected br e strike of aircraft workers st a Northu-ast F.iiHlan . factors\nof Avroe and Company, where IfifsO\nmen nearly all engineers, are out.\nTli\" strike threatehl tn Involve 30.-\nnoo n\u00abxt weekend unleu a lettle-\ni meet It ii\nCANADIANS MAY\nSERVE UNDER\nU.S. COMMAND\nPhilippines Seen\nas Logical Base\nfor Operations\nOTTAWA, Nov. 1 (CP) - The\npossibility of Canadian fnrces serving under over-all United States\nCommand in the Pacific was semi\nhere tonight following disclosure nf\nnaval plans which indicate launching of the Japanese expedition from \u25a0\nthe Dominion, rather than from\noverseas. (See page 3),\nThe re-volunteers will be given\nleave in Canada before entering the\nPacific conflict and it seems logical\nthey would go by way of the North\nPacific possibly to Philippine bases\nand come under United States\ncommand,\nA reliable source has s.ild that if i\nthe Canadians entered the war\nacross the North Pacific, a logical\nbase for them would lit' the Philippines where Oen MacArthur is\nconsolidating bis position.\nH also would be a good point for\nCanadian troops to join in any Allied thrust and it was recalled Canucks already have cooperated with\nAmericans in the Aleutians. It was\nsuggested members of the Canadian\nMilitary Mission- already scouting\nground In the Southwest Pacific\u2014\nmay have participated in the Am-\nerienn Philippine landings as they\ndid recently  at Saipan.\nThe Navy statement of future\nplans gave no indication of the size\nnf the naval force which would be\naent to the Pacific, but it previously has been estimated that the\nsenior service would use a third nf\nits 33.000 sen personnel with perhaps fewer than 250 ships Including\ncruisers, carriers, destroyers and\nescort*.\nThe Navy by that time possibly\nwill have nt least a second cruiser\nfind its own carriers In addition to\nRoyal Navy carriers for which it\nprovides sea-crews.\nOUTLINE PLAN\nFOR WORKMEN'S\nCOMPENSATION\nNew British Scheme\nPlans for Benefits\nand Pensions\nLONDON, Nov. I (CP) - The\nBritish Government, proposing to\ntreat workmen's compensation as a\nsocial service instead of a liability\nof the employer, has published plans\nfor benefits and pensions payable\nas soldiers' pensions are.\nThe new scheme is scheduled to\ntake effect at the same time as the\ngeneral scheme of social insurance.\nHen? are the^highitfcKtsr- \"\u2022\n1. It will cover \"all persons working under a contract of service or\napprenticeship, except those under\nschool age,\" and to non-manual\nworkers without any Income limit,\nand will apply to accidents arising\nfrom and in the course of employment and to specified industrial diseases.\nJaps Force Way\nInto Kweilin\ni\n(AP.   --\nive fore-\nCHUNGKING,\nThroe Japanese  (\nec\\   their   way   into   the   suburbs   of\nKweilin,   htralegic   Chines?   base   in!\nKwangsi   province,  nnd  n  fourth  is!\nwithin   two   miles   of   the   city,   the\nChinese Hijjh Command announced\ntonight\nFierce fighting was reported In-\nprogress\nThe Chi ne.se communique slso\nAdmitted the loss of Lingchwan, on\nIhe Hunan-Kwangsi railroad 1.1\nNorth of Kweilin\nOn the West river front In\nSouthern Kwangsi, the high command said, reinfoi red Japanese\ntroops made further advances from\npositions West of Pingnam. Doth\niiiims jullftred heavy cuuaIUoi.\n2. The liability, instead of being\non the individual employer, will be\non a rontral fund out of .which all\nbenefits and administrative charges\nwill be paid.\n3 Benefits likely win amount to j\n\u00a320,000,000 a year (about $90,000,-;\nO00i-or twice the amount paid out j\nin workmen's compensation before :\nthe war.\n4 The weekly contribution re- ,\nr]uired for men will be about 10 j\nrents, for women slightly under j\nright cents and the employer will\npay half those sums, the employers ;\ntho other half. One-sixth of the '\ntotal funds required will come from\nthe Treasury.\n5 Pensions paid under the new \u25a0.\nscheme will not be affected by any\nsubsequent earnings of the workman\n''This system is In many respects '\u25a0\nlike that which is the basis of war ,\npensions schemes.\" said a recent I\nGovernment white paper outlining ;\nthe proposa's.\n\"It thus recognizes a certain similarity between the position of tho j\nsoldier wounded in battle and that |\nnf the man injured in the course of!\nhis productive work for the com-\n\u25a0 munitv.\n\"Neither is liable to have his pension reduced nn account of what he\nmay earn after the injury, each is\ncompensated not for loss of earning\ncapacity but for whatever he has\n1 Inst In health, strength and the\npower to enjoy Hf**-.\"\nBenefits will be the same for men\n, and women.\nAn injury allowance will be paid\nas long as the workman is incapaci-\nI lated unless it is replnced by a pension. The initial allowance will be\n$7.75 and this will be increased to\n*9 after 13 weeks if pension has not\nbeen arranged\nWhere disability is likely to be\npermanent or prolonged, a pension\nwill be paid, based on the degree\nof disablement as assessed by a\nmedical board. The maximum w-ill\nbe $9 for 100 per cent disability\nA man virtually unemployable will\nalso receive a personal supplement\nof %7 20.\nWhere the injury allowance Is\nt7 7r> the allowance for a wife will\nhe $2 weekly, where It Is $9 the\nwife's allowance will he $2 20. Al-\nlownnce for one child will he from\n$1 10 to $1 IMS There will fy nn\nprovision under Ihe scheme for -id*\nditional children in view of the\nGovernment's plan for family al-\nlownnrea.\nRED ARMY ONLY\n33 MILES\nFROM BUDAPEST\nGreat Drive Rolls\nRapidly Over\nHungarian Plains\nLONDON, Nov. 1 (AP) - The\nRed Army thrust within 33 miles\nof Budapest today In a great drive\nrolling rapidly Northwestward\nacrosa the Hungarian Plain between the Danube and Tlaia Rivers,\nArmored spearheads undoubtedly were even nearer to tha Imperilled Hungarian capital ai the\nmidnight Moscow communique\nannounced capture of the railway\ntown of Lajosmizte, only S3 miles\nSoutheast, along with more than\n100 other communities In the\nmarsh-dotted flatlands between\nthe rivers.\nAmong these was Kecskemet,\ngreat railway centre. Kecskemet\nfell after 24 hours of heavy street\nfighting during which the Russians\nalso pushed past the city on both\nsides.\nThe Germans contended this by\npassing waa what finally forced\nthem to abandon Kecskemet, but\nthe Russians also thrust straight\nthrough the city of 80,000 and North-\nwestward another 11 miles up the\nrailway toward Budapest. They\nalso announced capture of Kere-\nkegyhaza, 10 mile* West ef Kecskemet on a spur railway, and Uj-\nkecske, 17 miles Northeast of the\nKecskemet's Zolnok line.\nThe Moscow communique which\nannounced these gains also repeated an earlier order of tha\nday from Premier Stalin on final\nclearance of the enemy from the\nPetsamo region of Arctic Finland but said' nothing of tha Polish, East Prussian and Weat Latvian sectors of tha long Eastern\nfront\nTt made clear, however, thtt a\nbig-scale drive across the plains of\nHungary, wat progr^lng.rieadll-jr\ntowards  its  goal,  Budapest,\nThe companion Soviet drive mor*\nthan 100 miles Northeast of Budapest in the Northeait corner of Hun-\ngary, also progressed during the\nday, Moscow said, with capture of\nmore than 40 places Northeast and\nWest of the District centre of Nyire-\ngvhaza.\nThe major Immediate threat to the\nHungarian capital, however, was\nfrom the Kecskemet direction.\nThe Germans asserted the Russians had transferred all their\nSouthern front reserves to that sector in a determined drive across\nthe plains between the Danube and\nTisza Rivers. ,\nThe Paris Radio appealed to Hungarians to revolt.\n\"Your hour haa come,\" it said.\n\"The fighters for Hungarian inde-\nnendence in France, Belgium, and\nHolland, the Hungarians who fought\non the Paris barricades, send an\nurgent appeal to the workers o(\nBudapest, to the students, lhe peis-\n; ants and all strata of the people.\"\nF.D.R. Hopes Air\nWill Be Served and\nUsed by Humanity\nBy  FRANK   FLAHERTY\nCanadian   Press   Staff   Writer\nCHICAGO, Nov, 1 (CP).-Dele-\nKates and technicians of 51 countries\ntoday began the task of formulating\na new international law of the air\nin harmony with the war and postwar aims of the United Nations as\nexpressed in the Atlantic Charter.\nAs they assembled in the International Civil Aviation Conference\ncalled by the United States Government they were greeted wtth a message from President Roosevelt con-1 t^j,\nPersistent Reports Gen. McNaughton\nWill   Replace   Ralston  on   Cabinet\nOTTAWA, Nov. 1 (CP)-\u2014Defence Minister Ralston ha$\nresigned from the Federal Cabinet, it was learned reliably tonight.\nSources close to the Government would go no further\nthan to say the Minister had resigned on \"the question of reinforcements for overseas.\"\nWhile it was understood that final decisions had not been\nmade, there were persistent reports that Col. Rolston would be\nreplaced by Gen. A. G. L Mc-.\nNaughtGn, former Commander |\nof the Canadian Army Overseas.\nGen. McNaughton could not be\nreached for comment tonight.\nPolitical observers saw far-\nreaching repercussions as likely to\nfollow Col. Ralston's resignation.\nIt Is known that Navy Minister\nMacdonald has been a strong advocate of men called for compulsory\nmilitary service being made liable\nfor service overseas, with the present system of voluntary enlistment\nfor such service discarded.\nMr. Macdonald was expected to\nsupport Col. Ralston In whatever\naction he took In respect to\nInforcements. The possibility was\nseen he also might resign unless\ncompulsory overseas aervice was\nImposed, He could not be reached  Immediately for comment\nPrime Minister Mackenxle King\nwas understood to stand by tht\nexisting policy under which overseas service Is on a voluntary\nbasis, supported by -all the\nFrench-speaking ministers and by\na number of English-speaking\nCabinet   membera.\nMunitions Minister Howe and\nAgriculture Minister Gardiner are\nout oi the dty, but they participated In earlier discussions on the\nstatus of UN Rome Defence Army\nlast week.\nToday's Cabinet meeting, the seventh since Tuesday of last week,\nwas comparatively short, the Ministers leaving the East block about\nthree hours after they assembled.\nParliament Hill had been on\nthe alert throughout the dsy, expecting some statement on the\ncabinet discussions but the office\nof the Prims Minister said that\nnothing would be forthcoming\ntonight\nAn Indication of Col, Ralston's\nposition was given In his speeches\nIn tht House this Bummer, when\nhe said ht would not favor de\nmoblllxatlon or tht return to civ\nUlan occupations of men In tht\nHomt Defenct Army whllt gen\ntral strvict troops wert engaged\nIn  battle overseas.\nThe senior Defence Minister re\nturned only three weeks ago from\na tour of the European battleground\nwhere he spoke with front line\ntroops and received their frank\nopinions on a wide variety of subject!.\nHON. J. L. RAL8T0N\nstood by opinion they had expreet-\ned on previous occasions.\nGen. McNaughton retired frHJl\nthe Army last September and tffo\nweeks later resigned as President\nof the National Research Foundation, a job from which he was giv-\nleave of absence to take command of the 1st Divisigjn when wir\nstarted.\nCol. Ralston announced the retirement of Gen. McNaughton from\nthe army in September The former\ncommander was given leave of absence from his overseas post on\nDec. 30, 1643.\nIn his letter of retirement, Gen,\nMcNaughton said that Col. Ralston\nand himself had not always been\nof the Mme opinion as to the course\nto be followed but he believed that\nneither doubted the sincerity of\npurpose of the other.\nB.C. Reaches\nIA Per Cent\nof Loan Quota\nIt was understood that several\ntimes soldiers Indicated to the\nDefence Minister they wert an-\nxlous In cast tht Home Defffnce\ntroops should,bt demobilized first\nand obtain jobs they might desire later.\nSupporters of a policy which\nwould reduce the nun\\bers of the\nHome Defence troops now that the\ndanger of an invasion of Canada hm-\ndeclined have said that more men\nshould be releaeed from the home\nforce to engage ln eaeentisl civilian\noccupations, where they would be\nliable to call to further army service if the need arose.\nThey have said that the re-esiab-\nllshment ln civil occupation regulations promulgated by the government protect the Jobs men in the\ngeneral  service  units  hope  to  ob-\nTh<\nread)\ncent\nbetn\nsum   of   $.1fl.fi.13,750   ha<\nbeen   invested   and   R6\nof   the   public   objective\nreached   in   'he   Seventh\np-jr\nh is\nVic-\ntory Lojn  campaign,  Loan officials\nsaid  Wednesday   n_nht as the drive\npassed the he\nIn Vanrmu\npublic have\n$16,.\"-11.400 w\nand Mt 1'1-m\nthe way amn\nAn\narmed\nin*. p\u00bb.\nH:, !\nTier-,\nR;*\nay mark\n.vestments hv the\nbed the total of\nV ir.rn'iver South\nKast Knd showing\n'ven units\nif S3 170.SO0 by the\ns   raivie   them   to\nFORMER REVELSTOKE\nMAYOR DIES\nVANCOUVER, Nov 1 (CP) -\nFuneral #ervlces will be held this\nweek fnr W A Foote, former Mayor\nof Revelstoke, B.C Horn in Nova\nScotia Mr Foote at one time was\na hospital director in Revelstoke.\nSome officials aaid the trend of\ngovernment policy wis indicated\nin an order-ln-councll made known\ntoday which provides thst men on\nactive service may be made available for tny es\u00bbntial civilian wnrk\nconsidered in  tht  nations!  Interest\nPreviously, the soldiers had been\navailable only for certain specified\nactivities In which shortages of U- ]\nbor or supplies affected the war\neffort, such is forest operating\nand railway work\nThrough transfers to ._ wide:\nsphere of essential operations, thr\nnumber of the men in H-mie I>e\nfence army could be sharply reduced In a short time The present j\nestimate strength of the home force\nis 70,000 men\nGovernment sources said thst dis\ncusaions   In   the   cabinet   were   not j\nheated,   as   tht   various   Ministers\n70   ,\u201e_\u25a0   r\nN.T.h\n_\",!   <>_    $7\nS.t.,[;:ch     !\n22 l>, .1\nii   Va:\nini'ivcr   1\nlar.d   ,l.\\\nIIS\" 00  0;\non  Wcli:\n..   r:.   n\nf.rr p...v!\nr\u00ab;i,_v   n, \u2022\nr.   '.v\nr-::)K\nliming '.<\n...noo ij'.iul\nRsilw.iv\n(ivrr lh.\ntr, ,,f C'n:\n1' )    al   ('\n_.,|. i.f thf\nn ix I\nMl    X\n:   !''\n\u25a0ti'ot an\n\u25a0lim i|i;.'lj\nEnglishmen\nto\nHave Eggs\nin Shell Again\nf i IT\n1* .:!\u00ab\u25a0.\nMVA    *.'   \u25a0\nK \u25a0-,;<(\n\u25a0    1     (\ntaining these statements\n\"I know you will see to it thst tht\nair which God gave to everyone\nshall not become the means of domination over any one.\n\"With full recognition of the sovereignty and Jurisdictional equality\nof all nations let us work together\nso that the air may be used by humanity and served by humanity.\"\nOnly the opening session of the\nconference took place today. Tomorrow at the second plenary session.\nAdolf A Rerie, prlnclpsl United\nStates delegate and acting chairman,\nannounced that the United States,\nCanada. Great Britain and possibly\nFrance will state their thesis of what\nshould be done by the conference\nMunitions Minister Howe, for Canada, is prepared to outline the Canadian draft proposals for an International air authority, first made public after submission to other governments last March. Special Interest In\nconference circles attache! to some\nmodifications in  tht orlgintl draft\nS.\u2122.n.\"wm \u00bb\"^ *...,0c7n,'jmNTH V,CT0RY L\u00b0^. \u00abNISAL CANVASS\nada> position bffnr* thf conffrrn.f\nm brttfr known than thit of. moit   yraj|  Unit\n.oui.trlM    b-CiuM    th\u00ab    Canadian   \u25a0    .  y,\n(Jov.rnment U tht onl-\/ ont to put I \"\" TsOOttnay\nlot ward > -jxcitlc dr V pUn. NeUon Unit _\nm ,ei;.\niff i\nt hii\n,.,|    |\u201e\nnow\nfKH\nI    _\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\n<hlp-\nKootenay's Bond Scores\nDay'i Sol,'i\n$27,950\n$67,450\n. $43,050\nTotal\n$785,800\n$479,250\n$361,650\nQuota\n$1,025,000\n$1,000,000\n$   823,000\n *mmm*WmwM\n2 '\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 2, 1944 Agree to Form\nUnited Yugoslav\nNational Gov't\nNeed of Expansion at Hospital\nShown by Miss Tregear in\nTalk lo South Slocan Institute\nWhite the number of in-patienti\nalone has doubled ln the past 10\nyeara, there has been little increase\nin bed accommodation at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital, Miss Honor\nTregear, Superintendent, told the\nSouth Slocan Women's Institute\nWednesday in showing need of expansion at the Hospital in a paper\non the \"Advantages of a Community Hospital.\"\nReturn of servicemen from over-\naeas, already creating a problem in\naccommodation, will soon be in\ngreater volume, she said, and many\nof them will require hospital attention for a considerable Ume. The\ndemand would greatly exceed present facilities, which, she felt, called\n: for expansion.\nToo frequently during the past\ntwo years the hospital had been\nunable to accommodate patients due\nto bed sortage. Proper segregation\nhad not been carried out, because\npatients could not be refused if\nbeds were available, and this presented more difficulties in nursing\nof patients. i\nIncreases were shown ln the\nfollowing figures;\n1933       1943 I\nPatients admitted     1424      2942 '\nBirths     144        268 I\nLaboratory testa       703     13688 |\nX-ray pictures ..  699      2860\nAverage day's stay dropped from\n15.18 in 1933 to 8.7 in 1943.\nBENEFIT TO FAMILY\nA community hospital, Miss Tregear said, stood ever ready to heal\nthe sick, it carried on an educational program of benefit to the\nwhole family and in promoting good\nhealth it made the community a\nsafer place to live In; it carried on a\nresearch program which would\neventually benefit every member of\nthe family who may be ill; it offered advantages which could never\nbe secured at home and tended to\nconserve and preserve human life.\nIt was in the hospital that much\ninformation could be obtained. Mothers were  taught  and  guided   :~\nother families In the community.\nThey could Interpret the facilities,\nvalues, advantages and problems of\nthe hospital to others, thus simulating interest in the hospital.\nThe present, she said, waa built\nout of the past, based upon the required knowledge in dealing with\nsickness and needs of patients. Examples were expansion of the hospital, isolation and T.B. Clinic. The\nfuture would be built out of tha information gained from present needs\nand problems of the community hospital.\nWhite money was essential in\nwork of the hospital, it had been\nonly second in the thought and interest shown by the Directors of the\nNelson hospital. They were wholeheartedly concerned and untiring in\ntheir efforts to promote the best for\nthe wetfare of the community.\nCooperation and understanding\nshown by the entire hospital per-\n| sonnel proved they had visions and\ni hopes of a larger and better com-\nj munlty hospital, she concluded,\n3 B.C. Gov't\nGroups Reach\nLoan Targets\nThree Porvlnclal Government departments have reached their objective In the group payroll and payroll\nsaving* dlvta-on of Neleon'a 7th Vic-\ntory Loan campaign. They are th*\nFinance Department, Public Works\nDepartment, and tho Uquor Control\nBoard employees.\nTh* Police Department In ths Nelson city employees Internal drive leads\nall other civic departments in doing\nover the top. It had an over 300 per\ncent -subscription.\nNOOBJECTION\ncart of lnfantt and children.   Chil- j TO   POSTPONEMENT\ndren were taught the value and lm- : f.\u2014 *\u00bb..   ... ,.-\npor\"t*nce of cleanliness. ^'\" -\"\u25a0\u00ab  1 ALKj\nMothers working on hospital aux-, TEHERAN, Iran, Nov. 1 (AP..-\nlliaries and fathers acting on boards The Unlted sule- AtnbaMador Le\nof governors or special committees ; |.nd ^---jj -    \u2022 \u25a0\u25a0     ...\nmade   important   ---*-'>-\u25a0\u25a0 *'-\u00ab_   \u2666_ i .   _,._ ,-.\nLONDON, Ntv. 1 (CP.-Agrtt-\nmtnt for formttlon tf a \"Unlttd\nYugoslav National Govtrnment\nIn tht shortest poulbli tlmt\" wat\nrtaohtd In oonftrtnott today bt-\ntwttn Manhal Tito, president of\ntht Yugoslav Council of Liberation, and Dr. Ivan Subnilc, Prima\nMinister of King Peter's Royal\nYugoilav Oovtrnment, tht free\nYugoilav radio announced tonight\nMany Beautiful\nExhibits af\nKaslo Mum Show\nKASLO, B.C.-Tha Kailo Chrysanthemum Show, sponsored by the\nMum Society of tha Japanese Men's\nClub, was held on Saturday and\nSunday in the Kailo Hotel. There\nwas a very large number of beautiful exhibits. Judging was done\nSaturday and prizes awarded to\nwinners on Sunday afternoon.\nPrize winners were:\nOne bloom: lut \\*TuM\\ C. Ogawa,\nBanun; 2nd prize; S. Inomata, Mrs.\nOoollde; 3rd prize; H. Yarauakl, Birmingham; 4th prize, fl. Sato, Banzan.\nTwo blooms: 1st, C. Ogawa, Banzan; and, K. Ratal, Banmn; 3rd, H.\nKonno, Banzan: 4th, 8. Tokt, Dally\nMail.\nThre* blooms: lit, B. Fujlta, Birmingham: 2nd. 8. Tokl, Banzan: 3rd,\nS. Matmiba, Banzan; 4th, g. Fujlta,\nDally Mall.\nPour and mors blooms: lit, H.\nKonno, Dally Mall; 2nd, H. Imada,\nBirmingham; 3rd, M. Imada, Banzan;  4th, 8. Fujlta, Birmingham.\nBush (Mri. Smith): lat, T. Fu]i-\nmoto; 2nd. T. Uyeda; 3rd, 8. Banno;\n4th, S, Banno.\nCascade (Mn, Smith): lat H. Naga-\nUklya; Snd, 8. Inomata; 3rd, H. Naga-\ntaklyn: 4th, T, Fujlmoto.\ncontributions   to j [\nToasfTea\nOnt reason why doge u a rule\nan more cherished hy humans\ntMn cats ls that In many respect*\nthey art mors like them. Lovers\n<rf cats say that dogs are simply\naervllt hypocrites\u2014they do what\nihelr masters like and their mtu.-\nters naturally applaud them for\nlt. In our own little animal population we have noted tome curious differences. Tor Instance,\nour bitches as a rule are surly\nwhen they have pups; they will\n$ot lat strangers handle them\nOur cat* have been different. They\ndo ttot seem to care who handle*\ntheir kitten* and when ws have\ntaken some of them away to dispose of, the mother cat ha* regarded us with philosophy, We\nhaTe never known a cat that\nwould obr*ct when anybody plck-\n\u2022d up her kittens. We have also\nnoted In our preeent houae-cnt.\nMlns WlgRins, that when she ls\nabout to have % litter, she will\nehnie off the premise* tho-ee that\nsurvive from her previa.u litter,\nIn other words, when ahe Is\nthrough feeding her kittens, shs\n1* through In every other way.\nCooDfRHAM.\" Worts\nLimited\nTORONTO, ONTARIO\n.... addressed a letter to the\nranian Government today confirm-\n.ng the latter's decision to postpone\ntalks on foreign oil concessions in\nIran until after the war ss entirely\nTwo Kimberley\nGroups\nAttain Quota\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, Nov. l\u2014KIm-\nberley Victory Loan lub unit on a\ngood day's sales today reached 61 92\nper cent of its quarter million\nquota on unofficial reports. The\nColin Cameron Lumber Company\nof Wasa and the C. M, & S. dairy\nat Marysville both hit the 100 per\n\\*u\\ and within th. rights of the   \u00abnt   buyer   class   today.   Both   sc\nGovernment. \u2122n   ,0r ' \">eabIe list of employ-\nThe United States is raising no\nobjection^ to the postponement snd\nonly requests that interested American   oil   companies   be   Informed\nwhen the Government of Iran begins   applicants for luUseriptions of $154\nnegotiations in the granting of con- *\"\"\ncessions after the war, Morris said.\nThe BBC. in a broadcast recorded\nin New York Wednesday night, said\nSir deader Bullard, British Minister\nto Iran, also had no objection to\nthe postponement of oil concession\nnegotiations until after the war.\nToday's 117 applications averaged $150 for a total of $17,650. Kim-\nberley's  campaign so far  has  1041\n800 averaging $148 s subscriber.\nSEVERAL U.S.\nSHIPS DAMAGED\nIN PHILIPPINES\nlift Power\nRestrictions on\nLower Mainland\nVANCOUVIR, Nov. 1 (CP) \u2014\nPower restrictions Imposed on tho\nlower Britiih Columbia mainland\nlut May will bo lifted at 4 p.m.,\nP.D.T. tomorrow, Britlih Columbii Klectrlo Railway offlclali innounced tonight\nThe reitrlctloni were Impoied be-\nciuse of a power ihortage due to\nlow rainfall and light anow In the\nmountalni lait Winter.\nW. G. Murrin, B.C.E.R. Preiident,\nannounced he had been Informed\nby Dr. E. A. Carrothen, Public\nUtilltlea Commlulon chairman, that\nan Improvement In the water aupply following recent ralni permitted lifting of the reitrlctloni which\nimpoied a partial dimout here.\nBlackout regulatloni are still ln\neffect, however, and may be enforced \"at a moment'i notice,\" civ-\nUlan defence offlclali aaid.\nKimberley P.T.A.\nAccepts Rules\nfor Scholarship\nKIMBERLEY, B.C. - The Klmberley P.T.A. met tn the High School\nMonday evening, sixty members\nwere In attendance. President Mrs.\nB. Archibald presided. A report\nfrom the Health Convenor was\ngiven and parents were warned of\na threatened pink-eye epidemic.\nRev. B. A. Resker, who has been\nappointed Safety Convenor, spoke\na few words, and mention was made\nof a separate hill to be set aside for\nthe children when the sleighing\nseason arrives.\nMrs. Poole, ln the absence of Mrs\nClarke, outlined the program for\nthe coming months. Mrs. Poole\nspoke of the necessity for parents\ntaking a more active participation\nin the program, which would be instructive and educational.\nMiss Travis outlined the rules\npertaining to the Fine Arts Scholarship that the P.T.A. Is sponsoring.\nThis report was read by Secretary\nMiss McKie, A general discussion\ntook place and it was decided to accept the rules as outlined by the\nTrustees, with the addition gf one\namendment. Trustees are F. P. Le-\nvirs, for a term of three years, Mrs.\nA. Pentland, for a term of two years,\nand C. J. Fredrickson for a term of\none year, and the President of the\nP.T.A. The Kimberley Parent-Teacher Fine Arts Scholarship ls tenable at tbe Banff School of Fine\nArts and must be used in the same\nyear In which It ls awarded. Since,\nhowever, the successful candidate\nmay have other plans for developing\nhis talent, he may use the money\neliewhere and at some further date,\nsubject to the approval of the Trustees. The scholarship may be applied on any course offered at the\nBanff School of Fine Arts.\nThe stipend of the scholarship ls\nNazis Say Allied\nShips in Scheldt\nLONDON, Nov. 2 (Thuriday)\n(CP)\u2014Allied ihlpping already hai\nentered the three-mlla-wlfe\n\u2022ohilde River eituary with sup-\npllai bound for the great Belgian\nport of Antwerp, the Berlin radio\naaid early today.\nThla reported movement of ihlpping came at triple anault forooa\n\u2022talked the lait Germini within\ngunahot of the vital KO-mlle-long\nInland waterway.\n\"German E-boati attacked enemy ihlpping In the Schelde eituary,\" wai the way the Berlin\nradio itated the iltuatlon, \"and\ndeitroyed one vmel of 2000 torn\nand a email gunboat\"\n\u25a0\nColdwell (alls\nfor Survey\nof Industry\nMONTREAL, Nov. 1 (CP).-M. J.\nColdwell, C.C.F. national leader,\nsaid In an address prepared for delivery tonight that a nation-wide\nsurvey of Industry must ba undertaken at once as the first concern\nof the new Federal Reconstruction\nDepartment to determine the pre- ]\nwar capacities of Industrial, their J\npresent wartime capacities and the\npost-war needs of the nation.\n\"Only through such over-all planning can Jobs for all become a\nreality after tha war,\" Jie said.\nWar plants owned by the Canadian people must be operated under\nsocial ownership or control. If they\nwere turned over to \"monopolistic\nInterests\" some would be shut down\nwhile others would be operated\npart-time only. If the plants were\nturned over to private Interests as\nthe present Government proposed,\n\"we are back at 1939.\"\nTRUCKS HAUL SLAB\nFROM CANAL FLATS\nFOR  FUEL RESERVE\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Nov. 1 -\nNearly 100 trucks are now hauling\nslabs from the Canal Flats sban-\ndoned mill-sites to railhead, E. W.\nBourque, Regional Wood Fuel Controller, reported sfter s trip to the\nEast   Kootenay  operation.\nPresent hauling contract, held by\nHarwell Construction Company, is\n50,000 cords, snd Mr, Bourque expects that it will be completed by\nthe end of February.\nThe wood Is for Prairie and B, C\nmunicipal reserves\nWASHINGTON, Nov.  1   fAP)\n, The Navy announced tonight  that   fixed at $100 per year. In most cases\n\"leveraf\"   United   States   warships   this sum is sufficient to meet, at the\nwere damaged in the Battle of the\" Banff  School, expenses  of  tuition,\nPhilippines in which more than 02   supplies, bperd, lodging, and trans- j \"u\nT -.,'    ...,.1,    \u201e_   A  ______ \\  Wo\nJapanese ships were sunk or dsm-\nsged.\nThe ships listed si damaged were\nportation.\nA candidate to be\nHeavy Bombers\nStrike Vienna\nLONDON,  Nv.   1   (CP).\u2014Britain\nbased United States heavy bombers\nattacked German synthetic oil plants\nat Gelsenkirchen and railway targets at Hamm and Cobleni today\nwhile other heavy bombers from\nItaly struck military objectives in\nthe Vienna area.\nThe daylight assault on German\noil and railways, top targets for the\nAllied air forces during October,\nfollowed another major pounding of\nCologne both by British Mosquitos\nand a force of more than 500 R.A.F.\nheavy bombers.\nThe 300 United Statei heavy\nbombers and 200 fighter escorts frojn\nEngland shot down three ME-262\nJet-propelled planes thit tried to\nwhip Into the bomber formations.\nOne fighter was lost, all the\nbombers returned safely.\nThe R.A.F. also was busy with a\nseries of strikes at a variety of targets, including two raids on the bat-\nVred city of Cologne.\nDuring October Allied bombers\nand fighters made more than 60,000\nflights, at a cost of approximately\n400 Allied planes, Cologne, in the\nNorthern lector of the Siegfried\nwas bombed 18 times, lending\nHere Is Your\nFur Coat\nWith Cold Weather Ahead, It\nWill Be Wise for You to Be Prepared by Investing in a Warm\nFur Coat Now!\n<* French Seal\n(DYED RABBIT)\n(A\nConey\n(DYED RABBIT)\nOpossum\n(GRAY)\nWallaby-\nPersian Lamb\nSIZES 16 TO 20.\n$110.\u00b0\u00b0 to S350.00\nFink's Ready* to * Wear\nigible\nust   weight to a terse statement today by\n1. Possess creative ability in art,\nnot identified by name or type nor   music, dramatics or writing\nwas the extent of the damage dli\nclosed. \u25a0\nPreviously lt hsd been innounced that in the battle Oct. 22-27 six\nAmerican warships were lost. They\nwere  the  aircraft carriers  Prince\nton, two eicort aircraft carriers, two   cation;\n2. In the Judgment of the Trustees, have applied his ability by\nmaking in outstanding contribution\nto school activities;\n3 Re a student enrolled In the Kimberley schools at the time of applt-\nthe Air Ministry that \"the aim of\nthe strategic offensive is to make\nCologne more of a liability than an\nasset.\"\nYou Women Who Suffer From\nHOT FLASHES then\nCHILLY FEELINGS\n.     During 38 to 52 Years\n^ of Age!\nIf jwii-likp so many wornm between the un of 38 and 52-\neufTrr from not flashes, weak,\ntired, nervous irritable feelings,\nare a bit blue at times-all due to\nthe functional middle age period\npeculiar to women-try Lydla K.\nPinkham's Vegetable Compound\nto relieve such symptoms.\nPinkham's Compound la one\nof the best known medicines you\ncan buy for this purpose. Here's\na product that helps nature and\n4 Have passed his sixteenth birthday st the time the scholarship is\nawarded\nThe lelection for any year will\nnormally be made in June of that\nlame year. Each candidate is required to make an application to the\nDamn Robert Silvercruys, BclRlan | Secretary of the Board of Trustees\nof the  Kimberley  PTA.  Fine  Arts\ndestroyers and a destroyer eicort\nBaron Silvercruys\nin Brussels\nBRUSSELS, Nov, 1  'CP Cnble>-\nFlushing Almost\nin Allied Hands\nNEW YORK, Nov. 1\u2014An NBC\nbroadcast from Holland tonight\nuid the \"town of Flushing Is almost entirely In our hands.\"\nTha German garrlion opposing\nBritish assault forcei of the lit\nCanadian Army had been estimated at about 600.\nReport Romania\nGov't Resigns\nLONDON, Nov. 1 (AP) \u2014 The\nRome radio reported today that the\nRomanian cabinet had resigned.\nThe broadcast, heard by the Associated Press, gave no details but\n! said King Michael had accepted the\nI resignations.\n| Earlier, the Moscow radio said\n, demonstrators in Bucharest de-\ni manded replacement of the govern-\n| ment of Gen. Constantin Sanatescu\ni by a \"national democratic front\" re-\nl gime.\nOne Out of 40\nNewsprint Rolls\nFrom Powell River\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 1 (CP). -\n! More than one of every 40 rolls of\n' newsprint used throughout the\n\u25a0 world is manufactured at Powell\nj River, Harold S. Eoley, Preslrin t of\nj the Powell River Company, said in\n| an address to the Board of Trade to-\ni day\nV-Loan Holiday Drive Brings\n$30,450; Blues Hold Lead\nBlue Group\t\nRed Group    _..._.\nWhite Group \t\nTotal\nt 38,300\n_.    $ 28,750\n$ 13,15.\nS 78,200\nQuota   \t\n....   $325,000\nAmbuudor to Canada, here fur dia\ncm*,:ona with hla government, told\nI pre*.\" conference today \"Belgian\npeople here and ln Canada realize fully how much we owe Canada\nand the Canadian forcei for the\nmiraculoua liberation of our homeland\"\nB.irnn Silverrruyl, who fnr seven\nyears was Belgian Minister in Ottawa before hemming ambataador\nlait January, returned to his h'Hne-\nland fnr the first time Ilnce UM\nafter vUitlng I\/mdon where ha had\nan audience with the King\nScholarship not later than May 31\n.     ,.   , , . .    , \u25a0 b-v tht crL'w ot s Royal  Canadian\nIn order that a complete record of: Air  For\u201e  .__.h  ^ Np\nPILOT KILLED\nAT WHITE ROCK\nWHITE ROCK, B C, Nov. 1 -\n(CP.-The pilot of a Klttvhawk\nfighter plane waa killed when his\ncraft plunged into the aea today\nWest of White Rock pier.\nThe plane jtruck about thre..\nquarters of a mile from ahore and I \"m, To\\.y pointed out that Can\nexploded under water, eyewitnes.- | ,da now leod, tht world in this\nes said Body of the pilot waa re-; \u201e,,d 0f the total national produc-\ncovered a ahort time after the crash ;tkm'lhl, province aupplled  14 per\nHOSMER\nthat'i a awijlble kind to buy I\nThousand! upon thouaandu\nhave reported benefit*. Follow\nlabel direction*. Plnkhani'i Compound la worth trying.\nLydia E. Pinkham's VEGETABLE COMPOUND\nRe-\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR  VANCOUVER  HOMI\"\nDu\u00a3ferin Hotel\nSeymour 6t Vincouver, B. C\nNawly  runovnt-jrl   throughout   Phonn   ind   \u2022levator.\nA     PATTFRSON.    latt   of\nColrmnn.   Alta ,   I'rnprlftnr\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger and Freight\nJ! _-\u2014\t\nConcede Re-Election\nEdmonton Mayor\nEDMONTON, Nov. 1 KT> -\nelection nf Mayor John Fry wai\nronrr.lrd tonight ihortly ift\u00abr clow\nof thr civic tlectlon polli With 11\nof 40 pnlli heard from. Fry'i vot\u00ab\nwai 4,12!. agalnit 1,304 fnr M-yeir-\nold Rice Shej'pard in the two-man\nr ac\u00ab.\nTemperatures\nWhile intermittent rain fell at Nrl-\nlon during the 34 houri ending\nWrdneiday at ? pin, amounting In\nall tn .17 Inch, th* temperature nnge\nwai even more mtrlrUd than Tuei-\ndiy'i, bring 7 fl degrete. compared\nwith Tunday'i rmga of Juit tight\ndearer! Wrdneiday i rt.rrmei wert\n4.1 ft tnd 317 drgrrn Tie \u00bbwo-day\nrainfall amounlrd 'to   31   Inch.\nhla accomplishment, may be on file : have   \u201e-.\u201e   _..\u201e,-,,   and   hj\neach   candidate  ll  urged   to   make   will  be released shortly\nprrlimir.ary   application  at  the  age] .\nof 14, and igaln at 15. ApplicaUgng\nmust be made on forms obtainable\n\u25a0 t thr office nf the School Board ln\nthe High School. Siiace on the form\nIs provided fnr thr iij{naturei of\nteachers willing ar.d able to certify itaten.enta made by the candidate Fach candidit** must br prepared tn produce example! nf or\nf'.emnnitratr his ability If sn rr-\nqueited by the Trustees No change\nin tr.y of their condltloni may br\nnu-le without the sanction of thr\nKlmberley PTA.\nA report on the tjuestlonalre, re-\ngirdlr.f the cafeteria in vice at thr\nichooli wai given by Mr* Ad'.ard,\nthe reiult* were disappointing ns. lr,\nof-kln\nname\nBC-Mr   and  Mr*-..  i*n\nhavt left  for  Kdmnnton\nret   before   moving   o_\nth\"\nHOflMEH.\nMcconichlr\n!o   vlalt   i-rle'\nrheir new home.\nMIm   Eileen   Ruaaell   attended\nTeachera Convention In  PVrnle\nMm P C. Wildman ej^nt Friday at\nMichel\nA]*-* fit Denla hu returned from\nWaUon l*kn where \\\\e spent the sum-\nn.T\nJ   Paakevtteh  \u00bb1*1 ted  Michel\nMr\u00ab M ft-Wfhuck hns dlspoted of\nh*T property to J   Allasln of Klmhrr-\n>y\nMr    and   Mra   Alex   Rt    Denle  have\nFerule Ui upend <he Winter.\n..nt of the pulp and 7 per cent of\nthe paper.\nThe Industry not only hai the\nhighest Investment of all British\nColumbia's Industries but it also has\nthe highest investment per employee, something over $16,000, Mr,\nFoley laid.\ni      Mr   ond  Mr\nI nl\u00ab\u00bb vlaltori\nMlaa   Mary   Dominie   1\nRot Dla-m were frr-\nFrneit  Tallrv\nNov   1  fAP)\nf Tallryvlllr, IVI, \\\nNelson - Trail\nRossland Freight\nJ. C. MUIR\nPhonei: Nelion 77; Roaaland 2UL; Trail 1180\nSALMO\nConnection! For:\nKASLO   -   CRISTON\n_   NAKUSP\nal\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\nx PIUS\nv,       Mm* i*\n'*), llnin''  '        a       ,1\nnrdcr to operate efficiently, there\nmust be an enrollment of 100. Only!\n40 rrpliei to date itated their wtll-\nIngneai   to  avail  thrmielvei  nf  the    ____\nCafeteria lervice i\"D^,, C __\u00bb.\"   f~\\    __\nA  \"Bring and Buy- Rale of .ur- |     b\u00b0Y OCOUtS      Out\npnae   packagn   netted   tht   mm   of   Qp   Hallowe'en\nU-rn-t Olennlt and Betty Curran I    WILMINGTON. Del\niddreeied the meeting on the activities of the itudenti, aged from\n13 tn 18 ln thetr endeavori to e*-\nUhllah a 'Teen-Town\" Club Theee\nrluhf have mrt with great auccesi\nin other rentrei, ar.d thry outlined\nlhe advantages of ha\\ ing iuch a cluh\nn.aHiihed in Klmberley 'Hie\nP T A promlied their whole hearted\nlupport\nRefreshment! were itrvrd at the\nroncluilnn of thr mretlng In the\nHome Economic! Room\nvliltlng   In\n8 Million Pounds\nof Food for Belgium\nBRUSSELS, Nov. 1 (APi-The\nfirtt conilgnment of more than\n8,000,000 poundi of food which the\nAllied armlet are to Qlve Belgium between now and Nov. ?0\nwill be delivered to the Belgian\ngovernment   Friday.\nWater Level\nThere was a drop of 0* foot !n the\ncontrolled level of the Writ Arm at\nNrlson during the 24 hours endn C\nRt 1 p.m., when the water it nod\nat 5 fi2 feet above the low water\nmnrk or zero.\nIn not too pleasant weather, memben of Servict Clubi were out In\nforce early ln Nelion'i V-Loan civic\nholiday. Although not complete,\ntheir reporti showed (30,430 in application! latt Wtdnesday night\nCanvasseri of the Red, White and\nBlue division! reported that citizens gave them a good reception\nwhen they called. Most had given\nthe matter of lubscribing for the\nVictory Loan thought, and were\nready for the salesmen.\nThe Incomplete return! reaching\nheadquarter! War Finance Committee Indicated that subscription!\nwere not quite as high as those obtained on the holiday last Spring.\nHowever, it was hoped that further\nreturns would improve the picture.\nIt was found that time did not permit full coverage of all territory.\nMany homes may still expect i visit\nby a service club salesman. There\nare also some repeat calls to be\nmade. From these it is hoped new\nor Increased subscriptions will\ncome.\nIn the selling competition standing, Blues were still leading, while\nthe Reds were pulling up in\nall-out effort to Rain the lead. The\nthird-place Whitei had. through\nthe holiday drive, doubled their\nprevious sales.\nRossland Social \u2666 \u2666 \u2666\nBy MRI F. Q. BRAY\nR068LAND. B_0., Not. 1\u2014 The\nFriendly Circle of St. Andrew'! United Church held 1U monthly meeting\nTueaday afternoon ln the Church annex. A short devotional tervlce was\nconducted then routine huilness deal:\nwith. A White Elephant exchange waa\nheld. Refreshment! were served by\nMrs. A. S. Jenaen, Mrs, George Jor-\ngenaon, Mra. W. BUhop and Mra. H\nDouglas. Mra. H. K. Johnston and Mra\nR. Ecclea were idsltora. othen in\nattendance were Mrs. T. R. Davie, Mri.\nR. Donaldson, Mra. S. Marun. Mr*\nT Kalhovd, Mre, Jorgenaon and Mis\nP. L. Swift.\nMri. Bud Pollock and daugh>n\nwere Nelson Tleltori. over the weekend.\nreturning home Tueaday.\nA quiet wedding was nolemnlaed in\nthe rectory of St. Augustine Churcn,\nBrandon, Oct. 35, when Father Trudn\nof Camp Bhllo united in marriage\nMiss Rita Fourt, eldest daughter cf\nMr, and Mrs. Thomai Fourt, R-om-\nland, and Pte. Stanley Wllion of the\nParatroopers, Ctitnp Shllo, youngest\naon of Mr. and Mrs Jack Wilson. Rosa-\nland. The bride v,a\u00bb uttlred ln a\nQueen's     blue     tw\"-piece     afteri^oo\n\u25a0 11 and accea-\nwore a cornage *>f\nI roars. MIas Rita\non waa the bndei-\nred afternoon drew\n:;r\u00bb Her oorsage wu\nmr Wilson, HC.A.F.\nit of the jfTonm, win\nir happy couple are\n\u25a0ineymoon at Roe**\ny    Are    visiting    the\nCanadians Back\n<ee  why  people  get  upiet! 1 Dcvvich  ViCOT\nullowe'en prsnks. \"\nfrock with blue\n\u2022orlea. She nls*.\nAmerican Beau:\nKeenan of Brain\nmaid and wore a\nwith navy acceaao\nof pink rosei. Art\nat Brandon, broth\nthe be_)t mno Tl\nupending their 1\nland, where thf\nparenta of both.\nWomen'a Hoapltal Auxiliary m\u00abt in\nmonthly er salon Monday evening lithe Solarium at Mater Mleertcordlae\nHoapltal, Mrs. J A.Butrher. President,\nln the chair Routine bualnearf wm\ndealt with. The final payment on the\noxygen unit fnr thr Incubator\nbong... by the Auxiliary was ordered\npaid. The Auxiliary i.eiid-M to buy a\nitreWhrr for thr Hospital slun \u2022\/,\nhold a telephone bridge this month,\nand a numnau\" S'lle rar;v m tha\ntwo affairs to go toward the purchas\ning of the stretcher. Mrs. H. L. Christian waa appointed convenor of the\nbridge. Those In attendance were Bister BeJnard, Sister Paachal. Mrs. J. A.\nButcher, Mrs H, L. Christian. Mrs\nE E. Topliff, Mrs, L. Niciolacm. Mrs\nJ. Corner, Mrs. P. Lalonds and M\nO. Mara.\nBt. Anne'i Red Cross knitting\ngroup of Stt.red Heart Church met \u00bbl\nthe home of Mrs. Ocno _*.anuaai Monday evening, Wool was distributed\namong the members to knit baby\nsweaters, bootees, etc., for tbe Red\nCross. The hosUss served dainty refreshments and waa assisted by Mr\nRichard Blythe. Those in attendance\nwere Mrs, J, D Mitchell, Mrs. J.\nPage, Mrs R. Blythe, Mrs W J. Turner, Mra. W Christian, Mrs. L. Brown\nand the hnate-a.\nEastern Firm Buys\nIsland Sawmill\nNANA^JO. Nov 1 (CP)\u2014 tssttrn\ntntpreits hive purchased the Frank\nBeban Lumber Company here Including sn electrically-driven uw-\nmill with > capacity ot 33.000 feet\ndaily and large timber atand\nll'ai k Jack Mountain and Valdez\nIsland.\nThe price wu not given but lt ll\nbelieved to be near the $500,000\nmark.\nlpawlrh,\nnf a  bn.k\nExpect Apple Crop\n16,487,400 Bushels\nOTTAWA. Nov I (CP) - Th.\nappla rmyn In Nova Ftrntta, Ontario and Britiih Columbia' are tt\nperted to total ia.4MT.000 Sinhell\nthla vear rnmpared with U,\u00abH.?nO\nIn 19*... an Incraaie of J flM.JOO\nI bnahali. tht Dominion II \"\u00ab\u00bbu ol\n| Statu'..c<   Uld   today   In\n'- -'\u25a0-\nHalloween pr.,,_.. ,   .\nU\u00abt nijht prank.tern carried a IPSWICH. Knfland, Nov 1 (CP\npile of Iorj . quarter of a mil. and ' Cahl-l-IUv Harold Green, vicar\n\"tacked Ihem neatly ln Talley'i ' of SI Nirhnla. Church\nfront yard Thev didn't know Ta]. found himself Ihe rrntie\nley had rui thr log) fnr firewood I controversy after h\u00ab responded to\nand Irf! them where thev fell be- an appeal for comfort for German\ncause he couldn't figure' out how prisoners of war In this country by\nto get  them  to  his  hnuse | sending a tin r\u00abf rat poison.\nThe vicar, who laid he sent the\npackage as a Joke, wai rebuked by\nthe bishop of Ipswich. Rt Rev\nRichard Hrnok\nIn   addition   to   letters   upholding\nMr   Oreen. the Ipiwlch vicar was\nvisited by a ilx-fnol Canadian lol-\ndler     representing    800    wounded\nmradel   In   a   military   hoipital\nNIGHT\nCOUGHS\n.. .cued without doalng whm you nib\nthroat, chcit and WICKS\nback wtth tltac-taud   Vl.ToJjl\ndot toaldi\nBiggest Penicillin\nFactory Producing\nI IVrRPOOL,    rngland. Nov     1\n(IT R.ut.rl     The   world's biggest\npenlnllln factory now Is In production   hire    So\nch   progreai   hai\nbeen made In thl building up of the   Tha Cinadian told Mr  Oreen: \"My\n13-arra f 1.000.000 fictory thit thi   cnmndei  paid  my  fin  ind   they |\nflnt d.pirtmenli are complete and   want m\u00bb to lay thit they ire be- '\na dn,en huge inrubitnri with hun-\u25a0 hind  you\" The unidentified Cani-\ndredi ol pinlrlllln-produclni trayi  dlan wu i priioner of tht Otrmani\nti  latcit I a\" turning out luppllei ol tht ntw  until tietd by Amtrlctn forcei \u00abnd ffl\nTHE  SUPERIOR\nBATHROOM\nTISSUE\nYour Crnccr hai\nIt now.\nSOVEREIGN\n To Use First In, First Out Basis,\nR.C.N. Volunteer\nto Fight Japs\nOTTAWA. Nov. 1 (CP).-The Canadian naval contingent that will\ngo to the Pacific will be raised on\na re-voluntary basis with a partial\ndemobilization after the defeat of\nGermany being made on a \"first-\nln, first-out,\" basis.\nThis was disclosed here today by\nCapt. H. McMaster, Naval Director\nof Personnel, as he outlined the\nnavy's plans.\nHere, briefly, is the picture:\n1. Full naval effort until the defeat of Qermany,\n2. When It has been ascertained\nwhat categories and what number! of personnel are required for\nthe war against Japan, the contingent will be selected from men\nwho re-volunteer,\n3. These men will enjoy a leave\nef unspecified length In Canada\nbefore going to the Pacific.\n4. Certain key men will be retained in the service \"regardless\nof their wishes.\"\n6. The remaining naval personnel will be released on i general\n\"flrst-ln flnt-out\" demobilization\nplan.\n6, There will apparently be no\nspecial campaign pay but a navy\nitatement points out that those\nwho serve In the Japanese campaign will through their additional\nIIIIIIIIINIlNIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllMNIIi\n\"BUILD B.C. PAYROLLS\"\nWE\nKNEW\nONLY\nPACIFIC\n\"Pacific Milk was the only milk\nwe knew as children. Mother\ntaught us all to cook, boys as\nwell as the girls, and of coifrse\nln everything where milk it\nused it was Pacific.\"\nThis lady writes more along\nthis line which space does not\nallow us to print\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated and Vacuum Packed\n11111 [ 1111111111111 (111111111111113 r 111111111111\n%m\nBLUE RIBBON\nTEA - CdunufA\nlength of service qualify for higher\nmusterlng-out benefits.\nThe R.C.A.F. which like the navy,\nis believed ready to use a third of\nits strength in the Pacific, has al\nready announced the re-voluntary\nplan and the partial demobilization\non a \"tirst-in, first-out,\" basis.\nThe army, said to be contemplating usini   a division h   the Pacific\nhas not yet announced its plans.\nLEAVE IN CANADA\nWith the navy planning to give\nits Pacific fighters a leave in Can\nada before they take up the war\nagainst Japan, it seems possible they\nwill enter the conflict across the\nNorth Pacific possibly to bases in\nthe Philippines rather than return\nacross the Atlantic and accompany\nBritish forces to Indian bases.\nThe statement said that during\nthe transition period following the\ndefeat of Germany it is expected \"to\nrelease some personnel for civil employment.\"\nAt the moment the navy is endeavoring to formulate a plan for\nthe interim release of personnel\nwhich will be fair to all and give\nrecognition to those who volunteered early in the war as opposed\nto those who were slower in coming forward.\nDetailed personnel requirements\nfor the war against Japan will be\nworked out. Announcement then\nwill be madt that personnel who\nrequest to do so will be considered\nfor service ln the Japanese campaign.\nHOPE ENOUGH WILL STAY\n\"ft is hoped that sufficient numbers with the required qualifications\nwill ask to stay in the service,\" said\nthe statement.\nIt will be made clear, however,\nthat the purpose of the announcement will be to ensure \"that the\nkeenest men are given an opportunity to serve.\"\n\"Where a man's services are required he may be retained regardless of his wishes.\"\nThe statement said that all persons who volunteered for the naval\nservice did so \"for the duration of\nhostilities which includes the war\nagainst Japan.\"\nWhen it had been ascertained\nwhat category and what numbers of\npersonnel were required \"the balance of the present navy who wish\nto fco and could be spared will be\ngiver a priority listing according to\ntheir length of active service. They\nthen will gradually be returned to\nclvU life.\"\nNaval headquarters said it was\nstressing the advantages which\nwould accrue to those who serve In\ntha Japanese campaign. In the first\nplaca, as the length of service increased so would their war gratuities, bonuses and rehabilitation\ngrants. Also those who are proceeding into the actual theatre of war\nin the Far East will be granted leave\nbefore they go.\n'Tt is hoped that the naval service plan when it is finally crystallized and put into practice will provide for smooth and equitable reallocation of peronnel, due consider-!\natlon being given to the Interest* of\nthe individual and of the nation as a\nwhole, both 'rom the military and\neconomic points of view,\" said the\nstatement.\nJaps Urge Chiang\nto Join\n''Kith and Kin\"\nNEW YORK, Nov. 1 (AP) - A\nJapanese broadcast beamed to\nChina lait night urged Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek to Join his\n\"kith and kin, the one billion peoples of Asia,\" In Japan's war against\nthe United States and Britain.\nThe broadcast, recorded by C.B.S.,\nfollowed announcement of Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell's recall from\nChina, and declared \"It might be\neasy to deal with Communists with\nJapanese aid.\"\n115,580 Planes\nBuilf in U.S.\nSince July 1910\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 1 (AP). -\nThe United States built 145,580 combat planes\u201474,953 bombers and 70,-\n627 fighters\u2014between July 1, 1940,\nand Sept. 30, 1944. lt was disclosed\ntoday by the War Production Board,\nIn addition to the bombers and\nfighters, the output included: Transports 17,592; naval reconnaissance\n2345; trainers 54,642; communications\n10,785, and special purpose 1459,\nmakinga total of 232,403.\nDevote Increasing\nAmount of Space\nto U.S. Campaign\nLONDON, Nov. 1 (AP).-With the\nAmerican presidential campaign\nnearing ita climax, British newspapers are devoting an increasing\namount of space to it, including\ndaily quotations on the betting odds\nas reported by their Washington and\nNew York correspondent*.\nWhile the Press refrains from editorial comment, British correspondents In America are not backward.\nOne of the most widely read, Don\nIddon, New York correspondent for\ntha Daily Mail, predicted that Mr,\nRoosevelt \"will win\u2014and win handsomely.\"\nC. V. R. Thompson of the Dally\nExpress, said tho campaign has been\nperhaps the bitterest since the Lincoln campaign in civil war days and\nthat \"it is quite remarkable, therefore, that %itain has been kept out\nof it.\"\nUndertake Large\nProgram to Assist\nT. B. Patients\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 1 fCP). -\nBritish Columbia may soon undertake a program to assist in the rehabilitation of tuberculosis patients,\nDr. W. H. Hatfield, Provincial Director, Division of Tuberculosis\nControl of the Provincial Board of\nHealth, announced yesterday at the\nannual meeting of the division.\nHe said that a committee will\nbe appointed \"almost immediately\" to elaborate on the following\nproposed program;\nEstablishing of a pension system.\nSubsidizing of established Industry to employ those handicapped.\nEstablishment of.state industries\nto employ only thoi_: handicapped,\nand enactment of legislation* un-\nder'whlch afflicted persons would\nbe given priority In certain fields\nof employment.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nB.C.S ROIL\nOF HONOR\nlillllllliillli        \u25a0iitiiiiiiinr\nCANADIAN   ARMY\nOFFICER*\nSeverely wounded\u2014\nClerk-ion, Charlei Harold, Capt.,\nVancouver, B.C.\nWounded\u2014\nValentine, William, H.-Capt, Vancouver, B.C.\nWARRANT  OFFICER*,   N.C.O.'*\nAND  MEN:\nKilled In action-\nHives.  Christopher George. Tpr\nVictoria, B.C.\nDied of wound*\u2014\nSmith, Albert Edward Jackson,\nPte., Comox, B.C.\nSeriously wounded\u2014\nMacKay,   Norman,  Pte,\nLanding, B C.\nGibson's\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIMMMIIIIMIII\nl\u00bbW*_E\u00a7\u00a5 mm VICTORY\nBUY VICTORY BONDS\nTHE NEED IS GREATER\nTor total victory he fights a total war For nothing lew well he\nlay down his arms. For your sake hp's willing to gamble on coming through alive. Whether he does or not is decidedly your\naffair .\nThe Imminence of victory has climaxed the responsibilities\nof the home, front. Canada's borrowing npeds today are greater,\nnut less To see the uniformed service* gel all they nerd to win\nwith minimum low is still our biggest Job\nNOW is the hour to buy Victory Bonds\u2014one more than be-\nSeverely wounded\u2014\nLavineway, Bernard Gordon, Pte ,\nK51974, William E. Lavineway father), Box 912, Kelowna, B.C.\nPreviously rsportsd missing now reported safe and wounded\u2014\nShelford, Hugh Morton. L -Bdr.,\nWistaria, B.C.\nWounded\u2014\nChristison, Harold Jamei, Rfn.,\nVancouver, BC\nI-eClair,. Roy Alexander, Pte,\nVancouver, B C,\nMcEachern, Punnett John, Cpl,\nVancouver. B.C.\nMoody, Donald, Pta , Lowar Capi-\nlano, B.C.\nWilliams, Thomas Luke, Pta , Vancouver, B.C.\nSlightly wounded\u2014\nAndersen, Carl Marius, Cpl, Vancouver, B.C.\nJohannson, John, Cpl.. Vancouver. BC\nMcWilliami, Douglas Arthur. Pta.,\nVancouver, B C.\nReminom, Gerhard, Pte, New\nWestminster. B.C.\nAsk. Julian Mervln, Pte, Peachland, R C\nStuart. John James, Gnr, Penticton, BC.\nR.C.A.F.:\nMining   on   active   icrvice   sfter  sir\noperations\u2014\nHurtubise, Paul Emile. PO., Dawson Creek, R C\ni ITI\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 2, 1944 \u2014 t\nCHESTERFIELD SUITES\nJust Arrived! Hardwood Frames, Kiln Dried, Non-Marking, Thoroughly Braced, Dowelled,\nGlued, and Corner Blocked for Strength. Clean New Fillings. Full Spring Construction.\n3 Piece Suites\nThis fine Suite comes in a\nFrench Tapestry in Rose with\none Blue Chair in same design.\nHard wearing and good looking. Full spring construction\nand showwood arm trims.\nSUITE  \t\n3-piece Suite in up-to-the-mo-\nment Striped Velour in a rich\nshade of green*. Showwood\ntrims and smart, modern design. Priced right at, Suite\t\n$\n$\n159\n195\n1 Only Chesterfield\nIn fine Velour.    Can be converted into double bed.\nHas the appearance and design of a high class\nChesterfield. Nine only. Reg. price $98.       $\u25a0\nSpecially Priced at\t\n75\nSpecial Clearance of\nStudio Lounges\n5 only, well made lounges in Blue or Wine Tapestry. Back rest and three loose cushions. Is\nconverted into a comfortable double bed by\npulling out spring in base and using loose pad.\nRegular price $89.50.\nSpecial\nPrice ...\n$59.00\n.3\n_..\nI:\nNew Hassocks\nBeautiful combination! in round and square designs.\nThese makt ideal gifts for the coming season.\nRound Style, each \u00abJ>_t. \/ J\nSquare shape, piped seams, each *ty I \u2022 I m*\nExtra large Square shape, each   *\u00a5*******\nBetta Hassocks    \u00abJ>\/.bO 4>l_^.Vj\nPin - Up Lamp\nWalnut\nBedroom Suites\n3 new styles in these popular lights. Hang\nin your living room, dining room, bedroom\nor wherever you need additional lighting\nCrystal or Metal bases.\nEach   ..\n$2.95\nCairo\nTufted Rugs\nA superior grade of tufted rug  in two sizes     Soft\nshades of Rose or Green in a leaf design, \u25a0\n3  only,   Modern  Suites   in   rich  Walnut  Veneers.\nWaterfall design; large plate glass mirrors.    These\nsuites consist of Vanity and Bench, Tall Chiffonier,\nDouble Bed.    Reg   Price $119.\nSpecially Priced, Suite .  ,\nSize 6'i\n9', each      Size   8'6\"  x   10'6\",  each\n$49.50        $79.50\n$98-oo\nSTORi HOURSt\nMon-TuM -T-iiiri -Tri.\n2 s m -S p m.\nWedneiday: S a in -12 nnnn\nSaturday:  -  a m -R p m\nINCORPORATED   21.?  MAY 1670.\nPHONES:\nReady-to-Wear\nHosiery     \t\nDrygoodl   \t\n(IrorerU*    \u2014\n49\n33\ntt\nIM\nMen'i Wear  -.- .'...   \u00bb\nlore!\nInvest in Victory\nBUY VICTORY BONDS\nSponsored by\nStar Grocery\nllUlilllUUIIIHIllMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIII\nFiery, Itching Skin\nGets Quick Relief\nHere i\u00bb t clean atalnles* penetration\nantiieptle oil thtt will bring you\n\u25a0peedy relief from the Itching nnr.\ndlftraM of Er7\u00abTT.i, lU-hlng Ti***.* ami\nFeet. FUahM and ikin trouble\nNot only (1o#\u00ab till* healing antie\u00abp-\nflr oil prom nt* rwlil tnd health v\nhealing In open ttoree and wound*\nhut holla and simple ill-art-, tre **\u25a0_>)\nquickly relieved In *kln affertiona\nthe Itching ot frrrmn ta quickly itop-\np-*\u00bbr1, the pniptloni dry up nnd wslr\noft In a rery tea day* The ternt ie\ntrtii- <>f Barber* Itch. Halt Rheum and\nnther akin eruptions\nVou ran obtain M-\u00bb<ue - Fmerii-i\n(\u00bbi| at Mann Rutherford i\" or any\nmodern drug store.\nEdmonton Pilot\nDowns 15\nSince D-Day\nWITH THE RCAF IN Et'R-\nOPE, Nov    1   iCT Cable' Fit -l,t\nDon lj.ubn.--n, young Edmrfnton\nSpitfire pilot, became thf highest\nscoring fighter It CAT pilot tn\noperationi since IM)nv with thr\nannouncement today that he downed two rw-190'g during one rrcenl\nlortle over  Holland.\nThe double kill, made during Ihr\nconcluding mrtlf of hi* operational\ntour, railed hli frnre to IS enemy\nplanei destroyed, and three damaged ilnce June fl, when the Invaiion of Western France began\nLaubman. recently awarded a bar\nto hla HFC, made hi* latest score*\nnear Coei Fid In Holland when he\nr baaed two enemy nlrrraft after\nleading hi* flight in an attack on\na railwav vard The ftrat fitmmc.\nHashed and Hie ie*-,,,.d al\u00ab*i rraih-\ned, aft*! the pilot Jumped out.\nWirei of R.A.F.\nOfficers Return\nHome to Britain\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 1 fCPl - A\ngroup nf wivei nf RAF. nfficeri\nwho have been living in Canada\nfnr the past two nr three year* pns-\n<ed through Winnipeg !\u00bb\u25a0* night\nnn their way home tn Pritaln Moat\nof the wlvr* have been living In\nMedirlnr Hal, Alta, and all had\nnothing but praise for the hospitality thry had received  In Canada\n\"Morf than anything elie,\" Mra\nKathleen Moren said, \"I think we\nare going tn mlaa the freedom of\nIhe great open spare* of Canada,\nand the good friend* we have made\nhere '*\nMr* Fve Wmahlp aaid ahe would\nmu* the hrlgM light* Her hnme\nI* In the Industrial Midlands where\nthe factories bring nothing but\nimoke \"I'm all for1 coming back\nw*r\u00bb j)* mon nt the war 1* over,\"\n\u00abhe tmrrn. ->(l that'i probably be-\n1 cauM 1 wa\u00ab born In Hamilton, Ont,\n| and   lived  kl  Canada  until   I was\nTrail Man to\nAttend\nDruggist Meeting\nVANCOUVER. Nov. I <CP>. -\nCouncil of the British Columbia\nPharmaceutical Aaaocietlon will\nhold Ita annual meeting at Courtenay Nov H-lfi, official!, announced\ntoday. R. C. l-flng of Courtenay\nPresident of the Association, will\noccupy the chair. Those attending\nInclude: E. W Hartlwood, Trail; W\nA McGill. Kelowna; J S Spurr,\nNanaimo; J. W. Croobi, J P Kennedy. F T B Whaley. F H Fuller\nton and Miai Verna Envea, all of\nVancouv\u00abr.\nFive Killed in\nPlane Crash\nWINNIPEG,  Nov _\nFour men in ont plan* and on\u00ab of\niur In the other were killed.\n(CPi.-Fivt;\nWeather Forecast\nKootenay; Light wlnda, cloudy to\nnvfrfiit with fewer ihower-*. Thuri-\nii;iv and slightly lower temperature\nl.ighl frusta early Thursday morning,\ntxcept modtraU Eut Kootenay.\nKilled in the first plane were Sgt.\nR. fox, I-lnydrninstrr, Sask , Lac. G.\nHont, Rosthern, Sask. Lac. H. Loe-\nirmen wert killed last Monday j wen. Rokeby. Sask, and Luc, L. C.\nwhen two training planes crashed on Jamionn of Crestwynd. Sask.\na landing itrip at No. 7, Bombing Killed in the second was Lac S\nand Gunnery School iRC.AFi at H Ling, Sardis, BC Other occu-\nDafoe, Sask, RCAF officials an- pants of ihr plane were slightly innounced here today jured\nDoes Your Stomach Rebel\nAfter the Meals You Eat?\nTh* bloated, hem-ry testing after memle; t_t>\u00ab amply.\nmilking, gnawing Mors me-ala; the Mrhinx of gu_ and\nlUtuIiMiflV between mr*!*; the riamg vul \"Miring nf\nfood, all l he-ae, and mora, fall to the lot of thorn miflerinn\nfrom ftnoiach trout.|-\\\nHurilix-k Blood Hilton he\\\\m to atimulate the alu\u00abiah action ol Um\nrtinfti-ra and Intwriinal ayatem by promoting tha flow of the important *****<<\njuicM an nerewary for the proper .ligtwtion of fcx-H.\nVou will find when you take R. It. H. that, digi-etion. unmllatioa mA\nelimination are greatly improve-.! by ita um1\nAak at any drug counter fori! H H.    IW $1.(10 a hottk\nTU T. Mill.win Co . UmiU-4. T\u00ab\u00ab<*<ilo. Ont\nt\n \u25a0--__.._________________-___________________-_.\n\u2014___\u2014-___\u2014______,\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 2, 1914\nLate Marriages...\nGirl of 28\nIsn't an\n\"Old Maid\"\nDear Miss Fairfax:\nI'm 28 years old and have been\ngoing with a man of 35 who loves\nme, but I'm not sure of myself. We\nplan to be married shortly. He's\neverything that any girl would\nwrit, and I know he could give me\na good home. Our tastes are about\nth\"* same.\nI've accepted him because Pm\nafraid If I don't marry him I'll\nnever have another chance. Mother\ntells me that most marriages are\nlike that\u2014one partner always loves\nmore than the other. Since I've\nmet him I've had no more lonesome evenings, as he is always on\nhand to take me wherever I want\nto go,\nDo you suppose I can be happy,\neven though not deeply In love? I\ndo have some affection for him, and\nwould not want to hurt him; he's\nao fine.\n-T.\nYour mother is probably thinking\nof that old adage concerning marriage\u2014one loves, the other submits\nto being loved.   Many women have\ngone Into a lukewarm arrangement such as you propose and have\nlearned to love devotedly the man\nthey accepted in this fashion.\nLikewise, the reverse ls equally\ntrue. After they have entered Into\none of these half-hearted arrangements, the man of their dreams has\ncome along with devastating effects\nto everyone concerned. All said\nand done, there are some questions\nIn life every individual must decide for himself. At 28. these days,\na girl Is not supposed to be placed\non the old-maid ihelf for keeps.\nKaslo W. I. Buys\n$100 Victory Bond\nKASI.O, B.C.-The Kaslo Women's Institute met Friday afternoon\nat the home of Mrs. A. F. Stephen-\nBon, with 19 merftbers present. Mrs.\nStephenson was th the chair. The\nSecretary-Treasurer reported having $163.29 balance in bank and $100\nVictory Bond had been purchased.\nA letter \u00abnt to Mrs. Whlttaker, received from Dame Fellowes, a member of the W. I. at Kings Lynn,\nSandringham, Eng., the branch\nwhich Queen Elizabeth Is associated\nwith, was read to the members.\nMrs. F. Spiers, for the Quilt Committee, reported having four completed quilts on hand, Mrs. Fred\nSpiers offered to take over the work\nof the Secretary-Treasurer during\nher absence. Mrs. E. Singel and Mrs,\nC. Llnd assisted serving refreshments.\nEverything\nyou expect\nfromafine\ncup of tea...\n\u2022 Deep hearty flavor\n\u2022 Fragrant bouquet\n\u2022 Utmost enjoyment\nIn Canterbury you get traditionally fine tea, full of the\ndeep rich flavor and full-\nbodied gotulness you like\nbest Nona better. Every\nfresh young Iff f picked ia\nita prime. Every steaming\ncupful certain to Mtiify. Try\nCanterbury soon... one tee\nthai gives you everything!\nfeatured at SAFEWAY STORES, LTD.\nUa bagi\nWartime...\nWhaKauses\nFatigue!\nBy  LOQAN CLINDCNINO, M. D.\nIf th. rest of tb. world ti (ltlf u\nfatigued m 1 um and I Item TO IM\nevidences that it ii, lt ls fatigued\nindeed. Why shouldn't lt \"be? Th.\nwar has been io arranged tt)\u00abt lt\nwould tlr. anybody out I seem to\nsee evidences of It all (bout me \u2014\nIn the new books, In tb. pronounce,\nments of statesmen, in schemes for\nworld planning. I suggest from the\nviewpoint ot a physician, that after\nthe war ls definitely over we all\nhave a period of rest uid recuperation and try to renew the springs\nand wells ol the spirit.\nFatigue li the commonest of the\nsymptoms of which th. human race\ncomplains. And ln spit, of that we\ndoctors are quite at a loss to explain what causes it. It it not always due to excessive or extr. exer-\ntion. T)iat kind of fatigue ll .My to\nunderstand and to r\u00abm\u00ab4y. But we\nall know ths person who ll tired all\nthe tim. ind never doa \u00bbny work.\nAnxiety Is a cause of fatigue even\nIf lt is not sccompanled by any particularly Unusual aotlvlty.\nThe simplest fatigue itates gives\nus a clue to the cause of some of\nthe more complicated ones. Brought\nto the lowest common denominator\nthe body gets tired when it performs\nmuscular exertion over a certain\nperiod of tine. This certain period\nvaries with the individual. The feel.\ning' of fatigue is in this simplest\nform located in the rnuscles and we\nmay assume that it ls due to lack of\nfood. Or rsther to having all the\navailable food used up.\nWe know the energy giving foods\n\u2014the sugars and starches \u2014 are\nburned in the body by insulin secreted by the pancreas. Perhaps the\nneurasthenics vary from other people in the habit of secreting more insulin than normals, and rence us.\ning up their available food energy\nquicker.\nFor these persons it ls suggested\nthat a diet high in cereals, bread,\nfruits, vegetables, desserts, and\nstarch and sugar containing beverages-milk and soft drinks\u2014 would\nbe the proper one.\nWARWICK, England (CP) ~^7t\nis an extraordinary thing that a\nwomen's crowning glory ihould\nhave become a louse,\" members of\nthe Warwickshire Education Committee were told by an alderman\nwho said that in order to preserve\nartificial styles of hairdresstng some\nwomen and girls don't wash their\nheads for weeks on end. It was stated that in some Warwickshire\nschools every other child has a\nlousy head.\niriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiP\"\"\"niiniiiiniiiiiiiiiinniiimniMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiinw\n\u2022 Canada's daring paratroopers take\ndesperate chances in carrying out\ntheir war duties. You take no\nchances in investing in Canada's\n7th Victory Loan. It is backed by\nall Canada. Buy Victory Bonds to\nthe limit.\n\/ \\\nWe'll Lend Money\nIf yuu need money to buy Victory\nBunds the Hank will lend it to you\non ej.iy repayment terms. The\nintereit on the loan for six monthi\nwould lie the same as that payable\non the Bonds. Vou can, therefore,\nhorrow**the required funds without\nexpense.\nll is tint necessary tn sell Victory Bonds\nto obtain money for temporary rtauir*-\nmints. The Bank will riadily accept\nVictory Band, at security jor loam ai\nhu irtterert r.itrs.\n\/\nTHE CANADIAN BANK\nOF COMMERCE\ni\u00a3L\n3UB.fi\ndUnhfoh\ntrHouAmvivRA\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nllllllllllllinillllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllMlllllHIIIIIMIlillllllllllNIIIIIMIMIII\nTODAY'* MENU\nFrankfurters In Blanket!\nPotato Chips\n{law Carrot. Strips, Celery, Pickles\nSuccotash\nPumpkin or Squaih PI.\nCoffee\nFRANKFURTERS   IN   BLANKET8\n6 Frankfurters\nStandard recipe baking powder\nbiscuits.\nRoll out dough ibout V* Inch thick\nand cut ln 4-inch iquarei. Place a\nfrankfurter on 'each square and\nwrap dough around the frankfurter, moistening and pinching edges\nof dough together. Bake rolls ln a\nmod.rately hot oven (425 degrees\nF.) 15 minutes or until done. They\nmiy bi itrved with whit, sauce to\nwnld) . little prepared mustard his\nbeen \u00abdd.d or plain. Serves 4.\nPUMPKIN OR 8QUA8H PIE\nIV, cups strained squash or pumpkin\n1 cup boiling milk\nVi cup sugar\n1 teaspoon salt\n1 teaspoon cinlimon\n1 egg, slightly beaten\nPour boiling milk over squash or\npumpkin before adding sugar, add\nsugar and other ingredients and mix\nwell, pour Into unbaked pie crust\nand bake at 400 degrees F., for 10\nminutes, then lower heat to 350 degrees, and bake until custard is set\nand crust well done, about 45 or 50\nminutes.\nPUMPKIN PIE\nV, Can or IVi cups strained pumpkin\nVi cup sugar\n1 teaspoon salt\n2 eggs\n1 tablespoon cornstarch\n. Vi teaspoon allspice\nVi teaspoon cloves\n1 tuspoon cinnamon\nVi cup milk\nBlend ingredients w.U together,\npour into unbaked pastry lined pie\ntin and bake at 400 degrees F., for\n10 minutes, then lower heat to .150\ndegrees F., and finish baking. It will\ntake from 45 to 60 minutes.\nFinicky Eater\nNeeds Attention\nBy GARRY C, MYIM, Ph.D.\n\"Dear Dr. Myeri: \u2014 Our boy U\nseven, an only child. Since he waa\na tiny baby, he hasn't eaten aa much\nai he should. (\n\"He cannot be persuaded to try\nanything new not even candy of\nwhich he ia not very fond of cookies\nor cake. He is not fond of desserts.\nI couldn't honestly say he really en-\nJoys eating anything unless it li\ngingerbread and waffles. I may\nhave unconsciously caused a good\nbit of trouble because I worried\nabout what he was going to eat\neven before he was born. I know\nthe fault is mine. I'm Just asking\nfor help ln determining what my\naction should be.\"\nYou don't need scolding but encouraging help. A wise principle ii\nto make no problem harder than it\nneeds to be. A better way is to present at the beginning of a meal one\nessential food in 4 very, very small\nportion, with the child's understanding that unless it is oaten\nhe will have no other food until\nthe nex.t regular meal.\nLet the youngster serve himself\nthis food, taking as little, as he likes,\njust so it is visible to you. Don't\npresent more than one such required food at any meal for some\nweeks. I doubt even whether you\nshould serve a food he dislikes for\ntwo meals in succession. Though\nyou will eventually require him to\neat a portion (no matter how small)\nof every food prepared for the family, be happy if you have attained\nthis goat after a year or so.\nSay nothing about his eating, tin\nno urging, make no reference to his\nbeing thin or to his poor appetite\nIn his presence. Steel yourself tn\nhave no feelings about his eating.\nOnce'you are completely under control, you should be able to smile\nnnd laugh at meals and engage thai\nlad in happy con vei sat inn. In Mich\nan atmosphere he should be able\n1 eventually to enjoy his food.\nGRAND FORKS\nGRAND FORKS, B.C. - Grand\nForks Gyros entertained at dinner\nat   the   Hotel   Province   Thursday\n, evening.  President Frank Nightingale   of   Gyro   International,   discussed   the   post-war   activities   of\nI Gyro Clubs. Mr. Nightingale comes\n[ from  Halifax and  is  on  a  tour  of\n; Western clubs. He is accompanied\nby  Mrs. Nightingale, who was entertained by the Gyrettes at a din-\n, ner the same evening at the Grand\n1 Forks Hotel and afterwards at the\nhome of President snd Mrs.  F.   W.\nEuerby, The visitors were motored\nU> Penticton on Friday by Mr, and\nMrs. Glen Manly.\nMr, and Mrs. F. Smith were here\nnn Sunday. Mr. Smith was returning from a trip to the Fraser Valley, where road engineers of the\nprovince were In conference for\nseveral days, He wai aci tmpai.ied\nby Road Supt. K Jamieion of H-w\nland, and Road Supt. J. H. McDonald of Grand Fmks hsd been with\nthom this far Road Supt John Tay*\nIfir of New Denver had also been\nwith the gmup.\nMr. and Mrs, W. S McPhenon\nhave been on a trip to Coast cities\nand were attending the golden wedding of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas K.\nNeedham at New* Westminster, Mrs\nNeedham and Mrs McPherson being sisters. Tho Needhams were\nniarried at Donald, and Mr. Needham wai a pioneer locomotive en-\ngineor in the Boundary diitrict,\n\"pulling\" the firit pnsionger train\ninto thr Boundary back in 189J and\nthe fust pasaenger train Into Phoenix mining camp In 1000. The Need-\nhams i\u00ab-sided in Grand Forks for\nmany years. Their son, Jamei, Is In\nthe lumber bui!ness at Shelton,\nWash., where (heir daughter, Mri\nEmma Jordan, alio resldei\nRandolph Davli !\u25a0 hire from\nVancouver, conferring with hli\nbrother, Archer Davis\nMr. and Mri Leonard Stephenaon\nhave gone to Vancouver to ipend\nstvsral monthi.\nAcl, Elner Skandi of the R C A T\nhaa been on a vlilt to his mother.\nMrs. J. Skandi it Christine Uke.\nHe ii taking training at St Thomai,\nOnt.\nRpr   Andy Pavlii hai been here\nfrom Wainwright visiting hu par- i\nant*.  He his four brothen  In  the\nservices.\nHOn. Grot* Stirling and Mrs Stirling of Kelowna were htn> for eev- i\neral days last we#k\nCopitible  Bart  Pelton  hu  gon# '\nto   Victorli,   whirr   he   ii   taking   a i\n\u25a0p-eHa! officer'\u00bb rnune\nMiss Jean Dinimore hai accepted !\na position on the staff nf the Bank\nof Commerce.\nDon't Starve ...\nEat Nutritious\nMeals and\nStill Lose Weight\nBY IDA JEAN K.YIN\nIt'i definitely a mistake to try to\nloae any conalderable amount ol\nweight by merely taking smaller\naervlnga ol everything. It's ao much\neasier to cut calorlea than to stint on\nthe amount of food and go hungry.\nSo, let's cut some calorlea . . \u25a0 moat\npeople like meat, fish and fowl, and\none or these fooda should he use J\nrtnlly to furnish protein which _s\nneeded at all tlmea for repair of body\ntissues. The calories can be cut to\nthe bone bv tiBlng only lean meat. Th<j\nway to make this surtUngly clear i.-,\nto compare a serving of lean with b\nnerving of fat and lean. An average\nserving of leim round beef, 3'A ounces,\ncontains 160 calories; the same serving of average fat round of beef contains 210 calorlea; and nn avoraye\nnerving of fat rump roset contains flOO\ncalories. A dieter's dinner can contain between' 600 and 000 calories\nand If all theae an ueed up In fat\nmeat, It won't be much of a dinner-\nOhoose lean meat like veal, lamb and\nlean beef, or meat* ln which the fat\ncornea all in one wedge so It can be\nremoved from the lean. Meat organs,\nliver, kidneys and sweetbreads, are\nexcellent, for their pioteln. Iron and\nvitamin value. Chicken and non-fa1\nfleh are fine. Meats should not be\nI fried.\nIn the reducer's  menu, no foods\nshould be Med. Take egfi . . . two,\nti.eu ni .. _a._. ... ,i \u25a0*___ ..-.iter couul\noJj ca-...-v., i\u00ab_ !>..-_____-\u25a0 or bolted\ncount Ijj tdjonea. iwu _>_.unu*ieu in\nUte top oi a double Duller wl _h a tablespoon of mill but no fat, would fur.\nii..- \u25a0 only .00 calur.es, but fried, U6Qt\nKate count 100 calories per level\ntaoiespoon.\nlhe lata left ln the menu can M\nIn the form ot cream and butter. ih<_n\ntney can De-light on the table where\nyou run see them, lt makes dlet.ua\neasier.\nA good reducing diet muat furnish\nevery_ning but caionea In abundance,\nbo nil the protective looda must be included ln the three meals, '4 or 3 vegetables. :>, fruits, always one ruin..\nthree thin slices of whole gram bread,\nsome butter, meat, flah or fowl two\nmilk. To halve the calorlea tn milk,\ndrink skim'milk or buttermilk, tiki in\nmilk has the same protective nutrients aa whole milk, with the exception of Vitamin A. But thla can be\nfurnished ln a Vitamin A concentrate\nwithout calories.\nThe idea Is to cut the unnecessary\ncalories so you can have a variety ol\nfood, and an abundance of all the\nnutrition essentials, except calories-\nstored fat ta excess calorlos, so to lo^e\npounda the calories must be below the\namount used, then fat ib reconverted\nInto energy.\nEUINBUOH (CP) - Prof. Arthur\nBerriedale Keith, 65, distinguished\nauthority on Empire constitutional\nproblems, died at his home here.\nProf. Keith's many publications\nranged over almost every aspect of\nthe Imperial constitution and with\nmany  international  problems.\nderlng even \\n lee water. AH itr\u00bb.\nviceniLii  will be lis ed with it In\ntime, but fur the present prlurlty Is\nbeing given to the 14th Army In\nBurma.\nNew Cream\nDeodorant\nSafely helps\nStop Perspiration\n1. Doei not rot dressei or men'i\nshut-. Does not irritate ikm.\n2. No waiting todiy. Can be used\ntight \u2022([\u00ab shaving.\n3. Prevents under-irm odor,\nhelpi itop peripirition itfely*\n4. A pure, white, antijeptic*\nstainless vanishing ucim.\n5. Awarded Approvil Seal of\nAiiiciKanliijututcofUundcr-\ning\u2014hirmleis tp fabric Use\nArrid rcguJarly.\nLONDON (CP) -- British manufacturers have produced a genera\nservice poap which servic.. tv \u2022< <\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nuse for washing, shaving and laun\nThere's a difference between commercial\nbaking and home baking...\nhome baking requires\na home-type flour!\nYou'll be thrilled with the finer results\nyou get with home-type\nKitchen Craft Flour\nYour hoh.e baking methods are very\ndifferent from commercial bakeshop\nmethods. That's why you use home-\ntype baking powder and shortening.\nFor the same reason you ueed\nKitchen Craft \u2014the new home-type\nflour. It's made especially for home\nbaking in 3 important ways;\nKitchen Craft li tight-bodied: Mixes\nsmoothly and quickly with other home-\ntype ingredients to give fine even texture\nIn all your home-baked foods.\nKitchen Craft li property milled; Retains\ndesirable moisture in your pastries,\ncakes and breads in spit. ->\/ the drier\nheat of home ovem.\nKitchen Craft li dependably uniform:\nAbsorbs the ssmf amount of wster each\ntime \u2014 so you ran always follow your\nrecipes to the letter.\nTry this new home-type flour nnd\nnotice the improvement it makes in\nnil your baking. Kitchen Craft Hear\nconies in several convenient sizes.\nITS TRUE!\nWITH HOME-TYPE\nKITCHEN CRAFT\nFLOUR MY BAKED\nFOODS ARE LI6HT\nAND DELICATE\nEVERY TIME\nYour choice of 2 finest-grade white flours\nBOTH made specially\nfor home baking\nBOTH made of top-\ngrade Canadian\nwheats\nBOTH guaranteed to\nplease you with better baking results\u2014\nor your money back\nat SAFEWAY\nSAFIWAY STORES WAITED\nBUY WAR SAVINGS\nSTAMPS AND\nCHTlFICATlt\n \u2014mmm.\n-~\u2014\nia?\nmtmttaataaataatatrrtatm\nFRESH ARRIVALS\nTODAY\n4 New Ones From\nSCOTT McHALE\nPriced from\n$9.50 to 512\nR. Andrew\n& Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nSAYS SOLDIERS AT\nFRONT AFTER FOUR\nMONTHS TRAINING\nEDMONTON, Nov. 1 (CP)-The\nEdmonton Journal aaid ln a news-\npage story today lt was learned here\nthat many Canadian soldiers are\ngoing into action after only four\nmonths' training.\" The paper said\n\"authority for the statement comes\nfrom an official of the National Defence Department, Ottawa.\"\nVictory Loan\nConcert Helps\nRossland Drive\nROSSLAND, B.C., Nov. 1.-There\nwai a large attendance Sunday evening at the concert sponsored by the\nVictory Loan Committee ln the\nCapitol Theatre. \"0 Canada,\" by the\nRossland City Band, opened the program.\nHoward Bayley, Chairman of the\nVictory Loan Committee, reported\nthe Victory Bond drive was progressing favorably and the figures\nposted in the Victory Loan window\nwere true figures. He hoped the\nsales of bonds would continue and\nthe quota be reached.\nMrs. R. Haggen presented the\nprize winners of the contests held\nthis last week. In the elementary\nschool Sharon Abbott won the prize\nfor making the most words out of\nthe slogan \"Invest in Victory Bonds.\"\nShe made 349. Charles Whitehorn\nwon the prize for the pupil in\nGrades 111 and IV who wrote the\nbest letter to his parents on \"Why\nBuy Victory Bonds,\" and Merle Gordon won for Grade V and VI sections.\nMrs. Haggen thanked the students\nwho participated in the contests, and\nthe teachers who helped.\nRev. H. K. Johnston compared life\nin a totalitarian country with one\nIn a free country. He lived in Manchuria from 1924 until Pearl Harbor, when he became a prisoner. He\nwas under constant police control.\nHe emphasized the need to \"buy\nbonds and prepare for peace.\"\nThe picture \"Attack\" was then\nshown on the screen.\n\"God Save the King\" closed the\nmeeting.\nCOOKING\nCALENDAR\nN\n0N10M SOUP\n(SERVES 8)\nltav <__- <.**** \"\n**\u25a0*\u25a0** ^wa_i\n,*\u25a0>*.*** be^***\"\norbuttt*\n5 tubVuvomsu** \u2022\u2022t-t)\nirapbo-B\"** *\u2022*\u25a0**\u25a0      \t\nFtaXlOXO\nStmtuxmstlt\ntf ttssttat peupu\nsresumZsu^rm*\nH mPtuAahvTttmrn\nturn* est** \u00ab***\u25a0**\u25a0*\ny^LTatUt \u25a0J\"***1' \"**1 **7\nnit an* trWTSf sat. \u2022_\u2014\u2022\ncamtuuattmm^am\nIt's made with\nNELSON SOCIAL N\u00bb\"**!\u00ab\u00ab- Win War Stomps,\n14th in B.C.; New Quota $500r000\nBy MRI. M. a. VlQNtUX\nChirgt tor Injtotmtnt Announotminti tn thli pigi ll It.SO\nZUBICK-RILEY \u2022\n\u2022 St Saviour's Pro Cathedral\nwu tbe scene of a pretty but quiet\nwedding Monday evening with Rev.\nJ. G. Holmes officiating, when Marjorle Joyce, only daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Riley, 934 Robson\nStreet became the bride of Stoker\nFirst Class George Roland Zubick,\nonly son of Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Zubick, Innes Street The bride chose\nan afternoon frock of pale blue\ngeorgette, blue gloves to match,\nwore a wreath of pink rose buda in\nher hair and a corsage of the tame\nflowers. Her bridesmaid, Miss Pat\nGlllott, wore, a beige silk Jersey\ndress and matching corsage and\nhead dress of bronze mum*. The\ngroom was supported by Stoker\nFirst Class Edward Hendricks. Mrt.\nRiley, the bride's mother, donned a\nbecoming medium blue ensemble\nand accessaries to match, while the\ngroom's mother chose turquoise\nblue with accessories en tone. The\ngifts to the bridesmaid and best\nman were a saphire and gold pendant and a leather wallet. An in\nformal reception for Immediate rel\natives was held at the home of the\nbride's parents. The three tiered\nwedding cake centred the tea table\nwhere Mrs. E. M. Glllott presided\nand Mrs. Frank Beresford, Jr., cut\nthe ices.\n\u2022 Miss Nina Patterson, Innes\nStreet, has as guest Miss Patsy Bryan of Rossland, who is here for the\nweekend.\n\u2022 Mrs. D. W. Wilkinson, who has\nNew Donations\nill J, Army\nFund to $3471\nAdditional donations to the Salvation Army's Home Front Appeal, received this week, have boosted the\ntotal to $3471, L. W. Sells, Campaign\nManager, reported.\nEmployees of the Whitewater\nMine contributed $90.50, while from\nWynndel came a gift of an added\n$11. Other donations received at Nelson amounted to $31.50.\nCongratulations on Nelson District's success in the Red Shield\nDrive and appreciation of the splendid work of Committee workers, ls\nexpressed in a letter to Mayor N. C.\nStibbs, Chairman, from Hon. E. W.\nHamber, Provincial Campaign\nChairman.\nThe financial result of the drive\nwai gratifying, the message said. If\nquotas were met in Victoria and\nVancouver, the Fund would be\nswelled by $100,000.\nPopularity the Salvation Army enjoyed with the people of B.C. was\nevidenced in the response to the appeal, the Provincial Chairman wrote\nbeen gueit at tha Kinahan homa (or\nI few days, left yesterday to join\nher huiband at Prince Oeorge.\nTO VISIT MONTANA\n\u2022 A. Willey, Third Street has\nleft for Great Falli, Mont, where\nhe will visit hli sister.\n\u2022 Rev. and Mn. W. Oilbert\nware viiiton from Nakuip Tun-\nday.\n\u2022 Mn. Bate of Winlaw vlilted\nNelion Tueiday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. V. Koalancle of\nCreicent Valley were recent ihoppen. ln the city.\n\u2022 Peter McLean is here from\nSaskatchewan on an Indefinite visit\nat the home ot hli brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. McLean, 420 Railway Street\n\u2022 Mrs. W. S. (Duke) Harris of\nthe Alpine Mine vlilted Nelion yelterday.\n\u2022 Oscar Appleton ot Sunshine\nBay was among vislton to town\nTuesday.\n\u2022 Miss Margaret Haggen of\nRossland ls a guest of Miss Nadlne\nFleury, Mill Street, over the weekend.     - *\n\u2022 Mrs. W. A. Ward, who has\nbeen a patient ln Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital for the past fortnight, returned to 1304 Vancouver\nStreet yesterday.\n\u2022 Miss Yvonne Fleury, Mill\nStreet, has left for Rossland to\nspend the weekend at the home of\nMiss Margaret Bourchler.\n\u2022 N. R. Sardich of the Gardner\nDenver Company ls making a tour\nof the Company's plants in Denver,\nColorado and QuLncy, Illinois.\nNelson per student purchase of\nwar savings stamps ranks 14th ln\nthe Province, while that of students\nof another Kootenay centre, Cranbrook, ranks third, Miss E. A. Waller, Director of School War Savings\nln B. C.-Yukon, told students at\nNelson schools. Prince Rupert students had the best record, with\nstudents of Revelstdke second.\nHume School students have a\nproud record fof the past term, an\ninvestment of $4.16 for each pupil.\nSales in Nelson schools from\nSeptember, 1943, to June, 1944 were:\nHigh School, 249 pupils  $ 332.25\nJunior High, 304 pupils   $1067.41\nCentral School, 420 pupils .. $ 318.00\nHume School, 230 pupils .... $ 957.25\nToUl  $2674.91\nB. C. schools led Canada in per\ncapita sales last year and helped to\nsave a total of $5,000,000 ln war savings stamps In the Dominion. Since\n1940 British Columbia pupils have\npurchased over $5,000,000 in savings.\nMiss Waller has been visiting\nschools throughout the Interior for\nthe past three weeks. As well as\nspeaking here early this week, she\nshowed the technicolor film,\n\"Squander Bug\" to audiences at\nCentral and Junior High.\nSenior students here were not\ndoing as well as those ln other B. C.\ncentres, Miss Waller said at a High\nSchool Assembly. The Provincial\nper student average saving was\n$3.42 while theirs was $1.35.\nThis year B. C.-Yukon schools objective is $500,000, which breaks\ndown to an average per pupil purchase of two war savings stamps\nper month.\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 2, 1944 \u2014 S >\nBogart Going Home\nHOLLYWOOD. Nov. 1 (AP) -\nGruff Film Actor Humphrey Bogart\nannounced today he and his wife\nhad agreed to a rematch ot their\nperennial battle.\n\"I'm going back home,\" Bogart\nsaid. \"Mayor and I have decided to\ntry it all over again. In other words,\nwe'll return to our normal battling.\"\nE. Kootenay Nears Half Way Mark,\nHas $419,250; Cranbrook Leads\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Nov. l.-East\nKootenay Victory Loan was officially near the half-way mark at 47.9\nper cent of its million dollar objective today with two sub units officially and one unofficially over half\nway toward their respective goals.\nCranbrook took the lead back from\nFernle today with 62 per cent of its\n$230,000 objective while Fernie had\n56 per cent of its $220,000 quota.\nApplications for the unit total 2050\ntoday with Kimberley on official\ncount showing 832 of them and Cranbrook 569. Windermere's total of 16\napplications so far indicates official\nreports are funning behind sales.\nThe day's report for the unit was\nCranbrook   $23,800\nCreston  12,800\nFernie    7,250\nKimberley 21,250\nNatal-Michel         \u2014\nWindermere     2,350\n$143,200\n80,950\n124,050\n123,000\n20,700\n7,350\nTotal\n$67,450       $479,250\nNelson, Its Citizens, Will Never\nBe Forgotten, Says R.A.F. Officer\n\"The name of the City of Nelson,\nand its citizens, will never be forgotten by any of the staff and pupils of No. 34 Service Flying Training School, Royal Air Force,\"\nGroup Captain A. ap Ellis, Commanding Officer of the Medicine\nHat Air station, said ln a letter to\nMayor N. C. Stibbs. Over 1500 Empire airmen from Medicine Hat and\nother Alberta stations have visited\nNelson since a Citizens Committee\nwas formed early, in the war to arrange billettlng and entertainment\nof these airmen.\n\"As this unit will be closing\ndown in the course of a few weeks\nand as the majority of its personnel\nhave already left, I take this opportunity on behalf of myself and all\nrank, of this unit, in thanking you\nand the committees of the various\norganizations as well as the citizens\not Nelson, for the outstanding hospitality they have given us,\" the\nletter said. It continued:\n\"As you know, from the arrival\nof this unit until Its departure, some\nhundreds of men have visited your\ngreat city, having been entertained\nand well cared for during their stay.\nYou will realize, through this excellent cooperation and hospitality,\nwhat it has meant to me as the\nCommanding Officer of a Royal Air\nForce unit in Canada, as, had it not\nbeen for the hospitality of your citizens, the morale of this station\nwould not have been what it is\ntoday.\n\"The generosity shown has\nbrought the 'home from home' feeling to all ranks, and this relaxation\ngiven has urged them to play their\npart in the duties for which they\nwere sent out here to perform.\nAgain thanks to the kindness\nshown by all of you, all ranks, on\ntheir return from leave to duty,\nhave shown the spirit that is called\nfor, as well as making them realize that they should give their best\nand so uphold the great traditions\nof our service.\"\nGAME PLENTIFUL\nAROUND SIRDAR\nflIRDAR, BC\u2014Deer are plentiful\nespecially on the flat* and near th*\nshores of the two lakea but ooyotes\nare stated to be hunting them much.\nDucks are In great numbers on Duck\nLake but are hard to get u they are\nfrequenting well cut from nhora\nwhere feeding 1.. utated to be good.\nMany seagulls are haunting the\nNorth Shore cf Duck Lake at Atbara.\nWATCH   FOR.THE\nOVERWAITEA\nSPECIALS\nOtt, JltH dL\\\nTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2\nPro R6c Setup to Expand lo Take\nin New Kootenay Centres\nIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII '\npREEMA||\nFURNITURE CO.\nThe House of Furniture Values\nPhone 115 Nelson\nSee Our New Glass\n\u201e COFFEE TABLES\n$11.50 Each\nA Deposit holda till Chrlitmu\niiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiininiiiiniiimii.mil.\nPro Rec setup in the Kootenay\nwill expand to include centres at\nGrand Forks and Fernie and likely\nKimberley. Creston and Cranbrook\nare also interested in establishing\ncentres.\nThe expansion is in line with the\nIncreased physical fitness program\nfor Canadians, decided upon at a\nDominion conference in the East earlier this year. In the Kootenay it is\nthe direct result of an organization\ntour completed last weekend by Ed\nKelter, Pro Rec director for Kootenay.\nAppointment of Noel Parker,\nphysical eduction teacher and former Pro Rec member at Victoria, as\nPro Rec leader at Fernie has been\nrecommended by Mr. Kelter. Cpl.\nDurnin, R.C.M.P., at Grand Forks\nwill instruct the classes there,\nTO HOLD EXHIBITIONS\nPro Rec courses have been popular in Trail. Rossland and Nelson for\nsome seasons. The training has produced some outstanding tumblers\nand display teams as well as beneficial recreation for hundreds. A number of former members on enhst-\n'ment have been accepted st P.T. Instructors In the armed services.\nA corps of fine leaders from Nelson will put on displays ln the various Kootenay centres, where the Pro\nRec plan is still new. These leaders\nare the product of a course conducted throughout the past year under Mr. Kelter.\nArrangements for temporary accommodation for Pro Rec classes at\nNelson this season will be made,\nLater it is hoped that the former\nheadquarters in the Civic Centre\nrecreation hall will be available.\nReductions\non\nCorduroy\nReversible\nRaincoats\nColors of\n\u2022 Red\nt Blue\n\u2022 Biege\n\u2022 Green\n'i Length Model-\non.) Long Models\nREGULAR\n$19.50 lr\nREGULAR\nfU.OT for __\nSee Them at\nt. 1\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\n7:30\u20140 Canada\n7:31\u2014Tout Ss Coffee  (CKLN)\nB:0O\u2014CBC News\n8:15\u2014Front Line Family\n8:30\u2014 Morning Concert\n\u00bb:.0\u2014 BBO News\n8:15\u2014 Melody   Incorp   (CKLNl\n9.23\u2014 Voice of Memory   (CKLNl\n9:30\u2014Marching to Victory (CKLN)\n0:45\u2014Music tram Britain\n9:59-Tlm\u00ab  Signal\n10:00\u2014Morning Vlalt\n10:15\u2014Tin Pan Alley Ooei to Town\n(CKLN)\n10:30\u2014 Organ Magic (CKLN)\n10:45\u2014Stream Line Melodies\n11:0O\u2014Musical Americana\n1:15\u2014Dan Barry (CKLN)\n11 23\u2014Song Shop (CKLN)\n11 30\u2014 Soldier'! Wile\n11:4t>\u2014Dancing Till Noon\nAFTERNOON\n12:00\u2014B. C. rarm Broadcaat\n12:25\u2014Notloe Board   (CKLN)\n2:30\u2014CBC Newa\n12:45\u2014Matinee Memoriae\n1 0O\u2014Old Favourltea ICKLN)\n1:30\u2014Modern Mualclani\n1:45\u2014Song ReclUl\n2 00\u2014 B.C. School Broadcaat\n2.30\u2014CW^C. Band   (CKLN)\n3 00\u2014Western Plve\n3 15\u2014 Headline Hiitory\na 30\u2014Curtain Echoaa\n3:45\u2014BBC New.\n4:00\u2014Mualcal   Magic   (CKLN)\n4:08\u2014Vole* ot Memory  (CKLN)\n4:15\u2014Alouette Quartet\n4 3d\u2014Carl Kalaah Ss Orch.\n4:45\u2014CBC Newa Roundup\n5 oo_Don Allen Time  (CKLN)\n6 30\u2014 To   Be   Announced\n8:15\u2014Family Album\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody (CKLN)\n7:00\u2014CBC Newa\n7:15\u2014To Be Announced\n7:30\u2014Roland Todd'a Orch.\n8:00\u2014Drama\n8:30\u2014Muilc ot the New World\n9:00\u2014BBC Newa.\n8:15\u2014London Letter\n8:30\u2014Talk\n9:45\u2014Serenade ln Rhythm\n10:00\u2014CBC Newe\n10:18\u2014CBO Newa Roundup\n10:30\u2014Ood Bave the King\n\"I get my\nftf\/SW VITAMINS\nAND MINERALS\nTHIS WAY\"\nWith three \u2022\u00bb-rare-good meals \u25a0 day\nincluding fruit juice plus Ovaltine\nnight and morning I'm getting all the\nextra vitamins and minerals .'\nbesides quick\ngood energy\nelements anil\nmuscle building proteins.\nJiutfollowthie\nreoipe for\nbetter health\n1MIAUA\nDAY PtW\nOVAtT.NI\nNIOHT AND\nM0ININ4\nGet\nOvaltine\ntoday I\nOVALTINE\nTHI rKOTECTIMO .o___d.d_.ink\nMrs. Thea. A Gibson\nNelson end District Representative\n(or\nSpencer Corsets and\nHealth Garments\n110 Kerr Apartments\nLook lovely while\nvou look toward Vlc-\nt^t,*\\ 'ory. Have your hair\nFAiKvlEW BEAUTY SHOPPE\nPHONE 389\n1111111.11111111.11111m111111111111i-Mi.ini\nMALCOLM'S FURS\nRepairs \u2014 Alterations\nStorage\n659 Baker Sr.      Phone 960\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini\nFor Reliable Watch Repairs\nConsult-\nFine selection of\nFALL AND WINTER HATS\nFelts and Velvets\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\nMILK\nK\nLi nature's most perfect food.'\ntenay Valley Uairy\nm\nSIRDAR PUPILS STUDY\nUNUSUAL NATURE\nSIRDAR, B.C.\u2014On Friday afternoon\nthe School principal took her pupils\nfor a natural history leseon to the\nSection Home Creek, where flora nf\nunusual nature Is to be seen-. In the\ncanyon-like mouth of the Creek near\nthe highway an Interesting display of\nrocka can be observed varying from\nthe newer rocks to the most an-\nrltnt. Within easy reach of this point\nthe effect of glacial actlnon Is most\napparent on tho rocka by tho railway.\nFRY'S\nCOCOA\nIm^mJMM!\nEVENINC\n8 00\u2014flunwt Berenid*\nWynndel Man\nPasses Here\nIra Rhodes of Wynndel died al\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nWednesday afternoon. He was TO\nvenri of age.\nHis wife at Wynndel is among\nsurvivors.\nWATCH TOMORROWS\nPAP-tl   for  our   GROCERY*\n'    SPECIALS\nR&R.   CKOCIIY\nMr. n. R. Horner\nJuCLblwtl JiMt\nLimited\nTailored arti Dren\/\nBLOUSES\nIn white end color*.\nSliei 12 to 4(1\n$1.95 to $6.95\nIASHION FIRST LTD.\nBe prepared for a surprise when you taste \"Royal City\"\nWhole Green Beans! They're so tender and delirious,\n\u00bbo wafer-thin and slender, you wonder they don't melt\naway before your very eyes! For all that, they make\nhearty eating and you'll be surprised bow many\ngenerous servings there are In one ran. There's 11\nquality about \"Royal (illy\" whole Green Beans\u2014a\nquality which is part and parrel of all \"Royal City\"\nCanned Foods. And they're so Inexpensive! No waste,\nmuu or fuss! Look for \"Royal City\" Whole Crcen\nBeans first thing nt your grocer's tomorrow.\nRfiXALClTY\nCANNED   FOODS\n P9PP1\nv\nV   .\"\u25a0\nSfofam laily Netmi\nEstablished April _>  1901'\nBritish Columbia'*\nMort interesting Newspaper\nPubllihed tvtry morning txcept Sundiy by\ntb* NEWS PUBI_ISHINO COMPANK UM-\ntTED, 266 Btktr St.. Neiton, British Columbu\nMEMBEH OF THI CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nTHURSDAY, NOV. 2, 1944.\nA Job No Government\nCan Do\nExtent to which British Columbia\ncan develop secondary industries, instead of depending too much as we do\nat present upon exports from our primary industries of mining, lumber and\nfishing, depends to no small degree\nupon government policies.    '\nBoth Ottawa and Victoria present\nadministrations are doing what they\ncan to give confidence to Individuals\nand companies so as to encourage them\nto show initiative and enterprise, but\nthere are threats of Socialists and\nothers which have a tendency to cause\nmany to await events before embarking on actual operations.\nWe know from past experience in\nthis country that free enterprise, if it is\ngiven the opportunity, and ls not\nstrangled by oppressive regulations, is\ncapable of carrying out the development of new industries and new businesses which we must have if we are\nto provide work for the 80,000 from the\narmed forces and war industries who\nwill be seeking employment after the\nwar.\nFree enterprise is at its best in developing secondary industries, which\nusually in the beginning are small,\ngreat as may be their aggregate employment of men and women.\nNo government, no political body\nand no bureaucratic body, can develop\nlarge or small new industries \u2014 the\nlarge often growing out of the small\u2014\nthat this province needs. Free enterprise can and will do so, but it will not\ngo very far with its plans if there is\nfear of anti-business legislation or\nthrottling regulation. \u25a0\nwill be considered invalid and If the\nloot can be found tbe Germans will be\ncompelled to disgorge lt. One form of\nlooting which represents huge industrial Interests is the \"purchase\" by\nGermans of stock in companies in\nFrance and other enslaved countries.\nIt will be comparatively simple to\nblack out these transactions and return the securities to their rightful\nowners.\nNeutral countries have concerns\nwhich have been acting as channels for\ndisposal of securities and other property stolen by the Germans. In proved\ninstances, such concerns are placed on\nthe Statutory List, unless it seems wise\nto turn a blind eye for the time being\nso that the Germans will not be warned and devise means of finding safer\nhavens for their booty. They will be\ndealt with later.\nUnder currency regulations all\ncurrency and securities exported from\nEurope to the Western Hemisphere\nhave been seized unless accompanied\nby a British consular certificate stating\nthat there has been no enemy interest\nin them since Sept. 3, 1939. They are\ntreated by, the navy as contraband.\nLetters to the\nTaking the Loot Out of\nthe Looters' Hands\nGreat Britain, the United States\nand their Allies have established policies to prevent the Germans from\nconcealing or disposing of looted property, or from shipping securities or\nother assets from Germany to neutral\ncountries, in which some of the Na7.i\nleaders are hoping to find refuge after\nGermany's defeat.\nNeutrals have been warned against\noffering refuge to Nazi criminals and\nsteps which have been taken by the\nAllied governments to prevent the disposal of loot are typified hy those recently announced by Great Britain.\nand which are:\n(a) Public announcements warning neutrals nr others against lending\nthemselves to the concealment or the\nrealization of looted property.\n(b) Private negotiations with governments or with neutral hanks either\ncollectively or individually to the end\nthat they agree to forbid or to refuse\ntransactions of a type likely to cover\nthe disposal nr concealment of loot\n(c) Statutory List action against\npersons or firms in neutral countries\nagainst whom there is evidence that\nthey have assisted the enemy to conceal or to realize property Which may\ninclude loot.\n(d) Seizure of currency and valuables from westbound ships crossing\nthe Atlantic, whether carried as mail,\nas cargo nr by passengers except in\ncases where non-enemy origin could\nbe proved\n(c) Warnings to neutral governments thai clearing claims on Germany should not he allowed to accumulate since thev may never lie rnpsid\n(f) Steps to liquidate erfemy interests in undertakings arid firms outside\nGermany.\n(g) Scrutiny of enemy assets In\nneutral countries, in particular newly\nacquired or newly constituted assets\nwhich are likely lo represent either\nflight capital (i e funds or realisable\nassets laid up by our enemies for future use) or else looted property or\nproceeds of its sale\nThe systematic spoliation of subjugated countries has taken every form\nfrom open looting to transactions of\napparent legality but which were imposed by force. All such^trsnsactions\nEditor\nLetten may bt publlihed ovtr I nom di\nplume, but tht actual namt of tht writer\nmuit bt given to tht Editor at evidence of\ngood faith. Anonymoui letten go In the\nwaste piper btikiL\nFormer Trailite Says C.C.F.\nExecutive Right in\nRejecting Herridge\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014The decision of the CCF. Provincial\nExecutive, ln respect to H. W. Herridge. It\nbringing forth the customary cry\u2014\"Dictatorship\", from those who choose to Ignore the\ncardinal rules by which any decision should\nbe Judged: the reasons for the decliion, tnd\nthe method by which lt ls obtained.\nIn tha first Instance, tht reatont for thlt\nparticular decision ire obvious. Mr. Herridge promised the people of the West Kootenay that he would represent them on tha\nC.C.F. platform of the Provincial Legislature\nfor the ensuing term of office, and he was\nchosen by the people on the basis of that\npromise. The other obvious conclusion Is,\nshould the temptitlon of a Federal seit be\nsuccumbed to by other membtrt of the party\u2014\nind they undoubtedly muit havt b\u00ab\u00abn tempted\u2014It would disrupt tht unity of the Provincial C.C.F. Party, at well as leaving the representation In a constant state of flux.\nThis possibility waa foreseen, dlscuiaed,\nand derided upon with the full knowledge of\nthe C.CF. membership, and I, for ont, am\nproud to stand behind an executive body\nwhich Insists that this decision ihould be upheld, even at the risk of \"Dictatorship\" Implications from the Ignorant and the malignant.\nMr. Herridge has placed himself parallel\nto the much-criticized position of Hon. Itn\nMackenzie, who has chosen to go off at i tangent by announcing \"No Japs between the\nRockies and the Pacific\" ln the face of his\nleader's expressed policy of dispersal of Japanese Canadians throughout the Dominion.\nThe deflection on Mr Mackenzie's part may\nbe accounted for by the methods, and reasons,\ngoverning his statement, but the CCF. party\nhas no intention of upholding the action of\na member who places his own preferences\nbefore the policy promulgated in a solemn\nresolution by his Provincial Party\nNo doubt Ihe West Kootenay executive\nwill consider these things before backing\nMr Herridge*! stand further. If they still\n\u25a0choose to align themselves wi'.h Mr. Herridge In continuing his stand, their position\nwould be obvloui\nIs it mere coincidence that iuch in issue\nhas been enforced in a district whert the\nLabor-Progressive psrty has antrtnshed Itself Or ll this the \"boring within\" proce\u00abl\nrecently denounced it tht I WA. convention\nin   Vancouver*\nKAY LOW DON.\nVancouver, D C, Or: 22S. IM.\n? ? Questions ? ?\nANSWERS\nOpen tt any rtadtr. Namtt of pononi\naiklng qutttlont will not bt publlihed.\nThen It no charge for thlt itrvlia. Qutttlont will not bt iniwered by mall except\nwhin thtrt It obvloui neceulty for prl-\nvaoy.\nConstant Reader, Rowland\u2014Please Inform\nme If It ls possible for mt to take my dog\nwith me In the car. through the Statei\nfrom Paterson to Grand Forks, on my way\nto Vancouver. Also what procedure must\nI take to allow myself and family of two,\naccess through the States? Both my children are Canadian born, and myself born\nIn Scotland.\nThe answer to your first question Is No.\nIn an article run ln our paper on Sept. 27 It\nsays that no dog can bt brought Into Canada\nfrom the United Slates without a certificate\nfrom a U. S. veterinary under terms which\nmean that Canadians cannot at present take\ndogs with them when crossing the line and\nbring them back.\nThe certificate must be signed or endorsed by a veterinary Inspector of the U. S. Bureau of Animal Husbandry certifying the animal has been Inspected and found free of any\naymptoms of contagious disease, that the animal has not been exposed to rabies, and that\nno rabies case had occured within 50 miles\nwhere the dog has been kept for the preceding six months.\nIn order to get through the States you\nmust take your own and your children's birth\ncertificates. A valid or expired passport would\nalso be a good reference. It ls advisable to take,\na letter from a banker or other responsible\ncltlien.\nE. H. G\u201e Slocan Park\u2014I missed the horoscope for March 11. Would yifu please\nprint lt?\nIf this Is your birthday you are spurred\non In adversity, rather than discouraged. You\nare an ardent lover, and the bitterest enemy.\nNever halfway ln your work or social life,\nyou are either thoroughly liked or disliked.\nBenefits will be received from unexpected\nsources ln the next year, and uncommon activities will progress. Elders will help and\nhinder. Discretion la advised in ^aU business\ntransactions. Today's child will possess psychic talent, gaining thereby, but will need to\nexercise great care in routine business matters.\nB. II., Kaslo-\u2014If a married man as proprietor\nof a business In 1941 had an Income of\n$1730 what would be the Dominion income\ntax, also the general tax be?\nYou would be taxed $320 80, of which\n$180 40 ls refundable. This ls assuming that\nno life Insurance or similar outlays are deductible from the refundable portion of tax. Tht\ntax would also be reduced by any patriotic\nor chariUble donations made out of the $1750.\nIf there are dependent children there would\nbe a deduction of $108 for each from the tax.\nWe do not understand the reference to \"geq\nerel\" tax\nPress Comment\nLOUDtR\nThi? politlcilcindldiitei ire facing * toujh\ntime. F-ven with their Ira.her lungu they'll\nfind it difficult to rrmke the mi rives heard\nabove the roar nf ran nan -6t. Loul* S'.,ir-\nTlmei\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS AQO\n(From Dally Newi, Nov. 2, 1934)\nElrctrlc power of 60,000 volts pulsed over\nthe West Kootenay Power and Light Company's Salmon Valley tranfrnisslon line Wednesday afternoon, between the Bonnington\nplants and Ymlr.\n^Several people got their feet wet Wednesday night when the sewer at the corner of\nBaker and Kootenay Streets plugged and several inches of water collected.\nWork nf laying the cement on the West\nside nf Vernon Street has been completed\nby the Nelson Public Works Departments,\n25   YEARS   AGO\n(From   Dilly  Newi,  Nov. 2.  1919)\nOne  of  the  closest  games  played   in  thi\nY.M.C A   Bowling League was that between\nteams led by Y  Y. Brake and D. N'agle, when\nthe form-v trin ram'* nut nn top by 13 pins.\nA German gun of large calibre Is the Interesting and valuable prize, which ls being\noffered for !nter-d:\u00abtr:ct competition In ron-\nnection with the Victory Loan. 1919 In British Columbia.\nT R. W;!son, Charlie Young and Leslie\nSteel, returned to the nty las* nigh* after a\nsh >oting trip, with a load of ducks.\n40   YEARS   AQO,\n(from  Dally Newi, Nov, 2, 1JW_\nManager Cram.on nf the nprra hnuje returned In Nelson last nigh', frnm a visit to\nRoasiand\nJ. C. Drewry, director of the St Eugene\nMining Company, nnd one of the best known\nmining men tn the Kootenaya, Is paying Nelion  a  vi\u00ab:t\nA W Strickland, Manager of the Bank of\nMontreal branch at New Denver, returned\nafter a viitt tn Nelson.\nWar - 4 Years Ago\nBy Tht Canadian Prill\nNov ? IM**\u2014 Ken\u00ablngton Ptltre. London,\ndamagad bv German air rtid. Greek firres\nbombed Koriiia and Argrroctslro In Albania\nTwo hundred civllltnt Vllltd In Italian a:r\nraid ot Salonika \u2022 R A T stored trr direct\nhl'i on enemy transports and 'r--p< '\u25a0\u2022 F'hi-\nppii\nWords of Wisdom\nIf hofor bt your clothing, Iht suit will lait\na lifetime; but If rli'hlng he your hon^r. It\n_.-!!]  soon bt worn  threadbare    Arnol\nEtiquette Hints\nIf you havt . 't\u00ab*\u00abn-\u00bb|\u00ab daughter who ia\n\u25a0.-> viitt the homf of a rhum f-- e w*tk \u00abpd,\nprnv.H* her with a amall gift, to take to ihe\nfriend's mother After iht return* tvune ih\u00ab\nihould   writ*    hr\u00bbad-\u00abnd butter\"   n <t*f  bvh\nToday's Horoscope\nYnu are bold and amMtloui and have hlgS\nlde-.ii. You are very positive in your Idea*,\n\u25a0 nd make an enemy rather than rompromjse.\nYou are critical and very rflentlMi in your\npunishment nf wrong Ynyr mat* will have to\nhe ta-'fiil and have gr>\u00bbi' understanding fnr\nyour home tn be happy. Sudden trouble\nthrough women, incurring financial loss,\nthrea'eni you. Defer domestir -chargei if\np*M!r*!e O'herwlw, gmd fortune will be realised in >\u2022;: r*t* vear B#w\u00bbr\u00bb of the l|w,\nh-wever Today'* rhild v .'1 hav* * \u00aburren-\nful. ev-entfu] r-irr-r snd r-.<-<-! \u00ab. \u00bb de*ect[_-e nr\ndiplomat Great mental pnweri, ahre-fdneai.\nIngenuity a-d riavi'y of manner are, indicated\nto Uit clvi-ii md\n _.\t\nher mother.\nTest Yourself\n1   Niar \u00bb-hat 'own it \"Mr Old Ken\"lr_.y\nHomt\"'\n}   w>.-\u201e  [,  \\V    dr-v  W!'__on  h'irled\"\ni  Wti. firs' \u2022\u2022f\u00bbrr\u00bb. <n N_-v York \u00ab\u25a0 lb.\n\"Trrrire  t-lt'r\n.BUT   ANIWtn.\nI   Btrdstown.  K\u00bb\n;   In  Wtthlniton.  P   <~.  <-,'..d-ii\n\u25a0\u2022   '.*\u2022 ifgt   WitMnfton.\nThis Arm\nNIWCASTLE-ON-TYNt. England\n(CP) \u2014 Friday li tn unlucky day\nfor 44-year-old Seaman Tommy\nScraggt. Theie things have happened to him ilnce 1910\u2014alwayi on\nFriday: One ship he tailed on was\niunk by mlnei, three went aground,\nthree collided with other ships, one\nwith an Iceburg, and three we,re\niunk by torpedo.\nLONDON (CP) -Brig.-Gen. A.C.\nCrltchley, of Calgary, Director-General of British Overseas Airways\nCorporation, has gone to Weat Africa\nfor a, tour of the company's African\nroutes and to survey possible departure points for a United Kingdom\nSouth America service.\nMany Beautiful\nExhibits af\nKaslo Mum Show\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014The Katlo Chrysanthemum Show, sponsored by the\nMum Society of the Japanese Men's\nClub, was held on Saturday and\nSunday in the Kaslo Hotel. There\nwas a very large number of beautiful exhibits. Judging was done\nSaturday and prizes awarded to\nwinners -on Sunday afternoon.\n\"How long do you expect to be hart chum?\"\n(34 War Vessels\nProduced\nLONDON, Nov. 1 (qP) -Britain\nproduced 634 major war vessels displacing 1,183,501 tons from the outbreak of the war until last December, A. V. Alexander, First Lord of\nthe Admiralty, informed the House\nof Commons today, and paid a special tribute to Canada's ship-building\nachievements.\nWarships produced In Britain Included battleships, cruisers, monitors, destroyers and submarines,, he\nsaid. Other naval vessels built during the period totalled 3988, or 455,-\n277 tons. During four yets of the\nFirst Great War Britain produced\n1654 warships of 1,595,000 tons.\n\"While lt would be wrong to assume we are at the end of real\ndanger from attacka on our shipping,\nespecially by U-boats and mines, I\nthink we have now reached a stage\nof the war at which we have good\nreason to hope that the worst of our\nshipping problems are over.\"\nMr. Alexander said \"we could not\nbave survived at one period, but for\nthe persistent efficiency and continuity of our shipyards and had we\nnot early placed an order for 60\nmerchant ships In the United States\nbefore her entry in the war and obtained the assistance of Canada ln\nthat most remarkable addition to the\nshipping of the United Nations\nwhich she had produced, starting\nfrom scratch.\"\nBetween midnight and dawn on D-\nDay. the R.C.A.F. 'dropped 1000 tons\nof bombs on the Normandy battle-\nfront.\nYOU NEED\nKEEP FIT\nTMS\/\n**~   \"\u2022\u25a0 *SUrr^^tu}.\\\nSHOPPING these days\nreally requires fitnessi\nEno helps to cleanse the\nsystem of the wastes tnd\nexcess gastric acids that most\nalways bring on sluggishness,\nindigestion and a listless\nfeeling that take the edge off\nlife. Sparkling and refreshing, Eno is pleasant to take-\nfree of |harsh, bitter salts,\ngentle but effective In its\naction. Buy a large bottle\ntoday from any druggist)\n\u25a0j?\nFRUIT SALT'\n|SW|KL!NO AND RSFRtSHlNG BEFORE BREAKFAST\n<^uW\/\/r\u00a5uW aa rte\/r Hfotwy Wbyh\n______________\n______\n__T\n eeeg\n)ewey Flays\nllllman\nind Browder\nBOSTON, Nov. 1 (AP) - In \u25a0\nUl attack on President Rooievelt\nnd his \"violent supporteri\" Oov,\nhomas E. Dewey declared tonight\nUt his Democratic opponent, In\n0 \"overwhelming desire to per-\netuate himself in office for 16\nears, has put his party on the sue-\non block\u2014for sale to the highest\nldder.\"\nAnd the highest bidder, Gov.\nlewcv said in a prepared broadcast,\n1 not the \"notorious One Thousand\nHub,\" but the \"Political Action\nlommlttee of Sidney Hillman and\nie Communist* of Earl Browder,\"\n(The Democrats $1,000 Club i\u00ab an\niganizatlon which Mr. Dewey has\nId: was formed to sell ipeclal\nestige (or cash contributions.)\nWhile asserting he had no quar-\nrl with Communism In Russia, the\npublican presidential nominee\nayed both Hillman and Browder\nleading a fourth term move \"so\nit form of government may more\nislly be changed.\"\nRe-echoing the phrase \u2014 \"Clear\nrerythlng with Sidney\" (Hilman)\nhlch he has attributed to Mr.\njosevelt m connection with last\nimmer's Democratic convention,\n. Dewey said;\nSidney Hillman has become the\n:gest political boss ln the United\nites, and ln the words of David\nibinsky, Sidney Hillman ll \u2022\nont for the Communists'.\"\n3ov. Dewey, addressing a Rapub-\ntn rally, declared that with HM-\nin's aid \"the Communists are seiz-\ncontrol of the New Deal,\nrough which they aim to control\nGovernment of the United\nates.\"\nOne Killed When\nCan Collide\nNIW WWTMINSTI31, B.C.. N<rv.\n1 (CP).-Jaek Sator, 11, son at Mr\nand Mn. Oscar Sator of Langley,\nwu killed whin two automobiles\ncollided on tht Trans-Canada highway ntar Langley Prairie early today.\nDouglas Hough, 16, the driver of\ntht vehicle ln which Sator was a\npassenger, suffered a itvtrt out on\nhis forehead and a cut Up, Anothar\npassenger, Eric Renters, IS, of Langley suffered concussion.\nIx Parties in\nresidential Race\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 1 (CP) -\nttle ls heard of any but the Den)5>-\nat _ and Republicans in the United\nates presidential race but there\nilx national tickets offering\nndldates for top honors In next\nlesday's voting.\nThe Democratic candidates, Preil-\nmt Roosevelt and Senator Harry\nruman of Missouri, and the Repub-\n;ans, Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of\nw York and Gov. John Brlcker\nOhio, will have their electors'\nimes on every state ballot.\nBut four minor-party organlza-\nini plan to Have presidential and\nce-presldentlal electors listed on\niny itate ballot! or provision tor\nam to be written ln.\nThese are:\nThe Prohibition Party .(which\nds all other minor parties ln\nnber of candldatft), with Dr.\nmde A. Watson of Los.Angeles\nd Andrew Johnson of Wllmore,\ntucky, as candidates for Presi-\nt and Vice-President,\ne Socialist Party with Its per-\nlal candidate, Norman Thomas,\nYork, and Darlington Hoopes,\nding. Pa., heading the ticket.\nSocialist-Labor Party with\n\/ward A. Teichert, Greensburg,\nand Aria A. Albaugh, Massllon,\nas candidates.\ne America First Party with\niv. Gerald L. Smith of Detroit and\ny Romer, St. Henry, Ohio,\niking the highest offices.\nrobably the activities of the*se\niups mean little to tha ultimate\nIt There were seven minor\nties ln the 1940 presidential race\nd they polled a total of 267,000\ntese of about 80,000,000.\nFOaLGIIIIsof\nCranbrook\nKilled Overseas\nCRANBROOK, B.C-Flying Officer Lawrence Glllli of this city\nhas been killed in action with the\nRoyal Canadian Air Force overseai,\naccording to word rectlved here by\nhis parents, Mr. and Mra. Malcolm\nGlllis. Ht wu 26 years old and a\nformer teacher at Yahk and Creston\nschools.\nBorn ln Cranbrook, he graduated\nfrom high school here and the following year from the Provincial\nNormal School at Victoria and for\nthe next few years taught ln East\nKootenay schools. He enlisted with\nthe air force in 1941 and was commissioned immediately on graduation from service flying school the\nfollowing ytar. Be served lp Canada for ovtr a year prior to projrto.\ntion to flying officer and overseas\nposting.\nHe was married tn Creiton In\n1942 and hli wife survivw hin)\nthere. His parents and only iliter,\nHilda, live in Cranbrook.\nBowling Scores\nHighest five pin soore of tha see*\naon. .36 points, wu relied b; M. Stelner ot Bradley's team in the Nelson\nUtiles Bowling Club play Tu.sd.y\nnight. Har aigragate for two games\nwu 419. Top team icon wu tlm\nmarked up by Flnk'a In deflating\nBrownies 14.--1351. In other games\nJonclla'i beat Bhorthouae'a 1306-1343,\nHigh is Dry whipped srsdlsy's 1391-\n1378, and Palms took Tecos lMB-tOM.\nTeams and scorei wart:\nBHOWNIES\nN. Brake  138   US\u2014 341\nI. Thody    154     93\u2014 340\nA. Brown       148     78\u2014 316\nV. Phillips   -...    131    188\u2014 31J\nM. Ross      163    177\u2014 338\nToUl  _\t\nriNK'8\nH. smith\t\nM. Laughton \t\nI. Alisander\t\nD. NOrtleld\t\nP. Brown ,\u2014_\n698    648\u20141361\n12 Million Parcels\nPacked\nby Red (f oss\nTORONTO, tt**. 1-Slncs thi com-\nmin-emmt of peeking ln 1M0, the\nplanta of the Canadian Red oro\u00bba ban\nBioked 13.188.303 toed pernila tor\nrttijh and Allied prisoners of war ln\nenemy hindi. Harold Leather, chairman of tbe Society's Prisoners of Wsr\nParcels Committee, told the Canadian\nRed Ctobi Central Council at a meeting ln Toronto today.\n\"From January lit. 1944, to September 10th, tbe sis planta located in\nToronto, Hamilton. Montreal, Windsor,\nLondon and Winnipeg, hava packed\n4.188,916 Id tht nine months period.\"\nhe said, \"Since the opening in 1940\nthis work hu involved the tipendl-\nturi ot 138,000\u2022.00\"\nDuring the nlm months of packing\nthis ymr he said that all planta hsd\npacked to capacity.\n\"During the he\u00bbt of tbe summer tbe\nvoluntary workers hs va turned out\nwonderfully well, and I (eel that it\nis i gr\u00ab\u00bbt aohleviment of the Win's\nortanl-atloni of Canada-to hart dona\nmen a splendid Job,\" hi declared.\nTht number of Canadians In all aer-\n.lo\u00ab and civilians in enemy hanna\nli 8180, acoordlni to a report made bj\nMri. Jackson Oook, aotlng director <*\nthe Canadian Md Crou Inquiry Bureau ln Ottawa.\n\"The Bureau hu (orwardsd to the\nnut-of-kln, ln Canada only, at\nWounded. 8000 \"Red cross Messages\"\nfor tbe period from Aug. 31 to Stpt.\n80, with a higher number expected for\nOctober,\" she aaid. \"TbUe ineiaagea\nare sent one oent postage rate, and\nfrom letters on file are being received\nby th addreiteea with gratitude and\nas evidence of Red Cross service.\"\nThe first known greeting card\nappeared in England ln 1842.\nChristina Lake\nResort Sold\nto Calgary Men\nORAND FORJtS, B.C., Nov. l-Salt\not Klnnlsy's Retort at Christina Uke\nto I, N. Campbell and O, X. Donoihua\not Calgary wu put through Tussdsy\ntnd tht transfer beoomsa effective\nImmediately,\nTransfer Includes tbe oommodloua\nChristina Lake Hotel whloh hu Men\noperated by Mr. and Mrs. O, J. Kings-\nley for nearly 90 yean, u well u tht\ndancing pavilion, a number of Summer cottages, thl imall poit offloe\nand confectionary ihop, and aome 78\necru of grounds that have formed\nthis popular amusement beach. Mr.\nKlngsley hu retained several lota for\nprivate um. Thl prloe wu not die-\nThe retort wu started by 0)t John-\ntnc, 40 nan ago. le built a hotel on\nttt water's edge and had a dancing\npavilion out over the water. It won\nMat popul|rtty among thou ot tbe\nthen ismous mining oampe of phoenix and Oreenwood. Try, original hotel wu destroyed by fire and the property was acquired by Victor Blner ol\nPhoenix, wbo built tbe pavilion on\ntbe water'a edge and erected a fine\n\u00bbbore. Re operated the retort fpr many\nyean and then aold out to tho Klngs-\nStruck by Train;\nKilled Initantly\nCALGARY. Nov. 1 (CP).-rPhiUp\nLysak, Calgary, wu killed Initantly\nWhen struck by the Northbound Canadian Pacific Railway passenger\ntrain about five mllea  North  oi\nCrossfllld.\nMr, Lysak wu foreman ot a railway gang at work on the tracks.\nNELSON DAILY NIWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 2, 1944 - 7\nA sparrow eats more than five pounda of grain a year.\n\"m\nSALADA\nTEA\n131\n98\n137\n177\n176\n188\u2014 307\n147\u2014 348\n133\u2014 349\n164- 331\nits-us\nTotal      708   719\u20141438\nHigh Individual Score: V. Phillips.\n188.\nHljh Aggregate Scots: D. Norfleld\nand P. Brown, 338.\nSHOBTHO.BE'S\nM.Dyer  118 138\u2014344\nA. Bkllton      117 117\u2014 384\nA. Lewis    103 119\u2014 333\nR. Ronmark   138 113\u2014 338\nJ. Oentles ._  169 136\u2014 806\nTotal \t\nJONEUA'B\nB. Math-son  67\nV. Bliney   118\nM. Henry   138\nH. Matheion   149\nV. Mathlaon .\nI\n681    813\u20141343\n104\u2014 171\n131\u2014 347\n118\u2014 363\n169\u2014 308\n155. 1M\u2014 817\nBritish Work\ntoward Ravenna\nDME, Nov. 1 (CP).-Brltlsh Sth\nny patrols slong the Adriatic to-\nr worked forward along the cout\nvtrd Ravenna and drove the Ger-\nfrom two prepared positions\n^rth of the Bevsno River while\nUed   Sth   Army  troops   repulsed\nveral vicious German counter-at-\nJcks South of Bologna.\n|(The coar,t_l patrols possibly were\nTied out by Canadian units which\nIve been operating ln this area.)\n[Indian and Polish forces of the 8th\npny   improved  a  bridgehead   on\nWest side of the Ronco River\n|d cBptured Meldols, seven miles\n|uth of Forll.\nhe Germsn counter-sttscks South\n[Bologna were made by Infantry,\norted   by  flame-throwers.   Al-\nheadquarters tald. The fighting\ntermed costly for both sides,\nthe Italian West coast In ths\nl Esit of Musis. Brazilian forces\nptured   La   Rocchette,   Lama   di\nand Pradoscello. A little far-\nWest,   other   Brsilllsns   took\n^unt San Quir.rn   German coun-\n.-attacks forced the Brsilllsns to\nhdrsw ilightly in the Castel Nu-\n) area.\nTotsl      131    684\u20141815\nHigh  Individual  8.ore:  J. Oentles.\n169.\nHigh   Aggrtgstt   Scors:   V.   Msthl-\nson, 817.\nHIGH * DRY\nC.   rom-lll  181 160\u2014 841\nF. Jones      113 178\u2014 388\nW. Stem     116 78\u2014 191\nD Loni  _     106 133\u2014 337\nM. Berqulit     140 94\u2014 334\nTotal\nBRADLEY'S\nL. Score  108\nL  Scon  10S\nJ  Latham   145\nM. Sttlnar   IBS\nL. Score  106\n...   864   837-1391\n76\u2014 180\n76\u2014 160\n178\u2014 830\n338- 416\n76\u2014 160\nToUl       643    638\u2014378\nHigh Individual score: M   Stetmr,\n335\nHljh  Aajreiste Scots: M.  Stelner,\n418.\nTECOB\nI,  Tnlloch  _      14\n118\u2014 181\nT   0111               138\n134\u2014 361\n111\u2014 156\nL. -Core       90\n117\u2014 307\nJ.  Butler       134\n138\u2014 351\n603\u20141094\nPA1.MB\nM.  Murray        90\n117\u2014 307\n0   Patterson      191\n180\u2014 837\nP Hickey     181\nHI\u2014 348\n111-  166\n168\u2014 ltt\n_    \t\nTotal      897\n631 \u2014 1118\nHlih  Individual  Score:\n0   Patter-\nion. 107.\nHtsh   Aggregate   Soore:\n0   Patter-\nion, 837,\nButter wu mede by some tribes\nin   Tartsry  bv   filling   s\nskin   bag\nwith milk, tying It to a saddle and\ndrag It over rougf ground by way\nnf churning.\nInterpreting\nThe War News\nBy   KIRKI  L. SIMPSON\n\u25a0AlkoriRtfc.  Prnii Wir  Anatyit\npowerful    Red    armiei    !n    thf\nll-Dinuhf   r-onMnr   tn   Hungary\nitnrmfd  to  within   two  icore\n\u25a0m  of  Bjdape*>t  In  a  three-day-\n\\ renewrd offemlve Aimed nt the\nSouthern  gateway   to   Austria\nI Germany.\nitrong hMur.il Imrrlrri bar\n[Red Ai my apprnach t>> th*\nMarian cipiUl frnry the South\ni Fa \u25a0 Ann\" the fall <>r Isolation\nJBudapeit would exf.'*-\" Vienna\n||f to Ruulan pteuure.\nlather a Ruulan march nn Vila to await raptur* nf Huda-\nwhlch could prove a alnw\nL bloody luisih.\"*--, irniiin*- to he\n,. Th* Hungarian city ha* lieen\nI called tha gate-* a* to Vienna\n- ' ifilorm-iiitln Un TIm-\nDanubt corridor li on a tcale now\nto luggtit It may bi encircled and\nhypaiied while th* advance agalnit\nVienna li carried out\nMilitarily, Budaptit li of prime\nImportance, It hai been converted\nby th* Null Into an Important war\nlnduitry centre, more Important\nprobably than Vienna.\nHowever, there could bt far\ngreater political and military value\nln bringing Vienna under cloae\nthreat than ln itormlng th* itrong\nInterior deftncei of Budaptit. Tht\nRuulani have ihown a ganlua for\nexerting thalr prtaiura In tha whole\nSotitheaitarn tnaatre whare It could\nyield th* greateit reiulti at the\nleant coit and \u25a0\u25a0 Hp<I Army crowing\nnf the Danube below Hudapest to\nimplement th* potential threat to\nVienna ^uujd clUM no \u00bburp\u00bbU\u00ab,\ntkMght(fJmmajl^44...\nCorporal Harold Bradlty Leppard w\u00bb rate of i patrol lent ont to local*\ncnemj; pofitloiu on hii regiment's front in Italy,\nTh* patrol locattd an enemy post of unknown\netrenith. Cpl. Leppard set out with the patrol com-\nmanaer to obtain a prisoner, leaving the rest of the\npatrol in observation.\nTh* Iw* mant-gad to get within 5 Tarda of the port\nundetected-then rushed it A machine gun opened\nnp on them and wounded CpL Leppard in the\natomach and twice in the arm.\nAlthough NV*r*ly wounded, CpL Leppard killed\nthe German manning the machine gun and one other\nwith his machine carbine. Thii enabled the patrol\ncommander to overpower and capture the third\nmember ol the poat\nIn spite of th* Intense pain of hit wounds, Cpl. Leppard then helped to eacort the prisoner back to the\npatrol. For his courage, dash and determination,\nne wu awarded the Military Medal.\nWhere does Duty end, Corporal Uppard?\nTF you c\u00abn get men like Corporal Leppird to talk.,, whloh ii ipt to\n\u25a0*\u25a0 be difficult.., they will auure you that in war there it no end to\nduty until the job ii done \u2014whatever the cost may be.\nAnd you may think to younelf \"That's all very right and proper for\na fighting man, but nurely It can't apply at thii itage of the war to people\nat home like me\".\nYet all the while, at lurely ai you ever knew anything, you know in\nyour innermoit heart that it does!\nYou know that to ease up before victory' i\" \u00abn accompliihed fact ii\nneither courageoui nor wiie. Commonienie will tell you that the terrific\ninteniity of the war In recent monthi hai greatly increaied Canada1*\nborrowing needi for war purpoKt. And while more and more Canadian\nboyi are diking woundi and death daily\u2014counting deiperatrly on your\n\u2022upport \u2014 you iurely cannot betray their truit\nSo doubt no more what to do about Victory Bondi. Becauie the\nneed ii greater than it hai ever been before, buy o;i<! more bond than\nyou have bought in any previous Victory Loan.\nCorporal Harold Bradley Leppard, M.M.\n*'<0-\u00bb_d coin\nInvestuiVktory\nBuy VICTORY BONDS\nNATIONAl   WAI   NNANCt COMMITTI!\n\t\n'\n *\n\u2022 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 2, 1944\nTODAY'S News Pictures\n.-fmrnt**^ a.\ni f&*d \u25a0*&\n.....\n--\u25a0-*\u2022-.-\u2022-.\u2022*.:-'\\\u00ab\u00ab*m*#iauaauam\n\u2022      .        '   \"*\u2022*         :%2\\* \u25a0'\u25a0                         *'  .\n;^^^---***ti_li(ift'**_***v^a*\u00bb    a**^ '.;                            :.^;. %.\n_\u2022\u2022 _   its, \u25a0-\u25a0                             \u25a0 \u25a0                                                    %-\nf*\n#-\u25a0'\n' '_\u201e       -1      ft\nSrs   \u25a0       '\u2022     Ut.\nm               \u2022-*\u25a0*-\u00bb. \u201e..    msta.\n\u25a0\u25a0 ft\n0            %             .                   ... ..                         '-:\nTHEY TAKE TIME OUT FOR A DUTCH\nAPPLE: Two Britiih Tommies of the Second Army\nof Qen. Sir Mllei Dempsey. munch on a couple of\napplet at they keep a watchful eye on enemy posi\ntions near VenralJ, Holland. The Second Army la\nwaging a new offensive In this area and are steadily advancing.\nHONOR FOR PENICILLIN DISCOVERER: The Earl of Hall-\nfax, Brltlth Ambauador to the U. S,, it ihown accepting, on behalf of\nSir Alexander Fleming, the John Scott medal at a dinner In Philadelphia. Sir Alexander Fleming li the discovered of penicillin, the\nwonder drug. Preientlng the medal It Ernett T. Trlgfl, chairman of the\nAdvisory Committee of the John Scott medal fund.\nV-MAIL PROPOSAL: Cupid In\nthe form of V-mall hat brought\na propotal of marriage from the\nfar-off Paclflo to icreen actrets\nMlml Berry. Much decorated\nLieut,-Col. Alex tttierry will wed\naoon.\nWAR GUEST8 READY TO GO HOME: Thli li one of Canada'i\nwar gueit families, the MacGllchrltti, who followed FO. Robert Mac-\nQllohrlit to Canada. Now their father has been posted to India and\ntha family Is going back to England. Left to right they are: Archie,\n11;   Mn.   R.  D.  MacGllchriit  and   Robin,  4.\nIKE'S    ADVISORi    Robert    D.\nMurphy, veteran American diplomatic trouble shoot tr who li\npolitical advisor to Gen. Klttn-\nhower for the military occupation\nof Germany.\nPINS ON SIGN OF LIBERATION: While an armed patriot and\ncivlllini look on. a Britlih parachutist nlns thi Union Jack on the\narm of a imall hov. whn looki bewildered The climax of the Britlih\nMight In (\u00bb'\u25a0> Medlten _nejn cime whon th<-y landed parachutist! from\nAmerican C if* over Megan tlrfielo in Greece.\neyj^frndm\nA HOUSE FOR HER: It costs\nnothing but a little time to make\nthla dollhoute from two cigar-\nboxea, acrapt of wallpaper; bltt\nof cloth cover the furniture.\nCigar-box     hat    10     different\nRiecet   of   furniture.   Instructions\n17 contain patterni for houte and\nfurniture;   direction!.\nSend 2Q centi for tme pattern to\nThe Neleon Daily News, Needle-\ncraft Dept, Nelion. Write plainly\npattern number, your name and\naddreii. Patterni will be mailed\nto your home In about 16 daya.\nThere may be tome further delay In delivery becauie of the\nlarge Increate In orden during the\npreient teaeon.\nHAS NEW DUTIES: Walter ft.\nWood*, of Ottawa, newly appointed deputy miniiter of the Department of Veterani' Affaire. Mr.\nWoodi, for tha pait I' a yean\nhai bean aiioclate deputy min\nliter of thi Department of Pen-\n\u2022 'om and National Health.\n\"It    ain't    woman's     privilege     \\r, '\nchange   her   mind.   The   acamp   who |\nitarted   that   Idea  meant   to   aay   you\ncouldn't depend on a woman to ke\u00abp\nher word.\"\nMiss McKay Speaks\nat Nakusp\nTeachers Meeting\nNAKUSP. BC. \u2014 The October\nmretliiK of the Upper Slocan-Arrow\nLakes local of the British Columbia\nTeachers' Federation was held in\nthe Nakusp School Saturday afternoon\nThe report of the District Council\nrepresentative, Miss Timmte of New\nDenver, was rend mid discussed, and\nplant, were made for attending the\nKootenay Boundary Timbers con\nventinn   in  Trail.\nGuest speaker was Miss McKay\nwho described the purpose of the\n\"Rural Teacher, a majtnzine recently published hy the Department of\nEducation, Victoria. The maga\/inr\nIs ti' be a medium of exchange of\nproblems and experiences of thr\nrural teacheri Mini McKay also\nshowed interesting pictures \"itilli\"\ntaken from a moving picture film\nshowing the complete renovation of\nseveral schools in the Nanaimo Diitrict. all work done by the pupil*\nand supervised by the teachen Mr\nJewell, Inspector of Schools in the\nNelson area, accompanied Miss Mr-\nKay\nMiss M. Stanlforth. Public Health\nN irse for this district, gave a description of the work of her department and recounted ber experiences nf hi'i work of tbe Teare\nRivet District\nThe NalU-ip teacheri ierved lei\nr\\,\\y\\\nhi\". -J- t\nknock\nIAhjwwom   I\nHUH?\nNOW-LISTEN-BOOBy-\nVOU CAN'T ANSWER\nTHA*T PHONE-VOJbE\nH\/VIN' TOO MANY\nKIDS CALLIN'VOU UP-\nl*LL LOCK THE DOOR-\nSO SHE CAN'T <S(T\ntbl AND USE THE\nPHONG - AN' I'M\nOONNA TAKE A NAP-\n|C*T'   IWOtMjj^WW-i yJfUf  liv. Wori- n|Wi\nWHY DONT VOU\nANSWER TVe PHONE\nWHEN I CALLED UP ?\ntVE PHONED AT\nLEAST TEN TIMES\nM THE LAST HOUB-\nTfloVtMJL   WtVdin.  \\m\nTODAY'I PATTERN: Itidlv- q\nIduallty li tht keynote of Pattern -,\n92tt; graceful ilde doling; em- _\nbrolder or applique apray on yoke j\nor leave plain. M\nPattern 9266 oomei In ilsee 30,\n32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48.\nSize   36   requlrei  _Vj   yardi  39-\nInch;  t\/t  yard  eontraiL Tranifer   '\nIncluded.\nbend 20 centi for thli pattern to j\nThe Nelion Dally Newi, Needle-\ncraft Dept, Nelion. Write plainly\npattern number, your name and ,\naddreii. Patterni will be mailed\nto your home In about IS dayi.\nThere may be aome further delay In delivery becauie of the\nlargo Increate In orderi during the\npreient eeaion.\nAUNT   HET     jo\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nYOL*RE LUCKY*! WHEN\nYOUR PALM ITCHES,\nTHAT MEANS\nYOU'RE GOINK-\n'   TO RECEIVE\nfew;*. V   SOME\nMONEY\nI* It\n<iRCTTKt.,\nYAHASAKI,\nTHM NO\nBODIES\nMl TO M\nKHINU\nYlTUTHKW\n\u25a0 \\ SCMtCH tAVu> I\nsi IK! 4CMH.I\nmm\n-    -\n \t\n\u2014\n\u2022m*mimWtWmw**wm\n- \"\u25a0\"\nWPM.M v u i in\n\u25a0 *nv.--i-|iWii-fR_piMB\nU<V.\n1 '\nCLASSIFIED\nPHONE 144\nHELP WANTED\nK Lineman-Meter Reader aa Aula-\nst Electrician tor trie City ot Cran-\n\u00bbk. B.C.\nWuel be experienced ln Primary and\nsondary   wiring   and general el\u00abc-\ncal work and military exempt.\nPermanent position and eligible to\nne   under   Superannuation   provl-\nina If under 36.\nfcpply nearest Employment and Be-\n\u2022tlve  Service  Offloe,  reler   number\ni-22a_.   \t\nutm. - oirl for general\nlouiework for oouple. Bos 8313\nJally Newa\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAVKRb AND MINI\nKKPRKSENTATIVED\nWIDDOWSON.  PROVINCIAL\nE   W    .\nAssayer. 301  Josephine 8t\nNelaon\nj     8     ELMES     ROSSLANP.     BC\nAssayer, Chemlat. Mine repreeen ve\nflJE  WEST  KOOTENAY  ASSAY  OF-\ntlce. 410 Kootenay St.. Nelson. B C\nA  J   BUlE   Independent Mine Repre.\neentutive  Bos 54   frail, BC\t\n[PER1ENCED OIRL FOR HOUSE-1\nwork. Oood wages. Bos 5861 Dally\nNewa.\nBUIIUINU CONTKA1 IOKH\n.*NELSON ^BUILDING   CONTRACTORS\nNo Jobs too email or too large\nPhone 530 907 Front 8t\nANTED    -    HOUSEKEEPER.    806\nEdgewod Ave.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Ratea for non-\nlommercial advertisement* under\nibis clasaltlcaUon to aaalst people\nleaking employment Only 26c tor\nUM week (6 dayel covora any\naumber ot required lines Payable\nId advance Add 10c U bos num-\nyet desired\nQ\u00ab OVER 60, CANADIAN, DEBUlia\n[ull time employment aa caretaker\nSr other chores as dlah washing In\ns\u00abmp Handy Inside or outside or\nHut have you? Write or apply National Selective servloe Office, Nelion\n~\\S, YOUNQ WOMAN WITH 10\nnontha old boy wante houaewois\nH hotel work where she can keep\niba baby with her. Write Box 6747\n\"laily News.\t\nPABLI LADY WILL DO DRESS-\nnaklng alteratlona and children s\nlewlng Excellent references Mis\nsTm. Waring, 815 Observatory St\nphone 763-Y\n[Ll do plain sewino. sheets.\npillow cases, etc. lor boarding, apart.\nM_tt hou\u00bbea:PhJ0?;Bj\t\nSLWISHES HOUSEWORK BY THE\nday. Phone 763-Y.\t\n_______________ u==^\u2014=i\nCIIIIIUPRAITOR-\nJ COUN MCLAREN. DO., CHIRO-\npractlc X-ray Splnogrephy Strand\ntheatre Bldg.. Trail, B.C Phont 826\n_N(ll,-l.-.ll_ AND _UHV_.YUB_\nft W HAOQEN. MINING AND ClVa\nEngineer, B.C. Land Burveyor\nRoaaland and orand Form, B.O\nBOYD  C   AFFLECK.  21.   QORE ST\nNelson, B.C Surveyor and Engineer\nINMIKANt K AND HEAL EHTATI\nCHA_>_   F    MCHARDY,   INSURANCE\nReal Estate   Phone 138\nMAlHlM-TlT\nPERSONAL\nWBKt   IN   VANCOUVER    BTOP   Al\nAlmas Hotel. Cm O 1 t. Depot.\nuffiS twits asm mSF\ntlve. 2 weeka aupply 11; 12 weeka\n\u26666 at Fleurys Pharmacy.\nJ. CHESS\nSecond Band Dealer\nPhone 1011 524 Vernon Bt.\n25c   [IONS pHOTC^C\nP   O   Box 434. Vancouver\nAny 8-exp roil developed and printed\n25c  Reprlnta 3c   Free 6x7 coupon\n8o KODAK PRINTS 8c\n\u2014Refunda on  failures\u2014\nIn  Today\u2014Out Tomorrow\nFilm   Exchange.  Castlegar.  or\nPostmaster, Brilliant,\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINTED\n(6 or B exposure roll) 2Sc Reprints\n8c each For your snapshots, choose\nKrystal Finish Guaranteed non-fade\nprints Krystal Photos. Wilkle, Saskatchewan. Established \u25a0 over SO\nveara\nBENNETTS  LIMITED\nMachine Shop, acetylene and electrio\nwelding, motor rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 834 Vernon Bt.\nSTOP SUFFERING FROM FOLLOW-\nIng etomach Disorders: Acid atom-\nch. Indigestion. Heartburn. Coated tongue. Bad Breath Sick Headaches, etc Use Ellk'a atomact powder No 2, prepared by experienced\nPharmacist It must give Immediate\nresult* or money back, 11 00, 12 00\nEllk's Medicine Company. Dept 42\nSaskatoon   Saak.\t\nBTOP ITCHING TORTURE8 <5?\nec_ema, psoriasis, ringworm, athlete's foot and other skin Irritations with Ellk's Ointment No. 5.\nfinscription of noted akin spec*\nallat Itch relieved promptly\nskin healed quickly or money refunded 1100, \u00bb2 00 Mall orders\nfilled promptly Order today from\nEllk'a Medicine Co. Dept 42, Saskatoon  Suk\nSTEVENSON'S MACHINE SHOP -\nSpecialists ln mine and mill work\nMachine work, light and heavy\nElectric and Aoetylene welding.\n708 Vernon St., Neleon        Phone 88\nOPTOMtTKlSTb\nW  E. MARSHALL\nOptometrists\n1458 Bay Ave., Trail Phone 177\nSASH  FACTOKIKt)\nLAWSON8 8A8H FACTORT \t\nHardwood merchant       278 Baker St\nHKCOMI  HANI1  STORKS\nrANTED, MISCELUNEOUS\nWE    BUY.    SELL   AND   EXCHANGE\nWhst hsve vou? Ph   534   Ark Store\nlltrtSD \u2014 A GOOD USED 8TAN-\ndard office typewriter as well u\nrortable one. also a listing adding\nmachine. Will pay caah. What have\n\u00bbOU? Boi No. 5777 Dally News\nUP U8 JOUR SCRAP MKTAUi OR\niron Any quantity Top prices paid\nActive Trading Company. 818 Pow-\n\u25a0U St., Vsncouver. B  C\nANTED TO BUY-MAHOOANY OR\nwalnut   metronome   with   bell.   In\nd condition M Mclnnea, PO. Box\n.\u201e. preeton.         ___\t\naNTED\u2014EMPTY FEED SACKS FOR\nregetables.  State   price.   Box   57.3\nlaity Newa.\t\nU(TED\u2014DINING ROOM GATELEG\nlltenslon   table   and   lour   chairs\nPhon* '034-Y.\t\nU\u00abTEP\u2014ONE PIPELE88 FURNACE,\nsine. Burn Lumber Ss Coal C_>\nUITEQ-GIRL'S FIGURE BKAThS.\nlire five   Phone 008L.\t\nIP YOUR HIDES TO J.  P   MOR-\nah. Nelson   B  C\t\ntOPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nImmediate\nliki\nOccupancy\nroom house on two lots. Llv-\nroom, dining room, kitchen\nbath down and three bed-\nooms up. Concrete foundation,\npart basement House well det-\nirated and bright. Half a block\nf\u00a3.carline:   $2250\n\\ D. Rosling\nI Ward Street\nPhone 717\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nNOTICE OF CANCELLATION OF\nRESERVE\nNOTICE Is hereby given that the\nReserve established under authority of\nOrder-ln-Councll No. 1863, approved\nDecember 8th, 1843, notloe of which\nwaa published in the Britiah Columbia Gazette of December 16th, 1843, Is\ncancelled ln so far as lt relates to\nBlock 27 of Sublot 20 of Dlatrlct Lot\n4595, Kootenay Dlatrlct, Plan 787, containing 10.31 acrea.\nH. CATHCABT,\nDeputy Minister of Lands\nLends Department,\nVictoria. BC\nOctob-r <'-h.1944.\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nOur\nCHRISTMAS CARDS\nare now ready. W\u00ab were fort-mutt*\nln our purchase! and hava a varied\nselection to choose from. Bold in\nlots ol 3 dozen only, prlnt-ed with\nyour name and Address. Reasonable\nprices. Write for samples to Nelson\nDally News, Christmas'Card Dept,\nNelson, B.O.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nTHE WHICH,,. ,m\nTJtlVJuit JjMcl*L . . .\nPUUl.TKV   RAISERS\nPLAN  YOUB  1948 Poll THY\nOPEBATIONS NOW!\nA OOOD poultry flock Is ALWAYS a\naure source of revenue.\nWe have been aupplylng our customers\nwtth  OOOD chicks for a quarter of\na century.\nOrder youra NOW  for   1848  and\nremember\u2014\n\"IT'S RESULTS THAT COUNT\"\nWrite tor prlcea\nBos N. Langley Prairie, B  C.\nPOH SAL_\u00a3-8IX MILK COWS ANt)\none heifer. William Boiling, 10-\nMlle Ranch. Silverton.\n45 HEAD MIXED CATTLE FOR SALS.\nCows, calves, yearlings, etc., Oeorge\nAtwood. Cranbrook. B.O\nFOR BALE\u2014ONE 10 TEAK OLD MAEE\nwith 4 month old colt 175 cash. Ap-\nply Chernoff Bros., Valllcan, B.C.\nCOWS FOR BALI. HAMPSHIRE. tL-\nwyn 8t, Nelson.\nMACHINERY\nSTANDARD RECEIPT BOOKS 4 RB-\ncelpts to page with duplicate sheets\nNelson  Dally  News Printing  Dept\nROUND OAK COOK BTOVE, BAB*\nplay pen, chest of drawers, Uno,\ntubatand, utensils, mirrors. Call\n10-3,  5-7.  811  Kootenay Btrc-et.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nPOR BALK \u2014 PURJ3RKD AUtKDALl\npups, males only. Registered 136.\nless papers, $16. t- H. Hlrd, Blocan\nCity. \t\nFARM, GARDEN & NURSERY\nLLOYD GEORGE AND VDHNO RAfiP-\nberry canes, 75c per doz. Large\nbearing black cumnts We each,\nCory thomless blackberries |1.00 per\ndoz. T. Roynon, View Bt.\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES SPECIAL\nlow prices Active Trading Co. 010\nPowell St., Vancouver.  R C   '\nFOR SALE - DAVENPORT. DESK,\nheater and other furniture. Prions\n728-K.\nLARGE ROUND OAK HEATER K>R\nsale, good condition. Apply 606\nFirst Bt.\nPOR SALE\u2014BOY'S SKATES, BIZE A\nand iVi. alao Connor tubs on stand.\nPhone 230-L. ______\nRUBBER   STAMPS    FOR    MARKING\nFruit Boxes   Nelson Dally News\n7011 PAY LESS AT THE ARK BTORE\nStock  ReduclnR Sale now on\nFOR  SALE-pBOYS  SKATES,  SIZE  fl\n1110 Besttv Ave.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nNelson Machinery\nEquipment Co.\nNELSON, B.C.\n314 Hall St. Drawer 230\nMining,    Milling    and    Sawmill\nMachinery\nLawrence Industrial Power Units\nHeaps   Engineering   Co.   Sawmill\nMachinery\nSpear and Jackson, \"The World's\nOldest? Makers of Saws.\" Baw\nBits, Holdera, Circular Saws,\nPower Saws. Gasoline and Eleo-\ntrlc. \"The Saw Without a Flaw.\"\nLONDON, Nov. 1 (OP-R\u00abut\u00ab)\u2014Reflecting tha Announcement of tne\nGovernment's new bond lsaut, tho\nstock market today continued on yesterday's late upward trend, with signs\nof Increase turnover.\nBrltlth funds were In requeet early,\nbut subsequent adjustments resulted\nln minor setbacks, while British railway! met ao Investment Inquiry.\nNSW YORK\u2014Aircraft shares gave\nthe stock market a bullish nod today\nbut other departments were unresponsive and1 at the close prices were\nirregular. Transactions totalled about\n700,000 shares.\nCanadian Issues wen firm to higher.\nLake Short gained %, Dome %: and\nCJA \\i.\nCHICAGO\u2014The weakness of oorn\ndisturbed grain futures markets today\nand prices broke und\u00ab\u00bb the pressure\nof hedge selling and profit taking.\nDealings were limited ln all pits, indicating pre-election nervousness and\nthe local character of the trade.\nWheat dropped more than a cent a\nbushel below the previous close lat*\nIn the session and there was more\nactivity as prices worked downward,\nThs setback was In sympathy with\nother grains.\nA late break ln corn futures carried\nprices of new lows for the week.\nMONTREAL\u2014Papers got most of the\naction ln light transfers up to the\nflnsl hour today on the Montreal Exchange The group was higher on average. Heading the list were Abltlbl\nfl per cent Preferred, Price Bathurat\nand Brown.\nIn Metals, Smelters and Noranda\nwere In front. Intercity Baking touch-\ned a new high ln Miscellaneous. Mines\nwere generally higher.\nTORONTO \u2014 Stock*   registered   a\nfirming tendency In today's Toronto\nexchange market and volume expanded to about BAO.00O shares. Soma of\nthe cheaper Issues provided ths\ngreater part of the share turnover,\nEast Crest leading with volume of\nabout 300,000 shares.\nIn the gpld group gains of 10 oenti\nwere boarded by Pioneer and Anglo-\nHuronlan pid other golds up about\nS cents were Macaasa, Pickle Crow\nTeck Hughei, Giant Yellowknlfe,\nO'Brien. San Antonio, Pamour and\nCon west.\nTrading waa comparatively dull In\nthe Base Metal group on a ilightly\nstrong prloe note.\nWINNIPEG\u2014Ixport sales In barley\nto the United States were estimated\nat 600.000 bushels today on the Winnipeg Grain Exchange. Malting grades\nwere Involved.\nTrading In rye wu moderately active with dealings confined to locals\nand commission houses.\nFutures closed V*. - % oent lower with\nOctober at 1.0&Va- Trading was sanctioned during the day ln July rye\nwhich came on the board at 11.0*1%\nand closed at $1.03.\nVANCOUVER \u2014 Total turnover on\nVancouver Stock Exchange today\namounted to 53.400 shares of which\nmore than 48.000 wer* traded !n\nBrldge River Consolidated.\nLONDON (CP) - Members of the\ncivil defence services will be allowed to keep their uniforms on\ndemobilization but all Insignia except war service chpvroni and\nwound strlpee must be removed be-\nfofe they may be worn on unofficial occasions.\nToronto Stock Quotation!\nLondon Concrete Mixers\nLondon Pump_.        Air Comp-Maori\nCompletely overhauled.\nAir Equipment Service Ltd.\n\u00ab58 Hornby Vtncouver, B.C.\nPOR SALE-WARKHOOS1! ELEVATOR\nopenited by hand with weight drum\nand rope complete. Can be aeen at\nThe W. H. Mallrln Oo.. NeUon.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\n18 FOOT ROUND BOTTOM nSRINQ\nboat, cabin, motor 11 desired. Boi\n6760 Dally Newa,       .     ,\nRENTALS\nWANTED TO RENT\u2014S OR 4 ROOM\nhouse, would buy any furniture,\nBon 5770 Dally Newi.\nfOR SALE - INTERNA TONAL IV,-\nton truck, jood mechanical condition   \u00bb300.0_.   Central   Truck   and\nEquipment Company.\t\nNEW  AND USED BATTERIES. NEL-\n\u25a0on Auto Wrecking and Oarage.\nFOR AUTOMOBILE PARTS\nCity Auto Wreckera\nFOR RENT\u2014HEATED ROOM, UT_L_U\ntlea supplied, 719 Kootenay Bt.\nROOM AND BOARD\nWANTED\u2014ROOM AND BOARD FOR\nmother and 3^ year old child vrlth\ncare of child during day whlli mother works. Box 6805 Dally Newa.\nMINES\nAnglo-Huronlan  \t\nBase Metals Mining .\nBeattle Qold Mlnea ...\nBldgood Klrkland \t\nBuffalo Ankerlt-a\t\nCaatle-Tretheway  \t\nChromium M At 8 \t\nOonlarum Mines \t\nConsolidated M & 8 .\nDome Mines  ,\nEast Malartlc  \t\nFalconbrldge Nickel\nHard Rock Oold \t\nHolllnger \t\nHudson Bay U_a ....\nInternet Nickel  \t\nKerr-Addison \t\nKlrkland Lake \t\nLake Shore Mines ....\nLamaque Contac ~.\nLittle Long Lac \t\nMacL CockshuW \t\nMadsen Red Lake ....\nMalartlc Oold -\t\nMclntyre-Porcuplne ..\nMcKenzIe Red I_>kt .\nNoranda -\nNormetal \t\nOmega Oold \t\nPamour Porcupine ....\nPerron Qold \t\nPickle Crow Gold ....\nPowell Rouyn Oold ..\nPr-Btpn East Dome ....\nSan Antonio Oold ...\nSherrltt Gordon \t\nMl\n.12\n1.50\n.3514\n1.15\n1.09\n1 35\n1.-8\n6 IS\n38.00\n3 38\n. 55\n,88\n10 50\n31 38\n83.00\n11 38\n10.\n17.00\n6.30\n1 33\n2 (10\n2 17\n3.40\n6B SO\n1.87\n50 39\n.63\n27\n1.24\n1 04\n2.511\n.00\n2 47\n3 95\n.88\nSlscoe Qold \t\nSlftden Malartlc\t\nSullivan Cons  \u2014\t\nSylvanlte\t\nTeck-Hughes Qold\t\nTobprn Oold Mlnea.\n.96\n.40\n1 38\n2 50\n3 50\n1 05\nVentures          10.00\nWalte Amulet \u201e      4.7J\nWright Hargreavea  _.      8.40\nAunor       8.70\nAumaque   _         .80\nCochenour _.       3 83\nOhestervllle - -        I.M\nOolden Gate _         .10%\nalant Y K  _       7.78\nSteep Rock         3.89\nTrans C R ..._   .88\nOIL8\nImperial       18.78\nInter Petroleum      21.38\nRoyallte       18.00\nTeiaa Canadian          1.31\nVermllata  . .    11\nINDUSTRIALS\nBell Telephone  _    160\"^\nBrewers Ss Distillers        8V\u00ab\nBC Power \"A\"  _      18\nBuilding Products      18\nCan Car St Foundry .        B1^\nCan Malting  -      48\nCan Pacific Rly  _      11 Vi\nDominion Bridge  -      39*,*\nDistillers Seagram*  \u2014     39 \\t,\nFord of Canada \"A\"       35\nImperial Tobacco .....\u2014      11%\nMontreal Power       lfi'i\nPower Corp  - \u2014       8\nSteel of Can       68 n\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, NOV. 2, 1944 \u2014 \u2022\nBuilding Workers\nto Unite With\nCong rets of Labor\nVAKCOUVIR, Nov. 1 (CP).-Amalgamated Building Workers ot Canada, large independent union, hu\nvoted 2 to 1 by genual referendum\nto affiliate wtlh the Canadian Congreu of Labor, Amalgamated Building Workeri headquarter! here announced today. Next itep will be\nformal application for a charter, an\nAmalgamated Building Workeri\nspokesman laid.\nNEW   YORK   STOCKS\nAmerican Can \t\nAm Smelt Ss Bat ....\nAmer Telephone ....\nAmerican Tobacco\nAnaconda .\n  87%\n  40 ti\n.  184\n  6714\n  3714\nBeth Steel    64tt\nCanadian Pacific  _ loy,\nDupont    169\nGen Electric  \u2014 39\nGen  Motors   -   61tfc\nInternational  Nickel    80%\nInter Tel & Tel   ,.... 89V4\nKenn Copper  84%\nUS Rubber  \"  48%\nUB Steel  \u2014 6814\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Nov. 1 (OP)\u2014Tueeday'a\nreceipts: 636 cattle, 133 calves, 1640\nhots, 1114 sheep. Today's: 304 cattle,\n36 calves, 73 sheep.\nAbout 2000 cattle carried over from\nTueeday. Hoga sold Tueaday at #16.35\nfor A's at yards and plants.\nGood lambs 10.80-11.25. Common\nlambe W-10.\nGood butcher steers 10.50-11. Good\nbutcher heifers 9-9.60.\nGood cows 7.25-7.50. Canners and\ncutters 3.25-5.\nStock cows and heifers 6-7.76. Good,\nreal calves 9-9.50.\nGood stocker and feeder steers\n8.75-9.60.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 1 (CP) \u2014 Grain\nquotations:\nOpen    High    Low    Close\nDec.     ....  108 tl    107V,    105%    106%\nMay     105K     109%     104%    104%\nJuly    104%    104%     103        192\nOats: All futures at celling prices\nof 51 %B,\nBarlcv: All futures Ht delllng prices\nof 64% B.\nCASH PRICES:\nOats: 3 C.W. 61%: n 3 C.W 6l%:\net. 1 feed 91%; 1 teed 51%;,3 feed\n61; 8 feed 49: track 51%.\nRye: 1 C.W. 1.05%; 2 C.W. 1.05%:\n3 CW. 1.00; re). 2 C.W. 88%; 4 C.W\n90%; track 1.05,\nBarley; All grades at celling prices\nof 64%.\nOets: Screenings\u201410 00.\nU.S. Navy Fliers\nDestroy 2594 lo\n28to Jap Planes\nPEARL HARBOB, Nov. 1 (AP).-\nUnited States navy fliers, paced bj\nan ace who downed nine enemj\nplanei on one mission to Mantis\ndeitroyed (rom 2594 to 2846 Japa\nnese planes during the two monthi\nAmerican troops Invaded Palau arict\nthe Philippines and the nov>*\ncrushed the enemy's Imperial fleet\nThe Aug. 31-Oct. 31 scourge of th*\nfoes air power in sweeps extending\nfrom the Philippines North to within\n200 miles of Japan virtually nullified work of the enemy's assembl>\nlines for the period and cut deef\ninto his store of battle-tested pilots\nAdmiral Nimitz, issuing this \"conservative recspltulation of enemy\naircraft losses,\" said the cost wai\napproximately 300 carrier planes\u2014a\nratio of better than eight or nine to\none in favor of U.S. fliers.\nThese achievements are those ot\n3rd and 7th Fleet carrier fliers alone.\nThey do not take into account for\nthe same per'od a noteworthy bag\nby army fliers.\nShowing the way for the navy is\nCmdr, David McCampbell of Loi\nAngeles with 30 planes to his credit,\nincluding nine he got in less than\ntwo hours Oct. 24.\nCAMBRIDGE, England (CP). \u2014\nReports thst a body was found in a\nwatertank at King's College caused\na stir until inspection showed it was\na bronze statue of Hermes, the wing\nheeled Greek god, which usually\noccupied a place at.Whewell's Court\nat Trinity.\nSink 31 Warships\nAround Greece\nin Six Weeks\nLONDON, Nov. 1 (CP).\u2014A. V,\nAlexander, First Lord of the Admiralty, told the House of Commoni\ntoday the Royal Navy had sunk 31\nenemy warships and transports and\n40 smaller craft and severely damaged 18 warships and merchant vessels and 15 smaller craft around\nGreece in the last six weeks. Many\nof the ships, he said, were carrying\nGerman troops.\nAt Aukland in\nFirst Round World\nFlight by R.A.F.\nAUCKLAND, N.Z, Nov. 1 (CP\nCable).\u2014An RAT. I_^ncaitcr bomber commanded by Wing Cmdr. D. C.\nMcKinley, D.F.C, making the first\nround-the-world flight by an R.A.F.\naircraft, arrived at Auckland today\nafter a trans-Pacific flljfht.\nThe plane left Britain Oct 11,\nflew to Montreal, and then proceeded by way of Waihlngton, San\nFrancisco, Honolulu and Pacific islands airfields.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\ni\n\"\\]$  lr~ VOU   NEW)   A   ClOOD   AC-\nUdent   or   ilcineae   Policy    C     W\npplerard   393  Baiter  Bt\t\nBPKCl.-_-.IZ-S   IN   PAilM   LANDS\nour  Hat\u2014 R-beruon  Realty  Co\nm    53- Ward 81   \t\nSAL*\u2014 LARUE HOUSE, i UJVB,\n(urnace.  13500.00, food  terma\n'ho\u00ab 1_B-X,\t\nthan Sally Neroa\nTel-phona 144\nlossified Advertising Rate\nllo par Una per ln__rUon\n44. per line per week (8 ennarc-\ntlva Inaertlnm tor cost ol 41\n\u2022 1.4. a line a month 138 tlmea)\nMinimum 2 llnea p. r Inaertlon\nBoi   numberi   Ilr   eitra    Thla\niTva any number of tlniei\nPUUI-IC  (IJ-OALI  NOTH E8.\nTouEH-s. rrc.\nllo per Una firm inaertlon, and\n4c each aubaequent Ina-Ulon\nALL ABOVI  l-ATTH  IJBS   10%\nIB PROUIT PAYMENT\nSPECIAL  LOW   B4T1B\nKon-commerrlal  il t ii at loni\nittilet tor  _.V  (or  ain   rr.nilrrrt\n.BlBbCT at llnei Tor ill dayi. pay-\nilr In alliance.\n8UU8CRIPT10N RATXa\n_jl\u00ab oopy    \u2022     ol\nly Oftnlar. per *ie_\nIn   adranra  \u2014        Js\ncarrier,  per  year        13 00\n111! ont.lde Nelion i\nmonth         \u2014\u2022 \u2022    IS\nnontna _..._      2 \u00b0\u00b0\nmontha 4 00\n.1  Tt\"       ,0\u00b0\nAbo-_   ritea  apply   ln   Canada.\n11*1 Ulatfa and  l*nlt\u00bbd  K'.ni-\nto aut*crlbe:i llilng outalda\n.Jlar carrier area.\nTltrul.trt and t\u00ab' Canada abtrt\nrt   poflifa   li   iwiuirad     f*u*\nOth 41 fiO   three nvihthl. 44 nn\nmonth. 4\" 00   .ui. .-at   ll\u00bb 00\nDOWN\n1. Plunder*!\nt Apart\nS. Sntra\n(Fuel\n5 S-sh_p\u00abd\nmoldings\nI Salt\n(ch\u00abm.)\nT Simlani\n\u2022 Rebound\n> Wormlik*.\nlarvae\n11 Cram\n15 Gormuv\ndlier\n18 Ot) top\nU. MoneUry\nunit (Latvia)\ntX Obnoxloua\nplant\n14. Bone (anal)\ntt. Bad order\n(abbr)\nM. Cover\n37. Quadruped\nM A wise\nanswer\nSO Fastened\n11 Gaseous\nelement\nIS U S. Preel.\ndent (posi)\n14. Soviet leader\nGUI .Fl   I-_-HH\nnBHnra nraiaao\n-.BUMS  \u25a1-_(?___-\niai_[_r_<   aa\naencr. nacKH\naSaaat. nnaa\naa   Mm\nnnna nr-: nou\nMC-DP-I _ sasiSB\nr-iMija ciuna\nTriter-iy'i tttam\n38 Chief\n40. Pole\n41. Queen of\nfairies\n43 A wing\nACROSS\n1 Sounded,\naiabell\n5 Eskera\n9 Helmet-\nshaped\n(Bot:)      \/\n_0 Gazes\n12 Tumult*\n13 Choose\n14 Shrub\n(Jap)\n13 Goddesa\nof e\u00bbrth\n1. ColnlFr)\n17 Comes to\npan\nJO Whether\n11 Senior\n(abbr.)\n\u00ab Greek\nletter\n13 Doglike\nmammal\n28 Receptacle*\nfor fluid*\n27 Circle\n20 Cravat\n30 Father\n32 Color gold\n(Her)\n33 Uttle child\n35 Maleahcep\n37 Indefinite\narticle\n38 Urge\n39 Muffler\n41 Tropical\nfrail\n43 English\nauthor\n44 Foralgn\n45 Finishes\n46 Can*\nCRTPTU4JC0TB\u2014A oryptogrun quotation\nVMJDAXMSDA \u00bbD QC VCKWNM8FT-\nFAX imi IO VUJDAXMS ACM Kft\nIDNRADVV-NBEOMR\nADVERSE   FORTUNE   REVEAL*\nTeatcrday'a   Oyptoqurit*.\n'ROSrERITY HU\nDistributed bv Kin* Faatura* lyallect*. Ua\nVANCOUVER   STOCKS\nMINES                               Bid Ask\nBayonne -         .07 .08\nBralorne  _   147. 1490\nCariboo Oold       J.00 3.15\nOolconda   ___       .0. .0.\nHedley Maecot        .-8 .89\nRoot Belle          3S .29\nPacific Nickel         .13 .13\nPend Oreille       1.30 135\nPioneer Oold       370 \u2014\nPremier Gold       1.18 \u2014\nPrivateer -       M tt\nReeves MacD  _       .31 \u2014\nReno Oold        .0514 08*4\nSheep Creek  -     105 1.08\nSllbak Premier 80 .88\nWhitewater    _       .07V1 .04\nYmlr Yankee Oltt 03H \u2014\nOILS\nAnaconda  _       .04>4 .06\nAnglo Can  87 .69\nAP Consolidated ..._       .11\nCal ti Edmonton ....     175 1.79\nCommoll           18'4 \u2014\nCommonwealth         20 AS\nMcD Senur BSp 0614 .0614\nPacific Pete  _       .80 ts\nRoval Canadian 0314 BSV,\nRoyBllte          18.00 \u2014\nSouthwest Pete 16 .35\nVanalta             09 .0914\nVulcan               _       .18 \u2014\nINUI'STRIAI _\nCapital   Eat               8 B0 4 38\nCoast Brcwerlci       180 185\nUnited Distill        8 00 875\nMON1HEAL STOCKS\n[MH8TH1AI-8\nAssoc Brew of Can   2314\nCan Car & Pdy Pfd   3814\nCan Hleanishlp   10^\nCon Min A Smelting   61'*\nDom Steel H Coal B   71\nNaUonal  Brew Ltd     M\nQu-bec Powar  13\nShawnlgan W * P   18\nSt Lfijflflnce Corp          3'.,\nSt Uwrence Corp Pfd   JO',\nIUNK .\nCcmmerce     _  14^\nDominion  - -  181,\nImperial      16'4\nMontreal      _  IB\",\nNova Scotia   2\u00ab',\nlonal         It's\nToronto  2614\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 lnd         14673 up   30\nJO rails        41 66 up   07\n15 utllr,        28 67 up .37\nA perfectly packed parachute will\nopen within two and one-h*lf aec-\nnnda after the rlfword ha* been pulled,\ned\nOK. IV*\\*M WtYHAND*\nOPTVtiWHOl.lTHt+4\/\n\u25a0yOU-CT HTM* HDWUAi\nWITH SII4 tNOU-T*-MT,\nTVB POCTOK* WOULD l\"**t>\n_W4**T\u00bb (WAU.V WB0N4 !\u2022\nTV\u00abYP LOCK use* yxin\nSOIWyMRLBLOYr- V OK-1 WASH   *\n7T#\u00abs*hN_X\/rAM40T      MVHANP\u00bb\n.SOt** TCHMTAW      *\u2014vCTHi\nCARIBR STAMP iBTWEeN) WKX*\nM\u00bbAM\u00bbwyHAP*c\u00bb\u00abss,yTHN<J'\u00abirr\n\u2022XXJouaHr\n\u25a0ttstawwyexm\nIETS be qalte -rank.\nWhen you read \u2014 as you probably did durln-r\nJ the past few months\u2014that more than 300,000\npeople in Canada have syphilis, what wu your\nreaction? Did you say, \"That's too bad, something\nshould be done about it\", and then turn to the comic\npage? Chances are you did.\nBut if that article had told you that Tommy Jones,\nthe lad who used to mow your lawn after school hsd\nsyphilis\u2014how would you have felt about it? Or that\nthe young couple who built that cute house in the\nnext block, hid just lost > baby through syphilis...\nwould that hive made you stop ind think?\nOr, if you suddenly discovered thit7\u00ab*r Mir \u2022\u2022..'.\nNo?Thit couldn't happen? Rut it cin. And it does... to\nhundred* of Tommies and Marys every year, right here*\nTrom   s  statement\nMarch   Mth,   1944\nIn Canidi. Right In your community. You*11 neTer\nrcid irticles like thst, of course, for these ire tha\npersonal tragedies that people bear in silence.\nSo, when you pick up the paper sometime anil\nread, \"... there were 5,000 new VENEREAL DISEASI\ncases reported in this province last year. . .\", remem-\nberl These ire not cold figures. They represent 5,000\nheart-breiking . . . heart-aching situations.\nYes, VENEREAL DUEAJE is a serious problem. It'l\ni problem for parents, for taipiyers, fur young peopla\non the threshold of life; for everyone.\nVINIREAL DISEASE need nerer itrlke if we all do\nour part. If we know the facti. If we use these facta\nto advantage. If we don't shrug our shoulders ind siy,\n\"This couldn't hippen to inyonc in my family.\"\nYou have a duty to your family and the community.\nLEARN THE FACTSI\nFICH T VD ON\nFfir \u00ab\/\/ rhe teett ibo-ot VU writ* yrtot\nPrr-mrui*! t>ptftmcnt of HrilfSfof th* new,fr\u00ab boolWf\n\"viCTulT   OVn   1 !_l\u00bbll\".\nSECTOR FRONT\nXf-traeiJh\nttstwtn ot ttwii im An*.. * * n tv _ i \u25a0\u25a0An*\nta farther i\"_._*_\/;\/(^r atatmil VD.\n_x\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NIWS, THURSDAY, NOV. % 1944\nIT POTS YOUJN THI BIST Of SPIRITS\nT\n\"CRIME DOES NOT PAY\"\nColored Cortoon\n\"THE BODY GUARD\"\nLait Timei Today\nComplete Shows 7:00-8:55\nCIVIC\nKINSMEN CLUB SHELLOUT MATINEE TODAY AT 2:00\nFrl.-Sat.: Ann* Sheridan, \"SHINE ON HARVEST MOON\"\nVITA-MINERAL OVALS\nVitamin and Mineral  '\nFood Supplement\n100 tablet! $2.50\nMann, Rutherford\nDRUG CO.\nCensorship Held Back Stllwell News;\nNelson Slated to Return to China\nTrail District $239r200 to Go to\nFly Victory Loan Pennant\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. 1\u2014Over the\nthree-quarters mark on tha road to\nIta $1,0_5,000 objective, Trail District ls turning its energies to a last\nrtretch drive (or $239,200 in 7th\nVictory Loan applications. That\nmuch will see its pledge fulfilled.\nHav* the |ob Don*\nRi-jji.\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nROSCOE\nAND\nFOURNIER\nOARAQEMEN\nttCl CHIBT AUTO SKRV1C1\nPhona 12] Nelaon. B t\nFor General Contracting,\nBuilding and Repaint.\nPhone 647L\nN. H. NELSON\n.lll.llllll.IIIIMIIMI__.--_ll.ll_.M-.llllllll\nW\u00ab  Now  Have a  Supply ot  Beit\nENGLISH CHAMOIS\nCUTHBERT MOTORS\nnilHHllllllllllliiiiilliilliiiiiiiiillliinii\nThe unit with $27,950 received\nWednesday reached 76.6 per cent of\nits quota\u2014the best showing in the\nKootenay to date. Trail city leads\nthe five sub-units making up the\nDistrict, 86.2 per cent of its $705,000\nhaving been subscribed.\nFruitvale held second place with\nclose to 84 per cent raised so far o_\nits $25,000. Castlegar was slightly\nbehind Fruitvale with almost 83\nper cent of the same quota.\nRossland was In fourth place with\n$108,750 for 68 per cent of Ita $160,\n000 quota. Greenwood had 35 per\ncent of ita objective and Grand\nForks 20 per cent.\nIn the C. M. k S. Internal canvass official raturns placed the to\ntal at $506,800 for 92 per cent of its\n$550,000 quota. The West Kootenay\nPower and Light canvaas had reached $12,874, while the Tadanac municipal canvass was the only Internal drive to have passed 100 per cent\nwith $21,762.\nDay's sales   Total\nTrail       $21,750   $60\u00ab,050\nRosslaqd\nGrand   Forks\nGreenwood-\nBoundary  ...\nCastlegar   \t\nFruitvale   \t\n1,350\n500\n50\n108,750\n15,100\n11,300\n20,700\n20,900\nTotals  .$27,950   $785,800\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nfometrist\nOptc\nSuit* 205\nMedical Arts Bui\nding\nReliable Watch Repairing , . .\nPrompt Service\nHARVEY'S\n684 Baker St.\nEMPIRE CLEANERS & DYERS\nWe Call For and Deliver\nPHONE 288\nMen's and  ladies C'l  **s\\\nWinter Coats *}*ata*y\nMen's, ladles' suits, Indies'      Q0_*\nDresses, plain 9tly\nSee the Selection of\nOccasional Chairs\nat\nHOME FURNITURE\nFLEURY'S\nPharmacy\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nMed ArU Bit\nPHONE 25\nKootenay Kids\nAid Milk\nfor Britain Fund\nNelson youngsters turned their\nHallowe'en fun into an estimated\n8000 quarts of milk for their coualns\nin Britain. Several thousand additional quarU will go to kiddies\noverseas through the effort* of\nchildren In other Kootenay centres.\nOver 4825 sheets of Shellout ticket* were distributed through the\nKootenay hy the Nelson Kinsmen\nClub, while over 1200 were distributed in Nelson, Some 280 District\nteachers aided the drive. Every\ncentre of East and West Kootenay\nwas covered.\nJunior High School Cadet* tnd\nRed Crow members, guided by\ntheir teachers, did a splendid Job\nof distributing the tickets here. T. S.\nShorthmise reported to the Kinimen Club Hallowe'en Committee.\nThe \"take\" in Nelson would likely\nbe $800, he said.\nYoungsters who gavt up their\nHallowe'en fun and treats to aid\nthe Milk for Britain fund will be\ntreated to a show this afternoon.\nHawks Blast Out\n8-3 Victory\nFrom Rangers\nCHICAGO, Nov. 1 (AP).-Chl\noago Black Mawks, comparatively\nlethargic In the first period, exploded for alx goala In the aecond\nperiod and two more In the third\nto beat New York Rangers 8-3\nbefore 10324 fane tonight It was\nthe firtt meeting of the two clubs\nIn the 19.4-45 National Hockey\nLeague seaion.\nThe game became a wild melee\nduring the free-scoring second* period, and Selbert was given a major\npenalty for lighting with Walt At-\nanaa.\nLineups:\nNew York \u2014 McAuley, Heller,\nGoldup, Thurrler, Hunt, K. MacDonald.\nChlcag*\u2014Karakas, Selbert, Mitchell, Thomas, Harms, Brayshaw.\nNew York subs\u2014Dill, Hunt, Bucko\nMcDonald, Warwick, Atanas, Harold\nCooper, Demarco. Scherza, Shack.\nChicago subs\u2014Bretto, Smith, Pur-\npur, Check, Joe Cooper, Moslenko,\nHoreck, Johnson, Fraser.\nReferee\u2014Bill Chadwick; llnesnien\n\u2014Joe Springer and Steve Meuris.\nSummary\nFirst period: 1, New York, Bucko\nMcDonald (Atanas) 7:27. Penalties-\nDill, Joe Cooper, Scherza, Heller.\nSecond period\u20142, Chicago, Smith\n(Harma, Horeck) 3:43; 3, Chicago,\n(Moslenko (Horeck, Smith) 5:49; 4,\nChicago, Horeck (Smith) 13:04; 5,\nChicago, Check (Fraser) 15:21; 6,\nChicago, Fraser (Harms, Brayshaw)\n16:25; 7, Chicago, Check (Purpur,\nThomas) 19:41. Penalties\u2014Bretto,\nSeibert, Atanas, Kilby MacDonald,\nBrayshaw.\nThird period: 8, Chicago, Seibert\n(Smith, Moslenko) 6:25; 9, Chicago,\nSelbert (Purpur, Fraser) 11:20; 10,\nNew York, Hunt 16:36; 11, New\nYork, Warwick (Schack, Demarco)\n18:29.   Penalties\u2014Atanas, Warwick\noy SPENCER MOOSA\nAssociated Pren Staff Writer\nCHUNGKING, Nov. 1 (AP).-K\ncan now be disclosed that Gen. SU1-.\nwell recieved his recall from Washington Thursday, Oct. 19. He took\nformal leave of Gen. Chiang Kai-\nshek the next day.\nOn Saturday, Gen. Stllwell drove\nto the airport and left China.\nBrooks Atkinson, New York Times\ncorrespondent, left for the United\nStates with htm.\nThe correspondents ln Chungking\nknew Gen. Stllwell had left, but\nwere unable to break the story. They\nexpected to have an opportunity to\ngive the background when Washington on Oct. 28 announced Gen. Stilwell'i recall, but iron-clad censorship as relentless as any ever Imposed by Chungking\u2014both American and Chir__.se\u2014clamped down.\nThere was no response today to\nefforts to obtain a statement from\nGen. Chiang.\nRumors, purveyed as bet, are\ncurent that the American attitude\non tht question of over-all Allied\ncommand In Chine it unchanged and\nthat M\u00bbJ.-Gen. Patrick J. Hurley,\nPresident Roosevelt's representative\nhere, renewed original proposals tfter Gen. Stilwell's departure.\nBy JOHN  M, HIGHTOWER\nAiiociated Press Staff Writer\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 1 (AP). -\nDonald M. Nelson, President Roosevelt's production trouble-shooter, it\nslated to return to China soon to\nhelp step up munition! production.\nThe White House evidently believes\nthe Stilwell affair has not prejudiced\nhis chances for success.\nIn fact, it was learned today that\nsome of the arrangements previously made tor Invigorating China's\nwar effort are believed not to have\nbeen upset by the President's recall\nof Gen. Joseph W. Stllwell at the\nrequest of President Chiang Kai-\nshek.\nSays Gen. Chiang Wouldn't Allow\nChinese lo Be Foreign Trained\n$1916 COLLECTED\nFOR SALVATION\nARMY, CRANBROOK\nCRANBROOK, B.C.\u2014By a fair\nmargin East Kootenay exceeded Ita\nSalvation Army home front appeal\nobjective of $1500 to turn in $1918\nat the conclusion of the fortnight's\ndrive for work funds for the organization in Canada.\nThe Cranbrook house-to-house\ncanvass done largely by members\nof the school staff;, and students of\nsenior m at ri cm la tion resulted ln collection of $1037 of the final total.\nKimberley's contribution, most of it\nthrough a large donation by the\nPatriotic Society, amounted to $403,\nand Creston's collections were\n$14812.\nThe rural centre! continued to\ncontribute out of proportion to their\npopulation with the following totals: Windermere-Invermere $126,\nCanal Flat $77 78; Wardner $5130;\nFort Steele $50; Brisco $11\n$6.25 and Edgeweater $3.50\nBy LLOYD STRATTON\nAiiociated Pren Staff Writer\nWhile I was in various parts of\nunoccupied China last January and\nFebruary, the statement was made\nto me that it would be largely up to\nthe American forces to win the war\nin China, with the aid of Britain\nand China in that order.\nIt wm explained that this was\nnot because of any lack of bravery,\ndevotion or ability on the part of\nthe Chinese armed forces. It was\nchiefly the inability to obtain for\nproper training and equipping Chinese troops. *\nIt wai frankly itated? >i I\nheard it repeated In many quarter! thereafter, that the basic rea-\nion that a relatively paltry amount of Chlneie manpower wai\nmade available wai Preiident\nChiang Kal-shek'i reluctance to\npermit any large number of Chlneie to be foreign trained or\ncommanded lest these lame Chlneie troopt might turn agalnit\nhim at lome future date,\nThli type of planning envliagei\na continuance of the type of sectional government by war lordi\nthat io long hat kept China dismembered.\nRecognized reports of military,\neconomic #hd financial fraternizing\non the part of the Chinese with the\nJapanese, and vice-versa, were coalmen In Chungking. This ordinarily\nincomprehensible cdnduct was justified for reasons of strategy or\neconomic relief by persons in both\nmilitary and political positions.\nAt the same Ume, one was told\nof   battles   in   which   the   Chinese\n\u25a0 showed   themselves   to   be   great\nfighters when given  the incentive,\nthe leadership and the equipment.\nHow long the main featurei of\nthli situation have existed is prob\nHe aaid lt was only the four freedoms enunciated by President\nRoosevelt, plus a fifth\u2014the freedom\nof economy.\nBy freedom of economy, he said he\nmeant the right of the Chinese people as a whole to fully enjoy the\nsocial, economic and security benefits granted the people of the United States.\nA visitor to wartime China inevitably draws the conclusion that the\npresent Government of China, in\nnearly all of its essential operations,\nis not Democratic.\nREXALL\nlcSALE\nCONTINUES TODAY, FRIDAY\nAND SATURDAY\nCITY DRUG CO.\nSMXMMXMWMMXMWWUMaiMl\nYour Rexall Store\nPHONE 34\nBOX 460\nSTETSON.\nHATS\nAll the new shapes and\ncolors   for   Fall   Wear.\nt*   Playboy        $ 6.50\n9    Stratoliner     $ 7.50\n%   Premier        $ 8.50\n\u2022   Royal\n$10.00\nNo Phont \u2014 No Exchanges \u2014 No Chargei \u2014 No Delivery\nNakusp Passes IN Per Cent in 7th\nV-Loan; District Has $361 r650\nVictory Loan\nRolls Up lo\n$575,813,500 Mark\nOTTAWA, Nov. 1 (CP).\u2014C\u00abn-\nada't Seventh Victory Loan rolled\nup to the $975,813,600 mark today\nand a national loan official tald\ntonight they expected the number\nof applications would total more\nthan 1,000,000 when returnt from\ntoday'i telling are all In.\nThe $575,813,500 total Included\n$263,151,550 from Individual Canadians.\nReports today Indicated purchases\nout of payroll savings across Canada\nare reaching a substantial figure.\nTwo of the armed servlcet\u2014-he\narmy and the navy\u2014reported they\nhad exceeded their objectives,\nwhile the R.O.A.F. It within $280,.\n000 of ltt $15,000,000 quota.\nLoan officials anticipated the total\nto be announced tomorrow will not\nbe less than $645,000,000.\n, i Heading today's list of large pur-\nlematlcal. But long before early I .,.-_. w__ $ir500000 ,rom th- Ca.\n1944  there  wai  evidence   In  the\nNakusp oontlnued to add to lttI\nproud  7th   Victory   Loan  record\nWedneiday.   Firtt In Brltlth Co- j\nlumbla to attain ltt objective In\nthlt greateit loan, Iti itandlng hat\nofficially   patted   the   106.5   per\ncent of ltt $55,000 quota Wedneiday,     Application!  for  an  additional $700 lifted ltt contribution\nto $53,600.\nSALMO DISTRICT CLIMBS\nThe steady march by Salmo toward its $20,000 goal also continued. Second in the unit, its subscription Wednesday stood at $9800,\nexactly 49 per cent ot Its quota.\nNelson had achieved 40.9 per cent ol\nita $258,150 target, on official returns to noon hour. This did not include results of the all-out Red,\nWhite and Blue drive. Kaslo 36 per\ncent, and New Denver 19.3 per cent\nThe District, with $361,650 in sales,\nreached 43.8 per cent of its quota.\nSales   reported   Wednesday   and\ncumulative totals were:\nDay's Sales      Total        %\nNakusp $    700   $ 58,600   106.5\nNew Denver     3,250       15,500     19 3\nKaslo        1,200       19,600     36\nSalmo       1,950        9,800     49\nNelsop     35,950     258,150     40\nTotal     $43,050   $361,650\nCLELAND HEADS\nWINDERMERE\n7TH LOAN DRIVE\nIKVTRMERB, B.C., Nov. 1\u2014An energetic committee U laboring ln tne\nWindermere District to again reach\nthe BybfltantlE-lly Increased quota of\nthe Seventh Victory Loan. To date\nabout \u202210,000 haa been subscribed\nagainst a quota of $53,000.\nThe committee follows:\nChairman, W. H. Cleland of Invermere.\nVice-Chairman, P. A. McOrath of\nCanal Flat.\nFairmont, Rev. A. O. Barry,\nKootenay Reserve, Dominic Nicholas.\nWindermere, K. M, Marples.\nAthalmer, F. Richardson, B. Wey-\nIcamp.\nWilmer. A. W. O Btatham.\nThe Benches, N. M. Magpies.\nRadium, J. J. Meredith, H. C, Oliver.\nEdgewater, I. C. Peatfleld, H. H\nMoore.\nBrlaco, Mrs. Blair, A. Folfenden.\nCinal Flat. Newton Newman,\nInvermere,  C. Oaterloh, Dr. C\nHarding, O. A. McGulnnese. A E\nFisher, Rev. B. 8. Hartley, Canon T\nD. %octor. F W. Hllller. W. Weir, E\nTunnacllffe and H. V. Taylor,\nLadies Aid Holds\nSuccessful\nWhist, Salmo\nSALMO, B.C.\u2014Ladiei Aid held a\nsuccessful bridge and whist drive In\nthe Community Hall recently, prizes\ngoing to Mra. M C- Donaldson. Mrs.\nPayant, S Curwen, R. Q. Thistles-\nwalte Mrs, BmU Lund was the lucky\nwinner of a box of chocolates.\nEMORY'S\nLIMITED\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nSHIP THREE CARS\nOF APPLES FROM\nBOSWELL THIS WEEK\nSIRDAR. B.C\u2014Boswell Fruit Qroir-J\nBra have shipped three cars of oboloT\napples from this\"\" point during thL\nweek and expect to continue shlppl#|\nfor \u00bbon_e Ume yet. The lack of fru_l\ncars held the shipping up for soral\ntime. Alex Mackay Is ln charge of th|\nloading at this point.\nChartered Accountant*\nAuditor!\n542 Baker St Phone S-J\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL    HOME\n,      AMBULANCE SERVICl\n\"Distinctive   Funeral   Service* I\nSIS Kootenai St Phone Ml|\nJ. P. Walgren\nGeneral Contraetoi\n301 Carbonate St.\nApproximately 8.000,000 torn of\nfood are now stockpiled throughout\nEurope.\nKOKANEE\n8ERVICR STATION\n295 Baker SL\n\"Adam- arid \"Arnold-\nComplete Union Service\nMotor Tuneup and Brakei\nour Specialty.\nDAILY FLASH\n1,500.000 persons are disabled ttt\nnually as a result of injuries sul\ntainea ln the home.\u2014Do you earn\nour hospital and medical contricl\nSTUART AGENCIES '\n577 Baker Street Nelaon, B. 1\nPhone 880\nLarson's Lunch\n(Dose to Greyhound Depot)\nOpen 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.\nHome Cooked Mealj|\nNEWPORT, Monmouthshire (CPI\n\u2014Sir Jnhn Beynon. 79, a leading\nSouth Wales Industrialist, died here\nPAIGNTON. England (CP) -\nTwo lion cubs born it Devon Zoo\nhave been named Stalin and\nChurchill.\nillllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllll\nNEWS OFTHE DAY\nessssssMSjjsasss-S-sssis\nKEEP YOUH\nELECTRICAL\nAPPLIANCES\nD* GOOD R__P\/_LR\nEtECTRIC CO.\n874 Baker St\nRates: 22c line, 27c line black face\ntype, larger type rates on request.\nMinimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nH.   A.   Blunders,   Chimney   Sweep\nPhone 687.\nI   I\nKIDS\nDon't Forget\nthe\nKINSMEN   MILK   FOR   BRITAIN\nShellout Matinee\nTHIS AFTERNOON AT 2 P.M.\nCIVIC THEATRE\nPlace all the tickets you have collected in on envelope \u2014 Mark your\nname, the number of tickets you\nhave collected on the outside and\nbring it with you.\nA Per\u00bbon\u00bbl Property rio\u00bbt#r give*\njrMteit protection. B luck wood Ag'y\nM i.iit Muton pipe tobfirco V*i lb\np*i_k__S\u00ab M ccnU et Valentine*.\nApplltnot rtpfclri of ill kind* Beat-\nty Bervlct. Phone. Bl.\nUnritlm* Club Dinner Hum* Hot*]\nl TuNKlay. Nov 7. fl 15 pta. Speaker\n! tShlmt Juitlre W. B. Parrla.\n| All rip-fjrp*-wi of hardnew In m\u00bbnv\nm\u00bbkri of pencil* D. W. M'_J>rby.\nTht HUtM-ier ind Typewriter Mini,\nj AM B*ker H.rmel. N*l*u_. BC.\nwhole atmoiphere hanging over\nthe   Chlnete   capital.       General\ngloom, distress, frustration, dissatisfaction, dissension, disappointment and criticism were voiced or\nobierved everywhere.\n'     While   the   clash   between   Gen,\n' Chiang Kai-shek nnd Gen. Stilwell\n; strikes at the core of the upheaval\nWilmer i and muc^ is being made of its significance, actually it seemed to be\nmuch more than simply t\\ disagreement   from   a   military   standpoint\nor a difference in personalities as\nbetween two leaders.\nBATER BETWEEN JAPS,\nCHINESE\nDealings in contraband, Including\nopen barter and sale between the\nJapanese and Chinese near the\nfront, were going on with the\nknowledge nf the Government, in\nsome instances actually being en-\ncouraged. The htter wai on the\ngnumd that the availability of this\nmnterial to the Chinese people,\nmostly merchandise, food or usable\ngoods, relieved their d^nperate ne^d\nfor such  commodities i.r\\d  that  the\nnadian Pacific Railway, Including\n$3,500,000 from Canadian Pacific\nEmployees Pension Fund. Others in-\nj eluded Manufacturer's Life Insur-\nI ance Co,, Toronto, $8,000,000; Massey-\nI Harris Co., Ltd., Toronto, $3,000,000;\nI B r i t i s h Columbia Sugar Refining\n1 Co., Ltd., and associated companies,\nVancouver, $750,000; John Inglis Co.,\nLtd., Toronto, $500,000; Granby Con-\n: solidated Mining, Smelting & Power\nCo., Ltd., Copper Mountain, B.C,\n! $500,000; Marathon Paper Mills of\nCanada Ltd., Port Arthur, $500,000\nbearer.\nDon't forget  tn pay   fpr  ymir Kin-\nauction   ruffle   ticket*.   m\u00abrch\u00bbndt*e,\nl md ton** at Blackwood  Agency, 63fl\n! Ward Pt.\nH-O-T\nFOUNTAIN DRINKS\nat the\nMelon Dew\n_*_>\u00ab_> aaam umuts\nThe Feature Will Be\nTHE NOVELTY COMEDY\nThe Canterville Ghost\nStorring   Mo.gc.reT   O'Bnpn,   Charles   lough-fen\nond Robert Young\nBuytm for hnvuo* In every dty with\nriuli We ne*d luting* If you wtnt\nto e*t\\. em- \\ie Rotwr'jmn R-falty, 533\nW\u00bbrd Street\nDon't forget to enm* \\o Fugl-Ni Prr.-\npe-u'.-ri- whiet tnd Old Time tnd\nModem Pane* tonight Refreshment\"\nPlette brine your own augur.\n* Owinj to 1\u00bbrk rrf Winter qu\u00bbrt\u00ab**T->\nere mi_.l rletr out tt pen of fat ftprlm\nro\u00bb*Hn| chicken* \u00bbt flo <-*nt\u00ab \u00ab pound\nrleaned, dr*\u25a0*\u25a0#\u25a0\u00bb(I tnd delivered phoii\nHtllertn'i 7V4-H3\ntt,\nratg\nFl I\nrr-T\ntin,!     I\ntm\n[>l\nn\\m\n\\,....\nT,.l.\nl(hl. 1\nanaill-iii\nlr\nfl'\nin  \u00ab\npm\n_!\u00bb\u2022_..'\nIf 'not\nlor   pun.\n<m\nllf\nm   i.\nut,i   \u00ab\np-\u00ab_.r   r    *\nlllrklii,\nkm\nH<\nfrMhnipnt-i\nI>>n'l '\u25a0nit for cold weather Re-\npltre ihcae _ir.>k*in window p*n\u00bb\u00bb now\nwe rerry fUu in all ettndard tie*\"\nand cut to four m*a\u00abur*ment* Hip-\np*f\u00bbr>t.'i\nrnvftni or thi; urnrrMra\nAunrtaf nut\n* OO\u2014Holy  rV-mniunloTi\nll.n(l_-nun-lT darrl-Mi\n7 <K>-*ur-)e*-t     -What   .iea   B*yon\nVli-tnrf H\nTOO LATI TO CLASSIFY\nrow    iirvr\npabln    furnl\nmonth only\nMnOBRN     VHOOM\n\u00bbhad.   Winter   rate*,   hi\nPhon* io\u00aba-x.\nFive Candidates for\nNew Westminster\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., Nov,\n1 (CP).-The Social Credit Party\nintends to contest the Federal election in New Westminster riding, it\nwas announced today. This wil]\nmean that there will be five candidates in the running for the seat.\nTom Reir, the Liberal member, has\nbeen renominated; George Twins has\nbeen named Progressive-Conservative candidate; George Weaver, the\nC.C.F. nominee, and Harold Griffin.\nJapanese, \"paid in Chinese gold or j tn-e Labor-Progressive standard\nother currency, wore thereby accumulating a currency which would\nbe whnllv valueless to thom as\n.here would be no market fnr their\nfunds after Japan was crushed\n1 was dismayed to see how little\nfreedom there was in the exchange\nor nubliration nf news\nThe Government prrss and cen-\n*nrnhip authorities, some of them\nlife-long newspapermen, readilv admitted the fundamental undesir-\nnbilitv nf the practice and vehemently stated tt was contrary to their\nown principles nnd beliefs, but tha*\nin this as in other respects the gnnd\nnnd eventual welfare of China dictated and necessitated the action\nCRITICAL  THREAT\nThere is no doubt tha' In the mind\nof Chiang Kai-shek snd mod of his\nndviscni Ihe Chinese Communists\nrepp-sen! n critical threat to Chins\nand to the Central Government tTn-\nt-ouh'edlv the Central Government's dor.-_.ii:- to \"safeguard\" the\nCommunist border bis removed a\nlarge number of trained Chinese\ntreops nnd much money and food\nfrom general w;irfnre against the\n:'' mm on  enem v\nThe Chinese Communist was described tn nie by responsible rril-\ndonh. nf China an nf and for tar\nChinese: I was told there was little\nrelationship with any other Communists except in connecting the\nname with a Chinese cause Whatever the mcdlt of the prlitlcnl controversy, it \u00bbeemed to representv\nllves of some other Governments\nLbnt the pollfT of the Government\ntoward the Communists had not\nbeen   realistic.\nAt one lime ] asked a lendrr of\nthe Communists If he could state\ndearly and simply what the Com-\nmunistj wantfd In Chin*.\nDON'T SAY BREAD\nSay Hoods\nSUPREME MILK BREAD\nSOMERS' FUNERAL\nSERVICE\n701 Btkei SI Pbone \u00bb2\nOpen Day ind Night\nCrerfMiorium Ambulanc*\nVie   lake   pride   In\nkeeping   jour   httr\n\".mt: fu I\nHaigh   Tru-Art\nrho.it M7\nF.H. SMITH\nIf Hi Electric\nPhon* 666 3S1 laker St.\nruumu\u00bbu***uuu\u00bbtutasamasaau*au\nPhone 10 or 11\nFree Wartime Delivery\nSPECIALS FOR THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nSHAN0\nCleans   painted\nwalls  and  woodwork.\n40-oz. bottU\n40c\nSALAD      DRESSING:\nWhip,  8  oi.,\n2  for\nKRAFT   CHEESE:   VelveeU   or\nCanidian, ' 2 Ib. pkti.,\n2 tor\nTOMATO KETCHUP:\nHelm, 14 oi. bottle\nTOMATO  SOUP:   Helm,\n10 oi. tlna, 2 tor\n80DA   BISCUITS:\nChriitle'i,  Ib.  pkt\nSARDINES:  Brunivsick,\n3 tlm\nRobin Hood\nOATS\n3 LB. ECONOMY BAG\n25c\n550\n33<\nCOFFEE:   Brald'a,\nIn  lina,  lb.\nCOCOA:   Fry'l,\nLb.   tin\nKRAFT   DINNER:   A   meal   for 4\nin  8 minutei. '{r\\t^\n2   OKI. *,0*F\nFLOUR: Maple Leaf, Robin Hood\n52.98\n$1.59\n83<\n250\n!!)(.\n29<\n220\n9\u00ab   lb\nlack\n\u20221  Ib.\nl\u00bb< k\nii lb\nii  k\nTABLE\nSYRUP\nEa-non'i. 12 oi. bottle\n80AP\nFLAKES:   Maple\nLeaf,  la\nrg.   pkt\nEUREKA   BLEACH:\n2   bolH\n',\nPUREX\nJ   roll!\nStar Quality Fruits & Vegetables\nTOMATOES:  B. C.  Hot  houie,\nLb.\nCARROTS:   Local   bunchei,\nLb.\nCEL-RYi Local Utah type,\nLb.\nCAULIFLOWER:   Whin   haadi,\nLb.\nBROCCOLI:\nFreih local, 2 Iba.\nSPINACH: Local,\n1 Iba.\nTURNIPS:   f\u00abcellant  cookera,\n\u2022 Ibt.\n8WSIT POTATOES: From Tanneeaee,\nI Ibt.\n28c\nr.c\n10c\n10C\nI9C\n19c\n23C\n25C\nONIONS:   Oka-ig.n,\nS lbi\nPARSNIPS    Local   *a|frd,\nt   lbi.\nr.RAPES:   tmperor    Toka,l,\n1 lbi.\nAPPLES:     r,nry     DtllCiOua,\n!  Ibt.\nAPPLES:   Fane,   Mclntoah,\n< lbi.\nAPPLES' Son. a.client\nCOOkari,  a  tbl\nGRAPEFRUIT:  California, ilia  Wi,\ni  for\nORANQES   lundltt. Hi. 220'a.\n.\u2022 doi.\n230\n170\n390\n250\n290\n25*\n250l\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1944_11_02","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0416986","@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":"1944-11-02 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1944-11-02 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\/1.0416986"}