{"@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":"1944-12-01","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0417206\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" ixits Too Small\nfor Fire Escapes\nNew Law Hits Civic Centre, Eagle\nHall; Other Kootenay Buildings\n\u25a0\nMost of Nelson's buildings which are used for donees\nand similar crowd-attracting events are condemned to make\nImportant structural changes under new public safety regulations validated by order of fhe Lieutenant-Govemor-in-Council\nunder the Fire Marshals Act.\nBuildings affected include the Nelson Civic Centre,\nEagle Hall, Odd Fellows' Hall, Masonic Hall, the City Hall and\nthe Canadian Legion.\nThe trouble is that in greater or lesser degree they lack\nadequate means of exit for the public in the event of a fire,\nand the panic which sometimes arises and causes more deaths\nthrough crushing or suffocation than the actual fire.\nMost other buildings in Kootenay are, it is believed, similarly affected.\n\" Last winter the public was horrified by holocausts resulting from fires in various parts of this continent. Hundreds\nlost their lives through incin-<*>\neration in fires and crushing\nwhen panic - stricken crowds\nattempted to escape through\ninadequate exits.\n' Some of the worst dlsasteri were\nin Boston, St. John's, Newfound-\nltnd \u00bbnd ln > British Columbia\nvillage on the Alaska Highway.\nFIRE CHIEF*\nMUST ACT\nThe   British   Columbia   disaster,\nfollowing the others, was the im-\ndances, is on a second irtorey. It haa\na (Hi-loot entrance stairs and so Is\naU right in that respect but the\nconstruction of the stairway does\nnot meet the regulations which call\nfor 'slow-burning' type of construction. Its exit is the main trouble.\nAt the rear it has a three-foot doorway and a three-foot stairway,\nwinch ends 11 feet from the ground.\nPersons escaping by this exit would\nhave to jump or fall eleven feet.\nFor the number of people the Eagle\nHaU will accommodate the new reg'\nmedUt* impulse to the passing of I Nation.\" ca'll for \"nine feet of exit\nito-Ct*r regulations to govern pub- \u25a0\nlie buildings ln this province.\nUnder the regulations the duty\nof enforcement is placed on the\nshoulders of local fire chiefs. If they\ntre derelict ln their duty of giving\nnotice to owners of offending building!, \u00bbnd closing them to public\nun unlets the changes required are\nmadt, fire chiefs are subject to\ncharges in a criminal court and to\ncivil damages to injured or relatives\nof dead In the event ot a disaster.\nProcedure Is that a fire chief\nInvestigates public buildings and if\nthey do not conform to the new\nregulation! gives notice to the owner thtt changes are required. The\nowner has the right of appeal to\nthe Provincial Fire Marshal and\ntrom the Fire Marshal to a county\ncourt\nCIVIC CENTRE EXITS\nFAR TOO SMALL\nCMc Centre Commission has already met to discuss the changes\nneeded to comply with the law,\nand, is the changes Involve capital\nexpenditures, has passed the matter along to the City Council. Lodges and other building owners are\nalio holding meetings, or preparing\nto deal with contractors.\nor fire escape, in addition to the\nfront entrance.\nOddfellows Hall is of three storeys of which the second is that\ngenerally used for dances or other\npublic gatherings. To this It a four\nfeet, six inch winding stairway entrance as against the five feet required. Exit is through a window\nwhence a straight ladder attached\nto the wall goes to within eight\nfeet of the ground. Those escaping\nby this route would fall or Jump\nthe eight feet. A seven-foot exh ll\nrequired. In cases of fire escapes\nfrom upper storeys there are specifications as to how they lhall be\nbuilt, io that the public may eicape\ndown them conveniently. Escape\nladders attached to walls are not\npermitted.\nLEGION  NEEDS WIDE   DOOR\nCanadian Legion does not require\nto make extensive alterations. Its\nentrance is satisfactory. Its present\nexit, which takei the public to the\nalley at the rear, is three feet and\nhas to be extended to five feet, and\nthe exit doors made to iwing. outward instead of inward. The Legion\nHall ls small, hence the comparatively small exit required.\nMasonic Hall has no exit and less\nTbt regulation! are definite and 1 than five Mot entrance.\n  The Nelson City   ,Hall   Council\nChamber on tbt second floor haa\n\u2022o-t**-'-   \u2022 -\u2022-*- .\"\nMAY NOT COVIR\nLODGE MEETINGS\nThere is a question at to application of the new regulation! to\nmeeting halls for lodges. A ruling\nis being sought In tht meantime\nwhile lodge meetings can continue\nin Masonic Hall and Oddfellows'\nHall, ihey are closed to public gatherings. Masonic Hall Is rarely If\nmandatory. Ivery public building\nto which thty apjly must bave an\nentrance tt hast five feet wide.\nSite tnd type of exit, which mint\nbe In addition to tht entrance, depend upon number of people that a\nbuilding will accommodate and\nwhether tt ls below ground, on the\nground door level, or one or more\nitortyi above the ground.\nCivic Centre ll In trouble ln two\nretpeptt\u2014the entrance and the exits\nto tbt badminton hail, which has\nbeen in uit by Boeingi but which, ^ei ^ (or pubUc gatherlng,i K\nnormally  li med for  dances  and  ^   n().   maUrlally  ejected,  udlen\nbanquets   ai well as for sporti.\nDoor entrance to the badminton\nhall It five feet, but between the\nfive-fool door and the hall is the\nbottleneck of a four-foot passage.\nThert ls \u2022 four foot exit on the\nT Wert ilde and a ilx-foot door tn the\nskating arena,  making  a total\n,     10 feet when the arena Is not heft V Ing uied. But the regulations, be-\nctutt oi the large number of people\ntht ball can accommodate, require\n_9 feet of exit. When the arena ls\nmaterially\nplaces for lodge meetings are Interpreted as coming under the law.\nThere are many provisions in the\nnew regulations, ln addition to those\ncovering size and construction of\nexits. An exit, for example, must\n\"J, I be marked by a lighted \"Kxit\" sign\nin red letters not less than six ich-\nes deep. The sign must go on automatically with the floor lighli.\nBasis of uze ot exits it number of\npersons hall will accommodate\nwhich  is calculated at six squart\nIn use the regulations say that tne   .   .    . ., . _      __\nsix-foot door  to that part of Uie ],,_.__ >ul ,*; ,\u201e,<\u201e ,v_ u.j_i.\n! Under this calculation the badmln-\nbuilding doe, not count, leaving. |.^\"^\"- \\\u00a3\"\u00a3,\u00a3\" c^rT^uld\ndeficiency of exit ipace nf 25 feet\nTher* ii another difficulty \u2014\nusually the six-foot door to\narena ll kept padlocked, and so are\nthe exit doori from the arena when\ntht arma li not In use. The door\nto the irena openaiinward, ton, and\nthat la agalnat regulations.\nLONG   DROPS   FROM\nFIRE   ESCAPES\nEagle   Hall,  used   frequently   fnr\naccommodate\nth.iHa_14M_.\n1366   people,   Eagle\nDe Gaulle in Russia\nLONDON, Nov. to (CP-Reuter)\u2014\nMoseow radio announced tonight\nthat (len. De Gaulle now ti In Km-\nsla, en route to oonfer with Marshal\nsi'tlln tt Moscow. The radio said\ntht French leader left Stalingrad\nfor Mo-oow Wednesday.\nB.C. Army Camps Quiet; Six Day\nCrisis Appears fo Be Over\nVANCOUVER, Nov. JO (CP) \u2014\nHome Defence Army campa j\nthroughout Britiah Columbia were\nquiet tonight and It appeared the\nelx-day-long crisis created by\nantl-comcrlptlon demonitratlont\nwaa over, at least temporarily.\nA train which had been delayed\nabout 24 hour* at Terrace, B.C.,\nwhere the moit aerlous disturb-\n\u25a0 ncr-n wera reported, was rolling\ntoward another British Columbia\ntown carrying an English-speak-\nIng regiment from Saskatchewan.\nDeparture from Terrace was delayed when members nf a French- [\nCanadian   regiment   fmm   Quebec\npicketed the train and made threats\nof armed violence In protest agHlnst ,\nthe Federal Government's approval\nfor the aendlng nf up to IB,000 Home\nDefence   trnnps   overseas   as   rein- i\nforcementa\nMeanwhile, Army enquiries were |\nunder   way   at   Nanaimo.   Terrace,\nVernon, Courtenay, Prince George, i\nChilliwack   and   Tort   Albernl   Into '\ndisturbances which hegnn  last  Friday    evening.     Results     nf     these\nprobes will be aent to Pacific Com- '\nmanrl   Headquarters   at   Vancouver\nwhich will decide what further ac- j\ntlon will be taken.\nTerrace village, which saw three I\nparados with total marrhers in two\nof the parades reaching 1500 and in i\nona of thtm man carrying rifles and 1\nwearing steel helmets, was quiet\ntoday. Buslneu was normal and\nsoldiers circulated ln cafea and\nstores.\nA list of grievances drawn up by\na section of Home Defence lolditn\nat Terrace has been aent te Canadian A miy Headquarter! at Ottawa. It Is believed there will ba no\nfurther demonstrations while their\nsubmissions are under consideration.\nSome of the soldiers at Terrace\nwho received arms from other men\nin the ranks during the demonstrations have returned the rifle* to\nofficers. It Was believed the Insurgent Home Defence men had returned to normal dutlei and reporta\nfrom Terrace gave no Indication of\nany continuation of the \"sltdnwn1\nstrike which prevailed early this\nweek.\nMaj-Gen. G. R. Pearkes General\nOfficer Comm finding-In. Chief, Pacific Command, returned to Vancouver by plane today following a\nvisit to camps at Prince George and\nTerrace.\nWhile the situation In Terrace hai\nbeen* serious during the last few\ndays it now would seem that discipline has been restored, Gen\nPearkea said on his return. At\nPrince George normal routine and\ntraining Is being carried out wtth\nout Incident.\nTo Cut Lend-Lease\nIn Half.\u2014Page 3, 1\\L\\\nFrench Doctor Soyh Canucks   IO    \\\nFrom Prison Camp.\u2014Fagt 4.\nNow Rental* Rulot\non Furniture Sales,\u2014Page 9.\n0LUMB1A. CANADA-FRIDAY MORNING. DICIMBERL 1044\nm^mmttetmtmmmmtktymmm\nNUMBER 182\nTOTAL EFFORT\n9TH SWEEP UP\nTHREE MORE\nGERMAN TOWNS\nReach Flooded Roer\nAlong 20-Mile Front\nNorthwest of Julich\nCOUNTER-ATTACKS\nBy AUSTIN BEALMEAR\nAiiociated Prtu Staff Writer\nPARIS, Nov, 80 (AP)\u2014United\nStatei 9th Army troopi iwept\nthrough three more German.\ntowni today In their new imaih\nat the northern end of the bilking Aachen front and tonight had\nreached the flooded Roer River\nalong a 20-mlle front northweit\nand South of Julich.\nThe Roer li the lait important\nnatural barrier standing between\nthe Allied armiei attacking ln thli\nzone and the Rhine, aome 25 milei\nto the Bait\nIn bitter fighting Eait ind Northeast of Geilenkirchen 9th Army\ntroopi seized the blackened villages of Undent, Floosdorf and\nRoerdorf, all on or near the Weit\nbank of the Rper. In another village, Beeck, a mile southwest of\nLindern, American troopi found\nmore German dead piled ln (be\nitreeta than in any German town\nyet entered.\nWhile the attack by thre* dlvliioni of the 9th Army beat back the\ndug-in Germans and threatened to\ndevelop Into a drive on Dusseldorf,\n28 miles away. United Statei lit\nArmy infantry on tha right won\nthe fortified towni of Lameradorf\nand Grosshau In savage fighting\nand put moit of the bloody Hurtgen\nForeit behind them.\nThe British ind Army continued to face German forcei acrou\nthe Man River in Southeait Holland and Canadian forcea ware\nholding tha northern end of the\nAllied line around Nijmegen and\nextending Into the de Wyler Foreit Iniide Qermany Just East of\nNijmegen.\nNo major activity wu reported\nfrom pither the.prltlsh or Cana<\nfronti.' ~~\nIn almoit every lector from\nHolland te Switzerland the Qsr-\nmini wer* counter-attacking frequently and hard.\nLindem is HV4 miles from the\nPrussian arsenal and rail city of\nMunchen Gladbach and standi on\nhigh ground overlooking the,enemy\nstronghold of Linnich to the Southeast Flossdorf and Roerdorf are\nRoer River towns between Linnich\nand Lulich.\n(A German military spokesman\nannounced that 70 Allied divisions\nperhaps 850,000 men\u2014now were\nslashing at the Western defences of\nGermany. The enemy High Command claimed that 74 Allied\ntanks had been knocked out during the last two days).\nTh* Germans were not conceding a yard without fighting tor il,\nand few surrendered before they\nhad fired their last cartridge. Even\nafter the most concentrated barrages by Allied guns and planes\neach blackened village still was defended by German troops who\nsomehow survived. For days after a\ntown is flattened and overrun, the\nruins continue to yiled groups of\nsnipers.\nTh* 95th Infantry Division of the\nU. S. 3rd Army hurled back 10\nGerman counter-attacks ln 24 hours,\nbut pushed on a mile to within\nthree mllea of Saarlautem, midway\nhftwetn Merzig and Saarbrucken.\nReport Evidence\nof Mistreatment\nby the Japanese\nQANBERRA, Nov. 10 (CP) -\nEvidence the Japan*! hav* massacred, tortured and mistreated Australians, both military and civilian,\nas well as New Guinea native!, wu\nreporttd today to the Queensland\nHouse of Representatives by Herbert V. Evatt, Australian Attorney\nGeneral.\nMerchant Seaman\nCommended        *\nOTTAWA, Nov. SO (CP)-Trans-\nport Minister Mlchaud announced\ntoday that Dudley James Shubert\nof Vancouver, s-wMng. as radio officer on a merchantman of British\nregistry, had been commended for\ngallantry while \"engaged ln hazardous operationi.\"\nDetails of the action were not disclosed.\n|j*Hi|J|P_UW|^IV- J\u00bb*^iP> W   .\u00bb  I    '.\u25a0*\"\"?!\"^M:-:\"!t    2S'*t'*>V\ncrultlng Officer In Winnipeg got th* lurprlie of hli\nlife when this tri* walked In and asked tt enlist\n\"for lervice anywhere.\" Thalr mother Is In China,\nThey have not seen her sine* outbreak of war. And\nthey are determined ta find her a* they enlisted t\u00bb\nfight either Jap or Hun. Sons ef Henry Lee, restaurant owner of Souris,* Man., they are, left to\nright! Alfle, Jimmy and Willie. The three Chlneie-\nCanadlani enlisted the same day, when they were\n\"old enough to fight,\" they explained. And they\ntook It the hard way . . , Infantry, \u2014 Canadian\nArmy Photo.\nRUSS BUST OPEN\nTWO ROUTES\nINTO SLOVAKIA\nAnother Big Red\nArmy Hurls Huns\nBack Beyond Pecs   .\nLONDON, Nov. 30 (AP)-Rus-\n\u2022Ian troops, attacking In the\nmountains northeait of Budapeit,\ntoday blaited open two Invaiion\nroads leading Into Southern Slav-\nakia by oaptiirlnf th* itronih((Wtl|\nof Eger and Silkuo, Premler-\nMarshal Stalin announced In or\n..d\u00bbr \u00abf \u00bbb\u00bbjjtWyi*ti<^ \u201e}i,.\n \u2014^.-.^\u2022-tsra   Hungary   tts-\nother big Soviet army bad hurled\ntbt Germans back into tbe bills\nbeyond Pecs, IW miles Southwest\nof Budapest, alter crossing the Danube River on a 93-mile front and\ndriving forward more than 26\nmiles.\nThe German High Command was\nreported to hav* drawn reinforcements from as far away as Italy ln\na desperate effort to halt Marshal\nFeodor I. Tolbukhln'i 3rd Ukraine\nArmy, which has pushed to within\nabout 100 mllei of the Austrian\nfrontier.\nCol. Ernst von Hammer, Axis\nradio military commentator, estimated that Tolbukhln had sent 20\nSoviet Infantry divisions, two\nmechanized corps and between five\nand six tank brlgadea across the\nDanube in the powerful effort to\nforce a decision in Hungary, invade\nAustria and cut off the retreat of\nmore than 100,000 German troops\nln Yugoslavia.\nThe Russians captured 50 more\nlocalities during the day, including\nSiklos, in Northern Yugoslavia, 18\nmiles South of Pecs, the Soviet\ncommunique laid.\nMore than SO localities wer* taken In Czechoslovakia and seven\nothers beside Eger and Szlzksz in\nnortheastern Hungary, the bulletin\nuld.\nFORMER U.S. SECRETARY\nOF INTERIOR DIES\nEL PASO, Tex., Nov. 90 (AP) -\nAlbert D. Fall, SI, United States\nSecretary of the Interior under the\nHarding Administration, died here\nlate today.\nFall figured ln th* Teapot Dome\n\u25a0candal and, alx years after he left\nthe Cabinet, was found guilty of\ntaking a bribe and waa lined $100,-\n000 and sentenced to one year in\nJail. He served nine months in prison, most of th* tlm* ln th* hospital, and retired to Ul ranch.\nConscientious\nObjectors Total\n9,329 in Canada\nOTTAWA, Nev. >0 (CP)-Labor\nMiniiter Mitchell told th* Houie\nof Commoni there ar* 9,329 com-\nclentloui objecton to military\n\u25a0ervice In Canada, Ha was answering a queitlon from Thomu\nRon (L.-Hamllton latt)\nBy Provlncei th* objecton ar*\ndivided ai follows: New Brum.\nwlok, two; Prince Edward Island,\nthru; Quebec, 28; Nova Scotia, 29;\nBritlih Columbia, MS; Alberta,\n1,101; 8nkatchewen, 2,129; On.\ntarlo, 2,481; Manitoba, 2420.\nNew Female Wage\nOrder in Alta.\nEDMONTON, Nov. SO (CP) \u2014\nTM new Female Provincial Wag*\nOrdtr establishing a minimum of\n(IS a week will go Into operation\ntomorrow, and Is designed to take\ncat* of Increued living costs\nTrade Relation! Board official laid\ntoday. Under the old order a mini-\nmum of $12.50 and (14 a week wu\nprovided for, depending on occupa\ntlon.\nAccept Tenders\non Treaiury Bills\nOTTAWA, Nov. 80 (CP) - Fin\nance Minister Ilsley announced today tenders had been accepted for\nthe full amount of $03,000,000 Dominion of Canada Treaiury Bills due\nMarch 2, 1944. Average discount\nprice of the accepted bidi was\n$99.-0591 and tha average yield waa\n.378 per cent.\nQuebec Asks Gov't\nto Respect Pledge\nAgainst Conscription\nQUEBEC, Nev. SO (CP) -The\nGovernment tf tht Provlnct of\nQuebec hai adopted an order-ln-\ncouncil asking tht Federal Government \"to reipect and fulfil Its\nsoltmn engagementi and sacrsd\npledget agalnit conicription for\noveneai itrvlce,\" It waa announced tonight at tha Leglilature.\nThe order-ln-councll wai ilgned today by Lieutenant-Governor\nSir Eugene Fliet and a copy sent\nto Prim*. Minister Mackeniie\nKing.    : \u201e\n\u2014ft. V ,.\t\nAgainst Japs\nCHUNGKING, Nov. SO (AP) -\nMa).-Gen. 'Albert C. Wedemeyer\nheld out hope tonight that steps\nnow in preparation would turn the\ntide ln China against the Japanese.\nMaking no attempt to deprecate\nthe gravity of China's military situation, Gen. Wedemeyer said the\nenemy was obtaining a corridor\ninto French Indo-China and establishing good Interior lines of communication, after driving swiftly\nthrough Kwangsi.\nIn the path of that Japaneie drive,\n1,000,000 misery-stricken refugees\nhad abandoned their homea, travellers arriving here estimated. By the\nthousands they were pouring into\nKweichow, and from Kweichow to\nSkechwan, where this wartime capital is situated.\nSON More Japs\nKilled or\nDrowned al Sea\nOEN. MacARTHUR'S HEAD.\nUARTER8, Philippine!, Dec. 1\n(Friday)\u2014(AP) \u2014Five thouiand\nmore Japanese soldier* were\nkilled or drowned at see\u2014making 28,008 who tried but never\ngot to Leyte\u2014ai United State!\nplanei for the lecond straight\nday accounted for an Ormoc-\nbound enemy convoy Thursday,\nThe fighters sunk a' 9000-ton\ntraniport and three small freighters\naad ingulfed a -000-ton freighter\nand ieMttoiarti'Sairm:'\nIn contrast with Wedneidiy\"!\nerasure of a 13-shlp convoy, two\nships of which got reinforcements\nto Oruioc before being wrecked,\nthis one didn't even get close to\nthat port.\nj    The  fighter-bombers   raised  the\n' enemy's reinforcement losses in attacks on seven convoys to 29 transports, aggregating 103.750 tons, and\n18 escorting warships sunk.\nSoar-Union Falls\nto Gen. Patton\nLONDON, Nov. 30 (CP-Reuter)\n\u2014Ths French War Miniitry, ai\nquoted by Paris radio, reported\ntonight that Saar-Unlon has fallen to General George Patton.\nSaar-Unlon, on tha Saar River,\nabout 12 miles due South ot\nSaare-Guemlnes, where the German frontier starts to run Eait,\nli the first Important flaar Valley\ntown reported fallen.\n\"Not Deserting\nOverseas Men\"\nBy D'ARCY O'DONNELL\nCanadian Preu Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, Nov, 30 (CP) \u2014 Two Progressive Conservatlvs\nmembers urged today in the Commons that the Governmsnt\nmake all fit home defence troops available for service in ony\ntheatre of war, while two Liberals\u2014one from Quebec and the\nother from Saskatchewan\u2014an-<->~\nnounced they would oppose the\nGovernment on the conscription issue.\nCardin Says Conscription \"No Good\n(or Canada Now or in the Future\"\nOTTAWA, Nov. 30 (CP) \u2014 Hon.\nP.J.A. Cardin, former Transport\nMinister and Liberal Member for\nParliament for Richelleu-Veraheres\nin Quebec, said tonight in the Commons that a policy of conscription\nwu Mno good for -Canada now or\nln tht future.\"\nMr. Cardin resigned his portfolio\nIn 1M2 when he differed with the\ngovernment on whether action\nshould be taken to authorize action\nby order-ln-council, should it become necessary to ust compulsion\nfor overseas service.\n\"We should vote on lt (the Government confidence motion) and\nnot be afraid to say yes or no on the\npolicy is propounded by the government on the 23rd of November,\"\nlaid Mr. Cardin.\nTht motion was clear. It endorsed\nthe policy of the government and\nthe policy was conscription for\noverieu service. There was no need\nof amendments and sUb-amend-\nmenta.\n\"Wi have dont mora thin ydu\nEnglish speaking Canadians and\nBritish descendants In this war,\"\nha said, \"You havt only obeyed\ntht call of your blood. What you\nhave dont you have dont from\nsentiment. What wt have done\nWt have dona from reason.\"\nIf the position was reversed, he\nsaid and English Canadians were a\nminority In a Frehch empire he\naiked If they would act as generously at the French-Canadians had In\nthli situation.\nUhlty had been maintained only\nbf conceuions madt by Franch-Ca-\nnadtans In the House of Commons\nand tliewhtre. No concessions had\nbeen madt by English-Canadians.\nThtrt was Itsa agitation now In\nQuebec than In British Columbia\nand that In Nova Scotia. It was\nridiculous to say that a handful\nof French \u2022 Canadian soldiers\nwould create difficulty in British\nColumbia If the majority of the\nsoldiers and \u25a0 number of the Inhabitant* wert not In sympathy\nwith the'm.\nMr. Cardin ssld he agreed with\nMunitions Minister Howe that the\npresent Issue was \"mostly political\"\nConscription was here how, had\nbeen here since 1942.\nMr. Cardin said many people had\nasked what had brought about the\nreinforcement shortage. Thert was\nan answer.\nWhen Hon. Normarl Rogers was\nkilled early in the war tht Defence\ndepartment was divided Into three\nand the three ministers competed\nfor the manpower of the cpuntry\nThis had caused the present trouble.\n\"We tried too much for the the\nof our country and our population.\"\nsaid Mr. Cardin.\n\"If this Is the position then why\nnot be men and do aa Australia did\nand take men back from the krmy\nto develoD our industries.\"\nDefence Minister McNaughton\nshould discuss with military officials the possibility of reducing the\nsize of Canada's Army.\nMaxima Raymond, leader of the\nBloc Populaire party, said:\n*A country has a right to forct its\nsubjects to fight ln the defenct of\nthe country, but not ln the defenct\nof the country of others,\" he said.\nCanada's sacrifices in men wis\nno leu than those of other Allied\ncountries.\n\"A people of 11,500,000 cinnot assume the role of policeman of the\nworld. It is high time this was realized and that our front was narrowed.\"\nWalter Tucker (L-Rosthern), who\nrecently retired rrom the Canadian\nActive Army with the rank of Captain, and Philippe Picard (L-Belle-\nchasse) expressed belief that conscription was not necessary at this\ntime and said that they could not\nsupport the Government's action\nin making 10,000 Home Defence\ntroops subject to service overseas.\nTo the government's motion of\nconfidence they moved an amendment, proposed by Mr. Picard and\nseconded by Mr. Tucker.\nIt declared:\n\"This House will aid In the maintenance of an efficient war effort\nbut it does not approve of compulsory   service  overseas.\"\nSpeaker J. A. Glen ruled the\namendment out of order when the\nCommons met after the dinner recess.\nHoward Green (PC-Vancouver\nNorth) said that adoption of the\namendment would mean that Canada would be deserting her boys\noverseas.\n\"Neither I nor any other member of the Progreiiivt Constrva-\ntive party In this House, nor any\nTory so-called from coast to coait\nhaa the slightest Intention of de-\naertlng our lads overseas no matter whatever tlst may befall,\" he\nuld.\nHt joined with Hon. R. B. Hanson\n(PC-York-Sunbury), acting leader\nof the opposition, In urging the\ngovernment pass a new order-ln-\n[mwdl making all fit men among\nCanada*! 68,000 Home Defence\ntroops avail;\u00bb51e for service In any\nwar theatre.\nMr. Hanion said tht Progressiva\nConservative party Intended to\ncontinue pressing for an \"all-out\napplication\" oi conscription to all\nmen called up under the National\nResource! Mobilization Act Ha\nserved notict on the govtrnment\nthat If it stopped with anything\nless It was only transferring the\nbattle from the House to tht\ncountry. War veterans and men\noverseai would not bt content\nwith anything  leu.\nMr. Green said Commons' members should insist before returning\nto their homes that the government\npau a new order-in-council making\nall draftees available as overseas\nreinforcements,\nTht Cabinet wu \"hopeleuly\ndivided\" on the conscription Issue\nand because of this division the\ngovenrment might have difficulty\nobtaining the authority to pau\nother ordsrs-ln-councll making\nmore drafteei available for overseas servict. Tht division might\ndelay reinforcements et a time\nwhen thoy wert sorely needed.\n'This tlmt there might not be\na Minister with backbone enough\nto resign, ind the Canadian people\nwould never know' what was\nreally going on,\" said Mr. Green.\nMr. Tucker said that the people\nof Canada had gone into the war\non the basis of the voluntary system. They would not have gone in\nunited on any other system. By going in a\\ the start Canada rendered\nvastly greater aid to the Allied\ncause than would ha\"ve been the\ncase going In later or divided.\nHe continued:\n\"To insist that we must send\n15,000   troops  overseas   ln  spite  of\n. the pledges we gave at one stage\nin the war, Bnd to pretend that it is\nj a matter of life and death when, as\nj a result of actions in which we have\ntaken part, hundreds of thousands\ni of Europeans have been freed, and\nnow are ln a position to fight and\nare anxious to fight, if they are\ngiven the arms for which they nre\npleading, nd when we are telling\nthem that their efforts must be limited because we cannot give them\nsufficient arms and equipment.\"\nThere were possibly 20,000 or 50,-\n000 Frenchmen and Belgians begging for arms and equipment to\nhelp beat the enemy.\nCanada was at stake unless wt lent\na few thousand men oveneaa, I\ncould have approved of It and tried\nto have it understood In my Province.\"\n\"But I cannot believe that, nor\ncan I believe that without thesa\nfew men the outcome of the war\nwill be changed or even delayed.\nThe whole trouble Is that our military experts want to make good\ncommitments they have made, even\nIf they prove to be too large.\nMr. Green in his address said thii\nhe wished to speak as an Infantry*\nman of the First Great War who\nwas personally interested in men in\nthe infantry today.\nHe believed that members of tha\nCommons should insist that the\n16,000 Home Defence troops be sent\noverseas Immediately rather than la\nmonthly instalments.\nHe could not understand how tha\nCabinet could have refused CoL\nRalston's request that tha troopi\nbe sent over as relnforcementi. Ha\nfelt that the Cabinet if it doubted\nthat reinforcements wert needed\nihould have given tht benefit of\nthe doubt to the men oveneaa.\nThe Canadian people now would\nnot stand for any delay In getting\nthe reinforcements overseai. Action\nshould not be delayed to appease\nthe anti-CQnicriptlon minority. Tha\nminority ihould not have a vetoing\nright on the will of the majority.\nThe Government's policy wu a-\n\"political eompromiie.\" There\ncould be no compromise ovenoai\nand he felt there should be none In\nCanada either.\nUnder the compromise plan there\nwas no authority to send any more\nthan 16,000 N.R.M.A. men oversea^.\nA new order-ln-councli would hive\nto be passed by the Cabinet for poi-\nsibly every additional 1,000 needed\nu reinforcements.\nThe Government's manpower policy, aimed at satisfying eight Provinces and appeasing of Quebec, had\nset Province against Province, General Service personnel agalnit draftees and lately draftee against draftee.\nUnder the Government's manpower policy tjiere was tht \"lowest\" kind or compulsion.\n'Boys Beginning\nlo Realize What\nThey Have Done'\nTERRACE, B, C, Nov. 30 (CP)\u2014\nSubstantial numbers of Home De-*\nfence troops at Terrace are volunteering for active service, a soldier\nsaid In an interview here today.\n\"The boys are beginning to realize just what they have been doln|\nin the last few days and It's worrying them,\" he said. \"In my outfit\nalone, I guess close to 100 men have\n'gone  active'  since  Monday.\"\nIt is believed here that rending\nof army regulations Involving mutineers has been responsible for\neasing of the once-grave anti-conscription situation among Homi: Da-\nfence troops at this northern British Columbia village.\nBrig. A, R. Roy, commanding officer of a brigade stationed here*\nbrought the regulations to tha attention of the men Wednesday\npointing a life imprisonment sentence could be given.\nThe situation has improved vastly but has not yet fully cleared. A\ncomparatively small number of\ntroops, about 200 in all, still refuse\nto work.\nThe Weather    ,\nNelson  weather,  Thursday: Min,\n32 2.    Max, 38.2.    Precipitation  .ot\nForecast:   Koolenay,  light  winds\novercast with light snow shower^     '\nnot much change in tcmperut-ire. ? '\nHe uld Mr. Green's ipeech wu\nthe \"old story of tht Tories wrap- I\nping themselves In the flag and\ntrying to get away with It.\" Mr.\nGrttn had iaid he was proud of\nbtlng a Tory because Tories did\nthtlr shirt tnd had Implied thst\nother parties did pot do their\nshare.\n\"It ill becomes any member of\nthe Opposition to cast such aspersions,\" uld Mr. Tucker. \"No group\nof men in this country have contributed mofe in their sons than the\nmembers of this administration.\"\nMr. Picard uld that if he believed that \"when the order-ln-\ncouncll wu pawed tbe security of\n20\nmfSP\nSHOPPING*\nDAYS^fi\nBUY ^vV*.'.. SI Ah\n_________________________________________\n \u00a7m$mmmm*mmmmmm*ikm^ \"\" n iMtsmm-\"m.r. tu \\i t-mmimim*\n**..<*,, s,<wm*m\nt\u2014 NILSON DAILY NIWS, FRIDAY, PICIMHR 1, 1944\n[lsiey Charges Sask. Gov't \"Flouts\"\nSeed Grain Agreement; Will\nHake One More Try for Settlement\n., OTTAWA, Nov. 30 (CP)-Charg-\nIng thlt Ul* Saikatchewan Government had \"flouted\" the $117,000,000.\nleed grain agreement, Finance Minister Ililey hai laid that he had\nbeen perauaded to make \"one more\neffprt\" to reach an amicable set-\ntlement of the 1938 advance.\nMr. Ililey made the itatement\nln a letter to Provincial Treaiurer\nC. M. Finei, which he releaied tonight He had been asked for comment on a dispatch from Refiina\nquoting Acting Premier J. W. Corman \u2022\u25a0 laying that Mr. Ililey had\nmade a new propoiil \"which amount! to an ultimatum.\"\n\"I guess the best thing I can do\nll give you a copy of my letter to\nMr. Finei,\" Mr. Ilsley laid, producing the letter.\n\"It c.n be argued strongly on behalf of Canidian taxpayeri generally,\" Mr. Ililey wrote, \"and lt hai\nin fact been suggested to me, that\nunder the circumstances the Dom-\nare necessary to collect from the\nSaikatchewan Government even to\nthe point of offsetting amounts due\nfrom the Dominion to the Province.\n\"Thli would be a serious step, and\neven though the provocation ln this\ncan ll very serious, lt is one I\nwould heiitate to take except aa a\nmatter of lait resort. Nevertheless,\nthe way in which your idministra-\ntion has flouted the lolemn agreement between the Dominion and\nSaikatchewan ls even more damag-\ningito the mutual confidence which\nll io essential to sound relationships\nbetween the Dominion and the\nProvince, and, unleas the Province\nli willing to give lome new evidence of iti good faith, could not be\npermitted to pan unchallenged.\n\"Therefore I have been penuaded\nto make one mor* effort to reach\nan amicable lettlement of this matter .and now offer for the careful\nand immediate coniideration of your\nGovernment the following program:\n\"In th* flnt place, the Dominion\nwill Implement iti guarantee to the\nbanki aa of Oct. 31 on the basis\nof certified clalmi. Though the\nagreement contemplates payment by\nthe Dominion only to the extent that\ncent and will come due aerially in\nIbjispTiA\nW\u00bb havt heard of a aehool for\n\u2022hlldren which le extremely exclusive, and laya down certain rulee\nwhich It seema to hope will dl<-\ntxmrage parent* who wt*h to have\ntheir oftoprlng confided to Us\ndistinguished If chilly embrace*.\nOns lOnd mother took her five-\nyear-old Doris to the school and\nsought to havs her enrolled. The\nteacher objected, No children or\nthat age wer* accepted. Dor In\nwould hare to wait a year. \"But I\nam sure,\" aaid the Infatuated\nmother, \"that Dorlj could pwj\nany six-year-old test\" \"We nhaii\nme*,\" said the teacher coldly. Then\nshe turned to Doris and commanded: \"Say some worda.\" Dorii\nhssltated and glanoed at her mother. Then she inquired: \"Purely irrelevant words?\"\nCOODERHAM\/WORTS\nLimited\nTORONTO,, ONTARIO\nthe Province la unable to pay, and\nI am of the opinion that your Government Is ln a position to assume\nat least part of the debt, nevertheless the Dominion does not wish to\nbe classfied as \u00ab defaulter and intends to honor its obligations without qualification.\n\"In the lecond place, I would\nsuggest that you should review vary\ncarefully the cash position of your\nProvince in the light of comments\nI have made above and as a result\nof that review and as an evidence\nof the good faith Of your Province\nyou should agree to make a payment ln cash to the Dominion of\nan amount that could be considered\nreasonable and fair under all the\ncircumstances. This should include\nthe amount In respect of which the\nProvincial Department of Municipal\nAffairs itself assumed responsibility\nand gave the notes to the banks in\nrespect of loans required by farmers in local improvement districts\nTor the administration of which lt\nwas directly responsible.\n\"In the third place, when the\namount of thc payment to the banks\nhas been established, the Dominion\nwill ask Saskatchewan to deliver\ntreasury bills lo an equal amount\nless the amount of the cash payment\njust referred to. These treasury\nbills will bear interest at three per\nequal instalments at the end of each\nof the next five years. This will\ngive you an opportunity to budget\nahead to meet payments of principal\nand interest as they come due. While\nthese terms differ somewhat from\nthoie pertaining to treasury bills\npreviously given by Saskatchewan\nto the Dominion, the changap are\njustified, first, by the fact that this\nguarantee was implemented at the\nrequest of the Province, secondly,\nby the doubt cast on the attitude of\nyour Government to its treasury\nbill obligations as a result of the\nstatements made by your Premier,\nthirdly, by the desirability of pro.\nvldlng an incentive fnr the Province to co-operate ln the speedy collection and settlement of the remaining advances, and fourthly, by\nyour improved financial position.\n\"In the fourth place, the notes\nof the municipalities will become\nthe property of the Dominion. They\nwill, however, remain with the\nbanks and, as the Province il responsible through its treasury bills\nfor ultimate payment, collection and\nwhatever adjustment you may wish\nto make with the farmers and the\nmunicipalities will be in your hands.\nIt would be my idea that payment*\nreceived by the municipalities would\nbe transmitted to the Province and\npaid by the Province at six months'\nintervals to the Dominion by way\nof interest or reduction of principal\non treasury bill account. I wish to\nmake it perfectly cle;ir, however,\nthat the interest and annual instalments of principal on the treasury\nbills are payable refiardlesa nf the\namounts collected by the Province\nthrough  the municipalities\"\nMr. Ilsley'B letter, dated Nov, 21,\nBald he was hopeful his proposals\nwould be acceptable for he wished\n\"if possible, to avoid the extreme\nmeasures for collection from your\nGovernment that may be open to\nme.\"\nRev. Edward Doyle\nHears Pother Dead\n..\u00bb ir-oute to Bedside\nRev. Father Edward Doyle ot the\nntaff of Cathedral ot May Iamaou-\nlate, who wu called to .London, Ont,\nbecauie ot Ulniw ot hU father, J.\nDoyle, learned at Winnipeg while ao\nroute to London that hli father had\ndied, Ait vised on, Sunday of hla father'\u2122 Ulneia, he left Nelion the aame\nnlfht.\nMrs. Doyle and ill other aoni tt*\naurvlvon.\nPopular Nelson\nGirl, Marlon\nBradshaw, Passes\n'Popular Nelion glrWtthd Marlon Bradihaw, aged 18, daughter of\nMr. and Mn. Charlei Bradihaw,\nNorth Shore, died mddenly Wedneiday night ln Kootenay Lake Oeneral Hoipital, where lhe hid been\ntaken In the afternoon. She had\nbeen 111 for lome dayi and her\ncondition became luddenly wone\nWednesday.\nMiu Bradihaw wai born on October 21, 1926, at Wlnlaw. She lived\nln Nelion with her family for tha\npast li yean and received all her\nschooling here, attending lenlor matriculation at the time of her death.\nActive In ichool iporti, iwlnt-\nming and pro rec, lhe wai well\nliked. She wai t membp of St.\nSaviour'i Pro-Cathedral and lang\nin the choir.\nIleildei her parenti, ihe li mr-\nvlved by a lister, Mn. J. H. (Sybil)\nGrivelle, now of Nelion, whoie huiband is lerving with the Air Force\nin India; two brothen, Flying Officer Harold Bradshaw, with the Air\nForce in Malta, and Bruce of Nelson: and a nephew, John Henry Grivelle.\nBombers Fly\nThrough Sky\nAblaze With Flak\nLONbON, Nov. 10 (AP) \u2014 AU\nmoit 1800 United Statu heavy bombert flew through a iky ablaze with\nbunting flak today to dump their\nloads on four Vital German oil ri-\nflnerlei and on rail yardi but Jt\nbomberi were lost u German\nground gunners claimed ihell big-\ngut toll of lhe war.\nB.A.F. and United Statu heaviei\nrained exploiivei on rail yardi,\nlynthetlc oil reflnerlei and gaiol-\nine plant) in Germany. '\nA communique trom U. S. Sth\nAir Force headquartert . iaid 30\ntighten alio tailed to return trom\nthe America* raidi but the majority ot the tighten were believed\nto have landed in friendly territory.\nTom ot bombi were dropped on\ntour lynthetlc oil plinti at Blohelm,\nZeiU, Meneburg, and Lutzkendorf,\nall ln the Leipzig area, 100 milei\nSouthweit ot Berlin. The four oil\ncentre! normally produce about 90,-\n000 tons ot fuel a month.\nThe Islands of Luzon, Pnnay ar.d\nCobu have the principal railroad llnei\nin the Philippines.\n(ardin Warns\nCompatriots\nlo Be Careful\nOTTAWA, Nov. 30 (CP) - Hon.\nP. J. A. Cardin, former Transport\nMinister and Ltbreal Member for\nRichelieu-Vercheres, in the Commons tonight asked his French-Canadian compatriot* to speak openly\nin their disapproval of partial conscription but \"let us respect the\nopinions of others and let us be careful not to cause any damage to\nproperty, not to injure the life of\nanyone.\"\nHe added:\n\"Let ui wait in calm and patience\nthe hour when we shall be in a\nposition to express as Canadians\nand as electors our opinion of what\nhas been done today and what may\nbe done tomorrow.\"\nlie had asked the Speaker's permission to address Just a word to\nthe citizens of the Province of Quebec and ask them that, whatever\nmay be their sentiments, whatever\nmay be their feelings at the present\ntime, to be calm, to take things\neasy, to reflect before acting, and\nto remember that they are not only\ncitizens nf the Province of Quebec\nbut et the same time citizens of\nCanada as a whole.\"\nHe spnke of the understanding\nfriends of the French-Canadians\namong the English-speaking popu*\nlatum of the Dominion.\n\"I say to my French-Canadian\ncompatriots: Be careful, my friends,\nmy brothers; be careful not to lose\nthe advantage of the friendship we\npresently enjoy to a greater extent\nthan we have enjoyed lt in the\npast in the English-speaking Provinces of Canada.\"\nRangers Win\nFirst Time on\nMontreal Ice\nMONTREAL, Nov. JO (CP)--New\nYork Rangeri celebrated their flnt\nappearance of the tenon on Montreal ice tonight by icorlng their lecond win of the National Hockey\nLeague leaion, whipping the league-\nleading Canadiens 7-5 before a\ncrowd of about \u00bb,000.\nThe fint penalty shot ot the season here was the turning point of\nthe game. It came early ln the third\nperiod, and itarted Rangen on a\nfour goal splurge thit put them Into\na lead Canadlem couldn't cope\nwith.\nLineupi:\nNew York \u2014 McAuley; Librle,\nHeller, Watson; Warwick, Scherza.    '\nMontreal \u2014 Durnan, Lamoureux,\nBouchard; Lach; Richard, Blake.\nNew York lubi \u2014 Dill, Atanai,\nGoldup, Thurier, Demarco, Shack,\nMoe, MacDonald.\nMontreal subs \u2014 Hsrmon, Field,\nO'Connor, Majeau, Gauthier, Oet.\nlitfe, Chamberlain, Rossignol.\nReferee \u2014 Chadwlck. Linesmen\n\u2014 Gravel and Mulllns.\nSummary:\nFirst period \u2014 1, New York, Atanas (Demarco) 3M9; 2, Montreal,\nRichard (Lach, Blake) 11:20.\nPenalties \u2014  Labrie, Lamoureux.\nSecond period \u2014 3, Montreal,\nBlake (Lach) 1_M; 4, New York,\nWatson (Scherza, Warwick) 7:17;\n5, Montreal, Blake (Lach, Lamoureux) 14:38; 6, N\u00bbw York, Goldup  (Thurier)   18:32.\nPenalties \u2014 Field, Bouchard, Labrie, Richard, Dill.\nThird period\u20147, New York, Scherza (major penalty shot) 2:39; 8, New\nYork, Watson, S:37; I, New York,\nDemarco, 5:40; 10, New York, MacDonald (Thurier) 8:05; 11, Montreal, RoJlgnol (Chamberlain, Bouchard) 10:40; 12, Montreal, Lach\n(Rihard, O'Connor)  11:04.\nPenalty\u2014Watson.\nExtra Christmai\nHelp May Be\nEngaged on Dec. 4\nOTTAWA, Nov. 30 (CP)-Arthur\nMacNamara, Director of National\nSelective Service, announced tonight thet the date on which retail\nbuslnessei may engage extra help\ntor tbe Christmai rush without tint\nObtaining a permit hu been advanced to Dee. 4, insteid of Dec. 13,\nll prevlouily announced.\nStlbbs Reports\non Executive\nMeeting at Trail\nTRAIL, B. C.,'Nov. JO\u2014Twenty-\nfive repreientitlvei were preient\nat the meeting ot the Union of Kootenay Municipality held ln the\ncouncil chamber ot the city hall\nhere Wedneiday, when Mayor N. C.\nStlbbs of Nelaon, and Mayor 3. E.\nOordon ot Rouland reported on the\nrecent Union of B. C. Municipalities\nExecutive meeting held ln Vancouver. Both men emphasized the resolution preiented at the meeting\nconcerning a requeit to the government for greater financial assistance to relieve the coit of educate nfrom municipal taxation.\nMayor Gordon ihowed a let of\ntablet of the school coati year by\nyear made out tor Rouland, and\nInformed representatives that the\nUBCM planned to uk each municipality to make ilmllar tablet and\n\u2022end them ln io thit a \/complete\ntable could be made for the entire\nprovince.\nMayor Stlbbi invited repreienta-\ntivei of the munlclpalltlei to vlilt\nNelson lometlme early In the\nSpring for the next regular meeting.\nHonorary Secretary-Treaiurer W.\nE. B. Monypenny pointed out thit\nthe comtltutlon needed reviling.\nMr. Monypenny wai aiked to put\namendments ln the constitution,\nbring it up to date and submit copies to memben of the executive.\nOfficeri for 1945 were elected\nwith the reeve of Tadanac being\nnamed president, thl mayor of\nRossland, vlce-preiident ind Mr.\nMonypenny honorary tecretary-\ntreasurer. The executive committee wai to be Alderman Thomson\nof Trail, the mayor of Nelson and\nthe mayor of Kaslo.\nMayor Clark of Trail, President\nof lhe union, presided.      .'\nMajorarrle\nDoffs OM\nIn Die\n1\nProvince Hotel\nGRAND FORKS\nHas new modern hot water heating system installed\nfor comfort of guests. Combined new furnishings,\nluxury beds, private balhs ond showers, and excellent dining room service, the Province is always\ninviting to travellers Special facilities for commercial men. Try the Province next time you visit \u00bb\nGrand Forks. jj\n\" it\nrXrtr)#2i>S!lS!ZXZ>\u00bb*^^\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\"\nHockey Schedule\nIce hockey  eclu-dule ot the Nelson\nAmateur  Hockey  A-eoclatlon lor  the\ncoming week ol Ueoember Uil ji,-\nolu-slvl will b- la follows\u2014\n_li.__U.-Y\u2014\n\u00ab 30-5:30_-R\u201ei_\u00aban. Pool.\n5 .30-7.00\u2014Mldgrt   Siena.\nll KM'Al \u2014\n7:00-8 OO\u2014Panther Midgiti ri Dodders\n8 00-8 0O- Midget  Ren.  st Wolves,\nCommercial.\nli oo.lo JO\u2014Commercial   eiml,   Juvenile! vi I_eafi.\nH'EllNEMiAY\u2014\n5 OO-U-OO- Panthers ts Dodger B*n-\ntamA\n0 00-7 00\u2014 TA O. VI MRS Mlrtl-U.\nTill RUI) _Y\u2014\n1 00-10 30\u2014Commercial lame. Leafs\nVI Wolvei.\nFKII1AV \u2014\n6 oo-o oo\u2014f a c.   n  um   Ban-\ntami\n6 oo-7 OO- -Scout AA-OclftUon hour,\na \\ ri KliAY\u2014\n7 OO.H.30 -Dodgeri ti UHJC. Mld-\ngele.\n1:30-10 DO-  Dodglri ti UU  Han-\nt-imi.\n1000-10:30\u2014Clan   lo*.\n10 30-13 00 -Bantam Pool.\n6 00-7:00   p.m.\u2014Midget   ttsd   Srire-\nnlll Ripa.\n'      \"YOUR VANCOUVER  HOME\"\nDufferin Hotel\nSeymour 8t Vancouver,  B, C\nNowly renovated throuflh-\nout.   Phenei   *nd   elevitor\na   PAnrnsoN, i*u of\nC..len.in.   Alta..   Proprietor\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON DAILY\nAf 10:30 a.m.\u2014txcipt Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nM   H   MelVOR, Prop.\nT.oil\u2014Phone 135        Nelson\u2014Phone 35\n\" \u2014-\u2014-\u2014-1\nGreen Re-elected\nNEW ORLEANS. Nov. SO (AP)-\nThi American Federation nf Labor\ntoday unanlmouily reelected William Oreen ai Preiident for lhe Hit\ntime and he immediltely pledged\nhlmielf tn work toward union with\n' lhe Congress nf Industrial Orgin-\niratlnn* and the United Mine Work-\nera.\nPIMPLES\nCUT1CURIV\nSOiVP and CMN\\MINT\nn_n_iTji\u00a3_TK>i_[\u00abn_ai*:y_t.-i\n1\nAir Delegates\nAgree lo Disagree\nCHICAGO, Nev. 10 (CP) \u2014\nAnglo-American delegation! to the\nInternational Civil Aviation Conference today agreed to dliagrte\non the mfiln lnue of freedom of\ntho air.\nThe eonferenoe of M national\ndelegation! prepared to adopt an\nAmerican propoial by which thoie\ncountrlei deilrlng will ratify a\nprotocol or agreement on bpan\ncompetition  In global air routes.\nThose opposed Jo open competition\nwill fall back on the preient system\nof til-lateral agreements u between\nnations involved in international\ncommercial  flying.\nThus It would appear that the\nUnited Kingdom will find Itself outside tht international convention or\nagreement which  emerges.\nThe multi-lateral agreement Is\nexpected to compose tht United\nStates, most of the South American\nrepublics, and a number of European countries.\nTht position of Canada, whose\ndtlegation labored long and hard to\nbring Anglo-American aKretment,\ncould not be immediately ascertained.\nAdolph B-erlt, tht Assistant Secretary of State, and American deflation head, told a preis conference\nthli afternoon that when the Britiah\ndtlegation rejected tht Ctnadian\neoflnpromlie pmpostl madt earlier\nthis week that ended any chine*\nfor agreement\nHt aaid certtin British Common-\n\"wealth countries preiumtblj Including Canada, wtrt working on a\nre-draft Of the American proposal\nIn an effort to make it nccrptablt to\nas \u25a0many aa possible.\nIt waa btlng considered tonight at\na late meeting nf tht Joint iwb-aom-\nmlttet on air transport which planned to submit It to a plennry session\nas aoon aa possible\nTht    Anglo-Amer lean    situation\nwas dracribed as \"htad-on collision\"\nj over the principle of restricted air\nroutes frnm which the British group\nrefused to deviate.\nP-51 Mustang Speed\n450Milesan Hour\n1 INOLIWOOD, Ctlif, Nov. 10 -\n(AP)\u2014North    Amerif-U)    Aviation,\n1 Inc., today announced It had received War Department permission to\nrevral a speed of 450 milts an hour\nt<rt ltl P-fll Mulling fighter, reported to br the world's fastest pro-\npellrr-drlven   plane.\nBruins Score S\nin Final Period\ni\nCHICAOO, Nov. JO (AP)\u2014 Boiton\nBruins, sparked bf Ken Bmlth and\nArt Jackson, acprtd Jive goals In > hectic final period hen tonight tot a 7-\u00bb\n-rational Hockey League 7. lctory over\nChicago Black Hawka. A crowd ot\n10,547 hw the Bruins win their third\nln a row (rom the Hawka.\nLINEUPS;\nChicago\u2014Karakaa; March, Cooper;\nDahlstrom; Purpur, Brayshaw.\nBoston\u2014Bennett; Egan. Crawford;\nCowley; Cain, Jennings.\nChicago subs\u2014C. Smith, Check, Moslenko, Paplke, Thoma, rraeer, eel-\nbert, Horsck.\nBoston subs \u2014 Clapper,  Calladlne,\nShewchuk. Uarlo. cupulo, K. Smith,\nJackson, Gaudreault.\n- Referee-yKlng Clancy. linesmen\u2014\nJoe Springer and Steve Meurlam.\nSUMMARY:\n_ 1RST PERIOD\u2014\n1. Chicago, Brayehaw (Selbert, Dahl-\natrom) 16:11.\nPenaltlee\u2014Paplke, Jackaon and CU-\npulo.\nSKCOND PERIOD\n2. Beaton, Smith (Shewchuk, Mario)\nS:1S; 3. Boston, Cowley (Egan, Jen.\nnlngs) 13:0-\nPenalty\u2014Thomi.\nTHM) PERIOD\n4.  Boiton, Cupulo   (Mario)   316  ;.\n4. Boston, cupulo (Mario) 3:33; 8.\nCheck (Fraser, Cooper) 3:18; 7. Boston, K. Smith (Cupulo) 11:10; 8. Boston, Jackson (Calladlne. Egan) 16:4-;\n\u00bb. Boston, calladlne (Jackson)  19:98.\nPenalty\u2014Cain.\nLONDON, Nov. JO <CP Cable) -\nThe Major wasn't dreaaed to visit\nthe King. He dashed up to tha\nfront door of Buckingham Palace\nwith a tankman's greaay overalls\nover hli battledress.\nBut a pike-bearing Yeoman of the\nGuard allowed him to enter \u2014; even\nif his nam* wasn't on tha official\nlist of those to bt decorated by\nHis Majesty.\nFor this wai Maj. David Currie of\nOwenJSound, Ont., and Moose Jaw,\nSask., Just arrived from the Holland\nfront by motor torpedo boat, car\nand rail aa the seventh Canadian\nwinner of tha Victoria Cross during\nthis war.\nMaj. Currie doffed his overalls in\na palace ante-room, drank a glass\nof water preferred by a court attendant, and walked along a carpeted dais past rows of spectators\nto face the Sovereign.\nThe Major bowed to the King\nwhen the Lord Chamberlain announced his name and award. He\nstood stiff as a ramrod while the\nLord Chamberlain, in morning coat,\nread the citation of his gallantry,\nthen took a pace forward.\nThe King took the Cross from a\nvelvet cushion held by a brigadier\nand^pinned it on Maj. Curries battledress tunic. His Majesty, wearing gold-braided uniform as an Admiral of the Fleet, smiled, chatted\nwith the Canadian Major for a\nminute or so, and shook his hand In\ncongratulation as the khaki-clad\norchestra in the massive hallway\nstruck up: \"God Save the King.\"\nThe investiture\u2014which took place\nrecently but for security reasons\ncould not be mentioned until tonight\u2014wai over. Maj. Currie donned his coveralls and his black beret\nand stepped out Into the rain in the\nPalact courtyard to face a barrage\nof photographers.\nCanadian and U.S.\nAir Officials\nConfer al Coast\nVANCOUVER, Nov. SO (CP)-A\nthree-day conference between Canadian and United States Air Force\nofficials of Pacific Coast Command\nIs being held here In an effort lo\nestablish a co-ordinated control\nsystem over the Pacific region,\nWestern Air Command announced\ntonight.\nChief concern of the six-man\ncontrol committee Is to establish\ncooperation in air-sea and air-land\nrescue work-\nIt ls hoped to standardize each\nprocedure and synchronise communication   facilities.\nRCAF officers in the committee\nare Wing Cmdr. J. C. Miller, and\nSqdn.' Ldr. H. L, Watson, flight\ncontrol officers at Western Air\nCommand.\nAmerican members are Cmdr.\nAR. K. C. Jones, U.S.N, air officer,\nnorthwestern sector, Western sea\nfrontier; Cmdr. Ward Davis, officer\nin command No. 11 flight control\nsquadron; Lieut. Howard Green-\nley, U.S.N.R., representing Naval\nAir Transport Service, WeBt coast\ndivision; and Capt. T. E. Hopkins,\nrepresenting Alaskan division,\nU. S. Army Air Forces.\nJUST ARRIVED ...\nWOMEN'S CRUSHED KID PUMPS. Plain frji   Af?\ntrim, walking he\u00abl. Black. Priced, pair **9t    tj\nWOMEN'S BROWN OR BLACK OXFORDS \u2014 New\nshipment \u2014 Low or walking heel.   All sizes.   Priced:\n$4.45 $3.95\nCome in and see our Table of Odds and ends:\nWomen's   Sandals,   Loafers   and   Overshoes.\n95*   -   $1.95   \u25a0   $3.95\nHouse Slippers and Rubbers.\nShop Early at\nJ Jul cfimkAi^\n411 BAKER ST.\nFour Councilmen Whose Terms\nExpire lo Be Election Candidates\nPour members ,of the City Council\nwhose terma expire thla year are\nplannlnf to place their hata ln the\nring when olvic election* are held In\nNelaon Thursday, Deo. 14, It waa\nlearned Friday. Nominations clone at\n2 p.m. on Monday, Dec. 11.\nMayor N. C. Stlbbs will b\u00ab candidate for an elehth term u Mayor, and\ntenth successive year on the city\nCouncil. He established a record lor\nNeleon ln 1842 when he was the flr_ t\nMayor elected for a sixth term, and\nanother ln 1943. He aarved ln 1936 and\n1937 as an Alderman.\nAlderman Ross Fleming, completing hla thirteenth year aa Olty Council member, aaid he would otter for\nreelection aa alderman \"If he had a\nbacker.'\" He haa eerved two y-ara oa\nthe School Board, wu an alderman\nfor nine years, and after dropping\nout for aeveral years ottered again\nand waa elected tn 1940, retaining office ever since.\n\"My hat's In the ring,\" said Alderman 11 H. Hlnltt, well known for his\nwork aa Chairman of tha Council'*\nPark Committee, and who has aerved\nthree years on the Council. He w_l\nfirst elected for a year as alderman In\n1941 when A. a itltrhla resigned to\noontest the mayoralty.\nStill \"oonalderlng,\" although expecting to seek a second term wu Alderman Oeorge Clerihew, who flrat\nventured Into the civic field tn 194a.\nBefore Fairview became part of tu*\ncity he served u chairman of the\nHume School Board.\nContinuing tn office for another\nterm are Alderman T. H. Waters, J.\n1. McKenale and A. H. Allan.\nINDIAN GROUP PLEDGE\nSUPPORT TO GOV'T\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 80 (CP) \u2014\nThe Native Brotherhood of Britlih\nColumbia, an Indian organization,\ntoday wired Prime Minister Mackenzie King pledging Its full support to the Government In the present crista.\n\"We, as the real Canadians, are\nnot proud of the adverse publicity\nemanating from tha Ottawa capital\nln this present critical period,\" a\nwire over the signature of President\nAlfred Adamu of Massett, B.C.,\nsaid.\nTrail Curling\nTRAIL, B.C.. Nov. SO\u2014Reaulti In thi\nCrown Point oompetltlon of the Trail\nCurling Club tonight, follow:\nW. L. Wood 13. W. Brown 3.\nM  M  Butorsc IS, W. B. Hunter 11.\nW. P. Robertson 6, R. C. McOerrlgle\nt.\nn. J. MacKinnon t, I. L. Jon<\u00bb 1.\nh. F. Ty\u00bbn I, O, Ortnar a.\nE. W Campbell 8, T. A. Rice S.\nA. H. Woolf 7, I. W. Haalewood 7\nR. P. Dockerlll 7, A. R Calvert ????\nTonlght'i draws;\n\u00ab:30 p.m.\u2014A. w. McDonald vs D\nWetmore; D. McLennan \u00bb\u00bb T. Hudok-\nIln; tl. W. WSIr vs A. Crichton; H. H\nMiller va O. F. Relmann.\n8,30\u2014J. Devlot va A. (. Allison; A\nB. Rlss vs R. Somerville; M. Morrison\nvs R. E. Hill; H. T. Beckett vs \u00a3 L.\nVance.\nWITH STANE\nAND BESOM\nRinks for the Roy Sharp Cup oompetltlon of the NeUon Curling Olub\nWill be drawn at ths Clufiroorns at\n9 o'clock tonliht. The draw will \u00bbs\nmad* from the h_t, and It will not be\nn*o_s*..ry for skips to be on hand u\nhad been previously reported.\nOolllnaon Cup games Thuraday\nnight resulted as follows;\nA. H. Allan won from A. J. Han-sdn\nby default.\nA. Wst^rs I, S Haydre 7.\nR   n, Wallace 8. A. B   Ronmark 7.\nJ  II  Orav 11. A  O   Harvpy 8\nJ  TfB\u00ab!.\u00ab |0, H. Faranholtz 8\nR  D  Hlrksy 9, J. H   Una 11.\nJ   R  Bsllfy II. W. Brown IS.\nP. Fwing 10, o R Ronmark 11\nA  (l  RitrW* 7. C. McKinnon in\nF. ll Smith 9, L. I>wlr\u00abBU fl.\nHalf C.C.F. 19-PI.\nProgram Adopted\nMONTREAL, Nov, 30 'CP) --j\nPlans for an intensive cumpaiKn tn\nacquaint the Canadian people wuh\nthe aimi and policies of the CCF.\nparty were studied in clos-ed com-;\nmittM mtetingi of the n_-.im.al convention of that party here today,\nas half of an Intended 19-point program was adopted by the 250 delegates coming from all nine provinces of the Dominion.\nWidely-divergent opinion! as to\nthe degree of iodalization a Federal C.C.F. government elected to\npower should introduce in it* firs^\nterm of office have been expressed]\nby delegates, with some British Columbia representatives urging n\ngreater socialization of inditstriei\nthan forecast In the Adopted section of the mnnlfcsto dealing with\nsocial  ownership.\nA redraft of that section Is expected to be submitted tomorrow\nin an attempt to reroncil both\ncamps. The -fpnke.iman for the more\nradical wing of the party is Harold\nWinch, CCF. leader In the R. C,\nLegislature.\nHeavy Fighting\nFlares in Italy\nROME, Nov. 30 (CF Renter) -\nHeavy fighting has tlared up both\non the 5th and 8th Army front* in\nItaly in improved weather.\nThe Germani, using rocket launchers and all kinds of armor and\nartillery, have won back some\nground.\nThe heaviest counter-attack was\nlaunched Northwest of Foreetta\nTerme, on the Platoia-Bologna road\nwhere the Germani have recaptured\nthe dominating height of Monte\nBelvedere, 28 miles Southwest of\nBologna, which was taken by American troopi of the Sth Army last\nweekend.\nAnother attack driven into the\nSth Army positions 10 miles Soutn-\neast of Bologna and Just North of\nthe much contested height of Monte\nGrande, resulted ln the Germani\nregaining possession of Monte Cas-\ntellaro.\nTroopi of an Indian division and a\nEritish armored unit occupied the\ntown of Casola Valser.io, with Monte Fortino and the high ground on\nthe 5th Army's rignt flank along the\nSenio River.\nMayor Stibbs Returns\nFrom\nU.B.C.M. Executive\nChief buslneM or the Brtcutlre\nmeeting of the Union of BO. Uunlci-\nPfllltlM at Vancouver Friday tm preparing of repreaentatlona to b\u00ab made\nto povernment Department*, the Cabinet and thf Houw Municipal Committee from resolution* of Uie Union\nconvention nfld nt Nflann, Mayor N.\nC. Stlbba, who returned from the\nCoast Monday. stv-| Line* of approach were also p: pnred for a brief\nto be submitted to the Oovtrnment\nwJ-lnn for rrlipr f- r munirlpalltleg of\nthe cost of thr education load.\nDorsey Struck\nFirst Blows\nHall Testifies\nLOS ANGELES, Nov. JO (AP) -\nBandleader Tomm-f Doriey wai thi\naggressor ln their encounter at the\nDone; apartment lait Auguit, Actor Jon Hall testified today. Hi ilso\nlaid that Mrs. Dorsey hid ribbed\nhtm by the hair.\nThe bespectacled mieitro struck\nthe first two blows, Hill declared,\nalmost knocking him uncomcloui.\nThe fight was on the second-storey balcony ol Doney's Hollywood\nipartment\n\"Then, I reclll, I had a headlock\non him,\" HaU continued.\nWhat they were lighting about,\nas nearly ai Hall could lay today,\nwas Dorsey'i exception to hli grilling the bandleader'! will by putting his arm \"casually\" around her\nshoulder.\nA Jury Is trying band leader Dorsey, hli actress wife, Pat Dane, ind\nTommy'i friend, Allen Smlliy, on\ncharges ol felonloui assault\nJam Churchill, blond night club\nsinger, didn't get thi opportunity\nto tell thi court ibout the touch-\n\u25a0ir-.d-gn icrep she had with Mra\nDorsey while thi boyi win throwing punchei. The court rulld that\nthe encounter between the girls wu\nan unrelated Issue.\nSAN FRANCISCO, Nov, 10 (AP)\n\u2014Sim Sneid will be tne senllmintil\ndvoriti when the Held teei OH tomorrow In the 72-hole Sin Tranclico\nopen but hard shelled observer!\nbracketed the defending chimp,\nijyron Nelsrn, aa the man to beat\nfor top prill.\n'out with\n2,928 Join Up in\nLatt Few Dayt\nMONTRIAL, Nov. W (C**)-\nWir tirvlcii Miniiter i.fiteirt\nuld her, tonight thit 29SI men\nhid enlisted for ictlve service In\nthi Mentml diitrict within nine\ndiyi, in ivirigi ot MS I diy.\nHilf or the men who volunteered I lnj(<_i\u00bblcrl Try ltl\nweri   FrenchCinidlins. [ _\t\nJap Sentenced to\nServe Year\nin Road Camp\nSPOKANE, Nov. ,1(1 (APi- Gordon K. HlrabHVnihl, Jspnnesf-Am-\nerlcan graduate nf the University\nof Washington, w*t.s convicted todiy In Kederal district court nn *\ncharge of failure to report at n con.\nscietlmis oljjecto-- camp and was\nsentenced to serve one veir In a\nroad camp.\nHirabayashi, accompanied l>v his\nwhite wife whom tie married in\nSpokane, refu\u00ab_d an offer In have\n\u25a0 n altorney represent him.\nDo This For Acute\nCATARRH\nBelgian Food\nSituation Serious\nBRUSSELS, Nov .10 <CP-R*uUr)\n\u2014Prime MlnlMrr Pirrlot nld tonight tht D\u00abl|iftn f<-i'\u00bb_i {nsltlon wu\ntxtremtly urnve, with only \u2022nough\n(-ompstlc f\u00bbtj to Um fnr i fortnight\nnnd tnough horrv'-killed mut for\nn month.\nNo need to In chin coldi $n\nten dowti thu fill ind win-ff.\nYour hind? h-Xtl\u00abofdrp\u00abKliW\u00ab\nI'm:., ir i with in qtick anion,\ntwo-minute r.ii.f will check\nihem from the Kin. At\n\u25a0 11 Drui Storei.\nYou Women Who Suffer From\nHOT FLASHES then\nCHILLY FEELINGS\nPut il test dropi of Vlckj V\u00ab-tro noi\nup each nmtrll. It ilulnW iwollen\nmrmbhinM, ioml.M Itrtk- U||-W*\ntion, flinlvr. mucui \u2014 and WIvlLw\n, 10 makes breith-\nVATR0N0L\nDuring 38 to 52 Yean\n^ ofAgel\nIf you-Uke \u00abo many mmum b#-\ntsesm the un ot M and SJ-\nluffir from hot tisahtt, ink,\nI lnd, nrrvoui Irritable fMllnfi,\ntut a bit blue at tlmei_ailduito\nthe functional middle ue period\npeculiar tn *omen-tnr Lydla t,\nPlnkbam'i Vejetabli Compound\ntc relieve such symptom*.\nPlnkham'! compound ls on*\nof the beet known medlrlnei you\ncan buy for thla purpoK. Hin'i\na product that Aielpi lutwi ud\ntt-iO a sensible kind to ^t\nTliouiandi upon thoiiiand.t\nhari rupnrted beninta. Toiler*!\nlabil direction!, rink linn's Compound ta worth Iryinn,\nLydia E. Pinkham's VEGETABLE COMPOUND\n *WWrnmrim*mmre*m*t*frai2T^^\nmm\nmiw\u00abi i.iiiuiiy \\e\\i3mmxwkWAjtmm*\nTo Cut Lend-Lease\nin Half; Will\nPay Cash to U.S.\nBy  JOHN   CHESTER\nAnoclatcd Preu Stiff Writer\nLONDON, Nov. 30 (AP), -\nPrime Miniiter Churchill revealed today a far-reaching\nAnglo-American trade arrangement whereby, after the defeat\nef Germany, lend-leaie would be\nout nearly In half but. Britain\nwould pay caih for United Statei\nmaterial! Intended for eventual\nre-export from  Britain,\nHammering home Britain's necessity for, and intention of, rebuilding its largely-vanished export\ntrade, the Prime Minister reminded\nthe House that \"it is no part of the\nlend-lease act to provide general\nrelief or to provide for post-war reconstruction or to aid our export\ntrade.\"\n\"We shall pay cash for any additional supplies we may wish to\ntake fror\/t the United States for\nexport purposes,\" he declared.\nHe added that the removal of uncertainties should make it possible\nfor exporters to lay plans now\n\"with assurance\" that they could\nbecome effective after the war with\nGermany ends.\n\"Lend-lease\u2014that very great act\n\u2014has stood us and our Allies in\ngood stead and we have never asked\nnor expected any assistance which\nls not strictly within its terms and\nprovisions,\" the Prime Minister declared.\nArrangements already had been\nmade in Washington, he said, as to\n\"what the American administration\nfeel it is proper and right for us to\nhave in accordance with the terms\"\nof the act. He added:\n\"The end of the war with Germany will make possible large reductions in some of our requirements. We expect our needs will\nbe met by a program at a rate not\nmuch more than half of whitf we\nhave been receiving in 1944. All of\nthese supplies and services will be\nexclusively for the joint war effort\nagainst the common enemy.\"\nMr. Churchill reminded the House\nthat lend-lease was an act which\n\"was for the defence uf the United\nStates and is strictly limited to\nwhat is necessary for the most effective prosecution of the war by\nthe United States and its allies.'1\n\"The prolongation of the war into\nwhat will be for us the sixth and\nseventh years means that certain\nimprovements are essential if our\nnational economy is to be as fully\neffective as possible for the prosecution of the war,\" Mr. Churchill\nsaid.\n\"Fatigue and abstinence carried\ntoo far and endured too long can\nimpede the effectiveness of a people at war at least as much as a\nmore sensational form of privation.\nRELEASE  OF  MANPOWER\n\"After the defeat of Germany\nsome  release   of  manpower  to  in-\nw any Wirt,!\nm\nTEA.\nTFWC? 50KESW\"\ncrease the supplies available for\nessential civilian consumption must\nfollow in due course and tome improvements in the standards and\nvariety of national diet.\"\nMr. Churchill said Britain.also\nmust make a seriotto effort to rebuild the export trade \"which we\ndeliberately gave up in the extremity of our emergency but without\nwhich we cannot live in the future.\"\nThe House cheered when he said\nhe considered \"the statement I have\nmade is one of a highly satisfactory\nnature.\"\n\"Never has there been a more\nthorough understanding of the facts\nof the economic position and the\nposition and the problems nf Great\nBritain   and   the   United  States  of\nAmerica on both sides than we\nhave now been able to reach,\" Mr.\nChurchill said.\nDeclaring that \"the defeat of Japan must still continue to have the\nfirst call on our resources,\" Mr.\nChurchill added that following the\ndefeat of Germany, exports would\nthen be subject only to those inevitable limitations \"dictated by\nthe need of the war against Japan.\"\n\"So that we can play our full\npart in continuing the struggle, a\nprogram of lend-lease aid against\nJapan after the defeat of Germany has now been planned with\nthe American administration to\nmaintain our fighting power\nagainst Japan. Without any reduc\ntion In our proportionate efforts,\nwe shall be able along with the\nU.S. to releue some of our manpower to produce some more civilian goods.\n\"Some improvement in the variety of the civilian diet will be made\npossible. We shall be able to do\nmore to build temporary; and emergency houses. We must necessarily\nfor the .most part depend on our\nown efforts in this field, but in addition to those efforts resulting from\nthe planned and proportional program we anticipate aid from American sources not only in materials\nbut also in complete houses to meet\n! some of our needs for temporary\n1 and emergency houses for war\nworkers in war areas.\"\nTwo Lob Donated\nfor Slocan\nInstitute Hall\nSLOGAN CITY, BC\u2014The Slocan\nWomen's Institute mat on Baturday\nat tho homo of Mra. Cider tflth the\nPrealdent, Mn. R. L. Reynolds, ln the\nchair. Eight membera were preeent.\nMrs. popoff told the membera of\nher meeting with the Nel*op CH)\nCouncil ro the proposed Nelson and\nDistrict Women's Rest Room. The Nelson City Council have found a room\nfor which they will pay the rent,\nlight and water, the Institutes to\nprovide furnishings and a caretaker.\nDiscussion on the proposed Slocan\nWomen's Institute Hall followed. Mrs\nPopoff donated two lots. It wss decided to sell bonds and start a subscription list, work to start as soon\naa possible.\nMiss Bowman, principal of the High\nSchool, gave an Interesting account of\nher travela ln Palestine, showing\nheaeddress, coat and pictures, also\nheaddress, coat and leaves of native\ntreea, ahrubs and flowera. The social\nhour was given over to a lively question and answer talk with Mies Bow-\nman. A delightful luncheon waa eerved by the hostess, Mrs. W. W. Elder.\nDon't Tell Plans\nfor After the\nWar Says Perry\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 30 (CP).\u2014\nEducation Minister H. G. Perry,\nChairman of the British Columbia\nProvincial Post-War Reconstruction\nBureau, said at a meeting of Vancouver's Rehabilitation Committee\nWednesday that owners of industries would be foolish to tell what\nthey intend to make after the war\nbecause anybody might \"steal their\nidra.\"\nMr, Perry said, \"Industrialists in\nthis area are extremely alert to the\nproblems of reconversion, but the\nsituation is still subject to sudden\nchange and it is therefore impossible for them to make definite\nplans yet.\"\nHe emphasized dependence of\nCanada's present prosperity on a\nlarge volume of exports.\nContinuing he said, \"If one-tenth\nof the projects submitted to the\nGovernment could be proceeded\nwith, there would be no unemployment problem.\"\nSpeaking of public hydro plans,\nMr, Perry said that rural electrification would provide a large number of jobs. To develop another\nmillion horsepower, he said, would\ndistribute $75,000,000 in new payroll*.\nMr. Perry declared that, \"no modern industrial nation could progress\nnr even survive without an abundance of cheap electric power,\"\nRossland Lots\nlo Be Available\nfor Overseas Men\nR066LAKD, B.C., Nov. 20\u2014The City\nCouncil Monday night adopted a resolution that city building lots owned\nby the CHy would \"be made available\" to aU men serving In His Majesty's services overseas, on application\nby the men concerned, or by relatlvee\non their behalf. The Property Committee was directed to draft rules to\ngovern this matter and submit them\nto the Council.\nAid. A. C, Rldgers, Board of Works\nChairman, reported 88 man-days five\nhours spent by the Board ln t\\\\e last\nfortnight, distributed, 32 on street\nmaintenance, eight on sanitary work,\n12 on garbage collection, seven on\ndrainage, 13 on general work, \\Ve for\nsidewalk repairs, ft 'j on rinks grounds\nand buildings, and seven man-days\nfive hours on equipment repairs.\nSix man-days were expended by the\nFife, Water and Light Committee,\nAid. Ethrldge reported\u2014one In making water boxes, two In Installing\nservices ln Park Street, two on services\non Butte Street, and one on the Rock\nCreek flume.\nFor the Sports and Recreation\nCommittee Aid. Darby reported on the\nformation now ln progress, of the\nArena & Athletic Association, which\nls to be Incorporated, and which will\nbe npplying for use of the Rink this\nseason.\nIt waa decided to follow the procedure of other years In providing leu\nat the Rink.\nFirst and second readings were given\nto the Traffic Bylaw.\nNILSON DAILY NIWS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1944 '- S\nThe \"Bay's\" Food Specials\nSailing Friday, Saturday and Monday\u2014Phonei 191-194\nCOTTAOE  ROLLS.  Union, nilf CORN: Royil City, Oolden it*\nor whole, S\\tt   B,n,,m>  '\u2022 \"*\u25a0 \"n          ^\"\nCUT GREEN BEANS:        I gA\nr,*,,    Ktftb:   no. o,  uoiumma,     \"Wif.\niitf   Choice, 20 or, 2 tint *\u25a0\u00bb\u2022*\nLb.\nPICNICS: Pork\nST. ..   29*   AX.*.-, \u00bb\u00ab..-.\nPEAS: No. t, Columbia,\nCHUTNEY SAUCE: I ol.\nbottlet, each  \t\nPLUM JAM: McDonald'!, SIj.   FLOUR: 5 Roioi, tl  C)\n\u00ab>*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0? 49 lb.eecki.eech \u00abPl.O-J\nNo. 4 tin\nFort York Tea, Ib.\n69c\nCeylon end Indian\nHostess Coffee, Ib   46c\nGround ei ordered\nPECAN NUTSi Lerge,\npollihed,  Ib.  \t\nFILBERTS: Oregon\nIn ihell, Ib, ....\nCtJk   FLOOR WAX OR NO RUB: Old\nOJV   Engllih, gjj\u00a3\nLarge tins\n\u2022X(ktf  8HANO; Cleans wood\nwork, bottle\nFR0ITS AND VEGETABLES\nORANGES: -Rfl'i,\nDot\nGRAPEFRUIT: it's,\nTexai Plnki, 2 for\n\u2022J-Iji   ONION8: Good quality,\n5 lbi.\nSWEET  POTATOES:\n2 lbi\t\n23*\n25<\n^ateoift'Bag ^ottqmng\nINCORPORATED   2?? MAY 167a\nGRIMSBY. England <CP) - It\nhaa been disclosed that Grimsby\nwas the first town in Britain to receive s major attack by \"butterfly\"\nanti-personnel bombs\u2014in June last\nyear. They killed &9 and seriously\ninjured 18V\nBROMLEY, England (CP)-CapL\nJames Sidney Critchley, pioneer\nmotorist, who took King Edward\nVII for his first motor ride, has\ndied at the age of 79.\nOut-of- Town\nCustomers\nWrite lor Our Samplei af\n(IljrtBtmaB\nQJariifi\nSold in 2 Dozen lots only,\nprinted with your name ond\noddress\n\"Prices\n$2 up to S4-S0\nPROMPT SERVICE.\nNelson Daily Newi\nChriitmai  Card   Dept.\nNILSON, B. C.\n*\u25a0*\u25a0\/CpJSA,\nGARDENING\nCompiled  In  the  Interest! of\nBetter Gardening by the\nNelion Garden Club.\nTHF, HOtSE PLANT\nOne of the secrets of success tn\nKeeping bouse plants in good condition during the Winter ta to itart\ntheir care immediately the heat Is\nturned on in the home In the Fall, The\nreason Is thst one of the most oommon causes of failure during the\nWinter is that the plants are kept\nIn rooms that are much too warm for\nthem. By the time Christmas haa arrived, the plants may be wllt-ed or\notherwise In poor condition, particularly if they have been plated near a\nradiator. MoTe house plant* have been\nkilled by heat than by cold. The ideal\ntemperature for house plants is about\n85 degrees or better still, flO to 05\ndegrees P., three degrees less than\nthe recommended house temperature\nboth from the health point of view\nand that of the war fuel-saving campaign. If one desires to have the plants\nin any of the living rooms, the best\nthing to do is to keep the rooms as\ncooi aa possible consistent with pergonal comfort.\nThc various plants ha\\e different\ntolerances to sunlight, ferns ahould\nbe placed where there Is an abundance of light but not In direct gir.i-\nllght, while, on the other hand*\nllowrrlr.K planta as a rule require all\nthe aunlltfht they can get. especially\nin Winter time. Foliage planta are\nmore tolerant to Insufficient, but In\nWinter time they may be placed In\ndirect sunlight.\nCare should be taken to prevent\ndirect draughts on plants. At the\nsame time, a dry atmosphere is to be\navoided because it not'only stunts\nthe planta but helps Uie increase of\ncertain Insert pests, such aa red eptd\u00ab?r\nand thrlpe. Moisture In the air around\nlhe plants may be Increased by standing thf- pota In shallow trays filled\nwith pebbles, gravel, or moss snd\nkeeping It moist. Drainage in the pots\nle an important factor. Thla may best\nbe arranged hv using sol) In the pot\nthat will allow both air and water to\npaaa through easily.A mixture of two\npart* (rood garden loam soil, one part\nrotted manure, nnd one part aand\nwill general|v fulfill the soil requirement* of potted plants. Further\ndrainage may bo obtained by placing\npebbles, small stone* or Uke mat-ertal\nat the bottom of tbe pot, ao aa to\ndrain off any excess water,\nMIM I'ROPAfMTlON\nCan chrysanthemum* be propagated\nby rutting* in the Fall the same as\ngeraniums?\nTlw answer I* nn.\nCuttings from hardy \"mums\" are\ntaken In th- Spring from \u00bbhoot* that\ntrim from the crowns of plant* that\nhave been carried through the Winter\nBest result* in propagating hardy\n\"mums\" says R C. Palmer, superintendent flummerland Experiment \\1\nStation, are got by *Urttng Individual cutting* tn April, when the old\nplanta have usually sent out a num-\nber of new shoot* at the h*ee from\nwhich a few amall root* have developed\nThese new shoot* msy be cut off\nsnd \u00abet out In the permanent portion\nabout IB ihches apart, making aure\nthat the toll ls prsssed firmly abou*_\nthem.\nrianta rrom such new cutting* prp.\ndue* much superior flowera to the old\ncrowns which may well be djecardtd.\nThe young plenta should be tipped\nbrick when about a foot high to en-\noourtun branching. In mid-Bummer\ngrowth mav hr encouraged hv applying s top-dresalng of some good ftr-\ntlliwr.\nTraililes Tell Derby Banquet\nof Need lor Fish Conservation\nExperience! tn SO yeara of fishing\non Kootenay Lake and Its streame and\nresults of studies carried out in connection with the lake fish, were described by R, T. rTuffy) Garland of\nTrail, while O. W. (Curly) Wheatley,\nstressed the need for cooperation by\nall Hportsminded person* In seeing\nthat proper stocking was carried out\nln a conservation program, at the\nGyro Derby banquet Wednesday night,\nMethods of stocking at present being followed were not very successful, Mr, Wheatley said. He r\u00abcalled\nthat American sportsmen who recently attended \\,r\\\\ West Kootenay Rod\nand Gun Association annual meeting\nat Kaalo had told him that bett-er results had been obtained In Idaho\nwhen fish were held until they were\nof legal size, eight inches, then used\nto stock fishing waters,\nHatcheries and rearing ponds were\nnot being uaed in this Dlatrlct to their\nfull extent mainly because of the need\nof more money. The Game Commlaslon wa* unable to help further at\npresent because of Its limited resources.\n\"If we wish to go fishing ln thli\nlake, we have to pay for lt unless we\nwant less satisfactory fishing and\nmore fresh air, sunshine and scenery,\" he aaid.\nNERD ADVERTISING\nHe urged his listeners to Join the\nRod and Gun Cluba, \"to dig down\ndeep into your pockets.\" Advertising\nwas needed. Those who derived Income from this sport were duty bound\nto put out money on advertising, he\nfelt. The Oyro Derby, now giving to\na good cause, the Gyro War Services\nFund, ahould consider diverting the\nmoney back Into fishing after the\nwar, \"so we can reap the benefit and\nenjoy fishing too.\"\nIn discussing conservation, he said\nthe District faced continual falling\noff of fishing due to the lake depth\nand the lack of murine plant life. The\nsurrounding country waa rocky and\ndevoid of life, he continued. A richer\noountry would give a richer lake.\nDescription of the lake and creeks\nfrom Coffee Creek North to the Lardeau, ita geography and topographs*,\nwas given in interesting detail by Mi\nGarland,\nHe described Its early history from\nthe time David Thompson, great\nNorthwest explorer, readied tli* main\nlake In 1807, when David Douglai,\nnoted Bcotch botanist, collector for\nthe Royal Horticultural Hoclety In\nEngland, studied Ita flora, to thn\ngreat flood periods of 1894, 1903 and\n1818, and modern tlmea.\nSeventy miles In length, one to\nfour miles wide, It had an area of 180\nsquare miles, and ranged from 380\nLo 395 feet in depth, sounding* having shown It to have a floor almost\nlike * milliard table, he said. In 1894\nthe volume of flow paqt Nelson was\nfrom 215,000 to 325,000 cubic feet ar\n3000 tons of water per second. That\nwas during a flood period\nFigures taken on the average flow\nnow showed that 107.00 cubic feet a\nsecond flowed past Nelson In the Summer period, and an astoundlngly low\nfigure of 4AO0 cubic feet In Winter\ntime. This would explain why Industry wanted to level the flow to 10,000\nfeet per second. \"Bottlenecks\" below\nNelson had already been removed,\nhut there were others between Nelaon\nand the Outlet. High water, of course,\nhad not appeared In recent years because of Ught snowfalls, but lt would\nreturn with heavier falls of *now.\nHe told of extensive studies of the\nlake made In 1927 by Dr. J. R, Dy-\nmond, Department of Biology, University   of   Toronto,   his   assistant.   Dr\nCharles Mottley, and the noted artist, .-\nE. B. 8. Logiir of the Roysi Ontario .\nmuseum.       \u25a0 *\u25a0\nIn testing the main lake waters, Dr.   \"\nDymond had stated tbe lake was not\ncapable  of  supporting   a  huge   In-   *\ncrease of fish life.\nThe great quantities of food-carrying driftwood and vegetable food *\u2022\u00ab\npoured into the lake by the creeks x\nduring high water time had now dia. -\nappeared. The lake waa being fed by\nglacial stream* and the ice fieda -,\nwere shrinking, too.\nHe described fishing In streams \u2022\nalong the mntn lake, snd told of sport *\nhe and others had enjoyed fly fishing for native cutthroat trout and\ngolden spotted char, the District's\nfirst fish. In recent years he had made\nsome of hla best catches on streams\nsuch as Woodbury creek and others,\nand named many streams that hm\nthought had potentialities for stocking,\nBeautiful Teeth\nStart Young\nIhs building of\nneautiful teeth startt with\nj mother's diet, before the b_b]F ii\nbora In bebyhood, io pre-school\nyears, the teeth ire still in the\nformative ittge-ind ereii la\nadolescence, milk and vitamin D\nmust keep up the good work ol\nnourishing tnd protecting the\nteeth.\nIrradiited Ca rnation Milk *, \u2022\niplendid source of calcium ud\nphosphorus, and'is enriched with\n\"sunshine\" viumin D. A wholesome, nourishing, digestible milk\nfor all ages. Write for free book,\n\"Vour Contented Baby\". Cut.\nlion Co. Lid., Vancouver, B. C.\nI       tUMDMT-D\nCarnation\nMilk\nCow.\"\nA CANADIAN MODUCT\n mWmwm*\n\u25a0iii.i. app\nKP1W\n''\"\u25a0\u25a0ans-a-p a_\u00bbim^i|n i\nPiWMP\u00bb,ii.p.\u00abPW'ifl \u2022 mmwm\n\u25a0 ilj'iwm)iw***z*mii*ee*mim*\n7<e\u2014-^\n$M*am Saila Sfhub  Letters to the ? P Questions ? ?\n,   ANSWERS\nEstablished April 32   1902.\ntjrltitk Colnmbla't\nNe*< Jnteregtittp Nrntpaptr\nfubllajied every morning **cipl Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPAN*. LIM-\nITED. 288 Belter St.. Nelion, Brltlth Columbia.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTH$ AUDIT BURl_MJ Or CIRCULATIONS.\n_____ _ .. ,. \u25a0\nFRIDAY, DEC. 1, 1944.\n\u2022Wf**  v   \u2022\"\u25a0\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u2022    \u25a0\u25a0 \t\nInflation Story Is Always\nthe Same, Though\nDetails Vary\nWe have heard much of the effects\netf infletlon In China and in Italy. Now\nWe are hearing of the sufferings of the\nI\"reneh from the same cause.\nCorrespondents say that \"the least\nvaluable commodity In France today\nJs -Trench money,\" and they tell such\n\u00bbtorie* as the following:\nEverybody seww trwitiei-lly intent\npn getting rid of what he has before tt\nbecomes worth even Ies*. To the poor\nthat present* no difficulty, for the\n*ost of living lg three times what It is\nJn Canada, but the unfortunate rich\nere being driven to desperate lengths\nto convert shaky piles of franci into\nlomething they believe of more permanent worth.\nAmong the results hes been the\ndUtppearance of the starving artist in\nt garret. The Quartier Latin has become the home of the nouveau riche,\nwhile the banks of the Seine are lined\nwith the bearded young men and women in smocks, frantically daubing\ncanvases for all they ere worth, can-\nvases that are siyipped from their\nb\u00abndi almost before the paint ia dry.\n\"We have made some utterly fantastic sales and the sensational price\nbu become the normal.\" declared Al-\nphonse Bellier, manager of L' Hotel\nDrouot, one of the leading art houses\nof Paris. \"Our customers are all\nFrenchmen and during the four years\nof occupation I do not know of German buyers ever coming to our establishment Of course, Germans may\nhive bought indirectly through an\nagent, but I do not know of a picture\nwe have sold that I could say went to\nGermany.\n\"While some of our customers were\neld-time collectors, the majority were\nnew amateurs\u2014doctors, lawyers and\nIndustrialists recently converted to the\ncult of the painting.\" The greatest sales\nof the war, he said, were the collections of Georges Vlau and Felix Fene-\nlon and the Canonne collection. The\nViau sale alone brought 52,000,000\nfrances or more than $1,000,000. It contained sketches and canvases by Dele-\ncroix, Corot, Daumier, Cezanne, Degas,\nRenoir, Monet, Pissarro and Gauguin.\nA landscape by Cezanne, for which\nthe bidding was exceptionally hot, was\nknocked down for $100,000.\nAt the Viau sale three pastels by\nDegas brought $44,600, $30,000 and\n$28,000. A landscape hy Corot was sold\nfor $24,200 and a landscape hy Daumier for $26,400.\n\"I don't see how such prices can\nbe maintained,\" said Waldemar\nGeorge, art critic, \"I don't believe our\nEnglish and American Allies will be\ndisposed to pay such prices. The works\nof French painters are actually selling\nfor less today In New York and London than they are in Peris.\"\nBut it is not only in painting that\nthe Paris rich are splurging. They buy\nJewelry, furs and wines. The latter are\nconsidered an exceptionally sound investment, for wine improves and increases in pnre with ago.\nDespite taxes you can buy imported\nwines at a British Columbia government liquor store more cheaply than\nin France, home of fine wines. Champagne, and not the best, fetches arouhd\nJ$6 a bottle. It was once dear at $2. True,\nGermany took a lot of French wine\nand the production of the vineyards\nw\u00bbs below normal ln war years, but\nthere is still plenty of wine in France\n\u2014in the cellars of Frenchmen who\ntrust wine more than francs.\nDealing in jewelry is hampered,hy\nthe fact buyers must turn in the equivalent gold or silver for eavh article\nbought.\nTh\u00abt is the sltmtion In France.\nThere would be differences In detail but the general result ln Canada\nwould be the same If we relinquished\ntoo early our control of prices and\nwages. All except speculators and the\ncomparatively few with larger Incomes would suffer. Even those with\nlarge Incomes would ultimately join\n' the poverty-stricken.\nEditor\nLetten miy bi publlihed ever \u25a0 Mm tt\nplum*, but th* actual rime of thi writer\nmuit bi given to the Editor \u2022\u25a0 evidence of\ngoad tilth. Anonymoui letten go In thl\nwut* papir baiket\nLabor Is Not the Only Cost\nin Making Shoes, Writes\n\"Experienced\"\nTo Uw Editor\nBUv-Yomt eatrttifontttit Mr. f- \u2022\u25a0 B**tt\nef Neiton aaka In your Isiue of th* 13th !n.\nitant the following rhetorical eueetloii:\n\"Has lt ever itrucli yqq that you oould\nnot pay a mat tt tot making a pair of tboet\nand expect him to turn around and buy Bl*\nsame shoes for $10?\"\nMay J anuwtr t>y another riwtorlcal question, viz:\n\"Has It never itnick you, Mr. Baatt, that\nthere were other Items of expense Involved\nin the malting ot th* ihoei b*sld* th* eoit of\nlabor?\"\nUnles* the manufaeturer alms at bankruptcy h* muit \u00bbdd to the coat of Ubor th*\nfollowing. Item*:\n(1).   Cost of leathea*, tn*\u00ab, et*.\n(2). Hla own libor Involved In tmej.\nvision tt Uw work, marking prle*, and lelllng\nthe ihoei. Surely h* li not expected to work\nfor nothing's). We\u00bbr ind tear on machinery \u00bbnd\ntools used. Al) machinery has a limited life.\nSay a machine hu a normal Uf* of 10,000\nworking hours, \u00bbnd li uied for on* hour.\nThen ont t\u00abn' thousandth part of th* eoit of\ntha maehtnt muat be *dd*d to th* cost of\nthe labor if the manufacturer hop\u00abi to itay ln\nbusiness.\nti) Coat of h**tlng and lighting th* building where laborer worked. Thii could ba\nwork\u00abd out on \u00bb time hour bails. Say the total\neoat for 8000 houn li *\u00bb0 ind workman la on*\nhour making shoes. Thin oni thr**-thousandth\npart ot MO should b* added ta th* ltl* prlca\nof th* show.\n(8) In tht lame wiy lUowtnc* Ihould be\nmade tor depredation of th* building in\nwhich labor worka, taxes paid on the Min*,\nfir* Iniurance \u00bb**>d oth*r Item*.\nHowever, may I ask Mr. Butt, If hi Is\n(bl* to cit* \u2022 can whir* * manufacturer\ncharged an amployi* glO for \u00abn *rtlele hi\npaid him Juat J7 to mike? It la uiual for man-\nufacturtri to m*ke i ll_*ral dlicount whan\netlUng to employe**\u2014many times at a loss\nIf strict coit accounting ware eonildered.\nMr. Beatt appears to bl very much enam-\norid of th* eo-optratlve movament I confeu\nthit from much tjrptrlmet with th* movement In OnUrlo, ln the Prairie Provinces,\nand In B. C. I am doubtful If lt b\u00ab a panacea\nfor al lour economic Ills. Th* success ot thi\nfirmer depandi on finding a reidy market for\nhis produce at fair living prices. And prle*\ndepends on the number of customers and thi\nlack of deitructlv* competitors. When farmer! do their own banking, itortkeeplng and\nselling it tends to drlvi thi btnkeri, storekeepers and others displaced on to the land,\nand so increases competition, lessens the number of customers and io tends to depress prices\nand thus lowers the standard ot living.\nIn this land of opportunity and plenty\nmost of us are willing that our fellow citizens,\nthe bankers and business men, should have\nwhat we claim for ourselves\u2014a fair living. 1\nam certain they give as good service as their\ncooperative rivali ind I doubt if their services ire more costly.\nA passage from Proverb! might be i fitting conclusion:\n\"Devise not evil agalnit thy neighbor\nseeing he dwelled, securely by thee\"\nEXPERIENCED.\nTrail, B. *C, Nov. 1!.\nOpin tt tny reider. Ntmei of ptrttnt\nliking quntlone will not ba publlihed,\nThero || pa chirge for thli service. Qui*-\ntltni will not be tmwered by mall exeept\nwhtn there li ebvloui neceulty for privity,\n(J. T-. JftJiet*\u2014Could you pie*** glv* mt Information is to the rites at * funeral of \u2022\nmember ot th* Royal Canadian Mounted\nPolice, In particular, why hli boots ar*\nplaced In tha itlrrups, on hli horse, point*\nIng baekwardi?\nThe placing ef riding boots reverted ln\nth* Itlrrupi \u00bbt \u25a0 funeral of i m\u00abmb*r of the\nHoy\u00bbl Canidian Mounted Police Fore* ll ob-\nlerved by ill cavalry units. It does not ipply\nonly to the Mounted Police. It ll analogoui\nto tht \"Arma Reversed\" of a military funeral\nof in Infantry soldier.\nThe other rites of the funiral art ilmllar\nto any other military funeral.\nW. B., Kaslo\u2014Would you kindly let mt know\nIf thert la anyone who would recover an\novernight can for m*.\nWrltt te the Oreat Weit Saddler Co, Calgary, and thay will do this for you.\nA. M- M-, Procter\u2014Would you please tiE m*\nth* prop\u00abr name for young rabbits?\nA young har* Is called a leveret and lt 1*\nllklly thlt \u2022 young rabbit would be called tht\nsame, ai rabbits are of the hare family.\nE. O. R, Trail\u2014Would you please print th*\naddresses of reliable gunsmith* ln Nelson\nand Vancouver.\nSam Brown, Bicycle *_ Rcpaln, 078 Bik*r\nStreet, Nelion; and Lisle Eraser Sporting\nGoodi Ltd., 545 Granville Street, Vancouver.\nJ. B-, Salmo\u2014Can you  please glvt mt tht\nn\u00bbm* *nd address of \u25a0 compiny who id-\nvertlied In your paper lome time igo for\n* help or remedy for isthma lufferers?\nTwo compinles who hivi idvertlsed recently In our psper are the Asthma Bronchitis\nCo.,  Ut Vincouver Block, Vancouver;  and\nth* Bunco Co., 6707 Friwr Street, Vmcou-\nPress Comment\nGeneral Eisenhower's characteristic order\nto stop civilians entering the militiry Forward Zone in Europe for business purposes\nwill be heartily welcomed in this country. The\nRrltl'h public will (eel reassured now that\nthe Supreme Commander hai given ' this\nacutely controversial matter his personal attention, It is exactly the kind of Just, impartial action that was to be expected from General Eisenhower, who has added one more tn\nthe. many great lervlces he hai rendered *o\n'he t'ni'ed Nations, His ban applies not only\nto Americans but to British and other Allied\ncivilians.\u2014 London Daily-Mail.\nWords of Wisdom\nA lovely countenance if the fairait of all\nrights, and the aweetest harmony ta the sound\nnf the voice of her whom w\u00bb love.\u2014Bruyeri.\nEtiquette Hints\nWa'er goblets are filled at a dinner Just\nbefore the guesti are to be seated at the table.\nVerse\nVER8I OR WORSE\nThere's a Bank in tha town\nThat has earned much renown\nThrough   the   work  that   has   Just   bean\ncompleted.\nIt is bright, it Is dun.\nIt's an architect's dream\nOf dingy surroundings defea'ed\nWhen  you  enter ita doors\nThe  Manager  roars,\n\"Come in. my gn^d friend,  ynu   ara welcome\";\nWhile the girls on the staff\nMake   many   to   laugh\nHy their witty and helpful luggesttoni.\nIn theae dayi of distreu\nI havt to conf4*\u00bb,\nA Jokt ll not out of flirt\nIt help\u00ab to tUty\nGlum thoughti of thi d*y,\nAnd io puti \u2022 en ill on our fact\nForglvt m\u00ab I pray\nTor  having  my  lay,\nFor intulti wen never lnt-wdid\nSo good luck to all\nAt \"Old  Montraal\".\nThat'i thl bfit I cun d<\\ en I've ended\nI,   W  SELLS\nNelson, B. C.\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS AQO\n(From Dally Newa, Deo. 1, 1919)\nHonorable Basil U. Aylmer of Queen's Bay\nand   George   Pe_.se   of  Nelion   renewed  acquaintance!   at   thi   Originals   Club   meeting\nand banquet In the Hume last evening.\nL. O. R. Dozols of the Geodetic Survey\nitarted work Thursday to construct a fundamental bench work, a sunken six-foot concrete ihelf, on Vernon Street. During the summer Mr. Dozois has carried on a survey from\nColumbia Gardens to Salmo and from Nelway\nto Nelson.\nCitlwni of Rossland welcomed a snowfall of approximately three or four Inches of\ncontinuing all day.\n2B YEARS  AQO\n(From Dally Newi, Deo, 1, 1919)\nNews received by R. G. Joy, Secretary of\nthe Soldieri Welcoming Committee, atatei\nthat Corporal C. H. Swannel ls expected to\narrive in Nelson tomorrow from Revelstoke.\nMrs. W. D. Burllngham of Nelson, left\nthis morning for Louisiana and Texas on an\nextended visit.\nR. B, Foster, head of the Information and\nService Branch Department of Soldiers Civil\nRe-establishment, arrived in Nelson last night\nfor a visit\nH. V. Fuller, of Greenwood, owner of the\nBay claim ln Skylark camp, made a great\nstrike on the claim Wednesday morning The\nquartz ls of a greenish white color and is literally speckled with gold.\n40  YEARS  AGO\n(From  Dally Newi,  Dec. 1, 1904)\nForeman Jardlne  and  his  gang  of el_;ht\nmen have finished their work nf clearing the\nupper   Kootenay   River,   South   of   Koo-enay\nLanding.\nA. H. Bucharan nf Nelson, manager of the\nBank of Montreal, left yesterday for Spokane,\nToday's Horoscope\nThe turquoise is the blrthstone of December, and it means prosperity. Narclssui\nIs the month's flower and indigo and green\nthe colors. If December I is your birthday, yon\nare leif-confident, reliable and determined,\nrather quiet and reierved, but fun-loving.\nYou have a keen and alert mind and much\nexecutive ability. You are gentle and affectionate in your home, and always itrfve to\nadd to the happiness of your loved ones. During tha next 12 months you ore advised *r\\\nexercise the utmost vigilance and circumspection in all your affairs. Do not be over-\ntrustful. Carefully peruse all documents.\nAvoid changes and safeguard your health.\nBorn on this date n rhild will probably travel\nfar, being restl**\"*?. romantir and highly-\u00ab!nir.)-t.\nSudden finanrU! reverses an* threaded\nthrough law and ill-advised Investments\nWar \u2014 4 Years Ago\nBy The Canadian Preei\nDec. I, 1940\u2014Thousands mide homeless\ntn new German raid on Snuth.impton, RAF.\nhit Wilhelmshnfen, l_orient and Brest naval\nhaaei, Greeks captured strategic pMnts in Pre-\nmat region of central Albania ,1. P Kennedy\nresigned as I1 S ambassador tn Great Hn'-\nain.\nTest Yourself\n1 Who uid. \"Tb. evil thit men d\u00ab llv\u00ab\nattar thit-o; th' gnnd Is oft Interr. . with thtir\nbontr?\n3. In u-ho-f poem do 7011 find tha lines,\n\"! hivt baan faithful to thee. Cymri, [n my\nfishlon\"'\n3. To tha t\\ina.of whit popular mnt um\n\"Tha Bittla Hymn of tha Republic\" wt'\nTHT   ANtWtRS\n1   Mirk   Anthony  In  \"Jullm Cilur.\" hr\nShikaipaira\n3  Emit D-iwfc-ii'i\n..  Thit of 'John Brown, Body\nBIG RID DRIVI DUB AS WW FRONT\nBLAZES: Whllt Allied irmlei on the Weitern front\nearry on their terrific winter puih to tha Rhine,\n\u2022 huge red offenilve It reported getting under wey\nnear lut Pruttla tnd neer Wiriaw, Polend, with\nimaller drlvei gathering momentum In Czechoilov-\ntkla and Hungary. Map ihowi the . ey ipoti In\nwhich the Nazli are now being herraned ae the\nbattle for Germany approaches a crltli. Distance!\nof varloui crucial polnta to Berlin 11 Indleited by\narrows.\nWar Services Gratuities Pile Up\nfor Servicemen; Fall lo Apply\nOTTAWA, Nov. 80 \u2014 Thoutandi\nof former roembert ol the R.C.A.F.,\nor dependent! ot deceated member!\u2014whether they know It or not\nhave lubstantlal War Service Gratuities due them from the Dominion\nGovernment. AU they h\u00bbve to do li\naik for it, and although it li nearly two months ilnce thii wat fint\nannounced, less than 6000, of an eligible total of upward! of 40,000\nhave made application.\nThere are probably leveral rea-\ntoni for thl! apparent lack ot Intereit ln lumi ranging from lomething less than 1100 to more than\n$1500. The most likely reason li that\nthe great mijorlty of them do not\nrealize that theie amount!, payable\nin monthly lnitalmenti, are owing\nthem. Others probably have delayed applying, believing that the\nWar Service Grinti Act, 1944, doei\nnot come into force until Jan. 1,\n1943, there li no point ln applying\nbefore then.\nBy making application it once,\nhowever, they are allured that the\nfirst checki will be In their handi\nearly in the new year.\nFormer member! of the R.C.AT.\neligible for the gratuity can get\napplication formi at any Navy,\nArmy or Air Force establishment\nln Canada as well as it tny branch\nof the Department of Veterani' Affaire- in the larj-er citiei.\nIn the caie of dependents, lt ii not\neven neceuary to fill out an application torm. They need only write\n1 letter giving the name and number of the deceased. It should be\niddressed to RecoJtts Office, R.C.A.F. Headquarters, Ottawa.\nThls is only the R.C.A.F. picture.\nThe gratuity also applies to discharged members of the Navy and\nArmy and dependents. When the\noriginal announcement was made\nit was expected that there would\nbe a flood ot applications, and in\nanticipation large staffs were set\nup by each of the three services.\nInstead, thert hai been just a\ndribble which, ln the case of the\nR.C.A.F. hu averaged approximately 60 a day.\nIt li hoped that thett eligible will\nmake applications tt once io that\nthere will not be 1 flood which will\nclog the michlnery tnd deliy payment*.\nQuick Thinking of French Doctor\nSaves Canadians From Prison (amp\nHALIFAX, Nov. SO (CP) .-Three\nratings from the Canadian Tribal\ndestroyer Athabaakan, which was\nsunk In the English Channel last\nApril, can thank the quick-witted-\nnesa of a French medical officer\nfor their preience in Canada instead\nof In 1 German prlion camp, Chief\nStoker W. D. Mitchell of Vancouver\nand Victoria, said today.\nMitchell told of the French officer's ruse after arriving here\naboard a hoipital ihlp as a wounded\nsurvivor of Athabaskan. The three\nmen aaved from a German prison\ncamp were Stoker John Dolan of\nMontreal. Able .Seaman Edward\nMcCloy of Brockville. Ont, and Ordinary Seaman Raymond Moar of\n('hathim, N.B.\nOf Athabaakan's survivor*, 30\nwere taken to hospital at Orleans,\nand at the end of June 25 were\nmofed to Germany. Hy early August three of the five who were left\nwere pretty well recovered, only\nMitchell and the ihlfc'i doctor, Lieut\nJames Fyde of Crystal City, Man.,\nbeing bed patients.\n\"When the American forces\nneared Orleans, the German commandant came to the hospital and\nordered the French doctor to get\nall the 'walking wounded' ready\u2014\nthey were going to be a vacua ted to\nGermany,\" aaid Mitchell.\n\"So the doctor hurried around\nand told the boys to get batk into\nbed, and to tell anyone who asked\nthat they weren't able to move.\"\nThe deception worked. A number\nof Frenrh Senegalese and Arab patients were moved to Germany, but\nthe 30-odd Canadian, American and\nBritish patients in the hospital were\nleft behind and freed hy the American troops Aug, 11.\nLONDON (CP) - Men's raps may\nbe in short aupply this Winter. The\nladies have taken to transforming\nthem into berets by taking off the\npeaks, putting about six rowi of\nstitching around tbe base and adding\na feather.\nAsks That Nazi\nPrisoners Be\nReturned to Camps\nWILDWOOD, Alta., Noc. 80 (CP).\n-The Wlldwood Branch of tht Ctnadian Legion uld In t reiolutlon\nof proteit paited tt their monthly\nmeeting thli week thtt German\nprlioneri of war, working ln t lum\nber ctmp htre, have entered homti\nand \"allegedly moleited dteant Ctnadian women,\" and tiktd Ihe prlioneri bt returned to the prison\ncamp.\nA number of German military\nprisoners of war recently were tent\nto the Wlldwood Diitrict to work\nat t local lumber camp and the\nresolution laid that \"breadwinner!\nhave lost work ai a reiult, while\nthe freedom given these prisoners\nhas been abused to the extent of entering homes and allegedly molesting decent Canadian women.\"\n(Col. W. F. W. Hancock, Commissioner of Royal Canadian\nMounted Police in Alberta, laid today in commenting on the reiolutlon \"there have been incident! In\nthat area and two German prlaon-\ners have been charged with indecent assault.\" He said as far as he\nknows they have not yet come to\ntrial.)\nRosslanders\nMust Shovel\nSnow or Pay\nHOMLA-*-), >.C. NOT. 3\u00bb\u2014The Oltl\nCouncil decided Monday night H\ndraw tho cttizeni' attention to thl\nbylaw requiring them to riroove tit*\nnow from In front of thtlr P't-\nmleaa tad aik them to eooptrtte\nAlao all owners of empty building*\nare to be notified they must dear tht\n\u25a0now Item In front of their proper-\nUM.\nGary Bowell\nPromoted to\nRank of Major\nCapt Gary Bowtll, formtr Ntlion boy who went oveneai three\nyears ago ti a lit Lieutenant in\nthe Canadian Army, his been promoted to the rank of Major, hli iliter, Mri. O. J. Tupper of Nelion\nhas Itarned. Major Bowell li now\njervlng in Normandy.\nMANCHESTER, England (CP) -\nAir raid casualties In Manchesttr\nilnce tht war began wart 999 p\u00abr\u00bb\nsons killed and 1,778 Injured.\nXMAS\nCAKES\n\u2022 Almond Poste\n\u2022 Rich, Dark\n\u2022 Iced, and\n\u2022 Uniced.\nCanadian Bakeries\nNtlion, B.C\nI KNOW A THING\nOR TWO ABOUT\n6000 BREAD\n\/\nKNOWATHIN0\nOR TWO ABOUT\n.6000 YEAST\/\n,4\ndever women bake\n...   nAVM VEAST\nWilli   l-w.    -\n^RApped airtight \u00a3jj.\nFOR DEMNDABUI\"\nThis Army\nANEW\nSERVICE\nWe are pleased to announce\nthat we are now able to move your\nhousehold effects to Coast cities\nduring the winter months.\nWe are bonded to use the highway in\nthe United States so that we may miss the\nCascade Highway which is impassable\nduring the winter months.\nPhone 106\nwilliams transfer\n\"Htna on to tht c*\\. ws'll tttt *hl\u00bb ent newt\"\n HB\npppiHf\nrnkmrnemmm.\nBoudoir Slippers\nA Perfect\nCHRISTMAS\nGIFT ....\nPotent leather\nWine Leather\nQuilted Satin\n$2.95\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaden In Footfoshlon.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiii\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nButcherteria News\nStewing Beef ond Kidney, -Ib. 23c\nSPECIAL BOILING FOWL, Ib 22c\nStewing Veal and Lamb, Ib.\nBoiling Beef, Ib.\t\n15c\n15c\nCOMMERCIAL BEEF\nSirloin, T-Bone, Round Steaks ond Roaiti\nPer Ib 39c\nRoasting Chicken, Ib.\nRolled Veal Roasts, Ib.\n35c\n35c\nGOOD HAMBURGER, BREAKFAST\nSAUSAGE, lb 15c\nOven Pork Roasts. Ib.       27c\nDelicious Corned Beef, Boned and\nRolled, Ib 25c\nDELICATESSEN\nChicken and Pork Pies, Sausage Rolls\nCottage Cheese, Baked Beans\nFRESH OYSTERS JUST ARRIVED\nPlace your orders early for Lutefish and\nMelton Mowbray Style Pork Pies.\nPHONES S27 \u25a0 528 \u2014 FREE DELIVERY\ni i r \u25a0 111111\u25a0111111111111 11 r :> 111111111111111111111111111 r 11111111111111111111111111111j t\u25a0i11\nMcHardy, Nelson,\nOfficer of Notary\nPublic Society\nVANCOUVIB, Nov. 30 (Wi-*\nHirjreives of Vincouver wu elect-\nid Prisldent of tbe Society of Notaries' Public ot Britiah Columbia\nit tht innual ftmtil meeting.    -\nF. B. McLellan md Hubert Leth-\n\u2022bjr tt Victoria were elected flnt\nvice-president snd aecond vlce-\npresldenti ire 0. M. McHardy, Nelson; N, Wright, Nutlimo; W. D.\nBowden, Mew Westminster.\nWest Grand Forks\n\/oung Folks Wed\nWIST GRAND PORKS, DC, Not.\n30\u2014Nick 0, Mlkortolf snd Miss Mabsi\nP. Vinjoff ot Weit Grand Fork* were\nmirrled Tueiday.\nA. 8. Makortoff left 8t. Vincent's\nHospital, Vanoouver, Nov. 17, and re.\nturned to hie home at West Orand\nForks.\nNELSON SOCIAL Jetlde.SoWlor\n(ommllled\nMurder, Suicide\n< ly MRI. M. l. VIONIUX\n' Charge for Engagement Announcement! en thla page Is $1.50\nHonoring Mrs. R. Lunn, Ob\nservatory Street who plans on leaving In the near future for the Eut\nmimbers of tbe senior C. W. L. met\nWedneiday tfternoon it thi homt\not Mra. Norbert 0. Choquette, Stinley Street, Rev. Father F. t. Flynn\nof ibt Itiff of the Cathedral of Mary\nImmacualti mode i molt fitting\nipeech ifter which Mn, L. II. Choquette, President of thl Leigue,\npreiented Mn. Lunn with a handsome brown leather purse. Among\nthose attending were Mrs. Robert\nMain of Bonnington, Mrs. George\nA. Tapp, Mrs. Thomas Prime, Mn.\nLutkvltch, Mrs. A. G. Gellnas, Mn.\nJoseph Sturgeon, Mrs. M J. Vlg-\nneux, Mrs. W. G. Fullerton, Mn.\nD. Mclnnes, Mrs. P. Bialkowskl,\nMrs. W. McDonald, Mn. G. F. Stevens, Mrs. Louis Colettl, Mrs. L. H.\nChoquette, Mn. Ann Aduddell,\nMrs. J. Muraro, Mrs. Edith Edgar,\nMra. M. DeGiroIaitio, Mrs. J. McKinney, Mra. Jean -Casper, Mrs.\nM. J. Varseveld, Mrs. Philip Rihal,\nMrs. J. P. Herron, Mn. Vecchio,\nMrs. Arthur A. Perrier, Mrs. Klrby\nGrenf.ll, Mrs. J. Vivian, Mrs. C. V.\nOn, JJul dtit\nFRIDAY, DECEMBER\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\n7:38\u20140 Canada\n7:S0\u2014Eveready Earljblrdi (OKLN)\n-iOO-OBC News\n111! -Front Une-Family\n*.:>0\u2014Musical programme (CKLN)\n1:49\u2014Morning Concert\n-:00\u2014BBO NIWI\n\u00bb:lS-Mslody Inoorp (CKLN)\n\u00bb:30\u2014Morning Melodies (CKLN)\n*-___-=\nJjlVlL\nSent on\nApproval\nTermi In accordance with\nW.P.T.D.  Regulations.\npM\nMain at Sixth\nand In Hotel Vancouver\nniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii\n9:45\u2014Latin Americana\n9:69\u2014Tlmi Signal\n10:00\u2014Morning Vlalt\n10:1S\u2014Ogllvle Flour Programme\n(CKLN)\n10:20\u2014Tin Pan Alley Does to Town\n(CKLN)\n10:80\u2014Singer's Corner (CKLN)\n10:45\u2014Organ Magic  (OKLN)\n11:00\u2014Hits of Today\n11:16\u2014Dan Barry (CKLN)\n11.93\u2014Soot Shop\n11.80\u2014Soldier's Wife\n11:46\u2014Muslo from ths Movies\nAFTERNOON\n1_:00\u2014B O Farm Broadcaat\n13:45\u2014Tho Notice Board (CKLN)\n13:80\u2014CBC News\n12:46\u2014Matinee Memortea\n1:00\u2014Old Favourites (OKLN)\n1:16\u2014Old Favourites (OKLN)\n1:30\u2014 Modern Muslolana\n1:45\u2014Recital\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n2:80\u2014Eyea Froht\n3.00\u2014Don Mesaer and -Slanders\n3:16\u2014Prairie Comment  ',      '\n8:30\u2014Curtain Echoes\n8:46\u2014BBC Newsreel\n4:00\u2014Musical  Magic   (CKUI)\n4:08\u2014Voice of Memory (CKLN)\n4:15\u2014Headquarters Report\n4:80\u2014Carolyn Gilbert\n4:45\u2014CBC News Roundup\n5:00\u2014Concert Master  (CKLN)\n5:80\u2014Musical Program (CKLN)\n\u2022VENING\n6:00\u2014The People Art (CKLN)\n6:16\u2014Servloe Men's Quiz (CKLN)\n6:80\u2014Cavalcade of Melody (OKLN)\n7:00\u2014CBC Niwb\n7:16\u2014The People Nut Door\n, 7:30\u2014Eventide\n1:00\u2014Soliloquy\n>:80\u2014V. D. Octroi Series\n9:00\u2014BBC Newsreel\n9:15\u2014Peerless Present! (OKLN)\n9:80\u2014Three Suns Trio\n9:46\u2014Chapel ln the Say (CKLN)\n9:65\u2014Interlude\n10:00\u2014CBC News\n10:15\u2014cbc Nsws Roundup\n10:30\u2014God Bave the King\n*\nWell bowled .sir!\"\nthetj shrieked\ni\nTPiy bade tn the dayi when\nyou could buj \u25a0 cricket bit\nIn i general itore, maiclw\nbnl |e<l  from   thit   good\nGripe-Nati nourlibin ent.\nat\nTodiy, when he cricket to\nwork In i -nr Job, folki\n\u25a0Url off thrir bo* j tl\u25a0 yi with\nthit fimo-ai nr.nriihr-i.-n. hi\nGrape-Nats Flakee ai well\nii Grape-Nou.\nNuff flirt I You'll want to\nbike oyer to your |roccr*i\nright ntw for n regular me\nor giant economy package.\n%\nNn wonder they work\nnnarUy! Orap-r-Nut* Flakea\npro-ride nrbohydratM rod\npr__t*lni, m\u00abfn1 quintl-iei\nof phoiphorn* rod iron md\nother food i-\u00bb\u00bbfii[l-ili.\nG|     \u2022!     ll|l|\u00bb  tliH'N-ll\nrape=Nuts Hakes\nAhsa\\a>ttOMmMr*ats\nGagnon, Mrs. M. Scally, Mrs. A.\nLing, Mrs. Vito Romano, Mrs. D.\nMcPherson, Mrs. J. N. Hunt, Mrs.\nP, E. Poulln, Mrs. J. E. Bennett,\nMrs. L. G. McCallum, Mrs. A. T.\nNoxon, Mrs. W. E. Kopecki, Mrs.\nV. Doyle, Mrs. Tony Bell, Mrs. D.\nAurelio, Mrs. F. Boyd, Miss W. Kinahan, Mrs. J. Morrison, Mn. Folsy,\nMiss Albertlne Choquette, Mrs.\nPhi) Long, Mrs. Bowser, Mrs. Lawrence, Mrs. Soucey, Mrs. Archie\nBlaney, Mlsi Mollis, Irving, Mri.\nC. F. McDougall, Mn J, V. Meyers,\nMrs. Lepekski, Mri. J. McPhail,\nMrs. J. Culiinan, Mlu Miry McDonald and Mrs. Henri Gagnon.\n\u2022 Mrs. Quance, Jr., of Robson\nwai I visitor ln Nelson yesterday\nto ittend the funeral of Mrs. William Wltklns of Trill.\ne Mri. A. D. Emory, Vernon\nStreet hu as gueit for a few days,\nMiss Irene Denny of Willow Point.\ne Mother M. Irene, accompanied by Sister M. Stanislaus of Nlc-\nolct, Que, who have been on \u2022\ntour of Inspection through the Weit\nhave returned East.\ne Mrs. Ernest Smith, Stanley\nStreet is a patient in the Kootenay\nLake   General   Hospital.\ne Mn. S. Bonacci of Procter\nvisited Nelson yesterday to Ittend\nthe funeral of Mrs. Wllliim Wat-\nklnl.\ne Shoppers in town yesterday\nIncluded Mr. and Mrs. O. a. Fair\nof Salmo.   \u2022\ne Mr. and Mrs. Robert Quln\nwere visitors in Nelson yeiterday.\nC J, Dolphin of Bonnington was\nin town yesterdiy to ittend the\nfuneral of Mrs. William Watkins.\ne Mrs. George Honteid, Robson Street, has returned from i few\nweeks spent ln Trail it thl home\nof her son-ln-liw ind daughter\u00bbMr.\nand Mrs. Percy J. Coates.\ne Sgt Morgan Jonei who hai\nspent a brief leave it thl heme\nof his mother, Mrs. T. O. Jonw, Mill\nStreet, has returned to Currie Bir-\nricks, Cilgary.\ne Mr, and Mrs. Pit Jirvii of\nRevelstoke are ln town, hiving\nbeen called by the death ot thi former*!, sister, Mrs. WUllim Witkim.\ne Riv. Father Clement of New\nDenver visited Nelson the first of\nthl week.\ne Mr. and Mn. Haywood of\nVancouver have been city visitors\nenroute to Salmo where they have\npurchased a hotel.\ne Monty Thompson of Vancouver has returned to the Coast ifter\nvisiting his mother ln thi Annibli\nBlock.\n\u2022 Mlu Ann Picton of Silmo\nspent yesterday ln town.\ne R. H. (Pat) Stewart, mining\nman of Vancouver, is a city visitor.\n\u2022 J. H. Dunn, merchant of Silmo, visited Nelson yesterdiy.\ne Mrs. Charles Kelman, Ward\nStreet, has returned from s couple\nof Week! spent at the Coast.\ne Fit. Lt. George Lee Warner is\nspending a few days at the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. George A. Hunter,\nEdgewood Avenue before leaving\nfor Montreal. Mrs. Lee Warner\nplans on remaining with her parents for the duration.\ne Mr. and Mrs, George Atkinson, Rosemont, have had as guests,\nMr. and Mrs, Frank Atkinson of\nRoblin, Man., who left yesterday\nlor the Coast.\ne Dave Johnston who vlilted\nNelson and Salmo this week returned the Coast yesterday.\ne Mrs, A. Major of Procter was\nIn the city yeiterday to attend the\nfuneral of Mrs. William Watkins.\ne R. Gibbon of Salmo visited\nNelson yesterday.\ne Cameron Clark was In town\n[rom Kaslo yesterday,\ne Mr. and Mrs. V. J. Koslanclc\nof Crescent Valley spent yesterday\nin Nelson.\ne Mrs. D. Taylor of Sunshine\nBay was in the city yesterday to\nattend the funeral of Mrs. William\nWatkins.\ne Mr. and Mn. Peters of Salmo\nspent yesterday in Nelson.\ne J. Hambly of SUverton was\nin town yesterday en route to the\nCoast\n0 Mri L. E. Somers, 511 Hall\nStreet, ls a patient in Kootenay\nLake General Hoipital, where she\nunderwent \u2022 toniilectomy cm\nThursday. ,\ne Mrs.' Irene Kubiikl ot Ymlr\nwas shopping in Nelson yesterday.\nEngagements\nLiilen to loon s bc-i'-.o a, ..,...,   -   , .it AL_>RICH FAMILY\"\nFRIDAY'S \u2014 5 P.M. \u2014 CFRN and Dominion Network.\nS.-Sgt. and Mn. R. Keffer wish\nto announce the engagement of\ntheir eldest daughter, Doris Betty,\nlo L.A.C. Hopp, eldest son of Mr\nand Mrs. H. Hopp of Edgewood. The\nwedding to take place later In Dec\nLONDON (CP) - Civil servants\nentitled to free rail travel will not\nbe permitted to travel by rail during\nthe Christmas season.\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C, Nov.\n30 (CP) \u2014A coroner's Jury decided\ntoday thlt George McGunigle,.trainer soldier, murdered Arthur Otto\nSohulu of Vernon add then com*\nmltted suicide Nov. 19 it the McGunigle home ln Miillardvllle.\nMn. Grace Varney, 32, who had\nbeen living with McGunigle, testified that she escaped from tbe\nhouse after appealing to McGunigle\nto think of his eight-year-old\ndaughter Gwen. Mrs. Varney was\nSchultz' sister.\nMn, Varney who had been ln hoipital recovering from shock and in\naxe wound in her forehead testified that McGunigle, a mirrled mtn\nand father of several children, told\nher \"I've killed Arthur, now I'm\ngoing to kill you and then myself.\"\nHe attempted to strangle her and\nhit her on the forehead with a small\nshingler's axe. the told the Jury.\nShe testified she and McGunigle\nNILSON DAILY NIWI, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1944 - *\nhid quarrelled before the trigidy\nwhen McGunigle followed hir te\nhir ichool at Por\\ Coqultlem ud\nthreatened to mike trouble with tbe\nprlnclpil unlesi ihe give him lome\nmoney.\nMrs. Varniy cime te Vincouvir\n\u2022nd telephoned her brother it Vernon. Nov, 11, the and hir brother\nwent to the cottage to pack hir belonging!.\nSchulti iccuiid McGunigle ol\nstriking a woman. A moment liter\nMcGunigle itruck down Schulti\nwtth th* stock of thi gun, ind while\nhe lay unconscloui on thi floor,\nshot him through thi right cheek.\nDr. S. >0. Purvis testified thlt\nMcGunigle hid Ihot hlmielf ln\nthe temple.\nThe coast of Venezuela wu the\nfirst part of the American mainland\nslfhted by Columbus.\nSCARVES\nIn gay, bright colon.\nM.S0      $1.93\nFASHION FIRST LTD,\nFOR A GIFT OF QUALITY\nConsult\u2014\n*s^\/\/\/^>^^^V^\/^^A\/A\/^Ar^*V>J,*A\u00abv\/VV\nJust Received:\nNEW HATS, DRESSES\nAND  WOOL SHIRTS\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\ntmmtottttttjteattjtystttmtttttttit\nILK\nTS BEST\n, Pasteuni\nfAt-LIV   |\/AIR>\nAT   ITS BEST\nRaw irK\/ Pasteurised\nBRADLEY S\nMEAT MARKET\nFOWL, Freih\nDressed, Ib.\n30*\nCHICKEN, Freih      \u2022*\u00a3#\nDressed, Ib 3 O\nBREAST VEAL,\nPer Ib. \t\nBOILING BEEF,\nPer Ib.  _\nHAMBURG,\nPer Ib \t\nPORK\nTENDERLOINS,\n13*\n13-\n15'\n_45*\nPREPARED\nLUTEFISH, Ib....\nCHOPPED SUET,\nPer Ib\t\nVEAL SHOULDER\nSTEAK\/ Ib. \t\nVIAL SHOULDER\nROASTS, Ib\t\nPORK SHOULDER\nROASTS, lb.__\n30'\n17*\n25*\n25*\n27*\nPOT ROASTS, Round Bone,\nComercial,\nPer lb.\t\n25'\niiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimiii\nVREEMAft2\n^    FURNITURICO.*^\nThe Houm et furniture Values\nPhone 111 Nelson\nOnly M Shopping Dayi Till\nChrlitmai.\nOCCASIONAL\nCHAIR\nAs   ihown   with   ihelM   it\neovers and  walnut finiihed\nframes.\nSee Theie Big Values at\nONLY $10.95 EACH\nA Depoilt Holds Till\nChrlitmai.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllimi\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Three men who\nused in electric hotplate to boll Witer for tei ln the midst of 48 tons of\nhigh explosives wen fined CM\n(about 9130) lich it 1 Northwestern\ncourt\n__\u25a0_______! me \"av* *\u25a0**\n^L\\^m^^T    Permane\ngtflP t\u00b1     to suit y\nWj '\nFAIRVlfW BEAUTY\nPhone job\nRave en  Individual\nPermanent Wave\nto nit ymir type\n\u2022t\nSHOPPI\nMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIII\nMALCOLM'S FURS\nRepairs - Alterations\nStorage\n659 laker Sr.     Phone NO\niiniintiniiininiiiiiniiunimiiiim.il\nOnly LIFEBUOY gives you vital\n2-way protection against offending\nTodays'! busy, actl-re women ire turning by\nthe thousands to Lifebuoy for protection\nagiinit \"B.O.\" For they find that Lifebuoy's\nall over protection is both lasting and\ndependable!\nYou see. Lifebuoy contains I spedal purl.\nfylng ingredient that stopi \"B.0.\"1 You can\ntell this by Its distlnctl-re icent-so fresh;\ndean-smelling, wholesome! Remember, the\nLifebuoy scent vanishes In \u2022 twinkling \u2014\nLifebuoy protection lasts tnd lasts!\nTHf ONLY SOA?\nwTjtrVltLO ISFICtAUV\nZy*ADi ro __\"\"\nstop's, o:\nA LEVER raom-cT\nCfej^^ky^ujUt\n\u2014\u2014l^k.t^^^ay-m\n \t\nW^Iave Made Every Effort to Make Your Christmas Shopping a Pleasure.\nSHOP WITH CONFIDENCE AT THE \"BAY\"\nHOUSECOATS\nCosy Chenille House Coats with wide sleeves\nand roomy pockets. Include one of these on\nyour Christmas shopping list. All shades.\nSmall, Medium and Large.\nBed Jackets\nBrushed  Rayon In lovely pastel shades.\n\u2022      Long sleeve* In Teafose and Blue.   Small,\nMedium and Large.\nPyjamas\nSpun Rayon Pyjamas.   Boxy top, etastle on\ntrousers.   Floral designs.   Siies 14 to 20.\nSWEATERS\nA warm gift that pleases all\nyear. . . Soft wools tailored In\nthe ever-popular V-neck style\nwith long sleeves. Colors: Maroon, Teal and Blue. Sizes 36-42-\n$2.95\nMen's\nShirts\nGive .him fine Shirts for Christmas;* Here Is a choice selection\nof colors and pittemt in a woven pattern broadcloth. Sizes\n141\/2-17.\nEach '\u201e, ,.\nHandbags\nGive her a practical gift this year.\nLook over this selection of Handbags In various styles. Colors:\nBrown, Black or Navy. Tax included,\neach:\n,^%^\nWool\nScarves\nBy Kynock\nComfortable warm wools, made\nin Scotland, that will surely\nplease him. Wines, Blues and\nGreens! In plains <J\u00bb| CA\nor checks   -dHeVV\nGift Suggestions for Boys\nBRUSHED WOOL ZIPPER SWEATERS \u2014JAareon,\nGreen, Blue and Brown in 6-16 years\nEach \u2014\u2014\t\nBROADCLOTH SHIRTS\u2014Blues, Greens ari_Brcmr*\nin sizes 12Vi - 14'\/i.\nEach   \t\nBOYS' TIES\u2014Ready-tied with elastic tape that will\nplease your boy this Christmas. *y C**\nEach    *^+\nCostume Jewellry\nA large assortment of lapel pins, necklaces,\ntor rings, bracelets and (9*1  AA\nTOYLAND HIGHLIGHTS\nCloth \"Joy\" Doll*. Alleolors.\nfoich\t\nGames for the Fomily.\nloeh\t\n$1.00\n__29*\nPlastVc Tea Sets.\nJet\t\nBlackboards,\nEach \t\n_\u2022*\u25a0?-*\u25a0*\nPHONES:\nReady to-Wcar\nDrygoodi \t\nGroceries \t\nHosiery \t\nMen's Weer _\n_ 59* $1.25\n$1.49 $1.79\nPlastic Airplanes, ea,\n25'\nPlastic Trains, 2 pc.\n35'\nCarpet Sweepers, eo.\nPlasticine,\n29t,  49e,  79c\nYou Wil\nby\nI Help the Clerks and Post Office\nMailing Your Parcels Early.\nINCORPORATED  2>!t MAY 1670.\n! Smart Gift Items\nfrom the\nHome Furnishing Dept\n' Foot Stools\nWalnut-finish Foot Stools. Covers of Tapestries and Brocades. <PQ AP\nEach  ,  -4)0.7 J\nNest of 3 Tablet.  Oblong shape with turned\nlegs. -Smooth Walnut finish on i\"\nBirch. Set of 3\t\nCoffee Tables\u2014Duncan Phyfe <M A AC\nstyle. Walnut tops. Eoch  <4>IU*7?\nMahogany\n.CONSOLE CABINET\n1  only in French design.    3-drawer top\u2014\nReg. price $39.50.\nEach \t\nJ    BOYS' GLOVES\u2014Serviceable Capeskins, d\u00bb|  ttC\nJ    warmly lined with fleece. Pair.    **9It*atJ\nFor Women\nComfortable, warm Chenille Slippers that will\ndelight her on Christmas mom. Sizes 5-9 in\nlight or dark blue, wine and tt^ ^tLZ\npeach *4>_fc._L2\nNovelty plaid and multicolored Slippers In the\npopular wedge style that Is both (**% IA\nsmart ond comfortable. Sizes 4-8.   ^Iel7\nFor Men\nComfortable, long-wearing Romeo-style Slippers that any mon will surely appreciate. Soft\nleather upper^with sturdy leath-1\ner soles.   Sizes 6-10.   Pair\t\nGift Lineni\nRayon Damask Sets\u2014Cloth 70x88 and 6\nnapkins.\nSet\t\nPrinted Crepe Cloths\u2014Size\n54x54.  Each_\t\n$15.95\n$3.95\nPrinted Novelty Weave Lunch Cloths.\nIdeal gifts. Size 54x54. &-J QP\nHem-stitched    Linen    Cloths.    Pure\nbleach.  Size 54x54.\nEach\t\nliik China\nGift luggMtions\nRoyal Ivory Diner Sets with a central\nfloral design mode by Titian Ware\u2014\n66-piece service foi 8 persons:\nRoyal Staffordshire\nPOTTERY\nTeasels In colorful pastel shades with\nfloral designed mode \u2014 21-piece service for 6 persons:\nSTOM HOURS:\nMeA.-T-fet.-Thurs.-Fri.\nf \u00ab.m.-5 p.m.\nWed n tide y: 9 a.m.-12 men\n\u25a0_ So-urday: 9 a.m.-8 p.m.\nI __\u25a0 '     llilHMtlfc\n ______^_________-hJH _H\u00bb^^^^\u201e\nSays Organized Aflempl Made fo\nKeep Men From Volunteering\nTSSf.\nChristmas Cards\nat Stomp Canteen\nitdt oontilning i\nu stamps w'U be\nOTTAWA, Nov. SO (CP)-Dr.\nJ. H, King, Government Senate\nleader, Hid In tht Upper Chamber today then had been in or-\ndenized attempt to have rgen called up lor Homo Defence refrain\nfrom volunteering for general\neervlee.\nTho' ichemo wai planned, ha\nMid, to force Prlmi Minister Mackenzie King to take action Introducing compulsory overseas service ,\nDr. King wi*. thi flrit of four\n'tpeiken who took part ln the Sen.\n(to discussion on relnforcementa\nuid conicription. The debate will\nIM continued  tomorrow.\nSenator C. C. Ballantyne, Pro-\ngreiiive Conservative Senate leader and member for Quebec, took the\npoiltlon that the government's action in making 16,000 men available\nfor compulsory overseas service\ndid not go far enough.\nTAKE A FUU.\u2122 IN THE\nLUNCH B\nChrlitmai cardi\nfor 18 w\u00bbr aavlnu a\ngiven\nFairview\nI Cash Market\nROLLED SHOULDER VEAL\nROASTS, Boneless, *} \u2022% <\nPtr lb 33\nvIal RIB\nSTEWING, 2 lbi.\nj STEWING LAMB,\nPtr Ib\t\n25*\n15*\n45'\nIV\nPORK\nTENDERLOIN, Ib.\nBEEP LIVER,\nPtr lb.-J\t\n\u2014 Commercial Qualify\nROUND BONE POT *)r#\nROASTS, lb sLj\nRUMP ROAST, any\ncut, Ib. __\t\n38*\nBEEP AND KIDNEY*) 3 <\nSTEW, Ib -43\n15'\n38*\nSenator J. W. deB Farris (L-Brtt-\nlih Columbii) supported the government'! iction and called for a\nrestoration of public confidence In\nthe Government\nThe only speaker to oppose the\nprinciple ot conscription wu Sir\nThomas Chapiii (PC-Quebec). Kl\nsaid Canada's war effort bad reached a peak and could not be expanded Indefinitely.\nAt the time the National Resources Mobilization Act had been-j\npassed ln 1940 there had been no\ndtmand from any major party for\nall-out conscription, Dr. King said.\nSome of those called for military\nservice under this act had been\n\"schooled to resist voluntary enlistment ln order to force the Prime\nMinister to bring down an order-\nln-council.\"\nThere were demandi from the\nopposition side of the Chamber that\nDr. King name those who had taken such actions. The government\nSenate leader said he was not suggesting lt was any political party\nbut the group was well known.\nSenator Ballantyne objected to\nrestricting the theatres In which\nN.R.M.A. could be required \u2022 to\nserve to Europe while general service men were available for the Pacific or any other part of the world.\nThe order should also apply to all\nN.R.MA. personnel.\nSenator Farris defined the two\nIssues before Parliament as whether the course proposed by the government was adequate to assure\nnecessary reinforcement! md\nwhether the government ihould be\nsupported ln Its war effort. He gave\nan affirmative answer to both questions.\n\"The voluntary system hai not\nfailed, but lt hai reached the end\nof Its Immediate effectiveness,\" be\nsaid.\n\"This order-ln-councll ll not par\ntlal conicription. It decide! the Issue.\"\n\"Col. Ralston's support to tbl\ngovernment, the Hoi|ie of Commoni\nlupport, even tbe unanimous nip-\nport of thli senate tl not enough,\"\nhe uid at another point\n\"If the government is going to\ncarry on so Canada can give full\nsupport to ber war effort we muit\nhave restored public confidence. If\nwe do not the war effort will not\nmeasure up.\"\nPrime Miniiter King ihould not\nbe criticized (or supporting during\nmore than five years ait wir i voluntary lystem which Brought Canada into the war united.\nThere was, and there still is, the\npromise that If we don't keep our\nheads we face the possibility of tbe\nmost serious breakup ever known\nin this country,\" he said. \"Out of\nthat turmoil you might bave pro\nlonged the war.\"\nAt the conclusion of today's sitting Dr. King Informed the Sen\nate lt appeared likely the Commoni\nwould conclude ltl discussion of relnforcementi by Tueiday.\nto stamp purchaser! at Uu Mlu Canada Glrla' Stamp\n   Canteen ln Nelaon\ntaturday, when tha White team under Captain Mary Davis will ba on\nduty. Tile oarda are Weal for Chrtat-\nmas gifts.\nWould Consider\nol Outpost\nLONDON, Nov. 10 (OF)- Leslie\nHore-Belbha. former Secretary at\nState lor Wir, urged thl1 Houie of\nCommoni today to oonalder \"an offer hy Belgium to give ua aome kind\nof atrate-po outpost and economio\noutpoaU aa well, almllar to thoae wa\ngave the United states In the Weat\nfndlea,\"\nSpeaking In the throne speeeb debate, he asserted Britain muit \"han\nregard to our flank on the Continent.\"\nThe House cheered when he asked:\n\"Do not our paat experiences ihow\nthat we cannot stand aloof mm the\nirganltatton ot Western Europe?''\nringing before thi Houm thi pro-\na pact linking together the\nKuropean oountna tor security purposes, Mr. Hore-Bellaba declared ''It Is sometime suggested that\nany attempt of economic, political or\nstrategic unity tn Western Europe la\na threat to Russia.\"\n\"There ahould be no auch thought\nIn our minds ind If that thought\nexists In the minds of the Ruasiens\nit can easily be removed,\" ha aaid.\nHe contended Britain ahould rea-\nHie that \"America from tha nnt\nGreat War and now Russia from tha\naecond have emerged aa great economio federations.\" Britain alone could\nnot attain auch size, hi said, but tha\nBritish Empire oould.\nReferring to the aviation conference\nat Chicago, he aaid tha British Em-.\npin hsd spoken with different voices,\nwhereas \"one volos would be decisive.\"\nWould Use the\nWhite Feather\nEDMONTON, Nov. SO (CPW.\nMurray Olbbon of Montreal, honorary preiident of the Canadian authors' Aiioclitlon, uld In in Interview today Canada'! reinforcement\nqueitlon could be settled quickly by\nhaving girls place white feathers\non male frlendi wbo refund to aid\nthe country's fighting forces. He\nadded thii wu effective ln Englind\nin the lilt war In dealing with oon.\nsclentlous objecton.\nMoit contemporary law* on pawn\nbroking are dart-red trom Roman Jurisprudence.\nfrgare Haggen\nto Matte\nAssessments\nEtosauu-D. BA, Nov. 10-To mike\n10 new aaaaumsnti of Improvemenu\nmade to Roisland properties, thl City\nCouncil Monday night Inatructed city\nClerk J. A, McLeod to engage R. W\nHaggen, who made the laat aaaeea-\nment of Roaaland. Thli action wu\ntaken after Mr. McLeod reported this\nwotg necessary. Mr. Hagten will resort hli findings to Mr, McLeod, to Be\nIncorporated tn the asseemOnt roll for\n1848. I\nThe City Clerk reported that eight\nwater consumers had been notified to\npay their small of water ratea,\nsuffer cutting off of their services.\nNotion lent to all owing road tai\nhad had good results, Mr. Mcleod reported.\nOlty Foreman Roy Hancock told the\nCouncil-that the arch at tha Western\nentrance to Roaaland had been given\ntemporary repelre.\nRossland Boy\nDies, Aged Five\nROSSLAND, B.C., Nov. 10- Jamas\nRussell Pollock, aged five, only eon\nof Mr, and Mra. Alexander Pollock,\ndied Wednesday evening at hla homa\nhate. He wu born Auguit 19, mt. and\nbesides hU parenta ta survived by a\nsister, Bernlce.\nFormtr Nelion\nSinger on\nVictoria Program\nARTHUR STRINGER\nHAMBURGER,\nPer Ik\t\nLEO OF LAMB,\nPor lb. \t\nAlso Fresh Fruits and\nVegetables Daily.\nDEATHS\nASH FORK, Ailr-John W\u00abth\u00abrt-1.\n78, one ot the West's most colorful\ncharacter*-! md discoverer of tbe famous cliff Palace ln Ueu Verde National Park, Colorado,\nROOSEVELT FIRES\nNORMAN LITTELL\nWASHINGTON, Nov. SO (AP)-President Roosevelt, stepping Into a Justice Department taw, tired Assistant\nAttorney Oeneral Norman LltteU today for \"lnaubordlnatlon.'V\nLitttU had been warring with hla\nchief, Attorney Oeneral Bldclle, in exchanges that followed Blddle'a demand tor UtteU'a resignation. Uttell\naccused Blddle ot having Interfered\nIn oni Justice Department case in\nfavor of Thomaa o. (Tommy the\nCork) Corcoran, former Preaidentlal\nIntimate now In private law practice.\nMcLeod to Handle\nRossland Election\nROSSLAHD. B.C., Nov. 80-Cty\nClerk J. A. McLeod wu named hy the\nOlty Council Monday night to be returning officer for the coming municipal election, tor which nomination\nwiU take place Dec. 11, lnd polling\nDec. 14. Appointment ef the deputy\nwu left open.\nPlace ot nomination win ba tha olty\nClerk's otlloe. ind polling. If necessary, will take place in the Council\nA popular singer and amateur actor of note when he resided In Nelson, Arthur Stringer la taking part\nIn a weekly radio musical program,\n\"Pacific Nocturne.\" at Victoria. The\nprogram la heard every Monday at\n730 p.m. ovir ojvi, Vlotorie.\nMr. Stringer wu transferred from\nthe B.O. Forest Branch office at Nelaon to Victoria two years ago next\nMarch. While ln Nelaon, he took part\nIn many sports activities, particularly tennis and football.\nAlao alnglng on the radio program\nla WlnnKredApplegate, Madelyn Keay,\nla pianist, Patricia -Straughan violinist, and Dick Betey announcer.\nChinose Kill 826\nJaps in Four Days\nSAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 30 (AP)\n- The Chinese Communist!' 8th\nRoute Army In a recent four-day\nbattle killed, wounded or captured\n826 Japaneie and puppet troopi tn\nKlangsu province Northeut of\nHiuchow ln Northern China, i wire\nleu dispatch ben the Communist.\noperated itatlon at Yenen laid today.    .\nMENINGITIS CASE\nAT VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, Nov. M (OF)\u2014A\nfive-year-old child sulfating from meningitis wu brought from Ladner to\nVancouver Isolation hospital jester.\nday.\nMfiyFrtairV\nPay latt Tribute\nto Mrs. Watkins\nMany Diitrict frlendi attended funeral lervicei held at St. Saviour\"!\nPro-Cathedral Thundiy for Mri,\nMargaret Watkins, who died suddenly at Trail Monday at th* age\nof 38. Service! were conducted by\nRev. J. Q. Holmes and Ven. Archdeacon Fred H. Graham. A great\nnumber of floral tributes were received.   .\nHymna sung were \"Unto the\nHills\", and \"Abide With Me.\" Fired\nIrvine, W. E. Wasson, Ar L. Creech,\nInspector John Macdonald, Oeorge\nHontead and Colin Major were\npallbearers. Mrs. Watkins wu laid\nto rut In the Anglican plot at Nelion Memorial Park.\nMi*. Watklni wu the wife of William- Watklna, C.P.R. Agent et\nTrail\n\"Seventy Not Out\"\nChurchill Score\nLONDON,' Nov. SO (OP)\u2014Prime\nMinister Churchill, 70 yeara young,\nwu greeted with a roaring cheer when\nhe entered the Bouse of Commons to.\nday to follow his usual custom of putting In a full day's work on hla birthday.\n\"Seventy not out\"\u2014an sitremely\ngood score ln cricket\u2014wu the personal greeting given the prima Minister\nby 87-year-old Will llionie, labor,\nthe oldest member of tha House, u\nhe passed him on the floor of the\nHouse on the way to hla seat among\nthe Opposition benches.\nMr. Churchill wore a deep red rose\nln his buttonhole and appeared ln\nhigh good humor u various member;\ncame up to congratulate him.\nThe \"70 years young\" label wu\ngiven Mr. Churchill by the Sydney\nMorning Herald, which aaid hla \"flair\nfor living dangerously\" bad made him\nthe one leader who oould Inspire the\nworld during the dark days of the war.\nEven the Germans took notice. Helmut Suendermann, Deputy Preu\nChief,, wrote about Mr. Churchill ln\ntodays \"Voelklscher Beobachter\" under the title \"We Accuse.\"\nA D.N.B. broadcast of the article\nIncluded theee wordi: \"Churchill\nonoe uld there wu no chance for\nhim tn a peaoetul England, ln a calm\natmosphere. He wu a fighter.\"\nNILSON DAILY NIWS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1,1*\nAlderman Hinitt\nLeaves Hospital\nAlderman H. B. Hlnltt, who wu a\npatient In Kootenay Uke General\nHoapltal te* nearly o month after\nundergoing an operation, haa return-\nid to his home at 818 Kokanee Strut,\nFIRST HEAVY SNOW\nIN MONTREAL\nMontreal. Nov. 80 (OF)- Ibe\nfirst heavy snow storm ot the year\nstruck Montretl todiy, .lowing publlo\ntransportation to a walk throughout\nthl olty end grounding ill Ilr traffic\nTurkey hena produce 80 per cent\nmore .gge ln their first laying year\nthan they do ln any subsequent year.\nRossland Social. \u2666.\n\u2022y MR8. T.\nROSSLAND, B.C., Nov. 80-Pkmsar\nCircle of St. Andrew's United Church\nmat Monday evening at the borne of\nMrs. John I. Gordon. Mri. R. Ecclei\ngave a reading celled \"Miracles of\nBritain.\" Routine business wu transacted followed by a social hour. Refreshments weTe served by the hoe.\nteu. A bake aale among the memben\nwill be held at the next melting.\nThou attending were Mn. R. loclee,\nMrs. J. Shearer. Mlu M. wilkle, Miss\nJ. Henderson, Miss A. Oordon, Mrs. O.\nBishop, Mrs. A. Coombes and ths hosts.\nMindly Circle of St. Andrews\nUnited Church held Its monthly\nmeeting Tuesday ln tha New Bun-\ntt. BRAY\nday School rooms, when 17 members\nwin present. Mrs. F. L. Swift, president, presided. Rav. H. K. Johnston\nand sirs. Johnston were meats. Mr.\nJohnston gave an Interesting addreu.\non the \"Revival of the Church.\"\nElection of offlcera for the oomlng\nyear took place, wtth Mrs. F. L. Swift\nre-elected President; Mn. B. Don\naWaon, Vice-President; Mra. R. Richardson, Secretary; Mn. S. Martin, re\nelected Treasurer; Mrs. T. Devil, Oon\nvener; Mrs. R. Davli, Membership\nSecretary; Mra. H. Smith and Mn.\nH. Nixon, Visiting Committee; Mrs\nDouglu and Mn. Kalhovd, Sick Vlalt-\nlast Committee. An enjoyable aoclal\nhour followed, with Mra. H. Evana and\nMn. Jorgenson serving refreshments.\nlllllllllllllllllllllll'illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllimillllMIIIIIIIIIIII\nKnhfoh\n^\u25a0\"^TT. net a\noHoiU^WWiU\n\u25a0y BETSY NEWMAN\nmiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiii\niiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMHiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiitiitin\nTODAY** MENU\nShrimp Cocktill or Fruit\nRout Goose with Potato Stuffing\nBaked Sweet Potatoei\nPickled Peaches. Sweet Pickles\nOlivu, Celery\nPlum Jelly Green Peu\nMolded Tomito Salad\nCrmberry Holy Poly\nCoffee    Mlnti    Silted Nuti\nRout Goois With Potato Muffing\nIn buying the goose select one\nwhich hu a pliable yellow bill and\nsoft yellow eye*. An 8-pound goou\nwill serve 8 to 11 persons. Singe\nind remove plnfeathen. Wssh goote\nIniide md out with \u2022 cloth wrung\nout ol wirm witer, dry thoroughly\nrub Inside ind out with uit ind\npepper. Stuff loosely allowing space\nfor dressing to swell Sew or skewer\nopenings ind tie wings ind legs\nclou to the body. Piece on rack\nin routing pan and tear In hot wa-\noven, NO degrees F-, tor flnt 19\nminutes, then roast uncovered, it\n390 degreei F\u201e allowing -0 minutei\na pound until fowl ls tender.\nPOTATO ITUfFINQ\n3 cupi hot mashed potatoes\nIVi cUps dry bread crumbi\n1 egg\n1 teupoon uit\n1  teaspoon uga\n1 chopped onion\nHi cup finely chopped islt pork\n1 cup muihroomi cut Into bit!\n1-1 cup butter.\nMix potalou, bread crumbi, egg.\nsalt and sage. Add pork, onion and\nmushrooms. Muted ln fat.\nCRANBERRY ROLY POLY\n24 cupi psstry flour\n- teupoons biking powder\n1 teupoon uit\n1 tibleipooni fit\ny. cup sugar\nSi cup sweet milk\n1 egg, will beiten\n1 cupe cranberries\nSift  flour,  biking  powder,  uit\nmd sugar together, work In short-\nnlng, idd egg, md milk. Roll out\no t sheet ibout % Inch thick ipmd\nurfice   with   butler,   rover   with\nrinberriae,    sprinkle' generouily\n-.Ith sugar and roll up. Place In\nautre of large flat pen, well greu-\n-   . id, brush over top with Melted but-\n-  ter or fit, Mm in hot oven until\nbrowning starts, then reduce heat\nto 880 degreu F., md finish baking\n48 minutes.\nR.R.Horner\nR & R GROCERY\nUPTON'S NOODLE \u00ab.\nSOUP, 2 for\t\nMIRACLE   WHIP\nDRESSING,\nS ox. .\t\n16 oi\t\nPEARL BARLEY,\n4 1b..\nCHICKEN HADDIE,\n14 or. tin\nBISCUITS,\nPor Ib.\nTANGERINE\nORANGES, Ib.\nGRAPEFRUIT,  Texas  Pink,\nSixe96, IQ.\n2 for _  I *\nSWEET SPUDS,        <*) C<\nFresh lot, 2 lbi.      Am J\nCAULIFLOWER, Hood:\n35* ,145*\nNETTED GEM POTATOES,\nSock\n100 Ibt. ...\nONIONS, No. 1,\nS Ibt.\t\nFroth Splnoch, Bunch Cor-\nrofi, Turnips, Lettuco,\nCslory, otc.\nPHONE HI\n24'\nA special way of\nprotecting freshness\nAs tlwtys, this luxury blend is delivered direct from roaster\nto grocer. Bot now it it kept in tbt wholt hot tnd ground\nfresh the instant you bay. Thit it nature's own way\nof safeguarding freshness tnd your absolute guarantee\nthat every pound is at peak of flavor goodness.\n^SAFEWAY STORES, LIMITED\nnil     II11 _______________\u25a0______\u25a0________\u25a0\n__________*_!\nIMMMM_#________k_t______E__M__li\n \u2022 - NELSON DAILY NIWS, FRIDAY, DIC1MBIR 1, 1944\nSays Legion Did\nSupport Voluntary\nRecruiting\ni OTTAWA, Nor. M (CFW. C.\n0, Heft-ili  Qtntftl Secretary  ot\ntha C.n.dl.n Uglon, Mid tn * ititement todty thtt the Cin.dtfn It-\nHon htd otfartd \"\u00abv\u00bbry f.cffty\" of\nIU org.nlxatlon la lupportlng vol-\nUnttrr recruiting up ia tha time\nCol. J, Ii. Raliton reilgned \u2022\u2022 Define* Miniiter. v\nMr. Herwig wit commenting an\nt itatement by Col. Riliton lut\nnight In tht Roust of Commoni that\nhi navtf hid bttn able to gat \"cooperation\" from tht Legion la toI\nunttqr racrultlng.\nMr.* Harwlg-i itetoment aid that\nIt early it Saptambar, list, ft* la -\nglon offered to lupport tha Oofem-\nmenfi racrultlng polloy, \"although\npointing out that tha lyitem ol vol-\nuntary racrultlng wu contrary ta\ntha vlewi of Legion membtrihlp.\"\nTbt rtatamtnt Mtdt\n\"Legion halls tnd memben alike\nhare been pieced at tha dllMttl of\nluthorltlea charged With tht re-\nipomlblllty of conducting recruiting otmpalgni ind oa numeroui\noooulonj Legion offloeri hava ad-\ndraaaed recruiting meatlngi.\n\"Tht Legion lt\u00ablf hu let in *x-\nimpl* tor tht rut ot Canidi. A\nrecent lurvey dUcloied thlt 16,000\nLegion memben had enlisted (or\ntbt lecond time and 14,000 mm and\ndiufbttn of Leglomlrei, bow are\non actlvt icrvice. Beveni tlmei we\nhava been commended for our effort! by tha Director oi Recruiting.\n\"Apparently theie fecti were not\ndrawn to tha attention ol CoL Raliton while ba wu Miniiter af National Defenct.\"\nTo Half Shipmenf\nLend-lease Iron,\nWASHINGTON, Nov. U <AP)-\nThe United Statei plani to hilt\nlend-lease ihlpmenti of Iran and\nSteel to Britain Jan. 1\u2014which mcam\nI draitlc downward revision of th*\nwar aid program tpr IMS.\nIt wu announced officially todiy\nIn a itatement lummlng up lengthy\nAnglo-American land-laue ccinfer-\nencei Just concluded here. They rt-\nlulled la I $5,(00,000,000 program\nfor ihlpmenti to Britain during IMS\n\u2014a out of almoit SO par cent under\ncomparable flgurei lor thii year.\nElimination ot coit-free ihlpmenti\noi iteel md lome other \"raw nd\nleml-fabrlcated matariali\" to Brit-\nIln ii made poiilble by decreuing\nwu demendi on Brltiln'i own iteel\nlnduitry, lt wu learned. It hu bean\nordered Into effect Jan. 1 In order to\nsmooth Uw Way tor reconvenlon of\nBrltiib lnduitry to civilian production oa an \"equitable baaii\". with\nreconvenlon in the United Statei.\nBritish authoritiei ara eager to reconvert ln order to begin reitorlng\nthalr _ 1 par cent losi in exporti.\nThe itatement promised no change\nIn thl fundamental pollclei that\nlend-lease i\u00ab a wartime system only\nind thlt no article which Britain\nrecelvel under lend-lease may ba\nre-exported.\n\"After the defeat of Qermany,\"\nlt continued, \"ther* will ba no Impediment to tb* United Kingdom'!\nexporting, article!, lo far as war\nCondition! permit, whloh lr* no\nlonger lupplled under lend-leaie\nand ar* obtained out of their own\nproduction or purchased from thli\ncountry for caah.\"\nSlocan City Old\nTimer Dies\nSLOGAN CITY, Bfl-Word wu r\u00ab-\nMlvtd here from Victoria of th* death\nof Thom* Jamie Armittoag ta hla |\nnth year. Ur. Armatrong left Mr*\nabout three monthi ago to makt hi*\nHomt with hi* soa-lii-law and laughter, Mr and Ml*. M. I. Shannon. Ua\n1* aUTVlvM by ftm other <Uu|ht*ri,\nUN. H. ButUr, Victoria ant uri.\ntweedenberg ,of Chicago, and, 10\nIrandchJ-dren. HI* wife pre-deceaied\nhim about nine year*; ago. HU only\nion, BoMrt Jamei Armatrong, wai\nkilled In the tint Great Wu..\nUr, and Ura. Annitrom turn hen\nfrom Calgary ln IMS. Their wn wu\nth* flrat child born In Slocin Olty.\nUr. Armstrong took a keen Intereit II\n\u2022porta, especially butball. He WU th*\ntint olty policeman after incorporation and like many more old tlmtri\nWU Interested In mining.\nfages for\nlousework in B.C.\nm\n'iyANOOUvra, Nov. 10 (CP). -\nOn* Job Britiih Columbii women\nC do right now to help the post-\n%nr world li bring pruiure on the\nLtgtslttlv* Aisembly thli coming\nunion to put through an act eitab-\nJjjhlng minimum Wlg\u00abl *nd hlgh\u00abr\nptandardi for household workers,\nflit. One* Maclnnli, C.C.F. member of th* Leglllitur* for VancoU-\nver-Burrard, told delegatei attend-\nbig th* women's lehool for citlten-\nphlp ben yeiterday.\n' Mn. Maclnnli urged a five-point\nprogram for domeitic workeri Including: Eitibllihment of training\neounei at thl completion of which\nefficiency certificate! would be\nawarded; Signed agreements arranged through Selective Bervice,\n.between employer* and employees;\nUbor legliUtlon which would include the household worker extension of unemployment Insurance\nand workmm'l compensation to in-\nfiude thii worker; Selective Servloe encouragement to th* womin\nWorker to tiki proper household\njtralnlnf.\n} Mrs. Nancy Hodg**, Liberal member of thl Leglilature tor Victoria,\n^ald She MW a possible solution to\nthe domestic worker problem ln the\nlystem of horn* emergency service\njut.bllihtd by th* Red Crou at\nVictorli. th* pointed out dinger in\n(the pOlt-WU tri of th* \"everlasting ua wir.\"\n' \"Penomlly I believe I woman\nhas Juit u much right to be in the\nlabor market u I man, If that'i her\nchoice,\" Mrs. Hodgu Mid.\njCRITICini  MENTAL HOMEI\nAt an earlier union Mill Kay\nLowdon, Superintendent of the New\nVista Horn* for mental patients,\n'criticized th* mental hotpitlll In\nB.C.    ai   btlng-urloualy    over\ncrowded, hopeleisly under-staffed\nby docton, nursei and attendants,\nand u employing out-moded methodi on the patienta which were actually cruel.\nOther mental hospital! acrou the\ncontinent turn out 65 per cent cures,\nB.C. hoipital* turn out 11.32 per\ncent, Mlu Lowdon laid.\nShe urged th* lohool to strive for\nan improvement ln th* mental hospital iltuatlon ln the provinc*, to\nleek for more medical docton if\npsychiatrists wer* not avillabl*, for\nIsolation wards for tuberculoid Snd\nvenereal eases, and for admission,\nnot commitment.\n\"Once committed to an Insane\naiylum a patient cannot be released\nunleu torn* friend or relative signs\nhim out lnd aiiUmes responsibility\nfor ilx months,\" Mis* Lowdon uld.\n\"If you haven't a friend, you stay\nthere till you die, whether you are\ncured or not.\"\nAustralia Expects\nFull Share in\nArmistice Plans\nCANBERRA, Nov. SO (CP-Reuter), \u2014 Herbert Evatt, Australian\nMinister of External Affairs, said\nin the House of Repr.ientatives today that Australia expected tb have\na full share In planning the armistice and\" post-armlitice period after\nthe war against Japan.\n\"W\u00ab have every right te expect a\nlhare ln the planning, and every\nreaton to believe that our claim\nwill b\u00ab recognized by tht British\nind U.S. Governments,\" h* declared.\nReferring to the Dumbarton Otks\nproposals for 1 world organization\nafter thl war, Mr. Evatt uld *n-\nthuslastlc support by the Britiih\nDominions could hardly be expected unless their material contribution to the war effort wu evidenced\nby their being given an opportunity\nof playing a full part In th* world\norganisation. -\nm,m.    J\nThree Hills\nCOAL\nTHE IDEAL COAL\nFOR FURNACES\nIt you htot by furnoet , . .\nthert ll no bttttr cool for thli\npurpose . , .\nWt suggttt tllllnfl your cool bin\nnow and bt atsurtd of a warm\nhome this coming Winter.\nPhone 33\ntiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimiiiiiiiiiiimii\nB.C.S ROLL\nOF HONOR\nllllllll I I MM\t\nOFFICER!\nKilled In action\nClark, Robert Scott, Major, Kim-\nloops.\nWounded remaining on duty\nMcDonald, Thomu Rlchlrd, Ctpt,\nNew Weitminlter.\nWarrant Offloiri, N.C.O.'i *r.d M\u00bbn\nKilled li\\ action\nEaston, Edgar Vernon, Tpr., Vancouver.\nShaw, George Carleton, Pte.,\nKamloops.\nTurff, Clarence Alfred, Pte., Vincouver.\nSerlouily wounded\nMoody, Jlmel, Pt*., Sa'anlch.\nWounded\nEdwards, Bruce, Pte., Vancouver.\nSowar,!, Charlei Ernest, Pte.,\nPenticton.\nMaxw\u00abll, David, Pt*., V.noouVIT,\nOlynyk, Henry Peter, L-Cpl., Mt\nCartier.\nPatterson, Jamei, Pte., Kamloops.\nPrice, William, Pte, North Vancouver.\nRiseley, John, Pte., WhitMock.\nSmith, George Marshall, Pte.,\nVancouver:\nSummers, Jeffrey Jamei, Pte.,\nKamloops.\nWounded\nMcNamara, William John, Pte.,\nVancouver.\nFalk, Peter Bernhard, L-Sgt.,\nYarrow.\nOrint, Wilford Duncan, Pt*.,\nVancouvtr.\nGreengrau, Robert, Sgt., Vancouver.\nSUvenion, John Park, Pte.; North\nVancouver.\nSlightly wounded\nGrahame, David Ian, Pte., Inder-\nby.\nHasiall, Percy George, Cpl., Whit*\nRock.\nWounded, remaining en duty\nOuielle, John Hirold Worley, Slgmn., Vancouver,\nMorrison, John H*nry, Pt*., M.l-\n\u25a0kwa.\nSwart, Amoi Chirlti, Pt*\u201e Pion-\nMr Mine.\nMlMln|\nBl.il, Jean Plerr*, Pte., Steven-\n\u25a0ton. .\nCallow, Edward Clirenc*, Pte.,\nBowser,\nPnvlouily reported milling *n io-\ntlvt i.rvlir,  now  nported  prli-\nenan of w.r In Qermany\nMiUigm, K*nneth Ivi* Roy, FI.-Lt.\nVincouvtr,\nP.tteMOn, Oeorge Rudolph, Flt-\nLt., Kelowna\nWlnohnter, lldney Arthur, FILL Vancouver.\nCrlckm.y, Peter Hedfey, F-Sgt.,\nV.ncouver.\n2egarchuk, James Eugene, F-Sgt.,\nVancouver.\nWest Transfer Co.\nEttoblishtd In  1899\nslocan crn\nlLOCAN ont, to-J. KuuUr *t\nNelion, Oil. est tha 1 OOF. of Smiah\nColumbia, pill bia oflieial vlalt tt\ntiocin Lodgt Vt. 40, l.OaO.T. OB\nTuaidiy mnlnl. It th* conolualon\nof tnulnu. . wMt.l etenint wu \u00bbp\u00abt.\nmimbirt of Floral labekah Lodge\njolnini Delioioui auppir vu itfvtt.\nMr. Hunter wu accompanied from\nNelson by D. Frmi_.Uo.it, T.U.U., A\nReld. and Mr McUll.nd.\nH. C. N)r wu a vliltor to rltlurn\nduring the week.\nMlaa Jean McDonald Ml on Monday to loin tha Army.\n(\n\u25a0Ined with bright, writing windowi freshly\nstocked with today's news, the newtpnper k the\nbusiest thoroughfare in town ... busier tcxlaj\nthan ever befort.\nki tome windowi yon iM ttwt oi the horn*\ntow*, the nation, and the re* of the world. In\naome yoo find entertainment, advice, interpretation. In othen you find newi of the good* and\nservices offered by \u00bb__nnh_ctnt#tt and letaile*.\nEvery day in the week, mry wwk In lhe year, yon\nand your family uw* 1 tktk t\\*mt mm, loofcinf\ntor things th* imeraat yon... aad fint_h***g ~_h_i\nin both the tttwe mi ad-vtHkh-f wiedmtte.\nPractically < \u25a0wry-body in emj <\nalong this i_o\u00bb0Kghiwt of rtcm and KWwht*\nevery day ... simply became the newspaper k\n\u25a0 indispensable to everybody everywhere. That's\nwhy the 37,000,000 families in the United Stales\nand Canada buy, and read, over 43,300,000\nnewspapen every weekday ... ovtr |j,cx>o^#o\nnewspapers every Sunday.\nAnd because everybody k to intensely interested\nin the contents of the newspaper, it'i easy to understand why advertisers, national and local, find\nnewspaper space the most effective medium with\nwhich to wr 11 the* story and sell their goods.\nTNI   IIIEAB   OP   ADVERTISING\nCXHAWAM   MHf   NEWIPAPIII   A JSOCIAttOM\norwnacat    mm* m___m v met mm    hai\n\u25a0\n___________\n____________________\n Tucker, llni Non-Quebec Member,\nTakes Stand Against Conscription\nOTTAWA. Nov. 88 (\u00bb)\u2014Witter\nTucker (L\u2014Koathern) uld tonight\nIn tha Commons that ha did not\nbelieve the Government's conscription policy would provide iny ntnre\nreinforcements than the voluntary\nenlistment system.\nMr Tucker uld there wu no need\nfor the Oovernmenl's Order-In-\nCouncil authorising the sending of\n18,000 Home Defenct troops oversew.\n\"There wu no need tor tbe measure\non the basis ot defending Canada\nsgalnst her enemies or of achieving\nvictory,\" uld Mr. Tucker. \"It Is doubtful whether the meaaura will provide\nany more men than the voluntary\nmethod. 1 think thla will be shown\nln future daya.\"\nEafller Mr. Tucker aaid he aupport-\ned and aeconded an antl-oonscriptlon\nmotion proposed by Philippe Picard\n(L\u2014Bellechae-ie)\u00bb He was the tlrst\nKngllsh - speaking and non-Quebec\nmember to take a atand against overseas conacrlptton.\nThe amendment wu ruled out of\norder by Speaker J. A. Glen when the\nCommona reaumed after the dinner\nreosas.\nMr. Tucker said hi \u00bbu satisfied\nthat If Canadian troops had been\nmoved to e quieter theatre of \u00bb_r\nfor a time and there had been a\ncertain amotnA of remuaterlng the\nreinforcement situation would have\nbeen straightened out without resort to Conscription.\nHe said he would prefer to see\nmen of the B.C.A.F. now being re.\nturned to a civilian reserve given a\nchance to tight In the Army rather\nthan to tee men of Home Defence\ntroops compelled to fight. Many of\nthe H.C.A.K. men were analous to\nplav their part In the war.\nConscription ln the lut war had\nbeen a failure and lt would be even\na greater (allure thla time.\nHlatory would give credit to Prims\nMinister Mackenzie-King for atavlni\noff conscription u long u he did to\npreserve national unity.\nUnity had beet) broken oy the Government's recent action, but he did\nnot now how badly It had been broken.\nHon. P. J. A Cardin (!_\u2014Rlohelleu-\nVercherea> congratulated Mr. Tucker\non hla speech which wu \"a very\nstrong one from the point of view\nof reason and from the point of view\nof real Canadlanlsm.\"\nMan Chambers\nAwarded D.S.O.\nOTTAWA. Nov. 30 (CPl - Capt.\nfActing Maj.) Alan Chambers, 35,\nof Victoria, Liberal member of Parliament for British Columbia's Nanaimo constituency, has been\nawarded the Distinguished Service\nOrder while serving with the Canadian Infantry Corps overseas, Defence Headquarters announced tonight.\nNo citation accompanied the announcement.\nMaj. Chambers, elected to the\nCommons In the 1940 general elections, entered the active army in\nAugust of that year. He went over-\nseas in 1942 to attend a special\ncourse at Cambridge University\nefter more than a year of service\nen the Pacific Coast.\nHe was attached to a divisional\nheadquarters in September, 1943,\nreturned to Cimdi list January\nmd went back overseas In May.\nMrs. Chambers and their four-\nyear-old son live at Victoria.\nDiet After Mysterious\nAccident\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 30 (CP) -\nJoseph R. Baldwin died in hospital\nearly today from injuries suffered\nln s mystery accident near the waterfront Tuesday. Shortly after his\nadmittance to hospital he told a\nnurse he had been hit on the head.\nIt is understood his wife lives ln\nVictoria.\nIdentify Carriers\nDamaged in\nBattle of Philippines\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 30 <AP>-\nThe Navy Department today Identified four escort carriers, the Kalinin Bay, the Fanshaw Bay, the\nWhite Plains and the Kitkun Bay,\nas having been damaged in the\nBattle of the Philippines Oct. 24.\nThe announcement also disclosed\nfor the first time that 800 survivors\nof the St. Lo and 800 of the Gam-\nbier Bay were rescued. The loss\nof these vessels was previously announced.\nwgyyyyMWwyw\nMinora Blades give\nLOW-COST\nSHAVING\nMinora ou_0-.ll ond outthavei\nordinary double-edge blades, for\nhoneil-lo-goodneis economy, try\nthe quality blade In the low-price\nfield. Fiti your double-edge rotor.\nCanada's Export\nTrade $478r500r000\nOTTAWA, Nov. 80 (CP)-Csn-\nade's external trade, excluding gold,\nwas valued at $478,500,000 ln October, compared with $428,795,000 in\nthe corresponding month of last\nyear, an increase of 12.4 per cent,\nthe Qominion Bureau of Statistics\nreported today.\nDuring the first 10 months of\nthe current year the aggregate value\nwas $4,-85,-41,000, compared with\n$3,83.,870,000 in the similar period\nof the preceding year.\nCoast Airman\nDecorated by\nU.S. Air Force\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 80 (CP) -\nOne of many Canadians who served with the U, S. Army Air Force\nin the MMdle Bat, riythf-'Oftc-r\nTrevor M. Anderson of Victoria, of\nthe R.C.A.F., was recorafed recently with the United SUtes Distln-\ngutihed Flying Crou and the American Air Medal end Seven Oak\nLeaf Clusters for his outstanding\nservice as a wireleu air gunner.\nAnderson received the decora-\ntions at a ceremony at R.C.A.F.\nstation, Boundary Bay, B. C, where\nhe' is stationed at present\nAnderson's wife resides at Lad-\nner, B. C.\nWedding\nInvitations\nor . . .\nAnnouncements\nCorrectly Printed ond ort\nGood Stationery.\nWEDDING CAKE BOXES\nAND  ENCLOSURE CARDS\nOur work  is the best.\nNelion Daily News\nPrinting D-spartmtnt\nNELSON.  B   C.\nFormer Maple Leaf\nHockey Player\nKilled in Action\nTORONTO, Nnv, 30 (CP) - Dud\nley (Red- Garrett, former professional hockey player and property\nof Toronto Maple Leafs of the Na\ntional Hockey League, has been\nkilled in action with the Royal\nCanadian Navy, his father, Dudley\nGarrett, said last night.\nYoung Garrett played with Providence Reds of the American Hockey League and New York Rangers\nof the N. H. L. in the 1M2-43 sewon,\nafter figuring tn the deal that had\nbrought Babe Pratt to the Maple\nLeafs\nJ. A. McDonald Back\nAfter Being Patient\nat Spokane Hospital\nJ. A. McDonald, President ot tht\nMcDonald Jam Company, Ltd., is\nback in Nelson after a month at\nSpokane where ha received medical attention. Ha wu' a patient in\nSt. Luke's Hospital there.\nMr. McDonald, before going to\nSpokane wu a patient tor \u25a0 considerable period at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital here.   .\nMr. and Mrs. McDonald hava taken up residence at 404 Vernon\nStreet.\nBritish Press\nPraises\nChurchill\nLONDON, Nov. JO (CP-Reute.)-\nThe British press today extended\nwarm greetings to Prime Minister\nChurchill on his 70th birthday.'\nThe papers stressed that they\nwere voicing the sentiments of the\ncountry and of the friends of freedom throughout thf world.\nAs the Times of London phrased\nII: \"Mr. Churchill has proved himself in the years of national unity\na true national leader. ...   \"\u2022..'.'\n\"Along with endurlhg youthful-\nness. disarming humor and essential\ndislike ot pretension and parade he\nhas disclosed in all great issues an\never-increasing maturity of , pt;\nlience and tolerance which supply\nthe reason why the loyalty of his\ncolleaguea in an all-party government has roots which go Into something deeper even than the plain\nand paramount duty of the hour,''\nThe Manchester Guardian said:\n\"No British name has ever meant\nso much to men and women under\nevery sky. . . .\"\n\"Whatever the future that awaits\nhim he has lived his finest hours.\"\nNavy Hopes Soar.\nas Jenkins\nReturns to Lineup\nANNAPOLIS, Md., Nov. 80 (AP)\n--Navy nudged nearer an even\nchoice against Army today u Bob\nJenkins of Alabama, left half-back\nand leading ground-gainer for the\nMiddies, recovered from an infected foot and returned to the starting\nlineup for Saturday's football game\nbefore some 70,000 In Baltimore's\nMunicipal Stadium,\nWhile Navy gained a. first-string\nback, Annapolis coaches disclosed\nthe probable loss of a second-string\nfullback, Fred Earley, with t Broken finger received In' practice.\nLibrary Service\nExtended to\nChildren in B.C.\nVfCToftlA, Nov. 80 (CP) -\"The\nProvincial open ahelf library terv-\nice has been extended to children\nIn outlying sections of B. C, lt wu\nannounced today by Provincial Librarian C. K. Morrison, Superintendent of the Public Library Commis-\ntlon.\nHeretofore the open shelf division\nhas only been available to adults.\nUnder the scheme persons in centres where there are no libraries\nmay order six books for six weeks\nIrom the division's headquarters in\nVictoria.\n\"You May Bet I\nDidn't Tell\nHer Who I Was\"\nVICTORIA, Nov. 30 (CP) \u2014 Even\nBritish Columbia's Liquor CommU-\niloner W. F. Kennedy admits liquor\nregulations  can be  confusing.\nIt seems Mr. Kennedy decided\n',o use his October snd November\npermits yesterday. On the street he\n\u25a0net a woman who asked him the\nway to the liquor store. He replied\nhe waa going there himself and they\ni walked  along together.  The  store\nwas closed\u2014it was Wednesday.\n!    \"You may bet I didn't tell her\nwho I was,\" Mr. Kennedy ssld.\nNew Rentals\nRestrictions on\nOTTAWA. Isot.K (CW..- New\nrental restrictions, designed to\ncheck evasion of rent control\nthrough the sale or rental of furniture, charging of commissions or\ncollecting of rewards, were announced today by tbe Prlcee Board.\nTht new order prohibits tny person from' charging or demanding\npayment ot a commission or reward\nfrom' a tenant and* not more than\none month's rent may be collected\nln advance.\nto prevent exploitation of tenanb\nthrough the tale of furniture it excessive profits, the order prohibits\nany person offering housing accommodation for rent from selling or\nrenting furniture to a tenant unless\nthe price or rental for the furniture\nhas been set by the Rentals Appraiser.\nTat order alao provides against\nany new racketeering practice by\ngiving the Rentals Administrator\nauthority to Issue special directions\nIf \"unreasonable or unjust\" conditions are Imposed on a tenant.\n\"We Intend to stop these practices which have never been customary In leasehold transactions\nand which are obviously designed\nto evade the rental regulations,\"\nOwe rt Lobley, \"Rentals Administrator, said ln a statement\nGen. Duffy, Who\nFought in Spanish\nCivil War, Dies\n\u2022 DtBUN. Nov. 0 (CP) - Gta.\nEoin O'Duify, 92, who led the Irish\nBrigade which tought alongside the\ntorces ot Gen. Franco In the Spanish Civil War, died here today.\nO'Duffy was formerly co-leader\nof the Fine Gael, or United Ireland\nparty which composed the principal\nopposition to Prime Minister De Va-\nlera, until 1934 when he resigned\nthe, party presidency. The leadership wai then taken over by William T. Cosgrave.\nO'Duffy alio htd been tht leader\nof the Blueshirted League of Youth\nand a former Free State Commissioner of Police,\nVancouver Autoists\nUse 44 Per\nCent Less Gasoline\n'VTCn-ORIA, Nov. 30 (CP)-The\nCoal and Petroleum Board announced today that the total gasoline sales tn October, by divisions,\nwere as follows:\nVancouver area 1,788,481 gallons;\nVictoria area 384,469 gallons, balance of province 1,369,337 gallons.\nVancouver tutolsts used .44 per\ncent less gasoline than they did in\nOctober of 1943.\nNewgate Contractor\nGets 2 Yrs. and Fine\non Forgery Charges\nFERNIE, B. C, Nov. 30 (CP) -\nCharles Hampton McNab, logging\ncontractor at Newgate, B. C, was\nsentenced to two years imprisonment and fined $1000 or an additional year when convicted in county court here today on seven counts\nof uttering forged documents. The\noffences extended over a six-month\npdHod tnd Involved checks made\npayable to sub-contracting work-\nmtn ln McNab's employ.\nInterpreting\nThe War News\nBy   KIRKE   L.   SIMPSON\nAiiociated  Press Wir Analyst\nWith Its triple bastions, Julich,\nLinnich and Duren, cloaely Invest-\nrd, th< CJeiman Roer River defence\nline in the Aachen sector is beginning to crumble. Collapse there\nwould open the way to the Cologne\nPlain.\nGerman resort to blowing 'Roer\nflood gates, adding impounded waters to the already rain flood stream\nwas a move of desperation. It might\nslow up the Allied advance temporarily but must also deny the de-\ncounter-attack   And   counter-attack\n! hat been the main German reliance\n'to fend off both Ruulan and other\n! Allied forward sweeps during gigantic German retreats both in the\nI East and the West.\n1 Front-line report* from the Aach-\njen theatre reflect Allied expectation\nof early decisive puncture of the\nRoer line despite the Germtn effort\nto turn it Into a mile-wide moat.\nEven the main Siegfried line defence Inside German frontiers til\nthe way to the lower corner of the\nNijmegen-Arnhem Allied wllent on\nthe Neder Rhine might he unhinged\nby  a  Roer  breakthrough.\nPays $100 Fine for\nFailing to Notify\nChange of Address\nVANCOUVER, Nev. 30 (CP) -\nH. G. Fleming, 22, and J. R. Kirk-\nland, 19, were each fined $100 or\none month in Jail after they pleaded guilty in police court here to\nchargee of (ailing to notify the military registrar of change of address\nFleming was sentenced to an additional month In Jail when convicted of possessing offensive weapons.\nNELSON DAILY NSWS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1944'- \u00bb\nAdvocates Taking\nGerman Language\nFrom Concerts\nEDMONTON, Nov. 30 (CP) -\nJ. Murray Gibbon of Montreal, Honorary President of the Canadian\nAuthors' Association, ln an interview here today advocated the German language be eliminated from\nthe concert and operatic stage but\nthe German music be retained.\nJobs Becoming Scare\nin Edmonton\nEDMONTON. Nov. 30 (CP) - W.\nG. Paterson, Asslstsnt Manager of\nthe Edmonton National Selective\nService office, said today Job openings in priorities of work other than\nfor mine workers and loggers, are\nbecoming scarce here.\nLawyer Asks Court\nPermisson to\nSue 91 Yr. Old Father\nMONTREAL, Nov. 30 (CP) -\nA M-year-old lawyer today asked\nrourt permission today to sue his\n-11-year-old (uther for an alimcntury\npension, without paying tha ordinary court cotta,\nMr. Justice Pierre Ceagraln reserved Judgment oo tbt petition,\nmsde in superior court. Ivldence\nsubmitted by Aston French wu\nthat .he could not make the necessary dlabursMnenla to take regular\nlegal action unless tha court agreed\nto- waive tht costs.\nThe petition was attacked on behalf.of Rev. Arthur French, the father, on the grounds that tht ton\nhad sufficient means to Institute\ns court action. The aon had been receiving an annuity from his father\ntor the Ust 34 years.\nAND WE DO MEAN EARLY\nAt this time of the year there are so many things on\none's mind that figuring out just what to give brother,\nsister, husband, wife, mother, father, uncle, aunt,\nfriends and neighbor is most difficult. A visit to any\none of the Nelson stores will prove to you that choosing Christmas Gifts is really no trick at all. Nelson\nmerchants have on their shelves a wide and varied\nassortment of gift suggestions this year; tricky little\nideas in almost every line of merchandise that will\nthrill both the giver and the receiver.\nReally it's easy when you wander through the wonderland of Christmas windows and display counters.\nTRY IT'   DO YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING\nIN NELSON AND SAVE'\nLet the Merchants of Nelson\nAssist You in Your\nCHRISTMAS BUYING\njJwtfiZ\/fl. \u00a3Z__fl\/LM_L\nNeljon'i Modtrn Plant\nIndividual Attention tt\nEvery Garment\nStandard Cafe\n\"NtUon't Popular\nRittaurant\"\nTht Stit tor Less\nCall Us Flrat fer Ceal. Woed\nWeek\nCoke, Moving ar  Transfer\nWest Transfer Co.\nPhone 33\n(ee us FIRST tor you' Heating.\nPlumbing  and   Ventilation\nRequirements\nKOOTENAY  PLUMBING\nand HEATING CO.. LTD.\nBUY\nNELSON BRAND-\njams AND JELLIES\nProducts ol the\nMcDonald |am\nCompany,   Limited\nTHE MAYOR\ndr>d\nALDERMEN\nof tht\nCity oi Nelson\n.In. ite you to do your\nShopping In Ntlion.\nTHI\nL.D.\nNelson's Most Popular\nRESTAURANT\nOOOO FOODS\nGOOD SERVICE\nMODERATE PRICES\nSPECIAL\nRULED\nFORMS\nOf everj description at tha\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nPrinting Dept.\nPHONI 22 FOR\nLetterheads      Envelopes    tnd\nill   kinds  ot   Business   Forms\nH. M. Whimster\n|ob Printing\nTHE MAYOR\nALDERMEN\nol ths\nCity of Nelson\nInvltt you to do your\nShopping in Ntlion.\n _\u2014____.\nSO - N EISON DAILY NIWI, KIDAY, DICIMII11,1944\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nRCAF-IIRQIANTI MAJOR IN NEW ROLI:\nis\u00ae'\nwhen they ti\nfor youngiten t\nirrlved :   '\nraphar, the WO'i aeam te be tn'oylnq thslr lob.\n, Toronto!\nil; WO. 2\n, wr! end WO.\n'(iftete,\n\u2022HI ILALOMS IN A lARONOl Whlls not-htrntre are wining up thalr tkllt and praying for mow, pretty touthernen like\nBtrbsra Chimbllit do not hsvt to wtlt Thty ski on wsrm wstsr se\nthe lovely Bsrbsra Is doing here at IL Petirshurg, Fie, dressed In a\nflowery sarong swim suit In wster tkllng tht motive powtr It provided by a motorboat and a tow ropt.\nI\nINDIA-CHINA IURMA PIMLINI: Vital artery ef Iht Allied\nwar effort In Atla, tht Chlnt-Burme.India pint line\u2014et-litir-N of\nwhleh hit only raetntly keen dluloted\u2014ttretehat off te the War ft\u00bbm\nthlt mtnlfold vtlve Inlttllttlon at a pumping itatlon, tcmtwhtrt In\nBurma. Man tf tht TltAb Inglnttr Pttrtlmm Dlitrlhjtltn ttmpany,\nwho lastalltd the Mite work ever this Intricate vslvt tyttam.\n\"NO SURRENDER\"! Today tha\nU. 8, Marina Corpi revealed the\netory of tha Marina who wouldn't\nturrandi.. Ha It Held C. Ohim-\nberlaln, 28, of El Cajon, Calif.,\nshown here. When Corregldor\ngive up, ha refuied to turrender,\nand managed to make his escape\nhy boat, After 21 diva ef hungry\nand thirsty drifting In tha China\nSea, he returned tt the Phllipplnee, landing behind tha Jap\nllnei. He lerved with guerilla\nunlti far two yttn, being commissioner a lieutenant In the American Army by one of hit leaders\nen the Islands, an Amerltan colonel. He escaped from the Islands again, reenllsttd In tha Marines, demanded combat duty,\nand It back battling the Jape. He\nhat been awarded thl Dlitlngulihed Service Crott.\nINDIAN MAOIITNATfl Brig.\nOliver M, Martin, a fuil-t.lor.-i\nMohewk Indian, who haa been\nappointed mtglttraia of York\ncounty. Tht flnt North Amtrlean\nIndian tvtr glvtn tht opportunity of dispensing \"whltt man'i\njuitlce\" In Ontario.\nDIIIQNIQ TO FOOL: Shown\nhare far the firtt time ll the new\nNasi \"glm\" mine whloh waa discovered by Brltlth tapper! ef the\nath Army In Italy. Designed to\nfoil mini ietaiU*. the mint I.\nnon-metal, and haa a high par-\nentail of glut uied In Ita con-\nitruetlon, Tht actual oatlng of the\nmine It ef a fibre mbatmoe. Bolte,\nprimer otp, and ether perts are\nef glm. A Brltlth tapper holdt\nthe only metal part af the mint et\nleft-the MHltar. At right hi\nhtldt tht |b_M primer up.\n\u2022*%fJH-\u00abt\u00bb\nTODAY'S NEEDLECRAFTl\nFer mothert\u2014for fond aunties\u2014\nthla collection of varied motifs\u2014\nto embroider on baby'a blbt,\ndresses, end on older children's\nclothes. \u2022 \u201e\nCute anlmajs, floral motlfi give\nI \"personal touch\". Pattern Mr\nhaa tranafer of 11 motlfa from\n4'\/2x11 to 2x3 Inchea; itltchei.\nSend 20 centa tor rnta partem te\nTha Nelion Dally News, Needle-\ncraft Dept, Nelion. Wrlti plainly\npattern number, your neme end\naddreu. Patterni will be mallei\nto your homo In about 11 dayt.\nThere may be aome further delay In delivery beoauae of thi\nlarge Increase In orders during the\npresent icaion.\nmaJiwn  Wwdin\nsues i_ io .0.\net In sixes 1l<\n, 34, 36, 38, 40,\n36, 3\/i ysroje\nTODAY'S PATTERNt Refreshingly simple detail makea Pattern\n9326 at Irresistible et tunthlne.\nButton-front, eaty to Iron and\nwear. Becoming for tliet 12 to 48.\nPattern 9326 cornea '\n14, 16, 16, 20! 30, 32,\n42, 44, 46, 48. Sire 36,\n36-Inch.\nSend 20 centa for tnlt pattern to\nThe Nelion Dally Newe, Needle-\ncraft DepL, Neiton. Write plainly\npattern number, your name end\ntddrett. Patterni will ba mailed\nto your home In about 15 daya,\nthere may be some further allay In delivery because of the\nlarge Increase In orders during tha\npreient ssaion.\nfi-Mta.iiJii iMta-aweww-w\n\"Maybe It's sour grapes, but I\nhite to He a big Industry owned by\na snooty'llttle heiress who couldn't\nearn I dime lor heraelf.\"\n\"Oh.    Um    doctor's    treatmtnta\nmust  havt   done  yon to much\ngoodi rest only limp when \u00bbo\u00bb\nwett \u2022_-\u00bb-\"\ni\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nLOUDON (CP) -Shoe repalri\nnow out i null more In Britain,\nRepair ihopi hive been permitted\nto Increase their prices by about\none-halt cmt In 2A cent*, illeotlvi\nOet \u00bb ^^\nLONDON (CP) - 8o*e i-tooli\nnew are teaching cliesi as pkrt ot thi\ncurriculum, on groundi tt helps\nboyi to learn mithemitlci by laid-\nlt| to disi, loglcil thinking.\niH-wnn   ii i.ml in.i iiii'i\n\u00ab\u25a0_ t mua*mutuams*mstUtwTSS*t*)\ninns   .*\u2022>\n5^\nIQttPQWN\nSMALL\nCARRYING\nCHARGE\n ^rJ\n_______25__s__-S!Si\n^_&W_Q>t4-\u2014\nweur-iou\nCAW TAKE\nTH*CAE\/\nOii-eem-\nAW CAN 1\nCALL, AT\nARENM'\n01 IT. NOW \u00ab THiH W*Y-\nTHN4 B-tf I CAN DO R* YOU!\nan\nnixcm immii i in -._**_\u25a0\nnw(K-eiwi> AtmvH.Two\ntm \u00abm - mm im\nMftlUL-XKl\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\nPHONE 144\nIIRTHS   .\nll-OONAtD-TD Ur. in* Hrt. It J\nloDonsld of Klmberley >t McDougall\n;ospltal, Kimberley, Nov. 20, a daugh-\nCOULT___\u2014To Mr. and __fa. Bouglai\ntulter ol Klmberley at McDougall\nioaplttl, Klmberley, Nov. 37, a ton.\nLioWNtv\u2014To Mr. and Mri. A. Dow-\ney oi Fernls, Nov. ll, t ton. Robert\nndrew. Mr. sat Mra. Downey were\nifmor resident, ot Klmberley\nORANT\u2014To Mr. add Mra. A. D.\nirant ol Klmberley at McDougall\nIdtpital. Kimberley, Hot. M. a eon,\nOTl_R__iH-To Mr. and Mr\u00bb. 0.\neterloh OX Invermere, former Klm-\nerley realdcnte, rt Invermere Hoe-\nItal, Nov. __, a daughter\nJOHNSON-JTo Mr. tnd Mn. Bert\nohneon of Trail et Trail -Tadanto\n.wltal, Wov 88. a daughter,\nHUP .WANTED\npanted D-Mediately- clean\ntidy man to ehore on tmall dairy\nterm Able to Bilk. Permanent if\ntatlsfactory. 178.00. Apply Box lM,\nKrnle, B.O\t\nkpyflumcBD ontLs fob oknbr-\nal work In hoapltal. Apply Mlts\nMtnn, Kootenay Lake oeneral Hoe-\n\u25a0fat*\nMI-TKD \u2014 K3^PEBI__.0___ -\naid mtn (or local sawmill, gojd\nwages. Apply National Selective Ber-\nvice. Order No. 4J34\nrANTED\u2014 WOMAN Will ____!_!_\"*_--__-\neare at Palrvlew home, five elter-\nnoont t week, Apply Bo\u00bb 3097 Dally\n_d__til___B waWbd hJiA\nj employment. Apply Rational\neotive mttit*.\n_ SI-fiBKBSB- WOK\nBetuty thop. Apply Selective\nIce.\nSITUATIONS WANTID\nSpecial Low Ratei fo' non-\n\u2022ommerclal advertltemente under\nfill claiaiflcatlon te taelat people\ntteklng employment Only _M tor\ntM week It daya) coven tny\nnumber of required llnei Ptyablt\ntn advtnoe Add loo If boi number deelred\t\nSFAbu lady.WU..do\nmtklng alteratloni and  ohlldren'e\nIng.  Bxoellent ref*Ten08l   Mrt\nlltm Waring, 91\u00bb Obaervttory St\n763-Y.\t\npa\u00bb\".|\n-WllllB.tr\nyhpnt'\n.R0PEKTY. HOUSES, FARMS\nswm \u2022*\u2022  ~\nA Real\nFamily Home\nBis roWt house on four corner\nJott Stale* Street. Dwelling\n\u00a5tt large living room, dining\nroom Willi UMplae*, kitchen\nWith dtnett* down md thre*\nj\u00bbflroom\u00bb and bathroom up-\nairs. Full hutment, concrete\n.jundation, cjipent floor, hot\nWiter furnace, fault room. Easy\ntfitranct te. fueL Plenty ot\nCloset space, electrical outlett\nttt good floort, glassed-in\nlleeping porch and verandah.\nPrloe\n$4000\nAnd termi can bt arranged.\nFor an appointment a**\nr. D. Rosling\nNt Ward St Phont 717\n\u2022i Ifl Imuran.*, Ifl Roaltng\"\nWO STORY PBAM1 BtrtUDWa.\n\u00ablo_e ln, can be uted H rooming\nCum, or altered to make several\nirtmentt. Oood InvtttmenV Place\naold. Apply P. B. Poulln.\ngrtments. C!\nit be sold\nWird St.\nW \u2014 \"-\n> Room House\nOb Ttlutble epnier lot Full\nKuem-nt ttt. To clean up an\n\u2666state ottered tor quick salt tt\n$21 SO\n(T. A. Whitfield\nReal Estate tnd Iniurtnct.\n|17 Hall M. ytmt \u00bbM\nNOT Rff-NAKOB TOOB MOST-\non the Yorkthlrt Btvlnga tad\nMonthly Rtduottee pita ti\nper cent C W Ae*A*tVdL\n1 SALB-BAl-OH, HAS OOWB,\ntones, tbttp, chickens tnd firm\nmplementt. Mrt. H. Maletolt, t ml.\n-felway. Salmo, B.C.\nIbIsalb\u2014-Vk ACBBB wlTBBniLD-\nat fruitvale. Would trade for\nNick sookototfl, creteent Til-\nebon My Nrum\nTtlepkont IM\n;io_slfied Advertising Rat*\nllo per Uns ptr insertion\n44o per lint per week (9 eontte-\ndve tntertlont for cott oi 4)\n11.411 Unt I motith ll\u00ab timet)\nMinimum I Usee per lnttrtlon.\nBoi   number.   He  Htrt   This\nren any number ol tlsnte\nPBBLia lUOALl Nonets.\nIt-TOB-lB. ITO\nlSe per Use firtt insertion, ____\n[4c etch sUbtequent Insertion\nAU. AliOV* BATHS UtSS  10*\nPROMPT PATMBXT.\n\u25a0FECIAL LOW RATE!\nHou-ri.mmKrlti s 11 o 111 \u2022 a I\niled for Me foe tny required\nber of llnei far ill dsys. pay-\nIn advance.\nS0B8OBIPTIO1I RATXS\n Jt oopy \u2022   At\nly estrtlit. far *n.l\n\"im  edvenoe __\nper year   ...\n\u25a0Hill onfilds Nflun:\nmonth    _\u25a0__-.\nmonths .\u2014\nmonths\t\nrear\n__ 1\u00bb O0\n-*    .71\n_  10*\n_   400\n__. loo\nAbove  ratea  apply  In  Canadt.\n\u25a0Ited Stats, tnd United  King-\nl.i subscrlfctrt living outtldt\nIsr earner traa\nwhen tnd W fianada ataattt\nrt poetafe le required: One\nnth 11 80: three months. \u00bb4 0O:\nvon ths. MOO; ons year 111.00\n'C\nfOR _AU, MISCELLANEOUS\nOur\nCHRISTMAS CARDS\ntrt now Nld;. Wt wtrt fortunate\nln our purchases and have t varied\nselection to chooie trom. told in\nloti ol t doien only, printed With\nyour name and address. Reaeonsolo\nprlcei Write for samplss to Nelion\nDally News. Chriitmtt Card Dept..\nNelaon. B.O\nPOR SALK - POLD1NO BKD-TTA\nbaby cwrltgt, btbjr'i crib butlntt,\nBimmom double bed and spring\nAll like sew. Phone 107.\nCHRISTMAS TRIMS KB SALB-OR-\nder now and till two weikt baton\nXmas. All sizes tnd print, writt P.\nSopow, e-o Victor Hotel, Ni'\nTOR SALB-ONI SKINOU\ncomplete with Sawi and Packer. M.\nDu Most, HUB Mtl Siding, P.O. BoM-\nbery, B.C,\ntm -Fittl-lor'TWU'gMJtAl\nlow prion  Active Trading Oo. 916\n\u25banwell St.. Vth-OUftr. B 6\nTOn. 8ALS-1 PR, MMf'B C.C.M.\nekatea, alM 11%. On shoes. 1008\nStanley St. or phone WrjU\nFOR SALE - BBAWr !*<__.__*\n(stand model). Very good condition.\nBox 2038 Dally Newt.\nDaily]\n.WHIT\nfoil 3_UP WlflTE BNAim, 8-BOt-l\nrang!, with iplral gratei, good ta\nnew. Phone 478-X,\npor sAL_H-_AHffbT(.ycaT_r>\u00ab_v\ncondition. R*a_ontbl\u00bb. Pti. 844.L.\nSdIIS   ITAMP6   POR   MAMUrfn\nnuit Bdtet Nelion Duly News\nn utiiy ,\nODRtN\nHam anw, uotaw turn\ndtlkt. Vu Uu tt tht Ark Btdrt,\nm s_J__K-_*6ViiMUHM, \u00abU i\n1110 Beatty Ave.\nPOR BALE-BRICK-LINED HEATER.\nOood condition. 21^P\u00bbrk Bt.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAMAYKM ANU MINE\nBgmUfcNtATJVTO\t\nB   W   WIDDOWSON   PROVIKCIAl\nMint tepresen've\nvkfTlLsaATor\nfi_\u00bb, 410 tutttnty H, Ktlaos. B O\nA J BUH independent Mine Repre*.\ntentative Boi 54 Trtll. BO\nmilUHNO CONTItyTORa\nKELSON   BUILDIBQ  CoIlTRAO*lr6*8\nor too Urge\nno jobs too tmall or\nPhone 530\n801 Front St\nUHIkopbaCTOM\ncoun mclaren. b.c, chiho-\npractlo X-ray Splnography Strand\nTheatre Bldg.. Trtll, 1.0 Phont IW\nP.NdlNKKKS AND SURVEYORS\nND SU\u00bb\nmm\naRraftt\nR. W   HAGGEN. Ml    _\n\u25a0nglseer.    B.C.    UM    Burv-yor\nRossland tnd Grand Porkt, B.O.\nBOYD O   APFLBCX, 111 OOR1 fT\n_ iteison. B.C Surveyor add Bnglnter\nINHURANCB ANP Rg_AI, BBTATI\noiias   p   mcharDY. \"IsilhUtidk\nReal Eetate. Phon* 188, \t\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS  LIMITED\nMachine Shop, acetylene tnd electric\nwridlng. motor rewinding\ncdmmerclal rifrl|sration\none 893 U4 Vertion st\nWANTID, MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP 08 TOUR SCRAP METALS OB\n1MB. An\/ quantity Top prion Mid\nActive Trtdlng Company, tig Powell 6l\u201e TtB-MWW, \u00bb 0.   \u2022.\n#A_ffBt -\u25a0 60M- iljmt 'MT-\nten rut, not (nt thin li inohn\nsquare  Bo tb  P.OJ.. Nelaon Dally\n60ODS_^ETYP_*wW_lB>Jffil-L\nIng cabinet. Apply New Grand Hotel,\nVemdn Btnat.\ntf-jtm--. res? n ifM m-\ndltlon. Will pay caih. Box 8177 Dilly\ntm,\nw\u00bbw\u00bbt        u _\nWABTBD ClOtD-S TRICYCLB, OOOD\nOODdltlon. Ph. 1078-R.\nWANTED - DOU_ PRAM IN OOOD\noondltlon, Ph. 419-R\nuvnuinvui \u00ab\u00bb\u25a0 w\u00abw  *\u00bbt\nWANTll--\u00abI_l\u00bbntIO SEWIN6 MA.\nchlnt. Phoni 884-T,\nWAJT-ltD - A   SECTIONAL   BOOK-\ncul. Phone 61B.R\niANTBD-SMAL-,' THMTJCfl. WSt\n2<221 Dtlly Newt,\n\u00bb>_\u00bb\u00abl-fcslb PIAltO. BOX RR\nDilly Ntw,. \t\nBtttp r\u00aba fltow to j. P-USv\n\u25a0in, Nelson, B.C.\nPERSONAL\ntniBM   tM   VAMCOUVER    BTOP   A1\nAlmtl Botet, Opp C P B Depot.\nJ   CHESS\nSecond Htnd Dtller\nPhone 1081        8-4 Vtrog Bt\nPhoni 1981 wt veruon Bt\np'aintuI WW ^0-MtLV-JLav-.\n. td with Uoyd't Cora Balvt. soo it\nFleury'i Phtrmacy.\nU5N\u00abaOMBI READ CUPID DESTINK\nmagailne. Copy Nov.-Deo, issue with\n\\ tddreseei. 38c Milled plain, sealed\nBoi 197, Chapman Camp, B.O\n&crsPH6w25c\np   O  Boi 434. Vanoouver\nAny 8-iip foil developed Uld printen\nt5c Reprint! 3c   Ptee 8i7 cou__n\n_!bDAK'r-t._i-W*a'. BBWi H_5TT\nMaguln.s, back numbers SOo dot\nSltvt Bohu, a Doukhobor hiitory\n12.75 ill postpaid, latlstactloh\ngutrtnteed. Mtcdontld, Postmaster.\nBrllUtn.  B.O,  _\nPlUtS DEVELOPED AND PRINTED\n(8 or \u2022 uposurt roll) ltt Rlprmu\nSo each For -four enapshote. chouse\nKrystal Finish OUtrtnteed non-tide\nprlnti Krystal Photoa. Wilkle, Ste-\nkatchewaa. Establlihed Over 80\nyears\nWTO\t\n140 tor 830.00 gold piece\nHO tor 810.00 gold piece\n810 for 8 6.00 gold piece\n8 8 for 8 3JK) gold piece\natoll premiums ptld on til gold coins\nof UI country. These prices offered\ntor limited tlmi only.\nB.O. Collateral               77 E. Hastings\nVtnoouftr, B.Oj\t\nifop stt?fffetta\"-*h6flToffi.w.\nIng stomach Dlsordeni Acid Stom-\nch. Indigestion Heartburn. Coated tongue. Bad Breath Sick Head-\ntchn, ito OBI Ellk-i itomtot powder No a. prepared by eiperlenced\nPhtrmtclsl It umt give immedlite\nresults Or money bttik. 1100. 13 00\nEllk's Medicine Company. Dept 43\nSaskltoon  Sask.\n'\u25a0   \u25a0 \u25a0   \u25a0'\u25a0'!   \u25a0\nLIVESTOCK, rOULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nTHE  'WHICH ..,.,,\u201e\nCHICK-.   f.lVF WW'\nMORE THAN EVER BEPORJ\nll lt necessary to rtiae OOOD BIRDS.\nTwenty-flyi yeiri of effort ttt WMI*\nence Is behind tht production ot our\nftmous chicks. Help to ENSURE your\nSUCCESS by  ordering your chicks\nttily from onl of our Hatoheriss.\nPrlcei per 100 Uneexed   Pulleu\nWhite Leghorns    H4.oo   139.00\nRocks, Reds,\nNew Hampi     18.00    38.00\nLight Suawx     17.00    80.00\nbighorn Oku. 81 for 100;\nHeivy Ckls. 8* tor 100\nSUFIS. CHICKS SIRED IT\nR.O.P. MALES\nLeghorni  18.00    li.oo\nBooki, Redl,\n(tew Htmpt. ._     17.00    83.00\nLeghorn Okie. 44-100\nHeivy Oklt, 810-100.\n88% Suing acouraoy guaranteed\nOrder   NOW\u2014avoid   disappointment\ntnd remember\u2014\n\"ITB BMOI.T8 THAT OOUlfT.\"\nRump&Sendall\nSTOP ITCHINO TOltTURES OP\netseraa, psoriasis, ringworm, tth-\nlett't net tnd other Ikin lrtltl-\ntlom With Bllk't Olntmsnt Mt, 6.\nmtttrlptloa of noted ikls specialist Itch relieved promptly\nakin billed quickly or money refunded 1140, MM Hall orders\nfilled promptly order today from\nElik'i Medicine 00. Dipt. 41 USk-\nttoon Saak\nINfO-f'g   MACBOtt   8HOP\nSpecialists In mine tnd mill work\nMachine   work,   light   tnd   heavy\nElectric tnd Acetylene welding.\n708 Versod Bt\u201e Nelson        Phont 98\nOPTOMETRIgTg\nW  1. MARSHALL\nOptometrlstt\n1458 Bay Ave., Trtll.\nBASH  PACT0B1E8\nLAWtONB SASH PAOTWtY-\n8F.CQND HAND IT0I\nWE   BUY.   SELL  AND\nWhat have vou? Pb   684  Ark Store\nIt0|gg.\n\"gxMitdk\nFARM, GARDEN b, NURSERY\nNUT TRIMS \u2014 ORDIB HOW\ncirculars. Writ* Canada's leading\nproducer of superior early bttllng\nnut treee. Jack Oellltlj, Box 18.\nWelt-snk. B.C.\nGETACIftCULEx\nFOR CHRISTMAS\nIdeal Health gift for rather, 'Mother,\nHusbtnd, Wife or other lovsd onei.\nHELP KEEP THEM YOUNG\nThis teruatlonal Mechanical Rotary\nEierolier (I9\"_31\"_M\") hit B-toot\noord, plugi Into 80-cyrle A.0, current and has 14 b.p. motor, guatanteid\nagalnit defect.\nGreatly atlmulat.s circulation\nthroughout intliM body ind glvn rial\nrelief Oom NUmbneia, swelllngl. Oold\nPoet, Sinus, Varlooee vslns, Asthma,\nParalysis, Lumbago, Oonetlpatlon and\nBodlflet Model tor standing, altttni,\nor lying-down treatment*.\nCUB Pries In B.C. 1199.50. Transportation up to 33.BO prepaid.\n'We Sli Clrculex Only\nROBINSON\nCIROJL6X HEALTH CENTRE\n1876 WM BTtb An, Vanoouver, BO.\nWHte for Booklet\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\n\u00bbOLLE\u00bb CAHABI-* OUT OF til-\nported Haftt Mounuin, ml _dng.\nera, guaranteed It 8800. remain\n81.00. Una Xmas gift. VL A. Woyne,\nAppledale, B.C.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nAC-iosa 1 Pitt\n1, A sweeten- *\u25a0 Question\nlug S.BOD*\n6. Arlt \u00ab.ChanK\u00bb\nU.AHtvoHBI       WlBoB\nU-Uga-dwlth f. Itudy\nrespect WUntly\n\u00ab, Meadow\n23. Evil: prefix\n25. Cuckoo\n28. Bog\nrr.Uiitrt\nM. Coward\n31. Regret\nucucu \u25a1uasQ\n0P3D  d-.il BD\nHi Llll-ir.* or_D\n'.*ll '.1   rrMt-.lsas\nia.ii? rje_ci--__\nYsetetdar'i *.,.*\u00bb,\n40.Wt_l.lerl\ntbout Idly\nO.Eunlnf.poi-)\n44. Duflgurt\n13,In_ingtn     I. At one time  33. Metal tag\n14. Become \u00bb.l_ow freely  34. Thick nice\nlltbll to        10. Blunderi       35. Psrt of a\n15. Coin (Slim) lT.T-OU-lihed        book\n18. Away        19. Per. lot      J\u00ab. siwrtlun\nll.Blttir-ttch      *W>t garmenU\n11 S-mgtfor trchlte-ture 38. Infant\ntwo M.Puab 39.G-d-.not\n11. Nut Jl. Warp-yam '    diieort\n14 Kilt of 1\nkalti\nU.WbUkin\n29 Recipient\noft girt\nM. Island In\nPlCtfe\nJl.Oorgt\n31 RtStdn\n34. Mineral\n\u2022prtng\nJ7. Obtain\n38. Beseech\n41 Tag\n43 Cenulof\nBeetlei\n40. Century\nplant\n46. Mtd, it I\ndog\n47 Harassed\n48. Garment\nDOWH\nl.OM'snamt\nruajtwhou\nrum bet\nCKTTTOQr&nt\u2014A rri-ptogran\nBKMY   H T M w W N   OWMTTTHI   U   AUt\nLE    TKMT     NVO     YKLFP    KM     BVHIK\nO WMYITHLF A-IKUB.\nYe.t\u00abr*iy*i  CryptogMtol   WITH  FATTWOI Mill.  MM\nTRUQENO l'USH. YOUR FATB-VIMIU\nBox N,\n11TB,\nLangliy prairie, B C\nTHC WHICH\nCHICK*) GIVE\nRHtllTJ\n2.1TH ANNIVKUSAKY YEAB\nIn order to better aervt our cua-\ntomeri In thl Interior of B.C. and the\nPrairie Provinces, wt IM opening a\nmodem branch hatchery at Vernon,\n8c. ln the famous Okanagan Valley.\nA ntw 78,000 Smith Electrio Incubator will be Installed and an upert\nhatcheryman will bt In charge. Thli\nplant will ht ln operation In January\nfor the balance of the season. Place\nyour orders NOW direct from our advertisement In this Issue.\nRbmp&Sendail\n\u25a0 \u25a0     \"~- I  I II fl        B\n_______ LTD\nBoi N.\nvarnon, B.C.\nOOOD YOUNO HORSE WILL BB\nMid very cheap. Beaaon\u2014no hay for\nfeed. John Shouitoff, Salmo, B.O.\nMARE, 9 YR8. OVER 1400. WILL BELL\nOt trade for older horse, McConnell,\nHarrop,\nFOR SALE\u20147 MOB. JERSEY AYft-\nshlri heifer. Flnt oondltlon. Apply\n7oe Richards Bt.\nTOR SALB-QNB REOENTLY f-UOSH-\nened cow. N, K. Foohachow, wln-\nliw, B.C.\t\ntgttSScsrwfflBt 1 oar\nold. Enguln Shoreaoree FOst otflot\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nKOTICS TO CBK-1TORS\nIN THI MATTER Ot TUB ESTATE OF KATHHRINE SUSAN\nOBBEN, DBOBASED.\nNOTIOE ll hereby given thlt td-\nmlnlstritlon ot thi estate of Kither-\nine Suaan Ontn, who died it Key\nWeit, Florida, on September 7th, 1044.\n\u2022u on November 14th, 1944 granted to\nMonttgue Edward Harper, and that\nall persona having claims agalnit ths\nlaid estate are required to file particular thereof with the undersigned\nsolicitors on or before December litt,\n1944, after which date the estate 11-\ntett will be distributed among thl\npersona entitled hiving regard only\nto thl claims whloh shall thin htvt\nbeen  filed 11 above required.\nDATED at Nelion, B.C. thlt tOth\nday of November, 1044,\n0'flIIBA, OARIAND * OANSHTm,\nP.O. Bot 490, NeUon. B.C.\nSollcltori for thl Administrator.\nm\nFrovlnce of Britlih Columbia\nDepartment ot Fublle Work\nfLOOAR \u2022 ARROW MKM - TBWrOR\ninOBWAY\nPublic notice It hereby given that\nowing to winter conditions the Monashee section ot thl Sl^cm-Arrow\nLakee.Venura Bold ll OlOMd Until\nfurther not!**.\nSlgnld-I   SMITH.\nDistrict Engineer\nOourt Rome,\nNelson. BO.\nSovsmher lOtn. 1844.\n%oWb%\nFrovlnoe of British Ooluntbla\nDepartment of Publlo Works\nBCKmWAT IAKB FEBRT.\nThe Kootwnay I_Ut ferrv run 1\nBJ. \"Mo(M\"\nwill\nbe taken ovtr-by tht S4. \"Mogli\" for\ntwo diyi on Sundiy, December ltd,\nand Monday, December 4th, during\nboiler wash of SB. \"Nasookin\"\nThs  (mas  load limit on  ths an\n\"Mojrts\" la flvs tons.\nSIgnid - \u00bb S8BTR,\nDistrict Engineer\nOourt Houm,\nNeUon. BC.\nHovtmber 99IB, 1044,\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nTHESE\nWON'T\nJLAiSdI\nLONG\n1938 Ford Coups.\n1934 Ford Sedan.\n1933 Chrysler Sedan.\n1935 Hudson Sedan.\n1930 Studebaker Sedan.\nW\u00ab Are still paying top\nprices for good used cars.\nKOOTENAY\nMOTORS\n(Nelson) Ltd.\nH HARROP\nONE 1*34, TWO TON FORD TRUCK\ndual Wheels, otn bt ssen at Shorty'!\nHepllr Shop, \t\nKtW AND USED SNOW CHAINS.\nNeUon Auto Wrecking and Oarage.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEO. 1.0V. to (OF) \u2014 Oraln\nquotatlona:\nOpen   High   Low    Close\nRYE:\n... 108K   109%   loatt   11m;\n_ 11014   11114   no     m V.\n.... 109!i    100H    10814    l\u00b00!t\nDec\nMay\nJuly\t\nOATS:\nDec. ....._\nMay _.._\nJuly \t\nBARLEY\nDeo.     ...\nMay\nJul;\n61V,\nSlV,\n59\nem\n84 S\n8g\nUl\u00bb \u201e     .\nOABH PRICES:\nOats: J feed 49; 9 feed 4(; other\nl-adte at ceiling 81V4.\nBtrliy: 8 tied 88: other grade, it\ncelling prlcei 84>4I screenlngt 9.00.\nRye: 1 O.W l.Mli; \u00ab 0.W7 1.09*4.\n8 C.W. 1.04V,; re]. 2 C.W.97)4: 4 O.W,\n1.0014: track 1X\u00bb)4.\nNILSON DAILY NIWS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1,1144 - 11\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nINDU8TBIAM\nAnoe Brew of Otn  li\nCin Oar* Fdy Pfd  fit\nCin Stetmihlp   lit\nOon Min Si Smelting   \u25a0  4ft\nDom Steel* Ooal B .  \\l\nMcCoil FroSMUd \u2014 ., , 1\nNaUonal Bnw IM .- - lit\nauebec Powlr  II\nShawnlgm W * F _______ IB\nBt uwrence Corp  gl\nBANU\nOommerce ,\u201e  ,  ... U]\nDominion  Ill\nimperial    . . Ill\nMontreal\nNova Scotia .\nRoyal\t\nToronto .\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES\nAngio-Huroaint \t\nBite Metals Mining ,\nBeattle Oold Mlnei _\nBldgood Klrkland \u2014\nBuffalo AnkiTltt _....\nCaitle.Trethewey .......\nCentral Patricia \t\nChromium m & s .....\nConiirum Mlnei \t\nConsolidated M * S .\nDome Minn .\nFOR AUTOMOBILE PARTS\nCity AUto Wreckers\nMACHINERY\nFor Immediate\nDelivery\nBABBITT\nHigh-speed mttol \u2014 guaranteed analysis.\nShafting, cold-rolled.\nChannel and Angle Iron.\nPipe, Pulleys, Mining Rail\nSee Us For:\nSawmill Mahllrelli. Cordwood\nSaw Mandrells, Small Mandrells for Home Work Shop use.\nBabbitt and Ball Beirlhg.\nSawmills,  Saws,  Power  Units.\nMining equipment I specialty.\nNelson Machinery\nEquipment Co.\nNELSON, B C.\n214 Hall St.\nDrawer 230\nFOR RENT\nAIR COMPRESSORS\nROCK DRIIiS\u2014CONCRETE\nBREAKERS\nwith hose and steels.\nPURVES E. RITCHIE 8. SON\n8.8 Hornbv Vanoouver\nEaat Malartlo \t\nFalconbrldgo  Nickel _.._\nBard Boot Oold _  _\nHoilingor \t\nHudson Bay M * B ............\nInternet Nickel \u201e\u201e,\u201e,\u201e |\u201e.\nKerr-Addison _.\nKlrkland Lakt \t\nLake Shore Mlnei \t\nLamaqut Contao \t\nLelteh Oold _ \t\nLittle Long Lao  \t\nMacL Cockshutt ......._____,.\nMadien Rid uke\t\nMalartlo Gold  _ \u2014\nMclntyre-Forcuplnt   _\t\nMoKiii-ll Red Ukt\t\nNlplislng Mining  _....\nNoranda \t\nNormetal .\nomega Qold _.\nPamour Porcupine .__.\u201e.\nPerron Oold  _.\nPickle Crow OOld \t\nPowell Rouyn Oold\t\nPreston Bait Dome _..._.,\nSin Antonio OOld _.._._\nShirrltt Oordon     11,80\n7.18\n.14\n1.88\n.80\n8.40\n1.01\n3.18\n1.49\n1.41\n\u26667.16\n38.00\n3.40\n4.50\n,   48\n10.88\n30.00\n80,88\n11.88\n1.05\n17.35\n6 20\n1.23\n1.28\n3.80\n2.3S\n3.40\n60 50\nI.N\n2.10\n81.78\n.85\n,46\n1.30\n1 10\n2.1)6\n1.00\n2.50\n4.00\nSiaoot Oold .............\nBladen Malartlo _.-\nduillvan Ooat ...-_-\nflylvtnlti _............\u201e\nTeck-Huihei Oold\nToburn Oold Mlnet.\nVenturst ....................\nWalts Amulst __.-\nWright Hargreavei.\nAunor ......._..___..._\nAumaqut.\nCochenour.,\nChestervllli\nNegui \u201e _\nSteep Book\nTrans 0 It ........__...\nOpp** oan\t\nCliimicil Reectrch .\nImperial _..\nInter Pitroliuro .....\nRoytlltt .\nTuaas Oanadlan ........\niMIUHTKItLS\nBell Telephone  \t\nBrewers A DlstlUert .\nBo Fowet \"A\"\nBc Power \"B\"\nCan Halting .\nCan Paclllo Itly  ....\nCm (nd Alcohol \"A\"\nDominion Bridge ....\nDistillers Seagram.. ...\nFord of Canada \"A\"\nCioodyear Tlrt\nImperial Tobacco\nMontreal Power _\nNat Steel Car \t\nPower Corp __.\nBteel of Can\t\nJl\n.88\nIM\nIM\nIM\n.41\n10.81\n4.58\n8.80\n8,70\n.88\n\\il\n1.18\nIM\n.70\n1.40\nil\n18.08\n30.8)\n18.00\nU5\n.   Ill\n.     IK\n.    ll\ni%\n80\n1114\nj:\n30\n89\n35 'A\n12\n20\n12%\nSixty Companies\nIncorporated\nVICTORIA, Nov. 10 (CP) - SUb\ncompanies were Incorvorattd thli\nmonth under tht Companlet Act\nmaking tb* bualest ilnglt month\nslnct INT, tcoordlng to W, U\nLlewellyn, Deputy RegUtrar oi\nCompanlt*.\nFor five tuootailve montha now\nthere have been mor* than DO new\ncompanies a month and there li\n.ivery indication the year will bttt\nill recent periods.\nThli week's new companlet Include th* following: California (B.\nC.) Oold Mining Corporation (N.P.\nL.) 1910,000. Clinic Optical Co, Ltd,\n110,000; 1'ox Speclaltlei Ltd, \u00bb10,-\n000; Arbuthnot Manufacturing Co,\nLtd. 125,000; Congold Mining tnd\nExploration Co, Ltd, (N.P.L.) I,-\n000,000 iheres N.P.V.; Brown Brothen Greenhoiisei Ltd, |28,000|\nManhall Batteries Ltd., $10,000; Un.\nIverul Plastics Co., Ltd., \u00bb10,000|\nAoma Asbestos Cemint Ltd., $10,-\n000; Clamol Holdlngi Ltd., $80,000;\nMagnet Blectrle Mtnuftoturlng.Co.,\nLtd, $25,000; Budg Salei and Servloe Ltd., $10,000; S. tnd O Logging\nCo., Ltd., $10,000; Leland Manufacturing Co., Ltd., $10,000-AU of\nVancouver.\nKtlamalka investment* Ltd., $28,-\n000; NaUonal Strvict Station Ltd,\n$10,000; Vernon, Salmon Arm Coach\nLinn Ltd., $25,000\u2014all of Vernon.\ntlland Farms Employees' Association, Victoria and Hellanct Health\nAssociation, Trail, wer* riglstirid *\nundtr the Societlei Aot\nJ\ntt\nVyiMluL JrtmcU,\nLONDON, ftov. $0 (OP)\u2014Tn* itock\nmarket closed irregular ifter t moder-\nate day's trading.\nIndustrials were mined.\nNEW YORK\u2014 The atock market\nbulge of tbe preceding session Inspired\nconsiderable profit cashing ind, while\nmany leaders continued the advance\non a restricted basis, numerous issues were pushed into the minus\noolumn.\nCantdlan Issues wen firm, posting\nfuctlonal gains.\nCHICAOO\u2014 Oraln futuree markets\nwere firm to strong with the entire\nlist, except December wheat, holding\nabove the previous cloee throughout\nmost of the session, December corn\nand rye ahd July buity were itrong.\nLiquidation accounted for eaal-\nneea of the nlarby wheat dellveiy.\nScattered buying and light offerings\neupporttd prlcu for thl deterred\nmonthi,\nMONTRBAL\u2014Led by Papers most pivotal grqups were, higher an average\nin transaefloni.\nAlooe Preferred, Noranda and Nickel\nIhowed rtsei ln Metals but Bnpenil\nWas easier In Refineries, In Mine*,\nAubelle and Prancoeur worked higher.\nTORONTO\u2014Industrial stocks finned narrowly and the mining groupi\nheld ateady. Volume wtl around tn*\nhalr-mllllon mark.\nThe early hours of trading brought\nIn heavy selling of Steep Rock ind the\nprice wilted to 3.40. About 30,000\nshares of the aUck changed handi.\nUte In the day the quotation Wtl\nStronger md the Cloel around 1.47\nWaa down 14 cent* nit Lakt Dufault\nWu another weak ltl* Metal,\nVolume In th* gold stocki wu supplied chiefly by thl Junior IsbuM, including Uuvleourt. Bldgood-Klrkland,\nAubelll, rrancoeur and Witt Ukl.\nWINMTPBD\u2014Bin purohtied MO,-\n(XX) bushels ef Ctniditn whllt.\nLocal buying tnd upturni it Chicago advancid ryi futurei mon than\na cent during the session. Little outside intereit wu neorded ln the maf.\nket.\nVANCODVt__\u2014Mines and Oils etlll\nheld firm. Volume wu light with only\n16,010 shares changing hands.\nBritish Law Lords\nKnow What a\n\"Juke Box\" Is\nLONDON. Nov. 10 (CP) - Tht\neminent British Uw lords who comprise the Judicial committee of th*\nPrivy Council knot* now what a\n\"Juk* box\" la.\nThey listened with amusement to\nduring a copyright Infringement\ncase concerning Canadian principals\nwhen Bamuel Rogers, K. C, who\ncame from Canada aa Counatl for\nont of the ptrtiu explained that\nwu th* nam* for a coin phonograph.\nAfter a two-day hearing, presided over by Lord Maugham, the !\ncommittee reserved judgment ln an\nappeal by Vlgneux  Brothen and\nKm Restaurants Ltd, Toronto, from\na Judgment of th* supreme court '\nof Ctntdt retraining them from Infringing OB tht' copyright of tht\nCanadian Performing Right* Society by playing ln public on a \"jukt'\nbox\" th* musical composition \"Sttr\nDust-\"\nTh* MM wu eilled * test on*\nconcerning th* copyright ot mm!*\nreproduced in public placei by phonograph.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\nJO lnd\t\n30 rajls..\n18 utlll.\n14744 ott.4T\n4J88off W\n19 48 off U\n\u2014\nNew 5 k.w. generators with U Rol\ngaa engines mounted on itlll best,\n110 volt, 60 cycle, ilngle phase   Immediate delivery from stock, 1710.\nAir Equipment Servici Ltd.\n1401   Hornby St. Vancouver\nLOST AND FOUND\nL06T-0-TB HOR_\u00ab BLA-tTCkT, BLUB,\nbetween Cfuoent Biy \u00abd retry\npinder leave at Dave Wade's. Re-\nwsrd.\nVANCOUVER   STOCKS\nWillitst trtnifsr. -Mats, ii, ota\ntpplled to thl Public truitUea Gom-\nmiMion, to ditoontinui th* seniduitd\npublle freight Herri-* hitwun Orty\n'vi idd Ortwfor* Biy. Any Mjee-\ntlons to the sbovl tpplloatlon miy be\nmads In writing en or btfort Dec 10.\n1H4. Idd-tuM to the superintendent\nef Motor Carrlen. Publlo utliltlsa\nCommlaslon, 1744 WMt OeorgH Street.\nMINIS\nBayonne \t\nBralorne _ \u2014\nCirlboO oold -\nOolcondi       , ~\nOrull Wihksne _..\u201e\nHedley Masoot j....\nBoot Belle \t\nPacific Nlrkel \t\nPend orsllle \t\npioneer Oold\t\npremier Oold\t\nPrlvit\u00ab*r \t\nReeves MUD\t\nReno Oold  ....\nSheep Cretk \t\nSllbek Prlmler  ..-.\nWhitewater   ....\nYmlf Tinkle Olrt\noas\nAnaconda  ~-\nAF Ooneolldated ..\nCal <*- Bdmonton .\nCorflmoll \t\nCommonwealth\t\nMcD Segur Bxp\t\nNltlonaJ  TtU  \t\nOktlU Oom  -\nHeine ?iu  \t\nRoyil Ctniditn -\nttoytlitt _\t\nvtnaltt \u2014\ni-imi-imi.i\nCtpltal Bst \t\nCout Brewerlet\t\nUnited Distill \t\nBid\nAsk\n.07\n.07*\nIS 1.5\nMil\n1.88\n_ 10\noen\n.08\nOOH\nfit y.\nm\n14\n\u2014\n.28\n1J\nuo\n400\n1 in\nM\n'jo\n05 u,\nl.oe\n.in\nM\nMS\nMV,\n1IH\n1.71\nat\nSSH\n.07\n41\n\u2022.\u00ab'!\n.03'^\n1800\n\u25a0tity,\nlas\n1*0\n6 to\n1 as\n415\n1 il\n,43\nIS\n\u202205 V,\n1.10\n.0\nns\nIt\n.0T,\n.14\n45\nM\n80.00\ntr\u00bb%\n120\nIIS\nPhotographs\nWill Be\nWelcomed\nNIW   YORK  STOCKS\nRENTALS\n\"\"OR    RJ3\u00bbT    8    ROOW    Hf)t!Kl    0\u00bbl\nNorth Shore, taatfTOnt property. H\nmils trrai tarty. TUpna_778-X_l,\nfttRNafi'ait^rafiiw room\nwith gaa 'Hu* Hotel\nrndtaW'itiiH.^unff oouhj.\nm fMi\u00abr*B, y-noni rro-u.\nAmtrletn Ot*\t\nAm Bmelt t Btf \u2014\n: Amir Ttliphoni ...\u2014\nAmerican  Tobacco  ....\nI Anteondt \u2014\nI Bath Bleel\t\n[ cinidiin rtcirio _\nOupont  -\nI otn \u00bbtetru .....\ntun Motors\t\nInternational   Nickel\nKrnn Copper ., -\t\nun Rub\u00bb*r _ -\ntm atMl  \t\nHh\n188n\n88\\\n17-.\nII\n10\nlet'A\n19'.\nIt's\nIS'.\n14 ,\n4*  ,\n62;\n>OOMANDiOA>D\nwofit-- toou tyro BOAJtc roet\nsu\\a*t in* IV) ywr oM -__u*\u00bb*\u00bb\nind owe of child during dty, Bm\nIn toenforukl*  ptltate\ns&\nIn. Bt*Mnah4a rales Tb. ldM-L\n*80\u00bbI  144 f-m  KANT AH KKHVU \u00ab\nCalgary Livestock\nCAIXJART. Nov SO (CB)\u2014Wtdnet-\ndty'i receipt. 78] cattle. M ttlvta.\n1*8 hogs. 1.1 aheap: todty IM tittle, sei tvog*.\nUmba 811*18-1180\nOood to choice butcher ateera 10AO-\n11 88; oommon to medium 7 50-10 35.\nOood to choice butcher helfera D00-\n1.78: r-mmnn to medium a. 0O-8 50\nOood rows 7 35-7 7ft: common to me-\n, dlum ft*0-7,00. oommon to medium\nTOtPTBraK   Mill. SCO-Ill.\nBlocker and ttodey aleera oommon\nlo medium ln0-7 7\u00bb Cann.ra and\ncutter. 2 00-8 00.\nFor the Nelson Daily News\nAnnual Pictorial Edition\nThlg Interesting edition of ttn Nelson Dolly Ntwl, which\nbecomes mort popular and la mort widely distributed ev*ry\nyear, will be published as,usual at the end of January next.\nPages of photographs are now being prepared for It. Pictures that ore illustrative of life in Kootenay help to make the\nedition a great force In advertising this district. Consequently,\nthose who send them In perform a real service for Kootenay.\nPictures of Summer Life\u2014Gardens, fruit orchards, bathing,\nswimming, fishing; Pictures of Winter Sports\u2014Skiing, Skating,\nsnow scenes' Pictures of happy outdoor scenes; anyfhln-j, In\nfact, that will give outsiders a good idea of the attractive condition* under which we live In this part of British Columbia will\nbe en]oyed by the thousands of readers of this Annual Pictorial\nEdition.\nPlease send in pictures early. Preparatory work prior to\npublication involves considerable time.\nAll photos or negatives will be carefully handled and\nreturned to the sender.\nAddress pictures, with desctiptive matter, to\nPhoto Editor\nDaily News Annual Pictorial Edition\nNelion, B.C.\n 11 ua. NILSON DAILY NIWS, f RIDAY, DECEMBER 1,1944\nTHI ORI4W WHITE WAY SIT TO\n^ MAOIC MftODY...HIAIT-WARMING\n# ROMANCE...GAY GOINOS-ONl\njh' \u2014 mr* i\nAnother M-C-M H\/.l |\nColored Cartoon:\n\"BLITZ WOLF\"\nLale.t World\nNow*\nComplete Showi\n7:00 \u25a0 9:05\nRHYTHM\nhYTECHNICOlORFUU\nMURPHY * SIMMS\nt\nCHAIltS CIO HI A\nWINNINGERDlHAVEN\nUNI HAflL\nHORNE < SCOTT\n\u2022-\u2022'ROCHESTER'---\nNANCY WALKER \u2022 BEN BLUE\nKtui) Btmen-Tbg Rass Sisters Dim Mmphy\nTOMMY DORSEY And His Orch.\nCIVIC\nTOYLAND\nReady for Vour\ninspection.\nMann, Rutherford\nDRUG CO.\nSHE-TOLD, England (CD \u2014\nLady Holbrook, wife of 94-ytar-\nold Sir Arthur Holbrook, Britain'!\noldest ex-member of Parliament,\nhu died,\nJ. P. Walgren\nGeneral Contractor\n301 Carbonate St.\nDid you know that It lt a happy\nfeeling to know that your hospital\nand medical bills will be paid in\ncue of serious illness or accident?\nSTUART AGENCIES\nPhone 980\nS77 Baker Street       NeUon, B. C.\nSHANNON. DAME\nSCORERS IN\nCALGARY GAME\nCAfcOAHY, Hov.\u00bbtCSE^-ltM.-\nC.S. Tecumieh put over the flnt\nbig surprise of the young Alberta\nService Senior Hockey League leaion when they defeated Currie\nArmyi itar-etudded lextet \u00ab-J here\nlut night\nThree itralght goal! In the aecond\nperiod put the Ten out front and\nthey protected their illm margin by\nlyitematic checking and \"Sugar Jim\nHenry'i\" ipectacular net-minding\nduring the hectic final period.\nDoug Calrni Willi Wo, Ernie Me-\nCullotigh tad Joe Shannon were\nthe markimen for the Tart While\nBunny Dane, George Dawei and\nReg Bentley tallied tor the toldten.\nIn their flnt League contatt Navy\nwere blanked 7-0 by R.C.AJ.\u201eMut-\ntangi although ln a pre-ieason exhibition game,they won over the\nArmy 6-5.\nLlneupi:\nArmy \u2014McAneeley; Boll, Lena,\nDame, Kaleta, R. Bentley, Sub* \u2014\nH. Black, Stewart, Grant, Andenon,\nDesmarias, Rlmttad, Dawes.\nNavy\u2014penry, McDonaldJemple\nton; Cplrne, Solowlnski, Van Dee.\nan; Subs-McCulough, W. Black,\nShannon, Warea, Dickie.  '.*\nThe tint VM. national ilectlon -to\nbe broadcut by radio were'tlioee announcing lb. election of prealdent\nHarding In MW_        *\t\nNEWS OF THE OAY\nRatar. _2o line, 27c line blaek feet\ntypi, lirgir type ratea on rcqueeL\nMinimum two llnea. 10* discount far prompt payment\niiillliliilllilliiliiinillilllliiiliilillilili\nH. A. Daundiri,  Chlmntj ttt**t>.\nPbone 8.7.\nPythian Mataa aale of srtuX Pee\n18, In tbi Mt MB.\nA tn new waaner motor, in itock at\nthe Btstty Rtpalr Bhop.\nMocilla mag.. ColUira, Can. Ben*\nJournal on tale at Valentine*,     .\nThi Wrlghta ln business again. Qro-\ncirlei, Confectionary. 104 Baker St\nExpect 25,000\nqt Miami Track\nRacing Opener\nildeW\n\u00bbt 25,000 or more the number Of ape*\nDonit i| heed of a ayndieate wh|\u00abh\nrevlved.'.GuUitream to take adytn\ntag* St tbe war-time turf boom.\nSeventeen better-than-average\nthoroughbred! were named.for the\n\u00bb_500: inaugural handicap and the\nalx furlong race wu split Into two\ngsct-n-ir ~ \"\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 -*\u2022\" -*, \u2014\nFor that cold and stuffed\nnose... for eosier breathing\nUse:\n~ \"VICJPS INHAWI\"\n40* each\nAt your Hexill Store\nCity Drug Co.\nOrlbbigi tonight, I>\u00abla Ball, 8.00\np.m. aharp, Adm. Me. geftmunenta.\nDont wait unUl attar the me\nIN8U-US NOW. Blackwood Agency.\nItor J, It. Watklna quality producti,\ncall Spenoer O. Colman, 180 Baker It\nRow la the time to ordir your\nChrlitmu gift lUbecrlpUon. Walt'a\nNewi.\nt\u00ab3\nPRETORIA, South Africa (CP)\u2014\nO.S.W. Talbot, 22 year old ion ot\nthe  late  Bishop  Neville  Talbot\nfounder ot Toe H, and former biihop of Pretoria, hu been killed ln\nNormandy.\nThs wsllbosrd thst Is fireproof, does not wtfp,\nshrink or swell.\u2014Uniform in thickness\u2014will take\nsny type of decoration.\n4'z8' sheet, only W thick.\n$1.84 PT Shsrt.\nBURNS\n'LUMBER f, COAL CO. 1\n..<hsAr.nL\n\u25a0\nSssl lh.\nFOR ARMATURE REWINDING, MOTOR REPAIRS . . .\nWe have a fully equipped shop for taking care of your\nmoto,r troubles promptly ond efficiently whether large or\nsmall.   Enquiries invited from industrial concerns\nTRAIL ELECTRIC SHOP\n1425 Dewdney Ave.\nTraU, B. C\nBecome a Regular Listener of\n\"Chapel in the Sky\"\nPROSRAMMI, AS BROUGHT TO YOU\nEVERY FRIDAY AT 9:45 P.M.\nTHROUGH THE COURTESY OF\nSOMER'S AMBIA.ANCK SERVICE\nLISTEN TO THIS EXCELLENT PROGRAMME TONIGHT\nAT 9:45 P.M. OVER STATION CKLN\nNOW is the time to\nmake your walls fresh\nand attractive with\nAlabastine. Apply it\non any wall surface over \u2022\nplaster, wall-board or\ntoiled painted walls.\nn 5-lb. package!\n75c PER PACKAGE\nt        for HOME IMPROVEMENT!\n...Easily, Quickly Erected\nThe longer yon delay male-\nIng improvements tnd\nrepairs, the more they coat\nModernise your homei\nRemodel nouied rooms,\nor attic\u2014with\nHURCH'S   HOT er COLO WATER\n-% iM\nto tiuxnl\"\nFIRE   PROOF\nAULr  BOARD\nGYPROC cats tnd fltHi u eeifly'u\nlumber.   Will not warp, sag, buckle\nor shrink i i i i is fire-proof tnd\nvermin-proof.\nSpecif** GYPROC and _ ecu re a sturdy,\npermanent job;\n$57.50 PER 1000 SQ.FT.\nGood Eqestqht is Pricefess-Good Light is Cheap!\nDo Your BREAD BAKING in\nPYREX WARE\nWith PYREX yoo tetneJly ee* tha breed while\nit ia baking. You know what ie going on inaide the\ndiah and you get a crop*** croat o,n the bottom tnd\neidea aa well aa the top.\nPYREX ia made for esrtay baking uee\u2014for bread,\npiea, cukes, puddings, custaida, egga, pot pica, beans,\nmacaroni, casserole, au gratia disliea, etc\nIt ie eanitaiy\u2014never wears oot and ie guaranteed\nnot to break in actual oven uee.\nA cotnp-rt. Mi may bt Ud tot u a\u00bbe_i\u00bb\nooal   alirt jr-irt tad .r~*\"T * *\"'   ' l\u2014 **\nCall today and make\nyour selection for\nChristmas.\n$1.80 doz.\n25-40o.<5O-WATT\nNSIDE  FROSTED.\nmak* it eery {\nPoor li ih ri n( ie tUt ctuet of\nBach \u2022ytitr\u00abin, f-ttigu* tnd\nUclt mi poit*. One out ef firt tchool\nchildrtn end on* oot mi three edulti\nh*vt defective tyte \u2014 tnd the bwl\npr.vtntion tgeinu tr\u00abtr*in ia good,\nbright light Wl diffueed.\n\u2022Check four lighting. Ute bulb* oi\n\u25a0ufident wettege to giro 70a proper\nlight The coit of good lighting ie\n\u25a0light The coit oi poor ey-Might ii\nhigh.\nWLeX  lamps\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nNELSON, B.C.\nBoasting chickens. Fresh killed,\ncleaned, dressed and dell wed Wo a lb.\nHaUetan*a 7M-RS.\nDanes   tonight,   IM  p.m.,  St\nHaU. Clsn McLesry. Mirg.r.t Ore-\nham's Orchettrt. Adm. 80c.\nFlowers and planta make' lovely\nXmas flfts. order, early, stock la\n\u2022caroe. Kootenay Flower shop.\nFinest assortment ot _\nUonerv. D. W. McDerby 'The Stationer\nis Typewriter Man\" \u2022__ Baker Btres.\nTrinity Bertfee 35 Tea sad Ssn\nof Work sad Home Cooking tomorrow, a to 0 o'cl-ck la the church HaU.\nSILVER SLIPPER CLUI\nAnnual Ntw Years Eve Frolic at\nLegion. Blue Blowers Orchestra. Dress\noptional.\n\u2022msO-TOAJ-XRA CLOB\nMeeting tonight, t o'clock, la club\nrooms 701 Front street. Colored slides\nand important buslneu.\nCheck your In sur an oe Covtr. Values\nhan Increaeed. Consult ut snd get\ntha benellt ot our Iniurance eiperl\nen ce. Robertion Rtalty, MJ Ward St.\nBrighten up your homt with an\nAladdin Mantle Lamp. A shipment ol\nlamps Just rec*'.ed. Economical,\n-mart-looking asst. trouble-l.ee .Illumination. Hlpperson's.\nATTENTION B.B.T.\nBro. 1. Burks will he at ths Bums\nRots! Deo. lat ter a dsy or two. Members eea eoaeoM him re B JtT. lnaur-\nsnos aad othsr matters.\n, Dee. Sth, l\u00bb1<!|. tpoesor*.\nlaaaaii Mtt-f *Seje   *\nSaviour's Chnrch\nmn, i:u\nttatj Ot,\nli  Helpwi.\nof at.\nhy Martha\npm. BsssnalVms, phoat\nMrt. sriard, _*.--U Ala. He.\nBaeet Kid Hockey, attend the benefit ahowiag' er Cora. r. 8. Farters\n\"Northwett reaaete.' Capitol Theatre.\nTuee. Dee. 5. Admlaslon 80c. TlckeU\nfrom aay KM Hockey player.\nCHKMTMAB TURKM8\nBroad breattod bronse turkert, raited on our Itrm, now btlng milk fattened. Bifid, draws, aad dtllTsred.\nCuntnt prlctt. Plwte eider early. Hal.\ntana Foul try Farm. Fh. IH-Kt.\nAMERICAN HOCKIV LIAQUI\nEA8TIRN DIVISION\nTeam: \u00bbllf APta\nBuffalo   . ,    I   I  14140 18\nHershey        t   t   1 50 S3 17\nProvidence _    4   7   2 42 50 10\nWEBTIRN DIVISION\nKttaburt-h ...__..._ \u00bb I'IM 9* IB\nIndlanapelU   ........'  1   \u00ab   5 51 38 19\nClevelehd   ............   8   7   1 42 49 13\nSi Loula -    1  \u00ab  2 28 41  I\nFrank McCool\nPlays Three Games\nWith Broken Toe\nTORONTO, Nov, *) (CP)-Coech\nClarence   (Rap)   Day  ot Toronto\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL    HOME\nAMBULANCE HRVIOI\n\"Distinctive runeral Service\"\n111 Koottnty SL Phona M\nsu2Qtmmttm**mtttttttttttmm i\nReliable Watch Repairing.\nPrompt Service\nHARVEY'S\n884 Baker SL\n\u00bbst)i>n>mittmm\u00bbMu\u00bb\u00bbiK)i\nUt Ui WInterlae Your Car\nAntifreeze, Lubrication,\nTune-up for Winter Starting\nAll work guaranteed.\nKOKANEE SERVICE\nBex m\nPhons 14\nMaple Leafi aaid today thtt Rookie\nGoalie frank McCool trom Calgary haa played in Toronto's laat\nthree National Hockey League limit whllt suffering trom a broken\nDelicious. . .\nChristmas Cakes\nat\nHOOD'S BAKERY\nFor General Contracting,\nBuilding and Repair*.\nN. H. NELSON\nSOS Cherry St.\nLarson's Lunch\n(Clow to Greyhound Depot)\nOpen 8 a.m. to I p.m.\nHome Cooked Meals\n1\nGowtis\nThe Ideal Gift\nGladden hit heart with\none of these All - Wool\nGowns. In plain shades of\nWine, Green and Blue.\nAlso In Tartans.\nw*.n to ftt.oo\nEMORY'S\nLIMITED\nTHE MAN'S STORE\ntoe. Nature ot the Injury waa ills\ncovered thla week.\nVou eea remove n stains trom\naUver by rubblni lt with a cloth that\nhaa been dipped In wet aalt\nW. W. Powell\nCompany, Limited\nTht Homt ef Good Lumber\nTelephone 17\u00ab\nWholesale and Retail\nfttt tt Stanley Street\nLA. CAMPBELL & Co.\nCherttree AcCBeitfSMtl\nAuditors\n141 Baker SL\n-**\u2022\nAnnual CM* Toy Bile, K3tit.\n\u25a0play la vacant Fashion IBM start\nnext Soo* Baktry. Monday, Dee. A.\nOpen Saturday-. Order by\n847.Y or 1004-R. Wl_talbt*1xr\u00bbl\nTommy Oust IJ 00; Doll Oo Carta\nt_ 00; Dollt Bed 41-15. Irtmlnt Boirdt\nll 00; Trains t-.OO; etc.\nOrder tarly \u2014 DtHvery.\nrtlNEBAl, NOTICB\nBRADSHAW\u2014Bthtl Marlon, passed\naway Wed, Hot. tt. Fuatfal ttrvlcte\nwill bs held from BL etTlour't Bro-\nOatbadral on Bat, Dee. S, at 1 p.m.,\nRev. I. O. Holmu oftldatlna. IMneral\nirrsnssmenta have been tntrusttd to\nSoman Funeral Homt. mtamaat ta\nNtlson Memorial Park.\n.       CABD OF THANHS\nMr. W. Watklns and family and Mr.\nW. B. Jartds and family wish to thank\nall trttida fee kindness aad eapraaa.\ntons of sympathy eneadtd to them\ndurlnc their bereaveoent In the loes\nof s lo-ilne wife and dsi\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nrem tAiJt \u2014 AJX-smtL cmuyn\nerlb larie slat, hlth chair, commode\nchair, chaise lonate, petr *Mt. Ala.\nPhone 441-U -,\nFLEURY'S  Phormecy\nm\nCompounded\nAeoirtlely\nMed Aria Blk.\nPHONI 25\nily t\nStyled et\nHaiAh Tru-Art\nBeeuty Salon\nJohnjtont Block\nPhone UT\nL\\\nH.-0-T\nFOUNTAIN DRINKS\nat the\n\u2666Melon Dew4\nVet-\u00bb-e imimin\nSOMERS' FUNERAL\nSERVICE\ntM Bekei St Phont Ml\nOpen Diy and Nlfhf\nCremetortua           A___ralaaee\ntaaaataassetttt ats<\nROSCOI\nAND\nFOURNIER\neARA\u00abiMn\t\nensmmtm^***^\nsfcaaatlllHWWWWgWeW^\nF. H. SMITH\nif ifa\nFttMnMS\n151 lake, If\nvtttemmmmm\n4-Piece Walnut\nBEDROOM, SUITE\n$79.00 end up\nHOMI FURNITURI\nTora\nELECTRICAL\nAPPLIANCES\n\u00ab OOOD UPAIB\nH ELECTRIC Ca\n574 B.ker It\nTIRE PUMPS\nFoot-operated \u2014 forcei air\nat high pressure  Into any\nsize tlrt.     .\nCUTHIIHT MOTORS\n\u25a0lie     '. 'miL.mtiu'ksm',.aimmmwpis\\t\\'     S-SL-T\niiimimniioieiMieteaMMM'iMnii':\nHivt the |ofc Dent Riitit\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBM\nPHONE 115\nEMPIRE CLEANERS ft DYERS\nWe Call For and Deliver\nPHONE 288\nMen*\u25a0 and ladlea M_W\nWinter Coats   \u25bc\u2022\u25a0\u2022**\nMens, ladln. KUta. ladlee*    tAm\nDresses, plain  -\t\nClearance\nOf FALL AND WINTER\nCOATS\nReg. Price\n$29.$0\n$35.00\n$49.50\n$24.50\n$16.95\nSpecial\n$22.50\n$26.25\n$37.50\n$18.95\n$12.95\nSpecial Rack of 25 Dresses\nReg-price $8.95 to $29.50\nSALE PRICE\n$6.95  to  $19.95\nj\/lihWanua       jaVidu*\nLIMITED\nING MACHINES ARE WORTH\nWAITING FOR ...\nMcKAYtSTRETTON\nLimited\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 206\nAna Mullein.\nWitch tor the\nSUGAR BOWL\nSPECIALS\nAuction\nI trill hold en Aototonjt Dm\nP-JIUC MARKET\nWEDNESDAY, DEC. *\nAnrone deelroui ol puttlnf tny\nartltlH la this aale. may tU'tt n\nMM IM tv pbone et N or\nioe-u\nWttah Dsllv Newa tor parUeulara\nA\n*m\ni\nYour Calendar\nREMINDER\n.\n1944   DECEMBER  1944\n3\n10\n17\n4\n11\n18\n5\n12\n19\n6\n13\n20\n% 25 26 27 28 29 30\n7\n14\n21\n\u2122\n1\n8\n15\n2\n9\n16\n22 23\nFor Car Co-uervation\nYour Car Conservation Headquarter.\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCOMPANY LIMITED\n35    Phone   35\n\u2014\n^aumtaM^atm\n_*_\u25a0\u25a0&\nmmimu^^t^^tmmmmtalt^mmmmm\n. ..\n\u25a0Aril\n.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1944_12_01","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0417206","@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":"1944-12-01 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1944-12-01 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\/1.0417206"}