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An International commission to govtrn Europe'i Inland waterways would ba\nparticularly Interested In the control of (1) the Kiel Canal which\nconnecti tha North Set with thi Baltic; (2) tha Rhine River; (S) tht\nDanube and (4) Oil Dardanelles, linking the Black Sea tnd tht Mediterranean. Thtn thert It tht final peace arrangements Involving tht\nold Balkan iitellltei of Hitler (a) and highlighting the troubles tf\nBulgaria, Romania, Hungary and Austria. Finland'i out (b) will alio\ncome up. Alio thi matter of Qermin'i Western boundaries have\nbeen left untettlid, with France planing to take over tht Rhlneland\nundtr tome lort ef International authority.\nisJioJ) Vrges \"Yes\"\note for\nuor Act Reform\nVM\u00abMUA, Stpt 18  (CP)-A\nw liquor act or a \"wholesale\nrevision ef tht present act\" waa\nurged by Rt Rtv. Horace E. Sexton, Anglican Bishop tf Britlih\nColumbia, In I public address\nhtrt today.\nHi  urged  hli hearen te vote\n\u2022Yes,\"    ihould    tht  Government\nhold a plebiscite It tht Oct. 25\nProvincial election as to whether\nalcoholic bevtragel may be aerv-\ned with mull In public placet,\n' \"I im told on good authority,\" be\nlaid, \"that tht present act is not\n-.together   workable.   Our   great\nneed la ln reform of our liquor\nlaw...\"\n\"If people tre going to drink, let\nthere be faculties for doing it more\ndecently .... Let us try to Improve a. system which seems deliberately or inadvertently rde*ign_d\nto make tht consumption of aloo-\nfrlll-VWHa'*-l \"\u00bb VtnW'tfttStm\ndlireputable is possible.\"\nfcrOULD MINIMIII ABUSES\nStating that the British \"pub\"\ntyitem may not Be perfect. Bishop\nSexton asserted it wai i great improvement on British Columbia's\nbeer parlors and .that returning servicemen reient dictatorship ai to\nwhit they are going to drink after\nexperiencing the freedom of the\nOld Country \"pub.\".\n\"In a free eountry every cittern\nIhould be able to order beer, wine\nor any other alcoholic beverage -\nio desired and should be permitted\nto have a drink with hli meals, in.\nstead ot retorting to hotel bedrooms or automobilei to Indulge in\nsecret drinking,\" he added.\nBishop Sexton said he believed\nthat many abuses of the liquor\nlaw would be \"greatly minimized\"\nor disappear If alcoholic drinks\nwere available in moderate quan\ntitles tt dance suppers u well as\nyrith meell In public plica.\n. He termed beer parlors \"guttling places,\" when beer consumed without food U \"a potent cause\nof drunkenness.\"\nDeclaring he waa not to bt regarded u tht friend of tht liquor interest! my more thtn\nthose who held opposite views\nwere to be regarded u tht sup.\nportejs   \u00b0f   bootleggers.   Bishop\ned,thAt refjrm,.\n'^nor'Acf is tn \\ir-\n. gent necessity.\n\"tt the Government ihould wisely consult the electorate al to\nwhether alcoholic beveragei miy be\nserved with meali ln public places,\nI would idvise ill my hearers to\nreply, with t molt decided yes.\"\nHe laid further thit'\"while many\ngreat .Christian! ire teetotallers,\nperhaps the belt known total abstainer in our time wai Adolf Hitler; who certainly wu no paragon\nof virtue.\"\n$161,615,000\nHighway Program\nRecommended\nraamA, sepi n <cp> - -a\n\u00bblfJ7,\u00ab1S,000 hlghwiy program In\nWeitern Canada hai been recommended to the Dominion Government hy the United Statei-Alaska-\nPrairiei Highway Asociation.\nAt \u2022 meeting held here Frldiy the\nAiiocUtlon eStimited that the program would require 4,2711,000 min-\ndaya to conitrtict and would Involve\n6.707 mllei of road.\nTht program, officials laid,\nwould give ready acceaa to the main\ncltici, towns md pirki of the Prtl-\nTie Provincei ind Britlih Columbia\nMANITOBA MILEAGE\n1 UUuge In Manitoba would be 101\nat a coit of |17,5_J.OOO, Siikatche-\nwin 1,444 mllei st tU.000,000, Al-\nbarta 1,823 it $45,5M.0O0 and British Columbia 2740 it Mg.500,000.\nConitructlon of m tll-wetther\nhird-iurfice highway connecting\ntht Alaiki Highway route was\nrecommended to thi Provlnclil\nGovernment! of Manitoba, Silklt-\nchewin, Alberti and Britlih Columbia. Purpose of the road would\nbe to enrourage tourist traffic.\nA resolution wu adopted urging tht Dominion Government to\nlid thoet tnxloui to eslibliih tour\nist facilities tn tht Northwest Territories, the Yukon md Northern\nBritlih Columbia.\nQUICKIES . . . Sy Km Riynolds\n\"Yeu'ri right, deer, I ihei.lt'\nhave t hobby. Remind mt ti\nlook tn tht Nilien Daily Ntwi\nWint Adt for I timer.'.\"\nPUBLIC RELATIONS\nCHIEF RETIRING\nOTTAWA, Sept 16 (CP) \u2014 Joseph W. G. Clerk, 49, dlrectcr-ln-\nchlefof public relation! tor the\narmed forces, has resigned his pot\nto return to business lite, a Joint announcement from Defence Minliter\nAbbott md Air Minister Gibson said\ntonight.\nThe. resignation will become effective In October and the exect\ndate will be announced later.\nThe Ministrri laid, they received\nthe resignation \"with regret\", Mr.\nfcbbott added that the lervlcei were\nlorry to tee Mr. Clark go.\n\"We Will misi him greatly and\nwe appreciate the pains ht has taken to tee that his department la\nworking smoothly before be leaves.\"\nHe added that Mr. Clark'i work\ncould not be over-estimated In the\ntelling of the story of the building,\nfighting and demobilizing of the\narmed forces. Through Mr. Clark's\nefforts, he aid, a day-to-day record ln word, picture and sound was\navailable on_Uie tervlce effort.\nCALL HIM ALPHA\nNOQALES, Art-, Sept. II (At*)\n\u2014 Tony  Papathoodorokoumount-\nourogiar-akopouloa, Jr., wm born\nlast WMk to proud pirenti, Mr,\n\u2022ad Mrt. (read above), Senior.\nft*\nm %*&*\nN.ils<.n Lions Club\neUcttlvet Charter\u2014Pat}* S.\nM.LA. Fights for\nIneomt Tax, Benefit.\u2014Page J.\nAir Hsroos Honored\nbi Britain.\u2014Pago S.\nI0CSLT\nBORDER CLAIMS\nBEFORE\nBIG-5 TODAY\nLONDON, Bipt. 16 (AP)-Yu\ngoiliv and Italian reprtlintatlvet\nflew to London todty, armed with\nconflicting clilma on tht pert of\nTrleite, the province ef Vtntlll\nGlulla and thi Istrlan Penlniuli,\nto be laid tomorrow before the\nBig Five Council of Foreign Mills,\nllrttft.. .....\nThe Big Five will ieek an iml-\nciblo lettlement of' the Ittllin-\nYugoslav border dlipute, a lource\not itralned relitlom tlntf tht tnd\nof tht Flnt Great Wir.\nDiplomatic quarters expressed the\nbelief that the first big clash between British-American and Russian interests at the conference\nmight develop over thit Issue.\nBritain\nInterested\non Elections\nBy ROM MUNRO\nCanadian Preu ttaff Writer\nLONDON, Sept IS (CP Cable)-\nEuropean countries tre preparing\nfor general elections to choose new\nParliaments for tha flnt time since\nthe. German irmiel swept over the\ncontinent md here ln Britain, where\nSocialism rode to power last July,\npolitical observer! are keenly\nwatching development! across fix\nChannel.\nThit Fall at least tlve European\ncountries go to the polls with tht\nFrench elections Oct. 21 the mott\nsignificant vote. Norway chooses a\nnew Parliament on Oct 8 and tiny\nLuxembourg votes Oct. 10, although\nthere is a possibility of a postpone-\nment. In Yugoslavia a general election has been called by Marshall\nTito for Nov. 11 and. Czechoslovakia's complicated election procedure' mutt be completed in time for\nParliament to meet aa scheduled\nOtLSS.\nMANY NEW PARTII8\nIn tht liberated European countries there it t great resurgence ol\n\" during\ndeveloped from the resistance movements ire striving to win popular\napproval -\nThen tn unlikely to be my\nWinter election! but Belgium il expected to go to Sit polls ln March\nand Holland will probably vote ln\nApril. Denmark il lilted to have\nSpring elections, and to it Poland\nwhich is gradually getting its political situation straightened out\nThe muddled situation in'Greece\nprobably will not bt cleared up sufficiently to hold a vote until the\nSpring. The problem it present Is\nme of extending the authority ot\nth* Government In Athens to the\nprovincei to enable tret flections\nto be conducted.\ntn Austria no ditt hai yet been\nset for elections. Thi provisional\ngovernment of Dr. Karl Banner U\ntitnbllihed la the Runian lone and\nH U cut off hy demarcation linei\nfrom the British, American tnd\nFrench tones.\nIt is generally believed thit elec\ntioni will not be nnctiontd by Britain and tht United Statet in tome\nBalkan countrict-whlch ire In the\nRuasian tone in Influence\u2014until\npeace treatiei with them are concluded. The council of Foreign Min-\nUteri li scheduled to draw up these\ntreaties durldg Its current conference in London.\nONLY RETAILERS\nCOMPLAIN, SAYS\nFOOD CHAIRMAN\nButchers Give Away\nMeat to Avoid Waste;\nOpjjbsltion Grows   \u2022\n\u00aby Tht etntdlM Ft*'..;\nEvidence of Canadian meat deil-\ners' dissatisfaction With tht new\nsystem ot meat rationing continued\nto pile up during the weekend ti\nretailers prepared to place thilr\nprotests before the Prices Board\nnext Wednesday, but K. W. Tiylor,\nthe Prjcei Board's Deputy Chairman for Food, said in Ottawa the\n(inly. objections to meet rationing\nhid com* from the retailen.,\nMr. Taylor said letteri and tele-\ngramt received by tht Prlcei\nBoard Indicated \"nothing but\ncommendation from every elm\nof tht community In touch wth\nui with tht exception of retailor..\" He uld ht had received\nbetween (0 and 30 letteri from\ncitizen and ill approved rationing except ont Who contended\nCtnada had no need for export\ntrade anyway.\nTRAOI MEAT\nFOR COUPONS\nAbe Lcvine, Moncton, N.B., melt\ndealer, on Sttiitdiy gtvt tway Mt\npoundi of bologna, 200 pounds of\nfrankfurters and 200 pounds of chic*\nken loaf to customers who gavt up\nration coupons and tokens. Otherwise, Levine uid, ht feared tht\nmeat Would spoil because customers\ndeclined to surrender couponi and\nalio pay for it.\nIn Vancouver, Moore's Delicatessen gtvt tway pork loaves, ham\nloaves aryi veil tnd cheese loaves\nto customers who surrendered tour\nmeat tokens.\nRefusal of consumers to expend\ncouponi for cooked meat \u2014 they\npreferred to keep thilr coupons for\nweekend roasta\u2014led to widespread\ncomplaint! ot wtlttge ind to a\npromise by Finance Minister Ililey\nthat t change in coupon valutg for\ncooked meats would be considtied.\n.',\nHon. N. A. McLarfy\nFormer Stale\nSecretary, Dies\nOTTAWA, Sipt. 18 (CP) - Boa.\nNorman A. McLarty, SS. former\nStat* Secntiry ln tht Government\not Prlmt Minliter Mackentli King,\ndied suddenly of a heart attack at\nhii home here early today.\nTht former Minister, who resigned from tilt Government shortly before tht last general election and\nretired from politics, had appeared\n\u25a0old-line    .There wert nj. further\nit IffiW *te_ Ko-tfWB WBt\n^eory Airmen Go\nto Jail\nfor Forty Winks\nNEW WESTMINSTER. B. C, Sept.\nN (CP) \u2014 Two lirmen from the\nRCAF ilr station at Boundary Bay,\nnear ben, walked Into New Wot-\nminster Police Station today and\nasked \"whit do you have to do to\nget Into Jail\"\nAfter I night of celebrating, tht\nairmen, umble to ttnd accommodation ln hotali decided they would\ngo to tht police itatlon tt catch t\nt.w hours ileep. \u25a0\n'Tht Police Department provided\nthem with the iccommoditlon thty\n* in ted.\nHorror Camp Victims lo Testily\nas Nazis'Trials Open Today\nLU-N-ilHO. Sept IS (AP|-\nJn.\u00bbf Kramer, Director of th* nt-\ntorioui Bitten eeneentrttton\nr\u00abmp, Md 47 Elite Quird henchmen will go en trill tomorrow\nwhew en Allied trlbunil alta for\nthe flnt time In lodgment ef the\nNlll  horror cimps.\nThey were lodged In celll ht this\nmedlevil city todiy while \u25a0 Prltlm\nmilitary court completed InMMn-'\nute trlil preparation. Conviction\ncan meen death by \"ranging nr\n\u2022hooting, or\u2014at the1 discretion of the\ninurt Imprisonment up to life,\nconfutation ot VPfttif of mere\nfine\nWhile the ilifinfliifhinrrirt in\ntheir celli, trucks brought nearly t\nicon of wltnueei scroti Lueneberg\nHeath from BtlMn lUelf. Th* wit-\nneaeei did net come from the horror\ncompound, long since burned down,\nbut from neighboring military bar*\nrocks, where they have been recovering from iteration and di-\nThe itlnking evil that wm tht\ntot of Relun> prlioneri has htto\ntranilated tap thi formil legillsrn\nof \"violation of the law and ulaget\nof war,\" bui the evidence will be\na complete recital. Illuttreted ei\nmolhn picture of th* drgridlllon\ntnd dfjfi br itarvitkm, typhus tnd\nother iifmet undtr tht Krui-B if\nIrt Prices\nofficial* had announced Saturday a\n\"sweeping lnvestlgition\" of reports\nthat Montreal ind District butch.\nen wir* going to Ignore rationing\nregulations hid been conducted.\nOnly three alleged Infractions were\ndlicovered in Montreal Saturday.\nONI HAM FOR\nONI RESTAURANT\nBom* Ottawa butchen Slid thty\nwert forced to throw meet away\nSiturdiy owing to tht low tbb ln\nlalei. They hivt decided against i\nprotest itrlke pending the outcome\nof Wednesdty'i conference between\nmeat trade representative! and the\nPricei Boird. Butchers in Pembroke, Ont., Northwest of Ottawa,\nhave decided to don next Siturdiy\nunleM tht meat rationing il modified.\nAt Canada'i lecond ment rationing plan entered iti second week,\nreitaurant, hotel and cafe owners\nin Brentford, Ont, announced that\nthey had called a protest meeting\nOne reitaurant operator complained\nthat th* number of meat coupons\nallowed him wai 11, lufficient to\nbuy ont cooked htm.\nSome butchen In Brantford ire\nreported to be Ignoring tht re\ntlon regulation! In part or alto\ngithtr.\nA luggeitlon mide It t Chathim,\nOnt, meeting of 000 Weitern -Ontario butchers that all rationing\nequipment be ttnt back to the\nPricei Board found little fivor with\nJohn King, Preiident ot tht Toronto Mett Dealer.' Aisoclation, who\nsaid there was\"no poisibility ot his\nauociition following mlL\nStrikes Threaten\nIn More Plants\nWINDSOR, Ont, Stpt 18 (CP)-\nStrikt Committees wire orgmlied\ntonight by Loral IM of tht United\nAutomobile Workeri (C.I.O) in\nprepiritlon tor ponlble lympithy\nitrlke ictlon in thi walkout Involving 10.000 production employeei of\nthi Ford Motor Compiny of Cinadi\nLimited called tait Wedneidiy by\nII AW. Local JOO,\nDate tor itriku tmong thi 8,000\nLocal 199 memben ln M Windier\nplinli employing 1X000 workeri\nwill be subject to rroommtndiUon\not tht U.A.W. Policy Cotamlttet\nIn Windsor lad ipproval ot Ike\nInternational Executlvt Boird of\ntht Union, i ipokMman Mid tonight Strlkt eotii hurt\nilrtidy been taken In IM pllnti.\nIncluding thit of Chryiler Corporation which emplnyi -.000 men. Th*\nother 11 employ * total ef more\n504 SERVICEMEN\niOARD TRAINS\n.=OR HOMETOWNS\nHALIFAX, Sept. 18 (OP) -\nHomeward bound after yeari\nfighting thilr eountry'i battle\novencii, a group of SOS Cinadlan\niirvlcsmen wire ' on Dominion\n\u2022oil tonight after their arrival\nhire iboird thi hoipltal ihlp Lldy\nNelion avtr tht weekend, \/\nDlumbtrkitlon begin thli\nmorning, with 48 men from Military Dlitrlct No. 8 (Neva Sootla\nand Prlnc* Edward liltnd) going\nMhtrt first. Thty were followed\nby mn frem all parte of th* Dominion.\nHtr pMiertger Hit was predom-\nImntly mtdl up of Army veter-\n, tni but there were 49 airmen tnd\n; t ftw iillon aboard n will.\nill in i ' '\nMcLAnTY\nin excellent health Siturdiy it tht\nwedding of hli daughter, Sheila,\nwK> married Lieut. John McCaugh-\ney, of Ottawa, t member of the\nRoyal Canadian Navy.\nLater at homt ht gavt no Indication ot illness. During thi light\nhowever, he got out of bed and fell.\ndying ilmost immediately.\nRev. A. Ian Burnett, Minliter of\nSt Andrew's Church, who officiated at the wedding informed a shocked congregation of the death ot one\nof Its most esteemed members.\nHit widow, formerly Dorothy Mc-\nColl, daughter ot J. & McCoU of Toronto, ind hli younger diughter,\nBarbara, wert it home ind the\nnewly-mirried couple who had\nstarted on their honeymoon returned from their-journey. '-\nWORKED FOR VETERANS\nTht funeral service will be held\nTuesday is SL Andrew's Church\nand the body will be taken to To-,\nronto for cremation.\nSine* retirement from the Government, Mr. McLarty, native of St.\nThomas, Ont, had been busy with\nphilanthropic and literary organli\nntions, pirticulirly in effort! to assist men ind women returning from\noverseas. ,\nHt wu \u2022 mm whoie towering\nfigure, hippy smile tnd hit never-\nfailing humor, spread gaiety among\nall who knew him. Hli compiny\nilwiyt ittnd ready to do tnythlng I\nTo Mr. McLirty public lift wu t\nduty and when ha decided to re\ntire, he i|ld:\n1 hav* been In Pirliiment tor 10\nyttrt ind i Minliter for six md I\nthink I have done my ihire. but I\nlawyi itind ready to do inythlng I\ncm to batter th* lot of th* returned\nmm md women.\"\nElected In 1S3S u Liberal member\nfor Essex West, which Includes pert\nof Windsor, ht Oiled three dlttarent\nportfolio*\u2014Pottmuter General, Labor md State Secretary.\nOf then ht alwayi Instated his\nmora thin two yein u Libor Minister, from 1SJ8-41. tt the start of the\nwir were tht hardest\nJAPAN'SWAR\nCRIMINALS\nTOKYO* Sept. 11 (Af\u00bb)- it-\npan'i mllltirlita orowded Yoko.\nhimi'i prlion todiy ind with thi\nteehnlcil irreit af Shlgenorl To\ngo,who It Foreign Minliter helped plungi hit nation Into t dim-\ntroui war\u2014thi manhunt for tip.\nrung wir criminal suipecti wai\nneirly ended. , -\nG\u00abn. MacArthur lummoned Japan's Premier Hguhl-Kuni to hii\nHeadquarters tnd. It was believed\nhe told the Prince the ume grim\nfacts laid down Saturday to the\nnow-censored Japanese press.\nThat wu \u00ab blunt itatement that\nJapan wu * batten nttlon, not ah\nequal of thi Allies; hence Hlgashi-\nKuni'i Government could not negotiate with the vlctorloui powers\nbut would do as It wu told.\nIMPOUND ASSETS OF FORMER\nENEMIES >     , ,\nWilli Jsptn's S,000,000-man home\narmy mora thin halt dlurmed. Admiral Halsey innounced hii Third\nFleet demolition iquids had dismantled th* once-formidable coastal defences South md East at Tokyo.\nGen. MacArthur also ordered tht\nJapanese to Impound tht asseti of\nformer enemy nations\u2014 Germany,\nItaly, Bulgaria, Finland, Hungary,\nRomania and Slam\u2014tnd to preserve in good condition thaw of tht\nUnited Nations\nThe men filing into their cells in\nthi three-storey Yokohama prison\nwere changed indeed from the days\nwhen they rampaged through the\nPacific.\nOne General professed to hav*\nopposed the wir, an Admiral Mid\nthe Navy sought only peace md not\non* among than would stand up\nmd admit responsibility either tor\nthe conflict or atrocities.\nOnly Hideki Tojo, th* fallen dictator, would, admit responsibility\ntor war md even ht Insists thit\nhistory will den* him of the stigma of I wir crimlml.\nTojo, recovering qWcWy from \u2022\nbotched suLpidt tttemft wi\nhit\nu hii wound win permit lid ;\nqueers cm b* trrangtd.\nCan't Decide Which\nMan She Wants\nOAKLAND, Calif., Sept 18 (AP)\n\u2014Nivy Lt Jamei tt Cales, Jr., faced an uncertain marital future Siturdiy ifter i itralned reunion with\nhis pretty blonde wife, Laurie, who\nremarried after Cales wu officially\nreported killed tn actlon.\n\"You're broar* minded, Milter,\"\nL.urie told the Nivy flier yester-\ndiy iter he arrived by ilr from\nJipan where he wu freed from t\nprison camp. Ht uw for tht first\ntlmt their baby boy.\nLaurie hu not indicated which\nhusband she wanti\u2014Lt. Cilei or\nArmy Lt. Etnn P. Bernstein, wounded European veteran, who hu tiled\nsuit for tnnulment but hu not definitely uld he wanti to give her\nup.\n'This Ii going to take \u2022 long\ntitae I've married two wonderful\nfellows,\" Laurie said after Lt Cales\ntold her he wanted to remain married to her.\n120-Mile Wind\nWrecks Blimp Base;\n2 Die, 50 Hurt\ni \u25a0 \u25a0 * \u25a0 I\n. MIAMI, Flo., Sept. 16 (AP)\u2014Domogs from wind ondf\nflame In lost night's hurricane was estimated at $50,000,000\ntoday with the greatest loss at the United States Navy's Rich*\nmond blimp base where three great hangars collapsed, burned\nand destroyed 366 airplanes and 25 patrol blimps.\nThe loss at the blimp base alone was between $30,000,000\nand $40,000)000, a Navy spokesman said.. An exact figure\nwill be determined by a Board*\"\nof Inquiry novv Investigating\nthe accident In which one man\ndied.\nFifty lallon war* Injured, only\na few of them lufficlently ta be\nsent to hospital. Hirry M. Schutt.\not Mltini, Civilian Chief at fit j\nbase wu killed.\nTh* 90-foot-hlgh roof* of tht\nthree hinjin \u2014 lirgeit tingle-\nipin wooderi itructurei In tht\nworld \u2014 eolliptad ai hurrlcme\nwlndt tf 110 mllei an hour howled icrou tht itatlon.\nPlanes iheltered within their\n1100-foot length md 320-foot width\nburit into flame u wreckage tell\nupon them md the three itructurei\nwent up in flames. Tht mm wire\ninjured u they fought tht flames\nUt tht roaring itorm.\nTURNS TO If A\nTht death toll itood it two tonight u tht itorm whipped near\nDiytom Beach, headed back toward\nth* sea. Tha other death was, a\nRondurm seaman who drowned\nwhile attempting to rescue his dog\naboard tht storm-foundering two-\nmuted schooner Icaros. '\nA tete afternoon weather idvli-\nory reported tht itorm -still blowing at 75 mllei tn hour over t\n\u2022mill irt*.\n\"Northent itorm wimlngt hivt\n' bun ordered 'North of Jickson-\nvllle (Florida) to Capt HUteris,\"\nKM\nrt of the lUn-m hid ipent\nIti main fury, howevet, ft it battered acrou the keyi with a vidoui\nsideswipe st Miami md rampaged\nacrou tht Everglades. \/\nRAILWAY PIONEER DIB\nMONTREAL. Qui- Bept IS- A\npioneer in railway dining car service md an officer and employee\nof the Canadian Pacific Hallway for\nMi yean, William Arthur Cooper\ndied here suddenly thli morning In\nhit TSth year.\nHt wu manager ot the C.P.R.'s\nsleeping, dining ind parlor car\ndepartment from 1013 until 1S3S\nwhen he retired.\n300 Canadians\nFrom Hong Kong\nte!\nBy WILLIAM STEWART\nMANILA, Sept IS (CP Cable)-\nMore than BOO Ctnidlin prisoner!\nliberated from Japanese camps,\nwhere they were taken ifter Hong\nKong's fall Christmas Day, 1941, are\nexpected to leave here Tueiday on\ntheir homeward Journey by sea.   j\nThe group excludes 80 hoipltal\ncases who will remain under medical care until 1 Canadian hospital\nship arrives ln tht Philippine* to\npick them up.\nThirty two other Canadiin prisoners, among the first to reach her*\nfrom Japanese campi, await air pillage to th* United State* md Canada.\nWith only I imall trickle of O*.\nnadions arriving here from tht Japanese home Islands became of bad\nflyiflg weather, Tuesday'! evacua-\ntlon party will leave th* fl\u00bbn_tl\u00ab\u00ab|\nsection it the reception camp here\nalmost bar*.\n15? Million USs.\nTourist Dollar\nWASHINGTON, Sept. VKKTr--\nAmericin tourist! irt expected te\nspend $159,000,000 in Canada thi*\nyeir white Canadian visitor! are\nspending ibout f-3,000,000 to t\u00bb\nUnited States, Semtor June* Mead\n(Dem.-N. Y.) uid today. Tha Department of Commerce eitimitet,\nhe said in a statement, represent a\nreturn to tht peik pre-war yeirs.\n-\u00ab\u2014\u2014-\u2014_-__\u2014\u2014_\u2014_\u2014__.\n2 DIE IN BLAST\nCLYDEBANK, Scotland, Bept IS\n(CP)\u2014A blinding explosion ripped\nBritain'! largest battle-hip, the \u00ab,-\n000-ton H.M.S. Vanguard, ln a fitting-out basin here tonight killing\ntwo workeri md injuring itx\notheri.\nNips Sign Hong\nKong Surrender\nJ-*\nHONG KONQ, Sapt 18 (CP)-\nAs every winhlp In thi hirbor\nRATTLESNAKES HIGHLIGHT BURIAL\nMi\/\"\n1.000.\nTht union ipokwmm Mid\nmembers ot Local IM tre inrnoui\n\u2022a Imraainle wilkout but\nipMkM urpd rutralnt md Mid\ntiny ihoaM twtlt i duWoa of th*\nPoUy CoOfsjlttM u to \u2022\nsic ttme *_\u2022\u00bb*,\nRESUME CABLE\nSERVICE\nTO HONG KONG\nVANCOUVER, Sept lS-Rieump-\ntka af cable nrrl-* to Hong Kong\nwent Into tttoct Stturdiy, It wu\nleirnid from Cuxdten Pacific Til-\nigrn-l btr* who racelved the id-\nvice from Imperlil Ciblei. All\ncluau tt ctbtet md telegrimi miy\nbt not, with pra-wir ritu pre-\nvilllng. Par the praunt time bail.\nMl* mtutgu win bl limited to\nthou uctrtalntng ficti md ix-\nohmgtag IlitolidsTlwi. CP.R. Tite-\nripht I\nTht fiKhful tf tht Dolly Pend Churth of Ood turreunded by \u2022\npushing crowd ef eurloui, bury Srothir Liwli Peed u he hid wish-\ned\u2014fondling tvte hli open euket tht rittlurteki whloh killed him.\nPreechir Ford died m tht ruurt tf iniki bite* r*e*lv*d during * ier.\nvlo* Mild n\u00ab*r Oiliy, Tinn, it whleh miki handling wu a highlight\nHi **rrtlmi*d to prmeh fu 10 minute* and died a* W later.\n\u25a0     \"   \u00abi\nfind 21-gun ulutei, tht Union\nJick wu raised In '.In courtyard\nef tht Government Houu today\nafter Jipinese comminden formally Surrendered the Hong Kong\nand Kowloon area*.\nSurrender wu received by.\nRur Admiral Cull Hircourt, Brl.\ntllh Comminder-ln-Chlef In this\nraglon.\nMil-Gen. Umeklchl Okada, Japanese Hong Konk commander, tnd\nVice Admiral Rultako Fujiti, South\nChina Fleet Commander, signed th*\nunconditional lurrender document!\nfor Nippon.\nTh* ceremony took plice it th*\nGovernment House overlooking\nHong Kong Bey. Ironically th* edifice wu rebuilt md modernised by\nthe Jipeneu ifter th*y occupied\nIhe city becetue th* old Britlih\nstructure hid uggtd from pre-war\nbomb shelter! built undernetth lh\nRoyil Marlnu, Atistrillin Air\nPorct mm. Hong Kong volunteers\nmd Indiin troopi participated 1ft\nth* colorful surrender ceremonies,\nArctlghts impended from in over;\nlooking gallery Illuminated thi\nscene. .\nIn signing Admiral Hircourt wu\nflanked by Ml).-Om Pm Hwa Ku*.\nrepresenting Chim; Col. Adriin\nWilliamson repreientlng Lt-Gen.\nAlbert Wedemeier. United Statu\nCommander ta China: Cept Wallec*\nCrwry of Vincouver, of th*\nCanidlin Nivy, md official\nThe Weather\nTtmp*rttUT*t:\nSundiy, Max. SST, mln  SI, i\ntract.\nSiturdiy, Max IT. Min, SIS. rata\nSS Inch.\nroncail' Kooteaay \u2014 ModUaM. 'i\nwind*   Plrtly   cloudy,   becomlM\ntloudy Mondiy ilternoon. Continue\nlag cool\nl____j______\n 'A-.\n\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 17, 1943\n-   -'\u25a0'\u25a0      ' \u25a0\u25a0       '        \"T     \"\n(her Prlcei, Improved Stock\nirk Top Elko Auction\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Sept. It-\n\u25a0 At prices generally higher than the\nf Open market 951 head of (eeder\nStittle brought $83,192.79 Saturday\nBit the annual Waldo Stockbreeder!\nH Auction at Elko, -In comparison\nf with 1944's total ol $29,110, lor 666\nI head. It was the Association's most\n\\ successful auction to date. Top price,\nJ $18 a'hundred weight, was paid by\nJ Tritei-Woods, Fernie for the first\nf prize calf of the junior clubs.\n- All animals entered were sold by\nf tlose of the auction except one cow\n\".'Which was shot when it was injur-\nI ed and the third prize calf which\nI the owner refused to sell. High\n* general price was $10.70 for a lot\nI of 13 steers and for a lot of four\nI calves, while the average price per\n\\ bvindredweight was around $8.\nI Largest single transaction of the\n1 sale was a lot of 26 cows at $8.50 a\n, hundredweight amounting to $2328.\n'SHIP TO  MONTREAL\nFarthest shipment  at  conclusion\nof the sale was to Montreal and a\nI second lot went to Vancouver with\nI wbit animals going to Alberta for\nr finishing. Among competitive bid-\nI ders present and buying were H.\np Cohen of Lethbridge. A. Green of\nTaber, W. Johniton of Southern. Alberta, Nat Meltjer, A. L. Bryant, M.\nVandenburg, Ivan Staple! end W,\nSpeeri of Creiton, 'L Malflola of\nFernie and representatives of F,\nBurni and Co. DeNoon and Panlow,\nKetchen Packing Company, all of\nCalgary and Trltes-Wood of Fernie.\nJack Aye of Baynes Lake managed the sale as Association President,\nJack Durno, Calgary was auctioneer\nand William McQillivray, Victoria\ngraded the animals.\nImmediate Canadlen Pacific Railway Service for shipping out animals was made available on the adjacent track, and special C.P.R. service wa. supplied for bringing In\nentries from the Columbia Valley\nover the Kootenay Central earlier\nin the week. Other entries were\ntrucked and herded in from all\nparts of the district, with emphasli\non the Waldo-Newgate district\nwhich started its association sever,\nal years ago.\nQuality of animals was noticeably improved. Andy MacDonald,\nRoosville, won first, Gordon Earl\nsecond, Marlon Earl third and D.\nChivers, Waldo, fourth in the Junior\ncalf competition.\nReminds Veterans\nCanObtain y\nAdvances at Banks\nVeterans waiting for their gratuities can obtain advances from the\nbanks, H. A. Doak, Manager of th*\nBank of Montreal Branch at Nelson, told the Board of Trade at the\nHume Friday. He made the itatement after hearing Charles Defleux, Director of the Vancouver\nSun Veterans Bureau, say In a\nspeech that veterans had to wait\nfrom three to four months for their J\ngratuities.\nSalmo Bucket\nBrigade Fights\nFire; Loss $700\nSlocan Park\nOldllmer,\n[Mrs- Crebbin, Dies\nMri. Annie Darling Crebbln, resident of Slocan Park for the past\u00ab\nyean, died there Saturday at the\nage of 85, after a lengthy illness.\nMri. Crebbln, who would have celebrated her 86th birthday on Bept\nit, was postmistress at Slocan Park\nBorn In Port Hope, Ont., she came\nto Nelson in 1900 and moved to\nSlocan Park two years later. Her\nhusband, Willam Crebbln, died\nSept. 8, 1-24.\nShe Is survived by two daughters,\nMrs. Percy Jones of Trail and\nPearl R Crebbln at home.\nFuneral Services\n[ (or R.Wiseman,\nMichel Oldtimer\nf** NATAL, B.C. - The  funeral  ol\nRichard Wiseman, 70, who died In\nthe   hospital   after   a   long   illness,\ntook place at the Michel Anglican\nChurch.   Rev. A. Mercer of Fernie\n.officiated.\n: jjl(r, Wiseman wu born in the city I attended in a body to pay last trif\n' '\"bf'Yorkahire, England, in 1875. j bute to one of their departing mem-\nto the Kootenay District, spending\nclose to 30 years in Michel.\nHe was an ardent football supporter and acted in the capacity of Secretary-Treasurer of the Michel\nFootball Club for many years until\nfootbal folded up in the Crow's Nest\nPass and the East Kootenay & few\nyears ago. He was also an active\nmember of the Michel R.A.O.B., and\nheld a high office until forced to\ngive up taking an active part in\nthe lodge due to failing health. Until only a short time previous he\nwas employed bs company check-\nweighman for a number of years.\nMembers of the Michel RA.OB\nHe'came to Canada in\nv\nToiST-Tifl\n7\" Jew things would have hurt\n\u25a0 'Horace Walpole more than to\n\u25a0have been told that he was a\n'='\u25a0- bad critic. Yet, according to Ste*\n. \u00abhen Gwynne, his biographer,\n\u2022> that  Is   exactly   what   he   was.\n\u25a0 -Though a great reader he had\n. . no love for what is best in lit*\ntrature.  He did  vnlue  Shake-\nI    jpeare, but the only aspect of\n| Shakespeare's  genius  of which\n.;.   he  shows  real   appreciation   is\n_    represented    by    Fa .staff.    He\nn; .-called   A   Midsummer   Night'B\nDream \"forty times more non-\nrt-aensical than the worst transudation,   ot   any   Italian    opera-\n8* boblcs\" For contemporary work\n-\"' TPqpe   was   his   standard;   and\n\u00bb'    \"though he felt Gray's greatness\nto the full, It fs difficult to he\nsure that this was not chiefly\nbecause Gray was, in a sense,\nhli   own   discovery.    Fielding\npjeased him but he condescended to Fielding much as he condescended to Garrlck- Sterne he\nchose   to   despise.   He   attacked\n\u25a0u;.:with   some   justice,    Johnson's\nr,. pompous    vocabulary,    but    it\n,     never   occurred   to    him   that\n\u201e,., Goldsmith, In  full  oposition  to\n*\"' thU 'fashion for verbosity, was\n\u25a0* \u25a0 writing an English purer, sup-\n-*'   pier,   simpler   and   more   alivo\nnr than Addison had ever achieved.\nt CeOOERHAM^WoRTS\n\u00ab\u2022-   \u25a0 Limited\nTORONTO,-ONTARIO\n100C andibcrs. The pallbearers, chosen from\n1 the R.A.O.B. membership of Michel, were J. Cassandra, T. Slmont,\nS. Weaver, W. Duncan, J. C. Smith,\nJ. Hamer, Sr., and Ft Martin.\nHe Is survived by a wile and a\nson in England.\nA Salmo bucket brigade Saturday\nnight battled for five hours a tire\nthat completely destroyed the barn\nof Mrs. B. Chernoff's farm. B.C.\nForest Service men helped combat\nthe flames.\nAll livestock and other buildings\nwere saved from the blase, which\nbroke out abput 9:'_0 p.m. Value of\nthe barn and hay destroyed was\nestimated at $700.\nThe fire attracted scores to the\nfarm site near the airport, about\nIVt miles from the town.\nUrges Wharf\nImprovement\nfor Excursions\nThe moonlight excursion without\n\u25a0 doubt would bi part of thi Mid*\nsummer Bonsplel, Roy Sharp, Civic\nCentra Commissioner, told '-the\nBoard of Trade at the Hume Friday,\nIn urging that something be done to\nprovide proper wharf facilities.\nThi highlight of the Bonsplel,\npreparations for the trip would be\nsimplified If the wharf could be repaired. Mr. Sharp wai reporting on\nthe Bonipiel to the Board which\nhad charge of entertainment.\n\u25a0\u00bb\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nBlaylock Shows\nImprovement\nDecided Improvement hai been\nshown during the last few days by\nS. G. Blaylock, who has been seriously ill for the past month at his\nNorth Shore home.\nChairman of the Board of Directors of the Consolidated Mining <*-\nSmelting Company, Mr. Blaylock\nhas been residing at Willow Point\nsince early Spring when ha retired\nas President Of the Company.\nPackers' Strike\n\"Unjustified\"\nTORONTO, Sept 16 (CP) \u2014\nWalkout of the \"beef gang\" at Toronto plant of Canada Packers last\nJuly\u2014which led to sympathy\nstrikes In packing plants across\nCanada\u2014\"was unjustified, and In\nviolation of the agreement\" between Union and Company, a\nBoard of Arbitration finds In Its\nreport made publio tonight.\nThe report, signed by Mr, Justice\nJ. G. Glllanders, as Chairman, E. B.\nJolllffe, Board Member chosen by\nthe Union, and L. A. Forsyth for\nthe Company, recommends that the\nCompany, In conjunction with the\nUnion, \"should examine carefully\nthe situation on the beef floor\u2014\nwith a view, lt it seems desirable to\ndo so, of reorganising and re-arranging the operations of the floor\nso that co-operative and co-ordinated effort toward full production\nwhich appears to prevail In other\noperations at the plant should extend to these operations, and that, so\ntar as is reasonably possible, the\nlauiei of the present disaffection\nshall be removed.\"\nThe report notes that at the time\nof the beef gang walkout, \"it was\nthe act of the employees who took\npart therein, arid, at that stage, not\nauthorized, condoned, or approved\nby the Union.\" \u2022\t\nSgt. F. Castle\nArrives Back\nFrom Overseas\nWi. Presents\nFarewell Gift\nto Mrs. GtlloH\nSOT. P. CASTLE\nSgt. F. Castle of Nelson wu among a draft of soldiers who\ncrossed the Atlantic on the Cam-\neronla, and arrived ln Vancouver\nFriday.\nA caretaker at the Nelson Arm-\norles when he enlisted, Sgt. Castle\nwas married overseas. Sgt. Castle's\nbrother married an English girl\nafter the last war. Later he died as\na result of gas suffered ln the war,\nand when Sgt, Castle went overseas he called to see his brother's\nwidow, and subsequently they were\nmarried.\nSgt. Castle la visiting at the home\nof a daughter by a previous marriage while waiting for his wife to\narrive from England.\nMrs. I. M. fJlllot, First Vice-Pre..\nWent of the Woman's Auxiliary to\nthe Active Forces was presented\nWith a farewell gift Friday night\nat a meeting at the Civic Centre\nMrs. James Dawson, Second Vice-\nPresident, presented the gift on behalf of the memberi.\nMrs. Glllott, who li one of the\noriginal memberi of the Auxiliary,\nis leaving Nelson to reside In Vancouver. She was also presented with\na bouquet of flowers by Mrs. Frank\nCameron, who was welcomed baek\nafter several years absence,,\nPlans were made for parcels to be\nsent to the servicemen who will be\noverseas for Christmas. The foremost difficulty ln this project was\nthat the files could not be utilised\nsince so many of the servicemen\nhave returned to Canada. It .was decided tq_appeal to the public for addresses of sons and relatives over-\nteas.\nGeneral arrangements for a tag\nday to be held this month were\ncompleted.\nA social hour was held, Mrs. Q.\nSutherland and Mrs. R. Keffer serving tea. Mrs. H. H. Currle presided.\nCRANBROOK, BC, Sept. It\nHirry Gammon, a resident here for\nil years, was unanimously chosen\ncandidate for the Cranbrook Riding\nby thi C.CF. it a nominating con\nventlon here thli afternoon,\nHe Is a locomotive engineer with\nthe Canadian Pacific Railway, and\nhas been an active trade union\nworker with the Brotherhood of\nLocomotive Engineers, serving as\ntheir chairman and committee\n'member.\nHis name wai proposed by James\nSims, Cranbrook, and seconded by\nJ. McGregor, Klmberley. In aceept.\ning he laid he was a novice as a\ncandidate but considered the election should be fought on Issues and\nnot on personalities.\nThe meeting agreed the Dlitrlct\nExecutive, T. M. Anderson, H. M.\nBaker, Trevor Evani, all of Klmberley and J. A. Geneat, Cranbrook.\nshould be the nucleus of the campaign committee.        j\nRev. J. H. Matthewi,Trf.P, will be\nIn the three East Kootenay ridings\nof Columbia, Fernie and Cranbrook\nthe first 1] days of October to assist\nIn CCF. campaign!.\nChairman of the convention was\nT. M. Anderson of Klmberley and\nsneclal guest speaker was Arthur\nTurner, M.L.A, of Vancouver East\nconstituency.\nJunior, Intermediate\nPractice Tuesday\nJunior    and    Intermediate\nplayers  will  practice    again\nball\nwill  practice    again    this\nTuesday. The Intermediates ara attempting to line up one more game I Baltimore\nPlayoff Scores\nINTERNATIONAL LEAQUI\nMontreal  &\n[before hanging up their ipikei for\nthe season.\nPlayers asked to turn out Include\n: Ron Nash, Jack Harry, Buzz Mb-v\n: Donald, Bob MacDonald, Don Bu-\nj ehar.ni., Alec Broslno, Qicar Chrii-\nI tensor.. Ken Highland, Johnny Ba-\n! chynski,   Herb   Pitt*.   Ron   Stuart,\nMickey Maglio, Ron Cathcart, Den.\nny Kraft, Alec Clark, Bob McNabb,\nJimmy   Todd,   Walt   Malahoff   and\nKeith Buchanan.\nLet your\nj Telephone\niSPEfDyour\nf CAMPBELL\n:\u00a5\nr\nloin...\nAlexander Graham Bell didn't realize It, but by\nlimply phoning first you can arrange for I Campbell\nLoan in a tingle trip.\nA life Insurance policy lafeguardi borrower In cm\nof death. Thil outstanding feature coeti nothing\nextra on all loam from $.0 to $1000.\nThere are 4 kinds of loans to chooae from md miny\nrepayment plans. Chooae the one that'l Juit rtfht for\nyour need*. You em\nUMVWV\ncount on Campbell\ndependability\u2014\u2022 byword for over II vein.\nand\nIS\n.113\nBritain;  Baillari\n'Mums on\nPublic Market\nfor Your Every Painting Need\nWe Recommend\nPAINT\nMade by the Makers of Duco\n566 BAKER STRUT\nHathaway\nand Lollar.\n(Montreal leads best of seven series. 2-1.)\nNewark     t   9   0\nToronto    4   7   1\nMoore, Hlller aid Vangrofiki,\nEteineckc; McCrabb'and Pruett.\n(Best of seven series tied, |-!),\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nBt. Paul           1    T   4\nIndianapolis ll   12   1\nSunkel, Weaver, Keljy, Daniels\nsnd Nai-ron, Cardinal; Jlmlnei and\nBrady.\n(St. Paul leads best of seven te-\nrlei 2-1).\nMilwaukee     II]\nLouisville ' 7   11   0\nCardoni, Bpeet, W. Davis snd Pad-\ndon, Stephenson; Cecil and Walters,\n(Louisville leads beat of seven\nstries, 1-1).\nAMERICAN   ASSOCIATION\nPLAY-OFF!\nMilwaukee    8   10    0\nLouisville .......       4    11\nAcnsta and Stephenson; Berry\nsnd Walters Louisville leads best\nof seven series 3-2.\nJohn McCormack,\nFamed Tenor, Dies\nDUBLIN, Sept. U (CP) - John\nMcCormack, world-famous tenor,\ndied at his home in County Dublin\ntonight after a brief Illness. He was\n61.\nThe greet Irish singer had been\nliving quietly ln Booterstown, Just\noutside' Dublin, under a doctor's orders to give up singing.\n\"I guess rpy bellows are ever;\nstretched from holding those long\nones,\" ha said ln an Interview only\ntwo monthi ago. \"While I wai on\na concert tour for the British Red\nCron my health broke down and\nthe doctor ordered me to leave the\nconcert stage and come to Ireland\nfor a rest.\"\nLater Mr. McCormack'i health\nwas\" reported to be somewhat improved. He still had difficulty In\nbreathing, however.\nThe singer who held world audiences spellbound with \"Mother\nMa.hree\" and \"I Hear You Calling\nMe\", was described as the finest\ntenor Ireland ever produced.\nHe sang ln every country of the\nworld except Russia and those of\nSouth America.\nMr. McCormack made more than\none concert tour In Canada both\nJust after the first Oreat War. Toronto and Montreal audiences cheered him to the echo.\nHe retired to his native Eire In\nIBM but returned to London In 1938\nto sing for the Red Cross in a formal farewell concert at Albert Hall\nPhysiotherapy\nExplained lo\nJoroplimisls\nPhysiotherapy, the practice of\nheallng by natural methods, was Interestingly explained to the Nelson\nSoroptimlst Club by Mrs 0. A. But-\nling, when the Club held Its September dinner meeting Friday night\nat the Hume.\nStressing Its possibilities and advantages aa a profession for women,\nMrs. Bulling said it would consist\nof a course covering from two to\nthree years which would Include an\nIntensive study of anatomy, mas-\ne^ge-. manipulation, breathing and\nexercise. After this would corhc the\nstudy of the use of heat ln electrical treatment of muscles and nerves.\nThe work of the physiotherapist\nIl done entirely In conjunction with\na medical doctor, Mn. Butting told\nthe meeting, and as a profession for\nwomen it was entirely satisfying, ai\nthe results of massage and heat\nwere so apparent In cases o( fractures, curvatures due to contracted\nor loose muscles, and alio in nerve\nand muscular trouble.\nIt was a profession ln which a\nWoman could set up a private practice and In which the pay would be\nadequate. Many hospitals, she laid,\nhave a department of phyiiotheripy\nwhich greatly reduces the work of\nboth hospital nuriei and doctors,\nMrs. Bulling was thanked by MUs\nBarbara Lang, President, on behalf\nof the Club.\nChrysanthemums, telling at 25\ncents a bunch marked the only\nchange ln the Nelsen Farmer's Public Market Saturday. Egg prices remained the lame and there were\nno new appearances on the fruit\nand vegetable stalls.\nEGOS\nGrade A Large, doi.  BO\nMediums, doi            48\nLltflt pullets, doi     .48\nDAIRY PRODUOI\nCottage Cheeie. lb. _  .M\nGoafs Cheese, lb     .29 and 39\nButtermilk, gallon   .40\nMS AT\nVeal, lb, .12 to ,J9\nBeef, lb,  12 to 5\nLamb, lb,  19 to .41\nFowl,  lb.   _ 28\nLiver, lb t  31 to .35\nPork sausage, lb.     31\nMinced ittak, lb.   *l\nPork, lb \u2014 JJ to .38\nMutton, lb.     .10 to .S3\nRoasting chicken, lb.\nVEGETABLES\nNew Potatoes, 1 lbi.\nLettuce, head .\nCelery \t\nParsley, bunch\nSmall onions, bunch\nNew eabbua, lb, .\nNew beets, VpMk ,\nNew carrots, bunch\nCauliflower, head ...\nGreen Peai, lb. ..\nWu Beans, 2 lbs.\nCom, doz.\nVisiting Lions\nAllforHoliday\nHere Next Year\nAt least five ot the partlei of\nLinns from Washington and Idaho\nattending thi Nelaon Lions' Charter\nNight here Saturday are going to\n\u25a0pend a holiday ln the District\nnext year. Their first visit to the\nKontcnayt, they were loud in their\npraise and anxious to get back next\nSummer,\nMost of the visitor!\u2014there were\nover 200\u2014remained Sunday, soma\nfishing on tha main lake, a large\nnumber golfing and about 20 or so\nvisiting the Civie Centre.\nSenator Virgil A. Warren, Dli-\ntrct Secretary, Spokane, thought the\nNelson Golf and Country Club\ncourse the \"prettiest I've ever seen\"\nand he Is planning to promote a\nSeries of inter-club games to be\nplayed ln Nelson at eome future\ndate.\nThe visiting ladles had quite a\nday ln the stores Saturday and left\nquite a bit of money In women's\nand Jewellery stores.\nMost of the visitors planned to\nreturn home via PaUrson and\nNorthport and Nelion Lioni wen\nInterested to learn they did thli\non recommendation of tha Amtrlean Auto Association. Thiy told\nthe Nelionltai that they relied\nthoroughly en the 3-A advice, and\nthus wire avoiding thi Nelion-\nNelway stretch.\nommewtnjwttetmmwt\nENGLISH\nFELT HATS\nFour different itylea\nln all colon\nS4.9S\nFINK'S\nLADIES'WEAR\n$26 From War\nStamps Sales\nUnder Captain Mary Davla thi\nRed Team of the Miss Canada Girls\nturned in (26 from their sole of\nWar Savings Stamp's on Saturday,\nthe first day of selling this season.\nThil was much more than was railed from sales on the first day last\nyear, lt was reported.\nThe Miss Canada Girls are hop- |\nIng to reach the objective for thel\u00bb\ncampaign year of enough itampi to\npurchase 25 hospital beds for thi\narmed forces, each bed costing $25.\nIt is hoped that the sales thli\nyear will be as high as those lait\nyear if not higher in order to make\nthis objective.\nThe memberi of the Red Group\ntelling were Mary Davis, Captain.\nAlice Koch, Leille Holroei, Peggy\nWood, Patricia Birdbeck, Dolow\nSmith, Peggy Smith and Margaret\nMcCoiham.\nACCRA, Gold Coait, West Airles\neCP)\u2014Soldleri from the Gold Coait\nare undertaking the Job of bringbig\nRangoon back to normal. Engineer!\nof a West African company were also specially eommended for thejr\ngood work ln clearing up the Bombay dock area the explosions there.\nPIMPLES-BLACKHEADS\nTRY THIS PROMPT RELIEF FOR\nUNSIGHTLY  SKIN   ILEMISHES\nCatlcun CMU-isv.luiblt, scUsiU\/lc mdUwl\ntrt7cr4^_-_^l^rw\nCUTICURASOAPIOINTM-NI\nC.P.R. Studies\nLegal Aiptctl\nof Park Crossing\nTo Open Legal Barrio\nfor Fortune\nFound on Man\nVANCOUVER, Stpt. IS (CP)-A\nlegal battle over tha fortunt found\nt>y a morgue attendant on the body\nof John G. H. Hill, 72, last February, will open ln\nhere next week\n.10 to 2S\n 10\n-    -15\n     25\nVegetable Marrow, ea. 10, IS, M\nEggplant, ea.  .10\nOarllc, ea, -     > for OS\nPumpkins, each        _8 and .30\n\"         =:..\n._ 36\n_ .15\n__ .23\n_. .05.\n_... .03\n  .13\n  .03\nString beans,  lb.\nGreen pipperi, lb. ,\u2014\nCucumben, dot   _,\nCarroti, 2 lbi \t\nTomatoes 4 lbi. for .\u201e\t\nTurnlpi lb. \t\nRadlinet, bunch    \t\nGreen pepperi, lb. - \u2014_\nSquash lb \t\nSage, buncM   __..\nFRUIT8\nYellow Trantptrent Applet,\ni lbi,  _\t\nPlumi. J lbi \t\nStrawberries, box  ,\t\nPeachel, lb __, j\nCitron, each \t\nSnow applet, box \t\n.. .26\n- .\u00bb\n. 30\n. .10\n1(1\n$1.60\nPLANTS AND FLOWERS\nEverlaitlng, doi -__   3S\nAston, dpi     ,   25\nGladioli, doz. --    M\nSnapdragons, dor.    \u2014    .23\nChryiantnemumi, bunch  23\nCP.R. talked about.\" Mr. Bailey it\ntended tht Board meeting as a gueit\nof C. E. Lister. Superintendent of\nthe Kootenay Division.\nHe referred to H. A. Doak'i reference to Ihe \"bad itati\"\nrailroad exuded before the eroii\nMinigfr; .1\nBALLANTYNE\nPhont 1WI\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON DAILY\nAt 10:30 a.m.     Except Sundoy\nTrail Livery Co.\nM   H   MrlVOR. erto.\nTroil\u2014Phone 135\nNelson\u2014Phone 35\nQUICK REWARD\nNOSES BUSHER,\nRICHEST FILLY\nNEW YORK, Sept 13 (AP) -\nBuiher, the little tqulnt glamor gtl\nof racing, took her third licking of i '^'_^n{r,w\\AAie\\uWrk\nth. IMS ituon Saturday but Li.      Mr  _,n u ,\u201e,, wh       \u201e,,\nMayer i crick three year old filly\ntodty itandi ai the gritttit money\nwinning filly of ill tlmt.\nGiving tway weight te tht rest\nof the II three yeir oldi in the\n123,000 added Will Rogeri mill at\nHollywood Park, the chtilnul Ally\nrtn t dud gtmt ract but flnlihtd\nt neck behind Normin Chureh'i\nQuick Rewtrd, t strapping colt that\ntoted 112 pounds. Buiher carried\n133 including Jockey Johnny Long-\nden, formerly of Tiber, Alta.\nTht place money of 1*000 was\nenough to tilt Bushar's urnlngi to\n1273.120 tnd tniblt her to pus Top\nPllght'i mirk of 1275,000 by 1220\nWith tht 130,000 Derby, $18,000 Vtn-\nIty tnd 178,000 Gold Cup thud of\nher Buiher ihould pile up thouundi\nttop htr rtcord.\nWilh a rtcord of tight triumphs\ntwo iwondi and t third In 11 itaiii.\ntht Western tpeediter hli amassed\n3213,820 thli iiiinn. Last ytar In\nwinning Juvenile honors, Rusher\ncollected M0.S0O.\nGeorge Bailey, General Superintendent, Canadian Pacific Railwa;',\nVancouver, told the Board of Trade J Hill, who was found dead in bed\nat Ihe Hume Friday thit \"good or in a Cordova Street hotel room, tnd\nbed\", ha liked to hear \"the good old [will be between hls'wldow, Lent, In\nTAKt TITLg\nRENPREW, Ont., Sept It (CP)-\nSupremt  Court I Naval Central Registry Olrli Softball team defeated Renfrew P-0 here\nIt will hinge on the domicile of | Saturday   to   sweep  their   best-of-\n1 three Eastern Ontario Ladiei Soft\nLos Angeles, and the Official Ad\nmlnlstrator here, S. A. Moore.\nThe Attorney General hai been\nasked to apply for letteri of administration In the name of Mr. Moore,\nof the;)!,, )|st, Mrs. Hill ai beneficiary.\nMri. Hill's iHwytrt will at tht\nlame time ilk for incilllary letteri\nof adminlitritlon In tha name of \u2022\nball title series ln two straight\ngames and bring the championship\nto Ottawa for the fir|t time In five\nyears The Wren team won the first\ngime 13-1 here Thursday.\nIng. rraponslblllty for the eroaalnri trust company which hai Mn. Hill's\ncondition rested on either the Ciiy\nor Publle Works Department How-\n\u2022stir, he tald, If it were found thst\nthe C.P.R. wai responilble, th time\nwould be loit In repairing the crosi-\nhig. The 'legal aipecti\" wert being\nstudied.\nHe had not heard of any troub!*\nabout crosslngi undtr responsibility\nof the CP.R.\nON MF ATLESS DAYS\n\u2014    use.\n\u2022x\u00a9\nBuih and Sawdust\nFires Give\nFiremen Busy Sunday\nA bush Ore ee virmt property In\nTiirvlew. early Sunday atSraeen,\nand smouldering tawduit ntir tht\nCPU tracks a little liter op, caused Notion Plre Department to be\ncalled out on two occasion! on Sunday.\nTht flnt ilirm wai turned In at\nJ o'clock, when guttt of wind hid\nrained t buih flrt to ipread on I\nvtctnt   lot  In   the   BOO   Block  OK\ni fourth Strut\nSmouldtrlng itwduit it tht felt\nof Park Street on the like tide of\n! the CPR trirki wu Ihe reiion\nj for t lecond ilirm turned In il\nj 3:30 Plre Drperlment officials\n. think this w\u00bbi probably brought\nabout by a spark.\nBoth fires wen eillngulihed\nquickly.\npower-of.attorney for thla purpoat.\nMoney and seciirltlei valued at\nt7(l,000 were found ln a ihlrt ileeve\ntied around Hill's waist. A revised\nvaluation placet tht turn tt 130,000,\nOkay Victoria Bid\nfor Weitern\nInternational\nTACOMA, Wish, Kept II (API-\nApplication of Victoria, B. C, for\nmembership In the Clan \"B\" Weat-\ntrn International Baseball League\nwis approtid by director! meeting\nhert todiy,\nOrder Next Winter's Coal\nNOW\nBe sure of a warm home this\nwinter. Order any of the\ncoals listed here.\n\u2022 THREE .HILLS    \u2022 GALT\n\u2022 CROW'S NEST\n\u2022 DRUMHELLER\n\u2022 CANMORE BRIQUETTES\nA Coal For Every Heating Problem\nWest Transfer Co.\n________\n__*____________.\n \u25a0\n\u2014mm\u2014.\n' s___s \t\n* ,.   -',;'.   ,.\u00bb  \u00bb, '\u25a0 \u2022'    ,,' ,\nBank Robber Tells\nPolice What He\nPlanned on J)oing\nBy   NEIL   MATHESON\nCanadian  Preu  Correspondent\nCHARLOTTETOWN, Sept. 16\n(CP).\u2014Dark, cocky Ulysse Lauzon,\nluspected bank robber who has been\nlought by police of five provinces\nand was arrested at the Covehead\nRace Track near here Wednesday\nafternoon told the R.C.M.P. at Char-\nlottetown \"that If he had had the\ngun he used to rob Ontario banks\nIt would have been a different\nstory\" when he tried to shoot R. C.\nM.P. Constable W. H. Warner, while\nWarner and Constable T. II. Keefe\nwere taking him into custody along\nTortured By\nSINUS PAIN\nVoucsn get quick relief   \u00ab    \/_\nfrom painful distress with i^'V'jfti\na few drops of \u25a0____\u00a7_   \\-_m\nVlckaVa-tro-nol. WICKS \u25a0_*|.. V\nl-heTm^t. VATRO M0_\nwith his wife Eileen  and   Walter\nKoresky, a companion\nPLANNED ON SHOOTING\nLauzon told police here yesterday\nshortly before he was taken away\nby Quebec Provincial Police, that\nhe had plarined to shoot Warner\nand Kcefe, throw their bodies into\nthe back ot his car, and then head\nfor Borden and leave Prince Edward Island.\nHe said he planned to dispone of\nthe bodies by throwing them overboard while making the ferry journey from Borden to Cape Tormenting N.B. f\np Lauzon added that his plan might\nnave   succeeded   if   that   \"yellow\n 1\" Korsky had not lost his nerve\nand thrown his gun away.\nAsked by police if he would commit murder Lauzon replied, \"Why\nnot?\"\nLauzon said the R.C.M.P. constables \"sure had guts\u2014lots of guts.\"\n\"When I had my gun pointed at\nWarner he kept coming,\" Lauzon\nsaid.\nThe 22-year-old Lauzon said he\nexpected to get about 17 yean In\nprison. \"By that time planei will\nbe numeroui, snd we msy be.in-\nIng you,\" hs threatened.\nLauzon, who said hs escaped trom\nan Ontario prison by wwlng the\nbars out while a pal lang to cover\nthe noise, and then climbed the\nwall by means of a 30-foot rope\nmanufactured trom blankets, said\nhe had $300,000 \"stashed away where\nno one could get ft It\"\nHe said that at' one Urns bs had\nbeen worth' 1500,000.\nShortly after he told his story to\nCharlottetown police, Lauzon, his\n-0-year-old wife, ond Koreiky were\ntaken by Quebec Provincial Polce\non the beginning of the Journey\nback to Quebec where they are suspected of stealing a car, and later\nto Ontario to answer bank robbery\ncharges.\n'Teen Agers Must\nAttend Church\nfor Three Years\nVALPARAISO, Ind, Sept.\"l6 (AP)\n\u2014Two boyi who took a plane from\nthe Valparaiso airport and flew lt\n40 miles to South Bend must attend church every Sunday for the\nnext three yean.\nThe boys are Ronald Smalley, 15,\nand Richard (\"enters, 14, both of\nChesterton, Ind.\nJuvenile Court Judge Walter\nCrisman ordered them to report to\nthe probation office weekly, to go\nto school, to be off the streets by 0\no'clock nightly, and to attend church\neach Sunday.\nThey made the aerial ]oy-rlde before dawn Wednesday. Attendants\nat the South Bend airport said the\ncraft was nearly out of gasoline\nwhen the boys landed.\nAllied Air Officer\nTells of\nEscape From Nazis\nOTTAWA, Sept. 15 (CP). - The\nincredible story o> 15 monthi of\npainstaking effort which preceded\nthe ill-fated escape.of 78 Allied air\nofficer! from Stalag Lult III in\nMarch, 1944, was told to The Canadian Press today by Fit. Lt. A.\nKeith (Skeets)  Ogllvie of Ottawa.\nSHEER LUCK\nBy \"sheer luck\" Ogllvie was,'one\nof 12 survivors to return to the camp\nafter 50 others, \"including eight Canadians,\" were shot \"at random\"\nafter their recapture.\n(At the time, London reports said\nsix Canadians were asnong those\nshot in cold blood by ihe Nazis.)\nOgilvie, who went overseas to\nJoin the R.A.F. in 1939, recently returned to Canada and yesterday\ncelebrated his 30th birthday\u2014his\nfirst at home in seven years.\nKEY MEN\nThe mass escape was designed as\na. screen to enable \"certain key\nmen\" to reach England, he said. Of\nthree who eventually got to Britain, he believed at least one was\none of these key men.\nSome 100 tunnels were started\nand discovered before success was\nachieved by ths most elaborate of\nall, a 350-foot tube, three feet high,\nthree feet wide and 30 feet below\nthe surface, which had such refinements as a small wooden railway,\nlighting and a pressure ventilating\nsyitem.\nCoordinating the work, which\nInvolved at least 500 prlioners and\nthe simultaneous construction of\nthree tunneli mere than 300 feet\nlong, wai an R.A.F. escape expert\nknown even to ill but a handful\nof hit fellow prisoners ai \"Big X.\"\nWhile work was in progress an\nelaborate warning network of war\nprisoners kept watch above ground\nand served the dual purpose of disposing of sandy soil from the tun-\nnellings. The others worked m relays of two or three at the \"faces\"\nand in passing back excavated material for disposal.\nThe greatest problem was avoiding detection by German seismographs, he said. The excavated sand,\nlighter in color than the top-soil,\nhad to be disposed of a handful at\na time during sports events, meal\nparades and \"any other time when\nthe earth was being scuffed up\"\nThe three major tunnel projects\nMJorn to a Quaker family in a little thatched\ncottage in England in-1766, John Dalton acquired enough education at twelve years of.\nage to start a school of his own. He began to\ntake regular weather readings and was noted\nfor his ability to predict the weather. He\nstudied flowers and insects, optics and colorblindness, and finally decided to make chemistry his life work He noted the constant proportions in which different elements combine\nwith one another, and finally established the\natomic theory in chemistry.\nJUST as Dullon's research paved the way\nfor the development of many new and\nimproved materials and products, so research carried out by the Canadian Nickel\nindustry has played its part in developing\nbetter materials and products.\nSixty years ago there were practically no\nuses for Nickel except for Nickel plating,\nfor coinage and for Nickel silver. Today\nNickel is required in nearly every industry\nfor making top quality products or for\nkeeping production costs down.   The re\nsearch that has helped to bring this about\nwill be continued in the years to come,\nThe information collected from the field of\nmetal research by International Nickel\nscientists is available to Canadian engineers,\ndesigners and metallurgists socking better\nmaterials for any product or process.\nResearch reveals new uses (or Nickel. Increased use of Nickel from Canadian mines\nand plants means employment for\nCanadians and brings many benefits to\nCanada.   .\nNICKEL\nALLOYS\nTHE   INTERNATIONAL   NICKEL   COMPANY   OF   CANADA,   LIMITED,  25   KING   STREET   WEST,   TORONTO\nwere nicknamed \"Tom, Dick and\nHarry.'\n\"Tom\" wss nearly 100 feet long\nwhen discovered by S guard who\naccidentally dropped a himmer near\nths entrance and became suspicious\nof ths hollow sound, \"Dick,\", was\nuncovered by s Kail spottsr.\n\"Harry,\" escaped detection because of Ita depth\u2014SO test below\nths surface\u2014and ths clever entrance,\ncontrived by hinging ths concrete\nslab under a stove in one of ths\nhuts. This was closed while work\nwas in progress.\nTha sldas were ihored up with\nbunk ilati and a small wooden\n' railway, wai Installed to speed removal of earth. Far' Illumination\noil lamps, made from \"margarine\nand pyjama cords,\" served until\na quantity of wire wai itolen and\ntha tunnel  lighted electrically.\nEven a ventilating,system, made\nwith two kit bags as a double-action Sir pump and powdered milk\ncans fixed together to form a pipe\nwhich wai burled under the railway, wai installed to air the sultry\nworking face, Ogllvie laid.\nAfter nine months of work and\nseveral heart-breaking cave-ins,\n\"Harry\" was completed on March\n23. The \"break\" cams off \"like a\nmilitary operation.\" Unfortunately,\nthe 77th man to emerge was caught\nby a guard and the alarm given.\nOgilvie himself was among 32\ncaught and handed over to Gestapo\nat Gorlitz in Silesia'\n\"They told us that some would\nbe shot, but we thought it was the\nusual Nazi bluffing. For several\ndays they picked out groups of six\nor eight at random. It was just luck\nthat I wasn't among them.\"\nHe.was one of four returned to\nStalagi Luft III from Gorlitz and\nthere found eight other escapees\nwho' had been ' recaptured.\nWill Sail With\n1000 Tons\/\nLess oi Meal\nOTTAWA, Sept. 15 (CP) - A ship\nnow loading in Halifax will sail\nwith 1,000 tons less meat than scheduled because of the. present meat\nsituation in Canada, K. W. Taylor,\nDeputy Chairman of the Prices\nBoard, said Saturday.\nCommenting on rumors that\nmeat was rotting In storage while\nmeat rationing wu being Instituted, Mr. Taylor uld that there\nnow wai in itorage, \"leu than\ni third ai much meat u there\nwai 17 monthi ago.\" On 8ept 1\nthere were only 40,000,000 poundi\nof meat In cold itorage In Canada, compared with 150,000,000\npoundi during the peak period of\n1944.\nMr. Taylor said J. R. Croome,\nhead of the British Food Mission refrigerator ship loading in Halifax\nwould have to tail without 1,000\ntons of meat Intended for the cirgo.\nThe shipment would be made up\nwith cheese and other foodstuffs;\nhe added.\n30 Miles of\nFighter Squadrons\nRoar Over London\nLONDON, Sept. 15 (Reuters). -\nThirty miles of fighter squadron-\nroared over London today in tribute\nto the heroism of the handful of\nfighter pilots who five years ago\nsaved Britlan from the German\nLuftwaffe.\nREMEMBER CHURCHILL'S\nWO^DS\nLondoners remembered former\nPrime Minister Winston Churchill's\n\"Never have so many owed so much\nto so few\" as the mighty roar of tne\nfighter planes recalled to them Sept.\n15, 1W0, when the R.A.F.'s tired\npilot* shot 185 Nazi raiders out of\nth* sky\u2014\"the most brilliant and\nfruitful\" of large scale air engagements, as Mr. Churchill said at the\ntime.\nAnd In every part of the World\nwhere the R.A.F. is stationed the\nthoughts of personnel were turned\nto these heroes of the Battle of\nBritain who stemmed the tide\nagainst Hitler's Luftwaffe.\nTAKES SALUTE\nAt Southeast Asia Command\nHeadquarters, Kandy, Ceylon, Air\nMarshal^SIr Keith Park, Allied Air\nCommander in Southeast Asia, who\ncommanded No. 11 fighter group\nduring the Battle of Britain, took\nthe salute at a march past.\nIn New Delhi and Bombay, too,\nthe occasion was commemorated\nAir Vice-Marshal R. L. Ragg who\ntook the salute at New Delhi, gave\nfour reasons for Britain's success\nover the Luftwaffe: 1. Superior\ndiscipline and morale; 2. Better\ntraining; 3. Superior fighter aircraft, and , 4, Teamwork between\nthe squadrons, ground staffs and\nthe operations room staff*.\nNELSON DAILY NIWS, MONDAY, HPT. 17, IMS - 1\n(nbftify'BiiQ (tampan*\nMCOKKJftATID  St* MAY 1670.\nHeels Low f \u2666.\nQood Looks Higfu*,\nAn Autumn Inspiration for Comfort and\n\/ Class in Shoes\nBlack Beauties\nYou'll like those black suede ties. Ideal shoes for that\nsmart Fall and Winter costume. Size. 5-8!_. fj OQ\nThree widths, B, C and D 3 eefO\nLeisure Loafers\nPleasing to the eye. Comfortable to wear. Sturdy leather\nsoles and low heels for walking comfort. $*% O'B*\nLoafers and Oxfords.   Sizes 5-8Vi   ___\u00bb3'P\nSmooth Walkers\nBlack and Brown Oxfords right in step with the tlrtm\nLow heels will appeal to young girls. %\/_ *_)&\nSizes 4-8!_    ' TtemmJ\nOpens Case Which May Affect Income\nTax Return oi Legislative Members\nCALGARY, Sept. 1(1 (CP) - A\ncase which may effect the income\ntax returni of Memberi of Provincial Legislature and the Federal\nParliament wai opened in Exchequer Court of Canada here Friday.\nIt is a challenge by James C.\nMahaffy, former member of the Alberta Legislature, of the lection of\nDominion Income Tax Act which\nspecifies that aessional indemnities\nof members of Provincial and Dominion Legislature! are to be taxed without deductions, such as expenses.\nMr. Mahaffy*, through hli counsel, S. J. Helman, seeki deduction\nof $235 from the taxable amount of\nhis indemnities, claiming the\namount   as   expenses   Incurred   in\ncourse of hli duties as in M.L.A.,\nthe amount Is not disputed br la-\ncome tax officials.\nWRITTEN ARGUMENTS\nA itatement of fact! In the test ,\nwas presented to presiding Judge\nC. A. Cameron, Ottawa, by Mr, Helman and lt wai agretd written ar-   \\\ngumenti   would   be   provided   by\nhimself and S. H. Adams, counsel   1\nfor the Income Tax Department, at\na later date. Adami wai not preient    j\nbecause of recent death ot hi! wife.\nThe section dealing with indemni-\nties waa passed in 1910 and had\nnever been challenged In court In\nEngland i \"white paper\" brought\ndown in 1921 allows tht coit of\ntravelling and miscellaneous expense! to be deducted.\nPOWER AT COAST\nWHEN B.C.E.R.\nIS TAKEN OVER\nV-U-COUVI-S, Sept. 1\u00bb (CP) -\nSale of electric power at cost to\nconsumers in Vancouver and the\nLower Mainland will result from\nthe proposed. Provincial Government purchase of the British Columbia Electric Railway ai a public\nutility.\nThii was stated here today by\nMayor J. W. Cornett following a\nmeeting held this week with Premier John Hart and a municipal\ncommittee here.\nMayor Cornett laid that Premier\nHart explained that the Provincial\n-overnment is prepared to take\nover all power generating facilities\nof the company but would leave\ndistribution of power and management of the company's transportation systems to municipalities.\n'Mayor Cornett said the Government would sell power to munici\npalise! on the understanding tht\nmunicipalities would retail it at\ncost to consumers within their boundaries.\n\"Thli policy ii part of the Premier's program to attract new ,'\n.uitrlei to Britlih Columbia 1)7 <\nfering them power at cost,\" Maya]\nCornett said.\nMacqueen P. C.\nCandidate\nfor Saanich\nVICTORIA, Sept IS  (CD-Mif I\nL. H. MacQueen, Independent FN*\ngresslve-Coniervative   nominee   lathe Saanich constituency for the October 25 Provincial general election,\nwai  approached  Friday  with \u00ab*\u25a0 i\nquests that ht withdraw hli nom-\nination, lt was learned today.\nFrank Davey, campaign manager\nfor Maj. MacQueen, said Maj, Mae-\nQueen had rejected the representation* which were ~\"-'- by Maj. A.'\nD. MacDonald of Sidney. \\\\\nSlim is the sign of Fall\nPlan $1,500,000\nin Ntw Buildings\nfor B.C. University\nVANCOUVER, Sept 15 (CP)-\nPlini are being prepired here to\ncomtruct three new building! it the\nUnlvenlty of Britlih Columbia. The\nnew building! will cost approximately $1,500,000.\nThey ire for a new phyilci building, an irti building ind \u25a0 women'i\ndormitory.\nExpendlturei hivi been ipproved\nby the Provincial Government ind\nUnlvenlty Governor!, ind work\nwill itart when tht plani hivt been\nipproved and a llc.net li buued by\nthe Federil Oovernmertt\nLONDON (CPI-Only 10,000 mm\nand women out of tht wir total of\nmort than 200,000 still irt engaged\nlint '\ni In filling bombt ind ibelli.\n' \u2022   '\u25a0 rTT-7\n1\n#**$**\n[    'iVv-           . .^M\nBit,'.',- --^J^\nhk\nfr*>Jt  \u00a7\n_ki\nv* \u25a0'\u25a0.,\u25a0'\u25a0\nI             .      \u25a0'   '..  V*\nJ     WSM\n\\jt-\\               ;,j\n1 \u25a0     \"-.IB\n'^_l\n*\n1\nv_____\n>,\u2022_______\n\u25a0\u25a0gB\ny\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 A:^__F\n\\\nfefc*  \u2022\nB\n*\u00a7&\n'<tJ|H   \\w\n\u25a0\n'^_____\n~M\nIf   ,,.,\nKHBH\n*\nClever Double Dli|omli ahow\noff clone-wrapped ilim lhiea, lootnting\nthe linnrlnrw o( Ihis slender wool\ndreat, deaignrd by Bote Barrack of\nNew York.\nWould a few pound! tern lit you\nmar (a-Jiioni like title 7 Thtn write (or\nthe \"KtUofo Writ-M Control Piatt,\" a\npurte-aiied guide with 63 mhiring\nmenu, planned for your own need.\nTime menu! Include Kelloflt'i AH-\nBran herauat it to guaranteed, on a\ndouble-your-money-back baaia, to\nkeep you regular naturally. And,\nbeing made only from the iiloJ etier\nlayer* \u00b0l ,,|!' wheat, it to rich In rrr-\nIaih \"pn-itditi\" food elementa your\nbody mutt bavo, diet or no diet I\nNo wonder thli delicloui cereal to\naerved by nearly one out of every two\nlimllieii ln Canada. Order Kellogg'i\n\/IB-\/trim today. To get tht \"Kellofi\nn'eiaht Control Plan,\" cut the box-top\nfrom the package; print your mlili\nand reqoett on the hack and mail\nKellogg Co. of Canada, I.I.I., Umlon,\nOntario, Dept. 144.\n-top   A\nme M\nlllo    \\\n i ; I\t\n  W << > it<mtm*ym\u2014me\u2014\n'\ntitm Salltj Sf tm\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia.       <\n\u25a0Most Interegtinji Newspaper\ned every morning except Sunday by\n!WS PUBLISH-NO COMPAMV. UM-\n268 Baker St., Nelaon, British Columbia.\nJIR OF THE CANADIAN M1188 AND\nAUDIT BUREAU OF CIBCU-ATIONS.\nto i i     '\nMONDAY, SEPT. 17, 1945.\nLet Us Not Forget the\nPart U.S. Played in\nDefense of Canada\nIn the great wave of relief and.\ngiving that swept this country\nV-J Day and since, we in Canada\ntave not yet voiced as fully as perhaps\nIwe might our deep obligation to the\n\u2666 chief architects of victory over Japan\n, in which we ourselves had so small a\n'\u25a0' .share, says the Ottawa Journal. The\n[\u2022atomic bomb and the entry of Russia\nI Into the conflict in the Far East have\nowtthadowed the fact that Imperial\nfppon was tottering on the brink of\nfeat even before those two epic\n(Wents \u2014 that Japan, except for a final\nJ-iiivasion assault, had already been\nbeaten by the. United States Army,\nNavy and Marine Corps, with men of\nBritain and the Southern Dominions\npressing inward in other segments of\nthe Immense Pacific battle line.\nIt was these men, let us remember\u2014\nthe men of Nimiti, MacArthur, Geiger\n.of \"the U. S. Marines\u2014who made Canada secure from Japanese attack in\n. the anxioys months immediately after\nE  Pearl Harbor and kept her safe for\nR more than three and a half years. When\nBritain was going through her dark '\nhours and could spare neither men nor\nRlhips for the Pacific, it was our friends\nthe Americans who kept the sea lanes\nto Alaska clear, who built the overland\nroute which was Canada's first line\nof tupply for the defence of the Northwest, and who hurled Hirohito's men\nbut; of the Aleutians in the Battle of\nAttu.\nIt is true that Canada sent a number\nfinest squadrons of the 'R.C.A.F. to\nka  in  the early months  of the\nth Pacific action and that Cana-\nwere ready to battle the Jap at\na. But the occupiers of Kiska had\nady retreated eastward in the fog,\ned by the fate of their men at At-\n,The Aleutian Islands fighting waa\nhelmingly a United States opera-\nLet us remember also that the men\n0 forced back the Japs in the green\nill of Guadalcanal, those who went\nthrough the awful slaughter of Tarawa\n^TajJd the bitter struggles of Saipan, Iwo\nJlma and Okinawa were all Americans\n\u2014end it was they who kept the enemy\ntoo busy even to think of a large-scale\nBraid on Victoria or other spots on the\ncout of British Columbia. It was these\nmen who implemented the spirit of\nPresident  Roosevelt's pledge  that  if\nCanada   were   attacked   the   United\nStates would not stand aside.\nFrance Has Big Problem in\nMines and Unexploded\nBombs\nUnexploded bombs, land mines, and\nmunitions caches still infest France. In\neofcstal regions as many as 100 persons\nhave been killed in a single month\nby these destructive machines. Issuing\na new warning to the people of France,\n\"General Dario of the Ministry of War\n.haa aaked the full cooperation of local\nl^avrthorities.\nReminding the public that the Ger-\nmans often laid mines not to defend a\nbattle position but simply to prolong\nthe war for the French people, the Mln-\nlatry has requested that Individuals\n^report locations of mines to the proper\nauthorities rather than try to remove\nthen, by amateur methods. Children\nmult be closely supervised to prevent\nthem from picking up Small shells or\nther explosives as playthings.\nAs an example of the traps left behind by retreating Nazis, Dario cited\nthe case of the soap bars. A rumor went\nthrough a town that soap was for sale;\nsomeone had found a cache. For some\nreason, the bomb disposal officer decided to investigate. His suspicions\nwere justified He found a closet filled\nWilh explosives made to resemble soap\nin both rolor snd consistency. Another\nofficer happened to see a group of\nmen sitting around a hot stove on packing cases- rases whlrh contained 40\nton.', of dynamite.\nThiPe important operations now\nface the government: clearing mine\nfields, disposing of hnnihs, and salvag-\ning munitions. A special office has been\ncreated to study the technical problems Involved, to coordinate the activities of the organizations engaged ln\ndisposal operation*, to prepare detailed\nmaps of dangerous areai, and to draft\nlegislation on occupational accidents. A\ncentral bomb-inspection office is located in Paris, and each region has a disposal director and an officer who ia\nable to recognize and Identify explosives and direct their unprlmlng, and\nremoval. One or more such special officers are attached to each munitions\ndepot.\n'Highly trained personnel ii essential for these dangerous tasks. Courses\nare given in almost every region and\nan \"Ecole Normale de Deminage\" has\nbeen established in Paris to train a\npermanent crew of inspectors and technicians. For rapid and efficient operation, at least 580 bomb disposal officers,\n2500 junior officers, and 2000 technicians are needed. As yet only a fraction of these numbers are available,\nand many operators have been killed\nat their work.\nAccording to official estimates,\nabout one billion anti-personnel and\ntank mines are planted over an area\nof 617,000 acres in 40 departments, of\nwhich Bouches-du-Rhone, Calvados,\nand Herault are most heavily infested.\nIn the densely mined regions, for example at Crotoy, as many as 25 mines\nwere removed fr<jm each small house,\nShortage of fine precision detectors\nis hampering detection of many mines.\nAs mines vary greatly in type and explosive power, many of them can be located only through use of such instruments. At first, mines were constructed of metal and were detectable by an\nelectromagnetic detector, but later\nthey were made of wood, glass, vulcanite, or even tar paper. Fortunately,\nsince many of these latter types were\nplanted in the lines of counter-attack,\nthey were sprinkled with a metallic\npowder which usually reacts to a good\ndetector, Disposal officers say that the\nsurest detection methods is sounding\nthe area with a slender steel wire at\nsix inch intervals, but- obviously the\nprocess is too slow and tedious.\nA crew of two men is normally able\nto neutralize 20 mines a day. Attempts\nhave been made to construct a mechanical apparatus to crush and explode\nmines, but so far experiments have\nbeen unsuccessful.\nAbout 250,000 unexploded bombs\nremain on French soil and disposal of\none bomb requires the work of a six-\nman crew for two days. Because of the\nsize and high explosive power of these\nbombs, the operation is very delicate.\nIn addition, they are extremely unstable and dangerous to handle,\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS AQO\n(from D\u00ablly Newi, September 17, 1835)\nSome world observers believe that Franc-\nIs weakening on the question of sanctions\nagainst Italy lt Mussolini lnvade'i Ethiopia.\nThe French, it !\u25a0 said, hope, that any sanctions\nthat may be levied will be weak enough not\nto offend II Duce.\nMrs. J, C. Petty relumed to Nelson yesterday ifter visiting the Slocan where, in the\nhotel conducted by J. C. Harris at Sandnn,\nshe saw i lemon tree with large fruit on it\nand an orange tree also bearing. Mr. Harrli\nhu \u2022 dite pilm imong hli collection of\nmore or less tropical plants.\n26 YEARS  AGO\n(From Dally Ntws, September 17, 1K01\nMr.  and Mrs.  C. Romano have  returned\nfrom an automobile trip to the Okanagan and\nthe Coast.\n3. A. Curran of Nelson has completed the\nmoulding of the new C.P.R. tug at the C.P.R.\nshipyards ln Nakusp.\n40 YEARI AQO\n(From Dally News, September 17, 1905)\nThe Tirlff Commiiiloners who are spending a few days In Nelson wer* taken vester-\ndiy, under the luiplcu of the Board of Trade,\nto Procter upon the C.P.R. steamer Kokanee.\nSome 80 or 70 peraoni were on boird, Including Nelion business men and their families,\ndistinguished visitors from the United Slates\nand Europe, and the personnel of the Commission.\nT. Bowman, Acting Registrar of the Supreme Court and County Court, has been\ngazetted Justice of the Peace and an Issuer of\nmsrrlage licences\n? ? Questions \u25a0'? P\n1 ANSWERS\nOpen to any rMdtr Names of persona\nasking queatloni will ntt bl published.\nThere II no ohtrge far thla service. Quea- .\ntlona WILL NOT BE ANSWERED BY\nMAIL except whsn there It obvious necis-\n\u2022Ity for privacy.\nRcifder, Trail\u2014Does score count from ball first\nhit, In English billiards to score in in off\nor last ball hit? In a gamo ln which the\nplayer hit the red ball first then opponent'! white for a billiard then went ln off\nopponent'! white. What would be the\nwore? Which ball would the in off count\nfrom!\nScore counli from first ball ML When\nplayer hits red ball first, then opponent'!, then\nwent In off opponents, he eeorei 5.\nM. P, Nelson\u2014What It the method of fire-\nproofing muslin?\nMake the following solution: Ammonium\nphosphate, S ounces, common salt, _ ounces,\nwater, 90 ounces. Heat to 120 degree! F., and\n\u2022oak the muslin for half an hour, then hang to\ndry. After washing, the muslin will always\nneed reflreprooflng.\nT. G., Rowland\u2014What day of the week wai\nChristmas 1881 and 1926?\nChrlstmai Day 1889 was a Wednesday and\nln 1928 a Saturday.\nLetters to the\nEditor\nLetteri may be published over a nom da\nplume, but the actual name of the writer\nmuit be given to the Editor ai evidence of\ngood faith. Anonymous letteri go In the\nwaste paper basket.\nSays Windsor Put in Busses\nLong Ago and Scrapped\nStreet Cars\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014H. B. Lindsay's economics on street\ncir versui buses, costs of purchase, operatlonT\netc., are .Ike his statement, that Windsor, Ontario had their first street cars ln 1890 and still\nhave them, very wide of the mark.   .\n. About ten years ago, Windsor purchased a\nnumber of buses as an experiment. So successful was this investment, thit they gradually\nIncreased the number of buses and discarded\nthe street cars, until today there Is not one\nstreet car operating in Windsor.\nFurthermore about three or lour years ago\nthey lifted most of the street car rails and sold\nthem for Junk. t\nToday the buses are operating exclusively\nfrom Amherstburg to Tecumseh, Windsor,\nWalkervllle and Riverside being well serviced, a pleasant change from the street cars of\nformer years.\nPETRO ROSSINI.\nRossland, B. C, SepL 10.\nFavors Street Cars But\n\u2022 With Some Improvements\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014The letteri of Mr. Carter and Mr.\nLindsay-on our local street railway are very\ntimely.\nThe citizens of this town would certainly\nbe 111 advised to go in for gasoline buses,\nespecially as we own the electricity which\nruns the street cars.\nI do not believe any form of trtniportatlon\nin the town would show a profit and buses\nwould show a much larger deficit than our\npresent one.\nI believe It Is agreed that i good deal of\nthe deficit is arrived at by charging for electric\npower. This power would be going to waste\nli not used, so why saddle the railway with lt?\nI am given to understand that the life of\na bus here would be from tlve to eight years,\ngu would always be required in large quantities and tires would be needed and I believe\nthe upkeep would be many times what the\nstreet' railway Is.\nI believi a few of these tuggettions would\nhelp a lot:\n(1) The procuring of one or two modern\ncars (as in Vancouver).\n(2) Creoioted ties ln place of the plain\nwood.\n(3) Thi filling ln of all the space between\nthe tracks even with the road, thus doing\naway with a haiard for motorists ind pedestrians crossing the street.\n14) A thorough inspection ifter etch trip\nby the motorman and a report to be made\nby him.\n(5) An O.K. that everything is In order\nby the shopmen, especially ln regard to the\nilr brtke.\n(8) A better service of say 20 minute* Instead of half-hmlr between 10 a.m. and 10 p.m.\nand half hour service till 11:30 am. and lm-\nproved service In the mornings. \u2022\n(7) I would urge that the Intersection it\nHall Mines Road and Stanley and Observitory\n_nd Stanley be Improved at once.\nI believe I have touched molt of the necessary points for now.\nSPENCER J. NEWELL.\nNelson. B. C, Sept. 11, IMS.\n\u00ab7   j    _\u25a0 wr- j         Today's Horoscope\nWords of Wisdom       _ __! __..?__\nSome ire unwisely liberal, md more delight to give presents than to pay debts. -Sir\nP  Sidney.\nTest Yourself\nONI-MINUTI TUT\n1  Can you Identify then Biblical chine-\ntars1 What wu Ihe name of Abraham's wife*\n1 Who did bur mirry?\n.   Who wis Jtcob'i favnrlle wife?\n. - \u2022 ,\n(oast Newsman Tel\nol Veterans'Bureau;\nNeed of Public Enlightenment\nThi itepi which in being taken\nto establish returning Canadian service men and women ln civilian life\nwire outlined to the Nebon Board\nof Trade it the' Hume rrldly by\nCharlei Defleux, Director of the\nVancouver Sun' Veterans Bureau\nend member of the Sun editorial\nstaff for 32 years.\nMr. Defleux li himself a veteran\nof World War II, hiving served in\nthe RCAF Intelligence Branch for\n4V_ years, and initiated the Veterans Bureau when he left the Air\nITorce.\nThe public, he hid found, waa not\nfully enlightened on the many phases of rehabilitation measures. There\nhad been publicity, but exciting\nworld eventi hid caused relegation\nof the publicity to the \"back page\".\nHi felt lt wu vital that thi public\nshould understand what wu being\ndone for the veterans.\nThe Bureau gave counsel to the\nveteran who considered himself the\nvictim of Injustice. It cooperated\nwith all other ag.nclei such u the\nGovernment bureaus and veterans\norganizations.\nThe Department of Veterans Affairs wu administered In sympathise and sincere fashion, he uid. In\ndischarge procedure all rink wai\nabolished, and men and women\nwere told what to expect in the\nway of grants and benefit!. They\nwere advised as to employment and\ncareers, encouraged to bring up\nquestions,\nEXAMINATIONS THOROUGH\nMedical examinations were thorough. He urged the Board members\nto impress on relktives leaving the\nservice to list all disabilities which\nthey considered they Buffered during service. The man who remembered everything from flat feet to\nheadache! wai wise, for the day\nmight come when ha might want a\npension for tome condition!.\nTopmost among problem! for the\nreteram was the housing situation.\nSome caset were tragic he uid,\nand he wat frankly afraid of the\nfuture. This problem affected the\nwhole reestabUshment program. The\nveteran had to get a roof over his\nhead and his dreamt for the future\nwere melting because he was forced\nto use his credits to buy a houte at\nan inflated price and thus wu\nthrown Into the labor market.\nThere had been criticism of the\nDepaitment of Veterans Affairs on\nthe subject of dtby ln gratuity payments. This wu unjust for it wu\nnot the concern of that Department.\nThe Army had stated it could not\nget out gratuity checks within three\nmonthi of discharge. To add to the\nllfflculty ledger sheet! from' the\nTreasury were not arriving at the\nDepartment of Veterans Attain offices until a further six weeks bad\nelapsed.\nRehabilitation had received a tet-\nback from this failure of Army administration. The excuse cited wu\nthat of insufficient clerical help,\nbut he felt that there had been\nample warning. The RCAF. wu\naffected to a slightly lesser degree, while the Navy wat now facing\niti teat\nThere were still some veterans\nwho  believed  the  reestabUshment\ncredit to bl i loin. The credit\nwu actually a conditional gift, available In a turn equal to the amount\nof the buic gratuity. It could be\nused for construction, purchaie of\nmodernization of i home, purchase\nof a business or even tools for a\ntridi.\nThere wu a safeguard agalnit\nmisuse. The veteran wu required\nto pur up one-third of the amount\ninvolved, thi Government providing\nthe: other two-thirds. The credit\nwai available for 10 year!.\nEmployment wu a big problem.\nThe lUdden collapse of Japan had\ncreated a bid condition. However,\nveterans were not lacking in guidance hen for thi Selective Service\nwu doing an excellent Job. Reports indicated that a healthier condition prevailed in Canada than ln\nthe United States. Excellent legislation guaranteed the veteran'i reinstatement in hl| pre-war occupation with all right! of seniority,\npay and vacation.\nA Government grant wu payable\nto the Jobless veteran. It wu $50\nmonthly for ilngle men and 170 for\nmarried men with $12 for each\nchild,\nMr. Defleux appealed for continuing harmony between the veteran\nand organized labor. There seemed\nto be a timidity \"about referring to\nIt, and that wu a, sure way to breed\nsuspicion. It' was unnecessary. Both\nneeded each other and Canada needed their harmonious relationship.\nJobs breeded Jobs. The wir worker\nmuit be employed If the veteran was\nto be employed and vice-versa.\nTREND TO EDUCATION\nThere was a great trend towards\neducation and vooational training.\nIt had resulted ln a system whereby\nthe veteran had only to name hb\nsubject md the Department had a\ncoune to match,It\u2014from haird_e.i-\nlng to dleiel engineering.\nTuition wu free, but grant! for\nmaintenance were deducted from\nthe amount ot the reestabUshment\ncredit. In vocational training the\ngrant would not be paid for longer\nthan the veteran's period of service.\nWhere exceptional progress was\nmade, however, and further training\nwat required, payment of the grant\nwu extended. Application had to\nbe mide within 12 months from the\nend of the war.\nOfficials noted \u2022 slump In the\nnumber of veterans silking to\nopen their own businesses. Mr.\nDefleux felt there were two responsible factors\u2014first the alliance of an adequate loan system\nand secondly the necessity of the\nveterin using hit available resources for housing.\nThere were few veterans whose\nreestabUshment credit exceeded\n$1000.\nThe Veterans Land Act waa an excellent long range plan, but suffered a shortage of qualified staff.\nHe thought the situation would\nstraighten itself out and that a tin-\ncere effort wu being mide ln thli\nDepirtment.\nNEED  DECENTRALIZATION\nIn  the  matter   of   pensions,   he\nWarns Miracle\nMay Not Come From\nTest Tube Drug\nCHICAGO, Sept. 11 (AP1.-A\nCalifornia bacteriologist has an.\n. nounced discovery of in extract\n\"deadly\" to tuberculosis garmt In\ntrie tut tube but 1 representative\nof the Amerlcin Medical Also-\nolitlo'n expressed the opinion\nthere wu \"little reason to be especially optimistic.\"\nDr. Anthony J. Salle, assistant\nprofessor of bacteriology at the\nUnlvenlty of California at Loi Angela, uld Thursday night at Los\nAngeles that a bacillus extract\nknown ai subtllln had \"proven\ndeadly\" to the germs ln a tut \u2022tube.\nRELATIVELY NON-TOXIO\nHe added there were Indication!\nths extract would be \"relatively\nnon-toxic\" for animals and humans.\nWork with infected anlmab will\nitart ioon, he said, and If result!\nin favorable experimental work\nWill Itart with humans.\nIn Chicago, Dr. Morrli Fbhbeln,\nEditor of the Journal of the American Medical Association, said \"Many\ndrugs have been found In the past\nto control the organisms of tuber*\nculosli in the test tube, but when\nthey wen applied to the human\nbody they did not prove effective.\"\nthought there should be some de-1\ncentralization of administration. Th\"|\nconfidence of the veteran wu shaken when he considered that the fate\nof hit pentioa retted upon the judgment of men in Ottawa. The veteran\nwould have more confidence, he felt,\nif the original pension decision was\nreached by local authority, by thote\nwho examined him md knew hit\npersonal problem.\nA large number found they luf-\nfered a \"pre-enlistment condition\",\nand this phase was arousing an in-\ncreuing storm. It meant that the\nGovernment was not willing to accept a responsibility little in comparison to that admitted by the man\nwho volunteered.\nCanada fell far below the United\nStates ln disability benefits. Such\nbenefits there reached a maximum\nof $235 monthly.\nHe felt bitter over the question\nof estates of those who give their\nUvea. Surely, he laid, it wu not\nnecessary to take 12 months and\nmore to clear up a man's pay and\nallowance estate or to forward thi\npersonal effects back home. Yet this\nwaa the condition prevailing.   De-\nSendance Allowance Board ques-\nonnaires were mailed to mothers\nwho sought the gratuity as part of\ntheir son's estate. It was unnecessary and was a failure of the forces\nthemselves to set up an administration system to meet conditions.\nHe did not wish to give the impression that rehabilitation measures were not succeeding. He did\nfeel that even more could be ac\ncomplished. Tribute should be paid\nto the designers of the plan. He\nwas convinced lt would not run\nafoul of party lines. He urged his\nlisteners to give rehabilitation serious study in all Its phases.\nMr. Defleux concluded by paying\ntribute to the \"old veteran\". Thi\nreturning warrior of today owed\nhim a debt of gratitude for he bad\npaved for him the way of organization and unselfishly shared in ths\nconstruction of a rehabilitation program denied ln their day of need.\nThe new veteran would not forget.\nWants Dandelion\nPlanted on Grave\nLACKAWANNA, N.Y., Sept. 11\n(AP).\u2014In a will filed Friday,\nDelmore Francis Miner, who died\nAug. 14, aaked that a dandelion\nbe put on hli grave. \"Just plant\na dandelion,\" the will read. \"I\nlike them. They are the harbinger\ncf Spring, and good weather, and\nmaybe better things.\"\nFilm Board Official lo Organize\nDiscussion Groups in Rural Areas\nFilms dealing with training of\nwar veterans who hid lott arms or\nlegi to use tools in industry and to\nenjoy normal lives were enjoyed by\nthe Board ot Trade at the Hume\nFriday.\nIbe films were ihown by Rex\n.Mills of the National Film Board\nwho It remaining ln Nebon for leveral monthi to carry out organization of Film Board rural circuits in\nWent Kooteniy.\nE11 \u2022 b 11 thment of discussion\ngroup! In connecUon with the filmt\nis sought by Mr. Mills, who with\nMn. Mills, wu \u25a0 guest at the Board\ndinner Such groups have already\nbeen organized In the Okamgin by\nMr. Mills.\nHis object, he uld, wu to tie ln\nthe films with local community pro.\nbttms Some of the films would\nseem to hive no local angle for\ncertain communities, yet he hid\nteen a fine youth project grow ln\na Vancouver blind community u\nthi result of discussion following\nihowlng of a Chicago film. Much of\nthe work of teen-agers md so on\nbad been ihown. The Cout group\n\u2022et.up a gymnasium, were taken on\nikallng partial md hikes by adults,\nmd other activities developed, u s\nresult. Previously, whin trouble\ndeveloped, \"the kids\" were* always\nblimed.\nMall objectives of the Film Board\nwere to create discussion of current\nevenU of Canada; to create a feeling of citizenship ind pride In\ncountry through discussions, con-\ntuts, essays and so on; and to report on Canada's wir effort\n\"Canada it War\" had been\nIhown In all Cinadlan thiatrn, In\nA birthday today meins you ire i cautious, deliberate person Your Judgment It\npractical and sound. You an ttudloui, imbi-\ntloui and ire Interested In trsvel snd good\nbooks. You spire no (Mini to ichleve luccess.\nYou will find hipplneu In nurrlige. Ths\nmill this morning miy bring a meesage of\ngood cheer that you have been waiting tor.\nShould you hare any disappointment, nmim.\nher that thin are things you can do shout IL\nDon't be peevlih; write s letter yourulf.\nTEIT ANIWIRI\n1 Stral, liter cilled Sirah\n2 RrbeRih\n3 Rai'llcl    Her   sister   Uah   was  his\nlfe\nEtiquette Hints ,\nIf you make a phone call through i secretary or telephone operator, be ready to talk as\nsoon \u25a0\u25a0 the call li ready. It is incontlderate\nso keep \u25a0 person wilting.\n1600 U.S. theatrei, md ln English\n\u2022nd South African theatrei.\nDevelopment of m intelligent Interest in political affairs wu being\nproduced by the dbcuHion in rural\nareas, he uld. If, fog Instance, a\npicture ihowlng Ukrainian customs\nwu put on, discussion might Uke\nplace on how Ukxmlan immigrants\nmight fit In the locality.\nGIVE RESPONSIBILITY\nIn dealing with youngsten, lt hid\nbeen found thit the most unmine-\naguble lobered down when given\nresponsibility md leidenhip. He\nhad seen one group organize drama\nclub, table tennb md other actlv.\nItles In which the toughest element\nhad taken a great part. Allowed to\nrun their own show without Interference from parents, they were\nlearning to look intelligently to the\nfuture.\nThe Board wai non-polltleal, he\ntold the Board, operated much like\nthe Cintdlin Broadcasting Corporation. It wu definitely divorced\nfrom pirty politics There were 07\nrural circuits from Vlctorii to Hall-\nfax, tlx of them being In British\nColumbia.\nVisual education on such mitten\nU agriculture wu given to idults\nind school children with special\nplcturu dealing with fruit ind so\non.\nMr. Mills uld plcturei deillng\nwith Immunlutlon, heilth, home\nnursing, etc., would fill one of the\nneeds of the more isolated areas\nwhere doctors and nurses were almost unheird of.\nPerminency In dtvelopment of\nvbuil educstlon wu here and the\nwhole scheme wu being plieed on\nsolid ground.\n\"G'wan homt with your mally-rkh, iwMf-ot-a-aut\nGrapt-Nutt flakesl You're holding up the fob.\"\n\"But mister, can I h\u00bblp tt if yoat\nold shovel seeps mapping st these\nglorious, malty-rlch, Gripe-Nuts\n1-\u2014ts? tt ki-jws what's goodi\"\n\"You said lt, kid-end It wants to\ndig into thou cirbohydrrUes for\nenergy, proteim for muscle, phosphorus fur teeth and bones, Iran for\nUw blood, sod other food r-SiyiUsU In\nOnpe-NuU Hikes.\"\n\"Smart ihovell tt probably know\nthat Onpe-NuU Flakes sn mads of\ntwo grains\u2014wheat and malted barley\nspecially blended, baled and touted\nfor doable goodness and May digestion.\"\n\"O.K., OX\u2014ITI chock the Job snd\n|S get rot Onpo-Nuta Flaku now.\"\nMr\nTea is the\nRefreshing\nBeverage\nTEA\nCLASSIFIED SECTION\nPHONE 144 FOR AN AD TAKER\n..j.,.;..--,      :,   -..-\u25a0\u25a0-:   . .-....-.v , , ,\n\u2014 k---:-*-:----- -   ^^^-\u25a0^'^^\u25a0-\u25a0^-^^\n -\nI.\n\u25a0 \u25a0   \" \u25a0      i\ni-s^w^PP?^-^~~~~'\nOn ifa Olh\n.   'MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17 !\nare at\nAndrew\n& Co.\nI in Footfashion\njg Brings\nat for\nustomers\nIR, Sept. 17 (CP)-\na   dream,   but   pork\nloaves and veal-and-\n.5   were   being   given\na Vancouver store this\n1 of theae commodities\npresented to every cut-\ninder of four meat cou-\nre'a delicatessen ln Ker-\n! might as well give the\nI let lt spoil,\" Mr. Moore\nI lust aren't buying it.\ning their couponi fot\nof meat and don't leem\n; meat pies.\nGRAND\n>rink For\nillLY  NIGHTS\nOLM'S FURS\nStorage\ntt \u2014 Alteration!\nir St.     Phona 960\nfftfi i i.ij...,ii i-ji n\n:er supports\nIth garments ond\nre control, see\nHEA A. GIBSON\n\u2022rr Apts., Nelion.\ntsta _a______-HB i r-B\ntz\u00bbxxxexisi*xt%soca&\n<JEW FALL-      -.\u2022\u2022 \u25a0\nSAND HATS\nFASHION SHOPPE\nttt&8SS!%$itS&!\u00bb!ie#!\u00bb\nMaeitro of tht CBC't Monday\nafternoon ihow, \"Ottlgn for Lli-\ntenlng,\" li Dirk Keetbaai, who .\ncame to Ottawa from the Netherlands In 1928.\nIn the natlon'i capital ht It\na well known violin soloist at\nsymphonic, operatlo and talon\nmusic events, He oonduett tha\norcheitra In the CBC't TnamA\nCanada network studios Mondays at 4 p.m. ovtr CKLN.\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\n7'30\u2014O Canada\n7:31-Wake Up and Live (CKLN)\n8:00\u2014CBC News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:30\u2014Breakfast Club\n844\u2014C.P.R. Train Time\n8:45\u2014Rhythm on the Keys (CKLN)\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Morning Melodies (CKLN)\n9:30\u2014Melody Parade\n9:43\u2014Music Room _,_,\n9:5_-Tlme Slgnil\n10.90-Moraini Vjiit \u00bb'\u2022'\n10.15--CK_N Preu Niwi\n10:30-Muilcal Roundup (CKLN)\n10;.5-Organ Magic (CKLN)\nU:0O-Bawalian Striqgi\nll:15-Mu_lcal Slmllet (CKLN)\nll:30-8oldler't Wife\nll:45-Memories ln Song\nAFTERNOON ,\n12:00\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:25-The Notice Board (CKLN)\n13:3n-CBC Newi\n12:45\u2014Matinee Memories\nl:0O-Old Favourite. tCKLN)\nl:lj-01d Favourltea (CKLN)\n1:30\u2014Modern Musicians.\n1:45-Afternoon Recital\n200\u2014From the Classics\n2:13\u2014Songi for You\n2:30\u2014Roblnion Family\n2:45\u2014Downbeat\n3:00\u2014Don Master\n8:15\u2014Mirror for Women\n3:30\u2014Curtain Echoes\n' 3:45~Swln\u00ab Time (CKLN)\n4:00\u2014Design for Listening\n4:13\u2014Design for Listening\n4:30\u2014Stock Quotations\n4:45\u2014Two Piano Team\n5:00\u2014Sacred Heart Programme\n(CKLN)\n5:30-CKLN Preu News\n3:45\u2014Children's Story Time\n(CKLN)\n\u25a0VENINC\n6:00\u2014Claiilcel Momenta (CKLN)\n6:15\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n(CKLN)\n6:30\u2014Cavalcadi of Melody\n(CKLN)  ,\n7:00-CBC Niwt\n7:15\u2014Canadian Roundup\n7:30-Re-!ta] Time\n7:45-Pat Terry\n11:110  -Night Music\n8:30-Flesta\n9:00-Nlght Claatlci (CKLN)\n9:15\u2014Peerless Newi (CKLN)\n9:30-Muilcal Program (CKLN)\n9:45\u2014Muilcal Program (CKLN)\n10:OO-CBC Newt\n10:15\u2014Ninth Victory Loan\n(CKLN)\n10:20\u2014Interlude (CKLN)\n10:30-_od Save tht King\nRossland Social\nBy MRS. F. Q. BRAY\nROSSLAND, B.C., Sept. 13\u2014At the\nfirst meeting of the Fall teason of\nthe Martha Circle ot St Andrew1!\nUnited Church, members decided\nto affiliate with the Women'i Millenary Spciety. Refreihmentt\nwere terved by the hoiten, Mrt. E.\nMacGauley, assisted by Mn. Fraser\nMltchel. -Present were a guest, Mrs,\nWhltehouse, Mrs. F. S. Peters, Mn.\nE. E. Morriion, Mn. Selfe, Mlu G.\nMartin, Mn. F. Mitchell, Mn Ellison, Mri. K. Boiworth and the hostess.\nMn. S. H. Htyden entertained the\nmemben of the Dorcat Circle of\nthe St. Andrew'i United Church on\nTueiday evening. The devotlontl\nperiod was conducted by Mrt. W.\nBlackwell. They also decided to\naffiliate with the Women'i Missionary Society. The report of the\nWomen'i Auxiliary wu read. Re.\nfrethmenti were terved by the\nhostess, aulited by Mrs H. Keffer.\nThoie present were Mri. E. Sec-\ncombe, Mri. J. Roicorla, Mri. D.\nMartin, Mn. E. Lyndrup, Mri. Jen-\nten, Mrs. W. Cunningham, Mri. F.\n5S3BW\/\nLECKIES\nH. White, Mn. W. Blackwtll, Mn.\nC. A. Hamon, Mn. W. Arrowimlth,\nMn. H. Keffer.\nMr. and Mn. Lei Treverton, who\nhave been holidaying it Balfour and\nother Kootenay polnti, returned to\nthe city.\nMri. Thomu Wood left on Monday to vlilt her ton Alex who\nrecently returned from oversell and\nIt a patient ln the Hospital in Vancouver,\nMn. J. B. Rlchardion, who hu\nbeen vlilting her father-in-law and\nmother-in-law,-Mr. and Mn. Robert Rlchardion, Second Avenue, hu\nreturned home to Vancouver.\nL. W. Laslett Is visiting his daughter, who li spending her leave In\nVictoria. Pte. Aileen Laslett la\nitatloned with the C.WA.C.'I at\nCamp Borden.\nMr. and Mn. _>. G. Palmer returned to the city from a holiday\nat Kulo, the gueits of Mr. and Mra\nGeorge Johnion.\nMrs John Hermani wu a Nelion\nvisitor.\nMr. and Mrs. L. E. Walker, Mr.\nand Mri. L. C. Faurot were ln Col-\nville, Wuh., to attend the Faurot-\nWalker wedding.\nSgt. A. R Orman, R.C.A.F., who\nrecently returned home from over-\nleu and hu been visiting hli parent!. Rev. and Mn. C. H. Orman,\nColumbia Avenue, hai gone to Vancouver to apply for hli dlicharge.\nHe wu accompanied by hit brother, J. F. Orman.\nThe memberi of the Government\nSquare Circle of St. Andrew'i United Church returned meetingi Tueiday night when they were entertained by Mn. T. Nort. Mn. E. E.\nPerkini conducted the devotional\nperiod. Mn. H. Bathie gave an ln-\ntereitlng report of the W.A. meeting. After much discuulon the\nmemberi decided to affiliate with\nthe memben of the Women'i Mli-\nslonary Society. Refreihraenta were\nlerved by the hoiten. 'Pretent were\nMrs. H. K. Johniton, Mrs E. __ Perkini, Mri. R. Morln, Mn. H. Bathie,\nMn'. E. L. Hedley, Mri. H. W. Lefevre, Mn. C. H. Clegg tnd the\nhosteu.\nMn. Ruuell Rice, and three\nchildren left on Wedneidiy night\nfor Sloui Lookout, Ont. They were\naccompanied u far ai Nelion by I\nMr. Rice. Mr. Rice plam to leave\nfor i month'i holldiy at Sioux Lookout.\nFlight Lieutenant Auitln Bithle,\nGaiety, Grave Ceremony, Dance\nLions Club; Many Gifts Presented\nNelson't newly organlred Lloni\nClub became i full fledged member\not Lions International md of District 19 Saturday night, when tn\na ceremony charged with significance, (he Club received ltt charter.\n\"An Instrument ot authority\" and\nbearing \"many rights and retpontl-\nbilitie.\", the' charter wai presented\nto Preiident Martin J. Varseveld by\nDon C. Wtke, Dlttrict Governor, at a\nmonster banquet ln the Canadian\nLegion building. Beautiful glttt\nwere alto pretented by Waahington,\nIdaho and Britlih Columbia clubs\nof District 19 while nearly 300 Lions\nand their wives and gueita watched.\nFull of enthusiasm despite their\ntwo-day, actlon-flUed journey by\nuuto caravan to Nelson, .American\nLions taw to lt that there wat never\nt dull moment, and the crowded\nhall wm alternately noity with\nspontaneous tinging and laughter\nat the mirth-provflklng visitors' antics, or gravely illent during the le-\nrlous ceremonial, periods,\nMUSICAL HIGHLIGHTS\nOne of the highlights was provided by the Spokane Lions Chorus\nwhich provided a splendid musical\nrespite. Comical vocal numbers by\nWarren Hauskens, Spokane radio\nartist, were also enjoyed. A dance\n.brought the program to a close.\nThe aim of service clubs, cooperation and unselfish service to their\ncommunity, was reflected In the\nfact that Rotary, Gyro and Kinsmen\nrepresentatives were attending, the\nnew Lloni were told by Mr. Wike,\nwho came from Walla Walla, Wuh\u201e\nto present the charter,\nSince 1914, he said, Lions International, had grown'to 4888 clubi in\n13 different countrlei containing\nnearly one-quarter million memberi. The banquet wu typical of\nLions gatherings.\n\"You have seen horseplay and hilarity, everything from the standpoint of entertainment, but you\nnave also seen the group ready to\nsettle down to business.\" The club\nwm unique in that the members\ncould work and play together,\nthrough playing learning to know\neach other, to recogniie each other's\nabilities ,to cooperate on the Job.\nLions clubs wert engaged In\nabout 70,000 various activitiea for\nthe betterment of communities.\nThe charter gave the Nelson Club\nthe privilege to Join nearly 5000\nother clubs operating under a code\nof ethici, expressing Ideals of Lion-\nism and practising the golden rule.\nThe International colon, purple and\ngold, embodied theae ethics and\nideals ln their meanings.\nThe Nelson club was proud to\nJoin the large Lloni International\nfamily, President Varseveld said ln\naccepting the charter. Great possibilities for community service were\nopened.\nThe Club would play Its part in\nthe growth of the community and\nwould gladly Join hands with all in\nany worthy enterprise. He extended\nhearty cooperation ln worthy alms\nby which all Lions itood with the\nother lervice clubs and foresaw the\nday when lt would be said Nelson\nwas a better place ln which to live\nby virtue of Its clubi\nMANY GIFTS\nGifts presented Included a Union\nJack by Frank Staples of the Creston Club; the \"pot of gold'' by W..\nHarman of the Grand Coulee Dam\nClub; stationery by J. Blodgett of\nthe Hlllyard, Wash., Club; a frame\nfor the Charter by Everett Jinnett\nof the Sprague Club; the Stars and\nStripes by the Worley, Idaho, Club;\na set of flags representing the nations in which there were Lions\nClubs, by Tom Landers of the Coeur\nd'Alene Club; 100 visitors' cards by\nH. Adams of the Fairfield, Wuh.,\nClub; a gavel by thi Odessa, Wash.,\nClub; President's Pin by the Rlt_-\nvllle, Wash., Club; Secretary's Pin\nby the Rod-ford Club; an order\ntor I bronze bell by M. Goodwin of\nthe Spokane Club; and a speaker's\nnotes stand by W. Wallace of the\nVancouver Club.\nW. P. Kapak, Club Secretary,\nopined the program and then wu\nsucceeded'as Chairman by Senator\nVirgil A. Warren, District Secretary,\nand a Lion for over 22 yean. The\nSenator had led the Spokane Club\nfor 17 yeari for perfect attendance\nand' had held every high office, Mr.\nKapak uld in an Introduction\nspeech.\n\"O Canada\" and \"America\" were\nsung and an invocation given by\nRev. A. Stewart ot Nelson prior to\nthe banquet. \/\nAll through the banquet, the American visitors burst into song and\nhad the whole gathering singing\nfavorite oldtimers. Francis Baxter,\nwho conducted the Spokane Chorus, and head of a music department\nwhich Includes the entire Spokane\nichool district, also led community\nsinging. Accompanists were Norman Thue, Tadlo performer, and\nMiss Calvert, both of Spokane.\nSenator Warren read many congratulatory telegrams from Llona\nInternational officlali and clubs. He\nIntroduced at the head table, Gordon Allan, Kinsmen President, and\nMrs. Allan; F. H. Smith, GyroTresl-\ndent and Mrs. Smith; George Sinclair, President of the Creston Club\nwhich sponsored the Nelson Club:\nZone Chairman Hanley Morris ana\nMrs. Morris; Past District Governor\nKelly Hagen and Mrs. Hagen; Mrs.\nMartin Varseveld, Mrs. Don Wike,\nAlderman A. H. Allan, Rotary President, and Mrs. Allan; T. D. Rolling, Kinsmen District Governor,\nand Mrs. Roiling; Mrs. A. F. Pelrce,\nwife of the Deputy District Governor and W. Wallace ot the Vancouver Club.\nMayor N. C. Stibbs welcomed the\nvisitors. Nelson had, he said, iplen-\ndld examplei ot what tervlce clubs\nmeant to a community in Rotary,\nGyro, Kinsmen and Soroptlmist\nclubs. Establishment of the Lioni\nClub wai a wonderful opportunity\nfrom the Civic point of view for the\nclubi efforts were nearly 100 per\ncent local, he laid. He outlined a\nnumber o! luggested ambitious projects, gave a few facta about the\nCity for the benefit of the visitors,\nand invited them to Inspect the\nCivic Centre.\nConcluding, he left the \"thought\":\n\"Make no little plans; they have\nno magic to stir men's blood;\n\"Make big plans; aim high in\nhope and work, remembering that\na noble, logical diagram once recorded will never die, but long after\nwe are gone will be a living thing,\nasserting itself with ever-growing\ninsistency.\"\nDeputy District Governor Peirce\nresponded to the welcome,'express.\nIng his pleasure over the fact that\n\"this beautiful city\" was to be the\nlite of another Lions Club. He as-\nlured Mr. Stibbs that the \"large objective.\" he had lilted might not\nprove io large for the Club wtien\nthe work accomplished by other\nClubi was considered.\nThe reason for the unfortified\nboundaries between Canada and the\nUnited Statei wm because of the\nfriendship and good fellowthip of\ntht two nations Amerlcani took\npride in thli friendship. Basil for\nthe existence of the Lions Clubs was\nservice to the community and he\nwu sure the new Club would not\nfall short\nAt the close of the banquet pro-\ngram, applause was given to the Pythian Sisters who prepared the din-\nner. t\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MC\n\\o5of'\nkv, %m. it, IMS\u2014 '\nNELSONSOC1AL\n\u25a0y MRS. M. J. VJONIUX\nCharge fir engagement announcement! on thli paga It It JO\nPICKARD-GORRIE\n\u2022 On August 18 I wedding ot\nIntereit to many Nelionltei took\nplace at the manse, Arthurlle St,\nBarrhead, Scotland, when Rev. T,\nL. London united ln marriage Lie.\nGordon Plckird, ton of Mr. md\nMn. Leslie Plckird, Douglu Hotel,\nTrail, ind Irene, eldest diughter of\nMr. ind Mn. John G. Gorrle, Ellan-\ngowan, Gaterjlde, Barrhead. Thi\nbride looked charming ln a dove\ngray luit, navy flit hit ind veil.\nAttending her wu her sister, Miu\nGorrle. Both wore conagei ot\nwhite heather and tweet peal. Jo-\nteph Docherlt, cousin of the groom,\nwai bett man.' Later the couple left\nto spend their honeymoon at Troon,\nAynhlre.\n\u2022 Mn. S. S. Fowler of Rlondel\nwai tn the city at the weekend enroute to the Coait.\nt 3. Sutherland, Fairview, hu\nreturned from a week ipent at the\nCaait.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. Steve Maco and\ntheir daughter, Nanci, of Vancouver, former residents of Nelson, are\nguests of Mr. and Mri. Charles De-\nFerro, Fairview.\n\u2022 Mist Rosallee Trlggs, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Trlggs,\nFront Street, left yesterday to attend U.B.C. ln Vancouver.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. G. Noel Brown\nof Corra Linn ipent Saturday in\ntown.\n\u2022 Mrt. O. S. Bowman ot Spokane ii spending a few dayi In Nelson. .\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Frank Abey of\nMirror Lake visited town Saturday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Appleton of Sunshine\nBay visited her sisters, Mn: H. H.\nPitta and Mri. Ruby Clayton, Nelion Avenue, at the weekend.\n\u2022 Mn. H. Mlddleton of Willow\nPoint was among city ihoppen Saturday.\n\u2022 H. Beck of Kailo ipent the\nweekend in Nelaon.\n\u2022 Major and Mn. S. C. Price and\nson Michael tt Harrop visited the\ncity at the wekend.\n\u2022 R. G. McLeod, mining man\nof Seattle, pioneer reildent of Nelion, li a Nelson visitor.\n\u2022 Miu Betty Bfown, daughter\nof Magistrate and Mn. William\nBrown, leaves this morning for\nVancouver to attend U.B.C.\n\u2022 Mri. Charlei M. Beltner, Stanley Street, hai returned from Trail\nwhere ihe ipent a week at the\nhome of her aon-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mn. R. A. Giles\n\u2022 Benny Monteleone, R.C.A.F,\nli here from Calgary visiting his\nwife and family.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. Emilson visited town Saturday.\n\u2022 Shoppen In the city Saturday\nIncluded Robert Main of Bonnington.\n\u2022 Miss Margery Fraier, daughter of Mr. and Mri. William Fraser\nof Kootenay Bay, hai left for Edmonton where she will attend the\nUniveriity of Alberta.\n- \u2022 Leslie Tralnor, who attendi St.\nAuguitlne Seminary in Toronto and\nhaa spent the holidays at the home\nof hii parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie\nTralnor, Stanley Street, has left\nfor the Eait to reaume his course.\nHe was accompanied as far as Kimberley by his mother, who with him\nvisited her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Pierce for a few\ndays\n\u2022 Commander and Mrs. Burrord\nA. Smith of Longbeach visited town\nSiturdiy.\n\u2022 Pti. P. K. Druiklc, who ipent\nseveral yean oveneat, has arrived\nin Nelion and It guest of hit titter,\nMn. Jean Katper.\n\u2022 Joteph Ogemkl arrived at the\nwekend from lix yean oveneas\nand Is visiting hit mother, Mrt.\nOgentki it Apex.\n\u2022 Mr. ann\\Mn. Robert McFtd-\nden and the former's mother of Bonnington spent Saturday In Nelaon.\n\u2022 Miu Slgrld 'Holmgren, who\nipent her three weeks vacation li\nthe home of her parents, Mr. and\nMrt. W. Holmgren, Carbonate\nStreet, hu returned to. New Wett-\nmlmtcr to resume her course at the\nRoyal Coluraban Hoipltal.\n\u2022 Frank Trozzo and hli lister,\nMlsi Amelia Trqzzo, of Appledale,\n\u25a0pent the weekend ln Nelion.\n\u2022 Miss Mae Bowkett, 720 Stanley Street, left yeiterday morning\nfor Vancouver where ihe will take\nup her studies at the University of\nBritlih Columbia.\n\u2022 Mn. Louli Choquette, John-\nitone Block, il spending her two\nweeki vacation at the home of her\nparenti, Mr. and Mn. Charlei H.\nStark in Trail.\n\u2022 Memberi of Circle No. 3 of\nTrinity United W.A. met at the\nhome on the North Shore of Mn.\nJ. B. Stallwood Thursday when\nthoie present were Mrs. W. E. Colet,\nMn. H. D. Dawaon, Mn. J. P Fink,\nMn D. H. Ferguson, Mri J. C. Grum-\nmett, Mn. i. R. McLennan, Mn. S.\nA. McLeod, Mrs J. Nelll, Mn. J. H.\nWilkinson, Mrs W. A. Weafherhead,\nMn R. Scott and Mn. Shell aa a\nviiltor.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. Arthur Johnson\nof Keremeos are holiday viaiton in\ntown.\n\u2022 Mn. J. Bichan, who ipent the\npast few weeki viaiting her sister,\nMrs. A. Jerome, Hoover Street, alio\nfriendi ln Procter and Caitlegar, returned to her home in Vancouver\nSaturday.\nRequiem Mass\nSungforJ.Surina\nof Sh&tty Bench\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014Funeral lervlcei\nfor Joieph Peter Surlna of Shutty\nBench were held Saturday morning from the Sacred Heart Church\nat Kaslo. Rev, Father Moehan conducted the high mass.\nThere wai a wealth of beautiful\nfloral tiibutes and many spiritual\nofferings.\nPallbearers were J. McPherson,\nJ. Reu'ter, T. Taylor, J. Mikalpik, J.\nBabista, and Capt. G. W. Weit.\nLONDON (CP) - Viscount Addl-\nson. Dominions Secretary, has appointed G. W. Tory to be his private secretary and Miss E. J. Emery to be his assistant private secretary.\n____\"__\"\n1* REEMA\nFURNITURE CO.\nThe Houm o! Furnitura Value!\nPhoni 115 Nelton\nBUY ON OUR\nBUDGET PUN\nTerms ln accordance with Wartime Prlcei ind Trade Regula-\ntlon.\nNEW DELHI, Indli (CP)-Rep-\nretentatlvei ot the recently formed\nIndian National War Memorial\nCommittee may thortly visit the\nUnited Kingdom, Canada and thi\nUnited Statet. The Committee was\nappointed to prepare a scheme for\nthe establishment ot a military academy ln India at a war memorial.\nIt hu been deolded a subcommittee\nihould go abroad to itudy methods\nof academies ln other countries.\nBLOUSES\nIn  crepes,  iheers  and   tpuns,\nStripes, florals'and plain colors.\n$2.50 to $12.95\nFASHION FIRST LTD.\ndiotidaif.\nTnakliL\nWhtn you oik ui to\nchange addroit of\nyour paper, when you\ngo on your vacation\nand whtn you ara\nabout to return,\npleato giro tha pretent address to which\nthe paper it being\ntent at well at the\nnew address.\nWe keep our moiling lilt\nby poitofficei rather than\nby Individual namei.\nTHE\nNelson Doily News\nCirculation  Deportment\nPHONE 144\nS\u00ab\u00bb\u00bbK\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\u00bbS\u00abS5r\u00bb-\u00ab\u00abS\nReliable Watch Repairing . .\nConsult\u2014\n491  BAKER ST.\nRCAF., who returned recently\nfrom oveneas, left last week to vlilt\nat Edmontpn and Calgary.\nFo. Roy Brown, R.C.A.F.. ipent\nthe weekend ln the city with hli\nwife Pte. Mary Brown, C.W.AC.,\nnee r,!iss Mary Bathie, who li\nipending her leivt here with her\nmother, Mrs. H. Bathie. Fo Brown\nreturned to hli station tt Williams\nLake.\nGnr. Claire Scatchard, who recently returned from overseai ind\nhai been visiting hii parents, Mr\nand Mn. W. K. Scotchard, Georgia\nStreet, hu reported to Vincouver.\nTOR   MILK-TRY\nK.V.D.\nPHONE 111\nIN Is Not (fk&pwiAibk.\nYES, Listeners1 CKLN will not be held responsible for oil\nthe fun and mirth, and all that happens on the air\nMONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 17TH, AT 8:15\nBecause Don McNeil, and all the \"Breakfast Club\" Gang\nwill be heard over CKLN every morning at 8:15 to 8:45\nTUNE IN TO THE \"BREAKFAST CLUB\"\nEVERY MORNING OVER CKLN.\nBrought to you through courtesy of \"Swift Canadian Co.\"\nDRIFFIELD, Yorkihlre, Englind\n(CP)\u2014Firmer! wno gave Germtn\nprisoners cigars and clgarettei to\nencourage them to work have been\nwarned thit thli is contriry t to\nWir Office orders\nThrown From Horse\nBALMORAL. Scotland. Sept le\niReuten) - Prlnoeu Illtabeth.\nwhile riding at BiUnoral recently\nwith htr litter rrlnctii Mar|iret.\nwu Ihrewn from htr hottl tnd\nitvtrtly hrulied both l\u00bb\u00abi\nShe hu been ordered to tiki t\ncomplete rett but will be ib> to fulfil her fortheomlm engif\u2014nenti In\nEdinburgh and Olasgow at (he purl\nnf tht month.\n_____________________\n  ,\u2014\n6 - NELSON DAILY NIWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 17, IMS\n>*\"\u00bb-\"', .\"\u00ab\u2022..\u25a0\u00ab>..\"\nvumwn\n~~-wew-\n\u25a0    \u2022\nmm\nTODAY'S News Pietwes\nFAMOUS SPANISH BULL-FIGHTER COMING TO MEXICO: Manuel Rodriguez, Spain's most\nfamous bull-fighter, li reported to be coming to\nMexico. On this occasion the bull triumphed over\nthe' matador; he wat thrown to the ground and his\nlife saved only after comrades rushed Into the ring\nand succeeded In distracting the bull. Here he it on\nthe horns of the enraged animal.\nHIMHKHir>ll_aH______H__H-__i__i-B-V\u00abl>    *\u25a0   s_.uwwwsr.jww   \u25a0   \u25a0_\u00bb\nFINALIST8  IN  GIRL8*  NET CHAMPIONSHIP:  Shirley  Fry\n(left), of Akron 0., engages In the traditional handshake with Jean\nDoyle, of San Diego, Cal., her opponent in the final of the. national\ngirls' tennis championship at the Philadelphia Cricket Club. Miss Fry\nsuccessfully defended her title, defeating the San Diego girl.\nSHOOTING HIGH: Frances\nKenney of Raleigh, N.C, has every\nright to the medals which cover\nher practically from head to toe.\nFor three years she has been senior women's champion of the\ntwo Carolina!. She also holds\nthree junior A.A.U. national medals and was on two first-place national relay races and took second\nplace In the 400-metre free style\nswim. Ambitious Frances Is now\nshooting for the senior U. 8. national swimming championship.\nBATAAN COMMANDERS REUNITED: A dramatic moment is\npictured here is General of the Army Douglas MacArthur embraces\nLt-General Jonathan M, Wainwright In the New Grand Hotel In\nYokohama. Gen. Wainwright was recently released from a Japanese\nprison camp.\n(_t-. i _ PHO JOB: Ray Flaherty,\nformer coach of the Washington\nRedskins In the National pro\nleague, is the new mentor of the\nBrooklyn Tigers In tha same football loop. Flaherty has been in\nthe service.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\n0SABANK\n0FF)C1AL,HE tS'\nTHE SOUL Cf\nINTEGRITY. HE\nNEVER PUT HIS\nHAND TO A DISHONEST MILLION,\n*tyjauta~i\u00a5bxela\nTODAY'S NEEDLECRAFT:\nThe clever housewife chooies crocheted dollies. They give \u25a0 look\nof luxury\u2014they're durable, prac-\ntlcsl. Mike these\u2014they'll be your\npride!\nDo these dollies In string or\nfiner cotton. Use them In sets or\nat Incidentals. aPttern 809 hat .directions; atltches.\n8end TWENTY CENTS (20c) In\ncoins (stamps cannot bs sceepted)\nfor thli psttern. Print plainly\nSIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE\nNUMBER.\nSend your order to Dally Newi\nPlttern Department, Nelton, B. C.\nTttaAmn  Tflcudw\nLITTLE GIRL FROCK: She'll\nwin all hearts In thlr adorable\nfrock with perky bows and heart\npoekets. Pattern 9392 Includes a\npinafore, too. Make both \u2014 for\nbusy schooldays and playtimes\n'ahead.\nPattern 9392 comes in sizes 1, 2,\n3, 4, 6, 8, 10. Size 6 takes 1'\/4 yards\n39-inch; \\\\ yard 35-Inch contrast,\nSend TWENTY CENTS (20c) In\ncomi (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern. Print plainly\nSIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE\nNUMBER.\nSend your order to Dally News\nPattern Department, Nelson, B. C\n\u00a3UNT HET\n|iT WOULONY HURT YOU\nEXERCISE VtXJR PETS\n'ANDTHEN-\nHENRY\/\n\u2014\u2014\u2014t\nmzzsf\naag___B__aa_fr--i----B-\nE4*X>I!-I CAN'T OCT\nMY MINP OFF THAT\nrWiRlwS _ VISIT TO\nMY FIANCEE WILL\nit I\n(AH. MY LITTLE\nMUFFIN1! - I FORGET ALL\nMY TROUBLES WrOS I'M\nWITH TOJ It ALLOW ME\nTO  PRESENT YOU VITO\nTHIS LITTLE '-OQOOO\nTRINKET!!,\nI\nAN&ELS   .\nHAVE   ..\nSTRANGE - MR. AND MBS. BEN ]\nINDAYTON   HAVEN'T SHOWN\nUP- IM THEIR LETTER -THEY\nSAID THEV'D GET HERE AT   )\nEXACTLY ONE   (-. y ,\nO'clock: -- its f m sure they\nPOLIR NOW--      ARE'NTCOMIN'.\nC\u2122. ttt,. (\u00abiWmV*\u00ab\nWELL--I'LL\nOUST RUN\nDOWN TO TH'\nOFFICE-ANO\nSEE IF I GOT\/\nANVrAAIL-\nBV GO-L.V-THI9\nSIQN CERTAINLY\nWORKED OUT TO\nME SATISFACTION.'\n_\nCH,KIN*.HlAil HALlRkHniO\n' WI OW iAVE fl\/t_y AHP     f\"\nrvcTLccie.' r\nA.\n\"Travellers get critici-ed; but\nIf all travel is like that bus rule\nI took, nobody does it the second time If it ain't necessary.\"\nSAUT5 SAW..\n4\ndBfr\n_xm^J_!3>V\\\ni iwjp^\nMviAl\n\u2022fcA\n' w\n&*\n\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0- '-_.:_ifitfl.--r_T\nm.y^\nWKY, THAT OFF-KJ-Y Booty   woody\nOF VO_*S H\u00ab.D THf SOUTH Silt PR1HU-.\nPRUCTICAllY SWOONING IN YOUR .\nHOIV DO YOU DO II, CHUM ! DON'T\nTELL ME All \u2014 JUST GIVE ME\nIESSON  NUM6ER ONI;.\nWIT, mt WOWNT W I\nPUYIN6 'MElANCHOlY\nSHE \u25a0\u2014 LOOK, SAWVE\nYOU KNOW\nTHAT6M\nBEFORE\nrt\n\"The doctor told me It waa tha\nwork of providence that cured nr\nbut ht'i'charging me for _;\/*,\nLONDON iTP> -- A new national\ncampaign, led by 500,000 women, id\nbeing planned to use child nurseries\nIn conjunction with maternal welfare centres so Lh\u00ab,L mothers can\nleave their older children fur a few\nweeki before and after new babies\nare born, Also advocated are baby\n\"parking places'1--nurseries where\nchildren could be left nvcrniRlit\nwhile their parent* went out together. Th*.' children of ex-servicemen's wives, war widows and mother! on part-time work would \\\u00bb\nlooked \u00bbft?r In othrr nurseries whit\ntheir pacuU worked\n.\n\u25a0\u2022\u25a0*-*\u25a0\u25a0 -\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 -' --\u25a0*-\u25a0 \u2014\u2022-\u25a0s- \u25a0\n\u25a0- \u25a0\u25a0 - '- -\n \u25a0\n1-653\nPHONE 144\n_f WANTED\nOMAN FOR GENERAL\nI ln private suite. Must\nlook. MOM pur month\nsj and room. Apply Mri.\nia. Castlegar Hotel.\nH-OUSEKEEPER FOR\n\u2022'to fte country. Apply\nf\u00a3r Wo. -T4\u00ab.\niHRH IMJtft Iv -0\nttore and deliver. Box\njjewi. \t\n-TyOUNG LADY FOR\nirk. Apply  to  Box 202,\nPtobj CCOT TOT\n.femill.* Box 232, Dal'\/\nPOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nrWAiWb - aJWCV\nS^WAsher. A.?Pii\ni Cafe.\nTH   AND   SALESMEN\t\nWASCARD A(^NTS\nien, boys and girls earn\nSy In spare time taking\nnertonal Christmas _ir]t\n'not necessary. Beautiful\nll album tupplied. Per-\nstmoi eardt may alio be\n'minted creit of Army,\nforce, C.W.A.C., etc. Also\nSJectlon of mwrlflci-t\nStmas card assortments\nrful spray desiens, foil\nBoxed In bea-tltfl <r\u00bb>\nIS ipeclal asiortments of\nrnei, comics, children'.\"\nous Chrlstmai teils, gift\n[ tlntel ribbon, home plc-\n4in. Established over 30\nTON WALPERT CO\nfnlverslt\" Tower Bulldins.\nitherlne St. W., Montreal.\nSrunTrpt; OF\" rTKWirT-\nrtlsed products have ooen-\naalesmm tn cover Drus\ncar trade ln OkanaKan and\nr> Salarr. rommlseion and\na Aoollcant mint own\n,ile Preference given to\nith reta'l experle\"e- 'n\nIn*. Appl* to nearest Se-\nSirvic- OMce. No. N-l-\n^TI0NSWANTID_\nil low ratei for non-com-\nadvertltemenU under\nBiflcatlon toaiilitpeo-\n|dng employment onu\nSeweek(\u00abdH\u00bb i covert\nmber of required llnei\nI In idvance. Add 10c II\nmber '\u25a0 detlred\n^jgrwwrnTO\nIres housekeeping position\nblv ln home with other\nr&x 082 DallrJIewi^\nf_7fTJBUC~STXNdGRA-\nvcr 15 years' experience.\n106S-L.\nJUSINEtt AND\t\n(SIONAL DIRECTORY\nlay-rTTnid mini\nghOWSON k CO ASSAY\n.otepMnjSLj-_!_-!_n__\nEs. ROSSLAND. B C.\nT_&mW__Mir___5E__-^\nIriJOoWAV A&SAY\n410ir^ejiav_Jt_JWson_\ninjjtpendent Mine Reo\n________X__M==\nma co____^_MZ\nn_uiLDfSaTc^fRM^\n^oo.m.Uo.to^l.rgr\nLarge Stock\nWNl.OWS-DOORS\nFRAMES-SASH\nWHY WAIT?\nfor catalogui showing rough openings ln wall\nB.C. SASH It DOOR CO.\n999 W. Broadway\nBranch: 119 Columbia, Wettmlntter.\nFURS\"\nBuy your fur coat now-Speelil\nprices, large telectlon\u2014No luxury tax.\nPOLAR FURS I.TD.\nMB Granville St.      Vancouver\nSTANDARD RECEIPT BOOKS, 4\nreceipts to page with duplicate\nsheets. Nelson Daily Newt Prlnt-\nlng Dept,\nFOR\" SAS--STB- OK-AN IN\ngood condition. Suitable for imall\nschool or church. Phont JJ8-X or\ncall 1023 Front St\nPIPE - FITT1NOS - TUBM, \u00ab\u00ab\u2022\ncial low prlcei Active Trading\nCo., 918 Powell St. Vancouver\nFoTsa__-__-U-\u00a3 iPLADT CASE\npiano, good condition. t-SO.00. Box\n8164 Daily Newt.   \u00bb\n \u2022-\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0     \u25a0 -F.      i       -a   )l.-|i  mum mi   -i  a\nNEW OR USED HOUSEHOLD AS-\nticlei. Pay leu It thi Ark Storo.\nPIPELESS-\"FU_.NAC_l\u201eb.I8-\ntcr, 28 x 28, with com. Ph. -3.-Y.\nFOR   SALE-SMALL   EUiWrtlC\nttove, UP voiH, Phone Ki___\nBABY'S BUGGY IN A.l COiTO.-\ntion. Apply 809 Innti St W.\nFOR   SALE   -   CHEBTiaiFIELD\nSuite. Phone 247-X.\nui for particular!.\t\nfMSAW^M ACS* RANCH AT\nWlnliw, B.C. toll of wood and\nwater good. Buildings., t acres undlr cultivation. Level and belt of\nApply 0. 8tonton, Wlnlaw,\n245 foot frontage, imall\nmodtrn   house,   eleotriclty   and\nwater lnttallid. Fruit treei, pretty\nirdin, frii title, water rlghtt.\nriu __%___ _m W^''\nre*\nrasr,\ngoing concern, electric lights, running water. Alto wood lot Apply\n\u2022 \"   '    B.C.\nFjrnnraPB HfJWT to-\ncation In Nelion. 4 big roomi and\nbathroom. Apply E. J. Tinant, 924\nBehnten. Ph, 311.    ______\nAUTOMOTIVE.\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nNEW 'BICYCLES, ACCESSORIES,\nand repairs, Free Illustrated catalogue. Western Canada'! leading\nbicycle ttore. Established 1910. C.\nH. Harness k Son, 308 Notre Dame\nAvenue, Winnipeg, Man,\ntt)H SALifi-HARLEY-DAVlDSON\ntwin 74 motorcyole ln good run\nnlng condition. Apply W. J. Libe\ndoff, Olade, B.C\n.MAM   D.CTONAI7.\nplained,   Only   10\u00ab,   \"Delmarh\"\nQreicent, BC,\n\u2022nd Exchanged J. Cheis. 534 Vernon St\nsamnrm\n3\nweeki' tuppur\nat Fleury't Fhirm*\n$r\nhufe\u00bbvW-'Bi_ VbU_'HW\nband borrow i Kaliomtna Brush\nand forget to return tt? Ask him\ntonight.\nfltW-h*' WrVESTIOATOR. PKf.\nsum traced. Confidential. Highlit\nreferincet. Room 58, Arlington\nHotel, Trail, B,C\nHERBAL \"SpiClAU-tf'JUS\nnever-falling, remedy (or ikln\ndiseases. Write to E. Thauberger,\nM.H., Box 914, Vancouver.\t\nRETURNED 3ERVICEMEN!' SPE-\nclalist in European itampi. US.\nand Britlkh bought, iold. The New\nStamp Shop, 508 Hornby, cor.\nPender, Vancouver, B.C.\t\nROLLS ta?raWPEP'AND PRltfT-\ned, 35c. Reprints 4c each. Daily\nService. 3 extra prints with 60c\norders. Satisfaction guaranteed.\nR. Macdonald, Box 190, Klmberley,\n25cT5sn^25c\n*nrmi= -n _mw. coach.\nSerial No. 571889. Heater, good\ntirei Sale price $425. Apply P.\nSamarodln, 920 Gordon Road after\ni-EE\nFOR SALE-1934 INDIAN 45 MO-\ntorcycle. Good condition. Box 238,\nNelaon B.C.\t\nAUTOMOTIVE'PARTS. Flf\nI njiiivm \u00bb\"   i tMiawi   \u00bb\u25a0*\u25a0.*    rt*~*-J\nused Box 34. Cit* Auto Wrcke\/I\nEW AND USED BATTERIES.\nNelion Auto Wrecking -Garage.\nFOR SAI_E-U8ED RANGE ANT)\nheater. Ph. 584-L2.\nf\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED-GENERAL STORE OR\nother suitable business it once.\nCan pay caih. Phoni 984-R1 or\nwrite Mrt. C. Becker, 1419 Vincouver St\nSHIP US VOUH SCRAP MTTA--S\nor Iron Any quantity Top prion\npaid.   Active Trading  Compiny\nam Poweii St.. *_wuyy[\nRENTAL COMPRESSORS\nWe ire again in a poiltlon to rant by\nday, WM- or month, prtibli air\noompriuon, gaaoline or Clesej\ndriven, electric self itarter, mounted\non ruuber-tlred wheels.\nFtoWS E, RITCHIE k SON LTD\n658 Hornby St. Vancouver, B.C\nWANTED - WEEKLY staX\nauantity vegetabli Juicet. Apply\nBox 148 DaUy Newt-\nWaSTSC\"-tAB-WfJ-\n\u25a0katet. Slzet 9 and tV\/t. ______\u25a0\n'^\nWANTED - FAb?S O'\nHighest price paid. Box\nwAiWefi -\"tflWnjPf^nBK-\nter Phoni SM-X.    \t\nShip YoTHt Hfb\u00ab8 WT. f. U-Tt-\ngan, Nelaon, B.C.\t\nRENTALS\nWANTED TO RENT BY QUIET\nworking couple, housekeeping\nrooms, suite or imall house. Phone\n884\nWANTED TILL END OF JUTTS-\nfurnlthed house or suite. Box 130,\nDally New.\nwANl?g_>-5 6* .ROOM HOPS*:\nto   rent   Apply   Box  309   Daily\nNews.\nLAfiY^AST-Wm-'ofl SMALL\nhouse Immediately. Ph. M4-Y,\nFOR TlENT - 1 BEDHOOlta. PH.\n4J9-Y. \t\nROOM AND BOARD\n\u201er,:_________l___-\nrBSAlFjTD^rcWRO-\nY-rty Splnography Strand\nS^ANOi-M-L-Ml\nrjToaEN :MINING AND\ng$Ur aCUnd Sur-\nSilar.d and Grand FerM.\nBffL_-K.iffiooM^.\nBC. Surveyor, ^f1\"6\"\n^HARWTrT5uTTANCT\nItttt  Phone 198\n^^\u00bb___^__ZZIZ-\nMtTT. L-Jifl'ttr\nu Shop,  acetylene and\n\u25a0elding, motor rewinding,\nH 324 Vernon St\nI ln mine and mill won\nwork, light tnd heavy\nin. Acerylene welding\nSt.. NcUon_     _P_J_\nJhW___Pu^tW3\ngETT-ni6Yl.ANb\nlartered Accountant\nrla St, Trail  _Ph. 818\nTf-X\"AND\"E'X\"C11ANGE:\nf you' Pk.8M-Arkjtore\nPETS\n|TpRD4__R 8PAN1F.I-5\n\u00bbd. Born 9th of June. Best\ntoft In States and Canada.\nlox 210MJchel, B.C.\nan 9ail|4 Nftn*\nTELEPHONE 144\n'ltd Advtrtiiing Rati\nline per Inieruon\n_ lint per week '8 cor,\nI Intirtloni for coit ol \u00bb>\nI lint t month\ntimet)\nBum J llnet per Into\u2122\"\"\nBumben lie extra This\nUiny number of tlmn\nC (LEGAL) NOTICES.\nTENDERS   ETC\n-*r line (list iniertlon and\n\u25a0ch iubio<i\"cnl Iniertlon\nrABOVK   RATES   LESS\nIbR PROMPT PAYMENT\nT|CIAL LOW HATH\ncommercial iltultlom\ntor 2\u00bbe 'or any nqulrto\n|r ef lines (or lit  diyi.\nIt In tdvanc*.\nBsCniPTlON RATF;S\nWeoej k\n\u25a0Tier, per wes-p\n\u25a0gvance\nKiel, per vtar\nloutslot Ninon:\nWANTED - A PLEASANT ROOM\nfor middle aged lady leaving hoi-\npltaL Requlret food food, complete rest and a little nurilng care\nfor one month. State particular!\nand termt. Box 084 Dally Newt.\nCAPABLE HIGH SCHOOL GIRL\nwants room and boird ln return\nfor light dutlei. Box 077 Diily\nNews.\nWANTED-ROOM AND BOARD\nfor itudent In exchange for houie-\nhold tervlces, Phone 1191-L..\nLOST AND FOUND\nLr-^-NEAR GRAVbL PIT AT\nBrilliant Wed, Licence Plate No.\n_ o.4 witn Ntlson, B.C., plate\nattached. Leave it Utxrty Confectionery. Reward.\nMACHINERY\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY\nOF RELIABLE MINING\nMACHINERY\nMoneha Trams ond Mucking Machines, Min\u00bb Ralls,\nPipe,   Comprttssori,   Rock-\nCrushers,  Bell Mills, Stop-\n\u00abrs, Jack Hammers, Valves.\nVancouver Sales &\nAppraisals Limited\n346 Beach Avenue\nVancouver, B. C.\nSflP\"-_!ffiS X'\u2122BER\"3ori_\neconomically. Use the modern\nand un-to-date type National Por\ntable Sawmllli. Manufactured 'bv\nNATIONAL MACHINERY CO\nLTD. Vineoi'ver BC\nP.O. Box 494, Vincouver\nAny 8-exp roll developed in\ned 25c Renrinta 3c. Free 5x7\nIn Both Tries\nlOSTON, Sept. U (AP)-Dave\nFerrUi' attempt to win hit 22nd\nAmerican Leagua garni ot the season fallad tedljr' l| Chicago Whlti\nSox rallied for (lvi rum in the\nilxlh Inning to defeat thi Rid Sox\nB-l in the second game of \u2022 double-\nheader. Chicago also took thi tint\ngame, 8-9. Thi latin win Roiton'i\nlixtb md Mvinth In i row\nCtiicago  :.    9  U   0\nBoiton      9    8    1\nLee ind Treih; Rubl ind Holm.\nChicago\nBoiten %..\n    a 13   o\n ,    l   i   i\nCastlno, Grove and Tresh; Ferriss,\nHausmann and I'ytlak.\nATHLETICS SCORE \/\nPHILADELPHIA, Sept. 18 (AP)-\nPaced by i fifth-inning homer by\nFlrit BaiBJtW Dick Slebert, Phlla-\ndelphia Athletic! defeated Cleveland Indlani today, 7-5, in the nightcap of an American League double-\nheader after dropping the opener,\n3-0.\nCleveland      8    8    0\nPhiladelphia   ..._.     0    9    0\nGromek   and   Hayei;   Newiom,\nBerry ind Rosar.\nSecond.\nCleveland  _   ... 8    8    0\nPhiladelphia        7   10    1\nCenter, Ileynoldi, Salveson, Him\nMd Hiyci, Desautels; Knerr and\nBerjy.\nFIRST FOR CHANDLER\nNEW YORK, Bept 19 (AP) -\nSpud Chandler, recently dlicharg\ned from the Army, won hit first\nAmerican League gome of the 1348\nseason as hit New York Yankei\nmates overcame \u25a0 four-run deficit\nto beat St. Louli Browns, 8-4, and\ngain an even break In today's\ndoubleheaer. The Brownt won the\nopener 6-2 {behind Bob Muncrlef.\nThe split, before u crowd of 37,849,\nleft the St. Loulians In third place\nby one game over the Yankees.\nSt, Louis      9    8    1\nNew York -, :\u25a0    1    \u2022    0\nMuncrlef and Mancuso; Monham\nand Robinson\nSecond:\nSt. Louli      4    8    0\nNew York  8    8    1\nShirley, Zoldak and Mancuso;\nChandler and Dresche..\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 17. 1941 - 7\nCubs Knock Out Brooklyn With\nRecord 18th Sweep of Twin Bill\n_ .  . . eprlnt; 3c. Free 8x7 coupon. I\nPhysiotherapy and Masjgge\nElectrical treatments, cabinet baths,\nparticularly helpful in cases of irtn-\nritis, rheumatism, neuritis and sinus.\nReducing courses. Phone 1133 lor\nappointment. 614 Victoria St\nFILMS UKV ELOPED AND PRINT.\ned (8 or 8 exposure roil) 23c. Re.\nDrlhts 3c each. For your snapshots\nchoose Krystal Finish Guaranteta\nnon-fade prints Krystal Photos,\nWilklo, Saskatchewan. Esttbllshed\novcr 30 yean.\nSTOP ITCHINO TORTURES OF\neczema, psoriasis, ringworm, athlete's foot and ether ikin Irritations with Ellk'i Ointment No 3\nprescription of noted ikln specialist. Itch relieved promptly, skin\nhealed quickly or money refund-\nMedicine Co- Dent 43, Saskatoon.\nSask\nSTOP SUFFERING FROM FOL-\nlowing stomach Disorders: Add\nStomach, Indlgettion, Heartburn,\nCoated Tongue, Bad Breath, Sick\nHeadachet. etc. Use Ellk'i Stomach powder No. 3, prepared by\nexperienced Pharmacist. It mult\ngive Immediate reiults or money\nback, 31, it. Ellk'i Medldni Com-\npany, Dept 42, Saikatocn, Silked, 81.00, $2.00. Mall ordin fljled\npromptly Order today from Ellk'i\nHOW WOULD YOU LIKE TO OWN\na $10,000 Home built wherever you\nwlih? Or If you prefer we will\ngive you $10,000 in Victory Bondi.\nMonthly $100.00 Victory Bond\ndraw. Proeeedi for underprivileged children and their* playground!. DON'T DELAY. 811\ndown right now, lend $100 lo\nVerne Tupling, Secretary, Kiwan-\nis Club of Sudbury, Box 83, Sudbury. Ontario.\n1 1b'h.P. VERtlCAL BUTT STRAP\n\u25a0team Boiler. Pressure allowed,\n130 lbi. It being used every day\nand la In good working condition.\nApply to Arlada Dairy Co., Edge-\nwood, B.C\ntX ROI PORTABLE AIR COM-\npretson. No priority required. AIR\nEQUIPMENT 8EHVICE LTD.,1401\nRave your doctor'and\nHospital bills paid anywhere\nin North America\u2014No neid\nfor large advance payimenti\nor groups. Contract can be\npaid monthly. Join the Reliance Health Assoc., Chamber of Mines Bldg., Nelson,\nBC\n.t as motfs\nHornby St. Vancouver.\nFARM, GARDEN & NURSERY\nBULBS\nFOR FALL PLANTING\n10 large Darwin Tullpi, 10 to S8\nIns, high, 4 each red, yellow, purple, white and pink $3.00\n-0 large yellow Daffodlli or 20\nlarge white Narclsius for $300\nBuneh flowered Narcissus bulbs\nfor Xmaa blooming, 8 large bulbs\nfor . $100\nRilnbow collection Tullpi ot outstanding varieties, postpaid.\n1   dor. $1.3.\n. KUYPER'S BULBS\nHATZIC, B.C.\nWe Grow Only the Best\nPhone 144 far Want Ad Strvlct\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nI   ta\n1100\n108\nion\n1(10\n^jSTWtfSt?\n||_Waisd United King-\nI tubserlberi living out-\nKvulir cirri\" area\nWhert and to Csnidt\nText\u2122 pottage Is required\nMAth II SO. three months\nUx months $8 00. one year\nInventor\nof the\ntelephone\nOgled\nContract!\nthe\nthouldert\nDriest\nOoddMtof\nh\u00bbr\u00bbeiu\nLeglt-turn\nBooth\nDry, a* wine\nFor\nNirr\u00bbw In-\nNet (fed)\n14 Keel-Wiled\nenekoo\nis Sheltered\ntide\n18 Sprite\n18. Utile bin\nof medicine\nSO. Chief god\niBabyl)\n$\u00ab Fog\nXI Afresh\n$4. Bellowed\nS3 Baking\nchamber\nIT Rriciif\n18. A unit of Ult\nijhhb uuau\nUUPiLl-   i\"\"\"B\nl-tULillul     __..\nai7ti aga   i\nni.iir.nmn\nUUQtlK  P1_I-I_H\nI.HiriUI'IIHli     .\nKL(      H'-'l'i   MLUl\n_\\f_      U-iViiBi\nSuae_] uwuuu\nlIHIlli   l,_,l.il.1\n,  .JHUH  HUM-\n\u2022\u2022ttrlir'l \u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb'!\nSI Cxcettof\nchtneet\nII. Conclude\n43 Fortify\nACROSS\n1. Sunn up\n5. River\n(Ger.)\n9. VVtariet\n11. Nonsenil\nllling)\n12 Rtluetant\n11. Comer\n14. Unit of\nwork\n18. Decay\n17. Old timet\n(archaic)\n18. Trlck-\nIO. Twlgt\n23 Story\ntt. Amtrlean\nIndiana\nIS .Section of i\n\u25a0wltchboard\nW Outer\ngarment\n30. Tilth\n31. Odor\n33. Fast\n36. Sick\n17. Back\n40 Hube of\nwhttli\n42 Having ran\n44 Oeeurrtnct\n43 Corntred,\n\u25a0sIn ttret\nII Trav\u00abl\nIT. Botch\nDOWN\n1. Dexttroui\nI. Movible\nbarrter\nI. Drtwilowl>\n4 Ctoterlt\n8 An age\nI Theiter iett\nC-TPTOOroiX-A tryx\\\u00bbe~t- <r>\u00bb\u00ab\u00bbtt\u00ab\u00bb\nBMDDMK   H   OTDDCM   ITHIHW   DTHJ\n\u25a0   WCMHD   N M H O   C\u00ab   Tuuni.suHx   \u2022\nBTHXMBrMHEM.\nSaturday's IVyptoqaol.r    DEBT II TH\u00ab PROLIFIC MOTHER\nOF FOLLY AND OF OUMK   DISRAELI\nBORROW WITH\nLIFE PROTECTION\nOn Campbell Loans a life Insurance policy takes care of\nyour unpaid loan balance In\ncase of death. No extra cost for\nthil protection. 8!xample of\nplans to chooie from:\nYou        11        18 10 14\nGet       Pvti.     Pytl.     Pytl.    Pytl.\n$100     $ 9 SI   $ 7 84   $ $\n200        IB 62      1S.28\n400        37 25     50 55     23.88\n\u25a0800        88 88     45 40     SS 00     $010\n800        73 85      5(1 DO     4810     9910\n1000       91S3     74.40     57 20     48.40\nREDUCED RATES\u2014$10-$1000\nNO ENDORSIRS\nPtione Firtt for Faster Service\nCAMPBELL\nFINANCE CORPORATION\nLIMITED\n680 Baker St. Phone 1088\nAbove Fink'i Rtady-to-Wtar\nWildcats, Co-Ops\nWin\nFirst Football\nBy Thi Canadian  Prill\nA crushing victory for Hamilton\nWildcats, a luccesrtul debut by football's first major co-operative and\nreturn of Toronto Argonauti after\na three year abience highlighted\nopening garnet of the 1MB gridiron\ncampaign Saturday ai firing started\non three Mattered frontt in Ontario.\nWildcats Inaugurated a campaign\nfor their third ttraight Ontario Rugby football Union championihlp by\nsuppressing Windsor's Rockets 21-6\nat Windior'i Kennedy Stadium before an estimated 2.00 fans who\nwatched the bortler clty'i flnt O.R.-\nV.U. competition in more than a de-\ncadi.\nIn the other O.R.F.U. league game,\nstrength ihowed'up ln the expected\nplacet ai Toronto Oakwood Indlani\nbattered Ottawa Trojam 11-1 before 8,000 fans it Ltntdowne Park.\nThi three Stukui brother!, BlU.\nFnnk and Annli, joined with Jl-\nyeir-old running naif Hott McKel-\nviy te count ill Indian points.\nThi filth O.R.F.U. teim-Tor-\nonto Bilmy Beach Tip-Topi\u2014took\nadvantages \u25a0 bye ln the schedule\nto play in exhibition game in Toronto agalnit Argot, reorganized under Coach Teddy Morrli for their\nball tinee the Interprovinclal Union\nfolded ln 1941.\nTwo tlngltt on klcki by Art Skid-\nmore and mother on Billy Bell'i,\nfIrit-Quarttr hoist give Argot \u2022\n3-0 victory before 7,000 fans In a\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\niT.R_sAir^\"-<5oc GewS\nhorsa with harnen, $80. Call at\nShorty's Repair Shop. 714 Baker,\nram, mi - mtAvT work\nhone, 1750 lbs, 7 yeari old, gentle. R. J. Trcston, Kaleden, B.C.\nfM sale ~ vouwa irsm\ncow.  Apply   Bill  Sofonoft  Brll-\nllant\t\nvoari.   N.   Doienberger,   R.R.   1,\nNelson.\nTOW SAUt-TOOD JCTs\u00bb7 CO\",\ntrcihtiii Nov. Hamilton, Perryt.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nTOR SALif7^18 fTHBY 8^~B-AM\nirml-Crulser, mtionltt cabin. 8\nH T. Btndix Eclipse air cooled motor with clutch, both used very\nkittle. 2 whrrltd irillar, rood rubber, $800.1'.O Box UB7, Trill, B.C.\nFOR RACt^\"18-rt. TnBOARf) fi5-\nj torbott, .81.4 ft bum, Up. Pltrce\nengine, firs! cliu condition. R.\nFtirhurtt, Sllvirton, B.C.\ndtfemive    itrtngth,    with    Argoi\nshading Betchei slightly on the attack.\nCO-OPS WIN\nAt Ottawa, Indlani asserted superiority early on touchdown! by\nFrank Stukui tnd McKelvey. Tht\nclub which will pool all profltt ln a\nclub undertaking joverntd \"by tht\npltytri for the players'* struck\nagain lite In the fourth quarter\nwith BUI Stukua getting a major\nscore after Jim Cumming and\nPlaying Coach Arnle McWatters\ncontributed Ottawa's two tingles,\nthe latter dlstllowid because of in-\nterftrtnet. \u2022\nA minor mtlee brokt out after\nMcWttteri' icort when t youngiter\nneir the Indian touch-line tried to\neitch the bill. Order finally wu\nrestored ifter Jostling between police officials tnd cthtr youths who\nswarmed to tht touch-line from all\nparts of the ptrk. But the umpires\nwathed out the icore.\nRockets flattered home fans tt\nWindsor by taking a 5-3 first-half\nlead on Letensky'i touchdown ifter\nt blocktd kick, but Wlldciti erupted for 18 polntt in tht third ijuar-\nter to ita! the Issue.\nANOTHER FALLS TO\nGALLANT SIMON\nWINNIPEG, Sept. U (CD-Gallant Simon, owned by Lou (Jrwiano\nof Vancouver, B. C, won the !e\u00bb.\ntun race at Polo Park here Saturday, the $2500 Added Speers Handicap.\nIntermediates\nEdge Out Juniors\nNelson Intermediates took the\nmeaiure of the F.A.C. Juniors 9-8\nin an exhibition game at the Civic\ngrounds Sunday afternoon, A good\ncrowd witnessed \u2022 fair game of ball\nconsidering the cool weather. Both\nsquads were ihort a player\nHighlights of the game were some\nnice fielding by Walt Malthoff, and\nRon Stuart of the Junior! and\nJohnny Bachyntkl of tht Intermediate!,\nJack Harry, veteran chucker and\ncatcher of the old Rossland Seniors,\nhurled for tht winners. He .truck\nout eight, walked two and hit one\nbatter and yielded 11 hlti. Slim Porter,In the abience of Bob McNabb,\ntook over the mound work for the\nJuniors. He walked two and itruck\nout three but allowed only nine\nhits,\nWalt MalehoH hit the enly homer\nof the game, but there were lev-\nflrit appearance  In  blgtlmt foot-<|eral two base hlti, Bob MacDonald\nand Jack Harry getUng two each\nand Ron Nath one for til wltvpen,\nHerb Pitts and Jimmy Todd getting\none esch for thi lown.\nEach side pulled off \u25a0 doable play,\n,   ., ,    ... i Bob. MacDonald to Bun MacDon-\ngami itudded wi h preseaion .umjLw f    ^utertmHXtrtet Alec\nblet. Both tearm indicated powerMT CUrk to Herb PItti for lhe JunlM-,\ni^cfonrliris ,_Ts-_rt-fTh llMtn A T'lnl   I\nCHICAGO, Sent. 11 (APV- 0W-\nIII* Oubt knocked Brooklyn out\nIf | mathematical chance fir tht\nNatlonil Lea.ue ptnntnt, enhanc\nid their own chancel if orabblnj\nthi flit) md let \u25a0 major tiagut\nricord Miy \u2022\u2022 thiy dumpid thi\nDodatn In both ends If \u2022 doublt\nhttd, 3-8 and 4-0,\nTht double victory, oefort \u25a0\n\u2022lewd of 40,187, came al It- Louli\nWis splitting with Philadelphia,\nand moved thi Cubi to four full\ngames ahead If thi champion\nCardinals In thi pennant chtse.\nIt wu Chicugo's 18th sweep pf I\ndoubleheader thli niton, pitting\nthe record of 17 held by St.. Louis.\nNeither victory waa an eaiy one.\nIn the flnt game, they had to come\nfrom behind a 1-0 deficit tpr I M\nlead, let thi Dodgers til thi count\nat 2-2, and then move ahead ts win,\nIn th| second, the Dorjegrs tied the\ncount It 2-1 In the leventh after tha\nCubs bad taken \u25a0 1-0 lead in the second, and then Chicago swept ahead\nwith two runt in the lait of tht seventh.\nBrooklyn     2   8   1\nChicago     3   8   0\nBranca and Dantonio; Prim and\nGillespie.\nSecond:\nBrooklyn ..,.-    18   3\nChicago     4   10   0\nSeati, Oregg, Buker and Sand\nlock; Wyie and Livingston.\nLOWLY PHILS\nAID CUBS\nST. LOUIS, Sept. 18 (CP) -\u25a0 The\nlaat.place Philadelphia Phillies who\nhave won only 44 garnet all year,\nsplit a doubleheader today with the\nsecond-place St. Louis Cardinals,\nhelping Chicago Cubs to extend\ntheir National League lead to four\nful Igamei. The Phils won the flnt\ngame, 4-3, with two rum ln the\nninth, and the Cards took the nightcap, 10-3.\nManager Ben Chapman, who Inserted himself Into the Phlllle lineup as a plneh-hltter, drove home the\nrum In the opener with a\ntingle off Rid Barrett after Johnny\nAntonelll hid walked ind Rene\nMonteagudo had ilapptd \u2022 tingle off\nStaffer Ken Brukhardt.\nTh* Red Birdi' bats finally came\nto life In thi nightcap and thiy\npounded the offerings uf flvi Philadelphia hurlirt for 18 safetlet.\nPhiladelphia 4 n  2\nSL Louli 3    8   2\nMauney, Kraut, Krai, 8ctanz . I\nSemlnlck; Kurkhardt, Barrett and\nSrumling.\nSecond:\nPhiladelphia     I    8  2\nSt. Louia             10   18   1\nSproull, Kraut, Leon, Fox, Karl\nend Splndel, Semlnlck; Jurisich,\nGardner and Rice.\nPIRATES, GIANTS SQUARE\nPITTSBURGH, Sept. 18 (AP) -\nThe Pirate-Giant battle fqr fourth\nfilace |n the National League ent'.ed\nn a drgw today at thty split, Pittsburgh taking the first garni 3-2 and\nthe New Yorkers winning the nightcap, 0-2. Jack Brewer limited Pirates to four hiti in the second game.\nNew York     2   8   0\nPittsburgh      3   8   1\nMaglle and Lombardi; Roe and\nLopez.\nSecond:\nNew York    I   13   1\nPittsburgh       2    4   4\nBrewer tnd Kluttz; Gablei, Beck,\nCuccurullo, Rescigno and Lopez.\nup ai a pi\nwinning\nWIN IN 11TH\nCINCINNATI, Sept. 16 (AP) -Al\nLakeman's llth inning single, scoring Frank McCormick, gavi Cincinnati Redt a 8*4 National League\nvictor yover Boston ln the lecond\ngame of today's double-header, Thi\nBraves wbn the opener, 4-3,\nBoston      4    8   0\nCincinnati     3   110\nLee, Hutchingi md Mail; Bowman, Carter and Lakeman.\nSecond:\nBotton      4   11   3\nCincinnati     8    8   0\nLogan, Hendrlckson and Hofferth;\nCarter, Kennedy, Harriit, Fox and\nLakeman.\nFish! Listen\nfo these\nTwo Lions Roar\nThe game was tied at the end of\neach of the flrit three _r.ntn&i, Oscar Chrlstenson and Bob MacDonald led the winners with three\nruns each, Ron Nash with two and\nJohnny Bachynskl one. Jimmy\nTodd, Ron Cathcirt, Herb Pitta\nscored twice each, while Walt Ma-\nlahoff and Slim Porter icorad one\neach for the Juniors.\nBatteriei were\u2014\nIntermediates\u2014Harry and Christen son.\nJunior*\u2014Porter and Cathcart.\nTIDY PiTM WINS\nFOR NEW OWNER\nVICTORIA, Sept. 18 (CP) -Tidy\nPeter, running hli flrit race for his\nnew owner Dr. K. R. Darbyihlrt,\nscored hii third successive win tt\nthe Willowt traek here Saturdty.\nBefore a crowd of 8800 persons he\ncopped the United States Handicap\nfrom a muddy field.\nThe Lloni were roaring in Nelson Saturday, but the loudest roan\ncame from two iwaggerlng memberi of the Spokaae Lloni Club.\nThey, It leemed, caught fish that\nwere flih.\nLeonard Arbon md Harviy (Juir.\ntin will never lit certain Lioni forget ItiettiTrWiey couldn't _WT\u00ab\nboat, oh no. Thiy weren't food\nenough to eateh a fish while waiting for the Kootenay Lake Ferry,\neither. And the betting by the other\nferry-sitter-outeri wat five to one\nthat they couldn't. But they did.\nCaught In the group ot ciri carrying visiting Lloni thit were\norowded oft tht Nssookin it Gray\nCreek Saturday morning, till two\nIliak Waltoni hunted around. A\nboat wai spirited up, lomt oars and\ntacklt mysteriously found, snd\nawiy went Messrs Arbon and\nGutrtln.\nIt teemed ai though they were\nhardly out of sight of their hecklers,\nwho enviously watched from the\nferry landing, before they were\nbtck. There appeared to be no flah,\nand the money wai beginning to\nchange hands, when the fishermen\nreached undernttth an overcoat\nand pulled forth a trout tstlmitcd\nto weigh inywhere from 18 to 23\npounds. To lay thiy created a ten-\nsation wai putting It mildly tnd to\ntop It off they alto ihowed an eight\nor nlne-pounder\n\"I caught an 18-pounder In thi\nPend d'Oreille\", said Mr. Ouertln,\n\"but It wasn't a pitch on the baby\nwa caught thli morning,\" Beaming\nMr, Arbon nodded approval ana\ncontinued to tacklt anyone who\ncared to listen to the ttory.\nHYTHS, Essex, England (CP) \u2014\nAlbert Langford, Hythc itatlonmtt-\nter and holder of the Southern Railway1! gold medal for long and merl-\ntorioui tervlce, hn retired after S3\nyeari' tervlce.\nk^mmmmm*m^mm^ee^ttkmew*<m\u00bbme\nMinora Blades\nSPEED UP\nSHAVING\nMinora glvn you quicker stiovts\nthan ordinary dolibli-tdge roior\nblades. It's thi qualify blad*\nIn thljow price field, fill your\n_out-\/t-\u00ab.(je roion\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWirWIFIO. Stpt  18 (CP)-Oraln\nquoiatloni:\nRYE:\nDec.       , I.Jt.   137%   ISSVsj   187H\nMay 182       I8IH    iSlH    If-'1-\nJuly 14JH   1441*   U)<*   144*\nOils   All futures tt tiling prlctt\nof II'4.\nCASH PRICIS:\nOatr } CW. 6H_; ri. I CW. tlV||\n3 CW 81'.: ex. 1 feed SH; 1 feed\n31: 1 toot im,. I toot in.; trick\n51H\nRri. 1 CW. I84HI I C W. 1844;\ndw. i-Wi fJ.       \t\nC W. l }1: track I 84\nJ C7*. li\u00bb\u00bb! i*J. I CW. \\M; 4\nl M: track 184.\nScrtmlna M oo i ton.\nrETERHT.Atl, Scotltnd (CP) - A\nmine, ctujiht in thp neti of tht Peterhead motor fishing holt Mtgglt\n(lews, blew up without damaging\nthe ship.\nNakusp Legion Dane*\nBrings $86\nNAKUSP, B.C.-The September\nmuting of the Auxiliary to tht\nCanadian Legion heard a rtport by\nMrt. Ott that $88 wat the total raised at their recent dance.\nA lttttr wu rtad from the U.N.\nR.R.A. ibout tht clothing drlvt do.\nnttioni to bt lift it tht Thrift\nShop.\nSeveril ntw mimbert were welcomed. Mri. Ruben Buerge wu In-\nitalled in Vlce-Pretldtnt.\nRefrethmentt wen terved it tht\ncloti of tht mitlng with nostsiei\nMri. Bert Buergi ind Mn, Olion.\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK, Sept. II (AP) -\nGrowing libor rlfls throughout\nthe United Statu htlped put l further chill on the itock market Saturday and leading Ralli. Steels.\nMotors and pivotal fnduitrlils btck-\n\u2022d down fnctloni to more thtn two\npolntt.\nWINN-PEO-A lubttmtlal export\nbuilneii In wheat to the United\nKingdom Wat reported on the grain\nexchtnge md while the exiet\n\u25a0 mount wis not announced It ll estimated that It li mora than 18.000,-\n000 buihils.\nNo other nport business In wheit\nor roirse grain wai reported.\nRyt futures prlcei ihowed lomi\nIrregularity esrly In the tradi whin\nsn aatler torn it Chlctgo prompted\ntome telling Liter ofurlngi dried\nop md viluet idvtnna In ruponse\nto Irxil buying. Trtdlng wu somewhat Inactlft.\nAt Ihe clou prlcn win 1J4-H\nhigher with Oct. 1.84; Dee. J JTti-\nH; M\u00ab* 1 M't-a, and July Utt.fi\nCHICAGO - Short-covering In\nlit! trade pmhrd ryt futures prlcei\nup tround I eent a buthll. Other\n-rtlnt wert steady to firm moit of\nthe tlmt.\nforecaiti of oottlMe froit In\npirtt of the eorn belt led to firm-\nnew In thit grain.\nWheat closed V, lower to S\nhigher, torn wat t< lo \u00abt up. oils\nwire <m down to M un. rye wu \u2022*\nlower to 1*4 centi hgher, and barley wu unchanged to H lower\nOVERSEAS\nMAILING...\nCome and select now so that your son, daughter or friend\nmay receive your Christmas Greeting on time.\nOVERSEAS MAIL CLOSES IN OCTOBER\nALL NEW STOCK TO CHOOSE FROM!\nCALL C. D. PEARSON\nAT 144\nCHRISTMAS CARD DEFT.\n\u00aelj? Mmn laily Nnin.\n__________________________\n^^M^gH\n m-mm\\mw\nm*\nI\n\u2022 - NELSON DAILY NIWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 17, 1945\nHURD HATFIELD\nwisa* uwswtY - rera uwfoid\nPLUS\nLATEST WORLD NEWS\nCOLORED CARTOON\nDONNA REED\nTONIGHT\nShows at 7:00-8:51\nCiwis\nCamera Club\nSees Color\nTravel Films\nTht program of the Nelson Camera Club it its regular meeting\nThursday evening In their Civic Centre club roomi, was given over to\ni splendid showing of movie film,\ndepleting scenes taken over a wide\nterritory from Victoria to Regina.\nWith the exception of one film, the\nprogram wai made up from the library of Fred Blakeman, who took\nthe picturei and who owns a complete movie outfit The scenes\nringed from farming activities on\nthe Prairies to delightful park feat-\nUTM Ot Victoria with its luxurious\nmd abundant flowers shown ln natural color. Added to Mr. Blake-\nxnin'i Own productions was a color\nfilm On s recent Rose Festival at\nPortland, Ore.\nAn interesting feature was scenei\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllM\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME *\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n\"DlttlBCtive Funeral Service\"\nSIS Kootenay St   \"      Phone 361\nsiii'iiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nHave the Job Done Right\nSEE\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nSOMERS' FUNERAL\nSERVICE\nTO Baku St Phone 25.\nOpen Doy and Night\nCrematorium Ambulance\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllliniillllllllllllll\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\nPrcscriprions\na.   Cvl A Compounded   \u2022\nItJlJBLl Accurately\n'IrTirtfv      Med  Arts Blk\n%}V\u00a3)        PHONE 25\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl\nAuto Pointing\nUpholstery Repairs.\nEitimitei gladly given\nWorkmanshin Guarr^'-pd\nCUTHBERT MOTORS\n\u00ab\u00bb54\u00ab\u00ab*\u00ab6\u00abS5\u00ab5--\u00ab\u00abWrWJSK4Sft;\nHivi   Your   Furniture   Expertly\nRecovered   at   the\nNELSON UPHOLSTERY\n\u2022IIS Hill St Phone 148\nLatest   Popular\nSHEET MUSIC AND FOLIOS\nMcKAY & STRETTON\nLimited\nPhoni M4\nln natural color taken during the\nvisit of Their Majesties, King\nGeorge and Queen Elisabeth to Victoria juat prior to the war.\nREVEALS PROGRESS\nMost revealing was the showing\nof a color film taken by Mr. Blakeman in 1938, one of the first color\nfilms to be taken in B.C. To compare the reproduction of the color\nin flowers In thii film with that of\nthe present day was a startling revelation of the development of color\nphotography since that time.\nVice-President Phil. Robinson acted as Chairman and introduced Mr,\nBlakeman. The Chairman explained the loan of a projector was ar-\nraaged   through  the  Nelson   Film\nLibrary.\ns\nThe thanks of the club memben\nand their Invited gueiti were expressed by Rosi Fleming to Mr.\nBlakeman for the showing of his\nfilm, and for his running commentary, and to J. M. Morley for his\nservices as projectionist. Mr. Fleming pointed out that the same wonderful effects in color photography\nwere available for \"still\" cameras,\nand that \"we are promised wonderful development! owing to research\nduring war-time.\" He also brought\nbest wishei from President E. G,\nKidd, who il ln hospital.\nRoy Stone Wins\nClub Title\nRoy Stone added the Club championship to his Imposing list of victories at the Nelson Golf and Country Club Sunday when he defeated\nGordon Allan three up and two tp\nplay. He wins the Appleyard-Lowe\nTrophy as a result. Former Trall-\nite. Stone on Labor Day won the\nWest Kootenay mens' open tournament.\nln Sunday's play, Allan was\ndown four on the fifth. A birdie\non the sixth left him only three\ndown, but he was unable to cut\ndown the lead further. He laid some\nnice drives, but was off on the\ngreeni.\nStone defeated G W, MacKay in\nthe semi-finals, while Allan took\nS. A. Maddocks in a close match\nending on  the  18th  hole.\niiiiiiitinitiuiifiiiiuiniiiimitiiHiiitiii\nELECTRESTEEM\nBABY BOTTLE WARMER\nond STERILIZER\n$4.50\nMann, Rutherford\nDRUGCO.     '\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini\nSouth Slocan\nVeteran Home\nFrom Overseas\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C, Sept. IB\n\u2014Sergeant Marwood F. J. Yeatman\narrived in Nelson Friday from oversea! He crossed the Atlantic on\nthe troopship Cameronla, which\ndocked in Quebec on Sept 10.\nSgt. Yeatman's father, J, 1). Yeatman motored to Nelson to meet\nhim, accompanied by the sergeant's\nwife, whom he married in England\nand who arrived In Canada on July\n4.\nSgt. Yeatman went oveneas with\nthe British Canadian Dragoons In\n1941, and for over two years wai an\ninstructor on tanks. Since D-Day he\nhas been serving the Ambulance\nCorps.\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 A notice, \"Just\nmarried, keep out,\" posted on the\nwindow of a crowded train travelling to Charing Crow Station was\nrespected by pauengeri who had to\nstand.\nLeaves Unexpectedly\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiii\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nRates: 22c line, 27c >!ne black faoe\ntype, larger type rltei on request.\nMinimum two lines. 10% dlicount for prompt piymenl\nllllllllllllllimillllllllllliillllllllimilli\nDusty Rhodei, Chimney Cleaner\nPhone 328-R2.\nWe still have peaches for prenrv.\nIngl Wrlght'i Grocery.\nMaster Mason Pipe Tobacco V, lb\npkg. 8_c at Valentines.\nHyacinth bulbs, 3 for $100. Whjte,\nblue, yellow. Kitchener, Nelson,\nFor   water    pump    repairs   see\nSK1LTON at 301 Baker Street\nWhy not give us a call to Increase\nyour fire insurance protection today? - C. W. APPLEYARD.\nDo you carry enough insurance on\nyour property and effects? See\nLLACKWOOD AGENCY.\nElliion'i Royal Patent Cake and\nPastry Flour is best for fancy baking. Get it st |ny good grocery.\nNStSON LITTLE THEATRE\nMeeli Can. Legion, Tues. Sept 18\n8 p.m.\nAll Interested pleaie attend.\nEnquire about a comprehemlve\npersonal liability Insurance policy\nRon Somers' Agcy., 302 Baker. Ph\n1111\nMeeting of Nelson Liberal Assoc.\nCanadian Legion, Tues. Sept. 18 st\n730 p.m. Appointment of delegates\nto nomination convention.\nCash register rolls for all models.\nD. W. McDerby, \"The Stationer k\nTypewriter Man\", 852-854 Baker\nStreet, Nelson, B.C.\nNelson CC.T. Club meeting Tuesday 18th. 8 pm. Eagle Hall. All\nmembers ln good standing please attend. Business Important.\nIf you are Interested in Accident\nand Sickness benefits from the first\nday for a life time see or write H\nF. Dill representing the Continental\nCasualty Company.\nNICE, France, Sept 18 (AP) -\nGen. Elsenhower left here unexpectedly Saturday after .riving Friday for a vacation with Gen. Mark\nW. Clark and Ambassador W. Av-\nerell Harrlman. His ludden departure  waa Ilot explained.\nSet Up Motor\nCarriers\nBranch Here\nOrganization of the Kootenay Carrier Association, to be an associate\nmember of the Motor Carriers Also-\nelation, was carried out Friday night\nat the Canadian Legion,\nNelson carriers and taximen and\nCastlegar operators attended the\nmeeting. Assisting ln the organization were Gene Bucktnan, Secretary-Manager of the Motor Carriers\nAssociation, and 3. B. Tomkins and\nErnest Carruthers, publiahers of the\nMotor Carriers Magazine. The three\nmen were guests of the Nelson\nBoard of Trade at the Hume Friday. All expressed amazement at\nthe modernness of Nelson, It was\ntheir first visit to the City from\nVancouver.\nAcceptance of the local body as\nan associate member is expected\nshortly. Gordon Williams waa named Secretary-Manager, while Director! will be John Towler, Kelly\nOzelle, J. C. Mulr and W. Tonkin\nof Kaslo.\nFunctions of the Association and\noperation of its tariff bureau were\ndescribed by Mr. Buckman. Need\nof uniformity and standardization\nof tariffs was stressed during discussion and a new household goods\ntariff, first of its kind ever recognized by British Columbia, was\nstudied. Mr. William! was one of\nthe pioneer movers of the tariff. It\nhas been adopted by carriers from\nCranbrook to Vancouver Island.\nMr. Tomkins and Mr. Carruthers\ndisplayed a shippers' guide which\nthey are preparing. When complete lt will have the names of every town ln B.C., lists of carriers\nhauling freight to tthe towns and\nthe services they give, show time\nschedules and mileages, and movements of all types of carrying services such ai railroad, bus lines and\nwater traffic.\nFormer Nelson\nNurse on Way\nto Far North\nA former Nelson Public Health\nNurse and School Nurse is to be\nresponsible for the health of tht\npopulation of 300 square mllei ln\nthe-Yukon Territory, She Is Miss\nNancy Dunn, O.B.E., who has left\nfor Wrangell, Alaska, to board the\nlast boat to gp up the Stlckine River this season to Telegraph Creek.\nAfter being nurse in Nelaon tor\nfive years she left ln August 1942,\nto take up post-graduate work ln\nIndustrial relations at the Coast\nMlsi Dunn came to Nelson from\nthe Peace River country.\nA story ln the Vancouver Province telling of her appointment follows:\nThe Far North calls, and a veteran Canadian nurse has answered it.\nMiss Nsncy Dunn, OfiX., who\nhas been taking post-graduate work\nat the Vancouver General Hospital,\nand the Royal Jubilee Hospital in\nVictoria, has left for Wrangell,\nto board the last boat to go up\nthe Stickine River this season to\nTelegraph Creek.\nThere'she will be responsible for\nthe heallh ot the population of 300\nsquare miles, reaching her patient!\nln the remote areas by dog team\nand plane. The nearest doctors\nwill be 200 miles away, In White-\nhorse and Hazelton.\nMiss Dunn, the daughter of Mrs.\nSidney Young of Toronto, nursed\nduring the First Great War - ln\nFrance and Belgium, and has served for six years In the Peace River.\nFor the.past year ihe has been on\nprivate duty ln Victoria.\nHer appointment came through\nthe Dominion arid Provincial Government!.\nFormer Fernie\nResident\nDies In Nelson\nMrs. Ethyl Kennedy, 65, who hai\nlived in Nelson for only three weeki,\ndied early Sunday evening in Kootenay Lake General Hospital.\nMrs. Kennedy was a resident of\nFernie for 35 years, going there\nfrom her home In Brantford, Ont\nShe ii survived by her husband,\nFred Kennedy, and two sons, Spencer ot Edinburgh, Scotland, and Osborne at Rock Island, Illinois.\nTO RETURN SOON\n(\u25a0    *\nEasy to Digest and\n, Pleasant to Tako\nIt Your Rexall Store\nCity Drug Co.\nPhona IS. ' Box 460\nMAJ. GEN. HURLEY     -\nSHANGHAI, Sept. 1\u00ab (AP) - A\nreliable Informant from Chungking\nsaid Saturday Ma).-Gen. Patrick J.\nHurley would return to Washington within the next two or three\nweeks and would shortly submit\nhis resignation as United States Ambassador to China.\nGen. Hurley has been Intensely\nactive to bring about settlement of\nthe complicated dlfferencei between President Chiang, Kai-shek\nand the Communist!.\nSub.-Lieut. Wade\nWinding Up\nFive Years Service\nMrs. Dave Wade passed through\nNelson on her way from Klmberley\nto Vancouver where ihe will meet\nher son, Sub-Lieut. John Wade, who\ns arriving from Cornwallls, Nova\nScotia, to receive hli discharge after\nnearly five years service ln the\nR.C.N. They will return to Nelson\nto take up residence at Lockeport\nLodge on the North Shore,\nSays Economic Burden of Children\nMust Be Moved lo Community\nLONDON (CP)-Mrn from the\nArmy Pioneer Corps now \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0 being\nemployed as gtnkeri in a plant pro-\ndiirmfl gas for the use of I_ondon\nCity.\nTHE\nCoffee Cup Cafe\nSpecializing In\nHome cooked meals and\nsandwiches.\nNear Greyhound Deoot\nHOSPITAL AND DOCTORS'\nBILLS PAID\nJOIN THE RELIANCE\nELECTRIC MOTORS\nVi H.P. to 1 H.P.\nNELSON ELECTRIC\nPhona 260\n301  Biker St\nNelson, B.C.\nMUs Haxel Hai-vie, Carol Gwynne\nCosmetic demonstrator, will be at\nMilady's Beauty Parlour Mon,\nTues , and Wedneiday. Please phone\n244 for appointments.\nCovers Doctors, Hospital, Naturopath. Chiropractor bills plus weekly\nIndemnity and death benefit \u00bbt n\nlow monthly cost, Phone 980. E M\nDA, 577 Haker St'.\nExtra gas\u2014You now have It Protect yourself against Law Suits and\nCollision, etc. We write Auto Insurance, and can live you money\nRobertson Realty.\nELLISON'S BEST FLOUR\nthe family specialty\nELLISON MILLING CO.\nPHONE 238\nPARENT8\nNelson   P.T.A.   extends  a  ipeclnl\nInvitation to parents of pupils Just\nstarting school.  Tomorrow, Central\nSchool, 8 pm.\nAnother shipment of DDT. Barn\nSpray Just received. The miracle\nwartime Insecticide. Limited supply ivill-hle for dilry and farm\nuse only, lllpprrson'l.\nTHE NELSON LIONS wish to thank all\ncitiren. of Nelson who so generously provided room in their homes for the accommodation of their guests on NELSON\nLIONS' CHARTER NIGHT.\nRegulir meeting of Nelton Gridu-\nate Nurses' Association Monday evening. 8 o'clock In Nurses' Residence.\nGuest speaker: Mini Alice Wright,\nReglitnr of B C. Nunes' Allocation, full ittendance li required.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nTuneril Service! tor (he lite Mri\nAnnie D. Crebbln of Slocan Park\nwill be held trom the Thompion\nFuneral Home Tueadiy it 3 p.m,\nRev. T. J. S. Ferguion officiating\nInterment will be in thi Nelion\nMemorlil Pirk.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\n1-ennedv\u2014Mm Fred, pa\u2014ed iwiy\nSundiy Sept. lt. Private funeral\nservices will be held at Somer'i Funeral Horns on Tueediy, Sapt 18.\nit 1 pm. Interment will tike place\nIn Kelson Memorlil Pirk\nTOO LATI TO CLASSIFY\nron sale - i6 quiet, heavy\nlogging   horsei   In   CPU  stock\nTirdi ill day Tuesday, Sapt IS\nR Buerge, Room U, Roysl Hotel.\nBy JAMES MeCOOK\nCanadian Preu 8tatt Writer\nLONDON, Sept. 18 (CP)\u2014The\nefonomic burden of children must\nbe moved from parents to the\ncommunity, work in the home\nmust be eased and more leisure\nand afforded the wile and mother,\nsaid a report of the standing tolnt\ncommittee of working women's\norganizations issued here.\nThe report was prepared at the\nrequest of the Royal Commission\non Population which invited opinions on the extent of the practice of\ncontraception, motives for family\nlimitation, conditions that operate\nat present to keep down the size of\nfamilies, and measures that might\nbe taken to influence present\ntrends.\nTtie report said that population\nIs pre-eminently a womarTl quel-\ntlon, \"ai no one can make women\nhave more children unleli they\nwint to hive them.\"\nThe woman's attitude was influenced ln part by the estimation In\nwhich the rearing of a family and\nthe work of a home were held by\nthe community. This work never\nhad received the status It deserved.\nMARRIED WOMEN TO\nHAVE CHOICE\nThe committee said lt held strongly to the view that a married woman should be free to choose\nwhether to devote herself tn a home\nand family or enter employment\noutilde the borne. Social services for\nmothers and children should be organlred io ihe could mike her\nrholce freely.\nThe committee slid It felt, however, that the woman who choie\nmanagement of a hnme and the\nrearing of children was doing work\nvf social value n great ai that she\nmight to outside\n\"The community hai the lame obligation to her ai to othfr workeri,\nto see that health and working condition! ara lafeguirded\u2014eg, by the\nprovision of libor-uvtnt equipment\nIn all house! built by public author -\nItlai; adequate maternity grand;\nfacllltiei forleliure, ate.\"\nThe public ihould understand\nthai pruant population trends In\nthi United Kingdom were to-\nwarde a population livel and pop-\nE. A. CAMPBELL & Co.\nChartered Accountant!\nAudltan -\nMl Rakar St- '   Phona IK\n\u2014\nu I at Ion structure which muit\nlead to a shrinking economy. Assuming the continuance of an unplanned economy, thit would\nlead to lower standard! of living,\nThere wu no evidence to show\nthat \"over-population\" wm the\nciuie of depression.\n\"It has been noted that In public\ndiscussion of population problems,\nthere is almost invariably a comparison between the Victorian family of eight or 10 and the one or two\nchild families of today; and. aa the\nactual problem is not always presented clearly, it Is sometimes assumed that there is an intention to\npersuade the mothers of today to\nproduce Victorian families,\" the\nreport said.\n\"This is not t popular Idea and,\nthough It Is a mistaken one, it tends\nto raise suspicion of any proposals\nfor increasing the birth rate.\"\nBIRTH  CONTROL\nThe committee said it was of the\nopinion that birth control is \"almost universally practised\". It was\nnot possible to give categorical answers to the question on motives for\nfamily limitation as this was a personal decision In the case of every\nmarried couple,- Family limitation\nbegan in the higher Income groups\nbut it now was true that the class\ndistinction in the birth rate had almost  disappeared.\nMost parents sought to give their\nchildren a good start in line\u2014easier\nln a small family. In a majority of\nhomes another child meant a lower\nstandard for the whole family.\nOverwork of mothers of many children, economic insecurity, fear of\nwar, and fear of childbirth and the\ntotuwquences of ehildbearing were\nother factors given as reason* for\nthe falling birthiate, .\nAs the family of one or two had\nbecome normal, there had been a\ntendency to regard the family of\nseveral children \"with-* mixture of\npity and amusement, artd parents\nhad to face not only increased financial worry but the scorn of others\nwho Jtnew better than thatl\"\nphone asa\nWe Coll For ond Deliver\nMenu ladles' wits, ladles'      |<U\nDreint! plain      . _     \"w-l\u00bb\nMan'! and Ladles' (1.11\n8ummar Coat! #*oaMi\nEMPIRE CLEANERS I DYERS\nHUDSON\nPAKTS AND SERVICE\nSMEDLEY GARAGE CO.\nNam to Post Office\nSOU Virnon St Nelson\nCanada's\nGrip on Paper\nSlips Again\nOTTAWA, Sapt. 19 (CP) .-Canada, the world's greatest source of\nnewsprint, has let her officinl grip\non supplies slip another notch, It\nwas described Friday, and tha\nPrices Board said decision would be\nreached within the next two months\non total relaxation of the control!\nthat came into existence during the\nwar.\nTO BE INCREASED\nFor the second time since the collapse of Germany, the allocation\nof Canadian newsprint to United\nStates publishers will be increased,\nthis time 10,000 tons a month ln the\nlast three monthi of 1943, and a\nproportionate Increase will benefit\nCanadian publishers.\nWith that announcement, the\nBoard disclosed that the monthly\naverage of newsprint exported to\nthe United States would total 230,-\n000 tons a month through October,\nNovember and December, taking up\na total of 690,000 of the 879,000 tons\nexpected to be produced in that\nperiod.\nO. E. Hoult, Newsprint Administrator of the Board, said the figure\nof 230,000 represent! an increase ot\n10,000 tons a month over the third\nquarter of the year and 30,000 tons\nover the first half of 1945. The increase between July and September was 20,000 tons a month from\nthe previous 100,000 tons.\nWith Canada producing more\nthan four times the amount of newsprint produced by the United States\nin 1944, Canadian publisher! have\nbeen drawing an average of about\n16,900 tons monthly over the lait\nfew monthi. At the lame ratio ai\nthe U.S. increase, that should mean\nabout 750 tods more a month in\nCanada.\nA. F, W. Plumtre, Pricei Board\nSecretary, wai the authority fer\nthe itatement that a decision on\nrelaxation of newsprint controls\n\"will be mide sometime between\nnow md mid-November.\"\nHe wu commenting on Washington report! that all contrail by\nthe United , States Government\nlikely would be ibollshed Dec.\n31. Hi said:\n\"Similar ictlon ln Canadi would\nnot necessarily follow. What happens after the end of the year :\u25a0, itill\nsubject to discussions between ourselves ind United Stales authorl-\ntlei. Any action taken in the United\nStatei naturally hai in Influence\non whit we do here regarding newsprint\n\"However, our lituitlon li lome-\nwhat different. Wa have responil-\nbilities to other countries as well.\"\nSlammin' Sammy\nSnares$2000\nTULSA, Okie.,-Sept. U (AP)--\nSam Snead took 31000 top money\ntodiy with i final icore of 277 in\nIhe Sotithweit Invitation Golf tournament.\nTied for second place with VA\nwere Ben Hogan and Viv Ghe__l.\nSnead ihot the finil round in 73.\ntwo over per, while Hogan carded\na 08 and Ghenl 71.\nByron Nelson placed fourth with\n288, cirdlng par 71 on the last round\nCANTERBURY, Kent, Ingland-\nICP)\u2014A dliuied military cemetery\nhere will be converted Into a children'! pliyground.\nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nTIRED SHOPPING?\nDrop Into the\nMELON DEW\nfor a Pickup,\niiliiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiliiiilii\nWALNUT\nBEDROOM SUITES\nFrom $89.50 up\nHOMI FURNITURE\nB.C. Firm lo\nTurn Out\nSeaweed Products\nVICTORIA, Sept. 18 (CP) - In\nthli atomic age the last word In\nbreakfait cereal li seaweed. At\nleast that Is how the Marine Laboratories Ltd. of Ebiirne, B.C., feel\nabout lt.\nWhile seaweed cereal Is still a\nmatter of the future, within a few\nweeki now tha firm will be turning\nout a variety of seaweed product!\nfor medicinal purpoiei and to. supplement ordinary diets of both human beings and animals. '\nThe products for human con\nsumption are being prepared from\nneurovystlsus, a larger kelp com.\nmon on the Southern Coast of British Columbia. This product la\nrich ln minerals and Iodine and Is\nexpected to be on tht market shortly ln tablet form.\nTha Company's preparation for\nanimals is from mareycystlsus and\nwill be used to enrich brans and\ngrains for stock.\nThe firm bellev.es a wide market\nwill be built.up In Canada for cat-\ntie, and their product will ba used\nparticularly tor its conditioning\npowers and u a tonic for. cattle\nwhich are kept in the barns all the\ntime, bejng fed only grains snd hay.\nOther products the firm hopes to\nmarket soon Include a seaweed product used for Its laxative qualities\naa well as in laboratories and ln\nproduction si lie cream.\nWith the cutting oft of agar-agar\nsupplies trom Japan, there has been\nquite a scramble for other sources.\nThe firm hopes to develop the local and Canadian market for thli\nproduct\nConsiderable research In seaweed\nproduct! haa been done recently by\ntha National Research 'Council.\nWhether or not Brltlah Columbia,\nwhich has led Canada in development ot these products, will win a\npermanent industry, is not known.\n\"Tha whole seaweed business Is\ngradually coming to the fore but\nwhether It is Just a war baby or\nnot remain! to be seen\/ said 0. T.\nAlexander, Assistant Fisheries Commissioner of tha B.C. Government.\nConsiderable development of seaweeds for enriching foods hu been\neffected In Britain.\nOne thing appears certain, however. There Is sn abundant lup-\nply of kelp ln B C. waters for the\nproduction ol seaweed product! If\nthe market! can be maintained.\n15 YEARS EXPERIENCE\nWITH THE T. EATON CO.\n8ervice on all make! of radios\nand refrigerators\nWELL'S SERVICE SHOP\n617, Vernon St Phone 1115\nColl ond inspect our now\nihipment of\nWoman's Shoes\nThe\nBootery\nDON! SAY BREAD\nSay Hood's\nSUPREME MILK BREAD\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiniiiM\nFor Reliable Watch Repair*\nPROMPT SERVICE\nHARVIY'S\n98* Baker St\n11 r 111 ] i > 1111 r 11 1111111 r i. 11111 i s 11. i,\nRaincoi\nBe prepared for wetl\nther In one of these |\ncoats. \u2014 Made witl\nbalmacan collar,\ned raglan style.\n$12.80 to 930.4\nEMOR1\nLIMITED\nThe Men's Storl\nCBR Head I\nData for Radi\nSeries on Inle\nData to be used In t\nbroadcasts trom VancouM\ncollected in the Kootenay-\nby Doug Nixon, Producer\nCanadian Broadcasting Co\nstation at Vancouver. M\nand Mrs. Nixon were guai\nBoard ot Trade at the Hun\nRe hoped the trip won]\nfirst ot many, Mr. Nixon\nBoard.   Authentic   matei\nsought for. the broadcastl\nto be started ln October\nlargely with Interior centi\nhistorical facts would be\nths series would cover pr>\ncommunities and what\nfor the future along the\ntlon angle. ,\nMr. Nixon la ln charge of\nthe CBC Western section;\ndramas, handle! special ev\naa the San Francisco Co\nbut Is probably more wide!\nfor his work on \"The Can\nlly\" and \"Producer's Wora\nMr. Nixon waa applaud\nhe told the Board he stre\ndorsed everything that\n(bout the condition of son\nInterior roads. He snd Mr\nlost no time ln signing thi\nthe Highways petition.\n   COWLIN'S\nRADId\nREPAIRS  and   8ERV\nPhone 145 110 Hoo\n\u00abz#xxo\u00bbs&v\u00bb\u00bbni)H>)tti\nJ. A. C. Laug\nOptometrist\nSuite 203\nMEDICAL ARTS BUIL!\nt\u00abts\u00bbtet\u00bb7~jM >'.\u00bb www\nFor Best Results, I\nWATKIN'S FLY AND\nSPRAY\nSPENCER C. COUfl\nNelion Dialers.\nt524 VICTORIA \u00abT\ni&ssss&sesoz&xase&asott\nROSCOE\nAND\nFOURNIER\nQARAOlMlN\nSKT CHIEF AUTO SER\nPhone 122 Nelsor\n\u00ab\u00ab55*SM5\u00abSSS5*Sr\u00bbK-Sa5\nEveryone Admires a\nBeautiful Permanent\nPhone 327 for an\nAppointment\nHaiAh Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nJohnstone Block\nIf It's Electric\nF. H. SM11\nPhone 666      3S1 M\nKOKANEE\nSERVICE STATI\nand garage\nExpert Repair Wo\nPromptly Done.\nOil,   Oil,   Wishing,   Qre\nOpposite Bank ot Moot\nYour\nDollars\nare urgently needed\nfor this work of mercy\nNo agency can take the pines\nof The Salvation Army In tho\ngreat taik oi helping Ihe unfortunate and reclaiming\nhuman Met. Iti work of mercy\nneeds the ropport of\ndollari.   Give gtnerouily,\nSpace donated by\nW. W. Powell\nCompany,  Lim\nlie Home of\nHOME FRONT APPE\n_______\n_________\n_mm_mm\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1945_09_17","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0417686","@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":"1945-09-17 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1945-09-17 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\/1.0417686"}