{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0414415":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2022-06-09","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1940-11-06","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0414415\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" FT_\u2014\u201e\nMilitary tern Set Up on Cr***\nSays Churchill.\u2014Pag* 10\n*\u25a0 World Ev*nh R*vl*w*d In Speech\nFrom Throne.\u2014fife 3\nNail Prisoner Caught After Taking\nTrain.\u2014Page,3\nboti 3\nflnt Session of 19th Paritament\nProrogued.\u2014Page 8\nExchange loard to Relax Rules\nfor Christmas.\u2014Pag* 11\nCanadian Air Commander Con to\nRoyal Air Force.\u2014Page I\nNILSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-WEDNESDAY MORNINO. NOV. 0.  1040\nNUMBER 170\nTO ELECTION VICTORY\nRadio Tells Story\nllantic Fight\nBelieve Convoy Being Attacked by German\nRaider; 16,000-ton Passenger Liner\nand Freighter Are Shelled\nNEW YORK, Nov. 5 (AP)\u2014A running fight In-told-\nAtlantic between a German raider of the \"Graf Spee class\"\nand what appeared to be a British convoy was told In three\n11 terse radio distress messages today, but silence shrouded the\nfate of the vessels attacked.\nThree hours and 10 minutes after the 16,698-ton passenger liner Rangitiki wirelessed that she was being sheHed\nby a German raider, Mackay Radio intercepted a warning\nmessage from the Portis Head station in England,\nA convoy was still being \"leisurely attacked\" by a\nraider of the Graf Spee class, it said.\nSandwiched in between was another message, from\nthe freighter Cornish City.\nThe Cornish City gave no bint ot\nthe character or tonnage ot the\nvessel attacking ber. Her position,\nhowever, was almost exactly that\n'of the Tangittki. It wu assumed\nboth vessels were part of the con-'\n| voy referred to in the Portis Head\nmessage.\nBritish Sink Five\nSubmarines, Lose\n8 Merchant Ships\nLONDON, Nov. 5 (CP) - The\nAdmiralty todiy announced the\nIon of eight British or Allied\nthlps, totalling 10,000 tons, by\n\"enemy ictlon1' In the week ended\nOct._7-_0.\nAt the same time lt was mide\nknown thtt the Royal Navy'i relentless hunt tor submarines continues to show successes. Destruction of it least five during the last\n,few days was reported.\nIlia Adminlty itated two were\ntunk In the Western Apprciches to\ntht United Kingdom, one of them\nbeing the crtft that torpedoed the\nCanadian liner Empress of Britain.\nReuten Newt Agency reported from\nTangier thit three Italian submarine! had been sunk In the Strait\nof Gibraltar.\n, 4b* weekV 4-rrtru.tton Ot\nt merchant ships Wll In itself\nimall, thll did not Include the loss\nof the Empress, which for the last\nyear had been a troopship, nor the\nlubsequent sinking by submarines\not two armed merchant cruisers,\nthe Laurentic, 10,724 tons, and the\nPatroclus, 11,314 tone.\nThi Press Association said tonight\nthtt the 10,141-ton steamship. Wind-\nior Castle, docked unscathed at I\nBritish port The Germans had\nclaimed ihe wai damaged by bombs\nTht captain said the Germans dropped tour bombs but til of them\nmisses. ,\nCOUNT DEAD MAN'S VOTE\nFAIRMONT, Mmn., Nov. 0 (AP)-\nA dead man's vote wat counted by\nelection officials In this county u-\nnlght,\nHobirt George Reynold!, 43, veted\non an absent voters' ballot before\nlubmltting to in operation in t\nhospital here. He died thli forenoon\nfrom gangrene.\nThe billot, officials hive ruled,\nwill be counted, since Reynolds was\nalive it the time lt was delivered.\nILSLEY'S MOTHER DIES\nBERWICK. N. S., Nov. 0 (CP)-\nMrs. Cttherine Ililey, 07, mother\nof Finance Mlniiter J. L. Ilsley,\ndied todiy.\nTht metwget, Shipping circles\nwld, wtrt tht flnt of tht wtr In\ndilating an attack on a British\nconvoy by a German raider.\n\"Btlng gunntd by tntmy ihlp\nof tht Graf Spee class,\" tht Rang.\nItlkl wirelessed thll morning.\nAn hour and 30 minutes later the\nsteamship Cornish City sent t message that it was being shelled in\nalmost the lime vicinity, approximately 1000 mllei East ot Newfoundland. The messages were picked up by Mackay Radio.\nIn Buenos Aires, although British\nEmbassy officials have declined\ncomment, it is known from a list\not \"overdue\" ihips that a powerful\nGerman or Italian.unit has been at\nlarge in the Atlantic.\nInformed naval circles nid It\nprobably is a pocket battleship.\nThey believe that the Brltith have\nbeen clot* oajba 6e.li of .tbii;\nraider, frequently forcing lt io\nchange hunting grounds.\nOne source In Buenos Aires said\nthia warship apparently ll-following the route ot the' Graf Spee. Thii\ninformant suggested that the attack in the North Atlantic indicated\nshe Is heading homeward after a\nlong cruise in the South Atlantic\nThe 'position of the reported attack on the convoy Is 000 miles West\nof the declared German blockade\nzone around the British Isles. Maritime circles in New York expressed\nbelief lt ii outside the point where\nBritish warship escorts pick up convoys bound for Britain.\nAt least one raider has been reported In the South Atlantic and\nanother In the Indian Ocean.\nThese are believed to be part ot a\nnumber of lo,000-to.i freighters,\nwhich were nearing completion in\nGerman shipyards at the outbreak\nof the war. They are reported to be\nfast and easily converted into armed\ncrullers. ,\n.Other reports Indicate the Null\nmey have established fuel tnd supply hues on out-of-the-way islands\nthroughout the Seven Seu to service a fleet of ralden.\nAN EAST COAST CANADIAN\nPORT, Nov. 0 (CP)-The British\nsteamships Rtngltlkl tnd Cornish\nCity reported 11 under gunfire\nfrom I German raider on the Atlantic todty, sailed from thll hirbor recently.\nMighty Campaign Over for Them\n-W\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0-.   !     -\u25a0\n.\nPresident Leading\nin 38 States for\n442 Electoral Vote\nWillkie Scores Gains ih Popular Votes iit]\nEvery State Compared to Republican      1\n1936 Showing; Battle to Finish\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 5 (AP)\u2014The popular vote foil\nPresident from 60,950 of the country's 127,245 votind\nunits was:\nRoosevelt 14,066,238\nWillkie    10,736.134\nWILLKIE, the defeated\nGreeks Pour Shells Into Italian Military Base\n\"Victory More\nThan Political\"\n30,000 Italians Reported Trapped in Area\nof Korit_*a; Attack Heavily in Central\nSector and Hold in Southern\nATHENS, Nov. 5 (AP). \u2014 Greek soldiers, fighting fiercely along the\n.,,,\u201e. entire Greek- Albanian frontier, have scored new successes and are pour-\nday)i (AP) - Edward JI Flynn mg \"heUa *n,\u00b0 the ,***rliBry \u00ab\u00ab\"\u00bb*\u2022 *\u2022\u2022\u2022 Important Italian base city of\nDemeerttlo ' Nttonlil Chilrmin,, Koritaa, \" **\" \u00ab>i\u00bbM*' reportwltanight.\nasserted ihortly after midnight The iltuaUon as wmmed up In reporti hert tnt:\ntoday ht \"assumed\" President! 1. Greek troops, occupying hills in Albanian territory South ot\nRoosevelt had been reelected ind Koritza, are shelling the road* and the vicinity of the dl;, an Italian\nadded: \"Whtt wi* won wu more, 00ricentTtt'o_p\u00bbWSiK':'.V:\u2022   \/      '    - * \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0- '--'\u25a0- -   *\u25a0- \u25a0*-'\u2022***\nu tl\ni tntir* T-$!*rBr*-^p*f**f3r.\n\"Nor em I ever claim tt was\nvietory for lite party,\" he continued [\nin a statement Issued It a Democratic National Headquarten where\nhe received returns.\n\"It was the decision by the vast\nmajority of our citizens, with no\ndistinction ot groups or elements or\nindividuals, to continue in the course\npursued for eight years under the\nleadershlt of our Chief Executive\nwho hat io far steered the ship ot\nitate through the storms and reefs\nthat beset the whole world at this\ntime,\n\"With the election passes whatever bitterness there hai beefc in\nthla campaign. Franklin Roosevelt\nwill be tbe Preiident of the whole\ncountry and I un sure that those\nwho supported Wendell Willkie now\nwill join the Preiident (n efforts\nto keep our nation out of war and\nto carry on the program ot economic progress that hat-brought us\nso far on tht road to recovery.\"\nWashington Gives Roosevelt Early\nLead; Other Democrats Take Lead\nSEATTLE, Nov. S (AP)\u2014Incom-\nplete tnd unofficial returni from\ntS Ktttered precincts of Wuhlngton'! 3018 tonight gave President\nRoosevelt AM votes to Wendell\nWlllkle's J291.\nBep. Monrtd C. Willgren, Dem-\nocntlc nominee, led Stephen * F.\nChidwlck, Put Nationil Commander of the American Legion ind\nRepublican candidate, 32-7 to 2993\nfor the United States Semte, In 42\npreclncti.\nCanvass of TO precincts Ihowed\nClarence C, Dill, Democratic former U. S. senator, leading Seattle's\nMiyor, Arthur B. Langlie, Republican, 797. to 2837 in the bitter\ngubernatorial contest. Langlie hid\na slight lead over Dill in earlier\nrecapitulations.\nFint meagre returni from the\nState's congressional district! showed tbe Democratic incumbents, War-\nten G. Mignuson, Martin F. Smith\nand John M Coffee leading for reelection. Payson Peterson, Republican, was leading Henry M. Jackson, Shohomlsh County Democratic\nprosecutor, for Representative Wall-\ngren'i seat, ind Rip.' Charles H\nLeavy ind hii GOP oppontnt, Walt\nHorlin were neck tnd neck In the\n5th diitrlct\nSimilarly, Rep. Knule HiU (D)\nand Frank Miller, the Republican\nnominee of 1938, once again were\nrunning neck and neck in the 4th\ndistrict. Miller led Hill, it the lut\nelection, in other ptrti of the arei\nonly to lose the election In the hen\nmore populous Coulee Dam district.\nLieut.  Qov.  Victor  A.   Meyers\n. tnd other Democratic Incumbents\nor nominees for state administrative offlcei ltd In eirly reports.\nPearl Wintmiker, State Legislator, wu leading Stanley F. Atwood, Incumbent State Superintendent of Public Instruction, more\nthan 3 to 1 in early counts on thli\nnewly-non partisan office.\nThe highly controversial initiative\n139, against which U. S. Senator\nHomer T. Bone campaigned, which\nwould require a vote approving issuance of public, utility district\nbonds, wu a major item In Washington's campaign. Early returns\nihowed a sizeable vote against the\nproposition. V\nBut tht umt count ihowtd i similar vote margin favoring In old-\nage pension pltn providing t $49\nminimum monthly old age pension\nand repealing tht existing law.\nRoosevelt lead\n41,000, New York\nNiqW YORK, Nov. 5 (AP)-Pru-\nident Roosevelt's lead in nil home\nstate over Wendell L. WlUkie,\nretched approximately 41,000 tonight with ibout one-fifth of the\nState's probable 6,000,000 votei un-\noffically counted.\nIn 1110 out ot 931S district! Rooievelt had 709,838; Willkie 884,245.\nNine Westchester County newspapers ot the Macy Chain which\nsupported Willkie announced tt\n7:20 p. m\u201e PST, thtt they htd conceded the election to Preiident Rooievelt.\nAt the same tlmt returni from\n725 of 4051 districts .In New York\nCity gave Willkie 208,465; Roosevelt, 334,990.\nIn the contest for United Statu\nSenator, the Democratic Incumbent, James M. Mead, had 181,655\nto 187,184 tor Representative Bruce\nBarton In returni from 827 out ct\n9319 districts.\nFORMER LUMBER JACK\nSPEAKS TO EMPIRE\nLONDON, Nov. 5 <CP)-W-llim\nHolt, a Yorkshire weaver, ipoke\n\"tor tht common people of Ihe\nEmpire'on the Britiih Broadcasting\nCorporation'! \"Britain Speaks\" feature tonight. .\n\"We, the people, feel tnd know\nwhat we are fighting.for in this\nwar,\" ha said., \"Tht neirer one\ngets to .ui, tht mort ont sees '.he\nspirit of Churchill .evident In Hit\npeople.\" '\nHolt, who has travelled to many\ncountrlei il \u25a0 sailor, told ot weaving the tint piece ot cloth from.\nVancouver blind wool while villi-\ntng there many years ago. He also\nworkid In British Columbia as i\nlumber lick at one time.\n(Btrder dlipitches reaching Belgrade, Yugoslavia, aald tha Greeki\nhad cut communications between tht main Italian irmy tnd 30,000\np   Italians In thi Koritza area).\n2. Tha. Macedonian front, il \"quite\nsatisfactory,\"\n3. In the central sector, the Greek\nair force1 huvily -Hacked Itellin\ntroopi column! while ground forces\ncaptured a number of prisoner! and\na quantity of wtr equipment\n4. Greek forces are holding their\npositions on the Southern sector.\nJust North of the Kalamu River,\nnear the Ionian cout.     ,\nMeanwhile, there wu increasing evidence that Britain Is giving active aid. British- tighter\nplanes were said to have shot\ndowd an Italian bomber over\nGentral Greece.\nIn addition seven other Italian\nplanes caught oh the ground at\nKoritza airdrome were destroyed\nby Greek planet end two others\nof the Italian squadrons which\nraided Piraeui, the Port of Athens,\nwere reported ihot down.\nAthens, itself, hid Its longest\nilr raid ilirm' ot the war\u2014an hour\nand 15 mlnutei.\nThe Italians .dropped t number\nof bomb! in an unsuccessful attack\non, Piraeus, and the town of Phal-\neron tnd Ellinoco in the Athens\ntrea.\nHeavy anti-aircraft fire wu heard\nfor more than 30 mlnutei In the\ncentre of Athens itself. Slight damage wu reported in Piraeus.\nU. S. ELECTION\nAl A GLANCE\nBy The Associated Preu\nPresidential: At 1 tm, EST, thit\nmorning Pruldtnt Roosevelt led in\n38 States with 439 electoral voter,\nWillkie in 12 with 92.\nPopular, vete at midnight! with\nmore than one-third of the nation'!\nprecincts counted: Roosevelt 11,-\n177,478; Willkie 8,753,810.\nHouse: Democrat! elected 139; Republican! 18. The Democrat! picked up two Republican seats In Connecticut. Republicans had not won\nany Democratic seat* at thli hour.\nSenate: Four Democrats and ont\nRepublican, .ejected. No turnover!.\nSix incumbents trailing, including\nfour Democrats (Walsh, Mats.;\nO'Mahoney, Wyo.; Pittman, Nev.;\nGerry, R. I.); 1 Progreuive (Lafol-\nlette, Wit,). and 1 Republican,\nTownsend, Del.\nGovernor!: Three Democrat!\nelected, No turnover!. Sttssen, Republican, Minn., overcame early\nlead by Petersen, Farmer-Laborite,\nthough Baldwin, Republican, Conn.,\nwu still behind Hurley, Dem.\nRoosevelt* Traill\nWillkie, Home Town\nHYDE PARK, N. Y., Nov. t\n(AP)\u2014Preiident Rooievelt cirried hli home diitrlct in the town\not Hyde Park in today'! balloting.\n426 to 309, but trailed Wendell\nWillkie in the other three districts\ncomposing the town. The vote (or\nthe complete township glvt the\nPresident 1363, Willkie 142..\nFETE MARGARP.*- SURVIVORS\nHAMILTON, Bermuda, Nov. 9\n(CP Cable)\u2014Five offleer-turvivan\not the H.M.C.S. Margaree, sunk In\ncollision with \u25a0 merchantman In\ntht North Atlantic, wert guests it\nluncheon todty ot t Bermuda Ser*\nvice Club.\nATLANTA. Ga\u201e Nov. 5 (AP) -\nRepublican hopes that the third\nterm isue would drive a wedge into\nthe solid South went glimmering\nswiftly tonight as mounting returni\nonce more showed thll lector\"! 124\ntlMtws*^p-tt\u00bb*T-*ard: President\nRoosevelt.\nUnofficial, Incomplete returni\nfrom all the 11 \"solid\" States showed\nthe Democratic nominee far ahead\nof Republican Wendell Willkie.\nTennessee, where Roosevelt's 1930\nmargin of 2 to 1 wu smallest any-\nwhere in the South, also was watched hopefully but from the tlrst reports this home of the Tennessee\nValley Authority gave no encouragement to the Republican nominee\nwho fought the T.V.A. for y.ara.\nOther \"solid\" Slates for Roosevelt were Alabama, Florida, Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi,\nNorth Carolina, South Carolina,\nVirginia and Texai.\nNever Fell* Better\nDeclares Willkie\nNEW YORK, Nov. t - (Wednu-\ndty) - (AP). - Wendell WlUkie\nin t brief radio address early today to campaign supporters gathered In the ballroom of bis hotel\nheadquarten said \"I never felt\nbetter in my life.\"\nDESTROY \u00bb CHURCHES\nLONDON, (CP).-Rt Rev. Godfrey Parsons, Bishop of Southwirk,\ndisclosed In the Diocesan Gazette\nthat 20 churches In his diocese hive\nbten destroyed In tir nidi and 70\nothen hive been damaged. Southwirk li In South London.\nNelson Board ol Trade Will Visit\nNakusp, New Denver on Trip Today\nNelion Board of Trade, led by\nE. A. Mann, President, goes \"on tht\nroad\" todiy.\nNint can carrying 81. memben\nof the Board wil leave thla morning at about 8 o'clock for Nakusp\n\u2022nd Ntw Dtnver on t greeting trip.\nThey ire due at Nakuip for luncheon at 12:30, tnd will return to\nNew Denver tor a banquet at 0:30.\nMost of the ptrty will remain overnight, returning to Nelion Thursday.\nWith tbt lut Board trip to tht\nSlocan md Arrow Lakes district\nItlll recalled with enthusiasm, the\nEntertainment Committee htd no\ndifficulty in arranging for a large\ndelegation.\nJohn Learmonth, who proposed\nthe trip andhastakenan active part\nIn organizing it, Tuesday expressed\nthe belief the jfarty would probably\nbt larger than Indicated. Several\nmemben were delaying their decision until the lut minute.\n\"There'! lots ot room, anyhow,\"\nhe asserted.\n\"Solid Sour\nBacks Roosevelt\nGovernors Elected\nBy The Cimdlin Press\nFollowing is The Canadian Press\nlist of State Governors elected tn\nthe United States elections:\n(Legend: D-Democrat; R-Republl-\ncan; S-Sdcialist; I-Independent; F-L\nFarmer-Labor; x-lncumbent).\nMaine\u2014Sumner Sewell, R (elected\nSept. 9).\nFlorida-Spessard L. Holland, D\nunopposed.\nTexai\u2014x-W. Lee O'Danlel, D.\nGeorgia\u2014x-Eugene Talmadge, D.\nSenators Elected\nBy The Canadian Preu\nFollowing ii the Canadian Preu\nlist by parties of United States Senators elected ('\u2014incumbent):\nREPUBLICANS\nMaine\u2014Ralph O. Brewster, unchanged (elected Sept 9).\nCalifornia \u2014 '\u2014Hiram Johnson,\nunchanged.\nVermont\u2014x-Warren R. Austin\nunchanged.\n(Regular term ending Jan. 3,1947).\nVermont\u2014George D. Aiken.\n(Unexpired term ending Jan.\n3. 1045).\nDEMOCRATS\nFlorida\u2014'\u2014Charles 0. Andrews,\nunopposed, unchanged.\nTexu \u2014 '\u2014Tom Connally, unchanged.\nVirginia \u2014 \u2022\u2014Htry F. Byrd, unchanged.\nMinlstippl\u2014\u2022\u2014Tbtcdort G. Bilbo, unchmged.\nTennessee\u2014x-Kenneth McKellar.\nunchmged.\n(By The Canadian Presi) ',\n\u2022   At 9:30 p.m. PST, the Party standing in the\nStates House of Representatives:        '\n1940 Last House\nUnited:\nDemocrats\n139\n258\nRepublicans\nOtheri\n\u2022  18\n167\n\u2014\n4\nVacancies\n\t\n6\nDoubtful\n278\n\u2014\nTotal\n435\n435\nHARRISBURC, Nov. 6  (Wednesday)   (AP) ~]tm*a*\nF. Torrance, Republican State Chairman, conceded PennsyM\nvania to President Roosevelt today at 1:50 a.m. EDT.        -J\ni   in.in   p.... . .up-.\nBy H. M. P-Tf RS\u2014Canadian Pren Staff Writer\nNEW YORK. Nov. 6 (Wednesday) <CP)\u2014The Unlttdj\nStates, looking apprehensively at wars of aggression In Euro****\nand Asia, on the basis of incomplete returns from Tuesday's\nelection apparently piaced its trust anew in the experierte-H|s\nleadership of Franklin D. Roosevelt.\n\u25a0 __,     \u25a0 .--_-_-_\u2014\u2014-----\nTheie returni indicated the nation\"'\nSecond Colliery Is\nTied Up by Strike\nGLACE BAY, N. S. Nov. 3 (CP)\n\u2014A lecond Cape Breton colliery\nwai tied up tonight through refusal\nOf native-born miners to work with\nmen of alien descent\nStrike ot the majority of the 309\nworkers at Dominion Coal Company'i No. 11 mine left the pit idle\n\u2022long with No. 1-B, which hii not\nworked since list Tueiday. A total\not 1790 mtn were affected it tbt\ntwo collltriea\nagreed with Mr. gojltevelt thit the\ngravity of the world tl'-tiion rubified the scrapping of the historic\ntradition igtinst three terms for my\nPresident ind rejected t vigorous\nand ipecticulir Wd by Wendill\nWiilkie, Republican.\nMr. Willkie, who bunt upon tht\npolitical icene like a comet, carried\nout a campaign the like of which\nthe Uhited Statu had never seen\nbefore, and revitallied the Republican Party, after Hi dlsutrous detests of 1932 and 1939:\nWhile the lud .Mr. Rooievelt\npiled up 'n state after state led to\nwidupread concessions by leading newipaperi thit he hid won,\nMr. Willkie refused to concede\nthat what he cilled hii \"crusade\nto uve America\" hid failed.\nHe reiterated hli conviction that\nit wu still \"a horse rice* which\ncould not be decided until more\nof the ballots had been counted. As\nhe mtde thii declaration the popular\nvote stood at about 6,200,000 for Mr.\nRoosevelt, md 4,800,000 for Mr.\nWillkie\u2014a little over one fifth of\nthe expected 50,000,000 total.\nBut experienced political observers read into the trend ot results\nts thiy pound over Preu Association wires the certainty thit.Mr.\nRoosevelt had cirried the nation.\nAt that time the Preiident was\nleading in the States Mr. Willkie\nhad to capture to win. They were\nNew York, where the race wu\nspectacularly close; Pennsylvania,\nwhere the expected flock toi willkie in the wake of Labor Leader\nJohn L. Lewii did not materialize;\nIllinois,  Willkie. own native  In\ndiana, . Wisconsin, Cslltornli, Ohl*\nMissouri \u00abrrd Mttitchusetts.\nIn all, the 38 Statei la which the\nPresident wis ahead held a total ot\n442 electoral votes, to 89 for th*\n11 la which Mr. Willkie wu in\nfront A majority ot the electoral'\ncollege il 386.    .\nMr. Willkie, in the languigi \u00abl '\nthe  ring,  wu  in  there slugging\nright till the end. He had taken on \\\n\"the champ\" forcing htm to ent*\u00bb\nthe ring to defend hlmielf, tnd had\npiled up points for hii side.\nHe hid scored galnt In tht popt\nular vote In every State at eerm\npared with tht Republican show\u00bb\nIng In 1936; hi had attracted ad I\nenormout following.\nIn the intense excitement over the\npresidential campaign, little attrition wu paid immediately to th*\nImportant battle over control ot\nthe House ot Representatives.\nMost observer! believed that the\nPresident propably cirried wlttk |\nhim \u25a0 majority. Early thit morning\nthe only definite results tt hind\nihowed 139 Democrats elected (51\nof them unopposed in 11 Statu in \u2022\nthe South) against 18 Republican!\nelected. Necessary for a majority <n\nthe 433-member Houie ls 318.\nDetails were also slow In coming\nthrough on the race for one-third\nof the Senile, 34 Governor!' chaW j\nand a number ot other matters being settled by the electorate.    -\nSoon after midnight the Now\nYork Times tnd New York Herald\nTribune, both of which supported\nMr. Willkie, acknowledged their\nconviction thtt Mr. Roosevelt has\"\nbeen reelected.\nOpposes Immigration as Headed by\nFascist; Assails Blaylock, Beat\nVICTORIA, Nov. 8 (CP) - Ttie\nSroposed immigration of 19,000 Brit-\nih families to British . Columbia\nfirm lands wai opposed In the Legislature today by Colin Cameron\n(OCT Comox) because Lord Croft\nhtd bten behind it\n'Speiklng In tht debate on the\nthrone speech, Mr. Cameron uld:\n\"It il now plain thtt the revolution in Spain wu Fascist-inspired\nCroft wu tht official, agent of\nrrtnclsco Franco In Britain all during tht Spanish revolution tnd il tn\ntvowed Fuciit\"\nCameron referred to recent arrests on 'Vineouver Island under\nDefence ot Ctnada Regulations.\n\"Would our loyalty bt loit by\nraiding Communistic literature?\"\nhe uked. \"Whit reucn Hu behind\nthese arrests; ostensibly the reucn\nwas given that the accused wtre\ninterfering with Cinidi'i war tf-\nforti.\n\"In' Princt tht fifth columnists\nwtre responsible mtn, leaders in\nIndustry, finance ind polltlci. Authorities in Canida If sincerely anxious to find fifth columnist! should\nlook in th* same direction.\n\"Blaylock (S. G. Blaylock, Man\naging   Director  of  Consolidated\nMining k Smelting Co. Ltd.'oil\nCanida   it   Trail,   B.   C\u201e)   and\nBeatty (Sir Edwird Beatty, President ot Canadian Pacific Railway !\nCompany) hadn't thought, to men* '\ntlon that t steady stream of wat-\/\nmaterials from Trail hid until a\nfew dayi igo'bten sent to our\npotential enemy.\n\"Beatty said: The products of\nour pltnt htvt been vlrtutlly con* ;\nscripted by the Dominion Gov* ,\neminent.'\n\"People who will convert war* '\ntime Industries to their own need!\n\u2022re   much  more   dangerous   thin I\nthose who distribute pamphlets,\"\nCameron quoted from whit h*\nsild wu the Edmonton Journal slating Kurt Gruenebaum, exiled German banker of Essen end partner\nIn the firm of Simon Hlrschltnd,\nwu now a memoir of tbt Foreign\nExchange Control Board It Ottawa.\n\"Are wt not justified in asking\nabout this appointment?\" he uked.\n(A directory ot the principal war\norganization! Issued by the offic*\nof director of public Informitlon,\nOttawa, Oct 1, does not lilt Kurt\nGruenebaum in tny capacity in th*\nForeign Exchangt Control Board).\niiiii.i^firiiii\n Germany Paid for War Preparedness\nWith a Lowered Standard oi Living\nBy  R, J,  DEACHMAN\nI  We ire told thit Germany has hid,\n; all along, a new and unique sys-\n| tern of finance, In tact, lt ll said to\nbe \"a system of industry In which\n\u25a0 the necessity of financing constitutes no brske upon unlimited expansion.\" Thst Is a subtle touch but\n; it ls far from the .truth. Germany\nhas nothing of the kind, unless U\nbe the strength which comes from\nS*ckleasness,  together  with  abso-\n1 kite control, not only of labor but ol\nSpltal\u2014both sre slaves to the Nazi\nlust tor power,\nAined From the Richest\nPart of the\nDrumheller\nLower Seam\nComplete Heating\nSatisfaction\n'  LOW IN ASH\n, Trial Will Convince You!\nJMP\n$10.50\nb\nPhone Your Order to 889\nrwler Fuel\n& Transfer\nHere Is one place when the\neconomist has fallen down. Hi has\nkept on using money as a measure ot\nvalui. He Imagined, naturally\nenough, that beciuse he understood\nhis own meaning all others underitood him. Now he ll astonished te\nfind the world discussing wir snd\nfinances in terms of wsges and material costs, as if this Involved- s\nnew presentation ot the case. But\nth| German situation explains It\nperfectly. -Germany put her 'whole\npopulation to work and the real\ncost ot the war to th* German people waa th* loss of production of\n7,000,000 workeri. If they had put\nthem to work it different tasks, thiy\nmight hav* hid that tremendous\nvolume of production for thalr own\nUl*-they preferred irmam*nt\u00bb-ln\nth* words of Mr. Goebbels\u2014\"guni\nbefore butter\".\nWhen Hitler came Into power,\nGermany had a greater total army\nof unemployed, in proportion to\npopulation than any other country\nin the world. It has been estimated,\nby competent authorities, at 9,000,-\n000 out ot a total population of approximately 70,000,000, but this figure exaggerates the situation. Between tbe depth ot the depression\nind the opening ot the World War,\nthe number of workeri increesed\nby 8,000,000, but the increaie Included new worken coming into\naction through normal growth ot\npopulation. Even after allowing for\nthe tendency to over-eitimat* difficulties which confront an enemy,\nther cin ben o question as to the\nvolume of unemployment end the\ndesperate conditions In business and\nindustry in Germany at that time.\nWe may Ignore, for a moment, the\nmethod by which the change wai\nbrought about\nPRODUCTION GAIN\nTAK-N BY STATE\nThe fact is, by 1888 Germany\nhad reached a stage ot full employment\u2014and this is the sstounding\npart-practically th* entire increis.\nIn th* volume of production went\nto the State. Between 1883 and 1938,\nMcNary Concedes Defeat\nMcNARY\nWALLACE\nSAUUt Or*. Nov. (WrtnMdayMAPi.-Senator chwl** X. ,\nNary, Republicm Vice-Presldentlil cin-ldtte, conceded defeat lut nil\nIn a prepared statement Issued at Fir Cone, his country home,\nNary said:\n\"1 am congratulating Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Wallace and wishing\nthem grace ana their administration prosperity. We ire i united country.\nThe two-party system li secure. We shall try to afford Mr. Roosevelt\nand his issociates i worthy snd vigilant opposition.\n\"Today's trend indicates t victory tor our principles four yean hence.\"\nld-t-olat.a\nhelp* check _ith-\n\u2022rinaofmucui...\nnUmi it.fM,\ne\n\u25a0-*.\np\n-I';\nGLASSES ON 10-DAY TRIAL FREE!\nDONT SEND A PENNY-JUST MAIL COUPON. Just try\nthtm. Prov* at our rilk how greatly our tine glasses will\nImprove your ippearance, enable you to tee fir er neir,\n, read the smallest print or thread the finest needle. Perfect\niitisfaction guaranteed, or the 10 day trial costs you nothing. DIRECT FROM FACTORY TO YOU-When you get\n{liaises from us, you ire dealing direct with one of the\nP*     \"   ' ' '     \"      \u25a0\u25a0-.\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n1\nlargest optical laboratories In Canada. You save the middle,\nman's profit. Glasses in latest styles for as little as\t\n'PAY NOTHING Unlets Sitlsfled. WEE   COUPON \u25a0\t\nTry our  glasses   10  dayi and | Victoria Optloal Co.,       Dipt L-11,\nI nights it our risk. If not amazed      273 Yengi St., Toronto, Ont\n\u25a0 and  delighted,  they  coit  you 11 would like i pair of your stylish\nnothing. Mail the FREE CC-U-. glasses on 10 diy Free Trill. If not\nPON todljl     . perfectly  satisfied,  they  coit me\nVICTORIA OPTICAL CO. 'SgST\nDept L-11\n178 Yenge St., Toronto, Ont\n' Address\n|P.0\t\nAge...\n. Prov..\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel Nelson, B.C.\nGEORGE ben WELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS   .      EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nHUME - 3. A. Toby, S. R. Maddiion, H. B. McDonild, Vancouver;\nMr, and Mrs. E. 8. Jones, Cranbrook;\nMr. and Mrs. Southoy, Retallack;\nJohn Taylor New Denver; A. F\nCady,. Coleman; R. Brough, A. Anderson. Medicine Hit; A. Catheriec.\nMontreal; Mr. end Mri. J. Southey,\nWinnipeg; R. E. Anderson, Mrs. R.\nC. Merchant Spokane.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nMR. AND MRS. PETER KAPAK. PROPS.\nIn our new wing you may enjoy the finest\nroomi in  thi Interior\u2014Bath or  Shower\nROOMS 31 UP-SPECIAL MONTHLY OR WEEKLY RATES\nthe national Income increased by\n33,000,000,000 Relchmarks,' roughly\n$11,000,000,000. Ot this, only three\nper cent, or 3330,000,000, wtnt to increase the consumption ot the people; the balance went in payment\nfor war preparations.\nTh* ching* wis brought about\nby th* employment of every \u00ab\u00bb\u2022\nployable person within the German\nnation and doing It without increasing the total wige payments ot the\nworkers\u2014th* workers were piylng\ntor th* coit ot th* wir. It there ire\n10 mm working it t Job ind you\nbring In 10 mora men, and make, to\nthe 20 th* asm* total wage ptyment a you formerly mad* to the\n10, you will hav* a greater volume\nof production at lower costs. In\nmuch the sarno way, th* new ruler\nof Germany handled the Industrialists and the private enterprisers.\nThere wu, however, a little more\nrestraint Profits were limited but\nthe limitation wu no greater, inw\n|n iome wiyi not io greet u that\nwhich hu taken place in the United\nKingdom Ilnce the advent ot wir.\nTht Germin corporation wu permitted to make a profit up to six\nper cent. Beyond thit it might\nmake a further profit ot six per\ncent but thli hid to be Invested\nIn Germin bonds.\nThere wu only on* class which\nseems te have been sheltered'to\nsom* extent. While th* price level\nin Germany was maintained at a\nfairly steady level, the price ot\nfarm product! wu permitted to\nrise and Increue during this period, approximately 30 per cent\nWhether thll wu due to i desire\nto increue production of farm prod\nucti, or whether lt irose trom i de\nsire to plicate the Junker class, is\nnot apparent It may hsve served to\nkill two dogs with the one stone. It\nstrengthened agriculture, and provided powerful and influential\nfriends for the new administration.\nAPPLY FIGURES\nTO CANADA\nKeeping these facts in mind, wt\nmay now examine the situation\nwhich would have been produced\nin the Dominion of Canada by our\nacceptance ot the Nail type ot national economy.\nWe, too, were at the bottom ol\nthe depression in 1932. We moved\nupward with fairly iteidy expansion of the national Income until\n1937. There was a slight recession\nafter that date. Then Cime the hesitancy caused by the fesr ot war. In\n1940 our estimated nitlonal income\nis approximately $4,500,000,000. The\nfollowing table gives the distribution ot the national income in\nCanada In 1931 tnd 1987:\nTha National Interne of Csnsda\n(Figures in millions and tractions\nadd five ciphers)\n1933 1937 Increase\nSal'rles, w'ges $1,830.8 $2,436.3 $883.7\nI'vstmt. incm.     435.8     431.4    138\nAgriculture ..\n144.8\n439.4  2949\nOther    Indi\nvidual   En\nterprises ....\n290.9\n364.5    73.8\nMunicipal Ed-\n159.9\n137.8 \u2022   2.1\n$2,861.7 $3,829.4 $987.7\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n[\n\"YOUR  VANCOUVER  HOME\"\nDtif f erin Hotel\nJM Seymour St.\nVancouver, B.C.\nout Phones and tlivifor.\nA- PATTERSON,   lit* of\nColeman. Alta, Proprietor.\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Passenger and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON DAILY\n(   At 10:30 a.m.\u2014Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\n M..H. MelVOR, Prop.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135       Nelson\u2014Phone 35\n(')\u2014Decrease.\nIf we hid followed the German\ncourse of action, the total increase\nin the national Income would have\nbeen expended In war. This would\nhave left us in 1937 a total of 8967,-\n700,000 for that purpose; our expenditures were $24,000,000.\nBut even this would not hav:\nbeen equal to the accomplishments\not Hitler. During this period, we carried an unemployed army in excess\nof 300,000 workers. Under full employment In peace time, our national Income, under the preient\npice level, would approximate $4,-\n000,000,000. In five years it would\nbe $20,000,000,000. It wu actually\n$13,874,000,000. If we had foUowed\nthe German method trom 1932 to\n1937, it we had held wage payments, profits, investment Income\nend other sources ot income it the\nlevel ot 1932 ind put everyone to\nwork, we would hive had ivillible\nfor expenditure in wir and preparation for war, the difference between\nthese two sums-$4,126,O00,0OO. Whal\ndid we ipend? About $81,300,0001\nThere wu no mystery In ill this\nso tir u finance is concerned. Nisi\nGermany is paying for the wir in a\nlowered standard of living, In the\nloss ot the things the Germin people might hive hsd. Any nation,\nwilling to suffer ind endure u tht\nGermin people have done, could do\nth* ume thing. Hitler boasted that\nbetween 19J3 and th* outbreak ot\nwar, he had spent 90,000,000,000\nmirks, ovtr $30,000,000,000 on rearmament. The figure agrees, relatively, with what Canida ' would\nhave had available, taking Into con\nilderition the difference In population. In C>nada the increase iu the\nnational income raised the stand\n\u2022rd ot living ot the Canadian people. In Germiny lt was absorbed\nIn preparation for war.\nWOVE 8PELL OVER\nGERMAN PEOPLE\nIs ther* still no magic In all this\nextraordinary happening? Strictly,\nIS a matter ot finance, there la absolutely none, and yet, there ti\nsomething which hu never been\nexplained, and which will be the\nsubject of discussion tor generations. How wu Hitler able to waive\nhis msglc spell over the German\npeople? How wss he able to con-\nvlnce a nation ot 70,000,000 people,\na people not without Intelligence\nand capacity In many ways, u ther,\nput history proves thst thty ought\nlo make this stupendous sacrifice\nsnd expend, In a period ot five\nyears, an amount of energy, material and labor which We measure,\nIn terms ot money, st $30,000,000,000?\nStranger still, this vut effort wu\nmade, not to satisfy human needs,\nbut to conquer ind enslave the\nworld.\nThere is the strange enigma ot\nthe whole situation. There is nothing in the lit*, or record or conduct or appearance of Hitler which\nmight sem to give to him the power\nwhich would draw other men to\nhim. His speeches are coarse ind\nvulgar. His voice is harsh tnd\nraucous. His promises irt midt tn\nbi broken\u2014no ont could trust him.\nHe Is void ot human sympathy\nThere ts-nothing whatever In his\nrecord to show that ht underitindi\nanything whatever of humanity and\nita needs, and yet this mm, possessing, apparently, no quality\nworthy of admiration rose, from\nlowly birth, to be the head ot a\npowerful nation.\nTHEN HE MET\nTHE BRITISH\nA few brief weeks igo he teemed\ndestined to conquer a continent, tf\nnot the world. Then, he came in\nconflict with the will of another\npeople possessing ill the qualities\ntions which he lacked, Now the\nworld waits for victory against thv\ntyrant whose atrange qualifications\ngave him power over one race, but\nfailed either to influence or dismay another. The reason must be\nthat they are different, in thought\nand feeling and In character, and\nthese are the things, thank Heaven\nwhich, In the end, determine human\ndestiny.\nNelson Kin to Cable $\n(or Ambulance to\nNslson Klnsmin Club will Mbit\n$1800, proeeidi of Iti recsnt Kinauction drlvi, te Prim* Minister\nWinston Churchill fir th* pur-\nchue of a war ambulant*.\nThli wat decide* it thi Tuesday mppir misting after Kln-\n\u2022uctlon Chilrmin L. W. Bates,\nrtporttd th* fund eellMtltm,\nwhll* not complete, hid niched\n$1118. Th* drlvt orossid over\n$2300, ht Midi expeniei totalling\n$484 ind th*   remalndir   btlng\n-*\u00bb\\\nM ^N\".\ntainly to be t\u00bb***nW\u00bbr thalr\ni ot thli pitrMkafort'' hi\nt liio voiced ninclstlon ol\nmad* up\noomplSt*.\n\"Th* people\nar* c*rt*li'\nsupport\nssid. He\nth* cooperation trom fellow members.    -\nThe fund wu raised through Ihe\nsale of donate! articles, talent ind\nservices it public auctions snd in\nthe popular \"Kinauctions of Uie\nAir\" over CKLNi\nELECTION RESULTS BY STATES\nstate\nAl*. ....\nAria. _,.\nArk.\nCsl. ._.\nColo. ...\nConn. ..\nDel. _\nNa.\nOa. ..\nIda. .\nIll,\nInd,\nIowa\nAnoclitid Preu Elictlin Results\n14,227 7.\n19381\n432 828\n418101\nlift.\n143,198\n1,730\n834,308\n212,001\n118,173\n184,71-\n-\n4,712\nJ ,918\n,100\n,408\n88,898\n73,132\n178.888\n3,098\n18,801\n856\n29.857\n144,318\n21403\n2,405,339\n477,888\n15,984\n1,411,884\nX\n1,088,391\n87,079\n81.887 '\n23,445\n181,960\n290,818\n209\n38,808\n210,590\n1.321\n108,086\n280,816\n2,689\nElectoral Vote\nRvt, Wlk.\n1 t\n\u00bb *\u2022\n11 -\n-A 1\n\u25a0   \u00ab. -\n'8 -\n7 -\nU _\n- 4\n\u00bb -\n18 -\n- 11\n- 9\n10 -\n- 5\n8 -\n17 -\nt \u2014\nIB -\n4 -\n'- 7\n8 \u2014\nA '*\u25a0\n' - 16\n8 -\n47 -\n18 -\n- 4\ni -\n8 -\n36 -\n4- -\n8 -\n- 4\n11 -\n11 -\n4 \u00a5\u00bb\n- 1\n11 -\n8 -\n8 -\n\u00bb -\n1 m\nIn Excellent Condition\n;,\n. $39.50\n$99.50\nFink's FURNITURE\nPhena 553 441 Baku St.\nOak Dining Room Suit*.\n6 pl*c*i \t\nKnit ' Place Dining Raom Sulfa,\nRegular #25. S.critic.  ........\nTotals\n127,245      48,663      11,177,478\nSaves Two From\nCar Alter Dive\nInto (row lake\nBritish Attack\nInvasion Ports\nLONDON, Nov. 3 (CP) .-British\nbombing squadrons flying In the\nteeth ot a Southerly gale attacked\nGerman targets on th* French \"invasion cout\" tonight Simultaneously gum defending: the Empire\ncapital roared Into action against the\nregular German night air attack.\nObservers along the English\nChannel said they could see flashes\not'exploding bombs on the French\ncoast, the sweep of searchlights and\nbunting anti-aircraft shells.\nThe Nazi raiders made four attempts to raid London during thi\nday but each time they were beaten\noff by Britiih tighten. Th* Air\nMinistry innounced seven German\nplanet were ihot down ind six\nBritiih tighten loit.\nBLAIRMORE, Alta., Nov. 5 (CP).\n\u2014Besting at his home In Bellevue,\nrecovering trom bruises, cuts tnd\nshock, Austin Fisher, 33, todsy wss\nreluctant to discuss the part he\nplayed In rescuing two friends trapped In a closed cir from the ley\nwaten ot Crow'l Nest Lake, Mon-,\nday night.\nFisher and his two pals, Bill Mat-\nion and Duncan Hutton,'Bellevue,\nwere returning trom Crow'l Neit\nwhen it a point one mile Bait of\nthe West side of the Canadian Pacific Railways crossing, the car,\ndriven by Fisher, skidded on a curve\nand landed on its top in the like.\nFisher turned tha window down\nand crawled out He swam to shore\nand got a rock, plunged back Into\nth* witer snd smashed a window ot\nthe sedan. He pulled one out by hit\nhair ind tended him safely on\nshore. He rescued the other but\ncould not remember how he hid\ndone It\nThe trio wilted on the bank tor\n30 minutes before help came. A cir\nfrom Fernie took them bick to\nCrow's Nest All three sre lufferlng\nfrom cold, shock, bruises ind miner\ncuts.\nKimberley and Salmo\nAra Represented at\nYoung Peoples Rally\nKimberley md Silmo, u wtll it\nRassltnd md Trail, were represented at the Young Peoples Billy held\nSaturday night at Nelion, Between\n80 md 90 Young People trom the\nDiitrlct centres and Nelson it-\ntended.\nBev. W. J, For*aes-Robertson,,Flrst\nPresbyterian\nthe apeaker.\nChurch Pastor,' was\nCROWDS 'EM IN\nRICHMOND. England (CP).-A\nSurrey policeman hai made sleeping accommodation for eight people\nIn his Anderson street shelter.\nAdulti sleep the long wty of the\nshelter and the children crosswise.\n- DETERDINQ MISSING\nLONDON (CP) - Lieut. Henry\nDeterdlng, R.N.V.R., son ot the late\nSir Henri Deterdlng, millionaire\noil king, li reported missing whilt\non service with th* Fleet Air Ann.\nLONDON, (CP). 4\u00bb Two Polish\nmerchant ahipi which rm tht\ngauntlet of French defence! it Dakar have reached Britain lately. The\n1000-ton motor ship Ro.owie and the\n1864-ton Kroman dodged steel cables'\nat the harbor mouth.\nLate Flashes\nBERNE, Nov. 8 (AP). - Switzerland had one of the longest sir raid\nalarms tonight since the war began.\nPlanes were heard over Basel. Both\nBerne ud Zurich hid 90-mlnute\nalarms.'\nOTTAWA. Nov, 6 (CP)-Negotli-\ntions now sre underway for construction ot a big aii-plane factory\nat London, Ont, it was learned unofficially tonight.\nLONDON, Nov. 6 (Wedneiday)\n(CP)-Thi Air Mlntttry innounced todiy thit \"Hit night aircraft\nof th* bomber command carried\nout attacki tn objectives In Germany and on Invulon ports in\nenemy occupied territory.\"\nGovernor Stassen\nSecond to Peterson\nMINNEAPOUS, Nov. 6 (OP). -\nGovernor Harold Stassen, Republicm, who campaigned vigorously on\nbehalf of Wendell L, Willkie, was\nrunning second to HJilmar Petersen.\nFarmcr-Laborite in early returni\nSixty districts of the State's 3896\ngave Stassen 10,513 votes, Petersen\n12,492, md Ed Murphy, Democrst,\n2362.\nSEEK TENDERS TO BUY\nFARM AT WINDERMERE\nCRANBROOK, B. C-, Nov. 8 (CP).\n-Tenders will be received Nov. 13\nfor the purchase of th* 432-acre\nDominion Experimental Firm it\nnearby Windermere where agricultural md farm experiments nave\nbeen carried out by the Government for the past 20 years. Two\nhundred acres are under cultivation.\nNORMAN THOMAS\nMINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 3 <CP),-\nWith 132 ot 3896 districts reported\nRoosevelt led Willkie and Norman\nThomu, Socialist, in Minnesota\ntonight. Tht vote: Roosevelt 32,-\n033, Willkie 29,197, Thomas 119.\nMinnesota's 11 electoral college\nvotes went to Roosevelt In 1936.\nDill, Langlie\nIn (lose Race\nSEATTLE, Nov. 8 (AP). -r With\nPresident Roosevelt steadily piling\nup in Increasing lead ovtr Wendell\nL. Willkie, Interest in Washington\nState election returns tonight\nturned to the see-saw gubernatorial\ncontest between Clarence C. Dill,\nSpokane, Democratic former U. S.\nSenator, md Seattle's mayor, Arthur B. Langlie, the Republican\ncandidate.\nIncomplete and unofficial returni\nfrom 782 of the State'! 3018 precinct! gave Roosevelt 117,209 votes,\nWillkie 77,282.\nIn the bitter race for tha Governorship, Langlie took m Initial slight\nlead; Dill pined him on the next\nrecapitulation, md the lead ching-\ned handi ilx times is eich gained\nblocks ot votes.\nIncomplete returni from 832 precincts give Dill 106,081 to Linglie'l\n100,4.7.\nRon Andrews Is\nNew Head Nelson\nBadminton dub\nRon Andrews will take th* helm\npt the Nelson Badminton Club as\nPresident tor the 1940-41 seaion. He,\nalong with Mill Isibel Dawson, Secretary, and Denis Crowther, Treasurer, were elected it tbe annua!\nmeeting Tuesdiy night\nA Floor Coinmltte* of William\nRamsay, Chairman, Mrs. Douglas\nMale, Miss Elizabeth Carrie, Stewirt Mclntoih ind Cal Cameron\nwis also appointed. Ont change only\nwai mid* In tht playing and floor\nrules for th* leason. Th* seniors,\nwho previously wer* 'permitted tbe\nuse of on* singel* court during both\nweekly junior sessions, hav* been\nlimited to the use of th* court on\nTuesdiy evenings only, Oreitly In.\ncreased interest and membership\nof U\u00bb\u00ab Juniors necessitated this\nmova. Th* Juntas us* th* courts\nbetween 9 md 1 p,m.' on Tu*sd\u00bb**i\nand Thursdays.\nASSETS 83.98\nThe financial statement ihowed\nthe Clup's issets totalled $3.93. The\n1939-40 expenditures of $1130-08 exceeded th* receipts ot $1088.11 by\n$03.96. The bank balance trom the\nprevious season however w*l $67.91.\nTribute was paid to Denis Crow-\nther, Treasurer, tor his tine work\nsnd he was nominated tor President. However, he declined the\nhonor, md was rotected treuurer.\nVotes ot thanki were passed ior\nMr. Crowther and the othen of th*\nretiring executive, Monte Morley,\nPut Presktent md Normtn Ashley.\nPest Secretary.I\nElectoral Vote\nStanding\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 6 (Wed-\nnesday)-(AP).\u2014At 9:30 p.m., PST,\nwith returns tir. from complete,\nRoosevelt wti leading In States\nhiving s total electoral vote ot 442,\nu'follows:\nAlabama, Arizona, Arkansas,\nCalifornia, Connecticut, Delaware,\nFlorida, Georgia, Idaho. Illinois,\nIndiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Miry-\nland, Massachusetts, Minnesota,\nMississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, Ntw Mexico, Ntw York. North Carolina,\nOhio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania.\nRhode Island, South'Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin,\nWyoming.\nWillkie wss Lading in Steles with\nin aggregate electoral vote of 89, is\nfollows:\nColorado, lows, lUnsu, Milne,\nMichigan, Nebraska, New Jeney,\nNorth Dakota, Oregon, South Da.\no'.a, Vermont\n\u00abmm*4*sm*r*smi,%nr**i^a>m\nFlannelette\nPYJAMAS\nLeading the Midnight\nStyle Parada In Sleep!\nTogs. Tha smartest thing\nIn bedroom wear. Sizes 14\nto 20. Small, medium and\nlarge. 5 styles to choose\nfrom. Special\n$1.49,^1.95\nWedneiday A. M.\nSurprises\nClearing of short lines In\nParish fashion and regular\nshoes *t a real saving; All\nsizes in the lot. One half day\nonly. Shop eirly!\nFINK'S\nLadles' Wear\n34 ATTEND HOME\nNURSING CLASSES\nThirty-four members attended the\nSecond session ot tbe Home Nursing\nclasses, conducted by the St. John\nAmbulance Anoclition, Nelion Centre, Monday evening, Further Instruction on roller bandaging were\ngiven.\nNext Mondiy being Remembrance\nDay, th* classes will be held Tuesdiy evening.\nFORBID ARMISTICE\n,   CEREMONY, BELGIUM\nLONDON, NOV. 8 (CP)-Gerrnan\nauthorities la occupied Belgium\nhiv* forbidden ceremonies or demonstrations on Armistice Day, Nov.\n11, the Britiih Broidcutlng Corporation laid tonight. \"They fear that\nthe Belgian population might ihew\ntheir reil feelings toward the German Invaders,\" the BBC laid.\nCromwell, Formtr U.S.\nMinister to Canada,\nIf Trailing Barbour\nJERSEY CITY, Nov. 8 . (Wednesday) - <CP>, \u2014 James H. R. Cromwell, former United Statei Minister to Csnsda, eirly today trailed\nfir behind Wirren Barbour, hli\nRepublicm rival In tht fight tor\nthe New Jersey sut In the United\nStatei Senate,\nCromwell who resigned till poit\n\u2022t Ottawa alter serving one yeir,\nto fight the election on tht Democratic ticket, hid collected 183,488\nvotei 'to Barbour's 829,147 when 888\nof the State's 3881 districts hsd\nreported.\nLOOKS ALL RIGHT\nSAYS WKKEVELT\nHYDE PARK, N. ,Y\u201e Nov. 8\n(Wednesday) - (AP). - With' \"full\nreturns\" still lacking (resident\nRoosevelt told a Jamboree of his\nHyde Park neighbors esrly todsy\nthst \"It looks all right\" tnd that\nhe thought In th* tutor* they would\nfind him \"lust the sam\u00ab Franklin\nRoosevelt you've known s great\nmmy years.\"\nThe President spoke tram the\nportico ot his country home to\nhundreds of persons who hsd staged\na torchlight pared* from Hyde Park\nVillage. Elmer Van Wagner, Hyd.i\nPirk Supervisor, said lt wii \u2022\n'\"victory\" piride.\nSuggests Kinsmen\nRaise Fund Aid\nNelson Namesake\nSuggestion thit the Nelson Kinsmen Club underteke aa its next\npatriotic effort * campaign to raise\nfunds to aid In the rehabilitation\not the war-stricken people ot Nelson, Lincaihire, England, wii made\nby Mayor N. C, Stibbs it th* Kin's\n-upper meeting Tueidty. Tht town\nU located within i few miles of\nLiverpool md ia a heavily bombed\narea.\nNo need at horn* wis comparable\nto thst ot the people in tbe old lsnd.\nand, it Mhooved every Canadian\nind. Canadian organlsiUon to lend\noveneu every nickel that they\ncould raise, His Worship ssid, Wheu\nIt wll suggested th*. Kin might\nsupport * Christmas Cheer drive\nfor Nelson and District poor,.His\nremark WSS heir lily endorsed by the\nmembers.\nWhite no definite decision oa the\nsuggestion was reached, a War Service Committee of Thomas Csrew,\nChairman; Jick Horswill, Thomu\nMcGoyem and Benjamin Sutherland, wai appointed.\nStampeders Beaten\nSASKATOON, Nov. 8 (CP). -\nTwo quick goals in thi third period,\none of them on i.pepilty ihot tiken\nby Mel N-llien, give Siskitoon\nQu,akers a 8-4 victory Ovtt the Calgary Stampeden, 1840 Western\nCanada ch-mpl.nl, in a senior ex-\nhibltion hockty gime her* tonight\nRots Kraellng bagged the other\nthird period goal for the winners.\nCam Burke, with two, Pan Sprout\nand Jack Qulgley accounted for the\nCalgary goals. The Saskatoon goal-\ngetters were Neilsm md Knellng,\nwith two each, Syd Fenn and Ab\nWelsh.\nas Trains Crash\nLONDON, Nov. 8 (CP Cable) -\nOn* person Wis killed ind 40 Injured, IS seriously, when lbl London-Perth Express oi th* London,\nMidland md Scottish Railway collided tonight in the blackout with\nk freight train near Gretna Junction\nla Cumberland,\nIt wai th* second train' wreck ,\nin England within 34 houn. At least\n37 persons were killed md 88 injured Monday whan a Penance-\nbound train was derailed In Somerset th* worst train accident in\nBritain In three years.\nIn tonight's accident the engineer w*s killed Instantly, but it was,\nbelieved there wer* no other fatalities. Monday's accident wu not attributed, to wir causes, but tt wis\nbelieved tonight'! was du* to the\nb'l-kout\nGovernors Elected\n-Arkinm-Homer M. Adklna D.\nVerrnonN-Wtlllim H. WIlUs, R,\nTennessee\u2014a-Prentlce Cooper, D.\nACHEY JOINTS?\nGin Pills, for the kidneys, help remove\npsin-cauiing toxins that an Often th*\ncause of rheumatic twinges ind ichey\njoints. Money back if not latUfitd.\n \u00ab,\n1WPP?P\u00abPP^\nSpeech From the Throne\nReviews World Events\n:!\n!!\nOTTAWA, Not. 5 (CP) .-Text of\nthe speech from the throne read by\nSir Lyman P. Duff at prorogation\nof Parliament today follows:\nHonorable Memben of the Senate\nMembers ot the Rouse ot Com-\nti the present session opened\n.one tree country after another, in quick succession, had become tbe victim of Nazi aggression.\nBefore Its adjournment on Aug. 1\nItaly-had Joined her axis partner u\nan open enemy, French resistance\nhad collapsed, and the Government\nof France hid surrendered. Britain\nherself was threatened with Invasion.\nThe theatre of conflict had begun\nto spread into her lands beyond the\nconfinei of Europe. Japan and China\nwere still at war.     ,\nAmong the nations of the world,\nthe United Kingdom and the Britiih Dominions, alone, stood In arms,\nin the defence of the world's freedom.\nCanada hai willingly accepted the\nwidening responsibilities -which\neventi have placed upon her. The\nmeasures which you hive taken\nhave had In view the immediate\ntask of sharing more completely in\nthe defence of Britain and securing\nour* own country more effectively\nagainst international subversion and\nexternal attack. They have also had\nIn view the long rang, task of ensuring the ultimate defeat of the\nenemy.\nTo serve these ends, the structure\nef the administration has been altered and enlarged. A Ministry of\nNational Defence tor Air and a\nMinistry of National Defence for\nNaval Services has been created.\nThe scope of the Department of\nMunition! and Supply hai been expanded and Iti organization strengthened. A Department of National\nWar Service! has ben established.\nThe Government has been  em-\nSowered by the NaUonal Resources\ntobilizatlon Act to bring to the defence of Canada and the advance\nment of the common cause all tha\nresources of the- couhtry, both human and material. In the different\nbranches of war activity there hai\nbeen a iteady expansion and acceleration of training transport, manufacture and production.\nBy the Unemployment Insurance\nAct you have made a valuable contribution to industrial and financial\nstability In time of war, and to social security and Justice in the time\nof peace It Is deeply gratifying that\napproval wai given by. all the Provinces to the necessary amendment\nto the British North America Act\nto permit ot the enactment of unemployment Iniurance by the Parliament of Canada,\nMemben of the Houie ot Commons:\nI thank you for the financial appropriation! which you have made.\nThe determination ot the Canadian\npeople to support and advance the\ncause for which we hive taken up\narms, hai been reflected ltt the unselfish acceptance by all of iti\nheavy financial burdens.\nHonorable Member! of the Senate:\nMemben of tBe House of Commons:\nIt has become only too apparent\nthat the lust tor conquest Will continue to enlarge the theatre of war\nThe struggle to preserve freedom\nwill be long and hard. May Almighty God guide and uphold its\nbrave defenders.\n--NILSON DAILV NIW8. NELSON B. C.-WEDNESDAY MORNINO. NOV. t.\nCRANBROOK \"WHOOPS IT\nUP\" AT CELEBRATION\nCRANBROOK, ft C, Nov. 5 (CP)\n\u2014Pegged- toppants and handle-bar\nmuiUchea were the order ef the diy\nand young ladles ia 18th century\ncostumes. danced with all comers\nst a dime a throw when the Gym\nClub presented Its \"Hippy Canyon\nof 1940\" celebration here during the\nw.-ekend.\nThe whole town \"whooped it up''\nat tbe celebration to provide fundi\nior community work ot the Club\nfor war services.\nJust Two Minutes\nto Go\nA Kit flihttr ______ itubbora chest\n\u00ab*Ms Pumon'i. On .ok prem\nP*r_____\"H_5a nhn itvbu relief\nii two miirjTga, Ah\u2122J.a.-.\nI bottle h__d-.\nPLUMBING\nREPAIRS - ALTERATIONS\nSHEET METAL. WORK\nB. C. Plumbing & Heating\nCompiny  Limited\nUnderwood  Elliott Fisher  Ltd\n536 Ward St.    Phone 99\nSunditrand Adding Machines\nUnderwood  Typewriters\nSALES and SERVICE\nt**t***t**s**tt\u00bbt****tme*oti\nBreakfast Nooks\nBUILT TO ORDER\nKootenay Sash tt Door Works\nM E. OBAL Opp. City Hill\nTo Keep Cascade\nOpen This Winter\nVICTORIA, Nov. g (CP)- Ihe\nCascade Highway from Rossland to\nGrand Forks, neirly 80 miles, will\nbe cleared of a foot of mow and\nkept open for traffic during the\nWinter monthi, Hon. C. S. Leary,\nMinister of Public Works announced\ntoday.\nIn previoui years this section of\nNo. 3 Highway, reaching in altitude ot 5500 feet over tbe highest\nsummit, hai been closed to traffic\nfive or six months.\nWith restrictions on Canadians\nentering the United Statei recently\nimposed, much traffic has been diverted to Canadlm roads and the\ngovernment decided that the populated lection of the boundary diitrlct required year-round facilities\non toe Cascade route.\nW-Cmdr.E. McNab\nto Be Transferred\nLONDON, Nov. 1 (CP cable). -\nActing Wlng-Cmdr. Ernest McNab.\nleader of tbe Royal Canadian Air\nForce fighter iquadron in Britain,\nil to be transferred to the Royal Air\nForce, lt wu learned today, and will\nihortly be placed in command ot an\nR. A. F. itation.\nThe exact nature ot the duties hai\nnot yet been defined. McNab's promotion from Squadron Leader to\nActing Wing Commander was announced officially here today.\nMcNab's squadron hai destroyed\napproximately 75 German aircraft\nIn the weeki tt hu been fighting in,\nthe defence ot Britain. McNab, trom\nRegina, wu tbe flnt officer of the\nR. C. A. F. to get into action, shooting down a German bomber on his\nfirst combat flight Auguit IS.\nWAR CORRESPONDENT'S\nFLAT DAMAGED IN RAID\nLONDON, Nov. 5 (CP Cable)-\nThe fiat of Edwin S. Johnson, Canadian Preei War'Correipondent\nwith the Canadian Active Service\nForce, wu badly damaged early\ntoday when a heavy calibre bomb\ncrashed through one wing ot an\nadjoining block of flats.\nMr. Johnion, who returni to Canada ihortly u Military Correspondent at the Ottawa Bureau of the\nCanadian Presi, wu occupying thi\nflat when the bomb hit but wu\nunhurt. Rescue workeri were itlll\nremoving dead and wounded from\nthe adjoining block of flats when\ndaylight came.\nITALIAN BUILDINGS IN\nBRAZIL BURNED\nSAO PAULO, Brasll, Nov. 5 (AP)\n\u2014Fire of undetermined origin swept\nthrough a building occupied by the\nItalian Consulate here early today\nand destroyed the consalite files.\nFiremen brought the blue under\ncontrol after two houn.\nFint American of Sacred\nRota in Vatican City\nVATICAN CITY, Nov. 5 (AP).-\nMonsignor Francis Brennan of Philadelphia, first American member of\nthe Sacred Rota which decides appeals for marriage annulment, arrived today to begin his duties.\nR.A.F. Attacks Motor\nTransport in Libya\nNAIROBI, Nov. I (AP). - Text\nof a Royal Air Force communique\nissued Tuesday: >\n\"Aircraft ot the R. A. F. carried\nout many reconnaissances over enemy territory in Libya yeiterday\nDuring one theie an enemy motor\ntransport was heavily machine-\nsunned by one of our aircraft, causing considerable damage. An enemy\nfighter which endeavored to attack\nour aircraft wu ihot down.\n\"Fighter aircraft of the South\nAfrican Air Force engaged four enemy tighten, one of which wu ihot\ndown, the pilot escaping by parachute.\n'R. A. F. bomben attacked a camp\nand military building! at Keren,\ncauilng a number of fires. An enemy bomber which wai encountered\nby one of our aircraft on patrol over\nthe Red Sea wai severely damaged.\n\"Further reconnaissances were\ncarried out over Greek and Italian\nwaten.\n\"Aircraft of the South African\nAir Force were again buiy Nov. 3\nand. Nov. 4.\nLondon Is Main\nNazi Objective\nBERLIN, Nov. t (AP)-Tuesday's\nGerman High Command communique: \"Deipite continued unfavorible\nweather, the Air Force made day\nand night attacki on England and\nScotland, with London the'main objective.\n\"Between 7 p.m. Monday and 0:10\na.m. Tuesday, fighting planei flying\nin continuous waves over tbe Britiih capital dropped a total cf more\nthan 1900 bombs of all calibres. On\nNovember 4 and the\" following night,\nfighting squadrons also undertook\nnumerous attacka on important objectives such u airdrome., industrial and traffic facilities, munitions\ndepots md barracks,\n\"Whattisham and Ford hangars\nwere hit again and a large number\nof planei destroyed on the ground\nIn Hllllngton, Leith, neir Edinburgh,\nind other places In Scotland violent\nexplosion! followed bombardment\nof industrial plants. -\n\"One British airplane wu shot\ndown when approaching the Channel CouL One German plane Ii\nmissing.\"\nOrder New Trial\nlor Whitehouse\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 5 (CP)-Con-\nvietion of Roy Whitehouse, 23-year-\nold youth sentenced to be hanged\nNov. 29,for the murder of William\nIngram, aged Fernie merchant a\nyear ago, was quashed by the Court\nof Appeal here today and a new\ntrial ordered.\nThe judgment granting him a new\ntrial was one of 11 delivered when\nthe Court of Appeal opened its Fall.\nsession with Mr. Justice D. A. McDonald making hii fir appearance\nhere as an appellate Judge after 18\nyean on the bench of the Supreme\nCourt.\n1M0-\nTWO REMANDED\nON DEFENCE CHARCE\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 5 (CP)-Mltch-\nell John Sago ot Winnipeg ind 1\nA. McEwen, alias {wen, of Toronto\nwere each convicted of two charges\nunder the Defence ot Canada Regulations In poljci ccurt here, today\nand remanded until Friday for sentence.\nSENTENCED 3 MONTHS\nON DEFENCE CHARCE\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 5 (CP)*- Convicted of making disloyal statements contrary to the Defence of\nCanada Regulations, Joseph Hoch-\n\u2022tetter wu sentenced to three\nmonths in jail in County Court here\ntoday..\nSURVIVORS SAY FISH\nSCHOONER BURNED\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld- Nov.,5 (CP\nCable).\u2014Thirty Ftench fishermen\nreached Newfoundland In dories today and reported the lou by fire\nof their three-muted schooner Notre\nDime Socorrl 40 miles off the\nSouthern coast They bid been rowing three diys.\nOPPOSE R.C.A.F. USE\nOF VANCOUVER PARK\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 5 (CP) -\nVancouver city council today unanl\nmously adopted a resolution opposing the transfer ot Locarno Park to\nthe Royil Canadian Air Force unless it ll \"absolutely essential for\nmilitary purpose!.''\nSPEAKS 66 HRS. 15 MIN.\nIN ROOSEVELT CAMPAIGN\nTUSCALOOSA, All, Nov. 5 (P>.\n\u2014Hii voice reduced to a cracked\nwhisper, Edward Devlin completed\na marathon campaign speech for\nPreiident Rooievelt M houn and 15\nmlnutei after It started.\nAsk B. C. Gov't, to\nConsider Shelters\nVICTORIA, Nov. 5 (CP). \u2014 The\nBritiih Columbia Executive ot the\nTrades nad Labor Congress of Canada this morning asked the Provincial Government to consider the\nneed for air raid ihelten In this\nProvince.\"\nMolotoff May Confer\nWith Axis in Vienna\nBUCHAREST. Nov. 5 (AP).-The\nNizi Iron Guard newspaper said\ntoday negotiations between Germany and Russia were underway\nand predicted that Russian Premier-\nForeign Commissar Molotoff might\ngo to Vienna to confer With the\nGerman and Italian Foreign Ministers, Ribbentrop and Galeazzo Ciano.\nRecently German sources here resorted German-Russian negotiations\nunder way, seeking agreement concerning the Balkans and the Near\nEut, especially those regions where\nInterests of the two powen might\noverlap, such ai the Dardanelles or\nthe oil fields of Iran (Persia).\nHAMBER HONORED\nBY HIS OLD SCHOOL\nVICTORIA, Nov. 5 (CP)-Lleut\nGovernor E. W. Hamber hu beep\nhonored by St. John's College, Winnipeg, which he attended as a boy.\nHe hu been made a fellow of that\nhistoric Institution, in which nis\nfather wu Intimately interested in\nthe pioneer dayi of Winnipeg where\nhie mother wu born in 1880.\nWhat's SHE got\nthat I haven't got...?\nFOUR. MEN\u2014ud e imlle like na oa lantl\nThat'i whit she's got... thanki to Pepsodent\nwith Irian-1 And now thit I've chmged to\nPepsodent, 1 have s \"Come-Closer\" Smile, too\n(and the third man from the left!)\nWhy don't you tee for yourself the wiy 1RIUM\nIn PEPSODENT flashes into instant, safe action I\nUgly sutface stains disappear from teeth\u2014safely\n\u2014quickly. Remember, it's what's in your dentifrice\nthat makes the big difference I So be iiui to get\nPBPSODBNT containing IRIUM for extra effective-\nntss\u2014greater cleansing fiower I\nOF  ALL  rOOTKI'ASfFS  AN'}  PilWUIKS\nONLY PEPSOPErVT HAS IRIUM\nKNOWN TO 1H1   IIINIAI\nPROFESSION AS\nPUHIIIII) AI.KVL SULIAtl\nloothl\nIfisB&L.'\nCANADIAN FLIER KILLED\nTORONTO, Nov. 5 (CP). - Flt-\nLt A. V. Him Liursen, formerly\nof Toronto, hu been killed Overseas\nwith the Royil Air Force, G. Peter-\nion, an uncle, said today he had\nbeen advised by Launen's father in\nVancouver.\nAdvises Judgment\non Petain Action\nBe Held Till Later\nLONDON, Nov. I (CP Cable).-\nLord Halifax told the House ol\nLords todiy It would be well to\nsuspend Judgment on the recent\nHltler-Petaln conversations u Great\nBritain hu not been fully informed\nof what passed between the Nasi\nleader and the head ot the Vichy\nGovernment\nlite leader ot the House of Lords\nwent on:\n\"Whatever he may have hoped to\ngain for France, we cannot believe\nthat the government headed by a\nman of honor like Marshal Petain\nwould commit France to a count\nwhich would stab In the back her\nformer ally.\n\"We on our side have repeatedly\nrejected suggestions by the enemy\nfor an agreemnt at the expense ot\nFrance. Is it too much to hope thit\nthoie who direct French policy may\nsee more clearly u German plans\nare unfolded that the cauie of\nFrench survival li thi ume u\noun?\"\nEMPRESS OF BRITAIN\nLOSS UNDER INQUIRY\nLONDON, Nov. J (CP Cable).-\nCapt H. H. Balfour Under-Secretary\nfor Air, intimated today In a written\nreply to a question put in the House\nof Commons, that the loss of the Canadian Pacific Liner Empress of\nBritain wu the subject of a formal\nAdmiralty Inquiry,\nSWEDISH FREIGHTER\nSUNK BY ITALIANS\nLISBON, Nov. J (AP).-Sinking\nof the W-tcn Swedish freighter\nMeggie in the Atlantic October 29\nby a submarine which crew memben identified u Italian, wu disclosed lut night when a lifeboat\nbearing 10 survlvon-landed at Saint\nMichel Island iq the Azores.\nGANDHI FOLLOWERS\nSENTENCED 4 YEARS\nGORAKHPUR, India, Nov. 5 (CP-\nReuters). \u2014 Pandit Jawahartat\nNehru, one of two men chosen by\nMohandas K. Gandhi to make antiwar speeches u part of a Nationalist plan of \"limited civil disobedience,\" wu sentenced today to\n\"four yean ot rigorous imprisonment.\" Flnt to defy the law with\nanti-war speeches was Vlnoba\nBhave, sentenced October 21 to\nthree monthi' Imprisonment.\nItalians Add Up\nEnemy Air Losses\nROME. Nov. t CAn-JTuesday'i\nItalian High Command communique:\n\"Hie movement of our unlti is\ncontinuing in the Epirus lector,\nwhere our troopi, overcoming lively\nenemy resistance, have reached the\nhead waten of the Ov Jussa River.\n\"Our Air Force developed intense\nactloni in cooperation with land\noperation! all day long, bombing\ncommunication lines, columns of\ntroopi and motor can, barracks, defence works and lections of Fiorina.\n(Phlorina), Kastoria and Yauini\n(Ioannina).\n\"Batteries (of artillery) and other\nobjectives on the mountain range\nNorth of Yanina and along the Ya-\nnina-Kalikaki Highway were hit repeatedly in dlvebombing actions.\nOther of our planei bombed the\nporta of Vol.*, Prevesa and Patru.\n'During air fights, an enemy pur-\ns-tit plane was shot down, and another probably wu shot down. A\nlater check shows six enemy planes\ndestroyed during air actions November 2 in addition to those reported yesterday. Enemy planes shot\ndown that day therefore total 11,\nplus one probably -hot down.\n\"One of our pursuit formations\non a reconnaissance flight over\nMalta surprised and machine-\ngunned leveral big seaplanes in the\n.larbor. All of pur planes engaged\nin the above actions returned to\ntheir buei.\n\"Our lubmarines operating in the\nAtlantic have sunk steamers totalling 24,000 tons.\"\n(No confirmation wu available\nfrom British sourcei on my of the\nabove claims).\nTension on French\nAreas Is Lessened'\n. WASHINGTON, Nov. 5 (AP). -\nState Secretary Cordell Hull indicated lessening anxiety about\nFrench possessions in the Caribbean\narea today and said naval and other\nactivities by the United States Government were only a part of usual\nprecautions.\nHe said the truth was that the\nGovernment was carrying on conversations with the French Vichy\nGovernment and other countries regarding commercial and other questions; that a regular patrol was\nmaintained along the American\ncoasts and ship training carried on.\nApart trom that, he said he knew of\nnothing special regarding Martinique and other French territory.\nSAIL FROM TRINIDAD,\nLAND IN BAHAMAS\nNASSAU, Bahamas, Nov. 5 (AP)\n\u2014Eight men In a small open boat\nhave landed in the Bahamas with a\nstory that they sailed from Trinidad, Just off the Northern Coast of\nSouth America, to this British colony In 21 days.\n(The United States Navy, Coast\nGuard and Immigration Border Patrol have been watching for a group\nof nine men\u2014refugees from Devil's\nIsland, penal colony in French Guiana \u2014 who were reported' sailing\nfrom the Dominican Republic toward Miami.)\nAppeal Allowed\nDoukhobors Under\nFarm Debt Ad\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 5 (CP)-T*-e\nappeal ot the Christian Community\nof Universal Brotherhood, Doukhobor sect, and the Board ot Review;\nwider the Farmers' Creditors Arrangement, Act, was allowed when\nthe Court of Appeal opened its Fall\nleeeion. The appeal wu from a\njudgment b. Mr. Justice II. B. Robertson in the suit ot the National\nTrust Company that the Doukhobor\nsect was not a farmer within the\nmeaning of the debt arrangement\nstatute.\nB.(. House Briefs\nVICTORIA, Nov. S (CP). - The\nB.C. Foreit Branch hu reforested\n3359 acres of land, Hon. A- Wells\nGray, Lands Minister, said In a\nreply to question! of Herbert Ani-\ncomb, Conservative, Victoria. Another 390 acres are now being planted. Last year 1084 acres were planted. Acreage cost of planting is $11.20\nper acre.\nHon. W. J. Asselstine, Trade and\nIndustry Minister, said in reply to\nquestions that the Government spent\n$86,765 in connection with the San\nFrancisco fair exhibit. The Government sent 28 persons to San Francisco in various capacities and their\ntotal travelling expenses were $5205.\nPremier Pattullo's broadcast on\nthe gasoline \"strike\" situation on\nMay 13, 1940, was paid for out of\nthe public treasury at a cost of $25,\naccording to a reply to questions.\nThe broadcast wu advertised beforehand at a cost of $148.30.\n-lie contract price of the new\nwomen's Jail at Oakalla was $63,000.\nHon. C. S. Leary, Works Minister,\nreplied to a question. The cubic foot\ncost of the jail was 40 cents of the\nT.B. hospital unit in Vancouver 37\ncents and ot the nurses' home at\nEssondale 19 cents.\nPlans have been drawn for a new\nlaboratory building at University\nof British Columbia but no decision\nhas been reached whether to build\nit next year, Mr. Leary, Minister of\nPublic Works, announced today.\n-PAOI THN\nHALF DAY \u2022\nBARGAIN^\nWabasso Sheets, SecondsCl -fi\nThe bargain of the season. 80x100. Each. \\| A**\nMen's Windbreakers     Ci t\nDoeskin, full zipper. Reg. $2.95. Each    NI **\\\nFlannelette Gowns -A\nReg. $1.00. Short sleeves, V neck. Each .     j\\jt\nLadies' Hose, Perfects        cn -\nChiffon and crepe. Ml sizes. Pair      Jiff\nWomen's Shoe Clearance Cl AA\nAll'types odd size. Reg. to $3.95. Pair .  \\1 llffl\nHit and Miss Rugs   '        -ft\nGood color range. 18x36. Each      teVtt\nHandled Sugar Bowls       yt\nAssorted colors and shapes. Reg. to 85c. Each     J ~I t\nStrawberry Jam -~\nSunline. 4 lb., tin  ,     _j\/'f\nNo Phone Orders. No Exchange!\n_\nCertain advantages in freight\nrates for users of feed-grain have\nbeen granted following representations made by the Provincial Government to Ottawa, Premier Pattullo said in reply to R. L. Maitland,\nK.C., Conservative Leader. The Premier detailed changes in the' freight\ntariffs.\nNo loans have been guaranteed\nto any companies by ^the Department of Trade and Industry since\nMarch 31 of last year Hon. W. J.\nAsselstine informed Herbert Ans-\ncomb. \u00bb\nPremier Pa'ttullo told H. E. Winch,\nC.C.F. Leader, that he has had one\ncomplaint about rental charges in\nPrince Rupert and the Dominion\nhas appointed a rentals administrator.\nNo Coal to Hear Paris\nPARIS, (via Berlin, delayed), Oct.\n30 (AP).\u2014With coal supplies almost\nexhausted and most office buildings\nand public establishments without\nheat, Parisians shivered and donned\nmore clothing today. Electric radiators, virtually the only heating facilities available, were at a premium.\nParisians with friends at the few\nhotels and buildings which are\nheated huddled In groups around\nradiators.\nCoal for November will be parcelled out In-pound lots, Instead of\ntons. The amount of coal allowed\nwill depend upon the number oi\npersons In a family or office.\nNazi Prisoner Hid In Packing Box;\n(aught After Taking Train lo Toronto\nTORONTO, Nov. 8 (CP).-A man\nIdentified as Gunther Kray, a German naval officer who escaped early\nyesterday from an internment camp\nIn central Northern Ontario, was\ntaken into custody this morning in\nthe Toronto Union Station. He was\narrested by a Toronto detective and\nwas said to have reached this city\nby train.\nKray was taken Into custody by\nDetective John Nimmo after police\nreceived a report from a Toronto\nhotil that a man had asked for some\nchange for English currency. The\ndistrict was searched and Kray was\nlocated at the railway station.\nNimmo said that the man failed to\nproduce a reglitratlon card and aald\nhe was an Englishman. Kray made\nno resistance. He waa said to have\nridden to Toronto on a passenger\ntrain.\nKray il the 18th Internee, to escape from custody in Canada ilnce\nthe start of tha second Great War.\nNone Is st large. One, Ernst Nueller,\nwas killed when shot by a guard In\nnorthwestern Ontario after he\nIgnored orden to surrender.\nInterviewed by newspapermen at\npolice headquarters, Kray said he\n'crept Into a packing case yesterday\nafternoon, and the case was later\nnailed up and carried out to a\nfreight train by clvl'lins.\"\n\"When they hid gone I kicked\nthe board off, went to the ticket\noffice, bought a ticket and hung\naround until the early morning train\nfor Toronto. I boarded it and was\nwaiting for another train to take me\nto Montreal when I wai arrested. I\nhoped to hitch-hike from Montreal\nacross the border and then go to the\nGerman Embassy in New York.\nKray, 30, was dressed In civilian\nclothes he brought with him, He\nwas rescued from waters off Narvik, Norway, by men of the British\nDestroyer Foxhound after his German destroyer had been sunk by\nH. M. S. Warsplte.\nCARRIED FOOD\nPILLS FOR 18 DAYS\nTORONTO, Nov. 0 (CP).-PoHce\nsaid today that a search of Gunther\nKray, taken into custody here today\nafter a 18-hour period of freedom\nfrom a district internment camp, revealed enough concentrated food to\nlast 18 days. The food, found in his\npockets, wai in the form of pills and\nwas made up of vitamin concentrates prepared by German chemists.\n\"It wai lent to me tn packages\nfrom home,\" police quoted him al\nsaying. \"The pills are good and keep\nyou nourished like food. But they\nare very hard on the nerves and we\ndon't use them If we can help it.\"\nCost of building a 39-mile road\nfrom Nakusp to Arrowhead ls estimated at $660,178, Works Minister\nLeary informed J. A. Paton, Point\nGrey, Conservative.\nBy motion, Conservative Leader\nMaitland is asking for a complete\nreturn on the progress of the government's oil drilling program in\nthe Peace River.\nH. E. Winch, C.CF. Leader, ls asking for a study of B. C. road policy\nby a committee of the whole House.\nR.A.F. BOMBER CREW\nBURLESQUE NAZI NEWS\nLONDON, Nov. 8 (CP). - The\ncrew of a Royal Air Force bomber\nreturning from a raid on Hamburg\nswitched the radio to \"transmit\" and\nput over a burlesque of German\nnews In English, followed by songs\nfrom the operas of Gilbert and Sullivan.\nWhen caught by a large concentration of searchlights, the wireless\noperator shouted into his set: \"Dis\nis Goering here. Put out dose flaming lights.\"\nR.C.A.F. HERO KILLED\nTORONTO, Nov. 5 (CP)-One of\ntwo heroes of an epic return flight\nfrom a bombing raid on Antwerp,\nPilot Officer Clare Arthur Connor of Toronto has been killed in\naction with the Royal Air Force.\nDEATHS\nNEW YORK-Gvtes W. McGar-\nrah, 77, one of the country's leading\nbankers tor more than 30 years.\n. VANCOUVER-John William Allan, 65-year-old former civic assessment commissioner.\nSOUTHAMPTON, England \u2014 Sir\nArthur Henry Rostron, 71, retired\ncommodore of the Cunard, Line and\nCaptain of the Carpathia when she\nsaved more than 700 survivors of the\nsunken Titanic in 1812.\nVICTORIA PILOT\nAWARDED D.F.C.\nLONDON, Nov. S (CP cable). -\nPilot Officer John Blandford Latta\not Victoria, B.C., who hu bagged\neight enemy planes while serving\nwith the Royal Air Force, has been\nawarded the Distinguished Flying\nCross, the Air Ministry announced\nThe citation said the British Columbian had \"displayed great coolness in the midst of tierce combat\"\nand had shot down the eight German jfjlanes,ih ^operations. over\nFrfcnce end -fritalri.\n\"Once,\" the citation-added, \"when\nhis squadron' attacked a number of\nMesserschmitt 109s, he shot down\none of them and, although his own\naircraft was hit In the wings and\ntail by cannon shell, the officer attacked and destroyed a second Messerschmitt\"\nDEATH ENDS CHILD'S\nSIX-YEAR SLEEP\nAKRON, O., Nov. 5 (AP)-Death\nlast night ended seven-year-old\nDorothy June Russell's six-year\nsleep.\nWhen she wu less than a year\nold she wu stricken with whooping cough, followed by encephalitis\nor \"sleeping sickness\". She fell into\na coma from which she never recovered.\nCANADIAN ARMS\nOUTPUT MAY SHOW\nINCREASE SOON\nWINNIPEG,  Nov. 8   (CP).-0|\nnadlan production of arms and arm\namenta may be expected to shot\nincreasingly satisfactory results\nthe near future, Major-General '.\nD. G. Crerar ot Ottawa, Chief\nthe Canadian General Staff said _\nan Interview here today.\nEn route to the Pacific coast tl\ndiscuss defence problems Major*\nGeneral Crerar saw _S00 memben\not the Canadian Active Service\nForce in training here during ht\nbrief stop-over.\nR.C.A.F. OFFICER KILLED\nPETERBOROUGH, Ont, Nov.\n(CP).-Flying Officer Ross Alta-j\nmember of the Royal  Air Fore\"\nand former resident here, was kfllei\nin a flying accident two days t$\naccording to Information rccelv\ntoday by his parents, Mr. and f\nJohn  Allen ot Peterborough. J\nwas 23.\nUianteewi\nIGARETTE PAPERS\nDOUBLETS?\nPERFECTION...\nSince 1807\nAlways order <\nMiliums\n______________________\nthe Scotch of\nSuperlative\nQuality!\nDislWed and\" Boff\/eJ\nIty Scotland\n26% ox.   ?3.75\n40 ox.      i5.60\nTHE SCOTCH THAT CIRCLES THE GLOB^\nrhls advertisement Is not published or displayed by tha Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of British Columbia.\nCOAL..\n.WOOD   :r\n ' ..\u2122J*_NPf!\nWW '\n\u25a0\u25a0\n--NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON B. C.-WEDN.8DAY MORNINO, NOV. t. 1MB-\nIN\n>RINT\nCORRECT NAMES OF\nADVERTISERS BELOW\nA\nli \" '\u25a0\njfi   \" '\nO\njV  .   ... '                                                                                                           \u2022\n.;\n-1*.\n\u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-..'-\u25a0 I , , , ,\nJust Write These Advertisements\n1st\n2nd\n3rd\n$5\n$3\nIN MERCHANDISE AT ANY OF THE\nSTORES ADVERTISED ON THIS PAGE\nIN MERCHANDISE AT ANY OF THE\nSTORES ADVERTISED ON THIS PAGE\nIN MERCHANDISE AT ANY OF THE\nSTORES ADVERTISED ON THIS PAGE\nBe Sure to Spell\nthe Firm Names\nAccurately\nCONTEST PARTICULARS\n1. Unscramble the jumbled firm names below. Each name appears with either the correct slogan or address\nbeneath an appropriate heading.\n2. On the blank forms provided above, list In their proper order the firm names you have discovered.\ni . \u25a0\n3. Then write your OWN idea of a suitable wording for a brief selling message designed to fill the blank space\nin each ad, between the heading and the firm name. Be brief\u2014your copy should not run beyond forty words\nfor each space. Submit a full set of twenty advertising messages.\n4. Return your completed page to the Nelson Dally News addressed Contest Editor by Thursday, Nov. 7th.\n5. For the set of advertisements the judges, who will not be in any way connected with the Nelson Daily News,\nconsider best, prizes of $10.00, $5.00, and $3.00 in merchandise at any of the firms whose advertisement\nappears on the page will be awarded. ' , '\n6. The winning advertisements will appear In the Issue of Saturday, Nov. 9th.\n _____ADBI\u00abi\u00ab fmmmmmm.\t\nPRINT CORRECT NAMES OF\nADVERTISERS BELOW\nM\ni.\n'J                 .'     '*\u2022'\u2022'\nN\n\\       i\nP\n:\u2022\nP\nS   '\nT\n\u2022\nV\nt\nw\n*\n*\nYou May Win a\nPrize \u2666\u2666\u2666Get Your\nEntry In Early\nCONTESTANTS NAM!.\nIs for ACCURACY\nNAR CURE FR0THD0MN\nThi Nyal Store\nIs for FINE FURS\nCURLS FAM SL0M\n889 Biker St\nIs for MOVING\nSIT SIR FRAMANWELL\nPhoni 106\nIs for TREND\nYES YOU ALARM BRIPT LADS\n877 Baker St\nIs for BEVERAGE\nNM0D CALL COAT DJDM\n301 Vernon St\nIs for HEALTH\nLADIE ARPST DLIM\nPerfectly Paitiurlted Products\nIs for NATTY\nYOML RESTD\nLeaders In Mtn's Wear\nIs for VITALITY\nLAY DOVEY RENT0 KAILAY\nIs for Courteous\nFAT SURE ICE YOCH SIVEK\nYour Tixaco Dialir\nIs for JEWELRY\nSOL NECIN0L\nThi House tor Flm Dlimonds\nIs for Paperhanging\nand Painting\nHURRY BM0SP\n^^JjeriljJhjJrFjej^^\nIs for WARMTH\nFORT TREWS CEASN\nIs for DRUGS\nHACEY LAMFRUY PRS\n_-_-^^Every|ncJ,^iDru^tori^^^^^\nIs for KNOW\nLOVVL D0VYPT CLEW\n Thi Hoini of Good Lumbir\nIs for QUEEN\nERN TUM JANH\nm -ill\u2014 \u2014\u25a0\n\u2014--\nMarks the SPOT\nLAM ONER CEASC\nN-lion. Leidlng Cl\u00bbin\u00abrs_\nIs for ECONOMY\nL0MAR HIRSCERS\nPepulir Pricu\nIs for Ladies' Wear\nDARE HER TO RISCATH\nSp.olillilno In Lirge ind Hilf 81m\nIs for SERVICE\nCREAG TRY R0S\nNelson's Pints' Pood Stan\nIs for ZIP\nDAD NOW NERCAR\nLudiri In r-oottithlon\nKASLO Social *. \u2666\nI KASLO,, B.C.\u2014L. McLean has re-\ni-Overed Irom Wi Illness which con-\n; lined him to Victorian Hospital for\nleveral weeks.\n[ Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Barrow return-\nad from Johnson's Landing where\nthey visited the former's \u25a0 brother,\nA. H. Barrow, and returned to their\nhome in Sidney, B.C.\n, Mr. and Mrs. Percy Ames hive as\nguest   the   latter'i   mother,   Mrs.\nSimms of Nelson,   _'\t\nfc  Mr, and Mrs. C. R. Foluai have\n_\narrived from Victoria to make their\nhome in Kaslo. They have tiken up\nresidence in Miss Munn's cottage\non Front StreeL\nII. Thomllnson of Howser wu I\ncity vliitor.\nI. Sparrow of Howser viiited\ntown.\nMrs. J. Marsden of Meadow Creek\nspent a (ew days in town.\nMr. and Mrs. M. G. De-all of Cnn-\nbroow were weekend city visitors.\nMiss Kate Riddell. who teaches\nschool at Longbech, spent a weekend with her pirenti, Mr.-ind Mrs.\nJ. A. Riddell.\nMr. and Mrs. W. H. Dunn viiited\nNelion. ''\nEthel Paget returned to Johnson's\nLanding after a tew days In town.\nW. Patrick ol Retallack spent a\nweekend In Kaslo.\nGeorge Soukoroff of Castlegar arrived 1 ntown with friends, all of\nwhom left for Gerrard.\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Sherraden ot\nAinsworth visited town.\nMrs. E. A. Hendricks left for Nelson to visit her ion and daughter-in\nlaw Mr. and Mrs. Welter Hendricks\nLiter she will go to Trail to visit\nl.er ion ind daughter-in-law, Mr.\n\u2022nd Mrs, Robert Hendricks ind thtr.\nto Regina to ipend the Winter with\nmother ion and daughter-in-law.\nMr. and Mn. Fred Hendricks.\nBRONQHT TO LIGHT\nLONDON (CP).-The River Ef-\nfra, one of London's hidden streams.\nwas brought to light by a German\nbomb. The river, which Is cirried\nunder the city through e lewer.\nenteri the Thamei near Vauxhall\nBridge.\nWILLOW POINT SINDS\n. PARCELS TO SOLDIERS\nWILLOW POINT, B. C. - Parcels have been sent to Gunner Robert Thompson and Gunner Buster\n(Haskell, who are overseas with the\nC. A. S. F. Others who hive Joined up md itlll In Canada will be\nser.'. parcels later.\nMoney (or the gifts wu donated\nby the. Woman's Auxiliary, Women's Institute and the proceeds of a\ncard party at which Mrs. J, Cjllroy\nand Mrs. H. I. Middleton were hostesses.\nMrs. Gilroy, Mrs. B. Townshend\nind Mrs. C. Shannon hid charge of\nthe parcels.\nYmir W.I. President\nHonored at Party\nYMIR, B. C.\u2014The Women'i Inititute held a bridge party when tint\nprize wu won by Mri. M. Peters\nand consolation by Mrs. Davis. Refreshments were served by members.\nA present of appreciation was\ngiven to Mrs. Harry Steveni, who\nhas returned from the President's\nchair, after serving four years, as\nShe it moving to Salmo to reside.\nNAKUSP MAN GIVEN\nFAREWELL PRESENT\nNAKUSP, B.C.-G. Hunter Gardner Jr. who left to reside U> Vancouver, wu teted when business\nmen surprised him at his home. Mr.\nGardner received a leather tipper\nclub bag. F. Rushton making the\npresentation. Invited guesta were R.\nIslip, W. Maxwell, G. W. M Hike-\nman, H. Jordan, N. A. Herridge, A\nMatheson, W. Millar, B. Buerge, F.\nRushton, G. L. Mcintosh, W. Rogers,\nO. Harper, D. Hummon, V. Millar,\nS. Jackson, P. Jupp, P. Young, A. E.\nFowler, E. Munn, Dr. H. F Tyreman,\nMr. Sherrln of Vancouver and M.\nBarrow.\nNAKUSP IUNIOR W.A.'\nIS GIVEN PARTY\nNAKUSP, B. C.\u2014The members of\nthe Junior W. A. of St. Marks\nChurch and their leader, Mn. D.\nHummon, were entertained it \u25a0 Hallowe'en party at the home of Mrs\nG. W. Battershall it Glenbank. Following the business period, games\nwere played and later hot dogs wen\nserved. Memben preient were An*\nnle Oros, Amy Crance, Joan Brown.\nDorothy Evans, Dorothy Ennls,\nAnne Ennls and Jim BaltershilL\n \"\u25a0\u2022*:   \u2022\"\u25a0\n******\nm^mmm\n\u25a0\n\"**^**-*e*****le******9\nHal\ntssttstxtttMticwtttiiatxstscxscti\nNEXT\nFigure Skating\nTime\nte. Pair IJll.lt)\nkates   and\n$10.00\nLadles Boots\nblack or whi\nLadies   Outfits.\nBoots in white.\nPair  \t\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nUatttMSStOOtOtttt^tttOSSt^\n439S-3QQ-53953--99\nROBSON  HAPPY CO\nLUCKY CLUB MEETS\nROBSON, B. C. \u2014 The Happy Go\nLucky Club met at the home of\nIrene Tipping when two members\nwere appointed to meet the Women'i Inititute md the Farmers' Institute to decide on the date for the\nYouth Training  School.\nIt wu decided to hold a social\nevening in the near future.\nFEMALE PAIN\nWomtn who suffer pslntul, Irregular periods with cervous. moody\nnull, due to function-, cause should\ntm Lydla E. _>_______\u2022. Vegetable\nCompound wry taecUve to relieve\n\u2022Hob distress. Pin-ham's Compound\nk Mi especially to help such wt-k,\nthea women during dlBcult days.\nThousands of wofien h\u00abve reported\nmurk-tile benefit*. Made tn Can-\n\u00ab*\u00bb. WORTH TRYTNQI Any drug,\nitore.\nMuch Wiser lo\nTake People al\nTheir Face Value\nBy CAROLINE CHATFIELD\nPride youHelf on seeing through\npeople, reader? Well nobody enjoys\nhaving you around. Think you are\n\u2022mart enough to separate what people say from what they really think\nand feel? If so, you probably can't\nresist the temptation to let them\nknow how smart you are. But when\nyou've given them the works they\nwon't think you're smart \u2014 Just\nmean. They won,'t admire you.\nThey'll be afraid of you.\nEvery one of us has a little motor\nInside running at top speed, trying\nto make the worse appear the better part. We keep It in perfect repair, well oiled; and we never permit it to stop. But there is usually\nsomebody around to throw in the\nmonkey wrench and make the motor\nsputter and spit.\nFor instance, we dislike somebody\n(no excuse for it), we disapprove\npractically everything that person\ndoes and says but, trying desperately to be charitable, we attempt\nto conceal our distaste by saying\nsomething'pleasant about him when\nhis name is brought up. Then we\nlook swiftly around to be sure we've\nbeen taken at face value. \"Got away\nwith it\" we say. But by the time\nwe are giving ourselves the r>i pat\non the back, we catch an amused\nexpression in somebody's eye which\naccuses us point blank of lying. Do\nwe reproach ourselves? No, we are\nirritated with the snooper.\nOr we've neglected some duty,\nsome courtesy, some expression of\ngratitude we owed and up we come\nwith the prettiest, smoothest excuse\nwhich we are sure will extricate us\ncompletely from the embarrassment\nwe're in. \"Have mercy on me,\" says\nthe excuse. \"No mercy,\" says the\nfriend, and she disposes of our little\nruse with an \"Oh yeah,\" or a sarcastic smile. Do we curse our stupidity? No, we curse her cruelty.\nPride yourself on seeing through\npeople, reader? Think you.are smart\nenough to read the thoughts they\ndon't express and see devious reasons for those they do express? Well\nyou aren't very smart If you refuse\nto let them get away with it, whatever it is. People like to be taken at\nface value, given full credit for all\nthe pretty words that fall from their\nlips.\nNEW CAMEL HAIR COATS\nChamoli Interlined. _>o*r flfl\n.Size. 14-18-18 ftOD.lMj\nMilady's Fashion Shoppe\n448 Biker St Phone 874\nGENERAL\nELECTRIC\nRADIOS\nTopi In tone and\nbeauty.\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO.\n\u25a0SN Biker St Phone 260\nR. & R. Grocery\nThi Heme of Better foods\nQUALITY  GROCERIES Al\nSAVING PRICES\nPhone 161   Free Deliver*\nGive Child\n2-.2Yea.s01d\nMet* from Misery of Colds\nImproved Vicks Way\nNow when your child catches\ncold relieve mlsery-eully-wlth\na \"VapoRub Manage.\"\nWith this more thorough treatment, the poultlce-and-vapor\naction of vicks VapoRub more\neffectively WHETaarMlrcltated air\npassages with soothing medicinal\nvapors... stimulates chest and\nback like a warming poultice or\nplaster... STARTS RELIEVING misery\nright awayl Results delight even\nold friends of VapoRub.\nTO OET a \"VapoRub Massage\"\nwith all Its benefits-massage\nVapoRub for 3 minutes on important ItlB-AREA OP BACK\nis well as throat and chest-\nspread a thick layer on chest,\ncover with a warmed cloth, be\nsure to use genuine, time-tested\nVICES VAPORUB.\n--NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON B. C.-WEDNESDAY MORNINO. NOV. \u00ab.\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M. J, VIGNEUX\nt   Mrs. A. L. McCulloch, Terrace\nApartmenti, left via CPJR, yester\nday to spend the Winter with her\nsisters in Toronto.      .\nMiss Shirley Stevenson of\nYmir viiited Nelson Monday.\n3. 3. Binns and J.' R. Hunter\nmotored' to New Denver Monday\nfor the funeral of Charles Nelson.\nt Mr. and Mm. R. T. Tiffin, SU-\nica Street, havt returned from t\nvisit to Edmonton. Whilt away Mr.\nTiffin was called to attend the funeral ot his sister, Mrs. F, T. Brewer\nof Elm worth, near Beaver Lodge,\nPeace. River,District\nt P. Bawtr of Procter viiited\nNelson Monday :\\*f >\nI. MacNaughton, Superintendent of the C.P.R. at Cranbrook,.returned yesterday .after a brief visit\nin town.\nt Mrs. F. Watson was In the city\nfrom Edgewood yesterday.\na Mr. and Mrs. W. Cartwright ot\nthe Kootenay Belle mine were visitors in town.\nt Mrs. Horrigan of Willow Point\nhas left to make her home in Vancouver.\nt Alderman Alex-G. Ritchie ind\nHerbert Logan attended the funeral\nof Charles Nelson In New Denver\nMonday.\nt Vere McDowell of the Kootenay Belle mine was in town yesterday.\nt Mrs. Clarence Shannon of Willow Pcint shopped in Nelson yesterday.\nt   Mrs. Walker, Ward Street at\ntended the funeral ot Percy Bennett\nIn Procter Mondiy.\n't David Laughton, D. Heddle\nand \u25a0%. W. Somen attended the funeral of Charlei Nelion in'New Denver Monday.    '.,..\"\u00bb\nt Mlu Emily Whettstein, who\nhu been holidaying for a month In\nSaskatchewan, hai returned. \u2022*\na Arthur' ttkei, J-X. !**\u2022 W-\nterday for Spokane with hii ion\nArthur, who attends business college there and who ipent the week,\nend in Nelson.\nt Mr. McDonough of Sheep\nCreek visited town yesterdty.\nt Louli Montabeeti wu in town\nfrom Burton yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Vincent Fink, 424 Robson\nStreet, entertained members of her\ncircle of St Saviour's Church Help-\nen, when those attending were\nMn. G. N. Colville, Mrs. W. 3.\nLeigh, Mrs. F. P. Sparks, Mrs. E. 8.\nPlanta, Mn, Norman Roscoe, Mrs.\nRonald Andrews, Mrs. A. J. F. Peel,\nMrs. John Morey, Mrs,' S. E. Brlard,\nMn. W. M. Toone and Mrs. J. Lyon.\nt Mn. R. A. Yeld of Edgewood\nvisited Nelson yesterday.\nf Mri Norman Cunningham,\nwho has been a guest ot her parents, Mr, and Mrs .M. J. Varseveld,\nHall Mines Road, ior a few days,\nhu returned to Rossland.   .\nt *Mr. and Mn. V. Kosianclc of\nCrescent Yalley viiited Nelson Monday.\nt Mrs. W. A. Ward of Procter\nipent yesterday in town.\nt Miss Rence Mtnte of Burton\nIs a city visitor.\nSocial Orders ...\nHumanist Looks\nal World\nToday\nSAFEWAY\nWEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY\nRolled Oats ^ HT:15c\nCOFFEE ST. Lb. tin 49c\nVegetable Soup \"-\u2014Tin 10c\nSODAS: Red Arrow *jQ\nor Graham, Pkt. ... 13C\nCATSUP: Highway, in\n16 ei., 2 tins .... 1\u00ab9C\nMARMALADE:\nEmpress, 2 Ib. tin\n25c\nPURE LARD: Swift's, Or\n3 lbt. ..v    COZ\nCURRANTS: Freih,    *)r\n2 Ibi    tidC\nBABY FOODS:\nLibby's, 4 Jins .,\n25c\nGinger Snaps.... 2 lbs. 25c\nPastry Flour... 7-lb. sk. 30c\nPeas and Carrots, 3 tins 29c\nDaw Kitt\nHAMBURGER STEAK, ***.    II t*\\mt\nBREAKFAST SAUSAGE, \/    Iht      \/Si*\nPORK SPARE RIBS  I*    IU J.   L Jl\n25c\n1 lb. Pork or Lamb Liver, Vi lb. Side Bacon,\nfor :\t\nPIGS FEET: Froth,\nLb\t\nSHOULDER VEAL      1 -7\n5c\nSTEAK: Lb.\nPORK JOWLS: Rind- OC -\nless, Smoked, 2 Ibi. \u00a3DC\nBOILING BEEF: Blue   Q\nLabel, Lb.\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, M.D.\nThe remarkable book!, As I Remember Him\u2014the Biography of\nR. S. by Dr. Hans Zinsser (Little,\nBrown k Company) contains a remarkable amount of rich mental\npabulum.\n\"R. S.\" is a man who, like Dr.\n-Zinsser himself, Is a thoroughly\nmodern man of science, but far\nfrom being a narrow, specialist is\nrichly endowed with general culture, and is a great humanist. He\nis sympathetically, even affectionately, concerned with the destiny\nof the human race. His whole training has led him to believe that science, the finest fruit of man's intellect, can or should solve man's\nproblems. Yet he has found himself\nin a world, in a period of the world's\nhistory, when every resource of science has been turned to the destruction of all the civilization that man\nhas so carefully built up.\nPLAGUE RESERVOIRS\n\"R. S.\" is a bacteriologist whose\nfate it has been to travel all over\nthe world to try to locate the hidden reservoirs of the great plagues\nthat once devastated mankind! He\nfound a reservoir of typhus fever\nin Mexico, of cholera in Russia, of\nrelapsing fever, plague, smallpox\nand dysentery here and there irt\nChina, Russia; and the Balkans.\nThese diseases were common In the\nmiddle ages, almost disappeared\nnow. But back in the hinterlands\nof civilization they sit like great\ngiants half asleep, ringing the aren,a\nof modern life, eyeing the petty activities of man, ready at any moment to walk in and stop the foolishness.\nIn Russia after the revolution\nR. S. saw human' hunger for the\nfirst time in his well-ordered life.\nNot just a day or two without food,\nbut famine. \"It was a new experience of human misery, and more\ndreadful to see than battlefields or\ndeath from disease. Two little boys\nto whom I gave a small loaf of\nbread made me ashamed of the\nbreakfast I had eaten.\"\nSMUG 80CIAL ORDERS\nR. S. went to Russia with the attitude all modern men of sensibility must have\u2014a profound distrust\nof-the old, long established, smug,\nLEMONS: Sunkist, mod. size, Doz... 25c\nCOOKING ONIONS: 10 lbs  25c\nIAPIWAY   8TOR-S   UMIT-D\nFAVORITE\nFLAVOR-IT\nWitt\nGOOD COOKS\ncsa\nNEW OFFER (\nSand 15 BOVRIL CUBE wrappers fo \"BOVRIL\", Park Ave.,\nMONTREAL for FREE BOTTLE\nof BOVRIL sent you post froe.\ndevitalized social orders of our time.\nMany scientists .today, as J. B. S.\nHaidane, a great humanist.scientist\nsays he is, are \"convinced Socialists.\" They weren't born Socialists,\nthey acquired Socialism as a political doctrine. ;\nBut however it may eventually\nwork elsewhere, in Russia, according to R. S., it does not work.\n'Russia was my first experience of\nliving in an atmosphere of universal fear. No day passed without platoons of troops moving through the\nstreets Avith some ragged wretch\nled away to no one knew what fate.\nThe old scrub-woman in our house\nwai sick: I found malaria in her\nblood and gave her quinine. She\nbegged me to p?y no attention to\nher. It would mean persecution by\nour supervisor.\"\nThe Communism of Russia means\na state capitalism with all the faults\nof our own, none of Its efficiency\nand no hope of control by popular\npressure, trade unionism or competition.\nGirl's Courage\nIs Recognized\nIn Award List\nSlocan Objective* W>\nIs Almost Doubled\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C.-The Slocan City branch of the Red Cross\nSociety met In the Orange Hall with\nthe President, H.' Graham, in the\nchair. Other members present were\nMrs. H. Nye, Mrs. D. Swing, Mrs.\nA. Ewing and Mrs. E. Hicks.\nJunior Red Cross work was discussed.\nThe recent campaign for funds\nwhich closes in this district Nov. 10\nhas been very successful. Our ob-\njectlve of $200, which was reached\nby the New Denver unit alone, has\nbeen almost doubled, with a total to\ndate of $38). Canvassers believe\nthey will top $400.\nHAMILTON, Ont, Nov. 5 (CP).-\nSixteen-year-old June Mills, of\nSiult Ste. Marie, Ont., has been\nawarded the Royal Canadian Humana Association's' bronze medal for\nheroic action last June 9. .The girt,\none ot a party of seven, tried to\nsave members of her party itrug-\ngllng In the witer In Haviland Bay\nand succeeded In rescuing one.\nFive penoni were drowned, Including the girl's mother and a\nyoung brother, Earl, when the boat\nin which they were returning from\na camp across the bay waa swamped\nand the seven persons tossed into\nthe witer. Otheri drowned were\nMr. and Mrs. Gordon Macdonald\nand their Mn,. Donald.\nIt waa dark and moit of the\nparty disappeared in the water.\nJune went to the reicue of Mr. Macdonald but was forced to let him\ngo and then directed MicdonalcT.\ndaughter, Dorene, to the boat, and\nheld her there until June'! father\narrived in another boat one hour\nlater.\nOTHER MEDALS\nTwo other perioni from Ontario\n\u2014William Briscoe of Hornepayne\nand David McFarlane, Hamilton-\nwere awarded, the Society's bronze\nmedal Briicoe saved a baby from\nher burning home June 21,1940. McFarlane lh a canoe with Edward\nToswell and Vern O'Keefe in Hamilton Bay last July 9, swam in rough\nwater to shore for help when the\ncraft started to link half way across\nthe Bay. The other boys were\nrescued.-\nGIVEN PARCHMENTS\nAwards of parchment certificates\nfor heroic actlona in Quebec and\nOntario fololw:\nLeonard Whitfield \"Glover, Montreal, for the rescue of Nick di Bello\nfrom drowning at Laval s_r ie\nLac, near Montreal, August 22, 1938.\nYvon Charbonneau, Montreal, for\nthe rescue of Andiew O'Neill from\ndrowning at Longue Pointe, Montreal, July 3, 1940.\n\u25a0 Leonard Wells, Toronto, for rescue of George Hill in the Don River,\nToronto, April 30, 1940.\nDalus Lee, Barrie, for rescue of\nKenneth Dawson at the Barrie dock,\nJuly 4,1939.\nArthur Oswald, Toronto, who was\nInstrumental in saving lives of employees and guests from the fire-\ngutted Avonmore Hotel, Toronto,\nMarch 15, 1940.\nJack Ray Harmcr, Plattsvllle,\nOnt, for the rescue of Shirley Ha-\nmacher in the Nith River, July 5,\n1939.\nPatrick Yensen, Capreol, for rescue of Ian Nartin in the Vermillion\nRiver, December 2, 1939.    .\nJoseph Metzger and James A\nThompson, Fort Erie, for assistance\nin the rescue of William Kent in\nthe Niagara River, April 8, 1940.\nLucien Laprade. Ottawa, for the\nrescue of Lieut. Andre Lafleur in\nBrown's Inlet, May 1, 1940.\nMurray Barlow and Eric Brown,\nChatham, for assistance in the rescue of Carl Machacek in the Thames\nRiver, June 10, 1940.\nJason Gould, Oakville, for the\nrescue of Christopher Snider at\nOakville, June 8, 1840.\nSEES NEW FIELDS\nOPENING, WOMEN\nW._SHmOTQN, (CP), - Miry\nAndenon, director ot the Women's\nBureau In the United Slates Labor\nDepirtment predict* that the national defence program will alter\nthe industrial status of women.\nWhen the United States .built up\nthe ramparts in the First Great War\nperiod, Mlsi Andenon said, \"Women bobbed their hair, Invaded industry\u2014and stayed there.\"\n\"The preient United States defence program will open new fields\nto women. And they are already\nwearing slacks. It may. be after this\nworld upset there will be women\nheading engineering firms, building bridges, skyscrapers.\"\nYour Hands Need\nLots of Atfenlion\nBy DONNA GRACE\nHindi, ll we have often observed,\nare temperamental. They are definitely expressive of one'! moods and\ncharacter. They respond to careful\nattention and are sure to embarrass\nui when we neglect them.\nHealthy persons usually have nice\nhands as the circulation keeps the\nskin firm and well-nourished, but\nthin hands need plenty of lubrication, warmth and massage.\nWhile in some instance! brittle-\nness may be due to improper diet\nor other physical disturbances, the\naverage case Just means neglected\nnails, harsh soaps and lack ot lubrication.\nThere are some nice creams and\nlotions to correct this brlttleness\nand many girls find a soaking in\nhot olive oil will relieve the dryness.\nSome girls feel that all they need\nto keep the nails in good condition\nIs to cover them with a brilliant\npolish. It is true the polish does\ncover many defects but It takes a\nclean foundation for real mil\nbeauty.\nMake a practice of gently pushing\nback the cuticle whenever washing\nor applying cream to the hands\nThis will train it to1 a smooth firmness so that cutting will not be\nnecessary.\nFRENCH-CANADIAN SCOUTS\nSING   FOR  GOVERNOR\nOh his recent visit tq Quebec His\nExcellency the GovernorTGeneral\nas Chief Scout for Canada, reviewed Boy Scouts and attended a camp-\nfire sing-song. A. feature was the\nsinging of some 300 French-Canadian Scouts.\nENGLISH   SCOUT  CYCLI8TS\nMEET PHONE EMERGENCY\nSixteen English Boy Scout cyclists performed valuable work when\nGerman air bombs put the telephone system of a Northeast British\ncoast town out of commission. The\nScouts, ranging in age between 15\nand 18, quickly established a cycle\nmessenger service between A.R.P.\ncentres, and maintained it day and\nnight until the telephone system\nhad been restored. >\n\"Every boy was a hero,\" deolar-\ned the town's Director of A.R.P.\n\"Without their help things would\nhave been very difficult.\"\n^UACWWQA\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nGET SOME TO-DAY\nWedneiday Morning Special\nSAUSAGE MEAT: ^\nBRADLEY'S\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nPHONE 831    832\nILK\nAT ITS BEST\nRaw and Pasteurized-\nKOOTENAY VALLEY DAIRY\nPHONE 118\nz&assttsssxsstsszszasts\nTODAY'S MENU\nMacaroni with Chipped Beef\nCelery and Apple Salad     Jam\nWhole or Cracked Wheat Bread\nand Butter\nMilk\nOAK  HILL  POTATOES\nFour cold boiled potatoes, 6 hard\ncooked eggs, salt and pepper, 2 cups\nthin white sauce, 2 cups milk, 4\ntbsp. butter, 3 tbsp. flour, 1 tsp. salt,\ndish bf pepper or paprika.\nDice potatoes and eggs, make\nwhite sauce by melting butter in\npan, add .flour, mix smooth, then\ngradually add milk, stirring con\nstantly, cook until smooth and thick\nand season with salt and pepper.\nI*our over diced potatoes and eggs\nIn baking dish, sprinkle crumbs on\ntop and bake until crumbs brown.\nMacaroni   With  Chipped   Beef\n',4 package macaroni, Vi lb. sliced\ndried beef, 4 tbsp. butter, 3 tbsp.\nflour, sprinkling of pepper or paprika, 2 cups milk, 1 cup croutons.\nCook macaroni according to direction! found on pickige. Tear\nbeet in pieces, melt butter In pan,\nadd beef ind cook until light brown.\n(This process miy be omitted and\nthe beef idded directly to the white\nsauce after it hai been torn Into\nshreds.) Take from fire and sprinkle\nflour snd pepper over beef, blending\nwell, then idd milk gradually, stirring to keep from lumping, then\nput ovir low heat ind cool until\nmixture  thickens md boils. This\nmay be baked for a short time with\nbreadcrumbs sprinkled on top, or\nmay be served on hot platter covered with croutons. Croutons are\nbread cubes fried In butter until\nbrown, or toasted.\nToys Are Needed\nThroughout Year\nBy GARRY C. MYERS, Ph.D.\nAbout ninety-five per cent of all\ntoys are bought by parenti for\ntheir children Just before. Christmas. Yet there is nothing about\nthe late weeks of December which\nshould make playthings more valuable to the thild then than at any\nother time In the year. Moreover,\npractically every toy a child will\nhave during a period of a year is\ndumped before him on Christmas\nmorning. No toy then can have\nthe value It would have if It were\ngiven singly throughout the year.\nGetting so many toys at once excites the youngster, disperses his\nattention and tends to make him\nscatterbrained. He may not play\nwith any one long enough to use it\ncreatively or enjoy it. Certainly it\nis not favorable for cultivating best\ncare of property.\nSome parents may want to be di'\nferent and proceed more intelligently.\nPICK TOYS WITH CARE\nIf parents were to buy toys\nthroughout the year, they would\nbe likely to do it with more care\nand thoughtfulness. They would\nhave more opprtunity to observe\nand study the child and his likes\nand use of each toy. Then they\nmight be Influenced less by paint\nand sales pressure right before\nChristmas. Nor would they be so\neasily impressed with novel'toys so\nmany of which are thrust on the\nmarket at Christmas time. Instead\nthey would, I believe, give more\nattention to those toys which have\nwide educational value.\nWORK TOOLS FOR CHILDREN\nSome toys, like plain blocks with\nseveral of the same dimension or\nmultiples thereof, will be used for\nyears. So also can such playthings\nas small ten pins, dominoes, check\nmen, crayons, paste, scissors,\nhammer, and saw. A hammer, saw\nand vise can be selected for the\nchild of three that should be useful\nto him at six or seven.\nAmong the most valuable playthings for a child are tools and ma*\nterials from which he can make\nthings.\ntaestw*ot*aiom\u00bbtsto9eostsexostst^\nFUR TRIMMED COATS\nSizes 14 to 40\n$25.00\u2014 $60.50\nFashion First Shop\n438 Baker St Nelson, B.C.\nttattttssssststttsstssttsststtsttst\n\u2014\nTha\nButcherteria\nPHONE 527  FREE DELIVERY\nBetter Meats for Less\nHorswill'*\nCROCERIES\nThe boat service in town.\nPHONE 235\n\u2022HaatswH-prf-WxBr^^\nWATCH REPAIR\n' ll \u2022 Job for experta Our work\nassures  your  satisfaction.\nH. H. Sutherland\n848 Biker St\nGIVE YOUR ROAST\nAN EXTRA FLAVOUR\nthis new way\nA FAMOUS Montreal cook lent us\nthis tip on roasting. She advises\nmining a tabUspooaful of H. P.\nSauce Into about a cupful of water\nind suggests pouring this mixture\nInto the bottom ol the roast pan\nand using It to baste the meat occasionally while it is roasting. This\ncook tells us that this plan greatly\nimproves the flavour of both roast\nand gravy.\nFor fried steaks, broiled meats,\nchops, hsmburg steaki ud other\nfoods, including fish and fowl, add t\nlittle H. P. when serving. Thick,\nfruity H. P. Sauce bring! out hidden flavour In foods. Try tt with\nyour nest meat A small amount b\nall that is needed to add a distinctly\nenjoyable and appetizing flavour.\nWEDNESDAY, NOV. 6\nCOFFEE\nFresh Ground,\nLimit 2 Ibi., Lb\n33c\nFLOUR: Five Roses,\n7 Ib. lack\t\nTISSUE: Nile,\nLarge rolls, 5 for ...\nTEA: Royal Seal,\nLb\t\n32c\n19c\n57c\nBe Sura to Cet Your Entry\nBlank for\n\"MY FOOD\nMERCHANT\"\nConteit Entry Blank With\n$2.00 Purchase\nWeekly Priaes\nPAO.   FIVI\nSOAP.P.&C,\nLimit 6, 6 ban .\nFIC BARS:\n14 oc. cello pkt.\nCOCONUT:\n16 ox. cello pkt.\n25c\n19c\n23c\nCRACKERS\nOrmond't, 1 fin\nFamily pkg. ....   iUl\nSWEET POTATOES:\n3 Ibi\t\nCARROTS:\n3 bunches  \t\nCELERY: Utah,\n2 lbt\t\n27c\n10c\n13c\nFLOOR WAX\nNo Rubbing, CC\nQuart tin    \u00abWt\nPLUM JAM: Nabob 40\nPure, 4 Ib. tin  t*H\nPINEAPPLE: Black 17\nLabel, Tin ....... Ill\nQuality Meat\nSpecials\nLOIN MUTTON        OC.,\nCHOPS: Lb    LO\\)\nROUND. SIRLOIN AND T-\nBONE STEAKS:        OC\nJSmsV.\u2122;,\" 2jc\nT..T: 20c\n1 lb. of Baby Beef Liver, also\nVi lb. of Sliced Side   OC\nBacon: Both for ...   OdC\nFor Figure\nSKATING\nFlaring Velveteen \"Shor-\ntie\" Skirts and 'fitted\nGrenfell   cloth   Jackets;\nSKIRTS\nUp from $6^5\nJACKETS\nUp from _. $6,95\n(|) famanTfunt (jl)\nPhone 200, Baker-St.\nALWAYS DELICIOUS\n4X CAKES\nAT YOUR GROCERS\nOverwaitea\nLimited\nWedneiday and Thunday\nSPECIALS\nCHEESE\nGolden Loaf, 1Q\n2 Ib. box\nPASTRY FLOUR:\nB. fr K\u201e 7 lb. sack .\nPEAS: Sin 5'i,\nTh......\t\nCORN: Golden\nBantam,Tin ......\nCREEN BEANS:\n3 tins for\t\nPurex Tissue\n\u201e,\"* 25<\nAPPLES: Maelntoih, (\nDOX      \u2022 \u2022\u2022 e \u2022t\u2022\u2022\u2022\u00ab \u2022 \u2022      *\nCABBAGE:\nLb ...\u2022\u2022\u2022tv\nTURNIPS: Nakuip,    \u2022\n10 lbs. for    '\nSWEET SPUDS: <\n4 lot* for \u2022\u2022*\u2022\u2022\u00ab e \u2022   *\nCELERY: Fresh Utah,\nLb\t\nGRAPEFRUIT: 126'i,\n8 for ...\nJELLY BEANS:\nLb ,\nBUTTER\nFirst Crade,  Overwaitea\nBrand,          J       AP\n3 lbs. for    \u00ab*JC\nI took my 'Schoolgirl Complexion'\nwith me...\n0_.~>~(\ncom.\nToday th* Quint bathed with gentle Palmolive\n... made with Olive Oil I\nL_H\u00bb n tmmttnt, \"H-pet OW CJ.C rtmnmta, Mn., W-t. K, 10 to 1MB |> tsaaimi But,\n\"***,\n_______\n\u00bbAVIITOi)MONtY|\n^^.\u25a0^\u25a0^\u25a0\u25a0^^\n *3**********\\^*K\nBpPP\nPlilittiippilpljllpli\n|PipfPP?P, i^4.|pippK|l\u00ab.p.\nwpniiiiiHipp^i.\nPAO- 8IX-\n.   Established  AprU 22. IMS.\nBritish Columbia'e Most Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sundiy by\nthe NEWS PUBUSHING COMPANY LIMITED.\n266 Baker StreeL Nelson British Columbia.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\n\u2022   THE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS.\nW WEDNESDAY MORNING, NOV. 6, 1940\n*\u2014r\nCASUALTIES\nCircumstances of the present war have emphasized\nthe part the Canadian Navy is playing, for the Canadian\nArmy has not had its opportunity.\nIf the Canadian Army were taking part in land operations, the casualty lists would be numerous and long,\nby contrast with present experience.\n, To illustrate, we may take the experience of the 54th\nKootenay Battalion in the Great War, a unit in which every\npart of the Kootenay was represented, and which was'dear\nto the heart of this territory.\nThe 54th's first operation in France was a raid, on\nSept. 15,1916, in Belgium, in company with some other\nFourth Division units, made for the capture of prisoners\nand to get information. The Kootenay unit captured some\nprisoners and a machine-gun, but at the cost of 69 casualties. There were 17 killed, including one officer; 43 wounded, including five officers; two died of wounds, and seven\nmen were unacounted for. In this small operation 2$ were\nout of the war irrevocably. Of the 43 who survived wounds,\nit is safe to say that some never fought again, and that the\nmajority lost a lengthy period from active service.\nOn the Somme, on Nov. 18,1916, the 54th had almost a\nsolo operation, in capturing Desire Trench, attacking in a\nsnowstorm. The Battalion had 213 casualties. Two officers were killed and 10 wounded, among the latter being the\nlate Major Gilbert Anderson, who guided the advance, and\nto whom there is a memorial tablet in {5t, Saviour's Pro-\nCathedral here. Of other ranks, 59 were killed, 124 were\nwounded, 10 died of wounds, and eight were missing. The\nlosses in dead and missing alone were thus 71. How many of\nthe 134 wounded officers and men were also through with\nthe war, through permanent disablement or invalidism, is\nanybody's guess.\nOn March 1,1917, the 54th, and one of its fellow units\nof the Eleventh Brigade, the 75th of Toronto, were selected\nto carry out the first gas attack ever made by the British\nArmy, and, as everyone knows, it was a slaughter, for the\nvariable wind failed to carry the British gas to the German\ntrenches directly in front of the two battalions, trenches\nwhich the Germans, learning through captures of what\nwas brewing, made into machine-gun nests, crammed with\ntroops. The 54th casualties were 202, more than half of\nthem by death or capture. Six officers and 83 other ranks\nwere killed, the slain including the gallant Lieut.-Col.\nA. H. G. Kertball, D.S.O., who led the 54th with a bayonet.\nTwo officers and 10 other ranks died -of wounds. Seven\nother ranks were missing, making a total of 108 put\nout of action'by -Jeath or capture. The wounded numbered\n94, including five officers.\nThs 75th' underwent a similar holocaust, and its Colonel too died at the head of his men.\nTo \"summarize, in its first three operations, none of\nwhich was a general battle, the \"Gallant 54th,\" as Jack\nMulholland's poem calls it, lost 484 officers and men,\npermanently or temporarily. It had nine officers and 158\nother rank's'killed; two officers and 22 other ranks died cf\nwounds; 22 other ranks were unaccounted for, and of\ncourse lost for. the duration of the war if still alive; and 20\nofficers and 251 other ranks were wounded but survived\nto get away to .hospital.\nIn the general actions, the 54th's heaviest losses were\nsustained in the Bourlon Wood and Cambrai battles, the\npreparatory Bourlon Wood action being on Sept. 27, 1918,\n\u2014exclusively by the Fourth Division\u2014and the Cambrai\naction three days later. Combining the figures for the two\nbattles, the 54th lost the services of 375 officers and men..\nSeven officers and.56 other ranks were killed, one of the\nofficers being the youthful Capt. Don McQuarrie of Nelson; two officers and seven (fther ranks died of wounds,\none of these office'rs'being Capt. Garland Foster of Nelson,\nregarded as the best adjutant in the Fourth Division; and\n12 other ranks were unaccounted for, making 84 completely lost.Avhile 291, of whom seven were officers, survived wounds long enough to be evacuated from the front\nand pass out of the jurisdiction of the fighting force.\nThe 54th was one battalion out of approximately 50,\nthe Canadian Corps of that war normally having about 48\nfighting battalions and two or three working battalions.\nWhen the present war is over, the Canadian Army will\nhave had the overwhelming bulk of casualties, and of course\nproportionately also far more than the Navy. In the case\nof the Air Force, the casualties in flying personnel will be\nhigh under any circumstances. ,\n-NILSON DAILY NEWS. NILSON B. Cf-WIDNM&K. MORNINO. NOV. 6. -1M0\u2014\nTHE ROYAL AIR FORCE\nPER ARDUA PER ASTRA\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QU1LLEN\n*If a woman's house is neglected,\nshe may be sickly. If It's a littlo\ndirty, she's probably lazy. But il it's\na mess like Mary's, she just plain\nrirn.vr\"\nBy Q.S.\nBANG\u2014The Bomber Fund blew\nwide open; its BOOM reiched'London town. Well done, Nelion snd\nDistrict;- Your handsome donation\nwill provide goodly gadgets essential to a winged weapon oi war\nwhich ls a costly combination ot\nmanifold material and a marvel of\nmechanical skill. It ls a token ot our\ngratitude to tbe Mountaineers of\nCloudland, the keen young falcons,\nmany oi whom are really only boya,\nof the Royal Air Force, and Its\npowerful ally, the Fleet Air Arm.\nUnceasingly by day and night, they\nwing their way aloft in flimsy airborne machines\u2014\n\"On rigid arms, to conquer In the\nskies,\nWith pulsing hearts, unshaken\nnerves, and rids\nTo meet the hordes of evil as they\nmr.\" -.:,\nMatchless men, who hold the\ncaptaincy of the clouds, md nee'\nrelentlessly the challenge of outnumbered combit, They otter an\nastonished world the Inspiration ot\na dogged courage and sheer audacity\nagainst the vaunted Luftwalfe of\nHermann Goering and his master,\nthe Butcher of Berchtesgaden, (or\nall of whom an appropriate title\nwould be \"Mass Murder, Inc.\"l\nWithout recognisable code ot honor, except of belief in babes-inarms being fair bomber-prey, power-mad Nazi sky-stukas machine-\ngun mothers and their children, and\nset drowning men afire.. In blind\nsavagery, they bomb-blast maternity homes and hospitals indiscriminately, and with an unholy glee.\nWhat a record to write into German\nhistory! The world looks shudder-\ningly into the naked soul of Nazidom, and its \"kultur\" of alleged\ntotalitarian invincibility, ahd now\nhas no doubt for what purpose this\nin is being waged,\nNO RIFF IN THE RAF\nThe Union Jack still flies; so does\nthe R.A.F. We hear of \"Eggs on\nHamm\"; we shall hear more of\nthe Grapes ot RAF on legitimate\nmilitary targets. Neutrals rate our\nwinged warriors equal to any in\nEurope. With becoming modesty, we\nbelieve that pilot for pilot, and\nplane for plane, they are rather better. Our valorous vigilantes, birds ut\na feather who flock together, in\ntheir daring and devotion, as well\nas by their, hair-raising exploits, are\nheartening millions of Britons st\nhome and overseas.\nTHI8 THEIR FINEST HOUR\nThe heritage of the Renaissance\nand the Reformation, the foundation\nof Christendom, if you like, will he\nkept alive on and over the embattled coasts of beleaguered Britain\nby the vibrant breed of men who\nhave become the chief guardians of\nthe spirit and traditions pt Drake,\nFroblsher and Raleigh, and ot Nelson, Clive and Wellington. As Kipling said, \"There is no break in\ntbe line... no loads are missing\"!\nIn one element, on fragile wings,\nIhey encompass cliff and coast and\nthyme-dad headland of the green\nand lovely oasis in the European\nwilderness. In another, the un-\nplumbed estranging sea, with\nstrong-steeled ships, they fling a\nbrawny right arm around the large\nconvoys that, under the \"Red Dust,\ner\" and guarded by the White Ensign, pass steadily and safely on\ntheir lawful occasions \"through the\nunknown wastes of the oceans.'\nAnd on land, armed forces group-\ned from every corner of the Empire,\nstand in clock-round watchfulness\nto repel the rash invader. Bell-ringers in every coastal belfry from\nJohn o' Groats to Land's End are\nwithin arm's reach of the ropes that\nwill loo.se the tocsin far and wide,\neven as in days of old watchers with\ntorch in hand stood by the beacon\nfires to warn of the coming of the\nSpanish Armada. We know what\nhappened to the Dons! We have\nsome idea of what may happen to\nthe regimented robots of a pinchbeck Napoleon!\nThe decent peoples o( the world\nin   this   darkening  hour  look   to-\nWAR\u201425 YEARS\nAGO TODAY\nBy Ths Canadian Press\nNOV. 6, 1915\u2014M. Skoulidos, new\nGreek Premier, announced policy\nfriendly to Allirs. Reinforced by\nAnglo-French forces, Serbians repulsed Bulgarian troops advancing\non Prllip and Monastir. On tho\nWestern Front, French captured\nGerman post at Andrechy.\nREES\nwards the British Isles with shining\neyei, and say amongst themselves,\n\"la the days ot their past, they\nwere greet; todsy they are greater.\"\nTruth will not \"Forever remain on\nthe scaffold, wrong forever on the\nthronel\" \"\nIt the great invasion hu not yet\nrolled across the shires and counties\nof the Homeland, it Is that every\nBrltrJn above Britain's iklai can\ntake on more thin hii own weight;\nthli offsets the weightier tons of\nscreaming metal,\nIncidentally, the Army, ready to\nconquer or die In the last ditch, is\na trifle sore with the comrades ot\nthe Skyways; it prays dally for\nthe Teuton Juggernaut to itart rolling across the dividing waters of\nthe English Chinnel (\"We nil\nagainst England\"); and \"the blight-\nen ot the R.A.F.\" go over nightly\nand itop lt from coming!\nWhen the hlitory of these times is\nwritten, It miy show that the wir\nwu mainly wop through the latter\naerial superiority of Britain and her\nallies, for the will not be fighting\nthis thing alone to the finish. No,\nSirree! All the blltzkrieging is not\ngoing to be don* by the originators\not this blasting method of annihilation.\nAVE IT ATQUE-\nHAIL AND FAREWELL\nAs peril rides over the Homeland\nfrom dawn to dusk, and through the\nnight watches into daylight again\nand as the Four Horsemen of the\nApocalysc groom their steeds tor\na wild ride, with the future filled\nwith dread uncertainties, except the\nassurance of eventual victory (and\nsome cheering surprises to keep our\nchins up), let us pause in the dally\nround, the common task, for a valedictory salute to the elite ot the\nfree British Commonwealth, including the braves from our own Kootenay valleys, who have already,\nalas, sailed into the sunset and \"gone\nWest\" with all flags flying ... a\nfarewell flight across these planetary skies that remain aloof and\nunaffected by mankind's ceaseless\nwarring.\nBut let us not grieve unduly for\nthem; remember Walt Whitman's\nwords, \"I know this orbit of mine\ncannot be swept by a carpenter's\ncompass. I know that I shall not\npass like a child's carlacue Cut with\na burnt stick at night.\"\nWHO DIES IF ENGLAND\nLIVE8?\n\"0  valiant hearts,  who  to  your\nglory came\nThrough  dust of conflict and  of\nbattle-flame.\"\nBecause of their self-immolation\non the altar of Moloch, there will\nbe fewer young men (And let me\nwrite this very gently) to call\nCoo-e-e \"Down Under\" as they ride\nthe ranges of Australia's backblocks\nwith the westering sun in their\nfaces after this war is won . . .\nfewer lads to return to the sheep-\nruns and tall tlmberlands of Zea-\nlandia under the Southern Cross\n. . . fewer to walk the winnowed\nwheatlands at harvest home of the\nLast Best West, or greet the rising\nsun along the dusty yellow trails of\nthe African veldt. ... Far fewer\nstill will be those to come at long\nlast as evening shadows lengthen\nto red-brick farm and mellowed\nmanor in the little island under ihe\nNorth Star, when the rooks wing\nhoming flight to their high nests in\nthe elms that throw leisurely shadows across the sunlit green of vale\nand upland, or hear again the well-\nloved click of ball on bat on the\ncricket fields ot rural England. . . ,\n\"These who were but children yesterday\nLook down with other eyes.\nMan's desperate folly was not theirs,\nBut theirs the sacrifice.\"\nAllow therefore this humble tribute to the Empire's skyshooters,\nwho, with the other armed forces\nof the free British Commonwealth,\nform a combined chain of steel\naround the Island Kingdom, whose\nlinks no enemy, come wind, come\nweather, can ever break.\nCONTRACT.\/. .\nSHOOTING TOB TOPS\nSTRAINING to g^ln a top icore\nen a hand In dupUcate play does\nnot necessarily mean trying some-\nthing whleh placei the odds tremendously agalnit your success.\nThat more often results In a bottom icore than a top. A better attitude la to seek some move, ot\ncoune different trom what you\nthink most players will use at\nother tables, but which ls equally\nor nearly as sound aa the one they\nprobably will employ.\n\u2666T\u00bb\nVA1.7\n\u2666 io as\n+AQ96-\n\u2666'KB\nIS   :*'\t\n\u2666 Q\u00bb4\n\u00a5QJS2\n\u2666 KJTB\n\u2666 \u00ab\u00ab\n\u2022f\u00bb 54 8\n*Q\u00bb2\n&J  \u2666J10T.\n\u2666 AJ1086S\n*K8'\n\u2666 ASS\n4KB\n(Dealer: North. Neither side\nfUlnerable.)\nNorth     Eaat    South      Wut\n1* Pass      _\u2666 Pass\n>\u2666 Paaa      3* Pass\n-NT      Pas*     l*\nApproximately the same bidding occurred on thla deal at all\ntables ot a tournament In St.\nLouis, but different leads were\nmade by Weat Where the heart\nQ was chosen, It ran to the K.\nThen the heart 10 was finessed\nand the A furnished a diamond\ndiscard. The ipade 3 waa finessed\nto the Q and the diamond B returned to the Q and A. The A and\n10 dropped the missing trumpi\nind three high clubs furnished a\nBy Shepard Barcldy\nsecond iHfntfiiH dlicard, so that\nSouth mad* two overtricki.\nOn* West player decided that at\nneaSy every table the lead would\nbe likely to*b* a heart. Ha reckoned that South probably did not\nhave both the A and Q of diamonds. If hi* own partner had\neither, that Mad could not directly\ncosts trick, and would be different trom th* othtr player*' lead*.\n8o he led th* diamond 8 to the Q\nand A.\nSouth thtn tried to get rid of\na diamond before losing tht lead.\nHt played three high dub*, dli-\ncarding a diamond on th* third\noa*, but Weit luffed with th*\nspade 4, cashed the diamond J and\nreturned hli diamond K, to South'!\nruff. Later Wut got a trick with\nhli -pad* Q, when South tried a\nUne***, so tht contract wu held\nto i-Sp-dei txactly, with no over-\ntricks. At every ether table South\nmade one or two overtricki.\n\u2666 AKQJS4S\n*}A3\n*>i\n\u2666 083\n!_**!'$\u25a0\u00ab      I)\n\u2666 K J64\n\u2666 KlOf\n\u2666 10(1\n\u2022\u00bbQ86\n\u2666 9 8 3\n+ J.72\n\u2666 \u00bb\n*K.S1\n\u2666 A Q 10 7 B\n\u2666 AQ4\n(Dealer: North. Neither tide\nvulnerable.)\nAfter West leads the heart 4,\nhow ihould South play thli deal\nfor C-No Trumpi?\nR,R. Burns Urges Bridge al\nCastlegar, Improvements lo\nCascade Road, Snow Removal\nSERIAL STORY*. .,\nBy RUPERT GRAYSON\nBefore   the   Blitzkrieg\n^rtsttstttttttsstssttstssttt\nHarvey Is Named to\nCalgary Command\nOTTAWA. Nov. 5 (CPI-Lt.-Col.\nr. M. W. Harvey, V.C. M.C.. hai\nbeen appointed Officer Command-\nInjr Military District No. 13 (Calgary), Defence Minister Ralston announced today.\nCcl. Harvev succeeds Brie. C. E.\nConnolly, D.S.O., transferred to the\ncommand ot Military District No. 6\n(Halifax),\nBorn in Ireland, he is 50. and\nenlisted with tne Canadian Mounted\nRifles at Macleod, 'Alts,, in 1015.\n?\u25a0? Questions ?J\nANSWERS\nOpen  to any  ruder.  Names of\npersons asking questions will not\nbe published.\nssaw. tttttt:\nA. L., Nelson\u2014What is the elevation  of Rossland, Trail, Nelson,\nNakusp. Creston, Cranbrook and\nKimberley?\nRossland-3517   feet;  Trail\u20141367.\nNelson\u20141783: Nakusp\u20141438; Creston\n-1983; Cranbrook\u20145013; Kimberley\n-3682.\nH. H., Nelson-Which district in\nB. C. had approximately the greatest numbers of hours of sunshine\nin the year and the least annual\nprecipitation?\nTaking an average ot the last, 10\nyears,   Kamloops-Ashcroft   district\nrecorded the most hours of sunshine\nand the least rainfall.\nT. N\u201e Creston-I am told thst it 1\nchange my place of residence, 1\nmust inform the Government? Is\nthis so?\nVes, under the regulations passed\nunder the National Registration Act,\nit is. necessary for'any perion reg'\nistered under the Act, It he or she\nchanges place of residence, to secure\na form of notice from a Post Office,\ncomplete it and forward it to the\nDominion Statistician at Ottawa.\nThis must be done -within 14 days\nof the change in residence. It Is not\nnecessary to change the original\ncertificate.\nN. J.. Nelson\u2014Is the engineer's head\noffice for '.he Provincial Government in Nelson or Creston?\nThe Department of Public Works\noffice at the Court House, Nelson,\nis the head office lor the Nelson-\nCreston Riding.\nJ. .*., Nelson\u2014How do you count\na nine and four threes in a crib\nhand? I get 20, but a friend counts\n24.\nTwenty-four points is correct.\nE. V., Nelson-What day did October 18, 1902, fall on?\nOctober 18, 1902, was a Saturday.\nA. M. S., Nelson\u2014I have a pattern\nwhich I wish to transfer to some\nblack velvet material. I have tried\nbefore unsuccessfully. Could you\ntell me how to do this?\nTake the original design, lay it\non a layer Of paper, and trace the\nlines of design accurately with a\npacking needle, the eye of which, is\nheld by a piece of wood for a\nhandle. It is necessary to press\ndown well.' The design becomes\nvisible \u00bbn the back by an elevation.\nWhen everything has been accurately pressed through, take whiting\n(formed in pieces) lay the design\nfade downwards on the knee and\npass mildly with the whiting over\nthe elevations; on every elevation\na chalk line will appear. Then dust\noff the superfluous whiting with\nthe fingers, lay the whiting, side\non the cloth, holding it so that lt\ncannot slide, and pass over tho\npaper with a soft brush.\nGOVT. AWARDS SEVEN\nBUILDING CONTRACTS\nOTTAWA, Nov. i (CP)-Award\ning ot seven construction contracts\ntotalling \"^47,000 was announced tonight \"by Munitions Minister Howe.\nContracts, approximate completion dates and contractors employed)\nIncluded:\nWireless Training School, Calgary, tlO.OOO, Paving, Shortly, Chap\npelle and Witt, Cilgary.\nCHAPTER TWENTY-EIOHT\n(Continued)\nOun wai talking mainly to gain\ntime, and was unobtrusively examining the room while-he talked\nIt wai plainly furnished with a\nroll-top desk, 'a couple ot bentwood\nchairs,' l small table and a iteel\nfiling cabinet. The walls were decor-\nated with maps\u2014a large scale one\not London and iti environs, and\nanother of Berlin. A map ot Europe, another of England, and yei\nanother' of the South of France\nStuck up with drawing pins were\nsome pictures of rather .undressed\ngirls, torn from various periodicals,\nand a couple ot colored ones from\nLa Vie Parlslenne. .\"\n\"Sit down,\" Trent pointed with\nhis automatic to one ot the small\nchairs, ,\nGun sat. He was astounded It\nthe physical exhaustion which that\nshort but sharp walk had produced. It showed how Trent's diet\nwas getting him down.\nTrent dropped into the chair by\nthe desk and laid his pistol on lt.\n\"Now,\" he demanded, curtly,\n\"what have you. got to say?\"\nGun eyed him steadily.\n\"If youll pardon me for mentioning It, Mr. Trent, you're rather\nmore business-like than hospitable,\naren't you?\"\nTrent stared, then grinned.\n\"Oh, I see. A drink's what you\nwant, I guess. How about a spot\nof brandy?\"\n\"An excellent Idea, thank you,\"\nTrent took a bottle trom a drawer\nin his desk and handed it to Gun.\n\"Help yourself\u2014there are glasses\nand a siphon, on the table over\nthere. Pour me one ai well \u2014 a\nsmall one.\"\nGun obeyed without a word. He\npoured with his back to Trent\u2014a\nliberal one for himself and a small\none' for Trent, Unobtrusively he\ndropped the pellet from his waistcoat pocket into the latter, before\nsplashing it. He noted with satisfaction that the pellet dissolved\ninstantly.\nHe handed the drink to Trent\nand tossed oft his own at a gulp,\nDrew a long sigh.\n\"Ah, that's better. If you don't\nmind. . . .\"\nHe poured himself out another\none, and made it both shorter and\nweaker.\n\"Could   I   bother   you   for\ncigarette?\"\nTrent passed hli case, without a\nword. Gun took one, lit it and inhaled luxuriously.\n\"How long will that pellet I gave\nHazeldeane keep him quiet?\" Gun\nasked.\n\"Oh, if no one actually shakes\nhim. about four hours,\"\n, Gun made a calculation.\n\"That's all right, then,\" he observed, with satisfaction.\n\"Oh, he'll be quiet enough. Now,\nwhat have you to tell me?\"\nGun puffed his cigarette, and\nsmiled blandly at his interlocutor\nIn the tint place, Mr. Trent,\nthat you are a very ingenious person. This persuasion by limited\ndiet and comfort is tbe most effective thing ot iti kind I've itruck\nyet It weakens a man's will, and\nloosens his principles, u no\namount of mere physical torture\nwould. And\u2014\"       '\n\"No doubt,\" Trent Interrupted,\nroughly, \"But I didn't bring you\nhere to tell me that\u2014I know it\nalready. Now, out with it, whet\nhave you got to propose?\"\n\"I was about to say.\" Gun persisted, gently, \"that, although it is\nexcellent In Ita way, lt has rather\ndefeated Iti own object In my caw.\nBut only temporarily, of coune. By\nWhich I mean that such imall\namenltiei ai food, drink, washing\nand io on have now assumed so\nmuch Importance to me, that I find\nI cannot lay a word\u2014or II you prefer it, I WILL not lay a word\u2014\nuntil I have had a meal, a wash\nand at least two houn' sleep on a\nreal bed. After that, as your countrymen i*y, T, shall be' ready to\ntalk turkey!\"\nTrent sheered:\n\"Oh, no you don't Talk tint-\ngrub afterward\u2014and all the reit'\nGun appeared suddenly to lose\nhis temper. It seemed obvious that\nhis nerves were completely\nunstrung!\n\"Look here, blast you! With your\ndevilish cunning you have made\nme lose grip on my principles, I'm\ngoing to turn lousy traitor, just\nbeacuse I can't stand tt any longer.\nBut by God, I won't lay a word\nuntil I've had what I've asked for.\nGive me that meal and a wash and\na bed, and yeu can wake me in two\nhoun and I'll talk. Refuse\u2014and\nyou can damn well take me back\nto your bloody hen-coop. But you\nwon't get a cluck out of me, now\nor at any other time\u2014not If you\nstarve me to death twice over.\nSee?\"\nTrent eyed him narrowly.\n\"Look here, my friend, you're\nnot trying to pull my leg, are you?\nYou've really got something to say,\nhaven't you? Because I don't like\nBeing made a fool ot, and you'll\nbe mighty sorry later if you try It\"\nGun shrugged.\n\"You'll have to take your chance\not that. But I've got something to\nsay, all right. Look here, I'll be\nquite frank with you\u2014I'll put my\ncards on the table, Tre.it! I can't\ntell you much myself\u2014Haieldeane\nkeeps his secrets very tight, and\nI'm only his assistant. But I've got\na plan for making him talk'\u2014to\nME. And when he'i done that,\nmaybe 111 talk to you. If we can\ncome to terms! Now there's the\nposition\u2014what are you going to do\nabout it?\"\n(Te Be Continued)\nitsstttt^ttstttttttttstttttsttttts\nJsal yowiMii\notosot\nONE-MINUTE TEST ,\n1. Why do we places flowers on\ngraves?\n2. What minerals are present In\nmilk?\n3. What is the oldest free school\nin continuous operation in the\nUnited States?\nHINTS ON ETIQUETTE\nIn playing bridge, it is not correct to lay your hand on the table,\nif you are dummy, until after the\ntlrst card has been led,\n.WORDS OF WISDOM\nOur strength often increases In\nproportion to the obstacles imposed\nupon It\u2014It ii thus we enter upon\nthe most perilous plans after having had the shame of falling in\nmore simple ones.\u2014Rapln.\nTODAY'S HOROSCOPE\nThose who are celebrating birthdays today will find the year just\nstarting a most successful one. It\nwil) bring happiness and gain in\nmany ways, including a secret matter.  However,  caution  should  be\nexercised In regard to correspondence. Born on thii date a child will\nbe of a forceful, determined yet adventurous character, prone to experiment and tike risks. If born in\nthe latter part ot the day the birth\nwill be more fortunate.\nONE-MINUTE TEST ANSWERS\n1. The custom originated with the\nancients who believed that the dead\nenjoyed the fragrance of flowen.\n2. Phosphorous, iron and lime.\n3. A school built by George Wash\nington, in 1783, and still In\nuse in thi public ichool system\nof Alexandria, Vs.\nChange Canadian\nPaymaster Status\nOTTAWA, Nov. J (CP).-The De\nfence Department announced today\nthat in all units of the Canadian\nActive Service Force the paymaster\nno longer will be a regimental officer, but an attached officer from\nthe Royal Canadian Army Pay\nCorps (C. A. S. F.).\nThis order is effective as of October 1, 1940, and applies to all units\nof the Canadian Active Service\nForce whose authorised establishes! attached personnel, exceeds 300\nmint, including tint reinforcements\nmen, ill ranks.\nVICTORIA, aC, NOV. 4.-R. R.\nBums, M.P.P. ior Rossland-Trail,\nmade a strong plea In the Legislature today for \"the absolute necessity ot putting the 28 miles ... between Rossland and Cascade In such\nshape thit those compelled to use\nan ail-Canadian route can do So In\nsafety and comfort,\" and urged that\nthe highway be kept open during\nWinter.\n\"The heavy Increase in traffic\nthrough the interior districts has\ncaused an insistent plea tor dustlesi\nroads. As you know, traffic hai increased a thousand told. The bot\nweither and the winds hav* made\nthe unpaved roads a serious problem that muit be solved. Ai the only\nhighway that can be easily and\nprofitably be kept open the year\nround, 1 would like to impress on\nthe Minister of Public Works the\nabsolute necessity ot putting the 25\nmiles ot the Southern Trans-Provincial highway between Rossland\nand Cascade In such a shape that\nthose compelled to use an all-Canadian route can do so in safety and:\ncomfort- True, some work has been\ndone, but much more remains to be\ndone. The estimates are in, ahd they\nare not formidable.\n\"It ls a fact that If the Kettle\nValley R. R. went out (and It has\nbefore) a vast and essential industry\nat Trail and the citizens of the entire South Eastern B.C. would be\nabsolutely cut off from the Coast\nduring the snow months.\n\"I do not think that coast people\nrealize what they are losing by the\nlong delayed Improvement and completion ot this Southern highway.\nHundreds ot can would roll in to*\nVancouver, the Lower Mainland and\nthis beautiful Victoria and the Island, If thli Southern highway wai\ncompleted is lt should be.\n\"How long would lt take to repay\nthe outlay on thii expenditure?- Juit\nconsider the new business created\nby the Big Bend now. With tbe population already residing on the\nSouthern road, this revenue both to\nmerchants and the Government\nwould be many times more; yei,\nrevenue that would loon pay lor\nthe Hope-Princeton and the improvements to other lectiom of this\nroid.\"\nMr. Burns answered some of the\ncriticisms of British Columbil highways by Prairie visitors, pointing\nto heavy construction ,and maintenance costs ot highways in this province, as compared with the Prairies, \"It ls all a matter of money,\nthis road business\" said Mr, Burns,\n\"hut I can say without fear ot contradiction that never in the history\nof B.C. have we got as much for\nour money ss In the last seven yeara\nWhy, in my district in 1933 we had\nfive miles of paved road. Now the\nmain roads are paved, the othen\ngreatly Improved.\"\n\"Then we have the coast driven\nkicking about sections of our interior roads, claiming that tourists are\nthus kept out of Vancouver (always\nVancouver). The Interior members\nhave tried for yean to let them\nknow juit that but Vancouver thii\nyear howled itself hoarse for- the\nnew. King George Highway, when\nthey already had a paved road to\nthe border; not a very good one, but\nplenty for all the business they now\nget As usuil It wai (Cater to the\nAmericani; give him 10% on hii\nmoney; never mind our own people\nIn the interior.)\"\n\"For the money expended on the\nKing George Highway, you could\nhave pavement completed from\nCranbrook to Vancouver. And another thing, if our own people had\ntaken a little more punishment and\ndriven our own roads instead of\nspending every cent in the U. S. A.\nfor several years, we would have\ngoods roads. Oh, yes, there ire bid\nspots, but the accommodation is better and there is no comparison in\nthe beauty ... we have it in every\nway.\"\nHe suggested that while the Big\nBend should be paved, the Inter-\nProvincial road from Alberta to the\nSea ihould tirst be made a real highway to the Coast via Hope-Princeton.\nHe spoke of the necessity of keeping the highway between Rossland\nand Cascade kept snow free this\nWinter. \"Through the efforts of the\nMinister of Public Works it has been\nmade ready; rock cuts have been\neliminated; earth cuts leveled. This\nroad can be kept plowed tor len\nmoney than lt costs to open the\nsummits in the Spring. From an Industrial and military standpoint this\nservice Is essential. The Department\nof National Defence has already\nrecognized that it is of military\nvalue by using It when required.\nWe also need the frulti and vegetables from the Oakanagan; things\nwe now have to buy from the\nAmerican side.\" \u2022\nMr. Burns referred to \"the absolute necessity tor a bridge at\nCastlegar. The traffic there has\ngrown enormously, and it is in a\nline-up. Not only does this slow up\ntraffic, but it hinders the steady\nflow on the road. It sends cars along\nIn roaring bunchei.\" He spoke of\nconsequent traffic dangers and said:\n\"We do not expect a free bridge.\nWe would be glad to pay a reasonable toll.\"\nTrail is one of the principal centres of war activities in the West.\n' '.Ve have not the pomp and circumstances, the brass hats and brass\nbands you have in the Coait Districts, but Sir, wi do hive the men\nwho turn out the materials, both\nmetals and chemicals, that wll finally settle the argument Too much\ncredit can not be given to these men\nfor the way they have slogged to\nkeep the metals and chemicals rolling, for they with our farmen can\nand will ba the means ot providing\nthose essential things necessary to\nwin the undoubted victory.\n.'Tr*il, e workmen's town, has\nsupplied oni-tenth ot ill the supplies shipped from British Columbia\nby the Red Crou to Britain. Nor\nshould we.overlook the magnificent\nwork of these women of thi Interior\nwho manage to iqueeze from their\nalready 'heavy    househcld   duties\ntime to knit and eetr tor the Bed\nCross and other orginlzitlon.\"\nOt \"our duty to our fighting men\nwhen thii wir 1* over,\" Mr. Bums\nssid that \"So far as my district la\nconcerned this post-war spectra has\nbeen to a great extent Uld low tor\nthe principal industry hu on lt*\nown ltiatlve guaranteed the reemployment ot thoie returning.\n'One ot the moit gelling things\nin my district as lt must be In others, ls the position ot sarna foreign\"\nen. Now, while tha legality ot th*\nthing Is undoubtedly cornet, thi\nfact remiini that torelgnm and\nconscientious objecton art earning\ngood wages while our own men\nhave gone to tight for them ai will\nu ui. Thii ls a statement that cin-\nnot be refuted. Ot coune we reillz*\nthat it is very hard for a man to\nfight against hla mother country,\nbut theie same people, having been\ngnnted every privilege under our\nGovernment, ihould be willing and\neager to forsake those things they\ncame here to get away from, Sad\nwillingly come to the defence ot\nthis Canada ot oun and theirs, for\nsre we not all here with the solemn\nduty handed us by the Almighty to\nbuild \u25a0 new nation where freedom\nof thought freedom of speech, freedom of religion and cf the Press ar*\nour Indisputable rights? For we,\nno matter where wa war* born,\nmust forget the old customs and th*\nold systems we were brought up to\nbelieve in, and accept th* duty to\ncreate and uphold a new country of\nfree men within .the British Commonwealth of Nations.\n\"I think It high time that the**\nwho have made Canada their horns\nand taken advantage of its Institutions should begin to realise thla\nthat If they do not willingly do so\nthey should be forcibly mad* te\ntake their share of the burden, ot\nit possible, have their citizenshii\ncancelled, and also where possible\nbe deported whence they came.\n\"Mr. Speaker, whan you hear, ai\nI have heard, a woman bom Is\nCanada of Slav extraction say \"Wai\ncome good now, Canadian man ge\ntight, my man gets his good Job',\nwell, lt makes you' see red. Heaves\nknows I have tried to be tolerant\nwith these people, but I am afraid\nI was wrong. They ar* not nor de\nthey wish to be, on* ot us.\"\nMr. Burns favored atate health\ninsurance.   .\n\"As to health Insurance, I mads\nthe statement last session that thi\nyounger medical men favored It 1\nwas flatly contradicted by a member of the Opposition. Sine* then\nI have made It my duty to enquire\nagain I find I wai right And also\nI am ot tbe opinion thit lt the\nmedical men will not cooperate tnd\nget thii.badly needed service going,\nthen the Government ihould enlilt\nthe brightest young men we csn\nfind md train them tot thii lervlc*.\nWe are doing lt tor wir; why not\nfor peace?\nu.s. army official!\nvisit McNaughton corps\nSOMEWHERE IN ENGLAND,\nNov. 5 (CP Cable).\u2014General Raymond Lee, Military Attache of Ihe\nUnited States Embassy, and Mai.\nGen. Barton Young and Maj.-Gen.\nJamei Cheney, Air Corpi memben\not the United States General Staff,\nvisited the corpi headquarten of\nLt-Oen, A. G. L. McNaughton today.\n, The visitors alio met Maj.-Gen. G.\nr. Pearket, Commander of th* 1st\nCanadian Division\nMONTREAL CREEKS GET\nMESSAGE FROM KING\nMONTREAL, Nov. 5 (CD-Gratitude la ixpressed by King Georg*\nII of Greece and Premier Metixai\nIn cables replying to, promises of\nsid from the Montreil Greek Com-'\nmunlty, which hu started a campaign to purchase arms for Greece.\nYOUR MONEY\ngoes farther. You want to\nspend your money today In\nthe way that will get you\nthe most for it.\u2014A modern\nheating plant In the homt\nwill save you money and\nwork. We will gladly estl-\nmate your requirements.\nPhone 666\nKootenay Plumbing\n& Hentiia Co., ltd.\n357 Baker ft\ni.i l.._u..a_t_<|jjhjffifo,,, nf, lf rftmm-\nl^^ill^\n * THRILLING NEW BIGNESS\n(In all major dimensions)\nThe new Chevrolet ii SIZED up beyond all expectations,\nboth inside and out\u2014made so Impressively BIG and beautiful In all ways that It marla a two-year advance In one.\n* DASHING NEW \"ARISTO-\nSTYLE\" DESIGN \u2022JESS?\nFeaturing a massive new \"Canada Clipper\" grille ~\nswifter, smoother, smarter lines-beautiful two-tone color\ncombinations on all Special De Luxe models* \u2014 and\nconcialed running boards at each door, assuring easy,\ncomfortable entrance and exit. *oP(io__i .1 .m_\/i \u201ei,. aw,\n* LONGER, LARGER, WIDER\nFISH ER   BODIESfwi\"> No-Draff Ventilation)\nWith more feet room, more shoulder room, more searing\nroom-wilh wider windshield and Increased driver vision\n\u2014with more luxuries, comforts and conveniences than\nyou've ever before found In any low-priced car.\n* DE LUXE KNEE-ACTION ON\nAl I MODE. C \"\u00b0'<\">'K> 'P-l-l'-l trt** one K.or\nHU Iflwl\/tLj end Imtetret SlwdrprM* Si..ri-S)\n' New harmonizing of the front and rear spring action, plus\nwider spread between rear springs, longer wheelbase,\nadded weight and Improved weight distribution, gives\nbig car comfort, readability and safety.\n^ FAMOUS VALVE-IN-HEAD\n\"VICTORY\" ENGINE SS?JK\nIn-Head Engines have led the field In performance with\neconomy of gos and oil. Today's magnificent, powerful,\ntime-tested Chevrolet Valve fn-Head Engine represents\nthe peak of power-plant efficiency and economy.\n_____________\nIt's a SIZE sensation . \u2022. a STYLE sensation ... a DRIVE\nand RIDE sensation ir Bigger in all major dimensions\nboth inside and out \u2022. \u2022 with 3\" longer wheelbase and\n\"three-couple roominess\" in all sedan models ^ With\ndashing new \"Aristostyle\" design and longer, larger,\nmore luxurious Fisher Bodies that set the new style for\nthe new year ^ With the powerful Valve-in-Head\n\"Victory\" Engine that lifts performance and lowers\ncosts ^r It's the new leader by the builder of leaders\n\u2022 \u2022 .CHEVROLET .. \u2022 holder of first place in motor car\nsales for 9 out of the last 10 years!\n^CHEVR\nNELSON TRANSFER\n323 VERNON ST. Chevrolet Dealers\n* NEW LONGER WHEELBASE\nA full 3. Inches hove been added to the wheelbase -)\nmalting Chevrolet for '41 even longer, than the famous\n'AO model whose 181 inches from front of grille to rear\nof body made It \"the longest of all lowest-priced can.\"\n* ORIGINAL VACUUM-POWER\nCUIET AT NO (*\u00bb\u00ab\u25a0 oi On\/y\n\u2022Hill I EXTRA COST Chevrolet Builds It)\n8016 automatic, requiring only 30% driver effort. ,J,\nIntroduced by Chevrolet exclusively 3 model years ago-j\nrefined, developed, perfected to the point where It Is\nnow recognized as \"the world's easiest gearshift.\"\n* SAFE-T-SPECIAL HYDRAULIC\nDD A If EC' Designed to stop quicker with less driver\nVIUIIUpJ affort-to be completely under driver\ncontrol\u2014 to last longer-and, above all, to be truly\nequalized at all times. These are \"SAFE-T-SPECIAL\nHYDRAULICS,\" giving yon and your family maximum\nmotoring security.\nPfw many mora oiitstanding comfort,\nMaty andcoflvwiJwic* features including\nAll-Sllent Syncro-Meih Trammliilon * Chevrolet's Famous Tlptoe-Matlc Clutch * Sealed Beam\nHeadlights with Separate Parking Lights *\nStabilized Front Ind * Automatic Rid* Stabilizer\n* High Quality, dear-Vision Safety Glass *\nHypold Rear Axle * Exclusive- Box-Girder Frame\nC-I'l\n ***************\nmm\nPAGE   EIGHT-\nFirst Session of 19lh Parliament\nOpens; New Memben Introduced\nBy C. R. BLACKBURN\nCanadian Press Stiff Writer\nOTTAWA, Nov. 8 (CP)-In a\nbrief throne speech reed by Chief\nJustice Sir Lyman P. Duff, deputy\not the Governor-General, the tint\nsession of Canada's 10th parliament\nwu prorogued today. Many Sena\ntors were absent but an unexpectedly large number of Commons\nmemben attended the formalities in\nprelude to formal opening of a new\nsession Thursday.\nThe session prorogued today was\nadjourned Aug. 7 subject to recall\nif circumstances indicated the necessity, but the only meeting was for\nprorogation.\nNo Canadian parliament ever be-\nfore had remained In session for\nSo long an adjournment and never\nbefore has ther been a prorogation\nand formal opening in the same\nweek, -\nIt waa the second history-making\nevent this year on Parliament Hill.\nLast January a regular session of\nthe 18th Parliament was opened and\nParliament dissolved on the same\nday, when Prime Minister Mackenzie King decided on an Immediate\nappeal to the people.\nToday's procedure ws purely formal. Memben of the Commons met\nfor formal Introduction of four new\nmemben electee' since the last meet-\npay tribute to two members wo\ndied during the adjournment. Tributes to Senators H. W. Laird, Con.,\nSaskatchewan, and G. A. Fauteux,\nCon, Quebec, were paid by Government Leader Danduraad and Senator C. C. Ballantyne, Con., Quebec,\nacting as opposition leader In 'he\nabsence of Senator Arthur Meighen.\nIn the Commons Speaker Glen\nannounced the election of four new\nmember* line* Parliament adjourned. Prime Minister Mackenzie King\nand Defence Minister Ralston ushered Navy Minister Macdonald, Lib.,\nKingston City, to the chamber amid\napplause.\nSupply Miniate. Howe accompanied the Prime Minister for the Intro-\nGets Copy of\nHitler's Appeal\nFrom Bristol, England, -C. F.\nHunter of Nelson has received a\ncopy of the propaganda circular of\nHitler's July 19 speech which was\ndropped in thousands in England,\nand which became the subject of\nmany Jokes in the Old Country\npapers. It contains the extraordinary\nthreat to Great Britain to quit the\nwar or suffer the fate of Poland,\nNorway, the Netherlands and\nFrance. Some finders sold it and\ngave the proceeds to the Red Cross,\no'hers kept it as a curiosity.\nThe document Is of four pages,\nea:h 18 by 13 inches in size,\nIn a letter accompanying the\n\"Last Appeal\", Fred Penfold, Mr.\nHunter's brother-in-law, mentioned\nthat one of his company's stores\nhad suffered from bomb damage to\nthe extent of broken windows and\nthat 25 yards away a building had\nbeen destroyed, a baby having been\nrescued from it alive and well 72\nhours after the explosion.\nductlon ot Louis Breithaubt, Lib.\nWaterloo North.,.\nConservative Leader' Hanson snd\nJ. H. Harris. Con., Toronto-Danforth\nIntroduced G. R. Bounher, Con.\nCarleton, and with E. E. Perley,\nCon., Qu'Appe-le, Mr. Hanson introduced A. H. Bene*, Con, Saskatoon City.\nThe Prime Minister left the chamber to take hia place at the side of\nthe Governor-General'! deputy In\nthe Senate Chamber.-.   .\nOnly one member wai present In\nuniform\u2014A. J. Lapointe, Lib, M\u00bbV\napedla-Matane, an officer In the\nVeterans' Guard.\nHeaded by the mac* bearer and\nMr. Speaker the members trooped\ndown the long corridor to the Senate where they were thanked and\ndismissed in the speech from the\nthrone and the session' was ended,\nMembers Leave\nBefore Session\nIs Prorogued\nOTTAWA, Nov. 8 (CP)- Priced\nent was shattered as Parliament\nprorogued today when memben\nof the House of Commons left the\nSenate Chamber before proceedings were complete.\nLed by their Speaker they turned\nand went out when Sir Lyman P.\nDuff, Deputy of the Governor-General, finished, reading the speech\nfrom the throne, apparently under\nthe Impression everything was over.\nThe Governor-General's secretary\nwalke*. down through the chamber\nto deliver to Speaker Glen of the\nLower House a copy of the speech\nbut Speaker Glen and his commoners had gone. A messenger brought\nthem back, the'copy was delivered\nand Speaker parent of the Senate\nannounced it was the deputy- gov-\nernor's wiU that 'the Parliament\nstand prorogued until Thunday.\nSIX ARE CITED\nFOR BRAVE ACTS\nHAMILTON, Ont, Nov. 8 (CP).\n\u2014Posthumoui award of the Royal\nCanadian Humane Association's\nparchment certifcate was announced\nhere today for Harold Duffett of\nGlace Bay, N. S\u201e who, with Jean-\nette Moore, also of Glace Bay, rescued Leo Jackson* from drowning\nat Glace Bay Lake, July 28, 1940.\nFour other Nova Scotlans who\nreceived the award of the parchment certificate were:\nMrs. Marlon C. Hayden and Harry\nGray of New Glasgow, for assistance in the rescue of Jean Schur-\nman from drowning at Black Point\nN. S\u201e July 18, 1939.\nBaden Powell Halifax, for the\nrescue of John Boutllier trom his\nburning home at Halifax, May 4,\n1940.\nOtis Mosher, Lower La Have,\nN. S., for the rescue of William\nCreaser from a well at Lower La\nHave, May 16,1840. -    \u2022 <\n\u2014NILSON DAILY N-W8. NELSON B. (..-WEDNESDAY MORNINO. NOV. 0. 1840-\nOn, Jho, (Un,\nWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1940\n\"Superman\"\u2014the thrill show of the airlanes\u2014starts on CKLN and\nCJAT at 8:18 this afternoon, and will be heard each Wednesday md Fri-\n\u00a3lanet, whose feats ot itrength md entice la suspense, snd provide many\nhours of entertainment tor young and old alike. The -how ls billed is\none ot the best ot 1940, ud preview! confirm the publicity man'i itate-\nment 100 per cent Weekly\nday atternoon- thereafter. Modelled on the popular comic-strip character,\n\\ wni\ndlo audience\nr young and i\nid preview! cc\nper cent weekly prl-et are offered ouring me mow oy ih ipon-\nion, a well-known cereal manufacturing concern.\nL. W. Brocklngton, K.C., will be heard in .a broadcast at 8 o'clock\nWednesday evening, when he will ipeak on Canada'a War Effort \"Alter\nof the Moon\", heard weekly from Winnipeg on Wednesdays at 8 pan, has\nbeen cancelled for this occiiion only. Mr. Brocklngton won great acclairn\nfor his two recent broadcast speeches, and since he occupies an important\npost In Ottawa, hli address tonight, ihould be m Informative md\nauthoritative on*. \u2022 >- . '.-\"'\u25a0\nThe popular Scandinavian Melodies programme, arranged ind presented etch Wedneiday at 9:13 p.m. by Sylvia Laakso, Betty Franklin\nand Annie Busk, will be aired as usual tonight Annie Busk announces\nthe programme, and Clara Swanson is accompanist.\nIVENING\n.6:00\u2014Radio Birthday Party\n(CKLN)\n6:80\u2014Challenge to Youth\n7:00\u2014The News\n7:18\u2014Britain Speaks\n7:30\u2014BBC Radio News Reel\n8:00\u2014Address by L. W. Brocklngton.\n8:30\u2014Popular Music (CKLN)\n8:00\u2014Songs of the Range\n9:15\u2014Scandinavian    Singers\n(CKLN)\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNING\n7:S7\u2014O .Canada.\n8:00\u2014BBC Newi\n8:18\u2014Clirk Dennli, Tenor\n8:30\u2014Juit Between Friendi\n8:48\u2014The Balladeer\n9:00\u2014Tfle Newi\n9:18\u2014Recital\n9:30\u2014B. C. Schooli Broadcast\n10:00\u2014Musical Interlude (CKLN)\n10:30\u2014Frankie Masters' Orch.\n10:45\u2014Tht Newi\n11:00\u2014Musical Varieties\n11:30\u2014Favorite Waltzes\nAFTERNOON\n12:00\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcait\n12:30\u2014The Newi\n12:45\u2014Musical Melodies (CKLN)\n1:00\u2014Preienting . . .\n1:15\u2014Club Matinee\n2:00\u2014Closing Stocks\n2:15\u2014Mirror for Women\n2:30\u2014Popular Songs     .\n2:45\u2014BBC Newi    \u00bb\n3:00-Toplcal Talk\n3:15\u2014Message    From    Sandy\nMcPherson\n3:30\u2014Recital Series\n3*45\u2014Talk\n4:00-The Little 'Revue\n4:30\u2014Serenade For Strings\n4:55-r-News. Comment\n5:00\u2014Manny Strand'a Orch.\n5:15\u2014Superman (CKLN)\n5:30\u2014Stanford   University    Programme\n9:_0-\"C!aailci For Today\n10:00-Talk\n10:15-Tht News\n10:30\u2014Freddie Martin1! Orch.\n11:00\u2014God Save Tbe King\nC|AT \u2014 TRAIL\nMORNINC\n7:00\u2014Church In the Wlldwood\n7:18\u2014 Roundup Time\n7:30   Breakfast Club\nr -.S-On the Mall\n.1:30\u2014Symphony of Melody\nAFTERNOON\n12:00\u2014Voice of Richard Crooks\n12:1S\u2014Shall We Waltz\n1:30\u2014Buccaneers\n2:30- Home Folks Frolic\n3:30\u2014Dance Hour\n4:00\u2014Radio Revue\n.4:45\u2014 Spotlite\n5:15\u2014Superman\n.VENINC\n12:00-Slgn Off\nOther  Periods\u2014CBC  Programmes\nROBSON\nROBSON, B. C. \u2014 George Pastor\nand Marion Foster of Waseco, Sask.,\nwere guests ot Mrs.'E. Ostrum.\nMiss Thompson visited Trill.\nMiss Meda Hougen, Mn. Ostrum,\nGeorge Pastor, Marion Foster visited Trail.\nThe small son of Mr. and Mrs.\nL. M. Quance was christened at\nthe Robson church when he recelv-\ni<d the names of Anthony, Franklin.\nRev. Ferguson officiated.\nWINDSOR CASTLE SAFE\nLONDON, Nov. 5 (CP) - The\nPress Association today said the\n19,141-ton steamhsip Windsor Castle\nhad docked unscathed at a British\nport, contradicting German claims\nthat she had been damaged by\nbombs.\nThe captain aald the Germans\ndropped four Bombs but all missed.\nCHINS UP! THERE'LL ALWAYS BE AN ENGLAND\nTo Send\n\/ Christmas\nCards\nTo Your Friends\nand Relatives\nOverseas\nOur stock is complete with designs to suit almost any\ntaste. They include etchings, patriotic, snow scenes and\nmodernistic. We also have a nice line of religious cards.\nWe give service. Your card will be sent by return mail\nif desired. Send for samples.\nPRICES RANGE FROM\n$1.75, $1.90, $2.20, $2.85,  up to $4.20\nPRINTED WITH YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS\nSOLD IN LOTS OF TWO DOZEN ONLY\n\u25a0 - \u25a0. (     \\ \u2022.'\nCity Residents Phon* 144\u2014Our Agent Will Cttl hrWilly\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPARTMENT\n236 Baker Street\nNelson, B. C.\nJ. Houston Nakusp\nAwarded Honor\nlor Heroic Deed\nHAMILTON, Ont., Nov. 6 <CP).-\nEight persons Irom Western Canada\nwere cited for heroic action. In the.\nawards of parchment certificates\nannounced here today by the Royal\nCanadian Humane Association.\nThey are:\nNell Graden and William S.erban.\nEdmonton, for rescue of John Kon-\ndrosky from drowning in the North\nSaskatchewan River, Edmonton, on\nFebruary 2, 1939.\nArthur Parker, Saskatoon, for the\nrescue of Dorothy Daniels in the\nSaskatchewan River, Saskatoon, on\nMarch 7, 1940.\nSheila Chambers and Alfred Savage, Victoria, tor assistance in rescue of Frederick MacPherson in\nThetis Lake, B. C, August 13, 1939\nJohn Houston, Nakusp, B. C, for\nthe rescue ot Louis Gensick from\ndeath by serious wounds, Nakusp\nHot Springs, B. C, April 27, 1940.\nA. R. Clement and Gordon Lindsay Mason, Courtenay, B. C\u201e for assistance In the rescue ot A. K.\nJeffrey from drowning at Comox\nBay, B. C, July 1, 1940.\n(th Round Draw\nin Bridge Tourney\nFourth round draws for the bridge\ntournament sponsored by Mra. Vincent Fink's Circle of St. Saviour's\nChurch follow:\nFirst Prize Draw:\nMr. and Mrs. E. C. Wragge vs.\nMrs. W. R. Grubbe and Mrs. W. M.\nWalker. '\nMrs. K. H. Grenfell and L. K\nChoquette vs. Mr. and Mrs. W. W\nFerguson.\nMrs. A. O. Mackay and Dr. H. G\nCameron vs. Mrs. R. H. Dill and\nMrs. T. H. Johnstone.\nMr. and Mrs. George Hallett vs.\nMr. and Mn. E. E. L. Dewdney.\nConsolatl.n Draw:\nMrs. G. Lawrence and Mrs. A\nMcD, Noxon vs. Mr. and Mrs. John\nErb.\nMrs. L. H. Choquette and Mrs. C.\nA. Larson vs. Mrs. J. O'SHea and\nS. A. Maddocks.\nMrs. R. Watson and Miu B. Johnion vi. Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Aid's\nof Salmo.\nMrs. John Cartmel and Mrs. P.\nG. Morey vs. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. F.\nPeeL\nWar Stamp Sales\nTotal IjRMO\nWar savings stamp and certificate\nsales tn Nelson reached i total of\n$48,940.79 at the end ot October.\nSales during October amounted to\n$1969.50. compared with (4320 in\nSeptember. The reduction is believed partly due to the Red Cross\ncampaign which reached its conclusion in October, ahd In which\n(10,108.11 was subscribed to aid in\nthe war effort.\nTODAY'S News\nWest Kootenay Registered Vegetable Growers at Nelson\nPictured around conference table at meeting at Jarktnson, Nakusp; Mr. Chanter; A. H. NoaW\n-Ai-!. r  ii w  r<h--.\u00bb-- r\u2122i\u00ab..i.   ..... _i_-)_j Balfour; R. B. Homersham. Kamloops, a member\nwhich F. H. W. Chanter, Longbeach, was elected of y,. \u2022-,. Geo_g. p,^^.   Qu^_,. m. H\ndelegate to annual meeting of Interior Vegetable Kershaw,  Natusp;  and  J. J.  Camobell,  Willow\nMarketing Board were, left to right; Benjamin Point (partly shown).\u2014Dally News Photo.\nNelson High School Junior Red Cross Stages\nHallowe'en Ted\nTying Tony Bell's recent top\nen'.ry in the Gyro Club \"Salmon\"\nDerby was the 24-pound Kamloops trout landed Sunday otf\nWocdberry Creek by Kingsley\nFl-ck of Nelson. The big fellow\npul un quite a fight\u2014Dally Newi\nPhoto'.\nUnder Arrest\nLeft to right: Miss Genevieve Grluelle, Miss Marjorie Jorgenson, Miss Betty Emory and Miss Neena\nMcClement\u2014Daily News Photo.\nArabs Support British Force in Near East\nActing to'tHwart fifth'cdlumtT*\nactivities. Premier Metaxas ol\nGreece ordered the arrest ol\nPrince Paul, brother of Kin-\nGeorge of Greece, and his German-born wife. <   X\nDefence Chief\n'--*\u2022 \u2022 -j\n.-.,\n__4___i___.\nA company of the Arab legion that is incorporated In the British army of the Near East, top is\nshown in action on ihe desert, bottom. Fierce and\nffitssst8\u2014ftife.i :\u25a0.>.\u25a0'.: \u25a0'-\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 ^^m^^mam^mu^ ...tm\ncanny fighters, these men are at home in the desert,\nand are slated to play an important role in the\ndefence of the Suez Canal.\nGeneral Alexander Papagos,\nwho is in command of all oi\nGreece's land forces.\nPhilippines Defenders\nMcLeary Heads Trail Curlers\n___-_.___s__t_^___Wiktt<**\nPhilippine scouts working with the U. S. army and air force in\nthi Philippines, shown manning a heavy calibre anti-aircraft machine gun as they stand at the \"jeady\" for an enemy invader. While\none scout fires the gun the other stands ready with additional\ncartridges.\n'    '. \u2022 ;       '\u25a0    '   \u2022'\u25a0 '      .\nWILLIAM  McLBARY\nPresident of the Trail Curling Club for the 1940-41 season. Mr. McLeary. who has htid various executive positions in the Trail Club, hat\nbeen a member since 1928. Previous to coming to Trail from Nelson\n17 years ago, Mr.' McLeary wai \u2022 member of the Nelson Curling Club.\n\u2014Photo- by Progress Studio, Trail.   ,\n 5w\"*^WiWfW\nW30\neenberg Most\naluable Player;\nFeller Is Second\nHANK GREENBERG\nnCAGO, Nov. 5 (AP).--Henry\njnberg, Detroit outfielder and\ne run specialist, is the American\n(ball League's \"most valuable\ntic\" for the second, time in six\nis.\nIter seven years at first base for\nTigers, Greenberg moved to the\nield \"for the good ot the team\"\nexperienced one of his bright-\nseasons, leading the League in\nie runs and runs batted in. He\n11 homers and drove In 150 runs,\nreceived the award tint in 1935.\n24-man committee, representing\nBaseball Writers Anoclition of\nerica, gave. the 29-year-old\n-nberg 292 points in the annual\nI for the award. Bob Feller,\nleland's young pitcher, trailed\nTiger star with 222 points.\nte DiMaggio, New York star\ni led the circuit in batting for\nsecond straight season, fell to\n1 place In the voting after wln-\n[ the award in 1939. DiMaggio\nlved 181 points.\njck Newsom of Detroit wu\nth and Lou Boudreau of Cleve-\nI was fifth with 120 and \"119\nIts, respectively. Jimmy Foxx,\nIon first baseman, drew 110\nits.\nhoolboy Rowe of Detroit ssved\nmth place with 82 points, fol-\nB by his team mate, Rudy\nk, 61.\nORWALK, 0, (C-P).-Women's\na hats are a frequent cause of\n\u2022mobile accidents, traffic officers\nii told at a district meeting here.\nActor Hunts\nPUSIE TO RETURN\nVANCODVSR, Nov. 5 (CP) -\nJean Pusie, fiery French-Canadian\ndef-nceman who lift Vancouver\nLions In mid-season last year, in a\nhuff and wai suspended from or\ngenlzed hockey, his been reinstated\nand li returning to the Pacific\nCoast League,!'. was announced today by the office of League President f. W. Taylor. The announcement did not siy what team he will\nJoin on his return.\nLadies'Pro-Rec\nOpens Tonight\nPro-Rec centre for ladies opens\nat the Nelson Civic Centre tonight\nMiss Eileen Mecdonald, who also\ninstructs ladies in Rossland and\n.Tail centres, will conduct the Nelson classes.\nThe hour and a half sessions will\nbe held every Wednesday, opening\nat 7:00 p.m. Women's fundamental\ngymnastics, various forms of exercises and dancing will be included\nin the instruction program.\nHockey Scores\nQUEBEC SENIOR\nVerdun 5, Cornwall 4.\nCAPE BRETON SENIOR\nSydney 8, North Sydney 4.\n\u2022-NILION DAILY NEWS. NILION B. C-WIDNESDAY MORNINO. NOV. .,,1940\u2014\n-\u00ab*Atll NINI\nJimmy Wilson, Series* Hero, Toning tt Easy\nONTARIO W.A.A.F. 'TAKE\nEXCEPTION' TO RULE.\nCANCELLING MEETING\nTORONTO. Nov. 5 (CPJ.-Chlef\nOfficer of the Ontario Branch, Women's Amateur Athletic Federation\nof Canada have \"taken exception\"\nto the cancellation of the Federation's biennial meeting, scheduled\nat Montreal thii month.\nMeeting here last night, the Ontario Branch decided to forward a\nletter to the Dominion- Federation\nPresident, Mlsi Edith McKenJla of\nWinnipeg.\nMcCarthy to Continue\nManaging Yankees\n' NEW YORK, Nov. 9 (APWoe\nMcCarthy, who hai managed the\nNew York Yankees for 10 years,\nwill cntinui in hli Job next season.\nMcCarthy'i three-year contract,\ncalling for a $35,000 annual salary,\nexplrea this year.\nREMEMBER  WHEN?\nBy The Cansdisn Press\nJack Chesbro, one of baseball's\nleading ipitball pitchers, died at\nConway, Mass., nine yean ago today. He led National Leigue pitch-\nera in 1001 and 1902 whUe with\nPittsburgh, and In 1904 hung up an\nall-time record for games won with\n41, while playing for the New York\nYankees.\nGary Cooper, screen star, wends\ni way homewards after getting\nplentiful supply ot ducks at\na opening of the hunting sea-\n|n at Sun Valley, Idaho.\nResidents of Crete\nCheer British troops\nLONDON, Nov. 8 (CP)r-Resldents\nof the Greek Island of Crete In the\nAegean Sea gave a hearty welcome\nto British troops who landed there\nlast-week, the British Broadcasting\nCorporation Nid tonight.\nQuoting an account given by\nBritish officer with the forces there\nthe BBC ssid the islanders turned\nout in picturesque native costume\ncheering snd showering the men\nwith flowers.\nLittle damage was done by Italian air raids on the islands, the BBC\nquoted the officer as saying. One\nraid had been made only a. few\nhours after the British landed, but\nhad caused only two casualties\namong the troopi.\nElection Returns\nAre Televised in U.S.\nNEW YORK, Nov. 8 (AP) Associated Press election bulletins were\nbroadcast by television tonight It\nwas the tirst time election returns\nhad been televised.\nAs the bulletins appeared on s\nnews printer they were picked up\nby a Nitlonal Broadcasting Company television camera and flashed\nto homes, taverns, hotels snd party\nheadquarters in New York, New\n.Jersey and Connecticut.\nN. B. C. estimated 90,000 persons\ngathered around television receivers to watch the news come in. .\n'\/) %tsot\/\nTwo Yukon Mineral Claims Among 51\nShippers on Consolidated Custom\nList in October; Tonnage Is 4098\nHero of the World Series, Jimmy Wilson, Cincinnati Reds' coach who went in and caught the\nReds' games after a long layoff, takes it easy. at\nhis Philadelphia home. Here neighborhood kids\nlook through the Wilson's parlor window while\nJimmy poses with his wife and daughter, Jane.\nNelson Eagles Will\nPay Fraternal Visit\nto Rossland Aerie\nNelson Eagles tonight will travel\nto Rossland for a fraternal visit,\nreturning tbe visit paid to Nelson\nin June by Rossland Aerie.\nThe Nelson men will travel by\nspecial bus.\nGauthier to Goal\nfor Seattle Olympics\nSEATTLE, Nov. 5 (AP) .-Seattle's\nOlympic! got agoalielas t night\nhut he probably won't be here tor\nthe Seattle Paelfie Coast Hockey\nLeague opener here tomorrow night.\nManager Bobby Rowe ot Portland wu to Impressed with the\nwork ot hii rookie netminder,\nBlickie Javoric, that he released\nall strings on midget Paul Gauthier\nand Seattle signed him at Vancouver last night\nSeattle thought it hsd Alex Wood\nof St Louis, but wood held out\ntor more money about the time the\nGauthier transaction was made.\nGauthier formerly played tor Spokane.\nShould Gauthier not arrive In\ntime, Mac Beattie, a Calgary amateur, wtll be pressed Into service,\nManager Danny Cox said.\nSports Roundup\nBY EDDIE BRIETZ\nNEW YORK, Nov. 8 (AP)- Add\ngrid casualties! In the Auburn-\nGeorgia game, one ot the Auburns\nstiff-armed field,Judge Roy 8-fie-\ngel and sent him to the sidelines\nwith a broken arm. . . , That Detroit-Washington deal (Buddy Myer\nfor $15,000) is cooking again. . . .\nColorado's only two sll-Amerlcas\nmet on the same field Sunday when\nWhlzzer White fit and bled for the\nDetroit Lions vs Dutch Clark's\nCleveland Rams.... Lou Little says\nCornell gave the finest passing exhibition he ever has seen, man and\nboy.\nNAMES IS NAMES:\nNavy hai a 208-pound halfback\nnamed Hurt who has been hurt all\nseason. ... One of the Georgetown\ntackles is Fullilove, but you can't\nget the opposition to believe it. . .\nFrank Zmak (pronounced smack)\ntackles for Santa Clara Snd George\nPoppln is one of the guards. . . .\nArkansas' triple threat back Is Harold Hamberg, who has everything\u2014\nlike all good hamburgers.\nTbe reviews of Lou Nova's comeback were so disappointing the Dec.\n13 Garden date which had been reserved for Nova, may be turned\nover to the OveTlin-Belloiie proposed re-match.\n, Jock Rogers of   Durham, N.C.,\nrespectfully submits bis all-America backfield nominations: Fullfack\nKlmbrough (Texas Aggies): halves\nHarmon (Michigan) and Fojtx (Tennessee); quarter, Snavely (Cornell)\nOutsider Australian\nTurf Classic Winner\nMELBOURNE, Nov. 9 (AP) -A\nrank outsider at odds of 100 to 1,\nOld Rowley today won the Melbourne Cup Australian turf classic.\nOld Rowley finished three-quarters\nof a length in front ot Maikai, with\nTidal Wave in third place only s\nneck behind.\n,Tfce'favorite, Beau Vlte, arts\nfourth, beaten out of third piece\nby a head.\nThe winner shot to the front of\nthe field en eighth of a mile from\nthe finish and beat oft a determined\nchallenge by Maikai. His time wss\nthree minutes 28 seconds, for the\ndistance ot about two miles.\nSewell, Pcckinpaugh\nChoice for Indians?\ni\nCLEVELAND, Nov. 8 (AP).-The\nchoice of a new Cleveland Indians\nManager drew near, today with mosi\nbaseball fans regarding the lesdthl\ncandidates as Luke Sewell snd\nRoger Peckinpaugh.\nAlva Bradley, President of the\nAmerican League club, reported \"I\nbelieve I will have a definite announcement to make early next\nweek.\"\nAll In How You Look at it\nSeagram's Famous Brands\nSEAGRAM'S \"V.O.**\nSEAGRAM'S \"KING'S PLATT\nSEAGRAM'S \"OLD RYE\"\nPrices for it at.\nbottles range\nfrom Jj.3J to $3-35\nI advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of British Columbia.\nV   p mini nHMnii____.__fr_it_.__a\nThere are big moments in football for players ll well is fins\u2014\nthrills that fans know nothing about. For instance at ton, Vince\nDennery of Fordham University Rams gives you reaction of an end\ncharging In to block a punt The kicker's foot looks as big as an automobile and just as irresistible. Centre, how the hand of Len Eshmont\nof the Rams looks at the end of a straight arm. This is from the would-\nbe tackler's viewpoint. Bottom, the bill doesn't look any too small\nto Joe Ungerer as he stands ready to receive a pass tossed by Ford-\nham's Flip Filipowicz. This was a nice euy peg. Flip can sling 'em\nto make the ball appear about the size of a peanut with the speed of\na bullet ,\nrlnffiii'yriii ffiiiirtMiliiir--^'-\"''\nHitler Sees Great Storehouse of\nGoods lor Nazis in Soulh America\nBy JOSEPH PIATKIEWICZ\nCentral Pren Cinadian\nCorreipondent\nBuenos Aires\u2014A continent that Is\npotentially wealthy In oil, Coal,\nmeats, cereals, rubber, tin, gold,\nWool, nitrates and numerous undeveloped natural resources ind industries. A continent thai has many\nfins harbors\u2014havens for battleships,\nsubmsrlnes sod aircraft carriers.\nThis idea ts in tbe mind of Adolf\nHitler when he looks upon South\nAmerica. Above all, he sees s continent thst could easily be made\nthe bread basket of all Europe,\nArgentina, with her warehouses\noverflowing with beet and her granaries filled to capacity with wheat\nand other cereals, would prove s\nvaluable prize tor Herr Hitler's conquering hordes.\nThrough recent years German\nimmigrants have been building\nfriendships and business contacts in\nArgentina. Today a great many of\nthe warehouses and markets are\ncontrolled by theie Germans. These\nNazis are, In most instances, Argentine citizens.\nBLOCKADES EFFECTIVE\nIt wasn't strange then to see Germany reap a major share of business\nin this country by the use ot its\nexchange system. Up to a tew\nmonths sgo the trade and price increases had been favorable to Argentine trade, and the country appeared to be in a position to gain\neconomically from continued war in\nEurope. But later the maintenance\nCustom Total Reaches\n37,731 Tons for\n10 Months\nTwo shipments trom mineral\nclaims at Keno, Yukon Territories.\nwere among receipts st the Tadanac\nplant ot the Consolidated Mining k\nSmelting Company during October.\nThe Eureka shipped two tons snd\nthe Rem three tons.\nCustom shippers during tha month\nnumbered 91, third highest number\nof shippers this year so tar. The\n1940 record to date was 97, established in July, snd the second highest 82, the total for August During\nOctober 41 mines shipped ores, 10\nshipped cencehtrstes and one shipped both.\nTotal receipts ot custom ores and\nconcentrates tor the 10 monthi to\nOctober Si reached 37,731 tons of\nwhich 33,311 tons were ores and\n4420 tons were concentrates. During\nOctober custom ore amounted to\n3359 tons and concentrates to 730\ntons, a total of 4008 tons.\nTHI SHIPPERS\nOctober shippers were:\nOres \u2014Amandy, Greenwood, 38;\nArlington, Erie, 49; Athabasca, Nelson, IB; B.C. Gold Group, Tulameen,\n99; Bell Mineral Claim, Slocan City,\n9; Butcher Boy Carmi, 44; California, Nelson, 7; Centre Star, Ymir,\nSO; Chepleau, Slocan City, 10; Commodore, Ymir, 38; Coronado, Smith.\nK     ruRNITUM COMPANY   K%\nlbs House of Furniture Mass\nhale Block     Nelson     Phoni 11*\nTnd* In Year\nOLD FURNITURE\nAs fart Payment on Your\nNEW FURNITURE\nera, Si Cuba, Sandon, 8; Dentonia,\nGreenwood, 95; Duthle, Smithers,\n23; Eureka, Republican, Wash, 383;\nEureka Mineral Claim, Keno, Yukon\nTerritories, 3; Gold Standard, Pen*\nticton, 39; Granite, Taghum, 89;\nHarriet, Erie, 8; Hewitt Silverton,\n189; Highland-Bell, Beaverdell, 878;\nHomestake, Grand Forks, 7; Jessie\nVictoria, Nelson, 8; Jo-Jo, Three,\nForks. 9; Jumbo, Rossland, 174; Kal-\nsmslks, Lavlngton, 81; Molly Gibson, Paulson, 34; Monashee, Lumby,\n39; Morning Star, Oliver, 46; Nugget, Salmo, 281; No. 7 inlne, Boundary Falls, 62; Okanagan, Trout\nLake, 1; Providence, Greenwood,\n249; Ram Mineral Claim, Keno, Yukon Territories, 3; Sally, Beaverdell,\n17; Spokane, Tye, 88; Union Grand\nForks, 439; Venus Juno, Nelmn, 19;\nYankee Boy, Grand Forks, 20; Ymir\nLessen Big Four, Ymir, 9; Ymir\nLeasers, Ymir, 78; Total-3359.\nConcentrates \u2014 Cariboo, Camp\nMcKinney, 5; Cork Province, Ksslo,\nKaslo, 20; Durango, Salmo, 88; Duthle, Smithers, 6; Goodenough, Ymir\n42; Grimwood, Nelson, 10; Highland\nSurprise, Retallack, 38; New True\nFissure, 112; Nicola, Nicola, 80;\nWindpass, Boulder, 87; Yankee\nGirl, Ymir, 344. Total-739.\nof this favorable trend proved to\nbe Impossible for this simple reason\n\u2014blockades prevented Imports from\nGermany to reach Argentina, and\nthus resulted exchange difficulties.\nThe Nazis' only real competition\nfor Argentine trade wai Great Britain. Until nine monthi ago thll wu\ntrue, but now thit German vessels\ncan no longer reach Buenos Aires\nexport! hive dropped considerably.\nHerr Hitler needs a great deal ot\nfood tor the millions of people who\nsre now a pert ot bis empire. His\nwar machine will bog down unless\nhe Increases his fuel supply, which,\nst this point In the conflict must be\nlow, despite Rumanian oil fields.\nThe master of continental Europe\nlooks toward South America with\nhungry eyes.\nThe Germans hava been far more\nsuccessful In their economic penetration of South American than In\ntheir political endeavor.\nDocuments seized some years ago\ntn Port Alegre, Brazil, on the arrest of Ernst Dorsch, former head\not the Germen labor front In Brazil,\nincluded this notstlon \u2014 thst the\nGerman Government up to Sept 30,\n1937, bad contributed (800,000 to\nthe Nail propaganda fund In Southern Brazil most ot lt coming In trom\nthe offerings ot local Germans. (It hi\ndoubtful whether anyone will ever\nknow Just how much money Hitler\nis putting in his Nul propaganda\nfund for South America).\nAt the same time tbe police seized maps of the East coait ot Brazil,\nnotes ot where  troops snd arms\ncould ba landed and descriptions of\nports and harbors, especially in the\nSouth ot Brizil. This is the section\nOt Brazil that Is directly across trem\nDakar, the point ot Africa thst ls\nclosest to South America.\nIn August Arnulf Furhmann, confessed author of a Nazi plan to seize\nUruguay ss a German colony, was\narrested by the Argentine police.\nInvestigation by a Uruguayan Con-\nfreislonal Committee in June showed that Furhremann wai in charge\nof three International polts, Uruguayan police ssid he wai the leader of anti-Semitic agitation through-\nrat South America.\nAlthough these sre only a tew Instances in which so-called Nasi\nsplss were arrested, there seems to\nbe a great deal more Nazi under,\ncovet work In South America than\nthe natives know about\nPolitical circles ot all shades admit there ls a possibility ot a serious\nNazi menace to South America in\ngeneral and Argentina In particular.\nThis menace ls conceded to hinge\non the result ot Hitler's war with\nEurope.\nPreventing Germany from gaining\nthe economic control ot South America would be one ot tbe most important reuons for the United States\nrushing to the defence of Brazil,\nArgentina and other Latin-American countries. The establishment ot\nbases In South America by the Nazis\nwould definitely endanger the safety ot this country.\nUp until a few weeks sgo, ths\nSCOUTING-Here and There\nSCOUT* BUILD DOCK\nSea Scouts ot tbe lit Brockville,\nOnt, Sea Scout Troop in erecting\n140-foot E-ihaped dock before their\nboathouse. It Is planned also to erect\na diving tower.\nTWO NEW COUNTRIES ADOPT\nSCOUTING\nIn spite of the world crises the\nBoy Scouts International Bureau at\nLondon hu recently registered two\nnew national Scout Associations.\nThey are for Salvador and Haiti.\n\"BIO CHIEF BLANKET PIN\"\n\"Big Chief Blanket Pin\" is the\nnamed earned by one young London Boy Scout from the simple but\nthoughtful service rendered by htm\nIn a big sleeping shelter during\nGerman air raids. Carrying s Scout\nhaversack full ot big blanket pins,\nhe makes a nightly round ot one ot\nthe London tube shelters, tucking\nin snd pinning children's blankets\nScout camp fashion.\nSCHOLARSHIP FOR SCOUT\nLIFE SAVER\nAn annual scholarship Is awarded by the American Veterani ot\nForeign Wars to an American Eagle\nrank Boy Scout who hu previously\nreceived an award for life saving.\nTha scholarship is valued at $300\nand carries with it a geld medal,\nfor 1940 the award went to Eigle\nScout Robert Stotkr ot Colfax,\nWash. Scout Stotler rescued a six-\nyear-old boy from drowning.\nTEXA8 SCOUTS ASK FOR\nUNION JACK\nA request for Union Jacks with\nwhich to decorate their town, alongside the Stars and stripes, has been\nreceived by Mayor Day of Toronto\nfrom the American Boy Scouti ot\nSherman, Texu. Mayor Day him\nself wu a Boy Scout of i Toronto\nTroop.\nFLAGS AT BORDER\nCELEBRATION\nSmall flags ot tbe two countrlei\nwere exchanged by Canadian and\nAmerican Boy Scouti at tbe fourth\nannual Pesce Arch celebration at\nBlaine, on the British Oolumbla.\nWashington border, Some 10,000\nchildren and adults took part In tha\nservices and joined In the singing\nof the two national anthems.\nBOY SCOUT V.C. REPEATS ACT\nOF SCOUT V.C. OF FIRST GREAT\nWAR\nDuring the famous battle ot Jut\nland of the First Great War sn set\nof outstanding gallantry won post\nhumous V. C. for a young Boy\nScout seaman, Jack Cornwall, In\nhis honor there wai created a new,\nipeclal Boy Scout decoration to be\nawarded for courage and fortitude\nunder great -tress. By tragic coincidence the let which won the V.C.\nfor Jack Cornwall hai been almost\nexactly duplicated in the present\nwar by another Scout Leading Seaman Jack Mantle.\n\"Leading Seaman Jack Mantle\nwu in charge of the starboard pompom when the Foylebsnk wsi attacked by enemy aircraft on July\n4, 1940. Early in the action his left\nleg was shattered by a bomb, but\nhe stood tut at his gun and went. n\nfiring with' hand-gear only,'for the\nship's electric power had tailed. Almost at once he wu wounded sgiln\nIn many places. Between his bursts\not fire he had time to reflect on\nthe grievious Injuries ot which he\nwu soon to die, but his greet courage bora him up till the end of the\nfight when he fell by the gun he hsd\nso valiantly served.\"\n-rrn :\t\nJibe Aba4o\u00bb -%z^_       ,\n~\/e**te*y ait Air \/tjeye :\nHnruTuPCRficntn\naBmWW ____i_F _____\u25a0 .S\nnum  iu rinn L I I un >.\nBC5PEEIHI \u00b1,\ncRnnoinn rye wm.Ky\nTk\u00bb I.ITISH COLUMBIA OISTIUHY CO. LTD\nNlwWHTMINSTtMC\nThis advertisement ll not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by ths Government ol British Columbil.\nUnited States could have done little\nto aid Argentina lt She wsre attacked from bases in Africa. That\nsituation soon may be changed\nthrough the acquisition by the American government ot a base la\nBruit\nWith Europe no longer a mirket\ntor United Statei export!, the people\nengaged in commerce hive been\nlooking toward South America u a\nplace to send their goods. No longer\nare they Ignoring this huge continent\nGermany's need for steel snd eosl\nhu been greatly lowered since lis\nconquest ot Norway Belgium and\nFrance, but the Nazis will feel tbe\nJack of cereals and meats this win*\nter. Tbe Germans alio need nitrites,\nquicksilver and tin. South Americs,\nrich In all these things, would prove\na valuable prize lor Hitler.      ,\nSee Our Prices\nBefore you buy or exchange any\nfurniture.\nHomt Furniture Exchange\n41S Hall St Phone 1032\nCARS RUN BETTER WITH\nAMALIEOIL\nShorty's Repair Shop\n714 BARER      NELSON. B C\nHAVE YOU A\nSNAPSHOT\nYou Would Like Reproduced in tho\nDaily News Annual\nPictorial Edition?\nPictures of people, of Kootenay-Boundary\nbeauty spots, and activities, are of interest   \u25a0\nto Daily News readers. Reproduced In the\nannual Pictorial Edition they will be an\nexcellent promotion for your community.\nSend Your Negatives or Prints for\nSelection to the\nPHOTO EDITOR\nNelaott Satlg Nmuh\nAll Prints er Negatives Will Be Returned\n\u25a0,^^^^ama&mmmiamlaaamm\nI\n Hip j Aillllli im iirPwrw^i^pi\n\u2022\nX'SLWliVIP UHiHiVUWqPipii\nmimm\n\u25a0\nl,.-'\u00ab^|p\u00abj*wi._i-\u00ab^|lj|pi|-pui,iij^iyi. *\nPAGE TIN .\n-NILSON DAILY NIW8. NELSON B. C.-WEDNESDAY MORNINO. NOV. 8. 1M0-\nBritish Establish\nAir> Naval Bases\non Island of Crete\nCall on De Valera forUse of Eire Bases; Nazi\nInvasion Failure'Is Historic Victory\nSays Churchill Speech\nEIRE BASES NEEDED FOR COMBATTING\nU-BOAT WARFARE ON BRITISH SHIPS\nBy J. P. SAi DI l\n'    Canadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON, Nov. 8 (CP Cable)\u2014\nBritain has established air and\nnaval bases in the Greek Island of\nCrete, Prime Minister Churchill\nannounced inthe House of Common! today, and systematic bombing attacks on military objectives\nin Southern Italy will be intensified.\nPossession of Crete \"will enable\nus appreciably to extend the activity and radius of our Navy and\nAir Force,\" the Prime Minister\ndeclared.\n\"Already we hive begun bombing Ittleki on military objectives'\nIn Italian cities ind bases In\nSouthern Italy and that will continue on an ever-growing scale,\"\ntha Prima Minister said.\n\"In .addition to these developments In the Mediterranean theatre\nof war, he continued, \"other forces\n\u2022re in movement with the desire\nand design of helping the Greeks\nto the utmost of our capacity, having regard to our other obligations.\"\nThe Prime MlnUter asked the\nHouse to excuse him specifying the\nscale of Britain's military cooperation with the Greeks or divulging\nInformation that would benefit the\nenemy.\nLater, when pressed by H. B. Lee-\niSmith, Labor, that the,bombing of\nItalian towns be intensified, even\nif that Involved a diversion of aircraft from German targets, Mr.\nChurchill reiterated his pledge that\n\u2022would be done \"to the utmost of our\ngrowing power.\".\nThe Prime Minister's war statement made no more than a passing\nreference to Marshal Petain's de-\nciiio nto collaborate with Hitler in\nestablishing a new order in -Turope,\nbut he devoted time to an examination of the German U-boat menace\nend the handicaps imposed on the\nBritish Navy by the neutrality of,\nEire.\nMr. Churchill expressed confidence that the Navy would find\nmeans of beating the U-boat campaign whleh In recent weeks has\ntaken a heavy toll- of British, Allied and neutral shipping on the\nNorth Atlantic.\nThe fact Britain is not able to\nuse bases on the South and West\nCoasts of Eire to refuel submarine-\nhunting destroyers and aircraft \"is\na-most heavy and grievous burden\nand one which should never have\nbeen placed on our shoulders,\nbroad though Jhey may be,\" the\nPrime Minister declared.\nMr. Lees-Smith, who has acted as\ni luhitltute for a Leader of the\nOpposition since the Labor leaders\nJoined Mr. Churchill's Government,\nwent even further, suggesting that\nIf Britain could use Lough Swilly\nend Berehaven on the Eire Coast,\nthe TJ-boat campaign might be\ntransformed in a night\nThe time ls coming, he said, when\nthe United States and other countries interested In Irish independence should understand the price\nBritain il paying for her principles.\n\"You know what Hitler would do\n\u2022bout those ports,\" the Labor spokesman added significantly.\nLeslie Hore-Beli-ha, former Secretary for War, went the furthest\not all, calling on Prime Minister\nlemon de Valera of Eire to hand\nback for the duration of the war\nthe ports Britain gave up under the\nIrish Treaty while Irish-born J. J.\n*Tinker, Labor, proposed the same\nthing In the interest of a united\nIreland after the war.\nThe Prime Minister said that although German submarines have\ntaken a heavy toll ot shipping, Britain's tonnage is almost _*> big as\nwhen the war broke out A steady\ntol1 is b*ing taken in underwater\ncraft two having been destroyed\nin the Western Approaches the last\ntwo or three days, including the one\nthat sank the liner Empress of\nBritain.\nThere have been many demands\non the Navy, particularly since the\ncollapse of France, Mr. Churchill\nadded, but new construction is coming into service and the 50 United\nStates destroyers will be extremely\nuseful.\nTurning to air raids, the Prime\nMinister announced that 14,000 civilians had been killed and -0,000\nseriously wounded since Ihe first\nbig attack eight weeks ago. Property\ndamage particularly In London, had\n-fen severe but it could be handled\nly the Government Insurance plan.\nReviewing the war position, Mr.\nChurchill made the following main\npoints:\n1. A naval and air base has\nbeen established in Greece and \"I\ncan only say now we shall do our\nbest.\"\n' 2. The\" rise in U-boat sinkings\nis \"more serious than air raids'\nand the inability to use the ports\nof Eire constitutes \"a heavy and\ngrievous burden\" upon the Navy.\n3. The 90 United Stales do\nstroyers are coming into service\n\"when most needed\" and merchant\ntonnage is still \"very nearly\" what\nit was at the outbreak of war.\n\u2022 4. \"Unhappily\" the Vichy Government is engaged in \"sincere\n-nd loval collaboration with Hit-\nSell What Yow Don't Want Through The Classified Ads.\nlcr\" and Britain ls \"therefore left\nalone.\"\n5. Vigilance hu changed the\nInvasion danger to the \"Invasion-\nscare.\"\n6. Although sea and air are the\nmain elements of the war effort\n\"we must have a strong army to\navoid a disastrous stalemate.\"\n7. On the home front and In\nthe Mediterranean \"we are far\nbetter off\" than could be predicted\nfour or five month ago.\nThe Prime Minister celled the\nratio of one British casualty to\neach 20 Italians in North Africa\n\"a good augury for the greater\nbattles which certainly will develop, if not in the Winter, certainly in the Spring.\"\nGerman air raids have done\n'Very little\" damage to British\nmunitions and aircraft production\nand no utility in the great cities\n\"has broken down\" although\nransport has been \"a greater difficulty,\" Mr. Churchill declared.\nHe said shelters are being \"multiplied and improved\".\nGermany's failure to Invade\n\"when we stood alone\" constitutes\n\"one of the historic vlotorlei of\nthe British Isles\u2014and It a monumental milestone of our forward\nmarch,\" Mr, Churchill averred.\nHe said the weekly average casualties in September were 4500 and\nin October 2600 but the Royal Air\nForce was destroying \"three enemy\nmachines\" to each British loss and\nthe enemy was losing from six to\n10 pilots to one for Britain.\nAir power, \"the indispensable\nprecursor of victory,\" and sea power, which will move \"considerable\narmies\" in 1943 and 1944 led him to\nconclude that \"I personally have no\ndoubt whatever that we shall make\no,ur way through all right\"\nBritain's large army, \"improved In\nequipment and training\", must be\n\"constantly imbued with a spirit of\ncounter-attack,\" he added, and\nnothing be done to \"retard or impair\" its development\nFor what it lacks in numbers compared with \"Nazi or Fascist hosts\"\nit must make up in \"quality and\nequipment.\"\nBritain has 1,700,000 men in the\nHome Guard, \"all of whom will be\nin uniform by the end of the year\"\nand nearly a million have rifles\nand machine guns, he announced,\nForeign Secretary Viscount Hall-\nfax, in a similar war review to the\nHouse of Lords, said Germany's\n\"recently redoubled efforts to starve\nus into surrender\" would fail, that\nBritain has made \"the cause of\nGreece our own\" and that \"Turkey\noenstitutes a very solid barrier\nagainst aggression.\"\nNflann Eailtj News\nTelephone IM\nTrail: K. Lowdon 716- X\nHossland: Fnnk McLean\nClassified Advertising Rates\nlie per line per Insertion.\nMe per line per week (6 consecutive Insertions for cost ot 4)\n11.48 per Una a month (26 times)\n(Minimum 2 lines per Insertion)\nBox numben lie extra Thli\ncoven any number of timei.\nLEGAL NOTICES\n18o per lini first'insertion and\n14e etch subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOB PROMPT PAYMENT\nSPECIAL  LOW  RATH      -\nNoncommercial   Situations   '\nWanted   for  26e  for  any   ri-\nqulnd number ot lines for ilx\ndayi.  payable In  advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle copy  ....__. $ J05\nBy carrier, per week \u2014     20\nBy carrier, per year _\u2014  13.00\nBy Mail: .\nOne month ____________ $ 75\nThree monthi \u201e   2.00\nSix monthi    4.00\nOni year     8.00\nAbove rates apply tn Canada,\nUnited States, and United Kingdom, to subscribers living outside regular carrier areas\nElsewhere and In Canada where\nextra pottage li required one'\nmonth $1.50, three months $4.00,\nsix months $8.00, one year $15.00\nHallowe'en Social\nHono-s Mrs. Rouleau,\nWho Is Leaving Kaslo\nKASLO, B.C.-A delightful Hallowe'en party was given at the home\nof Mrs. Percy Amas by Mrs. Amas\nand Miss Daphne Chandler. It was\nin honor of Mrs. F. S. Rouleau who\nIs leaving shortly lo make her home\nin West Summerland.\nA profusion of 'mums, black cats,\nwitches and pumpkin faces decorated the rooms. Bridge tool, up the\nearlier hours, each player being giv-\ne na \"mystery\" box to be exchanged\nby the players. Mrs. J. R. Tlnkess\nand Mrs. George Morton were prize\nwinners.\nTable numbers were made of\noranges with fees painted, tosimu-\nlate pumpkins. These were topped\nwith lemon peel caps and tally cards\ncarried out the spirit\nA long table was daintily arranged with cleverly made place cards\nand delicious refreshments. Mrs\nCarl Hild and Miss Alice Augustine\nassisted the hostesses. The \"mystery\" parcels caused much merriment.\nMiss Augustine presented Mrs.\nRouleau with a handsome lace table\ncloth. The guests surrounded Mrs.\nRouleau singing \"She's a Jolly Good\nFellow.\" Guests included Mrs.\nSimms of Nelson, Mrs. G. S. Wellington, Mrs. W. H. Dunn, Mrs. F. S.\nChandler, Miss Beatrice Brown,\nMrs. A. W. Bavington, Mrs. John\nPaterson, Mrs. Carl Hild, Miss Iris\nClarke, Mrs. Besecker, Mri. G. S.\nBaker, Mrs. E. H. Latham, Mrs.\nGeorge Morton. Mrs. C. J. White,\nMrs. J. R. Tinkess, Miss Alice\nAugustine, Miss Jennie Clarey and\nMrs. Rouleau.\nJOHNSON'S\nLANDING\nJOHNSON'S LANDING, B. C.Mr, and Mn. F. Barrow of Sydney,\nB. C. were guests of A. R. Barrow\nfor a few daya.\nW. Bowman ihopped In Kaslo.\nJack Raper haa left for Trail.\nA Hallowe'en party, organized by\nthe school teacher, Miss J. Beesom,\nwas held in the ichool houie.\nAt the invitation of Mr. and Mrs\nF. Barrow, the school girls, Lillian\nStenberg, Doreen Lake, Jean and\nPat McNicol, went into Kaslo to\nsee the moving pictures of the\nschool and district, taken by Mr.\nBarrow.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nCORPORATION OF THE CITY OF\nNELSON   '\nCOURT' OF REVISION\nPublic notice ls hereby given that\nthe tint sitting ot the Court of\nRevision will be held tn the Council\nChamber of the City Hall on Friday, the 15th day of November at\n10 o'clock a.m. tor tbe purpoie of\ncorrecting and reviling, tbe voters\nlist, for the ensuing year.\nW. E. WASSON,\nCity Clerk,    .\nNelson, B. C.\nNovember 4th, 1940.\nCORPORATION OF THE CITY OF\n.,     SLOCAN\nCOURT OF REVISION >\nPublic notice ls hereby given that\nthe tint sitting ot the Court of\nRevision will be held in the Council\nChamber of the City Hall on Fri\nday, the 15th day of November at\n7 o'clock p.m. for the purpose of\ncorrecting and revising the voters\nlist for the ensuing year.\nW. E. GRAHAM,\nCity Clerk,\nSlocan, B. C.\nNovember 5th, 1940.\nCHILDREN ENTERTAINED\nBY CRAWFORD BAY FOLK\nCRAWFORD BAY. B. C.-A com.\nmlttee composed of Mrs. Mooney,\nMrs. Fisher and Mrs. A. Derbyshire\nentertained the children at Hallowe'en In the Community Hall.\nThe children al) sat down al\ntables gay with oranges and black\nstreamers, pumpkins, apples and\ngood things to eat Parents and\nother visitors occupied another\ntable.\nGames were played and eaoh\nchild was given a packet of candy,\nOlder children were invited to\nthe hotel by Mr. and Mrs. Bennett\nand Mrs. Roy McGregor where they\nnlaved fames and can-.\nCrawford Bay\nCRAWFORD BAY, B. C.- Mn.\nC. H. King and daughter Margery\nleft for Trail, where they will reside. Mn. King's three sons, George,\nJack and Bruce, who are working\nin Trail, will make their home with\ntheir mother.\nRev. Lancaster, who has been living at Vanderhoof,' visited Mrs.\nFisher at the weekend, when he\nheld divine service.\nRolf Jacobson motored from\nTrail to spend a few days with his\nmother, Mn. Nelson.\nColonel Cholmley visited Nelson.\nMrs. M. Morrison has been visiting Turner Valley.\nMiss Lytle and her brother Eric\nmotored to Creston to bring home\ntheir mother, who hai been a patient in Creston Valley Hospital.\nMiss J. Hedstrom has returned\nhome from a visit to her sister at\nTurner Valley.\nMn. A. J. Watson has returned\nfrom a trijj to Vancouver. Miss\nBolus of Tuxford, Sask., joined Mrs.\nWatson when en route for Vancouver and returned to Kootenay\nBay with her to be her guest for a\nfew weeks.\nMrs. Fisher visited Nelson to\nmeet her husband, Pte. D. Fisher\not the Veterans Guard, station at\nSouth Slocan.\nF. Rushton Nakusp\nLegion President\nNAKUSP, B.C.-The annual meeting of the Arrow Lakei Branch of\nCanadian Legion was held in the\nLegion Kail, when Hon. C. S. Leary,\nPublic Works Minister, was named\nHonorary President; F. Rushton,\nPresident; T. Howe, Vice-President;\nA. Bennnett, Secretary-Treasurer,\nand D. Berrard, W. Vinall and A.\nBerling, Executive.\nPlans were made for renovating\nthe Legion Club rooms. Arrangements for the annual Armistice\nDance were alao completed.\nKASLO BROWNIES GIVEN\nHALLOWE'EN SURPRISE\nKASLO, B.C. - When the local\nBrownie Pack gathered, at the Vimy\nPark Pavilion for their weekly\nmeeting they were delighted to find\nthat their leaden, Miss Daphne\nChandler and Mn. Percy Amas, had\narranged Hallowe'en party.\nFollowing business, games, exercises, etc. all were seated at a table\ncentered with their emblem,\n\"Brown Owl\", and beautifully decorated with flowers and Autumn\nleaves.\nMISSIONARY VISITS\nEDGEWOOD PEOPLE\nEDGEWOOD, B. C. \u2014 Miss D.\nSawyer, who recently arrived from\nEdinburgh, Scotland, and has been\nvisiting Mrs. Yeld, left for Nelson\non her way to the far North to take\nup- missionary work. On her way\nhere Miss Sawyer spent some time\non the Prairies, and was very appreciative ot the British Columbia\nscenery which she found similar\nto that ot Switzerland.\nPROPERTY. HOUSES. FARMS\nKASLO ENJOYS MOVIES\nKASLO. B.C.-F. J. Barrow, of\nSidney, B.C. presented motion pic-\nteuers In colorr to a packed Eagle\nHall audience. Many district and\nCout scenes were shown as were\nreels ot beautiful flowen, but the\nfilms which appealed particularly\nwere thoie of David Hs.tin and\nicenea he had sen home from over\nsen, where he went with the flnt\nCanadian contingent -\nDavid la the eldest son of City\nClerk and Mrs. H. T. Hartin of this\ncity\nWE HAVE SEVERAL CLIENTS\nlooking for good \u2022homes, Fair.\nview or up the hill section. If\nyou wish to sell get In touch with\nus. Appleyard.\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALU\noif easy terms In Alberta and\nSaskatchewan Write for full in\nformation to' 908 Dept of Nature\nResources C P R Calgary Alia\nFOR SALE - HOUSE, 4 ROOM,\nterms. Apply Rueckert'i Apiary\nMill St., Box 126, Nelson.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\n3-TRUCK SPECIAL8--\n'35 International Panel\n'37 Ford Panel\n'39 Ford De Luxe Panel\nAll Cprry Our Guarantee\nCENTRAL TRUCK &\nEQUIPMENT CO.\n411 Hendryx St.     Nelion, B. C.\nREPOSSESS--. i.35 FORD Dt\nLuxe.Coupe. Thli eu is in excellent condition, hai good rob\nber- md licensed. A really good\nbuy Interior Motor Finance Corp\n554 Ward Street Nelaon, B. C.\ntf x So\" c. C. M. BBS WITH\nlamp, extra brake, stand. $80\nAbo 80\" x 18\" bike, new tires,\ntubes, rims, spokes $15. H. R. Kitto\n\u202229 NASH SEDAN, 400 SBBSC_t\nfor economical transportation plus\nluxury, thii la a real bargain at\n$150. Nelson Transfer Co. Ltd,\n1935 PLYMOUTH SEDAN WITH\nbuilt In trunk. A premium car\n$575. Sowerby-Cuthbert Ltd., Opp\nPost Office and Hume Hotel.\nSPECIALIZING IN ELECTRIC &\nacetylene welding. Stevenson's\nMachine Shop, Nelion, Phone\nLOANS. INSURANCE, ETC.\nFUNDS FOB lit MORTGAGE. NEL-\nion or TnU property. Yorkshire\nPlan, repay monthly. Let us refinance your mortgage and save\nyou money. C W. Appleyard.\nESTABLISHED 0V*_R 25 lO-AftS.\nH. E. Dill, Fire, Cur, Health Insurance Agency. &a Ward Street\nPERSONAL\nROLLER CANARIES AND  supplies. Kooteniy Flower Shop.\nred CRASS SHOP, m BASIS\nSt needs merchandise donations\nWhen in VANCOUVER mt At\nAimer Hotel. Opp. C. P: R. Depot.\nTHE PERFEC. CriRlsf t-AS SHT\nA portrait ot yourself. Special of\nter at McGregors Phone 284\nSALVATION ARMY - If YOU\nhave old clothing, footwear, furniture to spare please Ph.. ui 61SL.\nmsirWm Bros. \"MWEt-R1-\nBread\" helpi build healthier boyi\n\u25a0nd girls. Ph. 258 tor daily dlvry.\nPERSONAL\n(Continued)\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOl\nANY SIZE 6 OR 8 EXPOSURE\nroll films developed ud printed\nHe. We have installed the very\n. latest model Projection machine\nand will tend t 8 by 7 enlarge,\nment, tree with each film developed Include 5c tor postage ind\npackin.g Krystal Photos, Wilkie.\nSaskatchewan.\ntHINKIHfl'or PERSONAL\nChristmas Cards? Tommy Caley\nli The Nelion Dally Newi ageni\nHe will be on the ipot with our\n, samples It you leave your itreet\naddress and the tune you would\nlike him to call Reach tor tne\ntelephone and tall 144.\t\nmen -RBflAIrl VtTALIT?. V.G-\nor, pep Try Vitex 25 tablets $1.00,\n60 tablets $2.00 Guaranteed. 84\npersonal \"Drug Sundries' $100\nFree price lilt of drug sundries J\n' Jensen, Box 824, Vancouver. B C\nFOR and WANTED TO REN1\n1930 FORD.SEDAN. GOOD CON-\ndition. cash, $175. (Joined army)\nMra. G. Strong, Vallican, B. C.\n1938 FORD VB LIGHT DELIVERY\ntruck, run 15.000 miles, good tires\nind condition. Phone 667L2.\nLIBERAL ALLOWANCE ON YOUR\nold tires tor new tires Nelson\nAuto Wreckers. Phone 946.\nCHEAP FOR CASH, '27 CHEVRO-\nlet In good running order. A. J.\nHolmes, Slocan,\nNEW  AND  US-fl.  TtRfiS.  SEE\nthem at City Auto Wrken, Ph. 447\nLAKE FRONTAGE OPPOSITE\nNelson Terms Johnstone Estate\nBox 198 Nelion B C\nHELP WANTED\nNOW IS THE TIME TO GET A\nGovernment Job as Clerk, Postman, Customs Clerk, Steno., etc'\nFour Dominion-wide exams held\nsince War began. Free Booklet.\nM. C. C. Schools Ltd., Winnipeg\nOldest In Canada. No Agents.\nWANTED - GENERAL FARM-\nhand, good milker. Wages $25 per\nmonth. Write or Phone, J. Hanson.\nErie, B. C.\nWANTED -'FULLY EXPERI-\nenced girl. Able to cook. Mn. B.\nA. Stimmel, 12 Ritchie Ave., Trail.\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finder*\nIf you find anything, telephone\nThe Daily News. A \"Found\" Ad.\nwill be Inserted without cost to\nyou. We will collect from the\nowner. '\nLOST - BLACK AND WHltt\nSpaniel dog, on Cemetery Road\nAnswen to \"Jiggs\". Fruitvale licence padlocked to the collar\nPhone Daily News.\nEDGEWOOD THEATRE\nOFFICERS REELECTED\nEDGEWOOD, B.C.-The.Edge-\nwood Little Theatre held the annual\nmeeting and decided to carry on\nthis Winter. The officen, J H. Nay-\nlor, President; Mrs. H. P. Coates,\nSecretary; Mrs. Daly. Director, were\nreelected.\nLIVESTOCK. POULTRY\nand SUPPLIES. ETC.\nFOR SALE - YOUNG TEAM OF\nhorsei. gentle. 1500 poundi each.\nE H. Arlt Creston, B. C,\nFOR SALE - *.6R*-SH1R*. PM\n7 wki. $4. J. W. Gregory, Nakuip.\nfWEEKS OLD PIGS,\" $3.50 MACS\nF.O.B John Egloff. Edgewood.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Rates for noncommercial advertisement! under this classification to assist\npeople seeking employment\nOnly 25c for one week (6 days)\ncovers any number of required\nlines. Payable In advance\nYOUNG WOMAN WANTS WORK\nby day or hour. Experienced. Mn.\nE. Clark. Phone 94. \t\nEXPERIENCED   HAIR   DRESSER\nwanti work. Box 5105 Daily News.\nEXP.   PRAIRIE   GIRL   WANTS\nhousework. Phone 794R2.\nBOATS AND ENCINES\nFOR SALE-ONE 35 FT. CRUISER\ncabin, good for launch parties or\ntowing. Name Eleanor, boat and\nboat house, price reasonable. P. O\nBox 51. Procter. B. C.\t\nMUSICAL   INSTRUMENTS\nAND REPAIRS\nWEBB'S. ALL KINDS STRINGS\nfittings, repaln. 808 Baker S. Nel\nson. Next Scandinavian Church.\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOARD-   AND   ROOM,    WOULD\nsuit two. 904 Vernon Street\nHAts clean-..) AND blOCKLD\nCleaning, pressing, repairing and\nalterations. H J. Wilton. Josephine\nStreet. Phone 107.\nDON'T BE COLD - J. CHESS 2nd\nHand Store hai a-stock of good\nheaten on hand. See them at\n824 Vernon Street\nLADIES, WE HAVE JUST RE\n'ceived I shipment ot Chinese\nSilks, housecoats, scarves, hankies, etc. Stanley's, 652 Biker St\nTEA FOR ffiSDERB - PACr-ID.\nready tor mailing. Murctue's delicious cup quality. Orient Tea Co.\n720 Homer St.. Vancouver. B. C\nWANTED - GOOD CLEAN COT\nton rags not len than 12 inches\nsquare, 9c lb. F. 0. & Nelson.\nDally Newi,\nHAIROOODS\nLADIES AND GENTLEMEN'S\nwigs ind toupees\u2014fil and shid\nIng guaranteed Free catalogue\nHanson Company P. 0 Box 601\nVancouver B C.\ntOOK YOIJR BE-j_\"F6R THE\nFall dances md parties, visit\nMilady's Beiuty Parlors it 577\nBaker Street for hair styling it Its\nbest Phone 244 tor ippointmenti\nTWO tRZt tHlLVft*-! -ftCKSts\nare held at The Dally Newi tor\nMn. T. S. Shorthouse, 904 MUI\nSt to see \"Foreign Correspondent'\nat Civic Theatre. Good Nov. 6 or 7\nmen's 6rW6 SUSftWH, SEND\n$1.00 for 12 samplei, plain wrapped. Tested, guaranteed and pre\npaid. Free Novelty price list\nPrinceton Distributors, P. O. Box\n61. Princeton, B C\nSUPERFLUOUS HAIR SAFELY.\nprivately removed. Fice, arms,\nlegs; treatment $2 postpaid, plain\nwnpper. Guaranteed to kill roots\nwith one application. Canadian\nChemistry Co., Wilkie,'Saik.\nSPECIAL OFFER - 100 GUARAN-\nteed tirst quality double edge\nblades, with free razor for $1.00\ndelivered. Drug Sundries, belt\nquality, assortment Ot 27 for $1.00\npostpaid. Free price list. Plain\nsealed wnpper. Western Supply\nAgency, 14th Ave. E., Calgary, Alta\nTODAY PERSONS WHO HAVE\nluffered from rheumatic ind arthritic pains tor years are finding\nrelief by using '\nRAY'S RHEUMATIC RUB\nThi long proven formula ihould\ndo the same for you. At Mann-\nRutherford Co, Nelion, and other\ndrug stores.   '\t\n(Continued tn Next Column)\nFOR RENT, A COMFORTABLE 6\nroom itucco houie with bath, furnace, garage on Nelion Avenue\nApply 520 Mill Street\nrOR REN*T. 5 RM flbt<-!AL0W.\ncement foundation, white plumbing, $25 month. C.\u00b0 W. Appleyard.\nFOR RENT - 1\u20142 ami 4 roomed\nheated cabins. Low Winter rates.\nShardelow Auto Camp, Ph, 884.\nFOR RENT, SMALL COTTAGE,\npartly furnished, 2 garden lots, $17\nmonth. C. W. Appleyard.\nWANTED - LOT WITH SMALL\nhouie. Cloie to city limits. Box\n5141 Daily Newi.\nFURNISHED H1 6USB t-BSPINU\nroomi tor rent 411 Carbonate St\n.OHNSfONE BLtX... M6.V_.RN\nGen  Electric equipped suites\nTERRACE APTS Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites\nSHIPUSYOURSCRAPMETA\nor Iron. Any quantity. Top pn\npaid. Active Trading Compa\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B.\nSKIP uS YOTR HlB-S. J.\"\nMorgan, Nelion, B. C\nPETS. CANARIES, BEES, i\nFOR   SALE \u2014 TWO   PUREBR\nSpringer  Spaniels,   female.\neach. 2 yrs. old; also female Co\ner. Box. 5150 -Dally Newi.\ntfAW_!b--A,->oa.\"6ft,A'PB\nPhone 638L.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL PIRECTQ\nASSAYERS end MINE AGEN7\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINC\nAnalyst. 305 Josephine St.. Net\nHAROLD S. BLUES. ROSSJ\"\nB C. Provincial Assayer, Chen\nIndividual representative tor i\npen it Trill Smelter.\nA. J. butt, ..toEPBffitolT'\nrepresentative. Full time at\ntlon given shippers' inter\nBox 54. TTlll, B. C\nCHIROPRACTORS\nJ. R. MCMILLAN, D. C NEU\ncalometer. X-ray. McCulloch\nDR. WILBERT BROCK,' Ok\n542 Baker Street Phone 969.\nCORSETIERES\nSPENCER CORSETIERE. MRS\nJohnstone,' 105 Kerr Apts. Ph.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYOI\nFOR BENT - 3 ROOMED HOUSE\nD Maglio, Phone 808L.\nFOR  RENT  -  FURN. 3 ROOM\nipirtment Private bath. Ph. 981H.\nFOR RENT tURN. SINGLE HSKP\"\nroomi. Strathcona Hotel\nFOR RENT - 5 ROOMED HOUSE.\nClose in. Apply R. A. Aldersmith\nA   SMALL   HOUSE  FOR   RENT.\ncloie In, $15 mon, C. W, Appleyard\nFOR RENT 2 FURN. OR UNFURN\nhikp. rms. 1011 Front St Ph. 928Y\n415 MAPLE STREET IOR IM-\nmediate rental. Phone 344L1.\nIQg RENT -1 Urg! ttm. OR\nunfurn. rooms. 311 Vernon St\nFOR  RENT - WARM STUCCO\nhouse, close in, furnace. 408 Silica\nSee KERR APARTMENTS First\n;OR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nPIPE, TUBES, FITTINOS\nNEW AND USED\nLuge.itock for Immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\nlit Avenue and Main St\nVancouver, B. C.\nP-pE-FrrTirtos. tubes - spe-\nclal low prices Active Trading Co\n918 Powell St. Vancouver, B C\nWANTED - RELIABLE BUYER\nfor a 30 Holt Cat Good cond. Summer and Winter tracki. Ph. 465X.\nCHOICE OF 3 COPPER TUB\nBeatty Washers, all In good condition $35. McKay & Stretton.\nMETAL LATHE, WOOD LATHE,\nacesrles,, moton, rad. cab. Ph 872X\nUSED WASHER, GOOD CONDI-\ntlon. Phone 260.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, P. O. BOX1\nTrail, B. C Surveyor and.\ngineer. Phone \"Beaver Falls.\"\nr. w. haggeM. Mining & CI\nEngineer; B. C. Land Survi\nRossland and Grand Forki, \u00a3\nINSURANCE AND REAL 1ST\nC.  D. BLACKWOOD AOENC\nInsurance, Reil Estate. Phoni\nChas. f mchaRdV. tMJSM*\nReel Estate. Phone 133.\nR. W. DAWSON, Real _5Bj|\nsurance. Rental!. Next Hippe\nHardware, Baker St Phone 11\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and ele\nwelding,  motor  rewindm-\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 324 Verna\nMEMORIALS\nSAME AS USED ON GRAVES\nForeit Lawn Memorial Pirk.\nprice lilt trom Bronze Memo\nLtd, Box 726 Vancouver, I\nPATENT ATTORNEYS\nW. ST. 3. MILLER, A. M. E. :\nRegistered Patent Attorney, I\nada and U. S. A. 710 3rd St\nCalgary. Advice tree, confide!\nSASH FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTf\nhardwood merchant 273 Bake\nSECOND HAND STORES.\nWE  BUY,  SELL   &  EXCHAI\nfurniture, etc Ark Store. Ph.\nI HEARD YOU-.IT MUST BE TEAI.0U9Y WEEK A-\nr\u2014t ROUND HERE--WEtt.COUNT ME OUT,\nYOU GENTLEMEN AND LADIES OF tElSURE CAN\nSPEND YOUR TIME BEING TEALOUS.BUT I'M THE\nONE WHO HAS TO DO THE WORK AROUND HERE\nYOU AREN'T BY ANY CHANCE TCAIOUS OF OUR\ntEISURE,ARE\nyYOU, WALLY?*\/\nDADDY-1 THINK VOUT? LIKE OWNING\nA BIG STORE - WHV DON'T VOU SEE\n\u00ab= VOU COULDN'T r3UY A PjARTNER-\nSHIP IN THE WATT PUR COMPANY?\nIT'S THE: PINE ST STORE IN TOWN-\n7 T\nNO-I'M SORRY- WE ARE NOT **\nTHE WIACtKET TO SELL   A\nPARTNERSHIP-WE  CO SUCH\nA MA**V_*l_OUS BUSINESS -\nOUR PROFITS ARE SIMPLY\n-TREMENDOUS ON EVEPYTHINS\nWE SELL-JUST STEP IN CLR\nSALES ROOM-I'LL SHOW YOU\nV*_   __ WHAT I MEAN\nI'M\nWITH\nvou-\nnow-thereg]\n*\u25a0* IO_.C_OOCO j\nWELL-IMAGINE SEglNG VOU!\n^JS^-V&t&s.\nTHIS OUTPIT RK3HT NOW-\nl*U_ TAKE IT WITH ME-\n\u25a0***-**--  '    -\n_____\n__-__,\n *m\niroilo Golds\nHold Spofllghl\nORONTO, Nov. a (CP).-Gold\n:ks held the spotlight today oft\n\u25a0onto Stock Market.\n'reston, Kerr-Addison, Chester-\ne and San Antonio Golds posted\nv highs for thi year, all holding\na* ot 6 to 15. Aunor advanced\nto.8-07.\nJorandi uid Nickel hid small\nns, Steep Rook firmed 6 to 1.00\nI Ventures gained 35 to 3.05.\n'algary and Edmonton firmed a\nr, Home Oil was steady it 2.33\nI other Weitem oils held steady.\n,C. Seed Growers\nAsk Price Fixing\nJTONON. B.C, Nov. ! (CP)-The\nitish Columbia Seed Grown*' anil convention here approved a\nlolution asking the Britiih Colum.\ni Marketing Board to establish a\nice on all approved seed stocks\na figure not less than twice the\nIce level of registered lied,\nthe convention last night elected\nI H. Baumbrough of Vernon and\nL. Mudle of Grand Forki as distort for two-year terms and J,\ndi, Parksville, B. W. Cox, JJewd-\ny. and Fred Mattock, Rayllegh\nsunt, ss director! for one-year\nrms.\nCILVIE MILLS REPORT\nDECREASED PROFITS\nMONTRBA.., Nov. 8 (CP)-De-\nease of $$4,153 was reported today\ni Ogilvie Flour Mills Co. Ltd., In\nit profit after deducting charges\nadministration, maintenance and -\ngas, of $1,070,731 for the fiscal\nnr ended Auguit 31, compared\n1th $1,101,104 In the previoui cor-\nipondlng period.\nProfits equalled $1.27 per com-\non shire, against $1.43 in the pre-\nous fiscal year.\n3ALFOUR\nBALFOUR, B.C.-B. Irving and\n\u25a0other of Kimberley villted Mr.\nId Mrs. Frtser of Balfour.\nMn. Hudion wai a guest ot Mn.\n. Hall of Nelson.\nMr. and Mn. Hoikin, Mr, and\nErs. Cooper, Mrs. Seal and Mrs-\nollison motored to Nelson.\nMn. R. Bell returned from Bos-\n\u25a0ell where she ipent i few days\n\u25a0Ith her Mother, Mn. Spence.\nAlbert Shrtevee villted hli par-\nnts here.\nMiss Audrli Hudion snd Miss\nM-ghne Shrlevei in working in\nSe-L\nMr. ind Mn. Witeraon of Mirror\nlike were guesti of Mr. ind Mrs.\nMier.\nMrs. E. Hill of Nelson visited Bailor.\nMiss Nora Hartrldge has returned\nrom Nelion, where ihe spent two\ni Mrs.' Bill McKay ihopped In Nel-\npn.\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS. NILION B. C.-WIONI8DAY MORNINO. NOV. I 1M0-\nSmall Oil' Gains on\nCalgary Exchange\nCALGARY, Nov. S (CP).-Minor\ngains were posted tor oil issues on\nCalgary Stock Exchange. Turnover,\nhowever, was light only 3100 shares\nchanging hands.\nHome, Twin Valley were traded\nat 0 and 3 up, respectively and bids\nwere higher for Dalhousle, Extension and a tew other issues.\nCanada's Imports\nUp in September\nOTTAWA\u2014Canada's Imports In\nSeptember were valued at $86,-\n207,000 compared with $73,5134,000 in\nSeptember, 1830. \/During the nine\nmonths ended September the value\nwis $798,720,000 compared with\n4519,332,000 in the corresponding period ot 1939.\nPurchases trom the United Statei\ntn September were valued at $61,-\n381,000 against $50,799,000 In September 1939, while the imports from\nthe United Kingdom totalled $11,-\n162,000 compared with $9,263,000.\nImports from Australia were valued at $1,809,000 against $955,000\nfrom British India and Burma $1,-\n156,000 agalnat $7410110, Colombia\n(\u00a3.8,000 against $906,000 Straits Settlements $9.6,000 agalnit $998,000.\nImports from other leading countries were as follows, with figures\nfor September IBM In brackets;\nCeylori $6-6,000 ($911,000)1 British\nGuiana $679,000 ($814,000); British\nWest Indies $981,000 ($1,209,000);\nFiji $405,000 ($387,000); Brazil $587,-\n000 ($203,000); Japan $480,000 ($304,.\n000); San Domingo $381,00 (nil).   ,\nLONDON CLOSE\nLONDON, Nov. 5 (AP).-Brltlsh\nitock closings,.-! sterling: Austin Q\n18s 9d; Cent Mining SLOVt; Crown\n13; De Been pfd \u00a34%; Rhodeslin\nAnglo Am 14s; Rhokana \u00a37Va;\nSprings 21s 10lid; Venterspoit 27s\n6d; West Wltwatersrand \u00a33*4.\nBonds: British VA percent Consols \u00a375%; British 2Vt per cent war\nloan l\u00a30l*4; British funding 4s\n1960-90 \u00a3112'\/(.\nCALGARY LIVESTOCK\nCALOA**, Nov. 6 (CP). - Re-'\nctipti: Catlte 270; calves 66; hogi\n190; iheep 190.\nMedium to good heifers 5.50\u20146.50.\nCommon to 8.28 down. Common to\nmedium cowl 3.25\u20144; odd ones at\n4.90. Choice bulls 6. Common to\nheavy vealen 9.80\u20147; choice light\nup to 8. Stocker calves 8.90\u20146.90;\ncommon stocker and feeder steers\n5\u20149.90. Good lambs yeiterday 8.25\u2014\n8.90.\nLilt price Bl hogs 10.10.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\niTONTREAL, Nov. 9 (CP).-Spot:\nButter, Que. 29%\u2014%; Que. fresh\n29*4-*.. Eggs, Eutem A-large 48.\nButter futurei: Nov. 29H-80;\nDec. 30-30%; Jan. SO**-*..\nWinnipeg Prices\n(lose Unchanged\nWINNIPEa, Nov. 8 (CP).-Trad-\nIng In tha wheat pit at the Winnipeg Grain Exchange wu confined\nmainly to the opening and closing\nstages during today's session and\nprices closed unchanged wltb the\nDecember future at 71H cents a\nbuihel, Miy at 78% and July it 77%.\nExporter! purchased approximately 290,000 bushels of No. 1 Northern In tbe cash wheit mirket tor,\nshipment trom Fort William to ths\nAtlantic seaboard. Other dealings\ncomisted of odd cars. Spreads were\ngenerally unchanged.\nMinor liquidation sent December\noats and t>\u00abley futures fractionally'\nlower In the coin* grain pit Crushers ihowed iome Intereit in flax,\nbut other dealings wer* thin.\nB.C. SEED GROWERS\nAPPROVE INSPECTION\nVJHVNON, B.C., Nov. 8 (CP)-The\nBritish Columbia Seed Growers' annual convention today approved the\naction of the Department ot Agriculture Inaugurating a disease Inspection service end expressed the\nhope such work will be continued,\nMOYIE\nGains and Losses\nEven at Montreal\nMONTREAL, Nov; 9 (CP).-Gilns\nand losses ran about even In today's\nquiet lite itock market trade,\nPrlc* Brothen snd St Lawrence\nPaper preferred eased small\namounts.\nNickel and Dominion Bridge\nchalked up fractional gains while\nImperial Oil boarded the minimum\nadvance.\nLondon Stocks Firm\nLONDON, Nov, 8 (AF). - The\nstock market cloied firm today on a\nstrong demand for high class investment stocki ind Kaffirs.\nGovernment Wir Loin !%\u2022 ended\n% higher at \u00a3101%. Industrials and\nhome rails both appreciated sharply\n'Copper ind diamond Issues moved\nup while oils encountered good Inquiry.\nImpressive factors In thi mirket\ntoday were favorable reports on the\nGreek situation as well as the anticipated release of proceeds in connection with the requisitioning of\nCanadian securities.\nYMIR\nPrairie Tourlsb Will Not Face Bad\nPills of Southern Transprovincial\nRoad MtGrath Tells Vancouver Board\nMOYIE, B. C. - Mr. \u00bbnd Mrs.\nAlex St Denis md daughter returned from Windermere.\nJack Young is a patient in St Eugene Hospital, Cranbrook,\nMr. and Mrs. Norrii Braiden entertained at a party Thuraday. Mrs.\nAl Champion assisted the hostess.\nMr. and Mn. Walter Andrews visited Marysville and Kimberley.\nMn. Thomas Wills has taken up\nresidence in the Whitehead home.\nMrs. Solecki and son Michael vlalted Procter.\nMiss Kay Solecki Is visiting Mn.\nR   B. Johnston, Vmcouver,\nMill Myrna Conrad ot Chapman\nCamp viiited here.\nMri. Thomai Wills visited Cranbrook.\nMr. and Mn. Andy Plcco, Kimberley, visited here.\nMn. C. LaBonte and two ions,\nNorman and Edward were guesti of\nMr, and Mrs, H, A. Smith.\nMrs. Alice Guindon has left to\nreside in Cranbrook tor a few\nmonths.\nMr. snd Mrs. BUI Pederson and\nfamily have returned from Windermere and are visiting Mr. and Mrs.\nHempltt\nMr. tnd Mn. Hoofer of Trail visited Mn. Guindon.\nTORONTO STOCK QUOTATIONS\nIINES:\n.dermic Copper \u2014\n,mm   Gold   \u2014\n,nglo Huronian \t\n^mtfleld Gold\t\nIstorla Rouyn Mines\nMinor Gold    -\nlagamac Rouyn \t\nlankficld Gold\n_sse Metali Mining\t\nBeattie Gold Minei\t\nBidgood Kirkland\t\nIg Miuourl \t\n\u00bbJo Minei .. .'. \t\nralorne Mines - \t\nWtt Trethewey\niuffalo Ankerite,\n.18\n.01%\n2.08\n.08%\n.01%\n2.07\n.12\n.08%\n-12\n1.18\n.16\n.05\n.09\n0.90\n.00%\n4.40\n.01%\n\u00ab\nlunker Hill Extension\nbnsdian Malartic .  ..\nlariboo Gold Quartz     2.10\n-urtle Trethewey ... **\nlentral Patricia'\t\n'hromlum M8tS ....\ntoast Copper  _\n\"onlaurum Mines ....\nomolidited M k S\nome Minei\t\nbrval Siicoe\t\n\u25a0it Malartic -\t\n[ldorado Gold\n\"alconbridge Nickel ...\nfederal Kirklmd _.\t\nPsancoeur Gold ....\t\nSillies Lake  _,\t\ntod's Lake Gold \u2014-.-\u2014\n(.old Belt     \t\nirandoro Mines ._.-___-_.\nJunnar  Gold\t\nlard Rock Gold \t\nlarker Gold \u2014\t\nlollinger\t\ntowey Gold \u2014\nludson Biy M k S ..\u25a0_.\u25a0__._\nnternitlonil Nickel \t\nM Consolidated  \u2014\ntick   Walt*   ~~\nlaolca Gold  \t\nKerr-Addison  \t\npirkland Lake \t\nShore Mines\t\nLeltch Oold  _\ntebel Oro'Mines\nKittle Long Lac \t\n(tcassa Mines ,.-___\nticLeod Cockshutt ..-.\t\nBladsen Red Lake Gold ..\nsandy \t\niuntyre  Porcupine   SHOO\ndcKcnrie Red Lake  -    1.22\n.55\n1.90\n.18\n.B0\n1.80\n30.73\n23.73\n.01%\n3.20\n.32%\n2.75\n.04\n.43\n.04\n.38\n.22\n.05%\n31\n1.09\n.04\n13:00\n.29\n27.23\n38.00\nDI\n.37%\n.02\n325\n1.00\n19.00\n.53\n.01%\n2.20\n370\n2.58\n.511\n01\nNormetal   \u2014 ...,\u2014\nO'Brien Gold ..... _\nOmega Gold   \t\nPamour Porcupine \u2014-...-_.\nPaymaster Cons  \t\nPend Oreille _______\nPerron Gold   \t\nPickle Cro* Gold \t\nPioneer Gold   \t\nPremier Gold   \u2014\nPowell Rouyn Gold  -\nPreston East Dome  \u2014\nReeves   MacDonald\t\nReno Gold Mines\t\nRoche Long Lac   :\t\nSan Antonio Gold  \u2014\nShawkey Gold       \t\nSheep Cr**k Gold  \u2014\nSherritt Gordon   _-\t\nSiscoe Gold  \t\nSladen Malartic -\nSt Anthony  - --\nSudbury Basin \u2014\nSullivan  Consolidated\t\nSylvmite  \u2014\nTeck Hughei Gold  \u2014\nToburn Gold Mines _._\u2014\nTowsgmac .- \t\nVentures  \u2014\u2014.\nWaite Amulet  \t\nWright Hargreaves  \u2014\nYmir Yankee Girl \t\nOIL8:\nAjax \u2014\nBritish American  \u2014 -\nChemical Research _.\nImperial       \t\nInter  Petroleum  - -\t\nTexas   Canadian    -.\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAbitibi Power  \t\nBell Telephone  \t\nBraslUsn T L k P\t\nBrewen 8t Distillers\t\nBrewing Corp  \u2014\nB C Power A  -.._. \u2014\nB C Power B \t\nBuilding Products\t\nCanada Bread\t\nCan Bud Malting\t\nCan Car k Foundry \u2014__\nCan Cement  - \u2014\nCan  Dredge    _\u2014-_-\nCan Malting\nrlcVrUle Graham\nitcWatten Gold \t\nMining Corporation\n\u25a0bneta' Porcupine ..\n\u25a0terris Kirkland\t\nWlplislng Mining\t\nHoranda -..- \u2014\n.06%\n.28\n.80\n.50\n.02%\n1.18\n38.00\nTtoXtnt\njiartmenr, House or\nStore\nDAILY NEWS\nUSS-ADS\nWill Rent It for You\nCan Pac Railway .\nCan Ind Alcohol A .\nCons Bakeries \t\nCosmos \u2014\nDominion Bridge \t\nDom Tir & Chem\t\nDistillers Seagrams  \u2014\nFanny   Farmer    _.\nFord ot Cmada A .\t\nGen Steel Warei \t\nGoodyear Tire \u2014\nGypsum L k A\t\nHamilton Bridge\t\nHiram Wilker  ,\t\nImperiil Tobacco \t\nLobliw A  -\t\nLobliw B \t\nKelvisiitor -\nMsple Leaf Milling ......\nMassey Harris\t\nMontreil Power \u2014.._\nMoore Corp      \t\nNit Steel Cir  _ _.\nOnt Steil Prods \u2014.....\nOnt Silk Nit  _:._...\nPsge   Hersey    \t\nPower  Corp \u2014\nPressed  Metali   \u2014\nSteel of Can   \u2014\nj_l_nH_.il  Pa.In* _ \t\n..:.....\n.36\n.90\n.13\n1.30\n.28\n1.80\n1.80\n3.00\n2.30\n.85\n1.02\n3.25\n.25\n.14%\n.04\n2.50\n.02\n.80\n\u202286\n.51\n.50\n.09\n1.35\n.60\n2.55\n3.-0\n1.35\n.12\n3.00\n3.85\n6.60\n.04\n.13\n18.60\n.18\n11.00\n14.75\n1.20\n.90\n156%\n4%\n4%\n1%\n23%\n1%\n14%\n1.85\n4%\n8%\n3%\n17\n36\n5\n2\n13%\n25\n27\n5\n25\n26%\n17%\n6%\n74\nt%\n4%\n41%\n14\n26%\n28\n8%\n3\n3%\n29\n44%\n43',.\n7\n6\n108%\nft\n9%\n74%\n.65\nEN|OY, HALLOWE'EN\nPARTY AT NAKUSP\nNAKUSP, B.C. - The Anglican\nChurch Hill was gay with orange\nmd black streamers and Hallowe'en cats, owls and spooks when the\npupils of the Nakusp High School\nheld a Hallowe'en party. Dancing\nand games were teaturei.\nWinnen of a ipot dance were\nMiss Irene Buerge md J. Kerr, while\nMiss Caren Anderson and W. Rush\nton won a contest J. Zeleinlck won\nthe chair prize.\nYMIR, B. C\u2014Mr. and Mn. Wallace have returned from a trip by\ncar to the Prairies.\nMr. Snd Mra Forsloff and daugh\nten wen called here from Spokane\nthrough the death ot the latter's\ndaughter, Mrs. C. Andenon.\n\"Red\" Taylor hai returned from\na trip to Nicola.\nThe bridge tournament sponsored\nby the Ymir Work Unit of the Red\nCross was won by Mr. and Mrs.\nCurwen first, and Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Jones', consolation.\nAttending the funenl of Mn. C.\nAnderson at Rossland were Mr. Bell,\nDick Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Matt Olson, Tony Campo, Tom Wilkinson,\nMrs. Spivy and Mr. Curwen.\nHoward McDonald returned from\na succcsful hunting trip up the Windermere.\nMrs. Foster end baby returned\nto Trail after a weekend with her\nmother, Mrs. Chrlstlm,\nMr, and Mrs. Frank Flagel 'and\ndaughter Joan of Regina have returned to Ymir to reside md were\naccompanied by Ed Meyers.\nMrs. Hary Stevens of Salmo visited Ymir.\nMn. A. McDonald entertained at\na Hollowe'en party In honor of\nher granddaughter of Trail, Guests\nwere Dcna Rue and Mary Leu Gllle,\nJackie Tenney, Florence Bain, Enid\nClarke, Marlon Halverson, Barbara\nBond, Noreen Turner, and Joan\nCurwen,\nMiss Louella Hong of Nelson spent\ne weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Bir-\nties.\nMr. ind Mn, Climece Mclsaac\nand ion, Lorlng, visited Nelion.\nCAMP L'STER HUNTER\nGETS URGE MOOSE\nCAMP LISTER, B^ C. - Fimk\nYerbury hai retunred from a hunting trip in the Windermere district.\nHe had the good luck to bag a\nmountain goat md a large moose\nwith a 54-inch spread between the\nhorns.\nMONTREAL   STOCK   QUOTATIONS\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAlta Pac Grain - - 2\nAssoc Brew of Can  16%\nBathurst P fc P A  \u201e 13\nCanadian Bronze   40\nCsn Bronze Pfd         104\nCan Car k Fdy Pfd   20%\nCan Celanese         -  30%\nCm  Celanese Pfd   124\nCan North Power    9\nCan Steamship      ...- _____ 4%\nCan Steamihip Ptd   13%\nCockshutt Plow       8\nCon Min k Smelting  39\nDominion Coal Pfd    20%\nDom Steel 81 Coal B   9%\nDominion Textile   86\nDryden   Paper    _   6\nFoundation C of C .\nGatineau Power\t\nGatineau Power Ptd\nGurd  Charlei\nHoward Smith Piper\nH Smtih Paper Pfd ..\nImperial  Oil   \t\nInter Petroleum\nInter Nickel of Can \t\nLake of the Wooda\t\nMcColl Frontenic  \t\nNational Brew Ltd ....\nNational Brew PM ....\nOgilvle Flour new _\nPrice Bros  \t\nQuebec Power    \t\nShawnlgan W it P\t\nSt Lawrence Corp\t\nSt Law Corp Pfd \t\n12%\n11\n89\n4%\n14\n101\n11\nIS\n37%\n17\n6\n30\n40\n23\n13%\n15v4\n18%\n3\n17\nSouth Can Power .\nSteel of Can Pfd ...\nWestern Grocen\t\nBANKS:\nCommerce   _.\nDominion  \u2014 ~t\nImperial\t\nMontreal     .\nNova Scotia \u2014\nRoyal   \u2014\nToronto \t\nCURB:\nAbltlbl 6 Pfd\t\nBathunt P 8c P B .\nBesuharnols  Corp\n12\n75\n50\n152\n186%\n193\n180\n277\n188\n238%\n8%\n2%\n6%\nBritish American Oil ....    18%\nB C Packen      12%\nCan Industries B   2.22\n.   .83\n3\n4%\n3%\n4%\n3%\n, 11%\n3%\n.    .20\n1%\n.    17\nMcColl Frtntenac Pfd      97\nMitchell Robt  \u2014.'..-     9\nPower Corp Pfd  \u2014    94\nRoyalite Oil .'.     22%\nUnited Dist of Can     ,70\nWalker Good k W     40%\nWSlker Good Pfd     19\nCan Marconi  \u2014.\nCan Vlcken -\nCons Paper Corp \t\nDonnacona Paper A -\nDonnacona Paper B\nFalrchlld Aircraft\t\nFraser Co Ltd .'. ~\nInter Utilities A \t\nInter Utilities B \t\nLake Sulphite\t\nMacLaren P k P\nVANCOUVER STOCK QUOTATIONS\nBig Miss        03 .03%\nBralorne  -1    10.00 10.25\nBridge River Con.      \u2014 .01\nCarlbo* Gold     2.15 -\nFairview Arnil 00% _>1\nGolconda \u2014      .04 .07\nGold Belt :\u2014     .19% .22\nGrsndvlew       .13% .15\nOrull-Wlhkshe .....      I>2% .03\nHedley M\u00abcot -.      ~4 .38\nHome Gold  -      - -00%\nIndian Minei       j01 j01%\nInter Coil k Coke..      32 \u2014\nIiland Mountain 84 .90\nKootenay Belle    '30 \u2014\nMcGil'ivray  20 . -\nMinto Gold       .01 .01%\nNicola M & M - 00% .01\nPend OreUle      1.80 1.90\nPioneer Gold ,     2.28 2.40\nPorter Idaho .......     .01% .02\nPrem Border  _      .00% XII\nPrem Gold  88 M\nQuitslno       .01% .03\nPrtvSleer  ...- -      64% 30\nReeves-MacDonald      .15 .23\nRelief Arlington...      .03 .03%\nReno Gold  _._.      .14% .18\nSalmon Gold       X)2 .04\nSheep Creek      .88 _4\nSUbak Premier __     .57 -\nSurf Inlet  _      .08% .09%\nTaylor B R      .02 \u2014\nWellington  00% .01\nWeiko Minei       - .00%\nWhitewater        .01% .02\nYmir Yankee G ....     .04 jOS\nOILS\nA P Com       .09 -\nAn_l-\u00abm_ted           MV, ill\n.04\n.35\n1.62\n.25\n22\n32\n31\n.16\n.17%\n     2.3\nAnaconda .....,\u2014\u2014\nAnglo Canadian ...\nCal k Edmon ......\nCalmont  - -\nCommonwealth ....\nCommoil  .........\nDalhousle  .\nDavies Pete ....\nExtension \u2014\nFirestone Pete ..__\nFederated Pet* ..\nFour Star Pete \u2014\nHighwood Sarcee\nHome \t\nMadison  \u2014\nMar Jon _ ,.,.-\nM.(>ougall Segur _\nMercury   \t\nNat Pete  \t\nPac Pete \t\nMill City Pete ...\nMonarch Royalties\nNordon Corp       XH\nOkalta Com       .85\nPacalta   ._ _.      .06\nPrairie RoyaltlM .     US\nRoyillt*    ,-. *ai.00\nRoyal Canadian \u2014     .09\nSpooner\nUnited\nVanalta\nVulcan\n.04%\n1.64\n20\n.28\n.18%\n.05%\n.85 -\n- .12\n.12%      -13\n2.45\n.01 -\nJ01*. -\n\u00ab% -\n.04%\n.05\n.05\n30 -\n.04 -\n- .03%\n.80\n.06%\n.03%\n.04%\n.28\nAM.\nWest Flank \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates .._ 1.00\nCoast Brew _  1.85\nWestminster Paper 11.78\nPacific Cayle .---. -0\nUn ited DU t ...._._.- . .70\n.06\n1.18\n1.40\nGood Roads Vital to\nthe Interior, He\nDeclares      \u25a0!\nThst Prairie tourists would not\ntsee the bad sections of Interior\nBritish Columbia roads ind thit the\nwhole Province was losing through\nfailure to cater to them was argued\nby Arnold McGrath, M.L.A. for\nCranbrook, tn in address to the Vancouver junior Board of Trade. Much\not the Transprovincial route wil\npaved, but other sections were driving away tourists, he Slid,\nRoidi comprlied th* moit Import-\n\u2022nt problem ot the Interior, Mr, McGrath asserted. Sixteen thousand\nfewer can uied border'porti In the\nKooteniy this yeir than in 1939.\nThese were mostly Prairie tourists\nWho ordinarily went South Into the\nUnited Statei to avoid B.C, roads,\nbut who thli year stayed out of\nB.C. altogether, he believed.\n\"They will not face our B.C.\nroute to the Cout,\" said the Member. ,\nMr. McGrath invited the Coaat\nbody to visit the Kootenays, calling\non Trail, Nelson and Cranbrook,\nwhen Its annual caravan tour was\nmade next year.\nHis address, In part, follows:\nTRIM FOSTER -UNITY\nThe trips of the Junior Board\ncaravans are appreciated in the interior. These visits foster and produce a deeper bond an a closer unity\nbetween the different provincial\npointi. The result ls 1 better understanding of one another's problems,\nand the final realization that we all\nhave something in common and that\nas citizens ot this great province,\nregardless of where we live, we can\naccomplish a great deal by working\ntogether. ...\nThe most Important! matter to\nthe people of the Interior Is the\nquestion of roids. I think Vancouver has come to realize that Interior\nroads are as important to the City\nof Vancouver as they are to the\ncountry people. It Is natural that\nthe people of the Interior should be\nroad' conscious.\nOnly 47 per cent of the people\nof the province live in the interior\nmd we have over 20,000 miles of\nhighway. This means that we have\na mile ot highway for every IS\npeople living in the interior. Speaking ai a member of the legislature\nI kpow thst every one ot those 18\npeople wmt their mile ot roid improved and at least 10 of them want\nanother mile built somewhere.\nIn the past seven years, a planned\nhighway program has brought a\niast Improvement There are now\nmany miles of good highway In the\nInterior and the people are appreciative but because of bad sections\nwhich form connecting links our\ngood sections of road are not getting\nthe traffic they warrant . ..\nI Just want to speak to you for\na few minutes about the Southern\nTransprovincial route and I think\nyou will see that Vancouver has\nreason to be Interested in this route.\nSOUTHERt' ROUTE\nMORE IMPORTANT\nVancouver has derived great\nbenefit thic year from the Big Bend\nHighway. Ii is not a good road but\nlt has become the easiest transprovincial route. We were all happy\nto see this road opened and we all\nrealize what benefits have been derived, but I know you will find that\nthe Southern Trnsprovincial is an\neven more Important route.\nUntil this year little attention wis\npaid to the Southern rout; because\ntravellers used the American roads\nto avoid our bad sections of highway. This year passport regulations\nand the restrictions ot the Foreign\nExchange Board mdc travel across\nthi line practically prohibitive. It\nii interesting to note what this did\nto our traffic from the East.   -\nDuring the months ot July md\nAugust last year 8,433 Canadian\ncars crossed the border at Kootenay\nports. Most of these cars were from\nthe Prairies and were bound for\nthe Coast Vancouver and Island\npointi are most frequently the destination of these travellers. In the\nsame two months this year the number ot Canadian can crossing out\nat these same ports was only 583.\nThe incoming traffic of Canadian\ncars shows about the same drop\nwith 8,932 entering in those months\nof 1939 and only 1,206 in the same\nmonths of 1940. In other words, the\nnumber of Canadian can travelling\neach way was 16,000 fewer In those\ntwo monthi, this year. The number\nof Canadian cars travelling to and\nfrom dropped to 10 per cent of the\n1939 volume.\nIt would be Interesting to know\nwhat happened to these 16,000 can.\nTrue, many ot them used the Aig\nBend: md a tew tackled the Cascade\nor the Monashee. But my answer Is\nthat most ot them did not come.\nThe local people of the Kootenays\nwent the other way\u2014to Banff and\nJaiper for their holldiyi. The\nPriirie traveller may have come\nthrough the Windermere and possibly as far as Cranbrook ind then\nturned back.\nWILL NOT FACE IT\nBecame ot 1 few mllei ot bad\nroad they will not face our B.C.\nrouta\u00bbto the Coast We are losing\nvaluable tourists In these people\nfrom the Prairies. In fact, 1 am not\naura but that a mistake Is being\nmade In paying too much attention\nto the American tourist and forgetting about our Canadian tourists\nwho can come in increasing num-\nben from the Prairies and other\nCanadian pointi. We ire next door\nto them ind we hivi everything to\noffer thit they cinnot find it home\nor any place near their homei.\nFigures kept it our \u00abCrinbrook\nport of entry show that the average\nnumber of passengers. in a Canadian can about 3.2, whereas the\naverage number of passengers in an\nAmericin t^ag g, gnfm jA^ Jjjjfr|\nfact ii will known\u2014thi Americin\ntourist ii usually in 1 hurry ind\nthinks chiefly ot the number ot\nmills he can drive in s day, while\nthe Canadian traveller takes his\ntlm*, spends hi- money snd when\nhe* comes to in attractive ipot will\nusually stay tor awhile.\nI think, our Canadian tourist is\nvery Important At the preient time,\nbecause of a tew bid mllei ot highway on thi southern Transprovincial, we sre not getting this business\nsnd of course.it fellows thst the\nCout is not getting it. Even it they\ndid not come to the Coast, Vmcouver would benefit If we ware getting\nthem ill becauie most supplies are\nsold by Vancouver wholesalers. If\ni tourist camp operator at Cranbrook heeds a tew more beds or\n.some new plumbing, he usually\nbuys it In Vmcouver.\nApart from tourist considerations\nthere an 40,000 people living in the\nKootenays. They all like to come to\nthe Coast and they all have lots of\nmoney to spend. As long u they\ncould drop into the Statei to avoid\nthe poorer sections of roid they\ncame, but now they itay at home or\ngo elsewhere.\nMANY MILES PAVED\nThe road situation isn't 11 bad as\nyou might think. The Southern\nTransprovincial starts at Crows\nNest. The worst sections of road are\nbetween Crows Nest md Grand\nForks. This is a distance ot 326\nmiles and already 191.5 miles -ire\npaved. There are only 110 miles\nwhich hasn't been touched. An interesting fact is that in this year up\nuntil August 31, 40 per cent of all\npassenger car and commercial vehicle licenses Issued In the Interior\nwere issued at points along this 326\nmiles pf road. ... We have 40 per\ncent of all licensees in the Interior\nliving In this section.\nFrom Grand Forks two routes cm\nnow be taken. Since lt will take\n$2,000,000 to finish the Hope-Princeton link, we have to forget It for\nthe present If we use the route by\nPrinceton and Merrltt, our' Transprovincial would have a mileage of\n806 miles, of which 434 li now paved,\nand of which 372 miles need to be\nrepaired. It we take the route\nthrough the Okmagan Valley and\nvia Kamloops, the distance becomes\n927 miles, but 373 of lt ii now mvid\nmd There ire only 332 mllei on\nwhich work is needed.\nTaking thli latter route, we find\nthat until the end of August this\nyear 87 per cent ot all licenses is\nsued in the Interior were issued at\npoints along this route.\nWe need work on 352 miles of\nroad to have a first class Southern\nhighway to Vmcouver. Thll would\nbe the road which would bring the\nInterior people to Vancouver. This\nroad as well would serve 87 per\ncent of the car owners In the Interior. For the present this is the road\nwhich ihould reoeive first attention. . . .\"\nHOME OIL UP 15;\nRENO GAINS 2Vi\nVANCOUVER. Nov. 8 (CP). -\nLight buying on \"Vancouver Stock\nExchmge today helped push prices\nup fractions to 15 cents. SaleS totalled 30,205 shares\u2014highest volume In more thin three weeks.\nHome OU rose 18 to 2.40 as Calgary tt Edmonton and Calmont\neach added 4 to Monday's closing\nbids, th* former closing It 1.00 md\nth* litter it 28, Anglo Canadian wai\nup 8 to 80.\nHedley Mascot Gold advanced 2 to\n53 ai Pioneer gained 1 cent it 2.26.\nReno finished at 14%, up 2%.\nFend OreUle was the only base\nmetal to trade and gained 6 at 1\"\nButter Values Now\nat Highest Levels\nCreamery butter at Montreal Is\nnow quoted at 29% centi per pound\nIn carload lota The market la des-\ncibed by observers 11 \"very firm\"\nFurther advances ire expected by\nthe trade. Very low returni to farmers when cream wu worth 13 centa\nto 15 cents per pound was discouraging to production. Output ot\ncreameries teU In large producing\ncentres.\nThe step-up of Industrial employment in factories has greatly Increased demand tor butter. A serious shortage ll faced unless output\ncan be quickly expanded.\nBacon ls another product in keen\ndemand. Britain Is seeking Can-\nada'i entire output to replace the\nloss of Danish supplies.\nFarmers across the Dominion who\nhave herds In full production during the coming Winter are figuratively speaking, going to be \"In\nclover\" up to their eyei. With high\nprices tor cream and a genuine market for skim milk it their bacon\nhog pens, the cash Income of mmy\nwill stimulate Christmas buying in\nall centres.\n\u2014\u2014*\u25a0    p PAGE  ELEVIK\nExchange Board\nto Relax Rules\nfor Christmas\nOTTAWA, Nov. 8 (CP). \u2014 the\nForeign Exchange Control Board ls\nmaking special arrangements with\nthe post office and customs authorities tor the Christmas .season to\nfacilitate the export ot goods 11\nChristmas gifts, it was announced\ntoday,\nUntil December 31, 1940, exporti\not goods and merchandise is Christ-\nwas gifts ot any value to persons\nin British Empire countries msy be\nmade without obtaining a licence\nfrom the Foreign Exchange Control\nBoard and to countries outside the\nBritish Empire of a value not exceeding $25 eich. The parcels should\nbe plainly marked aa Chrlstmis\ngifts.\nA permit is needed for the exports\nof gifts hiving a value ot more than\n823 each to non-British Empire\ncountries, applications for which\nshould be made to a bank.\nNAKUSP\nKaslo I.O.D.E. Has\nSuccessful Social\nKASLO. B. C-The Mth Battalion\nChapter I.O.D.E. sponsored a successful tea, home cooking and doll\nsale at the lovely home of Mrs. A.\nStreit the spacious rooms being\nmide even more attractive with\nquantitiei of 'mums. ,\nA luge number of lovely dolls of\nall sizes, donated md dressed by\nmembers, were displayed, mmy\nsales being made by Mn. M. C. T.\nPerclviU, In charge of this department.\nThe horn* cooking tables were\nsoon cleared by Mn. E. Singel and\nMrs. W, L. Billings. Tea arrange-\nmenta were In the hands ot Mn.\nStreit and Mn. J. R. Tinkess and\nMiss Katherine Streit serving. Miss\nA. Hodges guessed the exsct weight\nmd thereby won the decorated fruit\ncake donated by Mn. Leona Lockard.\nMn. 1. S. Chandler told fortunes,\nMiss Bally Singel attended the door,\nwhUe Mlsi Streit wai cashier.\n. t       ,\nWINNIPEG CRAIN\nWINN-PBG, Nov. 8 (CP).-Gnln\nfuturei quotation!:\nOpen High Low Close\nWar Gives Sheep\nIndustry Impetus\nOTTAWA \u2014 Many agricultural\nproducts have been affected by tha\nwar, either adversely or in a bene*\nflclal way. Among these ls wool\nThe production of army uniforms,\nsocks, greatcoats, blankets and\nother Items for the fighting forces\nnecessitating the use of large quantities of wool and woollen goods\nhas given a decided impetus to tha\nsheep Industry.\nNot only have sheep raisers been\nreceiving a fair demand for wool\nbut lamb and mutton from their\nflocks has been selling at good\nprices compared with values ruling\nin the Autumn periods of recent\nyears prior to the outbresk ot tha\nwar, . ,\nVANCOUVER FIRM BIDS\nON NEW CARGO SHIPS\nNORTH VANCOUVER, B. C, Nov.\n3 (CP).\u2014Clarence Wallace, President of the Burrard Drydock Company Ltd., said today his company\nhas submitted tenders tor the construction of several large cargo ships\nat its plant here under Canada's\nprogram of marine construction.\nNAKUSP, B.C.-At the monthly\nRed Cross tei held it the Lelind\nHotel proceeds were in lid ot the\nRefugee fund. Hostesses were Mn.\nJ. Parent Jr., Mrs. J. Davidson md\nMrs. R. McCulloch.\nMrs. ,J. Dolman left for Trail to\nvisit Mr. and Mn. A. B. Thompson.\nMn. H F. Tyreman left to spend\na week with her parents st Golden.\nH. Hunter Gardner and son, Philip, left for Vancouver. Mn. Gardner\nwill follow.\nMiss M. Owens, R.N., and Mlu\nTompkins, R.N., formerly of the\nstaff of the Arrow Lakes Hospital,\npassed through town en route to\nVernon.\nW. L. MaxweU visited the Coast\nMr. and Mrs. H. Jordan have returned from a trip to Princeton.\nMr. and Mrs. G. L. Mcintosh arrived from Vancouver. Mr. Mcintosh has taken over Uie Nakusp\nDrug Store.\nMrs. A. Mtddlemass ot Rock Island visited Nakusp.\nMr. and Mrs. W. H. Stones, Mrs.\nStones Sr, and Mrs. Guidon were in\ntown from Burton.\nMrs. G. Lea and family and Mrs.\nP. McLean and family ot Arrow\nPark shopped in town.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Kay and Miss M.\nJohnson were in town from Arrow\nPark.\nMrs. M. Barrow and Mrs. E.\nMunn visited Nelson.\nWilliam Murray of Chilllwack has\narrived to be teller at the Canadian\nBank of Commerce.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Patterson have\nas guest their daughter, Mrs. L.\nWoodhouse of Vernon.\nW. Morgan of the C.A.S.F. of Victoria whs home on leave.\nMr. and Mn. W. Morgan haS as\nweekend guest Victor Walker of\nTrail.\nMiss Dolores McGill ot Arrow\nPark was In town.\nMrs. E. Angrignon, Miu B. Bol-\nIver and F. H. Angrlgnon ol New\nDenver motored to Nakusp.\nMr. and Mn. F. Rushton and Miss\nN, Johnson attended the funeral of\nC. F. Nelson at New Denver.\nJ. Davidson returned from a trip\nto Revelstoke.\n71%\n75%\n30%\n30%\n71%\n730\n30%\n30%\n41%\n41%\n40%\n'l22%\n128%\n71%\n73%\n30%\n30%\n41%\n41%\n40%\n121\n125\n48       44%\n71%\n73%\n77%\n30%\n30%\n29%\n41%\n41%\n40%\n122%\n128%\n44%\n47\u00ae\nHEADLIGHT REFLECTORS\nSILVER PLATED\nL.C.M. Electroplating\nLaurlt. Bldg.    704 Nelson Ave.\nTT\n\u2666\u2666waiim Ma**!-! \u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666 1.\nGrenville H. Grimwood\nPROVINCIAL ASSAYERS\nMETALLURGICAL CHEMISTS\nPHONE 818\n189 Baker St.    Nelson, 8. C\n\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0\u2666\u00bb\u2666*\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\u2666\u00ab\u25a0\u2666 M \u2666\u2666\u2666\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0! \u2666\u2666>*\u2022\u2666\u00ab\nWHEAT:\nDec.\t\nMay .....\nJuly\t\nOATS:\nDec, _....\nMay\t\nJuly -  -\nBARLEY:\nDec.    41%\nMay _  41%\nJuly -  40%\nFLAX:\nDec  121\nMay ........ 123\nRYE:\nDec 48\nMay    47%\nCASH PRICES:'\nWHEAT-Noi. 1 hird ind 1 Nor.\n70%; No. 2 Nor. 6\u00bb%; No. 3 Ndr.\n67%; No. 4 Nor. 84%; No. 8. 62%;\nNo. 8, 58%: feed 34%: No. 1 Gimet\n05%; No. 2 Garnet 64%; No. 3 Gar-\nnet 64%; No. 1 Durum 65%; No. 4\nspecial 84%: No. 5 special 62%; No.\n3 special 38%; No. 1 mixed 61%;\ntrack 71%; screnlngs $3 per ton.\nOATS-Nb. 2 C. W. 83%; Ex. 3\nC. W. 80%; No.' 3 C. W. and Ex. 1\nfeed 20%; No. l feed 28%; No. 2\nteed 27%; No. 3 feed 23%; track 31%.\nBARLEY\u2014Malting grades: 6-row\nNos. 1 md 2 C. W. 43; 2-row Nos. 1\nand 2 C. W. 48%; 6-lrow No. 3 C. W.\n42%. Othen: No. 1 feed 42%; No. 2\nfeed 41%; No. 3 feed 41; track 41%.\nFLAX-No. 1 C. W. 121%; No. 2\nC. W. 117%; No. 3 C. W. 107%; No.\n4 C . W 96%: track 122%.\nRYE-No. 2 C. W.44%.\nLOW\nREMEMBRANCE DAY\nRAIL FARES\nMONDAY, NOV. 11\nBetween ill Stations In Camdi\nGOING\nNovember S to i p.m,  Novim.\nbtr 11 (If no train Novtmb\u00abr I\ntickets will b\u00ab sold lor\nNevemb*r 7)\nRETURN:  _.iv-  D-iUn-tlen\nTiKtcby, Noveiiber 11 (II aa\nkiln Nov-mb-rU H-kiti will b*\nisod on DM iviilibl* Ir-ln).\nFARE AND %\nFOR ROUND TRIP\n(Minimum Fare 25c)\nA*k\u00abr\"__A_r   Anal\n[ANADIAN PACIFIC\nConsult Your Local Agent\nfor Further Information or Writ*\nJ. C. WATSON\nCity Tloket Agent, Nelion, B.C.\nMETAL   MARKETS\nLONDON, Nov. 8 (AP). - Bir\nJ silver 23 7-!6d, unchanged. (Equiv-\nilent 42.50 cents.) Bsr gold 168i, unchanged, (Equivalent (33.88.)\nTin barely steady; spot 257 10s\nbid. \u00a3257 IBs asked; future \u00a3259 15s\nbid, 2\u00a360 uked.\nMONTREAL-Bar gold in London was unchanged at $37.54 an\nounce In Canadian funds; 168s In\nBritish representing the Bink of\nEngland's buying price. The fixed\n835 Washington price amounted to\n138.50 In Canadian.\nSpot: Copper, .electrolytic, 12.78;\ntin 61.50: lead 5.50; zinc 5.63; antimony 15.25.\nSilver futures closed unchanged\n.tBto-Bld: Nov. 37.73.    .\u00bb        >\nImproved Service\nKettle Valley Route\nDally\n10:05\n2:55 p.m.\n9:30 a.m.\na.m.\nLv. Nelson  Ar.\nLv. Grand Forks  Lv.\nAr. Vancouver   Lv.\nDally\n7:30 p.m.\n2:36 p.m.\n7:45 p.m.\nMaking Direct Connections With Steamers for\nVictoria and Nanaimo.\nSTANDARD SLEEPER\u2014DINING CAR\nAIR-CONDITIONED DAY COACH\nLow Fares in Effect\nConsult Your Local Agent for Further Information or Writ*\nJ. G. Wit'son,   City Ticket Agent)   Nelson, B.C.\n6t4MtU(S4c\n \t\n\u2022    '\"l'.'\"UJI'PS*>  \u2022 \u25a0 miyevMiqet\ni^n^wewTOjjpppwjpfv^nBf^'\nMQI Twatvt\nI\nCIVIC\nLAST TIMES TODAY\nMatlntt Todty it 2:00\nComplete shows 2:00-7:00-8:57\nCor Coughi, Celdi a\nBronehltii\n. Use\nBuckley's\nMixture\n40* ind 75*\nMann. Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nPHONE 61 NILSON, B. 0.\nLONDON, (CP). \u2014 Army vehicles\ndamaged beyond repair no longer\ngo on the scrap heap, but have their\nparts carefully salvaged, to speed\nup replacements for other trucks.\nk\n1931 Studebaker\nSPORT ROADSTER\nRumble Seat, 2 spare wheels In\nfender wells. C* \u2022tt\nPrice   \u00bb*\u00bb\nQueen City Motors\nPhone 48    Limited    581 Josephine\nFleury s Pharmacy\nMed. Arts Blk.\nPHONE 25\nPrescriptions\nCompounded.\nAccurately\nFOR RENT\nSTEAM HEATED SUITE\nAnnable Block\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSUITE 105 MEDICAL ARTS BLDG.\nFIRE INSURANCE\nRATES ARE DOWN\nle*. Us for Fir* and Automobile\nCover.\nRobertson Realty Co., Ltd.\nI Lambert's\nfor\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\nGet the\nFURNACE\nPut In working order NOW\nR. H. Maber\nI Phone 655    510 Kootenay St\n1939 PLYMOUTH\n3 door Sedan. New tires. Ofif _.\nPrice _.-    *\u00b0\/>\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nBaker St     Limited      Phone 119\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nWANTED-EXPERIENCED FARM\nhind on poultry farm, able to milk\n$25 month, board and cabin. State\nage and particulars. J. H. Dolman,\nNakspu, B C.\nSELLING OFF ONE YEAR OLD\nWhite Leghorns, 50c each. $45 for\n100. Wallace. Tarry'i, Thrumi P.O.\ntXSSSttttttt'Mtt&KttKISttttrSt^\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nosossbsseessoirttssssssssoiossssssite\nGet your antifreeze now and be\nsafe. Irwin's Service Station.\nWomen's Pro-Rec opens at Civic\nCehtre tonight 7 p.m.\nCut Flowers and Funeral Designs.\nPhone 010, Mac's Greenhouses.\nPlace your magazine sub. now for\nChristmas delivery at Valentine's.\nAntifreeze and winter lubrication'\nfor your car. Beacon Service.\nElectrical   Contraction.   F.  H.\n8MITH, S51 Biker St PHONE 668\nWhlst party, Wed., Nov. 8, Pair-\nview Catholic Hall,. 704, 4th Street.\nNELSON SKI CLUB\nmeeting, Sivoy Hottl, t p.m.\nTonight\nBuy your mincemeat at the Trinity Service Club Gift Shop Sale on\nSaturday, November 30.\nLast call to til Eagles wishing to\ngo to Rossland tonight\u2014Special bus\nleaves Greyhound at 8 p.m.\nSale oa damaged hockey sticks,\nregular $1.85, now 75 cents. Hipperson Hardware Company.\nUnique program of drama, choral\nand instrumental music at St Paul's\n\"All-Boys\" Concert November 15.\nSTANLEY CONFECTIONERY\nFRESH FRUITS, VEGETABLES\n652 Baker St Phone 585-We Deliver\nThe edjourned annual meeting\ndf the Nelson Muilcal Festival will\nbe held in Council Chamber, City\nHall, Thursday evening, 7:50. Nov. 7,\nAll Interested are invited to tttend.\nMADAM BUROYA\nPhrenologist tnd Palmist reading\nstudio now optn tt 259 Baker St\nSpeclil rtidlngi SOc. Open evenings.\nQrenfelVs Cafe\nVi Dozen Fried Eastern CA-\nOysters    \u00abvV\nWINTER OVERCOAT\nYOUR   CAR\nNOW\nAT\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpp. Port Office tnd Humt Hotel\nWINTER O'COATS\nBeautifully Filter Cleaned.\nRepaired. Shortenend and Pressed\nPHONE 1042 FOR PRICES\nFree Theatre Tickets\nAS ADVERTISED IN THE DAILY NEWS\nCLASSIFIED COLUMNS MUST BE CALLED FOR PERSONALLY BETWEEN 9 a.m.\nAND 6 p.m.\nAT THE DAILY NEWS OFFICE\n-NILION DAILY NEWS, NILION I. C-WEDNESDAY MORNINO. NOV. 8. 1140\u2014\nParade of Airmen Features International Plowing Matches\n___\u25a0_\u25a0. i\nlcSALE\nNOW ON\nWedneiday\u2014Thunday\nFriday and Saturday\nCall early and gtt the bargains.\nNe Phont Ordtn\nYeur Rexill Start\nCity Drug Co.\nBox 450\nPhone 14\nLandon Now lo\nLower Mainland;\nNew Westminster\nTWO STEEPLES    >\nWOLSEY\nVIYELLA\nENGLISH HOSIERY\nFrom England come then\nfamous woollen hosiery.\nAll colors and. sizes. Pair.\nf 1.00\nEMORY'S\n****** LIMITED ViA\"\n\"The Man't Store\"\nSeventy-five thousand personi turned out to watch events on\nclosing day of the international plowing match at St. Thomas, Ont.\nA parade of 3000 airmen from the St Thomas training school,' right,\nwas a feature ot the closing day program. Rob Campbell, upper left,\nwas one of the contestants tor the championship mitch. Freda Johnson, of Wilton Grove, Ont., ls pictured using a tractor, lower left.\nShe has been plowing with horses for the past six years and this wsi\nthe first time she had operated a tractor.\nYour bey wants *C\"OM\"i\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nC.M.&S. Warehouse Clerk Pleads\nGuilty lo Stealing Sum oi $1000\nMag\nistrate- Takes\nTime to Think\nOver Case .\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. 5\u2014Magistrate\nParker Williams reserved Judgment\non the Rex vs MacLean case in\nmer, when hii expenses would not\nbe so high.\n\"And then thingi became worse\nend worse,\" he uld.\nMUCH OVERTIME\nQuestioned regarding his work, he\nsaid he had done t great deal ot\novertime. \"In fact, that gateman\nwhich Daniel MadLean of Fruitvale | once remarked that I did more over-\npleaded guilty to stealing S1000 from time tha nany other person in the\nthe Consolidated Mining k Smelt- S. lelter,\" he said. The extra time, he\ning Company, at Tadanac, after a1 .aid, was spent because he had not\nTRAIL SOCIAL\n\u25a0y MISS FLORENCE BIRD\nLONDON \"(CP)-About 300 A\ngentlnlani of British parenti,\nhave come to England to Join tt\nfighting forcei. Some of them spa\nonly a broken English and\nArgentine citizens.\nLaco Mazda Lamp!\n5 for 91.00 up to 100 wat\nStandard Electric\n431 Josephine St Phone SI\nA\nO. L. LANDON\ntwo-hour hearing in Tadanac Police\nCourt Tuesday afternoon.\n\"This is the most difficult case\nI. have yet experienced. I don't\nthink the accused is a criminal, and\nfelt as capable of doing his work\nsince his illness, and also that there\nwas more work to do.\n\"The company had given-me three\nmonths off on account of my illness,\nhe has had a fine clean record over j and I felt I owed it to them to do\na long period of service to tha com-1 as much as I possibly could.\"\npany. I feel that something must Asked if he had been drinking\nhave broken him down, and don't I heavily, he said that occasionally he\nfeel ready at the moment to make\na decision,\" stated the Magistrate,\nas he adjourned the case until 10\no'clock Wednesday morning.\nMacLean, employed tt the company warehouse, was charged with\ntheft, aggregating (1000 from the\nperiod Jan. 9 to Oct. 31.\nSALES SLIPS HELD BACK\nE. G. .Randall, Assistant Chief\nAccountaint, explained that the\nmethod used in committing the theft\nhad been the withholding of sales\nslips from the accounting department, and failing to enter cash Intakes In the receipt bock. Sales\nslips were made in triplicate, he\nsaid, the original going to the accounting department, the duplicate\nto the customer, and the third copy\nbeing retained in the book. Original\ncopies turned in to the accounting\ndepartment were checked with the\nreceipts each month, but it was not\nuntil special investigation was\nthought necessary and the cash receipts were checked with the triplicate orders, that it-was discovered\nt great number of the original slips\nhad not been turned in. The majority of these originals, together with\na cash receipt book, were found In\nMr. MacLean's room. Others could\nnot be accounted for, stated Mr.\nRandall. Sales slips were not num.\nbered consecutively, Mr. Randall\nstated. Total funds found missing\nthrough the special tudlt were\n(1381.19.\nMr, Randall said no previous Irregularities in Mr. MacLean's work\nhad ever come to his attention.\nACCUSED GIVES STORY\nIn tense'nervoui tones, the accused explained the course of events.\nHe was In Nelson at the time he\nJoined up in the last war In May,\nIBIS. Two years liter he wu discharged as medically unfit, with a\nbad heart and a nervous breakdown\ncondition, In Mty, 1917.\n. \"Were you fit when you Joined\nup?\" asked Donald McDonald, hli\ncounsel.\n\"You htd to be,\" MacLean replied.\nReturning to Nelson after hli discharge, MacLean went back Into the\nservice of the Dominion Expreu\nCompany, but had to give it up because he could not stand being on\nthe train In hit nervous itate.\nHe came to Trill and worked for\nIhe Consolidated for six months\nbetween 1917 and 1918, and secured\npermanent employment in 1919,\nfirst in the purchtslng depirtment,\ntnd later In the warehouse.\nIn 1937 he contracted double\npneumonia, which left htm la a\nrun-down condition, necessitating\nhis accepting the offer cf t three\nmonths layoff in order to regain\nhis itrength.\nPrevious to hli Illness he had\nbought a home Ih Fruitvale, where\nhe had been forced to move oi\naccount of hli, wife's heilth, and.\nwhen he was Informed by the docn\ntor that he ctuld not stand the\nJourney back and forth to Fruitvale\neach day, he decided to establish\nhis own private quarters In Trail.\nHe stated he bad not started taking money until this year ind when\nhis finance! became so desperae.\nhe thought he would take a little\nduring the Winter, ind would be\nable to put It back durin. tht Sum-\nhad been so frantic that he had\ntaken quite a lot. \"This is the first\ntime that I have ever been In court,\"\nne replied to a question raised as to\nhis previous record.\n\"Crimes like these are either committed by criminals or are foolish\nacts of persons, sometimes driven\ndesperate by circumstance!,\" argued\nMr. MacDonald. \"Every cue itands\non Its own circumstances, tnd if this\nman had been in normal health, this\nwould have never happened. He\nwas driven to lt, and hai already\nbeen through Hell, financially, mentally and physically.\n\"I could have produced numerous\ncharacter witnessu\u2014\"\n\"They would not be necessary tn\nthis cue,\" Interjected Magistrate\nWilliams.\nLENIENCY ASKED\n\"But the fact that Mr. MacLean\nrefused to allow any of his friends\nInvolved ls characteristic of him,\"\nsaid Mr. MacDonald. \"This whole\naffair has been a shock to tbe Company officials, tnd to all his friends.\nHe hu already suffered terribly\nand will continue to do so all the\nrest of his life from the stigma of\nthis affair. The law calli for a\ncriminal to be put tway for the protection, of society, but I can assure you, even though I feel it ls\nnot necessary to do so, that everybody who knowi Dan MacLein\nwould not wlih thit,\" Mr. MacDonald concluded.\n\"In view of the faet that the prisoner Is- liable to a Jail term up to\n14 years for thli offence, tnd in\nview of the excellent plet put up by\nMr. MicDonald, I would request\nthe Magistrate to follow his usual\npolicy of tempering Justice with\nmercy,\" R. J. G. Richards, Crown\nCounsel, remirked.\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. 5-PUot Of-\n'leer Oicar Johnston, ot the Royil\n-anddian Navy, now stationed at\nHalifax, li spending a ehort holiday\nat the home of Mr. nnd Mrs. D.\nDownie 1133 Nelaon Avenue.\nMrs. J. Willis of Farron Is spending two weeks' holiday u the guest\nof her brother-in-law md sister, Mr.\nand Mrs. M. L. Brother! of Sunnlngdale.\nMr. and Mrs. F. H. Strom! of Hall-\neybury, Ont., spent tho weekend\nvisiting In Trail.\nActing Chief of Police Fred Steele\nSergt. J. McMillan, Constable John\nGordon of Trail and Deputy Chief\nW. Irvine of Tadanac attended a\nfarewell party given for Chief of\nPolice Alex Stewart In Nelson on\nMonday night.\nMrs. E. Symes hu returned to\nher home at Grand Fork! alter\nspending a few diys here visiting\nfriends.\nMrs. George Shorthouse has returned from Vancouver, whoie she\nenjoyed a two weeks' vacation.\n- Mr. tnd Mrs. G. Forrester ot\nLancer, Sask- were visitors to Trail\nover the weekend.\nLloyd R. Smith, a weekend vliitor to - Trail, hu returned to his\nhome   it Penticton.\nMri. George Coupland has returned from the Coast, whe.e she\nvisited Sergt. and Mrs. James Coup-\nland.\nA wedding of Interest to many in\nTrail took place at high noon Oct.\n28 at First Presbyterian Church,\nYakima, Wash., when Netta, daughter of Mrs. David Cook, became\nthe bride of Robert Hermon of Kimberley, son ot Mr. and Mrs. Charles\nF. Hermon, 880 Eldorado S'Jejt,\nTrail. The ceremony wai performed by Rev. David W. eFrry. The\nchurch waa beautifully decorated\nwith chrysanthemums in pink aid\ndeep rose shades. The bride, who\nwai given in marriage by her brother, Horace Cook, wu gowned In a\nfrock of white moire in princess\nstyle with a long trail. Her lung\nveil wu caught to her head with a\nwreath ot orange blossoms, and she\ncarried a bouquet of chrysanthe-\nRed Cross Auxiliary\nCompletes Its Plans\nfor Concession Booth\nFinal arrangements for operating\nthe refreshment concession at the\nCivic Centre during tbe . Winter\nwere completed when the Junior\nAuxiliary to the Nelion Red Cross\nSociety met tt the home of Miss\nRuby Gibbon, 818 Silica Street,\nTueiday night\nWith most of the necessary equipment already obtained, but a number of essentials such u towels,\nkettle and io on still needed, the\nAuxiliary decided to mtkt tn appeal for theie.\nSpirit of Patriotism\nIs Reimann's Theme\nBefore Trail Rotary\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e Nov. 8 - O. F.\nReimann. President of tht> Trill\nBranch of the Canadlm Legion,\naddresscdnhe Trail Rotarians Tues-\nday ifternoon tt a patriotic meeting arranged to commemorate the\nforthcoming Armistice Day. Mr.\nReimann spoke on the spirit of\ntrue patriotism.\nADAPTABILITY\nMAIDSTONE, Englind (CP). -\nThe yellow cowling of t Messerschmitt shot down In a Southeast\nEnglish t\u00abwn provides t kennel tor\ntn Alsatian d-uf\nmums and pink rosebuds. Her only\njewelry was a pearl and tmelliynt\nnecklace, the gift ot ihe groom. M-ss\nRhea Clarke, as ma'.d of honor, wore\na gown of fuchsia velvet and carried a bouquet ot chrysthanemumi\nin orchid end pink shades. Min\nVina May Cook and Miss Margaret\nCook, u bridesmaids, wore gowns\not turquoise velvet and carried\nflower mufti. The three attendants wort htlr corsages ot 'mums.,\nGeorge Peters wai -best mm. and\nFranda Mills and William Wright\nacted as ushert. After the ceremony\na reception was held at the home\not the bride'i mother. Mrs. Cook\nwas charmingly attired In black\nvelvet with t corsage ot pink rosebuds. Later the young couple left\non a wedding trip to the Coast, the\nbride travelling in a blue crepe\ndress, mink coat and matching accessories. Her corsage was ot Talisman roses. On their return they\nwill reside at Kimberley.\nMrs. C. F. Hermon, 880 Eldorado\nStreet, entertained Saturday afternoon and evening, at \u25a0 delightful\nreception in honor of Mr. ind Mrs.\nRobert Hermin who were married\nat Yakima, Wuh. on October 28.\nChrysthanthemums In shades of\npink md yellow were attractively\narranged throughout the roomi. The\ntea table wu centred with I silver\nbowl 6f pink rosebuds and fern, md\nlighted by cream candlei In illver\nholden. Mn. J. L. Kitchin and Miss\nGwen Hermon presided at the urns.\nGuests were Mr. md Mn. J. L,\nKltchnl, Mr. and Mn. E. L. Hodge,\nMr. md Mrs. Gordon Williams, Mr\nmd Mn E. R. Humphries, Mr. tnd\nMn. Howard Parker, Mr. and Mri\nWarwick Parker, Mr, and Mn-\nChow John, Mr. and Mn. Sing Lee,\nMrs. Hamilton Currie, Mr. md Mrs.\nMax Richards, Mr. and Mn. M\nHodgeson, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh\nMorey. Mr. and Mri. R. Melrose, Mr.\nmd Mn. Lawrence Whittaker, Mr.\nmd Mn. J. Plumb, Miss Dorothy\nPlumb, Miss Elsa Willlimi, Mn. E.\nA. Archibald, Miss Pauline Archibald, Patrick Archibald, Mrs. A.\nCottrell, Mrs. G. Handley md Mrs.\nJ. Kitchin, Sr.\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, Nov. 8-\n|G. L. Landon, Dlatrlct Agriculturist\nat Grand Forki ilnce 1930, has been\nappointed Diitrlct Agriculturist tor\nthe Lower Mainland with headquarten at New Westminster, effective November 1.\nHe has been connected with the\nB. C Department of Agriculture\nfor almost IB yean, being Poultry\nInstructor at Nelson for four years,\nand District Agriculturist it Grand\nForki ior 10 yeirs.\nDuring tht put ilx yean he hu\nbeen In charge of the Poultry Flock\nApproval work In tht Fruer Valley during the Winter monthi.\nBlood testing ind approval of\npoultry flocks by tht 8. C. Depirtment of Agriculture It proceeding\nrapidly, and hu reached t total of\n88,000 birds. Indications are that the\ntotal will be close to lut year's\nrecord of 115,000 birds blood tested\nPASTEURIZED MILK\nFOR THE BABY EACH DAI\nIS MY RECOMMENDATION\nTHE DOCTOR WILL SAY.\nPalm Dairies Ltd.\nSEE\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFor ill your need! In plumb.\nIng   repairs,   alterations,   an.\nInstillitloni\nPh 81. 801 Vlctorli tt\nMACO CLEANER\nI\nHats Clemed md\nBlocked\n327 Btktr\nPhont SSS\nFINANCIAL SECURITY\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nMonthly Savings Plan\nR. W. DAWSON\nBonded  Representative\nBox 81      Hipperson Blk.     Ph. 117\nHOOD'S\nBREAD\n\"Your Homt Bakery\"\nAFTER THE SHOW\nTRY A LUNCH AT\nThe PERCOLATO\nW. Kopecki 809 Btktr\nMOTHERS I\nHorehound Honey ami\nMenthol\nFor Thit Tickling Cough\nal Smi^thsk\nPrescription Druggist Phon\nFIRESTONE\nTIRES\nSKY CHIEF AUT\n206 Baker St SERVICE  Phont\nMcArthur Shipping\nFrom the Old Union\nMine, Franklin Camp\nVANCOUVER, B. C. - W. E. McArthur of Greenwood, who is operating the lod Union mine of the\nFranklin camp, as well ti properties at Phoenix, hu developed i\nsubstantial amount of good ore In\nthe Union which Is going forward\nregularly to Trail smelter for treatment.\nMr. McArthur trucks tht output\nfrom the old Phoenix camp operations to rGeenwood where he, together with other mine operators,\ninstalled t concentrator, the concentrates being shipped to Trail.\nAverage daily .tonnage trom the\nPhoenix operation Is 88 toni, the\ntotal tonnage tor the month of September being 1680 tons.\nNurses to Hear\nLectures Upon\nInvasion Action\nOutlines of ilx lectures on emergency action In the event of invasion \u2014 lecture! to be given to all\nnunei \u2014 were preiented to tha Nelion Registered Nurses Association\n\u2022t Its meeting at the Nurses' Home\nTuesdiy night by Mlu Nancy Dunn,\nThe meeting heard Mlu Vera B.\nEidt, Superintendent of Kootenay\nLake General Hoipltal, report on\nthe B. C. Hospital! Association convention at Victoria lut month.\nMlu Eidt also give t more detailed account of organization of\ndistricts md chapter! discussed by\ntht Registered Nurses Anoclition\n\u2022t \u2022 meeting in Vancouver following the hospitals convention.\nOrganization of a study group\namong tht active md associate\nmemben of the Nelion Association\n-\/a- unrUrt____a\nJohn C. Hodgson\noi Consolidated\nDies al Montreal\nDirector pf Company\nSince 1906; Donor\nof Curling Cup\nTRAIL, B. C. Nov. 8 \u2014 John Cu-\nuls Hodgson, Director of thi? Consolidated Mining & Smelting Compmy of Canada, Ltd., since its Inception in 1906, died at his home In\nMontreal on November 2.\nMr. Hodgson was well known to\nmany old-time employees of the\nCompany md other pioneer residents of Trail. He wu ap annual\nvisitor here until recent years.\nHt wu particularly Intereited In\nthe progress ot the Trail-Tadanac\nHospital, and took tn Interest In\nsport, particularly curling. He donated the Hodgson clock for annual\ncompetition between Trail md\nKimberley.\nBorn In Montreal In 1888, Mr.\nHodgson had been associated with\nthe iron md copper industry since\nhe wu 16 years old.\n\"The Consolidated Mining k\nSmelting Company has lost one of\nIts but friends.\" itated S. G. Blaylock. President md Managing Director. \"Mr. Hodgson has always\nbeen a close friend of all Consolidated employee!, md It wu largely\ndua to' hii efforti thtt Trail has tht\ntine hoipltal accommodation existing it the present time.\"\nHe is survived by three sons, Cat-\nsels V. of Vancouver md Bruce J.\nand Thomu W. of Montreal.\nFROM GERMAN WRECK\nLONDON (CP).\u2014Salvtged from\na German pline, a Germin parachute md t mtp of Englind butd\non t Britiih ordnance map irt on\ndisplay in tht lobby of tht Mlnlitry\n\/if trtfrtr-utlon.\nBE MODERATE\u2014AT YOUR\nNEXT PARTY SERVE BEER    ,\nYou'll* Be the Popular Host if It's\nCOLUMBIA\nLAGER\nBEER\nPHONE THE VENDORS\u2014HAVE IT DEUV\u20acRED\nkOOTENAY BREWERIES LIMITED\nThll advertisement is not publlihed or displayed by the Liquor Conti\nBoard or by the Government ot Britiih Columbil.\nI *\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n6 Star Surprises\nFOR WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY\nMaple Leaf,\n49 Ib. aack\nCampbell'!,\nVegetable, Tin\n$1.4*\n10c\n* FLOUR\n* SOUP\ny^ Tomatoes \u25a0\u00ab \u2022\u00bb\u2022'*\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb. 2 **\u00bb \u2022. itc\n* WALNUTS ,r;r. 29c\nic Brown Sugar, 3 lbs. 22c\ni LETTUCES? 2 to 19\n\u2022JGROCERYf*\nNelson's Premier  Feed Store\nPHONE 10 or 11 FREE DELIVERY\ns\n.\n_tj|\u00ab.-ilfafc\u201eir^ -\nM^ifiiiMiiliiii\nk-\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"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. 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Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}