{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0415362":{"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":"2022-06-16","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1941-09-18","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0415362\/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":" *\nto*\nThree Swediih Deitroyen Blown\nUp at Anchor in Port. Page 3.\nBritain Ordered Great Tomato\nSupply for Emergency. Pago 3.\nAircraft Output Beginning to\nBrighten In Canada. Paga 9.\nBill   8\nPitor i\nVICTOR\n\u25a0ttiift\n* I c\nAll Claiiei Included in Carman\nRopriiali In Parii. Paga 3.\nAxis Forcei Step Up Operatloni\nIn Tobruk Ana. Paga 3. .\nVOLUME  40\nFIVB CENT! PIR. COPY\nNEUON, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-THURSDAY MORNINQ. SEPT. 11, 1941\nNUMBER   121\nSMASHING WIN OV\nBRITISH ARMADA\nSMASHES HAZIS\nIN FRENCH AREA\n300   Fighters   Escort\nBombers; 11 Nazi\nPlanes Downed\nBOMBER AND 13\nFIGHTERS LOST\nBy   WILLIAM   STEWART\nCanadian  Prett Stiff Writer\nLONDON, 8ept 17 (CP Cible).\n\u2014 Two iquadrom of Blenheim\nbomberi, eicorted by more than\n300 flghten \u2014 one of the itrongeit\nair fleeti Britain hai ient over\nthe continent ilnce the aerial offenilve itarted In June \u2014 iwept\nover the Channel Into Northern\nFrince In broad daylight today to\nblast i power houie and other Important targeti In the German-\nheld Bethune area.\nMmy other fighter planes fought\nwith the Nazis in the skies over\nFrance while the raid wai proceeding snd at least 11 German Messer-\nichmitt 109s were destroyed. The\nraid cojt the Royal Air Force one\nbomber and 13 fighters. Four of the\npilots were laved.\nFlying In liyer-eake formation,\nthe   bombers  ind   fighter   drop-\nried from the cloudi over Mu-\nngarbe, neir Bethune, ind aimed\ntheir bombi it coke ovens, \u25a0 tir\ndistillery, a thermic power nation\nand a synthetic gaioline plant\nWaten on the Kent coait laid\nthe roid of pawing planei waa\ncontinuous through the afternoon.\nThe Air Minijtry News Service\n\u2022aid that \"representatives of all\ncountries    which    have    provided\nfilloti for the fighter command\nook part jn the operations.\" AI-\nIt waa stated that one United States\nthough no countries were specified\nEagle Squadron was \"in on the\nbig ihow.\"\nThe bom-bers irrived over the\n\u25a0molting planti In three flights.\nExplosions ipread over the entire\nworks. A large fire broke out in\nthe greit building. Flames shot up\ntrom \u2022 large tank.\nSMOBitavkr\nHeld al Ottawa\nOTTAWA, Sept. 17 (CP)-Leaders\nof Church and State gathered on\nParliament Hill today to pray for\ndivine blessing on the effect of\nCanada's soldiers, sailors, airmen\nand war workers as Reconsecration\nWeek drew to a formal cloae.\nFor the second time within four\ndayi the wide space in front of the\nParliament Buildings was the icene\nof a church lervice in connection\nwith the movement to reconsecrate\nthe nation to the pursuit of the\nIdeals tor which the British and\nother free nations (ight.\nTonight a joint Protestant service\nwai held In which representative!\nof the Church of England, Presbyterian. United Church of Canadi\n(and Baptist clergy participated. A\nRoman Catholic service was held\nat the same place Sunday.\nWismer to Speak\non Credit Unions\nVICTORIA, B.C., Sept. 17\u2014\"Credit\nUnions and Their Importance to\nthe Nation's War Effort is the subject of a radio address Hon. Gordon\nWiimer, Attorney-General, will deliver over the Britiih Columbia network of the Canadian Broadcasting\nCorporation at 6:15 o'clock P.D.ST,\nfrlday.  September 19.\nBRITAIN  KEEPS UP\nSHIPMENTS TO\nSTATES\nNEW YORK. Sept. 17 (AP).-\nThe war has cut sharply Into\nUnited States Imports of linen\nand boosted pricei but dealers\nestimated today Britain ii sending to this country about 60\nper cent aa much as before the\nwar.\nOne firm reported that during\nthe past year lt received linen\ngoods approximately at the rate\nof 1936 and 1939. A wholesale\nbuyer, however, said his company was able to get only\nabout 40 per cent aa much linen\nas normally,\nMudslide Near\nPenticton Holds\nUp K-V. Trains\nVANCOUVER, Soot. 17 (CP). -\nCai*-adia.i Pacific Rai'wny Company\nofficials raid tonight that a mudslide near Klrton, B C, 25 miles\nNorthwest of Pentictor, E C,\nshortly after midnight las', mght\nhad held up bith East- and Westbound Kettle Valley trains.\nThey said the slide, caused by\ntorrential rains' wu cleared about\n5 p.m. PDT, today md that No. 12\nKettle Valley train, due in Nelion\nat 9 p.m. would probably arrive\nthere about nine hours behind\nschedule.\nWest-bound No. 11 train, due In\nVancouver at 10:30 a.m. PDT today\nwas held up for nearly 20 hours and\nwill not arrive here until early\ntomorrow.\nAt Nelson the Eastbound Kettle\nValley train from Vancouver, due\nhere Wednesday night it 8:30 Pacific Daylight Time, wai posted to\narrive at 5:10 ijn. Thursday by that\nTime, and to leave for the Eait 20\nminutei later ifter being serviced.\nSecret Nazi Landing\nFields Were Found in\nBritain Says Visitor\nTORONTO, Sepl 17 (CP).-The\nToronto S\u00abar today quoted \"in In-\nfluentlally-place* feaglialis-Heir \"arMo'\nrecently arrived here\" ai eaylng\nthat British authorltlei had discovered 20 lecret Nui landing fieldi\nin the British Isles lut September.\n\"Fifth columniit! hid rolled out\nthe fields ind then disguised them\nwith fences and brush that couljl\nbe easily removed,\" the Star quoted\nits informint.\nCounter-espionage sgents diicov-\nered the lecret fields were to be\nidentified from the air by a brilliantly-painted red bar at the edge\nof each field.\nShortage of Skilled\nLabor in B. C. Mines\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 17 (CP). -\nDr. W. B. Burnett, President of tht\nCariboo Gold Quarti Mining Company and past Preiident of the B. C\nChamber of Mines said today that\ndifficulty is being experienced in\nobtaining skilled labor for British\nColumbia gold mines. i\n\"The lituation is by no means ier!\noui yet,\" he said, \"but a shortage\nnf good, experienced men is beginning to develop and we have\nalready loit workers from the m*'\nchanical departments who are virtu,\nally irreplaceable.\"\nCLAIM NAZI SUBS\nSINK 6 FREIGHTERS\nBERLIN, Sept. 17 (AP)-The German high command claimed today\nthat German submarine! had sunk\nsix freighters, totalling 27,000 tons\nin the North Atlantic.\nInterpreting\nThe War News\nBy KIRKE L. SIMPSON\u2014Auociated Preu Staff Writer\nWeather and other portents might seem to make a\nBritish offensive in Libya a logical move, but the British High\nCommand may delay such an operation until it can see how\nthe struggle on tha Southern flank of the Nazi-Russian battle\nline is turning out\nA cryptic bulletin from Hitler\nheadquarters announces that the\nGerman offensive in Russia is \"developing into an operation of the\ngreatest extent\" This probably refer! principally to the Naii surge\nacTOii the lower Dnieper. Neither\nthe liege of Leningrad, the Nazi-\nclilmed victories South of Lake 11-\nmen, nor attempts to encircle Kiev\ntepresent strategic moves ot first\nmagnitude.\nOnly swift German conquest of\nthe Donets River basin. Eastward\nof the great bend of the Dnieper,\nand the lower reaches of the Don in\nthe vicinity of Rostov offen Hitler\nany hope of a decisive stroke. Once\nutrlde the pine line from the Raku\noil fields at Rostov, he would have\ncut a  Russian Jugular  vein.\nJust what ii happening Eastward from Dnieper bridgeheads\nneither aide hai revealed, it ii beyond question, however, that\nMoicow is fully alive to the critical nature of this prime Nazi offensive. It goes without saying,\nalso, that developments in Inn,\nitrengthening Anglo-Ruuian military contact! and lupply routei.\n\u2022 re keyed to that German attack,\nand that the Russian! hive masted picked armies to meet the onslaught.\nThit being the case, even though\nsound military reasons urge a British offensive in the Western desert\nit may await developments in the\nUkraine. Whatever the force of\nthe British and imperial troopi now\nmustered in Egypt under the new\nBritish commander there. Gen Sir\nClaude Auchinleck. much of It\nmight be needed In defence of the\nBaku oil fields, and the back door\nto India via Iran.\nLondon guesses that the Germani, in the wake of the bloody\ndefeat they lay they inflicted on\nRussian counter attacki South of\nLake Ilmen, are attempting a new\nthrust to Bojogoe Junction of the\nmain Leningrad-Moscow railroad.\nHowever, this does not leem likely.\nWeit of Bologoe, with a lingle\ntrack railroid puslng through\ngorges of the Valdai Kills ind along\nthe rim of Lake Vildai ai the only\nroute of advance, there ire height!,\nreaching up nearly 1000 feet. That\nrepreients more difficult country\nthan the Germani hive yet croised\nanywhere in Russia.\nMore likely, Oermin forces\nfrom the Lovit front ire belnq\nruihed South to beliter Bmolenik\nIn thi centra. Thit city . In lm\nmlnent dinger ef recipturt by the\nRuulani, iccordlng to Moicow ie\ncounti.\nSTRONG RUSSIAN\nFORCES QUICKLY\nSEIZE TEHERAN\nEven Surprised British\nOfficers Held Up\nfor Time\nPARACHUTE MEN\nTAKE OVER ROADS\nBy DANIEL DELUCE\nAuoclated Preu Staff Writer\nTEHERAN, Iran, Sept. 17 IKP)\n\u2014Hundreds ot Russian parachute\ntroops and strong mechanized\nforcei occupied the strategic outskirts of Teheran today and both\nRussian and British staff officers\nentered the capital to forestall any\nfriction with the Iranians.\nThe 400 Red parachute troopi\nwhich were dropped on the edge\nof the capital took control of the\nroads so quickly that they even\nbarred the way to approaching\nBritiih troops for i ihort time.\nOne bespectacled Soviet liaison\nofficer halted \u2022 BritUh brigadier\n12 mllei from Teherin, produced\na mip, and vaguely waved at the\nentire Teherin irei ai filled with\nthe Red Army.\nThe astonished British officer\nsent his 12 irmored cars through\nthe Russian lines with instructions\nto itop it i bridgeheid five miles\nfarther on.\nA Germin motorcade of diplomats, women md children in route\nto Turkey ifter thi abdication\nyeiterdiy of Reia Shah Pahlevi\nwai halted by the Ruulini it\nKlriJ, 25 mlin Northweit of\nhen,\nThe former Shah himielf, ousted\nbeciuse of suspicion of pro-Nizi\nsentiments, arrived at Isfahan, 210\nmiles South of the capital. He plans\nto go ibroad as s\u00b0ob as the trouble\nblowi over.\nThe Brltlth and Russian forces\noccupying Teheran found fault with\nhis dilatory tactics ln getting rid of\nGerman agents.\nRussian troopi under Maj-Gen.\nNovikov moved Into the Teherin\narea tome 20,000 itrong. Fifty-three\nSoviet tanks lumbered on to tbe\nairfield and Red troopi took over\nIranian Army and Air Force barracks, A brigide of Britiih troopi\nwai approaciiipg from tie Soutn-\nWhtle the troopa moved In, Mohammed 6hih Pahlevi, 21-year-old\nluccesior to the throne, swore before Pirliiment to uphold the constitution. ,\nOn British Initiative, thi Oovernment unt i note to the Japaneie Legation demanding iur-\nrender ef thi exiled Qrand Mufti\nof Jerunlem, the pre-war leader\nof Arab revolt! In Paleitine. Me\nwai reported to have taken refuge with thi Japaneii.\nThe Grind Mufti has been stirring up Moslem dissidents against\nBritain trom his successive refuges\nin French-mandated Syrii, Iraq\nand then Inn.\nTwo Iran irmy leaden. Gen.\nAhmad Nakhievan. former Wir\nMiniiter, ind Gen. Riizi Nikhjevin,\nformer general staff officer, were\nreported freed from prison ilong\nwith some other high political prisonen of the former Shah.\n* ;\u25a0\n\u2022     ODESSA PREPARED FOR LAST-DITCH FIGHT    \u25a0     .\nThis photo, radioed from Moscow, shows a street scene in beleaguered Odessa, great\ngrain port of the Ukraine on the Black Sea. Barricades are thrown up in the streets,\npaving blocks and sandbags being used for defences.\nWorld Free Forces Must Join\nto Save Freedom States King\nin Mighty Battle\nCuderian, Who Broke Maginot Line, Beaten\nby Red Tanks; Cerman Losses in Two\nDays Reported to Be 80,000\nMOSCOW, Sept. .18 (Thursday) (AP).\u2014Red Army\ntroops have smashed the Cerman pamer forces of Col.-Gen.\nHeinz Cuderian, the \"phantom general of the French campaign,\" in a mammoth battle near Bryansk, 230 miles from\nMoscow, the Russians reported today.   y\nThe maximum Cerman losses announced yesterday and\ntoday by the Russians totalled 80,000 including the 20,000\nNazi casualties in the battle with General Cuderian.\nThis was the latest big success contained in Soviet\ncommuniques detailing great operations on a curving central*\nfront extending from Yartsevo, 30 miles Northeast of Smolensk,\ndown past Yelnya to the Bryansk sector.\nThe big-fisted 53-year-old General Guderian who drove\nhis panzer units in a lightning enveloping thrust behind the\nFrench  Maginot  line  in  the?,-\nSOLDIER HELD IN\nCONNECTION WITH DEATH\nCHERTSEY, Surrey, England,\nSept. 17 (CP Cable)-Peter Alexander Macdonald, 29, Canadian Midler, ind Peter Cuaack, 30, merohin'.\nseaman, were remanded In cuitody\ntodiy when they ippeired In court\non a chirge of \"being concerned together' ln the death of Mary Emma\nSalmon. The woman'i body was\nfound in the bedroom of a house at\nWeybrldge. Police said she apparently had been strangled.\nMANITOBA LACKS\nFULL RECRUIT QUOTA\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 17 (CP).-Cipt.\nM. H. Garton, Recruiting Officer\not M. D. 10. said today that unless\nthere Is a msrked Improvement in\nenlistments during the next few\ndays that Manitoba's September requirements of 1243 recruits will not\nbe filled. Onlv 359 men have en-\nlilted thii month with 88) more\nneeded.\nDUTCH ROYAL PLACE\nNAMES BANNED\nTHE HAGUE, German-Occupied\nNetherlinds. Sept. 17 (API-Arthur\nSeyss-Inquart, German Commissioner for the Netherlandi, ordered today that henceforth the namei of\nno living memberi of the Houie of\nOrange-Nassau be used for establishments of any kind, private or\npublic.\nPrairie Flier Diet\nKUMMERSIDE, P. E. I., Sept. 17\n(CP).-Ottlclili nf No. 9 Service\nFlying Training School of the Royil\nCantd'tn Air force here announced\ntodiy Lac. Claude Ruuel Moore of\nWilkie, Silk, hid been killed Instantly in the crash of a mining\nplane on I night flight.\nSchool offlcen slid they hid no\nInformation on the cause of the\ncrash, which occurred lste lut night\n\u2022 half mill from the school while\nthe airman was on i solo flight. An\nInvestigation Is being held\nLOGGER KILLED\nALBERNI. B C, Sa-pt 17 <AP).-\nAxel Wretling, SO, bucker it \u2022 logging camo it Franklin River, wu\naccidentally killed yesterdiy He\nwis born in Sweden ind hit Vincouver iddress is given u Ml Hastings St. Eut.\nBusiness Level\nOver 1929 Period\nOTTAWA, Sept. 17 (CP). - Bull-\nnew operations in Canada ire tar\nmore extensive than at any other\ntime and the high leveli of the 1029\nprosperity period hive been greatly\nsurpassed the Dominion Bureau-of\nStatiitici laid tonight. ,\nin* f\u00ab*_w-*mWttstst- ecoaomlf\ncondltioni in July the Bureau pictured the riling force of the Canadian industrial effort ipurred by\ntne requirements of wir and in i\nliter, preliminary report on Auguit, iald: \"The majority of facton\nlndicitlng the trend of economic\ncondltioni ihowed gaini during\nAuguit over the preceding month,\nthough there wai \u2022 minor decline\nin the physical volume of buiiness\nAlong with the higher tempo of\ninduitry hive come increued pricei\nand the Bureau said \"the present\nlevel of wholesale pricei li higher\nthan at iny other time lince the\neirly monthi of 1930.\"\nIn the second week of Auguit.\n1941, Index of commodity pricei wai\n91.4, ihowlng a gain of mon thin\n10 per cent in the same week of\nmo.      \t\nPlan Air Coder Units\nThroughout Province\nVANCOUVER. Sept. 17 (CP). -\nFlying Officer E. G. Symondi. District Air Cadet Officer, slid today\nthat Air Cadet units will soon be\norganized In High Schools throughout the Interior and Northern British Columbia districts.\nFo. Symondi hu Just returned\nfrom an organization trip to Kimloops, and left tonight for Prince\nRupert, where another Air Cadet\nbranch will be orginlied Later, he\nsaid, he will orginlie branches in\nthe Interior cities.\nSubmarine Lott\nLONDON, Sept. 17 (CP).-Losi\nof the British submarine P32 was\nsnnouneed tonight by the Admiralty. The submarine wis I\nnew type and Its specifications\nhave not been disclosed. A lister\nihip, PSS, was reported lost earlier thli month.\nLate Flashes\nNEW YORK, Sapt 17 (CP) \u2014\nThe BBC uld tonight that tha\nwing of tha Royal Air Force on\nthe Northern uctor of the Rui-\niiin front \"hu already been In\ncontact with tha enemy.\" Thi\nbroadcait wai heard hare by CB8.\nBERLIN. Sept. 18 (Thursdiy)-\n(AP).\u2014\"Enemy plmei\" bombed\nSouthwestern Germiny lut night,,\nit wu announced today. It wu\nclaimed that only a Imill number\nof plane! took part in the attack\nand that damage wai ilight.\nGUAYAQUIL, Ecuidor, Sept. 17\n(AP). \u2014 Ecuadorem sources said\ntoday 12 women and sewn children\nwere killed when Peruvian planei\nmachine-gunned three boats loaded with persons being withdrawn\nfrom Bilao, Tendiles ind Pagu. The\nveuels irrived here todiy Miny\nof the refugeei were reported\nwounded.\nBUDAPEST, Hungiry, Sept. 17\n(AP).\u2014Thi newipaper Namtetl\nUJug uld today M well-known\nCommunist! had been ihot In\nBelgride, former Yygoilavli, for\nthi iiiying af \u2022 Qirmin Mldlir.\nZAGREB. Croitli, Sept. 17 (AP)\n\u2014Thi riilwiy be4ween Sin)evo\n\u2022nd Brod hu been blown up ind\ntwo bombi were thrown it \u2022 but.\nIt wai learned todiy. A Germin\n\u2022 Ir force corporal ina I private in\nthe bui ware injured.\nNecessary  to  Smash\nNazi Military\nMachine\nOTTAWA, Sept. 17 (CP)-rree\ntorcei of the world must ict \"increulngly u one,\" Prime Minister\nMickenzie King iald ln a ipeech\ntodiy,   \"If   huminity   li   to   be\n\u2022pared   a   prolonged  and   bitter\n..li first public addreu lince\nhis rttum from Britain, delivered\n..at * Canadian. CJ-ab mtl'i and\nbroidcut over \u2022 nitionil rework, Mr. King iald that \"Nothing\nleti thin one vut brotherhood of\nfreedom will suffice today to preserve  the   world'i  freedom.\"\nThe prime Miniiter quoted from\nPreildent Rooievelt'i speech announcing American action againit\nAxil raiders in the North Atlantic\nto llluitrite hii warning ot the\ndanger to the Americu if Europe li\ncompletely conquered.\n\"It must lurely be apparent that\nIf freedom is to be preserved anywhere in this world we have now\ncome to a time and place where\nforces of vaster scope and proportions than those of any single nation\nor empire, however powerful, must\nunite In opposing thoie forces which\ntoday seek world conquest and\nworld dominstion,\" the Prime Mlnliter uld.\n\"Union merely in purpose ind aim\nwill not be lufficient,\" he declared.\nNothing In recent monthi. had\nbeen more algniflcant than tbe\nrecognition of the deepening Interdependence of the Britiih\nCommonwulth ind thi United\ntuna*.\nThat deepening Interdependence\nhad not developed beciuse the nitioni of the Britiih Commonwealth\nwere weaker than hitherto\u2014 \"They\nare, I believe\u2014in fact I know-far\nitronger than ever before.\nThe development of interdependence grew from a realization that\n\"Neither tcting ilone could destroy\nI military machine such as Germany\nalready possesses ind is in i position further to strengthen.\"\nOf the Soviet forcei the Prime\nMiniiter laid The reslitince of\nRussiin arms has been magnificent,\"\nbut he wirned that tbe Russian\neffort was not without its \"subtle\"\ndinger! to the Britiih ciuse.\n\"In miny hurti hu been born\nthi deceptive hope that Ruuil\nmight win thi wir for ui,\" ha\nuld.  \"There  could  be   no   more\nperiloui   llliiilon!\n\"Ruisli Is fighting to save herself, it Polind. ii Holland, u Belgium, u France, as Yugoslavia and\nu Greece fought to uve them-\nlelvei.'\nHitler tttacked Russia \"in order\nthit he might gain in itrategic poiition. In resources ind in power,\"\nthe Prima MinUter declired.\n\"He sought ilso to remove the\nlut potential menace of land attack upon hia forcei of tyranny\nbefore the Nuis locked in mortal\nconflict with whit remained of the\nforcei of freedom, at the spear\nheid of which the peoples of\nBritain continue to itand.\n\"We In Cinida.\" he laid, \"can\nmake no more effective ippeil to\nfree men throughout the world thin\nthe ippeal of our own eximple, \u25a0\u25a0\na people itill removed from the\nheirt of the itruggle. yet putting\nforth our otmoit effort.\nCOMPULSORY WAGES\nPOLICY CONSIDERED\nOTTAWA. Sapt. 17 (CP). - Consideration Is being given to hiving\nmidi compuliory the Fedenl wir-\ntime wigti policy which Include!\nthe payment of a coit-of-living\nbonui where wimnted, It wii\nletrned here tonight.\nTha wagei policy ii covered In an\norder-ln-eouncil which preicribei\ntor boardi of conciliation In Indui-\ntnei covered by the Induitriil Dii\nputei Inveitlgitton Act tnd recom-\nmendi tham for ill other Industries.\nSeek Formula lo\nEnd East Dispute\nOTTAWA, Sept. 17 (CP)^-La-\nber Mlnliter McLarty uld tonight\nan official of hli department at\nIt Catharlnu, Ont, hu been instructed to gat Ip touch with rap.\nruentatlvei of Itrlking workeri\nIn th. M.KInnv* Induitrlei Ltd.\n\u2022plain thert tn ttw hope a formula\nmight ba worked out ts and tha\ndlipute.\nAdvlied thit union officials hid\nuld they had concrete propouls\nwhich would be presented if he visited St Catharines, the Minister\nsaid he had been in touch with R. S.\nStacey, international representative\nof the striking United Automobile\nWorkeri of Americi, who Is tt the\nstrike scene.\nThe Minister uld Mr. Stacey had\nidvised him there might be some\nformula to end the dispute which\ncould be worked out in direct conference, but not by telephone.\nThe Minister said he did not feel\nthat hli presence in St Ctthannes\ncould assist in working out the\nformula.\nECYPT PROTESTS\nCAIRO BOMBING\nCAIRO, Sept 17 (APV - Axis\nbombs fell in-the centre of Cairo\nTuesday not far from the famous\n4000-year-old Aihar Unlvenity. one\nof the principal Moilem monuments.\nAs the Egyptian Government pro-\nteited to Berlin and Rome, Egyptian\nnewipaper reports stressed the\ntheme that the bombing ot Cairo\nis in offenee against Islam.\nLONDON, Sept. 17 (CP Cable).-\nLondon morning newipiper today\nplaced prominently, in their colums\naccounts of the Axis. bombing of\nCairo and recalled Prime Minuter\nChurchill's warning tbtt Rome\nwould be bombed in retaliation.\nThe Mirror In a front page editorial uid \"We must bomb .Rome\nnow.\"\nRecognition Won by\nUnion of Woodworkers\nVANCOUVER. Sept. 17 (C). -\nNigel Morgan, International representative of the International Woodworkers of America, said today the\nunion had won recognition \"in principle\" in an award handed down at\nVictorit by in Arbitration Board\nwhich investigated a dispute between 275 employees tnd the management of Lake Logging Compiny\nit Cowichan Like, B. C.\nThe Board denied the I. W. A\nformal recognition as bargaining\nigency for the men but \u2022 recommended that a \"union camp\" be established in -which ill workeri\nwould bo required to be union\nmembers.\nU. S. Navy Convoying\nBritish-Bound Ships;\nSearching for Raider\nWASHINGTON. Sept it -\n(AP).\u2014Secretary Knox revelled today that the Americtn\nnavy wis convoying British-\nbound cargoes on the North Atltntic tnd, In iddition. hid been\nlurching for \u2022 Germin lurfice\nraider believed to be operating\non the Piclflc. i\nBut, he idded, eicorting ,\ngroupi ot merchant ihipi wai\nonly one of miny methodi thit\nwera in uie. Since the flnt\nGrett Wtr, he stld. mtny wayi\nof protecting shipping on the\nhigh seu had been perfected\nand the navy Wu employing\nthem ill.\nin\nSummer of 1940 \"lost two-\nthirds of his effectiveness\"\nwhen he collided with hardhitting Red tanks, the Soviet\ncommunique said.\nThe Rusiiin communique said\nthese were Guderian'i loues: 20.000\nmen dead, wounded and prisoners,\n500 tanks, 70 armored cars, 1525\ntrucks, 195 planes, 85 heavy machine\ngum. 81 trench mortars and several\nthousand -rlflei tnd large quau-\ntitiei of ammunition.\nThe German claim of having\ndestroyed three Soviet armiea ui\nthe Uke Ilmen dUtrict South of\nLeningrad brought t quick iniwer from Moicow. The Russian\ncommunique said the Red Army\nloit 30.000 klMed and woundea\nthere in \u2022 month of fighting but\nadded thit tha Germans leat from\nJ5.000 ta SOflW.   -       - jSi\nAt Ytrtievo on the Nbrtheru\nehd ol the central front the Germain were said to have loit 10,-\n000 killed md wounded, 100 field\nfuns ind 100 mine-throwers, to\n.uiiltni commanded by Marshal\nSemeon Tlmoahenko.\n(Guderiin Is nted' as \u2022 great\ntechnician tnd Berlin said recently\nthat he wu using \"successfully\" a\nnew tactic of mounting artillery\npieces on tanks on the central front\n(Cuderian attached to the general stall In the First Great War.\nwas the first man to step icrosa the\nAustrian border when the Anschluss\nwu ordered and wu toasted for his\nexploits in Poland, Holland and\nFrance.\n(There is still some mystery ts\nto just how Guderian got his heivy\nGerman tanks icross the Maas\nRiver in less than 12 hours in his\ndrive into the Low Countriei in\nMay, 1M0).\nObserver! here received the impression long ago that the fierce and\ncontinuing R e d counter-attacks\nilong the centrtl front were de-\nligned to relieve pressure on besieged I^eningrad in the North and\nOdessa in the South.\nThe early morning communique\nreported stubborn lighting all along\nthe Jagged tront and continued Red\naerial activity. On Monday alone\nSoviet tirmen were said to have\ndestroyed 78 German planes, losing\n25 themselves.\nAside from the Bryansk and Yartsevo victories the Soviets gave de-\ntaila of other succuses without reporting the specific localities.\nBERLIN,  8ept  17   (AP).-Thi\nQerman High Commind auerted\ntoday thtt thi Qerman  Invulon\nof Ruuil li \"developing Into in\nopentlon of the greiteit extent\"\nWhether this was in  the North,\nwhere German besiegers were  reported within field glass view ol\nLeningrad, or-the pouth where armored  units were reported fighting\ntheir way acrois Southern Russia\"\nSteppes toward the Crimea and tho\nDoneti River buin the communique\ndid not My.\nA German wtr reporter on t hill\noutside Leningrad said he was 18\nmiles from the heart of the North-\nem industrial centre and speculated\nwhether Russlani in apartment\nhousei picked o\u00abt by hii gluses\n\"have my inkling we are so cloie.\"\nT.ie hill from which the observation was made wts regarded is\nstrategically important, but the reports did not fix ita precise location\nBetween that elevation and Leningrad Itself is a factory district built\nor. a treeless plain from which every\nsquare yard could be swept by fire\nfrom Russian fortifications.\nTAYLOR TELLS POPE\nU.S. TO AID BRITAIN\nVATICAN CITY. Sept. 17 (AP).-\nMyron Ttylor, President Roosevelt's\nenvoy to the Vitlcin, has informed\nPope Plui of the Preiident'i determination to help Britain crush Hltlerlim, it wu undentood unofficially todiy. Mr. Tiylor'i ipeciil\nmission now is considered ended.\nDISPUTE HALT FUHING\nVANCOUVER. Sept. 17 (CPU -\nScores, of fiihing boats ind more\nthin 1000 flihermen were idle In\nporti ilong the Johnitone Strait\nfishing grounds today while negotiitioni continued In \u2022 dispute with\npackers over pricei for the 1941\nchum ulmon pick.\nFloods Follow\nTyphoon; M Die\nMANILA, Sept. 17  (AP).-A ty-\nfhoon, bringing torrential raini and\nloods, swept over Northern Luzon\nIsland leaving 24 personi dead in\nits wake today.\nRed Cross disaster relief workeri\nreported from Pampanga and Pan*\ngasman Provinces late tonight that\nflood waters were receding and\nmost of the breaks in the Pampanga River had been repaired.\nSome towns were Isolated for W\nhoun by floods which blocked\nhighways, washed away crops, ind\nbadly damaged public worka\nthroughout the area. It wu the\nfourth time within three months\ntbat floods awept over the rich\nPangasinan agricultural area.\nReports were circulated that Government agents hid found evidence\nthe Pampanga River dikes had been\nsabotaged.\nAmericon Legion\nFavors Repeal of\nNeutrality Act\nMILWAUKEE. Sept. 17 (AP; -\nThe American Legion national convention went on record today favoring repeal of the United Stttes Neutrality Act and removal of the present geographical limitation on uie\nof American troops.\nShakespeare Is\nin Newfoundland\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld., Sept 17 (OP\nCable). - Geoffrey Shakespeare,\nBritain's Dominion's Undenecre-\ntary, arrived in Newfoundland today and ii expected to reach thii\nCapital tomorrow for a two-day\nvisit.\nHe will go later to Canada where\nil is understood that, among other\n\u2022natters, he will study problems relating to British children residing\nin the Dominion during the war.\nPRODUCTION IS BRITAIN'S\nWEAKNESS, HORE-BELISHA\nLONDON, Sept. 17 (CP Cable).\u2014\nLeslie Hore-Belisha, former Cabinet\nMinister, told the Liberal Nttiontl\nAnnual Conference today that production Is Britain's \"great weakneu\nin the war.\" He advocated compulsory transfer of productive energiei\nto war purposes.\nANZAC HERO PILOT\nREPORTED MISSING\nLONDON. Sept. 17 (CP Cable).\u2014\nSgt.-Pilot Jamea Ward, 22, fint New\nZealander to win the Victoria Crou\nin this war, was reported mining\ntoday.\nJgJtftfl\nMin. Max,\nNELSON    38    5\u00bb\nVictoria         47    58\nNanaimo          45    61\nVancouver           49    61\nPrince George     35     54\nEstevan Point ,     44     61\nPrince  Rupert'    41     63\nLangara _    46     61\nDawson       25     45\nSeattlo         48 * 65'\nPortland     56    65\nSan Francisco  u..   53     75\nSpokane    51     63\nPenticton     36     58\nGrand Forks    45    V,'\nKaslo     42     -\nCranbrook    43     56\nCalgary  -   41     55\nEdmonton            29     56\nSwift Current       42     73\nRegina     4fl     7\u00bb\nPrince Albert             45     72\nWinnipeg 40     72-\nForecasts: Kootenays \u2014 Light\nwinds, cloudy and cool with wide-\nly   scattered   showers.\nLevel of the West Arm at Nelaon\nWednesday wai 7 68 feet above tha\nlow water mark, a rise of .03 foot\nfrom thtt of Tueiday.\n-\t\n . .\n\t\n\u2014tm\n ' l>  .!\u25a0\u00ab.\u25a0 IUJ<.iJLUJIIIJJIlJl\u00abl|l|U |\n' In ichooli throughout Canada, from\ndawn to dusk, keen-eyed young men frofh\nthla Dominion and other Empire countries\nlearn to become gunners in R.C.A.F.\nschool* of tht British Commonwealth Air\nTraining Pliyi. Nothing ls left to hazard In\nthe training of a gunner, for, In actual\ncombat, much depends on hit sharp eyu\nand quick trigger finger. These photoi\nwere taken at the Bombing and Gunnery\nSchool In Jarvis, Ontario. Tha ona at left\nshows actual training ln the air. The gunner's target U a drogue (aleeva target)\ntowed by mother machine. It it more thin\n20 faet long, but looki like 1 to tht gunner, The towing cablt li mort than 1000\nfeet long, but fM the purpoie of this ex\nplanatory photograph Tt wat ltt out only\n100 feet. At right, ready for the word \"go\",\ntha young gunner with hit Vicken gun\nstands by the tall ot a Fairey Battle.\n\u2014Photoi, Public Information.\nTraining Corps Letter lo Ralston\nUrging Reserve Unit, Use of Armory\nHere, Wins Support of Nelson Bodies\nA Nelion Civilian Training\nCorpi letter to Col. J. L. Rtliton,\nMlnliter of National Defence,\nurging tht formation of a rtitrvt\nmilitary unit In Ntlion Wedneidiy evening it a representative\nmtttlng at tht City Hill won the\ntndonatlon and tupport of deli-\ngitei of civic authorltlei, tervlce\norganlzatloni, tht Board of Trtde,\nand Junior Chtmbtr of Com-\nmirct. Tht mtttlng wu called by\ntht Training Corpi.\nThe  letter,  should  an  effort to\nobtain  use of the Nelson Armory\nlor drilling by the Corps throuth\n\u2022Col.  David   Philpot,   O.C.   of  24th\n' Field  Brigade,  and  later  through\nm the Officer Commanding of Military\n5 District No. 11. fail, will also include\nC a request for use of the Armory.\ni     Delegates   it   the   meeting   will\n\u00abg report to their vtrioui organizations.\na^putlinlng the purpose of the letter,\nand gaining final endorsation from\ntheir organlrationa before the letter\nill ilgned ind lent.\nt   l-fae endorsed letter follows:\nMan of 30, 40, 50\nPEP,  VIM.  VIGOR,  Subnormal?\n.Wtnt normtl pep. vim. vigor, vital-\na lty? Try Ostrex Tonic Tablets. Con-\n**talni tonics, stimulants, oyster element!\u2014aids to normal pep after 30.\ni   40 or 60. Get a special Introductory\nalu for only 35c. Try this aid to\nnormal pep ind vim todiy. For sale\nat all good drifg itorei.        (Advt.)\nCascade Hotel\nFully  Licensed\nMODERN  ROOMS,\nMODERATE   PRICES.\nW. J.  MARSH,  Manager.\nBANFF, ALTA.\nCol. the Hon. R. L. Rallton,\nMinister of Nationil Defence:\nSlr-The committee of tht Ntlion\nCivilian Tnining Corps with the\nsupport of the civic authorities, lervice clubs, Board of Trade and Junior Chamber of Commerce of this\nCity respectfully request the formation of a reserve unit In thit City.\nIf this ls not possible tt thia time,\nwe would request permission to use\nthe Nelion Armory for drill our-'\nposes on not exceeding two nights\na week.\nThis Training Corpi li .compoied\nof professional tnd business inen\nand others, who foT reasons of age\nand business are at present unable\nto join the Canadian Activt Service\nForces, but wish to take training so\nthat in the event of in emergency\nthey vfltt be ready to do their part.\nIncluded in our membenhlp ire\nt number of veterans of the First\nGreit Wir.\nA considerable number of qur\nmembers have already Joined the\nC A.S.F7, and others who have been\ncalled up for their military training\nhave stated that they found the instruction received in our Corps of\nconsiderable value on Joining the\nForces.\nAH expenses of the Corps. Including rifle range practice, ape paid by\nthe members.\nThe use of the Armory would tdd\ni military touch to the organization,\nand would be I distinct tid to\nrecruiting.\nWe ire ilr.\nYours respectfully.\nShould consent to use the Armory\nbe received by the Corps from other\nsourcet. the request for its use will,\nof course, be delated.\nMODERN INSTRUCTION\nF. C. Collins, Chief Instructor for\nthe Corps and Chairman of the\nmeeting, outlined the benef;ts derived from training provided by the\nCorps. Only modern milltarv instruction was given, and -this by\ncompetent    Instructon.    who    had\nHOTEL\nAUSTIN\nWhen  at\nthi Cout\nSt.y it\nthi\nAUSTIN\nThere'i i\nDifference\nVANCOUVER\n200 Modern Rooms\nWith ind Without Privttt\nBtth.\nHouitkttplng   Suitei\n1 to 4 roomi.\nAt Mott Populir Pricei.\nIn the hurt of tht thtttrt\ndlitrict\n(Fully Llcenied)\n1221 Granville St.\nI   Guide for Travellers,\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel Nelson, B. C.\n.     OEORGE BENWELL Proprlttor.    ,\nSAMPLE ROOMS EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\n.'_    WJta \u2014  H.  I.  tarling. W. S\ni * Dtle, J. H. Bennett. C. H. Hatkdn\n\u00ab& Cllffe. J.  R.\n. mth. and Mrs, D\nThill,  Vancouver;\nF. Fraser and ion,\nWeit Vtncouvtr; M. F. Burdick,\nTrail; J. H, Lewis, Medicine Hit; L\nRoberU, Calgiry; J. Whillans Toronto; Mn. A. Streit, Mn. O. A.\nWest. Kulo\nNEW ORAND HOTEL\nPHONI       MR AND MRS PITER KAPAK. Propi.       PHONI\n\u2022\u00bb-) m      in our ntw wing you may enjoy tbe tuiut\n\u2022w-T     rooms   In   (bt   Interlor-Bith   or   Showtr\nSPECIAL RATES BY THI WIEK OR MONTH\n234\ntr\nVANCOUVER, B.C., HOTELS\n\"\"\u2022V6UR VANCaUVH H-5MP\u2014\nDufferin Hotel\nM Seymour SL\nNewly  renovated   through\nHit   Phonei   tnd   elevitor\nA. PATTERSON   lata ot\nColemin,  Alu., Proprlttor\nmadt a thorough itudy of thtir tub-.\n\u25a0oet to bring themselves up-to-date.\nInstruction included squid and platoon drill, first aid, map raiding,\nfield sketching, and later will Include rifle range practice and tig-\nnailing.\nBenefits of such training, ht ttld,\nwere evident by the fact that one\nmember, a day after entering military training camp, was raised to t\ncorporiL\nMusketry di-ill of the Corpa Is\nunder J. C. Chamben, i former\nmusketry Instructor, while first ild\nis Instructed by C. O. Anderson of\nthe St. John Ambulance Association^ both qualified men. The. ser-\nvlcea of I formtr brigade signaller\nto instruct signalling wnen That ls\nundertaken have also been offered.\nMr. Collins, who is Chief Instructor,\nwas a former Company Sergeant-\nMajor in both the Princus Patricia\nLight Infantry and the Fint South\nAlberta Regiment.\nAa a method of encouraging enlistment in the Corps, it was luggeited that the men on every drill\nnight stage t ptride, led by t bind,\nthrough the mlin streets to their\ndrill hall. The Corps leaders, lt wu\nsaid, wert eager to recruit more\nmembers.\nNakusp Board Has\nSpecial Service\nNAKUSP, B. C.-In conjunction\nwith the nationwide reconsecration\nprogram the Nakusp Board of Trade\nheld a special program in the Legion Hall Mondiy evening. A. Stanley, President of the Board of Tnde,\nwu Chairman. Rev. F. W. Daglish\nand Rev. 0. Grondahl officiated and\nthe guett speaker wu Hon. C. S.\nLeary, Minister of Public Works.\nThe topic of Mr. Learys address\nwu \"Canadas Wir Effort.\" He uid\nthat in the past 15 monthi Canidi\nhu ieen the greatest and most rapid industrial development of her\nhistory and he outlined phues of\nthis development.\nThe proclamation Issued by the\nGovernment was read by Mr. SUnley ind Rev. Dagliih led the assembly ln pledging reconsecrition.\nNAKUSP BRIDE-ELECT\nHONORED AT SHOWER\nNAKUSP, B. C.-MUl Betty Russell, whose marriage to Leonard\nSims Ukes pltct ntxt month, wu\nguest of honor it i showtr given by\nMiss Gloria Hearty, Saturday afternoon. Miss Hearty was assisted at\nthe tea hour by Miu Betty Davison.\nThe guetti preient were Miss Russell, Miss W. Robson, Miues Evelyn\nmd Betty Dtvlion, Miss Veri Div-\niet, Miu Glidyi Olson, Mlu Eileen\nEvans, Misses Beatrice and Vera\nJohnion, MUs Shirlty Johnson, and\nMiu Helen Guenird.\nNO SALES OF SYRUP\nFOR SHIPMENT TO U. K.\nOTTAWA, Sept. 17 (CP).-Lon-\ndon reporU that food bootleggers\nhid obtained stocks of maple syrup\nintended for Canadiin troops\nbrought from Agriculture Department officials who administer the\nMaple Syrup Act the information\nthat their records show no ules of\nCsnsdlan maple syrup for shipment\nto the United Kingdom for Canadian soldiers.\nMercos take Lead\nin Senior Softball\nFinals at Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Sept. 17\u2014Trail Mercos went Into the letd In the first\nlame of the Trail mens senior soft-\nball finals, Wednesday night, taking\nthe Castlegar Millionaires into\ncamp, 5-3.\nThe Mercos brought In their first\nrun in the opening inning, and\ngained their final four runs in the\nlecond inning, when they collected\nwilks and two nits off Cy Daviei.\nCliff Wanless then took over the\nmound duties for the visitors, and\nheld the Mercos down for the remainder of the stretch.\nCastlegars three counters came in\nthe seventh Inning, but the eighth\nand ninth Innings, with the teams\nstanding 5-3, added to excitement\nof the fans, although both innings\nproved scoreless.\nHeavy hitters were Zibin and\nWorobey for Castlegar and Demore\nfore the Mercoi. Zib.n and Dcmm*(*\nwent good four trips, and Worobey\nconnected for a two-bagger.\nPitching records read: Davlet. 2\nstrikeouts and 3 walks; Cliff Wanless 5 strikeouts ind 3 walks: ind\nHarry Broverman, Merccs, 9 strikeouts and 1 walk.\nVETERANS GUARD\nIS HONORED WITH\nParking Restriction\non Groutagt Avenue\nConsidered at Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Sept. 17-The placing\not parking reatrlctiom on GrouUge\nAvenue wu Uktn undtr consideration by the Trail Police Commii-\nslon Wednesday afternoon, ind\nafter considerable discussion WU\nheld In abeyance for further Investigation.\nF. H. Steele, Acting Police Chief,\nreported that the main congestion\nwu behind the Laiereff Block,\nwhere on t recent night 28 cart hid\nbeen parked, making It impossible\nfor the fire truck to get through\nihe lane in case of sn emergency.\nVerigin Car Off\nRoad al Genelle\nTRAIL, B. C Sept. 17\u2014Cltlm\ning the accident to be ciuied by dt\nfectlve steering mechiniim, which\nlocked u he wu going iround t left\nturn on tht Trill-Cutlegar Highway, nttr Genelle, causing hli car\nto leave the road, John Verigln of\nVallican ucaped serloui Injury In\nan automobile accident tbout 8\no'click Wedneidiy morning.\nHis ton tnd diughter, who wtrt\npassengers, were unhurt.\nCir   dimtge   wis   estimited   It\n$350.\nMiny new stylet and colors now showing will enable you now to complete\nyour Fall wardrobe.\nIn black crushed kit. Patent trim, dreu cuban\nheel. A dressy yet most\ncomtortable pattern tor\nFall wear. Sizes 4 to 10.\nAAAA to C.\nMAIL ORDERS\nLadies' Wear\nCOATS .;'.. 4\n-nwnds, boucles, Harris tweeds. A large assortment.\n$17.50   to   $49.50\nHATS DRESSES\nAll the smart Fill styles.       Feather flannels In plaids\n*\u00a5) Qh     \\A (_. ond stripes and plain silks\ntfLtU-J to -Jrt.Jd in s|Zes 1 2to 2(X 38 to 44\nFLANNELETTE\nPYJAMAS\n' Many flowered patterns\nto choose from,  Small,\nmedium and large.\n\u2022pl.jD to tpZ.Ju\nGOWNS\nFloral designs and plain\nwhite, long sleeves. Made\nin Yama cloth, ffi QC\nPriced at \u00abpl.*W\nBLOUSES\nNew Fall styles. White\nand colored. Sizes 14 to\n20 and 38 to 44.\n4>Z.ZJ and -.LaS-J\nPYJAMAS\nSnuggle down, rose, blue,\npink, Small, medium and\nlarge,\nPriced at....\nChildren'! Coati\nNew ooats In flared and\nboxed styles. The season's newest materials in\nfur trims and tailored\nStylet, bizes i to I4x.\nPriced from\n$6.95 . $15.00\nBED JACKETS\nSmall, medium and large.\nPastel shades, tfl QO\nPriced at \u2022*} 1**10\n.'*\u25a0\nI\ni'l\nfarewell\" Mmfc .*\u2022\" s'h.\u00b0\u00b0l \u2022\"\u2022\nDriven ond Jomtori\nCet Wage Increase\nMen of No. 4 Platoon. 13C Company, Veterans Guard ot Canada,\nwere guesti of honor Wednesday\nnight at a farewell party at the\nArmory sponsored by the Women's\nAuxiliary to the Active Service\nTorcei.\nDancing featured the entertainment.\nIn charge for the Auxiliary were\nMrs. F. Walton, Mrs. E. M. Glllott\nMrs. Mair, Mrs. Joseph Holland and\nMrs. H. H. Currie. President.\nThe Guards' committee consisted\nof Cpl. F. Joynes and Cpl. F. W\nGillangham.\nMiss Winnie Norgrove, J, J.' McEwen and Earl Halliwell played tor\nthe dtnce.\nSaskatchewan Man\nEnlists at Trail\nTRAIL, B .C, Sept. 17\u2014S. Czer-\nnick, of Melavil. Saik.. enlisted at\nthe Trail Recruiting Office, and\nleft for Victoril Wednesdiy morning.\nLA GUARDIA VICTOR\nNBW YORK, SepL 17 (AP).\nMayor F. H. LaGuardia amerged\nIrom an apathetic city primary at\ntht Republican mayoral nominee\ntoday it virtually complttt returni\nfrom yesterday'i balloting gave him\n61,776 votei to 48,639 for John R\nDtviei, former President of the\nNational Republic Club.\nBowel Complaints\nof Children\nDuring the hot summer aad tarly\nfall taonthi mott childrta, and\nespecially thott teething, art subject\nto dlarrhtte, dysentery, colic, cholera\ninfantum and othtr bowd complaints.\nEvery mothtr thould keep a bottlt\nof Dr, Fowler's Ei tract of Wild\nStrawberry ia tht home aa a pro\ntection againit tudden atticka of\nthete troublH.\nDon't experiment with lew tad\nuntried remedlot. Consider your\nchild't health. Ott \"Dr. Fowltr't\"\nIt haa been meetttfnlly mad by\nthontaodi of Canidlan mothen dap\ning the pttt M yttrt it hu bets oa\nthe market\nDon't accept a lubttitute.\nGet tha genuine \"Dr. Fowler'a\".\nTW T. Mllssuri Co., IM. ToroWss, Oat.\n a\t\nSOUTH SLOCAN CHURCH\nAUX. PUNS SHOWER\nSOUTH  SLOCAN,   B.C.   -   The\nWomens Auxiliary of St. Matthew's\nChurch   returned   Its   meetings   in\nthe Parish  Hall  Wednesday afternoon  Mri. A. Mitchell presiding. A nrll\u201en   wlumDl,   3cn00\ndisplay of aprons made during the  T     ,     , Associltion convention i\nSummer   was   on   hand.    It    was I -- \"\nplanned to hare a tea and material\nshower in Octobtr and lo join with   \u201e,_\u201e,, ura,n, , x.\nthe men's club In arranging a social   by   ,\u201e    D,   '(mint  In   promoting\nevening In the coming week          | b,\u201e     \u201e,.\u201e\u201e\u00a3 g \u201eudtnti from\nMrt. Turner Lee  read an inter-   ,\u201e.   .,\u201e\u201e._.   ,._mT .\nCRESTON, B.C.-Chairman Don\nBridley ind Trustees J. B. Holder,\nC. W. Perry, H. A. Powell ind J. E.\nVinAckeren were out for the tpt-\nclal meeting of Creston Valley\nUnited School District it which\nthe salary ichedule for janitors, bus\ndrivers and office help wai up for\n(mil decision ifter being left over\nfrom a ipecial meeting late in\nAuguit.\nAter much discusilon It wu\nigreed lo advance the pty of ill thli\nclast ot employee effective for tht\nnext 12 months. The salaries to be\npaid ire as follows:\nDriver-Mechtnic Godfrey Vigne,\n1100. G. Buih ind E. Mirtln, Crtt-\nton janitors, WS. Bui drivers H.\nMiller tnd X. Dupyron, $3.75 ptr\nround trip. N. Blccum, bus drlvtr,\nti 25 per round trip. Jinitors of one-\nroom schools, H per month. Jinitors. two-room schools, $15 Dtr\nmonth. R. R. Roebuck, supervising\njanitor, $120. Helen Humble, stenographer, $55 per month.\nA letter was read (rom T. Gtutier.\nwho tenches science, httlth and\ngeography in the senior high school,\nasking for a raise In ulary, but\nthis wis declined.\nThe meeting unsnimously chose\nTrustee H. A. PoweU to repretent\nthe District it the 1MI convtntion\nof the Britiih Columbil School\nt\nNiniimo next week. Mr. PowtU\nwill present i resolution from this\nDistrict urging i 50-50 contribution\netting\nMrs.   1\nRussel.\npsper.  Tet   wis terved\ntitchell    md    Mn.    F.\nlest  afflutnt  fimill.i.\nAdded Space Is\nGranted to Trail\nBus Temporarily\nTRAIL, B.C., Sept 17-Addltional\nparking tptoe, up to 16 feeL will\nbe illowed temporarily to the City\nBui Company, tor an extra but\nscheduled for the Milligan HIU run.\nThli wu the decliion of the Police\nCommission Wednesdiy iftemoon,\nafter r. H. Steele, Acting Police\nChief, asked coniideration ln respect\nto a request for thla iptct madt\nby tht But Company.\nThe coming winter teaion, coupled with gu restrictions, were ficton ln an tncrtut of business\nwhich wts expected to grow tvtn\ngrtater u the Winter progressed,\nChief Steele pointed out.\nMiyor Herbert Clirk itated thit\nthe bui ihould bt considered ln tbe\nlight of a facility for the public and\nthat the arrangement could be\nagreed to for a Tew weeka it least\nto ttt it it worked out without interfering with nearby buiineu\nhouiu.\nTht but itand ls it the corner of\nBty Avenue ind Spokant Strtet\nMontreal Beaten\nNEWARX, N. f* Sept. 1\u00bb <AP).-\nNtwtrk Betn drew tint blood ln\ntht final round of tbe lnternttionil\nLeigue Governor'! Cup playoffi tonight by defeating Montreil Royali\nln the ninth Inning, 6-5, before \u2022\ncrowd of 8191.\nMontreil        9   6   2\nNewirk   6   9   3\nMicon, Mungo (7) tnd H. Howell;\nChrlitoher, Gettle (8) ind Padden\nKingsgate Study\nClub Hears Talk on\nThe Women's Creed'\nKINCSOATE, B. C. - The Ladlei*\nStudy Club had their first meeting\nof 1*41-42 session ln the Hall lait\nFridty night Thtrt wu i iplendld\nturn out ill the rtgulir memben\nwith tht exception of Mn. Alice\nBalf, who ls still it Chief Moun\ntain,   were\nfuests,  Mrs.\nurgtr,\nprastnt.   Thert   wtrt\nTrumbull, Mrs. Swel\nind   ntw   mtmben,\nBarry   MicDonild,\nMn. Boiwell\nMn. Colllna\nThtrt  wu\nMrs.\nMn.\nMrs.   Spalding\nAnderson  and\nKINGSGATE\negular program\nu mott of tht tvening wu taken\nup with butinett. Mn. Meilke givt\ni mott interesting ttlk on the origin of Tht Womtn'i Creed' by\nMiry Stuirt which hu been tdopted by meat of tht women's clubs In\nthe country.\nMn. Trumbell give i brilliant ex-\npoiition ot pltnoforte pliylng for\ntht entertainment of the memberi\nduring the tvening. With m Influx\nof new memberi ind tht contlnutd\ntctivt lupport of tht old ones the\nclub is looking forward to t most\nsuccessful yttr.\nTrail Pollct Commission\nte Buy Door for Garage\nTRAIL, B.C., StpL 17-Purchise\nof t verticil tilde door for the City\nPolice garage, tor $60, wu luthor-\nIttd by the Trtll Police Commission\nWednesday.\nKINGSGATE, B. C.-Mr. Basker-\nville had as a guest at the weekend his brother-ln-lsw, Gordon\nLawson of Winnipeg. Mr. Lawson   \u2014 _\nwis also  viiiting in  Creaton,  and' hactOFV   (JDeratinQ   Ot\nwti tccomptnied on his return by        -*       '        ~   . . \u25a0'\nDoris Btskervllle who will  attend I      LdDOCltV'   Lumber\nthe   University   of   Msnltobt   this! T^u    ''\nWinter.\nBarry MacDonald returned to\nduty ln the Canadian Customs\nTuesdiy and Joe Brogan started on\nhis vtcition.\nMrs. M. A. Geispttcher ind son\nPaddy Mitt left this week for Ills-\nmark, N. D, to Join Mr Gelspatch-\ner who wis transferred (or duty\nthere some time ago.\nMr. tnd Mrt. Charltl Trumbull\nmoved thit wetk to Setttlt, Wish.\nMr. Trumbull his bttn tcting as\nteasonil Customi officer on the\nU. S. ilde for the Summer. Another\nSummer mtn. Gtrry Fenlin left\nThursdiy. He is to ittend colKge ln\nCillfornli.\nJem Chipmin left Tuetdty for\nSpokant where she will study until\nthe opening of the session at Motcow. Ptul Thom ilio left for Moscow thli week.\nMn. E. E. Chipmtn't parents. Mr.\ntnd Mrs. H. W. Welling from Priest\nRiver ire there on I vltlt. Little\nChappie Crfcpman who hid iuch \u25a0\nmarvellous escape from serloui Injury In i motor iccident recently\nit making a wonderful recovery.\nPowell Match Block Factory Ships\nThree Cars of Blocks to South Africa\nDemand Keen\nShipment of 100 cam\u2014thrtt\nctrloidi\u2014 ot mttch blocki du-\ntlntd for Johannesburg. South\nAfrica, hu bttn complttad by\ntht W. W. Powtll Co, Ltd. of\nNtlion. Tht blocki hava bean\npicked Into tpiclilly made wood\ntn oaitl Instead of Mint ihipped\nIn bulk it with Canadian ihip\nmlntt.\nR. I. Horton, Mintgir of tht\nCompiny, itated Wedneiday thtt\nthtu blocki go In band to htw\nOrleans, La., whtra thay ara\nloadtd on t boit for Durban,\nSouth Africa, Ulan by rail ta thtlr\ndefinition. On account of tha war\nIt wu not poulblt to obtain ihlpping tpici from Pacific polnti,\nnor wu It poulblt te gtt ipact\nat Ittttrn Cinidlin tr Ntw York\nporta,\nTht thlpmant It tht flnt to go to\n  \"   ~ \" of IMS.\nCompiny. iltck for tht put few\nng ts\ncapacity for the first time this Sum\nmonthi .hive Uken t Hidden ip>\nfactory La running t\nfor the first time this\nmrt\nfull\nSouth Africi llnet tht Fall\nA   number   ot   similar   ihlpmenti\nIBM.\nMitch\n.....m,.,**.,: \u25a0:..\u2014. mu*^m\u00b1,tLma^i.'..^t.. . .--\u25a0 ...st \u25a0\nwtrt mide previoui to that Ul\n\"' ' '   block  thlpmeal  by  tha\nmer, Mr. Horton ttld. Blocki ire\nbeing ihipped to Pembroke, Ont.,\nind Berthiarville, Hull tnd St.\nJohna, P. Q.\nWHOLESALE   DEMAND  QOOD\nWhile retail lumber tilts ara\nlomewhat down from Iut year.\nwholeule demand it huvy ana\nlumber li being ihipped Jutt tl fut\nu It it dry. On tccount of tht vtry\nwtt weather, togtthtr with tht txtra demand creited by Canaditn\nind Amtrietn govtrnment requirements, than ia a largt ihortage of\ndry lumber for ill markets. Tht\nCompany hat tnough lumbar In\npile to takt ctre of 1842 block ind\nmitch plank builneti, but tht sawmill operators are two monthi behind on deliveries of grttn lumber\non account of bad logging condltioni tnd wuhed out roads.\nMr. Horton expecti to make a\ntrip ts Eutern American and Ctntditn mirketi thli Fill to get flnt\nhand market Information, and to\nilgn up contracti for IM] match\nblock requirements of mttch companiei.\nTrail Coal Dealers\nUrged Deliver Large\nOrders After Hours\nTRAIL, B.C, StpL 17 - Ftced\nwith the perennial problem of coal\ndeliveries ln tht builneta lectloni\nof the city, proving t hindranct to\npedeitrlan and vehicular traffic, tht\nTrail Pollct Commiulon Wedneidiy\ndtcldtd to send circulars to all coal\ndealers requesting them to postpone\ndeliveries ot large quanutlti, or\ncarload lota, until after buslneu\nhoun.\nRovers Appeal for\nFruit, Vegetables\nfor Nelson Needy\nRover Scouta of Nelson, hoping\nto txttnd a helping hand to tha\nneedy familiei of the city, ntxt\nWedneiday will make tn tppeal to\ncitizens for donations of vegetables\nand fruiti which will be distributed\nto lut fortuntte familiei.\nThe tppeal li urgent, for tht\nRoven already have the namet of\nstvenV ft millet, who ara in want\nand would welcome gifta of vegetables tnd fruits. They expect to\nobtain the names of mora.\nThe Scouta will not mtkt a house-\nto-house canvau, but will irringi\nto collect any donatloni. Rev. W. J.\nSilverwood it in chargt of tbe drivt.\nFORMER BALLET\nDANCER AWARDEDi\nBRAVERY MEDAL\nLONDON (CP). - Twentyyur-\nold Joan Winifred Hobion, who\ngive up her ballet-dancing to loin\nthe Women'i Auxiliary Flrt Service hu been iwarded the Britiah\nEmpire Medil for bravery during\none of London'i heaviest tir raids.\nJoin, youngeit mtmbtr of tht\nA.F.S. unit which tht ttrvti, wis\noff duty tnd ilone ln the witch\nroom of her stition when t call\nfor fire-pump, ctmt  In\nShe grabbed a tin hat tnd respirator and ran to the streK Despite the blackneti of the night, sht\nwu tblt to commandeer two iuto-\nmobiles, one of them cirrylng a\nnavil officer it whom Joan threw\norden right tnd left\nTht girl loided both can with\nhoit tnd directed them to the fire.\nSht dragged the holt io the roof\nof a. tall building rocked by explosions ind for four houn fought\nthe (lames raging next door.\nBRITONS PLAN TO\nUSE GULLS' EGGS\nLONDON  (CP). - Britona may,\nbe eating  gulls' eggs  in  piece of\nhens' eggs in IMS. Plan, are under\nwty to collect thouiandi of them I\nnext    yetr    to    replace    steadily |\ndwindling supplies of ordiniry eggs.\nFrom mid-April to mid-June tnli\nyear\u2014the laying season\u2014H.000 eggi -\nwere collected it Plia Dinam, Lord\nDavies' Montgomeryshire estate.\nThey were marketed locally or given\naway.\nIn London they were scarce. In\npre-wir dtyt they used to be imported \\nd told for Itid (three\ncents) eioh. Thii Summer pricei\nhivt ranged from 55 centi eich\neirly In the season to 19 centa liter.\nWest End restiurtmt* terve gulls'\neggi is i delicacy In season. They\nare served hird-boiled and gourmets enjoy their fltvor.\nINVERMERE SCOUTS\nCOLLECT ALUMINUM\nINVERMERE, B. C.-The Ukt\nWlndtrmere Boy Scout Troop rtturned It'i meetings Thursdiy tvtnlng in chtrge of Scout Muter E.\nR. M. Yerburgh ind assistant Scout\nMuttr O. Rotiington. Thtlr flnt\nservice thit session hu betn to u-\nilit with tht Aluminum Drivt. Tht\nScouti hive ilready mtdt t houst\nto houtt canvat tor aluminum\nwhich thty will flatten for shipping.\nFour new Scouts hive Joined tht\nTroon thli Fill which will mtin\nforming a ntw patrol. Tht ntw\nScouta art Ken Jackion, Dennii\nWllllimton, Dennii Kendrlck and\nPeter Bartman.\nTrail Patriotic    ]\nAilots$2000to\nI.O.D.E. Spitfire\nTRAH* R C, Sept lT-Tratt and\nDUtrlct Pitrlotlc and Wilfire Socltty Tueidiy night voted gJOOO to\ntht Arthur Chtpnun and Jamet li.\nSchofield Chapteri, I.O.D.E, it the\nTrail chapter1! quota toward tht\nProvinciil Spitfire Fund.\nA ium of tm wu guaranteed\nto tht Trail Rtd Cron Society to\nprovide tccommodatlon In lieu of\ntht Knox United Church btsement,\nwhich haa betn uied u tht Red\nCrott workroo\ntt wai-di\ntb forward copies\not tht monthly flnmclil report to\nall local agenclea and local branches\nOl tbt agenclti to which tht Society\ncontributei. '   \\ J-\nA committet comlitlng of Dr. C.\nH. Wright A. E. Alliion and J. H.\nShieldi wu ippolnted tot co-aider\ntht queition of making donations\nto local bandi.\nR. M. Hoyland, Secretary, reporttd varioua imendmenti to the War\nChiritlei Act, and wu Initructed\nto in mge for tht annual general\nmeeting next January.\nChinese Wishes\nTrail to Return\nHis Possessions\nTRAIL, B. C. Stpt  17-f. H.\nSteele, Acting Chief of Police, wu\nInitructed to consult tht City Solicitor with rctgect to a letter aent to\ntht   Pollct  Commission,  by  Fong\n\" ' \" that i\n _jD itjiad at tht L\nOf hli  irrest In Trail, flva yetrs\nSlng.'oTftail who Iteted that ptr-\nsonal belongings seized at tht ume\nNIGHT BASEBALL\nPACIFIC COAIT\n.Settle    -.     1    1   t\nLot Angeles     0   7   0\nTurpln   and  Fallon.  Collins   (8);\nDobernlc tnd  Campbell.\nHollywood       5   6   2\nSan Diego             17   1\nToit   tnd   Dapper:   Rich,   Oliver\n(I) tnd Salkeld. Billinger (S).\nLITTLE SNORING. Englind (CP)\n\u2014The whole population turned out\n*h.-n i mobllt theatre viilted thli\nNorfolk villtge lo boott t war weiponi week. Then trt no\nin town.\nthet\ngo, had never been returned to\nnlm.\nSing wu lentenced to ieven yean\ntor mintlaughter, In 1936. ln connection with the death of a Chineie\nowner of tht Vancouver Cafe in\nTraU.\nChief Steele itated that he remembered the belonging! hiving\nbten in tht city Jill about three\nytan ago, and luggeited that thtv\nmight hivt become mixed up witn\ntomt other clothing tnd materials\nicqulred by tha Trail Community\nChett\t\nRUTH SAUNMRS HCADS\nSCHOOL COUNCIL\nINVERMERE, B, C. - Tht tltc-\ntlon of mtmbtrt ot tbt Student'i\nCouncil for tht Athalmer-Inver-\nmere ichool took place thla week.\nTht following officeri were selected PretldenL Ruth Saunders; Vice-\nPretidenL Gilbert Cartwright, Secretary-Treasurer, Jetn Kim. In iddition two repretentatlvet were\nchou trom etch grade ibove Grtdt\nVL\nAmong othtr dutlei the Council\nthli yeir will ittend to the ule of\nWtr Savings Stamps, assist the junior Red Cron tnd organize t\nmovement for the improvement of\nthe ichool groundt.\nINVERMIRI \"TWEENIES\"\nENftOLLED AS BROWNIES\nINVERMERE, B. C. - The School\nAnnex, Invermere wu the icene\not i mott impressive little ceremony Wedne*iiay afternoon wben\nnine little girlt formirly \"Tweenies'\nwere enrolled into Uit Second Lake\nWindtrmert Brownie Pick by their\nBrown Owl, Mn. E. R. M. Yerburgh\nind Tawny Owl, Min Joyce Johniton. The newly enrolled Brownlei\nare, Joanne watt, Fay Mitchell,\nMarian Robion, May Quay, EUeen\nTyler, Mona Mitchell, Christine\nWeir. Betty Um and Maflgaret.\nBroadfoot.\nSLOWDOWN BREAKS UP\nOTTAWA Sept 17 (CP) .-Labor\nMlnliter McLarty told newspapermen at a Preu conference todty\nthe slowdown whloh hu bttn conducted by minen ln Cape Breton\n\"seems to hivt pretty weU dliln-\ntegrated.\"\nConsider Your Case!\nfc\nIf you've tried everything ilte to no avail\n.why not try Chineie\nHtrbtf Thty havt Men\nfamoui for centuries for\nhelping to ipeed tnd\ndirect Nature'! methodi\nof correction.\nWING W0\nOHINIM MIDIOtNl CO.\nOfflct Houn: 10 to t\nNIW\/, Will Strttt, Neir Mtln\nSPOKANE. WASH.\n\u25a0Htturfss-ua\nj,   .\n *,\nMajority Must Vote\nfor Strike Under New\nLabor Regulations\nIf Back Aches\nHelp Kidneys\nDo tou feel older than rou art or suffer\ntrom Getting TJp Mights, Backache, Nervousness, Leg Pklns, Rheumatic Pains, Burning,\nscanty or frequent patsagts? If so, remem*\nOTTAWA, Sept. 17 (CP). -\nStrlkei in wir Induitry are made\nIllegal unlaw a majority of worker! affected vote In favor of itrlking at a poll taken under luper*\nvision of the Labor Department,\nLabor Miniiter McLarty announced at a Preu conference today, i\nThe Minister disclosed details of\nnty or iiequent passages? 11 so, remem-   an   order-in-council   to   thli   effect\nber that wur Kldneyi are vital to your   whicv.  WflS passed  at a  meetine Of\nhealth and that these symptoms may be due   EfillL  \"...?-\"   ......L\u2122.,\"***\nto Kidney and Bladder troubles\u2014In auch\ncaaei CYSTEX uiually gives prompt and\nloyoui relief by helping the Kidneys clean\nout poisonous excess acids and wastes. You\nhave everything to gain and nothing to lose\nin trying cyatei.Aprlnted agreement wrapped\naround each package assures a refund of\nJour money on return of empty package unes* full; -satisfied. Don't delay. Oet Cystex\nOlss-text from druggist today. Only Hts,\nHoney back agreement protects  you\nIN WAR TIME\nDOUBIFMINT\nhelps us al]\nstand fhe\npace i\nfort..\nly \"spark\n-t ikI dt\nIly uie of\nWrlgley'i Doublemint helps\nkeep you fit on your job by\nrelieving fatigue and nervoui\ntenilon. The pleasant chewing and delicloui flavor cooli\nyour mouth and throat,\nfreshen! your taite, iweetem\nyour breath\u2014and aidi digestion, too! CHEW DOUBLE-\nMINT WHILt YOU WORK\u2014\nmillion, doi Only St.\n\\jyruHumm\nCabinet Council yesterday,\nThe order, Mr. McLarty said,\nwould not apply to the current\nstrike at McKinnon Industries, Ltd.\nat St. Catharines, Ont,, whioh was\nin progress before the order was\npassed. But it will apply to all similar disputes in the future.\nUnder provisions of the new order, as outlined by Mr. McLarty,\nany strike in war Industry ii Illegal until:\n1. A Board of Conciliation hai\ninvestigated the dispute, and ill\nfindings have been delivered to\nboth parties.\n2. The employees have notified\nthe Minister of Labor that they\ncontemplate a strike.\n3. Thereafter a vote has been\nLiken under the supervision of the\nDepartment of Labor, subject to\nsuch provisions and restrictions ai\nthe Minister may impose.\n4 A majority of the employees\n:oncerned have voted in favor of\ni strike.\nCommenting on the new order.\nLhe Minister said that \"too often\ni strike has been precipitated by a\nsnap vote in the heat of discussion\nwhen the opponenta of a atrtke have\nnot been given an opportunity of\nregistering their objection to interference with the war effort.\n\"Any employee who now goes on\nstrike contrary to the new regulations, or who encourages or in-\ncites others so to strike, is liable to\na fine of $500, or not more than 12\nmonths imprisonment.\"\nMr. McLarty said th\u00ab order en-\n\u2022ured demoqratic methods by which\nit would be established whether a\nstrike would be called.\nStrike votes will be under the\nauspices of the Labor Department,\nand all concerned will.have an op-\nportbnity of expressing their view,\nIn the past it has been illegal under the Industrial Disputes Invest)\ngation Act to go on strike until i\nBoard of Conciliation has invest!-\ngated a labor dispute.\nDiscussing the strike at McKinnon Industries, Ltd., St. Catharines\nthe Minister said the straight issue\nwas whether the Government's wartime policy as set forth in order-\nin-council was to be maintained.\nThe McKinnon workers were \/receiving the wages to which they\nwere entitled under this policy.\n\"I am convinced that P. C. 7440\n'covering wartime wages) has saved\nthis country hundreds of millioni\nof dollars, and I would put th\nquestion as to whether we should\nbreak this policy because a group\nwants larger' wages paid,\" Mr. McLarty said\nThe Lab^r Department' has taken\nt.h* position that wartime wages\npplicy of the Government, including the cost-of-living bonus, is preventing a \"runaway' in wages due\nto the increased demand for labor\nat the same time is providing i\ncheck on inflationary  tendencies.\nThis was understood to be the\nreason for Mr. McLarty's claim that\nP. C 7440. covering wages, has\nsaved the country hundreds of millions of dollars.\nThe Minister added that \"time and\ntime again\" employees have stated\nrhey had no desire to strike but had\nmore or less been compelled to do\nio because they were members of a\nlabor organization or for gome other\nreason, and had to follow thalr\nleaders.\nSometimes amall groups of employees met to discuss itrike action\nand took auch action without the\nmajority being consulted.\n\"The purpose of this order is to\nsee that auch consultation takes\nplace,\" the Minister said.\nMr. McLarty said the order provided all employees who, in the\nopinion-of the Labor Minister were\naffected by the labor dispute or\nwhose employment might be \u25a0 affected by the proposed strike, were\nto be held within five days from\nthe dey the Minister received notice\nthe employees desired'. to taka a\nstrike vote.\nThe Labor MinUter had wide discretion to say who was affected by\nthe proposed strike, Mr. McLarty\nsaid. The Board of Conciliation\nwhich must have investigated tha\ndispute before the strike vote ls\ntaken will retain all its opportunities* to bring about a settlement.\nThe Industrial Disputes Inquiry\nCommission will also continue to\ninvestigate as to whether a Conciliation Board should be appointed\nentitled to vote and the vote was  in labor disputes.\nBritish Ordered Huge Canned Tomato\nSupplies for Invasion Emergency\nSAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 17 (AP)\n\u2014How the British Fo&d Ministry\ntried to buy 15,000,000 cues of tomatoes to stock food depots for an\ninvasion emergency and now American growers were caught short was\nrelated today by a cannery official.\nThe tomatoes, were wanted for\nmore than their, food value. British\nauthorities figured that in an invasion attempt tha Germans would\nstrike first at the water systems of\nthe British Isles.\nBy stocking food depots with\nquantities ol canned tomatoes the\nFood Ministry planned to provide\nthe people with a safe and nourishing drinking fluid that would substitute for water ' in case normal\nwater supplies were destroyed or\npolluted, explained Preston McKin\nney, Vice-President of th* Canners'\nLeague of California.\nMcKinney told a Pacific Coast\ntrade conference that the Federal\nSurplus Marketing Administration\nhad tried to fill the huge British\nrequest but wu unable to get the\nfull 19,000,000 cues from this year'a\npack.\nThe canned tomatoes, providing\nboth food and water, would meet\nthe possible emergency with a mini-\nmum of effort, warehouse space and\nexpense.\nEven though this year's pack will\nnot fill Britain's unprecedented order, it wu estimated that if the\nF.S.M.A. gets only haU of th* \u00bb,-\n.000,000 cases, there will be eight\ncans for every person in the British\nIsles. r\nThree Swedish Destroyers Blown\nUp While tying al Anchor in Port\nPRINTING\nThat's our business and\nwe are here to give just\nthat service  that your\nbusiness needs.\nComplete\nBindery Dept.\nAutomatic Presses\nModern Type Faces\nare at your service to help\ncreate that particular piece\nof printed matter you need\nPhone 144\nNrlamt iaihj Nruia\nCommercial Printing Dept.\n266 Baker St. Nelson.\nc.\nSTOCKHOLM, Sweden, Sapt\n17 (AP)\u2014Three Swedish destroyed blew up mysteriously . and\nunk today while at anchor In an\nEait coast Swedish port and tint\nreporti uld at least 31 men were\nkilled.\n(An unidentified transport was\nreported in a German news agency\nbroadcast also to have been lost despite heroic efforts. The news\nafjency uid the 1570-ton Swedish\nminelayer Klas Fleming was heavily\ndamaged when mines aboard her\nexploded.\n(The transport was said to have\nburned.\ni The destroyer Goteborg. on\nwhich the first blasts occurred, split\nin two and sank instantly, DNB\nsaid.\ni So fierce were the explosions,\nsaid the broadcast, that soldiers on\nthe nearby Island of Maergarns had\nto take refuge in air raid shelters).\nCasualties were (eared to be high\nbut the full extent of the disaster\nwu not known because of flaming\noil hampering desperate rescue\nefforts.\nIt wu established, however, that\none officer, six noncommissioned\nofficers and 24 marines were killed\nbesides 11 others injured in the\nexplosions.\nSwedish    authorities    said    they\ncould not account for the blasts\nwhich, apparently, started on one\nship and sank ail three one after\nthe other.\nThe explosions occurred in Haars-\nJeerden harbor, a fiord on the Baltic Sea coast South ol Stockholm\nused by Swedens rapidly expanding\nnavy u a proving ground.\nAll three destroyers were relatively new and Swedish-built.\nThe 1040-ton Goteborg, completed\nin 1936, was said to have blown up\nand sunk first. Explosions followed\non the sisters vessels K'as Horn and\nKlas Uggla, each of 1020 tons.\n(A dispatch from Stockholm Io\nthe Swedish-American News Exchange said a boiler explosion\naboard the Goteborg was the cause\nof the disaster. This would indicate\nthat ammunition may have been\nset off and hit the other ships).\nThe Klas Horn sank quickly and\nthe crippled Klas Uggla went dj-iwn\nlater.\nDetails of the series of blasts\nstill were obscure, however, as\nevery available coastal boat put out\nto rescue survivors and recover the\nbodies of the dead from the burning waters.\nEvery ambulance in Stockholm\nwas rushed to Haarsfjaerden to help\nwith medical aid u the victims\nwere brought ashore.\nLeadership Sale\nSOFT WOOL AND\nWOOL MIXTURES\nIn Two Price\nGroups That Will\nSave You Money\nQroup I Qroup 2\nTHe price of tKese fine\nwool socks is exceptionally low. There is a reason, of course. They're\nsubstandards of higher-\npriced socks with tiny\nflaws that will not affect.\ntheir wearing qualities in\nthe slightest. Some have\nLastex tops. All sizes.\n2 Pair\n$1.25      2 Pair\n85c\nAxis Forces Step\nUp Operations\nin Tobruk Area\nCAIRO, Sept. 17 (AP)- Heavy\nAxis shelling of British forward positions in the Tobruk area was reported by British Middle Efcst headquarters today as the North African\nDesert warfare continued its step-\nped-up pace coinciding with the\nend of the seasonal heat.\nAlso in the Ooncter area of Ethiopia, where remnants of the Italian\nArmy have been besieged since capture of their main forces, weather\nconditions now have permitted resumption of British offensive operations, the British Command has\nannounced.\nThe Axis shelling in the Tobruk\narea followed British raids from the\nbesieged port and was described as\nhaavy in the East. In the South and\nWest sectors it was reported abating.\nBritish reconnaissance units are\nespecially active in anticipation of\na possible Axis offensive;\nBritish patrols in the Uolchefit\narea have made several deep penetrations,  today's communique said\nROME, Sept, 17 (AP). - The\nItalian High Command claimed today Fascist outposts had repelled\nBritish forces in scouting operations in North Africa and Ethiopia\nThe daily war bulletin, which\nwas unusually brief, also reported\nAxis planes had attacked British\nmotorized columns near the Libyan\noases of Giarabub and Siwa and acknowledge British planes had\nbombed Tripoli and Bengasi.\nTAX BILL SENT TO F.D.R.\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 17 (AP\u00bb-\nFinal Senate approval sent to President Roosevelt today the $3,533,400,-\n000 tax bill\u2014bigg\u00abt revenue measure in United States history and\none designed to help defray the\nmounting costs of national defence.\nOVER 1000 NORWEGIANS\nSENT TO PRISON CAMPS\nSTOCKHOLM, Sweden. Sept. 17,\n(AP)-More than 1000 Norwegians;\narrested during the state of civil\nsiege were tried by court martial\nand sent to prison camps in Germany or tn the Norwegian Interior,\ndispatches from Oslo said today\nUniversity professors and many labor leaders were among those sentenced. Jens Tangen, President of\nthe Federation of Labor, was sent\nto a concentration camp in Ger\nmany.\nINCORPORATED   2*!f MAY 1670.\nR.C.A.F. Patrol Far\nOut in Atlantic\nBritish lo Probe\nFood Bootlegging\nLONDON. Sept, 17 (CP.-Cable)-\nBri'.ish authorities today were reported investigating evidence of\nlarge-scale food bootlegguig through\nblack markets by persons who ob-\nleined control of foodstuffs destined for the national reserve ani\nwere rumored to have got their\nhands on maple syrup intended for\nCanadian troops.\nThe \u00abtory, first published by Lord\nBeaverbrook's Evening Standard,\nwas called \"substantially correct\"\nby officers of the Food Ministry,\nwho were unable, however, to deny or confirm the maple syrup report owing to lack of information\non diversion of the individual commodities.\nReporting \"astonishing discoveries\"* in black market operations by\nMinistry of Food enforcement officers cooperating with Scotland\nYrd, the paper said the racketeers\nhad \"been able to obtain control of\nmany hundreds of tons and tens of\nthousands of cases of the most valuable foodstuffs\" \u2014 including stocks\nbuilt up to provide a reserve for use\nin case of invasion.\nAustralia Must\nWatch for Sudden*\nTurn of Events\nCareful Jack met careless Jill.\nAlasl The girl is single still I\nFor perspiration spoiled romance,\nGirls who offend don't stand\na chance.\nBatt tonifht with UFE BUOY\n-THE ONE SOAP\nESPECIALLY MUE TO PREVENT \"I.O.-\n(I* OS*\nMELBOURNE, Sept. 17 \"(AP). -\nPrime Minister Fadden, reviewing\nthe war before the Australian Par\nliament today, said Australians must\nremain vigilant and in readiness for\nsome sudden turn of the war im\npelling them to active self-defence\nnear their own shores. He said Aus*\ntralian security was imperilled as\nnever before.\nImportant aspects of the Far-Eastern policy of the Government'now\nwere under direct discussion of the\nBritish and Australian Governments, he added.\nPLAN FOR PRISONERS IN\nREFORESTATION WORK\nMELBOURNE, Sept. 17 (AP) -\nPlans to employ thousands ot prisoners of war in reforestation and\nirrigation worki in Australia were\nsubmitted today to the Federal Government by labor manpower ekperts\nafter consultation with E. S\nSpooner, MinUter of Organization\nof Industry. Safeguards were provided against prejudicing employment or wage standards of Australian workers.\nR.C.A.F. Officer\nAppeals to Youth\nLONDON. Ont., Sept. 17 (CP)-\nAircraft of the Royal Canadian\nAir Force home defence establishment on occasion have carried out\npatrols mure than half way across\niho Atlantic Ocean, it was disclosed\niocfev by Group Capt. J. A. Sully\nof 'he R. C, A F.\nIn an address to the London Ca-1\nnadian Club, Gr.up Capt. Sully I\nsaid:\n\"As you perhaps know we operate a section of the air force which\nis entirely separate ffom the (Brit-\nish Commonwealth) Air Training j\nPlan.\n\"Its purpose Is the defence of ou:      LONDON, Sept. 17 (CP).\u2014Group\nshores, and careful plans are in ef-  Capt  J. A. Sully of the Royal Ca\nfeet for such defence on both the;nadU\nEast and-West coasts, .Squadrons of\nwell trained airmen are continually\npatrolling   our   coasts,   and   stand\nready to meet the enemy should ne\napproach.\n\"On the East coast our home war\nsquadrons are doing an exception\nally good job of work in their anti\nsubmarine patrols. Day after day\nour aircraft patrol far out to sea,\nescorting the convoys going overseas, and meeting and escorting\nthe convoys coming this way.\"\nAll Classes Are Included!\nin Reprisals by Germans\nLABOR COUNCIL WOULD\nOUST LIBERAL LEADER\nVANCOUVER, Sept, 17 (CP). -\nThe Vancouver, New Westminster\nand Diatrict Trades and Labor\nCouncil last night voted in favor\nof the resignation of its President,\nE. A. Jamieson, foUowing hii recent nomination as Liberal candidal* for Vancouver Centre in the\nforthcoming Provincial election.\nBULCARIAN SHIP\nSINKS IN BUCK SEA\nSOFIA, Bulgaria (via Berlin)\nSept. 17 (AP).-The 2300-ton Bulgarian steamer Sphipka was reported today to have sunk in the\nBlack Sea Mondav while en route\nfrom Varna to Baltic. Cause of the\nsinking wu unknown here.\nNews Gathering in\ntarly Days Recalled\nat Press Meeting\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 17 (CP), - A\npioneering chapter in the history\nof Canadian newspaper publishing\n\u2014the founding ef the old Western\nAssociated Preas, Canada's first co\noperatve news distributing asaocia\ntion\u2014was recalled here last night\nat a dinner in honor cf E H Mack\nUn, a Director of Th* Winnipeg\nFree Press.\nNewspapermen from many parts\nof the Dominion, here for the meetings of the Board of Directors of\nThe Canadian Pre*\u00ab and the Canadian Daily Newapapers Association, heard from M. E. Niohols ot\nThe Vancouver Province, and Hon\nW. F. Kerr of Regina, pioneer\nWestern editor, the early day history of cooperative news gathering\nand distribution in Canada.\nThe W. A. P. was the forerunner\nof The Canadian Press, which today distributes on a non-profit, co\noperative basis news from all the\nworld to B0 of Canada's M daily\nnewspapers.\nACCIDENT CAUSED BY\nSICNAL MISREADINC\nTOKYO. Sept, 17 (AP) - The\nmisreading of a signal by the engineer of an express train was given today as the cause for one of the\nmost disastrous railway accidents in\nJapanese history. Tha revised casualty toll of the accident, which occurred yeaterday, waa M dead and\n97 injured.\n21 SALMON ARM\nRECRUITS JOIN R.C.A.F.\nSALMON ARM. B C, Sept. 17\n(CP).\u2014Salmon Arm will be well\nrepresented Jn the Royal CanaSlan\nAir Force. Twenty-one young men\nsigned up when a R. C. A. F. recruiting officer visited here this\nweak.\na Air Force today appealed to\nthe rftion's youth, still attending\nschojl, to prepare itself for -\"the\nchallenge tha; awaits it\"\u2014to Join\nthe R. C A. F. and help keep up\nthe Hood of airmen now going oversea?.\nIn his addresa to the London Canadian Club, Group Capt. Sully\nrecalled Air Minister Powers recent statement that Canada may be\ncalled upon to provide half of the\ntotal flying men for the Empires\nair fcrcaa.      \\\n\"This is a challenge which Canada cannot let go unanswered,\" he\nsaid.\n\"This is our appeal at this time\nof reconsecration: That youth in\nthe schools prepare itaelf for the\nchallenge that awaits it and that,\nin so preparing for the high task\nlhat lies ahead, it hare the sympathy\nand encouragement of its elders.\"\nGroup Capt. Sully reminded his\naudience that Reconsecration Week,\nending today, marked an anniversary in the British Commonwealth\nAir Training Plan. Just a year ai*\"*\nthe first graduate ol the plan received his wlngi.\nInvalided Troops\nReturn to Canada\nMONTREAL, Sept. 17 (CP).-In\n,good spirits and glad, to be back\nhome, scorei of invalided Canadian\nsoldiers arrived here today in five\nlong trains from the East coast\nCanadian port where they landed\nrecently from the United Kingdom.\nOne young soldier said that there\nhad been evidence on the voyage to\nCanada of a submarine attack.\nDepth charges had been dropped, ht\nsaid, and wreckage wu seen floating on the surface a few minutes\nlater. The soldien were told it had\nbeen a submarine.\nPARIS, Sipt t1 (AP)\u2014German\nauthorities announced today that\nihooting ot hostages In reprisal\ntor attacki on Germani would be\nextended to Include not only Com-\nnuinnti But \"all clttiei of the\nParii population,\"\nThe announcement came ai a\nGerman non-commissioned officer\ndied of bullet wounds inflicted\nMonday by an unidentified assailant in defiance of the executions\nfor previous attacks on members of\nthe Army  of Occupation.\nThe new policy, announced in all\nParis papers and posted on walls\nthroughout  the  city,  read:\n\"If attacks continue, the occupation authorities will shoot increasing numbers of hostages, and these\nhostages no longer will be taken\nexclusively from among Commun-\nlits, but from all classes of the Paris\npopulation\"\nThe soldier was the second reported slain in Parj within a few\nweeks.\nBoth French and German authorities pressed a citywide search for\nthe persons responsible for the\nshootings and for the kidnappers of\na son of Col. Herteaux. Vice-President of the Veterans' Legion, now\nthe official political party of the\nVichy regime.\nNewspapers published in appeal\nasking a woman who witnessed the\nfatal shooting to come forward and\nhelp officials with their investigation.\nPolice Headquarters said that the\nwoman told a subway ticket-taker\nthat she had seen the German shot\nfrom a passing automobile but dis\nappeared without making henell\nknown.\nHerteaux' aon wai reported kid*\nnapped Sept. 8 in the Passy Diatrict\nof Paris. Thus far no trace of hits\nor his abductors has been fount].\nPolice meanwhile Jailed the jjUe*\nleged leader of a strike which halted\na public works project in a Paji\u00bb\nsuburb aid reported they had found\npamphlets of Communist origin oa\nsome ot the 500 strikers.\nIn the unoccupied zone, a British\nCatholic priest, Father Price, aaa\narrested at Tarbes and ient td a\nconcentration camp on a charge* of\n'anti-national activity and &'_*.\nspect toward the Chief of State.1'\nThe Prefect of the Upper Pyrenktt\nDepartment personally ordered th\u00ab\ninternment. Father Price was nil*\npended by his Bishop a month ago.\nInternment at Vals les Bains t*.\ncently included a number of clergy.\nThe measures recalled an alleged\nCommunist document recently mad\u00bb\npublic asserted some clergy wfcrsV;\nworking to overthrow the Petain,\nregime.\nVICHY. Sept. 17 (AP) \u2014 Pie\u2122\nPucheu, Minister of the Interior,\ndeclared in a* interview tonight ha\nwas doing his utmost to prevtnt\nthe increasingly serious German reprisals for terroristic outbreak* ta\nParis \u2022\nHe said a delicate situation had\nbeen created in France by \"Communist attacks\" in Pans against\nthe German Army of Occupation\nand that \"natural measures had\nbeen taken by the German authorities to punish them.\nMAN HELD AT COAST\nON CONSPIRACY CHARCE\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 17 (CP).-\nClifford Dawley, 30, wai held by\nCity Police today on i charge of\nconaptracy to connection with the\nkidnap-robbery Sapt. 7 of Chong\nDot, Chinctt cannery labor contractor.\n\t\n\u2014-\u2014___\nASK RECREATION\nCENTRES Bl KEPT OPEN\nLONDON, S\u00abpt. 17 (CP)-Seven\nhundred memberi of the Young\nPeoplei Keep Fit League petitioned\nthe Governm-ent oday to keep London recreation centrei open thla\nWinter regardless of the danger of\nnight air bombings.\n______._.,\nRadio Manager\nAdmits Wrong in\nCutting Program\nFORT WILLIA.1. Sept. 17 (CP)-\nRalph Parker. Manager of Radio\nStation CKPR in Fort Williim, said\ntoday he \"was entirely in the\nwrong\" on cutting Col. G. E.\nMcCartney. Chairman of the Fort\nWilliam Civil. Recruiting Committee, off the air last night during a\nbroadcast appeal for recruits for\nthe Canadian armed forces.\nCol. McCartney said today he had\nbeen silenced apparently because\nhis address was \"too tough\". After\nthe silencing. Col McCartney called\na meeting of the Recruiting Committee which endorsed the ipeech.\nSTAND OUT\nTROM\nTHE CROWD\nAUSSIES CROW TIRED\nWAITINC FOR ACTION\nMELBOURNE, Sept 17 (AJPI-\nAustralian soldiers in the Far East\nare exceptionally well treated and\nIn the fittest condition but are growing tired ind waiting for'action, J,\nRoxburgh, Rad Croe* executive today declared.\nswwisiTsHif SUNK\nSTOCKHOLM. Sweden. Sept. 17\n(AP). - The Swedlih Consulate\nGeneral In Hamburg. Germany, re-\nported today that th* newly-built\n9050-ton Swedish motorship Yarra-\nwonga had been sunk but that the\ncrew wu saved. No detaila were\ngivan.\nJ\n fKtte* nun\n\u25a0\u2014\nCharm, Simplicity.,\nOlrl Plant Model\nOutdoor Wedding\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX\n'A day or two ago I received a\nletter from a very happy girl. I\nfrith there were space enough to\n\u2022print the entire contents, but I'll\nnave to confine myself to telling\nyou about the wedding arrangements, which Imprest me at charming. The letter started:\n, Tiear Mist Fairfax:\n^\"Well, it's happened at last and\nI'm Just about the happiest girl in\nlhe world. One year ago I fell in\nIjve with a young man who I\nthought was unaware of my exist-\nfence. However, to make a long\n. itory short, we're going to be mar-\nWed ln September.\nI The girl lives in t houte that\nonce wat the centre of a large family estate but which has dwindled\ndown to only a couple of acres. She\n-wanted an old-fashioned wedding,\nbut there isn't enough 'money to\nBend on an elaborate affair. Being\nsentimental, the wanted to be mar-\nglad ln white, so the bridal dress\nto be of white organdy. Her sis-\nirs are going to make the dress for\nBr. Hie veil she will wear was\norn at her grandmother's wed-\ntag.\n. SThe marriage ceremony is to take\n\u25a0\u25a0place  ln   the  garden   Just  before\n{unset, under a very old oak tree.\nThe entire house will be decorated\n\u2022 With wild flowers, which the bride's\nfrienda are taking care of. There'll\nbe goldenrod, sumac, Queen Anne's\n' lace, and all the other lovely wild\nflowen that grow out-of-doors and\nare to bt had for the taking.\n\u2022 -Hia flowen from her mother's\nOld-fathlaned garden are to be\nlaved for the table in the dining-\nroom, where a stand-up supptr\nWill bt terved. It will consist ot\nchicken talad, hot biscuits, sandwiches of all torts, home-made ice-\n,eream and ol course, the wedding\nm*.\ntltie w-sddlng cost must be kept\ndown to at little as possible. The\nfamily she's marrying into must\nbt Impressed with the good taste of\nthese arrangements\u2014not only the\ngood taste, but the good will of her\n'\u25a0 friends who love her detrly and\nare demonstrating how populir iht\nll\nTit wedding ctkt It to be mide\nby the  six bridesmaids  under the\nittpervlaion of the high ichool domestic   science   teacher.  This   will\nfulfill an old tradition thst the more\nhands which stir, the better luck\n..fpr the newlywedi. Altogether, It's\n, gplng to be whit might be called a\nI Tjooa-wlll wedding\", with the girl's\nI friends    showing    their    genuine\nfriendly Interest\nApart from the charm and simplicity of the wedding, there is the\nfiirift which mutt appeal to the\ntype of family Into which this girl\nfi marrying. They are self-made\n\"people who hive acquired I good\nSeal of wealth by wise saving ind\nwilt expenditure. They hid iet\ntheir hearts on their ton marrying\nS certain \"society girl.\" but already\nthey're reconciled to his marrying\n' a fir' \"ho possesses the qualities\nthat made the family fortune\u2014dIus\ngood-taste.\nYOUNC CIRL HELD IN\nftONNKTION WITH THIFT\n\u2022EDMONTON. Sept. 17 <CP>.-A\nVytar-old girl believed by police\nba retponsible for a series of\n_ina thefts in downtown stores\ngurlng the past two Inonthi today\nWat held in custody ot juvenile nu-\nIJiorltles for further questioning regarding her activities.\nYOUR DAUGHTER'S FALL OUTFIT\nKH'jpif l!\"*w\"\u00ab \u25a0\"\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0 '*>'\" \u25a0\u00abw\u00bb^W\n-NILtQN DAILY NEWS   NELSON. B. C.-TMUR8DAY MORNINQ, SEPT. 18. 1941\u2014\nNow Is the time to outfit your young diughter\nfor Autumn. The three models, sbove, are service\nable for cool Weather and will stand frequent washing after hard days of outdoor play.\nAPPLEDALE\nAPPLEDALE, B. C.-Pat Morin\nand Dick Smith, tttendtd tht Liberal convention at New Denver.\nMr. and Mrs. Earl McLem visited\nthe latters parenU, Mr. and Mrs. W.\nT. Wynne over the weekend.\nMr. and Mrs. Heln of Cranbrook\nhave taken up residence here at\nCedar Cabins.\nDon McGregor of Penticton was a\nvisitor here for a few days.\nMrs. H. Currie of Trail, who has\nbeen a guest of her brother in law\nand sister. Mr. ind Mri. B. Lansdown for three weeks, has returned\nhome.\nMrs. Rurak of Ytrkton. Sask.\nwho has been visiting her brother-\nin-law and sister for a couple of\nweeka, haa returned to her home,\nMr. and Mrs. J. McGregor of Penticton who have been visiting at\ntheir Summer home here, have returned to Penticton.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Yeomans of Vincouver are visiting Mr. ind Mrs.\nW. T. Wynne.\nMr. and Mrs McDonough md\ndaughter Jean of Trail, visited Mrs.\nT. frouo.\nGordon Eptodt his left for Penticton where he expects to work.\nD. Davis of Willow Point visited\nhis mother. Mrs. Davis, who teaches\nschool here.\nJack Smith of Winlaw visited Mr,\nand Mrs F  Honeysett\nMrs. E. Trozio of South Slocan is\nI guest of her parents, Mr. ind Mrs.\nS. Winaskl.\n\u2022SERIAL STORY\nBy RICHARD HOUGHTON\n|! Death at the Switch\n\u2022     CHAPTER THIRTY-#OUR       I lige,\" Henry explained\nJ \"You\u2014you hive no\u2014no power to|      If ht could keep up his life In\nJrrsttt anyone\"\"\nOn, J ha CWl\nTHURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1941\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNING\n8:00\u2014Front Line Family '\nUili-CBC News\n8:30~Prelude to a Happy Day\n9:00-BBC News\n9:15\u2014War Commentary   (BBC)\n9:30\u2014Sweet Hour of Prayer\n9:45-CBC News\n9:59\u2014Time Signal\n10:3O-The   Light   That   Shines   Ii\nDarkness\n10:45\u2014Out For an Airing\n11:30\u2014For Our Listeners\nl*C     IJV   \u2014UU      I. rs   *    .        av **      \u2022 \u2022**\u00bb      i.v\u2014 .sj      .. - - f      \u201410                    --\nMrs. Pottei- isked   1 lunnce    premium    payments.    I d\nbetter\nthink \u25a0 he   could   afford\nhouse.\"\n'The payments must have been\nlirge. D.dr.'t he ever miss one'\"\n\"Lis: yeir he barely got the'\nmoney to the company in time to\nkeep the pol.cy from lipiing The\npreceding lour yein he was prompt\nAFTERNOON\n12:00\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:30-CBC News\n12:45\u2014Mid-day Musicale\n1:00\u2014News Bulletins\n1:03\u2014Recital Series\n1.15-Club Matinee\nl:45-Freedom Ferry (BBCi\n2:00\u2014Talk\n2:15\u2014Charles Jordan\n2:30-The Wtsicn,  Five\n2:45-Rxhird Crooks Recordi\n3:0O-Three Suns Trio\n3:15\u2014 Arile Shaw Recordi\n3:30\u2014Dance Music\n3:45-BBC News\n4:00\u2014Salon Music\n4:30\u2014Talk: Sir Norman Burkett\n5:nO\u2014Salon Orchestra\n5:30\u2014Talk, L. W. Brockington\n\u2022VENINC\n6:0O\u2014To Be Announced\n6:30\u2014CBR Presents\n6:45\u2014Here We Go Dinana\"\n7:00\u2014Toronto Philhirmonk Oroti.\nA.R.P. Officials at\nQueen'i Bay Named\nQUEEN'S BAY. B. C.-At in air\nraids precautions meeting held In\nthe tchool here. K. R. Attree was\nsppointed assistant warden tnd H\nE. Mthood deputy warden. G. Porteous. district warden, was in tht\nchiir.\n8:0O-CBC Ntws\n8:15- Britain Spetkt\n8:30\u2014Stag Pirty\n9:30\u2014John Avison's Orch\n10:00\u2014Rebroadctit of L. W. Brock\nington talk\n10:30\u2014Radio News Reel\n1L00-CBC News\n11:30\u2014Dance Orchestra\nCKLN\u2014NELSON\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nAND THE FOLLOWING:\nMORNING\n7:57-0 Canadi\n10:0O\u2014Morning Pirade\nll:00-Music for Everyoni\n11:30\u2014Words and Music\nAFTERNOON\n12:25-Tht Notice Botrd\nEVENING\n9:00\u2014The Mystery Club\nUT30- God Save Tne King\nU. S. NETS' BEST\nNBC-RED\n7:00\u2014Xivier Cugat's Rhumbi Re-\nvut\n9:30-Tommy Riggi ind Betty Lou\nNBC\u2014BLUE\n1:00-Rudy Villet Progrimme\nCOLUMBIA\n8:00\u2014Major Bowes  Amtteurs\n7:15\u2014Profeuor Quit   *\n- Jonet imiled. \"No more than iny\ntthar prlvite cltiien, I tm Juit in\ntturtnee company investigator.\"\nsi \"Gee!\" slid Richard, \"and Pop\nfcought miyfce you came here to\nsjrrett him! Ar.d I thought you were\n\u00ab crookl\"\n\u25a0t \"Rlchird!\"\n\u2022 Jonet ltughed, t sort of deep ind , ha record ihowi.\niKret  tmusement.   He ihoved  his     Jones   stepped   shead   of   Henry\nSair back  from  the  tible.  'Thit  icross the freaky porch ind knock-\nin   excellent   breikfut.   Mn.  ed on the door. ,.      .\nI set the sun Is Uying to     Mri   WiUett opened the door so\nIne   this  morning.   Suppose,  Mr .  quickly  thtt  Henry  wu sure she\ntter, thit you ind  I  walk over j must have witched them climbing\n%> iee Mrs. Wlllell? I'd like to hue! the pith. From her pislid fict she\n\u00ab -jvitneti to whatever she has to I pushed   iwiy   i   w.tp  of  her  \"\nHty.\" I ke:\nI Henry readily icqulesced\n\u2022 The wilk towird the village wai\n\u25a0Krltfil' \u2122VUThf two m!n, \"Jmes lifted his eyebrow,. \"Now,| Mis. Dorothy Hamilton of Nelson\nfamed off on a side roid it the* Mrs WiUett! That isnt fiir I thinki of Nelson spent i weekend with her\n\"Tillage outikirts ind climbed the | we did* very well by you. It wis parenU, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ham-\nilllto Ives' lonely house. you  who retorted to  trickery. ilton\nTt certainly doein't look like the1    Her suspicious eyet widened sud-      E. Peterson of Howser is spending\nof t mm with i 150 000 in-  der.ly in (right. \"I-I-What do you  i few days in town.\nranee   policy,\"   Jones   observed, i mean'\" _ Mr. and Mrs   W. H. Dunn visit-\nKASLO\nKASLO, B. C -District Engineer\nan(r Mrs* smith of\nkenipt black hair \"Don't expect me Ernc|t Smllh ani? Mrs* smith\nthedw.ynyiu'm.dT.r mo\u00b0ck Tsp'irt\" j **\u00bb \"\u2022\u00bb \"\"\"day visitor, to ft\nushsmf** |\nok at those shingles curling on\nroof.  It's a wonder  It doesr.'t\nak like a sieve  And the paint Is\nellng off the porch pillars \"\n\"Ivei   used  to  live   In   a  bigger\nbltce on the other tide of the vii-\n\"You dropped thai ring of Ives'' ed Nelion al the weekend.\non the track\u2014pretending the ghost\nof John Ives did it\u2014to derail tht\ntrain ln front of Mr. Spinelli\"\nHer mouth dropped open Her\nfare turned from yellow to grey. ,\nWhile Henry, too. stared a' him\nin surprise Jones explained, 'It so\nhappened that I was tble to see whtt\nwat going on betttr thin the other\npersons in the room, because I took\nthe precaution to shut my eyes be.\nfore the lighti were turned off My\neyes idluited themselves quickly\nto the dirkneu\"\n\"I didn't mein tny hirm!\" Mri.\nWiUett gtsped. One bony hind fluttered to her mouth. \"1\u2014I wu tun\nMr  Spinelll-killtd him\"\n\"You letrned I few minutei liter i\n(hit you wert wrong. The reil\nmurder tttacktd Snlnelli. Lucky for'\nyou he'i not deta!\"\n\"You\u2014you hiven't told thi polict\nwhtt I did?\"\n\"No, ind I don't think It will bt\nnecessiry. But you cm set now,\nwhy we won't be surprised if you\n\u2022niweer t few queitioni Tor ui\nShe held the door open. 'C-comt\nIn.\"\n(To Bt Contlnutd)\nS. Tiylor of Trail wa sa city visitor at the weekend\nMr. and Mrs. W. McLeiry of\nTrail are ipending a thort holiday\nIn town\nMr. ind Mrs Noel Bicchui of Vernon ire gueits of Mr. and Mrs. A.\nP. Allsebrooke of Shutty Bench. Mr.\nBacchui li a member of thi Vernon Vefenns' Guard.\nHirry Thomlimon of Howser It\ntpending some time In town in connection  with Forestry  Department i at the home of Hon\nwork. .   mer\nFAMOUS DOC DIES\nCALGARY, Sept. 17 iCP)-Dalt\nof Cawsalta, who many tintes helptd\nRoyal Canadian Mounted Pollct\nofficers find their man and who\nwas considered one of the best\npolice dogs in Canada, il dead. He\nwas destroyed recently when\ngrowth became too painful.\nQUEEN'S BAY\nQUEENS BAY. B. C.-Mrs. H. E.\nMahood Is visiting her brother-in-\nlaw and sister. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald\nElkington, at Fernie.\nMisses Joyce and Phyllis Hirst\nhave gone to Vancouver for a short\nvisit.\nMrs. Burrird A. Smith of L(,>ng-\nbeich ipent a day here recently\ngueit of Hon Kenneth and M\".\nAylmer.\nErnest Smith and W. H. Foster\nof Nelson were at the Bay recently.\nHon. Mrs. Perry Leake ls visiting\nher brother and slater ln law, Lord\nind Lady Aylmet*. at Wlliow Point.\nMiu Non Johnson of Willow\nPoint was a weekend guest of Mr.\ntnd Mrs K. R. Attree.\nMrt. A. P. AUiebrook tnd ber ion\nof Shuttys Bench ware recent\ngueiti of Mrs. J. S. Hirst.\nThe monthly meetings of the\nChurch Guild have itarted ifter\nbeing discontinued during the Summer. The first meeting wis held\nMrt. K. Ayl-\naSi:\ncKtlLLACw'wQA.\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nTodays Minu\nCiuerole of Rice ind Meit\nCinned Corn\nMixed Vegetable Selid\nVelvet Cretm\nGrahim Crackers\nTet or Cofftt\nCuitroli of Rltt tnd Mttt\n1 cup tire, -i teispoon MIL 1\nteispoon chopped onion, 1 teispoon\nchopped thymt and perilty, 1 tgg,\nH tiupoon each mtrJOrim, H ID\ncold cooked meal. H teaspoon pep\nper, 2 ttbltipooni crtcktr crumbs.\nBoll rice until tender In tilted\nwater; chop mett, tdd pepper, ult,\nonion, panley. thyme, marjoram,\nbeaten egg ind crtcker crumbi;\nmoisten with hot wtttr, or mttt\nitock nr gravy to mikt tt pick lit-\nily. Butter imill mold, Unt bottom\nind sides H Inch deep with riet;\npick in meat mixtura, cover cloiely\nwith rice, and steam 43 minutes.\nWhen ready to serve, loosen iround\nthe edge of mold, turn out on hot\nplatter and pour tomito siuct\niround It.  Serves  -\u25a0\nVelvet  Creim\n1 quirt mUk. 4 imall box gelitln\nNo 1. H cup sugir, 3 tfl*. 1 teaspoon vtnilla.\nPut milk in doublt beiltr, add\nsugir tnd gelitln. Whtn hot tdd\nbeiten yolki of eggs ind cook until\ngelatin hit dluolved tnd mixturt\nlooki like thin custard (about 10\nminutei). then uka from itove and\nadd beateui whitei of eggi, fltvor\nwith vanilla. Ttall may bt madt tha\nday before it la to be served. Strvet\nEducational...\nWonder pox Is\nSource of Joy\nlo the Tiny Tot\nBy GARRY C. MYER8, Ph.D.\nWhUt vltltlng a kindergarten the\nsupervisor called to my attention\ntht \"science wonder chest1' uted\nwith her kindergarten children.\nWhat I first aaw wu a metal box\n28 inches long, 14 inchea wide, 10\nlnchei high.\nIt has a padlock with a key kept\nby the tupervlsor. To have thia box\nla considered by the young child a\nrare privilege. With but very little\nInstruction, the child learnt to\nexamine the contents and enjoy the\nwonden they reveal.\nAt once I taw how this box and\nlta contents could be a great treasure chest for the young child ln\nthe home, If controlled wliely by\nthe parents, and made available to\ntht child as reward for good\nachievement or conduct\nITEMS IN CHEST\nCompass\u2014to watch the needle\nmove; to have direction brought\ndefinitely to mind. Priam\u2014to mtkt\nrainbow colon. Magnifying glau\u2014\naa an aid to remove iplinten; to\nmake things larger. Mirror \u2014 ip\nmake faces in tor fun. Packet of\nieeda-Mo see what our plants grow\nfrom. Thermometer\u2014to teat water\nfor fish bowl. Magnet\u2014to pick up\nnails. Candle\u2014a kind of\" light.\nPlumb line\u2014to see if our tower of\nblocks is straight. Counting rod\u2014\nto familiarize us with numbers.\nRuler\u2014to aee how things are measured. Hour glasa\u2014to time turns in\nthe swing or rides on the truck.\nScales\u2014to weigh our blocks., Kaleidoscope\u2014to make strange, tgal-\nanced, ever-changing Ideas out' of\nnext to nothing. Top\u2014to show balance. Syringe\u2014to show how it holds\n\\yater. Alarm clock\u2014to time ourselves. Glut (colored)\u2014to look\n-through to make combinations of\ncolor. Pedometer\u2014to iee how fir\nwe can walk. Field elaises\u2014to tee\nthings far away. Bell\u2014to listen to.\nPiece of coal\u2014to see what keeps\nour homes wirm. Pltct of cork\u2014to\nsee how light it ia md how It floats.\nPiece of lud\u2014to tee how heavy (t\nis. Copper\u2014to see whtt pennlei\nare mtdt out of. Cotton**-to let\nwhat our clothu trt made of. Wool\n\u2014timt ti cotton. Coral\u2014to iet what\ngrows in tht oceans. Level\u2014to it*\nIf our \"blocki are level with the\nfloor. Btromtter\u2014to itt how the\nweither cm be predicted. Sponge-\nto see how lt will hold water tnd\nfind out where lt comu from.\nOf courte. If you wert to sdve\nthese all to the average child under\nfive or six, without proper luper-\nvision tnd guidance, he soon would\ndestroy them. Then, lnstud of his\ngetting good education from tham\nhe would probably lose good training both In science and citizenship.\nSOLVING PARENT PROBLEMS\nQ. Do you hive faith ln ihimi\nand ridicule fpr making \u25a0 child try\nhirder to learn at Khool?.\nA. None it ill.\nKitchen Shower for\nSlocan City Bride\nSLOCAN CITY, B. C.-A lurpriie\nkitchen ihower wu htld it tht\nhome of Mr. tnd Mrt. Fred Stor-\nSard in honor of Mri. Charlu Htn-\nerson   (nee  Miu  Rita  Patenon).\ngames ind dancing being enjoyed.\nThe guut of honor wu preiented\nwith \u25a0 pink ind whitt box filled\nwith gifta.\n' Those present included the Missel\nPatenon, Betty and Dorothy Terry,\nEleanor and Dean Swan of Kimberley, Annie Freda and Elsie Storgard, Ethtl Smith, Junt Graham,\nlrent Budd, Myrtle Hufty, Jein\nMcDonald, Marion Levique of Kulo, Nine Rindler, Thelmi Ruuell,\nLorraine Ruuell, Mr. tnd Mn. F.\nStorgard, Mri. M. Terry, Jtmu Hlslip. Vern Marsh. Winston'Storgard,\nH. Wirner, A. Michelt, Allan Wirner.\nSLOCAN CITY\nSLOCAN CITY. B. C-Mn. W\nCrou wat a visitor to Nelson.\nMUs Irene Budd wu i visitor\nto Nelson.\nPte. Trut Hicka of tht R.M.R., lt\nhome on furlough.\nPte. Imming ipent \u25a0 few dtyi it\nhli home here.\nMr. ind Mn. T. Ptguri of Trill\nwere recent visitors here.\nAlex McMillan of Sandon, who\nwu returning from a trip to hit\nold home in Glengarry. Ont., vliited relativei here.\nMr. ind Mrs. A. Schneible tnd\nfamily of New Denver ind Mr. ind\nMn. 0 Chrlitophenon ind fimlly\nvlalted relttivtt here,\nALBERTA BPIDIMIC\nBAN TO BE LIFTED\nEDMONTON, Sept. 17 (CP). -\nAlberta health offieiils uld todty\nindications now look promiilng for\na lifting it midnight Sundiy, u\nscheduled, ot tbe Province-wide bin\nin effect since Auguit 11 on til\nluembllu of chlldrtn undtr 18\nyetn.\nFor the itcond day ln succession,\nonly out new ctse of polio wts reported by Provincial luthorltlu md\nnone ot sleeping sickneu.\nKing Accepts Cift\nfor War Relief\nBv FOSTER BARCLAY\n(Ctntditn Preu SUff Wrlttr),\nV3NDON, Sept. 17 (CP).-Bliti\nblti: \t\nA Spitfire pilot, coming homt\nfrom a sweep over Northern Frtnct,\nsiw small fishing bottt off tht\nFrench cout.\nAs ht circled thtm it tbout 100\nfeet the French fishermen itood up,\nreiched for their om md madt t\n\"V\" tlgn with them.\nThe pilot acknowledged the greeting by waggling hla wlngi.\nTht King hu accepttd u a birthdiy gift on behilf of hli subjecti\n$11,500 unt ky tha Britiih Amtri-\ncm Wtr Rtlltf Auoclition of St-\nattle to tht Britith Rtd Crtit and\nSL John fundi to bt iptnt on luxll-\nnry hoiplttU ana to pay for two\nmobile phytlothertpy  units.\nAUCKLAND. N. Z. (CP). - Naw\nZealand soldien returning from\nthe Middlt bat uy equipment of\nGerman parachute troopt conalttt\nof hmd grenides. pistols, bread,\nbacon, bliculta, bot coffee, onngu\nmd energy pilla.\nCostume, Jew\u00ablry, reachei new highs In charm, beauty and originality this season. This one is called \"Holiday Pin\" and ln gay enamels\nset with colored stones symbolizes our holidays with such motifs as a\nChrlstmu tree, fireworks, New Year's Eve horns, a Valentine heart,\na hatchet and thtmrocki. The bangle bracelets in yellow, green and\npink gold metal are by the same designer.\nArthritis...\nRight Food Only\nPart Treatment\nBy  LOGAN CLENDENING, M,  D.\nI am frequtntly uked to -print\na diet for irthritli. 1 refrain from\ndoing io btctuit I think theae requests are bued on a falsa conception of erthrltii. Too much,\nnowadays, wt are inelintd to believe that there Is t diet for everything, and It only you ctn find the\nright diet your troubles will be\nover.\nProbibly the best rule thtt wu\ntvtr given for diet ln arthritis wu\nto point out thit some arthritic* ire\nundernourished and tome tre overweight. One group ihould hive t\nplentiful high ctlorlt diet and the\nother, a reducing diet.\nBut there ls a germ of truth ln\ntbe idea that ditt has something to\ndo with irthrltU. Tht Amerlcm\nCommittee for the Control of Rheu-\nmatiim definei arthritis u i tyite-\nmatlc diseue with Joint minlfes-\ntatlons, md tyitemlc memi thit\nthe general nutrition is impaired.\nOLD DIET\nThe old ldet wu thit tht proteins\u2014mest especltlly\u2014foods were\ninjurious in arthritis. The old vm\nNoorden diet, long so popular ln\nVienna md tt tht Europem spis,\nused t raw vegetable diet.\n' The beneficial retultj on thett\ndiets hu been attributed to lack\nof todlum ultt\u2014including ordinary\ntablt salt. Tht aodlum salts tend tl\nhold wtter in the body and retention ot fluida il certainly present in krthritis.\nThis hidden \"drooiy* or water\nretention is a fact which constitutei\nthe basis ot the modern diet which\nLs Juit the opposite of the low protein\u2014nw vegetable diet. To chaie\nthe flluds out of the body, we\nahould give foods that do not tand\nto retain water.\nThe cirbohydntu \u2014 itsrches,\nsugars, vegetable foods and cereala\n\u2014are most Influential in this connection, btctuit for tvtry grim ot\nvegetable food itortd thtrt ii stored\nthret to four grams of witer. One\ngram of fit itoru only one-tenth\ncram of wtter and protein '.cads to\nlittle or no itonge of water ln the\nbody.\nNEW DIIT THEORY\nOn thli buii the diet for arthrltica\nfor levtral months at a time I have\nused saccharine in coffee, two or\nmore grains a day. Is this harmful\nto my health?\"\nAnswer: Several years ago I published all lhe information that has\nbeen accumulated about the rumor\nthat saccharine is harmful and at\nthe time 1 wtnt over t number of\nresearches, all of which indicated\nthit there is no harm ruulting from\nthe uie ot saccharine, even ln ltrge\ndotal, md even over i long period\nof time.\nIndulgence...\nOvereating Is the\nRoot of Many Ills\nBy IDA JEAN KAIN\nIn the dictionary, tbe wordi gourmand and gourmet, meaning epicure\nmd connoisseur of food, are followed by gout and gouty It happens that thia sequence li purely\nalphabetical. But actually it is often\ntrue that gout it the penalty of a.\nlove of good food.\n.Ironically enough, it usually follows that shortly after one can af.\nford fancy groceries and rich deli,\ncaciea, he la threatened with gout\nor lomething equally unpleasant\nand ia forced to eat very limply\nand sparingly and to uke regular\nexercise to Jog bla liver,\nEating should be a pleuure, but\ndon't ever be so short-sighted as to\nunder-estimate the consequences of\noverdoing it. More ills can bt traced\ndirectly or indirectly to an exceu\nof food than to any other cauae\u2014\nfar more than to overindulgence in\nalcohol.\nOvereating ll a high-calorie pro.\nosition Nobody ever overeata of\nUie protective foodi. That'i why the\nnutritionists are alwayi urging you\nto eat the protective foods first,\nthen eat whatever you like within,\nyour calorie quota.\nThere la recurrent identlflc evi-\ndence thtt tha adult who ttaya\nwithin hii calorie requirementi, or\nslightly under, but geti an abundance of fruh grean vegetablu, frteh\nfrulte and fruit luicet, milk, cheese\ntnd wholt gralnt, and adequate\namounts of lean meat, fish and egga\nls healthier stays younger and Uvea\nlonger than the penon who catera\nto his love of food.\nOf course you might want to ar-\nl gue that there art plenty of people\nwho ore underfed and who ara far\nfrom well. That'a true but an\nanalysis of thett diet would ihow it\nto be extremely deficient In \"*\nprotective elements.\nKaslo I.O.D.E. Gains\n$24 From Bake Sale;\nComforts Co to Coast\nKASLO, B. C\u2014There wu t good\nattendmce it tht lut mtetlng ot\nthe Mth Battalion Chapter, I.O.D.E.\nwhen the Regent, Mrs. F. S. Chandler, presided. Encouraging reporti\nwere given by the recording secrettry, Mrs. E. McCirtney, tht Treuurer, Mias Ktthleen Streit, add by\nother offlcen md committee memben.\nThe Chapter will purchaie a\nwreath to be placed on the cenotaph on Remembrance Diy.\nA committee ii collecting old\nwoollem to be forwarded to Winnipeg to be made into blankets.\nThe last ihipment of comforta to\nVancouver included 4 pain tockt, 7\niweaten, 5 scarves, 17 pair lir forct\nsocks, 9 nivy tweittn, tnd 2 long\nileeved nivy swelters. Shipments\nire being mtdt regularly.\nThe \"Rummage ihop\" convener,\nMn. Leona Lockard, turned ln\nHM.\nTht committet In chargt of the\nrecent bake ule added 12-1.20 to\nthe funds.\nAnother lot of elgareti hu been\nsent to Kaslo and District men serving oveneu. This is a monthly undertaking. A letter re-outllnln\u00ab the\ndutlu of Educitlonil Secretary fcai\nread. The corresponding secretary.\nMrs. J. R. Tinkess, wu Instructed\nto write Mn. E H. Morphet con-\ngratuliting her on the lucceu of i\nrecent operation.\nThe driwinp for tevenl dontted\nirtlclei ruulted u followi: girden\nipron, H. T. Hirtin;: buffet iet, C.\nW. Wtbtter: centerpiece, E. Giegerich. ind hindmide glovei, Mrs.\nM. M. Lane of Alnsworth. Thii idded SIS to fundi.\nUnder convenenhip of Mn. T\nH. Horner i \"traveling basket\" will\nbe drculited imon? the memben\nand a service for a dime cimpilgn\nwill be iniugurated at once.\nUle\nihould contain it leut one gr.m. .IVmSSklS\/ISVobS\"\nof protein of good biologic nullity- ' \" h0m>c,,oking in Qcobtr.\nanimil flesh, milk or eggs\u2014dally for\nevery two pounds of nody weight,\nfoil imount his been found by\ntrill tnd error to keep most arthritic patjeiTti ln equilibrium. Tht\nrest of the needed calories for tht\nday should conslat of one-third to\none-half cirbohydratu \u2014 ceretli,\nbreed, vegetables, fruits, sugar\u2014\nmd fit one-third to one-half.\nAlong with thii, tmphtiii hu\nbetn put lately on the vitamins.\nTht dlgtttlvt tract of tht arthritic\nli often deficient in absorption and\nextra vitamins are needed.\nthe\nNAKUSP\nNAKUSP. B. C\u2014L. W. Dawion\nof Vulcm, Alta., was ln Ntkuip, a\nguut at tha homt of B. Belngesiner.\nMn. J. Olion and daughter, MUa\nMargaret Olson, wera viiiton to\nNtlton.\nMr. md Mn. M. Embree ltft on\nMondty for DrumhtUer to attend\nthe marriage of their ion, Douglu\nEmbree.\nO, Hun ttr Gardner Jr., of Vtncouver ii tpending a holiday tt tb*\nhomt of hli pirenta, Mf. md Mri.\nG. Hunter Gtrdntr Sr, of Glen-\nbtnk.\nMn. VL LtRue hu rtturntd from\na holiday ln Nelson.\nMUt Isabel Guidon ot Burton tru\na vititor to Nakuap, , ,\nHiiiiiiiiiiimiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiimiinijuiii\n'Build B. C. Payr-tlt\"\nEnriches\nCoffee or\nPorridge\n\"Our family ute Pacific Milk\ndaily for coffee end porridge,\" Mr. T. writes. Pacific enriches, brings out tht\nflavor, heightens the \u00abn)by-\nment; bring! forward a\npleasure that makes you look\nforward to coffee or porridge\nwith anticipation.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated  and   Vacuum   Pscktd\nJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIHHIIIIIIIINIIIIIHIlia\nQUESTIONS AND ANSWERS\nT. P. L.: \"1 am ovtrwtlgtit tnd\nfor t number of yttn off tnd on\n'\n.\n The New\nFall Styles\nAre Here\nGet ready for FaU ln smart\nnew ihoei from Andrew's.\nKeeps you out ln front ai\nbeing well dressed. Look like\ncustom styled shpes but yours\nfor far, tar less!\nA Complete\nYou'r* certain of satisfaction\nwith these shoes. Their fine\nleathers and high-grade workmanship give you the best your\nmoney can buy!\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders In Footfaghion\nPOR MILK AND CREAM\nValley Uaii\niOOTENAY   f ALLEY   l\/AIRY\nPhone 116\nAluminum Drive\nMoving Forward\nToward a (Umax\nWith aluminum corrali all In\nplace on Baker Street and at five\nschools, and with organization complete for a city-wide collection campaign. Nelson today is all set to\nmake Its aluminum contribution to\nCanada's war effort. Throughout the\nDistrict Hed Cross Auxiliaries are\nsimilarly at work.\nIn every home housewlvei are\ndigging out discarded saucepans,\nbattered coffee pots, leaking pans\nand io on to make their contribution. Every boy and girl attending\nschool ia helping in the process,\nfor they not only want to fill the\nbins on their own* school .grounds,\nbut they also want a piece of aluminum to \"pay\" their way Into a\ntheatre matinee Saturday morning\nat the Civic Theatre.\nScouts, Cubs and Cadets are being organized to assist the Boards\nof Trade, Service Clubs and women's war organizations ln their big\ncampaign.\nThursday night Mrs. E. D. Rutherglen of the Canadian Women's\nTraining Corps made the second\nradio appeal for assistance, directing\nher remarks especially to the women of Nelson and District. Tonight\nR. B. Morris, representing the Red\nCross Society will speak over CKLN\nCondition of Mrs.\nKohar Is Unchanged\nCondition of Mrs. Antonio Kohar,\nunder treatment in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital fnr a bullet wound\nin the abdbmen, was little changed\nWednesday. An operation was performed late Monday.\nBRItK MONTH\nfCUV\ntm tatatet toni.hs, ssak sous\narfeUsorsWsd I*.ln> tSmlm Im\ntim !)\u00abpUosb*s-  Brtt. af tat\nUtrmtr,  . ,  .  trml,  paaefc  fssslt\nIm swmssi, tcllahtful, r-aii.-lo-\nMSTTSS     \u00abSSH     SVOSSOSSllr.I,     \u00ab-.-ss\nbrick mm.  t..-f_\nICE CRUM\ntook Jor\nthli SI*\nThe Finest\nTissue You\nCan Buy\nSears1 12 Million in\nNewspapers Is New High\n$12,219,824 Spent in 1940 in 889 Dailies\n\"Reiterates Faith in th'e Newspaper as\nAdvertising Medium,\" Says Sales Manager\nNEW YORK, Sept. 15-Once again,\nSears, Roebuck & Co. established ltaelf as the largest direct buyer of\nnewspaper advertising by investing\n$1],21!,SM in newspapers during\n1M0, in all-time high (or the second\nconsecutive year, It was announced\nby Dr. Boris Emmet, Sears' retail\nules manager. Last year's huge total\ntopped 1900. the previous record\nyear by 1810,175 representing a 7.1\nper cent Increase.\nAnnouncement to Editor & Publisher of Sears' 1M0 advertising e\u00ab-\npenditures was made In advance o(\nissuing a special advertising report\nto all of the company's 613 retail\nstores, preparatory to the firm's 55th\ninnlveriary celebration, scheduled\nfor Sept. 10 to 30. Ust year marked\nSears' 10th yeir in the retail field.\nind Included the opening of s new\nstore in Honolulu, thus expanding\nthe compmy'i retail operation! beyond Continental U. S.\nNelson Daily News\nAdvertising Sells Qoods\nJ. B. Stark, Local Advertising Manager is\nat your service in the planning of\ncampaigns to sell mote goods\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS\nPhone M4\n\u2014NELSON DAILY NIWI. NILION. B. C-THUH8DAY M0HNIN9. HPT. II. 1H1-\niaae>\nMISS N. MILES HONORED\nBEFORE DEPARTURE\nCRANBROOK, B.C. - PresenUtion of a cigarette lighter waa made\nto Miu Nancy Milea Saturday on\nthe eve of her departure to Toronto.\nThe presentation waa made by J.\nH. Cameron, President of the Crag-\nbrook Liberal Association, on behalf ot tht Joint executive and members, in recognition of her lervices\nas Secretary to the Cranbrook Liberal Association and the Young Liberal Association, in which lhe has\nbeen active for teveral years.\nICROSS\nSouth Slocan Makes\n430 Pounds of Jam\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B.C.\u2014The Hed\nCross Auxiliary met in the Community Hill Friday for ita bimonthly meeting, Mrs. P. O. Bird\npresiding.\nIt was decided to send Christ-pas\nboxes to the \"local boys overseas\nagain this year.\nThe aluminum drive is still going\nstrong and will be forwarded to\nNelson by September 20.\nMrs. F. H. Russel, convener of\nthe iam-making committee, reported that 430 pounda of jam had been\nmade to date.\nIt was arranged to resume the\nafternoon meetings tor the Winter\nseason to begin September 26.\nLarge Shipment\nSent From Creston\nCRESTON, B.C.\u2014There wn considerable variety to the business\ntransacted at 'the September meeting of Creston Valley Red Cross\nSociety at the rooms Saturday. The\ngathering was in charge of the\nPresident, Mrs. W. R. Long.\nThe Society's aluminum drive is\na feature ot this week's effort, with\nthe finish of the drive tet for Saturday. Advice haa been received\nthat each branch society must have\na constitution of its own, and this\nwill be drafted and submitted at\nthe next regular meeting, October 9.\nMrs. R. B. Robinson gave \u25a0 report\nof the Work Committee. A large\nihipment of finiihed work has been\nthipped to Vancouyer, and numerous donations have been received.\nMore workers are urgently needed\naa socks and mitts are winted ln\nlarge quantitiei, and there are\ndresses, pyjamas, laundry bagi gnd\nlayettes to be made.\nMrs. Mallandaine spoke of the\nwork done at Jam making and\nstated that canning would be undertaken. Mrs. E. C. Brown, who Is in\ncharge of the committee organiring\na Red Cross raffle, stressed the fact\nthat no Red Cross drive would be\nstaged this Fall as ln the past, and\nfunds must, therefore, be niied in\nother directions.\nAn tuction sale will be held in\nOctober if sufficient goods are\ndonated.\nFruit donated by Mrs. Kemp, tnd\nmarrows, squash and cream donated\nby Mrs. Haskins were sold. A cookie\nJar given by Mra. Wells, and fruit\ngiven by Mrs. Haskins were raffled,\nand were won by Mrt. H. Adams\nand Mrs. D. K. Archibald respectively, with sales tnd raffles accounting for in intake of-14.\nMrs. F. J. Dunn Finds\nSmall Black Widow\nSpider in Bathroom\nA small black widow ipkler, clear-\nlv marked, was found by Mrs. F. J.\nDunn. 612 Sixth Street, on Wednesday. The spider was spinning a\nweb in the bathroom of ner houae\nCRESTON\nCRESTON, B C. \u2014 Mrs. Wells lett\ntoday to visit friends it Winnipeg,\nPort Arthur, Toronto and other\npoints in Eastern Canada, and will\nprobably bo away until die end of\nOctober.\nRev. A. S. Partington was at Fer\nnie for the Fall lesiion if the runi\ndeanery of Ue Church of England in\nK^tenay East.\nMr. and Mn. John Ryckman ol\nWeat Creston were visiton in town\nMonday\nJ. E  VanAckeran of Canyon and\n\\ J. B. Holder of Erickaon, were vial\nj tors Monday for tha session of the\nI Trustees of Creston Valley United\nSchool Distrxt.\nHarold   Lingston   left  Mondiy   to\nspend i holiday wiU> hii brother.\nErnest it Lethbridge, n well tt tt\nCalgary and other- Alberta points.\nMrs. F. H. Jackson tnd Mn. John\nI Spntt   repretented   Chriit Churcn\nWomens Auxiliary, at the Fall convention of W. A. branchei of East\n* Kootenay, which was held it Fernie Thursday.\nMrs. Percy Robinson wti the\nguest of her brother-in-law and inter. Mr. snd Mrs. Jack Sewell ot\nKimberley,\nMr. and Mn. W. Ferguson ind\ndaughter. Mra. Strong, ipent Sun\nday dt Kimberley.\nFred Payne of Crinbrook Is i\nguest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E.\nW. Payne.\nMr and Mrs. Lester Jamet of\nChapman Camp viiited the latter's\nI parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Ryck-\nI rrusn at West Creston.\n\u2022 F   C. Rodgers returned Tuesday\nfrom Nelson.\nSouth Slocan\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C. - Mr.\nand Mrs. W. A. MaoCabe ind son\nBruce have returned from thtir\nSummer home at Willow Point\nMr. and Mrs. R. E. Friinll tnd\nMs Phyllis Frizzell of Edmonton\nwho are on a motoring trip were\nguests of Mr. ind Mrt. O. W. Hum-\nph-y at Summerhill Sunday, leaving Mondiy morning on their return\ntrip.\nMr. ind Mrt. Howird H. Frlipell\nof Nelson wtre alao gueala of Mr.\nind Mn. Humphry Sunday.\nMr. ind Mn. AO. B. Holdtn hive\nrelumed from t weeka trip to Calgary and other polnta in Alberta.\nDEATHS\nVICTORIA - Capt. Jamet Qlbbs,\n7.1, retired master mariner.\nH It Is on the air a\nC. E. RADIO\nwill get it.\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO.\nLamb, Cheese Prices Up; Local Fruil,\nVegetables Plentiful; Honey Scarce\nAdvanced lamb and chtete pricei,\nt heavy tupply of local vegetables\nand fruiti, and waa tha likelihood\nof new pack canned salmon arriving on this market were reported by\nNelton wholesalers Wednesday.\nIXPECT SALMON\nA portion of the 1941 salmon pack\nhaa betn rtleaaed by the Government, and a small quantity waa expected to arrive on District markets\nwithin a week. Previously, release\nof canned salmon was held up,\nwhile the likely size of the pack\nwat ascertained because large quantities were required to fill orden\nfrom Great Britain.\nThere waa no definite newi on the\npossible arrival of bulk dates, but\nIt wai thought a small ihipment\nmight be received in January.\nHoney wai reported scarce this\nyear, and the main supply \u25a0 will\ncome from the irrigated sections\nabout Taber, Alta., and from Ontario, Maniteba and Saskatchewan\nhad small honey harvests.\nAlthough the weather hat teen\nwet, canning of fruit has gone right\nahead, and iome wholesalers reported their stock of jars sold out. Additional supplies have been coming\nIn to meet the demand.\nStocks of one size ot apple juice,\nwhich is processed in the Okanagan, have been depleted and no\nmora will bt available until Novtmbtr.\nLOCAL VEGETABLES,\nRetailers, lt wat ttld, had been\nbuying ttblt salt in quantity, anticipating a lubstantial Increase In thii\ncommodity ihortly.\nLocally, business for fruit and\nvegetable wholesaler! wat alow.\nThere was a plentiful supply of local vegetablei of all Kinds, and\npeart, especially Bartlettt, crab apples, apples, and plumi. Local stocks\not peaches were the only onei ttlll\non tha markets. Demand for onions\nwei being supplied from local\ncropi, although tome were coming\nin from Grand Forkt.\nGrapes, orangei, lemons, and\ngrapefruit were being imported\nform California. Swtet potatoes\nwere new. The Okanagan waa atill\nsupplying blue baiktt grapes, and\ncantaloups, while tomatoes were on\nthe market from Grand Forkt.\nTht milling market wai stable,\nwhilt tht only change In the meats\nwas a slight advance ln the price of\nlamb. The cheese market waa reported strong and prices were advancing, Butter and egg pricei wert\nunchanged although egg recelpti\nhad been light.\nAmong carlot arrivals were a ctr\neach of meats alfalfa hay, aalt,\ngroceries, cereals and flour.\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MR3. M. J, VIGNEUX\na   The engagement of Mary Mar-\nflaret Madden, third daughter of the\nate Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Madden\nof Nelson, to Stanley, elder son of\nMr. and Mrs. G. Montgomery, 6842\nAngus Drive, Vancouver, Is announced. The marriage la to take\nplace in Vancouver October 3.\n\u2022 Douglas Elsdon, son of Mr. and\nMn. T. W. Elsdon, Bonnington, left\nyesterday for Vancouver to resume\nhis studies at University ot Britiih\nColumbia.\na Mri. Frank Rossman, Nelion\nAvenue, hai returned from Trail,\nwhere she spent a couple of weeka\nwith her daughter.\na Mrs. J. Fisher of Hall Siding\nspent yesterday in town.\nEXPECTED FROM KIMBEHLEY\na Mrs. E. G. Smyth ls expected\nIn Nelson today Irom Kimberley\nto be a guest ot Mrs. James O'Shea,\nTerrace Apartmenta.\na Gunner Lloyd Coulter of London, Ont., wai in the City en route\nto the Coait on a holiday.\na Percy Gilchrist returned yesterday to Vincouver after a few\ndayi in Nelaon owing to the illness\nof his mother, Mri. G. N. Gilchrist,\nSecond StreeL\na Honoring her guett, Mrs. H.\nGeorge of New Denver, Mrs. J. B.\nGray, Biktr Street, entertiined at\nthe tea hour Tueiday afternoon.\nThose invited were Mra. George\nWilliamson, Mri. L. A. Jewitt, Mrs.\nNorman Richirdson, Mrs. A. Ru-\nzickt, Mrs. M. Gibbs, Mrs. C. R.\nMcLanders, Mrs. Andy Mclntyre,\nMrs. L L. Boomer, Mrs. Rendall ol\nGreenwood, Mrs. E. Iiutc!iant of\nNew Denver, Mn. Dacy Petty, Mrs.\nStanley Bostock, Mrs. J. Kline and\nMrs. W. J. SUyerwopd.\nVISITOR FROM SALMO\na Mrs. G. G. ralr of Salmb spent\nTuesdiy in Nelson.\na Mra. Butchird wai In tht C'ty\nfrom Nrtv Denver Tueidty. '\na Angui Campbell, Victoria\nStreeL had is guesta his brother-in-\nlaw and siiter, Mr. md Mn. Fred\nBrett of Retallack, also his cousins,\nMr. and Mrs. Cy Drake of Bridge\nRiver District, who have returned.\na Frank Talbot of Salmo visited\nNeUon yesterdty.\nt Miss Deanie Wallace, Cedar\nStreeL had as guest Miss Edith Slye\nof Cranbrook.\nt Mrs. C. D. Blackwood, Hall\nMines Road, will have as her weekend guest Hon. Mrs. H. Perry Leake\nof Ballour, who plans to arrive this\nmorning.\na Albert Erickson of Caitlegar\nvisiled town Tuesday.\n\u2022 Mr. ind Mrs. W. T. Elsdon ol\nBonnington spent yesterdsy in Nelson. They were iccompanied by\ntheir son Robert (Bobby) who left\nfor Calgary for his R.C.A.r. examination.\n\u2022 Mrs. A. Dunsmore of South\nSlocin ipent Tueidiy in town.\nRETURN TO TRAIL\na Mr. ind Mra. Gordon Hollington returned to their home ln Trail\nifter a couple of weeki in Nelson,\nt Robert Mtln. ion of Mr. ind\nMrs, R. Main, Pop Inn, plans to letvt\ntodiy to resume his itudiet tt University of Toronto.\nt Mrs. Hirold Smith, Granite\nRoid, left yesterdty by motor for\nPortland, Ore.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mra. George Biddlecombe of South Slocan ipent Tuetdty In Nelson.\nTO RESIDE AT FERNTB\nt Mr, tnd Mrt. Fred Brett of\nRetaUick. who vilited Nelion, htvt\nlett to make their homt in Fernie.\na Complimenting Mra. L. G. A'*\ngar, nee Hilda Talberg, Mrs. A.\nWilley of Bonnington and Mn. Jack\nKilpatrick were co-hostesses at a\nsmart kitchen shower and \"kids'\nparty\" Tuesday night at the home\nHelen Harper\nSWEATERS     '\nAt ADVIRTIIID IN LIFI\nFASHION FIRST\nLIMITED\nYou will find Mtlsfaction In\nour large gssortment of\nHATS\nMILADY'S Fashion Shoppe\nWATCH REPAIR\nli a Jab for txperti. Oui1 work\n\u25a0nurei your utlstictlon.\nH.  H. Sutherland\nDRY CLEANING SUITS, or\nladiw' and Men't .... Ov**-\nNELSON CITY LAUNDRY\nand Dry Cleanln\nMISS MYRTLI HUFTY OP\nSLOCAN CITY HONORED\nSLOCAN CIT*. B. C.-On the\nevt of going to Ntlton to attend\nBusiness College Miss Myrtle Huf-\nty's frlendi gavt a surprise party\nfor har at ber home. Gamea wert\nplayed and at midnight a dainty\ntupper waa aerved. Those present\nwera Mlai Hufty, Mr. and Mrt. Hut-\ng, Leslie and Frank Hufty, June\nraham, Ruby Wilton, Ellen Middleton, Irene Budd, Lorraine end\nDoretta Ruuell, Gloria Catley, i*.\nTerry, Betty Terry, Jean McDonald, Allan Warner, Vernie Manh\nand Adolph Melchel,\nTwo Gifts Swell\nQueen Fund $31;\nTotal Now $676\nTwo contribution! to tha Queen\nElizabeth Fund, received at Tha\nDally News Wednesday, boosted\nthe fund total $37 to $876.47. The\ncontributions included a $35 check\nfrom the Castlegar Patriotic Society,\nrepresenting donations from Doukhobor employeei of Waldie'a mill,\nand a $2 -gift from Mn. F. H. Graham of Nelaon.\nThit fund la to htlp the people of\ntht bombed areai of Britain.\nof Miss Mae Fotos, 707 Victoria\nStreet. The prize for the best\ndressed little girl was won by Miss\nFrances Lincoln, other guests included Mrs. Leo Atwell, Mrs\nGeorge Stewart, Mrs, O. onens'on\nMrs. H. C. Pitts, Misi Rita Jones,\nMiss Jeanette Winlaw, Misi Emily\nLeeming, Mrs. A. Euerby, Mrs. Bud\nGreenwood, Miss Betty Freeman\nMiss Peggy Gibbon, Mrs. P. Duffy,\nMisa Monica Brewer, Mrs. Miles\nRiddle, Miss Audrey Emery, Mrs.\nF. E. Wheeler, Mrs. William Ramsay, Mrs. John Morey, Miss Alison\nYounger, Mrs. F. E. Dickens Jr.,\nMrs. Leonard Batley, Miss Betty\nMcDonald and Miss Eva Henrickson.\nHERE FROM ROSSLAND\na Rossland visitors to town yetterday included Jack Cox, Philip\nThatcher, Ray Scott and Jack\nLaface.\na WilUam (Bill) Kapak, who\nspent the holidays with his parents,\nMr. and Mrs. P. Kapak, Vernon\nStreeL plans to leave this morning\nfor Saskatoon to enter Univenlty\nof Saskatchewan on an exchange\nscholarship from Dalhousie, Halifax.\na Mrs. H. George of New Denver, who visited for the past week\nat the home of Mr, and Mrs. J. B.\nGray, Baker StreeL left for her\nhome yesterday.\nt Bruce Burtch waa in the City\nTuesday from Brilliant.\ne- Mr. and Mrs. Pat Duffy from\nFruitvale have Uken up residence\nat the upper apartment! on 822\nVictoria Street.\nLONDON (CP). - Captain Arthur\nLawrence and Chief OfficeT Ernest\nAlbert Hall, rescuers of a crew attacked by enemy aircraft off Dover,\nhave been awarded the Emile Robin\nlife-saving prize for 1940.\nCASTLEGAR\nCASTLBGAH, B. C. - Mra. R.\nShields had as a gueit over the\nweekend their daughter Min Mont\nShield! of Trill.\nMr. ind Mri. W. Duncan and\nGeorge were Trail vlilton Saturday.\nMiss Kiy Harria of Trail tpent\nthe weekend with her parents, Mr.\nand Mn. W. Hirrlt.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Thatcher of\nTrail have taken up residence ln\ntheir new home at Kinnaird.\nMias Pat Comerford of Shore-\nacres visited Mr. and Mrt. R. E.\nMcGauley at the weekend.\nTom Easom of Kinnaird was a\nTrail visitor Saturday.\nR. Hunter ls a patient ln the\nTrail-Tadanac Hospital.\nMr. and Mn. G. Himlln of Trtil\nvisited Castlegar Monday.\nMr. and Mra. S. Vaughn of Trail\nwert Castlegar viiitora Monday.\nMist K. Tyson of Trail viiited in\nCastlegar Monday.\nMr. and Mrs. D. Crawford returned to Trail Sunday where they\nwill reside for the Winter months.\nMr. and Mra. O. Cuiack of Trail\nvisited the latter's parents, Mr. and\nMn. R. E. McGauley Monday.\nMrs. J. Thatcher entertained on\nMonday afternoon in honor of her\ndaughter Carol's fourth birthday.\nThe little guests were Patsy Mc-\nLoid, Shirley Dittrich, Joan Dit-\ntrich, Linda Thatcher, Dickie Mc-\nLoid, Jerry Dittrich, Barclay Crelghton and Linda Thatcher. Mra. H. Mc-\nLoid assisted the hostess ln serving\nthe small guesti.\nEAST KOOTENAY\nRECRUITS CO TO COAST\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-Four recruits left for District Depot, Victoria, the week ending September\n20. They were C. W. Moore, Creston, J. A. Ball, Michel, James\nMcNeil snd T. E. Ralph of Kimberley. W. S. Scott of Kimberley\nleaves Thursday for District DejjbL\nTwo More Apply,\nWar Emergency\nTraining (lass\nWomen may soon be able to take\nWar Emergency Training counti.\nWhen B. B. Clark, Director of the\nNelaon class now being organized,\nwu at tbe Coait during the Summer thit question wai discussed and\nwhile nothing definite reiulted, he\ngained the impression that lt was\nquite likely women would be invited to train. Commercial, ichooli\nat tht Coait had already announced\ncoursei for women, ha added.     ,\nMr. Clark pointed out the training given in the war emergency\nclasses waa especially useful to\npenoni going into employment ln\nthe airplane Industry, and that women would probably be employed\nto an increasing extent in this\ninduitry.\nNIMBLE FINGERS\nHe laid young women, In their\nlate teens or early twenties, preferably with High School education.\nwould probably be accepted first. In\nmany cases, in aircraft work requiring nimble fingen, women were\nbetter than men.\nSo far, however, tnere wai no\nprovision for women to takt the\ncourte here. It was believed tht\nresponse of men would determine\n-PAQI  FIVI\nFREEMAN\n\u2022    FURNITURE CO.   *^\nThe Bout* Of Furniture Vtluei\nPhona 115 iagli Block\nYou oan havt naw furniture on  i\nconvenient terms when you buy\non eur\nBUDGET PLAN\nhow  toon  the  count   might  bt\nopened to tham.\n-Two additional Inquiries wera received  Wednesday by  Bir, Clark.\nThe ntw class will start about Oe- ;\ntober 1 lt sufficient application! ait-9\non hand.\nLONDON (CP). - Sir WilUam\nClark nai been elected Chairman\nof the Council of the Royal Empire\nSociety, succeeding Maj.-Gen, Sir\nFrederick Syket, who retired ifter\noccupying tht poit thre* yean.\nVrr--z_tae,.> 'i*ss.\n\u2022*M\/l(j(J$~\nMadeline .\u00bb\nCarrod\nTry Lux Met\nSoap facial denning for'\n30 dayi. Flnt pet Lux Toilet\nSoap't Whipped Cream Lather lightly In,\nrinie with warm water, then cool. Pat gently\nto dry. Now lee bow imooth yonr ikin feels I\n9 out of 10 Screen Stars use Lux Toil\u00abt Soap\nAn Urgent Appeal\nIS MADE FOR YOUR OLD\nALUMINUM\nTHE GOVERNMENT ARE IN NEED OF EVERY PIECE\nOF SCRAP ALUMINUM IN THE DOMINION OF\nCANADA TO BE USED IN THE PRODUCTION OF\nPLANES.\nBins are located at all ichool grounds\nand on the corner of Baker and Ward\nStreets. Deposit your old aluminum\nat these places before Saturday night.\nA house to house canvas will be made\nat 7 p.m. Friday. When ytu hear the\ntrucks coming help the canvassers-\nhave your aluminum at your doorstep.\nSPECIAL CHILDREN'S MATINEE\nCIVIC THEATRE \u2014 SATURDAY MORNINC 10 p.m.\nADMISSION\u2014A PIECE OF ALUMINUM\nEvery boy and girl is urged to find a piece of old aluminum and present it at the theatre as their shard\nof Canada's war effort. Mothers are asked to cooperate with the children in this affair. Adults are also\nwelcome to attend.\nThe Drive Closes Saturday Night \u2014 Do Your Part Today\nThii Advertiiemant Mad* Poiiibla by Hi* Following Firms:\nWood, Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd. The Brackman-Ker Milling Co., Ltd.\nMacdonald's Consolidated Ltd.\nThe W. H. Malkin Co., Ltd.\nNotional Fruit Company\nPalm Dairies Limited\n_____\n_\n \t\nf^mmmm^m\nPAGE  SIX          ...   \u25a0\" i  -    \u25a0'\nNf-Umtt Baihj yitm\nEstablished AprU 22. 1001\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Meretting Newipaper\nPublished tvtry morning txctpt Sunday by\ntht NIWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED. 266 Baker St. Nelson, BritUh Columbia\nMEMBER OT THS CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS.\nTHURSDAY, SEPT. 18,194L\nSays Bismarck Crew Refused\nto Serve Guns\nJohn T. Whitaker, of the Chicago\nlaily News' foreign staff, who is writing a series of copyrighted articles on\nBritain, from which he has just returned, devotes one\" published 4ast\nweek, to the Hood-Bismarck sea fight,\nand asserts that the crew of the German pocket-battleship mutinied when\ndoom became certain. The crew, he\nclaims, wanted to scuttle the Bismarck\nand take to the boats. Practically all\nof the 100 survivors picked up, whether officers or seamen, from the complement of 2400, agreed in their tale,\nhe says, but the British Admiralty,\nin the interests of high naval tradition, and in honor to the German officers, who appear to have fought gallantly, stubbornly and skilfully, has\ndeclined to give out the story \"that illuminates the character of Nazi morale\u2014a morale that is unexcelled until\nthe going becomes too rough.\"\nMr. Whitaker contrasts the action\nof the German crew with that of the\nmen of the Hood, who went down singing in the best tradition of British seamanship. Of the Germans, he says:\n\"The men of the Bismarck fought\nin the conviction that she was 'un-\nginkable'. This is the story told by all\nher survivors. In addition to remarkable armor protection, this two-year-\nold warship had utilized the most modern trick of building further protection through series after series of separate watertight compartments with\npressure doors.\n\"Where four torpedoes will sink\nany normal battleship, the Bismarck\ntook six direct torpedo hits and 20 hits\n1>y 15-inch shells before a final torpedo\ndispatched her. Despite her broken\nrudder she had made her way to within 400 miles of Brest, which spelled the\nprotection of German aircraft and\nsafety.\n\"Her crew behaved admirably, with\nfull confidence in their ship and in her\nability to get away, until the final\nmorning. Then, as the British closed in\naround her, ship after ship circling\nher, and the British flying boats zooming down with torpedoes, the German\ncrew lost hope.\n\"Shaken by shellfire, and vomiting\nas the ship was repeatedly shaken, the\nmen had no song on their lips. They\nbecame in a twinkling not heroes but\nmutineers. In the last two hours her\ncrew behaved in the Nazi tradition of\nscuttling the ship. Only her officers\ntook the gaff.\"\nThe story of the mutiny, Mr. Whitaker, states, is well known in Britain,\nand he says he had it from several unimpeachable sources, including individuals who interviewed the survivors.\nNILION DAILY NlWt, NILSON, B. &-THUUPAY MORNINO, SEPT. 10, 1041-\nit\n\"God   is   my   Helper.\"\u2014Psa   54:4.\nIt was a dark night and the drended alarm,\nfollowed by the chug-chug of the enemy\nbombers, could be heard in every home. Within a few minutes the noise of falling bombs\nand screaming guns awakened the children\n-who had been asleep, and sorrow and sighing\nwere to be found in every street.\nJust on the outskirts of this naval town\nln England lived an earnest Christian ex-naval\nman. He had commended the little home, hii\nbeloved wife and four dear children in prayer,\nand they had laid down to rest. In one moment all was dark. Father and Mother were\nwith the Lord. In a miraculous way under\nthe ghastly ruins of the little home the children were saved. Willing hands were soon\ntrying to help In the midst of the inferno.\n\"Hark\" said one, \"a child's singing\" And\nthere trom under the ruins could be heard\nthe clear voire nf a little child,\n\"Safe am I. safe am I.\nIn the hollow of His hand.\"\nWords of Wisdom\nLet ui be of good cheer, remembering\nthat the misfortunes hardest to bear are thoie\nwhich never happen.\u2014J. R Lowell.\nTest  Yourself\n1. What is the title ot the poem that begins, \"The boy stood on the burning deck\"?\n2. What novel brought Booth Tarkington\nil first public recognition?\n3. Is an unusually good card player referred to as a \"card shark\" or \"card iharp\"?\n? ? Questions ? ?\nANSWERS\nOptn tt tny reader, Namei of penoni aiklnu\nqueitloni will not bt publlihtd.\nCurious, Rossland\u2014What ta tht difference be-\ntween a trade union and an industrial\nunion?\nA trade union la a labor organliatlon ti\ntilt workeri within ont trade uiuaUy ikilled\nor lemi-skilled only; an industrial union la\naU tha worktn within a given Industry, unskilled as well u ikilled.\nM. P., Nelaon\u2014From whert art submarines\noperated, on the surface, and below water?\nOn tht surface a submarine li navigated\nfrom the conning tower or a light bridge over\nlt below water, with tht aid of periicopes, of\nwhich two or three of different heights are\ncarried. Theae can ln aome oaaea be partially\nwithdrawn into the hull, and ara fitted with\nrange-finding mechanlimi. A gyroscopic compass .operating repeating compasses at varioui\npolnta in the ihip, givei direction.\nP. and J., Crestova\u2014Wa havt been having an\nv     argument aa to which of two men invented the telephone, Alexander Graham Bell\nor Philip Reis. Could you pleaie tell us?\nThe telephone owei lti preient commercial importance to Alexander Graham Bell.\nIti invention may fint be credited to Philip\nReii, who, ln 1681, transmitted' muiical Kunds\nin a vibrating membrane. Bell, howtvtr, put\nthe theories of the tranemisiion of aound into\npractical operation, and he wai tha inventor\nof the telephone as we know lt today.\nIt ,T., Wynndel\u2014Would you pleise tell ma\nwhen and where George Bernard Shaw,\nthe great English dramatist, was born?\nGeorge Bernard Shaw was born in 1880,\nIn Dublin.\nReader,   Robson\u2014Hava  you   a  formula   for\ncleaning gloves?\nAny ot the following may do tha work,\nbut nothing is said regarding keeping tha\ncolors: (1) Soft soap. 1 ounce; water, 4 ounces;\noil of lemon, Vt drachm; precipitated chalk\nof sufficient quantity. Dissolve the soap in\nthe water, add the oil and make Into a atlff\npaste with a lufficient quantity of chalk (2).\nWhite hard soap, 1 part; talcum, 1 part; water,\n4 parts. Shave the soap into ribboni snd dissolve in the water by heating. Insert the talcum. (3) Curd soap, 1 ounce; water, 4 fluid\nounces; oil of lemon, half a fluid drachm;\nFrench chalk, a sufficient quantity. Directions\nare the same as fomula No. 1.\nPress Comment\nWARTIME PRIOES\nThe Tribune, of Winnipeg, says that a serious question has been railed ln Uie public\nmind as to the efficacy of the Wartime Pricei\nand Trade Board. The probability U that\ndoubt on this point is entertained throughout\nthe length and breadth of the land. Tlie Tribune points out that ln Winnipeg, since the\noutbreak of the War, the pricei of 22 commoc\nfoods have risen by 32 per cent. It admits\nthat there are a variety of reasoni, and iome\nof them good, why these increaiei of prices\nshould have taken place, but it suggests that\nwhere the citizens believe they have Juat\ncomplaints the specific instances ahould be\ndrawn to the attention of the board. The\nquestion that arises Is, why should citiieni\nhave to do this? It ll a matter for the board\nItself to keep track of all -price increase!\neverywhere and of controlling them when it\nis aicertalned that they are not caused by\neconomic neceeaity.\nThe fact ii that tte Wartime Pricei and\nTrade Board hai done very little ilnce IU\nInception lave prove the emanating point of\nreams of publicity. In descanting on the condition! that exist in wartime affectign production, distribution and consumption it merely\nprovidei essays on political economy. The\npeople are interested ln the actual facts of\nthe situation, in the prevention of profiteering, and, in many instances, they cannot understand and have fajjed to be informed on\nreason! why certain commodities, and eisential\nones, should be mounting steadily in price.\nThe Wartime Prices and Trade Board has now\nfunctioned long enough to get down to brass\nfor members of the public having to maka\ntacks. It is that organization's duty to control\nprices and there should never be any necesrity\nrepresentations on this lubject Horeover,\nthere should be the fullest investigation of\nwhy prices vary so greatly in different parte\nof the Dominion, vary far more than can be\naccounted for by the cost of transportation to\nthe markets from the points wnere commodities originate.\u2014Victoria Colonist\nQERMANY WILL FEAR\nThe significance of quality (in Churchill-\nRoosevelt statement) will not be lost upon\nUie world\u2014allied, neutral or enemy. In Germany that memory of 1918 will be revived,\nand fear of Anglo-American invincibility .viU\nadd its dark shadow to the thrusting wings\nwingi of the Royal Air Force over the land of\nthe Third Reich\u2014London Newi-Chronicle.\nCAMP GADGET\nNewest camping gadget ii i sleeping bag\nof reinforced special paper, wind and waterproof, and weighing only three pounds. Tht\nquestion is. hai it a zipper, or does Uie woodi-\nman, when retiring for the night, give an imitation of a pound of pretzeli wrapping IUelf\nup? And does a peper knife come with It?\u2014\nWashington Evening Star.\nToday's Horoscope\nHalcyon days await today'i birthday children in the next 12 monthi. All their affairi\nwill prosper exceedingly. They should make\nhay while the nmshlne. The year will be moit\nhappy, fortunate and eventful for them\u2014one\nlong to be remembered. The child who ii\nborn on this date will be remarkably fortunate, and poiseii many fine traiu of character and exceptional talent. He or ihe will forgi\nahead in life, earning fame and renown.\nWar\u201425 Years Ago\nBy Tht Canadian Prtn\nSept. IB, 191*8\u2014Frenrt captured Florini\nIn Macedonia, and puriued retreitlng Bulgarians. Britiih took a strongly fortified point between Ginchy and Bouieaux Wood, and\nFrench captured Denlecourt on the Somme\nfront.\nTEST  ANSWERS\nI. \"Casablanca\".\n?. \"The Gentleman From Indiana\".\n3. A \"shark\". A \"card sharp\" suggests a\ncheat.\nEtiquette Hints\nDon't try to carry on a conversation with\na person who Is using the telephone. It ll embarrassing for the one using the phone, and\npuzzling to the perion at the other end of the\nline.\nLetters to the\nEditor\nLetters mty bt publlihtd cvtr t nom dt\nplumi, but Uit actual name et tht wrlttr\nmuit bt given ta tht Editor at evidence tf\ngood filth. Anonymoui letteri ge In thi\nwaste paper buket\nWould \"Tropnwt\" to\nFind Who're Useful\nTo Tht Editor of Tht Dtlly Ntwr\nSir-One, signing himJelf Reallit, bat\ncontributed an Interesting letter which you\nprinted SepL 0. Tills worthy gentleman proceeds to abolish \"The Capitalist System\" by\nsimply asserting that \"there la no iuch thing.\"\nPerhapi ha feels that our present wayi of\ndoing business have produced too much muddle, distress and rascality to bt deicribed u\na system. It so, I cordially agree with him.\n\"Good Sane Government Can Only Follow\nSound Procedure.\" Thus the letter la headed.\nWith thli I am ln hearty agreement, ao in\nthli latter 1 will endeavor to iet forth what\nappean to me to be \"Sound Procedure.\"\nMoses won the title of \"Lawgiver\" by\ngiving forth tht celebrated Ten Commandments, Which ahould be the foundation ot ail\nlaw, Ull Fourth Commandment opens with\nthis statement of human duty: \"Six daya\n\u25a0halt thou labor and do all thy work.\" Our\nlaws and customs, under what most educated\npeoplt describe as tha Capitalist System,\npractically abrogate thla moit sensible law.\nGet hold of some valuable real .estate or iome\ngilt edged securities, and then you art legally\nentitled to \"take your ease, eat, drink and ba\nmerry\" for ieven dayi in the week.\nIn wartime we return to the ancient wisdom and \"sound procedure\" that tha old\nprophet laid down. Wa try hard to make\neverybody \"do their bit\" even If our modern\nlack of system entitles iome ui to be unlimited slackers. Will Realist Inform ua? Ia\nhe in favor of conscription for wartime? If\nlt la \"sound procedure\" for war time, doea\nIt become unsound Its peacetime?\nPRODUCTION EPFICIENT\nUnder the Capitalist System, for thtrt ll\nno other term to uie, mankind hu been\norganized for modern mail production moat\nefficiently. Production haa been prodlgloui,\nbut distribution hu failed disastrously. Tht\ngoodi produced have too often gont to tht\nwrong people. The moit fundamentally useful people have been wont paid; fraudulent\nrascals flourish.\nWa iee tha Canadian army being rapidly\nbuilt up and efficiently organized to bt the\nbiggeit business ln the country, but lt Is not\ns capitalist enterprise. Doei thii fact suggest\nto Realist that there might pouibly be \"lound\nprocedure\" without our usual methode of\nbusiness and procedure? It li time that wa\nabolish useleianesa from Canada for tvtr, Ltt\nme explain how up to data poultry mtn successfully get rid of unprofitable chickens.\nOiey have an efficient device for trap neat-\nlng each bird. The record ia ktpt of tht\neggs laid by each hen; thou that fall to\npay their way go to tht pot\nI suggest that wt devise somewhat similar\ntrap nesU for every Canadian citizen. Pot-\nlibly even our friend Realist may be subjected to this ulutary testing. What 11 ha\nshould prove to be \u2022 mere cackltr?\nObviously our human trapnetts would\nbe of the bookkeeping variety. Wa ahould\nwant an accurate record kept of the good\nwork done by each citizen and his personal\nexpenses. This would ba tha work for tht\nbanken of the future; magnificent work,\nkeeping track of what people do lniteid ot\nwhat they hippen to have. Such recorda\nwould ierve to guide Canada ln all its under-\ntakings, and to ahow accurately where the\nrewards should go.\nFancy every Canadian working on a well\nthought out plan for the whole country, not\niome working desperately hard, arhllit others\nire despicably idle, but all trying to do useful\nwork. Am I luggeitlng \"lound procedure?\"\n' Youn for Justice,\nr\nNew Denver, B. C, Sept. 12, 1041\nr J. C.\nHirris.\nA Tribute to Greyhound Men\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014Can you ipare \u2022 little of your valuable space for theie somewhat crude venea\nin appreciation of our Greyhound boyi, Hav-1\ning travelled a great deal this Summer, my\nfriend from Vancouver, and I, feel that with\nall due acknowledgment of the courtesy of\nother bus lines, our boys in grey, from tht\nCoast to Alberta, deserve public recognition,\nfor their genial courtesy, gentlemanly friendliness  and  thorough  capability.\nWith tht\u2014in placea\u2014terrible roads,' and\ndifficult passu, such u the Cascades at night.\nI really don't know how they keep their good\nhumor, and make us ill feel like one happy\nfamily, but they doi There has been much\ntalk lately of attracting tourisU thii way,\nand I'm aure if our bus drivers had anything\nto do with it, we would get plenty of them.\nFor friendllneu, and cheerful ungrudging\nlervice, mean a lot, when one ls travelling,\nand elderly people certainly appreciate it.\nTWO PASSENGERS\nNelson, B. C, Sept. 15, 1941.\nThe venei follow:\nTO OUR BUS DRIVERS\nWith a cheery grin, they \"roll 'em ln\",\nTheie boyi of the Greyhound breed,\nWith muscular grace, they hold the pace,\nNor ucrifice ufety to speed.\nWt go thro' \"the pan\", to their ehttry laugh,\nAnd \"over the top\" ls the town.\nTho' driving all night and the roads a \"true\nfright'\nThey greet ui with never a frown.\nWe purr o'er the plain to tha loothlng refrain,\nOf a motor Just tuned to the minute.\nAnd we know ai we go that the boys wa like io\nAre giving their belt \"to the limit\".\nTho' exhauited and tired, they leem ever\ninspired.\nTo think of our comfort and pleuure,\nAnd we pray the dear Lord, Hii ptact to\nafford.\nAnd bt with them in duty and liiiure.\nSo here'i to the lads of the Greyhound Unei\nWho make our vacation! io pleasant\nMay their eyei never falter, their hearts\nnever fall.\nOf the courage they have to \"itay-wlth-lt\".\nWords of Challenge\n\"The ordeali .therefore, of the conquered\npeoplei will be hard. Wa muit give tham\nhope. We muit give them the conviction that\ntheir lufferlngi and their rulitancei wtll\nnot be in vain. The tunnel may be dark and\nlong, but at the end there li light.\"\u2014Wlniton\nChurchill.\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nCP.R. Builds 90-Foot Turntable\nat Nelson Roundhouse\nHAS STRIKE WORRIU\nDean Wayne I.. Morie, above, ot\nUnlvenity of Oregon Law School\nat Eugene, Ore., named by Preiident Rooievelt u chairman ot\nboard to mediate threatened nation-wide railroad itrike. Morse\nis the Pacific Coast arbitrator for\nthe contract between C.I.O. longshoremen and the waterfront employers.\nSMOKE SILHOUETTE\nA view looking Eut on Wacker\nDrive. Chictgo, showing cloudi\nof smoke rising from a tour-storey\nwarehouse that went up ln flames,\ncausing damage utlmated at $250,-\n000. The smoke clouds silhouette\nthe -Mather Tower.        .\nSUPPLY EXECUTIVE\nZ. P. Taylor, formtrly executive\nassistant to Minister ot Supply\nHowe, who hu been named to the\nnew Supply Board post of Executive Officer of the Council.\nOld 70-foot turntable has been taken out and here a crew Is tearing down the old\nmasonry wall. The concrete wall for the new turntable, with rails in place, shows the\nextension necessary for the new 90-foot turntable. A. E. Stewart, Divisional Engineer,\nis standing on the concrete wall in the right background.\nCrew taking out the old centre base on which the turntable turned. Piled ties were\nused in taking out the old turntable.\nCrane lifts big loads of rocks out of centre and swings them to gondola behind\nIt\u2014Daily News Photos.\nGeneral Otozo Yamada of ihe\nJapaneie general stiff, who was\nnamed commander-in-chief of the\nnew \"National Defence Headquarters.\" responsible for all\nphases ot naUonal defence ot Japan.\nON THEIR WAY TO THREE-POWER WAR CONFERENCE\nThe four-man American mission to the forthcoming British-American-Soviet conference in Moscow is shown. Left to right, are: Major-Gen. James Burns, William L.\nBatt, Admiral William H. Standley and W. Averell Harriman, Chairman.\n   -\u2014\n * '        ' ' '   \u25a0  \u25a0 \u25a0 \u2022 ' \u25a0',  '..*..'' \u2022\n\u2014NELSON DAILY NIWS. NELSON. B. C-THURnOAY MORNINO. SEPT. 11, ,1941- *      ij I     < l_9_m_mM-V \u25a0 ' <\u25a0   ,*______t_V\nBIG ZEKE GIVES POINTERS TO TROOPS\nBig Zeke Bonura, left, former big leaguer, who took plenty of razzing in his day,\nhappily dishes some out at the reception centre in Camp Shelby, Miss., where Zeke is\nnow one of Uncle Sam's soldiers.   He's assistant director of the centre.\nSPOR\nia^T\nMttl IIVIN\nDodgers' Rally in Ninth Puis Down\nPirates; Cards Win Two From Braves\nlo Trail League Leaders by One Game\nBy tha Canadian Praia\nFor tight Innings yesterdty a\nrudt Jolt teemed In itore far tht\nptnnant \u2022 hungry Brooklyn\nDodgera but Flatbuih'i beloved\n\"bums\" awaktntd ta thtlr parll\nIn dime-novel fashion and tort off\na flvt-run nlnth-lnnlng rilly to\n\u2022quelch  Pittiburgh  Plratei 6-4.\nAi a final touch io tbeir ipine-\ntingling lurge, the Brooks quenched\na counter-rally by the Buct in the\nninth in tht hick of time after one\nrun had scored. A big \"5\" tacked\non the scoreboard for St. Louis was\nthe spur which snapped the Dodgers\nout of their lethargy.\nUntil that five-run Inning of the\nCardinals against Boston, the\nDodgera were docile before the fut\niltnts_of Sotlthpaw Ken Heintzel-\nLandis Names\nEllglbles (or\nWorld's Series\nCHICAGO, Stpt 17 (AP). \u2014\nTwtnty-flvt mtmbtrt of Ntw\nYork Yinkeei, chimploni ef the\nAmericin Ltigut, todty were\nnamed by Ktntttw Mountain Lin.\ndit, Commiuioner of Baiabill,\nai eligible.* for World'i Seriei\neompetltlon.\nLmdii alto ntmed 26 members\net  Brooklyn  Dodgert   at   eligible\nthe Seriei and 23 far St. Louis\nmalt  now  engaged  with   the\nera ln a fight for the National\n.at chimpionahlp.\nThe eligible list follows:\nYANKEES (25):\nSrnett Bonham,  Stanlty Borda-\nEry.   Norman   Branch,   Morrii\neuer, Sturgeon Chandler, Frank\nP. Crotetti, Williim Dickey, Jofteh\nDiMiggio, Alley Donald, Vernon Gomel,   Joieph  Gordon,   Thomu  D.\n\u25a0enrich,  Charlei E.  Keller, John\nJ. Murphy, Steve Peek, Gerald Pnd-\nTar, Philip Rizruto, Rabest A. Rolfe,\n. Jtanfci Rotar, Charlei H. Ruffing,\nI Marius Rusto, George Selkirk, Ken-\nttt   sllvettrt,   Charlea    Stanceu,\noiH Sturm. Coaches: Arthur Flet-\nher, Berli Combt.\n! BROOKLYN D0D-3IM (25)1\nBd*ard J. Alboata, John T. Allen,\nLdolph Camilli, Hugh Chiey, Ptlar\n\u00bbrt, Curtii B. Dtvlt, Thomas\n, Leo (Manager) Durocher,\nJttalmmoni, Hermin L.\nLiwrence French, Auguit\nalan. Lukt D. Hamlin, William\nrman, Walter Kirby Higbe, New-\nKimball, Harry A. Lavagetto,\nJoaejsh M Medwick, .Arnold M.\nven, Harold Reese. Harold P.\n'iter, Lewli Riggs, Fred Walker,\nJamet C. Wtideli, John Whitlow\nWyatt. Coichet: Charlei Dretten,\nfun Corrlden.\nST. LOUIS CARDINALS (23)1\nJunta R. Brown, Morton Cooptr,\n\u25a0WUliam Wilker, BKel Crabtree,\n\"frank Craapl, Williim E. Crouch,\nHarry E..Guntbert, John L. Hopp,\nIra K. Hutchinson, Howard Krist.\nIdward Lake, Max Lanier, August\nR. Mancuao, Martin Marlon, John\nR. Miie, Terry Moore, Don W.\nPadlatt, Howird J. Pollet, Clyde\nShoun, Enoi Slaughter, Lon Wirn-\nekt, H. Coiker Triplett, Ernest\nWhite. Coaches: Clyde Wares, Mike\nGonzales.\nMcMillan Ring  Frtt\nMOTOR OIL\nCosts you lew.\nShorty's Repair, Shop\nT14 Baker St Nelaon. B. C\nCANNON BALL SETS\nNEW TROT RECORD\nDELAWARE 0, Sept. 17 (AP).\n\u2014A new world's two-hat trotting\nrecord for two-year-old coita travelling over a half-mile track was\nset in the USOO Delaware Gazette\ntwo-year-old trot when Cannon Ball\nbeat out the favorite, Colby Hanover, in today's opening grand circuit race.\nOwned by George Benham of\nCedarhurst, L. I., and driven by\nHarry Whitney, Cannon Ball trotted\nthe heats in 2:06 and 2:07%, a cumulative time of one second under\nthe old record. The time of 2:07iri\nwaa alto the fastest hett trotted by\na two-year-old over a half mile\ntrack this seuon.\nDykes Plans lo\nBreak Up Team\nBy BILL KINO\nAuoclated Preu Sports Wrlttr\nBOSTON, Sept. 17 (AP).\u2014Putting reverse English on the futile\nwar cry of \"break up the Yankees\",\nkeen-witted Manager Jimmy Dykes\nof the Chicago White Sox, suggest!\nthe other seven clubs do eome slashing on their own hooks. \u2022\nAny time a club finishes 20 or\nmore games behind the leader, tear\nlt to ribbons,\" Jimmy advL.es before pointing ouL \"something must\nbe radically wrong when they are\nthat far buk. They can't improve\nof their own accord unlesi they\nshake themselves up between seasons.\"\nAnd, since he Ii cuting himself\nas a basebaU physician, James is\nwilling to take Uie first taste of his\nown prescribed medicine,\n'1 probably will be forced to\nundergo an operation on my own\ngall bladder within a few months,\"\nDykes said, \"but no matter what\nthey do to me, it will be time to\nthe cutting I'm going to do on my\nWhite Sox \"\nBALL STANDINGS\nm\nAMERICAN\nNew York     97   IB\nBoaton     7t   X\nChicago     73   74\nDetroit      71   75\nCleveland     70   74\nSt. Loull   66   7B\nWashington ... 83   80\nPhiladelphia 62   84\nNATIONAL\nBrooklyn       W   51\nSt. Louii     91   51\nCincinnaU  79   64\nPittsburgh    77   66\nNew York   64   75\nChicago     \u2014 66   78\nBotton _  59   94\nPhiladelphia     , 40 100\nPet Bhd\n.548 X.\n.497 24'A\n.4863 26\n.4661 26\n.455 30 Vt\n.441 31 Vt\n.425 35\nM0\n1541\n.552\nStt\n1\nlSVi\n\\5h\n.460 284\n.488 27\n.413 334\n.286 51\nShaving's just a pknk now.\nFor Blue Gillette ore slick\u2014and howl\nThese blades lick wiry whiskers fast\u2014\nYou get dean, easy shaves that fast\/\nt&3!3_____-\nYou afwoyj get easier shaves\nwith Blue Gillette Blades, because they have the sharpest\nedges ever put on steel.\ntekyem\natia%-m_*c\\Ym~^i*w vtao fa fatt fra)\nHaaae tl (Mil ilMl\nmtti \u00bbaio\u00ab sums you ivnt ustd i .. ot rout monsy back\nMillers Hang On\nlo Playoff Raft\nMINNEAPOLIS, Sep'- \u00bb (AP)\u2014\nThe Millers weathered a itonn ot\nerrors and Louisville base hits today\nand clung tenaciously to their\nAmerican Association playoff ratt\nwith a 10 to 6 victory over the\nColonels.\nThe Minneapolit victory prolonged the semi-finil playoffs it\nlent another day. It was the Millers'\nsecond straight triumph after three\nLouisville victoriea. Louisville\nmust win one of the remaining two\ngames, the Millers need them both.\nLouitvllle     6 14   4\nMinneapolis     10 11   5\nLeFebvre, Fleming (5), Scheetz\n(7). and Glenn; Hogiett, Kline (8)\nand Denning.\nBOXING RESULTS\nBy Tht Auoclated Prett\nGARFIELD, N. J. \u2014 Tippy Lar-\nkin,   136,   Garfield,   stopped   Joey\nZoddt, 136, Newark, N. J, (4).\nWHITE PLAINS, N. Y. - Jacklt\nDonovan, 186V4, Buffalo, N. Y., outpointed Augie Arellano, 159, Houston, Texas (8).\nNEW YORK - Lou Schwartz,\n161-Vi, Brooklyn, N. Y., outpointed\nAndre Jessurun, lSQVt, New York\nin the eighth.\nman. They madt hita ln every inning\nbut the first, a total of 15 for the\ngame, but repeated failurea agalnit\nthe pitching of Heintielman left\nthe runnen stranded.\nThe Cardinals edged a little\nnearer Brooklyn by iweeplng a\ndoubleheader from Boiton Bravei,\n6-1 and 3-2, and now trail tht\nNational League leaden by only\none game. Estel Crabtree, 37-\nyear-old outfielder, imacked t\nhome run in the ninth Inning of\nthe tecond gamt to bring victory\nin a pitchen' duel between Max\nLanier and Jim Tobln.\nHit homt run ln tha seventh Inning of the flrtt game tied tht icon\nand then in the eighth eame a five-\nrun splurge on Brave mlaplayt, two\nwalks and three hita. The pitching\nin the first game waa top-notch and\nuntil Tom Early blew up in the\neighth he waa tha equal ot rookie\nHoward Pollet who ctme through\nwith bit fourth victory agalnit om\ndefeat ln tha month he hu bate\nln tht majors.\nCincinnati's Reds took a twin bill\nfrom Philadelphia, a hit batsman\nwith the bases full doing tha trick\n3-2 ln the nightcap after Johnny\nVander Meer yielded but thrte hits\nand fanned 11 to win tha opener 1-0,\nGent Thorn-pun'! aecond two-big-\nftr opened the ninth with tht icort\n-2. Benny Zlentara rin for him.\nEddie Jooat tnt patted purposely;\nEddie Lukon beat out a bunt to\ntill tba bases and Paanon'a tlrtt\npitch hit Bill Werber u ht itood\nit tht plate ln place of Chuck\nAleno, to forct In tne winning tally.\nLed by Babt Dihlgren with t\ntriple and two singles, Chicigo\nCubi ilimmed thtlr , wty to t\n7-3 triumph ovtr tht Ntw York\nGlints tnd movtd within htlf t\ngime of fifth plaea In tha Na-\nVALUABLE CMD\nSfTUXArCAODWAU'\nCAPTAUJ \u2014 tam\n\u25a0fatti n iri\nAasAwrter\nouitotows\n\u2014\u2022*\u00ab*\u25a0> rfe\nDtOtlYPMPA\ntlo-itl Ltigue, now htld by tht\nGiants.\nPhil Marchlldon'i generosity with\nbaste on ballt and a two-run error\nby Sam Chapman gavt Detroit a\n3-2 victory \"over the Athletics.\nBoston Rad Sox, surging trom\nbehind with a two-run ninth-inning\nrally, extended their currant victory string to eight itrtight at thty\ndefeated the dispirited Cleveland\nIndiana 3-2.\nThree itralght singles ln the lQth\nInning brought Wuhlngton Senators\na 9-8 victory over St. Loula Browns.\nIn tha 10th, Hllli* Layne singled\nafter two were out. Ht took tecond\non Ctcil Travis' hit tnd cunt hojnt\nwith the winning run on Mickey\nVernon's tlnglt.\nNew York Yankees broke up\nwhat might have been a iparkling\nin    Spud\n_  ith by I\nIng across four runi In tht fifth\npitching    dutl   between    Spu*\nChtndler and Ed Smith by blast-\ninning   to  beat  Chicago  White\nSox 5-8.\nNATIONAL\nBrooklyn    t XS   X\nPlttaburgh    4   8   0\nC. Davie, Hamlin (8) and Owen,\nFranks (8); Heintzeljnen, Sewell (8)\nand Lopez.\nFlrtt game:\nBoiton     1   8   2\nSt Louit     8   7   1\nEarly, johnion (8) and Maai;\nPollet tnd Mtncuio.\nSecond game:\nBQiton     2   8   0\nSL Loula     2   6  0\nTobln ind Berrei; Lenler and\nMancuso.\nFint game:\nPhiladelphia       0   3  3\nCincinnaU    1   8  0\nMelton tnd Livlnp'.on; Vander\nMttr and Lombardl.\nSecond game:\nPhiladelphia^    2   8  0\nCincinnati       3 10   0\nBeck, Pearion (8) ind Wirren;\nThompton and West.\nNew York    3 10   3\nChicago      1 10   1\nKoslo.Lehrmsn (6) tnd Danning;\nV. Oban and McCuUough.\nAMIRICAN\nDetroit      3   4   0\nPhiladelphia    2   7   3\nBanton and Tebbetti; Mtrchildon,\nVaughtn (8) md Wtgntr.\nClevelind    2   6   1\nBoiton _    3 10   1\nBagby ind Hegan; Dobson and\nPytlak.\nSL LouU    8 11   2\nWashington      8 20   3\nAuker. Newtln IT). McKain (7)\nand Ferrtll; Wynn, Anderson (6),\nZubtr (7) tnd Etrly, Evani 10).\nChicago     3   5   1\nNew York       5   8   3\nE Snflth ind O. Dickey; Chindler\ntnd W. Dickey, Silveatri 3).\nGrizzlies Take\nFirst Road Trip\nVANCOUVHR, ta*. 17 (CP). -\nVtncouvtr Grizzlies lt-ft tonight for\nRegim on thtir flrtt rotd trip, i\ntough Jiunt thtt Includes four\ngarnet within t wtek tnd will undoubtedly provt or disprove the\nntw Cout grid machine u a \".ureal\nin lta flnt yur ln the Wetttrn\nInterprovlnclal Football Union.\nThe Grizzllet meet Roughriden\n-agalnit whom thty lott ont, 4-1,\ntnd won ont, 7-6, here lut weekend\u2014tt Regina next Friday. Then\ncomet t two-gtmt tenet Sept. 23\nind 24 it Wlnnlptg with tht Blut\nBomberi, chtmpiont of Weitern\nCinidi for the pMt four yea:\nTht Cout team will thtn bounce\nbtck to Rtgina for t final gamt\nther* Stpt 26 befort returning\nhomt to engage tie Bomben here\nThinkiglving Day,\nPitying Coach Qrtf Kabat took\neight backfielden with him, including Jick Homt, BiU Heindl,\nJimmy Gilkea, Oirnlt Smith, Jack\nLabelle, Sammy Carol, Johnny Gor-\n\u2022nko ind Norm Trmsollnt.\nGrizzly linemen making the trip\nIncludt Streaky Adamt, Charlie\nMiUman, Gordon G-Hhaya, Mort\nVan Ostrand, Jack Baton. Brie\nSmith, Bob Billion. Al Polliok,\nHank Smith, Casey Jonet ind\n\"Moon\" Cimeron.\nStan Letcock tnd Ltrry Htynea\nwiU play at outiidt and centre. Jot\nKtyu tnd Art Fr*>g wiU look\nifttr tht mtp tpot\nOFFERS TO IUY PHILS\nPHILADHJ'HIA, S-tcL 17 (AP).\n\u2014An offer to buy tnt National\nLeague Phillies wu mailed to\nGtrry Nugent today by Jtck Ktlly,\nNttioml Dirtctor of tht United\nStatai phjnical training program on\nbehalf ol i lyndlcite ht headi.\nNugent U with tht PhlUltt it Cincinnati.\nANOTHER FISH STORY\nThe thrilling final moments of a battle between m\u00bbn and giant tuna fi\u00bbh are showt*\nabove. In picture at left Capt. Vincent Droughton of the ahlp Eugen** IV, ia aeen\ndoing battle with a huge tuna off AtUntic Highlands, N. J. Capt Lou Marron of the\nBrielle Marlin and Tuna Club is seen holding the rod while Droughton reaches for the\nwire leader before gaffing, tn centre photo the monster fish makes his final struggle.\nAt right the tuna is gaffed, and is about to be hauled out of the water.\nFORMER CHICAGO PLAYERS NOW WITH DODGERS\nFor some peculiar reason there are eleven former Chicago playen (White Sox\nand Cubs) who are now playing with the league-leading Dodgers. Seated, in front\ncentre, are: Augie Galan and Kirby Higbe; in the row behind, are, left to right: Billy;\nHerman, Dolph Camilli, Larry French; Burt Davis and Witt Wyatt. Standing, rear,\nare, left to right: Knute Kimball, Dixie Walker and Hugh Casey and Coach Red Corrigan. All but Wyatt and Walker were one-time Cubs.\nBig Shakeup f o\nCome in Indian\n(amp Next Year\nBy WHITNIY MARTIN\nAuoelited Pratt (part Wrltar\nNBW YORK, Sept. 17 (AP).-\nTht tttm whloh everyone expected to go places ln tht American League thia year went farther\nthin tnyone expected. It went\ntrom fint to fourth, tnd pouibly\nfifth, In ibout thrtt months, and\nlor thli reason we havt i hunch\nthtt tht blggeit rattle when tha\ninnuil winter ihakeupt occur will\noomt from Cltvdand Indiana.\nWt took note of an Indian box\nscort rtcently, tnd with tht ex-\nception of two tr three familiar\nnames it might have been the lineup\nof t team In the trl-county league.\nRoger Peckinpaugh It loting no\ntime in trying to lind out what ht\ncan expect ot the young fellowi the\nclub is bringing up. He knows what\nht can expect of the veterans, and\nln several cases ht knows it isn't\npeace and quiet.\nHad not so much betn expected\nof tht Indians the situation wouldn't\nbe to bad. But when a team falla\nflat on Its fact two years in a row.\nit's obvious that something muat\nbe done. The club officials thought\nlt was the Manager's fault the first\ntime. Now they ihould be con.\nvinced it lin't tht Manager, and\njust il I guess we'd say thit Peckinpaugh will be back next year.\nIn ont gtmt tht othtr dty tht\nIndians hid a fallow nimtd Jtck\nConway tt ihortttop, t guy by\ntht mmt of Bob Ltmon it third\nbut, mother stranger ntmed Jim\nHegtn bthlnd tht plate, tnd t\ngent lilted In tht lineup \u2022\u25a0 Frier-\nion In lift fltld.\nRolllt Htmtlty, Clint Brown, Ruas\nPeten tnd Larry Roienthal weren't\neven taken on tht laat Eutern\nswing, ihowlng thit Peckinpaugh\nintended to link or swim with a\nbatch of rooklei, ind if the club\ndropped i notch or two thtt wu ill\nright, too.\nSports Roundup\nByHUOH I. FULLERTON, Jr.\nAiso-jlited Prttt Sport Wrlttr\nNBW YORK. Stpt. 17 (AP). -\nPennant progreu report: Butbtll\nmen may feel that the Yanki were\nnot iny better thta tven monty in\ntht World Series u long u Chirley\nKeUer and Rtd Rolfe trt out, but\nthe booklet don't iee It thit way.\nTheir figure is 9-5 igalnst tlther\nNttiontl Ltagut Club.\nBaseball writers with the Dodgert\nsuggested I separate column in the\nbums' box icorea \u2014 \"Erron laved\nby Camilli.\" . . . Hana Lobert pointi\nout thit the Cardi' speed im't limited to Hopp. Marion and Brown . . .\nThey're ill fut, ht uyi, tvtn thtlr\nbat boy.\nKirby Higba haant thavtd linct\nbtfort tht Dodgtn itarttd their\nWttttrn trip tnd uys ht won't\ncut 'tm off until thty clinch tht\nptnnant.,. Maybe tht record book\nwill chinge hii mind. The lut time\nBrooklyn won tht ptnntnt\u2014in 1920\n\u2014the nee wun't decided until\nStpt. 17.. .\nCONSUMERS' RESEARCH\nChirlet Haddad of Worcettar,\nMui, polnti out thit Cleveland's\nfondest memories art of two 20-\npme winntn, Ferrtll tnd Feller.\nSo how tbout t ftw mort \u2022T\"\nboys? . . And from tht ume town\nSteve Markitwici nomlnitta Jot\nDiMiggio md Dolph Camilli ai tht\nmott viluible Major Leaguers (ind\nhim prictlcally \u2022 next-door-nelgh-\nbor of Ted Williams!) , . .\nCoach Gus Dorais is getUng ilong\nwith only 34 players on his University of Detroit football squad but\nthere are 123 men bidding agiinit\nhim for hts job on the common\ncouncil In the municipil election\n... He must have got his slgnils\ncroued when he cilled for candidates.\nHITLIR WILL TRY TO\nMAC WORLD DOWN\nWITH HIM\u2014IAXTIR\nTORONTO, SepL 17 (CPl-Bav-\ntrley Btxttr, Toronto-bom mtmbtr\nof tht Brltlth Houm of Commoni,\nuld In in Interview htrt todty thtt\nwhtn Hltltr gou down to defeit\nhe will do ill possible to drag the\nwhole world with him\nMr Baxter, who crowed the Atlantic by clipper pltne, on tn official million to New York md Washington, wil] renew acqutintincei ln\nCinidi tnd iddress tevenl gather-\nAlberta Puck Men to\nStudy Kootenay Plan\nfor Games Exchange\nCALQABY, Sept. 1\u00ab (CP).-Def-\nlnlte make up of the Albtrta Senior\nHockey Leagua will ba decided on\nfor tht 1941-42 seaton at a mtttlng\nto ba htld ln Calgary ntxt Sunday\nafternoon. Repreaentatlvet of Lethbridge, Turner VaUey, Red Dter\nand Cat-ran- Clubs will be preient.\nOfflctn will bt tltcted tor the\nituon, t committee formed to draft\nthe ichedule and an application\nfrom tha Kootenay League for an\nexchange of garnet, the ume as\nlut Winter, will be conildered.\nLethbridge, Calgary and Red\nDeer Clubs are all set but Turner\nVaUey Oilen may drop out of the\nLeague thia winter.\nFavorites Fall\nBefore Unknown\nin Nel Tourney\nLOS ANGELES, Sept. 17 (AP).-\nUnseeded George Richardi of sub-\nurban Montebello continued to\nknock favorites out of the Pacific\nNorthwest tennii tournament today,\neliminating Hal Surface of Kansu\nCity, 6-1, 8-10, 9-7, ln a singlet batUe thit luted two houn 20 minutes.\nRichards, who yesterday defeated\nTed Schroeder of Glendale, Calif.,\nstaved off three match pointi in the\ndeciding set to enter the semi-final\nround opposite Oakland's Frankie\nKovacs.\nKovaci won by default from William Tilbert, Clncinntti, 6-4. In tht\nsecond let, with Talbert leading 4-1,\nhe puUed \u2022 leg muscle md had to\nreUrs-\nJtck Kramer, Montebello, advanced to the quarter-finals to meet\nNaUonal Champion Bobby Riggi\nwith i 6-1, 9-4 victory over Jamei\nWade, Stanford Univenity.\nIn women's singles, Mirgaret Otborne, San Francisco, defeated Mrs.\nMidge Vtn Ryn, Auitin, Tex., 6-1,\n6-J, md Gertrude Dockatader, Los\nAngeles, defeated Barbara Bradley,\nLoi Angelu, 7-5, 7-5.\nDoublet resulu, ill third round\nmatchei:\nNational Doublet Champion Kramer and Schroeder deleated Tom\nFalkenburg and Arthur McDonald,\nLos Angelea, 6-2, 8-1; Larry Dee and\nWade, Stanford, defeated Jot Btch-\nmin ind Diit Ilenhuth, Lot Angeles, 6-3, 6-4; Surftct tnd Douglai\nWoodbury drftattd Talbert tnd\nJohn Vtn Ryn, 6-3, 8-6; Dorothy\nBundy tnd Valerie Scott, England,\ndefeated Virginia May and Joan\nHerrlck, Los Angeles, 6-2, 6-2, and\nMUs Scott and TaTbert defeated Patricia Rote ind Georgt Richardi,\n6-2 ,4-6, 6-3.\nBatting Leaders\nBy Tht Anoelittd Priu\nBatting (three leiden in tiei in\netch lugut):\nFlayer, Club G Ab R H Pet.\nWllllama, R S . 194 424 129 174 .406\nTravli, Sen .... 141 371 99 203 .366\nDiMagg, Yanks 131 512 116 161 .356\nReiser, Dodgers 129 510 109 171 .335\nHack. Cube .... 143 556 106 in .317\nMedwick, Dodg 123 499 96 158 .317\nMiie, Cirdi  _. 129 470   69 149 .317\nHomt runs: Americtn League \u2014\nWilllima, Red Sox, \u00bb; Nttioml\nLetgut \u2014 Camilli, Dodgtn, 33.\nRuni batted in: American League\n- KeUer, Yankees 128; Nitional\nLeigut \u2014 Camilli, Dodgen, 112.\nSPOKANE GOLFER DIM\nSPOKANI, Sent. 17 (AP)\u2014Wil-\nlard D. (Bill) Mader, 49, professional it the city's downriver golf\ncoune for 20 yeeri tnd widely\nknown u a teacher of long-iron\nplay, died today.\nHOCKEY HEAD DIES\nPORT ARTHUR, Sept. 17 (CP) -\nWilliam J. Altkens, 47, a brewer's\nagent and President of the Ttiundcr\nBay Amiteur Hockey Association,\ndied here today.\nCANADIANS\nRILAX IN SPOKANE AT\nAL MORSE\nCLUI AND CYMNASIUM\nAFt    BAR   -CARD ROOM\nEVERYBODY  WELCOME\nW. 425 MAIN AVE.\nSPOKANE, WASH\nBuffaloes Get\nStrangle Hold\non Championship\nNATAL, B. C. \u2014 Pliying on I\nwet field Natal-Mlchel Buffalo*\ntook a strangle hold on Crow'i Nut\nPut Baieball Leagua championship and ttw prized J. K. Ripgland\nCup when thty defeated Kimberley\n4-3 it Natal Sunday.\nOnca again Tom Krall, ace pitcher\nandy work-horse of tht Buffalo\npitching staff, bested Mitheri in a\nthrilling duel Both tllowed but\nieven safe hlti. Krall itruck out\nfive Klmberler batten and walked\nnont, while nil opponent wtlktd\nsix tnd itruck out six.\nKlmberler scored tht fint run ta\nthe fourth inning on two hita. Tha\nBuffaioei camt right back to tia\nthe game ln tha bat of the fifth\nwhen Androlick walked and tcortd\non Katrichak'! hit\nTht vlilton took a two-run laad\nIn the tixth on two hltt tnd two\nwild heaves, but tht Buffaloes aniwered by scoring a tlnglt run In\ntheir half of tht ilxth ind then tied\nlt up at 3-all ln tha seventh whtn\nPeten icored on Kitriohak'a liner\nto centre. The winning run w\u00abl.\nicored ln the last of the ninth when'\nKimberley midt two lucoettlva errors to permit tht runner to icore\nfrom third while tht pity was being\nmade for a putout at fint base.\nThe game wu umpired by J. Jo-\nsay of Natal and A. Morrii of Kimberley. Dua to tht conatant nln\nonly a tingle gama wu pliyed ot\nthe double header Uut wu scheduled. Two gamei, if neceeaary, will\nbe played at tha Natal Ball Park\nSunday.\nScore by lnningi:\nIII\nKlniberley ..... 000 101 000-9 . I\nNU.-Michel  000 Oil 101\u20144  7 I\nBatteriei:\nKimberley, Mathen ind Ckowdar.\nNatal-Mlchal, T. KrtU and Weaver\nTHERE'S NO MISTAKING\neAa\/uid&rt..\nTHATSWH?\nBLACK&\nWHITE\"\nDIITILLIO, tUJIDCD\n\u2022 NDtOTTlIOIN    ,\nDili idvertliement It not publiihed\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or  by  tha  Governmtnt \u00abf\nBritiih Columbia.\n- . \u2014\n\t\n CLIAN-CUT NIW HOMI FROCK\nWlahiatv   TltaAtin,\nFATTERN 9TS0\nTou'U like tht\u00bb casual, well,\ngroomed air that this new Marian\nMartin Pattern, 9750, will five\nyou. You'll like its quick sewing-\ntime, too, due to the helpful Sew\nChart! The long centre-front panel, accented by buttons In \"Jolly\nthreea\", ia very slenderizing See\nbow tha lections at the side of\nthe ikirt are gaily pointed above\nthe walit to hold ln the gathered\nbodice fullneis. 'A trim waiat-line\nla further assured by the little\nhalf-belt that ties In the back. For\na touch of color, you might use\nric-rac n the simple collar, at the\nwalat and in the tucks of the ihort\npuffed sleeves. (Make them long if\nyou like). You'll enjoy tasks when\nyou wear this frock!\nPattern 9750 may be ordered\nonly in misses' and women's sizes\n14. 16, 18, 20. 32 ,3t. SS. 38, 40 and\n42. Size 18 requires 3\\ yards 35\ninch firbic and 2 1-8 yards ric-\nrac.\nSand twenty cents for this Mar-\nIan Martin pattern. Ba sure to\nwrlta plainly your SIZE, name,\n\u25a0 ddren and ityle number. Send\nyour order to The Dally Newi,\nPattern Department, Nelson. Pattern will be ient to your home\nwithin  10 dayi.\n*\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS' NELSON   B. C.-THURSDAY MORNINO, SEPT. 11. 1941\u2014\nKNIT THIS LAURA WHEELER SWEATER WITH\nOR WITHOUT SLEEVES\nSuch simple knitting, this sleeveless sweater, you\ncan make it with sleeves if you like. That special someone will find it a practical addition to his wardrobe! Pattern 2962 contains directions for making sweater in\nsmall, medium and large sizes; illustrations of it and\nstitches; materials required.\nSend twenty cents for this pattern ta The Nation Dally Newi,\nNeedlecraft Dept., Nelion. Write plainly pittern number, your name\nand address. Pattern will bo mailed ta your home within 10 days.\nCONTRACT . . .\nDONT HELP BVOLAJtlBa\nTHERE ARE Juat three kinds\nif occasion* on which you ahould\ndoubla -rour opponent'! slam contract. Ona of theae ll when you\nara certain to beat It, no matter\nhow ha playa tha hand, and even\nIf ha thould than shift tin declaration to another ault or No Trump.\nTha iecond la when yon are trying\nto cause your partner to make an\nopening lead different from the\nexpected one and tell him ao by\ndoubling. The third la when your\nopponent has made a palpable sacrifice btd, which you can punish\nterrifically, and you are trying to\nkeep your partner from bidding a\nalam af your own o\u00bber It. At\nother ttmea, eapeclally If your\ndouble can help the declarer play\nthe hand -McceaafuBy, your Job la\nto paaa.\n(AKJ\nf AJ\u00bb\n\u2666 10 5 4 1\n+ J42\na) 10 \u00bb 4 3\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n, \"Thu who la country u bain'\n\u2022poied. In a few more years,\nfolki will let Main Street fill\nup with tmih if the Government\n\u25a0don't move It\"\nfungus Disease\nDamages Asters\nWhat to do about astor wilt\nBy DEAN HALLIOAY\nIt is a keen disappointment to the\nflower gardener when the China\nAlters lov color, wilt and die just\nas they are about to come into\nbloom T^iis is caused by stem rot\nor wilt which is a fungus disease,\nand one of the most destructive\ndiseases nf asters.\nAs illustrated in trsdsy's Garden-\nGraph, the fungus ittacks the roots\nfirat and advances up the stem\nwhich becomes black it the 101I\nlurface. \"Hie infection of item rot\nuiually hegins in the seedling stage\nbut is not noticed until later ss\nthe buds develop. The cause fre\nquen'.ly is due to eircessive water\ning. allowng lhe planu to remain\nirio'st too long\nTo prevent this trouble buy wilt\nre-Van! varieties, or sterilize the\n\u25a0oil nnrl dls'nfec' Ihe seed Unfortunately, this fungus lives over Win-\n\u2666 Q108\n4 None\n4 K 10 IT\n5 3\n*.\n_\n4\u00bb6U\n?4\n\u2666 KQ\u00bb7\n\u2666 AQ8I\n*<**>\nfKITDI\n\u2666 A J8\u00ab J\n4 None\n(Dealer:    North.   North-South\n\u00bbulner\u00bbMe.)\nNorth\n1*\nINT\n<*\u00bb\nEaat\nP:s.<*s\nPass\nPia\nSouth\n1\u00bb\n3f\n\u00ab\u00bb\nWest\nPass\nPas-i\nDbl\nAfter Weat led hia spade 2 to\nlie Q, South surveyed tha sltua^\nBy Shepard Barclay\nHon and dedded to count on Weat\nfor three trumpa to the Q. Ha\ntherefore cashed the heart K and\nled tha heart 3 to tha 10 and J.\nTha heart A then dropped the Q\nand ended all chance of hla being;\nbeaten.\nNext ha led the diamond 2 from\ndummy, Eaat covering with the Q\nand the A winning. The diamond\n3 then waa lent to the 10 ind K.\nThe club A waa ruffed, the .spade\nA used aa an entry to take lha\nmarked finesse of tbe diamond 8,\nthe J dropped the 0. making tha\n6 good, and South finished with\ntwo trump tricka.\nIf Weit had not doubled, South\nwould have taken the diamond K\nand A on the first two rounds,\naetting up the Q for Weit and\ncausing defeat of hia contract, ai\nbe also had to lose a diamond\ntrick.\n\u2022 SS \u2022\nTttuorrew't ProMoa\n4 a 10'\nf A J\u00bb 1\n\u2666 K\n+ kj\u00ab;s!\n\t\nCOMIC AND ADVENTURE STRIPS ..\n\u2666 7\n* K Q 10 7 >\n4 10 7 5\n4AQI1\n(Dealer:    North.   North-South\nvulnerable.)\nWhat would you comlder perfect bidding by both sides on thla\ndeal?\nDistributed by King Features Syadkate. Int.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\nI Cheat\nI slangy*\n4 Cry of a\ndove\nT Krlghtaa\n\u00bb Wont\n12 Lowest deck\nof a vessel\nII Fragrance\n14 Strap of a\nbridle\n7 Inflamed\nspots\n8 Crawli\n10 Disclose\n11. Savory\n17 Cloie to\n15 Dnnki little 18. Captivate\nVerbal\nRestaurant\nChinaae        28. Malt kiln\ntea 39. Mineral\nRowing 30. Arboreal\nimplements mammal\nPerformers 32. Agreeable\non the oboe 33 Mandate\n34. Cooks at\nhigh heat\n18. Hebrew\nletter\n37 Planta\n42 Part of Saturn's ringi\n41. French\nauthor\nfclSIMU   _V_i\nwem *_vvs\ni  nann  -.'.innu\nOHHUQii ?iniiP<\n:im nr-wa iii;i*:<\nrasa raaana\ni-r.iiri mm i_\nauann maim\nnpi hod anna\nararam una\nnna itwwi as\naaaa auaoara\neraa-ia ueise\n'\u25a0itiijis uuun\nijutiu anan\nV-.t>i*d\u00ab>'i Aaiwer\n1\nn\n2* Small island 41. Viper\nby little\n11 Elongate*\nfish\n17 Finnish\nseaport\n20 Perched\n21 Appentioa\n23 Attempt\n24 Body ef water\n25. A garment\n27 Outwlta\n29 Urge\n31 Boy\n34 Cry of a iheep\n33. Plana\n38 Grampui\nSO Definite\narticle\n40 Froien water\n41 Peruvian\nIndian\n43 Long.eared\nrodent\n44 Girl's namt\n\u26664 Raised to\nthird powtr\n47 Geology term\n48 Eyes\n49 Short sleep\n\u00bb0 Sorrow\nDOWN\nI Provinct\nof ancient\nPalestint\nt Metal\n3. Vigor\nCRYPTOQUOTE\u2014A cryptogram quotation\nPCXOX       WV       BL       MGXNP\n9-18\nJj _\nHi\n m.\nTHE GUMPS\nBy Cut Edson\nhltoU HM'PNOTIZE\nVIM- IS IT FA|RT\u00bb\nOFFERWEAPWJW\nFIFTY BUCKS Ta\nHYPNOTIZE &M\u00bb.\n6ii\u00bbAPIMT6WC*\u00bbJ>\n#TVWTMIU.I*MJ-    l 'M,JM\nM\n*-*_\n7_m\u00a3__}__*!_\n\"-ON'TBECRUOE-\nM OUST* So*\nMAN, BUT I HAVE A\n6REAT 6*T-ANt>\n\u2022-\u00a9UOFFWME\nSwS\n\u25a0\u00bb. \u00ae \\\\-UtS, *\nJANE ARDEN\nBy Monte Barrett arid Russell Rosi\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManus\nM X B W O V\nIIWPCLOP     N     gWTPOGX     LJ     BNK8XVV\u2014\nNOWVPLPHX\nYettertay't   Cryptoquote:    EARTH    PRODUCES   NOTHINB\nWORSE THAN AN UNGRATEFUL MAN\u2014 AUSONIUS.\nDiitsihsit.il ks  Kins r.iiss... Irnattata. Inc\nHOW TO WORK CRYPTOQUOTES\nCryptoquotei are quotations of famous persons written In cipher\nA substitute character has replaced tht original letter For Instance,\nin \"R\" may substitute tor the original \"E' throughout the entire\ncryptoquote. or a \"BB' may replace an \"LL\" Find the key snd follow\nthrousih to the solution\nte- in Ihe sr:! so that  If* any  butiui  the same  soil  year altar  \/par,\nwilt-resistant  varieties art planted I will will be present\nAH-THAT VACUJM-CLEAWee\nSALESMAN IS GOWE -IT IS\nABOUT TIME HE GOTTCEIP\nOm BiWGesr IK\/ DOOR-BELL-\nt:\njlvvw-t*\nHEBE nOUARE-SAELaD\nJUST A MINUTE-I WU.\nGTVB NOU A QJABTEC\nFOB THE LOW OF IT- I\nHAVEWTAIJV USE FOR\nrr mow\n\\w^\n5*\nOn'\nTHAKJkS-\nUOW IKU\nGO TO\nCOLLEGE-\nHENRY\nBy Carl Anderson\nMOW, REMEMBER JOE' KEEP\nE^t**TwlM6 UNOEP VOUP\nu. HAT\nDONALD DUCK\nBy Walt Disney;\nKING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED\nBy Zane Grey\ntMUTHS\nwivrH^aiGL\nPLEADS WITH\nITU MOTTO\nDO*yOOHW\u00bb*TDJSaSOKOCHOVNAMlTsl ffW, WNO).' ****\u00ab\u25a0\u00bb BRAND -. WCCTN Ah.0\nfoo toja esKhsoaavowc sounonos, A *mx h*v\u00bb -to *\u25a0\u2022-- man* ChaOSM \u00ab\nkO.NBLO I    , ,. , ' > CHART THS OH.-BEAAN4 PCSMATO*  *\nlwow.' rt -sson }l,*rhsfvx-^,\n'WS MANY Or <Cls!*AIS TO S\u00ab5\n'THO\u00ab TOSTAU- ION \u00bbN ITTACK\n(W* TXI WtH-JL fcv Jr* HA3-\n,OXiN.'   ^\/\\m, OOONNO\nI4KW04 \"\nSV\u00abN\u00bbSTK \u00abVr \u00bbLkST ICM015 \u00ab0OM tss* _\n(SWAT UEQt) 0>= SMkfiiV 66**^ THUNOESS H *U3 CONf USON SCOOiS\nTMB Fttjris TllNOgA\/\nBLONDIE\nBy Chic Young\nQj  IM, U N-hi-i Vl.4ii. w, W\u00bb< i\u00bbiiw^\n -\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\n^Classified Advertising\nWHERE BUYER AND SELLER MEET\n-NILtON DAILY NlWt. NILION   B. C-THUR8DAY MORNINO, IIP.. 11.\nHELP WANTED\nApplicitloni will  not  ba conildered from persona engaged in\n' tht production ot war supplies\nWANTED - GENERAL BLACK-\nimlth, good wages, steady work.\nApply Chu. 0. Rodgers Ltd.\nCreston^B. C.\nWanted - fence post mak-\ners, good timber, good ground to\nwork on. Winters lob. Apply Clui\n0. Rodgeri Ltd., Creiton, B, C,\nAll round dairy farmTuTTD\n. first clui milker (40 month, board\n* ind room, ittrt at once. Box IOU\nFernie, B. C.\t\ntysANTED - AN EXPERIENCED\n.truck driver. References. Apply in\n.   writing to Box 2816 Daily Newi.\nAQENT5 AND SAtESMEN\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n1930 FORD AA\n1 '\/j-TON TRUCK\nSALESMEN wanted for\nNELSON AND TRAIL\nA progrtulve company estab-\nllahed over 50 yean hai two\nopenings for residents with good\nconnection. Appllcanta, preferably married, must be of good\nappearance between tha agei\noi 28 ind 40 years wbo can pan\na rigid examination. Exceptional immediate opportunity and\nearly promotion including [.fusion at age 60 for.quallfied men.\nIn applying itate agi, education, ulei experience. If your\naniwer meeti requirementi an\nrlntment for personal inler-\nwlll follow. All inquiries\ntreitad confidentially. Apply\nBox 2806 Daily Newi.    \t\nly Newi.\n_msr\nCapabli men and women to\nbecome Toothlll representative!\nln varioua \"British Columbia\ntown!. Heri li in opportunity\nlot you to maka extra money in\nyour ipari time. Show our com-\nSlete range of Chrlstmu cardi\n> friends ind icquilntancei.\nWrlti todiy for FREE SAM-\nplea Toothl.la Ltd., Dept. N.,\nTIS Bower Building 543, Granville, Vancouver, B, C.\nRENTALS\nLOWER  RENTALS\nAttractive furnlihed luitei, 130\nmo, where you ire privileged\nts enjoy our well-kept lawns.\nKERR APARTMENTS\nBOUK-rTa&e sTeam hEatEP\nhouie kaadlng roomi in Annible\nBlock torrent R. W. Dawion.\n____ B7 Wird Street\nKk kt*-2 BEDRMS. PRIVATE\nhone. Prlvite bath ind ihower.\nBrUkfrit 606 lSUci St. Ph. 479L\nmtWX - MODERN 5 ROOM\ncottage on North Shore netr the\nferry. Retiomble rent Ph. 773Y2\nx bib rai wast awav\ntm* homt Strathconi Hotel Apti\n\u25a0SftfttrJT - RIAL NICE H0M8\nTurnice, electric itove. Ph. 89\nTHtRA'\nTOff - i ROOM H00SU\nIn. D. Migllo. Ph  808L.\n_.<_ km TJttutlM m\"odirn\nBlgldilre equipped luitei.\nW>li WW. sW* WR'MNT\n\u00ab In. $18. C. W. Appleyird\nRfJOM W5E__ -&KKGI\n*U*t* baiement. 500 Victorit S*.\n._.' DBCftTEf!\nrm. ipt Private btth Ph 494R\ns*Al*MrNT FOR RENT. APPLY\n619 Joiephlne Street\n]_i__mt rat mop\nply Mrs. Gibbon, Wtlker Apti.\nSITUATIONS WANTID\nSpeciil Low Rttu for non-\ncommerciil idvertiiementi under thli claulficaUon to usiit\n- people ieeklng employment\nOnly 25c for one week (6 diyi)\ncoven any number of required\nUnas Payable ln advance. Add\n10a If box number dulred.\nfaPIRIENCED TRUCK DRIVER\ndesirei work on rotd or eliewhere. Willing tnd truitworthy\nState wages Apply P. E. Youiwt\nCranbrook. B. C.\nIUK)5i6Bhj; MriMANKTbf-\ntin* iteady poaltlon. 15 yean'\naxperlenoe. Referencei. Apply to\nBox 2741 Dtlly Newi.\n.bVM WajJ wTfifwffrTOTri\nchQd. with experience on firm,\nwould like work tor tbe Winter\nBox 2785 DaUy News.\nWANTID MISCELLANEOUS\nDual rear wheeli, good tirei. A-l\nbody and cab. Mechanically better\nthan good.\nLicensed\t\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpp. Post Office and Hume Hotel\n$215\nTRUCKS!   TRUCKSI\n2-1936 Long Whaelbaae International!.\nX-i ton Ford.\n\u25a01\u20142'.4 ton Maple Leaf.\n1-1935 Loni Wheelbaie International Light Delivery,\n1\u20141937 Ford Lt. Del. like new.\n40   h.p.   International   Engine,\nCentril Truck tt Equipment Co,\n702 Front St.        Nelion, B. C.\n'38 PANEL DEUVERY CHEVBO-\nlet Safety glass throughout, luper\nhydraulic brakei. Relax In its\neue of steering, gear ihlfting and\nriding. Smartly finished. A real\nbargain, $650. Nelson Transfer\nCompany Ltd,\nftoW im Your baWHW? BB\na free battery tatt on the moit\nup-to-date Willard Tetter. Nelion\nAuto Wrecking,\nSNAP - 1938 D-30 ____\u25a0\ntional truck, dull wheeli, good\ntirei, low mileage. In excellent\ncondition. Box 2820 Dllly New!,\nIF IT IS USED PARTS YOU WAOT'\nwe muit hive lt City Auto\nWreckers. 160 Baker Street\n\u202228 PONTIAC, PERIDOT S5OTT,\nheater, new paint. Snap for\ncash. Phone 530.\nton -Kit - ERSKNJ STUDE-\nbaker, Al cond. 140 Baker Street\nPERSONAL\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT\nAimer Hotel Opp C. P R Depot\nYOUR FULLER BRUSH k0__\nIt In town permanintly. Ph. 442Y\nELECTROMJX DEALER, SER-\nvice, Suppliea. G. Fruer, 410.\nFirst Street. Phone 75.\nWhV  6fc L6h&V-HiJNt*RlDS\nof memberi. Weitern Socitl Club.\nSub. 23, Edmonton, Alta.\nSID   CLOffilNQ   wou\u00a3ir~Bt\ngratefully received at tha SalvaUon Army, 513 Victoria Street.\nWANTED - GOOD CEEAN COT*-\nton ragi. not leu thin 11 inchea\n\u2022quire, tc lb. F. O. a Nilson\nDally Newi.\nAM   YOU   WOftATftb \"t-tVt\niome thing? Let mi lolve it. Send\nonly 10 cents per queition, birth-\ndate ind poitage. Gretta, 1012 Haro\nVincouver. Sitlifactlon allured.\nMEN - REGAIN VIGOR, Pfi? -\ntry Vltex, 25 tablet! 11.00. Penon-\ntl drug sundries 24 ior $100. Supreme Razor Blade Sharpener 35c\nSharpens blidei perfectly. J. Jensen,  Box  324,  vineouvir, B.  C\nmen's bftUo'SWJBRIB. Sim\n$1.00 for 12 samples, plain wrapped. Teited. Guaranteed and ore-\npaid. Free Novilty price list\nPrinceton Distributors, P. O Box\n61, Princeton, B. C,\nLONELY MEN AND WOMEN ET-\nerywhere WTite to me. I will help\nyou to mike new friends. Individual Introduction!. Excluilve\nmethodi. Introduction Bureiu, PO\nBox S83. Victorii, B. C.\n23c - The Photo Mill - \u00bb5e\nP O Box 335, Vancouver\nRolli developed tnd printed, 25e\n5x7 Enlargement Free\n12 reprints 8x7 enlargement 35c\nGUARAtrtttD 5hU0 4UNBRIH8\nSend for new low price list with\numple. or $1.00 for li luper fine,\nwitpaid.   Western   Supply,   Box\n!83. Vincouver, B. C.\n:;\u25a0>,.\u25a0\nvoitfl sionraom oft mla-\nttve In the hoipltil will enjoy\nretdlng The Dtlly News Phone\n144 tnd hive I copy delivered\neach morning.\nIhip us your 9Crap metals\nor Iron. Any quintlty. Top pricei\npaid. Active Trading Company\n016 Powell St.. Vincouver. B C\n\u25a0tAjnTI)\"^rTfPRICjHT\"5HIN6LS\nmlrfilne. prefersbly Sumner doubla butt. Give loweit cash price.\nP. O. Box 122. Vemon, B. C.\nRtf Ws V6ur hTd'e\u00a7 J~T\nMorgin, NeUon. B \u2022 C\nfifolBntt BaUtj Nphib\nTelephone 144\nTnfl- K. Lowdon, 716-Y\nClassified Advertising Rates\n' lie per line per Insertion.\n44c per line per week (6 comecutlve lniertloni for coit of 4).\n11.43 t line t month (26 timei).\n(Minimum 2 llnei per inurtlon)\nBox number lie extri. Thli\ncoven my number of timet\nPUBUC NOTICES, TENDERS\nETC.\nIk par line, fint lniertion tnd\n14c lech tubtequent inurtlon.\nAIX ABOVE  RATES  LESS\n10* FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.\n\u2022PICIAL LOW RATE!\nNon-commerclll   8 I tutt I oni\nWanted for 25c for any required\nNumber  ef  llntt  for lix  diyi\npiyiblt In idvance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle copy   $   j06\nBy carrier, per week \u2014      IS\nBy carrier, per year _\u2014\nBy mill:\nOne month       \t\nHiree monthi \t\nSix monthi    _-.\nOne yur        \t\nAbove ratei tpplv In Cinada\nUnited SUtet ind United Kingdom to lubscribers llvini outiide regulir cirrler -areai\n. Eliewhere ind In Cinida whets\nerttrs poitage ii required one\nmonth SI 50, three mnjthi $4 00\nalx monthi $8 00. one yur $1300\n1J.00\n$    75\n200\n4 on\nlira\n(ir  Pur  CGATs RHJNB)\n\u00abMO GLAZED, Minor Repairs\nAlio enquire about our Urge itock\nof new fur coiti\u2014llbenl tride-'n\nallowance\u2014eaiy terma.\nPOLAR FURS LTD.\n VANCOUVER, B. C.\t\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT\ned (6 or 8 exposure roll) 25c. Reprints 3c each For your vacation\nintpihoti. chooai Kryitil Finiih.\nGuirtnteed non-fidl print!\nKryitil Photoi. Wilkie Sukatchewan  Eittbliihid over 30 yean\nSPECIAL! - MEN'S PERSONAL\nDrug Sundriei. Fineit Quality\nTeited Guirtnteed. 12 for 30e u\nsorted. Including world'i funnlut\njoke novelty tnd citalogue of\nSundriei tnd Novelties Weitern\nDistributon. Box 24, Dept. NC\nRegim. Saikatchewan\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nRUBBER STAMPS FOR UNBM\nployment Insurant*! Theie are re\nquired for cancelling stamps by\nemployen In employee'! books\n05c each. Poitage 5c extri Nelion\nDiily Newi Commercial Printing\nDept.\nlN3S\nPIPE. TUBEI.. .\nNEW AND USED\nLarge itock for Immediate ihipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\nlit Avenue ind Mlin St\nVancouver   B   C\nFOR SALE-TWO REPOSSESSED\nmintel model batttry radios Whu\noften? T. D. Roiling, 568 Ward\nStreet. Phone 717,\nKm sALi - LEotfASB RltfAlC-\nentor, Findliy Rsngt. Rogen\nConsole Ridio. Apply to Noble\nHqtel Office.\nPipfc \u25a0 PnTtKOs - WM9 - IW\nciil low pricu. Active Tndlng Co\n919 Pcwell St., Vincouver. B  C\nflb ii 6\u00abvaL'sepARAK)R In\ngood ihape. Price $3500, Box 1717\nDally Newi.\n6WIW0 MosrscwrTMiKiro\nttble Good condition Ph 484L1.\nCONNSOSSTNE DftjVt WA'StT-\ner. it \u25a0  bargain   Beatty Waiher\nStore. Phons 81.\t\nBnA?rsrAW-fA*CTOR,rftA\"W.\"i\nuwi   Sic  $45. Shrievei. Bilfour\n~WZtJCf-r_Vf_TeT6. PLEASE\nbrine rour container. 610 Robion\nFOR'SALl\"- USED SINGER SEW-\nInt mach-ne Phone 160.\t\nRtf SALE - FtRrpLACTTYPE\nheiter. ilmoit naw. Ph. 2I4L.\nIUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nA88AYER8  and   MINE   AQENT6\nHAROLD S ELMES, ROSSLAND\nB C. Provincial Aaiayir. Chimin\nIndividual repreuntatlve for iblp-\npen it Trill Smelter\nK. j,\"BWW,\"iNbiPfiHBHiTjfflNE\nrepreientitive. Full time attention given ihlppen* lntereit.\nBox 54, Trail. B, C.\nCHIROPRACTOR*\nj. it. McMillan, d. c, neuro-\ncalometer. X-ray, McCulloch Blk\nay  ]\nnr\nA. B ' McdCHALD, b  C.,1 Palmar\nGrad  X-ray, Strand Blk, Trail.\nbit wiLBERt brsck; d:c;'5T6\nBakar Street. Phone 969.\nCOR8ETIERE8\nSPENCER CORSETIERE, MISS\nShirley Boomer, 317 Gore. Ph. 60)1\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, P. O. BOX 104\nTrail, B. C. Surveyor and En-\nglnetr. Phone \"Beaver Falls,\"\nR. W. HAGGEN, BSnftS S CIVIL\nEngineer; B. C Land Surveyor.\nRosiland and Grand Forki, B. C.\nFOOT SPECIALISTS\nJ, I GOROSH, D.S.C., R. Cp. (DOC-\ntor ot Surgical Chiropody) Foot\nSpecialist. 613414, Birks Building Ph. MArlne 1118, Vancouver.\nINSURANCE tnd  REAL  ESTATE\na W. DAWSON, Rail Eitate, Iniurtnce, Rentals. 557 Ward Street\nAnnible Block. Phone  107.\nC. b. BCtaSWOSD AGENCIES,\nIniunnci, Rial Eltitl, Phone 99.\nCHAS F McHAEDY, INSURANCE,\nReal Eitate, Phone 188,\t\na E. DILL, FIRE, AUTO. ACCI-\ndint Iniurtnce. 531 Wird Street.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine ihop, loetylena tnd electric\nwelding, motor rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 314 Vernon St.\nOPTOMETRISTS\nW. E. MARSHALL\nOptometrists\n1458 Biy Ave, Tnil     Phone 177\n1ASH   FACTORIES\nKOOTENAY SASH le DOOR FAC-\ntory. 907 Front St., Nelson. Phone\n530. No tob too small or too big.\nECWSHrt Sas\u00ab tKdtokl.\nHardwood merchant. 273 Baker St\nSECOND  HAND STORES\nWI BUY, SELL AND EXCHANGE.\nWhat hava yout Pb. 534 Ark Store\nLIVESTOCK. POULTRY AND\nSUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR SALE OB TRADE - PURE-\nbred Jeney Bujl with Reg. papen\n3 yn. old. From R. O. P. hero\nit the Coast. Gentle. Or exchange for fresh Reg. Jersey cow\nAbey'i Ranch, Mirror Lake. B. C\nHORSES   FROM   PRAIRIES   FOR\nquick   ule.    Reuonable.   Blaca\nmare, $65; bay gelding, $55; one\niply Fred\nHlookoff. Cutlegar, B. C.\nwill matched team. App\nPor saLe - 4 KAUNY floATS,\n7 monthi old, off good milking\nmothen. Price $3.00 each. Box\n2726 Daily Newi.\nFOR SALE - 2 GRADE COWS,\ngood milkers. Price $66.00 each.\nBox 2725 Daily Newi.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nrOR SALE - 714 HOOVER ST\nhu 6 good rooms, closets, cement\nfounditiont   tnd   buement,   fire-\n6lice, in Al repair. For uie on\nlonlhly Piyment Plan. $2800.00.\nRobertson Realty Co,\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR $__\non eaiy termi In Alberta and\nSukitchiwan. Write for tull informition to 908 Dept. of Nitunl\nResources, C. P. R\u201e Calgiry, Alta\nFOR SALE - 2 STOREY MOD\nern itucco house it 524 Gordon\nRoad. Nelion. Open fireplace,\nfurnice, itone garage, 1 tcre. Ap-\nply 1850 Topping St., Trail, B. C\nToppu\n~__z\n10 ACRE^RANCH. CHEAP FOR\nquick ull. Clou to ind overlooking Kooteniy Like. 7-room house\nlots of witer, fruit treu. Box 1158\nDally Newi\nFOR SALE-HOUSE 4 ROOMS\nTermi. Apply Rueckert'i Apitry.\nMill St Box  116, NeUon, B t\nhouse   650.00   cash.   P,  O.  Box\n41, Nelion.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\n$1400 - BLACKSMITH SHOP,\nfully equipped, 1 lots, house, garage, no oppoiition. Oeorge Davii,\nBluffton, AlU.\nLOANS. INSURANCE, ETC\nGET OUR QUOTATIONS ON FIRE\nIniurtnce.* Bt A. Whitfield, Ph. SO\nC.N.R. Revenues Cain\nMONTREAL, Sept. 17 (CP)-Cinidlin Nitlonil Rillwayi todiy reported grou revenuei of $6,483,901\nfor the week ended Sept. 15, compired wltb $4,888,627* for the corrupondlng week lut ynr, in Increue of $1,576,274.\nLONDON CLOSE\nLONDON, Sapt 17 (AP).\u2014Britiah itock clotlng! In Sterling: Auitin\nA 17i6d: Cent Mining J* i:>\", Cour-\ntiuldi 31i Id; Bait Geduld \u00a310*,.:\nLondon Midland \u00a315V-: Mex Eagle\nlOl 3d: Springi 34i 6d.\nBonds\u2014British IVt par cent Contois 1*8.)',. Britiih 3>t per cent\nWir Loan \"'IH; British Funding\ntl lBOO-BO \u00a3116.\nEXCHANCE MARKETS\nBy tha Canadian Preu\nCloilng exchinge rites:\nMontreil\u2014Pound, buying 4.43,\nulllng 4 tfl; U.S. dollar, buying 1.10,\nlelllng 111\nNew York\u2014Pound 4.03H; CanadUn dollar 89H.\nStrikes ThreaHn\nStttl Production\nNEW YORK. Sept. 17 (AP-Cur-\nrent labor troubles in the United\nStatei ire deicribed tn Iron Age today u a threat to continued high-\nrate steel production.\nThe trade magaiine laid:\n\"Calling tba C.I.O. strike In captive mlnei producing coil tor the\nnation's steal planti at mid-week\nleimed to dingerous to tba national\ndefine! program that lt oould not\nbe permitted to continue.\n\"thi iteel Induitry since Jan. 1,\n1941, hit lent the equivtlent of ona\nmonth'i production trom wildcat\nstrikei yhlch ire pf ten called without tha approval or knowledge et\nunion leaden,\n\"But tha moit ImporUnt developments ln the. labor lituation ara\nlikely to come ln the current negotlatloni between thi Steel Workers\nOrgtnizing Committal and aome ot\nthe Urge 'little iteel' companlei.\nPrices Fall lo\nRead to Sales\non Winnipeg Mkt.\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 17 (CP).-Sale\nof 300,000 buiheli of CanadUn\nwheat for export to the United\nKingdom failed to reflect ln tha\nWinnipeg Grain Exchange nit todiy where Wheit futurei illpped\nfractionally lower. Finil quotatloni\nwere tt-tt lower, October at 72tt\ncenti, December 74 14 and May\n7Btt.\nCoane gralna averaged higher\nmoat of the session and nur the\nclose rye moved mora than a cent\nabove the previoui don on ihippers1 Ind maltsters' orders. Flax\ncontinued itrong on a (ew purchases by crushers. Fair mill purchitei\nln oati were reported,\nRepatriation Cuts\nRailway Debt\nOTTAWA, Sept. 17 (CP).-Repi-\ntrlatlon oi itock issued by the former Grand Trunk Railway is practically completed and a reduction of\nat least tf 503,000 In thi ouUUndlng\ndebt of the Canadian National Rillwayi will be effected, Finance Deptrtment officiaU uld today.\nThe repatriation arrangemenU\nwere made following a Britiih ordtr transferring O. T. R. Itock holdlngi ln the United Kingdom to the\nTreuury ln 1940, By Cinidlin order-ln-councll the C, N. R. wai\nauthorized to purchue the securities held ln tha United Kingdom\nand tha Finance Mlnliter wu allowed to make loam to the railway\nCompany for thli purpoie.\nThe toUl amount outstanding wai\n\u00a324,624,000 (about $110,000,000) and\nofficial! uld that repatriations were\nIbout \u00a313,000,000 to dite. The remainder of tha itock is probibly\nheld ouUlde the United Kingdom\ntnd thui would not be iffected by\nthe order making holdlngi there\navailable to the BritUh Treaiury it\na specified vesting prtci.\nAUSTRALIA RUDY\nTO RECEIVE SOVIET\nTRADE NEGOTIATIONS\nMELBCrtJRNB, Sept 17 (AP>-\nSir Frederick Stewart, Minister of\nExternal Attain, announced in Par\nlliment todiy thtt Auitralia li\nretdy to receive Soviet consular\nrepreaenUtivei for development of\ntrade relitioni* with Rulsit.\nWINNIPEG CRAIN\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 17 (CP). -\nGrtin futurei quotei:\nOpen    High   Low   Cloie\nWheit:\nOct.   .        72tt     72\u00abi    72H     71tt\nDec.   ..      74i*     74V4    74        74ti\nMay 78K     78tt    78y,     78W\nOaU.-\nOct   .       47        47tt     46H     46tt\nDec    44tt     44%     44%     44tt\nMay 43tt     44%    43%     43tt\nBarley:\nOct.   .       66%     66%     Mtt     Mtt\nDec    66%     55tt    54tt     Mtt\nMay       14%     SOtt     54%     54%\nFlax:\nOct   161%   183      ISO1;   160%\nDec    1594   161      150%   l\u00bbtt\nMay     159%   160      156%   lMtt\nRye:\nOct   .....   62S     (Utt    61%     63tt\nDec       61%     62       61%     61tt\nMar       62tt     63%    63%     63%\nCaih pricu:\nWheat: No. 1 hard 71; No. 1 nor.\n72: 2 nor. 69%; 3 nor. 67%; 4 nor.\n66%; 6 wheat Mtt; 6 wheit 63tt:\nfeed wheit 57tt; 1 amber durum\n73%.\nOtts: 2 c.w. 48%; ex. 3 c.w. 47tt;\n3 c.w. 46%; ex. 1 feed 48; 1 feed 42%;\n2 feed 41%; 3 feed 39%.\nBirley: 1 ind 2 c.w. 6 row Mtt;\n1 tnd 2 c.w. 1 row 57tt; 3 c.w. 6 row\n52%; 1 feed 51%; 2 fetd 51; 3 feed\n50%.\nFlax: 1 c.w. 1.60%; 2 c.w. 1.56%;\n3 cw. 140%; 4 c.w. 1.35%.\nRye: 2 c.w. 68%.\n\u25a0   -        ...    m:-m*a-.m..    . \u25a0\u25a0--.',\u2014 \t\nMONTREAL     STOCKS\nINDUSTRIALS\nAaioc Brew of Ctn      16%\nBtthurst P It P A     13%\nCan Bronze pfd   105\nCtn Ctr st Fdy pfd     24%\nCin CeUneae     28%\nCan North Potver     5%\nCan Steimship  .        6tt\nCan Steamship pfd   105\nCockshutt Plow     6%\nCons M It S    40%\nDom Coil pfd     17%\nDominion Steel & Coil B ....    I\nDominion Tixtlli     74\nDryden Piper      6%\nFoundition Co of Can     16%\nGatlneau Power      . Stt\nHoward Smith Paper         15\nHoward Smith Paper pfd .... 101\nImperial Oil    10\nInt Petroleum    15tt\nInt Nickel of Canada     31\nLake of the Woodi    18\nNttiontl Brew Ltd     27%\nOgilvie Flour new    21\nPrice  Broi _    12\\\ntaebec Power  _    15\nANKS\nBtnk ot Commerce  149\nDominion Bank       192\nImperial Bank        101\nBank of Montreal  1S7\nBtnk ot Nova ScotU 276\nRoyal Bank          155\nBank of Toronto  249\nCURS\nAbiUbl 6 pfd            Stt\nBeauharnoli Corp _    9tt\nBritish American Oil     17%\nB C Packen .-    X*>Mt\nCm Vlckera     Stt\nCons Paper Corp     4%\nDonnicona Piper A      SU\nDonnicom Paper B     Stt\nFiirchlld Alrcnft          2%\nFrtser Co Ltd     11\nMacLaren P* P  14%\n\t\nAircraft Output\nBeginning to Show\nBrighter Outlook\nTORONTO, Sapt, IT (CP).-Tha\ngrowth ot Canada'i aircraft Induitry. a program when lucceu\ndepends on fliwleis organlutlon\nand an \"infinite capacity tor taking pilni,\" wu traced today by\nRalph D. BaU, Director-General ot\nAircraft Production.\nMr. BtU, luncheon speaker at\ntha opening day'i leision of tba\nNational Induitrlil Advertiser! Allocution convention, gan delegitei in iniide picture ot the Do.\nmlnion'i vital contribution to the\nwar effort. \"Wa havt hid our\ntroublei and our blick momenta-\nmuch more than momenU - -*ft,\nweeks, monthi; but Uie bright ipoti\nara gradually beginning to ihow\nup u production lehaaulu commence to roll.\"\nThe Director-General told how\nplme output ln the country'i factories had risen trom Ian than ona\nplana a wuk hi the four yun Immediately preceding the war to 40\na weak at present. During the aame\nperiod tha total number oi worken In tht Induitry had rUan trom\n1000 to 8000.\nCinada now is. building 11 different typu of craft ranging from the\nelementary trainer to tht giant\nStranraer flying boat Tha lUt ln-\ncludu such machlnu ai the Hurricane fighter and tht Bollngtroke\nbomber, \"mort commonly referred\nto ln Englind u tht long-nosed\nBlenheim, whose dtlly raids on\nUlt Channel porU you rud about\nalmoit every morning.\"\nI.W.A. Refused       *\nUnion Recognition\nVICTORIA, Sept 17 (CP)-Inter-\nnitlonil Woodworker! of America\nwere denied formal union recognition, but wert granted a union camp\nagreement ln the award ot an arbitraUon board which heard a dispute\nbetween Uie Laki Logging Company at Cowlchan Lake ana IU 175\nlogging tnd booming employeei.\nThe iwird, madi by a boird con-\nlUting ot Dian F. M. Clement, R. J.\nHamilton and John Stanton, wai\nmide pubUc by the Labor Department todty. It wai a unanimoui\nfinding.\nWhile union recognition wn the\nchief point tt Usui the men also\nwon seniority rlghU In employment and Uw privilege of Have of\n\u2022baenci for war iirvlci, or tor sickneu and Injury up to 14 monthi.\nLate Selling Hits\nChicago Wheat Prices\nCHICAOO, Stpt. 17 (AP'.-A let\nup In profit taking, partly the cauie\nof thli week'i reiction ln grain\npricei, gave the market more ita-\nblllty for a time todty but selling\nwu rtntwed latt in the diy and\nwheat almoit another cent \u25a0 buihei.\nWheat rallied illghtly trom the\nlow but clotad %\u2014tt lowir thin\nyeiterday, September |1.17tt, December tl.ll%-,tt. Corn wu %-tt\ndown, September 77%, December\n82%; oati tt off to % up; rye %-%\ndown and loybeans 3%\u20143tt lower.\nSwedish Press\nPolicy Attacked\nHELSINKI, Sept. 17 (AP).-The\nConservative newspiper Usii Su-\nomi asserted today certain newa\npapers in Sweden \"through blind\nmttgonism\"'tcwird Naii Germany\nhid lost sight of their own intar-\neiti ind were pUying into the\nhandi of Runii.\nThe InfluenUil Goteborg Lfceral\norgm HindeU-Tidnlngen wu ilngled out for ipeciil atUck.\nB. C. POWER CORP.\nREPORTS $144,578 CAIN\nMONTREAL, Sept. 17 (CP).-In-\ncrease of 1144,378 was reported today by BritUh Columbil Powtr\nCorporiUon Limited ln August\ngroat eirningi ot $1,560,550, compired with $1,415,972 ln Ule correiponding month of 1940. Expenies\nrose 1146,336 to $1,233,010, againit\n$1,064,875.\nCALCARY LIVESTOCK\nCALOARY, Sept. 17 (CP). - RecelpU, cattle 270; ctlvu 66; hogi\n100; iheep 58.\nMedium butcher iteen 7.50-8 IS.\nMedium light helferi 7.50-8. Good\ncowi 6-6.50; common to medium\n4.50-5.75. Ctnnen tnd cutteri 3.28-\n4.25. Odd good bulla 6.25. Good veal-\nen 9.50. Medium to fair itocker ind\nfeeder iteen 7-7.50.\nGood lambs Tuudiy 925-969.\nHogi 13.23-13.33 for B-l yards tnd\nplmu.\nlW-\u00bb     '\"           . \u25a0\"*\u00ab\nMETAL MARKETS\nMOWIMAU Sapt IT (CP).-Bar\ngold Ui London wu unchanged today at $37.54 an ounce ln Canadian\nfundi, 168s in Britiih representing\ntha Bank of Englind's buying price,\n-ntt fixed pT wuhington price\namounted to $38.50 In Canadian.\nCopper, electrolytic, 12.75; tin\nSLSO: laid SM; tine 5.65; antimony\n15.75.\nNIW YORK\nCopper iteady; electrolytic ipot\n12.00.\nTin itiady; ipot ud nearby 32.00;\nforward SUM.\nd  iteady; ipot,  NtW. York\ninc iteady; Iut.St. Louli ipot\ngnd forward 7.25. \/\nHEW   YORK   STOCKS\nOptn Cloie\nAmerlcm Cin   \u00a73% 83\nAm Smelt \u00abi Rt   44\u00bb, 45\nAmer Tel & Tel   186% 155tt\nAmer  Tobicco     70%\u00bb IX\nAmcondi  2SH 29%\nBildwln   Loco     16% 16%\nBtlt & Ohio         4% 5\nBendix Aviition   40% 41%\nBeth Steel     69tt 70\nBorden  Corp    lltt H\nC P R  4% 5\nCerro de Pasco   33 33%\nChrysler Corp    59% 50%\nCon Gas N Y     17% 17%\nC   Wright  pfd     10 10%\nDupont     151% 152\nEastman  Kodak    144 145\nrreeport Texu   39% 40%\nGeneYal   Electric     33% 34\nGeneral   Foods     40% 41%\nGeneral  Motori    41% 41%\nGoodrich  19tt l9tt\nOrtnby Coni      9 S'i\nGrett Northern pfd .... 13 13%\nHowe  Sound     34% S3\nIntl  Nickel  30% 30%\nIntl Tel gi Ttl  3 '3%\nKenn Copper   S7tt 38\nMont  Wtrd     33% 13%\nNuh Motori     4% S\nN Y Centril    13% 12%\nPicktrd Moton   ltt- 1%\nPenn R R  * 21% 11\nPhillipi  Pit!     45 45%\nPullmin   Corp     16% J\u00abtt\nRCA                4 V,\nStfewty   Stores     46 47\nSUn Oil of N J   43% 43%\nStudebaker Corp   6% 6%\nTexai  Corp            ..... 41% 41%\nTexai Gulf Sulphur 38 38%\nUnion  Carbide         79% 79tt\nUnion Oil of Cal   15% 18\nUnited  Aircraft   41% 41%\nUnion   Pacific     76tt 77%\nU S Rubber   18% 28%\nU S Stttl  69 69%\nWeit Ilio      88% \u00ab\u00bb%\nWeit  Union     30% 36%\nWoolworth         30% 30%\nYellow  Truck     15% 19%\nLATE BUYING\nBOOSTS PRICES\nNEW YORK, Stpt. 17 (APlLait\nminute buying In itttls and motori,\ncoming on top of persistent accumulation of iharei of lircrift-mtkeri,\ntodty unt Uie itock mirket Into a\nclosing climb which produced a\nnumber ot new highs tor a year or\nport,\nGaini ln tha fivortd groupi ringed 1 to 2 points.\nTurnovtr aprpoxlmattly 700,000\niharei, ibout 100,000 more than on\nTuuday.\nUrges Farmen\nlo Raise Hogs\nVICTORIA, Stpt IS (CP).-Brlt-\nIlh ColumbU Farmers todiy wtre\nidvlied by J. B. Munro, Deputy\nMlnUttr ot Agriculture, to nlte\nmore hogs, poultry products, dtiry\nproducU ma more feed grains, Mr.\nMunro hai Juit returned to Victoria\nfrom a confaranct of igricultunl\nofflciili diicuiilng war farm production it Ottawi.\nMr, Munro laid British Columbil\nhivi done \u2022 grett Job ilrudy in\nhelping to fight tht war. They have\ndoubled hog production, increaied\ngrain growing 15 per cant and in-\ncrtaitd llvtitock In virloui llnei.\n\"But we cm do more,\" ht uld.\nTiki hogi, for lnitanct. Britiah\nColumbia cannot expect to raiie\nhop for BrlUin, of course, but It\nihould go a long wiy toward meeting iU own needi in pork tnd btcon.\nHe uld expecUtlom ire that the\nexport egg price next yetr will be\nfour centi \u2022 dozen higher io thtt\nthen U opportunity ln more poultry producti.\nAlong with liveitock lncrtiiei,\nMr. Munro itreued tht need for\nfirmen to pow their own feed,\nbeciuie It wil] put the Industry on\ni round economic bins where It\nctn continue ifter firm pricei fall\nigiin.\nKtnt Praises Air\nTraining Succeu\nLONDON, Sipt. 17 (CP Cible).-\nTht Duke of Kent, freih from hli\ntour of Canada to itudy progreu of\nthe Commonwealth Air Training\nPlan, declared ln a broadcait todiy\nthat the Dominion cm Uki \"ipecltl\npride in IU ouUUndlng lucceu.\"\nHi uld ht htd been tmiied it\nll]'growth of Uie plin. Thi people\nof Britain, he uid, havi no idea of\n1U magnitude.\n,,\"T*\u00bb J**\"\" igo it wis t plan,\"\nthe Duke uld. \"Todiy lt :\u25a0 a vlUl\nwar Induitry, which combines the\nadvantagei of mau production with\nW*. i*10?* J \"'Jul lelecUon md lndlvlduil triining.\"\nCOMMUNIST CHANCE IN\nPW.ICY TO BE WATCHED\nSAYS RCMP COMMISSIONER\nTOJTOTO Sew. 17 (OP),-Col.\nat J'\u00abMdf AwlsUnt Royal Canadian Mounted Police Commiuioner\nta Winnipeg, declired ln in id-\n.\"? \u2022\u00b0\u201e\"'t MUl knnual convention\nof the Chief Conitibles' AuocliUon\nof Cintdt yeiterdiy thit the ibout\nftce of the Communist pirty it\nCinida since Rustii'i mtry into tin\nwir agalnit Oermsny muit bt re\ngirded with luspiclon by polici\nand civilitm alike.\n. 1?' J?uroI*\u00ab,n epruce uwfly a\nlacks ill ipeciei of tpruce grown .\nCinada.\nVANCOUVER   STOCKS\nMINES                         aid Aik\nBralorne Gold      11 40 11 SO\nB  R  Con       01 -\nCariboo   Oold   ..        2 27 130\ng-sntonla M       .01% .01%\nFtlrvltw Amal 00% oi\nGeorge Copper .....    ,12 \u2014\nQoleoai*     joeH 07%\nOold  Belt        .23 24\nOrmdvllw     .15 .16\nQrull  Wlhkine      ,02% 02%\nHedley Maicot     .47 48\nHome Oold  00% .00%\nIndian Mlnea 01 \u2014\nInt Coal St Coke       \u2014 33\nIslmd MounUIn ..  .   1 26 1 30\nKootenur Belle       - .30\nMcGillivray Coil ...     \u2014 .13\nMinto Gold          ...     .02% 02%\nNicoll M 4 M      .00% -\nPend  Oreille    1 80 1 90\nPioneer Gold     2 42 2.43\nPremier Border .....     .02 02%\nPremier Gold 80 87\nQuiUino Copper          01% 03\nReevei MicDonald .      - JS\nRelief Arlington .   .    .00% .01%\nReno   Gold     ...     .10% ,11\nSalmon Gold   00% \u2014\nSheep  Creek       .98 100\nSurf Inlet 11 -\nTaylor BR 02 04\nWhltewtteT \u25a0           .     01% 02\nYmir Yankee Girl .     .04% .06\nOILS\nA P Con .             .     .07% -\nAntcondt Copper  .      \u2014 .04\nAnglo Cmidim            62 68\nCil Corp         i.36 148\nCilmont Oil                 19 23\nCommonwealth OU.     .26 19\nCommoil     .22 \u2014\nDaviu Pttt 14 \u2014\nlaat Crut           02% -\nFoothills O Ik O ....     tf) -\nHighwood Sarcee ..     ,13 -\nHome Oil      ...        1.66 2 60\nMadlion Oil       \u2014 .01%\nMar Jon-Oil     ......     .01% .01%\nMcDougaU Segur ..     .06 .06\nMercury Oil    04% -\nMill Cltv Peto 07% .00\nModel  Oil  17\nRoytl Cm        04% OS\nRoyilite Oil             23 50 2500\nSouth Ind Pete 01 -\nUnited Oil          05 .07\nVihilti Ltd       03% -,\nVulcin OH             - it\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital   Eitatei       1.00 -\nCout Brtw          1.1S 1.32\nPacific Coyle  27 \u201e3J\n-PAOI   NINI:\nCool, Wet Weather Does Widespread\nDamage lo B.C. Fruit and Grain Crops\nVERNON, B. C, Stpt. It (CW -\nRtln and cool wtathtr throughout\nmoit ot BritUh Columbia during\ntbt past two weeki has halted har-\nveitlng opentioni is many districts\ntnd cauied considerable damage\nboth to field cropi md trie fruits,\ntht ProvincUl Agriculture Department'! horUcultturil branch reported today ln IU flnti fortnightly report ot Um letson,\nFtrmers probably wiU luffer the\nheavleit loll Ui gralni and field\npau whUt tomatoes grt reported\nrotting Ott tht vines in tht Klmloop\nmd Aihcroft dlitrlcU, Tht delay\nln picking alio wlU ctuie t lou In\nUit crop of Mclntoih applu.\nA hall Itorm it Kamloopi t week\nago bruised fruit Uteri and badly\nSlurtd Utt hop crop which will be\nhirvested at conslderible extra expense and a lon of about 10 par\nctnt\nTht report itatei that Mclntoih\napplu trt moving out ot Kamloopi,\nwhirl thli variety U running to\nUrge iliM. At Salmon Arm and Sorrento, however, picking u being\nheld up by tht wtt weather. Weal-\nthlu irt practically cleaned up\nthen and all lite varieties of ipplei\nhtvt ilzed will ind ire ihowlng\nexcellent color. Pruntl and a few\nplums art lUU coming la at Salmon Arm and Uteri itlll art a few\nBartlett md Flemlih Beiuty ptlr\non hind.\nThe Armstrong, Vtrnon and Okanagan centru nport a certain\namount ot grain uncut md considerable atlll in Uit itocki 1 wil ting\ngood wttther for threshing.\nOnion growen In theie dlitrlcU\nart prevented from getting their\nbulbi out ot tht ground tnd from\ndrying tha crop which ll ilready\npulled. Harvesting ot atone fruits la\nabout complete and a large tonnage\nof pruntl ot good illl md quality\nhave been moving out, with the poi-\nliblllty that final yleldi may run\nabove estimates\nIn tht Kooteniy and Arrow Laku\ndlitrict harvesting hu bein brought\nto a halt on Kootenay FUU with\ntwo-fifths of tht peu out yet md\nabout 60 ptr ctnt of Uie Spring wilt\nstlU to be threshed. Grand forks reports much of tht crop unthreshed\nIn tht grain-growing districts and\n\u2022ome iproutlng of the iheaf.\nLater varieties of plumi are being\npicked at Cruton, Italian prunei ire\nabout reidy, with t good yield expected. Bartlett and. early peara\nare ovar with good yleldi expected\nin later varlttlM.\nThe grape crop In the Vineouvir\nIslind dUtrlct U Tight Vegetables\nire ln good lupply but considerable\ngriln U ItUl ln the field. Vegetable\nind flown Ntd crops are being\nhirvuted.\nIrregular Trade\non Montreal Mkt.\nMONTREAL, Stpt  11   (CP). -\nUtilities, induitriill, pipers ind\nminu movtd ilong 1 rigged track\ntoday ln trading on thi itock market.\nMontreal Tramways poited a\npoint idvtnce tnd Montreal Power\nexpanded recent gtlni. On tht down\ngrade wart Power Corporation md\nCanada Northern Power.\nGeneril Steel Wares sold up to \u2022\nnew high but wukentd illghtly.\nOthers firmer wtrt Dominion Tir,\nDominion Bridgt, Aibestoi md thi\nalcohol iuues.\nPrice Brothen, Howard Smith\nmd Bathurst turned upward ind in\noils International Petroleum ihowed\nt small giin,\nMinu wen on the iott ilde,\nlouei going to Smelten ind Hudion Biy Mining,\nPend Oreille Cains\n10 at Coait Cairn\nVANCOUVER. Sept. 17 <CP>-\nSevertl imiU giini dotted the Vincouver Stock Exchange today. Trading continued ilong t narrow path\ntl transfers toUlled 10,025 shares.\nCariboo Oold Quart! tdvmced 3\nto 2.30 and Gold Belt at 23, Sheep\nCreek it W md Premier at'86 eacn\nclimbed 1. Privateer tt 31 tnd\nIsland MounUIn it 1.17 both firmed\na cent.\nCalgary & Edmonton Oil at 1.40\ngained 4 and Mill City firmed t\ncent at 8. Home OH ilipped 1 to 2 S3\nwhile McDougil Segur remtlned\nunchanged it 5.\nPend Oreille, lone but meUl\n'.rider, ran 10 to 1.86.\nSTOCKS DECLINE AS\nRUSSIAN CAMPAICN\nSHOWS WEAKNESS\nSYDNEY, AuitnlU, Sept. 17 (CP\nCable).\u2014Stock Exchinge pricei tre\nreceding trom lut weeks upwtrd\nmovement n Auitrtlian newipip-\nen Uke \u25a0 lerloui view of the Rui-\nlitll  lituation.\nThe Sydney Morning Hertld decUred in in edltorlil thtt Auitri-\nliins muit idmlt their mlndi to the\nhirih fict thit ifter thret monthi of\nincessant, ferocious fighting the\ncampaign li turning itrongly in Hitler'i favor.\nToronto Slock\nPrices Strong\nTORONTO, Stpt. 17 (CP).-Vol-\numt wai iround 300,000 ihares on\nthi Toronto Exchinge todiy with\npricei holding firm to itrong tn\nspot**. Stnlor oU, paptr ind Massey-\nIlnrris itocki .saw considerable\ntrtding ictlon ind telecUd Uiuu\nof the gold and bate metal group\nturned over in volume.\nThe old Mauey-Harrli itocki recorded louu of H uch tnd the\nnew stock, tndlng on 1 \"when\nissued\" bull, came out it 4^ for\nthe common md 11% for thi preferred. Abitibi pfd. firmed li toi\nnew high for the ytar it 8V1. English Electric A and Steel of Canida\nBfd. added 1 and 2 polnti resplc-\nvely andln Foods Canadian Bak-\nerlei pfd, gained 2 to'43.\nBate metals ihowed little chmge\nIn the average.\nHome Oil gained 4 to 2.S4 ind\nCilmont md VermUiU wert off\n1 to 1.\nProposes Reviiion\nof Neutrality Act\nWASHINGTON, Stpt 17 (AP)-\nSemtor 0\\iy Gillette (Dtm, lowi),\na frequent AdminlitraUon crIUc on\nforeign affairi, proposed today that\nboth Neutnlity ind Letse-Lend\nAcU be revised becauie ot President Rooicvelts ihoot-on-ilght order! to tht United SUtu Navy.\nWhile Gillette nid hi thought it-\ntempU to revise tht let muit bt\nmtde soon, Senitor Gerald Nya\n1 Rep, North Dakotti predicted the\nAdmlniitration would bt ilow to\nleak iny changei thtt would open\nto ituck 11 likely to Involve the\nUnited SUtu further ln Uie war.\n\"I think we htvt tnough votei,\"\nhe idded, \"to difett my chingu\nin the Neutrality Act.\"\nChairman Robert Reynoldi (Dem.,\nNorth Carolina) of tfie Senate Military Affairi Committee charged tha\nPreiidenU orden to the Navy made\nit tppeir thit tht United Statei\nwas going to \"shoot iu any Into\nthii wir,\" but Semtor Clefde Pepper (Dem., ploridi) priiseJthe new\niea policy.\nDOW\nJONES AVERACES\nHigh   Low    Cloie\nChange\nip   IN\n30 Induitriill\t\n......    129 48   127.17   12011\n20 rails   -\t\n      20S4     VIS     20.40\n      18.98     18.60     18.90\nip    JO\n15 utilities  -_\t\n111     10\nTORONTO\nSTOCK      QUOTATIONS\nMINIS:\nReno Gold Mlnu \t\n03%\nAldermac Copper \t\n22\nRoche Long Lac\t\nAnglo Huronitn  \t\n1.75\nSan  Antonio Gold  \t\n141\nArntfield Gold    \t\n.08\nShawkey Gold\t\nSheep Creek Gold  \t\nOIH\nAunor Gold\t\n175\n100\nBigtn*c Rouyn  \t\n.10\nSherrltt Gordon  \t\n1 1st\nBankfield Gold\nOS\n.\u00bb7\nBase MetaU Mining  .\n11\nSUdcn Malartic\t\nJS\nBeattie   Gold  Mlnei   \t\n107\nSt  Anthony        _\t\n.07*\nBidgood Kirkland\t\n.12*4\nSudbury Basin \t\n1.80\nBobio  Mlnu  _.\nBralorne Minei  -\n06*\nSullivan  Consolidated \t\n75\n11 50\nS-vlvanite                \t\n140\nBuffalo AnkerlU    \t\n4.25\nTeck Hughes Gold ..\t\nToburn Crild Minei ..*.\u00ab...._\n2.88\nCanadian   Maltrtic   \t\n,\u00ab0\n138\nCariboo Oold QuarU _.\n1.20\nTowagmac\t\n18\nCaitle Trethewey\nso\nVenturei         1.\t\ntss\nCentril   Patricia   \t\n172\nWt'te Amulet   \t\nBIS\nChromium M k S   ... \u201e\t\n.20\nWright Hargreavu\t\n425\nCout Copper   \t\n125\nYmir Ytnkee Girl .._ _\n.04*\nConiaurum Mines    \u2014\nX2t\nOltS:\nConsolidated MAS\t\nDime   Mines\t\nEait Maltrtic   -\t\nEldorldo   Gold     -\nFtlconbrldge  Nickel   \t\nFedenl Klrklmd\t\nFrancoeur   Gold\t\nGilliea   Ltke\n40 75\nMl\nlttt\n41\n3SS\n.03 H\nM\n.03 Vt\nAjax     _.\nBritUh American OU\t\nChem cal Research \t\nImperial Oil       \t\nInter Peuoleum  ....\nTexas Canadian   _ -\nINDUSTRIALS:\n.13*\n17.50\n.22\n1000\n15 JO\n9.1\nGod'i Lake Gold  \t\n3S\nAbitibi   Power    .....\n105\nOold Belt       _\t\n_\nBell  Telephone\t\nBrntllm T L tt P  \t\n193\nGnndoro Mlnu \u2014\n.05 Uj\n7*\nGunntr Oold       _-\t\n:\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,\nBreweri Si Dlitillen\t\n4*\nHird Rock Oold -\nM\nBrewing   Corporation   ..   .\nB C Power A  _\t\nB C PoweT B\t\n1.30\nHarker Oold  \t\n.04\n12 90\n23*\nHomager\n1J0\nHowev  Oold      -\t\n.22 Vi\nBuilding   ProducU .....\nCintdiBreid\t\n14 Vi\nHudson Bay M * S   .1\t\nMOO\nS\nInternational  Nickel   \t\nM00\nOn Bud Milting  \t\n*\\\nJick   WHU -\u2022\n;,\">\nCin Cir tt Foundry _\nIVt\nJtcoU Gold    \t\n.om\nCin Cement  \t\n5*\nKerr AddUon  -\t\n445\nCm   Dredge     -\n16\nKlrklmd Ltke\t\n75\nCin   Milting    _\t\nM*\nLake Shore Mlnu \t\n1519\nCtn Pic Riilwiy  \t\nti1.\nLeitch Oold\n.43\nCm Ind Alcohol A\t\n1*\nLebel Oro Mlnu  -'\n.01*\nCom   Bikirlu      _..\n11*4\nLitUe Lona Uc  \t\nMici.\u00abi  Mlnu\n1.00\nCotmoe         _ _ ,\n24\n4 00\nDominion Bridge\t\n14*\nMicLiod   Coekihutt\t\n219\nDom Ttr it Ctitn ....,\t\n\u2022i\\\nMtdien Rtd Liki Oold .....\n.SO\nDistillen SeiframJ  \t\n23 *\nMandy   .      .   .         \t\n.07\nrtnny  Firmir\t\n23'-,\nMclntyre   Porcuplnt   \t\nMcKenile Red Lakt\t\n9190\nFVrd of Canadi A \t\n17\n10s\n0#n Steel Warn\t\n9*\nMcVittle Grihtm     \t\n.ot\nOoodyur Tire \t\n73\nMcWitten Oold .  ._.\n.14\nGypium L Si A  \t\n1*\nMining   Corpontlon   \t\n1.84\nHimllton Bridge    \t\n4S\nMoneti   Porcupine    \t\n.40\nHiram  Wilker\t\n48'l\nNlplulng Mining _:\t\n129\nImperiil Tobicco \t\n3*\n6S.V1\nLobUw A\n27\u00ab4\nNormeUl         \t\nMH\nLablaw B _.\n24',\nO'Brien   Oold     _ \u2014\nOmegl   (wld          \t\n.157\nKelvinator      _\t\n8'.\nim\nMaple Leaf Milling\t\n3*\nPimour Porcuplnt  \t\n129\nMaisey   Hirrii       .\n1*\nPaymuter Com       _\n11\nMontria] Power\n14*\nPend  OreUle\t\n188\nMoore Corporation  \t\nNit Steel Ctr\t\n46*\nPerron Oold\n190\n37*\nPickle Crow Oold\n290\nPtge HerJev\n104\nPioneer Oold             -\n131\nPower Corporation     \t\n-t*\nPremier Oold\t\nSS\nPrnicd   Metals\n7%\nPowell Rouvn Oold   \t\n82\nSteel of Can\t\nCH\nPreston Eut Dome _.\n329\nStandard Paving _\n\u25a0\\\n P*WW\ni\"tMm\"4iy\u00bbyfi\"nwi'wm.'-\n\"*<\u00bb riN\nRomance in Bombay!\nDrama in Hong Kong!\nAction on the China Seas!\nThe roaring comedy melodrama of today's\nFar East\u2014along the seething China coast\nfrom Bombay to Mandalay.\nWhere thii dashing British\nefHcer meets a mysterious\nadventuren \u2014 te become\npartners in crime.\n-NILION DAILY NIWI. NILION  B. O-THURSDAY MORNINQ. SIPT. 18. 1941\u2014\n'_____,;>\u25a0:.  . .;*s&*.,*:.^\nConservatives Aim at\nPopulation in B.C. in 10 Years,\nWalker, Love Tell Grand forks\n'CLARENCE\n\/toduclwn\nin Mw\nExtra\n\"Coffins\non\nWheels\"\nExposing tht un-\n\u2022cruplous    used-\ncar dealers.\nmi*. PETER LORRE \u2022 jessie Ralph\nREGINALD OWEN \u2022 MATTHE'w BOULTON\nColored\nCartoon\nCIVIC\u00ae\n\"ROOKIE BEAR\"\nTonight,\nFri. and Sat.\nComplete  Shows  7:00-9:01\n1939 DODGE DeLUXE\n4-DOOR SEDAN\nLow   mllesge.   One   owner.   8-ply\ntires. Heater. CimC\nPick ot tha Market at       9*w\/3\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpp. Hume Hotel and Post Otflee\nR. W. Dawson\nReal Estate and Insurance\nPHONE 197\nTHE ANNABLE BLOCK\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMedical Arts Building\nSTTOCKHOLM (CP). - Two Ger-\nman planes with permits to pasi\nover Swedish territory flew towards forbidden areas August 9,\nand were werned off by shells.\nThey resumed their correct course.\n39 Chev. Master DeLuxe Coach\nHeater,  defroster fan.  Really eco-\n9975\nSKY CHIEF AUTO\nnomical\ntransportation.\nW. W. Powell\nCompany, Limited\nThe Hone of Good Lumber\nLUMBER       LATH\nSHINGLES\nWholesale and Retail\nTelephone 176\nFoot ef Stanley Street\n_*\nClub Cafe\n(24 Baker SL\nModern Fountain Service\nHome Furniture\nWe Sell the Goods for Lew\n413 Hall St.      Phone 1032\nFleury's Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nPHONE 25\nUed Arts Blk.\nGRAY'S\nThe right place to go\nfor a dainty  lunch\n580 BAKER STREET\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, Sept. 11\n\u2014At a wall attended public meeting ln Davis Hall Monday night,\nRussell R. Walker, Provincial Organizer for the Conserv*tive Party,\nfired the tlrtt broadside Jn the\nelection fight in support ot the\nGrand Forks-Greenwood candidate,\nT. A. tove. Ha referred particularly to the recently completed platform of the Coniervative Party, aa\nannounced by tha Leader, R. (..\nMaitlnnd. K. C\u201e at the latter's nominating convention in Vancouver-\nPoint Grey laat FrWay night.\nA greater war 'effort naturally\ncame first with the Conservative\nParty, declared Mr. Walker, who\nadded that mere criticism ot the\npresent part being played by Canada ln file great struggle was not\nenough; there must be specific suggestions brought forward.\nWHY NOT WOODEN\n8HIPS\n\"Our's la a great maritime Province,\" remarked the apeaker. \"Here\nwe have timber ln abundance, but\nafter two yeart of war wt find we\nhave not launched a single commercial ship. Meanwhile there are scores\nof British-controlled ports in the\nWestern Pacific, in Australia and\nNew Zealand, crying for -British\nColumbia lumber, and we have no\nbottoms in which to ship this essential war product.\"\nMr. Walker asserted that Britisn\nColumbia might well build a fleet\not staunch wooden ahlpa, load thein\nwith lumber, and send the cargoes\nwhere they would do the most\ngood. He said there waa no cargo\nso nearly 'indestructible as one ot\nlumber transported in a wooden\nship. And, thanks, to the British and\nUnited States navies, the Pacific\nwaa a submarine-free ocean.\nLOWEST MECHANICAL\nCONTRIBUTION\nSurplus food, now going to waste,\nmuat be preserved and held for shipment to Britain and other markets,\nsaid the Provincial Organizer, who\nmaintained that while this Provinct was making the greatest per\ncapita financial contribution to the\nwar effort, it was alao making the\nsmallest per capita mechanical contribution, with little more thtn 30\nper cent of Provincial plants capable of turning out some form of\nwar products actually being so engaged.\n\"Highways cspaole of ttrvlng the\ninterettt ot this country ctn only\nbe had when wt taka tht dirt out\not politics and put lt on tht roads,\"\ndeclared Mr. Walker, wbo explained that under the proposed\nHighway Commission guaranteed by\nthe Conservative Party if returned\nto power, first consideration would\nbe given to the construction ol\n\"missing links\" ln tht present sys-\n,em of rotds, such at tht long-\niwalted Hope-Princeton Highway.\nA long-term program would be carried out, the Commission being\nplanned along the lines of the beat\not the Americtn Commissions which\nhad resulted in giving that country\nUie finest roads in the world.\n. Local labor would of courte be\ngiven fint chance of employment,'\non rotd construction projects. Furthermore, provision would be made\nfor the payment of taxea with roadwork, up to tlie requirement! of t\ngiven tection. The proposed Highway Commission would be.rte-pon-J\nsihle to the elected representatives\not the people, the Legislature.\nDEVELOP WITH\nPOPULATION\nTht ipeaker givt t condensed!\nplcturt of tht undeveloped wealth.\nof British Columbia, and said tht\nConiervative Party tdvoctttd I\npopulation of two mlllloni In British Columbit within tht ntxt tt)\nyean. Ht uierted that certain\nover-populated countriei. If given\na chance would establish 10,000,-\n000 of people Ih thli Provinct\nwithin 10 yetn, tnd turn Brltlth\nColumbli into a ntw Garden of\nEden. Tht pitifully imall population of approximately 800,000\nwu entirely too small to accomplish tht task of developing thii\nhugi section of Cinada, a section\nlirger thin tht combintd Stites\nof Wuhlngton, Oregon tnd Ctll-\nfornla.\n\"Surely we, living ln security ind\nrelative luxury cm iee our wiy\nclear to shire the superabundant\nweilth we hive been bleated with\nwith tome of thoie who ire cirrylng our battles In Europe todsy,**\nexclaimed Mr. Walker.\n8MAI.L CENTRES\nNEED INDUSTRIES\nThe Conservitive Party wu ill\nout for industrial expansion af British Columbia, he proceeded Thu\nhid been cilled decentralization of\ninduitry. It actually meant tbe\nbuilding up of Induatrlei in smiller\ncentrei, i policy which would remit\nIn i mtteriil Improvement In living condltioni til over British Co.\nlumbis. Each section of the Province hid been itudled by the Con-\nlervattve   Party,   and   information\nhad been eecured showing tht pressing needs of every part\n' Mr. Walker declared tht Conservative Party proposed to put\nUfa into the great mining Industry.\nThe Llberali were pointing with\npride of accomplishment to laat\nyear'a record production of $75,000,-\n000, but the truth waa that the war\nalone waa responsible tor thit record. Slnct the prospector waa no\nlonger ln the hills, the legitimate\npromoter * could sot finance new\nproperties, and the gold of the producing mines wat rapidly diminishing. He tald Ult Government had\nbeen sadly remiss ln not declaring\nthe country \"in a state ot gold\nboom,\" aa a special war effort; that\nwhile the United Statea waa providing many billions of dollars\nworth of war aufoiHsa on the Lease-\nLend basis, there still were hundreds of articles for which Britain\nhad to pay cash. Britith Columbia\nhad the gold, but it wun't being\ntaken out and put to work.\nInviting questions from the audience, he told one questioner that\nmarketing legislation must be made\nto apply to every district according\nlo the needs of the area, that sweeping changes would be made under\na Conservative administration, that\nconstant research, must be carried\nout, and that the apread in prices\nbetwen those received by the producer and thoee paid by the consumer must be drastically reduced.\nThe cost ot administration of marketing legislition was the chief cause\nof the complaints coming from all\nover the Province. Too many farms\nwere having a padlock placed on\ntheir front gates through the lamentable failure of the present legislation.\nA BRITISH COUNTRY\n\"What are you going to do aibout\nthe Doukhobors? was a question\nhurled at the speaker.\nMr. Walker explained that for\nthe duration of the war Ottawa had\ndecreed that all racial questions\nmust be matters for the war-time\nadministration, but he taid that the\nConservative Party intended to see\nthat in future everyone living in\nCanada must be a British subject\nin the fullest tense of the term,\nabiding by the laws of the country,\nusing the language and conforming to the customs of Canadians and\nupholding the laws of the land to\nthe fullest extent.\nThe meeting wss presided over\nby D. C. Manly, President of the\nGrand Forks Conservative Association, who ptid an eloquent tribute\nlo the candidate T. A. Love, carrying the Conservative banner. He\nreferred to Mr, Love aa a person\nof unrelenting energy and effort,\nand one who-had given much of\nhii time for all worth-while movements thit his taken root tn the\nBoundtry country.\nLOVE APPLIES\nHIGHWAY SCHEME\nMr. Lovt detlt only with locil\nIssuet, applying the Highway Com\nmission plan of tht Conatrvative\nParty, and illustrating what it\nwould mean to havt a real highway through Southern Brltlth Columbia. He quoted Bruce Hutchison's comments In The Vancouver\nSun to the effect that 150,000.000\nhad been spent In the paat 22 yeart\non highways, and that the asset did\nnot represent more than half that\namount. \"Where the other half has\nSone, nobody knowt,\" wrote  Mr\nlutchlson. '    .\n. Mr. Love touched on the lack of\naction on the Doukhobor problem,\nneed tor greater consideration in\nOld Age pensions, and need for\ncorrections in marketing control.\nPrompt, efficient typewriter repair!, underwood Agency   Ph   (9\nFleury's Pharmacy is open thii\nevening. Phone 29,\nW. A- Tea today, St. Paul's Manse\nPhotographer on hand at 3 o'clock.\nOld Virginia Fine Cut 10c, 15c and\nhalf pound tins 80c. VALENTINE'S.\nNomination meeting of Nelson\nJunior Chamber of Commerce at\nHume, 6:15, Tonight.\nSlaw cutters to save you time and\ntrouble, Hardwood frame with steel\nblades. Get yours today. Hipperson's\nDon't forget to come and enjoy\nyourself at the Eagles Whist Drive\nand Dance tonight at 8 p.m. Ad. 25c.\nWomen's Inititute regular meeting Friday at 2:30 pjn. Members\nand friends asked to bring needles\nand thimbles to sew comforters for\nBritain.\nVegetable drive for Nelson's\nneedy families, sponsored by Nelson Rovers, Wed., Sept. 24. Phone\n700, 86 or 235, and your produce\nwill be called for.\nPING PONG TABLE TOPS\nSize 5 ft. by 9 ft.\nVs inch thick  . $5.50\nv4 Inch thick $7 50\nBURNS LUMBER & COAL CO.\nR. C. A. Victor Record Playing\nMachines are priced from $11.95 to\n$1950.00. Your selection ls greatest with R. C. A. Victor. Hear some\nof the world's greatest music in\nyour own home. McKay & stretton.\nWe carry In stock the largest and\nmost complete line of typewriter\nand adding machine parts ln the Interior. If your machine needs attention get in touch with us. D. W,\nMcDerby, \"The Typewriter Man\",\n654 Baker Street, Nelson, B. C.\nSCANDINAVIAN MOVING\nPICTURES\nVtn Lodge will sponsor showing\nStt., 8 p.m, at Legion Hall, proceeds for Queen's Canadian Fund.\nFetturt tnd short subjects with\nEnglish narration. Adults 50 centa,\nChildren 15 centi.\nMass Meeting at\nThrums Against\n\"Vegetable Acl\"\nAt a matt meeting held at Thrums\nSunday, \"Farm Producers\" stated\nto represent localities from Castle\ngar-Brilllant-Tbruma to Slocan City\nand Nelson to Creston, passed a\nresolution to the effect that the\nVegetable Marketing Board would\nbe of no use or benefit to them.\nThe resolution was paastd witn\nthe explanation that theae producers were small truck farmers\nwho lived close to the cities, and\nthat the Institution of such an or\ngahlzation with mediums and agents\nonly added to the farmer's burden\nAn earnest appeal was made to\nthe people at large to support them\nin their opposition with the B. C.\nInterior Vegetable Marketing\nBoard.\nJacob Polonikoff was Chairman,\nand P. Konkin, Secretary, and the\nDoukhobor settlements were chiefly\nrepresented.\nAlan C. Clapp Is\n(.(.F. Candidate\nIn the Boundary\nAlan C. Clapp has been nominated as C. C. F candidate in Grand\nForks-Greenwood riding.\nMr. Clapp Is an ex-service man\nand a past President of the B. C.\nTelephone Company Employees' organization. He is employed by the\nTelephone Company at Grand\nForks.\nSingle Forest Fire\nReported in Week;\nSeason's Total 449\nOne forest flrt occurred In Koo-\ntenty-Boundtry In tht week tndlng Wednesday. When It cimi\ntime Wedneidiy for tht Forest\nBranch dlitrict offlct it Ntlion to\ncompile tht week'i itatlitlct the\nreport wis covered completely by\njuit 10 words\u2014One flrt In week,\nnont now burning; season's total\n449.\nTht loni fire reported wu In\nthe Cnnbrook district, tnd It wit\nt minor ont, probibly due to t\nctmp flrt.\nWebster Named\nas Burns' Agent\nTRAIL, B. C Sept. 17-R. R\nBurns, Liberal candidate for Rossland-Trall, has appointed J. L. Webster to be hit agent under the Provincial Elections Act.\nJALLOPY SALE\n1929 Essex       1927 Essex       1928 Pontiac    1930 Hudson\nSedan Town Sedan Coach Sedan\nRuns good, might need   Ntw  tlrtt,  licence  tnd     Orlginil  pilnt ind up-\n\u2022  new (f-\u00bbe   trunk. tJ^C      holltering  good,    sJ-JC   Mechanically COC\nclutch.\n$25\nFull prlct\nws ?;\nr tires.\n1931 Ford\nConvertible\nCoup*\nRumblt iut, good tlrtt,\nfine running motor, licence, etc. fifiA CA\nFull prlct     .. *_**\u2022*_*\n1929 Plymouth\nSedan\nSet  thli   real   bargain   In\nlow    price   traniportitlon.\nFull\nprlct \t\n$99.50\nChrysler 72\nSedan\nLooks tnd runs likt new\nhydraulic      brakes,      good\ntilts, try thli  nlct riding\ncar.\nPrlct   \t\n$135\n1930 Model A Ford Tudor\nLlcenied   tnd  thoroughly   reconditioned,  tires\nlook like new, good paint tnd \u00a31Q(\n'30 Ford Model A Town Sedan\nNiw paint, ntw tlrei, guirtnteed mileage, 20,-\n000, hia bean In ont fimlly til Its life, If you\nwint a nearly niw cir try thla *-s210\nupholstering.\nThese cars won't last long at such prices so make your choice early. A deposit will\nhold any car any reasonable time.\nQueen City Motors Ltd.\nPhone 43 Ford ind Mercury Dealers\u2014Nelton, B. C.     561 Josephine St.\nYour\nPRESCRIPTION\nIs Sate in Our Cara\nOnly Graduate Dispensers\nPurest    of   chemicals.   Largest\nstock to lupply trom.\nMost moderate prices.\nSafety-Accuracy-Fair Price\nYour Rexall Store\nCity Drag Co.\nPhone 34 Box W0\nLeave ua your film for\ndeveloping.\nHOEY IS DEPUTY\nSTEEL CONTROLLER\nOTTAWA, Sept. 17 (CP).-M. A.\nHoey of the Munitions and Supply\nDepartment has been named Deputy\nSteel Controller, Munitions Minister\nHowe announced today.\nAt the same time, Mr. Howe announced the appointments of Clarence W. Marshall as Assistant to the\nController, in charge of structural\nsteel; and J- H, Dougherty as Assistant to the Controller in charge*of\nsteel and iron castings.\nKeep Youth and\nLoveliness  with  a\nPermanent\nHai&h Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nJohnstone Block\nPhone 327 .\nNEW\nFALL\nHATS    ,\nVour hat gets hard use; a\ngood one will stand op\nunder rains and rough\nhandling; a cheap one will\nnot. These new hats art\nmade for service as well\nas looks; they're here In\nnew Fall shades.\n\u2022 Biltmore 93.85\n\u2022 Kensington ?5.00\n\u2022 Brock |6.00\n\u2022 Stetson 97.50\nand SJ58.50\nEMORVC\nLIMITED\nThe Man't Shop    \u25a0\nCALL\nLet us give you an estimate on\nbody repairs.\nPhone n  Jt  VJffJ   Rhone\n19J     \u2022**\u25a0 *\\m.lr      195\nBody & Fender Works\nHOOD'S\nDOUGHNUTS\nSUPREME QUALITY\nYour Home Bakery\nPIES\nAT\nBUTLER'S\nHIGH GRADE\nCEDAR SHINGLES\nLAMBERTS'\nLUMBER LTD.\nPublic Analyst\nE. W. Widdowson\n301 SOS Joiephlne St   Ntlton. B. C.\nDo You Need Another BASE PLUG\nin your Living Room. Kitchen, etc.?\nThen Ctll\nF. H. SMITH\nElectrical Contractor\nPhone M\u00ab SSI Bakir SL\nMACO CLEANERS\nHATS CLEANED\nAND BLOCKED\n827 Baktr Phont ;\nWhipping\n0\"^i\n* occasions\nBi\n1931 Ford Convertible Coupe\nGood tires. Motor and 61 JM\nbrakei  9***_\\\nQueen City Motora\nPhont 41    Llmlttd    M1 Joiephlni\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC CRAVES\nI\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 81S\nI\nFOR RENT\nUght HoiiMkkoeping Rtomi\nAnnible Block    \\ ,\nR. W. Dawson\nGrenfellV\nOyiterburger Sandwieh OJ\"\nwith Coffee ..Ldt\nI'M TELLING YOU!\nThat Buttermilk Sure is Great\nThe PERCOLATOR\nEVEREADY\ntUSHIM.MIS\n*rtt\\(l_-~ K.llts-s'irt\n<hr*t*ta*. Co-p'ete villi\nbrl'*,,*.\nF\u00bbESH**J|\u00bbTTHIEI\n?\u25a0   .-       \u25a0  .\u2014\n1.21 SPOTUOHT\nS\u00abeo-l .4 4*\u201eg- ta *.,-,\n-\u2022<- totp.e Cm\u2014altxtH -nt,\n*\u25a0\u25a0\u2022>***\u201e\ni'l .00 fLOODLI-JNT\nfcrnadfali ^-f. ta UmI\n\u2022\u25a0d tmpat. Cattaam *\u25a0*\n-hftHri*\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nEveryone Is Rushing to Hear\nTHE FIRST BROADCAST OF THE\nNABOB\n%Yb^-__hi^ tf_d,\nCKhN\nTONICHT 9 TO 9:30\nTHIS IS NO TIME\nTO GUESS\nABOUT TIRES\ntires.\n-\"ul\n.ill \u2022*\u2022'\"%\u201e v_-i\nV>v>?\n\"\\\n-   A      '.__* ,1, I i   -it     IU      \u25a0'\u25a0).*-.      .... \u25a0\u25a0 \u00ab \u25a0\u25a0'\"\nGO G00DYIAR Am.m\nNELSON TRANSFER CO.. LTD.\n323 Vernon St.    Coodyear Tire Dealen    Nelion,   B. C.\n.m-.-... .Ama......   ... .*.       ...:,\u201e_-.-___ _......     ,,*..\u25a0     -.     .   \u2022 '--i^g\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. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1941_09_18","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0415362","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","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"}]}}