{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0415595":{"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":"2022-06-22","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1942-12-05","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0415595\/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":" Government Workers Glvtn Right tf\nloin Unlom.\u2014P.gt 1.\nNo OblocHon to Salt of Commodity\nWith Othtr Goodi.\u2014Pag, J.\nChanging Conditioni May Tighten\nRationing Control.\u2014Pagt i.\nVOLUME 41\nFIVE CENTS PIR COPY\nnuwinrji nii_ mp|\nlu $to$\nPlMf^lfPPI\nm*fmmr   ,      1\n\u2022   l5||p-\nCut Food Meat to Keep Living Coiti\nat Low Level.\u2014Page 3.\nU-Boat Preventi Allitd Shipi From Picking <\nUp Gorman Survlvon.\u2014\u00bbPag\u00bb 5.\n$30,000,000 Paid In Subsidies to Kttp\nPrltta Stable.\u2014Page 9.\n> -      NELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-SATURDAY MORNINQ, DIC. 8. 1842\nQ \u2022**_***    ~^~\nNUMBER 11\n=\n$10,000 Damage\nin Cranbrook\nFruit Plant Fire\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Dec. 4 (CP)\n-Officlall of the Scott Fruit Company today estimated at more than\n$10,000 damage caused Thursday\nnight when fire gutted the company\nwarehouse and office here. Both the\nbuilding and contents were covered\nby Insurance,\nFlames had burst out of the building when the fire was first discovered at about 7:30 p.m. Firemen had\nthe blaze under control within an\nhour and a half.\nStocktaking by the firm had been\ncompleted Thurglay morning with\nstock valued at $10,000. It wu declared to be a total lou.\nBales of matches, cardboard car-\n. toni, large stocks of ice cream'cones\nand other Inflammable materiali\ncauied tne blaze to ipread rapidly.\n11 More Villages\nFall to Russ;\nLash Strongpoints\nBy EDDIE GILMORE\nAssociated Pratt Staff Writer\nMOSCOW, Dec. 5 (AP) (Saturday)\u2014The Red Army\nseized 11 more villages, in the Stalingrad area yesterday, presumably in the Don River Bend west of that city, surrounded\na German stronghold near Velikie Luki on the frozen Central\nFront, and killed upwards of 2500 Nazis in'twin offensives\nthat still are gaining ground, the Soviets announced early\ntoday. .   .\nThe regular midnight communique said  the  Russians\ngained 200 to 300 yards inside Stalingrad itself, occupied two\nimportant points northwest and southwest of the Volga River\n\u2014 <?city, and were beginning \"the\nliquidation of encircled enemy\nstrongpoints\" in the area of\nVelikie Luki, only 90 miles\nI from the Latvian border.\nDispatches said lhe Germani were\nthrowing reserve! Into ,the Central\nfront In a desperate effort to stem\nths Red Army in the RSthev-Velikie\nLukl-Vyazma triangle Northwest of\nMoscow.\nThe communique said that several more populated places had\nbeen telied West of Rzhev,<and\nfor leveral dayi tHe Ruulani have\nreported numeroui holei torn In\nthe Qerman lines between that\npoint and Velikle Lukl.\nOne German Infantry battalion\ncounter-attacking West of Rzhev\nwas smashed, the Soviets said, and\nanother battalion wai routed from\na height controlling ah Important\nroad In the Velikle Luki area.\n\"Hundredi of enemy dead remained on the field of battle\" In the latter sector, the bulletin uld.\nIn the Stalllngrad area, the communique aaid, the Ruulani still\nwere advancing on the Ea'slerrt Sink\nof the Don at the rear of Stallngrid.\nIt li. this momentous push that\nthreatens to trap tho Nail ilege\narmies anchored between the Don\nand Volga Rivers before Stalingrad.\nSeveral enemy strongpolnli were\noverrun during yesterday, an4 a\ncommanding height was taken after\na battle v\u00bbhlch cost the Germans\n900 dead.\nSouthwest of SUlingrad another\n1000 Germans were killed, and six\ntanks, 19 machineguns, two trucks\nand 30 enemy dugouts were destroyed In the capture of a strong\nenemy point.\nThe Russians conceded they were\nmeeting stubborn resistance.\nRed Crou Monty in\nRossland Post\nOffice Is Stolon\nROSSLAND, B.C., Dec. 4- A\nthief broke Into the Red Crou\nbox at the Rosiland Poit Office\nThursday ' night, and stole the\nmoney In It, total of which wai not\nknown.   ,\nthe Red Crou box wai on a\ncounter In the Post Office lobby,\nand the theft apparently took\nplace before the lobby wai locked\nat midnight.\nREPORT GERMANS\nBUILDING\nFAST NEW U-BOAT\nLONDON, Dec. 4 (CP Cable).-\nThe Evening standard without giving the lource of iti Information\nsaid In a front-page story today that\nGermany ls building U-boats with a\nsurface speed of 20 knots \"or perhaps a little more.\" The top speed\nof surfaced submarines is 'normally\n15 knots.\nThe paper said the higher speed Is\nbeing attained without Increasing\nthe size of the submarines. Production was still concentrated on\nU-boats of 500 to 750 tons \"which\ncan be built ln very large numbers.\"\nAlberta Schools\nDangerously\nShort of Fuel\nEDMONTON, Dec. 4 (CP)-Possibility of the temporary closing of\naome rural schools because of lack\nts' coal loomed again tonight as officials reported country classrooms\nrunning dangerously low on their\nauppllei.\nH. Speen, Chairman of the nearby\nSturgeon School Division, uld that\nof 85 schools In the division, some\n20 should have coal at once. He said\nno ichools have yet been closed, but\n\"the danger line is bemg approach-\n. \u00abd.\"\nR.C.A.F. Loses Four\nPlones in\nSweeps Over France\nLONDON, Dec. 4  (CP Cable).-\nSpltflre squadrons of the R. A. F\nand R.C.A.E. carried out offenilve\niweepi over France and Belgium,\nthe Air Ministry announced tonight.\nR.CA.F. headquarten iaid four\nof ltl plarus were lost ind lhat \"one\nenemy aircraft wai destroyed by our\nfighters.\" Other enemy aircraft were\ndamaged by R AT. fighters which\nsuffered no loss.\nJAPS SHORT OF\nMATERIALON\nGUADALCANAL\nMarines Plan to\nBuild\nNew Airfield\nRAINS ARE DUE\nBy JOHN M. HIGHTOWER\nAssociated Preu Staff Writer\nWA8HIN0ITON, Dee. 4 (AP.) -\nJapan'! latest costly and futile attempt to deliver troopi and sup-\nlies to Guadalcanal Island was cited by Navy Secretary Frank Knox\ntoday ai evidence that enemy\nforcei there muit bi running\nihort of materjal.\nKnox described the attempt, made\nMonday night, as a complete failure\nfor the Japs and he called it \"Round\n3\" ln the battle for control of the\nSoutheastern Solomoni.'An American naval force unk six warships,\ntwo transports and a cargo vessel.\n\"They lost a lot of ihlpi,\" Knox\nuld, \"and they fcent away. They\nfailed to gain their objective. They\ndid not get ashore.\"\nVancouver Asked to\nWatch for\nEscaped Prisoners\nVANCOUVER, Dec., 4 (CP.) -\nVancouver police have been asked to\nbe on the lookout for four prlioneri of war reported missing In Alberta after escaping while being\ntransferred from one prison camp\nto another. Names snd descriptions\nof the prisoner! were not aallable.\nRadio Stations Will\nBe Part of ARP\nVANCOUVER, Dee. 4 (CP)\u2014\nCommercial radio stations of the\nprovince will become part of the\nBritish Columbia air raid warning system at midnight tonight,\nthe Advisory Counoll of the Provincial Civilian Protection Committee uld today,\nIn future, all air raid warnings\nwlll be broadcast over radio stations as will as being sounded\nover the existing alarm lystem.\nNAVAL Off KER\nOf KASLO.\nIS DECORATED\n\u2022v\nLt. Cmdr. Stubbs\nand Members of\nDestroyer Honored\nSANK HUN SUB\nOTTAWA, Dec 4 (CP)-Awardi\nto four officers and 17 ratings of\nthe Canadian Deitroyer Anlnl\nbolna for gallantry and courage\nIn the action In which the Aiiln\nIbolna rammed and unk a surfao\ned Qerman lubmarine were an\nnounoed tonight In extra edition\nof the Canada Gaette.\nThe commanding officer of the\nwarship, Acting Lt. Cmdr. John\nHamilton Stubbi of Kaslo, B. C*was\nawarded the D.S.O. and hli. first\nLieutenant, LleuL Ralph Lucien\nHenneuy of Ottawa, received the\nD.S.C,\nThe conspicuous gallantry,medal\n\u2014one of the moat coveted awards ln\nthe gift of the King and the first to\nbe awarded a rating in tbe Canadian Naval Service In thla war-\nwas awarded to Acting Chief Petty-\nOfficer Max Leopold Bernayi of\nHalifax for valor and 'daunt est devotion to duty.\nFollowing is the list of awards\nand those receiving them:\n'The Distinguished Order\u2014Acting\nLL Cmdr. John Hamilton Stubbi.\nThe Distinguished service Crou\u2014\nLleuL Ralph Lucien Henneuy, Ottawa.\nConspicuous Gallantry Medal \u2014\nActing Chief Petty Officer Max Leo-\npold Bernayi.\nDlitlnguiahed Medal - Petty Officer Cook, Claude Francli Daly,\nActing Leading Seaman Percy (TyF\nSmith, Engine Room Artificer, 4th\nClass, Donald Portree, Acting Lai.\n(W-aariCeaWta. _.'.\u00ab;, ><;*$\u25a0*_\n\u2014\u2014\nOn fhe bland, Kntti BtWAtiterU '^ffitloned  in  dlipatcho-  Sur\ncan forcei are  gradually expand\nIng and \"taking In more territory.\"\nOne objective of the expamlon\nwu brought out by Ma)-Gen.\nRalph J. MUchell, Chief of Marine\naviation, who uld that conitructlon of another airfield on Guadalcanal Is contemplated when suitable territory ll won.\nMitchell expreued some concern\nover the effect the Imminent rainy\nseason wlll have on the vital Guadalcanal airfield.\nMeanwhile, ihe Navy reported In\na communique that ground activity\non Guadalcanal Thursday wai Um\nIted to minor patrol operations ln\nthe course of which 14 Japs were\nkilled. Army fighters executed five\nattack mlulons ln support of the\nland troops.\nNOT 8IMPLI TASK\nMitchell uld he believes the Japanese actually were managing to get\nIn some freih troops and lupplles\nby imall boats at night, but that all\nthe evidence pointed to the conclusion that those on the Island were\nrather hard pressed.\nHe uld. however, they may be\nable to hold out In the Interior of\nthe Island for a long time and the\ntask of eliminating them may not\nbe simple.\n10 Men Killed in\nBomber Crash\nSODA SPRINGS, Idaho, Dec. 4 -\n(AP).\u2014Wreckage of an army bomb\ner carrying 10 men wai found In a\nsnow-blanketed canyon ln Southeastern Idaho Mountains today and\na wlteu of the crash uld the huge\ncraft was In flames before It struck\nthe ground.\n(harp e Biq Interests Bucking\nPlans for Pacific Coasf Steel Plant\nVANCOUVER, Deo. 4 (CP) \u2014,\nCharges that establishment of a\nsteel Induitry on the Pacific\nCoatt li being obitructid by largi\nfinancial Interests In Eutern Can.\nada and the United Sties who\nhave Influence at Ottwa, were\nmide today at a meeting of the\nPacific Plant Committee, Mt up\nto Investigate possibilities of a\n\u2022tul plant on tha Pacific Coait\n\"It seems to me Ihil there Is i\nhookup between Eastern and US\nInterests who have Influence with\nthe Government In Ottiwa.\" A. J.\nTurner, C. C T. ML A. for Vincouver Kail, declired.\n\"Thit Is ohvlnus,\" J. A. Paton,\nConservative M.L.A. for Vancouver-\ngeon Lieut. Arnold Livingstone\nJohnson, Ordinary Seaman Kenneth\nWilliam Wation (posthumous), Zick\nBerth Attendant Norman Leckie,\nAble Seaman Michael Joseph Scullion, Chief Stoker Joieph Edmond\nPatry, Norman Leilie WUkinton,|-\nGunner, Ab. John Henry Clarke,\nAb. Morris Henry Young, Acting\nLeading Stoker (Ty) Keith McCormick, Ab. Bruce Richard Mitchell,\nLeading Supply Auiitant (Ty) Ro-\nger Rodman Whynot, Sub.-Lt. Douglas Sutherland Martin, Walter Fred\nSutherland, Acting Leading Telegraphist, Steward,H.rry Reid Taggart\nLt.-Cmdr Stubb's decoration Is\nawarded for gallantry, devotion to\nduty and distinguished services\nunder fire. The citation said he\nshowed outstanding skill and Inspired leadership and conducted a\nbrilliant action against an enemy\nU-boat.\nIt continued: \"Thli officer, in\nthe face of enemy fire at from 100-\n300 yards range, and with the\nbridge itructure on fire, handled\nhia ship with dauntleu resolution\nand courage and pressed the attack\nwith great determination to a successful conclusion.\"\nThirty-year-old Lt.-Cmdr. Stubbs\nwas born In Kulo, the son of Major\nand Mrs. J. Hamilton Stubbi, now\nresiding ln Victoria, He attended\nBrentwood College, Victoria, and\nhaa been with the Royal Canadian\nNavy since 1930. A siiter, Mri. Kenneth G. Tatlow, livei at 8250 Cedar-\nhurst, Vancouver,\nPLAN CHANGES\nINWAR\nRISK INSURANCE\n\"Demonstration of\nNon-Profit\nMaking Intention\"\nOTTAWA, Nov. 4 (CP) - Finance Mlniiter Hiley tonight announced that the Government had\nauthorized certain administrative\nchanges ln the ratea and underwriting conditioni of the War\nRisk Insurance icheme, Including\na policy holder's right to a refund\nof hla pro rata portion of 90 per\ncent of the net surplus remaining\nln the fund at the end of the war.\n\"Thli ls a recognition,'' the Minister nid \"of the partnership that\nexists between the contributing\nproperty owneri and the taxpayers\nof Canada.\n\"It also Is a demonstration of the\nnon-profit-making Intention ot the\nGovernment ln setting up the\nscheme.\n\"If the rate of 25 cents per $100\nprovea to have been too high (and\nno one knows today what rate would\nbe too high) the contributors will\nshare in the surplus along with the\ngeneral body of taxpayers who have\nunderwritten the rlik to the extent\nthat the amount of the damage exceeds the amount paid into the fund\nby the policyholders.\"\nIn a statement distributed to the\npresi,' Mr. Ilsley uld the icheme\nhad been ln operation ilnce Sept.\n15 and In the ilx weeki to the end\nof Octeber, 19,000 policiei were lined for a total value ln excess ot\n11,290,000,000, with premiums totalling  approximately  $3,000,000.\n\"However, It li fair to uy that\nthe response to the .acheme hai\nnot been ea great \u25a0\u25a0 haa been expected. Ponlbly thli li due to the\nfavorable turn ef eventi In re-\ncent weeka. It would be a mistake\n'*- If recent vnto news were allowed\nto give rise In. Canadi to any\nfalse lenie ef Immunity from war\n. damage.\n\"No one knowi when or how the\nenemy may atrlke, or what exploiion of munltloni may occur, and it\nIs tbe conildered opinion of the Government that it la neceuary and\nImportant that there be an effective'\nand comprehensive scheme of war\ndamage Insurance for property In\nthis country.\nFor the scheme to be effective,\nIt must have wide support, the Government Is anxious that this wide\nsupport be obtained, and with that\nobject In view It has authorized cer.\ntain administrative changes ln the\nratu and the underwriting conditions to be effective as from the\ncommencement of the scheme, viz.,\nSepi 19, 1842.\"\nHenceforth, Mr. Ilsley announced, It wlll be permissible to separate stock from buildings, machln-\nery and equipment In applying (or\nInsurance, thui modifying the \"all\nor nothing\" principle to that extent\nBig Shipment of\nSmokes From\nB.C. Fund U Loit\nVICTORIA, Deo. 4 (CP.) - The\nBritlih Columbia Overuaa Tobacco Fund haa been advised by\nthe Agent-General for Britlih Columbia In London, W. A. McAdam,\nthat a large ihlpment of olgarettei\nand tobacco haa been loit at ua,\namounting to over 1,250,000 olgarettei and some 350 poundi of\ntobacco.\nThe itock wlll be replaced.\nPoint Grey, laid. \"As soon li we\natart i plmt here we wlll cul Into\ntheir mirketi. That's where the\ntrouble ilarts.\"\nA letter from Steel Controller\nF. B. KUbourn In Ottawa itated It\nwould not be desirable it the preient time to divert ittel from production of direct wir equipment to\nminuficlure of the imount of equipment required to transform ore to\nfinished iteel,\" Mr. KUbourn uld.\nC. M. Campbell, Technical Advisor to the Committee, said he\nbelieve \"thit letter Intended to\n\u2022care us. I don't think Mr. KUbourn will give ui iny more\nassistance thin he Is forced lo\ngive.\"\nReport 700 Italian\nPrisoners Aboard\nTorpedoed Ship\nLONDON, Dec. 4 (CP)-A Reuten dlipalch from Lourenco Mar-\nques reported today that more than\n700 Italian prlioneri of war were\naboard a Britlih iteamer torpedoed\noff the cont of Mozambique. One\nhundred and ninety-two survivors\nwere landed at Lourenco Maryuei,\nIt iaid.\nPROTEST SHUTDOWN\nOF SPRUCE CAMP\nVANCOUVER, Dec. i (CP.)\nloggers employed at Pacific MIUs\ncamp In the Queen Charlotte Islands\ntoday proteited to the Government\nand officlall of the International\nWoodworker! Auoclatlop In Vancouver agalnit a propoied shutdown\nwhich would halt airplane spruce\nproduction tor i month.\nThe 119 logegri claim the company\nhai polled notlcei the camp will\ncloie down for a month beginning\nDec. 10 for repain.\nJAPS PARACHUTE\nSUPPLIES tO\nN. GUINEA MEN\nJaps Lose Heavily\nin Lives in\nGround Fighting\nALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN\nAU8TRALIA, Dec 9 (Saturday)\n(CP)\u2014Hard-preued Japaneie, apparently finding too costly In ships\ntheir repeated attempta to aid the\ntrapped forcei in the Buna-Qona\narea, wire reported today dropping luppllei by parachute In an\naerial attempt to relieve their beleaguered comradea,\nThe Allied Command communique Issued at noon seid that \"the\nenemy has resorted to supply dropping by parachute In an effort to\nrelieve his beleaguered garrison.\"\nThe noon communique told of\nmopping up of pocket! of oppoil\ntlon lett behind by the Allied spear\nhead which fought Its way to tbe\ncoait near Gona and then turned toward Buna. More than 400 enemy\ndead have been counted. In addi.\ntion. an estimated 41 Jap* drowned\n\u00abri_St two large barges were sunk\nby bomben Of the Allied air force.\nThe fighting ln sectors othir than\naround Gona wai labelled intermittent.'\nAllied planei bombed alrdromei\nup to tbe New Guinea coait at Lae\nand Salamaua and alao ranged to\nNew Ireland, setting fires last night\namong aircraft at Kavleng.\nTebourba Retake!\nby Enemy;\nTank Losses Heavi\nLack of Air Support Handicaps Allies\nThough Bombing of Axis Dive\nBomber Airfields Is Easing Strain\nBy BLAKE SULLIVAN\nAnociated Preii Staff Writer\nLONDON, Dec. 4 (AP)\u2014A series of terrific Axis <\nter-attacks through the mountains between DJedeida and\nteur which caught the British 1st Army with its Amerljjfll\narmored forces on the flank at Tebourba were reported tonigj)\nto have left the plains and hills of Tunisia strewn with th\nwreckage of tanks and the situation at Tebourba in doubt. ..-.\n\"It is now clear that \/\\xis troops have recaptured Tebouj\nba,\" 20 miles-west of Tunis and about 35 miles south fl\nBizerte, said the military correspondent of Reuters Newi\nAgency.\nItalians Hasten to\nMake Cities\nReady for Evacuees\nLONDON, Dec. 4 (CP.) - German\nbroadcasts describing hasty Italian\npreparations to withstand Intensified Allied bombing Indicated today\nthat Italy expects to have a problem\not caring for at least 2,000,000 refugees from areas of heavy attack.\nThe Berlin radio broadcast dls-\npatchesf rom Rome telling of housing requisitioning on a large scale,\nwith 800,000 rooms ready and 2,-\n000,000 expected to be provided by\nthe end of next week.\n\"This means that a person may\nInsure his itock-ln-trade by itself,\nor hli buildings, machinery and\nequipment by themselves, or, of\ncourse, he mey insure both. All the\nproperly ln any one category must\nbe insured . . ,\n\"Regulations will be promulgated\nln due courie to allow reconildera-\ntlon of existing policies, so that any\nInsured who negotiated his policy\non the basis of the old, more rigid\n\u2022all or nothing* principle may secure\nthe benefits of the modification announced today If he wlihei.\"\nSir John Dill\nResigns\nIndia Appointment\nLONDON, Dec. B (Siturdiy) (CP)\n-Field Marihal Sir John Greer Dill\nh\u00bbi reilgned from his ippolntment\nas Governor Designate of Bombay\n\"owing to the high Importance for\nthe conduct of the war of hli dutiei\non the combined chiefs of stall\ncommittee In Washington,\" thc India\nolfice announced today.\nIn his place Col. David John Colville, ScotUb Comervatve member\nof Parlament wai deignatrd to succeed Sir Roger Lumley, whose term\nai governor of Bombay explrei on\nMarch 17, IMS.\nVancouver Hotels\nShort of Coal\nVANCOUVER. Dec. 4 (CP) -\nShorUgei of coal hai assumed serious proportion! for many Vincouver Hoteli, officlall nld ti'lt, with\nsupplies on a day-to-day bull.\nTropical Storm Hits\nJamaica Shores\nKINGSTON,   Jamaica,   Dec.   4\n(CP Cable) \u2014A raging cloudburst\nthat emptied Itielf over a lection\nof Northern Jamaica claimed at\nleast light Uvea and cauied heavy\nproperty dimage and disruption\nof communications, according to\nreports reaching hire todiy, One\niuch torrent swept ilx houiei Into\nthi lea, five memben of a native\nfimily living In one of the houiei\u2014\nIncluding four children \u2014 were\ndrlwnid.\nThe Germans also were reported holding to Mateur, 25\nmiles south of Bizerte.\nAn Allied headquarters communique aald: \"Our troops in fie neighborhood of Tebourba are consolidating their positions\" without giving\nthe situation at Tebourba Itself and\nwithout mentioning the situation\nat the advanced positions of the Allies it DJedeida, 12 milei West of\nTunis, or at Mateur 2J miles South\nof Blzerte.\nThe Implication waa plain, however, that the Allies had come up\nagainst a ston. wall of reiiitince In\nthe admlHlon that the forcei of Lt.-\nGen. Andenon were consolidating at\nthe rearward poiltion. ,\nThe Morocco radio aald the Germans had thrown \u25a0 fleet of about\nM tanki tfltp their-eounter-at-\n\"__* tttfftit.tKe'lirger\" pari wer*\ndeitroyed er damaged.\nThe enemy also wu reported by\nthe aame source to have tent parachutists Into the attack but these\nwere said to have been rounded up\nand made powerless ln short order.\nBerlin claimed that the ruins of 40\nAllied tanks dotted the battlefield\nafter 48 hours of fierce fighting.\nThe lut reporti hid aald Brit\n'   lth  and   American  troopi    were\nholding   doggedly to the Weitern\nouttklrti of the little white-walled\nrailroad town of DJedeida whlli\nthe Germani fought from the Eutern half and that the town had\nchanged handa several times.\nThe lut official reports said that\nthe Alliei still were applying pressure at Mateur. But there was no\nofficial \u00bbport on the situation at\nthose two placei tonight\nAn Allied communique last Tuesday mentioned clashes with German armored patrols In the mountains between these two towns, 15\nmiles apart, ind apparently the\nenemy launched hli first counterattack in that area the next day to\nstrike at the Allied rear and perhapi in an effort to separate the\ntwo Allied forcei operating igainst\nTunis snd Bizerte.\nLACK FIGHTER COVER\nThat the Allies were atill lacking\nsufficient planes at the right places\nalso was Indicated by the Reuters\ncorrespondent with the 1st Army\nwho uld: 'The Army's freedom of\nmovement ls handicapped by lack\nof fighter cover though attempts to\nkeep Axil dive bombers grounded\nby Intensive bombing of Tunisia\nairfields are easing the strain.\"\nA pro-Allied French communlqt)\nalso announced considerable flgb\ning In Central Tunisia, Including it\nrouting of Axis patrols betwei\nGafsa and Gabes, the capture\n\"Important enemy positions\" and fl\ntaking of a number of prison*]\nEast of Sidi Bouzid and BO mill\nWest of Sfax and 129 mllea Sow\nof Tunis.\nThe military correipondent\nthe Daily Mail quoted authoritatll\nLondon sources as uylng \"Gen, Al\nderson's 1st Army faces a period I\nhard, tough and relentlest land an\nair fighting before. It can hope I\npry the Germani looie from fl\nbridgehead around Bizerte and Tils.\"\n\"And for \u25a0 while we cann\nreekon en air lup.rlortty. .\nThe preient battle probably It fl\nopening itage of a deelilve tin\nconflict for North Africa.\"\nNew Type Explosive, Poisonous\nBullet Used by Naii Planes\nLONDON. Dec. 4 (CP)-The Britlih Medical Journal uld today that\nexamination of bullet remains taken\nfrom the thigh of a wounded Canadiin filer and of ammunition found\nin a wrecked Nail plane hu confirmed that the Germani are uilng\na new type of explosive and poli-\nonous bullet\nThe projectile, a Mauser rifle\nbullet, contains V., grains of\nphosphorus, double the minimum\nfatal doee, the Journal uld.\nThe wounded Cinadian whoie\nname' wis nol given wu uld to\nhive linded near Norwich after a\nflight over enemy territory. He\nwai removed to Norwich hosplt.\nwhire Dr. A. J. Blaxlind performed in operation to remove the bullet.\nWhile the operation wu ih pro\ngreu, the Journil quoted Blaxland\nli laying: \"Mr assistant and I were\nastonished that the wound emitted\na visible vapor which possessed\nthe imell and characteristics of\nphosphorus.\n\"There was radiographic evidence of minute portloni of metal\nIn the thigh and a ragged large\nentrance to the wound would sug\ngeit that the bullet exploded In\nthe tissue! of the thigh, probably\nupon itriklng the bone, thui re\nleasing and scattering concen\ntrated phosphorui.\"\nThe bullet wu uld to be con\nitructed of two layen, the outer\none of copper plated Iron and the\nInner oni of lead, while phnaphoru\"\nwai contained ln the noie.\nThe article did not disclose lhe\n.'ale of the Canadian.\nALLIED FORCE HEADQUAI\nTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, Da\n4 (AP)-Unlttd Statei combi\ntroopi itriklng southeait of Tebi\nu near the Tunlslan-Algerll\nborder drove a Nazi armored co\numn back toward the cout todi\nin a disorderly retreat, capturfl\nmore than 100 prisoners and til\nIng a town.\nThe Americans fighting with fl\nFrench Allies were commanded I\nCol. Edson Raff, U. S. parachute lfl\nder, and Included mixed unlti\ninfantry, mechanized and parachlt\ntrops.\nTebessa, Algeria, Is 75 mllea fro\nGafsa, an Important Junction\nSouthern Tunisia, and 140 mil'\nfrom Sfax, a Mediterranean poit\nGET $5,000,000\nCONTRACT TO\nBUILD SWEEPERS\nPORT ARTHUR, Dec. 4 (Cjft\u00ab\nGordon F. McDougall, General JU\nnager of the Porth Arthur Sht]\nbuilding Company, Ltd., announce\nhere yesterday his company bl\nbeen awarded'a contract totalllt\nmore than $5,000,000 for conltrW\nHon ot minesweepers.\nNASSAU RIOT DUE\nTO LABOR TROUBLES\nNASSAU. Bahamas, Dec. Hr'.d\nCable). \u2014 The Royal Commit^\nwhich investigated the June 1 rt\nat Nassau found the disturbance W|\ndue to labor discontent and not1!\nracial feeling, stated its report mat\npublic today. Sir Alison Rum!\nchairman of the Commission, recoil\nmended more liberal labor leglil\ntlon.\nNelson's .temperatures, for fl\nfirst time this season, kept wholly\nIhe 20'i for a 24-hour period, Frldfl\nwhen extremes of 21.1 and It d\ngreea were recorded lor the 24 hofl\nending nt 5 p m. The former flfll\nwas the coldest dip o( the season\nfar as recorded here. The lowest pt\nInns dip was 22 degrees on Nov. 1\nA fifth of an Inch of snow fell.\nThe lake declined .08 loot ilurli\nIhe 4H houn ending at I p.m. fj\nd.y, v'hen II reached 622 feel kbfl\nIhe low water m.-rk Wedncsdl)\nrending wai 6.30 feet and Ttmi\nday'i, 6.5.\n  \u2014\u2014\n \u2014\n\t\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY. DEC 5. 1942\nirtime Metals to Equip, Operate\njnay Florence Mine; First\nDim Ore Outlet, Ainsworth Area\nBy SIDNEY NORMAN\nrtime Metali Corporation, the\nHon Qovernment agency dltt the campaign to Increaie\nrt ot base metali In Canada,\nSnulp and operate the Florence\nf two milei ahovl Alnsworth,\nr a lease ind royalty plan. The\nrtaking will be known as Koo-\nt Florence Project.\nA. Roie, at preient with Plon-\nOold Minei, Bridge River, hai\n(appointed Manager and it li\njltood will assume his duties\nHe li well-known ln the\ntea, having been at various\ninnected with Galena Farm,\nWhitewater   and   Reevei-\nMinei. At one time he\nchl\/ge ot the Kaslo office\nrii Syndicate.\nft.   1B0 TONS\nM mill building on the West\nKootenay Lake ls to be\nbi tated and the equipment ol\nI onsolldated at Ymir, already\nhAed, will be set up in the new\nlion. The firit mine work will\nWppletlon of the raise between\nlong lakeshore adit, known as\nSKnd No. 5 level, which is 550\nsiove it on the dip of the ore-\nryHMeanwhlle, t crew of men\n[\"continue the work of preparing\n:;\u00abamp for occupancy and re-\nring the right-of-way for the\ner line connection with the Nel-\nmunicipal line at Ainsworth.\n(ter installation of a compressor\nird the end of this month, th.\nI will be put in shape to supply\nMen 125 and 150 tons of ore\nf end it Is expected that pro_uc-\nwlll commence early in April.\nMill installation design provides for\nexpansion to treat customi ore, thui\nproviding the first outlet ot the kind\nIn the hlitory of the Aimworth district.\nTO OPERATE UNDER ,\nROYALTY\nThe property will be operated\nunder lease and royalty from Florence Mining Company, a private\ncompany, Incorporated ln BrltUh\nColumbia and owned by George B.\nWebster of Toronto. Wartime Metali\nCorporation will provide fundi to\nequip and let up the mill, put the\nmine ln ihip; fqr production md\nthereafter operate lt. Royalty will be\npaid for lead and line produced, but\nnot for silver or cadmium content of\nthe ore. Provlllon is made for amortization of capital expenditures,\nand at the concluiion of the lease,\nwhich can be terminated by the\nCrown on three months' notice after\ndeclaration of peace, the property\nreverts to Florence Mining Company, which bal first right to obtain full ownership of mill and\nother capital Items at a price equal\nto the unamortized balance.\nFrom 1912 to 1924 the Florence\nmine officially credited with production of 74,781 toni of ore, yielding 129,047 oil. of illver and \u00bb,7M,694\npoundi of lead, worth at preient\nprices about $700,000. No effort wai\nmade In pait operation! to recover\nzlfic values, present In the ratio of\nbetween 5 per cent and t per cent\nper ton. It II eitimated' that between 50,000 and 60,000 torn of tailings can be recovered by dredging\nfrom the shore dump and lake and\nprofitably handled.\nOTH STANE\nJSD BESOM\n(suits of the early games ln the\nion Curling Club's Roy Sharp\ni competition Friday night were:\nf. W. Laishley 13, Leo Desireau 4.\n, B. Poulin B, J. A. Smith 5.\nI HonwUl 10,1. A. FarenholU 4.\n, A. D. Greegwood   11,  R.  D.\nice t.\n. Mlchelion 11, Robert Hickey S.\n.MSTRONG WINS\nKNOCKOUT\nAND, Ore., Dec. 4' (AP)-\n' Armstrong continued on the\nebeck trail here tonight by scor-\nII technical knockout over for-\nt lightweight champion Lew Jen-\nI ltt the eighth round of a sched-\nten-round bout.\nng weighed 144; Jenkini,\nDARLAN ORDERS\nOFFICERS TO\nREJOIN ARMY\nLONDON, Dec. 4 (CP)-Reuter.\nreported that the Vichy radio\nbroadcast an Algiers dispatch today\nthat Admiral Jean Darlan had ordered French Army Reserve officers and non-commissioned officers\nto rejoin their North .African Unlti\nby tomorrow.\nNelion ond Trail\nMen Win \"Sparks\"\nCALGARY, Alta, Dec. 4 <CP)-\nGroup Captain E. R. Owen, Commanding Officer at No. 1 Wireless\nSchool. R.C.A.F, Calgary, presented\n\"Bparks,\" denoting wireless proficiency, to a large claas of graduating\nstudents yesterday.\nAmong the graduatei were A.\nHoneyman, Trail, R. A. Mclnnn,\nNelson.\n\u00a7t. Pattl'0\nlttttrt QUjurrlj\nMinister:\nREV.  H. STEWART  FORBES\nB.A, B.D.\nOrganist ind Choir Leader\nMm. T. J. 8. Ferguion,\nB.A,  A.T.C.M.\n9:45 a.m.   Sunday Schools.\nColored Slides\u2014\"The\nCitadel    of    the\nChiangs*.\nSenior Choir.\n1:30-5:00 p.m. An Every Member Canvass of the of\n1:00 a_n.   MY   VOW    UNTO\nTHE  LORD,\nthe Congregation.\n7:30 p.m.    CHRI8T    AND    HIS\nCHURCH.\nSenior Choir,\nday,   Sat. 3-5   pm.   Excelsior\nClub Xm,.j Bazaar in\nthe Church Hall.\nibn, 3 p.m. Exec, of W. A. at\nhome in the Church\nHall to thc memberi\nof the Circles.\n.Ion , 8 pm, Excelsior Club at\nhome of Mrs. Nettle\nJohnson, 611 Kootenay' St.\nfed, 8 p.m. Midweek Service\nfor Bible Study and\nPrayer In the Vestry.\nW, Dec. 11 Mission Band and\nJr. W.M.S. Xmas Tea\nand Sale.\nDec. 13 White Gift Sunday Special Music by\ntho Beginners' Choir.\n\u00a9rinttg\nInttrt QUjurrlj\nJosephine and Silica\nRev. Gordon G. Boothroyd,\nB.A,  B.D,  MlniiteT.\nC. C. Halleran, L.M, Choirmaster\nand Organist.\nMusic by the Senior Choir\n10:00 am\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worahlp.\n\"THE ART OF COMFORTING.\"\nsecond In series on book of Job.\n7:30 pm\u2014Evening Wonhlp.\n\"WARFARE and SPORTSMANSHIP\"\nA cordial welcome to alL\nJflrr.1\nJJrrulnitrrtau\n(fhurrli\nKooteniy ind Victoria\n10 am\u2014Sunday School\nMorning Subject:\nHI 1 m    \"The  Inlrnlion  and lhe\nDeed\"\nEvenliij:\n7:30 p 111     Hash Judgments\"\nfirat (Eljurrtj 0!\nQlhrtst fcrirtttiBt\n_W  BAKER   STREET\nA Branch ol Thi Mother Church\nThe Flnt Church of Chrlit,\nScientist  In  Boston.  Masi.\nSunday School 9:45 i.m.\nSunday  Service  11 i.m.\nSubject   Union Sermon\nOnd, thi Only Cauie and Creator\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8 p.m.\nFREE   READING   ROOM   IN\nCHURCH   BUILDING\u2014\nAll  Cordially  Waloome\nffl-H.tif.1 QHjurrtj\nRev. H  R. Stovell, BA, B.D.\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Church School.\n11:00 am-The SalnU of\nCaesar'i Household\"\n3:00 p.m -Shirley  Hall.\n; 30 p.m.-\"Now ls the Accepted\nTime\"\nCommunion at thc close of\nevening service.\nCoaat Consumer!\nDemand\nReduced Pricei\nVANCOUVER, D*. \u00ab (CP) -\nHundredi of OOMUmin itormid\nVancouver orocery ihd butcher\n\u2022torai fodiy ind demanded reduced prlcei for tei, coffei, milk and\nmilt undir thl Imprmlon prlee\nreduction! announced by . Inineo\nMlniiter llsle'y In hit ClMdl-wldi\nbroidout lilt night, Mme Into\neffect Immediately. Stort ownen\nhid to ixpliln thiy wire without\nInitructloni from thl Pricei Board\n\u25a0nd  prion  remained  nnchanged.\nPREMIER HAS\nDISCUSSION\nWITH ROOSEVELT.\nAlso Calls on Hull,\nHalifax; to\nReturn on Sunday\nBy J. .. SANDERSON\nCinidlin Prm Stiff Wrltir\nWASHINGTON, Dec. i (CP.) -\nTrade ind financial irrangementi\nbetween Canada and the United\nStatea and post wkr plana ln many\nparts of the world were diacuued\nhere today by Prime Mlniiter Mackenzie King with President Roosevelt and State Secretary Cordell\nHuU.\nThe Prime Minister arrived for\na weekend of Informal dlicuiilom\nwith the President and plani to\narrive back in Ottawi Sunday\nmorning. He conferred for _n hour\nwith Secretary Hull this momlng,\ncalled on Viscount Halifax, the\nBritish Ambassador and, apart\nfrom a few minutei at the Canadian legation, ipent the reit of the\nday inside the White Houie.\nAt his conference with Secretary\nHull and, probably\" later with the\nPresident, the Prime Minister was\nexpected to take up iome of the\nimplications of exchange notes, announced earlier ln the week, by\nwhich Canada and the United Statei\nagreed to promote a freer exchange\nof trade after the war.\nIt was thought likely that direct\nfinancial relations between the\ntwo countries, as distinct from\nlong-range policiei, might be discussed because in some quarteri\nhere there li concern over Cin-\nada'i ability to continue paying\nher heavy obligation! in the United States for neceisary war luppllei.\nAt his Presi conference, Mr.\nRoosevelt said the terms of the Hyde\nPark declaration, which forms the\nbasis of wartime financial arrangements between the two countries,\nwill not be discussed in detail but\nits objectives will be. This was taken to mean that the two North\nAmerican leaders might igalh survey Canadian-American financial\nirrangementi since they ilgned the\nHyde Park declaration ln April,\n1941 in order to determine whether\nany fruther itepi are neceisary to\nsustain Canada's ability to meet her\nobligations ln terms of American\ndollars.\nCharge Jobs Sold\nto Yard Workers\nLOS ANGELES, Dec. 4 (AP)-A\nU. S. Maritime Commlsilon inspector and four otheri ire under ir-\nreit here on Federal Indictments\ncharging they sold ]ob| to several\nhundred shipyard workers for feei\naggregating between gSOOO and\n$50,000.\nSeized by Federal Bureau of Investigation agenti at Long Beach,\nCalif, last night were the inspector, Charles W. field, W. F. Moffat, deicribed ns a former tire ihop\noperator; O. B. Bartlett, James F.\nThornton, identified ta a former\nBethlehem Steel Co. employee, and\nRay Palmer, all live In Long Beach.\nPrice Celling\nWould Have\nOTTAWA. Die. 4 (CPJ - Donald Gordon, Prlcei Boird Chilrmin,\n\u25a0aid todiy thit If the deciiion bid\nnot ben taken to reduce prices ol\ncirtlln commodliies in inflationary\nspiral would hive been itarted\nwhich would hate \"endangered thi\neffectiveness of thl price ceiling\" in\nCinada.\nBut evep if that spiral started, the\nupward trend would have been at I\nlower rate than would be the case\nunder similar circumstances without price control, he uld.\nAny suggestion thit failure ta\ntake thli iction would have resulted ln i \"complete blow-up\" of the\nprice celling wai a \"definite overstatement,\" Mr. Gordon laid. \"But\nif iction had not been taken there\nwai the rlik that the upward pressure of prices would reiult in lncreued cost-of-living bonuses and\nconsequently higher coiti of production. That would itart in Inflationary spiral ln Canada.\n\"The  preuure  mltfht have become bo extreme that lt would hava\nprice celling,\" Mr. Gordon said,\nendangered the effectiveness of the\n\"Even then, however, the price\nceiling would not be blown up. It\nwould still have a definitely retarding effect on the pace of the upward\nspiral.\"\nReport Herriot\nArrested by Vichy\nLONDON, Dec. 4 (CP.-Reutera\n\u25a0aid the Rome radio broadcast a\nVichy report today that Edouard\nHerriot, 70-year-old former Premier\nof the French Republic, and Jean\nBorotra, Davil Cup tennii star, had\nbeen irrested by Vichy authorities,\nHerriot, Socialist leader and Mayor\nof Lyon, was placed under house\narreit Oct. 2 after he wrote a letter\nof protest to Marshal Petain against\nanti-democratic meaiurei.\nA Stefani dlipatch broadcast by\nthe Rome radio iaid Leon Jouhaux,\nformer Chief of the French General\nConfederation of Labor, and Francois de Tesson former Under-Secretary of Foreign Affairs, also were\nplaced under arrest.\nHonors Won by Nine\nCanadian Airmen\nBy WILLIAM STEWART\nCanadian Prm Staff Writer\nLONDON, Dec. 4 (CP Cable).-A\nDistinguished Service Order for\nWing Cmdr. A. C. Brown of. Winnipeg headed a list of awards announced today for nine Canadian\nairmen serving ln the European and\nfolddle East theatres of the war.\n' Brown, commander of the famous\nR.C.A.F. Demon Squadron based tn\nBritain, already hid won the Distinguished Flying Cross for meri-\ntorloua conduct.\nDistinguished Flying Crosses were\nawarded ln today's list to Acting\nFit. Lts. W. M. R. Griffin of Toronto, R. I. A. Smith of Reginas. Pos.\nArthur Clifford of Unitey. Sask,\nFrederick Waterman of Princeton,\nB.C, and Wo. A. J. G. Van Rassel of\nCochrane, Ont\nThree men whose home towns\nwere not known here got Distinguished Flying Medals. They are:\nFit. Sgti. F. H. Ballantyne and Warren H. Wortley and Sgt. Russel\nCurtli.\nNAZIS TAKE NORWAY\nFREIGHT CARS\nLONDON, Dec. 4 (CP.)-Reuters,\nin a dispatch from Stockholm, quoted the Svenska Dagbladet today as\nsaying the Germans had directed\nthat all freight cars in Norway be\nshipped' to Germany\u2014presumably\nbecause of a severe shortage of\nrolling stock in the Reich.\nReconstruction Group Confident\nof Canada's Post-War Future\nOTTAWA, Dec. 4 (CP)\u2014Pension!\nMinister Mackenzie uld today at a\nspecial meeting of Provincial Representatives and members of the Committee on .econstruction that he :s'\nconvinced the Canadian people will\nnot let constitutional difficulties\nstand in the wiy of a complete\nrounding out of i system of social\nlecurlty.\nDr, F, Cyril Jamei of Montreal,\nPrlnclal of McGIM Univenity and\nChairman of tht Reconitruction\nCommittee, uld Cinada full thi\nproipact thit one-third of thou\nnow gainfully employed, Including\ntht mtn Ind womin In tht armed\nforcti, will haye to find ntw em-\nploymtnt Immediately afttr the\nwar.\nHe urged haste ln preparing detailed plans to meet the unemployment p-oblem which will develop\nwhen peace comei.\n\"Wc in Cinada hivt encountered\nconstitutional difficulties in our ai-\npiratloni for the improvement of our\nsocial security legislation,\" said Mr,\nMackenzie. \"But 1 am satisfied t^e\npeople will not pe-mlt any man-\nmade instrument ot thl nature of \u2022\nconstitutional enactment to stand In\nthe way of the complete rounding\nout ln this country of a system of\nsocial security which will free our\npeople for all Ume from, feari of\nill-health, hunger, unemployment or\nan Impoverished old age.\"\nCanadlani would not be content\nwith removal of the opportunity\nfor individual growth and development. At the ume time public\nopinion aaked that the nation provide collective security against\nsickness, unemployment and want.\nMr. Mackenzie la Chairman of the\nCabinet Committee on demobilization and reestabllshment to which\nthe reconstruction Committee reporti.\nHe uid the one-day meeting, attended by 40 committee memberi,\nprovincial mlniitei. and other official!, wu lo review the progreu\nmide In the itudy of ooit-wir problem! and of the courie to be followed In handling them.\nDr James laid tha ilngle, central\nproblem wai obtaining full employment of thl Canadian population at\nthe highlit pouible itandard of living, \u25a0\nClaim Thrtt Allied\nShipi Sunk\nin Indian Ocean\nLISBON, Die. 4 (AP)-Dlspatches\nfrom Lourenco Marquei, Portugu-\nen Eut Africa, uld todiy AxU\nlubmarlnei had lunk three United\nNitioni vessels In shark-infested waters ot tbe Indian Ocean thli week\nincluding the 10,709-ton Britlih Uner\nLlandaf Castle.\nThe Llandaf Castle wai reported\nto have been bearing 1000 South\nAfrlcin troopi towird Durban on\nleive.\nThe dlipatchei declired ihe went\ndown off Zululand ind only 40 wr-\nvivon were known to hivi bein\nlanded.\nJUDGE DECLARES\nSPIES WORKED\nFROM EMBASSY\nCerman Diplomats\nin Argentina\nMay Go on Trial\nBUBNOS AIRIKS, Dec. 4 <CP>-\nUnlted Statei charges of Axis espionage ln Argentina were tubstin-\ntlated today by an Argentine Federal Judge who declared In thl\nmidst of an inquiry that ipylng here\nwas directed from the German Embassy and made an initial move to\npunish the offending diplomati or\nexpel them.\nJudge Miguel Jantui made the\ndisclosure in ordering tht teiti\n' mony of ilx accuied spies itnt\nto the Supreme Court to determine whether the Relch'i diplomati miy be brought to trial.\nThe Supreme Court ii the only\ntribunal authorized to try diplomats\nbut in order to do so it must obtain\npermiision from the German Gov\nernment to have the representatives\nwaive their diplomatic immunity\nfrom prosecution.\nA Court source said that if Berlin refused, as expected, to permit\nthe diplomats to stand trial as common spies, then Argentina would\nbe forced to declare them persona\nnon grata.\nHowever, if the Supreme Court\ndecided to press for the trial It\nappeared likely that Germany\nwould withdraw the accused representatives or possibly oust them\nfrom the German Foreign Service\nlp an attempt to maintain diplomatic relations with Argentina.\nA resposslble legal authority\nsaid one of the persons named In\nthe testimony taken by Judge\nJantus was the German Embassy's\nNaval Attache, Capt. Dietriuh\nNeibuhr.\nNelbuhr's expulsion from this\ncountry was demanded several\nmonths ago by a Congressional in\n\u2022vestigating committee on the\ngrounds that he arranged the escape\nof more than 100 interned sailors\nof the German battleehip Admiral\nGraf Spee, which was scuttled in\nthe River Pate In December, 1939\nafter a defeat at the handa ot the\nBritish Naivy.\nAfter the questioning of the firet\nsix of 38 spiea under investigation.\nJudge Jantus se.lt them back to\njail to await the court's decision\nWickard, McNutt\nto Cain Power\nWASHINGTON, Dec. 4 (AP)-Ex\necutive orders naming Secretary\nof Agriculture Wickard as Food Administrator and transferring control\nover Selective Service to the War\nManpower Commission, headed by\nPaul V. McNutt were reported tonight to be on President Roosevelt's\ndesk for action tomorrow.\nEnjoy the Coming\nSeason in Real\nI Comfort\n\u2022 Famous for Their Fitting Qualities...\n\u2022 Renowned for Their Wear...\nWalk'Over Shoes\nAre Tops\nEspecially designed for the woman\nwho demands supreme comfort combined with ityle.\nALL SIZES\n4 to 12\nAAAAtoD\n$13.50 to $16.50\nFink's Footwear\nBURNS' BLOCK\nSJ_^^^^^^^^^^^^^&lte^*frl\nLieutenant Founds,.\nFormerly in\nNelson, Is Promoted\nPromotion of Lieut. C. T. (Fred)\nFounds, of the Veterani Guard of\nCanada, to the rank of Captain la\nincluded in a llit of appointment!,\npromotion! end retirement! ippeir-\ning ln tbe Canada Gazette,\nCaptain Found! was in Nelson\nfor a time ll Commanding Officer\nof a Veterani Guard Group stationed here, and became widely\nknown.\nWhether lo Have\nChristmas\nCheer, Is Argued\nWhether or not Nelson should have\na Chrlitmai Cheer Fund thii year\nwas argued at length Frldiy night\nit the annual meeting of the Chriitmii Cheer Associition. In the end\nthe imall meeting decided to meet\nagain next Thuriday, and to decide\nIta action on the bails of attendance\nand reporti received then. In the\nmeantime inquiries will be made.\nTwo main arguments were presented: That the number of perions\nin need of Christmas. Cheer wu\nsmall compared to previous yeari;\nand in opposition, that those who\nneeded It now^ needed It just aa\nbadly as before.\nIt was also argued that a large\nnumber of perioni in the City made\nit their practice each year to give\nto the Cheer fund to help fellow\ncitizeni in less fortunate circumstance!, counting It a privilege as\nmuch aa.a duty. In opposition to this\ncontention- it was argued that appeals to the public have been io\nmany, and that wartime financing\nhad so reitricted fundi of mmy\nperioni, that they would not be able\nto give to Christinai Cheer.\nIt wai pointed out thit there were\nno direct relief recipients as such;\nand that there appeared on tho\nCity rolls the names o_.34 persons\nreceiving social illowance. hese 34\nwere largely unemployables, it was\nexplained. Provincial Government\nauthorities had authorized a Christmas payment ot $3.20 extra to each\nCitizens Aiked to Share Christmas\nNew Year's Wilh Visiting Airmen\nNelion citizeni in being called\nupon to ihiit thilr Chrlitmu ind\nNew Year'i feitlvltlei with ilr-\nmen from Britain, Auitmlji, Niw\nZealand, U, 8. ind Eutern Cinidi.\nAn appeal to thi Citizeni Committee to try to arrange I ihare\nIn Nelson'i holiday-making for\nAuitrillini md Niw Zealanden\nIt No. 2 Wlreleii School it Calgary wu received Frldiy in I litter from Grahim Witt, Y.M.C.A.\nSupervisor it Cilgary. Then boyi\nIn blue will have \"no homei to go\nto\" for thi holidiy the letter Hated. Thit ll unleii citiieni open\ntheir homei to them.\nThese men will be gnnted five\ndays leave either at Christmas or\nNew Year'i. At Chrlitmu they will\narrive here Dec. 24, ind leave Sunday, Seven men from thli ichool\nwere gueiti for the holiday lut yeir.\nIn addition 11 Australlin trainees will be coming to Nelton oa\nChrlitmu leave ind it'Niw Year'i\nfrom the same itation will conn 22\nNew'Zealanden and eight R.A.F.\nplloti. There U I small group of\nEaitern Canadian! ind American!\nIt Maeleod, who becauie of distance\nto their homes, will be unable to go\nhome for tbe holldayi. If billets can\nbe arranged tbey too will be invited\nto Nelson,\nMany citizens ilready have arranged for British airmen trom No.\n34 S.F.T.S., R.A.F., it Medicine Hat\nto visit here on private invitation!.\nVisits for itill otheri trom Medicine\nHit ire being arranged through tbi\nCitizeni. Committee.\nCitizeni willing to share their turkey ind fun with the lirmen have\nbeen uked to communicate with\nMn. George A. Hoover. Billets Convener, or Mrs. A. (f Lambert, Secretary.\nRossland Social\nROSSLAND, B. C, Dec. t- Mrs.\nGus Spilker and Miss June Smith\nexpect to leave for the Coast Dec. 9\nto attend a Canadian Girls in Train\ning convention as delegates of Weit\nKootenay. She will return to Ron-\nland for Christmai and Miss Smith\nat the New Year.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Berry who ipent\na honeymoon in Rossland with Mrs.\nBerry's parenU, Mr. and Mrs. Sam\nIrvin left Monday for Chilliwack.\nThe Ladles Anglican Church Guild\nmet at the rectory Wednesday when\nelection of officers was held. Mrs.\nJack Howatt wai elected President,\nMn. J. Milllken Vice-President,\nMrs. T. White, Treasurer, and Mri\nW. C. Brooki Secretary. Final plans\nwere made for the December tea.\nTresent were Mn. C. r. Ormin, Mri.\nWhite, Mn. R. Steveni, Mn. C.\nStorie, Mrs. .Millil-.rn, Mn. Mann,\nMn. J. W. Young, Mn. Matthewi,\nMn, Jack Mowatt, Mrs. O. Tobias-\nson, Mn. S. Davlei, Mri. Turner,\nMri. Singer and Mn. W. C. Brooki.\nAt the recent election of offlcen\nfor the Rouland Nurses Association\nMlu Jessie Miller wai elected Preiident, Siiter Eugene, Vlce-Preldent,\nMin Ven McOovern Secretiry, Mlu\nMiry Fimum Treuurer, Mlu Miry\nTompklm and Mlu Elile Swan, u\nMembenhip and Social Committee,\nMary McGoughley, Program Committee, Mri, Crellin, Finance Committee, Mn. Ronald Eccles, Community Cheit Committee, Mri. J.A.\nBy MRS. HARVEY FLEURY\nLonsbury, Red Cross Committee and\nMrs. Roger Terhune and Mrs. Lonsbury, ARP Committee, It was decided to send Chrlstmu gift! to the\nfive local memberi who are In the\narmed forcei. Theie are alias Babe\nMacDonald. Mlu Julia Ondrea, Mill\nJean Alllion H. R, Christie, and\nDr. MorrUon.\nMrs. C. Ii. Clegg wu hostess to\nSt. Andrews Government Square\nCircle Tuesdiy. a\\Jri. Carl Troseth\nwas elected Preiident for thi coming year, \u00bbIra. Clegg, SecreUry, Mri.\nG. .lo.-.'i and Mri. Freeman, Sick and\nVisiting Committee. Those present\nincluded Mri. J. C. Urquhart, Mn.\nE. Perkins, Mrs, Lefevre, Mrs. Rene\nMorln, Mri. G. Josa, Mri. C. Troseth1 and Mri. A H. Freeman\nMrs. C. t. Orman wu hoitess to St\nGeorge's Anglican church Women's\nAuxiliary Tuesday afternoon when\nMn.. F. A. Newell was reelected\nPreiident, Mri. Jewell Vice-Prcil-\ndent, Mn. M. Storie, Secretary, Mn.\nThomu Tongue, Treuurer and Mn.\nC.F. Orman, Honorary Preiident.\nThoie pruent were Mn. B. G. Leei,\nMn. W. R. Fulton Mn. F. A. Newell\nMn. Mirk Storie, Mn. S. E. Thomai.\nMn. E. Jewell and Mrt. Thomas\nTongue.\nFrank Staudlnger Is visiting OU\nfriendi and relatives In Rouland.\nMrs. Donald Bell of J. lllow Point\nU viiiting her ion ind diughter In\nlaw, Mr. and Mn, Riy Bell ot thli\ncity.\nfimily, and $1.83 to uch single person, in receipt of iuch allowance,\nThe suggestion wu offered thit\nold ige pensioner! received only\ni small mm monthly and could use\na Chrlstmu Cheer check,,ind thit\nthere were probably other famillM\nbi difficult circumstances which\nbe assisted.\nAnother suggestion wu thit, to\ntike care of persons receiving social allowance, and possibly old age\npensloni, the Association might turn\nover IU |70 balance to the City, and\nask the City to distribute Christmas Cheer, using this and the $200\ncustomarily given to the fund.\nIt wu argued thit the imall ittendance indicated the public was\nnot Interested; ind agalnit this lt\nwu contended thit the large dumber ot contributors i yetr ago Indicited keen Interest,\nLut year contribution! amounted\nto $930.75. Checki to fimlliei end\nsingle persons, md meali, groceries,\nshoes, clothing ind fuel purchued\nfor the needy totalled $1058.43, The\ndifference between contribution!\nand expenditures wai made up out\nof the balance from the preVloui,\nyear.\nDIES IN 6-FOOT FALL\nPORT ALBERNI, B. C, Dec. 4\n(CP)-Bdward Tatooah, S8-year-old\nIndian of Green Cove, died ln hospital here yesterday from Injuries\nsuffered when he fell trom a bridge\nonto rocks aix feet below. H s widow ind two small children live\nhere.\nV.M.D. TAKES\nARMY 8-4\nVICTORIA, Dec. 4 (t-F)\u2014Victor-\nla's Army entry in the Vancouver\nIsland Senior Amateur Hockey League tonight differed IU lecond defeat of the leason, dropping an 8-4\ndecision to Victoria Machinery Depot.\nConnie King led the V.M.D. icor-\nen with four goils while Jack Kllpatrlck marked up two and Lei\nBird and Bua Brayshaw uch netted one. The Army scoren were\nElmer Kreller, \"Pinky\" Melnyk, Bus\nAlgar ind Bill Cane.\nLAYING MASH\n\"Made Better to db a\nBigger Job\". Have s poultry\ntalk with your local B. & K.\nManager today,\nThe\nBrackman-Ker Milling\n4. I. Tnrvcy, Lmtmt Hmmegmr\nMmm 126. N*m, P.O. In 420\nFIRST AID\nWi cin help you obtain in\nIndustrial  Flnt Aid Certificate\napproved by the\nWorkmen'!   Compensation   Boird\nthrough \u25a0 Correspondence Course.\nWrite for Information to\nFirst Aid Attendant! B.C.\nS03A Wett Pender Street,\nVanoouver, B. C.\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0i\nHad Another Bad Night?\nCouldn't You Get Any Rest?\nTo thoie wbo ton, night Ifter night, oo deepleaa\nbeds. To those who ileep in a kind of a way, bu!\nwhoee rat ii broken by bad dreanu and nightmare.\n\u2022 To thoee who wake Up in tbe morning ai tiredas when\nthey went to bed, we niter in Milburn'a Health and\nNerve IHIIa 1 tonio remedy to help soothe and strengthen the nam.\nWhen thii ia done there ihould be no more ration nighti due to tnd\ndreams and nightman*.\nl'rioo dOo i boa, U pilli, it all drug oounto*.\nLook for our regbtertd trade mark i \"Red Heart\" on the package.\nn> T. Iim-m Oa. LWhd Tomlo. 0_k\nGuide for Travellers\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n1\n'YOUR VANCOUVER  HOMI\"\nDuff erin Hotel\nSeymour St       Vanoouvir. B C.\nNewly renov_t\u00abd through\nout Pnonii ind eleviter\nA. PATTERSON, Uu of\nColemin. Alia.. Proprietor\n\u2014 ^IIIY \"V\n Cut Food Prices to\nKeep Living\nCosts at Low Level\nOTTAWA, Dec. 4 (CP)a-Food\noott reductloni announced lait\nnight by Finance Mlniiter Ilsley\nwlll be made effective In a matter\nef dayi, \"possibly over the week\nend,\" Donald Gordon, Chairman of\nthl Prlcei Board, laid today.\nIf the $40,000,000 tubildy and tax\nreminlon plan worki effectively,\nhe said, the cost-of-living Index\nen January I, 1943, ihould not rise\nover the November 1, 1942 figure\nof 117.7 per cent of the pre-war\nlevel. The November 1 Index li\nthe moit reoent figure available.\nMr. Gordon gave this information\nat a Press conference, held by Finance Minister Ilsley and attended by\nLOANS\nor piamond*. Jewelry.\nRadios. Silverware, Furs,\nGuns and All Valuables\nB. C. COLLATERAL\nLOAN BROKERS LTD.\n77 E. Hastlngi, Vancouver.\nconitant Increase In production of\nmilk and butter.\nEven If tbe reduced cost to the\nconsumer of fluid milk created \u2022\ngreater demand thu It preient. the\nsupply could be Increased 38 per\ncent by reduction of 10 per cent tn\nbutter production. It would be poiilble, too, he aald, to Increase the\nfluid milk iupp\\y by reducing\ncream comumptlon\u2014but he laid he\ndid not think that would be necea-\naary.\nQuestioned on the possibility of\nfurther increases in food coits, Mr.\nMr. Gordon and other price-control | Oordon said these were'posilble. But\nthe Board was working on -\nI\n_m\nTHE   BEST   IN\nCOALS\nDRUMHELLER\nGLO-COAL\nMERCURY\nPHONE 701\nFairview\nFuel Co.\nA Woman's Work Is\nNever Done\nThii old nylng may or miy not\nbe true, but If your home lacks\nthi convenlencei of modern\nplumbing the job ot housekeeping ii greitiy Increaied.\nA coploui lupply of hot water\nind a modern sink wlll idd much\nto the joy of living at home.\nPhone 666\nKootenay Plumbing\n& Heating Co., Ltd.\n357 Biker 8L\nexecutive!.\nThe Pricei Board Chairman said it\ncan be assumed that if the new program, which will reduce, the cost to\nthe consumer of tea,, coffee, oranges\nand milk, works effectively\/it will\nmean there will be no automatic increase in cost-of-living bonusei in\nFebruary.\nThe fifth item mentioned in Mr.\nIlsley's broadcast announcement last\nnight, beef, will not necessarily be\ncheaper to tha consumer but the\nproposed action to narrow the profit\nmargin of some retailers might prevent an increase and efforts were\nunder way to fix maximum retail\nprices for standard cuts, Mr. Gordon said.\nMr. Ilsley said the saving to the\nCanadian household budget will be\nat least 840,000,000 a year, and possibly many times that. The total\ncould not be estimated because It\nwould depend upon the spiralling of\ncosts which might have followed a\nrigid policy of meeting higher living\ncosts by cost-of-living bonuses alone.\nIt was quite possible other commodities would be added to the list\nannounced last night, but it was\nhoped the action now taken would\nabsorb the shock of any further cost\nincreases over the ceiling.\nThe Minister iaid hli ipeech lait\nnight might hive given the Im-\npreulon the reductloni would\npush the coit of living nearer to\nthe basic period uied In applying\nthe celling a year ago (September 16 to October 11) thin It\nactually doei.\nHe uid there wai no ponlblllty of the reduction proving lufficient to affect the cost-of-living\nbonuies now being paid.\n(Cost of living bonuies now are\nat a maximum of $4.23 a week. Employees ln Canadian industry who\ndid not receive the bonus until last\nAugust, whfn the first general compulsory variation went into effect,\nreceive a maximum of 00 cents a\nweek or 3.4 per cent of weekly\nwages depending on their salary\nand age category.)\nMr, Gordon said the Items chosen\nfor price reductions were picked\nout for their widespread use, their\nnutritional value and the facility of\napplying the reductions.\nMilk was \"weighted\" at 4.17 per\ncent in the food group of the cost-\nof-living Index. Tea and coffee were\nalmost universally used snd oranges,\nwhile possibly not common in lower-wage homes, would be more\nwidely available at the lower cost.\nJ. G. Taggart, Foods Controller in\nthe Prices Board, said there wai a\na retail\norder which he hoped would prevent further puncturing of the general price celling.\nMany foodi were not included in\nthe ceiling control and there were\nelementi entering into the lituation\nover which the Canadian authorities\nhad no control\u2014thlijgi like shipping\ncosts and war risk insurance.\nA I per cent Increaie In the cost\nof living li estimated to add $35.-\n000,000 to Canadian household budgets, Mr. Gordon said. Operations\nof the Price! Board were believed\nto have kept down a rise that might\nhave reached 19 per cent during the\npast 12 monthi.\nBracken Refuses\nto Talk\nAbout Politics\nOTTAWA, Dee. 4 (CP) .-Premier\nJohn Bracken of Manitoba arrived\nby air from Winnipeg today to attend a meeting of the Committee\non Reconitruction\u2014and he wain't\ntalking politics.\nHe declined any comment on\nwhether he might be a candidate\nfor leadership of the Conservative\nParty at iti Decerhber B-ll convention In Winnipeg, but when he wai\nasked whether he, would be ln Winnipeg at convention time he said:\n\"I'll be ban!, there ln two or three\ndays.\"\nNEWS,  SATURDAY,   DEC.  5,\nmmmmmmmmmwmmmmmm\nPROVES CERMAN\nEMBASSY TOOK\nPART IN ESPIONAGE\nBUENOS AIRES, Dec. 4 (AP)-\nFederal Judge Miguel Jantiui aald\ntoday a Government inveitlgation\nhad proved that the German Em-\nbasiy was involved in espionage\nwithin Argentina.\nGov't Workers Given\nRight to Join Unions\ni\nI\nOTTAWA, Dec. 4  (CP).\u2014Exten-1 resentatlom to the Government by\nlion of collective bargaining rlghti organized labor groupi.\nIn announcing the new legislation\ntoday, Mr. Mitchell said that after\nto employees of Crown companies,\ndescribed as \"an important and significant development in the Government'! labor policy,\" wai announced today by Labor Miniiter'\nMitchell.\nUnder an Order-in-Council dated\nDecember 1, workeri ln Government\nplants are given the right to Join\ntrade unions and to bargain collectively. Provisions of the Industrial\nDisputes Inveitlgation Act are also\nextended to employees ln Crown\ncompanlea\nAuthority li provided for an officer or agent of a Crown company\nto negotiate with any of its employees with a view to concluding a\ncollective agreement covering those\nof the company's employees whom\nthey represent\u2014providing the employees participating In the negotiations are properly-chosen representatives of a trade union to which belong the majority of the employees\nor the majority of employees In any\ntrade or craft appropriate for collective bargaining.\nCrown companies are prohibited\nfrom entering Into any agreement\nwhich lncludei provliloni which\nthi Labor Mlniiter conilden wlll\nreitrlet or hamper output, except\nio fir ai ll necesiary to protect\nthi hialth ind lafety of thl em-\nployeei.\nSince the principle of collective\nbirgaining was recommended to\nwar industries by an Order-in-Council passed ln June, 1940, a number\nof Crown companies engaged in war\nactivity have been iet up and the\natatui of the employeei In these\nplinta hai been the lubject of rep-\nI\na comprehensive study of the situation \"and with due regard to the\nsplendid contribution made to the\nwar effort by Canadian workers\ngenerally,\" the request wai coniid-\nered \"perfectly reasonable.\"\nIn the preamble to the Order the\nLabor Minister represented that the\nImprovement of relations between\nemployer and employees was of\nvital importance in accelerating production of war supplies and munitions of war, and in leading to full\nsupport of the war effort by workers in all branches of industry.\nEmployees affected by the Order\nInclude any person employed by a\nCrown company to do skilled or\nunskilled manual, clerical or technical work.\nIt specifies that such employees\n\"shall be free to join or to continue\nmembership ln a trade union and to\nparticipate in the administration ind\nlawful actlvitiei of a trade union.\"\nOfficera of Crown companiei ire\nprohibited from dismissing or refusing to employ any person because\nhe is a member of a trade union, and\nfrom using influence to prevent an\nemployee from joining or continuing\nhis membership in a trade union.\nMoit recent representations for\nCrown company collective bargaining rights have been made by the\nUnited Steel Workers of America\n(C.I.O) on behalf of employees st\nResearch Enterprise! Ltd., Government-owned company ln Toronto,\nwith 8000 workers. Union officials\nsaid that if the legislation were not\napproved this week a mass meeting\nof employees would be called Saturday morning, halting production in\nthe plant.\ni\ni\ni\nI\nI\nI\nI\ni\nI\nI\n(hanging Conditions May Tighten\nRationing Control at Any Time\nOTTAWA,  Dec.  4   (CP)\u2014 Exten- j nadlani, said Government otflclil*\nsion rather than relaxation of strict I today when questioned u to the fu-\nraiioning controli, eipeclally in re-\ntipect to imported necenitiei, remains the wartime prospect for Ca-\nRecruiting Officer Here!\nFrom Monday, Dec. 7 until Wednesday, Dec.\n9 inclusive, the C.W.A.C. Recruiting Party will\nbe in the Nelson Area, Headquarters at the\nDrill Hall, Nelson. - Watch for announcement\nof exact date for your locality.\nWOMEN! \u2014 You are needed in the Canadiin Women's Army Corpi re\nreicue men for fhe combat forcei \u2014 if you are single or married without\ndependents, between 18 lod 45, tnd I British\nlubject.\nFor further information regarding piy, uniform,\nprivileges, enlistment, see thl above Recruiting\nParly of C.W.A.C. penonnel under 2nd Lieut.\nM. S. Patterson.\nDecide to Join Now!\nture outlook.\nCanadian consumers now have ration coupons for gaioline, sugar, tea\nand coffee. In the food ration books\nare exlra couponi which may be\nused for rationing of other commo- |\ndities If this becomes necessary, and :\nPrices Board officials\u2014without spc-\nIfying any particular article\u2014iaid\nthe changing war,picture might require uie of these extrs couponi it\n.py time.\nCanadi thus far haa avoided rationing of food and other products\nmainly produced at home, although\nshortage of beef and butter in many\nareas during the preaent year have\ncaused concern to* food supply authorities.\nRationing of clothing has been\navoided although wool, cotton ind\nother materials are lirgely imported All \"frllli\" hive been removed\nfrom clothing and officials laid today that with economy It wai poi-\nlible there would continue to be \u2022\nfair lupply of essential material!.\nThe leather Industry is severely\nstrained to keep pace with the demand for shots and other leather\nproducts for Canadian and other Allied armies.\nIn warning Cimdiam thit the\nsupply condition cin never be con-\nildered\u00bbitaple, officlili havt wirned\nthat intemillonil development! may\nforce extemion of rationing at iny\ntime.\nNeedi of the United Siatei, United Kingdom. Ruiii. Auitralia. New\nZealind, South Africa ind thi\nrighting FYenrh ire among thoie\nwhich hive to be comldered in dU-\ntributlon from the stockpile of war\nsupplies ind food to which Cinadi\ncontribute! ind trom which ihe\ndnwi.\nSEASONABLE\nGIFT MERCHANDISE AT\nCLOVES FOR CIFTS\nA useful gift\u2014A style for' every use. Fine kids ind\nsuedes for dress wear, capes for general wear and also\nfur-trimmed, lined gloves for warmth. Sizes 6 to 7'\/_.\nPair   \u2022\u2022\nSheer Loveliness\nHosier\nPanties\nfor Gifts\nNew and different \u2014 Floral designi In ^\nRayon Suede Taffeta on Pastel grounds\u2014 jgj\nIdeal for gifts\u2014Sizes: Small, Medium,\nLarge,   Pre-Christmas Sale, Each\nCrepe\nThe gift every woman will appreciate this Christ\nmas. Lovely flattering Hosiery. New Fall shades\nSizes 8'\/. - 10'\/_. Pre-Christmas Sale.\nPair $1.25\nNEW SPRING\nPrints\nNow ii the beef Maion for radio\nreception. We hive i fine models\n\u2022HII in itock, uniti that will give\ncomplete satisfaction.\nNo. 11\n6-tube \"Dictator'\nLong and short\naerial\nH.B.C. price ..\n' Console model,\nwave,  Built in\n$79.50\nNo. It\nSame model without\naerial \t\n$69.50\ni\nI\nI\nI\ni\nI\n1\ni\n1\nI\nI\nI\nI\ni\nI\nI\nI\nI\ni\nI\n.\nI\nI\nNo. 31\nBattery Set, complete tfOn CA\nwith batteries a*tOl.*JV\nTermi Arranged\u2014\n32-Pieea\nBreakfast Sets\nAdvance showing of Wa-\nbasso and Magog Prints\nof Superior quality. Beautiful new colors and. designs for every purpose.\n36 inches wide. Pre-\nChristmas Sale, Yard\n29c\nFine quality semi-porcelain up-to-date designs in florals and \"Mexican\" effects.\n6\u20147 inch Plates.\n6\u20146 inch Plates.\n6\u2014Cups and Saucers.\n6\u2014Fruits.\n1\u2014Platter; I Vegetable Bowl.\nPriced, Set\u2014\n!\nI\n2 Great Values\nWabasso Hem-Stitched Sheets in\nsize 81x99. Smartly wrapped in\npairs for gift giving\nPair  \t\n$7.95\nPillow Slips with faggoted\nian hems. Size 42 inch\nPair  \t\n$4.50\nted Ital-\n$1.18\nSpecial\nComforters\nmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm-\nI    Most Acceptable Gifts\n1\nI\nfor\nI Men, Boys\nMEN'S LINEN INITIAL\nHANDKERCHIEFS, 3 for\nMEN'S SPUN SILK SCARVES\nHand blocked\t\n$1.00\n95c\n___6S, Eng. (CP)\u2014A few min-,\nutci liter belnj ehoifn J_ord Miyor\nof the Yorkihlre City Arthur Clirki\nIt:, collar*', unit died.\nJust Received ... 24 only Cotton\nComforters, with large quilted\ncentre panels in satin. Filling\nof wool, and cotton-wool. A remarkable value. Size 66x72.\nEach:\n$495\n1\n1\n1\n1\ni\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\nGIFT TIES\u2014Men like gifts they can\nwear, ind  ties ire ilways welcome.\nGift\nBoxed    tUtt and\n4Sc.nd $1.00\nMEN'S  FANCY\nSOCKS\nSmart,  good-looking  fancy\nSplendid color assortment\nSize 10 to 11 Vj. Pair\t\npatterns.\n59c\nHtrt It a Special\nMan's and Woman'i\nSki Outfit\nComplete outfit by om of\nCanada's finest ski makers. r\\r\\ enjoyable and\nwelcome Christmas gift\nfor him or her. Per set\n$9.95\ns\nPHONI*:\nDryloodi D\nGrocerlei 113\nHoilery M\nReedy-to-Weir 49\nMen'i Wear  tt\nmeomeeume er* ._wwm.\ns\n\u2022TORI    HOURI!\nMonday. Tueidiy.\nThundiy, Frldiy\n. \u25a0 m. In 9:30 p.m.\nWedneidiy: \u00bb to 11\nSdt'diy: 9 to \u2022 p.m.\n WILSON  DAILY NIWS. SATUtDAY.  WC.  J,  1\u00bb42\nirm Done by\nrong Kind\nilshmenl\narry Cleveland Myen, Ph. D.\npm what 1 have seen and beard\nSid tn score! of letters, I Infer\nmany parent? and teachen re-\nMo multiple and long drawn?\npunlshmenta.\ni example \u25a0 mother spankt her\ni year old {or hitting a playmate\nhe muit tit for 20 minutes ln a\nF occulonal mother would\ni this tot serve * chalr-sltting\nence on three or four succeeding\nI lor the tame offence. Ever so\ny teachen wlll have a child\nln hli leit It recess every diy\nliveral davt for one offense.\nlIMON TRANSQRES8I0N\nIdlng Insult to Injury, i pir-\nor teacher wlll remind the child\nUhtihment he hid leveral diyi\n: the punishment for mlidem-\nir, especially when he hu m-\nKl thli parent or teicher ln tome\nI.\ncommon transgression agalnit\nitld it home li to remind him of\n\u2022 mughty eed md the punlih-\nit therefor ln the presence of \u2022\nIt\neclde on the punishment the oise ihould have, Just one type of\nlihment md let the sentence be\nonly on* continuous period.\ni li not the Intensity or duration\n(unlshment io much u its absol-\ncertalnty that makes It most ef-\nIve, After the punishment has\nId act il If nothing Irregular hid\nMned md don't refer to the\nItar again.\n.VINO PARINT PROBLEMS\n.What ire the moat effective ar-\naents to i youth not yet imoklng\ntvold beginning the habit?\n.\u2014Health and economy appeals.\nr youths realize before they be-\namoklng how very expensive it\n\\. My Jjpr-old baby refuses to\nme help him brush his teeth. He\ntbe brush and makes a few\nIpes at them and then firmly\nmps hia teeth on the brush.\nL\u2014You expect too much of that\nly. Ui\u00ab a 10ft cloth ln place of\nbruih and be very gentle and pa-\nIt When you do use a brush\nIn have a very small one with\n, pliable bristles.\nduett  of  the  milkweed   are\nused ln the manufacture ot\ner, rayon md nltro-collul.se.\nIon top op\nHE WORLD\nTAKE PHILLIPS'\nHU MAOHESIA\nt to wile up in the a.m. feeling \"all\nIffThasgiveeioeailve itomach acidity\nI one-two action of Fhillipi' Milk of\n_\u2014Phillips' Milk of Magnesia is a\nily effective \u2022____\u00bb_\u2014quickly Mttlei\nI Speet itomach. TWO\u2014it alao pro-\nptes mild yet thorough elimination,\ni Ideal laxative-antacid. Bead the\nactions on tbe package and tike only\nI directed thereon, or\nI prescribed by your\nlysld-a. ATiiliMe\n.liquid or Ublet\nLY 25. AT ANY DRUQSTORE\nCASTLEGAR\nCASTLEGAR. B.C.-Mr. ind Mil.\nW. Byers, George Byen Utd Htll\nB. Byen ol Nelion viilted Mr. and\nMri. W. Bliton recently.\nMr. ind Mn. Al Richirdi of Rosiland visited thl latter's parents\nhere Wedne.'day.\nMri. L. Atkinion ind Mn viaited\nTrail Thundiy,\nMrs. R. Wade wu I viiltor to\nTrail 'Thunday.\nMn. Wm. Easton ll I patient ln\nTrail-Tadanac Hoipital.\nMisses Eva ind Norma Petenon\nwere Thundiy viiiton to Trail.\nMiu Polly Mackaroff waa a visitor to Trail,\nA pleasant surprise party WII\nheld at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nP. Bruce, when a number ot friendi\ngathered on the occasion of thi\nformer's birthdiy. The evening wu\nipent playing bridge and whlat.\nWinner! for high score were won\nby Mrs. I. Petenon and I. Petenon.\nGueits Included Mrs. L. Parent, Mr.\nmd Mrs. T. Schlavon, Mr. md Mn.\nI. Peterson, Pte. and Mn. Knoblauch, Mlis Elizabeth Snell, Mn, A.\nLimpard, Mn. S. Ryson, J. Hifstad\nand Mn. P. Bruce.\nNo. 2 Refugee Circle held Its\nmeeting at the home of Mrs. J. Morrison. A knitted girls suit was turned in. Membera present were Mrs.\n1. punlop, Mrs. J. Dyck, Mrs. R.\nA. D. West. Mri. N. Oswald and Mrs.\nJ. Morrison.\nSitka, Alaska, never has experienced weather colder than five degrees below zero.\nPickup...\nOffice Workers\nNeed lo Use\nTheir Muscles\n\u25a0y IDA JIAN KAIN\nIt ll hard to convince thi tired\nbuilneis girl thit exerciie will rut\nher. Jtut broach th* tubject md\nihe drawl bick ind let* you have\nit\u2014\"After the way I work all day,\nI em to tired I can scarcely drag\none foot thud of the other. Don't\nuy 'iXMclie' to mel\"\nThat's what you might call bnln\nfag. It tells you ln no uncertain\nterms that you ire tired of having\nthing! to do, but doing a few vigorous exerclsei Is the antidote. The\nmuscular activity stirs up the circulation and tends a fresh flow of\nblood to the brain and nerve center!. You feel refreshed almost Immediately and you will be pleasantly fatigued md better able to\nrelax later on.\nYou brain worker? are very much\nInclined to think you don't need\nstrong backs, so why exercise? But\nthe muscles you use all day long\n\u2022re the imall ones, especially those\nof the eyei. Laundering and keeping your clothes ln repair prolongs\nthe use of the same muscles. Then,\nfor diversion you go to the movies,\nand when you go to bed you read\nyounelf to ileep. None of those\nthingi la exercise for the powerful\ntrunk, leg md arm muscles.   Any\niet Wty thii tuei them li i chinge\nind i rut\nYou don't havi to do ciliithmlei,\nYOU can bowl, skate, pliy badminton, or do my type ot iporti thit\nglvei pliy to your muiclee. But you\nnot hive th* dhlnei to pliy regu-\nlarly wd you dn always depend\nen walking ind i nt ofexerclm.\nIt walking li your only concession\nto conditioning, you should be able\nto average i mill ln ibout 20 minutes ind ihould stay out for an hour\nJust 18 mlnutea' scttlng-up exercises wtll keep you ln trim. Have\na freah circulation of air ln the\nroom, dont wear binding clothing,\nand do the kind of exercises which\nget at the midsection. Here ar*\niome good onet.\nLie on back on floor, legs itretch'\ned straight down, armi straight up\non floor. Swing right leg up from\nhip, left irm down from ihoulder\nand touch fingers to toes. Return\nto position ind repeat with other\narm md leg. Keep the stomich\nflat, imill of back against floor.\nContinue for 20 counts.\nLie on floor on back with hlpi\ncloie to wall, legs straight up the\nwall, armi stretched \\>n floor beyond head. Flex one knee to cheat,\nmd bend elbowa to touch hands to\nshoulden. Then thrust that leg\nup wall ea you flex other leg and\nstretch armi above head on floor.\nTry to make the movements rhythmical.   Keep going for 20 counts,\nFor a third exercise, stand up\nand stretch tall, hands clasped on\ntop of head and elbows out at sides\nin line with shoulders. Have feet\nparallel, and hold hips still, and\nslowly bend acutely sideward. Return to position and bend to other\nside.   Repeat 10 times, relax.\nThe businen girl could well emulate Joyce Reynold!, icreen beauty, In performing the illustrated exercise! which bring Inlo play h:p\nand trunk muicles. Office workers\nwho sit at desks for hours would\naccomplish much towards a fitners\nprogram by including in their daily\nroutine fifteen minutes of these exercises.\nSLOCAN PARK\nSLOCAN PARK, B. C.-Mn. H.\nGibion. who has been ill In Nelson\n(or two weeki. has returns to her\nduties as primary teacher.\nMr. and Mrs. Walter Chernenkoff\nof Taghum accompanied '. y MUs M.\nChernenkoff were guests of Mn. S.\nConkin.\nMike Hallahoff who has been employed at Verigin, Sask., for the\npast three months has returned.\nPete Bonderoff of Watson, Sask.,\nis visiting relatives here.\nGeorge Hallshotl Is a guest of Mr\nand Mrs. F. Konkln.\nMike Ozeroff o[ Grand Forks Is a\ngueit of his sister, Mn. S. Conkln.\nMisi Nancie Samrodin has returned home alter spending a few\nweeks In Nelion.\nMrs G. WUllow of Melson wai a\nvisitor to Slocin Park.\nMrs. Fred Chersenoff li viiiting\nrelatives in Nelson.\nMrs. F. Konkln hai returned from\n*Vinl..w where ihe ipent a few days\nwith her parenti.\nminium iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinii\noLuiUl.(&l\ndtoU-S&WW-L\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\n(pfsSSe\n%&\nw_\n%0'f\"\natJnr\" Jb fi.'i. _ooM.tr on how to MVI coai\n\u25a0_j.nMj_uj.im w__________n___U___i____E2__\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiih.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiii\nVitamin Bl has had a lot of publicity ai i valuable element In the\ndiet It li well-deaerved publicity.\ntoo, becauie lf we get the correct\namount of this vitamin it promotes\ngrowth, stimulates the appetite, aidi\nin the normal Intestinal functions,\nis an aid to stronger and be'.tcr\nnerve control, 1 preventive and cure\not beriberi, and is important In\nmaking better uie of the carbohydrates we eat, producing more energy. We can get It in cooked oatmeal, lean pork, milk, fresh or\nevaporated, lean smoked ham, beef\nliver, baked beans with pork, navy\nbeam, fresh lima beans, peanuti,\npeanut butter and yeait.\nTODAY'S MENU\nBreakfait\nGripefruit or Orange Juice\nOatmeal With Milk\nHot Roll!, Mufflni or Toait\nJam or Jelly\nCoffee or Cocoa\nLuncheon\nCreamed Lima Belni\nPeanut Butter Sandwiches\nSewed Prunes\nCookies M'.lk\nDinner\nBoiled Hsm\nMashed Sweet Potatoes\nCRANBERRY GELATIN SALAD\nH pound cranberries, 1 orange, 1\nmidlum-ilzed apple, _ cup sugar,\nV. cup cold water, 1 package orange.\nflavored gelatin, 1 cup warm or hot\nwater,   _ cup chopped celery.\nRinse one Urge or six smsll moldi\nIn cold water. Pick over cranberries, wuh, drain ind (orce\nthrough i food chopper w'lh orsnge\n\u2022nd apple. Do not peel either or\nuigt or apple. Stir In Hilar, cover\nand iet ailde In a cold place unMI\nsugar is dlnolvrd. Diiolve gelatin In warm or boiling wiUr, ac\ncording to directions on wrapper,\nstirring until lt Is dissolved, cool\nand add fruit mixture and celery.\nTurn into njolds and chill until\nfirm. Serve on lettuce with mayonnaise or cooked dressing.\nICE BOX ROLLS\n1 cake yeast, V_ cup lukewarm\nwater, ' 2-3rd_ cup shortening, V,\ncup sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 cup\nmashed pota'.oes, 1 fop scalded milk,\n2 eggs, well bealcn, flour to make\na fairly stiff dough.\nDissolve yeast ln lukewarm water. Add the shortening, sugar, sail\nand mashed potatoes to scalding\nmilk, itlrrlng to mix thoroughly\nWhen cool, edd dlsiolvcd yeast and\neggs and again mix well. Add sufficient flour, a little at a time, to\nmake a stiff dough and turn on \u2022\nlightly floured board. Knead thoroughly. Put Into bowl large enough\nto allow rising, rub over with melted ihortenlng, cover tightly and put\nIn refrigerator. About 1 hour before mealtime, pinch off the dough,\nihape into rolls and lei rise until\nlight. Bake In hot oven (128 degreei\nF.) for 15 to 20 minutes.\nFire...\nHeating Versus\nHealth Hazards\nBy LOGAN  CLENDENING, M.  D.\nAnyone reldlng my article yesterdiy on fuel wtll undentand thit\nI do not regard low temperature\nu necessarily being I heilth hazard. Our homee ind offices hive\nbun to overheated md kept so dry\nIn thi put few years thit 1 believe\nthli hit dried out the mucous mem-\nbranea of th* not* and throat Ud\nInduced ooldl rather than prevented them. Lower temper|tures, with\nthe body kept wirm md the skin\nkept comfortable by added clothing,\nwlll probably be a giln rather thtn\na loia.\nHazards do exist, however, especially with thoie who are changing over to older formi of heating,\nthe details of which they miy hive\nforgotten. Probably th* gruteit\nhazard ln changing over from fuel\noil to other formi of heating will\nbe the danger of setting the house\non fire. There ls an enormous death\nrat* that la \"falrlv . iteady, occurring naturally molt In the Winter,\ndue to people being trapped in\nburning homei. A large proportion\nof theae fires are traced to dirty,\noverheated atovu, furnaces, flues\nand pipes. Experienced men ihould\nInspect all heating apparatus and\ntheir recommendations for cleaning and repairing ihould be heeded.\nPRECAUTIONS NECESSARY\nIt seems superfloui to mention\nIt, but there ii itill in enormoui\ndeath rate among people who start\nor speed up a fire ln the grate or\nstove by pouring in kerotene.\nOpen fireplaces, umcreened, may\nbe the cause of serious burns by\nletting fire to clothing, especially\nthe clothing of children.\nGu or oil heaters without flues\nln poorly ventilated roomi, lf allowed to burn for my length of\ntime, may result In death from\ncarbon monoxide polionlng. Anybody changing over to gat ahould\nbe sure that all detachable tubing\nis tight md iound so that leaks\nwill not occur.\nDISCONNECTED PIPES\nA great mmy people are planning\nto save fuel by keeping their windows cloaed, whereu under ordinary circumstance! in the past they\nwould always have tome windows\nopen \u2014 even on the coldeit dayi,\nThis attitude of mind Is a distinct\nhazard ln Itielf, becauie an open\nPlPIII|!_pj|HMlll|lllW..II\nSERIAL STORY..,,, ',) By Mirt* Wnrt Cosmetics ..,\nMARK'S WIFE\nOHA. TIR THIRTY-THI.SI\n(Continued)\nRuth Calder came Into thl kitchln ind Ht down It thl table when\nBirbara WU icooplng tpoonsful\nOt fresh ihrimp nltd Into netti ot\ncrisp lettuce. She finlihed, picked\nup the platter, itarted for the refrigerator, came back md picked up\na bowl containing biscuit mixture.\n\"If you hid roller ikitu, you\ncould move tutor,\" the nune taid\ndryly. Her eyei retted upon the\ntible with ltt two cupi of custard\nto be chilled, ltt two sllcu of cinte-\nloup, ind wint on to the golf bag\npropped agalnit thi screen door. \"1\ntake tt thit you're getting supper\nfor\u2014liter.\"\nBarbara slid th* platter Into the\nrefrigerator ind cloud thi door.\nTnrn'i picking me up it hilf-pait\nilx. He'i living mi \u2022 golf leuon.\nWe'll hive lupper here when it'i\nover. About half-patt eight.\"\nRuth Mid, \"Only the two of you?\"\nBarbara nodded. \"Pim'i atayed\naway longer than she expected to.\nShe wai only going to be gone for\nthe Labor Day weekend, but ihe's\nstayed a week.\"\nRuth folded her armi across hir\nample boiom. \"It'i none of my\nbusiness, my dear, but don't you\nthink it would be more discreet to\nput off your golf lesson until Pam\ngets back?\"\nBarbara put down the knife with\nwhich ahe wat going to slice a loat\ncake. \"I can't see why,\" ihe said.\nRuth shrugged. \"As I said, It'l\nnone of my builneu WHOM you\nie, or when, or how often,\"\nBarbara rm her finger along the\nblade of the knife, avoiding the\nolder woman'i glance, \"Ruth, you\nknow It'i all right for me to go\nwith Tom. We're not\u2014I mein there\nIm't anything myone could uy\nabout us. We never do mything\nclandestine. Other women play golf\nwith men who aren't their huibandt.\"\n\"At I wat saying,\" Ruth continued u If Barbara had not interrupted her, \"it's none of my buil\nneu, And lt li no builneu of anyone else. In South Wlntrldge, but\nthat doein't prevent other people\nfrom thinking it Is.\"\n\"But what can thiy think?\"\n\"You.i lot two .strikes igalnit\nyou. Birblra; you're young, pretty\nand successful\u2014and a widow. That\nalone makes you romantic and dangerous to the average womBn. 1\ndon't know where it began, but the\nfirm 'young widow' hu ilways\nbeen i red flag to mirrled women.\"\nBarbara laughed. \"That's because you're old-fashioned, Ruth.\nThat went out long ago. People\ntalk about fun ind freedom and understanding now. That'i niw, too,\nto 'most people. Fun, ,1 mean. I\nknow it is to me. Oh, I've been having such a good time these last few\nweeks!\"\n\"I know,\" Ruth said. She didn't\nadd that she knew what snatches\nof song meant, the ready, light\nlaughter that was always on Barbara's lips, the little trill in her\nvoice when lhe aniwered the telephone.\n\"And that's ALL It ls,\" Barbara\nwas laying. \"Fun with Tom and\nPamela\u2014md Tony\u2014when he can\nget away to Join ui. What do we\ndo? We only play tennii, and golf\nand awlm and\u2014and eit at each\nother'i homes.\"\n\"And Tom Kilcran,\" Ruth said relentlessly,\" known to every mm\nand child In thli town, dropi ln here\nduring the evening when he'i 'Just\npaulng by.' He takes your ion riding ln Pam's old pony cart which\nhe'i had fixed up purpotely for\nSonny. He goei to church and walki\nhome with you. He 'Juit happened'\nto drop ln at the Yellow Candle\nTea Shop where you and .Ellen\nlunch. And he'i been lunching at the\nDowntown Club every day for ten\nyaanl\"\nBarbara felt color rlie ln her\ncheekt, because the knew this was\nall true and had been pushing the\nknowledge away from her that\nothers knew the same thing.\n(To Be Continued)\nwindow which admits ventilation\nwill do much to prevent any possible danger trom heating apparatus\nwith which the householder may\nnot be familiar, such u those mentioned above. It ll better to be\nuncomfortable, cold, or moderately\nuncomfortable rather than to take\nchancel with the heating apparatus,\nQUESTIONS AND ANSWERS\nA. C. P.:\u2014It psorlasli contagious?\nIf you ever have it can you get rid\nof it altogether without any danger\nof lt coming back again? Does taking a bath affect psoriasis?\nAnswer:\u2014Paorlails ls a chronic\nskin dlseu, the cause of which is\nentirely unknown. Many cures\nhave been proposed for lt but hone\nof them can be guaranteed to be\npermanent. It Is likely to recur.\nBathing does not usually affect lt\none way or the other.\nMen InFavorof\n'Natural' Bloom\n\u25a0y  BEATRICE FAIRFAX\nA few weeka ago thit column publlihed I itory entitled \"Cosmetici\nCurUllld\".\nI'll not publish now th* replies\nfrom my girl cOrreipondenti. Too\nmany of them do net realize we are\nup to our necks ln a war. But the\nmen who aniwered leem d\u00abH|hted\nwith the prospects of no mor* beaded eyelashes.\nA letter from a gentleman who\ncalls himielf \"Old School\" warmi\nup and goes ln tor iome rough ituff,\namusing but not to be quoted. He\nthinks every wefman ihould bl sufficiently trained ln the irt of giving\nhenelf a becoming hair-do. Some of\nthem, with the brand A beiuty pir-\nlor upon them look like clowni because the style of the \"da\" doein't\nfit the personality. \"And the operators in these places ire as Inefficient in matching the makeup to th*\nclient ai some amateur photograph*\nen are in getting a natural smile.\"\nHe thinks 99 per cent of picturei\nare, ruined by forced imllet. Better\nno imile at ill. And that not on*\nwoman In a hundred fcnowi any.\nthing about the art of putting on I\nfacial make-up.\nThe test Is when you tee a really\npretty woman and you can't make\nup your mind whether the bloom ll\nreal or applied.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n\"Build B. 0. Payrolls\"\nSAID OF\nPACIFIC\nMILK\n\"I have found Pacific Milk\nmoit economical ln every way\nand alwayi have perfect luccesi\nin all my baking. It givei cus-\ntardt and puddings I rich\nsmoothness I have never found\nln any other milk.\"\nThis statement from Mre. W,\nT.'s letter printed Saturday we\nthink very fine and io repeat It.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated ind Vacuum Packed\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\nDiMaqgio's Wife\nWill Seek Divorce\nRKNO, Nov., Dec. 4 (AP).-Mn\nJoe DIMagglo's attorney today confirmed reporti that ihe ^111 ieek 1\nReno divorce from thc New York\nYankee baseball outfielder.\nln announcing the pending divorce action, her attorney, Joseph P.\nHiller, uld Mrs. DIMiggio ind Joe\nseparated it San Franclico ihortly\nbefore ihe cime to Reno Tueiday.\nThe tea drinking lublt wsi Urge,\nly rtipomlble for ihe development\nof tine Engliih porcilim.\nYES!\nand Make it a\nPoint to Come and\nOrder Your\nChristmas\nCards \u2666 \u2666\nIF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR DISTINCTIVE AND INEXPENSIVE . ..\nCHRISTMAS CARDS\nWE ADVISE YOU TO COME AND LOOK OVER OUR SELECTION OF\nHIGH CUSS CARDS \u2014WHICH INCLUDE BEAUTIFUL SNOW\nSCENES, ETCHINGS AND THE MORE COLORFUL MODERN\nCARDS. NO TWO SAMPLES ALIKE. SOLD IN LOTS OF 2 DOZEN ONLY. PRINTED WITH YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS -\nPRICED FROM ...\n$1.85, $2.65, $3.40 up to $7.50\nPHONE 144-OUR REPRESENTATIVE WILL CALL PERSONALLY.\nUttetm latlij NfuiH\nPRINTING DEPT.\nNelion, B. C.\n266 Baker St,\n__.\n**--\u25a0\u25a0- \u25a0\n iSlS\n^mmmmmmmmmmm*\nSlippers\nfor Christmas\nIS YOUR\nSON,  DAUGHTER  or\nHUSBAND\nin the\nARMED  FORCES?\nHe or She would love a pair\nof our warm slippers. . .\nKeep them comfortable with\nslippers from our large selection.\nPRICES TO SUIT\nYOUR POCKET BOOK\nR. Andrew & Co*\nLEADERS IN FOOT FASHION\nI\nI\n*\nNo Objection to Retailer Making\nale of Short Supply Goods\nlth Order for Other Merchandise\nOTTAWA, Dee. 4 (CP)-The\nPricei Boird iet forth ai a mittir\nef policy today that It doei not\nObject to a retailer making a sale\nef a commodity In ihort lupply\nonly when It li iccompinled by\nan order for other merchandise\nbought In hli itore,\nThl Board ipeclflei, however,\nthat the amount Involved muit be\n\"reasonable,\" and don not permit the retailer to designate the\nteoond Item which muit be bought\nIn addition to the article or commodity tn ihort supply.\nThe Board cited as an Instance\nit the provision a pound ol but-\nr would be sold only when ac-\nimpinied by the purchaie ot lay\nof groceries \"cannot cause any\nirdihip to i regular customer, as\nis would represent about the min-\nIlLm of groceries a week that\nmil. be purchued.\"\nThe Board viewpoint on the reaction on sales ot short commort-\nlllllllllllllllllllll.lllllllllllllllllllllll\nFur Coats\n\u25a0lady's Fashion Shop\nIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIII\nWATCH REPAIR\nll \u25a0 Job for expert!. Our work\nassures your satisfaction.\nH. H. Sutherland\n11 Biker St\nNelion, B C.\nHANDBAGS\nA new selection Juit In\n$2.50 to $6.98\nFashion First Ltd.\nitics In some itores was made clear\nIn a memorandum issued to Prices\nand Supply representatives,and approved'by E. G. Burton, Retail\nTrade Administrator and M. W.\nMackenzie, \u2022 Chief of Supply and\nDistribution.\n\"The Board does not approve or\npermit a retailer to make the sale\nof one article contingent upon the\npurchase of another designated\nitem?' the memorandum said.\n\"That Is to siy he cannot refuse\nto sell a pound of butter unless lt\nIs accompanied by the purchase of\nhalf-a-dozen cakes of soap. Thii\npractice obviously would develop\nInto the racket for getting rid of\nsurplus stock.\"\n22 BIRTHS IN\nNELSON, NOV.\nNelson City births in November\nwere 22, deaths 15, stillbirths 6. and\nmarriages 5.\nIn the Nelson District there were\n29 births during November this\nyear, 3 deaths and 2 marriages. Last\nyear there Were 17 births, 3 deaths\nand 3 marriages in the District.\nBruce Sutherland\nTakes Over\nC.C.U.B. Estate\nBruce Sutherland of Vancouver\nti ipending about 10 dayi at Caitlegar ai agent for the 0. L. Salter\nCompany, which Is receiver for the\nNational TriSst Company and the\nCanadian Bank of Commerce in the\nmatter of the assets of the Christian Community of Universal Brotherhood. For the pait three yeari\nthin work hai been carried on by\nR. M. Balmer, who died at Robson\non Tueiday.\nAi far as the National Trust Company and the Bank of Commerce\nare concerned, thia work la now\npractically cleaned up.\nFor several years Mr. Sutherland,\nacting for the Salter Company, has\nbeen liquidating the assets of the\nCorbin Mining Company.\nHe was a resident of Nelson for\na short period in 1914 and 1915, when\nhe enlisted for service in the First\nGreat War.\nYMIR\n;eep fit to\n10 YOUR BIT\nwith\nICE CREAM\nYMIR, B. C.-Mr. and Mrs. Emilson were Nelson shoppers.\nJoan Curwen and Donna Rue\nGille  were Nelson visitors.\nCharlie and Chester Christensen\nvisited Nelson.\nTom Clarke returned lo Trail Saturday.\nMrs. Craig and Mrs. Franks were\nNelson shoppers.\nRev. and Mrs. Dovey spent Monday in NaClion.\nHarry Jackson went to Nelson\nTuesday.\nMrs. Hans Edwardson is i patient in Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, Nelson. She lost a finger when splitting some kindling\nwood.\nMrs.' Nord was a Salmo visitor\nMonday.\nMrs. Christensen gave a sleigh\nriding party in honor of her son,\nChester's 10th birthday. The Invited guests were Ruby and Harold\nGould, Edith Nystrom, Joyce and\n\"Henry Brown, Gerry Cooper, Joan\nCurwen, Lily Nord and Mary Lou\nGille.\n0 Christensen Is spending a few\ndays at Slocan C:ty.\nHugh Jones of Salmo visited\nYmir Monday\nFred Larsen was a Silmo visitor\nAIR CASUALTIES\nOTTAWA, Dec. 4 (CP)\u2014Three\nmen were reported killed on active\nservice overseas and three missing\naf'.er air operations overseas in the\n430th casualty list of the war issued by the R.C.A.F.\nFollowing ls the latest list of\ncasualties:\nOVERSEAS:\nKilled on active service\u2014Martin.\nEric, Po,, Vancouver; Mcintosh,\nDouglas Young, Po., Besbe, Que,;\nGould, Jay Randall, Sgt., Saskatoon.\nDied as a result of injuriei sustained on active service\u2014Taylor,\nMelvin Elliott, Fit. Sgt., Wellington,\nOnt.\nMissing after air operations \u2014\nBendwig, Richard Alanson, Po.,\nNewark, N.J.; Llebeck, Millard Meyer, Po., Chesley, Ont; Wickitrom.\nFred Edward, Po., Erickson, Man.\nPreviously reported missing\u2014now\nreported prisoner of war\u2014McLarty,\nDonald Willlam, Fo, Buenos Aires'\nArgentina.\nPrisoner of war \u2014 Hogg, Walter\nNorman, Sgt., Picton, Ont.\nPreviously reported missing \u2014\nnow for official purposes presumed\ndead\u2014Hardy, Robert Edward, Foi,\nLondon, Ont.; Majeau, Russell John.\nPo., Edmonton; Murray, Gordon,\nPo\u201e Brooklyn, N.Y.; Richard, Jos:\neph Albert, Po\u201e Middle Sackville,\nN.B.; McLean, George Percy, Wo.,\nTimmins, Ont.; Cranswlck, Douglas.\nFit. Sgt., Vancouver; Fawcett, Milton Argue, Fit. Sgt., Fort Frances.\nOnt.; Hemery, Albert Anthony, Fit.\nSgt., Saskatoon; MacFarlane, Thomas Campbell, Fit. Sgt., Ottawa;\nWhite, Allan Rene, Fit, Sgt., Amherst, N.S.; Cauchy, Louis Augustin\nMarie, Sgt., Levis, Que.; Hancock.\nRonald, Sgt., Winnipeg; King, Arnold William Charles Ernest, Fit.\nSgt., Winnipeg; Martin, Emerson\nHubert, Fit. Sgt., Bury, Que.; Payne,\nNorman Austin, Fit, Sgt., Montreal;\nWheadon, Albert Edward George,\nSgt., Gypsumvllle, Man.\nPreviously reported seriously injured\u2014now reported dangerously\nill\u2014Bruyere, George Joseph Robert,\nD.F.M. Sgt., Montreal.\nCANADA.\nPreviously reported seriously Injured\u2014now reported dangerously\nill-Williams, Wyndham, Lac. Toronto.\nCanadian! In the Royal Air Force,\noverseas:\nPrevlouily mining\u2014now for official purposes presumed dead \u2014\nMain, Ba1.ll William, Po., Vancouver;\nReid, James H_we, Po., Vancouver.\nNELSONSOCIAL\nBy MRS.  M. J, VIGNEUX\n> The following marriage took\nplace In Victoria on Nov. 21 Lhe\ncontracting partiei both being former Nelionitei. It readi:\nLANGILL-MURPHY\nA quiet wedding wai solemnized\nlaat Saturday at if.. Columbia's\nChurch, when Edna Nora Murphy,\nR.N., eldest daughter of Mr, and\nMrs. J. Murphy, Glyn, P.O., and\nArthur Langill, youngest ion of\nMrs. M. Langill and the late Mr.\nLanglll of Nelson, were united in\nmanrlage by Rev, Canon H. V. Hltcn-\ncox. The bride was given In marriage\" by her father and wore a\nwoollen afternoon dress in dusty\npink shade with a corsage bouquet\nof white carnations and violets. Miss\nBernice Donaldson, R.N., of New\nWestminster, attended the bride in a\npale blue woollen dress wi;h -a corsage bouque^of pink and white carnations. Lee Langlll of Vancouver\nwas groomsman. Miss Margaret\nHines played the wedding march. A\nreception was held at the home of\nthe bride's parents where Mrs. Murphy received the guests in a navy\nblue ensemble. For a honeymoon\nUp-Island the bride donned a teal\nblue coat with a brown squirrel collar over her wedding ensemble. Mr\nand Mrs. Langill will make their\nhome in Vancouver.\ne Mrs. D. G. McDougall of\nQueen's Bay spent yes'erday in\ntown.\ne Mr. and Mrs. A. McPhee of\nProcter'visited Nelson yesterday.\ne Shoppers in town yesterday\nincluded Basil Palmer of Kaslo.\n\u2022 J. H, Dunn, merchant of Ymir\nvisited Nelson yesterday.\ne Visitors in town yesterday Included A. M. Ham of Silverton.\ne J. Ragotte of Ainsworth visited Nelson Thursday.\nVISITOR FROM TRAIL\ne Mrs. T. W. Slader, Kerr Apartments, had as guest yesterday her\ndaughter, Miss Phyllis Slader of\nthe nursing staff of Trail-Tadanac\nHospital.\ne Mri. J. McLeod wai ln town\nfrom Procter Friday.\n> Mrs.   Wilmer   McHardy   and\ndaughter Ann of Balfour spent yeiterday in town.\ne Church of the Redeemer Service Club membera met at the\nhomes, of Mrs. William DeFoe and\nMisi Betty Freeman this week.\nThose attending were filra. Reginald Stratton, Mrs. S. Addlion, Mrs.\nIt. Dyke, Mrs. Arthur Gibbon, Mri.\nReeve Harper, Mrs. J. P. Honwill,\nMn. E. J. Preaton, Mrs. A. Niven,\nMrs. H. Chester, Mrs. W. J. Silver-\nwood, Mra. B. B. Stallwood, Mrs,\nT A. Carew, Mrs. S. N. Miy, Mrt.\nGeorge Schupe, Mrs. Howard Ward,\nMrs. M. Spence, Mrs. S. S. Simpson, Mrs. J. Bereau, Mri. E. E.\nHopwood and Mn. R. B. Brummitt.\ne \u2014is. William Maglio, Cedar\nStreet entertained the Junior C.W.L.\nat her home this week when those\nattending were Mrs. George M.\nBenwell, Mrs. Douglas Cummins,\nMrs. J. M. DeGirolamo, Mrs. J. DeGirolamo, Miss Georgina Maglio and\nMrs. Freddie Romano.\n\u2022 Logpn McPhee of Kaslo visited town yesterday.\ne Shoppers In the City yesterday inciuded Mn. W. Wadeson of\nSouth Slocan.\n\u2022 Mri. A. P. Whiteman of Pass-\nmore spent yesterday in Nelson.\nLEAVES FOR SOUTH\n\u2022 Mrs. Margaret Erickson of\nSeattle, who has been visiting her\nniece, Mrs. Alex Ioanin, Fairview,\nloaves today for Los Angeles,\nwhere she will reside with her\nnephew.\n\u2022 Frank Abey, Sr., of Kaslo, was\na City visitor yesterday.\ne Mrs. G. D. Bell of Bonnington visited Nelson yesterday.\ne Mrs. A. T. Parks. Richards\nStreet, entertained the First Presbyterian Church Women's Association at her home Thursday afternoon when those present were Mrs\nJames Kay, Mrs, M. Gibbs, Mrs. A.\nWinlaw, Mrs. Beatt, Mrs. Dacy P$t-\nly, Mrs. W. T. Ohoate, Mrs. Peters\nof Appledale, Miss Lanskail, Mrs.\nD. Heddle, Mrs. C. R. McLanders\nand Mrs. A. Wallach.\nU-Boat Prevents Allied Ships From\nPicking Up Hun Survivors\nBY  WES  GALLAGHER\nAssociated Pren 8taff Writer\nALLIED HEADQUARTERS,\nNorth Africa, Dec. 3 (Delayed)\n(AP)\u2014British naval officeri told\ntoday how the waters between Sicily and Tunisia were left filled\nwith German troops Tuesday nltfit\nby the Royal Navy's destruction of\ntnree Axis destroyers and four\nmerchantmen but the presence ot\na U-boat kept them from picking\nup any survivors.\nThe' night engagement was con-1\neluded without a single Allied casualty, they said.\n'(The Admiralty originally an-!\nnounced yesterday that two destroyers and four merchantmen of\na Tunisia-bound convoy were sunk.'\nAllied Headquarters in North Africa in a later report gave the Axis\nlosses as three destroyers and four\nmerchantmen, at least two of which !\nappeared to be troopships. Thc Admiralty said it accepted the later,\nlarger figure as correct.\n(While the operation was carried\nout without a casualty, the British\nforce was attacked later from the\nair during Its return to base and the j\ndestroyer Quentin was sunk.)\nAn officer aboard one.of the crui\nOil JIul QJjl\nSATURDAY,  DECEMBER 5\nIt is believed that the \"fiery serpent\" of the Old Testament was the\nguinea worm, an Oriental parasite.\nButcherteria News\nIMALL BOILING FOWL, Limited number, per Ib. 21<\nIrish render dripping, Per ib. ' 12*\nJOLLED VEAL ROASTS, With Dressing, Per Ib. .32*\n)D POT ROASTS, Per Ib 26<\nHNG UMB, 2 Ibi 25<\u00ab\nriWINC VEAL, 2 Ibi 35<.\n.en Freih Pork Pies, 4 for 28c\nUAKFAST SAUSACE, 2 Ibi 3r>\u00ab.\n)D HAMBURCERS, 2 Ibi .%.<\u00bb\nJNELESS STEW BEEF, Per lb.       i 25<.\nkESH CHILLED HALIBUT. Per Ib 30*\nUSH CHILLED SALMON, Per Ib 30*\n)NES 527 - 528\nFREE DELIVERY\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNING\n7:55\u20140 Canada\n8:00-CBC Newi\n8:15\u2014Serviceman's Hop\n'8:30\u2014The Music Box (CKLN)\n8:55\u2014The Notice Board (CKLN)\n8:011\u2014 BUG News\n9:15\u2014Peter Dawson, Baritone\n9:30\u2014Childran's Scrapbrook\n8:5.   T me Signal\n10:00\u2014All Out (or Victory\n10:15\u2014Khaki   Scrapbook\n10:45\u2014Musical Program and News\n11:00\u2014Sign OK until 2:00 p.m.\nAFTERNOON\n2:00\u2014Musical Cocktail\n2:30\u2014Johnny Long's Orch.\n3:00\u2014Wings Abroad\n3:15-CBC News\n3:30\u2014Musical  Progrimme\n3:45   BBC N*wl\n4:00\u2014Musical Programme\n4:15\u2014Songs to Remeber\n4:30-Talk-'The Bible In War\"\n4:45\u2014News Commentary\n5:00\u2014Canadian Calendar\n5:30\u2014The Blue Playhouse\nEVENING\n6:00\u2014News Bulletin\n6:05\u2014Hockey   Broadcast\n7:30-King Edward Hotel Orch.\n8:00\u2014Red River film Dane.\n8:30\u2014Saturday Dance Parade CKLN\n0:00\u2014Open House on the Blue\n9:20-Dal Richardi Orch.\n10:00-CBC News'\n10:15\u2014Dance Orch.\n10:30\u2014Canadiin Calendar (rebroadcast)\n11:00\u2014God Save the King.\nsers taking part in the daring aclion\ntold the story in these wordi:\n''We slipped up on the convoy In\nthe darkness and it suddenly was\nlit up by flares dropped from our\nplanes.\n\"Three Italian destroyers started\nmaking smoke and then tried to run\nfor it.\n\"Bu: we fooled them.\n'We had sent our destroyers to cut\nthem off and they were forced to\nturn bwk right Into the guns of our j\nships and w. let them have lt.\n\"One Italian destroyer fought a\nlittle bu: the rest went right down.\n\"With the escort out of the way\nwe went for the convoy, which was\ntrying to scatter. We rounded them \\\nup one by one just lika shooting:\nducks sitting on ihe water.\n\"One ship must have been full\nof munitions. It went up with an\nawful bang. Another had plenty of\noil and made a real nice fire. Some\nmust have been troopships becaus.\nmen on the deck could see Jerries\nin the water.\n\"Boy, what a showi\n\"Not one of those ships could\nhave escaped. We wanted to pick up\nsurvivors but a Jerry sub had surfaced in the middle of Ihe battle\nand we had driven her under witn\nshell-tire but she still was hanging\naround. We could not take iny\nchmces of getting tin-fished so we\nMust kept on going, heading for\nhome.\n\"We did not suffer a icratch ln 'he\nwhole engagement. On the way\nback German aircraft took a faw\npotshots it us but we didn't hive\nanything else to do ind we were\nready for them.\"\nLoss of Life Low\non Torpedoed\nU. S. Troop Ship\nBY JOHN A. MUNRO\nAnoclated Pren Staff Writer\nWITH U. S. NIAVAL FORCES AT\nCASABLANCA, Nov. 16 (pe layed)\n(AP)\u2014Submarines torpedoed and\nsank five United States transports\nafter the Initial landing operations\nalong the North African coast, but\nloss of life was low as the troops\nhid left the shipi.\nThree other transports, a destroyer and a tanker were damaged.\n(The Navy announced in Washington Thursday the loss of the\ntransports but this was the flnt\nword that Ihe troops had moved\noff safely beforehand.)\nSmouldering wrecks and capsiz\ned naval craft and merchant ships\nare to be seen everywhere In this\ncluttered porl, which the French\ndefended bravely but unsuccessfully.\nThe American shelling and bombings were so accurate that casual-\ntics and destruction outside the har.\nbor area were almost nil.\nOf eight ships which sallied from\nthe harbor to fight us, all but one\nwere sunk or damnged.\nThe sloop Grandiere escaped after laying down a smokescreen and\ndashing into porl. The destroyers\nBrestoi* Boulonnais, Frondeur and\nFoTurgcux went down before U.S.\nguns outside the harbor, their colors flying to the last.\nThe fast cruiser Primauget was\nseverely damaged, burned out and\nbeached, as were the destroyer\nleaders Albatros and Milan. The\npowerful but unfinished battleship\nJean Bart, 35,000 ions, was found\nto be damaged but still capable of\nfiring. Her four 15-inch guns will\nmake an excellent shore battery.\nTwo other warships, the destroyer\nleader Milan and the destroyer\nL'Alcyon were damaged in the harbor. The destroyers Tempete and\nSimoun likewise were unable to\nfight because they had been laid up\nearlier by collission damage.\nAmong a dozen-odd merchant\nships sunk or damaged in the harbor were the passenger liner Por-\nthos, 12,629 tons; the Llpari, 9954\ntons; the He De Ouessant, 6187 ton;\nand the San Blaise.\nAt least a dozen fine merchantmen Were untouched.\nThere was not the loss of a lingle\nAmerican ship in achieving this ;n-\nitial victory. It was laier than the\nsubmarines sank the transports unloading in the open roadstead off\nDedhala.\nNELSON  DAILY NEWS. SATURDAY, DIC.  5,  1942-8\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nPhona 115\nThe House of Furniture Values\"     Nalton\nOnly 18 More Shopping Days Before\nChristmas\nSee Our Selection of Occasional Pieces\nat Prices You Will Want to Pay\nA Deposit Hold* Until Chrlitmai     9\nfa \\x\\ fa{ fcvfa, }x\\ fcfr&n. fa, forfo;fr\\ fr-r&n. .\"H^ffi\nHartin Reserves Defence in Charge\nof Theft of mn From Kaslo;\nEvidence for Prosecution Complete\nKootenay Men\nWin Badges\nMacDONALD, Man., Dec. \u00ab (CP)\n\u2014Air Gunners today represented\nwith badjes a'. No 3 Bombing and\nGunnery School, R.C.A.F., included:\n.U Cox, Cranbrook; H. C. Dawson, Trail; E. Johnson, Wardner;\nJ. A. Seaton, Castleg.r; R. K. Ford,\nKingsgate.\nWINNIPEG, Dec. 4 fCP)-Gradu-\nate air navigators and air gunners\ntoday presented with badges at No\n5 Air Observer School included\nJ. D Lancaster, Michel, B C.\nTRAILITE WINS WINGS\nDITNVILLF. Ohl, Dec 4 fCPi -\nFliers from Canada. Great Britain,\nAustralia and thc United Slates took\npart todiy in a Wlnps parade al\nNn. 0 Service Flying Training\nSchool.\nGraduates included Cpl Harold\nHeber Ollli of Trail.\nProsecution evidence was completed Friday in the preliminary\nhearing of H. T. Hartin, former Kaslo Clerk, on a charge of theft of\n$19,472.92 from the City of Kaslo,\nover a period of 10 years. Mr. Hartin reserved his defence. His Worship John Cartmel, presiding, adjourned the hearing until Monday.\nAfter prosecution evidence had\nbeen completed C. B. Garland, acting for Mr. Hartin, argued briefly\nthat the prosecution had failed to\nproduce evidence of criminal intent.\nas required finder the charge. Mr.\nHartin's books, he held failed to disclose the actual condition of Kaslo's\ncash and while the evidence showed\n\"a bookkeeping mess.'\" he contended, \"there is no evidence whatever\nof intent.\"\nDAWSON ARQUE8\nINTENT SHOWN\nE. P. Dawson, of Brown Ji Dawson for the crown argued that sufficient intent was shown in that Mr.\nHartin as Kaslo Treasurer had the\ncharge of the funds of the municipality from 1932 to 1912, and at the\nend of that time the funds were\nshort. Mr. Hartin had given no explanation of how the shortage occurred and this also showed intent,\nMr. Dawson argued.\nThe difference between the figures obtained by G. T. Meredith,\nAuditor, on making up a new set of\nbooks, and the figures in Mr. Har-\ntin's books, in his opinion indicated\nMr. Hartin must have had knowledge of the shortage. But he had\ndone nothing to show a shortage\nand, Mr. Dawson argued, thia disclosed intent.\nHis Worship commented there\nwere \"large sums involved\" and\nsome explaining to be done.\"\nA. Vande Casteyen, present Muni-\ni.\nclpal Clerk at Kaslo, who ln MM1\ntook over from A. L. MacPhee; o\u00bbs\ntemporary clerk after Mr, Harfln'i.\nsuspension, identified an agreement\nheld In City of Kaslo files unijer\nwhich Mr. Hartin placed property\nin the hands of Herbert ExtBf, .as\nTrustee, to secure payments to the.\nCity ot Kaslo. The ai munt set out\nin the agreement was (10,436.\nBasil Palmer, Government Office\nAccountant at Kaslo, testified he had\nwitnessed Mr. Hartln's signature On\nthis agreement.\nLONGBEACH\nLONGBEACH, B.C.-Mrs. J. C,\nArmstrong was shopping in Nelson.\nCommander B. A. Smith spent the\nweekend at hii home here.\nMayor and Mrs. Mathisen ipent\nFriday and Saturday in Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. R. C. McNown were\nshopping in town Saturday.\nThe Georgian military road, 130\nmiles long, is the only paved high-\nway suitable for heavy motor traffic through the Caucasus mountain!.\nIf It Is on the air a\nC. E. RADIO\nwill get It\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO.\nPHONE 11\nFOR MILK AND CREAM\nKootenay Yal1-ey U\nAIRY\nMOYIE\nrfot4(*$Rrfa4<^rfa4**r^\nFor the\nHoliday\nSeason\nLet's arrange to\nLook Our Smartest\nHere is a Tip . . .\nFeather Cut.   Soft\nfeminine, easily adapted to any style . . .\n\u00a3\nY\nLONGBEACH TEA\nPROCEEDS $13\nLONGBEACH, B. C- Kokanw\ngroup of tha West Arm Auxiliary\nhfM a successful tea and sale Dec. 2\nat the home of Mrs. B. A. Smith.\nThere wa* a table of small articles\nsuitable for Christmas gifts, and one\nof home cooking. Several members\nnf Crescent Bay group were visitors\nduring tha afternoon. Proceeds of\nIhe sale and tea totalled $13,\nSUNDAY, DECEMBER 6\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nEdgar\nMORNINC\n11:55\u20140 Canida\nsFTERNOON\n12:fKV\u2014New York Philharmonic Ore\n1:30\u2014Church of the Air\n5:00\u2014 CUC Newi Bulletin\nJ:03\u2014CBC   Ducuiilon  Club\n2:30\u2014 Magic Carpal\nS:0\u201e\u2014 M-lody  Time   (CKLNi\n3:30\u2014A Canadian in Britain\n1 45    BBC New. and Analyill\n4:00-The  Cavaliers\n4 30\u2014Variety Programme\n5:00-Charl;e   McCarthy   St\nBergen\n5:30-Weckend  Review\n5:45\u2014Mart Kenney'. Orch\nEVENINC\n6.00\u2014Talk - Review of Beveridge\nReport\n.:15\u2014Talk\n8:30\u2014Sunday  Serenade   (CKLNI\n7:00-CBC Newa\n7:15\u2014Our Canada\n8;00~-_BC N\u00abw\u00ab Rael\n8:30-The Wishing Well\n9:00\u2014ClaJaica lor Today\n9-30-Vr.sper Hour\n10:0fl-CBC Nawi\n10 15-Bndge to Dreamland\n10:30-God Save lhe Kin J\nSLOCAN  CITY\nSLOCAN CITY. B. C.-Mr. and\nMri. Wilier Clough lett Monday for\nVincouver\nMn. D. Ewing arrived here, trom\nVictoria Sunday.\nJohn Cecchini spent the weekend\nat hla home l-i Nelson.\nMn. J. Bortola. la expected home\nIn a lew days.\nMr. Bortolac apent Saturday In\nNelson with his wife.\nMil. John Graham who accompanied her husband In Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital Saturday night, arrived home Tuesday and reports\nMr. Graham doing nicely\nMri T Cooper spent Mondiy in\nNelson.\nMrs. W. Middleton of Nelion was\n\u25a0 visitor here Tuesday and Wednesday, guest of Mrs. D. McKay\nMOYIE. BC-Russell Conrad of\nthe University of Tdaho. Moscow,\nand haothar Philip Conrad of Washington Sla'e College, Pullman also\nI.nVaune and Gerry Conrad of\nCranbrook spent Thanksgiving Day\nat the hnme of their parents, Mr.\nand Mra Phil N Conrid at Moyie.:\nOn Saturday the brothers mntored I\nto Kimberley where they visited\nrelatives and friends In the evening  Mr   and  Mrs.  Conrad  en'er-j\n'tained  in honor of their inns and\n1 daughters\nT.Ms Andrewa nf Kimberley spent\nI Sunday at the homa of her parents.\nI Mr  and Mrs. W. E. Andrews.\nI 'Mr. and Mrs. H   llaigh of Kim-\nIberley were guests at the Conrad\nh-rne on Sunday\n1    Mrs. .HI of Cranbrook called at\nIthe home of Mr and Mrs. M Nicholson and Mrs Rudrum r.n Tuesday\n1 Mrs Msgra nf Cranbrook accompanied hy her son and daughter\nand grandchildren motored In Moyie\non Friday.\nj Robert Picco nf Michel! apent the\nweekend at the hnme nf his parenti.\nMr and Mrs Tony Picco at Aldridge\ni Mr. ind Mrs. .1 V. Kershaw spent\n.1 !r-w diys nt Yahk last week.\nMr and Mrs. Magra and daughter visited Mr. and Mri. Mark Nicholson nn Sunday.\nPhone 244 \u2014 We'll Do the Rest\nMilady's Beauty Parlors.;:\n577 BAKER STREET\nIf ____\n.\nLONDON (CT>\u2014Sir Halting! _.\nIimiy. Dapuly Secretiry (MlllUryl\nto the War Cibinel, his been promoted Lieutenant General He hsi\noflen been rilled Prime Mlniiter\nChurchlll'i \"right hind man\"\nBRADLEY S \u25a0\nMEAT MARKET\nT-BONE SIRLOIN STEAKS AND\nROASTS, P\u00abr Ib 35c\nTENDER POT\nROASTS, Ib\t\nTENDER RUMP\nROASTS, Ib\t\nLEAN STEW BEEF\nPtr Ib\t\n26cjT,tr.HAMBURC 35c\n32c ^AGE,rMr.35c\nCHOPPED SUET        OC-,\n2 Ibi ODl\n25c\n28c\nVEAL SHDR. STEAKS\nPar Ib\t\nVIAL OVEN ROASTS OQ.\nPer Ib LOm\nLAMB STEW\n2 Ibi\t\n35c\nCHOICE FOWL 00.\nFreih Killed, Ib. . .. \u00a301\n\t\n____________\n _..lum Batl. N\u00abB0 ?^ Questions?? On the Side\nANSWERS\nEitabllihed April 22. 1902.\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPubllihed every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED. 266 Baker St., Nelson, British Columbia.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU' OF CIRCULATIONS.\nSATURDAY, DEC. 5,1942.\nCarol and Otto Get\nCold Shoulder\nEx-King Carol, who delivered Rumania into Hitler's hands before he\nlost his throne for the second time, recently made a reappearance on the\npolitical scene, in the United State\",\nwhere he sought to assume leadership\nof the movement of those of Rumanian\nbirth to provide a Rumanian Legion to\nfight against the Axis.\nCarol was politely informed by po-\nlitioal quarters that he would have no\nrecognition. Presumably he will re-\ntun\/ to South America and the lady he\nleft there.\nNow we have another would-be royalty angling for Allied friendship and\na possible throne, Austria, which was\ngobbled bloodlessly by Germany, being\nthe country concerned.\nIt is not surprising to learn that\nBritain will take no official action in\nsupport of Archduke Otto's bid for the\nAustrian throne. Even his insinuating\noffer to raise an Austrian Legion in\nthe United States to fight the Nazis\ndoes not avail as a bribe. The British\nGovernment is not to be beguiled into\nfighting the battles of petty princelings.\nWhat happens to Austria after the\nwar is a matter to be settled later by\nthe people of that counry.\nThe objectives of the United Nations include the establishment of free\ngovernments for all nations which\nprove themselves fit and able to govern themselves.\nThis goes for India and for every\nother country either participating in\nthe war, or a victim of the Axis.\nOpen tl inV nadir. Nimei it pinem\nuklng quntleni will net be publlihed.\nThen   li   ne   ohirgi   for  thli   lervlce.\nReider, Nelion\u2014Cin you tell me the nune ot\nthe theme long on the C.B.C. ptino teim\nridlo progrim that ii heird over CKLN it\n4:15 p.m.\nThi theme song of thli progrim li Gavotte\nby Gluck.\nJ., Klmberlejr\u2014When i loldlir goei oveneii,\nwho li lupposed to lupply him with thingi\n\u25a0uch ll shirts, locks, iweaters, etc.?\nSoldien clothing Is lupplied by the Army.\nR. T, Nelson\u2014On whit day ol the week did the\nfollowing dates tall: September 3, 1880;\nNovember 8, 1881; June 2,1882, and July 3,\n1888?\nFriday, Saturday, Frldiy and Tueiday respectively.\nC. P- Grand Forki\u2014Ii a man 88 yean old exempt from Unemployment lniurance pay-\nmente?\nIf he li at work he muit contribute; there\nli no age limit specified.\nReader, Trill-\u00bbWould you pleaie give me\niome htnU ai to the proper care of mahogany furniture?\nFint ot all, do not uh furniture pollih\nuntil the furniture Is well duited or lt will\nsmear and clog. Mahogany furniture should be\nwashed either with cold tea or with vinegar .\nand water. For the plain pieces, use a soft\nflannel or sponge; for any carved or ornamental parta use a soft brush. Dry, then apply\npolish with a flannel or wft cotton pad, Rub\nlt well Into the wood but do not use too much.\nRub off with a soft duster and pollih with\na lecond duiter or chimols leather. Highly\npollihed furniture ihould be waihed with\nmethylated iplrlU and waUr. Put two tible-\nspoonfuli pf methylated spirits Into two cups\nof warm water, wring a small sponge out of\nthis and wash the furniture all over. Dry and\npolish with a chimoli leather. No further treatment should be necessary.\nWil\nSome Be\nMissed?\nSome 307 Christmas parcels\u2014with\nthe traditional cake as the first of eight\nitems\u2014for service men or service women from Nelson who are serving outside Canada, were committed to the\nmails by the Nelson Women's Auxiliary to the Active Forces up to the end\nof November.\nMailing of another 200 or more\nparcels\u2014minus only the Christmas\ncake\u2014to those serving or training in\nCanada, will be begun this week.\nYet the Auxiliary estimates that\nroughly 100 servicemen from this\narea will fail to get parcels from it, for\nlack of 'r.ie addresses so often requested. .This number will include many\nwhol were provided parcels last year,\nbut whose current whereabouts are unknown. It will also include many who\nsent'back no word after enlistment.\nIt is a pity that this should have\nto happen. It is a pitty that any service\nman. who.went from this locality, even\nwith, only the slenderest ties remaining\nwith it, Rhould possibly have cause to\nfeel [lonely and forgotten, this Christmas) But there will be few who are\nnot keeping in touch with at least one\nfriend left behind. It is up to that one\nfriend to provide the address that will\ndirect a Christmas parcel to a lonely\nservice man, perhaps far distant from\nany familiar scene.'\nTest  Yourself\n1.  Why doesn't a like freese from ths\nbottom up insteid of vice versa?\n2 What Is the heivlest liquid?\n3 Which has the larger population', Am-\nIrilia or Ihe City of New York?\nTEST ANSWERS\n1 Water expandl when it freerei, io it ii\nli.htrr thun unfrozen water and therefore\nlloati\n2 Mercury\n3 New York Cily.\nWords of Wisdom\nParty itmdtrdi ir* tht ihidowi in which\npatriot.im n bur ltd \u2014 St Pitrrt.\nEtiquette   Hints\nD-in't let rffertncei to anothfr'* m*. phyi-\nral handicap or #xrfis wp.jM cr\u00bb*p inlo your\nromtriition.\nLooking  Backward\n10 YIARS AOO\n(From Dilly Newi, Dec S, 1932)\nFor 1932E. K. Holdworth, now reildent of\nKitchener, ii champion bisi citcher, with a\nsample that tipped the beami at four poundi\n10Vj ouncei.\nHon. H. H. Stevens, Minister of Trade and\nCommerce is making a trip to British Columbia and will speak it Nelion. W. K. Esling,\nMP., will also give an address.\nC. C. (Vic) Mawson of Creston was elected\nCommander of the Wild Rost odge, Knights\nof Pythias.\nJ. E, Hamson, Jr., wai elected President\nof the Soni of England.\n25 YIARS AOO\n(.rom Dilly Newi, Die. I, 1917)\nW. J. E. Biker. Dlitrict Witer Engineer, of\nNelion, and J. T. Rowland, Auiitant Engineer\nof Victoria, arrived in Grand Forki to Inquire\ninto the feailbillty of the irrigation plan which\nwas submtted to the Provincial Government\nby Grand Forks ranchers and ctlzeni.\nTrail's contribution to the Victory Loan\nreached the sum of $85,700.\nE. E. Phair, builder, and for many years\nowner, of the Strathcona, ind one of Nelson's\npioneer residents, is back in the city after\nhiving lold out hli hotel Intereat! ln Prince\nGeorge.\nJ. 8. Deschamps, a district lumberman,\n.and resident of Rosslmd, has acquired eight\nsections of timber land on Sullivan Creek.\n40 YIARS AQO\n(From Dally Newi, Die. 6, 1902)\nH. M. Stevenion, Jr, Minager of the Highland mine at Ainsworth, was In town yeiterdiy.\nJudge Forln, and G. C. Hodge, delegatei\nfrom the Nelion Curling Club to Uie annuil\nmeeting of the Kooteniy Curling Anoclatlon,\nleave this morning for Rossland.\nJ. A. Dewar came In Wedneiday from\nYmir.\nToday's Horoscope\nSincerity, prudence, poiie, Integrity and\nrefined taitei are thi flneit attributei of the\nperions who have birthdays today. They have\nmany friends and are witty ind entertaining.\nThey are neat dressen ire fond of loprti and\nnature. An early mirrlige would be wiie. They\nihould not be imprudent or Impatient In love\nor builneu during the next yeir, then they\nmay expect at lent average good fortune. Foster ambition. Secret help wlll be vouchiafed\nthem. Fairly fortunite will be the child who li\nborn on thli date. The divelopment of a lecret\nmatter ii likely to greitly influence thi life\nfor good or ill.\nHOROSCOPI FOR SUNDAY\nYou are a penon of rare vitality ind\nitrong convlctloni If you hivi t birthdiy todiy. Your penomllty ittricti otheri. You hive\n\u2022n alert, icquliltlve mind, ire mtereited In\nbooki, irt ind muiic. ind hive iome Ulent for\nthen pursuit!. No iicriflce li too greit for i\nfriend or member of your family. An ictive.\nbuiy yeir li foretetn for you. Military, navil,\nengineering, medicil ind legal matters ire\nwell ilgnlfled. Push ill your iffilri, for lucceii\nls portended. Moit lucceuful In the \"lervlcei\"\nor ii i doctor lollcltor will the child be who\nli bom on thli dite. Ambition, determlnaUon.\ncounge, klndneu of heirt, ind bonhomie wlll\nbe evidenced.\n\u25a0y I. V. DURLINQ\nThe long thit nerve'i a nition'i hurt\nIs in itielf I deed. (Unltil).\n-TENNYSON.\n(In thi preient wir the long thit moit\n\"nerved i nition'i heirt\" li \"There Will Al-\nwiyi Be in Englind.\" Though of the so-called\n\"papular long\" class this ditty, ai in lniplra-\ntlonil long ratei with the \"Marsellaise\" of\nFrince. As for thl United Stitei their national\nanthem \"The Star Spangled Banner,\" li still\nthe the belt inspirational wir long).\nOnce more I note Elinor Glyn, credited\nwitb originating the term \"lt\" as used ln \"it\ngirl.\" The first \"It girl\" of the films was Aileen\nPringle ind she wai so called because Elinor\nGlyn iaid of her \"She hai it.\" However, Mrs.\nGlyn wai merely quoting Rudyard Kipling,\nthe originator of the term \"it.\" In hli itory,\nMri. Bathunt, Kipling wrote: \" Tlm't beauty,\nio to speak, nor good talk necessarily. It's\nJust it. Some women will stay in a man's memory it they once, wilked down i itreet.\"\nSIDELIGHTS\nWlniton Churchill wrltei ill ot his ipeech-\nei. Not only that, he wrltei ipeechei for other\npeople. Mr. Churchill wrote the ipeech Edward VIII made In informing the world of his\nabdication. . . George Washington and seven\nother Presidents of the United States Hurried\nwidows. Everything continues to indicate that\namong men of experience, widows are considered preferred matrimonial material. An Investigation of the matter ls iaid to have revealed that only 5 per cent ol spinsters have\nnever had a proposal of marriage. The majority of unmarried women it ls alleged are that\nway because they have never received a proposal of marriage from the type of male they\nconsidered the right man for them to marry.\nPASSING BY\nEunice Kennedy, one of the nine children\nof ex-Ambassador to England, Joseph Ken-\nnedy. Eunice lives ln Boston but goes to school\nat Stanford University, Palo Alto, Calif. The\nStanford co-eda are, generally speaking, quite\ngood looking. However, the most beautiful co-\nedi ln California are those of the University\nof California at Los Angeles.\u2014Judy Deane, entertainer, Miss Deane, who ichleved fime .\nlinging thit ditty \"A Good Man U Hard to\nFind,\" sayi thdre ire 68 ittrlbutes i man must\nhive before he can be considered a good husband. Some of the 68 mentioned by Miss Deane\nire: \"Remembers birthdays and anniversaries. Geta a hair cut once a week, shaves twice\na day. Earni i good iilary which he turns\noer to hla wife 100 per cent, Hai a lense of\nhumor. Does not smoke a smelly pipe and if\nhe smokes cigars does not chew at the end of\nsame.\" .\nALMOST CONFIDENTIAL\nNow girls named Ann are making radical\nrevisions ln the spelling of the name their\nparenti gave them. For instance, there is a\nyoung woman nimed Hudlin. Miss Hudlin is\nthe fint one \"n\". An I ever heard of.\u2014Many\nwomen who weigh from 110 to 115 pounds\nshould weigh 140 pounds to be healthy. However, they do not want to weigh 140 pounds\nbecause then they couldn't have that school\ngirl figure. A woman who Is 25 to 30 pounds\nunder her right weight ls usually nervous, easily Irritated ind subject to many minor ills.\nSuch 1 woman, when married, ls likely to\nmake her husband uncomfortable, and unr\nhappy. Every husband should ascertain what\nhis wife's right weight should be and then insist upon her maintaining this weight. As this\ndepartment hai often staled it is better for a\nman to have i plump wife who is cheerful\nthan a crabby wife who ls nice-looking.\nASIDES\nIn the 18th century Tokyo was the largest\ncity ln the world. It ls now the third largest \u2014\na man who smokes a cigar in a holder doesn't\ndeserve to be in possession of a good cigar\u2014So\nthe Nails have tossed General Weygand into a\ncell. I am afraid the general Is in for some\nharsh treatment. In World War 1 he was ths\nman who read the terms of the armistice to\nthe German representatives in that railroad\ncar it Compeigne.\nTIPS\nToday I had a $1.25 check and tipped the\nwaiter a quarter. He snatched up the 25 cents,\nglared at me and walked away without a word.\nIt was plainly evident he thought the two-bit\ntip wun't enough. If 20 per cent of a check Is\nnot enough tip what Is? The way some people\nmap up tlpi without even a \"Thank You\"\nmakei you feel ai lt what you gave them wai\nsome money you owed them for a couple of\nyein. It'i about time the tipping public organized ind decided, with the aid of representative! or people who receive tips, what\nconstitutes i fair tip. I have alwayi felt 10 per\ncent of the check ls a good tip though I often\ngo above that.\nDIVI BOMBERS\nIt hn been claimed thit United States\nNivy flieri originated dive bombing. This\nclaim is open to question. Some aviation experts say that dive bombing was originated in\nthe Bpanlih Civil War in 1938 by the famous\nSpiniih ilr fighter Maj. Joaquin Garcia Mor-\nito. It ll further olaimed that the Null got\ntheir dive bombing Ideal from Mijor Morato\nin addition to many other of their air battle tac-\ntlci which they hive uied in the current war.\nWOMEN ETC.\n\"Do mm like witty women?\" is i question\nI note ls undir dlicuiilon. It probibly depends\non whit use the women miki of their wit. If\n\u25a0 wlty female ipeciilizei in naity remarks\nregarding other people the average man will\nnot like hir no matter how witty the aforementioned remarki are. Regular feilowi alwayi like women who hive a good ieme nf\nhumor, but they don't care much for the catty\ntype of femile wit\nSTRENGTH THROUGH JOY\nJ P Bickell. Preiident of Hclntyre-Por-\ncuplni Gold Minei, presented \u2022 retolution thit\n\"gold ind the gold mining Induitry of Cinidi in mentlil.\" Hli ruolutlon wu pined.\nHi nld the government needed wealth to proi-\necuti thi wir. \"We either buy wir bondi with\nwilth or we buy thim with confetti.\" h\u00ab\nlaid. \"If wi throw gold mining overboard.\nwe miy find wi'vi won thi wir ind lost the\npile!.\"\u2014Toronto Globi ind MilL\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nWar\u201425 Years Ago\nBy The Cinidlin Prm\nDec. 5. 1917-Ruulim it rBeit-Litovik\nagreed to cimtlon ot fighting on ill fronti for\n18 diyi from Dec. 7. Britlih evacuited Bour-\nlon Wood ind ground nur Noyellei In Cambrai area; Germin ittacki nur Gonnelleu and\nLa Vicquirie beaten otf\nBRITISH GLIDER FLEET GOES TO BATTLE\nMembera of the army's airborne force\nwho have volunteered for the adventurous task of piloting Britain's fast going\nglider fleet into battle, have all undergone vigorous army training before taking up a job which requires the skill of a\npilot when in the air, and fighting phys\nique when they have landed the gliders\non enemy soil. Above appear aircraft towing gliders during training. Right, a tough\nlooking airborne soldier stands by his\nglider, waiting word for the air manoeuvres to commence.\nSTAR DIES IN FIRE\nBuck Jonei, famed cowboy iti\not Hollywood, was one of manyl\nnotables   seriously   hurt   in   the]\nnight club fire disaster in Boston,1\nMass. He is in hospital with critl*\ncal burns.\nBULLETS.F0R OFFENSE AND DEFENSE\nCAMACHO THE BOSS\nGen, Manuel Avilo Camacho,\nPresident of Mexico, is shown in\na recent photograph taken in Mexico City.\nThe U. S. Flying Fortresses not only\nspell death in the form of bombs, their\nexcellent armor-plating provide a good\ndefence against enemy fighter attacks and\nthe many guns with which the Fortresses\nare equipped make them deadly to ihe\nwould-be attacker. Somewhere in England a Fortress prepares for a raid over\nEurope and its cartridge belts that feed\nthe machine guns are checked.\nSCRAP DRIVE IN TIIE DESERT\nA recovery' unit operating with the\nAustralian Imperial forces in the Western desert, now the scene of a great Axis\ndefeat, is shown loading a disabled Bren\ngun carrier on a salvage truck for transportation to the repair shops in the rear.\nA German shell is exploding uncomfortably close in background.\nBUCHMAN ILL\nDr. Frank N. Buchman, ab\nfounder of the world-famed\nford Group movement, was\nported seriously iU at his S\ntoga Springs, N Y\u201e hotel.\nBuchnan is a native of AllenU\nPa.\nNEW PHOTO\nA recent photo of Dana L Wil-\ngrcii. new Can\u00bb_im Minister to\nMoicow ind to Kubishev.\nNEW VULTEE \"VENGEANCE\nContinually producing planei of superior quality the Allies are rapidly getting the upper hand in the air. Latest addition to the formidable array of United\nNations aircraft is the Vultee \"Vengeance,\" reported to be the highest per\nforming land-based dive-bomby of\nkind. Developed bv the NBshvijfc, Tet\nDivision nf the Vultee Aircraft Infl.\nis power with a-1600 H.P. \"Double\nclone 65 air-cooled radial engine and hi\nloid capacity of 2000 pounds.\n\u25a0____.:__!,,\u25a0,__\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0____\u25a0_,   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0__.__: ,'\u25a0\u201e' .jH Yjj,  i   ^ _\u25a0_,...,      ^\n1\n-\t\n.j,,.... ... ^Y\\\\\n McSpadenEdged\nOut at Half\nMark by Revolta\nMIAMI, Fla., Dio. 4 (AP) -\nJohnny Revolt* of iviniton, III,\n1933 winner, unk I 40-foot chip\nthot on thl 18th hole todiy to\ncomplete \u2022 brllllint flvi-undir-\npir 65 ind take thl halfway Iild\nwith 135 In the \u00bb.,000 Miami open\ngolf tournament. Hi wilked off\nthe green with \u2022 two-itroke edge\nover Hirold McSpaden of Philadelphia.\nStarting the day in fifth place\nifter his first-round TO, Revolta\ncame through with seven birdies\u2014\nagalnit a pair of bogeys\u2014to end up\nwith hii 1S9.\nThe first pice-iette-, Tiny Ben\nLoving ot Springfield, Miss., lost\ncontrol ot his driver, and added \u2022\n72 to His opening 08 for \u2022 tie in third\nplace at 1S8 with E. J. (Dutch) Har-\nrlson of Little Rock, Ark.\nHarrison far back yesterday with\n* 72, got into running by scoring\na SI\u2014the best nine hole score of the\ntournament\u2014coming home today\n\u2022nd taking a 08.\nMcSpaden managed a par 70 to\ngo along with his starting 87 and\nfinished the day Just where he started lt\u2014as runner-up.\nLeonard Dodson came ln with 71\nand two-day total of 140.\nWillie Turnesa slipped over par\nwith a 71 and finished ln a tie for\nfifth at 130. Even at that, he held\na five-stroke margin over the other\namateurs.\nI Four-Way Tie\nin N.H.L.\nBy The Canadian Press\nBuddy O'Connor of Canadiens and\nMax Bentley of Chicago forced a\nfour-way tie among N.H.L. icoring\nleaden Thursday night, O'Connor\ncollecting two assists and Bentley\ngetting one. Lynn Patrick of Rangers and Syl Apps of Toronto who\nled the list yesterday, failed to score\nforcing the four way tie.\nm    The leaders:\n0 A Pts\ntApps, Toronto r 10   8 18\nKJPatrldc, _tang<rr._~_;:.__.._ 8 10 18\nQjM. Bentley, Chicago _   t 13 18\n'Connor, Canadiens     3 15 18\nBruneteau Detroit,  _   9   8 17\nDrillon Canadiens     9   8 17\nSchriner, Toronto \u2014  10   8 18\nD, Bentley, Chicago    9   7 16\nWatson, Rangers    3 13 18\nTrainer of Horsei\nand Fighters Dies\nNBW YORK. Dec. 4 (AP.) -\nWhlstlin' Bob Smith, 73, who trained\nChampionship race horses and prize\nfighters for half a century, died to-\nixf. He was best-known for his\nUorMwUi the mighty Cavalcade the\n1934 Kentucky Derby winner, and\nbis Job of managing Frank Erne, the\nformer world lightweight cham\nplon.\nCanadian Rugby\nUnion Champions\nCanadian  Rugby  Union  .Senior\nChampions, ilnce 1910, follow:\n1920\u2014Univeralty ot Toronto.\n1921\u2014Toronto Argoniuti.\n1923\u2014Queens University\n1923 and 1924\u2014Queen. University\n1925 and 1920\u2014Ottawa.\n1927\u2014Toronto Balmy Beach\n1921 and 1929-Hamllton\n1980-Toronto Balmy Beach\n1B31\u2014Montreal\n1932-Hamllton\n1933-Toronto Argonauts\n1934\u2014Sarnia Imperials\n1935\u2014Winnipeg Blue Bombers\n1936-Sarnla Imperials\n1937\u2014Toronto Argonauts\n1938\u2014Toronto Argonuats\n1939\u2014Winnipeg Blue Bombers\n1940\u2014Ottawa Rough Riders\n1941-Wlnnipeg Blue Bombers\nBarney Ross\nDecorated\nMARINE FRONT LINES, Guadalcanal, Nov. 22 (Delayed)\u2014(AP.)\u2014\nBarney Ross, retired pugilistic champion ln three divisions, was credited\ntoday with scoring seven knockouts\nof Japanese snipers which brought\nhim a promotion for merit and a recommendation that he be decorated\nfor courage.\nHe stood guard over three wounded comrades throughout the night of\nNov. 19 and refused to be evacuated\nwhen his Marine unit wu ordered\nto the rear after being Isolated ln\ndangerous underbrush, remaining in\nan advanced position and firing\nmore than 480 rounds of ammunition\nduring the night, Uklng a toll of at\nleast seven dead Japs and 10 probables.\nFor his heroism, Ross was promoted on the field to corporal, and\nhis company commander Capt 0. K.\nLeblanc sent in an official recommendation for the Navy Cross or\nthe Army Distinguished Service\nCross.\nHockey Results\nBy The Canadian Preu\nQUEBEC SENIOR LEAGUE\nCornwall 6, Quebec 3.\nCAPE BRETON  LEAQUE\nArmy 8, Navy 0.\nSENIOR A OHA\nR.CA.F, 7, Research t\nHamilton 4, Niagara Falls J\nPort Colborne 3, St Catharines 3\n(overtime tie).\nJUNIOR OHA\nHamilton 12, Young Rangers 2\nReinstate Four\nHockey Pros\nPORT ARTHUR, Dec. 4 (CP) -\nFrank Sargent, president of the\nCanadian Amateur Hockey Association, today announced reinstatement\nof four rofessional hockey players\nto amateur hockey status. The play\ners are Eddie Convey of Toronto,\nGeorge Gee, formerly of Chicago\nBlack Hawks in the National league\nSudbury, Ont., Ken Hage and Hector (Hee) HIghton, both of New\nWestminster, B.C.\nInterpreting\nThe War News\nBOXING RESULTS\nBy Thl Anoclated Press\nPhiladelphia-Eddie Wllion, 179U,\nPhiladelphia, outpointed Tony Gan-\ngemi, 183, Philadelphia (8).\nBlliibeth, N. J.\u2014Marvin Bryant,\nlNVi, Dallas, Texu, outpointed Joe\nAgosta, 149, New York (\u00ab).\nTall River, Mass.-Frankle Britt,\n151H, 'ill River, defeated Freddie\nWolfson, IM, New Yolk, be default. (Wolfson disqualified ln\nfourth round for low blow).\nMilwaukee, Wis.\u2014Quentin (Baby)\nBreeie, 130V., Manhattan, Kas., outpointed Matt Dougherty, 1384, Milwaukee (10).\nBombers Slight\nFavorites\nTORONTO, Dec. 4 (CP.) - The\nEast-West final leaps from the frying pan Into the fire tomorrow.\nBy that, it li not intended to Suggest that anything will go from bad\nto worse when Winnipeg R.C.A.F.-\nBomben oppose Toronto R.C.A.F.\nHurricanes at Varsity Stadium ln\nthe 17th Dominion championship\nmeeting of Eait and West Rather,\nthe Implication ls that the third wartime Grey Cup final will resolve\narguments which hive been sizzling\nall week on the relative abilities of\nthe two teams.\nSo far most of the arguments\u2014\nsuch as the Hurricanes have no pass\ndefence, or that Toronto's speed will\nrun Westerners ragged \u2014 have been\nsufficiently ln Winnipeg's favor to\nInstall the Bomberi a slight 8-9 favorite ln some quarteri, but the\nBombers themselvei Insist It'i strictly on even-money proposition.\nYoung Giant\nGives Mills\nTough Battle\nBy  ALLAN   NICKLIION\nCinadian Press Staff Writer\nLOJTOON (.CVl-QtoH of Britain's\nprofesional boxen are ln lhe armed\nforces but Gunner Johnny King\u2014\nWho announces he hai no Intention\nof defending his bantamweight title\n\u2014Is the only British champion serving oveneu. Johnny is ln South\nAfrica at the moment\nThe other titllsts, Heavyweight\nLen Harvey, Lifhtheavy Freddie\nMills, Welter Ernie Roderick, Lightweight Eric Boon, Featherweight\nNel Tarleton and Flyweight Jackie\nPaterson, are In the RA.F. Po. Len,\nonly one to reach commissioned\nrank, is sports officer at an air station. Jock McAvoy, middleweight\nking, is not ln the services. He's doing war work and running a butcher shop in Northern England.\nKing is an anti-aircraft gunner\nand has had a more adventurous\ncareer alnce the start of the war\nthan he ever had In his 16-year\nring career. He was on the battleship Prince of Wales from the time\nshe wai commissioned until she was\nsent to the bottom by the Japanese.\nOn that trip, Johnny was picked up\nafter being In the water nearly three\nhours. ,\nHe was bombed ind machine-\ngunned in Singapore, then trans-\nSports Roundup\nBy HUGH PULLERTON, JR.\nAssociated Prm Sport Writer\nNEW YORK, Dec. 4 (AP)-You\ncan put whatever value you want\non Berlin radio statements (and\nget plenty of change from a buck)\nbut the folks who have been hollering that the United States ought\nto give up iports because of the\ncurrent shortages of players, transportation apd equipment may be\nInterested In a recent Item matched\nfrom the airwaves ... the Berlin\nannouncer reported that no fewer\nthan ilx international iporti events\nare scheduled ln Europe next Sunday ... they include tennis matches\nbetween Sweden and Denmark at\nStockholm, International cycle\nraces at Zurich, Switzerland;\nwrestling meet between Italy and\nCroatia it Barl, IUly; .Budapest vs\nVienna women's swimming at Budapeit, Switzerland vs Sweden Ice\nhockey at Zurich and a triangular\namateur boxing meet Involving Germany, Hungary and Italy at Berlin\n... we pick the Italians to take the\nboxing meet. They've been getting\nplenty of roadwork In Libya.\nPROFESSIONAL ATTITUDE\nIn Canada they like to tell stories about the thrifty lads'from the\nMaritime Provinces, so when Andy\nLytle, the Toronto Star sport scribe,\nheard of recent dlsorden at Chicago hockey games, he was reminded of a brawl that took place at the\nMontreal Forum. While the players were fighting, the customers\nshowed their dlsplasure by tossing\npennies, dimes and even quarten on\nthe Ice ... In the midst of It all,\nGordie DrlUon calmly \u2022 skated\naround, gathered up the coins and\npresented them to his parents, who\nhad come from Moncton, N.B., for\nthe game.\nfared to \u2022 minesweeper In the Pacific. The sweeping was hot stuff,\ntoo.\nKing flnt won the Britlih bantam crown In 1932, loit tt to Dick\nCorbett ln 1934, and regained lt In\n1939 when Corbett relinquished It\n\"Fearless Freddie\" Mills, the\nBournemouth Bomber Briton* look\non as a world champion, atepped\nthrough six furious roundi in a\ncharity exhibition et Manchester\nthai he won't forget ln a hurry\u2014\n\u2022ven lf he wanti to.\nMaking his flnt appearance since\nhe won the Britiah and Empire\nllghlheavyweight titles last June,\nunorthodox Freddie met a young\nglint from Leeds who pliyed him\nit hli own game. For young Al Robinion dared to swap punches with\nthe chimp in a manner that had the\npacked house on Its feet\nIt wasn't an auspicious debut as a\ntltleholder for 23-year-old Freddie\nwho took the crown when he slugged ageing Len Harvey right through\nthe ropes in two rounds. Before the\nfight Robinson wasn't conceded a\nchance against Mills' vaunted hammering ability.\nTom Powell\nBrings In Buck\nTom Powell of Rosemont and a\ncompanion brought back a busk\nFriday afternoon from a two-day\nhunt in the Five-Mile section. The\nbooty was brought In by water.\nMontreal Negro\nWins From\nEnglish Fighter\nBy ALLAN NICKLESON\nCinadian Prm Staff Wrltir\nLONDON, (CP)-Wh\u00bbn Opl. Ar-\nnold Hayes puts, his mind to lt, he's\na fair sort of fighter. But when\nhe's not In the mood, the Montreal\nNegro can look mighty bad.\nHolder of the Canadian Army\nOverseas light-heavy boxing crown,\nArnold was ln the groove against\nJack Smith, a Worcester lad who\nhadn't had a serious fight since\nhe cime out of Dunkerque, and took\nan eight round decision rt London's\nQueensboro All-Services Club. For\nArnold, who put up a disappointing\nshow in the quarter finals of the\nBritish Army championships at\nYork last March, It was perhaps his\nmost concvincing display on this\nside of the ocean.\nSmith, regarded as a comer before t_.\u00ab war, shook the six-foot\nMontrealer badly with one stlffrlght\nto the Jaw but was out of practice\nand couldn't quite cope with the\nrushing, swinging tactics of his grim\nopponent.\nAn uppjreut that began near the\ncanvass won the main bout of the\ncard for Eric Boon, British light-\nheavyweight champion. He knocked\nNILSON  DAILY NIWI,  SATURDAY.  MC.  5,   1942\u2014T.l\nout Jake Kllraln of Glasjow In the\nsecond round af i scheduled 10-\nrounder. It wu an unpopular, lur-\nprlae flniih to a Ult that itarted on\na alow cautious note.\nPrevious to tbe main match there\nwere eight rounda of concentrated\nfury between Big Jim Wilde, the\ndocker from Swansea, and Sapper\nGeorge Muir of the New Zealand\nArmy. Muir gave the Welsh heavy\nweight veteran a 39-pound pull\nln the weights and took the decision\non the itrength of a great lut round\nrally.\nBoth went to the floor in the first\nround and Wilde hit the deck again\nln the second round. Muir came but\nof the icrap with a aevercl. cut eye.\nJo Jo White Goes\nto Athletics\nSEATTLE, Dec. 4 (AP)-The Seattle Baseball Club Management\nannounced today the sale of outfielder Jo Jo White to Connie\nMack's Philadelphia Athletics.\nIt will mean a return to the American League from which White\ncame to Seattle ln 1930. He came\nas part payment by Detroit, for\nFreddie Hutchinson, the highly\nrated rookie pitcher, and through\nfour seasons has been a sparkplug\nof the Seattle team that won three\nstright pennants.\nManager Bill Skiff announced\nfrom Chicago that White was sold\nfor an outfielder, Wilson D. Miles,\nand an unannounced cash sum.\nMiller Goes to\nReds lor Cash,\nJoost, Andrews j\nCHICAQO, Dm. 4 (AP)- TM\nWinter bueball meetings floundered to a flniih today with th* mn\nJor leagues finally completing I\nplayer trade\u2014Eddie Miller of Boaton Bravei to Cincinnati for Ed-\ndie Joost, Nate Andrews and Cuh\n\u2014and the minor leagues making\nplans for 1943 In a stormy oo(l9\nvention session.\nMiller has been the outstanding\nshortstop ot the Nationals for aboiNi\nthree yean and has keen with the\nBraves since 1939.\nJoost became the Redi' regular\nshortstop In 1941 but Manager Casejr'\nStengel of the Braves said ha Uwl\ntended to use hlrp at aeoend bM*,--j I\nAndrews had been with St Loult\nCardinals and Cleveland Indiani Iff.\nthe past but served at Syracuse tytgjj\ntbe International League lut yeat.\nHe pitched ln 81 games, won 17 and J\nlost 12. ';\u25a0\nThe minor leaguea voted tofV\nplan that would preserve territory\nlal rights of clubs farced to suspend\nduring the war, but would permit\nleagues to re-align themselves in''^\norder to continue operationi,        ,    r|\nBy KIRKE L SIMPSON\nAnoclated Press War Analyst\nA grime test of relative itead-\n{utness of Japanese and German-\nItalian troops under flght-to-the-\ndeath orden seems to be developing. This could  throw  light on\nwhat would happen should  the\nwar ln Europe collapse for the\nAxU and  leave Japan   to  fight\n\u2022lone tn the Pacific.\nSuch a distant possibility waa vis-\n^allied by Prime Minister Church-\nin his recent broadcast warning\nily what was in store for her from\nrica and urging a revolt agalnat\nfussollnl. The British leader saw no\nirobabillty of a Japanese capltula-\non even if the Axis structure in\nope fell under cumulative Al-\nblows.   Instead   he   pledged\nompt shifting of British power to\nhi Pacific theatre ln that even to\nDiet an expected Japanese fight to\nfit death.\n| That gives high placed British en-\nonement to what Joseph Grew,\nlormer American Ambassador to\nyo, and all other repatriated\nImerlcans from the Orient have had\n) uy since their return. Those who\nhow the Japanese best, who en-\nthe savage treatment accord-\neven non-combatant Amerlcins\nMore their release, do not see any\npect of Japanese weakening\nbatever happens In Europe.\nIln Timlin the probability of an\nMcapabli trap closing on Germin\nOerman-Itallan forces trying to\noff the Anglo-American  ad-\nace ls very reil. A similar trap\n\u25a0yawning for the remnants of Rom-\nTll'i irmy In Tripolitania.\nAllied spokesman  In Iaondon\n_A that the situation in the Tunli-\nerte triangle alter two days or\nI\nmore of fierce position skirmishing\nln which losses were about matched\nwould give the \"edge\" to the side\nwhich \"regains strength most\nquickly.\"\nThat Is true, but there are other\nfactors. While the Immediate problem of Gen. Elaenhower_ command In French Africa as a whole\nand the British-American spearhead ln Tunisia ln particular ls\none of bringing up reinforcements\nand supplies, the Nazi task of\nbolstering the Tunisian foothold\nby sea Is even more difficult.\nWhatever help ln force reaches the\nGulf o[ Tunla from Italy must\ncome by sea. It must pass through\nnarrow waters constantly under\nAllied air and sea patrol.\nEisenhowers' problem of communications Is more one of distance\nthan anything else. Hla communication lines run back 1000 miles ind\nmore to such Moroccan ports os\nCasablanac all-rall-connected with\nthe front, as well as the closer Mediterranean ports of Algeria.\nA iroop or supply ship sunk or\nbadly damaged before It unloads\nmeans the loss of all It carried. Air\nattack on land communications cannot be equally effective.\nIt therefore seems certain that ultimately sufficient Allied strength\nwlll reach the Tunisian front to lsy\nclose siege to the Axis garrisons at\nTunis and Biserte. When that happens those Axis forcei will be ln\nmuch thi ume situation as thi Japanese on New Guinea and Guadal\ncanil. Whether they ilso stand\nready to fight lo the death to delay\na complete Allied vlcjory remains\nto he seen. There Is little reason to\nexpect it ut Italian contingents at\nleast\nLady Curlers End\nFirst Week\nCup Competition\nLadles' Curling Club rlnki mded\ntheir fint week of pliy ln the F. C.\nSharpe Cup Competition with two\ngames on Thursday and Friday afternoons.\nIn Thursday's games Mrs. H. M\nWhimster defeated Mn. 0. Slmpion,\n9-8, and Mrs. T S. Homersham defeated Mn. E. May 9-7; while Friday's results were Mn. A. H. Whitehead 13, Mrs. T. A. Wallace 7; and\nMrs. T. S. Jemson, 11, Mrs. Charles\nNorris 9.\nDraws for Monday ind Tueidiy\n\u2022re:\nMonday\u2014Mrs. Wallace vs. Mn.\nJemson, Mrs. Whitehead vs. Mn.\nNorris.\nTuesday\u2014Mrs. May vi. Mn.\nWhimster, Mrs. Slmspon vs. Mn.\nHomersham.\nlohnny Rino\nJoins U.S. Navy\nOKLAHOMA CITY, Dec. 4 (AP.)\n\u2014Johnny Rlizo, Brooklyn Dodger\noutfielder, enlisted In the United\nStates Navy today as a first class\nseaman. Rlzzo, 30, ls married.\nErvln Dusak, 22, former rookie\nslugger of the St. Louis Cardinals\nalso tried to enlist In the Navy but\nwas rejected because of a miner\nphysical defect. Duiak said he would\nundergo a minor operation and try\nagain\nBOSTON, Dec. 4 (AP.) - Thl\nTreasury Department has approved\nan offer from Boiton Bruins of thi\nfull gale receipts from four hockey\ngames to the Boston Metropolitan\nChaptef of the Red Cross, the\nBrulni' management announced tolly.\n\/_\nmw _ unu wwu\n^ Into acH0n-tf\u00ab n0\nWhen a flflW \u25a0\"d**V Too much depends on\ntoe for anything to go ^-,\n^edn-arfs^PO\" '' ^ ^\n^dhow **\u00ab* - ^iopisen^^eoithe\n^ and thoroughness with wb\nvehicle is tested. m_\n. ted 12.1** *\u00bb\u00bb to \"\"\"j,, te, do_. g\u00b0 *> \u00ab'\n*,_\u201e_. ***** *****\n2S.p_.1.*'*X'\"al'Pfol\n!\u2022_\u00bb.\/ The live* ot\nnlv, teat intert-\nn0 seek and destroy the enemy,\nThe^inbatfledr^^ ^ ^ 0\n^ the men in worbng W* are iD the\n\u25a0\u2014**t^:   ^ourhont        A\nSame tight   Into every ^ ^    \/J\nwWk of some W.^\nemployees.\n\"I111 \u00b0ar \u00abto\nPt-d.r,,_       '\"d *0 ,\n'Volxs.\n\u00b0tl..\n\"\"\u25a0\"\u2022d \u00a3!**\u2022\u2022*\u2022\u00bb,\ntoe*\n\u00b0ri.,\nof\n>Mv_t^Uoklm\nth.\nJk\u00ab4\n\u00b0tth,\nWife.,\n\"''C'^cw..\nt\u00ab>*ty.\n\u2022   'Pa.,- ^\nctl: : .\nFORD MOTOR COMPANY\nHAKIM OP ro\u00ab0 V.l\nAND KMCU1Y CAM,\nFOID UUCKI\nOf CANADA, LIMITED\n A TREAT FOR YOU\nTention please! No one can have\ntoo many pretty towels and pillow\ncases and tea cloths. So hurry and\nembroider these cute kitten motifs on yours. Pattern Mi contains\na transfer pattern of 20 motifs\nranging from 2x2 inches to S'Ax.'A\ninches; illustrations of stitches;\nmateriali required.\nSend twenty centi for thli pat.\ntern te The Nelion Dally Newi,\nNeedlecrift Dept., Nelion. Write\nplainly pittern number, your\nmme ind iddreii. Pattern wlll\nbe milled to your home within\n10 dayi.\nTOO EARLY OE TOO LATE\nHOLDING up your sure-winner\nhigh cards until just the right\ntime is a vital fundamental of No\nTrump play, just as Important to\nthe defense as to the declarer. If\nyou play them too early or too\nlate, you smooth thc path for your\nopponent. Coming In quickly with\na high card, so you may promptly\nstart another suit, sometimes decides the Issue. On other occasions, deferring its use until you\nblock the enemy's remainders of\nthe suit can settle the case.\n4 AQJ4\n\u00abK2\n\u2666 AQ65\n4872\n\u2666 87\nV Q 10 8 5\n3\n\u00bb K 10 4 2\n+ 10 i\nN\nW  E\nS\n^K 963\nV A 9 64\n\u2666 J :i\n*AQ5\n4 10 3 2\n*J7\n4987\n4KJ 9 6 3\n1 Dealer: North\nnerable.)\nEast-West vul-\nNorth       East\n1 \u2666          Dbl\n_ A          Pass\n3 NT        Dbl\nSouth       West\n2 4           Pass\n2 NT        Pass\nDid you ever see bolder bidding\nthan that by East and South, or\nmore timidity than West showed?\nThe latter was even timid about\nleading his own suit, hearts, so\nopened thc spade 8. sure East\nmust have it in good shape.\nWhen the spade 4 went on from\nNorth. East played his 9. the 10\nwinning, and he held up the K\nagain when the J was finessed.\nNext he ducked the club 8 and the\nJ won a finesse. The apade 3 to\nthe A brought a second club lead.\nNow East came in with his club\nA. took his spade K and heart A\nand led the heart 4 to the K. South\nthen ran three more clubs and the\ndiamond A. refusing the finesse\nbut getting nine tricks.\nEast had two chances to beat\nthis contract. One was by coming\nin promptly with his spade K and\nopening hearts, while he still had\nthe club A for a re-entry. The\nother was by holding up on clubs\nuntil the third round, thereby killing the rest of South's suit East\nwas too late with his spade K and\ntoo early with his club A.\nTomorrow's Problem\nVJ9S2\n4 J 985\n+ QJ42\n4 K Q 6 3\n442\n4, A T 6 5\nN\nW  E\nS\n4 A 10\n48 7 4\n4 A K Q 7\n3\n*K 93\n4QJ95432\n4 A 10\n410 6\nA 10 8\nI Dealer: East. North-South vulnerable.)\n* If East bids 1-Diamond and\nSouth 2-Spiules on this deal as an\ninterference bid, what should\nWest do?\nDi-trlDuted by King Features Syndicate, Inc.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1 Disk In ice\nhockey\nn Length\nmeasure\n9 Metal\n10 Roman\nemperor\n11 Part of roof\n12 Overalls\n14 Scraps of\nliterature\n15 Shield\n17 Dandy\n2,Pertaining\nto a cttv\n3 Mountain\npass\n24 Receptacle\n25 Land\nmeasures\n27 Butt\n4 Patella i pi I 28 Mischievous\n5 Harm\n6 Bom\n7 VesseJ\n8 Fame\n11 Gun (slang i\n13 Enemy\nscout\n16 Crown*\n21 Flash\nIS Weight unit  22 Sweet\nTflaMoit   *7Ylwdbi\nNEW  YOKE TREATMENT\nFirst choice for the busy-day\nwardrobe ls Pattern 9251 by Mar-\nianlMartin. It gives exceptional\nfigure flattery. Your width-across\nli nicely broken up by a surplice\nneckline, a vestee-like pointed\nyoke and a slimming skirt panel.\nContrast for the collar and yoke is\nsmart.\nPattern 9251 may be ordered\nonly in women's sizes 34. 36, 38. 40.\n42. 44, 4. and 48. Sire 36 requires\nJ% yards 3J inch fabric.\nSend twenty centi ror thli Mir-\nlin Martin pittern. Be iure to\nwrite plainly your 8I2E, name,\niddreii ind ityle number.\nSend your order to The Dally\nNewi. Pattern wlll be lent to your\nhome within 10 dayi.\nsunstanc-\n23 Resort\nLONDON (CP)-Mcn of the special service brigade-\u2014a branch of\nthe Commandos\u2014are to wear ber-\nets similar to those of the Royal\nArmored Corps They will be\ngreen.\nAUNT  HET\nBy ROBERT QUII.LEN\n''Oi'Riiimin'   this   country   I;\n19 Vehicle\n20 Attempt\n21 Yawns\n23 Part of\nhead I pi i\n26 Kind of acid\n30 Peels\n31 Kind of\nlliard\n32 Part of\nBatumi\nrings\n33. Boggy\n34 Tooth\n36 Decorated\nletter\n39 Prickly fruit\nenvelope\n40. Place\n13. Wine ,\nreciptacle\nM. Guided\n15. Malt\nbeverage\n46 A dance\n48 Asian\ncountry\n50 Daze\n51. African\nriver\n52 Melody\n53 Valley\nDOWN\nI  Music\nInstrument\nCRYITOQCOTE\u2014A cryptogram quotation\nchild\n29 An Islet\n31 Adjudging\n33 Large\nnumber\n35 Elongated\n36 Obese\n37 Accumulate     Y\"\"\"\">' *\"*\n38 Poem division 42. Affirmative\n40 Cup-like vote\napoon               47 Firearm\n41 Foreign 40 Nothing\npTaPt\n\/.\nTIm\n\u25a0\nr p\nfli-.li \u25a0\n->\nLE\nAM\nd|i\n,. i |J|j\nLA\nTE\naona w_ __a_i\n_m_ ____\n_\n1\nE\nV\nfc.\nD\no\nR\n1:\n'A'\nU\nb\ni\nM\nA\nIffL.\nMP\nKit\ni\nP\nN\n-\nA\n_\n1\n1\nR\nii\nU_J\n\u25a0.ji\nI |i|\n_\nt;\nti\n_\nc\n____\nQO\n___\nifflfcW\n_______\n,\\ L\n0\nN\n''_____ ''\u25a0\np.\ni\n_\n1\ni><\nta\n.\n4   _\nA\nii\ni\n_\nV\nI\n.\n\u25a0 m\n1*\n_\n\u25a0>\n.\nEAA. LRWYAU N I K A E Y! TJ H F A YJA\nQXURAT O A X U. EHFFAW XWT EXT \u2014\nY .II K E I W.\nYeiterday'\u2022 Cryptoquotei THE FASHION WEARS OUT MORI\nAJ'PAREL THAN THE MAN-SHAKESPEARE.\nin.iriiMH\u00ab_ be _-h rutur\u00ab \u00abi\u00bbait_i\u00ab im.\nCryptoquoici are quotation, ol tamoui penons written cipher.\nA substitute character hns replaced the original letter For instance,\nan \"If may lubitittite for the original \"E\" throughout the entire\ncryptoquote, or a \"BR\" may replace an \"LL\" Fino thi key and follow through to the inlu'lon\nLONDON (CP)-Houm iwapping \u2022 LONDON (CP)\u2014Lieut. John Stu-\nis the latest development in plans | art Mould, Royal Australian Naval\nto tackle wartime housing problem? I Volunteer Reserve, has been awird-\nin Britain. Big families with imall i ed Ihe George Meal and George\n. houses are exchanging them wilh Crois within lix months. In April\nkecp.n' house I know women who J ,mai) families whn have bin houses. ! he received his G.M. \"for g.il'intry\ncan't do it, lm'. | never saw one of in lhl, m,.m,ier more Ihn i 2000 fam- ' nnd undaunted devullon to duly\"\nVm quit pliym' around nnd gel at I ilioj have exchanged houses in Shif. I Now he has been i_nd _ the G C\nIt.\" | field al< ne in the past 12 months.      ' for similar bravery.\nlike\nHENRY\nBy Carl Anderson\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy George McManus\n.\nWHERE'S  ME WATCH?\nI'M 6URE I HAD IT\nBEFORE   I   TOOK\nWE  MAP\nDIP vOU TVKE A SWOOZ.E -\n04.DOV \" lAOTHER'S COUSIN\nWM-JWV  WAS HERE- TOO\nBAD MDU WERE ASLEEP\nWHILE HE W>S   HERE .'\nHELLO-THIS 19\nJIGGS-SAY-\nDAWcJV-WOULD\nVOU   MIND\nm-mtm_\nCm*. IU1, HJ*| tmmm 3g*\u00abfc<<!\n__, W_II rtrf_ meg-      |     lg-5\nDONALD DUCK\nBy Walt Disney\n Mr.\nPHONI 144\nPHONE 144\nBIRTHS\n\u00bbATE-To Mr. and Mri. Thom-\nBate, Richardi Street, at their\nme, Dec. 2, a daughter.\nBWVELL-To Mr. and Mri, John\n.mil, of Prince Rupert end Nel-\n;i. at Kooteniy Lake Oeneral Hos-\nal, NeUon, Dec. 3, a aon.\nPOPOFF-To Mr, and Mri, Sid-\ny Popoff of Taghum, at Kootenay\nIke Oeneral Hoipltil, Nelion, Dec\nI son.\nLADEN*-To Mr. and Mn. How-\nd Laden, of Northport, Waih, at\nIter Misericordiae Hospital, Ross-\nl\\d, Nov. 27, a son.\nTYLLIA-To Mr. and Mra. Alex\nrilla, of Northport, Wash., at Mater\nllieficordiae Hospital, Rossland.\n\u2014. 1, a son.\nCAMERON-To Rev. and Mrs. W.\nurray Cameron, of Rossland, at\nIter Misericordiae Hospital, Dec.\na daughter, Jean Elizabeth.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASSAYER8 AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES '\nHAROLD    S     ELMES     Rouland\nBC   Provincial Assayer   Chemut\nIndividual  repreienlativi for\nshippers at Trail Smeller\nA J  BI'lE. Independent Mine Representative   Box 54 Trail   B.C.\nE W WIDDOWSON. PROVINCIAL\nAssayer. 301 Josephine St Nelson\nTHE WEST KOOTENAY ASSAY\nOffice 550 Stanley St. Nelson BL\nKOOTENAY ' MINES ASSAYERS\nBox 308. Nelson. B.C\nCHIROPRACTORS\nA.   B   MCDONALD.   DC,   Palmer\nGrad   X-Ray   Strand Blk., Trail\nENGINEERS  AND  SURVEYORS\nHELP WANTED\nApplications will not be consider-\nfro.Ta persons in the employment\nany firm, corporation or otnei\niployer engaged in the produr-\nin of munitions, war equipment\nsupplies Ior the armed force'\nless such a person li a skilled\nIdeiman not ac.ually employe, al\nI trade\t\n'PLICATIONS WILL BE RE-\nlelved from single girli with Se-\nllor Matriculation Standing, for\nunployment as laboratory assist-\nints. Apply to your nearest Na-\nlonal  Selective Service  Oflirer.\n_NTED AT ONCE: COMPETENT\nItenographer to operate bookkeep-\nng'machine. Apply National Selective Service,, Nelson, B.C.\nLBETAKER FOR RANCH, \"sUFi\ntlderly man or couple. Box 789,\nDaily News.\nR  W  HAGGEN  MINING St CIVIL\nEngineer;   B.C.   Land   Surveyor\nRossland and Grand Forks. BL\nBOYD C AFFLECK 218 Oore\"ST\nNelson. BC. Surveyor and Engineer   Phone 669-R\nINSURANCE  ANO REAL ESTATE\nCHAS F McHARDY. INSURANCE,\nReal Estate. Phone 135\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine ihop acetylene and electric\nwelding,   moior   rewinding.\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 324 Vernoj St\nINTED: EXPERIENCED STEN-\nigrapher. Apply National Selec-\nIve Service Office, Nelson.\nRL FOR LIGHT HOUSEWORK,\n'hone 773-X1.\nCHOOLS AND  INSTRUCTION\nENOGRAFHERS AND TYPISTS\nleeded badly by Government lor\n1 work. You can train at home\nJob as Stenographer, Typist,\nBee Clerk, Letter Carrier, MaU\nHerk, Customs Examiner, etc.\n\"ree advice and record of ap-\nointment of our students from\nLC.C. Civil Service School Ltd.\nWinnipeg. The oldest in Canada\nSTEVENSON'S   MACHINE   SHUp\nSpecialists in mine and mill work,\nmachine   work   light  and   heavy.\nElectric  and  Acetylene  welding.\n708   Vernon   Si.  Nelion,   Ph   98\nOPTOMETRIST8\nW   E   MARSHALL\nOptometrist!\n1458 Bay Ave\u201e Trail      Phone 177\nPERSONAL\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT\nAimer  Hotel   opp   CPR   Depot\nHIDES\nShip lo J   P   Morgan. Nelton.\nTOP   PRICllS   PAID   FOR   USED\nfurniture,   stones,   heaters,   toon\nmusical Instruments Ph 534 .Ark\nSELL -OUR KITCH. STOVE OH\nheater for cash You get a square\ndeal from Cheat 2nd hand itore\n'WE COLLECT YOUR DEBTS\" IF\npeople In British Columbii owe\nyou money, we will collect it.\nStinaird Rates; Hlgheit reference!. Commercial Service Corporation Ltd, 830 West Hastings\nStreet. Vancouver, B.C.\n250-THE PHOTO MILL-_.5<\nP O  Box 335. Vancouver\nRolls developed and printed 23c\n12 reprint! 5x7 enlargement. 35c\nIF YOU WANT PRINTING OF ANY\ndescription write to Daily News\nCommercial Printing Dept, Nelson. BC.\nI PAY CASH FOR ALL LIQUOH\nand wine bottlei \"Mickiei\" 6c\ndoz. 23 and 40 oz., 16c doi Deliver to J P Morgan. Nelson. BL\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nWe Always Sell for Less\nTop prices paid for used furniture\nSEE US before you BUY. SELL\nOR EXCHANGE\n413 HALL ST.     PHONE 1032\n25c Any size roll developed 25c\nand printed\nReprints 3c or 40 tor '$100\n48 houn required on all work.\nSend In your friendi filmi' too\nFILM EXCHANCE\nP. O Box 50 Castlegar B C.\nSASH FACTORIES\nLAWSONS    SASH    FACTORY\nHardwood merchant, 273 Baker St\nSECOND HAND 8TORES\nWE BUY. SELL AND EXCHANUE\nWhat have you? Ph. 534 Ark Store\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nRENTALS\nHOUSES TO RENT\nlour room bungalow on Gor-\nTon Ro.d. qtni\nler month  t___l\nlive room house on Silica St.\nTloae-in. (p-| r\nJer month iu 10\nive room flat. Very conven-\nInt  location. $90\nler month *D__U\nnail   bungalow.   Five   rooms.\n(Uca St. (Hon\nft month t_<__U\nroom house, Victoria St.\nose to C.P.R. #00 CA\nhr month tO-t-t.tJV\nhrge family size dwelling. unUl district. CQIt\npr month    \u00abDr3f)\nf. D. Rosling\nI Ward St,\nPhone 717\nI RENT: 7-RM. HOUSE. 4 BED-\nores. Partly furnished. On 4th\n, near Radio Station. Ph. 434-R2,\n|ter 1 p.m.\nrRENT:\"SMALL FIJR~APA.lT-\nlint 2 bedrooms, furnace. Close\n$30. Mrllardy  Ins. 4; Real Est.\n[lone  135.\n\"RENT:   HOUSE.   5   ROOMS\"\nod location. Fairview. Ph. 117\n1035.\nISM FOR RENT. SH ARE BASIS\nreliable  tenants.  Some  stock\n791. Daily News.\nBSEKEEPlNG^iiOOMSTOR\njit. ilngle and double   Morgan\nlock. 305 Baker St.\n_m7i-R'M. HOUSE WiTB\nlth IH. Ph. 276-L evenings,\nIRACE APTS \"Beautiful modern\nIgidaire equipped  suits\nFOR RFNT\nlovely home In 900 Block on\nbonate. Polished floors Hot\nir healing Modern d* I A\nhen. Month \u00abB iU\n, nice bungalow type homes,\n&-tO      and       \u00ab_OU\nMonth, respectively\n3-rijim   cottage.   Clean    mri\nbculatc.\n|h\nALSO\nKmetit   Close   in.   2   bedrooms\n\\te  bath. Range\n|d\u00abd\n\/. APPLEYARD b CO Ltd\nBaker St. Phone 2(19\n$15\n$20\nHOUSE   FOR    RENT,   714\n8t. Phone 1082-1.\n\"RENT:~6\" ROOM' OUt'LEX\nPhone 316\nSOOifE' Ft_R  RFNT\"AP\n127 Silica SI\n[V    FURNISHED\"   3-ROOM\nle. Stirling lintel\nflfKERR APARTMENTS\nIN   THE   SUPREME   COURT   OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nIN PROBATE\nIn the Matter of the Estate of Jessie\nKerr Fraser, Deceased\nTAKE NOTICE that Letten Probate of the Will of Jesiie Kerr Fraier who died at Nelaon, Britiah\nColumbia November 9th, 1942, have\nbeen issued to Roy John .Douglas\nMacQuarrie, executor, pursuant to\nthe order of His Honour W. A. Tils-\nbet, Local Judge, dated November\n20lh, 1942, and all persons claim,\ning to be creditor! of the iaid deceased or to be entitled to the said\nestate, are, on or before the 31st\nday of December, 1942 to send by\npost pre-paid or to deliver to the\nsaid executor or to his solicitors,\ntheir Christian and surnames, addresses and descriptions, full particulars of their claims, statement!\nof their accounts and the nature\nof the securities, if any, held by\nthem, and thcreafer the said Estate\nwill be distributed among the parties entitled thereto having regard\nonly to the claims of which said\nexecutor has then notice.\nDATED at Nelson, British Columbia, this 3rd day of December, 1942.\nBROWN Sc DAWSON,\nSolicitors for the Executor.\nAPPROVED:\nW. J. STORGEON,\nDistrict Registrar,\n~ PROVINCE'OFTmiTiSH\nCOLUMBIA\n\"TRUST COMPANIES ACT\"\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that\nMichigan Trust Company, registered to do business under the British\nColumbia   \"Trust   Companies   Act\"\nis applying for cancellation of ltl\nregistration   In   British   Columbia\nAny  person  having any  objection\nlo such  cancellation  should forthwith   communicate   such   objection\nto   Inspector  of  Trust  Companies,\nPnrl;ament Sui'dlngs, Victoria. B.C\nDATED at Victoria, B.C, this 27th\nday of November, 1942.\nARTHUR J. PATTON,\nSolicitor for the Company.\n~GOVERNMENTlaIQUOR ACT\"\n(Section 28)\nNOTICE  OF  APPLICATION   FOR\nCONSENT TO TRANSFER OF\nBEER      LICENCE\nNOTICE is hereby given thst on\nthi  24th day of Drccmber next, lhe\nundersigned intends to apply lo the\nL'quor Con'rol Hoard for consent lo\ntransfer  of  Beer Licence  No.  5767.\nHss'.l-d   n  respeel nf premises being\npart of a building known as Outlet\nHotel, situate on III A St B Lot 710.\nDL.  309  in  the  Koo i nay  District,\nBritish Columb a. from S. A, Ward,\nexecutor  and  owner of the estate\nof the laic W  A   Ward to Sarah A\nWard. Proctor. B.C., the transferee.\nDATED AT PROCTER. BC. this\n23lh day of November AD, 1942\nSARAH   A   WARD,\nAnplieant nnd transferee.\nMUSICAL  INSTRUMENTS\nNORD IIEIMER PIANO GOOD\nI    cond  $90. Cash. H  R, Kilto, City.\nSPECIAL!\nSend 10c for world's Funniest JoKe\nNovelty Sc catalog of sundries,\nbooks on all subjects, iuch as. sex.\nbirth control, humour, art, romance, educational etc.\nWESTERN DISTRIBUTORS\nBox 24NF Regina, Sask\n25cl,ONS pHOTO-25c\nP.O. Box 434, Vancouver.\nAny 8-exp. roll developed and printed 25c. Reprints 3c. Free 5x7 Coupon.\nPersonal CHRISTMAS CARDS 50c\ndoz. Made from your own negatives\nSpecial.! 5x7 enlargements, 9c each\nNERVOUS .TENSION OF LONG\nhours on essential work bring digestive disorders, acid stomach, indigestion. Thousands rely on Wild-\ner's Stomach' Powder. From a\ntime-proved English formula\nPleasant. Tasteless. 50c and $100\nsizes at all druggists.\nMARRY! HUNDREDS OF MEM-\nbers. Many with means. Widows\nwith farms. Country and city gins,\nteachers, nurses, farmers' daughters, cooks and housekeepers\nMost all ages. Particulars 10c\nLadles free. Canadian Correspondence Club, Box 128, Calgary, Alta\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT\n' ed (6 or 8 exposure roll) 25c, Re\nprints 3c each For your vacation\nsnapshots, choose Krystal Finish\nGuaranteed non-fade prints\nKrystal Photos. Wilkie, Saskatchewan   Established  over  30  years\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES.   BICYCLES\nSTILL A FEW\nCHOICE BUYS\nIN USED CARS '\nPEEBLES\nMOTORS LIMITED\n153 Baker St. Phone IU\nNELSON, B. C.\nSPECIAL BUY: 1934 INTERNA,\ntional light delivery. Firit clasi\ncondition. Good tires. Very reason\nably priced. Queen City Motori,\nNelson.\nWE CARRY A COMPLETE STOCK\nol International truck parti, Centra! Truck and Equipment Co.Ph\n100.   702 Front St, Nelion.\nGOOD   \u2022\nTRANSPORTATION\n'41 PONTIAC SEDAN\n'39 CHEVROLET COACH\n'30 FORD CONVERTIBLE\n'30 CHEVROLET COACH\nSKY CHIEF\nAuto Service\nNelson, B. C.\nFOR SALE: 1935 CHEV, %-TON\ntruck. $375. Cash. Apply Shorty's\nRepair Shop, 714 Baker Si.\n1929 DURANT, GOOD TIRES. Ll\ncc_sed.' $100. Kootenay Motors\n'Nelson) Ltd.\nNEW   &   USED   SNOW   CHAINS,\nNelson Auto Wreckers. Vernon St,\nGenerators and springs\nCITY   AUTO   WRECKERS\nFOR  SALE  MISCELLANEOUS\nV; '    '   ' *     \u25a0       \u25a0 '     ,... ,-        .    -*\n\u2022r \u25a0        .;.        .      .,  .,;  .'\u2022   , \u2022' \u25a0__*._'_*__..\nClassified  Advertising\nA     Look Down These Want Ad Columns for Bargains    A\nShips Sunk OH\nCoast of Tunisia\nCAH.O, Dec. 4 (APl-AllleS aircraft, continuing their attacks on\nGerman supply linei In the Mediterranean, have lunk two more merchant ships in an attack on a Southbound convoy off the coait of Tu-\nnliia, I Brltiih communique announced today.\nThe sinkings took place Wednesday night, and coincided with heavy\naerial attacks upon Biaerte and Tunis, where hits were scored on fuel\nitorage tanki, docki and workshops.\nAUled long range tighten _lmul-\ntaneously attacked a Southbound\ntrain near Gabes, Tunisia.\nThe Mine night, heavy and medium Allied bombari flew icroii tne\nMediterranean to smash at the Axil\nairfield at Cmdia, Crete, when they\nitarted many flrei.\nAn Allied long-range fighter wai\nreported to have attacked an enemy destroyer off the North African\ncoast, but the results apparently\nwere uncertain.\nDespite the scope of the Allied\naerial operations only one plane waa\nlost. Two German planei -were ihot\ndown.\nCarloadings Gain\nOTTAWA, Dec. 4 (CP)\u2014Carloadings ln Canada for the week ended\nNov. 28 totalled 71,288 cars igilnst\n70',260 the previous week and 69,097\nin the week ended Nov. 29, 1941,\nthe Dominion Bureau of Statistics\nreported today.\nThe index was 143.4 against 136.7\nand 140.9.\nLoadings In the Eaitern division\ntotalled 43,049 can compared with\n45,747 and 45,734 while Weitern division loadings were 26,239 against\n14,513 and 23,363.\nCHRISTMAS GREETING CARDS\nfor Overseas mailing, made from\nyour own negatives 75c per doz. 2\ndoz. 135 complete with envelopes\nSend your orders NOW. You will\nlike our Superior Photographic\nCraftmanship yo_r films and\nprints ara properly processed\nCompare them wi'.h those you now\nhave Any 6 or 8 exposure film developed and printed 25c. or 12 reprints 35c. Enlargement made\nfrom your own negatives 5x7\n15c, 2 for 25c or framed in an attractive leatherette easel frame\neasy to mail, no glass to break,\nand an ideal Gilft to anyone Overseas 5x7 size special 45c 3 for\n$1 20 or 3% x 54 nze special 29c\n3 for 79c Your films receive proper care and attention Mail tnem\nwith confidence To SUPERSNAH-\nSHCTS, PO BOX 2909 WINNIPEG     TRY IT\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY  AND\nFARM SUPPLIES. ETC.\nGOATS FOR SALE: CHEAP OR\nwill put out on shares. Box 790\nDaily News.\nHEAVOORSES FOR LOGGING,\nfarm and saddle at Perry Siding\nF. Hlookoff. Castlegar. B.C\nFOR SALE- YOUNG HORSES FOR\nwork of all kinds. Abey _ Ranch\nMirror Lake.\nROPERTY. HOUSES. FARMS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy it-rms in Alberta and\nI Saskatchewan Write lor full in-\nj formation to 008 Dept ol Natural\nj R-sourcos CPR. Calgary Alia\n\\ SMALL RANCirAND^STORE ON\ni    Nelson-Trail Highway. Apply Box\n629 Dally News.\nTA   WHITFIELD. __AL _STA it\nnnd Insurance 417 Hall SI  Nelson\n(Eljnfitmtta\nDon't Put Off\nOrdering Them\nPHONE\n144\nOur Representative Will\nCall With Samples\nGET THEM PRINTED WITH\nYOUR NAME AND ADDRESS\nNelson Daily\nNews\nPRINTING DEPT.\nWRITE FOR SAMPLE OF OUR\nnew payroll and time iheet. They\nare essential lo every line of business today. Daily News Printing\nDept., Nelson, B.C.\nELECTRIC WASHER, DINETTE\ntable and 4 chairs. Crib, double\nbed, steel folding cot, mats. Apply .10 Silica St.\n1 METAL SINGLE BED COM\nplete In good condition. Cheap\n122 Douglas Road or Ph. 780-Y.\nSAVE FURNACE WORK\nand WORRY\nWonderful opportunity to buy\nautomatic coal stoker. Practically good as new iVIll lave\n' 23\u2122 on coal bill and give more\nheating efficiency than hand\nstoking. Requires no expert attention. Operates automatically\nwith thermostatic control. Ideal\nfnr any house furnace Bargain\nat $200 In storage ready for\ndemonstration and installation.\nD. L. KERR\nNelson\nPIPE \u25a0 FITT1NOS - TUBES - SPE-\ncial low prices Active Trading Co\n916   Powell   SI    Vancouver    BL\nFOR  SALE:   CHILD'S  SKATES  St\nbools. Size 12. Pract. new. Ph. 210\nVANCOUVER\nSTOCKS\nMINES\nBralorne .... \t\n650\n7.00\nCariboo Gold\t\n.83\n1.00\nGold Belt \t\n.12\n.14 Vi\nGrandview \t\n.12\n.14\nH:dley Mascot\t\n.38\n.30\nIsland Mount\t\n.63\n.75\nKootenay Belle   ...\n.19\n\u2014\nMcGillivray  _\n.18\n.20'*\nPend Oreille\t\n1.02\n1,10-\nPioneer Gold \t\n1.10\n1,17\nPrem Gold \t\n.54\n.5(1\nPrivateer \t\n.28\n.32\nReevei MacDonald\n.28\n\u2014\nReno Gold\t\n_.%\n,08\nSheep Creek \t\n,81\n.83\nSilbak Prem ...\n.55\n\u2014\nWhitewater\t\n.0,1\n,03 *_\nYmir Yankee Girl\n.00\n_7\nOIL!\nAnglo Canadian   ..\n.44\n-\nA P Cons    \t\n.07%\n\u2014\nBritish Dom  _\n21V,\n.23\"\nCalgary tc Ed\t\n1.11\n1.13\nCommoll        \t\n.14\n\u2014\nCommonwealth   ....\n.2(1\n.23\nDalhousie      \t\n.21\n\u2014\nFoothills   \t\n.75\n\u2014\nHighwood Sarcee ..\nm_\n\u2014\nHome\t\n2.35\n2 45\nMill City\t\n.06 Vt\n.07\nModel\t\n.21\n.22\nNat Pete\t\n__\n\u2014\nOkalta Com \t\n31\n.33\nPacific Pete \t\n.21\n.25\nRoyalite \t\n20.00\n\u2014\nSpooner     \t\n.04 Vi\n\u2014\nSouthwest Pete \t\n.16\n\u2014\nUnited    _.\nJOt\n\u2014\nVanalta    \t\n.04'.\n\u2014\nVulcan ....'.\t\n,07\n\u2014\nPioneer Cold\nPostpones\nRegular Dividend\nVANCOUVIR, Dec. 4 (CP) -\nPioneer Gold Minei announced today that it would not pay lta regular dividend next January becauie\nof the uncertainty ot the labor iltuation.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Dec. i (CP)-Cattle\n261. calvel 7, hogi 127, iheep IU.\nChoice butcher steers 19.26-10.30\nmedium' to good (.60-10. Oood to\nchoice butcher helfen 9.38-9.75;\ncommon to medium 8-0.\nGood cowi 7.50-8, common to medium .-7, canners and cutters 4-9.30.\nHoga yesterday\u2014lJ.U tor Bl yards\nand plants, sows 10.10-10.29, live\nweight yards, 11-12.90 dressed yardi\nand plants. Good Iambi 10.25-10.83\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, Dec; 4 (CP)-Butter\nQue. 38.i, Eggs, Eaite__ A-large\n50, A medium 48, A pullets 49, E-B\n42, E-C 40.\nFuturei-Butter, Dec. 38*4, Jan.\n37V., Feb. 38, March 38%, eggs, Dec,\n49.\nNELSON  DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY,  DIC. 5,  1942\u20148\n$30 Million Paid in\nSubsidies to\nKeep Prices Stable\nWINNIPEG CRAIN\nWINNIPEG, Dec. i (CP)-Grain\nfutures quotations:\nOpen   High   Low   Close\nWHEAT:\nDec    SO       90        M       90\nMay     93%    93%    93%    93%\nOATS:\nDec     45       \u2014       \u2014       \u00ab\nMay       47%    -       -       47%\nJuly       -       -       -        481.\nBARLEY:\nDec    80       -       -       80\nMay     62%    -       -       83%\nRYE:\nDec    \u2014       \u2014       \u2014       83\nMay   ...    65       65V*    64%    84%\nWHEAT: 1 hard 90%; 1 Nor., 90%;\n3 Nor., 87; 3 Nor., 84; 4 Nor., 83;\n5 wheat 79; 6 wheat 77; feed wheat\n76; l Garnet 83%; 3 Garnet 84%; 3\nGarnet 84; 1 Amber Durum 92.\nOATS: 2 C.W. 45; ex. 3 C.W. 42%;\n3 C.W. 43; ex. 1 feed 42; l.feed 40%;\n2 feed 39%; 3 feed 38%.\nBARLEY: 1 St 2 C.W. 6 row 84%;\n1 _ 2 C.W. 3 row H*.; 8 C.W. 6\nrow 58; 1 feed 56; 3 feed 55; 3 feed\n54.\nRYE: 2 C.W. 6>.\nPETS. CANARIES, BEES. ETC.\nIRISH     SETTERS. \"MAHOGANY\ncoated aristocrats. ARDEE KENNELS, Waldhelm. Saik.\nMINING PROPERTIES\nFOR LEASE: NO. 3 AND NO. 3\nleveli California Mine. Ph. 855-R\nor call at 253 Baker Street.\nMONTREAL     STOCKS\nINDUSTRIALS\nAssoc Brew of Can _  14%\nCan Car St Fdy  27\nCan Celanese pfd   130\nCan North Power    6%\nCan Steamship pfd \u2014 30\nCon Min Sc Smelting _  37\nDom Steel Sc Coal B   8%\nDom Textile _,... 71\nFoundation C of C  _ 15%\nGatineau power pfd  76\nH Smith Paper pfd   96\nMcColl. Frontenac \u2014  6%\n... 33\n... 13%\n,.' 16\n... 12\n10%\nNat Brew Ltd . \t\nQue Power\t\nShawnigan W & P \u2014\nSt Law Corji pfd \t\nSouth Cen Power   \t\nSteel of Can pfd  \t\nBANKS\nCommerce \t\nDominion \u2014\t\nImperial\t\nMontreal \t\nNova Scotia  \t\nRoyal   ..\t\nToronto\t\nOTTAWA, Dec. 4 (CP)- Total\nsubsidies paid through the Price\nStability Corporation since Inception of the over-all price ceiling in\nCanada Dec. 1, 1941, are roughly\n$30,000,000, Hector McKinnon, Corporation Chairman announced at a\nPreu conference today.\nMr. McKinnon made the announcement ai reporters assembled in the\noffice of Finance Mlnlster41iley who\nlait night announced a program of\nsubsidies to stabilize the cost-\nof-living Index. This new program,\nincluding tax revisions wi\" cost\n$40,000,000 a year addition to previous lubsidy commitments which so\nfar have cost $3,000,000.\nMr. McKinnon said the subsidy\ndemands had been heaviest during\nthe last five months, due largely to\nincreases in shipping costs on imported articlei. Subsidy payments\non domestic items\u2014including butter, leather garments, footwear, and\nsimilar Items\u2014amounted to about\n$13,000,000. \u2014\nIncluded ln the domestic subsidy\npayments have been allcwances to\nencourage butterfat production under a program announced during the\nSummer.\nMr. McKinnon said that recently\ngasoline imports had required iub\nstantial subsidy paymenti becaus'\nof higher shipping costs. These pay\nincuts went mainly to the shippini\ncompanies engaged In transport .\nCanada of petroleum products.\nMr. lUley said that during the la_\nseaslon of the House he had ex\nplained the difficulty ol eatimatint\nwhat the total subsidy pavmentl\nover a long period might be.\nHe had given an estimate of $90,\n000,000 In a year, but had Indicateo\nthen that the sum might rise aa higll\nas $100,000,000 or more. \u2022\nIn face of the danger of a rising\nspiral of inflation, the Miniiter said\nhe had been prepared to considet\npaying even larger amounts to con*\ntrol the cost of living.\nDonald Gordon, Prices Board\nChairman said it was difficult to\nestimate the monthly cost of subsid*\nies, tince changes were brought on\nby varying situations which had te\nbe met.\nMr. Gordon said about $900,000,001\nhad been apent on subsidies by tht\nUnited Kingdom.\nNBW   YORK   STOCKS\nAm Smelt Sc Ref ..    37%\nAmer Tobacco    41%\nAnaconda       33%\nBendlx Aviation   '34\nBeth Steel   54%\nCanadian Pacific _  6%\nChrysler  66\nDupont ._   130%\nEastman Kodak   145%\nGen Electric   29\nGen Motori     42\nInter U'ckel  _.... 28\nKenn Copper  _  27%\nPhillips Pete    42%\nRadio dorp  _ 42%\nRadio Corp .._   _ 4%\nClan Oil of N J    43%\nTexas Gulf Sul    35%\nUnion Carbide     76%\nUnion Pac  _.v_  79\nU. S. Rubber _ _ 24%\nU S Steel   46%\nWARNS U. S. MORE\nRATIONING SOON\nNEW YORK, Dec. _ (AP)-TM\npeople of the United States today\nhad it straight from Leon Henderson, Price Administration ' boss,\nthat they could expect ln 1943 rationing of more ltema\u2014including\nclothing and food\u2014and punishment\nof flagrant rationing violators.\nCrack Russ Shot\nBags 354 Huns\nMOSCOW, Dec. 4 (AP)-ItedJ,.\nStar iaid today that 300 Sorl^i^\nrifle experti on the Kalinin front\nhid killed 14,000 Germani, the molt '\nlucceuful being Sergeant Yeiakdv, .\nwho bagged 354.\nThe article did not lay over what\nlength of time thli happened, nor\nhow the deathi were all confirmed.\nDOW JONES AVERACES\n30 Industrials\n20 rails \t\n15 utilities   ....\nHigh Low Close Change\n115.32 114.41 115.02 off     ll\n27.11 26.76 26,82 off     .17\n13,85 13.68 13.75 off    .06\nTJloAkt JwidL\n127\n141\n197\n140\n222%\n126%\n210\nLONDON, Dec. 4 (AP) - South\nAmerican railroad iharea were\nstrong in today'i itock mirket In\ncontrast with easier tendenclea tn\nmost other sections.\"\nIndustrials, oils, home rails, rubber! and kaffirs turned ln an indifferent performance on the whole\nwith activity generally light ln all\ndepartments.\nNEW YORK-Buying of either\nwar or peace stocki subsided and\nToronto Stock Quotations\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor iron. Any quantity Top pricei\npaid. Active Trading Company.\n918  Powell  St..  Vancouver.   B.C\nLUMBER WANTED. PLANED,\n(boards, shiplap or dimension!\nIn carload lots. Write Royal Lumber Yards Lid., Calgary, Alta.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecill Low Ritei for noncommercial advertisement, under thli claanficltlon lo assist\npeople seeking employment\nOnly 23c lor one week 16 dlyil\ncoven nnv number ol required\nlinei Pnyuble in advance Ado\n10c  if  box  number  UelireU.\n150  IT. 2-IN. IRON PIPES. PRAC\nnew.  E.  Bergstrom,  Granite  Rd\nFoiriALE:  PIANO ~IN IXC ELL\ncond . Home  Funlture  Exchange.\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\n11 you find anything telephone\nThe Daily News A \"Found\" Ad\nwill be Inserted without eon to\nyou We wlll collect from thi\nowner\nFOUND: LADY'S SWEATER ON\nVernon SI. on Wednesday. Apply Dally Newi.'\nSfalHOtt Eatly Npwh\nTelephone 144\nTrail Circulation: Phone 1378-R\nClassified Advertising Rates\nlie per line per insertion\n44c per line per week (6 coniec-\nutlve Insertions for cost of 4)\n$1.43 a line a month (26 tlmesl\n(Minimum 2 lines per Insertion).\nBox number lie extra.. This\ncoven any number of times.\nPUBLIC NOTICES, TENDERS.\nETC.\n18c per line, first lniertion ind\nltc  eich  subsequent  insertion.\nALL    ABOVE    RATES    LESS\n10*. FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSPECIAL LOW RATES\n!    Non commerclil situation \u25a0\nI    Wanted for 25o for iny required\nnumber  of  lines  for  ilx   dayi\npayable In advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle Copy .... $   .03\nBy carrier, per week   . 35\nBy carrier, per year .....    1300\nBy mall:\nOne month     $   .79\nThree monthi       2.00\nSix monthi       _..    4.00\nOne year       ...      . 800\nAbove ratei ipply in Cinada\nUnited Stitei ind United Kingdom lo lubtcrlberi living outiide regular carrier arm\nElie.vhere an,! lo CinaOa where\nextra nonage il required one\nmonth II 50: three mon hi 84 00;\n\u25a0li months 1800: one veer $19.\nAnglo-Huronian ..     2.55\nBase Metals Mining  _      .08\nBidgood Kirkland  0B%\nBobjo Mines       .07%\nBuffalo Ankerite _      1.41\nCan   Malartic      _ .\u00bb      .40\nCentral   Patricia       .71\nChromium M Sc S    .._      2.55\nCoait   Copper         1.00\nConiaurum Mines   _..      .65\nConsolidated M 4 S     36.75\nEast Milartlc          1.09\nFalconbridge Nickel      3.40\nGod's  Lake Gold 12\nHard Rock Gold       .43\nHollinger     8 05\nHudion Bay M Sc S  _.   26.00\nInternational Nickel    32 00\nKerr-Addison     4.25\nLike Shore Minei       9.50\nLamaque Contact  _ -    3.60\nLeitch Gold       ..       .59\n.85\n.140\n,36\n1S8\n.42.00\n.69\n112\nSt\nU..9\n.70\n..VI\n72\nIM\n.f-\nI *\\\n.65\n2d\n140\n.55\n116\n171\n.55\n4 111\n335\nLittle Long Lac       \t\nMacLeod Cockshutt'..   .\nMadsen Red Lake Gold\nMiiirtic Gold\nMclntyre-Porcuplne\t\nMcKenile Red Lake \t\nMining  Corporition  _\t\nNlplsslng Mining _ _\nNorenda   ..\n\\ Normeial _.\nPamour Porcupine \t\nPerron  Oold \t\nI Pickle Crow Gold \t\nPowell Rouyn Gold \t\ni San Antonio Gold \t\nSherritt Gordon  _\nSiscoe  Gold       \t\nSladen  Malartic\t\nSudbury Bailn ....\nSullivan   Consollited   __\nSylvinlte  \t\nTeck-Hughm  Gold  \t\nToburn Gold Minei ._\t\nVentures\nWright   Hirgreivei   ....\nOILS\nBritish Amerlcin \u201e.\nImperial   .. \u2014\nInter Petroleum      i\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power\t\nBell   Telephone\t\nBrewen & Di_rt ...\nB C Power A\t\nCan Car St Fdy\t\nCan Malting\n  %\n  33\n........ 7%\n  36%\nCan Pacific Rly    8\nCan Ind Alcohol A  4\nDominion Bridge ._..._.  33%\nDom Tar & Chem' _ _.... i.\nDlstiUen Seagrafllj    37\nFord of Canada   30\nGoodyear Ire _  65\nHamilton Bridge  -,. 4%\nImperial Tobacco _ - 11\nKelvinator               8\nMontreal PoweT  23%\nNitS:eclCar  31\nPower Corp  _  5%\nSteel of Can _ _  60\nleaden generally ihlfted to Irregularly lower levels.\nIn the final hour, declinei of fractions to a point or so were plentiful.\nTORONTO - Industrial \"stocki\nmoved up to \u2022 new high for the\nyear.\nMONTREAla\u2014After consistent improvement from the beginning of\nthe week issues turned reactionary\nIn trading up to the final hour today.\nInternational Nickel was harder\nin metals and Consolidated Smelters was down.\nVANCOUVER - Stock market\nprices held firm this morning and\ntrading was active.\nWINNIPEG-Total rales of wheat\nfutures aggregated only 200.000\nbushels. Prices cloied unchanged,\nthe December it 90 centa a bushel\nmd  the  Miy  93%.\nCoarse grain dealingi were featured by the isle of 1,000,000 buiheli of oata futures.\nCHICAGO\u2014Buying of contract*\nspecifying delivery of wheat before\nthe end of this month rallied the\nwheat market today. Earlier there\nwaa a show of weakneas following\nword that the celling on flour had\nbeen extended, without upward revision it iome traden expected.\n17(15\n111 80\n[6.00\nHunters - Fishermen!\nSnapshots of Came and Fish In\nKootenay District Will Be Welcomed for The Daily News Annual\nPictorial Edition\nPlease Send Prints or Negatives to\nPhoto Editor. They Will Be Carefully Handled and Promptly Returned.\nNflamt latlij Nntta\n.-__\u25a0\n,\n r\n11 **mm\n10-NIUON DAILY NIWS, SATURDAY, DK. 5, 1942\nCIVICTHEATRE BOOKINGS DECEMBER\n\u2022:' '\" Oeo. 7-8\n\"WILD BILL HICKOCK\n.    RIDES\"\n\"THE FALCON'S\nBROTHER\"\nbee Mo\nBANK  NIGHT\n\"MAISIE CETS HER\n* .MAN\"\n\"CLOSE CALL FOR\nELLERY QUEEN\"\n beeVH-IS\t\n\"CHARLEY'S AUNT\"\nwith JACK BENNY\nDec. 14-15      ,\n\"THE BIG SHOT\"\n'THIS WAS PARIS\"\n'     Dec. 16-17\nBANK  NIGHT\n\"HER CARDBOARD\nLOVER\"\n\"MAN AT LARGE\"\n~\" Dec. 18-16   '\n\"MOSCOW STRIKES\nBACK\"\n\"A HAUNTING Wf WILL\nCO\"\n*    Dec 21-22\n\"MY FAVORITE SPY\"\n\"MAN WHO RETURNED\nTO LIFE\"\nDeo. 23-24\nBANK NIGHT\n\"SUICIDE   SQUADRON\n\"AFFAIRS OF MARTHA\"\nDeo. 25-26\n\"THE GAY SISTERS\"\nwith\nBARBARA STANWYCK\nOEORGE BRENT\nGERALDINE FITZGERALD\nDeo. 28-29\n\"YANK AT ETON\"\nwith      '\nMICKEY ROONEY\nDio. 30\nBANK NITE\n\"CALLINC DR.\nGILLESPIE\"\nHENRY AND DIZZY\nDeo. 31-Jan. 1-2\n\"SPRINGTIME IN THE\nROCKIES\"\nwith\nBETTY QRABLE\n\u2022   JOHN  PAYNE ,\nNEW YEAR'S EVE\nJAMBOREE THURS., DEC.\n31, 12:00 MIDNIGHT\nSubject to change without notice.\u2014Cut out for reference.\n|uit Arrived...\nThe flneit bt of\nRUBENSTEIN\nTOILETRIES\nthit wi have ever ihown.\nMann. Rutherford\nDRUG CO.\nMisi Hammer Suffers\nConcussion\nin Foil From Sleigh\nInjured in i till from i sleigh.\nMill Evelyn Hammer, daughter ol\nMf. ind Mrs. E. 0. Hammer, 020\nThird Street, il I patient tn Kooteniy Like General Hoipltil recovering trom thi effects ot a slight\nconcussion. The young woman, who\nwu injured Thursday evening, wu\nsaid Frldiy night to be doing well.\nMin Hammer was flung trom the\nsleigh, on which the md her litter\nJem were coasting down Elwyn\nStreet, when'the tied itruck \u25a0 pott\nneir the Nelion Avenue Intersection. 'She struck her held on the\nhard surface ot the roid, ind wit\nunconsciout for tome time liter\nbeing taken to the Hospital.\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\nW. _ THOMPSON, Prop.\nDay md Night Service.\n24 Hour Ambulance Service\n816 Kooteniy St        Phone 311\nsst&&ts$ss&&&s&seststoss!sv%x,\nHivt the Job Dont Right\nSee\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFHONE 815\nX&&!*S$&S&SSS&\n_\u00bbaWX\u00bbWX\nVSSJO-VX-\nBargilm In thi Claitlfled\nGRENFELL'S\n.  ioast younc turkey\nWith steam pudding\nTODAY\nTry i Wint Ad.\nPut ln \u25a0 Full Sized Grocery\nOrder it\nLAKESIDE SERVICE\nPhone 485       W. O. Armitrong\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0I\nMeet Your Old Fishin' Friends\nat tho\nQyro Trout Derby Banquet\nWednesday, Dee. 9 at 6:15\nTRINITY CHURCH BASEMENT\nTicket! It Hippenon'i, Wood, Villince, Minn, Rutherford,\n\u2022nd Fleury's\u201475o.\n\"CARELESS\" Today\n\"CAR-LESS\" Tomorrow\nwe are\n,   CAR-SAVER\nSPECIALISTS     ' ,\nCuthbert Motors Ltd.\nOpp. Hume Hotel ind Pott Office\nNews of the Day\nDancing every Siturdiy Night\nEAGLES-Populir Prlcei\nToyi,  DoU'l  Houses,  Beds,   etc\nmide to order. 923 Gordon Rd.\nGet your fllmi also developing\ndom at VALENTINE'S.\nEXCEL8IOR   CLUB   BAZAAR\nTODAY   '\nIl your ironer operating latlsfac-\ntory? Ph. 91 for trained lervlceman.\nSee the ihow of Chrlitmu chocolate boxei it VALENTINE'S.\nFor Site Furniture Moving\nPh. 108 WILLIAM.' TRANSFER\nFirm for nil. 9 ac. cleared. 47\nIn  timber.  Blackwood  Agency.\nXMAS GIFT SUBSCRIPTIONS\nOder nqw it Bishop's Newt Stand\nOpp. Dally Newi.\nGet your Chrlstmu Trie Llghti\nnow. Complete strings or extra bulbi\nWOOD, VALLANCE HDWE. Co. Lt\nROTARY\nLuncheon Mondiy, Dec. 7, 12:15 p.m,\nHume Hotel, Ed Kelter, speaker.\nARE YOU' ON THE MUNICIPAL\nVoters'. Lltt? Enquire it Mann'i\nCommittee Roomi, or Phone 884.\nAVOID CHRISTMAS RUSH1\nMake your appointment NOW,\nPh. 317, ROSE BEAUTY PARLOUR\nYour Permanent deserves the Beit\nFuller Bristle Comb will do the\ntrick. Ph. 617-L your Dealer.\nAT THE RINK TODAY\n9 to 12 a.m. Junior Hockey.\n2 to 4 p.m. Children's Skating.\nBadminton racquets reitrung md\nrepaired. Skates sharpened by NEL\nSON'8   EXPERT,  H.  R.  KITTO.\nBEST FOR FURNACES\nGREENHILL\nWashed Furnace Coal\n$11.00 PER TON\nBURNS\nJ LUMBER 6L COALC0.l_\nMann's\nProgressive\nPlatform\nCo-operation ta th* full wird ill memberi of Hit\nCity Council.\nTill opportunity for ill Department headi to UM\nl+eir Inltiitivi to tha fulleit extent 10 thit our City\nOfficei, our Enjincorinn Depirtmint, our Fir* Dopirt-\nmont, our Elcctrc.l Department, ind all worken for th*\nMunicipality will co-openfi to fivi Nelion th* efficient\n\u2022ervice thst li essential to \u2022 careful ind economic operation of ill ulilitici.\nMann for Mayor\nMann's Campaign Committee\nSugar Bowl\nGrocery\nFancy Grocerlli it Attractive\nPricei\nFree Delivery Phone 110\nSAUSAQE: Fresh, smill,    jCt\nRAW HAM: Fresh MjM\nsliced, Ib. *W\nBOLOGNA: Fresh ytA\nillced, Ib -**\nDAD'S COOKIE8: \u00a3(<_\nPkt  .v ******\nBUTTER: The flneit     *|_2Q\nGlen-ale, 3 lbl.     Y*******\nCHEESE: Goldenloif,        \u00a3MA\n2 Ib. box ****>\nORANGE MARMALADE: *PA\nI lbl.  ******\nPORK and BEAN8: Van Cimpe,\nlarge life, _ym*\n.for \"\"**\nPOTTED MEATS: _\\C__\nHedlund'i, 3 for  **\u2022**\nECONOMY CAP8: 4JM\nAPPLE9: Wagenert or      _\\At\\\nSpies, 7 lbl.  *.. ******\nPUREX TISSUE: Af*A\n1 rolls  - .**-**\nKLEENEX: 2i_\nBOO siie, pkt. ***>\nCURRANTS: JM\nCHERRIES: -ytt*\n'\/,1b. pkt.  ******\nFRESH CUT PEEL: oqA\nPURE LARD: __OA\n11b. cartons, 2 for *\u00b0T\nGRAPEFRUIT: Large        A*A\nTexai, 4 for        Mf\nGRAPES: Freih stock,      ]M\n2 Ibi,    -***.\nPOTATOES: Flneit getA\nGems, 17 lbs. *****\nSALMON: Fancy Pink,      ft*.\n1 ib. tlna *****\nFreth  Vegetablei,  Fruiti, Clket\n\u2022nd Burn. Fresh Milk ind Creim.\nH. A. Saundera, chimney sweep.\nEntire systems tm to (3. Ph. 90. Leaving Dec. 17, 'back ln Spring.\nYou ire tun to enjoy uy mm of\nthen dlihet. Almond or Wilnut\nChop Suey, Boiled or tried noodles,\nmandarin style soup. CHUNGKING\nCROP  SUEY  t*  COFFEE   SHOP.\nEverything for washday\u2014Celling\ndrien, folding Ironing boards, sleeve\nboards, clothei hone; adjustable\ncurtain stretchers, ironing boird\nmats md covin, ltc. ,\n-HIPPE-BON'S-\nIN MEMORIAM\nIn loving memory ot Wllllim Vicken Dawney who pined iway Dec.\n5th, 1940. Ever remembered by hit\n-wife ind- little daughter.\n21 Christmas\nHampers So\nFar, Rossland\nROSSLAND, B.C., Dec. 4-At 1\nmeeting of the Rossland Community Chert tonight it was itated by\nMn. Fraser Mitchell thet 10 far 21\nfamilies were registered for Christmas hampert.\nMr. and Mn. A. F. O. Drike volunteered to supervise Boy Scout end\nGirl Guide repair work on toyi.\nEach ls to be wrapped, ready for\ndelivery tor the 27 children lilted.\nIt wat decided to aak achool principals to appeal to itudenti for\ntoyi.\nGifta ot cinned goodi and canned\nfruit had been promlied by a number of church circles for the hampers, lt wai reported. The Community\nChert voted to ipend up to $50 ft\nhampers If needed.   ,\nLatt year 29 hampers were given,\nBishop, Campbell\nBack From U.C.L.A\nGoto Air Force\nOeorge Biihop tnd Howird\nCampbell, popular Nelion youthi\nwho lor over three yetn have it-\ntended the Univenity ot California\nit Loi Angelu, Ifter 1 one-day\nvisit here left Thundiy morning\nfor the Royil Cinadiin Air Force\nmanning depot it Edmonton. Both\nhave enlisted tor tir crew.\nBishop, well known In Nelson\niporti, visited hli mother, Mn.\nH. J. Bishop, while here; while\nCampbell, who was equally active\nIn iport, viaited hii uncle md aunt,\nMr. md Mn. D. D. Towniend, ind\nhit ilater, Mn. J. E. Reid. The\ntwo left Nelton for Cillfomli In\nSeptember, 1939, i\"l thli wu their\nfirst viiit home since thtt time.\nBOMB NAZI FIRM\nVALPBAISO, Chile, Dec. 4 (AP.)\n\u2014Two bombi exploded todiy ln the\nAT THE RINK TOMORROW\n12:30 to 2 p.m. Figure Skating Club\n3 to 3 p.m. Skating Clufc.\nBEGIN now to have your lolled\nclothing laundered the modern, efficient way at the CRY8TAL LAUNDRY. Juit Phone 75 for the Driver.\nRenwlck't portraits are the Real\nChristmas Gift. Rates are reasonable, Photographs perfect. 562 Baker Street\nRemember distant friendi with\nflowers. Order Early and save Telegraph charges. KOOTENAY FLOWER SHOP-Ph. 9fli\nWALL FINISHES\nKalotex. 5 lb. pkg 70c\nVelio, 5 lb. pkg $1.33\nBURNS LUMBER _ COAL CO.\nWhy In the world did I not come\ntb you long ago; is an expression\nI hear many times every day. Dr.\nW. Brock,  (Chiropractor) Ph. 959.\nCRAWFORD'S\n551 Ward \u2014 DELIVERY - Ph. 264\nCheese, pound SOc\nMacaroni, 5 pounds  83c\nChriitmas papeteriet and stationery, ithe ideal gift D. W. McDerby,\n\"The Stationer and Typewriter\nMan\", 654 Baker .St, Nelson.\nDry Cleaning Is a muit on your\nXmaj shopping Ult, only 17 more\ncleaning days till Xmas. So please\nshop early. Phone 1042 send It now\nfor delivery anytime befdre Xmas\nHave you a typewriter or adding\nmachine for which you have no further use? I will pay highest market\nprice for any standard or portable\ntypewriter or adding machine. D.\nW. McDerby, \"The Stationer ind\nTypewriter Man\", 654 tfaker Street\nNelion, B.C.\nWhen Guests Arrive\nAnd the Tea or\nCoffee Ration ii\nrunning low \u2014\nYou'll Always Please\nThem With a Snack\nPlus a Bottle of. . .\nColumbia\nLager\nBeer ot Its Beit\nKOOTENAY\nIREWIRIES\nLIMITED\nPhis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquo-\nControl Board or by the Government of British Colombia\nFleury's Pharmacy\nCompounded\nPrescriptions\nAccunfely\nMed  Arts Blk\nPHONE 25\nONLY THE BEST IN\nHOOD'S\nFRUIT CAKES\n\u2022Tm going to hive my\nhair fixed differently\nit\nHai_h Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327\nJohnstone Block\nBright, newly decorated 4-room flat,\ndole In, Ph. 358R. Annable Block.\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCOMPANY LIMITED\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^3^^^^3^3^^^3^3^S|^:\nPlan the\nGIFTS\nFor the Home\nand Family\nTONICHT\nTHEY ARE THE\nMOST IMPORTANT\n,     ON YOUR\nLIST.\nSee Our Selection of...\nEnglish Chinaware\nDINNERWARE SETS, 32-piece, $10.50 to $25.20\nBREAKFAST SETS, 32-piece ... .$6.75 to $12.00\nCUPS AND SAUCERS, Dainty designs, up from fl.OO\nVASES, BOWLS, of unsual beauty, f 1.25 to f 2.20\nTTitnii-TiTWir_irrrriirTrmriirtitiiitimiiiiiiiii\u00bbiiii__wiiiMiiii\nChristmas Toys\nWOODEN TRAINS   $2.50\nHOBBY AND ROCKING HORSES .. .f 1.20 to-f2.80\nTABLE TENNIS SETS  $4.00\nCHINA TEA SETS f2.75\nCONSTRUCTION TOYS  fl.OO to f2.25\nHeadquarters for Winter Sports Needs\nSKIS $1.40 to $13.00       C.C.M. OUTFITS $4.25 to $5.50\nBADMINTON RACQUETS, Slozengers' $9.00 to $15.00\nYOU'LL FIND HUNDREDS OF CIFT\nIDEAS IN OUR LARGE SELECTION\nWOOD, VALLANCE HARDWARE\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nMall Orden Will Receive Our Prompt Attention\nPhones 26,27 and 151 P.O. Drawer 500 Nelion, B.C.\nI\n\u25a0    .\n\u25a0+u__:_'i->.*=**\u25a0 .j. . J\u00a3.\n_____________*\nm-\n*     -\n\\\n\t\n\t\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_1942_12_05","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0415595","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"}]}}