{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0418304":{"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":"2022-08-11","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1945-12-06","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0418304\/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":" \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 *w\t\nGordiner Urges End to Trade Barriers,\nEstablishing of Industry Near Farm Areas\nI       By   GEORGE   KITCHEN\nB   Canadian Preu Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, Dec. 6 <CP)-__grlcul-\nture Minister Gardiner today told\nihe Dominion-Provincial Agricultural Conference that \"too little attention\" was being paid te war-induced trade barriers thst hamper\nagricultural production and restrict\nthe flow of farm products between\nCanada and the United States.\nAddressing the concluding session of the annual conference, Mr.\nQardlher said:\nI 'The future of agriculture requires\nfilet all these restrictions and arll-\nOeial levels be removed at the eerll-\nest possible date. In my opinion,\nfuture policies of production and\nmarketing should be governed by\nfha usumptlon thst they will be\nremoved.\nI \"Otherwise, what is the uss of this\nltlnent presuming to give leader-\nIp to the world on mutual assis-\ntee If we cannot come to one enter's lid on our own continent\nluse of artificial restrictions.\"\nDuring the three-day meeting\ndelegates, representing Federal and\nprovincial agriculture departments\ntad leading farm organizations, surveyed the entire field of Canadian\nagricultural production and made\niTecommendatlons on which, the Down's 1(146 food production pro-\nwill be based. .\nCANT MORE HOGS\nIALVES, BUTTER, MILK\nHere are the recommendations for\nobjectives for the main form\nlucts, with IMS production  ln\nicketa:\nGrain crops \u2014 wheat 23,414,100\n\u25a0eres (23,414,100); oats 14,310,200\n(14,393,200); barley 8,000,000 (7,350.-\n500); rye 487,100 (487,100); summer-\nallow (Prairies) 19,397,000 (10,397,-\nKX\u00bb; hay and clover (9,975,000).\n' Livestock marketings \u2014 Hogi 8,-\n148,000 head (.,900,000); cattle 1,-\n110,-00    (1,720,000);   calves   000,000\n(800,000); iheep and lambs 1,100,000\n(1.200,000).\nDairy products-Milk 17,900,000,-\n000 pounds (17,600,000,000); creamer; butter 310,000,000 (294,000,000);\nCheddar cheese 180,000,000 (183,290,-\n000).\nPoultry products\u2014Eggs 378,805,000\ndozen (395,019,000); poultry meets\n288,179,000 pounds (288,179,000).\nFruits\u2014Apples 12,500,000 bushels (7,416,000); psars 890,000 (ttt,.\n000); plums and prunei 460,000\n(346,000); psabhss 1,700,000 (1,496,-\n000); sherries. 300,000 (183,000).\nPotatoes and canning crops\u2014Potatoei 523,600 sires (507,600); beans\n7000 (8940); corn 40,000 (37,731);\npeas 37,000 (36,785); tomatoes 40,-\n000 (13,310).     '\nMiscellaneous\u2014Flaxseed 1,250,000\nseres (1,0(9,200); flue-cured tobacco\n85,000 acres (76,880); burley tobacco\n12,500 (10,185); maple syrup 2,730,000\ngallons (1,630,000); honey 43,038,000\n(-0,036,000).\nIn his references to trsde barriers,\nMr. Gardiner said these restrictions\nwere necessary during the war but\nif continued too far Into the peace\nwould create \"misunderstandings\nand hardships.\"\nCHIEF MARKETS OVER8IA8\nThese barriers, ssld Mr. Gardiner,\nhsd made trade between the two\ncountries \"absolutely Impossible\"\nHe expressed belief that Britain\nand the Western European countries would \"long remain the chief\nmarket of our surpluses\" and said\nhe was fled to note the conference\ndiscussions gave attention to production problems ss related to the\noverseu market.\nMr. Gardiner turned to the domestic situation end luggeited\nthat lnduitry be established In\nclose proximity te the farming\nartai ef the Weit and ths Marl-\ntimet te \"place hungry mouths\nclose to the producers rather than\n\u25a0 cross the ocem.\"\nUeSt Okays New Car\nprices to\nMeet Wage Boosts\nDETROIT, Dec. I (API-General Moton Corporation and the\nUnlttd Automobile Workers\nf (C.I.O.) agreed tonight ta reiume\nnegotiations, at the Governmer.'\nfluhed tht sute Industry s green\nlight te fix ntw car prices In lint\nwith wige Increases.\ngotlatlom en ell disputed points\nWill be resumed Thursday In Detroit between O.M. and tht U.A,\nW.-C.I.O.\n\"The corporation confirmed hit sn-\niounccment, adding today's unher-\nllded meeting st Pittsburgh, be-\n;ween compiny and union leaders,\nMd been kept lecret st the unlon'i\n\u25a0wt\nCONTRACT ENDED\nMeanwhile, the U.A W. and the\nChrysler Corporation broke off their\nnegotiations and ths working con.-\ntract terminated after both Sides\nrejected offers for its continuance.\nTwo federal concilia tori Mt in\nepnfi\nnegotiations which they ssld\nthey were not notified hed been\npostponed.\nH. W. Anderson, <_.M'Vtoe-Prei-\nldcnt in charge of persoostl, has\nnld settlement of Ihe picketing\ncomplaints might lead to renewed\nbargaining on the union's demand\nfor a 30-per-cent wage Increase.\nMr. Anderson wu not at hla office\nhere today..\nArtificial Ice for Creston\njw Year; Two Curling Sheets\nCRESTON. BC. Dec. 5 \u2014 Ivan artificial Ice and the preient build-\nspies, Preiident, and Frank ln8 will be lengthened to Install the\n... , , . brine tank and the compressor for\n..nlor executive official of ifrMJlnt   Wlh  ^   ^Mon  o(\ni Creston Curling Club, snnounc- (_\u00ab new pi,nt ,nd pip,  etC| Cres-\nriit .Creston would  hsve irtl- Iton will be the first B.C. town Eut\nIce by the new year. I of Kootensy Lake to have an arti-\n! day Tuesday, artificial Ice flclsl Ice curling'rink. Allowance\njineeri and offlclali viewed the for \u25a0 third sheet of ice, if necessary,\njllng Rink, looked at the com- hu been made ln building plani.\nasor recently purchased and fin- The annual meeting of the Creston\n' drew the blueprint of the new Curling Club will be held next\nIt will contain two sheets of I Tueiday night.\nformer Archbishop of\nCanterbury Dies.\u2014Page 6.\nTo Simplify Sugar,\nPreserves Rationing.\u2014fag* S.\nSecond Reading for\nEmergency Powers Bill.\u2014Page 7-\nHE'S FATHER OF 25 CHILDREN\nOmerlf Tsrdlf, 83, of Pleiilivllle, Que. a town of 4600, which\nholds the Canadian record tor large families, Tsrdlf li the most prolific, with 25 children. Here he shows hit second wife, mother of 16,\ns record of ths birth of the flnt child In 1882.\nToSeek End !\u2022 Discharges in B.C.\nNewCmmfHeetoMake Job Survey\nas Magna Carta\nfor World Trade\nLONDON, Dec, 6 (Thursday) (CP) \u2014 London morning\nnewspapers said today that the United States ond Great Britain\nhad concluded negotiations for* \"\na loan of $4,400,000,000 to   ipRhAUE (TD|KF\nAGREEMENT;\nMAYMEANVOTE\nBritain\nThe Dally' Herald, Labor, ln reporting that an agreement had been\nreached ln Washington on the loan,\nsaid repayment of the.loan will be\nover a 50-yeer period starting from\n1M8, but no Interest will be payable\nfor the first five years.\nDuring the remaining period, the\nHerald said, the rote of Interest will\nbe two per cent, or about (88,000,000\nfor the first yeer.\n\"MAGNA CARTA POR\nWORLD TRAOS\"\nThe Dally Sketch, the Dally Mail\nand the News Chronicle also published special dispatches from\nWashington and Ntw, York stating\nthat the loan agretmgat had been\nreached and that fonrtal snnounce-\nment would be msde todsy.\nThe Sketch iald the losn \"will\nSets Britain'! winter\" and termed\nths money s \"Mkgns Carta\" far\nworld trade,\"\nThe Dally Mall ssld \"s Jog hat\nbssn given to world trsds by the\ngreat deal.\"\nPLAN IND RE8TWCTIONS\nThe Mall said the long and detailed document, listing the terms of\nthe loan, lncludea.'a provision that\nBritain work towards a reduction of\nthe sterling debt and dissolution of\nthe dollar pooL fjiother provision,\nthe Mall ssld, was that Britain join\nwith the United Rates ln a long-\nrange plan to reduce tariffs and\neliminate quotas \u00bbed restrictions on\nworld trade.       ,\nAnother provision.of tht igreement, tht Dally Htrtld uld, callt\nfor Britlih iupport of tht Bretton\nWoeds International monetary\nftlMr\nfUte\noods,\nN. H-'fa Nfy, ltvUj called for\n.Jhmjtofii\nVANCOUVER, Dec. . (CP) -\nA committee authorized to take\nlarge-scale action In an attempt\nto solve Vancouver'i current un\nemployment criilt wai formed to-\nday at s conference of repreien-\nUtlvet of City Courrtll, libor,\nveterani and many other organizations.\nThe conference suggested tha\ncommittee made a cltjy-wlde survey of builnen and lnduitry to\nlocate Jobi for unemployed vet\ntram and civilian; and' alio ei\ntabl-ih a tub-committee to bring\npr f urt on thf Dominion Government to itop dlichirge In British\nColumbia of lervlce penonnel\nwho enliited outilde the Prov-\nInce.\nIt wai suggested that the subcommittee attempt to have mill-\ntary authorities freeze Industrial\nItave  until Jobt are found.\nTht suggestion, and tht Idta\nof a committee camt from Maj.-\nGen. Bert M. Hoffmeliter, a leader\nIn effortt to find work for- tx-\ntervicement.\nGen. Hoffmeliter told tht mtttlng thst the Ideal answer would\nbt to find Jobs for everyone, add-\nIng unlett thit li done, there will\nbe hardship and .suffering thit\nwinter,\nLtwli McDonald, representing\nths Vancouver Command of the\nCanadian Legion, criticized tridet\nunion for not giving full cooperation In veterini' rehabilitation,\nidding that veterani havt been\nrefuted Jobt bectute \"the unions'\nown men were on tht Kit ihead\nof thtm , . . (veterani) have no\ntenlorlty.\"\nWINDSOR, Ont, Deo. 5 (CP)\u2014\nNegotiating ind Policy Commit'\ntees of thi United Automobile\nWorktri of Amerlcs (C.I.O.) gsvs\nuninlmoui approval todiy to\nnew settlement proposal whloh\nmiy lead to \u2022 iccond union mem\nbershlp vote, It wu learned hers,\nTh\/ union ln s statement; said\nonly that both committees were\n\"unanimous In their decision\", but\nit was believed the decision Involved a new proposal to end the\n85-day union security strike et tthe\nFord Motor Company,\nThe new proposal ls ield to have\nbeen submitted to Labor ilintiter\nMitchell.\nThe shop stewards, who rejected\na Government settlement formula\nlast Wednesday and vtert supported\nby a membership vott the follow-'\ning day, are,to pass on the new\nunion plan within the nexLM hours.\nProm advices here. It If believed\nthe Government *U1 be urged to\nsupport the union in Its reported\nstand that negotiation and arbltra\ntion ahould start while, the men\n\u25a0till are on the picket lines.\nThe Government formula wsi for\nnegotiation and arbitration after the\nmen returned to work.\nAction of the two union committees has baited, temporarily at least,\ns movetr\/'district business and\nfenskmal men lo\nnrtrfbersnlp vf>t_i,\ntoday snd laid plans for ci\nintornrtloniT^s-SblllisSeTlfund   of | opinio.,   but   on   learning  of  the\n$MO0,O0O,OOO   with   the   following  union meetings it was decided to\nquotu  for major  powers:  United  withhold further steps until the ilt-\nStates, $2,780,000,000; Britain $1,300,-  \"'\" '\n000,000; Russia, $1,200,000,000: China\n$__0,0O0,O0; Trance $450,000,000; Canasta was asked to put up $300,000,-\n000).\nThe Herald expreued the opinion\nt'that til* new irrmgement will not\nprevent in expansion of trade Within the Commonwealth, but will enable the Dominions to make Immediate essential purchases in the\nUnited States.\"\nThe loan must be approved by\nCongress.\n4 Killed} 2 Missing\nin Coast Qakp, 26\non Missing Plane\nVANCOUVER,  Deo. 0   (CP)-\nFour rhen wen killed lut night\nand two fishermen were Itlll listed IS mining believed drowned,\ntonight from near-record gales\nthst swept Western Wuhlngton,\nOregon and British Columbia.\nTwenty-ilx wire reported aboard\nthe U.8. Navy plans mlulng ilnce\nNov. 29. The learch for thl plane\nwu continuing.\nLloyd Merrymtn ind hll un.\nWilliam, 13, were unreported after\nleaving Steveston, B.C, Ists yuterday on i flthlng trip In their\nbolt, the Blanche B. Gulf of Georgia fishermen iald ths gale at ths\nmouth of the Fraur Rlvsr wu\nthe worst In yeari. Thl Blanche\nB wu found alrnoit tubmtrgid\ntodsy off the mouth of thi Fruer.\nREACHM 72 M.P.H.\nThe wind reached \u2022 maximum ver\nloclty from the South it Seattle of\n56 miles in hour for I five-minute\nperiod, the length for compiling records. An extreme ef 04 miles for\node minute' wis recorded. The record highs for five minutes were\n80 miles, lit April, 1943, end Dt miles,\nin O-tober, 1984.\nPortland,. Ore., reported gusts\nreaching Tt miles sn hour and Olympla 70 miles sn hour.\nA Public Power District lineman, George L, Cunningham, wu\nkilled at Shelton, Wuh, whtn \u2022\npoll fell ai in earth bink give\nway.\nThl other victims wtrt Clifford\nMsthlw, Eugene, On, ind Theodore Dukes, 40, killed when filling treei hit thilr truck and bull-\ndour, and John Mussy, 89, electrocuted whtn hi touched fallen\nwlrei which hid lit fin to hit\nhouie.\nAt Vlctorii winds which it times\nreached a velocity of 50 mllu in\nhour, toppled telephone md light\npoles and left large sections of thi\ncity In darkness for \u2022 time.\nNanalmo, B.C., on the Southern\nUp of Vincouver Island, wu without outside communication for \u2022\nlarge part ot the night ind llnei\niNRRA Health Head\njys Epidemic\nEurope Unlikely\nJflDONv \u2022>\u00ab\u2022 ! (CP)-Dr. An-\n' Topping, European Health Dl-\nMeyer Trial lo\nOpen Holiday\nURGES RIGHT TO GLASS\nOF BEER FOR INDIANS\nGREAT  TALLS,   Mont.,   Dee.   5\n(AP) \u2014 Representative!   of   seven\nNorthwestern tribes at the conference -of  tht  American  Indians  of\n.   Montini think tha 112-year-old Fed-\nfor United Nations Belief and (era! law denying Indians the right to  causing the murder of 48 Canadian\nbWUtlon Administration, ssld | buy llrjuor ihould bt repealed by ' prisoners of war, will definitely be-\nthat oo Winter epidemic of, Congreu    Preiident J. 3 Cilbrilth | -,\u201e n#xt Mo-diy, \u201e wll announced\nsays there Ire 80,000 Indlin braves   \u201e   c,nldlin   Arm,    Headquarter!\nIn  the Armed Tercel \"Who ihould . hert tod\nhave the  right when they  return      Tflt he,',n    o( ^ cul ,\u201e the\nhome to havt a glass of beer.\nBy  WILLIAM   BOM\nCanadian  Preu  Staff Writer\nAMSTERDAM, Dec 5 (CP Cable)\n-Trial of S S. Maj-Cen. Kurt Meyer,  charged  directly  or   Indirectly\ni wu likely In Europe\nIf disease did break oul on\ncontinent, bt told \u25a0 meeting of\nRoyal Sanitary  Institute, itrlcl\nntine method! and emergency\n\u2022res   would   prevent   It   from\ndlng\nSEEK HOMES\n| VANCOUVER, Dec. 5 (CT)-Tht\nregency Shelter Reglitry rtport-\nI today tbe number of ftmillu In\nffencourer  seeking  accommodation\nrisen   to   an   all-time   high   of\nwith 3-183 of them lervtcemen\nKILLED IN ACCIDENT\nALERT BAY. B C, D\u00ab. 9 (CP>-\nRotwrt t>. Waltcri, 17, of (MM Robion Slrwtt, Vincouvtr, employed\nii chnkrrman by the Canada Foreit   Product*.   Ud.,   \u2022# Camp   O\nEnglfwood. wm killed In \u25a0 loutng\naccident Tuudaj, It wm dlMlpMd ' r\u00bbport*n will b* accommodate! nt\nproa* cut ion ind 'defence by Ma).-\nGen Harry Foiter, Preiident of the\nTribunal, li rxpected to Iwt wven\ndayi. \u2022 4-\nSfl-t*loni will be held twice daily.\nWirelrw and teleprinter transmit-\nlinn facilitiei In tht court rooqi will\nrelay ropy from rorreapontfentl cov-\nennj the tfidl  to  I\/indon and the\ntoday  An inqueit will be held here\nThi_r\u00bbdiT\nthe   officers'\nRiflrM\nmets   nf   the\nVERDICT FOR\nYAMASHITA'S\nCASE FRIDAY\nMANILA. Dec. S (AP)-A Military Commission recessed today to\nponder the fate of Lt.-Gen, Tomoyukl Yama_fhita after hearing final\nsummation! in which the proiecu-\ntion demanded the death penalty\nand the defence pleaded for \"Justice\n\u2014acquittal.'*\nIt promised  a  verdict Trlday.\nMaj, Robert M, Kerr, Chief Proiecutor, sold that \"in view of the ig-\nfxavatcd nature of the crimei and\nn view of the measure* of the\nerLmei, we recommend that the len-\ntence, if deqth be carried oul by\nhanging\"\n\"Every reMonable doubt hM been\nshattered by devaitating wltneaset\"\nagainat the Japanese army commander, who li accuied of condoning innumerable atroojtlea by his\ntroopo ln the Philippines, Maj. Kerr\nsaid.\nRegina I \"There I* no doubt of hid responsibility and negligence.\"\nFeels It'll Take\nFew Months to\nEnd Building Furor\nVANCOUVER. Dec. 5 (CP)-Thr\nVancouver Dally Province in a financial   page  story 'today  iald\nuation ls clarified.\n1946 Liquor\nlor \"Bonuses\"\nVICTORIA, Dec. 1 (fcP)-When\n1918 liquor permlti trt Ittutd\nntxt wttk Brltlth Columbiana\nwill htvt \u25a0 new form, deilaned\nfor flexibility In the hope that ne.\notnlty for rationing will btcomt\nless ai tht year goei on.\nTht month-by-month ritlon\nitamp lyitem ihowi a \"C\" ftr,\ncomplete ration; \"X\" for 8cotch;\n\"\u2022\" for iplrlti; \"O\" for pin; \"W*\nfor wint tnd \"B\" for malt liquor,\nwhllt \"1\", \"2\" and *T tt* let uit\nt< ipirei If itocki build up to th*\npoint where bonuici cm be given.\nEach permit booklet comliti\nI combined application form Md\npermit, with tht otntrt notion In\ntriplicate.  Whtn  tht  application\nII madt tht permit thtn will be\nlined at enct, eliminating tht\npostcard ayatem In uie thli yttr.\nDuplicate tnd triplicate, copiei\nwill bt forwarded to tht permit\nchecking office htrt md checked\nfor addresi tnd othtr requirements.\nAid to Britain\nPreliminaries\nOpen on Weekend\n.    ly CLYDE BLACKBURN\nCantdltn Presi (tiff Writer\nASHINGTON, Dec. 8  (CP) -\nttlkt an lht financial\nSEATrt-B,\nState. Naval officials here uld tonight it now wta believed that Bt\npersona wert aboard the 'Trlvatttr*\nlirplane\u2014Navy venlon of the B-24\nUberttor-rwhlch hat betn mlitinf\nsince Nov. 29 on a flight from Kodlak. Al\u00bb.ska, to Seattle\nAll were believed to be Amerlcan\ntervlce peraonnel.\nSearch for the plane continued\nmeanwhile, over the 10O0 mllea of\nrugged Pacific coajtllne between the\nplant's takeoff field and destination. No word was received from Ihe\nihlp after lt left Kodlak. Many of\ncalled In\nice tre ex-\nOttawa thli s\nind.\nFuH-draat negotiations on Can-\ntda'i \"Mrt in reaMbUthlnf th*\nUnited Kingdom at t trading powtr will be delayed, however, it wt*\nlearned today.\nTh* Brltlth financial mission In\nWashington will leavt htrt Friday\nafter completing negotiation! for \u25a0\nloan from the United Sttttt, detail*\nof which are expected tomorrow la\nin official announcement.\nIt now Is generally believed tb*\nUnited States will make a long\nterm loan aggregating H,400,000,000\ntht search  planet wert\ntoday, the Ntvy sail u a roaring  taci'udrnV\u00bb*^.oW,OOo\"o%'nabl\"e\"Bri-\nCanada Likely lo\nBe Member ol\nSecurity Council\nBy ROSS MUNRO\nCanadian  Preaa Staff Writer\nLONDON, Dec. 5 (CP Cable)-\nCanada probably will become a\nnon-permanent member of the United Nations Security Council when\nthe orKamutton holda iU first meeting here early in January, it wm\nlearned today.\nThe 11-member Security Council,\nwild furor of building of all types i charged with primary respomibillty\no nthe catch-as-catch-can principles! in the new world organization fortWM\" hiding for \"h\"ome7oni*hi on der-5ecreUry of thi exchequer', Sir\nwith no holds barred Is expected I maintenance 0l* international pe_ice lhe Canadian hotpital ship UtlUa. I Percival Leiachlnf and Robert\nhere M a result of the termination rt \\ \u00abnd security, will consist of Britain, | dM ln Vancouver early tomorrow. ' Brand.\njale moved Northward   from   the\nWuhlngton coait\nLAST CANUCK TAKEN\nBY MPS HOMEBOUND\nTACOMA. Wuh., Dec. S (AP)-\nThe latt Canadian prlioner-of-war\nto leavt the Piclflc theatre\u2014Pte.\nJtrl \"Motimin of Lunenburg. NS.\ntain to pay for tuable turplui lend-\nlease lupjillet now In the United\nKingdom.\nLord Keynet, held of tht Britlih\nSllulor., will not go to Canada and\nIs expected to sail from New York\nfnr home next Monday.\nBut a party of hit assistant! will\nleave for Ottawa frlday hetdtd hi\nSir Edward Bridges, permanent un-\nthe  United   Stales.   Kussia,   France | .\nand China and six non-permanent\nbuilding controls announced from\nOttawa Tuesday.\"\nThe newspaper added:      t\n\"This is expected ln a few months\nto smooth out into orderly peacetime procedure.\n\"Pla,nK5 h*.^n^SnThPleted ,nr Ite^mV but ln th. tint election, thr\nmore than $20,000,000 of heavy con-'\nstructlon ln Greater Vancouver and\nNtw   Westminster   In   addition   to\nhousing    programi    now    reaching\ntheri peak.\nThe non-permanent memberi will\nbe elected  normally  for  two-year\nfeUICKlES\nBy   Ktn   Rtynotd\n: U*N. Military Power Diminishes\nwill be chosen for one-year termi.*\nSources in the Preparatory Commission of UNO., now meeting\nhere, said Canada has an \"excellent chance\" of being elected tu the\nj j M j     , first Security Council.\nMay KC-Apply tOr Should   Canada   be   chosen,   her\nEmmSL   AlLi_.Mn_-_i. ; represenUtive   On   the   Security\nramiiy   Allowances , Council  automatically  will  become\nOTTAWA. Dec. 3 (CP) - Health j one of the early presidents of the\nMinister Claxton aald today that council if the present plan of elec-\nparenta who have requested cancel- ting presidents in the alphabetical\nlation of their family allowance pay-i order of the respective countries\nmenta and later wish to re-apply I names is followed,\nmay do io and will have thrlr nrc- !\nond application treated as a\none.\nCancellation  of a  family  tllow-  a| Employm\u00abnt Aid\nance regiitratlon may be made at ~     '\nany Ume, but the reqtjett fnr ran- VANCOUVER. Dee. 3 (CP)-Th*\neellatlon must bp signed by thp B.C. Commnnd of the Canadian L_\u00ab-\nsame persons or authored rppre- gion Is asking Federal, Provincial\nsentatlvea   who   made  thp  original  and municipal authorities for an old\nmembers of the united Nations to: |\\|0 Change for Budgetary System ...\nbe elected by the general assembly, j \u2022       3 * '      '\nHart Assured Supplies to Be Made\nAvailable lo Enable Use of Manpower\nunemployment but \u25a0 flrtit short-\nagi of manpower.\nTha Ontario manpower short-\naga wa\u00ab estimated at 20,000, Mr.\nHart said.\nUrge Early Ptniion\napplication.\n>M*m, till en* \u00bb|iin ib.-t hew\nget mt wills  a  Dally  H.yn\na Atr\nLONDON, Dtc I (AP)-Tht nru-\nlive military powtr which the United Nitloni broufhl to beir tfttnit\ntht Axil afirennri It diminishing\n\u25a0t ta ivtiMnertt-dni pte* it men\nind woman fn uniform return to\npeicetlme pursuit!\nAn AMtcltttd Prttt lurvty of\nttsreral world riplttli reflecti tbt\ntpeei with which. In tht ttetn\nmontht ilnce tht flnt half of the\nstnugle wtl rllmtied on VI-Dty.\ndemo. IllietJon hn profruted.\n(Intt tht tad tf tne wtr tjiinjt\nOtrmtny, lht irlilih Oevirn.\nment hat **m*kllln* iefrt-1-\nmtitly LfttfiSt tffp* in* whtn\ntht flnt tl> mnnthi tf 1MI art\ngent, i-tMta t\u00bb havt 4JOM0O\nmart la mvfl).\nI        Britain's ta**l wtrtlmt Itrtrtfth\nnivar haa bun dlioloatd but Ita\npaeoathni iirvlcai totalled 1,-\n4W,000 mtn.\nOn VE-Diy, the United Slatei\nArmy had reached a peak of 11,300.-\n000 troopa. Lut July the United\nStttta Ntvy\u2014Including Marines tnd\nCout Guard\u2014had reached 4.0M 000.\nEftlmatet of.current United Statu\nArmy tnd Navy ttrenith tre placed\nIt SJOO.OOO tnd 2.MO.0OO. reipertlve-\nly. SeverU million mort pertonnel\nwill be returned to civilian life by\ntht tod of tht fIleal yttr next June\nJo, On thit dite, lht trmy expert*\nto bAdotrn to 1,830.000 ind Ihe\nnivy. (JsVU.OOO.\nTO CUT MO AftMY\n\u00bbY TWOTHIROt\nrijurn on Russia iri univallable\nto otton\nKAMLOOPS MAYOR\nKAMLOOPS. BC. Dec J (CPI-\nAlderman Fred W. Scott tonight an- employment problem li to be ioIv\nbut Oenerallulmo Stalin recently ' nounced he would reiign hl_ alder- ed. It will be neceuiry to Ukt older\ntold an American Congreubntl del-; manic ittt to oppoie Mayor Oeorge people off the libor market tt i relegation that tht Soviet Union wai j R. Wlllltmi, who leeki reelection ' annable age and pay thtm t iiUi-\nRtd to   hit  fifth  comecutlve   term   ai factory retiring tllowince.\nige pension nf not leu thin %SS\nmonth ind payable it the age of 90\nynri without a meeni tett\nRobert  Micnlcnl.  Executive  Secretary of the Commind. uld It ti , tel-.rimi and brlefi forwirded by\nthe belief of the Legion U the un- ' vtrlouj  orftnlutlom  ind  munlcl\nVICTORIA, Die. t (CP)\u2014 Con-1\ndance    thit    idequati    supplies\nwould bi madi available In tht\nmat uviral monthi to abiorb all |\nmanpower  now out of work  wm i\ngiven  by  Re-mitruetlon   Mlnlitar\nC.   D.   Howl   In   Ottawi,   Premier\nJohn Hart uld today on hll return\nto Vlctorii from Ottawa\nTha    Premier   ilio   announcid\nthat Britlih Columbii would continue ntxt ytir undlr i budgetary\nsystem   ilmllir   to   thtt   now   In\nforei with thi Dominion Oovim-\nmint providing 112.000400 In lieu\nof   tht   Income   ind   corporation\ntixn   forfeited   by   tht   Provlnot\nduring wtrtlmt. I    Temperituret \u2014 Mix.  \u00ab\u00ab.   Mln.\nWhile  In Ottiwt.  Premier Hirt I\u00bb\u00bb: Ri'n-  H of Inch.\nmade   r\u00bbpe\u00abl\"l   repreienttttoni   to i    fnrecuf.  KooUniy: Cloudy with\nMr.  Howe ind  plired  before  the locculonil light nln or mow ovar-\nDomlnion - Provinclil     Conference j night    Becoming    pirtly    cloudy\nMr Hart uld he alio drew the at-\ntentlon of Dominion Government\nauthorltlei to the municipal eon*\nitructlon worki projecti which\nmight illevlite the unemployment\ntltuitlon ind at the ume tlmt cart\nOf varloui programi of long deft*\nred public worki\nThe Weather\ndemoblllilng two-thlrdi of the\nArmy. Evidence of^-Jarge-icale re-\nleue of troopi li leen In the number! of demoblllxad loldltrt ln Mot-\ncow, and dally ntwipaper itorlti\nconcerning tht return of toldltn to\ntheir peacetime Joba\nCanada hu itrlppid htr trmtd\nfor, e, by almost 300X100 mtn tnd\nwomtn of tht 1,000,000 undlr irmi\nit tht tnd of tht wtr and It pro\ndressing   towirris  flntl   demobllll-\natlon it tht rati of *\u00bb,000 monthly.\nOn vt-Day, Cmadltn Army\nitringth numbtrtd tpprexlmately\nntflOO mtn tad wtmth, with\nmort thin 100,000 In tha Ntvy tnd\nthouundt In tht RCAF.\nmiyor. Thli move wlU neceialtite i\nby-tlectlon,  probtbly  on   Tstc.\nslant with the tlvlc elections\nlong s\nSAYS POUND FACtS\nTYPHUS EPIDEMIC\nWARSAW.   Dtc.   B   (AP)\n5 Nominated C.C.F.\nStandard Bearer\nDr.\n\u2022 pi\nrim tnd pointed out thit etlitlng\n' In* ui\nhlch mtght other\nholdln\nup  con-\nBlT-\nVERNON, B.C,'D*c. 5 (CP)\nmrd G. Webber eras nominated lut\nnight u CCT. itandard bearer In\nHenry A. Hollt.CJiltf Medical Offli the Dee. It North Oktniain by-\nctr for tht United Nitloni Relief Ultcllon. Mr. Webber wu tor four\nind Rahtbilltatlon Administration ' yttn m-mber (or Similkameen hut\nIn Poland, uld todty tht country suffered t defeat tn thit tiding In\nwat 1 icing t typhui epidemic thli' tht Oct 19 gentrtl election\nWhiter whloh might reach urloui I At Hit nomlntting convention\nproportion!. Thl Polish Health .Harold Winch lUM thit ht will\nMlnlilry rivalled neirlr lt.000 'ipeik In Mr. Webber's behilf In the\nPolei trt dying monthly of tubircu- tltctlon cimpiign throughout tht\nlotlt. i riding\npal bodlu drawing attention to tht\nlerioui unemployment iltuitlon In\nthli Province\nPUIHID WORKI PROGRAM\n\"I urged upon the Federil iulh-\nnrlilti tht need for t worii\nin\nbctlleneeki wert\nitructlon' saorlt\nwltt   illeviltt   tb*  lltuillon.\"   Mr\nItart rontlnuM\n\"Th* Honorthle htr Howt id vised\nmt that he would lift ill reetrKtlom\non (hilldlng but .could not remove\ntbt 'n-nlrojs from th. dlitrlbutlon\nOf supplies In view of tht (act thtt\nInequilltlea might oreur Ihrostgh\nth* country If thli wer* **ne\"\nMr.   How.   iIk   told   PreVsltr\nHtrt that tht tondltlon tf unem.\nploymint wtt Itetllitd M In On\n1   tirlt whtrt thert wtt rttA taty a*\nThurldiy.   with  icatttrtd\nContinuing    mild    with    mod*t*W\nSoutherly wlnda\ni ,\n :\t\n ' J-.'\n'.'). p-   . .\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 6, 1945\n1 '\" ' \u25a0 '*\" I\", s \u25a0       '\ni. Gerow Assumes Responsibility\nBF Any War Department Failure lo\n*nd Added Warningsto Pearl Harbor\n'\u00a3.\nWA8HINaTON, Dec. B (AP) -\nLt.-Oen. Leonard T. Gerow, bruth-\nIng wide t suggettion that \"higher-\nups\" might ihare lt, assumed full\nsibility today tor any War\n_.lment failure to lend add!\nal warning] to Pearl Harbor be\nl tbe Japaneae attack there Dec.\n', 1941.\nIn a dramatic moment ot the\nJoint Congressional Inquiry, the tan.\nned officer solemnly told the Pearl\nHarbor Committee: r\nIt there It any War Department\nresponsibility for failure to send additional warnings to Gen. Short, lt\nmutt fall on the War Plans Divliion\n.and at chief of the division at the\ntime, I accept the responsibility.\"\nWilliam D. Mitchell, Committee\ncouniel, luggeited that the reply\nef Lt.-Gen. Walter C. Short, Commander at Hawaii, te a warning\nfrom Waihlngton \"wint higher\"\nbut Oen. Gerow Interpoied.\nIt wit hit job, Gen. Gerow tald,\n.to check operation! mettagii from\n_ \/ oveneai Itatlom and hi had 41 of-\nt 7 floen to' help him. Hi would taki\nthe reiponelblllty.\nMr. Mitchell had developed that,\nfrom the routing iheet record and\nInitialling, both Wtr Secretary\nStlmion and Gen. Marshall, Army\nChief of Staff, apparently saw Gen.\nShort'i reply to a Nov. 27,1941, message  trom   Gen.   Marshall   saying\nhostilities with Japan might be near.\nGen, Short'i message laid he had\nplaced hit command on the alert for\ntabotage and established liaison\nwith the Navy. It developed after\nthe Dec. 7,1941, attack that the command was alert only agalnit tabotage.\nMa).-Gen. Sherman Mllei, an ear.\nHer witness, had expressed the opln.\nIon that Gen. Short's reply wai \"totally Inadequate\".\nLED FIGHTING FORCI\nGen. Gerow left the War Plans\nDivision early In 1942, and later\ntook part lh the Normandy landings and commanded troops ln Eu-\nrope.\n\u25a0 Mr. Mitchell read to him a statement Mr. Stimson made last Fall\nln connection with an Army Board't\nreport on Pearl Harbor. Mr. Stlmion\nhad tald: \"A keener tense of analys-\nli and a more Incisive comparlion of\nthe messages exchanged would have\nInvited further inquiry by the War\nPlans Division of Gen. Short, and his\nfailure to go on the necessary alert\nmight well have been discovered.\"\nThe committee counsel uked\nwhether Gen. Gerow considered\nthat a \"fair\" statement.\n\"Yei, ilr, I do,\" the wltneu re.\npiled.\nGen. Manhall will be the witneii\ntomorrow, giving the committee the\nopportunity to go into the same subject with him.\nCIVIC WILCOM.- FOR\nMORAL RE-ARMAMENTIRS\nVANCOUVER, Dec 5 (CP) \u25a0_\nCouncil Chamber of the City Rail\nresounded today to the harmony\ntinging ot a mixed choir at Mayor,\nJ. W. Cornett and Aldermen otter-'\ned an official civic welcome and\nblessing on the Moral Re-Armament\nGroup which la ttaging a lerlet of\nfour plays here thla week.\nUrge Schools of\nAgriculture\nThroughout B.C.\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 8 (CP)-Bi-\ntabllihment of ichooli of agriculture throughout British Columbia\nwas urged at the annual convention of the B.C. School Truitees'\nAssociation here. Delegates also endoried School Cadet Corpi on compulsory basis.\nA resolution from South Vancouver Island Branch asked the Provincial Government to let up the\nagriculture ichools with Federal as-\nalstance.\nThe Association ln an adopted resolution upheld the right of teachers\nto take part In political campaigns.\nDelegate! defeated a motion from\nNorth Saanich School Board asking\nthat teachers taking part In political campaigns flnt obtain leave ot\nabsence from their School Board,\nVictoria Woman\nOverwhelmed by\nUnwanted Service\n5    VICTORIA, Dec. B (CP)-A nlne-\ndajr-old myitery Involving ordering\nA ol taxi cabt, telegraph boyi, mllk-\nI men, moving trucks, ind grocery\n1 men to the home of Mri. R. M. Lally,\nI wai climaxed today when the wo-\ni men'i phone number wai uied in t\nI local newipiper advertisement\n\u00a3 about which ihe knows nothing.\ni    The myitery It baffling City Po-\n1 tee who are inveitlgatlng, md hai\n\u25a0 Hn. Lally \"worried lick.\"\n%    She   laid   that   ihe   \"hasn't   the\nft Mutest Idea whit it li all about,\"\n\u00bb and could name no tuipecti.\nI    \"At tint 1 had an ldei thit It\n| wm being done by ichool children\nI m t prank, but I don't think they\n. would go thli far,\" the iald.\ni STRANGERS COME FOR\n[> DINNM\nHer trouWn itarted Nov. .7 when\ntlx taxis called at her houie after\n'they had keen ordered by phone.\n>S but not by Mri Lally. Tbe ume day\n'   \u25a0* moving truck came to move her\n[furniture. Thli alio had been ordered by phone but wu unknown\nto the lurpriied woman. The ume\nday leveral atrangers arrived it her\n' houte who claimed to have been\nI invited for dinner.\n1    The next day another taxi irrlved at Mrt. l.ally'i door end then\nToistJea\na telegraph boy. Neither had been\nordered by her.\nThe day after that five different\nmilkmen came to deliver milk. The\nsame day two more taxis and two\nmore telegraph boyi called.\nThen a baiket of grocerlei which\nhad been ordered by phone wai delivered to the house, followed by\nthe arrival of another moving van.\nMn. Lally iald the phone call!\nmaking the unauthorized ordera\nwere made by it least two people,\none of them a woman.\nOne ot the legend! ibout Calvin Coolldge, probably flctl-\ntioui, wu that he rarely If ever\nimlled. In that cue we wonder\nwhy-he Invited Will Rogen tnd\nIrvin Cobb to visit him one dty\nIn tbe White House. The itory\ngoH that on their way to the\nreception, the two humorliti\ndlicussed the President'! notor-\nlout Inability to crick t smile,\n;even at whit othen considered\n\u00bb pretty fair wheeie. Rogen\n\u2022aid thtt he htd heard the\nitory but would make a bet that\nhe would extort a imile from\nthe tmlleless Coojtdge. It happened that Rngeri was preiented firit, with Cobb itanding Juit\nbehind him. The President and\nthe Weitern humorlit ihook\nhandi tnd bowed, tnd then\nCobb heard Rogen lean toward\nCoolldge, and lay: \"Beg pardon,\nbut whit wai the name?'' THi\nwon the bet, for the Coolldgi\ncountenance wrinkled appreciatively.\nC.OD-RHAM\/WflUTi\nLimited\nTORONTO, ONTARIO'\nEntry of Mukden\nImminent\nCHUNGKING, Dec. 8 (AP)\u2014Chinese Nationalist troopi were nearlng\nMukden today after thrusting more\nthan 210 miles Into Manchuria in\nthree week* and a triumphant entry\ninto the city appeared imminent.\nFormal entry might be delayed\nuntil the completion of negotiations\nwith Russia for moving ln troops by\nair, but apparently no Chinese Communists stand between the Nationalists and Mukden.\nLiu Cheh, Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs, announced 'that negotiations for tha air movement to\nMukden and tha capital at Changchun and for taking over the administration throughout Manchuria\nwould be concluded within a few\ndays.\nAsked whether Nationalist troops\nwould be permitted to go on in overland, now that they are ao near\nMukden, Liu replied: \"I've not said\ninything to exclude that possibility:'\nGen. Hslung Shlh-Hul, head of the\nGeneralissimo's branch headquarters in Manchuria, said here that tie\nNationalist advance would continue until the entire territory was\nrecovered.\nWhile the advance Into Manchuria\ncontinued unopposed, other Chinese\ndispatches declared Chinese Com-\nmuinsts were gathering for a new\nattack on the walled inner Mongolian city of Kweiiul.\nUrges Readiness\nlo Fight\nfor Freedoms\nMONTREAL, Dec. B (CP.-Gen.\nH. D. G. Crerar, who guided Canada's Army to victory in the Second\nGreat War, today called upon peace-\nloving Democracies to be prepared\nto support their principles by^ aggressive action until that \"distant\nday\" when there are no more wars.\nThe Canadian Army commander\nwarned a Montreal Canadian Club\naudience that \"hateful though the\ncondition may be, recourse to force\nfor the settlement of group, or International, disputes ls a prospect\nwhich all realistic men and women\nmust continue to face.\"\nGen. Crerar believed \"that In some\ndistant day, and through much hard\npatient work by right-minded\npeople everywhere, we can become\nso civilized that recourse to force\nwill become as unthinkable between\nnations as it is now between the\nprovinces of Canada.\n\"In the meantime, however, and\nuntil that day has clearly arrived,\nthose countries which support the\nthesis of peaceful settlement must\nbe prepwed, and Immediately, to\nact In defence of thtt proposition.\"\nGen. Crerar, who began i two-\nday visit to Montreal whkh is part\nof the cross-Canada farewell tour\nhe is making before his retirement\nfrom the Army early next year,\nspoke to an audience of 000. Head\ntable guests included 2fl senior Army\nofficers who served with _tim overseas.\nThe Army commander's 26-\nmlnute addreu followed morning\nvisit* with Montreal educational\nand religious leiden and a press\nconference at which he aald he\nfavored compulsory military training and establishment of a peace*\ntime.Canadian Army greater than\nthat which existed between the\nlast wart.\n(an Change\nChristmas Hours\nTRAJt, BC, Dee. J-Adam Bell,\nProvincial Deputy Minliter of Labor, hu wired tbe Trail Retail Merchant'! Auoclatlon, laying that hit\ndepartment It willing to allow the\nTrail itorei to remain open Friday\nnight, Dec 31, Inttead of Chrlitmu\nEve, but that the only way permission can be granted la to Issue\nIndividual permits to each merchant\ndesiring the change.\nH II. Burnt, President of the Merchants' Allocation, tald thit morn,\ntng that the names of the memberi\nof the Association would be wired\nto Mr. Bell to that permits could be\nIuued and he asked other merchants\ndesiring* the change to notify the\nAssociation secretary to that their\nnames' could be Included.\nThe merchant! decided that they\nwould itay open Friday and Saturday nights prior to Chrlitmu\nbut would dote Chrlstmai Eve.\nStores will alio be cloied both the\nday following Chrlitmai and the\nday following New Year'a Day.\nPenhalegon Given\nSixMonfhs\nfor Trail Thefts\nTRAIL, B.C., Dec. 5\u2014William Bernard Penhalegon, 18, of Lethbridge,\nwho wu sentenced to a year1! hard\nlabor at the City Police Court tn\nNelion on Friday for atempting to\nhold-up Mrs: H. J. Biihop at her\nnews-stand ln Nelson, wai given\nsix monthi In Oakalla prison farm\nwhen he was arraigned In Trail Police Court, before Magistrate Parker\nWilllami, today.\nHe wai charged with iteallng $17\nand a suit of clothei from Nick\nBonderoff ot Trail. The lentence\nwill run concurrently with that given him by the magistrate at Nelson.\nPenhalegon pleaded guilty to the\ncharges and restitution of the stolen\nclothing will be made.\nREPORTS PILOT K1LLID\nIN CRACKUP\nKOTZEBUE, Aluke, DM I (AP)\n\u2014Pilot Oene Jack landed today at\nthe accne of a crash lut week of a\nFerguson Alrwayt mall plane and\nreported Pilot Don Oeorge had been\nkilled outright In the eraekup.\nLoit In a itorm and only a ihort\ndiitance from a life landing ilte\non level ua Ice, George crashed Into\na hllltld* '\nDiscuss Joining\nWarfield and\nAnnable lo Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Dee. J-Ineorpora-\ntlon at Annable-Warfleld Into the\nCity of Trill wu dUcutted at a\nwell-attended meeting ot Upper\nWarfleld ratepayer!, lut night.\nSpeaken were Robert Walton,\nchairman of the Annable-Warfleld\nRatepayers Anoclatlon, Eric Broad-\nhunt, chairman of tht Annable-\nWarfleld ichool committee and\nMayor Herbert Clark <rf Trail.\nThe meeting wu the flnt of a\nseriei ot three which will be held\nprior to the circulation of a petition requeuing the annexation.\nSubiequent gatherings will be held\nat Warfleld and Annable.\nWith Stane\nand Besom\nResults In Wednesday nlghfi\ngames of the Nelson Curling Club's\nSharp Cup competition were:\nD. Laughton 11, E W. Kopeckl 13.\nF. Ewlng S, L. Deilreau 8.\nA. Jeffi 5, H. Bush 12.\nW. J. Wltchell 10, R. D. Hickey B.\nT. H. Bourque 12, A Gilker 8.\nR D. Wallace ., W. Brown 14.\nF. D. Cummins 7, E. C. Hunt 15.\nH. D. Harrison 9, K. McRory 10.\nJ. B Thorn 9, C. H. Marshall 4.\nH. Farenholtz 2, A. Ronmark 11\nTuesday night's game between PJ\nE. Poulln and H. Waifick ihould\nhave read: H. Wujtek mfsn by default over P. E. Poulln.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiimii\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nRatei: Be line, 27e line blick fiei\ntyp* larger type ratei en rwWj*\nMinimum twe llnee. 10% dlicount for prompt piyment\niiiiiiiiii.iimisiiiiiiimisimii.miiii.iii\nDRY  LUTEPI8H  AT THI\nFAIRWAY. PHONE MB.\nElectric floor poliihert for rent\nat Beetty Service. Ph. 91,\nFor lniurance, tee Bon Somen,\n302 Biker St Ph. Ill-, .\nT. H. Waten Committee Roomi,\nMaglio Block, now open. Ph. 940.\nDon't wait until after the tire.\nINSURE NOW. Blackwood Agency.\nLoses T 0,000\nGallons Gasoline\n: PRINCE RUPERT, BC. Dee. !\n(CP)\u2014Ten thouiand birreli of high\noctane ivlatlon gasoline poured Into the te* off the Alaiki coiit tfter\nthe Shell Oil Company'i tinker Illinois ripped out her bottom on Morris Reef In Chithim Sound, It wai\nI ditdoied todiy when the 3980-ton\ntanker wai brought to Prince Rupert In tow.\nCarrying ivlatlon gasoline for the\nUnited Stitei Army Air Force field\ntt WhiUhorse, the Illinoli wai head-\n, Ing for Skagwiy when ihe itruck\nMorrli Reef throe weeki ago, ripping her bottom from fori peak\nto bridge. With her cirgo dlulpited.\nthe dimiged tinker hung on the\nreef until removed by American salvage workeri.\nThe Illinoli cirrled l crew of 38\nmen and ii undrr command of Captain Ralph L. Kuhn. She li rcgliter-\nod it Wilmington, Del Extent of\nher damage li being lurveyed at\ndry dock.\nEGG PRICES\nTUMBLE, COAST\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 5 (CP)-Egg\nprict!. fell, four and flvt centi a\n('fieri In Vaneouve today.\nOne reason for thr drop, marketing officials laid, ii t surplus which\nhas developed In the lait few dayi,\nAnother reaion ii a desire on the\npart of produceri to dispose of\ntheir eggi before the Tall export\nprice ii lowered after Dec. 15.\nThe producer naw will receive Sfl\ncents a dozen for Grade \"A\" large,\n34 cents for Grade \"A\" medium, 30\ncents for Grade \"A\" pullets, 30 cents\nfor Grade \"B\" and 19 centj for\nGrade \"C\" peeweei.\nPrice to the wholesaler will be\n41 cents for Grtde \"A\" large, 39\ntepts for Grade \"A\" medium, 30\ncents for Grade \"A\" pullets, 35 cent*\nfor Grade \"B\" and 23 cents for\nGrade \"C\" peeweei\nDEFER DECISION IN\nAUSTRALIA STRIKE\nCANBERRA, Dec. 5 (Reuten)-\nAfter talks with Australian union\nand itrike leaders in Canberra today, Prime Minister Chifiey announced that a decision ln the strike\nsituatfbn had been deferred until\nafter a trade union conference ln\nSydney Friday.\nBOOST REWARD FOR\nHIT-RUN DRIVER\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 5 (CPl\u2014Two\nadditional offers of $100 each today\nbrought to M50 the total reward for\napprehension and conviction of the\nautomobile driver who cauied the\ndeath of Jamei Maxwell, 58, Thunday. Maxwell was hit as he was\nabout to board a street car and the\nautomobile did not stop.\nPhytotherapy end Manage\nElectric Treatment!. Phone 1129.\nSawi   iharpened,  fitted  at Nor\nbcrg'i filing ihop, 53d Stanley SL\nT. H. Wateri Committee Roomi,\nMaglio Block, now open. Ph. M0.\nYour Portrait by Vogue (tudlo,\nFink Block (below Walt'i) Ph. 108. J\nComplete hospital    end  medical\ncontract!. 577 Baker Street Ph. 980,\nKitty, A Maid and Million Men,\nand Congo Song on sale at Valentines.\nTomorrow 8 p.m.\nJohn Beadell Concert\nSt Pauti Church Auditorium.\nRipe Anjou peart end freih pine-\napplei. Wrlght't Grocery, 104 Baker St\nChrlitmai Table Centres ind No-\nveltlei. Mac's Greenhouses and\nWait's Niwi.\nThat Will Please * \u2666*\nBlouses\n\"Su-Shan\" Blouses, tailored collar\nand Hi at neck, long and short\nilees\/ei. Colors lime, rose, turq,\nand white.\n$3.95\nPURSES\nFine leather Handball. Neat\nunder arm envelope tnd the\ntop handle itylei, made ol fine\nmorocco and goat Black,\nbrown and navy.\nPrinted   ilUr   hankies,   nice\nbright ihadei. _$\u00a3\nGLOVES\nfine kid gloves trimmed\nwith white stitching In black,\niavy and Drown. C) CA\nPrice         ?JiW\nLined cape ikin gloves, plain\nor fur trim. Black and brown.\n$1.95 ^ $2.50\nFillk's Ready - to - Wear\nfttjft^imv!*^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nAcme Painten and Interior Decorators. Office at 420 Falli Street.\nPhone 1138.\nHandicraft uie at Flnk'i Print\nShop, Sat. Dec. 8, High School Junior Red Crou.\nPre-School Clinic for Immunizing\nCentral School, Friday, 9:45 a.m.,\nMill Street door. Ph. 1111.\nLeather Writing Cull, genuine\nleather, S5.00 to $12.00 at Kootenay\nStationers. Succeuori to D. W. McDerby.\nAre You i Sufferer\nI   From Rheumatic Pains?\nTheae paint oome from an Inflammation tn tbe\nrmwlttt and are generally e.imct hy a depoeit of potion\na the blood ralUl sirie aHd whirls produo_iHh\u00ab irritating and painful effect thai eauiee many daya and\nnight, heavy with pain.\nDuring tha put. 80 yaan Canadian people hara found that br punfytng\nthe blood itrram, Burdock Blond Bitter, eidt them lo enjoy iraer body\nmovement with lea. rheumatic pain, aa B. D. B. help, to tone up the lyetan\nand elear up tht urie add in tbe blood, and probably tu-Jp lorufy tbe tyttao\nin\u00abt. future attack*.\nPrice 11.00 a hottl. at all drug eosmtan.\nTW T. UlTbni. C-, IJ-.IU,!. Tor-f,*-, Ons.\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014Pamnger ond Freight\nNelson - Trail\nRossland Freight\nJ. C MUIR\nPhnnei! Ntlton 77; Kouland 171\nCoeiFStttleni For:\nSALMO   -   KASLO   \u2014   CRISTON   _,    NAKUSP\nGOES BACK \"HOME\"\nVANCOUVER, Dtc. \u00bb (CP) \u2014\nJama. Chirlebotl, 45. who police\nsaid ipent I2S yean In Jill ilnce\n19S0, was sentenced today to four\nye.n in prison whan ha pleaded\ng'lllty to throe chargei of dealing\nin forgeries Th. chargei aroie out\nof rashlng of four check. Involving\nJ721.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMI\nRADIO\nREPAIRS\nNILSON ELECTRIC CO.\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllHIIIIIIIII\n11 r1111j1111r m 1111111111 n1r 1111111r 1TT1iiiiii\nFLEURY'S    Pharmacy\nPreicrlptloni\nCompounded\nAccurately\nMed. Arte Blk\nPHONE25\nIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIII\nTOP STOCK SHOW\nKAMLOOPS, BC-, Dec. 8 (CP)-\nA near-perfect \"beef type\" iteer\nshown by F.erlscourt Farmi of Lytton was adjudged grand champion\nof the ae-venth annual Christmas fat\nitock ihow here today and a top\nquality iteer exhibited by Claire\nwood, tcen-aged Armitrong girl,\nwai named reserve grand champion.\nTORONTO STRIKE ENDS\nTORONTO, Dec. 8 (CP) - A\nlettlement which provldei for \"an\noperative agreement\" between the\nImperial Optical Company tnd the\nUnited Electrical Workeri Union\nIC.IO.) todiy brought to an end\nthe 30da..-old itrike it the optical\ncompany'i correctal lem plant\nGift! for the hockfy player.\nC CM. laminated hockey itlcki, ihln\nguards, elbow padi. Hlpperson'a.\nI will not be reiponilble for any\ndebts incurred by any one other\nthan by myielf.\n\u2014S. E. Doyle\nAprons, pillowslipi, home cook-\nIng and tea. Come nnd get them, Excelsior Bazaar, St. Paul'l Church,\nSit. 3 to 8.\nOur Chnitmai Cardi in now\nreidy. Comi in and make your\nchoice early. Nilion Dilly News.\nChrlitmu Ctrd Dept\n\t\nPHONE\nWi Call For arfd Deliver\nMen's. I_,1l.s' wltt, .idles' QAj-\nDream, pliln ._.._. *v*\nMen'i tnd Ledlef SI  IS\nSummer Coati         *fm*m9\nEMPIRE CLEANERS 4 DYERS\nMiiiiiiiiimimFHMiiMiniiiiuiiiiTiiiiii\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOMI\nAMRULANCI   MftVICI\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\n8IS Kootenay St Phone Ml\nlillllllHiillltUHIIHIIIMIMIIIIIillllllll.\n '     .1\nThe Independence movement begin ln Chile In 1910, with the ouit-\ning of the Spanish ruler Captain\nGeneril Antonio Harclt Carraico.\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuit* 203\nMEDICAL  ARTS  BUILDINO\nFLUORESCENT\nLAMPS\nMcKAY&STRETTON\nPhone Mi\nLIMITID\nN.lson\nenri\nNELSON FUNERAL CHAPEL\nLTD.\nL. R. Downing .nd C. J. Harrii\nSucceuori to Somer'i Funeral Home\n70S Baker St. Phone III\n\u25a0\u00ab\u00ab\u00bba\u00ab\u00bbaa\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb>r~\" _'\u00bb_-_>.\nHove the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PtUMBER\nPHONI IIS\nExtra gas\u2014 You now have lt. Pro-\ntect younelf agalnit Law Sulli and\nCoilltlon, etc. We write Auto lniurance. and can lave you money.\nRobertion Realty.\nIMPORTANT\nAnnuil Mtg. B.C. Prev. Govt. Km.\nploytei Assoc, Cm. Legion, Thur.,\nDec. fl It I p.m. Election of officers.\nRtfruhminti, Pliaie bring sugar.\nCLERIHEW'S   BEAUTY   LANI\nSM Jotephlne St.\nOur experkince plut tht flneit\nquality luppllei mum Life Iniur-\ntnce for your hiir. Phone 1145 for\nappolntmenti.\nBICYCLES   POR   BALI\nBoyi * ill so .     Boyi 129 50\nGlils 141.00 .    Girls $.17 SO\nGlrl'i Engliih I Speed $42.00\nAll Complitily Recondition.d\nSAM BROWN\n171 Btktr St Nelson, B.C.\nFUNERAL NOTICI\nWright\u2014The funerel of the lit.\nDr. 3. I. Wright of Cutlegar will\nbe held In Clatk'i Funeral Chapel,\nTrill, today at 1:10 p.m., Rev. J.\nRogert offlelttlng. Interment In\nMountain View Cemetery.\nTOO LATI TO CLASSIFY\nWANTED TO BUY USED PIANO\nBox MSI Daly Newt.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nFor Rellobl* Woteh Repairs\nPROMPT   URVICE\nHARVEY'S\nSS4 Baker SL\nliiiilliilillillliinillillililliiliiHiiimiii\n__l_tt_m__m_m_^\nDominion lo Pay\nPlanning Grants\nREGINA, Dec. 5 (CP)-Premier\nT. C. Douglai of Saikatchewan said\ntonight three concrete reiults emanated from lait week's meeting o(\nthe co-ordinating committee of the\nDominion-Provincial conference in\nOttawa \u2014 the setting up of a continuing committee there and the announcement! by the Federal Government lt will begin to pay health\niervlces planning grants effective\nJan. 1, 194o, and planning grants for\npublic works projecti.\nDouglai said a close scrutiny of\nthe Dominion proposal! reveiils that\nwhen the Federal Government says\nIt will look after all unemployed,\nthis excludei sell-employed individuals and anyone who had been\nunemployed for two years.\n\"This means the Federal Government would not be responsible for\nfarmers, ranchers, trappers or fishermen in the event of a depression.\nOn the Prairies, these groups constitute the major portion of the population.\n\"Your government has expreued\nthe view that if the Dominion Is\ngoing to be responsible for the unemployed ln the more highly indus-\ntriallred provinces, lt must also accept full responsibility for the primary producer! in the agricultural\nProvince!.\"\nThe Saikatchewan Government\nfeeli also there are iome fieldi of\ntaxation which should bo assigned\n1 to the Provinces. Unless the Federal\nGovernment Is willing to withdraw,\nthe Provinces can expect leu and\nleu revenue from the gaiollne tax\nand taxei on liquor and amuiement.\nonce considered Provincial fleldi of\nrevenue entirely.\nThe Stikatchewin Government\nhai taken the poaition that In addition to the annual subsidy of $12 per\ncapita which thi Federal Government Ji offering eich Province,\nthere Ihould be tn tdjustment or\nemergency grant io thit^tn emergency during a period of crop failure\nwould find the Provincial Government able to give sufficient assistance to maintain loclal iervlces\nCQUal to a minimum Canadian\nitandard.\nIOY WITH BIG HEART\nIMPROVES\nVANCOUVER, Dec. \u00ab (CP)-Slx-\nyear-old Colin Gray, the boy with\nthe big heart who was given only t\n\"few monthi\" to live when examined by ipecltlliti lait yttr, hu\nihown conildertble Improvement\nhit mother uld today,\nLONJQON, (CP)-Midget radlot,\nmanufactured In the Unlttd Statei\nand mtdt entirely of blue mirror\n|lau are on nil In London itorei.\nASTHMA? raz^mah\ntoe quick itW (wm ,tke \u00bbl>\u00bb**\u00bb\nEd fbwa]\nthousand.ol uaeri. RAi-MAHUtBt-Wb.\nmade lo relieve Itching, rtratmlng em\ncfcoM-up brotK-laLtubta tl_l__MM\u00abej\ncouth, cauied by Aithma. Chi**\nBnackhltandHarFnar. S0c.ll. *-il\n_.,. _..\u201e\n103,000 THROUGHOUT\nB.C. RECEIVE\nFAMILY ALLOWANCES\nVICTORIA, Dm- 5 (CP) -\nThroughout Britlih Columbia 103,*\n000 famlllei, comprising about\n200,000 children received family\nallowance* In November, about\n1000 mort famlllaa than In October, W. R. Bone, Regional Director\nof Family Allowance! announced\nTueiday. Total paid out waa IV\n200,000.\nFor every family traniferrad to\nanother part of the Dominion\nabout two have entered the Province, he tald. Much of the Increaie\nla accounted for by loldleri' fun-\nlliet returning to their home Prov-\nInca aftar periods In Eaitern Canada, but many othtn are new reildenti.\nNEWSPRINT CEILING PRICE\nTO BE RAISED\nWASHINGTON, Dtc. 5 (AP)-The\nceiling price of newsprint will be\nraised $6 a ton by the Office of\nPrice Administration, generally affective the first of the year ln line\nwith annual contracts, officials announced yesterday. Officials tald the\norder is primarily to assure an\nequitable price, but It alio \"should\noperate to prevent further decreasei\nin United Statei newiprint production during 1M8.\" The action would\nput basic port price,, of newsprint\nand ilderun newsprint at $fl7 a ton,\nwith super-standard new_rprint at\n$7050, zone prices varying accordingly.\nTheory of More\nWartime Male\nBirths Exploded\nVICTORIA, Dec. 5 'CP) - The\nB.C. Dlviion of Vital Statistic! today ihowed there was little truth In\nthe common belief that during wartime mala blrthi Increase over female, e\nPlotting ratios for the five-year\npeacetime p\u00abriod from 1934 to 1838\nand  for  the   five-year  war  period\nfrom 1939 to 194V the Division con- j\nelude*:\n\"There Is no Justification fnr the\ncommon expression that there are\nn.ore boys born during the wnr than\ngirls\u2014the ratio being 1.09 to 1 in\nthe five years pri^r to the war and .\n1 Ofl to 1 in the five years of the\nwax,\" I\nTrail Curling\nResults\nRemit, of Wedneid.y nlgWl|\ngamei ol the Trill Curling elub'i\nCrown  Point  competition  were: \u25a0\nR. Stone 7. D. McLennan 8.\nJ. H. Leckie 7, G. S. Ortner i.\nT. D'Amour 10, W. P. Robert-on I\nG. W. Weir 10,1. W. Hulewood ll\nA. C. Alliion 5, A. H. Wooll 7.\nS. Gray 6, W. B. Hunter S.\nJ. Atwell 0, C. D. Stuirt 15.\nJ. DeVito 5, r. Hudoklln A.\nA. Cheyne 11, A. Robb 1J.\nC. Strachan 10, R. Somerville Jr,\n5.\nJ. Bell 7, W, Cirrle 8.\nA. W. McDonild S, H. T. Beckett 4\nThursday', driwt:\n6:00\u2014\nM. M. Butorac va. R. C. McO\u00abr\u00bb\nrifle.\nH. Currle v\u00bb. R Somerville Sr.\nD  McLeod vl T. Strachan.\nW  H. Baldrey vl II. H. Miller.\n730 p.m \u2014\nR  P. Dockerill va. A. B  Clark.\nF J. Plester vi. D. Forreit\nA. E. Allison vi. J. P Schofleld.\nW. Rae vs. R. E. Hill.\n900 pm.\u2014\nJ D. Hartley vs. L. Ft Tyson.\nV  Ferguson vl. E  L. Jones.\nA  B. Ross va. R. J. MacKinnon.\nD. S. Wetmort vi. Q. O. Servlc*\nVANCOUVER, Dee. S (CP) \u2014\nJark Houghton, \u25a0 K ER. met\u00abr\nronder. narrowly cicaped Injury by\nan nxe-wleldlng woman here today.\nPolice reported the woman had be\u00ab_\nconflned to an Institution thr\u00bb\u00bb\nyears ago.\nHow Your\nChild May Be\nInviting Colds\nThtt W Wfar  .trWri  mort  wilh  Um\nrvi    r,  for   I'Ur.   \u2022Utlty   J   \u25a0\u25a0,\u25a0:\u25a0,,'.'\u25a0,'   }\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00ab<'\u2022\nhMOM lm r\u00ab|t:!\u00bbr In \u00ablnt\u00abr and thli \u00abpb-\nrllllnr.   Oflrtt   triw\u00bbn    .Ml|-_.nr\u00ab  \u00bb!.<_   iQTJtM\n\u00bb\u25a0*\u25a0 -i. br roid i\u00abrrn\u00ab Tn I tl;. prrrtnt \u25a0<_.)\u25a0\ncoldt. k\u00abtp >\u25a0 nr ahtlf \u2022 \u25a0\u2022\u00bb';\u00ab i\u00bb|iikr wttk\nf'SiMr\u00abm'i T*n TtVk.a. TjVm* pUuaal,\nlink .\u00bb!\u25a0:\u00bb<\u00ab fnr rrrnnn.t.i l ti II ir* \u00bb\n:\u00ab!>'\u25a0\u25a0.# itj.l mnrt. T \u25a0 -, \u25a0:\u25a0 - }-.*',., .\u25a0.\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0-\u00bb\nth\u00ab * -T i1<nr,*ch that < l-tn ler* with nnU\ntf-v-tarfetwtli. (WCMWrwiOwr-Tihkte\nt. '\u2022> \u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0. i''\u00abr I k\" r cklld tfilrxt 1;\"--\ntt.MUUT t\"t .1.  Uf at  JriiffUU.\nPAR ALIO I\nDr.CHASES\nParadoi\n\u25a0HI. r.  Bl lit I   ,,l\n  ^PPaaPi\n.....\nres\nNazi Plan for\nty DANIEL DE LUCE\n. NUERNBERG, Dec, . (API-Herman Goering shattered Czechoslovakia'! lait will to rciist Hitler'i\nmm\nICE CREAM\nOutdoou!\ntttt MMflMMf \u2022aaaalr^ar'haii MMIM\nlaayrtWW It20\u00abbove aareor lower-\nhi   twa   mlnutei,   mix   I an (land any,\n%M%pt   9Hm   t%m\\t   ttttTft,   tV9p*ffli(d\nmilk ar Htrtwad milk\u2014put Httaaw\nflf 20 mlnuttl or Uss\u2014Ihtn whip end\n\u2022MSI. TM'! aU, N. caoklngl Smooth\n\u2014me In tt iHots. Sm ta In psnt\u2014v*\u00bb\nmake H. (Uu mM r ikliss milk far\nd.lkl.uB h-i.n taiHrtl.) lSe f>Vg.\nm\u00abk\u00abs It strvlngs. You *ii my\nflavovr. Aik your gtoctr *\ndeny. H ka doosn'l sarrv It, stud at\nl ana 20 i\nH.00 lar 7 psickagis\nLonnonDCKRy\nJ05 Dominion Squirt Building\nwir machine with tht ultimatum\nthtt \"half of Prague would lit ln\nruins front aerial bombardment\nwithin two hours,\" tht International\nMilitary Tribunal wai told today.\nProsecutors at the trial of Goering and 19 other Natl leaden accused of war crimei laid before tbe\ncourt official German recordi tnd\nFrench and British diplomatic report! disclosing the Nazi pattern of\nthreats, treachery and broken prom-\nlies that crushed the Czechs only\nfive months after the Munich Pact\nled Prime Minister Chamberlain to\nproclaim \"peace ln our time.\"\nDI3CL08ED IN COLD DETAIL\nIn cold detail, the prosecution disclosed the ordeal of Czechoslovakian Preiident Emll Hacha when he\nwas Imperiously summoned to Berlin the day before German troops\nmarched across the border March\n14, 1939, and was told thit Prague\nwould be bombed If the Czechs fired\non the Nazi Invaders.\nGoering bullied Hacha with the\nbombing threat if he did not Immediately \"invite\" German troops into\nhis country, it wai revealed ln the\nreport M French Ambassador Ro-\nTHE SUPERIOR\nBATHROOM\nTISSUE\nYour Grocer has\nit now.\nSOVEREIGN\nIndustrial Bank\nes\nal Report\nOTTAWA, Dtc. 5 <CP)-Flr_t annul report of the International Development Bank, mtdt public hert\ntoday, discloied that loam to t total\not t3,lM,050 htvt bttn authorized\nto date tnd thtt f-71,753 U outstanding on these loans.\nSET UP IY PARLIAMENT ACT\nTbe btnk wu iet up by Act of\nParliament a year ago for tht purpose of extending medium tnd longer term credit to Industrial enterprises of moderate size. Jt ii a subsidiary of the Bank of Canada and\naa such!-! publicly owned. The report was preiented to Finance Minliter Ililey by Graham Toweri, President of the Bank.\nIn\" all 98 appllcatloni were approved but some were withdrawn\nlater by the applicants and as at\nSept, 30 thtrt wtrt 80 authorized\ncredlti i on tbt booki ot the bank.\nAverage siie of the credit! wai $39,-\n978. Average term of the loam was\nflvt yein tnd til credits before\ninterest tt flvt ptr cent\nDlitrlbutlon  tf tht  credlti  by\nInduitrlti:\nAuthorized Outit'd'g.\nFoods and\nbeveragei  * 342,900 $ 7\\.89\nTextiles and\napparel'     793,250   279,210\nLumber and wood\nproduct!     325,300   148,922\nIron, steel and\nmetal producti   318,000    82,804\nMachinery and\nequipment     539,000   108,106\nStone, day and\ngliss producti\nRefrigeration\n341,000\n318,000\nOther\"     -35,000\n80,992\n30.000\n69,729\n212,189\n105,000\n11.700\n\u25a0y Ontario and Weitern Prov\nInces:\nOntario  1,_9_,580\nManitoba       336,000\nSaskatchewan ...    30,000\nAlberta',.     135,500\nBritlih Columbia\nTerritoriea     .     137,500    11,487\nOf tht bank'! $25,000,000 authorized capital $10,000,000 wai issued,\nall to the Bank of Canada. Of this\n$8,947,750 was Invested in Government securitiei which were the main\nsource of revenue, yielding $297,952.\nLoans by investment produced revenue of $10,550 for total earnings of\n$308,509. Expenses were $110,886 and\nnet operating earnings $197,842.\nOut of the net earnings $108,000\nwas appropriated to contingency reserve to meet possible future losses\nand the rest was transferred, to the\nreserve fund.\nTha report continued:\n\"The bank's function is to extend\nfinancial assistance to industrial enterprises ln cases where tt ls the\nopinion of the bank that credit\nwould not otherwise be available on\nreasonable terms and conditions and\nwhere the amount of capital Invested by the owner is such ai to afford\nthe bank reasonable protection.\n\"There hai not yet been sufficient\ntime to prove that a worthwhile volume of business will be maintained\nor that the bank can operate on a\nself-supporting basis\u2014but nothing of\na discouraging character has shown\nitself\u2014and I feel that the situation\nI have described tends to support\nthe belief expressed before the\nBanking and Commerce Committee\nduring the passage of the bill, that\nthere is a need for such a bank ln\nCanada.\"\nNILSON DAILY NtWS, THUMDAY, DIC. I, 1941 \u2014 a\nGIVE SENSIBLE GIFTS\nLadies'\nTweed Coats\nHard-wearing Tweed Coats of Harris and Herringbone types\nthat make' a .grand Christmas gift for\nmother and sister.   Sizes 16 to'42.\nPriced at _\n$35.00\n\\\n^ A\nDresses\nNovel yoke treatment\u2014twinkling buttons\nand graceful draping and new steeve fashioned in crepe and jersey. $1 *1 QC\nSizes 14 to 40      IL. at J\n.Skirts\nw\nLadies' nicely tailored Gabardine Skirts by\n\"Gerhard Kennedy\". Pleat in $ A QC\nthe front. Jizes 14 to 20  ^eelj\nHousecoats\nbert Coulondre read Into the evidence.\nPROSECUTOR READS REPORT\nThe prosecution then read British\nAmbassador Sir Neville Henderson's\nreport that Goering ln an interview\nlater did not deny the threat but\ngave us his alibi that he Intended\nonly to unleash the Lutfwafte \"If\nGerman llvei were loit.\"\nUnder thii preisure, German rec-\n1946\nD\nG\nD\nQ\nQ\nD\nQ\nQ\nJLLfolL fiLdteOULL\nhurry, send them along,     .._,\nLAa^IlS-WLL\nabout Kootcnay's throng.\nLl fo\/L CdIdil\nlocal color wt mean\u2014\nLl foit JiwuL\nsend the good inapt wt'vt Man.\nLLihlLffffLoL\nwhere we print thii edition,\niLJalL ftiLt-hsid,\nItt't avoid thii conditioni\nLLfoiLSdmL\nwhich art alwayi a boon,\nLlQdAa (MuMLAiwwiiL\ntend thtm in ioon.\nLlQlVl ^tiqik\na grtat many pages\u2014\nLET'S makt It an issue\nRemembered through ages!\n-p.     -my   \u25a0 *. -\nEdition\nby a|B\n.ich-' 5\nT, in I\nPHONES:\nReady-to-Wear\nHosiery   \t\nDrygoods    _.\nGroceries   \t\nMen's Wear .....\nords showed, President Hacha finally gave in and the Germans poured over the border without opposition the next day.\n\"PURE INTERNATIONAL\nBANDITRY\" #\nHitler's leisure of Czechoslovakia\nwas described as \"pure international\nbanditry\" by the prosecution which\nIntroduced document! showing how\nthe Fuehrer called Ciecti and Slovak leaders to Berlin.\nHungiry'i part In the partition of\nthe little country was shown by\nletter to Hitler from Admiral Nich\nolas Horthy, Regent of Hungary,\nwhich he told of plans lo manufac\nture a \"frontier Incident\" March 18, |\n1989, ii a pretext for the Invasion\nof Ruthenii, one of the Czechoilo-\nvik Provinces.\nHorthy, however, did not need to\nfake an \"Incident.\" Hitler's troops\nmoved into Ciechoslovikia March\n14, 1939, and Hungary took the opportunity to seize Ruthenia with\nnegligible opposition.\nSTAGE FOR INVASION\nThe  stage lor  Invasion  wai set\nMarch  13,  1939,  prosecution documents disclosed, when Hitler ordered Slovik Premier Joseph Tiso to J\nBerlin ind threatened to let Hungiry  Invade  Slovakia  unless Tiso\nrenounced union  with the Czechs |\nimmedlstely. Two ot the trial de\ntendinis,   Field   Marshal   Wllhelm\nKeitel and former Foreign Minister\nVon  Ribbentrop,   were  present\nthe meeting.  Tiso  gave in.\nThe day before German troops\npoured across the Czech border,\nHichi was called to Berlin to receive the ultimatum. Hitler told\nHacha. German records Introduced\nas evidence disclosed, that the irmy\nwould move it 6 o'clock the next i\nmorning prepared to uie \"physical\nforce.\" Hitler added:\n\"London and Paris were not In i\nposition to' really stand up lor\nCzechoslovakia.\"\nResuming for the British prosecution staff, Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe\nlisted Germany's violation of 69\ntreaties, agreements and issurancei\nilnce Hitler came into power in 1933. j . , , , ,\nObviously   bored   is   the   Briton   Machinery MOy\nitarted reading the ditei md*pro- . Cfarf\nvisions of German promlies to rt-' \u2022\"\nfriin from wir, Field Marshal Keitel munched on pieces of cracker.\nVon   Ribbentrop,    who    negrtiated\nmany of the agreements,\"scribbled\nnotes.\n. Sir David said the British proiecutor! would call no witneisei for\noral testimony\nA grand selection of Ladies' Housecoats In\ncosy Chenille\u2014wrap-around skirt and gerv\nerous tie. Sizes 14 to 20.\n\\m-m Priced at \t\n.'7.95\nBedjackets\n_ \u00ab\n._ 52\n_ 4.\n... 193\n... 39\nLadies Brushed Rayon Bedjackets \u2014 Long\nsleeves, tie at neck\u2014pink and fl IQ\nblue. Small, medium and large       ltl *r\n^oiW* *$*! d^wf <\u00abf.\nMcawoiuaw nt may uro.\nNELSON. B.C.\nSTORE HOURS:\n9 i.m.-5 p.m.\nMon.-Tuei.-Thurs.-rrt\nWedneiday: 9 a.m.-13 noon\nSaturday: I i.m.-l p.m.\n^^^^^^^^^r^^^^^*^^^^^^^?**\u00a7i\nEuropeans Forget Debt to Allies*\n\\ Troops Rile Natives\nBV R088 MUNRO\nCanadian Preu Staff Writer\nPARIS, Dec. 8 (CP) (By Mall)\n\u2014Relations between people of\nWestirn Europe ind Allied loldleri on the Continent hive\nchinged \u2022 lot from the expimlve\nmonthi of liberation\u2014ind chinged for the worse.\nThe happy cimindle which ex-\nlited In th\u00ab flnt fluih of freedom\nhai been replaced, to a large de-\ngree, by Irritations, suspicions,\nbickering and misunderstandings\nwhich sometimes lead to violence.\nThl    predominant    attitude\nIn Paris,   for example,  a\nmany  Frenchmen  appear to\namong many Europeans seems to\nbe  this:  \"The tooner thoie  soldiers get homi ind  liavi us to I American, British and Canadian sol-\nounelves In our country, the bet- jdieri with a disregard and lack of\nter It will bi.\" They have been  respect which has something almost\nrather quick to forget tha debt I hostile about lt\nthey   owe  the  irmln  to  which\nthese men belong.\nIn Le Havre relations between the\nReplacing the original practice of Frencn ,nd the Americans became\nheaping gifts and hospitality on the ;,_ ltra|nC() that violence broke out.\nliberators,  a   growing  tendency   is i The port was made out of bounds\nevident   among   Europeans   to   be to   the  troops' to  prevent  further\ncurt with the troops, sell them goods < trouble.\nat exhorbltant  prices,    and    treat\nVIOLENT OUTBREAK\nbetter record than the American!,\nsome have caused disturbances on\nleave that have damaged the Army'i\nreputation.\nThe British are by far tht bait-\nbehaved troops on the continent\nTheir whole approach to the problem of living In a European country\nlood Iis 'ar more commendable than thtt\n_ ., I of either the Americans or Canadians. The Britlih Tommy, for til\nhis profanity and grousing, display!\na sense of responsibility In Europt\nwhich troops from across tha ocean\nlack.\nthem as naive tourlsti open for exploitation.\nRolling This Week\nWASHINGTON, Dec. 3 (AP) -\nAfter a long delay, machinery may\nstart rolling this week for creation\nof the two world financial Institutions agreed on at the Bretton\nWoods Conference. They ire in International Monetary Fund ind \u2022\nWorld Bank.\nBritain li the key to the situation.\nThe deadline for countrlei to ilgn\nthe Bretton Woodi agreements is\nDec. 31. If Britain signs, sevenl\nother countries probably will fol-\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 5 (CPl- Sis- '\u25a0 low and the fund and bank are confer Joseph Willard, of the ststf of t sidered almost certain to come Into\nSt Paul's Hospital here, foiled a existence ai planned,\nholdup itempt by, three irmed men j If Britain doei not ilgn. the pros-\nln the hospital's pharmacy lait night. I p_ct li uncertain.\non the dotted line. The monetary\nfund's total capital Is set it $8,800,-\n000,000, and 65 per cent, of that ls\n15,720,000,000.\nSISTER WILLARD\nFOILS\nHOLDUP ATTEMPT\nSister Willard told poller the .href\nentered the pharmacy, threatened\nher with gunn and demanded a supply of narcotics.\nThey fled when she Uld them tht\ndruggist waa not on duty and she\ndid not have i key fnr the vault\nUp to now Britain has delayed\naction pending tha outcome of negotiations on a proposed loan from\nthe United Statei\nThe. fund and bank will not be\nbornajunlil countries subscribing 65\n.per cent, of the capital have signed\n\u2022Ntlson latitj Hims\nQUESTION IF HIROHITO HELPED JAPAN\nINTO WAR BROUGHT INTO OPEN\nly   RUSSELL   BRINES\nI tack en Purl Hsrbor navit bin\nwould opin thi conflict Dae.'7,\n1M1.\nTOKYO. Dec. 5 (API-The long\nundercurrent question, \"did Emperor Hirohito help puih Jipin Into! Additional, it was learned thit\nthe wir?\"\u2014i queitlon which by Its ] when Prince Fumlmiro Konoye res-\nvery  niture  onie  could  not hive | cently deicrlbed lo lulhorltlei in\nbeen uked publicly tn Jipin\u2014wu\nout In the open today.\nToday a retired Japaneie General.\nToihlio Nlihio. told the Auociited\nl'res-. that Hirohito attended \u25a0 highly lecret conference held it the Im*\nperlil Palace In late November or\nearly December. 1M1, Just prior to\nthe outbreik of wir In the Pacific\nNlihio iald Ihe Mikado Informed Ihi\nSupreme War Council \"Jipan might\nhive to fight If thlngi didn't Improve\"\nNliMn added, r_5wivir, what\nnther Jipineaa have iald \u2014 tha\nEnspirer wiint told a iniak at-\nother secret conference held it the\nPalace Sept. t, 1M1, he dlicloMd\nthit Hirohito wii prrienl The Sept\n8 conference, held when Konoye wu\nPremier. Included \u2022\u2022 \u2022 participant\nWar Minliter Hldekl ToJ6 who liter\nreplaced Konoyt u Premier.\nTht Stpt 6 confertti decided thit\nJiptn would begin preparing for\nwar la th* middle oi October unleai\nther* wai a derided Improvement\nIn negntlitloni at Waihlngton. No\nproposal wai mid* it th* confer-\nenc* to remove th* chief itumbllng\nblock to tht Wuhlngton negotiation*, the prieanc* of Japaneie\ntroopi tn China.\nAs a result of thli iltuatlon ln\nWestern Europe most soldiers spend\ntheir leaves ln their own circle of\nclubs and theatres. Social contact\nwith such people as the French and\nBelgians is being reduced practically to nothing.\nThe men thimulvei iri \"fid\nup.\" Even though they know they\nhive to wilt for shipping, It ll\nhard to rationalize thli In their\nmlndi.\nThe attitude of the Europeani\ndoei not help this any, for it serves\nonly to embitter the soldiers still\nmere.\nNOT ONESIDED\nThe problem is not entirely onesided, however. The behaviour ol\nChurches, Inc. snd the donation was | Allie(J troop, ,w,|ting repatriation\nannounced by Dr. Henry Smith Lei- I generally has not been up to itan-\npur, Executive Secretary of the Am- dard, ,et when the w>r wu on\nerlcan Commltte*. Conduct of some Americans has\nI been provoking In France and Bel-\nIXWORTH    THORPE.     Suffolk, glum many have displayed a sense\nEngland (CP)\u2014Harry Shaw, 78, has of     exaggerated     self-importance\nhelped gather In 68 harvesti. Is de- | which ingen the people of thoie\ntermlned to keep working. His first countrlei.\nJob. doing odd   Jobs   on   \u2022 farm, I    The Canadian! are next In line\nbrought him 3d (6 cents) \u25a0 day.       I among offender!. While they hive i\nReceives Gift of\n$1,000,000\nNEW YORK, Dec. S (AP)-A gift\nof $1,000,000 by John D, Rockefeller,\nJr., for Christian Rehabilitation. Reconstruction and education ln Europe, was announced Tuesday.\nThe money was contributed to the\nFriendi of  the  World  Council   of\nnlBBO* l\nMW*J\ni , i\nBLUE RIBBON\nBAKING POWDER\ntU\nLakea iraotkm\n.-..:.  .:..   .,*...-A-CmJaU.,\t\n Ihsr Deaths,\nMarriages Up;\n-Divorces Down\nVICTORIA, Dtc. 8  (0>)-511ght\nlncreues ln the birth, death and\nmarrlaga ratei and a reduction ln\ntile number ot dlvorcei aro noted in\nthe October summary of th* Division of Vital Statistics released today  In   the  Provinclil   Boird   of\nHealth December bulletin.\n'    Births In B.C. during October to-\n' tilled 1685, compired with 1404 dur-\n' ing October, 1944, bringing the total births ln the province for tht\nfirst 10 monthi of thli ytar to 15.101,\ncompared with 15,322 blrthi during\nthe flrit 10 monthi of 1944.\ni    lite October birth rate thli yeir\nwas 21.411, compared with 19.33 ln\nOctober, 1944.\nDeaths during October totalled\n-779, compired with 682 during October, 1944, The rat* for the month\na, 10.04, agalnit 9.00 in October,\n\u25a0tt 10 monthi ot thli yttr to 15,101,\niof thli ytar totalled 7528 igilnit\n|7 during the umt period of last\nJf.\nThe marriage rate during October\nSeased from 9.87 In October, 1944,\n11,88.  During   the   month   883\nrltgti were recorded.\nPlvorcai ln October totalled 87,\nMY m MORI?\nJohn Beadell, popular Canadian\nttnor to bt httrd In recital In St,\nPaul'l Church Auditorium thli\nwttk, For hll Ntlton recital Mr.\nBeadell will ba tulittd by in Instrumental trio from Trail com-\npeud of Mri. C. H. Wright, plan-\nlit, Otto Nltdtrmmn, violinist,\ntnd Jtmu Blroh, etlllit\nand\nSPARES\nJonellas nosed out Atomic! by t\nilngle pin ln the nlght'i but team\nperformance ln Nelion Lidlei Flvt-\nPln Bowling Leigue pity Tueidiy\nnight at Oellnta Alleys. Jonellas\npiled up 1761 plni In their two\ngames, but with D. Norfleld getting\nI icore of 290 ln one game, Atomics\nmade lt a close race.\ncompared with 105 during October,\n1944.\nDuring the first 10 months of this\nperiod of 1944. October Illegitimate\nyear 780 Illegitimate births were recorded, against 653 during the same\nbirths totalled 83, compared with 49\nduring October, 1944.\nFINDING NELSON\nPAPER JUST\nUKE BEING HOME\nHli pleasant surprise ln discovering his home paper at No. 22 Canadian General Hospital overseas is\ndeicribed in a letter to the Daily\nNews by Lieut. R. D. (Bill) Myen,\nformer Nelson boy. The letter follows:\n\"It has been quite a time since 1\nwas last in Nelson but my heart is\nstill there and I am impatiently\nwatting for the day that 1 will be\nable to return.\n\"At the moment I am enjoying (?)\na lengthy sojourn in the hospital\n1 have been laid up for several\nweeks here but hope to be back to\nmy unit in a couple of weeks.\n\"Today I got a very pleasant surprise.' 1 was in the Red Cross library\nand I found a large stack of \"Dally\nNews.\" I haven't teen any for a\nlong time and spent the remainder\nof the time catching up on the local\nnews, lt was really just like being\nback home.\n\"I want to express by appreciation\nto the organization that sends the\npaper over here and assure you that\nit was just like \"a breath from\nhome\" to be able to read them.\" '\nScores were:\nATOMICS\nSpot  58\nK. Mangan   178\nM. Murray  151\nB. Langstaff  123\nD. Norfleld  290\nP. Brown  209\nTotal      1009\nDIEHARD8\nSpot'    52\nL. Tulloctt   156\nV. Phillips   121\nV. Blaney   116\nA. Brown -. 95\nM. Ross   170\nTotal               710\nHIGH 'N' DRY\nSpot                  107\nF.Gill             123\nJ. Butler       99\nM. Dunster  100\nB. Booth     48\nC. Fornelli   181\nTotal,  658\nHigh  individual score-\nifeld, 290.\nHigh   aggregate   score\nfield, 445.\nPALMS\nSpot     , 3\nN. Wood   185\nM. Arnot   178\nP. Hickey  157\n58 116\n172 350\n132 283\n11) . 235\n155 446\n122 331\n751 1760\n52 104\n288 444\n111 213\n72\nKKV 195\n140 318\n743 1453\n\\pprovtd C-.rfff.rrn\nAmerican Basic\n* Phn '41\nWASHINGTON, Dec. I (AP) -\nThe lite Preiident Roosevelt on\nAug. 29, 1941, approved t Joint Canadian-American basic defence pltn,\nlt wu disclosed today.\nOn June 7, 1941, the lite Pruldent declined to ipprov* \u2022 British-\nAmerican plan for Joint military operation! in the event the United\nStates became Involved in war.\nThese disclosures were brought\nout In records submitted to the Senate-House Committee Investigating\ntbe Japanese attack on Peirl Harbor Dec. 7, 1941. They ihossrtd, how-\ntvtr, that Mr. Roosevelt's military\naide, Maj. Gen. E. M. Watson, told\nWar Department offlclili that \"In\ncue of war, the (British-American I\npapers would be returned to the\nPresident for hli \u2022approval.\"\n107\n214\n10(1\n116 216\n80 128\n179 360\n802 1460\n-D. Nor-\n-D. Nor-\nI \u00ab.\n205 390\n159 337\n144 801\nDr. T.H, Morgan.\nNobel Prize\nWinner, Dies\nH. Pearson\nR. Ross\t\nTotal .,\nARISTOCRAT8\nSpot\nM. Gould .\nN. Bennet     .....\nG. Laughton \t\nD. Barrett\nH. Smith\nTotal\n8HORTHOU8E\nSpot\nA. Skilton     166\nA. Lewis     114\nR,  Ronmark      128\n187\n120\n818    1649\n112\n82\n109\n68 171\n82 149\nUl 271\n584 1257\n41 82\n150 316\n76 190\n118     246\nJ. Gentles .   181    141     272\nA. Shorthouse 129    107     236\nTotal 709    633    1342\nHigh Individual score\u2014N. Wood.\n205.\nHigh   aggregate score\u2014N.   Wood,\n390.\nACES\nA. Kuhn\nNT. Ramsden\nS. Mann\nO. Patterson\nB. Maloney\nTotal\nJONELLAS\nSpot\nJ. Ennis\nL  Dunnett\nM. Paterson\nD. Wesch\nM.  Dingwall\nTotal\nTOPS\nSpot'   \t\nN. Brake ..\nM. Logus\nB. Renwick ...\nLow Score\nM   Speirs ..\nTotal\nMAY WEAR UNIFORMS\nWHILE UNDERGOING\nPLASTIC TREATMENT\nOTTAWA, Dec. 5(CP)-Alr Minister Gibson said today efforts are\nbeing made to make it possible for\nAir Force personnel to continue to\ntvear their uniforms while undergoing plastic surgery treatment.\nHe wu replying to Flt.-Lt. James\nSinclair fL-Vancouver North) who\nurged that a dozen plastic surgery\npatlenti at the Trenton, Ont., RCAF\nHospital, which was.being closed,\nbe allowed to weir their uniform!\nuntil their treitment ls completed.\nCol. Gibson said he had an interview during the weekend with some\nof the patients. Under ordinary routine the men would be discharged,\nturned over to Veterans Affairs and\nwould not be allowed to wear their\nuniform*.\nMany of the patients were badly\ndisfigured and said it was most embarrassing for them to go around in\ncivilian clothes when people did not\nconnect their disfigurement with\nwar service.\nGREENWOOD\nGREENVoOD, B.'C.-M1m Beat-\nrice Merchant, Principal of Kettle\nValley School and Miss Margaret\nBurrows, primary teacher of Pentlcton, spent tht weekend in Greenwood.\nMiss Mildred Fritz and her brother, Adolf Fritz of Beachley, Sask.,\nspent the week ln Greenwood.\nPASADENA, Calif, Dec. ! (AP)-\nDr. Thomai Hunt Morgan, regarded\nby many mtn of science as the\nworld's foremost authority on heredity, died here yesterday.\nNOBEL PRIZE WINNER\nThe 79-yetr-old winner of the 1933\nNobel Prize for medicine luccumbed\nafter a short Illness.\nProfessor Emeritus of Biology it\nCalifornia Institute of Technology,\nDr. Morgan was a leader In it least\nfive fields of scientific research, but\nhis epoch-making contributions to\ngenetics overshadowed all else.\nHOW HE WON THE\nNOBEL PRIZE\nHe won the Nobel Prize for clarifying the lawi of heredity and the\nmutation of ipeclei after 17 yttn'\nstudy of tiny vlntgar files\u2014dro60-\nphili melanogaster.\nSEAFORD, Sussex, England (CP)\n\u2014The freedom of Dieppe hu been\noffered to Capt. Gordon Munton\nwho made 11,000 croisingi of the\nChannel in- the Southern Railway\nservice, including.several during the\nDunkerque evacuation.\nOnihctut\nTHURSDAY, DECEMBER 6\n214\nS14\n257\n396\n.49\n1590\n32\n325\n233\n410\n42!\n339\n899 862 1761\n115 99\n179 135\n159 98\n182 174\n234 215\n869 721\n16 16\n141 184\n131 102\n211 199\n242 180\n44\n140\n108 135\n96 1J7\n63 98\n63\n514\n110\nHigh Individual score\u2014D. Wesch,\n242.\n\u25a0High aggregate score\u2014B Maloney.\n449.\nLed by sparkling bowling by\nGwen Macrone and V. McDougall.\nSouth Slocan girls took two games\nout of three from a visiting Nelion\nquintette at South Slocan Alleys\nSunday. All three of Miss Macrone's\nscores were over 200.\nScores were:\nR   Ross\n127\n166\n203   496\nH. Pearson\n142\ninn\n204   526\nD. Norfield\n176\n128\n123   427\nM. Dingwall\n231\n187\n116   534\nM. Dunster\n180\n195\n120   495\nTotals\n856\nRS.fi\n766 2478\nV. McDougall\n247\n140\n200   587\nM. Bland\n137\n117\n182   436\nA. Hiltz\n166\n140\n104   410\nE. McGregor\n149\n200\n144   493\nG. Macrone\n203\n229\n227   659\nTotals\n902\n826\n857 2585\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNING\n7:30\u2014O Canada\n7:31-Muiical Reveille tCKLNi\n8:00\u2014CBC News\n8:15-Breakfast Club\n8:30\u2014 Breakfast Club\n8:44-C.P.R. Train Time\n8:45-Toast and Coffee Club\n(CKLN)\n9:00-BBC News\n9 15\u2014At Youf Service iCKLN)\n9.30-At Your Service iCKLNi\n9:45\u2014 Philadelpnia Coast Guard\nBand\n9:59\u2014Time Sisnal\n10:00\u2014Miniature Concert\n10:16-CKLN  Press News\n10:30\u2014Musical   Roundup   iCKLN)\n10:45\u2014Matinee for Moderns\n11:00\u2014Musical Americana\n11:15\u2014Women's Forum I CKI.N i\n11:30\u2014Soldier's Wife\n11:45\u2014Dancing Till Noon\nAFTERNOON\n12:00\u2014BC.   Farm   Broaacist\n12:15\u2014BC. Farm Broadcast\n12:25\u2014The  Notice  Boaro  i CKLN I\n12:30-CBC News\n12:45\u2014Matinee Memories\n1:00\u2014 Modern Minstrel!\n1:15\u2014School for Pirenti\n1:30\u2014Old Favourltei 'CKLNl\n1:45\u2014Old Favouritei 'CKLNl\n2:00\u2014School Broadcait\n2:15\u2014School Broadcait\n2:30\u2014Robinson Family\n2:45\u2014Downbeat\n3:00\u2014Western Five\n3:15-Headllne History\n3:30-Curtain Echoes\n3:45\u2014Peerless News (CKLNi\n4:0O\u2014Evening Scrapbook\n4:15\u2014Evening Scrapbook\n4:30\u2014Stock quotations\n4 45-Top Bands\n5:00\u2014Sacred  Heart Programme\n5:15\u2014Famoui  Belglam   iqKLNi\n5 30-Htppy the Humbug (CKLNI\n5:45-Hlppy the Hlimbug (CKLN)\nVENINC\n6:00\u2014Chrlitmu  Cindlellght\nICKLNI\n6:15\u2014Christmu Candlelight\n(CKLN)\n30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody (CKLN)\n59-C.P.R. Train Trme (CKLN)\n:00-CBC Newi\n15\u2014Newi Roundup\n30\u2014 Panorama\n0O\u2014Drama\n15\u2014 Drami\n.30\u2014Story of Music\n45\u2014Story of Muilc\nOO-Modern Rommcei (CKLN)\n15\u2014Song  Recitll\n30\u2014Cua Lomi Time (CKLN)\n45-Musicil Progrim (CKLN)\n:00\u2014CBC News\n15- U\u00ab Paul Trio\n30\u2014God Save the King\n\"World Suffering\nfor Wont     ,\nof Women's Brains\"\nCALOARY, Dec. 8 \u00ab_P)-\"Wt ire\nIn \u25a0 natlonil criili. Never wu there\n\u2022 time when we were nearer tht\nprtclptct. Wt want th* knowledge\nof ill tht people, for th* world is\nsuffering tor want , of women's\nbraini,\" Aldermin Rose Wilkinson,\nMLA. told delegates attending tht\nBth Annual Provincial Convention\nof th* Social Credit Women's Auxiliaries ot the Albert* Social Credit League.\nMort thin 60 representatives ot\nauxiliaries ln all parts of tht Province todty ittended the largest con-\nventlo not the organization.\nThe slate of offlceri, hetdtd by\nMri. Stell* Biker of Edmonton, wat\nreturned to offlct whan tht elections were held it Tuesday morning's session. Other officer! include\nMrs. E. C. Manning, Honorary President; Mri. E. <G. Windior, High\nRiver, Flrit Vlct-Prtildenti Mrs. S.\nE. Ctrter, Edmonton, Second Vice-\nPreiident: ind Stella Hughes, Edmonton, Stcrettry-Treisurer.\nWilh Die Legion\nBowlers\nTeams skipped by Jick Hamson\nand A. G. Ritchie captured games\nMonday and Tueiday nlghta rupee-\ntlvely In ten-pin Chrlitmai tournament bowling at the Canadian Legion Alleys. Hamson with icorei of\n155 and 170 topped the scoreri in the\ntwo matchei.\nTonight the male bowlers df the\nLegion club will meet the ladiei in\na return challenge match ln an effort to avenge a bad beating last\nweek.\nThe Christmas tournament will be\nresumed with games Thuriday and\nFriday.\nScores Monday and Tutsday wert:\nV. GRAVES\nW. Leslie   100   97-197\nMrs. C. Barrett        88   75-163\nMri. A. Dingwall   125 111-238\nV. Gravei        124 143-267\nTotal      437 426-863\nJ. HAMSON\nE. Anderion     97   89\u2014186\nMrs. T. Stenson  113   88^201\nMn. J. Chipman  143 113-256\nJ. Hamion         155 170-325\nTotil 508 480\u2014968\nHigh indlviduil icore\u2014J. Hamion,\n170.\nHigh iggregite score\u2014J. Hamson,\n323.     ,\nA. RITCHIE\nK. Musfelt          95 102-197\nMri. N. Tofelt     95 102-197\nMn. A. Kraft     98 139-237\nA. Ritchie 136 135-27!\nTotal 424 478-E02\nA. KRAFT\nC. Cummins            95 104-\nMn. R. Olsen  103 102-204\nMn. V.Graves    119 142-281\nA. Kraft .106 126-232\nTotal   . 422 474-896\nHigh individual score\u2014Mrs, V.\nGraves, 142.\nHigh aggregate score- A. Ritchie\n271.\nFeel Small Home\nBuilder\nMay Suffer\nVANCOUVER, Dtc. S (CP)-Ot-\ntawa's suddtn lifting of comtructlon controli wu glvtn i mixed reception In Vancouver todiy.\nlnduitry applauded lt and iald It\nmeant tht start ot mllllom ot dollar! worth ot ntw building, with\nconsequent Jobi for hundred! or\neven thousands ot men.\nBui men concerned with homing\nwere alarmed ind one construction\nmm commented '.It's going to be\npretty tough on the returned tbldler\nand the imall house builder.\n\"Whit materials then trt avillable will now bt used up on big\nprojects. A lot of luxury homes will\ngo up, ai ,well u ill the commercial\n\u2022nd induitrlil comtructlon.\"\nGeneril feeling wu thit lt will bt\nthe signal for \u25a0 wild catch-as-catch-\ncan scramble for materials In which\nthe small home builder will come\nout empty handed.\nIt Is feared that'whit material Is\nleft for homes will go into the big.\nger and more lucrative job*\nReil beginnings of ths petroleum\nIndustry of the world rite back\nonly to the middle of the 19th century, when the first oil well was\nsunk ln deliberate search for i supply ot \"black gold.\"\nH ALWILL. Devonihlre, Englind\n(CP)-In th* miln strtet of thli Ut.\ntie village tr* eight ftmillu ntmed\nWhit*, living tlmoit ntxt door to\netch other. Thiy Include the poit-\nmaster, district councillor, i milk\nretailer, ind the vlllagt confectioner.\nJ.l.TR\u00bbMBBLUTMin.ou.e.,B:C.\nYou'll enjoy our\nOrange Pekoe\n.   mend\nVt\n\"Jl\" Ea jAi\nStiff Sentences for\nArmed Robbers\nSIMCOE, QnL Dec. 5 (CP)-Sen-\ntan cm rangih|.fron_ two years less\none day to 12 yean and 20 lashes\nwere passed today on four men who\npleaded guilty on charges of armed\nrobbery of some $33,000 from the\nImperial Bank branch at Langton,\nOnt. Sept. 13.\nThe court sentenced Gail Hast-\ningi of Windsor, Ont., to 12 years\nand 20 lashes; Dominic Mlnnille of\nOttawa and Gerald Blackburn of\nWindsor each to 10 years and 20\nluhes; and William Vance of Windsor to two years less one day definite and two years less one day indefinite.\nThe men this morning changed\ntheir plea to guilty after a statement was admitted into evidence\nagainst Vance yesterday. The statement, given to police by Vance, told\nof the plans made to rob the bank,\nvfoHfrfc-fr*^eHfr*^fr*fafotHfoK!i<-.\n^e Tracks for\nWADE'S\nTips for Christmas\nMEN'S LADIES'\nWriting Caiet\nBoudoir Sett\nUtility Com\nand\nEngliih Billfolds\nHandbags\nAND DONT FORGET\nTOYS FOR THE KIPDIES\nWADE RIGHT IN AT\n346 Baker St.\nt4a-i fn Vi |h J> >\u25a0 JH w V fr\\ W fr\\ V\\ fr\\ iW twYt_H\nNow-sweeter,\ntastier bread with\nFLEISCHMANN'S\nBECOMING MORE\nDANGEROUS FOR\nMOTHERS-TO-BE\nVICTORIA, Dec. 5 (CP)-It ll becoming more dangeroui for women\nto beir children In British Colum-,\nbia I\nDuring lut October (Ive mothers\ndied giving birth to bibiei. In Oc-\ntober. 1M4, only two mothin died.\nMiUrnil. mortility hn claimed 38\nlivei 50 far thii yur, compind with\n30 during the 10-month period for\n1944.\nlBBff\u00a5*\u00bb\u00bb44a\u00bb\nIt'i IO Miy to btke delicious, imootb-textured\nIrtavcs if you um Fleischminn'i active fresh Yew.\nThis fresh yeist is jull-strmflb. It goes rigbl to ivorlt\nto help you get best baking results rtvry time.\nIF YOU BAKE AT HOME    insist oo\nFlei.schmano't attire Irrsh Yeast The\ncake with the fimilisr yellow libel!\nDependable\u2014Ctruda'.s fsvorite for over\n70yes_-s.\nMEASLES, MUMPS,\nCHICKEN POX\nVISIT LILLOIET\nLILLOOET.  Br,  Der,   5  'CP)-,\nMild outbreaks of measles, chicken\npox and mumps In Lillooet were\nbeing enmbatted by health officials\nhere today. It was the first time\nthat outbreaks of all three diseases\noccurred here at the one time Measles have been contracted by about\n25 children.\n' a i\nrf^fkwti\nMADE IN CANADA\nTO PLAY SANTA\nTO FELLOW\nUNDERGRADUATES\nTORONTO, Die. 5 (CP)-Unlver-\n\u25a0\u25a0itv of Toronto students will pity\nSinti Cliui to fell-W'tindergridu-\n\u25a0tei In Holland'! hlrd-hit Uiilvirslty\no( Amsterdim thii Chrlitmu Plani\nmnounced yesterdiy call for \u25a0 ram.\npus-wide cimpiign Ior contributions >\nand thi landing of food pirrels to \\\nIndlviduil Dutch 4tadenti is i\ngood-will gesture\nWIST Ol-INSTTAD, Suiiex, _.n_-\nUnd 'CPl\u2014Canadian loldl-ri quartered mar hen htd their lust view\nof a [ull-dnu hunt whan mlghhor.\nhood raaldtnti rode to hounds\nHunting pink, wai i*\u00abn for tht first\ntime In ilx yaan. '\nceMan-^^^?\nGrandma reniemheri, a. though it were yesterday. Every\nmorning sharp at seven, the \"gas man\" came along to turn\nout the itreet lamp opposite our home. Well, one morning,\nGrandma aaked him to come in and try a new breakfast\ncereal that had juat come on the market. He got quite a\nsurprise to find it came in a package and required no\nrooking. And how he cliortled when he tasted its really\ndifferent flavor! It was Grape-Nuts, of course.\nW Ghnrtlloi ovar that urn*\n\/ . MaltT-rifh, f-rr-l ts i nul\n\u25a0\u25a0 (IiT\u00bbr hai _>\u00abwq |nfn| on\n\u2022\u25bctr floe*. And loader aid\nloodar the** dirt! BeMUM note\nthat grand gM\u00bbdna*a li In rorN,\nI\u00bbldaa !\u25a0!\u25a0\u2022 .1 (.RAPE NUTS\nrU_ttS,loa!\n\u2022 ...limit i.iti am\n3 And th* tame good noar-\niihntssntl Carbohydrates\nfor rnecgy; protelm lor\nmtmle; phoiphonji for bonea\nand i \u25a0 ill. Iron for tha blood;\nand olhar food eatenllalil It's alt\ngoodnoaa that corim from two\ngoldm grain* wheat nnd mallrd\nbarley ipeclallj Mended, baked\nand touted, for glorloua flaror\nand eaiy digeation.\n4 Going ihopplng today?\nPirk up a \/ ickaga of\ngood-to-e_.it, noarlibloi\nGripe-Nuti Flaket. You'll appre*\ndale the economy of tha giant\niiie packagtv\n\u25a0     -\u25a0    ' ,    iir n   >\u25a0i - i    ft* ,\nrape.Nut$ Flak\n\t\n\t\n\t\n______\n \"\nMen's Oxfords\nJust received ... 3 lines\nMen's Oxfords.\n$8.50 and $9.50\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.'\nLeaders in Footfoshion\nl\u00abasS8\u00bbSS68S\u00bb8\u00abSSS\u00abS3\u00bbSSS\u00bbWSS&\nBirds have a pulse rite nearly\nJoublc the human rate; havi body\ntemperaturei five or 14 degreei\nibove man'i.\n-\u00bb\u00abS5SS\u00abSS\u00abWSSS\u00abS\u00ab3\u00abftKSSS\u00bbK\nReliable Watch Repairing,. .\nConsult\u2014\n... \u25a0 '       .\n\u2022\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\"\u25a0' \u2022      '     '\u25a0\u2022.} \u25a0\n'' .>:\u25a0\n\"Vancouverites Have\nan Accent\"\nVANCOUVHt; Dec. 5 (CP)-Blrt\nShowier, President of Vancouver,\nNew Westminster and Dlitrlct'\nTrades and Labor Council (A.F.L.),\nsays Vancouverites have an \"accent\"\nA Glasgow, Scotland, barber uked Showier If he came from Vancouver. When informed he did, the\nbarber wld he knew by Showler'i\naccent.\nShowier wai born ln LSndoh and\nhai an Engliih accent.\nV.C. Owen\nCandidate (or\nSchool Trustee\nV. C. Owen, B.C. Telephone Company Chief Clerk to the Di-flrict\nManager, and resident of Nelson for\n15 years, said Wednesday he would\nbe a candidate for school trustee ln\nthe civic election Dec. 13.\nMr. Owen has been active In a\nnumber of community affairs since\ncoming to Nelson .from Vancouver\nin 1930. He has been with the B.C.\nTelephone Company for 28 years.\nHe is a past president ot the fyJsnn\nGyro Club, and is still active on the\nRed Cross executive. A golf enthusiast, he has served on the Nelson Golf and Country Club Executive.\nMr. and Mrt, Owen have three\nchildren, two of whom attend school\nhere.\nSugar Plan to\nFur Coats\nthe Gift\nfor Housewives\nOTTAWA, Dec 5 (CP)\u2014The existing sugar and preierve rationing\nplan will be simplified for the Canadian housewife at the beginning\nof the new year, the Pricei Board\nhai announced.\nThe simplification wllT be brought\nabout by combining tugar and preserves rationing under a tingle plan\nitarting Jan. 1. Housewives will be\nable to purchase preserves or lugar\nwith one kind of coupon and the\nnew plan will mean a slight Increase\nIn the consumer ratloni,\nThli coupon miy, be uied for the\npurchase of any one of the following Items:\nOne pound of sugar; 24 ounces of\njam, jelly, marmalade, fountain\nfruits or cranberry sauce; four\npounds of honey, 30 ounces of corn\nor table syrup; 80 ouncei ot molasses; 40 ounces of canned fruit-\ntwo pounds of honey-butter; 40 fluid\nouncei of maple tyrup; four pounds\nof maple sugar.\nOn Jan. 1 all valid and unused\npink coupons marked \"sugar\" will\ntake the new ration values. On Jan.\n17, tugar coupons numbered (18 and\n89 will be declared valid, and in\nFebruary the last of theie coupons,\nNo. 70, will also be validated. After\nthis the \"S\" coupons are to be used\nfor thf sugar-preierves consolidated\nplan.\nBy the end of thli year all of\nthe \"P\" couponi will have become\nvalid, the last four\u2014H, 23, 24 25-\nbeing validated on Dec. 20. All unused preserves and \"P\" couponi will\ncontinue to hold their 1948 value\nfor preserves or the half-pound of\nsugar and all theie couponi will expire Jan. 31, 1948.\nThe allotment of sugar for home\ncanning will be the tame as ln 194S,\n10 pounds per person, and will be\nprovided by declaring valid 10 \"O'\ncoupons during the months when\nmost home canning is done. These\ncoupons may be used, as in 1948,\nfor the purchase of either sugar or\npreserves on the same basis as other\nregular couponi.\nFur coats are a most acceptable gift ... a gift that is\npractical, warm and stylish\n.. . choose a lovely\nELECTRIC SEAL\n(Dyed Rabbit)\nCONEY COAT\n(Dyed Rabbit)\n_ By MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\nCharge fer engagement announcement! en thli page li 81.60\nMtntRAY-FOWUE\n\u2022 The marriage took place Sunday, Dec 2, at St. Saviour'! Pro-\nCathedral at Kelson of Mlu Glenna\nMarie Fowlle of Creston, B.C., to\nRobert Nelson Murray, B. Comm.,\nnotary public of Yahk, B.C, Very\nRev. t, P. Clark, Dean of Kootenay, officiating. The bride ls the\nyounger daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nt. A. Fowlle of Creston. The\ngroom, th* elder- son of Mr. and\nMrs. H. B. Murray of Yahk, Is a\ngraduate. Of University of British\nColumbia, where he waa affiliated\nwith Beta Thcta PI Fraternity. The\ncouple will reside at Yahk.\n\u2022 T. R. Alexander, Assistant\nC.P.R. Superintendent, and' A. E.\nStewart have left tor Winnipeg to\nattend a complimentary banquet\nhonoring Mr; Alexander's father, W.\nF. Alexander, who ll being superannuated.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mn. E. Creed Johnston of Bonnington, accompanied by\nMrs. G. F. Chapman of Brilliant,\nhave returned from a few days spent\nin Spokane.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. t. P. Sutherland,\nFront Street, have had as recent\ngueit Miss Eveline Burman, who\nteaches in Salmo.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Kennedy\nof Trail were recent guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Pagdin, Victoria Street.\n\u2022 \u25a0 Herman Kehdrlck, merchant,\nof Needles, visited town Tuesday.\n\u2022 . A. Forslund of Edgewood\nipent Tueiday in the city.\n\u2022 Mn. Wilfrid Laiihley, Third\nStreet,, has returned to Coeur d'\nAlene, Idaho, where she attended\nthe-funeral of her mother.\n\u2022 Bert Huyck, ex-resldent of\nNelson now of Vancouver, la spending a few daya in Nelsoh.\nTWO OPERATIONS TO\nASSURE NORMAL\nLIFE SUCCESSFUL\nYOUNGSTOWN, O, Dec. 8 (AP)\n\u2014Two operations to assure a normal\nlife for six-year-old Patrick Cirden,\nwho was born with hla bladder outside the abdomen, were described as\nhighly successful by hit mother today. The operation! were performed within the last ilx weeks at the\nCleveland clinic. Pat's health was\ngood 'until sbout six months ago,\nwhen he began to grow weak.\nDONCASTER, England (CP) -\nRoman coins unearthed here have\nbeen Identified ai belonging to the\nperiod between 289 and 273 A.D.\nModerately triced.\nLook over these Fur Coats Today\nMilady's  rashion bhoppe\n.VifoV-fajVifrvfofrvfoVvVkfaki w\\ _aj\nPASTEURIZED\nMILK\nIS SAFE FOR CHILDREN\nValley Ua\niOQTENAY   I ALLEY   WAIRY\nU__t_B-l-UL--l--J-l^-i-_--S-_tt-_a--\nSfENCER SUPPORTS\nFor health garments and\nfigure control, see\nMRS. THEA A. GIBSON\n110 Ktrr Apts., Nelion.\nnapgnn\nWATCH TOMORROW'S PAPER\nfor our\nGROCERY SPECIALS\nR. t, R. GROCERY\n_\nWHAT DO\nYOU MEAN,\nBRISK?\nJust this\u2014brisk\u2014that's the word\ntea experts use to describe the\nfresh, lively, spirited flavour of\nLipton's Tea, the tea with the brisk\nflavour, never flat, insipid or wishy-\nwashy. Change now to brisk tasting Lipton's Tea.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Oeorge 4lel-\nbecque oi Bonnington visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Rev. W: J. Sllverwood, Putor\nof the Church ot the Redeemer,\nFairview, ls spending < today ln\nBonnington where he will address\nthe P.T.A.\n\u2022 Mrs. E. M. Long, Latimer-\nStreet, left yeiterday to make her\nhome In Vancouver.\n\u2022 Rev. Father J. J. Chcevers\nof Fernie ipent yesterday In the\ncity.\n\u2022 In.Halifax at the rectory ot\nSt. Mary's Cathedral at noon .on\nNov. 27, Josephine Rita, youngest\ndaughter ,of Mrs. Thomas Wall of\nNelson, and the late Thomai Wall\nof La France Creek, became .the\nbride of Jamei Arthur Fetherston-\nhaugh, son of Mrs. J. C. Ftthertton-\nhaugh, of St. John, N.B. Rev, Father MacLean, Command Chaplain\nAtlantic Coast, officiated. Given\nIn marriage by Lt. F. W. M. Drew,\nR.C.N.V.R., of Nelion, B.C., the\nbride was attired In a two-piece\nfrock of sheer wool ln pastel blue\nwith brown accessories. Her corsage was of pink rose buds. Her\nbridesmaid wai Leading Wren Re-\nnee Guthrie, W.R.C.N.S., of Blaine\nLake, Sask., and the groom was\nsupported by Lt. Robert Greene,\nR.C.N., Ottawa. A reception waB\nheld at the Lord Nelson Hotel following the ceremony. TS* bride\nand groom then left for a honeymoon at Kentvllle, N.S., and St.\nJohn, N.B. The bride is a member\nof the Naval Library Service of\nthe W.R.C.N.S. and the groom recently received his, discharge from\nthe R.C.A.F. Mr. and Mrs. Fether-.\nitonhaugh expect to make their\nhome at St. John, N.B.\nInstallation ol\nDean (lark\nto Be Held Here\nVery Rev. Frederick Patrick\nClark, M.A., il to be inducted ai\nRector, and Installed ai thi first\nDean of Kootenay by the Most Rev.\nW. R. Adami, M.A., D.D., Archbishop of Kootenay at a ceremony\nto be held in St, Saviour's Pro-\nCathedral next Tuesday night.\nDean Clark il the fifth rector of\nSt. Saviour's. He came to Nelson\nearly ln November as successor to\nRev. J. G. Holmes who had left for\nCoeur d'Alene, Idaho. Prevloui to\nRev. Clark'i appointment here, he\nwas Rector of Holy Trinity Church,\nVancouver.\nGraduating ln Arts and Theology\nfrom Lennoxville University, the\nDean was ordained In Montreal ln\n1932. He was afterwards successively Rector of two churches in Regina\nand sub-warden of the Theological\nCollege there.\nSLOGAN PARK\nSLOCAN PARK, B.C.-MliI P. R.\nCrebbln of Castlegar was a week\nend visitor to Slocan Park.\nPvt. Joyie Graevlion, C.W.A.C. of\nOttawa, Is visiting her parent!, Mr.\nand Mrs. E. Greiviion.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Polonlhoff were\nrecent visitors to Vallican.\nMable Zytsoff is home after\nspending several days in Taghum\nPolly Polonikoff visited relatives\nIn Perrys.\nMr., and Mrs. J. Chernoff of\nGrand Forks have returned home\nafter spending a couple of weeks\nvisiting the latters parents, Mr. snd\nMrs. D. Markin.\nRecent Nelson shoppen were\nMr. S. Plonldln, Paul Markoff, P.\nOsachoff and Nick Poohachoff.\nNAKUSP BAZAAR\nREAPS $155\nNAKUSP, BC.-Sum of J135.0S\nwas taken at the annual Christmas\nBazaar under the auspices of the\nUnited Church Ladies Aid. Twelve\ndollars was also taken by the C.G.\nIT group at their hand-made toy\nstall. The bazaar was held in the\nParish Hall and presented a gay\nscene as the crowds came in for afternoon tea and to purchase their\nChristmas gifts. Over 100 aprons\nwere sold along with other gifti. In\ntwo hours not a gift was left.\nSupervising the tea were Mei-\ndames A. Burling and T. Steenhoff\nassisted by Mrs. F. Coates, MUs R.\nHamer. Serviteurs were Misses Betty Miller, Joy Oxenham, Isobel Embree, Marlon Embree,'Norma Edwards. Sales ladiei were Mrs. H. L.\nMiller, Mri. P. Henke, Mri. E. C.\nJohnson, Mrs. B. McRoberts, Mlsi\nA. Bowes and Mn. J. Reilly, and\nconvening the bake table which\nproved a great attraction were Mes-\ndames G. P. Honley and G. Hood\n\u2022 Mn. E. W. Bill, Past President of\nmany years standing, received.the\nguesta. .\nNEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER, B.C. - Mn. J.\nGreer ipent the week end in Trail.\nStanley Alywin of Fernie ii visiting hii mother, Mrs. M. Alywin.   .\nMr. and Mn. J. Tier were viiiton\nto Nelion during the week.\nGeorge Deire of Zincton visited\ntown.\nStanley Thomllmon of Zlncton\nvlllted hi! family Friday.\nMrs. A. L. Harrii and daughter,\nNancy, and Mn. Marie Harris, .pent\nthe weekend in Nelion.\nMr. and Mri. J. Hawthorn of Rosebery were vlilton to town Friday.\nMn. Falrar hai left the Slocan\nCommunity Hospital for Nakusp\nHospital.\nMn. Jones is a patient ln the hospital.\nViiiton from Silverton during the\nweek were Mr. and Mrs. Harnbly.\nMn. Graham, Mrs. Wallace and Mrs.\nT. Leaik.\nMn. G. Palethorpe wai a viiltor\nto Nelion during the week.\nMr. and Mri. C. E. Kenneth were\nNelson vlilton on Friday.\nNAKUSP\nNAKUSP, B.C-Mn. J. WUeman\nof Nelaon is vlilting her huiband\nhere.\nMr. and Mrs. C. H. Horrey were\nvisitors to Arrow Park Sunday.\nMrs. G. Mauchlin of Arrow Park\nis a patient in the Arrow L^ke Hoi\npital.\nMr. and Mri. Lirry Ward were\nvisitors to Nelion Monday.\nMrs. Akerman of Carroll'i Landing, who hai been a patient In the\nArrow Lakes Hospital, left for her\nhome Monday.\nMrs. Joe Farra and biby daughter\nof Edgewood, who have been pa-\ntlenti In the Arrow Lakei Hoipltal.\nreturned to their home in Edgewood\nMonday.\n\u25a0J    .'' ....,'.- \u25a0;    r\n\u25a0   ;\nMp\nBy BARBARA WACI.\nBREMEN, Germany, Dec.' 8 (AP)\nPart ot the, bitter price of defeat\nfor the returning German' ioldter\ntheae days ii the light of the wlde-\napread capitulation of hit womenfolk to the Allied arinlrt ot occupation.\nThli bitterness ihowi itself in\nanonymous poems addressed to\n\"German Women\" which are appearing in many parti of the country.\nMany German women are buiy\nmaking friends with American and\nBritish soldiers. There li a practical motive\u2014Allied loldleri mean\nclgareti, and clgareti mean food\ntrom the black market.\nMoral itandardi limply do not\nexist as they once did.\nThere hai been a tremendous increase in venereal disease and a\nBrltlth medical official ih Berlin\nettimated the average \"VD\" rate\namong German women ln that city\nto be 25 per cent. In iome area!\nit was at high as 50 per cent.\nThe'routine questions: \"Are you\nmarried?\" \"Have you any children?\" are as often answered with\na \"yes\" to the last and \"no\" to the\nfirat ai the other way around. The\nihrug of the shoulders by women\nrefugees endlessly moving aver Germany with their children to the\nquestion: \"Where ls the father?\"\noften means that she does not\nknow where he is or sometimes who\nhej_. '\nMany women who have lost their\nh#'.bands, and are left with young\nchildren, feel that the only hope for\nthem ls somehow to get out of Germany. Many feel that the only\nchance of survival for their babiei\nIt the chocolate ban, soap, or the\nfood that British and Americans\nwill buy.\nGREENWOOD MAN\nLAID AT REST\nGREENWOOD, B.C.-Friends and\nrelatives of the late Emll Erneit\nFritz paldslhelr last tribute to hii\nmemory at funeral lervicei here.\nRev. A. A. Burnett officiated at the\nlervlce In the United Church,\nGreenwood.\nMr. Fritz had been resident ln\nGreenwood for the past eight years.\nHe leaves to mourn hli lou, his\nbrothers and sisters, a wife and\nthree imall children.\nNaSON DAILY NIWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 6, 1945 - 1\nGreenwood Urges\nUse of Surplus\nEquipment in\nGREENWOOD, B.C-The Com-\nmunity Association at a meeting ln\nthe Public Library Thuriday evening received a letter from Inspector of Schools Carter urlng that\nvarious organization! write to Hon.\nC. D. Howe requesting that Canada'i\nwar assets be uied for educational\npurpoiei. The club lecretary wai\ninstructed to write in tupport of\nthe movement. Other organizations\nare planning to do the tame.\nThe Circulation Comniitte* reported that 80 new hooka are now\non the thi\"\nFreenaN\nFURNITURE CO.\nThe Houie of Furniture Valuta  \u201e\nNUMB   T\nPhone 115\nBUY ON OUR\nBUDGET PUN\nTermi tn accordance with Wartime Prlcea tnd Trade Regulation.\n\u2014\n-_-_-_--_______-____\nHYDE, Isle of Wight (OP)-'Mn.\nTate Maud Butler, formerly Miss\nMaud Milton, a star of the Victor- 'a\nian stage, died at 90 years of age.        .\nPHONE\n707\nOVIRWAITEA\nLIMITED\nPHONE\n707\nPUREX TOILET TISSUE, 3 rolls 25e\nSTONED WHEAT\nTHINS, pkg. \t\n15*\nFELS NAPTHA\nSOAP, 3 ban\t\n(Limit 3)\n25*\nCHRISTMAS CRACKERS\n50c - 75c \u2014 $1.00\nSHREDDED WHEAT, 2 pkgs.\n2lc\nCASTILE SOAP,\n5 ban\t\nJCt\\ MATCHES, Had Bird, 31 <\nmmj       3boxestopkg.  mtl\nVEG. JUICES, Aylmer Mixed, 2 tins    39c\nNATURAL BRAN, pkg. _17c\nIODIZED SALT,\n2 Ib. pkgi., 2 for....\n17*\nINSTANT POSTUM *\\-tti\nSmall iixa    ___. \/\nLarge liza ._ '. \u201449$;\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimii\nJUST ARRIVED\nNew Shipment of\nBLOUSES AND SKIRTS\nBlouses, sizei 12-4.\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOP\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nCREAMETTE EGG NOODLES, 2 pkgs. 18c\nCANADIAN CHEESE, Medium, Ib 35c\nPURITY COOK BOOKS _     $1.00\nAn Ideol Chrlitmai Gift.\nGreenwood Teacher\nro Go to Kimberley\nGREENWOOD, B.C-The Board\nof Greenwood\" City School! received\nthe resignation of the Primary teacher, Miss E. J. Neuert, on Nov. 30.\nMisi Neuert will begin work in\nKimberley school! after the New\nY__r.\nLONDON (CP) -'Five-year-old\nJoyce Murphy, itone deaf ilnce\nbirth, spoke two wordi, \"For you,\"\nwhen ihe preiented a bouquet to\nthe Queen at the LondMvCounty\nCouncil's School for Jailor .Deaf\nPupili. She had reheiried ther| with\nher teacher.\nMALCOLM'S FURS\nBALFOUR\nBALFOUR, B.C.\u2014Mri. E, Rim-\nlay wai i gueit of her inter, Mn\nV. Hoskln, Baker Street, Nelion\nMiu Har.el Noakei has returned |\nfrom Vancouver where ihe received her diicharge from the W.R.C\nNS\nMrs H. Heglind wai i gueit of\nMn. G. Conrad.\nChulie Noikei li home on leive\nfrom the Army.\nMils Mirgtret MacDonald hai obtained a poiitlon In Nelion.\nMn. W. McKay accompanied her\nson, Mac, to Nelion where he ll to\nundergo \u25a0 toniillecto'rrry.\nMrs H. Hudion wu a weekend\nturn  of Mri. O. Conrad, Latimer\ntreet.\nMr. and Mri. V. Hoikln were tt\nBilfour-over the weekend.\nOn Siturdiy. December 1. Balfour Community Club held a brief\nmeeting it Woodlind Hall, follow.\ned by t few tablet of whist Later\ndtnclng wu enjoyed tnd refreihmenti were lerved. Mr. and Mri\nMacGullvary were holt tnd hoiten.\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Colon of men'i\nmlu next year will be much thi\ntame at during fhe wir-milnN\ngrry. It wit diicloied by the Brltlth j\nColor Council I\n\\\n' I    I tl . \t\n \u2014\n\u2014\n\t\nfotan Sattg Netua\nEstablished April 22, 1902-\nBriti\u00abh Columbia'*\nMort Int\u00abt\u00abstit.(. Newspaper t\n,J>llahed tvery morning except Sunday by\ntie NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED, 266 Baker St, Nelson, British Columbia.\n'MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nTHURSDAY, DEC. 6, 1945,\nAc. va need Time Is Good,\nBut Not as a Purely\nLocal Measure\nWartime Daylight Saving was\n.pular in some parts of Canada and\n|ihe United States, but it is evident\n[that the jnajority of the people in both\nTBuntries were against it.\nAs a nation-wide measure we can\nJ'tfcerefore have little expectation of\nf'iaylight saving in Canada during\npeacetime.\nThere are many of us who find\n! great benefits from advanced time, as\n; the majority seem to do in,Great Brit-\nipjn, but the fact remains that the ma-\ni Jority don't want it in Canada and as\nalong, as that condition persists there\n>Wt much that the minority can do\nabout it.\nIn West Kootenay, for example,\n.Nelson prefers advanced time, but\n'Representatives of the majority of mu-\n; nicipalitles at a recent meeting did not\n;.\u00bbgree with the Nelson viewpoint. We\n! in Nelson seem to be out of step with\n.the majority in the district as a whole.\n\u2022\"Spokane ha_ been approached and also\nis not interested in advanced time.\nNelson Board of Trade has been\ntaking an interest in the question, because of benefits which it felt the\npeople of Nelson had gained through\nJ Wartime Daylight Saving, which, of\ncourse, was nationwide and did not\ncreate any complications of varying\ntimes within small districts.\nThe Board appointed a committee\n.which approached the CPR and urged\n[ that the time change from Mountain to\n- Pacific should be made at Midway instead of at Crow's Nest. Actually, we\n.'are about 20 minutes out of sun schedule in this locality and extension of\nMountain time to this area would put\n\u25a0 us about 40 minutes the other way, 40\nminutes in advance of the Greenwich\n1 \"time basis, but this would be offset by\n, the fact that the mountainous topog-\n,. raphy of this area deprives us of the\ni sun earlier than if our horizon were\nwider.\nPresumably the Committee will be\nreporting at Friday's Council meeting\n,of the Board and we will learn what\nprogress has been made.\nThe idea of changing time at Mid-\ni Way instead of at Crow's Nest is a good\none and should be pursued.\nOne thing we definitely should not\nattempt, and that is another experiment in \"two times\", in local time in\nNelson which differs from that of the\npeople of the surrounding district. We\nhave tried that experiment in throe\nSummers, each about 10 years apart,\nin the last 35 years. Each time, after\ntrying it for a Summer, the people of\nNelson have voted it down by over-\n, whelming majorities. It is one of those\nthings that look attractive -at first\nSight, but which in practical experience create serious inconvenience\nWithin the homes of our people, disruption of business relations with Nelson's\ncustomers in the surrounding district\nand bickering and ill-feeling within the\ncommunity. Our experiences with \"two\ntimes\" have been most unhappy. Tim\nmany people are compelled In conduct\ntheir affairs nn standard time, no mat-\n| ter what their personal preferences\nmight be.\nIt Did Happen and None\nShould Forget It\nOne who visited Gerrrjanv just before the war was told by an American\nOfficial: \"These Nazis will insist on war,\nthey have dreams of conquest beyond\nbelieving,\" recalls the Christian Scl-\n. ence Monitor. Most of us couldn't quite\nbelieve it  Hut in the stenographic records of Hitler's conferences  with his\n' aides-  now exposed nt Ihe Nuernberg\n5 trial   we luve the evidence that the\n? Nazis plotted war nnd the killing of\nI millions as gangsters would plan rob-\nI bery and murder.\nPeace could never satisfy them Dip*\nlomatic victories wouldn't suffice Hitler said: \"The German pinlilem can bo\nSolved only by way of force.\" He feared\nonly a last-minute \"proposal for mediation.\" As early as May he had deter-\nmined to attack Poland. Befon the invasion he told his generals that ha had \u2022\ngiven orders \"to kill without mercy all\nthe men, women ahd children of the\nPolish race or language.\"\nIt is still hard to believe. But there\nls plenty of corroborative evidence.\nTake Hitler's view that the utorld considers Genghis Khan a statesman, and\nwould forget his own slaughtering of\nmillions so long as he succeeded. Take,\nhis sneers at \"those worms\" Chamberlain and Daladier striving at Mupich\nto keep the peaceT>y appeasement, take\nthe actual efforts of the Germans to\ndepopulate Poland.\ni This may all seem like \"old stuff\".\nSomeone may say, \"We know the\nNazis were bad, but they are finished\nnow.\" But the record is well worth\nreviewing. Those of us who thought\nHitler could be held off by appeasement, those of us even who hoped\nagainst hope in the last days of August,\n1939, that somehow peace could be\nkept, may.with profit be reminded that\nall Hitler's talk about Danzig and the\nCorridor was \"window-dressing.\"\nHitler was telling his Generals:\n\"Danzig is not the subject of the dispute at all. It's a'question of expanding\nour living space.\" He wanted Poland.\nBut that was not all. He wanted to '.'redistribute the world,\" and he was quite\nprepared to wade through blood to do\nit.\nWe had supposed that he would be\ndeterred by the stiffening of British\nand French backs after the seizure of\nPrague. We believed that he miscalculated, thinking they would not fight\nover Poland. But now it appears that\nhe was ready to tackle them\u2014and Russia and America, too, although he did\nmiscalculate in his plans \"to crush the\nSoviet\"- and to keep Americans from\n\"landing in Europe.\"\nIt is an almost unbelievable story\u2014\nbut it happened. The Germans still\ndon't believe it, and Allied officials\nshould be taking better measures to get\nthe Nuernberg trial to them by radio\nand press, suggests the Boston paper,\nEven if we believe it, we should read\nit again to steel our resolve really to\norganize and police the peace, so, that\nno such gang can arm themselves with\nthe atomic bomb and make Hitler look\nlike a piker.\n'\nPress Comment\nDISTORTION .\nWhen the CCF Leader, Mr, Coldwtll. in a\nV-J D*y itatement, queitioned the Allied policy of dealing with the Japaneie Emperor, he\nvoiced a view undoubtedly momentarily quite\nwidely held throughout Canada. ,\nThat the unconditional surrender formula\nwas thus seemingly broken,-was a natural first\nreaction More sober reflection, however,\nmight, have l^d to the conclusion that if no\ndealings were to be held with Hirohito, the Al-\nLei would be left without anyone whom to\nconduct surrender. We have subsequently been\nassured moreover, that because the Emperor\nis left for the moment does not absolve him\nof any future charge of being a war criminal,\n\u25a0 Where the majority of Canadians cannot\n(to along with Mr. Coldwell's view was the\nfurther statement he made hinting that \"big\nbusiness\" wanted tn keep the Emoeror to\nfurther their own Allegedly dark doings and\nwas behind the Allied Comhiand moves.\nMnre cleverly designed propaganda tactics\nat ;i moment that should have been devoted\nentirely tn national thanksgiving and rejoicing,\ncould scarcely have bren devised.\nDuring Ihe recent election campaign, the\nCCF bitterly denounced the activities of such*\ngroups as the Public Informational Allocation\non the jjr Hinds principally that they were dis-\nt jrttng CCT policy.\nCould any distortion equal \"thii latest attempt tn plant suspicion of our leaders' actions and motives in the mindi of the people of\nthii nation\"-Vernon News.\nLooking Backward\nTIN YEAR* AQO\nFrom Daily Ntwi, December 8, 193V\nIn a:d nf the Nelson Boys' Band, the Nelion  Aerie, Fraternal Order of Eaglet, sponsored the large*! whllt drive held in the city\nth:s year   Some 4.1 tablei were In play nnd\n\u25a0 pprnximately 10 people, or sufficient for five\nmnre tablei, paid admiulons but could not be\naccomodated.\nTWENTY-FIVt  YEAR* AQO\nFrom Oally Newt, Dacimber 8, 1920.\nA meeting of rltireni wai held last night\nlo dueim the selection of candidate! for the\napproaching civic election.\nThe sum of |10O wai railed at St. Paul'l\nPresbyterian Church for the fund for itarv-\n!ng Chinese\nToday's Horoscope\nY^u ire a peraon nf rart vitality and\ni'r *ng ronvirtion*. Your pertoniltty attracti\nn'her* Vou hive an alert, acquliitivt mind\nYou ire intHuUd in books, art and muilc.\n\u25a0 nd have iome talent for theie punuiti. No\n\u00abacrifice ii too great for a friend or a member of your family Today breathe an at-\nmoaphere nf fucceu, and emanate an aura\nof good will Ynu can attract the btit things\nin life, nnd the ones you want If yon will appear to be on the way to their achievement.\n?? Questions??\nANSWERS\nOpen te any reAer Namii ot penon*\nuklng queitlon* will not bo publlihed.\nThoro ll no chirge for thit lorvloJo. Queitlon. WILL NOT BE ANSWERED BY\nMAIL except when thoro, I* obvloui moot-\n'lit\/ for prlvaoy.\nAnxioui, Rouland\u2014Can you tell me how I\nmay bleach piano keys which have turned\nyellowr\nIf the key\u00ab are of Ivory and yellowed\nthroughout there ll little you can do to whiten\nthem. Hydrogen peroxide wiped on the surface may help. Rubbing with powdered chalk\nor whiting moistened' with denatured alcphol\nIf often uied to clean piano keyi.\nL. T. M\u201e Nelion\u2014Pleaie give me a recipe for\ngreen tomato Jam, using certo If poislble?\nThe only green tomato recipe we have\non hand ii the following one for preserve,:\nEight pounds green tomatoes, six pounds sugar,\none tablespoon preserved ginger, six lemons.\nWash the tomatoes, remove any dark spots\naround the items and weigh them. Cover\nthem with boiling water, let itand for five\nmlnutei, drain and lUce them into preiervlng\nkettle, placing a layer of the tomatoei, then\na layer of illced lemon, then the lugar With\nthe ginger sprinkled over. Drain and boil\nthe syrup for 10 minutes. Skim, and add the\ntomatoes and cook rapidly until they are clear.\nPour Into clean hot jars and leal.\nX. Y. Z\u201e Nelson\u2014I have heard that there Is\na  way  of  hardening  new  glassware  io\nthat lt is not likely to break.   Could you\ntell mewhat to do? >\nTo toughen china or gloss place the new\narticles Irt cold water, bring to boil gradually,\nboll for four hours, and leave standing in the\nwater till cool.   Glasi or china toughened in\nthis way Is not likely to crack with hot water.\nLegion's Call For\nTotal Victory\n*ANIFE8TO OF DOMINION COMMAND\nIn 1941, when the fate of civilization was\nhanging In the balance, we addressed to the\nPrime Mlnitter of Canada \"The Legion's Call\nfor Total War\", urging the immediate, complete and scientific mobilization of all our\nresources\u2014spiritual, intellectual, financial, agricultural, Industrial, Many of iti proposals\nwere afterwards carried out by the Government.\nWe now address ourselves to the people\nof Canada because Total Victory is still to be\nwon. Victory in the field must be matched\nby victory at home, over everything that\nweakens and.divides the nation. The things\nthat weaken can be found in everyone; every\nCanadian, therefore, can start with himseU.\nEvery Canadian must accept his responsibility.\nOur greatest task lies ahead. Total Victory\ndemands a total effort fnr a new world, worthy\nof the sacrifice our comrades have made. We,\nas veterans, believe that we rtiurt^ighfc fo?\nthis new world here in Canada.\nThe Legion issues this Call for Total Victory-\nIn the name of the hundreds of thousands of\nCanadian men and women who, in past wars\nand in the war just, ended, have served their\nKing and Country. As Canadians and member! of the British Empire Service League,\nwe are proud of the role played by the British\nCommonwealth and Empire in the struggle\nfor freedom and pledge ourselves to do our\npart in creating th? great moral forces required for Total Victory,\nAfter the First Great War most of us felt\nthat our efforts were finished with the winning\nof the war. Now we know that the job is not\nover because military victory hen been achieved, The conflict will continue with the forces\nof good and evil arrayed against each other.\nFor Canada, having won the war of arms,\nhaa still to achieve the ideals of peace. Total\nVictory will come only when these ideals have\nbeen achieved.\nOur fatheri, inspired by a vision of Canada devotr-d to the service of God, chose as\ntheir mott), \"He shall have dominion from\ns-a to Een.\" This is the heritage we have\nreceived, and on this heritage we must build\nour   nation.\nThe children of our country, who are its\ngrenteft potential wealth, must grow up in\nthis fighting faith. They will then respond to\nthe challenge to live to make their country\ngreat This purport will give them the incentive to learn the dignity of work, the\nvalue of a task well done and the dynamic\nqualities of team-work. Only thus ran national\nunity be achieved.\nHundreds of thousand., of houses will need\nto be built Yet homes are more than houses,\nand Canadians have the challenging task of\ncreating the kind of homes and family life\nthat will make this nation strong, clean, united,\nTo build the Canada we want is nn enterprise which requires, the work of all. It will\nneed the combined initiative and imagination\nof government, m.in.igemfiit and labor, freed\nfrom the menace of fear and greed\nMide rich by the special gifts of every\nrare within it, Canada will then demonstrate\nits answer to the chaos of conflicting races\nwhich, throughout history, has challenged the\npeace of the wnrld. Thus will Canada fulfil\nthe vislqn of our King who said: \"With God's\ngrace, you may yet become the example which\nall the wnrld will follow\"\nIn thr faith that the people of Canada are\nwith us, we issue this Call to Action for Total\nVictory\nTest Yourself\n1   Where would you look for i pulmonary\norgm'\n3. If vou were offered $6,00- blnnnunlly\ncr biennially, which would ynu tike?\nJ  Wh.it Is the plural of Underfoot?\nT(8T ANIWIIM\n1   In Ihe h'imin body.   It li the lung\n?. Blanmully. which li twice a year, biennially is onre in two yeari.\nJ. Tenderfee^.\nA tuiedn li not considered Mil dreii; only\ntails ire fill dreu A blick lie It worn with\nt l\\u\nWords of Wisdom\nMoit ol our mhtorrunai ire more iupport-\n\u25a0hli than the commend of our frlendi upon\n. tjhrm.\nCrowned Ktng (Seorge^Queen Elizabeth.\nFORMER ARCHBISHOP\nOF CANTERBURY DIES\n\u2022if?\nJLOKDON, Dm. 5 (CP) - Lord\nLang, Hl-ycar-old former Archbiihop of Canterbury who waa a leader\nln forcing the abdication of King\nEdward VIII ln 1936, died unexpectedly here today.\nAn active Member of thi Houu\nof Lordi since hli resl_nitlon ai\nheld of thi Church of England In\nIMi, the churcKmm collapsed\nnear \u2022 railway itatlon and died\nbefore hi reaohid hoipltal.\nThe high point in tho career of\nScottiih-born Dr. Cosmo Gordon\nLang came ln 1937 when he crowned\nKing George VI ind Queen Elizabeth in Westminster Abbey. With\nStanley Baldwin, then Prime Minliter, he headed the forcei which\nbrought about the abdication ol Edward, because of the }atter'i love\ntor Wallli Warfleld Slmpion, American divorcee.\nA bachelor, Lord Lang was the\nbrother of Or. Marshall Lang, who\nwu elected Moderator of the Oeneral Alsembly of the Church of\nScotland In 1935. It wai the flnt\ntime In history that brother! had\ncontemporaneously filled tha roles\nof leaden of tha Church of England and the Church of Scotland.\nLord Lang was active up to the\ntime of hli death.\nIn October, 1938, Lord Lang and\nthe Archbishop of York declined an\ninvitation to St. Jamei Palace to a\ndinner at which Mrs. Slmpion wai\nto be present.\nIt was later reported that Lord\nLang threatened to withhold communion from Edward and that the\nKing replied: \"Please remember that\nI am the head of your organization.\"\nOn Nov. 17, the Archbiihop presided at \u2022 ucret meeting of the\nHouie of Lordi whloh discussed\nthe romance of the King and Mn.\nSimpson. On Deo, 10 Edward abdicated.\nLord Lang lerved is Archbiihop\nof Canterbury for 13 years and ai\nArchbishop ot York for 20 years.\nHe resigned the Archbishopric of\nCanterbury March 31. 1942, to be\nsucceeded by Dr. Temple.\nThis Is perhaps the most powerful\nchurch position in the world outilde\nof that of the Pope.\nAi a churchman, Dr. Lang work*\ned diligently for the Interests of\nthe \"average man,\" attempting\nconilitently to dole tho gap between whit he called tha \"froien\nrespectability of the Church\" ind\nthe masses of people.\nThroughout his vigorous career,\nDr. Lantf was known as a diplomat\nof the first rank. In his two archbishoprics he was a Member of the\nHouse of Lords, where he was re-\nCOSMO O. LORD LANG\ngarded as one of the most Influential members.\nDr. Lang was the 97th Archbiihop\nof Canterbury. A native of Scotland,\nhe was born at Fyvle, Aberdeenshire, in 1864, the son of Very Rtv.\nMarshall Lang, D.D., Principal of\nAberdeen University and at one\ntime Moderator of the Churcn of\nScotland.\nEDUCATED AT\nQLA8GOW, OXFORD\nHe wai educated at Glasgow and\nOxford Universities, graduating\nwith a Bachelor of Arts degree from\nBalliol College, Oxford, ln  1888,\nIn 1928 Archbishop Davidson, a\nfellow Scot, retired and Dr. Lang,\nthen Archbishop of York, succeeded\nhim as Archbishop of Canterbury\nand Primate of all England and\nMetropolitan.\nYokes Sees Canucks Have Adequate\nChmtmas Food\nBontts in\nStore for Britons\nBy 4AMES McCOOK\nCanadian Presi Staff Writer\nLONDON, Dec. 5 (CP)-The Brit-\nIsh people, condemned for yea's to\nan almost unvaried diet which iome\ndocton say.ii damaging to health \u25a0\nare receiving a Chrlitmu bonui of\niome of the tastier rationed foodi.\nFED UP WITH\nMONOTONOUS FOOD\nDr. Edith Summerskill, Parliamentary Sectary to the Mlnntry\nof Food, hai iald that Brltoni are\nfaded, tired, exhausted and fed-up\nwith monotonous food, but there ls\nobvlotjj pleasure that their normal\nration will be increased by one\npound of lugar each, four ounces of\nchocolates ond iweets, lix ouncei of\nbutter and margarine, sixpence (12\ncenti) worth of fresh meat and four-\npence (eight cents) worth of canned\nbeef.\nEarlier Sir Ben Smith, the Fodd\nMinister, announced that four Instead of two ouncei of butter may\nbe tak>n every other week until\nfurther notloe. Trie weekly ration\nof cooking fats, cut earlier this year\nto one ounce, has been restored to\ntwo, and the cheese ration, reduced\nto two ounces a week last April, has\nbeen restored to three.\nSTILL FAIL TO AGREE\nWhile grousing about monotony\nof the British diet ls common, medical authorities still fill to agree on\nwhether the nation'! health has been\ndamaged by the food restrictions\nmade necessary by war.\nTroopi on the Move\nBy Thi Canadian Prm\nDue at Halifax\u2014S. S. Eaitwoi\nPark (Wedneiday) with 18 membera\nof Canada'i Armed Forcei.\nDue at Halifax\u2014S. S. Rlverdalt\nPark  (Wednesday)  with nine r\u00ab\u00ab\npatriated military personnel.\nDeaths\n_*mSh\n\u00abfi>_    r\u00ab\nBy WILLIAM   BOSS\nCanadian Preu War Correspondent\nWITH THE CANADIAN OCCUPATION FORCE, Germarfy, Dec. 5\n'CP)\u2014Provision of adequate recreational facilities for all ranks of the\nC.A.O.F. has been a major concern\nof the Divisional Commander, Maj.-\nGen. Chris Vokes.\nAbolition of the short, 72-hour\nleave for C.A.O.F. personnel, which\nautomatically put the Brussels and\nAmsterdam leave centres beyond\nreach except for lohger furloughs,\nmeant that potential facilities within\nthe divisional area had to be exploited.\nLarger centres ln the 3rd Divisional zone of occupation are Varel,\nLeer. Aurich. Emden. Wilhelmsha-\nven and Oldenburg. The plan is for\neach of these to have an Officers'\nClub, one for warrant officers\" and\nsergeants and at least one, and\nwhere possible, several clubi for\nother ranks.\nLatest tn be opened is the Brtms\nGarten Club for other ranks in\nAurich where C.W.A.C. Sergeant\nViolet Dixon, Saft Coats, Sask..\nhas charge of the siuuk bar. This\nand all other rank clubs in Aurich\nare under over-all supervision of\nSalvation Army Hostess Elizabeth\nPatterson, Winnipeg,\nBesides a lounge in which a four-\npiece orchestra plays \"tvery afternoon and evening, tho Brems Garten, a converted beer garden, has a\n1 writing rnnm, a reading room, table |\ntennis hall, ski-ball alleys which\nlater become bowling alleys and a\ntheatre.\nMotion pictures are shown nightly\nwhile at least one \"live show is produced weekly,\nCANADIAN FOOD AGAIN\nSgt. Dixon's restauraot now serves\nthe troops Canadian apple, tomato\nnnd grapefruit juices. Cana Han\npeaches and plums, and Canadian\nfruitcake, Men can have anything\nfrom sandwiches and pastries or\ncakes tn full hot or cold plate\nlunches and deseerta.\nIt'i all table service in this club.\nby C W.A.C.'j under Cpls. Thorns\nRitry Winnipeg, and Veronica Rogers, Toronto,\nIn the Black Button Club, troops\nget free haircuts, tailor service and\nwatch repairs, paying only for the\nrost of parts or replacements. Soft\ndrinka and doughnuts are always\navailable.\nThe Eskimo Inn In Oldenburg\nserves 2600 dishes of ice-cream free\nto service personnel dally, and for\nhalf a German mark patrons get\na soft drink to go with it.\n4J-\nNetherlands first woman convict-\nrd of treachery and condemned to\ndie is J. N, Verneulen. 25. found\nguilty of^ienouncing Dutch patriots\n\\o the Germans.\nTOKYO\u2014Baron Koyata Iwasaki.\n66, head of the family which controlled the Mitsubishi financial interests and one of the richest men\nin Japan.\nTORONTO-Walter Stanley Lund,\nSuperintendent' of the Engraving\nDepartment of the Toronto Evening\nTelegram.\nEVANSTON, IU-Kenneth Gladstone Smith, 53, retired President\nand son of the founder of the Pepso-\ndent Company.\nNEW YORK-Sir Robert Ureal-\nter, 61, Executive Secretary and\nGeneral Manager of the Cooperatives in the British Isles.\nBOSTON-Porter H. Adams, 81,\nversity, Northfield, Vt., and inter-\nformer President of Norwich Uni-\nnational authority on aeronautics\nEDMONTON-Solicitor in the Department of Trade and Industry and\nresident of Alberta for 37 years.\nRobert Jackson Gaunt, 62,\nMINNEAPOLIS-Fred R. Coburn,\n161, former Executive Sport* Editor\nof the Minneapolis Tribune and former Managing Editor of the Minneapolis Star.\nNEW YORK-Sir Robert Lanc**-\nter, 61, Executive Secretary and\nOeneral Manager of the Cooperative Wholesale Society, which services all retail cooperatives in the\nBritish Isles.\nUTS W\"\n\u2022 Authorities lty the difference\nbetween\" husky children and those\nwho art poor eaters, underweight\nand nervous li often limply a matter ,\nof proper nourishment, especially ao\nadequate lupply of vitamins.\nBut vitamins alooe'are not enougtu\nFor authorities now igree that vitamins do not work alone. They work '\nai a team with certain other food\nelements.\nFor this reason, thousands tre'\n\u25a0witching to Ovaltine. Unlike men\n\"vitamin carriers,\" Ov_ltine food\nbeverage contains not only extra.\nvitamins bot nearly all the precious\nfood dementi needed for health and\ntop vitality. These include Vitamins A, Bi ud D, the Important\nmineral, calcium, phosphorus and\niron, high quality proteins and quick\nenergy fuel-food\u2014e combination of\nfood element! authorities agree are\nneeded for ben results.\nSo, if ymr child li thin, nervoui\nand not developing properly, why\nnot turn to Ovaltine as thousinds are\ndoing. Three normal meali plui two'\nglasses of Ovaltine a ity eve your\nchild all the extra amotion ot viumina\nud mineral! needed for health *o_\\\ntop vitality.\novKttti:\nTW  ftOTIOINO  KJOD-OK\nNEW BORN BABY\nFOUND IN BLOOD\nSTAINED PAPER\nVANCOUVER,' Dee. 8 (CP) -\n'Wrapped In a blood-itilnid Dec.\n1 edition of a Vancouver niwi-\npapir, thi body of \u25a0 mw born\nbaby wu found lata yuterdiy\nlying face downward In i field In\nthi Renfrew District.\nIlivin yilr-old George Bolger\nmedl the rllscnvrry. ai hi Crossed\nthi field on hli way homi from\nichool. . .\n\/\n \u25a0\u25a0\nmm- L__ ...\n\t\n\t\n\t\n\t\n rans and Newcomers Stage Brisk\nir Berths on Dynamiters;\nhy Brown Is a \"Hit\" as Coach\nIBERLEY, B.C, Dec. 4-Kim-\nft Dynamiters ln the revived\nDay Senior Hockey League\njot going to be a push-over.\nkg from the pep and hustle the\nire showing for Coach Harry\nn In practice sessions thus far.\nnn, proving to be a real \"go-\n'\"ln his first term as a coach,\nMn putting his club through\nlout sessions, and it is rapidly\nf Into condition. Rail-birds are\nted with its showing in prar-\nand are eagerly awaiting the\nlg games ln Kimberley when\ni appears here on the lBth and\ni good goalies, Jakie Nash and\ns_ilburn, are fighting It out tor\n\u2022st-string netmlndlng Job, and\nre well known around Koote-\ngckey. Nash formerly guarded\nimp for Port Arthur Bearcats,\nJilburn It a former Edmonton\ndefence, Brown hat paired\nIf ,wlth big Bill Johnston,\nPutt Holdltch and Butch Zak\nform the other duo. Another de-\nfenceman is expected to Join the\nclub toon, and a real fight It expected to develop for the regular\npositions.\nMORE ARE COMING\nUp on the forward lines, there are\n12 players trying for bertht on the\nteam, and otheri are on their way.\nThose on hand now, and several of\nthem showing mid-season form, are\nFrank (Sully) Sullivan, Sam Calles,\nSandy Sanderson, Gordie Wilton,\nScotty Ness, Buck Kavanaugh, Jack\nWotherspoon, Ike Armstrong and\nGuffy Livingstone, all holdovers,\nwhile newcomers Include Jock Ten-\nnant, Slugg, Chadwick and Gillespie.\nThe Dynamiter management is\nclose-mouthed regarding Uie Identity of the other new faces still to arrive, but they are expected well\nbefore the opening games.\nKimberley takes to the road for\ngames in Trail and Nelson on the\n21st and 22nd respectively.\nirge Labor\ndling Hampers\nfish Recovery\n(DON, Dec. 5 (CP>\u2014Britain's\nlonth-old Labor Government\niccused by ita opposition to-\nOf \"fumbling and fiddling\"\nI \"stifling\" the country1! re-\nr from the war.\nnlng a two-day debate on a\nrvatlve motion for a vote of\nre against the Government,\nrvatlve Oliver Lyttelton al-\nI the nationalization program\nlid the Labor administration\net an \"anaemic\" British in-\n' could be sustained only\ngh the Iron lung of Govern-\njontrol.\"\nLyttelton was answered by\nEtford Cripps, his successor as\nint of the Board ot Trade,\nleclared the Government In-\n[ to provide \"a firm basie\" for\nclal reconstruction lt had pro-\n.ind said that the only per-\nyho would benefit by a lack\nivemment control would be\nrofiteers and racketeers.\"\nLyttelton said th. attitude of\nlovernment was giving the\nI States a head start towards\nimp leadership,\nformer President of the Board\nkde accused the Government\nllring \"some visionary theory\",\nevery effort to solve \"the\nIt economic crisis\" any county faced was being \"stifled by\nade and inefficiency an.\nSt.\"\nI compared the \"energy and\naudacity\" of American demobilisation and reconveralon with what\nhe called the \"fumbling and\nfiddling\" of th. Attlee \u2022 Government.\nThe rate of release from the\narmed forces, he charged, was\nonly about half that of the United\nStates.\nIn an obvious reply to the statement last week by Winston Chur-\nchll, former Prime Minister, that\nunder * the Labor Government\nqueues are long, faces longer and\nshelves barer, Sir Stafford said: \"It\nis the simplest thing in the world\nto suggest to people that lots of\ngood things would be available\nwere it not for thf*wickedness of the\nGovernment that witholds them.\"\nMUST B008T EXPORT TRADE\nSuch \"lrresjlonslble advocacy o( a\npolicy of plenty\" waa not excusable\nfrom persons who ought to know\nthe situation well.\nDue to the overseas demand for\ngoods, it was not necessary as ln\nnormal times to await the development of the home market before\nbolstering up exports. Reconversion to civilian manufacture was\nrapid.\"\nSir Stafford said the Government\ndid not intend to direct labor to\njobs on a permanent basis, or to\nkeep employment compulsory. He\nsaid such controls would be kept\nno longer than necessary.\nThe debate continues tomorrow\nwhen Mr. Churchill speaks, followed by Prime Minister Attlee and\nHerbert Morrison, Lord President\nof the Council. Mr, Churchill today\nsat smiling as former ministers, now\nin the opposition, spoke while Mr.\nAttlee was busy taking notes.\nHockey Scores\nBy The Canadian Press\nO.H.A. MNIOR \"A\"\nToronto   Staffords   8,    Hamilton\nPats 3.\nO.H.A. JUNIOR \"A\"\nHamilton Lloyds 4, Toronto Young\nRangers 3.\nQUEBEC PROVINCIAL SENIOR\nDrummondvllle 7, Lachine 7.\nO.H.A. 8ENIOR \"A\"\nOwen Sound 3, Stratford 2.\nGreenwood Cogers\nWhip Forks\nGREEN.WOOD, B.C-The Grand\nForki basketball team met Greenwood All-Start In Greenwood and\nwere beaten by 11 polntt.   -\nAfter the game the Greenwood\nYoung People'! Club sponsored \u25a0\ndance ln the Masonic Hall, It wu\nthe initial social event of thli club\nand wu very auccewful,\n\u2014', i i^i|8rp,w^,\"',a*.\nBruins Jumps\nHawks (-3 and\nInto 2nd Place\nBOSTON, Dec. 5 (AP) \u2014 After\nrushing off an early lead, Boston\nBruini jumped into the National\nHockey League's second place berth\nby defeating Chicago Hawks fl-S tonight before a packed 13,800 crowd\nat the Boston Garden. For the second time in lt games the visitors'\npentley brothers and BUI Moilenko\nwere held scoreless.\nLineups:\nBoston: Blbeault; Egan, Crawford;\nSchmidt; McGill, Dumart. Subs;\nCowley, Reardon, Cain, Clapper,\nHenderson, Church, Gallinger, Guldolin, Shill.\nChicago: Karakas; Wares, Allen;\nM. Bentley; Moslenko, D. Bentley.\nSubs: Smith, Hammll, Kaleta, Marluccl, Hamilton, Johnson, Horeck,\nCooper, Grosso.\nReferee: Clancy; Linesmen: Cleary\nand Smith.\nSummary:\nFirst period:\n1, Boston, Guldolin (Shill. Gal.\nlinger) 6:02; 2, Boston, Shill (Guidolln, Henderson) 15:21.\nPenalties: McGill, Gallinger.\nSecond period:\n3, Boston, McGill (Schmidt) 1:46;\n4, Chicago, Marluccl (Horeck, Hamill) 4:51; 5, Boston, Dumart, (Egan,\nMcGill) 8:41. 6, Chicago, Grosso\n11:37.\nPenalties: Wares, Reardon.\nThird period:\n7, Chicago, Wares (Allen) 5:45; 8,\nBoston, Schmidt (McGill) 15:16; 9,\nBoston, Cain (Reardon)  19:14.\nPenalties: None.\nDempsey May\nRevive Amerks\nfor N.H.L. Play\nTORONTO, Dec, 3 (CP)\u2014If Jack\nDempiey's plans materialize he li\ngoing to find himself ln direct competition with Madison Square Garden\u2014and fight promoter Mike Jacobs. But that doesn't bother tho\nManassa Mauler.\n\"Why should the Garden say 'stay\nout of here' to legitimate free enterprise?\" queries Jack. \"Why\nshould Mike corral all the fight talent?\"\nIn Toronto to referee a wrestling\nmatch, the one-tlme No. 1 man In\nthe heavyweight ring admitted that\nif tbe new sport arena project li\nrealized the old Brooklyn Americans may again be seen. In National\nHockey League circles.\nAt Montreal lut week, Dempsey\nhad a long confab with Mervln\n(Red) Dutton, NHL. prexy. There\nwere no reporti on what wai discussed but rumor had it Dempsey\nwas anxious to obtain the Idle charter of the Amerks.\n\"Mr. Shorlstop\" Definitely Nof\n(or Sale, Jay Cardinals   '\nBy   IID  FEDER\nCOLUMBUS, 0., Dec. 5 (AP) -\nThe \u00bbJ!50,800 price tag that was dangling from Marty Marian around the\nWorld Seriei Ume hu been torn otf\nand \"Mr. Shortstop\" is definitely not\nfor tale, St. Louis Cardinals told the\nrest of tbe baseball world today.\nEddie Dyer, the alow-talking Texan wtiovcame out ol tht oil business\nto manage the Cardinals next year,\nlaid all thia and considerable more\nout on the counter for the folks to\nlook \u00abt today at baseball's great lobby-sitting sweepstakes\u2014the annual\nMinor League meetings.\nDyer says that not only \"Mr.\nShortstop,\" but probably the entire\nIM Cardinal infield \"seems like lt\nwill stay\" the same as It wu in\n'4S, with Ray Sanderi on first, Dutch\nVerban on aecond and Whitey Kur-\nowskl on the hot corner. The Cards,\nhowever, are going to put a first-\nbaseman's mitt on Dick Sisler, son\nof \"Gorgeous George,\" and \"take a\ngood look at him\" next Spring, ln\nthe hope there's lomething In heredity. Dick played the outfield for\nthe.United Statu Navy at Bainbridge, Md .\nAlio back from service for Infield\nduty are Lou Klein, who'll be \"valuable ai general utility man,\" Eddie\nexplains, and Jim Brown.\nAltogether, 10 top-flight pitchers\nar* coming back from tha services\nto hook up with the half dozen or\nio dependable! on hand lut year,\nand If any deals are made, the fling-\nera will be involved.\nLooking at It right now, Dyer expect! his outfield will be Terry\nMoore and Enoi Slaughter, both on\nthe way out of the army, with Johnny Hopp and Buiter Adams alternating ln the third ipot, depending\non enemy pitching. Red Schoen-\ndlenst also will fit ln, but will be\nmoved ln u assistant shortstop if\nhll trick arm gets better. Harry Walker and Stan Musial may not be\nback from service till next year.\nORANQE BOWL QUEEN: Glamour will be added to the annual\ngridiron classic In the Orange\nBowl at Miami, Fla, this New\nYear's Bay by Mies Llbby Walker. She hu been chosen \"Queen\nof the Orange Bowl\", to reign over\nthe classic and tha accompanying\ncelebrations.\nCoach Moher\nDoing All Right\nfor Royals\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., Dec.\n8 (CP)\u2014Clarence Moher, 30-year-\nold pilot of New Westminster Royals of the Pacific Coast Senior Hockey League, is proving Edmonton\ncan produce top-notch coaches as\nwell as players.\nAfter a dismal start due to conditions which Moher could not\navoid, the Royals are ln second\nplace close to the league-leading\nVancouver Canucks and at present\nare the \"hottest\" team ln the circuit\nMoher who did his first coaching\nwith midget and Juvenile teams at\nEdmonton took Edmonton Canadians to the Western finals last sea-\nion and jumped into senior ranks\nfor the first time this season when\nemployed by the New Westminster\nclub.\nVancouver, Seattle and Portland\nhad their teams well organized before negotiations began to form a\nNew Westminster squad and fill out\nthe loop's Northern Division.\nMoher managed to pluck some\nplayers from the already well-har-\nvuted Prairies and was given some\nplayers discarded by Vancouver and\nSeattle but he still needed reinforcements.\nDue to the late start, Royals lost\nfour straight and seven of their first\nnine games. Then New Westminster\nbegan to ahow a lot of whistle and\nwon two straight over Vancouver\nCanucks, composed mostly of\n\"name\" players.\nMoher'a Royals have won nine of\ntheir last 11 games.\nTwo Mm Convicted\non Vagrancy hargei\nPleading guilty to chargei of vagrancy, John Gillis and John Ryan,\nneither of any fixed abode, were\nsentenced to 10 and seven dayi respectively with hard labor by Magistrate William Brown in City Police Court Wednesday.\nThey were arrested Tuesday by\nChief of Police Robert Harshaw,\nwho laid charges that \"not having\nany visible means of maintaining\nthemselves, did live without employment and were thereby vagrants\".\nWould Cut Off\nWordy Memben\nWilh Guillotine\nBY JAME8 McCOOK\nCanadian Preu Staff Writer\nLONDON, Dec. t (CP)-It'i a far\ncry from Britain'! 16tb century\nQuen Elizabeth to Willie Gallacher,\nthe Wut fife Communiit member\nof Parliament, but they had iome\nldeei  in common\nThe Queen lent a message to the\nHouse ot Commoni in her day praying the worthy burgeuu not to consume so much time ln long speeches and Mr. Gallacher rose in his seat\nin the Houie the other day vtith the\nsame Idea\n\"I have heard memberi ipeak for\n45 mlnutu and then another member gets up and says that hla predecessor hu said everything that was\nneeded to be said\u2014and gou on for\nanother 45 mlnutu.\n\"Any member who uyi 'I only\nIntend to keep the Houie a few\nmlnutei' should be clamped down\nupon by the Speaker. Every time I\nhear that phrase a cold feeling goes\ndown my back. I would like to see\nthe guillotine, erected right here on\nthat floor. I would make a Job of\nthe honorable memberi on the other\nside.\"\nMembers chatting In the corridors remembered a commoner of\nlong ago who completed an Interminable addreu with the remark:\n\"I am speaking to posterity.\"\n\"And If you ge on much longer\nyou'll ioon aee your audience before you,\" came the reply from a\nlong-suffering  listener.\nRestoration: Prime Minliter Attlee probably was glad to get away\nfrom Downing Street on hla Journey to Washington lut month. Tot\nweeki bomb shelter walli ln thU\ndingy Whitehall street heve been\nfalling before noisy pneumatic drills\nthat must have affected the quiet of\nNo. 10, the Prime Minliter\"! home.\n'\u25a0:> \u25a0\u25a0    '\";\nNILSON DAILY NIWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 6, 194S \u2014 7\nEmergency Power Bill Gels Second\nReading Without Recorded Vole;     ,,\nPbC'sIo Introduce New Amendments\nPREDICTS NEW WAR\nCAUSED BY MONEY\nOTTAWA. Dec. 5 (CP)-Sen-\nator James Murdock (L-Ontario>\npredicted another war today and\nclaimed that money, \"the cause of\nwars\", would be the basla of its\norigin.\nThe new war would come, he told\nthe Senate, because men were reared in the belief that it was logical\nand natural to gain gold or Its\nequivalent, money.\nBill Cook Looking\nfor Pucksrers\nOTTAWA. Dec. 5 (CP)-Bill Cook\nof National Hockey League fame\nwho now manages Cleveland Bar-\none ln the American Hockey League. Is looking for hockey players.\nDiscovered in1 Ottawa today, he\nsaid he was here on \"hockey business,\" admitted he was intereited in\nplayers, but said he had no one In\nmlr.d at the moment.\nThird Straight\nfor Dodgers\nDodger midgets took their third\nstraight game ln as many startr,\nwhen they squeejed by the FAC.\nmidgets by a .-2 score ln another\nleague fixture at the Civic Arena\nTuesday evening. The game.was\nfast throughout, with the Dodgeri\nhaving a margin of the play In the\nfirst period. The second was ab\u00b0ul\neven while In lhe third the losers\nkept the Dodgers hemmed In their\nend of the ice and only good goal-\ntending by goalie Joe Stedile held\nthe Y.AC. In check.\nIn the latter parf of this period\nthe fairview goalie. Norm Macleod,\nwas hit in the face by a puck and\nhad to go off for repairs. His team\nates played with six men up till\nthe end of the game.\nBachynski, Kennedy and Hyisop\nwere the scoring line for the Dodders. Bachynski scored twice and\nKennedy and Hyssop once each with\nthe latter also getting an assist\nHood and Hopkins notched the\nr.AC's .oali. In penalties Carew\nand Hood were sent Vf for losers\nand Stainton for the winners\nTeams were:\nDodgers\u2014Stedlle Mores. Carman,\nHyssop, Staples, Kennedy, Bachyn-\nsk  Trlckct. Mnir and Stainton\nT AC -Macleod. Maglio, Todd\nHoed. Carew, Hopkins. O'Genski.\nBuchanan. Shunter, MacDonald,\nCooper, Hunter, Bone and Duns-\nmuir\nOfflclali\u2014\nReferees. Jim Todd. Tom Shrleves\nand Bob FiMs: Scorer, Charlie\nChristenson; Timekeeper, Ron\nBrown.\nLegion Edges\nM.R.K.Juves\nLegion Intermediates still had\nlady luck with them when they managed to nose out the MR.K. Juveniles as the whistle went on a last\nsecond much-disputed goal. They\ngained a 7-6 win ln a league game\nat the Civic Arena Tuesday evening.\nThe Hysop-Koehle combination\nwas easily the best looking on the\nIce, and their smooth passing plays\ntook them right through the heavy\nLegion defense. Hyssop scored three\ngoals *and collected two assists,\nKoehle was good for two goals and\none assist while their left wingmate\nPerrier picked up a goal an an\nassist. Hallbauer and Ross collected\nan assist apiece on the night's play.\nFor the winning Legion squad,\ntheir defensemen led their attacks,\nwith Johnny Milne and Don Por-\nteous getting two goals each. Haines\n,-,na Matheson scored the other two\nLegion goals with Matheson getting\ntwo assists. No penalties were meted\nout to either side.\nTrams were4\nLegion\u2014Elliot, Kuhn. Rlesterer.\nNash, Haines, Noakea. J. Milne. G.\nMilne, Mathejon. Bradley and Gainer\nJuveniles\u2014Malahoff, Rom, Longden, T. Koehle. Hyssop. Perrier,\nKraft, Wanlck and Hallbauer.\nOfficials\u2014Referees, Bill Hooper\nand Mickey Maglio; Tlmekeper,\nJack Morgan; Scorer, Slim Porter\nHome Construction\nPermits4Tirr.es .\nGreater This Year\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 5 (CP) -\nHome construction permits In Vancouver last November were four\ntimes greater than those for the\nsame month in 194.. A total of 238\npermits, worth $874,105 were Issued,\ncompared with 90 permits, valued\nat 1252,000 in the same month in\n1944.\nBY JACK WILLIAMS     \"\nCanadian Preie staff Writer\n, OTTAWA, Dec. 9 (CP)-The Government'! Emergency Poweri Bill\nwu given second reading by the\nCommoni today without a recorded\nvote.\nJohn Bricken, Progreulve Conservative leader, had served notice\nduring the debate that hll party\nwould oppose lecond reading and, If\nthe bill passed, would Introduce new\namendments when the bill wu In\nthe committee stage.\nAn amendment of Frederic Dorlon (Ind. \u2014 Charlevoix-Saguenay)\nproviding for a six-month hoist\nwu defeated in a call for \"Ayes\"\nand \"Nayi\" with the Piopeulve\nConiervatlvei lupportlng the Government\nThe Houie went directly into\ncommittee and the Government proceeded with the Introduction of its\npropoied emendmenta which had\nbeen in the hands of memben for\nthe lut two days.\nMr. Bracken wu the Uth member to speak today. In general the\nbill had been oppoied by Progress-\nve Coniervitlvei and Independents,\ncriticized by Social Credit members\nei being too iweeping despite the\npropoied amendment! end lupport-\ned by C.C.F. and Government speak-\neri.\nHe lilted hll objectloni to the bill\nunder four headings;\n1. It constituted an Invulon of\nprovincial rights.\n2. It gave blanket power to the\nGovernor-in-Council.\n3. It wu objectionable ln providing authority on iuch matteri u Immigration, deportation and the revoking of nationalization.\n4. It gave wholesale legality to all\nOrders-ln-Councll passed under the\nWar Measures Act, iome ot which\nParliament had never seen.\nMr. Bracken uld the bill\nahould require the Government to\ntable Orders-ln-Councll which\nwere being brought under It.\nThere also ihould be a disclosure\nof tha extent to which provincial\nPremiers who had objected to the\noriginal bill had approved the\nemendmenta.\nJustice Minister St Laurent, who\nwas piloting the bill, said the amendments had not been drafted until after the meeting of the Dominion-Provincial Conference Coordinating Committee.\n'\"ftere is no suggestion that any\none of the provincial Premiers has\nany responsibility whatsoever for a\nsingle word ln tl|Is bill,\" he said.\nTRIED TO MEET PROVINCES\nOBJECTIONS\nProvision! of the bill had been\ndiicuised at the conference and the\nPremers expressed their objections,\nbut at the same time made lt clear\nthey did not want reipomibillty for\nwhat wu ln the bill.\nIn making amendments the Government had attempted to meet the\nobjections of the Premier! but the\nchangei had not been submitted to\nthe provincei.\nThe first amendment    Mr.    St. '.\nLaurent proposed when the bill got\ninto committee provided for a\nchange ln the title which changed\nthe deicrlptlon of poweri conferred\nupon it from \"certain powers\" to\n\"certain transitional powers.\" ThU\nchange, he uid, wu intended1 to\nmake it clear that the emergency\nwu ot a transitional nature\nYou get slicker\nshaves and save\nmoney too, with\nBlue Gillette\nBlades...made of\nsteel hard enough.\nto cut glass, so\nth^yst% sharper\nlonger!\nItpsysbaskfot\nBlue Gillette\nBlades\nM.R.K. Bants\nBlank Panthers\ntn nne nf th* cloteit bin turn\n|\u00bbrr.ei nf th* new leaton. thr M R K\nnovo\" nut tht Pantheri l-n In i 1m-\njnir KflnT\" nt the Civic Arfna Wednesday afternoon.\nNrilhrr ttim wm able in tcore in\nthe opening period tnd It won't till\n\u25a0lnvnt the end <>f the ucond tesiion\nth\u00abt Dntitt MacLean tlapped In ,i\nlooie puck pmt Goalie Maclnnw In\nthe Panther net to icore the winning\ngoal.\nThe checking *\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 very clot*\nthroughout tnd th* fotlitt hid It-\ntie work to do\nDoug MacLean drew both nf th*\nM H K \u25a0. ptnaltlM in th* third period nnd nitlkowikl tnd Choquette\ndrew two Panthar penaltteg.\nTin mi wtrt:\nMRK BenedtUl. Towriu, Hen-\nwick, Martian Meagher, f. Anderton. Apoitolulk. Pickering. Thick,\nLanfitaff. Chrlttatiaon, Mathewi,\nand Pifdon\nPmth*rt - Ma^Inn**, Choquette.\nK ftandan. O Sandan, Ackert,\nStiff. V Grundy. Malkowakl. R.\nHulln. P Poulln, Kunti \u00bbnd Trailer '\nOfflclali\nRrfereet, Slim Porter and Law-\nrernr* Ludlow; Boortr and Tim**\n'kttper. Jimmy Hood.\nFootball Yanks to\nPlay in New League\nI NEW YORK. Dec. S (API-The\nnew All.America Pro Football Con-\n[ferenre srorrd sn Important victory\nl today when Dan Topping, part owner nf New York hesebali Yankees,\nannounced he wss transferring operations from Ihe Natlptial Football\nleague to the new circuit In lMfl\nTupping who owns the Brooklyn\nfranchise     In     Ihe   National   loop,\n'which wu merged with Boston for\nthe IMS campaign, iald his learn\nwould be known is the New York\nFootball Yankees and would play\nIs home games In Yankee Stadium\nBranches In South America\n\u00ae Art\u00absitssi-B-\u00abooe Airei-\n3 tranche*.\nt|) Irmi\u2014 Pemambsico\n(Ft-rife), Rio de Janeiro,\nS .ui,,-. Sao Paul\".\nd)Bi*tm,tmmm   GeoTte-\nlo\u00bbn, New Amsterdam.\n(i) ttAeatAa   Barranqnllla.\nBogota. Call, Certafena,\nMuiaaJea, MedeDln.\ni t.rt   lima.\nCi) Ikm-my t Montevideo.\n\u25a0 V.n.tnnUt   Caracas,\nCin.lad Bolivar,\nMareraiho.\ne\nPa.i.noAl. HlLr \u2022\nTor, FofUDOr. Tainraa\nCollectlsni \u2014 commercial\nI ell era of credit\u2014-Credit reports market incarnation\u2014\nassistance in \u00ab_UNt\u00abMng d*\nidrahk trade connecUom.\n. hie South American may owe you money ... or\ncontrol supplies you would like to buy ... or b\u00ab\nlooking for goods you hayj. to tell. Ynu want his nnmo\nand addrttg, the nature and extent of his business ...\nand hia credit\nWe can put you in touch with him . . . nnd in thr\nright way. We know South America. We have had\nour own branches there for over 31 years. DuriiiR\nthat time we have formed business associatinns which\ncan be of inestimable value to you\u2014if you are\nplanning to share in the tremendous twiv-wny trndn\nnow opening up with the South American republics.\nWe sre the only Canadian bank with il\u00ab own\nbranches in South America. Our offin-Ys have l^n\nin direct contact with the rapid nnd drnslic change*\nin business conditions made down Ihere by the war.\nTheir service* are at your diipoeal. Correspondence\nis invited.\nTHE ROYAL BANK\nOP CANADA\nA hlitliatil link baititfit ( nntfii nil,\/ \/ -i'j'i    . \u25a0',\u25a0'- J  \u25a0!\nlintwiW\nI\nNILSON BRANCH\u2014S. A. MADDOCKS, Manoger\n ___-___---\u2014\u2014_.___________________\nrfcw- \u25a0-: \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   ' .j        -    . , . j..,- ,        -, \u25a0\u25a0 ::\u25a0      \u25a0: :-v.'i- \u25a0'\u25a0.\u2022\u25a0 .;\nt- NiLSOM DAILY NIWJ THURSDAY, OK. 6, 1>4I\nTODAY'S New Pimm\nTHI DEAN OFF TO ENGLAND] Rev. Hewlett Johnion, tip\n\"Re*\" Dean ef Canterbury, returning te Englind after a short ipeak-\nIng tour In Canada and the United States, Is shown with a fellow\npassenger, Inga Leulie Berger, throe-and-one-half monthi old, about\nte leive the Bedford airport, Boston, Mass., on a London-bound plane.\nTha baby Is travelling with her three-year-old brother and their parent!, Br. ind Mn. Curt Berger, to Denmark where they will visit\ntheir homo, Dr. Berger Is an associate profressor at Cornell.\n8TOWAWAY8: Mrs. Winifred\nMary Marelco, 25, wife of.former\nPte. Ralph Joseph Mareseo, of\nCorona, Long Island, holds her\nelght-monthi-old baby, Joseph\nRalph Mareseo, ihortly ifter their\narrival In Boiton as stowaways\naboard the troopship New Zee-\nland Victory. The baby, born of a\nwartime romance In England, wai\nfed canned milk which the mother\nsaid she brought aboard the ship\nIn a bag. They have been plaoed In\ncustody of Immigration Bureau\nauthorities pending a decision In\ntheir case. Mri. Mareseo itated\nthat her husband did not know of\nher plan te stowaway.\nPARRI RESIGNS: Premier Fer-\nrucclo Parrl who resigned as premier of Italy is a crisis In his government wis precipitated. He has\nheaded a six-party coilltlon since\nlait Juna.\nSWEDI8H PREMIER STEPS OUTi Thli genial dancer Is Prlmi\nMinister P. A. Hanson of Swedish, who Is shown euttlng \u25a0 rug with his\ndaughter, Kirln, at the \"coffee party\" that marked his 60th birthday,\n\u25a0t his home near Stockholm.\n,NAVY COACH?: According to\na story In the Army and Navy\nRegister, Cmdr. Louis J. (Bullet\nLou) Kirn, above, one of the great\nplayers In Navy history, will be\nthe next coach of the Middles,\nsucceeding Cmdr. Oscar Hagberg.\nThey'll Do ll Every Time\n*\n____ IM   IHWl\nYesterdan HE\n(30TA6EAT W\nTHE SMOKER. HE\nCOULDN'T HWe\nKEPTHSSTOGIE\ndOM&WlTHA    '\nBLOW TORCH \u2014\nkm  tmi etc art !-\u2022\u00bb\u2022*\u00bb\nBE SURE TO GIVE AllA\nYOUR PETS A DRINK OF\nWATER-HENRY\/\n\u25a0 \u25a0'''\ni'ii   i\n<sh\n\u2014\nAMoi(i_aoH \u2014\n4\n___________E_________>l_-_\nfyJamasWuidti\nFOR THE KIDDIES: Gay little\nhindwarmeri \u2014 In plain knitting\nstockinette and cable itltclr mltteni are eaay knitting \u2014 grand for\ntha kiddles on thoie Icy days!\nThese knitted mittens are In\nfour sizes; make them In a differ*\nent color for each child. Pattern\n746 directions In 4, t, 8, 10-year\nsize.\nSend TWENTY CENTS (20c) In\nfor thil pattern. Print plainly\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nSIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE\nNUMBER.\nSend your order to Dilly Newt\nPittern Department, Nelson, B. C.\nWxVtan  W\/lahLin\nFROCK AND PANTIES: Little\ngirls love Pattern 94751 Frock li\nsweet with lice trimmed scallops;\nfront buttoning makes It easy for\na wee girl to dress herself. Fun to\nmatch pintles to dress.\nPattern 9479 comes In sires 2. 4,\n6, B. Size 6, frock, requires 2 yards\n35 Inch material.\nSend TWENTY CENTS,(20c) In\nco,ns (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern. Print plainly\nSIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE\nNUMBER.\nSend your order to Dally News\nPattern Department, Nelson, B. C\nAUNT HET\n\"Men are to ag|favatin'. They\nran do miracles to win a war, and\nthfn they lose interest in savin'\nthe world till somebody start* another one.\"\nSALLYS SALLIES\nThli would be Ideil wallpaper, tf\nyou to ln for mystery atorlea.\"\n(TMUCKLE-A    \\ 'TWERE MIGHTY\nAttvte AMoottki'l wHrre otx\/v\ncast o' mm \\ ALLOW ME r \u2022\nlove you ] \\*\u00ablk suchtu.\nnciaah serrr) behind to; ui\nABNER-BUT-\nSUDDENLY- *H$\nHAff.\nPET\nKQOLYAR\nTHET\nYO'\nSUDDENLY\nCITS TIRED\nAT'\necavrmm\nsat \u00bb**\u25a0\nHc\/err-Hi\noavT\nloec nvtrr)\n(\"SHOK HI OO-AN'\nttk^tYtttXA' Arrows\n\/r- taspr him.\".'-\nh&u str Mf\nntw, \/w\/R\/wr\n-SOWS AC AW\nTHINK UP A UN-\nfKWANTKAL\nP&GON FO'\nDQIN'ITff)\n(l3tHM Ht 9_\\\n\/tvm\/\/t\/'AAYha\nhim-frya..\nFELL pe^W'1-i.oqir\nfiSugpnjl\"***'-'-\n\u25a0 jjy,..,1:. J.igs&j-f5'\nAND TO BE SURE\nVOU DON'T BET\nOUT-rM GONG\nTO LOCK VOU l\\|l\na6-V-v\\ABC>EM-\nl*AE=A>J-MAGGIE!\nHELLO--CASEY\t\nLSADWrrWTH'ACE\nAN' MOVE A UTTLE\nTO THE RIGHT-SO I\nKit-SEE ME CARDS\/\nPUT INANOTVCl\nVMS FOR JK3GS-\nHE'S SHY IN\nI THE KITTY*\nA\n.\nJ'i.t..l\nCtfA IW. Kiat h\u2014ia jytemmjaip ___4 njta mr** _\u2022\n126\nn\n\u25a0mipiiiiiiiii\"\n..  \u00a5lW NOT PLAYING\ni mustnt)^ with rr^\nyrz\n\\\n_W  I  WASJU\n(checking TO\nV, |F ANYTH1N\nV_.  MISSISK\n3\nSUT.GEE.NOO\nBKXJGHTUS\nDCnVNTS\nUS A SUIT.\nS_\u00bb-V_Er\/S.\nCCAX ISN'T\nPASS UP A\nBAB3A1N    .\nTHAT^\nTHECE MUST\nSOWETHINS\nWB0N3 W1TH_^ JUST A\n'EM AT  amg REMAKKASLB\nTHAT     Bi.gAg6\"-CHOH\nJV>\nll\nHMMl9,500-.ftMa.ft7OO\u201eYm KILLED ONE MAM ALRIACVANPl\nWHAT? 5_Uy TIN THOU-ANdI Klrifi OOT THERE TO FREEZI-ALL **J\nIII |PM fc__f_\\\\_ | -amtV TU'S STIPEND** I\n**S\nBUT F YOUR IDEA IS TD\nGRAB SAWYER, WHY THE\nDEL*'. WHY NOT 'PHONE\nH\u00ab \u2014LET HW KNOT\nYOU'RE IN TWiTi*\nPOO THE\nSIMPLE\nCEASOH\nSKAGG,\nTHAT MEU\nUKE TD FANCY\nTHEMSSLV1S\nAS THE\nPUR.-BK.\nE\nLONDON (CPl - The Sunday\nGfiphtc recently published a full\nfront pan picture nf Field Marshal\nSir Harold Aleaander. governor- \u00ab*t\ngeneral designate nf Canada with\nhis dog Tessa who \"is hnplni to ac-1\ncompany her master In Canada.\"\nLONDON     (CP)-rir\u00bbt   conihjn-.\nment of (07s mide lor Britlih war\norphans   by   German   prisoners   nf I\nwir In Enelinrl hll irrlved In I. -n  I\ndon frnm Par Cimp, Com-aLL I\nrr C0UIO BE A HlDE-OOT\nCOR OTHER DEJERTIR*\neaoa in\/rt aERVAN\n*Jftt(ARlNE, JW\nN\nIT COULD BE A\nNlWUEKOftHlNCiS-\nBUT 1 THINK THAT\nTHAT IH.AND l\u00bb UNKEO\nWITH Till* mutoft\n7  PACK WUR BA5 AND CATCH T* NEXT\nPLANE, 4CVTH! I'LL  PHONE OUR FIELD AM\nIN \/HiAAti AND CHARTER A \u00abEAP_AH_ FO\nyou- asm 60T to know tmt on\nTHAT I.LAND!\n\t\n .\t\n\u25a0' -\u2022-\t\n \t\np-fv\n\u25a0 :-.-.    *,'\u00bb.-*..\n\u25a0 um\n11\nPHONE 144\nHELP WANTID\n0RTUNITY FOB A BOY, 18\niri or over, to learn a good\ndt ln a iteady builneis which\nnot subject to lay-offs. Do not\nply unless you really want to\nis a trade that you can stay\nth, Night work ln preu, stereo-\nit and mailing depirtment of\nly newspaper. Apply William\nawn, Nelson Dally News, after\nun.\t\nRT GIRL OF GOOD PERSON -\nly who can use typewriter wtll\nintonating and profitable a\n|.ipaper job,which we have to\ntr. Apply Mr. R&msden at the\nHy News office between 9 am\nI 5 p.m. Nelson Dally News.\nlOGRAPHKR  WANTED. AP-\nNelson School Board, 804 Car-\nrote Street __^_^\nITED -  WOMAN  OR  GIRT\ngeneral housework. Write Box\n.Trail, B.C.\nfTED-STENOGRAPHER FOR\nal bank. Apply Box 2507 Dally\nws.\nITED\u2014GIRL OF WOMAN TO\nIp with housework. Ph. 653-R\nTEACHERS\nARY TEACHER WANT-\nIbr Castlegar schooL Duties to\nJanuary 7th. Salary sche-\ne ln effect Apply with refer-\nca  to  the    Secretary   School\nurd, Castlegar, B.C.\t\nTED\u2014 TEACHER FOR PAT-\nlon Rural SchooL Salary $130\n[ teaching month. Duties to be-\nJtnuary 7th, 1945. Apply F. A.\nJLellan, Official Trustee, Trail,\nFOR SALE, MISCELUNEOUS\nSINGER\nNEW SEWING MACHINES\nARE HERE.\nWe have just received a limited\nnumber   of  new  electric tnd\ntreadle machines.\nSINGER SEWING MACHINE\nCO.\nPhone 41 Nelson, B. C.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nBUH-QERSI\nWe carry tht mott complete itock\nIn the province of\nSash, Doors, Windows, Frimet.\nImmediate shipment - from 300 sizes\nand designs.\nAll sash and windowi ar*\ndipped ln the famoui\nWOODLIFE\nWOOD PRESERVATIVE\nand need no priming coat\nbefore Installing.\nThey will not\nSWELL, SHRINK OR WARP\nOut-of-town orden shipped\npromptly.\nNorth Shore Sash and Door Co.\n123 W 1st Ave.,       North Van., B.C.\nUTUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial low rates for non-com-\nrclal   advertisements   under\nclassification to assist peo-\n\u25a0 leeking employment Only\nI for one week (6 days) coven\nf number of required llnei.\nyable ln advance. Add 10c if\n_ number is desired,\nL_! WALTS SHARPENER,\nsrythlng sharpened from scis-\nto lawn mowers by machir,-\n'. Neat saws, hands saws re-\nthttd, circular saws gummed.\nluced prices on lawn movers\nDec. 2032 3rd Ave., TraU.\nHOLLY FOR CHRISTMAS GIFTS\nExtra (in* Christmas Holly, large\nbox, $1.00. Double box, $1.75. Delivered In Cinada and U.S.A. Kuy-\nper'B, Hatzic, B.C.\nFOR SALE - WAGON, MOWER,\nrake, plow, harrow, 2 harness,\nblacksmith's outfit and unfinished\nsleigh. Apply A. N. Maloff, Castlegar.\nFOR SALE-ONE DOUBLE BAR-\nrelled han\\merlesi ihotgun. \"Ithl-\nca\" 16,\u00ab,auge, in good inapt, Ap-\nply Box 3438, Daily Newi.\nPUBUGNOTICE\nTHI CORPORATION OF\nTHE CITY Or NELSON\n,WTOOTA!L^ijiCT^ONS\"\u2022\nPUBLIC NOTICE li hereby given\nto the electors of the Municipality of\ntht City of Ntlson thtt 1 require the\npresence of tht said electors it tht\nCity Hall, Ml Front Street, Nelson, B.C. on Monday, the 10th day of\nDecember, 1943, at 12 o'clock noon.\nPacific Time, for tht purpose of electing penoni to represent them aa\nMtyor, Aldermen and Police Commissioners for tht City of Nelion,\nand School Trusteei for the Nelion School District\nThe mode of nomination of candidates ihall be ai followi: The candidate shall be nominated ln writing; tht writing shill be subscribed\n| by two electors of the Municipality\njat proposer tnd seconder, and ihall\nbe delivered to the Returning Officer at tny Ume between the data\nof tht notice nnd two P.M. of the\nday of nomination; the laid writing\nmay bt ln tht form numbered 3 in\nthe Schedule of tht \"Municipal El-\ncctlons Act\", tnd shall state the\nnames, residence, and occupation or\ndescription of ttch person proposed,\nln iuch manner ai sufficiently to\nIdentify such candidate; and ln the\neyent of a poll being necessary, such\npoll shall bt opened on tht 13th day\nof December, 1945, between the\nhouh ol 8 o'clock A.M., and 8 o'clock\nP.M.; Ul tht Council Chamber of the\nCity Hall at tht corner of Ward and\nFront Strtttt, of which tvery person la hereby required to take notice and govern himself accordingly-\nOry*n undtr jny hand at the City\nHall, Nelion, B.C., thli lit day of\nDecember, 1045.\nW. A. GORDON,\nReturning Officer.\nRepresentatives to be elected:\nMayor.   \u00bb\n3 Aldermen for two years.\n8 School Tniatees for two years.\n1 Police Commissioner for two\nyean. .\"\u00bb\nltPollct Commissioner for one\nyear.\nPIPE - HWHRSS - WflBfi, m-\nclal low pricei. Active Trading\nCo., 918  Powell  St,  Vancouver\n8 MM. MANNLICHER RIFLE, 40\nshells. $85 cash. A. Edwards,\nSheep Creek.\nFOR' SALE-SPENCER HEATER,\nalmost new. Phone 221-L.\nSHI MIDDLEAGED WO-\ngood cook, wishes position\nhousekeeper. Able to take com-\ntt charge. Business couple or\npreferred.  No objection   lo\nnf out of  town.   Reply   Box\n2 Nelson Dally News.\nSTENT  YoWg   WOMAN\nidd like Job keeping house for\nhelor, widower, or In mother-\nhome Apply Box 2038 Dally\n___.*.        \t\nAS JANITOR IN HOTEL, OF-\nbuilding or apartment block.\nJ0_3_Daily_News.\n_j5NG.    WILL SEWTN\nhome or mine. Ph, 584-R1.\njTOCK, POULTRY AND\nfARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nNEW   OR   USED    HOUSBHOIJ.\ngoods. Pay less at Ark Store.\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METAUS\nor Iron. Any quantity. Top prlcti\npaid. Active Tridlng Compiny,\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B.C\nWANTED - SMALL BILLIARD\ntable. Box 1, Broadwater, Lower\nArrow I-lkea.\t\nWILL TRADE BOY'S SKATES,\nsize 1, for size 13. Good condition.\n_Phone 291-L.\nPIANO\" IN ~GOOD CONDITION.\nPhone 1029-X of Box 2501 Daily\nNews.\nPERSONAL :\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP A'l\nAimer Hotel  Opp fffcR  Depot\nrm\n-m.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE. W. WIDDOWSON k CO. ASSAY-\ners, 301 Josephine St., Nelson,\nH S. ELMES, ROSSLAND, B C\u201e\nAllayer, Chemist l\/lint Rprsntve.\niHt WEST KOOTENAY ASSAY\nOffice, 410 Kootenay St.. Nelson.\nA J. BUIE, Independent Mine Representative. Box 54. Trail. B.C.\nBUILDING  CONTRACTORS\nNELSON BUILDING CONTRACT-\non. No lobs too small or too large\nPhone 3B4-X3 Box 154.\nCARPENTER WORK, REMODEL-\nllng and repairs. C Peterson, 917\nObservatory Street\nCHIROPRACTORS\n3. COLIN McLAREN, DC, CHIRO-\npractlc X ray Spinography. Strand\nTheatre Bldg., Trail; EC. Ph. 32a\n\u25a0HE  'WHICH .......\nIICK5 cive RHULTS\n,v\nirllir hatched  chicks ire\nneeded next season!\nwill pay you to order\nsefore 1st Jan, 1946.\nrite for further particular!.\njmp&Sendalj\nN, LANGLEY PRAIRIE, B.C\nVernon, BC\n(Brinch Hitchery)\nBT   QUALITY   RO.P.-SIRED\nIde blind Red ind New Hamp-\nChlcks it my regular price\nfor 25, $8 for 50. $15 for 100\nyour    IMfl    Chicks    now\nORGE GAME, R.O.P. Breeder,\nitrong, BC.\n8ALE-25 HAMPSHIRE\"PUL-\nlaying. $2  each.   Hillerin'i.\nine 505-RJ1\n\"BALE-ONE   COW,   FRESH-\n3 win. Fred Maloff, Crescent\nlty.\nfe -  FRESH   COW   JEN-\n\u25a0 Dairy, Box 517, Roulind.\nTELEPHONE 1*4\nfied Advertising Ratt\nc per line per Insertion\n- per line per week <6 con\nUtlve iniertloni for colt of 4)\n1.43 l line \u2022 month\nIX limes)\nInlrnum 2 lines per Insertion\nnumbers lie c-tn Thli\n\u25a0ny number of tlmei\nV, TON OR TON CHAIN BtOOL\nTowniheild, RR. No, 1, Nelion.\nSHIP YOUR HIDES T6 J. f. UOR-\ngan. Nelson, B.C. '\nWANTED TO BUY, TRICYCLE Dl\ngood condition. Phone ___.\nWANTED\u2014 ELECTRIC HEATH\nGood condition. Ph. 234.\t\nPROPERTY, MOUSES, FARMS\nFOR SALE-4 ACRES NEAR BON-\nr.lngton or S. S. Buildings, young\nfruit treei, bearing. Best water\nlupply ind electricity. $1500.\nWrite Boi No. 848, Nelion Dally\nNewi.\nWILL RENT OR BUY FOR CASH\nmodern home ln Nelson. Apply\nFinning Tractor k Equip. Ca,\nNelion.\nSTANDARD RECEIPT BOOKS, 4\nreceipts to page with duplicate\nsheets, Nelson Daily News Printing Dept.\t\nSEE US IF^TOTTNTCtD A OOOD\naccident or sickness Policy. C W.\nAppleyard, 382 Baker St.\nTOR \"SALE - LARGE HOUSE,\nEast TralL Apply Box 847, Nelson News.\nDIAMOND DRILLERS\t\nNATIONAL DIAMOND DRILLING\nCO, LTD., Drilling and Bit Ser-\nvlce. Box SOB, Rossland, B.C.\nENQtrtBERS AND SURVlVgRT\nR.   W.   HAGGEN.   MINING   AND\nCivil  Engineer.  B.C.  Land  Sur-\nveyor Rossland and Grand Fonts.\nveyo\nD C. AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST,\nNelson, B.C. Surveyor, Engineer\nINSURANCE AND R\u00a3AL ESTATE\nCHAS F. McHARDY, INSURANCE.\nReal Estate. Phone 135.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine Shop, acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding,\nPhong 593 324 Vernon St.\nSTEVENSON'S MACHINE SHOP-\nSpeclalists in mine and mill work\nMachine work, light and heavy\nElectric and  Acetylene welding\n708 Vernon St.. Nelson Ph. 98.\nj ~CHARTERED~ACCOUNTANT\nROGER M. HOYLAND\nChartered Accountant\n1815 Victoria St., Trail Ph. 338\n8ECOND HAND 8TORE8\nWE BUY, SELL AND EXCHANGE\nWhat have youT Ph. 534. Ark Store.\nThe ayllus, or agrarian of the Indians in Peru, date back to ancient\nInca days.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nOOWN      16 River laland\n1 Apportion    20 Furple-\n2 Long, stout        (lowered\nglove herbs\n3 Com iSwed.121 American\nI Wiping Indiana\ncloth 22 Pint-eotu\n8 None god tret\n\u00ab RelaUng to   23 Ulr\n24. People of\nIreland\n28 Dtitrea.\n39\nIBLIC (LEGAL) NOTICES.\nTENDERS  ETC\n-. per Una llrst insertion and\neach subsequent Insertion\n\"X   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSPECIAL tOW RATE*\n-on   oommirclil iltuitloni\nnted for _V for any required\nfiber  of   lines  for  tlx   diy*.\nill In advance.\nIWBSCRIITKIN  RATES\nJl ropy \u00bb   <~\nttrrler. per week\nIrivance . -      29\ncarrier. |>er year 13 00\nills outilde Nrnon:\nmonth         $    75\n-.monthi .- _     2 00\nmontha      ___..    4 00\nrear .         9 00\nbove ntei apply In Tanada.\nttd Statei and (Jnlted King-\nto subscribers living out-\nrtfulir carrier irea\nir\\. I,. - and to Cinidi\n:e extra iiosl^Ke Is required\nmonth il 50 Hirer months\nilx months SHOO, one )Cir\n7 Biblical\nnami\n9 Prophet*\n12 froien\nwilter\n13 I'.rformed\n14 River In\n.'{inland\nsignal\n28 A stamp\n27 Public\nnotlcce\n29 Lett\n,7111ft     -HUM*\nm '.' Aj.i'.iitm\n:*r,i_: ma\nHffl__[SHHnt.i m\niuwutA   a:\nuau   an mm\n\u25a0A'2.7,nn i'.',!_i_-i.a\nHt'lii.A  '-V,M!_i\nma am\nTeftirdir*! Aisxer\n30. Sharp edgi\n(Arch.)\n32. Signal\nlystem\n88. Cry of iheep\nACROSS\nI Put\nk Apex\n7 Like i wtng\n8 Poems\n10 Color\n11 Telegripn\n12 Metal\n13 Made hoi-\nlows ln\n15 Mirih plant\n17 Part of\n'to be'\n18 Type\nmeuurt\n19 Covir\nM dagicioui\n21 rgyptKm\ndivinity\nM Wtnnow\n23 Leglilatun\nli Number\n2H Penruryt-\nvania\niabbr I\n]' Aes eigle\n29 Onward\n.11 Daughten\nof one n\n\u25a0liter\n33 Goddeuof\ndlicord\n.14 Boat\n35 Capital\nI Swlai I\nM Angle of i\nfault vein\nJT Mini\nentrance\n38 Virying\nweight\n(Ind I\nJ!> rwikey\ncttvi-onvvn-A,\nHAYBR  AWUJDl' HTQOARB  O 3 CO\ntWBB WAII TD HY THARQB-ICWHT.\nVeiienUy's Cr>ptosiiio\u00abei   THE rNCURABU! ITCH Of mmT\nINO P08SESSKS MANY\u2014JUVBNAL\nsALt - mmsm, cash\nregister. J. Cheis, 814 Vernon St,\nPhont 1081. \u25a0\nSLENDOR TABLETS ARE EfFIC-\ntlve. ] weeks' supply 81; 12 weeks\n85, at Fleury'i Pharmar\nNh\n_tE \u00a5he UW or \u00abte >aMT.\nOtt our Fun-Budget. Good (or I\nmillion laughs. Only 28 ctnti pott\npaid. L. Kgfjl yibank, Suit\nk,Sai\n25c\"L^ ^w6-25c\nP.O. Box 434, Vancouver\nAny il-exp. roll developed tnd printed 28c Reprlnti 8c. Free 5x7 cou| \u2014\nSU1 PLIES FOR ENGrlNl\nSurveyors, Draftsmen, Blue am\nPhotostat Prlnti, Drafting, Map\nMounting. Calgary Drafting, 60a\n1st St. W\u201e Calgary,\nATTENTIOI? SCHOOL BOARD\nsecretaries. We have a large itock\nof newsprint, mimao and bond\npaper and can fill any order Immediately. Dally Newi Printing\nDept., Nelton, British Columbia.\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT-\ned (8 or 8 exposure roll) 25c. Reprints 3c each. For your inapthoti\nchoose Krystal Finish Guarenteea\nnon-fade nrlnta. Kryetel Photos,\nWilkie, Saskatchewan. Established\nover 30 Yean.\nTuAi_it\u00abJ_MS\t\nASTHMA\nTREATED BY MAIL\nby celebrated European Herballit\n40 yean experience.\nLIFE AND NATURE\nRedwood Ave.      Winnipeg, Maa\nLET THE AMAZING FORTUNE\nteller help you with your family\nproblems. Lucky days and fortunes told with ilx question! for\none dollar. Please write with Ink\nto Mdme. Alblna, 143 Rupert Ave,\nWinnipeg.\nSTOP ITCHING TORTURES OF\neczema, psoriasis, ringworm, athlete's foot and other skin irritations with Elik's Ointment No 9\nprescription ot noted ikin specialist Itch relieved promptly, ikin\nhealed qulrkh or monev refunded, $1.00, 82.00. Mail orden filled\npromptly. Order today from Elik'i\nMedicine Co. Dept 42, Saskatoon.\nSask\nSTOP SUFFERING FROM FOL-\nlowlng itomach  Disorders:  Add\n'Stomach, Indigestion, Heartburn,\nCoated Tongue. Bad Breath, Sick\nHeadaches, etc. Use Elik's Stomach powder No. 2, prepared by\nexperienced Pharmacist It must\ngive Immediate results or money\nark. II, $2. Elik's Medicine Company, Dept 42, Saskatoon, Sailed. 31.00, 12.00. Mall orders filled\npromptly Order today from Ellk'\nNEWELL'S HEATH CLINIC, 805\nKensington Bldg., Winnipeg, Man.\nNewell s Liver, Kidney and Bowel\nTea $2, NeweU's famous Pile\nSalve. Full treatment $5. Sample\n$2. Newell's famous Varlcoe Ulcer Salve. Sample (2 NeweU's\nfamous Arthritis, Rheumitlim Ll-\nnament. Sample $2. New Life\nHerb inhaler for sinus, headache\nand catarrh. Last for years 75c.\nThe above sold on money back\nguarantee.\nHOW WOULD YOU LIKE TO OWN\na $10,000 home, built to your own\nspecific ations, wherever you\nwish? If you prefer we will give\nyou $10,000 In Victory Bonds. Opportunity to win $100.00 monthly\ndraw. All proceeds for underprivileged children and playgrounds\nDraw date\u2014December 31st, M45.\nDon't ' delay. Receipts milled\npromptly. Send $1.00 for one ticket, 6 for $5.00. right now. To. Klwanis Club of Sudbury, Box 53,\nSudbury, Ont.\t\nCampbell Loans\nFOR\nMarried Couples\nNO  ENDORSERS\nNeed some caih right iwiy?\nWhy not consult a friendly\nCampbell expert? He will show\nyou how married couples can\nget from $20 to $1000 without\nendorsers. Quick service. Easy\nrepayment terms plus life lniurance at no extra cost\nCAMPBELL\nFINANCE CORPORATION\nLIMITED\n560 Baker St. Phone 109S\n.  Above Fink's Ready-to-Wear\nMACHINERY\nNATIONAL PORTABLE SAWMILLS art strongly built for economical production to lult Western Canadian timber. Manufactured by NATIONAL MACHINERY\nCO. LTD., Vancouver, EC.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nWe are equipped to do efficient\nand prompt\nRADIATOR REPAIRS\nAlso have an up to date radintor\nboil out machine.\nQUEEN CITY MOTORS\nLIMITED\nNelson, B. C.\nFOR SALE-1929 CHEV COACH,\nGood condition. Good tires. Apply E. McGregor, 609 Third St,\nferial No. 374204^Price $298.\nPAIR 750\" M 20 DUAL TRUCK\nchalni City Auto Wreckers.\nRENTALS\nWANTED BY EX-SERVICEMAN\nmd mother and father, by January lit, 3 or 4-roomed suite or\nhouse. Gai or electric range. Permanent buitness people. Phoni\n912-X.\t\nFOR\" IlfNT^BEflROOM AT 87\nHigh St Ph_493-R.\nBEr>ROOM\"~Y6R~ RENT. PHOTIC\n614-X.\nLOST AND FOUND\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY\nOF RELIABLE MINING\nMACHINERY\nMancha Tram$ ond Mucking Machines, Mln* Roils,\nPlpt, Compressors. Rock-\nCrushers, Ball Mills, Stop-\ners. Joek Hommers, Volves.\nVancouver Sales &\nAppraisals Limited\n848 Beach Avenut\nVancouver, B. C.\nSASH AND DOOR TACTORY AND\nlawmill equipment ot all types.\nSend us your enquiries. National\nMachinery Company Ltd., Vancouver, B.C.\nFOR SALE\nINTERNATIONAL,\n41 H.P., V.D., 8   Diesel\nPOWER UNIT\nIN OUR SHOW ROOMS\nCentral Truck\n& Equipment Co.\n1944 PEAT OUTPUT\nVALUED AT $5,397\nOTTAWA, Dec. J (CP)-Cana-\ndlan production of peat fuel ln 1944\ntotalled 844 short tons valued at\n$5397 compared with 782 toni worth\n$7000 ln 1943, the Dominion Bureau\nof Statistics reported today. Commercial production of peat moss ln\n1944 totalled 80,448 short tons valued'at $1,889,553 compared with an\noutput of 94,360 short tons worth $1,-\n461,422 ln 1943.      -\n702 Front St.\nPhont 100\nPAiNT spftAY dbMWjfSsiiRir\ncomplete with hose and guns. In\nItock. AIR EQUIPMENT SER-\nVICE LTD, 1401 Hornby 8), Vancouver.\nSTEAMSHIPS IMPROVE\nMONTREAL, Dec. 5 (CP)-Ad-\nlustments ware mixed in light deals\ntoday on the bond market.\nIn high gradei moit of the Hit was\nunchanged but the Eighth Victory\nLoan wai a shade better.\nCanada Steamships were Improved. In Utilities, Montreil Tramwayi\nB\" and St. Maurice ilt, were\nhigher and Bell 4Vis, Quebec Powers and Winnipeg Electric \"A\" slipped. Weit graim were up slightly.\nFOR SALE-NEW P. k H. 250 AMP.\nportable electric welder with new\nChrysler englnt, with all accessories and rods. Bayes Equipment\nk Repairs, Cranbrook, B.C.\nLONDON ALL-STEEL HAND\nhoists, 5-ton capacity; Immediate\ndelivery from stock. PURVES E.\nRITCHIE k SON LTD., Vancouver, B.C,\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, Dec. 8 (CP)-Graln\nquotations:\nOpen   High   Low   Close\nDec    167      mV,   1661.    178Vi\nMay     167tt   177      167*   177\nJuly    158s.   165W   llAVs   IMV,\nOatt (all futures at celling prices\nof 51* cents).\nCASH PRICES\nOaU: 2 C.W, Ex. 8 C.W, 3 C.W.,\nIx. 1 feed and 1 teed, all 51V.; 2\nfeed 50\\i; 8 feed 49; track 51V4;\nscreenings $8.00.\nRyt: 2 C.W. 176V4.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Dec. 5 (CP)-Cittle\nmarket active at the week'i id-\nvance.\nTueiday'i receipti: 1273 cattle, 201\ncalves, 1337 boo and 296 iheep. Today:' 20ff cattli, 3 hogs and 2i>6\nsheep.\nHogi wld Tuaiday it $1615-11645\nfor A'j it yardi and plants. Sows\n$11.25 live weight.\nGood to choice butcher steers\n11.25-11,90. Good to choice butcher\nheifers 10.00-11.00.\nGoad cows 8.00-8.78. Oood bulls\n7.50-8 00.\nGood to choice veil calvei 9.00-\n10.00.    .\nGood itocker ind feeder iteen\n9.00-9.50. Cannen and cutters 4.00-\n3.50.\nGood Iambs 11.75. Good ewes ind\nyearlings 6.00-9.00.\nLOST- CHILD'S WAGON FROM\n320 Fourth Street  Phone 10O7-Y\nL&ST-i.ICEVSE PLAft\" Cf -Jil.\nFinder pleaie phone 279-X.\nPARM, GARDEN t NURSERY\nWALNUT  TRf.llS-IPR-r_  CIROT-\nIan available. Write Jack Gellat-\nly, Canada'i leading producer of\npew and better nut treei Box 19,\nWeitbank. TS.C.\t\nIUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nl^_____________-inn.;sii_iiii_iiiiiii_s\nWANTED. PARTNERI TO INVEST\nIn new business with excellent\npoislbllttlti, no competition, ln\nNelson. Reply to Box 2131 Dally\nNewi.\nPanama's total nrea li 34,189\nsquare rrille,!, Including the canal\ntoot.\n-____ __,\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK\u2014Advancti of fraction! to around five polnti to new\nyearly topi ln tht aircraft and railroad equipment groups featured an\nirregularly higher stock market.\nCHICAGO-Gralni nllled ln the\nface of another sharp decline on\nMay rye futurei.\nwheat closed unchanged at h,\nhlgher, corn wu unchanged at ceilings, oatl ware up Vi to lVi, rye\nwai H to 4V4 up, barley was Vi\nlower to V> hlghtr.\nTORONTO\u2014Induitrlil itocks took\ni long step to t ntw high for eight\nyein In operatloni on the exchinge,\n\u2022ddlng more than a point to tht Index standing. Tht gold and burnetii itocks alio poitod Index galni,\nhelped milnly by the freer bidding\nin the afternoon period. Western\noils had a small net lou. Due to the\nquieter action In tha cheaper gold\nitocks aggregate volume wu down\nto about  1,600,000  ihirei.\nMONTREAl^Utllltlei and indui-\ntriili extended their current up-\nrwing In tridlng on the itock exchange ind curb mirket ind moved\nup to new eight-yeir highi in the\nlndlctl.\nVANCOUVHR-Tridlng ilicken-\ned off on the itock exchinge u\n\u25a0ales amounted to 88,980 shares.\nMlntt generally were down and olli\nand Induitrlali were iteidy.\nLONDON \u2014 Hopei of utlriictory\nreiulti from loin negotiations In\nWuhlngton buoyed the itock mirket md galni wtre general.\nWINNIPEG \u2014 Ryi futurei pricei\non the grain exchange movrd In i\nwide range riling from early lossu\nof five centi to advincei is high\nai the five cent miximum gain In\nthe December. Buying by ihipplng\nintereiti, accompanied by reporti\nthit a large export business hid\nbeen worked abroad In North Am\nerlcan rye, wu the chief factor ln\nthe reversal of form. Thert wai\nloma buying accredited to ihlpptri\nIn early trade. Locals and comml\n\u2022ion houiei entered tha buying In\nlater itagu of tha Haalnn. Trading\nwai quite active.\nFinal pricei were 8 - 3 Ms higher\nwith Dec. $1.76V_; May $178-SI.T7\nJuly S1.68V.-H.\nExport buslneu wu modeil with\ntha United Kingdom purchmlng\n400,000 buiheli sf Canadiin wneat\nFOREIGN EXCHANGE\nNKW YORK, Dec. 5 (CPl The\nCinadlan dollar wu unchmged it\na dlicount ot 9 3-16thi ptr ctnt In\nterms of United Statu fur_ji In\ndoling fortlgn twhangt deallngi\ntoday. (Ottawi Foreign Exchinge\nBoard rates 909-9.61 pc. dls) The\npound iterllng wu unchanged at\n\u25a0   -    ' -\u2022-       riia\nPOSTPONE CHANGE\nW. WAR LABOR\nBOARD DUTIES\nOTTAWA, Dec. I (CP)-Ubor\nMinliter Mitchell announced today\nlt bad bttn dtflded to postpone\nuntil Feb. 1, 1946, tht transfer of\nthe duties tnd jurisdiction of the\nWestern Wtr Labor Board to the\nNational War Labor Board tt Ottawa.\nThe transfer of luthorlty wtl called for by order-ln-councll passed\nNov. 6 but tn order extending the\ntime now hai been passed.\nMr. Mitchell uld In t statement\nthe extension wu btlng madt to allow tht Western Labor Board,\nwhich Is undtr tht chilrmtnihlp of\nGeorge B. Kenwood and located at\nEdmonton, to \"maintain Ita Interest\nIn certain United Statu Government projects not ytt cleared.\"\nHe did not elaborate.\n\u25a0  -.\nNILSON DAILY NIWS, THURSDAY,' DEC 6, 194S \u2014 \u2022\nForest producti account for about\none-third of all the exporta of Paraguay.\nRAILWAY REVENUES .\nDOWN\nOTTAWA. Dtc 5 (CP)-Tht Do-\nminion Bureau ot Statlitlci reported\ntoday tht grou operitlng revenuei\nof Cantdltn rallwayi In September\nthil ytar declined to $62,768,530 from\n$68,262,692 In tht correipondlng\nmonth lut year.\nFreight revenuei ihowed t dt-\ncrtut trom 1(44 of 10.9 ptr cent,\nand pautngtr rtvtnuti wtrt down\nby-2.2 ptr cent.\nOperating expeniei declined by\n$3,348,760 or ilx per cent and tht\noperating Income wai reduced trom\n$8,984,029 to $7,828,026.\nTor tht nine months ended September, operitlng revenues declined from,$589,303,337 ln 1944 to $580,-\n599,969, operating expenies increased from $466,175,151 to $466,227,384\nand operitlag Income wis reduced\nfrom $85,710,331 to $81,419,699.\n1. i\nRelease Lilt of\n13 Contracts\nOTTAWA, Dtc. 8 (CP)-The Department of Publlo Works today released a Uit of 19 contract! awarded\nIn Novtmber. They, Included:\nLockport, Man. '\u2014 Extra steel\nstringers to East approach of St,\nAndrewi Bridge, Dominion Bridge\nCo, Ltd., Winnipeg, at about $6195.\nSARDIS MAN CATTLE\nCLUB DIRECTOR\nTORONTO, Dec. 5 (CP)-Namti\nof five directors of tht Cinadlan\nJersey Cattlt Club, elected by mall\nballot ln all Province! except Ontario, were releaied today. Ontario\ndirector! will be elected at the\nelub'i annual meeting here ln February, 1949.\nA. E. Dumvllle of SardlJ, B. C,\nwas named to represent British Columbia, while Charles Dixon, Jr, of\nSt. Albert'i TraU, Albtrta, will\nreprtient thi Prtirlt Provincei.\nPhont 144 for Wint Ad Service\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES\nAldermac  .....\nAstoria  \t\nAtlas     \t\nAubelle \t\nAunor \t\nAumaque \t\nBagamac   \t\nBase Metali Mining\nBear Exploration\nBeattle Oold  Mlnei .\nBevcourt\nBidgood Klrklind \t\nBobjo Mlnei   _\nBonetal \t\nBralorne \t\nBroulm   \t\nBuffalo Ankerlte  -\nBuffalo Canadian \t\nCampbell R L    _\nCanadian Mai \t\nCariboo Gold Quartz\nCentral Patricia\t\nC Porcupine \t\nCltralim _.\t\nCoin Lake \t\nCheitervllli _ _\nCochenour  ._\nConiaurum Mlnei'   ...\nConsolldited MAS..\nConwest \t\nCroinor  _\nDelnite     \t\nDome Mlnei \t\nDonalda   _.\t\nDuquesne  _ \t\nEut Amphl  \t\nEut Malartlc \t\nEut Sullivan  \t\nZlder \t\nEldona   \t\nFilconbridge Nickel ..\nFed Klrkland  -\nFnncoeur  \t\n-roblsher  _\nGlint Yellowknlfe \t\nGillies Lake\nGod's Like Gold \t\nGold Crest  -..._\nGold Iigle  __\t\nGold Dale \t\nGolden Arrow \t\nGolden Gate      \t\nGolden Manltou \t\nGunnar Gold       \t\nHard Rock Gold .......\nHarker Oold  _-.\nHarricana    __..\u201e..\nHawga  \t\nHeva   Cadillac\t\nBollinger  _\nHomer   \t\nHoico    _\nHowey   \t\nHudion Bay Mil.\nInspiration\nInternational Nickel ..\nInt Unnlum  \t\nJickntfe        \t\nJick Wilti  -...\nJuon  \t\nJellicoe\nJoliet Quebec \t\nKiyrand  _\t\nKerr-Addison \t\nKirk-Hudson    \t\nKlrkland  I.iki  \t\nKirk Townilti   _..\nLibrador    \t\nUke Sbori Mlntt\t\nLimaque Oold \t\nUltch Gold \t\nLixinden   .      \t\nLlngman Like\nLittle Long Lac \t\nLouvcourt \t\nLynx \t\nMicism \t\nMacleod  Cocklhutt .\nMarcus\nMadun Jrfed Lake \t\nMalartlc Oold T\nMclntyre-Porcuplni   .\nMcKenxle Red Like\nMcMarmac _\t\nMeWatten\nMining  Corporition  .\nMoneta \t\nNigui\nNtw Bldlamaque \t\nNib\nNlplulng Mining \t\nNorinda \t\nNormetil  .        \t\nNoriemin \t\nNorth Cinidi  \t\nOTeiry \t\n(in.,,,:    Gold\nOrenada\nPimour Porcuplni \t\nPaymister\nPlnd Oreille\nPirroa Gold\nPickle Crow Gold\nPioneer   \t\nPowell Rouyn Oold\nPremlir Gold\nPreiton Cut Domt\nQuec niton\nQuemont\nRegcourt       _\t\na.  -. t. r.\n.10\n.in\n.51\n.on\n4 35\n1.23\n.53\n.19\n1158\n135\n78\n31\n.21\n.40\n18 75\n.91\n680\n.40\n2 05\n1.15\n183\n2.78\n.32\n.32\n.77\n1.82\n4415\n1.89\n63.00\n116\n145\n143\n211 93\n1.39\n1.56\n.39\n2 53\n4.25\n1.39\n195\n6 10\n.17\n.77\n3 40\n940\n.18\nMt\nM\n.09\n3i\n.75\n.38\n1.73\n42\n.88\n30\n3S\n1.96\n55\n16 00\n3S,\n.55\n41\n37.95\n1 09\n42.00\n190\nJ5\n.36\n.49\n.12\n68\n33\n16 75\n15.1\n2 04\n37\n6.75\n$325\n890\n145\n.27\n1.87\n125\n133\n.33 V,\n490\n920\n106\n4 05\nJ 50\n74 00\n160\nJS\n78\n$00\n70\n163\n60\nS3\n3 85\n97 IHI\n97\n.29\nlit\n.14\n33\nS3\nIT*\n75\n7 85\n142\n4 19\nsun\n1.14\n3 ft:\n3 80\n09\n1415\n37   \u25a0\nRouyn Merger \t\nSan Antonio Gold\t\nSen Rouyn \t\nSheep Creek      \t\nSherritt Gordon\t\nSigmi Rouyn  _....\nSiscot Gold  \t\nSladen Malartlc\t\nSpringer  -.\nSteep Rock \t\nSturgeon R  \t\nSulllvin Com \t\nSylvanlti  \t\nT C Rtiourcei \t\nT Lundmark -\nTeck-Hughei Gold ...\nToburn Gold Minei .\nTowgimae \t\nUpper Cinidi . \t\nVentura  \t\nVicour  \t\nWalte Amulet\t\nWisi Lik* ,,\t\nW Milirtlc -....-..\t\nWllUey  \t\nWright Hargreivei ,\nYellore*  .:......\t\nOIL} _\nAhglo-Cuf*. - \u2014\nBritlih American _\nBritlih Dom \t\nC is Z Corp _\t\nCalmont -\nChemicil Reseirch\nDilhouiit -\nDivita Petroleum ....\nEut Crtit\t\nFoothilli\t\nHomt OU\t\nImperii!  \u2014\nInter Petroleum \u2014\nMid Contlntnt\t\nNitional Pttt\t\nOkilta \t\nPacilta\nRoyillte\nSouth Ind Pet*\t\nUnited  \u2014\nVermilata         \u2014\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbltlbl Power\nAbltlbl Power pfd \t\nAlgoma Stall  -\nBathunt A  \t\nButty  \t\nBall Telephone  \u2014.\nBrafirtth Traction \t\nBwwen k D-rU!len .\nB C Picktn   \t\nB C Power \"V    _\nBuilding Producti \t\nCinidi Breid  \t\nCm Brew  \u2014.\nCimda Cannan \t\nCm Cir* Fdy\nCm Cir k Fdy pfd ..\nCm Dredging\nCm Milting   \t\nCm Mirconl\nCm Piclflc Rly .\nCm Ind Alcohol \"A\"\nCocklhutt Plow\nCons Bakeries\nCons Pipir  \t\nDistillers Seigrims\nDom Steel a Coil B\nDominion  Bridge\nDom Foundriei\nDom Tir ,'-\u2022 Chem    ...\nFmny Firmer\nroed of Cinidi \"A\" .\nQitlnuu\nGitineiu 1% pfd \t\n(lm Steelwiru \t\nGiorge Wiaton \t\nGoodyeir Tin\nOt Lakei Piper .   \t\nGypsum Lime\nHimillon Brldgt -...\nHlnm Wilker\nHlnm Wilker pfd \t\nImperiil Oil \t\nImperiil Tobicco \u2014\nInt Metili\nInter Nlckal  -.\nKelvlnitor\nLike of the Woodl\nUuri Secord      \t\nLobliw A  _\t\nLobliw B\t\nMiple I,\u00bbif\nMiuey Hirrli\nMiner Hirrti pfd ....\nMcColl Front pfd\nMcColl Front pfd \t\nMontreil Power \t\nMoore Corp        \t\nNit Steel Car\t\nPigi Ktrahty \t\nPowilt HlviT  -\nPower Corp\nPrilled Melili \t\nShiwlnlgtn  \t\n.llcki Brtw\nSouthim    _ .\nSteel ot Ctnidt\nStttl of Can pfd\t\nUnion Oai\nUnited Steel\nUnited Corp\nWinnipeg Kite pfd\n\t\n\t\n.57\n5 85\n145\n.1:69\n79\n1600\n.89\n44\n129\n2.63\n.35\n290\n240\n133\n.60\n5 30\n2 25\n.35\n260\n1375\n.79\n.4 30\n.139\n10\n.23\n929\n.38\n1.00\n25.50\n.87\n2.05\n.45\n.33\n.38\n.15\n.11\n199\n375\n15.89\n2235\n.19\n.14\n.48\n.08\n19.00\n.071.\n.09\n.14\n5 35\n7950\n17.75\n19 00\n$8.00\n18150\n27 85\n11.29\n19 50\n4.15\n11.00\n650\n2265\n22 00\n18 00\n94.00\n25 00\n53 50\n5 15\n20 15\n18 20\n15 35\n15 75\n1450\n88 50\n1115\n39 23\n29 50\n18 50\n49 00\n30 23\n15 25\n104 00\n19 65\nTOO\n103 25\n900\n1315\n100\n105 00\n2185\n15 50\n13 50\n32 00\n4185\n14 00\n29 23\n1900\n28.00\nM28\n12 50\n1415\n2940\n13 79\n106 00\n.   22 00\n70 00\n23 29\n.   2900\n$765\n1250\n1700\n1098\n16 00\n1915\n7139\n79.00\n10 25\n7 15\n23 73\n9100\n,. ...\n19.1 Trade Up\nfo $8 Billion\nOTTAWA, Dec 8 (CP)-\u20acantdt'i\nInternitlonil trade transaction!, expanding greatly with htr wu effort\ntotalled mort than $8,000,000,000 In\n1944 compared with $9,000,000,000 ln\n1999, the Dominion Bureau of Statlitlci said tonight\nTbt net credit balance on current\naccount with all countries ln 1944\nwai $987,000,000 compared with\n$126,000,000 in 1939, the bureau said.\nCurrent credlti trom exports of\ngoodi ind services, Including mutual'\nlid, totalled $4,536,000,000 In 1944\ncompared with $4,064,000,000 in 1943\nmd $1,487,000,00 ln 1999 while current expendlturts totalled $3,539,-\n000,000 in 1944 compired with $2,\u00ab\n858,000,000 In 1948 and $1,331,000,000\nIn 1999.\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nMINES\nBRX    \t\nBayonnt   _,\nB R Com\t\nBrilornt    \u00ab\t\nCuyunl  _\nCirlboo Gold  -\nDentonli  \t\nQolcondi  \t\nGrandvltw  ..\u201e\nGrull Wlhkine ......\nHedley Mascot \t\nInt C k C\t\nisland Mountain ...\nJuon    __\nRoot* Belli  _\nO'Ltiry    \t\nPiclflc Nickel \t\nMlnto -_\nPend Oreille \t\nPioneer Gold _\nPrem Bord \t\nPremier Gold \t\nPrivateer. \t\nRtd Hawk\t\nReeves MacD _\nReno Gold  __\nSalmon  \t\nShttp Crttk  _\nSllbak Premier .....\nTaylor Bridge  _\nWhitewater   \t\nWellington  __\nOILS\nAnaconda  \u2014.\nAnglo Canadian \u2014\nAP Consolidated ...\nCal k Edmon  -\nCalmont  __\nCommoil  \t\nCommonwealth\t\nDalhousle  \t\nDavles  ______\nFoothilli\t\nHomt   \t\nMercury ......\t\nModel   ,\nOkalta Com  _\u00bb\nPacific Pttt  \t\nRoyal Canadian \u2014\nRoyalltt \t\nSuniet       ~_\u00bb\nUnlttd ,   .-_& ...\nVanalta _.___ *.\nVulcan .    \u201e\nINDUSTRIALS\nItJEtt \u2014\nCoait Brtw ...\u2014\nUnited Distill __\nPadtlc Coylt _\t\nPpwtll Rhrtr ....\n.19\n.19\n.19\n2.85\n2.89\n.24'\/.\n.35    1\nJO\n.21'A\n1.99\n1.80\n.08'A\n.11\n49\n.1354\n.07H\n2.75\n6.65\n.08 ri\n2.55\n.69 ti\n11*\n.60\n.07\n.18\n1.62\n150\n.80\n.03H\n.07\n.09\n1.00\n.19\n1.95\n.41\n.23\n.42\n.36\n1.38\n1.73\n.07\n.21\n.48\n.87\n.08H\n.   19.00\n\u25a0   m\n-      M$\n3k\n\u25a0ilTtt.\n8.90\n2.50\n8.50\n* 17.29\n20\n.20\n.20\n19.00\n2.90\n2.90\n.25\n.37\nJl\n32Vt\n1.40\n.35\n1.85\n.08*\nJ5\n,15\n.08\n2.95\n8.80\n.0814\n2.60\n.70\n.13\n.09\n.18 ti\n1.64\n1.65\n.89\n.03%\n.07%\nSYl\n1.05\n.22\nJ.OO\n.44\n.18\n1.48\n1.85\nn\nti\n.92\n.04\n.06\nIt\n8.78\n1.55\n10.00\n.31\n18.00\nMOHTMAL STOCKS\nINDUSTRIALS\nAuoc Brtw of Ctn\t\nCan Car k Tdy Pfd ....AB.\nCm Staaa-ihlp Pfd   -*>\nDom Stttl k Coil B .\nH Smith Piper Pfd .\nMcColl  Frontcnac  ..\nNational Brew LM .\nShawlnlgan W k V\nSt Lawrtnct Corp ..\nBANK!\nCommerce _____\nDominion  \u2014____\nImperial  __\u2014__.\nMontreal         .\nNova Scotia _,...\nRoyal   \t\nToronto \t\nin I\n17.00\n34.00\n47.00\n3.15\n!7.Q0\n13.00\n44 50\n20 50\n1035\n19 79\n22.50\n22.25\n19 85\n29 50\n18.29\n30.00\nNEW YORK STOCKS\nAmerican Can ....-\nAm Smtlt k Rtf....\nAmer Telephone ....\nAmerican Tobacco\nAnicondi _\nBeth Steel _.\nCnnadlan Piclflc ..\nDupont     ...    _\nEutman Kodik \t\nGen Electric \t\nGen Motori\nInternat Nickel \t\nKenn Copper .--_\nStan Oil of N J   .....\nUS Rubber    __\nUS Steel\n104.00\n68.75\n190.75\n68.50\n4885\n9325\n18 50\n1*6.15\n$16.25\n4735\n75.25\n38 50\n.. 60 25\n67 25\n68.50\n62.99\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 lnduitU.  19108 up M\n20 rail!  _    64.9T off .32\nis utiii _  iter up .04\nBillheads\nAre Necessary\nin Any Business\nPrlnttd Statlontry oddt pres-\ntigs to any firm. I' tells your\ncustomers who you are, and\nwhat you have to sell.\nGtt thtm printed at the\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nPRINTING DEPT.\nWhere you can always\ndepend on\nQUALITY PRINTING\nNtlton Doily Ntwt\nPrinting Dtpartmtnt\nNELSON, n  c.\n 10 \u2014 NILSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, DEC. 6, 1945\nTONIGHT\u2014Compltti Showi at 7:00-8:40.\n\u2022    ; 'i\u00bb t'* \u25a0 ...'.'\u25a0 ,w  .  ,      .',;;.\u25a0\nKWXW\nPMWM\nFor Christmas\nARE NOW ARRIVING DAILY\nHere are a few of the hundreds of new books\nrecently received:\nCan Timberlane, Sinclair Lewis ___\nI Saw Two England!, H. V- Morton,.\nBurned Fingen, Kathleen Norris .\n$3.00\n$3.00\n$2.50\nDarkly the River Flewi, John MacDonald $3.00\nDragon Harvest, Upton Sinclair __$S-__S\nDied in the Wool, Ngaol Marsh , $2.50\nGreen Dolphin Street, Elizabeth Goudge\nThe Yellow Room, Mary Roberts Rinehart\nMagic Lantern, Lady Eleanor Smith\nCome Spring, Ben Ames Williams \u2014\nSon of Normandy, B. M. Sawdon .\nChina to Me, Emily Hahn\t\n $3.00\n $3.00\n$3.00\n$2.35\n$3.00\n$3.75\nBOOKS FOR BOYS - BOOKS FOR GIRLS\nBOOKS FOR JUVENILES\nMANN, RUTHERFORD\nDRUG. CO.\nlllllllllllllllllsl.lllllllslllllllllllllllll.il\nURGE SIZE COMFORTERS\nSpecial $3.95\nHOME FURNITURE\niilillililllllllllllliilliililiiliiilliiimiiiii\n- CHARLES WINNINGER. FAY Raintfd\nMarch of Time\nLatest World Newi\nColored Cartoon\nCivic\nIRENE'S\nMil I INFRY\nMILLINERY\nJUST   RECEIVED\nA SHIPMENT Or\nFURI IRISH LIKEN\nHANDKERCHIEFS\ntnd I\nBeautiful Assortment of\nSWISS LACE\nHANDKERCHIEFS\nKOVELTY COMB md\nEA-UUNG SETS\nALSO OOLD, SILVER and\nBLACK SEQUINS\nB \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 -_\u25a0_____--\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 Bi\nSUPPERS\n\u2014 at \u2014\nThe Bootery\n\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 i\n\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\nREPAIRS & RADIATOR WORK\nLES BROWETT'S\nTINSMITH and 8HEETMETAL\nSHOP\nBIO Kootenay SL        Phone 1151\nR. NADEAU\nLICENSED PLUMBER\nPhone 1157-615 Victoria St.\nJ. R. WATKINS\nQuality Producti, Extract!\nand Spicei.\nSPENCER C. COLMAN\n\u00ab24 VICTORIA ST.\n!\u00ab\u00ab$MBKeS3\u00bb--\u00abB\u00abS\u00bb3$$tt$\u00abtt$\u00bb\nROSCOE\nAllO\nFOURNIER\nQARAQEMEN\nSICY CH-ET AUTO SERVICE\nPhone IM Nelson. B. C.\n15 YEARS'EXPERIENCE\nWITH THE T. EATON CO.\nService on all makes of radloi\nand refrigerators\nWELL'S SERVICE SHOP\nBIT Vemon SL Phone 1115\nmm \u00bb\t\nHeadwork That\nCounts.\nHaigh  Tru-Art\nPhone 327\nJohnstone Block\nm\n-**Mr\"*i\"**itB>iy***>Vi\nmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm*\nFrom jJUrULt the Jeweller\nDIAMONDS\nA fine leltujtlon from\nf 11.00 to $300.\nPlui Tax.\nCUPS AND\nSAUCERS\n$3.15 1   $6.00\n21-PC. TEA SETS\nFrom $21.50 to $25.00\nMEN'S WATCHES\nTHE\nCoffee Cup Cafe\nSpecializing In\nHome cooked meals and\nlondwichei.\nNear fireyhound Depot\nLADIES'\nWRI ST WATCHES\nFrom $18.50 to $65.00\nPlui Tax\nAll the best makes.\nFn $16,50 1, $75.00\nPlus Tax\nCRYSTALWARE \\\nand STEMWARE\nVases - Goblets\nand\nOrnamental Pieces\nWALLETS\nA fine selection of men's\nwallets from\n$250 to $10.00\nIVIRYIODY LOVIS TO SHOP AT\n$Jiaif, - The Jeweller\nFor Fine Christmas Gifts\nMali Orden Personally Attended te\n407 BAKER ST.   NI140N, J.C.\n.........   .__.. -^aOHftl\nSEE PAGE TWO\nHAY\nTour choice ot:\nALFALFA, MEADOW, TIMOTHY\nEllison Milling & Eleyator\nCo., Ltd.\nPhona OS Nelaon, B. 0.\n-*\u2014mrn*\u2014t-a-mrm-rmm-am-amtnm*rwmw*\nHave Your Furniture Expertly\nRecovered at the\nNELSON UPHOLSTERY\nMS Ball 8L Phone 141\nE. A. CAMPBELL & Co.\nChartered Accountanti\nAuditors\n543 Baker St Phone SU\niiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nASK YOUR GROCER TOR\nHOOD'S\nSupreme Milk Bread\niiiiimiiimi.ii.ii.isiiiiiiiiisiiii.iiisiiiii\nHudion, Essex and Terraplane\nPARTS AND SERVICE\nSMEDLEY GARAGE CO.\nNext to Post Office\n508 Vernon St Nelson\nFOOD VALUES\nJlbOJfL ilflSL SttVL\nPHONE 10 OR 11\nFREE DELIVERY\n|<3^44\n04\nSk\nkW^'K * vt&\nORANGES doz. 53c\nCalifornia Navels, 220'\u2022\nPA8TRY  FLOUR: Te\u00ab\nTime, 7 lb. lack . .\nCHOCOLATE MALTED MILK:\nBorden's, 40a\nLb. tin  \u201e    4JV\nKRAFT DINNER!\n-pkta\t\nPEARL BARLEY!\nOgllvle's, 2 Ib. carton\n370\n350\n220\nPEACHE8:  Malkln's Beit\nchoice quality,\n20 oz. tins, 2 tor\t\n430\n290\n570\n230\nCRANBERRIES   ... lb. 49c\nRITZ BI8CUIT8:\nChristie's, 2 pkts\t\nEGGS: Grade A large,\nIn cartons, doz\t\nCORN FLAKE8:\nQuaker, 3 pkts.    \t\nCHEE8E: Goldenloaf or Spred-\n\u00a37_.Pk,  200\nCOCOA: Fry'i,\nLb. tin\nQUAKER OATS:\n3 Ib. pkt.  ..\n310\n190\nMATCHES: Red Bird,\n3 box carton, each\n290\nMUNCHIE8: A ready to   OJW\nICE:\n330\neat cereal, 2 pkts.\nWORCESTERSHIRE SAUCEi\nHeinz,\nBottle\nGREEN ONIONS. . each 19c\nLarge bunches\npint 39c\nOELNOR FRESH FROZEN\nPEA8:\nI. oz. pkt.\nDELNOR  FRESH  FROZEN\nSLICED STRAWBERRIES: 18 oz. carton\nGRAPEFRUIT: Texas,\nMa, 3 for\nRHUBARB: California,\nField grown, 2 lbi.\n250\nN\n390\n290\n350\nquart 69c\nPINEAPPLE8: Large        7QJ.\nsize, each .    ' *\u00bbV\n290\nTOMATOES: Field\ngrown, Ib.\nAPPLES: Creiton fancy    ')t_tl.\nwrapped, 3 lbs. AOV\nAPPLES:    Northern    Spy    or\nRome Beauties, Cj   7Q\nSPINACH: Freih local,\n2 lbs.\nSWEET POTATOES:\n2 Iba.\nCARROTS: Local\nLocal bunches, 2 lbs.\nOKANAGAN ONIONS:\nNo. 3, 4 lbs.\n350\n250\n130\n230\nPARSNIPS: Local\nwaihed, 4 lbs.\nRADISHES:\nBunch \t\nPAR8LEY:\nBunoh\nGREEN PEPPERS:\nLb.\nCelery, Lettuo., Cauliflower, etc\n230\n100\n100\n280\nNelson's Finest Pood Store\nQUALITY - SERVICE\nQueen Wflhelmlm. ef (he With'\nerlandi, Is i good painter. Three of\nher work! ue being exposed it the\nIt lt'| Electric\nF.H. SMITH\nPhone 666      331 Baker St.\n.   '\" p   I  ';        \u25a0    ;,\nBe- Prepared for Stormi\nWind Shield Wiper Blades\nand Ami\nKOKANEE SERVICE STATION\nWE TAKE PRIDE IN OUR\nSERVICE OF MEALS\nMELON DEW\nParticular Ladles Aik for\nEliiobeth Arden\nTOILETRIES\nWe carry \u2022 complete Una.\nMall orders given prompt service.\n1   We are sole agents tor Nelson\nDHtriet.\nAt Your Rexali Store    .\nCity Drug Co.\nBox4\u00ab0\nPhon. M\nLa Paz, Bolivia, produces 80 par\ncent of the value of all manufactured goodi produced ln the country.\nPre-war, Chrome-plated\nGAS TANK LOCKING CAPS\nWith two keys, complete:\n91.71\nCUTHBERT MOTORS LTD.\ni   i\nGive Him\n'    Underwear\nMake his gift practical\n. \u2022 Underwear It sure\nol\nCombination* In\n-.otton, cotton and\nShirts and Shorts in bn\n-.loth or jockey style with\n<ull elastic.\nEMORY'S\nLIMITED\nThe Men's Store\nJiOMiMIMMM-tMBI\nI Announce\nMy Candidature\nfor a NintH Term as\nMayor of Nelson\nMy supporters believe that my record for the past eight years as Mayor and\nfor two years prior to that as Alderman is the best indication of my capacity\nfor continued good work on behalf of Nelson and its residents.\nThe Record \u2666 \u2666 \u2666\nUnflagging effort In support of Improvements In Nelson and unfailing cooperation with all organizations and movements to attract residents to the City.\nSound financial management.\nConstruction of many thousands of squar. yards of concrete itreets\nand sidewalks.\nImprovements to the parks led recrestlonal facilities and general\n.salification of th. City.\nSupport and encouragement of the Better Gardens Club and\nsimitar movements.\nProvision of water vflthou. eharg. fer sprinkling of g.rd.n. and\nboulevards, whieh has added ta th. beauty ef the city.\nEstablishment of free garbage collection, which haa mad. for a\ncleaner and healthier city. -\u25a0\n> Modernization   of the   Pir*   Department  and  a   successful   battle\nto bring down fire Insurance rate., whloh has resulted In a saving on Insurance premiums paid by property owners and houaeholders ot not less\nthan $20,000 a year.\nSchool patrols and better traffic regulation, both direct and In\neducating th. public to exerclle prudence In traffic.\nEitabllihment of Pro-Rae .nd City iupport for this and similar\nprograms of physical education and recreation, such as swimming classei\nst   Lakeside   Park.\nModernisation and r.novatlon of th. gaa plant, work which when\n\u2022ompleted will provide more economical and efficient servlc.\nFor 1946 ...\nNow that wir r\u00abitrktloni irt lifted 1 propoti that thi progrim of\nitreet Improvemente be vlgoroasly pursued ind complttid it thi urUiet\nponihlt dite, which will htlp to relieve my approaching unemployment\nproblem.\nRenewal of watar malha and itorm tawan it overdue and It an\nenentlal featurt of Nelion i Immediate poatwar public worki program.\nImprovtmenU to tht Watt intranet to tht city, for which proparty\nhu been purchued, Win be carried out Arrangement! for Provincial\nGovirnmt.it fundi In aid of thla work havi bttn mada.\nTo continue civic assistance In Improvement of Bportman'i Park\nand our Parka and Recreational facllltlat generally.\n\u25a0attermenta at our city powtr plant ara aaatntlal. I propoie that\nthey bi earrlad out ai aoon aa equipment can ba obtained and wrth tha\nview to economical production of incrtaierl power to meet the growing\nneedi of the city. It le both poulble and deelrabla that there ihould bt an\nelectric range, with iuch other domeitlc electrical equipment u It required, In twry home.\nNelion'i builneta tectlon waa once ont of tht comparatively beet\nIlluminated In tha country, but It la now out of date. I propoie that itepa\nbt taken toward a new lighting ayatem, worthy of thli clty't Importance,\nIti itanding ai I modern ind progreulve community and Ita petition at a\ncommunity In which Ita electric power lyetem li oni of ltl mijor aurti,\nI favor an equitable adjustment of light and power ratei,\nNelion'i houilng ihortage It acute, and the dtmand for new end\nbetter houilng accommodation la Increasing. I iupport wholeheartedly\nall measure*, by public and private enterpriie, directed toward remedying\nthli tltuitlon.\nMy policy Include! beaut If Icatlon of the waterfront, to that wt\nmay hive mon fully profit from our laketldi advantage*.\nNelaon potieim \u25a0 good ilta for a seaplane baae and I propoie\nto devote ivory effort to emu re that one will be eitabllihad.\nI am oppoatd to the %f> Poll Tax, and propoie to urge thit the\nProvincial Leglilature repeal the Pell Tax Law. in that no one would have\nto pay thli Inequitable tat.\n\u2022 ome yuri before the war Inqulrlee were made Into methodi of\nbetterment of our erty transportation lyitim. Since that time there hdve\nbetn many change*, and I propoie thai technical data be obtained from\ncompetent icurcii ao that wa may decide whether the modernliatlon and\nexpansion of Nelion'i transportation system should bt by itreet car*, bum\nor trolley buses.\nNORMAN C STIBBS,\nCommlltM Roomi, Boord of Trada Building PKoiMt %M - 1101\nVOTING DAY DECEMBER 11, I A.M. TO I P.M-, CITY HALL\nReelect STIBBS for- MAYOR\n_____\nm sen \u25a0\n.__\u25a0____.\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_1945_12_06","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0418304","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"}]}}