ll HIDE‘; I2 n- Q-n ‘IA Ir.- LPvr ti‘. LL‘. LEV hilt Ull. ....__ .._.-..-_=.. nk1»\Jr4—| iHx-vnmrd country-a cfivtv-l inf/fl":- |fj;‘_'"'>1?"“‘T'1:!‘;ii">'-!>E*§w_| r?-"."f"’f"""f"* r-'rr_4r""' a . .»<~ -.»-.._- -¢_>__. .: _':V:p_£ p. d: C st 1i: H Fl iffi!’ §§'!J" Look for the Penmans label when buying knitted Underwear, Hosiery and Outerwear. stood for uniformly materials, sound workmanship and smart style. ONDERWEAR . . For 72 years this name and trademark have high-quality KNITTED PRODUCTS KPHO . OUTERWEAR . HOSIERY . . Bolivian Tin Key Man In lf Shipping Routes King Will Become U. S. Defense Plans Are Closed r.»-.—-~—.,. n, _ P High in the hills of ,inill; In (listanec is the village at BY TOM WOLF NEA Service Staff Correspondent NElv YORK, ~- If evcr increas- ing Japanese pressure in Asia should close America's shipping lanes to the tlii-rich Far East and if Germany should seal British merchantmen in European harbors, the destiny of America's vital tin supplies would fail right in lite die ot‘ the plump lap of a ozic. .0 Bolivian named Simon I. Pdlillt). Today “’I‘in King" Patina, one of l. the world's largest individual pro»- ducers of tin, owns 6O jer cent oi Bolivia's ti-n mines-sole appre- ' einble source of the precious metril in tile Western Hemisphere. Pa- linos Unsaticnal rise fioin lllkl" ble orizins in Cochabamba. Bo- livia, where he was born during the American Civil War, to a for- tune variously estimated between 150 and 300 millions is largely due to a woman who said “no. ' Pniino became a miner acci- dentally‘. Fired from a clerkship in u sinrill store in Cochobumba because he accepted title to .1 llll mine us payment of $250 a debt.- ridrlrn ]ll()5li(.‘('l(ll' owned the store, o Ht out iii i905 to ‘ivfirk :1 alto high in the frigid ~ u. "m an iliiica criiinln: liuvk \\'llS with him. T225 first. lWl-liziiiizl loads of Pniino ore that the .-u>-i~-t'o rrl llamas C:ll'lii'l' (town the treacherous Andes 5i‘}l(‘\ .~.'~n,\cd rirh. Within a, year n.i Arn il‘;l.'l iii-m was rirr: P.i‘.:'o Willil lil‘il swnictl ti, him n ..i'iiilou.. prite for his Salvador-t run. T‘.\'I'I\'O‘S “WFI-I DH 1511154 DECISION woman said "no." go bankrupt with Siivarirra." Paitnols wife told him. "ti" icu will brcome ei gran Mira- t1‘ greatest of tin miners." o imp: his properties. l-iis as right l-le prospered. new mines, prospered irirg tin prices of the first .. itl War put the finishing -. '= tin r-molrc, Lack- .'lltllPl”.\', Pollno urts i it'll.) mils from Hollvli .-i. - it’ H.~ctl¢~, a small 'l '<.v."|i ii-sr Liverpool TH lfiiliriii llfiillli a controlling l~i lhi- sniz-lfers‘. . i l l» I'.il‘() hnd mines. . l‘.l| n llPlli) z-i ii‘ 111'!" lls. The American National lead smelt- Bnlivla. is the world's largest tin mine. al. Llallagua with American . nvrrwl n Bourbon princess. the mouth of the mine. filmnn I. Patina ....."tin king" of‘ Bolivia. Co, with whom Patlno had been asswiiiicd in American scnelters (lining iliv Woriti Wnr, invested m some or Patton's Bolivian mines. lie rewarded the Ameri- can crmcern with the chairman- ship oi Palino Mines and Enter- l7l‘l-'(‘S cflllSfilitliltiTl. Then he re- tirerl in Paris (where he had lived mast of his life since 1.0..» to iii." fabulous luxury that wrs his dire. “T N KING'S" SON MARINES A PRINCESS short. round. beautifully-dressed. Simon Prittno lived up to his lor- timic, fir-t as a private citizen, then as Bolivian minister to Franc», Whatever lie did he "said it with R smile"-~his iuvorltr oxpresflon. llt- ownv-(l pwhccs lll ParLs. Nice. Bliirrllz iii atlrliilon to several >t",'lllll-lilhifbil"ll mansions in his nrittvi- Bolivia. Tl!‘ had six private autrinubilts. His regal mode was capped with reality In i931 when his second son and business heir. Afii/ITl-TJ. Such is the man who recently Bolivia. e %')\ In the foregrourid ls the arrived in America. on the invi- tatiori of U.S. defense experts to discuss the possibility of shipping Bolivian ores direct to the U. S , should the need srise. In the first press conference of his career nc recently revealed that discussions with the Defense Commission would touch on the building of a la U. S. smelter. ere are, of course, other Bo- livian tin producers, most import- ant among whom are Hoehtchlld and Aramayo. But since Patina economics provide the main sta- bility for Bolivia's often-shaky economics, with which they are inextricably interwoven, if Patino says "no," what Bolivian interest can afford to say "yes"? SMELTING THE TIN CREATES NEW PROBLEM Even should Senor Pattno cori- eent to deliver his ores to America, the U S tin supply would not autnmaticially be assured. Domestic smeltierl can, of course, be built. Already the Phelps Dodge Corp. is experimentally refining Bolivian are? atIa pilot smelter at Laurel i . L. . But. there are many bugs to be worked out. For one thing, Lio- livlan ore is primarily impure. lt mist be mixed with Nigerian or Malayan ores, or subjected to a tricky, expensive electrolysis proc- ess. to produce first grade tin. ln the second place, Bolivian production has frequently fallen short of the quotas allowed by the _tin cartel. Most observers at- tribute this to unstable Bolivian economics and high taxes rather than to depletion of tin reserves. But even working under the most favorable conditions. such as exist at prestnt, Bolivia cannot hope to produce much over 50,000 tons a year-about two-thirds of the U.S. normal needs. ‘Ihese. then, are the facts. But. the picture Ls not all black by any means, for America is. at long last, awake to her tin needs. The longer the shipping lanes stay open, the greater the reserves America can lay up under the Defense Commission's buyiing policy. I! they m: closed, there might be s pinch. By reclaiming scrap tin: by di- verting all supplies to essential industrial and military urptises: by building domestic sine ters and importing Bolivian ore directly, America's vital tin needs should rm: CHARLQIIETOWN GUARDIAN 'Oanatlian Troops Patrol In Iceland (By Francis Stevens) SO Sept. dawn Canadian troops are engaged in patrols each night as they guard this sub-Arctic outpost of mirlrion against possible enemy at.- tac . This correspondent accompani- ed a French Canadian Major as he led his men on a recent patrol over rough. rocky country while Icelanders slept. The Major was a member of a regiment which provided a guard of honor in Montreal during the Royal Visit last year. Then no wore a brilliant dress uniform and busby. But on the night patrol his khaki brought the same dash to more astere duties. The patrol visited where troops manned gum in the teeth of a. cold wind, meanwhile warming their feet at charcoal burners. French Canadians call the Hoy- al Air Force here the "cocktail of Empire" as every Dominion is rep- resented in it, Canada by a fly- ing officer from Winnipeg. Col. Paul Grenler of Montreal presided over the scene like the conductor of a symphony orches- tra. "Alouettc" and “O Canada‘ ivere sung with vigor. Dinner was prepared by a chef formerly employed in a Montreal sea-food restaurant. The menu in- cluded bread-cakes shaped like airplanes. French Canadian troops assem- bled Sunday last; for outdoor Mass rimid a background of mountain peaks Father sabourin. fonnerly priest at st. Ambrose Church. Montreal, ‘known here as “the smiling padre" "id the boys to "keep smiling and what lonely posts . .nging," no matter pens. Still Probe Ruins‘ For Trapped Victims hap- DONDON. Sept. il-(CPi—Alter- hating between frantic efforts to move tons or mascury and szlcnt listening for the tsppiri! of en- tombed men and women, (lClllUtl- ticn squads still probed tonight the ruins cif an east London school bombed Monday night whezi it sheltered nearly 500 persons. They had ta e er on the first. floor or the two- storey building when an enormous bomb strurk it and tumbled wreck- age. dead and wounded into a huge crater opened up by the bumn. ‘The men, ivomcn and children had been quartered there awaiting re- moval to the country after their own homes were wrecked by Sat- urdays raids. Rescue workers al- ready liave brought out two ba- bias. siill alive. Physicians and nurses. by tcrchltght ‘n the hours of dark- ness gave first aid to the living and supervised the transportation of the dead as the debris was grail- i‘ ually cleared from the bomb erat- i er. 20 feet deep mid 40 feet wide. i The Dally Herald zt=ked:— ' "Who is to be held responsible for this appalling tragedyh 5n, whgch whole families from wrecked homes London were left by official neglect , to die in a bombed refugee centre.” Anarchist ' Movement In llumania working BUCHAREST, Sept. il—-(AP>—- Geii. lon Antonescu, Rumaniirs military dictator, announced in a broadcast tonight that an anar- chist movement has spread throughout the country and that he is taking the most drastic steps to crush it. nied reports that 2.3 secret policc had been slain by members of the I Iron Guard. Antonescu made no direct ref- erence to the Iron Guard, but it IN ICELAND, l1—(CP)—-From aunt to b the Do- 1 l n temporary snelt- A government spokesman de- [to jOptimism illoiced Over Wheat Surplus WINNIPEG. Sept. lL-(C-Pl-OD- Limism over the ultimate dispose-lo! the exportable our lua of $0,000,000 ushers of Cm wheat was voised here 000119 b‘- Mauiiesoir, resident of the Wmnl- ipeg Grain Egxcha-HG?» “$955198” "19 Gsalkuul ineevlllg. “These are not the dis a in which to be Pessimistic about e solution or the agricultural problem in West- ern Canada." he said. vFai-mers, grain traders, farmer organisations, the Canadian w» beam, the banks. and the Govern- ment . . . are all fuliyconscloul of Lire necessity of maintaining a sub- stantial reserve of wheat somewhere in the Eltdlh lillllDlro IBi-inlt fill , possibility of a short crop w mlnfliie next year pr two. and aealnst the time when continental Europe shlJ be freed from the Nazi yoke and the starving millions have to be fed- "Canada is logically that D6" 0f the Empire in which such reserves of wheat should be held. The ww- lem than becomes one of storage and finance." Elevator companies are rushing the constitution of additional m for about bushels of and when this is completed Lana- ‘(HE'S elevator capacity will wtB-l 8D" proximately 465,000,000 bushels. Australia ‘To Aid Victims Of Bombing sE —ER»-13’ 19.‘. $23l.‘.'.'..'.2’°é.§‘..’.':",;,';',5 day. The attractive. And the dell. clone, genuine pcppgg. mint flavor assure; g pleasant breath. keep Doublemlnt Gum _ hllldylllpllflgofpqxket .- GiT SOME TODAY! m: FlA van it ASTS ' OTTAWA. Sept. ll-(OW-A fast converted liner, the former Can- ‘adian National Steamship Prince Robert, has hem added to the lighting strength of the Royal Cin- acliiin Navy and two more _0I the same SlZe will go into service in October, Munitions Mznister Howe announced today. A; auxiliary cniisers. armored and equipped for naval action, thaw craft will give the Canadian sea forces their largest fighting units. Tire two still undergoing conversion are the former Prince David and North Star. i Since the war, he said expendi-i tures in Canada by the Domlnlonl and Great. Britain, for implements . cf warfare have amounted to V145,- _ l 000,000. i ' 'lh.~ Ministers progrrsireportm- eluded the following facts: , 1. Lar e and small tanks will be produce in Canada on designs tvorked out from British and Un- itcd States plans and using cast- stcel armor plate as well as a type cf rolled steel armor, both devel- oped i:i Canada. 2. hree new explosive plants built- at a. cor-t of 5311000000 in On- tnrio, Quebec and Manitoba, will start production before the end of 1040 3. An $8.000000-shell-fil1lng plant in Quebec will begin production in November‘, and another in Ontar- io, built at the same cost will start production the middle of 1941. j , 4. Army rifle short-ages have been relieved by purchase of 80.000 Lee- Eiifield i-iflcs from the United States. and a new Canadian factory is expected to start production of Ime-Enfields t-he middle of i941. l 5. Shipbuilding schedule and orders in hand are sufficient to keep all Canadian yards busy until the end of i941. 6. Total British and Canadian eapztal invested on new war indus- , tries in Canada is $222,600,000. To- i tal British purchases in Canada since the war through munitions ministry total $203,000,- The iiew auxiliary cruisers were all former passenger liners of 6,- 0 iCIlS. The North Star was forri-ielv the Prince Henry. It was sold in 193B to the Clark steamship Company and re-named. operating curing the summer season between Mont- real and Newfoundland, and in the winter between Miami and Nassau. Bahamas. Meanwhile construction is pro- wdins ahead or schedule on 64 corvettes, i0 for the Royal Navv and 54 for Canada's Navy. The Minister anticipate the start of actual production on heuvv tanks in February in a $3,000,000- Canadlan factory and said he ex- pected delivery of several exper- imental t-anlcs of a small, highspeed type in about 60 days. H» said airplane engines continue Cnnadian problem but would not delav tho-I air training scheme since 5.000 mo- , tors had been purchased to place ' in fuselages manufactured in Can- i i was said that his warning was, directed especially at that green-- shirted organization. Although Aiitonescu has issued’ a decree against any public dem- onstrations, an Iron Guard leader said the organization is planning a great three-day manifestation, beginning Fridsy-the birthday oi the slain Guardist Corneiiu Cod- ieanu—-in memory of thousands of its members who were executed during the regime of the deposed King Carol. while Antonescu has banned all uniforms, Iron Guardists por- aded the streets tonight in bright tunics and many women appeared in similar costume. The Iron Guard has been rela- tively quiet since its outbreaks preceding Carol's abdication. But the organization has be- come restlve since it became ap- parent that. Gen. Antoncscu had no intention or turning over im- portant‘ posts _to _lts memgzrs. TlliLlE THE TOILET!- HERE'S YOUR "’ 5 Pgicss MAC '-. _ . * 2i no fully be supplied under any ctr- cumstan bee. _, tattle or importierl from Great Brl-‘i a n ‘FlTSL of the new explosive; plants I will start. production next week. i the Minister said. and shipments i grill be made to the United Ktng- - om. a? WHY HAVE ilqi- sons FEET .7 shim v SPECIALS ON SALE FRIDAY—SATURDAY—MONDAY SURPRISE S OAP $53.51 __ _ _ 35c OXYDOL Large Pkg. — -- -- 23c Small Pkg. — - -- 9c Old Dutch CLEANSER, Tin 11c- 2 for _ __ _ _ 21¢ EATONS FLOOR WAX Tin _ __ __ _ 45 ' O SANl FLUSH, Tin ____________29c Climax WALL PAPER CLEANER, Tin - ._ __ SILVO OR BRASSO, Tin—----___z5c 15c 20c BON-AMI Cake or Powder. Tin - -_ __ TURPENTINE, Bottle —- -— - -_ __. __ BROOMS. Good Quality. Each - -_ __ Eamns Each 6c TOILET TISSUE 4 For—- 23° DOMESTIC SHORTENING 1 Lb- GRANULATED OR BROWN Lb. 7c. 1o Lbs.-_69c SEEDLESQ Rmsms ‘Bulk Lb.13c- 2 Lba.----____ 25c McOREAOWS VINEOALR Zl§li°.‘ZL'l°i' 39c BULK IOING SUGAR Li» 3ib..------¢9,, — FRESH Allll OOOKEO MEAISN-g- . _ CORNED PORK HOCKS Lb- 11¢. 2 Lbs. 21c éggfifikST BEEF, Lb. ---------- SIRLOIN STEAK, Lb.—-------29c RIB ROAST BEEF, Lb.-—-—---—2‘|c 25c Blli 5 OLEANSER Tm 5c. — - - -_ I30 3For—------ B|ock----__-|3c SHIRRIFFS GOOD MORNING MARMALADE TLb- Jfil"—-——-———-23c LIPTONS T E A 1 Lb. Pkg. — — —— HEWZ TOMATO QATSUP Eatons Select Always PORK SAUSAGE Fresh Lb. FRANKFUgRTS, Lb.-—---——-25c COOKED HAM SLICED, Lb. _. -- -_ BAKED MEAT LOAF, Lb. — — —- — Breakfast 27c BACON SLICED, Lb- — - - — - —- Green TOMATOES, Peck -— -- — 25c GRAPEFRUIT 25c Small Size Each 7c. 4 for — HEAD LETTUCE, Each CAULIFLOWER, Head — -— CHOICE GRAPES, Lb. -- 19c s'| e k'n NEW CARROTS, s Lb .- _ DIN/IONS Lb. 12c. 2 Lbs- -- 23° s 239 CANADIAN NO. 2 QNIDNS. l-b-3¢- 1° l-b=-———-—z9g SUNKIST URANGES "'°°'-s"°°°’°“‘““'__“33t 14 Oz. Bottle -' _ 19c 8 Oz. Bottle — ——- 10c Firm Ripe TOMATOES Lb. 9c. 3 Lbs- — PERSONALITY FOR SALE