Jcroiiaaiosrai IRS BROUGHT P t‘ R d WWRAIIEIL rao ise ai s ‘W's “A WONDER“ Over Eastern States By U. S. Bombers NEW YORK, Oct. 8 —(AP) — A widespread test to determine the ‘bi-my °Y I-h’ “my air tome and civilian air raid spotter; to dgfgnd the United States from bombing Hid-i Will b0 18181011611 mmorfgw W” m "95 “V6119! the whole or Dflrt 0f l0 northeastern state; and the District of Columbia From tomorrow until t. 1g at least eight squadrons of the new. wt type of bombers. with head. quarters at Langley Field, va_ Wm Icfiliflffles the new. from Massachn. Isetts to North Carolina to rate ‘m9 5W1 01 40.00) civilian spotters stationed 1n 1.600 observation posts, l As H0011 as bombers are spotted, 0G I6. Declares i0.l.0. I I Leaving ;lI‘3I| um m: "c" 4 III' nun Illill Illlilll Endn- 4 m‘ "ow ma: m cAnAoA MINOIIA-BLADES save you MONEY 5N EASY GOOD-LOOKING SHAVES! ti agitation Philadelphia and Norfolk. VANCOUVER. Oct. 8 - (GP) — est detector apparatus, with the Wborts of spotters and "It! lnfflrlnation cgitres evaluating the ‘Splitters’ observation; n; to type of arcraft. approximate height and dlrefliiim of Ivsht. Augmenting the llfiporis will be finding of the lat-i {President of _ e Canadian ' and Metallurgy, _ tie ‘Congress tcr I. _ ll organization is leaving a ..-..1 agitation and dlssatisfuct-i _ o. 18:1" lll'li‘.'.‘ iunks of Canadian labcr W1 thus hindering Canada's war "f-‘iil- situation is grave," he sold. ilcn of the whole world- ui s . Every strike in an duslry ircziizs more loss of lle n our Lclllin", forces. Our boys .-an mi flglil with bare hands. It is. hlch time to forget. politics and put» ’ this in Three thousand civilians will man m1, W Cl. McBrifie oghMcGlll Un- io C. I. 0. invasion 1r lo sure the lives of our fight- : ' I John L. Lewis ls the Hitler of the IJIJO!‘ movement and the C I.‘ 0 Ills Nazi party," Professor Mu- Brlile sold. “Burning ivlfn zeal to givl‘ all labor the benefit of his ilcn rilla, LEWIS sends his fifth column into llllv lnbor field that offers oos- ghilili"; of csnquest. . "Fallon the course of the c. I. O. and IOII will liild a trail 0f Kilim- iion and dissatisfaction which the employm- is powerless to avert. Ihe rsull IS higher CCsls to the operat- ¢r_ but lower earnings for the crltrt. w“TIl(‘ real question is, shall labor tlon by an organization which ¢onirollcii outside of Canada and has $Ill.\\'ll. time and again. that 1 prznluigv object. is to gras contr". oi the labor movement wi hout re- gard to the interest or desires of the worker-sol‘ the effect upon our sirugfzlc nglililst Hitler? I "Laws." Prof McBride said, ‘ts an ardent isolationist and his C. I. 0. is inlcstcd with enemies of the dehlocrlllll: iorm of government. cnmllinn labor is loyal, but if not iveu protection it will be driven in- Io uilwnnlc-il strike after strike." NIJIEII‘ Campaigner For Teetotalism Dies In New York NEW YORK, Oct. 9—-(AP)-—D1'. CilillIiS Gillln Pease, 86, founder sud president of the Non-Smokers‘ PPILlCIIYL‘ League of America. 8nd a lilclcng crusader against tobacco, roilcc. lea. chocolate. meat, llquor| coildlnlcills and medicaments, died KSIEIZ ll_\'. l-lc iii-gun his campaign a alnst wllnl. he regarded as noxious n1lu- triers lit the age 0f 12 when he pushed n cup oi coffee away from illc breakfast table and lectured. his mctilcr on the virtues of cold water. l-le smoked for a week when he wrs ll. ihcn launched his one-man drive to OllSIl the tobacco industry. . Afier acquiring a medical and denial couciltioil somewhat late in, lite, Dr. Posse wrote dozens of pain- plileis and delivered countless lect- ures calling for teetotallsm, vege- tarianism and asceticlsm. Among the familiar elements of modern civilization which drew his wrath were ginger ale ("when a ricer in the forest fastness desiros “all; drink. it seeks not a brew but the‘ crysinl trot/er brooks at which to quench its thlrstf‘) chocolate ice cremn sodas, vinegar, lollypops, col"- sets, vaccination, a wide variety of drugs. caillital punishment and ram- inanl‘ Ha i. ln 1909 he was instrumental in obtnlninll Passage of an ordinance forbidding smoking in the New York EIIWVJII)‘. Dr. Pcilse resigned in 1911 from the lnicmiitlona Art Society be- cause an l1 year old girl rec ted at one of its meetin a a goem by James lvhllconib Riley n w lch, Dr. Peale declared, smoking "was mentioned four times distinctly." ______ if be CDlllpPllCd to accept rep-resenta- as detectors evaluated and illustrated o" hose mars or the countryside. orders will be sent to pursuit air bases to intercept the bombers; to anti-aircraft battei-‘es to throw up a barrage; to searchllght bgtteflgg to deprive the bombers of the pro- | WW0“ 0i night; to the ail-mm Wamink service for the safety of Greenwich Village Still Retains Is Individuality NEW YORK. Oct. 9 - (AP! -, Greenwich Village, once the home of New York's most individual ln-' divlduallsts, has gone to seed a bit ln recent veers with an influx of 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. (white collar) workers. But an advertisement in a morn- ing newspaper suggested today that the area still houses some daring pi . said the ad:- “Wanted-dilmployment for two young women in early twenties: A. B. degrees, intelligent. attractive, whimsical, ambitious, literary, pov- erty stricken. "Can act, model, dance, sing, act. knit, sew, paint, decorate, act, sell, ride horseback, read to lnvallos, swim, act, play hockey, walk dogs. play bridge, teach, speak French, German, Greek, cook, mix drinks, play piano and ukelele, compose, act, wash dogs. parachute jump, play tennis, hook rugs, mind childrell, act, psychoanalyze debate. garden, photograph and a . “Phone Chelsea 3-3058 between 5.30 and 9 p.m." Investigation disclosed the adver- tisers were Gay Churchill, Zl, a brunette, daughter of Dr. H. R. Churchill of the University of Penn- s lvimla, and redhead Bartan Low- e1, 20, who hails from Long Island. Quickly they told what the ads hinted: that they wanted to act. Amherst Showman Acquitted on Charge of Shooting Soldier ‘IRURO. N. 5.. Oct. 9—(CPl-— Frank Elliott, showman from Ain- herst, N. 8., was acquitted in Su- preme Court today of a charge of shooting with intent to maim. Elliott was charged alter an in- cident at his travelling carnival here July 30 in which Arthur uu- fresne, Montreal soldier, was alleged. to have been injured slightly. 0n the following rught, from nearby De demolished the Elliott show o rt . “Tgekiiiyg the stand in his own de- fence llllliott today told the petit jury he had fired a shot from a re- volver into the ground aster Du- fresne had refused to leave a booth into which he nan leaped. Dufresile had entered the boom during an " r r“".l*:.'..::";:.n2;-=i had n won a - y the sllaot. Elliott rou of'so iers were gag-latching toptear the show down and take money from the booth. lie had fired in anvattemllt to scare them off and had not aimed at Du- iresne. l Sometime later, he said. two sol- diers asked him if he knew a soldier had been shot. He said one told nlm the incident would be hushed uD i! Elliott gave him $5. CALLS NAZIS __ (0ontlnued__from_ pagew l) ELIZABETH ARIIEITS II IBTO RY IIEII MIIK E ll P LIP STICK -— — $1.60 CREME ROUGE—-$_l.50 NAlL POLISH —,.95c MATCHING FACE POWDER-Jllii We are sure you will want to see tliis up to 4181c snake up’ and will I" 81nd to have you call. lliiiissoirs bert camp complete- ' Lightweight I Is Postponed NEW YORK. t. 9—(AP)-The lS-mmid light/weight title fight, scheduled for Oct. 81 in Madson Square Garden, between Lew Jen- kins, recognized as the dlamsnon in New Yn-k and Sammy Angott N.B.A. king, today was postponed to allow Jenkins time to recover from a rib injury. The New York State Athletic Commission approved the new date, tentatively set by prmnoter 0c lMlke Jacobs as Dec 19, when an X-ray showed Jenkins had a cor- tical fracture of the leiit 11th rib. Jenkins said he was injured about three weeks ago in a motorcycle ac- cldmt and hence was not at Lls Cochrazle fight Mon- day night, which he lost after being floored five times. Fred Browning manager of Jenk- kins, put wp a $1.500 forfeit and Jenkins was instructed to re-aort for a physical examination Nov 'l. T! Lew is not m goon‘ condition at that tfme, the Cimmlssion ruled he must forfeit his claim t1 the title, $750 to Charley Jones, man- ager of Angot-t and the remainder to promoter Mike Jacobs. The new dale ls subject to An- gott's approval, Chairman John J. Phelnn of the Commission said Jenkins’ purse cf approximately $7,000, held u-p after the Cochmne fight, probably wzuld be returned, w him Tuesday. oofv Honor Roll for September. Senior Department Grade X-i. Hazel Rayner; 2 Dorothy Simmons; 3. Alma. Moase. Grade IX-l. James Plllmari; 2. Emeline Rayner; 3. Pearle Smith Grade VIII—1. Brad Melons: 3- Allie McDonald. Grade VII--1. Evelyn Wood; 2. Loretta Hogg; 3. Ora Hogg. Grade Vl-l. Florence McInnls; 2. Orland Callbeck", 3. Virginia Mouse. Primary Department Grade V-i. Helen Simmons; 3- Doris Waite; 3. Ruth Rayner. Grade IV—l. Norma Wovdside and George Moase; 2. Eunice Wal- field; 3. Wesley Gunning. Grade III-J. Ralph McInnis; 3. Ingham Montflmefy- Grade H41‘. l. Lilly GunnIHB; Sylvia. Rayner; 3. Jean Rayner- Grade III-Jr. l. Joyce MacKaYZ 2. Thelma Moose and Charles Mal- lett; 3. Alan McDonald. Grade 1. (a) 1. Erlsor MacKaY- Grade I (bi David Schurman; 2. Margaret Walker; 3. Jean Heliel- Grade 1 (c) 1. Arthur Blanchard- nrincipal Mlrriam MMDOIIBIJ Assisiant-Jlelen Mutiart. Girl Guide News ovmculr. coma nann- P“ QUARTERS ice at St. Pet- "-31% Egimggghggio square. will m Qpen for one hour this after. noon (Friday) from 5-0 P- ‘in this office will not be gpfiléufl-Bare until Friday. 0st 1'1 d t e o, asked w take a vaghilg col- thls hour. Please watch S umn m notice of shopplns daw- s yon ma common TOY TOY rant lease leave i-hfill‘ finwlslhneduwdsesatpm Queen Bus“ not later t an Monday 110011. 13th. These toys must I” P6 w Monday afternoon. Be Mir have name of Guide and COmPI-flll number attached. 1st. 2nd. AND 3rd. COMTANIE5 “Kid cfiiltgrid to maintain the circles. "r m‘ onor - "We inienll to maintain o! policy of protectinl i116 "Q5933 m, m“ against domination b! any foreign power ‘which has be- come crmd WWI quar the world. We with all our strehti-Il {Pd heart and all our mind. congressional reaction to the mgggggg clogel IOIIUWQd EIIB l1- ready welLdefErled line of eieaviaghd between the sullwml‘! 5M E nents of his forelxn P°11¢Y~ ' ical of the comment was this from chairman Tom Connolly 9! m; 55115“ pol-eign Relations Oom- moo:- l '. . .a splendid and eloquent eaqioslilon of what 1591mm m‘ Iqlgn policy should be. And this, from Senator Robert Taft (Kieth-Ohio); I “A policy of carrying 0n ll! I111‘ lhlll d0 l0 Ill 011.7’ tic. l The receipt of the mental! 10111115 m; you” of jupresentatives de. $6M5,000,000 199399715‘ ep re . ~ ‘Willi’ 3‘°.I°“§;l€£l‘.§ "Wilma? Olilton Woodrum (Den-VII in!!! can-that Planes and the battle lillb to b0 Hi er. At the other end of the clPIWI- the senm Bllakllll 60mm" Iiiéieiiihi’ gvIiol-Eow n: tllllclty of the reconstruction finance cor- poration, In be use Administrator. Jesse Jones. nave f STORE li_. Sig“! would go money in two or threemon m“'%%erm, and to a desire to con-| I declared naval war on the Atlan-t 1.500.000.1300 d in the defence Fede l (give, and it had heard tlgiommge say he’ back for even “:1!!! meeting will d innit? gafrliii xpecta ' m’ ° on their toy ‘ l ted l» .2.““3.‘.°;...‘i.°".‘}2 i... aloof‘... I Th ular weekl his hgldngoniflht at in. at mt Friday's ma“ "I" Guides were very plea-std w Wel- come three Brownies from the lat Pack, who are now old enough to become Guides. The Brownies. who ‘If’; “$1512 “m”? nifimififl . e r0 Thornton have all won their ol- Iden-bfl" a; Brownies, and smi ug- ‘ly followed a path of brown-paper ‘stepping-stones as they stepped ‘from thefigck w become members o1 the G e 00ml"!!!- UPTON SCHOOL Honor Roll for September. grade IX. 1e Lean; 2, Ada Macllenrlan. ' Qlélfifl III. Jll-ILIOT-l, AIGIIIQ Lill- giig‘ I, Benion-l, ulnar Liv- I 3min. Junior-i, Mlth ‘rumor: 2 Jennie uvltllltone; i. I‘ no! '15 be an. . "Ilgacllligr-Rheta Ii. Judson. ~ I -— — _..__..._._._.__ REGINA, Oct. l-(OPI-Whml overnnient mean ' e pl ment to Western farmers of a uabel for wheat, oasis m; Fort William for i fth mi I I531? 3.... it» 131' will b cimliortbem at all wheat delivered, said ran... G 1 All um Minister radio - , Livingstone. rode III. Senior-l. Jean Mac- ht‘ III-v rm; CHARLQJTEETOWNHGUARDIQN Title Scrap As Jenkins The Champ, Injures Ribs A iii-round handicap match _be- tween Oochrazle, welterweight champion from Ell th, NJ, and Ray Robinson, New York negro, for Oct. 81 in the Garden was an- nounced by Jacobs. The bout re- places the iX-xoned Jenkins-An- gott fight. . Jacobs labelled the fight a handi- calp affair because Cochrane must make 14.5 paunds, Cochranes title will not be at stake as the State Conrunisslon requires all champion- ship fights to be over the lo-round rou e Curt Homnann, manager of Rob- inson. said starting with the Coch- rane fight that 11's boy would quit the light-weights and campaign among the welters. He is expected to make amund 140 pounds. Jockey boots NEW YORK, Oct. 9—(AP)—- Jockey Alfred Robertson, the vet- eran little Scottish riding star, vnote a new record into the turf books today by booting home six winners on the seven-race card at Jamaica. Available records show several other jockeys have ridden as many as half-a_dozen winners ln one day's riding. but the 30-year- old Scot. by hi3 performance today, became the first rider to turn the 30 in the second; Gun Galomur at $28.40 in third; Grand ’ Party ‘lltfiqigo ‘in Elle 10111113} llaial Pry a . n e sx , n Hfllfle $|X stanLike at $40.30 in the seventh. I Winners Cape Breton League opens November 3 SYDNEY, N.S., Oct. 9—(CP)— The Cape Breton Hockey League will open Nov. 3, it was decided at a league meeting tonight. The lea- Klle B88111 will be made up of syri- ney Millionaires Allan Cup final-- trick twice in his career. He did it m“ In FWPIIRTY. i938, at Havana, during his first year in the saddle. Although he was stopped aboard the long-shot Picture Hat in the fifth race today, each of his other mounts paid handsome odds. They We" 5078110 at $15.80 for $2 in the first race: Running Lights at $29,- 1st; lass season; Glace Bay Miners and North sydney vicinrias. REMEMBER WHEN (By The Canadian Press) Thedpgslts of coach of the Montreal OUT OUR WAY 478i of the National Hockey Bv J R. William: come on. come oro .' FIGHT TH wAR WHEN vou err ‘THERE.’ WHAT YA wAlo-r 9 ii ,1.\. mi i \ ' \\ \i' .} :1‘ 1 BRINGING UP FATHER .. ,_. _ _ ._~1.Ju 1-1:‘ Céhlédéé 63 8.9.5 WAY YOU MLJSTLFT Mlbfi ‘IE2 TIZAN LIKE YOLI DID vESTiDAvl/ w’ BUT vou GET ARD, ' EVERYTHING FREE AND TH'ZI BUCKS MAYBE NEVER SEE ‘Nike L ‘THE BUGLER "roo YOUNG FER ‘TH’ SPANISH WAR, Too MANY KIDS F-EIZ TH‘ usr one, AM‘ woo OLD FER THIS ONE "HIS OPINION SHOULD BE soon .1 CLOTHE AND IS CLEAR.‘ AND WELL, HE'S GOT TO TALK SOMEBODY To OF h/IISERYSTATE communal: IVest Kent | Rifle shoot 'I‘he West Kent Miniature Rille‘ 5h00t was rte-organized for 19-11-42 lfilder the leadership of ..'.iss Mazy; acLennan and Mr. N. S. MRCIBUU.‘ gill: foircst shoot was held Oll Thu - fly. t. 9n, tn i five ‘hem its Itslgsvillzit of the fllst .............. 96 Allison Cudmore Blair Ere-haul. . . . . 84 gqvk Bursesls o; 1e next s oot ll be h l Tuesday, 0ct._14th, e d m“ FfilEI-le. 19ft Vacant by the drown- ilig cf Barbe Slebert, was filled by Wplloilltlnfint of Pei/e Lepine, two Yea“ 880 ‘Dd-HY. as coach and manager, Slebert took over the Canadians in January of the prev; his “"5 W150" t0 brine them out of t§11§y§§lgar into the Manley Cup Wflfiirjillevu aches. our: BOARDING nous}; BUSTEK tiller DAGI-IED our NlTH l-lis LOWER y LIP HANGING LIKE AN ’ OPEN SUITCASE AND some HE oiohrr WANT BREAKFAST! M. ‘n-‘JWS A5 PEcuu/AR HIM LIKE THE / CHAMBER OF ’ COMMERCE WELCOMING P~ LOCAL BOY WHO HAD UUGT H's THAT BATTLE- €>Hil> JOCKEY 9AM Ni-IO BREEZED IN LAST Nléi-IT.’ -- JULIET’ GREETED PAGE SEVEN -~::al LIBEIIIZIFFMI Getliffe out For workout ST. HYACINTHE. Que. Oct. —lCPi—‘l‘s\'o rcsiiilzirs turned o ’ practice w. the Montreal Can! 1L5 training camp here toda iliiflfillkh Couch Dick Irvin had seq this was exclusively "rookie tryout we _ 'r'.» two-Elmerllach and Ray Gcillffe-lleiiwd DlCk Irvin as hi Dix‘. Ins Nauonal Hockey Leagud possibilities through a 5m; mark‘ out and then foimcd ttvo teaml for il practice game, The Gansdiens mentor snlmq most eflectlv 1" after the m§<...t°‘{',“,f,§“§"§{§“he a: tfles on at least four playey‘ t-‘Wflally for his 1941-42 Canad- lens. He did not name them. hi5 1139s in an effort to find thi Mlnard’: a . With I-UMainr Hymn]; THAT ouel-IT "r0 BREAK THE FEVER ‘IOU PATIENTQ HAuE BEEN RUNNING/u... NOW you CAN so GI-lOPPiMG FOR usED OVERCOATS INSTEAD oi= \ OQCHIDS/ ' ' HA5 THE GAME EFFECT A5 A WET BLPINWET= AH-‘IDNIGI-IT-ILLI BE wma ‘ HOPE NOII-i we... ’ {gigging UJISH ‘IO EXPRESQ you ARE ABSOLUTEE) I CORRECT! .. \ Jo - I - -.,._ a f ,5 \ \ - - / / . - ‘ 1.2a...“ an...’ Syvvlxainlm. Wuldngttrurvvrrvlfl IO ‘o If ’_‘__—?’_‘_ ff. 5L7: By Edwina wzu. WHERE'S cam cousliu MILLIE r ' MERCY! WHAT l "A RACKET! --ANYBOUY WHO HASNT ANYTHING RE TO DOP-HUMPI-I"! l SUPPQSE THAT LIGHT IN THE B HA5N'T BEEN FIXED YET, cousiN“ TI/IICLTJs sac \<, POP l r o T.SElLi\/iS' ATHROOM * 5 l - - a EITHER l - III 1 1 i‘ I ‘Ft-E GIRL 5AM $HI‘S LOOKING 5 SOME - By Weston: MAYBE I COULD HELP wou FIND / H M