 Nelson's Record
2139 '
Traffic Fatality* Free Days
nv*
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WIATHIR  FORECAST
KOOTENAY: Sunny with occasional cloudy periods in the afternoon. A little warmer. Winds light.
Low and high at Cranbrook 45 and
75, Crescent Valley 45 and 80.
^fr'B.C., GMADA-MQNDAY MOWm^
Not .More Than 6c Dally, 10c Saturday
No. 70
Victoria Cathedral Jammed
For Sunday Morning Service
By PErEfl BUCKLEY
Canadian Press Stall Writer
'.  VICTORIA (Cll-'-Princess Margaret attended divine
services at Christ Church Cathedral here Sunday and then
settled into a quiet day.        . Y
Her only official activity was to receive a bound
parchment copy oi an early Victoria newspaper. The rest of
the day was her own.
THE WORLD'S SUMMER CURLING CHAMPIONS
and top rink at Nelson's Uth annual Midsummer Bonspiel are members of the Hector Gervdis rink of Edmonton. The Edmonton curlers defeated Jim McCullough's
Calgary rink at the bonspiel finals Saturday afternoon,
copping the championship trophy and prizes. Rink members are, left to right, Hector Gervais, skip, Rowley
Douziech, second, and Mike Miciak, lead..
< —Daily News photo.
Foot Clamps Down on Cypriots
As 27 Die in Week of Violence
Tripoli Shaken
By Explosions
BEIBUT, Lebanon (AP)—Heavy
fighting erupted in Tripoli •Satur-
.,(,  day after rebels,blew up a huge
rf   *le*ic.po^«;'itationv^ind';dy&-
*•>     nfited ife water main'supplying
the port district.
It climaxed 48 hours of the
worst outbreak of shooting and
violence m that northern port city
since the rebellion broke out 65
days ago.
There was speculation in this
capital that the outbreak might be
the opening gun for a rebel offensive, long expected here. But there
have been many false alarms before.
A rebel spokesman told the Associated Press that Tripoli's Nahr
el Bared power station— which
feeds power to Beirut in peak periods—was blown up Friday. Informed sources in Beirut estimated damage to the electric power
station at more than- $2,000,000.
The rebels also claimed they
blew up- a four-storey building
used by security forces as an ob-
lervation post in Tripoli.
Queen Still Has
Slight Fever
LONDON (CP) - The Queen
still suffered from a slight fever
Sunday, but Buckingham Palace
doctors reported the acute sinus
inflamation which struck her earlier in the week was abating.
I Three court physicians' said the
Queen had a restful day hut that
her temperature still has not returned to normal.
By SHAHE GUEBENLIAN
NICOSIA, Cyprus (Reuters) —
British Governor Sir Hugh Foot
today issued an order banning the
movement of Greek and Turkish
Cypriots throughout Cyprus for 48
hours.
The standstill order to prevent
the island from exploding into
civil war included:      .
House   curfews in   all   main
ii\ towns for 48 hours; an absolute
'ft"1»r*I'-ri(ita "traffic,' 'and stay-at-
home orders for everyone except
those involved in essential service
.until further notice.
The governor's order, said maximum security patrols would be
launched in all areas, particularly
rural districts.
The ban climaxed a. week
communal violence: during which
27 Cypriots and British security
men lost their lives — seven of
them Sunday.
The island's 400,000 Greek Cypriots are demanding union with
Greece and Cyprus, and 90,000
Turkish Cypriots want partition
of the island between Greece and
Turkey.
The number of British police on
Cyprus will be doubled in a bid
to halt the mounting wave of violence between Greek >and Turkish,
Cypriots residents, British officials
said. Three hundred reinforcements are due here shortly from
Britain, they added.
The latest killings boosted the
number killed in inter - community strife to 49 in the -last five
weeks.
SHEPHERDS SHOT
Since Sunday morning, three
Turkish shepherds were found
shot to death in two east Cyprus
villages, while an 80 - year - old
Turkish gardener was slain by
terrorist bullets in Leonarisso,
northeast Cyprus.
At-Tavros, also in east Cyprus,
a-Greek Cypriot was stabbed to
death and here in   Nicosia   an
other Greek died of stab wounds
inflicted by Turks. A Turk was
shot dead near/Nicosia.
Curfews were clamped on Nicosia and Limassol following outbreaks of arson. Famagusta and
Paphos also were put under curfew.
Five Turkish Cypriots were
killed Saturday when a bus carrying them to work was trapped in
an ambush .jnd..ri4dled...'\>7ith
;macMiw*-<'gurij:- rifle ana Shotgun'
fife. The body, of another TurSsh
Cypriot was found in Ayios Theodoras village, northeast Cyprus..
Idaho Rider Captures
Stampede Bronc Title
CALGARY (Cp) - Deb Copen-
haver of Post Falls, Idaho, spurred his way to his third North
American saddle bronc riding
championship Saturday as the 1958
Calgary Stampede ended a week onds.   With   veteran  driver  Bill
of rodeo competitions.
Copenhaver, who won the title
in 1953 and 1955, edged out three
other Americans and two Canadians to take this year's major
rodeo event. Jim Tescher of Sentinel Butte, N. D., was second and
the two Canadians—George Myran
of Viking, Alta., and Bob Robin-
sonwf Caigary—followed' third and
fourth. Robinson won the championship in 1956.
A record crowd,of 545,960 persons attended the six-day stampede
despite intermittent rain 'during
the week and a thunderstorm Saturday night,. The attendance was
7585 better than last year's total
of 538,875. But it fell below early
predictions made by officials of
550,000. Turnout Saturday was 94,-
087, well below the 1957 record of
107,148.
SHOW RAINED OUT
A heavy downpour Saturday
night sent the "biggest outdoor
show on earth" indoors just after
the finals for the world chuckwagon championship. A mammoth
grandstand .show was washed out
as thousands scrambled for shelter and their cars.
In the chuckwagon contest, the
Merle Anderson outfit from Carbon, Alta., leader during the week;
won the championship with a total
time of seven minutes, 21.5 sec-
Greenwood at the reins, the Carbon team defeated the Peter Baw-
den outfit from Calgary, 1957 winner, and the Lloyd Nelson rig from
High River, 1956 winner.
Bawden collected a total time of
7.:26.8 and Nelson 7:32.6. Ralph
Vigen of Grande Prairie, Alta.,'
was fourth in 7:33.6. Both the Bawden wagon, driven by Dale Flett,
and the Vigen' wagon finished Saturday's race in best'time of 1:10.1.
Jack Schecter's outfit from Edmonton was fifth in 7:34.
Anderson's share of the chuckwagon prize money is $1850.
Other Rodeo Winners:
All-round North American cowboy—Guy Weeks of Abilene, Tex.
Calf roping — Dean Oliver of
Boise, Ida.
Wild steer decorating — Bud Van
Cleave.of Taber, Alta. ■
Bareback bronc riding — Jack
Hawkins of Manhattan Beach,
Calif.
Brahma bull riding — Gid Gar-
stad of Veteran, Alta.
All-round Canadian champion—
Wilf Garlitz of Youngstown, Alta.
Best - dressed cowboy — Harry
Toihpkins of Dublin, Tex.
Hunt For Laska
Abandoned
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fia.'(AP)
—The. hunt was abandoned Saturday for Laskat the tiny female
white mouse known to have lived
through at least part of a blazing
12,000 - mile - ap - hour journey
through space.
Sixty hours after Laska was
hurled aloft Wednesday night by
a mighty Thor-Able rocket, the
U. S. Air Force announced it has
stopped the search for the mushroom-shaped nose cone in which
she travelled.
Earlier, the air force had said
the nose cone reached its Atlantic
target area 6000 miles away, near
Ascension Island off the coast of
Africa. It was the first intercontinental range flight by a U. S. ballistic missile.
Ships and planes searched the
area for VA days.
LIVED 22 MINUTES
Capt. E. M. 'Griffith, Thor-Able
project officer, told reporters in
an interview that Laska is known
to have been alive 22 minutes after the rocket blasted off.
By that time, the mouse would
have travelled more than 4000
miles and ,the nose cone would
have been only eight minutes away
from its target.
"We received telemetry data on
the mouse here at Cape Canaveral
for 22 minutes," Griffith explained.
At that time the heart beat was
good."
—— rt
Canadian Accident
Toll Reaches 44
By The Canadian Press -
Accidents killed at least 44 persons in Canada this weekend.
A Canadian Press survey shqws
30 killed on the roads, seven
drowned and seven dead in other
mishaps from 6 p.m. local times
Friday to 8 p.m. MDT Sunday.
The toll by provinces (traffic
deaths in brackets):
Ontario 19 (16), Quebec 15 (9),
British Columbia 3, Alberta 3 (3),
Manitoba 2 (1), New Brunswick 2
(1).
B. C. to See Sputnik
VICTORIA (CP)-Dr. R. M.
Petrie of the dominion observatory In Saanich says Russia's
Sputnik III will probably be visible ln B.C. shortly after 10 p.m.
today.
He said the satellite will be
moving from southeast to the
north at about 30 degress elevation.
The carrier rocket, 10 time* as
heavy as the satellite, will follow
15 minutes later, arcing across
the northwest horizon at. about
17 degree*.
H-Bomb To End
Human Race!
LONDON  (AP)  - The Arch
W
H-bomb war.
The Anglican Primate of England, Dr. Geoffrey Fisher, comments in a new book:
"For all I know it-is within the
providence of God that the human
race should destroy itself in this
manner. There is no evidence that
the human race should last for
ever, and plenty in scripture to
the. contrary."
The Archbishop was one of 22
contributors to a book out today
—"The Fearful Choice"—edited by
Philip Toynbee, 42, son of his: I ■
ian Arnold Toynbee. The younger
Toynbee, former leftist novelist,
advanced the view that -occupation by the Russians would be
preferable to a hydrogen war.
The Archbishop, In a critical reply, contended, "policy should not
be based simply on fear of pain,"
SAYS VIEWS "WICKED"
Dr. Fisher's views were described Sunday as "wicked" by Canon
L. J. Collins, the Preceptor of St,
Paul's Cathedral. Canon Collins,
leader of a group of. Anglican
churchmen who feel Britain should
renounce nuclear weapons—alone
if necessary--said:
"It is one thing to accept suffering on one's own behalf. It is
quite another—and a wicked one
at that—to think lightly of suffering caused to other people:"
DRUMMONDVILLE, Que. (CP)
—Hon. Jean Lesage, leader of
the Quebec Liberal party, says Liberals throughout the province have
launched an. all-out offensive
against Premier Duplessis' Union
Nationale-government and stand
ready for a provincial election^
Margaret Applauded by Throngs
am
Throngs of people gathered
outside the Empress Hotel where
the royal suite Is situated, and a
few blocks away at the Anglican
Cathedral as the princess, in a
stunning pearl grey dress and
cloche - type flowered hat, drove
to the grey, Gothis cathedral for
the regular 11 a.m. service.
Low To Stand
By Until New
Leader Chosen
VANCOUVER (CP) - Solon
Low, retiring Social Credit leader,
told a convention of B.C., riding
delegates here Saturday he will
stay at the helm of the party until
a national convention chooses his
successor.
A party spokesman said Sunday
it will take at least a year to organize such a convention. He said
it likely will be held in Wihnipeg.
T)ie 58-year-old Mr. Low, who
has led the party for 14 years, is
retiring to take a high school
teaching, job in his home town of
Raymond, Alta.
Tom Irwin, former speaker of
the legislature, has been proposed
by the B.C. division of the party's
national council for > the pi)st of
federation president. He would
succeed Dr. E. C. Hansell.
Saturday's closed meeting dealt
with the leadership and the national convention.       *:. I
WaRK.0M.CqNS!ITUTI01*4(. :.
"'■'A special' committee* vfas'Set up
in B.C. to bring section of the constitution up to date.
Later this month Mr. Low will
attend another convention meeting
in Drummondville, Que. Reports of
both meetings will be considered
hy the national council.
Premiers Bennett of B.C. and
Manning of Alberta are mentioned
as possible candidates for party
leadership. Others mentioned are;
Rev. Alex Patterson, former Social
Credit MP for the Fraser Valley;
Russell Patrick, Alberta's minister
of economic affairs, and Fred Mur-
dock, president of the Ontario Social Credit League.
Mr. Low said once he steps down
he will never again run for parliamentary office.
SUEZ CANAL
PACT SIGNED
GENEVA (AP) - An agreement
was signed here Sunday under
which the United Arab. Republic
contracts to pay the old Suez Canal
Company nearly $65,000,000 for the
waterway, nationalized two years
ago by Egyptian President Nasser,
The agreement gives the company shareholders the equivalent of
£23,000,000 Egyptian ($64,802,00) in
compensation spread over the next
six years.
The British government is the
biggest single shareholder. Most of
the others are French private investors.
The compensation sum covers
the 12 years which was still to have
elapsed between 1956 and expiration of the company's 99-year concession in 1968.
Windstorm Smashes
Okanagan Fruit Lands
PENTICTON, B.C. (CP) - The
South Okanagan mopped up Sunday after one of the worst wind
storms.in its history.. .
The storm, hit Penticton at about
7 p.m. Saturday night, with winds
reaching a velocity of 65 miles per
hour.
The east wall of Penticton'* new
$55,000 centennial building was
moved out eight inches at the top.
A construction company hurriedly
erected supports to prevent its complete collapse.
Residents along the shore of
Lake Okanagan washed inches of
sand from their lawns and driveways; At the Penticton Yacht Club
five or six boats were holed by huge
breakers, 10 to. 15 other boats suffered minor damage, and one cabin
cruiser was, sunk.
Trees were blown over near the
old sternwheeler S.S. Sicamous
and numerous roofs in the lake-
Shore area were damaged.
At Oliver, large trees, were' uprooted by the wind. Power lines
were cut and fruit trees suffered
heavy damage.
At Osoyoos! doors and plate glass
windows -in i several business estab
lishments were blown in and the
roof of a house under construction
was blown off. Tenters at the community park trailer camp found
themselves without shelter as the
storm whipped their tents away.
At Kelowna, it was the worst
wind storm experienced in the last
two decades as telephone and
power lines tore down communications lines and towering trees toppled. Power was off for one and
half hours in some outlying areas.
The huge reviewing stand con-
sructed for Princess Margaret to
open Lake Okanagan bridge next
Saturday was picked up by the
winds and hurled into Mill Creek,
which winds through the city park.
SPOKANE, Wa*h.(AP) - Weary'
mining crews, volunteers and forest service workers apparently
checked Sunday a forest fire that
had threatened the little northeastern Washington towns of Ford and
Uranium City.
They had battled .through the
night with heavy construction
equipment sent by the.Dawn and
Silver Buckle mining companies. .
She was applauded both before
and after the service.
CHURCH JAMMED
Tho church was jammed when
the princess walked to the first
row of pews on the right side and
took her seat. Admission was by
ticket only.   ■
There was no particular change
in the matins service for the occasion, although it began with the
Anthem.', As usual, is concluded
congregation Singing the National
prayers for the Queen, temporal
head of the church, and other
members of the Royal Family.
Dean Brian Whitlow used the
verse • from Genesis: ."This is
none other than the house of God,
and this is the gate of Heaven"
to urge reguar attendance at
church on his parishioners.
The princess sang hymns,
prayed and listened attentively
as both lessons were read.
She wore a light grey dress
fitted the full length, with a belt
effect in front, while sweeping
from shoulder tb hem in a loose
coat effect at the back. Her jewelry was a two-strand pearl necklace and a small diamond
brooch.
Her hat appeared to be of a
net-like fabric woven with small
delicate-colored flowers.
Her accessories were matching
grey  gloves,  elbow length, a
black purse and black shoes.
RECEIVES CORSAGE
In front of the church she accepted the f i r s t bouquet of her
Canadian tour, a small hand
corsage presented by 10-year-old
Elizabeth Tyrwhitt - Drake, who
won the honor after getting highest marks' in Sunday school examinations. .      ...
Princess Margaret chatted with
Dean Whitlow outside, the. cathr
'dtal' before :s'tepfflhi?-into'~her •*!
mousine for the drive back to the
hotel; '  .   *,..
She, responded to the cheering
crowds with smiles and small
waves of the hand.
After the church service, Seth
R. Halton, publisher of The Daily
Colonist, gave her a reproduction
of the first issue of The British
Colonist, published Dec. 11, 1858.
Richly hound in blue morroco
leather and partially hand-illuminated in gold, it represented a
newspaper turneoY out by Amore
de Cosmos, an almost legendary
figure in early British Columbia*
who was premier of the province
torn 1872-74.
BUSY DAY- <-
A full schedule is planned for
today. She goes to city hall at
10:05 a.m. PDT for presentation
of civic officials and then on to
the provincial ParUament Buildings for her official welcome to
B.C., celebrating its Centenary.
Then there will be an armed
forces parade and an RCAF fly
The afternoon will begin with
Princess Margaret receiving
church, judiciary and other representatives in the main lounge of
her hotel.
Later she will attend a garden
party on the grounds of government house - destroyed by fire
last year and now in the process
of reconstruction — which 4000 or
triore persons will attend by invitation.
Her evening is free. The pnn-
vess leaves here Wednesday to
continue her two - week visit to
the province and six - week Canadian tour. -: '■■■■ r, ■
The royal visit began Saturday
morning when the princess stepped from an RCAF C-5 aircraft
at suburban Patricia Bay airport
to a 21-gun salute and official
greetings from Defence Minister
George Pearkes, Lieutenant-Governor Frank RoSs, Premier Bennett and others.
Crowds lined the bunting - decorated highway and streets as she
drove the 18 miles to her hotel.
Apparently dissatisfied by the brief
glimpse they got of the princess
as she walked into the hotel, the
throng of about 3000 outside set up
a chant of "we want Margaret"
that lasted for more than an hour.
UNSCHEDULED DRIVE
After lunch the princess eluded
the small army of press representatives to take an unscheduled
drive with the lieutenant • governor and his wife to see the still
incomplete Government House
Building and to several vantage
points around the city for a view
of Victoria, the surrounding water
and the city suburbs.
She slept for a few hours, then
turned up at a press reception
and captivated.the group by
shaking the hand of everyone
present. She spoke to a majority
of the more than 300 there. She
was poised, friendly and vivacious.
Occasionally she touched a
glass to her Ups without apparently drinking.and smoked a single
cigaret from a gold-plated holder.
There was a burst of applause
from the usually - blase press as
she left the room after visiting
for.iy* hours.
PRINCESS MARGARET
New York Preacher's Antics
Draws Grins From Russia
MOSCOW (Reuters) - A New
York preacher set up his $16 portable throne outside the Kremlin
walis Saturday and proclaimed
himself "czar.of the Soviet Union".
'Homer A. Tomlinsoa assembled
bis aluminum throne, planted it itt
theimidd^le: :tf,J3&<tfuiM*>#aa\
bOwed gracioiisly to scores bf curious but confused Russians.    .
While perched on his chair, Tom-
linson set an iron crown covered
with gold paint on his head during
the coronation ceremony.
The grins from the. Muscovites
could have melted the cold war.
The 65-year-old religious leader,
dressed in colorful Chinese mandarin robes, said: "I believe there
is more real Christianity in the
Soviet Union today than ever *be-
fore in the history of this nation
of the north."
Tomlinson claims 12,000,000 of
his 70,000,000 followers in his
"Church of God" are Russians. He
De Gaulle Seeks
Reform of Union
PARIS (AP) — Premier de
Gaulle called Sunday for reform of
the French union into a vast, free'
community in which revolt-torn
Alegria would have a special choice
place.
Aides said de Gaulle deliberately
did not specify what this place
would be because he felt it would
be unfair to make a; decision until
after the people of Algeria have
had a chance for a free vote.
The aides said the general still
had an open mind on the question
of Algeria's links with France and
that the final decision could not
be reached until all the people in
metropolitan France and Algeria
had had a chance to express themselves.
De Gaulle spoke by radio to
France's overseas' territories,
which have been tightly controlled
from Paris.
France's ties with her overseas
possessions were the dominating
theme as the nation moved through
a three-day celebration of Bastille
Day, today's national holiday
It won't be de Gaulle's fault if
today's parade isn't the biggest and
best France'has ever seen.
and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev arrived here from Berlin Fri*
day—aboard separate planes. .,
In his whirlwind tour of Europe,
Tomlinson already had proclaimed
himself king of Germany, Belgium
and Holland.
***.-, :-•'.
She's Pretty,
Victoria Decides
VICTORIA (CP) -There wa*
one predominant, reaction from
the thousands who crowded Victoria streets Saturday to see
Princess Margaret: "She's pretty."
The crowd'was enthusiastic, but
the traditional reserve of Victoria
held the street demonstration to
Some cheering and'a lot of hand-
clapping.
Frank ■ Tonin 'ot Victoria, 84,
stood for more than an hour to ht
assured of a good 'position. "I've
seen them all — years ago in England."
Joanne Fogden, 10, of Victoria,
pushed her way through the
crowd with her bicycle, stared at
the princess and announced:
"She's nice."
A small girl with pigtails, ignoring the rules of protocol completely, dropped her ice cream cone,
clapped ner hands and screeched:
"Hi, princess." 	
Millionaire
Dies of Wounds
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — Millionaire politician Abboud Abdul
Razzak, 83, died Sunday of wounds
received Friday in an ambush by
unknown, assailants.
Abdul Razzak was shot in both
legs as he rode through rebel-held
territory in the Moslem; quarter
of Beirut,
Abdul Razzak formerly was a
member of parliament. His soh,-
Mohamed Abboud, former minister
of finance, was assassinated in 1958
in front of the presidential palace.
WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) - Four
district residents were killed and
two critically injured Sunday night
when a speeding car veered into
a truck and exploded.
The car's speedometer w a s
jammed at more than 100 miles
an hour.
And in This Corner...
VICTORIA (CP)—Meticulous planning never eliminate* that
last.minute hitch that all traveller:;—including royalty—undergo.
Proving it was the busy buzz of telephones as official* tried to
make new arrangements for Princess Margaret's hairdresser.
It was found that all the electrical outlets In the Empress Hotel
were wired for direct current power—and all her equipment was
built for alternating current.
ANGOLA, Ind. <AP)--An unoccupied boat anchored in the
centre of Jimmerson Lake containing a fishing pole baited and
ready for use, set conservation officers to dragging the lake Friday.
Alter two hours futile work under the hot Sun they called for
a skin diver. While they were waiting they found the angler drinking beer in a cool lakeside tavern. He said two thirsty friends had
rowed past on their way to the tavern, and he changed boats and
joined them. .   ,-
.   Officers withheld the fisherman's name while they searched, the
law books for a charge that would apply.
VICTORIA (CP)—A message across Victoria's Government
Street reads "British Columbia's Capital Welcomes Princess Margaret.
It was designed and hung so that anyone approaching from the
north could read -it. .
Princess Margaret arrived Saturday from the south ahd read
the sign backwards. All of her tours of the Island city approach the
signs from the south.
 ,. .,.-. .._ ,,.,.,
2 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 14, 1958
COMPLETE SHOWS 7:00-9:05
CIVIC
TONIGHT and TUESDAY — One !
DRIVE-IN
TONIGHT and TUESDAY — One Show 9:10        |
/      - 2nd BIG HIT -
I For the Laugh of Your Life
"JUST MY LUCK"
l| -. ■ ■ ■ Norman Wisdom, Margaret Rutherford
CASTLE THEATRE
CASTLEGAR, B.C.
"BITTING BULL" (Cinemascope)
Dale Robertson, Mary Murphy
Carrol Nnish
CARTOON and NEWS
Trail in Path
Of Wind Storm
TRAIL,(CP) — Rossland was
blacked out and power and telephone line* in the West Kootenay-Boundary area were affected
by a wind storm which swept
through the area Saturday night.
Me storm-first hit the Okanagan and Grand Forks areas.
West Kootenay Power and Light
Company officials here were unable to estimate the full extent of
'damage. Service for the most part
was restored Sunday.
A tree cut across power lines
In Castlegar Resulting in a short
circuit. Forestry crews were called out to watch for fires but none
resulted.
RCMP were called out on the
Arrow Lakes where it was at
first feared a couple in a boat
might be in danger. The unidentified couple was found later. They
had beached their boat during the
storm.
Traffic on Riverside Avenue in
Trail, the only artery to East
Trail, was halted until a tree
blown- down in the storm* was
cleared.
NELSON EAGLES
SHARE TROPHY
A $100' contribution to the 1938
Conquer Cancer Campaign from
the Nelson Fraternal Order of
Eagles has helped win the Jack
Diamond Trophy for- the F.O.E.
'in British Columbia.
It is the third successive year
the trophy has been awarded to
the" Fraternal Order of Eagles
in the province.
Their. contributions * this year
from all Aeries in the province
totalled $5336, the largest amount
yet-given by the order.
Chemcell Names
Vice-President
The appointment of Vincent T.
Anwyll as vice-president, Canadian
Chemical Company, Limited has
been announced by Robinson Ord,
president.
Mr. Anwyll has been with Chemcell since 1951, joining the company
as plant manager at Edmonton
during the early stages of plant
construction. He will be located at
the Chemcell offices in Montreal
from September. 1st.
Modern
Prescription
Service
Prompt, Courteous Service
While You Walt or
By Delivery
(Service Is Our Watchword)
Open 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Nelson Pharmacy
"Your Fortress of Health"
433 Josephine St.
.     PHONE 1203
Auto-Vue Drive-In
TRAIL, B.C.
HELD OVER TONIGHT
"THE TEN COMMANDMENTS"
Special Sunday Midnight Showing
Box Office Open 12:01 a.m.
MANY FRIENDS
ATTEND  FUNERAL
Funeral service for Alexander
McAuslin Dunsmore was held Saturday at Thompson Funeral Home
conducted by the Reverend Canon
W. J. Silverwood.
Many floral tributes decorated
the chapel for the service, which
was attended by many friend*
from South Slocan, Bonnington and
Cora Linn, a* well as members of
the Masonic order.
Hymns sung w,ere "The Old Rugged Cross",and "Abide With Me".
Pallbearer* were T,. Sadler, J.
Jerome, H. McDougall, H. James,'
J. Street and b. MacDonald.
Interment was made in the Masonic plot at Nelson Memorial
Park.
Fertilizer Act
Raises Plant
Food Content
A new Fertilizer Act, overhauling the old one and bringing regulations up to date, went Into effect
July 1.
The Act was approved by Parliament in April, 1957, and the regulations authorized by Governor in
Council in June of this year.
C. R. Phillips, of the Plant Products Division, Canada Department of Agriculture, explained that
one immediate result -will be tb
increase plant food content of some
fertilizers because the regulations
set a higher minimum standard.
This, he said, will tend to eliminate smaller volume grades of
lower analysis.
Special attention has been given
sale of fertilizers with a pesticide
content. It will be possible for a
farmer to obtain mixtures of fertilizers and pesticides, provided
they contain pesticides of the type
and quantity suitable for the purpose inteiided. Further, the farmer
must be supplied with labelling and
directions for use" of the product.
Fertilizer sales in Canada last
year reached 800,000 tons.
The new Act was published in
the Canada Gazette June 23.
British Cricket
LONDON   (Reuters)   —  Saturday's close-of-play cricket scores:
New Zealand 286 vs Scotland,
No play, rain.
Essex 268 vs Glamorgan.
Cambridge University 161 for 7
vs Oxford University.
Yorkshire vs Middlesex. No play,
rain.
Sussex 145; Hampshire 120 for 3.
Somerset 118; Northamptonshire
13 for 2.
Nottinghamshire   105  for 2   vs
Gloucestershire.
Lancashire 214 for 6;  vs Combined Services.
Kent 198 for 5 vs Surrey.
Worcestershire 148 vs Warwickshire.
Leicestershire 63 for 7 vs Derbyshire.
For Service
Call...
Kootenay Plumbing & Heating
Co. Ltd.
351 Baker St. Nelson, B C. Phone 666
A Complete Plumbing and Heating Service
Koolaree
Echoes
i—
HAPPY DAYS 8 -10
Well, Mom, we are on the home
stretcn and tne competition i* running high. There are two of
the cabins. The Klu Kluxers of
Cabin 2 and the Nootkas of Cabin
5 are tied in table marks and one
is leading tne other by two marks
ior the camp championship. We
Have sure got into a tine iix with a
five-way tie in volleyball.
We had our water sports and
Cabin Stangroom, pardon us, Cabin Five won. Alan Stangroom's
tnree firsts gave then that victory;
Dash: Stangroom, Charlton, Rog
Plunge ' for Distance; Little,
Graves, Ingledew.
Diving: stangroom, Piper Rogers.
Underwater Swim; Stangroom,
White, Rogers.
Koolaree Classic (Boat Race)
Cabins 5, 6 and. 7.
Total Point* Cabin 5 — 24.
The boat race just'about estab
lisned a new record tor the distance around the whart witn tne
jme being one minute seven seconds, several camns estaDlisneo. a
record into the home stretcn anu
men lost their sense of direction tor
ine loss. Of course, you will remember this is len to a boat and
no oars, hand paadles only, but it's
exciting ana lots ot tun.
As part of our waier safety program Hogers, Algar, Fraser, car-
roil and Adams uemonstrated tne
upset boat, bailed it anu got iiacK
in and towed it asnore for a new
record of eight minutes. This is
done to demonstrate that ali is not
iost when a boat upsets, if the occupants will Keep tneir neads. The
boy* have learned the Hoiger-Neii-
sen method of artificial respiration
while in camp ana had a demonstration of what not to do ln handling a boat, things that cause up
sets, fire etc.
The fight is on and the volleyball knocKout tournament, for tne
championship is on, and believe mc
they are giving no quarter. There
are some great rallies and every
cabin, plays it close. Cabin 3 has
knocked out Cabin 7; Cabin 5 has
knocked out two; Five gets the bye
and Five has now knocked out 3.
Those neighbors, Cabin Four and
Five are at it in 15-point game.
The score has gone to 13-all; 14-13,
14-14. Billy Williamson, the smallest guy in the cabin is serving and
he does it, scores those final two
points for the win and the volley-
call championship.
'-. Things are different this year. We
are actually on the second last day
and tonight we have our closing
chapel service, an important part
of our camp closing. So the fellows
have gathered at tne.campfire for
their final program and the conclusion of ."Around the World, in
Eighty Days"; Last "night wewere
left in Sicily, so we take if from
there and Cabin Three'presents the
■finale. Mike Burroughs in Freddy's
red hat and jacket is being taken
on a tour of Italy visiting Vesuvius,
Rome, Venice and finally dropping
him back in England.
The flares are alight and the
blanketed campers are now wending their way through the trails to
the Chapel: Here they receive the
farewell messages of the Counsellors, Rev. L. C. Hooper, Don
Daly, Gordon Service and Don
Armstrong. The Big Chief, Fred
Robins, also Addressed the boys
and exhorted them to be faithful to
their homes and church groups.
- So with a round of cocoa the final
night has been brought to a close.
v,S;boyiwinnally-
This is the last day the projects
are being completed. Cabin 2 is
finishing the new notice board,
Cabin five the new grease dump
and Cabin 7 the chapel seats. We
are grateful to Rev. Lloyd Hooper
for the amount of repair work he
has accomplished to lavatories, the
"Pop" and around the camp in
general. For a couple of days he
has had our good friend Jack Steed
helping him. Other times it has
been Mike Flood.  .
Well, here it is just before train
time and the boys are at the cairn
to receive the awards. Cabin 5
Nootkas under Bob Algar won the
Camp championship by four points
over Cabin two, winning Table
Tennis, Volleyball and- Water
Sports. Cabin two took the other
honors, winning Cabins, Softball,
and Field sports. Members of the
championship cpbin were: Bill
Armstrong, Geoff Gaylord, Gordon
Graves, Mike Ingledew, Don Murray, Don Parker Dean Smillie,
Alan Stangroom, and Bill Williamson.
Mike Ingledew was voted best
Camper for 1958 and received the
coveted award'of a hunting knife
presented each year by Ian Potts
of Courtney, a former Camp Counsellor.
After a two-hour wait for the
CPR, the camp is at rest until
the 86 junior campers arrive tomorrow morning.
Baseball Standings
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L
San Francisco .. 44 37
Milwaukee   42 36
St. Louis   39 38
Chicago   42 41
Philadelphia   .... 38 38
Pittsburgh     39 43
Cincinnati   37 41
Los Angeles   37 44
Pet Gbl
.543
.538
.506
.506
.500
.476
.474
.457
AMERICAN LEAGUE
New York  53
Detroit   40
Boston    '-.....
Kansas City
Chicago   39
Cleveland    39
Baltimore  : 37
.506 WA
40   40   .500 13
41 .481 14 '.'
42 .461 Mtt
44   .470 15V4
.468 15Me
Washington  ,'.....   35  46   .432   Wa
he Weather
Toronto   58 82
Winnipeg ,  62 81
Saskatoon   51 59  :
Calgary   43 56
Penticton  50 76
Vancouver  53 70
Victoria   52 71.
SMILING Midsummer Bonspiel Queen Fran Johnson is croWned Miss Nelson before 2000 spectators at the professional hockey game here Saturday. The pretty 16-
year-old L. V. Rogers High School student was crowned by retiring queen Jane Miller
while Mayor T. S. Shorthouse, right, looked on. Red-coaled Mounties flanked the royal
throne. Miss Nelson, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Johnson of 204 Chatham Street,
won out over queen candidates Betty Brown, 905 Fourth Street, and Joyce Stewart of
South Slocan.—Daily News photo.
NAMED JAYCEES CITIZEN OF THE YEAR Saturday hight was Dan F. McKay,
left, well-known sportsman whose work and plans for Sliver King Ski Hill have awakened a new interest in Nelson's potential as a year-round sports centre. Mr. McKay received the Jaycees citizen scroll, an engraved wallet "and key case, which were presented to him by'Mayor T. S. Shorthouse at the hockey game Saturday night. Mr.
McKay was voted top citizen over five others for his work for the betterment of the
community.—Daily News photo. ' ,
THIRD EVENT in the Midsummer Bonspiel was captured by the Norm Sm,ith rink
of Fort Saskatchewan, Alta. Pictured with his rink is Norm Smith, Ian Guess, Doug
Mulholland and Stuart Becker.
50 Hikers Leave for
Kokanee Glacier Park
A Centennial trek through Kokanee Glacier Park lo
popularize the scenic region 'eft here early Sunday with:
plans to enjoy the outdoor Wonders rather than hike over the
rocky summit In groups from
Nelson and Kaslo,
At least M men, women and children left here by car at 6 a.m. Sunday for the old Joker mill site near
Kaslo where it was otpected  the
garty would split into groups for
iking, fishing and berry picking,
Actual plan* for the trip were
sketchy but some spokesmen who
stayed behind said only a few men
would hike up to the 9500-foot Kokanee Glacier.       »
The trek is sponsored jointly, by
the Nelson Chamber of Commerce
and Kaslo Board of Trade,
They are attempting to show the
need for adequate access roads into the 10-square-mile area which
abounds in emerald lakes, fast-
flowing streams and towering
mountains.
Now only the hardiest, those who
can make their way through the
bush, withstand constant attack*
from mosquitoes and other insects*,
and climb steep slopes, can explore
the magnificent wilderness.
Original plans called for a two-
day trek to the top of the park by
groups from Nelson and Kaslo. But
one of the hikers- from Kaslo told
the Daily. News Sunday night he
had been informed the trip was off.
Others at Nelson said some hit
192 New Fires
Burn in B.C.
"Hie B.C. Forest Service reported Friday 192 new forest fires
broke out in the province between July 4 and 11.
The forest service report issued for the week ended July 11
showed the number of fires in
the province so far this year rose
to 1325 from 1133 the week before. Eleven of the newi fires were
in the Nelson Forest District
where so far this year there have
been 154 fires reported.
Cost of fighting the 1958 fire*
increased to $862,791 from $770,-
000 a week earlier.
Lightning strikes over the entire province have been blamed
for some of the new fires. But
the report said thunder showers
in the southern interior have
brought some relief to the fire
hazard in that area.
The Kamloops district has reported the largest number of fires
this year with 479. But cost of
fighting them, $92,000, ls far below the $697,649 spent on 296 fires
in the Prince George Forest District.
Fires in the Nelson area have
cost an.estimated $14,335, the
lowest figure from any of the
five forest districts in the pro'
vince.
The weather forecast calls for
moist air over entire B.C. early
thi* week.
FOURTH EVENT went to these Melfort, Sask., curlers—R. L. Mahan, Ed Trevethick,
H. Scott and fi. E. Mahan. (See other pictures on front and sport pages).
- '■' ■ 3j —Daily News photos.
RCAF Displays'
HereAugusli-4
Three major RCAF attractions are
in store for thousands of people
living in towns and cities in the interior of B.C. during the next two
months.
More than 200 airmen, 10 separate displays and the Royal Canadian Air Force Tactical Air Command Band from Edmonton, will
visit 16 major centres during that
Ume.
The 55-man band under direction
of flight Lieutenant Carl -Friberg
of Rossland will play public concerts in each of the communities
visited.
Another attraction will be a 100-
man drill team from the RCAF's
Manning Depot at St. John's, Quebec .
On display aboard three large
trailers will Be air force equipment
ranging from a cut-away section of
an Orenda engine, used to power
the CF-100 jet interceptor and, the
Velvet Glove air-to-air* guided missile.
Another display Willi include a
six-foot-high mechanical man that
actually walks and talks.
The RCAF unit will visit Trail
July 24 where the men will parade at City Hall and march to the
Trail arena.
On July 25, the display will move
to Rossland where a band concert
will be held in the Columbia arena.
Castlegar residents will see the
unit July 28 at the high school
grounds. On July 28 the display
travels to Cranbrook where the
band, will stage a concert at Rotary Park. Kimberley residents
will have an opportunity to see
the unit at Coronation Park on
July 29.
On July 30 the band will play
in City Park at Fernie before moving to Creston for an August-2
program at the Civic Centre
Grounds.
The unit will be in Nelson August
3 and 4 at Lakeside Park for a
concert and the Civic Centre for a
precision drill exhibition.
The RCAF team leaves the Kootenay-Boundary region after an
appearance at Grand Forks August 6 at City Park.
ers left here Friday and Saturday
and approached the summit from
this side.
Kokanee Glacier Park has-long
been In the eyes of Nelson citizens
who look to the region as a mecca
for tourists and city residents alike
who long for the splendor of the unbroken wilderness.
But their dream will not materialize unless passable roads are
constructed into the area.
Trees Fall
From Wind
At Kaslo
KASLO — High winds
played havoc in this small
Kootenay Lake community
Saturday night.
. Huge Cottoiiwood trees in Kaslo
Park were snapped off, branches
were blown across town streets, and
a $500 boat and motor were swept
out Into the lake.
Trees were blown across the road
between lardeau and Trout Lake.
A camper living in a tent in Kaslo Park narrowly missed Injury
when a Cottonwood fell across a
picnic table beside his.tent.
Winds ripped a tin roof from a
boathouse. Huge waves iapped up
onto the beach and carried away a
14-foot boat and outboard motor
valued at $500.
The boat, owned by H. Gallas of
Trail, was sighted overturned in
the lake about four miles south of
KaslQ Sunday but attempts by the
owner to locate it later failed.
RCMP at Nelson said Sunday
night they are looking for the owner
of a rowboat picked up In Kootenay
Lake Sunday morning by the crew
of M.V. Anscomb.
The boat contained fishing equipment and may have been torn from
its mooring during the storm. However, it was also thought possible
its occupant, Or occupants, could
have been thrown into the lake.
Telephone service at Kaslo was
knocked out Saturday night but
was restored several hours later.
Residents op the North Shore
were left in darkness briefly at
9 p.m. Saturday when a tree fell
over power lines. Small trees and
branches were blown down.
BONSPIEL WEEK
QUIET FOR POLICE
>. City police A "Sunday :Bon-
tpiel-Week was one of the order-
liest on record.
It was unusually aulet, one
officer said, as he reviewed the
week's activities.
Most of the 400 visitors here for
the mid-summer event left Saturday and Sunday almost as quickly
as they arrived one week ago.
But during their stay they enjoyed a maker Street breakfast,
beach party, four dances, golfing,
fishing trips and tours around the
city.
Even the weekend, expected to
be busy for the police department, was one of routine business
for the officers. There were only
two minor accidents reported.
Keep Your Eye on Classified!
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If You Are Planning
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A CENTENNIAL FLAG' was Nelson's gift to the rink which Came the farthest to
compete in the 14th annual Midsummer Bonspiel. Mayor T. S. Shorthouse presented
the flag to Gordon Henderson, who entered the 'spiel with a rink from Alliston, Ontario. Pictured left to right, are Mayor Shorthouse, Don Porteous of Nelson, 12-year-old
Carol Gibson, J. Hughson and Barney Gibson; back row—Florence Gibson, Gordon
Henderson, Eve Hughson and Eloise Henderson. Everyone, with the exception of the
Mayor and Mr. Porteous, who curled with the Ontario rink, is from Alliston.
—Daily News phofo.
Kimberley Couple Celebrate
60 Years of Married Life
KIMBERLEY - Mr. and Mrs.
Fred .Therriault of Lower Blarch-
mont marked the 60th anniversary
of their marriage July 4, 1898 at
Frenchtown, Mont. Queen Elizabeth, Premier John Diefenbaker
and Premier W. A. C. Bennett all
lent congratulatory messages.
He was born 86 years ago at
DESTRUCTIVE WINDS
Velocity of the spiralling winds
in a tornado or "twister" may
reach 400 miles an hour, or higher.
P.B.C.
is here!
CRANBROOK   —   A    member
when the Cranbrook Rotary Club
they" home'steaded VprppertyTtl SS^WAM^dS &**S
_. , _ , . . .,. I ttnuou6 member since, Fred Scott
Pincher Creek and remained there L^ installing officer ior $* m
47 years. Since its scale and their slate of the club,
retirement in 1951 they have lived \   C. S. Andrews became new presi-
l)ere ident, Cam Ferguson past presi-
_,'   ,        ... ...   ,     .Ident, Keith DeArmond vice-presi-
They have eight sons, Albert and | den^ j0hn Connolly, secretary,
Damse at Pincher, William here,; James Kraft treasurer, V. C.
Joseph at Vancouver, | Frank at | Brown, C. F. MacKinnon and B.
Moiese, Mont., EU and Henry ^f^L^^L^ S™ M°"
Charlo, Mont., and Hector al;Fair- ff^SS installa-
banks, Alaska, and' three daugn- tion luncheon yiere wivestei mem
ters, Ifrs. "Josei.. McKay of Jeffrey, j bers for whom program" chairman
Mrs. Altie Rutledge of Cowley, | Keith DeArmond arranged un-
'Alta. and Mrs. Zelma Deschamps '
of Kimberley, 23 grandchildren and
one great-grandchild.   ./•
Each was presented with a purse
and a watch at a reception at the
Moose Hall attended by 150 guests.
Their longtime friend," Harvey
Whitcoff of Pincher proposed the
toast to the couple, which opened
the evening's program of games
and dancing.
•Mam wt w*
DRY**
REMOVES
•OOSt: DANDftUFf
WILOROOT'S NEW
Push-
Button
Can
• NO WASTE • NO MESS
• QUICK • EASY TO USE
• JUST TOUCH THE BUTTON
FOR HANDSOME HAIR
fiet Wildroot Greom-Oil Gharfie
« Ae new Push-Button Con
Madawaska, N.B., and she was
born 85 years ago at Frenchtown,
Mont.  Following their  marriage
Cranbrook Rotary
Installs Officers
New Cominco Pott
For Davenport
TRAIL —. The appointment
of.,L>*H.'-Oa'v.en port to the
position of Supervisor, Materials Engineering Section was announced recently b'y J. V.
Rogers,' Manager, , Engineering
Division of. The Consolidated
Mining and Smelting Company.
The section* Is within the Engineering Development Department.
Born In- Edinburgh, Scotland,
Mr. .Davenport was educated in
England, where he earned a de-
greo'.ln'physlcal metallurgy. He
worked In England, Germany
and New Zealand before coming
to Canada In 1953. He joined
Cominco at Trail as a,development . engineer.
H* is a member of the Association of Professional Engineers of
B.C., the Institute of Metals, and
an associate of the Institution of
Metallurgists.
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Captain Morgan
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known to club members.
Winds Demolish
Reviewing Stand
KELOWNA (CP) - The reviewing stand from which Princess
Margaret was to officiate at the
opening of Okanagan Lake bridge
next week, was demolished by
heavy winds here Saturday after
noon..
The 15-by-80-foot structure, built
on .the bridge causeway, wa*
snapped up by the 60-mile-an-hour
wind and tossed into nearby Mill
Creek.
It was built according to security
regulations but had not been anchored to the hard surface road
way. Crews were working to replace the eight-foot-high structure.
It was the worst wind storm-experienced in central Okanagan in
the last two decades.
The $7,500,000 pontoon bridge
spanning Okanagan Lake between
Kelowna and'Westbank, will be officially opened by the princess next
Saturday.
Codling Moth
Threatens
Apple Crop
By J. E. SWALES -
District Horticulturist
Second brood codling moths are
expected to emerge in Kootenay
orchards before the end of July,
this season—at least two weeks
earlier than normal. Since first
brood worms were more prevalent than usual in most orchards,
the job of controlling second brood
moths can be expected to be more
difficult than usual. It is considered
likely that at least two DDT sprays
will be required to obtain satisfactory control of second brood
codling moths in many orchards
this season. i
During thinning operations many
growers have found that some
worms have already left the fruit,
while other worms have just entered the fruit. This would indicate that the emergence of second
brood moths will very likely be
spread out over the period extending from the end of this month to
about the end of August. Therefore, spray coverage will have to
be maintained during that period
in those orchards where first brood
worms were prevalent if severe
crop loss is to be prevented,
When second brood codUng
moths become active, a notice will
be carried in this paper and announced over . the CBC Farm
Broadcast. However, in order that
they may time sprays more accurately to conditions in their orchards it is suggested that apple
grower's place baited traps in their
trees to determine when second
brood codling moths are active.
Baited traps may be prepared
as follows: Slice Vt to Vt over-ripe
banana into a half pound tobacco
can or other suitable container,
add one tablespoon molasses, half
Jill the can with water and add one
teaspoon of yeast. This bait mixture will have to be renewed every
10 days or two weeks. After several days' time, if the banana
slices come to the surface of the
water, the mixture should be stirred and more yeast added to "activate" the bait. Another bait material which has been found almost
as satisfactory as the banana-molasses-yeast mixture is oil of sassafras. If this material is preferred,
it is suggested that 3 or 4 drops
of oil of sassafras be added to a
can half filled with water. This
bait will have to be rene'Wed at
about weekly intervals. Oil of sassafras may be obtained from any
drug store.
INSPECT FREQUENTLY
After the bait is prepared the
cans should be hung in the shade
in the upper portion of an apple
tree: At least six baited cans
should be hung in different trees in
various .parts of the orchard, but
concentrated in the area or areas
where jfirst brood cworms..vwere
■most prevalent. The cans should
be inspected frequently for the presence of codling moth,. Since only
a small percentage of the* moths
will be attracted to the bait, the
discovery of an average of one
moth or more per can would indicate that a DDT spray is warranted.
It is recommended that DDT.be
applied at the rate of 12 pounds
per acre in concentrate sprays, or
VA pounds per 100 gallons in dilute
sprays for eodling moth control,
As a precautionary measure, to
prevent the development of pinpoint apple scab later in the season, it would be advisable to add
ziram to one of the second brood
codling moth control sprays. It is
recommended that ziram be applied at the rate of five pounds per
acre in concentrate sprays, or one
pound per 100 gallons in dilute
sprays.
In orchards where bud moth was
a problem earlier in the season
and where satisfactory control o:
the insect was not obtained at that
time, it is recommended that malathion be added to the first second-
brood codling moth control sprajt.
When applied at recommended
rates, malathion will also control
aphids and mites in this district.
Trail'ile's Son
On Mew Bridge
KELOWNA (CP) - Twenty-four-
year-old Tom* Lauriente, who graduated from University of British
Columbia two years ago, will be
one of the proudest men in B.C,
when Princess Margaret, officially
opens the Okanagan bridge next
Saturday. ■»-'
He has been project engineer in
charge .of erecting thes steel portions of the big bridge.
In the two years since his graduation, Lauriente, son of an Italian
immigrant of Trail, has been project engineer on the Oak Street
bridge in Vancouver and two highway spans pear Golden, B.C. He
also has handled various major
street construction projects for
Dominion Bridge Company and his
last big job before the Kelowna
bridge was project engineer for the
Pacific Great Eastern Railway
near Fort St. John.
KASLO — A resident of Kaslo
for over 20 years, A. W. Bavington
died at the age of 46.
Mr. Bavington, born in Toronto
and a resident thereuntil 1936 when
he came to B.C., arrived in Kaslo
in 1937. He took a job with the Kaslo Kootenaian newspaper-, later
working at Websters General
Store. In 1946, on the death of Mr.
Webster, Mr. Bavington took over
the managership of the store.
He was married to Elsie Rouleau
in 1938. Surviving, besides his wife,
are a son, David and a daughter,
Barbara.
Two Raging Forest Fires
Brought Under Control
KELOWNA (CP) - More than
930 acres of grassland and scrub
timber were blackened in two raging forest fires before they were
brought under control Sunday.
The flames reached a point on
Black Knight Mountain only 214
miles east of Rutland before being
stopped.
At Peachland, 15 miles south of
Kelowna, 30 acres of non-merchantable timber were destroyed.
The fire which started in the slab
pile of the Trautman Garroway
Mill, was brought under control
late Saturday night.
The flames were fanned by hurricane force winds which at times
reached a 60-mile-an-hour peak.
Bert Hewlett, local forest
ranger, was unable to estimate
damage from the two range fires
but did not expect it to be heavy.
Most of the damage area had been
logged several year* ago.
The most serious personal loss
was suffered by Mr. and Mrs.
Shotaro Yamaoka, a Japanese
couple who. lost their modest
four-room house and garage on
Black Knight Mountain.
The fire ignited a gasoline tank
near the house, and the tank exploded, shooting flames 200 feet.
Fanned by a strong south wind,
the fire quickly spread to scrub
timber. Within two hours it swept
up the mountain and was less than
500 feet from the mountain peak
when the wind suddenly shifted to
the north.
This stopped the flames spreading over the mountain top into a
rich forestry area where Black
Mountain irrigation dam is also
located
Flames narrowly missed the
home of Walter Stranaghan on one
of the oldest, farms in the area
and threatened the Kelowna ski
bowl chalet. About 100 volunteers
from Rutland, and Kelowna helped
B.C. forestry crews.
Wins Contract
For Highway
CRANBROOK - Current British
Columbia Government News reports the contract for surfacing
new highway in Cranbrook electoral district has /been awarded Perini Pacific Ltd., of Vancouver for
$248 664. The contract covers a
total of slightly more than 20 miles
of the Southern Transprovincial
Highway, made up of 7.65 miles
along Moyie Lake, 9.40 miles from
Irishman Creek to Aldridge and
3.20 miles from Goatfell to CUrzon
Junction.
The work will require a new asphalt mixing plant which the Perini Company is expectting from
the factory this week. Meanwhile
work is going ahead at Ryan where
a crew is crushing gravel for the
southern part of the contract. Gravel-has been crushed in recent
weeks at the Tipton gravel pit
near Green Bay for the work on
the northern part of the contract.
Keep Your Eye on Classified!
Kaslo Nan
Dies al 46
WICKS WANTS
STRIKE INQUIRY
VANCOUVER (CP) - Labor
Minister Lyle Wicks announced Saturday night he has recommended
to the B.C. cabinet that an industrial inquiry commission be set up
in an effort to end the prolonged
lockout of B.C. pipefitters and
plumbers.
The lockout began two months
ago after the union voted to strike
but* refused to set a date.
The*'union rejected a majority
conciliation board recommendation
which would have given them a
slx-per-cent wage increase over
their present $2.60 an hour. They
demanded a 60-cent-an-hour increase.
Discuss Diamond
Mine's Future
LONDON (CP) - Percy B. Williamson of Kelowna, B.C., prin.
cipal stockholder in the $100,000,-
000 Mwadui diamond mine he inherited from his Quebec - born
brother John, arrived here Saturday to discuss the future of the
mine.
The De Beers Consolidated
Mines Corporation has claimed it
had acquired a major interest in
the mine, but the sale was denied
by another stockholder, I. C.
Chopra, Tanganayika political figure who was legal adviser to the
late Dr. Williamson.
Chopra met Williamson at the
airport. Williamson would make
no comment but Chopra said:
"There is no further development yet. Mr. Williamson and I
will have meetings over the weekend."
When Dr. John Williamson died
Jan. 8 at 52, he willed his BOO
shares in the limited liability operation to his brother Percy, and
two sisters, Matilda of St. Sauveur,
Que., and Mrs. Alex Millar of
London.
Percy Williamson had acquired
300 other shares during his brother's lifetime. Chopra holds 100.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 14, 1958 — 3
Smaller Apple, Bigger
Pear Crop Forecast
An apple crop smaller than the
bumper harvest of 1957 is forecast
for the Kootenay, Lower Arrow
Lakes and Creston in a horticultural newsletter by J. E. Swales,
distirct horticulturist. A larger
pear and crabapple harvest is anticipated, however.
Mr. Swales estimated the 1958
apple crop in the Creston valley
at 301,000 boxes, compared to 423,-
646 boxes picked last year. In the
Kootenay and Lower Arrow Lakes
orchards are expected to yield 10,-
700 boxes, compared to last year's
crop of 14,069.
The harvest estimate, with the
1958 figures shown first, follows:
Creston Valley—Crabapples, 500
boxes and 388 boxes; pears, 14,000
boxes and 11,764 boxes.
Kootenay and Lower Arrow
Lakes—Crabapples, 300 boxes and
237 boxes; pears, 2500 boxes and
1519 boxes.
In his report Mr. Swales said the
weather has remained unsettled
since the last report. Heavy showers have fallen in some sections of
the district. A hail storm which
struck the Harrop-Procter area on
June 27 is reported to have been
so severe that fruit trees and small
fruits, as well as other plants, were
torn to shreds. Damage to buildings has also been reported. While
rain has fallen around the fringe
of the Valley almost daily, little
precipitation has been experienced
in Creston Valley orchards. However, the rain has come close
enough to keep the cherry growers
uneasy*. Rains in the Renata area
are reported to have caused considerable damage to cherries.
Strawberry picking is finished.
As indicated in the last report, the
strawberry crop was disappointing.
It is estimated that well over 5000
crates of strawberries  were lost
due to fruit rot and soft berries.
Less than 10,000 crates were sold
on the fresh fruit market. The remainder of the strawberry crop,
equivalent to approximately 10,000
crates, was frozen at the Wynndel
plant.
Raspberries are moving in volume. In general, the fruit is not of
its usual good quality and lacks
size in those patches affected by
the "die back condition referred
to in the last report. On the other
hand, some growers are harvesting
top quality fruit.
BINGS GOOD
Bing cherries are being picked
in Creston Valley and should be
moving in carload lots within the
next few days. The fruit sized up
better than expected in most orchards and, if the weather remains
dry during the picking season, the
crop should easily reach previous
estimates. Rains are reported to
have caused a loss of at least 3000
crates of cherries at Renata.
Apples and other tree fruits continue to size very well. Disease and
insect pests are fairly well under
control, although second-brood codling moths are expected to be a
problem. •
New Denver to See
Historic Caravan
NEW DENVER - Sponsored by
British Columbia Centennial. Committee, the Historic Caravan will
be in New Denver July 17. It will
be on display by the fire hall on
Sixth Street.
The caravan will include historic
museum exhibits of B. C. and features from our historic past, a
collection of data taken from the
Provincial Archives ahd the
Museum.
LET US SHOW YOU
HOW MODERN COMMUNICATIONS
CAN MAKE MONEY FOR
YOUR BUSINESS
Whether it's a message across the office or across
the country, successful business transactions
depend on the speed with which instructions are
received and implemented.
Don't handicap your office and sales staff with
obsolete communications.  We supply  a wide
ELECTRONIC
SECRETARY
Answers your phone with a recorded
message; asks the caUer to leave his
message, then records reply. This small, -
compact uplt is ideal for most offices;
enables them to offer 24-hour service.
TELETYPE
Provides instant and accurate inter-city
typewritten comrnunlcation between branch offices. Large or small firms find Teletype indispensable for production control,
shipping control, sales reports, etc.
PBX
Private Branch Exchange. Available .in
capacities from 10 local lines and three
trunks to custom equipment providing
hundreds, of locals and many trunks.
Eliminates walking from office to office;
essential for smooth control of incoming
and outgoing calls.
LOUD-SPEAKING
TELEPHONE
Enables user to move about the room
or take notes; and talk on the phone at
the same time. Operates by miniature
microphone and small loud-speaker.
Perfect for local or long distance conference calls. Converts instantly to conventional telephone.
BRITISH   COLUMBIA
variety of equipment, suitable for any size business—a partial selection is shown below. One of
our representatives would be glad to show you
how modern communications can help you build
an even more profitable business. Just call our
Business Office.
SECRETARIAL
ANSWERING UNITS
To speed calls and avoid calls going
astray, you'll find these extremely useful.
When required, one person can answer
up to ten designated phones in a single
department of your business.
KEY PHONES
Can be used to make and receive calls
over more than one line. A call on one line
can be held while another Is answered.
LD.P.
Integrated Data Processing. IDP Is automation of paper work—an advanced
-system combining the speed and efficiency of Teletype, leased lines and
modern business machines. The time
your clerical staff saves can more than
pay for the cost of the system.
CALL COLLECT AND
ZENITH SERVICES
Subscribing to these Long Distance
services Is like establishing branch
offices at low cost. They enable out-of-
town customers to call you by Long
Distance, to order or get Information,
at no cost to them. Both are "proven
ways to build sales and goodwill.
TELEPHONE   COHPAMY
"Communication* for Modern Business"
a—
L^L.
 —■■—
Nflaott latlg :taa     ImefpTS*.± N*w'
• . Established AprU 22. 1902.
Interior British Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper
Published every morning except Sunday and statutory
holidays by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY
LIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.
Authorized u Second Class Mail, Post Office Deportment, Ottawa,
MEMBER Ot   1'HE AUDI! BUREAU 01 CIRCULATIONS,
MEMBER Oil   i'HIi CANADIAN PRESS.
The Canadian Press, ia exclusively entitled to Uie use for republication of til new*
dispatches credited to it oi to 1'he Associated Press or Reuters in this paper,
and also the local news published therein.
~ Monday, July 14, 19S8 '.
12 Ways to Keep Holidays Happy
Deaths caused by drowning, fire
and other-than-traffic accidents may
climb as high as 100 this summer,
warns the All Canada Insurance Federation.
The federation says that summer
accidents and drownings are on the
upswing, and offer these suggestions
ior forthcoming weekends and holidays.
1. Always. put out fuel-burning
lamps and stoves when you
leave the cottage.
2. Keep kerosene, gasoline and
other inflammable fluids in well-
marked salety eons with pour-
spouts.
3. Use outdoor fires sparingly. Always be doubly sure they are
out before leaving them.
4. See that all boats are in seaworthy condition; never use a
boat with an excess of motor
power.
5. Never overload a boat; lt is Safer
to underload.
6. In poor weather or unfamiliar
waters, keep the boat close to
shore.
7. If your boat overturns, stay with
it. Never attempt to swim for
shore.
8. Don't swim alone; be certain that
children are accompanied at all
times.
9. Very small children should be
kept away irom docks.
10. Even .22 bullets can travel one
mile; when using them ior target
practice, make sure you have a
safe backdrop.
11. Keep a .freshly-stocked first aid
kit in the car, at the cottage or
on cruising boats. Learn how to
administer artificial respiration.
12. When you arrive in a new area,
iind out where a doctor can be
reached quickly.
Constructive Action Demanded
To End Freedomite Terror
It is one thing for the eastern Canadian
press to be taken in, as it often is, by Sons
of Freedom sham demonstrations against
the education of their children in New Denver school. It is quite another when well-
meaning B.C. groups who know the facts,
or have the opportunity to find and assess
them for themselves, fall prey to the same
errors,
Efforts of the Sons of Freedom to have
their children "freed" from New Denver
were endorsed this week by the local Quakers and the Fellowship of Reconciliation, a
city pacifist group. Trouble is, the "efforts"
of the Sons of Freedom are not directed at
having their children freed from -New Denver.
They can gain that any time they agree-
to send their children to school for an education. The children are held under the same
legislation which permits B.C.—and every
other Canadian province — to take away
the children of any parents who refuse consistently to educate them.
The Freedomites want us only to waive
the law of the province for their special ends.
Their activities — such as the recent demonstration in the office of Miss Ruby McKay,
provincial superintendent of child welfare-
are the publicity-seeking activities of ham
actors.
They are not the expression of frustrated mother love. Any Freedomite parent
can visit his or her child on visiting days
simply by obtaining a ground, pass to the
school. They prefer to stand outside the
fence and wail. "Government papers," they
say, lead to conscription.
Papers such as marriage licences and
birth registrations apparently do. But
drivers' licences apparently don't, to judge
by the number of Freedomite drivers. And
Pump Virtuoso
Have you ever played a bicycle pump like
a trombone, by blowing across the outlet and
moving the handle in and out? Versatile
musician Spike Hughes has found yet another use for a pump.
He has written a special overture for next
month's Midsummer Madness concert at the
Albert Hall — an inebriated cross between
the Meistersingers and the Pomp and Circumstance Marches, called the Masterdrink-
ers or Port and Circumference.
An obligato is provided by the regular
popping of champagne corks. But actual
bottles cannot be used, as their pitch is unreliable. Corks must pop on the notes G and
D only.
family allowance cheques apparently don't
to judge by the number—all of them—cashed.
Better than these well-meaning but naive
resolutions would be some positive action
by Victoria and Ottawa, along lines described this week by Prof. W. G. Dixon, director of University of B.C.'s school of social
work. He said adminitsratiOn was the major
problem at the moment to overcome the
Freedomites' feeling of being threatened
which makes them retaliate.
He called for a commission ion Doukhobor affairs. "There is no administrative organization within government to deal with
this major problem," -he told a citizenship
seminar at the Banff School of Fine Arts.
In-view of the long history of Freedomite problems and outright terrorism, that's
an amazing omission. .One that ought to be
corrected immediately.
The problem is certainly serious enough
for a section of government to be devoting
full time to it.—Vancouver Sun.
Letters to The   .
Editor
.Letters ta tne Editor on any topic of
genuine Interest are welcome If they ire
brief accurate and fair. No letter will be
Inserted in whole, or In part, except over
the signature and address of the writer.
Unsolicited correspondence cannot be returned.
Wants Explanation
To the Editor:
Sir—Without prejudice or sentimentality
will you, or sc-meone, please explain by what
right does our government keep the Doukhobor children at the school in New Denver
during the Summer holidays? If it is because of the difficulty in getting them back
again, should not that problem be dealt with
when the time comes?
Have not these normal Canadian children the privilege, under our democratic
laws, to spend their holidays at their homes,
such being the wish of their parents?
A number of people, I believe, would
like-to be enlightened on this point.
GRETCHEN GIBSON
Nelson.
Editor's note: An editorial in the Vancouver Sun published July 7 gives adequate
explanation to the queries contained In this
letter.
»y Eft SIMON
Canadian Press Staff Writer
ThS course of events ln the Lebanese;
crisis offer* fresh evidence that contradictions are the rule rather than the exception
in Middle Eastern! politics.   '
To the profound disappointment of President Camille Chamoun, the United Nations
observer group investigating his claim that.
Ganlal Abdel Nasser's United Arab Republic was feeding the Lebanese rebellion with
"massive intervention" has been discounting
his accusations. ,
Paradoxically, the unfavorable report
offers Chamoun his best chance of bringing
the rebellion under control.
FACTS OVERLOOKED
Chamoun's feeling that the UN observers
based their conclusions on insufficient evidence is shared by some diplomats in Lon
don and Washington, who are anxious about
the future of the West's staunch -A-ab ally.
Critics of the UN, report argue that it
takes no account of aid furnished to the rebel
before the observers arrived and makes no
reference to thi violent anti-Chamoun propaganda blaring incessantly from Nasser's radio stations in Cairo and Damascus.
The involved nature.of the Lebanese dispute makes it difficult to assess the validity
of Chamoun's case, although it is generally
accepted that Nasser played a considerable
part in fanning the flames of the domestic
issues that led to the outbreak of the fighting.
AN OUT FOR ALL
But the crucial effect of the observers'
negative report is that it cuts the ground
from under Chamoun's efforts to widen the
scope of the crisis by calling pn his Western
allies for military aid.
The ominou* grouping' of United State*
naval units and British troops just offstage,
which threatened to create a second Suez in
the tiny republic, is freed of any obligation
to intervene. The worried rulers of the anti-
Nasser Arab federation of Iraq and Jordan
are absolved of the necessity of ordering
their troops into action against brother Arabs.
At the same time,' Nasser is offered an
opportunity to pull in his horns. Foreign intervention, still possible if he continues to
make trouble in Lebanon, would force him to
seek the unwelcome presence of Russian
forces and nullify his recent efforts to establish his neutrality in the East-West conflict.
FIGHTING POINTLESS
Meanwhile, much of the steam has gone
out of the dispute in Lebanon itself. Chamoun, previously content to sit back and to
threaten his foes with the armed might of
his Western allies, has shown signs of backing down by indicating that he does not intend to seek reelection when his term runs
out in September.
The rebels, united chiefly in their demand for the president's immediate resignation, have little left to fight for. No serious
peace overtures have yet emerged from
either, side, but neither appears capable of
carrying on-hostilities for long without outside
help.
It remains far from clear whether Chamoun's successors will preserve the country's attachment to the West. The issue is
only one* of several couses for Chamoun's unpopularity and it remains doubtful that Lebanon's rulers would be willing to sacrifice
prosperity contingent on Western trade for
the questionable benefits of Arab nationalism.
PACT QUESTIONED
In the private view of some Western diplomats, there would be no harm in some
loosening of the tie. The ironclad guarantees
of the Eisenhower doctrine to bring U. S.
forces to the aid the Beirut, regime against
any Communist threat may have outlived
their usefulness:
Chamoun's readiness to use the doctrine
against his domestic foes, Cnmimrist or
otherwise, has given U. S. diplomats cause
to seek a less rigid defence agreement-with
their turbulent little ally.
KhrMihchev Declares There Will Be .
No Summit Meet if West
Talks About Satellites
- MOSCOW (AP) - Soviet Premier Khrushchev saia Saturday
rtussia still wants a summit conference, but "it wouid be better not
to meet" if the West insist* on
talking aoout Soviet satellite
countries.
He aiso rejected Western proposals for control of disarmament.
"We will speak about contrbls
Uncanny, Isn't It?
I have never yet been able to get a
Woirian to explain satisfactorily how she
seems to instinctively know:
That a woman she has just met is not
to be trusted.
How much a woman-paid for a dress
without seeing the price tag.
What every woman in a crowded room is
wearing without seeing"to pay any attention
at all.
What is being said in a conversation near
her, even though she hardly knows the
couple.
That the two woman who are being utterly charming to each other are actually at
dagger's point.
That a woman's hair is not its natural
color.
That a woman is lying about her age —
even though a man would. readily accept as
fact the,age she is going by.
They'll Do It Every Time        ■—       By Jimmy Hatlo
1THEN MEPHEW
MILDEW/WHO'S
WELL OFF IN HIS
OWN RIGHT. 60T
M4RRIED UNK
SPi*MN6 FOR A
VERy L4R6E
WEDDING GIFT-
.   TODAY'S BIBLE
THOUGHT
He Spoke of the temple of hit
Mdv.-JOlm t'.tl.
We know that if the temple Of
our bodies be destroyed and burled we have a Spiritual body awaiting us, different wholly in kind yet
recognizable, indestructible.
fiiwJL 2bL
..uiGOT/'NCrTHERM --—-
NEPHEW,QRULLER~ { «>£»©
A POOR RELATION. ^ ,>pj-
WHEN QRUU.ER
GOT HITCHED
WHAT DID HE
GET? GIVE A
LOOKy«..
H«NX/IND>tHATljO
HAT TIP TO MRS.
WiwAm FREy.
ZtiflQUEENSTOS
CUEVEUljID 18,
 a.
	
Not many women get their ideal
husband. They take what they
Can get, but usually they never
see one they'd like any better.
_■
Sack Goes Back
.oo.uneater
ny itsJii CAivUOmj
KOiW, l»pi — ine sack is on
ils way oacx to covering potatoes
lusitau oi the temiiune lOrm.
J. ilia * tile uesi. guens on uie
eve oi ntM wee*» nailan Ih-
siliun utoi0„ei' s auiuuui snowed in jumie.
not an uie experts will commit uittilSeives, uiu, uose Who
wm say wohiuiny curves ale
uuuiiu iu iiyit. tne>r way out ut
uie uug. ijid ji-ajiciii hlb'.i ladjiiuii
li-usct, <j'ii ueitjliillueu to leaa me
way. .
i>uJiing as extreme as form-
ciiufeUig, tiuiics oi idLcd jAietjeiu*
t.v> uuuiLca its e^pbCieu.
but uie jjttun,s is mat the human Shape Win emerge ii'Mil tins
year s uiapes ana lOias wmi
cioater ciaiuy tnan last year.
ine beitiess, siiuing waisulne
niio'ii. sun oe Wlul us. iilie ousom
niky rise and nemnnes waver,
mi chances are lhat most iamp-
Mldue snapts win ue mouitieu to
approximate the booy lines.
,,i.m, j/ivci-jtitAiiON
Toe designers are now in a final phase ot frantic preparation.
Princess Giovanna carraciola
(Carosai, coutunere of ambasba-
dors' wives and an original member of the Florence group, is ensconced in soft woois and brilliant colors.
"We Italians," the princes*
says, "are improvisors rather
than organizers. We prefer to
make miracles! Above all we art
individualists and lt is almost impossible to get us all to agree."
This individualism partially accounts for the internal discord
which has plagued the Italian fashion industry since its inception.
It also makes generalizing about
Italian design an extremely hazardous game.
But one common protest seems
to unite all the designers, It's
that the so-called sack has been
overdone and used to cover an
assortment' of Ills.
It won't be entirely abandoned,
but it will have some drastic
changes.
LOSES ONLY RESIDENT
DOUGLAS, Ark. (AP) - This
Southeast Arkansas town has lost
its only resident. Lee Edward
Whitney,, 84, who moved here in
1898, has gone to Sandwich, 111.,
to live with relatives. The town
had been incorporated back In it*
more populous days, and the
charter has not been formally revoked.
when there is complete trust," he
said, and .indicated such trust
might be a long time coming.
Khrushchev addressed a rally
in honor of the visiting Czech
president, Adtonin Novotny, after
returning from an East German
tour. ■ '
"How could 'one propose that
Uie Communist* should agree to
discuss with the capitalists how to
liquidate Socialist order In a
given state?" Khrushchev asked.
BETTER NOT TO MEET
"If such questions were to be
discussed, It would bt better not
to meet because the Soviet attitude would not change," the So>
viet premier added.
But, he said, "it is a libej to
say that the Soviet Union has lost
interest in a summit conference.
It regarded a summit conference
as a step toward the easing of in.
ternatlonal tension."
He predicted such a conference
would be held."if-not with present Western leaders, then with
their successors."
As for disarmament, he said,
the Soviet Union would not expose it* people and territory to
foreign Insoection or control.
"We don't let any outside persons ipto our sanctuary," he said.
To allow inspection controls
without trust, he added, "would
no longer be control, but intelligence work aimed at finding out
the weak points of the enemy in
order to begin aggressln. . .
When we see nothing is nlanned
against our country and those of
the Socialist camp we'll be ready
to open our doors."
Orangemen Mark
Glorious Mil
BELFAST (Reuters) — More
than 100,000 Orangemen proudly
tramped through the streets Saturday, celebrating the "Glorious
12th," while every available policeman stood by to cope with
possible violence.
Leading a strong international
contingent in Belfast's main parade was Col. P. Ashmore Kidd
of Kingston, Ont., imperial grand
president of the Grand Orange
Council Of the World, and the
Tobermorey Flute Band from
Toronto.
The "Glorious 12th" marks the
anniversary of the Battle of the
Boyne in which William of Orange, backed mainly by Protestants, defeated exiled King James
and his Roman Catholic supporters and secured himself on the
British throne as William III.
In the little town of Dungiven
in t)ie hills of Londonderry, feeling has been running high for the
last week and local Catholics
have boycotted Protestant shopkeepers because an Orange parade with police escort recently
marched down the main street.
With another Orange parade
taking place hundreds of extra police were drafted into the area.
Summer Lull Hovers Over
US. Business Horizon
By WALTER BREEDE Jr.
NE\*f YORK (AP)-The U.S.
economy settled down Into a
summer lull last week, But while
most lines loafed along in a mid-
July torpor, signs that could
mean a fall upturn flickered On
the business horizon.
Commerce Secretary Sinclair
Weeks ticked off some of these
favorable indicator* in his first
press conference since the recession began. They included:
Industrial production on the upbeat.
Employment totals and hours
worked.* week in U.S. manufacturing industries on the rise
again...
Consumers and businessmen
more confident than they've been
in some time.
Weeks volunteered this hopeful
forecast: There won't be much
change in the economy in the
summer vacation months, but "a
definite upswing seems in the
cards for fall."
SHARES OPTIMISM
Wall Street seemed to share his
optimism. Halted momentarily b
a cut in the FOrd dividend, the
stock market came' back strong
and finished with the averages at
a high for the year.
Defence contract* made news
again last week. Boeing Airplane
Company received contracts totalling more than $320,500,000 for
jet bombers and parts; Douglas
Aircraft got a $12,613,800 award
for rocket* for jet fighter planes.
New car sales have picked up
a bit in recent weeks but not as
much as dealers would like. Autos
are still the softest spot in the
consumer spending pictur*.
The latest government statistics
tell the story: Total retail spending last month came within one
per Ceht of matching June, 1957,
but auto sale* were down 30 per
cent.
WEATHERVANE
Many Observer* say that what
happen* to business as a whole
next fall will depend heavily on
the auto.industry's 1959 models.
If new 1959 cars go Over, business will improve with a bang in
the Steel, coal, nickel, aluminum,
copper, glass, rubber and textile*
industries, to name a few. More
jobs and bigger payrolls will
channel moro cash into retail
stores.
Steel makers, pondering the
possibility of a price increase
next month, are keeping their
fingers crossed; auto manufacturers and dealers are biting
Iheir nails. The new cars that vill
appear in dealers' showrooms in
a couple of months, were -designed two ' years ago. They're
bigger and loaded with more
chrome than this year's models.
Has the public's taste undergone
a Change? Detroit and Pittsburgh
wish they knew..
LONG WAYfTOWOR K_ Electrician, nuke their
way to top, of tallest chimney In Czechoslovakia to complete
lighting installation* atop concrete work* In Banska, Bystrica,
Chief Paull Says Island
Not B.C/s To Give Away
VANCOUVER (CP)-An Indian
chief says the British Columbia
government doesn't own the island it plans to give Princess
Margaret and he has asked
Prime Minister Diefenbaker to
advise the princess not to accept
it.
Chief Andy Paull, president of
the North American Indian Brotherhood, says in an open letter to
Mr. Diefenbaker that acceptance
of the gift by Princess Margaret
"would not be in keeping with
the dignity and solemnity of Her
Highness, in that the B.C. government does not own any of the
islands in B.C.—nor do they own
Canadians Not
Slighted Says
Mins. Fairclough
EDMONTON .(CP) - Citizenship Minister Ellen Fairclough
said Friday night a newspaper
report that, the Canadian delegation had been "slighted" at ceremonies inaugurating the British
West indies federation was not
true.
Mrs. Fairclough said the report,
published in Canada, was written
"from malice of very high order."
Addressing closing convention
sessions of the Canadian Federation of Business and Professional
Women's Clubs, the minister said
the Canadian delegation In Trinidad ".assured officials that it was
a false report."
Mrs. Fairclough was one of a
three-member official Canadian
delegation attending the federation',* inauguration ceremonies
earlier this summer.
She .said the report that Canadians had been slighted at the
ceremony, was "difficult to take
when we were in a land far from
home and among strangers, and
then have the apple cart upset at
the end by such, maliciousness."
all that now is known as British
Columbia."
The provincial government announced Friday lt will offer thi
princess 540-acre Portland Island,
near the southern end of Vancouver Island, at a ceremony
Monday. Recreation Minister
Earle C. Westwood said that if
she accepts, the island will be
developed as a provincial marine
park.
CAN'T MAKE GIFT
Chief Paull's letter says that
the B.C. government is not in a
position to make the gift because
the land is guaranteed to the Indians under the British North
America Act.
"The B.C. government has persistently refused to comply with
the proclamation of King George
III in 1763 . . . wherein His Majesty proclaimed that the native
Indians must be compensated for
their lands and that they should
meet the Indians in council for
the extinguishment of the native
title—and' this has never been
done."
Chief Paull says another decree
that the Indians must receive
compensation was made in 1858-
by Queen Victoria.
DEATHS
By The Canadian Press
New York — James F. McDonnell, 78, father of Mrs. Henry
Ford II, and brother-in-law of former atomic energy commissioner
Thomas E. Murray.
Guelph, Ortt. — Mrs. L. E. Loree,
77, mother of Michigan State Hospital's head surgeon Dr. Joseph
Loree. \
London — Eugene Malik, 20, son
of Soviet ambassador Jacob Malik.
DESTROY CARAVAN
ORAN, Algeria (AP) — French
artillery almost wiped out a camel-
caravan hauling explosives and
medical supplies from Morocco to
Algej-lan Nationalist rebels Friday, French headquarters here reported today.
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About the Town
PHONE 1844
Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Disney of
the North Shore have as guests Mr.
Disney's parents, Mr. and Mrs. E.
S. Disney of Revelstoke, also C. B.
McCarthy and son Charles.
* *  *
Mrs. Earl M. Stromme of the
North Shore and Mrs. W. J. Beatty,
704 Baker Street, have returned
from Tompkins, Sask., where they
attended the funeral of their
mother, Mrs. Sarah McGregor.
* *  *
After spending a holiday at the
Coast, C. H. Jones and Carol have
returned to their home on Tenth
Street, Mjchael who accompanied
his father and sister to Vancouver
TbsidkcMft.
fiif. dkuuuL Idhssdsx
"SCATTER" DOILIES
So popular, so useful — every
hostess adores these charming
little "scatter" doilies.
Airy fern design — ideal for modern or traditional setting. Pattern
769: crochet directions for $% inch
square, 10% round, 9>4xl3 oblong
In No. 50 cotton.
Send THIRTY FIVE CENTS ln
coins (stamps cannot be accepted)
for this pattern to Laura Wheeler,
NDN, 60 Front St., W., Toronto,
Ont. Print plainly Pattern Number,
your Name and Address.
As a bonus, two complete patterns are printed right in our 1958
Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Book.
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to order—easy fascinating handwork for yourself, your home, gifts
bazaar items. Send 25 cents for
your copy of this book today!
has remained as guest of his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Jones,
Sr,
*.„,'*♦
Mr. .and Mrs. J. Habegard, 609
Fourth Street, leave tomorrow for
the Coast where they-will visit Mr,
Habegard's brother, A. Habegard
of Vancouver for a week and their
son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. L. Olson and family of Haney,
formerly of Nelson.
Silver Dollars
Won by Cousins
Taking part in Nelson's centennial parade paid off for five cousins, the youngest cousin only two
years of age.
Little Avie Bouillet, tiny entrant
in the parade was presented with a
silver dollar as were his four cousins Heather Scott and Linda Lou,
Darvin and Ava Schneider. Avie
was a rootin' tootin' cowboy, miniature size. Heather was an old-
fashioned girl and Ava was the
same, while Linda Lou was decked
out as Queen Victoria and Darvin
put in an appearance as an Indian.
All the children received silver dollars for their appearance in the
parade.
All the youngsters are grandchildren of Mr. and Mrs. Bennie
Schneider, 1117 Front Street.
Margaret Arrives
In Light Blue
VICTORIA (CP) - Princess
Margaret, the most fashionable
member of the Royal Family,
successfully mixed two dress
styles on her arrival in British
Columbia Saturday.
Dressed in light powder blue
from her feathered cap to her
pumps, the princess wore a
matching trapeze - line coat and a
matching Empire-line dress.
The full - length coat, in textured silk shantung, was narrow
across the shoulders and had an
unpressed inverted pleat starting
at the back of the low neckline,
billowing out to full width at the
hemline just below the knee.
.The dress was snugly fitted to
her figure and made her appear
taller than her five feet.
The small hat of matching
light blue feathers fitted like a
wig over her dark brown short
le'ngt hhair and was finished with
a blue satin bow.
SHOPPING HELP
HARROGATE, England (CP) -
Tinned foods will soon be in cans
of uniform size throughout the
world, it was stated at the conference of the International Standards
Organization in this Yorkshire town.
HOME HAZARDS
Fatal accidents in the home,
such as accidental falls, number
about 2,100 a year in Canada.
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Get a NIAGARA loan -and quickly tool
LOANS
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10 YOUR COTTAGE!
Makes vacation time
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Victory Smiles at Bonspiel
HAPPY EXPRESSIONS on faces of winners of the women's consolation event indicate these Victoria curlers will return home with happy 'memories of Nelson Midsummer Bonspiel. From left to right the spielers are: Skip Vi LeRoy, third Jean Perlette,
second Donna Taylor and lead Kathie Trevelyan,
WREATHED in smiles are winners of the women's primary event at Nelson's Midsummer Bonspiel championship playoffs Saturday. This is the Snowdon rink from Warner, Alta., with Skip M. Snowdon, left, third E. Reid, second E. Orcutt and lead M.
Webb on the extreme right.
"She Was a Peach" Says
Canal Man of Queen
By ROBERT RICE
Canadian Press Staff Writer
MASSENA, N.Y. (CP) - Edward (Barney) Barlow, 63, met
the Queen when she sailed
through the Panama Canal a few
years ago, and he hopes to surprise her when she visits the St.
Lawrence Seaway next summer.
"She was a peach," recalled
Barney Barlow, who spent 42
years on the Panama Canal before coming here to prepare for
the opening of the two United
States locks in the 135 - mile
waterway from Montreal to Lake
Ontario.
His job was to train the 60-
man American crew needed to
work the locks day and night
during the navigation season
while 14-foot-draught ships use
part of the seaway. Full 27-foot-
draught navigation will start in
April, 1959.
TREASURES  PICTURE
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operational superintendent of
Miraflores locks in the Panama
CaHal paused at a picture of himself, Queen Elizabeth and Prince
Philip.
"She was a peach," he repeated. ''Gracious and charming.
And the prince . . . Well, sir, he
asked questions that nobody but
a born sailor would ask."
A tall, tanned mah with energy
to burn, Barney Barlow met Canadian, and American seaway officials when they visited the Panama Canal on a familiarization
tour four years ago. They persuaded him to come to this town
across the river from Cornwall,
Ont., to advise on lock operation.
"This is a much bigger job,"
he said during an interview, comparing the 50-mile Panama system to the seven-lock, four canal
seaway.
"But it's pretty well the same
kind of job as at Panama."
LINKS TWO OCEANS
The Panama Canal links the
Atlantic and Pacific oceans with
six locks, raising ships 85 feet up
three twinned locks at one end
to enter Gatun Lake and then
lowering them the same distance
at the other end.
"It works like a staircase at
each end," explained the grey-
haired canal expert who went to
Panama on a baseball barnstorming tour in 1916 and stayed until
this year.
He said ships are directed
through the Panama Canal locks
by a giant arrow, lighted at night,
which changes Uke a clock hand
to signal approaching vessels.
Seaway signals will be by means
of traffic lights much like those
used at street intersections.
Locomotives running on rails
alongside the Panama locks are
used, to pull ships through the
locks, but on the seaway, ships
will use their own engines. Panama locks are 110 feet wide and
,1,000 feet long, compared with
the seaway lock dimensions of 80
feet wide, and 860 feet long.
Last year 50,000,000 tons of
cargo were moved through the
Panama Canal, compared with
13,000,000 tons being moved
through the present narrow, shallow Canadian canals which will
be replaced by the seaway.
Cargo tonnage through the seaway is expected to be about
25,000,000 tons at first, growing
to 50,000,000 tons by 1968.  •
H93
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 14,19S8 — I
Dazzling Ball for Quints
Fifteenth Birthday Party
By ALFONSO MAURI
BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) -
The Diligent! quintuplets are planning a mammoth 15th birthday
party and their entry into adult
life along five different paths.
The Diligenti quints have made
it known they want, to be different
from each other.   '
But this week the quints return
home from their five different
schools to greet 500 guests from
three continents for their first big
public appearance together.
For the three girls, the dazzling
ball at their millionaire father's
palatial home will mean their
first white nylon tulle gowns and
for the two hoys, their first tuxedos, the end of short pants and
boyhood.
Textile tycoon Franco Diligenti
carefully planned the separate
lives of his brood on July 15, 1943,
after recovering from the shock of
learning he was the father of five
new children.
ALL SWORE SILENCE
Diligenti swore the household
to secrecy and registered the
births of Franco, Carlos, Maria
Christina, Maria Fernanda an d
Maria Esther at five different
public offices.
For eight,months the secret
Was sacred, but the news finally
leaked out when a deliveryman
became curious about the family's
monthly consumption of 220 quarts
of milk.
"I didn't Want a bunch of maniacs rushing around my house
flashing bulbs in my babies'
faces," the Argentine industrialist
said. "I wanted them to lead nor.
tnal lives.
"They had to forget that they
were different  from  other   chil-
Mamie Honor Guest
Ottawa Luncheon
OTTAWA (CP) - Mamie Eisenhower, wearing one of the new
fashions, was guest of honor at a
luncheon given by Mrs. Diefenbaker at the prime minister's residence.
The wife of the visiting president
wore a blue and green printed silk
dress with a "harem" hemline to
its full skirt — a hemline turned up
all round in Oriental style.
Twenty women attended the luncheon at 24'Sussex Drive — mostly
wives, of cabinet ministers and
other dignitaries who at the time
were at an all-male luncheon given
by the Canadian government across
the Ottawa River in Quebec province.
Mrs. John Foster Dulles, wife of
the U.S. state secretary, and Mrs.
Livingstone .Merchant, wife of the
U.S. ambassador to Canada, also
were present.
They lunched on jellied consomme, cheese souffle, chicken
salad and strawberries, and had
coffee on a terrace.
Mrs. Diefenbaker wore a pale
pink linen dress* and white shoes
with" small boats.
Crunchy Cookies
With Nuts, Dates
Make 60 cookies with this tasty
recipe — if you like nuts and dates:
2    cups sweetened prepared
cereal flakes
Wt cups sifted flour
Vt teaspoon baking soda
Vt cup soft margarine or butter
Vi cup granulated sugar
Vt cup brown sugar
1    egg
1 . teaspoon vanilla
Vt cup chopped walnuts. '
Vt cup dates, cut
Crush flakes slightly. Sift flour,
soda and salt. Blend margarine and
sugar and add egg and vanilla;
beat well. Add sifted dry ingredients gradually, mixing well. Stir in
nutmeats and dates. Roll teaspoon-
fuls of dough in flakes, place on Ungreased baking sheets. Bake in
moderate oven (375 degrees) about
12 minutes. Cool slightly 'before removing from baking sheets.
Try This on a Hot
Day in Summer
When it's very hot, the usual
drinks seem to miss that dry
spot in your throat. So when
you're really thirsty take a tip
from the Spanish, who serve a
slaker that consists of two ounces
of dry fino or medium amontil-
lado sherry, with a couple of ice
cubes in a highball glass filled
with soda, in which you squeeze
a wedge of lemon, lime or orange,
depending on your hanker of the
moment. It's an easy drink to
make,' but more imoprtantly, this
Spanish masterpiece quenches
thirst. -
he
dren,"  Diligenti  said  when
split them up.
Not only do the teen-agers display different personalities at
different British - run boarding
schools but their appearances
and modes of dress also are dissimilar.
MORE LIKE FRIENDS
When we.go to the movies we
could be taken for just a group
of friends," auburn-haired Maria
Esther -said.
The only fair-haired member of
the five, Maria Esther is called
"the lawyer" by the family and
shows tendencies of becoming -
sharp businesswoman.
Her dark - haired sister, Maria
Christina, looks forward to a
career as an architect.
Maria Fernanda plans to become a language teacher. All the
children speak fluent EngUsh,
Spanish, French, Italian and German.
The girls' two brothers also are
different from each other. Six
foot-tall Franco is the shyest of
the quints and favors introspective studies. He plans to study
economics.
His shorter, but far more extrovert brother Carlos is fond of
sports and is set to attend a school
of engineering.
But studies will be farthest
from their minds next Saturday
when their big party is held. It
was delayed four days for the
convenience of guests.
BROTHER IN CANADA
Among those attending will be
their half brother living in Canada
and their two sisters, one living in
Italy where Mr. and Mrs. Diligenti
were born, the other living in
Buenos Aires.
The mother of. 10 children, Including triplets as well as the
quints. Mrs. Diligenti always has
seemed unaffected by her bevy
of babies. During the quints' birth,
she was attended only by a midwife.
Originally publicity shy, her
husband now makes no fuss over
his children since all his planning
has paid off.
'The kids have developed their
own personalities," he says
proudly.
WADING POOLS
AND
BEACH TOYS
AT
JjuuunatLL
Japanese Wives
Welcome Electric
Rice Cooker
TOKYO (AP) - Two million
Japanese women have been
emancipated from tending a hot
rice pot. Thousands more are
clamoring for the same freedom.
, Every Japanese housewife
used to be a slave to the steaming pot at least an hour a day.
It had been that way for ages.
Then, in December, 1955, Tokyo
Shibaura Electric Company
brought out an automatic rice
cooker.
Demand for the gadget spread
rapidly. Monthly output rose from
3,000 to 150,000 but demand is
ahead of this.
The white porcelain cooker
costs about $10. The housewife
merely washes her rice, fills the
pot and turns the switch. Half an
hour later, the rice is done and
the heat shuts off automatically.
Wynndel Notes
WYNNDEL - Mr. and Mr*. J.
Gilders and baby of Calgary are
visiting Mrs. Gilders, Sr., and other
relatives in Wynndel.
Mr. and Mrs. L. Abbott and
Grant left for Spokane at the beginning of the week. Mrs. Abbott
and Grant will remain in Spokane
for a few days.
New Denver
NEW DENVER - Jack Smallenburg is in Calgary where he has
been attending the Calgary Stampede and visiting friends and rela
tives;
After visiting in New Denver
Mrs. Nels Nordstrom and children
Cheryl and Lisa Shawn left by
plane for their home, in Calgary
While here they were guests of
Mrs. Nordstrom's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Glen A. Emory and family.
Nurse-in-training at St. Paul's
Hospital in Vancouver, Miss Lucy
Hoshino is spending a month's holiday with her mother, Mrs. H. Hoshino.
'A Vancouver guest at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Clever is
Mrs. W. Kilfedder of Vancouver.
M. Leask. and daughter Carol of
Cranbrook are guests of Mr.
Leask's brother and sister-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Leask.
Mrs. Susan Flint and two grandchildren, Beverley and Bobby
Steenhoff, have returned from Kimberley where they spent a holiday
visiting relatives.
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Medical research aims at
a longer, happier life
for you and your children
Thanks to untiring  research,  many  dangeroue
diseases are under control today. A number of
other "killers", however, are still unsolved
, problems.
In the over-all research effort being made to solve
them, the medical schools of Canadian universitiei
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To help strengthen and develop their research programs, the Life Insurance Companies in Canada
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years 107 Fellowships of this nature, amounting to
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t-1589
 6 ~ NEUON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JUIY 14, TMt
Nothing To Retract,
Says Senator Farris
OTTAWA (CP) - Senator J. W.
deB. Farris said Saturday* he has
nothing to retract In a Senate
statement in which he referred to
Commons member Douglas Jung
a* "this Chinaman."
Senator Farris has been under
criticism in the Commons for
using the phrase ln commenting
on a statement made last week
ln Paris by Mr. Jung, first Commons member of Chinese Extraction, who sits for Vancouver Centre.
"I have nothing to retract,"
Senator Farris said in a statement. He said Mr. Jung himself,
in a Paris interview, had referred
to himself as Chinese.
"What is the difference?" the
senator said. "I would have referred to any person Of any other
race as I did about Mr. Jung."
CLAIMED BIAS
Mr. Jung, Vancouver lawyer,
was quoted in Pari* as
saying that Canadian delegations'
to Russia are hand-picked and
biased while Russian delegations
to Canada often cannot see the
people or places they wish to see.
Mr. Jung, 34, is national pres-
London
Move
Clippies
Smartly
LONDON (AP) - Britain's Negro discriminaiton problem is before the House of Commons in a
bill making it illegal to apply the
color bar Tn danee halls, restaur,
ant* or hotels.
Immigrant Negroes from British
colonies have become more or less
accustomed to .cold-shoulder treat,
ment in public places as their
numbers increased sharply in
recent years. But three specifii
recent incidents have arousei
widespread criticism by press am
public.
A Wolverhampton ballroom refused to accept customers designated as colored. In Birmingham,
a ballroom barred non-white men
who appeared without female
partners. A London hotel declined
room* to three American Negro
women who had a reservation,
PAKISTANIS TOO
Not only Negroes but Pakistanis
and visitors from India often have
trouble finding a place to live.
To most Britons the incident*
are all the more embarrassing
because the United State* ha*
been shown no mercy here in discussion of its segregation problem
—especially the Little Rock situation.
The color problem lay well under vthe surface in Britain until
a few month* ago, when a business slump and an influx of poor
West Indians anxious for job*
brought it fully into view.
In some places even labor unions, which pride themselves on
their left- of -centre views, have
sought to Impose limitations on
the employment of Negroes in such
jobs as bus conductors.
The Communist Daily Worker
seized on the Wolverhampton ballroom color bar as a cause celebre.
REFUSE OFFER
The Worker reported that Ray
Ellington, American Negro orchestra leader who became popular
here during the Second World war,
turned down an offer to play at
the ballroom.
So has Johnny Dankworth, who
leads perhaps the .best of the British modern jazz bands and is
married to Cleo Laine, a half-
West Indian singer and actress.
The House of Commons bill
against discrimination was introduced, as a private measure. This
means members may vote according to their consciences, with no
party recommendation,
The sponsor is Laborite John
Baird of Wolverhampton. He gave
no details of the penalties which
might be invoked.
Baird says many workers in the
industrial Midlands wear West Indian immigrants will cause firing*.
"It may be necessary to restrict
immigration to this country," he
said. "You won't solve the problem by segregation. The only way
is by education among both races
and by seeing there is much more
—mt
Look in the section in which your
birthday comes and find yhat your
outlook is, according to the stars.
For Tuesday, July IS, 1958
MARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)
— A friendly Mars aspect, plus
good ray* from Venus and Uranus,
give you many advantages now.
Aim for the top.
APRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus) -
Delicate matters, home and charity affairs; artistry, science under
stimulating influences. You can
make fresh strides, gains in your
specific work; also in new undertakings.
MAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini) -
Some benefic Mercury rays still
linger from recent auspicious configurations. You will increase your
chance* for. gains and favors by
using your finest artistry, showmanship and glamor. Try!
JUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)-
Friendly and encouraging aspects
for the most part — especially for
personal, family and home interest*. Be thoughtful; aid good causes where you can, but don't overtax yourself. •    ' ,
JULY 24 to AUGUST 28 (Leo) -
Not much help from the sun now,
but you can make appreciable
headway under benefic Venu* and
Uranus aspects. Emphasize system, initiative, cooperation.
AUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23
(Vifgo) — Mild rays. However,
with clever management, a smart
allocation of tasks and the maintenance-of an even tempo, you can
readily do well.
SEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER 23
.   .. ,  (Libra) — Venus' excellent position
welfare work carried out among should stimulate your artistry and
ident of the Young Progressive
Conservative Association.
Senator Farris, in a Speech
Thursday, said in tttt upper
chamber:
"What right ha* this Chinaman
got to represent the Canadian
people?"
Mr. Jung wa* ln Paris it a
NATO Association youth leaders'
conference.*
In the Common* Friday Liberal leader Perrson — to whose
party Senator Farris belongs—
tried to come to the defence of
Mr. Jung but was ruled out 61
order. Prime Minister Diefenbaker indicated disapproval. So
did JIarold Winch of ths CCF.
The senator said he did
not consider Mr. Pearson was
correct in stating in the Commons that "every member would
read the senator's remarks with
regret and disapproval."
DIVERTED ATTENTION
. He said he regretted that hit
remarks had diverted attention
from "really serious" statements
attributed to Mr. Jung,
He said he regarded the Commons member's statement's as
most unfair to Canada.
"Mr. Jung," he said, "purporting to speak as a Canadian representative attending an international assembly made the kind of
charges about the Canadian government authorities, past and
present, that Canadians have justifiably made against the Russians.
"In particular, he said that our
youths delegates sent to Russia
by Canada and the United States
are primed by their governments
to be biased beforehand against
Russia, and that Russian visitors
to Canada never got the chance
to see the places and meet the
people they would like to see and
meet;
IRON CURTAIN
"In effect, he suggest* a Canadian-American iron curtain. He is
saying that as between Russia
and the American nations it ls a
case of the pot calling the kettle
black, without indicating which is
the pot and which the kettle. I do
not question the loyalty of the
BRT Propose
Union With
Conductors
CLEVELAND'<AP)-In a move
intended to "sOlidify ill conductors ind brakemen Of the United
States and Canada into one
force," the Brotherhood of Rail-
road Trainmen has proposed consolidation with the Order of Railway COnducto/S and Brakemen.
The proposal wa* revealed Saturday in the Tralnmfcn News, official publication of the brotherhood, which published the text Of
a telegram tent by W. P. Kennedy, brotherhood president, to
the recent convention of the conductors and brakemen at Miami
Beach, Fla.
• The proposal I* to be considered by the new officers of the
conductors and brakemen, who
take office Aug. l. The order ha*
50,000 to 60,ooo members.
The 218,000 - member brotherhood includes brakemen, con'
ductors, dining car stewards and
switchmen among its member*.
The head of the brotherhood
said in his telegram:
"These are perilous time* for
the railroad workers in this country and the outlook for the future
is" rather dismal. Railroad employment ie at its lowest point in
82 years, and economists tell us
it will continue to-shrink. We will
soon be faced with wholesale consolidations which will further
harass the workers."
Chinese citizens of Canada or the
citizenship rights of any Canadian
of whatever race.
"I do not consider that the fact
that China is a Communist nation and closely affiliated with
Russia is an issue in this discussion and in my opinion should not
reflect on the loyalty of our Chi;
nese citizens. What I was driving
at in my remarks in the Senate
was to question the right of any
person to speak for Canada in a
way seriously reflecting on the
conduct of our Canadian authorities in relation to Russia. If
Mr. Jung was correctly reported
and unless he has real proof of
his assertions, he is unworthy of
the respect and confidence the
Canadian people have placed in
him."
Always Goldfine Has
Sought Good Friends
CENTENNIAL FLAGS were presented to Ontario rinks by Mayor T. S. Shorthouse
during Nelson's Midsummer Bonspiel last week. Zeke Cameron of Kenora, Ont., left,
is pictured shaking hands wilh Mayor Shorthouse after receiving his flag. Beside him
are his wife, Margaret, and Jane Meikle, also of Kenora—Dally News photo.
Your Individual
HOROSCOPE
Draktv
the colored people."
your instinctive knowledge of hand
ling delicate situations. Accent your
natural fairness and balance and
you should have a satisfactory day,
OCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22
(Scorpio) — Favorable rays should
stimulate your practicality, artistry, your scientific leanings — all
your good qualities, in fact. One admonition, however: do control emotions.
NOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER
21 (Sagittarius) — Sensible care advised in handling money,.Investing
and in advising others about finances or contract*. Otherwise, you
should win appreciable returns for
sincere, intelligent efforts' and management.
DECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20
(Capricorn) — Your astute judgment and instinctive know-how
should help you win lucrative rewards now. Be conscientious.
JANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19
(Aquarius) — A favorable Uranus
aspect. You can benefit if you are
up to requirements. Don't dally
over unessentials or waste time
with frivolous, pointless activities.
Be cheerful but purposeful.
FEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20
(Pisces)— Grand rays favor unique
and delicate matters. Be alert to
new'opportunlties.
YOU BORN TODAY are usually
of a sensitive, retiring nature, tenacious, honorable, purposeful and
roundly talented. You can do many
things In a colorful, entertaining
way. Never force Issues, however,
and avoid abruptness in dealing
with others. Time-wasting ana
brooding can wreck your many fine
intentions and chances of achievement, so be alert to these tendencies. Birthdate: Rembrandt, famed
Dutch painter,
Ceylon Seeks
Way To End
Red Rioting
COLOMBO, Ceylon (AP) - The
Ceylonese cabinet has approved
a four-point plan to try to end
three months of communal rioting
in this island nation by allowing
some use of the Tamil language,
a reliable source said Saturday.
The government estimates 158
persons have been killed in
clashes between the 2,000,000 Hindus who speak Tamil and the
6,000,000 Buddhists who speak
Sinhalese.
In April Premier S. R. W.
Bandaranaike cancelled a pact
with the predominantely Tamil
Federalist party to allow some
official use of Tamil. The Tamils
then began a civil disobedience
campaign which developed into
violence.
Bandaranaike is expected to
ask his party to approve the plan
next Tuesday. The plan would offer these concessions to the Tamils:
Higher education in Tamil, the
right to answer questions on public service examinations in Tamil,'
the right to correspond with the
government in Tamil and the
right to conduct legal affairs in
Tamil - speaking north and east
Ceylon in the Tamil language.
Rocketed Camera
Parachuted Back
CHURCHILL, Man, (CP) - A
Nike-Cajun rocket fired here Saturday reached an altitude -of 71
miles and the camera It carried
returned to earth by parachute.
The rocket was the latest fired in
International Geophysical Year
operations at this Hudsan Bay base
610 miles north of Winnipeg. The
camera took pictures of the horizon.
STILL AT LARGE
AMHERST, N.S. (CP) - Two
men who escaped Saturday from
the Cumberland County jail here
were.still at large Sunday.
Edward Bardell Adamson, 17, of
Victoria, B.C., and Edgar Oran
Phinney, 24, of Sackville, N.B.,' apparently slippe dover the eight-foot-
high prison wall, topped with barbed wire.
Adamson was serving six months
for car theft.
Coexistence Peace Hope
For World - Khrushchev
LONDON (Reuters) - Soviet
Premier Khrushchev said Saturday
the only way the world can escape war is to follow a policy of
coexistence, Moscow radio reported.
Khrushchev said in a Moscow
speech that there are leaders in
the West who reject coexistence,
though the only alternative is to
go to war. Khrushchev returned
to Moscow Friday from the East
German Communist party congress in Berlin.
"The Socialist camp does not
need war to win. It is convinced
that in peaceful competition it
will come out triumphant."
A summit meeting was bound
to end in faflure if the Western
leaders insisted, on including in
the agenda questions dealing with
the internal affairs of the East
European socialist countries.
They could not expect that Soviet leaders, being Communists,
would discuss with them around
a table how to liquidate socialism in these countries.
They now used the legal and
justified punishment of Imre
Nagy and the other leaders of the
Hungarian counter-revolution to
sabotage a summit meeting.
Keep Your Eye on Classified!
By SAUL PETT
BOSTON (AP)-What kind of a
man is Bernard Goldfine?
He is a big man in textiles, a
fast man with a buck or a name
or a vicuna or case of whisky.
He is a busy man, always rush-
ilhg, always late, always in crisis,
Life in the Goldfine bowl Is frenetic and frequently complicated
by the king fish stumbling over
his own ego.
For example, If the ordinary individual wanted a particular U.S.
government pamphlet, Wi get it
Simply by writing to the government printing office and enclosing
25 cents. Not Goldfine.
He'd call friends, a U.S. senator or couple of congressmen.
They'd have a secretary mail it
to him and Goldfine, always grateful, always generous, would send
the secretary a ease bf 12-year-
old whisky.
NEEDS FRIENDS
Why the roundabout way? Because Gol4flne needs to be reminded he has friends and one
proof of friendship is a favor.
Some men crave money; others, power, still others, fame.
Goldfine may crave all three but
the recurring motif In thll man,
running through his life in alternately comic and pathetic tones,
is his need to be liked. Not just
liked, but well' liked.
Ever mindful that he was born
poor in Russia, that his father
was a peddler, that his own education stopped early, that he once
shined shoes for a living. Bernard Goldfine wants to be told what
a fine, self-made man he is.
WON'T SEE TV ALONE
He seems always to heed people around Wm. He can't even
enjoy watching television alone,
say his sons Solomon and Horace
Maxwell.
If Goldfine grows dissastisfled
with a lawyer or an accountant,
he doesn't fire him; he hires another. H* hires lawyers by the
platoon. He seems to find greater
security in numbers. It is also
true he frequently needs lawyers.
"He is freouently in litieatlon,"
says one of the lawyers. "But the
odd thing about Mr. B is that invariably he is the defendant, not
the plantlff. He himself rarely
sues."
Why is he *ued *o often? Several lawyers and business friends
aKree on the answer.
SHREWD DYNAMO
They said that in many ways
Bernard Goldfine is an excellent
businessman, that he kept six textile mill* flourishing ln New Eng
land when everyone else In the
business fled south, that he is a
shrewd trader, good bargainer, a
dynamo of endless energy, a man
with vision about trends in textiles or real estate, an excellent
salesman and a man not afraid
to gamble on an investment.
But, these source* agreed, Bernard Goldfine is also a sloppy businessman by today's standard*.
He knows little about organization. His is largely a one - man
business. Details, paperwork and
the demands of governmental bureaucracy on business escape him.
Goldfine does not travel except
for business.' In business, be is
everywhere at once. He hires the
key personnel, arranges financing, handles his own labor relations (which are good) and still
handles sales to his older customers.
The Goldfine* take frequent
weekends at the seashore but they
can hardly be called vacations.
Invariably there is a buyer of
cloth or seller of yarn around.
"Mr. B loves the tumult of business," says Solomon Goldfine.
"He'd die without It."
NATURAL MEDICINE
The medical value of quinine,
made from the bark of the cinchona tree, was known in Peru
centuries ago.
Wi tdrallttmint II n»l publlihri tl dliploy!*
br ih> llquoi (Mini "mil oi by thi
"witwmit it Wjjjj mglM.
'INSIDE. VIEW  OF   LIFE— This giant plastic model of a human cell wai ihowa at American Medical Association
convention in San Francisco. It I* 21 feet in diameter and 12 feet high—more than a million Ume* larger ..than tha bailo unit of life.
*,*
 ■ "*-y
'
IT/5
Edmonton's Gerv ais Curlers
Capture Bonspiel Championship
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 14, 1958 — 7
2000 See Lethbridge Cop Thriller
8'6 From Nelson Maple Leaf Stars
SECOND EVENT WINNERS in Nelson's 14th annual Midsummer Bonspiel are pictured here. Gord Hacking, E. Kerkhoff, R. Kinniburgh and E. O'Donnell of Taber, Alta.,
knocked out Jack Thompson of Swift Current, Sask., in the final game. Other winners
on front page and page two.—Daily News pholo.
British Milers
Wonder Man
BASEBALL SCORES
First
SUNDAY
National League
7   0
-3   7   1
1 S SATURDAY
UDSet   AUSSla Milwau^^^iM UJU-3 10 1
WfWW*     te-mw.s.m tttlll  Jt" 1* 000 0S0 OOX—5    7 0   IJ,lll
Spahn, Rushs (o), Conley (71 and[ omcago
Crandail;  Antonelli and   Schmiut.
L ■ Spahn. HRs: Milwaukee—Adcock U), Aaron (16); San Fran-
LONDON    (CP)   —  Australia's cisco—Cepeda (18). .
wonder miler   Herb Elliott   was •itsburg.i     ...  W«
upset in the half - mile race by St. Louis 001 000 10x-2 6i o
Britain's Brian Hewson and Can-|   Friena, Gross (8), Facei (8) and]    _^ _  ._.  _..
ada's Mike Agostini placed third Foiles;' Mizell  and Landntn.  J>jjUlll lJ( ,,'J,Ce mi uross (8) taw
in a photo-finish to the 100-yard Friend. \ l8) and Hail; Brosnan, Jackson
dash event in the British Amateur, Phila       400 010.025-12 16 z (s)  j,aine  (i>j  iviaoe  (8) anu
Athletic Association track and held Chicago ........  20U 000 000- 2 a oj mi     wnaritB (a). w - Blaat-
champlonships here Saturday.      I   Semproch  and Upatt,   unj". ourn; L-jacKson". HRs; Pgn-Hail
Hewson spurted in the last   100 Henry (2), Nichols (8), Hobbiei (9    "    ^ StL-Boyer (17),
yards to nip Mike Rawson, an- and S. Taylor;   L - Drott.   HR:  "   »    4)>
other Briton, by about five yards Chicago - Banks (23). I m m m_5 w 0
ift^tSSt. ^ffi.JfflTS ana1,dBU&r^.iPWP:>rree^) — ,9, andjog.
000 110 000-2
...v«0„ Oilll 111 OOX—3    .
ivieytr, Hearn (6) rarreil (8)
anu aawaiSKi; Briggs ana S, Taylor. L-ivieyer. hrt: un-waiis (la).
rirSk
rjuSburgh       001 030 211-10 12 1
Jt.   bows        010 40u uu— 8 12 3
Rayuon, Porterfield (4) Black
uau; Miner, uiel (7)McCormicK
in) anu scnmmt. W—McCormick.
Li—juinson, nits: San rrancisco
—Jao.onsiu (Si) Cepeaa (W).
100 000 000—1  6 0
tmcago im ooo uox—t Io u
Simmons, Farreu (8i ana j^o-
pata, bawatssi \ii; hiiiman and
neeman. b—Simmons,
secona:
Pittsourgh        500 020 010-8 13 2
St. Louis 2il 200 0(10—6 U 0
Witi, Porterfieiu (1) Biacxgurn
(3) smiih (4) Law (i) and roues,
''i"T"nrhir«"" W    'tlaissv   I   ' Fnr   tacuaniei,  MaDe   (1)  StoDbs  (a),
«'7-"-."t'  »,- -v-,.!(6), Landis (12); Boston-Piersall run.  W-Law.  L-Mobbs .arts:
Robbie Bnghtwell, was second in (6)  Malzone (7). t-iusburgh—Mazeroski   (10);   St.
21.7 seconds. Detroit .   000 030 00-3 7 0 Louis-Landrith (2).
Vancouver's Bo b   Reid   took Washington .       010 000 00-1 9 0 Second:
""""' "' " "'" """" '"'*'' '    <"-<-—I—    iiMtn   19)    Hneft.1 umcinm
shop, was tlmea in 1:9.0.0 to uuuei rapine    .01   anu   „UDV     ..
the listed British record for 880 Kipp. HRs: Cincinnati—Dropo (2)
yards. Four other British marks' Los Angeles — Neal (15).
fell in the international meet which AMERICAN LEAGUE
Is a dress rehearsal for the British    pij-st
Empire Games opening Friday at Chicago      ...,  400 200 1Q0-7 11 0 second
Cardiff, Wales. Boston        ...    301 000 000-4 9 ll riiiu.ueiphia
Although Agostim, whose home Donovan and'Lollar; Sisler,
Is in Vancouver, registered a 9.9 smith (1), Wall (5), Kiely (9) and
clocking identical to those of Berberet; White (9). L - Smith,
giant Nigerian Jimmy Omagbemi HRs: Chicago - Lollar 2, (12),
and New Zealand's Maurice Rae,!Landls tm
the photo placed him third. Om-:   second
' agbemi took the title and Rae was Chicago 500 302 003—13 12 0
second.  'Boston '    212 000 000- 5 11 2
Agostini withdrew from the 220-    Shaw, Staley (4)   and   Battey,
yaVd   final   because   of   muscle Wilson, Fornieles  (1), Kiely  (5)
strain. The race was   w 0 n   by        —  "
Britain's Dave Segal in 21.4 sec.
onds. Another British runner
fourth place in the pole vault final.I wehmeier, Morgan (3), Hoeft
He was one of four competitors to1 (8) and Wilson; Griggs, Valen-
clear 13 feet, six inches, but was;tinettl (5), Clevenger (8) and
placed fourth because of his num- Courtney. W-Morgan; L - Griggs,
ber of misses during the vaulting. !hr*; Detroit - Virgil (2).
Agostini and Reid were the only    called after 8 innings, rain.
Canadians competing in the meet. Cleveland 000 000 000- 0 3 0
  I New York     220 000 06x—10 9 0
HEADS PACKERS _ **   *     "~~    ""
KELOWNA (CP)-Jack O'Reilly
was returned as Kelowna Packers'
hockey coach here Thursday night
by unanimous vote- of confidence
from the newly elected slate of officers
Ferrarese, Bell (3), Score (5),
Mossi (8) and Brown; Monroe,
Ditmar (5) and Howard. W - Ditmar; L - Ferrarese. HRs: New
STork — Carey 2 (11).
Kansas City at Baltimore, ppd,
rain
PONT MISS!!
The Ball Game of the Year
IOWA
GHOSTS
NELSON
OUTLAWS
TUESDAY
JULY 15
6:30 p.m.
Civic Centre Ground*
ADULTS 60c
- CHILDREN 25c
"AMERICA'S GREATEST SPORT SHOW"
INVITING   ALL
LITTLE LEAGUERS and PONY LEAGUERS
Buddirjg Ball Players Included
Monday, July 14 - Pancake Jamboree
Game Time 5:30 - Algars vs Vijo's
followed by
Free. Vijo Pancakes
and Refreshments
''.'. Sponsored by
Ellison Milling and Elevator Co. Ltd.
/'      * ■','.>.      With Assistance#
Diamond Grill W. H. Malkin Co. Ltd.
Palm Dairies Ltd. Kootenay Valley
Inland Natural Ga* Co.     Co-Operative Dairy
uncinnati        ' 010 000 010—2 7 0
Los Angeles      100 000 llx—3 4 0
wuxiiaii and .Burgess; liiauoin-
baroo, babine (9) ana Pignatano.
Vv—(jianomoardo. HRs; bos Angeles—uiiuam (2) Pignatano (4)
Bilko (6).
Second:
Chicago        000 130 000 0-4  7 0
New   iork     022 000 000 1-5 13 0
Moore, Quaiters (3) Keegan (5)
anu Loilar; Shantz, Kucks (5)
Duren (9) and Howard. W—Duren.
L—Keegan. HRs: Chicago—Landis (13).
First:
Cincinnati 000 000 000—0 3 0
Los Angeles      010 000 20x—3 6 0
Newcombe, Lawrence (8) and|
Bailey; Williams, Labine (9) and
Roseboro. W — Williams. L-New-
combe. HRs: Los fyigeles—Furillo (9), Neal (16).
American League
First
Kansas City   000 000 000—0  6  0
Washington     200 000 00x-2  7  2
Tarry, Grim (1) Tomanek (8)
and house;  Pascual and Courtney. L-Terry.
Second
Kansas City 00 020 000—2 4 0
Washington 100 000 30x-4 9 1
Garver, Gorman (82 and Chiti;
Romonosky, Hyde (8) and Courtney. W-Romonosky. L - Garver.
HR: Wsn-Vost 2 (3).
Cleveland       400 113 000-9 10   1
Boston 000 030 010-4   6   3
McLish   and   Brown;   Brewer,
Wall (8) and Berberet; L-Brewer
HR: Cle-Held (6).
First
Detroit 100 004 100—6 11  0
Baltimore       210 000 020—5 15   1
Foytack,  Aguirre   (8)   Fischer
(9)   and Wilson;  Beamon,  Loes
(6)  Lehman  (9)   and Ginsberg.
W-Foytack; L-Beamon. HR: Det-
Harris (8).
First
Chicago 004 003 000-7 li   1
New  York     012 000 100-4 11  2
Pierce, Lown (7)  and Lollar;
Larsen,  Maas  (3)  Trucks  (7)
Sturdivant (9)  and Howard. W-
Pierce. L-Larsen.
Second:
Detroit 020 100 101-5 9 0
Baltimore 200 000 1000—3 9 0
Susce, Aquirre (9) Fischer (9)
and Hegan; O'Dell, Zuverink (8)
Lehman (9) and Triandos. W —
Susce. L-O'Dell.
PACIFIC COAST league;
Seattle 1-0, Sacramento 6-2
Portland 13, Salt Lake 5
Phoenix 6-6, Spokane 2-3
Vancouver 7, San Diego 8
Win Singles Titles
BAASTAD, Sweden (AP) -
Wimbledon champion Ashley Cooper of Australia and Mrs. Heather
Brewer Segal of South Africa both
came from behind Sunday to win
the singles championships of the
Baastad international tennis tournament.
Cooper, 21, defeated Mervyn
Rose, his 28-year-old countryman
9-11,2-6,6-3.6-4,6-3.
Mrs. Segal conquered Karol Fageros of Miami, Fla., 2-6, 6-0, 6-0.
Mastodonlc Hector Gervais, a
6'3", 268-pounder with the streilgth
of a blacksmith, the strategic
attitude of an air force commanoer
and the delicate rock-laying touch
of ah expert pickpocket, proved
to behind-the-glass observers on
Saturday evening at Nelson Curling Club that he is one of the
classiest curlers,id the country.
' Hector directed his Edmonton
rink to a 10-4 triumph over Jim
McCullough of Calgary in the
final round of play in the men's
primary competition at the Uth
annual Nelson Midsummer Boil-
spiel. And the manner ia which
he did it was so simple as to be
almost routine.
McCullough, who had Barry Nai-
mark at third, Fred Storey at
second and Len Kalichak at lead,
twice gave up opportunities for
single points in an attempt to
juggle his last-rock ends so, in
the event of a tight game, he
would have the advantage of last
rock on the final end.
There is a possibility that the
two intentionally - blanked ends
might have had a different bearing on the trend of the game, but
the majority of observer* figured
Gervais — with Rowley Douziech
at third, Leo Douziech at second
and Mike Misiak at lead — was
simply too strong.
Gervais missed an excellent
chance for a count of.three on
the first end, but missed an open
takeout, clipping one of his own
rocks instead, and settled for one.
On the second and third ends,
McCullough made intentional'rollouts to hold the ends. bald. McCullough drew to an open house for
one to tie the score.
From then on, the trendchanged
Naimark and McCullough each
made a bad miss on the lifth end,
leaving Gervais with three. Hector,
who has played and beaten Dominion Champion Carl Baldwin
several times during the past year
or so, skipped, his mates to two
on the sixth end and a 6-1 lead
that started fans on the way home,
un ine sevenln end, nowever,
ihe Douztechs and ivliciak fell
uown ever so sligutiy, anu Dy the
time Gervais stepped into tne
nacK, he was wonting to keep the
nouse as clear as possible and
reauce McCullougn's score. Jim,
with last 'rock, roiled ior a count
of three.
Gervais, however, drew to the
fapr-iooi-urcie ior a tour-count on
tne eighui ana the ivicouueugn
rink, -as game as tney come,
started to prepare for the nae
nome.
A surprise of major proportions
saw Mrs. nine Reid oi vVarner,
Alta., eliminate heavily-favorea
delending champion iviaoei McCloy
q{ Jsldpionton, 9-oV: in the ..women s
primary event. Mrs. McCloy, a
iormer memoer of jidmunton
urads' basketoall team, jumpea
into a lead, but stood oaCK Helplessly as the Reia rink clipped
at tne margin and rallied in the
late ends tor the victory.
lilsie Biddell of bethbridge
trounced tidlth Little of Nelson,
12-4, in women's secondary piay,
whlie Vi LeRoy of Victoria eugea
Mrs. V. Poxon of Carbon, Alia.,
9-7, in the women's consolation
final.
uord Hacking of Taper, Alta.,
stopped Jack Thompson of Swift
Current, 11-7, in the men's secondary final, while Norm Smith defeated L. V. Rogers of Sagely,
Alta., 9-6, in the teritary. h. L.
Mahan of Cold Lake, Alta., aumpea
Paul Reglin of Drayton Vahey
12-6, in tne men's quaternary.
Following is a list of personnel
in rinks which reached the finals:
MEN'S PRIMARY
Hector  Gervais,  Rowley  Douziech, Leo Douziech, Mike Miciak.
Jim McCullough, Barry Naimark,
Fred Storey, Len Kalichak.
MEN'S SECONDARY
Gord Hacking, E. Kerkhoff, R.
Kinniburgh, E. O'Donnell.
J.  Thompson,  L.  Menzies,  H.
Kern, A. Braden.
MEN'S TERTIARY
Norm Smith, S. Becker, Ian
Guess, Don Mulholland.
L. V. Rogers, L. C. Race, Walt
Wait, M. Hooper.
MEN'S QUATERNARY
R. L. Mahan, El, Trevethlck, ...
Scott, R. E. Mahan.
Paul.   Reglin.    Remainder    of
names unavailable.'
WOMEN'S PRIMARY
E. Reid, R. Mueller, H. Orcutt,
P. Snowden.	
Lethbridge Native Son* All-
Stars defeated Neison Maple Leats
Ail-stars u-o before nearly jawo
fans at Civic Arena Saturaay mgni
in a star-siutldea thriller in winch
tne three National Hockey League
stars — Johnny Bucyk ana vie
otasiuk of Boston Bruins and
Anay Bathgate of New York
Rangers — proved their greatness,
as it tney had to.
Bucyk ana Stasiuk each scored
once tor the victors, witn Bathgate picking up two goals and
adding two assist* for Nelson in a
game that belied the' fact that
nockey season ls still more than
three' months away.
It was a spectacular thing, as
Leafs came irom behind a 5-1
deficit to create a 6-6 tie before
bowing to the superior finish of
the visiting professionals.
Bathgate, united on .a forward
line with Brian Roche and Jim
Middleton of Kelowna Packers,
made classics of his two goals,
but was Deaten five or six tunes
by ' former Nelson iMaple Leaf
goalie Ray Mikulan, wno currently
toils for vVinnipeg Warriors of the
western Hockey League.
Mikulan, although not as busy
as Nelson netminaer Gus Adams,
showed the touch of class1 that
makes him a professional. He
stood up well, smothered rebounas,
and generally carried himself as
what he is, one of IJie best. But
even at that, Adams was his equal,
Tiny uus, an in-and-outer for
Neison last year, played himself
a dandy game. He .stopped 18 shots
the first period ana 18 more in
• third, a total of 47 over-all,
A SPLIT SECOND after this picture was taken, the Lethbridge Native Sons added
the insurance marker when Andy Drobot of the Cranbrook Selkirks, shown at far left,
Slapped.home the puck in the midsummer hockey game. The picture shows Drobot on
the downswing with his stick and the puck in front of him. Others ln the photo are
Stewart, McDougald, Parker, Cirillo and an unidentified player. The Sons won 8-6.
—Daily News photo.
in
the ,  ..  ....
while Mikulan blocked 31. Adams
beat Bucyk four times on clear
breakaways and stopped Bucyk
three times.
Jim-Powers of Vancouver Canucks, John McMillan of Denver
University, Les Colwill of Saskatoon-St. Paul Regals, Howie Yano-
isik of Edmonton Flyers, Hal
I Jones of Rossland Warriors and
Andy Drobot of Cranbrook Selkirks added single tallies for the
victors, with Jones potting a rebound for the winner.
Gerry Penner of Trail Smoke
Eaters, Danny McDougald of Nelson, Jim Middleton of Kelowna
and veteran Bill Haldane of Nelson scored once each for the
losers to supplement Bathgate's
brilliance.
Lethbridge — goal: Ray Mikulan; defence: Don McGregor, Art
Mickson, Howie Yanosik, Ron
Yanosik, Larry McLaren; forwards: Jim McFadden, John
Bucyk, Vic Stasiuk, Harold Jones,
Les Colwill; Jim Powers, John
McMillan, Bobby Kromm, Carl
Cirullo, Andy Drobot.
Nelson — goal: Gus Adams; defence: Harry Smith-, Murray
Parker, Danny McDougald, Shorty
Malacko, Marsh Severyn; forwards: Gerry Penner, Adolf Tambellini1, Lee Hyssop, Wendy Keller,
Mickey Maglio, Andy Bathgate,
Jim Middleton, Larry Roche, Don
Appleton.
Officials — Bing Jukes, referee;
Scotty Cameron and Norm Hyssop,
linesmen.
First Period — 1. Lethbridge—
Powers 3:27; 2. Lethbridge — McMillan (Drobot, Cirullo) 4:15; 3.
Lethbridge — Etasiuk (McFadden,
Bucyk) 5:46; 4. Nelson — Bathgate (McDougald) 9:57; 5. Lethbridge — Bucyk (R. Yanosik,' McGregor) 12:28; 6. Lethbridge—Colwill (Jones) 13:31'; 7. Nelson —
Penner 15:39. ^
No Penalties.
Second Period — 8. Lethbridge—
H. Yanosik (Kromm, Bucyk) 18:17;
9. Nelson — Bathgate (Roche,
Middleton) 18:59; 10. Nelson -
McDougald (Bathgate, Middleton)
19:35.,
No Penalties.
Third Period — 11. Nelson —
Middleton (Bathgate, Roche) 1:15;
12. Nelson — Haldane (Penner,
Appleton) 4:50; 13. Lethbridge —
Jones (Colwill, Powers) 11:41; 14.
Lethbridge-Drobot (Cirullo) 15.13.
No Penalties. ,
Canadians Fall Before
Crack U.S. Doubles Team
By WILF GRUSON
Canadian Press Staff Writer
TORONTO (CP) - Big Barry
MacKay of Dayton, Ohio, and little
Sammy Giammalva of Houston,
Texas, a doubles combination
which the United States is hoping
Will develop into one of the world's
best, Saturday came through with
the victory that gave the U.S. the
clinching decision in its Davis Cup
round against Canada.
MacKay and Giammalva, fifth in
U.S. doubles rankings, defeated the
Canadian combination of Bob Ber-
ard of Sherbrooke, Que., and Don
Fontana of Toronto, 6-1, 13-11, 6-4
in an outstanding duel that kept a
crowd of 1200 on the edge of their
seats.
The victory shot the U.S. into a
3-0 lead and gave that country its
12th victory over Canada without
a defeat since 1913 in the preliminary rounds for the famed international tennis trophy. The two concluding singles, now little more
than exhibitions, will be pla"
WILLEY PLAYS TODAY
Bedard, Canada's leading player,
and MacKay,, ranked fifth in the
U.S., will oppose each other in the
first of the windup singles matches
and in the oilier Paul Willey of
Vancouver, the third-ranking Canadian player, 'will substitute ior
Fontana against the unranked Jack
Douglas of Santa Monica, Calif.
Douglas, former Stanford University football quarterback, replaces
Whitney Reed of Alameda, Calif
Argentine Sweeps
Davis Cup Play
BUENOS AIRES (AP) - Argentine completed a 5-0 tennis sweep
of its American Zone Davis Cup
competition with the British West
.Indies Sunday by winning the final
two singles matches. The Argentines will meet Israel next weekend
here.
Hockey Game Opens
Kelowna Regatta
KELOWNA (CP) - The week-
long Kelowna Regatta will be opened Aug. 11 by the second annual
mid-summer hockey game between
Kelowna Packers and an all-star
team.
Coach Keith Allen ot Seattle Americans will manage one club.
Guyle Fielder of Seattle, Phil Maloney of the Vancouver Canucks,
Glen Hall of the Chicago Black
Hawks and Okanagan star* -mil be
on the roster.
Coach Jack" O'Reilly wDJ handle
the Packers, with the Allan Cup
finalists being bolstered by incoming All-Start.
Mabel  McCloy,  Doris  Tymko,
Grace Latta, Elsie Marler.
WOMEN'S SECONDARY
Elsie Biddell, Eileen Eshpeter,
Lillian Snell, Helen Mark.
Edith Little, Evelyn Eckmier,
Inez Eckmier, Delia Schumaker.
WOMEN'S CONSOLATION
Vi LeRoy, Jean Perlette, Donna
Taylor, Lottie White.
Sybil Poxon, Joyce Budesheim,
Ethel Wright, Eileen Budesheim.
Outlaws Clown Way
fo Win Over Pucksters
Nelson Outlaws won an exhibition baseball game at Civic Recreation Grounds Sunday. But few
among the large crowd cared very
much.
The fans came to be entertained; and entertained they most tho
roughly were, as Outlaws — with it close, they made it interesting,
two home runs by Frank Hufty It was a scorer's nightmare. For
and one by Bernie Monteleone sup-'example, Haldane started in sixth
plying the power — came out on;spot in theb atting order, playing
top 7-2 over a crew of visiting' spot in the batting order, playing
hockey stars. ■ I "Mr. Adams" in the eighth, an
'   '--'      'u- — •"•-' ",rt„ori  in  first  hase  to  renlac
Coliseum Rules
Against Team
SPOKANE (AP) - Supporters
of senior amateur hockey here]
plan to go ahead and enter a team
in the Western International
League next season despite a setback from the Coliseum Advisory
Committee, they said Saturday.
The committee recommended
Friday that only the n e w Spokane
Flyers of the professional Western
League should be allowed to use
the municipal Coliseum, that two
league teams here could not succeed financially. .,
Clarence Tubbs, president of]
the business group backing amateur hockey, said he and his
associates were disappointed by
the committee decision but still
plan to go ahead.
"We are going to the City Council to argue our case now," he
said.
The  committee  makes  recommendations for action to the five
city Commissioners. Commissioner
H. I. McKenna said the council
will wait until it receives the committee's formal recomendation and
then give a decision or schedule
debate.
Roy McBride, general manager
enough to good bisSball to be thor-M*,M fffi «« ^ thinks the
oughlv enjoyable. Gus Adams Sndi-^Z riBht thfng
Ray Mikulan, rival goalies in the *™,me "glu tn!ng*    .        .... ■
exhibition hockey game the night, .The Flyers dropped out of .the
previous, joined forces for the Sun-|WI league .this spring and joined
day ball game. Their side lost, '"   '	
and, though the losers didn't make
\l;&(Aomad Qtfdami SiUtctteM S&J.
AMHERSTBUttG, ONt.
657«  1
Monteleone clouted a three.run
blast off starter — and loser —
Wendy Keller in the third inning to
overhaul a two-run Star lead. The
speedy Outlaw centre-fielder hit,
solo homers down the.right field
line in the fourth and sixth innings.'
Other Outlaw runs were carried by
Leo Petty and Frank Hufty.
Bill Haldane, Don Holmes, J6hn
McMillan and Keller put together
four successive safeties id the second inning off Les Hufty for the
two all-star markers.
Haldane tripled and scored on
Holmes' single. Holmes went to
third on a long double by John McMillan, Denver University hockey
star, and scored on Keller's single
Hufty was the winning pitcher,
walking five and striking out four
In the seven innings he worked,
rlt was a farce, but is' was close
moved to first base to replace
Bucyk, who was forced to leave,
to make travel connections early in
the game.
Ron Nash, Outlaw playing-coach-
manager, singled in his only plate
appearance, as a pinch-hitter for
Leo Petty. Ron's single was not as
surprising as the way he got it.
He hobbled to the plate with the
aid of a cane to face Marsh Severyn, hit the ball, dropped the cane
and ran like a man seeking the
cure.
Severyn, former star hurler for
Delisle Gems, pitched outstandingly for the losers, and will probably join the Outlaws on a semipermanent basis in the near future.
Defensive star of the game was
McMillan, who made a great running catch' of Lorne Bay's line
drive.
*»1  ItOfaU.   .„..,   ut.....0   —  „	
the professional Western League.
Probable Pitchers
NEW YORK (AP) - Probable
pitchers for today's major league
games (won and lost records in
parentheses):
American League
Chicago at New York (N) —
Wynn (8-7) vs Kucks (7-3) or
Ford (1-4).   '
Cleveland at Boston—Wilhelm
(2-4) vs Sisler (6-4).
Detroit at Baltimore—Moford
(0-1) vs Brown (2-0).
Kansas City at Washington (NK
-Urban (6-5) vs Ramos (7-6).
National League
Milwaukee at San Francisco —
Burdette (7-7) .vs Worthington
(8-4).
Cincinnati at Los Angeles —
Purkey  (10-5)  vs  Podres  (8-8).
Philadelphia at Chicago—Card-
well (0-0) vs Phillips (6-2). '
■|-      ,  This advertisement is not published c-r displayed by
jjbe liquor Control Boarder, byjhe Covernrrient ol British ColumbipJ
m—»ii   min    nun    iSBBB       linn i——
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——r	
.
8 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 14, 1958
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New Hosco Sparks
'■• ..■'■:'■
Urge To Speculate
By GERRY MARTIN
Speculators enjoyed their biggest runs since the spring of 19S6
and Canadian stock exchanges
broke all existing single - day
volume records during the week.
The week's volume at Toronto
of 50,792,000 shares was the heaviest week since the five-day period
ending April 9,1956, when 62,082,000
shares traded while the uranium
boom was at its peak.
New Hosco, the Cinderella copper stock that; bounced from 17
cents two weeks ago to $7.25 on
Monday, supplied the spark and
Quebec's Mattagami Lake district
was the torch for speculators.
New Hosco closed the week at
$4.50, for a gain of $1.35 as profit-
taking set in toward the end of
the week.
SPECULATIVE URGE
The urge to speculate spread to
other properties and Consolidated
Halliwell, another copper stock,
bounced ahead for a smart gain
before dropping back.
But while volumes soared, the
stock market generally was not
keeping pace with hte speculatives.' At Toronto industrials were
the only section to show an index
advance and their'* was a slim
1% points. Golds were off a few
decimal points but base metals
and western oils each were down
more than a point.        '
Among industrials, International
Pete was the big winner, adding
$13.50 to $59.25. The stock.moved
up $10 Friday on word that Standard Oil, New Jersey, had obtained slightly less than 97 per
cent of the company's outstanding stock. Standard offered International shareholders nine shares
of its stock for 10 International.
Federal Grain went up $5 to
$39 following a rumor the company was planning a tax-free distribution to shareholders.
Among the losers were Ford
stocks. The parent United States
company announced Wednesday a
20-cent cut in dividend payments.
SHORTER WORK WEEK
International Nickel was a $2.25
loser at $73.50 as the company
announced its Sudbury plant would
operate on a four-day week effective July 14.
Golds and western oils had few
major changes.
Index changes at Toronto: Industrials up .1.50 to 453.38; golds
off .09 to 82.65; base metals off
1.75 to 155.38; western oils off
1.31 to 135.45.
Index changes at Montreal:'
Banks up .59 to 52.13; utilities off
1.2 tp 139.2; industrials up .7 to
267.2; combined unchanged at
224.5; papers new up 1.8 to 377.5;
papers old up 11.05 to 161.14; golds
off 2.47 to 70.93.
Non-Ferrous Metal Mines
Watching and Waiting
NEW YORK (AP)-The non-
ferrous metals markets were in
a period of watchful waiting last
week, but with an odd twist—each
segment of the industry seemed
to be watching something different.
Copper men were watching
Kennecott Copper Corporation,
biggest of the big three producers, to see if it would increase its price to the level
charged by Phelps Dodge Corporation and the Anaconda Company.
Lead and zinc men were watch-
inr Washington to check on the
progress of the administration's
metals subsidy bill in Congress.
And those In aluminum were
looking at their calendars, wondering whether the light metal's
price will go up Aug. 1 when aluminum w o r k e r s' wages are
boosted by the final year of a
three-year contract.
The three-way market in copper continued with Phelps Dodge
and Anaconda at 26"4 cents a
pound, Kennecott still at 25 and
custom smelters, a small but volatile section of the market, in between at 26. The smelters' charge
seemed the most likely candidate
for a change, since their demand
was reported just about non-existent.
CUT IN SCRAP PRICE
A tipoff on the drop in demand
was provided by the smelters' cut
of Vt cent in the price they pay
for scrap copper. The drop to
20*4. cents a pound showed smelters had plenty of scrap on hand
-■ssk
and   apparently   weren't   Celling
much refined metal.
Kennecott reported business
good at its bargain basement
price. Phelps Dodge and Anaconda said orders were light.
Key to the future seemed to be
in pricing policies of'independent
fabricators of copper products.
These firms, and Kennecott's fabricating subsidiary, are pricing
their goods on a 25-cents-a-pound
basis compared to the 26%-cent
basis charged by subsidiaries of
Phelps Dodge and Anaconda.
Future supplies of copper will
be lessened because of the 20 per
cent cut in nickel production announced by International Nickel
Company. Inco's ore contains
both metals, so the action means
about 2,000 less tons of nickel a
month and about 1,900 less tons
of copper a month. The latest
sWsh, on top of two 10-per-cent
cuts earlier, brings the total to
about 35 per cent.
Lead and zinc continued to sell
slowly.
Major metals prices:
Copper—25-26% cents a pound,
delivered. Foreign, 24y4 cents,
nominal, New York.
Lead—11 cents- a pound, New
York; 10.8 cents, St. Louis.
Zinc—10 cents a pound, East
St. Louis; 10*4 cents, New York.
Aluminum—26.1 cents a pound,
ingots, shipping point (freight allowed). Pigs 24 cents.
Nickel—74 cents a pound, electrolytic cathodes, Port Colborne,
Ont., U.S. duty included.
Silver—88%    cents   an   ounce,
New York; 75 pence. London.
• Tin—93% cents a pound, New
York.
JAIL COMEDIAN'S DAUGHTER
LOS ANGELES (AP)-Barbara
Burns, 20, daughter of the late
comedian Bob Burns, was jailed
on suspicion of forgery Friday
night. Police accused her of attempting to pass a bad $65
cheque at a Los Angeles grocery
store. Last month Miss Burns was
given a 90-day jail sentence for
narcotics addition. She has appealed.
TELEVISION   FOR TODAY
PACIFIG STANDARD TIME
KXLY-TV - Channel 4
7:45 Good Morning
8:00 For Love or Money *
8:30 Play Your Hunch *
9:00 Arthur Godfrey *
9:30 Dotto »
10:00 Love of Life *
10:30 Search For Tomorrow *
10:45 Guiding Light *
11:00 Science Theater
11:30 As The World Turns •
12:00 Beat The Clock *
12:30 Houseparty *
1:00 Big Payoff *
1:30 Verdict Is Yours ♦
2:15 Secret Storm *
2:30 Edge- of Night »
3:00 Bingo
4:00 Early Show
5:15 Doug Edwards *
5:30 Laurel and Hardy
6:00 News
6:10 A Greater Spokane
6:15 Song Shop
6:30 Robin Hood
7:00 I Love Lucy * '
7:30 Frontier Justice *
8:00 Studio One *
9:00 Burns and Allen
9:30 Talent Scouts
10:00 Waterfront
10:30 Night Edition
10:35 Post Time
10:40 Late Show
KHQ-TV - Channel t
7:40 Color Test Pattern
7:43 Test Pattern
7:58 Bible Reading
7:59 Program Previews
8:00 Dough Re,Mi *
8:30 Treasure Hunt *
9:00 Price Is Right *
9:30 Truth or Consequences
10:00 Tic Tac Dough *
10;30 It Could Be You (C) •
11:00 Lucky Partners *
11:30 Haggis Baggis (C) *
12:00 Today Is Ours *
12:30 From These Roots *
1:00 Queen For a Day *
1:45 Modern Romances *
2:00 Corliss Archer
2:30 Your TV Theatre
3:00 Matinee On Six
"Dough Boys"
4:30 Four Thirty Movie
"Dangerous Number"
5:45 NBC News •
6:00 I Led Three Lives
6:30 Front Page
6:45 Viewpoint
7:00 Restless Gun *
7:30 Tales of Wells Fargo •
8:00 Twenty One *
8:30 Alcoa Theatre *
9:00 Suspicion *
10:00 Robert Cummings
10:30 Medic
11:00 If You Had a Million
KREM TV - Channel 2
6:00 Flash Gordqn
6:30 Newsbeat
7:00 Cowtown Rodeo •
7:30 Bold Journey •• :
8:00 Stars of Jazz •
8:30 Polka-Go-Round •
9:30 Florian Zabach
10:00 Man Behind The Badge
10:30 Nightbeat
10:35—Channel 2 Theatre
A SHOW OF HANDS _ Matching hand motifs on
hat and bag add to more than normal complement for Mrs. Jean
Carpenter at tennis championships in Wimbledon, England.
ON THE AIR
CKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL
PACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME
MONDAY,
6:55—Farm Fare
7:00—Chapel in the Sky
7:15-Wake-Up Time
7:25—Sports News
7:30—News
7:35—Wake-Up Time
8:00—News
8:10—Sports News
8:15—Opening Markets
8:20—Varieties
8:30-AU Weathers
8:35—Varieties
8:55—Morning Devotion
9:00—News
9:10—Musjcale
9:15—Story Parade
9:25—Women Today
9:30—Woman's World
9:35—Song Serenade
10:00—News
10:05—Musicale
10:15—Summertime
10:45—Musicale
10:55—News
11:00—Morning Melodies
11:15—Now I Ask You
11:45—Song Serenade
12:15—Sports, News
12:25—News
12:31—Farm Broadcast
JULY 14, 1958
12:54—Prairie News
1:00—CKLN Reports
1:15—Matinee
1:45—Sacred Heart
2:00—A Touch of Greasepaint
2:30—TranstCanada Matinee
3:30—Pacific News
3:40—B.C. Road Report
3:45—Rocking With Boates
4:45—Musical Program
5:00—News
5:05—Rolling Home Show
5:30—Parliamentary Roundup
5:35—Rolling Home Show Pt. t
5:45—Report From Pari. Hill
6:00—News
6:10—Sports News
6:15—Closing Markets
6:20—Mantovani
6:30—Special CBC Nat. Program
7:00^News
7:30—The Big Band Show
8:00—Vancouver Theatre
8:30—Summer Fallow
9:00—International Concert
10:00—News
10:10—Sports News
10:15—Lance Hurrison
10:30—University of the Au
U:00—Sign Off
CBC PROGRAMS
MOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME
TUESDAY, JULY 15, 1958
: 00—B.C. Fisherman's Broadcast   2:00—CBC Concert Hall
:15—Musical Minutes
7:30—News
7:40—Morning Devotions
7:55—March Past
8:00—News
8:10-rSports News
8:15—Musical Minutes
8:30—News
8:35—Anything Goes
9:00—BBC News
9:15—Morning Concert
10:00—Morning Visit
10:15—Song of Canada
10:45—Pages From Life
11:00—One Man's Family
11:15—Court of Opinion
11:45—Theme and Variation
12:15—News
12:25—Showcase
12:30—B.C. Farm Broadcast
12:55—Five To One
1:00—Afternoon Concert
2:30—Trans-Canada Matinee
3 30—Program Resume
3:45—Musical Program
5:00—Bands on Parade
5:15—Musical Program
5:30—CBC News
5:40—Neighbourly News
5:45—Sports Desk
5:55—Byline
6:00—Address by His Excellency
the Governor General
6:40—Musical Program
7:0O—News
7:30—Small But Neat
8:00—Drama in Sound
8:30—Song of Canada
9:00—RoiS Collier Group
9:30—Leicester Square
10:00—News
10:15—Critics At Large
10:3O—Distinguished Artists
11:00—Midnight Concert
U:57-News
DAILY .CROSSWORD
(Program* lubject to change by station* without aotlce.)
Bulging jars 24.
Fresh water
tortoise 25.
Tagged 26.
Timid
Glossy 27.
Enclosure     29.
Tree
Completely
Hebrew
letter
City (Alas.)
Crowd* 83.
Sick
Coat or wood 35,
Hawaiian
starchy food 87,
32.
British
general
Tardy
Entertaining
Through ]
Bellow
Flint-
like
rock
Warning
signal       Sntnidny'i Amwer.
Wife of Zeus
<poss.) 39. Bom
Boy's 40. Dance step
nickname   ■ 41. River
Jat  CLatv."
ACROSS
1. Hebrew
prophet
<poss.)
«. A duck
13. Egyptian
dancing girl
'var.)
12. Celerity ,
13. IrrcsponsP.
ble
15. Lose color
16. Not many
17. Girl'*
nickname
19. Like
20. Viscous
22. Back
23. River tGer.)
24. Tulip root
25. Coat fold
27. Makes raids
28. Among
29. True
30. Parson bird
31. String
32. Exclamation
34. East by
south
(abbr.)
35. Shinto
temple
86. Valley
(poet)
38. Between
the poles
41. Near (poet.)
42. Nest-build,
ing fish
43. Deputy
44. Clears, a*
from scum
DOWN
L Part of
TelAvlT
DAILY CRYPTOQTOTE - Here's how to work itt
AXYDLBAAXB
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A la
used for the three L's, X for the two O's*, etc. Single letters,
apostrophies, the length and formation of the words are all
hints.  Each day the code letters are different
A Cryptogram Quotation
KWM    KEZETU    UEESAO.WZ    OWM-
KEZETU    MSEEO,    HZO    YHWSK    T Z-
YHWSKYTN    QAIS    KVli    YHNMANB
SUTA — S AZZRMEZ.
Saturday's Cryptoquoto:    "MERE   FLM-FLAM   STORIES^
AND NOTHING BUT SHAMS AND LIES-CERVANTES.
«ft 1858, Kin* Fo*tUH» Owdkaia, Inc.)
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SMALL INVESTMENT   -
That's the Want Ad Story
YOU CAN NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED
-PHONE  1844
ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.
BIRTHS
LOFVENDAHL - To Mr. and
Mrs. Vic Lofvendahl, at Trail-Tadanac Hospital, July 1?, a son.
MILLER — To Lac. and Mrs. Ian
Miller of Trenton,, Ont., July 10, a
ion, Douglas Ian. Mrs. Miller 1*
the former Velma Jean George of
NeW Denver. :
HELP WANTED
ATTENTION: $40 PER DAY
Can you sell? If so, reply to
this ad, and your future may
easily be assured/Entirely new
—never before offered to the public. Product has Immediate appeal and does not require any
cold canvassing. This is a Urge
international company that can
offer you a dignifiedsand responsible position together with a
solid future. Our staff are aware
of this advertisement, so please
reply in detail to Daily News,
Box 5624. ■   ■   '	
ESTIMATEft SALESMAN If* OK
ROOFING, SIDING AND HOME
IMPROVEMENT FlRM'lN THE
KOOTENAYS. NO AGE LIMIT.
•WRITE BOX 396, NEW DENVER B.C.
WAlWiiD -DRIVER SALESMAN,
McDonald's beverages. Apply in
person,
HELP WANTED—FEMALE
EXPERIENCED WAITRESS
wanted. Apply between 6 p.m.
and 8 p.m. at Shamrock Grill,
Nelson.
5ELP WANtffcb Af o'Nfflg.WR-
ther detail* contact Empire
Cleaner* in person. 321 Baker
St.* Nelson. 	
SITUATIONS WANTED
DO YOU LIKE >A GOOD CON-
crete or cement work lob? Juat
phone 1752-L-3. I need custom'
ers. Experience not necessary.
Remember, Phone 1752-L-3.
P6R W fifiST It* BObY AND
paint work, see Ted's Auto Body,
1 mile Granite Road, or phone
bus. 98, res. 1186-Y.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
Trade Schools
DIESEL HEAVY
EQUIPMENT
Trained men are needed for all
types ot jobs in the Tractor and
Equipment Industry. If you are
mechanically inclined and are
not making better than ''90.00'
per week, or you don't have job
security, you owe it to.yourself
to write for free facts, without
obligation, about this training.
Tractor Training
Service Ltd.
Daily News Box No. 5594
DESTINY BAY STORE AND
auto court for sale. Store, coffee
shop, 2 apartments, gas pump
and truck. Lake frontage and 6
boats. Physical appraised value
$13,600. Offers to purchase will
receive consideration. For full
information T..D. Rosling & Son
Ltd., 568 Ward St.	
HOBBY, NOVELTY AND SOU-
venir shop, centrally located,
leased. Phone Trail 1276 for appointment.	
HELP   ME   BUILD   CABIN
(rammed-earth) on shares. Dan-
son, Kaslo 'over Bay)
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS
DEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF
used equipment, mill, mine and
logging supplies, new and used
wire rope, pipe and fittings,
chain, steel plate and shapes.
Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250
Prior St.,'Vancouver. B.C. Phone
PAcific 6357.
I STEEL WELDED COAL AND
wood furnace with new grates;
1 GE oil conversion burner and
necessary automatic attachments
and side arm hot water tank
heater and element. Phone 2088
or call 417 Hamilton Ave.
USED OUTBOARDS, REFRIGER-
PUBLIC NOTICES
LAND REGISTRY ACT
(Section 161)
IN THE MATTER of Blocks 4
and 10 of Lot 7449, Kootenay District, Plan 913-and-Lot 9374,
Kootenay District.
' Proof having been filed in my
Office of the Toss of Certificates
pf Title Nos. 79215-1 and 79216-1
to the above-mentioned lands in
the name of Iva Glee Olsen and
bearing date the 13th day of July,
1949, I HEREBY GIVE NOTICE
of my intention at the expiration
of one calendar month from the
first publication hereof to issue
Provisional Certificates of Title
in lieu of such lost Certificates.
Any person having any information with reference to such iost
Certificates of Title is requested
to communioate with the undersigned.
' DATED  AT  NELSON,   B.C.,
this 9th day of June, 1958.
L. A.McPHAIL,
Deputy Registrar,
Nelson Land
Registration District.
Date of First Publication:
June 16th, 1958.
The Bankruptcy Act
IN THE MATTER OF THE BANKRUPTCY OF D'ARCY DONALD
HUGHES, carrying on business under the name and style of D'ARCY
HUGHES MEN'S SHOP, of the
City of Nelson, in the province of
Britsh Columbia.
NOTICE OF FIRST MEETING
OF CREDITORS
NOTICE is hereby given that
D'ARCY DONALD HUGHES, car'
rylng on business under the name
and style of D'ARCY HUGHES
MEN'S SHOP, of the City of Nelson, British Columbia, made an assignment on the 3rd day of July,
1958; and that;the first meeting of
creditors will be held on the 21st
day of July, 1958, at the hour of
2:00 o'clock in the afternoon at the
office of K. D. McRae, Acting Official Receiver, at the Court House,
City of Nelson aforesaid.
DATED at Nelson. British Columbia, this 12th day of July, 1958.
THOMAS G. C. FOX,
Trustee,
P.O. BOX 189,
NELSON, B.C.
SCHOOL EXTENSION
GRAND FORKS
Tenders are invited for a 2-room
extension to the Junior Senior High
School,   Winnipeg   Ave.,    Grand
Forks, B.C.
Drawing specifications and tender documents can be obtained
from the office of Smith & McCullough Architects, Radio Centre
Bldg., Trail, B.C. on receipt of a
returnable deposit of $20.
Sealed tenders marked as to contents and accompanied by a certified cheque for 5% Of the total
value of the tender should be addressed to Mr. J. A. Hutton, Secretary School District No. 12, P.O
Box 380, Grand Forks, B.C., to arrive before 5 p.m. D.S.T. on Mon-
day> July 28th, 1958.
Signed -
SMITH & McCULLOUGH
Architects.
PROPERTY, HOUSES,
FARMS, ETC., FOR SALE
-   AUTOMOTIVE,
MOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES
New
Oldsmobile Sedans
New
Chevrolet Sedans
New
Chevrolet Pickups
1957 CHEV.  PICKUP
1957 CHEV. COACH
1957 CHEV.  HARDTOP
1956 CHEV. PICKUP
1955 CHEV. PICKUP
1955 OLDS. COACH
1955* OLDS. SEDAN
1955 CHEV. SEDAN
1954 OLDS. SEDAN
1954 CHEV. SEDAN
1953 CHEV. SEDAN
1953 DODGE COACH
1953 FORD PICKUP
1953 DODGE SEDAN
1952 DODGE PICKUP
1931  PLYMOUTH   Sedan
1951 STUDEBAKER  Sdn.
Reuben
Buerge
Motors Ltd.'
Chevrolet — Oldsmobile
Cadillac
Pbone 35-36 323 Vernon St.
Nelson, B.C.
FOR IMMEDIATE SALE: SPL1T-
level 3-bedroom home. Propane
range. Fireplace. Sacrifice price.
Phone CastlegaV 6161,
ators, washing machines,
us an offer. Jeffery Radio and
Appliances Ltd., phone 1302, 446
Ward St., Nelson, B.C.
MCCLARY GAS COOK STOVE.
Thermostat controlled oven, „4
burners, as new. Phillips Motel Hall Mines Road.
PICK YOUR OWN  BING AND
Royal Ann cherries, 10c lb. J. A.
West, Sunny Bench, Kaslo, B.C.
CHERRIES FOR SALE,AT MTN.
Station. Mrs. Soukaroff. 8c lb.,
pick yourself.
McCLARY CHARM WOOD AND
coal range in good condition,
Phone 370-L.        	
GURNEY AUTO. GAS, COAL,
wood itove, used 6 months. Ph.
CLEAN COTTON RAGS WILL
not be purchased by the Daily
News until further notice.
FREE FIREWOOD - YOU CUT
it and haul away ln town. Phone
1867.-L  __
CHERRIES, ALSO MILKING
goat for sale. Apply N. F. Rlel-
koff, Vt mile Blewett Rd.
HEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN
day and evenings. 924 Davies St.
ROOM AND BOARD
ROOM AND BOARD FOR YOUNG
man. 210 Vernon St.
NEW 2 -BEDROOM HOUSE FOR
rent or sale on North Shore. Op-
Sosite bridge, close in. Rockgas
eating, electric stove or gas.'
Phone 1778-R.
The Best
PLACE -
TO DEAL.
Is Still
NELSON MOTOR
PRODUCTS
America's No. 1 Cars
Pontiacs - Buicks
Vauxhalls
, And
G.M.C. Trucks
PLUS
The Finest Selection of
Goodwill Reconditioned
Used Cars To Be Found
Anywhere in Canada
Nelson Motor
Products •
LTD.
KOOTENAY AND VICTORIA STS.
NELSON
PHONES 658 ■ 659
Behind Bank of Montreal
MACHINERY
FIRM CLOSING
. OPERATIONS
Has the following Heavy Equipment for sale. All equipment is
in excellent condition and very
reasonably priced.
Two 1954 International
Trucks
Model RF211 with RED450
Motors, 36M Boogie with 20M
Axle Tandem Pierce Trailers
(10' bunks). Les* than,20,000
miles on each.
One 48 I Yd. Lima
With Bear Heel Boom. Cat.
Diesel Motor.
One 414 Adams Motor Grader
Diesel Motor. Equipped with
Cab, Healer and Lights.
One 105 Ingersoll
Rand Air Compressor
Two-Wheel Portable with Hose,
Plugger, Steel and Bits.
One Allis Chalmers
HD15A Tractor
With Angle Blade and Winch.
FOR FURTHER PARTICULARS
PHONE   MARYSVILLE,
LUdlow 2-4292 or LUdlow 2-4371.
BEST BUYS EVER!
USED
LAWN MOWERS
and
USED
CHAIN SAWS
See
H. "Fritz" Farenholtz
Charlie Ross or Alex McDonald
WELDING &  EQUIPMENT
CO.   LTD.
PHONE  1402
RENTALS
STORAGE SPACE FOR RENT IN
.good basement centrally located.
$13.00 to $20.09 a monlh accord-
• ing to space required. Apply
Appleyard, 421 Baker St,
CABINS FOR RENT. PHONE OR
write L. Sammartino, Balfour,
B.C., ph. 3-Q. Also, garden-fresh
vegetables for sale.
l-BEDROOM HOUSE - WIRED
for range and hot water. North
Shore, 2Vz miles from bridge,
$37.50. Ph. 156 days, 575-Y eves.
NEWLY DECORATED 2 - ROOM
suite, partly furnished. 723 Silica
St., phone 1341-X.
■ROOM
UNFURN.
tral. Adults only,
Box No. 5629.
APT.,  CEN-
Nelson News,
3 RM. APT., FURN. OR UNFURN,
Also 1 sleeping room, 1 block
from Baker St. Phone 385.
UNFURNISHED APT., HEATED,
Suitable for couple. Apply Box
5446, Nelson Daily News.
2-ROOM StUTE. PH6NE 4910C
or apply 140 Baker Street.
FURNISHED LIGHT HOUSE-
keeping room, frig. Ph. 496-R.
HOUSE FOR RENT - CONTACT
Mrs. Marquis, ph. 874, day:
FOR RENT OR SALE 5 ROOM
house UO High St.
2-ROOM   APARTMENT,  $45,   IN-
cluding heat and light. Ph. 1500
ROOM FOR RENT. PHONE 547-L
or call at 512 Carbonate St.
PERSONAL
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS.
Fridays. Phone 366rR . .
MEMBERS WANTEp FOR SUN-
. bathing group forming in Kootenays. Enquiries welcome. Write
Dally News, Box 5611. Enclose
stamped addressed envelope for
replies.     *i	
S*6P DANDRUFF, EXCESSIVE
falling hair, itchy or scaly scalp,
with Lanex, the marvellous Lanolin scalp treatment. Only $1.95
jar. Satisfaction or money batki
at Fleury's Pharmacy and- all
■druggists.     ^^
Order Canadian Athletes
To Get Out of Moscow
WANTED MISCELLANEOUS
SCRAP STEEL AND' METALS,
top prices. Old car bodies our
specialty. COMMERCIAL STEEL
& METALS, 6136 Willingdon.
Burnaby 2. Vancouver. B C
WANTED: LATE MODEL FRIDG
any make, nothing smaller than
a 9 cubic foot. Write Mrs. E. Ny-
strom, Salmo.
HOTELS AND MOTELS
CANADIAN FRIENDsy - WHEN
ih Spokane stop at the Colonial
Hotel, 124% Post St., one block
from stores and parking.
PETS, CANARIES, BEES
PETS FARM! ANY KIND OF
pets boarded at Taghum. Phone
Halveson. 599-L-2.
TRAILERS
BARRETT TRAILER SALES,
Fruitvale, have a new shipment
of Aljos, 15', 16', 17', 19'. See
these beauties before they go.
BOATS and ENGINES
14 FT. FIBREGLAS BOAT; ALSO
car-top boat, Mercury motors,
Norm Bowcock, 171 Baker St.
LOST AND FOUND
LOST AT GYRO PARK SUNDAY
man's watch, registered no. inside. Finder please leave at Daily
News office. 	
MODERN    1-BEDROOM    SUITE
furnished and heated. Phone 2075,
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY
AND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.
PULLETS FOR SALE-ANY AGE!.
Appleby Poultry Farm, Mission
Cto. B.C. -,...'
GOOD FRESH MILK
WANTED -
cow. C. A.
Noakes, Balfour.
Circulation Dept., Phone 1844
Price per single copy 6c Monday
to. Friday, 10c on Saturday.
By Carrier per week
tn advance,
Subscription Rate*
By Mall in Canada Outside Nelson:
j)ne month         $ Lib
Three months  _    $ 3.50
Six months  -    $ 6.50
> One year          $12,00
By Mail to United Kingdom or
the United States:
One month          $ 1.75
Three months _.    $ 5.0(1
Six months    $ 9.50
One year       $18.1)0
Where extra postage ts required
above rates plus postage.
For delivery by carrier in Cranbrook, nhone. Mrs Wm. Stevely
In Kimberley. A W  Brown. "
In Trail. Mrs Syd Spooner „
NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 14,1958 — 9
VIENNA (AP) - Canadian
gymnast Ernestine Russell of
Windsor, Ont., 19, and her coach,
Bernard Newman, appeared be-'
witdered here Saturday why they
jwere given only 12 hours to leave
Moscow where Ernestine competed in the world gymnastic
championships.
"On Thursday at about 6 p.m.
the Russians in charge of the
world championships gave us two
airplane tickets for a flight to
Vienna leaving at 6 a.m. the next
day," Newman .said.
"We do not know why they did
that," he said.
Informed that the Windsor Star
based on an interview with Mrs.
Newman, quoted him as saying
"the Russian government didn't
want us to stay, there is no doubt
about it," Newman said he did
not want to make any comment*
before reaching Canada,
Ernestine and her coach are
scheduled to leave here Sunday
night by air for Zurich. Travelling by different airlines, they
will proceed by way of Zurlch-
Parls-Brussels and London before
crossing 'the Atlantic and landing
in Montreal.
HELP WANTED
Government of British Columbia
APPRENTICESHIP AND
TRADESMEN'S'-
QUALIFICATIONS
BRANCH
Applications* are invited from young men for enrollment
in Pre-Apprenticeship trade classes which are to be held
in Vancouver and which are intended to lead to apprenticeship in the following trades:      ,:!'
TRADE  ■<& , Starting Date     Length of Course
Bricklaying'■'' « Sept. 22 8 months
Boatbuilding Sept. 22 5 to 11 months
Carpentry Oct. 6    ' 5 months
Electrical ,            Sept. 15 S months
Electronics Sept. 15 10 months
Lathing Sept. 22 5 months
Plastering Sept. 22 B months
Plumbing and Steamfltting Sept. 22 S month*
SheetMetal Sept. 15 5 months
Structural Steel .,,' ,            Sept. 15 5 months
Applicants should preferably be from 17 to 19J years old,
have a good basic education and be physically able to
engage in the trade. Selection of class from applicants
will be made by the Trade Advisory Committee. After the
first month an examination will be given. Students who
fail will be required to withdraw from the class.
No charge will be made for tuition and a subsistence allowance will be given to help pay room and board which
will be the responsibility of the student.   ,
The amount of this allowance will be $40.00 per month
for a student whose home is In the training city and
$56.00 per month for a student whose home Is outside
of that area.
Application Forms for Enrollment May Be Obtained by Writing to
THE DIRECTOR OF APPRENTICESHIP, DEPARTMENT
OF LABOR
4\1 Dunsmuir Street, Vancouver 3, B.C.
Please indicate the trade in:which you are interested.
FOR SALE OR TRADE 1 54-INCH
No. 341 Berlin brand resawf long
wheel-base, M-800 Merc, truck
with Columbia tag, 2 drum Skagit
with jammer, log cut-off saw with
winch, rubber tired logging arch
for D6 or D4, all in working order
and reasonably priced. Phone
47M or Box 708, Creston.
lOOKING FOR . FAIRLY NEW
home near new hospital, 2 blocks
from bus, 1 block out city limits.
Low taxes, quiet district. See this
for workmanship—for less than
$10,500. 823-Cherry St.	
FOR SALE - 2 BR., SUN PORCH,
living and dining room, fireplace,
small basement, carpenter shop,
on vacant lot, corner lot, East
Trail. Phone Trail 1276 for ap-
pointment:
BRAND NEW 3-BEDROOM NHA
home on Lakeview Crescent
(Rosemont). Phone 2107 or apply
Maple Leaf 'Construction, 1914
Kootenay St.	
FOR SALE, EXCELLENT RANCH.
trade  on  city
. Elder, Box 113,
Would consider
home. Mrs. A. G
Nakusp, B.C. ■ _ _
LOT 80 x 200 FOR SALE, NORTH
Shore. Overlooks city. Water,
power, TV to propertjr. Phone
1662-X, _ __
REVENUE HOUSE, GOOD LOCA-
tion, income $225 month, for less
than $13,000. Apply 823 Cherry St.
DUPLEX CLOSE IN - $80, MO.
Reasonable price and terms. Call
445-Y after 4 p.m.
4-ROOM HOUSE FOR SALE IN
Ymir. Box 269, Nelson, B.C.
EARLY CHRISTIANS
The Amharas, largest race ln
Ethiopia, were converted to Christianity in the 4th century.
ROADBUILDING - PIPELINES-
Dykes, etc., designed and built 1
by contract. A. G. Bayes Ltd.,
Cranbrook, B.C.
SPECIALIZING IN ENGLISH
car repairs. Used parts for 1949
to '52 Austins, '49 to '52 Hill-
mans, '50 to '51 Morris Minor.
'47 Studebaker, "47 Pontiac, '52
Vanguard, '47 Oldsmobile 8, For
sale, '53 Austin, '47 Olds'motor
Cottonwood Wreckage Service,
ph. 1363-L-2. Box 382, 24 Ymir
Road. Nelson
FOR SALE: 1951 FORD 2-DOOR.
PhonelOll-R after 6 p.m.
BUILDING SUPPLIES
Nelson Ready-Mix
CONCRETE
FOR ALL PURPOSES
PHONE 871
PREMIER SAND & GRAVEL
-    , For, '    ■
Sand, Gravel, Crushed Rock,
Fill, Cement and
Pea Gravel for Roofing
PHONE 1368 or 871
ESMOND LUMBER CO LTD
for all Building Supplies Specializing in Plywood. Contractor* enquiries solicited Phone or
wire order* collect 3600 E Hastings St.,"Vancouver. B C. GLen-
burn 1500.
FOR SALE - PORTABLE COM-
pressor, "Sullivan", 165 cu. ft.,
Model WK-314. Single stage,
Buda gas engine. Steel wheels.
Price $500. Nelson Machinery,
phone 18, Nelson, B.C.
D-2 CAT. 5J-179 CABLE BLADE
breaker plow, Massey Harris
tractor, plow, mower, harrow
Phone 23-W, Balfour. W. M. Taylor, R.R. No. 1, Nelson.
FOR SALE - SAWMILL AND 3-
blade auger. Apply to Pete Ostri-
koff, Wynndel, B.C.
TRACTOR AND TILLER, USED
as demonstrator at Shorty's Repair Shop, 714 Baker St.
BUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
ASSAYERS AND MINE
REPRESENTATIVES
S   ELMES, ROSSLAND, BC
Assayer chemist Mine Rep
AUTOMOTIVE
For expert body and paint work
and all types of mechanical work
and tune-ups, be sure to try
JOHN'S MOTORS
6 Mile North Shore
Phone John Kohout 1808-Y-3
liNWIMISIiKS   AND   SUHVliYOItS
JOHNSON AND McCORQUODALF
B.C. Land Surveyors.
Mine and Topographic Surveys,
Nelson, I015-8th St  Ph   144-R.
Trail, 1234 Bay Ave., Ph 2752.
BOYD C. AFFLECK-, MEIC
B.C Land Surveyor P Eng 1 Civil 1
218 Gore St    Nelson    Phone 1238
G W BAERG BC.
Land Surveyor
573 Baker St    Nelson   Phone 1118
INSURANCE
WAWANESA MUTUAL
INSURANCE CO.
Agent, 854 Ward St.
McHardy Agencies Ltd
Rail, air, steamship tickets,
See Jim or Betty Vioond.
I GLOBE -AGENCIES LIMITED
fl46 Cedar Ave.    Trail   Ph. 2345
Buying—Selling
MAIL
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Classified Advertising Department, Nelson, B,C.
 10 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 14, 1958
* SWIM SUPPLIES *
l
I
fcot
Sn©1
vo*
\oW
+** Swim Fins
0°
Sally Rand, Fan Dancer,
Hopes For New Career
By BOB THOMAS
LAS VEGAS,- Nev. (AP)-What-
tver happened to Sally Rand?
At a well-preserved 54, she is
still waving those ostrich feathers.
While she's hot doing 'it with a
physics book; in one hand, she
claims her future lies in a scientific career. •'.''.
"I've^ been going to school," she
announced proudly as she lounged
beside a hotel pool.
"It took Some /doing, because I
never graduated-from high school.
But I was allowed to take some
courses through the University of
California. I rook, physics, math,
chemistry and psychology. And
I'm proud to say that 1 had a 95
average. ♦ '
"I'm also, proud, of something
else. You know all the tests and
records of the university are kept
HAIGH
TRU-ART
Beauty Salon
Phone 327
-    578 Baker St.
Have Tha Job Done Right
VIC GRAVES
■       LIMITED       W.
PHONE 815
MASTER PLUMBER
by business machines. Well, a
company near my hometown went
through the files for employment
possibilities. They pulled out my
name and offered me a job- starting at $800 a month. Not bad,
huh?"
Does this mean she will give
up the fast-flowing fans%
TAX PROBLEMS
"You can't predict those
things," she said. "I wanted to.
I had. hoped to continue school
last winter. But I have problems
with the tax boys. I had to go
out on the road to make more
money." , ,
. She's been doing just that most
of her life. Since starting 40 years
ago,: she has played almost every
city of any size. Her big break
came when she flipped the feathers at the -1933 Chicago World's
Fair.
Despite all the money she has
made, she had been unable to give
up the fans because of money
problems. How come?
"It's a puzzle," she admitted.
"I don't drink, I've never put;a
dime in a slot machine, Tve
never laid even a $2 bet on a
horse, and I'm not a profligate in
my way of living."  •
SPEEDY ANIMALS
Prongnorns, the only antelope
native to North America, are
among the fastest of four-legged
animals.
I Bergman and
Life On North
By JAMES  BACON
PORTMEIRION, North Wales'
(AP)—Ingrid Bergman seems: the
happiest she has been in years.
She is working on a movie location in this lovely but rainy
corner of the British Isles, A visitor several times has been Lars
Schmidt, the wealthy Swede she
plans to marry.   ,
Friends and co-workers say
Miss Bergman acts like a schoolgirl with acute puppy love whenever he is around..
"She is so happy and such- a
joy to work with, says Director
Mark Robson, "that I get emotional everytime I talk with her.
I know she and Lars will be very
happy. He's an extremely, nice
guy,-'.'   .
Miss  Bergman's  marriage  to
Lesage Holds
Third Rally
On Gas Issue
PIERREVILLE, Que. (CP)-
Quebec Liberal Leader Jean Lesage says he estimates the Quebec Natural Gas Corporation
may have paid about $20,000,000
less for Quebec Hydro's gas-distribution system in Montreal than
the system was worth.   ■ ■ ■ •
Addressing a rally of 300 in this
town 48 miles southeast of Montreal, Mr. Lesage said the $39,-
000,000 paid by ' the privately-
owned corporation ■ for the pro-
vincially - owned manufactured-
gas distribution system "is too
low."       .-,..,   ; .. .'   .
"As a whole," Mr* Lesage said)
"the value of shares placed on
the stock market by the corporation has increased by about $20,-
000,000.
"I believe we have the right to
ask whether those who.purchased
Hydro's facilities did not pay too
low a price, possibly $20,000,000
less than the real value."
SERIES OF  MEETINGS
The rally was the third in a
series of meetings throughout
Quebec Mr. Lesage intends to
hold to talk about the sale.
He also said petitions will be
circulated in the 93 provincial
ridings asking Mr. Duplessis, for
a royal commission inquiry into
the sale and a general election.
In a question aimed at Hon.
Edouard As se 1 in, • government
leader in the upper-house Legislative Council, Mr. Lesage asked
whether Mr. Asselin did not think
it indecent to have introduced
legislation enabling the sale of
the publicly-owned system.
Mr. Asselin proposed the legislation while he personally was the
lawver for the corporation and
while his secretary, Pauline Perron, was registered as owner of
500 Common shares in the corporation, he said.
Keep Your Eye on Classified!
Family Enjoy
Wales Set
\'
1 movie director .Roberto Rossellini
was annulled Thursday.
Robson is directing her in The
Inn of the Sixth Happiness, a
story set in north Cfainal
NEVER HAPPIER
Ingrid says she: has never been
happier. ,   ,
Winning the academy award
for Anastasia has marked an upturn in her career. .She may re-'
turn to Hollywood—for the first
time since. 1949—next March to
appear in the Academy Awards
show.
"At first'I didn't think I would
return," she said. "But I feel now
that maybe people will forgive a
little."   •     •
Her three children, by Rossellini, were with her on the location. Her 19-year-old daughter,
Pia, by her, first husband,.Dr.
Peter Lindstrom, will visit her
later this summer in Paris.
WANTS PRIVACY
"I hope the photographers and
reporters will let us visit more
this time," she said. "It is not
so much news anymore."
She finds little privacy in Europe, she says, .especially in Paris.
"I know when I return there in
a few days," she says, "I will
find the photographers perched
up in the trees outside my apartment-but it only lasts a day or
so.". ■■'■■■■:.:
Here she spends her spare .time
teaching English to her three
children. Roberto, 9, and the
twins, Isabella and Ingrid, 6,
speak only Italian and French.
Russia Resents
.Refugee Pickets
NEW YORK (API-Hungarian
groups Saturday announced plans
resume picketing the 'Russian
United Nations headquarters despite the Russians' claim that
such action might prevent then-
taking part in UN work.
A huge demonstration at the
Soviet delegation headquarters
June 22 erupted in violence as
pickets attempted to invade the
building. Seven policemen were
injured and 12 pickets were ar-
-reisted.    	
The Hungarian organizations
were protesting the execution of
.leading figures of the 1956 Hungarian revolt     	
.In a subsequent note to the UN,
Russia said:   .
"Further repetition of hostile
demonstrations against the Soviet
representation and the absence of
normal conditions for its work
might lead to a situation whereby
the Soviet Union would be- deprived of the possibility of taking
part in the work of the UN."
Rev, Imre Kovas, one of the
Hungarian organization leaders,
said the organizations will hold a
mass meeting and will re-
to resume picketing the Russian
Sunday in further protest of what
was called Russian oppression in
Odds...
^Ends
..By M.D.R
Aha, you thought I'd gone.didn't
you? Well, when a story drops into
your lap you write It down and
leave" it to be sent out to be set
after you've gone and that is just
what happened to me Friday afternoon. I had just finished writing
you about the caravan when I was
introduced to a gentleman who
wandered into the editorial room.
He is Mr. George O., Wheeler,
news editor at the News tin 1917.
He recalls there were only three
ih the editorial room in those
days, Frank Payne, who was
managing editor, Litterlck, the
telegrapher (all the world news
came in Morse instead of by teletype in those days). Mr. Wheeler
was reporter and news editor ahd
Dora Billings was proofreader.
Rob Sutherland, was general
manager.
* *  *
While looking through our files
Of that' year he was reminiscing
on some of the stories in the pages:
He recalled writing a story on the
S.S. Nasookin ashe came into Nelson and his surprise on seeing it
appear on editorial page the following morning after he had handed
it to Mr. Payne the night before.
* *  *
He spoke of Mayor McQuarrie,
whom he considered one of Nelson's finest mayors — "he worked
very hard for the city," Mr.
Wheeler observed. He said he
remembered when armistice was
signed and people were all celebrating, Mayor McQuarrie's Son
had been shot the day before in
the fighting. The mayor did not
want, to be absent from the celebrations and what with his own
personal grief and a bad cold he
contracted pneumonia and died
only a short time later.
* a. *
Mr. Wheeler, now retired, has
lived in Palm Springs, Calif., for
the last 12 years. He finds a vast
difference in Nelson, but he says
it is surprising how many old
friends with whom he has been
able to renew acquaintance.
$65,000 in Grants
To Research Workers
TORONTO (CP) - Giants totalling $65,000 to 14 medical research
workers at 10 Canadian universities
■were announced Saturday by the
Canadian life insurance Fellowship
Fund. The award* range from
$3,500 to $6,000.
• Seven are new awards and the
others are additions to research
grants of previous years.
The recipients include:
University of Alberta — Dr. E.
C. Elliot.
University of British Columbia —
Dr. W. B. Chung.
Universityof Manitoba — Dr. G.
R. Cumming.     •
Princess Thanks Pilot
For Wonderful Trip
VANCOUVER (CP)-The chief
pilot on the' BOAC Bristol Britannia turbo-prop aircraft which
brought Princess Margaret here
from London Saturday said the
princess told him she had a "wonderful trip." .
Capt. J. T. tercy, s veteran of
Atlantic flying who captained the
plane, said the princess sent for
him near the end of the journey.
She told him 'she had rested
well and that the Bristol was "a
lovely olane."
Capt. Percy said Princess Margaret retired early after a light
supper Friday night and rested
until about two hours before arriving in Vancouver.
The captain said there were no
incidents on the trip but he had
reduced speed after crossing over
Winnipeg because "we were coming in too fast." He said they flew
at about 400 miles an hour for
most of the trip and by throttling
back, had arrived in the aircraft,
landing circuit over Vancouver
airport right on time.  .
Capt. ■ Percy, who has skippered planes for 25 yeafs and
has 15,000 hours flying time to
his credit, said' this was. the first
time he had flown royalty.
"But it didn't worry me," he
said. "It was. very nice."
The   big   Britannia,   specially
Pearkes Lauds
Joint Defence
VANCOUVER (CP) — Defence
Minister Pearkes lias termed the
formation of a new Canada-U.S.
committee on joint defence "a
tremendous stride forward to ensure we have co-ordinated defence." ,
The minister was 'interviewed
on arriving here from Ottawa. He
later proceeded to Victoria where
he welcomed Princess Margaret on
behalf of the federal government.
The minister said no date for
the committee's first meeting has
been set "but it will not be in the
too-distant future."
Canadian members of the committee are External Affairs Minister Smith, Finance Minister
Fleming and Mr. ' Pearkes. Its
formation was announced in Ottawa Thursday.
Mr. Pearkes said it is too. early
to say whether the U.S. will buy
any of Canada's supersonic interceptors, the CF-105.
Asked if an approach on the
matter had been made to President Eisenhower during his Ottawa visit, the minister replied
that "we discussed in general
terms the defence problems of
North- America . . . They (the
U.S.) know the qualities of the
CF-105. They have been up to see
"Mind you, we have got to examine the position this fall to decide-whether we go into production or not. No decision has been
made yet."
fitted for the trip, now will go
back into regular service until it
goes to Halifax to pick up the
princess and her party at the end
of their Canadian tour.
Youths Throw
Policeman .
Through Window
TORONTO (CP)-A rock 'n'
roil dance in suburban Scarborough Friday night erupted in a
brawl and the arrest of six youths
on charges of creating a disturbance.
One police officer was hurled
through a plate glass window and
lay bleeding on the sidewalk while
a crowd jeered.
Police said the fight started in
an argument between two youths
who wanted to dance with the
same girl. Seconds later three
fights broke out and soon "everybody, was swinging at everybody."
Constable Edward McConnell,
one of three officers on duty at
the dance, was taking one of the
fighting youths to the door when
he was grabbed by twp other
youths and thrown through the
window.
A tendon on the officer's wrist
was cut. He also suffered cuts on
the right hand which required 18
stitches. Hospital authorities said
he is unable to move the
fingers of one hand.
Several carloads of police were
needed to break up the fights. Police said there were about 130
boys and girls at the dance.
HOPE TO BEAT
ALPINE PROBLEM
AOSTA, Iatly (AP) — European experts believe they have
solved a big problem of travel
beneath the Alps. *
Within three years tourists will
be crossing between France and
Italy through 14,430 - foot Mt.
Blanc. Others from Italy and
Switzerland will travel under 8,-
491-foot Mt. Great Saint Bernard.
*In winter a motorist will whip
into the Mt. Blanc tunnel entrance 3,900 feet above sea level
at zero or lower temperatures.
Some five minutes later deep
under Europe's mightiest mountain, temperatures may- hit 120.
The sudden change could kill a
man. It killed many When laborers half a century ago ran into
a similar thermal problem digging the Simplon Railway Tunnel.
Engineers working on the two
highway projects plan "graduated acclimation." There will be-
heated areas at the tunnel entrance; then a' normal temperature zone; and then force-driven
air conditioning to cool the deep
driving hours through the Alps
under-mountain, zone.
The Custom 300 Tudor features
fine-car looks and performance.
You travel first class.,.at budget fares
WITH FORD, THE QUAUTY CAR OF THE 10W PRICE FIELD
Most people. guess too high on
Ford's price. And no wonder! Ford
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interiors once found only in expensive luxury cars. You ride in fine-
car comfort, too, for every Ford
front seat'is cushioned with soft
foam rubber.
New front and rear suspension
mean a smoother ride on any road.
And for added stability, Ford's
frame is bowed out to let you ride
lower—and safer too, within the
protection of the heavy frame rails.
Ford's new Interceptor V-8
engines feature Precision Fuel
Induction for smooth, sure power.
Teamed with new Cruise-O-Matic
transmission, they offer up to 15%
savings on gas. For even greater
economy, Ford offers the Mileage
Maker Six, Canada's most powerful modern Six.
First class travel costs less than
you'd think in a Ford. Let your
Ford Dealer show you why.
Five steel cress braces
are welded to the roof
rails of every Ford sedan
and hardtop to give you
the greatest roof reinforcement in Ford's field.
Competitors have only 2
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You get extra strength
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and other high-quality
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For extra built'in quality at no extra cost to you... see your
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• News of the Day
RATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on
request. Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment.
Rotary Luncheon-Monday, 12:15
p.m., Hume Hotel. ' .       ,*
OPEN TODAY UNTIL 12 NOON
EBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.
ELECTROLUX SALES, SERVICE
Clint Thompson
1215 Ward St.      •      Phone 1101)
See our used chesterfields and
davenports, priced to clear.
STERLING HOME FURNISHERS
Phone 263
SNAPPY SERVICE
For your hauling needs.
Kootenay Chimney Service
Chimneys cleaned and repaired.
' :   Phone 2117.
FOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING
find permanent* try the Charm
Beauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.
Ste. 211. Phone 1922.
" Mothers—Send your budding and
prospective ball players to Queen
Elizabeth Park tonight, 5:30, for
FREE Vijo Pancakes.
New summery styles in Ladies'
Dresses, popular' sizes; Vt sizes,
over-sizes—all at r
EBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.
Metal medicine cabinets, with
plate glass mirrors and shelves.
T. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.
101 Hall St. - Nelson - Phone 156
OLYMPUS Wide 11, a truly fine
camera, finer indoor pictures,
deeper focus, optical perfection.
Finest value af only $$9.95.
' CUSTOM CAMERAS
Stanley St. Opposite "The Bay"
Color or B&W Film Developed
RCMP RIDE, JULY 35th
TICKETS ON SALE AT
Chamber'of Commerce, Godfrey's
Ltd., Gilker's Ltd., Ben 'Sutherland, Emory's Ltd., Ramsay's
Kootenay Stationers, Fred White-
ley'si Mann Drugs, C. W. Appleyard Co. Adults $1.00. Children and
students 50c. Address'mail orders
for tickets to Nelson Chamber of
Commerce.
.CARD  OF THANKS
We wish to express our sincere
thanks and appreciation' to our
many friends who were so kind to
us during our Tecent bereavement,
ahd also for the beautiful floral offerings.
•       IDA and RAY
KOSIANCIC.
Goldfine Lashes.
Back at Accusers
WASHINGTON (AP) - Bernard
Goldfine struck back at his congressional accusers Saturday. He
said their purpose has been to
smear, pry and spy.
"This committee is on a fishing
expedition and looking into matters that are not pertinent or relevant to the inquiry at hand," Gold-
fine told reporters as he boarded a
plane for Boston.
Two members of the House of
Representatives commerce subcommittee investigating Goldfine's
affairs indignantly rejected his contentions.
"Entirely wrong," said chairman
Oren Harris (Dem.-Ark.).
"Ridiculous," said representative John B. B,ennett {Rep.-Mich.l.
APPOINT FOUNTAIN WORKS
ALBUQUERQUE (AP)-A man
named Fountain Work6 was appointed sales manager of an Albuquerque soft drink bottling company.
SWIM
WEAR
Trunks
and
Boxers ■
$3.95-$5.95
Come on iii, -
the water's' *:
COOL ' ';
EMORVS
THE MAN'S STORE
Gov't Booklet
Beats Popular
Best Sellers
By CAROLYN WILLETT
OTTAWA (CP) - Gordon Alexander says a booklet that entices
visitors to Canada would be hi*
office's best-seller—if it had a
price. ,
But Vacations Unlimited is distributed free of charge, as are
many government publications
produced through the art and
illustration section of the public
printing bureau.
Mr. Alexander, Glasgow-born
director of the section, said in an
interview that last year he and
his staff of three artists produced
104 publications. His present ivork
schedule calls ior 20 different projects for 12 government departments.
WIDE  RANGE
"We can jireate, design and
plan all kinds of public relations
material, from folders and posters to books."
The publications-lined walls of
his printing bureau office in
neighboring Hull, Que., speak for
the work of the section that has
been in existence for 10 years.
Bright cover* range from a series of maps on Canadian port*
to Joseph Schull's official account of the Royal Canadian Navy
during...,the Second World 'War,
The Far Distant Ships.
There are Join the Army posters, recipe booklets and Vacations Unlimited—the government
travel bureau publication v that
has gone into its fifth edition with
a great many ■ of its 2.000,000
copies distributed in the United
States.
MASS AUDIENCE
The former advertising .agency
executive says frankly that his
section "deals with millions" and
aims at a mass audience.
Departments also are interested
in getting their publications produced economically. But more
than money determines a pamphlet's appeal.
"Any printing job can be made
to look attractive if-it is properly
designed," vi says' Mr.  Alexander.
He says -the section gives its
artists some scope for creative
graphic art—whether in a book
cover design or a poster.
Work produced in the section
is a far cry from the sedate products of former years. The art and
illustration section grew out of
the directorate of public information established in 1941 to support
the war effort.
BUZZ POLICEMAN
WASHINGTON (AP) - Officer
Edgar Mangum went to his police
call box to buzz the station. He
got buzzed himself. A flight of
bees came out, mad as hornets.
Magnum said he left without even
saying hello.
FOR REAL FOOT
COMFORT
Sanl-ped Foot Powder  69
Sani-ped Foot Cream  75
Sanl-ped Foot Balm  75
And for Treatment of Discomfort Due to Athlete's Foot
ierosol Funfti Rex  _ 1.59
Fungi Rex Cream  75
At
City Drug
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250 Canadians
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E. G. Bernard, Manogtsr
tot Baker Street Telephone 1890
NELSON
