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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" -.\nNelson's Record\n2121\nTraffic Fatality - Free Days\nVol. 56\nllcbfll\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Mostly sunny today but with cloudy periods and\nafternoon showers. Little change\nin temperature. Light winds. Low-\nhigh at Cranbrook and Orescent\nValley 50 and 80.\nION, B.C.^CJVNAPA-THU^DAY MOBNING. JHNE 26, 1958\nGeneva Boycott\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Russia Wednesday night threatened\nto boycott next' week's Geneva atomic conference unless\n.the United States confirms the conference's main purpose\nIb to achieve immediate sus\npension of nuclear, tests.\nOtherwise, said in a Soviet note\nto the United States broadcast by\nMoscow radio, \"there is no need\nto send experts to that conference.\" :\u2022;'        '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"\nThe conference of Bast \u2022 West\natomic experts to study means -of\ncontrolling a nuclear test ban is\ndue to start to Geneva Tuesday.\nThe note said Russia would not\nattend the, conference if. it served\nas \"an act of deception\" to -the\nworld. ,,,'\nThe note was the second on the\ntalks | delivered- to the .United States\nIn the last two days. Tuesday's\nconfirmed arrangements for the\nconference and said Russia has no\nobjection to Canada participating.\nREJfECTS U.S. STAND\nWednesday's note rejected the\nAmerican positions outlined by\nU.S. State Secretary Dulles who\nsaid last week that any .agreements reached at Geneva would\nnot necessarily C 6 tn m i t the\nUnited States to, suspending nuclear -tests.\" *\n\"Ohe canqbt. agree   with   the\nposition of Uie U.S. state secretary,\" the note said. \"This conference will be of benefit only if\nit produces positive results . . ,\n'The Soviet government would\nJike to-receive from the U.S. government a confirmation that the\nexperts conference will be subordinate to the solution of the task\nof the immediate cessation of\ntests of nuclear weapons everywhere; that consequently, the aims\nof that conference remain s determined in the exchnge of correspondence between the Soviet and\nthU.S. government.\" *\nin Washington, President Eisenhower cancelled . a golf game\nahd rushed: back to the White\nRouse for a half-hour conference\nwith Dulles.. Later, Dulles told\nreporters he was deeply disappointed by the Soviet attitude.\nHe was pessimistic over prospects but expressed hope that the\nGeneva meeting mlgh* still be\nheld with the Russians attending.\nS.ome American delegates already are oh route to Geneva.\nShowers Reduce\nB.C. Fire Threat\nVANCbUVER. (CP)-Forty-eight\nhours of scattered rain were\nenough to send lumber workers\ntrooping back into the forests of\nVancouver Island and the British\nColumbia coast Wednesday.\nFor the moment it reduced the\nthreat of forest fires in the Vancouver fire district, but in the por-\nthern Prinoe George district,\nstorms lashed old fires into new\nfury without making any appreciable difference in the critical\nhazard. .\nThe .Vancouver district,' which\nincludes Vancouver; Island and\nmuch of the southwestern part, of\nthe province, has been under a\npartial industrial closure for a\nweek and. all unauthorized- woods\ntravel in the area is banned.\nLOGGERS RETURN 7<\n'   The  industrial   closure   forbids\nSlides Cleared\nOff (PR Line\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Canadian Pacific Railway's Transcontinental Line was back in working order Wednesday night after 33\nmudslides had ripped the track in\n- the Kamloops area Tuesd#.\nToday'CPR equipment will commence recovering four diesel engines, valued at $1,000,000 and\nseven freight cars that slid down\na 150-foot embankment at Squilax,\n42 miles east of Kamloops.\nA CPR spokesman said \"we\ndon't think they are badly damaged.\"\nSix oilier cars of a 65-car freight\nloaded with wheat were also derailed. ;\nSlides were caused by torren-\n' tlal rains.\nThe ..westbound Canadian arrived here four hours late Wednesday and the westbound Dominion was 12 hours late. Both passenger trains were detoured\naround the slide area over CNR\nlines.      i  -\nParliament\nWednesday\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker Informed the Commons federal experts are studying ' a possible\ncrude oil pipeline to Montreal.  -\nAgriculture Minister Harkness\nsaid he expects signing of the\nlong-awaited South Saskatchewan\nRiver dam agreement in the\n\"very near future.\"\nJustice Minister Fulton reintroduced a new and stricter bill\non human slaughter or food animals.\nRobert S. MacLellan (PC-\nInverness-Richmond) called during the Commons budget debate\nfor tax concessions to encourage\nnew Atlantic provinces industries.\nTHURSDAY\nThe Commons met to continue\nthe budget debate. The senate sits\nat 1 p.m.\nworking in the woods between\np.m. and midnight, the time when\nfire hazards are highest.\nWednesday MacMIllaii ahd Bloedel: sent back all but a few of its\n1200 forest workers on the'job for\nthe limited period and Comox Logging Company followed suit.\nBoth operate, mainly on Vancouver Island. \u25a0\nThe scattered showers which\nmoved across the southern part of\nthe province gave hope to lumber\nofficials that* the prbvinee might\nlift the industrial, closure.,     \"\u25a0\" .\nHbwever, reports of warm, dry\nweather moving in behind the\nstorms gave little hope of long,\nrange, relief froth extreme, dry\nSpells causes byvgenefal tack \"oi\nrain in the province:and soaring\ntemperatures.\nThe Vancouver district is the\nonly one with a closure in effect.\nNEAR RECORD\nPrince George district, where\nthe number of -fires threatens to\nset a record, has had no need to\nimpose closure.\nDistrict Forester W. C. Philips\nof Prince George said Wednesday\nmost lumber companies in the dis\ntrict, have closed voluntarily to\nallow their men to join the fire\nlines while many planing mills are\nshut for lack of timber.   \",'\nHeavy rainfall in the southern\n.  interior brought egme relief to\nparched forests and Ranger Bert\nHewlett of Kelowna said Wednesday the hazard Ib \"not quite as\nsevere\" as earlier.\nThe Kelowna district has had\nonly 10 small fires this season?'\n\u25a0 The storm at Prince George resulted in 10 new fires caused by\nlightning and the spread of others\nby winds of up to 50 miles an hour.\nAs for the one-tenth of an inch\nof rain that accompanied the storm\nin most areas, Mr. Philips said:\n\"A good spit would have been al\nmost as much help.\"\nHAZARD DROPS\nThe storm did bring an increase\nin humidity, however, and, a slight\nreduction in the hazard.\nHowever, there were 707 men\nreported fighting forest blazes in\nthe vast northern district. Nearly\n250,000 acres of fir, pine and cedar\nhave been burned over so far this\nyear in the Prince George area\nalone. The total of district fires\nso far is 245, and is rapidly approaching the record 300 fires\nlogged in 1938.\nThere Has been no appreciable\nrain in the area for two months\nand temperatures have been high.\nThe*biggest blaze, covering more\nthan 82,000 acres, was reported at\nLower Post near the Yukon border.\nNet More Than 6c Daily, 10c Saturday\nNo. 56\nBITTEN BY SNAKE\nPENTICTON, B.C. (CP) - *A\nwoman is in good condition in Penticton Hospital after being bitten by\na rattlesnake at Cawston, 35 miles\nsouthwest of here, Tuesday.\nMrs. Harry Squakin lifted a tarpaulin and the snake, which was\nlying under it, bit her on the\nknuckles.   .\nWhen she arrived at Penticton\nHospital her arm was swollen* to\nthe elbow.\nThe Penticton Hospital has anti\nmake bite serum.\nSCHOOL'!^ OUT trot**\" don't these lads know itVTheyp^radlM^Centtal School\nright into the path of Daily News photographer -Ian Brown: Wednej-Way armed with-\nbooks and. pencils ready tp discard at home. Their happy smiles show tha anticipation they hold for th\u00bbW^month summer vacation.ahead. Th* tenets were happy\ntop.rTrI)giIy:New*.photo.' *.'\u2022\u25a0(\u25a0     .'-'7'r*7      '    \"- :Jy''.\"\"\u2022',' ; '\/}\/\u25a0   j-7'.:,.,      \u25a0'.;\u25a0':- .',';\nWant Frontiers Seated. ,.,4\/,,^'    -7. ~j\nLebanon Asks OH\nGut Off War Siippl\nForces\nies flow\nConspiracy Charge\nStands, Wilson Rules\nGirl Drowns\nIn Elk River\nFERNIE-A 12-year-old girl\nwas drowned in the quiet backwaters of the Pk River Wednesday evening.\nRescuers were unable to revive\nSharellie Beraj after she was\npulled from the river by a 12-\nyear-old hoy. She bad failed from\na makeshift raft into water beyond her depth.\nThe girl was playing on the banks\nwith two friends when she decided\nto have a swim, despite her companions' protests. Dannja Strang\nand Marlene Zuffa told police they\nhad warned her not to go into the\nwafer.\nDannja swam out in an attempt\nto rescue her friend, but was forced\nto return to shore. The-girl was\nbrought out by Kant Chappel, who\nlived nearby, five minutes after\nshe fell off. the raft. - .\n. Members of tbe Fernie Fire Department applied artificial respiration and used an inhalator, but to\nno avail*   \u25a0'\nThe daughter of Mrs. William\nBeraj of Fergie, Sharellie hard lived\nin Fernie for about seven months.\nShe was born in Nofdagg, Alberta.\nWoodworkers\nBrillihPM\nTo Paris Sunday\nLONDON (Reuters) ~- Final arrangements were made Wednesday\nfor Prime Minister Macmillan's\npersonal talis in Paris Sunday\nwith French Premier Charles de\nGaulle.\nAn authoritative source close to\nMacmillan said the talks will be\n\"an exercise in personal relations.\"\nFrench Ambassador Jean Chau-\nvel called On Foreign Secretary\nLloyd here Wednesday to make the\narrangements. Lloyd will fly to\nParis with Macmillan.\nLater it was learned Macmillan\nand de Gaulle plan to discuss summit talks;, NATO, disarmament,\nLebanon's civil war, the North\nAfrican situation and the proposed\nEuropean free trade area.\nThe British prune.'minister, who*\nworked closely with'de Gaulle in\nNorth Africa during the war, will\nbe the first important foreign\nstatesman to confer with the general since his investiture at Uie\nbeginning of this month.\nThe aim of the Paris meeting\nwill be to range over world issues\nand aachleve close' understanding\non them. '\u25a0 '\nTotem Up in\nWindsor Park\nWINDSOR, Eng. (CP) - British\nColumbia's centennial! totem pole\nwhich will be formally presented\nto the Queen July 19, was erected\nin. Windsor Great Park Wednesday.\nTbe task of putting the 100-foot\npole into position was carried out\nby the ROyal Engineers, who 100\nyears earlier had been given the\n]0b, of building the first roads,\nschools and townships in the then\nGrown colony.\nThe pole is carved from a single\nlog of western red cedar and\nweighs more than .12 tons. It is\nsituated at the foot of an avenue\nof C a n ad ia n trees- planted in\nWindsor Great Park to commemorate the work of the. Canadian\nForestry Corps in the F i r s t\nWorld War.\nThe formal presentation ceremony JUly 19 is expected to attract a large turnout of London's\ndiplomatic corps. The presentation will be made by W. A.\n(Bill) McAdam. agent \u25a0 general\nfor B.C.\nTo Appeal\nCourt Martial\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014An army captain who won the Military Cross\nfor bravery in Korea is appealing\nhis court martial conviction of\nbeing unfit for duty on the parade\nsquare.\nThe appeal by Capt. George Tay-\nlor, MC, 43, of Annapolis County,\nN.S., will be heard here July-21\nby the court martial appeal board.\nThe board has five civilian members.  -  - '\u25a0-\u25a0  '*'.\"'\u2022   .\nCapt. Taylor was charged last\nyear at Halifax with drunkenness\nand with being unfit for, duty-at\nan army parade Sept. 16,. 1957, ln\nhonor of Rear-Admiral Hugh Pullen\nwhen Admiral Pullen took over as\nFlag Officer Atlantic Coast.\nDOLLAR HIGHER\nNEW YORK (CP) - The Canadian dollar was up 3-16 at a premium of 4 9-32 in terms of U. S.\nfunds Wednesday; a week ago\n3% per cent premium. Pound sterling was downs. 1-32 at $2.80 17-32.\nMONTREAL (CP) -\u00b1 The U. S.\ndollar closed Wednesday at a dis\ncount of 4 3:32 per ceht'in terms of\nCanadian funds, down 5-32. Pound\nsterling $2.68 1-16, down: %\nBy WILTON W.YNN '. 7 _ -     J |\nBEIRUT, Lebanon (AP^tehanon.asked'- the United.\nNations Wednesday to seal.off tKis-country's land cmd sea\nfrontiers with armed force and stop the flow of Syrian and\nEgyptian warsupplies to !$)\u2022 ~\nanese rebels\nPremier Sami Solh handed -to\nSecretary-General Dag' Hammar-\nski'oldthe request -tor a UN emergency police force similar to that\nkeeping the peace,on the Israeli-\nEgyptiah. border at Gaza. \u25a0 \u25a0',;. \u2022,'\nA special session-of the UN General Assembly may be called to\ndeal with the request.\nOnly a few 'hours after the. request, dynamite blasts and heavy\nmortar, madiine-guh. and rifle fire1\nshattered Beirut's unofficial truce\nin three sections of die capital,\nFIRE THROUGH STREETS\nRebels from behind their barricades on the outskirts of the Basta\nMoslem section opened fire down\nthe long: avenue leading to the\ncity's main square, chasing-, away\nall traffic and pedestrians.\nOther firing and dynamite, blasts\ncame from the 'Christian quarter\nof ^shraflah,'-and from near tthe\npost office. ' \"\u2022\nPresident Camille Chamoun,\nwhom the rebels seek, to over\nthrow ln favor of a regime favorable to President Nasser of\nthe United Arab Republic of\nSyria and Egypt, has predicted\na concerted rebel attack no later\nthan today.\nAltagh the shooting appeared\nto die dotfh, there were ominous\nindications of a showdown, soon\nNO INCREASE\nThe rebel leader in Beirut, Saeb\nSalam, said his forces will resist\nany. increase in UN. forces to Lebanon, even if only to 500 unarmed\nobservers. UN personnel now number less than lOO.men.\nKamal Jublatt, powerful leader\nof Drusa tribesmen, said at his\nheadquarters 16 miles southeast of\nBeirut,. he --tvquld ..not - permit UN\nobservers access to the. Syrian border in his territory,\nCharging i intervention in .Lebanon since. 1957 by Egypt.and Syria, Chamoun said aijebariesegar-\nrisoh at Marjayoun in south Lebanon, was .sftelled Tuesday from\nSyrian territory. He.said UN observers saw the shelling and examined some unexploded mortar\nshells.    \u2022>\nPremier Sami Solh announced in\nan interview the request for. a UN\nemergency police force to \"throw\na complete cordon around Lebanon's borders \u2014 by sea and land.\"\nAt the UN in New York, western\ndiplomats predicted an emergency\nsession of the General. Assembly\nto take up Lebanon's request. This\nwas basal, on,, the -belief the Russians would veto Security Council\naction.\nDecision Yet to Come on\nSommers Bribery Charges\n' VANCOUVER (CP)--The presiding Justice In the 31-\nday-old Sommers bribery-conspiracy trial ruled Wednesday\nthat the lone conspiracy charge in an amended Crown\nindictment will stand but said he will rule later on eligibility\nof 24 remaining charges of ~\nApproval For Bill\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The. \u25a0 Senate\nWednesday gave final approval to\na bill; (speeding up the: national\nhospital, insurance' plan,.- f*ut. not\nbefore a Liberal -Senator tyarned\nHie spendtagof .public, money tfill\nnot solve every -social problem. .\n'\u2022Senator -. Thomas' Cfear, Manitoba; also said it will ba> Canada's\ndoctors, not the federal or provincial governments,'who will determine whether the \"scheme wiB be\nadministerbd.'with reasonable efficiency.\/ .\u00bb\"''.\"\u2022.\n. 'The bill will permit federal cost-\niihaHng payments.to. start. July 1\ntoward :*!edera*fj*approved provin-\nciaf'ihsurance plans then in effect.\nIt already has been approved by\nthe Commons and receives royal\nassent Thursday. . .\nTragedy Probe\nOpens Today\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A royal\ncommission investigation into the\ncollapse of two spans' of the new\nSecond Narrows Bridge with the\nloss of 18 lives opens her July 9.\nChief Justice Sherwobd Lett of\nthe British Columbia Supreme\nCourt, appointed royal commissioner, ' announced the date Wednesday and said the opening session will be restricted to -formalities and probably adjourn.\nHe could not say immediately\nwhen the full public inquiry\nwould start.\nThe collapse of part of the unfinished . $16,000,000 bridge is expected to result in at least a six\nmonths delay in completion of the\nstructure and loss estimated at,\n$3,500,000.   '\"' .-\"\u2022\u2022,\"'.\nIThe bridge is to connect Vancouver with' communities on the\nnorthern shore* bf burrard Inlet.\nBodies of three or the 18 workmen killed have not - been recovered.\n) \u2014 Anofficial\nWoodworkers\ned Wednesday\ners have voted\niber operators.\n>ervised strike\nthe union\nl-jtake' place\niry of the\nt'committee;\n:ent of these\nlembers -who\nto executive's\n\u25a0eject a con-\nJn.\ntaping on the\nlast Bv. Mr. Fie-\n' ballot! have been\n_ pf wowjlfrom a few\nig pofefo. .-\u25a0 '.:\u2022:.\n('oiit'ilirit^llijjprt by the\n' siT:-r#resehtative and the\nairman recommended the\nunion get no wage increase. The\nunion is demanding a 10-per-cent\nraise. Basic rate is $1.72 an hour.\nViet Nam\nInvades Border\nPlfNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP)\nA Cambodian royal proclamation\nreported troops from neighboring\nSouth Viet Nam have invaded and\noccupied several Cambodian border villages.       \u25a0\nThis kingdom and the South\nViet Nam'republic are independent\ncountries that formerly were parts\nof-French Indochina. Long-standing\nfeuds have been bought over their\nborders.\nKipg Suramarit urged the U.S.\nto intervene as a friend of both\nnations and to ask South Viet Nam\nto ''stop permanently these unjust\nannexionist manoeuvres.\"\nChnibodian -Prune Minister Sim\nVar, whose government was overthrown Sunday on economic questions, made a broadcast calling\nfor calm. '      '\nForeign Minister Traong Cang\nsummoned representatives of all\nforeign missions in the capital to\nhear the royal proclamation.\nbribery.\nThe ruling was made by Supreme\nCourt Justice J. 0- Wilson after\nhe heard arguments from the battery of six defence lawyers and\nfrom prosecutor Victor Dryer on\nthe effect of Crown action Tuesday\nwhich reduced the number of\ncharges to 25 from 38 and shifted\nthem to the old criminal code.\nThe charges had previously been\nlaid under the new Criminal Code\nwhich became effective in April,\n1955. The prosecution shift became\nnecessary after the judge noted\nthat the alleged criminal acts of\nformer lands and forests minister\nRobert' Sommers and seven other\naccused had occurred before that\ndate. He ruled the old code must\napply.\nDay-long argument revolved\nmainly around the point whether\nthe limitation section of the old\ncode \u2014 which nullifies punishment\nfor a bribery offence more than\ntwo years old\u2014could apply. The\ndefence argued lhat all the 24 bribery counts fell into that category\nbut prosecutor Dryer maintained\nthat the limitation section was procedural only and that it did not\napply.\nJUDGMENT SHAKEN\nMr*. Justice Wilson said his feeling had been \"that ths.limitation\nshould apply but I have been\nShaken by some of the argument\nhere today.\"  \u2022 r        j\nAt the1 tame time the justice\nruled out.twodefence'arguments\u2014\nthat the.wort \"individual\" in the\nCriminal Code does not include a\ncorporation and that the Crown\naiiust'- prwa'fitiStect 'payS-iGnls' \"to\nSommers by others of the accused.\nSontjners S-eiigneS from the government in 1956 But still is Social\nCredit i-uember of ,the le^iHst-art\nfor Rbssland-Iraa. 'Charged, with'\nWm are H. W. Gray, John Gray,\nCharles D. Schultz, the C,1' D.\nSchultz Company Limited, Pacific\nCoast Services Limited, Evergreen\nLumber Sales and B.C. Forest\nProducts.\nAll have pleaded not guilty to the\ncharges, which mainly allege. \u2022\nsplit of thousands of dollars between the former minister, H. W.\nGray and Schultz in connection\nwith Issuance of government Umber licences while Sommers was\na member of the cabinet.\nThe involved legal points were\nargued in the absence of the jury\nof nine men and three women,' although they could have been there.\nTuesday the justice told them they\ncould attend or stay away until ths\nafternoon. None attended the morning sitting and when they reappeared at 2:30 p.m. the' judge\nrepeated his instruction, saying\nthey could stay or be dismissed\nuntil today. All the jurors filed out.\nTreasure* '     -\nTe Pay Taxes\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 TJie*\nyear -\u2022 old Duke. of Devonshire\nstood unobtrusively in an auction\nroom here Wednesday and\nwatched some of his historic family treasures go Under the hammer.\nFamous paintings, books, silver\nand even furniture from Chats-\nworth House in Derbyshire went to\nthe highest bidders to help pay inheritance taxes of \u00a36,000,000.        '\nIf his father, the 10th duke, had\nlived only four months longer, the\npeer would not have been compelled to pay taxes on much of\nthe estate.\nHis son Is forced to pay in taxes\nabout 75 per cent of the total estate, valued at \u00a38,000,000.\nWednesday-was the first of a\nfive -t day auction, with dealers\nbidding for French and English\nsilver. The silver brought a total\nof \u00a336,000.\n-       \u2022  . ! . .    ..       ..   I.\nLa* Convention\nBegins Today\n-. PENTICTON (CP) \u2014 The van-\nguard of 200 delegates to the annual conventions of the Law Society'of British \"Columbia and the\nCanadian Bar Association, B.C.\nbranch, started to anrive here on\nWednesday. The two-day meeting\nbegins today.\nTo Build Four\nRefuelling Bases\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Four bases for\nrefuelling tankers of the United\nStates Strategic Air Command will\nbe built in Canada, it was learned\nWednesday.     \u25a0\nThe four bases are Frobisher on\nBaft-fin Island, Fort - Churchill,\nMan.; Cold Lake,* Alta., and Namao, near Edmonton.\nThe tankers are used to refuel\n'bombers in flight. Their operations\nfrom Canada will require new\nhangars, storage facilities and extended runways. Construction will\ncost ih the neighborhood Of ,$50,-\n000,000.; '\nOfficials said tenders for the Fro-\nbisher job will close July 22 and\nfor Fort Churchill some time after\nthat. Tenders for the Cold Lake\nand NamaO construction will be\ncalled later.  ,\nFreighter Rams\nOil Tanker\nNEW YORK (AP) - A \u00abwed-\nish freighter rammed an oil\ntanker in the East River early\nWednesday, flinging sheets of blazing gasoline into the air and setting fire to Manhattan Bridge far -\nabove. The tanker sank. Three\npersons were reported missing\nand 37 injured.\nChemical foam was rushed to\nthe area to fight a possible new\nexplosion caused by the drifting,\nvolatile gasoline. Much of it\/ was\nfe.'the waters of -'the*. Brqbkiyn\nMvy'-yardi\nBoat Crowded\nJury Decides\n\u25a0 Ibfferlaw, Ont. (CP) - Aa-\ninquest jury ruled Wednesday\nthat the 14-foot launch in which\nfive RCMP men were carried to\ntheir deaths on wind-swept Lake\nSimcoe June 7 was overcrowded\nand overloaded.\nThe three - day .inquest was-held\nspecifically in the death- of\nRCMP Cpl. Herbert Smart, 84; of\nToronto, whose body was the only\none recovered. \u25a0\nThe jury said he died by ac-,\ncidental drowning in Lake Simcoe\noff Georgia Island, \"due-to rough\nsea caused by storm, failure of\nmotor causing boat to swamp,**'\nEric Silk, deputy- assistant attorney - general of Ontario, said\nhe concurred with what he called\na splendid'.verdict. \"\/\nThe jury also found that transport department standard life-\njackets and department-approved '\nlife cushions were unsatisfactory.\nThere were both kinds ,of equipment in the' all-fated boat, which\nwas put throgh its paces Wednesday for the jury.\nTestimony, was that the fiv\u00bb\nmen;in the 14-fo'oter weighed 860\npounds without their. clothes,\nequipment in the boat weighed 120\npounds \u25a0\u25a0 and the motor - about 129\npounds. .    . -\nTrail May Be Site for\nSatellite TV Station\nOTTAWA (CP) - The CBC is\nsurveying proposals for six satellite television stations across Canada, Revenue Minister Nowlan informed 'the Commons Wednesday.\nHe said -these' are English-language stations at Corner Brook,\nNfld.; Liverpool - Shelburne - Yarmouth in Nova Scotia; Kenora,\nOnt., and Trail, B.C.and French-\nlanguage stations at Moncton, N.B.,\nand St. Boniface, Man.\nThe satellite stations\u2014relay outlets which do not, originate their\nown programs-jwould either be\nlinked to the television microwave\nnetwork crossing Canada or would\noperate from kinescope recordings.\nSuch stations are generally used\ntor areas beyond broadcasting\nrange of normal TV stations, but\n\u25a0which do not have sufficient popu\nlation to support a regular station.\nTRAIL (CP) t- British Columbia's first low-power television\ntransmitter, relaying programs off\nthe CBC micro-wave network service may be located ot Trail.\nEngineers now are in Trail-Ross-'\n\u25a0land area making preliminary surveys. . .-r~v\nKenneth Caple, CBC director for\nB.C., said the CBC proposes to\nbuild low-power relay TV transmitters in some of the larger, centres of population along the route\nof the trans-Canada micro-wave\nwhere Surveys indicated- this is\nfeasible.\nHe said the major determining\nfactors would be concentration of\npopulation and proximity to the\nnetwork.\nMobile Tourist\nUnit to Tour B.C.\nVICTORIA (CP) -\u25a0 A mobile\ntourist reception and information\ncentre has been established by hte\ndepartment of recreation and conservation to operate in all sections\nof British Columbia. The unit is a\ntrailer fitted to display information\ntor-tourist promotion.\nAnd in This Corner ..,\nJASPER,. Alta. (CP) \u2014 Women drivers had their tribulations\neven in the days bf ancient Rome.\nGeorge M. Crossgrove, plant manager of Bell Telephone Company's Montreal area, gave evidence of this Wednesday in an address\nto Uie Telephone Association of Canada on motor vehicle accident\nperformance and records. \"\nChariot accidents, he said, were so prevalent on the streets of\nRome in 205 B.C. that a law was passed prohibiting women from\ndriving.\nThe law was enforced for 25 years, but \"whether or not It had\nthe desired results, I have been unable to find out.\"\nThe women had a friend, however.\n\"Cato, the great politician, was instrumental In having the law\nrevoked, and the ladies were again allowed to manoeuvre their\nchariots through the streets of Rome.\"\n |2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 26,1958\nONE PERFORMANCE AT 8:00 P.M. - DOORS 7:30\nDAVID 0. SELZNICK'S\n^\u25a0i i\"*ff|     production of\niJjBi**.- ERNEST HEMINGWAY'S\nADULT\nENTERTAINMENT\nREWELL\nARMS\nROCK HUDSON \u2022 JENNIFER JONES \u2022 VITT0RI0 DE SICA\nClNBMASCOpe\ncor-ort by M LUX.     >\nPrices: 85c, 60c, 25c\nI\nI\n\u2022\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nOne Complete Show at 9:10 p.m.\nM REYNOLDS\n\u2022PLUS\n\"THE KETTLES ON\nOLD MCDONALD'S FARM\"\nDOOR PRIZI\nTONIGHT\nWeekend for 2\nat the\nWS&\u00ae;.\nS P r ( T A C U L A R\nP L US\nBote\" Aeepnunotfatlea, Break's*' hi the Famous\ni      nu Out* Room, Car Storage Facilities.\n$1.00 Worth of Free Rides ot Net. Park\nII OoBons of Qosoline From North Shore Service\nDRAW TONIGHT at Intermission *\nBf^Jgs-tS-s-BB LB 55\nWeek Long Fiesta\nAwaits Curlers\nLatest Car In\nlatest Mishap\nA car rolled down a ,40-feot env\nbankment seven miles west pf\nKaslo Monday and damage to the\nvehicle has been estimated -at $4000.\nBut the car isn't a total wreck.\nAs a matter of (act the new car\nwas worth $7460.\n\u2022 It's at a city body shop now for\nbody repairs. The accident apparently didn't damage the refrigerator air cooling unit, the power rear-\nview mirror adjustment, the power\nseat adjustment, the. power windows, the power brakes or the\npower steering.\nAnd its two occupants escaped\nuninjured.\nThe car rolled down the bank\nafter hitting a soft shoulder on the\nnarrow road.\nTons of Rock\nFall on Road\nOne hundrde tons of rock thundered down across the New Denver highway at Cape Horn Monday\nnight four hours after a construction crew parked their equipment\nand left for home.\nThe mass of rock crushed an\nabandoned bulldozer.\nDepartment of Highways district\n\u2022superintendent George Kent of\nNew Denver said the rock apparently peeled off a rocky bluff and\ncrashed down where the highway\norew had been working.\nHe said he did not know What\ncaused the slide.\nTraffic was blocked from 8:\np.m. Monday to 2:30 a.m. Tuesday while bulldozers pushed their\nway through the slide.\nMr. Kent said some dynamiting\nhad been done in the area but that\nall blasted areas had .'been inspected and found safe..\" ii\u2122 '\nThe slide area'is is miles south\nof New Denver.\"'       \"\u25a0\/\"''\n\u25a0 \u25a0 r~*-y-\nI Airport Road\nI To Be Paved\ni'   ELK DRIVE-IN\nracvT.irr.au   ttr\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nIWgbt, Friday, Setardejr\n\"SHE CREATURE\"\n\u00a7\u2014 Plus \u2014\n\u00abB CONQUERED THE WOWJJ*'\nOne Showing 9:20 p.m.\nI\nAuto-Vue Drive-In\n-'\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022      TRAIL,BC-\nTonight, Friday, Saturday\n^\"okUHOMA\"\nGordon MacRae, Shirley Jones\nCARTOONS\nShows Start at Sundown \"\nDeath Accidental\nJury's Verdict\n_   A six-man coroner's jury ruled\nS'ednesdar that 33-year-old Alfred\nenry  Kirby   Guyan,   CPR  employee, died from severe electrical\n.shock at the CPR yards here last\nThe jury deliberated 80 minutes\njbefore returning   its   verdict'- to\ni coroner Doctor Harold H. Smythe.\n\u25a0  The jury attached no blame to\n.anyone.\nS. Guyan died at 10:05 a.m. June\nKB in the transformer enclosure at\n.' the railway yards as he explained\n: 'the workings of the main switch\nSand transformers to apprentice\n\"5-David Turner.\njs Guyan apparently turned to ex-\n;5Blain three high-tension wires to\naffile apprentice when he touched\ngone of them.\nj*  He had been In Nelson less than\nthree  months  and was  awaiting\nthe arrival of his wife and family\nS.the next day when the accident\nBoccurred.\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTonight, Friday, Saturday\n\"THE HAPPY ROAD\"\nGene Kelly, Barbara Luge\nThe Castlegar airport road will\nbe paved iryitWn tl\u00bbe next two\nweeks.   - \\\nHighways department regional\nengineer D. F. Martin Said Wednesday the work is inclu661 in\nseveral project* now underway in\nthe Nelson region.\nPaving crews are also working\non the approaches to the new\nSanca Bridge where half-a-mile of\ngravelled roadway on both sides\nof the bridge eliminated a hazardous curve on the old highway at\nthat point.\nIn other' sections of the district\nhighway construction crews are\nworking on the Salmo-Creston cutoff and the Blueberry-Paulson\nlink between Kinnaird and Christina Lake. \"\nMr. Martin said construction is\nalso continuing along the Kaslo\nhighway.\nThe regional engineer said also\nthat a crew from the Locations\nBranch is surveying the route for\nthe proposed Champion Lakes\nsection of the southern trans-provincial highway.\n\"Other highway work now underway includes paving of some widened stretches of highway.\nVisiting mid-summer curlers will run Into a week-long\nfiesta when they cross Kootenay Lake July 6.\n, Mid-Summer Bonspiel officials unfolded plans for the\ngala event Wednesday in a seven-day schedule that calls\nfor a wide variety of programs laid on especially,for parti-\ncipants and citizens during\nthe annual bonspiel.'\nIt starts July 6 at Balfour where\nranks of Junior Chamber of Commerce men will greet the visitors,\npass out treats for their children,\nand guide them safely Into the\ncity.\nThen, after registration at the\ncurling.rink, tha sportsmen,-their\nwives and husbands and children,\nwill be guests of the Nelson Garden\nClub at the annual Rose and Flower\nShow.\nIt will be their first day in the\ncity and a chance to get acquainted.\nMonday, July 7, starts early for\nthe curlers \u2014 7 a.m. in fact \u2014\nwhen they will flock to the 500 block\nBaker Street for an open-air breakfast of hotcakes, sausages and\ncoffee laid on by the Lion's Club\nBut it's down to business at 10\na.m. when Mayor T. S. Shorthouse\nofficially opens the bonspiel.\nFOUR BANDS\nAt 6 p.m., four bands will lead\noff the Grand Parade followed by\nthe Kiddles' Pet Parade. Bands\nwill include the Kootenay Kilties,\nNelson. City Band, Trail Maple\nLeaf Band and Cusick High School\nBand,\nLater, at 8:30, the citizens of\nNelson are invited to extend theif\nwelcome to the visitors at a \"bonspiel -mixer\" to be held in the\nCivic Centre Badminton Hall,\nsponsored by the city fire department.\nTuesday, July 8, is set aside for\n\"curling and relaxation.\"\nOn -this day the curlers are invited to make use of facilities at\nthe Nelson Golf and Country Club.\n, And while they make their way\naround the nine-hole course, their\nkiddles can -have swimming lessons\nin Rotary swimming pool at Lake\nside Park under supervision of\nRecreation Director J. R. Johnson\nAt 8 p.m. <he Nelson Little\nTheatre group will entertain with\n\"Love Rides the Rails,\" an old\nfashioned melodrama., The show\nwill be held at the Capitol Theatre.\nWednesday, July 9, is a day for\nthe ladies. They will be guests of\nthe Nelson Women's, Curling Club\nat a tea in the Hume Hetel.between\n3 and 5 p.m.\n. The Little Theatre Group will\nagain present ''Love Rides the\nRails\"? at 8 p.m.   .    r \u2022\nFrom 8:30 p.m. Until 3 a.m. bonspiel participants \"go native\" at a\nbeach party at Lakeside Park\nsponsored by the Jaycees.\nThursday, July 10, and just in\ntime  too,   is   another   day   for\nrelaxation.\"\nFacilities for this purpose will\nbe available at Lakeside Park and\nthe Golf and Countfy Club, interspersed with fishing trips - and\ntours.\nAll this will end at 9 p.m. when\nthe   Jaycees   stage   their   giant\nHawaiian Hoedown in the Civic\nCentre Badminton Hall.\nTRAILER MUSEUM\nA 34-foot trailer from Provincial\nArchives, with articles from B.C.'s\nhistoric past will be on display\nFriday, July 11. Its location has\nnot yet been announced.\nLater the same day Gene Dluhey\nand his orchestra, of western\nCanadian fame, will provide music\nat Playmor Dance Pavilion at\nSouth Slocan,\nSaturday, July 12, will see the\nend of Mid-summer Bonspiel, but\nnot before a professional hockey\ngame is held at the Civic Centre\nArena to be followed by a dance\nin the Badminton Hall, Both events\nare sponsored by Hockey Booster\nClub\/\nChairman of the bonspiel committee is Mayor T. S. Shorthouse,\nwho serves with Art Waters, E. T.\nBodard and Mrs. R. H. Bush,\ndirectors.\nFire Chief E. S. Owens' is secretary and R. A. Muitfo is treasurer.\nCommitte chairmen are:\nEntertainment \u2014 Joseph Keegan.\nWomen's entertainment _ Mrs.\nC. Eckmier and Mrs. L. Bicknell, co-chairman.\nAccommodation \u2014 Fire Chief\nOwens.\nQueen Contest \u2014 Albert Maida.\nPublicity \u2014 Fred Leno.\nPrizes \u2014 Jack McMillan.\nParade \u2014 George Benwell.\nHockey Game \u2014 James Boates\nFinance \u2014 Dr. C. E. Bradshaw\nCivic Centre director \u2014 J. B\nMorgan.\nPolice To Charge\nYouths After\nSideswipe Incident\nTwo teen-agers escaped Injury\nWednesday afternoon when the\ncar in which they were riding side-\nswiped a parked car in tne 600\nblock Second Street.\nPolice would not release the\nname of the 17-year-old driver who\nthey said would be charged with\ndriving without due care and attention and would appear later in\njuvenile court.\nThe car was proceeding south.on\nSecond Street when it smashed\ninto a car owned by Clifford Smith,\nThe Weather\nNELSON     57 79     -\nToronto    61 66\nRegina     31 73\nSaskatoon  43 74\nCalgary   47 78\nKimberley     50 78\nVancouver   58 68    .17\nVictoria     53 60    .06\n613 Second Street, which was parked against the right hand side of\nthe curb outside his home.\nThe youth driving the car tolc\npolice he was making an adjustment to a fan and was bent over\nbehind the wheel at the time of\nthe accident.\nBoth vehicles were slightly dam-\nNine Violent\nDeaths in B.C.\nNine persons,met violent deaths\non B.C. highways in nine of 230\ntraffic accidents reported to\nRCMP across the procvince during the week ending June 22.\nRCMP here said Tuesday the\nfatality figure jumped from four\nfatalities reported during the previous week,\nTwo fatal accidents in the-Nel-\nson RCMP sub-division claimed\ntwo liveB. h  \u25a0 . \u25a0.\nProsecutlbns were launched\nagainst 109 motorists involved in\naccidents in the entire province.\nIn the Nelson area where 26 accidents were.- reported, RCMP\nstarted seven . prosecutions.\nOne fatal accident in this area\nFriday took the life of 17-year-old\nBette Bowles when the car in\nwhich she was riding was ln collision with a lumber truck on the\nNorth Shore.\nCAR NOT STOPPED\nIn - answer to reporter's questions Tuesday, RCMP officers\nsaid the accident occurred near a\npolice roadblock about nine miles\nnorth of the city. They said also\nthat the accident' occurred at\nleast 900 feet from the location\nof a police car parked off the\nhighway on the opposite side of\nthe road from which the car in'\nvolved in the tragedy was travelling.\nIt had been rumored the death\ncar was involved in the mishap\nwhen it stopped for the roadblock. However, officers said\nTuesday the accident happened\nconsiderable distance from their\ntjatrol car and that no attempt\nhad been made to stop the car,\nE3E\n^rJ-\nFOLLOW THE BIRDS- VICTORIA NOW!\nUptfal, Gfy 4$h3ih,, (^laratrtA...Ce^kate\u2022'{!Mmn\\d''<m \\[mmWi JWa\/ict I\nSERVED NOW!\nEVERYDAY...\nby a network of the world's finest\nf\u00abrri\u00ab. Capacity for over 1,200 cars,\n17,000 passengers each way, every day.\nPlus Motor Coach service'via ferries.\nAlso 28 Air Flights daily. Tws to Vh\nhours of superbly scenic relaxation.\nYou'll love it!\nNANAIMO (\nk-     PLAN NOW!\nIJ.S-l\n7to!\n\u2022>\u00bb\n**,.\nEnjoy the thrill of cruising across the\nland-sheltered waters into Canada's\ntYiost beautiful City of Gardens. There's\nso much to see and da, make Victoria\nyour vacation headquarters!   For free\nliterature, write G. I. Warren,\nCommissioner, Victoria & Island\nPublicity Bureau, Be* 1000,\nVictoria, B.C.\n\"Seafflt\nTHIS IS THE LAST time Nelsonites will see\nthe old Five-Mile Intake dam, built of cedar logs\n30 years ago, to catch .the city's water supply.\nCity workmen started tearing it apart Wednesday to make room for a new $15,000, 250-ton\nconcrete dam. This picture shows where the old\nbarrier has sprung leaks, Waterworks superin\ntendent Jack Maber, with the department for 1%\nyears, will supervise the project. City engineer\nE. E. Olson will engineer new construction. Water\nfrom behind the dam'is piped Into a screening\nhouse and then Into a reservoir where it Is stored\nfor city consumption. Five-Mile Creek flows into\nthe lake five miles northeast of the city.\n\u2014Daily News photo.\nH. J. Bourgeois\nPasses al 79\nWell-known in Crescent Valley\nand Nelson, Henri 'Joseph Bourgeois died. Wednesday ih Kootenay\nLake. General Hospital at the age\nof 79 years.\nBorn in Ste. Celestin, Que., in\n1878, Mr. Bourgeois was married\nthere in 1900 and moved from that\ndistrict to Nelson in 1904. In Nelson he worked for Choquette Bakery for one year, during which\ntime he lost his youngest son\nthrough illness and two others in\na fire which'destroyed his home.\nHe and his wife moved to Crescent\nValley, where they were among\nthe first pioneers to homestead that\ndistrict. His wife predeceased him\nin 1935.\nHe is survived by four sons, Gaston of Vancouver, Louis of Crescent Valley, Maurice of Williams\nLake and Joe of South Slocan; four\ndaughters, Mrs. G, M. Helbecque\nof Bonnington, Mrs. A. Swanson of\nWinlaw, Mrs. Angelo Gollk of Vancouver and Mrs. Archie St. Pierre\nof La Salle, Ont.\nMr. Bourgeois ls also survived\nby three brothers, Charles and Antonio of La Gorgendier, Que., and\nPaul of Vananda, B.C., and one\nsister, Mrs. J. Du Mont of Kere-,\nmeos; 16 grandchildren and two\ngreat-grandchildren.\nYOUNGSTERS\nQUIT DESKS\nFOR SUMMER\nSchool's out today! The gteat\nmoment will arrive this afternoon\nand teachers will be alone in the\nschools Friday.\nL. V. Rogers High School, Junior\nHigh, South Nelson,' Central and\nHume schools will cease to echo\nto the scuttle, shuffle, tromp of\nfeet and the swish of crinolines for\ntwo months plus a few days\u2014the\nlong looked-for summer holidays\nHigh school students will return\ntoday for a few minutes to pick uo\ntheir report cards, Junior High\nschool will hold awards day ceremonies in the afternoon and the\nelementary schools will also hold\nawards days and parties, with the\nexception of Central school, which\nhas spent the past two days with\n-final programs and awards.\nAll the elementary schools will\nhold parties in the afternoon.\nBooks have been packed home\nalong with pencils, pens, crayons\nand paints. And the children are\nbusy playing school at home.\nGovernment exams have been\nconducted at L. V. Rogers High\nschool^up until today, written by\nthe 40 per cent of students who\nwere not recommended. .\nThe Answer fo the\nBurning Question?\nSUN 'N' SURF\nLotion to Aid in\nTanning and Avoiding\nSunburn   \u2014.  79e\nCream to Relieve\nSunburn   79e\nNelson Pharmacy\n\"Your Fortress!of Health\"\n433 Josephine St.\nPHONE 1203\nPOLICE CAUTION\nAGAINST CHEQUES\nPolice Chief Robert Harshaw\nsaid Wednesday he has nb knowledge that a bad cheque artist is\nin the city.\nHe was questioned by reporters\nafter a local merchant said several\nfirms in the city had been hit with\nworthless cheques during the past\nweek.\nWe get a few bad cheques\nevery once in a while,\" Chief Harshaw said, \"but there has been\nnothing unusual.\"\nHe said, however, that a $15\ncheque bounced at a city super\nmarket Wednesday.\nThe police chief warned merchants to' use caution when accepting cheques.\nKilties Elect\nNew Slate\nKootenay Kiltie Pipe Band held\nelection of officers at their annual\nmeeting Tuesday evening after a\nyear 'of \"rising standard of performance and attendance\".\nTaking the president's chair following election, R. C. Wright con*\nducted further election of officers.\nHonorary president is J. H. Davis\nand honorary vice-president Harry\nBurns. Past president John Applewhaite was named vice-president;\nMrs. J. J. Milne, secretary, and\nJ. J. Milne treasurer. Pipe Majof\nGeorge Milne was returned and\ndrum sergeant Glen V. White also\nwas returned. ' \u2022 . -    .\nTrustees are Ivie A. Speirs, David D. Paul and E. F. McLachlan.\nExecutive members are: Mr. and\nMrs. J. A. Miller,'J. S. Stout, I. A.\nSpeirs, Cliff Underwood, C. Fred\nWalgren, Ivan Walgren, W. F. Phillips, D. D. Paul, J. Miller, Mr. and\nMrs. C. P. Lipinski, Norman Hamson, Joe Johnson, Don Elder and\nKen D.- Forbes. Mr. Stout was\nmade a lifetime member of the\nexecutive.\nThe band has made 19 public\nappearnces during the year and\nhas never refused a reasonable request for its service in that time,\nit was reported. There have'been\n18 uniformed members turning out\nfor parades and it was agreed by\nmembers that the regular weekly\npractices have raised the standard\nof piping and general performance\nconsiderably.\nIt was learned through the treasurer's report that the band is in\nfair financial condition, with a\nsmall increased balance, and with\na further Increase in equipment.\nLack of sufficient members at\nexecutive meetings, was criticized\nand it was thought that the coming\nseason would be utilized for increasing activity of the executive\nmembers and continuation of the\npresent policy of practices and parades.\nThere were no Labor Day highland games last year and after\nsome discussion it was decided to\neliminate them this year also and\nconcentrate on consolidation of the\nassociation. It was felt to be late in\nhte season to plan for Labor Day\ngames.\nMrs. Evdoklmoff Passes al 88\nFormer Brilliant resident, Mrs.\nMike EvdokimOff, 88, died at\nMount St. Francis Wednesday\nnight.\nMrs. Evdokimoff was born in\nRussia, where she was married,\nand came to the Yorkton district\nof Saskatchewan in 1899. Her husband farmed there until 1916, when\nthey moved to Brilliant. In 1921\nthey moved back -to Yorkton. Mr.\nEvdoklmoff died in 1947 and Mrs.\nEvdokimoff came to Nelson a year\nlater to live with her son Mike in\nRosemont district.\nSurvivors are two sons, Fred,\nPort Arthur; Ont, and Mike of\nNelson; one aaugnter, Mrs. George\n(Helen) Tomilin, Grand Forks;\ntwo sisters, Mrs. Florence Parkin,\nGlade, and Mrs. Dora KOoftlnoff,\nSalmo; 16 grandchildren and nine\ngreat grandchildren. She waa predeceased by two daughters, Mrs.\nBill Voykin of Glade and Mrs. Bill\nLebedoff of Brilliant.\nAmbulance Drives\nThrough the Night\nTo Coast Hospital\nThe Nelson Ambulance Service\ndrove through the night Tuesday\nto Vancouver with s blue baby en\nroute to the Sick Children's Hospital.\nThe mercy run started from Kootenay Lake General Hospital at io\np.m. Tuesday with the young son\nof Mr. and Mrs. Ray Kosiancic of\nCrescent Valley.\nMiss Helen Brader of Nelson, a\nnurse at the hospital, accompanied\nthe infant to the coast.\nReports reaching the city Wednesday.said, the ambulance arrived at Vancouver early Wednesday morning and the child was\nadmitted safely to hospital.\nKootenay Stationers\nHave Moved!!\nOur New Location Is Now at     7\n469 BAKER STREET\nNext to Mac's Flower Shop\nPHONE NO. 362\nKOOTENAY STATIONERS\nNelson, B.C.\n\"TRU-FIT\" rings art-\njust automatic-lily to\nthe shape o! your\nfinger \u2014 never twist,\nalways tit, \\\nTRU-FIT\nIAM0ND RINGS\nThese are superior \u2014- hccnuao in each ring two\nconcealed \"TRU-FIT Angels\" spring into action to\ni embrace your finger gently, yet lirn.lv. The rings\n-   never twist \u2014 and are safely Kept In place.\nOrdinary rings ara\nsized to fit your\nknuckle only, then\ntwist and turn on your\nfinger.\nSECURITY and PROTECTION\nIS YOURS In TRU-FIT RINGS\nThese rings, arc indeed in\nby themselves,\nEtch of these creations Is exclusive in design \u2014 self-adjusting to\nths shape of your finger.\nCOLLINSON'S\nJEWELLERY LTD.\n\"NELSON DIAMOND HEADQUARTERS\"\nEstablished Since 1897\nPhone 120 Nelson, B. C.\n Leader Bars\nObservers\nIn Lebanon\nNumber of Charges In\nSommers Case Now 25\nBy WELTON WYNN\nBEIRUT, Lebanon (APHOne\nof the most powerful rebel leaders in the Lebanese mountains\nhas barred United Nations observers from operating in the\nborder territory lie controls.\n\"Our rebellion is a purely internal affair in which the United\nNations has no concern,\" Kamal\nJumblatt said Wednesday.\nThe gaunt, hook-nosed leader\nof the DrUze sect of mountaineers was interviewed at his village stronghold 18 miles southeast of Beirut. He is one of 17\nleaders charged by the government with inciting terrorism and\nrebellion. Other rebel chiefs also\nhave defied the UN Sroun, ,\nFEARS  HEAVY ATTACKS  \u2022\n.The rebels have been trying\nsince May 10 to overthrow President Camille Chamoun's government. Chamoun said Tuesday\nrebel forces were massing in\nthree areas and he feared heavy\nattacks were Imminent.\nChamoun conferred for 40 minutes with UN Secretary-General\nDag Hammarskjold, who was to\nfly back to New York Wednesday\nfollowing talks with officials of Lebanon, the United Arab Republic\nand the UN observation fgroup\nsent to Lebanon two weeks ago.\nChamoun charged that UAR\naid to the rebels has increased\nlately. If Lebanon is unable to\ncope with rebel attacks, he said,\nit will ask the Security Council\nfor a police force.\nSOVIET WARNING\nRussia warned against an international police force or any\nother foreign intervention from\nthe West. The official Soviet\nnews agency Tass accused Britain and .the United States of planning to send troops into Lebanon\n\"under the guise of the United\nNations or without any cover at\nall.\"  .\n\"The Soviet Union cannot remain indifferent to the preparation of foreign .intervention in\nLebanon, .however it is disguised,\"  Tass said.\nThe United States and Britain\nwere reported hoping that Chamoun's government would not\ncall on them for direct aid but\nwould be able to quell the rebellion with its own forces.   '\nJumblatt said Col. Maurice\nBrown of New Zealand, chief of\nthe observer team of less than\n100'men, visited him Monday at\nMoukhtara, in south central Lebanon.\n\"We told CoL Brown we welcome him and his observers any\ntime as visitors or guests,\" Jumblatt said. \"But in principle we\ncannot permit them to operate\nin our territory.\"\nVANCOUVER (CP)-The number of charges levelled against\nformer lands and forests minister\nRobert j Sommers Snd other accused in the now celebrated\nbribery-conspiracy case have\nranged all the way from one to\na total of 38 since the first indictment was prepared in November last year.\n.Most of the new indictments\nboosting the number' of charges\nhave been due to defence demands for \"particulars\" of the\ncounts which Jed the prosecution\nto \"split up\" the charges they\nalready had laid.      .        '\nNow the number of counts have\nbeen reduced to 25, including one\nconspiracy charge and 24 of bribery against the former minister,\nH. W. Gray, John Gray, Charles\nD. Schultz, the C. D. Schultz\ncompany, Pacific Coast Services\nSales and B.C. Forest Products.\nThe latest change was forced\non crown prosecutor Victor Dryer\nin the 30th day of the Assize court\ntrial Tuesday when Mr. Justice\nJ. O. Wilson ruled that the old\ncriminal code was the effective\nlaw and not the new code under\nwhich the charges were laid. The\nnew code became effective in\nApril 1955 but all of the counts\nagainst the accused were alleged\nFirst Coast NES\nManager Retires\nThe retirement of William Mc-\nKinstry, Vancouver, regional di\nrector of the Pacific region, Unemployment Insurance Commission, effective Friday, has been\nannounced by J. G. Bisson, chief\ncommissioner, Ottawa. '\nMr. McKinstry joined the Com\nmission in July, 1941, and -was appointed assistant. regional superintendent and manager of its first\nNational Employment office in\nVancouver. In March, 1943,:he was\npromoted to his present position\nof regional director.\nHis main responsibilities during .\nthe nucleus stage of the-inception day.\nto have occurred before that\ndate.\n\u25a0 As a result the prosecutor entered a pew indictment reducing\nthe number of counts to 25, from\n38, Tossed- out were 13 charges\ninvolving Sommers as a minister\nof the government. He remains\ncharged as \"an official, of the\ngovernment.\"     , \u25a0'.-\u25a0'.\nLegal authorities, said this was\nnecessary ?lnce the old code\nmakes no provision for the charging of a minister as such but\nuntter It an \"official of the government\" is liable for a conspir-\nace-bribery offence.\nOriginally in November last\nyear one conspiracy count was\nlaid. Then in January of this\nyear this was increased to six\nand later was consolidated into\nfive counts.  *\nThen in reply' to defence requests for particulars the crown\nsplit its case into 17 charges and\nWhen still more particulars were\nrequested split it again into 3B\ncounts^-including two of conspiracy and 36 of bribery.\nAll the accused have pleaded\nnot guilty to the indictment which\nbasically charges a split of\nmoneys between Sommers, H.W.\nGray and Schultz in connection\nwith issuance of government timber licences. Sommers resigned\nfrom the ministry in 1956 but still\nis a member of the legislature.\nThe Wai, which went into:its 31st\nday Wednesday, already has\neclipsed the modern assize court\nrecord of 23 days for a jury trial\nrecorded in a gas combines case\ntwo years ago.\nCogst-to-Coast\nDialing Soon\nOperator direct dialing of long\ndistance calls will be in operation\non a coast-to-coast basis within a\nyear, Winfield S. Pipes of Vancouver, president of the telephone\nassociation of Canada, told delegates at the opening of their,29th\nannual meeting at Vancouver Tues-\nSheriff\nMisses Cyril\nTOLEDO, Ohiov(CP)-Cyril the\nrunaway sea. lion was spotted\nTuesday night in the Portage\nRiver, 35 miles east of here, but\nvanished before a rope - tossing\nsheriff reached the scene.\nThe sea lion, which has covered 250 miles since its escape\nfrom a London, Ont., zoo eight\ndays ago, was reported sighted\nby a fisherman, Harry Rose.\n\"I thought he was a dog when\nI first saw him,\" Mr. Rose said.\n\"Then he rolled around in the\nwater and did some tricks.\"\nThe fisherman called sheriff\nMyron Hetriok in nearby Port\nClinton to come and bring his\nlariat. .But before the lawman arrived Cyril had frolicked away\nfrom the shore and into midstream. \\\nMr. Rose- said it was too dark\nto see which direction Cyril took\nbut sheriff Hettrick said rapids\nabout two miles upstream would\nforce the sea lion back towards\nLake Erie.\nCyril is apparently searching\nfor a water route south to his native California. He has already\ntried two rivers south of Lake\nErie without success.\nA close watch is being kept on\nthe river today for Cyril's reappearance. The sheriff plans to\nuse a lariat and large seine net\nin a bid to capture him.\nVancouver Man\nAppointed\nTrade Leader\nOTTAWA (CP) - H. Leslie\nBrown, top-flight Canadian trade\nexpert at London, Wednesday was\nappointed head of Canada's trade\ncommissioner service with the\nrank of assistant deputy minister\nof trade.\nThe 54-yeatold Mr. Brown, who\nstarted his career as a machinists' apprentice in Vancouver,\nfills the post made vacant by the\nappointment of John. English as\ndeputy minister of trade.\nPrior to his present appointment Mr. Brown held the rank\nof minister under Canadian High\nCommissioner George Drew at\nLondon, He played an extensive\nrole in organizing the Canadian\ntrade mission to Britain last November.\nof the S Unemployment Insurance\nCommission included the registration of all employers and the\nallocation of manpower to meet the\ndemands of wartime production.\nSince assuming directorship, he\nhas seen the Commission's organization in the Pacific region, which\nincludes the Yukon Territory, grow\nto. a total of 21 local National\nEmployment offices.\nA native of Ireland, Mr. McKinstry was bora in Belfast, Ulster.\nDuring World War One he served\noverseas with the Canadian army.\nHe is actively interested in veterans' welfare and from 1936, until\nhis appointment to the Commission,\nwas president of the B.C. Provincial Command, Canadian Legion.\nAlso in a fewVars most telephone users in Canada will be\nable to dial their own long distance\ncalls to a large portion of the more\nthan 65,000,000 telephones in Canada and the United States,\" saic\nMr. Pipes, who is vice-president\nand general manager of B.C. Telephone Company. Describing the\nTrans - Canada microwave radio\nrelay system which bfficially opens\nJuly 1 as a \"momentous task on\nthe part of the telephone industry,\nMr. Pipes said that the need for\nthese facilities is illustrated by the\nfact Canadians made a record total\nof close to 150,000,000 long distance\ncalls last year.\n\"This Indicates the growing\nawareness on the part of the public\nof the valve of long distance calling.\"   J * > (\u25a0\nReuther Seeks To\nEnd Wildcat Strike\nDETROIT (AP) - Walter P\nReuther Wednesday sought to\ncrush a wildcat strike by a small\ngroup of United Auto Workers at a\nChrysler Corporation missile\nplant.\nThe union president called officers of Local 1245 before the\nUAW's international executive\nboard to show cause why an administrator should not be placed\nover the local.\nTKe local represents 450 of the\nmissile plant's 8,500 employees.\nOfficers said they were unable to\nkeep the members from walking\noff the job and picketing the\nplant Monday and Tuesday.\nGeneva Conference\nExpels Hungarians\nGENEVA (Reuters) \u2014 The\n79-ntition conference of the International Labor Organization\ntoday expelled the Hungarian\ngovernment-delegation from the\nfloor.\n\u2022 The action came in a vote on\nobjections that had been raised\n' to the delegation's credentials\nand which were upheld by a\nvote of 142 to 48 with 29 abstentions, thus obtaining the necessary two-thirds majority.\nIt. marked the first time in the\nhistory of the organization,\nformed 39 years ago, - that the\ngovernment delegation of a\nmember-state has been expelled,\nOttawa Awards        v\nDefence Contracts\nOTTAWA (CP) - Contracts totalling $22,217,966 were awarded in\nthe first two weeks of June by the\ndefence production department\nand Defence Construction (1951)\nLimited.\nA $3,240,000 contract for the operation of an aircraft repair depot, awarded to Canadian Pacific\nAir Lines Ltd., Vancouver, B.C.,\ntopped the lists of contracts released today.\nA contract for repair and overhaul of airframes and components was awarded to the Bristol\nAircraft (Western) Ltd., Winnipeg, for $1,280,000.\nSome Cancers\nEasily Spotted\nMONTREAL (CP)-Many women are dying from a form of\ncancer that is controllable, (legates to the second world congress of the International Federation of Gynaecology and Obste-\nlice protection.\nThe Pan-American Cancer Cytology Society said that cancer of\nthe cervix can easily be detected\nand cured by a simple \"smear\ntest\" which can be made by any\ndtjetor for examination by experts\nin cytology\u2014the scientific examination of cells.\nDr. J. Ernest Ayre, president\nof the society, said \"health agencies have largely failed to grasp\nthe opportunity to stamp out women's second greatest malignant\noffender.\"       \u25a0        ,\nBreast cancer is the greatest\nmalignant offender, he said.\nHold Technician\nIn Secrets Charge\nWORTHING, Eng. (Reuters) -\nA senior British electronics technician Wednesday was ordered to\nstand trial on charges of giving\nsecret information to a Czech diplomat and receiving \u00a3500 for his\nservices.\nThe technician, 45-year-old Bryan F. Linney, \u25a0 pleaded! not guilty.\nThe dipldmat, Col. Oldrich Pri-\nbyl, Czech military attache in\nLondon left suddenly for Prague\neight days ago.\nLinney was described as a senior instruments engineer employed by a firm working on secret contracts: The court was closed to the press and public when\nevidence about the' \"passed information\" was presented.\nLinney was questioned May 27\nand arrested later.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 19S8 \u2014..'\nAnticipate Increases In\nDistrict Stone Fruit Crops\nHigher Hospital\nCosts May Boost\nInsurance Rates\nOTTAWA (CP)-Spiralling hospital costs may boost the cost of\nthe national insurance scheme well\nbeyond the original estimate, the\nSenate health committee was told\nWednesday.\nDr. J. W. Willard, head of the\nhealth department's research division, estimated that if all provinces get into the scheme next\nyear, the share of costs borne\nby ihe federal treasury would\nwould rise to about $215,000,000\nfor a full year.\nHe predicted that if wages and\nother hospital costs continue to\nincrease, in two or three years\nthe federal cost of the insurance\nscheme could well rise beyond\nthe $215,000,000 estimate.\nSenator Thomas Crerar (L\u2014\nManitoba) predicted on that basis that the federal treasury's burden would rise to $275,000,000 or\n$300,000,000 in five years.\nThe estimate of costs was made\nas the committee approved of\namendments to legislation providing that federal payments to\nprovinces start on July 1.\nFive provinces\u2014British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Newfoundland \u2014 have\nindicated they will start operating under the new insurance\nscheme on that date, i\nDr! Willard estimated the federal cost of the' scheme in the\nfirst six months of operation in\nthe five provinces wifl be about\n$30;000,000.\nIncreases in the yield of stone\nfruits in the Creston Valley and\nKootenay and Lower Arrow Lakes\nwere forecast in a report issued by\nJ. E. Swales, district horticulturist.\nNumber of crates of fruits anticipated in this season's yield, with\nthe 1958 estimate shown first and\nthe 1957 crop second, follows':.\nCreston Valley \u2014 Cherries 23,000\nand 23,907; peaches 3000 and 2700;\napricots 600 and, 568; prunes 20,000\nand 22,492.\nKootenay and Lower Arrow\nLakes \u2014 cherries 11,000 and 81S7;\npeaches 3000 and 2585; apricots\n500 and 225; and prunes 1500 and\n1235.\nMr. Swales in his newsletter said\npicking of some early varieties of\ncherries should commence in early\nsections towards the end of this\nweek, while Bings may be ready ip\nsome early orchards by about July\n1. The cherry crop may reach\nprevious estimates if the fruit sizes\nproperly. Sizing of Bings in some\nCreston Valley orchards appears\nSchool Pupils\nTo Welcome\nPrincess\nN. Denver Woman's\nFather Passes\n!R \u2014 Mrs. Harry\nson Dean have re-\n......     ernon, where they\n:a)ls-ai|\u00bbj the death of Mrs.\npper, W. A- Osborn.\nat the age of 74.\nivors,\\. teesides  Mrs.  Charl-\n^^^^BHsons, Alvln of Fort\nI^^HHtaymond of Edmon-\nand two. daughters, Mrs. N.\nof  Falkland   and   Mrs.   K.\ne ot (Drayton Valley.\nKELOWNA (CP) - School children in the Kelowna area will be\ngiven priority to see Princess\nMargaret during the first of her\npubhc appearances here,\nAn estimated 5,500 children\nfrom the district will ba at Ogo\npogo Stadium July 18 to welcome\nthe princess on her arrival here\nby plane. The stadium looks out\non Lake Okanagan, where the\nseaplane will put down.\nThe main event of the princess's stay here will be official\nopening July 19 of the Lake Okanagan Bridge. She is expected to . . ,. , .\ncut a ribbon across the causeway (previously estimated,\nand unveil a- plaque before driv-\n,ing across the pontoon bridge.\nOther events include a luncheon for 400 male guests, an ex-\nslow at flits time. Other tree fruits I\nare sizing very well and,, in general I\nare quite free of Insect pests and I\ndiseases.- Peach leaf curl is pre-l\nvalent and will tend to reduce the I\npeach crop on the small acreage |\nin this district.\n\"Vegetable crops  are making |\nvery good growth.\nWeather conditions! have been I\nvariable since the last newsletter. I\nCloudy, showery weather has alter-1\nnated with clear, warm weather.\nTwo electrical storms accompanied I\nby heavy rains were' experienced: |\nIn most sections of i the district.\n'On June 6 a total of .47 inches\nof rain fell at Creston and, on I\nJune 9, a heavy downpour brought\nL25 inches. The June 6 storm caus-;\ned serious damage to crops in the\nNelson area where hailstones as\nlarge as one inch in diameter were I\nreported.  Greenhouse glass *\nsmashed and crops were badly\nbattered, While individual losses...\nwere heavy, the over-all crop loss\nwas not serious.\n\"The strawberry crop has been,'\nheart-breaking for most of the\nstrawberry growers. At the beginning of the season a good crop of\nstrawberries was expected. However, the weatherman intervened\nand what with alternating wet and\nwarm weather conditions, the fruit\ncommenced to rot, or tarn soft.\nMuch of th efruit that was too soft\nMuch of the fruit that was too soft\nplant.\n\"Whle strawberry picking Is now\ntapering off, raspberries are beginning to move and should be.|\nmoving in. volume by the.end of\nthe week. Some raspberry patches\nin Creston Valley are apparently\naffected by a deficiency of boron,\niron, or manganese, and will not\nproduce as much fruit as expected\nearlier. Therefore, the raspberry\ncrop may be slightly lower than\nBURNABY, B.C. (CP) - Housewife Mrs. Julia Hardy said she\n_  o\u201e  _  would go to jail rather than pay\nhibition intra-squadTootball game a $10 fine for allowing storm wa-\nbetween members of the British tor from her home to flow into a\nColumbia Lions in training here, sanitary sewer. Municipal officials\nan aquacade, band concerts, fire- then withdrew the charge against\nworks and RCAF fly-past. 'her and 20 others. { '\nThe latest In G.E. engineering, featuring the new straight\nline design, with 13 cu. ft. of compact convenience, adjustable revolving shelves ... 74-lb. freezer,\nmagnetic door latches.\nNelson Electric Co. Ltd.\nauthorized GENERAL^ ELECTRIC dealer\nS74 Baker St. \" Phone 260\nConsider\nThese\nFacts:\nFor Only\ntw\u00bb Retailing has MORE ROOM\nat the Top.\nOne In every ten persons is in an\nexecutive position.\n* Retailing Offers\n, MORE OPPORTUNITIES\nfor Young People.\nOn-the-job training in retailing\nenables you to Earn While You\nLearn. . ,\"\n* Retailing Can Be a Very\nREWARDING CAREER.\nOur practice of developing executives from within provides opportunities to progress from trainee to\ndeportment manager to store manager.\nMake YOUR Career Retailing\nDial 456 and arrange for an\ninterview to discuss the opportunities with A. Taylor, store\nmanager.\nDOWN\nPER WEEK\nYOU!! Can Carry Your\nFavorite Music to the Beach\nor Picnic Ground.\nWtofttff *$>*% $amjmtt\u00a3-\nINCORPORATED   S-t? MAY 167a\n\u2022 Built-in receptacle for personal\nlistening.\n\u2022 Guaranteed performance.\n\u2022 Clear, true-tone.\n\u2022 Minimum power use-up.\n\u2022 One   inexpensive   battery   lasts\nmonths.\n\u2022 Hand-Carrying Case\nOLSON'S CREDIT JEWELLERS\n364 BAKER ST.      NELSON, B.C.      PHONE 1149\nPleue send mt the following!\n... *\nNA\"Vl         ... ,..i                \t\nADDRESS                           ..     '  _   \u25a0*\nCITY   '        '.\t\n\u25a1 C.O.D. n GBARGB MT ACCOUNT\n\u25a1 NEW ACCOUNT-[] CASH ENCLOSED\nNew accounts please ttate employment and\ntwo references.\nOLSON'S\nCREDIT JEWELLERS\nPhone 1149 Nelion, B.C.\n Nflsun latly Nnu0\nestablished April 22. 11102.\ninferior Britisfh Columbia'a Ldrgest daily Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall. Post Otfice Department, Ottawa,\nMEMBER Ul!   1'HE AUDl'l  BUREAU UC CIRCULATIONS.\n-MEMBER 01  1'HE CANADIAN PRESS.\nThe Canadian Hi ess is exclusively entitled to the use (or republication ot all news\ndispatches credited to it oi to The Associated Press ot Reuters In this paper,\nand also the local news published therein.\nrhttfacfay, lane 26, 19S8\nNow It's An Attack on Churchill\nF.B. Pearce...\n,\"..-. ..Writes\nNow it ia being suggested that\n\/inston Churchill blundered and that\nhe might have prolonged the war because of his refusal to launch the\nsecond front in 1942.\nIt'must be quite complimentary to\niMr. Churchill. Until now the pundits\n\u25a0have waited until a famous man's\n\u25a0fame passed into immortality with his\nIfuneral, but with Sir Winston, his\n[critics are attacking him in life\u2014this\nI must be fame indeed:\nNot too long ago it was being sug-\nI gested that Shakespeare did not write\nhis works \u2014 that a ghost writer was\nreally responsible for the famous one's\n[glory.\nThe attack on Sir. Winston is contemned in a book published \u2014 yes \u2014\npublished ln the U.S. and its writer\nlaunches a massive attack on a man\nto whom the world owes much.\nI Why it is ever found necessary to\ndrive-the knife into public men who\nhave contributed greatly to humanity\nis a question more difficult to answer\nthan those posed by Professor Trumbull Higgins ln his attack.\nGiven a similar set of circumstances, it would be interesting to know\nhow Prof. Higgins would have reacted had he carried the same load as\nMr. Churchill did in the black days\nof 1942.\nThis was the turning point of the\nwar and, while we do not wish to\ncompete in the field of strategy, we\nwould suggest that Britain was not\nquite ready to \/launch a decisive counter-attack and perhaps the unsuccessful Dieppe raid by Canadian units had\nsome bearing on Mr. Churchill's decision,   i.\nProfessor Higgins' book is really a\ncompliment to a grand old man \u2014 a\ntower of strength to some 54 million\nBritons and an example to the allied\nnations..\nInterpreting the News\nBy ED SIMON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nThe shattered windows of the Danish and\nlUfest German embassies ln Moscow offer\nfresh evidence of the deep and unexplained\nfeeling of uneasiness among Russia's rulers.\nI There can be no doubt that the mobs\nof demonstrators outside the two buildings\nacted under orders in a planned gesture of\nretaliation for similar activities outside-Russia's embassies In Bonn and Copenhagen.\nMoscow is not noted for spontaneous political\ngatherings. \\.-\\\nFor feasons of their own, the Russians\nchose to single out the Germans and the\nDanes, although similar Incidents occurred j\nat their legations in Ottawa, New York, Montevideo, Buenos Aires and other Western\ncities following the \"execution of Imre Nagy\nand his fellow-leaders of the Hungarian revolt.\nTHIN SKINNED\nIn their protests to the governments concerned, the Russians argued with some justice that the violence had been instigated by\ntrouble-making elements. Most political riots\nare the product of a certain degree of\nplanning.\nBut the Russians are equally aware that\nthere is nothing artificial in the revulsion\nand anger that greeted their announcement\nof the executions; It cannot have come as\na surprise to them that their bloody suppression of the Hungarian rebels remained fresh\nIn the world's memory,\nWhere Stalin would have calmly murdered his victims and ignored the resulting\noutcry, the present Soviet leaders have given\nthe appearance of being, remarkably thin-\nskinned.\nREASONS UNCLEAR\nIt is possible that Nikita Khrushchev's\nexpressions of outraged innocence are going\ndown well at home. But the reaction abroad,\neven from uncommitted nations and among\nthe Communist parties of the West, makes\nit clear that he is pleading an indefensible\ncase.\nFew convincing explanations have been\noffered for Khrushchev's conduct. The suggestion that he was aiming a Slow at the\ndeviationism of Yugoslavia's President Tito\nand similar Communist heretics ignores the\npredictable stiffening of their hostility as a\"\nresult of Nagy's death.\nThe move has been Interpreted as a\nwarning to Poland's Premier Gomulka and\nother satellite leaders against efforts -to\nslacken the bonds of Russian control. But\nthey already were aware of their precarious\nposition, while the Hungarians themselves'\nneeded no fresh reminder of Russia's capacity for ruthlessness.\nDOMESTIC FACTOR?\nThe possibility remains that Khrushchev's\ntroubles arise at home, with the same class\nof students, intellectuals and minor officials\nwho formed the core of the Hungarian uprising. Their activities, if any, would be we*}'1\nmuffled by Russian censorship from getting-\nabroad.\nEver since he attained power, Khrushchev has demonstrated a shrewd ability to\ncapitalize on every opportunitv to strengthen\nRussia's international position. Only the\nexistence Of an unknown domestic factor,\ncould account for what would otherwise\nappear to amount to a senseless squandering\nof his gains.\nUnder these circumstances, the unleashing of crowds of demonstrators'in Moscow\ncould set a precedent that will not easily\nbe forgotten.\nMob demonstrations, as the Manchester\nGuardian observes, can be habit-forming.\nKhrushchev might do well to consider putting\nshatter-proof glass in his own office windows.\nGems of Thought\nLIGHT\nThe light that shines the farthest shines\nbrightest at home.\u2014Bruce E. Baxter.\n\u2022 -       *     *     * - '\nWalk boldly end wisely in the light thou\nhast; there is a hand above will help thee on.\n\u2014Gamaliel Bailey.\nLight! Nature's resplendent robe;\nWithout whose vesting beauty\nAll were wrapt in gloom.\n. \u2014Francis Thompson.\n*     *     '\u00bb.--.\nIt 1\u00ab not often that I find, myself in agreement with the feeble utterances of an effete\nand decadent aristocracy, but when the Duke\nof Bedford asserts that the reason why men\nore so badly dressed is that their clothes are\nchosen by women, I find myself applauding\nhis good sense and courage. No doubt he\nwill be subjected to all the rancour of a\nsex which ... well, let's finish the sentence\nthere.\nI have every reason to believe that the\nnoble duke Is right. When I was in England\na few years ago I happened to remark in\nthe presence of 'my. wife's Sisteii that I thought\nI would buy a sports jacket; Immediately\nshe raised the cry, \"Lot's buy Frank a sports\njacket,\" and it was only my superior agility\nwhich prevented me from being hustled into\na haberdasherV and thrust into a garment\nOf whioh she approved. From then on when\nwe were in town I was always poised ready\nfor flight whenever w.e cartie tp a men's\nshop.\nIf she had had her way, I would have\nlooked, so darned English that the customs\nofficers would have suspected me of being\nan immigrant and I might never have got\nback to Nelson, Fortunately, however, I\nescaped her good Intentions.\nI don't for one minute believe that\nwomen will feel affronted by the duke's\ndeclaration. Their Idea Is that they are always right and not even a duke can convince\nthem otherwise \u2014 as every married man\nknows. Just when a man is getting accustomed to a suit and It begins to feel comfortable, his wife Is likely to look at him\nwith a Cold appraisal and say, \"You must\ngo and buy yourself a new suit, dear. That\none is getting shabby.\" This does not mean\nthat one fine day you go off alone and buy\na suit. No, she has to come with you. She\nselects the suit and you agree with her\nchoice, that is if you know what is good for\nyou.\nPsychologists have given various reasons\nfor this type of womanly behavior. My own\nbelief is that a-wife wants her husband to\nlook new but dowdy lest he catch the attention of that blonde up the street as an up-\nand-comihg young business executive, good\nfor at least a mild flirtation. Though, perhaps, after all it may only be a variant of\nthe \"mother knows best\" attitude,, of all\nwomen over the a\".e of ten and under.\nBut if women choose their men's clothes\nthey also take great care of them. Let a\nman come horn from Work Uian he is exhorted to change his clothes and if he hap-\n,;'\"pensjib.pick up a garden tool a voice leans\n\u25a0 ovtt-'of the window and says, \"George, are\n#i&pse your best trousers? You had better\n'' change them if you are going toido any\nwork.-\". And if he sits down to breakfast as\nlikely ..as not his wife willsay, \"Oh dear?\nj Why Ww you use your napkin. You've got\n<\\a spot-'jjh. your trousers.\" It is my belief,\n. jsupporte'd by other men I have talked '#\u00bb\npat; a '^\"great many women marry so that\nIthey can spend their time looking for spots\ni)h troiisers.\n> v,I i)9 not agree with those people who\n; think. ijhaf women behave this way because\ntheyV-jtaht their husband to look like their\n: dream: version of th *> perfect man. It Is far\nvmore Jlikely that they want him', to be. a\ndowdy foil to 'their beauty. You1 certainly\nmust admit that however well ..dressed the\nbridegroom, everyone looks at the bride. And\nso it is all thrtfigh married life. Everyone\nlooks at the woman, and wonder what she\nsaw in him to marry him. ,'V,\nIt Is the same in the' bedroom, if the\nbooks I read are anything to go on. The\nwoman is ravishingly beautiful in a filmy\nnightgown but nothing is said of the mafi.\nHe is probably wearing, a pair of pyjamas\nas glamorous as a suit of long Underwear.\nNo doubt someone will come up with\nthe sneering question, \"Why do men if they\nare so big and'strong, put up with these\nthings?\" The answer, of course, is that even\nthough they are big and strong they are\nInnately kind and courteous. After all, it Is a\nlittle thing to keep a woman happy and contented and look how successful men are at it.\nVancouver Council\nLegalizes Sunday\nCommercial Sport\nBy MARTIN TAYLOR\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Aftir\nyears of heated controversy and\nprolonged litigation, commercial\nSunday sport was made legal In\nVancouver Tuesday\u2014at, least for\ntho next few months.\nTwelve days after the British\nColumbia Court of Appeal- handed\ndown a 3-to-2 majority decision\napproving provincial legislation\nplacing the decision in the hands\nof the city, council passed a bylaw making it permissible to conduct 14 specified sports on the\nSabbath for gain.\nBut the contentious Issue, which has divided public,\nclergy, council, police commission, legislature and bench, may\nstill not be finally settled. .\nRECOMMENDS APPEAL\n\u25a0 Rev. Harold T. Allen, secretary of the Lord's Day Alliance\nfor B.C. and Alberta, said he has\nrecommended to the organization's national executive that the\ncase be taken to the Supreme\nCourt of Canada,\n\"The matter is not decided as\nfar as. we are concerned,\" he\nsaid. \"It could well be that the\ntwo judges who, ruled in our favor in the B.C. Supreme Court\nhad better grounds than the three\nwho ruled against us.\"\nThe legal issue has been narrowed down to one of provincial\nrights\u2014whether the B.C. legislature has authority to amend the\nVancouver city, charter in a legislative area which the alliance\nSuper Sleuths Lisl Rackets\nholds to be the responsibility of\nParliament under the Lord's Day\nAct and ancient English law.\nBUCKED LAW\nDespite the legalistic tangle\nand public controversy, . Vancouver Mounties-of the Pacific\nCoast League have played Sunday baseball here for three seasons\u2014and last year paid a fine\nfor doing so.\nIt is largely as a result of me\nMounties, whose.officials say\nSunday games are essential to financial success and Vancouver's\nfuture as a baseball'centre, that\nthe issue has been pressed to legislative action. The Club paid $150\nfor 1957 Lord's Day Act infractions.\nIn addition to' baseball, Tuesday's bylaw gave legal sanction\nto commercial ice hockey, ice\nhockey, ice skating, rol'er skating, rugby, soccer, Canadian foot-\nbali, golf, tennis, lacross, bowling, cycling, badminton and\nswimming.-\nThe regulation requires that\nsuch activities \"shall be conducted on an orderly basis\" and only\nbetween the hours of 1.30 p.m.\nand 6 p.m.\nThe charter amendment was\nmade at the last legislature session after Vancouver residents\nvoted twice in favor of commercial Sunday sport. It was put to\nthe appeal court to test its validity and was opposed there bv\ncounsel representing the Lord's\nDay Alliance.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Siventy-\nfive super sleuths met In Vancouver\nto plot the downfall of rackets.\nTheir files are a confidence\nman's paradise, containing elab-\norte blueprints for more than 2000\nswindles.\nThey were managers and executives of Better Business bureaus\nfrom 66 United States and Canadian cities, The business detective;\ndiscussed the latest advertising\ngimmicks and schemes, set to\nswindle -the public.\n\"We have catalogued more than\n2000 swindles at our central office\nin  New \"York,\"  said  association\nHe\navens!\nH. G. Wells couldn't have shown more\nimagination than this..\nA Roman Catholic priest in Washington\nsays the human race.'may have to find another planet for surplus population. World\nemgiration, he says, should be encouraged.\nOf course, it couldn't stop there. Soon\nthat planet would be crowded. Then ^we'd\nneed another. And another.\nBut what a wonderful way to cope with\na disagreeable mother-in-law.\nSend her to an outer planet so she could\nvisit only once a month.\u2014Toronto Telegram.\nLow on tke Ho&-\nMARCH 15, 1957:\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Finance Minister Harris\nsliced the ham thin Thursday night and\nthereby had enough to go around.\nJUNE 18, 1958:\nOTTAWA (CP)-Finance Minister Fleming sliced the ham thin Tuesday night but\neven then there wasn't enough to go around.\nAs the office wag observed, that ham\nmust be getting pretty high: But It looks as\nif there's nothing much left but a soup bone\nnow.\u2014Lethbridge Herald.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\ny4-4S~THE 4MERIC4N\nINDI4NS WERE CHILDISHLY\nFOND OF COU33ED 8E4DS\nT4LKlN'\/JUSTPUT4\n4NDSILLVC>WMENTS-   I SK*L0liS4M'\nTHEY P4INTED THEIR F4CES-1 SHeS MBS- ST\u21226\nU3VED>'LOTOFFUSS4l'D  hk      aaiLS,      ^\nFE4THERS'~'VEVE COME\n4 LON&LONe W4y SINCE\nTHOSE WRK,S4V4SE\n04VS, H4VEr?T WE,\nCHILDREN?\nIf JUNK 4NO tV4F\" \"^^^ SO LIKING JUNK   ,\nP4INT--LOOK WHO'S   W >JEWEU\"V S CHILDISH,\nHUHP THEN ITS SACK\nTO KINDERGARTEN\nFOR KV MOTHER\n4r4'4UNT4r*HlE\n,    NOTICE THE\nI0D0HE4DCRESS, ,\nCHILDREN\"\nTO04VS SQU4WS\nJUST4SL0ONy\n4S B\/SHORES\noFencHyeooME-'\nHER AHO\nPOC4HONT4S\nODTHEIRSHOP-\nLIFTlNG 4T\nTHE-S4ME  ,\n.DIME STORE.'\nV\n|^22Ci9\nW lyndltaU, Inc., WorlJ riihti n-Mrved. ,\nli\n\u2666Come Atom wav,\"\nTHE L40V SEZ-BUT\nIM WHAT DIRECTION?.\n1M4MX4ND4TIP0F1HE\nH4TL0 H4T TO MRS.   ,,\u201e,\nB-KETTLEB, W\nlOZSOCOMboRO School Ro.,\nST. LOUIS 23, MO.\nTODAY'S BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nGod' has made of one blood all\nnations of men. Acts 17:24, 21).\nBut Christian nations have vastly outstripped all others.\n(hwL 9(sL\nHeaven knows we all have faults.\nAnd love ain't, too blind to see 'em.\nBut real love is generous enough\nto keep its mouth (hut.\nJoyl&iL.:.\nPILLOW SLIPS\nHand embroidered.\nSpecial Priee, pair .j. _\u2014- ,\u2014\nH.95\nDAN RIVER GINGHAM\nClearance. Reg. $1.29 and $1.39.           .\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0 ftQaf\nTo Clear,'yd \u2014-- TO*\nSKIRT PRINTS\nAll bordered.\nTo Clear, yd.\n$1.00\nJcufoik (Dhi^ SoodL\nPhone 1485\n624 Baker St.\npresident Victor H. Nyborg.\nDonald Billam-Walker, bureau\nmanager In Honolulu, told of an\nelaborate scheme bis staff had\nbroken up that paid $l,6GO,ooo to\none slick con man.\nThe con man offered to double\nthe money of any Investor on the\nstock market. After receiving the\nmoney he did a receipt switch,\nmaking it Impossible for the \"Investor\" to demand his money.\nThe bureau had him jailed by\ndigging up a law which made it\nIllegal to borrow money from more\nthan 25 people without registering\nthe transaction.\n' ;\", \u00bb * '\nTrOTTK FASHION\nFor\nFun-Filled\nSummer\nDays\nA magniilcent array ol\ncohrlul sportswear designed to go anywhere\nunder the sunt Engaging\nfashions, slated to make\nyour sun-days, fun days\nby inviting compliments\nyour way.\n0eeX.\nLadies' Apparel,\nThe Fashion Centre\nPhone 775 - Nelion, B.C\nTHE WELCOME REFRESHMENT OF\ntea as it\nshould be\n Vb33\nL\nAbout-the: Town\nPHONI 1(44\nW. R. Workman, 623 Fourth\nStreet, left Monday for Victoria\nwhere he has been transferred by\nthe provincial Department of Highways.\n\u00ab    Si    <i\nMr. and Mrs. M. I. MacAlpine,\n124 Pine Street, will leave tonight\nby car for Saskatoon where they\nwill visit Mrs. MacAlpine's mother, Mrs. G. Ervin.\ni *  *  a\nEntertained by* women members\nof the Slocan Lake Golf Club Saturday and Sunday, ^nlne members\nof the women's section of the Nelson Golf and Country Club attended\nthe annual West Kootenay women's\nopen golf tournament Saturday and\nSunday at New Denver. Saturday\nthe guests were feted at a cocktail\nparty and dinner at the hotel in\nNew Denver and tea was served\nto the visitors-Saturday and Sunday. Those attending from Nelson\nwere Mrs. L. M. McBride, Mrs. E.\nMcGregor, Mrs. J. J. Morey, Mrs.\n0. J. Hesketh, Mrs. V. C. Miller,\nMrs. Carl Locatelli,* Mrs. R. H.\nDill, Miss Lillian Hickey and Mrs.\nA. Cameron.\n* \u00bb  \u2022   .\nMrs. F. Harry Johnson and\ndaughter, Frances, 204 Chatham\nStreet, are en route to Calgary to\nvisit Mrs. Johnson's son.\n* \u2022  \u2022\nIn Nelson to attend the wedding\nof their sister, Miss Electa Bitt-\nman June 28, Miss Lorraine Bitt-\nman and Mrs. Jake Martin and\nfamily of Fort Vermilion are staying at the home of Mrs. Harold\nCampbell of Ymir Road. Mrs.\nCampbell is Miss Bittman's sister.\n* .   a\nMr. and Mrs. W. Irwin and family of Loch Lomond Ski Lodge,\nFort William, Ont., have been\nweekend guests at the home of\ntheir uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.\nC. Shannon of Willow Point. The\nfamily left Tuesday on their way\nto visit Mr. Irwin's father, A. E.\nShannon of Princeton.\nNatal Notes\nNATAL \u2014 Mr. and Mrs..James\nSuter, accompanied by Mr. and\nMrs. Bud Mackay of Calgary were\nvisitors at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. Jack Turner.\nMiss Brenda Littler, who recently graduated from Mount Royal\nCollege in Calgary; is visiting her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Littler\nof Michel.\nMrs. Elizabeth M. Turner of\nRossland is in Natal, guest of her\nson and daughter-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. Jack Turner.\nGirl's Troubles\nDue to Tattoos\nSALTASH,- Eng. (AP) - Nineteen-year-old Yvonne Clements\nstarted a six-month jail sentence\nWednesday \u2014 blaming tattoos for\nher troubles.\nShe has the word kiwi on one\nhand, a skull and crossbones on\nthe other, a blue star on her forehead and a floral design on her\nchest.\nBut the tattoo she regrets most\nis on her leg. It says: \"I love\nmen.\"\nBecause of that, she told police, she could not get a job.\nProspective employers Invariably\ndecided she wasn't the.working\ntype. ,  ,  '   .\nDark-haired Yvonne was convicted Tuesday of stealing \u00a35 from\nher mother.\nShe hopes plastic surgery wfllle\nin prison will,remove those decorations.\nCanada's Dollar,\nGold Reserves Up\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Canada's official reserves of United- States\ndollars and gold rose to $1,897,-\n500,000 on May 31 from $1,875,.-\n000,000 at the end of April, the\nBank of Canada reported Wednesday.  v\nHoldings In gold declined to $1,-\n077,900,000. from $1,093,000,000 while\nholdings in dollars increased to\n$819,600,000 from $782,000,000.   *\nClearance Sale\nOur Entire Stock of SUMMER COATS\nREDUCED TO CLEAR\nPrices are cut to less than original cost. Sizes 954-20.\nOn Sale at $16.95 and Up\nSUITS\nRemaining Stock. Year End Specials. TO CLEAR.\nSUMMER DRESSES' '   i\nOur stock is now at Its very best . . . Come In . . .\nBrowse around at your convenience.\nDULLUM'S LADIES' WEAR\nPhone 1320 415 Hall St. Nelion, B.C.\nte,,\n**-* ^^iKlPT^\n-   ***&\u00bb'\n$k% '    ,'. .f      ,\n\u25a0iJi.laW jT-\n.*             * *   -j\n\u25a0 BrS*.    ,\nKir     ^IfeiJSS   '4Lji>>'\u00bb\n\" \"3P\n*:, 1 \u25a0\ni.\nP-^T  *\nlik**       \"         **\"'   4^m.      \"\nf  ;\nM'\nzw^mm\nft\nBBSs?'.\nst\\W  I\n*  m\n:i\" '''v-^r^MJI\nMR. AND MRS. C. G. DERBYSHIRE .\n\u2014Oliver Kenig phofo.\nDerbyshire-Kenig Vows\nExchanged at Crawford Bay\nCinderella slippers with rhine-\nstone-studded heels and a bouquet\nof blue tinted carnations complemented the bride's white chiffon\ngown when Bette Gertrude Kenig\nwas given in marriage to Clive\nGarnet Derbyshire of Riondel\nJune, 21.\nThe wedding was held in Crawford Bay Community Church for\nthe daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M.\nLetourneau of Riondel who became\nthe bride of the son of Mr, and\nMrs. E. Derbyshire.\nOfficiating clergyman was Rev.\nW. Edington and the bride was\ngiven away by her uncle, Flo.\nBouthillier of Vernon. She was attired in a white nylon gown with\nfingertip veil 'falling from a se-\nquinned tiara. Her bridesmaid,\nMrs. Ronnie Almack, a cousin,\nwore a pale blue ballerina,length\nnylon net gown with pink and white\nheaddress and carried a colonial\nbouquet) in matching colors.\nMatron of honor was the bride's\naunt, Mrs. Flo. Bouthillier, who\nwas attired in a pale blue nylon\nlace gown with corsage of yellow\nand white roses.\nTommy Johnston of Riondel supported the groom and ushers were\nLarry Derbyshire and Reg. Derbyshire.\nThe two grandmothers, Mrs. A.\nAlmack of Kimberley and Mrs. K.\nFredrick of Lloydminster, poured\ntea and coffee at the reception,\nwhich was held on the lawn at the\nhome of-the groom's parents.\nThe best man proposed the toast\nto the bride.\nServiteurs were members of the\nRiondel Community Church circle.\nThe bride's mother was gowned\nin dusty rose with white acces-\nNew Denver\nMr. and Mrs. Bert Robison and\ntwo children of Field were guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. James Draper.\nPOINTING  THE    WAY   TO\nouw\nFor fun-filled hours \u2014- see our\nsmart selection of eye-catching,\naction-cut sportswear.\n* COTTON SKIRTS\nK?    5.98 ,o 10.95\n* BLOUSES\nPriced\nFrom \t\n* T-SHIRTS\nPriced ,\nFrom  .\u2014\n1.69-08.98\n1.98 * 4.98\nit BATHING SUITS\nE?,  _  7.95,. 25.00\n* PEDAL PUSHERS\nFrom : . Z.7Q to 5.95\n-\u25a0Ir Slim Jims\nPriced   \u2022.\nFrom  -\t\n* SHORTS\nFrom  _\n.4.98.08.95\n. 1;98,0 3.98\nsorles and a silver fox stole and\nthe bridegroom's mother in a black\nand gold on aqua print dress with\nwhite accessories.\nThe guest book was in charge\nof Mrs. F. McWhinnie and Mrs.\nReg. Derbyshire and the three-\ntiered wedding cake was decorated\nby Mrs. L. Fiedler.\nThe bride wore a pale blue lace\ndress with white accessories and\nwhite carnation corsage for' her\nhoneymoon trip to Waterton Park,\nKalispel and Calgary.\nThe bridegroom is employed by\nthe CM. and S. at Riondel.\nOut-of-town guests included Mr.\nand Mrs. K. Fredrick of Lloydminster, Sask., and Mr. and Mrs.\nAlbert Almack of Kimberley, Mr.\nand Mrs. lion Almack and Miss\nBetty Hooper of Nelson, Mr. and\nMrs. H. Graham Brown, Miss.\nBrenda Brdwn, Mr. and Mrs. Willis\nand daughters, and Mr. and Mrs.\nR. Morton-Humble of Kootenay\nBay.\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\nFranc** Drako-\nLook itt the section in which your\nbirthday comes and find what your\noutlook, is, according to the stars.\nFor Friday, June 27, 1958\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n-A beneficial day generally, but\nyou may have to work steadier and\nmore patiently than usual to attain desired goals. This, however,\nshould prove a challenge to your\nmanagerial ability and your faith.\n.APRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurusl-\nWhlle influences are not especally\ngenerous in personal matters, this\nis a good period for making advancement in professional and\nother work Interests. Mental work,\nsound finances highly favored.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemlnil-\nA promising period for your special\ntalents. Dig into your bag of tricks\nfor new and unusual ideas, methods, twists. Make it a really BIG\nday.\nJUNE-22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)-\nMoon, Mercury, Jupiter in grand\narrayl A good day for trying new\nand unique enterprises; equally\nfavorable for routine matters, finishing incompleted projects.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)-\nGood influences for you and your\ninterests. You should feel Inspired\nto do your very best. You can\nmake permanent advancement,\ngains now.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) sp Notes to Gemini also\npertinent to you. The arts, Journal-\nIsm, research, mental work gen\nerally under fine influences.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 You may have to\nmake your own opportunities and\npei-haps work on items you do not\nwholly like now, but it is all in the\nday's work, so be your gracious\nself and put your best foot forward. 1\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 This can, should be a\npleasant, but maybe not exciting\nday. Those in professional fields\ncan make unusual advancement,\nhowever. Home, family interests\nfavored.\nNOVEMBER '23 to DECEMBER\n21. (Sagittarius) \u2014 Your Jupiter\namong the best aspected planets.\nThis can, and should be, a responsive, productive day. New and unusual ideas stimulated. You can\ncreate, build for the future now.\n.   DECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 Be your most hopeful, engaging (elf. Don't strain\nhealth or worry as long as you are\ndoing your best. In free time, enjoy a hobby, health-building pastimes.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Some influences call\nfor staunch adherence to duty without fuss or waste of time. Other\nplanetary vibrations encourage you\nto think smartly and act accordingly.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Extra caution advised\nin confidential matters. 'Other-\nwise, your influences are good. A\nresponsive day for study, teaching,\nresearch, all 'mental -work.\nYOU BORN TODAY are generally efficient and refreshingly\nclever. Your home-loving and domestic leanings are outstanding and\nyour friendliness, energy and courage are notable. Don't strain\nhealth; keep family relationships\namicable. Birthdate: Paul L. Dim-\nbar, Negro poet; Lafcadlo Hearn,\nauthor.\nRiondel Notes\nMr. and Mrs. Childress of Tacoma, tyash., visited their son and\nfamily, Mr. and Mrs. Robert\nChildress, Diane and Douglas.\nMrs. R. Hawksworth of Winnipeg is spending a six-week holiday\nwith her daughter, Mrs. Hans Jensen and family! Mrs. Jensen and\nson Melvin will return with Mrs.\nHawksworth to Winnipeg for the\nremainder of the summer.\nMt. and Mrs. Heinz Carl and\nfamily have left on a trip to Victoria where Mr. Carl will attend\nthe Credit Union convention.\nMrs. J. Jolie has returned fram\na trip to Viking, Alta., where she\nattended the funeral of her youngest brother.\nAinsworth Notes\nAINSWORTH - J. B. Fletcher\nis holidaying in Vancouver, guest\nof his son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. Paul Steiner.\n',. J. Brummit and\nIver were guests of\ntlfl \u25a0ents, Mr. and. Mrs,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 26,1958 \u2014 5\nAt Work With\nWomen's Clubs\nin Kootenay\nPLAN SHOWER FOR HOSPITAL\nNAKUSP - Members of the\nArrow Lakes Hospital Auxiliary\nmet for a potluck supper and meeting at the summer home of Mr. and\nMrs. ,W. Maxwell at Telegraph\nBay.    ,\nPlans for activities during Centennial celebrations were finalized,'\nand the Float Commitee reported\nwork was progressing on the Auxiliary float.\nTentative plans for the hospital\nshower in September were made.\nThe meeting also voted to refinish\nthe upstairs,hallway of the hospital\nThe work will be done during the\nsummer months.\nMrs. Bolstad, who is leaving Nakusp to live in Chilliwack, was presented with a gift and a WA membership pin.\nPLAN STRAWBERRY TEA\nNATAL \u2014 Final \"neeting of the\nCatholic Women's League before\nthe Summer recess was held ln St.\nMichael's Hall at Natal. A new\nmember, Mrs. F. McVeigh, was\nwelcomed. \/\nDelegate Mrs. P. Letasy gave a\nreport on the CWL convention at\nTrail.\nCommittees  of two  members\nInflated\nPOOLS\nand\nBEACH TOYS\nat\nJhswnanh\nRobson Notes\nROBSON\u2014Mr. and Mrs. A. McGowan and family of Kitimat are\nvisiting Mrs. McGowan's parents,'\nMr. and Mrs. Peter Wanjoff.\nThe LA to the Legion, No. 170,\nentertained the Legion members,\nwhen 45 sat down to supper. Robert\nWadey, on behalf of the members,\nthanked the ladies.\neach were appointed to clean the ,\nchurch each week of the summer -1\nmonths. It was decided to hold the\/\nannual strawberry tea July 19 with I\nMrs. W. Davey and Mrs. F. McVeigh, convening.\nFollowing the meeting a farewell party was held for Mrs. A\"'*\nMogale,   who   will   leave   Natal\nshortly for the Interior. '\nWUtculifa FASHIONS\nPre-lnventory Sale\n' Summer Cotton Dresses\n25% OFF\nChemise Dresses\n20% OFF\nSUITS AND COATS\nREDUCED DRASTICALLY\n10% REDUCTION on oil CASH SALES\n*\u00b0 hoi ov.nl JU*\u00ab mlx and ehli,,.\nEverybody lores the fresh flavour of this spectacular pie, the perfect warm-weather\ndessert, cool and refreshing. It's almost unbelievable that such an exciting\ndessert could be so simple to make\u2014-directions are easy, mixing is quick, it chills\nin your rejfrigeratoi-. Serve Monarch Ice Box Pie to your family tonight\u2014it's a\nda finish to any meal! '7 *\n5 flavours\u2014raspberry, lemon, vanilla, butterscotch, chocolate\n U \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 26,1958\n'Aim ir.*6*\"1'\nWIENER BUNS\nHOOD'S. Package of 12.\nTOMATO JUICE\nLIBBY'S, Fancy. 48 ox. tin\nNALLEY'S RELISH\nHot Dog or Hamburger. 12-oz. jar __.\nFRUIT CORDIALS\nNUTTY CLUB. 24 Oi. bottle . \u25a0.\nMARSHMALLOWS\nKRAFT Jet Puffed. Free Toasting Fork. 11 Vi ox. pkg.\n__35c\n2'or73c\n_.' 29c\n\u201e49c\n35c\nAFEWAY\nREADY-TO-EAT\nPICNIC TREATS\nFrom Safeway's Meat Section\nHams\nlbJ\u00a75\nND     %y\\ 7 7\nReady To Eat.\nWhole, Half\nor Quartered.\nCALGARY PACKERS SELECT BRAND\nHams\nBoned and rolled.\nReady to eat.\nCalgary Packers.\nlb.\nJCOTTAGE ROLLS\niff Calgary Packers. Select brand. Ready-to-eat\t\nlb. 79\nWIENERS\nSELECT CELLO . . . SUM JIMS\nBAR-B-Q\n1 lb. pkg.\n49c\nSMOKED\nPICNICS\n5 to 7-lb. average.\nib. 47c\n.\u25a0**\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\nI\ni\nM\nFRYING CHICKEN\nFRESH KILLED\nCUT UP ON TRAYS.. .READY FOR THE PAN\nlb. 59\nM Safeway\nSelect Quality\nSAUD DRESSING\nPIEDMONT. 32 oz. jar . ....\nFRESH BREAD\nPOLLY ANN. White or brown. Sliced. 24 oz. loaf.\nMIRACLE WHIP\nKRAFT. 32 oz. jar\nDILL PICKLES\n65c\n2 tor 43c\n__69c\n75c\nWHITE VINEGAR:\nHeinz. 33 oz. jug\t\nMAZOLA OIL:\n2 lb. tin \t\nICE BOX PIE:\nMonarch. Just mix and chill, ffti oz. pkg.\nBEACH SANDALS:\nAssorted sizes. Pair\t\nTOMATO CATSUP\nHeinz. 11 oz. bottle\nWATERMELON\nCalifornia.\nRipe and Juicy.\nTake One Along\nOn Your Picnic. s\nLb\nFrench's\nMustard\nFor Your Ham ond\nHot Dogs. 16 oz. jar\n26c\nStrawberries\nCantaloupes\nBananas\nLocal. Large, red\nBasket\t\nSalmon-fleshed\nJumbo 45s \t\nA MUST for\nevery picnic ..\n2 j* 39\u00b0\nHead Lettuce\nFirm Green Heads .....\nCucumbers\nOkanagan Grown\t\nLB;\nn*      Celery yV\nCrisp and Green, Stuff With Cheese   LB. \u2022*\u25a0 \u25a0\n1Q*      Radishes ?      13*\n'-W        ' anrl Green Onions. Loc. Bunches *\u25a0 for   \u25a0 \u25a0* ''\n '\n, lb35\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 1958 -\nMAYONNAISE\nPIEDMONT. 16 ox. jar\t\nMIXED PICKLES\nROSE, Sweet. 24 oz. jar\nSWIFTS PREM\nPOTATO CHIPS\nTOMATO JUICE: J      3Q*\nHtinz. 20 oi. tin .......... * I  \u2022*\u25a0 for \"W W\nMARGARINE: J     ^c*\nSolo. Top* quality. 1 lb. pkg. :.... *\" for \"\u00ab*\u2022'\nINSTANT TODDY: 4Q#\nChocolate drink. 18 oz. tin ( \u201e    **\nCHEESE SPREAD: JO*\nDarifarm. 8[oz. jar \"...'. \" W\nORANGEADE BASE: ?       21*\nSunkist. tVt oz. tin   \"for    AM'\nGREEN PEAS: J     or*\nRoyal City, Fancy. Sieve 5.15 oz. tin  *\u25a0 for f?fW\nCAKE MIXES: J     AQ*\nMonarch. White or chocolate         ~ for    * ^\nFROZEN PIES: J     fjzt\nManor House. Chicken or turkey. 8 oz  *\u25a0\"! for \"(\u25a0*'\nFRESH BUTTERMILK: jet\nLucerne. Quart carton  _ ^ss#\nPURE LARD: yy\nMaple Leaf. 18 oz. carton _-.  \u00ab\u00bb\u25a0\" \u25a0\nGREEN PEAS\nTown House, Fancy.    Sieve 4. 15 Of. tin -\nTuesday\nJuly 1st Is\nDOMINION DAY\nSafeway Stores will be elated.\nSafeway Coffee Values\nPRICES BELOW ARE WITH 10c COUPON AVAILABLE\nAf COFFEE DISPLAY\nAirway Coffee\nNob Hill Coffee Rich and aQmaic\nMild and Mellow.\n1 Ib. bag\t\n1  Ib. bag\nEdwards Coffee nbhtv,9ius:\n74* \u00a3_\n77r bag _..\n79* ?,JbL_\nAirway Instant ^ # delicious-\nSafeway Instant n^zT'al-\n41<\n44<\n6 or.\njar ._\n6 oz.\njar ...\n*1.55\n*1.62\n$1.65\n99*\n*1.08\nALARM CLOCK SPECIAL\nListen for the alarm clock to ring! Every customer who hai any size or quantity of\na Safeway Brand of Coffee in their order .while they ere at the eheckstand when the\nalarm rings, will receive absolutely free, a duplicate of their coffee purchase.\nTOILET SOAP\n*\nWoodbury. r\\       QOej\nBath Size bar. _  JL for Ov'4\nLUX SOAP\nFlakes\nSpecial Offer. Q1#\nGiont pkg     O I\nBROCADE SOAP\nAssorted colors. OQti\n5 bar dispenser ctn. 0#^\nRINSO\nGiant pkg.\n89!\nParty Pride\nHalf\nDelicious served   _    \u25a0\u25a0\nwith strawberries GallOn\nCarton\nor bananas.\nFRESH M|LK \/   s\nLucerne Bonus Quality. Standard or Homogenized. Quart Carton _\nCOTTAGE CHEESE\n\u2014Lucerne 16 oz. carton *,   ,' \u25a0\t\nCHOCOLATE MILK\nLucerne, Quart Carton :\t\nWHIPPING CREAM\nLucerne. Half Pt. Carton . i\nSPREADEASY CHEESE\n2 Ib. carton  \u2014\nSWEET BISCUITS\nDavid's, 2 lb. cello\t\nTIDE\nGiant pkg.\nIVORY SOAP\nPersonal. JEf JQ\"*\nFree facecloth.     P bars m%W-\n\u00bb'\u25a0\u25a0 KOOL AID\n5 \u00ab29\nAssorted flavors.\nPkg.    ___..\nf*\"'    *?Z2ZZ3\nSAFEWAY\n\u2022V'    -*\n!!\u25a0\u25a0'\nr.\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0,-\/\/,-\/\/,'.--\u2022'.; V.-Vy.-'t'-V.- \u2022'\u2022'-\n\\pp\n->\nWe Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities.\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\nB \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 26,1958\nBACON   lb.69e\nMogna \"-- \u2014\u2014  lb. 42c\nSmoked Sausage\nCold Meats\nTurkeys few\nUNION Brand.\nCountry style. .\nUNION Brand.\nTable ready. 6 ox. pkt.\nBrand,\nlbs.\ni*W^*\u2122^-'S\u00bba\u00ab^\nBarbecued Chickens\nA delightful treat.\nEoeh  \t\nIb. 69c\nlb. 33c\nlb. 59c\n- $1.65\nTOMATO JUICE: y     7c*\nHeinz, fancy. 48 oz. tin __.       \"for  I m-\nPEANUT BUTTER: OQ#\nKersey's. 48 oz. tin _..,. : j, -O'-w\" .:\n32 OZ.\nSALAD DRESSING: cm\nChampion. \"Keeps 'em asking for more tasty Champion Salad. w-W.\nSALAD TIME DRESSING: CQ<\nNalley's. 24 oz. ice box jar .'  \u201e   avw'\nCUCUMBER PICKLES: 29*\nP*m3Z3ET 3TOEJSH!\nLEMONADE:\n. Broder's. 6 oz \t\nREDDI-WHIP:\n; To top your berries. Tin\t\nMINUTE STEAKS:\n4 oz. pkg.:....::: .-.\t\nOuidooh.  Jjuudi,\n3      am  GINGER SNAPS:\nW55'\nLb.\nft SCOTCH MINTS:\nor ENGLISH ALLSORTS. Lb.\nCHOW MEIN:\n:\u00bb w. pkg :..\na     *1 QO  CORDIAL:\n\"'for    \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0WW    Nabob. 16 oz\t\n47'\t\nThe More You Buy the\nMore You Save-Compare!\n'1.95\n55*\n99*\n2\u201e,49*\n25*\nYour First Side of Beef at\n35c lb.\np Cut Up. Ready for Your Freezer With a\nI     FAIRBANKS-MORSE DELUXE CHEST FREEZER\n'Safety Door Latch, child proof, a tot cannot be latched in\nI       SHARP FREEZE and STORE COMPARTMENT\n\u25a0  Quiet operation \u2022. . built-in wall condenser means dry cabinet.\nEconomical operation;\nI*'\nw.    '        :r:m^,' a\nINSTANT MILKO:\n25c off sale price. 6 lb. pkg. \t\nPERFEX BLEACH:\n64 oz. Sale price  ,\t\nPURE STRAWBERRY JAM:\nMalkin's Best. New pack. 48 oz. tin\t\nLEMON CHEESE:\nNabob. 10 oz. tumbler    \t\nGRAHAM WAFERS:\nMccormick's. 1 lb. pkg Z ,\t\nPEAS:\nLynn- Valley, sieve 5. 15 oz ._.\t\nSARDINES:\nBrunswick ;  \u201e\t\nNalley's slices. 12 oz  \t\nFAMILY SIZE PKG.\nCAKE MIXES: y     yc*\nRobin Hood; White or chocolate with free mixade  \u25a0\"* for ' \u25a0 \u2022\u00bb*\nMIXADE: fi     _>Q*\nRobin Hood. Fruit flavored drinks       9 for \u00ab\"mF\nLEMONADE: y     yt\\t\nWyler's Powder. Sweetened  \u2022\u25a0  for \u00ab\"^\nWhere Else,  But  at LIBERTY  Can  You  Find  Such Selection.\nFRESH COOLED.;.\nCORN 4 Cobs 37\n\u2014\u2014 23c\nTOMATOES\nFresh field. 14 ox. '1\t\nSEEDLESS GRAPES\nThomson's Sweet.  *.,.,. ,\t\nBING CHERRIES\nLuscious\nO.K.   _\nGreen Peppers\nLarge Firm\nlb. 29c\n- lb. 39c\n- lb. 45c\nWINESAP APPLES    0 IL-   OQ,\nFancy Red    _______ \u00a3.    IUs>\u00ab    L 71\nBUNCH CARROTS    1 |LC   7'Cr\nor BEETS. Local, fresh pulled __\u2014 JL    I Us*.    JL\u00bbJ\\,\n10 lbs 29c\nPOTATOES\nLast lot. Gem's No. 2. Grand for salads\nLimit 20 Ibs. to customer.\n4\u201e49'\n*1\nSALMON:\nFancy Pink, Paramount. 7\"4 oz.\" tins\t\nROOT BEER EXTRACT:\nHires. Easy to make. 4 oz. bottle\t\nHI C ORANGE DRINK:\n48 os. ** \t\n10 .ADO\n4 ^.lOO\n35*\nJlJTV\nLIBERTY\nPRICES EFFECTIVE TODAY TO MONDAY NOON, JUNE 30th. \u2014 CLOSED TUES., JULY 1st\nWe Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities\n \u2014\nUS. Senator Defends\nCariatla1* \"Irrifertian\"\nWASHINGTON (AP) - A New\nEngland senator said Wednesday\nCanadians \"have some right to-be\nirritated\" with the United States,\nand called for more attention to\neconomic policies to help improve  Canadian-U.S.  relations.\nSenator George D. Aiken (Rep.\nVt.) suggested among other\npoints in a speech prepared tor\ndelivery before the Senate that\nCanada be included in any future\ninter-American economic conferences aimed at promoting economic growth of the Western\nHemisphere.    -\n\"At a time like this, when- international communism is again\nshowing its teeth, it is well that\nwe take stock of what is going\non in, the country with which we\nhave the most m common,\" he\nsaid.\nCOMMON NEEDS\nToo many Americans need to\nbe \"more aware of the common\nneeds and aspirations , of.' the\nUnited States and Canada.\"\nAiken, a member of the Senate foreign relations committee,\nsaid his suggestions were aimed\nat easing what he called the irri-\nTHE\nPRESERVING]\nKETTLE\nby   httuiUa \/Stiifcr\nCF GEHERAl FOOOS KITCHENS\nA friend of mine said \"If you can\nmake, jelly from one kind of fruit,\nthen jelly made from too kinds of\nfruit will bettotoe as good I\" Well,\nthat's certainly true of the fbV\nlowing recirjj: ..\"7 '*'',\n' ..hWbrant jijid, .'. ' '\u2022\"\u25a0;\nbasfbebrv jellt     ':\niii cups juice, fobout 1 guar*\njfallM ripe ret* curronts.tiniJ'ij'\nQuarts ripe red raspberries}\n7 cups (3 lbs.) sugar\nV> bottle Certo fruit pectin.\nFirst, prepare tbe juice. Crush 1\nquart fully ripe red currants. Add\n\"4 cup water and bring to a boil.\nCrush about IV\" quarts fully'ripe\nred raspberries. Place fruits in\njelly bag and squeeze out juice.\nMeasure 4 V* clips into very large\nsaucepan.\nNow make the jelly. Add sugar to\njuice in saucepan. Mix well. Place\nover high heat. Bring to a boil,\nstirring constantly. Stir in Certo\nat once. Bring to a full rolling boil.\nBoil hard 1 minute, stirring constantly. Remove from heat, skim\noff foam with metal spoon. Four\nquickly into glasses. Cover at\nonce with Vs inch hot paraffin.\nMakes about 11 medium glasses.\nWhere does pectin come irom?\nWell, pectin, is the jelling substance found in all fruits in varying amounts. Certo is pectin extracted from fruits rich in this\nnatural- substance, then refined,\nconcentrated and per\/ormance-\nctmtroUed. Your jam and jelly set\nexactly right uihen vou use Certo\ni end follow the tested Certo\nrecipes.\"   __^___\nPreserving Pointer: It's wise to\nbuy new rubber rings each season. A good rubber fs elastic and\nnot brittle. Test each ring before\nusing. It's poor economy to save a\nrubber ring at the expense of a\nquart of fruit.\nJam and jelly malting can sometimes bring problems . . . if you\nhave any, write and'tell me. I'd\nbe lilad to help. And please visit\nwith me again in my next column.\ntations that complicate otherwise\nharmonious relations between the\nU.S. and Canada.;\t\nHe said the proposed inter-\nAmerican i economic conference\nwould he to \"find ways to avoid\nextreme commodity price fluctuations, to promote, economic\ngrowth and technical co - operation, and' to Work toward' a common market and currency convertibility for the Western Hemisphere... .\n\"We must, realize' that Canada\nis taking her place among the\ngreat nations of the world. The\nvast resources and the relatively\nsmall population of Canada mean\nthat she is destined to go through\na periods of tremendous and rapid\ngrowth.\"\nSINGLE STOCKPILE .\nHe also urged-joint economic as\nwell as military ventures. \"\u2022\u25a0.'\u25a0 .\n'\u25a0' \"In considering supplies of\nwheat, oil,' lead,' zinc and -oilier\n.commodities,\" Aiken said, \"we\nwould do well to 'consider such\nsupplies,as a single stockpile.\n\"Not- that these; national- supplies; can be physically merged\nnor that they will cease to- be\ncompetitive, but in the field of\nworld development and world\ntrade and North American, security, they are so .vitally important that a co - operative, understanding relating to production,\nstockpiling and disposal becomes\na mutual necessity.\" ,\nSURPLUS COMPLAINTS   '<\u2022\/:.\nHe discussed at length' complaints in Canada that the U.S.\ndisposal of surplus agricultural\ncommodities abroad have hurt\nCanada.\nAiken said the disposal program has adequate safeguards\nbut \"we have in the past made\nisome mistakes.\"-,\u2022   :-...',\nThefe -were Instances . where\nshatter'. deals had.been ''harmful\nto Canada as well ,as tb oiir' own\ndollar, mar^t.\" .\nCanadian confidence and expectations 'received 'a severe blow\nlast December when it was announced Canadian oil shipments\nto' the west coast and the .northern part of the United States were\nto be subject to a voluntary oil\n'import control program;'\n\u25a0 Canadians were particularly Irritated by the argument that this\naction : was justified \"on - Hie\"\nground that' in the event of a war\nemergency there would be a need\nfor adequate supplies in the\nUnited States.\"\nThat argument \"simply does\nnot make sense\" because, in the\nevent of war, \"Canadian' reserves; and production will be just\nas available to the United States\nas our own petroleum resources.\"\nLIGHT SNOW FALL\nIN WYOMING\nCHEYENNE, Wyo.', (AP)-Light\nsnow, fell and temperatures dipped\ninto the 30s today in southeastern\nWyoming.\nLaramie's 34 was the lowest\nearly-morning reading. Cheyenne,\nthe state .capital, was only, one\ndegree warmer. One inch of snow\nwas on the ground of Laramie.\nTemperatures were in tiie 49s\nelsewhere in Wyoming and northeastern Colorado.\nThe Canadian-born storm moved\nin late Tuesday. Along with the\nsnow . and low temperatures it\nproduced,moderate rain, hail and\nstrong winds. \u25a0\nTorchlight' Tattoo\nAttended by 2000\nVANCOUVER (CF)-The\nSearchlight Tattoo drew 2000 more\njeopel here Tuesday night than\nMonday night for,a total attendance of close to 10,000. \u2022';;\u25a0\"'\nPremier W. A. C. Bennett, who\ntook the salute Tuesday night,\nsaid: .\"This is a truly amazing\nshow. Everyone in British Columbia shoul dbe proud of the show\nand should attend it.\" t\nFigures Up\nOTTAWA (CP) Commercial\nfailures under- the. Bankruptcy\nahd Winding Up Acts rose nearly\n12 per cent in 1957 to 2,198 from\n1,967 the previous year, the bureau of statistics said Wednesday.\nEstimated - defaulted liabilities\nrose nine per cent to $79,064,000\nfrom $64,254,000, but the average\nliability eased to $31,909 from\n-,$32,700 in 1956.\nGasoline station failures in the\nyear more than doubled to 52\nfrom 25. Failures of clothing\nstores rose nearly. 45 per cent to\n136 from 94.\nGreatest number : of failures\nwere in Quebec where 1,327 businesses wete declared bankrupt,\ncompared with 1,265 last year.\nFailures. rose to 122 from 98 in\nthe Prairie provinces while bankruptcies in British Columbia declined to 58 from 60.\nCONFIDENTIALLY  YOURS\n\u2014-by Byrne Hope Sanders\n(MONTREAL, June 26th \u2014You can't beat homemade jam! I make lots of strawberry and\n' raspberry and my family loves it! It always\nturns out beautifully because I follow the CERTO\nmethod. Certo is pectin, the natural -jelling substance found in fruit. The Certo people select the\nfinest pectin-rich fruit, then extract, refine and\nconcentrate it to give you perfect performance.\nWith Certo there's no guesswork. You get up to 50*% more glasses\nbecause you don't boil the juice away and you keep the true color\nand flavor of ripe berries. With Certo Liquid and Certo Crystals you\nget a booklet of recipes tested and approved by General Foods\nKitchens. Treat your family to homemade strawberry and raspberry jam\u2014successfully made\u2014with Certo.\n60ING TO EUROPE THIS SUMMER? Drop into your nearest\nBANK OF MONTREAL branch and. ask for\nyour free copy of the new Currency Guide.\nSmall enough to fit snugly into pocket or purse,'\nit tells you at a glance the dollar equivalents\nef no less than 11 European currencies. I'm\ngoing to be in London and the Continent next\nmonth, and I know my Currency Guide is going\nto be tremendously helpful. It also lists toe\naddresses of the B of M offices in London\nand Paris, and I'm looking forward to taking\nadvantage  of  their  many  travel  services.\nPerhaps 111 meet you in one of these offices of \"MY BANK\" this\nsummer.\nShed No Tears For \\Vinners\n\u2022 \u25a0'   Of U,S. Beauty Contests\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD (API - As the\nseason for beauty contests approaches, we are asked -to shed\na tear tor the plight of the poor\nwinners.   .   '   \u2022\"'.    ;'.\u25a0.''*\nDon't do it! .'\u25a0 Judging from a\nlocal survey, the contest winners\nare doing all right. : \u2022'\n- It is often claimed that, nothing\nremains for beauty queens after\ntheir victory except oblivion.\nTrue, few of them have set the\nworld afire.as*-actresses. But they\ncan still make good livings on the\nbasis 'of their prize-winning assets;\nThis is Uie conclusion reached\nafter,, surveying a teatp pf lov*\nlies assembled as. moon maidens\nin. Missile to the Moon. That's\nnot bad surveying\u2014not when the\ngirls include Reneta* Hoy (Miss\nGermany), Sandra. .Wirth (Miss\nFlorida), T a ilia Yelia (Miss\nYugoslavia), Mary Ford1 .(Miss\nMinnesota), Marianne Gaba (Miss\nIllinois), Lisa Simon e (Miss\nFrance), and'Sanita Pelltey (Miss\nNew York),'-.',    .\u2022-    ,\nNone of the girls has exactly\nhit.it big in. Hollywood. Yet they\nclaim they are able to support\nthemselves , on earnings from\nmovies, TV, modelling and night\nclubs.\nDo-beauty titles help their acting careers?\nNo, says Miss Germany, they\nare labelled as beauties without\ntalent.\nYes, says Miss Minnesota,\n\"beauty contests can be stepping\nstones to a Career if a girl keeps\nher head.\"\nBut all agree, that beauty must\nbe accompanied by talent. If a\ngirl' has; both-, she can. qave a\nchance ln Hollywood, tile beauties i declared, but .they recommended that she come here with\nno less than $590 as a nest egg\nto tide her over.\nAmong the other results of the\nsurvey: j'i.';\nBeauty winners do not rival\nJayne Mansfield in the chest department. The girls' bosoms\naveraged 35V, inches. .'\n, They must keejj strict disci:,\npline to maintain their beauty.\nRegular hours, careful diet,, exercise.\nUses Hypnotism\nIn Operation\nSAN. FRANCISCO (AP) - A\nteen-aged girl with her *heart opened was awakened on the operating table, to demonstrate the\nvalue of hypnotism in surgery, a\nBeverly Hills doctor reported today..\nWhile Iter heart was out of commission and her blood was being\npumped by a machine, the, 14-\nyear-old girl opened her eyes and\nresponded repeatedly to the doctor's \"instructions, he said;\nShe then was put to sleep\nagain by suggestion and came\nthrough the operation in good\nshape. Twenty days later she.\nleft the hospital.\nAn account of the operation\nwas given in a paper before the\nAmerican Medical Association by\nDr. Milton Marmer, who handled\nthe anaesthesia and did the hypnotizing. \u2022\nA return to consciousness while\nunder open heart surgery is a\ngood idea be'eause it allows the\ndoctors to check on whether patient's brain is being damaged\nwhile the machine is taking over\nthe jpb of the heart, he said.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY,. JUNE 26,195!\nm\nUrge Young Adults To Use\nPolio Vaccine Protection\nBy DON PEACOCK\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA  (CP)-Canadians old\nenough to know better are the\nones who neglect to take advantage of polio vaccine protection.\nThis Is the word from federal\nG. D. W. Cameron, deputy minister of health, who said in an\ninterview that \"the young adult\nwho misses this insurance is just\ncrazy.\"\nDr. Cameron said most health\nauthorities concerned with the\npolio vaccination program, begun in Canada im 1955, believe\nthe most important age groups to\nbe reached now are pre-school\nchildren and young adults.\nHe figured the toughest group\nto reach will be adults up to\nabout 40 years old. Many wives\nhad been to their doctors for the\nvaccine, but it was harder to get\nhusbands to taxe the time.\nYet, said Dr. Cameron, \"some\nof the worst tragedies caused by\npolio have occured in young\nadults, most of whom didn't\ndie.\"\nOnce during a polio epidemic\nin Winnipeg more than 29 young\npregnant wives were in iron\nlungs.\nThe Salk polio vaccine is eon-..\nsidered 89 to 85 per cent effective against the disease.\nFederal health experts esti-1\nmate that more than 5,000,909\nCanadians had received one or\nmore of the required three inoculations up to June 1. About 75\nper cent of these are estimated\nto have had all three shots.\nOf the total, it is estimated that\n80 to 90 per cent are between\nthree months and 19 years old.\nThe prevention program comes\nunder provincial jurisdiction, but\nthe federal government splits the\ncost of providing the vaccine\nwith any province that makes it\navailable free.\nThe greatest reduction in polio\nincidence since 1955 has occurred in school-age children. Now\nhealth authorities are anxious to.\nsee a wider segment of the population receive the protection.\nENJOY THE BOUNTY of the fresh fruits and vegetables sow-\nwith delectable Minute Mayonnaise made quick-\nas-quick with Borden's EAGLE BRAND Sweetened Condensed Milk . . . either plain, or with\n, Borden's Sour Cream added. Here's how:\nMinute Mayonnaise\n3\/3 cap Eagle Brand Sweetened Condensed Milk \u2014 1 egg\nyolk \u2014 H tap. salt-\u2014 1 .tsp. dry mustard \u2014 Vs cup\nvinegar \u2014' Vt cup salad ott \u2014few grains cayenne. .\nPlace all Ingredients In mixing bowl. Beat with, rotary\nbeater until mixture thickens. If you'd like a thicker\nconsistency chill before serving. Hakes 2 cops,\nOne of the dozens of delectable variations ls \u2014 add Vt cup Borden's Soar Cream\nio 1 cap of Minute Mayonnaise. Just made to complement fresh or Jellied fruit\nTHESB ARE THE DOO DAYS . .\". that every dog enjoys . . . if\nhe is lucky enough to be thriving on DR.'\nBALLARD'S   CHAMPION   DOG   FOOD,   a,\nveterinary diet which contains all the nutrients)\nyour-trusting pet needs. Every, fin of Br;\nBallard's contains tbe necessary energy bodybuilders which give your dog a shiny coat, I\nbright eyes and abounding good spirits . . - .1\ncomes in three flavors: Chicken, Liver and\nRegular. Your pet deserves a scientifically1\nhealth-giving  balanced  nourishment through\n.these dog days, and every day . . . Dr. Ballard's Champion Dog\nFood, of course!\n\u00a3)tUj ... has Sportswear for Your Family Vacation or any Summer Occasion\nMen's popular crew neck style is\ncool and comfortable on hotter days.\nNeat crew neck with short sleeves.\nWhite only. T   CA\nSizes: S; M, L   l.j\\J\nPoplin Boxer Shorts\nMen's boxer style with elasticized\nwaist and knitted inner support.\nDrawstring at waist,- key pocket\nwith buttoned flap. In plain shades\nof tan and blue. 1   QA\nSizes: S, M, L;  tt.afO\nWash and Wear Shirts\nBoys like wearing these comfortable\nsport shirts\u2014Mom likes them because they're so easy to care. for.\nJust wash and drip' dry. Popular\nSummer colors, patterns.\nSizes: 8 to 18. \t\nSturdy Summer Jeans\nHis-favorite Summer wear consists\nof a T-shirt and a pair of lightweight jeans like these. Tapered\nlegs, roomy pockets. Faded blue.\nBoys' sizes \u25a0) AO\n8-to 18. .:  .... X,70\nColorful Swim Trunks\nSizes: I \/I Pi Sizes: 1 fan\n2 to 6., I .T'V : ,S, M, L. I. .VO\nBigger ..boys' sizes are Lastex ahd\nelasticized satin with side piping\n,- and come in S, -M and L. Little boys'\nare-Lastex-satin briefs or cotton\nboxervtype in sizes 2 to 6.\nTan Boxer Jeans\nQllrs'      1.98    Boys' 1.98\nChildren's boxer Waist style crossover shoulder straps. Triple knees\nand double seat, strong stitching.\nPerfect for Summer play wear. Four\nroomy pockets. In Suntan. Sizes: 3\nto6X.\nNew  Rt-Afl   Suri  Dresses\n.Fa' a cool and comfortable Summer you'd\nIwant a wardrobe of Marjorie Hamilton'Fit-\nall sundresses! Such pretty styles in gay\nprints \u2014 Drip-Dry cotton is easy to\nkeep lovely too. Elasticized worst\n'gives perfect fit Stees: S, M, T QC\n'Catafina Swim Suits   Cool, Sleeveless houses\n' Here's t*iot new \"Bkureon'* look that*s\nso popular! It's smart and pretty \u2014\ncomfortable to wear too. These ara\ncool sleeveless styles with eollars,\ngathered elastic waists. Drto-Drv\ncrease-resistant cottons for _ _\na carefree Summer. Pastels,    y 09.\nCatalina for a smooth, sure\nfit. Draped sheath in faille\nLastex with built-in bra, or\nform fit sheath in stretch\nknit cotton. Solid colors,\ntwo-tones. Sizes: 34 to 38.\nSizes: 12 to 20.\nBoys', Kiddies'\nT-Shirts\nSizes:     o ft   Sizes 1   OO\n2 too. aO>   4 to 6X.    I .70\nBit' boys' sizes have short, pointed\ncollars ' and placket, necks. Shrink\nresistant combed cotton. Stripes in\nsizes S, M, L. Children's sizes 2, 4,\n6, in; interlock cotton. White, Blue,\nMaize. ...\nSizes: am am. n\n3-6X.\/6..70 8-14.\nSo many styles: long-wearing cottons in romper and plain leg designs, dainty frills and elasticized\nbacks. Bright and pastel patterns\nahd solid colors., Sizes: 3 to '8X.-8\nto. 14.   \u2022(.'\nj, Little Girls'\nHalters\nOft   Sizes:-        QQ\n2 to'-6...   \u2022\u20220;7*. 1 to 14. .. .70\nCotton \"halters to. wear with shorts,\nand jeans: Bigger 'girls' style 'has\nruffle.d elasticized top to wear onv\nor ott shoulders. Little girls' style'.:\ni pretty too. Sizes: 2 to 6, 7 to 14.\nBig, Little Girls'7\nShort's\nSizes: lift Sizes: 1 \u00abift\n3-6X l.iy 7-44. I.Z.7\nBigger girls', styles are. in sturdy\ngoplin or denim Pockets, cuffs, half\noxer waists. Little girls'in poplin.\nIn light and dark colors. Sizes: 3 to\n'BX47*-to>li-:\nSummer Sandals\n3:98\nComfortoble but attractive)\nSummer sandals In wedge\nheel, open toe style. They\nlook pretty with.cotton dresses, as well as with sportswear. In White and a choice\nof favorite pastels. .Sizes: 4\nto 9, half sizes included.\nCasual Shoes\n3.98\nYour favorite leather.casuals\nin a wedge style heel. Decorative stitching and bow\ntrim on vamp. A very comfortable fitting shoe for Summer. In light colors. Sizes:\n4 to 9, medium widths, half\nsizes Included.\nChilds' Sandals\n2.98\nSturdily made sandals make\nideal 'dress-up!' shoes for\nlittle girls. Halter strap, open\ntoe style. Elk (trade name)\nleather uppers, Neolite soles.\nPastels. Sizes: 5 to 8, B'W\nto 3.\n>oto&m!s.1W StftttjmttH*\nBeachcombers\n3.98\nFresh White duck pants are\nfirst choice for Summer\nlounging! They're so cool\nand comfortable \u2014 you can\nroll them up to your favorite\npedal pusher length. Sturdy\nfabric, strong srifcWftg. tn\nmisses' sizes.\nCotton Shorts\n2.98\nThese ara the kind ef i\nyou like for Summer sports\nand sunning. They're neatly\ntailored from quality fabrics.\nSome styles with novel trimmings. Choose two pairs for\nthe hot weather. Sizes: 10\nto 18.\nSheen  Halters\n1.98\nSheen gabardine nolters In\nprettv cuffed style can be\nworn with or without shoulder straps. Prettv dow trimming, boned foundation. In\nSuntan, Black, Peacock.\n'Sizes: 30 to 38.\nINCORPORATED-   2-? MAY 1670.\n 10\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 26,1958\nPrince George Fires\nIncreased by Storm\n** VANCOUVER (CP)-A violent\nthunder and lightning storm\nbrought new grief. Wednesday. to\nthe fire-ravaged Prince George forest 'district in Northern British\n\u25a0Columbia,.\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   Distriot forester W, C. Phillips\n! said four fires were fanned out\nof  control  by  high  winds   and\n. several new blazes were started\n'; by Jightiiing.     .\nThe area has been without a\nmajor fair, fall for two -months.\nParty fires were butntag in the\n\u25a0 vast, timber-rich district.\nthe WOrst WSS abbut 450 miles\nnortheast Of PrlilCe George in the\n, lOWOr post afea near the Yukon\nborder. A fire which raced Out\ni-.\u00ab control Sunday along a io-miie\nfront had consumed some sa.ooo\nteres of timber by Tuesday and\n> Was still raging.\n1,0011 FIREFIGHTERS\n. .More than' ooo forest service\nand lumber company men were\nfighting fires throughout the dis-\n, trict.\nI A total of 67 fires throughout\n1 British Columbia have drawn\n, tnore than 1,000 men to the fire\nlines. Fire losses in the forests\nthis year have already far surpassed those for all of last yeat,\nRain and cloudy weather\nbrought some relief to the Vancouver forest district, which includes islands off the coast and\nthe lower mainland area.\nNo 'new fires were reported in.\nthat area, during the last 24 hours\nand six fires were put out.\nThat left nine blazes in the Vancouver district, including a 1,000-\nacre fire at Gold River on Vancouver Island. Some 250 men\nWere at the Scene and it was reported \"under control tor the\ntime being.\"\nDEATHS\nBy this Canadian prem\nToronto \u2014 George Stanley Col-\nlines, 69, manager of the unem*\nployment insurance commission\nfrom its inception in 1940 until\nhis retirement in 1957.\nSan Jose, Calif. \u2014 Alexander\nMalcolm (Sandy) Smith, 99, Alaskan prospector and explorer.\ntt\nObjects To\nNowlan Remarks\nTOfiONTO (CP) -The Canadian Automobile C h a m b e r. of\nCommerce Wednesday took exception W remarks lrt Ottawa Tuesday\nby Revenue Minister Nowlan that\nthe government was, \"putting\npressure\" on auto firms to increase the Canadian\u00abmade eon-\ntent of .cats.    ,\\\nJames G. Dykes, general manager of the CACC, said in- a\nstatement there is a \"ceasless\neffort\" by Canadian manufacturers to increase the Canadian Content Of cars and trucks.\n\"It is unfortunate, we feel, that\nthe remarks ... may have left\nthe impression that some form\nOf government pressure is\ndeemed necessary Or desirable to\nforce a policV that manufacturers follow cheerfully and wholeheartedly as a matter of good\ncommon sense.\"\nMr. Dykes said it is not possible for Canadian firms to produce all car parts in Canada\nwithout sharp increases in retail\nprices. He said some parts made\ncheaply in the United States because of greater mass production\nCrowd Demonstrates In Moscow..\nRuss Stage Protest\nAt U.S. Embassy\nBy ROY ESSOYAN\nMOSCOW (AP)'--\"A crowd of\nmore than 1,000 Russians, some\nangrily shaking their fists and\nshouting the Russian equivalent\nof \"dirty S.6.B.\" demonstrated\nWednesday at the United States\nEmbassy.\nAbout 150 Soviet policemen kept\nthe noisy crowd under control\nand no rocks or Ink bottles were\nthrown, r ,i\nThe crowd* in eluded some\nyouths in Red Army uniforms.\nThe Russians converged on the\nbuilding almost simultaneously\nfrom three directions In what obviously was a well-planned demonstration.\" \u25a0\nThe embassy had prepared for\nretaliation against demonstration\nby Hungarian j refugees last weekend at the. Soviet united Nations\noffices in New York. Embassy\nwindows \"were boarded, the* first\nfloor  had  been  evacuated   and\nare imported by Canadian plants\nbecause they canndtr possibly be\nproduced here at the same cost.\nRussian   employees   had   been\ngiven the day off.* *\nSeveral men standing in two\nbfg trucks led the first group of\ndemonstrators that reached, the\niO-storey   embassy   .building   In\ndowntown Moscow..Placards ear-\ntied by the shouting demonstrators read \"Down with provocateurs\" and \"Yanks ga home'' In\nEnglish and Russian: '\n\u25a0 Tne crowd Converged on the\nembassy building from three directions In what looked like a\ncarefully organized protest\nmarch.\n\"Down with provacateurs,\"\nread, placards hi both Russian\nand English.\nSeveral Russians in military\nuniforms were among the crowd.\nAbout 25 soviet policemen held\nback the demonstrators as they\nsurged across the sidewalk toward the 10-storey embassy building.\nEMBASSY PREPARED\nThe embassy staff had made\nhurried preparations for the demonstration after Moscow newspapers for the first time published\naccounts of (he demonstrations in\nNew York protecting the execution,\nof former premier Imre Nagy and!\nthree otter leaders- of the 1986\nHungarian rebellion.\nSimilar 'reports Of attacks on\nSoviet embassies in Copenhagen\nand Bonn immediately preceded\nstone-throwing .assaults on the\nDanish and West German embassies in Moscow.\nA demonstration in front ef the\nRussian Embassy in Ottawa has\nnot, yet been reported to the Russian people.      . \u2022\nEarlier the ground floors of the\n10-storey building had been evacuated in anticipation of trouble\nand minister Richard Davis called on the Russians for extra po-\ntrics were told Wednesday.\nBOOST GUARD\nTwo extra guards, bringing the\ntotal to four, were posted .outside the Canadian Embassy\nTuesday.  ,.\n'' A report on the New York demonstrations distributed to newspapers by the official news\nagency Tass said,U.S. authorities    bear  direct  responsibility\n, \"Preparations for this outrage\nwere known to the American authorities in advance. But they\ntook no measures to prevent\nthem.\"\nTass claimed1 \"hooligans and\nprovocateurs\" attacked the Rus-\nsians' UN Embassy and that the\nAmerican policy even \"encouraged the provocative action.\"\n(Seven policemen were injured\nln the demonstrations by about\n350 Hungarian refugees. Nine\ndemonstrators were arrested.\nThree windows were broken and\nred ink was splashed On the\nbuilding.) ,\u25a0\nThe Soviet press made almost\nIdentical accusations of official\nconnivance in reporting the Copenhagen and ,Bonh demonstrations. \u25a0   \u2022\nThe American embassy, consulate and diplomats' residence\nnormally is protected by two unarmed Soviet militiamen at the\nmain gate,\nThere are more than 150 U.S.\nEmergency Rules\nCOLOMBO, Ceylon (fleutersl-\nEmergency regulations which\nwere brought into force throughout Ceylon May 27 have been extended for another month.\nThe regulations, Which give\nwide powers to the armed forces,\nwere introduced following countrywide communial disturbances\nbetween Tamil and Sinhalese-\nspeaking residents,   '\ndiplomats, wives and children ln\nMoscow. Some live on the second\nto seventh floors of the embassy\nbuilding. The rest live in'government - provided quarters elsewhere.\nYJOHDERFULIN COFFEE! \\\n1\nPlinP<*fat Pieties With Thw\nw\nIN OVERWAITEA'S BIG\nFUN IN THE SUN\" CONTEST\nTh^. Big Draw Is 5:30 pm June 28th\nOverwaitea Coffee Prices Are Down Again\nII     I mmmmkmmmm^mmmm^mm^mtPm^^ >\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0        I     Mil    1\nMYSORE  Our finest blend. Just  I .,.\u201e.\u201e...,,\nCAlC   Ouf popular blend. _..,,\u201e., ,,...,\t\n^85*\nU, 82*\n2nd. PRIZE\nFour Featherweight\nALUMINUM\n\"MARINER\"\nARM CHAIRS\nCORN BEEF\nHELLABY'S.\n14 oz. tins _\nL tins \/ J\nLook For Our\nBIG FLYER\nDelivered To Your Home\nTODAY\nWith Dozens of Specials.\nONLY\nJUMBO CANTELOUPE\nAt their\nBest.  __\nm\\    HOTHOUSE\nCl TOMATOES\n_ ib 49c\n_2 for 49c\nIb. IFi,m'\n\u25a0\"\u2022 ' Red.\nSMOKED\nSHOULDER\nHAMS    t49\nBOLOGNA\nGainer's Superior.\nBy the piece. -\u2014\u2014._\nlb.\n39e\nBACON\nGainer's Quality Side.\nBy the piece. ~_ ~\u201e\nIb.\n49\"\nOVERWAITEA\nLOOK FOR THE\nFAMILIAR TEA POT SIGN\n\u25a0________!_; sesamsmmams\n \u2014\nPf\nNEISON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 1958-^T\nA BARGAIN SHOP our SPECIALS! SAVE on sizzling steaks, juicy\nBEAUTY CHECKED we'ners' a\" the fixin's to make your picnic, barbecue or\nmamsmm a. m. ..* patio party a howling success! You always get more for\nFOR SAVINGS your money here!\nThompson\n0    SEEDLESS\nGRAPES\nSweet, plump clusters\nib. 39e\nCool, Sweet,\nDelicious\nWatermelon\nServe Ice-Cold. Wedges\nlc\nPink Flesh\nCantaloupe\nServe With Ice. Cream\nPil\nLuscious\nPEACHES\n2} lb. bosket\nfil\nFireside.   Pound\nMarshmallows\nFrUlt  Cordial    Malkin's. Assorted Flavors. ?4 ox.   55^\nFig   BarS    MeCormiek's. Pound Pkg , .  35#\nSweet Biscuits we.ton.. p.und Pk9. \u201e:.__.. 39t\nPork ana Beans Better Buy. is0\u00ab.Tin. 6 ^ 69^\ns    Swift's\nNalley's\nChicken Pies\nHot Dog Relish\nFrozen\n12 ok. jar\n3 for $1\n3 for $1\nTulip\nMargarine\n16 ox. pkg. ;V't'\n4 for $1\nJELLIED CHICKEN boBU.. \u00ab0, TiB _ 45*\nCHILI CON CARNE \u00bb\u00ab,\u201e,. h'u,. t.b,_..._ 49*\nSWIFT'S PREM *ouBd. i2.x,TiB __ 2 for 89*\nPOTATO   CHIPS    Nalley.. 7 \u201e. Pk, 1 3B*\nSWEET PICKLES Hab,.aB*. 24 o*. \u2022\u201e 39*\nFresh-Ground\nTOM-BOY\nCOFFEE\n16 or. pkg.\nPETER'S\nICE CREAM\nASSORTED   FLAVORS\nHALF GALLON\n89\u00ab\nKRAFT'S\nMIRACLE\nWHIP\n32 oz. Bottle\n69<\n'Name theiNEW\nmalkin's\nCoffee Blend\n|_ENTlw\"6RM\u00a57fEREj\nMALlTNT COFFEE\nDrip or Regular.\n16 oz. bag\nPrices Effective\nThursday, Friday, Saturday,\nMonday Morning, June 30th\n:\u25a0&&&&\u2022&:<&&\nWe Reserve the Right To Umit Quantities\n 12\u2014-NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 1938 iiiiiiiiitliliiiiiilliliiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiliiiiiiiiiilllillliiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiiit\nFormer Flyer Owners\nBack Proposed Squad\nSPOKANE\u2014The picture cleared\nup slightly here Tuesday night In\nregard to the identity of the business group attempting to form a\nsenior hockey team \"to operate in\nihe Western International Hockey\nLeague. Spokane Flyers, former\nWIHL king-pins, moved into the\nWestern Hockey League recently.\n; It was learned that at least two\nof-.'the 10 members forming the\norganization are former owners of\n'the Flyers, who apparently withdrew support from the squad in\nthe rocky days of 1954 after having\nvoted to fold (he franchise.\n. The pair are Clarence Tutibs,\nowner of an electrical business,\nand dental surgeon Dr. Frank\nJurdy, who met Tuesday with city\ncouncil members and the advisory\ncommittee of Spokane Coliseum.\n: In Trail Sunday it was reported\nthat a group of businessmen were\nplanning to take over the franchise\n. left\" open when the Flyers moved\nInto the play-for-pay bracket. WIHL\npresident Don Adams of Rossland\nconfirmed the report Tuesday.\nCity Council advised the hockey\ngroup to return at a later date with\nmore information. The city bodies\nsaid the group should make sure it\n- could get a WIHL franchise. \u25a0\nIn the past, the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association has refused to allow a team* to compete\nwithin 50 miles of a professional\nclub.\nCouncillors and Coliseum committee members agreed they want\nto check the Western Hookey\nLeague schedule before okaying\nany dates for the amateur squad.\nWIHL president Adams said that\nthe Spokane group must expect to\npay a subsidy similar to the one\nFlyers have paid in their lucrative\nyears since the construction of the\nColiseum.\nPROMISED LAND\nCOPS HANDICAP\nBOSTON (AP) - Mrs. Ethel D\nJacobs' Promised Land, a 4-to-5\nfavorite, drove through in the\nstretch Wednesday to win the $56,-\n700 Massachusetts Handicap at\nSuffolk Downs;\nPromised Land covered the 1V\u00bb-\nmile route in 2:01 4-5, just four-\nfifths of a second off the .track\nrecord set by Helioscope three\nyears ago.\nPromised Land took the lead an\neighth of a mile from the finish\nand scored by IVi lengths over\nCain Hoy Stable's One-Eyed King.\nMr*. Allele L. Rand's Clem faltered in the late stages and finished\nthird, another length back. Happy\nHill Farm's Kingmaker was fourth.\nPromised Land paid $3.60, $2.1\"\nand $2.20. One-Eyed King paid\n$4.80 and $2.20 while Clem returned\n$2.20 to show.\n\u25a0 1111111M \u25a0 11111111111111 f 1111111IJ1111II1111 11 f 111 \u25a0 111 11111 \u25a0 1111 II\t\nBrazil, Sweden Prep\nFor Final Encounter\nSTOCKHOLM (API- Brafll and\nSweden, finalists in the world soccer championships, took lt easy\nWednesday after qualifying for\nthe match to decide the supreme\nsoccer1 power.\nThe Brazilians returned to their\noriginal camp at Hindas \u2014 a quiet\ncountry village oh the'edge of a\nlake and surrounded by forests.\nIt was at Hindas that the Brazilians trained for the earlier\nrounds. And Hindas obviously suit-\ned them. . \u25a0 \"\nThe Swedes returned from Goteborg to their camp at Lillswed.\njust outside Stockholm. It was\nthere that the Swedes prepared\nfor the opening games.\nBrazil qualified for the final\nTuesday night with a 5-2 victory\nover France. Sweden made the\nfinal with a S-l victory, over defending champion West Germany.\nWIN TOSS OF COIN\nThe Swedes reported no injuries. They also won the draw to\ndecide on colors.\nBoth teams, play in blue and\nyellow. A clash of colors in the\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Boaii\nor by the Government of British Columbia.  7\nfinal was impossible. So. a flip of\na coin decided the issue.\n\"That's a definite advantage to\nus,\" said. Swedish, 'delectioii member Nalle Hallden.\n\"There is a psychological advantage in playing'in your own\ncolors. Then there is also the.possibility that one of the,other team\nwill pass tb one of your own men\nby mistake.\"    -\nBrazil trainer Vicente Feola discounted that theory with the comment that \"my players know each\nother's play \u2014 they'll not make\nmistakes like that.\"\nFrance arid West Germany, the\nteams defeated in the semi-finals,\nhave still one more game to play\nSaturday to decide third place.\nRacing Champ\nCannot Drive\nIn 500-Miler\nMONZA, Italy (AP) - World\nauto racing champion Juan Manuel Fangio of Argentina is without a car -for the Monza 5O0-mile\nrace Sunday.\n. American and Italian racing officials said they have little, hope\nOf finding a car for the Argentinian.' \u25a0\nFangio had been assigned the\nsame American Dean Van Lines\nSpecial which Jimmy Bryan drove\nto victory in last year's Monza\nrace.\nBut he has a contract wilh a\nBritish petroleum firm to. drive\ncars using only its products. The\nDean Van Lines Special and most\naf the eleven other American cars\nhere have a contract to use the\nproducts of a U.S. petroleum firm.\n. Officials tried to bring about an\narrangement, then late Wednesday\nsaid no accord could be reached*.\nWINNING COMBO -\nBy Alan Mover\nBOItaP\nfWLER,\n7Vf> 3-ygAR-\nOLl? OF 1957.\nMAPB A\nSUeCESSPUL\n6TARTA*\nA \"VETERA^\n4-y\u00a3AR-&.[>\n\/VfP\u00abtMM8'\n90 ioorbp   .\nA$ IP HB\nWA$ RBAPy\nROR\nA\/iomn\nYEAR.\nF\/rZS\/MMONS.\nBOLPRUISRS\n*yotrtnW\nBi-YEAR-O&P\nTRA\/flER.\nWILL BE\nWAay of\nRACE* ,\nffi WHlCtf\ntuey***\nTO RUT\n.\u2022mo moaf\nWE'SMTtV\/\nmwmrM\nCOLT.\nBMrDMei t\u00bb fflnj Rslwss\nNelson Displays Talents\nIn Two Hurling Triumphs\nNatal Hurler Tappay\nThrows One-Hit Job\nNATAL - Playing their first\ngames in Crow's Nest Pass Junior\nBaseball League competition here\nSunday, Natal Juveniles clouted\nPincher Creek in both ends.of a\nseason-opening doubleheader by\nlop-sided scores of 14-2 and 13-0.\nIn the first game, behind the\ncombined six-hit hurling of Al\nChala and BUI Rybachuk, Natal\nscored'in every inning while collecting 20 safeties and taking,advantage of 10 bases on balls served\nup by three hapless Pincher Creek\npitchers.\nLaidlaw started on the mound for\nthe visitors and was succeeded by\nWelsh and Sawada in turn. Natal\nled 12-0 after three innings and cut\nloose with an eight-run burst in\nthe fourth. Pincher Creek counted\nsingle runs in the fourth and fifth,\nrespectively. '  *\nLeading the Natal power parade\nwere Rybachuk, Chala, Ray Regh-\nSILVERTON-G. Nelson received, credit for a pair of victories\nhere Sunday in an exhibition baseball doubleheader that saw him\ncalled to relieve in the nightcap\nafter going all the way. in the\nopener in a 19-2 triumph by New\nDenver-Sllverton Seniors.\nAfter firing a one-hitter at Castlegar Cubs in the senior game,\nNelson took over for Pengelly in\nthe first inning with the score 5-0\nfor Nakusp Juniors. In the 6 1-3\ninnings Nelson hurled during the\nnightcap, he gave up only two hits\nand one run as his mates rallied\nfor a 7>6 triumph.\nCastlegar scored their first-game\nWE TAKE\nJust watch us go to work next time you drive in.\nWe start under the hood\u2014checking oil and water safety\nlevels\u2014and we keep a sharp lookout for other things that\nmight cause trouble. For instance...\nj [ :m    iz^^^j TPI77     op\nt-.- aWiiitetMSiiriiiiiiiti \u00ab^i\n\u25a0Jfj^WsiBW11 Pfll.'*!K.\nWe look lor the little things that make a big difference\n... a smeared windshield, dirt that cuts down headlight\npower, a soft tire. We try to correct them quickly so you're\non yeur way without, too much delay.\nPADE fVEL\n1!\ns\ni\nWhen you tell us you have a minute, we're glad to\ndo the tilings that are easy to forget, such as a complete\ntest of your battery's condition. It's just one of the reasons\nwhy every independent survey shows motorists rate the\nservice at the sign of the Chevron \"best in the West.\"\nYOUR CAR\nAt the sign of the Chevron\nStandard Stations \u2022 Chevron Dealers\nWe take better ears of your engine, too, with\nRPM Supreme Motor Gil'. Its exclusive Detergent Action\ncompounding keeps parts so clean, protects them so well,\nengines can outlast the car itself.\nSTANDARD    OIL   COMPANY    OF    BRITISH    COLUMBIA    LIM\nruns after a series of New Denver-\nSilverton errors and, in the finale,\nthe only run Nelson yielded came\nlate in the game when he obviously tired under the strain of\npitching almost two complete\ngames.\nNelson belted a long homer, his\nfirst of the season, to help his own\ncause in the opener. Hits in the\nsenior game were common as flies\naround a barn, especially for the\nvictors. Erickson and Gordon each\nclouted four hits, with-Morrison\nand Nobby Hayashi picking up\nthree apiece. Among Erickson's\nfour hits were three doubles.\nNelson was a big man in the\njunior encounter also,' with a pair\nof doubles in three times at bat\namong Silverton's nine hits. Nakusp had only six hits, three by\nGregory, and a three-run homer\nby Wilson,\nCalhoun Tops\nBobby Boyd\nCHICAGO (AP) - Rory Calhoun, No. 7 middleweight contender, scored two knockdowns\nand .outlasted a furious finish by\nBobby Boyd for a unanimous decision in a televised bout in the\nChicago Stadium Wednesday night.\nCalhoun, who knocked out Boyd\nin two rounds in New York last\nNov, 22, dropped Boyd in the second and in the ninth but had his\nhands full all the, way Wednesday\nnight.\n\u25a0 Referee Walter Brightmore called it for Calhoun 48-42 under the\nIllinois five-point -must scoring\nsystem. Judge Jim McManus. voted for Calhoun 47-43 and judge\nJohn Bray had Calhoun winning\n45-44. The AP card had it for Calhoun 46-42.\nCalhoun weighed 164 and Boyd\n163. . .-* '\nCCA ANNOUNCES\nSHOOTING SQUAD\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Four eastern\nriflemen and a pistol hotshot from\nBritish Columbia have been selected to represent Canada at the\nworld shooting championships in\nMoscow in August.\nThe Canadian Civilian Association of Marksmen Wednesday announced the following team has\nbeen chosen after weekend trials\nin Hamilton and Vancouver.\nRiflemen: Gilmour Boa of Toronto, current world champion in\nthe \"English match\"; Gerald Oue-\nlette of Windsor, Ont., Olympic\nsmallbore gold medalist; Edson\nWarner of Lennoxville, Que., Canadian Army champion; and Cpl\nJohn Hedger of Camp Petawawa,\nOnt.\nThe pistol representative will be\nCpl. J. R. Zavitz of the RCMP,\nNanaimo, B.C.\nA five-man trapshooting team\nwill be selected in a match at-Van-\ncouver July 2.\nFIGHTS\nBy The Associated Press\nAnaconda, Mont. \u2014 Roger Rouse,\n184, Anaconda, outpointed Joe\nLouis 3rd, 176, Alameda, Calif., 10.\nAthcl, Mass. \u2014 Tommy Garrow,\n137, Claremont, N.H., outpointed\nLou Carmonda, 137*4, New York,\nBritish Cricket\nLONDON (Reuters) - Wednesday's close-of-flay cricket scores:\nNew Zealand 39 for no wickets\nvs Lancashire.\nMiddlesex 171; Kent 99 for no\nwickpt.\nSurrey 202; Cambridge University 2 for no wicket.\nOxford University 37 for 2; ys\nWarwickshire.\n'Glamorgan .vs  Hampshire.  No\nplay, rain.\nNorthamptonshire 271 for 7; vs\nGloucestershire.\nSussex 62; Derbyshire 194 for 2.\nSomerset vs Royal Air Force. No\nplay, rain.\nLEAGUE LEADERS\nBy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS\nAmerican League\nAB R HPct,\nVernon, Cleveland.   146 25 61 .349\nFox, Chicago 255 34 85 .333\nWard, Kansas City  175 25 57 .326\nKuenn, Detroit 202 28 65 322\nMcDougald, N.Y.      186 31 62 .316\nRuns\u2014Cerv, Kanses City, 47.\nRuns batted In\u2014Cerv, 66.\nHits-Fox,  85.\nDoubles\u2014Kuenn, 20.\nTriMes\u2014Tuttle, Kansas City, 6.\nHome runs\u2014Jensen, Boston and\nCerv 19.   i,\nStolen bases \u2014 Aparicio, Chicago, 15. ;\nPitching \u2014 Larsen, New York,\n6-1, .857.\nStrikeouts\u2014Turley,  New York,\n80.\nNational laine\nAN R H f't,\nJIayi, Spn Fran. 258 52 97 .376\nMusial, St. Louis .211 31 76 360\nCrowe, Cincinnati ir-316 54.353\nDark, Chicaso in S3 69 .347\nAshburn, Phil. 237 38 80 .338\nRuns\u2014Mays, 52.\nRuns hatted ln\u2014Thomas, Pltts-\nhnreh, 64. '- .    '    ,\n\u25a0HitS-Mays, 97.\nDoubles\u2014Hoak, Cincinnati, 21.\nTrlnles\u2014May*. 8.\nH-me runs\u2014Thimas, \"'0.\nS'tlen bases\u2014M>\"\u00ab, 13.\nPitching \u2014 McMahon, Milwaukee, s-l, .857.\nStrikeouts\u2014Jones, St. Louis, 86.\nenas and Rod Joyce with three hits\napiece, Joyce's triple was the longest belt of the opener.' D. Sawada\nand Peterson had two hits each\nfor Pincher Creek.\nKen Tappay's one-hit ma'ster-\npieco in Uie nightcap sparked a\n13-0 victory. Tappay, a graduate\nof Michel-Natal's minor baseball\nprogram, struck out 20 batters over\nthe nine-inning route.\nWeins, Laidlaw and Peterson, the\nPincher Creek toilers, shared 12\nstrikeouts, but walked eight while\nsurrendering 12 hits to the potent\nNatal squad. Gordon Turlik led,\nthe locals with three hits as Tap-\npay and Rybachuk picked up two\neach. Rybachuk blasted a long\nhome run.\nOnly visitors' safety was a single\nby Graham in the first half of tha\nseventh, but he failed to advance\nbeyond second base as Tappay re-\ntired the remainder in order.\nSMOKES\nFORCANADIAN\nMILITARY PERSONNEL\nserving, with the\nUnited Nations Emergency\nForce in the Middle East\n$U2 sends 400\nEXPORT\nCIGARETTES\nor any other Macdonald Brand\nPostage included  '\nMall order and remittance tot\nOVERSEAS DEPARTMENT\nMACDONALD TOBACCO INC.\nP.O. Box 4\u00bb, Flats d'Armss,\nMontreal, dot, >-..\nThis offer Is sub'eet te ony change\nIn Government Rogulattons,\nClassified Ads Get Results!\nFREE DELIVERY\nfool Soiikd SbsM\nPHONE\nNelson 24 and 175\nTrail 26 and 192\nWhen Ordering Specify Brand Name-\n\u2022 Columbia Lager \u2022 Fernie Lager\n\u2022 Kootenay \u2022Columbia;\nPale Ale Cream Stout   .\nEMPTV  BOTTLES  COLLECTED  ON   DELIVERY   ONLV\nINTERIOR BREWERIES LIMITED\nGet in en our\nHOLIDAY SPECIAL\nWe're selling Super-Cushions\nby GOODjtifeAR ;\nmade with triple-tough 3 -T Cora\nGoodyear DELUXE\nSuper- Cushions, made   t*| C95\nord    IJ\nwith 3-T rayon cord\nslzs 4.70\u00bb1J3\nNYLON at new low prices!\nGoodyear 3-T NYLQN $1Q95\nDeluxe Super-Cushions'   I r aim 670\u00ab.i-\nAll prices with trade-in, blackwall, tube typo.\ntOW PRICES IN 4.00x16 and 7.10.15 SIZES TOO!\nTF\nTIRE SHOP\n323 VERNON STREET PHONE: 1930\nRECAPPING AND VULCANIZING SERVICES\n \u2022a^\u2014f\u2014ma\n<1M1111111111111111\u25a0111111111f1111111111\u25a011111\u25a0111111111111111111\u25a0\u25a0I]11f11\u25a011111111III\u2022111\u25a0I\nV b Hi\nIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nBROWN, LANE COME TO TERMS\n. HOUSTON (AP) - Lightweight\nchampion Joe Brown and Kenny\nLane, No. 1 challenger from Muskegon, Mich., signed contracts\nWednesday for a 15-round title fight\nIn Houston July 23.\nBrown, 32, was not present for\nthe official announcement, but the\n26-year-old Lane was jubilant as\nhis manager, Jack Kearns, signed\nTodd Oifsfs\nDefending\nTitle-Holder\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Mrs. J.\nH. Todd of Victoria was favored\nWednesday to win the B.C. Women's closed golf championship at\nMarine Drive golf club.\n. Mrs. Todd, who* won the competition three successive years, 1947,\n1948, 1949, edged out 1957 defending\nchampion Mrs. Brice Evans of\nCapllano on the 19th Wednesday to\nmove into the semi-finals.\nMrs. Todd stroked a par four to\nbetter Mrs. Evans', five. The two\nhad fought a see-saiv duel through\nthe first 18 holes of play.\nAlso advancing into the semis\nwere Mrs. Margaret Hutton-Potts\nof Marine Drive, who beat Mrs.\nHelen Cleat of Point Grey 3 and\n1; Miss Colleen Smith bf Point\nGrey, who beat Mrs. D. Patterson\nof Marine Drive 6 and 5; and Mrs.\nW. Knox of Marine Drive, who\ndefeated Mrs. G. Garnet of Point\nGrey 5 and 4. i.\nMrs. Todd meets Mrs. Knox and\nMrs. Hutton-Potts plays Miss\nSmith in the 18-hole semi-finals\ntoday.\nResults af consolation flight quarter-finals Wednesday: Miss S\nFoulds beat Miss Katie Duff Stuart\n\u00ab and 5; Mrs. D. Mcintosh beat\nMrs. C. A. Cooke 4 and 2; Mrs. A.\nTobin beat Mrs. H. McCranor 3\nand 1; Mrs. R. Patrick beat Mrs\nR. Renwick 2 and 1,\n\u2022the contract wilh Lou Viscusi, the\nchampion's manager. .\n\"I've been trying for a title fight\nfor two years and finally have\nmade it,\" Lane said.\nViscusi said the contract calls\nfor Brown to receive 40 per cent\nof the gate, including television income, and Lane to receive 20 per\ncent.\nWhen Brown successfully defended his title here May 7, under\na similar contract with Ralph Dupas of New Orleans, Brown received ,$40,000, and Dupas $20,000.\nThe;long,- talked - about match\nwill be the fifth time Brown- has\nplaced his title on the line since\nwinning the championship Aug. 24,\n1956, from Wallace (Bud) Smith\nin 16 rounds at New Orleans.\nHe defended successfully with\nknockouts last year over Smith,\nOrlando Zulueta and Joey Lopes.\nBrown defeated Dupas last month\nwith an 'eighth-round technical\nknockout.\nCASSADY AGREES\nTO LIONS TERMS\nDETROIT (AP)-Howard (Hopalong) Cassady signed his 1958\ncontract with Detroit Lions Wed-\nnesday, flie first player to come\nto terms with the new top command of the National Football\nLeague club.\nCassady, playing his third 'professional season, was signed by\nEdwin J. i Anderson, in his new\nrole as president and general- manager, along with head coach George\nWilson.\nAnderson moved into his active\nrole this week following the resignation, of general manager Nick\nKerbawy.\nBONUS BOY SUES BUGS\nPITTSBURGH (AP) - Former\nmajor league pitcher Paul C. Martin of Fayette City, Pa., Tuesday\nfiled a $20,000 suit against Pitts\nburgh Pirates, charging non-payment of bonus lioney.\nA Pirate spokesman said Martin\nvoluntarily signed a waiver freeing the ball club of paying the\nmoney after he retired.\nWHITE\nMerv Rose Feuding Again;\nRain Slows Wimbledon Play\nWIMBLEDON, England (CP) -\nFeud-loving Mervyn Rose of Australia supplied some fireworks in\nwinning his second-round match\nat the Wirribledon tennis championships Wednesday.\nA pelting rain \u2014 it's been show-\n'ering for three days \u2014 didn't cool\nRose's temper as he scored a\nbumpy 6-4, 10-8, 6-4 victory over\nJack Frost of the United States.\n, It was another good day for the\ntop-seeded Australians, but the\nBritish hit grief in their bid for\ntheir own championship in the\nmen's singles.\nRose!, third seeded, let the Cali-\nfornian\" get' far ahead in each set\nbefore pulling him back. He had\na squabble with press cameramen, which he won. He also had\na squabble with the umpire and\nlinesmen, which he lost.\nBLAMES COURT\nThe scowling Aussie strode from\nthe perfectly-kept court muttering in a stage whisper: \"You\ncan't play tennis on a court like\nthis.\"\nMichael Davies ,of' Swansea,\nWales, Britain's No. 1, got two\nsets down to Belgium's Jackie\nBribhant, pulled it back, then fell\nheavily ana lost the five-set\nthriller. Sets went 6-3, 8-6, 2-6, 5-7,\n6-1.   ,\nRoger Becker, Britain's No. 2,\nlost to Jean-Claude Molinari of\nFrance 6-3, 6-3, 6-4.\n, Officials called off play with 13\nmatched still unplayed, and 10\nothers unfinished.\nBarry McKay of Dayton, Ohio,\nonly men's challenger from the\nU.S., taped his blistered right\nhand and defeated Britain's E. R.\nBulmer 6-1, 9-7, 6-2.\nBETTER IN DOUBLES\nBritain had more luck ,in the\ndoubles when Michael Hann and\nIvor Warwick defeated Gil Shea\nand William Quillian of the U.S.\nVideo Executive\nReplaces Al Weill\nAs Bout Promoter\nLOS ANGELES (AP)\u2014An execu\nfive with a closed circuit theatre\ntelevision corporation Wednesday\nwas named to reolace Al Weill as\nnromoter, of, a heavyweight title\nfight between Floyd Patterson and\nchnlle'neer Roy Harris.\nThe Hollywood Legion Stadium\nannounced that William Rosensohn\nwill replace Weill, who was denied\na promoter's licence.\nThe bout, set for Aug. 18 here,\nwill be shown over a closed theatre-\ntelevision circuit, a Legion spokes\n\u25a0man said.\nBaseball Scores\nBv The Canadian Press\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nSt. Louis  000 003 000-3   8   2\nPittsburgh  000 010 000\u2014I   3\nMizell  and Smith;  Witt. Face\n(8) and \"\"rales, Hall (5), Kravitz\n(8). L: Witt.\nChicago   '.. 000 010 300 0\u20144   6   0\nPhila. i '.';.    001 201 000 1-5  9   1\nPhillpis, Hobbie (7), Elston' (7)\nand S Taylon Semproch, Farrell\n(7) and Lopata. W: Farrell; L:\nElston. HR: Philadelphia, Lopata\n(8).\nSan Fran 000 005 023-10 13  4\nMilwaukee .... 000 000 011\u2014 2  7  2\nWorthington, Monzant (8) and\nSchmidt; Rush. Trowbridge (6)\nJohnson (8), McMahon (9) and\nCrandall. W: Worthington; L:\nRush. HRs: San Francisco, Daven\nport (3).\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nWashington ..   000000 201-3  9  0\nKansas City     000 110 OU-4 8 0\nRamos,  Valentinetti   (7),  Hyde\n(9) and Courtney; Garver, Gorman\n(8), Tomanek (9) and House. W\nTomanek; L: Hyde. HR: Kansas\nCity. Ward (5).\nGordon's\nGordon's Gin,\nIce, a slice of Lemon\nand fill up with\nTonic Water,\nThe ideal\ndrink at\nany time.\n11^K&ffo^&U^\nThis advertisement is not published by the Liquor Control Board\nor by th* Government of British Columbia.\n6-2, 6-4, 7-5 in a fast-moving first-\nround game.\nIn the men's singles, all the\nseeded players except fourth-\nranked Neale Fraser of Australia\nwon their matches. Fraser's match\nwas rescheduled for today.\nTop-seeded Ashley Cooper of\nAustralia, nearing complete recovery from a pulled thigh muscle, defeated franz Saiko, Austria, 6-3, 6-4, 6-1. Second-seeded\nMai Anderson, Australia, defeated\nAndres Gimena Spain, 6-4, 6-4,\n6-4.\nLuis Ayala, fifth-seei'ed Irom\nChile, defeated youhg Earl Buch-\nholz of the U.S. 6-4, 8-6, 8-6 while\nsixth-seeded Kurt Nielsen, Denmark, deefated Britain's G. L.\nWard 6-8, -6-4, 8-10, 6-2. Seventh-\nseeded Sven Davidson, Sweden,\nbeat Francisco Contreras, Mexico,\n6-2, 10-8, 8-6.\nTotal attendance now has touched 60,000 \u2014 about 6,000 less than\nWimbledon was drawing three or\nfour years ago.\nIn women's competition, New\nYork's Mrs. Dorothy-Head Knode\nthird - seeded, was upset in a sec\nFOUR CANADIANS\nREJOIN 'RIDERS\nREGINA (CP) L Four Canadian\nholdovers have signed contracts\nwith Saskatchewan Roughriders\nfor the 1958 Western Interprovincial Football Union season, club\nofficials announced Wednesday.\nThey are fullbacks Sully Glas-\nser aid Vic Marks, quarterback\nRon Adam, and end George Tait.\nGlasser, 55, will be going into\nhis 14th season with Riders. The\nhard-driving -backfield star weighs\n185 pounds and stands five feet 10\ninches. He is a native Reginan.\nAdam, 25, is six feet one inch,\nand weighs 195. After guiding Saskatoon Hilltops to Dominion junior\nlaurels in 1953, tie joined Riders\nand has been used mainly as a\ndefensive half.\nMiddlecoff Drops\nFrom Irish Open\nST. ANDREWS, Scotland (AP)-\nCary Middlecoff, one of the United\nStates' top golfers, has scratched\nfrom next week's British Open golf\ntournament, it was announced\nWednesday.\nA spokesman for the Royal and\nAncient Golf Club said Jimmy McHale of the United States, a former\nWalker Cup player, also scratched.\nBold Ruler Wins\nStymie- Handicap\nNEW YORK (AP) - Wheatley\nStable's Bold Ruler won the $28,000\nStymie Handicap by five lengths\nWednesday at Belmont Park. Admiral Vee was second and Pop\nCorn third in the field of seven for\nthe Hi-mile race.\nEddie Arcaro rode the winner,\nwho carried 133 pounds. The time\nwas 1:48 2-5. Bold Ruler paid $2.80.\n$2.60 and $2.20. The victory was\nworth $17,900.\nond-round   match   by   Christine\nMercelis of Belgium, 6-3, 7-5.\nMrs. Margaret Diipont of the\nU.S., 1947 Wimbledon champ,\nbreezed through Britain's J. A;\nFulton 6-1, 64 to advance to the\nsecond round that defending champion Althea Gibson of New York\nand others reached Tuesday.\n\"Golden Boy\"\nQuits Giants\nNEW YORK (AP) - Frank Gif-\nford, one of the National Football\nLeague's backfield stars, made his\nbig decision Wednesday. He is ending a brilliant six-year career with\nthe New York Giants for a new\ncareer in television and the movies.\nThe 27-year-old former golden\nboy of the University of Southern\nCalifornia, who four months ago\nsigned a long-term contract with\na Hollywood studio, has been engaged to play the featured role in\na weekly TV show.\n\"The series is due to start in\nthe fall,\" Gifford said. \"It's an\nhour-long show based on federal\ncrime cases. I'm the hero. I catch\n'em.\"\nGifford said he had hoped to be\nable to play ohe more year with\nthe Giants but he admitted the\nstudio frowned upon the idea.\n\"Just say I am through with\nfootball\u2014with ihe remotest reservations,\" he said. ''I wish I could\nwork something out whereby I can\ndo the series and still play football but I doubt very much whether\nthe studio would even consider It.\nIt would mean taking 12 to 14 weeks\noff during the height of the TV\nseason. I really can't see how that\ncould be done.\"\nAussie, Yank\nPlan to Seek\nCanuck Crown\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Bob How*,\nsixth-ranked tennis player in Australia, and Whitney Reed, eighth-\nranked in the* United States, will\nplay in the Canadian Championships here July 28 to Aug. 2.  .\nConfirmation of both entries\ncame Wednesday.\nHowe, one of, the top doubles\nplayers in the world, is currently\ncompeting at Wimbledon. He beat\nR. W. T. Cawthorn of Australia in\nstraight sets Tuesday. He didn't\nplay Wednesday.\nReed is from California and owns\nan impressive record.\nBesides the international stars,\ntournament officials have lined up\nalmost all ranking Canadian players, including Bob Bedard of Sherbrooke, Que., Don Fontana, Toronto, Paul Willey, Vancouver, Sue\nButt, Victoria, and others. A large\ngroup is. also expected from California.  2\nSPINNEY ENTERS\nDOMINION DAY\nRACE HANDICAP\nTORONTO (CP) - Spinney,\nwhich won purses of $189,720 last\nseason, is being shipped to Toronto\nfrom New York for Tuesday's $25,-\n000 Dominion Day handicap at New\nWoodbine.\nSpinney won the $60,000 Canadian\nChampionship stakes over the New\nWoodbine course last October.\nOwned by Louis Rowan of Los\nAngeles and trained by Horatio\nLuro, Spinney won the $100,000\nSanta Anita Maturity last year and\nwas beaten narrowly in two other\n$100,000 stakes \u2014 the Santa- Anita\nHandicap and the San JeanCapisifijsoval of i\ntrano Handicap. g\u00bb*\nSindon Cops\nIrish Derby\nTHE CURRAGH, Ireland (A**>-\nSindon, a colt who never had won\na race, captured the Irish Derby\nWednesday by a head over favored\nPaddy's Point.\nSindon, owned by Ann Bullitt\nBiddle of Philadelphia, barely\nfought off Paddy's Point challenge\nin Uie stretch.\nPaddy's Point, second In the English Derby, came on In the stretch\nlike a Silky Sullivan to make up\na dozen lengths in the mud on the\nfront-running Sindon.\nRoyal Highway finished, third,\nanother four lengths back, in the\nmile and a half classic.\nSindon paid 100 to 8. Paddy's\nPoint was 6 to 4.\nThe best previous effort by' Sindon came in the Irish 2000 Guineas. He finished second \\o Hard\nRidden, subsequent winner of the\nEnglish Derby at Epsom.\nNEISON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 28,1938\u2014IS:\nCanny Scot Vows, \u25a0\nTo Fight Rivals   '\nSPOKANE, Wash. (AP) *- Spofe would consider granting Tubbs and'\nane's new professional hockey\nteam faced competition for local\nsupport Wednesday from a group\nof businessmen who want to retain a senior amateur league franchise here.\nRoy McBride, general manager\nof the Spokane Flyers of the pro*\nfessional Western Hockey League\nsaid his club should be the only\none operating here and that he\nwill fight any effort to establish a\nsecond team.'\nBut Clarence Tubbs, spokesman\nfor 10 local businessmen interested in keeping a Spokane entry in\nthe amateur Western International\nLeague, said his group is ready to\ngo all out for another team if the\nfans want it.\n\"I think ourl outlook' is bright\nand things are moving according\nto plan;\" Tubbs said.\nThe >Flyers drew more than\n100;000 fans in Spokane last season in the WIHL with three British Columbia teams \u2014 Nelson,\nTrail and Rossland. They pulled\nout this spring to join the pros.\nTubbs' group would seek to re\ntain the familiar faces from the\nold Flyers. McBride claims he\nhas complete control over them\nand has first 'rights on them.\nDon Adams, WIHL president;\nsaid in Trail, B.C.,   the   league\nassociates a franchise.\nMcBride fumed at the prospect.\n\"I'm sure the city and county\nwouldn't let another baseball tearn\ncome in and start using the newr17\nPacific   Coast   League   baseball\nnark,\" he said, \"because it would,\nhurt the Indians. I think our deal MB\nwith the Coliseum is   along  the ir\nsame lines.\"\nCity-owned Coliseum   has been-'1'\nthe home of the Fiyers. Tubbs met*\"'\nwith  Coliseum  officials Tuesday-\"\nto discuss possible playing dates\nand was told the matter will bevi\nFAST RELIEF FOR\nTIRED\nFEET\nGOOD RECOVERY\nFOR TIM TAM\nPHILADELPHIA (AP) - Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner Tim Tam is making a satisfactory recovery from an operation eight days ago on his injured\nright forVleg, a spokesman for the\nUniversity of Pennsylvania school\nof veterinary medicine said Wednesday,       j\nTim Tam, who injured the leg\nin ihe Belmont .Stakes, has been\ntaking daily'(exercise since tbe re-\n\" chips from the sesa-\nthe injured leg.\nProbable Pitchers\nNEW YORK (AP) - Probable\npitchers for today's major league\ngames (won and lost records in\nparentheses):\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nNew York at Chicago \u2014 Kucks\n(5-3) vs Donovan (3-7).\nBaltimore at Detroit\u2014Harshman\n(5-6) vs Hoeft (6-6).\nBoston   at   Cleveland \u2014 Sisler\n(6-4) vs Grant (6-4).\nWashington at Kansas City (N)\u2014\nGriggs (3-4) vs Urban (64).\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nLos Angeles at Milwaukee (N)\u2014\nPodres (7-6) vs Burdett (5-5),\nSt. Louis at Pittsburgh \u2014 McDaniel (3-7) vs Law (7-4).\nSan Francisco at Cincinnati (N)\n\u2014Antonelli (7-5) vs Nuxhall (3-3).\nSenator Longer Wins\nFourth Nomination\nFARGO, N. D. (AP) \u2014 North\nDakota's colorful veteran Senator\nWilliam Lariger won Republican\nnomination for a fourth term without party backing in a race with\nLt.-Gov. Clyde Duffy, the Repub-'\nbean endorsee, in Tuesday's primary election.\nDuffy conceded defeat ln a telegram early Wednesday. With 830\nprecincts of 2332 reported, Langer\nhad' 24,463 votes. Duffy 15,178.\nLanger's bid for re-endorsement\nwas spurned by the Republican\nstate convention this spring in\nfavor of Duffy, a lawyer. Langer,\n71, entered the race as an lnde-'\npendent, relying on a following\nbuilt up through more than 40\nyears in state-politics.\nPHILLIES SIGN TWINS\nPHILADELPHIA (AP) - Philadelphia Phillies said Tuesday they\nhave signed twins Richard and\nRobert Haines. 18-year-old Mont-\nclair, N.J., high school Negro athletes, for a huge but undisclosed\nbonus.\nThe twins are both six-foot, 200-\ntiound righthanded outfielders.\nThey will be sent to the Johnston\nCity, Tenn., rookie farm in the\nClass-D Appalachian League.\nGENE SARAZEN BEATEN  ;\nLIVERPOOL, England <AP) -\nNorman Sutton, '50-year-old senior\nBritish titleholder, Wednesday defeated Gene Sarazen of German-\ntown, N.Y., in the world senior\nprofessional golf championship\nover a course lashed with rain.\nHe defeated 56-year-old Sarazen,\n1932 winner of both the U.S. and\nBritish open championships, two\nand one in their 36-hole match.'\nUioval of If\nmoid bone in\nS&wiol\nPhone 1668-L-1    R.R. Ne. 1\nCanada's Most Modern\nVelvet 98 and 88 Gasolines\nGuaranteed Brake Service Using Only\nTop Quality Materials.\nFactory Bonded Brake Shoes With American\nBrake Block Safety Lining.\nWagner Heavy Duty Brake Fluid\nFree Estimates on Request\nOpen 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. Daily\nOutboard Motor Oils and Greases'\nTOMORROW\nC.CENTENNIAL SHOW\n\"The Show\nof the Year!\"\nNelson Civic Centre\n8:30 pm. - both nights\nMATINEE SATURDAY 2 P.M.\nFeaturing: 7\n* Hollywood Motion Picture and TV Stars\n* Backed by 10 Big Production Numbers and a\nCompany of 40\n* A Show Packed With Action, Comedy, Color.\nThe Greatest Variety Show Since \"Chautauqua\/7\nALL TICKETS RESERVED $1.00 AND $1.25\nMATINEE ADULTS $1.00 . STUDENTS AND CHILDREN SOc\nADVANCE TICKETS NOW ON SALE AT BEN SUTHERLAND'S\nNELSON CENTENNIAL COMMITEE\n 14\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 26,1958\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dally Nows doe. not hold Hull responsible) In the event\not tun error In the following lists.\nTORONTO  STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium ......,.....'.,....\nAlgom Uranium ;\u25a0.-.:\t\nAmal Larder  ...\nAnacon, Lead  : '\t\nAtlin Ruff \t\nAubelle   '\t\nAumacho   .'.\t\nAumaque\t\nBarnat\nBase Metals\t\nBaska Uranium\t\nBoymar\t\nBrunswick    ......\nBuff Red Lake\t\nCaliinan  ,...\t\nCampbell C  .\u201e...\u00bb.\u2122\u2014,\nCampbell R. L. \u201e.....!._........\nCan Met ...\t\nCentral Patricia\t\nChimo    ........:.\nCoin Lake\t\nCons Denison \u00a3\t\nCons. Denison Wts.  ....\nCons. Discovery  \u201e..,...\nCons Halliwell\t\nCons Howe \t\nCons Mining & Smelting ...\nCons Red Pop\t\nCon Sanorm\nCon Sub\nConwest\n.mv,\n17.12V4\n.   .15\n.51\n.20%\n.06\n.12\n\u2022low\n.36\n.20\n.23\n.07\n2.61\n.07\n.12\n5.20\n8.15\n1.44\n.90\n.53\n.16\n15.37%\n5.40\n3.20\n.51 .\n2.26\n19.37%\nCopper Corp.'.\t\nCopper Man\t\nD'Aragon ..... :..\u201e\nDonalda*. ,.\nEast Malartic ..'     1.!\nEast Sullivan\nElder Gold1....\nFalconbridge\nFaraday*  \t\nFrobisher \t\nGeco \t\nGiant Yel\t\nGoldcrest.\nl.a\nGold Eagle  .'..:\t\nGolden Manitou\t\nGuhnar Gold   18\nHarminerals  ..,...\u2022- ....\nHeadway    ....\nHollinger   .-. ......--.:  23,\nHudson Bay  45.\nInt. Nickel   74.\nIron Bay -   1.\nKenville    .... :.,.... '\nKerr Addison    18.\nLabrador   17\nLexindin\t\nLittle Long Lac    1\nLorado \t\nLouvlc't\t\nMacassa .3.\nMadsen R. L.'     2.\nMalartic G. F     1\nMaritime Mining \t\nMart McNeely\t\nMcLeod ...T : .....\nMcMarmac  .:\t\nMcKenzie R L\t\nMilliken\n21\n08\n.31\n11\n51\n,80\n.94\n.00\n.25\n,79\n.25\n.30    .\n.19tf|\n.10\n.28\n,50\n.12\n.53\nSlit\n.12%\n.75\n,66\n,06V4\n,25\n,75\n.04\n.93\n.56\n10V4\n10\n38\n,02\nMining Corp s.   12.\nMulti Mins  ....\nNew Delhi ,  \t\nNew Fortune'\t\nNew Harricana \t\nNew Lund ......\nNipissing     1,\nNoranda New    42.\n10\n,08\n21\n,81\n.25\n.49\n.49\n12\n13\n14\n.85\n.12%\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1210 ON THE DIAL\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nTHURSDAY, JUNE 26, 1958\ni:5S\u2014Farm Fare\n':00\u2014Chapel in the'Sky\n': 15\u2014Wake-Up Time\n':25r-Spbrts News\n': 30\u2014News\n':35\u2014Wake Up Time\ni: 00\u2014News\nli 10\u2014Sports News\n: 15\u2014Opening Markets\n::20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n1:30\u2014All the Weather\ni: 35\u2014Varieties\n::d5\u2014Morning Devotions\ni: 00\u2014News\ni:18\u2014Story Parade\ni:25-r-Women Today\n1:30\u2014Woman's .World\n9:35\u2014Song Serenade V\nt:45\u2014Food Facte\nl:00-rNews\ni:05\u2014Musicale\n:15\u2014Summertime\ni: 45^-Here's Health\n1:55\u2014News\n1:00\u2014Morning Music .\n1:15\u2014Fighting Words '\n: 45\u2014Song Serenade\n'.: 15\u2014Sports News\n!:25r-NEWS\n2.30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Prairie News\n1:00-CKLN Reports\nt: 18\u2014Sacred Heart\n1:30\u2014Drama in Sound\n2:00\u2014Holiday Time\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Pacific News\n3:45\u2014Rocking With Boates       i\n4:45\u2014Roundabouts   .\n5:00-NEWS\n5:05\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:30\u2014Parliamentery Roundup\n5:35\u2014Rolling Home Show\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Sports News\n6:15\u2014Closing Markets\n6:20\u2014Mantovani\n6:30\u2014Dinner Music\n6:45\u2014After Dinner Music\n7:00\u2014News and Roundup\n7:30\u2014Western Roundup\nBiOO^-Prairle Playhouse\n8:30\u2014Business Barometer\n9:00\u2014Portrait of a Woman\n9:30\u2014Vancouver Chamber Orch.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:10\u2014Sports News\n10:15\u2014Old Fort Langley\n10:30-Sign Off\nDEATHS\nBy THE CANADIAN .PRESS\nBrevard, N.C\u2014Ed M, Anderson, 52, president in 1954-55 of the\nNational Editoriaol Association,\ncomposed of 9000 non-daily newspapers, of a heart attack.\nNormetals .\nNorpax\nNorth pankin \t\nOpemiska L.\nPickle Crow ......\t\nPlacer Devel .'.\t\nPreston E. D. .\nQuebec Copper \t\nQuebec Litiiium \t\nQuebec Metallurgical\nQuemont \t\nRadiore\t\nRayrock\t\nSan Antonio\t\nSherritt Gordon\t\nSilver Miller  \t\nStadacona \t\nSteep Rock   .:\t\nSlocan Van Roi\t\nSullivan Con\t\nSylvanite   \t\nTaurcanis\t\nTeck Hughes :\t\nTemagami \t\nThomp-Lund \t\nfombill\t\nUnited Keno\t\nVentures i\t\nViolamac\nCBC PROGRAMS\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nFRIDAY,\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n7:111\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News ,\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00-News arid Weather\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n8:30\u2014CBC News       ,  '\n8:35\u2014Anything Goes\n9:00\u2014News\n9:l\u00a3j-Morning Concert\n10:0&-Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014Summertime\n10:45\u2014Pages From Life\n11:00\u2014One Man's Family\n11:15\u2014Strictly for Strings\nll:45VTheme and Variation\n12:15-News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadoast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n1:30\u2014Pacific Playhouse\n2:00\u2014Holiday Time\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\nJUNE\n3:\n3;\n4:\n4:\n5:\n5\n5\n5\n5:\n5\n27, 1958\n30\u2014Program Resume\n45\u2014Footlight Favorites        <\n00\u2014Day Dreaming\n30\u2014Raiders of the Mohawk\n00\u2014Bands on Parade\n15\u2014News\n:25\u2014On the Scene\n:35-Sports Desk\n40-Byline\n45\u2014Folk Songs\n6:00\u2014Points West\n,6:30\u2014Musical Intrelude\n6:35\u2014Roving Reporter\ne^S^-Rawhide\n7:00\u2014National News\n7:30\u2014Evening Concert\n8:00\u2014A Touch of Greasepaint\n8:30\u2014The Four' Gentleijieh\n8:45\u2014As You Like It\n9:0mSohgs of My People\n9:30\u2014Who Is the Composer?\n10:00\u2014News.\n10:15-Talk\n10:30\u2014Stanley. Street, Montreal\n11:00\u2014The Pattern of Music\n11:57-CBC News\nWiltsey Goglin \t\nWright Hargreaves      1,\nYeliowknife Bear  .-....-...\nYukeno\t\nOILS\nAmerican Leduc \t\nBailey Selburn    9\nBata Petroleum \t\nCalgary and Edmonton ....  25,\nCdn Atlantic '\u2022..\"    4.\nCanadian Devonian  \u2022 5.\nDuvex\t\nHome A   18\nLong Island Pete .*...\nMarigold\t\nMidcon ,\t\nNat. Pete      2.\nOkalta     1\nPacific Pete   17\nPetrol  ,\t\nProv. Gas  _     2\nRoyalite    20\nSpooner \t\nStanwell Oil\t\nTriad      4,\nUnited Oils    2\nYank Canuck \t\nWestern Pacific     ...\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi ,\nAlgoma Steel ...\nAluminum\t\nArgus 2nd pfd\t\nAtlas St .\nB.A. Oil .'. ...\nBathurst Power \t\nBeatty Bros ...\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian \t\nB.C. Electric 4s '.\t\nB.C. Electric 4%s\t\nB.C. Forest ....\nB.C. Packers B ...:\t\nB.C. Power A\t\nBurns A\t\nCanadian Breweries\t\nCanadian Canners \u2022.\t\nCanadian Celanese-\t\nCan.' Cement ):\u25a0.!.::\u00a3...-. ....\nCan Chem Co :..\nCanadian Dredge  ....\nCan. Malting   .....\nCan Oil\t\nCanadian Pacific Rly\t\nCan. Packers A\t\nCan. Packers B -\nCockshutt\t\nCons: Gas  :.\t\nDist. Seagram \t\nDom. Foundries .\nDom. Magnesium\t\nDom. Steel Ord\t\nDom. Tar & Chemical\t\nDom. Textiles .'.\t\nEddy Paper' .....\nFamous Players \t\nFanny Farme\/\t\n2.85\n.23\n.75\nS.55\n1.05\n9.50\n6.50\n.32\n4.85\n.72\n.20\n.65\n.17\n.50\n.09%\n.16\n.10\n.09\n.61\n.92\n.75\n.24\n.05\n.50\n.20\n.20\n.39\n.97\n.05\n.17%\n.30\n.06\n,00\n,75\n.90\n.12\n,87*4\n,08\n,14\n.94\n.45\n.22\n,62V*\n,79\n.50\n.75\n.19\n.80\n,35\n2.17\n.11\n.26\n27%\n28V4\n25%\n52%\n19\n40\n\u25a0 37%\n4.05\n41%\n6%\n80%\n95\n10%\n12\n40%\n14%\n30*4\n14%\n14\n31%\n5%\n22%\n59%\n\u2022 27%\n26%\n45\n41%\n12\n30%\n28%\n29\n10%\n22%\n64%\n21%\n43\n17%\n16%\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge 14\nBralorne ...1 \u201e     8.50 *\nCariboo Gold ._     .77\nFarwest Tungsten 09\nGiant Mascot .1 08\nGranduc    _    1.33\nHighland Bell .,     1.35\nKootenay Base Metals        .01%\nNational Ex  18\nPioneer '\"-Id       1>40\nPremier \/ .'der 05%\nQuatsino       21%\nSheep Creek  .     .39\nSherritt Gordon      4.10\nSilback Premier  05\nSilver Ridge    03\nSilver Standard  18%\nSunshine Lardeau      .10\nTrojan 17\nYale 10\nOILS\nAltex    -     .14\nA P Consolidated  38\nCalgary & Edmonton  24.75\nCharter -       1.80\nHome \"A\"    18.00\nOkalta Com .:     1.20\nPacific Pete    17.25\nPeace River Gas  44\nRoyalite    10.62%\nRoyal Can 56\nSparmac      .19%\nUnited        2.15\nVanalta   18\nVantor     1.13\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers     1.60\nAlberta DisUllers Vt     1.35\nB C Forests -.   10.50\nB C Power    39.50\nB C Telephone   42.00\nCrown Zeller (Can)    19.62%\nInt Brew B   ,    4.00\nInland Nat Gas      5.00\nLiickky Lager      ,.    5.25\nMacM & Bloedel B   28.50\nMid Western  .;    1.50\nPowell River    33.00\nTrans Mtn   49.50\nWestminster Paper  24.00\nWestern Plywoods   14.75\nUNLISTED Bid  Ask\nAlta Gas Trunk   16.12      \u2014\nTrans Can Com   26.25     \u2014\nTrans Mtn Unit  49.50 50.00\nWestcoast Com   20.00 20.25\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal   45.00 46.00\nCan. Bank of Com, .... 47.00 48.00\nImp. Bank of Can .... 49.00 50.00\nRoyal Bank of Can .... 63.00 64.00\nFUNDS\nCan. Inv. Fund :.    8.40   9.22\nCommonwealth Int    6,90   7.58\nGrouped Income  '.   3.38   3.69\nInvestors Mutual   9.93  10.74\nLeverage   - 4.87    5.35\nTrans Canada \"C\" ..       5,20    5.65\nFord A         \t\n.. .   80%\nGatineau      \t\n...      34%\nGen. Steel Wares \t\n8\nGypsum Lime \t\n...       33%\nHoward Smith\t\n...    .  31%\nImperial Oil \t\n...      44\nImp. Tobacco \t\n-       13%\nInt.: Pete,    \t\n\u201eu       45%\nLaura Secord \t\n....    \u25a0 21%\nLoblaw A\t\n26%\nLoblaw B       \t\n27\nMcColl Frontenac ......:.\n...       58%\nMoore Corp.   \t\n71\nNat. Steel Car\t\n...      22\nPage Hershey\t\n...      29%\nPowell River\t\n33\nRuss. Industries\t\n8%\nShawinigan  \t\n26\nSicks Brew\t\n29.\nSimpsons A  :..\n....      23%\nStandard Paving \t\n36%\nSteel of Canada\t\n...      59%\nTayldr Pearson \t\n8%\nUnion Gas of Can\t\n80\nWeston George \t\n28\nWinnipeg Gas\t\n6%\nLONDON (CP) - An 18th - century snuff box, given by Empress\nCatharine'of Russia to Baron Dims-\ndale in 1763, was sold for \u00a3850 at\nauction here.\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nTELEVISION   FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nKXLY-TV - Channel 4\n7:45 Good Morning\n8:00 Garry Moore *\n.8:30 How Do Y6u Rate *\n9:00 Arthur Godfrey \u2022\n9:30 Dotto \u2022\n10:00 Love of Life *\n10:30 Search For Tomorrow\n10:45 Guiding Light *\n11:00 Compass \u2022 \u00ab\n11:30 As The World Turns \u2022\n12:00 Beat The Clock * .\n12:30 Houseparty *\n1:00 Big Payoff \u2022\n1:30 Verdict Is Yours *\n2:00 Brighter Day *\n2:15 Secret Storm *\n2:30 Edge of Night *\n3:00 Bingo\n4:00 Early Show >\n5:15 Doug Edward* News \u2666\n5:30 Big Picture\n6:00 News\n6:15 World Venturas\n6:30 Kingdom of the Sea\n7:00 I Search For Adventure\n7:30 Climax *\n8:30 Playhouse'90 *\n10:00 Mr, Distriot Attorney\n10:30 News\n10:35 Post Time\n10:40 Late Slow\nKHQ-TV -Channel 6\n7:40 Color Test Pattern\n7:43 Test Pattern\n7:56 Bible Reading\n7:59 Program Previews\n8:00 Tic Tac Dough *\n8:30 It Could Be You *\n9:00 Dough Re Mi *\n9:30 Treasure Hunt \u2022\n10:00 Price Is Right *\n10:30 Kifty Foyle *\n11:00 Matinee Theatre (C) \u2022\n12:00 Queen For a Day *\n12:45 Modern Romances \u2022\n1:00 Charles Farrell Show *\n1:30 Truth or Consequences '\n2:00 Corliss Archer\n2:30 Your TV Theatre\n3:00 Matinee On Six\n\"Very Young Lady\"\n4:30 Four Thirty Movie\n\"Adventure Island\"\n5:45 NBC News\n6:00 If You Had a Million\n6:30 Front Page\n6:45 Viewpoint\n7:00 You Bet Your Life *\n7:30 Dragnet \u2022 *'.-\u25a0.'\n8:00 Sea Hunt\n8:30 Tennessee Ernie Ford\n9:00 Price Is Right (C) *\n9:30 Music Bingo \u2022\n10:00 Target\n10:30 Late Movie\n\"Junior Miss\"\nDOWN\n1. Room exit\n2. Troubles\n3. Bill of\nan anchor\n4. Apeer\n5. Way out\n6. House,\naddition\n7. Map\n9.Runaway ''\nand marry\n10. Digits\n12. Blah\n14. Waterfall\n17. Place\n18. Dispatched\n20.Related\n21. Get\n(dial.)\n22. Female\n(owl\n24. Clamor\nof alarm\n25. Storage\nboxes\n26. Way\n28.'Flre.\nplace\n29. Epochs\n31. Exterior\n34. Trick\n36. Medieval\natory\naaaa nana\nHUBKEl   aidHRK\nnmnns nasnis\nsunns BHSBHia\neh    hhh nana\nnssnEis noun\nHnrararjaid\nBQOBI   HUHSJEia\naasi lanci    as\nISBBStHi!   ilH\ntannas ass\nWl:-\n0@\nI   KflSS   KJHfl\n10\n*-tm\nYesterday's Answer\nKREM TV - Channel 2\n6:00 Space Ranger\n6:30 Newsbeat\n7:00 Janet Dean, R.N.\n7:30 Circus Boy *\n8:00 Zorro * .\n8:30 Real McCoys \u2022\n9:00 Pat Boone *\n9:30 Navy Log *\n10:00 Man Behind The Bodge\n10:30 Nightbeat\n10:35 Liberace\n11:00 20th Century Fox Hour\n(Programs sabject to change by stations without notice.)\nACROSS\n1. Immerse\n4. Busy Insect\nT.Klngr\u2014\n0. Wheel pin\n10, Gunwale\npin for oa\u00bb\n11. Brooks\n13. Rowing\nimplements\n14. Cabin\nbedstead\n15. Excla.\nmatlon\n16. Elizabeth\nRegina\n17. River (Pol.)\n18. Resort\n18. Road\nstations\n22. Regard\n23. Mothers* .\ndomain\n25. Young -\nherring\n27. Pet name\nfora\nrelative)\nSO. Electrlflea\nparticle\n31. Poem\n82. Negative\nrefely\n$3. Greek letter\n84. Regret\n85. Mark\n87. Swagger\n86. Corridor!\n40. Comfort\n41. S-shapetl\nmolding\n\u25a0 (2. Thrice\n(mujs.)\n43. Impost\nDAILY CBlrTTOQtOTE \u2014 Here's hdw to work Id\nAXYDLBAAXR\nULONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this sample A II\nused for th* three L's, X for tha two O's, etc. Single letters,\napostrophles, the length and formation of tho words art alt\ntint*.  Each day tha coda letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nACVGN OCV THYM OCVE BCJWJ\nMJNVEMT 8VPGN OJ DTM TVZHJ\nTMHBD- 8BCAJPJW.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: THIS BOUILLABAISSE ANOBLB\nDISH IS-A BORT OF SOUP, OR BROTH, OR 8R8W-\nTHACKERAY.\n4fi W. Kins Keaturs-t. ayaOeatt,\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\n \t\n\\(^5\nSMALL INVESTMENT       LARGE RETURNS\nThat's the Want Ad Story ~ PHONE  1844\nYOU CAN NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M. ON SATURDAY.\nBIRTHS\nMOREAU - To Mr. and Mrs. J.\nLed A. MoreaU, 1323 Stanley Street,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital,\nJune 23, a son.\n. KOSIANCIC - To Mr. and Mrs,\nRay Kosiancic, of Crescent Valley,\nat KOOtenay Lake General Hospital,\nJune 23, a son.  ,.\u25a0\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED AT BEGINNING OF\nSeptember: Full time ward aid,\nbetween the ages of 16 and 30\nyears. No living accommodation.\nFor full particulars please apply\nThe Matron, Vfeteflan Hospital,\nKaslo, Also part time kitchen\nwork, position vacant in September,\nWANTED - MAN WI'i'H iNDUS'\ntrial first aid certificate to Work\nas spare mah in sew mill. Union\nScale rate plus first aid premium.\nGood working conditions, MSA\nbenefits. Apply National Employment, Office.\nWANTED - CONTRACTORS FOR\nstud logging. MUtt have equipment to handle 8' logs. Contact\nCooke Lumber Co., Ltd., Greenwood, fl.C.\nWANTED - EXPERIENCED\nbookkeeper for local retail store.\nADDly BOX S717, Dally News.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nHOUSEKEEPER WANTED FOR\nsummer months. Box 6489, Dally\nNews.\nWANTED  -  EXPERIENCED\nhairdresser. Phone 817.\n,.\u201e warr MSJMSjjSjg lM\"\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nDO YOU LIKE A GOOD CON\ncrete or cement work job? Just\nphone 1752-L-3. I need customers. Experience not necessary.\nRetoemptr, Phone 1752-L-3,\nFOR THE BEST IN BODY AND\npaint work, see Ted's Auto Body,\n1 mile Granite Road, or phone\n186-X-3.\nYOUNG, MARRIED, FULLY Experienced typist desires full time\npermanent position. Phone 76'-Y.\nWILL DO' ALTERATIONS, Rijt)F-\ning or odd jobs around the home.\nPhone 1672-R.-3.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nNew\nOLDSMOBILE\nSEDANS\nNew\nCHEVROLET\nSEDANS\nNew\nCHEVROLET\nPICKUPS\n1957 Chevrolet Hardtop\n1957 Chevrolet 2 Dr. Sed.\n1957 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1957 Plymouth Sedan\n1956 Chevrolet Sedan\n1956 Meteor Sedan\n1956 Ford Stationwagon\n1956 Mercury Sedan\n1955'Oldsmobile Sedan\n1955 Plymouth Sedan\n1954 Meteor Sedan\n1954 Pontiac Sedan\n1953 Chevrolet Sedan\n1953 Dodge Sedan\n1953 Ford Coupe\n1953 Pontiac Sedan\n1953 Meteor Sedan\n1952 Pontiac Sedan\n1957 Chevrolet 1 Ton\n1957 Chevrolet f Ton\n1957 Chevrolet Pickup\n1956 Chevrolet Pickup\n1955 Chevrolet Pickup\n1953 Mercury Pickup\n.REUBEN  '\nBUERGE.\nMOTORS\nLTD.   .\nChev.-Olds. Dealer\n323 Vernon St.      Nelson\nPhone 35 - 36\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP>-The stock\nmarket, returned to the. upside\nWednesday with a moderate advance. Trading was the liveliest\nin a Week.\nMost of the favorites were not\nin the blue chip class, showing a\nrotation ef' interest from the\ntraditional leaders.  Steels how-\nBOATS and ENGINES\n22 FT. CABIN CRUISER, 76 H.P,\n.'Grey Marine engine, newly overhauled by expert, like new. Boat-\nhouse available. Will consider\n-part trade. Phone 1177 after 6\np.m. 455-Y; ,\nBEAUTIFUL If? VARNISHED\nmahogany boat, 14 h.p. Evinrude\nmotor. Double welled boathouse\nall for. $525. Phone 1268-L,\nMARINE PLYWOOD CAR-TOP\nboat, WA' long, 52\" beam, $75.\n7Mt h.p. Elgin outboard motor,\n$150. Phone 763-R.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nExclusive\nFOR* SALE-\"JAEOER\" 2-DRUM\nwinch, size 2-B, 6-cyl. Hercules\ngas engine, 4-speed transmission.\nDrum sltts 12\" diam., 22\" face,\nW flange. Price, $l5do. Nelson\nMachinery. Phone 18, Nelson,\nWe have-been authorized to\noffer for sale one of Nelson's\nfiner homes \u2014 at a very reasonable price.\nThis, heme was built and occupied in 1941. It consists of an\nentry porch, with through hallway to IC, and has 2 B.R.s,\ngood size with clothes closets,\nand ,3-piece bathroom opening\noff. Alio L.R., quite large,\nwith fireplace. D.R. opens out\nof the L.R. Oak hardwood flooring ln hallway, porch, L,R. and\nD.R. Modern kitchen adjoins\nD.R. Upstairs are 2 additional\nB.R.s and sewing room. Basement contains a rumpus room,\nlaundry room, fruit room, garage on level and Of course oil\nfurnace. It is a homey, family\nhoUse which lends itself to good\nliving. There are storm, and\nscreen windows and doers\nthroughout. It is located on 2\n36' x ISO', well-developed lots.\nHedges, lawns, rockeries and\ngarden. Full $16,500\nprice is only  ? ,w\u00bb\u00ab'vw\nAt Least $10,000 Cash Required.\nBalance on Agreement-for-Sale.\n$75 Per Month Plus 69s Interest.\nHerb Peacock\nREAL ESTATE and\nINSUftANCB A01CNCY'\nPhone 6t 632 Ward St\n\u00bb~~.~asa'.*sik*^^+*a+ifm*am*a*i.m*mm,**m**m-\nFOR SALE OR TRADE ON\nlarge house in Nelson. Must be\nin good repair and preferably on\nNorth Shore. New modern 2-bedroom home with carport, one\nmile from Creston, on No.\nHighway, acre and quarter lot\nin pears, large packing shed. Excellent site tor trailer court or\nether road-side business. Bex No,\nS786, Dally News.\nFOR SALE BY OWNER ON 4TH\n-St., Pairvlew\u20148 bedroom house\non corner let, large LR with fire-\n. place, separate DR, both with\noak floors. Oarage in full base-,\nment, concrete foundation. Price\n$13,500. Terms. Phone 857 after\n6 p.m.\nFRUIT FARM FOR SALE -\nacres, 3 miles from Creston;\nroom house with basement, oil\nfurnace: also 3-room shack, farm\nbuildings, fruit, hay, pasture,\nwoodland, irrigation. Write Box\n617,' Creston, B.C.\nBRAND NEW 3-BEDROOM NHA\nhome en. Lakeview Crescent\n(Rosemont). Phone 2107 or apply\nMaple Leaf Construction, 1914\nKootenay St.\nMACHINERY\nWANTED AT ONCE - TRUCK\nwith trailer to haul long logs.\nWittnt-mile haul. Ph. Kaslo 42.\n'\"r\" maeaew \u25a0\u25a0\"\" m  \u00ab\nRENTALS\nBARRETT TRAILER SALES,\nFruitvale, for Aljo and Terry\nTravel Trailers.        ....\n1955 31 FT. FACTORY-BUILT\ntrailer. Excellent condition. Ph,\n122, Salmo, days.\t\nLOST AND FOUND\nBIFOCALS IN RED CASE FOUND\nnear Cottonwood Lake. Ph. 301-R.\nONE BEDROOM APARTMENT -\nJohnstone Block; heated, $55,\nPour-roOm apartment, some furniture, Silica St., $45; and two\nrooms furnished $4o. T. d. Resting and Son Ltd., 568 Ward St.\nUNFURtf. 5-ROOM DUPLEX -\nlovely View, newly decoroted,\nchoice, adults only. Also 2 furn.\ni housekeeping reams for 2 business people. Phone 335-X,,\nriEDRuoii' TOffi'\"- WIreS)\nfor range and hot water. North\nShore, 2*4 miles from bridge,\njgiSjl Ph, 1|6. days, 575-Y eves.\n3-ROOM MODERN APT.,' bM-\ntral, self-contained, unfurnished.\nGas range, heat and hot water\nSupplied. Adults. Phone 2079.\n2 ROOM APT., UNFURN., STOVE,\ngas plate, suitable for quiet\ncouple. siSA Hall St. or phone\n1489-R.after 2 p.m.\nWr'HAvE\" A Me, fefeiGHf,\nspacious office in the Truck Terminus Bldg, For particulars\nphone 77.\nApts!, n fvMim>,\nadults. Available July 1. Mrs,\nVigneux Dolan, 616 silica, phone\nmli,\nI'M. apt.'Mm oarage -\navailable Aug. 1, Apply 90S Hall\nMines Rd.\nroom siiiTE -With bAth,\nImmediate occupancy. 912 6th St.\nPhone 1263-Y, '\n3-ROOM APT., NEWLY DECOR-\nated, Vernon St., furn. or unfurnished. Phone 385.\nm:mn i bdm, amm\nfloor. Apply Suite 101 Bevanne\nApts.\nBLiMlNG hobM Bf Week OR\nmonth. Apply Stirling Hotel\nLight housekeeping Rooks\nPhone 759-X or aoply 713 Baker,\nFOR RENT - GROUND FLOOR\nAnt. Phone 726-X.\nIl-ROOM ' BitlRNIS'kED 'APT.,   -\nadults only. Phone 766-X.\nLarge apt.\n. 711 SILICA ST. -\nPhone 1497-L after 6 ti.m,\n3-ROOM furbished apt   -\nClose in, Phone 839-R\ni-ROOM APt'. AND'BATH, PART-\nly furn, 210 Vernon St.\n3-Ritf. APARTMENT FOR RENT,\nJul\" 1. Phone 1341-X. \u25a0\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS.\nFridays^ Phone 386-R or 483-R.\nSLENDOR  TAriLEts  ARE   EF-\nfectiva. i weeks supply $2.50, 9\nweeks $6.00, at Fleury's Pharmacy and all druggists.\nFOR SALE-3 BEDROOM HOME,\nLR, DR, large kitchen, sun room,\nautomatic oil furnace, lake frontage, on 1 acre at Willow Point,\nbeautiful location. Phone 678-L-l.\n4-BEDROOM HOUSE ON 3 COR-\nner lots, wired for range; lawn,\ngarden and fruit; automatic\nstoker. Phone 582-L-3.\nFOR SALE - REVENUE HOUSE,\n3 self contained suites. Priced\nreasonably for quick sale. Phone\n1113-R.\n3 CORNER LOTS IN NELSON ON\nmain highway. Sell or Consider\nhouse trailer in deal. Apply Box\n5485. Nelson Dailv News.\nFOR SALE - 2 BR. HOME IN\nRobson townsite. Wired for\nrange, very reasonable. Phone\n2062 or 2069. Castlegar.\nSPECIALIZING IN ENGLISH\ncar repairs. Used parts for 1949\nto '52 Austins, '49 to '52 Hill-\nmans, '50 to '51 Morris Minor,\n'47 Studebaker, '47 Pontiac, '52\nVanguard, '47 Oldsmobile 6 For.\na ale, '53 Austin, '47 Olds motor.\n, Cottonwood Wreckage Service.\nph 1363-L-2, BOX 382, 24 Ymir\nRoad, Nelson,\nphone 1828.\nWRECKING '49 AND '51 AUSTINS\n502 Observatory. Phone 2058-X\nEvenings.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\n!>ETS FARM! ANY KIND \"OF\npets boarded at Taghum. Phone\nHalveson, 599-L-2.\n3-BEDROOM HOUSE ON 2 LOTS\nin Fairview, priced for quick\nsale. Phone 1268-L.\ntjPHlLL - LoVeLV 3-BA. llOME,\nmust be seen to be appreciated.\nPhone 1994-X to view.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nSCRAP STEEL AND METALS\ntop prices Old car bodies .our\nspecialty.'COMMERCIAL STEEL\ni METALS. 61S6 IVillingdon.\nBurnaby 2. Vancouver. B C\nWANTED-AUTO-KNITTING MA-\nchine, in working order. State\ncondition and price. P. S. Gross,\nPincher Creek, Alberta.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and shapes.\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver. B.C. Phone\nPAcific 6857\t\nUSfll6 OUTBOARDS, REFRIGER-\nators, washing machines. Make\nus an offer. Jeffery Radio and\nAppliances Ltd., phone 1302, 446\nWard St., Nelson, B.C,\nTRAILERS\nCirculation Dept;, Phono 1844\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday, loo on Saturday.\nSubscription Rates\nBy Carrier per week\nln advance.\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Nelson;\nOne month   $ 1.2b\nThree months ... $ s.so\nSix months - \u25a0\u25a0 $ 6.50\nOne year ..;.   $12 00\nBy Mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States:\nOne month    \u25a0    $ 1.75\nThree, months $ 5.00\nSix months   $9.50\nOne year    $18.00\nWhere extra postage is required\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by carrier in Cran-\nbrook, nhone Mrs Wm. Stevely\ntn Kimberley, A. W Brown\nIn Trail. Mrs Rvd SDnoner\nWANTED TO RENT - MODERN\n3 bedroom house close in, with\noption to buy. Apply B6x 3724\nNelson Daily News.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRBBENTATIVES\ntt, 8:  ELMES, ROSSLAND,  B C.\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep\nENGINEERS  AND  SURVEYORS\nJ6HNSON AND ivlcCORQUODALP\nB.C. Land Surveyors.\n\u25a0 Mine and Topographic Surveys.\nNelsOn, 1015-8th St Ph. 144-R.\nTrail. 1234 Bay Ave., Ph 2762.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, MEIC\nB.C. Land Surveyor P Eng (Civil)\n218 Gore St     Nelson    Phone 1238\nG W BAJsihG B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St     Nelson    Phone 1118\nINSURANCE\nWAWANESA MUTUAL\nINSURANCE CO.\nAgent, 554 Ward St.\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd.\nClassified Ada Get Results!\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nMK. 20 MERCURY OUTBOARD\nin 1st class condition. Apply\n623 Latimer evening.\nCOW FOR SALE - FRESHENED\nJune 5. Suitable for a dairy farm.\nApply Mike Chernoff, Salmo, B.C.\nPULLETS FOR SALE-ANY AGE.\nAppleby Poultry Farm, Mission\nCity, B.C.\nWANTED, 5 FRESH OR DUE TO\nfreshen cows. Bx 3808, Ply News:\nWANTED TO RENT\nt***.e+^>^m*a*\nMcGu'liocii\n\u2022D-44\nSlashes Through\nThe Price Barrier!\nThe price of the famous McCulloch D-44 Direct Drive chain\nsaw' has (Wee* again been reduced <*- dramatically I Efficient\nCanadian production methods\nhave allowed McCulloch to pass\nthis saving on to YOU I\nCall In, today, and see the D-44.\nLighter than any other aaw in\nits class, the D-44 has- a rugged\n6 horsepower motor that takes\nthe hard work out~of> woof*\noutting I\nPriced as Low as $234.'\n' >     (with 12\" blade)\n'-..,'.  See\nH. \"Fritz\". Farenholtz,\nCharlie Ross or Alex McDonald\n\" 9\n'WELDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO.,   LTD.\nPHONE 1402\n614 Railway St     Nelson, B.C,\nWOOD AND COAL KITCHEN\nrange pipes included, oil heater,\npipes included, dresser with\nmirror. Phone 1886-Y.\n18\" ELECTRIC WELD COAL FUR-\nnace. Also water tank with electric jinit and thermostat. Phone\n1447-L, 215 Chatham.\n500 GALLON PROPANE GAS\ntank and three regulators and\nmeters, as new. R. Hunter, ph,\n4187, Castlegar.\nCLEAN COtTON RAGS WILL\nnot be purchased by the Dally\nNews until further notice,;\nNEW- PHILIPS  TR-3 TAPE  RE-\ncorder. Convenient terms. Flem-\ning Recordings, phone 130.\nHEALtH FOOD CEltokE OPEN\nday and evenings. 924 Davies St.\nWANTED    -    3    GOOD    USED\ntruck tires 7.00x20. Phone 58S-L-1\nor write Mike Relkoff. Nelson,\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOARD AND ROOM FOR YOUNG\ngentleman. Phone Mrs. Truscott.\n1179-X,\nROOM AND BOARD - PHONE\n1876-R.\nFOR SALE - 9x9 TENT WITH\naluminum poles. Phone 1079-R.\nFOR SALE -LAWlNf CHAIRS. AP-\nply Daily News, Box 5433,\nFREIGHT\nSERVICE\nDAILY FREIGHT SERVICE\nVANCOUVER\nto Rossland, Trail, Castlegar and\nNELSON\n.'-'. Overoiglht Service\nPhone Nelson  1106 br Trail  191\n2 NEW TENTS - 9'X9'x7'. SELL\nat cost price; Phone 1628.\n1    BURROUGHS    ADDING\nchine. J.10, Phone 1455.\nMA-\nHOTELS AND MOTELS\nCANADIAN FRIENDS - WHEN\nIn Spokane stop at the Colonial\nHotel, 124U> Post St., one block\nfrom.stores and parking.\n:   \" HELP\n.   WANTED\n\"Applications for the position of Clerk in\nthe Village of Marysville will be received\nup to 12 o'clock noon, June 30, 1958\/ Applicants should state age, qualifications,\npast experience and salary expected.\nApply to:     \u2022\nTHE CORPORATION OF THE\nVILLAGE OF MARYSVILLE,\n7    BOX 49,\nMARYSVILLE, 8. C.\nBUILDING SUPPLIES\nNelson Ready-Mix\nFOR ALL PURPOSES\ni   PHONE 871\nPREMIER SAND & GRAVEL\nFor\nSand, Gravel, Crushed Rock,\nFill, Cement and\nPea Gravel for Roofing\nPHONE 1.368 or 871\nESMOND LUMBER CO. LTD.\nfor all Building Supplies. Specializing in Plywood. Contractors enquiries solicited. Phone or\nwire orders collect. 3600 E. Hastings St., Vancouver, B.C. (SLen-\nburn 1500.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 26,1958\u20141\never, did fairly well, bolstered\nby U. S. Steel's decision to go\nahead with a record program of\ncapital expenditures.\nAmong Canadian Issues, Canadian Pacific gained Vt and Distillers-Seagrams and Dome Mines\nwere up Vs. 'Mclntyre Porcupine\nadded VA.\nBrazilian Traction was down M\nand Molybdenum down 1-16 In\nCanadian issues on the American\nexchange. In the oils, Fargo and\nSapphire Petroleums were up\n1-16.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 The stock\nmarket Wednesday ended a five-\nsession decline with a mild recovery amid heavier tradin.S\nIndustrial gains were topped bv\na seven-point rise to a 1958 high\nof 25 by Hayes Steel and a four-\npoint gain to 39%, also a 1958\nhigh, bv British American Bank\nNote. Both gains were on single\nsales.\nSenior base metals moved\nahead in a fractional or 15-cent\nrange.' Golds were mixed to\nlower while uraniums and coppers showed some scattered\nstrength.\nWestern oils were featured by\nHome Oil A and B. both up %:\nConsolidated West Pete added 25\ncents at $6.25 and there were a\nfew 10 or 15-cent gains.\nMONTREAL (CP)-The market was weaker at the close of\nmoderately active trading on the\nMontreal and Canadian stock exchanges Wednesday,\nHowever, strength was shown\nby the base metals and construction stocks. Hudson Bay was up\n% at 45*4 and Canadian Dredge\nat 22 improved one point.\nSteels arid utilities showed a\nmixed tendency, with Stelco featured at 59%, a rise of IV..\nBanks led the general decline.\nOne-point losses were registered\nby Nova SCOtla and Banque Ca-\nnadienne Nationale.\nindustrial losers included International petroleum, down Wt.\nBuy and Sell Willi Classified!\nJor\nPRDTD,MDDL5i\nBuy PROTO for all of your home,\nfar in or shop tool nceda-ilie quality\nbrand preferred by professional..\nMACHINERY LIMITED\n708 Vernon Sit Nelson\nPHONE BT\nPONTIAC\nBUICK        VAUXHAUL PONTIAC\n<\nX\nX\nD\n<\n>\ny\nD\nCQ\n\\\n%\nm\nz\no\na.\n<\nI\nX\nD\n<\n>\ny\na:\nCQ\n8\nz\n2\nD\n<\nI\nX\nD\n<\n>\ny\nQQ\nHoliday \u00a7\nAt\nNelson Motor Products\n2 ONLY- 1954 FORD CUSTOMLINE SEDANS\n!.*'      - One With'RSdio. TwOTorie Paint, Air'Conditiorier.   ,.\". .\nIn A-T Guaranteed Condition.\n1954 PLYMOUTH SAVOY SEDAN\nEquipped With Air Conditioner, High-Drive Transmission,      v\nSignal Lights. Reconditioned, Ready for Holiday Trails.\n1954 PONTIAC SEDAN\nAir Conditioner, Signal Lights, Etc.\nMust be seen to be appreciated.\n'    1954 AUSTIN SEDAN ;\nFor the Economy Minded,\nThis Is the Finest in Low-Priced Transportation.\n2 ONLY - 1953 PONTIAC LAURENTIAN SEDANS\nEquipped With Radios, Air Conditioners,-Signal Lights.\n-,    A Couple of Twins: Two-Tone Blue.\n=     r1953 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR SEDAN\nEquipped With Radio, Signal Lights, Air Conditioner.\nNew Rubber and Paint.\n1953 CHEVROLET 5-PASSENGER COUPE\nAir Conditioner, .Signal Lights Etc. In First Class Condition Throughout,\n1952 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR SEDAN\nPriced to Sell. In Premium Condition.\n1952 STUDEBAKER STARLITE COUPE\nAir Conditioner, Overdrive, Etc!. First Come, First Served.\n1952 NASH RAMBLER 2-DOOR\nRadio, Signal Lights, Air Conditioner. Cheap as Borsch Today.\n1951  PONTIAC TORPEDO SEDAN\nIn Real Nice Condition Throughout.\n1950 METEOR 2-DOOR SEDAN\nRadio, Air Conditioner, Etc.\n1950 CHEVROLET SEDAN\nAir Cbnditioner, Etc. A Real Good Buy.\n1947 PLYMOUTH 5-PASSENGER COUPE\n. Here Is a Dandy Fishing Car.        *,\n1950 FORD 1\/2-TON PICKUP\nVery Good Rubber, Heater, Etc. A Real Soundifruck for the Farm.\n1949 FORD PICKUP\nThis Truck Needs a Little Loving and Coaxing.\n<\nI-\nz\no\n:QL'\nPONTIAC\nPONTIAC - BUICK \u2014 VAUXHALL \u2014 G.M.C. DEALERS\nTHE HOME OF MOTORING SATISFACTION\nWHERE EVERY DEAL IS SEALED WITH FRIENDSHIP\nBehind Bank of Montreal,\nNelson, B.C.\n. Phone 658-659\ns\nz\n00\nC\nO\nc\nX\nX\n>\nc\nr\n8\nz\nCD\nC\no\nC\nX\nX\n>\nc\nr\n-o\no\nz\nH\n>\nn\n00\nC\nO\n<\n>\nc\nX\nX\n>\nc\nBUICK\nVAUXHAUL        PONTIAC'\n \t\nE\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 1950'\nA BOOK BARGAIN\nYou Buy No. 1 and Get\nthe No. 2 in the Series\nFREE\nHARDY BOYS SERIES\nCHERRY AMES SERIES\nNANCY DREW SERIES\nn.29\nfor  Two   Books\nGood Reading for Juveniles\nAt A|l Times\nNine Provinces Share Road-Costs\nOdd!\nand\nby MD.fi\nWell, today s Till? day, the day\nto vrhieh students and teachers\n\u2022have been looking forward with\nmounting anticipation and to which\nmothers have been .looking with\nmounting dread. It is here at last\n\u2022the last day of school\u2014n<\nbut swimming  and playing  and\nstaying up later at -night-oh happy\nday.\n.-\u00bb\u00bb\u2022'\nToday, even the, smallest boy\ncan jump1 high, as *he sky, run\nfaster than the wind and shriek\nlouder than a jet. It is the day they\npush each other down and roll\naround in the grass like happy\npuppies. Even demure little girls\nfind the excitement of the hour\nalmost to much to contain, jumping up and down and running hither\nand ,yon like demented chickens,\n\u2022 \u2022 -*\u2022'   '\u25a0\nYesterday there were parties in\nthe elementary. schools and (or\nthose who didn't have them yesterday there'll be one today-to round\noff. the term. The pressure\/ of\nexams is off and there is much\nsteam to be blown off\u2014it is too\nmuch to have to sit still, stand\nstill or keep tongues, froni wag*\ngling. Soon the bell-will ge and\nsohool will 'be over for-two'months\nl\u2014oh ring them bells!  *\nBLE Signs Up With\nPacific Gf. Eastern\nV A N COUVER (CP) \u25a0'\"\u2014\u25a0 The\nBrotherhood of Locomotive Engi-\nneersthas signed a contract with\nPacific Great Eastern Railway for\nno wage increases in the next two\nyears, it was announced jointly,\nTuesday by union and management.\nHowever .there is an automatic\ntie-in between wages on the pro\nvincially owned railway ahd the\nCanadian Pacific. Railway. If the\nCPR grants its engineers an increase \u2014 the union is asking that\ncompany for 20 per cent \u2014 the\nPacific Great Eastern engineers\nwill get the same amount.\nThe agreement was regarded ai\nimportant because PGE engineers\nand firemen have been' pressing\nfor a B.C. differential-because of\n\u25a0generally higher wages here than\nelsewhere- ih Canada.\nThey did not press their claim\nin the contract, which runs until\nJuly, 1960. '}\nBusiness Spotlight...\nEast Canada's First Industrial\nSeminar Opens in Nova Scotia\n!grown ups' and life became inr\nfinitely more complicated.   '\u25a0'.,,,',\n' The grade nine pupils, who have\nbeen the seniors of Ihe junior high,\nWill become the lowly grade tens\nin high school\u2014in other words they\nrather get -taken down a peg. But\nof course all this is two months\naway. It's holiday time now and\nwhen you are young that's air the\ntime in the world.\n\u25a0OTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Nine provinces\n-jail except Quebec \u2014 now have\nnotified the federal government\n3tey want to enter agreements on\ncost-sharing {or roads entering into\nnatural -resources areas, Resources\nMinister Alvin Hamilton said Wednesday.\nfMr. Hamilton said in an interview that the latest- entrants are\nPrince Edward Island and Newfoundland.     .. t......\n|Mr. Hamilton said-no reply has\nhjen received from Quebec to the\nfederal offer to share the cost of\nsuch roads'oh a 50-50 basis up to a\n$1,500,000 federal contribution per\nprovince per year for five years.\nEarlier this month,' 'he announced that the central government has reached agreement in\nsubstance with- British Columbia\nand Saskatchewan and that these\nprovinces are going ahead with\nroads under the program.\nManitoba also had been authorized to proceed with construction\npending the signing of a general\nagreement, and negotiations then\nwere continuing with Alberta, Ontario, New Brunswick and Nova\nScotia.'\nClassified Ads Get Results!\nThey will go back.in the fall, an\ninch or so taller and ihto the'next\ngrade >they worked to attain this\nyear. There will be a new grade\none class and this year's grade\nones will no longer be the \"baby\nclass\", as some of the older grades\nrefer to them. They will br-r'youftg\nladies and gentlemen of grade two,\n\u00bb  \u00bb  \u00ab\nThe grade six class will be saying -goodbye to a school as well and\ntheir passing into grade seven and\njunior high will mark the end of\nan era for them. As I recall,\nmarbles and skipping ropes were\nno longer entertainments fprtjiese\nBy HARRY CALNEK\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nHALIFAX (CP) \u2014 The Nova\nScotia Light and Power Company\nLimited doesn't believe in having\nall its eggs in one basket.\nMore than a century ago the\nflrti\" started here with a transit\nsystem. Today the system\nmoney, but it is only one-facet of\nthe company's operation and ambitious expansion program.\nBesides, selling power \u2014 last\nyear -electricity sales totalled\n$11^732,343 \u2014 the company is helping Nova Scotia industrial development.\nThe first industrial seminar ever\nheld in Eastern Canada is bang\njointly- sponsored here Thursday\nby the power\/company and Crown-\nowned Industrial Estates Limited.\nThe firm!s industrial promotion\ngoes further than the seminar.\nThey have retained the servicesof\nFantus Factory Locating Service\nof New York and Chicago to\ndevelop Nova Scotia industry.\nRATES LOWER THAN U.S.\nLight and power officials.\ntheir rates are on a par-with the\nCanadian average \"and much\nlower than races prevailing anywhere on the United States Atlantic\nseaboard,\"\nThe largest single project was\n45,000-kilowatt addition to the\nHalifax thermal power plant.\nAt the same' time construction\nstarted on another 45,odo-kilowatt\ngenerator to be completed by 1959.\nThe eapacity of the Halifax gen-\neraitng:station will then bel70,000\nkilowatts;\nThe company hoard Of directors\nhave authorized another, generating plant in the 100,000-kilowatt\nrange across the harbor In a Dartmouth suburb. Itwm-he-eomple'ed\nby 1962-63. . *\/-\u25a0-\u25a0 . \"'\u25a0\"'\u2022 . ,.v    \u25a0*\n\"While there is. evidence of; a\nslowdown in general business in'\nsome parts of the continent,' little\neffect is noticeable here,\" company, president T. O. Mackeen said\nin his annual-report.,\nWe have'always been conservar\ntive in our outlook for the immediate future but we believe the\nfuture. holds, far more ' than the\npast.\" .\n135,000 HP. IN 5 YEARS\nThe construction program is\ngeared to future nfeeds. At present\n75,000 H.P. in generating, equip\nment is under construction. Over\nthe next five years 'plans, call for\nan additional 135,000: horsepower.\nWork has started on a 138,000-\nvolt transmission line from Halifax\nto Truro.. This will-be the company's part, of- an interprovincial\ngWd line connecting the power\nsystems of the New Brunswick\nElectric Power Commission, the\nNova Scotia* Power Commission\nand Nova Scotia Light and Power.\nCompletion of the line is set for\nnext year and- will make another\n100,000 H.P. available to company\ncustomers.\nAll the firm's power is derived\nfrom either thermal or hydro\nplants, Officials are keeping in\nclose -toiieh-. with nuclear developments, but say they will not consider building an \u25a0 atomic power\nplant until nuclear fuels are competitive with today's coal and oil.\nIn addition to the transit system\nand power generation the company\nalso operates electrical appliance\nstores in the province' and a 24--\nhpur-a-dajt repair service.\nKeep Your Eye on Classified!\nFive Summer Colognes\n>     \u25a0'.-'\u2022 'By   '\nTUSSY\nSAFARI,   CONTRABAND, '\nEARLY IRIS,\nWHITE CARNATION     -\nOnly $1.25\nSold Only at\nYour Rexall Pharmacy\nCity Drug\nSPORT\nSHIRTS\nfor\nSummer Comfort\nThese long arid short\nsleeve Sport Shirts will\nadd greatly to your summer comfort. In plain\nshades . *. neat patterns\nor stripes.      '\n$3.95 ond up\nEMORY'C\nLTD.     U\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nJ\nClassified Ads Get Results!\nHave The Job Done Right\nUIC GRAVEC\na       LIMITED        **\nPHONE 81S\nMASTER PLUMBER\n\u2022PLAYMOR-,\nPre-Holiday      (\non ihe\nMONDAY\nBuddy Mar\nComing From Vancouver-\nTo Appear With the\nROCOTONES\nNews of the Day\nRATES;\nrequest.\n30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nMinimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment.\nBabies, Weddings, Portraits\nVOGUE STUDIO \u2014 PHONE 1552\nNow available, a highly qualified\ntelevision service. Call 1302, Jeffery Radio and Appliances Ltd.\nBoys' smart- dress-up styles, in all\nsizes, at\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nFlags, pennants and crests\nHOBBY SHOP OPP. BUS DEPOT\nELECTROLUX SALES, J&AviCE\nClint Thompson'\n1215 Ward St. Phone 1108\nEverything for home canning or for thi\npreparation of frozen foods.\nCOLD PACK\nCANNERS\nWo. 157 Bright Blue $*>*\u00bb #i-\nEnamel, straight.-'._\u25a0 \u00bbrf\u00ab03\nNo. 367 Bright Blue *,\u00ab\u2022*) yf.\nEnamel; flared.\n\u2022A-    No. 247 Bright Blue Enamel.\nStraight  .\t\nM.30\n\"k Pyrex Measuring Cups\n1, 2 and 4 cup sizes.\n... :49c and up\n* Fruit Jar* Filler . .. .  .70*\n* Preserving Can Sealers\n* Preserving Cans and Lids\nLacquered and Plain.   \"''\n* Wooden Spoons\n#\n* Plastic Measuring Spoons\n* Strawberry Hullers\n-k Cherry Fitters\nit Preserving Kettles\nGive your lawn a bttpst with\nNitra-Pills fron\nCOVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP\nANNUAL GRANITE\npicnic   basket   supper,\n6 p.m. today.\nAD CUB\nTaghum:\ny\nPlate,  Sheet,  Safety,  Wirecr-snd\nPatterned Glass and -glass repairs.\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\n101 Hall St.    Nelson    Phone 156\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\nand permanents try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldfc\nSte. 211. Phone 1922.\nJ. O. RIESTERER, PLUMBING\nHeating, Repairs- .-.-\u2022-\nInstallations and Supplies\n'     Phone 42.\nSmart selection of wedding gifts\nto choose, from $4.95 up.\nBETTER BUYS AT\nBUTTERFIELDS\nNelson Rod and Gun Club Barrel\nDerby closing day has been set at\n5 p.m., Monday, June 30. Get your\ntickets now.\n1 3-piece chesterfield suite, exceptionally clean condition. 2-piece repossessed   davenport,   like   new,\nreduced to clear.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nBefore you buy a camera *be sure\nto see the wide selection of movie,\n35mm, Kodak and Ansco Cameras\nat\nTOWLER'S CUSTOM CAMERAS\nStanley St., opposite \"The Bay\"\nColor or B&W Film developed.-\n* Paring Knives\n* Jar Lifters\nir Jar Openers\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nTONIGHT\nWillow Point Church.Hall, 8 p.m.,\nCentennial social evening to honor\npioneers and demonstrate resusei-\ntator equipment. Moving pictures\nby Mr. H. Hinitt. Willow Point\nCentennial Committee.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nBOURGEOIS \u2014 Requiem High\nMass for the late Henri Joseph\nBourgeois of Crescent Valley will\nbe sung at the Cathedral of Mary\nImmaculate on Saturday at 10:00\na.m. Rev. Father R. Cain will be\ncelebrant and interment will be\nin Nelson Memorial Park. Rosary\nwill be \"recited at Thompson\nFuneral Home on Friday at 8:00\np.m. \u25a0 \"\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nMALLETTE \u2014 Funeral services\nfor the late Oliver Napoleon Mallette will be held oh Friday at 2:00\np.m. at the Thompson Funeral\nHome. Rev. H. R. Whitmore will\nofficiate and interment will be in\nNelson Memorial Park.\ni\nPhone 1530\nCo. Ltd.\nWholesale-Retail\nNelson, B.C.\nKeep Your Eye on Classified!\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327\n176 Baker St.\n%\n(when you buy a |ar-you get one 9-iluld-oz. |ar of Grape Jelly tree I)\n\"Yout'ttlove    t\nGRAPE-andallihe\nother kinds, too!\"\n1\nGomes off with an easy twfet\u2014\nno prying, no mess. Then\nscrews back on to seal all tbe\nflavorm.\nOne full-size Jar (9-oz.) of KRAFT'S new GRAPE JELLY\nFREE when you buy a Jar of any other variety of\nNEW KRAFT JELLIES\nWe want to prove to you\nhow good they are\n... that's why we make this generous free offer\nto get you tb try them! We think you'll agree\nthey taste even better than homemade. The\nreason: Kraft's special process captures the\npure friiit flavors often boiled away when yon\nput up jellies and preserves at home. The cooking vapors are caught and put babk in. But\ndon't take our word for how good they are.\nTry new Kraft-Jellies while this special offer\nlasts, and see for yourself! One offer to a\ncustomer.\n4Wonderful \\||\nVarieties \/ cr\n6 rape Jelly \u2022 Apple Jelly\nack   Raspberry  Jelly\na ba p p I e  Jelly\nTake this coupon\nto your grocer's\nfree! free!\nfree!\nThis coupon is good for a FREE Jsr of\nKraft Grape Jelly (9-oz. only) with the\npurchase of any variety of. now Kraft\nJellies at your grocer's.\n2fe the groeer: You aro authorized to act aa our agent ia redeeming this\ncoupon: A Kraft salesman will reimburee you for each coupon, in the amount\noflhe regular retail price of Kraft Grape Jelly O-ob. only) received, pins two\ncents for handling, provided you and tho customer have complied with the\nterms of this offer. Kraft Foods Lin-!ted. Mount Royal, Quebec (This\ncoupon void unless signed by the customer.)\nAddress.\nCity.\n_Zon\u00bb_\nLIMIT-ONE OFFER TO A CUSTOMER\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1958_06_26","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0430871","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1958-06-26 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1958-06-26 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"Nelson Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}