{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0430687":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2023-04-12","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1958-07-18","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0430687\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" Nelson's Record\n2143\nTraffic Fatality-Free Days\nvol. se      '   ~~    Wm '\nk^T\n>v>3\nWEATHER   FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Sunny and warm.\nA few thunderstorms on the mountains in the evening, Light winds.\nLow-high at Cranbrook and Crescent Valley SO and 90.\nUNStavesOff\nwn\nCouncil Hopes to Head Off Veto;\n\u2022 Russ May Call Emergency Session\ni By LLOYD McDONALD\nCanadian Press Sfcnff Water    , \u2022\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP) - The United Nations\nSecurity Council, faced with a deadlock over the Middle East\ncrisis, staved off a showdown vote by adjourning at 10:25\np.m.    Thursday    until    this\nmorning.\nThe adjournment raised some\nfaint hope of a compromise solution that would head off a big-\npower veto either by the United\nStates or Russia. The only alterna-\nBRITISH GOV'T\nWINS SUPPORT\nTroops Won't Fight\nRevolutionaries\nLONDON   (Reuters)   -The\nHouse   of   Commons   Thursday\nnight supported the government\nfor sending troops Into Jordan.\nThe Conservatives won a vote\nof confidence by 314 to 251.\nThe vote came aiter Prime\nMinister Maifnillan said British\ntroops would not be used against\nthe revolutionaries in Iraq. (Also\naee Page Three.)\nAneurin Bevan, the Opposition\nLabor party's foreign affairs\nspokesman, said: \"The government\nmay have taken a long step toward\nplunging this country-into war.\"\nMacmillan said Britain sent\ntroops to Jordan after learning of\na plot by the United Arab Republic\nto overthrow pro-Western King\nHussein. ...'-.        \u2022\u201e\u25a0\"'.\nHe strongly defended the troop\nlandings, stating that it \"is not\nright to abandon one's .friends in\ntimeof.trouble.\"\nBut Bevan retorted: \"Since when\nwas it the duty of our government\nto suppress revolution?\"\n\"If the.'rejjuest from.King Hussein ranks as a justification for\nputting troops -into Jordan, the\nIraqi government, in Baghdad\nwould be perfectly entilted to invite assistance frotn .Russia,\"\nBevan added..\n\"A KEPT COUNTRY* .\nSharply\" attacking \"governmehtl\npolicy, Bevan said: \"Jordan is;, s\nkept country and Hussein is a kept\nking and has been for many years.\"1\nBut Macmillan replied that the\nUnited Arab Republic of Egypt and\nSyria had planned a Thursday coup\nin Jordan similar to the one in\nIraq. British intelligence agents\nhad borne out King'Hussein's fears\nthat the revolt was planned.\nHe said Jordan had also asked\nfor aid from the United States and\nAmerican planes went on a reconnaissance flight over the country\nas a goodwill gesture before the\nBritish troops landed.\nThe United States had assured\nBritain of \"full moral support\" and\nSecretary of State Dulles had said\nhe believed the British action to\nbe right.\nMacmillan said Britain was flying 2000 troops into Jordan.as an\ninitial force.\n\"In the light of circumstances,\nwe will decide whether that number requires increasing,\" he said.\nEncouraging Trade\nWith Red China\nOTTAWA (CP) - The government is continuing to encourage\nCanadian exporters to do business\nwith Communist China - and looks\nforward to increasing trade with\n\u2022 that country \"substantially,\" Trade\nMinister Churchill said Thursday.\nIn a statement to the Commons\non Canadian trade prospects generally, the minister referred to the\nquestion of the United States embargo on sales to Communist\nChina, as they affect negotiations\nundertaken by Canadian subsidiaries of U.S. companies, and said\nthere is \"continuing consultation'\nbetween Canada and the U.S. on\nthe subject.\n\"Every effort is being made to\nfind an appropriate solution,\" Mr,\nChurchill said.\nlive then would be an emergency\nsession of the UN General Assembly itself which Russia this afternoon said she would call if necessary.\nSoviet delegate Arkady Sobolev\nlate in the. afternoon urged the\ncouncil to act immediately on Russia's call for withdrawal of the\nBritish and American troops from\nJordan and Lebanon. And if, as expected, the council became paralyzed by veto action, then the emergency assembly session should be\ncalled immediately.\nFrench delegate Pierre de Vau-\ncelles backed up the armed intervention by the other two big Western powers, but denied reports\nFrance would take similar action.\nThere were reports that Japan\nwas seeking backing for a compromise proposal, but its terms\nwere understood to be still wide\nopen.\nDelegate Alfonso Araujo of Colombia, Security Council president for July, called for the adjournment shortly after word of\nthe new Japanese mediation attempt was given the council by delegate Koto Madsudaira.\nCOMPLICATING FACTOR\nThe Japanese delegate. said. it\nwas not desirable for one country\nto take it upon itself to find a solution to, the current crisis. He was\nreferring primarily to the U.S.\nlanding in Lebanon. Japan felt that\nthe presence of foreign armed forces was likely to complicate the\nsituation.\nThe council president asked delegates to meet privately in the\nhope some compromise can be put\nbefore the council when it reconvenes at 10:30 a.m. * -.\nIt was apparent that all delegations were attempting to avoid the\nundoubted veto that would follow\nconsideration of the opposing American and Russian motions and negate the work, of the council. .\nBoth the British and the Ameri\ncan delegatefc'ttssurfed'' the- *eduii-'\ncil that'their .. governments were\nready to pull their troops ;out of\nLebanon and Jordan as soon as the\nUN itself could take up the task of\nkeeping the peace. Their contention, as expressed in the American\nmotion before the council, is that\nthe UN observer corps should be\naugmented by the type of. emergency force which took over along\nthe Egyptian border following the\nSuez invasion of 1956.\nWANTS EXPLICIT PLEDGE\nDr. Abdul Abbass of Iraq, whose\ngovernment' was overthrown in\nMonday's coup, asked \"for a very\nclear and unequivocal.statement\"\nby the U.S. and.Britain that their\ntroops will be withdrawn once the\n\"legally constituted governments\"\nof the two countries involved declared that' their presence was nd\nlonger necessary.\nJordan's delegate, invited to the\ncouncil table along with representatives of-Lebanon and the Egypt-\nSyria United Arab Republic, reiterated that his country \"would never\nbe dominated by the U.A.R.\" That\nwas why Lebanon had asked the\nU.S. for the help of its armed\nforces.\nThe Russian delegate once again\naccused the U.S. and this time included Britain in his charges, of\ninterfering in the domestic affairs\nof the Middle East area. He dismissed as a \"fairy tale\" the British and American contentions that\ntheir troops are in Jordan and Lebanon to protect these pro-Western\nArab states against agression by\nPresident Nasser's United Arab Re\npublic.\nNEW YORK (CP) - The Canadian dollar was off 1-32 at a premium of 4 9-32 in terms of'U.S.\nfunds; a week ago VA per cent\npremium. The pound sterling was\noff 1-16 at $2.80y4.\nNELSON. B.C., CANADA-FRIDAY MOSNING. JULY 18, 1958\nNot More Than 6c Daily, Uo Saturday\nNo. 74\nParatroopers Go to Jordan\nCanada to Back\nUN Police force\nBy GEORGE.KITCHEN'\nCanadian Press Stall Writer\n' WASHINGTON (CP) - Canada's External Affairs\nMinister Smith Thursday indicated Canada is prepared to\nprovide troops for a United Nations military force to stabilize the turbulent Middle East.\nFlying in from Ottawa for top-lev'el talks on Middle\nEast developments, he told reporters Canada, \"if requested,\ncould make a contribution\" of troops to protect the threatened Arab states of Lebanon and Jordan.\nAt the same time, he declared Canadian support for,\nBritain's military intervention in Jordan earlier Thursday.\nOTTAWA (CP) - The Canadian\ngovernment will give \"every encouragement and assistance\" to\nthe United Nations in efforts to\nform an emergency police force to\ntake over from British and U. St\ntroops in Jordan and Lebanon,\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker said\nThursday.\nEverything that Canada can do\nas a UN Security Council member\nwill be done to ensure early UN\naction, Mr. Diefenbaker told the\nCommons, saying he regards British and U. S. intervention in the\nMiddle East as \"interim\" action.\nBut he said getting the force together will be no> simple matter\nbecause of the possibility of a\nbig-power veto in the Security\nCouncil.\nThis would necessitate a two-\nthirds majority in the General Assembly for a UN police force.\nOPPOSITION QUESTIONS\nThe Prime Minister's statement\nfollowed a question by Opposition\nLeader Pearson asking whether\nTwiiter\nPicks Up Car\nVITA, Man. (CP) r- A small\ntornado Thursday picked up a car\ncarrying a man and five children,\nturned it around and put it dawn\nfacing the direction, it came from,\nbut no One was injured.\nOnly slight, damage was caused\nto the car when the. twister hit\nnear this town, which was severely\ndamaged'in a tofaado.^an6:i8,1955..\nJohn Homenuik, 38-year-old Gar-\ndenton district farmer, said he was\ndriving from Vita- to Gardentoh\nwhen the twister hit.\n\"I saw this black cloud and theii\nI saw it start coming down to the\nground,\" he said. \"I was going at\na pretty good speed\u201465 or 70\u2014\ntrying to pass it\n\"Then it hit the car and turned\nit right around heading in-the opposite direction. It tore the hood\nright up over the car. I was scared\nand shaky and I put the hood down\nand drove to Gardenton.:\nTOO SCARED TO TALK\n\"The children were all scared.\nWe were all so scared we could\nhardly talk.\"\nThe children were Theresa, 9,\nand Richard, 7, Mr. Homenuik's\nson and daughter, and three children of his sister, Mrs. Anita Kbn-\nstantuik of Ottawa, Kadra, Olga, 12,\nand Nestor, 9.\nThe tornado hit about 3% miles\nwest of Vita,. 50 -miles southeast of\nWinnipeg* near the United border.\nThere were no immediate reports of other damage although the\ntwister was -believed to have\ntouched in several places.\nBAD LEGISLATION,\nSAYS SENATOR\nOTTAWA (CP) - Senator C. G.\nPower (L\u2014Quebec) Thursday described as \"bad legislation\" a government bill authorizing trust\ncompanies to increase their lending powers by 25 per cent.\nThe measure would allow trust\ncompanies to lend up to 12% times\ntheir paid-up capital stock. The\nlimit now is 10 times their stock.\nSenator Power said in the Senate\nhe objects to the bill because there\nis no evidence that it will serve the\npublic interest. It would benefit only the trust companies.\nthe government would give \"strong\nsupport\" to the emergency-force\nidea.\nA demand for UN action also\ncame from CCF House Leader\nHazen Argue, who said \"all mem\nbers of this House\" support the\nidea wholeheartedly. The member\nfor Assiniboia said his party is\n\"exceedingly disturbed\" by the\nBritish action in landing airborne\ntroops in Jordan hut he, like Mr.\nDiefenbaker, said this was an interim action.\nMr. Diefenbaker told the House\nhe was notified \"in the early\nhours of the morning\" of the British decision to land 2000 air-borne\ntroops in Jordan.\nAt another point, the prime minister said Canada's representative\nat the Security Council is being instructed to consult urgently with\nAnglo-U. S. representatives, and\nother council members, on \"some\nformula\" for UN action which will\nachieve stability in the Middle\nEast. *\nSAFETY MEASURES i\nThe question of the safety of\nCanadian nationals in Middle East\ntrouble zones came up again when\nPaul Martin (L-Essex East) asked whether consideration has been\ngiven to. making a Royal Canadian\nNavy ship available \"if necessary\"\nfor evacuation purposes.\nDefence Minister Pearkes said\nno request for such. a ship has\nbeen made. Pressed for a direct\nanswer, Mr. Pearkes said Canadian navy vessels are available \"at\nall times,for>emergency purposes.\"\nFlaring Gas Well, Gold Planning\nShown Princess in B.C\/s North\nBy JACK BEST\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nFORT ST. JOHN, B. C. (CP) -\nPrincess Margaret arrived in\nnorthern British Columbia Thursday to begin a tour that will carry\nher through British Columbia's\nnorthland and then to the province's sunny interior.\nLooking fresh after a 2*4 - hour1\ntrip by air from Vancouver, thej\nprincess stepped from an RCAF!\nC-5 to a welcome from several:\nhundred pepple .gathered, at the\nairport in this northeastern B.C.\ncommunity.\nShe was wearing a perky white\nhat, with a full-skirted, sleeveless\ndress in pale blue and white\nprint.\n, Lieutenant,- Governor Frank\nRoss introduced F. E. Spicer,\nchairman of the Fort St. John, village council, and his counterparts\nfrom the communities of Dawson\nCreek, Pouce Coupe and Fort Nelson as well as business and military representatives.\ncess Margaret was w 1 sked\nthrough Prince George Thursday\nas an estimated 4000 spectators\nlined downtown streets to have a\nglimpse of the first royal visitor to\nthis north'central B.C. city.\nMayor Carry Jane Grey met the\nroyal visitor and introduced the\noldest resident of Prince George,\nMrs. Margaret (Grannie) Seymour\n106, and Peter Wilson, city solicitor\nfor 47 years.\nBefore boarding a special train\n... for  Quesnel,  Princess  Margaret\nflam* Hiprl  Arssm' watched Prince George's \"Century\nflame died  down Sam>,, Mex B  M ff|t_ pan three\ngold nuggets from a small brook\nnear the railway station..   .\nShe removed the elbow-length\nglove from her left hand and dipped into the muddy water to reach\nfor the gold in the pan.\n'Mr. Williston explained the pan.\nning.operation and presented the\nprincess with the three nuggets\nand a small silver plaque commemorating the occasion.\nSEES FLAMES FROM WELL\nThe princess saw flames belch\n100 feet into the air from a natural\ngas well. It was a flaring demonstration especially arranged for\nthe royal visit.\nThe princess withstood searing\nheat from the orange flame without flinching. At a signal from\nFrank McMahon, president of the\nWestcoast Transmission Com.1\npany, workers, \"flared\" the well,\nPacific Fort St. John No. 4, located five miles southeast of here,\nWheh the \t\nPrincess Margaret 'spent nearly\n10 minutes questioning Mr. McMahon about'-the operations of\nWestcoast, which gathers natural\ngas here in'the Peace River district -and pipes it to other parts\nof B.:C. and to'the United States\nPacific Northwest.-..\nLINE STREETS. IN ....\nPRINCE GEORGE ,   ,\nPRINGE GEORGE (CP) \u2014 Pno-I\nBLACK BALL\nMEN STRIKE\nVICTOBIA (CP) - Black\nBall ferries went on strike\nThursday night in defiance of\nthe Provincial Government\nwhich had seized the line under the Civil Defence Act. the\nstrike isolates Vancouver Island by ferry service from the\nB.C. mainland.\nProvincial Secretary Wesley\nBlack said he is attempting to recruit trained ships officers to keep\nthe Ball Ferries operating following the walkout.\nMr. Black said He had been in-\n\u25a0formed at 11 p.m. that the officers\nhad walked \/Off the vessels at\nNanaimo.\nUnder the Civil Defence Act, invoked by the provincial government in efforts to keep the service\nrunning in the face of a strike\nthreat, any employees who refuse\nto work in the face of the government order are liable to $500 fide\nor three months imprisonment.\nMr. Black issued an appeal for\ncaptains with deep sea licences\nand engineers with marine diesel\nexperience willing to work the\nferries to call him at his home\nhere.\nRockets Fired\nInto Space\nCHURCHILL, Man. (CP) - Two\nrockets were fired into the upper\natmosphere in a nine-hour period\nWednesday and Thursday by scientists taking part in International\nGeophysical Year experiments\nhere.\nThe first rocket fired by the\nAmerican scientists was a Nike-\nCajun model with solid fuel which\nreached an altitude of 86 miles\nafter being fired at' 5:37 p.m. CDT\nWednesday. Another of the same\ntype was fired at 2:22 a.m. CDT\nThursday. \/\nA payload of 60 pounds of instruments for measurement of the\nearth's scientific field was carried\nby the first projectile.\nInstruments to test air pressure,\ntemperature and density were carried by the second rocket. In the\nupper part of its trajectory, it\nejected a small sphere carrying an\naccelerometer and a transmitter\nto check rates of change in the\nvelocity of the sphere and the density of the atmosphere.\nSTRIKE VIOLENCE\nHALIFAX (CP) -\"The RCMP\nsaid Thursday, four persons have\nhave been charged with public mischief to private property in connection with a Tuesday night demonstration at a-Canadian Gypsum\nCompany plant near Windsor, N.S.,\nwhere 400 workers have been on\nstrike nearly nine months. Plant\nmanager M. E. King's car was reported damaged' by a barrage of\nlock* and rotten eggs,\nTo Help King Face\nThreats to Throne\nAMMAN (CP) \u2014 Britain sent 2,000 paratroopers to Jordan Thursday to help young King Hussein face up to new\nthreats to his throne. Britain thus joined the United States in\na military buildup in the smouldering Middle East. .\nKing Hussein asked for the British help, charging\nPresident Nasser's United Arab Republic had plotted to overthrow him. He feared a pro-Nasser coup Thursday such as the\none  that  killed  his  cousir \u2014 \"\nKing Faisal in Iraq Monday.\nQUARTET OF MISS UNIVERSE BEAUTY CONTEST entrants take an afternoon rainfall in stride at they pose en roof of a\nNew York hotel, From left are: Monlque Boulingguez, Miss\nFrance; Glrgltta Gardman, Miss Sweden; AMJa Bobrowska, Miss\nPoland, and Miriam Hadar, Miss Israel, Contest starts next week\nIn Long Beach, Calif.\u2014AP Wirephoto.\nCharges House Misled\nOn Trade Situation\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 An optimistic\nCommons review on Canadian\ntrade by Trade Minister Churchill\nThursday drew sharp opposition\ncriticism that he had ignored important facts and misled the\nHouse,\nThe minister said Canada's commodity exports during 1957 sailed\nalong at a record of almost $5,-\n000,000,000 and added that figures\nfor this year show even greater\nimprovement. The 1957 figure was\ntwo per cent higher, than 1956. \"\nf George McIIraith- (JL-Ottawa -:\nWest) said\" that ah- \"appareht\nimprovement in Canada's deficit\ntrading position with thettS.. resulted from a sharp decline in the\nimportation of capital goods to\ndevelop this country.\" .\nH. W. Herridge (CCF-fCootenay-\nWest) taking up mention'by Mr.\nChurchill that Canada expects a\nsubstantial build-up in trade with\nCommunist China, said the best\nway to start would be to extend\nBELIEVES JORDAN\nARMY LOYAL\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Gen. Sir\nJohn Glubbi who commanded Jordan's Arab legion for 17 years, said\nThursday night he believes the Jordanian army Still is \"fairly loyal\"\nto King Hussein.\nAttempts by Arab nationalists\n\"to go for .young officers with secret propaganda\" did not seem to\nhave succeeded, Glubb said in a\ntelevision interview\nBut he declared that the West\nwas rapidly losing the friendship of\nthe Arab world because Western\nnations did not realize the importance of propaganda.\n\"Colonel Nasser and the Russians have a regular technique for\ndisseminating ideas ... to stir up\nmistrust and hatred between the\nArab countries and the West,\" he\nsaid.\nThe general, who was retired by\nKing Hussein two years ago, said\nthe Arab nations were in \"an awkward dilemma.\"\n\"They dislike communism and\nthey do not want to be dominated\nby the Russians but they have\nbeen very much fed up with this\npropaganda to develop hatred\nagainst the West.\"\nRed China Trade\nProspects Good\nVICTORIA (CP) - Prospects for\nincreased trade with Red China\nare good, the B.C. government reported Thursday.\n\"The general increase in the\nstandard of living is accompanying\nChina's economic growth will undoubtedly lead to much greater opportunities for trade with that country,\" the B.C. bureau of statistics\nsaid in its monthly bulletin.\nA more comprehensive report on\ntrade possibilities with China is\nbeing prepared and will be available fropi the bureau later this\nmonth.\nThe bureau said recent purchases\nof prairie wheat, together with purchases of B.C. tfood pulp, paper\nproducts, fertilizers and magnesium shpw there are products which\nChina cdn buy from this country,\ndiplomatic recognition to that country's government.   .\nSAYS EXPORTS BETTER\nMr. Churchill said the improvement in Canada's export position\nwas due in great part to increased\noverseas shipments of Canadian\nwheat and uranium, and stepped\nup exports of beef cattle to me\nU. S. \u2022'.\nForeign trade was -vital to Canada, Mr. Churchill said, ahd a dominant influence was the U. S.   ,\n;\"One out ef every five Can*\ndials' \u2022derim'i*hls\"li'vel&ooc\" from\ninternational trade and Canadians\nin fact are more dependent on export trade' than are the people\nof any other industrialized nation.\"\nReferring to talks last week between President Eisenhower and\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker, he\nadded:\nThere is some evidence that the\ngovernment and public in the U.S.\nare becoming more keenly aware\nof the importance of good relations\nwith Canada.\"\nMajor points made by the- minister in his hour-long review:\ni. 1. Up to July 9 ia the current\ncrop year ending July 31, Canada\nhad.exported 297,600,000 bushels of\nwheat and flour, against 246,700 000\nbushels fo the same date last\nyear. \"It is now obvious that we\nwill- reach and exceed our ex-\nport.target of 300,000,000 bushels.\"\n2. The government anticipates\nbuilding up trade with Communist China substantially.\n3. Canada has a special appreciation of the West Indies Federation's problems of nation-building\nand as a trading partner.\nFEWER TRAVELLERS\nOTTAWA (CP) \"- Volume of\nhighway traffic that entered Canada on travellers' vehicle permits\nin the first six months of 1958 was\ndown fractionally from (he corresponding period last year, the bureau of statistics said Thursday. Entries in the period decreased to\n822,086 vehicles,.'down .7 per cent\nl&ctai WJUi vehioles a yeat ago.\n5 REMANDED ON\nCONSPIRACY\nKELOWNA (CP) - Five men\nwere remanded one week in court\nhere Thursday on charges of conspiring to cause an explosion.\nThe charges were laid by the\nRCMP following an investigation\nof recent bombings and attempted\nbombings in the Okanagan valley.\nThe men are John Antifeaff, 24,\nCrescent Valley; George Woykin,\n22; Kelowna; John Nazaroff, 21,\nCrescent Valley, Sam Konkin, 28,\nand his brother, Alex, 26, both of\nWinfield.\nThe men were brought here by\nspecial plane from Kamloops where\nthey have been held in custody.\nCanadian Output\nExpected to Triple\nOTTAWA (CP) - Canadians\nmay be producing around $51,000,-\n000,000 worth of goods and services\nannually by 1980, it is estimated\nin a study prepared for the Gordon!\nroyal ' commission on Canada's\neconomic prospects. The study was\ntabled in the Commons Thursday.\nThe figure \u2014 based on 1949 dollar values \u2014 would be almost\ntriple the $17,440,000,000 of 1955,\nthe base year for the commission's\nprojections as to' the country's\neconomic future.\n\"The agricultural labor force,\"\nit declares, \"will, it is thought,\ncontinue to decline, though at a\ndiminishing rate.\n\"Agriculture's share of the labor force in 1980 at seven per cent\nor eight per cent is expected to be\nabout half of its average' level\nfrom 1953 to 1955.\n\"The share of'the resources Industries may increase fractionally,\nwhile the share of primary manufacturing may diminish fractionally..\n\"together, these two related\ngroups of industries may continue\n,to employ just over 10 per cent of\nthe working population.\"\nfron-\nsaid  Syrian  troops  were\nmarching toward Jordan's\ntiers.\nLANDINGS AUTHORIZED-        I\nHussein, in a broadcast to his\npeople; said' the British landings\nwere' authorized by ah ' emer-\nbency session of 'Parliament.\nHussein blamed \"agents of international communism\" for in*'\nstigating the Iraqi revolt and\ncharged Moscow agents with at.\ntempting to destroy Arab freedom.\nThe British soldiers met with\nno resistance as they occupied\nAmman airport. A military\nspokesman said \"they had a jolly\ngood reception.\"\nAs the British forces winged ih,\nBaghdad radio repeatedly an-\nJordan, naming today as the day\nnounced a revolt was imminent in\nfor King Hussein's overthrow.\nThe 23-year-old king appealed\nfor help as a \"temporary measure until tills poor small country\ncan strengthen her Internal front\nand save the Middle East from\ninternational   communism,   corruption and blasphemy.\"\n' After the landings, a statement\nissued by the Jordan parliament\nsaid   the deputies  ana   senators\nfully supported Hussein's \"wise\nstep.\" I:\nThe British landing was the\nfirst time that British forces had\nentered Jordan since July, 1957,\nwhen an Anglo - Jordanian military\ntreaty expired. The treaty was ter-\nThe Soviet Union massed land,\nsea and air forces along its\nsouthern frontiers and announced\nmanoeuvres will start today in\nareas bordering Turkey and]\nIran.\nThere were  more  than 800C\nU.S. and British troops in Lebanon,\nJordan and Turkey.\nHEAVY FORCES AT SEA\nWith 3400 marines already\nashore in Lebanon and more than\n1000 paratroopers in Turkey, the\nUnited States sent two aircraft\ncarriers, a heavy cruiser and 16\ndestroyers into Lebanese waters,\nThe French cruiser de Grasse\nanchored off Beirut. The Royal\nNavy sent the 43'000-ton aircraft\ncarrier Eagle into the eastern\nMediterranean.\nMore British paratroopers left\nCyprus   for   Jordan   Thursday\nnight, i\nMore U. S. paratroopers were\nbeing flown to the Middle East\nfrom their NATO bases in West\nGermany and reinforcements\nwere on the way for the German\nbases from the United States.\nBritain already has a submarine\nsquadron in the eastern Mediterranean.\n! Prime Minister Harold Macmillan told Parliament that paratroopers were flown from Cyprus to\nJordan at King Hussein's request\nto head off a plot. Macmillan said   ....  ._    \t\nthe plot was hatched by Nasser's minated at Jordan's request after\nrepuhlic of Egypt and Syria. He I mounting anti-British feeling here,\nMarines Swing Into Action\nBEIRUT   (CP).\nAmerican\nmarines swung into action here\nThursday in a brief but bloodless\nsniping exchange - with Lebanese\nrebels.    . -,,\nThe marines opened fire after\nsnipers had been shooting at\nthem for several hours, jm -Am.\nerican spokesman said. The sniping stopped immediately.\nThe clash at the Beirut airport\nwas the first military, action by\nthe marines since they landed\nTuesday to support the regime of\nPresident Camilla Chamoun. No\nmarines were hurt, U.S. spokesmen said. .\n.'\u25a0   The sniping was a blunt Indication of the .growing  discontent\namong the Moslem population at\nU.S. intervention in the revolt-\ntorn Middle East country.\"\nSaeb Salem, the rebel leader In\nBeirut,, ordered  his followers\nWednesday to concentrate   their\nopposition against the marines:\nTWO MARINES DISARMED\nTwo marines were kidnapped\nDOUGLAS NOT\nINTERESTED\nSASKATOON (CP) - Premier\nT. C. Douglas, mentioned in many\nquarters as possible successor to\nM. J. Coldwell as national CCF\nleader .said Thursday he doesn't\nwant the job.\n\"I said.last year I.wouldn't consider the national leadership,\" he\ntold a reporter at the Saskatchewan CCF convention.\n\"I haven't changed my mind\nthis year. My answer is still no,\nDelegates to the; provincial convention here said they expected\nMr. Douglas would be asked to\naccept the leadership at the national convention in Montreal next\nweek.\nA top party official said there\nprobably also will be pressure on\nMr. Coldwell to continue in the\npost. He has said he intends to\nresign.\nby insurgents during the day but\nwere released . unharmed several\nhours later. The rebels were reported to have taken .their arms.\nThere was grumbling among\nLebanese legislators. Almost two-\nthirds of the entire parliament was\nreported \u25a0 opposed.-to the landings.\nSome pro-Western* deputies complained that the marines had infringed upon the independence and\nsovereignty of Lebanon.'\nSpeaker Adel Osseyran, normally pro - Western, said, he expects to call a special session ol\nparliament' to consider the com\nplaints. _'\u2022-'\"\nGov't to Start\nFerry Service\nVICTORIA \u2014 Premier Bennett\nannounced Thursday afternoon the\nB.C. government will start a fast\n[ferry service . between Schwartz\n[Bay at the tip of Saanich Peninsula\nand the mainland coast just north\nof Point Roberts. The government\ndecision was made as the result of\ncontinual threats by unions regarding impending strikes on the existing ferry services and failure of the\nFederal authorities to settle the\nCPR strike.\nThe new service will start within\n12 months. The government is getting two-ferries built of the type on\nthe Nariaimo-Horshoe Bay run of\nBlack Ball Linos which the government recently took ov?r on a temporary basis to prevent a halt in\noperation through a threatened\nstrike.\nUNDERGROUND PARKING\nTORONTO (CP) - Canada's\nfirst underground parking garage\n\u2014with space1 for 1320 cars\u2014is to\nbe opened here July 28, it was announced Thursday. It is located\nunder part of the civic Square at\ndowntown Bay and Queen Streets.\nTeacher-Trustee\nLiaison Arranged\nVANCOUVER (CP) - British\nColumbia teachers and trustees\nare setting up a liaison committee\nto handle mutual problems.\nA joint release Thursday by B.C.\nSchool' Trustees Association and\nB.C. Teachers Federation said the\nliaison group would be called the\nProvincial Teacher-Trustee Joint\nCommittee. If approved by both\norganizations, the first meeting is\nexpected fort September.    \t\nAnd in This Corner ...\nWARRINGTON, England (AP) \u2014 The roar of a cannon shattered the peace oi Withers Avetjue.\nThen whistling through the air came a volley of croquet balls.\nOne crashed through a window and landed on George Carter's\nbed.. '   . <\nAnother shattered a window in Mrs. Kathleen Anscomb's house.\nThe croquet balls were followed into Withers Avenue by red-\nlaced Maj. E. S. B. Talot, commanding officer of Peninsular Barracks, three streets away.\n'\"There's been some horseplay at my farewell party,\" the major\nexplained. \"They've been firing croquet balls out of an old cannon.\nCan't understand how they went so far.\"\n\"The cannon is a trophy from 1700-and-something,\" he said.\n\"Everybody fires it sooner or later. The croquet ball usually just\nrolls out the end and trickles across the barrack square.\"\nSPARTANBURG,   8.C.   (AP) \u2014 The Jailer knows, the towp\n-  knows and now you know, '\nBut the two teen-agers In the county's new Jail don't know \u2014\nyet \u2014 their efforts to scrape through a cement wall with a bent tin\ncup as a chisel have been detected electronically since Tuesday\nnight.   .'.\"'\u25a0'.\nJailer Carlisle Bruckman says the boys will be told to stop today.\nAnyway, he adds, they were only digging harmlessly toward another cell.\nCHILLICOTHE, Mo. (AP) \u2014 Sheriff Kelsie Reeter thought he\nheard children crying in a nearby wooded area surrounded by flood\nwaters from the Grand River..\nHe got a rowboat and investigated, but found no children.\nThe sheriff did find two kids standing on a-floating log. He\nrescued both young goats.\n 2 \u2014 NELSON PAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1958\n^tM&GU^UO we'rebsckt\n%<^^ \u2022'' for you and your family to see and enjoy,\nagain -and again\/\nW Walt Disney &\nSnow WH He\nand the Seven Dwarfs recmoowk\n\u25a0\u2022*\nChildren\n25e\nCIVIC\nX FAMOUS\nPLAYERS\nTHEATBJ\n7:00-9:00\nTonight and Saturday\u2014One Complete Show at 9:10\nThis is THE MAN...\n'who came a thousand\nta.,.   uy. -\nmiles to kill someone\nhe'd never seen!.\n\u25a0James Stewart\nTHE  MAN\nrROM IftRAMlB\nnoiwnuiu com anon\nMov Oonold .\u25a0*, bMrf\n\u00abBINB>V * CKBP - ODONNOL\nHK0L \u2022 MatMAH0H\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTonight, Saturday\n\"APRIL LOVE\"\n(One-CoJor)\nPat Boom, Shirley Jones\nCARTOON and NEWS\nta\nIliT\nDRIVE-IN\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\n'   Tonight, Saturday\n\"A MAN ALONE\" (Color)\n- Plus -\n\"Phantom of the Rue Morgue\"\n(Color)\nOne Showing 9:05 p.m.\nAuto-Vue Drive-In\nTRAIL,- B.C.\nTonight and Saturday\n\"COURAOE OF\n-     BLACK BEAUTY\"\n_ Jehu Crawford, Mlml Gibson\n\u2014Also\u2014\n\"ABOMINABLE SNOWMAN\"*\nShows Start at Sundown\nCanada's first newspaper was\nth* Halifax Gazette, first published os March 25th 1752.\nNELSON'S\nCENTENNIAL\nEVENT OF THE YEAR\nR.C.M.P.\nWORLD FAMOUS\nMusical Ride\n\u00bb\nand\nBand Concert\nJuly 25th\nti\nCivic Centre Grounds\n6:30 - 8:00 p.m.\nBUY YOUR TICKETS\nIN ADVANCE FROM\nChamber of Commerce, Ben\nSutherland's, Godfreys' Limited,\nGilker's Limited, Mann Drug,\nEmory's Limited, Kootenay\nStationers, Ramsay's, Fred\nWhiteley's, C. W. Appleyard\nand Co.\nPrices: Adults $1.00\nChildren SOe\nNo   children   tickets   sold   In\nadvance.\nAddress mail orders for tickets\nto\nKELSON\nCHAMBER OF COMMERCE\n-u.\u2014:\t\nKiwanis Guests\nTwo former Nelsonites were\nguests of the Kiwanis Club at its\nsupper meeting at the Hume Thursday night.\nThey were Capt. Thomas Powell\nof the Salvation Army,, visiting\nNelson before going to his new post\nat Medicine Hat, Alta., and R.,P.\n(Bob) Riesterer of Wenatchee,\nWash., former Nelson alderman,\nMr. Riesterer, a former Nelson'\nKiwanian, is holidaying here,\nCaptain Powell, educated here,\nleft Nelson In 1042 to enter officer\ntraining and was commissioned in\n1943. He has served in Weyburn,\nSask., Flin Tion, Man., Sault Ste.\nMarie, Ont., and North Bay, Ont.\nHe was a member of Kiwanis\nclubs in the two Ontario centres.\nPresident Dr. Joseph Vingo reported five members and their\nwives took part in an inter-club\nmeeting at Priest River, Idaho.\nHOT   DAYS  AHEAD\nInvest In\nSuntan  Comfort\nCOPPER TONE\nPla\u00bbtle'Tube .,- 98o\nGI\u00abM Bottle       $1,50\nSqueeie Bottle  !......' $1.76\nNELSON\nPHARMACY\n\"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine Ph. 1203\nWOMB WIDE PICTURES\n\u25a0ptesonls\nTHE DRAMATIC\nBRIY GRAHAM\nEVANGELISTIC FILM\nami?   7 \u25a0 \u25a0\nHIART\nisa\nREBEL\n\u00bb\"\"in9 ETHEL WATERS    '\nGEQRGIA LEE -JOHN MILFORD\nwith ths [111 I Y GRAHAM TEAM\nALL SEATS FREE\nBETHEL TABERNACLE\n70S Baker St.\nTONIGHT\n8:00  P.M.\nEVERYBODY WELCOME\nLOAD TOO BIG FOR\nLAW, FINED $15\nA $15 fine was imposed Thursday\non Fred Tedesco of Nelson after he\npleaded guilty to a charge of operating a lumber truck with a load\nin excess of the maximum 12 feet\nsix inches.\nHe appeared in provincial magistrate court before Magistrate William \"Evans.\nJohn Chernenko of Nelson was\nfined $25 and costs when he pleaded guilty to a charge of having\nliquor in his possession while still\na minor.\nHospital Plan\nIjWorks Smoothly\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nadministrator R. H. Procter said\nWednesday the change-over to the\nnew federal-provincial health plan\nwent off smoothly.\nThe greatest change, he said,\nwas the reduction in residence\nqualifications from one year to\nthree months.\nUnder the new scheme, any qualified B.C. resident travelling out of\nthe province may obtain inpatient\ncare due to an acute illness or injury and is entitled to have payments made on his behalf.\nThe payment rate, however, will\nnot exceed the standard ward rate\nin the province where the B.C.\nresident is hospitalized or the $12\na day benefit given by B:C.\nThe B.C. resident is still expected\nto pay $1 a day which would correspond to co-insurance if he was\nhospitalized in this province.\nMr. Procter explained, however,\nthat B.C., residents cannot deliberately leave this province for hospital treatment elsewhere unless it\nhas been previously-established the\npatient must have special care at\nanother centre.\nPersons hospitalized outside the\nprovince, within three months-of\nleaving B.C., will still be entitled\nto benefits on application but in no\ncase will they receive payments beyond a total of three months.\nThe Insurance Commission may\nextend the period of benefits for\ncoverage of B.C. students attending\nrecognized schools, universities, or\neducational institutions outside the\nprovince.\nThe new plan also provides that\nthe head of a family, who maintains\nhis home and family in B.C., can\nwork outside the province and still\nreceive the hospital benefits.\nThe Weather\nNELSON  59 93 -\nRegina   53 72 .08\nCalgary   48 78 \u2014\nPenticton     60 92 \u2014\nVancouver   62 81 \u2014\nCIDER CENTRE\nChildleigh in Devonshire, England, long famed for its cider, was\nrebuilt after a great fire in 1807.\nForty-five members of the RCMP Regina band will present a concert and marching display here July 25. Inspector Lydall, conductor, has selected a varied repertoire of\nconcert, march and popular music for the program. Tour of the band through the province is sponsored by the B.C. Centennial Committee.\nCity Council Wednesday night passed a motion calling for regular police checks of city garages and service stations operating on the new extended hours system,\nThe motion was put forth by alderman B. C. Affleck,\nwho said it is important the operators are conducting the\nsystem according to the city'\nbylaw.\n\"The service station operators\nhaven't kept faith with us with\nrespect to the promises they made\nbefore Council, Mayor T. S. Short-\nhouse said.\nHe rhade the statement during a\ndiscussion on lack of direction\nsigns which the operators said\nwould be installed at the three approaches to the city and in the windows of city service stations, to\ndirect motorists to the stations\nopen after regular hours.\n* *  *\nCouncil gave first and second\nreading to a bylaw containing provisions for the operation, maintenance and management of the waterfront airstrip.\n* *  *\n'The Nelson Recreation Commission has turned over $1288 to the\ncity from summer recreation fees.\nThere were 465 members of the\nsummer program.\n* *  *\nCity buses In June, compared\nwith the corresponding month last\nLazy Drivers\nPark on Wrong\nSide of Streef-\nPoiice Chief Robert Harshaw\nsaid Thursday vehicle parking on\nthe left side of city streets is prohibited by the provincial Motor\nVehicles Act and a city bylaw but\nthat his department does not plan\nlo crack down, on offenders.\nHe said, however, it is a dangerous practice and offenders are\nliable to prosecution. A number of\ndrivers have been warned, he said.\nChief Harshaw was questioned by\na Daily News reporter after a tour\nyear, travelled- fewer miles, used\nmore gas, carried more passengers\nand increased revenue by $99.\nTotal revenue for the month was\n$2153, compared with $2054 during\nJune, 1957.\nThey carried 27,644 passengers\nlast month, compared with 26,411\nduring June last year.\nLast month the buses covered\n5387 miles and used 1517 gallons\nof gas.\n* *  *\nA report from R. H. Procter, administrator of Kootenay Lake General Hospital, said cost of construction on the new hospital during June was $159,054.\nThe total expended to date is\n$1,096,954.\nTwo-thirds of that amount is\ncovered by the federal-provincial\ngovernments' grants, 55 per cent\nof the balance is paid by the Kootenay Valley' Hospital Improvement District and the remaining\n45 per cent of the balance is paid\nby the city of Nelson. .     \u00bb\nDuring June, with an average of\n85 men employed on the building,\nexterior painting was started and\ninterior plastering was progressing\nwell.\n* \u2022  *\nG. L.. Phillips, CPR superinten\ndent here, told Council he has approached the management of his\ncompany for the necessary approval required by the city before\nCouncil can determine whether or\nnot owners of private aircraft will\nbe allowed to build shelters at the\nairstrip.\nCouncil Criticizes\nCoast Newspaper\nCity Council Wednesday night expressed dissatisfaction over coverage the city received in the' Cen-\nthrough the-city during the P^t!\u00bbij.\u00ab\u00bbvi^1&1'ed * \u00b0\u00bb\nweek when at-least 30 vehicles! Vancouver Province.\nwere found improperly parked.\nIn a two - Mock stretch alone\nnine cars were parked with their\nwheels against the left side of the\ncurb.\nChief Harshaw said many motorists offer the excuse that during\nwinter months they are forced to\npark on the left side pf the street\nto enable vehicle traction on the\nslippery sarface. But he said a\ncontinuation of the practice during\nthe summer is laziness.\nThe Motor Vehicles Act does not\nexempt motorists from parking on\nthe left side of a roadway during\nthe winter.\n\"I won't say we are going to\nclamp down on the offenders,\"\nChief Harshaw said In answer to\na reporter's question.\nAlthough it made no formal protest, individual members voiced\nseparate opinions about the inside\nparagraphs the paper devoted to\nthe color and history of -this' city.\nMayor T. S. Shorthouse was the\nfirst to complain.\n* \"This is an.inland empire and\nVancouver depends a. great deal\non the production of this area. I'm\nsure Trail must also be disappointed over the poor coverage.\nThe Province enjoys a good circulation in this region and we should\nprotest its coverage.\"\nAlderman B. C. Affleck agreed.\n\"It is all too true the province\nends at Hope.\"\nCouncil referred to two paragraphs contained in a centennial\nstory about west Kootenay.\nSPUTNIK\nSEEN AGAIN\nTwo groups pf observers in the\nhigher areas of Nelson saw Sputnik III shoot across the Nelson sky\nlow on the northern horizon, Thurs-\nnight.\nM. J. Severyn, 1004 Carbonate,\nand a group of friends, and another group at the home of Frank\nBach, 302 Union Street, told the\nDaily News and CKLN they had\nseen the ton-and-a-half satellite, at\n10:03.\nThey said it was \"much duller\"\nthan on previous nights. It was first\nvisible close to the Grohman Creek\nregion and disappeared in the Kokanee Park area.\n'Rossland amateur astronomer\nRobert McAllister said that Sputnik probably would disappear for\na couple of days, then reappear at\nthe weekend, between 10:30 and\n11 p.m.\nCity Fire Loss Soars\nIn Month of June\nFire destroyed city property valued at $106,000 during\nJune. .7*\nThe loss is the) highest in any month so far this year\nand.is more than $100,000 higher than in the previous month.\nCity'fire chief E. S. Owens, in\na monthly report submitted t6 City\nCouncil Wednesday night, said the\nloss total of $106,430 is the result\nof five fire calls received by the\ndepartment during the-month. .\nHeaviest, loss was suffered by\nPeebles Motors Limited in an early\nmorning fire that gutted their main\nstreet garage June 21.\nDamage has been estimated at\n$105,000.\nFiremen were called to two car\nfires during' the month, a bakery\nblaze, and a mattress fire at the\nOld Men's Home, 618 Lake Street.\nTwo resuscltator calls \u2014 one of\nthem successful \u2014 were included\nin the'report.\nOne involved treatment to a\nswimmer pulled from Kootenay\nLake. Firemen were successful in\ntheir rescue.\nTheir efforts failed to revive a\nCPR electrician, electrocuted at\nthe railway yard.\nThe June calls kepi, firemen at\n'work for a total of 10 hours and\n38 minutes, four hours longer than\nin the previous month,\nDuring that time five firemen\ncame perilously close to losing\ntheir lives, and one suffered a\nfractured foot.   '\nOne outside call took firemen 10\nmiles south on the Ymir highway\nwhere a transport truck' caught\nfire from a blocked gas line. Damage to the vehicle, owned by an\nEdmonton company, was estimated\nat $3500.\n\u25a0 Actual fire fighting was only a\npart of the department's wori> during the month.\nIt assisted, with flag raisings,\npumping of basements and department training. In addition they\ninspected nine apartments and hotels, seven schools, and 21 other\nbuildings:\n'ailed To Stop,\nHil Olher (ar\nSturdy Interested\nIn PC Leadership\nTRAIL (CP) - David Sturdy,\nthe Vancouver lawyer who last\nyear defended himself successfully\nin a slander suit brought by former\nB.C. forest minister Robert Sommers,- said Wednesday he is interested in standing for leadership of\nthe B.C. Progressive Conservative\nparty. '\nMr. Sturdy, who announced recently he. had resigned from the\nLiberal party, said in an interview\nhe is palling on local conservative\nleaders in B.C. seeking their support for a leadership convention.\n\"I would seriously consider\nthrowing my hat in the ring if a\nG. Sanderson\nPasses al J6\nA resident of Nelson for 14 years,\nGeorge Sanderson died in Kootenay\nLake General Hospital Thursday at\n[the age of 76 years.\nBorn in Lancashire, England,\nMr. Sanderson came to Canada in\n1905 and settled in Ontario, later\nmoving to Manitoba and Saskatchewan. In the Second World War\nhe served for two years as a military policeman in Chilliwack.\nMr. Sanderson Was a member\nof the Canadian Legion and the\nMasonic Lodge.\nHe is survived by one brother,\nJames L. Sanderson of Alder-\ngrove, B.C.; two daughters, Mrs,\nSelind Durgan of North Battleford,\nSask., and Mrs. Robert George of\nVancouver, and one 6on( George\nSanderson of Aldergrove.\nAn Albertan who drove his car\nthrough a stop sign at Cedar and\nVernon Street and smashed into\nthe back of another car was fined\n$15 and costs in city police court\nThursday.\nJohn Ekkel of Iron Springs, Alberta, pleaded guilty to a charge\nof failing to stop for a stop sign\nwhen he appeared in court before\nMagistrate R. S. Nelson.\nTotal damage to the vehicles was\nestimated at $100.\nMelvin E. Warner, 1002 Hoover\nStreet, was fined $10 and costs on\na charge of speeding. He pleaded\nguilty to the charge.\nWarner was checked on Nelson\nAvenue Wednesday.\nlarge and influential group asked\nme,\" he said.\nHe said he is urging a leadership\nconvention because without such' a\ncontest there is no change the\nparty could win the next provincial\ngeneral election. He said he is at\npresent calling on party leaders in\nthe B.C. Interior on his way to\nBanff for a vacation.\nAdult Swimming\nLessons To Resume\nNelson Recreation Commission\nwill reinstate adult. swimming\nlessons at the float at Lakeside\nPark.\nStarting Friday, lessons will be\nheld Monday, Wednesday and Friday oi each week. Classes will be\nheld in the early evening.\nA speed swimming class will\nbe held at the float until Rotary\npool is again in operation.\nInstruction will be given by\ncity lifeguards.\nKeep Your Eye on Classified!\nSlight Rise in Coast\nEmployment Figures\nBIG TRUCK AND SMALL STREET made a poor combination at Vernon and Ward\nStreets Thursday afternoon' when this huge semi-trailer van broke an axle as lt turned\nup Ward Street. The unit blocked traffic on Ward Street for several minutes before a\nsmciHer truck pushed it out of the intersection,\u2014Daily News photo.       - '\nEmployment in the Pacific Region showed a slight Improvement during the month of June\naccording to the Monthly Summary of Employment Conditions\nreleased today by Horace Keetch,\nRegional Director, Unemployment Insurance Commission,\nVancouver.\n\"Because of certaifi adverse influences; however, including variable markets, bad weather conditions and in part, work stoppages\nas the result of unsuccessful wage\nnegotiations, the total number of\npersons seeking work remains well\nabove last year's level\", the regional director,stated.\n(No figures for June have yet\nbeen released, but on May 22nd\nthere was a total of 74,805 persons\nregistered for work in the Pacific\nRegion as compared with 37,583\nduring the corresponding month of\nlast year.)\nIn^the logging industry production was up slightly from May. Log\ninventories are at higher levels\nthan in 1957, and there was a general improvement in market conditions for lumber which permitted a number of sawmills to continue production at maximum capacity. And as the result of a sharp\nupswing in home building in the\nUnited States, there have been increased export demands for lumber\nand shingles.\nRECOVERY IN KOOTENAYS\nSome of the larger mills in the\nlower mainland area have taken on\nadditional shifts and some recovery\nwas also evident in the Okanagan\nand Kootenay areas.\nWith the exception of one plant\nwhich recently closed, the pulp and\npaper industry continues to operate\nat full capacity. Export shipments\nwere up 67% over those of last\nyear, and at least one mill is operating three shifts on a seven day\nweek basis.\nThere was no appreciable change\nin the mining industry and some\nsections of manufacturing have not\nyet recovered former levels of production and this has resulted in\na market surplus of. all types of\nmanufacturing skills and labour.\nIn the shipbuilding industry, the\nprincipal yard in the .lower mainland has been able to maintain its\ncrew of approximately 1,250 workers, but on Vancouver Island conditions\" in the shipyards are not\nquite so promising.\nJob opportunities for executive\nand professional personnel in the\nmajor centres are brighter with\nVancouver ' reporting an increase\nof 20% over those available during\nthe previous month.\nIn commenting upon the general\nemployment situation throughout\nthe Pacific Region, Mr. Keetch\nstated: \"There are a number of\nadverse influences mainly responsible for the unusually high number\nof persons registered for work at\nthis time, and once, these have|\nbeen removed I think we can confidently look forward to a significant\nimprovement in the overall employment situation.\"\nNew Manager for\nNelson Funeral Home Ltd.\nMR. W. F. DALUNQ\nBorn in Castle - Douglas,\nScotland, also went to school\nthere. Served an apprenticeship in his father's undertaking business. Joined the\nRoyal Air Force in 1941 and\ntrained in Canada as a pilot.\nReturned to Canada in 1948,\nmoving to Kinnaird, B.C, in\n1949, Was employed by the\nCM. & S. Co. Ltd. in Trail\nfor the past eight years.\nHe is an instructor in St.\nJohn Ambulance first aid and\nis also a trained Industrial\nFirst Aid attendant, certified\nin the application of Oxygen\nTherapy. He is Chairman of\nthe St. John Centre in Castlegar, B.C.\nHe is planning to move his\nfamily to Nelson as soon as\naccommodation is found.\nAdvt.\nTib efrertlsMtenl li nel ft\\MH or\nhf tin liquor tortlrfl! Board or By t\nBMBrnment ot Brlti'h fjhrmWi\nT-Shirt\nSale\nOn Until Saturday Night\nPenmans, Ken ley, Harvey Woods\nReg. $2.95\n$2.29 E-ch _ 3 ^ $6.50\nReg. $3.95\n$2.89 e\u00abh _ 3 ^ $8.00\nReg. $4.95\n$3.89 E\u00ab\u00abh _ 3for$7J.50\nGODFREYS' LTD.\n378 Baker St.\n ' **jArt^MPnS*aRHWS<'\n. AN INTERESTING STORY originating In the\nWindermere District came to a tragic ending in\nthe Mount Eisenhower area, Alberta. A steam\nboiler of ancient vintage was being transported\nfrom a farm dear Wilmer to Wetaskiwin, Sask.,\nwhere it was to be Included in the Western Canadian Pioneer Museum ot early farm and mill\nmachinery. An official of the museum had learned about the old boiler while visiting this area\nearlier in his private plane. The boiler was loaded\non a lowboy at the farm, and lay overnight at\nAthalmer ready for a dawn start Saturday. Sunday word reached Invermere that the brakes had\nfailed and the machine had crashed into the truck\ncab, killing the driver. A second man accompanying jumped from the cab but was seriously injured\nand further word from Banff indicated that he\nlater died. Heinz Seel of Edgewater. was apparently the last man to use the boiler about 1927.\nGarages) Stations\nGiven Permits\nFor Longer Opening\nCRANBROOK - Seven city\ngarages or service stations have\napplied for and been granted permits by the city to operate outside\nthe new Shops Closing Bylaw which\npledges all businesses to 6 p.m.\nclosing. . -\nMORE CUTTING FOR\nYOUR DOLLAR WITH\nHomelite\nDIRECT   DRIVE\nCHAIN SAW\nBuy Ihe chain'\nsaw thai gives\nyou Uie most\nlor your tut.\nlinj JM\"' B\u00bb\nIherjiiw Home-\nlite direct drive model.\n7-19. light, H pounds\nGot a free demonstration.\nNew 7-MONrH WARRANTY\n6.5 Horsepower\nONLY $233 with 12\" Blade\nHOMELITE\nSALES & SERVICE\nLTD.\n536 Stanley St.  \u2014  Phone 2042\nNelion, B.C.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\nFRIDAY\/JULY 18, 1958\n12:25\u2014News\n5:59\u2014Sign On     -\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05\u2014Wake Up Time\n6:30\u2014News\n6:35\u2014Wake Up Time\n7:00-Chapel in the Sky\n7:15\u2014Wake-Up Time\n7:25\u2014Sports News\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Wake Up Time\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Opening Markets\n8:20\u2014Breakfast Varieties\n8:30\u2014All the Weather\n8:35\u2014Varieties\n8:55\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:00\u2014News\n9:10\u2014Morning Music\n9:15\u2014Story Parade\n9:25\u2014Wofnen Today\n9:30\u2014Woman's World\n9:35\u2014Song Serenade\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Musical Interlude\n10:15\u2014Summertime\n10:45\u2014Musical Interlude\n10:55\u2014News\n11:00\u2014Morning Melodies\n11:15\u2014U.N. Program\n11:30\u2014Song Serenade\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Prairie News\n1:00-CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Matinee ,\n1:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n2:0O-rMystery of Edwin Drood\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\ni:30\u2014Pacific News\n3:40^-B.C. Road Report\n3:45\u2014Rocking With  Boates\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014Rolling Home Show\n5:30\u2014Parliamentary Roundup\n5:35\u2014Rolling Home Show Part 2\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10-Sports News\n6:15\u2014Closing Markets\n6:20\u2014Mantovani\n6:30\u2014Christian Science\n6:45\u2014After Dinner Music\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Evening Concert\n8:00\u2014Portrait of a Woman\n8:30\u2014The Four Gentlemen   .\n8:45\u2014Arranged by Johnny Burt\n9:00\u2014Songs of My People\n9:30\u2014Who Is The Composer?\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Talk\n10:30-Ste. Anne de Beaupre\nll:00-Sign Off\nLabor and Industry Keep Keen\nWatch On Stelco Wage Baffle\nt&2>5\nBy FRED CHAFE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nHAMILTON (CP) - A wage\nbattle likely to have a major impact on Canadian labor and industry is being fought here against\na background of sharply divergent\nviewpoints on the business recession, its cause and cure.\nAn Ontario conciliation board\nhas completed hearings in-a contract dispute between the Steel\nCompany of Canada, the country's\nbiggest producer of basic iron and\nsteel with more than 40 per cent\nof Canadian output, and the United\nSteelworkers of America (CLC)\nthe union representing about 7500\nemployees at the Hamilton works.\nSEEK SAME SETTLEMENT\nThe union wants a settlement in\nline with what it received two\nyears ago \u2014 a package deal of\nabout 33 cents an hour, including\nan unspecified general wage in-\nOver 200 Sign\nFor Swimming\nAf Cranbrook\nCBC PROGRAMS\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nSATURDAY, JULY 19-, 1958\nMAKE\n7:00\u2014Marine Weather'\n7:05\u2014Musical Minutes   .\n. 7:30\u2014News, Musical Minutes\n7:50\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Saturday March Past\n8:00\u2014News and} Weather\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Stu Davis -. '    '\n8:30\u2014Program, Resume\n.9:00\u2014CBC News\n9:15\u2014House Party-       :\n9:45-CBC Stamp Club   '\n10:00\u2014Gammon and Spinach\n10:15\u2014CBC News       \u25a0**>''-'    - -?\n10:25\u2014Weather\n10:3(M-Baseball Game of-the Day\nl:80-rOn the Spot   .\n2:00\u2014Musical Program..-    . ;\u25a0\u00a3\n2:30-Stu DaviS Short*  -f- *H!jj|\n2:45\u2014World Church News   . *&>.\n3:00\u2014News     \u2022 \u25a0<\u25a0 .-*\u00bb.\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0!\u00bb\u25a0\n\"\u2022\u25a0\u2022\n\u2022c\u00a30\nLAST AU YEAR tON<J^.\n3:10\u2014Weekend Listening\n3:15\u2014Speaker's Choice\n3:30\u2014Now I Ask You\n4:00\u2014Don Messer   .\n4:30-This Week\n4:45-Sports College\n5:00 \u2014Moods in Modern\n5:25\u2014News\n5:30\u2014Moods in Modern\n5:45\u2014British Empire Games\n6:00\u2014Royal Tour Review\n6:10\u2014Dances of the Nation\n6:30\u2014Jazz for Saturday\n7:00\u2014Captain From Connecticut\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Western Roundup\n8:00\u2014Dixieland\ns 8:30\u2014String 'n' Things\n-9:00\u2014The Centennial Show   -\n9:30\u2014Brock's Belfry\n10:6l)-News\n10:15\u2014Swing Easy\n10:30\u2014Dance With' Dal\nU:00-Hot Air\n11:57\u2014News\nCapture it all in Snapshots\n7 the   \u25a0\n\"magic eye\"\ncamera\ntwrnifyj C3\nPERFECT FOR COLOR\nPerfect movies right from your very first roll. That's\nwhat you have with -your Eumig C3. The\" Magic Eye\ncoupled exposure meter gives foolproof results \u2014\neven if the light varies during a shot, Handle it for\nyourself \u2014 you will appreciate its magic combination \u2014 precision and operating simplicity.\nEUMIG   C3  . $129.50\n,EUMIG   \"ELECTRIC\" . . . f 54.75\nFREE\nWith Each Camera\nOne Roll Color Movie Film\nValue $4.85\n2 PLUS \u2014 Ponlok Risomatic Tripod.   Value   $13.50\nWith Each EUMIG C3 CAMERA\nCUSTOM CAMERAS\nThe House of Famous Brand Names\nTo Buy Land for\nCrawford Bay Park\n' CRAWFORD BAY - The Crawford Bay and District Park Association held a public meeting at the\nCrawford Bay hall to purchase sufficient land for park.\nIt was voted to purchase land\nfrom Mrs. L. Johnson for a community park which is. part of Centennial project of this .district. A\nlarge number of people turned out.\nIt is felt that the community will\ngreatly benefit from this project.\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Free swimming\nclass enrolments at the five-days-a-\nweek courses at the Gyro Swimming Pool have passed the 220\nmark. Approximately half are in\nthe beginners section, four years\nand over, and are divided into\ngroups of 10 to 12 with the objective of learning basic floating and\nswimming this season. Their instructors are Mrs. Oscar Jones,\nwho is a staff life guard, Donna\nPye, Tina Horwood and Lorne\nLittle.\nOther classes are'juniors, intermediates and seniors who are\nlearning swimming specialty\nstrokes and diving. Their instructor is another staff life guard, Hans\nJuras, who is a Red Cross swimming bronze medalist. City recreation'director R. L. DeArmond is\nsupervisor of all classes.\nMr. DeArmond will be official\nexaminer for the beginners to certify they can swim, and a provincial Red Cross water safety officer\nwill come to Cranbrook to examine\ncandidates in the other three\nclasses for certificates in proficiency.\nThe pool schedule calls for classes\nevery day except Sunday and Monday. Both Mr. DeArmond and Maureen Campsall are spares on hte\nlife guard staff' which mans the\npool during daylight hours.\ncrease. It contends its demands\nare justified on the grounds of\nincreased production by workers\nand higher company prices and\nprofits, and that Increased consumer spending power is needed to\nstem the business recession.\nStelco counters with a firm hold-\nthe-line policy on . wages,- on\ngrounds that its employees are\nalready the best paid in Canadian\nindustry, that a steel price rise\nwould follow an Increase in employment cost, and that the recession follows less from lack of\nconsumer purchasing power than\nfrom public reaction to inflated\nprices of the last few years.\nThe company offers, only to\nnegotiate some improvements .to\nthe group insurance plan on condition the union withdraws its other\ndemands.'\nAVERAGE $2.30 HOURLY\nThe company estimates that\naverage hourly earnings at the\nplant for the first quarter of this\nyear were $2.30, including overtime (time and a half and shift\npremiums seven cents for afternoon shift, nine cents for evening).\nAdding statutory holiday pay\n(2Vi times normal pay), vacations,\na pension plan paid for by Stelco\nand group insurance, the average\nhourly \u25a0 earnings for the same\nperiod were $2.56, the company\nsays.\n\"The union does not complain\nthat the industry has grown too\nquickly,\" the Steelworkers told\nthe conciliation board. \"The complaint rather is that labor, the\nconsumer, and the taxpayer\u2014and\nsteelworkers are also consumers\nand taxpayers \u2014 have had to\nfinance too large a share of that\nrapid growth. A much larger share\nof the investment funds should\nhave been raised in the capital\nmarkets, according to the ways in\nwhich a free enterprise system is\nsupposed to work.\n\"If the industry, and Stelco In\nparticular, had not been quite so\npersistent and forceful in financing its tremendous expansion by\nhigh profits and quiok write-offs,\nit could have paid higher wages\nand charged lower profits, and\nstill had a reasonable return to\ncapital . . .\n\"Considering the substantial expansion that has already taken\nplace, and the big gains that have\nbeen made in productivity, Stelco\nhas never been in a better position than it is now to make a\nsignificant contribution to the\nstimulation of consumer spending,\nby raising wages and cutting\nprices; and never since before the\nwar has the need been more\nurgent.\"\nAir Trips Planned\nDuring Regatta\nINVERMERE - The thrill of an\naeroplane trip over the Windermere District can be one of the\ndelights of the Invermere Regatta\nnext weekend.  .\nA chartered plane from Pacific\nWestern Airlines of Nelson will be\navailable for 20-minute round trips\nof the valley north to Edgewater\nor south to Canal Flats and longer\ntrips of one hour -will also be arranged to the Lake of the Hanging\nGlaciers and Mount Assiniboine'.\nThe plane will seat five persons\nfor each trip, each passenger having a window for viewing and there\nwill be ample time and opportunity\nfor taking pictures.\nCity Extension\nTo Be Studied\nIn Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK \u2014 The city has\nbeen notified by the Regional Planning commission of the department\nof municipalities that a representative will be in Cranbrook July 20\ntb survey area north and east of\ncity limits to include an undetermined areft.\nThis is the flat land which was\nthe original Joseph's Prairie, early-\nday name for Cranbrook before\nany settlement in whit is now the\ncommunity. The Baker Farm, now\nthe city's Baker Park, overlooked\nit. It is occupied by homes, market\ngardens through which Joseph\nCreek passes, dairy farms and field\ncrops and extends to rising eastward foothills where the city garbage disposal pit is located.\nTELEVISION   FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\n.   KXLY-TV - Channel 4\n7:45 Good Morning\n8:00 For Love or Money *\n9:00 Play Your Hunch *    :;'\n9:30 Dotto *\n10:00 Love of Life *\n10:30 Search For Tomorrow \u2022\n10:45 Guiding Light \u2022\n11:00 Science Theater\n11:30 As The World Turns *\n12:00 Beat The Clock \u2022\n12:30 Houseparty *\n1:00 Big Payoff * .\n1:30 Verdict Is Yours *\n2:00\u2014Brighter  Day*\n2:15 Secret Storm\n2:30 Edge of Night *\n3:00 Bingo\n4:00 Early Show\n5:15 Doug Edwards *\n5:30 Boing Boing Show *\n6:00 The News\n6:10 A Greater Spokane\n6:15 Song Shop\n6:30 Sgt. Preston\n7:00 Phil Silvers *\n7:30, Michaels In Africa\n8:00\"Undercurrent *\n8:30 Men of Annapolis\n9:00 Trackdown\n9:30 Sheriff of Cochise\n10:00 Mr. District Attorney\n10:30 Night Edition\n10:35 Post Time\n10:40 Shock\nKBQ-TV - Channel 6\n7:40 Color Test Pattern\n7:43 Test Pattern\n7:58 Bible Reading\n7:59 Program Previews\n8:00 Dough Re Mi *\n8:30 Treasure Hunt \u2022\n9:00 Price Is Right *\n9:30 Truth or Consequences *\n10:00 Tic Tac Dough *\n10:30 It Could Be You (C) *\n11:00 Lucky Partners *\n11:30 Haggis Baggis (C) *\n12:00 Today Is Ours *\n12:30 From These Roots *\n1:00 Queen For a Day *\nl:45.Modern Romances *\n2:00 Corliss Archer\n2:30 Your TV Theatre\n3:00 Matinee On Six '\n\"Inspiration\" i\n4:30 Four Thirty Movie\n\"Meet The Baron\"\n5:45 NBC News *    '\u25a0     '\n6:00 Cavalcade of Sports \u2022\n\u20226:45 Weatherwise\nDecorationg Ideas\n7:00 Jefferson Drum \u2666\n7:30 Life of Riley *\n8:00 M Squad *\n8:30 The Thin Man *\n9:00 Lost Treasure\n9:30 WhMybirds\n10:00 Honeymooners\n10:30 Late Movie\n\"Broadway Melody of 1936\"\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1958 \u2014 3\nBritish Troops Answer\nKing Hussein's Appeal\nLONDON (AP) -. Prime Minister Macmillan said Thursday\nBritish troops landed in Jordan to\nforestall a plot to oust King Hussein's government.\nMacmillan told the House of\nCommons that Hussein had appealed to the United States as\nwell as to Britain for military\nhelp to block the threat against\nhis state.\nThe prime minister said British\ntroops are being sent by air from\nCyprus. \u2014\nMacmillan said the U.S. government is considering Jordan's\nrequest for help.\nHe specifically named President Nasser's United Arab Republic as being behind the \"conspiracy\" against Jordan.\nJordan's territorial integrity Is\nthreatened by Syrian forces, Macmillan said.     \/\nINFORMING jD\\\\\nBritain's decision to send troops\nto Jordan is\/being reported to the\nUnited Nations.\n\"We are making it clear that\nif arrangements can be made by\nthe Security Council to protect the\nlawful government of Jordan\nfrom external threat, the action\nwhich we have taken will be\nbrought to an end,\" he said.\nMacmillan said King Hussein's\nappeal for help came Wednesday\nnight after Parliament had debated the Middle Eastern emergency.\nThe young  monarch told  the\nBritish his country was faced\n\"with an imminent attempt by\nthe United Arab Republic\" to\noverthrow his regime, Macmillan\nsaid. . .\nHussein told the British that\nthe Jordanians had spotted Syrian troops moving toward Jordan\nterritory.\nThe king claimed that a coup\nagainst his government is\nplanned for Thursday, Macmillan\nannounced. '\nFIBERGLAS\nREINFORCED PLASTICS\nFor Boats, Etc.\nWrite for Full Information to\nM. E.   OBAL\nSASH & DOOR CO. LTD.\nPhone 2065  Trail, B.C   Box 122\nNew NORGE\nAutomatie Dryer and Washer\nMODERN  ELECTRIC\n1319 Bay Ave. Phone 1998\nPHONE 133\nGaitskell Appeals For\nPeace Talks With Russ\nLONDON (AP) - Labor party\nleader Hugh Gaitskell appealed to\nthe British government to\n'.'consider seriously\" Middle East\npeace talks with the Soviet Union.\nGaitskell told the House of Commons the dispatch of British\ntroops to Jordan was a move\n\"fraught with the gravest risks\nboth to our own interests and to\nthe peace of the world.\"\nNoting that Soviet forces are\nmanoeuvring on the Iranian and\nTurkish borders,  Gaitskell said:\n\"As the days go by and the\ndanger of a clash between the\nJordan forces and Iraq forces\u2014\nKimberley School\nC|ub Wins Award\nKIMBERLEY - The Kimberley\nand District school saving club of\nthe Credit Union has won the provincial award of merit, based on\nmembership increases and active\nparticipation in the provincial poster contest. Out of 24 posters accepted from the combined province, Kimberley had eight entries,\nseven of which received honorable mention.\nDiana Gerlitz of Lynmour Park\ndid the winning poster which gave\nKimberley second in primary\nGrade 1.\n70 Summonsed on\nParking Violations\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Time has run\nout for, approximately 70 persons\nwho have held city parking violation tickets running back to last\nNovember and they have been\nsummonsed by RCMP on information of the city. Under the bylaw,\nthe fine is $2 and court .costs of\n$3.50 for failure to pay to the city\nthe $1 penalty for a violation.   . '\nTwenty-seven of those charged\nappeared before the magistrate\nthe first day, while the others will\nbe spaced' for hearing over the\nnext several weeks.\nKREM  TV - Channel 2\n6:00 76 Sports Club *\n6:30 Newsbeat\n7:00 Federal Men\n7:30 Rin Tin Tin *\n8:00 Extra Sensory Preception '\n8:30 Frigidaire Theatre *\n9:00 Jim Bowie '     '\n9:30 Hydro Hi Lites\n10:00 Man Behind The Badge\n10:30 Nightbeat\n10:35 Channel 2 Theatre\n(Programs subject to change by stations without notice.)\nBuffaloes Beat ,\nKimberley Rovers\nNATAL \u2014 Scoring a 3-2 win\nover the visiting Kimberley Rovers\nat the Natal Ball Park, in a regular game in the Crow's Nest Pass\nFootball League, the Michel Buf-j\nfaloes continued to keep pace i\nwith the Lethbridge Bombers and!\nLethbridge Italia for the league]'\nleadership, as they notched their j\nfifth win in seven starts for a 10-\npoint total.  <\nPicnic Planned\nNATAL \u2014 The first picnic in\nNatal-Michel to be staged this year\nwill be the annual Comrtiunity picnic and sports sponsored by the\nMichel Local Union at the Crow's\nNest picnic grounds next Sunday.\nDuring the afternoon races will be\nheld for children while horseshoe\nand bocce (Italian bowling) tournaments will be staged for the\nadults. There will be quantities of\nice cream and pop on hand. All\nfamilies from the community are\ninvited also families of members\nworking   at Michel from   outside\nRoints such as Fernie and Crow's\n[est Pass.\n^EOT'*II*RV\nKids Win Ball 17-2\nNATAL \u2014 Combing two pitchers\nfor 12' hits that included extra\nbase blows in a scheduled game in\nthe East Kootenay Canadian Legion Little League played at Cranbrook, the Natal Michel Legion\nLittle Leaguers trounced the Cranbrook Legion Little Leaguers to the\ntune of 17-2.\nYOUTHFUL Ingenuity ol 24-year-old -project engineer Tom Lauriente, right, former Trail boy, combined with\nmature experience of erection superintendent Vic Bratt,\n66, in erection of 2,000 tons of steel by Dominion Bridge\nCompany crews on Okanagan Lake bridge. Only floating bridge in Canada, the $8 million structure links West-\nbank and Kelowna with 2,885 feet of concrete pontoons\nand steel work. The bridge was officially opened July 19\nby Princess Margaret. '.\nBUS TRAFFIC\nCanadian inter-city and rural bus\nsystems carried 13,526,900 passengers in the first quarter of 1958,\nan 8.7 per cent dfop.         \u25a0\nand behind them the Western\nforces on one side and the Russian forces on the other \u2014 advances, I beg the government to\npause and I beg the government\nto consider whether It would not\nbe better i to try and talk to the\nSoviet Union about this situation.\" *\nPrime Minister Harold Macmillan had just told the House that\nthe decision to dispatch British\ntroops was \"indeed the most difficult decision that I personally\never remember having to take or\nbeing associated with.\"\n\"I don't know whether we\nshall succeed in our limited objective,'' Macmillan added. '\nLOWEST PRICED SEWING\n.MACHINES\nIn the Kootenays\nUNION-PETERS\nDISTRIBUTORS LTD.\n1561 Bay Ave.  Trail  Phone 2080\nm\\m\nHAZLEWOOD DRUGS LTD.\nPrescriptions,\nStationery, Toiletries, Books\nTrail, B. C.\n943 Spokane St.     Phone 11\nSPEEDWAY\nSERVICE & GARAGE LTD.\nSales and Service\nMercury \u2014 Lincoln \u2014 Meteor\nCedar and Farwell Sts.      Trail\nPHONE 834\nPARSLOW'S\nGUNSM1THING '\nLOCKSMITHING\nFISHING SUPPLIES\n1532 Bay Ave. Trail, B.C.\n,   % TRAIL, B.C.\nNotice of Closure\nUnder\nSection 120, Subsection 1,\n\"Forest Act\"\nIn view of the hazardous condition of the forest\ncover and pursuant to the provisions of Section 120\nof the \"Forest Act\", the area hereinbelow described\nis hereby declared to be a closed district as from\nmidnight, Wednesday, July. 16th, 1958, and that no\nperson shall enter or be in the closed district for tht\npurpose of camping, fishing, hunting, recreation,\nprospecting for minerals, or any other like purpose,\nwithout first obtaining from -an officer of the Forest\nService a written permit therefore, until further\nnotice.        .\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'     t\"'      - -\nHON. RAY WILLISTON,\nMinister of Lands and Forests\nDescription of Closed Area\n10. \"All that portion of the Little Slocan River\nwatershed, lying upstream from the junction of\nAiry Creek and situated approximately two and\none-half miles Northwest of Passmore, Kootenay Land District.\"\nrnTTTTT\nPLYWOOD\nIs Your Answer to Building\nCupboards, Extra Rooms,\nPartitions, Etc.\nPick-Up Your\nFREE COPY\nOf the\nDO-IT-YOURSELF\nFOLDER\nPlywood Has Made Alterations\nEasy for the Handy Man\nBURNS LUMBER\nPHONE 1180\nCo. Ltd.\nNELSON, B.C.\n Nrlamt latlg tala   ., G(Tsl\u00a3Bb^ht\nfclstablished April 22. 1002. ..\nInterioj British Columbia's Largest Dally Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday arid statutory\nholidays   by   th*   NEWS   PUBLISHING   COMPANY\nLIMITED, 268 Bdkoi Street, Nelson, British Columbia. -\u25a0\nAuthorized it Second Clans Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER Of   ME AUDl'l BUREAU Ul CIRCULATIONS.\nMlSMHljlH Of  ME CANADIAN HKESS. .   *\nTh* Canadian Proas is exclusively entitled to the use tor republication ot all news\ndispatches credited to it or tb 1'he Associated Press 61 Reuters In this paper,\nand alio the local newt published therein.\n7 frlday, July 18.1958     \"   -.        -'     7    '\n'Nelson's Fish Hatchery\nAn Interesting Operation\nTha provincial' government's system oi hatcheries ior rearing game\niish has progressed to a stag* where\nit is an established and precise science\nworth many thousands oi dollars to the\neconomy oi this province.\n7 Nelson is fortunate in possessing\none oi the throe permanent iish hatcheries In B. C. (tho others boing at Summerland, near Penticton, and Cultus\nLake, near Chilliwack), but it stems\nthat iew persons ar* really awar* oi\nth* large operation being performed\nirom th* city hatchery.\nMoro public notice oi this operation\nwould be worthwhile, and civic mention, defining th* hatchery as a tourist\nattraction, would pay increased dividends.\nIt li not every city or region that ,\ncan boast oi such an establishment,\nand the gain* which th* hatcheries\nprovide ior th* province with Increased\ntourist trad* through better fishing ar*\nobviously manifest.\n' Apart from these iacts, the fish\nhatchery operation ls of great Interest\nto th* observer, who benefits irom a\nvisit to the establishment. There aro\nmany aspects oi iish and iishing which\ncan be learned from a visit to th*\nhatchery. From the biological qngle\nalone., there are vast field* of learning.\nThough always welcome, visitors\nare fewNat tho Nelson Fish Hatchery,\nand some\\ of those who do visit the\nplant look upon it more as 'a curio\nthan ja scientific part of B, C.'s\neconomy. -\nIn some cases, visitors have allowed their small children to molest\nth* iish, embarrassing th* attendants,\nwho have b*en fore\u00bbd to r*mon*trate\nwith the youngsters. I\nCity hooligans, 15 and 16 year*\nold, have been known to throw huge\nrocks into the fish tanks, and almost\ndaily evidence can be found to indicate vandalism. Perhaps an apple\ncore', thrown over the Wire fence, sits\non top of tho protective netting\u2014or\nmatches and cigarette butt* float about\ntn th* tank*.\nIf more persons become conversant\nwith th* fish hatchery operation, there\nls less likelihood of such distressing\nacts being committed, and a largo\namount of knowledge and entertainment can com* to thos* who become\ninterested ln the operation.\nA FRIEND\nA friend is one who is as willing to help\nyou wh'rt you-need it tt when you do not.\n'       -Stuart W. Knight.\n* ,. *     \u00bb   -\nHast thou a friend, and forgette'st to be\ngrate*ul?-4**ry Baiter Eddy.\n'\u25a0.-.\u25a0*    *    *\nReal friends are those who, when you've\nmade a 1661 of yourself, don't feel that you've\ndone a permanent job.\u2014Erwln T. Randall.\n-..-*'\u25a0      \u25a0. *   **;   *\u25a0\u2022\nYou can make more friends In two\nmonths by becoming interested In other\npeople than you can In two years by trying to\nget other people Interested In you.\n|   -' , - \u2014Dale Cprnegle;\n* \u00ab     *\nYour Wind Is the man who knows all\nabout you, snd still likes you.\n\u2014Elbert Hubbard.\n.'\u25a0:.*    * . *\n\u25a0   Love ls. blind;  friendship tries not to\nnotice'.\u2014Otto Efluard Bismarck.\nInterpreting the News\nToo Old To Learn\nWhen does one become too old to learn?\nCertainly not at the proverbial three-\nscore-and-ten. At an eastern college, Queens\n6f New York; * trade-schooUtralned chemist\nhss just graduated, magna cum laude, and\nwearing a Phi Beta Kappa key. \"I Had a\nwonderful time,\" he said. And he hopes to\nwrite poetry.\nSurely not at threescore - and \u2022 fifteen.\nSome years ago a quite successful Midwestern merchant retired to enter law school (of\nWashington University). To praotice law,\nsaid he, had been his life ambition.\nAnd not at fourscore. A sprightly farm\nwoman, not too long ago, graduated with\nstanding ahead of hundreds a quarter her age\nfrom the University of Wisconsin, Her children all were married, she explained, and she\n\u2022was alone \u2014 but free to do what she'd always\nlonged to do.\nHow do they find the competition with\nwhat are, after all, young professional* at\n\"book.larnln?\" Hard tt first, say several\nSeptember and December pupils at college.\nChiefly because the non-academic years have\ntrained one to make use of what he reads\nand hears but to retain the facts and the\nwords only Incidentally. The academic job\nrequires that one both learn and retain.\nWhen, however, one finds he can bring\nexperience to bear and add to knowledge,\nunderstanding \u2014 then it's the sharp young\nmemorliers who have to \"hump\" to keep up,\nv       \u2014 The Christian Science Monitor.\nBy LLOYD McDONALD\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWhatever action the United Nations pursues in the Middle East crisis, the road will\nbe hedged by legal technicalities.\nUnder, the UN charter, any country can\ntike measures of self-defence if it feels itself\nendangered from outside. But the interpretation of any such action varies widely and in\ndirect proportion to the interests of the outside countries involved.\nThus Russia has in effect accused the\nUnited States of committing armed aggression through Tueseday's landing of American\ntroops in Lebanon. But less thin two years\nago Russia stood accused by the U.S. and the\nrest of the free world for taking the same\naction\u2014but involving bloodshed snd brutal!-'\nties\u2014during the Hungarian revolt.\nThe UN charter clearly states that the\ninternal affairs of thy country are hot subject to intervention by the world organization\nas a whole. But the fine print ls there' because\nof the action of interested big powers in local\nsituations which breakout, as they hsve from\ntime to time since the UN's inception in 1945.\nOFF-BASE DEBATE\nThis legalistic approach has resulted in\nthe current off-base debate in the UN on the\nMiddle East. Iraq is the country most directly\ninvolved, -yet the delegates of tht Soviet\nUnion on one side and Britain and tht U.S.\non the other have concentrated on Lebtnon,\nwhere a sporadic rtvolt has been going on\nfor weeks.\nLebanon was chosen by the U.S. for the\nMiddle East troop landing because the recognised government there asked Washington for\nhelp under the Eisenhower doctrine to combat what it called Communist aggression.\nThe legal status of this landing would\nseem clear, but Russia, the acknowledged\nheadquarters of world Communism, contends\nthat the Lebanon uprising is a revolt of local\nmasses without any such ideological implications, .\nThat goes top far for the Russian attitude\non tht Irtq overthrow which shocked the\nworld and apparently caught Western capitals unprepared at the week's outset,\nThe Soviet delegate in the ensuing UN\ndiscussions has merely echoed and endorsed\nthe stand Of Egypt's President Nasser that\nthe outbreak,has been an Arab affair.\nVETO INEVITABLE\nAnd within the confines of UN headquarters, more paper-type legal problems have\"\narisen as the blood has flowed a few thousand\nmiles away.\nFor example, the Security Council,, the\nUN's official peace-keeping body, which can\nbe called into session at any time without\nauthorisation by the UN General Assembly,\ncarefully skirted the Iraq situation by concentrating on the allied problem of Lebanon,\nwhich has been on the Council's books since It\nbroke out in the early spring.\nA negative vote by any of the big powers\nis a Council veto, and with two directly opposing resolutions by the U.S. and Russia\nfacing lt, such a veto is inevitable from either\nor both sides.\nKOREAN PRECEDENT\nThe alternative following such a result\nwouldl be the calling, on behalf of any of the\nmajor powers, of an emergency session of\nthe General Assembly, where a two-thirds\nmajority vote prevails and the veto is invalid.\nBut there again technicalities come up.\nThe assembly has no policy-making power. It\ncan only \"recommend\" or \"call on\" !h the\ncase of an outbreak. But in the case of the\nKorean W.f* in 1950 it did work when the\nmajor powers of the free world volunteered\ntheir forces to combat aggression in North\nKorea and stayed to battle the opposing \"volunteers\" from ped China.\n\u2022There has been talk in these crucial days\nof similar action, spearheaded, t>y the U.S., to\ndesi with the latest outbreak, Washington has\njustified its Lebanese landing by the Lebanon\ngovernment's call for help. But to help embattled Iraq, the U.S. forces now in Lebanon\nwould have to cross the territory 8( NSsser's\nUnited Arab Republic to reach the sceene\nspeedily. And the U.A.R.'s Syrian member\ncould justifiably call this 'an aggression.\nWhether the legal line w|U be crossed by\na chalk line is the big problem now.\nTODAY'S BIBli\nTHOUGHT\n>   I will give him the morning star.\n\u2014Revelation 2:21.\nGod's gifts are worthy of the Infinite. You have a Father amyous\nto give you rbyal gifts. .\nQwiLXaL\nHints Banks May\nHave To Cut\nHousing Loans\nOTTAWA (CP)-The Canadian\nBankers Association today hinted\nthe chartered batiks may have to\nscale down their investments ln\nhousing.\nThe association today presented\na brief to the Senate finance committee showing that from March,\n1054, to last June 20, the chartered banks loaned more than\n1900,000,000 in mortgages!\nE, J.' Friesen, vice-president o(\ntbe association, quoted figures\nshowing that the banks, financed\nmore than 95,000 dwelling units\nfrom their own funds,\nHe said that whon Parliament\nauthorized the chartered banks to\nenter the mortgage Held in 1954\nthe'banks said they would co-op-\n\"The \u2666900,000,000 figure speaks\nfor itself,\" Mr, Friesen said,\n\u25a0 The brief said it-will be some\nyears before enough capital, is\npaid back to provide funds to be\nre-loaned on the' uame average\nscale of the last four years..\nI. . ' . .  i    '\nPeiping Crowd\nCheers Iraqi\nPEIPING (Reuters! \u2014 A crowd\nestimated at more than 100,000\nmassed Thursday with banners and\nflags in Pelping's Square o! Heavenly Peace to mark the creation\nof the Iraq republic and to denounce the landing of United States\ntroops in Lebanon.\nHousewives, workers and students who s'arted' summer vacations Thursday waved roughly-\nmade banners and shouted slogans\nagainst , \"aggressive American\ntroops.\"\nIn spite of the violent slogans\nand speeches scoring American\nIntervention in the Middle East,\nthe rally had a picnic air.\nOne student who addressed the\nrally said:\n\"If the imperialists dare launch\nwar, let them go ahead. They\nboast they have atomic and hydrogen bombs. So have we.\"\nBritish Athletes\nProtest Color Bar\nLONDON (Reuters) - Twenty\nBritish athletes Thursday protested\nthe exclusion of non-white athletes\nfrom the South African team competing st the British Empire\nGames.\nThe 'sportsmen, who included\nStanley Matthews, England's leading soccer player, Rev, David\nSheppard, former test cricketer,\nand Derek Ibbotson, four-minute\nS!r'im,aude,'h(-jr protest in a\n'etter to ihe London Times.\nBut the w4v\nHE TALKS JND\nPAYS SAID\nCLIENT IS M\nEQUINE OF\nA DIFFERENT\nHUE \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022   ,\nTH\/lMX>IND41r*>  -i*!N\nCf \"NE HJTOO HjIT !&\u00bb*\nTO JjIOC if\nHERBB3T,-'--\nBM4STORS\nCHKMdOlO,\nILL.\nSm^-tid^ Q*\u2122 KW'vCXl-.-mis BUYER, '\nwTO\n*ra\nLa\nT-l\u00ab\nI don't think Ella means to be\ncatty, She lust says whatever pops I\ninto her mind, and usually it happens   t6   be   something   that\nscratches.\nH\nE\nN\n. R\nY\nSays Canadians Friendly\nBut Also Wasteful\nCALGARY (CP7-A 83-y*sr-61d\nAustralian adventurer who has\ncycled through 38 countries and\ndined in everything from\nmosques'to Salvation Army Hos-;\ntels, finds Canadians friendly but\nalso wasteful.\nPassing through Calgary, Owen'\nMarks of Sydney, Australia, took\ntime out to talk of his travels,\nHe has been a farmer, in Iceland, a hotel lackey in Nqrway\nand a miner in Sudbury, Ont, In\nTurkey, he says, he ,'fe.lt just\nlike Marco Polo\" because) it ls\nMoslem custom to heip -all travellers. '\nAdmits Yukon\nRum Potent\nOTTAWA (CP)-Northern Affairs Minister Alvin Hamilton has\n\u2022confirmed that rum drinkers In\nthe Yukon and Northwest Terri-.\ntories get a more potent drink\nthan those In other parts of Canada, i\nIn the Commons Wednesday, he\nwas asked by H. W. Herridge\n(CCF\u2014Kootenay West) whether\nhe could, verify a long-standing\nrumor that liquor in the Territories had a higher alcoholic can-\ntent than elsewhere ln Canada.\nMr. Hamilton replied he understood this was true of rum. But\nhe believed the other liquots \"are\nmore or less average and in line\nwith those sold in the rest of\nCanada.\"\nReason for Ihe strong rum was\ne p e n s i v e northern transnorta-\ntion, he added. It seemed \"such\na waste to spend money for the\ntransportation of water.\nThe exchange occurred during\nCommons debate of a bill to permit loans by the Yukon Territorial Council to Yukon schools\nand municipalities. The bill was\ngiven final reading and sent to\nthe Senate.\nYugoslavia he Sound easy to\nget .into, but hard to get out of,\nbecause he overstayed his visa.\n\"The people there'had freedom\nbut no shoes before Communism.\nNow they have shoes, but no freedom.\"\nThe traveller has enjoyed the\nhospitality of English* lords,\nAmerican police, and Paris vagabonds benath the bridges of Uie\nSeine.\nComparing European and\nAmerican hospitality, Mr. Marks\nsaid In Europe people entertain\nyou to show hospitality, but in\nAmerica \"they are Inclined to\nspend Uieir money on making .you\nwelcome.\"\n! The yout|g Australian feels he\nwas born at just the right age\nto do the sort of thing he Is doing,\n\"If I had been born, sooner, I\nwould have been in the war. Before that there was the depression, and before that no one.had\nany money. Now everyone can\ntravel, but no one would want to\ntravel Ihe way I do when they\nare old.\"\nMr. Marks Isn't worried too\nmuch about the immediate future. It took him VA years to\ncycle from England to Turkey\nalong the Mediterranean and\nback through Europe. He figures\nit will take him another five\nyears -to cover South America.\nAt the moment he is hitchhiking his way across the continent\nto collect a speclallv-bullt British\nbicycle in Los Angeles.\nLAW  SEGREGATES  BLOOD\nBATON ROUGE,. La. <AP>-\nGov. Earl Long signed a new\nsegregation law Wednesday requiring blood plasma be labelled\naccording to race. The bill, which\ngoes into effect July 30. does not\napply in disaster areas or in individual cases where physicians\ndecide an emergency exists.\nRuss Stage Manoeuvres\nOn Southern Frontiers\nLONDON   (AP)  - Russia  an\nnounced Thursday that Soviet land,'\nsea   and   air   forces   will   start\nmanoeuvres Friday on the southern frontiers of the U.S.S.R.\nDiplomats here took it as an\nobvious counter-measure to the\nlanding of American and British\nmilitary forces in the Middle\nEast.\nA Moscow radio broadcast said\nRussia's Black Sea fleet would\ntake part in the manoeuvres in\nthe Transcaucasus area. Land\nand air forces will manoeuvre in\nthe Turkestan and Transcausasus\nmilitary areas, the 'broadcast\nsaid.   ,        .\nThe areas lie \"close to the Iran\nand Turkish borders.\nBoth Pravda and Izvestia carried the report of the manoeuvre\nbut devoted most of their columns to bitter attacks ,on the\nlanding of United States marines\nin Lebanon.\nthe government newspaper Izvestia charged the.United States\ngovernment with \"again putting\nthe world on the brink of war,\"\nadding the Soviet people \"are\nIndignant at the brazen action of\nthe imperialist aggressors.\"\nPravda, the. Communist party\norgan, claimed the American\nlandings constituted . a* \"flagrant\nU.S. military Interference In the\nInternal affairs of Lebanon.\"\nProvinces Net\nFunded Debt\nDecreases\nOTTAWA (CP) - Ntt funded\ndebt of provincial governments\ntotalled '2,305,ooo,oi)o at March 31\n1938, about $4,000,000 loss than at\nthe end .of the 1056-57 fiscal year,\nthe bureau Of statistics reported\nThursday.\nThe bureau said the decline In-\nnet funded debt was accounted\nfor by a decrease of about\n34,000,000 In long \u25a0 term treasury\nbills owing by the four western\nprovinces to the federal government.\nJn an Interim report on 1057-58\nprovincial financing, the bureau\nsaid seven provinces floated new\nbond Issues totalling $182,000,000,\nand nine made retirements ot\n$106,000,000, including' 181,000,00\nretired prior to maturity,\nProvincial totals of net funded\ndebt at March 31; Manitoba\n$144,347,000; Saskatchewan $274,-\n455,000: Alberta $30,177,000; British Columbia $88,482,000.\nPulp Mills\nTurn To\nTree Farmers\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Pulp and paper\nmanufnlcurers will be turning increasingly to \"tree farmers for\nthe lumber needed in their operations, the Senate 'committee on\nland use was told Thursday.\nBut, said Vernon E. Johnson of\nMontreal, president of the Canadian International Paper Company, education was neded to convince farmers that trees can be\ncash crops, like o*er agricultural\nproduce,\n\"They are a crop which can provide a lasitng and reliable -cash\nincome for the farmer who knowi\nhow to grow them well.\"\nQuestioned after submitUng a\n37-page brief to the oommittee,\nMr. Johnson said \"a 400-to-B00 acre\nwoodlot, well managed, should provide a better living than the\naverage farmer now earns.\"\n\u25a0\u25a0    _ \u2022\nDividend  Payments\nUp From Last Year\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Dividend payments by Canadian companies jn\nJuly totalled, $69,803,916 compared\nwith $64,600,525 in the same month\nlast year, reports J. R. Tlmmtos\nand Co.,.stock brokers.\nIncrease over last year is due\nmainly to interim dividends , by\nBrazilian Traction and Gunnar\nMines, ,   ,\nDividend payments for the first\nseven monlhs of, 1958 totalled\n$413,205,075 compared with $433,-\n656,076 in the same period a year\nago, \u25a0        .\t\nIP      \u2022*\nThere Is Real\nSatisfaction\nIn Reading the\nNEWS\nWhen It Is\nNEWS\nHave the\nNEWS\nDelivered To Your Door\n\u00bb * \u25a0\u25a0<\nBy a Reliable, Courteous\nCarrier Boy\nPhone 1844\n ----------------------------------------\n-mnnH\nfWrPPiiii\n33?.\nAbout the Town\nPHONE 1844\nRelatives of the bride and groom\nattending the wedding on Saturday\nof Jacqueline Maude Stewart and\nRonald Alexander McFarlane' in\nFairview United Ohurch, were the\nbride's mother, Mrs. ML Stretton,\nthe groom's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. A. McFarlane and the groom's\nsisters, Mrs. Pat Hodgson and Mrs.\nJ. Halley, all of Vancouver. The\nvisitors left for the Coast Sunday\nmorning by car.\n. *  *  *\nHonoring Mrs. T. J. Dolan (formerly Mrs. J. Vigneux), members\nof St. Ann's Circle of the Catholic\nWomen's League, Cathedral parish, met at the home of Mrs. F.\nBoyd and Miss W. Kinahan, 422\nSilica Street Wednesday evening.\nThe honoree was presented with a\nparting gift from members of the\ngroup on the occasion of her departure for Victoria with her husband. Mr. and Mrs. Dolan left\nThursday for the Island, travelling\nby way of Portland, Ore.\nBalfour Notes\nBALFOUR - Anne Wellwood,\nLoretta\u00bb Sammartino, Lynn < McNown, members of the Balfour\nGirl Guides, have returned after\nspending two weeks at Camp\nBusk guide camp.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Oakley left for\na holiday to be spent in Vancouver,\nwhere they will visit relations.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Gallagher, who\nwere married in Trail, after a trip\nby car to California and other\nU.S. points, spent a few days here\nwith Mrs. Gallaghers parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. S. Sammartino enroute\nto their home in Vancouver.\nOLD WEAPONS\nTOKYO (AP) - Radio Pyongyang reported excavations for irrigation at Songsan-Ri in north\nWhanghai province uncovered a\ncache of spears, axes and bronze\nmirrors believed 2,000 years old.\nMiss Claire Williscroft of Edmonton is spending a two-month holiday\nat the home of her parents, Mr.\nand.Mrs. G. MS Williscroft, North\nShore.\n* *  *\nMrs. C.'E. Jorgensen, 823 Victoria Street, left Thursday to spend\na holiday in Calgary, Banff, Edmonton and Medicine Hat.\n* \u00bb  \u2022 '\nMiss Maureen Kennedy was honored Monday at a personal shower\nwhen a dinner party was held at\nthe Shamrock Grill for the future\nbride. Hostesses were Mrs. E. Butler, Mrs. A. L. Boychuk and Miss\nDorothy Norfield. Miss .Kennedy\nand her mother, Mrs. A. Kennedy,\nwere presented with corsages.\n* *  \u2022\nMr. .and Mrs. Ralph Cummings,\n502 First Street, and Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Friedrich and son Jay,\n724 Baker Street, have returned\nfrom a holiday to Fort William,\nSarnia and Red Rock, Ont.\n'.\u25a0.-'a .\nMr. and Mrs. Mike Schmidt of\nCalgary are guests at the L. R.\nDuff cottages on the Ndrth Shore.\nMr. and Mrs. Schmidt owned and\noperated the Golden Gates Cafe\nin Nelson at one time.\nNelson Telephone\nEmployee Honored\nAn' employee of the B. C. Telephone Company in Nelson, Miss\nLucy Amatto was honored Wednesday evening prior to her departure, for the United States.\nMiss Amatto and 23 fellow employees sat down to a turkey dinner in the Lord Nelson dining room\nfollowing whioh the guests presented Miss Amatto with a piece of\nluggage as a parting gift.\nMiss Amatto is leaving for Spokane where she will seek employment. She has been with the Nelson branch of,the company for\nfive years and'has served in the\ncapacity of supervisor.\nWedding Principals Make\nTheir Home in Penticton\nPenticton is the home of newly-\nweds, Mr. and Mrs. Max Robert\nWeisner, who were married recently in Fairview United Church in\nNelson. Rev. H. R. Whitmore officiated at the wedding of 'Lucy\nBabakaiff, daughter of Mrs. Helen\nBabakaiff of Appledale and Max\nWeisner, son of, Mr. and Mrs.\nFrank Weisner, 420 Innes Street,\nNelson.\n58TH    ANNIVERSARY    8ALE\nCONTINUES THIS WEEK\nAT   ANDREW'S\nMany, many other lines have\nbeen added to tbe long list of\nextra specials now being ottered at the tremendous sale\nt   ch is now on at Andrew's,\nChildren's Shoes including\nBoys, regular to $6.99 on sale\nfor $1.99, $2.99 and $3.99.\nDon't put off your visit until\nit is too late, buy now and\nSave!\nMen's Hartt Shoes, regular\n$24.99, are on at a special price\nof $17.99 and $18.99.'\nWomen's Naturallzer Shoes\nand Murray Selby, regular\n$15.99 value, selling at $8.99 and\n$9.99. \u2014 Special lots at values\nup to $12.99 on sale for $3.99\nand $4.99. \u2014 Pick up a bargain\nin quality footwear at\nR. ANDREW & CQ.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nEst. Since 1902\nThe bride, entering the church\non the arm of her brother, wore -a\nwhite floor-length gown of' embroidered nylon net lace over taffeta,\ntrimmed with sequins, rhinestones\nand pearls and featuring lilypoint\nsleeves. Her veil was held in place,\nby a pearl-trimmed tiara and her\nonly jewellery was a pearl necklace and earring set; gift of the\ngrbom. She carried a bouquet of\nred roses.  ,\nMatron of honor was Mrs. A.\" D\nOlsen, sister of the bridegroom\nShe was attired in a blue bailer,\nina-length dress of lace over satin\nwith accessories in white. The\nbridesmaid, Miss Rose Schesnuk.\nwore a pink ballerina gown of|\nnylon net lace over satin. A pink\ntiara held a tiny veil and she carried pink and white- carnations.\nThe \"groom was supported by\nAlex Schesnuk and ushers were\nA. D. Olsen, Frank Weisner, jr.,\nand Bill Babakaiff.\nThe reception was held at the\nbride's home at Appledale where\nsupper was served to over 150\nguests. The bride and groom\nopened many gifts after cutting\nthe. three-tiered wedding cake and\na dance in Appledale hall was enjoyed by guests, following the bridal banquet.\nFor a honeymoon in the U. S.\nand Vancouver, the bride donned\na blue sheath dress with pink accessories.\nClassified Ads Get Results!\n7 p.m.\n-# Specials\nLIMITED QUANTITIES\nPERSONAL SHOPPING ONLY\nReg. 1.29 Sleeveless Cotton Blouses\nSanforized  cotton   blouses with -a  cool, small, peter  pan\ncollar. Large assortment of colors and prints. OO\nSizes 8 to 14.\nCotton\nSport Shirts\nIvy League stripe, long\nsleeve sport shirts. A real\nvalue for thrifty shoppers.\nI!m,l   1.49\nReg\nSport\n.2.99\nShirts\n7.99\nPlains \u2014 stripes, \u2014 checks.\nWell known manufacturers. Limited quantities.      \\\ni:zm,l    1.99\nReg. 3.99\nSuperior\nAir Mattresses\nMade of heavy duty vinyl.\nMeasures 66\"x28\". Ideal\nfor children and youths at\ncamp. Limited\nquantity. Special\n2.99\nReg. 12.95\nValue\nSlim Jims\nImported all-wool tartan.\nPerfect fitting. 2 pockets.\nAssorted tartans.\n\u2022Sizes 10-18\t\nRemnants\n1\/2-OFF\nCottons, Plastics and Synthetics. Buy now and save.\n'It OFF\nLinoleum -\nFloor Tile\nReg. .15 Each\nEach tile is 9x9x2.50 m.m.\nN.H.A. approved. Broad-\nvein design in your choice\nof 5 colors;. AQ\nSpecial, each      .\\Jaf\nMr. and Mrs. Max Robert Weisner, who are making\ntheir home in Penticton are pictured following their marriage in Fairview United Church recently. The bride is\nthe daughter of Mrs. Helen Babakaiff of Appledale aitd\nthe bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Weisner,\nof Nelson.\u2014Renwick photo.\nDAILY   CROSSWORD\nProperty\n(L.)\nSpanish\narticle\nMagic\nLamp\nowner\nWomen's\n24\norganiza.\ntion 25.\n(abbr.) 26.\nWith might   27.\nFrench wine'\nAngrier        28.\nSandy tract 29.\n(Eng.)\nRack 30.\nfor pens\nBehold\nPair\n(abbr.\nMan's\nnick.\nname\nConduit\nexit\nCrush\ntogether\nUnwinds\nVerse\nHebrew\nletter\nClose to\nCompass\npoint\nRoentgen\ndiscovered\nthem\namafci naa-a\n3-3E3SEI  HasHE\nH333 HimaanE\nQMH   HEH   SEE\nasannut]    as\ntanus hhsg\nBBHHH QUBQEa\nfflHFJEJ   HHHli\nara HHiaHaras\nshe uhh naa\nH'snaraE rime\nhhhhh Hanr-H\nHBHS   HHSB\nYesterday's Answer\n31. Mr. Como\n32. Nine (Rom.)\n37. Weight\n38. Breeze\n40. Exclama.\ntion\nACROSS\nStripped\nMan's name\nSeaport\n(Lith.)\nCrippled\nExclamation cf\nsorrow\nProcession\nUnderworld\ngod\nGuided\nCharged\nparticle\nDejection\nAlways\nConcealed\nRiver (I*.*.)\n\"Hoot  \"\nDrinking\nvessel\nChum\nRiver (It)\nDisbursement\nS3. Part of\n\"to be\"\n34. Bewitch\n35. Encountered\n36. Tailor\n(humorous)\n38. Mimlcker\n39. Region\nin Alps\n40. Not flat,\nas land\n41. Since\n(Scotch\nvar.)\n42. God of war\nDOWN\nl.Have\nfaith\n2. Accumu-\n. lated\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to work It:\nAXYDLBAAXR\n'Is LONGFELLOW\nOne letter limply stands for another.   In this sample A ls\nused for the three Vt, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,\napostrophles, the length and formation of the words are all\nhints.   Each day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nXLCCLO XBVRT HKNDDRGDDYH\nPDG \"CNL XDA\" CNWS KLRRH..,\nHDD \"CNL TWS\" \u2014KDDE.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: IF HAPPY I AND Wi-!.,.CHKD\nHE, PERHAPS THE KING WOULD CHANGE WITH ME\u2014\nMACKAY.\ntO 1968, King Features Syndicate. lac.)\n%\nt\n1\n3\n4\nt\n5\n6\n7\nes\n%\n1\n^\n10\nII\n11\n^\/A\n13\nH\n^\nis\n%\nit,\n17\nIB\n\".\nJo\n^\n31\n^A\n'^\n^f\nti\n%\n23\n%\nIA\n25\nlb\n^\/A\n%\nV\/A\nt-1\n%\n28\n29\n30\nHI\n32.\nis\n^\n%\nii\n3*\n37\n%\n36\n39\n%\n40\n*\n41\n^\n42.\n\"\/\/,\nSTRETTON-McFARLANE WEDDING\nHELD IN FAIRVIEW CHURCH\nFairview United Church was the\nscene of an informal wedding Saturday when Jacqueline Maude\nStretton, formerly of Nelson. and|\nlately of. Vancouver became the\nbride of Ronald Alexander McFarlane of Vancouver.\nThe bride is the daughter of Mrs.\nM, Stretton, one-time resident of\nNelson; and the groom is the son\nof Mr. and Mrs. J. A. McFarlane\nof North Vancouver.\nRev. H. R, Whitmore officiated\nat the marriage ceremony when\nMrs. Stretton gave her daughter\naway. The bride was dressed.in a\ntailored two-piece ensemble of\nheavily corded silk slub of aqua\nmarine shade with withe accessories. She carried a white Bible on\nwhich were posed two gardenias.\nSister of the groom, Mrs. Pat\nHodgson, was matron of honor.and\nshe chose as her outfit a turquoise\nblue sheath dress with white accessories and a corsage of pink carna\ntions..\nA reception was held at the Kina.\nhan residence, 422 Silica Street fol\nlowing   the   wedding   ceremony.\nCentre of attraction in the dining\nroom was the twd-tiered wedding\ncake, set in1 tulle sprinkled with\npink roses, and flanked by pink\ntapers. The tea table was covered\nwith a white hand-crocheted lace\ncloth and it was centred with a\nbouquet of pink carnations and\nbaby's breath in. a cut-glass vase;\nset on a table mirror.\nMrs. T. J. Dolan presided at the\ntea table and guests were greeted\nby hostesses Mrs. F. Boyd ,and\nMiss W. Kinahan.\nMichael Kinahan of Trail proposed the toast to the bride which was\nresponded to by the groom, who in\nturn proposed a toast to the bride's\nmother.\nRelatives from Vancouver attended the wedding. The newly-\nweds left for a honeymoon trip\nthrough the Slocan district and will\nmake their home in Vancouver.\nThe bride who has been living in!\nVancouver for the past few years,\nwas born in Nelson and attended\nschool here.\nQuick Exit From Russia\nNot Ernestine's Fault\nDescribed as \"tops in popularity\nif not in points\" at world gymnastic championship in Moscow, Ernestine Russell of Windsor, Ont.,\nhas now been ousted from Russia,\naccording to a recent news report.\nCanada's only entrant in the\nchampionships, Ernestine placed\nfourth in the horse-vaulting event\nand it was said she rated \"more\napplause than any of the Russian\nathletes.\"\nFollowing this report, a news\nstory was sent from Vienna saying\nthe young athlete and her coach,\nBernard Newman had been given\n12 hours to leave Moscow.\n\"On Thursday at about 6 p.m.\nRussians in charge of the world\nchampionships gave us two airplane tickets for a flight to Vienna\nleaving at 6 a.m: the next day\"\nNewman said.\nLatest news of the surprise move\ncame Wednesday when Newman\ndenied in Windsor that Miss Russell\nwas not wanted in Russia. He said\nhe thought he was the one the\nSoviet government wanted removed,\nAdmitting he had created the\nwrong impression by telephone\nfrom Vienna when he said he and\nMiss Russell were prematurely\nushered out of Russia, Newman\nsaid, \"I speak Russian and I guess\nI put my nose in, places were the\naverage fellow wouldn't have. I\nwanted to learn all I could about\nthe country,\" he said.\n\"All I want is a. shower and a\nlong, hot bath,\" sighed Ernestine\nwhen she arrived in Windsor.\n\"There weren't any baths, and the\nshowers in the Moscow hotel were\nthree floors down. <There was no.\nlaundry and it's a good thing we]\ntook our own soap.\" j\nRussian food was so unpalatable]\nto her that Ernestine Iost eight]\npounds in Moscow and promptly!\nto put it back on when she hit j\nVienna.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1958 \u2014 5\nNEW\n100% Nylon Wundo Fluff\n\u2022 Long Wearing \u25a0  \u2022 Machine Washable\nSixes 24x36 and 27x48\nColors:\u2014\nCANARY YELLOW\u2014PETAL PINK\nMINT GREEN\n-7 p.m. Special\nCash and Carry..\nSARAN and ALUMINUM.\nLawn Chairs $8.95\nJ>JiswnarLL\nWomen's Fall Suits Have\nStraight, Slim Lines\nI\nMiss Ernestine Russell, only\nCanadian entrant In world gymnastic championship in Moscow,\nis back in Windsor, Ont., following an \"incident\" in which she\nand her coach, Bernard Newman\nwere invited to leave Russia.\nNatal Notes\nof Linden, New Jersey, U.S.A., are'\nvisiting in Michel at the home of\nMr. Stoffa's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Krall Sr.\nA former Michel boy, Mr. Stoffa\nreturned to renew acquaintances\nafter an absence of thirty.years.\nMrs. Pete Zeith, accompanied by|\nbrothers John and Albert Krall,\nreturned to their homes in Natal-\nMichel after attending the funeral\nof their sister, the late Susan\nZvara, at Milwaukee, Wise.\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\nI K, Fra\u00ab-\nLook in the section in which your\nbirthday comes and find What your\noutlook is, according to the stars,\nFor.Saturday, July 19, 1958\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries)\n\u2014A responsive day for new business, important undertakings, improving projects already started,\nholding conferences. Be acquisitive\nnow, but curb emotions.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)-\nYour Venus is among the planets\nwell aspected now. New ideas and\nmethods stimulated. Be alert to\ngood opportunities; new enterprises favored.        ,\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Geminil-\nYou can reap benefits, high re:\nward for earnest efforts in all\nworthwhile endeavors. Move with\nalacrity when' the occasion demands, but remember to give\nquality as well as quantity performance.\nJUNE 22,to JULY 23 (Cancer) \u2014\nA clear, prosperous road ahead if\nyou show your innate keenness and\naptitude. Home interests, work,\nbusiness matters highly favored\nfor gain, new advancement.\nCANADIAN GOVERNMENT\nVictory Bonds\nEvery Branch of Imperial Bank from coast to coast\nin Canada is ready to give service and information\nregarding the conversion of Canadian Government\nVictory Bonds, See your local Branch Manager.\nIMPERIAL\nBANK OF CANADA\nBrake\t\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)-\nWhatever your field of endeavqr,\nyou can accomplish now. Search\nfor new advantages, opportunities.\nProfit from past experience.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Achievement is indicated now through .hard ' work,\nbeing faithful to your principles\nand making the best use of your\ntalents. Mercury says: \"Go\" \u2014\nbut not to extremes.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER\n23 (Libra) \u2014 There are many opportunities to be found now. Seek\nthem out and capitalize on them\nto the best of your ability. Avoid\nrisky ventures, however.\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 Day calls for keen\njudgement and a' realization of\nreal values. Maintain a steady,\nquiet pace that ultimately reaps\nlasting benefits.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Travel, essential changes, renovations, science,\ninvestigations among activities\nmost highly favored now. Your\nintuition should toe at a peak; heed\nit,\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 Saturn stimulates\nthe imagination now. New opportunities in creative work indicated.\nTake cognizance of whether you\nare wasting time and energies on\nfutile activities \u2014 not accomplishing as you should.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Be your most industrious self and see how gener-\nour will be your returns. Get .a\nquick and efficient start, and go\nforward with confidence, assurance. \u2022'\"'..\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 \u2022 Give details proper\nscrutiny. Press sturdily onward\nwith confidence in your plans,\nmethods, goals. Do not let pessimism dampen* your enthusiasm.\nBe sure you are headed in the\nright direction, however.\nYOU BORN TODAY are highly\nimaginative, impressionable, delightful company to young and old.\nAs a rule, you are gracious, sympathetic, charitable, understanding. Curb a tendency to argue lest\nyou become quarrelsome, cause\ndissension., You have the talent\nand ability for success in science,\n-artistry, stage and screen work,\npolitics, law, writing history. Or\nyou could become a skilled mechanic, technician, cook. Yos\ndeeply love home, family and\nfamily traditions, yet like to travel\ntoo. Control restlessness. Birthdate\nof: Sam'l Colt, Amer. inventor.\n(King Features) ..\nBy DOROTHY ROE\nNEW YORK (AP) - Women\nhave to move fast in the age of\nspace, says designer Adele Simpson.\nSo clothes must be geared for\nbodies in motion, she adds. In\nthe clothes shown in her fall collection, the body moves unhampered beneath \u00abthe free-hanging\nsilhouettes of suits, costumes and\ndresses.\nMrs. Simpson has acheived a\nshape that is distinctly new and\nyet definitely wearable in her\nnew collection. Suits have a free-\nand-easy, -air, with short jackets\nthat hardly touch the body except at the shoujders, and skirts\nhung from a camisole top, so that\nthey swing easily and never constrict the waistline.\nMost of the skirts are slim but\nloose, most of the jackets have a\nslight and graceful. dip in back.\nFEELING OF FREEDOM\nDresses follow the high-waisted\nEmpire line, but again with the\nfeeling of freedom and movement. Never is there a tight belt\nor a straining seam. When belts\nare Worn they are placed high\nand strung loosely through slots,\nleaving the silhouette unfettered.\nA new design has an understated, lightly shaped but loosely\nfitted overblouse and a draped,\ndome-shaped Zouave skirt, with\nharem hemline. This is used in a\nthree-piece costume of taupe wool\ncrepe.\n\"There must be no more sway-\nbacks.\" says Mrs. Simpson. \"The\nnew look in fashion has a straight\nloose, slim line from the ribs'\ndown\u2014no pinched waists, no accentuated busts, no hips thrust\nbackward. Stand as if you were\nsuspended by a string from the\ntop of your head\u2014that's the posture of the space age.\"\nCRAWFORD BAY \u2014 Mr. and\nMrs. Roy Eddy have had as guests\nrecently Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Hol-\nbert of Spokane, Wash., and Mr.\nand Mrs. Scharmz and Elwyn De-\nLaurier of Boise, Idaho.\n\"HOW\nCHRISTIAN\nSCIENCE HEALS\"\nCKLN, 1240 k,c.,>rlday, 6:30\nNew Functional Beauty!\n\"ruilitH- Dut-iei to Mt. Wt Uttm NMiMlciirrs\n13 Cu. Ft. 1958 AMC Refrigerator\nONLY\n$\n349\n\u2022 Full width trooior, capacity 75 lb), frosin food\".\n\u2022 Gold storage troy for short Hm* ttoragt, up to\n19lbf. \u2022\n\u2022 Innir door ponti for storing beveragoi, butter,\n't  Sliding porcelain critptr, held* 15 quartt.\n\u2022  Built-in look, designed and ongineored for fait\nfnitollotfon with standard eabinatt,\nNew functional beauty that is an accepted port.of today's gracious'living.... this\nfree standing refrigerator blends beautifully with Hie newest kitchen built-ini or\nstandard cabinets \u2014 is right at home anywhere \u2014 costs you so little when you consider what you get for your money. From the large capacity'freezer down to the 2-\nlargi crispers it lias been designed to give you tht utmost in food storage convenience ... even the door, is a marvel of well planned storage .with spaces for bottles\nond small cartons, butter comportment, egg trays, tray shelves and fingertip shelves.\nYou'll.agree it's tho last wdrd in refrigerator design and value ... see it today, bt\ntht Boy . ,7 buy it on \"Bay\" Easy Terms.\nALSO \u2014\n10.5 cubie Foot AMC   - 229.95\n10.5 Cubic Foot Deluxe AMC 279.95\nLESS LIBERAL TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE\nINCORPORATED  V!t MAY 1670.\n '.\".'\u25a0\u25a0\t\ni^i^.ifwrm^-!^!!Sfm^mi>.\nBusiness Spotlight-. . .7\nAlaska's Statehood May Affect\nAlberta's Big Oil Industry\n6 - NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1958    \u25a0 jqy Appeal Board\nShows Mercy to\nToronto Musician\nOTTAWA CCP) - A .bass-viol-\ntoting Toronto'musician will be\nable to deduct some transportation costs from his taxable income.\nThe income tax appeal board\nhas ruled that tht appeal of Gordon Cameron Mackay be allowed\nin part and the assessments referred back to the revenue department for reconsideration and\nreassessment.\nMr. Mackay, a free-lance bass\nviol player and also an employee\nof the Toronto I Symphony Orchestra, had claimed business expenses totalling $4,062.32 between\n1053 and 1055. The revenue department allowed $466.85.\nIn its judgment, made public\ntoday, the appeal board said the\nappellant, a man of medium\nheight and slight, build, had a\nheart condition. But to fulfil a\nconcert engagement he needed\nbass viol, a milky, 60-pound instrument which he could not get\ninto a street car or bus.\nTherefore, some other means\nof transportation was imperative,\nand Mr. Mackay used his car\nThe board ruled that Mr. Mackay was performing \"a contract\nfor services and not a contract\nfor service,\" except when he was\nworking on an employee - employer basis for the Toronto Symphony Orchestra.\nCALGARY (CP) -' Alaskan\nstatehood is likely to have Import-\n'ant effects on Alberta's oil indus-,\ntry, industry spokesmen . indicate\nhere.\n'Prospects of Western Canada oil\nproducers recapturing oil markets\nin the United States Pacific Northwest are dimming with the addition of Alaska to the union.\nGeologists say the surface has\nnot been scratched. Some say the\nsearch for oil in Alaska in recent\nmonths has been more feverish\nthan the gold rilsh.\nAlaska could become an - exporter able to compete with countries delivering oil along the U.S.\nHeat Drives\nLoggers\nFrom Woods\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A prolonged heat wave sent more than\n10,000 British Columbia loggers\ntrom the woods Thursday.\nA general forest closure went\neffect at midnight in the southwestern B.C. forest region.\nAll logging, sawmill, construction, mining, travel and recreation in the dried out forests is\nbanned.\n-In the Fraser Valley district\ndairy pastures. are parched and,\nwith wells dry, farmers are hauling water for stock and household use.\nA bush fire threatened homes\nln Glen Valley, 10 miles northwest of Abbotsford, until checked\nafter a 13-hour battle by , 20\nvolunteer firefighters.\nInability of some water mains\nto handle Increased demands .,as\nresulted in scanty water supplies\nfor many portions of Greater\nVancouver.\nSprinkling restrictions are in\neffect in West Vancouver, New\nWestminster, Port Moody, Port\nCoquitlam and Coquitlam.\nGreater Vancouver is using\nnearly double Its average daily\nrate of water and tapping its reserve lakes.\nLast weekend the water district\nconsumed an average 153,000,000\ngallons a day, compared with the\nyearly daily average of 86,500,-\n000 gallons. On some days at\ncertain periods, the district used\nWater at the rate of 200,000,000\ngallons.\nThere were 33 fires burning in\nthe Vancouver  fire district.\nwest coast. Low tanker rates leave\nher in a favorable maritime position. '\nShould   oil   import   restrictions\ncontinue in the U.S., Alaskan producers would be given preference\nover foreign producers.\nFAVORABLE STRUCTURE\nOne spokseman quoted an American oil journal as saying;\n\"It is esitmated that 100,000,000\nacres of Alaska is*, geologically\nfavorable for oil. Over half of this\nis uncharted wilderness.\"\nMain interest of the oil industry\nmay become centred in land owner,\nship and leasing rules. As a territory, the- U.S. government owned\nmore than \"90 per cent of Alaska's\n375,300,000 acres. The statehood bill\nprovides that Alaska will be allowed to select 102,550,000 million\nacres of unappropriated and un.\nreserved public lands to establish\na tax base.\nAlaska may open such land for\noil and mineral development. It\nis estimated 25 major companies\nhave spent more than $30|000,000\nin looking for Alaska oil, mostly\nin the Kenai a,rea.\nBy mid-1950, another 30,000,000\nacres are likely to come under\nlease or application. Oil companies\nstand ready to invest up to\n$300,000,000 in the search for new\nreserves.\nMARKET TRENDS\nCanadian Airport\nTraffic Increases\nOTTAWA (CP) - Traffic at\nCanadian airports Increased 15.3\nper cent last month compared with\nJune, 1957, the transport department reported Wednesday.\nFigures for 27 airports across\nCanada showed 287,937 landings\nand take-offs compared with 249,-\n700 for June, 1957.\nVancouver Airport was busiest\nwith 31,549. Next came Ottawa\n26,295; Montreal 26,234; Cartier\nville, Que., 26,233; Winnipeg 19,-\n985; Saskatoon 17,839; Toronto\nIsland 16,340; Edmonton 16,180\nToronto 13,854; Calgary 12,656\nNorth Bay, Ont., 12,075.\nScheduled airline take-offs and\nlandings saw Montreal'ahead with\n5214 followed by Toronto $080;\nVancouver 3179; Edmonton 2384-;\nand Winnipeg 2372.\nNEW YORK (API-Steels: and,\nother defence Issues boomed as\nthe stock market surged to high\nground for 1958 in heavy trading\nThursday. .\nAn estimated $2,187,000,000 was\nadded-to the quoted.value of\nstocks listed on the New York\nStock Exchange.\nInternational oils were unchanged to slightly lower. Gold\nmining stocks declined. A succession of news about higher copper\nprices boosted shares in that section.\nAmong Canadian issues traded\nHudson Bay Mining gained Iti\nand Aluminium Ltd. was up %\nInternational Nickel gained a full\npoint.\nAmerican Stock Exchange\nprices were generally higher. In\nthe Canadian list, Canadian Marconi gained Vi and Jupiter Oils\nwas .up Vs. Eureka lost 1-16.\nTORONTO (CP) - Industrials,\nbreaking through to a new 1058\nindex high,- led the stock market\nforward Thursday in light trading.\nCoppers showed strength as the\nprice of copper rose on the world\nmarkets. Campbell Chibougamau\ngained 50 cents at $5.50 and Opemiska was ahead 25 cents at\n$8.85. Almost every copper issue\nwas up a few cents.\nStocks that rose with the Middle East crisis slipped back in\nearly trading but were rallying\nat the dose. Trans Mountain was\nup I'M at 68%, but down from its\nhigh of $73V4. B-A Oil was. a **'\nwinner at 42. Home Oil B at\n19',ft and Royalite at 12V*a, each\ngained v>.\nAmong, industrials General\nProducts was the leader, adding\n5 points at 35, Empire Life was\nup 2 at 63 and Ford A VA at 86.\nMost.other industrials gains were\nless than a point.\nMONTREAL (CP) - Prices\nwere relatively static with\nchanges generally ranging to a\npoint on the Montreal and Canadian stock exchanges Thursday.\nRefining oils gained ground led\nby Trans Mountain Pipeline at\nWt, up 1%. In opening trading it\nhad hit 73>A. McColl at 56 was\nup one and BA Oil improved Vt\nto 42%. Canadian Oil was down\nVt at 26%.\nAlso strong were heavy industrials, led by Hudson Bay at 48V*\nand International Nickel at 76,\neach up one.\nUp one point each was Calgary\nPower at 6914, but Cockshutt was\ndown \u2022*  at 13H.\nChanges in a weak penny group\nmainly ranged to 5 cents each\nway. Western Canada Oil\nGrounds lifted 13 cents to 1.88.\nClosing averages; Banks up\n0.10 at 51.85, utilities off 1.0 at\n139.3, .industrials up 0.5 at 268.8,\ncombined unchanged at 225.6, papers off 1.6 at 377,2 and golds unchanged at 70.84,\nFamily Planning Not\nChurch Job Says\nBishop Front Ceylon\nLONDON (Reuters) -An Anglican bishop from Ceylon said Wednesday night that \"people who\nwant a refrigerator rather than a\nbaby are defeating holy matrimony.\"  '\u2022  ,- i\nDr. H. L. Jacob de Mel, bishop\nof Kurunagla in Ceylon and a\ndelegate to the Lambeth conference of bishops now in session here,\nsaid he does not think it Is the\nchurch's job .to instruct couples in\nfamily planning. He added the\npeople of Ceylon would be. suspicious of such work \"before we\nourselves are ready to think out\nthe matter.\"\nTito Recognizes\nNew Iraq Gov't\nBELGRADE, Yugoslavia (API-\nPresident Tito's government announced Thursday Yugoslavia has\nrecognized the rebel government\nin Iraq and plans to set up normal\ndiplomatic relations between the\ntwo countries.\nTito, who was conferring with\nPresident Nasser of the United\nArab Republic when the pro-\nNasser revolt broke out, cabled\nthe new' Iraqi premier that all\npeoples have the right to decide\non their own social- system,\nDenies Photographers\nLocked In Small Room\nOTTAWA (CP)-Defence Minister Pearkes told the Commons\nThursday that \"at no time\" were\npress photographers locked in a\nmess aboard HMCS Crescent during a naval review, by Princess\nMargaret off Victoria.'\nMr. Pearkes was replying to\nFrank Howard (CCF \u2014 Skeena),\nwho Wednesday asked for tn investigation into reports that 13\nnews photographers were locked\nin a mess aboard the Crescent\nfor S\"*' hours.\nThe account given the Commons by Mr. Pearkes differed in\nsome points from press reports.\nThe minister said the photographers were \"accommodated\" in\nthe chief petty officer's mess..\nHe said all had been previously advised of the limited facilities that were available because the Crescent is an operational ship.\nDuring the cruise the photographers were given \"ample opportunity\" to take pictures of Uie\nprincess. Also they had two periods of seven minules each to\nphotograph ships passing in review, but' because of limited facilities these had to be taken in\nturns, three photographers at a\ntime.\nPress reports quoting the photographers said they had been\nlocked in \"a' small room\" on the\nship during the 314-hour voyage\nand that at the time of the review\nwere let out three at t time for\nthree-minute periods to take pictures. The photographers laid\nthey could see virtually none of\nthe ceremonies,\nDismiss Goldfine\nOn Witness Stand\nWASHINGTON (AP) - Invest!-\ngators dismissed Bernard Gold-\nfine as a - witness in their\nInquiry into his gift-giving relations with White House assistant\nSherman Adams.\nTo the end of his eighth day\nof questioning, Goldfine maintained; \"I did no wrong.\"\nChairman Oren Harris of the\nHouse of Representatives subcommittee said he Intends to push\nfor a contempt of Congress citation because of the Boston textile\nand real estate millionaire's refusal to answer certain questions.\nRepublicans called for testimony from John R. Steelman, the\nchief White House assistant under former president Truman.\nGoldfine said he went \u2022 to the\nWhite House more often to see\nSteelman than he has since\nAdams came in under Eisenhower.\nTHE PHANTOM STRIKES\nCOLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - A\nsneak thief who robbed a sporting goods store of $175 worth of\nmerchandise wasn't much of a\ngrammarian. He left his note\ntraced on a dusty window: \"The\nphantom done this.\"\nUrges Additional Outlets\nFor Canadian Crude Oil\nBy DAVE OANCIA\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nMONTREAL (CP) - President\nGlenn E. Nielson of the Canadian\nHusky Oil Limited told the Borden commission today that additional market outlets must be\nfound now for Western Canada's\ncrude oil if the industry is to.\nmaintain healthy growth.\n\"Many independent oil oper-\nj ators now are in danger of going,\nout of business if additional markets are not found soon,\" said the\nhead of one of Canada's independent companies in a submission to\nthe royal commission on energy.\nMr. Nielsen said the only market over which Canadians, can exercise some control is in Eastern\nCanada. He did not take a position on the construction of a pipeline from the Prairies to Montreal but said he feels \"the most\neconomical approach is the one\nwhich should be followed.\"\nUP TO ECONOMISTS\nHe said it is up to the economists and other experts to determine how to get Prairie crude oil\nto'the Montreal refinery area and\nadded it might be more economical to extend the interprovincial\npipeline which now serves the\nSarnia and Toronto areas.\nMr. Nielson saw little hope of\ngaining new markets for Canadian oil in the United States. The\nU.S. producers now are facing\nmarkets nearly as curtailed as\nthose faced by Canadian operators.\nEven if the United States was\nto import all its crude, he added,\nCanadian oil could not compete\neconomically, except in a few\nborder. areas.\nHe referred to suggestions that\nPrairie crude oil coqld be shipped\nto the,.Chicago, Detroit and Tof-\nedo areas but he saw little hope\nthat Canadian oil could compete\nin these areas.\nHAVE U.S. PIPELINES\nRefineries there now are served\nby a network bf pipelines and\nany gains which could be made\nby Canadians would be at the ex-\npnse of U.S. producers who are\ncapable of supplying the market.\n\"The problem now is to find\nmarkets which would make it\npossible for the Canadian independents to stay in-business1.\n\"It seems wrong that Canada\nshould look beyond its borders for\nmarkets while at the same time\nallowing 'more than half our requirements to be, met by Imports.\"\nMr. Nielson was critical of federal government policy.\n\"Markets available- in the Milwaukee, Chicago and Minneapolis\nareas now are gradually being\nsupplied from United States fields\nwhile Canada tries to decide what\naction to take.\"\nThe company chief said he\nfeels the Canadian government\nwould, be responsible for the loss\nof any natural .gas markets because \"a political football\" has\nbeen made of the gas export\nquestion.\nThreat To Oil Easier\nThan In Suez Crisis\nBy THOMAS P. WHITNEY\nNEW YORK (AP) -Arab nationalists in Syria, Egypt and\nIraq could cause a lot of trouble\nfor western Europe's industry by\ncutting, the flow of-much of the\nMiddle East's oil in retaliation\nfor the American move into Lebanon.\nBut the free world's oil situation today is a lot less tight then\nit was during the Suez crisis,\nwhen closing of the Suez Canal\nand-sabotage of orte of the Syrian\npipelines to the eastern Mediterranean caused a petroleum\ncrisis in western Europe. Many\nwestern European countries were\nforced to ration oil supplies..   '\nFor one thing, there is a large\nsurplus tanker capacity available\nnow for any emergency.\nFor another thing, there currently is available, according to\nestimates Of oil industry officials\n. in New York, a large unused production capacity in the U.S.,\nVenezuelan and ; Canadian oil\nfields.\nKEEPING RESERVES  .\nAmerican oil industry officials\nalso estimate that west European\ncountries, which learned the hard\nway in the Suez crisis, are keep-,\ning fair sized oil reserves on\nhand.\nHere are some figures:\nTotal oil production of the non-\nCommunist -world has been\nrunning at 15,000,000 barrels a\nday during the last 12 moiiths. Ol\nthis, 4,000,000 barrel? a day are\nproduced in the Middle East.\nAbout 900.000 barrels a day\nflow to market through pipelines,\nwhich cross Syria and Lebanon to\ntbe eastern Mediterranean. Arab\nnationalists with or without the\nconnivance of their governments\ncould stop this flow very easily\u2014\nas they did during the Suez crisis\nhave threatened to do this.\nUNUSED CAPACrY\nBut hanging over the heads uf\nany Arab hotheads who think\nthey could bring the West to its\nknees by cutting off Arab Oil is\nfrom '2,500,000 to 3,000,000 barrels\na day of unused capacity in the\nUnited States, Venezuela and\nCanada.\nThe flow of wells there has\nbeen cut back Or is being held in\nreserve because of oversupply on\nworld markets. In a major crisis\nthis production could be turned\non and in time transported to\nwestern Europe to meet oil needs\nAnd, as American oil men point\nout, if the West needs Arab oil,\nthe Arabs need Western i money\njust as much.   '-.\u2022'\".    .  -; '\u25a0\nVEAL SAL\nMalkin's\nStrawberry Jam\n_99\nFresh Pack.\n\"The Kidt Love It\"\n48 or. Tin \t\nPride of Okanagan\nChoice Plums\n-\u00a5\u25a0 Veal Shoulder\n* Veal Stew\nTop\nQuality\nIS oz. Tin\nMilk Fed.\nWatte Free\n6fo-79c * Veal Rib Chops\n\" \u25a0* Veal Cutlets\n> Veal Sirloin Steaks\nHeinz\nTomato Juice\nBreaded,\nBoneless. Ready-to-cook.\nTender,\nDelicious\n10 oi. Tin\nIO'\" 99\n-it\n*\u25a0\u25a079\nib. 89'\nii, 75'\n1    \"'.    \"'\nWeston's\nSweet Biscuits\nRoasting Chicken\nlb. 59\nFresh Local.\nYoung and Tender,\nHead and Feet Off\n5-6 lb. average.\nCentennial\nAssortment\nib 39\nBreakfast Style,\nExciting new\nflavour \t\nBeef Sausage\nlb. 35\nCrabmeat\nCrawford.\n6 oi. Tin\nSea Heaven.\n4 oi. Tin \t\nFRYERS\n _59<z\n____ 49c:\nTomato Ketchup r \u00ab,. 49c!\nWhite Vinegar sr__ 99c\n'       :\u25a0>'\u25a0' '       -'-.'  '\u25a0*' \u25a0'\nGrapefruit Juice vLyt_ 39c:\nOrange Juice WfM 43l\nPears s\nFreth.   Ice-peck.\nPan ready.\t\nlb. 59\nBARTLETT.\nPride of Olcanagan.\noi. Tin  \t\n5 for 99c:\nExtra Sweet\nWatermelon\nRed-Ripe.\n12 Ib. average.\nEACH _--\t\n59\nOkanagan\nApp.Ulb.\ncrate\nPRICES EFFECTIVE TODAY AND SATURDAY\nWE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES\n w^m^m^,-                . ^.^^p^p^l^^-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1958 \u2014 7\nmmm\nM\nWhat To Do\nJudge, Jury, Counsel Wear tighter\nClothes In Court al Sommers' Trial\nVANCOUVER (CP)r-The Sommers bribery-conspiracy trial has\nbogged down\u2014in paper and heat\nThe paper is in the form- of\n\u25a0cores of letters and other documents presented by the. defence\nsince It opened its case Monday\nThe documentary evidence, is\nProducts counsl Douglas McK.\nnss dealings between his firm\nand another accused concern, Pacific Cosst Services Limited.\nProsecutor Victor Dryer, who\nhas challenged admissibility of\nmany of the defence documents,\nhas charged that $30,000 paid\nPacific by B.C. Forest was in\nreality bribe money to get a government timber licence and that\npart of it went to former lands\nand forests minister Robert Sommers.\nThe heat is the result of Vancouver's record temperatures.\nWednesday it caused Mr. Justice\nJ. 0. Wilson, to doff his heavy\nrobes and come into court in a\nblue business suit and the prosecution and defence lawyers to do\nthe same. The nine male members of the jury appeared in shirt\nsleeves for the second day and\nthe three women jurors in the\nlightest of summer clothing.\nThe Judge also gave the accused individuals \u2014 Sommers,\nH. W. Gray, John Gray and\nCharles D. Scnultn\u2014permission to\ntake off their coats in the pris\noner's   box.   All   but   Charles\nSchultz quickly did so.\nCHARGED AS KINGPIN\nSommers, who resigned his\nportfolio in 1956 but still ls a\nmember of the legislature, is de-\nscribed by the Crown as a \"kingpin\" along with H. W. Gray in a\nconspiracy to collect bribe money\nfrom firms willing to pay for use\nof his influence in obtaining government licences to cut Umber\non Crown land. The prosecution\nalleges that thousands of dollars\nwere split between Sommers;\nH. W. Gray and Schultz.\nWednesday B.C. Forest Vice-\nPresident Thomas Burgess testified that his firm retained Pacific\nand H. W. Gray for their knowledge of the industry. He said Pacific alerted his firm to business,\nworth, millions of dollars, including acquisition of timber, mills\nand other prospects.\nHa said Pacific gave B.C. Forest advice about getting into the\nlaminated timber field on a process known as \"glulam\" and\ntestified that advice given by\nH. W Gray on selection of \"pipe\nstock\" \u2022 lumber\u2014selected lumber\nused in the manufacture of\nwooden pipe \u2014 had saved B.C.\nForest $10,000 a year.\nHe also told the court under\nMr. Brown's uestioning that\nB.C. Forest had employed the\nSchultz timber engineering firm\nto do survey work in the.Jervis\nInlet area.\nGUIDE TO . ...\nNelson - North Shore\nBalfour\nWUUsAb Salgowi (Md Qoivd\nBALFOUR.   B.C.\nPHONE  9\n\u2022 Comfortable' Units.\n\u2022 Sandy Beach.\n\u2022 Boats and Motor Rental\n\u2022 Reasonable Daily and Weekly Rates\nMRS. JANE E.  MILLER\nQh&MSJnL \u00a3MCL    Auto Court\nAt 6 Mile on the North Shore \u2014 Phone 471-Y-l\n, For your holiday or one-n'ght stop-over\n\u2022 TRAILER AND TENT GROUNDS\n\u2022 16 MODERN CABINS\n\u2022 BEAUTIFUL SANDY BEACH\n\u2022 GOOD, SAFE BOATS\nMRS. A. SANDBERG, Manager\nFull Marine facilities\nRent a Boat, Motor or Both by\nHour, Day or Days.\n\u2022 Fishing Equipment\n\u2022 Accessories\nNelson Marine Service\nCity Wharf \u2022; Phone 1459\n\u00a3.. \u25a0\u25a0'\nEVAPORATIVE\nCOOLER\n\"Natures Own Air Conditioning Method\"\nAIR CONDITION A ROOM\nSize 13'x20' For Only $93.99       *\nWe Are Equipped to Handle,\nAny Sixe Air Conditioning Job\nColeman Electric\n502 Front St.\nPhone 2055\nCURZON JUNCTION, where the Dewdney Trail once met the Walla Walla frail\nand where Idaho blacktop now meets B.C.'s smooth Highway No. 3, is the site of a British Columbia Travel Bureau's tourist information caravan, above. It is not unusual for\n10 to 15 cars to be lined up here.\nTHE 'KOOTENAYS' latest historical marker is found\non Highway No. 3-95 overlooking the east side of Moyie\nLake in the valley in which David Thompson was the\nfirst white man to tread. All photos courtesy J. S. D.\nSmith of Nelson.\nCanada Ready to Assist\nUN, Says Diefenbaker\nOTTAWA (CP) - Prime Minister Diefenbaker said Canada\nwill encourage and\" assist the\nUnited Nations to send an emergency force of its own to-relieve\nBritish troops landed ln Jordan\nThursday.\nMr. Diefenbaker told the Commons that instructions have been\nissued to Canada's delegate at the\nUN to consult \"urgently all the\nBritish and American delegates\nwith a view to devising a formula\non action by the UN to achieve\nstability in the Middle East,\nHowever Mr. Diefenbaker, who\nBALFOUR\nFERRY\nSERVICE\nChevron Gas and Oils\nMarine Oils and Gas '\nTune-ups\u2014Check-ups\nOpen' 8:30 a.m. to II:(III p.m.\nPhone Balfour 30\nwas replying to Opposition Leader\nPearson, said that the situation is\nnot simple.\nIn an apparent reference to\nRussia, the prime minister said\nthere is the possibility of a veto\nin the Security Council on any\naction to send a UN force to Jordan.\nIf that happened, the. proposal\nwould have to be taken to the\nGeneral Assembly where* a two-\nthirds majority vote would be required in support of such a force\n\"or any\" direct action.\" by the UN,\nExternal Affairs Minister Smith\nwas en route to Washington for\nconsultations with U.S. State Secretary Dulles and British Foreign\nMinister Selwyn Lloyd. Mr. Smith\nwould go to the UN Saturday.\nSTAR LEAVES MILLIONS\nLAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)-Silent\nfilm star Norma Talmadge left\nan estate valued at $3,060,321 exclusive of real estate in California and Florida. She died Dec.\n24, 1057, in Las Vegas, where\nshe made her home. The eslate\nwas left to her husband and two\nsisters.\nMiddle East\nReaction\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nReaction to the Anglo-American\nmoves in .Uie latest Middle East\ncrisis has demonstrated again\nmat the world is split into three\ncamps \u2014 Western, Eastern and\nneutralist.\nThe Western camp generally\nsupports the sending oi troops\ninto pro-Western countries in the\ntroubie-packed area to bolster\nDeleaguered governments.\nThe Eastern bloc opposes it.\nNeutralist countries seemed most\nworried lest the dispute blow up\ninto all-out nuclear war.\nPrime Minister Nehru of India\nsaid he views the landing of U.S.\nMarines in Lebanon with grave\nconcern. \"As I've always said,\"\nhe added, \"foreign intervention is\naiways dangerous.\"\nHe had not yet commented on\nthe British troops landing in Jordan. '\nCOWPEMNS LANDINGS\nYugoslavia, another major\npower trying to maintain a neutral line, condemned the U.S.\nlanding outright and called for\nimmediate withdrawal of the\nmarines.\nIn .Ghana, Prime Minister\nKwame Nkrumah said the U.S.\ntroops \u2022 should be pulled out as\nsoon as possible, but he supported\nthe U.S. stand that an international police force should be sent\nthere to maintain peace.\n\u25a0Japan voiced doubts about the\nU.S. move. Koto Matsudaira told\nthe United Nations Security Council Wednesday that his country\nhad \"certain misgivings\" about\nthe circumstances which made\nthe landing necessary.\nCommunist North Korea's\nPyongyang radio said \"U.S. imperialists cannot \"cover up their\ntrue color as heinous aggressors.\"\nOn Formosa, Premier Chen\nCheng of Nationalist China issued\na statement saying \"we are\nhappy that President Eisenhower\nhas finally taken an action commensurate with the position- and\nresponsibility of the United States\nas the leader of the democratic\nworld.\" \/\nCRITICAL VIEW\nDagbladet, . Norway's largest\n\"afternoon newspaper, reflected\nthe critical view of Scandinavian\nnations, asserting:\n\"Once more those responsible\nfor American policy have acted\nstupidly and in panic Tho Iraq\ncoup caused the American land-\nAtlantic Fleet\nIn Readiness\nHALIFAX (CP)-The Canadian\nNavy's Atlantic Fleet is shipshape and ready for sea on short\nnotice if ordered by Ottawa into\na state of advanced readiness.\nSome elements of the fleet's\npowerful anti \u2022 submarine force\nare out of port. But, a spokesman\nsaid Thursday the navy here \"is\nready at all times to go to sea\non short notice.\"\nAs far as can be learned here\nthe fleet has received no instructions for increased sea duty because of the Middle East crisis.\nSome observers expected the fleet\nto be. put on an alert Monday\nwhen the United States Atlantic\nFleet increased anti - submarine\nvigils and cancelled leaves. But\neverything is normal here.\nThe aircraft carrier Bonaventure is in dry dock at Saint John,\nN.B., \"for refit until mid-August,\nNavy sources said today, however, that if needed the carrier\ncould be returned to service\n\"quickly.\" During the Suez crisis\nin 1956, her predecessor, the Magnificent, was used to carry Canadian troops to the Middle East\n(or United Nations police duty.\nFerry Walkout\nSeems Unlikely\nVANCOUVER (CP)-A threat\nened walkout of ships officers on\nBlack Ball ferries in defiance of\na regulation under which the\nprovincial government assumed\ncontrol of the service last month,\nfailed to materialize Wednesday.\nPresident Richard Greaves of\nthe Marine Engineers Union had\nsaid 85 per cent of union members employed by Black Ball\nproposed to leave the ships following the arrival of Princess\nMargaret in Vancouver Wednesday after her Vancouver Island\ntour.\nCaptain E. W. Meadows, business agent for the Canadian\nMerchant Service Guild, said\nWednesday night he doubted any\nwalkout would take place.\nThe two unions, together with\nthe Seafarers Interational Union,\nwent on strike against Black Ball\nJune 23 but the provincial government assumed control of the\nferry service under the Civil Defence Act.     ...\nThe government move made\ncompany employees liable to $500\nfine or three months imprisonment if they refused to man the\nships. The line has been the only\nsurface connection between Van.\ncouver Island and the B.C. mainland since the SIU struck CPR\nferries May 16.\nNegotiations between the unions\nand the company are continuing.\nThe engineers and Merchant\nService Guild members are seeking a 19-per-cent raise while the\nseafarers are demanding a 25-\nper-'cent increase.\nCaptain Morgan\n^\/^Vii\/y\/\nRUM\ning in Lebanon, an action which\nbrought the world to the brink of\nwar.\"\n\"Today, a new stupid action\ntook place, this time caused by\nGreat Britain. These actions have\nhurt the prestige of the West for\nyears to come.\"\nTHE VOLNEY\nHOTEL\nIN SPOKANE\n\"THE FRIENDLY CITY\"^\nMODERN ROOMS\nMODERATE RATES\nMr. and Mrs. Ray  Lynch,\nOwners\nTel.   MA. 4-2386\n$2 tingle to $6.50  Double\nFamily Rooms $6.60 to $7.60\nW, 410 Riverside Avenue\nSpokane 1, Washington\nUtiik Mod ami $sul\nBY RON LAWRENCE   .-\nThis column had hoped to give\nan account of the Kokanee Glacier\nPark trip by today, but due to a\nvariety of reasons, we were unable to proceed on the jaunt. Perhaps it is a pity, and yet we feel\nit may be Just as well to await\ncooler temperatures before attempting the conquest.\nFate has indeed been unkind this\nweek, one disappointment has followed another and it has come to\npass that little material is available for tihs column's use.\nOne happy feature of the week\noccurred to'us on Sunday, however, when, undaunted by rough\nwater, we hobbled down to the\nbeach by our North Shore home\nand cast a wicked line into the\nwaves. We are proud that the first\nfly (a royal coachman) hit the\nwater at precisely 4:27 a.m. and\nfor the next two hours nothing hap-\nDGncd\nHaving faith in the coachman\n(we liked the look of it, even if the\nfish didn't) we-continued casting\nfor another 10 minutes and eventually decided to have that last\ncast (for about the seventh consecutive time). Whether or not it\nreally would have been the last\ncast had we not caught a fish, is\nimmaterial and nothing to do with\nthis particular yarn. We did catch\na fish, though, an 18 inch, two-\npound rainbow which struck like\na blacksmith's hammer.\nFrom then on there was no looking back and we spent most of\nSunday \"throwin' 'er out an' reelin'\n'er in until our typewriter-thumping fingers were sore and our\nwrists ached. Result? Seven nice\nrainbow, about 14 healthy strikes\nto add to the day's pleasure and,\nof course, eight fish that got away.\nSince that time we have been\nunsuccessful, and, like \"the dawn\nof the world, the blinding rays of\na CONCLUSION are slowly seeping through the printer's ink which\nthickly encrusts this column's\nthinking machinery.\nFishing off the beach on the\nNorth Shore with a fly and bubble,\nthis column has caught fish only\non three occasions. On each of\nthese, the water was quite rough\nand no fish were visible jumping\nfor surface feed.\nOn the apparently perfect days,\nwhen the lake is as smooth as glass\nand fish are cavorting in mad\nleaps all over the placid surface,\nwe have had no luck, not even the\nmerest bite.\nSo, as we said, slowly we are\ncoming to the conclusion that fly\nfishing when the lake is chock full\nof mosquitoes, bugs, May flies and\na billion or more other pests is\nnot a. profitable venture. Besides,\nthe water being smooth, the big\nfish are more careful what they\nlatch into and are able to detect\nan artificial bug from the real\nthing.\nOn the other hand, when the water is rough, flies and bugs are not .\nin evidence on the surface and it\njust could be that the hundreds of\nsmall fry that gad about on a placid\nlake seek the more comfortable\nsurroundings of deeper water, feeding on plankton.\n. The bigger fish, more capable of\nnavigating closer ' to the surface\nand being hungry, will take a stab\nat almost anything that resembles\ntheir favorite morsel, especially so\nsince the rough surface does not\nallow them to see the object of\ntheir desire quite so clearly.\nThis column may be all wrong,\nbut we are going to test our theory\nfurther, fishing only on rough days\nand staying away on calm ones. At\nbest, results will be no worse than\nthey have been to date.\n* \u2022 *\nTalking of fishing \u2014 lt seems that\nthis is grasshopper time and it has\nbeen reported to us that the \"hoppers make good bait 'round about\nnow. Not having tried, we are not\ntoo conversant with this mode of\nfishing and if we can find one of\nthe pesky critters we will 'ave a\ngo.\n* \u2022 \u00bb\nThe odd looking fish efrught by\nthis column some time ago has\nturned out to be a Montana grayling. What do you know?    .\n* * \u2022\nAn advertisement In the Ohio\nUniversity .magazine, recently had\nthis to say: \"The rifle club will\nmeet .today at 7 p.m. Execution of\nofficers.\"\n\u00ab \u00bb \u2022\n\"Fishing? , , . You're kidding,\nof course . . . well\u2014it's tod darned\nwindy and cold and wet and miserable and the water will be too high\nand muddy and I have a lot of\nwork to do at home and my wife\njust won't stand for it ... but I'll\nbe ready ln 10 minutes.\"\nKeep Your. Eye on Classified!\nVACATION GUIDE\nFor South of the Border\nJhii BdvirtHimint li not pubilihurl et tlijployed\nby tho liquor Control Board ar by thi   *\nBtwTMgjjjl ef jjrjjjjtj ttkimhltt.\nWELCOME\nPARKING  FROM  OUR fRONT DGOB\nWhere\nHospitality Is\nTraditional\nWhen you're traveling\nWith your family, br when\nyou are traveling alone,\nthere is no substitute for\n. Sincere-hospitality at your\nfavored hotel.\nHospitality knows no sea'\n\u2022on at Hotel Spokane.\nFamilies are welcome, el\ncourse. In fact, under Our\nFAMILY PLAN,, no\ncharge Ii made for children under 14.\nHome Af the world-famous\n\u25a0Silver Grill. In the center\nof all downtown activity.\nWI,\u00bbUIII|IIHM\u201e,|J\nTHE SKYLARK\nRESTAURANT\nAnd\nCocktail  SDungsL\nPAN-FRIED CHICKEN\nA SPECIALTY\nCHOICE STEAKS\nAcross From Ridpath Hotel\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nAAA APPROVED\nLIBERTY MOTEL\nNorth 6801  Division St.\nSpokane, Washington\n\u2022 Ultra Modern\n2 to 6 Person Units.\n\u2022 15 Minutes To Downtown\nShopping.\nMR. and MRS. R. W.\n\"BOB\" WHIPPS\nOwners and Managers\nFina\nFood\nJhiL Jiwal in. JoodL. tuuffoddaik.\nENJOY OUR ITALIAN CUISINE\nOFTEN IMITATED NEVER EQUALED\nRIPPLE ROOM\nFOR COCKTAILS . . .\nN. 110 Howard Spokane, Wash.\nVISIT\nENJOY\nwest end of\nboone ave., spokane\nfree parking \u2014 picnic tables\nOul...\nJack Rabbit\nRoller Coaster\nScooter Cars\nRock-o-Plane\nOctopus\nRocket Ships\nMerry-Go-Round\nihsL . . .\n# Nut House\n\u2022 Free Zoo \u2014 Feed the Sea Lions\nRIDE  ADMISSION  TICRETS:\nChildren 10c (12 tor $1.00) - Teenagers 15c <8 for $1.00)\nAdults 20c (6 for $1.00)\n(Except Scooter Cars)\nThis Ad Wprth 1 Free Ride (Except Scooter Cars)\nT\n .8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1958\nUnheralded Tommy Robinson\nBreaks 100-Yard Dash Mark\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinii\nHolt, Moore Each Likely\nOpponents for Durelle\n\u2022;., VANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Boxing promoter Earle Kal-\n- gni said Wednesday night he has obtained world light-\nheavyweight champion Archie Moore's tentative consent to a title fight here in September with Yvon Durelle.\nvs Kalani said he phoned Moore in San Francisco af\nter hearing that Durelle retained his British Empire light-\nheavyweight title in a figlit with South Africa's Mike Holt\n,,in Montreal Wednesday night.\n7 , The promoter said Durelle had already indicated\nhe would like to meet Moore here but the bout depended\non Durelle's winning the Wednesday night fight. Details\nof the proposed match had not yet been worked out.\n\"\"!\"     JOHANNESBURG Reuters) \u2014 The  Transvaal  Na-\n...t'onal Sporting Club today .cabled an offer to Empire\nlight-heavyweight champion Yvon Durelle ior a return\n.fight with South African champion Mike\" Holt here later\n.   this year.\nDurelle, from Baie Ste. Anne, N.B., beat Holt on a\n\" technical knockout in Montreal Wednesday night.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMII\nByMCKSORDS-\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nSPORTS\nlllllllllllllllllllillMIIIIIIMMIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nA TIM CA\u00bbI OUT OPEN, AMD\nPLATTEMBD MAK6S A GOOP\nMARKER TO PUACE AT THIS EMTRAMC6\nTO A PORTAGE OKA SfOTWHEEE lOU\nHAVE HAD FISHINS LUCK. IT CAN BE,\n.SEEM FROM A SOOP DISTAMCB\nIF WU ARE PRIV- ,\nIMS IN THE OPS\/*\nCOOHm\/ AMD NEED\nWATER FOR AN\nEMERSEMCV, VOUR\nFOR A CANTEEM,    \/\"\nW'RAPA^BOTT'.e     *,,(\n\u2022LAYERS OF RUBBER\nTAPE. IT ACTS AS       ,\\\\\nAN INSULATOR AMD   '\\\nPROTECTS THE\nBOTTLE FROM EASj\"\nBKEAKAG6\n0 mt, bhta lUtiustssDlcMfl'i^' ~ \"\nBy JACK SULLIVAN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nCARDIFE (CPlr-Tommy Robinson, a dusky six-footer from\nBahamas who arrived in this\nWelsh capital too late for training licks, is the new British Empire Games 100 - yard record-\nholder.\nThe 20-year-old youth, enrolled\nat the University of Michigan on\na scholarship, got off a train\nWednesday night and hours later\nastounded track-and-field athletes\nwith a 9.5-second sprint in' a pre^\nliminary round of the 100.\nHis performance, which ticked\n1-10 of a second off the Games\nrecord shared by Australia's\nJohnny Treloar and Mike Agostini of Trinidad, who is running\nfor Canada this year, was the\nhighlight of an afternoon of fun\nand games for many* in the 100\nand 440-yard events. They were\ncontent to finish ih the first three\nin their heat, earning the right\nto continue when the track program opens officially Saturday\nafternoon.\nONLY BAHAMAS ENTRY\nTonight Robinson will., carry\nhis country's flag in the Games\nmarch-past of 34 nations in the\nopening ceremony. He is the only\nrepresentative from the British\nWest Indies island and a crowd\nof more than 40,000 ls expected\nto give him s champion's welcome. '       i\nSix of Canada's seven entries\nsurvived the preliminary round.\nThe casualty was quarter-miler\nDoug Clement of Vancouver, a\nsmoothie with plenty of international experience, who came\nUP with one of his poorer times\nto finish fourth in his heat. Clement, elected captain of Canada's\ntrack team just a week ago, was\nclocked in 49,4, more than a second off his previous best.\nGeorge Shepherd of Port Col-\nborne, Ont., and Terry Tobacco\nof Cumberland, B.C., who is Canada's best quarter - miler, both\nloafed in their heats. Tobacco\nwas timed in 48.2 in his winning\neffort, the third best time among\nthe quarter-milers, and won in a\nbreeze. Shepherd's time was 49.6.\nAgostini showed'the best form\nof Canada's sprint entries. He\nscampered home a comfortable\nfirst in 9.7 seconds, just 1-10 of a\nsecond off his Games record, and\nnoticeably slowed up fn the last\n25 yards,\nStan Levenson of Toronto went\nall out for second place in 9.9\nafter a photo finish. Ronald Jones of Wales was placed,\nfirst by a whisker.' V\nCAMERON SECOND\nStu Cameron of Saskatoon was\nsecond in his heat in 10 seconds\neven and Pete Stanger of Montreal qualified with a third place\nin 10.2.\nThe sprint quaUfiers face a\ntough afternoon Saturday, A six-\nheat second round, semi - finals\n1% hours later and'the finals 80\nminutes after that.\nA second round of the 440 is\nscheduled for Tuesday afternoon\nJhSL.\nSHORT\nCIRCUIT\nBy JOHN SHORT\nSptfdL \u00a3dtiot\nColorado Senator Proposes\nLegalization of Old Statute\nIt is no longer a secret thqt competitive sport in Nelson\nis feeling the pinch of financial necessity.\n\u25a0 Nelson, Maple Leafs for the past three ox four years\nhave struggled to avoid a series of baths in red ink; Nelson\nOutlaws have had difficulty making ends meet for more\nyears than Ron Nash will willingly discuss; attendance has\nfallen off at Little League and Babe Ruth League games,\nand there is slight promise of improvement.\nOutlaws, of course, have had more success at the gate\nrecently, and the upsurge in the team's fortune has been\nwell-deserved. Outlaws are worthy of all good things that\ncome their way, and there are other organizations in the same\nsituation,  among  them  Nel\nson's   Hume   Hotel   softball\nsquad.\nOutlaws have been handicapped\nfor several years by the fact there\nis no league operating in the West\nKootenay. The earnest local squad\nhas attempted to play a slate of\nexhibitions against high-calibre opponents, but every so often a' squad\nis rung in with lofty credentials and\nsinking performance.\nHumes are in a league, and it\nappears to be a league of tight\ncompetition in which any one squad\n'is liable to stop any other squad\non any given night. Humes are at\npresent leading their best-of-seven\nWest Kootenay Senior B Men's\nFastball semi-finals by one game\nover Thrums Indians, and they lead\nthe series by dint of hard work\nand good fortune\nThis adrailiHmaat It ml putlilhiJ n, ailplayaa by lha llqunr tjjjrj laard 0, Irf II\" Gwtnumat ol limA Calamlfr.\nand the semi-finals and final on\nThursday, July 24, two days before the 34-nation games close. t\nSurprise of the afternoon was\nthe disqualification of Ghulam\nRazik of Pakistan, ranked among\nthe first five in the Commonwealth in the short sprints. He\nhas done 9.6 in the 100. Razik\nmade two false starts and was\ndeclared out of the race.\nThis is believed to be the first\ndisqualification for such an offence since the Games opened at\nHamilton 28 years ago.\nHARD TO UNDERSTAND\nCanadian track coach Bob Adams of Saskatoon, who watched\nthe proceedings froih the stands,\nc o u 1 d n't understand Clement's\nloss.\n\"His start wasn't too good and\nI guess that's what beat him,\"\nhe said afterwards.\nThe 25-year-old Clement, who\nwill race in the 880 and the mile\nrelay, was lying third until England's Edward Hampson spurted\npast him in the back stretch.\nHampson finished third in 48 4, a\nfull second ahead of Clement.\nMorris Renwick, hook - tossing\nHume righthander, supplied the\nmajority of the hard work in Wednesday night's first game, 24 triumph, and at the same time he\nreceived a generous portion of good\nfortune.\nIt takes little imagination to\nwatch Renwick pitch ahd to remember the days when he was one\nof the most consistently good soft-\nball hurlers in B.C. lie isn't especially fast, and he isn't much pf\na showmaif, but he's a well-rounded\nand thoroughly competent hurler.\nAnd he proved it Wednesday\nnight, holding the hard-hitting Indians to four hits\u2014three of them\nscratch singles\u2014over a nine-inning\nroute. He struck out only one, and\nhe received excellent defensive\nsupport, and he was master of the\nsituation almost all the time.\nWASHINGTON .(AP) -Former\nsenator Edwin Johnson of Colorado proposed Thursday that Congress legalize an old baseball\nrule that would prevent major\nleague telecasts from conflicting\nwith minor league games.\nJohnson said quick money for\nball clubs and advertisers is the\nroot of baseball's radio and TV\nproblems.\nHe told the Senate anti-monopoly subcommittee he wasn't worried at all about the possibility\nvast sections of-the country\n'would be blacked out if baseball\nwere granted power to regulate\nits TV-radio activity.\nSelf-regulation is proposed in a\nbill passed by the House of Representatives that would lift the\nanti-trust laws from many prac\ntices   of  pro  baseball,   football,\nbasketball and hockey.\n\"My fear is that the majors\nwon't go far enough,\" Johnson\ntestified. \"They are not going to\nblack out broadcasts or telecasts\nat all.\"\nWOULD LIMIT TIME\nJohnson   generally   supported\nthe House  bill but suggested a\nCampanella's\nRecovery Said\nAbove Normal\nNEW YORK (AP) - The progress towards recovery of Roy\nCampanella, injured Los Angeles\nDodger catcher, is \"better than\nnormal,\" a spokesman for the New\nYork University-Bellevue Medical\nCentre institute of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation said Thursday.\n\"His determination and eagerness to recover are responsible for\n50 per cent of his improvement.\nThe next step will be to. get him\nout of the special neck brace and\ninto a collar.\"\nCampanella suffered a broken\nneck in an automobile accident last\nJan. 28, the injury leaving him\nparalyzed from the chest down.\nBritish Cricket\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Thurs\nday's close-of-play cricket scores:\nIreland 130 and 179; New Zealand 208. Draw.\nGlamorgan 92 and 1 for 1; Surrey 203.\nEssex 127 and 40 for 3; Derbyshire 72.\nLancashire 192 and 20 for 2;\nWarwickshire 108.\nGloucestershire 322; Hampshire\n40 for no wicket.\nPlayers 316 for 5 declared;\nGentlemen 63 for 3.\nKent 128 and 29 for 1; Worcestershire 197 for 8 declared.\nsix-year limit on the freedoms K\nwould grant, to determine how\nthe sports bosses would conduct\nthemselves. - He also recommended limiting major league\nclubs to control of 40 players,\nthus curbing farm systems which\nhe said have \"reduced the minor\nleagues to serfdom.\"\nJohnson is a former governor\nof his state and former president\nof the Western League, one of the\ntop\" minors. He told the subcommittee headed by Sen. Estes Ke-\nfauver (Dem.-Tenn.) he is disturbed only about the fate of the\nminors.\nHe said he would be happy if\nthe Senate amended the sports\nlegislation to incorporate a bill\nhe sponsored while in Congress\nseveral years ago. This would\nbar major league telecasts in cities in which minor league clubs\nare playing.\nBaseball once had such a rule\nbut dropped it because the justice department held it violated\nanti-trust laws. .\nto blow higher than the price of\nbeef, and they are likely to envelop\nthemselves and the spectators in\n  .. a cloud of near brilliance at any\nThese Humes are an interesting other time. ,\nclub. They are likely at any'time1   They deserve some support.\n\"I like Ihe way\nit slips on, slays on\nwith no laces to tie\"\nB and D\nWidths\nSizes 12'*\nOne of the season's top\nhits! A really dressy,\npractical comfortable\n-step in\" that feel*\nsnug and secure on\nyour foot.\nto a $0.99\nSizes 1%\ntog $6.99\nPhone\n1114\nDURELLE'S VICTORY ENTERED\nIN BOOKS AS NINTH-ROUND TKO\nMONTREAL (CP) - Yvon Durelle's victory over South African\nMike Holt in the British Empire\nlight-heavyweight title fight Wed-\nCONVERT\nVictory Loan Bonds\nof 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th and 9th issues\ni\u00ab\nCANADA\nCONVERSION LOAN\nBONDS 1958\nImmediate Cash Adjustment\nat any of our - , -  - :. \u25a0.  .\nmore than 775 branches across Canada\nTHE CANADIAN\nBANK OF COMMERCE\nnesday night has been scored officially by the Montreal Athletic\nCommission as a nintb-rdUnd technical knockout.        **\nCommission Secretary Gerry\nGosselin announced the ruling\nThursday night. The decision overrules an earlier report which scored\nDurelle's win as an eighth - round\nTKO.\nThe fisherman from, Baie Ste.\nAnne, N.B., retained his championship when Holt, narrowly ahead on\npoints, failed to answer the bell\nfor the ninth round of ihe scheduled 12-rounder.\nThe commission's reason for its\ndecision:\nHolt _was on his feet when the\neighth round .ended. The bell for\nthe ninth sounded to start the round\nofficially. Durelle answered the\nbell, but the South African did not,\ntherefore Durelle won in the ninth.\nLEAGUE LEADERS\nBy The Associated Press\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nAb R H Pet.\nPower, Cleveland .. 313 55 103 .329\nRunnels, Boston .... 296 51   97 .328\nCerv, Kansas C 286 57 ,93 .325\nFox., Chicago  339 47 109 .322\nGoodman, Chi 200 22   64 .320\nRuns \u2014 Mantle, New York, 65.\nRuns batted in \u2014 Jensen, Boston, 81.\nHits \u2014 Fox, 109.\nDoubles \u2014 Kuenn, Detroit, 25.\nTriples \u2014 Power, Cleveland and\nLemon, Washington, 7.\nHome runs \u2014 Jensen, 27.\nStolen bases \u2014 Aparicio, Chicago\n17.\nPitching \u2014 Delock, Boston, 9-0,\n1.000.\nStrikeouts \u2014 Turley, New York,\n106.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nMusial, St. Louis .... 272 41  99 .364\nMays, San Fran .... 331 66 114 .344\nDark, Chicago  274 34  92 .336\nAshburn,  Phil.   324 47 106 .327\nWalls, Chicago*    344 62 111 .323\nRuns \u2014 Banks, Chicago, 69.\nRuns batted In \u2014 Thomas, Pittsburgh, 73.\nHits -.Mays, 114.\nDoubles \u2014 Hoak, Cincinnati, 23.\nTriples \u2014 Virdon, Pittsburgh, 9.\nHome runs \u2014 Thomas, 26.\nStolen bases \u2014 Mays, 15.\nPitching\u2014McCormick, San Francisco, 7-1, .875.\nStrikeouts \u2014 Jones, St.  Louis.\n112.\nJEFFERY RADIO\nTakes On a New Look in Their\nNEW LOCATION\nPhilco Refrigerators - Television\nOUR AIM!!\nTo Keep On\nExpanding\nTo Give\nBetter  and   Better\nCustomer\nService\nPresent\nPrices a\nShoppers\nDream\n.   *\nWE NEED YOUR\nTrade - In\nNOW!!\nUp to\n$200\nAllowance on Your\nPresent Refrigerator\nPHiLCO'S-r $249.50\n1958 PHILCO'S\nSETS THE PACE WITH\nITS 'EXCLUSIVE FEATURES\nJEFFERY RADIO\nPhilco Refrigerators and Television\nAND APPLIANCES\nLIMITED\nPHONE 1302\nNELSON, B.C.\n'\n \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0   \u2022\n\\<m\nHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIMIIIimilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nMusial Passes Lou Qehrig\nOn Extra-Base Blow list\n11111111 i 111111 \u25a0 [ 11 \u25a0 111111111 i 111111 111111111111 \u25a0 11 Lt 11 i 11111111111J11111\nNo Outlaw Action\nCarded Weekend\nNelson Outlaws will be inactive\nthis weekend, for the first and probably only weekend of the 1858 seaton, manager Ron Nash announced\nThursday evening.\nThe local senior squad will return to action next weekend for certain, although as yet it Is. not known\nwho Will supply   the   opposition,\nHOMER WINS\nFOR MOUNTIES\nVANCOUVER (AP) - Vancouver - Mounties' catcher Charlie\nWhite hit the first grand-slam\nhome run ever hit in Capllano\nStadium since Pacific Coast\nLeague baseball came to Vancouver to provide the Mounties\nwith a 4-S victory over the\nPhoenix Giants.\nNash, pointing out that good competition ls headed this way in the\nnear future, admitted the boys\ncould probably use a weekend off.\nFairchild Air Base, which whip-\nped\u00abNelson two times in three tries\nhare a few weeks ago in a trio of\ndiamond classics, will be back, and\nOutlaws will repay the favor with\na visit to thi American centre,\nThe big event for local fans\nhowever, is the proposed visit of\nthe Havana, Cuba, Colored Giants\nJuly 31;\nOutlaws-have been pointing toward this game for nearly two\nweeks already, and they will no\ndoubt be at the peak of performance for the visty. These touring\nbaseballers (no, Mabel, they do\nNOT play softball) are considered\nas classy as the world-renowned\nHouse of David tourists.\nBASEBALL SCORES\nKy The Canadian Press\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nDetroit .       OOO 208 000-2 6 0\nNew YOrk      018 003 OOx-* 8 0\nHoeft, Moford (6), Morgan (7),:\nAqulrre (8) and Wilson; Ditmar,\nDuren (7) and Howard. W \u25a0 Dit-1\nmar. L-Hoeft. HRsi Detroit - F.l\nBoiling (8); New York - Howard:\n(8).\nCleveland      10 020 020-8 15 0\nWashington ...   000 120 000-3 8 1\nMcLish and Nixon; Pascual,\nRamos (7), Valentinetti (81 andi\nCourtney. t-Pascual, HRs; Cleve-\nland-Colavlto, 2 (18), Minoso (13);\nWashington - Sievers (241,\nChicago   ..'.    000 000 000-0 9 1\nBaltimore     ....   000 201 00x-3 9 1\nPierce and Lollar; O'Dell and\nTriandos. HRs: Baltimore\u2014Robinson'(3).\nKansas City ....   01 001 000-2 10 3\nBoston 000 050 Olx-6 10 2\nGorman, Daley (8), Terry (5),\nCraddock (7) and Smith, Chiti\n(5), Brewer, Wall (9) and Berberet. W-Brewer. L-Gorman, HRs:\nKansas Clty^-Maris (13).\nNATIONAL LEAGUE    \u2022\u25a0\nCincinnati :.  020 000 010\u20143  7 Oj\nCricago    000 000 020\u20142 10 1\nNuxhall and Bailey; Hillman\nHobbie (8) and Neeman. L - Hillman. HRs: Cincinnati \u2014 Robinson\n(in. - '-\nMilwaukee ...;.. ooi 231100\u20148 ie i'\nSt. Louis  :..  203 020 000\u20147 10 1\nRush, Trowbridge (4), Robinson\n(5)' Burdette (5) and Crandall;\nMcDaniel, Brosnan (5) and Landrith. W \u2022 Burdette, L \u2022 Brosnan.\nHRs: Milwaukee - Crandall (12).\nCovington. (14). St. Louls-Musial,\n2 (16).\nPhila    103 100 002-7 15 2\nS Francisco . 101 300 003-8 10 0\nSemproch, Hearn (4), Farrell\n(8) and Sawatski; Gomez, Monzant (5), Johnson (9), Grissom (9)\nand Thomas. W-Grlssom, L-Far-\nr-ell. HRs: Philadelphia \u2014 Anderson (13); San Francisco\u2014Kirkland\n(7), Wagner (3).\nPittsburgh   ... Ooo ooo 120-3 6 o\nLOS Angeles .. 000 022 Olx\u2014I 10. 0\nWitt, Blackburn (6), Smith (7)\nPorterfield (8) and Foiles; Williams, Labine (8) and. Roseboro,\nPignatano (8). W: Williams. L:\nWitt. HRs: Pittsburgh-Foiles (5)\nClemente (2);, LA \u2014 Cimoli -<6)\nZimmer (9), Hodges (13).\n$e|t0tam*$V.O.\nS'eafltairrs\ny\/s\/ or\nSure\n$uajjtam** \"83\"\nBy The Canadian Press\nStan Musial boomed out two\nhome runs Thursday to move into\nsecond place behind the fabulous\nBabe Ruth for career extrt-base\nhits, but first-place Milwaukee\nnevertheless 'staggered to. an 8-7\nvictory over St, Louis in one of\nfour major league daytime .games.\nAlso in |he National League, Cincinnati Redlegs stopped Chicago\nCubs 3-2 as lefty Joe Nuxhall short-\ncircuited the Cubs' usual come-\nfrom-behind effort. ,\n' In the American League, Hank\nBauer smashed a two-run triple\nto power New York to a 4-2 victory\nover the Detroit Tigers, and 'Boston Red Sox, with Tom Brewer\npitching strongly, turned back Kansas City 6-2,\n\"THE MAN\" PASSES GEHRIG\nMusial, 37-year-old seven-time\nNational League batting champion,\nhad five RBIs with his two home\n.runs. They .gave hlrti-1191 extra-\nbase hits since her broke in with\nCards in 1941.\nThe first four-bagger tied Musial\nwith the late Lou Gehrig of the:\nYankees, and the second slipped\nhim in the shadow of the much-\nstoried Ruth.   '\nMusial's extra-base*hits show 627\ndoubles, 167 triples and 397 home\nruns. Ruth slammed- 506 doubles,\n186 triples and 714 four-baggers.\nThe victory went to Lew Burdette on five scoreless relief innings. Wes Covington led the Braves\nwith four R^BIs, including a three-\nrun homer. Del Crandall pumped\na two-run homer.\nNuxhall, recording his sixth win\nagainst five losses,' struck out Cub\nrookie Tony Taylor to end the\ngame with Dick Johnson on first\nbase.\nThe Redlegs snapped a seven-\ngame losing streak and the third-\nplace Cubs saw a five-game winning skein, broken.\nHOEFT BATTED OUT\nThe American League leading\nYankees, who have won only six\nof 15 meetings with the Tigers,\ntralied 3-1 going into the sixth with\nBilly Hoeft holding a slender edge\nover Art Ditmar. Elston Howard,\nwho had homered earlier, started\nthe winning spurt with a single.\nJerry Lumpe's single pushed Howard to third and Norm Slebern's\ndouble drove in the catcher with\nthe tying'run. Herb Moford took\nover on the Detroit mound and\nBauer tripled to score Lumpe and\nSiebern.\nBoston's Brewer supported by a\nfive-run uprising and Murray\nWall's ninth-inning relief, woh his\nfirst victory in more than a month\nas the Red Sox swept the three\ngame series from the Athletics.\nLoser Tom Gorman was shelled\nin the fifth.\nRed Sox slugger Ted Williams\n|,sat'out the contest for a rest ac\ncordl'psl'to manager Mike Higgins\nHe was reported to have t slight\nstiffness in his shoulder.\nWith Rocky Colavito socking his\n15th and 15th homers and Minnie\nMinoso his 13th, Cleveland Indians\nnulled away to an 8-3 victory over\nWashington Senators Thursday\nnight.\nPitcher Cal McLish won his\neighth game as he checked the\nSenators with eight hits,\"including\ntwo singles and a home run by Roy\nSievers.\nSievers' blast with one on was\nhis 24th-of the season. His fourth\nhomer In three nights, Sievers'\ndrive boosted the Senators into a\n3-3 tie.\nHowever, Minoso's one-On homer\nin the ieventh off Washington\nstarter and loser Camilo Pascual\n15-5) put the Indians in command\nto stay.\nDick Farrell's wildness included\na bases-loaded wild pitch that gave\nSan Francisco an .8-7 victory over\nPhiladelphia Thursday and kept the\nGiants half a game behind league-\nleading Milwaukee.\nIt was another Giant cliff-hanger\nas the Phillies went ahead by two\nruns in the ninth, only to lose their\nsixth straight. Far-reil's wild picth\nsent Orlando Cepeda home with\nthe winning run.\nFarrell, Philadelphia's ace. reliever, walked Willie Kirkland and\nWillie Mays to open the home half\nof the hectic ninth. Jimmy Davenport sacrificed them along and Orlando Cepedt't double tied the\nscore.   \u2022\nLeon Wagner was walked intentionally and Daryl Spencer also\ndrew a pass. PinchhiIter Hank\nSauer had a 1-2 count when Farrell fired a pitch so wide catcher\nCarl, Sawatski had no chance te\nstop It.\nThe Phils had gone ahead 7-5 in\nthe ninth off Don Johnson, a Giant\nnewcomer just arrived from Toronto, Marv Grissom* relieved Johnson and got credit for his sixth\nvictory agalnBt three losses. Farrell alio Is 8-3 now.\nBlazing Billy O'Dell, flashing his\nall-star game form,, pitched Baltimore Orioles to a 3-0 shutout over\nChicago White Sox Thursday night,\nThe lefthander limited the White\nSox to nine singles while ending a\npersonal three-game losing streak\nand boosting his season's record to\n9-10.\nBilly Pierce, who had a five\n i going\n. He is 9-6. He\nlermittod nine safeties Including\nBrooks Robinson's solo home run.\nO'Dell, who turned in three innings of hitless ball in the American\nLeague victory over the National\nLeague July 8, had perfect control\nand didn't give up a walk to the\nWhite Sox.\ngame'winning streak going Into the\ngame, was the loser. He is 9-6,\nSpokane Amateur Bosses Fail\nIn Attempt To Use Coliseum\nSPOKANE (AP) - City council\ndecided Thursday that only Spokane Flyers, who recently joined\nthe professional Western Hockey\nLeague, should be allowed hockey\ndates in the city-owned coliseum.\nA spokesman for. a group seeking to maintain an entry here in\nthe amateur Western International\nHockey League said legal action\nwould now be tried in an effort to\nsecure -coliseum, dates.\nThe coliseum committee had approved dates for the Flyers, who\nasked to, be (he only local hockey\nteam,allowed to use the big building. The council supported the committee's recommendations by a 4-1\nvote.\nClarence Tubbs of the amateur\ngroup said a suit would be filed1\n\"because the right of franchise ih\nthe city .says no group shall be given any exclusive rights.\"\nA city counsellor said he felt the\ncouncil was acting within its authority ln deciding the use of the coliseum.\nMayor Harold Elmes of Rossland, Mayor Leslie Read of Trail\nand acting mayor Boyd C. Affleck\nalong with Art McElroy, secretary\nof Nelson Maple Leafs, and Western International Hockey League\npresident Don Adams of Rossland\nwere on hand for the meeting.\nNelson's\nSoccerites\nPlay Rovers\nB EG   PROGRAM        Joe Johnson's Nelson .Champions.\nBy -The Canadian Press easy conquerors of almost every\nLawn Bowling: Canada vs. rival the squad has faced this sea.\nKenya, Australia vs Jersey, Eng- son, moves up a step Saturday af-\nland vs South Africa, Hong Kong,ternoon with a shot at Cranbrook\nI' '           -\u2014   \" \u2014\n't* Wales, New Zealand vs North\niro Ireland, Rhodesia vjuScotland,\nJingles, pairs and rinks.\t\nThll advertisement It not published or displayed by the\nliquor Control Board or by tht Government of British Columbia;\nGREENS \u00bbST AS WILLINGDON\n(UPPERS TOUR TORONTO LINKS\nBy W. R. WHEATLEY.        .worth, Bob*\nTORONTO   (CP)   -  Canada's  '\namateur golfers who wllj compete\nin the Interprovincial team matches\ntook their first practice-round licks\nat the Scarboro course Thursday\nand came up with solid agreement\non one point \u2014 the 6615-yard layout\nis ideal and the greens are fast,\nFor what practice scores  are\n\u25a0 FLOOD DAMAGED ITEMS\nDOORS $3.00 UP\nMoke Ideal Picnic Table Tops\nAlso 2nd Grade Doors From $6.50\nIn Beautiful Condition\nUp\nPLYWOOD   5\/16from6*sq.ft.\nAlso Full Stock of Sheathing Grade Plywood at Sale Prices\nROOFING\nStill a Few Good Bays on Water Damaged Wrappers\nAlio a Complete L,ine of Top Quality First Grade Roofing\nC.M.H.C.  Endorsed\nCOLUMBIA TRADING CO.\n902 Front St.\nNelion, B.C.\nKidd   of\nRovers of the Crows-Nest Pass\nFootball League.\nChampions' most recent victory\nwas a 4-1 triumph over Spokane\nAll-Stars, and with more' accurate\nshooting, the score might have approached double-figures.\nJohnson, formerly a Scottish International, has had little success\nin his efforts to line up an exhibition with one or more teams in the\nCoast Summer Soccer League, so\nVancouver he is attempting to schedule an\n,\u2014j.t: j...    , he is tttempting\nshowed the way with a four -un-; exhibition with Calgary Callles of\nder-par 67 and Ken Banks of Mon-, the Alberta Soccer League.\nK.w\u00a3 .\"J^mwTLh1 rfn'; J\"11^\u2122. Kelson Recreational\nISiS'i'iE'j Paf. Director, is optimistic about the\nand soared Into the high 80s.        j chances'ot hjs\" club walkj      \u201e\u201e\nfour-man  teams- with a trlumph  .and hopes m\nThe   eight    .........\nshowed up at various times\nthroughout the day. The Manitoba contingent was the last to\narrive, late In the afternoon.\nThe interprovincial match , for\nthe Willingdon Cup and the Cana-\ngame will be 'used as a step toward further recognition. The usual\nsquad will make the jaunt, and\nJohnson is expected to tell the boys\nthey can let loose a little.\nIf Rovers are as good as their\ndian junior championship will be! K Rovers are as good as their\ndecided - Saturday in 36-hole medal, reputation indicates them to be the\nnjay \u2022 i ooys may need more than a little if\nThe defending champions from they want a victory, Johnson fears,\nBritish  Columbia   and  the   1957 f.       \t\nSMOKIES BOMBED\nIN EXHIBITION\nBILVSRTON - Ne* Penver-\nSllverton All-Start get to Jack Ferguson for three rum In the last\ninning of an exhibition baseball\ngame here Sunday afternoon to tig\nTrail Smoke Eaters with an 8-6\ndefeat.\nFerguson came on In relief of\nLouls-PeRosa in the ninth inning,\nand showed little stuff. He surrendered three hits and the same number of runs in the one frame he\nworked. DeRosa, in eight Innings,\nwalked seven, fanned eight and\ngave up five hits.\nWinning pitcher Ken Gordon gave\nup six hits in nine innings, walking\ntwo and fanning eight.\nFive Winners\nIn Golf Here\nFive players won golf balls In\nNelson Golf and Country Club's\nmen's night low gross play Thursday evening. Fifty entered.\nNet score winners were Gus\nAdams, 28; Dune Jamieson, 29;\nGeorge Barefoot, 30:-Fred White-\nley, Jl; Jack Stewart, 31. Low\ngross score went to Dune Jamieson with a 35 and gross golf goof\nof the week was credited to Red\nKoehle.\nAbout 25 golfers said they would\nparticipate in the Rainbow tournament in Kaslo Sunday.\nPlans are being ma.de* for Nelson's open Labor Day tournament.\nDoug Campbell, defending champion and a former club member,\nwill enter. from Vancouver, and\nBill Wakeham, 1957 Canadian junior champion, will enter. Another\npossible entrant is John Johnson,\nB.C, Willingdon Cup team member,\nWILLEY EXPLAINS\nCANADA'S DEFEAT\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Paul Willey, 27-year-old Vancouver tenhis.|\nstar and a member of Canada's\nunsuccessful Davis. Cup team\nagainst the U.S. this month, says\nCanada will [fever get anywhere\nin world tennis until it sends\nplayers on international tours.\n\"We've got to get competition\nwith other top players \u2014 we can't\nlearn much oy playing each\nother,\" Willey said ,in an interview\non his return here from the 6-0,\nDavis Cup defeat in Toronto,\n\"The countries which have the\nbest players have nearly always\ngot pfayert on tour,\" he,\/sald.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1958 \u2014 \u00bb\nFrom Here and There\nIn the Sports World\nHAVERTOWN, Pa. (AP) - Dow\nFinsterwald. reed-thin young golfer from Te.questa, fla., fired a\nthree-umier-par 67 Thursday for\na one-stroke lead in the first round\nof the Professional Golfers Association championship, l.\nLearning at the 17th hole 'lhat\nJay Hebert was in with a 68, the\n28-year-old tournament regular\nsank a 30-foot putt for a birdie\ndeuce, Then he sent his approach\nto within two-feet of the pin on\nthe spectator-lined Uth. His downhill putt went wido but he wat\nsafely In front of a'closely-packed\nfield at the end of a long, rigorous\ndaj'v\nFormer NHL star Bill Ejinicki\nof Winnipeg, now playing out of\nLynfield, Mass., scored a 39-87\u2014\n76. Hebert was alone In second\nplace, followed by brother Uone),\nand four others tied at 89.\nBracketed. with Lionel, the defending champion, were Jimmy\nDemaret, three-time masters winner, Dick Mayer, 1957 National\nOpen king, Ted Kroll and Felice\nTorza.\nTORONTO (CP) - End Art Powell, who last year had a knack\nof catching long passes for both\nToronto Argonauts and Montreal\nAlouettes of the Big Four, signed\nan Argo contract Thursday.\nThe Argos,-lacking in ends who\ncan catch the long pass, picked\nup Powell who was released by\nMontreal at the end of last season.\nMANCHESTER, England (AP)\n\u2014England won the opening two\nsingles Thursday to take a 2-0\nlead over France in their European\nsemi-final.match in the Davis Cup-\nlawn tennis competition.\nOTTAWA-(CP) -Secretary Wes\nBrown of Ottawa Rough Riders\nsaid Thursday advance season\nticket sales for home games of the.\nBig Four football team have already reached a record 7400. Previous record was last year's 6986.\nNEW YORK (AP) - Gaspar Ortega of Mexico and Mickey Crawford of Saginaw, Mich., who battled last Friday night, were signed\nThursday for an Aug. 13, rematch\nat Madison Square Garden. Ortega won the decision July 11 on a\nsplit decision.\nBUFFALO, N. Y: (AP) - But-\nfalo Bisons of the International\nLeague acquired centre fielder\nBobby Balcena from Seattle Rainiers of the PCL on option Thursday.\nNEW YORK (AP) - Hymia\nWallman's hearing before the New\nYork State Athletic Commission\nwas adjourned Thursday until\nSept. 19 at the request.of the district attorney's office.' Hi'-\nWallman, a fight manager\nwhose licence recently was- suspended, has appeared before a\ngrand jury investigating boxing\nwhich later indicted Bert Grant,\na boxing judge, on charges of ac\nceptlng bribes to favor Wallman't\nfighters.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n1958 Championships To Trail!\nTRAIL (CP) \u2014 The Trail Track and Field Club ha*\nbeen offered the 1958 Canadian decathlon championships, club coordinator Ray Gould taid Wednesday. \u25a0'*'\nThe B.C. Track and Field Association asked thei\nclub if they would be interested in having the champiotul.\nships ln Trail in conjunction with the Trail club's annual'\nKootenay championships.\n* Whether the Trail club can accept the invitation,\nMr. Gould added, depends on the facilities which are\nstill being developed.'\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIB\n\u2014&\u00a3**\u2014-_: ! l\t\nNOW IMPERIAL ANNOUNCES\nAN IMPORTANT NEW HEATING BENEFIT\nrunner - up Ontario quartet\nconsidered the teams to beat.\nthough both squads, as well as\nthe six other teams, have several\nnew players.\nQuebec and  Alberta  are   also\nranked as possible threats.\nGREENS_ARE FAST\nCanadian Entries\nAt Empire Games\nBy The Canadian Press\nLAWN BOWLING\nSingles: Jack Linford, Lachine,\nDoug. B a jus,   captain of the, \u00b0-ue-\nBritish Columbia team, said the    Pairs: Alex Houston and George\nwest coast boys 'found the greens M. Dewar Vancouver,\nexceptionally fast.\nBajus said the fairways were a\nbit fluffy for light iron shots. Except for Kidd's 67, the B.C. team\nwas a stroke or two off par.\nKelly Carln of Saskatoon was\nlow man for the Saskatchewan\nteam with a practice round 76.\nDr. Doug McAlpine of Regina\nshot a 77.\nRinks: Bert Gallagher, Harry\nHardier, Harry Robertson and\nSterling Shields, Edmonton.\nBEG RECORDS\nBaseball Standings\nBy The Canadian Press    ,\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nW  L    Pet Gbl\nNew York   56\nBoston  44\nDetroit    41\nBaltimore -.   41\nBy The Canadian Press\nlM-ytrd dash \u2014Thomas Robin-\ntort, Bahamas, 9.5 seconds. Old Kansas City  39\nrecord set 9.S set in 1950 by Johnny Chicago   40 49\nReloaT,  Australia.  World record Cleveland   40  47\n9.3.  -.    .'. . . i Washington  37  48\n.667\n.524\n.494\n.488\n.470\n.465\n.460\n.435\n12\nUVt\n15\n16%\n17\nllVt\n19%\nAt Least 18 Canadians\nMay Win Queen's Prize\n. BISLEY, England (Reuters) \u2014\nEighteen Canadians have qualified for -the second stage of the\nQueen's Prize competition today\nand six other Canadians are\namong 96 with scores of 95 who\nwill shoot off for 37 places in the\nsecond stage.\n' Most of the Canadians are members of the official Dominion team\nat Bisley. The qualifiers art:\nMej. R. F. Ftndick, Canadian\nCadet Force, 101; Cpl. L. Fish,\nOakville,' Ont., 101; \u20acpl. J. R. Mac\nreail, RCAF, 99, FO J. F. Ruddeli;\nRCAF 99, Maj. W. J. Strachan, Ottawa, 99, CPO D. R. Clarke, Halifax 98; Lt. P. K. Isdac, Winnipeg\n98, CSM N. McLeod Toronto 98,\nMaj. A.J.F. Roberts, Victoria 98.\nAlso Cpl. W. J. Brown, Virden,\nMan., 97, Lt.-Col. D. C. Brereton,\nWinnipeg 97, Cpl. J. C. Hatton,\n\u2022RGJAF 97 Cpl. C. A. Wiltshire. Ottawa 97; Capt. A. L. G. Clements,\nOttawa 96, Lt. N. Colville, Winnipeg 96 Lt.-Col. E. C. Cowan.\nKingston, f)nt. 96, Sqdn. Ldr. G\nT. Giles, RCAF 96, Cadet W. D,\nMcRorie, Canadian Cadet oFrce\n96.\nScorers of 95 to go into the tie\nshoot art: Maj. F. Battershill, Winnipeg, Maj. B. E. Besteck, Winnipeg, LAC K. E. Mcftory, RCAF;\nSgt. R. C. Moseley, RCAF, Cadet\nR. G. Pentland, Canadian Cadet\nForce FO W- J. Simpson. RCAF,\nFit. Sgt. H. Adams, RCAF, with\no total of 131 out of 150, won the\nTuesday aggregate prize for the\nbest total in events over soo, 900,\nand 1000 yards.\nThe Rapids aggregate challenge\ncup for the best total in two rapid\nfiring competitions at 200 yards\n\u2022a^d one at 500 yards was won by\nLieut. A. S. Derrick of Kingston,\nOnt., with 139 out of a possible 175.\n,  with\nNIW FORMULA\nFURNACE OIL\nON BUDGET TERMS\nNew, Formula Esso Furnace Oil\nburns super clean, greatly reduces\ndeposits on furnace parts, means\ngreater economy for you. You\nget uniform higher quality in\nevery gallon.\nPhone us today about Imperial's\nconvenient Budget Terms on\nNew Formula Esso Furnace Oil.\nIMPERIAL\nisso\nPRODUCTS\nALWAYS  LOOK  TO   IMPERIAL FOR THE BES1\nDealer (or Nelson, Kaslo, Silverton, New Denver, ind Nakusp\nSTEVE KLINOSKY \u00ab*\u201e. mu\nBeit Plumbing ond Heating\nNelson, B.C.\n i \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1958\nCLASSIFIED\nDeadline tor Classified Adt \u2014' 5 p.m.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nAN OCCASIONAL OPPORTUNITY\nfor teacher or intelligent housewife, resident in Nelson or in\nsurrounding territory, to interview on public opinion surveys.\nUse of car desirable, not essential. Some evening work required. Write Canadian Facts\nLimited, 49 Wellington Street\nWest, Toronto, Ontario.\nEXPERIENCED CLERK TYPIST\nwith shorthand desires positihn\nin Nelson. Write Box 23, Procter,\nB.C.\nWANTED: BABY SITTER WHILE\nmother works. Ph. 86-X, morn-\nings or 1922 afternoons.\t\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nDO YOU LIKE A GOOD CON-\ncrete or cement work job? Just\nphone 1752-L-3. 1 need customers. Experience not necessary.\nRemember,  Phone  1752-L-3.\nDANGEROUS TREES FELLED -\nCarpenter work, roofing, digging,\netc; By the hour or contract. Ph.\n1672-X-l. ___^_\nFOR THE BEST IN BODY AND\npaint work, see Ted's Auto Body,\n1 mile Granite Road, or phone\nbus. 98, res. 1186-Y.\nFOR   BETTER   BUILDING,\nmodelling, phone 597-L-2.\nRE\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nNew\nOldsmobile Sedans\nNew\nChevrolet Sedans\nNew\nChevrolet Pickups\n195? CHEV. PICKUP\n1957 CHEV. COACH\n1957 CHEV.  HARDTOP\n1956 CHEV. PICKUP\n1955 CHEV. PICKUP     ,\n1955 OLDS. COACH\n1955 OLDS. SEDAN\n1955 CHEV. SEDAN\n1954 OLDS. SEDAN       .\n1954 CHEV. SEDAN\n1953 CHEV. SEDAN\n1953 DODGE COACH\n1953 FORD PICKUP\n1953 DODGE SEDAN\n1952 DODGE PICKUP\n1951  PLYMOUTH   Sedan\n1951  STUDEBAKER  Sdn.\nCITY  PROPERTIED\nSilica St. house can easily be\nconverted to three apts. Part,\nalready         JfJ\"-'.\ncompleted\t\nBungalow, 1 bedroom, Robson\nSt Foundation and full base-\nment $g5Q0\nOn Terms.\nfurnace.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\n*i (Continued)\n1PW 2 - BEDROOM HOUSE FOR\n\"jent or sale on North Shore. Opposite bridge, close In. Rockgas\nheating, electric stove or gas.\nPhone 1778-R.\nFOR SALE - 2 BR., SUN PORCH,\nliving and dining room, fireplace,\nsmall basement, carpenter shop,\non vacant lot, corner lot, East\nTrail. Phone Trail 1270 for appointment .\nlots.\nstyle dwg.\n$8250\nsale.\nGOVERNMENT OF\nTHE PROVINCE OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nDEPARTMENT OF\nAGRICULTURE\nSEALED TENDERS, marked\n\"Tenders for Agricultural Clearing\", addressed to the Land\nClearing Division, B.C. Department of Agriculture, Legislative\nBuildings, Victoria, B.C., will be\nreceived by the Department until\n31st July, 1958, for land clearing\nin the Salmo'Fruitvale area.\nTenders will be submitted on\na per hour basis for crawler tractors, equipped with suitable land\nclearing blades and rear winches.\nNo tenders will be considered for\ntractors of less than 90 draw-bar\nhorsepower. No guarantee of\namount of work can be given.\nMoves will be limited in so far\nas is possible and consideration\nwill be given for moves within an\narea. No special tender form\nis required but tenders must set\nout: Make, model and year of\ntractor, make of clearing blade,\nlocation of equipment, rate per\nhour and consideration-required\nfor moving.\nThe Department reserves the\nright to reject any or all tenders,\nand the lowest tender will not\nnecessarily be accepted.\nHON. NEWTON P. STEACY,\nMinister of Agriculture.\nWM. MacGILLlVRAY,\nDeputy Minister.\n'VICTORIA, B.C.\n15th July, 1958.- ,_\t\nEmerge\nMotors Ltd.\nChevrolet \u2014 Oldsmobile\nCadillac\nPhone 35-30    '   323 Vernon St.\nNelson; B.C.\nTRUCKERS ATTENTION - YOU\nshould look at these '58 Fargo\nVfton V8, new, $200 off. '55 Ford\nVt ton; Volkswagen station wagon converted to mobile home on\nwheels. Big Job '54 Ford, long\nwheelbase. International 4 \u25a0 ton\ndump truck, 5-6 yard dump box,\nextra heavy hoist, $895. '52 Ford\n3-ton, long wheelbase. Phone 1090,\nPeebles Motors, NelsOn.\nBungalow on 2- corner\nModernized older\nelectric\nheat\t\nBest Wartime House, full basement, oil furnace. Three bed-\nooms. Well decorated. Recently reduced $1000 to \u2022 make\nimmediate     \u2022 $8900\nOn Terms.\nH4 story dwelling near\nschools, 3 bedrooms, full basement, hot air t<*,7<?lll\nfurnace:      $Olp\\)\nWith $3000 Dewn.\nRemodelled family home on\ncorner. 7 rooms. Hot water, oil\nfXe'    \u2022   $13,500\nWith $4000 Down.\nDwelling with basement apt\nbuilt 7 years, both heated with\nga^urnace.       $, g^QQ\nWith $5000 DrJwn.\nFamily home with basement\napt both self contained. Two\nfireplaces. Corner 3 lots. Hot\nSet' $16,500\nTerms. '\nIncome property, 7 apts, very\nkm. to...b!i\u2122e\" $19,900.\nT. D. Rosling\n& Son Ltd.\nM. (Trader) Parker, Salesman\nt88 WARD ST.      PHONE 717\nAll the above listings have been\nappraised and fairly priced.\nBRAND NEW 3-BEDROOM NHA\n.home*.on Lakeview Crescent\n(Rosemont) Phone 2107 or apply\nMaple Leaf Construction, 1914\nKootenay St.      \u25a0\n4-ROOM MODERN HOUSE, ONE\nacre of improved land. Fruit\ntrees. One block shopping centre\nin Fruitvale. Ph. 2111, Fruitvale.\nFOR SALE, VERY REASONABLE\n\u2014House in Salmo, 3 rooms and\nbath, '1 block from high school.\nApnly Harry Chernoff, Salmo.\nFOR SALE, EXCELLENT RANCH.\nWould consider trade on city\nhome. Mrs. A. G. Elder, Box 113,\n** * B.C.\nLOT 80 X 200 FOR SALE, NORTH\nShore. Overlooks city. Water,\npower, TV to property. Phone\n1662-X.\n4-ROOM  HOUSE FOR SALE\nYmir. Box 209, Nelson, B.C.\nTN\nTRAILERS\nAnnouncing Our\nSUMMER SALE\non\nUSED HOMES\nWe have a wonderful selection\nof good clean used mobile\nhomes and trailers priced low\nto clear.\nPlease contact\nRaLyn Mobile   ,\nHomes Sales\nLtd.\nTrail, B.C. . Phone 2250\nSPECIALIZING IN ENGLISH\ncar repairs. Used parts for 1949\nto '52 Austins, '49 to '52 Hill-\nmans, '50 to '51 Morris Minor,\n\u202247 Studebaker, '47 Pontiac, '52\nVanguard, \"47 Oldsmobile 8. For\nsale, \"53 Austin, '47 Olds motor.\nCottonwood Wreckage: Service,\nph. 1363-L-2, Box 382,, 24 Ymir\nRoad,, Nelson.\nTENDERS will be accepted up\nto 5. p.m., July 28th, 1958, for the\npainting and rejuvenation of exterior surfaces of Central Elementary School in Nelson. Specifications can be obtained from\nthe Board Office, 554 Stanley\nStreet. No deposit required but\nthe School Board reserves the\nright to require a performance\nbond from the successful bidder.\nLowest tender not necessarily accepted. Forward tenders to:\nSecretary-Treasurer,'\nS.D. No. 7, \u201e,\n554 Stanley Street, |. i\nNelson, B.C. \t\nResidents of Salmo are hereby\nnotified that from July 18th to\n31st inclusive the village office\nwill be open 5 days weekly, of-\n'fice hours as usual.\nFRANK FLOOD,\n\"Village Clerk.\t\nBUYING A CAR?\nWe offer an extremely: tow fl-'\nnance rate on new and late model,\nused cars, trucks and industrial\nequipment. Contact Wm. Kalyniuk. Agencies, Phone 1777, for\ncomplete insurance and financing\nfacilities before you buy.\n'39  DELUXE   DESOTO  SEDAN,\nradio, elec. wipers, oil filter, auto\nchoke,   good   rubber,   reliable\ntransportation. Offered for sale\nby second owner. $75 down, $25\nmo. F.P. $200, no interest. Pbphe\n1931-.                _\nFOR SALEJ - '53 DODGE SEDAN.\nWhat offers? Phone 1836 or write\nBox 5666, Nelson Daily News.\nof\nMODEL  A  FORD,* GOOD  RUN-\nning order, good tiresi $60. Jhone\n1025-L',*\nWRECKING\ncheap.\n41   FORD.   PARTS\nDaily News, Box 5767.\nFOR SALE: 1951 FORD 2-DOOR,\nPhone 1011-R after 6 p.m.   ,<;.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\n70 TWO-MONTH-OLD UNSEXED\nchicks, 75c each. 3 rabbits. Ph.\n471-X-l. ,       .      '  '\nPULLETS FOR SALE\u2014ANY AGE.\nAppleby Poultry Farm, Mission\nCity, B.C.\nWANTED - GOOD FRESH MILK\ncow: C. A. Noakes, Balfour.\nWANTED TO RENT\nNURSES NEED FURNISHED\napt. or home by Aug. 1. Box 5706,\nDaily News. \t\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - 56\" WRAP - AROUND\nwindshield and steering * wheel,\nboth new. Reward. Phone 1460.\nClassified Ads Get Reaultst\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nSCRAP STEEL AND METAL'S,\ntop prices. Old car bodies our\nspecialty. COMMERCIAL STEEL\n& METALS,' 0136 Willingdon.\nBurnaby 2. Vancouver, B.C.  '\nCANOE   -   GOOD   CONDITION,\nPhone 1429-X after 9:30 ym\nBUSINESS AND -7\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES S\nH. S. ELMES, R&SSLANPJsB.C.\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep\nEXTRA VALUE\n4-B.R, family home near new\nhospital. Bright and clean\nL.R.,. D.R., family kitchen;\nfull basement, 2 corner lots,\ngarden   and  fruit  trees.  Try\ns\u00b0pm\"ch .tl>is      $7500\n$2000 Down, Assume Mortgage\nPayable at $50 Per Month.\nJUST OUTSIDE\nCITY LIMITS\nLog effect 3 B.R. home. View\nwindows L.R. and kitchen in a\nsetting of 7 acres of cedar, Located Anderson and View Sts.\nAmazing Price        $6500\nOnly $1500 Down\nYOU SHOULD SEE\nTHIS,ONE!      , ,\n3 B.R. home with view location on paved road. Main floor\nhas large L.R., with tire place\nrecessed, D ,R. Entrance Hall \u2014\nall H.W. Flooring in good condition: Moderriistic K, with\nstainless steel sink and arborite counter. K. wired for electric range. Upstairs has tile\nflooring \u2014 very easily kept\nclean and consists of 3 B.R.s\nand bathroom. One B.R. quite\nlarge with double clothes closet and'other 2 with good closets. Basement is full size with ,\nfurnace room and laundry'\nroom. Electric H.W.. Tank.\nSplendid foundation and house\nis well supported. Garage on\npperty wnich is 100' x 120'\u2014\ndeveloped in lawns, flowers, hedges and trees. Full\nPrice asked        $ ] 3fQ00\n$5000 Cash Down Will Handle\nand Balance oh Payments of\n$50 Monthly plus 6% Int.\nHerb Peacock\n7 REAL ESTATE AND\nINSURANCE AGENCY\n532 Ward St. Phone 68\n7 SYLVIA BRASHEAR\n\"SALESMAN\n'Res. Phone 1821-L.      .\"%\n-\u25a0'\u2022''' h-\n\"\"\".\u25a0' * \u25a0\"\" I\nBARRETT TRAILER SALES,\nFruitvale, have a new shipment\nof Aljos, 15', 16', 17', 19'. Set\nthese beauties before they go.\nstaa\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nTrade Schools\nDIESEL HEAVY\nEQUIPMENT\nTrained men are needed for all\ntypes of jobs in the Tractor and\nEquipment Industry. If you are\nmechanically inclined and are\nnot. making better than $90.00\nper week, or you don't have job\nsecurity, you owe it to yourself\nto write for free facts, without\nobligation, about this training.\nTractor Training\nService Ltd.\nDaily News Box No. 5594\nm\n, AUTOMOTIVE   h\nFor expert body and paint work\nand all types of mechanical work\nand tune-ups, be sure to try\nJOHN'S MOTORS , *\"    '\n6 Mile North Shore      7\nPhone John Kohout 1808-Y-3  '\nENGINEERS  AND SURVEYORS\nJOHNSON AND McCORQUODALE\nB.C. Land Surveyors.\nMine and Topographic Surveys.\nNelson, 1015-8tb St. Ph. 144-R.\nTrail, 1234 Bay Ave., Ph. 2752,\nDESTINY BAY STORE AND\nauto dourt for sale. Store, coffee\nshop, 2 apartments, gas pump\nand truck. Lake frontage and i\nboats. Physical appraised value\n$13,600, Offers .ta purchase will\nreceive consideration. 'For full\ninformation T. D. Rosling & Son\nLtd.,'568 Ward St.     '\nHOBBY, NOVELTY AND SOU-\nvenir shop, centrally located,\nleased. Phone Trail 1276 for ap-\npointment. \u25a0\nHELP ME BUILD CABINS\n(rammed-earth) on shares. Dan-\nson. Kaslo lover Bay).\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nBQYD C  AFFLECK, MEIC\nB.C Land Surveyor P Eng. (Civil)\n218 Gore St    Nelson    Phone 1238\nG. W BAERG. B.C.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St    Nelson   Phone.1118\nWhile\nYou Drive!\n! Keep alert-chew gum\nAvoid traffic jitters and\ndriving drowsiness.\n1 Chew gum while you're\nbehind the- wheel.\nChewing helpt relieve\nstrain and tension-\nhelps keep you feeling\nfresh and alert, for\n: tafer driving.\nChew any brand of\nINSURANCE\nWAWANESA MUTUAL\nINSURANCE CO.\nAgent, 554 Ward St.\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd,\nRail, air, steamship tickets.\nSee Jim or Betty Vipond*\"\nGLOBE AGENCIES LIMITED\n1146 Cedhr Ave.    Trail   Ph. 2M5\ngum you like but chew\nwhile you drive. Naturally, we recommend\nrefreshing, delicious\nWrigley's Spearmint\nGum\u2014for lively, satisfying flavour and real\nchewing enjoyment\nStanley Street\nCompletely remodelled 3 B.R.\nhome in central location.\nLarge L.R. with fireplace, den,\nfull basement with hot water\n\u00a3nly\u2122lace;  $13,000\nWith Terms.\nHardware, and\nS(3orting Goods Store\nIn    neighboring    community\nwith close to. $50,000 turnover\nin 1957. Make us an offer on\nthis one.\nv  '\nGrocery Store and\nLunch Counter.\nOn North Shore.   Immediate\nkstss .... ,.:. $68oo\nTerms\nSummer Camp at Six Mile\nIS. \u25a0:.:\u25a0  $4400\nN      '  With Terms..\nObservatory Street\nDuplex on three nicely landscaped lots.   Completely independent   units.   7 years old.\nfe. ..I.:       $15,000\nTerms.\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\ntogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and shapes.\nAtlas Iron k Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver, B.C. Phone\nPAcific 6357.\nDINETTE EXTENSION TABLE,\ngrey'arborite top, 4 red leatherette chrome chairs. New condition. Price $50. Phone 1903-Y\nmornings.\nUSED OUTBOARDS, REFRIGER-\nators, washing machines. Make\nus an offer. Jeffery Radio and\nAppliances Ltd., phone 1302, 446\nWard St., Nelson, B.C. %\u25a0'\nFOR SALE - DUNCAN PHYFFE\ntable and 4 chairs, bookcase,\nchild's dresser, occasional table.\n.  Phone 144-L.\nMCCLARY  GAS   COOK   STOVE.\n'\"Thermostat  controlled  oven, 4\nburners,  as new. Phillips 'Mo-\ntel Hall Mines Road. \u00bb\n1 OIL HEATER, 2 OIL BARRELS\nand stand and connections.\n793-R.\nPh.\nSUNBEAM   FURNACE,   24-INCH,\ncomplete with fan and\nPhone 2079.\n[cHardy\nAgencies Ltd*\nReal Estate, Insurance,\nAppraisals\nPhone 135, or Evenings, 1065-X\n3 BEDROOM HOUSE, VIEW\nSt., and 7 acres, $7000. Low down\npayment. Phone 1610-L,\n6 USED OIL RANGES, FORCED\nair burners. Priced to eell. Co-\nlumbia Trading, 902 Front St.\nCLEAN COTTON RAGS WILL\ntot be purchased by the Daily\nNews until further notice.\nBLACK   LOAM   TOPSOIL\nsale. Phone 582-R-l.\nFOR\nGAS RANGE. SUIT   CAMP\ncanning, $10. 918 Kootenay.\nm\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evenings. 9M Davies St.\nBOATS and ENGINES\nFIBREGLAS BOATS ALL SIZES\nand Mercury Motors. Norm Bowcock. 171 Baker St.\nFOR SALE - NEW 15 FT. OUT-\nboard runabout. Sale price $350.\nPhone 559-X-l.\nBOAT HOUSE, WELL 6^ X 22 -\ngood condition. Price $250. Phont\n364-L-l.\n RENTALS\n4-ROOM BUNGALOW FOR RENT.\nWired for electric range, hardwood floor, close ln. To respon-\n. sible party only. Available this\nweekend. Phone 1.127-R after 8\np.m.\nSTORAGE SPACE FOR RENT IN\ngood basement centrally located.\n$15.00 to $20.00 a month accord,\ning to space required. Apply\nAppleyard, 421 Baker St\nFOR RENT \u2014APARTMENT, $45\n\u2014l bedroom, living room, kitchen. Oil heater md gas stove.\nImmediate occupancy. T. D. Ros-\nling & Son Ltd., phone 717.\n, phoi\nPARTIALLY   FUftiN.   LARGE\nhousekeeping room over our o(;\nfice. Hot water and gas available.\n$35 a month. Appleyard, Baker\nStreet.\nWE   HtAVE   A   NICE,   BRIGHT,\nspacious office in the Truck Ter-'\nminus   Bldg.   For   particulars\nphone 77\n2 ATTRACTIVE SUITES, 1 WITk\n2 bedrooms and garage, 1 with 1\nbedroom. Apply 305 Hall Mines\nRoad.\t\nUNFURNISHED APT.\nSuitable for couple.\nFall St. evenings.\n, HEATED.\nApply 1026\nFOR RENT - 3-ROOM SUITE ON\nNorth Shore. Phone 678-L-2.\nRENTALS\n(Continued)\nNEW MODERN APT. 3 ROOMS\nand bath. 8 minutes wtlk from\nnew bridge. Apply Ph. 940-X. Con\nCummins afternoons or even-\nML\n3-ROOM MODERN APT., SELF-\ncontained, unfurnished. Heat and\nhot water supplied. Adults. Phone\n2079.\n1-BEDROOM, fiOUSE - WIRED\nfor range ind hot water North\nShore,' VA- miles from bridge,\n$37.50. Ph. 156 days, 575-Y eves.\nModern s^m'TOe\" Wifji\nfull basement. Call on Mr. and\nMrs. Noble Gould at Ymir,\nSMALL FiJftN.   rioUs1*!.\nable for couple. Apply 1009 Park\nStreet.\ni Park\nUNFURN. 6.-ROOM APT., CEN-\ntral. Adults only. Nelson News,\nBox No. 5829^\nuux mi. tivi.ii.\nrsmMtrnmrmrmm\ngas. Phone 491-X or apply 140\nBaker\nFURN. 3-ROOM APT. BUSINESS\ndistrict, gfo 385,\nHOUSE FOR RENT - CONTACT\nMrs. Marquis, ph. 874, days,\nBED-SITTING ROOM FOR RENT,\nFairview. Phone 1050-R.\nAPARTMENT FOR RENT\u2014 PH.\n703-L.\nWonderful   Bargains  in\nUSED CARS\nAll Makes, Models, Prices\nAll Sizes, Express, Pump\nBE SURE TO SEE\nOUR STOCK BEFORE YOU\nBUY!\nel Emerge Motors\n.Ltd.\nPHONE   1135\nCome and See'\nThe Brand New\n19!\nThundeirbird\nNEW FORDS ... .NEW EDSELS\nThe Best Used Cars\n1957 FORD FAIRLANE 500 -\n1957 FORD \"6-cyl.\" SEDAN\n1956 OLDS HARDTOP    <\n1956 MONARCH RICHELIEU HT\n1956 FORD SEDAN '\"\n1955 PONTIAC SEDAN\n1954 FORD SEDAN\n1954 CHEVROLET TUDOR\n1954 CHEVROLET TUDOR\n4... Brand New 1958 FORD WAGONS\n1 ... 1957 FORD RANCHWAGON\n1 ... 1956 FORD SQUIRE\n1 ... 1952 AUSTIN COUNTRYMAN\nTRUCKS-\n1956 FORD PICKUP\n1955 FORD PICKUP\n1953 FORD PICKUP\n1952 GMC PICKUP'\n- OLD   MODELS\nLots of 1947 - 1948 \u2014$100 Cars\nCHEVS... FORDS... PLYMOUTHS\nEL BUERGE\nOTORS LTD.\nPhone 1744 and 1135\nNelson, B.C.\nRENTALS\nAPT.,.3 ROOMS AND BATH \u00a3\npartly, furnished. '210 Vernon St.\nBEPROOM FOft IftENT, GEWLjH-\nmen only, 410 Victoria St.\nBUILDING SUPPLIES\nNelson Ready-Mix\nCONCRETE.\nTOR ALL PURPOSES\nPHOISE'871:\nPREMIER SAND 8. GRAVEL\nFor t,     \/\nSand, Gravel, Crushed Rock,\nFill, Cement and\nPea Gravel for Roofing\nPHONE 1368 or 871\nESMOND   LUMBER  CO    LTD\n-. for all Building Supplies  Spe-\n: cializlng in Plywood.   Contrac-\n'\u25a0:' tors enquiries solicited Phone or\nWirt orders collect. 3600 E Has-\ntings St., Vancouver. B.C. GLen-\nburn 1500. ,     y\nMACHINERY\nFOR SALE OR TRADE 1 54-JNCH\nNo. 341 Berlin brand resaw, long\nwheel-base, M-800 Merc, truck\nwith Columbia tag, 2 drum Skagit\nwith jammer, log cut-off saw with\nwinch, rubber tired logging arch\nfor D6 or D4, all in working order\nand reasonably priced. Phone\n47M or Box 708, Creston.\nGM DIESEL, MODEL 3-71, EN-\ngine No. 3A-5187, with dash, instrument panel, fuel tank and\nradiator, price (950. Nelson Mai\nchlriery, phone 18, Nelson, B.C.\nROADBUILDING \u25a0- PIPELJNES-\nDykes, etc., designed and built\nby contract. A, G. Bayes Ltd.,\nCranbrook, B.C.\n1 AMERICAN SAW MILL AND\na Lymac power unit. M. Lornt-\nsen. Box 395, Fruitvalq, B.C.\nHOTELS AND MOTELS\nCANADIAN FRIENDS, - WHEN\nin Spokane stop at the Colonial\nHotel, mv, Post St., one block\nfrom stores and parking.\nMcCulloch\n0*44\nSlashes Through\nThe Price Barrier!\nThe price of the famous McCulloch D-44 Direct Drive' chain\nsaw has once again been reduced \u2014 dramatically l 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 saw in\nits class, the D-44 has a rugged\n6 horsepower motor that takes\nthe hard work out of woo'\ncutting 1 ; \".'\nPriced as Low as $234.\n(with 12\" blade)\nH. \"Fritz\" Farenholtz,\nCharlie Ross or Alex McDonald\nWELDING & EQUIPMENT\n*    CO,   LTD\n514 Railway St     Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 1402\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 18,1958 \u2014 11\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS.\nFridays. Phone 39*-R\nskin bMM Nt!Ls6N cLub\nformed. Phone Gerry Stevens,\n1197-Y for partlcultn.\nGREY HAIR TROUBLING YOU?\nUse Angellque Grey Hair Restorer to return, natural color,\nbeauty, to your hair. $1.50 tt\nMann Drugs Ltd., Nelson, and\ntil druggists,     '\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES\nBLUE J BOARDING KENNELS.\nWeekly rates. Across lake. Ph.\n189-R-2 for pick-up at bridge.\nREGISTERED GREAT DANES\nfor sale. Three mos. and older,\nMrs. W. Haegedorn, Renata, B.C.\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOARD AND ROOM -PHONE\n1231-Y.\n,j|\u00bb frff'P****-*\nWar & Brown Ltd.\nDAILY FREIGHT SERVICE,\nVANCOUVER\nto Rossland, Trail, Castlegar and\nNELSON\nOvernight Service\nPhone Nelson  1106 or Trail 191\nmm+.m.mmm.\u00bb*.m..m.m,im'*m<.~ m\u00bbw.....m,mm mm.m,mm.m..mmm.\nHELP WANTED\nGovernment of British Columbia\nAPPRENTICESHIP- AND\nTRADESMEN'S\nQUALIFICATIONS\nBRANCH\n\"' \u25a0,\nApplications are invited from young men for enrollment\nin Pre-Apprentieeship trade classes which are to be held\nIn Vancouver ond which ar* intended to lead to apprenticeship in'the following trades:\nTRADE\nBricklaying\nBoatbuilding\nCarpentry\nElectrical\nElectronics\nLathing\nPlastering\nPlumbing and Steamfitting\nSheet Metal\n.j.iuctural Steel    . .\nStarting Date\nSept. 22\nSept. 22\nOct. 6\nSept. 15\nSept. 15\nSept. 22\nSept. 22\nSept. 22\nSept. 15\nSept. 15\nLength of Course\n5 months\n5 to 11 .months\n5 months '\n5 months\n10 months       ,\n5 months\n5 months\n5 months\n5 months\n5 months\nApplicants should preferably be from 17 to l\u00b0i years old,\nhave a good basic education ond be physically -able to\nengage in'the trade. Selection of class from applicants\nwill be made by the Trade Advisory Committee. After the\nfirst month an examination will be given. Students who\nfail will be required to withdraw from the class,  \t\nNo charge will be made for tuition and 'a subsistence allowance will be given to help pay room and board which\nwill be the responsibility of the student.\nThe amount of this allowance will be $40.00 per month\nfor a student whose home is in the training city and\n$56.00 per month for a student whose home is outside\nof. that area.\n>\nApplication Forms for Enrollment May Be Obtained by Writing to\nTHE DIRECTOR OF APPRENTICESHIP, DEPARTMENT\nOF LABOR\n411 Dunsmuir Street, Vancouver 3, B.C.\nPlease indicate the trade in which you are interested.\nAli Our New and Used Cars\n;--MUST GO!\nOUR ENTIRE STOCK OF CARS MUST\nBE SOLD BY THE  END OF JULY.\nTremendous Discounts\nNew\u20141.958 Dodge Suburban .. I..,. $3000\n1956 PLYMOUTH SEDAN '.  $1595\n2\u20141952 CHEVROLET SEDANS--.---  $ 725\n1958 Mercedes'Benz $3200\n-       .'  $576 Off List.\nAnd a Few Others to Choose From.\nTODAY'S SUPER SPECIAL,\n7\"; :'    \u25a0'2,-1950 AUSTINS\nfor $175.00\nHaldane\n301 Vernon St.\nPhone 2135\nO\ne\nr-\nZ\no\n0_\ny\n5\nCO\nai\nz\no\na.\n_i\n<\nX\nX\nD\ni\nD\nCO\nai\n1-\nZ\nO\na.\nCAMPERS'  DELIGHT  IN\nHoliday. Sales Jamboree\n' Free\u2014Free\u2014Free\n..     $150 Worth of    \u2022\nCainpiiig Equipment\n1 Tent      1 Coleman Table      4 Coleman Chairs'\n1 Coleman Stove     1 Coleman Lamp *   1 Coleman Cooler\nTHIS EQUIPMENT FREE WITH THE CARS ADVERTIZED\n1957 CHEV. 2-DOOR HARDTOP    ;\nWith Radio, Two Tone Paint, White Wall Tires Etc. Only 7900 Miles Like New.\nRegular $2895\nJAMBOREE PRICE _., l $2795\n1956 METEOR RIDEAU SEDAN\nWith Radio, Automatic Transmission, Two Tone Paint. Only 13,000 Miles. Regular $2BB0\nJAMBOREE PRICE $2450\n1956 METEOR NIAGARA SEDAN\nAir Cond. Signal Lights, A First Class Family Car. Regular $2295\nJAMBOREE PRICE . $2100\n1956 BUICK SPECIAL SEDAN\nWith Radio, Automatic Trans., Air Cond. Etc. Clean Car, 18,000 Miles, Regular-$2995\nJAMBOREE PRICE _i \u201e_....:...-\u25a0._.:.... $2795\n1955 PLYMOUTH SAVOY SEDAN ' \"   ' .\nAir Cond., Signal Lights, Automatic Trans. A Real Fine ..Car. Regular $1800\nJAMBOREE PRICE _,\u201e...\u201e_-\u201e..: . L_^__i_$1600\n1954 FORD CUSTOMLINE SEDAN\n. Air Cond., Two Tone Paint, New Tires. Regular $1495\nJAMBOREE PRICE .\t\n$1395\n1954 PONTIAC SEDAN\nAir Cond., Signal Lights, Two Tone Paint. First Class Condition. Regular $1499\nJAMBOREE PRICE . $1425\nJAMBOREE PRICE\n1954 FORD CUSTOM SEDAN\nAir Cond., Two Tont Paint, New Tires. Regular $14911\n\u201e_. $1395\n1954 PLYMOUTH DELUXE SEDAN\nAir Cond., Semi Automatic Tram., Signal Lights\nReconditioned Engine and Transmission. Regular $1899\nJAMBOREE PRICE _.\u201e._ -\t\n$1295\n1954 PLYMOUTH SAVOY SEDAN\nRadio, Automatic Trans., Signal Lights. Only 23,000 Miles. New Car Condition.\nRegular $1598\nJAMBOREE PRICE $1495\n1954 DODGE 2-DOOR STATION WAGON\nAir Cond., Two Tone Paint, Radio, Automatic Trans., Signal Light. Regular $1899\nJAMBOREE PRICE --- Z $1795\n\u25a0   1953 PONTIAC LAURENTIAN SEDAN\nAir Cond., Radio, Two Tone Faint, Reconditioned Throughout. Regular $1399\nJAMBOREE PRICE' ^ ._.,_.... $1295\n7 7   Stock 41 t Model 7549\n1958 PONTIAC STRATO CHIEF 4-DOOR SEDAN\nBurma Green and White, Antifreeze, Heater, Power Glide Trans., Two Tone \"Paint,\nClock, 9 Cylinder.\nPrice _\u201e_ $3645\nStock No. 54 - Model 7249\n1958 PONTIAC PATHFINDER 4-DOOR SEDAN\nColor Red and Ivory, Antifreeze, Sun Visor, Heater, Clock, Oil Filter, Arm Rests,\nFoam Seats, H.D. Springs and Shocks, Cigar Lighter, Two Tone Pain*, V-8 Motor.\nPrice. L-~ _\u201e.$3452\nStock 93. Model Na 7249\n1958 PONTIAC PATHFINDER 4-DOOR SEDAN\nColor C\u00aby Coral Metallic and Dover White, Antifreeze, Sun Visor, Heater, Clock,\nOil Filter, Arm Rests, H.D. Front Seat, Cigar Lighter, Two Tone Paint, V-8 Motor.\nPrice .'. .\t\n$3295\nModel 7149\n1958 PONTIAC PATHFINDER SEDAN\nColor Aegean Turquoise Metallic, Sun Visor, Heater, Arm Rests, Cigar Lighter,\nWheel Trim Discs.\nPrice\n$3154\nStock No. 88 - Model 7649\n1958 PONTIAC 4-DOOR STRATO CHIEF SEDAN\n.    Color Honey Beige, Antifreeze, Air Conditioner, Clock, Oil Filter, V-8 Motor.\nPrice : __. \u201e\u201e  $3396\nStock No. 98'- Model 7649  :\n1958 PONTIAC 4-DOOR STRATO CHIEF SEDAN\nColor 3301, Heater, White WaU Tires, Clock, Oil Filter, Two Tone Paint, V-8 Motor.\nPrice - _._.\u201e_ L.  $3441\nStock No. 103 - Model 7191    -\n1958 PONTIAC PATHFINDER 2-DOOR.\nSTATION WAGON\n2 Seats, Color Red and Ivory, Sun Visor, Air Conditioner, Arm Rests, F,oam Seats,\nCigar Lighter, Two Tone Paint, 8 Cylinder Motor.\nPRICE -.- $3462\nStock No. 65 - Model 7749\n1958 PONTIAC LAURENTIAN 4-DOOR SEDAN\nPrice\nColor Forest Green, Seaforth Green, Antifreeze, Heater, 7.50-14 Tires,\nPower Glide Transmission, H.D. Springs and Shocks, Two Tone Paint,\n8 Cylinder Motor,\n$3865\n<\nI\nX\nD\n<\n>\ny\nD\nCD\nStock No. 97 - Model 7293    '\n1958  PATHFINDER 2-DOOR STATION  WAGON\nSolor Yellow and Ivory, Sun Visor, Air Conditioner, White Wall Tires, Clock,\n11 Filter, Arm Rests, Foam Sets, Cigar Lighter, Two Tone Paint, V-8 Motor.\nJAMBOREE SALE ENDS AT MIDNIGHT, JULY 26,1958\nTHE HOME OF SATISFIED CUSTOMERS\n\"All Above Cars Are Guaranteed*\n\u2022  at\nNelson Motor Products Ltd,\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK \u2014 VAUXHALL \u2014 G.M.C. DEALERS\nTHE  HOME OF MOTORING SATISFACTION\n.'\u2022\u25a0  ! ... WHERE EVERY DEAL IS SEALED WITH FRIENDSHIP\nBehind Bank ot Montreal, Nelson, B.C. Phone 658-659\n\u00a7M\nPONTIAC       BUICK\n * 1 : *\u2014\nVAUXHALL\nPONTIAC\nT~\n 12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1958\nYes We Have\n\u2022 DRUGS\n\u2022 STATIONERY\n\u2022 BOOKS\n\u2022 CHOCOLATES\n\u2022 CAMERAS\n\u2022 COSMETICS\n\u2022 MAGAZINES\n\u2022 SMILES\n\u2022 ETC.\nAnd For the\nFinest\nIn Prescription Service\nBe Sure To Try\nLesI ie Caron's Latest Film\nSaid To Be Stunning Picture\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOiYWOOD CAP) - How\nwould you husbands like the little\nwoman to watch you at work\n\u2022very day?..:::':.*i\nSound fritfttetjins? Maybe so,\nCommons Vets\nSupport legion\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The Canadian\nLegion found support Thursday in\nthe- Commons veterans affairs\ncommittee for its stand that all\nSecond World War veterans\nshould have until Sept. 30, 1962,\nto take (Jut policies under the government-sponsored veterans insurance plan.\nTht legion's position was presented by President David L. Burgess of Ottawa as the committee considered a government bill\nwhich would extend the eligibility\nperiod to that date for Second\nWorld War veterans -\"till in the\narmed forces.\nCommittee members indicated\nthat at a subsequent closed meeting they will prepare recommendations advising the Commons to\nadopt the legion request. \u25a0\nDischarged veterans were given\nuntil Dtp. 31, 1954, or until 10\nyears after discharge, to buy insurance in the plan, which provides policies up to $10,000.\nI Mr. Burgess.-\u2022 said those discharged after the war would not\nbe put in a worse position than\nthose who remained in the serv-\niiees. \u2022\u25a0\u2022:\u25a0\u2022\nKeep Your Eye on OastMed!\nHove The Job Done Right\nGRAVEC\nLIMITED       **\nPHONE 81S\nMASTER PLUMBER\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Daily Newi doe\u00bb net hold Itself rnpomlblt In tht event\nof an error in the following Hits.    .\nTORONTO STOCKS\n< (Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium\t\nAlgom Uranium\t\nAnacon Lead .\nAnglo Rouen .\nAtlin Ruff.......\nAubelle ..;\t\nAumacho\t\nAumaque\t\nAunor  ......\nBarnat\t\nBase Metals\n.10\n17.12%\n.SO\n.21\n.06%\n.15\n.10%\n2.37\n1.29\n.21\n.24\n.09%\n.05%\n2.70.\n.90\n7.50\n5.50\nCampbell R. L  7.50\nfiaska Uranium\nBoymar ,.\t\nBrunhurst \t\nBrunswick  \t\nBuffalo Ank .\nBuff Red Lake\t\nCampbell C\nbut Robert Wagner doesn't mind\nit. Of course, the fact that he is\nmarried to -Natalie Wood may\nput the situation in a different\nfight.\nNatalie is present every day\nBob is working oh In Love and\nWar. .She sits on the set while\nhe's acting, has lunch with him,\ngoes home with him.\n\"I like it,\" says Bob.\n\"I can't think of anything I'd\nrather do,\" says Natalie.\nTHEY'RE  INCORPORATED\nThe Wagners are not only married; they're incorporated. They\nhav eformed Rona Productions\nand intend to make movies. But\nnot right away. She is tied to\nWarners for another three yearsj\nand he has two years to go at\n20th-Fox.\nDespite their set visiting routine, they have no yen to appear\ntogether. The reason is they want\nto. keep their separate identities\nas far as work is concerned.\nNo press agent for The Barbarian is John Wayne. \"It's pretty\nbut there's no central storyline,\"\nha comments openly. His lack of\nenthusiasm stems from the difficult time he had with John\nHuston on the picture. They did\nnot get along. ...\nThe talk of Hollywood is Gigi,\nand especially its similarity, to\nMy Fair Lady. It is a stunning\npicture in all respects, but the\nstory has the same Pygmalion\ntheme, with Leslie Caron playing\nthe Julie Andrews role. And Louis\nJourdan plays a Gallic Rex Harrison, even sounds like Harrison\nas he declaims his songs. . , .\nIdeal hot weather entertainment\nis White Wilderness. Walt Disney\ndoes for the Arctic what he did\nfor the hotter regions in Living\nDesert. It's a fascinating tour of\nice and tundra with polar bears,\nwalrus and wolverines as stars.\nA single wolverine steals a kill.\nfrom a pack of wdjves and darn\nnear steals the picture, too.\nCan Met\nCassiar\t\nChimo _..-_...\nChromium  _\t\nCons DenisOn ,\t\nCons Denison Wts. .\u201e\t\nCons. Discovery \t\nCoils Halliwell \t\nCons Howe\t\nCons Mining & Smelting .\nCon Sanorm \t\nCon Sub \t\nConwest _\t\nCopper Corp\t\nD'Aragon \t\nDonalda\t\nEast Amphi\t\nEast Malartic\t\nEast Sullivan \t\nElder Gold\t\nFalconbridge    -..:\t\nFaraday f.\t\nErobisher  - .....\nGeco' \t\nGoldale ~\t\nGold Eagle\t\nGolden Manitou\t\nGunnar Gold\t\nHasaga\t\nHeadway\t\nHollinger\t\nHudson Bay \u2014\nInt. Nickel\t\nJoliet Que\t\nJonsmith  \t\nR J Jdwsey .......\nKenville\n1.30\n8.00\n.51\n2.45\n14.62%\n4.85\n3.10\ns    .57'\n2.10\n19.75\n.08\n.73\n3.25\n.27\n.41\n.16\n\u2022 .15\n1.53\n1.95\n.82\n26.00\n1.05\n1.78\n13.87%\n'    .18\n... .08\n.31\n16.25\n.20\n.47\n23.25\n.48\n.76\n.30\n.20\n-.50\n.05%\nUpper Canada\";.........\u2122......\nVentures ..:.....:.:\u201e.'.._j.'.'.;......\nViolamac  .\u25a0,...:\u201e.........\u201e\u201e.......\nWaite Amulet .,;;\t\nWiltsey Goglin ...: \t\nWright Hargreaves .,.'\u201e:...\nYale..: .-..,...,..;.. i\u201e,.\nYeliowknife :Bear. ,;.;\u201e..\u201e,..\n0118       '    \u2022    '-,.'\"     ;.\\'\nAmerican Leduc ,:.\u201e\u201e;.\nBanff Oils..,;.,: :......\u201e.-\u201e\nBailey Selburn \t\nBata .Petroleum ...:......\u201e....\nCalgary and Edmonton .\nCdn, Atlantic \u201e.\u201e.\nCanadian Devonian ..'.......\nCon Kast Crest :..,.\nDuvex \u25a0 ...;.\u201e..\u201e.\u201e..7\t\nHome A .\n27.00\n4.17\n5.85\n.32\n1.30\n.13\n.17%\n2.15\n9.90\n.07\n25.50\n6.15\n5.95'\n.45.'\n.13\n19.12%\nMarigold ::.i.......:.\u201ei.. - .09%\nMidcon  ..\u201e..;.\nNat, Pete ..: :...\nNew Continental\nOkalta\t\nPacific Pete ........\nPetrol ;:\nPonder  \u201e\nProv Gas .\u201e...:..'.\u201e\nRoyalite ;\nTriad .\n.82\n2.35\n.38\n1,28\n19.28\n.75-\n.24\n2.68.\n12.25\n. -.86-\nUnited Oils    2.24\nWestern Pacific',\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi ....:\t\nAlgoma^ Steel ...\nAluminuni i\t\nArgus 2nd pfd. .\nAtlas St\t\nB.A, Oil ...:,.:........\nBell Telephone .\nBrazilian \t\nB.C. Electric 4s .\n.25\n28%\n30%\n26%\n:52%\n19\n42%\n41%\n6%\n79%\nB.C. Electric 4%s ..: ::.;...   . 94%\nPassage Scheme\nDiscussed In\nU.K. Commons\nLONDON (CP) - Canada's assisted passage scheme, designed\nto \u25a0 assist Immigrants wishing to\nstart a new life In Canada, was\nthe subject of a question in the\nHouse of Commons \u2022 Wednesday.\nHector Hughes, Labor member\nfor, Aberdeen,,asked the undersecretary of state for Commonwealth relations,\" C. J. Alport, if\nhe is..aware that.\"the Canadian\ngovernment immigration service\nencourages skilled British tradesmen to emigrate to Canada by\npromise - of employment' there,\nthat such employment is not always'found for them, that some\nare thereby forced to return to\nBritain, and they are then called\non by the Canadian government\nimmigration service, to repay\nassisd passage loans made to\nthem on the representation -that\nemployment would be found for\nthem in Canada?\"\nAlport replied:\n\"I understand that the Canadian government \"Immigration\nservice make every effort to give\na fair picture of conditions in\nCanada to prospective immigrants, and that the declaration signed by applicants for assisted passage loans makes clear\nthat the Canadian authorities cannot guarantee employment in the\napplicant's own trade and sets out\nin detail the conditions attaching\nto the loan.\"\nKerr Addison -  17.62%\nLabrador\nLakeshore \u2014\nLexindin .....\nLittle Long Lac\t\nLorado  r.\t\nMacassa \t\nMacDonald\t\nMadsen- R. L\t\nMalartic G. F\t\nManeast.\n17.73\n4.90\n.06\n1.90\n.52\n2.99\n.28\n2.30.\n1.00\n.07%\n.82\n1.05\n.13\n.32\n2.79\nMining Corp.   11,50\nMulti Mins\t\nNew Alger \t\nNew Bidlamaque\nNew Delhi \t\nNew Harricana ....\nNew Jason\t\nNew Lund\t\nNipissing \t\nNisto\nMaritime. Mining\nMcLeod \t\nMcMarmac  \t\nMcKenzie R L\t\nMilliken\nNoranda New .\nNormetals\t\nNorpax\t\nNorth Rankin\n.51\n.08\n.05%\n.38\nJS\n.09\n.16%\n.90\n.06%\n.43%\n2.65\n.23\n.71\n8.85\nPickle Crow _     1.00\nPurdy M  '   .15\nPreston E. D.    M0\nQuebec Copper ,.     .32\nQuebec Lab      ,01\nQuebec Metallurgical  99\nQuemont     9.00\nRadiore  _     .65\nRainville      .30\nRayrock      .85\nSherritt Gordon     3.95\nStadacona  __..     .18\nSteep Rock  _     9.50\nSlocan Van Roi      .08\nSullivan Con  _    2.15\nSylvanite    1.01\nTaurcanis  \u201e      .85\nTeck Hughes    1.67\nTemagami    ,87\nThomp-Lund s    . .71 .\nShop Hera for\nHot Weather Needs\nWindow Screens\nAll Metal \u2022 Sliding\n10x36 ' $1.39\n14x36 : j   ' $1.90\nScreen Doors\nAH Standard Sixet _ $9.50\nScreening\nGreen Enamelled\n24 te 48 Inch Widths\n75e Lineal Yard and Up\n.^\u00bbi^w<r^\nElectric Hot Plates\nSingle Burner 4\u00abUO\nDoable Burner\n6.65\nZenith Refrigerators\nFull 9 cubic feet.\nSpecial   at   S259.9S\nat\n;    Charcoal\nBriquettes\nI lb. bagt 85c\nFor your outdoor\n\u2022 cooking\nColeman Camp Stoves\nSingie and Double Burners -\n14.95 .. 19.95\nZenith Freezers\n15 cubic foot Deluxe Model\nf3\u00ab9.S\u00ab\nWading   Pools\nInflatable, Plastic\n$2.98, $3.98\n$6.98, $9.98\nBeach Toys\nInflatable balls, toys,\ntwim fine and masks,\ntand pailt, tey boats.\nOpen Fridays Till 9 p.m. - Closed All Day Mondays\nMARSH AIL-WELLS STORES\nHipperson Hardware Co., Ltd.\n395 BAKER ST.\n(OWNERS)\nPHONI 497\nB.C. Forest\nB.C. Power A j i\t\nBurns A ..........\nCanadian Breweries\t\nCan. Cement\t\nCan Chem Co ,..\nCanadian Dredge\t\nCan. Malting'.....\t\nCan Oil\t\nCan. Packers B\t\nCons G.as..:..'.:\t\nDist. Seagram\t\nDom. Foundries ......\t\nDom> Stieel Ord\t\nDom. Stores\nDoiri. Tar k Chemical.\nDom. Textiles,....-,.:\t\nFamous Players,\t\nFanny Farmer '.\t\nFord A': ......\nGatineau  .;...:.....:.:.:\nGypsum Lime  :,.\t\nHoward Smith\t\nImperial 011' ..\".vi.'.L','.'-.\nItyp. Tobacco ....\u201e....\u201e\t\nInt.. Pete..................;\t\nLaura Secord\t\nLoblaw A\nLoblaw B\n10%\n40%\n14\n31%\n33%\n5%\n20%\n59%\n28%\n44 \u2022\n158\n28%\n31\n21%\n71\n12%\n8%\n18%\n16%\n85%\n33%\n34%\n33%\n46%\n13%\n53'\n21%\n30\n31\n58\n15%\nMcColl Frontenac ;..-\t\nMont, Loco\t\nMoore Corp '.:..      73\nNat. Steel Car ; ....:.., \u201e.      20%\nPage Hershey .'.       29\nPowell River .\nPower Corp.  ,\t\nRuss. Industries\t\nShawinigan\t\nSicks Brew. -.-....- .'....\nSimpsons A\t\nStandard Paving ......\nSteel of Canada\t\nTaylor Pearson \t\nUnion Gas of Can ....\nWestern Grocers A*\n34\n64%\n9\n25%\n30%\n23\n39\n62%\n8%\n82\n29%\nStarr Considers Taking\nActions To End Strike\nOTTAWA (CP)r-Labor Minister\nStarr said Thursday serious consideration is being given to \"definite\naction\" te resolve the seahnen's\nstrike that has tied up the CPR's\nwest coast shipping, fleet since\nMay. 16..  .7. -,\nHe did pot elaborate in his Commons reply to a question by\nFrank Howard, (CCF\u2014Skeena).\nAt the moment, no definite step\nhad been taken, the.minister said.\nTalks broke down a week ago\nfollowing several attempts by Mr.\nStarr to \u25a0 get the disputants into\nagreement. Last weelr he heid\nmeetings with executives of the\nCPR and the striking Seafarers'\nInternational Union (CLC). The\nminister said at the time he\ndoubted he would call a further\nmeeting unless the labor department could devise something that\nmight point to a settlement.\nAbout 320 members of the SIU\non the CPR's 10-ship fleet have\nbeen on strike. The ships have\nbeen immobilized and a total of\nbetween 1,100 and 1,200 persons\nleft idle.\nThe union has been seeking\nwage increases of 16  per  dent\nUSE BALL AND CHAIN\nMONTEREY, Calif. (AP)-A\nmother and elderly stepfather\nwho said a ball and chain hung\naround her 12-year-old son's neck\nworked wonders In making him\nbehave, pleaded guilty of unjustified punishment of a child. Aug.\n4 was set for sentencing.\nMINES\nCanusa \t\nCariboo Gold\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\n(Closing Prices) \u25a0\n.04%\n.73\nBank of Canada\nInterest Rate Down\nOTTAWA (CP) - The Bank of\nCanada interest rate dropped to\n1.70 per cent this,week from 1.91\nlast week, the central bank reported Thursday.\n\u2022The. rate had risen last week\nfrom 1.86 two weeks ago:\nThe record low was 1.5 per cent\nestablished Feb. 8, 1944, and the\nrecord high 4.33, reached Ja'st\nAug. 21. V.\nThe rate is fixed at one-quarter\nof one per cent above the average,\nyield .for short-term government\ntreasury bills. This week the yield\nwas 1.45 per cent, resulting from\nacceptance Of bids on $115,000,000\nin treasury bills maturing Oct. it\nat an average price of $99,460.\nManson Stern\nOn Union\nResponsibility\nVANCOUVER (CP)-A\"' B.' C'\nSupreme Cqurt' justice continued\nan injunction against picketing of\na Port Alberni pulp'mill','but said\nit is \"tantamount to impudence\"\nfor the dissehting parties to bargain over dissolving, of injunctions.   , :,\nMr. Justice A. MrManson directed the parties td'.prepare their\ncase immediately so the'trial on\na suit for damages against the\nunion can be heard-'July 31.\";\nThe temporary .injunction was\nobtained last week by MacMillan\nand Bloedel Limited, Canadian\nTransport Company and Vancouver Island Stevedoring Com:\npany against picketing by members of the (Plumbers and Pipefitters- Union,;\nBesides: blasting the \"bargaining\"- for dissolution of the injunction, Mr. Justice Mansbn had\nstern words about union responsibilities.\nHe said unions have been given\nby law \"certain privileges\" and\nthese \"are to be exercised reasonably and with scrupulous care.\"\n,Once an injunction has been obtained by an employer, he said,\nit was up to the court to say\nwhen it is to be dissolved.\nOn the suit for damages, he\nsaid that if the union is found\nguilty it is' \"extremely difficult\nfo make recovery\"-because' unions are not legal entities.\n, \"It is an inequitable law that\nmakes the employer liable for\ndamages and not the union, but\nso far parliamentarians have not\nhad the intestinal fortitude to\ncorrect the situation.\n\u2022 \"It is contrary, to every principle of British justice, but it is\nso.\"\nGiant Mascot  09%\nGranduc     1,32\nGrandview 33\nHighland Bell       1.21\nKootenay Base Metals 01%\nNational Ex         .17\nPioneer Gold\nPremier Border ...\nQuatsino \t\nSheep Creek\t\nSherritt Gordon\t\nSilback Premier\t\nSilver Ridge\t\nSilver Standard \t\nSunshine Lardeau .\nTrojan    \t\nUtica    .,...,\nOILS\nAltex   \t\nA P.Consolidated\n1.05\n.05\n.19%\n.51\n3.90\n.51\n.02\n.18\n.10%\n.15\n.01\n.12\n'.37\n24.75\n18.50\n18.50\n1.20\n19.00\n.36\nthis year and nine per cent next\nyear. The company offered eight\n:per cent        - > \u25a0,, '\nPrincess Laughs\nLast At B.C.\nNewspaper Men\nVANCOUVER' (CP) - Princess\nMargaret had the last laugh Wednesday night at two newspaper\nmen.\nSun reporter Paul King and\nphotographer Don Timbrell spied\non the princess through bramble\nbushes behind the home of Lieutenant-Governor Frank Ross.\nThe princess and her suite wete\nin the garden, seeking a respite\nfrom crowds and heat.   .\n\"We saw the princess 10 feet\naway,\" wrote King in his story\ntoday.\n\"She was swinging her arms\nlike a golfer . . . suddenly she\nchanged her act. She was seated\non an invisible saddle, her arms\noutstretched before her riding an\ninvisible horse. She waved her\narms over her head as we\nwatched, and pranced about in\nmerry  circles.\n\"The princess looked like a\nhappy little girl, just enjoying\nherself.\"\nThe RCMP closed in from three\ndifferent directions on the reporter-photographer team.\n\"OK, that's far enough,\" said\nan RCMP corporal, King related.\n\"The corporal marched us right\ndown the middle of the garden\non our way out.\n\"I shot an embarrassed glance\nover my shoulder as we retreated. The princess was pointing at us and laughing.\"\nHe added: \"We didn't get a\npicture, but it was worth every\nminute though. We were the only\nnewspaper men to see the princess prance.\"\nCalgary & Edmonton\nHome \"A\"\t\nHome \"B\" \t\nOkalta Com  \t\nPacific Pete\t\nPeace River Gas \t\nRoyalite    .*. ,  12.00\nRoyal Can 51\nUnited :.. 2.20\nVanalta 16\nVantor   1.20\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers   1.60\nAlberta Distillers Vt  1.45\nB C Forests  10.75\nB C Power   40.00\nB'C Telephone   40.25\nCrown Zeller (Can)   20.25\nInt Brew B  4.00\nInland Nat Gas.........  5.65.\nLucky Laiger  5.00\nMacM & Bloedel B  29.25\nMid Western -  1.40\nPowell River   33.25\nTrans Mtn   68.00\nWestminster Paper   2T.50\nWestern Plywoods   14.35\nUnlisted      .   .\nAlta Gas Trunk  16.25\nWestcoast Trans   78.00\nWestcoast Com   20.00\nTrans Mtn. Com  26.50\nBANKS\nBank of Montreal  46.50\nCan. Bank of Com  49.00\nImperial Bank of Canada ..'\u2022 50.50\nRoyal Bank of. Canada  64.50\nFUNDS\nCan. Inv. Fund  8.44\nCommonwealth Int  6.96\nGrouped Income  4.66\nLeverage  5.06\nTrans Canada \"C\"  5.35\nDIVIDENDS\nBy The Canadian Press\nAluminium Ltd. new 17% cents\nSept. 5, record Aug; 6.\nNorth Star Oil Ltd. pfd. 62%\ncents Oct. 2, record Sept. 3, pfd.\n62%. cents Jan. 2, 1959, record\nDec. 3, class A pfd. 15 cents Sept.\n15 record Aug. 15, class A pfd.\n15 cents Dec. 15, record Nov. 18.\nWestern Canada'Breweries Ltd.\n30 cents Sept. 2, record July 31.\nCool Togs\nFor Hot\nWeather\n\u2022 SWIM SHORTS\n\u2022 \"T\" SHIRTS\n\u2022 STRAW HATS\n\u2022 SPORT SHIRTS\n\u2022 \"IVY\" SUCKS\nEMORY'C\nLTD.     \u00a9\n\"THE MAN'S STORE\"\nDEATHS\nToronto \u2014 Dr. Anna Marion Hilliard, 56, who became Canada's\nbest-known woman doctor with a\nbest-selling book on sex, of a lung\ndisease believed to be cancer.\nToronto \u2014 George A. Marshall,\n66, president of the National Cash\nRegister Company, Ltd., of Canada.\nToronto \u2014 William   McMurtry,\n!, secretary of the Ontario Curling Association.\n\u25a0 Bobcaygeon, Ont. \u2014 Rowland\nHugh Lock, 63, former Kiwanis\nInternational official and head of\na Toronto refrigerating firm.\nHalifax \u2014 Dr. Robert MacGregor Dawson, 63, official biographer of the late prime minister\nMackenzie -King.\nPRESCRIPTION\nSPECIALISTS\nFREE DELIVERY\nCity Drug\nYour Retail Pharmaoy\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c Hat, 40c line black face typo; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment.\nTo rent tourist-cabin, Mrs.\nSherridon, Ainsworth.\nR.\nSuitable clothes make the holiday.\nTOT 'N' TEEN SHOP\nKnuckle Duster Rings.\nBOBBY SHOP, OPP. BUS DEPOT\nNELSON FUNERAL HOME LTD.\nAMBULANCE SERVICE. PH. 53\nBINGO\nEAGLE HALL TONIGHT.\nRunning shoes in all sizes.\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nTRAIL BUSINESS COLLEGE\nOffice re-opens August 18.\nLost \u2014 Pair of 5V4 ft. oars on\nroad to Six-Mile Lakes. Finder\nplease phone 76. Reward.\nELECTROLUX SALES, SERVICE\nClint Thompson\n1215 Ward St. Phone 1100\nKootenay Chimney Service\nChimneys cleaned and repaired.\nPhoee 2117.\nPhone 263.\nSNAPPY SERVICE\nFor your hauling heeds.\nSee our uBed chesterfields and\ndavenports, priced to clear.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nHAIGH\nv TRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\n.127\n17s* Baker St.\nSoccer players meet at Civic\nCentre, 2 p.m., Saturday.\nDance at the new Balfour Hall,\nBalfour, Sat., July 19, 9:30 to 1.\nMusic by Ted Swendson. Adm. 75c,\nstudents 50c.\nStrawberry tea at\/Balfour Sat.,\nJuly 19, 3 to 5 p.m. Home baking.\nAdm. 35c. On Mrs. Race's lawn,\nopposite Balfour wharf.\nReserve Friday, July 25th, for\nMonster Bingo with $1000 jackpot\nand $2500 in total prizes, at Civic\nArena, 8:30 p.m.\n. \u2022 ...   I.\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\nand  permanents try the Charm\nBeauty Salon, Medical Arts Bldg.\nSte. 211. Phone 1921\nStandard size doors and frames\nSpecial sizes made to order.\n%' H. WATERS & CO. LTD.\nPhone 156    101 Hall St.    Nelson\nATTENTION ODDFELLOWS AND\nREBEKAHS\nPast Noble Grands' Basket Picnic\nat Lakeside Park, Mon., July 21.\nBring your own tea er coffee pots.\nFor only $49.95 you can buy an\nOLYMPUS'precision camera. Finer\npictures, easier handled. At\u2014\nC\"JST6m CAMERAS\n'Stanley St.,-opposite \"The Bay\"\nColor or Biw film developed\nDEATH. NOTICE '\u25a0 .\".\n1 \u25a0 SANDERSON - Suddenly July\n16,1958, at the Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Nelson, George Sanderson, in his 76th year. Funeral\narrangements will be announced\nlater. Nelson Funeral' Home. in\ncharge ot arrangements.\nCity of Nelson Waterworks District\nSPRINKLING\nRESTRICTIONS\nUntil further notice garden sprinkling will\nonly be permitted during hours at follows:\n1. Residents in odd-numbered houses may sprinkle only\non Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays from 6 to 10 in\nthe mornings and from 6 ie 10 in the evenings.\n2. Residents in even-numbered houses.may sprinkle only\non Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays from 6 to 10 in\nthe mornings and from 8 to 10 in the evenings.\nSPRINKLING AT ALL OTHER TIMES\nIS STRICTLY PROHIBITED\nAny infraction of this order will be subject\nto the-penalty provided for in the City Waterworks\nBy-law No. 933.  \u25a0     \"      *\nCITY COUNCIL :\nBy Order:\n(Please Cut This Out for Reference)\nMid - Summer\nUsed Car Buys\nALL PRICES DRASTICALLY REDUCED TO CLEAR!\nAll Makes and Models\nFLATDECK\n1954\nMERCURY 1-TON\nReconditioned\nCLEARANCE  PRICE\n1956 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR SEDAN\nCompletely Reconditioned\nCLEARANCE   PRICE \t\n1955 PONTIAC V-8 SEDAN\nLaurention\n$795\nCLEARANCE\n1953 MONARCH FORDOR SEDAN\nCLEARANCE\n$7695\n$7825\n$7365\nj * S-P-E-C-l-A-L * ,\n\u201e 1946 DODGE SEDAN   6gA aa  i\n'try us at \u201e: __;_\u201e._ 9J7tVV .\n24 HOUR WRECKER SERVICE\nBeacon Motors Ltd.\nMERCURY   \u2014    LINCOLN    \u2014   METEOR\n701 BAKER STREET NELSON, B. C.   7 PHONE 578 - 579\nM\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1958_07_18","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0430687","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Nelson Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}