{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0430804":{"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":"1958-07-15","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0430804\/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\n2140\nTraffic Fatality-- Free Days\nzsmM\nVol. 56\nWEATHER   FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Mostly clear today.   Continuing   warm.   Winds\nit. Low high at Cranbrook 50.\nand 80, Crescent Valley 45 and\n80.\nNELSON, BC., QfiNAfiJWTOESDAY MORNING, JULY 15, 1958\nNot More Than 6c\n, 10c Saturday\nNo. 7,1\nTo Offer $6 Billion\nPublic Refund Loans\nBy HAROlD MORRISON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA. (CP) \u2014 The government embarked Monday\nen an \"Aladdin's Lamp\" type of financing, offering new\nbonds for old to the tune of $6,416,000,000, the largest financial operation in Canadian history.\nIt offered a variety of medium and long-term bonds to\nthe 2,000,000 persons and corporations, banks and other\ninstitutions  holding wartime\nViotory Bonds.\n\u2022' To get them to convert, the government offered higher interest\nrates and cash bonuses that may\nadd another $40,000,000 or $50,000,;\n000 to the national debt.\nAt the same time, it created some\n\"new money\" by borrowing $400,\n000,000 for five months from the\nchartered banks and the Bank of\nCanada at 2'\/z-per-cent annual in-\ntfiWtSt. :    \u2022[\u2022\u2022\nThe experts called the step inflationary, but their hope is-that\nthe government -will be able to pay\nthis off, when the loan matures\nDec. 15, through proceeds of the\nnext Canada Savings Bond issue.\nIt still needs another \"700,000,000\nin \"new money\" but authorities\nfeel this will be relatively easy to\nget later in the year.    . X\nBIG PUBLICITY DRIVE S\nThe big job ahead will be to sell-\nCanadians on the conversion issue.\nA-huge publicity campaign is being\nprepared.    '\u25a0 c \u25a0' - \u2022\n\"We are embarking,\", said Fi-\nnance  Minister  Fleming  in.the\nLonger Weeks\nFor Commons\nOTTAWA (CP) - Prime Minister Diefenbaker, introducing a\nresolution 40 have'the Commons\nadd IVi hours to its 25'4-hour work\nweek, indicated Monday that Parliament will sit. without adjournment until, the present session's\nbusiness is concluded.\nCCF members opposed*, the\nmove, which would see the House\nadd Friday evenings-and Saturday \u25a0mornings-, and. -afterrfbbn&Jt*\nthe present five-day *afid three-\nevening week.   . '.     {.'\nOpposition Leader Pearson shid\nthe Liberal opposition'would not\noppose the motion, \"which does\nnot go as far as some of us had\nbeen led to expect.\"\n\"We are as anxious as other\nmembers to conclude the session\nwith the least possible delay,\" he\n(aid. The session opened May 12.\nBeaten, Robbed\nTORONTO (CP) - Darryl Lane\nof Calgary was beaten and robbed\nof $105 in his hotel room Sunday\nby two men. He was taken to hospital with a fractured cheek bone.\nPolice said Lane told them two\nmen he met Friday Came to his\nroom and demanded his money.\nWhen he refused^ he was held by\nonev and beaten by the other.\nThey, then tied him up but he\nmanaged to free his hands and\ntelephone for help.\nCommons, \"on the largest and I\nbelieve the most constructive financial operation in the history of\nCanada . . . this is a tremendous\noperation requiring the enthusiastic co-operation of everybody concerned. \".'\u25a0{\nLater he and Prime Minister\nDiefenbaker. joined in broadcasting\nover the largest radio and television network ever set up in Canada,' to carry the message of the\nnew conversion loan to Canadians\nat home.\nThe appeal was to holders of the\nfifth, sixthr seventh, eighth and\nninth Victory Loan bonds, issued in\nthe years. 1943 to 1945, to trade\nthese three-per-cent bonds for any\nfour different \"conversion\" bonds.\nAll the new bonds are non-callable\nand range from three-per-cent\nbonds maturing in 3Vi years to 414-\nper-cent bonds maturing in 25\nyears.\nPUSH LONG-TERM SALES\nThe hope, bf course, is that the\nswitch will be to the long-term issues, such as the 25-year* issue and\na shorter one of 14 years. The 14-\nyear issue will bear interest of\n4'A per..cent and another issue of\nseven .years will be at\"a 3%-per-\ncent rate. *   .,\nThe new interest rates, which\ngenerally. are slightly higher than\nthose available for similar maturities on the current market, start\nhext Sept. 1. But- applications for\ntbe Canadian conversion, bonds\nwill be accepted until Sept. 15.\nCash bonuses will range from\nabout 50 cents to $2 for each $100\nbond converted.     :.\nThe cash bonus will go only to\nthose buying issues maturing in\nthe years beyond.the maturity date\n\u00ab't*i* Victory^JBonds:*\u25a0\"v ***: '\u2022\u2022\n,v*r.he~seven;ygar and'th'e^Vi-year\nbonds will not be available to holders of the eighth and ninth Victory\nLoan issues. The 314-year bonds'\nalso will not be available for the\nseventh victory loan bonds. .\nTWO MAIN OBJECTIVES\nThe conversion operation is designed to remove the uneasiness\nin the bond market created by the\nuncertainty of what the government planned to do about the maturing Victory Loans.\nIt also is designed to open more\nof the short-term bond market for\nfuture government financing operations by attracting holders of\nwhat are, .in effect, short-term\nbonds into long-term issues which\nwon't mature for some years, when\npossibly the federal treasury may\nbe in better shape.\nThe announcement produced\nsome uneasiness in the Commons.\nOpposition Leader Pearson said all\nCanadians must, hope the operation is a success.\n43Gonucks\nIn Iraq\nOTTAWA* (CP) - Forty-three\nCanadians are known to be in\nIraq. ,   ' -\nAn external affairs department\nspokesman said that of the 43 registered with the British Embassy\nin Iraq, 39 reside in the capital\nof Baghdad and four reside at\nKirkuk in the country's northern\nsector. ' . \u2022'\n\"We do not know what British\nofficials in Iraq are doing about\nit, but in any arrangements they\nmay have to make they will look\nafter Canadians on the same basis\nas British citizens,\" the spokesman said.\n\"We can depend on the BritisH\nto keep us informed.\"\nIt is not known whether 43 is\nthe real number of Canadians in\nIraq, since registration with the\nBritish Embassy is not obligatory. :     '-\u25a0'\u25a0-\nNo Agreement\nYet on Solution\nTo B.C. Problem\nOTTAWA (CP) - Justice Minister Fulton Monday said correspondence with the B. C. government indicates the possibility of\nProvincial-federal agreement on\nthe handling of only \"one aspect\"\nof the B. C. Doukhobor-problem.\n.'Mr. Fulton, who said Friday he\nhad not yet received a letter from\nPremier Bennett of B. C. setting\nforth the B. G. government's reaction to confidential federal proposals, acknoiMedged in Jhe Com-\nmims'lMday .the.* letter iWar-\nrived but that at that time it Mad\nnot been drawn to his attention.\n\"I wish to remove' any impression that a reply from the premier of B. C. was overdue,\" he told\nthe House.\nThe letter, however, indicated\nthe two governments had been unable to agree .on a mutual basis\nfor action except oh one aspect\nof the problem, which the minister did not specify.\nMr. Fulton went to B. C. two\nweeks ago for personal talks and\nboth federal and provincial governments have since kept secret\nthe nature of the proposals discussed.\nIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIII llllllllllllllllllllllt 1IIIII11III lllltllillMII\nUaS. tronsporfs\nOrdered to Europe\n-WASHINGTON (AP) - The defence\ndepartment announced early toddy that\nan undisclosed number of U.S. Ajr Force\ntransports have been ordered to the European area7T^e-<lestination of the planes\nwas not made knOWU \"',*\nLONDON (AP) * Plime Minister Mac-'\nmi Han late Monday night ordered 6000\nBritish troops to get ready for speedy*\nmovemerif to the Middle East, plunged into new turbulence Jby the revolt in, Iraq.\nlllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllMllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nLabor Appeals for Action\nOn Seasonal Unemployment\nOTTAWA (CP) - A national\nwinter employment conference\nheard a labor appeal Monday for\nprompt federal action to lick the\nseasonal jobless problem.\nA university professor added a\nplea that any program undertaken be within the context.of the\nfree enterprise system.       i\nWilliam Dodge, executive vice-\npresident of the 1,000,000 - member Canadian Labor Congress\nasked the government to say now\nspecifically what it plans to do.\nFast action was. needed.\nProfessor V. W. Bladen, chair-.\nman of- the University of To-'\nronto's political economy depart-\nDOLLARDOWN ' '\u25a0\":\u2022'\nMONTREAL (CP) - The U.S.\ndollar closed Monday at a discount\nof 4 per cent in terms of Canadian\nfunds, down 1-16. Pound sterling\n$2.69 3-16; down %.\nThousands Wait in Searing\nSun for Glimpse of Princess\nBy PETER BUCKLEY\nCanadian Press Sfaif Writer\nVICTORIA (CP) -\u2014 Pringess Margaret strolled coolly,\nthrough a round of official engagements Monday, ignoring\nblistering heat that levelled spectators on all sides.     -\nHer morning 1 was filled with public appearances and\nher busy day. was not to end officially until she appeared\namong more than 4000 guests at a garden party given by\nLieutenant,- Governor Frank\nBoss.\nThe princess glowed in a stun\nning chemise-type dress of white\nchiffon printed with blue corn-\nDowers and two separate panels\nof chiffon draped and fluttered\nfrom her shoulder to her- fashionably high hem.\nIt was by.far the busiest of her\nthree days so,far in Canada.\nAt1 every public appearance\nthousands of people stood for hours\nin do-degree weather, beneath a\nsearing sun, for achance to\nglimpse the princess.\nTHANKS B.C,\nIn her first speech of her Canadian tour, the princess expressed\nthanks for the \"tremendous welcome she had received in British\nColumbia.   The   300-word   speech\nfrom the steps of the provincial\nParliament Buildings was delivered in a clear, lilting voice and\nwithout hesitation.\n. Along the way, she picked up\nin succession a specially minted\nfold medal, a bouquet of tiny\n\u25a0 roses, and ai Island ott the Vancouver Island coast to be named\nIn her honor..\nTwo members of a special guard\nof honor at Parliament collapsed\nin the heat. While some 10,000\npeople lined the street waiting for\nthe princess to review an armed\nservices parade and an RCAF\nfly-past, ambulances and police\ncars flicked-steadily-amongst the\ncrowd to remove fainting spectators.  \u2022\nPrincess Margaret appeared the\ncoolest of anyone.\nThe official day began when\nthe princess-left the royal suite\nat the Empress Hotel here at 10: IS\na.m. ahd drove past cheering\ncrowds,to a platform outside the\ncolonial-style city hall for Mayor\nPercy ScUrrah's welcome to Victoria..\n5000 AT CITY HALL\nAn estimated 5000 persons were\ncrammed around the city hall.\nShe accepted a bouquet of Little\nPrincess roses from six-year-old\nDeborah Jennings, the mayor's\ngranddaughter, and shook hands\nwith the reeves or heads of five\nsurrounding communities.\nThe gold medal she received\ncame fit an inscribed *blue-mor-\nrocco leather case. Designed by\nthe Victoria Numismatic Society\nand cast at the Royal Mint in London, it shows the head of B.C.'s\nfirst governor, Sir James Douglas,\non one aide and the. Parliament\nBuildings on theother.\n1 She wrote \"Margaret\" in a firm\nhand in a special city hall royal\nguest book that already contained\nthe signatures - of the late King\nGeorge VI and Queen. Elizabeth\n(1939) and the then Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh\n(1951) and the Princess Royal\n(1955);\nFrom city hall, Prince** Ma\u00bb-\ngaret and the lieutenant-governor\ndrove to the Parliament Buildings,\nwhere thousands filled the lawns\nto hear the princess speak.\nRENAME ISLAND\nWelcomed by Premier Bennett,\nshe was asked to accept Portland\nIsland in the Gulf Island group\nabout six miles off shore from\nnearby Sidney, B.C. The island will\nbe- renamed Princess Margaret\nIsland and - converted as a play,\nground for small-boat owner*.\n\"Thanks to this wonderful and\ngenerous gift,\" site replied, \"I\nshall be able to feel myself already a landowner in the province.\nI can assure you that no token of\nyour affection could have given me\nso much pleasure, and I am proud\ntp feel that this new marine park\nwill in future bear my name.\"\nShe reviewed an honor' guard\nfrom the Royal Canadian Engineers at Chilliwack, B.C., and\nmoved into the legislative cbamber\nfor presentation of B.C. members,\ndeputy ministers and Victoria\nCross winnet Commander R.\nBourke of'Victoria.\nThen she strolled across ah outdoor passageway to the adjoining\nProvincial Museum for a hurried\ntour and returned to the main\nbuildings .where she left by the\ncentre exit\nShe drove 'the short half-block\nto a reviewing stand in front of\nthe hotel, where she sat and chatted with Defence Minister George\nPearkes and the lietenant-governor\nwhile waiting about 10 minutes for\nthe. parade to come into view.\nShe then went into the hotel\nand began preparing for a presentation of judiciary, clergy and\nothers, an official luncheon, and\nthe garden party, on the grounds\nof a Government House under construction to replace the burned-out\nformer official lieutenant-governor's MtUkUaw,\nRains Come,\nBut Too Late\nEDMONTON (CP) - ftainfall\nranging from drizzles to cloudbursts swept across the drought-\nplagued Prairies during the weekend, but it may have been too late\ntor many .patched field crop?.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u00ab,\n. The;'dry Saskatoon - Battleford -\nPrince Albert area of north-central Saskatchewan got the most\nrain, up to VA inches, and around\nIVi inches fell in southern Alberta's Lethbridge-Claresholni region,\nwhere farmers didn't need it.'\nSome of, the driest -areas of the\ntwo provinces were skimmed by\nthe rainfall. Less than a half-inch\nwas reported in the Edmonton\narea, Empress on the Alberta-\nSaskatchewan border, and Estevan in southeast Saskatchewan.\n\"Much of the crop was too far\ngone,\" said R. E. McKenzie, director of Saskatchewan's plant industry branch. \"With this rain\nthere will be a fair yield in some.\nfields which were doubtful. We're\nstill not going to have*a big crop\nbut the chances are improved.\" _\nKamloops Alderman.\nSaves Colleague\nKAMLOOPS (CP) \u2014 A Kamloops alderman dived fully\nclothed into deep water Sunday\nto rescue a drowning colleague\nafter hi* boat capsized at Paul\nLake, 12 miles northeast of heer.\nAlderman Cyril H. Day said\nUs chances were \"very sum\"\nuntil he: succeeded In attracting\nthe attention of alderman Tony\nAndrew shortly after his boat\ncjittsized. \u25a0'*\u2022'\nUnable to swim, lie struggled\nin the water for several minute* until lie was seen by Aid.\nAndrew.\nment, said he was pleading for\n'\u25a0recognition of the character of\nthe free enterprise system and\nthe property of seeking solutions\nto seasonal unemployment within\nthe i qontext - oi that system.\" .\n\"Business incentives\" should\nbe the principal means of bringing along a solution.\n90 ATTENDING\nPrime Minister Diefenbaker\nWelcomed some 90 representatives of industry, business, labor\nand all levels of government to\nthe two-day .meeting. After general sessions, they separated into\nfour main conference groups: Industry, government, trade and\ncommerce, promotion and publicity.\nMr. Diefenbaker said the problem of seasonal unemployment is\ndistinct from that of general unemployment, which shows \"major improvement.\"\nProfessor Bladen, who spoke\nlater, said winter unemployment\nis more serious when general unemployment conditions. Me bads\nT'By aliTfteans let us try-td**r*e-\nduce the seasonal element, but let\nus remember that the really serious problem is the maintenance\nof full employment,\" he   said.\nMr. Dodge asked for a detailed'\nfederal survey of the seasonally\nunemployed tn find out who is out\nof work and why.\nNRU Reactor\nIn Action Soon\nOtTAWA (CP) \u2014 Canada's powerful NRU reactor at the Chalk\nRiver, Ont. atomic project is expected to-be back in operation by\nthe end of July, J. L. Gray, president of Atomic Energy of Canada\nLimited, said Monday. NRU-code\nname for the reactor\u2014was shut\ndown May 24 after a rare uranium-\nmetal fire spread radioactive dust\nthrough the huge reactor building.\nOver-Water TV\nPARIS (AP) \u2014 The French radio-television netwark celebrated\nthe Bastille Day holiday by establishing the world's first over'water\naerial television link. The publicly-\nowned network telecast in Paris\nJuly 14 celebrations directly from\nthe Forum in Algiers across the\nMediterranean. It was done by\nsending the signal from Algiers to\nan airplane hovering over the Mediterranean; The flying relay station sent them on to Marseilles.\nEXPORTS DOWN\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 British\nexports last month fell by nearly\n\u00a364,000,000 ($179,000,000) to \u00a3223,-\n700,000 ($586,360,000). About \u00a340,-\n000,000 of this loss was attributed\nto delays caused by the London\ndock strike, tne rest was seasonal\nan announcement said Monday.\nImports- in June amounted to\n\u00a3300,coo-,ooo or \u00a38,000,000 less than\nin May.\nMargaret Watches\nFor Sputnik\nVICTORIA . (CP) - Princess\nMargaret ventured onto a small\nplatform atop the sharply sloping\nroof of the Empress hotel Sunday night for a'view of Russia's'\nSputnik III rocket carrier as it\nsailed over Victoria, it was\nlearned Monday.\nThe adventure is understood, to\nhave thrown hotel officials into\na panic.\nShe viewed the Russian satellite rocket, from a platform some\n150 feet above the ground. The\nplatform is protected only by\nwaist-High iron grillwork. and is\ngenerally used only by workmen.\nBeneath it is the sloping- hotel\nroof and then a sheer drop five\nstoreys to-a'first-floor balcony.\nIraq Government Oyerthrowrii\nBritish Embassy Ransacked\nBy WILTON WYNN\nBEIRUT, Lebanon (AP),\u2014 Revolutionists backing the Nasser movement proclaimed,\na republic in Iraq Monday, hanged the crown prince, wrecked the British Embassy and\nsplit the Baghdad Pact. ...\nThe army leaders directing the coup declared military forces in the country had rallied to their side and \"the situation has finally been stabilized.\"        :\nThe fate of young King Faisal and his jpremier, Nuri Said, remained a mystery. A\ncryptic Baghdad broadcast heard in Damascus called for public support for \"bullets and\nshells pouring,on the royal palace and the palace of Nuri\n\u25a0Said.\n. The revolutionists, said' Crown\nPrince Abdul Ilah, Faisal's uncle,\nhad been hanged in the heart of\nBaghdad.\nThe'British ambassador and his\nstaff were reported safe after the\nembassy    was    ransacked    and-\nburned. '\nBORDERS CLOSED\nVirtually all direct, communica-\nParliament\nMonday\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nTransport Minister Hees said\nsmall, noh \u2022 scheduled aircraft\ncompanies will be able to operate more freely in Canada.\nCCF House Leader Argue, opposing extension of the House's\nhours, said the government was\n\"putting pressure\" on \u25a0 the Commons too early in the session.\nOpposition Leader Pearson\nmoved non-confidence, regretting\nthat government proposals for\nregulating and financing national\nbroadcasting have not been announced.\nH. W. Herridge (CCF-Koote-\nnay West) moved an amendment,1\nregretting that the government\nhas not declared in support of\n\"maintenance and expansion\" of\npublicly-owned radio and TV,\nTUESDAY\nThe Commons meets at 2:30\np.m. to conclude a supply debate. The Senate sits at 8 p.m,\nIn Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, Wash. (AP) -\nCrackling flames fed by grain dust\nand plastics burned through an industrial block of buildings in Vancouver early Monday.\nDamage was estimated at $150,-\n000 in toe fire that destroyed the\ntwo-storey Washington Co-Op\nFarmers' Association building, an\nice and cold storage plant, a cafe,\na garage, and Corrosion Controllers: Inc., a small plastics fabricating plant.      :.,\nThere were no reported injuries\nor deaths, although firemen said\nit was an intensely hot fire.\nTo Decide on\nSecond Subway\nTORONTO (CP) - The Ontario\nMunicipal Board will decide Aug.\n19 whether metropolitan Toronto\ncouncil can finance a $200,000,000\neasttwest Bloor Street subway,\n6oard chairman Lorne Cumming\nannounced Monday. An immediate\nstart on the subway has' been approved by metro ahd permissive\nlegislation has been passed by the\nprovince to spend the money.\nJOHN SANDERS, right, of Albuquerque, New Mexico, It\nshown on the first leg of hi* descent from a rocky ledge high In\ntha Sumbres mountain*. With him it PFC. Al Lane, one of four\nmen In the Fort. Carton, Colo., Army rescue team. Sanders had\nbeen on the ledge since Friday July 4 and was In fair condition\nwhen he'arrlved at the bottom of the mountain In Colorado July\n9, Sanders'tell about 350 feet from the top of the mountain near\nAntonlto. His companion, William E. Garver, was killed In the\ntame fall when he tumbled 600 feet beyond the ledge.\n-AP Wlrphoto.\ntion with Baghdad was cut off and\nIraq's borders were ordered\nclosed.\nMost of the information on the\nsudden, shattering events came\nfrom the Baghdad radio.\nIt said a republic had been established following the \"liberated\nArab\" policies of President Nasser of the United Arab Republic\nof Egypt and Syria.\nThe coup, if successfully carried\nthrough, smashes the central arch\nof the anti-Communist Baghdad\nPact and. the new Arab Federation\nof Jordan and Iraq. King Hussein\nof Jordan quickly proclaimed himself chief of state of the Iraq \u2022\nJordan federation in succession to\nFaisal, his cousin. But many observers believed Hussein's days\naiso are numbered unless he receives substantial support from the\nWest.\n<kA   showflown*   throughout   the\nMiddle East appeared at hand.\nGENERAL AT HELM\nRadio Baghdad said Iraq was\nunder firm martial law with Brig:\nGen. Abdel KSrim Kassem, a fervent nationalist, heading a new\ncabinet.\nIt denied other broadcasts that\nfighting still was going on and repudiated a report that Abdul Ilah\na power in the .monarchy of King\nFaisal still was .at the head of\nIraqi army units fighting the rebels.\n\"This report Is contradictory,\"\nsaid Radio  Baghdad,   \"because\nthe Iraqi people this morning\nsaw the body of the traitor hung\nbefore the ministry of defence.\n\"Furthermore,  military positions all-over Iran have fully\nsupported the movement.\"\n' ThSre were odnfflcting'r\u00a7pc\u00ab\u00bb\nabout Nuri Said, a 'qngtime'power\nin Iraqi politics. Early broadcasts\nreported his death,, .but later accounts heard, in Jerusalem said he\nwas still alive.\nREPORT FAISAL ARRESTED\nFighting was reported around\nFaisal's palace and some Communist-bloc broadcasts,, (which\nhailed the coup as a triumph, said\nFaisal had been arrested.\nThere, also was no clear.word\non Western officials and citizens\ncaught up in the rapid-fire events\nin oil-rich Iraq. ,   -\nAdvices reacningTiondon by way\nof the Italian government said\nmobs had ransacked and set fire\ntoJhe British Embassy in Baghdad. Foreign office spokesmen m\nLondon said they had been out of\niiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit\nUN Summoned *\nUNITED NATIONS (AP)-The\nUnited Nations Security Council\nwas summoned Monday night at\nthe request of the United State*\nto meet today to take up the\nproblems ln the Middle East.   -\nThe meeting was Set for 10\na.m.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlin\ntouch with the embassy since Monday morning.\nPrime Minister Macmillan summoned an emergency meeting of\nhis cabinet to take up the situation\nin Iraq.\nThe U. S. Embassy in Londw\nsaid the latest reports it had received from Baghdad said tbe\nAmerican Embassy there was\nsafe.\nAmerican and British passengers arriving in London Jrota\nBaghdad said troops with fixed\nbayonets were patrolling the city\nwhen they left?, but that everything seemed quiet. They took of!\nfrom Baghdad three hours before\nthe radio reports of the coup were\nreceived.\nU. A. R. President Nasser cut\nshort a visit to Yugoslavia to begin a hurried trip home. He was\nnot available for comment before\nleaving Yugoslavia.\nFrom Damascus came a report\nquoting a man identified a* Dr.\nJaber OmaT, a minister in the\nIraqi revolutionary government,\nas saying:\n\"Iraq now will march with the\nU.A.R. toward complete liberation\nof the entire Arab motherland and\nthe.. realization of,. total Arab\nunity-**''' ' \"'\u00a3\"\u25a0\u25a0 ''''' \"yr**!\n\u25a0 The first ingestion that Hie revolt' had spread outside Baghdad\ncame from Iran, where oil workers\nat the Abadan refinery saw Iraji\nsoldiers across the.'border -raise\nNasser's U.A.R.. flag. There w\u00abs\nno sign of shooting. .\nThe revolt took place on the\neve of an assembly of chiefs .of\nMoslem members of the Baghdad\nPact alliance. Faisal, .Abdul Bah\nand Nuri Said iwere to have flown\nto Turkey Monday. -jf;\nThere were tecent' reports that\nNuri Said wasi urging the other\nMoslem members,\u2014Turkey, Iran\nand Pakistan\u2014to give strong aid\nto the Lebanese government of\nPresident Camille ChamoUn, who\nhas been fighting off a rebellion\nby pro-Nasser element*.\nIke Calls tor UN Meeting\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014President\nEisenhower asked Monday for an\nimmediate United Nations meeting\non the Middle.East crisis. There\nwere unconfirmed reports the U.S.\nmight send a military force there.\nThese latter reports came from\ncongressional sources. They followed an emergency White House\nconference which brought together\nthe president, vice-president Richard Nixon, state secretary Dulles\nand 22 members of Congress. They\nmet in the wake of the reported\noverthrow of the pro-West Iraqui\ngovernment.\nThe talk of U.S. troops being\ndispatched to the area was considerably weakened by a White\n\u2022fouse announcement that Eisen-\nhower is asking that the. UN Security Council sit in emergency\nsession this morning.\nIt appeared unlikely Eisenhower\nwould ask for such a meeting only\nto tell the UN that the United\nStates was sending in a force. It\nseemed more likely UN action\nwould be asked, with the United\nStates participating heavily .in\nwhatever the UN proposed to do..\nLEBANON ASKS AID \"\nA congressman attending the\nsession told' a reporter that Lebanon, a neighbor of Iraq, had asked\nfor U.S. military assistance and\ntl^t American forces \"will be sent\n.there.\"  \u25a0        \u2022 *. fig\nAnother Said that i any move\nis made as to Lebanon it will be\nsolely on a decision by Eisenhower.\nAnd in This Corner \u2666-\u2666.\nMUIRKIRK, Scotland (Reuters) \u2014 Thrifty little Miss Minnie\nBrown didn't think too highly of banks to she looked after har\nmoney henelf - all \u00a317,000 ($47,600) of It\n\"I've no valuables,\" the told police when the prepared to go\ninto hospital. But the wanted them to keep an eye on her tiny fruit\nWhen the died, policemen tpent six hours unearthing her fortune, and bank tellers took another three houn counting It.\nThere were buckett filled with eolnt and covered with cobwebs. There were, bills stuffed in mattreBses, In chairs and Inside\ncushions. And there were tea chests, palls, trunks and cans crammed with cash. ., \u25a0    > ,\u201e\nNow police are wondering If there It any more. 8o far no will\na hat been found.\nSAN PEDRO, Calif. (AP) \u2014 In red paint on the white hull of\nthe luxurious yacht of the Dominican Republic's playboy General\nRafael Trujillo Jr. appeared today these words:\n\"Zsa Zsa slept here.\"\nThe words apparently were painted on Sunday night. With the\ndawn, riders on the ferry to Terminal Island Jvere first to spot it.\nAboard the yacht Trujillo and crew were not to be seen. They\nlike to sleep late and were seemingly unaware of the sign.\nTrujillo came to southern California to have some fun. A friend\nwho introduced him to a number of hi* Hollywood playmates is\nactress Zsa Zsa Gabor.\nPEIPING (Reuters) \u2014 Mao Tse-tung has swum the mile-wide\nYangtae River four timet In the latt two years, a sports magazine\ntald.\nThe magazine New Athletics quoted the 64-year-old head of\nCommunist China at saying: \"It's at easy as resisting American\nImperialism.\"\nJACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) \u2014 Liquor store operator Conrad\nMangels Jr. told police Sunday he was robbed by telephone.\nHe said he answered his phone and was told:\n\"I've got a rifle trained on you.\"\nThe caller instructed Mangels to put the contents of his cash\nregister in a bag and place it by a telephone pole near the store.\nMangels did.\nPolice said the robber got $85.02 \u2014 less a dime for the telephone\ncall. - -'-:'\n -  \u2014'\u2014'. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0.\"\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY IS, 1958~\nm\nLast Times Tonight \u2014 Shows at 7:00\u20149:05\nCIVIC\nStarts Wed.\u2014\"JUMPING JACKS\" \u2014 \"SCARED STIFF\"\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nOne Complete Show 9:10\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nli\nI]\nI\nI\nI Norman Wisdom\nMargaret Rutherford\nI\u2014 \u2014  \u2014 asm   mam  \u2014J\nCOIffOltt\nGUMGWEt\n- PLUS -\n'Just My Luck'\nMishaps Down\nBut Police\nUrge Caution\nRCMP said Mopday the number\nif.traffic accidents and fatalities\nthroughout the province during the\nweek ended July 13 dropped from\nthe total a week earlier.\nThere were 220 accidents reported in the province to midnight\nSunday \u2014 eight less than the total\nthe week before. Two persons died\non B.C. highways during tha week\ncompared with five the week before.\n' In the Nelson RCMP subdivision,\nthe total dropped to 19 from 24 during the week ended July 6. Nine\nprosecutions were launched against\ndrivers involved in the subdivision\ntotal, the same as a week earlier,\nbut percentage-wise on a provincial\nbasis they jumped to 112 from 87,\nPolice cautioned' drivers to use\ngood judgment on the highways,\nparticularly during the busy summer months, while thousands of\nholidayers are travelling through\nthe province.\nBright Markers\nFor Airstrip\nNelson's waterfront airstrip is\ntaking on a new appearance.\nCity engineering crews started\nwork Thursday erecting 133 12-\n\u25a0 foot sections of protective markers which will line the half-mile\nlanding field separating the dump\nroad from the field.\nThe Department of Transport\nregulation markets will be'painted\norange and white, the international colors...   .\nOfficials here anticipate the\nairstrip 'will handle a greater\nflow of air- traffic in the future.\n\"SABRE\" 620\nFlash Camera\nFully Guaranteed\n- Takes 12 Pictures\nUses M2 Flash Bulb\n. For Color\u2014Black and white\nIndoors and outdoors.\nComplete $1.98\nNeison Pharmacy\n' \"Your Fortress of Health\"\n433 Josephine St.\n  '\nAuto-Vue Drive-In\nTRAIL, B.C.\nHELD OVER TONIGHT\n\"THE TEN COMMANDMENTS\"\nSpecial SundaygMldnight Showing\nBox Office open 12:01 a.m.\nCASTLE THEATRE\nCASTLEGAR. B.C.\nTONIGHT and WEDNESDAY\n\"SITTING BULL\" (Cinemascope)\nDale Robertson, Mary Murphy\nCarrol Naisli\nCARTOON and NEWS\nSolid Rock\nBase for\nNew Dam\nCity engineer E. E. Olson\nsaid Monday he ls confident\na new $15,000, 250-ton concrete dam under construction\non Five-Mile Creek will stop\nall seepage past the city\nwater supply intake house.\nHe told the Daily News Monday\nafternoon the old cedar log dam\nwhich held back the city's water\nsupply for 30 years has been completely demolished, loose gravel\nhas been cleared away, and a'\nsolid rock base .has been uncovered\nwhere the concrete dam will be\nbuilt.   .\nThe old dam was taken apart\nlate in June and early this month\nafter leakage through the barrier\nbecame too great and lowered the\nwater level below the intake house\nflume.\nTo maintain temporarily the\ncity's, water supply, engineering\ncrews have constructed a rock and\nsandbag dam 40 feet upstream\nfrom the new dam site.\nWorkmen are now making forms\nfor the concrete which will be\nhauled to the site by truck.\nThe concrete dam, which is expected to be ready for use this\nfall, will measure 80 feet across\nthe top and 16 feet at the bottom.\nIt will provide a 34-foot spillway\nsection.\nALL PART OF THE FUN during last Monaory'g Bonspiel parade, this forestry float\nwas a grim reminder as well of blackened patches throughout B.C.'s greenland. Faced with the prospect of less than normal precipitation and higher than average temperatures this month, forest service officals caution all those who plan a holiday in the\nwoods to use extreme safety measures. Already this year more than 150 forest fires\nhave burned over parts of'the Nelson Forest District.\nSouth Slocan Man in\nMusical Ride July 25\nLightning Blamed\nFor Riondel Fire\nA lightning-sparked bush fire\nfanned by high winds Saturday\nnight burned over three acres between Kootenay Bay- and Riondel\nbefore firefighters brought it\nunder control.\nThe blaze was In the same general area where the . storm\nknocked out power on Cominco's\n90,000-volt power line that serves\n-the region north of Creston.\n' A small spot fire.on Gray Creek\nwas extinguished soon after it\nwas located. Forest service officials said it was also caused by\nlightning.\nMayor Leaves\nFor Edmonton\nMayor T. S. Shorthouse left the\ncity Monday morning for Edmonton..\nCity Hall officials said Mayor\nShorthouse left on personal business and will probably miss Wed\nnesday night's City Council mealing.\nit's  all\nPRE-PLANNED\nOur experts \"blueprint\" every detail in odvcmee\u2014\ntake all the work and worry off your hands. And\nwe move you in a \u00aeSanltized Van I No extra co\u00bb.\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\n719 Baker Sf.\nPhone 33\nNelson, B. C.\nSERVING UNITED STATES,!\nCANADA. ALASKA, \u00abtf|\nHAWAII & PUSATQ RICO  _j\nThirty-five men of the famed\nRoyal Canadian Mounted Police\nMusical Ride \u2014 one of them a native of Nelson \u2014 will perform the\nexacting horseback drill here July\n25.\nThe Nelsonite is Constable Bruce\nDavis, now of South Slocan, who\nwas stationed at Edmonton prior\nto formation of a new Ride last\nMarch. The men have since been\ntraining at Regina.\nConstable Davis, who joined the\nForce two years ago, has a- brother, Jeff, who is an RCMP dog-\nmaster stationed at Winnipeg.\nConstable Davis is a graduate\nof Mount Sentinel High School at\nSouth'Slocan. His parents are Mr.\nand Mrs. D. J. Davis, South Slocan residents for the past 30 .years\nThe Musical Ride, which will be\naccompanied by the RCMP Regina\nband, will be staged at the Civic\nCentre grounds, at 7:30'p.m., July\n25.\nNelson, Kaslo\nSee Sputnik\nRussia's Sputnik III was sighted\nby Nelson and Kaslo residents\njust before 10 pm., Monday night.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Ludwig, 1311\nCedar Street, and their guests,\nMr. and Mrs. Joseph Nagy told\nCKLN. and the Daily News they\nsaw the satellite for 30 seconds,\nstreaking across the sky from\nSoutheast to\" the North at 16.minutes to 10 p.m. It had been expected shortly after 10.\nThey said it appeared as \"a\npure white ball, dim and yellowish at first, then becoming larger\nand brighter as it passed over.\"\nR. C. Blackmore of Kaslo and\na fisherman from California said\nthey'saw Sputnik at 9:45 while\nfishing off (Kaslo. It seemed \"very\nlow\" glowing brilliantly then\nfading alternately' as though passing through a mist, they said.\nOther Kaslo residents were\nstartled about 9:30 by a mysterious object travelling south to\nnorthwest which appeared to rise\n\"straight up,\" stop, then fade,\nthen glow as it accelerated again.\nThey said this occured three times\nbefore it vanished \"at terrific\nspeed.\"        \u2022 '\u25a0.-..,\nWindDeldys\nNike Flight*\n' CHURCHILL, Man. (CP) - Un-!\nfavorable winds Sunday forced\ncancellation of a rocket launching\nscheduled as part of International\nGeophysical year experiments being carried on at this base on the\nshores of Hudson Bay by United\nStates and Canadian scientists.\nThe, Nike-Cajun rocket is equipped with instruments to measure\nwind velocities, temperatures and\nair'densities in the upper atmosphere. Officials at the base, 610\nmiles north of Winnipeg, said the\nexperiment would be carried out\nMonday if conditions improved.\nSaturday, another Nike-Cajun\nwa* lofted to a height of 71 miles\nbearing a earner*! to study the.\nhorizon. The camera was landed by\nparachute.\nSUBMARINE CABLE\nPRONOUNCED SUCCESS\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The\nworld's highest-capacity submarine power cables, unking Vancouver Island with the Mainland,\nhave been pronounced a \"complete success by Tom Engledew,\nB.C. Electric vice-president and\nchief engineer.\nMr. Ingledew said the last two\nof the seven lines went Into service Sunday.\nLaid last week, the 138,000-volt\ncapacity cables replaced two of\nthree alregdy in operation.\nThe 45-member band will present an hour-long concert before\nthe Ride begins. Earlier in the day,\nat 3 p.m., they will play on Baker\nStreet before leaving for Mt. St.\nFrancis Infirmary,\nThe 80 members of the Ride and\nband will be put up in the Civic\narena. Their horses will be cared\nfor in the new city storage sheds\nnear the waterfront.\nThe Musical Ride and the colorful band are traditions of the Force\nestablished in 1873 to maintain law\nand order in the unsettled west.\nOriginally it was a semi-military\nbody with the immediate objectives\nof stopping the liquor trade among\nthe Indians, collecting customs\ndues, and gaining the respect of\nthe natives.*\nBy 1875 its objectives were gradually being achieved and police\nposts had been'established at strategic points on the vast Prairies.\nBetween 1885 and 1899 a period\nof rapid change and development\noccurred throughout the Prairies.\nThe Force met the problems accompanying increased immigration\nand the springing up of new settlements. It moved into the North at\nthe same time 'to maintain a strict\nvigilance during the, Yukon gold\nrush.\nIn 1904. the prefix \"Royal\" was\nbestowed on the North West Mounted Police by King Edward VII.\nWith only 84 detachments the work\nwas widely scattered in an area\ncontaining 350,000 inhabitants. In\none year alone, 44 murderers were\nbrought to justice.\nIt was in 1920 that the Foroe^was\nassigned duties over all of Canada,\nand \"When the name was changed\nto its present title. '\nThe RCMP today is responsible\nfor the enforcement of some 50\nfederal acts, the policing of eight\nof the 10 Canadian provinces, and\nmunicipal policing in many of the\ncommunities in those provinces.\nImprovements on\nVancouver Street\nThree blocks on Vancouver\nStreet - 1100, 1200 and 1300' -\nwill be paved this year.\nCity Engineer E. E. Olson said\nMonday the work on the street,\na main thoroughfare tg Rosemont, is part of an improvement\nprogram under way in six blocks\non the street.\nThe paving is covered in the\ncurrent  street paving. bylaw,\nA new -water main and storm\nsewer in theJ'OO, 1500 and 1600\nblocks are near completion and\nworkmen arc excavating the roadbed in those blocks in preparation\nfor paving at a later date.\nMr. Olson said that while those\nblocks will not be paved this year,\nsidewalks will be constructed on\nboth sides of the street.\"'\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nSo This Is\nNelson\nAn adventurous porcupine,\napparently fed up with the secluded splendor of Kokanee\nGlacier Park, has come to\ntown for a closer look at city\n. life,\nHe came down Sunday with\nJack Steed of 702 Latimer\nStreet, who was in the Park on\na hiking trip Saturday and\nSunday. But Mr. Steed didn't\nknow he had the passenger until Monday afternoon when he\nlooked inside his garage.\nThe porcupine apparently\nclimbed up under the hood of\nMr. Steed's car and stayed\nthere throughout the 60-mile\ndrive from the Joker mill site\nto Nelson. There were quills in\nthe rubberized wire coverings\nunder the hood to prove the\njstory.\nMr. Steed didn't say 'what-\nhappened to the animal following its discovery Monday.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIII\nPackard Rumors\n\"Exaggerated\"\nHAMILTON (CP) - Canadian\nofficials of Studebaker-Packard\nsaid Monday a report from New\nYork that the company has decided to drop the Packard- line of\nluxury cars is \"exaggerated.\"\nThe report Sunday night said\nthe South Bend, Ind., company\nhas decided to drop the Packard,,\nonce .a symbol- of prestige among\ncar owners, and will stake its\ndestiny on the, Studebaker line\nwhich will include a smaller\nmodel in November.\nA decision on Packard's. ult>\nmate fate will not be made until\nconsumer acceptance of 1959 models indicates whether \"chrome\nand fins\" or \"utility and economy\" cars are generally preferred.\nFuneral Services\nFor Early Resident\nFuneral service for John R.\nWaldie, a Nelson resident in the\nearly 1900's, was held Monday\nafternoon from Thompspn's Fune--\nal Home conducted by Rev. H. R.\nWhitmore.\nMr. Waldie died in the Trail-\nTadanac hospital Thursday at 72.\nPallbearers were Arthur, Allan.\nJames, David, Glen and Bruce\nWaldie, all nephews of Mr. Waldie. The organist was .Miss Barbara Lea.\nInterment was made in the Nelson Memorial Park.\nOttawa Presented With\nCNR's Revised Budget\nOTTAM& (CP)-The CNR Monday presented Parliament with a\nrevised budget for 1958, forecasting a deficit of $55,000,000.\nThe deficit was the same as\none predicted in an earlier budget\ntabled in the Commons June 2,\ndespite the fact that in the meantime the government ordered a\n$15,000,000 change in the company's accounts. <\nThe new budget predicts a\nslump in operating revenue* to\n\u2022$700,000,000 from th* $730,000,000\nJune forecast and from the actual $753,166,000 figure of 1957.\nThe latest figure is based on\n1957 material price*, wage and\nfreight rate*. i\nPresident Donald Gordon explained to the Commons railway\nr-ommitt.ee that the revised\nbudget was submitted because\nof stepped-up obsolescence of\nsteam engines.\nREDUCES. EXPENSES\nIn the first 1958 budget, the\ncompany included another $7,500,-\n000 under Hie same heading.\nThe new budget reduces equipment maintenance expenses by\nthe total of these two items.\nThe new budget has counterbalancing items that maintain\nthe deficit at its original figure.\nThe 1957 deficit was $29,600,000.\nIn the new budget, transportation charges are shown as dropping to $323,000,000 from the $335.-\n000,000 in the June one, presumably because of les* traffic to be\nhauled. Operating.expenses generally would drop to \u25a0 $697,100,000\nfrom the previously \u2022 forecast\n$727,200,000.\nThi* would take car* roughly of\nthe IM.ooo.ooo drop in gross revenues. Other items in the account are about the tame, to leave\nth* prospective deficit as it was.\nDetailed explanation of the\nchanges was expected from Mr,\nGordon during his appearance before th* Commons commute*, expected to conclude its- hearing\nTuesday.\n.n.m m,. am . mmmmmm,mlm^mm0.m\nKoolaree\nEchoes\nWell, Mom, I'm here. Guess\nwhat\u2014there are about 86 other\ncampers, and are we having a\ntime! Yesterday morning I started\nto get dressed when the bell went'\nfor morning exercises, and I was\njust about the last to get there.\nThen we did some crazy physical\njerks\u2014but they were kind of fun\nand I was sure wide awake when\nI finished,\n\"Seems they do everything on\nthe run here. When the bell went\nfor flag raising I was one of the\nfirst out of our cabin, but almost\neverybody passed me on the way.\nNot this morning, though. I was\nthird there.\n\"I don't like porridge much at\nhome, but it seems to taste different at camp and I like it \u2014 and,\nboy, was that strawberry shortcake good at lunch today! Our\nteam won the paper chase yesterday, so after-campfire last night\nwhile everybody else was getting\nready for bed we had a whole\nwatermelon in our cabin. Boy, Was\nit good!\n\"Remember Allan Whitley? He's\nLittle Chief of the Cneyennes in\ncabin one this year, and Jim Massey is their scribe. Mike Landucci\nis Little Chief of the Kiowas, and\na boy I didn't know before, Ralph\nPeitzsche is their scribe. Bruce\nWright ls Little Chief of the Mic-\nmacs, Idri* Schornagel Little Chief\nof the Sioux. The Blackfeet Little\nChief's Paul Nicholson, the Incas',\nJohn McGilvory, the Mohawks',\nJohn Christie.\nDavid Langridge, Bobby Kelly,\nHarold Harrison, Stephen Edwards\nand Keith Moore are scribes, and\nhave to keep track of everything\ntheir tribe does each day. Last\nnight at our Spook Night Campfire\nthey made their first report, when\nit was really dark, we started telli\ning ghost stories. Every cabin had\none, and' some other fellows kept\ncoming around with spooky masks\non. One put his'hand-bn my shoulder and I really did think it was a\nghost when I turned around. The\norgan kept playing gloomy music\nand after Mr. Robins told his story\nsomebody screamed. Boy, did I\njump! i\n\"1 had to do the dishes today and\nit was my turn to wash.. They, sure\nare fussy here. We lost a-half mark\njust because two cups weren't quite\ndry, but we won the Totem Pole\nfor our table, anyway, because\nmost of the other tables forgot to\nwipe off the outside of their sugar\nbowl and the salt and pepper\nshakers.'\n\"At church today Ricky Turner\nread the lesson and he did it really\nwell. Sometimes if the wind is\nblowing the wrong way I can't hear\nso well, but I heard Ricky swell.\nI'like church here. The collection\nplates are little small ones, but\nwhen Gerald Krause and Idris\nSchornagel finished taking up the\ncollection they seemed to have\nquite a bit in them, Mr. Robins\ntold a story about two pools of\nwater, and it hardly seemed like Wind Blows Trees\na sermon at all. '\n\"The thing I like best is the\nboats. They have lots of them, and\nthree of us had one all to ourselves yesterday. They make you\nwear a life jacket unless you are\na really good swimmer, and don't\nlet you stand up at all. I n e v e r\nthought rowing was so hard! I did\npretty well, though, but, boy, did\nI splash the fellow in the front bf\nthe boat. He had to change all his\nclothes before supper. The fellows\nhere are really swell \u2014 he just\nlaughed! <\".-'\u2022       . \u201e\n-Got to go now. It is my tribe's\nturn in the boats again and I sure\ndon't want to miss it.\"\nVeteran Newsman\nTalks of Early Days\n\"; Names such as John Houston, Chorlee Ink, Fred Dean,\nFrank Payne, Ralph Sutherland and R. F. Green, well known\nNelson oldtimers, Were mentioned during Monday's Rotary\nClub luncheon speech by C. W. Ramsden and O. George\nWheeler of Palm Springs,'\nSPEEDER PAYS\nFINE\n$50\nGeorge Clifford Leno, 224 Behn-\nsen, Monday was fined $50 and\ncosts on a charge of speeding on\nthe Hope-Princeton Highway. He\npleaded guilty to the charge be\nfore Magistrate William Evans in\nprovincial magistrate's court here.\nLeno was clocked by RCMP at\nspeeds up to 75 miles an hour. The\ncharge waii* waived *o Nelson.\nIn a tricky end play the ball\nwas. passed frbm Mr. Ramsden,\nDaily News publisher, who was\nscheduled to speak on the newspaper profession, to Mr. Wheeler,\none-time News editor in Nelson!\nIntroduced by J. H. Argyle, president of the Rotary Club,.Mr.\nRamsden Spoke threateningly on\nthe \"three-hour talk\" to ensue,\nthen in turn introduced Mr.\nWheeler, who spoke of his days\non the Nelson Daily News, mostly\nof his reporter experiences under\nMr. Payne, and the various amusing incidents of his career at\nthat time. He mentioned Police\nChief Tom Long, and the highlight\nof his Nelson reporting career\nwhen he wrote the story of the\ndiscovery of stolen bonds to the,\nvalue of $10,000 in the \"smelly\"\nbag. of animal skins carried by\nan old trapper, William Miller.\nMr. Wheeler spoke highly of\nMr. Payne, editor and publisher\nof the Nelson Daily News.\nHe also 'spoke of a suit he\nbought from Emory's Men's Wear\nin 1917, which was guaranteed\nto last forever. He paid $15 for\nthe suit and after wearing it for\nfive years, sold it to a second\nhand dealer for $25, good as new.\n\"It had never even lost its crease\"\nhe said.\nThe former newspaperman, in\nNelson from 1917-1918, told of the\nexcitement on the night of the\nArmistice. That night \"everyone\nin the News was so excited, they\ndidn't even change the dateline\non the paper and it came out as\nNov. 10-instead of Nov. 11,\" he\nsaid. \u2022';\nMr. Wheeler concluded his re-\nmarks by saying he had enjoyed\nhis two years in Nelson and commended the News Publishing Company for the standard of its news\nservice, saying \"no other small\ntown has a paper that is so good.\".\nMr. Ramsden, in his opening\nremarks, spoke briefly on the origin of the Nelson Daily News,\nmentioning the Tribune, the Weekly Miner, the Daily-Miner ana the\nDaily Miner and News. John Houston and Charles Ink were partners\nin the publishing of the Weekly\nMiner, said Mr. Ramsden, and a\nnotice appears on the first edition announcing that the paper\nwould be published every Saturday \"if the staff is sober.\" \u2022\nThe Daily News was published\nin 1903. r\"\nIn turning the speaker's stand\nover to Mr. Wheeler, Mr. Ramsden said that Mr. Wheeler left\nNelson for Vancouver in 1918, becoming news editor of the Vancouver *-Sun.- He published subur-\nban pqper* in Lbs' Angeles,: and\nwent to Palm Springs,.where he\nestablished the \"Palm Spring*\nVillager.\" He has been named\n\"Mr. Villager\" of Palm Springs.\nHe is past president of the Palm\nSprings Shrine Club and a member of Los Angeles and San Fran- ,\ncisco press clubs.      ,\nSpeakers were thanked by N. C*\nStibbs, who arrived in Nelson in\nthe same year as *Mr. Wheeler,\nhe said.  -\nVisitor* at the Rotary meeting\nwere Syd Barker of Vancouver\nand Herman Nicholson of Nelson,\na long-time friend of Mr. Wheeler.\nAt the conclusion of the meeting\nHarry D. Harrison thanked Rotary Club members for the assist\nance extended to himself and R.\nA. Peebles when a Rotarlan work\nparty cleared debris away following the. recent fire at their garage.\nOn Two Power Lines\nLights blinked out Saturday night\nin some parts'of the city and the\nNorth Shore as severe winds swept\nthrough the district.\nA tree that fell across power\nlines on the immediate North\nShore caused lights to black out\nfor at least 15 minutes at 9 p.m.\nbut beyond Six Mile residents were\nleft in'darkness for at least two\nhours.\nA tree that fell across. lines\non Chatham Street caused a temporary blackout in Fairview.\nCity electrical department crews\nlocated the city and immediate\nNorth Shore difficulty but were\nstill working on power lines at\nSix' Mile at 11 p.m. Saturday.  \u2022\nThe Weather\nNELSON' \u00ab 77.\nToronto ,    64 83\nRegina ...,: ,.    51 66\nCalgary '.. 48 64\nEdmonton    52 68\nPenticton    52 84\nVancouver    59 79\nVictoria.   ..  .;   55 80\n~ \u2014 \"9*aam\nVisiior Says\nNeed Publicity\n\"This place deserves more publicity,\" Ivor Williams of Edmonton\nsaid here July 11.\nHe was one of almost 500 visitors\nwho signed the guest register at\nthe Chamber of Commerce tourist\nbureau here during Bonspiel Week,\nJuly 7 to 12.\nIt was one of the bureau's busiest\nweeks so far this year. .   .\nMr. Williams' comments were\nlisted with those of other tourists\nWho described the city and district\nas \"nice .country\", \"lovely\", and\nan area with \"beautiful scenery.\"\n' The visitors came from all part*\nof Canada, the United States, particularly California, and from\nHawaii.\n(The number of tourists who sign\nthe tourist-bureau register indicates only a percentage of the total number who travel through the\ncity, and officials estimate at least\n500 more visitors passed through\nNelson during the same period.\nService Stations\nReach Agreement\nNelson garage and service station proprietors have, agreed on\nthe present schedule of opening\nhours.\nAt one time, several service stations were not in favor of the opening hours proposed by the Garage-\nmen's Association to city council.\nThese firms felt \"they wanted tb\nremain open all night.\nCity council agreed to the majority request, however, and service\nstations in the city.and Fairview\nnow operate on a late-closing roster. By this means, two service\nstations are open for service until\n11 p.m. and each give emergency\nservice after'that time.\nUnder the existing schedule, City\nservice stations have one late opening night every eight or nine weeks.\nIn Fairview, with fewer service\nstations, the roster alternates to\none late night opening in three\nweeks.\nARTHRITIS?\nI have1 been wonderfully .blessed\nin being restored to active life\nalter being crippled in nearly\nevery joint in my body and with\nmuscular soreness from head to\nfoot. According to medical diagnosis I had Rheumatoid Arthritis\nand other forms of Rheumatism.\nFor FREE Information on how I\nobtained.' this wonderful relief\nWrite . .\nMRS. LEU S. WIER\n2805 Arbor Hills Drive\u2014CN8\nP.O. Box 2696\nJackson,  Mississippi   ,\nT-SHIRT SALE\nPenmans - Kertlev\nHarvey Woodf\nReguluar $2.95     '\n*2-MEACH   3for*6-50\nRegular $3.95\n*189EACH    3 lor *8 \u00b0\u00b0\nRegular $4.95\n*3 89 EACH   3for*|1 50\nGODFREYS'\n378 BAKER STREET\n**M\n \t\nWorld Thr^dt^iwy\nBy Iraq's Rfetoluttoii\nmi\nEditor's note: William L.Ryan has, just completed a six-\nweek trip to the Middle East.\nHe visited Iraq as well a*\nEgypt, Syria, Saudi Arabia,\nLebanon and Kuwait.\nBy WILLIAM L. RYAN\nBELGRADE (AP)\u2014Iraq's revolution can be the beginning of\nthe worst of all crises for the\nMiddle East. It carries, a real\ndanger to world peace.\nThe west had more reason to\nfear such a development in Iraq\nthan 'in almost any other place\nMwadui Mine\nTalks Reopen\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Talks\nwere resumed at the colonial office Monday on the future of the\nTanganyika.\nFinance Minister C. E. Tilney\nand Resources Minister A. H.\nPike are representing the Tanganyika government, which is\nconsidering acceptance of shares\nin the mine- in settlement of\ndeath-duties on the estate of Canadian geologist Dr. John T. Williamson.\nWilliamson discovered t h e\nMwadui mine in 1940. He died\nthere, a bachelor, on Jan. 10,\naged 50.\nOn the government's decision\nwill depend the fate of the\nagreement in principle signed by\nPercy Williamson, brother and\nheir of Dr. Williamson, and mine\ndirector I. C. Chopra to dispose\nof their \"major interest\" in the\nmine to De Beers Consolidated\nMines Limited.\nThis was made clear by Chopra\nduring the weekend.\nDON'T HAVE MAJORITY\n\"There are complications in\nthe sale of the shares held by\nWilliamson and myself to De\nBeers,\" he said. \"We two do not\nhave a majority interest in the\nmine. The whole deal is subject\nto the approval of the Tanganyika government.\"\nTwo sisters of the late Dr.\nWilliamson are also shareholders. - '\nIf the Tanganyika government\naccepts shares in the settlement\nof death duties, and De Beers\npurchases the shares of Williamson and Chopra, the Tanganyika\nsovernment and De Beers will\nhold between them a majority of\nthe 1,200 shares.\nAfter that some agreement is\nlikely between the Tanganyika\nSovernment and De Beers. The\nproperty is valued at $100,000,000.\nAt their peak, earnings of the\nmine were estimated at more\nthan $8,000,000 a year.\nKeep Your Eye on Classified!\nin the Middle. East.'One; way or\nthe-other,..the events,in. Baghdad\nare bound to spill out into other\nsensitive-areas. \u25a0 .'.'.\nIf King-Hussein of Jordan is\nto survive the overthrow of his\nIraqi cousin Faisal, lie will need\nmassive support, from the outside.\nIf he gets .that support, the\nMiddle East will become a cockpit' for a deep world political\n.crisis, \", \u25a0\nBut if the Iraqi revolution is\nmade to stick, its-effect also will\nbe .felt, far beyond Jordan.\nThe turmoil is likely to reach\nKuwait, with \u2022 its oil riches, and\neven Saudi Arabia and the rest of\nthe Saudi Peninsula, where the\nfever for Arab nationalism, always strong, will get new impetus.\nDESPERATE COUP\nWhat happened in Baghdad ap\npeats to have been a coup by\nde'sperate men who had been\nawaiting an opportunity and who\nfeared that opportunity might slip\nfrom their hands.\nThe opportunity was afforded\nby the Lebanese rebellion. For\nextremists in Baghdad it must\nhave been a question of now or\nnever\u2014no' matter what Gamal\nAbdel Nasser's own opinion of\ntheir plans might have been.\nI was last in Baghdad a little\nmore than a month ago.\nOne could feel the tension being\ngenerated by the Lebanese rebellion. .One could almost see Baghdad bracing itself for the shock\nto come.\nToday's developments., foreshadow all sorts of chaos. Because of\nthis, it is difficult to believe that\nNasser wanted it to happen in\njust this way and at just this\ntime. He has grown afraid of\nSoviet influence .in the Middle\nEast, and his talks here in Yugoslavia with President Tito have\nindicated his desire to remain in\nthe middle between the two world\nblocs.\nNASSER'S RESPONSIBILITY\nBut whether Nasser wanted it\nthis way or not, he must bear\nresponsibility.\nThe Soviet Union surely will attempt to seize every opportunity\nto apply pressure against Western\ninterests in the Middle East.\nThe future of Europe for years\nto come is bound up with Middle\nEast oil resources.\nWhere intervention might have\nbeen considered foolhardy in a\nsituation like that which developed in Lebanon, Britain and\npossibly even France cannot regard lightly any threat to the\nflow of Middle East oil.\nThe United States, too, may\ntake a second look at the pros\nand cons of intervention. Events\nin Iraq are going to give a big\nboost to the forces of extreme\nand self-destructive Arab nationalism througiout the entire area.\nWorking-Age\nPopulation\nDeclining\nOTTAWA (CP)-Average age of\nCanadians dropped to 29.8 from\n30.4 in the K-year period between 1941 and 1956, the bureau\nof statistics reported Monday.\nIn an analysis of 1956 census\nfigures, the bureau also said the\nproportion of population under 15\nand over 64 increased during the\nperiod while-the working-age population became proportionately\nsmaller.\nIn 1956, children under 15 made\nup 32.4 per cent of the population compared to 27.8 per cent\nin 1941.\nThe 65-and-over group comprised 7.7 per cent of the 1956\npopulation compared to 6.7 per\ncent in 1941.\nThe lS-to-64 group made up\nonly three-fifths of the 1956 population compared to two-thirds of\nthe 1941 population.\nThe figures:\n1956: Total population, 16,080,-\n791; under 15-5,225,000; 15-to-64\n-9,612,000; 65. and over-1,244,-\n000.\n1941: Total' population, 11,506,-\n655; under 15\u20143,199,000; 15-to-64\n\u20147,540,000;  65 and over\u2014767,815.\nOther observations in the analysis:\nThe 1956 under-15 population\nratio is not record. This group\nmade up 38.7 per cent of Canadians in 1881 and never fell much\nbelow one-third up to and including 1931. The small number of\nbirths in the 1930s brought about\nthe reduced 1941 proportion.\nThe falling-off in births of the\n1930s also accounts for a comparatively small increase of only\n6.5 per cent in the 15-24 age\ngroup in the 15-year period: to\n2,291,000 from 2,152,000.\nIn 1881, the 15-to-64 group made\nup 57.2 per cent of the population. A heavy flow of adult immigrants boosted this to 62.5 per\ncent by 1911. The percentage de-\nrimed to less than 61 in 1921.\npartly because of First World\nWar deaths and the 1918 influenza\nepidemic. It rose to almost 63\nper cent in 1931 and reached its\nmaximum of nearly two-thirds in\n1941. The 65-and-over group made\nup only 411 per cent of the population in 1881.\nCNR Views Change\nOn Truck Services\nGOOVWM\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nVancouver Paper\nCelebrates 60\nYears Publishing\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The Vancouver Province Monday publishes\na three-part supplement to' its\nregular news edition in observance\nof British Columbia's centennial\nand its own diamond jubilee.\nThe first dally\" edition of The\nProvince was published March 26,\n1896. The Klondike gold rush was\nin toll swing.\n\"Men believed an empire of\ngold was being won in the north,\na -great work engaging the labors\nof many, creating a new region\nof life and commerce,\" the newspaper recalls in the lead article\nin the jubilee section.\nThe two centennial sections,\nfilled with feature sotries on B.C.'s\npast, are fronted by a page-size\nportrait of Princess Margaret, now\nvisiting B.C., and a relief map of\nCanada's most westerly province.\nThe entire eUtition runs to 96\npages.\nOTTAWA (CP)-The CNR may\ngo in for operating truck services\nto *a greater extent than now.\nPresident Donald Gordon said Monday.\nHe was appearing before the\nCommons railway committee as\nit began its annual examination\nof the affairs of the government-\nowned system.\nUp to the present, Mr. Gordon\nsaid, the CNR has \"not been too\nsold\" on the idea that it can make\nmoney on truck operations.\n\"But our views are changing\nand we may go in for more\". How\nsoon and how much-has to be\ndetermined.\"\nHe added that the matter is a\nvery live issue now, but he would\nnot want to confirm or deny reports, that the CNR is in negotiations for the purchase of any\ntrucking concerns.\nBIG WORRY\nDealing with the CNR's passenger traffic, Mr. Gordon said loss\nof money on this business is \"one\nof our greatest worries.\"\n\"We have some hopes that we\ncan meet the passenger problem\nby concentrating on intercity\nrather than transcontinental\nruns.\"\nThe CNR did not plan to go in\nfor stainless steel trains. The\ntrend now would be against further capital expenditures on passenger service, though it had\nspent heavily in. the last five\nyears.\nOf the CNR's transcontinental\nservice, Mr. Gordon said he is\ngetting \"very discouraged\" about\nthe system's ability to devise a\npassenger service \"that will be\nreasonable fn view of its losses.\"\nThree or four years of \"super-\nduper\" transcontinental service\nhad been most discouraging. The\nsuper-continental- was -not a financial success.\nEXAMINE NEXT STEP\n\"Now we have to examine the\nnext step,\" Mr. Gordon said\n\"Frankly, I think it will have to\nbe curtailment rather than expansion.\"\nSome decisions might be\nreached by fall.\nDiscussing commuter passenger\nservice, Mr. Gordon described it\nas a headache.\nHe said the company has been\ntrying to get out of unprofitable\nruns in recent years.\nAsked to explain a decline in\nCNR finances which left the company with-a $29,600,000 deficit in\n1957, Mr. Gordon gave two main\nreasons:\n1. A general decline in North\nAmerican economic  activity.\n2. More and more intense competition from other carriers.\nArt Smith (PC\u2014Calgary South)\nasked why the CPR had a profit\nand the CNR -a loss.\nNOT  COMPARABLE\nMr. Gordon said the two systems are not comparable. The\nCNR had nothing like the amount\nof non-rail incortle received by\nthe CPR. The CPR's ratio of\nnon-rail to rail revenue had been\ngrowing steadily.\nAlso, the CNR had higher maintenance costs.\nAnother factor was that the\ngovernment line had engaged in\ntemporary \"make work\" programs to keep men employed.\nCLC Asks Ottawa For\nUnemployment Survey\nOTTAWA (CP)-The Canadian\nLabor Congress Monday asked the\nfederal government to make a\ndetailed survey of seasonal unemployment, indicating who is\nout of work and why.\n. Lower interest rates, taxes or\nsubsidies should be used .to give\na boost to promoting winter-time\nwork, the CLC told the Conference on Winter Employment convened by Labor Minister Starr.\nThe two-day convention, grouping all levels of government as\nwell as industry, business, labor\nand other organizations, also\nheard indications that tradition\nand ignorance combine to frustrate more effective implementation of winter' work, especially in\nconstruction.\nWilliam Dodge, executive vice-\npresident of the 1,000,000-member\nCLC, said a reasonable working\nfigure of seasonal unemployment\nmay be about 140,000 and that it\nhas increased when it should be\ndecreasing.\nSHOULD START SURVEY\nA survey should be inaugurated.\nIt might cost money but no\n\"reasonable\" government should\nignote it.\nThe government, he said,\nshould also state now what it\nplans in the way of specific proposals. A policy of \"seasonal discrimination\" should be imposed\non individuals, firms and various\nlevels of government, making it\nless desirable \u2014 through taxes, in-\nLink Trainer Gives Joy\nTo Popeyed Youngsters\nBy SANDY CAMPBELL\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nSUMMERSIDE, P.E.I. (CP) -\nSighs of delight came from a\nfreckle-faced eight-year-old farm\nboy whirling around in the Link\ntrainer at the RCAF station near'\nhere.\nthe boy's eyes were closed in\nintense concentration. His straw-\ncolored hair was all over his\nface, and he was in seventh\nheaven as he dived and banked\nand zeroed in on an imaginary\nenemy fighter.\nHe must have scored a direct\nhit, because when the trainer\nceased its gyrations he hopped\nout with a big grin. The seat in\nthe practice trainer didn't have\na chance to get cold. A lineup of\nwide-eyed junior jet pilots was\nwaiting impatiently.\nFIRED IMAGINATION\nThe youngsters didn't get off\nW|M\nfc\nSUPREME\nMOTOR OIL\nHALTS\nENGINE\nWEAR!\nNew! RPM SUPREME Motor OH\nwith exclusive Detergent-Action compound keeps car and truck engines\nso clean, guards them so well, they'll\nlast years longer.\nRPM SUPREME Motor OH cuts engine drag, gives you Improved engine\nperformance in all seasons, all ell-\nmates, under all conditions!\nfor ony Standard Oil product, coll\nF. MAWER\n95 Government Road\nNelion, B.C.     Tel. 1153\nthe ground\u2014a Link trainer can\ndo everything except fly - but\nyoung imaginations had no\ntrouble supplying altitude and appropriate engine noises.\nThe Links were among hundreds of items of air force equipment on display during Air Force\nDay at the base. The huge hangar\ntook on a midway atmosphere as\nthousands of persons inspected\ndisplays -ranging from electronic\ngadgets to an airman's prized\ncollection of badges and hatbands.\nOutside, a mock bombing attack on a submarine was' staged.\nThe tarpaper-covered .submarine\nsquatted menacingly across from\nthe grandstand where the crowd\nwaited tensely for the sleek Neptune bomber to make its approach.\nTo add to the realism, the air\nforce hides an explosive charge\ninside the submarine. As the\nsmall practice bombs hit, an airman standing by detonates the\ncharge and the sub explodes in\nan impressive burst of smoke\nand flame.\nThe system worked perfectly.\nThe Neptune roared in over the\ntreetops and plastered a stick of\nbombs right on the sub's deck.\nThe airman on the ground pushed\nthe plunger at the exact moment\nand the crowd cheered as the\nsub disintegrated.\nNOSTALGIC NOTE\nA highlight of the flying demonstrations was an impromptu\ncompetition between a new Argus, sub-killing plane, and an old\nwartime Lancaster bomber. The\nArgus (hundred over the field and\nthen made a pass with one engine's propellers on each side\n\"feathered.    \u2022\nNot to be outdone, the Lancaster lumbered over with both\nport engines stopped, and winged\ndefiantly into the setting sun\nwhile the commentator on the\npublic address system delivered\na nostalgic euology.\nGraceful formations of CF-lOOs,\nT-33s and Sabre jets flashed over\nthe reviewing stand to end the\nshow for another year. The crowd\nwent home, and the Royal Canadian Air Force returned to its job\nof guarding the nation's skies.\nterest rates or subsidies\u2014to work\nin summer than in winter.\nThe governtaent should act\nfast There are \"encouraging\nsigns\" that the recession is levelling off, Mr. Dodge said, but\nunemployment next winter may\nbe one of the worst since the\nSecond World War if not a record.\nRaymond Brunet, past president of the Canadian Construction Association, said winter unemployment has been with the\nassociation since as far back as\n1918. It was in the association's\nown interests to spread work all\nthrough the year. Habit and tradition were to blame for ideas\nthat winter construction was of\ninferior quality and more expensive.\nLABOR COULD HELP\nThe Canadian Manufacturers\nAssociation suggested studies to\ndetermine whether more payments or more emphasis on\nplacing labor is required. Labor\ncould help by co-operation in certain fields.\nMrs. Rex Eaton, president of\nthe National Council pf Women of\nCanada, said women are playing\na part\u2014and need to do more\u2014in\nbreaking with the tradition that\nspring is. the time to clean and\nrefurnish houses.\nE. F. K. Nelson of the Canadian\nRetail Federation said salesmen\nappear to be those most affected\nby seasonal unemployment. Suggestions of retail stockpiling did\nnot appear feasible and the federation banked on re-timing its\nconstruction, maintenance and\nrenovation work to ease winter\nunemployment.\nARREST POLICEMEN\nNEW YORK (AP)-Two city\npatrolmen were arrested and suspended from the force Sunday\nnight after they admitted stealing\nsix revolvers from a police property clerk's office. This raised to\nfour the number of patrolmen im-'\nplicated in the theft of cash and\nguns.\nCyprus Under\nIWtour Curfew\nNICOSIA (AP) - A rOund-the-\nclqck curfew was enforced on\nCyprus Monday to halt mounting\ncommunal warfare between\nGreek and Turkish Cypriots.\nGovernor Sir Hugh Foot ordered everyone except civil servants and essential public workers\nto stay at home for 48 hours. '\nIt was the most drastic security move since the shootings,\nbombings, ambushes and riots\nbegan on this Mediterranean island three years ago.\nOBJECT  TO  U.K.   PLAN\nThe Greeks and Turks have\nbeen fighting each other since\nJune 8, ever since the word got\nout that the new British plan for\nthe island would not satisfy the\nGreek majority's desire to unite\nwith Greece or Turk demands to\npartition the island to protect\ntheir rights.\n'In a rising tide of attacks and\nretaliation, three Greeks and\nfive Turks died Sunday, bringing\nthe toll in the last five weeks to\n31 Greek Cypriots and 20 Turkish.\nFour Greek stores were burned\nand the chapel of St. Mamas in\nLimassol, containing the island's\nfinest wood carvings, was badly\ndamaged by fire.\nTwo British soldiers also were\nkilled in a mountain hunt for\nEOKA fighters I but this was an\naccident. Another soldier's automatic weapon went off.\nASK UN SUPERVISION\nLast week the island's Greek\nmayors accused the British administration \u2014 which has .40,000\ntroops here\u2014of being unable to'\ndeal with the situation. They\nasked for United Nations observers and a UN police force. The\nGreek government has suggested\nUN trusteeship for the island.\nIn London, there were growing\nfears of 'a civil war between the\n400,000 Greek Cypriots and 100,-\n000 Turks. The gravity of the situation increased chances for a\nmeeting between Prime Minister\nHarold Macmillan, Greek Premier Constantin Karamanlis and\nPremier Adnan Menderes of Turkey.\nBritain's new partnership-plan,\nannounced June -19, asked the\nGreek and Turkish governments\nto take a hand in administering\nthe island with the British, but\nup to now they have been cool\nto the idea.\nHUME, Mo. (AP)-Henry Edwin Engleman took five children\nfoV a boat ride on a pond near\nhere Sunday. The boat capsized,\nand all five children, wearing life-\njackets, were rescued. Engleman,\nreported to be a good swimmer,\ndidn't have on a lifejacket and\nwas drowned.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 15, 1958 \u2014 3\nJudge Throws Out Five Charges...\nSommers Still Faces\nSeven Bribery Counts\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Five\ncharges of bribery against Robert\nSommers, former B.C. lands and\nforests minister, were thrown out\nMonday by Mr. Justice J. O. Wilson of the B.C. Supreme Court.\nThe judge, in his most important ruling since the trial began\nMay .1, also dismissed one bribery\ncount .against British Columbia\nForest Products Limited and two\nothers against H. W. Gray and\nPacific  Coast   Services  Limited.\nHe instructed the jury that\nverdicts of not guilty were to be\nfound on the counts.\nIn a direction from the bench\nas the case went into its 39th day,\nMr. Wilson said the press should\nnot make public any part of his\nreasons for the rulings because\nit might be prejudicial to the jury\nof nine men and three women.\nThe result of the judge's ruling\nleaves Sommers still facing seven\nbribery charges along with a\nmain count of conspiracy. The\nfive charges against the former\nminister whioh were eliminated\ninvolved transactions in which the\nCrown says he received close to\n$7,500 in money and goods in\nconnection with use of his influence in obtaining government\ntimber licences.\nThe seven counts remaining\nagainst Sommers involve alleged\npayments to the former minister\nof some $7,000 in cash and bonds\nbefore he resigned his portfolio\nin 1950. Sommers is still a member .of the legislature.\nMr. Justice Wilson said that in\ncounts where there was no direct\nevidence of money or goods going\nto Sommers there was no case to\ngo to the jury.\nAt the same time the justice\nrefused a motion by the Crown to\namend the wording of the conspiracy charge. Prosecutor Victor\nDryer had sought to streamline\nthe wording of the charge to allege that Sommers receive considerations \"in money and otherwise\" instead of detailing such\nthings as bonds and travelling\nexpenses.\nDEFENCE OPENS CASE      -\nFollowing the judge's ruling,\nthe defence opened its case with\nDouglas McK. Brown leading off\nfor B.C. Forest Products.\nThe count dropped against B.C.\nForest involves a rug worth $607\nwhich was sent to the former\nminister at his Victoria home\nand paid for through the account\nof the Pacific Company.\nThe charges  dropped  against\nOne Canadian Dies Every\n44 Minutes In Accidents\nBy The Canadian Press\nSeventy - three persons were\nkilled in one of the worst non-holiday weekends in Canadian history.\nThey died at the rate of one\nevery 44 minutes from 6 p.m.\nFriday to midnight Sunday.\nThe Canadian Press counted an\nappalling 47 killed on the Toads,\n16 drowned and 10 dead in other\nmishaps in its regular weekend\nsurvey. Last weekend the toll was\n39, with 26 killed on the roads\nand-eight drowned.\nIn Ontario, where1 29 were\nkilled, 10 victims were children,\naged six weeks, to. 14' years.\nTwo road smashes in Ontario\nleft eight dead. A car travelling\nmore than 100 miles an hour was\nshattered against a truck near\nWindsor Saturday night and three\nmen and one woman were killed.\nA station wagon missed a highway curve near Gananoque Sunday night and it took more than\ntwo hours to pry the bodies of one\nman, one woman and two children from the wreckage.\nThree young men were killed\nwhen two cars met on the highway at the entrance to Bryson,\nQue., Saturday night. A CNR\nfreight train caught a light truck\n'on a level-crossing at Horne-\npayne, Ont., Friday night and\ntwo men and a four-year-old boy-\nwere killed.\nTRAGIC PICTURE\nThe toll mounted hour-by-hour\nthroughout the sun-filled weekend\nand this was the tragic picture\nacross Canada at its close:\nOntario: 29 dead\u201423 in traffic,\n4 drowned, one accidentally shot\nand a water skier killed in a fall.\nQuebec:, 28 dead\u201417 in traffic,\n8 drowned, two killed in a plane\ncrash and one hit by a train.\nBritish Columbia: 5 dead\u20141 in\ntraffic, 1 drowned, 2 in a fire and\n1 run over by a hay-filled wagon.\nAlberta: 3 dead\u2014all in traffic.\nManitoba: 3 dead\u20141 in traffic\nand 2 drowned.\nNew Brunswick: 3 dead\u20141 in\ntraffic, 1 drowned and 1 crushed\nwhile repairing a car.\nNova Scotia: a child killed in a\nfall from a swing.\nSaskatchewan: One killed in\ntraffic.\nNo deaths were reported in\nNewfoundland or Prince Edward\nIsland.\nH. W. Gray and the Pacific firm\ninvolve sums of $1,000 and $500\nwhich the Crown claims the minister received as part of the conspiracy for use of his influence.\nMr. Justice Wilson also declined a motion by Mr. Brown\nthat there shpuld be several conspiracy charges instead of one\nconspiracy count and 25 charges\nof bribery.\nCharged along with Sommers\nand H. W. Gray are John Gray\nand Charles D. Schultz. Also involved are the C. D. Schultz Company Ltd., the Pacific Company,\nB.C. Forest Products, and Evergreen Lumber Sales Limited.\nThe judge's ruling is the result\nof a week's argument by the defence for dismissal of some or all\nof the counts against the eight\naccused.\nIraqi Coup Not\nUnexpected\nUNITED NATIONS, N. Y.\n(Reuters)\u2014Confusion over developments in Iriq Monday made diplomats here wary about commenting on the situation, but\nthere was no immediate indication that events will find early\nreflection in the United Nations.\nLogically two conditions would\nhave to apply, observers said, for\nIraq herself to ask for Security\nCouncil action:\n1. The Nuri Said government\nmust still be in effective existence, and\n2. It must have evidence of\nforeign intervention on the pattern recently adduced by Lebanon.\nWhile the. Iraqi coup erupted\nwith what one diplomat described\nas \"shocking suddenness,\" it had\nnot heen entirely unexpected.\nWhen Britain and the United\nStates failed to act decisively on\nbehalf of Lebanon it was regarded\nas virtually inevitable that Iraq\nand Jordan must soon be ripped\nby internal dissension.\nThe United Nations itself has\nno role of shoring up governments of- any particular persuasion, and it may only act if\nthere is evidence of outside intervention.\nEven then the Security Council\nmust overcome the possibility of\na Soviet veto. This threat prevented the Security Council from\ndoing more last month than send\nobservers to Lebanon.\ns\nSAYS ADVANCE SLOW\nCLEVELAND (CP)-Ray Wilk-\nins, secretary of the National\nAssociation for the Advancement\nof Colored People, says American Negroes have waited too long\nand been \"too truly the soul of\npatience\" in their fight for full.\nemancipation. \"In a jet age we '\ncannot be content with the brawl\nof a turtle,\" he told the NAACP\nconvention Sunday.\n...............a................\nmKEu1 niie'. <Z.\nWIMPS*\n^\u25a0'\"\"\"tsul\nPRIVATE \u2014 ASPHALT PAVING \u2014 COMMERCIAL\nNow Available to Nelson and District Residents\nPicture above shows Blackline completing a paving job at Kootenay Forest Products.\nYou can now have your drive-way, parking area, sidewalk, ete.'paved with hard,\nlong-lasting Blackline Asphalt.\nCALL US TODAY at 2125 and find-out how little asphalt paving cost*. For example:\u2014 a 10 ft. x 30 ft.\ndriveway can be paved for at little as $75.00.\nCall 2125 Nelson For Estimate\nThere Is No Obligation\nBlackline Paving Co., Ltd.\n929 Spokane St.\nTrail, B. C.\nPhone 2656\nIN NELSON\nPHONE 2125\nFOR FREE ESTIMATE\n -\nNrlamt Sally Nmiia\nHisUblished April 22. 10(12. .     ,\ninterior British Columbia's Largest Daily Niwspapei\nPublished every morning except Sunday and statutory\nholidays by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY\nLIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Noison, British Columbia.\nAuthorized a* Second Class Mall. Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER Ot   1'HE AUDl'l BUREAU Ot CIRCULATIONS,\nMEMBER Ot  THE CANADIAN PRESS. \/\nThe Canadian Hiobs ii exclusively.entitled to the use for republication ot all new*\ndispatches credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuter* tn thll paper,\nand *lso the local new* published therein.\n,. Tuesday, Inly 15,19SB      '\nA Creed Can Be Useful\n\"We're ln business to make a profit\nand that's philosophy enough for us,\"\nwas one U.S. businessman's answer\nwhen asked if his firm had a \"creed,\"\nsetting out aims, principles and practices.\nBut many American companies\nhave found it useful, even profitable\nin dollars, to write down statements of\nthis kind. The American Management\nAssociation takes a look at them in a\n127-page booklet called \"Management\n-Creeds and Philosophies.\"\nSome owners and executives are\nnot sure what their business is; and this\nvagueness can lead to trouble. The\nAMA study mentions a prosperous\nU.S. manufacturing firm that went\nbankrupt when it ventured into speculative buying of raw material. Management had not defined, and by defining limited, its scope.\nSome creeds pinpoint objectives\ndefinitely, e.g., \"manufacturing and\nmarketing processed foods.\" All contain ethical statements about obligations.\nMost .of the creeds start with the\nfundamental duty of making a profit,\nquite properly since an unprofitable\nbusiness goes to the wall. Some say a\n\"fair\" or \"reasonable\" profit, others\nsay \"optimum\" and still others \"maximum\" \u2014 with due regard to the company's duty to offer quality goods at a\nfair price, pay employees, well, offer\nthem chances of advancement, show\nrespect for the public interest.\nEven platitudes like this, sonte\nfirms have found, are valuable in promoting goodwill, teamwork and, effort. But some of the creeds go beyond\nthe platitudinous as when they promise the \"best\" goods or the \"highest\"\nwages, commit the company to research, fix a desirable rate of growth,\ndisavow paternalism, set out a definite\npromotion policy or contain a pledge\nof help to community projects.\nOnly a few of the first questioned\nby AMA said that -writing their creeds\nhad been a waste of time. A great majority felt that it had been valuable to\nworkers, customers, shareholders and\nthe public to know exactly why their\ncompanies were in business and what\nrules governed their policies.\n\u2014Financial Post.\nLi&ht Seen Through Tower Windows\nEven in this day of actual air travel and\npotential Interplanetary space routes thousands have stayed firmly on the ground and\nSt. Paul's Restored\nIn the presence of the Queen and Prince\nPhilip, the east end oi St. Paul's Cathedral,\nLondon, was reopened for worship recently\u2014\nseventeen years after Nazi bombers had well-\nnigh destroyed it. The famous Wren church\nsurvived three high explosive blasts and 62\nhits by incendiary bombs, but only now has\nthe long and costly work of restoration,\ntowards which thousands of pounds were\ncontributed from Canada and other Commonwealth countries, reached completion with\nthe solemn blessing of a new high altar.\nThough Westminster Abbey is commonly\naccounted \"The Shrine of the Empire\", St.\nPaul's henceforth will have special ties of\nsacrifice and devotion binding it to every\npart of the Queen's realms. For the new interior, with a massive baldachin of elaborately carved and gilded oak standing 54 feet\nover the altar, reminiscent of that in St.\nPeler's, Rome, has been hallowed as a memorial to 335,000 fighting men of the Commonwealth who gave their lives in two world\nwars.\nFor year* to come the new St. Paul's will\nbe a place of pilgrimage for visitors from\nnumerous of all.\u2014The Hamilton Spectator.\nabroad, and Canadians may well be the most\nyet never felt earth-bound. They walk across\nsome field or open square beside which a\nchurch or memorial hall raises a tower into\nthe sky.\nIf the tower carries unbroken walls to its\ntop, their sight travels to the pinnacle and\noff into space, and their thought may rise\nwith their sight and at last take wings into\nthe vague forgetfulness of unclouded sky.\nBut If the tower has windows on two or\nmore sides so that light shines through it, or\nif the sky itself may be seen blue in a white\nframework of Wrenlike pilasters and cornices, their gaze goes no farther. Their thought\ntakes up at least a temporary lodging in the\nhigh place to which towers of peace were\nmeant to lift it.\nHistories of church architecture recall\nhow among early peoples who were preserving the Christian tradition, as in Persia, the\nbuilding of towers or steeples was a conscious\neffort to enclose, to provide shelter into which\nthe influence thought of as deity might be\ninduced to enter. This Influence people assumed to be in the heavens over them\u2014but\nperhaps some guessed it might be nearer\nthan it seemed. In any event, they raised\ntowers as if to catch it, or they raised them\nsimply as a gesture of meeUng it halfway.\nToday such actions are chiefly appreciated- for their symbolism, Yet it is a good\nthing to do\u2014to stop not far from some lovely\ntower, to let the thought climb it with the\nsight: and if there are windows to let in light\nor to let the sky shine through, to feel how a\nglow stays benignly in the memory throughout many an otherwise earth-bound day to\ncome.\u2014Christian Science Monitor.\nE. B* Pearce. \u2666.\n. .... .Writes\nWriting in ths London Dally Herald, Jane\nHulbert, who has just completed a visit to\nBritish Columbia, Says that \"The Englishman abroad hai one tremendous fault\u2014his\npride. His puffed up, high-faluting, traditional\npride.\n\"It trips him up, makes him unpopular,\nrelris his progress.\"\nNow conceding that his manner does\nmake him unpopular I would suggest that\nit is not pride but sheer unadulterated shyness.\nThis shyness is largely, the fault of social\nConditions in England and his upbringing.\nThere are too many fences in England. A\nman may live in a row of house* with party\nwalls on both side*, but that is not to say\nthat his Wife will know the neighbors, Indeed they may never speak in a dozen years.\nHis garden, if he has one, will be fenced to\nKeep out dogs and other people.\nThere is that wonderful thing, the English class system, which despite all that is\nsaid about it, no one wants to change for the\nsimple reason that it gives the Englishman\nthe chance \"to keep himself to himself.\"\nThe Englishman likes to keep to himself and he thinks that you too want to keep\nto yourself so he does not speak until he is\nintroduced, and often what looks like pride\nand stuffiness is simply the feeling that he\nshould not intrude on you. Of course this\nfeeling and this behavior doe* not make him\nthe easy conversationalist like Canadians. He\nsimply cannot understand being told on the\n. first meeting that, the stranger's house cost\nso much and that he got so much for his\ntrade-in car.\nincidentally, the heaviest brick I ever\ndropped in Britain was when I asked a man\nwhat his house cost. The silence was shattering for a moment.\nThe Englishman is often apt to get hot\nunder the collar if unkind things are said\nabout Britain, but it is often only in retort\nto such treatment that he becomes voluble.\nHe sometimes has reason for it. My sole\nrecollection of my first trans-Canada train\nride is an American forest ranger making\nfunny remarks about a lonely and' green\nEnglish youth and sycophantic Canadians\nsniggering. Just one voice raised in my favor\nand I would have been much happier in my\nindividual conquest of Canada.\nBut despite this there are other good\nCanadians who by their patience and understanding make the Englishman feel at.home.\nAlmost any Englishman who has been a long\ntime in Canada can look back with pleasure\non friendship with many Canadians during\nhis life here. Not all Englishmen are likeable\nindividuals but Uke Canadians they respond\nto the treatment they receive.\nI may perhaps be accused of partiality\nbut I believe the Englishman is the best\nimmigrant we- can get. He speaks English\nwell as might be expected and he dislikes\nhis language being badly used, he is law\nabiding and he understands our democratic\nprocesses; even if he never really becomes\nnaturalized his children are very good citizens; he may love England but his children\ndo not carry on the traditions of wearing the\nnational garb of their home land or having\na special day for celebrating a poet's birthday. In fact they are Canadians pure and\nsimple.\nAt this particular time we have an influx\nof well educated English as teachers in our\nschools. Which is all to the good, and in\ngeneral any Englishman who has a trade or\nis well educated for some particular job\nfinds no difficulty in getting work. After all,\nwhat the emplover wants is the man who\ncan do a job well.\nIf he finds his shvness a handicap he\nshould board with a Canadian family, who\nwill soon help him to flu^nov, particularly If\nthere are boys and girls in it.\nIt's Re\u00abn c-iiH\nThe most profound joy hss more of gravity than of gaiety in it.\u2014Montaigne.\nCBCY Expenses For Fiscal Year\nAlmost $3 Million Over income\nOTTAWA (CP)-The CBC Monday reported its expenses in the\nlast fiscal year jumped by almost\n$12,000,000, all but wiping out its\nreserve of funds.. \u2022'\nThe publicly \u2022 owned corporation's annual report for 1957-511\nshowed expenditures were about\n$2,700,000 more than its income\nfrom Parliament, commercial\nrevenues and other sources.\nRoughly $41,000,000 of the CBC's\ntotal revenues of $70,567,000 in the\nyear ended March 31 came in the\nform of, parliamentary grants and\nfrom a special 15-per-cent excise tax on radio and television\nsets and. Darts, applied at the\nmanufacturers' level.\nThe CBC said that reduction of\nits working capital\u2014down to $2,-\n445,000\u2014has rendered its day-today financing difficult.\nNEED MORE CAPITAL\n\"The nature and size of its (the\nCBC's) commitments require a\nlarger working capital,\" said the\nreports to Parliament for the\ncorporation.\nIt was the last CBC annual report  signed  by  A.  D.  Dunton,\nThey'll Do It Every Time       m~h\u00bb-.\u2014       By Jimmy Hatlo\nOntario Archers\nHunt Out Carp\nCEDAR BEACH, Ont. (CP) -\nThe carp became a game fish in\nthis area near Windsor this summer, and conservation, officers\nnow are sorting out reports on\nthe first bow and arrow hunting\nseason for the fish 'ever held in\nCanada.\nIt was an experimental season,\nending June 15, and was held only\nin Essex County. The conservation department decided to hold\nit after the sport had become popular in the United States.\nThe reason for its popularity is\nthat it's a tricky sport. Fishermen have to stalk the fish, shoot\nfast and accurately. Although\ncarp are known as sluggish fish,\nthey put up a ifight when hit.\nHELPS CONSERVATION\nFor the conservation department the sport may be a blessing. The' carp is a piggish type\nof coarse fish that roots out fish\nnests and eats the eggs of other\ntish as well as other food that\nmight otherwise be eaten by commercial or game fish.\nArchers generally use 40-pound,\ntarget-type bows adapted for fish\nhunting by attaching a reel to\nthe bow. String from the bow is\nattached to an arrow with a\nbarbed head. The 40-pound pull\neasily handles the drag of the\nline and the water resistance\nwhen the arrow penetrates the\nwater.\nArchers say the spbrt 'is difficult. At first there is a tendency\nto shoot under the fish because\nthe deflection of the water makes\nthe fish appear to be below its\nactual position.\nAlso a sharp eye is needed to\nspot the fish,  while the hunter\nmust stalk it silently.\nMANY FISH\nEssex County was chosen for\nthe experimental season because\nof its numerous marshes.. Carp\nabound near this tourist resort\ncentre 35 miles south of Windsor\nand recently hundreds wer\u00a3\ncaught in a carp shoot competition. Some weighed up to 20\npounds.\n\u25a0 Hunters reported good catches\nthroughout the county all season,\nTo get a' permit they had to\npromise they would report the\nnumber of hours they spent at\nthe sport during the season and\nthe number of fish they shot.\nThe reoorts will enable conservation officers to assess the effect of the. sport on the fish population and set limits for probable\nfuture seasons.\nchairman of the CBC' board of 000,000  for capital requirements\nLARHA SPENT VARDS OF DOLLARS,\nAHD THE PROFESSOR SPEMT VE4RS\nIMPROVING HER PEAR-SHAPED TONES \u2022-\nSCHOOL &\nVOICE 4>.0\nDICTION\n5^ffl\nWell, to m4ke a uoug story condensed, LARHA HIT IT BIG ON TV'\nBE4T1M6 WORDS* MD MUSIC TO DE4TH.'\nNEW\/NO\/NO.   .\nFOPy&ARSIDRUM \\\nIN NO. 1 RULE\/ EACH   \\\nSYLLABLE SOU MUST \\\nE-NUtKl-ATE EVER SO\noee-STiNCT-Lytf feel\nwm THE LIPS THE WORD?.'\/\nso\/oiherwise,tothe \/\nMET ytXMRE NOT\nSETTING\/\niicnoN\n\/&****\n'EE-OOU-NOO-NOONIX-\nCLIN6 CUW6-\nRILL4-RILU RUMOUM\nA 8LEEP BLOOP A\n.* SNORSLE ZOOP'\/\nRA2ZA MA2ZA\n.FAZ2A DINGDUM\nTODAY'S  BIBLE\nTHOUGHT\nPhilip sni'h unto him, cbme and\nsee.\u2014John 1:46.\nVisible proof is worth volumes\nof argument. Our lives are powerful arguments for or against our\nlife philosophy.\nl^H\nrang\nCousin Henry is some kind of\nphilosopher. I never knew anybody else who could be so calm\nand placid about trouble, so long\nas it ain't his.\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\ngovernors, who resigned last\nweek to become president of\nCarleton University here. His resignation became effective Monday.\nMost of the boost In expenditures was due to higher spending\nOn the sti|l-growing television service. TV costs rose to $58,070,000\nfrom $46,581,000 in 1050-57. Radio\nand integrated administrative services rose slirhtly to $15,188,000\nfrom $14,814,000.\nThe report showed that total\nrevenues increased to $70,567,000\nfrom $61,803,000, mainly as a result of higher parliamentary\ngrants and higher commercial\nrevenues.\nExpenditures rose in all departments, as more was spent for\nproiramming, engineering, network facilities, payments to p^en-\nci^s and private stations and for\nother services.\n$2,601,000 DEFICIT      '\nThey totalled $73,258,000, up\nfrom $61,394,000. The result was\nthat on the year's operation,\nthere was a deficit of $2,601,000.\ncompared with a small surplus in\n1956-57 of $408,000. After allowances for depreciation, the excess of expenses over income\nwas $4,968,000, up frcrn $1,561,-\n000.\nThe report said the CBC had\nto dispose of $0,018,000 worth of\nGovernment of Canada bonds to\nmeet operating and capital noeds.\nThis cut its holdings.in bonds to\n$2,445,000.\nIn addition, a reserve of $4,-\nInfants' Deaths\nWorry Ont. W.I.\nTORONTO (CP) - Too many\nbabies in Ontario are born dead\nor die in early infancy, says Mrs.\nHarry Francis of Shelburne, Ont.,\nwho led a study group set up by\nthe federated womens institutes\nof the province.\n\"The infant mortality rate has\nbeen cut by more than 50 per\ncent in the nation and in the province in the last 20 years, but the\nfigures are still much too high,\"\nshe reported to the WI. \"Way*\nmust be found to prevent this unnecessary waste of human life.\"\nShe said that in the period 1930-\n34 the infant, death rate per 1000\nbirths was 78.6 for Canada and\n63.7 for Ontario. In 1950-54, the rate\nfor Canada was 36.8, and for Ontario 29.8.\nURGE WIDER SERVICES\nThe study group recommended\nbetter distribution of medical and\nnursing services, an educational\nprogram on the need for improved\nprenatal and maternal care, im-\nproved facilities in general hospitals, Increased awareness of the\nproblems by the medical profession and research into the causes,\nof stillbirths and infant deaths,\nMrs. Francis urged the WI to\nsponsor educational projects, assist at premarital and prenatal\nclasses and clinics, - sponsor baby\nclinics, wbr(i closely with local\nhealth authorities and hospitals,\nand urge the government to be\n.more active, in this sphere.\nMrs. James Haggerty of Napanee, president of the Ontario federation, Said \"we are still studying the .statistics, but it seems\nparticular areas are affecting the\naverage.\" ' I\nShe suggested that Canada's\nrate o.f infant mortality in comparison with other advanced nations might appear high \"because\nof .our exhaustive system of\nrecords.\" '\nwes transferred to the surplus\naccount and was washed out by\nthe cost of additional studios and\nequipment, mainly at Montreal,-\nToronto, Winnipeg and* Calgary.\nThe obviously difficult financial\nposition of the CBC is likely to\nInduce the government into taking action soon on ways to meet\nthe corporation's growing money\nrequirements.\nMORE REVENUE\nGross commercial revenues\nrrse to $28,410,000 from $23,684,-\n000.\nOther sources of revenues included broadcasting licence fees,\ninterest on investments, profit on\nsale of bonds and miscellaneous\nincome.\nThe biggest single soending\nItem wes for programs, the cost\nof which climbed to $42,491,000\nfrom $36,860,000. Engineering\"\nworks cost $11,410,983. un from\n$9,451,000, and netwr-rk facilities\n$4 612,000. up from $3,115,009.\nCommissions to agencies and\nnetworks were st1.7nD.000, an in\ncrease Irom $3,846,000. while payments to private stations earning network programs rose to\n$4,089,000 from $3,455,000.\nA statement on operations of\nwhich the corporation operntes on\nbehalf of the Government, showed\nthey cost $1,806,000. uo from $1.-\n688,000. Salaries of the international service staff totalled $044,-\n000. compared wilh $798,000. while\nperformers' fees rose to $117,000\nfrom $100,000.\nMine Workers\nOpposed To\nGas Imports\nBy DAVE  OANCIA\nCanadian  Preas Staff Writer\nMONTREAL (CP)-The United\nMine Workers of America J Ind.)\ntold the Borden energy commission today it is \"unalterably opposed to the importation of unemployment Into the United\nStates in tjie form of natural gas\nfrom Canada.\"\nThe union joined powerful American coal interests in a battle\nto keen Canadian natural gas out\nof American markets as Canada's\nroval commission on energy began seven days of hearings here.\nIn a telegram to the commission, union president John L.\nLewis said that essentially the\nimportation of Canadian gas\nwould mean a loss of jobs for\nAmerican coal miners.\nCAN EFFECT ECONOMY\nPresident Frank F. Kolve of\nthe U.S. National Coal Association, representing producers of bituminous coal, also said in a telegram that the commission's recommendations on export as well\nas the Canadian use of natural\ngas \"can seriously affect not only\nthe U.S. coal industry but Canada's economic welfare and future relations between our countries.\"\nThe coal association is expected\nto reiterate suggestions that Canada conserve its energy resources by vetoing requests for\npermission to export natural gat\nfrom the Prairie provinces.\nIMPERIAL OIL\nSALUTES B.C.\nwith a new film in full colour on\nthe development of this Province\n\"MOST\nLOVELY\nCOUNTRY\"\n-\n\u25a0\nr\nBritish Columbia's develbpment has\nprogressed beyond the wildest dreams\nof Captain George Vancouver\n\"Abundant fertility that nature puts forth requires only to be\nenriched by the industry of man to render it the most lovely\ncountry that can be imagined.\" This was the vision expressed\nby Captain George Vancouver from the deck of his sloop\nDiscovery in May, 1792.\nIn full, natural colour \"Most Lovely Country\" was written,\nfilmed and produced in B.C. It takes you to all corners of\nBritish Columbia to show how, through the iiidustry of man,\nthis Province h#s been developed beyond the wildest dreams\nof its discoverers.\nISSOJ IMPERIAL OIL LIMITED\nWith this film on\nBritish Columbia's\ndevelopment\nImperial Oil salutes B.C.\nin its 100th year.\nAvallabs\\\\afier tht first showinjgs In August\nto Service Clubs, Church Groups, Schools\nand other' organizations at no charge by\nImperial Oil Limited. Write: Imperial OH\nLimited, 1090 Granville St., Vancouver.\n*\n ^\u2014\u2014\n^**m\u00ab\nL\nAbout the Town\nPHONE 1844\nOut of town students attending\nNelson's Summer School of Fine\nArts are Mrs. Alice Thornberg and\nMrs. Anna Secord, both of Mont\nrose, Mrs. Nettie Wells of Skook\n(Djiua. lip. (t)itk\nTftaAjuuL WMdiiL\nPrinted Pattern\nv>h-vm\nCOOL FLATTERY\nBe cool or covered-up .\u2014 there\nare two neckline versions in this\nPrinted Pattern. Sun style has wide\nstraps to conceal bra, slip. Proportioned for half-sizers \u2014 no alteration worries.\nPrinted Pattern 9027: Half Sizes\n141*, 16%, 18%, 20%, 22%, 24%.\nSize 16% requires 4'\/s yards 35-inch\nfabric.\nPrinted directions on each pattern part. Easier, accurate.\nSend FIFTY CENTS (50c) in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern. Please print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, N.D.N., 60 Front St., W.,\nToronto Ont.*\nSkinny men, women\ngain 5,10,15 lbs.\n\\\\ltsi , thrill! Bony limbs fill out; ugly hollows fill up; neck no longer scrawny; body\nloses half-starved, sickly \"bean-pole\" look.\nThousands of girls, women, men, who never\ncould gain before, are now proud of shapely, healthy-looking bodies. They thank Ostrex Tonic Tablets. Help build up body\nskinny because of appetite impaired by lack\nof iron. Improved nourishment helps put\nflesh on bare bones. Doa't fear getting too\nfat Stop taking when you've gained the 5.\n10, 15 or 20 lbs. you need for normal\nweight. Then avoid overeating of starches,\nsugar and fattening foods. 6-day \"get-ac-\n^uainted\" size costs little\u2014or buy economy\nsize and save 75^. Try famous Ostrex Tonic\nTablets for new vigor and added pounds,\nthis very day. At alTdraggists.\numchusk, Mrs. Isobel Macintyre\nof Chapman Camp, Mrs. Eve Lawrence of Grand Forks and Miss\nPatricia Kempston of Rossland\n* *  *\nMr. and Mrs. P. 0. Bird, 914\nObservatory Street, have had as\nguests their son-in-law and daughter. Dr. and Mrs. G. M. Kettyls and sons Kim and Shaun, who\nhave now returned to their home\nin Chilliwack.\n* *  *\nMr. and Mrs. Jules DeRidder\n718 Observatory Street, have as\nguests and their son and daughter\nin-law, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. DeRid\nder of West Vancouver, who are\nspending their holidays in Nelson\nand are also visiting Mrs. DeRid-\nder's parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. 0.\nBird, 914 Observatory Street.\n* *  *\nMr. and Mrs. George Atkinson,\n1013 Carbonate Street, have had\nas guests Mrs. A. F. Atkinson of\nVictoria, formerly of Nelson, and\nMiss Ruby Atkinson of Edmonton,\nwho have since left for Victoria.\n* \u00ab  *\nMr. and Mrs. William AirUi of\nYmir Road have as guests from\nMilk River, Alta., Mrs. Airth's\nsister-in-law. Mrs. R. S. Macmillan and family, John, Alistair,\nKeith and Sylvia. John Macmillan\nplayed hockey Saturday night with\nthe victorious Lethbridge Native\nSons.\n* *  *\nLeaving Nelson Wednesday or\nThursday, Dr. Adrian Officer, who\nhas been art class instructor at\nNelson's summer school of Fine\nArts, will visit in San Mateo, Calif.,\nbefore travelling to Mexico Citv,\nwhere he will spend a short holiday. Following his stay in Mexico\nCity, Dr. Officer will journey to\nmore remote parts of Mexico in\nconnection with art studies. He\nhopes, after a lengthy stay there,\nto cross by way of British West\nIndies, to his home in Ireland and\neventually to Italy. Dr. Officer\nhas spent the past year teaching in\nSalmo and he exhibited many of\nhis art works in Nelson early in\nJune of this year. He has received\ndegrees from universities and academies in South Africa, Edinburgh\nand London. England.\n* *  #\nMrs. E. T. Strornstead, 512 Second Street, entertained recently\nat a shower for her niece, Miss\nJoan Strornstead, whose marriage\nwill take place soon. Gifts were\npresented to the bride-elect in a\nreplica of the little red school\nhouse.\n* #     St\nMr. and Mrs. Gordon Smith and\nfamily have returned after holi\ndaying in Jasper National Park,\nstopping en route at Kimberley to\nvisit Mr. and Mrs. Denis Colman,\nformerly of Nelson.\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. W. M. Vance announce the engagement of their\ndaughter, Charlotte Mary, to Donn\nClare Langfarg of Calgary. The\nwedding will take place in Calgary.\nAlta., on August 16, 1958.\nDALLAS, Tex. (AP)-Ruthanne\nSelf, 14, has a lion cub for a pet.\nEdward G. Barry of Little Rock,\nArk., gave Ruthanne the 22-pound\ncub he received as retiring president of Lions International. The\ngirl's father, veterinarian Dr.\nR. A. Self, said she may keep the\nfour-month-old lion until it gets\neither too big or too mean.\nONLY AT  HFC...\nMoney service\nbacked by S\u00ae years'\nexperience\nFor fast, friendly loan service from specially trained,\ncourteous people, come to HFC\u2014Canada's leading consumer finance company. Borrow up to $1,000 in privacy,\nwith up to 30 months to repay on terms you select.\nYttu'ra orwayt welcome ot HFC\nHOUSEHOLD FINANCE\nCeyw&etltaK-fsf Canada,\n**. 6. Bernarel, Manager\n*Ot taker Street Telephone 1890\nNEISON\nFine Arts Exhibition Tonight\n\\m\nDemonstration of ballet, recital of strings,\na one-act play by Thornton Wilder and student\nart exhibit will be presented tonight by students\nof Nelson's Summer School of Fine Arts. Results\nof workshops held during the past two weeks\nwill be shown to the public In the L. V. Rogers\nHigh School auditorium. Dance, violin, drama'\nand art students have had an intensive course in\nall these arts, under the direction of Miss Joyce\nHirst, Elfreda Sewell, John Norris and Adrian\nOfficer. Number of students enrolled for the\nsummer course this year was 50. Shown above\nare members of the rhythmics group of the dance\nclass In iheir black leotards, taken on the grounds\nof the school.\u2014Daily News photo.\nYour Individual\nHOROSCOPE\nLook in the section in whioh your\nbirthday comes and find what\nyour outlook is, according to the\nstars,\nFor Wednesday, July 16, 1958\nMARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aires)\n\u2014 Tops for practical work, building substantially toward any\nworthwhile project, preparing\ngenerally for better days, ahead.\nKeep tuned to the tempo and kind\nof action which you know, from\npast experience, brings best results.\nAPRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus)\n\u2014 Aspects tend to make this day\nsomewhat dull. But you can always put pep and vigor into anything you do. and today favors this\ntrait in your personality.\nMAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini) -\n\"Your\"' planet, Mercury is still\nfriendly, so you can benefit\nthrough intelligent management.\nThose in the fields of writing,\njournalism, communications especially favored.\nJUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer)\n\u2014 Mixed influences. Be your\nusually self \u2014 alert to the. right\nthing* \"to do and say. Be wary of\nconfusing people.\nJULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo)\n\u2014 Day calls for careful precautions and good judgment\u2014especially if handling machinery, sharp\ntools, in travel, etc. Don't shirk\nduties; go straight .ahead; you\nwill gain.\nAUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23\n(Virgo) \u2014 Day is highly encouraging. Be ready to act the moment\nfn opportunity or advantage presents itself. Don't force issues but\nshow your talents, your ability to\nhandle responsibilities.\nSEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER 23\n(Libra) \u2014 Many opportunities in-,\ndicated here. In handling, hpwevej,\nbe extremely careful about details.\nWork hard at all tasks. Avoid carelessness. You carfadvance.       \u00bb\nOCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22\n(Scorpio) \u2014 If you plan well and\ndon't- mind a few extra tasks besides regular duty, you will top\neverything in the way of obstacles\nand come out a real -winner.\nNOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER\n21 (Sagittarius) \u2014 Pause to think\nbefore acting on new ventures, important deals, work. Irritation -and\nimpulsiveness could react adversely. Good results if you act calmly,\naccurately.\nDECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20\n(Capricorn) \u2014 Mild rays now, but\nlook forward to an excellent Saturn\ninfluence on the morrow. Prepare\nnow so as not to lose time when\nopportunities arise. Your innate\ngood management should be very\nhelpful.\nJANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19\n(Aquarius) \u2014 Handle all obligations without fussing. Don't let minor obstacles stymie you; face\nthem confidently.\nFEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20\n(Pisces) \u2014 Don't let everyone know\nyour plans, and surely not all your\npersonal affairs. But   don't   keep\nworries to yourself. Discuss prob\nlems with loved ones, wise counsellors.\nYOU BORN TODAY are sensitive, versatile and industrious.\nYou can give much pleasure\nthrough your witty conversation\nbut can also engage in discussions\ntoo heatedly, and fret needlessly.\nYou are usually right in your judgments, but once you make a sensible decision, STOP worrying\nabout results, so long as you are\ndoing the right thing. Cultivate\ncheerfulness and healthy, wholesome companions. Birthdate: Sir\nJoshua Reynolds, Eng. painter.\n1     Boswell Women's\nClub Holds Meet\nBOSWELL \u2014 Boswell Women's\nClub and LaFrance community\nmay jointly purchase a cup for best\npupil at swimming pool classes,\nchildren from both communities\nhaving participated in the classes.\nDiscussion on this matter was\nheld at the July meeting of the\nWomen's Club, when 14 people\nwere present, hostesses for the afternoon being Mrs. F. Holmes and\nMrs. K. Wallace. More information will be sought from swimming\ninstrctor G. LaPlant.\nThe group resolved to forward\nfive dollars to Mrs. Bell, secretary\nof the Crawford Bay fall fair committee for assistance with fair fin-\nWESTERN POST\nFort Chipewyan on Lake Atha-\nbaska in Alberta was built by\nAlexander Mackenzie in 1788.\nA letter from Mrs. Paul L. O'Sul-\nlivan was read to the group, which\ncontained an invitation to club\nmembers and friends to partake in\na tea to be held on the lawns of the\nO'Sullivan home, proceeds to be\ngiven to the. Handicapped Children's Society, which is a project\nof the club.\nEmpire Silhouette Leads\nLatest Fall Fashions\nBy DOROTHY ROE\nNEW YORK (AP)-The fashionable -woman may- be shaped\nlike a pear, a balloon, a bell,\nbook or candle next fall.\nSuch are the shapes of fashion\nas previewed to the fashion press\nMonday in the opening of a week of\nfall showings by New York's couture group of designers.\nCommentators avoid use of the\nword \"chemise\" like a plague.\nBut the unfitted silhouette, by\nmany another name, is still the\npredominant influence in the fall\nfashion lineup, with the high-\nwaisted empire slhouette the favorite variation.\nWomen who have been afraid\nof their husbands ever since the\narrival of the potato bag silhouette ma*y take comfort in the\nfact that new fall fashions offer\nmany versions of the no-waistline look, and that designers have\nmodified and adapted the more\nbizarre styles to suggest at least,\nif not accent, the lines of the human body.\nBELTS THIS YEAR\nAlthough belts never appear at\nthe natural waistline and seem to\nbe added as afterthoughts, they\nare present and accounted for,\nplaced just below the bust or anywhere from the hips to the hem.\nThe empire silhouette takes various forms. As- a. \"camise,\" it\nfeatures a soft, slender line, with\ndrawstrings at neckline and just\nbelow the bust. As a directoire\nsilhouette, it may have a high\nsash and flowing skirt. As a trapeze, it may flare sharply, pyramid style, from shoulders to hemline.\nSkirts are shorter than ever,\nrevealing the knees, and posing\ndifficulties in sitting or stepping\ninto taxicabs.\nSuits have brief bolero jackets\nor short, boxy jackets ending at\nwaist or hipbone, with most skirts\nMODERN  HOMES  NEED\nextra phones\nf\u00bb\nONLY 95c PER MONTH\naumssti eoumBtA telephohe company\nattached to a bodice to achieve\nthe important high-waisted, loose\nlook. Even in suits, few skirts\nhang from the natural waistline.\nSuit blouses are mostly over-\nblouses ending just below the\nbust, usually done in matching or\nco - ordinated fabric, sometimes\nmatching the jacket lining.\nNEW ATTITUDES\nThe new fashions demand i*ew\nattitudes. You never, never cinch\nin your waistline, and you learn\nto walk with that slinky debutante slouch popular in the 1920s.\nYour costume should not touch\nyour body except at the shoulders\nand perhaps the hipline. The waist\nis sternly ignored.\nYou.don't throw our your chest,\neither. Rather, you cave it in apologetically, and slither rather\nthan walk into a.room. You have\nto learn to cross your legs without raising your skirt to the waist,\nand this is a serious problem.\nMajor silhouettes include: the\nempire, the camise, the trapeze,\nthe balloon, the bubble, the pear,\nthe scythe,'the blouson, the long\ntorso, the globe, the middy and\nthe harem.\n, For the timid, the dress that is\nbloused just above the hipline is\none of the easiest to wear. Tall,\nslender women look well in the\nhigh - waisted empire clothes.\nShort girls can fall back on two-\npiece outfits with slim, straight\noverblouses and slender, short\nskirts.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY IS, 1958 \u2014 9\nSister's Family in\nVictoria 100 Years\nA family, one of whose members\nlives in Nelson at present, established themselves in Victoria in\nthe year 1858.\nGrandparents of Sister Mary Patricia of Mount St. Francis Infirmary arrived in Victoria in June,\n1858,- and her father landed at the\nport in August of the same year\nas a boy of 13 or 14.\nHis name was C. A. Lombard\nand he arrived by sailing ship, having cofne from France via Cape\nHorn. His travels to the west\ntook six months.\nSister Mary Patricia's mother,\nAda .Wilson of Yorkshire, England,\nwas sent for after the establish-\nnent of St. John's Church, an iron\nstructure .which had been shipped\nfrom the old country piece-meal.\nThe organ for the church had also\nbeen shipped out and Miss Wilson\nwas. sent for as organist of the\nchurch. She crossed the continent\nby the United States, a journey of\nthree months.\nMiss Wilson and Mr. Lombard\nwere married in 1880 and their\nfamily of three girls andiwo boys\ngrew up to be a highly^ musical\ngroup. The entire family took part\nin many Gilbert and Sullivan\noperas which amateur musicians\nin Victoria produced.\nMr. Lombard was the proprietor of a music store in Victoria.\nSister Mary Patricia is of the Order of Sisters of St. Ann which was\nestablished in Victoria also in 1858.\nShe* was chosen with Sister Mary\nDrucilla to attend the Centenary\nof the Order, June 5, 6, 7 and 8,\nduring which an historical pageant,\nwritten by Dick Diespecser. was\npresented.\nOne brother, J. L. Lombard,\nlives in Portland and is associated\nwith station KOIN, radio-TV, there.\nHe and Sister Mary Patricia are\nthe only remaining members of\nthe family.\nfly. dbutML ijJhsskk\nPicture this beautiful'.- needle-\niiainting In stained-glass colors accented with metallic thread.\nA memento of the 100th anniversary now celebrated at Lourdes.\nEmbroidery a child can do. Pattern\n645: transfer 14 x 17 inch picture,\ncolor chart, key.\nSend THIRTY FIVE CENTS In\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Laura Wheeler,\nNDN; 60 Front St., W., Toronto,\nOnt.. Print plainly Pattern Number,\nyour, Name and Address.\nAs a bonus, two complete patterns are printed right in our 1958\nLaura Wheeler Needlecraft Book.\nDozens of other designs you'll want\nto order\u2014easy fascinating handwork for yourself, your home, gifts\nbazaar items. Send 25 cents for\nyour copy of this book today!\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rate* on\nrequest. Minimum two lines, 10% discount for prompt payment.\nBabies, Weddings, Portraits.\nVOGUE STUDIO \u2014 PHONE 1552\nNELSON FUNERAL HOME LTD.\nAMBULANCE SERVICE. PH. 53.\nBINGO\nLEGION HALL TONIGHT.\nTOT 'N' TEEN SHOP\nOpposite Capitol Theatre\nELECTROLU5J SALES, SERVICE\nClint Thompson\n1215 Ward St. Phone 1108\nSee our used chesterfields and\ndavenports, priced to clear.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nFOR YOUR NEW HAIR STYLING\nand permanent* try the Charm\nBeauty Salon. Medical Arts Bldg.\nSte. 211. Phone 1922.\nShoes for girls and boys! A good\nvariety in all sizes at sensible, low\nprices, at\nEBERLE'S ON BAKER ST.\nJ. O. RIESTERER, PLUMBING\nHeating, Repairs.\nInstallations\" and Supplies\nPhone 62.\nThe Drawing of Club 58, sponsored by the Nelson Lions Club,\nwas won by Mr. J. Brinley, 615\nNelson Ave., Nelson.\nAUTO GLASS\nCut and polished to fit any make\nor model of automobile, at\nT. H. WATERS & CO. LTD. *\nPhone 156 - 101 Hall St. - Nelson\nFor only $49.95 you can buy an\nOLYMPUS precision camera. Finer\npictures, easier handled, at\nCUSTOM CAMERAS\nStanley St., opposite \"The Bay\"\nColor or B&W film developed.\nThe Kootenay Museum Association has adjusted its driftwood competition regulations to permit entries that have been varnished. Exhibition July 25 and 26. For particulars phone 1894.\nAttention, Willow Point Residents\n\u2014Artificial Respiration classes and\nresuscitator demonstration will be\nheld 7:15 p.m., Tuesday and Thursday this week. Willow Point Church\nHall.\nRCMP RIDE, JULY 25th\nTICKETS ON SALE AT\nChamber of Commerce, Godfrey's\nLtd., Gilker's Ltd., Ben Sutherland, Emory's Ltd., Ramsay's\nKootenay Stationers, Fred White-\nley's, Mann Drugs, C. W. Apple-\nyard Co. Adults $1.00. Children and\nstudents 50c. Address mail, orders\nfor tickets to Nelson Chamber .of\nCommerce.\nHoney Is a Good\nSource of Energy\nSome cooks prefer to use honey\nfor their baking. Here are some\ninteresting facts about the bee's\nproduct:\nIn using honey to replace other\nsweetenings in recipes, it is used\nmeasure for measure but the\namount of liquid must be reduced one-fourth cup for each\ncup of honey used., or in the same\nproportion for fractions of a cup.\nWhen using honey in baked products one should use a moderate\noven to prevent the product from\nbecoming too brown.\n\u2022 Creamed honey results from\nnatural and quick granulation\nwhich produces very fine crystals\nof a creamy-like consistency. It\nis classified .as creamed honey\nor finely crystalline honey of\ncreamy consistency and is in\ngreat demand.\nHoneys are dark or light depending on' the varities' of nectar,\nthe processing, and the storage\nof the product. However, dark\nhoney is not an inferior product\nas some people are inclined to\nbelieve.\nHoney supplements the supply\nof vintamins obtained from other\nfoods. It lessens fatigue and increases energy and power to\nwork.\nGive Your Living Room\nThe New Look\nWith a\nPOLE LAMP\nfrom\nj\nMuffins Made\nIn a Hurry\nMuffins can be made in a wink\n\u2014 these turn out to be high and\nfluffy with no .effort. In fact, the\nless effort put* into mixing them\nthe better they are.\n2 cups sifted flour\n1 egg\n3 teaspoons baking powder\n1 cup milk\n1 teaspoon salt\n1 tablespoon melted shortening\n3 tablespoons sugar (granulated)\nSift all these dry ingredient* together into mixing bowl. Beat an\negg until light and fluffy, add\nmilk and beat again. Pour liquid\ninto depression in middle of dry\n'ingredients, add melted shortening and mix ONLY until all dry\ningredients have been lightly\nmoistened.\nSpoon carefully into muffin- Un*\nand bake. 10-15 minutes at 350-\n375 degrees.\nBoswell Notes\nBOSWELL \u2014 Residents of Bos-\nwere shipped by steamer, Mr. and\nMrs. M. Kunst of Vancouver have\nreturned to visit friends. Mr. and\nBoswell Store before the present\nhighway was constructed. They\nMrs. Kunst formerly owned the\nwell in the days when supplies\nwill also Visit Kamloops before returning to the Coast.\nWorry of\nFALSE TEETH\nSlipping er Irritating?\nDon't be embarrassed by loose false\nteeth slipping:, dropping or wobbling\nwhen you oat, talk or laugh. Just\n\u25a0sprinkle a little FASTEETH on your\nplates. This pleasant powder gives a\nremarkable sense of added comfort\nand security by holding plates mora\nfirmly. No gummy, gooey, pasty tastt\nor feeling, it's alkaline (non-acid).\nOet FASTEETH at any drug counter.\nNELSON SCHOOL\nOF FINE ARTS\npresents\na one-act play by thornton wilder\n\"A Happy Journey\"\nballet -demonstration\nrecital of strings\nstudent art exhibit\ntonight-8 p.m.\nI. v. rogers auditoriupi\nadmission: 50 cents\nTravel tip\nfrom Rocky,..\nGO\nGREAT!\nOn Great Northern\nStreamliners\nto SEATTLE and\nVANCOUVER.B.C.\n\\\nI\nl\nI\nl\nFine Connections\nl\nI\n\\w>onrmuLiuiib ai oetnue ui cvcibli wun\nstreamlined International arriving Vancouver\n11:59 A.M. All times are Standard.\n\\\n\\\nBus leaving Nelson 1:15 P.M. connects at\nSpokane with Western Star (9:15 P.M.) or\nincomparable Empire Builder (11:50 P.M.).\nConnections at Seattle or Everett with\nFor information,\nPhone: 57\n557 Ward Street\n' Nelson, B. C,\n \u25a0*\u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0>\n6-NELSQN DAILY NEWS, TUE5DAY, JULY IS, 1958\n!  '\nOROCIEPHXES\nJELLO\n11 delicious flavours.\nFROSTADE\nAssorted flavour*,\nMUSTARD\nPREPARED. Heine. 6 oz.....\nKLEENEX TISSUE\n400'* \u2014 All colors. ..\u201e..\u201e\u2014,\u2014r.\nMAZOLA OIL\nSalad favorite. 32 ac.\t\nGAINE'S DOG MEAL\nS Ib. pkg. \u2014-. \u25a0*\t\nTEA BAGS     100for79C\nHudson's Bay. Orange labal. -   | ^tftf ^BjflF MJ       AT\nCOFFEE - NABOB   T |bs. $1 69\nSpecial this week only     AWmW U\nBOLOGNA       70f\nGainer'*, by the piece. LB. \u2014,    \u00ab\u25a0\/ \u00bb V\nBEEF UVER      AQ,\nGainer's. LB ..     T # V\nCottage, Rolls   7Qf\nGainer's. LB  ,      *   \/V\nLiver Sausage   CC,\nGainer's. Lb __\u201e_.    JJK\n69c\nSpecial\nPEANUT BUTTER\nSquirrel. 16 oc. jar\t\nGRAPE JELLY\nShirriff's. 9 ec. tumbler ..\nSTEAK\nGainers\nRedL\u00abM-^,\nSIRLOIN\nSIDE BACON   LQf\nGainer's, sliced. Lb.     W#% j    ! # i\nw\u00abNi\u00ab 2 ib, 89c \\Wm\nIb.\nHAMBURGER RELISH\nNalley's. 12 oc. \t\nBALLET TISSUE\n4 rolls i\t\nMid-Month Sale\nBREASTS OF CHICKEN\nFraservale QO\u00ab(\n16 oz  .0\"?\nCHOW MEIN\nHeat n'Serve. Aid\n12 oz.    *V?\nFISH arfd CHIPS\nFraservale\npackage  -\nTV DINNER\n4 kinds. Meal QQj\nin a Jiffy  \u2014 VT\u00abJ\nORANGE JUICE\nBroder's e\\ AQd\n6 oz.,  A tins *T7^\nGRAPE JUICE\nMinute Maid r% A Cal\n6 oz   A tins *r3\u00a3\nLEMONADE\nBroder's r\\ OfilW\n6 oz   A tins X7^\nGRAPEFRUIT SLICES\nMinute Maid rm OK**!\n10 oz.  __*   A tins  \u00ab3*?\u00a7!<\nPleasing prices for purse - conscious\npurchasers . . . freshest produce, that\nis perfect for warm, summer days.\nBLUEBERRIES\nRASPBERRIES\nFresh daily r\\ (jQ,\nA,    baskets OT^\nFIELD TOMATOES\nRed Ripe.                                         '    ft1\" j\nflavorful,  lb  AO%\nCultured,   for   pies,\nsauces, desserts.\nBasket ,\u2014\n35\nSink your hooks into some real eating! There is no\nbetter way to make the whole family hungry than\nby serving them our full of flavor ... tummer\nRipened Fruit and vegetables with a hot dish of our\nchoice Meat. You'll have a nourishing meal that\neveryone will eat.\nBAICEBTST TRB1ATS\nWIENER BUNS ^ **,. *.\u00ab__ 29<\nDONUTS Mrs. Willman's fresh. Dacen 35*\nBREAD Fresh. Sliced white, brown. 16 ac. 3 for 46 fl\nPumpernkkle Bread 24 oc. siieed28*\nSLICED   RYE or French Bread. 16 oc. 2 for 39 fl\nPORK AND BEANS  ft for $1\nSalad Queen. 1S ec. In Tomato Sauce. _    \\J I\nFRUIT COCKTAIL J ta for$|\nAylmer. 1 Soc. , ,       *^T \u25a0\nVEGETABLE SOUP ft tinS for$1\nHeine. Condensed. 10 ac.    adf \u25a0\nBABY FOODS_ 1Q tins for$]\n-Heine.5 oz \u201e  ,\u2014     IV .,'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nSTRAWBERRY JAM       $1-00\nPure. Nabob. 48 oc.  I\nDOG FOOD       in tins for $|\nRover. 15 oc. \u2014,\u2014.-\u201ej....|,^\u2014r-     I w \u25a0\nCREAM CORN       T tins for S1\nAylmer faney. 15 oc. ,,,. ,,.\u201e.,\u25a0     \u00a7   , *\u25a0\nNIBLETSCORN      S tins for $|\n14 oc. tin * \u201e      ,%W a\nPINEAPPLE\nFor Cottage Cheese, Crushed, Libby's; 20 ec. _\nSHRIMP\nPacific Maid. 4| oc. tin __,^h\u2014, ,\u2014\n29c\nFRESH TURNIPS\nNew r\\\nCrop. \u201e_\u00ab A\nPulled bunches\nlocal.    ,\t\nibs 19*\nFRESH CARROTS\n2   for 23*\nCELERY\n\"Just dug\" B.C.   \"\nfor flavor and crispness. LB.\n15*\nANOTHER LUCKY BUCK WINNER\nMRS. G. A. EDWARDS of 904 Edgewood Ave., Nelson, brought ih a Liberty Lucky Buck and received $20.00 worth\nof groceries.\n3 Liberty Lucky Bucks This Week Worth $60.00 Who has them?\nAU 6505747 CL 5965805 CL 1083680\nDELIVERIES TO ALL PARTS OF NELSON AREA EVERY \\\\ HOURS. PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED.\nLIBERTY\nPRICES EFFECTIVE ALL THIS WEEK.\nWe Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities.\n4r>\n \u2014\u2014\nl&fc\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 15,1958 \u2014 7\nt ii J .    tt.    i rn*   i* m -. * uj u. \u2014 uutuce device sprays water into engine of Boeing\nairliner in. high altitude de-icing test. Jet engine's hot air melted ice in lee* than 38 seconds.\nMOULDED   FOR   SPEED \u2014 London workmen carry plastic body to be mounted on\nspecial racing chasls. It is claimed the car can reach speed of 80 miles an hour in IS second*.\nMATERNAL \"-'MENACE \u2014 This tigress makes it\nplain that the will care for her own cubs at St. Louis zoo. Keeper*\nhave had to play foster-mother to 15 cubs In past three years.\nFUTURE NOTE \u2014 This air-conditioned plywood\nsphere, fitted with a thick circular latex mattress, I* called a\n\"bed of the year 2000.\" If* an exhibit at World Fair in Brunei*.\nCOOLER \u2014 Little Shelley\nPiper, 14 r month - old \u25a0 Seattle\nlata, expresset her pleasure\nupon finding a cake of ice a\ncool perch during summer in\nthe Pacific Northwest.\nFOUNDRY;. CHEC Ki- Worker sizes six-ton bell,\nest of set prepared at Annecy, France, for the Robert A,\nMemorial. Monument in Washington, B.C., will be 100 feet\nlarg-\nTaft\nhigh.\nNAMED \u2014 Gregory Peter\nXV Cardinal Agagianian has\nbeen appointedjjy Pope Pius as\nacting chief of Roman Cathollo\nmissions throughout the world.\nHe\" assumes duty, intended for\nChicago's Cardinal Stritch who\ndied before taking the post.\nON 'GIANT SCALE \u2014 Cranes lift concrete\"bridge\ngirder, reinforced by a steel cable core, from outdoor production\nline at Algonquin, III. The girders are used en state highways.\ni^l\u2122 ['\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'*> i\nM^!\nMpT-1\n\u25a0   vmM\nHmiWwV\/\nm.-'\n4j\n1 *\u2022\u00bb\n\u25a0\u25a0<:'       &  _,\n&t\\\n||l':                    \u2022\u25a0\u25a0 :;\n\u25a0H\n\u25a0L *\n_________P\n_______P*_r                   \/'\nMm  '\u2666 it %\nidJBfb Jh\nmmw!ir^i~:%\n'Ai    a2k^H   am        1\nRIVIERA REVELRY - Frank Sinatra lends both his\nvoice and a guitar accompaniment to entertainers at his table In\nthe cabaret Le Pirate at Cap Martin on the French Riviera.\nTUNE TIME\u2014 Ollie Strauster, 75, relaxes with horn-\namplified mouth organ at his Prlcetown, Pa., basket shop. Re'll\ndisplay hi* skills at annual Pennsylvania Dutch Folk Festival.\nPARADE CHECKUP- Couple In 18th century oo*.\ntume make last minute adjustments prior to participating In\nMunich parade which marked 800th anniversary of Bavarian city.\n, ., LAMA LOOK \u2014 Spufnik, the llama at Chicago s Lincoln Park zoo, has it* own \"sack\" style. Bag was tied\naround animal's body tp keep her from tearing out tufts of hair.\nm\nHELPING HAND FROM' DAD\u2014 Comedian Bob Hope helps his daughter,\nLinda, 19, with her makeup prior to their appearance In \"Roberta\" at St. Loul*. Linda made her\nstage debut with small role In musical which wa* her father'* springboard to fame 25 years ago.\nR.OYALc* COMPETITOR \u2014 Japanese Crown Prince\nAkihlto takes mount, Mlneyoshi, over barrier during horsemanship meet between Waseda and Gakushujn Universities in Tokyo.\nCHANOIivCCAKIsEkS \u2014 Mrs. Phyllis Hanson show* aon, Kirk, three, how she works\nthe atom smasher control board In the high energy-physics lab at Stanford University'\"After\nseven years at the controls, she plans to give up her post for routine housekeeping italics.\n I \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 15, 1958\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nTho  Dally New* doe* net hold  Itself responsible In tho event\nqt an error In the following lists.\nTORONTO  STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium      .08\nAlgom Uranium     18.00\nAmaPLarder 16\nAnacon Lead  52\nAnglo Rouen  37\nAtl|n Ruff  24\nAumacho ':...     .14\nAumaque      .11\nAunor'       2.38\nBarnat       1.29\nBase Metals        .22\nBaska Uranium 24\nBrunhurst       05V4\nBuffalo Ank \u25a0 88\nCampbell C         4.95\nCampbell R. L     7.85\nCan Met   1.25\nCassiar     8.00\nChimo 53\nCoin Lake 14V4\nCons Denison     15.00\nCons Denison Wts.      4.85\nCons Halliwell     54.00\nCons Mining & Smelting ..   19.50\nCons Red Pop      .10\nCon Sub- 71\nConwest        3.30*\nCopper Corp  25\nCopper Man  09*4\nD'Aragon   39\nDonalda      18\nEast Amphi  16\nEast Malartic      1.70\nEast Sullivan      1.90\nElder Gold     .' 87\nFalconbridge       25.75\nFaraday        1.08\nFrobisher  \u00ab     1.75\nGeco     13.50\nGiant Yel.         6.00\nGlen Uranium  13   <\nGoldale  16\nGold Eagle  081*.\nGolden Manitou  32\nGunnar Gold     16.1214\nHarminerals   13\nHeadway  50\nHollinger     23.00\n' Hudson Bay     46.00\nInt. 'Nickel     73.00\nIron Bay'     1.75\nJonsmith  18\nR J Jowsey 52\nKerr Addison     17.50\nLabrador     17.50\nLake Lingman 10\nLakeshore     5.00\nLexindin     06\nLittle Long Lac     1.91\nLorado  52\nMacassa     3.00\nMackeno          .27\nMadsen R. L     2.25\nMalartic G. F     1.10\nManeast 09\nMaritime Mining 82\nMcLeod      1.05\nMcMarmac      14\nMcKenzie R L 27\nMining Corp    11.62*4\nNew Alger      10\nNew Bidlamaque  07\nNew Delhi        38\nNew Harricana 14\nNew Jason 10\nNew Lund  18\nNipissing         1.85\nNoranda New     43.00\nNorpax  23\nNorth Can        1.15\n1.31\n.lt>Vt\n1.93\n9.10\n.08\n23.6214\n5.90\n2.15\n.05*4\n.13\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\n4.35\n2.07\n.13%\nWiltsey Goglin \t\nWright Hargreaves,\nYale 13\nYeliowknife Bear      1.00\nOILS'\nAmerican Leduc\t\nBanff Oils\t\nBailey Selburn \t\nBata Petroleum \t\nCalgary and Edmonton\nCanadian Devonian \t\nCentral Explorers\t\nCons Peak\t\nDuyex   .:\t\nHome A    18.62V4\nMidcon  85\nNew Continental  45\nOkalta .'. i     1.20\nPacific Pete .\u201e   18.25\nPetrol-        .78\nPonder      .24\n.Prov Gas     2.61\nEoyalite     11.37V4\nSpooner  18\nStanwell Oil 84\nTriad        \t\nUnited Oils \t\nYank Canuck \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi  \t\nAlgoma Steel \t\nAluminum\t\nAtlas st ;:\t\nB.A. Oil    \t\nBathurst Power \t\nBell Telephone\t\nBrazilian \t\nB.C. Electric 4%s \t\nB.C. Forest       \t\nB.C. Packers A \t\nB.C. Packers B \t\nB.C. Power A \t\nBurrard A      \t\nCanadian Breweries ...\nCanadian Celanese ...\nCan. Cement\nCanadian Dredge \"\t\nCan Oil\t\nCanadian Pacific Rly\nCan. Packers A \t\nCan. Packers B\t\nCockshutt \t\nCons Gas \t\nDist. Seagram\t\nDom. Foundries \t\nDom Magnesium\t\nDom. Stores\nDom. Tar & Chemical\nEddy Paper\t\nFamous Players\t\nFanny Farmer\t\nFord A  \t\nGatineau\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES     _,   \u25a0**\nBeaver Lodge 15\nCanusa    *\"' \"*: .\". 04%\nCariboo.Gold 75\nGiant Mascot      .10\nGranduc     .\u2022   1.35\nHighland Bell     1.21\nKootenay \"Base Metals        .01%\nNational Ex         18\nPioneer Gold     1:45\nPremier Border 05\nSheep Creek  \u2022 ' 51\nSherritt Gordon      3.90\nSilback Premier  06\nSilver Ridge       03\nSilver Standard         .19\nSunshine Lardeau       .10\nTaylor         .15\nTrojan :.     .15\nOILS\nA P Consolidated     ;..     .36\nCalgary & Edmonton  * 22.75\nHome \"A\" s....   18.00\nHome \"B\"    18.00\nOkalta Com     1.12\nPacific Pete          17.62%\nPeace River Gas \"   .35\nRoyalite    11.00 ,\nRoyal Can  51\nUnited    -2.10\nVanalta    15\n30\n25%\n19%\n39'A\n38'\/4\n41%\n6%\n94%\n10%\n12%\n12\n38%\n7%\n32%\n13%\n33\n21%\n29\n26%\n45\n44\n13%\n30%\n28%\n30\n10%\n69%\n12%\n43\n18'\/s\n16%\n83%\n34\nVantor         :...- I.U\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Distillers' :\u201e... 1.70\nAlberta DisUllers Vt  1.40\nInland Nat Gas  4:10\nMacM & Bloedel' B.  88,75\nPowell River      -\u2022\"  33.00\nTrans Mtn-       : ..-. 5.60   '\nWestminster Paper   25.75\nWestern* Plywoods  13.50\nBANKS?\nBank of Montreal  47.00\nCan; Bank of Com. ...v..:.... 48.50\nImperial Bank of-Canada . 50.00 .\nRoyal -Bank of Canada ... . 65.00\nFUNDS\nCan. Inv:-Futid :.:...:  8.51\nCommonwealth Int.  6.90\nGrouped Income -..J  4.60\nInvestors Mutual ...:....:..:.... 10.10\nLeverage.  5.02\nTrans Canada \"C\" ....,  5.30\nDEATHS\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nParis\u2014Jacques Chastel, 36, deputy general manager of the Christian Dior fashion house, of a cerebral hemorrhage.    '\nNorth Rankin\nOpemiska \t\nPickle Crow\nPlacer Devel\nPurdy M\nPreston E. D.\n.72\n8.50\n1.00\n10.25\n.15%\n6.30\nQuebec Copper  29\nQuebec Lab 08\nQuebec Lithium      4.30\nQuebec Metallurgical  96\nQuemont  ,     9.00\nRadiore  65\nRayroclr       .87\nSan Antonio  70\nSherritt Gordon     4.10\nStadacona  17%\nSteep Rock           9.50\nSlocan Van Roi 10\nSullivan Con      2.25\nSylvahite      1.03\nTaurcanjs 82\nfeck Hughes     1.81\nTemagami  82\nTorbrit  -      .29\nTrans Cont Res -      .22\nUnited Keno     3.85\nUpper Canada 70\nVentures .         27.00\nWaite Amulet . ,     5.85\n35\n44'\/8\n13%\n55\n22\n31\n31\n53%\n15%\n'72%\n21%\n29\n33%\n64\n30%\n23%\n82%\n13%\nGatineau 5% pfd    1.09\nGypsum Lime\t\nImperial Oil\t\nImp. Tobacco\t\nInt. Pete\t\nLaura Secord \t\nLoblaw A \t\nLoblaw B        \t\nMcColl Frontenac\t\nMont. Loco\t\nMoore Corp\t\nNat. Steel Car\t\nPage Hershey\t\nPowell River \t\nPower Corp\t\nRuss. Industries \t\nShawinigan\t\nSicks Brew\t\nSimpsons A  .    \t\nUnion Gas of Can\t\nUnited Steel      \t\nWestern Grocers A       30\nHopes To Beat\nUnemployment\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Prime Minister Diefenbaker Monday expressed\nthe hope that a national winter\nemployment conference can do\nsomething to solve the \"challenging question\" of seasonable\nunemployment which he said has\nbeen-intensifying annually in recent years.\nThe . prime ^minister- was welcoming more than 90 delegates\nto the opening session of the two-\nday conference. They include representatives of federal, provincial\nand municipal governments, industry and business  and labor.\nMr. Diefenbaker, speaking\nbriefly, said Canada's seasonal\nunemployment is distiftct from\nthat of general unemployment\nWhich he said shows \"major improvement.\"\n. 'Labor Minister Starr said that\nit appears to be an economic pattern in Canada that \"seems to\nstruggle and stagger seasonally\nand seriously every three or\nfour years.\"\nHe called for suggestions for\npractical and positive measures\nto help deal with seasonal unemployment.\nTELEVISION   FOR TODAY\nPACIFIC\nKXLY-TV - Channel t\n7:45 Good Morning\n8:00 For Love or Money *\n8:30 Play Your Hunch *\n9:00 Arthur Godfrey *\n9:30 Dotto *\n10:00 Love, of Life *\n10:30 Search For Tomorrow\n10:45 Guiding Light *\n11:00 Quest For Adventure\n11:30 As The World Turns \u2022\n12:00 Beat The Clock *\n12:30 Houseparty *\n1:00 Big Payoff *\n1:30 Verdict Is Yours *\n2:00 Brighter Day *\n2:15 Secret Storm \u2022\n2:30 Edge of Night \u2022\n3:00 Bingo\n4:00 Early Show\n5:15 Doug Edwards News *\n5:30 Name That Tune *\n6:00 News\n6:10 A Greater Spokane\n6:15 Trailer Tips\n6:30 Keep Talking \u2022\n7:00 To Tell The Truth *\n7:30 Spotlight Playhouse \u2022\n8:00 Bid 'n' Buy *\n8:30 Leave It To Beaver\n9:00 Badge 714\n9:30 Studio 57\n10:00 Mr. District Attorney\n10:35 Night Edition\n10:35 Post Time\n10:40 Late Show\nSTANDARD TIME\nKHQ-TV - Channel \u00ab\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 *\n9:00 Price Is Right * \u2022\n9:30 Truth or Consequences *\n10:00 Tic Tac Dough *\n10:30 It Could Be You (C) \u2022\n11:00 Lucky Partners *\n11:30 Haggis Baggis (C) \u2666\n12:00 Today Is Ours \u2022\n12:30 From These Roots *   .\n1:00 Queen For a Day *\n1:45 Modern Romances \u2022\n2:00 Corliss Archer\n2:30 Your TV Theatre\n3:00 Matinee On Six\n\"Are You Listening\"\n4:30 Four Thirty Movie\n\"Treasure of Fear\"\n5:45 NBC News *\n6:00 If You Had a Million\n6:30 Front Page\n6:45 Viewpoint\n7:00 Shirley Temple Storybook\n\"The Little Lame Prince\"\n8:00 Dotto * -.'\n8:30 Kraft Mystery 'Theatre\n9:30 My Little Marj-fie -\n10:00 Late Movie .'\n\"Daytime Wife\"\nKREM TV - Channel 2\n6:00 Flash Gordon\n6:30 Newsbeat\n7:00 Frontier Doctor\n7:30 Cheyenne *\n8:30 Wyatt Earp \u00bb\n9:00 Broken Arrow \u2666\n9:30 Pantomine Quiz *\n10:00 Man Behind The Badge\n10:30 Nightbeat\n10:35 Channel 2 Theatre\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS 1390 ON THE DIAL\nPACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME\n5:59\u2014Sign On\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05-Wake Up Time\n6:30\u2014News\n6:35-Wake Up Time\n7:00-Chapei in the Sky\n7:15^Wake-Up Time\n7:25-Sports News\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35-Wake 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\n9:15\u2014Story Parade\n9:25\u2014Women Today\n9:30-Woman's World\n9:35-Song Serenade\n10:(kWNews\n10:05\u2014Musicale\n10:15\u2014Summertime\n10:45\u2014Musicale\n10:55\u2014News\n11:00\u2014Morning Melodies\n11:15\u2014Court of Opinion\nU:45-Song Serenade\n12:15-Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\nTUESDAY, JULY 15, 1958\n12:31\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:54\u2014Prairie News\n1:00-CKLN Reports\n1:15\u2014Matinee\n1:45-Secred Heart\n2:00-CBC Concert Hall\n2:30-Fleet Review\n3:30\u2014Pacific News\n3:40\u2014B.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 \u2022\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Sports New*\n6:15\u2014Sports Special\n6:20\u2014Closing Market*\n6:25\u2014Mantovani\n6:30\u2014Canada At Work\n6:45\u2014After-Dinner Musie\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30-Small But Neat\n8:00\u2014Drarna in Sound\n8:30\u2014Science Review\n9:00\u2014Ron Collier Group\n9:30\u2014Leicester Square\n10:00\u2014News   *\n10:10\u2014Sport* New*\n10:15\u2014Critics At Large\n10:30\u2014Distinguished Artiste\nll:00-Sign Off\nCBC PROGRAMS\nMOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME\nWEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 1958\n2:00\u2014Captain From Connecticut\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:30\u2014Program Resume\n3:45\u2014B.C.' Roundup\n4:45\u2014B.C. Fishermen's Broadcait\n5:00\u2014Bands on Parade\n5:15\u2014Musical Program\n5:30\u2014CBC News\n5:40\u2014On the Scene\n5:45-Sports Desk  -    -\n.5:55\u2014Byline\n6:00\u2014Music by McMullin\n6:30\u2014Royal Tour Review\n6:40\u2014Mostly Music ,.,  .\n7:00\u2014News\n7:30\u2014Introduction to Wed. Night\n7:40\u2014Discussion on Film\n8:30\u2014CBC Symphony Strings\n9:15\u2014One Man's White.\n10:00-CBC News\n10:15\u2014Film in Germany\n10:30\u2014Recital\nll:00-New Records\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Marine Weather\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minute*\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News and Weather\n8:10\u2014Sports New*\n8:15\u2014Musical Minute*\n8:30\u2014New*\n8:35\u2014Anything Goes\n9:00\u2014News\n9:15\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014Summertime\n10:30-Welcome, Princes Margate*\n11:30\u2014Musical Program\n11:45\u2014One Man's\/Family\n12:00\u2014Theme, Variation\n12:15-News\n12:25\u2014CBC Showcase\n12:30-B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One   .\nI:00-Afternoon Concert\n,.\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\n(Program* inbject to change by station* without notice.)\n4. Game\nof cards\n5. Hal* em*\n8. Weight\n(Annam.)\nT. Doctrine\nt. Great Israel\nkings'. Rebutter\n10. Indefinite\narticle\n14. Edible\nrootstock\n18. Little devil*\n20. Garden tools\n2). Dramas\n22. Clone to\n28. Maxim\n25. King\n27. Guided\n28. Female\nsheep\n32. Ani.\nmale\npelt\n38. Goddess\n(Egypt.)\n34. Nickel\n(\u00bbym.)\n31. Malayan\nboat\n40. Farm\nbuilding\n4*.-\u2014upon\na time\n\u2022S.Letit\nstand\n(print)\n8\nT\nT\n[1'\n'Obi\nliils\naauaiiiiiuisiL\nar-*w;s sua\n'.1:1   -e.il .\"li\nI'.'l\n131\ni'-iy,\nHHHB   WrasH\nHLiaram awMmz\n\u25a0Ji'DJM   HBHH\na.'ju a>jid>j yci\nii'.i  HEBE   ISHHIa\naiiBHLJUKffl'.'i:;\nHI*)@HH   HaHEE\nasBrno aaais\n44. nWt of wo*\"*\n46. Perform\n4t. Contend for\n48. Solar deity\n\u2666var.t\n40. Tellurium\n.   *eym.)\n11\n!T\nP\n1\n&\nT\"F\nIT\nACROSS\n1. Emblem leaf\n(Can.)\n(.Coronet\n11. Constel-\nlation\nB. Pale\nto. Speak\nfirst to\nts. Chart\nH. \"King\nCole\n17. Sloth\n19. Prickly\ncheatnut\nenvelope\nJl. City (Ohio.\n24. Music note\n25. Old-type\nwriting table 28. Tributes\n29. Part of iris\n30. A little\n(while)'\n(Scot.)\n31. Slim sponge\ncakes\n35. And (L.)\n36.\u2014-Q\n37. Tear\n39. Measure\n(Jap.)\n40. Genus of tow\n43. Metallic\nrock\n45. Scholar\n48. Sound, as\nahorse\n50. Sorceress\nin the\n\"Odyssey\"\n51. Custom\n52. Dogma\nDOWN\n1. Lament\n1   2. Alms box\n(eccl.)\n%. Invader\nof Great\nBritain\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE \u2014 Here's how to woi* Itt\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter limply stands for another. In thi* sample A I*\nused for the three L'e, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,\napostrophies, the length and formation of the word* ate aM\nhint*.   Each day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\n\u2022XSB    WTYXF    XFVX    QVItS    JERT\nJSIT,    0 8ITB    SX    HFVXYITA    XFY\nBSOGSRSUVGUY\u2014ZAGHGSGO.\nYesterday's Crytoquotc: HIS HONOUR ROOTED IN M8\u00bb\nHONOUR STOOD. AND FAITH UNFAITHFUL KEPT KUt\nFALSELY TRUE-TENNYSON.\n\u2022\u00a91858. Kin* Feuturea Syndicate. Inc.*\n \u2014:\u2014\u25a0'\t\nSMALL INVESTMENT   -\nLARGE RETURNS\nThat's die Want Ad Stor? >- PHONE   1844 '\nYOU CAN NOW PHONE YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS IN UNTIL 5 P.M, ON SATURDAY.\nBIRTHS\nFREEMAN \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nW. Alec Freeman, 620 Eighth\nStreet, at Kootenay Lake General\nHospital, July 11, a daughter.\nBOND \u2014 To Mr; and Mrs. John\nBond, Nelson, at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, July 13, a daughter. !\t\nHELP WANTED\n1958 PROMISES TO BREAK ALL\nrecords in our company. Are you\nready to seriously plan your future Are you experienced at\nmeeting the public? Do you have\na car? Are you interested in better than average earnings with\na world-wide firm? If your answers are 'yes' we may be able\nto help you. To arrange interview\nphone 1915 during business hours\nor write Box 5624.\nEST1MATER SALESMAN FOR\nROOFING, SIDING AND HOME\nIMPROVEMENT FIRM IN THE\nKOOTENAYS. NO AGE LIMIT.\nWRITE BOX 396, NEW DENVER, B.C.\nWANTED - DRIVER SALESMAN,\nMcDonald's beverages. Apply in\nperson. __\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nEXPERIENCED W AIT R E.S S\nwanted. Apply between 6 p.m.\nand 8 p.m. at Shamrock Grill,\nNelson.\nHELP WANTED AT ONCE, FUR-\nther details contact Empire\nCleaners in person. 321 Baker\nSt., Nelson.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nDO YOU LIKE A GOOD CON-\ncrete or cement work job? Just\nphone 1752-L-3. I need custom-\n. ers. Experience not necessary\nRemember,  Phone  1752-L-3.\nFOK THE BEST IN BODY AND\npaint work, see Ted's Auto Body,\n1 mile Granite Road, or phone\nbus. 98, res.. 1186-Y.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES,\nFARMS, ETC., FOR SALE\nIt Listed ot o\nFAIR PRICE\nWe Can Sell Your Property\nFinances Available\nTo Get the Deals Through\nLIST   TODAY   \u25a0\nC. W. Appleyard\n,&Co.LtcL.,\nREAL ESTATE and\nINSURANCE AGENTS\nEstablished 45 Years\nBOX 26 PHONE 269\n4*21 Baker St,        Nelson. B.C.\nFOR IMMEDIATE SALE: SPLIT-\nlevel 3-bedroom home. Propane\nrange. Fireplace. Sacrifice, price.\nPhone Castlegar 6161.\t\nNEW 2 - BEDROOM. HOUSE FOR\nrent or sale on North Shore, opposite bridge, close in. Rockgas\nheating, electric stove or gas,\nPhone 1778-R.\nLOOKING   FOR   FAIRLY   NEW\n.  home near new hospital,.2 blocks\nfrom bus, 1 block out city limits.\nLow taxes, quiet district. See this\nfor. workmanship\u2014for less than\n$10,500. 823 Cherry St,\nFOR SALE- 2 BR., SUN PORCH,\nliving and dining room, fireplace,\nsmall basement, carpenter shop,\non vacant lot, corner lot, East\nTrail. Phone Trail 1\/76 for ap-\npointment.\nBRAND NEW 3-BEDROOM NHA\nhome on Lakeview Crescent\n(Rosemont). Phone 2107 or apply\nMaple Leaf Construction, 1914\nKootenay St.\t\nFOR SALE, VERY REASONABLE\n\u2014House in Salmo, 3 rooms and\nbath, 1 blbck from high school.\nApply Harry Chernoff, Salmo,\nFOR SALE, EXCELLENT RANCH,\nWould consider trade on city\nhome. Mrs. A. G. Elder, Box 113,\nNakusp, B.C.'\t\nLOT 80 X 200 FOR SALE, NORTH\nShore. Overlooks' City. Water,\npower, TV to property. Phone\n1662-X.\nREVENUE HOUSE, GOOD LOCA-\ntio'n, income $225 month, for less\nthan $13,000, Apply 823 Cherry St.\n4-ROOM HOUSE FOR SALE IN\nYmir. Box 269, Nelson, B.C.\nBOATS and ENGINES\nBOAT HOUSE, WELL IVi x 12\ngood condition. Price $250. Phone\n364-L-l.            . .     '\n14 FT. FIBREGLAS BOAT: ALSO\ncar-top boat, Mercury motors.\nNorm Bowcock, 171 Baker St.\nAUTOMOTIVE,.\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nNew\nOldsmobile Sedans\nNew\nChevrolet Sedans\nNew\nChevrolet Pickups\n1957 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 FO'tfD' PICKUP\n1953 DODGE SEDAN\n1952 DODGE PICKUP\n1951  PLYMOUTH  Sedan\n1951 STUDEBAKER  Sdn.\nReuben\nBuerge';\nMotors Ltd.\nChevrolet \u2014 Oldsmobile\nCadillac\nphone 35-36      . 323 Vernon St.'\nNelson, B.C.\nThe Best    '\nPLAGE\nTO7DEAL\n\u2022V IS\/Still ;\u25a0      '\nNELSON MOTOR\nv .PRODUCTS\n'America's No. 1 Cars\nPoritiqcs -. Bi|icks\n' Vauxhalls\n\u25a0 ;:\u25a0 And\nG.M.C. Trucks\nPLUS\nThe Finest Selection of\nGoodwill Reconditioned\nUsed Cars To Be found\nAnywhere in Canada\nNelson Motor\nProducts\nltd;   .;\nKOOTENAY AND VICTORIA STS.\n: NELSON\nPHONES 658-659\nBehind Bank of Montreal\nSPECIALIZING -IN E N G L IS H\ncar repairs. Used part* for 1949\nto '52 Austins, '49 to '52 Hill-\nmans, '50 to '5*1 Morris iMinor,\n\u202247 Studebaker, *47 Pontiac, '52\nVanguard, '47 Oldsmobile 6. For\nsale, '53 Austin, '47 Olds motor.\nCottonwood Wreckage Service,\nph. 1363-L-2, Box 382, 24 Ymir\nRoad, Nelson\nMACHINERY\nFIRM-CLOSING\nOPERATIONS\nHas the following Heavy Equipment for sale. All equipment is\nin excellent condition and very\nreasonably priced.\nTwo 1954 International\nTrucks\nModel RF2U with RED450\nMotors. 36M Boogie with 20M\nAxle > Tandem .Pierce Trailers\n(10' bunks). Less than 20,000\nmiles oil each.\nOne 48 1 Yd. Lima\nWith  Bear  Heel  Boom.  Cat.\nDiesel Motor.\nOne 414 Adams Motor Grader\nDiesel Motor. Equipped. With\nCab. Heater and Lights.\";\nOne 105 Ingersoll\nRand Air Compressor\nTwo-Wheel Portable with Hose,\nPlugger, Steel and Bitsy\nOne Allis Chalmers      ,\nHD15A Tractor^\nWith Angle Blade and Winch.\nFOR FURTHER PARTICULARS\nPHONE   MARYSVILLE,\nLUdlow 2-4292 or LUdlow 2-4371.\nBEST BUYS EVER!\nUSED\nLAWN MOWERS;\nand    \u2022'\/   :i-   '.-.\nUSED-\nCHAIN SAWS\nSee\nH. \"Fritz\" Farenholtz\nCharlie Ross or Alex McDonald\nVvIlDING & EQUIPMENT\nCO.    LTD.    ,-\nPHONE  1402    '-  '\u25a0  '\nFOR SALE OR TRADE 1 54-INCH\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.\nFOR SALE - PORTABLE COM-\npressor, \"Sullivan\", 165 cu. ft.,\nModel WK-314. Sing 1 e stage,\nBuda gas engine. Steel wheels.\nPrice $500. Nelson Machinery,\nphone 18, Nelsop, B.C\nD-2 CAT. 5J-179 CABLE BLADE\nbreaker plow, Massey Harris\ntractor,' plow, mower, harrow\nPhone 23-W, Balfour. W. M. Tay-\n.lor, R.R. No. 1, Nelson..\nFOR SALE ? SAWMILL AND 3-\nblade auger. Apply to Pete Ostri-\nkoff, Wynndel, B.C.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nH   S   ELMES.  ROSSLAND, B.C.\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep\nAUTOMOTIVE\nSJelHon Batlii Nt-roa\nCirculation Dept,, Phone 1844\nPrice per single copy 6c Monday\nto Friday, 10C on Saturday.\nBy Carrier per week\nin advance.\nSubscription Rate*\nBy Mail in Canada Outside Nelson:\nOne month          $ 1.25\nThree months    $ 3.50\nSix months  . \"_ ' $ 6.50\nOne year            $12.00\nBy Mail to United Kingdom or\nthe United States:\nOne month       _i__    $ 1.75\nThree months . $ 5.00\nSix months   * ' $ 9.50\nOne year     _..'...   $18.00\nWhere extra postage ls required\nabove rates plus postage.\nFor delivery by carrier in, Cran\nbrook, nhone Mr*  Wm Stevely\nIn Kimberley. A  W  Brown.\nIn Trail, Mrs. Syd Spooner.\nFOR SALE - '53 DODGE SEDAN.\nWhat offers? Rhone 1636 or write\nBox 5666, Nelson Dally News.\nMODEL  A  FORD,  GOOD  RUN-\nning order, good tires, $60. Phone\n1025-L.\nFOR SALE: 1951 FORD 2-DOOR.\nPhone 1011-R after .6 p.m:\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nSCRAP \u25a0. STEEL AND, METALS,\ntop prices, Old car bodies our\nspecialty. COMMERCIAL STEEL\n& METALS, 6136 Willingdon.\nBufrnaby 2. Vancouver, B C\nWANTED: LATE MODEL FRIDG.\nany make, nothing smaller than\na 9 cubic foot. Write Mrs. E. Ny-\nstrom, Salmo.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD FOR YOUNG\nman. 210 Vernon St\nBOARD AND ROOM -PHONE\n1231-Y.\nftOOM Atfft 60ARD, FOR MAN.\nPhone 705-X.   . ,\nFor expert body and paint work\nand all types of mechanical work\nand tune-ups, be Sure, fo try\nJOHN'S MOTORS    - *\"'\n,   \u00ab Mile North Shore\nPhone John Kohout 1808-J*-3\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nTrade \u2022 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\nt to write for free facts, without\n' obligation, about this training.\nTractor Training\nService Ltd.\n.Daily News Box No. 5594.\nDESTINY BAY STORE AND\nauto court for sale. Store, coffee\nshop, .2 apartments, gai pump\nand truck. Lake frontage and 6\nboats. Physical appraised value\n$13,600. Offers to purchase will\nreceive consideration. For full\ninformation T. D. Rosling & Son\nLtd., 568 Ward St.\t\nHOBBY, NOVELTY AND SOU-\nvenir shop, centrally located,\nleased. Phone Trail 1276 for ap-\npointment.  .  '\nHELP ME BUILD CABINS\n(rammed-earth) on shares. Dan-\nson. Kaslo (over Bay).\nRENTALS\nSTORAGE, SPACE FOR RENT IN\ngood basement centrally located.\n$15.00 to $20.00 a month according to space required. Apply\nAppleyard,* 421 Baker St.\nCABINS FOR RENT. PHONE OR\nwrite L. Sammartino, Balfour,\nB.C., ph. 3-Q. Also, garden-fresh\nvegetables for sale.\n3-ROOM MODERN APT., SELF-\ncontained, unfurnished. Heat and\nhot water supplied. Adults. Phone\n2079.,\n1-BEDROOM HOUSE - WIRED\nfor. range and hot water. North\nShore, 2V4 miles from bridge,\n$37.50. Ph. 156 days, 575-Y eves.\nNEWLY. DECORATED 2 - ROOM\nsuite, partly furnished. 723 Silica\nSt.. Phone 1341-X.\nUNFURN.   6-ROOM- APT., ,CEN-\ntral. Adults'only. Nelson News\nBox No. 5629.\n3 RM. APT., FURN.-OR UNFURN.\nAlso 1 sleeping, room, 1 block\nfrom Baker St. Phone 385.\n.UNFURNISHED APT., HEATED.\nSuitable for couple. Apply Box\n5446, Nelson \u2022Daily News,\nFURNISHED   LIGHT   HOUSE\nkeeping room^ frig, Ph. 496-R.\nHOUSE.'FOR RENT - CONTACT\nMrs. Marquis, ph. 874, days.\nFOR RENT' OR SALE 5 ROOM\n1  house 110 High St.\nBED-SITTING ROOM FOR RENT,\n\u25a0 Fairview. Phone 1050-R. ..\nAPT.,  3  ROOMS AND ,BATH -\npartly furnished. 210, Victoria St.\n2-ROOM APARTMENT, $45, IN\neluding heat and light. Ph. 1500.\nBEDROOM FOR RENT, GENTLE-\nmen 'only. 410 Victoria St.\nROOM FOR' RENT. PHONE 547-\not call at 512 Carbonate St.\nBUILDING SUPPLIES\nNelson ReadyrMix\nENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYORS\nJOHNSON AND McCORQUODALF-\nB.C. Land Surveyors.\nMine and Topographic Surveys:\nNelson, 1015-8th St- Ph. 144-R.\nTrail, 1234 Bay Ave., Ph 2752. '\n\"\u25a0 BOYD C   AFFLECK, MEIC\nB.C Land Surveyor P Eng (Civil)\n218 Gore St    Neison    Phone 1238\nG. W BAERG BC.\nLand Surveyor\n373 Baker St     Nelson    Phone 1118\ninsurance\nWawanesa mutual\"\ninsurance cq.\nAgent, 554 Ward St\/\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd.\nRail, ait1, steamship tickets.\nSee Jim or Betty Vipond.\nGLOBE AGENCIES LIMITED\n1146 Cedar Ave.    Trail  ; Ph, .2345\nLIVcS.OCK, POULTRY\nAND FARM SUPPLIES. ETC.\nPULLETS FOR SALE-ANY AGE.\nAppleby Poultry Farm.. Mission\nCitv  B.C.        \u25a0.\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0,\u25a0--.\u25a0'\u2022\nWANTED - GOOD FRESH MILK\ncow, C. A. Noakes, Balfour.\n,       FOR' ALL PURPOSES\n.7\/PHCiNE 871\nPREMIER SAND & GRAVEL\n-    - . \"For\nSand, Gravel,-Crushed Rock,\nFill, Cenient and\nPea Gravel, for Roofing\nPHONE 1368 or 871\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill,' mine and\nlogging supplies, new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings,\nchain, steel plate and shapes\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250\nPrior St., Vancouver, BlC. Phone\nPAcific 6357.\n1 STEEL WELDED COAL AND\nwood furnace with new grates;\n1 GE,oil conversion burner and\nnecessary automatic attachments\nand side arm hot water tank\nheater and element. Phone 2088\nor call 417 Hamilton Ave.1,\nUSED OUTBOARDS, REFRIGERt\nators, washing machines. Make'\nus an offer. Jeffery .Radio and\nAppliances Ltd., phone 1302, 446\nWard St., Nelson, B.C.\nMCCLARY GAS COOK STOVE.\nThermostat ' controlled ! oven, j 4\nburners, as new. Phillips. Mo-\ntel Hall Mines Road.\t\nSUNBEAM FURNACE, 24-INCH,\ncomplete with fan and stoker;\nPhone 2079.\nCHERRIES FOR SALE AT MTN.\nStation. Mrs. Soukaroff. 8c lb.,\npick yourself.      _\u25a0\nCLEAN COTTON RAGS WILL\nnot be purchased by the Daily\nNews until further notice.\nFREE FIREWOOD -\"YOU CUT\nit and haul away In town. Phone\n1867-L.               _\nCHERRIES, ALSO MILKING\ngoat for sale. Apply N. F. Kiel-\nkoff, Vt mile Blewett Rd.\nBLACK    LOAM    TOPSOIL\nsale. Phone 582-R-l.\nT5H\nHEALTH FOOD CENTRE OPEN\nday and evenings. 924 Davies St,\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS,\nFridays. Phone 366-R  .\nMEMBERS WANTED FOR SUN-\nbathing group forming in Kootenays. Enquiries welcome., Write\nDally News, Box 5611. Enclose\nstamped addressed envelope for\nreplies.' -\nFALSE TEETH DISCOMFORT J\nTry \"Dentur-Eze\" today. Wonderful plastic re-liner that makes\nteeth fit comfortably, prevents\nslipping, wobbling, tasteless,\nodorless. One application lasts\nwks. Only $1.95 at all druggists.\nSTOP DANDRUFF, EXCESSIVE\nfalling hair, itchy or scaly scalp,\nwith Lanex, the marvellous Lanolin scalp treatment. Only $1.95\njar. Satisfaction or money back,\nat  Fleury's* Pharmacy   and ail\n\"druggists.\nWANTED TO RENT\n3 NURSES NEED FURNISHED\napt. or home by Aug. 1. Box 5706,\nDaily News. ..'  -'\nHOTELS AND MOTELS\nCANADIAN FRIENDS, - WHEN\nin Spokane stop at the Colonial\nHotel, 124Mi Post St., one block\nfrom stores and parking.\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP) - The pro-\nNasser coup in oil - rich Iraq\ndrove down oil shares Monday\nand was the major factor in the\nstock market's sharpest break of\n(his year.\nAn estimated $2,800,000,000 was.\nclipped from the quoted falue of\nstocks listed on the New York\nStock Exchange.\nOils With resources in Iraq and\n-elsewhere in the Middle East\nwere hit hard. Western Hemisphere oils actually rose for a\nwhile but *ome of these erased\ngains ahd showed slight losses as\nmost stocks declined in a late\nsinking spell.\nOnly Studebaker-Packard rose,\nadding Vs in response to weekend\nnews that it is likely to drop\nPuckaM from its 1959 models.\nThe oil shares fell from 1 to;4\npoints or more. -Key stocks in\nother groups were off from fractions to-about 2 points. -Steel\nshares also sold off.\nCanadian issues dropped fractionally on the New York Exchange* Aluminium Ltd. was off;\n%\u25a0; Canadian Pacific was down\nVt. International Nickel dropped\nVt on 3,700. shares. Distillers-Seagrams lost Vs. Dome Mines slip-1\nped Vt, Hudson Bay %. and Mc-\nIntvre Porcupine %.\nAmerican Stock Exchange\nprices were thixed. Losers included International Petroleum,\nHumble Oil, Woodley Petroleum,\nTodd Shipyards and Fairchild\nCamera. \u25a0'   .\nTORONTO (CP) - The stock\nmarket I was lower monday ln\nmoderate' trading.\nAmong industrials Loblaw A\nand B' were winners. The A\nadded 2% at 31 and the B issue\nwas up 2 at 31%. The increase\nfollowed heavy buying from, the\nUnited States.\nTrans Mountain Pipe; Line\nmoved forward \u2022 briskly following\nword of the Middle East crisis. It\nclosed ahead 2 at 55. and was\nup to 58- in -earlier-trading.\nNew Hosco led the speculatives\nturning over 508,200 shares, while\ndipping $1.60 to $2.90. Barnat was\nthe next -active issue, trading\n403,270' shares, easing five cents\nat,$1.29.\nGolds' remained down with\nfractional losses to Mclntyre and\nHollinger. Bralorne was off 30\ncents at $5.50. Base metals\nstarted to rally in early-afternoon\ntrading-but a Vt loss at 73 to International Nickel and ? to 25%\nby Falconbridge cut into gains\nmade'by several other senior issues.      '.\"'.:'f\"\nWestern oils were1 ahead almost\nin a line in early1 trading but\nmost gains were cut in half as\ntrading progressed, pacific Pete\nat 18% and Royalite at 11%,\neach Vt. point \"winners, led the\nsection. '\nMONTREAL (CP) - Heavy\ntrading in the mines left penny\nissues generally softer at the\nclosei of. the Montreal and Canadian stock markets Monday. In\nquiet .trading, industrials were\ngenerally mixed.\nBig gainers last week lost\nheavily. New Hosco at 2.90 was\ndown 1.40 and Continental lost 30\ncents at 80 cents.\nExcep5 for Trans Mountain\nPipeline, up 2% points at 56 and-\nUnion Gas, trading smalliots and\ndown one at -82. changes ift'the\nindustrials were fractional.\nArgus at 22% and Powell River\nat 34 were up % each while Mc-\nGoll at 54 was down %. Up %\nwas Interprovincial Pipeline.\nClosing averages: Banks off\n0.07'at 52.06, utilities up 0.5 at\n139.7, industrials off 0.5 at 266.7,\ncombined off 0.1 at 224.4, papers\nup 0:4 at'377.9 and golds off 0.35\nat 70.58. -    .:'-.\nCANBERRA, Australia (Reuters)\u2014The highest 'dose of radiation recorded from the British\natomic tests at. Maralinga last\nautumn was less than a man\nwould get from wearing a lumin-.\nous watch for three weeks, it was\nreported Sunday. The test* included the first explosion of an\natomic bomb from a balloon.\nNasser's Fight To-Unite\nArabs Wins Another Round\nESMOND LUMBER' CO LTD\nfor all Building-Supplies Specializing in Plywood Contractors enquiries solicited Phone or\nwire orders collect. 3600 E Hastings St., Vancouver. B C.GLen-\nburn 1500\nPETS,. CANARIES, BEES\nPETS FARM!' ANY KIND OF\npets.boarded at Taghum. Phone\nHalvesob. 599-L-2.-\nTRAILERS\nBARRE.TT TRAILER SALES,\nFruitvale, have a new shipment\nOf Aljos, .15', 16'. 17', 19'. See\nthese barutles be'lore thev go.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST AT GYRO PARK SUNDAY,\nman's watch,\" registered no. inside. Finderplaase leave at Daily\n'.iiTews office1.\nBy ARTHUR GAVSHON\nLONDON (AP> - President\nGamal Abdel Nasser won a round\ntoday in his fight to consolidate\nthe Arab nations under his control in the most serious blow to\nthe Western position in the\nMiddle East since, the. 1956 Suez\ncrisis. \u25a0 \"'\nAnd for Britain and Its Western\nallies, the revolt in Iraq with.its\npro-Nasser overtones posed another tense question of possible\nintervention.\nWas the Iraq revolt an internal,\npolitical development or was it\ninspired by Nasser's' United Arab\nRepublic? And where can one\ndraw the line between the two?\nBREAKS WESTERN LINK\nBut whether inspired from inside or Outside the country it was\na decisive triumph for Nasser. It\nunhinged the kingpin country on\nwhich the Western powers were\nlinked by treaty ties to the Arabs\nin the Middle East.\nIraq, is the, only Arab state\nbound to the West by treaty ties\nas a member of the Baghdad Pact\nwith Britain, Pakistan, Turkey\nand Iran. The United States, although not a member, of the alliance; supports it and is a member of its leading committees.\nAll signs suggest that the.Iraqi\nArmy plot was cunningly tiijied\nand long prepared.\nBoth, in Iraq and Jordan there\nhad been much suppressed hostility against the pro-Western policies of the Baghdad and Amman\nGovernments.\" In- recent weeks\nthere had been evidence of\nmounting tension between Iraq\nand Syria. '     .\nRestrictions on trave1 alop* and\nacross tha borders of *h? two\ncountries had  been made -more\nstringent. For 'the . last, three\nweeks all foreigners \u2014 which\nmeant mainly Syrians, some\nEgyptians and some1 Palestinian\nArab*\u2014had been, barred irom approaching Iraq's - border, areas,\nmilitary' camps and oil installations. '.'! \u2022'' -\"' *>-\u2022\nCLOSED BORDERS   v\nEarly this month' Iraq virtually\nclosed its .borders with, Syria to\nnormal transit traffic after the\nTurks acted similarly along their\nSyrian frontier. ' * -\n. These moves, combined with a\ngood deal of troop activity north\nness in.the Iraqi capital.\nThe mounting nervousness 'coincided with a renewal of intense\npolitical activity in the Kurdish\ntribes' mountain areas in the\nnorth of the country^ This activity was* reflected also among the\nbig Kurdish communities working\nin, the oil fields around Kirkuk\nand in the, army itself, which has\nlaree numbers of Kurds.-\nOfficials have expressed fears\nprivately over the last few\nmonths that both Nasser and the\nRussians would have the opoor-\ntunity of exploiting Kurdish dissi-\ndence through, the Kurds who\neither live under their control or\nlook, to them, for political guidance.     .   .' 7    '\n\u2022 *:  *\u25a0..-. \"   P\nNELSON DAU.Y NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 15, 1958 \u25a0\u2014jj>\nRussia's Colcf War May\nPut End To Nationalism\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA ' (CP)-Russia's new\neconomic cold war may eventually force the free countries to\nmake nationalism. obsolete.\nThat, In essence, appears to be\none of the main thoughts to: emerge from the three-day oonfer-\nerence between President Eisenhower 'and Prime Minister Diefenbaker.\nIt appeared that Mr. Diefenbaker suffered' no loss of political stature from-that conference.\nRather it may have given him\nsome advantage*. For while\nmany of the economic frictions\nbetween the two countries still remain, new political bridges were\nbuilt and Canada seemed to get\nat least one major concession.\nAGREES TO CONSULT      .\nThe U.S. government agreed, at\nthe very, least, to consult with\nCanada where American export\nlaws prevent American-controlled\ncompanies in Canada from trading with Communist China in non-\nstrategic goods.\nThe way Mr. Diefenbaker sees\nit, it paves the way for these\nsubsidiaries to base their export\npolicy solely on Canadian law.\nU.S. companies have subsidiaries In many parts of the world.\nIf such a concession is allowed\nfor those located in Canada, why\nshould they not also be allowed\nfor those in other countries? And\nif they are to be allowed for subsidiaries, why not for the parent\ncompanies?\nThus, the U.S. may find herself in an untenable position in\n\u25a0maintaining an embargo on,trade\nwith Red China.\nECONOMIC THREAT\n'But aside from thi* point, Mr.\nEisenhower and Mr. Diefenbaker\nagreed that the Soviet economic\nthreat is serious, so serious that\nsteps must be taken Jo strengthen the economies of the Free\nWorld and make them more powerful throusft mutual co - oper-\nation.\nCanada has promised to play\nher part but the expert* feel that\nthe major move really ia up to\nthe US., for it is only the U.S.\nthat has the-vast financial re*\nsources, capable of influencing\nworld economic,trends.\nAs Mr. Diefenbaker described\nthe situation, in. the Commons:\n\"We new approach an era internationally where it becomes more\nimportant than ever before that\nthe nations, of the Free WofW\nmust in the interest of survival\nitself bring about e c o n o mTc\nChanges in unity that might 15 let\n20 years ago have been regardefl\nas impossible of achievement.\nNONE DISAGREED \u00ab.;\u25a0\nNo one in the Commons dis-\n\u2022agreed with him. His point\nseemed to be that economic barriers, erected perhaps because of\nnationalistic spirit, had to be removed and crushed. Trade had\nto be expanded. Backward counfl-\nries had to be given help. Low\nliving standards had to be raised.\nThis may involve some saqre\nflees among the wealthier free\ncountries, including Canada and\nthe U.S. Nationalism, which has\nbeen growing, in Canada, may\nhave to give way to some form\nof internationalism, Western\nstyle. a\nMany countries may view such\na step with' reluctance ahd distaste. But they may nevertheless\ntake it if they find it comes to- a\n.question of surivival. ..>\u2022\nJung Silent   3\nOn Farris'\nComments    t;\nBONN, West Germany (Router*)\n\u2014 Douglas Jung, Canadian member of Parliament at present visiting West Germany, Monday declined to comment on remarks\nabout Mm by Liberal Senator. J.\nW. deB. Farris in the Canadian\nSenate. \u00ab\n\"Thfs 1* the first I have heard\naboUt it,\" Jung said. \"I do not\nthink I' can say anything until'I\nhave read the full text of what\nSenator Farris said in Hansard.\"\nFarris said of Jung, who 1* of\nChinese origin: \"What right has\nthis Chinaman got to represent\nthe Canadian people?\"\nFarris wa* commenting on a\nstatement in Paris attributed \"lo\nJung, a Progressive Conservative\nthat Canadian delegation* to Russia are handpicked and biased.\n-CLIMBERS KILLED     \t\nBERGAMO, Italy (AP)-Three\nItalian mountain climbers were\nkilled Sunday In a fall while\nscaling the steep wall of Preso\nlana Peak near this North Italian\ntown.      ^\nMillar & Brown Ltd.\n'3'\n-*.<\nSE1VIGE i\nDAILY FREIGHT SERVICE a\nVANCOUVER \"\nto Rossland, Trail, Castlegar and    G\nNELSON     '5\nOvernight Service\nPhon\u00ab Nelson 1106 or Trail 191\n_t\n\u25a0Q.\nHELP WANTED\nGovernment of British Columbia\nAPPRENTICESHIP AND\n:: ,,* TRADESMEN'S\n.QUALIFICATIONS   .\nw\nApplications are,invited from young men for enrollment\nin Pre-Apprenticeship trade classes which are to be helcf\nin Vancouver and which are intended to lead to appren.\nticeship-in the following trades:        ,'\\\nTRADE\nStarting Date     Length of Course\nLEAVE IN SMALL .BOAT\nCOPENHAGEN (AP)-.- Three\nmen left Copenhagen in a 22-foot\noutboard, motorboat for New York\nSaturday. They said they expect\nto- make the trip across the Atlantic in-.8bout iO days. The boat\nis nowered bv two outboard mo-\ntn'-s, Durin'! the crossin\", the boat\n\"\/ill ^een-in contort with a Swpd-\n**h '\"\u00bbi''ht\u00bbr which is to supply\nit with fuel.\nBricklaying Sept. 22 5 months\nBoatbuilding Sept.'22 Stoll months.\nCarpentry Oct. 6 5 months      t:\nElectrical Sept. 13' S months\nElectronics Sept. 15 10 months      %\nLathing Sept. 22 5 months\nPlastering Sept. 22 5 months      .;:\n' Plumbing and Steamfitting Sept. 22 S months\nSheet Metal '   Sept. 15 5 months \u25a0\nStructural Steel \u25a0   Sept. 15 . 5 months\nApplicants should preferably be from 17 to. 19^ years old,\nhave a good basic education and be physically able tp\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.\nNo charge will be made for tuition and a subsistence allowance will be given to help pay room and board which\nwillbethe responsibility of the student.\nThe amount pf this allowance will be $40.00 per month\nfor a student whose home is in the training city and-\n$56.00 peMtionth for a student whose home is outside\nof that area. i : y,\nApplication Forms for Enrollment May Be Obtained by Writing'to'''\nTHE DIRECTOR OF APPRENTICESHIP, DEPARTMENT\nOF LABOR*     \u25a0'\n\u25a0411 Dunsmuir Street, Vancouver 3, B.C.\nPlease indicate the trade in which you are interested.\n 10\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, JULY 15, 1958\nTCP.\nANTISEPTIC\n59<\nHelps promote clean, rapid healing\nand relief of local'pain\nand inflammation.\nFor tuts, Grazes, Burns, Scalds,\nBites and Stings..\nCan be used as a mouth wash.\nA useful addition to any Medicine Chest.\nMANN\nDRUGS LTD.\nDurelle 9-5\nFor Empire\nMONTREAL (CP) - Early betting has established champion\nYvon Durelle as a 9 to 5 favorite\never Mike -Holt of South Africa in\nIheir 12-round light-heavyweight\nbout for the' British Empire title\nWednesday night.\nMost ring observers, however,\nfigure the odds are a bit long now\non the rook-jawed fisherman -from\nBaie Ste. Anne, N. B., and expect\nthe price fo shorten, possibly to TA\nto S, before fight time.\nPromoter Eddie Quinn, working\nin conjunction with the International Boxing Club, said ticket sales\nhave picked up considerably atfd\nhe anflc&tes a gate of $35,009.\nThe top ticket price is $7.30.\nFavorite\ntitle Bout\nLions Suffer First\nSerious Injury\nKELOWNA''B.C. (CP) - B.C.\nLions of the Western Interprovincial Football. Union have recorded\ntheir first, serious^ injury of the\n1998 training session here,\nImport centre and linebacker\nPete Brown from Georgia Tech.,\na 200-pounder, was flattened trying\nto stop fullback By Bailey from\nsteamrolling through the line during a practice session.\nIt could be the big fellow, who\nhas sustained head injuries before,\nhas been battered out of his bid\nfor a teattt berth; ,\nTwo other Lions suffered less\nserious injuries. Canadian end Vic\nChapman broke his nose and lineman Laurie Hodgson felt a foot-\nful of cleat* and had to be stitched up. i\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhone a27\nS7S Baker St.\nHave The Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVEC\na       LIMITED        \u2022\u00bb\u2022*\nPHONE 815\nMASTER PLUMBER\nThe bout, at the Montreal-Forum\nis to be carried oo national television networks in Canada and the\nU. S. with the Montreal and Sherbrooke areas blacked out on the\nCanadian system. Starting time*is\n7 p.m., DST.\nSHARKEY LIKES HOLT\nJack Sharicey, forma* heavyweight boxing champion in Mont-\nrealto referee a wrestling match,\nthinks Holt's polish will prove too\nmuch for the slow-moving champion, despite the odds. He picks the\nSouth African by a knockout in\n\"six or eight rounds.\".\nDurelle was; to return to Montreal Monday night from Ste. Aga-\nthe in the Laurentians, where he\nhas conducted his training since\narriving here 'last Friday from his\nhometown with manager Chris\nShaban.\n\"We're ready,\" Shaban-said on\nMonday. \"We've got no alibis if\nwe lose. If Yvon has. to give u>\nhis title, he's.going to lose it the\nhard way now\u2014in the ring.\".\nBoth fighters will do some more\nlight exercise before Wednesday\nnight to keep at peak condition.\nNeither Durelle's Canadian light-\nheavyweight title nor Holt's South\nAfrican crown in the same weight\ndivision are at stake.\nBaseball Standings\nNational League\nW  L Pet. GBL\nMilwaukee      43  36   .544\nS. -Francisco ....   44   38   .537    Vt\nChicago ;..   43   41   .512   VA\nSt. Louis  :..   39   38   .506  3\nPhiladelphia   ....   38   39   .494   4\nPittsburgh       39   43   .476   5%\nCincinnati *    37  42   .468  6\nLos'Angeles     38  44   .463  6Vt\nAmerican League\nW  L  Pet. GBL\nNew York .......   54  27   ,867\nBoston       41   40   .506   13\nDetroit     40   40   .500   13%\nKansas City ....   39  41   .488   14%\nChicago      39   43   .476   15%\nBaltimore     38  42   .475   15%\nCleveland ....'...   39  45   .464   16%\nWashington   ....   35   47   .427   19%\nKeep Your Eye on Classified!\nTrounce Giants 12-3\nPANCAKES' GALORE disappeared as rapidly as\nthey were made at Queen Elizabeth Park Monday night\nwhen Little-League and Babe Ruth baseball players lined up for the treat after a Babe Ruth ball game in which\nEllisons took Algars 13-5. At left former, mayor Joseph\nKary and Mrs.,Kary flip pancakes as Y. Tagami,' S. E.\nBriard and Mrs. Neit Derby hand them out to the never-\nending line of hungry l&ds.-^Daily News phofo.\nROVERS BEAT\nFERNIE 5-1 \\\nCRANBROOK - Cranbrook\nRovers .beat Fernie United 5-1\nin Crows Nest Football League\nplay here Monday. Rovers gained\nthird place in the standings while\nFernie stayed in last place. Scor-.\ning for Rovers were Luciano, Zol,\ntwice;'. Joe Pagarut and Peter\nEgemann. Fernie's single goal\nWas scored by Kinnedy early in\nthe second half. Rovers play in\nan exhibition game in Nelson next\nSunday.\nLEAGUE LEADERS\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nFox,, Chicago .... 323 46. 106 .328\nPower, Cleve ...'299 53 98 .328\nCerv, Kansas.C 275. 56 89 .324\nKuenn Detroit .. 267 35 86 .322\nRunnels, Bos .... 287   48    92   .321\nDuns\u2014Mantle, New Yorw 62.\nRuns batted in\u2014Jensen, Boston,\n76.\nHits-^Fox Chicago 105.\nDoubles\u2014Kuenn, Detroit 24.\nTriples \u2014 Power, Cleveland, Tuttle, Kansas City and Lemon, Washington 6.\nHome runs\u2014Jensen. Boston 26.\nStolen bases\u2014Aparicio, Chicago,\n17.\nPitching\u2014based on 8 or more decisions\u2014Delock-, Boston, 8-0 ,1.000.\n' Strikeouts -\u00bb Turley, New York\n97.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nMusial, St. L .... 264 39 96 .\nMays, San Fran 319 65 109 .342\nDark, Chicago .. 270 33 90 .333\nAshburn, Phil .. 312 47 102 .327\nSkinner, Pgh 285  51   92  .323\nRuns\u2014Banks, Chicago,-and Mays\nSan Francisco, 65.\nRuns batted in\u2014 Thomas, Pittsburgh . 72.\nHits\u2014Mays   San Fran, 109.\nDoubles\u2014Hoak, Cincinnati, 28.\nTriples\u2014Virdon, Pittsburgh .9.\nHome runs\u2014Thomas, Pittsburgh\n25.\nStolen bases\u2014Ashburn, Philadelphia and Mays, San Francisco 14.\nPitching\u2014Phillips, Chicago, Farrell, Phila, 6:2, .750.\nStrikeouts\u2014Jones, St. Louis, 108.\nCosta Takes Tisi\nNEW YORK (AP) - Former\nfeatherweight contender Carmelo\nCosta decisively outpointed Al\nTisi in a-10-round television bout\nMonday night. Both 'are from\nNew York.'    -\nThe two- light -' hitting featherweights fought four years ago\nwith the same result.\n\"Man, I'm sold on\nADAMS OLD!\"\n0%\u20ac*rta*i @4cfam4 !&&\u00a3t^Wkt.\nAMHERSTBURG. ONT.\nG-5736\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board\nor by the Government of British Columbia\nPark Wins\nIh Fi\nMarathon\nComeback\nBy JOE MacSWEEN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (CP) -\nCanadian-bred Tom Park Monday\nFASTBALL PLAY\nHEARS PLAYOFFS\nWest Kootenay Senior men's\nfastball league playoffs begin\nWednesday on the Civic recreation\ngrounds. t\nIn the last game of league play,\nHumes took Thrums 13-11 to gam\na tie for second place with\nThrums. Don Ball was winning\npitcher and the loss was chalked\nup to Fred Hoodicoff.      '\nBASEBALL SCORES\nBy The Canadian Press ,\nAMERICAN. LEAGUE\nDetroit     100 000 000-1 7 1\nBaltimore   1000 000.Olx\u20142 6 0\nMoford and Wilson; Brown and\nTriandos. HRs: Baltimore \u2014 Boyd\n(5),    \u25a0\nKansas City ...... 300 100 000-4 6 1\nWashington  OOO 000 000-0 4 1\n. Urban and Smith; Ramos, Constable (9) and Courtney. L: Ramos.\nChicago  000 000 000-0 3 2\nNew York ...:.... 100 110 llx\u20145 9 0\nWynn, Qualters (8) and Lollar;\nFord and Howard. L: Wynn. HRs:\nNew York\u2014Bauer (9), Mantle (23).\nCleveland  010 100 010 0\u20143 7 2\nBoston   002 000 100 1-4 6 1\n. Wilhelm, Narleski (6) Grant (8)\nMossi (10) and Brown, Nixon (8);\nSisler, Wall (5)- and Berberet. W:\nWall. L: Grant. HRs: Cleveland-\nBrown (6).. ..-.,'\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nPhila. ...A 400 140 000 01-10 10 0\nChicago  200 110 104 02\u20141-1 15 3\nCardwell, Semproch (9) and Sawatski; Phillips, Fodge (1) Drott (5)\nHenry (5) Elston (9) Hobbie (11)\nand S. Taylor. W: Hobbie. L: Semproch. HRs: Chicago \u2014 Walls (20),\nMofyn (16), Goryl (4).\nCincinnati    100 022 000\u20145 9 1\nLos Angeles  030 401 OOx\u20148 8 5\nPurkey, Kellner (4) and Bailey;\nPodres, Klippstein (6) and R o s e'-\nboro, W: Podres. L: Purkey. HRs:\nLA\u2014Zimmer 2 (8>,.Neal (17), Bilko\n(7).\nMilwaukee  201 022 320-12 16~1\nSah'Francisoo 010 001 100\u2014 3  5 2\nBurdette and Crandall; Worthington,-Crone (5) Shipley (.7), Monzant (8) and Schmidt. L: Worthington. HRs: Milwaukee \u2014 Covington*\n(13,), Logan (9); San Francisco r-\nWagner (2).        \u25a0','\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nBalding Wins~~~\nOntario Title\nTORONTO (CP) - Al Balding'\nof Markham shot twp four-under-\npar rounds of 67 for a 134 total\nto win the Ontario Professional\nGolfers Championship* Monday.\nBalding was one stroke ahead\nof Moe Norman of Toronto de\nHavilland.\nThe victory was worth $1,000 to\nBalding, one of the 10 top moneys\nwinners in the United States last\nyear and a high-ranking winner\nthis season.. He also received the\nDow Kingbeer.trophy.\nNorman received $650.\nU. S. to Beat Russ\nSays Team Coach\nNEW YORK (AP) - The head\ncoach of, the United States team\npredicted Monday \u2014 with no\nstrings attached \u2014 that his squad\nwill defeat Russia when the\nworld's top two track and field\npowers clash July 27-28 in Moscow. *     ..\n\"It probably Will be close,\"\nsaid George Eastment, \"but we\ndefinitely Will win. We have a fine\nteam.\"\nwon the Atlantic City water marathon for the third Ume.\nPark, 34-year-old native of Hamilton, OnL, now a swimming instructor at Bellflower, Calif., took\nthe lead almost from the start and\nat one point led by half a mile.\nThe transplanted Canadian had\nwon the race In 1954 and 1955 over\nshorter distances than this year's\n26% miles. \u25a0'  H \u25a0 t\nThe victory in 11 hours, 52 minutes and 45 seconds was a -big\ncomeback for Park, who last year\nsquandered a long lead three miles\nfrom the finish and finished a poor\nsecond.,        >.-.,,; \u25a0\u25a0\nArgentinian ace Alfredo Camar-\nero, last year's-winner, fell-by\nthe wayside Moriday when he became ill after seven hours in the\nchilly water around Absecon Island on which Atlantic' City is'built;\nLUMSDON SECOND\nPark emerged from the waves\nstrong and confident, not far ahead\nof Cliff Lumsdon, of New Toronto,\nOnt, runnerup.      -.-'..\nLumsdon, 27, won the race in\n1956 when he finished one stroke\nahead of Park.      \u25a0\nThe one-two Canadian finish was\nnot surprising. -Before the race\nPark and Lumsdon picked each\nother* as the. person to beat.\nLumsdon's second-place time was\n12 hours, nine minutes. He pocketed\n$1600. '\nGtfeta Andersen, Danish-born girl\nfrom Long Beach, Calif., captured\nthe $1000 prize as the first woman\nacross the finish line and got $800\nthird prize for her clocking of 12\nhours, 15 minutes and 30 seconds.\nShe aiso won $500 in other bonuses.\nELLISONS\nWHIP ALGARS\nEllisons whipped Algars 13-5 in\na Babe Ruth League game at\nQueen Elizabeth Park Monday\nnight.\nFor Ellisons, Keith Acres pounded but a home run and two singles\nin five trips to. the plate, while\nPhil Engstad japped out two\ndoubles in five trips. Burdenie and\nWilson speared homers for Algars.\nAcres allowed four hits, Engstad\ntwo for Ellison. The former struck\nout six, Engstad eight. For Algar,\nAnderson, Steed and Burdenie\nshared mound duties, allowing 13\nhits.    ,\nBritish Cricket\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Monday's\nclose-of-play cricket scores:\nMiddlsex 254 for '9 declared;\nYorkshire 441 for 4. \u25a0**\u25a0'\nEssex 268 and 112 for 33; Glamorgan 182.\nCambridge Universiy 161 for 7\ndclard and 53 for 2; Oxford University 180.\nSomerset. 116 and 47 for 2; Northamptonshire 217.\nLancashire 256 and 9 for 2;\ncombined Services 253 for 8 declared.\nKent 291 and 25 for 1; Surrey\n211.. ,\n'\u2022\u25a0\u2022 Worcestershire 148-and 43 for 2;\nWarwickshire 265 for 9 declared.\n. Leicestershire 70- and 18 for no\nwickets; Derbyshire' 189.\nNottinghamshire   276;   Gloucestershire 132 for 6.\n'.' Sussex 145 and 118; Hampshire\n265. Hampshire won by an innings\nand 2 runs.\nNew Zealand 286; Scotland 135\nand 119. New Zealond won by an\ninnings and. 32 runs.\nU.S. Cleans Up Davis Cup\nSeries With Canadian Team\nBy WILI? GRUSON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nTORONTO (CP) - The United\nStates, which approached the Davis Cup round against Canada-with\na virtually untested team- and with\nfears about the outcome wrapped\nit up Monday'with two more singles\nvictories, for a.clean sweep of the\nbest-of-five series.    -\nBarry MacKay.of Dayton, Ohio,\nsmashed out a 6-8, 6-2, 12-10, 7-8\nvictory oyer Paul. Willey of Vancouver and youthful Jack Douglas\nof Santa Monica, CallfM-breezed to\na 4-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-1 decision over\nDon Fontana of Torontoin the concluding matches to give the U.S.\nits 5-0-triumph.\" \u25a0'-'\u25a0 \u25a0\u2022.'-:j.*.'.-,.\nIt marked the 12th straight time\nthat the U.S. has beaten Canada in\npreliminary round \"for the international tennis -trophy.- -\nThe United States advances ot\nthe North American Zone final\nagainst either Argentina or Israel.\n.The-zone winner will meet the Eur-'\nopean champion to decide the chal-\nlehger to meet Australia, present\ncup holder.\nWilley, 27, the third-ranking\nplayer in Canada, was a. last-\n\u25a0 minute substitution against MacKay. H& replaced Canadian\nchampion Bob Bedard of Sherbrooke, Que., who* developed an\ninfection in his left knee from a\nfall. .\nYanks Blank\nWhile Sox\nBy The Canadian Press ..\nMilwaukee Brave* used very\nconvincing word* to remind San\nFrancisco Giants they are defending world champions.\nMonday night, the Brave*\ncrushed the Giant* 12-3 to regain\nfirst place in the National\nLeague., \u25a0,\" %\nIt was World Series hero Lew\nBurdette, accompanied by a timely\ntattoo on the bat of Wes Covington,\n-who made known the message to\nthe Giants, right in the bay city.\nBurdette tossed a neat five hitter, while Covington singled across\ntwo runs in the first and blasted\na solo homer in the third.\nIn other National League action,\nLos Angeles Dodgers took their\nfourth straight decision from Cincinnati, 8-5, while Chicago Cubs\nwon their first extra-inning game\nof the season, an 11-10 affair Over\nPhiladelphia,    ,    '   '\nThose were ihe only games scheduled in the senior league.\nIn the American League, Boston Red Sox decisiohed Cleveland\n4-3 in 10 innings, while Baltimore\nedged Detroit Tigers 2-1.\nWhitey Ford blanked Chicago\nWhite Sox on three hits for his\n11-th victory in a night game while\nHank Bauer and Mickey Mantle\nhomered in a 5-0 New York triumph.\nThe Yankees now- have a 13-\ngame lead in the American League,\ntheir largest of the year.\nFord, 29, a stubby southpaw who\nwon only 11 all last season because\nof arm trouble, struck out two and\ndidn't walk a man. He also drove\nin a run with a single.\nIt was the fourth whitewash of\nthe year for Ford, who has lost\nbut four. It also was his 102nd\nmajor league victory, his 24th over\nthe White Sox.\nEarly , Wynn, the veteran righthander who won the all-star game\nand has lost two straight since,\nwas given a quick shove toward\nhis eighth defeat against eight victories when Bauer led off. with his\nninth home run.\nMantle, who drove in two runs,\nwalloped, his 23rd.'homer in the\nseventh, a 410-foot drive to left\nfield while the switcher batted left-\nhanded.\nRighthanded sophomore Jack Urban pitched Kansas City out of a\nsix-game losing'streak as he subdued Washington Senators on four\nhits for a 4-0 night win.\nA three-run Kansas City outburst\nin the first inning proved to be\nenough for Urban: to .-register his\nseventh victory against five defeats. The Athletics added one in\nthe fourth as Pedro Ramos went\ndown to his seventh defeat against\nseven triumphs. '\nUrban's first shutout of the season was also his first complete\ngame since May 27.'\nAfter Covington's early work,\nMilwaukee added two more runs\nin the fifth to send Giant starter\nAl Worthington to the. showers. It\nwas his loss. 'Three relievers could\nnot put a stopper On the Braves,\nWorthington now has five.losses\nagainst e(ght wins. '\nThe long ball did the trick for\nLos Angeles. Shortstop Don Zimmer, out of the'Dodger lineup since\nJuly 6 with an injured knee and\nsore toe, returned to slam two\nhomers and drive, in four runs,\nCharlie Neal- and Steve- Bilko,\ncracked homers to add to the Red-\nlegs' troubles.\nCincinnati's' ace' Bob Purkey,\npitching on his 29th birthday, was\ntabbed with the loss. His record\nis now 10 wins ahd six losses,\nSWIM\nWEAR\nTrunks\nand\nSixth in Shoot\nBISLEY, England (Reuters) \u2014\nS. Sgt. F. Adams of Chilliwack,\nB.C., took-sixth place Monday in\nthe Duke of Cambridge competiti-.\ntion at the annual Bisley rifle-\nshooting competition. Shooting 10\nshots at 900 yards, Sgt. Adams\nscored 48 out of 50.\nMaj. B.* E. Besteck of Winnipeg\nplaced ninth.\nBoxers\n$3.95 -$5.95\nComa on in,\nthe water's\n. ,       COOL\nEMORY'S\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nBEG Athletes\nInto Action\nAs Rain Halts\nBy STEWART MacLEOD\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nCARDIFF (CP) \u2014 Commonwealth athletes Monday sweated\nthrough their stiffest workout in\nfour days as warm sunshine ushered in British Empire Games week.\nThe, athletes had been bogged down\nby rain since Friday.\nAll the activity wasn't confined to\nWales. In London Dr. Roger Bannister, first man to break the four-\nminute mile, started off from Buck'\ningham Palace with the Queen's\nmessage, to be read at the official\nopening Friday by her husband, the\nDuke of Edinburgh.\nBannister, one of 664 runners in\nthe four-day relay, trotted the first\nmile and got an official greeting\nfrom George Drew, Canada's high\ncommissioner in London, whose\ncountry was host for the 1954\ngames.\nELIMINATIONS THURSDAY\nWhile the Queen's message is expected to reach here in time for\nthe.6:30 p.m. official opening Friday, it will still be behind some of\nthe events. Because of a record entry of nearly 1,100 athletes from 37\ncountries, the Games federation\nhas decided on . elimination heats\nfor the men's 440 and 100-yard\nraces Thursday afternoon.\nGeneral manager Bob Osborne\nof the Canadian team said his athletes all are in top shape except\nfencer Leslie Krasa of Montreal,\nwho is recovering from a mild\nheart attack and has been with-,\ndrawn from the games.\nEagles Sign Pair\nPHILADELPHIA (AP) - Phil-\nadelphia Eagles announced Monday the signing of end Merle Flatt-\nley and tackle-guard Walt Mazur\nto National Football League contracts. \u2022 ' ,   .\nMazur, a former Pennsylvania\nState star, played last year with\nVancouver Lions of the WIFU.\nfi\n4 os. $1.29\n16 oz. $2.95\nCITY DRUG\n, \"Your Rexall Pharmacy\"\nFIGHTS\nBy The Associated Press\nHavana \u2014 Oscar Suarez, 114,\nCuba, outpointed Ray Ruiz, 113%,\nMexico, 10.\nHavana\u2014 Edwin Sykes, 11914,\nPanama, outpointed Orlando Lag-\nartija, 116, Cuba, 10.,\nDetroit \u2014 Henry Hank, 158%,\nDetroit, stopped Joe Fusco, 157%,\nWaterbury  Conn., 3.\nHollywood, Calif .\u2014Irish Tommy\nBain, 129, Los Angeles, outpointed\nEddie Gaspora, 128, Huntington,\nPark, CaK., 10.\nGoteburg, Sweden \u2014 Ingemar\nJohansson, 197%, Sweden, knocked\nout Heinz Neuhaus, 216%, Germany,'4.\nAmericas Greatest Sport Show\nTorifiie J Scream I Howl I\nIOWA\nCOtQRIU GHOSTS\nvs.\nADULTS60*\nNELSON\n- OUTLAWS\nTODAY\n6:30 p.m.\nCIVIC CENTRE\nGROUNDS\nYpitil Remember\nThis Show forever\nCHILDREN 25*\n\u25a0\u25a0\n\u25a0M\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. 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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"}]}}