Canadian Sleeping Bags Used by Everest Climbers REVOLUTIONARY ATOMIC DEVELOPMENT ANNOUNCED ,.,,, . ATT A MTTP (!TV i TV RCAh to Raise $5,000 as Canada s Contribution Towards Memorial Shirne if ( 1 OTTAWA (CP) A Canadian ...... i ,. 1 Tl. .. T". . .. VT - i . , i : At Ann . .. 1 1 , nMtmAnBTa!th AtlH v. r me umiea states todav successful "beec(ing" of atomic fuel that is prod 0Untfc least as much, or more, new fissionable material f','0" 01 11 up in tho process of making It. 18 bllm OTTAWA The Royal Cana- Canada s contribution towards ainea airmen wnc iosi incir uvea ; dian Air Force Association has the erection of a memorial' in the Second World War. sleeping bag designed to beat the Arctic cold was part of the equipment of the British team that conquered Mount ' Everest last week. Fatalities cf the RCAF's No. 6 isr w M It r i n The development is one of the most revolutions nic program. Tr in , atomic Prince Ruoert Dailv News Friday, June 5, 1953 'he toe for greater foot room. However, it's not quite the :icket for a casual fishing or hunting trip the retail cost is $115. Gus Soderlund Dies in South Bomber Group will be commemorated by the memorial which win be set up in Britain's historic The bag, an elaborate affair of overlapping zippers and down-filled nvlon, was designed York Minster Cathedral. ; It will feature an astronomi Prince Rupert 1 v i. ... .71 cal clock showing phases of the moon and solstice, and embodying signs of the zodiac. On the ; reverse side of the clock will be a ' map of the night skies showing j the constellations of the north- ern hemisphere. Representa-1 tions of the types of aircraft flown may also l-v i". Juried, j Under the dock will stand a , A 60-year-old former city em- ; olovee died in Vancouver Gen- , ril Hospital Monday. He was Gus Soderlund, former ! cemetery and parks caretaker. He had been ill for a year, and a month ago went to Vancouver ! for special treatment. Born in Gottenberg. Sweden. Mr. Soderlund came to Canada : uh u boy and had been it; B.C. for many years, employed inosi-' Ketchikan Wrangell - Petersburg Juneau and other Alaska Points by Fred van Veen, 44, of Ottawa and was one of 46 Canadian products winning this year's design merit awards in industry rponsored by the National Gallery. The lightweight bag only 8 j pounds was tested on the world's hiRhest mountain in 1951 and 1952 by Everest reconnaissance expeditions: under Eric Shipton. For this year's successful climb, the British team under Col. John Hunt ordered 12 of the bags from the Ottawa firm which manufactures them. D. W. Buchanan of the gallery's industrial design division said the sleeping bag had ap I FT3 CI n nrr i DR. J. W. T. SPIVKS, 46. of Saskatoon today was elected r esident. for 1953-54 of the Chemical Institute of Canada, at the college of graduate studies and head of the department of chemistry at -the Streams Run Hog Wild' In Montana GREAT FALLS, Mont. f lectern on which will lie the Book of Remembrance, listing the names of the men who did not return. One page of the book wi'1 br turned each week. Both clock and lectern will be enshrined in a framework of oak, surmounted by figures symbolic ly In the logins industry. He came to Prince kupert in 1043 and was hired by t:w city s caretaker of Fairview Cemetery in 1945. He- has no relatives here but is survived by a sister and a brother in Sweden. Funeral arrangements will be announced later. parently overcome one of the' main problems of Everest climb-icrs exhaustion from the biting of Courage, Skill, Sacrifice and ; Victory. On the sides will be j carved and colored the badges J and mottoes of the units which , operated from Northeast Eng-; MR LINES. j f hone 266 Office Opposite Host Office cold at night -Hog wild" mountain streams ' STANDARD KQflPMENT land. . I For the last two years the bag jto the hUls and threatened to j . ,or the RCAJ,,.S Arclic pilots ; liiunaaie me greater pan i i t nr ked Into their Arctic sur- vivol kits wiiii emergency food and other equipment. ! West Great Palls today. Rains which measured 4 21 In- It c.in stave off temperatures j ches here the Inst three days i shrine Is $30,000, of which about " hs so' far been raised. Others participating in financing tne project include the Royal Air Force, Royal Australian Air -- . pnti Royal New Zealand Air Force. A committee has been formed i-nder the chairmanship of Air Vice-Marshal G. E. Brooks, CB, OBE, of Toronto, who organized, and was Air Officer Commanding 6 Group from January 1943 until its low as 50 degrees below zero wiih its double covering th" Stopped lading Tli'iisday but! forecasters wid ii-.oie downpours j outer of nylon ancj the inner of were expected over the flood area j W()(,i Tle nvion keeps out wind East of the continental divide in tancj and ducks' down filling northwest Montana. keeps in the warmth. Overlap- Villagers were driven from ping zippers can be closed from Tracy, six' miles southeast of inside or outside and the sleeper Great Falls; Niehart, 36 miles ran put the parka hood In place southeast, and Monach, 13 miles .without putting his arms out 1 farther southeast. in the cold. It even turns up at the end of February 1944. Loggers Demands Similar sJ J.'.MiVt.V'-'iV;-:. f v llaMS J A Vw 'fcW 'ki CORONATION PARADE spectators mass in London's Trafalgar Square as daylight breaks over the city. This square is the one point where the Queen's procession passed three times. SOCIAL CREDIT Committee Rooms VANCOUVER Cf' Contract demands affecting 3,000 interior lumber workers probablv will be similar to those asked this year by the CIO International Woodworker? in negotiations with coist operators. Demands of the interior eroun ASK f0 SCOTIANO'I FAVOURITE SON JOHNNIE WALKER j were lined up at a conference of Civil Servants Publish" Paper For Members VICTORIA (CP) The B.C. Government Employees' Association has issued an eight-page newspaper to its 8.500 members' reminding them they are still without the right to arbitration. Publication of a newspaper by the association is an unusual occurrence. Much interest has ' ' . iwa locals in Kamloops and will now vo before the union policy committee, officials said Wednesday. On the coast, the IWA is seeking a 15-cent hourly increase for its 32.000 members over the cur OPEN DAILY , FOR TRANSPORTATION TO THE POLLS ON ELECTION DAY PHONE 173 tOH 1120 7 (Nil GOING '. iONo rent $1.46. IWA men from Prince Georpe. Kamloops. Cranbrook and Kelowna attended ' the Interior conference. been created by its appearance, Contract negotiations are ex coming, as it does, just before pected to open early in July election time. Try Daily New; Want Ads FINE OLD SCOTCH WHISKY Civil servants quickly repud- j iate any suggestion that the as- j sociation is seeking to play pol- ' itics, but some have acknow-' iedged that their publication : headed, "the story of your fight ; SMART LAWSON STYLE ior your civil right, appears .strategically timed. j CHESTERFIELDS The paper consists almost entirely of reproductions of news stories, editorials, letters to editors and adyertisements on the arbitration question which have DUtilled, Bleiuled Mottled in Scotland CoRlenu oi, JOHN WALKER & SONS LTD. Scotch Whisky Distillers f KltMAKNOCK, SCOUANO WILL Wool Frieze BLEND WITH MODERN OR TRADITIONAL Soring Construction i.u'.i. iimrm appeared in British Columbia's daily and weekly press. ? iW' i-c. ' : t t ii i ?"$ 21v 'v;i : . JNo man should have' a secret in the army 'I'i . i'i Unix vrtw-"nt is iint pub!isli4i) or at,piay?d by the Liquor Contra; Board or by the Qivirnm-nt ot british Columbia. , from his wife she Invariably finds out! , FIRST To Serve Your Every Need ?3 7rmvl of bom and evrjeoi in fie Army gives yoo a cb one fo broaden your horizon. Ihitty dayi .holidayt 9ry yar with pay it frt kind of vacation which want you con do mort let trior. TJSnlM 'CU l' ., I . ill. ' ''flit- V . :. .;! (Not exactly as illustrated I t 'f''jT- C V I MARINE HARDWARE , jji ( 1 -ix t..-t Young men trained to razor sharp condition complete masters of their weapons form the hard-hitting Infantry hatklxme ot our Canadian Army. Their job is Canada safety. In the Army today, there is a need for more young men to start Infantry training immediately. The life "is interesting and rewarding. Mm With ambition and intelligence can look for rapid promotion all the way up die hne-faster promotion than in almost any oilier career. medical The conditions of service -the ' and dental care the food and clothing -the . pay and long term pension plans make the Army a career that is really worthwhile. You are eligible you are 17 to 40 years g fJ to meet Army lest requirements. AflUanls should bring cerlifiaites or other proof of age u heii reporting fr '" fevr irltadi ore mtn from very pari oi Canada. They or your kind . . . Hying and working together makes H so. You'll bo proud of fhe men you serve with in fhe Canadian Army, Your needs are our business and we make it our business to see that you get what you need when you need it! This is whv we have on hand such a complete range of marine hardware . . : fittings and equio-ment of all types . . . tools, caulking compounds, the famous line of Sea King points and finishes, etc. Everything to get the fisherman and boat owner under way and off the ways for the rest of the season. Choice of Grey, Beige, Green, Red. 5 Only 2-Pce. Suites Special $189.50 ON ELECTION DAY JUNE 9th home. Drop in and see us. If you have need of special equipment let us help you locate it. V V- i, - 'r. f Vote As You Like -But Vote! Apply rlgli away - for full information write or visit the Army recruiting station nearest your No. 1 1 Personnel Depot, 4201 Wost 3rd Avenue, Vancouver, B.C. Army Information Centre, 119 AA Bty., RCA, Work Point Barracks, Victoria, B.C. A. MacKENZIE FURNITURE LTD. JoMe CANADIAN ARMY ACTIVE FORCE tfOYll EDWARD LIPSETT LTD. 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