Oxford University Observes 100th Anniversary Of Fam id Scholar, Empire Builder of Britain Atom Experts OSLO, Norway (CP Eleven! - be held at th, Nl , luntrics .so far have accepted Atomic In''tit,,t "-"utl vitatloos to mi International 11-13 it wUl Z, n''ar herf A mfen nee on atomic energy to fuence of ki,,i,e fir t .. a"i0 . in NurM RICHARD W1DMARK - DON TAYrrT OXFORD (API This univer-, He lftis Ceril Rhodes, born Kity city will see a .sentimental ! Jiriv 5, 1853. He gave his name pilgrimage next week to honor : to the Rhodes scholarships jmt a man who even in the 20th j SO years ago. century wasn't reconciled to j Lawyers, business men, efluca-having the American colonies Minnists and politicians from break away from England. ! British Commonwealth coun- 1 (W I' 6:50 - 9 ... i-jiimmmun GOBI" ' SI NDAV MIDMCIir Ovly RICHARD DENNING in ON THE haul- 'VOODOO "TARGET HONG KONG" 6 Ii Prince Rupert Daily News Saturday, June 28, 1953 CCIE1EIIB1II1B1IIIIIIII1III ., , , , p- h ' ULLJ If- I TIGER' 2 Years.Thro Teens vWv sr Girls' Summer STARTS MONDAY TWO FEATURrP MICKEY HOONEY - PEGOY RYAN ' ALL ASHORE" In Color by Technicolor ALSO Jon Hall - Mary Castle tries and the United States who once studied here will reunite ; to pay their respects to the errr-! pire builder who set up a trust fund to try to weld together outstanding scholars of the ; English-speaking nations. In the 50 jears some 2,500 students have taken Oxford degrees under the Rhodes trust. I Rhodes, a hard-headed colonist who amassed a fortune in South African goal and diamond mines, hoped to broaden youngsters from the dominions and help young Americans understand the mother country. He provided lo; 52 scholarships a year at Oxford, 32 from the United States, 20 from the dominions. Trustees later increased the dominion scholarships to 37. Canada gets 10 a year one for each province. Rhodes, who made no secret of his belief in the supremacy of English-speaking peoples, wanted to weld them into a power so great future wars would be impossible. He first envisioned a fusion into one empire with the United Suites an equal partner with England But before he. died in 1902. broken in health at 49, he had whittled his scheme down considerably. He finally ripririprl the WHEN THE REDSKINS RODE" Outdoor Wear. Sun Suits Dresses Bathing Suits Jeans Tee Shirts Shorts Underwear Blazers WALLACE'S DEPT. STORE In Super Cine-Color Times: B m . All Ashore 7:00 - 9:51 V"r Ql " " r"iiui Player, The; GAMMA GI.OBl'LIN, the anti-polio serum, is bJing obtained from human blood at the new pharmaceutical centre recently completed by Armour and Company In Chicago. The plant makes the substance exclusively from whole bhod provided by the Red Cross. The National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis is financing the operation with a $423,000 appropriation. The Foundation says it "appears to offer significant protection against paralytic polio for about six weeks," if injected into a person immediately after exposure. KNOS I'OIIAV DONALD O'CONNOR - DKI1H1E kl-vvrT? 7: - 9: p.m. in "I LOVE MELVIN" Mi Vim Ii '-v-, "" th Slory V " " " " i.T"" .- best way to bind Britain, her I Canada Protests Tariffs, Embargoes Effective July 1 on Exports to U.S. - (iiiiigii mwrnrn ibbibb PHONE in Ih lif. s dominions and the United States was through education. The Rhodes scholar, he insisted, must have moral character, powers of leadership, be athletic and show qualities of "manhood, truth, courage and devation to duty." Candidates must pass rigid tests before special selection committees. or OTTAWA ff' Through a combination of embargoes, quota restrictions and higher tariffs, the ed ad valorem tariff payment of 104 of the Defence Production 50 per cent of the product's Act. Section 104. the cause of value, on top of normal Amcrl- -jirotesls by Canada and other ex-can tari'f fs-t-anottirr virtual em- p-irting countries, expires June bargo. . ,30. Congress said it will not re- new it. l)KIKI SKIVIMni MILK , : ,, ,,. ,,h i,.,, ' Canada has made unofficial ;0 . hj;x2l W F" Sia Hours r. II 1(1 J V. l Ck ill 1(11 M ol the dried sl-lmmcd milk quota, '"I"' Woman ' , 1 J' .United States tightens her im-'port barriers July 1 against cheese, milk and other agricultural products. I Trade officials estimate the new curbs may reduce Canada's trade withi the United States by more than $2,000,000 a year. Canada in 1552 sold the United ; States about $2,750,000 worth of i dairy items hit by the curbs. After July 1. officials estimate, the shipments may be reduced ' " J Hi i..ip u m i-n E .-xrvrrfKmr '" I II 1IIII.I ill.. I I I ft, t JKW..,', - . -iiiiiiiii- - , ISPLAY BOOKUTt I but practically no part 'jf the butter quota. She is not interest-crt in the diied cream or malted I milk product markets and the j' eye-drop" quotas will discourage (anyone from getting into that field. CATALOGS and plans official protests on the new curbs, but the U.S. has an answer. The major problem in the U.S. is h-avy production and rising surpluses in government warehouses. To let trw US. Import pu.iid down would undoubtedly Invite more stockpiling, moie price-support on American sur- l-'.Uj05. ' These American surpluses are "considerable," says the trade depirtment and it concludes that TO t staiiwi m 14 STERLING HAYDEN KETCH I CAN She has flaxseed to ship, but the new tariff makes trade prohibitive. The new curbs go into effect under a proclamation issued by President Kisenhower under sec- WHERE CRAFTSMANSHIP COUNTS . . . COUNT ON US! Starts Monday TOTEM AND to about $600,000 a year. The drop may not be large when compared with Canada's over-all $2,300,000,000 exports to' the U.S. last year, but officials se? other implications in the move. OTHERS MAY FOLLOW The dairy restrictions, they fear, may be the beginning of it nay be "some time" before Evening Shows 7-9 p.m. a i s rnvnts tiihfj tion 22 of the Agricultural Ad- Canadian exports to the U.8. Dibb Printing Co. ALL ALASICA COMPANY UstMients Act, replacing section 'Improve." ( RADIO DIAL 1240 kcCFPR PULP AND SULPHITE UNION curbs in other categories of American imports. Prime Muiisler St. Laurent In his opening election speech June 2? said high-tariff exponents In (Subject to Change) .V.V.VW.V.VWAV.V.V Locol 708 w.v BATUIIDAT P M. 4-30 Mulvatlrm Army Pum. 5 fH) OK Ranch tians 9-15 Ktu Davln 5 SO Had Taylor 5:45 Rhvthm Pals 6:00 CBC Npws ' 6:0f Httludos AmluoH ; 8 30 Soiree a Qui-ljpc i 7:00 Hit Parade 7:30 Ray NorrH Qulntt I 8:00 Vancouver Theatre ,8 30 Whatcha Know Jx? i 9:00 The HuinrRtourlprH ! 0:3O Western Hit Parade 10:00 CBC Newt 10:10 ;BC News ilOJ.'v- To Be Announced I 10:30 Easy Listening 11:00 Weather Report 1 11-03 Fifth Arrivals 1 11 :0& Club -mil" SUNDAY AM SPECIAL MEETING LEGION AUDITORIUM Monday, June 29 7:30 p.m. Report of Wage Delegates. A STRIKE VOTE under the constitution will be taken. For oil members on Mondoy's 4-12 shift, a meeting will b held on Tuesday at 2:00 p.m. or the Metropole Hail. 0 oo. Ballad Time 9-ao Verier Hour IIIWI CM New. I n : I O CBC New 10 -.IS) -The Rmtoral Ion 10:30- Leiiter Reeltal U:0O Weutlier B.-Krrt and Ulna eft MONDAY VU 7 00-BC ll-.hertrien Jrtindct 7:15 Muslial Clfirk 7 SO H0 News: Weather riepol 7 Musical Cloek 1 W CBO New S.IO Here's Bill riiKXJ 8:15 Momlni; Sons . 8:30- MornliiK Uevolkiin 8 45 Little Concert 9:00 BI1C Newn and Coinnienlary 0 : 1 Musical Varieties 9:59 Time Burn;-. 10:00 -Mornlni! VUlt 10:15 Musical Prfa'te.n 10:80--!iC. Lloerul Talk 10 :35 Recorded Interlude II rOO Kindergarten ut llA All title ifouiulir Time 1 1 :2S Socrcd Talk 1 1 :3( Weather Henort I 1 :3 I Mesaaee' rei t'Xl I I .33 Rec. Int IH' Ucardlliavlan MeloUlea P M. iz rio Micl-Dnv Meimiea I2:1SCBC News 1 '2 - Pria;rarn Hes'imf l-i::0 BC. harm Broatlcw... la 5.T Keo Int. 1 :00 AfUTntm Concert 2:UO BC, Bclimil Broadcast 2 :30 Trans-Canada Matlneo, 3 1 5 Records for you 3 45 B C. ftcqtuuit Roundup 4:15 Maxlne Ware Show 4-30 The Mystery Horse 4 :45 Recorded Interlude 4 :55 Htock Quotatlona 5.00 The 0xk1 Old Daya 8:30 IBtindny MurnliiK Icvnul 9:00 HBC News and Commenlary 915 'Ifco Question Box 9:BO The Concerto v -s Time SlKiial r the U.S. are gaining strength. He Rdded : "The utmost vigilance and the greatest available wisdom and skill will be needed if Canada's interests in greater trade are to h promoted successfully in the U.S. and elsewhere in the world." Under the new curbs Canada's amall American Cheddar cheese market will be cut by half. The American market for dried buttermilk will be cut to one-twentieth of the 1952 size and its dried whole milk market virtually eliminated. Canada shipped about 1.500,000 pounds of cheddar south of the border last year. Officials consider Canada will be fortunate if he gets In about 700.000 pounds a year under the new curbs. FIR-REACHING (XT Import quotas for the whole world will be cut to 2,780,000 pounds a year from 9,500.000. Canada's dried buttermilk market likely will be chopped to a few hundred thousand pounds from 11.386,000 last year. The new curbs set the quota for the world it 496.000 pounds. Canada shipped about 1,500,000 pounds of dried whole milk into lhi U.S. last y.mr. The new woria quota is 7.000 pounds a virtual embargo and the end of Canada's V S. market in that product. Other world quotas under the I new curbs: 1 Butter, 707,000 pounds; dried Team. 500 pounds; dried skimmed milk. 1,807,000 pounds; mal-,pd milk products, 6,000 pounds; flaxseed and insced oil, an add i -A IP i iO OO B C. Gardener i 10:16 Just Mary IIO SO Wny of the Spirit 11:00- CBC Newi , ll:0:i Capitol Ri-)frt ' 1 :3f W.lelous Perlnrl 112:00 NBC Bummer Hym. Coneerta Ml. I 1:00 An Innocent Abroad ; 1 :30 Critically Speaking i i:0O Uddle ji'H-'s Yam 'i.'Ali European Music Shop ; i.JO CBC Newt b:05 ak the WeiithiTman 3:12 Weather Forecast 3:15 UN On the K'-cord ! 5:30 Distinguished Artlsta : 4:00 fiunday Chorale j 4 :30 Chember Music 5:00 Winnipeg Siinday Concert j B:0O "Big Train" i ' 6 :45t People, Places and Tliiuijs . 7:00 CBC News I 7:li Weekend Review l 7:20 Our Special Speaker ! 7:30 I.lttle Symphony Orch. 8 -OO Howard Cable Concert Iiamt 8.30 From the Operas 'M ..e modern comfort. U wiV to tr.vcl H' ,jvci time and money. It's the Fleet-Foot Runners ... FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY with the J LA DIES' and CIIILDKKN'S OXFORD STYLE. MEN'S AND HOYS' BOOT STYLE. your travel agent w. 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