16
RS - ;-, r. ,. Rundown Pep Up! T. 1hll'h hrlp "ptP Nants Of 1ne Ltd. ' .·. ., . . ,.;c• ' ' 1-,:p. , enne ee 1enna. COMPACT RUN DOWN? NEED THE DAILY. NEWS .1-dl1or Sedan I . ]· 1 - lull fi j>assenger size. .\ ,lllll . $2695· 00 A TONIC?? TAKE Nova Motors Ltd. BRICK'S TASTELESS \11 II I THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, 18, 19Gl (Price 7 Cents) --------------·-------- .. --. -·------ . --·- .. ··-·- ---------------- ________ , nnedy Calls For Greater U.S.- Canada Defence Effort ks Canadian elp for Latin States er1can B1· .\1.:\:; DONNELLY L'<::: .• llicoll Pt·e,;s Staff Writer \\';\ . L'f', --President called on ' .. , ::;,·t"r.H' :b rule in NATO defence and in I . · ttl Latin America. · ":,. 1 (,11· ·:rratcr defence effort. ·:·',iu: <Ill lnsloric to a joint silt · . II:' and Sl'nale. \\'as direded to all NATO I Thanks For That U.S. Pr.esident And Soviet Head To Hold Talks 1.0!1/DO!II 1 Hcut .. ,., • - A l.ahoa· mcmher ol Pm·lia. ment Wcdne;;day poke1! fun at the fit-st words of Y u r i {;ngnr!n . when he returned to earth. The Russians said Ga- garin declnred on landing: "Report to Premier Khrush· chev and the party that the mission is complete." F1·ank Tomney told the of Commons: · What do lhev think we are OI'CI' here? 'n is too funnv for words. 1f I h11<1 gone 'rountl lhr worltl and landed ll\ pa'ral'lmtr on lll)' in plowed fi!'ld, I woulcl han· <<lid: 'T h n k Christ :nr llwt.' " Bv WILLIAM KRASSER VIENNA ·!Reulet·s )-The Austrian govemmenl: went ahead Wednesday night with preparations for a: meelin,g here between and Premier Khrush- ehe\' during the first week in June . An Austrian government spokesmCin said official confirmation of the meeting could be expected at any 'moment. lie said "lhr sp•:ms mHdr rrt. P I t At to he rlclinih!'' and added: "1\'e Some l'rry reliable in .'···· .,11d :h1• l'n1· and told !he l•rr>idt•nt thai (';m. ar I amen hnpe tlwt the t:nited aud Pnris said Washington would .til·. yt'J·•II; ;I,• ,.,n., :;. ada has rrnchrd no dcd>ion on I llw Snl'ict l'ninn will inform us nouncl' I hat the meet . :rl<'':-: l'dl'il.lili- 0.\S !llclllhrr.lhip. A Glance nfrieially h)' at the will start .June 3 in Vienna. I h·:- ·n F11rn1 1 r .uul Thr lll'l'sidcnt rrpurtcd In lr>l." Pierre Salinger. Kenned:;'s . "r •rv·p-.· "' •'•<'ll· h;n·,. of his dr>ire lot· Thr l'nit('<l hm; press said in CAPS IN THE Station. L;ptiml.<, On!: 1\'!IHls lll<ll'l'Cd .• \\I'll ..... ,. rxtlillllled to nN•fly o:n•t.l· R.v TilE 1'.\:'\AillA:" Au>ll'ia infnt·malll• 11·helhP1' 11 1e the pres_icl_ent' di_scussed 11ith otherwise perfect par;Jde rehe; 1 rs<ll here . .\]a,· 15th. The Cmadian 1_\ir .. , In:•<' ··'"''' Iilii:- lril·s. hut without rhan- :\lay 17, 1961 co 1 ul<l 1 1 1 >e.hcld in Pnn!c. \!mtslcr D1efenhakrr getting readv for President .fohn F. Kennedv\ proposed Ca11adtan r·•·:rr-i:tt• .11•tl 1,,,,. nrlling to one ar<'a such as ut lac Jeen no appt oat 1 posstbthty of a me<'ttng •nth I , (' .. ·t· '" Latin America. The and Commons met from the Soviet llnion, the, Khrushchel'. :\'!Sit. h;ld 1ts honor gu<1rd from i\lannm.!Z Depot. St. .Jean. 'l:ue .. out ptac fo:· :n·:tH'I' 1'1- Die!enhaker abo was re- in joint session lor an addrhs spokesman told rcporlcr:;;. [ when the wind took the cars off two of the mcn.--1 UP! TelcphotrJI. . ;1 .\IHNII'fl .\.fl'· n' CanCi.\a. Jlortrd to ha1·e expressed inter.· by l 1 .S. President Kennedy wno: Communist bloc --- ------- _ .. __ · ------ - -·- ....... ---· r>t in the· decision, Canada to increase •rs' sources in Vienna said that as Re-Unl"ted · :·.- rl ;.:p(l' frnm .io1:1- to increaS(' the non-nuclear ca·' role in defence and for· far as the Russians are con- pabilities of U.S. forces. eign aid, i cerned, "it is lOO·pcr-cent cer- : lain" that the meeting will take! Conserl'ative and CCF :\IPs : place S t I H • E voted togeth_er in rejecting l...:b-j confirmed that sel'eral ars n IS yes OPPOSI!ton to_ second read·' leading officials of the. Rusiilan "Jrr. i! llli'.J!d 111g of a bill to mcrease mem- Embassv in Vienna had n·;r.-lfl>:!li!ity· oiJt OTTAWA fCPI - A squad of/ ber,hip or the CNR board of di- called io Moscow in connection rot. a n1tin11 lhat "star-gazers" confirms that rectors. with the meeting. ; rt·pon;Jhiluy." States. C!ags flyin_g_ on I Fisheries Minister Lean In Bonn, ii. foreign I the r .s. wr.-c . Parh_ament Htll for the v1stl of·. said 1 t r i n gent conservation spokesman sa1d West German 1 .. \mrrtcan :resident Kennedy h.ave the full I measures are needed for botJ Adenauer had been I . .;o stars, Works :'d_lmster Walker sports and commercial salmon , . of plans for the sum- 0\.\TIO:\ . 1 to}d an .applaudmg Commons ! fishermen on the Atlantic coast m1t meetmg by _a personal mes·! rrcrtrro a . ! to rehabilitate salmon runs. 1 sage fro,m dent Kennedy. i 1 AI thr slart' He saad he has sometJmes I Thursday May 18 1 In Washmgton, Undersecre-: 1! . minute suspected that Frank Howard : ' 1 tary of Stale Chester Bowies 1 . . ht< o! : I CCF -'- Skeena I, who complai.11· i The Commons meets at 11 1 told a Senate committee the; TORONTO <CPI - The Royal York Hotel strike here has re • united a fa. !her and son after a separa- tion of 30 years. Otto Kehnel. 51, a 1·alct at the· hotel, left Germany ii1 1930, headed for Western Canada, He lost track of his son Wilhelm, who wa1 In the German air force. Wilhelm came to Toronto se1·en years ago but could not trace his father until h!' saw his father's picture among picketers at the ho· i and in: ed Tuesday that some had only ; a.m. EDT on the bill. The! meeting got "tmder considera·l· rhamhr•·. ITt I·' 4R. had stars in his eyes. I Senate sits at 3 p.m. 1 lion" but no decision had l>een 11hted hy tel('\'i.;ion: ·---- ----------- lei. '"' his appt"al fol' ,·a. i1to tllr 0.\S. A JFK Tells Parliament Canadian Visit Rusk, Gromyko Propose All ·foreign Troops Quit Laos By JOIIX EARLE pre,cnterl lo the second sc"ion ;;isling- of li:dia as chain:nn I r tl 1 ·o 1f" · 1 1 e 1 ·· anrl C:mact;1 and Poland. GE!IIEPA fRculers1 - R:ts .• •;i o 1e I de 1\: .. '·· · ; Wednesday got in first with P''O· Ln.os. ?=' Sol'tct ore1gn The Soriet proposals >I'CI'f : posals for a pcare sctlleiJlenl tc1. Ga om:- ko. . presented aflel' l. .S. Stair ; in Laos but the \\'est 1\'n.o J·:,,t 'I he ctcclarat_lon' railed fnr a n:tarv Ru'!' lou\-: !he flollr [or ·' 1 1 1 I 1 1 lite iir't timr to onlline d .... :as quick to point out serious neutra an1 11\tl'penr rn ·""' 'hitches in lhrm. and the rrmol'al of all American >I;Hirl. · mtlilarv pcr>ot111el from 1111' Hu•k 11'<111>rd lite : The proposals, in lhr form of Southc;,, 1 _\,ian nation within :10 that a i two draft rlrelaralion,,, We're · " · 1 1 ·r 1 ............ ___ da1·s from the rom into force tum wonlrl r e1·r up t rc 1r of· an\· agrrrmenl he. \ell · win;.! coni inn d . readied. the truce in Gronll'ko that under tnr The ,\mrrican dclrgalc 1 .. Of Faith txtrrnal .\fl;un; 1 By ARCH MacKENZIE 1 and memhers of Parliament hours in the morning and co;1- life while l'.S. mu:.t and fon·rd lahor of the t'om- !aid tlir decision 1 CanadLan Preli!l Staff Writer i crowded the Commons cham· i finrd business to the usual ques-. stand lor election. · nmnist s em JH'O<hlc!' lliH' only it i; · OTTAWA tCPl - President her. lion period and second readin;:, There was that "lofty expres- aft<:'r another." nu:;;sian· proposal>, no· surcd lhr conference the .\ntr•·· strings would he att<Jchr.rt lo, il'ans hal'r "no military haot'-' rcnnomie ai!l In l.aos anti nn in Laos and wa11t none ... 111 iIi l a r \' or ha . Husk':-; ;.;pcreh was ;::reeled \\Ollie! he ·allowed in !he 11 ith a nell' round of dom. . from Communist C'hiua. ll'hirh of Canadians i Kennedy told Parliament Wed· The l!.S. Iemier stood on the -approval in principle with the sion of statesmanship" on the mo1 ,_ : nesday that his Canadian visit I'U.I( hclow the speaker's Liberals dissenting-to bill in- i faces of Canadian senators, he · nl>o drelarcd · is an act of faith-faith in the chair, his hands resting on a creasing membership of Ine · said-an expression indicnting · lo 11 ork out ar- : capacity of two good neighbot'S leclcm. His brcnzed face was CNR hoat·d of directors to 12 i they would not have to place lor con I r o I of to meet any problem and faith bathed in the harsh glow of l.'i from sel'en. 1 their cause before the people 1 nuclm thnt in the cause of freedom itself. telel'ision lights. "Geography has m n d e us 1 again. acccelahlr to othcl' In a 20.minute address, he re- The pt·esident was welcomed neighbors," :VIr. Kennedy said.· Complete attention marked· cited the challenges confron!ing by Prime :.linish•r Dielenbaker "llistory has made us friends. his urging that Canada intens1fy : of cnntrnl has i the free world as well as Its as a scholar, authur, Economics has made us part· its position in regard to tn the Cn. · h o p e s, strengths and weak- statesman and bearer of a great ners. And necessity has m'IJe whtle we s t e r n hemisphere' long .<ludy on nesses. responsibility as "leader of tile us allies. Those whom nature through the Organization of Romarr mli- It was the key appearance of world's 'most powerful nation." hath so joined together, let no American Stales. . Wtlh a visit that began Tuesday. A SHORT SITTING man put asunder," Loudest applause came when Canada· rare joint assembly or Senators The Commons sat only two The former senator for he said Nort11 American farms control nrer their a Canadian •·cto achusetls drew quick could p r o d u c e all the food St t• M• with a reference to the fact Can- needed by a hungry world 1 in Parliament agna 10. n, . ISery ada's __ senators for "while __ collective farms II, by radio and tele1·i: Canada, wa. 1 the Face Cong·o Republic the Pre;ident and for 2•; hours in By LYNN HEINZERLING 1 succeed I.umumba after n•s 1 .. LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo death three months ago have e. 'IS· fAPl U I t d l'ttl h prob. ; . . - . nemp oymen,. creep- one 1 e to rel'erse t e Jml· tng mC!ahon, stagnalton and gerous course. indica! d r I misery confront The Congo 10 More than hall the working e a t e r- months after independence '!r no ma.ior po!icv . · 1 outside the - 1 .' for o• Patrice Lumumba the postal 1 . 1st provtnce ol Katanga Is Ul!· !tiler · · · !tde. . clerk • turned-premier, put employed. The central govern· Dielen.l new nation on the road to eco- ment oper11tes at an average co:nmitment disaster, and. ., monthly deficit or atd h)· Canada .Joseph Kasavubu and the mef. Exports have fallen nearly 50 I or elsewhere, fective government named to per cent. Deterioration has cut the value of the Congolese franc ........ 40 ··•••••· 39 55 54 Nfld. Skies THURSDAY, MAY 18 Sunset today .. 7:311 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow .•..• 4; 19 a.m. Moonset tonight ..... 11:01 p.m. almost in half. j In wide areas of the country, ' the bush is creeping over valu- able plantations and interi-Jr roads, essential for movement of the country's cotton, rubber and palm kernels to the main transport arteries, are disap- pearing. CATASTROPHE SEEN Pat LONDON IAPl - Philip Wednesday a I' c a friendly p<Jt on the hack lo his brother in law, Anlony for tackling a tough joh. There has been talk that all is not sweetness and light between them. Philip visited the council o! industrial design where Tony, husband of Princess works as an unsalaried ie- sign consultant. The duke noted critici3m titat the government - spon· sored council gives its awards to things that look fine bitt won't work, saying: "The centre is not and ne1•er was intended, '" attempt to test the mechanical efficiency any of the pro- ducts shown here. ''Therefore, I was to hear that Ton\' .lones ha.1 heen ·put on this problem. and I wou!fl like h congratulate him for taking ,Jn a job bristling with difficul- ties.'' Squelches Reports or f i eiab. hoii'PI'r!'. dl'ii,·crcd a scathin;: rlcnunciJ· halurd when Gromykn outlined tion of ,\merican r o I i c Y •n the operalion of machinery lor Southeast Asia Tucsda)'. that a truce is: The official Conununist f'h:- honored in Laos. ncse spokesman accused Rusli Thev predicl('d long nnd '1a1 d of "sowing the seeds of new di• bargaining on such questions as; ficulties for the conference. ·• . the Russian jlroposals for tl;e · A British spokesman said 1t functions of the three - po,.·er was too early for a considered international control commis- comment on Gromyko's pr3pO- : sian, now attempting to 1·erify sals, but they "apJl('ar to con- ! a cease-fire in Laos. lain so me constructive tle- ' Abraham Chayes. legal ad· ments." I l'iser to the American dele;<a- Rusk also termed a matter of pointed out that the Rus· "first importance'' tile ' sian proposals carried a "clou-1 by the conference of detatled L,· 1 ble-hnrrelled" 1·eto o1·cr the op-1 structions to_ the three countr} eration of the commission, eon- truce comnussmn. ------- -----·----- i ------ 1 Eichmann Refused To Clean Up Belsen .JERL'SALEj! rRcuters • - about 13,0110 unburied cor;:>oes \'azi official in 1943 asked AJo\f I and a few days later some to clean up Bc';cn i 13,000 other Bclsen inmates died I t' concentration camp hecause 1t: of typhus and starva 10n. might . gil'e Germany a the documents sub- ; nallll! abroad, the Eichmann I m11ted Wednesday wa;; that J trial was told Wednesday. i showed Eichmann re]eclmg quests for Jews to leave Ger. The recommendation w a s man·occupied territory lor UD· made by Eberhard von Th-1d- occupied France because of den, a .Jewish affairs expert m "the coming final solution of the Nazi foreign ministry, after the problem of the European I a tour of Bel sen in 1943. J_e_w_·s_. '_' -------- He warned Eichmann, on trial LONDO:"{ IRcutcrsl - fi\C here for his role in the wartime THE COUNTRY PARSON American wife of Britain's re-I Nazi extermination of Jews, luctant peer poured cold water that because of "completely tn- We d n e s d a y on reports 'he adequate" conditions, would run lor parliament if her might give the Jews "materbI husband is not allowed· to 1 1ke for stepping up atrocity prop- his seat in the House of Com- 1 aganda abroad." ....... 39 ·- "' First 9uarter .... May 22 55 .. .. .. .. 45 61 TIDE_S A United Nations economist said the Congo's p r e s e 11 t course, "if not checked in will end fn complete catas- trophe." , mons. Belsen had been a prisoner of NUERNBERG JUDGE TESTIFIES-JERUSALEM, Israel: I Political . quarters reported war camp for Russians when :·· ..... 42 69 High 10:03 a.m., 10:0!1 p.m. " .... 37 Low a:111 a.m., 4:05 p.m. THURSDAY, MAY 18 b Stan ' 1 OVe the Moon. in tb Visible Plallets e west . and Stt ·" ..................... 9:34 p.m. l urn, low in south t 1'26 ow in eas • • • • • • • . a.m. east .... , 3 . 43 (All U •. . • • • • • • . • • • • • • • . . a.m. Illes Newfoundland Standard) ' I . ' Michael A. Musmanno of. the Pennsylvania Supreme Court plctur· / Mrs. Wedgwood Benn von Thadden visited it. Of 18,- ed May 15th, during the trial of Adolf Eichmann. Eichmann's :was contesting the 1 ooo Russians held in defensa lawyer lost a Ien•thy legal argument to keep the former !seat 1 n Bm;tol. . 17.0110 died. A major. source of the diffi· " c1 "B 1 culties was the refusal of the presiding judge of the Nuernberg War Crimes Trial off the But she commcnte : r!sto UNAWARE OF FATE . Copper . r1'ch Katanga provinte witness stand. Musmanno struck a hard blow at the defense does wtheant me. Yf 1 hatl h' 1 1 E' h . . b 1 wants 15 man 1 e ec e . In IS repor o 1c mann, to recognize the central govern- story that E•chmann was an obscure officer blindly o ey ng · von Thadden said the Jews who ment, The expected revenue orders that came down from the top of the Nazi high command./ Hedr dWeJhg- were to go to Belsen would oe l K t ·f th t · · 1 h f th "EI ,_ , ,, , woo enn, 1 n e r 1 e 1s rof. a anga or e He swore that Eichmann was n c arge o e nsa.,.gruppen, 1 father's title of Viscount Stans- bound to find out what happened of m.dependenee was a flying squad of Nazis especially created to e1tennlnate Jews. I gate last year. Benn, a Labor to the Russians there. At tne at slightly more than $100,000.· This was the first time In five weeki that Eichmann showed any ! member tried to renounce time, the Jews were unaware of 00:0• near.ly ha_lf of !:he budget interest In a witness. As Musmanno unfolded· his story, Elch· i title in 'order to stay in the their fate in Nazi camps. mann turned slightly pale Inside biz bullet·proof prisoner's dDI!k. j C011!mons. but the House ruled When British troops entered ment did not receive a fr,nc. -(UPI RadJotelephoto). agamst hun. BeLsen in April, 1945, they found "A lot of talking is done by folks who don't have anything to say-but have things they don't want to hear." / I l .I I I I I I I :I I . . :! i :: . r t i. ' ' I t I I

1-,:p. , RS enne ee 1enna. - Memorial University of …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...enne ee 1enna. COMPACT RUN DOWN? THE DAILY. NEWS NEED .1-dl1or Sedan

  • Upload
    vuquynh

  • View
    217

  • Download
    1

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: 1-,:p. , RS enne ee 1enna. - Memorial University of …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...enne ee 1enna. COMPACT RUN DOWN? THE DAILY. NEWS NEED .1-dl1or Sedan

RS -;-, r.

,.

Rundown Pep Up!

T.1hll'h hrlp "ptP

!Nants ~es Of

• .1ne

iS

'' Ltd.

' ~"' ~·~·-· .·. ., . . ,.;c• ' ' 1-,:p. , •

enne ee 1enna. COMPACT

RUN DOWN?

NEED

THE DAILY. NEWS .1-dl1or Sedan I. ]·1- lull fi j>assenger size.

.\ ,lllll . •

$2695·00

A TONIC??

TAKE

Nova Motors Ltd. BRICK'S

TASTELESS

\11 II I THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, ~lAY 18, 19Gl (Price 7 Cents) --------------·--------.. --. -·------ . --·- .. ··-·- ---------------- ________ ,

nnedy Calls For Greater U.S.- Canada Defence Effort ks Canadian

elp for Latin States • er1can

B1· .\1.:\:; DONNELLY L'<::: .• llicoll Pt·e,;s Staff Writer

\\';\ . L'f', --President K.ennecl~· called on ' .. , ::;,·t"r.H' :b rule in NATO defence and in I

. · :-c,nrl·i~dl,· ttl Latin America. · ":,. 1 (,11· ~~ ·:rratcr defence effort. prc~entcd ·:·',iu: in~ <Ill lnsloric ~peech to a joint silt in~~ · . II:' and Sl'nale. \\'as direded to all NATO

I Thanks For That • U.S. Pr.esident And Soviet Head To Hold Talks

1.0!1/DO!II 1 Hcut .. ,., • - A l.ahoa· mcmher ol Pm·lia. ment Wcdne;;day poke1! fun at the fit-st words of Sol'i~t Sll~1cemnn Y u r i {;ngnr!n . when he returned to earth.

The Russians said Ga­garin declnred on landing: "Report to Premier Khrush· chev and the party that the mission is complete."

F1·ank Tomney told the llou~e of Commons: · What do lhev think we are OI'CI'

here? 'n is too funnv for words. 1f I h11<1 gone 'rountl lhr worltl and landed ll\ pa'ral'lmtr on lll)' r~el in ~ plowed fi!'ld, I woulcl han· <<lid: 'T h ~ n k Christ :nr llwt.' "

Bv WILLIAM KRASSER VIENNA ·!Reulet·s )-The Austrian govemmenl:

went ahead Wednesday night with preparations for a: meelin,g here between Kenned~' and Premier Khrush­ehe\' during the first week in June .

An Austrian government spokesmCin said official confirmation of the meeting could be expected at any

'moment. lie said "lhr nwelin~ sp•:ms mHdr rrt.

P I• t At to he rlclinih!'' and added: "1\'e Some l'rry reliable som-rc~ in .'···· .,11d :h1• l'n1· ·~I and told !he l•rr>idt•nt thai (';m. ar I amen hnpe tlwt the t:nited Stat~s aud Pnris said Washington would .til·.

yt'J·•II; ;I,• ,.,n., :;. ada has rrnchrd no dcd>ion on I llw Snl'ict l'ninn will inform us nouncl' Fritl~y I hat the meet in~· . :rl<'':-: l'dl'il.lili- 0.\S !llclllhrr.lhip. A Glance nfrieially h)' ~'riday at the 1~- will start .June 3 in Vienna. I

h·:- ·n F11rn1 1r .uul Thr lll'l'sidcnt 1\'a~ rrpurtcd In lr>l." Pierre Salinger. Kenned:;'s . "r •rv·p-.· "' •'•<'ll· h;n·,. spok~n of his dr>ire lot· Thr l'nit('<l St11t~~ hm; ~s:;ed press ~ecrelnrv, said in Olt~<·a CAPS IN THE WIND~R.C.A.F. Station. L;ptiml.<, On!: Slron~ 1\'!IHls lll<ll'l'Cd ~' 1 · .• ~;,;;, \\I'll ..... ,. rxtlillllled ~id to nN•fly o:n•t.l· R.v TilE 1'.\:'\AillA:" I'Rt:~s Au>ll'ia infnt·malll• 11·helhP1' 111e the pres_icl_ent' di_scussed 11ith otherwise perfect clres~ par;Jde rehe;1rs<ll here . .\]a,· 15th. The Cmadian 1_\ir

.. , In:•<' ··'"''' Iilii:- lril·s. hut without ~Jll'rific rhan- Wrdnrsda~·. :\lay 17, 1961 hmerti111~ co1ul<l1 11>e.hcld in V~e~t~1a· Pnn!c. \!mtslcr D1efenhakrr tlt~,Force getting readv for President .fohn F. Kennedv\ proposed Ca11adtan r·•·:rr-i:tt• .11•tl 1 ,,,,. nrlling to an~· one ar<'a such as ut ti~I'P lac Jeen no appt oat 1 posstbthty of a me<'ttng •nth I • • • • • , • • (' .. ·t· .· '"

Latin America. The ~enate and Commons met from the Soviet llnion, the, Khrushchel'. :\'!Sit. h;ld 1ts honor gu<1rd from i\lannm.!Z Depot. St. .Jean. 'l:ue .. out ptac lcln.~. fo:· ~ :n·:tH'I' 1'1- ~lr. Die!enhaker abo was re- in joint session lor an addrhs spokesman told rcporlcr:;;. [ when the wind took the cars off two of the mcn.--1 UP! TelcphotrJI.

. ;1 J..1~tn .\IHNII'fl .\.fl'·

~.rJir': n' CanCi.\a. Jlortrd to ha1·e expressed inter.· by l1.S. President Kennedy wno: Communist bloc rliplom~tic --- ------- _ .. __ · ------ - -·- ....... ---· r>t in the· pre~idcnt's decision, m·~:ed Canada to increase •rs' sources in Vienna said that as Re-Unl"ted

· :·.- rl ;.:p(l' frnm .io1:1- to increaS(' the non-nuclear ca·' role in ~ATO defence and for· far as the Russians are con­pabilities of U.S. forces. eign aid, i cerned, "it is lOO·pcr-cent cer­

: lain" that the meeting will take! Conserl'ative and CCF :\IPs : place

S t I H • E voted togeth_er in rejecting l...:b-j Th~y confirmed that sel'eral ars n IS yes ~rat OPPOSI!ton to_ second read·' leading officials of the. Rusiilan "Jrr. i! llli'.J!d m~an 111g of a bill to mcrease mem- Embassv in Vienna had bee~

n·;r.-lfl>:!li!ity· oiJt OTTAWA fCPI - A squad of/ ber,hip or the CNR board of di- called io Moscow in connection rot. a n1tin11 lhat "star-gazers" confirms that a~l 1 rectors. with the meeting. ;

rt·pon;Jhiluy." Unit~d States. C!ags flyin_g_ on I Fisheries Minister ~lac Lean In Bonn, ii. foreign minis~!')' I 1r~ the r .s. wr.-c . Parh_ament Htll for the v1stl of·. said 1 t r i n gent conservation spokesman sa1d West German 1

ir:t~r .. \mrrtcan M· :resident Kennedy h.ave the full I measures are needed for botJ ~hancellor Adenauer had been I . .;o stars, Works :'d_lmster Walker sports and commercial salmon , m~ormed . of plans for the sum-

0\.\TIO:\ . 1 to}d an .applaudmg Commons ! fishermen on the Atlantic coast ~ m1t meetmg by _a personal mes·! rrcrtrro a Ibn~., \\ednesd~L . ! to rehabilitate salmon runs. 1 sage fro,m ~rest dent Kennedy. i

1 AI thr slart' He saad he has sometJmes I Thursday May 18 1 In Washmgton, Undersecre-: 1! hi~ ~o . minute ~ suspected that Frank Howard : ' 1tary of Stale Chester Bowies 1

. . ht< ~utlirnre o! : I CCF -'- Skeena I, who complai.11· i The Commons meets at 11 1 told a Senate committee the;

TORONTO <CPI - The Royal York Hotel strike here has re • united a fa. !her and son after a separa­tion of 30 years.

Otto Kehnel. 51, a 1·alct at the· hotel, left Germany ii1 1930, headed for Western Canada, He lost track of his son Wilhelm, who wa1 In the German air force.

Wilhelm came to Toronto se1·en years ago but could not trace his father until h!' saw his father's picture among picketers at the ho· i and gu~;ls in: ed Tuesday that some had only ; a.m. EDT on the C~R bill. The! meeting got "tmder considera·l·

rhamhr•·. ITt I·' 4R. had stars in his eyes. I Senate sits at 3 p.m. 1 lion" but no decision had l>een 11hted hy tel('\'i.;ion: ·---- -----------

lei.

'"' tJ,ou~htrnl ~~­his appt"al fol' ,·a. i1to tllr 0.\S. A JFK Tells Parliament Canadian Visit

Rusk, Gromyko Propose All ·foreign Troops Quit Laos

By JOIIX EARLE pre,cnterl lo the second sc"ion ;;isling- of li:dia as chain:nn • I r tl 1 • ·o 1f" · 1 1 e 1 ·· anrl C:mact;1 and Poland. GE!IIEPA fRculers1 - R:ts .• •;i o 1e •·.P0 1~·cr ~ I de 1\: .. '·· ·

; Wednesday got in first with P''O· Ln.os. ?=' Sol'tct I· ore1gn .lin~-;. The Soriet proposals >I'CI'f

: posals for a pcare sctlleiJlenl tc1. Ga om:- ko. . presented aflel' l. .S. Stair ~,,,._ ; in Laos but the \\'est 1\'n.o J·:,,t 'I he ctcclarat_lon' railed fnr a n:tarv Ru'!' lou\-: !he flollr [or

·' 1 1 1 I 1 1 lite iir't timr to onlline d .... :as quick to point out serious neutra an1 11\tl'penr rn ·""' 'hitches in lhrm. and the rrmol'al of all forct~n American >I;Hirl. · mtlilarv pcr>ot111el from 1111' Hu•k 11'<111>rd lite conlcr~arr : The proposals, in lhr form of Southc;,,1 _\,ian nation within :10 that a "hi~hh· dan;:crm~> ~dtna· i two draft rlrelaralion,,, We're · " · 1 1 ·r • 1 ............ ___ da1·s from the rom in~ into force tum wonlrl r e1·r up t rc 1r

of· an\· agrrrmenl th::~t mi~ht he. \ell · win;.! ron:r~ coni inn d . readied. 1·iol:rlin~ the truce in Lan~.

Gronll'ko ~aid that under tnr The ,\mrrican dclrgalc 1 .. Of Faith txtrrnal .\fl;un; 1 By ARCH MacKENZIE 1 and memhers of Parliament hours in the morning and co;1- life while l'.S. ~enators mu:.t and fon·rd lahor of the t'om­!aid tlir decision

1

CanadLan Preli!l Staff Writer i crowded the Commons cham· i finrd business to the usual ques-. stand lor election. · nmnist s )'~I em JH'O<hlc!' lliH' only wh~n it i; · OTTAWA tCPl - President her. lion period and second readin;:, There was that "lofty expres- 'horta~e aft<:'r another."

nu:;;sian· proposal>, no· roliti~al surcd lhr conference the .\ntr•·· strings would he att<Jchr.rt lo, il'ans hal'r "no military haot'-' rcnnomie ai!l In l.aos anti nn in Laos and wa11t none ... 111 iIi l a r \' pcr~onnrl or ha . .;.·~; Husk':-; ;.;pcreh was ;::reeled \\Ollie! he ·allowed in !he kin~- 11 ith a nell' round of cbat·.~e:• dom. . from Communist C'hiua. ll'hirh of Canadians i Kennedy told Parliament Wed· The l!.S. Iemier stood on the -approval in principle with the sion of statesmanship" on the

t~r mo1 ,_ : nesday that his Canadian visit ~reen I'U.I( hclow the speaker's Liberals dissenting-to ~ bill in- i faces of Canadian senators, he · nl>o drelarcd · is an act of faith-faith in the chair, his hands resting on a creasing membership of Ine · said-an expression indicnting

· lo 11 ork out ar- : capacity of two good neighbot'S leclcm. His brcnzed face was CNR hoat·d of directors to 12 i they would not have to place lor con I r o I of to meet any problem and faith bathed in the harsh glow of l.'i from sel'en. 1 their cause before the people 1

nuclm wcaron~ thnt in the cause of freedom itself. telel'ision lights. "Geography has m n d e us 1 again. acccelahlr to othcl' In a 20.minute address, he re- The pt·esident was welcomed neighbors," :VIr. Kennedy said.· Complete attention marked·

cited the challenges confron!ing by Prime :.linish•r Dielenbaker "llistory has made us friends. his urging that Canada intens1fy : of cnntrnl has i the free world as well as Its as a scholar, l'etcr~n. authur, Economics has made us part· its position in regard to th~,

tn the Cn. · h o p e s, strengths and weak- statesman and bearer of a great ners. And necessity has m'IJe whtle we s t e r n hemisphere' long .<ludy on nesses. responsibility as "leader of tile us allies. Those whom nature through the Organization of Romarr mli- It was the key appearance of world's 'most powerful nation." hath so joined together, let no American Stales.

. Wtlh Ameri~~n a visit that began Tuesday. A SHORT SITTING man put asunder," Loudest applause came when ~arh~ads Canada· rare joint assembly or Senators The Commons sat only two The former senator for M~ss- he said Nort11 American farms control nrer their

a Canadian •·cto achusetls drew quick laught~r could p r o d u c e all the food lirin~. St t• M• with a reference to the fact Can- needed by a hungry world 1

in Parliament • agna 10. n, . ISery ada's __ senators ~-e_appointed for "while __ ~~-the collective farms II,

by radio and tele1·i: Canada, wa.1 the

~:d:7~~~:~~r~\~~~ Face Cong·o Republic the Pre;ident and llm~tn Diefenba~Pr

for 2•; hours in By LYNN HEINZERLING 1 succeed I.umumba after n•s ~if'tc 1.. LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo death three months ago have

e. 'IS· fAPl U I t d l'ttl h • rangin~ prob. ; . . - . nemp oymen,. creep- one 1 e to rel'erse t e Jml· • tng mC!ahon, stagnalton and gerous course.

indica! d r I misery confront The Congo 10 More than hall the working e a t e r- months after independence

'!r no ma.ior po!icv . · 1 populati~n outside the sec~ssion· -1.' a~kcd for o• Patrice Lumumba the postal

1

. 1st provtnce ol Katanga Is Ul!· !tiler · · · • !tde. . clerk • turned-premier, put th~ employed. The central govern·

~lr. Dielen.l new nation on the road to eco- ment oper11tes at an average co:nmitment ~n ,~nomic disaster, and. Presido!~l ., monthly deficit or $12,000.~0~. atd h)· Canada .Joseph Kasavubu and the mef. Exports have fallen nearly 50 I or elsewhere, fective government named to per cent. Deterioration has cut

the value of the Congolese franc

........ 40

··•••••· 39 55 54

Nfld. Skies THURSDAY, MAY 18

Sunset today .. 7:311 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow .•..• 4; 19 a.m. Moonset

tonight ..... 11:01 p.m.

almost in half. j

In wide areas of the country, ' the bush is creeping over valu­able plantations and interi-Jr roads, essential for movement of the country's cotton, rubber and palm kernels to the main transport arteries, are disap­pearing.

CATASTROPHE SEEN

Friend~y Pat LONDON IAPl - Prin;;~

Philip Wednesday ~ a I' c a friendly p<Jt on the hack lo his brother • in • law, Anlony Armstron~-.Jones, for tackling a tough joh. There has been talk that all is not sweetness and light between them.

Philip visited the council o! industrial design where Tony, husband of Princess ~largarct. works as an unsalaried ie­sign consultant.

The duke noted critici3m titat the government - spon· sored council gives its awards to things that look fine bitt won't work, saying:

"The centre is not intend~d.

and ne1•er was intended, '" attempt to test the mechanical efficiency o~ any of the pro­ducts shown here.

''Therefore, I was delight~d

to hear that Ton\' t\l'mstron~­.lones ha.1 heen ·put on this problem. and I wou!fl like h congratulate him for taking ,Jn

a job bristling with difficul­ties.''

Squelches Reports

1\'r,t~rn or f i eiab. hoii'PI'r!'. dl'ii,·crcd a scathin;: rlcnunciJ· halurd when Gromykn outlined tion of ,\merican r o I i c Y •n the operalion of machinery lor Southeast Asia Tucsda)'. ~uarcntecing that a truce is: The official Conununist f'h:­honored in Laos. ncse spokesman accused Rusli

Thev predicl('d long nnd '1a1 d of "sowing the seeds of new di• bargaining on such questions as; ficulties for the conference. ·• . the Russian jlroposals for tl;e · A British spokesman said 1t functions of the three - po,.·er was too early for a considered international control commis- comment on Gromyko's pr3pO-

: sian, now attempting to 1·erify sals, but they "apJl('ar to con­! a cease-fire in Laos. lain so me constructive tle­' Abraham Chayes. legal ad· ments." I l'iser to the American dele;<a- Rusk also termed a matter of ~lion, pointed out that the Rus· "first importance'' tile i~suan~ ' sian proposals carried a "clou-1 by the conference of detatled L,· 1 ble-hnrrelled" 1·eto o1·cr the op-1 structions to_ the three • countr} eration of the commission, eon- truce comnussmn. ------------·-----i ------

1 Eichmann Refused To Clean Up Belsen .JERL'SALEj! rRcuters • - A· about 13,0110 unburied cor;:>oes

\'azi official in 1943 asked AJo\f I and a few days later some ~:ichmann to clean up Bc';cn i 13,000 other Bclsen inmates died

I t' concentration camp hecause 1t: of typhus and starva 10n. might . gil'e Germany a h~rll ~mong the documents sub­

; nallll! abroad, the Eichmann I m11ted Wednesday wa;; o~e that J trial was told Wednesday. i showed Eichmann re]eclmg r~:­

quests for Jews to leave Ger. The recommendation w a s man·occupied territory lor UD·

made by Eberhard von Th-1d- occupied France because of den, a .Jewish affairs expert m "the coming final solution of the Nazi foreign ministry, after the problem of the European

I a tour of Bel sen in 1943. J_e_w_·s_. '_' --------He warned Eichmann, on trial

LONDO:"{ IRcutcrsl - fi\C here for his role in the wartime THE COUNTRY PARSON American wife of Britain's re-I Nazi extermination of Jews, luctant peer poured cold water that because of "completely tn­W e d n e s d a y on reports 'he adequate" conditions, Be!s~n would run lor parliament if her might give the Jews "materb I husband is not allowed· to 1 1ke for stepping up atrocity prop­his seat in the House of Com- 1 aganda abroad." ....... 39 ·­"' First 9uarter .... May 22

55 6~ .. .. .. .. 45 61 TIDE_S

A United Nations economist said the Congo's p r e s e 11 t course, "if not checked in lim~ will end fn complete catas­trophe."

, mons. Belsen had been a prisoner of NUERNBERG JUDGE TESTIFIES-JERUSALEM, Israel: ~udge I Political . quarters reported war camp for Russians when

:·· ..... 42 69 High 10:03 a.m., 10:0!1 p.m. " .... 37 ~~ Low a:111 a.m., 4:05 p.m.

THURSDAY, MAY 18

b Proml~~ent Stan ' 1 OVe the Moon.

in tb Visible Plallets e west .

and Stt ·" ..................... 9:34 p.m. l urn, low in south t 1'26 ow in eas • • • • • • • . • a.m.

east .... , 3.43 (All U • . . • • • • • • . • • • • • • • . . • a.m. Illes Newfoundland Standard)

' I .

'

Michael A. Musmanno of. the Pennsylvania Supreme Court plctur· / Mrs. Car?hn~ Wedgwood Benn von Thadden visited it. Of 18,­ed May 15th, during the trial of Adolf Eichmann. Eichmann's :was .consl~ermg contesting the 1 ooo Russians held in Bels~n. defensa lawyer lost a Ien•thy legal argument to keep the former !seat 1n Bm;tol. . 17.0110 died. A major. source of the diffi· ~ " c1 "B 1

culties was the refusal of the presiding judge of the Nuernberg War Crimes Trial off the ~- But she commcnte : r!sto UNAWARE OF FATE . Copper . r1'ch Katanga provinte witness stand. Musmanno struck a hard blow at the defense does n~t wtheant me. Yf1hatl Btr•sdt~! h' 1 1 E' h

. . b 1 wants 15 man 1 e ec e . In IS repor o 1c mann, to recognize the central govern- story that E•chmann was an obscure officer blindly o ey ng · von Thadden said the Jews who ment, The expected revenue orders that came down from the top of the Nazi high command./ Hedr Bhusban~. Ahnth~nty dWeJhg- were to go to Belsen would oe l K t ·f th r· t · ·1 h f th "EI ,_ , ,, , woo enn, 1 n e r 1 e 1s rof. a anga or e 1r~ y~ar He swore that Eichmann was n c arge o e nsa.,.gruppen, 1 father's title of Viscount Stans- bound to find out what happened of m.dependenee was estimate~ a flying squad of Nazis especially created to e1tennlnate Jews. I gate last year. Benn, a Labor to the Russians there. At tne at slightly more than $100,000.· This was the first time In five weeki that Eichmann showed any ! member tried to renounce th~ time, the Jews were unaware of 00:0• near.ly ha_lf of !:he budget interest In a witness. As Musmanno unfolded· his story, Elch· i title in 'order to stay in the their fate in Nazi camps. wp~~~fcutde~~~~~~g cen~~:~m::~er~~ mann turned slightly pale Inside biz bullet·proof prisoner's dDI!k. j C011!mons. but the House ruled When British troops entered ment did not receive a fr,nc. -(UPI RadJotelephoto). agamst hun. BeLsen in April, 1945, they found

"A lot of talking is done by folks who don't have anything to say-but have things they don't want to hear."

/

I l

.I

I I I I I

I :I I . . :!

i :: . -~

r t i.

' ' I

t

I I

Page 2: 1-,:p. , RS enne ee 1enna. - Memorial University of …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...enne ee 1enna. COMPACT RUN DOWN? THE DAILY. NEWS NEED .1-dl1or Sedan

• :·

'{'

. -i. • " \ ... . ,.

.. .. .....

·~ "!

1; . )

l ,. ' ~

' I

"

.. \ ··' .. ~' 'J; ~· ., ' ,. 1 ., ,, ·' ) ·~ '!

' ., .i

' ·i :i J ·I .. ~ i

..

'

i Jl •

.! .!

·I ' '

I I I I

'

I I

i

,I :I I. ... I

' I''

I

i

'

I

. I·

.. ' '

'•

~. I ' :j' .,

.~ 1

. ' ,.

' 1

rl ·l

''1 I•

' '·' ' ' . :I . I

·h I• •'I rl . i

'

·' ,, !

'i I,

·i I

l.i' 'I

I

I

I

I ·J I •

·J ·l

1 ·I •I

:.

,.

...... •.· ..

..

THE LONDON PROMOTES T.V.

This week durin~: the Ki11, Karnival the London is promoting a full range f1

famous Sparton Television and Hi-Fi Sterio Combinations. The booth design ed and built by the "LONDON'S" staff, specificaUy for this show. is over 15 ft. ia height and is the first of it's type to he seen in St. John's. Of particular in­terest to the general public is the T.V. Camera which operates on a closed circuit around the booth, thus enabling people to see tht'mselvcs on the tele­vision sets displayed.-(Max Mercer Photo).

, . ftt booth of F. 1\1. o:Leary Ltd., home sen•tcmg divisions at f4tc Kinsmen

Karnival.

{:~~ Dour LaValley, second from right, and Jean Mavie with the Country All Stars­. · :: lloux, recording artists. A big hit at the Kinsmen Karnival, their records are

. : alto on sale at the Karnival.

. :

.,

··, ~. . '· .

~--. >: ~ ~:-~ ;

-. • . ~ .

' . .

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., WEDNESDAY, ~1:\.y

Weii-T raveled ArL~ollecti01 ;~~::r·~:~,--~~~·---~~-~---·--_-------~~ -- : . :_ ·- - . ~--~

CINDERELLA STORY

WITH JET BOOSTER i:

By ERSKINE JOHNSON J ., .. , Ji.o., • ., .. , i.

Hollywood Correspondent \ Newspaper Enterprise t\ssa.

bag of pretzels. The were prop~ i . < N~A l -;- The : needed in the scenes. ' ··

C!~derella story IS shll w1th us. j "How did 1 know," she \\_1th modern to~hcs, nr. cou.rse. \ laughs, "that the 5tudio pro· L1~e the pump~tn turnmg 1~to vided props for film tests? At a Jet. and landmg our herome I Northwestern auditions we al· on Cl~ucl Nine .. Or State Nine, ways brought our own props as ,lllGl\1 calls 1t. from home." ., ...... '.,., ...

t ~om um~·erstty campus to a j The idea of becoming an a~t· 1'

stars dressmg room m less ress didn't hit Paula Prentiss 1· than a year~that's the story of . until her junior college year. 1

Paula Prent1ss. Her high school ma)or was ' .. · Last June she ~as a post· science and for her first two

, graduate student m a drama college years it was biology. as class at Northwestern. In July, 1 prelude to a premed1cal

1 with an MGM contract, she was course. playing a starring role in the Then modern dance led to movie "Where the Boys Are." "Sensory Exercises" (panto·

She just completed "The mime and other acting prelimi· , 1> Ji;!Y{i >ro .,>>':o:i)'fii/ Honeymoon lllachine" with naries) and biology became a I;

st~l'~ ~lrQueen. And soon she bore and Paula won North· goes into another movie, "Bach· western's "best actress" award I rlnr in Paradise," with Bob -and an agent·turned·bantlit 1 1\11pc and Lana Turner. If you hrlped open the Hollywood . mbsed seeing "Where the Boys 1 door. 1

=,..,.,~;,;,;;;;,;;.;;;;r I That agent who keeps hearing I the words: "Idiot-idiot."

:By JERRY BENNETT

8 the Century )11;nling of Tlartar groom with 1\\o Kan.

1 In 1M6, a small sho\\'room llw-r ~~ a'crc, was huilt n~ar the under. I Inn· IH ,., ·n err:.:

WASHINGTON- INEA) - f ground warehouse. About 500 ~ 1 ;o j, ">"eN! f•·. ! After 30 years of cl?ak and 1 different pieces are displayed bul thr oh~r:ct• ·

dagger travels, a Chmcse art; there each month Since arriv· prin•Jt·,, :.n11 collection spanning 3,000 years ' ing on Formosa. ihe collection . Thr mr-'t . will be. displ~yed in the U.S. I had been kept intact; none of· thr~P·Ir~~rrl.

CINDEREI.LA ~ Northwest· ern University's loss is Holl)'· wood'5 good fortune. Frnm 1

campus to stardom in one y!'ar is the lot of Paula Pren­tiss. whose Cinderella's glass slippers have whisked her through "Where the Boys Arr" and "The Honeymoon Machine" and, coming up, "Bachelor in Paradise."

I FOR THE 1liRDS - Sign on soda vending machine tells the story - don't disturb nest inside bottle opener space.

1 Mother wren stands auard over her eggs.

Are," you saw Paula where the stars weer on Oscar night. She presented the "best sound" award,

PAULA IS A 22-year.old Texan (San Antonio l with chest­nut hair, brown eyes, the trace of an accent and with a flair for comedy. The latter is the hig~est reason why MGM flip· ped over Paula.

Says MGM Producer Law . renee Weingarten: "She's an­other Kay Kendall-only beau. tiful."

Says Henry Le1•ln, who di­rected her film test on Stage Nine the day she arrived in Hollywood from Northwestern: "It was the first time she'd ever been inside a studio. But she had such an innate fe~ling about the camera that even the cameraman couldn't believe she was just a novice."

Startmg w1th a showmg here . the treasure has been lost or · pot thai <Ia•~, ~~~ Ma~ 28 through Aug. 13 in the i damaged. · Dyna'iy wh1rh · .· National Gallery of Art. the col· · Then it was deeitled to de· years ~~n. Ai;o lection will be exhibited in. liver more than 2.i0 represrnta· 112 pain''n:'. 3.1 ·· New York, Boston, Chicago and , th·e pieces to the l'.S. for a · enamri< ~~rl San Francisco bc!ore being re 'show sponsored jointl)· by the· 'lToll<. 10 :,,!,, turned to an underground hide. C.S. gm·ernment and the Rc· cstrirs and f~·1 r aw~y in Formosa next year. [ public of China: sppcial pre· bronz<·s

The cultural treasures to be · cautions again were neees>ary. shown here were among the To pre1·ent possihl~ intervrn· thousands of pieces in the :'<a· ·. lion hy Rerl China's warships. tiona! Palace Museum at Pe· · the collection was bron:!ht lwrr king ,and a National Central aho~rd the \'S. :\aYy destro;w. Museum at Nankin~ in 1931. tenrlPr Bryce Canyon. \\'hen

11'11.1. PlY 0 T T ,I \1 .\ I?

.\lnrt.za~e ar.~ H~ t ion w1l! p;,·; ,,, l'rlnada ·1\ ;J:;:: ~r-. Then. when the .Japanese in· the ship docked in Lon~ B~ad1.

vaded Manchuria, Palace ~Ill· · Cali!~. the treasures wrrr Iran'· en2a~r.< In Br:•;.~ .. seum officials crated 13.000 ferrer! to a train ~uaniNI b;· Works ~lin:.~ .... strongboxes to ship the treas- armed Railway Expre>S a~rnts the Cnmin""' ures south to Shanghai for 1 anrl taken to Washington. D.C. Dill!'. 1i'o safe-keepinl(. , Since the rnlledion's arrinl

When the .Japanese military : at the :\atinnal Gallery. 'ecur· threat to China proper became I 1ty measures romparahlc to definite, the Palace Museum : · .· - · -------. aftf'r tr::::': fr( :c I l1ire the 11 ti·,""·"' · treasures were moved to . Ch·-'· r...., and AL. I ~ 11.." m Emplo)·mrr.t ~r:· ::f Chungking, the wartime capi· ! "11 lj:....ll!' fl ~ arlrerti,!•men·, :r. tal. Other pieces were brought I he umiC OW to Chungking from the Nan· I 1\len Decidt

!

king collection .. Missing pieces I W~en ta Go r of both collections were re· 1 •

turned by Japan at the end of I World War II.

When civ1l war broke out in 1

1948, the Nationalist Chinese i sent some 35,000 pieces in ; three shipments to Formosa. There they were stored in underground, bomproof vaults , equipped with temperature anrl • humidity con trois to preserve : the rare paintings.

Tonight a-t in thf

We P'' mother r·n ~1•·r ~~:· · then ,rm:loJ rt.-.

8 o'd TilE DETAILS OF HOW she

won that test is our Cinderella story. The studio needed a tall, 1

beautiful girl for the role of a young lady whose height kept the boys away in "Where the Boys Are." A Hollywood actress, ideal for the role, was readv to sign for the part when ·her agent turned bandit and de· manded she get a fanta!tic salary,

BA:::K TO NATURE- l!y way · Regional High

The agent didn't have to wear a mask and carry a blackjack to convince producer Joe Pas. ternak he was being robbed. In· stead of calling for the cops, Pasternak called for MGM's talent scouts.

"So how did I know?" the agent said.

"Idiot," said the actre.ls­and she's been repeating it ever since.

A telegram came from Chi· cago. The talent scout had seen a tall girl (5'9") named Paula Prentiss in a Northwestern Uni· versity play.

"She may be your Jirl," the wire informed Pasternak.

She was.

PAULA ARRIVED on MGM'I film test stage with the 1erlpt of the scenes she would be play • ing in one hand. In the other she carried a beer mug and 1

of spring cleaning, members : of the Manistee County (Mich.) · Boy Scout Troop 120 are ripp· lng down old election posters in their "Operation Facelift." Posters will be redeemed for cash by politicians and money will go to Scouts' summer camp fund.

COMMITTED SUICIDE BERLIN (Reuter~) - W·~t

Berlin newspapers e 1 a I m e d Tuesday that Lt.-Gen. Vineenz Mueller, a former East German chief of staff and deputy minis· ter of the interior, committed suicide by jumping from a second • floor window Friday. The East German news agency ADN briefly reported his death on that day without givilll de­tails.

BED CBOSIJ CIIAJitMAN TORONTO (CPl-Mn. J. J.

McLaren of Toronto ha1 been appointed national ehalrman of the Canadian 'Red Cro!M, it was announced 'Tuesday. She succeeds Isobel Hulme l!f Mont. real. Mrs. McLaren received the Red Cross badge of 1ervlce In 1949 and an honorary mem· bership in 195/l. Since 1957 lhe has been national vice • chair­man.

' ' Foxtrap

oiree" Doug Mawer and his Orchestra

Folk Singer John White

Wilf Doyle and his Nfld. Band

Songs by Joan MorrisseY

A Giant Fiddle Contest: Aspiring Fiddlers should brin~

their fiddles and participate.

Sponsored by

The Kelligrews Kiwanis and CBC 1

~~: ' ., ·. _{":. Put of .the firat ni1ht cro:wd at the .Kinsmen Karnival enthl;'alled by the circus acts.

sr. JOH

Prol J

y,\CANT LOT. Council'S attentl

· to the v• on a

on salisbun Newtown Ro;

3 salisbUrY Str Jos'eph power h: saY that thfe d!ot manner o ISP· motor vehicle

and garbage. thai the u~sightl

children m pia , the letter st

-newsprint carr company ha1· Botwood aft•

jammed i

federal icchreakc oas.•i>ted the \'C

pori after tr) da) .< to battN

ic~ to make a d ships will now I<

Bot wood and destin at ill liS

. The~e two ,.l ·to enter Boll

Sup Is I

Deputy Suprerr Orrler of the F

Dr. John in St. Joh

he will be press conferen•

at the Kn Club on

Bu1

family of T. managed from theil they lost

total loss was ·t about $:

Beeson said 11 in all, ru

but ·were of their bel

·s spread so

.-. ,Hay\vard Cl\): .. Was. ru to the·Geno . motnln

Page 3: 1-,:p. , RS enne ee 1enna. - Memorial University of …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...enne ee 1enna. COMPACT RUN DOWN? THE DAILY. NEWS NEED .1-dl1or Sedan

' "

I :r1.

I at'rl

t

'

. Band

MorrisseY

should bring

• wan1s

,

ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND The Daily News

Problems And City Planning At Council's Meeting

Lectures

'\(,\ST J.OT 1 sincerely hope you will t~k~ the \. 'l's aurntion has nccess11ry steps to ehmmate

rounrt 10 the 1·ery bad these conditions." on a 1·acant The Council decided to bring

asked to look into it.

WATER WORKS

did •· splendid job, and hoped it would prove satisfactory.

The Water Works Superin· SMALL STORE on Salisbury Street, this to the attention of the En·

:iewtown Road and gineer for action. lendent has written the Coun· Mrs. Edward Adams, who cil after looking at the situation applied to the Zoning Appeal at Ford's Hill on the South Board when her request to Sid~ where a blocked sewer has operate a confestionary store backed water up and partially on Carter's Hill was refused, ruined the floor of Mrs. His· has now been given permission cock's residence, Number 2. to go ahead. The Board recom·

3 SalisbttO' Street. . · h power has wnt ·

Jo!fP . d 1• that the lot I> u~~

I ll. nner of disposa I. Ill· 1 m~otor 1·chirle wrcrks.

nd garha~c. He al~o ~ t the un•ightly lot 1s t 1hitdrcn in playin~. In c the trttrr •talell. "I

AWFUL HILL The East sidewalk o£' Bate's

Hill is in an awful condition, say.; 1\!r. C. M. Hall who has written the Council. The short bit of sidewalk is mush used as an outlet from Water Street and it is a positi1•e eyesore.

This matter too, has been 1 gh·en to the City Engineer for · his altt'nlion.

The basement wall was in· mended to the Council that the spected, and found to be de· regulations be relaxed in the terlorated, but not, it is case o! the premises, number thought, because of the blocked 169·71. and the small store be pipe. The Superintendent has permitted. informed l\1rs. Hiscock that it I --concern of the Council. She had Subdi1•ision of frontage to is a wivate nlatter, and not the I CITY PI.ANJ'oi'ING REPORTS

i 8US PARKING stated to the Council that she · pro1·idc one additional lot is ~lr. Cla\cnce Sp~rkes of Sib· I· wanted her basement repaired proposed by :Mr. John Cahill of

! le)· s Col'e has wrttten of the by them. · 277 Elizabeth Avenue. The : congested bus parking on The matter will be passed planning officer repo~ts that he

- · . George Street, where the out· over to the City Solicitor fori would like this deferred until ~1,,;pnnt '"n't<'r' .. \~r of-to\\'n buses gather. He won· his investigation "Of the whole i the Commission on Town Plan· c~::lp:lll' 1."',' :· .(ln .. ~ d~t·s how long four ~uses there thing. I ni~g can review the proposal. ~'''~~''"''I ·'' ·.' r more wtll he allowed to ptck up pas· Tlus was agreed .

. I \I Ilk janlllll'd Ill ll'C oft : St'ngers. He felt that if that COD· "THANK YOU" r

?':: . . 1inues, he ~hould make the 1\lar::aret C. Murphy has ex· 1 Mrs. Alire Scammell of 2 Cir· frcml u·rhrt':oher lllhrr· · pa>'kin~ thrre ('\'ell more con· pressed thanks to the City 1 l'ular Road lms asllcd permis· lecture~ on fish drying by ,,.;-•rd :toe· ,.,,,,rb 1'' ~e>trd whrn ht' !'omes to park· Council for their prompt allen·: sion to suhrlil'ide her property~ Professor T. C'. Noel of the Dt>

. r·"l aflrr 1 r.' 111 ~. fot' I hi< 0\1'11 hu< there. 1 lion to the fault~· ~idcwalk in order to make spare for ! pa~lment. of .Physics of Mcm • d3'·' '" h:d·,·r tln•wgh The Taxkah insprl'inr will he· nrar her residence at 8!\ I.on:::'s aiH>ther house to he situated 1 onal Utmcrstty arc attract in~

r!r. '" , .. ,,k,· • ,.hannrl. 1nntifird of this situation. and I Hill. Sh slated that the men t!·crt' It was pointed out how·: a full cla>s of interestrd vrr. · ;':"' llt!IIIP'·' I"'"'· Ill'"''·, ·-·.. ·-- - ... ---·-.... · Cl'er that thr land is well be·, sons each day. The lrctures

a: !lc•'"'"'rl "11c! 11'111 '"ill lnw the road tr1·rl. The Officer i commenced May 15 and will : iHIII'•"'''~' \lttl'tn a A f COUIICi[: fdt that decision ~hould be. conclude on Friday. ~lay 19.

i;:- T~w,r I'·'" q·;•rl> al'r. hrlcl off until plans nf the pro·, Two _lecture~ are giren. each :. :n (':lH'r fln'Wil0d tht... ·-- -~-- pflsrd new huildin~ are obtain· · mornm~ bcg:mnm,::! at ~ o dock.

8 •td• PI ell :Tile lectures arc held m Jloom

·~ 1 lectures Professor Noel dis· T.C.H.

Supreme: Ul lng ans · 1 A of the USO huildin::. In the

f . 1 cusses \he meaning of the term Rc usa! 1s rrcommen<lcd ~lr. . 1 t' 1 'd't d '! ff 1 c G ll p . · , : re a 1\'e 1um1 1 y an 1 s e ec

i I d K ': '· · nrsons m con.ncct,on · on fish drying, the effect of

n. ( u e e"·mount With land he has a~qmred on: air speed and the temperature . · ~ ~ · • · the ~~~ns_~~nada _ll 1~hway, for

1 on fish drying. the methods of

i . . . . . \ Continned on Page 16) ! measuring and calculating all 1 There \\ere three appheatwns 114 Elhs Place wtshcd to build _______ ----· _ of these variables. The last two 1 for btuldmg on _the new Ken· a basement apartment but it is • lectures will de1•elop the t11eory

Is Here I mountroad permitted at the contrary to building regulations; lobsters In City of driving. The fish lecture~

p1puty Sllrrc·nw Knight City Counci~ ~:estcrday. Ja_ck White of Hunt's Lane ap. ; · . yesterday when 'Photograph~ Orler ~~ thr Kni~hts of 1 In !he btuld.mg plans submit· P.lled to build a dwelling addi· : . i were taken show the attentin

!lr Jnhn \\'. ~lc· : It·~! h.r the Ctly Engineer, ap. li~n, but the land is found un· I Lol!stcr~ arr. becom:?g m?rc 1 class who included members of .. 11 11, ~ 1 .• h•hu's this· phcal!ons for two ser1•ice sta·, SUitable fop. a ~eptie tank. : plrnltful Ill St. Johns ?urmg: the fish trade. officials of pro·

1 ~d he wtll ht' holding a ! tto~s and a bottling plant were 1 The total esl!mated value of I llwpast few <~ay, and _!Ins ~ay 1 l'incial and federal fishery de· . : prm ronlrrrncr tonight

1 renewed; . 1 all the a~ove plans that were n11hcate that mshore tce whtch 1 partments and some fishermen.

at thr Kni~hts of ,The u ~IO.n Acr.ated . Water I appro\'ed I~ set at $414,300.00. I prrl'cnted. some . lohsterme_n r Top photograph shows !he clas~ Cl\lh 011 St. Clare

1

\\orks L1m1ted wtll bmld the 1 .1\lF,TRO AREA ! fro.n~ settmg their . traps IS I ancl the bottom picture Profes· hottling plant. while l\!arshall1 . In lhts area outside the im· 1 mo\'ln~ off. sor Noel demonstrating a point

_ ~lotors and Adelaide Motors mediate City, three sets of When the season opened in· to the class. The le!'lure on Limited wit construct scr\'ice 1 plans were appro1·ed yes!erda~· · shore icc in man): areas would I fisll dryin~ are part of the re ~latiOns. · for the construction of three not a) low the sc•ttJng of lobster: search program under llr. D.

;; Rt:~GALOWS ' bungalows. traps ~ncl. as a result ,\obstrrs; I,. Cooper. hcacl of thr Depart. Fire more bungalow~ hal'e • Garland Clarke Limited will . Wl•re not as plentiful as at thr: ment of Chemistn·. ~lcmorial

heen permitted within the city. huild one on Lot 44, Portugal : stat'\ of the season in prcYious 1 l'nh·ersit)'. · ' These are for Garland Clarke. Cove Road: and also another on : yent·s. I - ---- -·

. ' '

fHURSOAY, MAY 18, 1961

Given On Fish Drying

Burning Dwelling 1 of Portugal Co\·e Road; H. B. Greenwood A1•ennP. off the Old I lnitinl priers were fairly 1

.!, Gon~h of Lot 74 Argyle Topsail Road: William Jlohson . lligh hut. as the supply im·rcas· Bobby Helms Carson's lamtll' ol T Brt''on of St•eet: Dougla~ Shute of Lot 1, will construct the third on the es anrl the 5cason ad1·ancrs.

nt~na);l•rl 111 CS(•ape O'Reilly s,tree! (m•ised plan~l:' Gonl~s. ~oad. lot 13 of Elliots : tlwse prices will decline to

2nd Off To Halifax LOCKOUT MAY END from th' r flaminn .Joseph \\ halen of Lot 102, I SubdiVISIOn. i somr extent, . Captt'vates Offl'cer Dt'es

thrl' In;: 1 nacticall~ · Portugal Col'c Road. and J. The e~timated nine of the : Sules of lobster~ by roads1tle , linn. T: .• J. Ahh••tt. l'remirr , po;;~,tm~> land thci~

1 Stapleton of Lot 27 Bristol St. • construc.hon of the three bun-: 1•endors were hnsk over .the I .J.Il. Smalhron<l. :-!ayor 11. (;. H.\

1 w I! 1 1

S"OO in OTHER PI.ANS I galows 1s 552.000.00. I weekend and several suppliers R d ( d Capt. Ronaltl ,J. 1\ikh<'Y. ;,n. :Ill'\\'> 1rill he ~oin·~ to l!alifa,.; 1 1 a; a 1011 .. ' . C. W. Powell of 9 Stonev.l DEVELOP J.OT I in the Holyrood ar!'a made a ecor row . second offieer ahnal'll thr C:\ll at the end of :-lay to attrnd the There were indications rarlJ·

house Street has_ been grant~d I Mr. Jack Winsor has applied 1 good day's pay by selling to ferry Wil!i;un Carson. die<! in F<·derali. 11 nf :-laynr> aiHi :tluni )OS\(rda)· afternoon that~ lock· _

1 11000 :perm iss' on to build a dwelling for permission to develop one 1 passing motorists. A record crowd attended tlw' hospital Wednesday at Sydney. <"ipalitir' Conrenliun. · Ill\\ at the Broll'nin~ llari'CY

B : awut. 51

t.h · h' 1 addition: L. C. Crane of 7 Ap· building lot on land Buhdil•ided Stadium last night to hear, N.S .. after a brief illness. Capt. .. . . . Limited hut\lin;: plant on Water · Pe.on sail 1 at IS' pledore Street will make alter· by the Avalon Realities, per· Bobby Helms' rendition of popu· llilchcy, a native o[ Freshwater. !he l'onfcrrnt·<· wttllact unlil Stlcct \\'e>t would encl.

11 10 all. nt>hed from 'I ations and extensions; P. My· mission for which was granted POSTAL Jar and western songs, and to 1• was a resident of Placentia. .June 3 anol o\h!•r Atl~mtil' Pro·: Larry Daley of the 1'ranEporl

but were unable to ers of 303 Pennvwell Road will by the Provincial Department. say that the show went over big . ''Il!Cl'' premiers \\'III.al,o he 111 1 and Allied Workers Union to tny of thm ht·longl~gs as! build a rear extension; Cyril The City Planning Officer re· is putting it mildly. . attendance. . 11h1l'h the locked out employees

spr~ad '" rapully. : B;ng will operate a restaurant commended permission he ~:il•en WATER Newfoundlanders, who have 'Petl•t forte' . /\; numhrr n[ important dis·. are attarhecl, said that a meet· . wa~ 11 " nnmediate. (approl'ed hy the Department Mr. Winsor. It was approved always shown their appreciation c·n,,inns arr pl;1nnrd and il•'m> · in~. ~cl for 3 p.m .. had been ar·

lllen f0r 11"' fire and tt · of H!'althl at 210 Dncllworth by Council. of songs of the popular and of intrrc'l tn all m1micipalitirs · Iau~ert hrtwrNI the umon, the 'hown nnm.·dt~lrl)' if in· i Strfet: the \\'ar Surplus store IN THE GOlli.DS SERVICE w~strrn ,type, were enthralled (Oml"ng and <"otmril.< orr on lhe agrmh ~company anrltn the presence of

wa1 carnrrl I on nuckworth Street will !'reel Denlopment i~ proposed in , by the singing or the youn~: conriliat· n officer Cynl Chur· a .<i~n: the J.'rench . Corner. i the ~ould~ at Doyle'R Brid~e· man who has made a name for ----------·---· chill. llnekwnrth Street wtll make : Ryan~ Brtd!!_e area. The Ctty 1 The office of the District Di· himself in an always crowded i Po•;ce Make There was talk that the em· rcnm·ations: and A Volley of Plannmg Officer has slated that rector of Postal Services ad· fielrl. : The nrll'e>t. of t hP C\'H h ployccs had taken a strike \'Ole. Freshwater !load will make 11 t~c deve~opme_nt requit'r.s spr \'lses that th~ Lewisporte and I Bobby Helms is one of the 1 roast~! llcet 111 :\'cw[oundlanrl. ' :.tr. Daley said this was not

·rear rxlrnsinn to his dwellln~. ctal eo~s1deFahon. tn accor1l Twillingate Water "service has biggest attractions in his line! the Petit FortL•. due for dclii'rrl· · true. 1\'0T RJo:Cm1~11lNJlt:D ance w1th the policy to he fnl· resumed operating since yester· e\'er to hit St. John's. a ;:cnninc here in mid-.July will · ot no1~·l 5 A t 1 The men, about 40 nf them,

There were two applieatio.ns' lowed in the 1\!~lrop~lilan. area. day, Wednesday, anrl the Lewis· western singer, and his sin~in::: arrii'C here until the first week: rres s I ha•e been locked out since May unt reeommen<led hy the Cit)' ! Therefore deet~mn on tins has , porte and Shoe Cove Water of 1·arious numbers captil'a!cd in August. ' 8. t:n~illl'er. Clement Yetman of· been deferred hy ·the Counctl. I 1-iervice will resume on Friday,· the hearts of• the people. A strike :cl the st: .John's· Firr <IITP'\.' wei'<' made hy The dispute is over a '1\'age ~ ·-·--- !\lay 19th. Postmasters served on l Doug LaValtev and his west- 1 New Brunswich ship)·anl where l·ity polkc ~-e~tcrday. I increase. The union asked for

Rehabilitation: these routes are notified th.at : ern all-stars also' took the eye of i the ship is being built has de- Two mrn wrre arrc>trd for; 30 cents extra an hour. lowered winter services are to be dts· , the. crowd and were loudly ap. lay"d final delil'cry. drunkcnnr». one for r~ilin~ to! this to 24 cents finally. ~he

CiR h<~ ad1 i'<'ol that - ----··--·· -·· -·- -·--- continued. plauded. Doug and his co-star, The vessel. when it docs ar- · rrmain at tlw >erne of an acri-1 company said they would gn·r Jean Marie, and the remainder rive will replace the Hopedale dent. nnt' f<H' dril'ing without i only 16 cent~ a~ hou~ extra. of the troupe like St. John's on the Plarentia Bay srrvier ,1 ltl'em·t•. and one gt\'l'n in 1 \\'hen th, dtscnsswns fatled the ~o m~ch that after a for~hcom· and the !lo(wdale will go on !Ill' , ch.ar~ 1 • lui'. ll<'in:~ drunk and/ l·nmpany lnl'l;cd tht empl())'trs

: 2l "Spe!'tal" wtll run : · )'ear ... A TTEc-;TIO~ :

' Nfld. Council l~old Its First

T. C. H. Is mg tr1p to lhe West they mtentl Labrador run. • dbord .. rh 111 lit{· ho111l'. out. to return here for a month or · ...... _ .. _ ----- · ---

Now Open so. Thry ha\'e alreadr been 011

lo<·al radio al!ll will soon bt• seen on 1'V.

ll 'gl . , Among other allrattion~ that The Traus·Canaola 1 IW&) I took the fancy of the audience

across Newfoundland is open was Steele's Bears, an amusing

A I M • · once again. Work~en yesterday act performed by three highly. t g closed a gap whteh they had trained Canadian be~rs. n n U a ele In earli~r bulld?zed ncar the Gam· The Flying Marions, a. thrill· bo Rtver Brtdge at Gambo.. ing three·man acrobatic act,

About a week ago the nver held peo;>le on the edge of their !'he first annual meelin~:, · merely those professionally 111 1 went on a rampage and threat· seats by their death-defying

. aft.:r the Inaugural Mectinl! o.f 1 ~ehabilitation and \~'elfare. en.ed to carry aw_ay the wooden stunts. .

· olf anct will then ~la•ch of 1960, for the Rehabt· 1'lhat would be narrowwg the bndge at the stte wher.e the Last, but by no means least. ~'lllda,1· of that week to'. !ita lion Council of Newfound· I Council below its objectives. road and river cross. the comedy team of Corri and

hohday bac~. land, was held yesterday at PAYS TRIBUTE To save the bridge a channel 1 Elsa entertained: the audience . th, present ~ystcm · Buckn~aster's Field. 1 Tribute was then paid to Dr. was dug throu~h the road clos· 1 with a .funny act that has sel· 1

• 11 no such thin~ ~s a · Mr. \\'ic!.ford L. Collins, act·· McCann, who did so much valu· ing it to traffic but allowing 1

, dom been· equalled in this city. 1

;'~r tr any other holiday ing President from October of ' able work for the Rehabilitation the river to by-pass the bridge. All . 11 .1 g t sh i ·~• ar hohctay is chan~ed last year, gave the report from Council, and who will be leav· The river has receeded . Ill .1 ' 1 was 3 rea t ow

1: nday whrn, as on May 1 that time and stated that the ing Newfoundland in July of enough now to allow traffic to ~tnd thosedwthotahkav~. 1~nob_esfeoer~

:1 1001e re t h 1 • ' • h C .1, th' be. d . 1 are urge o e ... • 1 sh · . ason o o · 1 btggest event m t e ounc1 s IS year. . resume · 't · too late . And after all

OP·dosmg day. year so far, was the PJ:e.mi~r's Mr. Collins also than~ed the :1•51~or a ~ery. great ~ause. Help Conference on Rchabthtat!On ~r~ss and radf?. f~~ their pub- Bus·tness Growth Kin Help Kiddies!

I• held from October lfJ · 19, 1960. hetty on rehabthtatton, and ex· ' · ft)Ured In The main value or"'this confer· tended appreciation towards ----...,..----ence was to Jearn the major de· Go/ernment members and the s t. · d

Accl"dent feels of rehabilitation services Executive itself. In. Housl·ng Area en ence . in this Province. Following Mr. Collins' report,

CENTRE NEEDED there were others heard from f A It - Mr. Collins said that in his the secretary, the treasurer and . or SSaU

H'l' estimation, a Rehabilitation the various committees com· A parking lot is being made • ward 'd l ' · · f h · th ·tit)' w • 3 rest ~n Centre is needed. It would act posmg thJ Counctl. out of part o t e square Ill e

10 th as rushed h~ am· as 8 focal point to combine all THE EXECUTIVE Churchill Park commercial sec· this ~·General Hospital the efforts in Rehabilitation Hon. B. J. Abbott then took tion." The front will be left with

injurie ornm~. suffering and other aids pertinent to the the chair c~nd heard the report a green belt. In view of the ex· ~ recetved when 1 work would gii\V up around of the nominations committee. pansi. of business premises in

011 , ,~as driving over· the dentre as auxiliaries. It allowed the newly elected the area and the addition of a Btrney's, Topsail Road NEW EXECUTIVE executive for ~.he Rehabilitation new department store and other

letident The Acting President felt Council· for tlils ·year. A photo· new commercial enterprises, •ne

0, ,occurred short· sure that the new incoming graph of this n~w council will this parking lot has become

A resident of LaScie and em· played at the mining town of Tilt Cove, was .sentenced to one year in the St. John's penilen· tary May 15 after he was found I

guilty on a charge of indecent 1

assault. · 1 I

in· I iw c liCk. When .the executive will represent more appear shortly m the DAILY essential. er: Hayward was walks of life In this Province, NEWS, along with a speech by In the original plan of the ." 1.t. Last 'reports that ever before ln that there Walttr Davis on "The growth area provision was made for the

_,:~Juries wer6 not wa1 1 fear that the Council of Rehabilitation services in parking lot now being. con· ou,, ·" · · would . become ·composed of Newfoundland." structed.

The RCMP conducted an vestigation after a complaint was lodged and the case wa~ heard before Magistrate G Walsh of 'springdale.

'

---SA LE--w ALL BETTER QUALITY LADIES' SKIRTS NOW REDUCED TO ................................................ 3.75 ALL LADIES' DRESSES- 10.95, 9.95, 8.95 NOW REDUCED TO .............................................. 5.95 BOYS' PLAID SPORT SHIRTS Were.2.45 NOW REDUCED TO ............................ 1.77 INFANTS' BONNETS 'N' BOOTEES . Were 39c. NOW Y2 PRICE ................................ 19'· GIRLS' STRIPED CORDUROY SLACKS Were 1.94 NOW REDUCED TO ............................ 1.44

"THE WORK OF ~lERCY 1\EVER ENDS SUPPORT THE RED SHIELD APPEAL"

E SHOPPING CENTRE FRESHWATER ROAD

I 1·

i I

I

Page 4: 1-,:p. , RS enne ee 1enna. - Memorial University of …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...enne ee 1enna. COMPACT RUN DOWN? THE DAILY. NEWS NEED .1-dl1or Sedan

.'•

.. , ., . ';.

!" '1

I •.·. , ,. ~.:

,<

'· . ' '· '

.'·" ' , . -~ ..

-·· -~- \ I

.. ·' ..

' ·i-:-:i

.. ~

~}

' ·< • 1

' ' ' '

' ; ' I

.. .. . . '

.; .

i

.. .... ~ 'i t ' ' ~

~ .. 11

1 ;"

1 ·-~

-~

·! :1 ' :I

'I f, I

:!

I

·I ~~ ;: 'I ,, !I jl

~

I . '

'j I ' I

'1 ! I I

,I I I : ~ I

I I I I l

I

i

;I I, .I i ,, :' •I :, I. .. I

I I I

I I

i I

. ;

1- . I '

I. ~ ' ! . '. I'

' ~-

·.

:_ I .. '

.,

~. ·~ :I

\ I

'1 n q t'j

J

' .)

'.

' I.

t· '

\ \: ,,

I

''I I

·J

l .I I

·I

i

THE D~41L Y NEWS Newfoundland's Only Morning Paper

YEARL\' SUIStRIPTION RATES

Canada ......... ........... 512.00 per annum

United Kingdom and all foreign countries . $14.00 per annum

AuthoriZed aa second e\aa' ma.ll, Post Office Department, Ottawa.

The DAILY NEWS II a momln1 paper established in 1894, and published at cbe News Building, 355-359 Duekwortb Street, St Jabn'a, Newfoundland, b7 Robit11on a. Company, Limited.

MEMBER OF TBE CANADIAN PR£81

Tbe CanadJan Preas II exclusive" entitled to the Ull for republication ol lil news despatches In thla paper credit· ~d•to it or to the Alaoctated Prell or Reutera and also the local news publish· ed therein.

All Press Services and feature articles In thi1 paper are copyriahted and tbetr reprncluctlon Ia prohibited.

Member Audit Bureau af' Cireulltlon.

THURSDAY. MAY 18, 1961

Education And Opportunity This year's university ~raduating

class was told by the Minister of Education, Dr. Frecker, that a partial answer to our educational problem was to be found "in ex­tending eve:y possible educational ad\'anta~e to the many, in accord­ance with their particular apti­tudes."

He added that the powers and skills thus created would have to be harnessed for the building of a better Newfoundland and that meant that it was a duty to pro­,·ide opportunit:v as well as train­ing. In Dr. Frecker's opinion, "op­portunities for successful careers exist in Newfoundland todav and \\'ill continue to increase with the de,·elopment of our pro\·ince's re­s0urees. ··

The openin~s in certain profes­sional occupations are ob\·ious. We need more doctors and teachers and nurses. for example, and there is need in some special areas of public sen·ice for other kinds of profes­~ional and technical skills. Below the university level many occupa­tions are waitin~ for trained per­sonnel and the new technical col­lege will undoubtedly make a very important contribution towards the filling of this particular gap.

But that is only the starting point. In order to keep usefully employ­ed at home those to whom addi­tional opportunities for university or \'ocational training will become f\Yailable, we have. to think in terms of economic growth. That usually implies a consideration of the de­\'elopment of out• natural resources. But I here are likely to be limits on their expansion. In any event, new

mines, for example, are no longer the source of mass employment as they were in the days when every­thing was done ·by manual labour. Even in the forests and in the fish· eries, increased production will not call for anything like the volume of workers required in these indus­tries a few years ago. These facts should prompt us to think about the most neglected of all our resources -our human resources. . .

The population is increasing at a faster rate than we can possibly hope to create additional employ­ment in the basic industries. But in this world of technology, the exist­ence of an important pool of high­\\· skilled labour can be the best re­source of all. There were implica­tions of that in Professor Caim­cross's report to APEC in which he said that growth in the future must be dependent yery largely upon our ability to engage in sec­ondary manufacturing on an im­portant scale.

Thinking must begin along these lines. There must be many things that we can make in factories in Newfoundland for our own con­sumption and possibly for e1{ports provided we have the required technical skills. Here is where we must seek new and special opportu­nities on an ima~inative basis. And if we are not prepared to concen­trate on the special resource invoh·­ed in a large segment of our work­ing force equipped with special skills. we must be prepared to lose population in the future because our basic resource industries may not have .a sufficient development potential to give employment to all.

Hands Across The Border The reception that was gi\'en in

Ottawa to President Kennedy when he arrived Tuesday afternoon on a brief courtesy visit to a great and good neighbour was particularly cordial. It was perhaps a reminder that in spite of the fear so often expressed of American domination, most Canadians have a very friend­ly feeling towards the United States.

Mr. Kennedy did not go to Ot­tawa with any other purpose than to return Mr. Diefenbaker's call of two months ago. But the fact that he went at all at this time suggests the importance that he may attach to elose and amicable relations be­tween Canada and the United States.

There have been occasions when these relations have been strained by ill-defined talk about American investment in Canadian industry. and by arguments over quotas and tariffs and defense orders and un­fair export competition in food­stuffs. These things are inevitable and sometimes they breed a meas­ure of ill-feeling.

But by and large, as President Kennedy said in responding to the address of welcome, there·is a com­munity of interests which far out­weigh the differences that may oc­cur from time to time. His visit, the first he has made beyond the bor­ders of the United States since his election, gives special emphasis to that fact.

A Message_ From · Khrusbche1 Followin~ days of rumour about

a meeting between President Ken­nedy and Mr. Khrushchev, the Rus­sian ambassador in Washington has tailed on the President to deliver a message from his chief. It is assum­ed that the message broached· the question of a meeting when Mr . Kennedy goes at the end of this month to Europe.

What could come out of a confer­ence of the kind is anybody's guess but there is little reason to believe that the Soviet leader is prepared to make any major concessions of a'

kind that would lead to a measure­able ·relaxation of present ,world tensions.

It is more likely that Mr. Khrush­chev is anxious to meet President Kennedy face to face and take the measure of the man. It is no less likely that the President might be motivated by the same purpose. But it is always conceivable that a frank exchan~e of views might have some useful results. At any rate, a meeting of the kind could do no harm and there is always the hope that it might do some good.

A Case For Mental Treatment. The case of the two men charg­

ed with placing obstructions on the railway track in the path of -an oncominll! train in the nei~hbour­hood of Mount Moriah hu b~n completed. The sentences, having regard for the nature of the offence, were li~bt. But tbe younger culprit was a juvenile and it ,was said in evidence that the older man had been treated at one time for mental illness. Thia raises the question of where he will be confined dur­in• the period of his imprisonment. The obvious place is the Hospital for Mental and Nervdus Diseases where hllhould be ktpt under ob-

servation and receive treatment if that should be required. A man who will attempt to 'de-rail a train,· to use his own words, "just for bad­ness," is clearly a case for psychia­tric examination and such treat­ment or institutional detention as this might r~veal to be necessary.

Gems Of Thought Matrimony ahould never be entered­

into .without • full recognition of its e11durin1 oblllatlona on both aidea.

-xary Jailer Eddf.

THE DAlLY ;\JEWS. ST. H\"S. NFLD .. THCRSDAY

IN THE NEWS .8' Wayfarer

NOTES AND COMMENT A reference in this column the other

day to the scarcity of good shore fish has brought a letter from Roger Bid­good' of the Goulds, a pioneer in the production of packaged fish for the grocery trade. He wrote that be had a few quintals of good merchantable cod last fall and that customers rejected it in favour of the heavy-salted fish which he produces in his own plant. This he describes as "wbite. thick, clean, with lots of sa It" and he has sent me a good sample to prove its qualit~·. I must admit that the s~mplcs were excellent although I hal'e always been partial to the hard-cured. light-salted fish which i~ produced today in only \'ery ~mall quantities and not to any extent at all comparable in quality to the best fish of former times. Mr. Bidgood assures me that the grocery trade and consumers much prefer his product and in appear· ance it is the h~st-looking, cleanrst and thickest salt cod I have seen for a long time, I am indebted to h'm also for samples of the caplin which he keeps in cold storage and of which he corns a quantity each week. I know nothin~: that makes a better "grog bit" and while corned caplin are good at any t•me. I rarely fail to take a supply when going on a picnic. They make a splendid appeliler. People like Roger Bidgood and W. J. Bursey. among others. who have shown so much en1er-

. prise in producin.!! fish for local con· sumpt'on in a \'aricty of forms. de· scn·c to he supnort,•d.

With so many people alrearly think· ing of the "twenty-fourth." I find it bard to under~tRnd why there l1as not heen a demand for the commemora1ion of this holiday at thr rnd or heginnin~ of thr w~ek to l!il'e thr f'shrrmrn a hili opportunity for its rn.ioymrnL ~hn~· go to rlist~nt pond.< and ~ulhe> ann some of thrm rea!'h tlw plates wlwrr the hie one; Jir only after Ion~ ~ncl tiresome Irani O\er rough trails. TheY ran hardl~· enioy a real holirlay when it must he fitted into a \iltlr more than twen1y-four hours. Thr, wljolr holida\' situation is perfectlv rirlieulons at the. moment brr 1\\Se of 1lw fjo.·p.da)' week. Except for Boxing Day there Is no extra holirla)' in the year. All. that happens so far as statutory holiclays are concerned Is that they are moved from year to year in substitution for the normal week-end boliday. I feel confiden1 that thr trade would agree to

a few of these statutory holidays being provided as "extras." Tbat would help to give them some real meaning. The twenty-fourth of May and Regatta Day ought to be put in that bracket of an extra holiday.

• • • J have had flippers twice this spring

and found them good but I am told th<~t that cannot be ~aid about many of those that have been 3\'ailable nor can I imagine anything more abominable than a flipper that is a bit "off." They have bern pretty ~carce this year he· cause of the failure of the sealfisbery. However. I ga1her that they are n11 longer as poJlUiar as they used to be. illany of the younger generation ha1•e never ra1en flipper pie and probably never will. I recall one sca~on during the war when no flippers were a1·ail· ahle at all and a frirnd in Green Bay sent me in part of a carcas~. I wa~ a~reeably surprised to find that tbe mrcass of a young seal Is equally as ~:ood as a flipper Seal liver was yet another delicacy that was once 8\'ail­ahle but never abundant. When one thinks of it. no industry anywhere could possibly he as was1eful as the ~eal· fi~ber)'. When it is realized that mil­lions of pounds of excellent meat were left on the icc each season in the bey­day of tbc enterprise, the waste seems shocking.

• • • One of the most .~erious forms of

waste that occurred in the height of the sealfishery was due to the system of "panning" pelt.•. I was reading O\'er a~ain the other day the hook written h1• an American nonlist. George Allen l•;n!!land. who macle a trip to the ire in 1921. In hi~ highly ~rnsational plot. a wndrtla wager! orer the is,ne of ,lolrn pans ended in a stanrl-up ~un h:ht hetwrPn the crews of two sralin:! rrS>els. Rut if the fi~h1 \l·as imaginar~·. thr •tcaling of pan' was not. ?<Tan~'. of !'our,r. were lost hcrause thr crews that ~et up thr pan< werr unahle to Te·

trirve thrm. Othrr~ wrre !(athered in h\' the crews of the first steamer~ to n;eet up with them. Fn~land's honk. "The ""hitr Wilclrrncss". is probahl~· one of the most intrrrs1ing curiosi1ie' of :\'ewfoundland literature. 1\ Incorpor­ates an exaggerated rhararter:1ation nf Caplain Abram Kean. slight\:1 dis~ni~ed bv the name ol Azariah Stahh. wtth ":hom 1he author made hi5 on!>· trip to the ire.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR "T\' CRITlCISliS, CONT'D."

Editor Daily News, Dear Sir.-Recently in your paper I

did a snwll amount of criticism of pro­grams originating from the CBC. I also criticized CJON, and most people agreed with my ,·iewpoint. Sc1·era! per-sons '"it! 1 ....... ,)It ha,·e rloue some cun-structi·.,, t•i';li(';,IJI. This I might have done hut I fl'lt tl:r dil'!·1·1ur>. t•tc .. should be the ones to reconstruct their program~. Mt~•· all. when lead points arc brought 1o thr attention of lhr tel~­ri,ion stat ion. it is up to I hem to rt~· construct. In the matter of my eriticism of C.JON. the)· stiil continue to refuse to correct had poin1s shown to them. One of these is the ron1inued use of a certain station identificatio11 recording. with an out of tune female voice and a noisy orchestra in the background. Jllr. Jamieson is intelligent enough to know by now that this makes our TV station seem amateur-like and silly. I am just as interested as he· is, to hav~ outsiders think highly of us Newfound-landers.

Again I must criticize and l am sorry it bas to be against a local presentation. A couple of weeks ago the Memorial Universih• Exten.~ion Service presented 8 ninety minute play on CJON, entitled "Rogue's Diary". Th~ play itself is a bad one. but if the acting is good. then tbat Itself is worthwbile watching. But the acting was bad, very bad. I rpa lize this was an amateur endeavour, but to take over our television time for nine!)' minute was too much to endure.

This is typical of other programs pre· sented by CJON. If this type of thing persists. the people in charge sbou\d be replaced, or educated in the funda­mentals of television broadcasting and · presentation.·

The players in the "Rogue's Diary" were not convicing in their parts. They did not live their parts as tbey should have done. One tiling I can't understand

' is why tbey used such a higb-pitcbed voice. This is alrigbt in a large ball, but on television it is borrible. Surely the director is aware of this, if be isn't, he should have been.

The movements of the player8 were 'Puppet-like', One would think that any minute they might fall down. And please, the man controlling the 'Mike' must be careful next time not to bave tbe abadow of the 'Mike' sbown on the wall In tbe background. This kills the reality of the presentation. Several tlmes when the players forgot their lines, the female voice In tbe background could be beard quite clearly, remind­.ing actors of their next lines. This is again, unforgiveable.

If CJON Is going to continue to pre· sent its viewers with such inferior pro. gramming, then I think it about time "We The People" spoke up and did 10mething about it.

In the meantime, originating from tbe CBC, Wally Koster stiJI hurts my ear­drums. "Juliette" remains quite boring. "Festival' '61" continues to distort my TV ~creen, and ".Close-up" on my tele vlaion remains 'Closed up.'

Before closing. I would like to change the subject to another wrong that has to he corrected. anrl the subject of my next lrter. That is the sale of filthy magazines on our news s1ands. and l inlend to lower tbe axe on the people in charge of such goings-on.

Sincerely ynurs. .TA~IES P. COOPER.

.\FRif.\S l'll:I;KS PE!'i' PAl, Erlitor Daily :\cws.

Dear Sir.-Your addrr•s h~s jm1 hrrn gi\·cn to m!' v!'ry recently by one o! my friends in our conn1ry who introduced ,.011 to me. J hrg to 1cll you that I want ~v name to. be published in ym1r daily n~wspaper so as to have a female pen friend in your country.

I am a boy of 18 and I am ~ feet !\ incbes. and I am teacbing at the abovt> named school. I sholl be very grateful if you can render tbis my obligation in time.

My hobby is photography and I am very interested in sports. games and dancing.

I beg to stop, Sir. I am, Yours tnlly. EDWARD OLU DOYE.

Methodist School Ilepete. Ugbonla P.A .. via Okitipupa Di\'ision. Ondo Pro1·i~ce. Ni::eria.

., EAitL L DOU&LAI

liOII liAS A DESTIN\' ~'OR US Two hundred years ago a young

Englishman studied law and after pass· ing his examinations opened an office. For ten y£ ars he waited for clients to appear and not a single client showed up. But since he had so much time on his hands he decided that he would turn to writing on ·legal matters. The young chap's name was William Black· stone, and, a\tbough he never beeame a practicing attorney, be made attorneys out of literally millions of men who read his books.

Marcus Dods, a Scotchman, experi­enced similar difficulty after he left the seminary and tried to get a cburch. He became what was known as "a stickit minister." No cburcb in Scotland would touch bim with a ten-foot pole. He could preach any congregation to sleep in five minutes. But Dods wrote books which ministers have been using now for generations in the preparations of · tbeir sermons. I bave two of his books which are not out of p·rint and I would not take $100 apiece for them.

Very often tbe Lord makes us fall at sometbing in order to make us success­ful in the tbings be bas really put us Into the world to do. So if things are goirig rough for you, remember Black· stone and Dods-and a bost of others • wbo have had tbe same type of e:ot·

' perienee. God ha~ a destiny for ~very one ol

us. and sometimes tbe most amazing rxperience for us to encounter is the discovery of what tl\at destiny really is.

"Cease Fire!"

I .'f !

What Others Are Saying

!.E~S I'LL\~\-RE

St. l'atharinr.' Standard In earlirr ria~~ a trip Ill a mntor rar

was a real joy ridr. hnt t_he great in· crrase in mo tnrlng has changed the PIC·

ture.

FLOCK TOGETHER Kit<:hrner-Waterloo Reeorrl

Although hirds of a feather flock teo· ,geti1rr. there is no record of their r1·er ha1•ing been charged with practicing dis­crimination.

JOY 1110 REl.IGIO~

Kitchener-\\'aterloo Record Too often religion is taken to be long­

faced and moro>e. If the first Chr:~tians bact been like this, perhaps Christianity would not have spread until it achieved victory in the Roman world. Certainly a gaiety of spirit must have been one of tbe more a1tractive qualitie> of the first missionaries. It is a quality which should be a rlistinglllshint:: mark of the hr­liel'er today.

l'S\'~L\I, RECESSIOS

l"al~ary llcralrl Thr cro~!'-country manpowrr ~nn·ry

rrrealrd thrre outstanrlin~ fad" Fir>t. thP "in-works" arr rrt.in.ring hi;h \l'a2e' and an cx<'ellcnt stanrlard of !11·ing, while the •·out-nf-works". of coursr. arc not. There has hcrn. in other words no cutback of salarie,; among the em· ployrrl. Second, there is little or no place nowadays in labor's ranks for the unskilled man or woman. And. third. that automation and improved tech­niques are throwing out of work an increasinto: number of skilled tradesmen.

TRAGEDY OF 'DROPOUTS' Ill' BRUCE JIIOSSAT

The teacher held up ,an ordinary tin can. She asked her young pupils to write down a list of all the uses thry thought it might be put to.

The champior turner! out to be a lad who drumm~d up 38 separate uses. The teacher viewed him with some astonish· ment.

This little exercise wa!< an example of new efforts ~orne schools are making to search ont youngster"' !'f£>atil·r ahili­tiPs. Sonw educators frel that stanrlarri tes1s and t·urricula put too limited a gauge on developing human talents.

Many in and hf'yond the educational world arc worried o\·er this beeau>e 1he nation still suffers tar too many "drop· outs" from st·hool. And unrmployment rate among dropouts is double that of those who finish high school.

The unhappy fact. too. is that the l' .S. economy in the 196()'s appears to be moving steadily toward more and more dependence on skilled. trained people. One company official called the un· skilled "handicapped workets in the truest sense."

Labor department sun·eys indicate lhat in this decade about 30 per cent of the young people enl~ring the labor force will be school drurou1s. That's better than the 1950s, but nobody thinks it's good enough.

Wby are th~>re so many who fail to finish?

A study made of the problem in seven U.S. communities disclosed that the biggest n•ason was wbat the edu­cators call "adverse school experience." By this they mean poor performance dislike of teachers, sheer boredom.

Tests showed nearly half the dropouts had below average IQ ratings.

Nearly all in the "adverse experi· ence" group were judged deficient in basic reading skills, which ~chool offic­ials believe provide tbe foundation for interest and achie\·ement In scbool.

Another big factor was family mo hility, with frequent changes or school. Half the boys who quit school had left their original home communities. They

Auld Lang ~lay 1H. 1~31:

SEAPL\SE ( ())tl\C.

Donald Fraser M ~~ .lohn• lhrflf pa:-;sengcr ~rap:~!lr \\it:~

flyine to :\'ewfoundland ir"::1 arrived at Charlo1trtn" r at !ll today. Accompanyin> Fr;-rr I!

Clayton. hoth oi the mrn m Colony Airwa1·s.

• • • RESO\·.nr:n

The "Bristol Home" •;t•11:, r. corner of Duckworl h ~nrl

Streets. has recently h:•rn and is now open to ptlhlir ~oon he e\·en further rxt;•t:;m:s .. smart bole!. . . .

LITTLE Jrf. The S.S. Prospcro orr:\eoi :

yesterday and Captain Jacob · ports that fine weatlwr nearll' all the run. and •te coast: as far as Cook'; H'roo•:r. · of icc. Thrre were a f<"' ;:e':<:' growlers seen. . . .

O£TL\R L\tTIO\ rnn~iderr~b1e r~l'111'1l11'11 1 ~;t '

rrr~1erl at Deer Lahr rr1·1'd:: '·· huilrling of two miniatnrr . '' the railway >tation. Til~·' :••e ilht,tration of what thr mm! can mean.

~la1· 18. 19~R: . :"\EW 110111\ Po~<ihly the mo-t ,.,,,t

1·aluahle reference h '"' of · land to date i; the · \n<l•'t·rl.'r: nomic Diplomatic ant' S:ra•r::~ now at Baird's hook'i•>rr. p,,,,•,,;_;: .. ,.~ IlL Fraser is a rontn:,,,·i~' ed:::: . ' .

cAR un:Sff.~ L'P to the present :; ?88 rrr~

licences have heen l'·"''ri a:l truck> and 65 motnr ··"c'e; Dri\·ers licences i~~ut· G!,1 ~al 1

' . I:-: Tnll:

The la1est issue of · T::d :'e, ican publication ront.l1I1'"" ar · ~cwfoundland's new ~O\ err>"f. don )lacoDnald. rnmo:n "'~h

. d l"lc• pI simply dec\tnr to '' · ·' · school. . .

Among girls. earl~ "''rrt''' important rea<nn. H· '' ' · .. less. hnt intrn·irwrl' it' It ··''m'

h• d II • ·lj 1 \ C'(l 10 fartor be m a w1,. ·' ' Surprisingly. rrnnt•r'ir

I I . tl•,,qrh ' ~d up ra1 1er rarr ~ . .. .. - '"' the areas studied "'"' ,nffrr •. :,. dil<tress and thi' l'l•·~"'·nt m>· loom lar~er in Slll'h I'''' r;. 1

Oh\'iotl~ly. a high propor:w~ . tragic dropouts are "ln,t" , 1 outset. when they f"!l to ~~· reading start.

The educator~· clerp 1 h 1'1'~ . must of course go to t c ~ But it is heartening 1hat thP~ ~ thinking beyond. wonrlrr~n our scbools operate ''" too t~ base to measure anrl !harbe 1 .,.~ . a I ,.t' range of our youngster!

WORD·HAPPY . '" · uon .~ When a new adminlstra .

· 11 Kennedy regime comes _,n .. tbl learn a great man)' t hlng> way.

This one has shown an tendency to commit matters

I. hi art Examples coming 1o 1g . department and agencY

f n the minding them to men 10 d favorably wben they can. an cations soliciting Republican ployes' participation in 3

fund-raising dinner. d nt At tbe start, tbe Pres e oDI

official entourage that ~0 ill write or otherwise use 0 IC

for outside gain. . E\•idently some in In!

acting perhaps more in . ·o,g ll'isdom. have taken to wrlli vet! (lain. It hasn't worked out

hv f Power

Cl AM Built thrift it'llli

Vl

Fll

Page 5: 1-,:p. , RS enne ee 1enna. - Memorial University of …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...enne ee 1enna. COMPACT RUN DOWN? THE DAILY. NEWS NEED .1-dl1or Sedan

1y'' .. .;.hlo

----···

- . ._'l .. : ":i'

...

....... \ .. , . . ·~..:~"'J\' .

r .:, ;s.,.. ~, .I ..... :.~ .. \ ..... - 41 • •• ~ ·~ . • ' I

I'; .,-.,."I ~ ,. .... ·· '• .. ~,~:~ I '

' "J .t. e I

( :·' .

I:

f. men

• 11 \TJ:n

-,. . ' ~ '

·· · h,,rn

I ruhlir nrr,

I ' '

. I ll'F.

nnto~

·~rnwn1 ha'

1\1 !1001\ · , omrrrl:rn>h!

1 . 1,.,ok ~~ ·

! -\rwfroundlar.d :r,d Str3tr~ir ':•torP. rrofwor

i • : r1hutml: ~rlitor. . .

I HT'\ff.~ ... ;·nt ~.!lRR motor 1 •• , i,, 11 rn and ·· ':"'r rvrlr' i I .>.IH' 'r.tn~a\ i'J89.

l. TDII: r ,f "Timr·." th~ l , I

:·.taminc ~tn arllc . w ~o\'fTD<•r. Sir nmplrtr wtth

. w~• ,1rt,· nwrrJa~e _, . n .. "<11., mrni10

" . . h'd . rr~ r ~It ;otnr l

"·"h Ill go to . n m11• hard~hiP

, I u ~r .·eh·. though n~ · 1 ,,·.3 , snlffrin~ . . . hi

.- "lrtnrnt ml~ .1·"h plarr>. 1 . 0 ""h proporuon 1 , '· I I

"lo<t" alrnO! 1 rr · ,.,. fail to gtl •

' !i).t ~dministratlo~ h"'

' II .. romes ln. th•

many thin8S

:,i agrncY .o mention th; , :hey can. an . ~ Rrpublic&ll ,,atifln in •.

nnrr. . • .a t toll · . the Pr_.ell ofl' a ~e that ~c!al

w 1<e use offl .n. r·me in more in . Ill ,.r

IJken to wr1tl .,n worked out

I

\' ~E\YS. ST. ~J'S, 1'\FLD., 1961

y France Survives Her Crises Power Inbred In Her Peop!e By 170 Years. Of Turmo~l

I ences long eno_ugh to close I s T E A M s H I p ranks behind a leader of na-

1 tiona! stature, such as Presi- M 0 v E M E N T s · dent de Gaulle . I • • * • • i OTHERWISE, ·IT IS "sauve THE NFLD.·GHEAT LAKES ! qui puet,'' which translates STEAMSHIP LTD • 1 roughly as "I'm all right, Jac- HighLner leave Hamilton \ ques; the devil with you." Hamilton, Ont. 1\lay 13, leave

!!:very generation of French- Toronto May 12, leave Montreal men since 1789 has known vio- May 16, arrive St. John's May lent upheaval and change of 21, leave May 23. ,

, regime. "The Black Series," •Dundee leave Montreal May i ·

1 th~ French call it, named for 17, arrive St. John's May 22, i a popular series of crime thrill- leave ~ay 24, . 1 : ers, runs like 'this: Gowm leave Ham11ton, Onl. 1

: The great French Revolu-~ May 24, leave Toronto, Ont. . i 'tion of 1789. followed by regi- May 23, leave l'l~ontreal May 27,. I·

cide and the First Republic in amve St. Johns June 1, lea\·e l ' 1793, terror iii 1799 which Jun~ 3. · · ! · ' brought Napoleon Bonaparte to •Gulfport leave 1\lontrcal t : power. May 24, arrh·e St. John'1 May l

Foreign war follewed by 29• leave May 31• ' Napoleon's banishment and the •Refrigeration.

GULF AND NORTHERN , return of the monarchy in SHIPPING co., LTD. 1 1814. Napoleon's return from ! Elba in 18115, Waterloo and the •Fergus sailing date indefinite ' 1 due to ice conditions. 1 monarchy back again. •Refrigeration.

Revolutions in 1830 and a FURNESS RED CROSS LINE new monarchy .. Revolution. in M.V. carol Trader leaving i'

! . .1 .!

1848 and a Second Republic. Halifax, N.S., May 19th, arriv , L Prince Louis Napoleon stages a ing St. John's May 22nd, leav· · f · : ' • . . .,:..;;

: coup d'etat in 1852, war with ing St. John's May 23rd, leaving t....:._ .. : _,__ _______ ·-·- -······ · ·· ··• ···· ...... -

cmlE and re- ; ~o. ~ut our paint$ la~t : b0a>l~ a J'-111\t manu·

' Germany follows in 1870, usher· Corner Brook May 27th, arriv· SPACE AGE HONORS-Pictured, above, is the Uis-1 ing In the Third Republic in ing New York l\lay 31st, Hali- · tinguished Service Medal presented to astronant Alan !I 1875. . f ax, ~.s., June 3rd, a~iving St. B. Shepard by President Kennedy. Ifs !\ational ; Two more wars with Ger- Johns June 6th. leavmg June . . d • h · 1 . d , many, ending in France's de- 7th for Corner Brook and New ·Aeronautics a~ Space Agency s 1g 1esl awar . feat by the Nazis in 1940. Then York. I

\ the Liberation und with it the S.S. Beeehmore loading cargo ------------. -------· ·-----Fourth Republic, which lasted at London, England, for Corner i Brook and inland rail points Whitlam. Drput,v Lc<11l~r of until May, 1958, when De :with transshipment at Corner the lcdcrn\ J,nhour Party, ilarl

. GaJile returned to power. The real geqius of the French; Brook. vessel leaving London asked 11heth~r ~len1ic< was biii·PO>It•L< in lhe :

•:hwa~ '· Thr ad~ ~hnw: · . of 'J~riamw>. eat·h i PARIS DEMONSTRATIONS: The paving blocks made bandy weapons. J1t~~10 rap and each i •

Wars, revolutions, restora· people, perhaps, lies in their 1, June 22nd. going to follow the Briti>h ex·

lions of the monarchy, repub- staying power. A Frenchman, 'ample in appointing a royal :hr Nhrr·, <ktrt. hk~ pie. Through the cenltme~. the)' ! street," a5 the French expres· weapom. lies and coups d'elat-"Any asked what he did during the 1 c A :11 BERRA. tReutrrs' _ commis~ion to examine how the

Only in times of extreme na- people who can think up so Nazi occupation, replied, ''I AuMralian Prime ~lini~lrr 'f1nh- ownership and control or news-·· matdrn< ,,nrP fra· · ha,.,. del'!~lolled a tolerance to 1 sion gors. political change - indeed al·: One is told that the Parisians mo~t an indifference to it-ex- . hesitate to use macadam on

· 1, m:r ni p:llnl 1.< rt·r· t't'!ll for those rare occasions~· their streets because the pRV· ;:cr of the Frmrh pco· · when they "descend into the ing stones make Sllch handy

tiona\ peril. such as the recent ! many ways to bedevil them- : lived through it." . ert Menzirs Tnesdav rclu~cd 1o paper~. ma~nzines, pel·iodical~ threat of poltical dictation from 1 selves politically are endowed 1 -- :appoint ~ Royal Commis$ion to and a:-,ociatcd lcku,ion inr~r-Aigeria, nrc •·renrhmcn able I with genius," an American edi·; (!lirxt: Colonial ~·ars and do- :study the control and ownership csts were commg into fewer to Rink their personal differ· tor once remarked to me. . domtstic prosperity), :of the nation's newspap~r>, E. r;, hands.

---------------------------------·---------------··--··--·---

". ·'

. ~~·· .~- /,'.: j .,.} ..... ,

'· . ; / ' .:~ ·f ..

THRIFTMASTER WORKMASTER

6 VB OR YOUR CHOICE OF THRifTMASTER SPECIAL, JOBMAiTiiR 5. ALSO WORKMASTER SPECIAL V8, TASKMASTER VS OR TRADEMASTER V8.

CHEVROLET TRUCKS HAVE THE ENGINES THAT ARE FAMOUS FOR DOING THE GREATEST

AMOUNT OF WORK WITH THE GREATEST AMOUNT OF DEPENDABILITY AND ECONOMY Built for rugged hard work, day-in, day-out, Chevy engines have proved they can tak~ it! Chevy's thrifty 6's give top economy all the way ••. yet have reserve power for that extra pull just when it'1 needed. Then there's the might and muscle of Chevy' a VB's: Here's power aplenty with the kind

of stamina that keeps payloads moving- profits climbing! And all Chevy engines, VS or 6, are quality engineered for long lasting, reliable service. Whatever your choice of Chevrolet engine, you get proven design- proven depeudability- proven economy.

I e

JUST SOME OF THE ENGINEERING 'FEATURES THAT MAKE CHEVROLET ENGINES FAMOUS THROUGHOUT THE INDUSTRY: A General Motors Value

YALYE·IN·HEAD DESIGN

A"CtWs ''" brellhlnc - eulor to IOI'tico, ~eduoes down-time ond molnt~nonce costa .•

IHORT·STRDKE ACTION

ReducH plotan ond rtn1 wear -111e1n1 lonsor en1lne llfL

FORGED STEEL CRANKSHAFT

Extl'l stranllth and durability ••• JIIOCislon blllonced lor •smoother runnlnlo

MORAINE ~EARINBS

Precision Moraine beartnp end fo111od steel connecting rods for rugpd durobllity ond lonaer lifL

PRESSURIZED COOliNI

Ensures ag.Jnst --lleattnc on Ions. !OUih hauls.

HIGH COMPRESSION RATIOS

A1111r1 fu II pulling power with ra111ler ~!'""- 11101lnes. Ex!lenslve P<emlum 1rac1es not required!

' FULL PRESSURE

LIJBRICATION Ensures proper lubrica­tion at all times to all moving parts. Positive actiro ell pump main· lain• protective m .. at all !'"Oints of friction. Full-flow oil filter keeps oil cleM\.

FIRST IN SALES BECAUSE THEY'RE BEST KNOWN FOR PERFORMANCE, SERVICE, ENGINEERING, ECONOMY AND ALL 'ROUND RELIABILITY

~:::::::::::::-==~.:::~.--------_:_ _____ See ;your local authorized Chevrolet deakr ------------------------..::c~r-'.:::.30:.:;.'" ·

THE HICI\MAN MOTORS LTD . WATER STREET ST. JOHN'S·

I PHONE 5047 CLARENVILLE BURIN GANDER SPANIARD'S BAY

----------~---·-·-Watch the Chevy Show, Tuesday nights over CBC·TY. CHECK y~ur local paper for time and c,hannel.

·-

I . '

. ~!

. j, 'I

•... :·'.;.:_., .. t ; f ' l

~ f

Page 6: 1-,:p. , RS enne ee 1enna. - Memorial University of …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...enne ee 1enna. COMPACT RUN DOWN? THE DAILY. NEWS NEED .1-dl1or Sedan

I'

• ~

' ;

. · ,. '

' '

. '

• 1 '

•• :~

,.

i :..}.

1 !

' t .,

' . J

:1 ..

..

, I I

I I ! : I ' . ' :

' '

I,

·' '

..

'

;~ ' l ~-~ :' .,, :I

" t '' '

I ·I

'.

., ' • .. ;

"I

i

I I I ' l

I ·i I ·! I l

I I .I I

.i

....... - . . . ' I

THE DAILY. ::\EWS, ST. THURSDAY, ~lAY

Social-Personal - (:olumn-

UCEIVING TREATMENT !he many friends of Mr. P.

'· Constantine, 60 Mullock. St. will be sorry to learn be IS a patient at St. Clare's Mercy Hospital where he is receiving medical treatment. Warmest Ylishes for a speedy recovery are sent to him.

TO CORNER BROOK Mr. Kevin Barry of Corner

BrJok, who had been to St. Johli's on buiiness this past

· week, left the city yesterday . to return to his home. While here he was registered at the New· foundland Hotel.

TODAY'S WEDDING The wedding takes place to·

dav ot Elinor B. Gill, daughter cf • Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Gill, )lerrymeeting Road, to Wilhelm Naubauer of Wutteral. West Cermany, at 7 p.m. at George Street United Church. Re\', Winsor will officiate.

LEAVES CITY .· Jir. C. Martin of Stephenville, who had been in the city on business. left yesterday to re· tum to his home.

FROM PORT ELIZABETH Mr. H. E. Senior. well known

business man of Port Elizabeth arri\'ed in St. John's on Tues· dav on a business visit. He is at~ying at the Crosbie Hotel.

TO TORONTO

lyn, N.Y.

FROM GRAND FALLS Mr. Stirling Thomas of Grand

Falls, arrived In the city yes· terday on a business trip and Ia staying at the Newfoundland Hotel.

RECEPTION The St. John's Branch of

Alumn.i of St. Francis Xavier University, will hold ~n ·infor· mal reception Monday night, May 22nd. for Rev, Father Ger· aid Rousell. The reception will be held at the K. of C. Build· ing, St. Clare's Avenue. Father Rousell is a member of the faculty of St. Francis Xavier University. His Pl\rents were both natives of Newfoundland.

The Alumni Branch will be holding its annual dinner on Wednesday, June 7th at the K. of C. Building. Lowell Murray, Alumni Director for the Univer· sity, will be coming to St. John's to attend the dinner. Tie· kets may be obtained from Rosemary Marshall, Frank Doyle and Nix Wadden.

FROM CORNER BROOK Jllr. and Mrs. J. Basha of

Corner Brook arrived In St. John's yesterday and are regis!· ercd at the Newfoundland Hotel.

MEETING HELD

Celebrates Mothers' Day

The Blue Room at the Newfound· hind Hotel was the scene of much aetlvity on Monday night 15th May, · as the Xi Alpna Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi gathered to honour their moth· ers, to celebrate the fifth an· niversary of the Chapter and to hold the final meeting of the season with the installation of officers for the coming year.

..,,..

Fer liNnday, May II

Present-For You and ours • • • Aspecu negative

lor the first time this wuk. Peo· pie-particularly children-will get on y()ur nerves. Quick tern· per and an urge to speak with· out thinking of effect on other people are accented. Tendency to disregard traffic and other regulalioos must be watchec,

, too.

· Past • • • When a swarm o! . locusts descended on Salt Lake

City, Utah, on May 17,-1848, it was feared crops would be

: destroyed, hut a flock of gulls · came and devoured the in.ect~!

Future · .. You ~r;v obtain an a~'"l:latic · light that will he tim'·' 1 ..... 0 on after the ~mge closeJ-and unli! th·, . safely in~ide hi> hr:ne .

The Day Unc~r Your Sign I lorn Mardi2! to April !91 LIBRA ISepl. 71 t, O·t ..

r:rtlerJ,fi~t inTIJ!Vi.rlg family mem• ~.L:art! ~.;.; :1 : r' ~ 7 .'.'.1

. may preoTe :a.d\·.aiiUgeous. ln:"t n:.a.~ I• :-:1 :.. •..• - ~ •• • -.:_ •.

IApr;l 20 le May 101 .aiHl social &t;lloJi:Jt t ouhl

you don't u~e utrr.cM liH.t,

GEMINI !Moy2! to Juno 21) Ti:,u,.::-iltlrs,nr~s could ...-in~:" ltJ~S o£ frienrh.hiJl. Don't 1k '!If 'tdlttrtd.

SCORPI!? to,•. ;·, •, !',, , 1 Jlo r.{'~ 1 · ·' 3 t•'·. . , .. ·II, tl,.t!•l~·. :-:r.:1:r.,:.e r· .:· ~ , ~· • .'. · ""Ill n~: ,., . · .. · ·

SAG!ITARIUS :t:,, )20,• , 1 h:<. ~~ a j,~,\· ,. · ~ · : , .:;:._ ... _. wrnn.- ~'l 1'!1J"e~ : .

CANCER I June 22 to July 2 I I CAPR!CORtl ICc:. 21 : T1J1hy i~ rclatinlr unimportant. Ho odds .Hr'o\..1~~ of "-"-~'!"" ._.,

an•l rr.rl~ o£ chor('s .around tb.e hou~r. lJi~crrtit:m h 1.,..:,-: •:

. LEO !July 22 to Aug. 21l AQUARIUS !Ja<. 11 ~, ~:; . Ti~ely ~etlan em )'O".Jr p3rt may end a Po~tr')ne :a!":: :. 7• •.:· •. , .-.~ .• -... ~· .

conflict in your nei«hborhood. ~;.nry, ·'•J<'rt.~ !": ·.e . .:._:._,_

I RGO I Aug. 22 le Sepi. 22) PISCES I Feb. 10 to ,_, .. ,\ .. ~ yoursdf. AYoid conflict with ":ork h:~.d ~n.l .as.:! "'"~r~.. '''.

•bo di:s.l£rte with )'out pbilo"'ph)·. thntSI. J)cn t "3\!~ (-.~·:-..-:

,.., • :~ •. 1

~========--=----· r-------, • The Do<'tcr : l Says ; 11, HAROLD '1'110~1AS Hn1:\~,

M.D.

A rr~! hr;•in ·· ,,. r : lcJrc i~ a

Mr. H. Landon Ladd, repre· nntati\'e of the JW A. who was in the cit~· on business last \Uek, left by TCA on Monday for Toronto.

The Cerebral Palsy Parent Council held a meeting on Tuesday night at the Vera Per· lin School. Guest Speakers were Miss Rose Dawson and Miss M. Fuller of Wales, Englind, who gave very interesting talks. The Council would like to tender their appreciation and thanks to both ladies.

A delicious buffet supper was e.n· joyed by members and their mothers after which President Mary Codner, cut the birthday cake, which was made by one and decorated In the traditional of the members, Lillian Vivian Beta Sigma Phi colours. Marg Guihan, Vlee·President, on l>r· half of the Chapter welcomed the mothers and expre~sed the hope that they would a~ain g1·ace our table at the next Mother's Day celebration. Marg also extended a special wel· come lo guests from other Chapters: Betty Carlton, Prr.· ~ident of Alpha Chapter, Gwen Aubin, Vice-President O! Gam· Mother of the Year Mrs. Louinska Guihan receives a g-ift from Mary Cod· rna Chapter and Marjone Ball. . ' · • h' h~ d h · l

\1'11.\T YOU SHOULD K;>;O\\" ABOUT USE OF ASPIRI~

ll'lticlt i.' <i,~:: :. ,. ,.: •. hoanl 'hrw \.w .. ·;;·,.·-;·~ f' 1 • Cfl\'r:f'ti ilhj·~ ,

with ad!)('·:· r.;.,,,;,, · to mat cit ~ikhr~ ,,·:.­sidr th~ hn\. rti·. ::~:! like a ro;HI m""' with ~l't of :~l;1h6

RETURNS HOME Mr. A. Ribling, well known

business man of Corner Brook, who had hecn in the city on busin~~~. left )'esterday to re·

· tum to the we~t coast city. While here he was registered at the Newfoundland Hotel.

TO LYNN, MASS •

Tl!UP TEA

Programme Director of Gam· ner, President, XI Alpha Chapter, Bet S1gma P4u, w 1le er aug ter-m- aw. rna and a member of our Chap· Mrs. Margaret Guihan. looks on, at a dinner celebrating the 5th Anniversary ter. Gwen Aubin on behalf of of ·the Chapter held at the Blue Room of the Newfoundland Hotel, Monday May the two Chapters thanked Xi 5th (Max Mercer Photo) Alpha for the invitation to cele· ' ~-~ ---brate Mothers Day with them. After dinner the installation of officers was conducted by Ann Hunter, aR fololws:

The Mature Parent~ President: Marv Moores; Vice·

President: Trudy Greene; Rfl· cording Secretary: Louise Rose re-elected; Corresponding 'iec- BY MRS. 1\lURIEI, LAWRE!'iCE retary: Bobble Tucker; Treas-urer: Chris Gillies. Deal' Mrs. Lawrence:

Mary Brooks Picken On Sewing

Nylon Net 18 Lovely, Versatile

BY HAROLD THO~IAS Hl.:~IA-:\ The latest discorery about aspor·

m ls almost like finding a ~mall oil well in your hack Yard For now it seem~ that ihis .simple dru~ is capable of lowering the blood sugar in potients with mild diabet.~s 1 sugar sickness l. It's difficult 1o figure out why this effect hns been orerlooked for m long. But I suppose we should hr. grateful that this important action has come to li~ht at all.

es: Anni\'(~r~.~;·ic~. ·::~ .. :. past~d a

Mr. Reg. T. Morgan lea\'es by TCA to attend the funeral ob· aequies of his mother, Mr!. C. H. Morgan, whose interment takes place Friday, May 19th, In Pine Gro\'e Cemetery, Lynn, Mass.

The George Street W.A. will sponsor a Tulip Tea and Mus· leal on Friday, May 19th, at the George Street Lecture Hall at 3 p.m. Pantry and Garden stalls. Convener for the musical is Mrs. Doris Migus, and amon11 the artists are Mrs. Celeste Flight, Mrs. Grace Oakley, Mn. Grace Hyde and Miss Marilyn Dingwall.

The final regular meeting 1\'~s Our 7-year-old plays cnnstnn!!)' RY ;\1ARY RROOKS' l'ICKE!II nylon nr~rskirl.

Because of his most recent ob· .<rrration, it rna~· be of prac­tical importance to re1·ie11" some of the important Facl' about aspirin.

guide: lkthb::'. t: .' pnsted birrh~:r.r.e a:.~ · rc£ercnt:r !o:· r-:•tn ~.··:·· information i, i~ :··: handed ont ;~~ n',j-~

rour~ter:-'. t1·~·::-~ ~:·.:

''l'hri~lnw~ ! ,t;1:• "Clippin~>. IIDN:·.:~

'include ·'""'r nf :: tried anrl tntr 1

::-hots. ~('~n'.i'.T~ .. ZJ a: snnp~hotc;; of ~~~r-~1. C!:

collect.

then brought to order by Mar)' with another chili! who is a Codner and the bu~iness meet- ye~r older. Though this child :>lylon net is tru!v ~ boon tro

women who enj~y the feminine touch in fo,hion, but. who ned 1o watch the pennies.

To makr an o\·rr~klrt. IJu;· a ~·,. to 3-yanl length of net. La\· a

yardstic-k on the two end·, ol the ncL Chalk a straight lmc and carefully cut hoth cd:;~s along the line. Turn these cut edges lo the ri~ht side '4-inch.

Clw l'lll in~

TO HOLD MEETING The monthly meeting of St.

James Woman's Federation will be held in Macpherson Acad·

· em/ this evening at 8 o'clock.

FROM CHANNEL Dr. and Mrs. J. Stasiek of

·Channel. arrived in St. John's yesterday and are registered at the Newfoundland Hotel. Dr. Stasiek is being transferred

. fro n Channt>l to Grand Bank.

ORDINATION ' · • The Ordination to the Holy

Priesthood will be conferred on Rev. Michael Charles Carroll at Seattle, Washington, on Satur·

·day, May 2oth. by His Excel· len~Y. the most Rev. Thomas A. Connolly, D.D. J.C.D. The young prie~t is the son of Mr. and Mr!. Charles Carroll. and a vandson of the late Michael and Sarah Carroll, formerly of Jt~hn's," also A nephr.w of thf! lAte Jam~s And Annie Maher.

: l:!is manv friPnil~ and relative~ ; ~will be ~tlendin~ the rrception

arterwarrls, including ?llr. and )lr!i. D. J.' Redmond of Brook·

IT'S A HOJIIEY OF A LOAF

· ' OUR OWN BREAD .. ~·· BEST BY TEST

HOLDS CARD PARTY A most enjoyable card party

was held yesterday afternoon in aid of the Animal Shelter Fund at the home of the Presi· dent, L.dy Dunfield, Waterford Bridge Road. Bridge 11ames were won by Mn. J. S. Kelsey and Mrs. Charlie Garland. Aue· lion games were won by Mrs. Woolgar and Mrs. Dean. De· licious afternoon tea brought the very pleasant afternoon to a close. The next card party II scheduled for May 29th .

BIRTHDAY GREETINGS Birthday greeting• to David

O'Neill, 20 Stabb's Court, who celebrated his 7th birthday yesterday. Greetings come from Ted, David, Gregory, aister Eileen, and grandfather and grandmother O'Neill. Also fro111 mommy and dadrly and grand· father and grandmother Harrla.

GUESTS AT PARK PJ,AZA .,trs. Richard O'Reilly, of St.

.John's, wa.s rrcently IUtstl at the Park Plaza Hotel in Tor· onto. Miss Janis Pinfold, also of St. John's, was a IIUest dur· ing her recent visit to Toronto.

Short white aloves of kid or fab­ric are always correct at a dance. Leave t h e m on to dance, take~ !hem off at anaek· time.

lng held. At the conclusion of is bossy toward Charlene. J the meeting, the mother of tl•~ don't mind this. I do mind her year was chosen and the lucky tattling. This youngster is a)-winner · was Mrs. L. Guihan, ways running in to tell me that mother-in-law of the Vlce-P·p. Charlene has taken off twr sident, Mary Guihan, Mrs. Gtti· sweater, is eating something or han was presented with a ~ift has done something else. l'\'e by Mary· Codner. Mr!. Guih~n. tried to tell her that thi~ tattl· who comes· from !\fontreal, i~ ing is disloyalty to Charlene \'isitinfl with her son, Bill Gtti· but it's no use ... han and hls family lrere in St. ANSWER: If we don't like to John's, and.lt was nice that she listen to a child's tattling, lt is could celebrate the occasion simple to tell him how we feel with us. Mary Guihan expre~s· "Disloyalty'' isn't always t 11 e ed thanks to the Chapter for motive for children's tattling the honour of having her any more than it is alway~ the mother-in-law chosen a~ the motive for ours. Mother of the Year. Kay Nor· For example, disloyalty m a ) ton, Programme Chairman, 'have no part in my reason for

You can shirr it-tuck it-fold it. You can m~ke cape~. over· skirts, stoles, yoke R, p:1ff slee\·cs-so manv thing~.

It costs only $1 to '$1..10 per yard. One-half vard will make a loHlv

protecti1·e cap for Henm~ wear, or e1·en for daytime when yo11 are dashing ·some­where and need to protect yom· hair from the breezes. Or vou can add glamour to 8 simple sheath dress by making a

~lake another l-inch turn, stitch through the center. and \'01l

hare a milliner's fold lscc' 11 lust ration>. A shows how thL• turn is made. B the ccmer stitching, Gather the top ~·Jgc of the net. Stitch a ribbor. band on the top, allowing en nough ribbon-say "•·Yard-at each end, to make a nice Itt

-then announced that slides o! telling you that a mutual friend Newfoundland scenery would of ours has lost his job.· I may be shown by Joyce Ebsary with reveal our friend's secret !o a commentary by Chris Gillies. you-the definition of "tattling"

f-~----_--_-_--_-. .._--_-_--,__,_.-:/; These were most enjoyable and -because I hope you may be showed some very fine shots of able to help him find another the flora and fauna of our is· job. I may taltle on him to land, especially around Con· show you !hal I enjoy more of ceptlon Bay. Kay then lhankrcl hi~ confidence than you· do. I .Joyce and Chri~ for their pf. mav tattle hecau~e mv own forts In making the affair that an~icl)' requi1·es your c~mfQrt. much more enjoyable. The •ve· And I may tattle on him out of ninl( concluded with e a e h a sclfrighteon~ salisf1tdion in mother beinl( presented with 11 my own freedom from econo-yellow rose In 11 vase, 11 mo- mic worrv. menlo of the celebrati!ll( of tJ,e Children t~ttle for 11s wid• ~ celebration of another Moth~rs · varietv of reason8 M we do. Day in the history of Beta Grownups fail to apt>reciate Sigma Phi. this because we don't like to

~ee the similarity b~tween

We The Women ltUTB MJLLETJ'

children's tattlin11 and e u r gossiping.

Once we see the tale-bearin~ youngster as a juvenile version of the gossip In ourselves, we can begin to credit his tattling with the same variety of mo~­lves that compel us to reveal the private experiences or our

B

-------Milliner's ~~----------·

W~ar th~ ovrr~kirl to oppn r~n

ter Iron!, or rcntrr hack as you prefer. 11 the net make~ A skirt too lonl(, simply turn n de~p hem to make it the len"lh you desire. :"\ct skirt can ''oe seven·ei~:hts length if you wi>h.

Stitch net over tissue paper, then tear the tis~ue away. Use H In !I '!itches per inch.

near Mr~. J'icken: Can I ~likh two thickttesses of chiffon in ;o seam7-R .. J.

llrar R, .1.: Ye.<. plaL'r the hn• lhicknrsse.~ of each section of th~ fnhric tnqether. Lay •h1·

fabric nat on 11 1ahlc, smtwh fl('rfectly, pin all edges fo gcther.

Its chemical name is acetylsali· cylic acid. When purcha:;ed IJv its chemical name in fii·~ grain tablets, you can IJu;· ~· manr as 500 tablets for mtdt less· than a dollar. ..

Since it's a pure chemical, nn one prmluct is any better or any worse than all other p1 o­ducts.

Its usual dose is fh·e lo 10 grain<. taken e\'ery three or fo•1r hours. There is no need to gi\'e children any special a•· pit·in. To prodde a lesser dose, you me1·e!y powder t h e five grain tablet and give a ~maHer amount. In the 11ntts· ual case of the child who can't or won't swallow a powder. \'OU can float the dose in m1l~ ~r mix it with ice cream.

H you prefer to subslitule ~ liquid product or similar ac· I ion mu can ~ive teaspoonful rlos~s' of ~lixir Tempra or Tyl· rno!. F:ach teaspoonful con· 1 ~ins lwo ~rains of aminophr· nol. a c!o>e relative o£ aspirin

.-\.,pirin acls in t.~ to. :30 minut~s The acl ion may be ~p~cded ~ lJit IJy powdering the tablet lw­tween two spoons and wa~hm2 the powder down with a no.t glas~ of hot water. a cup of tr~ or coffee Ito get the additional caffeine effect of the "doct~r·,

prescription"\ or a drink ol a carbonated beverage (to gPI effervescence\.

The aspirin effect is not intensi· lied br combining it with drug> 1 ikP 1;h~naret in or salol.

.Always fresh!

JUST ROW WOULD YOU DIAL friend8 to other people.

1 '.BEEF STEW., DUMPl-INGS'! With this new under~tandlng we are not di.~tnrbed by prejudice

:\ '~i rin does canse ocrasiuna 1 stomach irrilation: lwnce it b hest to a\"Oid it in patient~ known to ha\'e ulcers. But e1·en so, the irritation may oe reduced greatly by preparing the stomach with a prelimlll· ary cup or hot water, soup ot· milk and hv washing the po·•· rlrred tablet down with more warm fluid.

• AVOSET Cream

...... andfrah

:· ••daisy

BlllthlaDd months · after it's bottled .

• ov dairy. No other cram kapllib :il AVOSET ~

. , became llO other •· creiDl iuterilized

. . like AVOSET. -~ Baide., it whipt' fast, ' . . irays whipped. . > · ~ always healthful.

~- · life lnd'delicieus. · . , __ ;

' '

::avosET : . ~ •·.· -.. · .. ,·~~"" .. -~ , ' I •• Tlft4 II

C~!'"'c~ ... . ~· .... : ..... ·I

· ...... ' . . ,. ·• . - . '

Somewhere I came acro!ll the and misconceptions when Char-atartllng bit of information that lene's friend runs In with the a' system Is being tried out ex- news that our daughter h a ~ perlmentally that will allo\V a taken off her sweater, housewife to control her elect· Instead of seeing the image of ric cooking equipment by tete· Nasty Little Tattler, we see ~ phone. little human being who m ~ ~·

I llon't know just how this newest ~imply want to prove herself a boon to womankind wUI work good friend, may feel genuine -but just thinking about It cercern for Charlene'5 health, bring1 up a lot of interesting may want her ~ense of respon· questions: ~ibi!ity credited-or may in·

,Just bow useful . will it be if deed be taking self-righleou~ there's a teenager in the house· pleasure in her superior obed· hold? What housewife 'with a lence. IS. year-old daughter c o u 1 d. . . ever cliunt on be'ing able to get But now n~ne of these moh\·es . anything but .a busy signal if should stnke us as. strange 11nd she . wanted to turn on the fire bad. Gro~nups who are repel· under the potatoes by tele· led by child tattlers are just phone? , grownups who .li~e to g!or1fy

\nd would it be posRible to dial . their own gossTpmJI by otner not only a wrong number but names. to turn on a wrong oven? -------'-----What li mess that could make of some .other woman's p o t roast! ·

. . ' nil what happens when you are expecting guests for dinner alld,. everf time you dial. your number to tell ; the electric stove ·to start cooking, you 1et a busy signal because some:

.body <not you. or course) tt'fl

tbe :receiver off the hook? · 'ith all .the working wlvu thert are, ·won't the telephone llncf -be jllllmed around 5 o'.clock af wivea stop their filinl and typ. lq lon1 enough to tell- t b • I r eleetrkar appllancea te atar t

cooking? But why cross bridges ahead 01

time? . After all, this newest Idea in remote control cookery is still in the experimental stage and may never get any further. ·

So you can dream of the fun oJ being the .first one in . y o J r bridge club to have the 1irsl direct line to the. kitchen slov'!, and of watching the envy · on the faces of all the other ~iris when you say airily, "Than~ heaven, Tm dummy. Now ! can go and telephone my elec­tric skillet."

Place over tissue paper, with seam cannot tighten. Finbh tbe adjoining two pieces of the by overcasting with a loose second piece of chiffon over the stitch. . seam line of the fint. Pin Another way is to stitch the generously. thicknesses separately. Then

rhen stitch using 8 to 9 stitches place OIIE over the other. Turn lo the inch, stretching the fab· all the raw edges inside before ric slightlY as you stitch so the overcasting the seam.

If a buffering nclion is nesin-cl A hal( teaspoonful of bicarblln­ate or soda may be mixed 1n h the powder. Or thc comhina tion may be washed down \\'i: !· a glass of club soda.

Since aspirin is mainly used !r relieve pain and reduce fev~1

- its use should be discontinuPr' as soon as it has accomplisher! its purpose. And, if the pain or fever fails to respond to three or four doses, you'd bel· ter call your doctor for t h en the causative disturbance may require more exp~rt attention than you can provide your;elf.

FOR A KITCHEN SHOWER, match up a supply of l(ay tea towels with items she'll need for dishwashing and silverware care-dish drainers and mats silverware cups and cutlery trays, And for under the sink add a plastic vegetable bin fil· led with cleansers, dish mops, steel wool-wonderful idea f or keeping undersink space tidy and free of wet dribble•.

~pt·in~ flw,H'r" t :r~:

of tiny <hi!'' ·~ lol" duck> F:na: and learr< ,, •e": ~irts cou!d bE' :1re•e~·t matchin~ p;.,·.:: · :··. with a rll~;,er ,.,;· L kinds of h:;b;: ca:e · talcum tn 1:nv •

shoes in !'t(•'.:t ~ape:

pair to a : ,,, : i.abe: owner's n'lr~t\ tiP. sturd1· stri•:: and of thrm no " ·nrl :n withln .,fl<-1 rr;~~+i~~

If ton rlrr;w rioin~ tl•r~'• tbr 10.'!. '

t in2 On1' n ;;I :·r·.: hoard. ;---1 :1 ~kJ:-1t.

oul. 0\'r! ;'ntlrct.

pin ancl rr, ._;: br~~~t. The crriJ~rll'rl:·~ · accuralr ~:. ·!r ;c·l ~lip, non-!;;; ~~ r. ~:2: rubher :00(1:1 ·~i=-1:

1•\•: YOl' (.'A\' '.1 l"i: ,_._

E:\ERG \" FOR DE:\1:\(; Tl\lf: small 1o~•:, ln 3 .:

coni aint>r ~'' \IM we-~d ~ud ... n•tl pla>li<' p ... ! I' tlr • \\'t"l'- . ..;p:ln••ll"' t'!:V ~·

JllO:-:t ul llw ... ~ 11 ;,,: :\ ne~d--a' ·.\t':~ :.t.' J ~~­er tmn·lli:•.: tur ' . trowel>. and a pad as p!"<J:t'ciiOfl earth ll"l1rn ~nrc::r.; tin g. -

Bt·:VOflE ~tlii"IX';: I. "~ ·t. SFFD tn· ,.,,,,, .• '

holrl hh1~in: . It"• ,. that birrl< •Ill: 0' 1 r. hlur:

'.\"liE:\" yot· nKETB:· \\'r:•mows now~ · ingtime. n>r a .. ' · er on them 'ca;r.

rl .. Ol powder that nr, white residue 1•

til next Fall and move it, one ' polish and ;-o::r come olit clean , ready to go up a;J.: er,

NE

• • • -crowning glor: some '

~,;.,mO(>OIIllll your daY. Clea~ h2

gives the !!IU5 )UJ(Urious grow

• • • tile season's st

ears are ver: If the lob

or chaPI them nightly w

the day, sm moisturizer

from looking

•••

• •• cosmetics is

de~igned of \·our lou sho~· througl

be translucent to or rosy tones 1

· vou would di~ it ·i~ necessar)

of our cotto~ cutting therr..

in making pleal to I

~Irs. E. T.: quality cottons

It depenc launder tl

washing th1 water. it wou! to shrink ther

mav usr the !

the ·fabric in th1 since the seln

than the r you must c

inch or so. pulling at

my experien 1 have fotmc

buy a pat large for them

shoulders, ar In mo:

take into 1 waist measur' measurement.

easily enlarge• yourself r

about th~ ful fullest part of

words. a ct rather than

If you I to this 1

chances are more satisfied

the garment. ' given on thE be S~tALLE

Mrs. S. C. for some u1

buttonholes the center frc

Your bu1 on th1

Page 7: 1-,:p. , RS enne ee 1enna. - Memorial University of …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...enne ee 1enna. COMPACT RUN DOWN? THE DAILY. NEWS NEED .1-dl1or Sedan

. ; .

I'.

. 'l\,

. . . t'.

drr'IJ

" ('(: (1 ~ ., f' ..

·I t,r ~rr<ent!d

• p.:J-'.il h~<k!l · ';l';lrr :1:1J: L1:~

. h3h;; ( i': t iltml :o tin,· hangm

.. othe:O. r;n~.

·~m' n ::~t your ~hr ,kt'" t•roll

· rJ' hnHrrl. lllt'a~urf . , prr .... ~ !11:-fort ,·:hCnl(ir~. ;J\r~

·r "Jiirlr ror "' I .c.n-tir ri n tra~.

'OrlP fli(,h

\\ ~\\T miE :'; \' FOil \!ORE \li Tl\lE

--

• 1961 '1

Gaile Dugas

New ..

On Fashion . Daily Recipe Lingerie Fashions. For A Bridal Trousseau u~~~~e~:te~s P~eslf~:~t ~~~-~a~r

•.. Fashion Tip~<

, a ,01 ~11 hall!lk!'rchiel P ~ref · nowMr and p.l!t n ace , t1 , ,~ thr hox. powd~r

. ~~ -o- .

El'er since culottes hit the stores, there has been a definite tNnd to fancier pants. This sumn}tr two of the favorite fancy-pants will be the skant, half ants, and hal£ skirt, and the spnn:, Capri pants with skirt attaCh· ed.

· c'~1'1 and \'Oiir pull will ·pi' . 'th · : ' · JJe«lv coattd w1

"f nttn •.•

• • • -"mng glory is thinn· ,,.;: cro d• ,0me !'omouflage

.. ~i'\1 t" • •

· · ing 1·our hair ev~ry V"i:~ Clr~n ,hnir is fluffy

· the 1i.U>ion ol R ,,\ .... ~ . ·~,:;:ion> gro11 th. . . . .

1 •r.1, 0n·s shorter hair .ht ·r, are 1·rry much on

p,J. b · If the ]ohes tcome or c~apped. mas-

.' 0·1-hth· with cream. ·~f':11 ... • •" t·,. c~'. <mooth on an

l•l" • • ,

·e n:~J>l:ifllrr to ~~~p 'O<J'·in• drY and !rt'!'ll . ,\ .... •

. . .

l.inl(eriP for the 1961 bridal trousseau was 11ever more beautiful, A11d the Itegal bedroom roat and I!OWil (center) are for the bride who prefers •• upkce11 is a breeze. N~on makes the fashions shown here completely pradl· elegant tlmtllclty. Young brides favor the gown In the short length (rlgilt),

;. ·~ \(lJ ~,~, 1 ,~:.d 1 \:~rn_.;.s wlv:"_lh· ·, . ' neir<,an· to >hnnk

cal. Short ~own and matching bed jacket (left) have lavish trim of Bylon lace. This one has camlso!e top with vertical rowa of nylon lace,

· •• (l·~· ,"'~lr 1 -,,~~,,;1,, today b"' GAILE DUGMI The long length Is a bit more If you're weary of white, try a pleased by gowns and rob~s may look but It's deceptive.

:-.'E\\' YORK - 1 XF.A •-Though Mphlsticated. pale green, a soft coffee color, which pass up ruffles and lace In planning your bridal lingerie, . wr~ t\1t'"' ' ( _; ,,,,. I' :•' I ' ' ' ' ' •.;

.. n·ar:.··," ~M·:1.rrl ~kub. L bridal ling-erie is traditionallY Most gowns h a v e matching coral, turquoise blue or mauve. in favor of Grecian lines and allow for at least three gowns. white. 1961 brides may add a robes. But some have match- Have satin mules dyed to no trim. A half dozen would be bett~r . . ~:-:.;~~:h:; ~n :r:w~ on the

' . t h ~~-!;e ·.~;.,r:t ;;p,JI111l'i! r spln>h of color in gowns ilnd ing bed jacketa as well, Crys. match. "ou should ha1·e nvlon rob•s · Really good nylon bridal lingerie 1 ' o peignoirs this year. tal pleated, lace or ribbon Brides who like classically si~,.

, ~(l:r~h(lr"· ·r1 "' is not inexpensive. But bear in matched to l\\'o of the gowns. I~)' may al~o ha\'e any length trimmed, these sets are labu. pie clothes for daytime and

~lr<. E T. )\:f I·: T

and st)·lin~ th<>y prefer. Gen. Iously heautilul. And they e1·ening wear will undoubt•!rlly crally. the younger girls like wash out in a matfer of minul- prefer the same idea carried

-~~~~-~~-~~ length in gowns. es, dry In an hour or so. out in lingerie. They will be

mind that it wears and we~rs. You'll have it for years or unul you weary of it. Fragile it

Have three full-length s1ips and the same number or half· slips. ~ 1a::: 1 co::oi:• w11l r~rely

,.. :, 11 nr;•e11d' on h o w • •:" •3::ndrr them. If )'Oto

',\a•l-,:~;: P~rm in \'el'y Pollys Quiz .. -.------------------------------------------- . __ __.__ ________________________________ __ ·,\ 11:~r. ~~ ~ould h: n r,nort

.,.. .~r::--~ thrm fir~t. ·:':a' uir thl" :--~1\ ,1~r ~rl!!e ~:1 ·!a~r'r ·n lhr >kirt -~~.n.

•:~.ct" thr- ro:rha;!E.' i~ W•1'\.•n

· tbn the r~•t of I ll ~ ~~·1 :r.11'! rlip this t•n:c

inch ·~ ·'" Thi~ "' i 1 1 r·~~~ine at tht seams.

llmm l'hr~t To Gel 8n•l ~lu nt PRitern

~~r~. Farmw 1hou\d one take a "IJusl . " to rletermine

mr patl~rn to huy~" ll. Mrl. lin. )!. )kf' ·

1~ Ill\' txperirn'·~, with !it· I hm found that most

buy a patlrrn that is !argt !or thrm at the neck· . !houlnm. and hodice in

In mo<t instances, take m:o con>ideration,

·•a1st mra<"Jremrnt or thl! 11.ea•urement These can ll!l!y en:argerl

youmlf rathrr ti~htly ahout th~ lu!lr<t part of

fut:w part or the hust. In '·nrd,, a chrsl meast•re· rather than a bust me3S·

If you hny a pattN n 10 this measuremeut,

cbance; arr that )'OU w'll 1ati•lierl 1nth the fit

;arment Thi, measure· 1inn on the p~ttern may

. te S~lALLF.R than your mmure:r:ent. hut unl~ss

" are I'm· lar~e in t 'l e it· prooab')' will fol

btll~r. \l~re Do You Start The

Buttonhole? tunic~.

\ll·s. S. C. ~lri. s (' for some unu<ual reason,

buttonhole; should begin ~enter front in all •ar­Your huttons too, ;ay

on the exact center

the bottons fln accord· marks on the pattern.

BY POLLY CRA!ItER

PICTl'RE WISilOW GLARE CAS BE Cl'T TO GLOW

~I any lil'ing rooms seem unat­lractil·e becau~e one ~ide of the room is li.!<ht~d by the glare of a large picture window. T h • other side has no light from another window to offset this.

:o>ot long ago I saw this problem sol\'erl effecti\·ely and inexpen· sh·ely. Windows were on •h• west side onl)'. Split bamb'IO shades «porch ''arietyl had -------· ----·-· _ ................... ---~-----~~ ~·~---·~---~-------~~· ~~~~~---~~---~~ ......... been painted a deep bright blue. 'l'hev were lowered to tilt sill so that li~ht sifted pleasant· I~· through the slits, Curtains were white linen trimmed with blue braid the shade of t h e blinds.

Dea~ Polly: I am planning to pam my bathroom walls a pale lilac and get a white bed. room set. I have a ·light pink rug and was thinking about pink curtains. Al~o want a long cocktail table, paint~d while. On this, I intend to put a bright purple pillow and a white phone. :o>o one likes m~· plan. \\'hat do you think of it'! -Jimmr.

Dear .Jimmy: I'm with the op. position, too. I should think that a youn~ man would feel prettv sillv living ·in such a room'. A gold background with black lacquer furniture a n d bold black-and-white striped curtlins would seem far smart­er for a man, young or old. Then you could ha,·e a long emerald green table with a

white boxed cushion.

Ask The Designer

BY GAILE DUGAS

Dear Gaile: I read a fash.!qn story in which you said t n a t white patent leather would be in style this summer. I ha·1e never felt that white shoes were lor city wear. In fact, I don't own a pair. I have nev. er seen white patent leather, however, and It sounds inter­esting. Is it right for city wear this year?-0. J.

Dear 0 .. J.: In a sense, you're right in feeling that white shoes look out of place in the city in summer. The reason for this is that most women wear 'dark clothes in the city and therefore prefer black pat. ent leather or vivid colors. But this I~ what designer Mar­garet Clark, designer for Mar­garet Jerrold shoes, has to say about this:

"Definitely, white patent leath­er js a city shoe this year. Where you wear white pat~nt depends upon the treatment of the shoe. For the country-a rugged look, a stacked leather heel: for town-ornamentation and dressmaker detailing. For any occasion, it's crips looking and easily washable."

Summer Silhouettes In Chiffon

· mark the exact spot by lapping t h e

lront over the left front, '""'··"-... ,.,, is completed.

Dear Polly: :O.Jy connecting Jiv­ing room and dining roo:n have one scheme. L i v tng room walls and dado in the dining room are bone whiLe. Upper walls in the dining room have a French paper with ·ose· and-green ligures on w h it e. Curtains are while. brocade. Traditional mahogany dining

Dear Gaile: An article of yourt appeared in the paper about a woman who wore a. size 10 dress and the skirt was always light on her, Your reply to her was that dresses were ~ul Chiffon for summer rates two entirely different treatments. Evening gown (lef~l In smudge· on showroom models. If 1 am printed 11Ik ehilfon has floating skirt and wide self sash. Slim dinner dress (rtght) Is jewel· wrong, I wish you would cor· tinted ehlffon over 1 erepe undersllp. Both designs are from Herbert Sondheim.

. GLOSSARY: SteRm·

. Appl)•ing steam, such as rect me, but a's I understand

1 b Iron, slightly above ~~lr to raise the nap or h 1• Is usually necessary . ave pres1ed the ednes

it, most models are tall, have wide shoulders, sUm hips and First Day of are long-waisted, ' .

.1too hard and flatt~n­PI e.

chairs have needlepoint sea~s Well, if this Is correct, then .vhy but need slip covers, Rug ts am I having the problem of rose beige and sofa Is a • ume finding clothes that should fit . lighter. One chair is medium around my waist Instead of green, another leaf green Ieatb· around my bust? To explain er. Another club chair nuds to you further, I am tall 1nd

JUt - · reupholstering, What color? slim with wide shoulders, 1111111 lt1" ANN MRTOSH Tables and breakfront are Ilia· waist and hips, I take a size

pure exee!s baggnae hogany. Sofa and two chairs 7, or 9 dress but would rather road to success. It i~ a need slip covers. I also want take a 7 If the waistline came

lllinl emotion and can IJe a new pair of lamps agamst to my waist. Where can I 1,ct 10 ul to a t~n·a~er, 'ft1 white walls at either end of a size 7·9 dre11 that II long.

Sunday School BY .JANET HENRY

Home he comes bursting Wfth lace full of dirt, Chalk on his jacket And clay on his shirt,

Trousers and shoes In a terrible state. And sixty·two cents From the offering plate!

~eo;: e1s1e is silly and ·sofa. What type and color, walllted?-M. S. 0 urae f. Jealouay please?-Mrs, P. A. H w RS n L o n ael£-doubt and b 1 De M p A Th ·1 nd Dea M S • You ean't The THE 8 0 E T AT B 0 l\1 inlerio '! r n1~ ar rs. , .: e so a a r . .. IN MAY throw r;{ Teen-agers two cbalrs would be pretty with size you name are junior ~l!es April ahowers bring May show·

111 •ar out of their slip covers of floral chintz In • and are cut with a •hm·ter ers as truly as the flowers ft1l· Gil ly age, Cod. rose, green and yellow on waistline. From your own de- low after· for Ma Is the month

llltd tn hnproving YO'Ir· white The third chair tould scription, I'd say that your fl'D· to fete th~ brides ~f June Hon. larre ,:r,~ O;thers wilt, to be slip covered with a rouih, blem lies In trylnl to buy )Un· or the bride-to-be with this mp ~ar. textured white fabric~ Or, ~-ou lor sizes when actuapy, You erlallve shower dessert IPliN ml&bt use narrow green a n d are an Ideal mines size 10. · Plate G. SALAD white slripes which would al· Here, the waistline IS longer,

be Wtth I sprlnstlme 10 be fine for dlnlnl room chair the shoulders are wider nnrl SHERRY RAISIN SAUCE compoled of potato seats. Lamps might well be a the whole dress I»''porllollf!d Bring seedless r.aislns, to plump· cheese salad cold pair of black column bases accordlnlly. The next time ness by covermg wtlh a. :::a,l·

~ ICroDed with 'may. with either gold or black you shop, do try some alze 10 adian dessert Sherry and sim· ~ lllces of tender paper shadea. Try lamp1 on dresses. 1 think you may ~lnd merlng untU wine is reduced by ~ with Slier- approval to be aure size· a n d that your alze problem• a r e half. Serve warm on h a m ~. shape are correct. aver. slices.

IF YOUR'RE HOSTESSING A MAY-TIME-MERRY • MONTH OF SHOWERS AND SHOWER, do plall a specific FLOWERS theme for it-·linen, kitchen or Springtime • into • Swnmer, de· bathroom or .wha~ev~r .go-~o· lightlul season that it is, al· gether collechon ~s t~dtcated so happens to be one of the -rather than leavmg tt up to busiest with dozens of odd your guests, Miscellaneous jobs, i~doors and out, demand· showers nearly always result ing attention all at once. Win· in mismatches, . duplication ter duds have to be tucked and , wrong guessing.. The away to make room for sum. bride s chosen colours tn towel mer clothing, Gardening mus! and bath sets could set a beau· be started often before storm tiful colour cue for . bathroom windows are stored away, and accents and accessortes as de- June weddings just ahead fore­corative and imagina~ive as cast shower shopping along they are useful! For mstance, with a whirl of social events. a pastel-hued plastic tissue dis- Any bright tricks and shortcuts penser complete with pas!el that help keep household traf­tlssuee could be matched wtth flee moving right now certain· vanity waste basket full of Iy are worth a try. prettily-wrapped cosmetics and "fripperies"-s u c h as the bride's favorite fragrance in dusting powder, bath oil, colo­gnes, I a c e-trimmed boudJir cap, a frivolous shower c a o. Whatever colour scheme chos· en, you'll find just about every shade in the palette among the coordinated plastic and rubl)er lines whieh are washable as well as stalnproof.

I

Place a huge fresh strawberry m led Canadian canned freestone peach half and place the peach in a champagne or sherbet glass. Cover with an efferve­scent Canadian Rose that ha~

been well-chilled. Serve '·Vith teaspoon so the· guest may eat the peach after the wine has been sipped.

He was on his biggest !ish oho11 der kick during the days of \he recent campaign when he would set out from his Geor~e· town bouse with a thermos bot· tie of it. Mrs. Kennedy had it ~de up in hatches and stoc~d in the freezer for the frequent occasions when her husband would come home with a crowd of unexpected guests.

Unlike some women, Mrs. Ken· nedy is not a possessive with pri7.e recipes, so here is her favorite for fish cho\\'der.

FISH CROWDER 2 lbs. haddock 2 oz. diced salt pork 2 onions, sliced 4 large potatoes, diced I cup chopped celery 1 bay lea£ crumbled 1 quart ,milk 2 tbsps. butler 1 tsp. salt Freshly ground pepper

!immer haddock in 2 cups water for 15 minutes. Drain. Re·

• serve broth. Remo1·e bones from fish. Saute diced pork un. til crisp, remove 'and set aside. Saute onion in pork fat pocat· oes, celery, bay leaf. salt ~nd pepper. Pour in fish l>rath, plus enough boiling water to make three cups liquid. Sim­mer 30 minutes. Serve sprink­led with diced pork. Sen·es six.

FRESH ORANGE AND DATE SALAD

I medium fresh navel orang. es

1 cup diced celery 1 cup diced fresh dates

-0·· \ . ~tra!ess bra is not a luury.

1t s a must for summer wear. There's nothing qui~ so un'id\' or embarrassing as bra 1trD~ showing.

-o-S!eel'eless and backless sun-ch·~,

ses are dandv for the beaeh v• garden, but 'th~y'rc all wron~

A strapless bra is not a lu:run . ed up in an office or store t!;' summer. make sure that. .i•l' have one or several little :Jr kets that CO\'er the baren;.,.: You'll sli11 be comfortable .1r· you'll look much smarter,

Manners By ~HLLETT

If you are just a beginner at a game, be sure to say so if an expert asks you to play.

2 tbsps. mayonnaise Menu Head lettuce 6 slices fresh oranges Chicken Broth 6 whole fresh dates, pitted Crackers

Peel oranges. being ~ure to ~rim Chicken and Rice Salad in off the white membrane. Cut Tomatoes into sections. Place in a colan- Slit and Toasted Cheese Rolls der to drain off excess juice. Devil's Food Cake Strawberry Combine with celery. dates ~nd Sherb~t mayonnaise. Toss lightly and Coffee Tea )!ilk ~erve on head lettuce. Garnish _______ ... ------each with m slice of fresh or­ange and a whole pitted date .

Yield: Six Servings. ORASGE BOSTOS PIE

~~ cup butter or margarine 112 cups granulated sugar ~ egg yolks 211 cups sifted pastry flour '• tsp. salt 3 ~ cup cold water 14 !'Up frozen concentrated or·

ange juice 3 egg whiles ~ tbsps. sifted ICtng sugar

Grease two· 8-inch round layr.r cake pans and line bottoms with wax paper. Preheat oren to 350 degrees F. <moderateh· boll. Cream butter or mar~a;. lne until fluffy. Gradually add sugar and beat pnti! light and fluffy. Beat egg· yolks un­til thick ~nd lemon colored . Blend into creamed mixture and beat until smooth and ?.'('11

blended. Sift together pas+r:; flour, salt and baking powder Combine cold water and fro7.~n concentrated orange JLIICe. Add to creamed mixture alter­nately with sifted dry ingred­ients. ~ix just enough to

for 10 minutes. Then remo•:e from pan~. im-ert to cake rae:; and pee! off papers. When cool put cake layers togeth~r with cooled oran~e cream fiJ. lin;: and icinl! ~ul!ar. Yield­one 2-la,·er fillf'd cake. ORASGE CRE.\:\1 FILL!Sf.. 14 cup corn>tnrch 1 cup !(r~nulated sugnr •:, tsp. salt 2 tbsp~. fresn l~mon juice I cup peeled and choo!'ed or.

ange sections' 2 to 3 or· ang~c::)

Rind of 1 oranae. fineh- ~r~+ed 1; cup colt! water · ~ thsp~ bntter or marg~rine

~lix corn<t~rch. ~ranulated ;u. ~:wr and !':lit in et ~aucennn. :\drl fr~sh lemon juice. neel~rl nnrl chonperl rind aNi crlr! <I'~· ter. ~1ix thorou~hl•· to blen:l all in~rcrlicnls. look on•r mod!'rate hr"t. st irrin~ co•' ~tantly, until thiC'k•ned ""'' smooth. \\'hen thick and r' spremlin;! con;istcnrl'. remoi'P from heat anrl ~rld butter or margarine. ~!i~ well. Cool and use to fill the cak

blend ingredients with an r----....,;;.;;,-~_;;,;.;.;;..;;;,;, electric mixer u~e low speed. l Beat egg whites until stiff. Fold gently into flour mixture. Spoon batter into greased cake pans. Bake in preheated )ven 35 to 40 minutes. Remove from oven. Let stan~ on cake rack

-

CLEASSt:RS LTD. BE WISI!:

MARTINIZE I'he JT.ost in Dry Cleanin~

Phone 92186·7·52U

HUGHES-MAYNARD

POPULAR STYLES! POPULAR PRICE-S!

For Young

Wng Pa,raders

ENGLISH

CREPE·SOLE

SANDALS

T-strap style. Red and Brown Calf.

Sizes 4 to 6 ....... $1.65 Sizes 7 to 10 ....... $2.00 Sizes 11 to 1 ........ $2.20

CHILDREN'S MOCCASIJII ORFORDS

Foam rubber soles. Black or Brown.

Sizes 6-7 . $1.58 Sizes 6-12 .............. $1.78 Sizes 13-3 ................ $1.98

CBILDREN'1 SADDLE OXFORDS

Blue and While. Long. wearing crepe soles. Sizes 8¥.! to 3 ..... $2 !18

MISSES' PARTY PUMPS

Convertible Style. Black.

Sizes & and 7 .............. $1.29 Sizes 8 to 12 .............. $1.!10 Sizes 13 to J ...... ,...... $1 75

BUFFALO BILL

COWliOY BOOTS

White and Black or Red and Brown. Moulded ~oles.

Sizes 6 to 13 $2.9R

CORDUROY OXFORDS

White, Black, Blue, Red Green and Gold. Children's sizes 4 to 2'k

99c. Ladies' sizes 3 to 9.

$1.09

I I

i .I

I I

' ' I

Page 8: 1-,:p. , RS enne ee 1enna. - Memorial University of …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...enne ee 1enna. COMPACT RUN DOWN? THE DAILY. NEWS NEED .1-dl1or Sedan

I

' I I

) .I '

'I

:: ,. 'I I

• I l I, -~·

'~ :I ' :'! " J

I! ·•' ,.

., I ..... , ·.· ,J

~ -' ·I .. !i ., ' ,, ~

' ~ ~

. . ~

1.'

·I

'l I f· i\ !

'.,'

~ I ):

\; '

! .

I 1,; ·I

I

I )

~·. I J

I 1 I

,. ~. L': ,.

' ...

..

' '

At Your

•.

itS light! its

satisfying!

\

Library

'

• THE DAILY I\EWS. ST. ··s. \'FLD. Till' RSDA Y. \l.W

Conception Bay News

FREE HOME DELIVERY

·, .. ,?,,

·· . ..:·\~

!fT. JOHN'S: Phone 7345 or 6359

GANDER: K. L. Griffin Ltd., Phone 8-2387

GRAND FALLS: Bond Beverages Ltd., Ph1me %H6

BELl. ISLAND: Tom Muroby, Phone 2186

THE BENNETT BREWING CO., LTD.

Personals JI:\RIHH:R c;nAn: --- :lli"

Brtly ~tar SllllfiHIIIS .'prrll thr wrrkcn<i ri<ittng hrr parrnl' ~Jr. and :lin. (;ordnn Simmon>.

Mr. 'Ral1.cr Anon<rn arril'l'd !rom Toronto on Tuc'd"~' tn 1·i~it hi~ mother. :llrs. A .. \non·

· ~en and is thr ~urst of hi' llll<')e and aunt Mr. and ~~r~. f.. Jl~n· rahan.

Visiting thrir parrnls al IIH· hour Grare. ~lr. and ~Irs. E. F. ~loriarty for ;\lnlher's Day wcrr ~!r. and ~Irs. Francis CnC'hrane and sons Paul and Patriek. ;\lr. and !\Irs. Stephen ~loriarty aml sons Wayne and Edward and ~lr. ar d :\Irs .. John ~loriarty and daughter Helen, all of St. . John's.

Visitin~ friends at Harbour Grace for I he 1wekcnd ll'cre ~lr. .John O'Connel an•l \lr. R. :\u­gent.

~lr. William Krnncd)· .111d :llr. 1\ex Srnyard 1·isilcd their par· cnfs. :\Ir. and ~lr.'. \\'. B. 1\cn· nedy and ;\lr. ami :\lr·s. (;corgc Sin;vard for ~lotlwr's Day.

0 n Vnda)· IR•t pupils of (;,·ad•• ~B prr,!'nt<·d llwir an· Jlnal prngrarnmr. 11. too. wa~ 11rll rxct·utf'd :nHI hrou~hl forth flllh'h fal'llurahl~ •·on1111rnt.

Folloll·\11~ th•· pro:::r:unnw. thr ('I"" D:11wr \\'as lwld. arHI it

low were \'I·' : · .I:·:'"~

\Pt'l'lltl ali(! J, ,··

:llikr F:l·•·· · .. ,. di\'i~JO!l lll ''

dch .... ""' 1.. i~ toppill~ ~ilf· :..·•

Thr T·•~" ·.­rnn•r..:t,,d h· ·· ~qr-.: wi1hnul ;..,'j~ in;.: 1 h;H it w;1~

a nr;- rn.in.1·ahle affair and onr that 11'111 hP r·rmrmhrrrrl

1nn f 'nltlil ~~ ! • ,

for lnt~ and lh,... fJlttle :-:omr t11nr.

ller<· is lhr pro~r.1m111r and il <lcfinildy was a "1·arirt1·.·· pnintint: oui the fad that ~.'tn·

· d•·nls now.a·da~s lr:~rn 11Jill'~ than the thrre n·s in the das,;. r00IIl>.

A short Pia~·: "A Da<h <Jf Peppt•r"-l'<>-t. Tipp~· Smrtil. (;lrnys Xocl: .Jimmy \\'at>on. .\l~n·en llal'kct: :\!iss Son. llori;· llo1rnin~: Stumpy, Harold l'om· crs: Lem Har~i;. Ral'lllOIHI Broderick: .James \l'at;<;n !ir.. Edwin Paroons .

dr;nv lllllrh .r··, ~-~ .: ··~·.

hrm::: Ibn..:" r. i· . .'·~ ..

A ~pf't·i;..al :1 ·: ·' • ~·--~

nwdc 1 n .\l r l> ·.: \L.(.

,parked lh" 'i ·· ·Po·. : rt:- ... i . ..:t <'c! in :· - · Ikrm (';1iw· ,,' ~~

h:rn.

"Pnl'f ... :ur~>·'

h~· the lou\:t this wa:-; \\ ·· 1·

danrr en<l<·d

A Square Daneing presented by ~Irs.

:.loorrs.

Di<play- of thr fir<l ': 1\'illiam crlwarl. !l:c.

whi{·h i:' h•1!" ··

A piano solo "Bt·ll' of \In>· :1111\U:l) <!fi;ll:'

""w" played hy Sandra Ster!'n· :-;on.

.\ Short 1'1<1~·: "Tiu• nird on \'cllics Hat"-('asl. ;\lr.<. c;ra)· .\ris Sonwrs: c;raec. lleiPil l'il· .~rim: :\rllie Gra:;, Carol !'ike: F.ssie. DrJrr<•n Pikrim: l.<•t;-1. l;!cnda t:arland: Rosl'. Flormre

Congr2tula

JL\IlHc•: r: • ,. ·,,!:

\Irs. Lloyrl :\rrhihald w~;. St. .John's on Tur.,day.

a: l'enne;; :'-:an. Elaine Bnrke: l'lora. Frances Snow.

I ho:-.c ~r;FhJ;. l'nll·er·il'- ,.,. };~til. \\:1:-. '1ir :-:on whn TT ·1 .·

Srirncr tl1':.:' r1

RllclCfll'k I' ~

\I"'· \\' II.

A Vocal Duct. Sandr<1 St•·n·n· .-on and Sharon \\'hytr. "\\'lli'· prrin~ Hope ··

A man arrr<tcd for <lnlllk· rn rlrivin~ claimed the •·np smelled hair oil. The .iud~" had lo decide whether the man or his hair was plastererl .

The School Orchestra Rnck·A·Teens with some

"The :nwn and hf ;

popll· · ;\)ontrral ''· "' 1 du ri 11:1 1111· , 1 •• Jar numhers.

Repotting Helps I House Plants Thrive -- ---------------·---· ....... ----

ynnr l!ld(•': .1•

Tap I he i'"' :· t.1hlc m h, · ball will t:.'.

· intact. · Remon· tlh

of soil. For•' and loo~t\n :l~. :·,·nt '

rolling 1t 111.

l~c a '"""!' •· .r:,·d : loosen old :-<1< ing root>.

If thr pl.<'. gent!)· pull ··. them 11 1:, .. ' rruwns a:'l' r:~:rd. anv dt•cul ur c. ':,J;ed all· n•potllll': ~,·cp :tt moist. .

TypC' nt p··· r..: ·:··:! on thr pJ;ont. Fo·r::· acd

I '·'' like al'lll '"" "J: 1 '"" mold and htlll:CI' tol:tc:: culents gnm \,r.f nt

lo\\' in on:alll\ ':lalter.

house plant ... ;; .. t:nHal is thret• par:, ill nul~ garden Joe1m wtth en£ some orgc1.nic 111allt'f decompo,cd nwnurr.

' compost. or peat. and · sand. ~

Place a nnder ~r ' i broken pot on•r thr . hole. Then add a , sphagnum mo,, or ' draimtge. ,,1

Position t!H' pbnt '~ ·· ' I II ~

' BY ALLAN SWENSON 1 fine specimens in comparative· of the old ,oil '" ~;i k I II · below the pot nni. · Pot-bound plants cannot rna e 1 y sma contamers. · .1 1, hdJ.n;

satisfactory growth and look ! If your plant is extending gradually 11 11 ~ ··c~th' t: wel. A good green thumb rule I masses of roots through the l plant. Mml~a<~k ;h; gc is to repot most established drainage )!ole or along the i ~or! sellle.l f' lr 3; !~J · house plants every year. sides, it needs repotting. Best ormly an< rrm ·

Some plants such as clivias time to repot is late winter or ~ reed. and cacti will do well for .early spring when plants are , IV hen repott•••l , se\·eral years without trans· i beginning their new growth f•ce should hr abt'~' planting. Fast growers, includ-, cycle. quarter inch hrltlll' thf ing geraniums and begonias. ' Assemble the materials you'll : This permit' pror•·r · may need moving twice a year ; need. Old pols should be thor· 1 • 1 ~r: for best development Same 1 oughly scrubbed. Soak new II you usrd ~1 31\'

, size pols may be used if plants ! clap pols an hour to fill their scaled rnnlailll'1'· 1

are fairly mature and roots ! porous walls with waier. Gather 1 pol within the have an ·inch of room after you I earth and organic material that 'the spaec bctlrrctl have prepared the root ball for wil make up )'our soil mixture. ! witn sa"d or 111°~~ repotting. Otherwise, ·go to a To remove the old plant and better moislu~e iarger pot. A measure of good soil ball, first moisten the soil. i moisture is J11;t a~ culture is the ability to develop Hold the plant !Jiise between : plants as dr)'lng 00 ·

F

Onl.. ": (;rnrrRl ~~~ tndo:· that 1

10 ~pnn!=or i

hr the CBC I · in the lir

Ne

NE T DI: DAL - 0~

Page 9: 1-,:p. , RS enne ee 1enna. - Memorial University of …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...enne ee 1enna. COMPACT RUN DOWN? THE DAILY. NEWS NEED .1-dl1or Sedan

ws ,eph's

Day )uccess

' .....

:·.

:•_,·-

,. 'l

I • :: '·.' !

• ~ _ 1 r.

1 t .0 tht . thr pan :-

• .f ,ml hall 1~dd .. pol ru11. '-

·. while holdiDgto 'o(n\'C it ::entiY 'I ,. Pack the sol

.nd firmlY as you

l e soil . rl'poltt•d. t 'boUt · ... nld be a pOl . lll'h hc\0\1' the rid-

r 11·ate . iiH1> propc

:. : ust•d J:lazcd ~~5 I .. nta!lll'TS, Jt t~iner. ,. '"" lhc con . , ,. brtwecn

d or moss to

!~tliSlUre

·e is just as ' dro.·inl: out. I .i~ • .,

I

CTION II The Daily News SEC110N II --------~--------::---'-----;.:;.,-··--·-··-----------------····.

1 ST. JOHN'S, NFLD:, THUHSDAY, ~lAY 18, UJ6J \

and rv Entertainment Page Movies

Play For GM Spot Is~Ray Dudley On

S C I "Jr. Magazine" Advised d Not

ays ompany Canadian · horn. intcrnaliun· · ally-famous pianbt Ray Dudley

will he featured soloist when

S • I ,lui nor Mnga~ine presents ils Pons Orlng t ~lay concert for young peoJ?IC, Sunday, ~lay 21.

, Louis Apprcbaum will be p1•ar in tlw hour h'aditional!y , host of this, the sixth lumr-lung

C Of C bbl1:.'1t ' identified with t:encr;1t l\l<rlors. , .JuniOr Magazm_e r?nccrt, and ' onqL·est 0 c JWt1 . The play satirizes Canadian I 1\laTJO Bemardt wtn conduct ' nationalism and also in the the 24-ptcce orchestra. The

\LI 1tl -,. , \ iP~-- •l'"' of

··!''t'. ,11

._., n ·•·.: •' \\<Hl\d

~;\>.·t'l" ..j plil~ ,,"f 1'\~t· !ol;' IH'\1

• :;lt' ..:)pi

!Niall)' o1·cupird by General> company's opinion wol;ld place i Youth Choir, conducted by ~l11tnl'-' l'l'cscn\g. 1 G~l in the positio;, of seeming 1 Elnwr Jscler, will also be heard

'l'hl' <'olllP<lll)' made its cl<•<·is- to plead a <"ase for the u.s.; on the program. wh1ch Will be 11111 followinn the l'BC's inSist- owner.,hip of Canadian com- • seen at 3.00 p.m. ADT on the riH'r Ill at a"' play t'RilNI "Cnn- pani!'s. · CBC·TV nrlwor~. . ~II<''\ nf Cuhhletown" must ap. : "We make our decision after : Dudle)', horn m Bowm~nvtlle, __ --···--- ------------ ___ I f 1 , ns'd r !'on" said D :On\., numhers among h1s suc-

h · ~~reMl~ck~~m.~n e ~~I adver\isin~ ! resses the winning of the

0 . t 0 ; m~n;agcr. "Th~ough all our dis~ I Un~nimous Medal_ at the 1ntc~· rc es r a n : cussions with CBC management' nattonal CompelltlOn for MUS!·

I at l'arious levels we received · cal Performers, held_ at. Gene\•a

· • ' I in 1952, and a comm•ssmn from courteous hearmgs, but there 1 Q El' IJ ll II t record

' was a fundamental difference 1 neen •za e 1 0

' ' h1's o1vn Coronation !\larch for ; in attitude toward sponsored , h · programming that could not l1 ecr. 1 1 h t ken llim

i be resoh•ed, nncer . ours ave a , : .. . . II C , to such colles as London, New

llusincss. This Is the Arm•·, ' W lnle we have an a . an· I y k B I 'I . h 1\·l'llan - ' 1 d' 1 · or , russe s, ,, untc ,

Check to Cheek and You Keep a tan managemen , we are i d M I 'd H ·s now a mem-Cnmin:: Back Like a Son;:. Miss: n.e\:crthc.less a part of a l~rge i ~~r of ~~~~~usi: :acuity, Univer­~larshall will sing It's a Lol'ely ! United Slates compan.y. This ts . sitv of Indiana.

Network Tonight

Day Today and The Best Thing . well known. For. tins reason, }·or the Junio rl\lagazine For You. . ~e consider that It would b~ Concert. Dudley will play three

Seript and narration for the til-mannered for. us to as~~cl· works h\' Villa-Lobos: l\loren-1 ._ ... "-:• lnLo· tlw program will be handl!'d by ate our name Wilh a televtslon I A p; hresinha and 0 Poli-1

; ' :-:, • .1 :r:hllt<· tn Don \\'arner. noted Halifax : program that ~okcs. broad fun ,•a:,,·lo. ~lc'\1 ioin' Bernardi at I '"mfl""'l' hand leader and singer. ~ir .. at Cana!han natlon~lism. · ....... d .for a dn''' -the !

\'1111·

,,, .. ; \\',,•fl·. Will

~--· .. ,,. i~~-:·:~n·· on : \-;·: :-:,' :-;hnwra:o:r. ~-;1 :.~. ;,: ~ ;;il p.m .. '·': ,, lc:ll·., l'ana1la

.1-. ,rr.or:~o·mo·nt:< \\'arnPr will examine the life "At the same lime, hecam<' r· 1 f Ro"er '1·1t11111·5 ._ .. f h 1 , d' h . tna e rnm ... ·' • · ' .-~,· ,,, 11:;• :d \\"nnd>. and times of Irving Berlin and o t e Pays en mg: t e llll· . wr two pia•:·•s and

,,, .. , _r,.,11 , \lar;hall. talk about his influence upon pressiOn could be giVen !hal ---·nn. , c:"fl" ~I'll•·< Lilli> 1hc musical life of \be Cnitcd . General Motors was atlPmp\in~ The nrd\l'slra will perform

:e :r:o~ 11 r, d a~ states between the two world to usc telel'ision entertainment ~l;:lt<>.m Arnold's English 1\·ars as a propaganda I'Phicle to pre. J) ( ~· 1 , 5 s 1 ., ) and · · , f . ;mer "u m >CI , . • l' -

''"·r· '" hr , : sefnC~ a cd~se or U.S: owsner,shiP . 1hP Fircbird Suite, by Stra\'· · ,. rn•;rarr: "ill Ill· The prn~ram Will be pro- o ana tan compames. Ill' 1 an : . k

;l.,-,,:1· n11rrrbrrs as rluerd at CBC Halifax by Doug , erroneous conclusion might well 1 ms l'· _ --··-- __ __ ,, "''''''''' l.ik•· Sh>lll' Hughes. I be reached by some of the many · tioncd. we did su~:~rst to the .

··- --- ----·--------- ----- 'people who we pointed out to; t'BC mana~emcnttha\ it should ~·------ ; Brooks, ~nd, produced by Ber- , the CBC se1·er~l wee~s ago tl~a\ i not be presented under our

nard Sm1lh ,m ~astmanc,?~or. the play wa~ mcon~t~\ent w1th : sponsorship or in the t1me slot , The pubhcahon of Elmer 1 the company s tradtltonal phtl· 1 usually occupied by General

TOMMY COMMON AND FANS

Singing star Tommy Common of CBC-TV's country Hoedown ~i~ns auto~raphs for prcH~· fans at ~nc of his two record and a]Jpliance stores. Tommy recently cut his first LP album, The Common Touch. \\'lucb is extJected to be on the Canadian market this month. In addition to hi~ tele,·ision ap11earances, he has his own radio show, The Common Touch, heard TuesdjY afternoons on CBC's Trans-Canada nelwot·k.

, Gant;~·." the story of a spell· [ osophy and its well-known posi.' I i\Iotors Presents", . i .bmdmg_ evangehst, led to an lion. . •·we believe that the choice - ---------------------- ---- ---------- · · ·-· --------------

d f t t -· 10 '10-'' 1· 1 ~ews 4.00-Boh·, Bamlwagon · 1mme 1ate. storm o pro es , "It should also be made p~r- of \his play for identification · ~--· ... """"'"".,;,;;,.,rm ... x,;-,-.-,,, ... ""' .><snu•miaiu.. . .• "a wna • ------- some of 11 extremely l'lrulent feetly clear that we did not · with this company was ill· . 1 10.45-Sports 4.55-~ ew5

'•.I.''TR\'" II'J'rH in _nature. which has still not presume to suggest that the play · advised and would be capable 10.55-Lctters and ~lessagcs 5.00-Suppcr Serenade " ' I b d d f 1100 ·,, ~It'"hl.nli\S 5.'0-Fisherman's Fore<:a>t l.l'iLI~HR , enhr~ Y a ate : an to a ew- should not be produced h)' the :of creating widespread miscon· 1 1 . -l,C\\'5 • o lo "

but Importantly placed-lusty CBC. But. for the reasons men- : ccptions." , . 11.01-Paul Hershon's Music 111 5.55-):cws ·:~r :n,.,t-"rrhap< the h H L 'I k · th' 1 th , .. "llt 6.00-Bullctin Board ' c eers. . , "enc en, m IS ----·-------- ------------- 1 18 ·: e ,,.,. ;,'r.tro•rr;,al norris in latter group, thought the no1•el 1 something he very mu~~ wants : ~ -.._,,_,.:., : 12.00-:\ew~ Jlighlights 6.15-Sport,cca,t and Tral'~l-h:erattlrr ha< a\ last e\'en better than "Babbitt." p , -a cloak of rcspectabihly. 1 Show 1 1:!.01-Jlu~;c in the Night guide

ir.•o a I110\IC. some Carl Van Doren, in appraising aramount I The attraction an_d tie. be· I CBC 77·_ 440-5 NBoebi"SLewis ~ 12.30-:\cws 6.30-C\CW> I 'I · d L tt ·Y • ? 33 'I · · th Y "hl 7.00-Shille!agh Shol\limr the book, which he liked \'ery

1 tween (, ona an 11me 1s a _ 7.50-What's Conkin · !. .. -.> us1c m c · lo

. :h,· >lllhnr is Sin- much, also predicted the nature TOmOrrOW 1 stormy. emotiona~ one. a rela- THURSilAY :Ita\' lSth.' 7_55_Bob Lewis Show 1.00-~ew> in a minute ::~=~~~~~;' or lhc Crop : flr'l ,\nll'riran and extent of the conlrol'ersy, : 11onslup wh1rh lmngs both hurt i ' · 8.00-News and Weather 1.01-Sign Off. lO.OO-VODI Gold Hl'cord

it would arouse. ! ': and happiness to themsel\'es 1 f.l4 8.05-Sports Show . :hr \c•lrrl Prize for

ann thr f:lrn adap­.. ~la_\lll~ t<u!cty at thr

7'wrr 1nrn11.~h l'nitrd

"Thousands of tongues and i • 1 and others. But through it they i ' ' 8.10-Bob Lewis Show VOCM I II 1 I · \ 'nt the 3 c C " ' 10.45-Sport>rast pens," wrote the eminent critic,· "BUTTERFIELD 8" WITH are a 1 e 0 mng ou 1 0 : 7. 0- B news. 8.15-TI·ansportation Report I h . I I ' t '1 1 f h 'I . 10.55-::\cws "if not fists, will debate ..• A · EUZABETH TAYLOR open t e no en mner unum I 7.35-Top 0 t e ·' ornmg. 8.20-Boh Lewis Show 18th

!t:wr tornado of applause boos hiss· o 1 en con 1c s w He s 8.00- B ews an ea cr. : 8.25-Kiddies Korner I f h 'dd fl' t I. h ha c c N d \V th Tlll'RSU.\\', )lay · 11.00-Torbay \\'eathr:·

es, may shortly be e'xpeci~d , ." Elizabeth Taylor plays the 1 blig~t~d their ,lil•es •. until their, 8.15-Musical Clock. 8_30-!'iews and Sports ----------- . ~~:~~=~;~ ,·~~9t~ Ten . Gan:ry." ,:ar.< Hurl

. ac.d .Iran Simmons,

.... \rthur 1\cnncd\·, '· llran .la~grr and

"Elmer Gantrf' started off I most daring, down-to-earth and s\~r~ _Is re~ohed m a taunt i 9·00-Mornin~ Devotions. 8.35-We3lhcr Foreca,t 6.:JO-Si;;n on and :"ews I2.00-l\cws in prophetic fashion. It was dramatically powerful role of 1 gTippl~g C~lmax.. , 9·15-Program Preview. 8.40-Hob Lewis Show 6.~5-llrcakfast Club 12.05-Cl:IIJ :;~u chosen as one of the first selec· '1 her carer in "Butterfield 8" Edcl~e Ftsher, 111 a warm and 1 9.20-Piano Playtime. . 8.5fJ-,Just a ~linnle

·mak!n~ hrr dchut : rolr ·. Tl1r ,,·rcrn·

t 9 30 CBC N d D t 1;.55-:\cw' UHI-l''o.-'t•dlmll tions of the Book of the 1\!onth i :'>letro-Goldwyn.l\layer film vcr-: sensitive por~ra~·al, . enac 5 i · - ews an •rec 9.00-News and Weather 7.00-Breakfasl Club Club, and it was chosen as one : sion of the widely-read novel: Stev~, young p1a111st frtend of I Reports. 9.05-;\lusic for :ltillions /.!5-SiJol'beast

Ebrr (;antrl'" was ltd d:rrrtrd h1· Ril-hard

of the first books to be banned 'by .John O'Hara. i Glor1a, the only person whom : 9.45-Rccords at Random. 9.20-Star Time ?.:l0-0:ews and Tra 1 cl~uidc in Boston. . Also starred in the topflight 1 she feels really knows_ and \Ill· i 10 ·00-Arc~ers. 9.:10-Austin Willis 7.45-Sportseast

CJON-TV

OW PLAYING .-\\\'Alm WINNER BURT

"E 'R FOR BEST PERFORMANCE DIER C:\;\TRY".

.. You're all sinners ... all bum in hell!" Tell'em Gantry ••• ttll'em everytfiing -but not about your whiskey and

wamenl

Also - 't:P-TO·THE-MINUTE NEWS

TIMES OF SHOWS:

SHOWS: 6 O'CLOCK - 9.00.

~IATINEE: 1 P.M.

NEXT AnRACTION TDDIS:-.;EY'S "O~E HUNDRED AND _ AL~~ATIA;o.:S"- LAUGHS -'COM­

O:\f~ RIC WONDEHFUL MOTION IN COLOR. ·

cast are Laurence Hai'Ve\' who derstands her, and Ill whose i 10.15-Dons Janes. 9.35-Weather Forecast 7.55-:-\ews won an Academy Award' nom· Greenwich Village apartment: 10.25-J:o'or Consumers 9.40-Jerry Wiggins Show ' 8.00-Torbay Weather

II ination for his brilliant work in she often _take~ refuge. · J 10·45-30 N1fld. Schot~l BMroadca~t [ 9.55-Jane Gray Show 8.05-l\ews

"Room At the ·Top," and Eddie; Others Ill ptvotal roles,. are 10. ~ liSIC 111 e ornm& 110.00-News in a Minute 8.10-Breakfas\ Club

THLUSil.\ \', )Ia~ !Sth. · 10.15-t:artoons.

I Fisher. with Dina Merrill co- I Mildred Dunnock, Betty held, 11.00-Mormn_g Pops, 10.01-IIIartin's Corner 8.15-Sportscast . 11.011-Romper Room. : 12.00-Locat and llialional :'\ews

starred. Jeff1·ey Lynn, Kay Medford and 11. 15-Kecp 111 Touch 1 10.15-Jerry Wiggins House· 8.25-l\ ell's "B tt f' ld 8" t 11 th t Susan Oliver 11.30-Nfld. School Broadcast wives Choice 8.30-llit Tunc of the Day

f Gill er l(eM' T e Is ) e shory "Bulterft'eld, 8" was filmed in 111.45-Sacred Hearl Program. o OTia tss ay or , w ose · . , 10.30-National News 8.35-Spor(seast traumatic experience as a child CinemaScope and_ color _enlire- 12·00-BBC News. . 10.33-Whal's Cookin' 8.40-Breakfast Club has left a permanent scar. Liv- ly in New York C~ty and tis sur· 12 · 10-Announ~ers Choice, 10.35-Jerry Wiggins House- 8.55-l\cws ing by her own twisted tangle rounding areas, With sc~nes shot 12 ·30-F~rm Broadcast. wives Choice 9.00-Kilchen Corner of rules, she had always thought on location in Greenwtch Y•l· 12·45-Mtd Day Serenade. 10.45-Homemakers News 10.00-News love was the biggest lie since !age, Fifth Avenue, ,Stony Pomt, l.OO-Doy!e Bulle!Jn 10.50-Jerry Wiggins House· 10.05-Stork Club men and women were invented. Elmsford, Larchmont and Long 1·15-MusJCal Program. wives Choice 10.10-Homemakers News That is until she meets West n Island. 1.30-CBC News and Weather. ' 11.00-News Highlights 10.15-VOC~I Coffee Break

• ' · • 0 A Pandro S. Berman Prod~c- 1.45-Tom_my Hunter Show. 11.01-Jerry Wiggins House-

1

Special Liggett (J,aurence Harve)'), lion, it was directed by Dame! , 2.15-Musteal Randezvous wives Choice 10.55-:\ews married to Emily (Dina Mer- Mann from a screen play by 2.29-Dominion Obs. Time 11.15-The Right to Happiness · 11 00-$1000 Cluh. rill), whose devotion he can· Charles Schnee and John Mich- Sign_at 11.30-News 11:15-,Tuke Box Jamboree. not return but who give~ him ael Hayes. 2.30-M_usteal Randezvous 11.35-Nfld. Quiz 11.30-Wcstern Jamboree

2.45-T~me out for Melody. . 11.45-Town and Country. 11.55-News 3.15-Kmdergarten of the A1r 12.00-News Highlights 12.00-Money Barrell 3.30-GBC News ~nd Trans 12.01-Bob Lewis Town a11d 12.05-Ramblin' with Records

Can_ada Matmee CoutJtry 12.30-Ncws 4.30-Hah~a~ Theatr~. 12.30-News 12.35-Ramblin' with Records 5.00-l't~USIC !n The Atr. 12.31-Town and Country 12.45-Fisherman's Forecast

Summary. 2.00-Dr. christian, · :!.30-Chez Helene. :!.45-llinrsery School Time, 3.00-The Verdict is Yours. 3.30-llo.-ie ~latinee,

4.30-llusic in ~liniature,

4.30-llusic in ~liniatnre. 5.00-Junior Uoundup-Parl I.. 5.15-Junior Roundup-Part IL 6.00-Popeye Theatre. 6.25-World of Sport • 6.30-N ews Ca,·alcade. 7 .00-Aifred Hitchock

Presents. 7.30-:Uan Without a Gun. 8.00-Belie\·~ it or Not 8.05-Darton Allen Show. 8.15-:"ialional News. 8.30-Wyatt Earp, 9.00-Tight Rope P~~9me~~T 5.30-FisherJes Broad~ast 1.00-News 12.50-Rarnblin' with Records

1 5,45-Music from tbe :Albums 1.01-Town and Country 12.55-News

1 9.30--Livc a Borrowed Life. : 10.00-Checkmate

• NEWFOUNDLAND •

TOMORROW t\CADEMY AWARD WINNER (ELIZA­BETH TAYLOR)- BEST ACTRESS in "BUTTERFIELD 8",

Some women: never give a name ••• just a phone number:_! ____ ,..._..,

Euzi81iiiiivLoR iUmiaun8 LAURENCE HARVEY -'""~oi.011

EDDIE FISHER !.::""::;• M£1~--,

Also- UP-TO-THE-MINUTE NEWS

TIMES OF SHOWS EVENING SHOWS: 7 O'CLOCK - 9.00

MATINEE: 2 P.M .

LAST TIMES TODAY "F-EVER-IN THE BLOOD" - Also

".HIGH AND THE MIGHTY"

6.00-CBC News 1.05-Weather Forecast 1.00-Ramblin' with Records · 11.00-Tennessee Ernie Ford 6.05-Intermezzo . 1.15-News 1.15-Sportscast 6.25-Program Prev1ew. 1.35-Don Jamieson's Editorial : 1 30-Ncws 6.30-Snpper Guest. 1.40-Sports i 1:45-So the Story Goes 6.45-Light Music. 1.45-Art Baker's Notebook 2.00-Prizes and Problems 7.00-CBC News and Weather. 2.00-News Highlights 2.55-Ncws 7.15-You and Your Home. 2.Gl-What's Cookin' 3,00-~lake Believe Ballroom 7.30-Tops Today.. 2.03-Jerry Wiggins Matinee 3.55-:\'ews 7.45-Doyle Bullehn. 3.00-News llighlights 8.15-Parliamentary Report 3.Dl-John Nolan's Western 8.19-Roving Reporter Jamtoree 8.25-Rawhjde 4.00-News Highlights 8.40-l't!ines and Resou_rce~. 4.05-Ranch Party 8.55-Weather for Manners 4.30-National News 9.00-The Massy Lectures. 4.33-Ranch Party

Concert

Artists

Show. 11.30-Wrestling. 12.30-Sports Calendar

12.35-News Headlines and Weather

1~.45-Sign Off

ment. by !bert. Claire Gagnier, a petite

blond soprano with a warm, 1)-rical I'Oice, typifies the "new look" in operatic sopranos­offering appeal to the eye as well as to the ear. She'll sing 9.30-Variety Sho~case. 5.01-Dance Party

10.30-Science Review. 6.00-News Highlights i A Cradle Song, composed by Tw ocelebrated Canadian con- 1 Brott in honor of the birth of

cert artists, composer-conductor his son, in 1939 . 11.00-Night Spot. 6.01-What's Cookin' 11.30-CBC National News, 6.02-Weather Forecast ·

Roundup and Talk. 6.05-Bulletin Board 12.00-Sign Off. 0 Canada. Tbe 6.10-National News

Queen. 6.15-Sports

CJON THURSDAY, May 18lh.

6,30-News and Weather 6.35-Boh Lewis Show 6.40-Sports 6.45-News and Weather 6.50-Bob Lewis Show 7.00-News 7.05-Bob Lewis Show 7.15-News 7.20-Sports 7.25-Bob Lewis Show 7.30-News 7.35-Weather Forecast

'

6.25-News 6.30-Dave Maunder's Club 93 7.00-News Highlights 7.01-Club 93 · 7.30-N • .vs 8.00-N cws in a Minute 8.01-Best from the West f • -National News B ... -Best from the West 9.00-News Highlights 9.01-Big Six Programr.\e. 9, 15-Nfld. Soiree. 9.40-Salt Lake Choir 9.45-News

10.00-News Highlights 10.01-High Adventure.

! •

Alexander Brott and soprano Claire Gagnier will be guests when· World of :\!usic presents a pops concert on Sundar, May 1

21. : Wally Koster is host of the :

program, which will be seen· al 8.30 p.m. ADT un the CBC-TV network.

Brott. also a violinist and composer, has conducted major ' symphony orchestras in Eng­land, Holland, Switzerland. France, Israel· and ~lexico, and has been invited to conduct in Russia next year.

He'll direct lhe World ol Music orchestra in the Over

· ture to The Secret of Suzanne.

AlWAYS WAITu. r,,

YOUR SIGNAL

by Wolf-Ferrari, and Divertissc- , ....,=:!::::=======~

'I; .

Page 10: 1-,:p. , RS enne ee 1enna. - Memorial University of …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...enne ee 1enna. COMPACT RUN DOWN? THE DAILY. NEWS NEED .1-dl1or Sedan

. · ..

\ .,

·I '

., ., ,. '

··~ • ,• ; ·\ .(

J :I ·.~

.'*'.

n

1 • !I ' ·q

~ . I

I. i

1,

. I

.I ' i I I ' I

' I .

; !

I : ,1 :

I I . ' '

j

! I I '

I I I I I

I

. ! !

" I

'

I

. ! ' . .,

·.

,, • t ' ~ ' J .. ' I I

•I ' I

I ' .. I ' ,.

I . i

'

J

' . , . .

'·'

'I I

•,: :•

I

I

'

I

I I I

I ~ . I

I '

,. .

·i

I

THE DAILY THURSDAY

Tigers Open ·Five Game L As Regan Throws Six Hi

·i1l Hutchings By TH.E ASSO~IA~ED PRESS run homer in t~ fifth, had Right bander Stu Miller, who· a good pla .

. Flashmg to life m the ninth knocked In the tymg run wi•n a pitched to only one batter in the ski held p: b1 mning, San Francisco Giants ninth inning single before 8.469 ninth as the Giants recorded an John Ro Wer ~ gr~bbed two runs from Chico::o happy fans in. Candlestick Park. in~ing-ending double .play, re- grounder ~an,o reltever Don Elston and beat the So after bemg held to three ce~ved cred1t for the victory, his

1

Frank ~Ialz •ho Cubs 4-3 _Wedn.esday in the , on!y hits. through eight i~nings,. the second. . double ;>Ia/~~·. · day achon m the National Natwnal League leadmg Gmnts j Elston, who had won fn·e, ab-1 first. rowe '·1

' · 1 ~nockout Continues League. . . ralli_ed th~ir way I? a fifth i sorbed his second loss. . I play and -~r•; .

Senators fought off a late surge string of the campaign, ! ;lola honey threw out pinch-hi:l~r BALT!i!\•l:r;' ', . In the Amencan, Washmgtrm straight v1ctory, their longest· :\t New York, shortstop D1ck I close plav at •t · .

by .Ne~ York yankees and won RELIEVES CARDWELL I Jesse Gonder on a close play Regar. pi~(·h· · The H.utchings Trophy Knock- th~1r fifth straJght, game 8-7 de- Elston, who. relieve~ starter~ fo: th game-end.in~ out with the 1 tory orer -~:

out series of the I~ter-Ciub sp1te 14 Yankee h1ts. , ~on Cardwel_l m the eighth. re-: tymg run on th1rd base. 1 Wednc'!la: 11 ,; Bowhng League continued at And at Boston, Cleveland s, llred the f1rst four men he' A comfortable R-1 Senators 1 ger, >Wep• ••• ,g · St. Pat's Alley last night. Eight 1 Bobb~ Locke and Barry Latmun I faced. With one out in the nintn,: lead was whittled to R-6 in the i ies <~nrl .:;::; . team eliminat~d wi.th eight other I combmed talents for a six-hit h~ hit Orlando Cepeda with a' eighth and 8· 7 in the ninth but: can Lea~,.~ 1~1""'1 • teams .advancmg mto the win- ~-0 shutout ,of th.e Red Sox, best- ! p1tch~ ball and httle :\-lao tie i the Senators held on to wm. 1· Dctroil .-.c;,.} ; ners' hst. 1 !ng Bo;slon s _Billy Mobouquel,e 1 Alou.limgled the run?er to third. HA~ t'I_\'E-IIITTER . . !ess a"~'tlt 0, -t,

. • . 110 a hghtly·pltched game. . Ba1fey followed w1th a sm;r1e: Washm~ton went mto •h~ ong with 1; W1th J1m Carey pacmg the Out on the co38t, the Giants': down the first base line to score' l'i):rhth with Pete Burnside :·,,J;.: "arne ,r• ,._

1

way Holy Cross took three winning rtm scored as Elston i IT'S ORANGE BLOSSOI\1 TniE i ing along on a fil'e·hitter. 'i11~: hits and·:,~··.; ' frames from ~NRA. ~arey walked pinch hitter ,Jim Mar- I As traditional as the wedding! Yankees rose lip with fil'e tons The on::. o~::; w~s tops. again m the C!remt shall with the bases loaded ami[ cake is the toasting of thu: including a tii'<H'''Il hn ., ... 1., lead-oft ;,,,:~~r·,; Wtth a mighty NGEA lost two one out. 1 bride. As a rUIP, punch is· Ro~er ~lal'is helore relief pil· Brook' n11 t,in,0;' · frames t~ K of C and fell by Ed Bailey, who crashed a two-' served lor this purpose. 11 a: cher ~lart.1· Kutyna made 1>1:! Thr 1 1 r 1- .' the wayside. sparkling beverage is used. it i ~kowron hit into an innir:-:~.\1 1 - fourth -..·itho11~}

AH L A should he added to the rest of: m~ Ioree play \\'1\h the ha;es AI 1\<ollnn .... :., Otto Wheeler of Feildians nnounces the ingredients at the last; loaded. tlw IJe!in;l !io.,, :.

had the other total over 800 11 • · ., moment. Use a fairly large

1

• three ~:om~; 11 :;. •

but his team was eliminated. I block of ice. Ice cubes melt mu>t!c cl'l'lh€( 1 '

Elks took two frames from Two Divisions more rapidly .and dilute t "e c!ouhlr '''"I dro;!. Feildians while Wheeler was punch. I , Rock;· , . .,,,"ito .• , posting a 823 score. With their I . . . · . nandrt •·.;ch dro~ ... game tied at a frame each Col- NEW Ch11l all mgred17nts an hour or : . PTTTSflt'RGH ;~, legians moved Badcock into YORK <AP) - The so before puttmg them m _lhe I : Burgr, ·.1·ai:oP€d; action and edged Insurance 2-1. eight-team American Hockey Cep_eda an~ Alou reached th1rd. . a ~in:lr Badcock rolled 239 in the League Wednesday announced Pmch h1tter Hobie Landrl.th · · h mg m t rt•r of :~

deciding frame. a two-division setup for the was walked intentionally, then . run' "' til• Pira·• 1961-62 season to include the Elston, in a streak of wildne"~. 1 · r· .. "'·"' .. otll" arrlina:~ ~~

Federal copped iwo straight new Pittsburgh Hornets, tossed four straight balls to ,. l"il'ld . frames from St. Joseph's while Pittsburgh, which returns to Marshall. ; . .. ThP MC United treated Canadian the circuit after a five-year ab· ! olrol'r in :'ct .~•., ..

~:f.isond;:P;:~ 5~~~ 2~an:~~ . ~~:i~~~:n~itt1ayB~f~~!. w~~~: Cobb Resting Leo · ~i~'~"ro,:.:~~"r,;;;·;~:· Guards took two frames from land and Rochester. The eastern " field. ·· · Columbian. division will line up with Que-

Practice Corner bec, Providence, Springfield ATLANTA (AP) - Baseball . and Hershey. great Ty Cobb was reported in ·

Each team will play the other fair condition and resting com- • "-•·:.o.L: .. seven 10 times in a 70-game fortably Wednesday at Emory ·

ROGER :\L\RIS

Pir:~tr ,'''"1~: :\li7r!l h11r:r~ >H·

. notr.hin2 hi; ~~.:·~· a~nin~: otr rir:~c­

. St.1n .\In•:,: w;1

1 for thr l':o:·~· schedule. The number of clubs University Hospital. . which will participate in the His physician said Cobb, 74.

CATALINAS were the section "A" champions of Aero Bowling and ~vcre pre- . 1 post·season Calder Cup pla)·off was admitted Monday for treat·

I ~inr1~r" ~nr ..;,:;.: .. I ,... ' •;.,,, •

. Billy Klaus <nd Pete DalC)' Ernie Rr,:: 0 .,,:

lut homers early lor Washin~:on pitchfr fir i< :r. and the Senators chased los~r PH!f.\!lEl.P:i'\ Art Di!m~r with a four-run ou1 .. cinnali Rn:i< ~;•1 hurst Ill the fifth. They arldud hit< off .fohn

sented with their trophies at the annual present:ilion at the Old Colon\· last . T!1e Guards Jumo~ a~d 1 will be decided at the AHL's ment of arthritis and diabetes. night. Members of the winnin~ team are ileft to right'\ scaled: Flo Hutchens

1

. Semor Fo~tball teams W11l drtll, summer meeting. That meeting The doctor said Cobb is exper·

D . · . . . ' at the Prmce of Wales Arena was set for June 20-22 in Buf· t d t t th h ot Murphy. Standmg: Cec Hutchens, W11f Murphy.-(Ro~·al Photo Sernce). tonight. The open indoor work· falo. e 0 say at e ospital for a week or 10 days.

Aero Bowlers H01d'scltban-Meetingli~~~F~~~:S~~.:z::: Rivals -Ke_e_p DealiOg two more in the ,:··, enth. ria,· ni~ho r,.,, ·

• • •

Trophy Presentatl·on I An important meeting of the An open workout for the Yankees Into : ~l~te~~~~: 8f~:l~:~t. 1:~tt~~a: I ~~~io~e=~~ si~ni~~ ~~;t!:~~: .

At Fen way Park. Lockr. ~ow. 1w~ of lhrm :.:·• · 1-0 for the season, left with :wo h8lls and a . ;, out, two on and a 1·0 count on : third innin:: for · Gary Geiger in the se1·enth. He l2-1 l'irton· o•.e, appeared to ha\'c strained his j PhilliP>. · ·

Fl ·arm, and Latman came on 10' R!~ht b r. der ags . finish up. ! po~tcrl his fourth : .:-.tonbouq~ette IHi spread six i decisions while

1 h1~s and potched well enough to: p'acr Phill!e.<

The Aero Bowling League , Cramm. ! delegates and txerutin mem- I Starting at 7.00 p.m .. it will be By HARRY GRAYSON [ wm. I of them beino

c·,.,..::;:r:,,..,o=·--c·~· .. ~-.. • SCORE IS FIFTH I thirrl home ' II.W its annual dinner, dance

1

. 2 place: Sabres: Charlie and I . i held at the Upper Pttch of the Newspaper Enterprl~~e Sports ud presentation of trophies at M~dge Field; Frank and !ll)'rtle ' hers are to be at the Banner-~· Ayre Athletic Grounds and a Editor . the Old Colony Club last night. Noseworthy. i . full turnout of prospective NEW YORK (NEA)- When : ,·_··~ ic~'X?.·? Awardl wqn over the past sea-l 3. place: Fortresses: Lou and man Park rlJamon~-at _7.00 p.m. players is requested. Frank Lane liquawks about the ; .

The only run came on a d i~- . paign . pule play in the filth. Vic Po·,,·er ~ led off with the Indians' first '

! 1 hit of the game, a ringing do!Jale - were presented at the af· , Ann Kelly; Cyril and Trix A 1 R I Angels swapping Tex Clevenger · ,. II*, I Stanley. n n ·tt p and Bob Cerv to the Yankees, 1'

..::.~:.-::b::~~ ~~~t~~s~~: I Ladies: ~~~~~~~c~~. 162.7; 2. I ·Ua ega a ans !~!y ~!in~~~s~~tc;~~t t:~:e~e~ ;.·

\ to center. Willie Kirkland fol· i lowed with a single to left. b•Jt D!'trool ,j i

1 :"<ew Yo, ...

.· ... • ·,_1

:. Brain lnj·ury ~~~ne~~~d, NapOndinl while Wilf l\lurphy ! M. Noseworthy, 158.8. 1 . . York club almost i_nvariably gets ..,Ued ~ the toast to the win·, Jllen: 1. J. Ryan, 199.2; 2. P. · . The St. .Tultn s Regatta Com- 1mttee. wha_t it needs Wlt_hout delay. ... liven by Jim Brown, Gerry I Daley, 192.5. lnuttee, startmg to make their 1 Discussions on new boats for . R1vals and occasiOnally a N•· .,aeey toasted the losers with! HIGH THREE FRA~IES I plans for the . "hig day" in , the Committee disclosed that I ~tonal League ou~ht keep deal-•· Underhay responding. The 1 Ladies: 1. T. Stanley, 650; 2. ~ugust. !wid thr1r we:kty meet- : no new shells will be available mg the _Bombers mto pennants, Mentary'a report was present- E. Bennett, 568. I mg at CJty Hall last mght. Com- / until 1962. Five c:ompanies had 1 • In t.h1s case the . Yankees .. • Cyril Stanley. Men: 1. F. Noseworthy, 712; ; mtttee Presidrn~. James D. Hig- 1 been contacted on the new )l~ef P_Jtcber and a l'~ght-hand

PRIZE LIST 2. F. Joy, 701. gms, was chmman for the : boats and all bad replied that hef PJtch~r an. da nght-hand Pre-Christmas Series: Havocs; I HIGH SINGLE FRAME affair with 19 committee mem- 1 they would not be able to fill power pmch·httter. Truman

~ie and Winnie Parsons, Burt I Ladies: 1. D. Butler, 266; 2. hers present. an order until '62. c1.1kevetnhgetr-fthe namt e shounds a.lld Lynn Trask. i F. Norberg, 242. After the minutes of the last Jack Connors, chairman of 1 ~ a ~ an 1~8 eur eav:r-

SECTION "A" I :lien: 1. C. Vavasour, 273; 2. mreting were read and adopted the Boat House and Pond Com· weight ftghter-fJib one or· 1 place: Catalinas: Cec and i C. Field, 261. · James A. Clancey opened a dis- mit tee, suggested that all tbe ~· d the bdurl~ ~e~ t~~ ~the~

l'lo Hutchens, Will and Dot .1

COUPLES cussion on the Lions' Water ' boats and oars be insured and 1. ath~ m.a et, JUS t' el.ttla • ant u ca · . 1 h · h 'II b h ld h' . . . n 1s ms ance a 1 e cos .... urphy. 1. Rar Eddy and Jane Mer- rnn a w 1c WI • e 11 comm1ttee Mil investigate If '

Z place: Blenheims: Leight ; cer. after the Regatta. the matter. .:;:;t is unless the athlete aad Sara Rowe, Fred and Chris : 2. Frank Bennett and Lynn Hubert Kelly _or the Ways ~lans call for 12 races on the stl11 to be named in th Bronx Tavemor. ; Trask. and Means Comm1ttee reported "b1g day". Efforts will be made package is someone lik: Pedro

1 place: Havocs: Eric and 1 and. hsted three fund raising to have the Police Rac:e back Gonzales the young hitting and Winnie Parsons, Burt and Lynn I • proJ~ct~, for .~he summer. A on the program. The Stephen· stealing 'second baseman now Trask. I Probable Pttchers s~ecJal event and a car sweep ville regatta committee has with the Richmond Jtore And

AVERAGES 1

• Will be held_ with the usual Reg- written the City group with in- anyone sllghtly acquainte-d with . . . . I ,• , alta Comm11lee whePls being !entation of sending in ~~everal Roy Harney and the Yankee~~

Lad1es. 1. D.' Mugford, 193.7, By THE ,\SSOCIATED PRES'S plann~d for Regatta Day. crews for the races at Quidi knows that Senor Gonzales isn't S. W. 7an.ons, 192.9.. ~robable pitchers for today s Durmg ~he discus> ion on the Vidi. The local committee will going anywhere else unless an

Men. 1. ~· Meadus, 228.4; 2. maJOr leagt!e baseball . games three proJects the need of at look into the request from established star comes to the 1'. Tavernor, 22U. (won and lost records In par- !.east 2.~ workers for the sp~cial Stephenville. Stadium in exchange.

HI~H THREE FR.o\MES en theses): . event was strcssPd by Eric The ne". meeting of the Com- • • • Lld1es: F. Hutchens; 716; 2. Amertcan League Promroy. Alex Henley support- mittee has been IICheduled for Going to the Angels, as you

L. Truk; 672. Detroit, Bunning !2·3) at ed Promroy and pointed out Wednesday, May 31. There will no doubt have heard, were Men: 1. R. Eddy, 851; 2. B. Boston,. Conley ( 1·3). N. that the members should be be no meeting next week as Pitchers Ryne Duren and

Trask, 716. Was~mgtcn, Sturdtvant (2·2) aware of their duty to the Com· Wednesday is the 24th. of May. Johnny James and Le Roy HIGH SINGLE FRAME at Balhmore, Brown (2-ll N. Thomas, a left-hand hitting out-

Ladies: 1. D. Murphy, 278; 2.1 Kansas City, Herbert (2·2) at I L t Entry Chance fielder, the kind that falls out C. Tavemor, 256. · Minnesota, Knat ( !-2) N. as of trees without much shaking.

:Men: 1. C. Hutchens, 305; 2. Chicago, Pierce !1-2) at Los First Casey Stengel snd then P. Mugford, 304. Angeles, Kline (1-2) N. Ralph Houk gave up on Duren,

SECTION "B" Only games scheduled. ·F the fireball fireman of 1958-59. 1 place: Beavers: Bill and National I.eague or J v R To t Those keepinJ track of such

Nellie Bishop; Norman and Kay No games scheduled. . u rna men things for the Yankees report

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ that the bespedacled Duren is

Fishing Tackle $1.00 $1.00

DOWN

WEEK

SPINNING RODS ................ $2. 98

SPINNING REELS ................ $2.98

LEVEL WIND REELS ................ 39c.

up

up

up

. CATGUT HOOKS, FLOATS, SPIN

LINES, CASTING LINES, SPINNERS,

SPOONS, LURES, MESS KITS, CUTLERY SETS,

CAMP STOVES .................... $1.39 up

Handy Andy

:z 1

· Tonight is the deadline for phy·R. Redmond; M. Hall-H. not as swift as he was. Batters

I entries in the 17th annual JVR Simpson; P. Mullett-L. Walsh; he formerly scared stand up to Bowling Tournam~nt and all G. Withers-A. Miller; fl.. Ross- him. James lacks the hard one

1

1 those wishing to take part in G. Duff; Ray Smith-Don Quin· so necessary to handcuffing the event must have their ton; D. Fisher-G. Fuller; C. major league hitters,

I names in at St. Pat's Alleys. Keels-J. L. Chafe; D. Fitzger- On the other hand, the Van­With the draw slated for Frl- ald·R. Short; J. Carey-J. Wad- kee high command has been

1 day no names will be accepted den; Len Thorne-Bob Penney. enamored with Clevenger for 1 after tonight. Mixed Doubles: Mary Power- four years. The Washington

1 Action in the tourney will Ross Dyke; Mr. and Mrs. Angus Senators who became the Min­! start on Saturday night and the Fleming; Mary Walsh-J. Power; nesota Twins, for whom CleV· schedule of games for the open- Joan Phillips-W. O'Reilly; R. enger toiled throughout that ing night will appear on Sat- Mitchell-Jim Churchill; Flo period, have stirred up no end rday morning, All entries in Hitchen-Doug White; Mr. and of trouble for the Yankees, and the tourney are reminded to Mrs. Fred Butler; Mrs. J, Mur- the Fresno State College finger watch for the schedule as a de- phy-P. Mullett; Lar Walsh and appeared frequently enough to fault will drop a bowler from Partner; Joe Wadden' ad Part· be remembered. the event. ner; Doris Arns-Mike Martin; Clevenger was called upon

This year's tournament ap- Theresa Redmond-Gus Red- from 50 to 55 times those sea-pears to be the best yet with a mond; Armorel Miller-C. Duff; sons and thrice he struck out very large entry list. The Men's Iris Maddigan-Jim Kennedy; from 20 to 28 more than he Double section tops the list with Marie Hayes-M. Gladney; Joan walked. His earned-run , aver-lOB pairs entered. Morgan-J. Royle; Bev. Chaplin- age ranged from 3.92 to 4.35 •

The latest listings: J. Carey; Margaret HewerdinB· In 12 outings and 16 innings Men's Singles: Herbert Barnes, N. Petten; Winnie Parsons-R. with the Angels this spring he

Ross Reid, Steve Scott, P. Ring, Eddy; Mary and Frank Joy, had an ERA of 1.69. Joe Wadden, Mike Martin, Bob Ladles Slugles: Sheila Doyle, "It took Clevenger a little Redmond, Ken Reynolds, Pat Marie Hayes, Iris Maddigan. while to mature," said an Mullett, Lar Walsh, A. Down· Joan Healey. American League manager. ton, G. Duff, Gerry Wiseman, "He is a ripe plum, and the Robert Hollett, Mike Gladney Ladles Doubles: Doris Dawe Y'-nkees were there to pluck and Jack Carey. Olive Dunne, Mildred Bennell him as usual, He'll be a tre·

TEX CLEVENGER

"Quantity for quality"

Baltimore

:;_ :

1

· Kills Boxer : ~:~~~,;~~~~~ I Chicago

i 1 Bo;tnn J i SAN FRANCISCO (AP - A Lo> \n:r!r; i! coroner's autopsy di,closed ------·-1

·.·. ·; 1 Wednesday that lightweight: ('t . .! , Harry Campbell, one of the na· · I y · i I tion's most promising pro box- :

''j ers, died of a massive brain : B ,. hemorrhage - much more se- : ow mg vere than could be expected to ; resalt from one professional i fi~;ht. -

1 Coroner Henry W. Turkel de· : )laf . ; clared a further examination [ All€<; 1 ·,would be made to ascertain , 7.15 Pnn::ar ;., .

. whether an underlying disorder ; 8.30 Cenrral Tc was to blame for the death 9 4:; Trnrrrial 1; Tuesdar night of the 1060 U.S. . · .\llt>~ 3 olympics boxer from Detroit. [ 7.15 .\tapir Le;: 11

"The autopsy disclosed a ; \\' nrker< . massive blood clot on the brain 8.30 .\mh,,r•t Tr · and within the brain," Dr. Tur- ' ~fn1nr; , kcl said in a statement. The 1 9.45 r 1rtorian' r; 1 amount of bleeding and bruises i .\llr)·s l

has a rubber arm, knowledge,· seemed out or proportion to 7.15 \\'~;t End Tc control, Is fast enough with what he would expect to result! Tritphonr changing speeds. • from a professional fight." : 1!.30 Stearl Lumbe:··!

"This was a tremendous deal i Campbell, 23, was knocked i 1'<· . . for the Yankees. 1 down twice in the tenth round HOi t'nn1H':I T·: ''

" . ; by AI Medrano of Sadramento. ~ror· · T_hey g~ve . quantity for : The final bell sa,·ed him from :-.;on:- -Tram; q~aht~, Which 15 t.he oldest : a knockout. He collapsed in his note 1hai lh! 9l' tr1ck m the garne-t£ you can , corner and ne\'er regained con· the !tar: 11f the get away with it." · sciousness. knotkout ;,,ries.

DIAL 6127 1,,11,1J

Dealer FLOWER HILL

Men's Doubles: Ross Reid· Flo Hitchen; Georgina Abbott· 1 mendous help. Only in the Ste~e Scott; Jim Power-John De,nne Dunne; Iris Maddiean last two or three years has the Power; W. Benson-E. Short; A. Joan Healey; Elizabeth O'Brien 1 guy realized how well he car VES . . · hiP· Mo!loy.H. Butler; C. Reelis·E. Elizabet hCorbett· Ruth Guz pitch. He mixes a little side · \ LEY won the Umted Church Juven11e Basketb:11l champlO~S k S' Murphy; Ross Dyke-Gus Law· well-Nellie O'Keefe; Joyce EJ. arm with his overhead dcliv j of ihe winning squad are: (Left to right) front-W. Tucker, D .. Sto) e' lor; P. Ring-E. Collins; H. Mur- liotf-Ellzabeth McLellan. ery and pltche1 to spotll. He C. ~unders, B. Butt, T. Knight, B. Cook.-( Capitol Photo Serv1ce '

Page 11: 1-,:p. , RS enne ee 1enna. - Memorial University of …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...enne ee 1enna. COMPACT RUN DOWN? THE DAILY. NEWS NEED .1-dl1or Sedan

L ~i

\- ' . . .. . .-. ,, t ~)o.. I··

. ,·" T " I : ~· .. ~~ r, ':"~in~.

·. ~ )r :o·~ .. ' " "PI' : .''"~ . , ~ .n ~·~ 'o 1 I, I, f1 ~ ;.r'l '

: (" t (, ~ \ ..... , . , ;1 ..... ,. · el

... " .. 8

. , . : : l: ·~·:lr ,:J:b v.,;r ~

~·:u·:,h~d ~ ., .. ·•"d r\ro\'e ir. '··.~1:1\ ito and. •::l(:h dro\'e it

· '''' RGil r_\p, ·.,a\:oppd a

· ". 1\"pr\npsdar

. 'n::, .1,-,d

I.,. ·•r" ., C:' ·~., . ..... or.

I - ,")

lty

owling

!mprrirll H

.o\ llr~·~ 3 \laplr i.<•af 1"1.

·.r nrker> .\ mhrr•t Tr fl.

~~1otor!'. \'irtorian' \"!.

\Urn 5 ad \\' r;t E~d Tc. T~lephont 'trarl LumbH 11

Tc. ; ·nunril Tc. ,.,

:'ear~ d 1TF.-Tram~

, that thr 9.4~ •tart of the

.i.l

ST. JOHN'S, NFLp., THURSDAY, :MAY 18, 1961

GA~DER-GRMm LODGE OFFICERS: Very seldom seen at one place, here are the highest o(ficers ......... m in !1\cwfoundland. and one of British America. Seen here from left to right arc Sir Knight

Scott. Grand Master of the Royal Black Preeeptory of Newfoundland; Mrs. Et'hyl White, Worship· of thP Grand Lodge of the Ladies' Orange Benevolent Association of Newfoundland; M.W.

1 THE CAREFREE BOWLING LEAGUE ended another suc:cc~:;ful sea so~ last ni.!ihl Rt the Olcl Colonv Club

! with their annual presentation. Reeei\·ing trophies were: 1left to ri~h: 1 se<lted: Doroth_,. Thoma~. Rose

I Thomas, Mary Sturge; standing: Gurdon Cook. Laura Cook. Bob Penn;· . . ] une Chafe and Eel Thomas.-

Warren. Deputy Grand Master of the Grand Orange Lodge of British Anterica, and also Past ~laster of the Grand Orange Lodge of Newfoundland; and M.W. John Norman, Grand Master of

Grand Orange Lodge of Newfoundland, {Staff Photo)

'

GA.\'DER-8. J. Abbott, member for Gander District ls seen speaking at the opening of the new Hall at Gander last Saturday. On the platform behind Mr; Abbott, from left to right, is Mrs.

White, Provincial Grand Mistress of the L.O.B.t. .; Mr. Randolph Fifield, District Grand Master of .B.; !\Jr. George Turner, W.P. of" Gander's R.B.P.; "Mr. John Norman, Provincial Grand Master of the ~lr. Frank Tibbo, W.M. of Gander's' L.O.L.; Mr .. George Warren, D.G.M. of the L.O.L. in British ~Ir Gerry Smith, W.M. of Gander's Masonic Lodge (Mr. Smith is directly behind Mr. Abbott);

Htber Crewe. Chairman; Rev. E. C. Sturge of Fraser Road United Church; Rev John Moss of St. Anglican Churc~; Mr. Jack Robertson, Mayor of Gander; Mr. Moores, Provincial Deputy Grand

of the L.O.L.; and Brigadier Goulding of Gander's Salvation Army Corps. (Staff Photo)

(Royal Photo Service).

--------------------·--------

Carefree Bowlers End Season

The Carefree Bowling Club i has completed another success· , ful year witl. its annual dinner and presentation of prizes at the Old Colony Club last night.

Chairman for the evening was Gordon Cook, the President. The Secretary, Rose Thomas read the list of awards and pre· scntations were made by the · Treasurer, Gertrude Chafe. i

At the beginning of the year ! a Trophy was offered for the i most improved bowler for the 1

year, this was won by :Mary 1

Sturge. A cash prize was also i offered for the person making the most consecutive strikes 'in any one frame, this was won by Arthur Sturge.

Someone suggested the novel idea of paying a penalty of "one· cent" for every "no scorc1

' 1

during the year. This really 1

paid off in cash for our party i and fun for everyone. We I would also like to acknowlerlge ; a $5.00 donation to our club by 1

an anonymous donor. . I . The "Daisies" were the cham·

', pions this year, team members • being Les Chafe, Ethel Chur·

1 chill, Mary Thorne, and Harve 1 Chafe.

\ Highest a1·erages were won \ 1 hy Dorothy Thomas and Bob · I Penney. Laura Cook and June :

Chafe tied for the Highest ; Single, the .Men's Highest ~· Single won by Art Sturge.

Highest Three Frame won by 1

. 1 )

Dorothy Thomas anrl Art 1

Sturge. ; d t

1 BEAVERS were the sed ion "B" rhamp ions or' Aeru Boll' ling and "·ere present-Trophies were presente o '

Rose Thomas and Gordon Cook, ed v:ith their trophies at the annual pre,entation at the Old Colony last ni~ht who had the Lo)l'est Averages.

We pay our respects to mother on her day, :May 14. And then should do likewise the rest of the year.

Members of the winning team are (left to right l seated: Nellie Bishop, Ka)

Cramm. Standing: Bill Bishop. Norm Cr<tmlll.-(H.uyal Photo Service).

·-· --------------------------- --. ----·· ----~--------~

. GANDER-PRESENTING KEYS of the Lodge:

• • • ~~EII~LA'YING THE CORNER STONE of Gander's new· Orange Lodge on Saturday, May 13~h, eldnt member of the Lod&e, Mr. Richard Quinton (81) is seen (center) laying the stone whtle.

... lll•-· Grime ia lending 1 . helpi:nl hand (righi). Mr. John Norman, Grand Master of the Grand of NewfoUn~lalld, ialookinl Oil (left), (Staff Photo) • · . . ,

· GANDE&-GANDER'S NEW OkANGE LODGE on MacKay St., which was officially opened last Sat· urday, May 13th. (Staff Photo)

Mr. George Warren, Deputy Grand Master of. the Grand Ora11ge Lodge of Briti~tt America, is seen pre· . scnting the keys of Gander's new· Oran:;e Lodge to Frank Tihho. Worshipful Master o( Gander L.O.L. No.

240. (Staff Photo)

..

I

i .I I '

Page 12: 1-,:p. , RS enne ee 1enna. - Memorial University of …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...enne ee 1enna. COMPACT RUN DOWN? THE DAILY. NEWS NEED .1-dl1or Sedan

[.

I f

... •

. ~ .. ~~

... ~· ~~-

' ·.-.,.: I ''.·

' .. ! ' .. ..

• 1

! .. ' f • ~

. . ·, . ·'

.,

., 1 f li

-~

·I

i,

. I I ' ' I !

I,

i I I

i l.

I . '

'{ .... .. ·• .·.~

~. i -J .' ;1 '.

' \ .

'1

~: '

. i

'·'

I I I

'I

' I l

·I

1 ·I

·I

'. I

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S. NFLD., THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1961 ~12L-----------------------------------------~~~~~~~

St<>ck M~trkct J{ep<lrt llunu M 7- rl II II +I

Toronto MilL eerp 1!40 tiM 1J 11111 + Ill Mldrhll 11101 alo!o lllo!o 311'1 + 110 N Karrl 11000 ru I I N IIIII Cr loot IIIII IJ\Io l.!l!t Nat EIPI )100 I 8 I llolal)lfl 145 fH IIIIo JJ\41

~IIOIITO CJ.OIINO I!OCill lleiOR 1000 II II II lip "no Cno~a l'rooo Ntplull1f A110 1211 121 121 -1

'hrollto 510<11 EltciiUio-MIJ 17 Nor-Acme 1000 14 14 14 tQaalatlou 111 cent& Wile .. IISifkod I. Nonndo 2115 ~ olll oll'!i + ~

8o-Od,4 "'- ll4 - J:s-41•.._. ......e. Morlarllo 111011 14 u 14 -1 rllbtt IIW-DoWonull. NIA dUll II M-11111 11111 Ull 1118 Ill +II - _.,.. .., •• olon.l 11114 Now •- !?Ill tl t1 rr -1

H Oel,l\11o 1001 4 4 4 -~ leioo ~~~~~~~ lotW C .... llll'p Hw 141111 llltD It II II

.t.ba... mat ,_ IM llli +'" l'll'f' Aller 1tH'I I I IIi + !Ia •cad Uru - 1 1 1 N..,. Alii noe • _.'II -t A ••• 'II +I ~ .. 1.. JeOII • • • Ad¥-11 1411 411 u • Nuc!YI IIIli II 1M lOll- 1'1 .t.pl.. - .,. n ,. +I Norpo· IMM It II u -1

1141 Prod ~ Morando C Cttllenl 2111. Poudu~ C lllumtltl, II l'rlco c lhk cem N Que p.., Cd.n Brew 41\o!o IOJ&I Bank C4n Colaa 111\1 Ro11"\o C ltll Power IIIIo It L Co, c ltll Pwr pr ltl1o llblwla CPI\ , 2116 . Steel Cockllllttl 13 Tr Cao PL Sellroma :tl~-1 Wolkrr D Brldll 1.,. Conaillla !loa Tar IT CeQ Po' PIMindotloa m>

----=-

New York ..UalloM .. .. .. .. -1 • -Alnal lare 20SII 1i1!t ,,... 11'1 N Coldcltlll 31111 111 1110 lSI +I . 1'111:111' lOll CLQIIJIIO STOCIII AOI- 1,.. fl II rl -S N llan - II II II Beth IIHI 41% KaMooolt ~~--Anllo •v.r zao t11G till tiiG 'Norrllt Cal 1001 Ill 1111 1M Iori Woroor tll6 M•IJ Ill' • SOl> A.nl ltlfa liDO II II Ill +I NornUo - I I I C and 0 IIIlo NY Cont. 1G•~ Ao~U - I I I Oka llare SilO II 1J II +t c ... 11:- IIIIo Iloilo Co, llfo Artad WI - 12 II 12 +IIi Obpko ~ 1\!o 1\!o 1\lo l3 IIIIo l3 IIJI) lou Pot 2m A.r.. 1• Iilii II II -r~~~ O'Loary 11100 11\t II IJ -1 Oan W ltlto r714 lit 011 NJ 17 Arlo• - 7 II\ IIi - ()pfllljoko 7l71 till 1.'10 D1 -11 I Oc>odYtor II% Utd Alrcroll ~It A .o.re .. lo lteOt 47 1111 1~\lo _. Orohon liDO 111 Ill Ill -1 01 Nor JIJ 41 onodlum :zn, A ... reid w teO IS • • "" d 1101 1 Jl• I &tl c Cot MDII II& 110 Ill No:~~ I- 11 11·• H• ... _ li 1 lnl T T 1716 Wntn1ot Ulo •ti'n 1111 ••- 11 1•.; 10 +1 .. 1

~ 1 ' ';100 U\i 13 IS -1 N Mon 2500 I~ 13 w I &umacM 1000 ll'o !\i tl'l _ li N ~IYiamo 1107tle lot II II 1 ::::~· 111111 2ft 211 1'10 Nlrkol Ml 11101 II II U -1 I llar .. t 1011 1st IM 114 +4 Nlrk 111111 IIH 14 tN H -4 I Baoo Milo ltll IIIII II Ill\ + 11\ Or1111bjl 1:1101! II 21 Jl +I Booko 1500 I'> ,,... 1\• -I .Oollko 5111 Jl II 11 ·-1 •• Duq 1nt IM 17 IT - .... Poe Nick 1000 H IS t2 +1 llelchor tUM 17 16 II + I P11nour 1310 7t 1t 11 +I lethl• rroe uT 100 10 -4 Pomnoq m011 n~~t uw. 11 lliblt tlOO !1\ ! I - .... P&rdH 4!tle II 1:1 II •!croll tDOII 'PI U 71 +I P&Jmllt 11110 II II Ill B!<t<op !OliO 10 10 10 I Pick Crow 411 II Ill N Bordulll 7TOI I 71'1 I + lot Pilch Orlt (1110 4 4 4 - ~ IDU!OII Ma00 19 ~~ II -1 Plactr 1M tiO\i Ill tell •raiOI"'II Ill HO 1100 IDD +II I

8011 m J:l~ IU + 10 Pow Rn.u AIIO 31 :11 II ••un~wll 12500 T 1 7 Proo Air 71011 102 11 t1 -4 ~:1,1:4 1101 11 11 11 + •; I Qu• A•<•l 12& I I I (adol'ltl 112.! 11 10 10 -m Q\Je Cblb 1050 II II U +1 camo Cklb lUI It IIIII Ill t10 < '0

1

Quur Moft .IDe 10 II IO -1 t Torti IllS Ill I~ IIH Q Molal 1111 12 '12 11 C Astorta :IODII I 6 I Qunllon 500 U~t 13\i 13','-C ll\'llt 1710 1M 10~ 103 1 Quemont IDeO ftl Itt m +I t \lolol't :!50 ~~ tl'> 33 +I · Radloro 1- II II II .. 1 t :'< lora 2!00 10 ''• In + It ' llaln••llle SO& 17 If 11 + \0 C~n SW IIU 22. !2 22 I Ra~rock 1:!500 II U 14 -1 Clu·Erta t:OO 54 3! ~1 •·I : Rulm 1- :t% 20 1:1 H CaptAIII !00 7 7 T + 'I i Reeuo :10D11 Ill 161 Ill -4 Cu•iar 153 lll'o 14'i II'• • 11 I Ruopor 2800 Ill\ 15\0 I!W,- \0 C.,..... OM 71 71 75 -1 I ccni ,..1 ~ 1119 101 1119 -l 1 Rtn A 10111 1!19 no 1111 no + 10 c p :u~ 11 11 11 • 1 1 llln llup 21000 I I I r~~~ttr ore ~'700 3.1'1 l5 l!l\ ~ 11 KIU~ Alhab 21100 II 115 rT t I nnb·Koy, 111011 IILi 14'.1 11\1 Jloctit 1000 IW, I 1141 rh•b 111 11000 10 11 u llcckwlo 1000 11 17 17 - \oi Chlmc NOll 1.1 52 S2 Rvanor 1!00 II II 10141 rocb \VIII m 3541 ~411 340 -1 Satollltt :11!110 II II It C'oln Loko :MillO 15 II ll Shoop Cr SNT IM latl 1141 .. cnnlarao 42!10 11 on tn -·3 Ill llllllor 1100 !11\0 3Tlt 31 - 1\ Ccn·KQ' 1000 It II It -1 61oeoo 111110 Ill 1!1 1!4 tl r Bellek 100<1 I I • - •• I Stanrck l!60 135 1:16 135 +I r Btta 8 ~li'O I ~ ~ Starralt 211110 t 8 8 r c allln•• I 0011 I ~ R I st • ., II !til ISO 821 150 Uft t: Dloro• 1!.6'1 2f1 ,In 2011, ·• 7 Sud Coni I 3000 1\0 81~ II\ + \0 r F<n J.IOO 2011 2n 20 , • •; 1 Sylvanite 2000 l31it 2:W. 211\ ~··Ha~:lliN J: ,: ,: 4: _ 1 I Terk·H 4100 Itt 113 116 c \larbttt 11600 47 4.1 4~ + ~ Tenllt 100 11157 m 1~7 +I (' "arcus 5(J(i 9f\ tn 90 .~ 2 1 Thom L 1«'0 7:1 7! 75

~~~.:~,s 3!~ ~~f~ t;f'•ti~'t. 7.'~ ! ~~~:~u S:: {~ l~ ;: :,.~ (' :"ltorri<;On 3000 ~ '2~ :!~ "-l 1 Triballf 700 ~8 t8 21 -2 r ~10"hH f•OO 1~~ Hi' tf>~ 1 Ult-Shaw 6-'00 8 11 e Co" !"•JU• 1100 1~ 11 14 +1 1 U !lllnlnt 1!00 181'. 18 18\t (' sorthld u,no ~, ,~ J~ -2 II' Aab .. tno %160 ii6tl &10 540 -1~ Cnn Qu,. t:t:rm ~ ~ 54 ·-3 l 1n Krno 3910 190 110 uoo c Rto"C"Ollrt l:i!'ln q ~, ~. : t:pp Can 1300 131 llO 130 r ~Rnnrm Sfw'!'l 7 • .;. 1 ~ \"('nturu !620 S~4:t4 4~1.4. 4-t~i- " for Ct'\!1) t'l)l"l '"' ~I '!I -1 l Vtspar 1500 1R'11 18 18 -t t'o"rand 10399 103 BA m -1 \'lolom 1000 II IT IT +1 cr~ulf't- ~tM 36 ~., 3~ --:. W11ltr Ant 122.5 "s ao ., .,., ... ,\\i('h 17M 4S 42 43 -1 I w C'r.l(mt 410 Ill ll'i IJ'i- 'I : tnttr !117M II 21Wt II ll 4

14111 7 7 7 + 1· 1 W Ala lor 2500 4 4 4 ,. 1 ~~b~~:~t ,11•~ ft1~ " lltil + 'S I WIJlroy 123110 Itt tt4 118 +IT n~ \n.rron lloo ltl 11 26 -41 Wr Har1 U3lJ 18 tl 16 -2 n•o. Hont ;llM !6 ll'l 11 -1 Yoalo Lra« lOGO 14\t II IS -116 n-.,i~(ln Jl~n 101 .• J(IIJ In•• - ~~ I Yk obear 4780 12 N • n<rknon 1110 m 110 21% + S I Younr HG mn 15 4ft u tlfomP ~i.\ l'l11i !II~ !'1 1~- ltl Zttnmac IGOO 17~ 17i,i 17t-"- Ml nona Ida ''"" • I 8 Zulara ISIJO rT 28 11 tl:J,·;tn ·I '" ,, rurlt

\lal ~1110 1111 160 161\ I P'end Orro 1:000 240 1111 t• J:a .. ! !"ul •' • ·• ,;1 ~~~"1 1!!»& +-1 I OILI F.l•rr SB" 171 16.~ 110 'Aemt Gu liOO lllit ll\i u~ Y.Hroob 6lll0 17 1~ 1 ' 17 ' All Rox - 11 ill ll -1 !:I Sml JOI!l) ~ l ·1 - !A. 1· ~lmlnox SM 117 1Bl liT -t 1 r.u••ka 227" Jt · 19 :Ill Am Leduc 1001 IW. 111o ••• • Falc-on ~~~ W S? Sl +l\l ,. AhchDr SOD 1 1 1.,. F>rada~ t:wl Ill 1!111 Ill -1 ~ T'w"t T 111011 11 10 Ill 10111010 2&118 II II II T>tlma !100 31 19 It :•11•1 I A 1011 HI 715 ?Ill Frobl•h•r 106! II 12 I! •I &II IIi ,. 78 111'0 lilt 1116 Ga.l•·ln 17110 7 8•; ~~~ Banll 3750 110 IDD 101 +I Ceca \I!Ato 214~ t22\; 221i 22'4 llrltolto tile :t18 Itt -Giant \1( 217 nn•, Jn'; 18't-" Colalio 1100 42 42 42 +I r.J"i" 312! II' I 11'1 II\; -2\; Cal Ed 14001 ll71t 17!i IT%+ lit C<'!de'• :\54'10 2.1 2"~1; ,. -1 Calurt 1100 38 31 35 r.; ~!tRill 1!00 '" II 18 t'lmfrlRI 410 111 1ST liT -1 (';ranb•· 2rJ1 Sill Ill 111 - 'I ' C 011 IAio 200 120 128 1:111 tl r.nndrnr 1:!71 211 1911 It' I + 1\" 1 C Oil L wlo IIIII 11 111o M - It Granduo Hm 418 !!In 110 cs 011 wto 11011 10 10 11 Gulr~ t2llll I I I + .... I CS Pelt 2011 Ill SIC Ill -1 Gull I.e.. 211011 511 l'' 1,... I C ''h'tl- - 72 72 - ·-1 r..n 7 ......... 15~ +II ' : ~ I •• ~ ,.

'fiar3"11tck ,;r,; j;u, ii•i 12'1 , 11 I Cdn Dtv 411 4lt1 421 011 +:M llar·'llia 41111 W.!l 18 tn'l c: D•lbi 10Jll 440 430 44ll +10 'II .., l.akoo !11100 ~ I' I • I C Ex Gu 189tl IJI Ill LU -I Rut~~war 15M !1 111 !Ill -1 C Romtstrl 200 106 116 1M -1 T!•!lb W!OO 41•, I 4'1 Cent Dl >d 11100 Ill 175 Ill 11"11.11.. 1!15 ~13 !Ill 113 +3 \ Cl\ortor 011 26110 112 Ill 112 +I lkllinnr 4:!9' S23Lj !l'• 2:!'i- 1 ~ j C DraJfln JO&O 15 14 J! Holl'er 173ft 28! 115 , 2l,l , •Ill • C Ml< Mae 2!40 2M SIS 2&5 + 111 Hud Bar 1765 ISN 54°• 14'• - 1• C Co~t p liDO HO 1511 .. -a Ru.l'am 1.100 7 1 7 -1 · ... Jl)·dr• J:t •lin l! S4 11 + 1 Dtr·Pol ... 1 II 'll 71 -1 l?lt Siokol ;.,, s:• Tl 71 •I•; Domo l'oto 2441 Ill Ill •o -B '"' Mal1 !tot 1'1 1 5 -112 Dynamic 11000 It II t1 t\1. Irish co, 910.> m 133 115 -2 For1o Itt Sll 1M H.! +I lrNI IU 1111 liD lift II& + 12 Fr Pole •r Ill 545 141 lU -ll ho 471!1 14 II 14 +! Gr !'loblo 1'111 US\t 11\1. ll'!i ,t Waitt - Jl II !8 Homt ~ llti $11 lOll \tTn - 11 Ja<obuo 1101 114 It II •I Homo • llfl II~ til 1814 Jue D!tl - II lilt II + \0 II B Otl G 1220 114% 1ru 14% + lit ,TeW- 11110 ~~~ II\ I'll t If. Jum, Pld IIIIM U II II tT Jobllrh IDeM 11 I II +I Jupltor - 1111 110 • -11 Jnllft liM II Jll4 21 Ll l'tto IIIII II* I 1141 + 16 Joo~mlll liN 18ll 18\l 101-1 Loll Pollt lltD 41 • • -1 J,..oy :lfll II II U t I llori.CoJ,t IDtll f f T + 1" Xm•Ult YIIIO f T T Mayfair 110G 110 141 1111 K"" A.. 117G til 1&1i II Uedal 1111 IU Ill Ill -It IIUembt lUI 41(1 fll 440 Jlldctn 131M! 14 11 U Kirk !II.. um 'N f4 II IIIII CIIJ 1117 11Wt 11 Ill! + ~ Kopoa Nit II IT IT Not Ptlo 16M 1611 lit Itt -11 La~ MS. tl7 IU1~ Ul\ 1.4\l + .... N CoReerl 11110 I I I + 16 L Dnlauh Uftll Ill II II +I N c .. t !SilO 14 14 IN L Shore 121 Ill Ill SU N D&VIII - 1\t lilt ali + 16 La LUI lllllt 1M 2111 HO -111 NC 0111 111'1 Ill Ill 131 -le Lamaqaa loOOO !ID Ill Ill -s NCO wto 1Je0 M t4 It +1 Laarto 1114 44 0 61 -II'• North!4 TIIIO 1716 If II - ~ Lallll A• 11110 15 14 II -1 Okalto I 4TOI 4t 41 4t +I Lei lob liD 141 Ill 141 Pac Polo tll fl216 12~ 12\i- ~ LL L&l :Pill 171 171 171 P&moll 11101 14 H U +I Lcrodo IIIII 1M 171 171 +I P1111ojl rto 411111 7 I I -1 Lorodo WI IIIli II It t1 +I Por•o tr 3fM II II • -1 Ll'Ddhot 11180 Ulo!o 12 II - Ill Poruv OU. IDD lo.1 Ill U1 Marana 1111 1111 115. Ill Pllrtl 1111 71 7l 71 +1 loloclAel 1110 101 1111 111 PlliiU" ,_ 11 n f1 ·-s !olameut V 41101 I I I Plato - 41Wt G G Madoea Hill 144 UD liD -1 POedtr 11MM1 If II II -1 Maralro II- 101!1 II IDiit + .... Pralrto et1 11100 lfl U11 110 -It lllarbo)' !ODD IS I! I! - \oi Pro\'D Goo '17M 1!11 He He -It :llar<011 1500 6\\ 111 II\ Quonto 10!00 !\i 5 51'1 + ,.. :llorj'tlmo 23500 117 115 11!1 Ranror 1!00 1011 103 101 +2 :.tar Ia 11000 3:'1.> 37 37\0 + 1,\ Ret! Expl lllllll I I I + 1 Molllell - ''·I 7'"' 71it- b lloeky Pole 510 IIi ru 6l!o ·-I ~lattcm; 150 n:; m 775 Royalllt 2140 tiDlit 18!> 1014 - '!> Mo7tna 14000 10 10 It Jloyollte tr 121 122 22 22 llcMor MilO 7.... 71\ 111 -!1.• Sappblro TUCIO 73 11 Ill -1 :Meolor 17100 Ill 5I !t -1 I Sapph dell• 2JO sm 131 m -27 llomlt 7070 1~1 1111 IM -1 Sorcte ~~ 111 11 to +4 ~leta Uron 10011 ll 13 13 -I Secur Free llno 445 44n 445 + 1 \It Wrt&ht 204!12 It:! 91 111 +II Sooth U 5000 12 II 11 -1 .\luiii·M ZOOO II .... ,..... 21\i ,. v, Spoontr ISM ll ID\~ 11

····-· --- • Slan~·•IJ 17S4 40 :111 :111 -1

• .................... Tidal 19&! !14 54 !14

We build bette:r with

IDllrn'[bliiJl ill\DUlL~UiSCQI L•T ua PRov• •• aav• .,.., ••••.,

Wt11 .... ~ 1111111 lttilldlllp ..,.,_

tn .... UCI'" ,. __

tlltw Jell fuca ad lpmt. Clll ut lad111

. . ENGI.NEIOONG 'friagdale. Stieet

..

Trano Cao 1000 53 52 53 Trlllt 011 4818 20~ !01 207 -1 U Call!o \'l 1332 UR II! IU -2 l!n Olio 1215 110 IU 144 -2 Warne 1!00 I I I +lt.; Wtlljloc 141 II 13 IS + 10 W Cdn 0G IGtl IDI 101 IN -1 W~tbur • 12111 u &.1 54 ,., Watotoo ltlll Ill Ill us W !le•alll 4110 II II Ill -4 Wllllloll - II 13 II \'oa Cal IBIIIl 3 I I

M .. treal Nova Iloilo eo... ...... ........... .., .. Tor·O..

lAIII. I

n~ Nm ..., "'' + .. IJN 11m "" m• + ~ 1111 IN\0 Ill; l6'f.t + l 214 em• mt m~ +1

..... "'"' 711; 11% Ull tNW. 1114 141'1 + \oi

IIIDI!ITIULI 4111MS.I uti ..... m6 N + 'li ~~~"' 111M su. tt '~ m c ..... 1110 ... 4tllo ~ D MI.... 1110 H11t t11o 110 + \oi DtiAt lUI I~ UW. IIIIo +I lllutll ... ~ M ~- '4 1'111~1• - Ill W 11m - '4 ~~~~~- til Nlflt Ill! 11'14 lleiiiRoa Ill tiN 1M •~ + '4 Wllnr 1• Ill ItO 110 -1 Wolkan ,. 141\i ... II + '4 'Noot011 B 111 M:\t • •w. + ;%

Tltiii&INIIMIM,

Montreal

Toronto MOir AC11VK TOIOIITO ITOC¥8

87 Till Caaadl•• .,. •• lolto •lf!t Low CIHtllll'ro

lolldt .. N Ho• I Dom Tar Bell Phllllt "••'-AU IIIII hpphlrt Jump P .. C .Ex GN PoMGil

INPUITKIALI 2S44II ~I 21 Z\100 11'0 51,. IIIT5 liM 171 .•

Jel41 l»lol 1:141 ID!tl II llol

011.1 •100 I I 72100 73 If/ moe 2t 11 II!INI Ill lib liSCO 54 IS

liiiNKI

IDli + 1o 1%

t71> ~ 11 53~· 't' ....

llol- lit

I <l' 11 -s 24 +7

II 1-t n +1

204112 123 rl 111 12l8M 211 114 210

'IIIODOII 111

Mt wr~~•t WlllrO)' Joburko llurroJ tcrodo

II 761110 17 II I! liMO 1111 171 171

+II ·tl7 +2 +I +I

Mutual Funds lliCTU.\L FUNPI

.,. ftt Cu••••• Prts• Bid Aot

All Cdn COIIl a ~1 t.Z7 All Cdn DIY 1.41 1.9! American Growtk 9,31 10.20 lltoubran 31.66 ~1.3! Comadloa lat11lm .. t U9 IUS Canolund 41.93 44.03 Cllomplon Mutual !,!II 6.51 · Commonwealth lnltr It 7! ~U:1 Commonwealth Lo\·oraro 7.!16 ~.72 CCJrporate lll\'fl.torl'l: !U!B 10.79 Dh•onlllod otrlu II 4.10 4.80 DIYidtnd Shares 3.41 J,1l

..

.'1

2 3 4 5 6

7 8 9

10

Exceeding speed limit On wrong side of road Drove off roadway Did not have right-of-way

Reckless driving Failed to signal and

improper signaling Passing on wrong side Cutting in Passing on curve or hill Car ran away-no driver Miscellaneous

TOTAL

Pemns Killed 10,970 5,170 5,050 3,890 3,800

490 460 90 90 -

390 30,400

Persons Injured

1,001,000 174,200 215,800 585,000 151,000

80,600 31,200 78,000

•' 2,600 2,600

78,000 1,600,000

DtADLY RECKONINC -More deadly and much more futile than any war the United States has fought in,

slaughter on the highways last year alone killed or injur­ed more than 3,116,000 men, women and children. Injurie11 in 1960 were 7 per cent above 1959; deaths increaser by 1 per cent. :rota! deaths were 3.8,000; injuries, 3,078,000 Table above lists the major causes of this toll on the part

dri\'ers. Added to the figure in table should be those in· \'Ol\'ing pedestrians, bicyclists, trains, etc.: 7,600 killed, 478,000 injured. None of these tragedies was necessary. Almost all of them occurred because of negligence. care. lessness and indifference. Data from Travelers Insurance Companies.

Dominion EquiiJ 16.7! 11.na -----------~--. -·--···-··-- .. -·--· --------

Fednatt.'d Growt)'l 5.:!2 !·!~ I Bl!nq c~ !lUI~ $601~ &0 &1)1~ l El('ctrnlux 95 S1S " )!li +Pia' Qn r...as :r:SO $R!I11 8'11 P;:\1 Paramq 3000 };ll.l 1:11',: nl'l Bf'lh StPf'l ~~·,,, pr~ O~ll:n~I(G~· ; ~ 6·:.1i ' nanq PC 13.1 Ull,t 41% 4111 + ~w Fam Play (Jj SI!J1J !HI~ 191~ 1', I Q;'l; Gas Wb 10 3211 .120 3211 Paulla~h :woo t7 lri 16 'Bofin.s: l•d~ on.•

0 ec ·· ~c,·Ratll PA 25 1431;• (3~ 43Vt J.'Jcetwood J."iH $13~'2 ·]31 2 13• 2 -;)j:Que Pow lilB<;]B't Jfl ~114 •-··'• 1 Pun·upin RUJOo ta l.i 1!-i •2L- 1Bordf"n

FondJ Collpcllf Rxd S.JJ •. 1} 'ctt.!h p R 4ti S2R 28 211 .. l Fndtn rn St'' l'''' 13:\ p I 1 St\ -43 43 I Borg War f.',(' I )"onda CGIItetll C 6.59 717 . .1 • .,. ,.,. • ., ·.a. . Q Tt'l l~.:;apr 511 Slli'"J 2.11~ :.!1:-'1 nw Cp pr l u . ' ~:."···· 0 3 83 _.;, 19 ,. e-ll Phone 471'12 5533~ SJI~ .'i.1 3~ ... 3~; Frnsf"'" 100.) $22~.a 221~ 22~, + 1,4 1 Q TPI pr wt 25 s25 :.i z.i _ 1~ <.htf' cubillt ;1\110 -1-lJfl J.!ltJ j~'oil -10 ~1 Brn:m.:cu G~pP.J"~·neomt AceuJII. ~:99 1.55 Bnw 5. pr (0:) $~8:\t, 48'4 483.a _!4 'll'r PE't~ rr EJO Jti J~;j 345 -5 II Reitman J(}f) S17 17 li - 12 Qur :-;melt !J;,oo 20 13 If\ -2 ancy Erir 1.)1•1

Growtll otl 1n_. Gil 1 u 1.52 1 Bow 1,.-) P 200 S~1 12 s..2 + Vot Frosst A 12'5 $21 21 21 Roe A\' c 13 50 :f.j3~ 5~ S·'-a · St L colum :; ~11 570 :;tio Slifl -S Budd Co ~ ;r "· 1 VI' Grw•Lh fulll •at 7.U I Bow~trr 110 !81\ 8MI 8'"- \•1 Gnllneau li~ SJR 38 :u1 Rolhmd A. ~25 ~~:o 91 , q14 ~ 1 Sauerm nv 10100 23; 221 :.:2·1 .;..4 ! r-~urt lnd It"' l:ve!~~= llutual 1£51 1317 Braz1l 1973 454:1 435 450 +10 : G Dynam z25 $J71:l 3'i~ 37•§1 1 Ro,yal Rnnk 1515 $';":i-it 'i.il1; j;jJ, ~ ~" Sbop Sn\·~ iWO s-a ::~ H t Burn:b5 :::··· key .. tone 1'1'.03 •• :42 ' Rt\ on :!420 $34 33-ti 34 + ;II' CiMC ]jiJ $47h. "7~ 4i't. ~II,~ l Rothman• 824 su 13;~ 1-4 - 1,-,: Si!!-calta 1000 ~~ 51 ~1 -4 I Calumet 1ft'j:' I

Mutual AeeumulaUat find 8.13 t65 I BCE !i l'r z20 $-a3~i -461,t -i-Mt GL Paper liiiO 11R 17% 111 + Jn RQyalite t65 SlfJ~4 Ul:t~_: HP~ i Suln•y 1&11 $1211 l:l'':o J:!l.•- ':-~I Can Dry ~~;::·: Mutual Income- fu.nd ' 5.55 fi ,0'1 lJCE Sw.fo pr 200 $52 52 S2 ) Hand.v A 100 $17~ 17lh 171,t St L Cem A 5fJO 113 12:s4 12'" + l,4 Soc a 1011 100 lOIJ 100 CPR N, Amor'·aa lund ol C11 .. 10 II 11:11 ,· BC Poe 1100 13!% ~m 34'~-"'' llandy A wt zJO 19 9 f St L Corp 2.\1 13'1 m, m, .• •,: S l!ufoult 6-io!O 11 14 ll +I C••• Jl .,._, RadiJIOft"' 4.U 5 14 · OC Phone Hl9 SSt 50~2: 51 + 1,1 Holt Rcn 140 S20 2.0 2ft Salada s 1125 S21 20 20% + l ! SC Pow 6pr :t\0 $123 123 1~3 Cater Tr ~~~'I· Savt and lnvut ., Canada 5.7! e:s2 I ~Uild Proct 130 S:l5~& J~H·· 3j34 I Uome A 3.25 111 11)1,.1 11 Salada Wtl 45 $J.41.f 1414 141.~ j Spartan 3Jt.)J 230 220 1Jil I l'e)ar.e~e Suptrvlnd Amer. fund 1,97 165 Cul Pow 1~50 $271 . ._ 27 27~-~ ~ 1:-4 Homf J\ JBO $10~1 10~• 101.i: i 22 Shawln Ht6fl 27~• 27~'3 27~a + J,~: Sp-.rtiln wt• 3300 61i 6() till -HI 1 2~::r~ 11~ ~;:·.: 1 Sapii'Vlled lxee 55 .U.fit · I Can Cem ?5 $2.•JA 2814 28 1

·;, + ~4. i Horne Pf 3000 330 323 325 -.5 Shawin A 150 2.9•,-i~ 291.~ 29"1.1 -· 1,~ i Sullivan fllQO 15~ 151l 155 iUpetvi.ttd Exec 51 35_15 Cl }~ndry 200 S19l'l 191,; 1!•,a- 1\i

1

Uurn 11f wt 4100 6R 65 66 -4 Shaw 4 pr 10 S-12• . .; 421~ 421~ _ 1,4 ; Tarhe nono EH~ P. a Chrysler ••. pervlltd l:tte 51' e.Jt CSL ~C"l S.'i9 ~6~ .'i9 + 21.7 H Smith 120 1431.4 43:.\ 4.31,-!,: + " Sh~ard H65 S7t. 7 7 . ·ralln zlOO 9 ~ ' a~i .. ~i~t S\"C !~~·~~ Suparvlood Euc &I 6 II! f 55 • c Aviation IOU 123 23 23 Hud B"y 501 127', 27\'o 27'• Slmn•••• 35 $32'< 32'1 32'!- v,, Tih Explo 1000 "AI ''AI 6'.~ + II '-'". Suparvlold Growl• luld Ul ' I C Bank C 781 IIG 6!1; 66 + \l , H Bay mnr 215 $55\, M'4 55\~- ... Soutbam Ill $30 30 30 _ 1 > i Tr C:Corp 42l Ill 5()\1 51 ~'::; Cola

~TVrvlaEidlocllrnocn~:n· fulld .4 .. 111~ :::: ! ~·o,:~:; ~~~ ~~10 : ~\\ ~ ... : ::::: ~::k A ~ mtt ;~ .... ;~~ + \4 ~ .. f·~~l " ~;~R ~:z 7~ 1,. 7:i! .~,;:I L'·!~r...... 1: ~~ ~ 14: Coml Solv "'t.l

,.- ~ f.IO Cdn Celan 565 SZE% Ul'ri 28~\- \11 Imp 011 1859 $.JI3 45% 46 + J,r4 StHI c rt 33122 ollO ~ .t:z -t 25 U Prin 500 135 135- 13.') -UJ Con l!:d -4~r" 1 TUIQOII~ ·~.V .. elllllllluelan"t Vllua• I 117 .. 1UO 1.$9 C Ch•m %00 $1 7 7 Imp Tnb 19011 $14\4 14\1 Hl~ Sl•inhg ~ 871 $19!> 29 29 Vaugu.rd 31100 !'.> 8'.> 8'.~ ~onlajnPI '' . 'iJ "" II.S5 C Frbk1 A 50 Sll !tt,t 114. Ind Areep 185 $61 59% 59% + na Stelnh' pr :o $l071,1102 JI»IAI Vitiinia 1000 t II 9 -+ lh Cont C Xd i(/'1- 1

•- .I, fuoll 'g ~~~ I ~ ~~· #:t' 7~;;- ... :.t~ .. ~~~ol 12~~ .~~ ~~~ ~~: ~ ~~;~~:m m ::.., :,. ~ ... + 'i I 1\'etil\lllt lOf:oliol!~~ 2'" m- Y, ~:~w O~tl ::::

Montreal ~~~~ydro !~ :::~-~ ll\4 u... ;~: f.~~~ ~:;~ :;~~ !! ~~+I!> r:. Can PI ;~ ::t:• li::· ~~t. ~- :::: ~t\~ ~~~ ~I ~~ ~~~·· ~ ~~·· :2·· I ~~·~~;.uco ;;~:. ; C{ Pow 100 S12~~ u;i 121" Int t•lil Pr 725 U7~· .,7..., 47~ Walk GW lf,.'j $191/.a 49 4!Jlt • '~I Cdn Delhi ll:Vi HO 4Jj uo .... o:, I Curtbs . Cf. Pow Pr 225 SJlll,.t 838;'z 38Ya Inler PJ, ft25 $72~ 76~1 72 -1~ We-ston A z.s $~9 5~ ~ ~ t i Camp Chib 2::150 98.1i 96:i 9R?i -rl~ Deere 1 Cdn OU ll:lO $30~• ~7A 3D + % j Jroq G pr · '1000 $9"1!, t 91,; + \t ... Ztllen 4.') na11 :Jar 7 1.~ 1 ~ t 1 ~~ c Oum SUg JJ:i J!!1J•J 2rPe 201l·- lf•l D1.!.t Se•• ' CPR 274! S25'i 25'4 2o'"' + "'. JamaiCl PS 500 IJI 33 11'• + ~. Zellm pr 7:\ SH'; w, u~, l' Jn&soll 38 14! 42 12 +2 Uomr I {'.dn Pol pr 508 Ill\> II m. : Laban 100 $)~ ~~ 39%- •,; CASAili.\N I Cem llel d• 27011 liaS i80 68! -5 Dou~lll

IION!&EAL CLOIIHG IT()(:&I C Viekeu BOO JJ• 24 14 + ". Lowh :\1 6100 $17 ld 17 + 1 LiltPd C Paper BriO J43 _.2~ tJ + % I Uow Chem . •·· lr Tbo Cll&dlaa Pruo / Cocubutt z5() 11310 13% IJ% I L Si I. Ill SJI J7 II +I Al!rOfl• Jr.oo I l -I 'Con G" b~l 119'1 lo .. 19'o- ''' llu rom ><I ·.,,

lltatr•al ltock i:ach.aqa-MaJ lJ Cothlln 200 400 395 4:00 +2S i ~R ~nd PR 2095 $JI1 16~1 l6·'lt- ~t Tng N"flfl 3 ~..., 8 ,.,. ''• _ 11o Ge~n Min•• 100 $21'6 'J2Y, !2~4- 'J...a: ~ast Kod r:,. CompiN tabUlaU.on nt WedneldiY Comb En.t -1,75 $11%. 11~ U:'i I ~!arihme Tel H5 Sl9'.1 19',J 19r., T 00 . Gunn<lr ]OIJ 8.10 8.)0 B:jo .. 51) '~aton \Hii

traR.,dlaa•. QuotatiOJII te e•nta un.l~u! Coa MS 148; $261h, 2614. 2:6t'-- J.l. I ~as!' F $j2U SlJ~·· 1:.1!1: 13~~ + l4 A~l~:,onjan •~· ~!~ ~~, ~ Uollinger ~i:l nl.t 2:1 :.lJt' ... 16 f:l .~uto I. aukH •. z-...<Jdd tot, xd-Ex·dJvJdend. \ c Gla"s 100 S24.~ 2.41,2. 24\.'2 ... \l ~itch R A. 1M f9. g ' + ;4,1 Atlas 'rpJ )~r~~ S.l -~ ~~~-\ I 2 .hw!tf') [ y,n 4111 ¥6 4111 +ZJ I l-~1 ra~o ,. J:I'-E•·ritlltl. IW-!:¥•Wirrantl. j Con Can d S5Q S-13~ .f33a 43~• -t:!"t. I Mol!iion A 4~ 1:.!7~ !!i 27.,. I Au,:u~ru, ~67 411 44 "" -2 . Kerr ..\drt 600 SlO'• 1014 10'a- !-. r:•relitn 2~· ~.

Net Cr Cork 2$ Jjf) 70 70 .;.t . :'1-!oh:on R 390 U7 '¥1 27 - l.'IJ . .\\'alon lfYI sar• IP• Rl" l.oh fo fJ Wal $391.l JR\11 ~IJ 1 ~ +I I t.urd h T ... :rwk laJtt •trh L•wCleuCii

11"' I cr Zrll A 215 s2o t9s.l 19~ 1 M:ont LO<·o 825 $1 14 u -111 - Rakrr Jl)l:.n Hll.i HJ!J 101 ~ I Mn P.aprr ~!15 211~ 311, JJI, .rue ra ;;·

Acad Atl • lf200 •:'~ ~~t ~It\: tt: g:~eSr;:, ·~~ ~r"a::·"'.~~~::.J//~a~un~~~ : :~~~~ :f,4 ::~, ::~m~n ~ s!; ~~1 ~ ~~·~-;~H·~~~~~r 1~~ ~~~~, ~?~·~ ~:~~ ; 7~ t:~ 1t~t~~ ;,, A!toma Hll f4.8~ lUI 4f}

1i + %: D Bri~Jfe ~35 518:1& 18'~ 18'~ ~iA Wire B tiO $123-t. 12'• 12•~ FJellcrhll., 2000 %ti 2n 16 •I Out Tll951pr ~.n 1191..1 ~~~~ 191, Yen i'",ds Alumllll 1711 1311'1 37\1 17lol + I<' D Fndry 570 8Sj71\ 5'1\lo 57U, +I .... Noranda fi95 $161.1, 4! 48'• Bello en. 2500 4,1 4,, l'l . Rli>iPII 100 oil'' II'' 11\2 • '' ( lollllllliH' "il .lhun t , liM Nl!N 21% 2111, o·GJnil 15:> Hn11~ 68\:z I)Sl~ . :iS LP ,~9' $171;, li~l 161, I Honny~J l:t i StPPP R 900 au 831) Rt5 .j25 ·-·--··-~1\lmTI41~r l40 ~!~! ~~ ~nt- 19\ D St"e~l 8~5 1121,-z 12 1::! +J '<1!Rilne 225 S52~·i 52'~-l s:n. + 18 Bornite = ~~ *i l~ _ 6 1 T ~in A 110.1 S~01.~ 9~1 501~ .. •:.: •••• All ~ P dG .-.,. -.,.. .U~ri D 8lor~1 35 174% ?4~4. 7414 + "· ac PE"f- 696 S12% 12% 12~·- tb Bouran M 68 t 3 . Tran-. ~fl 1525 $14'• It ... 14~•- 11-

.l.al T • J 25 152' I! 52 Dom Tar 8:'155 $li~ li~• 17~• 1 l,age HPrs ~95 $25 241-i 4!1.- ~- Burnt RtiJ ~500 Mll 9 9 , l.'rt Gu 100 111:14 18"' IS'' A.riUt 151 ~ 40t,6. 40~ + \6. Dom Tar pr 2.00 l20h 20\".ll :U}1.;~ + ':2 · PPnmans 100 U9 29 29 -t c Q Yrll , 4 "'" 1.:. WC'rrut Tr vt 4:!1) 115&1 Jli14 15~- 11. AU.. IIIII 110 13110 II 31\i- ~~~ Dom Text 730 11m 13 II - >.ol Pow Corp 230 154'/o 51lj 541; tl c VauiO 1''0'1 4 lall ' I'll , 1110 tall'l it\41 211'1 -1\1 Dooohut 600 $19 18\l 19 + \<I Promlum !!00 270 WI 260 -5 Cnprand ;: I: 1~ l:;: :;i" ~ Tolol oole~: lotl .. lrlolo tltoltle m)D'> Bilk llut lUll 11&\t. Mlol ISV. + \oi Du Poat 1110 121 Jlwl 21 + ~ Prlce Br m Ill~'. u;o 13 .... + ',\ Croin RL 225 I! 19 : ,.d oil> 1016811, BIIIM NS Ill flllt 'n 71~ + 1'1 DupKio A 200 $7 1 7 Quo Tel . JIO f45'4 45 1!1> Cruude liiMI ~5 ~ 611 -II ---

OUR POARniNG HOIISE with MAJOR HOOPI.F D Explorm 100<1 l9 t9 29 -1 D<>lnn 5()n 9 9 ' D Le111 t200 76 72 'M H Ea•t SUII 2.100 199 199 139 + 2 Fatl 1000 ~~-:. 9'.-2 9L2 1- 1.l:'

faiC'O!Ii 900 S57V._ Sl'l•:Z 5i•.4 ·"- 1,

New 1ork Fano 1000 3 3 l + h ! Fundy 20011 6 6 6 , NEW YOIIK Cf,O!'INr. sTOCKS Futurit}' :100 2ft :0 2(] -5 Br 'l'h~ A••ot!latf'ill Prn• GoJd Ag~ 9000 38. 311 38 +2 New York Stock Exrhan2e-May 17 Ralllan 11000 l\1 3'.1 3\1 xd - Ex·dh·ldend xr - EHI~ht• Haslinn 11700 Ul lOJ 113 +4 xw-·Ex-warrantl. :\et cban1e il from

t::~t' A ':ig :~~-~.~~': ~'' pr~,·iou!l day'~ ~lose.) s .. t Lith Corp 10600 36 Jl l5 + 1 St,flk bin IIIP Low Clo"' Ch'l,. Low11ty SO $!!Pi 2n4. 2Pi + ~4 , ACf' Ind 1000 59 SB~ 58'" + 1"'

Mauval 1511'5 IB 17 18 + 1 1 Addrf's!' 1000 R! 81~ P.76 • -1•• ~lc!nt,n• 600 133:"14, JJ1r1 33~ ... 1.:._ I AliPIARJ 9700 12~~ U3.J 623 .. Mer Chip 114600 t05 93 103 +10 .\lli:;: Ch toooo 29 ::!8'• 191'11-'" 1 ~ M•loh pr z12 $11 11 11 Amerada 3600 11:1~ ~ t1 -l'i ~errlll 1500 103 103 103 Am Can 18000 42 1 ~ <4\P.i. -i1Sl + ~4 Mid Cblb 6800 19\, II 19 .... + I Am Cyaa I30iltl 47',1 ~ l'l'ot .. I> lft Pleasant 2500 58 54 8 :;a + 6 Am :\tot 30000 20 19 191t. .:.. ~~ ~IR Dalrie:~ 66{) $8% IP4 s~4 I Am Smtlt 2800 72 70~ 72 +1~., llussrn.... 100 $1J 16 11 Am Sttl liOOO 15l' 15 1514 + .1:4 ~ali\'f' :\f 1000 9 9 9 1 Am Tel 20000 127:1.1, 1:!51,-l 12tFi ro; Forma 1000 7 tiV, 6~~- 1.-3 · Am Tob 31i00 32 ttl 31t, + 1..!:-

Sfld LiJ:ht 200 $63 ~J lt1 I Ancnda MOO 641.; U &PI + 1 .. ~W Amlt 23300 38 :15 1'\ -1 I Armco ~tl 2900 751 j~j i·P'J. 74 .J- ~"~., ~A R:lre- ZlOO 3.'i :1~ :1-t -1 1 Armslt Jt.OO 56~ 5~ 561 Sr + 1 :·

Oprmjska 272!1 a."Joll 1\35 g.;:~ · Bahrot'k 1!.!00 4R-'4 4i 7 irl 4i1•- ..,~ PA lnv 1M 2'7.'i 2i.~ 275 . flalt Ohitt 1400 35t'"J JJ:\4. l.JL2 '-ll11 ---- --··-·· ----·--

COASTAL FREIGHT,ER

FOR SALE This ship is available because the service has heen discontinued. Has been on this Northern Nova Scotia coastal run since 1947. Available immediately and can be seen at Ferguson Industries Ltd. Shipyard, Pictou', N S.

Specifications

Gross Tonnage 116, net 67. Speed, 11 knots. · Diesel Engine, 210 h.p. Well maintained. Forward Hold depth 9 ft. Hatch 8 ft. 1 5% ft. After Hatch size 9lh ft. x 41/z ", Deck Equipment-! Diesel Winch serv· ing both hatches. Radio Telephlii•e Communications Equip­ment. '

Hull in excellent condition.

North Bay Steamship Co., Limited

P.O. BOX 553, HALIFAX, N.S . my18,1920

your host in HAl

325 brc • c~'· !. r8dio l!nJ TV.

New sp~c1CUI ideally desognoi the needs of and bUSinUS

E ~

• • • LESSONS t

and of high1 in tile Unitt

school work and obtain! European I

boys and schools. a constant •

here. from the mm

the Western and edu

A REPOR'I between

srslems and 01 divides pu

usuall the ac,

one school. pupils in ano

~it in· class• r Jtlt!idica,ppil~g eacl

I~ to 20 per the acade1

the universit technical

I 13th. tchool

tn a level than, tho11 h coileaa.

Ierma &en In Europe U

offers 200, G1 • • •

vtl(ational e alto i1 em1 perhapt a Europ1 f01 .or the di

tr~inln& In Europe ar

usually ll the U.s. A for lnstar chemi•tn

of the fa1

., (I

111 .. .~ n ·~ tli

IOJ Ill JU 201 2U 2U 261 261 281 10(

I

Page 13: 1-,:p. , RS enne ee 1enna. - Memorial University of …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...enne ee 1enna. COMPACT RUN DOWN? THE DAILY. NEWS NEED .1-dl1or Sedan

• j. , ••

, ..... t

· t hnsp In· •;pn killrd, tH'CI'~~ary.

.·nre. care. lnsurancr

... ' I • > ' 21: , .. ~~ .. \ • 1 ' l ~ • I

. ·r •. •.• -~~· l~:. ;:,,, ,\I·•' J{ t

: ·~·"' fl • ~3 1 1 ·••. ri' ~ (.j~ •

• 7 •• 1 ·~ '11:\ .;.' ~~·· ~:1. Sl

UJ(l ';() •t 7t ··~-·' ~111 •• ·~:~ k

-.:-,(1 4fl~, H9'-\ tO t;l ... l ~~j. lilt J:

C'flo.l !,;' 11 81:l ·~~ ·:r .. ·., 2,;1, 21 2.!!•

. '\~lr '4 4JL 1 44 t~•.r.• Sf. :• :J!l 4 Sl:t ·~" 4>. j<. fh . :•~· r ~··, r.~ ~ t.)l;

.... ,, .;~. i;'• r:, ~••• _:r •• , ~.)· .. , :f:t • :.(11~ h. t,j:.

4.'Jr• ~rr' • ol{l tr:• r.)\~1 ;:!: l ~111 1fl t-,:~1 ~~ Jl'• ll : v.:v ;,: 'i '7~.

·.,-~·· :t:'·. ~ll~·. 67r.,. lH 1 llh ..... ..: • W·• ~ ...

ij.; ·•·

:: : .. ..~ .. -~-: . .F• .,(II

.~tu•d on

r host in HALIF

., w Nova

~

~cottan HOTEl

'· bedroom,, each •o•o nnd TV.

ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., J~H.::..:U~R;;;..SD;...:A..;;;Y;.:.., ;;,..:M~AY..:_:;18::.., .;.;19;.;,61;_ ________________________________ ...::,13

* BEDROOM FURNIT.URE

~ * DRESSERS • BEDS OR HIBOYS, CONTACT

THE GREAT EASTERN OIL CO., LTD . WATER STREET ST. JOHN'S

I

ts Carry A Heavy Load: • JACOBY ON BRIDGE

B•SOLL \1 tr:\L . ·- 1 ~E,\, - J::1·er)·

mornin,. Cl~ude Gau· load! a plaul satchel

· 13 pound; of book~ Erm aft~rnoon he

lo.mr thr sante weiGht . for thrrr hour>.

. ' 11 ;tud• 11>~ Lahn and lor the th1rd .•tmght

11 addiuon. hr is work· . ·~r ,ranun~r of h1s

and <'11 !11 r other ;ub;etH \rxt year .

.. i>f'tn 1;.-nnan. llis · ;t:dtr! wtll rontinuc

,;~~ [a!hrr. 1 l'.ons postal

.. 1n;t,t• upon ha1·· · · prrp;trrd for thr

. , , .. ri~idl~ pn·parrd. .•urd•·lr~:ro boy, who · ~ ,,,, ... ~r hall. is

··:rnms jr" to friends .. ·nr!r;-rlut tn France.

·Ltllr to Bordeaux to ··ou ,·an find i!Ud·

· · · and Claudettes. arr funmhinR l'il•id

!or tritil'al Amer· chargt that American ,

Ill 10ft.

== s:: - - .. ~T"' •• §_.

TAK•: OUT CALLS JIOJt Ci\ UTION

N<MtTH .AK42 .QJ76 +3 ofoKJ54

WEST (D) EAST • JlO 4 97

18

I. ¥AK5 ¥10832 • A Q 10 s 8 • K 9 5 I

.963 .Ql072 SOUTH .Q8653 ¥94 • J742 .AS

East and West vulnerable Wea\ North Ea•t SouUI 1 + Double Pass 1 • ' PaSJ 2 • Pass ~ • l'ass Fass Pass

Opening lead-• J .

Hf ·osWALll JJ\C08'f·­How do' you hid the North

i hand after West opens with I one dbmond? Naturally, you

.. . : start by making a negative .. ;'< ·, . ' double and you are pleased

{\ • J.,:J 1' when your partner responds I ·· ..... ' ·· "' with one spade .

LESSO\S oi'Pr here : I and of ht~hrr raliber A 'CLAUDETTE' In 1 Frenell chemistry eTas~ furnlshPs a vivid What is Y?Ur n~xt bid?

~0!1 In the rnited States. argui.Jient lor critical American 1 who charge that our schools

1

. Should you, !liVe a smgle or . · d art aoft double ra1se .

!rhool 110rk I! e· • Your hands Is rlearly worth •nd nhtamed 1rom I bers at U.S. colleges. 1 teachers, I'm sory to uy-hut I a .~pade raise. Your partner European tePn-agers i "These European teachers George H. Baird, Cleveland, may have a very had hand.

:he bo)'i and g!rla in are highly respected, ofien I leader of the U.S. observer ex· ! After all, yon have practically !chools . . f 1 more highly regarded than our prdition. ! forced him to bid, but there I con~tant dm t or are ~till distinct possibilities of

. h ~ rr. Obsen·ers game. In fact many people from !he moment they think game is so likely that

the \\ tstern Europan they jump to three spades with and education of·

1 this type of hand,

However, a mere ral~e to ' ' • . , two is sufficient. In it~elf this

· A REPORT on maJ?r ! immediate single raise shows bttwc1•n t heIr : a very good hand because you

I:Oittmi and ours: 1 are im•iling a game after forc-dlndes pup1ls into j XXI I door, just opened It and ~tepper1 1 ing your partnrr to bid.

. u;uall)' at. age 1 In !logan Geer·~ Belle Union ' through. I<'ive men were in the 1 With scl'en high card points; I the arade•mcally ' deadfall it was the opening j back room ahead of him. Hogan I •.wo donbletons and a fh·e card

, ont school. the rank· , hour. The barroom was. empty: Geer, Breed Garvey and the I ~uit South should jump ri~ht pup1ls m another. They

1

except for the ~artender and · three Spooner brothers. Garvey I to four spades after the raise. ott m claN~ togelh· a swamper pushmg a broom I gave out With 1 surly growl. I south won't he too happy

each other. . across a Jittered floor. I "You're late. We been wait 'with his contract after West 15 to 20 per cent who Doors were propped wide to ; in' near an hour. I emtld have ' opens the jatk o! spades but

the aradrmic path ! let out the stale and rancid '!used that extra sleep." liM-cause trumps break ~icelv the URII'ers1ty or to odors of the night before. Bit· Garvey's face was still gro· • and West holds both Ace and

techmcal eduntio~, ter ghosts of a hundred dead : tesque from ~he effrct5 _of the . king of hearts e1•erything will a 13th. year . m , cigars and pipes, the sweet aour

1

ptstol _wh1ppmg admm1stered ' come out all right. arhool. ~tudymg smell of spilled whisky. by Chm Waddell.

1n 1 le1·el with or A lone barkeep moved up "Well, we're all here now," CARD SENSE ~an, thou in the U.S. and down dull and lethargic, Hogan Geer said. "So let's gel eolltltl. his mind ~!uttered and smoth· about settling several things ..

term• genmll)' are er>d by lack of sleep and good First, this Chris Waddell. : Q-The bidding has been: Ia lurope than in the air. With half-hearted, mechan· Seems Scorbie can't handle ! West North East South

F!me of!m 18~ days, ical effort he wiped down the him, so we'll have to." and seldof achie1•e, individual 200, Germany 240. bar, washed and •tacked "Scorbie!" Ringgold spat the You, South, hold: • • • glassu name like be might a curse. •Q98765 ¥32 +78 •854

IO!ational clasies, ex- 1 Price Ringgold came in from "Just so," nodded Geer in What do you do? ailo Ia emphasized, re- tbe street. The suggestion of his cold, humorless way. "But A-Bid one spade. However, Ptrhapa a deeper re· fellneness In this man, occa· useful to us because he is use· certain modern players '11'111 Europe for craftsman· sioned by his pale, hlrd·staring le&B. He's a front, and don't jump rlgM to two spades in an

lid .or the dignity of Ia· eyu, his tawniness of coloring, count beyond that. Which is all attempt to preempt. This bid Is was heightened by a certain we want of the marshal's o(Cice. not recommended unless yon

training is more ex· fastidiousness In manner and Sure, he made a mistake in ' can be sure of your partner's Ia Europe and the pre· dress. Even his soft, prowling bringing in Waddell. He guess· understanding,

. urually takes longer step held something Cllt·like. ed wrong, But so did the rest TODi\ Y'S QUESTION the U.S. A science In· He went quickly alonll the of us." You do bid one spade. West lor instance, Is a~ length of the room, ignoring Rinjlgold indicated the Spoon· passes and your partner jumps

Ia rhPml&try or physk11 both swaml'l!r and bartender. ers. "There's yo~r chore boys," to three spades. What do you of the faculty mem· He did not knock at the rear Geer ahook h1s naked head. 1 do now'!

--·-· ·-· ·· · ----- ---·-- ... ~- "It's not quite that simple. ! Answer Tomorrow

4 Ptdeetal partJ (VU.)

IWhan WIQ!Jirt Plrferm

lA-d 'llldday llnlltlor tlnferior plaett

IO Fenet111 1wm. lllltauirt I& "dlcma! Pial 20 !all!'• nut ~M8 ore UftUIUal 31 Equal 2fi 8 r~ilh title S3 Sample

lata 36 Swervef : :•nloua 40 Kalil etrtllll 10 ... ~!~r .f3lloake~a

~ .... ..,., .f5Soan hulllilil "'Caln'l brotller

.fT It•lf'• capital

.f8 Labor . 50 Nlllltd boUI 51 lip l:lllstntlll

btilll H TV'I SkeltOD i

Even though Waddell ~as only I ---------­been here a' few days hr'r. got came a time when fellows like the whole camp talking about you and me and Jlreed here, him. He's a tough ·proposition, moved an. That is, they did if that fellow-as tough as they they were smart." come." "Or scared?" jeered Ring.

"He's mortal," Ringgold said gold. shortly. "And a shot from the Gcer straightened and his dark-!" He shrugged. words fell thin and edged.

"Again, not that simple," "That's poor talk, Ringgold. Geer said. "A shot, yes - but 1 I'm scared any lime it"s inlelli· not from the dark. Anything j' gent to be scared. Any marks like that would point straiJ:ht of your teeth in Waddell's hide? at the Gulch. Which we can't 1 You had your chance to put afford." some there last night."

• • • Ringgold flushed. "All right. Ringgold's pale stare sharp. You're no~ scared. You're just

ened. "What are you talking being smart. This law and order about, Geer? What can't the talk - there's 1omething be· Gulch alford? You turning 1oft, hind it. Let's have it." or· something?." • • •

"No. Just 1mart." Gear lean· Mollified, Hogan Geer settled ed back In bil chair, 11nawed back in hi! chair a&ain. "It the tip from a cheroot and lit takes time for any camp to find lt. Past the flnt mouthful 'of itself. But one day some man 1moke he reaumed. "In my comes a!on1 t~ bring that In· time I've aeeil a dozen camps stlnct for law and order into like tbia one atart up, grow, focus and to provide a rallying live, and In many eases, die. In point. This fellow Wad dell all of them, when the flrat big could be just auch a man." ruah and fever went on. And "All the more reaton to Jet mel like you and me and Breed rid of him then," nid Ring. ha, Cllhlld In-bill But the Cold, · .. hwnan animal iJ 1 peculiar "I 10 a!Qnl with you there," I brute. Balliully be bu an In· Geer agreed. "But it mustn't ~ stinct for law and order, and happen on Ute Street. If possi· J 10oner or later that Instinct be· hie, not even near Ute Street." •

. I

·Jint to ehow. Thla Is a pretty "Why not?" rough camp. But there's been Jlo;an Geer made 1 gesture t rciueher ones in the past, and or impatlenet. in everY one of them there (Ta Be Continual>

I ~ . '

i~ Hl

THE STORY OF MAI\THA WAYNE

ALLEY OOP

CAPTAIN EASY

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS

PRISCILLA'S POP

-------

~fORTY ~fEEKLl!:

BUGS Rlll'o-11\Y

SHORT RIBS

\

By W. SHRUGGS.

By V. T. HAMLIN

By LESLIE TUR:i'iER

Bv ~IERRELL BLOSSER

VotJ\JE Jl.JST &EN QPrU!I.t:J:i BY A REBEL.

. :.~

. · . . ' '• . ~· .• ·.

.,• !.• ... : .. =

B\' AL \'ER\1 f.El:

Bv DTC:K C:A VET.l.

By LEO;-\ SCHLESINGER

. • •

By FRANK O'NEAL :

I I i

I I

Page 14: 1-,:p. , RS enne ee 1enna. - Memorial University of …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...enne ee 1enna. COMPACT RUN DOWN? THE DAILY. NEWS NEED .1-dl1or Sedan

' ' •

~ ' ' ' ~-

' ~4~ }

\'-t' ., . , .. ..

'· -t ' "'< r;.

~ fu

cr ~

-1

.,

"

·!. i

I I ' i

'I i !

I I

I

'i I I

I .. I I .,

I

' I I

i

' I

! '·

1' .. (

' . '

~ ' i . ' I I 'I I· I i

I

-"I ~' :I II

! j

! . !

•' I'

'. '.

i' . I

. I

' .,

,. ·' •I

·! . '

'' I I

NOTICE b the matter of Newfouadland

FlylntC Club In veluntary Uquldatlon.

DEFENCE CONSTRUCTION (1951} Lll\IITED

I . . .

Notice

I .

.

I BARGAIN !-9 x 12 OV31 Braided Rug. Charcoal

' ~fulli·colour. Slightly dam Nfld. PROJECT: Exterior Painting Aft 1 · d t ~~ 18 1 ed. Reg. $59.95 Now onlv

Armature of 50 PI\IQ's, and 3 Metal Build· ·cr t us a e a ay , 11 be bl S48.88. Nice for your cor·

Works in,l!s, RCAF Station, Goose Ba1·. I wi not responsi e tage. Call John Schlies CANADA 38 Labrador. for any debts incurred' mann-•4041. TENDERS Bambrick file 122·37-G4·2 bv mv wife, !\Irs. Ruth . my18.19 All persons claiming to be Street ·1 'h 1 · -------·---- ~--

eredltors of or who ha\;e any SEALED TENDERS address· Dial 7191.2 SEALED TENDERS, marked C lure j) • FOR SALE !-1951 Buick in elaimr upon or affecting New· ed to Secretary, Department of as to content addressed to the ( Sgd,) LLOYD CHURCHILL, good running order. Engine foundland Flying Club are re· Home for The Public Works, Roo~ _B_322 •. Sir BUILDING undersigned will be received 20 Merrymeeting Road .. ·in top shape. Requires son"· quested to send particulars of Charles Tupper Butldmg, River- MATERIA~S until 3:00 p.m. E.D.T. FOR R. EII..IT body work. Nearest offer same, duly attested, to Joseph Aged and Infirm side Drive, Ottawa and endorsed' • WEDNESDAY, June 14, 1961.1 ·~ ! ~~-~175.~. Phone 92313-F. Chapman, Liquidator of New· "Tender For Seap)ane Wlla.rt! CHESTER DA WE Ltd. 1 A S • f . FOR SALE !-A square oak foundland Flying Club, 3 Pres· - Extension, Goose Bay (Hap)'Y !' • ' ! Specifications and tender U 1te 0 i Dining Table with 4 leaves. eott Street, St. John's, New· A post of Cook (female) will Valley), Newfoundland", will be SHAWF ST.11 and TBOPISd~IL RD .forms will be on view at Build· OHI•CeS ' Only s12.00. Phone 43014. foundland, on or before the 2nd , be vacant at the Home for the received until 3.00 p.m. (E. ·n or a . your Ul tng 1 ers' Exchanges at Halifax, Fred- ' . . _ -·~ ~. - ~ . -day of June A.D. 1961, after 1 aged and Infirm, Sudhury s. T.), Reqmrements call 'I ericton, Moncton, Saint John. 283 I :\IARCHANT RD ·FOR SALE-Three tom~l~t~ which date the Liquidator of 1 Street. The salary for the post 80161 - 91171 N.B .. Board of Trade. st. John's. I ."e. 1 . · Truck Motors, A·l cond1hon Newfoundland Flying Club will is $1420 per annum with ap· WEDNESDAY, June U, 1961.: · -Newfoundland and DCL HalifaxiParkmg Space Avatlable. Dodge, Ford, Chev., and all proceed to distribute the assets I proprlate deductions for com- Plans, specifications and ELECTRICAL Branch Office and may be oh· For particulars parts for a 1953 Morris Ox· of the Company ha\'ing regard i .plete or partial living in. The forms of tender can be seen, or tained by Prime Contractors I Ph • 91 918 2120. ford. All parts for. a 1954 only to ,. e claims of which he i working week ~onsists of 40 can be obtained on deposit of APPLICANCES only from DCL Plans Section. ' • or ' .\feteor. Two bodieS, one •hall then have had notice. I hours. sum of $ZO.OO in the form of a , . , Room 158, at. the address be After 6 p.m. 1 _sta~~· one D~_m~:_Dial 3214

Dated at St. John's, New· · Living in accommodation is Certified bank cheque to the I BAINE JOHNS fON I low on deposit of $25.00 P.aY· my16 18 20 I FOR SALE '-1 good Oil D f C t uctmn • ' · foundland, Canada, this 1st day available if such is desired but order of the Receiver ~ene~~l COMPANY, Ltd. able to . e. cnce ons r --· ----- ~------·-- : Range with new Pot and

of May A.D. 1961. I is not compulsory. Uniforms

1

of Canada, through: Chief En· A«ency Deparhnenl J ( 1951 l Limited. FOR SALE I Blower Reconditioned tar· JOSEPH CHAPMAN will be supplied. gineer, Room. E:443, Sir .charles 1243 W;ter St. Dial 2102 : A secu;.ity ~leposit ol $2,500.00! . i hureto~ for only $135.00--

• ' Tupper Butldmg, R1vers1de ! or a 10 ·' bid bond must ac- \ LAND, LOTS OF LAND· Call H. Noseworth)· at Liquidator. Applications in writing, stat Drive, ottawa, ·ont., District YOUR FRIGIDAIRE company tenders. UN"'I.~TCHED i •40141. myi7, lS

lli!y4,11,18,25 ing age, marital status. anrl ex· Engineer, P.O. Box 4600, Buck· DEALER. I 1~ t\.

A TRAFFIC OUTLAW

· h ld be dd d J. D. JENNISON .. Secctary, · VALUES :. ,-~;,\N-;TE.D-We buy ~om1'cs, penence s ou ' a resse masler's. Field, Building 29, St. R ' ~ c/o Tender Opemng oom · : . k t 1

\O: John. 's, Newfoundland,_ D. istnrt HEAP & PARTNERS N 4 T B 'ld"ng ' 14 acres more or less 1 ma~azmes, poe e nove s, o. eml1• Ul

1 ' , ' " . ' ! and books. John D. Snow, I The Administrative Assistant. Engmeer, Ralst.~n B~tldmg, P.j (NFLD) Lt l 56 l.yon Street, . Groves Road, - nnlcs • 9

New Gower street 1 Department of Public Weltare, 0. Box 875• ~ah ~x, N.S. ! . . ' c' . · OTTAWA, Ontano. north T.C.H. apr17,1mth : Ccmfederatlon Building, I The deposit wtll be reltas~d 1 W1r1ng Mater1als, W1re and 18 19 ' St. John's. ! on return .of the. d~cuments In : Cables, M?lors, Starters, · ~:·. _ · __ -~----· ------ · Block of land, Bav Bulls COPYING SERVICE-White

my 17,18

D~puty Miuister.lgood condtlton w1thm a .month: Lamps. _Swttche~. 1,1ghtme Road \Vest Rannond"s. Printing, Mimeographing, R. L. ANDREWS, from fbe date of rcceptto~ of , Ftxturcs, ~tc H.iver' · Photocopying and Typing.

CANAUA TENDERS

tenders. 1f not returned Wl!h•!l ·WAREHOUSE: PRJNCE'S ST. : . ' · .1 ~• Personalized attention. Call that period .the deposit will oc i 'DIAL 5085 I Cahm Lots, Topsat Ponu ~~r~. Halley, at 90876. forfeited. , l I .

1

. Road. • apr27,lmth

To be considered each tend~r I FIRE INSURANCE Cabin Lots :\cal's Pond: TilE-CENTRAL BARBER must - I ! Road. ; SHOP-We are now operat-(a) be accompanied by one of I CROSBIE & CO Ltd INSURANCE 8 aci'CS, lllOrc or less, Top- . ing 10 chairs, you can .b.• the alternative securities ,. ' ' ' I ff

A" t f ·1 R d p · t i assured of prompt, e ICI· called for in the tender .,en 5 or • . sat oa · rommen ' ent, sanitary service. Na documents. UNDERWRITERS AT AT LOWEST RATES location. · waiting problem. 24 New

(b) be made on the printed LLOYDS. Funished three bedroom, Gower Street opposite Ad•· forms IUpp!ied by the De· LOW RATES · Ltd Partm•nt and t'n accordance DIAL 5131 Bun~talow, Chamber-.: laide Moton, · LAYOFFS QUERIED . SEALED TENDERS 1ddreas- ~ h

OTTAWA ICPt-The go1·ern- ed to Secretary, Department of with the conditions set lains area. . OIL BURNER SERVICE-ment was questioned in the Public Works, Room B.322; Sir forth therein. HARDWARE STORES Summer Cotta(fe furnish- Furnaces, Ranges and Commons Tuesday about .Ia~·· Charles Tupper Building, River· The lowest ar any tender not d ~"~ ' · Space Heaters, dependable offs of CNR employees smce side Dri\'e, Ottawa, and endon· necessarily accepted. e . service at reasonable rate1, 1et~lemeftt of the .th:eate~ed ed "Tender For Wharf Aeqnlsl· ROBERT FORTIER, TOOL RENTAL Comfortahle, 2 tenement: George Royle, Phone 47793. •trtke of non ." OPt'taling >all tlon and e:denslon, South Dildo, Chief of Administration Electric Sabre Sawa. house 99-lOl Carter's . mar1,lmth 1\'ln'kers Paul Hrllver IL-Tor- T l It s th Dlslrl I New 1 d s Portable Sanders and JI

1']), Acco11ntancy and Auditin" 11n1 o-Tri~it · 1 said ·lar•e num- r n Y ou . c : · Serv ces an ecretary. ,.

bers Or 1\·)orkcrs hal•e l~>n~n •ai~ ro. unlland," w1ll be recetved Un· D•partment of Public Works, Skill Saws. S 1 \ t · Service-Anyone requiring

AFTERNOO:-> LADlES

\I'HCOl!E CATERI:\G TO .

Dining-Da11cin• ~(ovies Stlllda~~:

Winner or the CRA. ~lenu .l.·1ar1 · 1961. .

":\ 0'.'" l,hi1' !{I)[",,L. ~ arc b;:wl"\ :. ~1· !r · my <IC"'I:..;ll :11~: ) .. House. \'.·Jil :_,, n·.r· -:-

.'·I

\\'ell ma:h··' r.· if Y<ll' '.' ·,·' 'c ' remodrl l't1::·r !" •• ;

help yon''·' h ~~~ '·.· tiral and 10 ·

and matrn.d, old r\prrtcnlrd ha111l< 1•::!! around.

c• " 1 ED s T) Reasonable Rates Large ' tore all( ' par . : assistance in preparing In· ! orr in the last two weeks. Trans- h 3·00 p.m. ( ' . ' ' ' I Ottawa, t c t ' 11'11 ' 1 H.\ IIIIlS & HISCOCK LTD. , mc11 , ar cr s I area: come tax returns can han 1-------

!'ort minister Baker said he i WEDNESDAY, June 14, Jllfil, General Hardware 1961-~n. lA :\ttractivc purchase terms .pxpert help. Dial 4908·H . ----... v.·ould obtain up-to-date figures I . ' s rf G d · t from the C:'\R. Plans, specifications and po mg 00 s. 1:-i TilE DISTRICT rot'RT arran~cd. for appomtmen ·

I forms of tender can be seen, or ST. JOHS'S WEST S 11 mar2!1,(1m) PICK UP \'OICE SIGNALS can be obtained on deposit of ERNEST CLOUSTON . . We Buy to ."c ·FAST AND EFFICIEI'tT PARIS I API - The French • sum of $25.00 in the form of I LIMITED ' B~tween ri ~~~~ P. ~r~cer~ ~~~-~ \Vc Sell to Live. Servic,_Four ramps oper-

WhereTo Balsam radio svstem's monitoring ~fa. 1 Certified bank cheque to the McCLARY AUTOMATIC ted, P a 11 'an avl '! J. G. BUTLER ating daily. All work is

tion re.Wrted it picked up I'IJJCe order of the Receiver ~eneral WAR.'\1 AIR CONDITIONING ~or, Defendant, : expert, prompt, courteous

signals Tuesday on a frequency o~ Canada, through: ~htef En· CANADA DIAL 4183 Sh • ff' S 1 j PHONE 42892 and fully guaranteed. Come 1 Situated m the -·~nerally used b~· So\·iet ~ecit· gmeer, Room.E-443, Sir Char~es E Zl& WATER ST. I . erl s a e .. lmy\3,18 in today. Adams Service the City.

::11ioiPns for their liaison wir.h Tupper Butldlng, Rlv~rstde TEND RS By ,·irtue or a Writ of Fwn Station, Pennywell Road, Quiet, Comfortab:t .;-ice satellites, Officials spec- Drive, Ottawa, Ont., District SEALED TENDERS address· GROCERS {Retail) I Facias directed to me in this Phone ~831. phere. :~ited that the Russians a;e Engine,er, ~.0. Bo~ 4_600, Buck· ed to Secretary, Department of 'cause and wherein I am so ~om- 11..1 t" F :;~ing communications In prep· mast~r s Fteld, .Bu~ldmg 29, St Public Works, Room B-322, Sir L. HEALEY : manded, I will sell at .,y Office ·~0 ICe or FOR SALE-A quantity ttf For ReW"''!tiOlll

information:

--··

KIN Bo~

ewspc SER

15 14 6 9

12 13 1

10 5 7 8

2

TO-D

I 24 29 19 30 27 20 18 25 17 23 28

All Consolatil

Help Kil

SEJ

AYAU WATER A

::~atlon for another s p d c e Johns, Nfld., _Dlstrtct Engineer, I Charles Tupper Building, River- Cross Roads and. Water Street 11 in the Court House on Friday TenderS Hay. Phone 98107· ·:-fl!lssl\e test. Ral~ton B~ildmg, P.O. Box 875• side Drive, Ottawa, and endors- DIAL 3026 next, May 19th, at :'::oon of the rny17,18 • Halifax, N.S., an~ can be seen . ed 'Tender For Community clock, ALL the right, title and - -P-AI_N_T-IN-:-G~-an-:d:-::D::E::c=oa=-A:-:T:-. THJ .·rt:r""!r"" '· · ~ at the Post Offlc~ 1~ G~and Stage, Point Lance, Newfound· INSURANCE AGENTS interest of the Defendant in and Tenders will be retei1•ed ~Y · ING-For all your exterior MRS. JOBS ,)

Falls and Corner roo • ew· ! land" will be . received until to the undersigned up to and tn· and interior painting and Residenl

fo~~:la%e~osift twhilldbe mrelnetasset.~ 3.00 ~.NmE. SD(EA. YD.J S. T.): 1961 AND BROKERS 1 l'tf~~~~~ns=~~~~r~ar, 1955 Model ~~~di;~rZ;:::e 3:t~~~i~t~t=~tfr~:: ~~:~~n~39~:~~~~!~~~:.es. i~-m-31-,t-f----•,~ s I

FAMOUS - This girl has made 1 name for herself even thoUih it Is only a first nime

on return o e ocu c l\'ED , une '• · 1 the said car hning to all int~nts hold land and dwelling house, ! mvl'> 'lwks good condition within I month Plans, 'Specifications and JOB BROTHERS I and purpose~ in good repair and known as "Maplehurst", situate · _ · · ----·-from the date of reception jf forms of tender can be seen, & COMPANY, Ltd. presently situated at Fort Towns- and numbered 60 on the north 'I Preliminary Notice tenders. If not returned with n or can be obtained through: Water Street , bend where it may he inspected, side of Bonaventure Avenue

1 that period the depDBit wlll be Chief Engineer, Room E-443, DIAL 2658 _ 4123 ·but not removed without permis- by which it measures forty feet forfeited. Sir Charles Tupper Building, sion from this Office or the Nnd. and extending northwards to

To be considered each tender Riverside Drive, Ottawa, Ont., Constabulary. Empire Avenue, a distance of I must- f District Engineer, P. 0. Box REG. T. MORGAN 1· Dated at St. John's this 12th three hundred and eighty feet; 1·

(a) be accompanied by one 0 4600, Buckmaster's Field, Build· INSURANCE Ltd. ! day of May, 1961. all beautifully landscaped. AT MY o\UCTION ROOMS the alternative securitdies ing 29, St. John's, Nfld., Dis· ,

1

w. J, WARRE!II, Property open to inspection I, 15 Henry Strett II d ' 1·n the ten er Temple Bldg., P .0. • ox 168,

ca e 1or trict Engineer, Ralston Build· 341 Duckworth St. Sheriif. by appointment. 1' SATURDAY documents. h 1 t d ing, P. 0. Box 875, Halifax, N. DIAL 80370 or 7751 TER:I'IS OF SAI.E Tenders must be in writing

(b) be made on t e pr n e s., and can be seen at the Post I The highest bidder to be the addressed to the undersigned 1 MORII..IfNG forms supplied by the De- Office at Point Lartce, New· purchaser. If any dispute arise and marked "Tender'', : ~ I partment and in accordant~ foundland. DRUG STORES the car to be put up again and The highest or any tender will · at 10,3o ! with the conditions te To be considered each tender all bids to this point cancelled. not necessarily be accepted. forth therein. t M. CONNORS Ltd, One-third of the purchase orice , 'High class Furniture and Ho~se·

The lowest or lnY tender not ~)5 be 1ccompanied by one of Prescriptions Pickup and to be paid immediately afler sale . J. A. WINTER, hold Effects, property of Mr. AI·

necessarily accepted. the alternative securities delivery service. and the remainder plus all r.ost~ Regtstrar of the Supreme Court, bert Hanke, Rennie's Mill Road. ROBERT FORTmR, ~ailed for in the tender PHONE 2208 of transfer, etc., to be paid upon Administrator of the Estate of Removed for conven~nce of sale.

Chief of Administrative documenta. taking delivery of the car. Pay. George R. Cake, deceased. Detailed particulars in Friday's ; Services and Secretary. (b) be made on the printed S ment to be made in cash or by mY13•16•18 Daily News. j

Department of Public Workl, forms supplied by the De· RADIO-TV REPAIR certified cheque If so required. ---. John M. Walsh ·. ottawa. partment and in actordanc:~ The Sheriff reserves the right to ----------.

AUCTION

Aucllonter. with the condition• et I GREAT EASTERN OIL cancel or postpone the sale at all wa~~o..•oow forth therein. times with or without notice. I~

. The lowest or any tender COMPANY, Ltd. may16,18,19 CLEAII..IIII..IG -Lucky. While most' Paris ..----------. bshlon models are anonymous and aeludom achieve individual fame, Lucky has broken through the bonds .and is known throughout Europe. Here she is modellinl 1 new "artichoke"

BE WISE MARTIN1ZE

not necessarily accepted. REt\AIRS TO RADIOS, TV I~ I~

hairdo.

ASPHALT

AND

CREosote

DIVISION

The most in Dry Cleanln& HUGHES-MAYNARD

CLEANSERS LTD. Pbene 112186· 7 ~52U

ROBERT FORTIER, Chief of Admlnlstrallve Services and Secret~ry.

Department of Public Works, Ott.twa.

IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE SHIPMENT

UNTREATED AND· CR'EOSOTE .TREATED TIMBERS

* BIRCH * HEMLOCK · * B.C. FIR FROM 3" THICK PLANK'TO 16" x 16" TIMBER.

ANY LENGTH TO .40 FEET

AND ALL ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES

DIAL 31101 te 3105

A

WELCOME WAGON

HOSTESS

. Will Knock at your Door .UNTREATED AND CREOSOTE TREATED PINE POLES AND with Gifts and Greetings

PILING. ·ALL CLASSES UP TO 60 ~ET IN· LENGTH. from Friendly Business · · Neighbours and Your

and Social Groups On the occasion of: ,

' Comer to the City,

The Birth of a Baby.

. . PHONE .. 964273, 90943 NEWFOUNDLAND . and 3582 . ,. ..

...... '.,

. :~·. ·• ~ . . . 'I'\' ' -)· • •• I ' ' .,

'. ,!. ..... , -t,'• •• · ... •, • •• • • . .. . ... · .·' I_ l',\oi.~ ... :,•;' ~: •• :: :_,, ,,

;_ i.

' .

I ,

2011 5 LINES

• tA\Q[i \ GuSSf 401

• ER!ND filLS

m U BREWERY 7 54 I

A SPECIALTY Planning to paint your

home? Give us a call. Reasonable Rates

FREE ESTIMATES CITY WINDOW

c:::.,EANERS

and PAINTERS 7 VIMY AVE. PH: 95440 my!0,1mth

Prompt Delivery On • STOVE OIL • FURNACE OIL • HARD COAL • SOFT COAL

, • IROI\: FJRE~IA!'f HEATfflG EQUIPMENT.

e AUTO SUPPLIES

e SPORTS EQUIP.

e TOOLS e APPLIANCES

e TOP QUALITY

Easy Credit Terms.

Ht~t~diJ .Att411 DEALER

1 FLOWER BILL PHONE 6127

IIIDDY ICI.OWAne

ELECTRICITY is CHEAP in ST. JOHN'S

IT'S A HONEY OF A Lt'a'ilt:;t;li lOAf I 1 i • t ' y , • • • r I I

OUR OWN BREAD I Cheap Reliable Electricil} I! BEST BY TEST In an ~ Arou11d St. John's ~-~ .. : .

FOR FAST

DELIVERY

.214 OR CALL AT

RETAIL 665 WA'fEll

-EMF

by

Two-store)

bedrooms,

room, full

landscape•

Excellent

37 ]

Tl

LE

Page 15: 1-,:p. , RS enne ee 1enna. - Memorial University of …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...enne ee 1enna. COMPACT RUN DOWN? THE DAILY. NEWS NEED .1-dl1or Sedan

!

!:

: n:· ~.

Comfortabll

R~en·ationJ ':on:

' JOHS FACET, f· .~rnt ~lanagtlftf I

KINSMEN Boys Club

Newspaper BINGO SERIES NO. 46 IO-DA \''S NUMBERS

I N G 0 n ~-l 32 52 74

14 ~9 39 59 62

6 Hl 40 57 (i4

9 ;)() 38 51 65

~~ .1- 31 60 63 _,

!3 ~0 45 47 66 3·! 50 .... ~

1 IS tiJ

}0 ~5 43 49 5 17 36 48

- ,,3 41 56 -· ' 46 s zs 42 2

. \ll Consolation Prizes have been claimed.

Help Kin - Help Kiddies

Expert Watch Repairs

AVALON CREDIT JEWELLERS WATEII AT ADELAIDE PHONE ?119

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL K\IPIRE AVENUE WEST

by Jensen Camp Road

Two-storey Dwelling, consisting of three bedrooms. living room, kitchen and bath­room, full concrete foundation, freehold, landscaped.

Excellent buy for the price of $5500.00.

Eric W. Noel REAL ESTATE

37 CAMPBELL AVENUE PHONE 94072 - 94073

---,., ••••••. •.••• .. -"~~-· Armature Worb Ltd ~-.ct 11. DIAl 7191 • 7192

WANTED 6-TWO APARTMENT BUNGALOWS

in good residential locality. Priced from $15,000 to $20,000 or Bungalows suitable for Apartments.

Eric W. Noel REAL ESTATE

37 CAMPBELL AVENUE PHONE 94072 - 94073

PRELIM1INARY NOTI:CE SPENCER CLUB

Annual Sale will be held on

WEDNESDAY, October -4th.

Canadian Red Cross Blood Transfusion Service

REQUIRE SERVIICE OF DRIV·ER

(Female)

Persons interested must have current drivers permit, be willing to travel with mobile blood collection team af!d undergo qualifying drivers test. Reply in writing to Business Administrator, 55 Duckworth Street, St. John's, stating driving experience, age and education. All applications are confidential.

ELEVENTH ANNUAL

Liberal Ball (Under the Distinguished Patronage of the Hon.

Dr. J011eph R. Smallwood, (D.C.L.), Premier of Newfoundland)

Tickets $3.00 double Dress Informal

Chris Andrews Orchestra. Plenty of entertainment.

Myer Frelich, M.C. Door Prizes Program Prizes Elimination Prlz11 Novelty Prizes

8.30 p.m. THURSDAY,

U.S.O. Building, Merrymeeting Road. Check with tht Laurier Club for tickets as there are only a few left.

FOR SALE SUMMER CABIN Completely furnished. Located Hodge­water Line, lh mile west of Trans-Canada Highway. Open for inspection this week­end. Also Boat and Motor. ·

For further details:

PHONE ............................ 94 7 49

CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN IF CHAFE MAKES THE CLOTHIS.

Wm. L. CHAFE TAILOR

4 HOLDSWORTH ST. ST. JOHN'S

ATTENTION

CLASS '61 MEMORIAL UNIVERSITY National Manufacturer-Leader fn it's field-offers a challenging sales career for Arts and Commerce graduates - with opportunities ·

Full training - wide range of benefits -Salary plu.s bonus - Plw expenses.

Telephone- MR. D. MURPHY,

Newfoundland Hotel - Friday, May ~9th . 8.30 - 5.00 for Interview. ·

my1S;1'1,18

SISTERS OF SERVICE AUXILIARY

MAYTIME. TEA SUNDAY, MAY 21st

from 3 to 5:30 p.m.

7 GARRISON HILL

Sale of Home Baking and Candv. A cor­dial invitation is extended to ali members and friends.

Kinsmen Karnival PROGRAM DOOR PRIZE

WINNING NUMBER - 1141

Help Kin, Help Kiddies

Holy Cross Association

Meeting TO-NIGHT in the School at 1 o'clock

All interested in Football, Baseball and Track are requested to attend .

-------- -- ""•·~~----

SUPPORT YOUR LIONS CLUB HURRY I HURRY •

HURRY! r.et your Tickets NOW

in the MAMMOTH

BUYERS • SELLERS SPRING SWEEP

To be giv~n away ONE 1961 METEOR RTDEAU SEDAN With the 12.,000 ~file Warranty-Anybody can sell tickets in this Mammoth Buyers­Sellel'll Spring Sweep.

I FIRST PhlZE • . . 1961 METEOR SEDAN

and to the Seller of above winnine ticket-$1,000.00.

I SECOND PRIZE . .. . . .. . $1,000.00 and to the Seller of Second Prize-$500.00.

• Each Book you aell givea you 15 chances on the Sellers Prize.

*= Tickets: 50c. each; 3 for $1.00 Book of 15 for $5.00.

Get your Ticket Now from any Lion or by phoning 9.3804

It has been brought to the attention of committee that a number of ticket! have been sold without names on the stubs. These stubs will definitely be in the drawing so hold your tickets and watch your numbers eyes down and looking, this is not a gamble it is an investment.

• HELP YOUR LIONS CLUll pay off the swimming pool in Bannerman Park for

the Children of St. John's, apr18,22,25my2,9,18

IN STOCK Fry's Cocoa ................................ ls, Y2 Fry's Hot Chocolate .... 1 oz., 1 lb., 2 lb. Fry's Chocolate Chips ................ 6 oz. Fry's Cocoa ........................ 25 lb. bags Fry's Semi-sweet ........................ Y2 lb. Fry's ~uds ................................ 7Y2 oz. Cadbury's Choco ........ Y2 lb., Jib., 21b. Cadbury's Chocolate Biscui1s

Y2 lb. pkgs

AGENTS •

ANNUAL JNSPECTI-ON 515 (Kiwanis) Squadron Royal Canadian ··-~

Air Cadets

TQ,.NIGHT, THURSDAY, Ma,· 18th, at 7 45 p.m.

DRILL HALL, BUCKMASTER'S FIELD · Parents and General Public are cordially · ·

invited to attend.

ATTENTION CADETS Cadets will fall in at Drill Hall at i p.m.

Sharp . (Sgd.) COMMANDING OFFICER.

----... ·~· - -~----- ·- ~

DANCE -~

• ST. KEVIN'S PARISH HALL, GOULDS.~ .

FRI'DAY NIGHT, May 19th : ADMISSION .. .. $1.00

Ravens Orchestra

Fl RST IN SERVICE TO THE CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY

Year after year, more construction is bonded by

USF&G than by any other Insurance Company.

CONSTRUCTION BONDS; BUILDERS RISK; CONTRACTORS LIABILITY; AUTO; FIRE; RENTED EQUIP~IENT, Etc.

U. S. FIDELITY & GUARANTY Co. J. K. LACEY, Resident Manager

& J. J. LACEY INS.~Ltd. (Associate Ageney)

211 VVater Street 1'1tone 7035

-.Smith ~~orona

TYPEWRITERS & CASHIERS . OFFICE SUPPlfES and EQUIPMENT

DOMINION MACHINERY & EQUIPMENT CO., LTD. . OFFICE EQUIPMENT DIVISION

191 WATER STREET DIAL 5105 MAIN OFFICE 4052 • 4053

WANTED Boy

For Grocery

NEWFOUNDLAND SERVICES

I

15-16 years of age i :;·, for immediate permanent PASSENGER NOTI~ES

employment only. 1

EAST Elii..ID i CONNECTION SOUTH COAST I~ ! SERVICE VIA PORT ·

STORES I AUX BASQUES . Train "The Caribou" lea-ling

162 DUCKWORTH ST. • St. John's 1:30 p.m. to-ilay.

~~~~~~~~~! Thursday, May 18th., will make i connection at Port aux BasCJUe! ' with M.V. Nonia on South Co~st

GREAT EASTERN . service.

OIL & IMPORT CONNECTION PLACENTIA BAY SERVICE (COMB~· co., LTD. ED RUN) FRIDAY

Radio, Television, Washers, Regular 8:30 a.m. train leav· Refrigerators, Deep Freezers. I ing St. John's to-morrow, Fri·

Electrc Ranges, 1 day, May 19th., will make eon· Floor Polisder•, 1 nection at Argentia with Motor

Gramophones !Vessel on Placentia B3y Service Public Address Sy!!tems. (Combined Run).

Tape Recorders REPAIRS AND SEF.VlCI CONNECTION SOUTH COAST

5 LINES SERVICE VIA ARGENTIA DIAL 3001 to JOO&

Regular 8:30 a.m. train leav-WATER STREET ing St. John's to-morrow, Fri·

P.O. BOX 938 DIAL 92128 day, May 19th., will make eon·

i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"ijian2iBi,1i1 iiiiiiiiiiiil nection at Argentia with M V.

NOTICE Pratt _Representatives' (Nfld) Ltd.

HAVE BEEN APPOINTED REPRESENTATIVES IN NEWFOUNDLAND FOR

1 Bonavista on South Coast Ser· [vice. I

I "TROUTERS' SPECIAL" TO ARGENTIA 8:30 p.m..

MAY 23rd.

Special Train for regular , points to Argentia will leave St. John's 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 23rd. Returning train will leave Argentia 6:00 p.m. Wed· nesday, May 24th.

FREIGHT NOTICES FREIGHT LEWISPORTE·BAIE

VERTE SERVICij'.

WESTMINISTER PAPER ,COMPANY LIMITED Manufadurers of the following •••

e PUREX TOILET TISSUE e SCOTTIE FACIAL TISSUES e WESTMINISTER TOILET e SCOTTIE NAPKINS

Freight for regular ports , Lewisporte'to Baie Verte will be i accepted daily at Railway i Freight Shed commencing II'- · ! day, Thursday, May 18th. 1

I :i TISSUE

e SCOTTIE TOWELS e CUTRITE WAXED PAPER I

'. !!

•h. and other Quality Paper Products . I

I

'',; t·~f :t :

.·,

Page 16: 1-,:p. , RS enne ee 1enna. - Memorial University of …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...enne ee 1enna. COMPACT RUN DOWN? THE DAILY. NEWS NEED .1-dl1or Sedan

' 't ; (

-· .

·.

..

... '• ·~ j; ....

'.

'

:ii i

·',

_:f

'

• ' ' .,

.,_

.\

' .. ., :•

• ' ~ ~

' . ,~:

.. ,

:.!

·I.

i,

~ I i :j I

: . ' I

'i I

I

. i I '

I ~

,I : I ; '

i I ' I I '

I

i

;I I, ,I ! '

,, ;I .!

;: " I

. I ' ..

' ., . L

·; I

j

~ 'j I. ~;

: .. I

I .. , •• •i

' ;1 '! i' I I I

---------------------------

QUICK. EASY!

DELICIOUS!

THE HAPPIEST MEALS HAVE A ROYAL ENDING

·CHOICE OF 7

FLAVORS

Royal Instant Pudding sokcs the etemal des~ert problem in sud, a quick, delicious wav. Eudlcsslv versatile, it can he ~crved iu dozl'ns of tempting wa,·s.

DISTHlBrTED H\'

ANOTHER FINE

PRODUCT

OF

ST:\.;\;DARD 81\A;\;DS

T. & M. \•/INTER LTD. DUCKWORTH STHEET DIAL .'5101

Available This Week

ROSE BUSHES HYBRID TEA

FLORIBVNDI

CLIMBERS

STANDARD ROSES

FLOWERING

SIIRl'BS

SIIADE TREES

EVEHGREENS

STH:\ WREBHY PLA:\TS

(Linlited Suppl~)

CERTIFiED SEED POTATOES

DUE NE!'\T WEEK

I A NATION OF SHEEP ! \Vm. J. Lederer .. $4.25 ! THE CAPTURE OF : ADOLF EICHMANN

~loshe Pearlman 3.25 1 JAPANESE INN I Oliver Statler ..... 6.50 I RESISTANCE, i REBELLION, :AND DEATH

Albert. Camu~ ·~~ TilE BATTLE OF

MATAPAN

4.50

S. \V. C. Pack .. . 5.00 , ADVE~TURE OF A COLU~1NIST

Pierre Berton . 5.00 , THE TOHCH

Wilder Penfield . 5.00 I A CANDLE TO !.LIGHT THE SUN : Patricia Blondal . . 5.00 :THE DOCTOR i ~JAKES A CHOICE

.! .. ~================~:=~=== : Elizabeth Seifert' 3.95 = .uo WATER STREET, i THROUGH THE

U d T • 1 Problems . Phone ms, st. John's 1 FIELDS OF CLOVER

ST. JOHN'S SEED CO., l TO.,

I<

I

i

nwante ranslents (Continued from page 3l l...------'1 Peter De Vrie~ .... 4.50 i usc in the car business. It was I ! THE CHANCELLOR

By ERIC A. SEY;)IOUR · in life with which ~hey had be· · ~omted /~t ~~:!n~~e 1:0~~~: I come accustomed m some far orpora ~ 0 . . . ••

For the past twch•e years ; , 1 . land avatlable w1thm the C11~ s I awa> P ace. 'I I . I' 't t th Newfoundland has been the 1 To sum up they liked our o.ne m1 e p annmg 1mt o e . ~e 121

Stock Market Lawrence Schoonover .. . .. 4.95

~JA\'ILA GALLEON ha1•en, if only a temporary one, i money but th~y virtually hated I North of the highway . ; . fur· (Conlmucd from pa" ,

'· · · for many outsiders. The)' have ! evervthing else connected with 1 thermore, l'l~r. Par~ons land Gen :IIIIIs 500(1 U'• ~2,, "'• ~ '' 1 come here to earn in man" res· I .1 s' h . 11

1

fronts the htghway m an area mtc 61o011 w • ~<'• 18' • • '•

F. VanWyck ~Iason

• ' 11. ue a person ts rea y an . 1 Th f 1 Gen T.re 61011 7'' 72 7J•, -1 peels, fabulous salaries when I unwarted guest and we hope of special contro. e re usa I Glld•l•n 700 12·'• 12'• ~~'· • I. o· k & ( L d judged by ~o.cal standards. . ! that if there are any here now was agreed upon. g~o~~,~~~ i'g,':0 j:,:· ;~: 1i;·; _': ,':. I( S 0., t •

These \'IS!Iors corer a Wide I with thi~ "dog in the manger" -- d I Graml l'n """" 111 :lq", w. ' I'•

:~~~ s~~:hbeel~~~f~:s~~~~ ;~e~~~ ; ~~t!:~~~~~h;113~~e~o wi~a~~~ ~~~ A k!~~8~h~~ !~A~urne_d : gtJ~;1, n ~~;~ ~~~: ~!~: ~~:: ~~:: i The Booksellers Of cndea\'our 1 C 1 . 1 'th h .· g bb d out on the Thorburn Road ts 1 Hon,.tk 1100 ·II 11•, ~P, .. ,, IS . •425 "OOS 3191 • 1 er am y w1 a' m ru e . . 't r . Hud Rny ttioo ..,_.)~~.' ·-j~ 1 4 ~~~~. ·~ t~:: p1n ~1 • or ~ or • These people have every lb , 'th f w 1 d ing fmdmg the necesst Y o movmg 1 1111• 1·J,.k• z~'" .. " _.. " · h h k' e O\\s WI a e peop e 0 into new quarters from where I In\ Tarv 11i00 54 13'' ;,3'• '1 -----·----rt/l t to come rre ~c1• tn!: em· dut)' here from other countries · tnt X irk qJoo Rn•; 7R·'· Ho • 1'', ----

ployment and thereby aid in~ we find many of them happy they are now lodged. They are I Int Pap ,d 35Hlll :w•, J;•, 36'• ·~'• I ,. ... ,,.fotJndland 1'n her econontt'c 1 b 1. . 'lh Th presently overcrowded and lnt T•J "'oo 5R'• 57•, 57'·• ··I'" ...,..... o e l\'Jng WI us. ey say . - JC'Ihns ~t 5000 1.1 it~ ... n; .. - 1 " •

and cultural resurnence How· h g t t d w have apphed to renovate a n~ar· 'Kennrrnt :,~(1(1 "''" ~3'• ,,,,- ..• ! •1 "r ll'bt'le the1· are., ll't'th. 11s 1ve w etrel'elhr one. oesH 0 se 0 n 1 by building for the time being. ~"'~• 11oo :t!'• JJI, 32'• ·' '• < ' ' • rO) S1 ere IS no eaven On . . . . · b h : 1\roehlrr JIIO 13'• 13 13•, • '• would at least hope thev woul1l lh E ·h . 1 · d'ff t I' Thts bmldmg IS unsmta le, t c , Loc"'' 47oo ~R"i z;•• z;•, - •,

: 1 ear . ac coun ry ts 1 eren , Off 1 d d . 1 ~ sh Fill 4on '~ ·~··, •~ ~ '· respect our people and hl'e with I as are its inhabitants, but the tcer repor e • an . re.tom- ~~:~i.n en 19100 J7'• 3;', Jt;•; -I'· us as though they were part of t 11 . . bt . d 1 'f I mended th11t they remam 11hcre 1 ~ll·K•• 2oo ~"'• Jn'• .w, ~ •,

. . l ogc ternc~s ts o ame on Y 1 I the. are until crha s b~tler 1 ~Iorek ~eno RP> Rl::, Rl•, -- '• our pro· population. 1theoutsidercanfitintothepic· ) . p p l'llnn linn ~~~"' m 119•,m•,-i•.·

l'nfortunatelr. in some res· 1 1 If 1 h d h b t accommodahon be found. :111nn ~~ Jloo R2'i RO'• s2•< ·' 1'· . · ure. no , e an s e are e ·1 Minn ont 1 ~r.n 32 JP" 3P-t~- ~~ peels, 1lns has not been the I ter suited for some other clime - I :llun,nn1o IWln 1R'> 47'• 48 + '• ease ~lanv of the Clv'·by·ninhts p h h ld d f' · JOINT COMMITTEE ~ont liard "'"" Jn'• Jo•., Jn•, - '•: ha1·~ onll."uscd us f~r stepping 1 · b er faps we~ 011 L to 1 me~ j Councillor Henley suggested'~·: ~,·i~t ;;~ 1;:g:: 1 ;~·· 1;~~;: ::! 8\uncs thc1· ha1·e derided our ~~ 0 screenmg. c u~ n~l 1 at the meeting of the Council: li:t ot;~ 930o 2M• 2a•; 2s•;- '' ·,,.a,· o'r' lt'fe · tlte'· count the days rtowth our ]arms opetn tan ro I that 1 committee be set up to '1 ;i\•! cc;.~n.Pt• 12011 ;s,, ;81 ' 58'" " '•

• · ' ou e we come ma o every. . h 'b'l' . f' " moo 2o•• t9•, w. +JI< of their stay as il another 1 . ff h' 1 look mto t e posst ttltes o '~Y sH ;;oo 1•, J'• 41• - ''

i mo.tth or two here would vir· ~~; 5 eppmg 0 st 1~ ~~-Pane, establishing a permanent Indus· 1 ~~~. P~~~ ~;: :~:: ::;~ 1~:; ~ 2., l hnllv kill them thc1· disco~o~nt the orte we fare ccrl am'th eyhare : trial Agency for St. John's and 1 oulb !'.tar \1900 22'' 22'• 22•,- ••

11 • · . · e )'pe o peop e WI w om p t· 1 1 . Parke n. ,;~on 1o•, 39·'• 39' • ·I ou.· cultural activities they ld l'k t . I area. ar ICU ar y concermng I Penn RR •2ar~ t;•.; w. 1;', ~ ~

rur;e our high cost or' li1•inn weswou .1 ~ 0 ~tx. h the Northeast of the City where : Ph~1P• D•d -Hoo '~'' 63•< •~ ~ '', · " ome mtss10nar1es ere 1ay 1

• 1 . h f b Philro 1!100 2J'• 21•, 23';- '• . t something we have to Jive with 1 f I' . . 1 there Wtl tn t e uture e i Philip :llor 3600 1oo ~,,, 9:1 - '•: ~nd can do absolutelv nothing 0thur c?s 0 IVthmg 1f~ lgdretaher development including indus· I Pit Plate 5000 69\1 ~91 ! •9'1 ~ '' 1 ~ an ln any o er ae ey t . 1 Proc Gam :uno 81 1 " ,~a., 81 - ~.,.,. to reduce), some even say they have worked but they some-. rta · . . . Pullman '.100 39'• 39:~; 39''- •• cannot maintain the standing times are given an extra allow· Followmg on this .. the Mayor I :~:uh su ~~~~~ ~ii: ~l:: ~i'' : ::

. . h stated that there m1ght be set I Roy Tab nll1l 11g•, 119 119 . 1 , ance ur co.mpe~satton. T ey up a joint committee for the , Royal tlut 16900 42'• 4t•; 42. ' '·'

MacCORMAC'S GF.AR STRt:ET

REeEIVING OFFICE. 1 AOEI.AIDE &TREET

Dial 5181 · z · 1

----- . - - ·-··-----BIRTH . ' Sketch Of Roya I too, sympathtze wtth our people Board of Trade and the Ct'ty 'I sears R 3~no w • .a,, .,,, + :·.

h' ' [ f l'f Shell Oil l.<l1l 14'• 41' • 41''-- •, ?n t IS parhcu ar aspect 0 1 e Coun~il to work together on 1 Sheroton '~oo 19'~ 19'' 19'• • Li' ASH-Born to Nelson and 111.1fld Re • t m Newfoundland but they have . b d h ld d' stnclalr 9~oo w. 43'• "'• • '•, h

, 1'11111 • g1men 1 d t t d r 'th var1ous pro !ems an o IS· I' soc:anr t7ol'o a•• 47'• 4r. ~ '·': Dolorosa Ash {nee Nas l at St. .1

e~rne 0 accep an tve WI cussions. Sou Pae 21701! 2r. 2'• 21'~ + '• ·Clare's Mercy Hospital a babv By Lt. Col. J. P. O'Driscoll thts problem !Ike the rest of us spmy R moo 33'• 32'' J''' -1 .. 1 • · I 1775 E I d d I d . . · -- I Sl.d Bnnd lfiOO 62-:K 62l~ 621.2 ·· ~~ gtr. n ng an ec are war Some special people domg SIGNAL LIGHTS std cal a2oo oJ'• "'' oJ - ,, ;

~: ~~~~t~e~m~~i~:~can Colonies wotkt . h re get. a tw1 e~ty ~er Councillor Nightingale stated , ~l~ ~J ;i~.~ !il: ~;·; ~; = ;; i ----DEATHS cen. mcrcase m sa ar~es 1m· that he thought the Council; stud P••k 42000 .s;• ~~· .~;; + '• i ... ___ ... ___ _

'j 1 The Americans had no regu. med1at_ely they are appom.ted to should have blueprints drawn I ~~~.~;1 ~~ 1i;i' ,g~,; ~~~.: _ ,1 1 . Jar Army at the time but hostily po.;ts tn branches of mamland f t f 'g

11 Tex sui 111oo 21•, 24 2'"• ~ '• TURPIN - Passed away at

formed I militia under the com· companies here. This is another ui.Phtsor. at nEew ~ys emF o hsl nta Thiokot moo ~~·· ·i''' 46•.; -t, .2.10 a.m. l\lay 17th. :'rlrs :'llinnie. mand o~ George Washington. indication of genuine accept. tg a mplre, r~s w~ er :J:l~;;~ s: :,6'" ~~t ;~;~: i; I Turpin in her 86th year at her

Benedict Arnold led an ex- an. f th fa t f th h' h and An~erson ~ve~ue Jllnclto~. • Twrnt c !lf.oo 49 47'> 47•; -2 I daughter's residence. 1\lrs. Leo P d't' t · d c d tl -e 0 e c 0 e tg er The hghts sttualton came m ! Un carb s;oo 142 uo u2 ~2 1 •

e 1 ton. o .mva e ana a, 1e • cost of Jiving, something not a]. . . . . ! Utd .~ire 6;oa 41 46'• 16''- '' Braztl, 7 Bradbury Place. Lea1·· mJ n objechve Quebec. I b r d b th . th for I httle dtscusston generalb. I us Steel 250<Kt 91\\ go•, 91 " ,, ing to mourn 4 daughters and

A Jd h d h 1 t k ways e tve Y ose In au · The Mayor felt that the whole i Panod 21l00 26'• 25 261, ·• 1 · . rn.o . a opec o eep orit>' at Ottawa. . 1 Walkero woo 191·, 49'' w;- '' 2 sons. Funeral to be helrl at

h1s mtsswn secret and chose a S f th d thmg should be especially re· . w un T•t 7500 11•1 m• 47'> ... '• St Lawrence Funeral notice l'ery difficult route to Quebec . 0 or e man. woman a~ viewed, with sound technical · Westho l!l1l00 Hl-i 43'1 'I + •• 1 ; · however, the British learned ch~l~ of some 'fotthher ethnttc assistance. There should be no i a ~OCHE-Passod peacefulll• .

THE DAILY :'\E\\'5, ST. · OH:\'5, :\FLD. Tlll'RSD:\Y ~lAY

A.TTENTION CAMERA FANS .....

Your pictures can be developeCJ

only once so don't take chances ..

color or black and white-you get

speedy delivery- so take your

films to

TOOTON'S DlSTRIBt:TOHS FOR KODAK 1\ :\FLD.

I b h . . h h or1gm, we say 1 ey are . o d" h · f h t ·' · · a out t e mJsston t roug k "th 1 t J'k spasmo IC c otce o w ere o ! awav at Pouch Co\'e on Wed. : · · friendly Indians and plans were woJ WI 1 us, earn °f l~fe ~sf put lights, but the whole 'thing II nesciay May 17th David Roche :

made to repel the Americans. ant actcep t oufrtwhay 0 •1 e. should be summed up and done 1 aaed 77 vears ' Funeral wili ·

! Th B 'ti' h h t no ge ou o e provmce as . b . " . . . · e rt s were very s or . kl 'b) ptece Y ptece.l · take place from the residence

of soldiers at th~ time, so they I qmc y as posst e. AMF.RICAK c1.0s1NG sToCKs of Martin Cahill at Outer Cove :

I ~ent Colonel Cohn Campbell to I which lasted until 1814. W M 5 H Ids at 9.15 Friday morning. R.I.P. 1 N f dl d · N Q BT Thl' Ato\orialtd Prtu · I ew oun an to recrtnt ew- When hostilities ceased be· • • • Amerkan stuck t:<hun~e-~t.,· 17 ' NORRIS-Passed peacefully . ' foundlanders. He collected I tween England and the United M et"n ' ''d .. - .;,.divldeml xr -- •:,·ri.hi> awar at the General Hospital 1 ..

I b I t h I d f. h . ' e I 9 I xw-t:x.warran\11. N<'l change tS !rom • ' · a ou wo um re IS ermen States the Regiment was dts· . prtvl•us dar's cJu.e.>' 1 un Wednesday, !\lay 17th, Jess1e I .l an~ r~tu:ned to Q,uebec. They banded in 1816. . On Tuesday, May 9, the w:M. I ~~ tk s I 114Hlrh L"" Cim ~~:~,. I Anne Norris. aged 77 years. (~IFTS FOR THE FIRST FA:\ liLY 1!' 'ewel

I .. arnve Ju1st hind bt1me das thde Many of the former Royal S. held their regular monthly 1 A~a~on '1~400 '•IH~ '• · Left to mourn are three daught-! PALM BEACH. Fla.-An unidentified Cuban mother. ho 1 111~ a. l il townspeop e a een email · Newfoundland Regiment sold· . meeting in the school. The 1 e.u Phone 1000 S41' s1. 5~': r •• ers Lydia (Mrs. Newman Ben- ·fan ·11 tended for Mrs John F Kennedy wecJlS as the small "l'Oll'J ~111~! ing the British to surrender to · f h · h 1 t' · h'ghl'gbt d by Brazil 4100 4'• 41-• 4l,, • • G , 1 .. • , • " •

. . 11ers oug t m t e American~· mee mg was t t e BA on 7011 w. w; 34'< + '' son), Jante (Mrs. eorge · C• b N f 1 A th Ma" 14th Mrs Hilda G Scrrcde (left) and ~lr~. the Amertcans as they ftgured Civil War in the Crimea and the affiliation of the G.G.I.T. Bunk Hill 100 12•.• 12 12 - 11 Anstev) Minnie (1\Irs. Fred 1 .1 an • a wna n em, J • • • : , ·'lnt I :1 ther w?uld be wiped out and I even the south American insur· i with the W.M.S. The study ~~"~~~~" 900,,?1~ 1 l~'i,;'~"'--:,...:.: Dodd), 'an at st,...John's, two Ramos hold the autographed, Cuban flag. also mtended for the ln·>U r Prt. I :j thetr c1ty destroyed .. However, I rection. I period was illustrated by the can Mar• sooo 7'1 _s11 .'!' ~ '·~ sons, Jonah of st. John's, and ; the First Lady. The Kennedy s were una hie to attend the ccrenwn"··. ~nd h , 1 ~~·hen they saw the fterce lo?k· The Regiment was again or.

1

presentation of a sketch put g:~•Wos i~ ~1, ;i~: ~i~ -; 1 \~. William of Clarcnville. one :Secretary Pierre Salinger acceJJtcd the gifts on their behalf. ( l'l'l I rlrpo: mg Newfou.ndlanders paradmg I ganized in 1824, and in 1827 on by three membe~s of the creo1• 3ooo 36~• 36~~ :l6 1o 1 sister, Mrs. Solomon. Martin, 1 --.. ... ;;. .... ·--.·--··----,-··~--·.,...-,..,-,.,,..,-,.,., ~~~~...;··--·.-::--·-

i ' through thetr streets, Utey too~ waR called Royal Newfoundland , C.G.I.T. and the semor leader, ~~;.1cr 10~: 17 1u~6;~ 11:16 _1,16 1 two brothers, W1lham and 1 ;.:: :,:.:::;: :. : •..

new courage and took up post· Veteran Companies, and in 11\liss Street, illustrating the Dome Pet 2900 a•• m Bl.<- "". Simeon Drodge, all at Little I •·' ·:,,.::. ·: .... · · lio~s w!th the British to defen,d 1842 The Royal Newfoundland I extent of the ecumenical move· ~~:·~~n 26~ 1~'1• 1~:"' ,;~~~ -:;:-1:;! Heart's Ease, T.B. Also fourteen . ,: · ... ·. · thetr e1ty, ~nd on .'>Jew Years Companies. ment am~ng th~ Protestant Gldlld 15900 2•,; '': 211 grandchildren and three gre~t· l : : ..... · Day ~776 :Vtth the help of the A very interesting decision ! ch~rches 1n. the fields of edu· 1::'~,.~11 u1: ~~~ i~~· ~~·.~1.~ grandchildren. The funeral w1~l <: .·: .. :···· hghlt~g Newfoundlanders the was made in 1870 when the • cat1on, heaiJ.Ilg and the spread L Shor, . woo m 3:• 3'>8 take place at 2.30 p.m. on Frt· ; : · o\mer1cans were repulsed and British decided to ' w1'thdraw of the gospel of Chr1st, es· Ma .. •y • H1"'1 14 13· • 14 + '.4 day May 19th from Carnell's '\ L-- d . . . . . Mead John 600 197 194 194 -3 , • .,.ue,_, save . their garrisons from the self. pec1ally tn the mtsston fields. ~osahl 40n 116'ltJ5h u• ·Funeral Home, 28 Cochrane St., ... • .

About 1'782, The Newfound. governing colonies Lord Gran This was followed by the wor· Moly 5500 42' 1 40~'• 41'' + 'h to Mo1mt p;easant Cemetery. ~ :• I d · d t • · . Nat Pet 161003 11-16 3'n 3';- '·1 · .. an Regtment was f~rm~ · I ville, Colonial Secretary, wrote ship service il) wh1ch a presen- NJ Zinc 900 2.11'• 231\ 23i1 · BYRNE-Passed peacefully .vu a volunteer orgamzatton at to the Governor and informed tation of money was giveu to the NJpl .. lnK aoo 1~> 15 16 1"' away at the Royal Victoria Hos· ,. t b t 1 d h Pac Pete 4100 12'>11 12\\ 121\- '4 .trs,. ut was pu on a regu ar him, "It will rest with the in. W.M.S. to be ~orwar ed to t e Pac Pet• w 1000 B!io a•;, s');- ~- pitai .. Montreal, Loretta, daught· ,:-• : • 3asls during the French Revolu· habitants of Newfoundland to presbyterial fteld secretary of Pratt-L 100 SJ'h 62\\ 63'·" •I er of the late Wm. and Rose 11 .. '•··: :::: · t' W d . · Preston 1200 511 5 3·16 5 J.J6- \io : ;: :•:• . '?nary ars, an w~s a recog. make the necessary arrange. afftllated groups. The money ts Sher wm, 400 133 132'1133 + '~'• Byrne, age 36 years. Left to 1 '/ .) .

11Zed force on the British Regu· ments for the internal 1eeurity to be used to help meet the C.G. So P•• o 800 3~ 33 ·• 33 - \io mourn her sad loss one daught· · :::: ··· · • b t 1792 Ab t . . . h .. Std K, 500 70\\ 6~l 69;i ·- .... ' ;:· • 1r f'rmy 1 ou. · ?U of thetr colony, or if the colony I.T. ObJective for t e use . m Teehnelr 31900 39V. 36'.4 :mo >~l> er, Karlen and one brother, · 1808 it was Jtven the tttle should hereafter become part various projects. The meetmg Tl'lll Lux 400 221'• 21'h 22 + 1 Leo also one sister Genevieve 'R · I " · · . . . · · • 1 · Tr.CO!It wl 3700 31'4 30..., 3114 % • ' oya · df the Dommton wtth such sup. closed With a socta evenmg Wr Harr 3300 tt·l& 1 1 J.ls (Mrs. A. Bourdin) of Vancouv. , .·

In 1812, there were four port as may properly be afford· which was enjoyed by the C.G. er B.C. Funeral Friday from , ? . . on the roll of the ed to It by Canada." I.T. girls and W.M.S. members. h~r late residence, 22 Mullock I ::" Jrttlsh Re1ular Army tJ;tat .had No military organization ex· t'ttle "Royal" In recognition of TV street, following Mass at the 1

~~~ formed In the Br1tish isted in Newfoundland between Basilica at 9.15 a.m. I · \merlcan Provinces, one of 1870 and 1914. its part in the battle of Cambra! REPAIRS MORGAN-Passed peacefully hese Re&lments was The Royal Newfoundland had the distlnc· from November 20th to Decem· away May 17th, 1961, at her ~ewfoundlanll Regiment and tlon of being the first of the ber ~th, 1917· home, 21 Glenwood Street, mmbered till hundred officers overseas Dominions. to offer The Regiment was disbanded REASONABLE RATES Lynn, Mass., Harriet Taylor

men. help to England In the first after World War I and was re· Morgan, widow of Charles Henry In that year 1812 II. war with World War. The Newfound. formed on October 24th, 1949 GUARANTEED WORK Morgan, formerly of Port de ' ...

h1 United. Statea broke out. land Regiment went overseas by Lt. Col. J. O'Driscoll and is Grave, in her 82nd year. Leav· · =::::=!!:::!:!~:::;~:.::::::::!~~~:l :'II Ro a1 N w1 dl d R 1 now part of the Canadian PHONE 94123 'I d

.. I y e oun an eg. October 4th, 1914. . Militia. ing to mourn daughter, "rs. SCHOOL FOR PRESIDENTS-The famous olcck tower of Haf\'ar nent toot part In this war, Casualties suffered in World Dorothy Steadman of Lynn, • • .

1 •11

f t • th lives of s~ War I, 1193 ·were killed, 2314 ~I::'COIT'S.QA:IDHltODN.:IEltYltlt'oPFDAV:· El t • Mass., three sons, Reginald of tn C!lmbrtdge, Mass., appropriate~ 1 u~trat~s one. ac lll e A.dant~ (

BE WISE were wounded,· and 1~2 were eC rOniC this City, and Harold and Wil . pres1den~s. All graduated from tlus umverstty. They are: Jnlm .• hool. MARTINIZE prisoners of war. Th1s repre· · C Ltd liam of Lynn. Mass .. seven iJohn Qumey Adams. (1787), Rutherford B. Hayes (Harvard La\\ Sc f.

'nit mOlt In Dry CleanlnJ sents 25% of' the actua(fighl· ~ LOAF entre . grandchi)dren and one great Theodore Roosevelt (1880), }'ranklin D. RoOSC\'Llt .(1904) and Joh.1.1ll'liJI PkiDI tllii·H2•1 ing strength who neve~ came OUR OWN BREAD 90 ~~ .. PBELL AVE. grandson. Funeral ,on Mav lnedy. (1940). Closest runne~-up in this category is the Collr;:c o[ '''I·

BUGHES·MAVNARD back, and more than 50)'. were BEST BY TEST \..I'V"l 19th, from St. Stephens Church M W'll' b V h' h th 'd t . att nded (Jefferson, wounded. to Pine Grove Cemetery, Lynn, ary, 1 1ams urg, a., w JC ree pres• en s e

. CI.U.NIBU LTD. The Reeiment was liven the :t".Q:O \fter' hour. 'PHONE 7313 Mass., U.S.A. and Tyler).

/

4-door . . 11 { cdindcr, lu

' $26! Nova.

11~ :\o. ~

enn ds I

Visit ·\\\'A ICP 1• • . . I issued JOt~

ended his fu rin~ing decla

dcmocraG •"fo banish the . lot. to dcfenc

;lc~ist people ore aims that swtcs." the (

~iJil;, it added. and ,teadfa>tly

. l\\o n>lllltrics alo . . and I ri~nds.

;1011,., ;~flcr the . i,;Ut>d. ~lr. I braut iful wife

;nHl dl'111lil'

rcllow suit ~nd • J110UJ11CO the I

· Borin~ jPt a

. COI'PI.E momcnl they

the han~ar Jr . <lraarturc c . 11; .. RC\F'

. m11 rel:ed ae · scrrn:tdin~ th 1

couple 1\'ith a n· air:-: ineludin~ H.1ck .-\~ain .

Scotti

YORK •CP• -jury indicl

bank of£icials ' thev misapr funds of th of Oklahom:

ide1 36, ba M4

for the F Corpo

the case an hank was .July 29, ~

added that i operations u

~liLTON Bl :"iATIOS

• General said Thur

beefed-up hal'e s

the danger c Congo. mer skjold

in a repoJ the ll·natiq Feh 21, call force if ne