16
.. . . i ' \l ... 11 ih d- or d, 50 ). ws •'lf ;on of Ill, !IH· i1nah - .-\ udr· rmnb. o·,\Jdrn n :n fil"l 11i !am· , \l["il lp- 11110 thl pub- ·• final fol!owa: Pike, and }\r. lr;. John Miss And It· Yetman. •nd Mr. 1:npanisu L'f.c.L .. ll"ersnn In th! 1mr and n11r thr nrr\ and ..-ill and Wrrtnr!· t lome l'. Sll· PTI"ffiOT1· 'ted b)" !1ne job makint CUii nkrd thr :;chool. who had m thrir mmr con· : of th! wa> born 2nrl lapleliln ;'o!oriar· art ise Bar· her JOth )!arch of dli; is the chool. Oil er. f, Oil a cll T THE NEW PONTIAC E ACADIAN erra Nova Motors Ltd . ' THE DAILY 14, 196.2 ·----------- . ·---·--·---(:-P-ric_e_: 7-Ce-n-ts):-- -----· ____ ___; ______________________ __;.. ___ Geneva 1 Cease-Fire Talks Negotiators Enter Show Down Phase 'f nur Nations In Complete Agreement On Stand E\"1:\:\ France-A gnarled, leafless tree stands out against the 1 1,y w1!h n French armored t:ar parked outsid,'! it on a promenade or" t.al>l' < ;.-•neva l\tarch 7th. The }lcace 1alks 11 rrr rrtltll'l:•cl nun•ing ahead rapidly deS}lite a Sltl'Jll'ise military the Algl'rian rebels to hrealt up the conference. Th.? mrt Mardi !Jth for the third day of llCA"Otiations. GENEVA (CP) ..... : four Western nations will-go into the 17- nation disarmament conference to-day with a united policy, an auth· oritative Western source said Tuesday night. The source said there was complete agreement among th"e United States, Britain, Italy and Canada on the stand they will take at the conference, based on the U.S. declaration on disarmament made at the EVIAN, ·.France 7 Reuters - United Nations General Assembly last Sept. 25. cease-fire are to sign an agree- - The was su!Jmit:cd i ment ending the Algerian war by Thursday, obser- to the assembly llS a guide for l _tests. . . vers said. Tuesday. N future disarmament negotiations ldi. o!fiCJ<tl' s;url I I . . ews and "a program for I proposals on nuclear trsts will ( . in Paris, sources close to .the French · and complete rlisanna-1 he _hased on the Urn eng ssue s . an·Ce· govcmmcnt said all essential points in the t:ease-fire illlCnt Ill a peaccfutworld.'' :offeted the SO\ICt Ill he I agreement have been settled. v d H ·t i The American declaration out-, old . Geneva last T d AI en 0 r I :lineR a three-stage disaJ'ma-11 I'll. 1R, h_ut some mod· , There was annoyance ues ay amou,rr rreriRn 1 r t th 1 1 t r k 1 " 1 menl program carried out under 1 Ica 1 _ons m e . 1 g 1 0 , new ' tt s • · L k ; delegates in this alpin.3 resort over Monday's predict· international inspection and :on· experience and rhscov_ery. lgare e mo I ng In lions by Age11ce France Presse that the agreement J k t lrol. Canada played n leading PROTECT!O:S . would "certainly" be Tuesday. ac po role in drafting this joint W•st- President Kennedy,. who :-o- The Algerians considered this 1 ern plan. - cently insisted that there mnsl F h t The three other \Vestern na- he . a system • of protec.liOn was a rene governmen ma- t t t b t t 1 tl11(e the smoking habit among single source of revenue for the noeuvre through the news emporary 0 e se i PONTEFRACT, England 1 AP l agreed to support the pro· s e r Wrih·r :school children. The rat'· 1"n ht'gll NOI"Ct'nment, bt·I"ng 1'n about · f h 1 up after ll_le cease-fire. : There's a vacancy for a nc1•;s !!l'am at talks he!·' rccentlv in 5 md Ill a . - ,., . agency designed to orce t e r 2 Tl t t bl f , · · u · d T d tl h D ,.r schools ha; increased alarm- £80G,OOG,OOO a year. Higher hand and terminate negotiations . · Je n e or progrcs· \'r.ndor in Pentefract Tuesday I Washington to co-ordinate their ues 11 Y. 1 rou)! , emo- ' i er H11!;<rn ,,, a i ingiy in recent years. taxes could discourage smoking without further delay, SIVe of Frenc! 1 troops . nigh\. · position at Geneva. c;allc leaders m _!hu! · · 1 rporl h;: . the i One he.ndmaster wrote that n and keep revenue at the same NO HID PROBLEMS , from Algena then· ' News vendor .Toseph Nixon. 3J, 1 DE:'o/Y RIFT _are detcrmll!!t 1 : 1 vllr:r oi l'hysn'KIIlS : Run·ey 1n his 700-pupil high level. I Dul observers here said there Y.ear stay after n self-determma- 1 learned Tuesday he won $3fl7 There were reports-emphati- . to seck reahsllc_ avenm;s of :·1o:,;,!r• <111 rl"l lmk he· •:hool showed that 132 boys and Taxes on cigurs and pipe to- was no reason to think that llon referendum. 1 on a one farthing bet in 11 soccer' cally denied hy the delegations agreement tllat Will pcrmtt the .• c and gn·ls smoked rcgtllarly and 1 hacco may be lowered and ciga-ltnlks to iron out final kinks in TROOPS ALERTED pool. He promptly retired. -that the U.S. and Hrilnin rl1s- world_ to move ,.rrom about 35 slnrlect doing !O in rette smokers thus encourag>d' r t h d In Alcreria, Frencl 1 lroo 115 "Every morninn my wife and on the plan to he pre llliS lime of nuclear pen!. ·-' ·. :•lmt-1•.': i'""''il said in prnm·try school to switch to what the 1' tcense· Ire· da"ff" ruln " t d 1 1 · ·h I get up at ;·3; am to felch to the conference - 'The British-American test-ban . m o any mcx nca e 1 ICU - were repor e p ace< on 1 e 1 . • · · • · 1 · treat draft submitted to the old '"' 1' ·mwnl ne· STIIO;>;G LA \\'S \\'A STEll is a less dangerous form I ties. . alert for a possible attemp[ by t 1e mormng and mar': . The riiscu.ssions starting today, • • Y '• . 1 , . 1 'C:' "f"i."J": "''fllllll>ll""ll· The rcport'.r, ,U}lJlOl'tcrs of smQking. I 11le Paris sources ,,,id the 'Algeria a r i•II for _he mclurle bP.SIIICs th0 lour We5\·! Gene\ a a. t Apn .1R <':· :ll:•l cru>h· om mend that cigm·ettc <Jdl"er· :lleanwhile manufac- 1 talks to end the ?'•-yenr Mo•-1 Morocco to CI'Oss the frontier Now I shall JU't he m hr.d Ill t•rn nalmns. ei!iht neutrnls and ' c_onlmllln, PI 0\1-IOils 1 for "'·' < •. ;,.·.: '""l'"''clion·· tisin" on telel'ision he rcslrictedJtm·ers nrc hastily mountin• a'J · . t' · ·AI · '1 ·d Tl "l"t · · A·J_ 1 slead." fi1·c Communist countric3.' 11011 machuwry anr contr?s . . . I em msun ec wn m gena m 1 1e m1 1 ary sources 111 . 1 , as turned dOirn hv the g 0 y 1 ct '"· ·.>:•> •• ,:: a:rd thr laws the Hale of 1 counler-nttack. They say the re- on longer than gicrs said large Algerian troup !·ranee declmerl to. attend . . .. . .. 1 i' , . · . tobacco to persons under 16 be 1 port's mnclusions arc based on i dieted earlier hec!ause both RideR movements had been noted dur· ' Exlcrnal A If n 1r s 11 .e:-oltoJtOI s. . 1 . 1 c. _' 11 SJans 1 .n- '''llll"•'cl , .. ,".Ill• nfo·· I 'l" ·tl t·t"·t"·l "d '' . . . s u ('t•• f (" 1 1 1"" SJstcll on Ulld111111ll1-llic \CO- ' 1 c 1 eel . 1 qucs IOilol 1 c s ,, 1s e1 1 cncc , were anxious to spec 1 fv all pos- mg the lnst 36 hours t . ccn o .ana( a, Jcmm,., a . " 1 . . • . . 11 t :: ''" ·, iHi"tOlll >toe·!; Other dirt•cted nt·and 1\l"e tampaigning for morel;iblc rlelails of the. border. They Raid the inRurgcnts ep p :powerful dclc_!!alion, flew tt ;: .:.:e •iH· r•'l""t. adults trying lo gire up 'he .rcsem-ch into air pollution ns a; mcnls to foresl'lll any disputes might try to hreach the r.on- 1 from Lond1m Tues1h1y and had " 011 1 ar 1 c .·con 10 .:1 i'; "I r !whit iudwlc llUhlic .1nrl i cause of lung cance1·. i once ·the pact been signed. mile-long electric barbed-wire i talks alter u- ·The 1 e pr.J· a luglwr. pedmps ptmlh••e, :ax ; '!'hey also claim there an•. Some reports here said t ,,. 0 harrier or march thl'Ough de so- F •1 d I mal \l"llh U.S. Stale Secreta!·)·. posed. 11 oulcl 1 'c _mad? up ... ,_:'!':'''' "" ">1ll·:111':· lhe !Ill' . . : and pharmaceu-11 question; were not yet late desert to skirt its .US I a e : Rn;•k. Earl of Home .. a \\esleln 311 . · · , .:: :''." ·"· fn•:n c1 1 h1s last a chon m1ght pro1•e. Ileal benefits in smoking. 1 The composition of the encl. · : flnlmn s lore1gn secretary. ; ncull akl ma 1 1 1 · . . ·k h 1 ·' ··:., ,,,, ... :·:o· :nlll thl' most ntlractil"e lo a go\'-! l!ow far the numnfaclurcrs: · . ' Rus am 0 c d 3 : '' :.,., • .,,,( :11 ,iw: 1 ,d 'emmcnt caught between the •lc.: will he ahle lo inhibit gol"ern- Rv .JAMES NELSOX . . Rusk .. Home and Sn\"Iet For. three-hour at a luncheon. : ·., •11·,1 !I does. 'rnnn of hmg cancer and t'JC 1mcnt action remain.< to he seen. A k p t t• F OTTAWA ICPl _ The Llh·' e1g1: :\hmster Gromyko. rcprc-i ther:· >ccond _m lim da)'s. hut .><:.: .. ,'''',. I.I•H·:<Iion hlue clouds of They de;nonstraled powerful s ro ec I·On ·Or I erals Up _their fusilmtej se.nlmg. thc_lhrec nuclear po\1 Gr?myJ;o smd was. ..... ··· 11 1"'· r nprn":l. rc-ltc smoke. . I prcssm·e m Westmmslcr re· of electwn campa1gn pamphlets 1 eJ s, m"e expected to meet. ee_!llcnt fhe) .'-··· 1•• I'''. t·:l! .1llll 1 Tnhacco taxes. thr hu:;:est cently wl1en the go,•ernment re· Tuesday' describing the past t'" he lore the. confet cnc? I dJ.aJ m,,mcnt and the .. . . - -·· .. ---------·-··--·-·- -·-- I ieclcd a monopolies commissi•Jn Automatl·,on YI.Ctl• ms years as "the years" -- -- p k ' · • 1 reeommendation lhnl one to. and promising "a square I t · firm sell its suhslantial lor farmers.'' T I D ' v a e n enslve in a rival company. l By ROBERT RICE llhe basis of an approach to th!sl National ota ISarmame.nt I . OTTAWA <CPl - Labor lead- problem whereby we hope to lJe I lers puhhshed Ils fmm I F M d WINS 19 TII n:R1tl ers demander! Tuesday that I he able to bring the attendant dis- . pohcy and a specwl "'0 r u r !j r 'TOHONTO fCPI-1\Irs. Viola federal government act to pl\1· locations within reasonable con-. contmnmg . two Could B·e B I essl· n.g · , f; on d a y was re- teet the "victims or technologi- trol." 1llustralmg clmm that smce elected pL·esident or the Pros- cal progress." Conserl"alil"eS po:\"el' S r>cctOJ'S and Developers .-\ssocia- As 4f'{lanized labor opened i's LAUNCH BAT,LOON 1Do?, bas . stn,-, US Pect lion for her 19th consecutive two-day assault on Parliament, . . nallon m both n.tllonal T M k• d term. Jlill, the cabinet heard: I ClllCO, Cahl. <API - A gJant uc.t and 0 .art n --TIIE·C-OUNTIIY- PARSON 1 , A proposal from Quebec's balloon was fhe. agnc;tllure Uti . "11.1.1·:. 'i. ;; ll"Pl -, lle Raid t-ollcclors for an or· Confederation of National TI·adc ChiCO Monday and the. eighth Ill a sertcs of 16. . I Ry .JOSEPH MacsWI.;EN .\OII(h, In .. , . ganiwlion here :\lonrlay night Unions• for new legislation to ]ugh out the I he at the rate of one a li:"'!TED NATIONS <CPJ - . 111:111\L•IIied road· i found Kent ville doors protect workers hit by the ef- aflet· droppmg, on ground slg- week m future. With proper planning. lola! dis· 'n 1 l .-rardlr•l "h<mrloneci 1\ocked and some pt'Ople "didn't fects of automation. nal, a camera hy parachute. The farm promises included n armament would be "an un- idleness ancl about great hardship are not l"alid prodded go1•ernmenls. acted with fore- sight and co-operation. Tur,rlay 111 a 1·atn .11- 'open them." 2. A plea from the railway Nour hours after launching, its consumer subsidy on butler to qualifie\1 blessing to all mJn- rapt.rr(• a in About 10 members brotherhoods that the railways altitude was estimated at more reduce the present huge sur- kind" and not a cause of Canada is named as one of the s e v c n biggest military spenders in the report, released durin.!! the weekend: 0 1 an - ;·em· · oid · were searching for the suspect take into account "some than 80,000 feet. The test flight plus, and a higher price for sion, says a United Nations j Tuesday. They were joined by ities'' in. unprofila- is the start of n project to pho- farmer on wheat consumed in study. loailc<L·t.s warnrtl re1-, an RCAF helicopter, air force ble services. prov1d111g eompen- 1 h 1 1 ·' 1 f Canada. lt said it would make The study prepared bv econ· lh• "It' f tl ,., l I' t"o f ·ork"l' dJ'•placed 11" ogJ ap P nne s anu s ars rom f" . l 1 . ' . • .• • ca n 1e J.t : po 1cc and an RCMP dog. sa I n or II " s " • ' • . manetal 1c p for western farm· on11sls from 10 countncs-West- "While the burden ot arma· ments is widespread, the great bulk of the world's military expenditures is highly concen· !rated in a handful of countries. ,. \.-,!!ey of Au·! found the body after the streamlining process. the upper hmlls of the s I ers more regular and less 1\e- ern, Communist and non-aligned · wc;l of here, to I a man told them of an incident . In l'€turn, the la?o; delega- atmosphere. A flight is on government politieal -says fem·s that disarmament ·:, 1 .e lookuut lur lhr mJn., im•oll"ing the suspect .at nearby 1> 3 1plpnrJs 0 taecrhSt 1 a 1 .r 11 r 11 iatct· tlus spnng. . _ _. ·-----·-···-- would· throw 1\orl;ers ., 10 hp ormed with a I \\'atcn·ille. police said " · - ,. 'n . . · wrislR appeared to have becm be forthcoming aimed at hrim:-1 · · , .. i'nH·h lound hound with rope, A note 1\":JS ing technological 'uisloculions in a rerorter! found near the "within reasonable control.". atme 1 11;ere >he hl"l'tl hut pohce would not rel'eal •Is STUDIES UNDER WAY one. Coroner ll. c. contents. 1 Mr. Starr told the 4ii·member toronl'r here for '!0 · "Some folks seem to think CNTU delegation that a numbnr · her as "badly I that working for a fellow of studies are under way on the about lhe f:Jcc. Iippe; Fallou·t gives them the right lo cheat impact of automation on indus- arms. , him." try. This information will "form and I rending results or j Resistant Plant· W 1de S tnke 1 . II"OltlliEll , Sak. · !CPl - A I · S«id . !hue physician claims I L. <r,rone m 1 ;rdcrs .. 111 his lime :to hove developed a product the r m. County, . that. could mnke shellers and 00 m s Pcnplc 111 the valley 1rc clothing resistant to radioactive about Mrs. Pinch's fallout. Dr. N. G. De Vcre of Herber\ snys the product uses· sodium sulphate found in large quanti- ties "near this community, 120 At Sydney' Cloudy . n ' .With Scattered mixed with T l!Jgh today 3?. emperatures Min Mru r NlghtOny· otonto · 34 40 Moncton ... "" 31 31 llalifax " " " · 22 29 · · ·" ••. 27 30 St. ...... 17 30 ...... 27 38 miles west of Regina. Dr. De Vere, a native of lnl!d, said in an Interview Mon- day the sodium sulphate re- duces the Intensity of . gommn rnys. lie said he developed the j)ro- cess. in his own laboratory in the lost few months and tested It by bombarding the product with gamma rays. SYDNEY <CPl-A plant-wide in recent months, refused tn strike at Dominion Sleet and work the Monday morning shill. Coni Corporation's big· steel mill Subsequent night and overnignt here . loomed as a possibility shifts of equal numbers stayed Tuesday as labor protests grew off work. against company efficiency ex- RE:\IATN OFF JOBS perts. Tuesday morning the rod and A spokesman for Local IM4 bar workers again "stayed in of the United Steelworkers of the streets" and workers in t.ho America !CLC) said it appcarP.d key blast furnace department likely "the whole plant would quit their jobs in sympathy, be down'• Tuesday night, ·The expert re-schcdulers were -A company spokesman earl- hired by' Dosco seven months ier in the day said there was ago to place the plant on a more a possibility a wildcat strike efficient operation basis. Dr. De Vere said his started Monday would spread. Two other depnrtmenls-,--me· could he used to line fallout About 67 rod and bar· mill chanica! and electrical - shelters and fnr treating fibre workers, in a continued protest down In mid-afternoon. There used In the manufacture of against the efficiency experts was no -immediate estimate of ....................... .,.,..< clothinl tor fallout protection. that caused two other walkouts the number of men on strike. / - ' I ' ' , . SANTO DOMINGO, Domhtican Republic.-Car set afire by str.:!et mobs burns outside the U.S. Embassy's passport offices here on 1\'lareh 8th. -The vehicle is owned by Passport Division 'chief Matt O_rwein. Tlw wild street disorders were toud1ed off by the gov- ernment's adion in permitting two alleged enemies of the state to flee the country and in against the U.S. giving them refuge on American soil.-.(UPI Photo), t "Available indications are about 85 per cent of the world's military outlays is accounted for by sc\"en counlries"-thc Slates. the Soviet Union, Brit- ain. France, Red China, We ,t GerJllanv and Canada. I , SPE:\ID HUGE SU:II : 'fhe report - and an inlro- : duction w r it t en by Acting i Secretary-General U Thant - ' admits that available data Is incomplete hut estimates that total military spending now amounts to $120.000,000.000, least two-thirds of the total in· come o[ all underdevelop?d countries. More than 50,000.000 people-some th1;ee times I Canadian population -were m uniform or producing for those in uniform. No Change OTTAWA !CP) - Transport Minister Balcer said in the Com- ' mons Tuesday he has asked tile i CNR if any change is contem- plated in, the status of the rail· way · station at St. George's, Nfld. He told Herman Batten !1- Humber-St. George'.;) that "ru- mors" the station· might be de- moted to a flag stop have been brought to his attention by Royal Canadian Legion branch in St. George's, I i . i I ' i ' I : t I :·, I i I I I I I I I I ' I . ' I '. i l' I .I I " I ·'· ,)' /l I

E ACADIAN SMAL~ PONTIAC THE DAILYcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196203… · and cnnl~ins "a program for I proposals on nuclear trsts will Urn • eng ssue

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Page 1: E ACADIAN SMAL~ PONTIAC THE DAILYcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196203… · and cnnl~ins "a program for I proposals on nuclear trsts will Urn • eng ssue

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·• final fol!owa:

Pike, and }\r. lr;. John ~nd Miss

And It· Yetman.

•nd Mr. 1:npanisu L'f.c.L ..

ll"ersnn • In th! 11mr and 1n11r thr nrr\ wil~

and ..-ill ~r;< and

Wrrtnr!·

nt lome 1 l'. Sll· CPTI"ffiOT1·

"''ted b)" a !1ne job 1>f makint ICUii ta~~­ankrd thr :1.< :;chool.

who had m m thrir 1mmr con· :n;: of th!

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ST

THE NEW SMAL~ PONTIAC

E ACADIAN erra Nova Motors Ltd .

'

THE DAILY =-----(-::i1----~------;;:'f;:H~E -::D::-:A"7IL;-;Y:;"":';N~El;;N;;::-S,--:S;::T-;.·· -::jO::;H;:;;N:;;,-;-S,~:;;-;;:-.,-;W:;;;E;;;D~N~E;;::S~D~A~Y;-,-~_r..-:7rA~R;;;C~H 14, 196.2 ·-----------. ·---·--·---(:-P-ric_e_: 7-Ce-n-ts):-------· --~--=--~:._-~_._...; ____ ___; ______________________ __;.. ___ ~

Geneva

1 Cease-Fire Talks

Negotiators Enter Show

Down Phase

'f nur Nations In Complete Agreement On Stand

E\"1:\:\ France-A gnarled, leafless tree stands out against the

11,y w1!h n French armored t:ar parked outsid,'! it on a promenade or" t.al>l' < ;.-•neva l\tarch 7th. The French-Al~rian }lcace 1alks

11 rrr rrtltll'l:•cl nun•ing ahead rapidly deS}lite a Sltl'Jll'ise military nffr11~h ~ h~· the Algl'rian rebels to hrealt up the conference. Th.? drlr~arion~ mrt Mardi !Jth for the third day of llCA"Otiations.

GENEVA (CP).....: Th~ four Western nations will-go into the 17-nation disarmament conference to-day with a united policy, an auth· oritative Western source said Tuesday night.

The source said there was complete agreement among th"e United States, Britain, Italy and Canada on the stand they will take at the conference, based on the U.S. declaration on disarmament made at the

EVIAN, ·.France 7 Reuters - Franco-AI~crian United Nations General Assembly last Sept. 25. cease-fire negotiator~ are expecl.~d to sign an agree- - The d~claralion was su!Jmit:cd i ment ending the Algerian war by Thursday, obser- to the assembly llS a guide for l ant~ ~uckar _tests. . . vers said. Tuesday. N future disarmament negotiations • ldi. o!fiCJ<tl' s;url \l~ste:n

I I . . ews and cnnl~ins "a program for I proposals on nuclear trsts will • ( . 1\'J.~nnwhile in Paris, sources close to .the French · gener<~l and complete rlisanna-1 he _hased on the rh"~1fl _lre~!y Urn eng ssue s . an·Ce· r~ govcmmcnt said all essential points in the t:ease-fire • illlCnt Ill a peaccfutworld.'' :offeted the SO\ICt Lu~on Ill he I agreement have been settled. • v d H ·t i The American declaration out-, old . Geneva ~e~otJalJons last

T d AI • en 0 r I ~ :lineR a three-stage disaJ'ma-11 :'~P. I'll. 1R, h_ut Wit~ some mod· , There was annoyance ues ay amou,rr rreriRn 1 r t th 1 1 t r

k 1 " 1 menl program carried out under 1 Ica 1_ons m e . 1g 1 0 , new ' tt s • · L • k ; delegates in this alpin.3 resort over Monday's predict· international inspection and :on· experience and rhscov_ery. lgare e mo I ng In lions by Age11ce France Presse that the agreement J k t lrol. Canada played n leading WANT~ PROTECT!O:S . would "certainly" be sign.~d Tuesday. ac po role in drafting this joint W•st- President Kennedy,. who :-o-

The Algerians considered this 1

ern plan. - cently insisted that there mnsl F h t The three other \Vestern na- he . a system • of protec.liOn was a rene governmen ma- t t t b t t

1 tl11(e the smoking habit among single source of revenue for the noeuvre through the news emporary governme~ 0 e se i PONTEFRACT, England 1AP l ·~lions agreed to support the pro· ag~m;t s e ~ r ~ prcrara\lo~s. Prr~s ~~~If Wrih·r :school children. The rat'· 1"n ht'gll NOI"Ct'nment, bt·I"ng 1'n about · f h 1 up after ll_le cease-fire. : There's a vacancy for a nc1•;s !!l'am at talks he!·' rccentlv in 5• md Ill a "ashm~ton st~tcment . • - ,., . agency designed to orce t e r 2 Tl t t bl f , · · u · d T d tl h D

,.r •r~ h,•in~ stuhh~d • schools ha; increased alarm- £80G,OOG,OOO a year. Higher hand and terminate negotiations . · Je I~e n e or progrcs· \'r.ndor in Pentefract Tuesday I Washington to co-ordinate their Jssu~ ues 11Y. 1rou)! , emo-' i o· er H11!;<rn ,,, a re~1ut i ingiy in recent years. taxes could discourage smoking without further delay, SIVe evacu~tJOn of Frenc!1 troops . nigh\. · position at Geneva. c;allc leaders m Con~ress _!hu!

· · >~rr>·, 1 rporl h;: . the i One he.ndmaster wrote that n and keep revenue at the same NO HID PROBLEMS , from Algena dul'ln~ then· th~ee- ' News vendor .Toseph Nixon. 3J, 1 DE:'o/Y RIFT ~.S. ne~otwlor~ _are detcrmll!!t1 : 1 vllr:r oi l'hysn'KIIlS : Run·ey 1n his 700-pupil high level. I Dul observers here said there Y.ear stay after n self-determma- 1 learned Tuesday he won $3fl7 .~21i • There were reports-emphati- . to seck reahsllc_ avenm;s of

:·1o:,;,!r• ~ <111 rl"l lmk he· •:hool showed that 132 boys and Taxes on cigurs and pipe to- was no reason to think that ~he llon referendum. 1 on a one farthing bet in 11 soccer' cally denied hy the delegations agreement tllat Will pcrmtt the .• c :;~:rllr '"wi-in~ and gn·ls smoked rcgtllarly and 1 hacco may be lowered and ciga-ltnlks to iron out final kinks in TROOPS ALERTED pool. He promptly retired. -that the U.S. and Hrilnin rl1s- world_ to move fonl'ar~ ,.rrom

about 35 slnrlect doing !O in rette smokers thus encourag>d' r t h d In Alcreria, Frencl1 lroo115 "Every morninn my wife and a~reed on the plan to he pre llliS lime of nuclear pen!. ·-' ·. :•lmt-1•.': i'""''il said in prnm·try school to switch to what the rcpo~t 1' ~ tcense· Ire· agrte~mebnl da"ff" ruln " t d 1 1 · ·h I get up at ;·3; am to felch ~cnted to the conference - 'The British-American test-ban • . m o any mcx nca e 1 ICU - were repor e p ace< on 1 e 1 . • · · • ·1 • · treat draft submitted to the old

·~r:·: 1::-~ '"' 1' ·mwnl ne· STIIO;>;G LA \\'S \\'A STEll S<~Ys is a less dangerous form I ties. . alert for a possible attemp[ by t 1e mormng _pape1;~ and mar': . The riiscu.ssions starting today, • • Y '• . 1 , .1 'C:' "f"i."J": :· "''fllllll>ll""ll· The rcport'.r, ,U}lJlOl'tcrs rc~·l of smQking. I 11le Paris sources ,,,id the 'Algeria a insur~cnt tro~ps r i•II :~1~m for deh~ery,. _he -~ld. mclurle bP.SIIICs th0 lour We5\·! Gene\ a ~.on[~l ~~-~c a. t Apn .1R :..•'.·~:::.lll'· <':· :ll:•l cru>h· om mend that cigm·ettc <Jdl"er· :lleanwhile ci~arctle manufac- 1 talks to end the ?'•-yenr Mo•-1 Morocco to CI'Oss the frontier Now I shall JU't he m hr.d Ill t•rn nalmns. ei!iht neutrnls and ' c_onlmllln, PI 0\1-IOils 1for mspo~-"'·' < •. ;,.·.: '""l'"''clion·· tisin" on telel'ision he rcslrictedJtm·ers nrc hastily mountin• a'J · . t' · ·AI · '1 ·d Tl "l"t · · A·J_ 1slead." fi1·c Communist countric3.' 11011 machuwry anr contr?s

~ . . . ~ I em msun ec wn m gena m 1 1e m1 1 ary sources 111 • . 1, as turned dOirn hv the g0y1ct '"· ·.>:•> •• ,:: a:rd thr '""~ ~ml laws prolnlutm~ the Hale of 1 counler-nttack. They say the re- dra~~ed on longer than pr~·! gicrs said large Algerian troup !·ranee declmerl to. attend . . ·~ .. . .. 1 i' , . · .

tobacco to persons under 16 be 1 port's mnclusions arc based on i dieted earlier hec!ause both RideR movements had been noted dur· ' Exlcrnal A If n 1 r s ~lm1s!er 11.e:-oltoJtOI s. . 1 .1c. _' 11• SJans 1 .n-'''llll"•'cl , .. ,".Ill• nfo·· I 'l" ·tl t·t"·t"·l "d '' . . . s u ('t•• f (" 1 1 1"" SJstcll on Ulld111111ll1-llic \CO-' ~ 1 ~ c 1 eel . 1 qucs IOilol 1 c s ,, 1s 1~a e1 1 cncc , were anxious to spec1fv all pos- mg the lnst 36 hours alan~: til~ t . • ccn o .ana( a, Jcmm,., a . " 1 . . • . . 11 t

:: ''" ·, iHi"tOlll >toe·!; Other ~\l~~rstions dirt•cted nt·and 1\l"e tampaigning for morel;iblc rlelails of the. al'l'all~e- border. They Raid the inRurgcnts ep p :powerful dclc_!!alion, flew in· 11~ tt 1 t"~e~lllol~ t~ounc.llt· ;: .:.:e :~~rr" '·,~ •iH· r•'l""t. adults trying lo gire up 'he .rcsem-ch into air pollution ns a; mcnls to foresl'lll any disputes might try to hreach the r.on- 1 from Lond1m Tues1h1y and had " 011 1 ar numsl~l 1c .·con 10 ~·

'· .:1 ·~~ i'; "I r !whit iudwlc llUhlic cl~~ics .1nrl i cause of lung cance1·. i once ·the pact h~s been signed. mile-long electric barbed-wire i S?parai~ talks shortt~· alter u- ·The cou~1 cl1. 1 e ll•Js,Ja~s pr.J· a luglwr. pedmps ptmlh••e, :ax ; '!'hey also claim there an•. Some reports here said t ,,.0 harrier or march thl'Ough de so- F •1 d I mal \l"llh U.S. Stale Secreta!·)·. posed. 11oulcl 1'c _mad? up ~f ~

... ,_:'!':'''' "" ">1ll·:111':· lhe !Ill' ~i~al·ettes. . . : ~sychologicfll. and pharmaceu-11 question; were not yet ~eltlccl: late desert to skirt its ~onlhern' .US I a e : Rn;•k. ~nd th~ Earl of Home .. Com~nnmt, a \\esleln 311 ~

. · · , .:: :''." ·"· fn•:n c1 ~-I 1 h1s last a chon m1ght pro1•e. Ileal benefits in smoking. 1 The composition of the encl. · : flnlmn s lore1gn secretary. ; ncull akl ma111· . . ·k h 1 ·' ··:., ,,,, ... :·:o· :nlll 11"11<~1 thl' most ntlractil"e lo a go\'-! l!ow far the numnfaclurcrs: · . ' Rus am (,Jnm~ 0 c d 3

~ : '' :.,., • .,,,( :11 ,iw:1,d 'emmcnt caught between the •lc.: will he ahle lo inhibit gol"ern- Rv .JAMES NELSOX . . Rusk .. Home and Sn\"Iet For. three-hour tal~ at a luncheon. : ·., r::-:~:r •11·,1 !I does. 'rnnn of hmg cancer and t'JC 1mcnt action remain.< to he seen. A k p t t• F OTTAWA ICPl _ The Llh·' e1g1: :\hmster Gromyko. rcprc-i ther:· >ccond _m lim da)'s. hut .><:.: .. ,'''',. I.I•H·:<Iion ~n!l.lueralii"C hlue clouds of ci{(~-' They de;nonstraled powerful s ro ec I·On ·Or I erals st~ppcd Up _their fusilmtej se.nlmg. thc_lhrec nuclear po\1 Gr?myJ;o smd th~re was. ~~ ..... ···11 '· 1"'· r nprn":l. rc-ltc smoke. . I prcssm·e m Westmmslcr re· of electwn campa1gn pamphlets 1 eJ s, m"e expected to meet. lh~-' a~l ee_!llcnt .~ 11 • ~n~llung. fhe) . '-··· 1•• I'''. t·:l! .1llll 1 C· Tnhacco taxes. thr hu:;:est cently wl1en the go,•ernment re· Tuesday' describing the past t'" mor~m~. he lore the. confet cnc? I rhsc1.1.1Se~ dJ.aJ m,,mcnt and the

.. . . - -·· .. ---------·-··--·-·- -·-- I ieclcd a monopolies commissi•Jn Automatl·,on YI.Ctl• ms years as "the w~slcd years" opcnmg:~~::::::'ss 1\lsnrn:Ame~~ Rcrln~ ~~s:'~:·-~·--· -- --p ~ ~ k ' · • 1 reeommendation lhnl one to. and promising "a square de~\ I t · ha~eo firm sell its suhslantial lor farmers.'' T I D • ' v a e n enslve ;holdin~s in a rival company. l By ROBERT RICE llhe basis of an approach to th!sl National ·Liher~l F~derati_onl ota ISarmame.nt I. OTTAWA <CPl - Labor lead- problem whereby we hope to lJe I he~dqum lers puhhshed Ils fmm I

F M d WINS 19TII n:R1tl ers demander! Tuesday that I he able to bring the attendant dis- . pohcy pamp_hl~t and a specwl "'0 r u r !j r 'TOHONTO fCPI-1\Irs. Viola federal government act to pl\1· locations within reasonable con-. ~eaflet contmnmg . two ch;~rls, Could B·e B I essl· n.g · , f; ~1acMilhm ~! on d a y was re- teet the "victims or technologi- trol." 1llustralmg 1l~ clmm that smce elected pL·esident or the Pros- cal progress." th~ Conserl"alil"eS too.~ po:\"el' ~n

S r>cctOJ'S and Developers .-\ssocia- As 4f'{lanized labor opened i's LAUNCH BAT,LOON 1Do?, t.?e~e bas hec1~ . Tor~ stn,-,

US Pect lion for her 19th consecutive two-day assault on Parliament, • . . nallon m both n.tllonal prod-~ T M k• d term. Jlill, the cabinet heard: I ClllCO, Cahl. <API - A gJant uc.t and e~lployment. 0 .art • n --TIIE·C-OUNTIIY- PARSON 1, A proposal from Quebec's r~search. balloon was launc~ed fhe. agnc;tllure p~mphlcl \\"OJ~ ~I Uti

. "11.1.1·:. 'i. ;; ll"Pl -, lle Raid t-ollcclors for an or· Confederation of National TI·adc f~om ChiCO Monday and sml~d the. eighth Ill a sertcs of 16. . I Ry .JOSEPH MacsWI.;EN l~ampl'rl_ .\OII(h, In .. , . ganiwlion here :\lonrlay night Unions• for new legislation to ]ugh out ~award the PacJ~Ic I he ISS~ted at the rate of one a li:"'!TED NATIONS <CPJ

- . 111:111\L•IIied road· i found m~ny Kent ville doors protect workers hit by the ef- aflet· droppmg, on ground slg- week m future. With proper planning. lola! dis· 'n1l .-rardlr•l "h<mrloneci 1\ocked and some pt'Ople "didn't fects of automation. nal, a camera hy parachute. The farm promises included n armament would be "an un-

idleness ancl lJriu~ about great hardship are not l"alid prodded go1•ernmenls. acted with fore­sight and co-operation.

Tur,rlay 111 a 1·atn .11- 'open them." 2. A plea from the railway Nour hours after launching, its consumer subsidy on butler to qualifie\1 blessing to all mJn-rapt.rr(• a ~usprct in About 10 RC~IP members brotherhoods that the railways altitude was estimated at more reduce the present huge sur- kind" and not a cause of depr~s·

Canada is named as one of the s e v c n biggest military spenders in the report, released durin.!! the weekend:

01 an H~ - ;·em· · oid · were searching for the suspect take into account "some hum~n- than 80,000 feet. The test flight plus, and a higher price for th~ sion, says a United Nations b· j Tuesday. They were joined by ities'' in. abandoni~~ unprofila- is the start of n project to pho- farmer on wheat consumed in study. loailc<L·t.s warnrtl re1-, an RCAF helicopter, air force ble services. prov1d111g eompen- 1 • h 1 1 ·' 1 f Canada. lt said it would make The study prepared bv econ· lh• "It' f tl ,., l I' t"o f ·ork"l' dJ'•placed 11" ogJ ap P nne s anu s ars rom f" . l 1 . ' . • . • • ca n 1e J.t ~ : po 1cc and an RCMP dog. sa I n or II " s " • ' • . • manetal 1c p for western farm· on11sls from 10 countncs-West-

"While the burden ot arma· ments is widespread, the great bulk of the world's military expenditures is highly concen· !rated in a handful of countries.

,. \.-,!!ey 1·illa~e of Au·! RC~IP found the body after the streamlining process. the upper hmlls of the ~artll s I ers more regular and less 1\e- ern, Communist and non-aligned · -'~miles wc;l of here, to I a man told them of an incident . In l'€turn, the la?o; delega- atmosphere. A ~ann7d flight is pc1~dent on government politieal -says fem·s that disarmament ·:,

1 .e lookuut lur lhr mJn., im•oll"ing the suspect .at nearby lh1~1 nnts 11111~~trdaLnnheo1vr 1>3

1plpnrJs0taecrhSt1a1.r11r11 ~lnn~cd iatct· tlus spnng. . _ ~\~mns. _. ·-----·-···-- -· would· throw m~ny 1\orl;ers ~n~

., 10 hp ormed with a I \\'atcn·ille. police said h~r " · -, . 'n . . · wrislR appeared to have becm be forthcoming aimed at hrim:-1 · · , .. ~ 1 " i'nH·h wa~ lound hound with rope, A note 1\":JS ing technological 'uisloculions Lh~ ~lon~l;ly in a sin~!2- rerorter! found near the ho<~y. "within reasonable control.".

atme 111;ere >he hl"l'tl hut pohce would not rel'eal •Is STUDIES UNDER WAY one. Coroner ll. c. contents. 1 Mr. Starr told the 4ii·member toronl'r here for '!0 · "Some folks seem to think CNTU delegation that a numbnr · her as "badly I that working for a fellow of studies are under way on the

about lhe f:Jcc. Iippe; Fallou·t gives them the right lo cheat impact of automation on indus-arms. , him." try. This information will "form

o~cncd and w~s I rending results or j • •

·:::,,,,"''·~~'"",~~~ Resistant Plant· W 1de S tnke 1. II"OltlliEll , lll~llBJ<;RT, Sak. · !CPl - A I · h;~ndsay S«id . !hue w~re •1-ins~:tlchewan physician claims I L.

<r,rone m1;rdcrs .. 111 his lime :to hove developed a product the r m . 1\lng~ County, . that. could mnke shellers and 0 0 m s

Pcnplc 111 the valley 1rc clothing resistant to radioactive about Mrs. Pinch's fallout.

Dr. N. G. De Vcre of Herber\ snys the product uses· sodium sulphate found in large quanti­ties "near this community, 120

At Sydney' Cloudy . n ' .With Scattered

~rnes mixed with T l!Jgh today 3?. emperatures

Min Mru

r NlghtOny· otonto ·

~ontreat"'.".. 34 40 Moncton ... "" 31 31 llalifax " " " · 22 29 Sydn~. · · ·" ••. 27 30 St. John·~· ...... 17 30

...... 27 38

miles west of Regina. Dr. De Vere, a native of fr~­

lnl!d, said in an Interview Mon­day the sodium sulphate re­duces the Intensity of . gommn rnys.

lie said he developed the j)ro­cess. in his own laboratory in the lost few months and tested It by bombarding the product with gamma rays.

SYDNEY <CPl-A plant-wide in recent months, refused tn strike at Dominion Sleet and work the Monday morning shill. Coni Corporation's big· steel mill Subsequent night and overnignt here . loomed as a possibility shifts of equal numbers stayed Tuesday as labor protests grew off work. against company efficiency ex- RE:\IATN OFF JOBS perts. Tuesday morning the rod and

A spokesman for Local IM4 bar workers again "stayed in of the United Steelworkers of the streets" and workers in t.ho America !CLC) said it appcarP.d key blast furnace department likely "the whole plant would quit their jobs in sympathy, be down'• Tuesday night, • ·The expert re-schcdulers were

-A company spokesman earl- hired by' Dosco seven months ier in the day said there was ago to place the plant on a more a possibility a wildcat strike efficient operation basis.

Dr. De Vere said his produ~t started Monday would spread. Two other depnrtmenls-,--me· could he used to line fallout About 67 rod and bar· mill chanica! and electrical - ~hut shelters and fnr treating fibre workers, in a continued protest down In mid-afternoon. There used In the manufacture of against the efficiency experts was no -immediate estimate of

-~-....................... .,.,..< clothinl tor fallout protection. that caused two other walkouts the number of men on strike.

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SANTO DOMINGO, Domhtican Republic.-Car set afire by str.:!et mobs burns outside the U.S. Embassy's passport offices here on 1\'lareh 8th. -The vehicle is owned by Passport Division 'chief Matt O_rwein. Tlw wild street disorders were toud1ed off by the gov­ernment's adion in permitting two alleged enemies of the state to flee the country and in prot.~st against the U.S. giving them refuge on American soil.-.(UPI Photo),

t

"Available indications are 'h~t about 85 per cent of the world's military outlays is accounted for by sc\"en counlries"-thc Unit~j Slates. the Soviet Union, Brit­ain. France, Red China, We ,t GerJllanv and Canada.

I • , SPE:\ID HUGE SU:II : 'fhe report - and an inlro­: duction w r it t en by Acting i Secretary-General U Thant -' admits that available data Is incomplete hut estimates that total military spending now amounts to $120.000,000.000, ~~ least two-thirds of the total in· come o[ all underdevelop?d countries. More than 50,000.000 people-some th1;ee times th~

I Canadian population -were m uniform or producing for those in uniform.

No Change OTTAWA !CP) - Transport

Minister Balcer said in the Com­' mons Tuesday he has asked tile i CNR if any change is contem­plated in, the status of the rail· way · station at St. George's, Nfld.

He told Herman Batten !1-Humber-St. George'.;) that "ru­mors" the station· might be de­moted to a flag stop have been brought to his attention by ~he Royal Canadian Legion branch in St. George's,

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0 •• A MAJOR DISASTER WHICH LASTED 1 07 DAYS .. INVOLVED 13,000 PEOPLE IN 37 COMMUNITIES~

And CANADIAN RED CROSS organix!ttions and volunteers were there .• ~ he!ping evacuations ... p,roviding meals and clothing o •• offering first aid o • • and assisting fire fighting too o ••. This service was made possible by your donations ••. You helped •.. You helped in anot~er 151 minor disasters. during 1961 ... And now, more than ever, Red C~oss again needs your help . o • Canadian Red Cross spent $170,000 in Newfoundland during 1961. The Campaign of 1961 realised $88,000. Your generous donation is a must for 1962. ·

THIS ADVERTISEMENT IS SPONSORED BY niH rzfJLLCWING r!RM.~

Ayres Ltd. The Royal Garage Ltd. Imperial Oil Limited Nfld. Margarine Co., Ltd.

Parker & Monro·e Ltd. . . ~erald S.. Doyle Ltd. Harris & Hiscock Ltd. Browning- Harvey Ltd. .

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·Brookfield ·Ice Cream ·Ltd. • ' ' I

Bowring's ·Limited Royle Excavating Co., Ltd. The Merit ·Insurance Co. ------------~----------J·. ~~------------------~ •, , 1 · , , 0, I ' .

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in the House . ;ood on~ He : a surp.-isi:Jg de:

' pr0,pcrilY and , tconomic succcs ' dcpres>in~ infha : at work i•1 the I · .; Mr. O'D<•a sai io ~ee that the C renewed its fni shore tr~p-fishel

· lircly promotin! 1 ation. He felt it

a man to make ; ~·ith a trap boa · ls cner~ctic, knj

doing and can gear. ~!r. O'Dea fishermen up to

' able to alford ; ·,Kine or a fleet and the Governr ven· 1ensible th

· them to acquir ; tools of their · doubted if the m · vided orcr the n

· b1· the Provinci Y.:ill brin;! abou

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aanrll of fishcrm . tr~de In fine n , using the late~!

Jcar. • .. , Th@ l'llitcd

P~rty m~mbu , Jlr. Spencer's co ·fresh fisil procj ·r·hcn he suggc ·,pro1·ince now 1 . ol the fin~st !i~ be found am·w]'

· or the Unitec '~ Auotcd fr11m a · ,prepared for tl ·'Trade by Doctor < ef ~remorial · ,il·hich he sugge

· . renerallevet of J · "fresh fish plants ·. :r---------

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sT. JOHN'S, ~EWFOUNDLAND

O'Dea Says G·ovt. Of Canada, Nfld.' s

Main Industry

In East Star Seal Patch

The· Daily News WEDNESDAY. MARCH 14, 1962 •

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C. Bay Still Greene Charges G.~vt.

Ice-Bound With Omi$sians Budget From

NAVY SERGE 54" SPECIAL $2.75 yard

MELTON ClOTH Green and Brown

54" SPECIAL

WHITE 27" ONLY

$1.95 yard

FLANNELETTE 39c yard

FLANNELETTE White, .Coloured and Printed 36" 49c yard ' .)

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Page 4: E ACADIAN SMAL~ PONTIAC THE DAILYcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196203… · and cnnl~ins "a program for I proposals on nuclear trsts will Urn • eng ssue

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THE DAILY NEWS Newfound/and1s Only Morning Paper

YEARLY SUDSCRlPTION RATES

Canada ....................... $12.00 per annum

United Kingdom and all foreign eountries $14.00 per annum

Authoriwl a~ second class mRil, Post Office Department, Ottawa.

The DAIU' NEWS Is a morning paper ,,stabllshed In 1894, and published at the News Building, 355·359 Duckworth Street, St. John's, Newfoundland, oy Robinson & Company, I,imlted.

MEMBER OF TilE CANADIAN PRESS

The Canadian Press Ia exclusively entitled to the IIAe for republication ol all news despatchea in this paper credit· ed to It or to the Associated Press or

· Reulers and also the local news publish· cd therein.

All Press Services and feature article• In this paper are cupyrighted •nd thcif reproduction il prohibited.

Member A.utlit Rurr.av of Circulation

-----------------WEDNESDAY, MARCI-l 14, 1962

---------------------------------------------------------Rise Of Consumer Credit Nothing has done more to raise

the physical living standards of the population than consumer credit but the question of how far it is wise for the individual to go in as· !;uming fixed obligations is be~in­ning to worry economists and socilologists.

In Canada last year consumer credit rcnched a new peak of S3.371.000.00. That was a per capltn rate of 8180 or \'Cry nearly a thous .. and dollars for the average family.

But <werages are misleading. A ver.'' large number of Canadialls prefer to pay as they go. Th:~t

means that the a\'erage debt of those who work on what the Brit· i~h call the "ne\'er, ne\·er" is \'Cry much higher.

Consumer tredit ran be a \'Cry ~ood thing. E\·et:ything depends on the commonsense of those who u~e it. And for those who look at life through rose-coloured spectacles, it can be a source of perpetual \Vorry in the long run. It can seduce people into buying too prematurely things they cannot afford and then weighing them down with such a burden of d:?.bt that the.'· lose their scn~e of Yalues altogether.

The young married people to­day are prone to want to equip their mortgaged homes with every kind of appliance that is use· ful and operate motor cars and other little luxuries as well. Tbnt is fine so long as they can meet the monthly charges and still bu~· their groceries and other necessities. It is fine e\·en if they lose the sa\'our of former ~·ca1:s when the acquisition of a much· wanted ::~ppliance was an achie,·e­ment and a landmark in their lives,

bringing a kind of special sati9fac· tion that is denied to those who, thanks to consumer credit, fill tl.eir homes with everything from the very start of their married lives.

Consumer credit can be like liquor and cigarettes and other lux­uries-something to be used with ~discretion and care or to indulge in to unreasonable excess. It de· pends on the individual in the first instance.

We may have come a long wa:v from the simple philosophy of Mr. Micawber in which happintss is found in having a penny more than one spends and misery accrues from spending a penny less than one earns. These are different limes. Nevertheless, they still make the same demands on individuals.

There is no crime-in fact, it can even be useful-to give financial hostages to :fortune just so long as one can always meet his obligations under pressure.

A man who buys a house on a long mortgage at reasonable inter· est is acquiring equity and security at a little more than the cost of rent. But the man who buys every· thing because he can get it on credit without thought for future capacity to pay is storing up a peck of personal trouble and helo· ing also to undermine the national economy. •·

In the last analysis, it is a mat­ter of tempering credit with reason and commonsense. Consumer credit can be a tremendous help to the sensible and a source of enduring trouble for those who fail to think of it in t~rms of disciplined ap· preach to a cle~ired standard of lh·ing.

Something For The Archiv~s A fine art auction gallery in New

York has recently sold an import­ant collection. of French historical documents, some of which have a bearing on C1111<1dian history.

The collection cnmc · from the archives of the Comte de Mamcpas who occupied an important posi­tion in the court of Louis XV and is said to contnin a unique reco:·d of the decline .of French power in Canada.

Our own interest is attracted by 'this statement in a Canadian Press despatch on the sale:

"The papers contain referenc<;;s to the decline of French power in the New World and plans to retake Acadia and Newfoundland from Britain."

Mortier Bay

Louis XV died in 177 4 after i'l

reign of nearly 60 years. In short, the papers in their relation to New­foundland could cover any pt:riod between 1715, the year of the death of Louis XIV, and 1774 and they would certainly seem to have ·a hearing on the French descrnt on Newfoundland in 1762 during the Seven Years War.

The papers relevant to Canada and Newfoundland were bought by the University of Rochester for $2,400 and it would seem to be a duty of our own Archives Depart­ment to ask that University for a microfilm of those documents that have special reference to Frem:h plans for the recovery of New-· foundland.

Concess:ons The vts1on of Mortier Bay P.s a

'I I , · great tran~s 1ipping and free pm·t light of the new situalion on the St. Lawrence. However, the conces­sions expired ];,st month and a Bill to renew them for another year has not progn:~:;cd in the House beyond first reading.

I .. ' I •

' I .I

has been held for a long time. It originated with H. C. Thomson,

a London barrister, about fifty years ago. He dedicated his life to its promotion. When the Commis· sion of Govemment considered re­ne\\'al of the conces:;ions about 25 years ago, the favourable decision was motivated by the fact that the prospect still existed and nothing was lost in any e\'ent by the re­newal.

The death of Mr. 'fhomson chang-. ed things but the scheme was re­vived seven years or so ago in the

These concessions cost New­foundland nothing. Their canceila­tion would destroy any prospec~ the scheme may have of realization. In the circumstances, there is good and solid cause for renewing thr.m with an annual review in the 1ig4_t of changing circumstances. 'l'h;~ is the course, we hope, tbe Go\·ern· ment and House will take.

I !I B. C. And The Doukhobors '

• I

Premier Bennett has asked at last for federal aid in dealing with fanatical sect o:f Doukl:J.obors who inhabit the East Kootenay district of British Columbia.-

, ll Bennett ha~~~ggested that troops . ~ · \: · ! • .. t to ..,. area for traiJJ.ina : l .

rather than dh'ectly t~ prevent dis­orders arising out of the local anger against Doukhobors believed to ,have blown up a hydro-electric tower with consequent disruption of industrial activity,

.The Doukhobora in the K~nar.

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. WEDNESDAY, :MARCH 14, 1962

-- Auld ·Lang Syne -March 14, 1946:

GOLDEN JUBILEE Presenting to lhe Pre~i

dent, Ron. Harold Macpherson, an impressively beautiful d~sk set, with golden caribou mount· ed and two. one hundred year old pens, the empl6yecs of the Royal Stores Ltd., nt lunch hour yestct·day, marked the Golden ,Jubilee of the firm. Alsn link· ed with the Pt·csident was ~lr. Campbell ~lacphcrson, present Managing-Director, whose wide business rore~ighl is wri!ing new pnges in the histm·y !If what is one of Newfoundland's oldest and leading businr>> firms.

• • J:'\'VESTITUUE YESTEltll:\ \' t:nderncath lif~·3izc portr:!its

nf fot·met· Dt•itish and tlt::n· Quccus, His Exccilcnc.v •he Arl ministrator, Sir L. E. Emerson. prcs~ntcrl honours to four men at noon ,·rst~rda,, in· the clinin~ room of the Government Hutt,;c

Military Road. · Those hOnour· cd were Lieutenant C. E. Bit· terwrth, R.C.N., who received the Distinguished Service Cross: Robert ThompHon and Stuart F'razer, M.D., both received their O.B.E.; and. Henry Craw· ford received the M.B.E.

I~ • \ JN,JURED MAN DII\S Shortly alter 11 o'clock yes·

lcrc!ay morning police were told that a youn-6 · man w:1s on Pleasan\ Slrcet in an injured couditiun. Two Constablr>s werr• sent to th(' scene and on arrival found the man, later itlcn:l· ficd as William OsmotHI, 3n Cashin Avenue, in a S<'llli· eonscious slate and with hloo:l f!owin~ freely from cuts ar> parcnll)• caused hy pieces of f!)itS!\, Oil hi~, ll~'{'l::, f:tl't' iiiH!

arms. He w;os t:Ji;r•n to thr· r;nc~ Jlf::;pitnl ror tJ·('il111J"I11

but a, lhe d?)' prn;!rr.,srd his eo:tdition ho~ame mnrP critil'al 'IIHI .11 7.:10 p.m. la~t ni~hl llr p:~soc!l ot\i':ly. l'nlicr arr in1·csti

gating the cause of the acri· dent.

~larch 14, 1931:

5,500 . SEALS S.S. Ranger and S.S. Thetis

in the Gulf killed and panned :lOOO and 2500 seals respective· II·. ll is evident from reports f~om the stemncrs at the front th<tl not only have ~ they r.nt killed any seals hut thry have not even S!'ell any. TherP is an ah,rncein their \'ieinity of icc ur the il'e is lo(]se. ,, • •

l'l'HSE OF fiOLD Al lhr office of the Al'a!nn

Te!ephnne Co. l:"t rvcning thr cn·worl\crs of :\!iss .Jrssie )l~.ior met am! presented her wil h a 'hort addre" and .1 pur;e rd .·~nld ns n .'li;zht tolcen of th<' ps!f•cm in whil'h she was held h.v thrut. ~liss ~l:1,inr i' leav. ing th~ Avalon Telrphonr C<1. and is ~oing to tit~ bml of lJnd~ Sam in tlw n~ar future.

Strength For The Day My EAIIL L. DOUGLASS

ON TilE ~!OrE

We who live on !he North Amcricnn continent are conlin· unlly on the move. We do nol stay pul. The policy uf modern industry is to mol'~ crlminis~ra· live officials from one part of the country to another. Pr•o!llr nrc conshHI)' pacl;ing up ;1nd taking off to rli;Lanl parts sure that tht')' will find whal the)' are h10ki11~ fot' at the cl'rl ol the rainbow.

That i> nol all had. It is a

- Letters !I !'!tilE l'ORT IN ST .• JOHN'S Editor D::i!y News.

Dear Sir-With the cmplo_, .. m.ont structure crumbling about our cars. il is long ol'er· dur, to thiltk abonl altcr:wtivc ccononm ar·tivity for St. John's. especially involving our once tmwnt11cd t•ew harbour develop· mcnt. Ov~r lh~ years the undersign·

eel has advocated a free port here-not as a panacea for evory ecor.omic ill, but merely as an inducement for interna­tional ~apital to move in with· out the mterk·ence of the high customs barrier. This has happened in Hamburg nnd Brem\!n, ete.,in tbe past and from 'them grew the gigantic trading unit O\'crshadowing Europe today called the Com· mon :'rlarket which is inviting Britain and other Common· wealths in.

Canada i~ like Britain was, . in the horns of a dilemma in this respect. Her infant indus· tries .:annul surl'ivc such a plut\1,~'. r:a;:~t~m··· llllC\IlllOilia,

that is exportin~ unemployment to 1\'ewfoundland now, wuul<i sta~nalc her rconomy.

With R free port in St. .John's howel'rr, Canada can grt the hcsl of both worlds. She l'an nurse her industries alon~ an1l l!rndual!y expose them one by one, throu~h the Sl. .John's free port, to world competition. ll would serve also as a safety \'alue against inllation as well as a yardstick of depression trends as at present.

Grain from 1\!anitoba via Port Churchill can be stored in elc· vators along the Srdhside. In· deed the World Food Bank, also advocated bv the unrler.1i~nrd eightern ye;rs a~o should · lle located here in radiation proof underground warehouses.

Ottawa was once persuaded (against better judgement) to give us a better harbour. Who is there now whom we can send up to get us a free port, grain elevators, the World Food Bank, a U.N. Base· in Pepperrell, transhipment facilities and above all a smeller for Bell Is· land or to turn it into market· able steel? Smell or sink? That is the question.

Yours Truly, E.D.C. HISCOCK

NARitOWS LINE NECESSARY Dear Sir,-All power used' in

St. John's runs from the West End to the East End. There· fore, when a break occurs in the West End, the entire Cily supply of electricity is cul o!C.

This was graphically illush·at· ed only lwo weeks ago when a break occurred during a sleet storm, with the result that Ute whole of the Jtorth west and north ·east areas of St. John's were without power for some hours, as well as ou tlylng areas as far cast as Pouch Cove.

Many v;tal institutions were drastically effected by this in· tcrruption. TV viewers will re­call that the local TV station wa~ orr lite air for soma four hours, whilst radio stations were enabled to carry on only Wilh emergency installations.

nece~sar.1· part of the ly~P. n[ industrial and com11wn·r:1l ch·,. lization we hnvc f'fPl~lcd. Bnt it rr,il.v becomes b:ul. \\'it.hot:t our l;nowin.~ it; the trthhlcY of lhe'e timP.s hegins to no:.kr us rcsll~ss. ,Just ycstnda)' I <'II· countcre(l a person whn ha"' m~1dc fi\'C thar·;~s nf jiJi)'i ;1 JH! residences within the p:"t five ycur~.

Our gt·:mdpan•11t>. for tbr Ptosl part, died in homes whidt !hey lwd founded fifty or nH,rt• years ago. Snmctimp:-; a Jlliltl

much againsl his will is ll)(h't'd

about h)· his comPany from nne

To ,..fhe ,\n opportutnity is now of·

IL•rcd to ohtnin dcctric Jllll>t'L'

from an· J::as~ ~:nd somce. thus nitigatin~ .if not eliminating. the rbk of total powrr failure in the East End ol St . .Jolm's, and making the East l~nd in· dependent ol the \\'est End source of sttpply.

Tltc Power Company say the most practical way to bring this power to the East End is by means of an ol'erilead ca hie acrooss the Harbour, at n cost .of half a million dollar,.

Some writers ha1·e opposer! lite O\'~t·Itead cable, staling it would be unsighliy, and sug· gesling that the cable be under water.

Only ten days ago lhc llaily News carried photographs of the destroyed fish flake' al the Battery, together with the news tltal i\lr. Riche, Presidt•nt of the Fishermen's Federation, had slated that lishPrmen would be cumpclled to appeal to Ihe Federal (;o\'ernmcnt lor lit•lp in restoring lhl'il' d<•n;olishcd ;ta:;cs. This is the same spot that some people rel'onuneiHI for a cable landing - where raftin:: il'c can be expected e\'cry winter. Wlwn a trnninal \\'as rcquirrd

for the new East Co:bt fen·~·. one of the rea;ons for choo>ing Argcnlia was !he fact !hal St. John'.!; is frequently icebound in winter. Submarine rabies and rafting ice are just not compatible

Up lo some forty years ago, all the offshore islands arouhd our coast were linked with lite telegraph system by means of submarine cables. The annual cost of maintenance was so high that in many caocs ·these cables were interrupted for weeks, on end, due to lite fact tltal expensive repcdt·s were un· warranted because rafting ice would surely disrupt the ser· vice on the following day.

In the meantime these islands would for protracted periods tach winter.

These hundreds of miles of cable were gladly abandoned when wireless arrived on the scene,

A futher dange,· to submar· ines is shipping. Jl will be rc· cailccl lhal only a couple of years ago the mines at Bell Is· land were shut down Ior a lengthy period dtte to the fact lhal an ore hoal had tangled Its anchor with lhe submarine cable, thus shutting off all power.

Ali this means !hal if we r-nnt· pel the company to use sub· marine cables the cost, and par. ticularly the main!enanee, will be so high thal· we can con· firlently look forward to very much increased eleclricity .rates in the not too distant falnre.

Yours truly, W. J. WOODFORD.

THE MILLION llOLI..\US IS GOING TO WOitK f'OU

THE FISHERMEN Editor D:1ily News.

Dear Sir:--l'or the first time in history the fishermen of Newfoundland are going to get

nial'P to another until hi' bon· l!y life io dnmagrd and d;.c·. jointed. But most of tl1e timr prople get into thr hahit of wandering hccause they "r~ t•r•>llcss, unsettled. >omet imr,; In;·. or a hit fuzzy in' their thinking.

GL'l your roob down. Yol1r "a{'rr:-; of di:unonds'' (!J'C •n

' l'our o\\'n hack1~romHI. We c;1n ~nsily enm::.:h Wilndcr into 1hr. descrl or ol'rr the prcripi1·r. \\'andL•rim . .: is onl~· ~nnd if i'. r~ the working out of n rldinik }llll'JlO'r.

Editor a helping hand. And tlii> time it's a :-:trp in thr right way. that will real!;· do some good for thr little fclow that has licpn forgot ten down through the years of :\'ewfoundland fish. ing history by all that w:~> in power. In my prcl·ious lcllrrs J\·r hel'n figlttinp; for the ri·~l1t both for the fishermen an-i the miners etc., who were al· wa1·s getting the brush off, and mo.st !I· what was to hl<tme iolr this the nulhorities iii rower in the fishing industry Jacked !he cxpericn<~e to do what the fishermen wanted to hrlp them.· This goes for members <tnd the heads of the departments o[ fisheries of ~cwfoundland .. If we had fully experienced men our fi;;hing industry lG· day would not be in the con!Ji .. tio'n it is. But with this latest aniiOUlll'l'llleltt from tlw House of Assembly by the llo11. :llr. Spt'n<'Pr !he fislwrnwn of NPw­fnuntlland t·an look lorward With ('IH'Olll';i\.!Pilll'llf to a bri~:h~· !'I' lutlll'!' in i\cwtou!HllaiHl's ~l'•.'iit<'>t indll>try "The Fioh­t'l') ." As l slall'd in Ill)' pa.<t IP11PI'S, l fanmr thr right thi1:c;, it dnr>n't maltCI' whir:1 par~;-. " ril!wr Lihrrals or P.l'.':;. B'lt in this partienl:•r ""'~' I•.·J,rl'" thr i\Pwfoundlanrl Pn" Ill! i:o! Co\'rrnmrnt sn nohl~' 11;,\'r r-mnr 1o thr nid nf 1hc r,,;,rr· mrn in .1pcndin~ till.' milli m dollar.< to help them, the rrrdit. ):!oes to lit~ l-Ion .• Jo,r:'h Sm:ill­wood, Prrmirr n[ Nc•.l'fonnrl· lanrl, who in my opin1r,:\ is really ctoin<Z a lot for In~ Prov­ince and its people. Hi> nam~ may yrl go down in history to he Newfoundland's ;!reatrst greatest Premier. There is onl)' one thin~ wron~. 1\'c should h<tl'e more men like him in \'ewfoundl:111d, th1•n the Prov­ince 1\'ottld he flourishing with proc;:Jrrity.

:\lr. Spencer in his address in the House of Assembly gai'C a wonderful speech <tbout grcnl· r:r thin«s to come in the fut· ure, like the sm<tll boat build· ing and fishing equipment to he used by the fishermen. lil;e lines, twines. etc. lie II'Pnt on to say nylon would ht' tlw bc.'t to Uo!'. I don't think the House of As,t•mbly is any plaee to praise one pmduet any more than the otlwr. This place was ncl'ct; mennt for adl'ertising, and you can't .tell a n•al rx· pcriencrd Newfoundland fish­erman 'the kind of fishing gear to usc. This he has lc<trncd him­self down lhrough th 1~ )'ears tl1e hard w~y. ~nd thrre is no nwin· hrr of the linus of A'semblv goin~ to l'l'fltn a ;:!rc1a.sv mit.t r!own a fiohrrman's !hroat, for thii; he will not ~wallow.

All tho fishermen nrrrl i~ ~ hnnt tn grt. him afloal. ho will soon deci:lc on thr NJllipmcnt to use, for a lol of this i~ ur to the nattlre of the sea bottom, if its a rought coral bottom his trawl ~tt·rtrher line calls for cotton gau~ing line. If it's a ~andy. hnUum then n.1·Jnn ~aug· ing l'n~tl<l tc usr•d. The rea;on for thi' it the h•Joks ~et loul<·rl in the coral the rotlon will brenk rrlrasing the stretrh~r line qnd ~~ l'ing his trawl. If

region appear to be an extremist section of the Canadian Doukho­bor population in the prairie provinces.

word. Being opposed to violence, they resisted conscription and were harried and persecuted for genera­tions.

The initial group of about 8,000 ,.Doukhobors ca·me to Canada in 1898. They were members o.f a sect of Russian peasants who were con­vinced that the Spirit of God was present in the soul of man and . directed his actions by its inner

The group in Kootenay is a fan­atical off-shoot and has been the source of a . great deal of civil trouble over education and other matters. Those convicted of ex­tremist acts are now to be hous­ed in a maximum security prison .

Labor Is Waging Battle On

Wide Front For Job Se:urity By PETER EDSON

"'

An alternative proposal is th~t an induslrv-wide fund be established by contri. bution ·from employers, this fund being in. sured by the U.S. government to pay for loss of jobs in a new and rapidly changing industry. \I

)

l

I l I

American Federation of Labor-Congress of 1~ dust rial Organizations has initiated a mo\·e for legi~ 1 lation to establish a government-operated imuran~ :.~ s.1·stem to pay retired workers their pmsiono wl:Ea -, former employers fail in business.

The contention is that thousands of :-e. tired workers lose their pensions ever~· 1·ear bet:mt::e hundred~ of employers-mo't o[

them with the best intentions in the wodd to sta~· soh·enl-go broke. In other in:-t<lltce;, inadequately finam:ed pension trust fund; find they cannot meet commitment:::.

Either way. the :·ctired worker stands to lO!I. Being m·cr li5. he may ha\·e trouble finding 11 1::: iob. If he has to fall back on his government old ·' insurance payments as his sole sourc~ of income, living standard goes down.

United Auto Workers ha\'e asked the automobile manufacturers to abandon "ex· cessive and unnecessary overtime" in the interests of reducing unemployment and spreading emplfoyment. UA W claims this practice by the auto makers deprives 25.000 workers of jobs. in an industry where auto· mation has hit hard.

The issue is simply that every time a new ployee is added to the payroll, the employer must additional social security and unemployment ance taxes. The employer must also pay supplemer.i ary unemployment benefits if the new worker is · off .

From management"s standpoint. tt is more efficient to keep the \\'ork for,e ;;s

small as possible and pay a little O\ ertime now and then when the orders pile up.

Rnih1·a,· labor conditions are ll0\1' >O

that. in the. opinion o[ some obscr\'ers. the b~sl \ion 1\'0uld be to wipe the slate clean and begin m·cr again with a new transportalion polic_,. for management and the employee brotherhoods.

Management contends that there mu;t be mergers and freer competition bet\\'een all forms of transportation. Rail mana~emen\ also contends that the co-called "feather· bedding" practices must be eliminated for more economical operations.

Rc.ilwa.v labor replies that mergers can mc<Jn a rerluction in the number of jobs. It is fore asked that no mergers be approved unless include employment security.

The presidential commission of fh·e em· player, five management and five public members-t!-ying for a year to find some solution to the work rule issue has finallY come up with recommendations so ad1·erse to brotherhod interests that a strike il threatened.

In comparison to demands such a' . Pew steel indusln' contract neootiation~ noll' ·· on appear relati,·ely simple. Tl~is is in spite or . fact that the steel talks ha\·e been made a ke1· of stabilization by the Kennedy administr~tion.

To people who hate organized labor and all ils works, these new demands 11·ill b~ viewed as more e\'idence of the union~ growing power and the insatiability of their demands.

To others, t.he overriding. issue is the of unemployment. still far too high. The. Executive Council, at its winter meC'tinl( m criticized the Kenneday administraton for being ly timid in fighting unemployment.

Another wav of CXlJrcssing the oante . . d· idea is to say that the president and his 8 d visers are trying to let management an labor solve their new problems in col!ec!I\j bargaining. If they don't, then demands WI grow for the government to step in and trY to do something about it.

the gauging line wel'e nylon . would recommen_d nYI~ and become hooked in this cor· stretcher line for' tls JtOger al, nine times out of ten the durability. The stro~e whole trawl would be lost. This stretcher the better 1 best would prov~ a great expense to The fisherman knol~oDD· the fishermen. But on the other JACK h&tid through my experlenc• I &t. J ohn'a Eatt,

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Page 5: E ACADIAN SMAL~ PONTIAC THE DAILYcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196203… · and cnnl~ins "a program for I proposals on nuclear trsts will Urn • eng ssue

• unty

Iclust~ial . :\nleri. ' II" · ,., nrw .~rs.

In. 1 it ed 1nint d tn

l'!'·

·hat lhe . ~UJ!ple.

: 1" 11 Pa:··

an 'ntri­c in­. for :~in~

· ~s 0[ In. fo:· legis. in~uranct un~ ,,,'hen

· '·car ·~ l 11 [

w or lcl .i 11l'C:;,

fund:::

1cl 1 he n "ex­in the . t and IS this :25.000

:? auto·

a new em· :r must pay nent insur· .upplement· •rker is laid

i 1 is ~rt·e ~s

,·ertime :p.

.() l'OilfUocd :c be~t solu· d bc~:in Rll il',. f~r both oodo.

re must between '<.gement feather· Jted for

:s can onlY . It is there­unless they

fi\'e em· " public 1d some s finally ad\·erse

•trike it

Rs these, tht Is now goinl

spite of tht e a keY issut tistralion.

labor and ; will be ~ unions' ,. nf their

the reducgfo fhe AFL· 'dl. n£! in Flori . •el"

or being 0'

the same nd his ad· . mcnt and collective

nands will in and tn'

:MARCH 7 1962 WEDNESDAY MARCH 1962 5

SPECIALS ... DISCOUNTS ... CLEAR-OUTS

EXTERIOR

BIRCH DOORS All Designs

Reg. $17.~0 to $29.50

LESS 20%

STEEL FOLDING

CLOSET DOORS Sli).{htly Damaged ·

4-ft. Set Reg. $31.00 ..................................... NOW *15·50 5-ft, Set Reg. $34.50 ................... -..... NOW *17 .'115

6-ft. Set Reg. $37.50 ................... NOW $18·75

SPECIAL C.LEARANCE · SALE · . Re~.

11 Sheets Arborite 10", assorted colours ................................................ $ 19.20

1 Only Picture Window 4.' x 4.' ....... ~ ......•• rrn .................... ;........................ 52.50

4 Only Double Boxes with Glazed Sashes 24" x 24" ............................ 34.75

6 Only Double Boxes with Glazed Sashes 24" x 24" x 12'' .................... 31.75

1 Only Sin~1e Box with Glazed Sashes 12" x 24" ........ -.................... ........ 18.50

2.1 Pairs Glazed Sashes, 12" x M" ............................................................. 8.50

2,400 fbm. Cedar Clapboard lV•" x 10" .................................................. 250.00

8 Only Taylor Steel Sectional Gara);e Doors, 8' x 7', each .................... 90.00

SALE $ "13·95

42·50 24·75 21·75

14·95 6·25

185·00

69·50

WALL PANELLING SPECIALS Reg.

42 Sheds Pref. Samara Paneling 4' x 8', Sher. Green or Bis. Blue sheet$ 15.04

6 Sheets Sliced African Maho);any sheet ............................................. 17.60

2 Sheets Tiama, Flat Sliced, sheet ........................................................ 9.12 . 11 Sheets Pre£ . .Surfwood Green, sheet ........... ....... .................................. 12.64

25 Sheets Surfwood Natural. sheet ............................................................ 8.64

SALE $ g.92

12·98 6.98 8.98

6.98

BARGAINS IN LOCKS-S.AVE 30% Reg.

Yale Passage Locks, Pol .Brass, Litchfield and Brandywine Desigru .... 3.29

Yale Passage Locks, Brandywine ..................................................... .-...... 3.39

Yale Bathroom Locks, Pol. Brass and Chrome ........................................ 4.20

Yale Key-in-Knob Entrance Locks, Pol. Brass ......................................... 7.89

~$PRING AHEAD/

SAJ,E $ 2.29

2.39

2.94

5.52

CLEARANCE VENETIAN BLINDS CLEARANCE

ALUMINUM I '

BROKEN SIZES- TOP QUALITY- EGGSIIELL COLOUR If any of, these sizes suit your rcquitTlncnts, here is a real bargain. Lengths are adjustable.

STEPLADDERS· Reg.

27'' OttUitltlttUtoooootoooooooooooooooooo"ooootoooootoo••$13.50

:S-ft. . ...............•.......... ,. ..... , •.............•.... 2t2.3'0

6-ft. ''''''''"''''''''''''''''"'''''"'''''"''''''''"'''''' !6.50

NOW ON DISPLAY

SALE.·

$ g.oo

15·00

17·67

Pro~ress and Minute :Mount Light Fixtures

Table Le~ Sets 4" to 29" Unfinished and Walnut Finish

Tower Foldin~ Doors- All Sizes

Exhaust Fans and :Ran~e Hoods ·

Electt?c Wall Clocks Matchless and Sherwin-Williams Paints

Hardware and Tools of all Types

I - - - ,. ; 0 .... ~ ,I·- ·' <.

Renovatin~ a room ?

.. WE SUGGEST • J

For the ceiling ... BP Fissuretone or Fissureperf Ceiling Tiles. . '

For the walls ... Wcldwood Unf. and Pre£. Wood Panels,

Beauty Plank and Masonite Woodgrain over 50 Varieties.

For the floor .. , BP Vinyl Asbestos Flortile.

Come in and see. our lar~e variety of home de cora tin~ Materials.

We'll be happy to give you samples and prices.

Reg. 20" each ........... ., ..................... '' .................. $3.75

SALE $1.98

24" each ... ..................................................... 4.30

44" each ................................. _............ .... ... . .. . . . 7. 60

48'' each ........................................................ 8.40

50" each .......................................................... 8.70

52'' each .......................................................... 9.10

e:uaa

JUST ARRIVED

PING PONG TABLES Ping Pong Tables Sold Separately or as a Unit

· . Set Table Tops-Unpainted ................... $14·85 Table Tops-Painted ..................... 24·S5 Table Stands-Unpainted ................ 14·00 Table Stands-Painted ..................... 16·00

2·:8 g.98 4.98

5.2i5

SAB

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Page 6: E ACADIAN SMAL~ PONTIAC THE DAILYcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196203… · and cnnl~ins "a program for I proposals on nuclear trsts will Urn • eng ssue

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THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. WEDNESDAY, ~IARCH 14, l95l

tt:•:t:•;•:•=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=•=•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•::•:•:•:•:•:•:·~

t'Social-Personal i ' .. ••. . . ~·4 ,.. .~ • •

1~1 Column ~1 w w ~: ~·: ~ '

• • • I. Andrews, KiM's Road. HAPPY BIRTHDAy I • • •

Happy birthday to Randy LEF.T TOW~ Folks of 13 Dunfield Av~nue Miss Bermce Sparkes, R.N., who celebrated his fourth birth· 39 Allandale Road, daughter of da. March 13th. Randy is a lllr. and ·Mrs. R. Sparkes, left u~'n of the Mcadow House here Jllarch 7th. by T.C.A. for ~ursery School where he is ha\'· New York .. In New Y?rk Miss ing his birthday party. Sparkes Will take a s~x·month

• • • Post Graduate course m Oper·

Women New Shape

The new shape for foundation garments for 1962 is based on

give positive bustline support and work with the longer gird· les for waistline control.

a simple, old fashioned fern- New molded bras, due to ~o· inine f I g u r e concept- the · pear on the Canadian market, curve! will give a rounded positive

Bust, waist and hips arc going to make figure news fm· the new season nntl they arc going lo be in the places nature in· tended.

outline without the use of wir· ing or special inserts.

Gil·dles with back panels for a gently rounded look: panels nt the hips for extra cor.trol.

TO AT'l'END WEDDING \ aling Rooom Technician at the l\1rs. S'cott WooHrey and Polyclinic Hospital. ~o more hy·pnssing, nc more

• • • merely outlining the figure. New fabrics like Spandex, w 1 l I

help achicl'e control without weight. daughters Sandra and Cheryl of RJo~TURNING TO ST. JOIIU'S Th~ hod)' .conscious look . of

Lewisporte, arri\'cd in town to R 1 t L St • . I Fall has g11•en way lo wmsls attend the weddin? of .lllrs. l do Jet r 'o ~~ey,f su~~nnj! nt the ~~aistline, and hips that. No . understatement anywhere. \\'oolfre)''s ncicc :I!Lss Shirley ~~. c.n ° f le 1' ew ~lUI ~-m l fit smoothly, and tllC high I The look in fashion and in Grcenlaml of Coley's Point to 1 ''~siOn °. t 1 ~ h a•~;.•a; I rounded bustline. foundr.lions. is very feminine Mr. Frederick Andrews of : ~ahona~ In~tllulc .or t e In ' I ' -as through a veil of goss·t· Clarl<c's Beach. ' 1s back m ~t: Johns t~day from :Clothes r01. Spring, del ail the' met·.

The widding takes place at a recent \'lSI[ lo Hahlax. , waist with bells. darts and Cole)·'s Point this even in!! at--] M~. S~orey left Ncwlou.n~lland 1 bows.. The o1•erall si\h~u~lle 8 'clock Reception al Dawc's : earher m the week to \'ISlt the I is dchcnlc and 1·cry fcmmm~. R~taura;1 t i 32. Newfoundland students at Skirts fnl! !roll) the waist m

' ' · • • • i the Halifax School for the : soft gentle gathers: capes flow JIO)lE .-RO~l JIOSPlT,\L Blind. ! ~.''cr lite ~ust in soft rippies.

Th friends of ~Irs. Eric Ben· : Mr. Storcv 'met with super·. I he look _15 al! woman, Col· c · . b · . 1 • 1 · · 1 ours arc !Ce cream tones and

5011, ,, II andale Road, Wt\1 e I \'I SOL'S at l lC Sl' 1001 to mqllll'C ' d I' . l t' l f . 19"? T .... ~ I t I . f tl f 11 N 1 c Jc,t e m s 01 n-. " ,

To nchiel'c the Cleopatra lonk with your eyes, first oulline the eves all around with black or I b;·own liner. Then apply bet? . Jim Craig, Marilyn Pmldestcr and Paul O'Neill will star in tonight's Regional eyeslmdow .on the. upper td I duction "DEATH TAKES A HOLIDAY"' by the Buckmaster's Play;!rs. This play ahol'c the !mer. \ou can al'o • ' b 1 f th tl h f tl t

Drama Festival is directed by

pleased to kno~v t 1a ~ le IS · 0 le progress 0 le ew· · is t11c best news the fm1n~a· home fr0m hosp1lal and IS feel· 1 foundlanrl s\u~l~nts. 1. , i lion ,gnrmcnl people hn1·c had I usc Kohl-like eye powder to Wtgh, and e ow arc som~~--e ~~r mcm crs o __ le ca_s___: _. ______ _

finish off the effect. in~ fine. . ST. P.\TRICK S m;siti\1, . 1 for some lime.

• • • . The M~cDonald Felloii'Shlp ' I YI~ITI:'\(; ST. JOH:'\'S 'Club of lhr Y.W.C.:\. is hnl'in:: 11 i~ r<t.<V lo ~chic1·r lhr n r 11·1

~II'<. Harry /\ndrrwo Sr .. n! its annu~l Sl. P~lril'l;'s ~lusical · fi;:t•1·r. · There. a1·c ror~clc:lro: Thr r S .~tm·ernm~n.t hr~<1n 1 . ·

\\'rslr)·,·illr i~ prrsrntl)' l'!'ilinl! ~nd Tra on Snhll'day I he lith. for an nnhl'o\irn ~moolh oul· 1 sale 11f poslill r.;mlo 10 1373. · Sl. ,John's. 1\'hilr in lmm. she ~~ ~ p.m. in lh~ Y.W.C.A. Club' linr; hich lop ~inllcs to nip. Prirr wM ~ penny apiece until I.: i~ a ~urst of her rl~u::htcr Wss nooms. 1 lhP. waiol. lon.~t line hras llul i 1952. . ·

Alicia Harf s Spring Fling

New 1-Iair Styles Are Fe111inine

DOUG LAITE

. I Shopping For Him I

JOE MURPHY PAUL O'NEILL

~~~~~~~~!

!Suits In Wl1ite A Thought !

Wool For Today l

l'ilClt.! gir1y hair styles for spl'ing are in keeping ~ith feminine, ruffly clothes and swirly skirts. In this styling, the hair is swept back from the brow (left), and set with fullness at the crown and sides. Young and simple hairdo (cenl•!r) has hair swirled

: "ASTRO-GUIDE" By Ceean For Wednesday, March 1.4

'Present-'For You and i Yours , , • Money is not the : most important ronsideration-1 be reaplive to opportunities that . mean more prestige also. Devote ~ the even in g to pleuurablc : pursuits and entertainment of i friendL Put your ingenuity to ~ work to cwercome an annoyance '! lint bothers you on the job. You

can do ill i ' Past ••• On March 14, 1681,

King Charles II granted n char· ter for :American land to Wil· liam Penn in payment for a debt to his father; Sir William

I Penn. 'The King name it Penn­sylvania-Penn's Woods.- in honor of the senior Penn.

Future ; , . Hay fever may be­come yirtually extinct, except for people whose work kreps them outdoors. Air-conditioning in both home and office will re• duce the amount of pollen b)' 90 per call.

Th~ Day.Under Your Sign AlliES [1om t.lorclt 21 to ·A,rll *'I 'J hr Jd.idas·toucb it JOUU IIIII« akain! Cor!Jidrr deals that will pay divid(Qds.

LIBRA (S.pt. n to Od. 221 Jltfotnl&tion that Ktmed hld&ec fr• you Jtth:rd~" will cmnc te Jiabt ....,...,

Tops For City,

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Resort 1

11"PP.V ar~ lh~ filmilir, 11he~e l

fllr ;:!0\'CI'llntCnl of Pili'Cills IS ~ the rP•Un of ~HPdinn. an;} l!1r :, ohPt!iPilCP nr l\1~ cl1i\flrrn IIW

; 1 "1hmi~sion of lore.-Lcnn:wl ! 1 ll:•rnn. ' '' 'I

, I W cm:-:n's

at crown and very lightly curled at the ends. Airy, windswept hairdo (right) is c:ut with delicate · fringe at the forehead. All styles aw by Charles of 1

the ritz. And any of these will provide flattery.

World Day

I Of PrayEr ! Beauty I I I .

BY ALICIA HART Glrls will be girls again this Cleanliness, scalp massage and

spring. Back in fashion . are vigorous brushing are as im· small waistlines, frilly ruffles portant to your crowning glory and swirly skirts. as any hairdresser.

Make·up will be soft and on the pastel side, and hair will de· licately frame the face.

In place of bulky, bouffant hair· dos, understated, shaped styles that mold the head will better complement the season's soft· ened silhouette.

Among the hair styles being In• troducfd by one leading beauty salon IS one that begins with a center parting ·and ends In puffy, ruffled curls around the ears.

Another 1~ a softly simple coif· fure, with loose waves molded

about the face on either side.

A third trend fo1· spring calls for hair swept ol'er lo one s I de, tndlng in an edging or ringlet curls. ·

Shampoo your hair whenever it needs It, Don't wait to do the joh at set Intervals. And be· fore you wash It, massage your scalp with a rotating motion of your fingertips. If it's dry, give yourself a hot oil treat· ment before shampooing.

Don't sneer at the old "100 strokes a day'' adage, Y o u r brush is the most valuable tool in your hair beauty kit.

Brush properly-from scalp to hair ends-with forceful stimu. latiug strokes. A n d, don't wm·ry ahuut your selling, It will full into place more na­tumlly :1!ter your hait· h a s het•n hrushed.

When you're succeeded in get· ling your hair and scalp into good, healthy condition, it's time to visit nn expert who will

· In the lig 1lenmg proce:;, '>":·,'4Y''l The 1962 Women's World Day of 1 changes from h!Jck lo •. ,

Prayer was obscn·ed on ~larch i to red: from ~·d I~ .;;l:,~ .. nth. :\lorning del'otions orct· 1 gold; from eo,d to ~ . .lo• .. CB~ were conducted by ~Irs. I pale ye\lmr, :'n,,::;- 1 ·

R. R. Ii:thhl Diocesan Pr~;i. 1 Yon can slop or ·''?li a: dent, C.E.W.A. 1. At 3 p.m. I these stagr~<. , , a sen·ice for 1\'omrn 1\'il< hrlrt rf your face is <~li.1 r~-, .. ~r·

This year, the while troplc·wel~ht won! ~ult will be correct sum· · mer wear ln. town ns well ns at 11 \·aeatiou resort. The comfort, wrlnkle·reslstance nnd shape retention of wool rna lies it perfect · choice for sum~er wear.

HELEN HENNESSY

Resort clothes lor men tell the tale of what will he popular in ~ the fashion parade for summer.' 'l'his yeat· is no exl'cption. ·

'l'he girl who prefers her man to look elegant, 11 hit UllliSI1u\ u;ul, ut the s11me time, to disp;uy taste will be pleased about llus year's new look-handsome. white tropic-weight wool suits.

I The while suit, of course, h:~s i

hecn a f:mtrile on aud off .fur ! manv years. Tlw uews :hi'' yea1: is that it will he r·orr~d nut only for \'acaliuHIII~ at a sm;~rt re~urt, hut al~o fur sum· mt•r Wt1ill' in towu.

in Gower Street llniled Clwch lo~g and narro:'··. ;;n~nu:tar and hrnadcast by the kindness lin e.< ~rP "h:>l .' 0 ·1 rl or Sl<•lion v.o.li·.rr. :.trs. 1'.: t'se nlnkPIIp ~n.l'.il>IC try.~ ,\braham 1\'iiS leader of this j the .<hilpP. nf ,10.11 f>re ; .• yPar's ~rn·icc :md the pr;~y,'r~: lures. for II. ~1. The Qurrn ancl l ~e ; Hoyal Family were said Ly Jlrs. Eric Cook. J!rs. S. .1. Davies <Diocesan P1·esident. \\'.A. 1 gave a very thoughtful address ln\;ing for her text the theme or this year's serv•,:e "C:od's I.on1, for the \\'or! d." :\ joint choir from 1·:Jrions ci!v ('\iUt'l'he.~ \\'as under ll1e dil't'c· lion of ~!iss :llat·gard J'el\:•y and :1 wrv lo~:111tiful >rolu, "ThP

FREE BOO GIVES MANY FOR HOUSE & f

Lord's Pr-ayt•r" was .sung ity You'd Ill:!\'~r dr~~LU tbt"rt' :1\rs. 1\'illiam Marsh:•\\, Otlu·rs beaomnnv wu,·ocouuuon, taking part rcj.lr~Sl'lllt•d :h,., day hou~~lwld.lye ''"" B:~ptisl Church, fhe I.ulhPr:llll It cun 811\t! '''u litn•·· H Church, the United Chtll'ch,l you work. It cuu ~31' • '"~ou 1St. David's and St. ftiden's\, In ~ore ";nys 1

1 '":'!i~ed the Salvation Army, the Angli- .

1

lmf a~:bme.klltt 8 nl 0~ bv can Cathedral and St. ~!i~h· ree 00 e ~repare -

ael s C urch. t'tl d "H wLveC••'Hfi'P'•I

E

SPANIARD 1chool on F were preser by the vice·

Obit

SPANfAflD'S ·midst of life w, tare familiar wo1

· )ian people but ·5Uddcn berea\ ithat we realize · ,to us. Such w; )Vednesday, Fet ·:news reached

. ;,Lawrence Pcdt )orrowfully deli :Parish priest, LAC Cecil Ron; been accidental

.)utomobile acci _;turning from llordon, Ontari }>eforc. I Cecil Peddle , ~inest young \>latched grow u not surprised th 'RCAF in Noven

was just ni of those b1

somethin! "1lt'<llno•u and

stresses c ....:: ..... , ..... ~ and

appealed 1 basic traini

and at and sui .._ __ _

TAURUS (April 20 to Moy 201 AdYicc freas ~c familiar •Uh the field enedd JI"''ft: ~trtmeb' t.mef•eill.

SCORPIO !'Oct. 2J to NOf, 211 Yom• ictus ntav bto difftrtnt, bMt ,.. mrm~r that Edi1011.'1 wel'f1 toe.

To wear .the new, more feminine hair styles, the lmir should be

~ bit longer than it was worn

shape it into one of spring's ---,--------­charming, feminine coiffures that will prettily "lop" your new ~pring wnrdi'Ohr..

Fashion Tips

Atheni:111 white woo\ lu;:t>wtl lor the cla"ir~ puril~· of tile 1\ htl1· wool 11om hv mt•n u1 :llleit•nl Greece I has· het>n h:nuJ.tailor· ed iuto suits designed along the cnnently farored trimmer styles, aud lined in sclf-pal!ecn· erl while satin rayon.

, h · I nent Cnnnd1nn ente, o ~

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On The Farm And lnTht ..... , •.. .,. , :\Irs. J. ·'· ~lc~tlrn, wifr of the' It conlaiM o,·~r fiO P'~e!

GEMINI (Moy 2t te JuM 2fl You·~ bt~M ''Mt r.lose tl! the ~. M Itt the trru." Gri "" ~·~ne.

CANCEil IJuot 22 !o JuJ. 211 Yflld au1 )I"Te ttJ ntrt ali ,.our ..nn ~er in otdoer tfl hold onte ,.em ttmper.

I LEO !July 21 te Aug. 211 Enrrthinr it in 'G~.'.' fa'fOf', ~ -urtnwiat tnd etkrwu.el b!JfliJ' rtl

VtlGO (Aut. 22 to S.l>l, 221 T.mk fM dura\Htty as well u a.ppeamJte •b= parcll.uinr ittm of appareL

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 21 !o 0... 211 The yount~ rttee"t culdinc. but witll an fUf hand. )falre D':lrtSUUtbVt M!IIC:S. t1ons.

CAPRICORN (Dtc. 22 !o J.., 201 lbl't sflirk rtulttt, Comp1eit. )'OUr taJ.k6 rhmnr the day M ,..,u tan pl11y at 1'11&ht.

AQUARIUS (Joo. 2t te Ftl>. -191 DM't ltt Pr'~ ~~~h1ems i..tedere ,.;tb doinr 1 roed da1'1 11'Gflc. PISCB iFoh. 20 to March 201 Thf! imflluse tn opreu your.Mif str011dr euld prMe ta be detrhJ'Imt.ll ri1bt ..,...

C 1962, Fl•ld Enlurri..., y..,

· !hi~ winter - about mid-neck len~th.

If your h~ir i; slr~i~ht. ~ soH permanent will 11il·r. it enough body to hold the new setlings. i . .

Of course, the appearance of yom• h~ir i~ not 11 resull of ex· pert stylin~ alone. It musl.be healthy to do justice to 11 n y shaping and selling,

At. the First· Sjgn of a Cold or GriRP!, Before You Do Anything Else, Take Two AsP.irin Tablets When you feel you are coming down with a cold or grippe, ~d feel headachy, with musdes that ache, a sore throat and fever, the (zrslthing you should do is take two AsPIRIN tablets. You should do this before you do anything dsr., bccai!Se AsPIRIN goes to work in· 1tantly to reduce your fever, relieve that dull, headachy feeling and ·~~se your mus'cular aches and •'c.~

pains, so )'Oil feel better fast. Used as a gargle, AsPIRIN also

brings quick, soothing relief from sore throat. Just dis.1olve .. three to five AsPIRIN tahlcl! in one-third glass of waler 'and gargle thor­oughly. Repeat gargle every two hours if necessary.

Buy Asr!RIN today, so you'll be sure to have it on hand when you feel a t(lld or the grippe coming

,, ...... on, For your children, get Fla· vourcd Children's Si1.e Asrmm. It's the I \4·grairi do.~agc recom­mended for chi!- rr::::::r=:::=:= drcn; with a flavour ~~-­children like.

Be sure you get gcn!Jine· ASPIIUN. ~k for the pack· ~~~ .... A

1'1,4 .-,-llf'><-F

age with the Bayer -N·-· HIADACHU

CDLDI cross.

l.i:htwcicht won\ i.' lhP por,•d , f.unl lli~hor n( :\rldonnrll;m:l.: with •·aluahl~ inform1~du~~ rahnc chmrc fnr 1\'illlll·\\C,Iill·: .,ftr.nr\rr\ ihe !'en·ice. : no home or fum •hnu :': : H you're h~l'in;! toruhle rhno3· PI' wrnr hrc·~u~:,o nf it> rrnn•·\;. · , out. To~~~ ,-our fr•crnP~··-·Jt.''"•

ing acce>sories for a na1·y !Ill it! nhlc •·on1fort. ::hnpe rrlenrinn' ~ write to:· Stonrl.rd

--·--·-----

~nd you'1·e tired of rrd, !i y and wrmlde rP~ict:mcr. Lr~ulrr for 19r.3 ''ill hr ~!r;. i Limited, 550 Slmbronkt~ leather pumps in carnmrl hrig~ , Colonrl lk~ino nf the Salra·\' Montr('al.

.st~E 1'0Un IIENTIST i nnr\ a handha.e; in n bri;!lot, Shoulrl the ln"ll you·rr hnpin~ In: tion .\rm~·. :.:::.:=::...-----'J,'ifi beige, Arid 11 starchy wh1!c put into the whilr cuit rrnh'~l. ----·-------,-------------hlouse. while glo\'es nnd )!old that it will he soiled aflrr onr · eanings nncl you.'re set io1· clay's wcnr, tell him it nin'l spring, necessarily so. If he doesn't

spilt his hre:~!;fnst cnffce or

Should you find that your ~ums bleed every time you brush your teeth, nm, don't WRlk, to your dentist's office. This w;;y You .can avoid serious trouble . that may el'entually cause the Try balaneing \('ide sl10ulders loss or teeth. with width at the hemline ~i

drop his hotllpoint prn in hts lap during office hours, he should be able to wc~r his suit several times before he shios

SUDS DAILY Bath oils transferred from !he

body will cause rubberized gar· ments to deteriorate, one niore reason for sud~in!( bras ~nd ~:irdlcs after every single w~ar­ing,

FOR BRUNETTE BEAUTY Brunettes should he particularly

careful about lhc hair stvlc they choose. Because of ·its hold darkness, their hair will attract the. eye immediately, nnd should he expertly styled at all times. ,

TllltEE·WAY CARE . To keep your skin in: good con·

dilion, three steps are neces-

your dresses and· skirts. l\laKe sure that clothes fit neatly ~t the shoulders, look for a ronn1l·

it orr to the cleaners. -

cd, sloping shoulder line and i When you succeed in vour mis-avoid all padding. Co~ts wi'n sion to convert him 'to sartnr· straight lines and longish iac· in! elegance, here are a :ew ket.s arc good choices, too. tips on what the nppr opr::tl'"

accessories shoultt be with his The craze for hoots itas sneak~d

up on most women and caught them still wearing galoshes. By next fall, boots will be the

. most loved and most,. talked · about accessory, :\lost of :he

new hoots are high cui and !

with sm~ll wooden or leather heels. l!ecls 01re semi-high lor drc>sy wear. For el'cm~g wear there are beaded boo~s.

white suit:

A blue >hirt is the perfect color accent, together witt, s\i;n black shoes, black socks, black knit tic and a snappy hand~er· chief squnrc-folded into the breast pocket.

sary daily. You must ·.vash it '.\.scarf tucked into .:1 ueckl!n~, to keep il clean, cream it to j' may not show loo much. But 1

1

.

keep it ·moist, Rnd massage it . you can he sure that if it's lo induce circulation. crumbled it will.

fn while, he .will be smartly at· tired on a resort vacation. In town this summer. wit110ut a eh:~n~c of a sinr.lc acrcssor.l', llc'\1 i!O ~ huc.iness rorrce•!',·. I In lunch elc~anti,V. or lo dinnrr I' and rlancing hanrlsomc\y that evening,

My boy is as smart as a whip! Yes sir, a regular cl1ip oft the old block. Why, already he's saving his money so he can go to college. Tt1a!'s right. Yes sir, a chip oft the old bfock. Wouldn't be surprised if he gets to be a big star on t11e football team. He's just like the old man. Now, boy, tell 'em where you're saving your money. Speak up, boy!

&~asRNK THE BANK OF NOVA scoTIA

NEWFOUNDLAND'S OLDEST AND LARGEST &AN~

Page 7: E ACADIAN SMAL~ PONTIAC THE DAILYcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196203… · and cnnl~ins "a program for I proposals on nuclear trsts will Urn • eng ssue

proc~;s,

:<:1ck 1o bron . ~ D r~d-go!d j :o \'P110W, n61 :: ·1,·.,'" wh!:•~ ·'· ''"•

l'lore-~h~p~ II ,._,. am:Hiar ftt \'~\1 nnn't ~-~~

· ·! J·~ir to ro"Jd ··1r f~ce and ht

BOOK \NY Tl~! E & FARM

~ 3ANK IVA scoriA

~GEST B}.NIC

IE DAILY NEWS. ·ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 1962 n . . , '

7. ·":

Group High School Singing Nose.worthy-Hutchings Wedding -

:

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.. ·;{~::}

SPA:-\1:\HD'S IL\ Y-This is the "High School Singing Group" of Holy Hedeemer Sehoul, Spauiard' s Bay, who performed at the 1ehoolon Frida\' afternoon, ~larch 9, during the Education Week programme when diplomas, prizes, scholarships and awards 11·m· Jll'L'SL'lltccl. Besides Newfoundland folk songs, the _group sang a school hvmn, the \Vords and music of which were written bl'the ril'l'·pritH.:ipal in hononr of the church's 70th. anniversary on May 3, 1961.-(Photo by E. H. Vokey).

;f: ·'

':A''

' . SPANIARD'S BAY-The marriage of Violet, daughter of ~lr. and ~Irs. Holand Hutchings of Spaniard's Bay, to Seward, son of ~Irs. l\Iarv and the late James Noseworthv of Spaniard's Bay, on ~londay, l\Iarch 5, at 7.30 p.m. Obituary The Hevercnd E. \Villis officiated. -

The bride, gowned in traditional white, was given in marriage bv ~lr Barnet Noseworthy, and was attend d by her sister Gertie and by i\Irs. l\Iyra Neil, wearing gowns of pink and ice blue. Attending the groon1 were :Mr. l\Iax Menchions and ~lr. Arthur Neil.

a ~·car in Egypt with UNEr', Spaniard's Bay comm.unity of Triton whose ·success and that proceeds were When his term of three years population is about 350 souls. indeed gratifying.

The reception was held at the ::e:!sidc Heslaurant \\'here the weddin<' supper was served mid the usual toa ;ls honoured and a dance held. Th; newly weds have taken up residence at Spaniard's Bay.-(Photo by E. H. Vokey).

had expired he re-enlisted for r.L. ort Sho' ts LAC Cecil n. Peddle (24) was ~·et another three and had high. ~!Ill I killed in a motor accident at ·(Continued on page 8)

hopes of making a career with SPANIARD'S BAY - The . Camp Borden, Ontario, on Feb· the RCAF. harbour is still filled with Arc· ' ruary 27, David Brown ( 44) waB

Last June 21 he married 1\liss tic icc but there is little we can I killed by a fall from a building Lorraine St. John of Riverhead, do about that except pray for at Toronto on March 5, and Harbour Grace, and shortly I a change of wind. Freddie Hutchings ( 4) was thereafter they returned to On· Three fatal accidents in less drowned in the pond there on tario to reside. He was only than two weeks have cast a Sunday. Our deepest sympathy twenty-four when his tragic end I pall o[ gloom over the little I goes out to the bereaved fami· came I' d t th 't · . overflow congregation for the I les an o e commum Y In

His remains were flown to funeral 1\lass at St. Joheph's, general. Torbay and from there were while for the Burial on Sunday '!'he annual meeting of the

L..\.C'. conveyed to his parent's home afternoon not half of the num· congregation of Holy Redeemer C[r!L lt0:-1.\LII·I'EDDLE by the RCAF on Saturday, 1 ber who attended the funeral Church was held on Friday

Sr·\ . , . . , • I ~larch 3. His funeral, a military found even standing room with- evening, 1\larch 2, and was pre· · :\L\l:ll ~ hA \- "In the one, was held on Sunday after· in the Church of st. Anne at sided over hy the rector, the

~:dst ol.htl· we are in death" noon at 3.00. Members of the Spaniard's Bay. The large num· Rev. E. Willis. The church offi· •rc la~nu,ar ''Nlb. to all Chris· Spani~rd's Ba~· branch of the bcrs of wreaths, telegrams, 1 ccrs of last y_car ~verc re-elected ':1" peop.e IJ11t ll 1' only when 1 Canad1an Legion acted as pall Mass cards, sYmpathy cards and and the pansh 1s found to be !ldden b::e,,·,,·mcnt occurs I bearers, and there was a guard letters testify to the esteem in in a f_airly healthy state !inan· that ~e rea•:ze ''h~t they mean I of honour from the UCAF at which Cecil was and his family cial!y . ~~ us .. Such .''a; the case on I Tor bay under the command of! held. There was a message from The lay-off at Wabana mines e~ne,da): l·cl>ruary 29, when Flying Officer Kelly. A· co· I Jllost Rev: O'Riclly, Bishop of has had its effect on the "main·

~e115 rcwl~d \lr. and Mrs. ; worker and close friend, whose · St. George's, Spiritual Boquets landers", i.e. men from Concep· 1.~rence Pcl~·Hc of Tilton, i name was Kelly also, nccom· from the Children of Mary and tion Bay who commute to and

!l,ro~fuiJ;· dc:llwcd by their 1 panied the remains from On· the Dominic Savios at Stephen· from the Island. All .three from t~~ C p.r;t·l. that their son, tario. The Office for the Burial ville Crossing, flowers from co· Spaniard's Bay have been noli· b;en c.u lt.'n~ld :~eddie, had of the Dead was read by the workers at Camp Borden and a fied of their termination of em· lut a~udcu,al·'' killed. m an Rev. John W. Peddle, curate of telegram from the wife of his ployment, at Tilton only one 1, omo '11c at•·ulL•nt wlulc rc·l Stephcn\'illc Crossing, the de· buddy who was killed In the out of three has a job at the B~:~n~ !ron~ work at C;1~p ceased's brother, assisted by same accident. People every. mines, while at Upper Island, be[ 011 • Ont,no, the c\'enmg I Rt. Rev. 1\Isgr, J. O'Brien, Rcc· where were kind. where nearly fifty miners lived

co:\ P , tor of the Co-Cathedra!, at liar· 1\Iourning their tragic bereave. only nine remain employed. fme•~ 1 . cdd1t 11'as one of the , bour Grace. Present in the san· ment beside his wife, are his This is a severe blow to the last · ~at~herung. men we have : ctuary were the Rt. Rev. l\lsgr. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence named community. l\lany of not gro11 np, and we were I J. W. Peddle, of Carbonear, and Peddle, nine brothers the Rev those laid off had forty years RC;~1? 11;.cri that he joined the the Rev. W.Shallow of Harbour John W. Peddle, curate at Step: of service with the company. h · m. ;;~,ember, 1057, when • Grace. The committal prayers henville Crossing Raymond · e was JU ·t · 1 ' • one or h '_ nmetecn. Ile was at the graveside were also read with the RCAF In England An· The schools in the five parish.

to d t. 0'e iloys who wanted 1 by Fr. John Peddle. • drew at Seven Islands, Fr;ncis, es of Port de Grave, South ordi~asometh:ng more than the I On 1\londay morning at 9.30 Jerome,. Clarence, Kevin, Terry River, Bay Roberts, Spaniard's th3l rty and an organization , Solem High !\I ass of ·Requiem and Wallace at home, three sis· Bay, and Upper Island Cove

' rcs•e' ca f I l · · I f d di;cipi· · · rc u rmm.ng, 1 was o fcrc. at St. Joseph's tcrs, Veronica (1\lrs. Donald held a tag day in aid of the ing,

110e _and char?ctcr bu1l~· Church, R1verhend, with the Lunn) at Feymount, Ontario, new Anglican Regional High

his ba~fe.Je;~ to" h1m. He d1d celebrant _being Rev. John :v. Lor~tta, teaching at Tilton, and School on Thursday, March B. Q'ebe C tr.m,n. at St. John, Peddle, w1th !IIsgr. J. O'Bnen Regma at home. · Reports indicate that the high Or.tart and at _Camp Bardon, as deacon and Rev. Fr. Shallow I "1\Iay his soul through the I school students who ·sold the .__~-~~~~·rquently spent· as sub-deacon. There was an mercy of God rest lin peace." tags met with considerable

Musical Progr3rmme

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SPAN , · · · ·. · ' Audit~~IIDS BAY-The music pupils of Mrs. Allan Hutchings p~t on a'musical programme 'in. the twos t"J? of Holy Redeemer School here on the_ ~'vening of Monday, March 4, All pupils played ing p~ ~chons each on the piano and several of them formed groups to render choral music. Those tak­Finn, ~~ '~ire: D~nna Murrin, Karen Smith, Susie :ollins, Karen Gosse, Marily Smith, Bernadette David G art yn Smtth, Bettf Chipman, Sadie Mercer,. Daphne Mercer, Bruce Sheppard, Hobin Gmse,

osse. Procee~ o the evening went to the new Regional High School.-(Photo by E. H. Vokey)

Eight Young Speakers j ;

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SPANIARD'S BAY-As part of the Education Week programme, two pupils from each of grades VIII, IX, X and XI, were selected to prepare and deliver speeches on assigned topics. Those taking part were (Front) Sylvia Sheppard, Evelyn Neil, Kevin Neil, Jackie Pauls and (back row) Linda George, Calvin Barrett, Lloyd Chipman ana Betty Reid. Judges ,were the Rev'd E. Willis, i\Ir. 0. Lawrence and l\·lr. · W. Rice, who commended all eight for excellent efforts. Winners were Betty Reid (XI) who spoke on "Being a Teenager in the Sixties",· and Lloyd Chipman whose topic was "Why I should Stay in School".-(Photo by E. H. Vokey), )

SPANIARD'S BAY-Mr. C. Hatcher, Principal of "Queen Elizabeth" Regionat High School at Foxtrap, was the special speaker at the prize giving programme of Holy Hedeemer. School. ~1r. Hatcher, who was for ~hree years (54-57) Principal of Holy Redeemer School, spoke chiefly on the function of a~d the great need for regional high scliools. Also seen !n the picture are Mr. 0. Lawrence, area schopl supervisor, and Mr. W. Hedderson, Principal of the school, and some of the fourteen members of the ~eachirig strff.-(Photo by E. H. Vokey). .

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.Obituary

DAVID BROWN

SPANIARD'S BAY -For the , 1econd times in less than a ll'cek the small community of Tilton was shocked to hear of 1nother tragic death at Toronto ~f a former resident, for on

o::. •.

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. WEDNESDAY, ~!ARCH 14, 1962 . 1 Mbnday, March .$, the Rev. E. dr~ds of friends came to ex·

1 , 1 (2nd.) Claudine Hutchings. I I Willis had to convey the sad press their sympathy personally. IT-:'strrbution os PlrZ lls I Grade X-(lst.) Calvin Bar-

Il tidings to Mr. and Mrs. Edward and the chapel of McDougall I' I f ~ I · " II ' ret!, (2nd,) James H. Gosse. ·Brown that their elder son and Brown on Danforth Avenue · 1

· · Grade Xl-(lst) Clarice Bar-David, 44, had been accidentally was filled for the funeral ser· nll"plo' mas And Scholarshl"ps rett, (2nd.D)IJPaLnOe~lvASokey .

. killed while working as a car- 1•ices conducted according to " penter on the new Acroquay the Anglican Rite by the Rev. · Honours Matriculation ( ip terminal at Toronto·lnternation- Johnson. The L.O.A., of which PRIZE LIST order of merit) Clarice Barrett, at airport al Malton. The un- the deceased was a member, ·SPANIARD'S BAY - The Kindergarten :-Ost.) Augus· Janet ·Vokey, Edward· Neil. fortunate victim fell to his was present and their burial programme of Distribution of tus Gosse. Sharon Hedderson; Matriculation (alphabetical ! , . . i · death from a height of more ritual was read by 'officers of a Prizes,· Diplomas' and Scholar- (2nd.) Donna Murrin, Dapbne order) Verna Bishop, Frances i ~a~h weekday_ ~urm_g Le?t ~ pr?m nen~ Amen. than thirty feet. He was pulling . Toronto lodge, Burial took ships of Holy 'Redeemer High Gosse. Hutchings, Marion Hutchings. can mv1tes you to ]Om w1th ium m h1s favonte pra). a plastic sheet over steel frame- place on the afternoon of March School was held on Friday Grade 1. - (1st.) Norma ~rade XI Certificate (alpha ed. Today, join with: · work when a rope attached to 8 and interment was in Rest afternoon, March 9, at 3.00. Clarke, John Dyke; (2nd.) Roy helical order) James Crane, CLIFFORD p. CASE the sheet broke and he lost his Haven cemetery. Chairman was the principal of 1 Gosse, Wade Barrett. Ca~vin Gosse, Josiah Gosse, Senator from· New Jersey footing. the school, Br. W. Hedderson. Grade II - (1st.) Jeanette Shtrley Gosse, Leander Greeley, ·

D 'd B 11 d Besides his family in Toronto, 1'h H'nh s 1 1 s· · G K G (2 d) · nv1 rown was we an h . d b h e 1., c 100 mgmg ossc, aren ossc; n . .1

MarJorie E. Mercer, Olga Smith, 1 "I ord make me an instrument 0 [ your )Jc favourably known hct·e. He e IS mourne Y is. elderly Group opened the programme Dawn lleddcrson, Lois Gosse. Marion Snow Gordon Vokcy • ' ' .' · a(~ married Marie Neil of' Span· parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward with the Ode to Newfoundland Grade I!I - (1st.) Martha Grade X Certificates - Cal· wh~rc thm·e IS hatred, let me sow love; where there lard's Bay in 1944 ami they Brown o£ Tilton, one brother, 1 after which the principal intra: Vokey, Claude. Neil; (2nd.) phabetical order) Calvin 1'. Bar. :is injury, IJar<lon; where there is doubt, faW1: where ha\'c fiv~ children, Patricia, William. E. (~rchiec() a_L lllount rlueed the guest speaker, Mr. C. Jeanette Vokey, Linda Nose· rett, Enid F. Barrett, Elsie I:,, . there is despair, hope; whet•e there is dark1·;·s>. li•ht David, Elaine, Donald and Pearl, five sisters, Sad1e <Mrs. Hatcher, principal o£ the Re· worthy. . . Clarke, James H .. Gosse. Hun· . and where there is sadness, joy. ' William. He worked in Toronto Ed Smith) a~ Tilton, Clarice gional High School at lloxtrap, Grade IV-( !st.) Etamc Ne!l 1 ter R. Gosse, 1\lclvm L. Mercer, "O Dh·inc Masl·r rrrant that I may not Sl h · for quite a n~unber o£ years but (Mrs. John Highmore) at Bell who spoke on present trends in (2nd.) Wayne Gosse. ! Allan w. Neil, Josejih Nose· " • " · · 1 IIJUc eight years ago he took his lsl~nd, Daphne. (~.Irs.' Azar!ah t education with emphasis on the Grade V.-(lst.) Goldie Bar-' worthy. Elizabeth M. Reid,' seck to be consoled a~. to console; to he undcrstofll! family there to reside pcrmant- Smith) at sr,a•:lard ~:Bay, ~!lid-/ need for and the role of the retl, (2nd) Shirley Jewer. I Gordon W. Smith, Clayton M. as to understand; to be loved a:; to love; for it is in h'. He was an excellent worker red (Mrs. \1 llham Pike) at Tor· ! regional high school. 1'hen fol· 1 Grade VI-( 1st.) Glenn is B~r-

1 Vokey. · t giving that we rer.:ive; it is in pardonin~ t'1at .

and skilled at his trade. That .onto, and Irene (l\lrs. Lcshc ·lowed Newfoundland folk retl, (~nd l Lorraine Ne I G d IX c t·r· · 111 ll. 1 ) 11 1 d 1 . . ~. ·. 1 ' 1' ra e er 1 lcate5 (m arc pardoned, anrl it is it1 rlvin.," that we arc hor1 1 he had hosts of friends is evi· If: !more at Be Is ~n · To Songs by the High School Sing· W1lham Snuth. alphabetical order) ,Joyce Chip· • . , J 1 o

denced by the fact that the them all we offer heartiest sym-/ ing Group and this performance Grade VII - (Is(). William I man, Lloyd Chipman, William :eternal hfc. Amen. ( SL Francis' P1·a)'~tl mortuary chapel where his re- pathy. ' was warmly received and Chipman, (2nd.) l\1 i I d red Chipman, Maxwell Bishop, ;

mains rested was filled with "Rest eternal grant him, .O thoroughly enjoyed. The prizes Clarke. James Dwyer, Rosella Drover. : flowers and there was an ex· Lord, and may light perpetual were then presented by the ?rade Vlll-Ost.) Raymond Wilfred Drover, Absalom . -Distributed, throuo·h the co-operation of The L,. ccedingly large number or tele· shine upon him." vice-principal and the diplomas Chtpman, (2nd.) Evely~ Neil_. Gosse, Claudine Hutchings, • men's Nationaf Co~mittee. by Newspaper ·E. a... .

.grams, letters and cards. Hun- by the principal. Grade IX- (1st.) Dav1d Ne1l, George Janes, . Mervin Janes, ; E . . , A.. · · liter. , David Neil, Shirley Neil, Wil· , nte1 pnse ssn. liam Peddle, Annie Porter, ----

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Rosalind Reid, Abraham Shep­pard Sylvia Sheppard, Doreen Smith, Keith Vokey, Robert Vokey,

SCHOLARSHIPS Confederation, Grade X-Cal- !

vin T. Barrett, James H. Gosse, : Allan W. Neil. (The certificates 1

!or these were presented by Mr. : 0. Lawrence, area supervisor). 1

"No Surrender" L.O.L. -won : by David Neil (IX), James H. i Gosse (X) and Calvin Gosse ! (Xf), and presented hy Mr. :

, Llewell~·n .. Tones and Mr. Clif- · ford Braz1l on behalr of the :

: Lod;:c.) 1 :\lark Go.~se & Son~ Lirni!rd-­. II'On by Calvin Bi1l'rctt t:\J ann : C!arire B?.rrctl (XI) and pre· ' senterl by Mr. Mark Goss~. I Director of the firm.

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NEWFOUND!./\hiD'S FRIENDLY THEATRE

TO-MORROW Is she a sinner • •• or a

realist In love?

. I i After a vote of thank~ han . 1

been proposed to the guest · : speaker and to all who had

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0 Low initial price II Outstanding economy D Four series-three sedans and a wagon D High-fashion standout styling 11 Widest range of colors and combinations D Interior hold's up to six adults D Upholstery· in luxurious leather, Vynide, Tygan·Rayon D Foam· rubber seat padding D Directional signal lights and sun shade IIi] Easy-to-read instrument panel m Four big doors m Push·button door handles ID Big trunk-more than 21 cubic feet l9 Electric windshield wipers IL) One-key convenience II1J Heater-defroster designed for Canadian needs m Econo-Power four-cylinder engine has more ~~go" IIlJ Nimble-size exterior G] Uniseal all-welded body fiil Double anti-rust treatment fD Independent front suspension fB New, out-of·parallel rear spring mounting· 6] Synchro·Ease transmi'ssion fD Easi-Guide steering gives you sure road feel SJ Safety-Touch brakes m Steering column gearshift standard (sporty floor shift four·forward·speed transmission an optional extra) flJ Big safety glass areas al! 'round flil Overlapping tandem-action windshield wipers m 12-volt electrical system iill Hydraulically·assisted clutch EIJ-'Improved·crankcase venti· lation el Economical down·draft carburetor DJ F.uel tank holds 300 pJJl.S. miles of.motoring OJ Tubeless tires IPJ Spare wheel stows conveniently out of the way im Parts and service readily available from coast to coastiD General Motors value and craftsmanship througl:wut

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Envoy Custom Sedan

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Whitewall tires optfonal a! extra cost

Manufactured for.General Motors Products of Canada, llmlted, by Vauxhall Motors, limited, Luton, England Be sure lo see Bonanza on thli CBC-TV nelworh each Sunday. Chech your /ocal/isling for channel and time

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LIMITED· I · : ·.·.·· \':· WATER STREET, ST.· JOHN1S, PHONE 8-5047; CLARENVILLE; BURIN; GANDER; SPANIARD'S BAY

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I helped the school in an,·wa,v, the High School Singing re- . turned to sing the scl1oo! h,·mn, · and which, by the way, ·was • sung for the first time, the ·

1 words of ll'hich.ue:

We who ue :;oung in years today,

Our hearts and voices raise To sing with joy and thankful­

ness Our Holy Jtrdecmer's praise.

Chorus: Holy Redeemer! Holy Redeem-

er! · We love to sing Thy praise;

Holy Redeemer! Holy Redeem­er!

We laud Thy Name ~!ways. ,

Our G1Me through childhood's fleeting hours.

And in our youthful clays, Will help u~ all our lives to

sing Our Holy Redeell)cr's praise. !

The pat tern Thou has set for us,

To mold our thought~ and ways,

11· Will le~d us on to nobler derds

For our Hoty Redeemer's , praise. i

Ghost Town I

MELBOURNE IRe 11 I e r >' , I -Radium Hill, A produtt or ! Australia's atomic boom, has become n ghost town.

The uranium mine at R~dium Hill boomed for nine year~ 1ml yielded more than £13,000.000 in exports.

But last October the Soath Aush·alian gol'ernment decided to close down the Radium Hill mine and plant. '!'bis meant the smal! town, built out of the desert 250 miles northeast or Adelaide, also was doomed.

By early December, the small community 'had emptied its stores and dwellings and most o£ the town's 1,000 residents had left.

The Radium Hill deposits were discovered early in the century 1by a prospecting miner . who thought that he had found rich tin resources. The ,Jre, however. turned out to be uranium. ATOM BOMB I

It was mined intermittent.ly until the 1930s. Then came the war and the' atom bomb-and n great demand · for uranium.

The Australian . governme~t. at the request of Britain. began large-scale production at Ra­dium Hill in 1944. The town flourished for years until a government committee found the world market for uranium had dropped and recommended Radium Hill be closed down.

Australia has other. richer uranium deposits elsewhere.

Optimism at the height of the boom created a swimming pool, an 18 • hole golf course, two schools, a hotel, tennis courts, a drive-in movie, a rifle range, bars and modern, tree-sheltered houses at Radium Hill. -' ·

FORCES REDUCED FOLKESTONE, E n g 1 a 11 d

!Reutersl-The Atlantic passen­ger steamship Conference · w1ll introduce group fares during the off-peak season, it was an· nounce6 here Monday, Effec­tive Aug. 16 this year for cast­bound passengers and Oct. 25 for westbound passengers, pas­sengers travelling in groups ~r 25 or more will be granted a reduction or 25 per cent.

slmlnc Patrick O'Neal • Mogens Wieth [·1a Dahlbeck • Maj·Britt Nilsson

lbJitt .. l"r-i l.i~tmoUC m1m __

Special Added Attraction The Picture That Gel!

To The Bottom OfToir9;!

TIMES Of SHOWS.

E\'1::\1\C:-"A \1:\TTEH OF .\IOH\I~ .. -fi.30 - 9.20.

"\f.\HY IIAD :\ LlTTLE"- R Cl'CLCH 1\ \IATll'IEE:-1.30

LAST TIMES TODAY "PARIS BLUES"

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\ RICH.I.IUI ClORGI LUANA ARJHUit

. BOONE· HAMILTON· PATTEN· O'CONNEU In ClnomaScopo and METROCOLOR

TIMES OF SHOW~

JWENING SHOWS: 7 O'CLOCK - 9.00 MATINEE: 2 P.M.

NEXT ATTRACTION ELVIS PRESLEY in "BLu'E HAWAII" with JOAN BLACKMAN - MUSIC - SONGS "" TECHNICOLOR.

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Purpose oJ to elect a ne1 for the curn St. John's f Mr. Miller

Comm E. Good

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Page 9: E ACADIAN SMAL~ PONTIAC THE DAILYcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196203… · and cnnl~ins "a program for I proposals on nuclear trsts will Urn • eng ssue

Amen. e Pray •.

11racc; ·e th~re : whl·rc ''• li~;ht:

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NFLD. WEDNESDAY; ~!'ARCH 14 1962

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The recent snow storm at Gander brought record snowfalls and scenes like this were quite common. In many cases people had to get out of their houses through the windows.-(Staff Photo).

\.O.T.S. Chartrr night was highlighted by a dinner with members from various clubs in \r11·i1n11 Hiland in attendance. Above is a scene of the dinner held in the Church Hall, Bruchen

-------------- ----------------------ch b C snow; and to ensure that the ! started. 1 from 5 to 10 years, and su~h am er om. rights of the local radio station~ :Mr. Weidmark mentioned the I business such as manufactunng;

DI•S t•fl"ed Wl•th. are protected with respect to 1 !act that :llr. W. S. Perlin had' processing; tourist establish· sa I more powerful stations being I been re~cntly appointed as the ' ments; wholesale; retail and the

F · •1•t• t 'P k I erected in the area. ' Newfoundland director and tlrat 1 profession are eligible for loans. acl I leS a ar I Mr. Norman Weidmark of the l their office at 8~ Elizabeth! ~ollowing his addrc.ss l!r.

-- Natwnal ll!anagement B:mk was 1 Avenue in St. John's welcomes: Wetdmark showed a ftlm en· GANDER - The Gander : mtroduced by Mr. Joe Good· 1 all enquiries !or loans for set· , tilled "The inrlcpcndan~e of I Chamber of Commerce are not : rear, Vice President of the I ling up new business firms in ' Dave Eames,'' after which a

satisfied with the recreational i Gander C. of C. 1\lr. Weidmarl; Newfoundland. The l.D.B. was question and answer pcrio~ facilities at the Terr~ Nova . gave an interesting address on established by an Act of Parlin- took place. The evenmgs ac!JI'l· National Park. At a dinner \ loans to small businesses and mcnt in 1944 as a subsidiary to tics were concluded .by dancin:::

I meeting held on Tuesday even· : illustrated how the I.D.B. can the Balik of Canada. The I.D.B. I to an orchestra provtded by the ing at Hotel Gander, with Mr. I assist business men in getting loan has a pay. back time of l C. of C. Norman Weidmark as gu~st I speaker, Mr. Ted .Henley, said •

Si.l inches of snow fell on Gander dming Feb mary establishing a new· record. The previous record for a 25 year period was 65.2 inches establish­tel in ~larch of 1962. The previous record for February. was 52.5 inches,

that representation had been made to 1\lr, Walter Dinsdale to have swimming and golf faci· litics added to the Park. ll!r. Henley, President of the Gan· der C. of C. also said that the C. of C. had been active in pressing for a 6 day shoppinL( week for Gander.

The Town Council have been asked to provide free land and special tax privileges to en· courage the efitablis.hment of new businesses, and apparently the Town Council is in favor of the suggestion. :

Among other projects of the I Chamber is to have the Tourist Board place one to two tuna fishing boats in Alexander Bay; Railway machine shops in Gan· der; Ensure that the Gander Bay Road . is kept clear of

spiritual life of men, and to develop an effective programme of Christian service. Many Clubs are doing this effectively but none would say that they the vear 1942.-(Staff Photo). ·---------- are doing the job they should

Gander A 0 T S a sing·song. . \be doing. No Club has all tlte • • • • FoiJowing is the charter mght secrets of successful operation

Cl b HoldS address giv~n by illr. P~ckford since all Clubs consist of men U i of t.he Lew1sporte Club. " , like you and I with our short-

ch t ~~· ht I First of all I a~ most ha p} comings and our excuses when a r er ·I~ 19 to bring )'OU grectmgs from all 1 a real challenge presents itself. GANDER - Fraser Road the members of your sponsor· 1 However let us never be •c­

United Church Men's Club re· i ing Club at Lewisporte. We. are cused or' not trying. This Club, ceived It's charter on \Yednes·l most happy that y~u sa~ fit to my Club or no other Club is an day evening in an impressive , b'ecome, one of us 111 . th~s great end in itself. Rather it is a ceremony conducted.by officials )layman s effort w1thm the means. of the Lewisporte Club and the I Church. First we must interest men. District Council. You are now ~ne of over 600 : Men who might not approach

The evenings activities were I such Clubs. It 15 a long way the Church through the front pre~eded by a dinner sel'Ved by I to Vancouver from Newfound· door. Men who think the walls the U.C. Women after which. land and Bermuda, yet all would fall down if they enter­the men from the Botwood, ' acr~~s the country men. ~re ed. Men who might ,not know Lew!sporte, Windsor ··and Gan·l strlVlng . to promote Chnshan what to· do in the Church. We der Clubs joined together for I Fellowship, to deepen the interest these men. Most of

given in the press. The next meeting of the

branch is scheduled for Mon· day, !llarch HJ.

PARH.OTT a regular Daily News carrier A REVIEW Gander. Wilfred is 11 years old and attends I The Be!l Island Branch of

A ] II l f ll . the Canachan Red Cross was rae enl\', · e serves t 1e o owmg sh·eets: 1 sponsored originally by the

Road; Bishop Street; Brochen Avenue; Hawk- Bell Island ~iwanis Club, and Arenue and Balbo Street. \Vilfred lives at 23 came into bemg on June 21st,

\ . 1951, when the charter was pre-

. 1 renue and IS a fine hockey and baseball sented b~· 111r. L. A. Harnum, · Red hair and freckles are his trade-marks. Newfoundland Commissioner

Island Canadian Red Cross at that time.

'fhe first executive consisted or the fol!uwing: President, Dr. G. A_ i>awe; Vice.President,

A reel' 1\lrs. A. R. Proudfoot; Secre· lng of the Bell Island I Mr. Willard Pitts (Bell Island). tary, Mrs. Mnry•Powcr; Treasu· or the Canadian Red 1 Civilian Welfare Chairman, rer, Mr F. A. Newhook; Execu·

Rwa; held in the .Legion Mrs. llaisie Parsons( Fresh· tive coiumittce, Miss Jean Gay, 29 ooms on ~tonday, Janu· water). ' Mr. Addislln Bown, Mr. Stephen

• 1962. Campaign Chairman, Mn. · purp0 1 h' A, Neary, Mrs. R1ta Stares, I se o t ts meeting Pet~r Pitts R N d u F d R R N n elc~t a 1 . . an mrs. re osc, . .. lor th new sta f or ofli· Disaster Chairman, Mr. Felix Since. its inception the corn-S c current Year. liere Dawson. munity ha> benefited greatly 1:· J~hn's lo the occasion Disaster Committee, Messrs. from the activities o£ the.local · rd .. t~llcr ~wing, New. l\lax Boone, James Lahey, Ber· Branch a few, among many of

lommtssioner and nard Stoyles, Arthur Proud· which are a Well Baby Clinic E. Good an executive loot 1 · 2 · . . . conducted annual y st nee 195

~xccuttl'e Comm1ttee, Mrs. ·by local doctors and. nurses; Rc~d Proudfoot, Mrs. Douglas Home Nursing Classes of Worn· Neil. , . , en and. a Disaster Service

Public RelatiOns, Mr. Max which rentlers. ··prompt emer· Stares. . gency assistance to fire .suffer-

'I_'he regular monthly meeting ers: carri~s on Wmhen's Wor~ ~Inch was to have taken place such as knitting and sewing, m the Town Hall on F~bruary lends out hospital. beds, wheel ~B. was postponed owmg to chairs, crutches, etc., from mclement weather and heir! its sick Room Supply Loan March 1. However on this Cupbo·ard and makes regular date the weather was still far collections of magazines which from good and. only a small are forwarded to the St. John's· number were m attend.ance. hcndqm~rters for distribution

Mrs. Georgina :Mr. Dawson, the Disaster· among patients in hospital. Chairman, reported that there The following have directed

1t!rs. Helen Cox· were eleven fires during the the affairs of the Branch, In the month. of Jan.uary and Febru· capacity of President, since its ary, As P.rev!ously announced formalion: 1951 Dr. G, A. Dawe; by. the Dommlon . Volunteer 1952 Mr. Addison Bown· 1953 Fire' Brlg~de, this wa~ an til Dr. Wali~r Templeman;' 19S4 time record. Ten fa~!hes were Mr. · Cyril Moakler: 1955·56 rendered a8sistance. Mrs. '!'tlary Pot..ler; 1957·5B Dr.

Elearior Due to the pending lny.orf of G. A. Buckingham; 1962 Mrs. some 700 Dosco workers, it Mary Power. Was decided to postpone this -------

Gov~rnmcnts or 59 countries in the worfr! maintain health

STEAMSHIP MOVEMENTS

NFLlJ. CANADA STEAM· M.V. Fauvette sailing from

Halifax March 13th, due St. John's March 15th.

"Refrigeration available.

FURNESS, WITHY'& CO., LTD. Munche>ter Port due St.

,John's Jl!:,rch ti, Lea1•ing for Jlalifaf and Boston March 7, due Hali[ax March 9 and Bos· ton March 14. Leaving Boston March 16. due Halifax March 17. Sailing for Liverpool from Halifax Murch 20, omits call to St. John's,

Newfoundland leaving Liver· pool Mnrch 14, due St. John's March 20. Leaving for Halifax and Boston March 2I, due Hali· fnx March 23 and Boston March 2B. Leaving Boston March 30 and Halifax April 4, due St. John's April 6 .. Sailing again same day for Liverpool.

Manchester Faith leaving J,iverpool March 28, due St. John's April 4. Leaving for Halifax and Boston April 5, due Halifax April 7 and Boston April 12. Reverts to Manches· ter Lines after Boston.

Nova Scotia leaving Liverpool' April 11, due- St. John's April lB. Leaving for Halifax and Boston April 111, due Halilax April 21 and Boston April 26. Leaving Boston April 27 and Halifax 11I11y 1, due St. John's :May 3, Sailing again same day for Liverpool. ATLANTIC MARITIMES LINE,

LIMITED M.V. 'Aalesund leaving New

York March 13th, arriving St. John's March lOth, leaving St. John's March 20 for New York.

The Lincoln penny was the lirst U.S. coin of ·a regular series to carry the likeness of an actual individual. ·

\ year's dr~ve for funds which was to hal'e taken place during the month o£ March to a later date. Notice of which· will be

and maternity insurance pro·, 'I'he Lincoln penny first was grams. · produced in 19U9.

these men are pretty good with a knife and fork, are able to· listen to a speaker or probably take part in a discussion and are willing to come. Having in­terested them we try to make them understand that the Church is available to them. Then by example, by prayer, by brotherhood, by our acts we try not to make just the Church available' to them, but to make God available to them. And then, if We are really ·doing our job, we don't' end there , •.. we try to reverse the proccd ure and to make the men available to GOd. And if God, in his wis· dom and the Church in its neeps, makes demands upon them so that they may not be as active club men as they were last year, this is not failure, this is success. · ·

Many of you·wilf say that this is a tall order. But ·.it is the sort of challenge l spok~ about earlier. Someone said' riot ·long· ago 'that the strides fonvard which the Christian Church will make in this half of the twen· tieth century will de'pend ili great measure upon the. efforts which laY-man will puf·into the life and ~ork ·of th.e Church.,

We can padille around ·the edges and get up, to our waists and have quite a gaod.time, but until we are wiiling to go over. our head and not have any re· servations, and strike out in confidence, will we really know the full benefit that can come. from total effort. At that time not only will we do the things we ought to do, but we will not. leave undone ·'the things we ought to ·have done. Then we will be truly .in· our Clubs, in our homes, and in our Christian lives . "As One That Serves'. What an appropriate place for this to happen at. "The Cross­roads of the World". In all your efforts we would wish you well and would ask you to remember .that if at any time we can be of assistance we are as near as your telephone.

now is the time to start your CanadaLife"Opportunity Fund" So you can have thaV'dream" raeation-so you can feel as if you are contributing to the partnership when you get married-so you can have a "nest egg" for an emergency or your own private month,ly income later on-so you can have ready money for a special trip or special training. •

There are so many saving, sensible reasons why. you should start your Cana?a Life "Opportunity Fund" Policy now. So go ahead-ask your Canada Life representative for all the details.

PotJC91 A' /2 . ----------1(!;7:\ 'Tt"tssumnco vomp~ •

NEWFOUNDLAND BRANCH

130 \Vater Street,

St. John's

D. W. MacPherson, C.L.U. R. C. ~tead

. B. 1: Fagan D. R. Barrett A. Miller P. A. Lundrigan R. Windsor Fmnk Pearce Fred R. Earle J. J. F'el tharn

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Page 10: E ACADIAN SMAL~ PONTIAC THE DAILYcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196203… · and cnnl~ins "a program for I proposals on nuclear trsts will Urn • eng ssue

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THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 1962

k Inter-Company ~ivil Service Hoc ey . • } c.L.B. Basketball

C bot In Flna S "C'' Company took a share of .. : a. • . . first place Thursday night as \hey handed Foxtrap their first

CNR Tl. e s·emt· s ~:~e:t :,~ ~;.~o;~a~f 1~5-rheof,~~i hnlf. "C" Company were never headed, as they survived a six

Fl point by Foxtrap in the third Two overtime goals by '::~n· Ivany and Baker. Dave em· quarter, to take the win. Pete

ham cartc1• gave CNR u 5·3 VIC· lng scored his second at 13.15 Chalker was the high man for· tory over Buckmastcrs und e~cn- on a play with his dad, Charlie, · "C" Company with a seven cd their hest or three sem!-£mal and Les Butler. ' Blll Peach point output. Paul Facey also series at one game apiece. kept his team within striking looked quite good as he scored

In the £irst game Cabot earn~d distance scoring ten seconds four points and continuouslY the right to meet Fisheries m later unassisted. carried the "C" Company rush· Section "B" finals as they dump· Two quick goals wrapped the cs. D .. Taylor gained five points cd 'frensury 8·5 to take the semis game up for Cabot. Eastman !or the losers and R. French in two straight. Fisheries cnt~r· scored at 2.35 and Ryan scored was most impressive on defence. cd the finals by taking two his second at 4.10 and his third Twelve fouls were called, five straight from Highways. Wally. Lawrence rounded out to r'oxtrnp. Only two figured

Mental arc in Section "A'' liu- the scoring in the game scar· in the scoring, one to each a'!s, dumping RCMP twice they inc two goals in five seconds. team. now await the outcome o£ the IIIs first at 13.20 and his second Next game tomorrow night, CNR-Buckmustcr's gamt to br. at 13.25. Cadet Company and st. illic· playecl Thursday night. The CNR· CNR vs UUCKS h Bucks series is the only one of B'tl! Wells started CNR on the hael's at 9.30 p.m. Bot . arc · 't · k tied in second place with a one the four semi-!innls t!wt wusn r'tSitt track scoring two qu1c · 1 · h c and one record. taken in two s t•mg I g;1mes. goals. !·It's first at .55 from ar·

b. · Sl. 1\tichael's Compan)' had , Bill Ryan was the tg gun 1or tcr and his second at 4.55 !rom

C<ibot lust night as he netted a Bob llollcll. Ron Brocklehurst little trouble pushinr: h~ck the I 1 l I · k 1 ·1 D Flctttt'n" 5 Cadet Com11an.v Friday ni~ht as

1

m l'tc ·. II' H c a\'e ' . " Cltt the lead in hal! at 7.1 I G " !'•slnl't •deled ., they romped lo a 33-11 triumph

~m cor ~c ~~· • n. " • scorin!l on a pass from Murray ht1rncct

1cach. .khn.1 Wh1ltcn mld~d C!tapll'n, Team captain C. Walsh In the C.L.B. Intcr·C:ompuny

c Basketball. After a c•losc first I 1 ~\-~ll~c 1·L~;~.';.~n~c scot·cd n lnt 1 tied it at 3·20 of the ~ccond half, with St. ~lichacl's hal'in~ \

t'+·k: fo1• T1·casuru ·in a los!".;" scoring unassisted Wllh a a two point lead, th_cv. op. cnrd I ' ' ' ' ~ bl I' I I Tom Conway cause, two of his mnrl;crs came uc ~tc 1

51~30 1 th third to up and scored 25 pomts ;n the wilhin the span o[ £ive seconds. score a '· 0 . c last half to tnl:e the win. Allen I Bill Dailon and nil! Peach added give the Bucks then· only lead Rex was again the big scorer fhc others. o{ the game. with 16 points to his Cl'e\li:. Hon

Bill Wells scored two qnid; Bill Conker, p!n)'ing a strong Hockwoocl had only four to p~cc goals to gil'e CNR a 111'0 goal game for CNR, had his ha;·d the cadet scorers. lead. Bill Conker got the goal worlt payof£ at 13:10 of the thn·d The game was a one-sided to send it into Ol'ertime :md as he stole the puclt. in Buc!;s affair and the cadets were never Graham Carter scored the :wo territory while his team was a really a threat. bi" market's, 1 k · ' 1 · ,.. man shy, to slnp t }C puc m.o The win put St. Mic tael's tn

Hon Brocklehurst. Cy \\'nlsh lhe net. a first place tic with Foxlrap and Tom Conwa" scored single ·' and "C" Company, the three markers for Buckmnsters. Grahum Carter was the he;·o

Ron Brocklehurst, Cy Wn!sn in the overtime, scoring the win· teams having a 2 win, 1 loss and 'fom Conway scored single ncr at 4:00 after taking n ~ass record. The Cadets arc now 1 inarkcrs !or Buckmaslcrs. [rom Bob llo!!ctl. Tltrce mmu- win and 2 losses, with ":\"

TREASURY vs, CABOT lcs Iuter he broke in nil alone Company without a win in their Dalton ga\'c Treasury their to put tltc game on icc for the two outings. ·

onh- lead of the game, scot·ing rallwaymcn. Next game is on Thursday, COLLEN FOR A DAY

PeeWee Round By WILSON BUTLER 1 Sterlings, at 4.55 p.tn .

. , I vs. Victor)'; at 5.30 p.m As a result of a 3·1 de.cnt nificcnt vs. York, and at

at the hands of the celler dwell- p.m .. its Cnrlbou vs. , ing Cansos Liberat~rs for t~e 'fhnrsday

, !irot time since thmr entry_ Ill 4.15-l'l_uaners vs. Inhnt A i r for ~ c competitlon fmd 4.55-Signallers ,.,_ B!;~\ themselves unable to reach a Walch playoH berth, they st~nd fifth 5.30-Vunl:Uard H. Tiocd in the division stnndtn~s and 6.00-Ncl;on \'S. Briton ha\'C only 10 points and three I' Friday ~amts to pin)', the last r!a~off 4.15-North Star; V!,

1 spot is being held by S;ntflrcs er4 who have 17 point~. In tile only 15.(:0--Commanuocs r:. oth~r gnm.· pl~l·cd :;estcrdar w~tch afternoon Sappers ln n battle I 5.30-Rangt•rs vs. Ea,le; for the ~emis tool\ :td•:antagc Saturday of Commandoe~· penalties to 8.00-Victc;•y n. llaron come Ir0:n hr. hind and 1;os~d 8.40-Yor!: vs. \' out the ckfcmling champs ~-l. !l.ZO-!.ibcrt.tors l'i.

Clar Bar• lin~ was th!! big man 5.00-"r.c Wee Ali Sl;rs 1 • for CJnso~ a~ he scored a hat ?at's 1 .• !riel: ~ 0 Jenrl them to their 5 30_::;a c .• 1• first win cf the s~nson. A win I · PP rs 1·'· ln .• ntr; whicll mcJnt ruin fer ~he Lib·l ~----c•ators ~s it dumped ',hem out ! -

of conl~ntion for the semi-\ y R bl C • fin aiL Lih•.'~Oto·,·- ha\'C been in i a y ua e Oln :he Ai:for~r dirision p!Jyofi, i C 'I t' si~CC the:; h~I'C bcell cr.l~red i 0! ec 10 n , in th!! lc~~ur bul as yet they I SURHC:Y, r..c.. 1('p. ,

haYc iaih.'ll to r.ome. up wHh ~ ] the ~ohl rll-:h con~m.::::-' si~~k rh;;mpion~h•P tho:lg•l ill~r~errill~ c•,!rhrr-c; ·:;' t!lr;- ha1·r i.'H:n 111 \he ch~•n,J.on- i l~n:'r:; !!us :w:. a ro::1 :::hip ~~amr~ t1n three occ;:oslo~s·] tio;1 thnt once \'.i':; m::t~ .fim Dr.\'C•l'NHI:~ counted for tne 1 mJ::t ,·nltH!lJli! ~~o~~cs~:·J~.s · lone Lih•,r:.lors mmlwr. The :·.-:ill be 40'1 mile> "'·~''·'· luss fpr J.ih,,rators lca1·cs them 1 C. E. S~inne:r. ~. in fifth >Put with 10 pomts 1 this Greater V~r.COIJ\'cr l'.'hilc CalbOS ha1·c morerl out : 19j7 houghl the <;ol:::r:or, . of the cellar with 3 just one l coins from George Kt!l;-, · ahead of 1he lucklcs~ .fc\:;. I fJmily ran the gc~e:o:

Sappers seem to have picked 3~cl liquot· rmpori~m in up the do or die game as the? l'lile for. many ..Y:ar;, realize that if lhcy arc to rcacn . The ~oms. won, "e ~r. the playoffs they will ha•:e to 111 Bar11ernlle, 400. come up wilh some wins. They cast of here, .dunug . have been winless in their past ten~ry. _llr. Skmner said three games which h~s dropped be m hts strongbox them ~rom 3rd place back into a burglar alarm and a fourth and could be their down- watchdog. fall. The)' must overtake Corn· ' He wouldn't .say wha! ~~

d ·r they arc to make the for the collection but sa-d mh~nd ~cs tl , d they mav do just eludes a 1921 little t tr spo • "n • · k 1 1 • th about

at • 6.25 of the first on a pass ' March 15, with the Cadets and from Bern Baker. Ryan scor<'d "A" Company. A loss for either his first o£ three at 7:45, assisted EX-EXECUTIVE DIES team means elimination from 1>1• Dave Fleming. Whitten scor· PHOENIX. Ariz. t CPl the play-offs. eel his lone goal at 13:15 unns- Harry Grccnwayn, 50, former ------sisted to gil'e Cabot the lead president of Lever Brothers and Da1·c Fleming rounded o.tt Company, died · here Monday. fil;st period scoring on a pass Greenway, n resident of Tor· ft·om R~an at 14:30, onto since JO:il, moved to Art·

C.N.I.B. Meeting

Singer Denyse Ange wears a broad smile for the Irish on The Tommy Ambrose Show, Friday, March 16, on the CBC-TV network. The pretty colleen" with second guest Billy O'Connor joins singer-host Tommy Am­brose in celebrating St. Patrick's Day with songs and music of Ireland.

th t th v showed their heels me c ~or ·: t a thns d ei ndin" champs yes· was the year Can~da o e e c o from the small mckel •c

terday a~tcrnoon as they camel la•·ge one The lillle ' b h. d 1 t in the !tna ' · · from c m a e : called in and melted do'!!

period and went on to a 2-1 wm . · 'th' t oints rematn. and move to WI m wo P There is also a !2 ·

Easlmau gave Cabot a three zona early in 1900 because o£ goal spread at 5.25 of the sec· ill health. Born in England,. he ond after Bob oJhnson set him joined tbc Unilevcr organtz~­ttp. Lawrence scored his first tion in 1933 and became prc>l· of three at 8.15 of the second on dent of Lever Brothers Com·

a three-way plaYi"~·i~th~~Plliet~e~pa~n~y~l~nml9~5~9.mmwmmwf

Tilt.: STORY: Arter i\llss Hmtc)"man leaves, 1\lnrgaret discovers that a letter ad· dressed tc• i\lrs, Faole bad disappeared. It was a letter tltat llllnry had found in the house.

(I * 1111

CHAPTER XI Lena had come to tel! :Mar·

garet tha\ Hilary wanted her, which was just as well; as :liar· garet wanted Hilary. .In the cool app!~-srcen and white room where Hilary lay with the covers pullcu primly up to her chin, ~lie said in an off-hand voice, "I got your magazines ·and your paste • . , feel bet· ·ter?"

11No." "What i~ it-your stomach?

Your threat?"

I!l!ary said almost in a c. uak that she would not, and 1\!ar· garct, leaving the room, con· trolled a ~mile that . ..flickered out by itself. Hilary must be m!stnl;cn about Cornelia's not having had a doctor, of course; he might have made late· evening vi~its.

Following, she got the direc­tory, leafed through the back to "Physicians," and went ex· aminingly through the names. She had or.ly thrown a glance at the slip of paper when Cor· nelia tuped it up; st!ll, she ought to recognize the name when she came across it.

It began with M., she was fairly sm·~ of that. And here were Martinez, Mendoza • . • Muir, that was it. Dr, Thomas 1\luir, General Practice.

Margaret dialed, and eic­pla!ned Hilary's fever to the nurse who answered. Could Dr. i\l:tir come to the house? Just a moment, please, the nurse WOllld ask.

At the C.N.I.B. centre, lllili· tary Road. March 6th, the E. A. Baker Club held its business meeting for the month. The President, Miss Elizabeth Mad­den, occupied the Chair, the meeting went as follows, the Ode to Newfoundland, Roll Call, Minutes of the last meet­ing read by the acting secretary and adopted, the treasurer's re­port was presented which show­ed the Club in good !tanding, financially.

Miss Ja11nie Sparkes gave her report on ~ducation in which she said that various contests had been held, she also remind­ed the mrm bers of the handi­craft exhibits, she would like for as many members as pos­sible to take part in these ex­hibits, she would like essays from members on any subject they thought suitable.

Gerald Hedd reported on re­creation, he snid thnt the Crih· bagc Tournament had been held with eleven members tak· ing part. The highest scorer in twenty games being Mr. Thomas Ingraham, Eric Bussey and James Brown. He congrattt· !ated the winners and hoped that tl'lis score would top other clubs in competition across Canada,

There were various reports and all were favourably accept­ed by the club.

Nostalgia, !Challenge To Gamblers

Big Business LONDON mcutersl - Brit-By JOHN T. CUNNIJ:'F . ain's new betting laws have

NEW YORK IAPl - W1th tnc I been taken as a challenge by enthusiasm of the old medicine · crooked gamblers out to make pedlar, U.S. mer chan Is a fortune from the countr)"s arc rediscovering an ancient bookmakers. maxim: Tug at the h cart The bookmakers estimate that strings and you'll haul in a attempts to defraud them on bundle. postal bets have trebled since

This knowledge has made the new bctlin« laws came into nostalgia big business. effect last sum';ncr.

And, say its merchants, busi- The new laws' allow gamblers ness is getting better as people to mail their bets to bookies search for the old kitchen com- throughout Britain. Previously, forts amid their parlor • like cash bets were taken In this

way only by bookmakers in Scotland.

The favorite method used by crooked gamblers to beat the bookies is to obtain envelopes time-stamped by the post office before the race or soccer game 6n which they nrc betting. They do this by addressing letters to themselves with a light pcnc1l.

When the letter arrives, they carefully erase the address nnrl readdress it to the bookie wi!h bets inside on a rae hat lts already over.

luxuries. "There's more interest now in

home life-like in the old days,'' explains a piano roll manu!ac· turer who once again is thriving after two lean decades. ·

Green often gives the gam­blers away, however, The book· makers b c co m e suspicious when thcv receive a big het from a person who normally

example, and snowflakes falling has only small wagers on a by its yellow light, and the race. -moan of the lonely st~am en-

Old gas lamps, old ale houses and restaurants, an . old rml· road, old • fashloned b~ats, lacy old valentines and old French telephones arc pulling in the old dollar bill,

'fhe success of Disneyland and its counterparts elsewhere in the United Stales are atlri· butablc, in part, to nostalgia.

"The rapid changes in the modern world nrc making peo­ple look for something to nold onto," says Dr. Ernest Dichter, a widely • known motivational researcher.

The American Gas Associa· lion calls this the second gas: light era, showing statistical evidence or 75D,OOOO outdoor gas lamps now, compared with the oldtime peak of 300,000 In 1914. SUBURBAN GAS LAMPS

gine, hoarse, hollow and muf. A number of other methods fled by the miles, end lost in have been tried to defraud ~he the swirling white. I bookies.

...

of the final~ berth .. After ,3 \lam! tnB5 goldpiece '!hie\·. scoreless first pmod Dal c Skinner \'a lues at !200. Buckle had given Co~mand~cs · Oldest in the group is a. the lead a~· he combmcd With ada half-penny minted i:. Brian Scoit and defcnceman Also included are a Greg Piercey at 3.44 of the 1909 gold sovereign, an second, but then t~e. roof fell 2':2-clollar gold coin, a~ in as Buckle was Slltmg out a \Prince Edward l5land tripping minor Ed. Holland and an 1873 t:.S. broke away all alone to heat sil\'er coin. Kenny and deadlock the game Explaining how the " then with the victory in sight was, put to~ethcr, )!r. · · Tommy Devereaux picked up said the Kelly family • Ricky Steele's pass and salted good look at each : it away with less than three came over the counler , minutes l.eft in the game. In gold rush days and lo!;e: the final minute of play Com· I odd ones into a back mandocs ~rcw their goaler in a safe. favour of the sixth attacker and ll!r. Skinner has o:r.E: the Sappers net was really in hi;; collection and plastered but luck was with the total value at s;').@ them as they walked away I with a big win. \ . . ·

Next act10n is scheduled for Daniel Boone t5 said to this afternoon when at 4.15[ traveled as far _west II · p.m. Hurricanes will meet Yellowstone Park area.

"I get these attacks," said Ililar~· mo~oscly, and Margaret had an instant vision of the Greenwich Village apartment, Hilary tottering off to bed to recall her parents' attention, ::'tlrs. Revcrton saying anxious· ly to friends and pediatricians, "She ~:ets these attacks."

"Hilary, do you remember the letter you found in the pan· try drawer?"

"What letter?" It was going to be one of

those conversations. "The one you spelled a word out of, when

·you w~re looking for shoelaces, . and I told you to put it back."

She came back presently with t~e information that Dr. Muir conlr! not make a house call that day. Margaret could bring the child to his office If she didn't mind a considerable wait,• or, If she preferred, he would urescrlbc an antibiotic.

1\largar.!t gave the receiver a look of astonishment. Prescribe for n new patient without even seeing her? But she said only, "I think in that case I'd better wait and sre how she does. This is the Dr. Muir who treated 1\lrs. Byrn-1 recently, Isn't It?"

Miss Madden then introduc­ed the special guest of the evening, Mr. Renouf, chairman of the Bonrd of Management of the C.N.I.B. 1\lr. Renouf thank· ed the President for her kind Introduction and said It was his first visit to the Club in session and he was pleased to do his duty In conducting the election of delegates to attend the com· ing Newfoundland Division Conference of the Canadian Council for the blind.

Mr. Renouf then appointed two scru!inccrs to look after the ballots. in case of election the B!lnd Ballot by tokens in different shapes such as a circle, square, halt circle and letters S, etc., each person to be elected to represent one of those plastic token of dofferent shapes.

The soft, moon-like glow of the old·time lamps lights subur· ban streets, restaurants, motels, drive-in theatres and airports in many U.S. cities.

You also can drift into ·the past on a river boat made to resemble those of Mark Twain's day, reports Evinrude Motor.s, which plans to distribute the 30· I root·long nat-bottomed craft r~r I the bul!dcr, Kayot Inc. of Man· I kato, Minn. It will cool more than $4,000 delivered, but will be worth it to romantics.

And Every Smart Salesman Knows ltl

"And I did," said Hilary with IUspiclous promptness.

She looked so flushed and in­jured that Margaret could not bring llmclf to pursue it. She got the tltermomctcr insteac~ ~Cd, found presently that Hi!· aiy'5 temperature had gone up .a:degrec and a half. Margaret 'glanced at the clock, gave her

· another aspirin, and went quietly off to find the doctor's telephone number.

'A curled piece of cellophane tape still clung to the pantry wall over the phone, but the sllp of paper with telephone n~bers It had held was g'!ne. ·:Margaret knew dismally

wliat had happened. The w~rmth of the pantry radiator li#il dried the tape, the paper AAil fluttered down, Lena in· ~d to the litter left every­wHere from Hilary's scrapbook work, hati swept it up and thrown It away.

She , went back to the bed· ,.room and Hilary, "What doctor ·did Cornelia have, do you · re: .11\f!mber?" , ·Hilary stared up from her magazine. "She didn't have a doctor."

"1 really couldn't ••• If you care to hold the line," said the nurse coldly, "perhaps the doc· tor can speak to you himself."

• • • l\largaret held the line. Twice

she almost hung up, but some· thing lorced her to go on lis­tening to dlstant waiting-room sounds: doors opening and clos· ins, a child's fretful wail, a voice making an appointment.

"Dr. llluir speaking." The low soft voice caught

Margaret by surprise. She said rather stumblingly thnt she had been quite concerned about her sister, Mr& Byrne; what had Dr. Muir thought of her when he saw her?

The elected delegates were as follows: llliss Winnie Sparl:es, Miss Mary Fitzgerald and Mr. Thomas Carmichael. Mr. Renouf congratul~ted the successful candidates and also congratulat· ed the Club on the fine work it is doing and wlshed them continued success for the lu· ture.

The President theri thanked Mr. Renour on behalf of the Club ·and invited him to rc· turn again to some other meet­Ing. ·------WARN OF BOGQS BILLS

MONTREAL (CPJ - The RCMP Monday warned Mont-. real store owners to be on the lookout for a new crop of coun· terfeit $20 bills which appeared In the city during the weekend. Three men wetc arrested by Montreal police for passing the phony bills and were turned

· over to the RCMP along w!t.h $2,200 in counterfeit bank notes recovered during the weekend.·

The Old Farmer's Almanac is . nourishing in telling city folks 1 when to plant· their turnips.

Hermnn Cortlnndcr, manag~r I of QRS Piano Roll Company in New. Yoi'k, says his compgny was the only piano roll maker to survive the 19·0s and 19-IOs9 Now he sells hundreds of thou· sands a year. Of what?

"Oh, Shine on Harvest Moon, When Irish Eyes Are Smlllng, The Plano Roll Blues, Beer Barrel Polka," ~ay~ Cortlander. "It's a nostalgic sort of thing." FRENCH TELEPllONES.

The same as with the telc· phones, many of, which are being Imported ·from France. Gilded, painted. and rewired, they substltute for the unromnn· tic modern Instrument. Pozens of shops have them for sale.

Those railroad buffs who seek to kCI!P the Smoky Mountain Railroad in operatlon between K n o x v i I I e and Sevierville, Tenn., arc probably more con: cerned with the · r a i I r o a d 's romantlc past than Its .future difficulties, ,

The line, In trouble a good part of its life, may be imved

' There's a good reason why so many local

service firms and suppli~rs use our classified

ads so consistently. They sell ! Through our

want ads, you're sure to reach that someone

who wants to buy, because so many people do

make a habit of reading our classified section

regularly. There, your advertisement quickly

reaches more people at one time, yet costs you

only pennies ~er day I

ADS JOB! To Want Place Yo.ur

CALL 8-2177 G)

Ads.

i ' I

I . : I;

"She did, she must ·have, The number was here, but it's lost." , "Well, he never came,". sald

Hilary practically. "Am I very aick?"

"I didn't actually see her," said Muir equably, and went on to exploin. The flu epidemic had been widespread and. in inany imtances severe, and wben he was not in his o!flce he had brcn at the· hospital. Mrs. Byrne's case had· been typical of · the 'intestinal type; he had therefore prescribed the usual antibiotic with In· atructlons that she was to re· port on her progress arid Jet him kno .v If Improvement was not rapid.

YOUR RED CROSS . by issuing 2,000 shares of stock at $200 each, with each stock· holder b e c 0 m i n g a vice­ The Daily News

I I

,. I

, I . ·-! \\'

••• ~·No", ~aid Margaret damp.

eningly. "You have a cold that ~- might as well get rid of, :'·tJiit'a all. Would you like some ::~p now?'' • , ' ..

Atfer she hung up, she rubbed h~r fingers . absently over the· headache In both temples.

('Fo Be Co~tlnued)

' president. That's 'the plan. 1 Some of the potential invest· ors frankly admit their impulse

YOUR HELP NOW to . i n v e s t is a pull by memories . , . ·---..1..------...1 ' Of a gas lamp glowing, lor

--· ..... __ ..... - •. ·~"C' ___ __,_..,..,.,..,.,. ____________ •

dg lu

on the aftern• ...... --~· 27th at th•

grm Hoi: a victory ove

and they senior Hi

.t .... th:m ch~mpiom looked like teadmg hy • seconds rerr but baskctb

fast game chan; of play

working layup in th_e 1;

Unit~d m t l.'nited have W•

"·•ames since thai yesterday t eros~ for J

once again working ftrd in I just fom in the

was foul• the ba

····~""""lor! two fre Cross holdir

Bob calmly wa· throw line ~hot, the ba

• .J

·1Inter .. Ch '{ LAST NIGII1 J:.L.B.-3 r. Rogers 2H

· (ec Andrews 22~

·i'. Nichols 22! it Kirby 1if

. · C. Andrews 24(

' 1085 ' t.S.R.A.-0

·.;. Ronayne 21; 1. Collins 16~

i Whelan 20: J. Peddle 24: ·;. Mackey 19:

101

So. 1-Spearns 15l Smith 24' Joy 19: Gallagher 30' Kearscy 271

1182

Wilson 16 i. Ryan 25-

,•.

n. ,,< ••

Holden 21' Joy 19 Spratt 24

106

of C.-3 Brewer 18 Tobin 19 Murphy 19

Dooley 21 French 22

loot

Lush 18 Browne 16 . Dalton 16

Donovan 20 Spurrell 20

92:

Bon's-3 Constantine 2~ O'Keefe 2e Power 2~ Redmond 24

· Hart 21 128

Joseph•s-o Maher 2~ Collins 21 Quinlan H Ring H

· Gosse H 9'

Cross-2 Wadden a: Cranshaw 2: Carey 1< Wadden 2( O'Rtilly 2•

114 Hall-1

Furlong 21 Rees 1l Stel'enson 1' Kavanagh 1l Byrne 2:

9i

In Canada tnore peo1

Scllg·

Page 11: E ACADIAN SMAL~ PONTIAC THE DAILYcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196203… · and cnnl~ins "a program for I proposals on nuclear trsts will Urn • eng ssue

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nm UAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, l\TFLD. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 196:! --ll

en1or Cross • 25 27 . '

' 1 • 0

; ·:::"'

Edge Itt

1-Ioly Overtime Thriller : .. :

(In the afternoon or Feb· J'\' ~ith at the l:nited Col·

f\ll ·1 ., m Ho\1· Ct'oss nrerl· lt!ll! • 0 u 't d c 1 d 1 ·.irltlr.1· orer nt c o • 1 • 11 anJ thry would ha1·e 11';\hr ;rnior lli~h School bas· ;;t,ball rh•mpiomhiP.

Howell Ties, Russell Decides I given credit for a great ga'ne which they played without the

· services of their star centre I I Percy MrDonald who was .

stricken with the flu bug. They·. : went into the game knowing J

I that l'nill·d had the ~dge on paper out when the)' got on the i It lookrrl like thry ~~~d t.he

I''! learl:nr h)' onr pomt 11'1 th 1 ~; 1 ' HrorHI.• rrmaining in the · ~ ~ut ha;krtball hem~ such

. · , I eonrt the Crusaders matched 1 i: ; the newly cr?wned ~hamps all

1

:: ' · \he way and tl \\'as JUSt a mat· ·.•.

ll·• r . I . I 1 (HI :an•r chan~cr tn ~he a~l · : i ler of bre~ks thnt ~eclded the • ,.., 0 r pJ;,,· a; l111tcd;

•'• ,,,,II , • · i cltarnpion.•hip. I I Russell ~ddcd ci~hl points to I .•.. , 1~,anth w11ri-in~ ~uard S('Orcrl

1 !a:ur in 1 hr la;t >rcnnd to krrn l'mtrd in the ru nmng,

l!nitcd h)lr won all of their 11mc! ;iurr that hi;: l'ictor)' ar.d 1·1;terd;;) thr)' defeated !lnl!.' rr~;; l~r the third time ar.d ~ncr a~a111 11 11·a~ th~t 1~ooth 11 llrkin~ .~liard who

l'nitrd in the game.

llA \'E RUSSELL 1\UB HOWELL

il'llh ju:t four ;rcomls rc· anti feil throu~h the hoop. Ue 1 Wit!l some 500 fans scream· m:1~in' 111 thr ~am~ Bob had one shot remaining with ing (one c\'cn fainted and hun­JI~IHll wa~ lnulrd a~ he wa> / C\'erything pending on its out· drcds were turned away) tlw 1dnncin~ the hall and he wns come. Once again the curly two teams started the fi1·e min· 1warrled two free throws with I haired guard stepped to the ule 0\'ertime. Eric 111ouland H~ly Cro;; holding a two point I line sh_owlllg no str.ain. He shot gave United a 23-22 lead in !rod. 1 and WtllMtt touclung the rim the first minute scoring a free Bv~ calmly walked up to t~c I ,;~·ishc,l through the hoop to throw but \j!ss than a minute

lm throll line to takl> lw he the g~me and send it into later Mil;e Bambrick tied it for !1rit ;hot. the ball hit the rim O\'crtime. Holy Cross scoring a free 1---· ·-· ··------..

Inter-Club Bowling League throw. Thc·n Joe Ashley put the Crusader~ two points up swish· ing a field goal. United then had possession of the ball and

. Columbian-2 as Dave Russell was about to

I' his four in the overtime for the

top scorer in the game. Roger . l\laundcr and Joe Asliley were . ! tops for llol)' ~ross with six . :points ca~h Mike Bnmblick

I and Jack Hurley had five each and ~lickey Walsh potted three.

Donnie Yourlen potted five for United. Eric Illouland and Bob Howell four each and Charlie Pollock two.

The game was the lowest scoring contest or the year as players on both squads played slow cautit•us ball and seeme!l to he nervous with their shoot· ing,

United held a 7·3 lead after the first quarter and 12-5 at half time but Holy Cross came roaring beck In the third quarter to outscore United 8·4 and again in the final qcarter 9·6 .

. i

Birmingham 175 238 233 646 shoot .he was fouled and tied United C~l~.x ~r?RES 21~ 299 3:14 852 G. Hollahan 190 195 242 6361

it with two free throws which FT PF Pts.1 ~~2 198 167 587 : c. Keels 164 192 230 586 he made na mis!ake on. Wi.th D. Russell ...... 5 2 . 1 12

228 224 213 665 ·B. Abbott 22G 284 222 732 1 !ess . than two m.mutes .rematn· D. Youden ...... 2 1 2 5 I 176 246 206 628. 1. Keels 242 171 222 635 1 mg m the o1•erllme Em l\lou· B. Howell ..... 0 4 1 4

c. Andrew! 240 204 235 679 1006 1080 1149 3235 ~land took a long. set shot, It E. J\!ouland .. ·· 1 2 3 4 I 1085 1171 1155 Hll Celts-1 1 bounced of! the rtm and lanky C. Pollock ...... 1 0 4 2 1

. n. Bursey 196 193 218 607 j Russell grab~e~~ the rebound to H 1

Toctab ...... 9 9 11 27 ,

CHAMPS-United Collegiate emerged as senior High School Basketball C'hamps in an overtime gPme a; their hom'l gym yesterday afternoon when they edged Uoly Cross 27-25. i\lembet·s of the winning traar are: Kneeling (Left to right)-Eric i\iouland, Don Youden. Sitting:-Wa,·ne Bradbury, John Paltle. Bob Howell, Dav~ Russell. Standing:-Bill Butt, manager; Elridge Oldford, Charlie PoUock, Graham Snow coach; Lewis Mercer, Bob Worthman.-(Royal Pitoto Service).

~~~ !!31 159 604 : !llcLoughlan 206 218 1!!6 550 I scor~ the Wtnm~g basket. 0 )' ro~~ FG FT P3F P61s.l: Sen=,·or Basketball· 165 178 171 514, P. Walsh 155 257 183 595 1. Holy Cress. trted desperately R. :Maunder .... 3 o ~O:i 294 !!04 703. E. Smith 189 237 190 616 I tn the last mmute or the game .1. As!Jiey ' '"' 3 0 1 6 I

! MUN

Irisl1 With Clash uc ~4 ~ 147 219 608 , M. Walsh ? :but United possessed the ball M. Bambrick .. 2 1 1 5 c 11 192 129 238 559 I ii~: 12t350 ~~ 2~~~: and Charlie Pollock did some .T. Hurley .. "" 2 1 1 5 : onno y .

lOlB 979 P.91 2988 i • fancy dribbling io kill the Ill. Walsh ........ :1 l 2 :1 i time. I G. Tobin ........ ·o o 2 o Hoops

Place Lra,::ue lrarlin~ .\ll'IIJI•ri;.l

••Lritlans 'i' 1 Guards-2 The Crusaders have to be Totals ..... 11 3 10 25 .. 0 o. 1-2

158 235 239 632 A. Andrews 23[1 166 215 619 T F • t T l'nirer,it)· rl"'h ll'ilh third e e place l'nitrr\ Collr;1atc a( th• 1 l'niterl Collegiate ~)·m thi;

247 185 168 6oo 1 D. Fisher 111 2o3 22s 6oa Ft'na's Contt'nue NHL A t' 0 lfS · 192 221 269 682 : R. McKinlay 185 259 261 705 I c I 0 n

. Galla&hcr 30i 277 205 780 ! W. Oakley 216 183 221 620 · aftemoon at 4.30 in the Girl< •

lli~h Sdwol Basketball Lcag11c.

278 141 180 599: G. Fuller 165 233 174 572 . '.The Felldians will skate nn Gordie Howe will be gunning D 28 I 70 39 w· 1182 1059 10613302 II 975 1044 1100 31191 the Ice at the Stadium at 8.30 I for his 500lh goal tonight when umps n - 'tn :Ill!:\ hare nine points anti

united lour . .,. ... ~."~1 , RCAW Lancs-1, tonight determined to even t11e the Detroit Red 'Wings and the

!til 173 181 515; Stewart 173 146 152 471 best of ~even Reries for the New York Rangers clash in one Bill Connolly led St. Pat's to , .T. Crotty 2 0 1 254 H5 182 581 i Brake 188 186 175 549 I historic Boyle Trophy against or two National H~X:key League 1 a 73·39 victory over United A.A. 1 D . .Maloney 217 205 181 603 1 Banks 291 178 271 740 the Guards at two cames games. . ' . in a senior basketball game 1 Totals:

1 0 1 2 31 8 13 70

TO:'\IGHT'S SE:'\IOR BASKETBALL G.\:\U:

192 340 235 767 · Licari 251 109 235 685 apiece. The Rangers and Wings are ' last night at the Irish gym scor- · 2H 327 165 736 i Wood 213 271 248 732 The Double Clues after tarn·

1 currently tied Cor fourth place I ing 28 points and moved his I Uniterl A.A.:

Senior bJsketball action con· tinues tonight at 7.15 at the Bishops gym when the Feild· ians tangle with Holy Cross. Both clubs dropped their open· ing g:~mes. The Double Blues were on the short end of a 51·36 score against St. Bon's. while the Cru>arle~s were nipped 4G·42 hy St. Pat"s.

10ii8 1190 944 3202 1116 9BO 10813177 lng a 3•3 no.contest game In anti this meeting in Madison small team inlo a first place · G. Taylor the finals opener looked lm· I Square Garden of the two rivals tie with St. Bon's each with two C. Blackwood

4 :?. 0 10 1 5 0 7 1 5 0 7 1 4 4 6 3 0 () 6 1 0 1 2 0 1 2 1 11 17 7 30

K. of C.-3 P. Brewer

Tobin J. ~turphy D 01)()1el· r. french

Laurin-O f. Lu1h ,T. Bro•·nt \\'. Dalton R. Donoran C. Spmdl

Canadian Leglon-3 180 226 238 648 J. Tilley 185 207 183 575 194 184 219 5971 F. O'Reilly 169 199 230 598 191 188 246 625 E. Long 147 205 270 622 216 :!70 206 6921 c Richardgon 140 242 202 584 225 247 259 731 1 Delaccy 212 192 208 612

1006 1115 1168 3289 r ·· 853 1045 1093 2991 • y·~ ~len-0

lR:'i m 197 597 · R. Benson 156 2BO 237 653 1

167 lfi3 194 524 1 T. Ash 118 Ui3 271 l 160 193 145 498 's. McGrcg;;oe 117 165 188 470 1 203 286 179 668 • B. Pye 161 248 209 618 i 20R 241 170 619 617 974 955 243~ 1 923 1098 885 2908 .

I

11. Bon'!..-3 . Postal-3 IConstantinc 238 211 227 676 1 C. Marlin I. O'Keeh 289 167 278 734 J. Barrell

224 184 169 577 193 255 192 640 2-13 142 196 581 I 199 210 217 626 267 233 196 696

I. Power 237 209 207 653 ' J. Ryan R: Redmond 247 293 199 739 · L. Mcanc>• V. • Hart 273 198 318 789 D. Meadus

1126 1024 970 3120 St J 1284 1078 1229 3591 . ostph's-o c.E.I.-o

F. llaher 228 220 188 536 D. Coombs 200 240 161 601 E. Collins 218 100 231 639 ' P. Squires 90 233 145 468 I. Quinlan 16n 178 194 541 G Noseworthy 201 151 147 499 P. Rm~ 163 2a~ 72 4B8 H. ViYian 229 165 193 587 I. Go!!e 192 152 263 6117 E. Batstone 153 224 178 555

970 993 948 2911 873 1013 824 2710

Dol)· Cross-2 J. Wadden 335 24G 2o3 784 ~.11 a~':;;:u3 J. ~ranshaw 225 220 179 624 W. O'Dwyer J. Carry 144 25f 214

247 188 234 669 203 197 187 587 203 213 167 583 19t 265 1·79 635 200 157 240 597

c; \\' ·• 613 H. l\lurphy ~ 0.ad~•n 202 210 tnt 603 G. Ta)'lor . RtJIIy 24:1 231 229 703 : .T. English

Cih' II l!~g 1162 1016 3327 . ali-t

l furion~ A. Rtr1

2n5 262 222 r.ao lR6 126 230 542 ti5 109 202 576

1044 1020 1007 3071 Crusadfrs-0 p; Hurley 169 235 218 622 L. Gosse 198 I 99 144 541 C. St~'cn•on

C. Knana~h 1· Rnne ·

F. Hickcv 108 112 1!!7 357 In~ 202 191 r,sJ J. White· 172 179 152 503 2~1fi 270 268 774 i A. Samuelson 186 196 229 611 9,0105911133142 . 833 921 880 2634

In Canada . more people buy

Stl\gl'l\m'.s v.o. than any

ot'mr quaUty

u,hisky.

(Hot insert d •I Li e by the Board

I!Uor Control)·

Collegians-2 J, Churchill 199 187 166 552 B. Crummey 130 210 191 531 D. Peters '180 246 281 713 A. Stockley 167 265 138 570 T. Robbins 157 180 205 542

Felldlans-1 E. Gullage D. Squires J. Williams J. Edgar H. Downton

839 1088 981 2908

154 197 185 536 146 253 201 600 245 217 164 626 146 171 184 501 236 144 236 616 927 982 970 2879

Patricians No. 2-3 ~· Withers 250 172 240 662 C. Gosse 283 214 128 625 C. Casey 213 305 206 724 J. Wilson 131 167 186 490 P. Dillon 179 145 208 532

Elk-cl A. Ross A. Cook N. Ash R. Nugent E, Moakler

1062 1003 968 3033.

151 180 178. 509 134 142 214 490 171 160 153 484 140 lOB 1~7 405 915 178 170 543 791 768 872 2431

pre·sslve as they knocked over wili go a long way towards de· wins. H. Jlloores the Guards 5·Z In the secoml termining which club gets a Connolly along with Dave J. Rodgers game, bullacked drive In their berth in the Stanley Cup play- Ryan are the only two players C. Collins third outings as they dropped o£fs. on the team with what you L. Holloway 11 H vertllct, In the fourlh In the only other !(arne the might call ha,kethall height, the J. Warford game the Felhllans ~tart en to , .first and second place club.<, remaining ten players are all Totals: regain tlleir old form In the i Montreal and Toronto, will tan- under six feet. But the Green · final period, but were nnable ; gle in Maple I.A!nf Gardens. The . and Gold arc stipcrb ball-hand­In overtake 11 H Guards lead 1 Habs hold a ~even point !carl ' lers and used it to great ad· : and dropped a game ~hind 1 o1•er the Leafs. vantage last night to feed Big i when Gar P~·nn triggered the j' . Both clubs will play without : Bill and he followed lhrou~h by I puck Into the open net for a

1 one of their top performers .. taking the rough edges off the ' 1 't! t l '(! 1

3·1 Guards victory. Montreal minus Don Marshall ' new nets at his home gym. ' -II I s a grea I e In Felldlan fans wilt be looking and Toronto veteran Bert Olm· 1 His 28 points was the second ·

for the rrturned spirit lnnlght stead. 1 highest single total in 1 his yet : wh~ll the ~erles cnnllnuM, young season as Dare Barrett, 1 BILL CONNOLLY while the White and Blue will · T H E the snappy St. Bon's basketball- · . ht. out to show that their last er polled 33 in a game against , United scoring 10 points, Cec · two vlctorie~ were no flukes. I RCAF Snnda\· . Blackwootl and Henley lo!oores

Both teams are expected tn PROBE COl\GO BEATING II •. h I k 1. tl ' scored · h J R d go with the same lineup as In ELISABETHVILLE (AP) _I Conno Y w 0 oo·s a 11 e sc\en eac' ~e 0 gers CANADIAN their last game, but the Felldl· A United Nations Indian sol· slugg~sh at times whc1~ it c~mes ; and Cia~ Collins SIX, Lloyd , ans may welcome the return dier H 8 r bat 5 h Singh nas to dnbbhng and passmg d1dn't i Hollowa) two and Jim Warford: of defeneeman Nev Henderson eme'rged from the Negro 'quar· have to do any of the like last · one. '!

wllo sufFered a knee Injury In ter or Elisabethville with his night as his mates whipped the St. Pat's held a 3~"27 lead I ~DAR OS the third game. hair torn out and his face ~ut. ball around for a chance to set after the first 25 mmutes of

The UN said it is invest!gnting. him up and when they- did he play and outscore~ their op­Slngh reported Katanga pro· just dropped the ball through . ponents 31-12 in the second I

LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo (AP> - Holden Roberlo, nn An· golan IJ!bel leader, said Mon· day the Algerian nationalists have promised his movement

·arms ad help against Portu· gal as soon ns Algeria obtains Independence. Roberto said Tu· nisia already is sending his mo1·ement considerable help.

vincial police arrested him and the ~oop. i half.. ! lnflicled the injuries after ),e Bernie Marshall !hi.~ past sea.: (Box Scores) I There could be nn opportunity for 1°"· rlzht inadvertently drove his truck son's Intermediate star for St. · St. Pat's: FG FT PF Pts. I away, to embark u]l<ln an attractive and re~<ard· into the quarter Saturday, Pat's, hit for 14 points. Tom B. Connolly 12 4 3 28 ! in: =eer In the Canadian Guards- wh~ :rear

Oregon contains the largest body of standing timber in the United Shttes ' .

Angel hit for nine, Dal'e Ryan B. Marshall 7 0 3 14 I by year Wl'1 on the stirring traditions of the five, Steve Angel, ,Tim Hickey T. Angel 3 3 0 9 many fine units from whieh tllli distinguished and Jim Crotty four and little D. Ryan 2 1 4 5 reglmentwasfcm:ed.Dttringtbcpr .. entptr!od Dick Maloney two. S. Angel 2 · o 0 4 6f int.rnaticnal tension the Canadian G1ardG

George Taylor was tops for J. Hickey 2 0 1 4 nud adve~ture-lorlng rounr men of c:ourngo an4 character to piRy their part In the Anny's ~ita\ bsk of helping preoerve wor'd puu. In

retarn,.the regim~mt offer• to entrant:! of the light r.alibro renn!.ll~ml emp\o:rm011t on a eoreer bui!, trainin;r that deve!cpo their abllit!,. to the full, a l1ealthy outdoor lito, unequallod cp]l<lrtuniti .. for advaceerueut and adventure, 1.11d I"'Y ratu that were never botta •

• If )'OO ore bdiTeen li ond !!3, sine!• and phyol· caUy fit, you can do no bellrr than innsligate this uc!ting career possibility. Gd complete details by filling In and llllliting the attached eoupon to your neorest Army Reuul\lng Station -TODAY!

Canadian Armed Forces Recruiting Centre, )lain Post Office Building, Water StrePt. St. John's, Nfld. Tele]Jhone 8·02!M

Plem ser.d me, with~Jl oil't3ti:Jt, y:'r plmplllet enliUe~ 'Backbone ~I til~ Mrrj- The Car.alian ·lnillllri'.

OFFICIAL OPENING-Albert Downton (left)., President, and Tommy Carroll, the only p.erson to roll a 1

perfect .450 single in the Inter-Club Bowling League, are· shown above rolling the first balls at the St. · l Pat's Alleys last night to officially or.i.:n the 1962 season. This League starts its· 40th year.-(RPS). --·

·/

IUmt'--------.......JI.te-Adlre::s_ __________ _

CityfiOtm-------..l'Prot·---last sthool JTide SliCCOSSiullj ccmptele:r..... ___ _

Etll-71

I

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'I

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The Daily News · 'Search for Freedom Code of Hammurabi FORAN EYE, ANOTHER EYE MUST PAY

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NEW YORK CLOSING STOCKS By Tbt Assoelattd Prtll

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:;. FIRE~ SAFE WIND- SAFE '~ . ~~·SEPARATE STRUCTURAL

.· FRAMES·

·~ MAKE

:Butler the moat Fleuble Pre·enalneered ·Bulldlna

• JU&Id Frame o Wedge 'Beam Frame • Low Rigid. l'rame o I•anel·Frame • Butterfly Frame · • Modular Rigid Ftame

Colour Standard 1n. all Buildings. Available for Schools, Churches. Ubrarles, Gara1e1 etc.

Make ll •m• FRY'S 8PIIHObAI.E S'l'IEET

ENGINEERING

COMPANY, LIMITED. DIAL t.ma 1: , .. t-................................................ ~

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ln tha 19th century, archeologists began uncovering whole civilizations some of whose names even had been forgotten by men­Sumer, Akkad, Elam, Babylon. Because they wrote on lasting clay tablets we know much about these ancient peoples.

ln 1902, French excavators brought to light Jn the ancient city of Susa a huge block of stone over seven feet high covered with thous· ands of cune!Corm (wedge-shaped) symbols. When translated, it began: "Law and justice I e.stabllshed in the land, I made happy the human rece in those days."

This ":as the imperishable monument of Ham·

114E KING OWES TO AlL HIS LAND

murabl, the first benevolent despot, greatest could be made to the king, who had the power or the rulers of Babylon, which wns the center of pardon. Lawyers were unknown. o[ the world for over 1;700 years. 'l'he important thing is that these laws. while ·The stone dates from ahout 2200 B.C. and they reflected long·standing custom, did not

deals with all aspects or life, !rom rents, con· come from the people but were given to them. tracts and wages to marriage and criminal law. They came down from the gods to the king to The Code of Hnmmurabi applieel to gentlemen, the people. But the idea o[ government 0111ng commoners and slaves. The king was a divine justice to the people, the idea of crime as a person and priests were set apart. It was oflen public, not family, affair, and the interpretmg severe: tho idea of "an eye for an eye'' was of the law by judges had their beginnings here. still present, but In the case of payment for Babylonian law spread throughout the ancient damages, an aristocrat was equal to two com· world and influenced later Hebrew and Greek moners and a commoner to two slaves. thought and, in turn, ilur own.

The commoner was n free man, but could be sold into slavery for debt or crime. Appeals 1\'EXT: Let My People Go

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P •f• I R • M 1 me5lic Prelate, an honour which I in grJce, he ha~ lr•l thrm 01 Ontl l~a equ uem ass I he ~eccivprl wi~h !tumility and the Eucharistic Brc~d nf 01! \. M earned Wllh d1gmty, and one altars. He has umted numbcn

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Place G~ 12000 70 6~ fi!\ -10 I Porcupine ~oo iV. 7~-1 71.-i !'ow Cp lp 2l Sl~ 49 4q ' !'ow Cp 2) 7~ $7311 731; 7~ 1 ~ I l're1n Sll 100 Sl6•1 1611 !fils- tt rro\o ~no zn; 20~ 201 -~ 1 Quo Cobalt 200 l4l 430 Ill 4 :!0 Que Oil 4ifiOO :1'2 2':: 21 J - tl I !itl Cnlum 2!1011 70:'i 6R:1 7n~ ... 1~, ~tr. nv Ld• Jrno m m 125 -~ ~aucnn n 2~t00 !l7 llA !11 -1 .Shnr Sllvt :!AI tn,~ R'4. fl:ll. I ~ nuf•u1t 500 11 11 11 • z 1

Sparlsn 14400 161 1ll 1.11 -10 I llit1At'lan wl~~: !HlO 4\ 4f'l 41 -' ~~: Str1 GCIII\ ~00(1 t1 11 ll -· 1.: i str.u R 1000 m 101 101 -1 I Taeho won J! ~~ .12 Totln 7l00 11 H II -1 'Tlh I':Jpl 1!000 ' 7'' ~ TitAn noo 1n 9', to Trano Ml 33n sw> II''< P'1 U A•h.,lns liM m ~~ 'If• •1! Un Ohobkl 1000 Jl 31 31 -1. U I'rin ::!!00 7~ ';'5 71l Van.dr-rht :!Oo 32'i 3:!() ~2.~ vnr:uard 2!50~ m; 1 1n +I W•n~tll 8000 21'> 21'. Z' I - c; W•st•rl 100 $11> ~i 91> + 'I

_______ .,...____ greater zeal for the salvation . Marriage. He has anomte1 the of souls, and for the beauty of \ d> ing for the fuller life, ar.j the place where Clod's Glory prayed for the eternal happinm clwclleth. My last contact with uf the dend. Rt. Rev. Monsignor W. H. Casey him as a Pastor was in Con· The ambassador nl C~mt ception Harbour, when he show· was a very real friend t~ h~· ~d me w:th pardonable pride, man beings. He is entitled h the restoration and ornamenta· I our highest honour. lion of In< Parish Church. 1!y 1 And so "Take forth hi! rt hbl meeting with him as a fcl· , mains, and according to JUli· low pncst was in St. Clare's, 1 ment cover his body and ne:. where all the best medical s!;ill lect not his burial. Let hi! r~ and attention could not restore mcmbrancc rest, and comfc~ the ra1·ageq of a fatal ailment. him in t11a departing of h.t Priestly like, he sought the spirit"- Eccles. And 11 )Ol blessing of all three of us at 1 give this final testimony to h·1 hi~ bedside and Happy Warrior 1 worth, remember "That we a:: that he wa~. he stili had hopes ! die, and like waters that !!·

of renderi:t!< further service to! turn no more, we fall do~~ , God ancl man. But fat~ de· I into the earth"-Km~~ ' I i creed otlwrwi~e. and :t~ the 1 "The small and th~ ~mt m i poet ~xclDmH, ~ t11cre, and the ;cn·~nl lo fm 1 "0 ~linprry ltop~ of mortal i front hi~ master."-.lnh

I mrn" ' "One m~n dielh •Iron~ ~r,~ lltll. Your hrnthrr i~ not hale ~nd rich md h•PPY. E''

! 1lr:1rl. s:1icl thP Chri't to the another, d1eth in h1tlrrn~~~ •! 1 wePpJng ~istrr~ nf L~zaru,. ~out with~ut 3ny mho Ar.i

Anrl hrrr, mny I ~xprc~.~ th~. th~y shall ~Jeep to~rthcr In til 'ympathy of thi5 Sanctuary I dust and worm~ •h~\1 rOt!~ nnd of this cnngre~ation to the them."-,Tob.

Abitibi t!OO SH\1 Ullo 4l~i C1oslnr oalu: lnda>lrlo1s Abll pr 200 $2! 24'4 21'1 - I'• mines and oils 1 6BD.200.

hrr~nverl sisten nf their he· "The poor man. 1od lh lored brother in the flesh, and creditor have met one AMthl~. our beloved brother in the The Lord is the lightener ~ Priesthood. Our brother is not them both."-Prov. Al~!oma 19n ~j2'i 51:\l St

Alum 1 pr 10 SIH'• 4R'• 451> - 14 Af.l!'\1!1 lliO tt7t,,. 4n .. 47\.~- +4 Asht~tn~ 91 S1\ 1.& !lP• JP• Att.. ~leel 50 $32 lZ ;2 R3.11 S -'~ ~ p "ill $2~ 2~ 2' - \.~ Dnnk Mont 1l~i ~i0\1 70 1 i iO~•- ~.t nunq PC ·1i.1 s::.\1.-:l ~1 :\1 - ~~ BPll l'h ld lOM !5a~o· 58 lB\~-nr .. u 'olll 34B 31n 340 +! 8.\ 011 :Glt S3l 35 IS + 1'1 nc Pow 969 $16% IN !Gli< + 1'1 BC Phono 109 1!3% ~m 55~ C•l Pow 100 S24V• 24V• 21\t - ~ Can Com 451 U21'• 31% 31•1- 'I•

AMERICAY CLOSING STOCKS By rhe .\S!iliCilltf'd rrr"

A.merlean ,;tock Exehan&&-Mf'reh 1S xd - Ex·dh·ldend, xr - Ex·rh:htl!.

X"'-Ex-warrants. Net chang• Q Irom prevloua da)''a closL'!,

dead. Life is not taken away. "What is pomp, rule, nil!. ln exchange for this enrthly but earth and dust?" hnhitation, there is given the And, live we know we can. f!l prnmise of immortality and , die we must."-Shoke!pem. the peaco and happin~s.l of l "Oh, it IS better. tn go inti riod's eternal home to those the house of mourmn~. than II

· who love justice and hate the house of feastin~. for IS iniquity. that, we are put in mtnd oft~l

Cl Fnd1'7 141! 114 23l'a 23'1\- I' Cdn Brew 4215 $12\i 121> l!lio B•ll Phone C Bronte m IIDI'I 19~ 1911 - li llrnll

N•l 800 55\1 !5 5511

2soo m Jlo m

And, who loves justice and end of all, and the lll'ln~ th.r.l· hates imquity more, than the I eth what is to come.'':-Ecc:!!. Priest who is true to his Di· Tho cold flesh wh1clt !Ol

Cdn Coin 2!0 uw. 3m J!li + \~ AA 011 C hem 625 S7\l 7l'.t 71'1 . Bunk Hill

300 331'< m• 33'1 + '' 700 9'> 91'1 9\'J + '•

16oo 3" m m -1·16 ~000 5V, 511 51'1

vine Calling. consign to the cold ~~rth lil!l c uuakr mo S7 m 61'1 - "" cs Pete C Imp Ilk 10!0 $6!1i 671\ 88 . - '10 Cdn More HR.. GRACE-A ~~~ge repre·l thougltt." says Holy Writ, "to Monsignor Casey was true to th? most meaningful mmon ~ CIL 320 tll!l 141'1 !Ill Chet~bro Cl !'ow mn $ll 121a 121i- li Con MS

.100 !R 57 57 - "' tooo 20~4 20'~ 2t}1i + v,

sentahve body of ctl!zcns and I pray for the dead, that they that callin-', and worthv of the thts priest. friend! attended tho Pontifical i ma)' he loosed from their sins." double ho~our of tho~o who "All is vanity e:o:~rpllnl :~ Requi~m l\las~ which w.H held, "I have glorified Th~e on the· ser\'e well. Today, we honour! love God and serve l!:m a:ol! on Tuesday morning, Fehruary earth, I have finished the work 1 h1s memorv l1ecause we know I Quotin!l th~ poet.

75Q[) I: I': 'It; moo 2•1 21; 2v.- ''

Cl Pow p ld 170 Sll 40\~ II DO\'·I'ol C Morconl T2l S!\i 514 lll + ~i Gldlld Cdn 011 J!! sn 3~ 3~ + li llollln•" 700 2QS" lO,. 20~ I - v,

lOll 47t 4 4ili 47V, 4900 t6•& lit 10l4 + •• 6lh at the Cathedral of the lm· 'which Thou gavest me to do," 1 that l1e ha~ horne the hurde~ i "For him the 11!1 ~r lad~r. CPR UJ5 ttl 25'1 2! hnp Oil

Cdn P•l pr 3n!! S\41~ 11'~ 14'1 - II Imp Tob C 2300 lOt•J ~!l".ilotv,-+ 2 maculate Conception, Harbour 1-.Tnhn XVII.. . 1 of tl1e day and the heat a~ainst ~ shall. be ~et. c \'lckor• 200 111'1 21 24ct .In• N A

co.hlln lllll$ !61'1 ~·1 M>- " M•uey P' Con /II~ mn $22 211\ 22 + 1'1 M•ld John Coronation zoo stn'4 10,_ 1011 Min co.,

7!l00 tlll 1:1 1~ 1 A- J,. ]400 119 12i~~ 127111 + ~1

<00 ll'o 131'1 13''>- II Grace lor the repose of the soul! lily Lord R1shop, R1~ht Rev. the insuperable odds of an in· Hi! Savtour shall TPC 01 " t1 o~. t~e lntc Ri~ht Rev. Y.lsgr. ~lonsi,~nori, Very lle1'. anrl Hev.

1

1 curahle malady. 1 late~t br~ath-Crtdll F t:\0 1112 lllil 142 - li Mol! 0 llrldlo 11000. $23 11 :Z.I Not P•l

!!100 ::!i'' 2711. !i34- •• liM 'l'> J U5 310 \\ 1ll1am H. Cas£•y. l•athrt·s. 1\ly dear hrelhren. I know what hurd~n~ and He walketh t" I l!l.t't••

n Cnmt 1000 SIB II i' Not Ruh !!10 l! 31 M -211 :\700 HI~ Hl, )41, + l'l The l\lass was cel~brated hy I think wr ma)· apply lhM~ ' what hardships Priests who coronet n Fn~..,. '~~ :m 11 Ar r•• P•l•

n oJ .. , 121 s1111 7' 1n +1 roe r•<• w l:iM 7'~ 7'1: 7~1- 11 His Excellency Rishop .T. :11. worrls of the E,·ang~l!st in all ' labour in the North have to ' Up thr~ugh th• ~ 111 •' n l'loreo 1!1! $13'i m; 131\ + \l Panlepoe nnm Tar M~, Ulll 21 •21 + '' 'l' .. hnclr

1100 I 1~·1! 1 !100 lO'fl 1MI 1~ll + 1\

tOO 21\1 ~l'i 211f, + 'I O'N~ill of Harbour Grare· their 'ignifkant meaning. to thr hear, for I have gone throu~h 1 death."

0011ohUt :100 1~\i 2.1'1 2l11 Vn Gas E4dy M 11111 U!\1 ~2\1 211i + ... Wr Htrl jjiO 1!·11 '" 15.1! + 1-1&

Grand Falls, assisted by Right! priest!)· lahours of• n11r dccrns·' the mill. Loneliness and isola·' Requiescat Ill pare Rev. :'Its!!!'. W. P. Hogan as eel Prelate. IJOn from on~·s fellows eat at l\lonsignor W11!. El•ctrolux 100 149\l 4DV. It\•- \1

Fn~hl 37!0 114'4 t:M 13\ls + .,. 'Jnlol Ul181 I 4!0,000. Frastr 3R3 $26~4 Z6\i 26'1 + 1\

Deacon and Rev. F~ther Hogan, Fifty.one yeArs ACn, we met. one's h~arl, and it would be P.P., of North River as Sttb.. - Will ca,ey anrl I !\Ty first difficult to remain faithful, only Peanuts are raised ln th:l! Fr Pelo pr 200 385 3!! 31! -IS

Gallnnu ~0 U2li 311 ~ 3111- 1.0 Gl, Paper 810 Sl9 18'i 1!11- \1 llord•o 100 $91o 9\1 91/a - lt Horn• Pf 100 313 31! 345 +S Hud II!' 725 S37'!t !7!i 57" + ~ HliC 100 $13" 13\ol lllh + " Imp ou ~5 $50 49lt 491' Imp Toh 18!7 $17 IT 17 + 14 Imp Tob p 1000 1814 ~ "' + li lnd A•••~ 1m t:l!\1 32 mt I Ironto pr 100 127 ·JT 17 +1 nl Pap 3124 $39~ 39 391> + •I

tnt Vlll .wo $43V. 45'i 4!1'1 - \4 In~ utu pr 110 ssm 51% sm- 14 Inter l'L 4!5 S8!1'. IS 85 + li Jamolea PS 3700 lltlla lP It - li Lour Fin A 185 123'~ 23V. :u•~ + li Mil PR 7'tn% $201' 1911 211 Marlllmo T 3!1 $:!% 21 . 22 + 14 Mass .IY.J pr 405 $107 107 107 Met Storts 10~ $31~ ~~ RIO + \4. Miron 6 pr !000 SIO 10 10 Molson A 800 $30 291> 29V. Molson B 450 Utv. 301'. 30\> + 14 Moloon pr 2! SU 42 41 - 1'1 Mont ],oco 25 $16 18 16 Mont 'l'rol 10 SB5 u 1t.1 -• Morgan pr 20 1100 10\J 100 N st cor 853 sm~ 21•1 2m + '-4 O!llvlt i.l 152 52 51 + If, Paae lim • !15 $!3\1• 2:1 ~ - \I P•nmons 25 $36 36 36 -1 Prll:a Br 125 $53 53 s:t - ~~ QN Gu 400 S7tJ 7'/• n1,- lA Que Pow 11:1 SJZH. 321h 32'4 + t;., Que l'hnn• mo $17~ 1711 471'•- y, Rot! A\' C B~O Sl\~ ftl,.l 8\-1 + U Rolland A 13SD SIO\i 10\, It\\ + \i Royal Bonk 'u um l\1•t Rm - li Royollle 100 Sl!l'l 131'1 13\i - •l ~alada r 1JDS ttm 111• Ill~ - li Shawln 4130 124 1m !.1 Shsw 4pr A70 $10 40 4D ~Ieard 3U SilO 81l l~t + '4 ~lmpson1 mD t31'.t Jtli U + If! ~S Slott d • m SID\\ 10\1 !Dii +It ~t•tl con · 215D 187\t 11"1 !8~ ~ttlnbl A 1!0 It!\~ U\~ 23~ T•xac~ C !In 15! !!~· !7 - II T Fin A. 10:1.1 Ill II em- .. ·rrc Corp xd 18!! !II> Ill 8\t- II Tr Can PL 711 1211~ 2!olt 21'11 + 1,4 wcoost Tr m mli 1111 111'1 Zellm 200 US II Ul> 3511- 14

CAN~DIAN AJax llllll 31 31 31 Alta Tllk A. t:IM 131\i 311~ 34\i _; " An Ani Mol 2000 348 m 310 +a Arno 311111 8 IV. I"- \i Atlao Tot 11011 110 301 3\0 AU11U!tul 413! 10 U 40 + 1 Avolon 440 Sl!lt l5li 1!14 + " B>llcy 1 l 4111 till tso nn -11 R>kor 111M 14\.fo ltl.fo 11\.fo + \0 llh•• llon . IIlii Ita!\ Ill> 11~- " lllu• II w lOll !10 ~ 1111 BIUilWlf 21\M Ill 1D :18 Bornite 210n~ 21' tl !I Ca1n~ Ctdb lftt &II m m +I c Drodr• ltlll ttm 12•r w;-,. C Kodiak liM l3n 1!5 I :10 Cenl Dtl 11)1)11 781 710 711 -10 CMm1107 IS!I 21J 21G 210 -6 Chlb Cop 7000 11 1~ 11 +I C Papor 1101 $11\.fo 4114. 4%\0- " Copstrm 1111 30 SO 30 Corvette A., 100 112\6 1211. 1116 Denault .100 Ito 20 » D ExplGI'tl' 500 31 31 38 D L•aso 3&00 II &0 12 +I Dumont 2500 :M 21\i 21~ - It Dumagaml 2000 :II 2l 25 Fono 1000 ~V. 21~ 2\r l'letl Mil 1100 100 100 11141 -\! t'urd :tOO I tal 151 ,Ill -2 t't H•llane /\UU ~o ln :1o ru11dy l~OO II 1l II -21!J thupe 1501.14) 3 3 :1 Ua.llhro ttHJO 111 90 oo -to Ulllet·ool I!MI ~10 370 370 llolllnaer 97.1 lUis 21\i jill- v, Jockey c 11100 m 35! m +! JubiiM m 41! 400 100 -:w

1 New· York Deacon. The A>Sistant Priest a~signment was 1o this Cathe· for the memory of the Christ, sections of th~ Snulh. was Right Rev. :lllsgr. Peddle 1lral. The assignment wns marie who in calling us, said "Unless of Carbonear The panegyric plPasant hy the boon r.ompan· you leave father and mother 0 t . th• larrel

d l . d h · · h • · 1 · f tl thf 1 s · . . • re~on eon a1n5 • · was e 1vere ~ Rtg t Rev. 1ons up o 1e you u acm· brother and s1ster, forsakmg b d ~ f t di ti ber In~~ NEW YORK CLOSING STOCIIB

BJ Tbo Anorloltd rroso Msgr. O'Brien, who had known tan and head of Altar boys. He all for my saka, you are not 1 Uo ·{ ~ ;~t" ng m the deceased intimately through. wn~ a youth of J!rcat promise, worthy of me." • m e ~. Ntw 'York B&ock Esehtnre-Mne11. U

ltd - l!:x.d1VIden4, U - EHIJhll, xw-E'I·Wtrnnb. Net chang• 1J Jrom

out hi~ lifetime. scion of one of Harhour Grace's Having put hand to the prevlctu1 dt)''l elan. Pre!et In tho Sanctuary best families charged with the plough, It were betrayal to

11•1 were many Monsignori and oversight of this Edifice of turn back. So, our mission to ACF lad 1100 Tnl 74 74\4 + 'lo Addrau 4900 m~ 78~ 781-4 tm priests of the Archdiocese of God. 1t so happened that his men must go on, by virtue of Al1ecan1 3700 llli 1m m; St. John's and the Diocese of duties were a prelude to the that ind~lible cl1aract•r of Alllo Cb 40011 2011 :WI'J 20% c Ammda moo 1151'11141'11HII-I% Harbour Grace-Grand Falls. Minor Orders whieh would lead Priesthood, sealing us as men Am Can 1100 mi 451\ 45\i + 1~ The pra.,ers at the grave. him to the Priesthood, apart. Am Cyan 14500 41'1o 46~1 4714. + lio • Am Mot 1100 tilt IG\i ~~~- 1-1 side were read by His E~· lily lllnsses were enriched Ilfsgr. Cn~ey has known the ~:;: ~~ 1~rrJ 1~lit 1 :I.,u~I~ _ v. cellency Bishop O'Neill. because he served them, and perils of the sea, and the Am Tob mo 94\t 91ll! 91 - 'I• PANEGYRIC my mis~ion journryings were storms of the land, but Souls Ancndo 3200 49 4611 49 + 1.1 "W 11 d' d Ilk t 1 I 1 I Armco 511 2100 69"' t;ai'J Gi!i +l'io e a 1e an e wa er~ ma< e P cas:1nt Jecause 1e redeemed by Christ were look· Babcock uoo 51 bl~ sm- v. that return, no more we fall readied niy horse and huggy, ed after, and the Sacraments llall Ohio 400 32\i l% 321• ·' i 1 h" 1 · 1 '1'1 I ·1 ' I llnetn1 5100 511, " 51v, _ 11 uown nto t 1e eart -Kings. ant accompante< me. w t cut·, of ~he Church were administer· llorc war 2~00 41111 mt m. + '" "Requiem atternam dona e1 calion w.aR SOilli'l.hing !lice ,th3t'1 cu. In spite of human h3rd· RlUfi!Wk 2Zti00 3G34 3311 361,1;,~ + .,, D 1 1 f I I t tl Budd co 4aoo l!l'a Ill'• l5ll + 11 om ne et ux perpetua luceat o t1e IJOy 1mngnus o te I ships, he rarried on. l(cl'ping Burl ln4 swo ~511 %1'1 ~m- 'k ei." Apostle of Ireland. Ali the faith like St. Paul. For forty· nurra:hs 24000 471L4 471,~ 47%- IAJ • con Drr 90o 2m 261k 26'.¥- ,, "Eternal rest grnnt unto him, signs of a Vucatton were three years he has fought the CI'R 4DOO 2114 241'• 24'1 + \1 0 Lord, nnd let perpetual light evident, and I encuurageel them. good fight. •roday, his course is I cue Jl 4800 7l'a 71'1 71> + 1> h' 1 1 ·•· Caler Tr 1300 m~ 3811 Jt + .,. s tne upon him." With the ode misunc erstanutng, run, and like St. Paul again, I

Chu' Ohio 3!00 Ml> ~ M1~ + ~

TONIGHT ON TV

THE

PRIME MINISTE~

Celontoo 4100 4ll> 41 41 + ,.,. ,I am sure that you all join we have been friends eve!' j feel that there is laid up for ' Chryo1or moo ~7'> 51\!! ~m +1'.0 with me, in this heartfelt 1 since. him, the ever lasting crown Clll'llo :tOO !1\'a om !Ills~· v. prayer for thA soul of our' I prenchrcl with joy, his 1 From the cradle to the grave, THE RT. HONOURAJLI g~~~ .::r~· ;i~ :;~ ~~~l ~~""+" ~ lamentr.rl hrothrr priest. liP is! Rilvrr .Tuhilrr Sermon som-e 1 the PriPst may be caller! the Coni Can 4!00 141~ 43\0 4411 + I& freed from hi~ bodily lll~. May rit:hleen yenr~ a~:o anrl now, Guardian Angel of hi~ flock. coni Oil !71111 sm 51\o !lli- 'I co'" Rll 3600 13 m~ n + ·~ our prayerf11l Intercession with ~adnc~•. I p1·~arh ius . . crone c• 100 !'! 81!> ~7 + 11 npePdlly remove the drosA ol fllnPral P?.nP~ynr. Tim prt,P<t h~~ rcge~erated Cr Zoll 110* stli ftl 1< ~IIi +I f I 1 W t! the Dun ZIM .u !J!'o es +'I human · fr.1llllle! which kfepA AR time w~nt nn, hi A l'oca-~numerous In an .sons 1 1 Dllt _.a, I!M 4~• 0 4116 - 11 him temporarilv from the f11ll lion devrlnperl, until I!nnll)' water~ of Baphsm. He. ha! 1 0011\0 uoo 25 1116 z + 11 " b i d t t! Dourt.o z~oo !Ills ~~ 31 - •• enjoyment nf God's perfect ~11r11 or him<rlf, ~nd wtth a so l'e. nnmerou.s pem es ·

JOHN DIEFENBAKEI

CJON-CJOX T\'. Cham\el.6 :~nd 1°

s:oo r.~J. Du P•nt 11011 211\i 241'i 25011 +1 11 Heaven. nriopll'on h" Bishop Marrh. he from •m. and confmmnt: them EUI KJd 9900 118\l 11111114\i + IIi ' "''l!lf!!~l'l'!!"! Eatoa Mfr 1308 m• 3111 381'1 + It "It is a holy and wholesome 'procer.derl to Qnehcc'~ fnmerl '!! El Auto L 270Q uo" .ltll 6ll - II Laval Semina~.·, wher~ he 81 Pato 11000 2111 21% 21\i • ·' Flrutn 1500 1m 1m 411-4 + v. NY cect 40il0 1111 17'1 11 zealously nnrl dlllgently pre· Ford ,700 1~1 DB !IlOilo +216 NY NH !00 II VI~ 111 d hi If f th oan Dyn moe 3m 3014 3011- 1'1 Penn RR TBOO 1111 11 11 pare m~e or e onerous Oen El xd 11000 7!1~ 77\i 7ft + \i Phelps n eaoo .\91> M'i Mil + '' responsibilities of the Priest· g:~ · t1r., ~= ~~16 ~~ ~~~ _" ~~PI~:.. ~l~ :~~ ~m ~~\t \~ hood. Truly, he was called hy nMc moo sa\6 5514 as~ -11'1 RCA • moo am !21\ mt + I'< God, and ltke Anron would not n.n Tiro 9'00 , ... 871& !7,.- •• Rat Purina t•no "'I 121L 43 + « Goodyoor «"oo 4all 41\t ~za- % nopub su 6soo 19 m~ mo _ ~i accept the honour unless it or P•l•• 1200 3 2~ 21\ Rty Tob 7800 7!1i 7Gifl 761>- v, was so. The day finally came nt A P 30M '7'" .... '!'L + " Bo•r• n 6'00 80'" 80", 801'• +" m Nor 11 • ioo c4!t 4((i 411i + ~' Slllll ou 3roo 1ov: Jm 39l'a " when he returned to us In the auk Oil 13900 41 4111 43~ + " soenn7 9000 lt~• 54 !41\- 1\ armour of Apostolic Holy • Refrigeration Space Available. Hud Ray, M 100 !Ill 14% nl'i + '' Scuth Pac 6400 2m 28~ 29 + 1,1 lnltrloka 2500 !71\ nv. 271'o + li BP•rry R 21000 12~ 21\t 22~ + v. Orders, to labour with distinc· lnt llu • 1700 !lZI> !!9 ~12 - 1'1 Sid Col 4200 5!1> lBV. !BV.- V. tlon in his natiVe land. lnl Nlek 71100 11\4. II 81 - OL Sid lnd S500 ~·L om 'l'" " lhl Pap tllllll 371'o :rM 37% + " sun Oil 2100 M~ ~n" lo"- "' I have followed his priestly tnl Tel 6800 51\i 54 !IV.- li ToKico 12100 !9 58 59 +!!I t N th R' c t lohno M 2100 58 m~ 51% TeK suJ moo 21V. 2ov. 2111, _ v. career a or tv r, a Kroohler GOO tm 17V. tT~- 11, Thlokot 9000 ;m. 37~ 38% + ~~ Fortune Hnrbour, at Bay de Lib MeN 1!400 · 171'1 17 17 - li 1 Tldewlr • 800 21 21 21 - '·• V 1 ·' c 1 tl li Llllon 3~00 1311'1 IZ9V. 131\lo +21'• 1'w•nt c 4000 3m 32,, 33 _ v. ere e nnu at once 1 on ar· Mmh Fld 500 4111 44'Va 111; + 1; Vn corh 5jUO IIC',<, IIHIIW'.I 1 1% bour. I speuk truthfully when I'

M&rlln 1700 2li~i 28 2GI~ 111 Ul•l Alrc 3000 4111 461!, 4111 •• --1\k 1 suy, lhnt '·e left as unfor· Moltoe loll 1811 18'1 18+1 llld Corp 3600 81; U'l m IJ M•,..k 101110 91 ~m 9l~l ~ •1 liM llyp, 51~1 911''• ";•.; 91J - •·, Jlt•tuhle Imprint lor goud in ull Mpl• lion 49110 Ul 127'1 131 ll'• liH llullll 400\J r,gt; 5n•; !•91.1 1 ''I tltnse ficltls 11r hi's ~Iittis[l')', Mlnn Mltl 159011 fi!(ll G7<~-~, 691,~ r:t \J~ Stt>t-1 JI.II{IO 71'• 7':1 ~ 7.l'M 1 •.:t Mlnn Clnt 2:mu 24:t.~ ::!~·~ 21% vuuutl 40lJ 21•l t.P~ 21•~ The Church's rewut'(l fur ser·

From Halifax, N.S., to St. John's, Nf!d. St Ship Leaving Balifas: Due ARCJ! • GULFPORT .............................. MARCH 13 ~~ RCg

BEDFORD II .......................... MARCH 17 ~[.111ca FAUVETTE .............................. MARCH 19 )\RCII'

• GULFPORT .............................. MARCH 23 ~I

Mont \Vdl"J Mllll :H .l'l',~ ;J:!~'>o~- ~~ W 1in Tel ~IIHI :Vf>~t '!ll'z 'l<I~M I 1 Not Avlat ~Oil 2!- 11'1 2~ , w"ll" El tl"''" 'il .,,,,, ·,.i'k , '· t•iceR well reudert•d came when 1

N:11 t:u1h l~lhl 1211'• II~'• 1'!11\1 1 '• Wnul\•11 2;oo Rz 81\1 82 1 '•1twu years a)!n, the Iluly Father I Not 0111 l!ilU 2!1~ 2! 2114- '• • Nat Gypo 3200 sm ~2 12v.- 'h . Total ••I••• 3,2oo.ooo. raised him to the rank of Do·

Fl [

-THI

Rad C B

'wEDNESDAY,

,UI. 7.3()-CBC Nev 7.3~Top of t ·8.oo-CBC New B.!~lllusical C P.OO-~Iornin!l t.!S--Folk Way 9.3()-CIJC N e~ 9.3&-Dlrcct fl,

. 9.45--R~cords 1 10.00--Archers 10.15--lris Powe 10.25--For Cons 10.3!l-Nfld. Scb 10.45-~!USIC Ill 11.00-!lBC Var 11.30-i\fld Sch 11.45--Kilchen ( 12.0()-llllC !'ICI 12.1()-Announcc 12.30-l'arm Br 12.45-)hd Day 1.0()-Duyle Bt 1.15-Don Mess 1.30-CBC :\cw 1.45--Tummy I 2.15-)!uswal 11 2.20-Domlnton

Signal 2.30--Muslcal I 2.4~AIIantic ~

cast 3.15-Ju:m Dr

Story 3.30-CBG N e11

Canada ~ 1.33-Trans Cat 4:JU-CBC riew 4.33-Johnny H 6.0U--~Iu51C in &.30.-Ftsheries S.45-~lusic fro MO-CBC Ne11 6.05--lntcrmezz 8.40-Program 6.45-Supper G 7.00-CI.lL New 7.15-Random t t30-Top& Tod ?.45-Doyle B1 l.l:i-Parliamcr 1.19-Roving R 1.2:!-Eternal s 8.4ll-Prol'inciai 8.55-\\'cather 1.00--lntro to 9.10-Dal'e Rot

10.00-Drama 11.30-CBC N a ti

Roundup Personall•

11.00--Sign Off~ The Que! IQ

voc ,.;,lVEDNESDA y

A;M, _!:28-Stgn On

Ac1

···-

Page 13: E ACADIAN SMAL~ PONTIAC THE DAILYcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196203… · and cnnl~ins "a program for I proposals on nuclear trsts will Urn • eng ssue

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hile not em. r: to I]Jl~

'~ a ling 1c:are. :ient reck

: !u·m o~t d ~~ our 1 numhrrs

in Holy nint~d the

Iii~. and happinm

~r Chrilt ·:1d tn hu. ~ntitl~d to

11 hi~ rt• 0: to iud~· : a.nd ne6· l.~t hi! re. 1J comfort 11.:: ol hi1 ~d a~ you 1nn)' to hi1 -:Ht w~ a1\ ., I hat !f·

!all down

•' n~at ~r• 1:11 Ia fr1t .. 1 oh. <t~nn[ Anrl h;~pp,·. Jlll\ ; : t ~rn~~~ ~I

c:r•u. And •thcr In the h~!\ rOI'!!

. Inc\ thl m~ another. ~hten!r of

'" ,. we can. !!I hake~p~are.

· to go into 1in~, than to tin~. for in mind of the ]!Yin~ think·

ne."-Eccle1. which you

I rarth ~il'tl ul sermon ol

•,;r~ptin;: te ~ H1m alnn~ ... ~t:

,i:,·~r hdder

1 hrlrlm

!l!ed In :oulh.

15 the larfesl timber In tht

GHT TV

lE

iME STER )NOURAILI

FEN BAKER :tOX 1'\', · (l and 10 r.~J.

tLINGS ' .

ST. NFLD. WEDNESD 'MARCH 1962

FOR FUEL & STOVE OIL DELIVERIES

DIAL 8-3001 to 8-3005 I

CONCEPTION BAY SOUTH AREA - DIAL

LONG POND EXCHANG·E ............................................ 227·2161

THE GREAT EA·STERN OIL CO. LTD.

Radio And TV Programm.es C B N

L (lil' umcrs 1 ,n~-·"'"·· Sdwol Broadcast

t m the ~lorninc

"·'"-"" . \'~nctv ·?1c-:if!d Sd!rt•i Bruudcast

hr:1 Comer

6.30-Ncws and Weather 6.35-The Bill Allen Show 6.40-Morning Meditation 11.45-\Vorld of Sport 6.55-News 7.00-The Bill Allen f.llow 7.15-World of Spo~t 7.30-News 7.35-Travel Guide 7.36-The BIH Allen Show 7.45-World of Sport 7.55-Ncws (Local) 8.00-RCAF Tower, Torbay

(Weather Report) 8.03-!'lcws (National)

' 8.08-The Bill Allen Show 8.15-Sports Capsule R.25-Ncws 8.30-Hit Tune of the Day 8.35-World of Sport 8.40-The Bill Allen Show 8.55-Ncws 9.00-Morning Meditation 9.03-Thc Bill Allen Show

l'holce 9.30-Ncws Headlines Bll•:ukast 9.31-'fhe Bill Allen Show

d Day St•rcnade . 10.00-Ncws I pr; ... nuw Httllclln ' 10.05-!itorl; Club ::i-Dol! ~lc.<-rr IU.OB-The Geor'c Cawdry 1 oJ-l'BC :-.cw> anrl Weather Show 11:-T,,mmy lluntrr Shuw 10.30-Ncws Headlines : li-\lum·al Rrllllrzrou5 10.31-licor~e Cawdry Show ~.2:1--lloml~IOn Obi. Time 10 ·55-New~

~1 ;nal 11.00-George Cawdry Show ::1•)-.\limral RrBdw·ous 1J.:l0-News Headlines 24~.\tl!ntic 5rhool Broad· . • 11.31-G,eorge tawdry Show

ca;t I 11.55-News 3\~.t";m Dra~me Tells a : P.M.

Stor\ 12.00-George Cawdry Show 3lt!-CBl Kews and Trans 12.30-News

canbda Matmec 12.3rt-Gcorge Cawdry Show 333-Tram Canada Matinee 12.45-Fisherrnen's Forecast 40'.'-CDC ~ew.• 12.55-News ! i3-Johnnl' Holmes Show 1.00-George Cawdry Show ,it<:-.,'.];,,,· 1n the Alr 1.15-World of Sport ~~~-Ftshmcs Broadcast 1.30-News (Local Summary) l.45-\lu;ic from the Albums • 1.45-Gcorgc Cawdry Sbow C.O[)...CBL :;ews I 2.00-News Headlines 6.Q5-Inlcrmmo 2.Ql-Prizcs and Problems 6 40-Pro~ram Prcl'iew I 2.30-NCWi Headlines C.!~~uppcr Guest I 2.31-Prizes and Problem• iOJ-.,'LL :\ell'; <~nil Weather 2.55-News 115-Ranilom Chapters 3.00-Sage Brush Sam Show 130-ToN Tud"~· 3.30-Ncws Headlines H5-Doyk Bullelln 3.31-Sage Brush Sam Show B\5-Parliamcntary R~port 3.5:1-Ncws 119-Rorin~ Rrporler 4.00-Bob Cole Show m-Etrrnal Sea 4.30-News Headlines llil-Pro1·inl'ial Affair! 4.31-Bob Cole Show E5.1-ll'ratilrr lnr ~larincrs 5.00-Suppcr Serenade HoJ-Intro to \l'rd Kite ~.30-Ncws Headlines Hl-Dm Rohhin~ .Jazt 5.31-Supper Serenade

5.45-Fisherman's Forecast· 5.55-News 6.00-Bullelin Board 6.10-Movie Guide 6.l~ports Report 8.2rt-Travel Guide 6.30-Ear!J Evening Newa

Roundup '7.00-Sage Brush Sam Show '7.15-Shellelagh Sbowtlme

r---.;.;;;.;.;.:;.=.:,;;.:.,,:: - '7.30-Ncws H eadlinet '7.31-Sbellellagb Showtlme '7.~5-New~

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

Actress

,, ..

8.00-Cre'am of the Crop 8.30-News Headlln~s 8.31-Cream of the Crop 8.115-Newa 9.31-Cream of the Crop 9.55--News

10.00-Night Show 10.30-News Headllnes 10.31-Night Show 11.00-Torbay Weather Report 11.02-Big Top Ten 11.30-News Headlines 11.31-Night Show A.M. 12.00-Night Show 12.30-News Ileadllneb 12.31-Night Show 12.55-News Summary, Weather

Report and Time 1.05-Sign Off

CJON WEDNESDAY, March Hth.

A.M. 6.30-The Bob Lewis Show.

News, Sports and Wcatb er Reports

9.0fl-lltusic for Milllons 9.20-Hit of the Day 9.30-Austin Willis 9.35-Weather Forecast 9.45-Doctor'a House Calls 9.55-Kilcben Glatter

10.00-Newa In a Minute 10.01-Marlin'a Corner 10.15-What'a Cookin 10.30-National News 10.35-Jerry Wiggin's House·

wives Choice and Newt 11.00-Robln Hood Bulletin 11.15-The Right to Happlneu 11.30-News 11.45-0rehld for tlisele 12.00-Bob Lewis Town and

Country, News and Weather

1.05-Wcather Forecast 1.15-News 1.35-Don Jamieson's Editorial 1.40-Sports 1.45-Art Baker's Notebook '2.00-Newa Highlights 2.03-J erry Wiggin's Matinee 3.00-News Highlights 3.01-John Nolan's We1tern

JKmboree 4.00-News Highlight! 4.05-John Nolan's llanch

Party 4.30-National News 4.33-J ohn Nolan's Ranch

Party :5.00-Newa Hl.r:hlllhls Ml-Art Andrews' Danee

Party &.~News Heaclllnet and

Weather 6.03-National News 6.10-SportJ 6.20-News. 8.30-Dave Maunder'• Club 13

and New• 8.00-News in a Minute ll'ld

Best frmo the Wtst 11.30-Nutlonal News 9.00-News Highllghtl 9.01-Nfld. Spiree 9.40-Salt Lake Choir 9.45-Newa

10.00-N ews Hlghllahll lO.Gl-Natlonal Newa 10.15-Pick of the Pop1 10.45-Sports 10.55-Letters and Mesucea ll.OIJ-News Highllghts 11.01-Panl Hershon's Music In

the Night and NPWI 1.01-Sign orr.

Weather

CJON-TV WEDNESDAY, March· Ulh.

10.45-Pastor'a Study 10.50-Wumen's News 11.00-llowle Meeker Show 11.05-Cartoons 11.15-Romper loom 12.15-Local, National Ne1n 12.30-Sign Oft 2.00-Dragnet 2.30-Che& Helene 2.45-Nursery School That 3.00-Muste Break 3.SD-The Verdict Ia Yours 3.56-CroSt Sectoln UIJ-MIIIe, de Pari1 UO-Tuglloal Annie 5.10-Frlendly Mug.r:lni 5,15-Maigle MuJall'ls 5.30-Ruzle Dau.J• UII-Caplaln Jaelr: 11.211-TIIe World of SJOrt 8.311--New. cavatca"-1.50-Pillnt ot VIew 7 .00-Father ot the Bride 7.30-Pete and Gladys ·

'8.110-Natlon's Buslneia 1.15-Nallnna1 NewM.

. 1.30-Ben Caset 9.30-Playdate

10.30-Perey Como Show 11.30· -News Ma1azlrie 12.00-SPGrts Calen4er 12.os.:-News and Weathtr 12.15-War In the Air· IU!i-Ptstor'a · Stud1 12.5G-SIP OU

• JACOBY ON BRIDGE

-.--~--··· .. ........ -EAST WAS BEST AT HINDSIGHT

WEST

NORTH 4103 • J 10 8'15 3 +106 ... AQ~

EAST

2l

I 4KQ8'/B 4542 ¥S ¥9

+AQ42 +JlOB

• J953 +KD~32

flOUTH (D) 4A:r9 ¥AKQU +KB7 ... 7&

Eai!t and Wert vulnerable South We.~ ~orlh Ea.st 1 ¥ 1 4 4 ¥ Pan PaSII Pass

Openlnt lead-+ J . By OSWALD JACOBY

There u~ed tn be a group In Seattle called the "Ifida Club."

McmberJhip was open to any bridge player whn would say "If l'da played such·and-such l'da beatr.n (or made) the hand.''

South allowed Well's jack of clubs to hold the first trick. He won the club continuation with the ace in dummy, ruffed the queen of clubs, played a cou­ple of rounds of trumps stop­ping In dummy, led the ten of spades and let It ride to West's queen.

At this Jllllnt West was dead. A diamond lead would make South's king good w.hlle a spade lead would allow South to dileard one of dummy's diamonds.

What about the 1Iida club? East promptly qualified for

membership. Before anyone else could apeak he uld, "If l'da played the king of clubs at trick one anrl led the jack of diamonds l'da beaten the hand.''

East 'II'U rlJ:ht, but that really would have been an amazing defensive play. Not only would he have to know about the club situation, but he also would have had tn be clairvoyant enough to lead a diamond, nnt a. spade.

CARD SENSE Q-The bidding has been:

l:ast Seuth West North 1• Pass :Pass Dbl. l'isa P.au 2¥ Db!. l'asa 1

You, South, hold: .AQ10,9,8,'1 ¥2 + A3,3 ... 9,6,5

What do you do? A-Pass. The West has prob·

ably jumped out of the frying pan right into the. fire.

TODAY'S QUESTION Again .East opens the bidding

with one spade. This time you, South, hold: . I(IKJ,2 ¥A6,!1,2 +AQ,3 "'Kl0,6 . What do you do?

An!wer Tomorrow.

• BARBS • I,. .. .

B1 ILU COCHRAN A diplomat' is a man who can

convince !tis wife she'll look fat In a fur coat

••• · A woman upon reaching 1M advl5ed friends never to hurry. That's a short recipe for a long life.

• • •

It's r1ne for parents to stay Up to kls~ the kldi goodnight but think !if the sleep they lose.

• • • Glasses lmflrove Some peo·

pie's gam~. says a lfolf pro. He means the kind YOI,t wear.

YOUR RED CROSS

•• SERVES YOU AND

SERVES FOR YOU

PRISCILLA'S POP

THE STORY OF MARTHA WAYNE

CAPTAIN EASY

I ' '

SHORT RIBS

~lORTY MEEKLE

BUGS BUNNY

HECK, NO .. .ot.O Rlli!V CREI!k'S GOT GOLD

LAVIN' ALL AI?OUNP EVERV WHICI-I 'f/M.,,

13

S?r-~'"""'"":. -~lKJLL ' .. ~ .

"'" ~ tM! ~EA. 1"4. T.M. p,tcn.

"He's not 'the Pied Piper-he's just carrying a transistor radio!" '·

By DICK CAVALLI' ; ! ,•

•,1 .

·i l 'I

" r I r l I

Bv LEON . SCHLESINGER

r ., I I j

i 1

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I l I '

I i I I .

I I,

i: ' 1:

i I

, ! I I " . :I . •.·· .. I

. ·, :

I'. . ~·

: . ~-.: .• T

Page 14: E ACADIAN SMAL~ PONTIAC THE DAILYcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196203… · and cnnl~ins "a program for I proposals on nuclear trsts will Urn • eng ssue

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Female Help Wanted A-1

WANTED Lady

to do tvping and general offil'e work part timc-aftcmouns

,\ppl~· nox 101 t·/n

THE DAILY NEWS

Where To Go

SIAD~UM TO·NIGIIT 8:30 o'rlnck

SR. FINAI.S Guard~ r~. Frltdlans

Balcon~· . . . . . . . . 7:i Ccnls Gen. Admission 50 Cents

Tickets on general sale lo1h1;; 0 a.m. to ;; p.m.

111~1'14.15

~~~~ =~-~~-~---~~.:-:1~-===== i :: Insuranl'c D .;:;,.' ---l J. LACEY ::)NSURANCE Ltd. : D~perrdahlc Fire lmur'ancr.,

;-~ Prom11t Claim Settl:mcnls. " :- DIAL 8·7035

:,.Jjlari,tf D -:-------------------- F-1

------------ ~.,.

LOST A LARGE, FLAT

WALLET Containing money and i I valuable papers. Finder

Call 96743 REWARD

fcht2,13.14

Auto Accessories I

I'

Nfld. Armaturt

Work! 38

Bambrtc• Street

Beauty Parlours K

GREAT EASTERN OIL & IMPORT

CO., LTD. Radio, Television, Washers. Refrigerators, Deep Freezers

Electric Ranges. Floor Polishers.

Gramophones Public Address Systems

Tape Recorders

REPAIRS AND SERVICE 5 1-NES

DIAL 8·3001 to 8·3005

WATER STREET Jan28,1y

Drug Stores

\1. CONNORS Ltd. Prescriptions Pickup and

lie livery service. PHONE 8·2206

Q

Q

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. WED~ESDAY, ~IARCIJ 14, InRl

~IOTORS cARS j JOIN THE Old Buddies 1Wor~d Day 1-- -- ·· · ·--- BLACK WATCH M IQf p . M . :(Royal Highland Regt.) F!~~I'ILLIA:II Ont lt\{'1_1 I rayer

• •

WANT TO BEA HAPPIER DRIVER?

OF CANADA Two waJTiors wl{o fo;tght to·: CAfl,BONEA~ .. \larch 11 , get her in JJI'itish skies two d~c-1 The '' orJ,J ~a~ ~f Pray€r

This is a gr~at rear to join aries ago hal'e been reunitd ·held 111 thr S.A. Citadel,, f· 1 Canada's only regular highland hc1·c on the north shore of LJke: day last. ~Irs. Allan n.: ·. ~

·regiment - during 19li2. the Sup~rior. 'wife of tl:c Corp, IJffic~· ·,' ·. Black Watch (Royal H!:~hland ,John 1'<1lrl'SOII. who flrw S;J.I·It:lc SCl'l'iLC and :llr>. r' -~ ' .. Hcgiment) of Canada cclehrales fires with the B.\1,- dtrring ti:e Bradbury. nf the l:n:l"d . · .' the one hundredth anniversary Second \\'nrld \\'ar. found ont: i!~rc L1e >pc~i<•l ~·!d··~" · · of its formation. Enrolment ap· of the l'clcran air~r<~fl in Eu-, il:rl;s wr!r .. m~d lltr Ia;-~~ : Plieillions are now hcin_.., a"· rope anrl has it flyin::! ;1~:11:1. 1 grr~~lfnm :_:·::d !"3id i•, ·~.-~: ·

BUY A NI:W f.A n NOW ~ c • ) f 1 t \' ! 'IVlTII A Low.cusr LIFE·Ili'SURF.D ccptcd from advcnlut·c-tal'in;: i The stru~glr inrnh·cd in g~llin:!; l'.'oiH ,.,. '-'· r:· 111~ l•t Kilo•• ..

XXX XXX XXXX XXXX X XXXX X X X X X X X X XXX X X X X X XXXX

X X X X X X X X XXX XXX XXXX X X X X

XXXX X XXXX X X X X X X X XX X XXXX X XXXX X X X X X X X X XX 11 XXXX X X X X

,.,11111 " n1n 11 of .0111 .• ,, 1, the old [Jgtllrr atrlJllrl'c ·,;;:_, I'.OIIH'·I 111 all p;,;·;, of , . ~ ._, c "'"'c atH . . . . , 1 · t~haractcr who are lookiil for' r~mnns~rnt of r:•rl,· "':11·t;n:·~ woJ'.r wc:·t· ""'''"'''rd '' ·'

t I t. ll ·c1forl'i to J>nl h:JII":'r.·d f·~b·~~-·; were lor'·"· ?•HI l11· r1, a ru v rcwan JJlff ('arrrr In,. . - . . · ·, . ll't'. t II ' . r ' IIllO ('()111 11::1 ili!3111Sl llic [j;•,~ pUi'j1fl>('~. ilii'l \''(' ;,l! ,,,.

"'I I l!~n" o Jc. ~a tis ac~t:o~ of 111iln Luff·.' ~[fr. ont• and II< a! fl""~' .I, 'iljlj'- : .. l:ndrtll1 0 rmport.~nl SCI I ICC to· :llr. l'rlt'J'><JII, pre~idrnl of t:;rou~'""'' Ill'~' ,._,,,~ 2 "

l an aria, the Hcgm1cnt offers the Tlmnrlcr \:ay Fly in~ (';,;, ll'or'd. ,\i•·:, F.r;:di:ll" !hem . a full-:m.Je earrrr. a . i~ar\ .tricri ,lor trn ~·r.Jr:; lo find a nut>lJ'ldi·~ arldrr·--. 1 •:c.1:~

LOAN . hc,Jith~ outdoor l1fc, good ratrs Sp1tf1rc. lho J;lll~lc - en~111e 1':i1ieh w;•< "Cod'- 1 "'·C ·:.

'of pay, travel at home and· ii~hler 111:11 led the f!.\1,- lo ·•ic- The \','hot,, '.l'orld .. >t ., · 'abroad, . o\llsl<~ndin~ . tr~ining 1 ~~r-:- in .t!;c l~J~tn Diltt'c. of Bl'it.n1 rd 011 t th;n Tho \\'p;·i·l.cD;;·

THE BANK QF I and man) opeu111gs fo1 adi.Jncc-, ,ud ~l.r~cd a 111dJOI 10le _m Prayer wa; lll:lll~llrdl"li fr: •men!. I IITCtktng Gennan 111l'O>J0'1 the Proteo.tant ('iJ;:rc·'"· 1'

Renta1s R1

_· NQVASCQTIA 1

" • !plans. foranyoneand~:ot·;;',:· ------------- • • · IC you arc .lr to .23, smglc anrt :\ yrnr ~~~o. :llr. P;~t0rscm: d~r the ar·spiec, 111 1_11/ :-CROSBIE & CO., Ltd.

A~Pnts f~r UNDI\RWRITERS AT

LLO\'DS.

H GLADY'S BEAUTY SHOI'PE I ---~- ·~··· ~ ~ ~- · cor. Bond and Prescott Sts. FOR SAI.E-1 new milch Phone B-4951·8·71!98, Speci·

Articles For Sa]e Floor Sanders, Belt Sanders,] ~-------.. ph)stc:!ll~· ftl •. !md out m~re llle<ll'd that f!l·c grn:~~·k IX Spit-. church or '"·~aniL.ll'nn.' . Power Saws, Electric'al Drills Nota'ce ---- a;l!lut th1s cxc.Jtmg opportHntl): r.'.rcs. were. fo1· sale ~~, Ilelgttu.n.: communit::. 11 ;, f•n· .\J.L. ~.,, Reasonable Rates Call 8-5016, 1\:0W. :rom ~~ur local Army 1.hc11e a fum lwd pmcol~scd tn0· years lh~ W.JI.S. M the l··.; etc. Reasonable Rates. Call Rccnnltng Statwn at: ohso.rtc . propeller craft from: Church spr>nsorrd lh• ··-.

LUI\' RATE!' IJI,\L 8·5031

D

Cow. Apply Charlie Mar· alizing m cold waving, hair .lin. Flatrock, St. John's styling, cutting and tinting, East. mar13,14 manicuring, facials etc., 14

operators, no waiting.

8.5()16, 8.735~. the Relg1an go1Wnment. 1. hut this ,.P."r 1.1 ,,.,., ·, .. · .. Notice is hereby given that Canadian Armed Force~ · " "

John Phillip Shave of the Vii- necrnitinl! C•:•tre, Sllii'PED 1:-. fRATES I jointly h:• the .\n·c::(.:l . U-RENT

D!v. Barris & Jliscock Ltd. 16!1 Water Street, St. John's

!age of Stephenville Crossing, ~Jain Post Office Buihlinl.(, The fiyin~ club bou~hl one: lion Arm,· an<! l't:ir"d in the District of St. George's in Water Strret, st .. Tohn's, ~flit., <~nd had a iww ~n~ine in,tallccl.; wome~ and it 1':::, h;:':\:

JOB BROTHER~ . (COMPANY, Ltd.

Lenten Specials Fue1 (Coal and OiJ) the Province of Newfoundland, i Telephone: 8·0291 , It wn~ fl~wn to EnQir:nd. '~'hl':·e c.e's'" · '':"P11:"'t:n: "'' Gentleman, will apply to the . ' . i 1t ';as d~~~~1;ml1?d and shrpped. tnnt the P1:1rc ,.r :•r0 : Parliament o[ Canada at the . Please promle mr dela1ls on i In I· ort \~ JI.Jam 1~1 cr;Jtes. _!tile h~!~P:t'l and hl'll£•r .·

L feb23,1mth R

Water Stret ~ DIAL 8-2658 - 8·-1123

D

REG. T. ~WRGAN INSURANCE Ltd. Temple Bldg., P.O ox 168,

3t1 Duckworth St. DIAL 80370 or 8·7756

. D

W. U. KNOWLING INSURANCE

Fire . Auto • Casualty PH: 8-2902, 8-7811

I

I

Labrador Pickled Sea Trout Labrador Pickled Herring l'rcsh Frozen Cod Fillet

Fresh Frozen Salmon 1-'l'csh Frozen Halibut · (\'o. 1 Soil Codfish

Stt·iC'tlv Fresh llerrml( Halih1;t and Cod nllcl

(when obtainable)

The Two-Way Stores Ltd.

ST. CLARE and GOLF AVE.

Dial 9·2198-9 · marB.l mth

158 Watrr Street St. Jttl111'~ mar6.lmth D ' POULTRYMEN-I( you are ,_...,., _________ .1 interested in securins; ROP

INSURANCE

hi;:h pl'nducin~ l~ying pul-. lrts at a reasonable price

that ran compare with any­thin~ on the market, we can supply you, with three way Cross Strain Leghorns !hat will satisfy you. Write for priers on day old chicks, hea\'Y and light breed pullets. 5000 Layera and 3000 chicks of this strain can be seen anytime at Hill Top Poultry Farm, Seal Col'e, Conception Bay Hi;:hway. Local A::ent call 8·1334, Mrllonalrl and Vrirnd~. Col'rh~~~~ Roar!, P. Kl. nulrl2.14,16 H

A11'ENTJON Groups, Schools, Cluh~ elr., for a plcHsing and profit· able. past-lime. why not try

_ . __ . - ~- ...... _ -- - • one of our manv handicraft Clubs • Entertainment E i ideas: Plastic ~·o'am, Flower·

craft, Mctalcraft, Leather·

NIGHT CLUB TMo'IGRT

Clust hne run nlshll Fine r.nrded dontlnr and IIden· ln~ musiC' .. So Co\·er. ILn!t !'ilt"ht

· Speclalsl. Comlnc Thursday: CBC Danee Band. 13 P!rte5.

Friday: Floor Show. BROOKFIELD ROAD - a p.m.

Phone 900%1

craft, Stixcra£1. Textlle Painting and Paint by ·No. Sets.

I F.. ~tELENDY, llt\NDICIIAFT SUPPLIES 16 Cashin A1•e, Phone 92941 Also m•ailable a wide range o( Sealskin Souvenir and Gift Items. Belts, Sealskin, Jewellery, Bow Ties etc. febl5,cod H

Prompt De1ivery On • STO\!'E OIL • FURNACE OIL • HARD COAL • SOFT COAL • IRON FIREMAN

BEATING EQUIPMENT

L

Contractors M

COSTS STAY DOWN WHE.N ARMCO BUILDINGS GO UP

~1isccl1aneous R present or next follm~ing scs-, career opportunities in the , ·non h'.-le. cluef cng:necr o:. !Je rn<h' t '::,n: ;·,·: ! ______________ ...:_. ____ 'sion thereof 1 r B'Jl I: , ~!he Thm11lrr !lay ~lull, \I':Js d~,!·' llw .\n2l1r: n ( h:trl''J ·.•rr' DO YOU NEED your Sp!'lng- I D' f ' 1° a 1 0 :Black "ale h. : ged IJv cleb\·s when lH' ·:c·t .':J>·::h B n::. b r. ~.J:·. . . tvorce rom us Wife Norma 1 "' • • • •

filled mattress re-comhtJOn· l'!ar, Sl . 1 tl V:11 f, ,,ame . . ................................. :about rr•:ts.,emhltng lhr 'lbur:. Tlwms ""'' '.f~>. r'':::r:~· . II "' 1 t l' , ~ li'lH~, o te I age o , A !d l. ! II l . I .. · I . : ·! I' . ed or ~our A noo ma · Sl 1 .11 C . . "[ rtss . ...................................... c 1.11 to \\lite to t 1e Btt"l nm1 !hr ~::·:·.·nliou ~\rn;· ..•

, k d d . . 1 ep rcnv1 e rossmg, 111 the c·t ·;T , · ·. · ·,1 .. f . 11 s ., 1.,. 1. . · · ·. tress rc·ptc e , an reco\· D' t . t C 51 G , . 1) o11n ............... ~ .................. ,an mnn .. I) 01 an or . p1, 1,e. '111on tr> :>It·.'. ll1•·i:•. crcd your· bedspring or !I PIS nc 0 [ N etrged,'' 1 ~ the Province ......... Phone ........... manual and 1rhcn il finally ar- :llaric ll:c·!;, ,,,.; );," daybed re-wired or your rovmce 0 ' ew oun lan • on i ril'ed, !11o ke1· clwpters were A>h. Fro:.1 the t :Ji:crl c~ · r 't 1 1 t d If • the ground of adultery. Las! Srhool GrarlP Completed 11115 , 11w Frrnt•n1J1• hr 'ot 1·11 a,l<il·l1·1,.,1 .,,, _,, 11 .. urm ure re.up 10 s ere . 1 D d · · '· ~ ·' · · · -so call us. Items called I' a.tc at ~1. John's In the Age E62·12 photo>l:tlic ~opies of the mis- :llr>. r_;~ fl Pmrell. '.lr; for and dcli\'crcd. Rates Provmce of Newfoundland, th1s ------·-"------ ·------ sin~ ehaptcr~. . Oatc~ and .\!r-; .. \lbl_'fi Pe:~: lowest obtainable. Keats I 28th day of February, A.D. I Statutory Not•c . _sprci<~l en~ine hose for the :llr,. Geo(cr Pa:·:nn, '.lr: ·, Mattress Factory, 16 Mount 1962· I u e' SpttfJre had to he. 11'1!Ct'er\ from li~htful :•1110 nllrl 'ln. G. Royal Avenue. Ph: 9.2753. DA~ID B. SPARKES, ___ a manufacturer m Scotland. Soper wn< piani;l.

Soltcltor for Applicant. 1 I • • . • 1

FOR YOUR Interior Painting feb28mar7,14,21 I In the matter of the Estate of , ACCIDE:"TA!, ~AhEO_FF ; and sparkling, also repair the late Elias Anderson of : The plane ' fn·st fh~ht here. , C • work. Our prices are rea· Not1'ce Burgco, in the Electoral 'ois-' last .Jan. n. was ahead _or sched-: 0m1ng

. . I ule-hut not hy des1gn. The' c ·\., R · , sonable. Dial 8-47673, F. trrct or Burgeo-LaPorle, In, S 'tf'. .. d " . t .· " , ",Q:\EAR. 'lar,h Melendy,l12 Barnes !toad. of Application the Province of Jliewfounrl· ;Pit "\11 '15 un ~r,ofm~. daxm, The Sa!l·ation .\nnr

8·73974. feb9,lmth R land, Canada, Fisherman de- 1 ,.1"5

05 tw fen a 1 ~

1115 0 wm spun 1 League wi II be ~en·tr.~ An.:

F D• d • , u o con 10. , F' h' . d T . . . CASH PAID FOR-Comics. or IVOrce cease . i To ayet·t 3 ~rnckup. the pilot: H a~IJO.le 7 ea In (JIC

. d k All persons c!aJ'tnr'ng to lJe i look off and stayed aloft for ~o: 'Ia hat14thp.mf. onth"'"l".·"''·.' magazmes, an poe et 1 • t \ r 11 1 1 t fl' 1 t 1 ·' arc . or e pr.ce . novels. John D. Snow, 9 Notice is hereb" given that 1 creditors or who have an" , 11111111 es .. ' 11• sea e es 'g 1 1 f'ft. •• c 1 • . .·11

' ' ' 1 of R" mmntes foll01•·ed 1 1 ) cen... a e,er .• u1

New Gower Street, Phone MARY SHIMONDS, of the City 1 clai~s or demands upon or ef-1 Cl;~hmemhers noll: a·re work-' dressed in olrt fashioned .

86808. jan6lmth R of Tor?nto, in the. County of : fect1 ng the estate of Elia_s And"i ing on a proj~ct to r'c>torc tho 1 tun:es and we are sure

TilE . CENTRAL BARBER Yo~k, m t?e Provmce o! On- erson, of Burgeo aforesa1d, are 1 plane's ori_ginal color scheme. ~herr parts. To _add to :\! SHOP-We are·now operat. 1 tano, :Marned Woman, Will ap- h_erehy requested to send par-i and war markin~s. 1 Joyme:;t there mll he a lng 10 chairs, you can be I ply to the Parliament of Can· li~ulars of same in writing,_ duly 1 E1·e_ ntuall)'. the cl_uh pbns to: stall and grabs .. assured of prompt, ef!lcJ- ada, at the present or next fol- . executed, to the undersigned . present it to a museum to sen·e; -------ent, sanitary service. No Io.wing sc.ssion thereof, for a 'Solicitors for the Executor, ~~~ 'as a n:cmorb! to (ana db .Is: Ca rbonea r waiting problem, 24 New I Btl! of Drvorce from her hus-

1 or before the 5th day of Apnl, who sen·ed \l'ilh the P.:\F, in- i ·

Gower Street opposite Ade· 1 band, ROBERT SBIMONDS, of' A.D. 1962. after which date the· cludin~ -~7 who garc their lh·esjl'-Jewsy Briefs

Laide Motors Ltd. R 1

. the City of St. John's, in the E~ecutor will proceed to dis- in the Battle o[ 13ritain. '· • ------'------------ Province· of Newfoundland, tnhutc the Estate of the said: CA!lBO:\EAR. \lmh

Truck Driver, on the ground of ; deceased, ha1·ing rcg<Jrrt only to i E '". .. 1 C . 1 • a1·c pleased to

IIOOY ICK.OWAn I

Better Living Costs Less

when you go All-Electric

Ll:.f~i ,, ... ,, ... , ...... tt

Cheap Reliable Eleetrlelty In and Around St. John's

R

adultcrr. 1 the claims of which it shall then ; "net,) 'd ur. 0 one polln< · l\cllowa)·. c·nc of our ~1·icn N t .; ' r ·tl . '. th t . hal' 11"11 n t'. 'nf pr~n!ll' ,, >aid to equal four t ' .. o 11 r 1~ 111 .1e1 1(1\~n . ~ • P .. o lte. .

1 1 1 • 1 f 1 , ~~ zrns. otl a~:lln. :.:.rr MAllY S!~D!Ot\'DS will claim • Dalrd a! Sl .. Tnhn''· this 5th . lilt nels r''' I ICC I s c'". ( -. hrcn hnll,~crl for ''"'ill '

' ' I f . Pnll:ll s 0 c lrr<c. I) ltllol' s Of I. f' ' r

I. her. costs of lllJS act10n ~s . < ;~y o jl;~reh, A.D. Wh2. '·milk nr :l~ ,.,.~s. ~ wee,;s "" ·' nn~ '""I"

l h h h d "" ! rih'. ~;u.~:Uiinrd 111 ;; ft-11 aga1ns rr '" a~ . : COOK, Tl.\ f!TI.ETT, ('II,\ [.""'·:n ~

D •TED t th C t f T -"'· 'fippo·t Y ire : " '• a· ~ 1 Y 0 nr~n·: and ~1.\JlSIIAI.L, ~~~ --~- ~ • to ln the Provmc~ of Onlmo, , Soli if 1 the E ~ ! · St II- t N f. • ----~- -- ~ - ---lthis271hdayofFebruaryA.D.,]A~D;~~; or .• muor. ' ~hM ory . O.ECe C.JE.lN.A. -1

1962· A. C. S. "'ILSON, 1

1 247 Duck.worlh Street, .. ! Cf'' • " - St J h " C ·In thP mallrr of thr Estatr nf "" eJo(f.' 1"l""r5 !iolicitor ror Applicant. 1 • 0 n s, "ew nnndland. r,.. .,.. . • '·'" 'mar7 14 2128 S Elias .Jamrs )Jar~h, l:cle of flAy HOJJEflT.' .. 1\mh!

mar14,21,28apr4 S ' ' ' ' -~--- _ -'-~- St .. John's in th' Prod nrc of St. ~blthrw·:' E;1•: ~ra:-:~~ '

Statutory Notl'ce , Jliewfoundland, llctirecl Baker, '.\'.A_ hrl<l thrir annual . : dcccasccl. · 1 1 f rn~ ntH 0 retinrl 0 All persons claiming to 1:•' Tucs,h)', :1:arrll Hll: .\

ln the matter or the Estate cf Agnes Dooley, late of St. John's In the Province Newfoundland, Spinster, ceased.

creditors of or who have any mrmbcr of m~mlwr• claims or demands upon or af- The meeting opcnrrl 11ilh feeling the estate of Elias er, following whidt rrpN!!.

dor: James :\!arch, late of St. John's' the prcricus year', 1rork c-

1

• aforesaid, Retired Baker, de· ·read and adoptrd. Rcr. 1. ceased, are hereby requested to ler th~n crr.durtccl the

All persons claiming to be : send particulars thereof in writ- of officers for the creditors of or who ha\'e any ing, duly attested, to the un- year which were:

• I E

We can erect your Armco Bwildinc fltl and save you money at the same tlmt. Factory-prGdueed parts cut job·Jite 'tiiOrlt, eliminate waste of matenals. Our • perlenced crews reduce constructiOII

: time and expense. Write er c.ll for *" . plete lnformali011.

NEWFOUNDLAND SERVICES

Published By Authority

claims or demands upon or af. dcr.<ignrrl solicitnrs for the Ex- Prr<ic\cnt. Siotrr feeling the Estate of Agne.< I ecutor of the "'ill of the said )IPrcer; I>! \'ic·r.r~·r Doole)', late of St. .Tohn's afore., 1leceased, on or before the 30th · tr :ll.l'l'tlr Yclm~n: ~nd ·.

. ~ •

i

·.

MARTY'S RESTAURANT • !01 If ATER STREET

Famous for fine loodt. Dlol 1·7155

TO.DA'r'S SPECIAL lt&ad Ler of Lamb - t!e.

t'ad "'"""'• Lurk:t Numbtrt ,, •1 - t'un .:... ~~37

··~~~~; :'·\,"-'!!!P!

::.:.·Where· To Stay

·' ,_ ! . Balsam Hotel

I

1:

;•,•,

I .. • ..

BARNES ROAD '

Situatrd In the heart of the. City.

Quiet, Com(o'rtable Atmos· ph ere.

, For Reservations and Information:

l · · · Dial8~336 j .~:·.; .' ~IRS. JOHN FACEY, • ~ Resldenl Manaaeress.

1· I I ··•· ·r.r I -~-' .,.rn31,tf E·2

I I i

i '

' ~~-~~~~~~~~~~ I l,·. I I ' . ~

: i [;;:' ~•·Wher~. To Stay ',,. Pirk .View Hotel · ~-~". ll8 MILITARY ROAD

· 1 . ;'.'centrally situated on the Bus · .~ · :fXIute; . Offers the best· aceom. · ·;·;;;"~oaat~on. For reservation and

i • : .. ; ;~lliJ~rmatlon: I · =-··· .:·oial 8-2557 i 1.; ··:1~;~3,e0d,lmth -----~ __ .. __ i ' .;.

I . . I· . ' ' . , I,.· - .~·

i • i

I

.lED ClOSS NUBS YOUR H~P

I c » lARvco

AUTHOitiUD PASSENGER NOTICES DEALER CONNECTION BAY RUN

'

·ADVERTISE. JN THE

DAILY.· .NEWS

Do not hesitate to call us, for free estimates. .

Anilable Short!~· Clear Spans, up to 130 ft. width.

J. J. HUSSEY LIMITED

119 New Gower Street,

St. John's Dial 85795 · 83270

App1icances M-2

HEAP & PARTNERS (NFLD.) Ltd. Wiring Materials, Wire and · Cables, Motors, Starters, Lamps, SwltchP_,, l.lghtlnll

Fixtures, 'te.

WAREHOUSE: PRINCE'S ST. • . DIAL 8·5088

M·2

RADIO· TV . REPAIRS ·

. GREAT EASTERN OIL COMPANY; Ltd. REPAIRS TO ·RADIOS, TV

GET . YOUR • MESS. AG. 'E . . AND M.L ELEt'TRICAL APPLIA \ICE.<; , .

OUT ~ EARL¥ mAL a.aoo to s-aGos M·3

PLACENTIA BAY Train "The Caribou" leaving

St. John's 12:01 p.m. to-day, Wednesday, March 14th will make eonnection vla Placentia ,Junction and Argentia with M.

I V. "Petite Forte" on Bay Run Placentia Bay.

CONNECTION WEST RUN PLACENTIA BAY

Train "The Caribou'' leaving St. John's 12:01 p.m. Friday, March 16th will make conncc· tion via Placentia Junction and Argentia with M.V. "Petite Forte" on West Run Placentia Bay,

CONNECTION SOUTII COAST SERVICE VIA PORT

'AUX BASQUES Train "The Caribou" ]caving

St. John's 12:01 p.m. to-morrow, Thursday, March 15th will make connection at Port aux Basques with M.V. "Bonavista" on South Coast Service.

CONNECTION SOUTH COAST SERVICE VIA ARGENTIA Train "The Caribou" leaving

St. John's 12:01 p.m. Friday, March 16th will make connec­tion via Placentia Junction and .(\rgentia with S.S. "Bar Haven" on South Coast Service.

said, Spinster, decea.<ed, are: day of ~larch, A.D. 1962, after. Presiden~. Si,lrr /l.orn:hy Under and by virtue of the herei:Jy requested to send par-! which date the said Executor bury: SPcrrtar,·. S:,trr ':

powers confcred upon me by 1 ticulars thereof in writing, duly , wi!l proceed to tlistribnle _the , Crane: Tn·:.'llr•·~. ''*r · 'l'he Logging Camps Act, 196ft attested, to the undersigned; satd E.<tate hm·ing regard only jnrir Parsnn>: l>t .-1>51., · the Act No, 21 of 1960, the Solicitors for the Executors of I to the claims of which he shall . Kathleen Parson>; 2nd · regulations made thereunder the Will of the said deceased, 1 then have had notic,e. . ant, S~ster May .Bradbury. and all other powers enabling on or before the 22nd day of Dated at St. Johns thts 6th Comm1tfee: S"trr me in this behalf, I am p!eas~d ~larch A.D. 1962, after which day o[ ~larch. A.n. 1962. Bradh·rry, Yrhnnn. to ~nnounce that for the pUr·! date thP ~aid ~xrcutnr~ will A \'L~~ (Inn and cnosnm, I l"ollowin; lhr blliillP': . pose of hold in!! Scalers' Ex<~m- 'proceed to. dt~frrlmle the sntd Soh.<·tlors rnr Executor. ! a ~nr1al hn<rr Jn:hl1 · inations, 8 Board will Kit nt': E~tatP havmg rr)lard only In ADDRESS; 1 p~nrakc~ was rn1ny•rl by the following placP on the date! lhe claim.~ of which they .chall! Perlin Buildin~:. j and time as ~hown hereunder: I then have had nottrr. ' :121 Illlc~worth Stt·ref. ~· Newsy Briefs

! llalcd at St. .Tohn'> tlr~ 20th St. .Johns, NPII'fnundland. ST .. JOHN'S day of Fehruary A.D. JnG2. ~!ar7,14,21 JlA Y RllBJ·;nT' ~larch I

Monday, April 2, 19fi% --- i Little Donald Sno\1' at . I~t:\VIS and COAilY, 1

1 his first birthdilt'

10.00 a.m. !;()hcrtors for the Executors, ~larch 6th Birthday "''"'~~'~'

I ADDRESS: I are fom his man\' cousio!.

W .J, KEOUGH: Temple Building, l . Minister of llllnes, Agrrculture 1. 339 Duckworth Street, 1 Bernice Noscworth~·

and Resources St. .John's, Nfld. ed her birthday )!arch mar14,16 feh21,28mar7,14 S Greetings come from her

CLASSIFICATION INDEX Male Help Wanted ............ A Articles Found .................... H-4 Female Help Wanted ........ A-1 Auto Accessories .................... I Domestic Help Wanted .... A-2 Garages .................................... J Positions Available ............ B Service Stations ......... , .......... J-1 Position .................................... B-1 Beauty Parlours .................... K To Let-Houses, Rooms, Fuel (Coal and Oil) ............ L

Apartments ...................... C Construction Contractors .... 11 A Wanted-Houses,. Rooms · .... C·1 Electrical Contractors ........ M-1 WELCOME WAGON Insurance .............................. D Electric Appliances ........ ;\l2 Clubs, Entertainment ............ E Radio-TV Repairs .......... M·3 HOSTESS Where to Eat , ....................... E·l Pian?s - Organs ............. o Will Knock at your Door Where to Stay ................... .E-2 Auct~on sa.lcs ... ' ' ' ......... p with Gifts and Greetings Where to Go ....................... ~E-3 Auc(Jon LIVestock Etr. ... P·l f . dJ , Automobiles ........ , .................. F Cards .................................... ~ p 2 rom Fnen y Busmess Taxi .......................................... F-1 D~uggists ............................... Q Neighbours and Your Cars For Sale ........................ G Mrseellane.ous ....................... R Civic and Socia] Groups Cars Wanted ........................ G-1 Legal Notices ......................... S O h . f Cars to Rent ........................ G-2 Business Services ................... T D t e OCCaSIOn 0 : Art!cles for Sale ...... : ............. H Real Estate A~ents ................ U New comer to the City, Arhclcs Wanted .................. ~H-1 Real Estate Wanted ............ V I Tl R' t) f B h A t. I C R t . H2 ' R I E . C S I "' 1C rr . 1 o a a V, r rc es or en .................... .

1

ea stale or a e ........... " I

Articles Lost ........................ H-3 Classified Display ......... : ...... X PHONE 8-4664, 90941

school chums .

Mrs. Clavton Monta~ue two childrr'n. North \\'est ,. arrived on Wrdnesday 1° . her parents ~lr. ;~nrl ~lr!. Greenland, Coley·~ Potn!.

Due to wealh~r not as man\' as expected ed the me~t and salad tea · pancakes as dessert. and and pantry stall, hel? bY Ladies of St. Matthews galion, on Tuesday However proceeds were

His many irie;;ds will bl py to learn Mr. Edward is feelirtg fine 1 operation at the Genera . pita! on Wednesday.

The use of candles d~l~ · 0,n,

far back as the begrn dir.l the· Christian era. ac.cor oitl the Encyclopedia Bntan

DAILY

Kl 8(

B

4 5 8

r

20 CON/

Help I

The f

The Th

New,

Pitts

19611 Deluxe with 4l with al Tarpaul Also in1

duty trc licence

This

NO Ml

CLC IF CH

.

c ..

Page 15: E ACADIAN SMAL~ PONTIAC THE DAILYcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196203… · and cnnl~ins "a program for I proposals on nuclear trsts will Urn • eng ssue

--1. r ~

; '-\:·: !rn:: . :: ',\ <'!'(• )It!.

·· · l.·~!·.n'li ·:·.~'--Tho~;:

.\:··~~y. 1n a~.

i i :·· ::" L:e~: ~~:. " .\n~;~

· <···i L'hurc: . nr:;:lburo \1•·;. \\"l!t;!

·~,~·=--! Pr.~~~~J

ng ~larch 12-

·\r:nv llo!t n 1n~ An Oll 1 t !1 r Sche~l

1 \\' rdne!dl•. the price il

·rr; will it ;l11onrd m ;urr will loot rid to the~~ I he a pant!)'

r ·ids

nu~ older citf "ft r:· }13ri~l

<t 1w11t th!ll : •>Ill irarturd "\ ~ f"ll c:

. . ·g:ers .;:. . . \!;~rch 8-·t Rranch c.t

.1nnual meet· : nf officen. fi: h :\ !!!II ''rr; attendti nrd with pn!· tirh reports 11 u·, work w!ll cL · Rer. 1, Buf rd thf electi(l!l

the ensuinl ,. ; ; rr ~!argartl , Prr.•irtrnt, Sil on: ~nd \'itt · ])nrothY Btl~ . !'i-trr ~II! ·r, ~i,ter ~III -t A•st., S~(ll 1, · rynd As!ill n'radbury. 5~

:.•trr norot"'

'" n. ·-' hiL<i11F'~ p~n"' lll~hli:Wd b! ~ jn~·rd by alL ------Briefs rs \larch s ~ ;~~~~,' cr!ebrJt.l il rl a\' rue!dll· :hrl;,. ;:reeti!IJI 1 n)' COUSin!.

- I worth~· celeb~ aY )!arch ., from her J1l

~nta~ue .~ 11 rth Wrst lll~•'l

d to '"' tlnrs a~· Rol · and ws. ~~··s point. - ··oP' her condlreDI expected at ·~ cl salad tea~ «ert. and c tJII ;ll, held bl' tatthew's cOB~ 1csdaY eren ~ 'eds were g - it ~nds will be~

Ed ward sa 11 . foliOIVing Jfft h General ' e .. , esdar­___-:

DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 196.2

KINSMEN BOYS' CLUB

Newspaper BINGO SERIES No. 59 TODAY'S NUMBERS

8 I N G 0

4 25 45 53 67 5 27 4·4 49 74 8 26 43 66

72

20 CO\SOL:\ TION PRIZES FOR THE LETTER "T"

Help Kin - Help Kiddies

The Community Concert Association

of St. John's Announces

The Third ·Annual Concert of The 1961-62 Season

New York Concert Trio C~·nthia Otis, Harp Ardyth Alton, Cello Paul Boyer, Flute

MARCH i 9th • 20th Pitts Memorial Hall 8:30 p.m .

FOR SALE ONE ONLY

1961 Model "ELGIN" 15 Foot D~luxe fibre glass boat, equipped With 40 h.p. Super Johnson Motor, with all necessary remote controls. Tarpaulin and speedometer included. Also included in sale one gator heavy ~uty trailer equipped wlth winch and licence plate bracket, lights etc.

This unit used as demonstrator.

TERMS ARRANGED NO DOWN PAYMENT

NO MONTHLY PAYMENT 'TIL JUNE

CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN IF CHAFE MAKES. THE CLOTHES.

Wm. L. CHAFE TAILOR

4 HOLDSWORTH ST.

FUEL! FUEL! FUEL! FUEL! When you need oll . Here's what to do:

DIAL

UNION Oli.-8-2822 When you need. oil-You need us ·

OUT OF RESPECT FOR THE LATE

James P. Johnson

THE ARCA.D~E STORES and

"A.LLEY & C·O., LTD. WILL BE CLOSED UNTIL 11 A.M.

WEDNE~DAY, MARCH 14th.

H. M. C. DOCKYARD HALIFAX, NOVA SCOTIA

INVITES APPLICANTS FOl\ THE

APPRENTI-CE TRAINING PLAN Vacancies exist in the folfowing trades:

Fitter (Mechanical) Electrician Machinist Sheet Metal

Plater

Entrance examinations will he held at centres throughout the Atlantic Provinces in Mav, 1962. Successful candidates will commence training about 1 August, 1962.

I

QUALIFICATIONS

Age 16-22 (Inclusive)

Education: Grade X (N .S.) · or equivalent · (:Minimum)

Proof of education must accompany ap­plication.

Apply to nearest National Employment Service Office not later than 16 April, 1962. mar14,3i

FADIL'S Mona Ryan~s

Beauty Salon (Imperial Oil Bl~g.)

Will be Open

SATURDAY, ST. PATRICK'S DAY,

March 17th

· Featuring:

John Prevost and Jean Jacques, hair

stylists from Guillaume and Robert. '

Special rate for University Students,

Student Nurses and Teenagers.

$1.75 FOR SHAMPOO AND. SET

For appointment:

Dial952'0l & 96725

SPECIALISTS In SILVER, NICKEL and

COPPER•PLATING Let us restore your precious heirlooms and

~xiPEll:Tsllverware to original lustre "· WORKMANSHIP - GUARANTEED

I .I

·WANTED CHIEF ENGINEER

(For New Government Vessel)

Diesel Engine, 2366 BHP with 3400 cu. ft. refrigerated cargo space. Salary $5,200 per annum plus overtime bonus. Excel­lent pension plan and other employee benefits. Home port St. John's, New­foundland. Must possess Second Class Motor Certificate of Competency accept­able to the Department of Transport of Canada.

Applications should be made by letter to the Area Director, Department of Fish­eries (Canada), P. 0. Box 5667, St. John's, Newfoundland, not later than March 23, 19(}2, and should include full particulars of cd ucation, training and experience. marl0,6i

The Old Mill Saint Patrick's Night

SATURDAY, MARCH 17th

Big 8th Anniversary Dance with Leo

Informal

:Michaels and Irish Singalongs by Sonia Clayton,

Cover $4.00 Double

Call for reservations: 8-7581 or 90026

TO-MORROW NIGHT Big Band Sound Featuring, C.B.C. Dance Band

with Mary Lou· Collins

FRIDAY Big Floorshow.

I .

>

SAFETY COUNCIL OF NEWFOUNDLAND .

Notice is hereby given that a General Meeting of all members will take place on WEDNESDAY, March 28th, at 4:00 p.m. in the board room, King -George V Institute, Water Street, to re~eive nominaions for officers and directors for the year 1962-63.

(Sgd.) MARY ROSSITER, Office Secretary.

SEE S~MPSONS- SEARS for vour

RlNK ROLLER SKJtTE,~ LADIES' and GENTS' :MODELS

ONLY $221198 PAIR

15

USE OUR ALL .fURPOSE ACCOUNT ..

ATTE:\DS PLAY I LONDON <Reuters! - Que~n

Elizabeth went to London's Pic· Paramount cadilly Theatre ~!onday night !0

sec_ Rean i\nouilh's play L'In;i· Now Playl'ng tatwn au Chateau, one of tnc plays in the French Theatre . ---------­Festival, She went as guest of) French Ambassador .Jan Chau· RICII.\Ril BOONE- GEORGE vet and ~Irs, Chauvel. IIL\~IILTO~ IN "A THUNDER

OF DRU~IS" Fl;I:DS FATHER DEAD

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho <APl- In ·•A Thunder of Drums· Glen Howard, 11' arrived home ~letro-Goldwyn-~layer present: from school lor lunch :llonday and fotmd his father dead in the a rousing outdoor adventure-basement and t h e 5 e words drama in CinemaScope and col­scrawled in blood on the bas~· or dcpticiug the exciting era of ment floor: "It was an acci- thr. U.S. Cavalry-Indian war; dent." Rex Howard, 45, was ly· of the 187~'s. , ing face down, apparently ha''· It was wntten b)' James '~ ar­ing diet! as he finished print· ne: Bel!all, noted , h1stonan ing the message in block letters. 1~nter who"e scenanos ha~·e Detectives said a bullet from a given the screen some of 1ts .22-calibre rifle went through most memorable Western ac· Howard's cbcsL lion stories .among them "Fort

~~~~-·-=~~~~~-~.~~~-.... ~.---~~-""~·-----~-""-.~----=----~---------- ---·--- . Apache," "Rio Grande." "She

M.SO Rt stOCK ' p\.YWOdO

WA\.\.BOARO uNOcR\.A'l

Cc\UNG 1\\.c J,. t/1· f){'fCR\OR

sHcA'fH\NG UGH'f f\X'fURES

ELECTRic WIRING

SWITCH Bo" .. RE "'ES

CEPTABLE . w . so~Es ALL SWITCH

DUPLE~ lS OUTLETS

FUSEs

LIGH~ BULBs

SHAW STREET·

JUST ARRIVED NEW

SHIPMENT OF

MODERNFOLD DOORS

ALL SIZES

LUMBER Of

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FINANCING AVAILABLE

PHONE 8-0161

Wore a Yc!low Rihhon" and "Sergeant Rutledge."

The picture's cast includes i both Hollywood veterans and 1 some of its most popular ~·oun­' ger players.

I Richard Boone, star of tele· 1 l'ision's "Have Gun, Will Trav­. el" and "l.ledic" series, plays his first sl arring role in a ma­jor film as Captain :Maddocks, balt!e-scarred commande~ · ol the under-manned garrison sta·

1 lioncd at Fort Canhy to pro· ' teet carh· ~cttlcrs from atl:cks I I •

1 bv A9ache and Comanche In· 1 dians. _, ·

, George Hamilton and Luan3 ' Patten, whn scored 2; a roman· tic team tr. "Home From the Jlill," rep•·«cnt the love inter­est in "A Thunder of Drums,'' with Hamilton portraying Lt. .\lcQuade, a West Pointer neW· ly assigne.d t~ Fort Canby whose lack of e~:11erience brings him

'!,

into conflict with his com:nand· uing nffirt!r; and Miss Patten cast as Tracey Hamilton, his former finance who has coine ., to the pos1 to marry another ' · . officer b(cause she believes ; ! ' ~lcQ:t~de had deserted her. · '1

Two·time Academy Award , · nominee Arthur O'Connell,· re- ''· cently seen in "Cimarron," has : :· a meaty role as the veteran In· '· dian fighter Sgt. Rodermill, and ·! other important parts are filled ·I by Chgrle> Bronson, Richard · ,· 1

Chamberl~ir., James Douglas, · i j Tammy 1\larihugb, the little t I girl who was trapped on . a · sinking ocean liner in "The Last Voyage," and Carole Weils,

11

of TV's "]l;ational Velvet" ser· ies. ,

The picture introduces._.the popular· recording star, Duane Eddy making his film acting de· .

11

.

but as. a guitar·strumming trooper who sings "Water from a Bad W ~II" and "Ballad Clf i Camden Yates."

I ..

j

The. story presents Its action· filled events from the very opening sequence, a terrorizing scene in which a little girl wit· nesses the murder of her moth· cr and sister by raiding llldi­ans, and .builds up to a hair· raising climax in which a pa.

. I

trol, led by McQuade, is · de· played away from the main body of Maddock's troop ljs a · I decoy for the Indian mai'au· : ' .· ders. When the Apaches at· , i · tack, the lone patrol makes its heroic stand against greatly outnumbered forces in one of the most exciting battlfis ever recorded on film.

I I I

I' t: .I ,f I

" "A Thunder of Drums" was photographed largely OR IOCR• tions In the colorful desert· mountain area near Tucson, Arizona, with other · scenes !i!D!ed In a block.Jong atitben· tic replica of the orlgiliaf his­toric Fort Canby, constiiicted at the MG M studios.

. l

The adventure-drama . was ' · produced by Robert J. finders, producer c;f the "Best of the Post" videoseries, and was di·

. rectcd by Joseph Newma~ ··.;

·- •• "'! . ' ~. ~ .

. : ~ '

Page 16: E ACADIAN SMAL~ PONTIAC THE DAILYcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196203… · and cnnl~ins "a program for I proposals on nuclear trsts will Urn • eng ssue

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THE DAILY NEWS. ST. JOHN'S; NFLD. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 1962

·Ravenel '

Fund. Growing

The Ravenel Disaster ~'und is meeting with tremendous sue· cess in the province.

The fund was established PT 109 J h F early in the year to provide • - 0 n · financial assistance for the 18 Kennedy in World crew members who lost their War II lives when the French fishing Robert J. Donovan 5.75 trawler Ravenel sank in Janu· THE SERPENT'S ary. \The vessel went down while enroute to St. Pierre from COIL theT Grdand Banks. Farley Mowat .: .. 5.00

o ate, more than $3,000 COU AGE has been collected on behalf of R -the fund. The campaign was The Story of launched by Lions Clubs on the Sir James Dunn Burin Pe~insula in. February. Lord Beaver brook 3 50

'

FOR. ST. PATRICK'S DAY

NEW YORK SPARE RIBS .................................................... 100',

. NEWFOUNDLAND TURNIP TOPS ........ 2 Doz./1's (A Real_ Treat)

NEWFOUNDLAND BLUE POTATOES ................................... 75's

IRISH SODA BREAD-NEW SHIPMENT (WHOLE MEAL MIX)

IRISH FRUIT AND CHERRY CAKE .................................... 1 1lz Tins

' '

th ·stairs, a spu1

cl1lhs clutl, can •• trusltr ud in II Uis

Recently, tt was dectdcd to ex- ! • I lend the fund to other areas of 'BENITO MUSSOLINI

i

aWtiu It

lET US HELP YOU ENJOY THE CDNYEMIENC[ If a NODEU HUIE: INCREASE lHE VHUE OF YDVR PROPERTY, ' SAY E ON COS ll y REPAIR l MAINTENAHC£ IILLS ......

REPAYMENT TERMS CAN BE ARRANGED TO FIT YOUR BUDGET

nnd ;\IECHANICAI- CONTRACTORS

the province. Many of the Christopher 1

donations received. thus ~ar Hibbert ................ 5.00, ha1·e come from vartous scrvt.ce BEYOND OUR clubs and other commumty . 1

organizations throughout the 1 SELVES island. · Catherine PHONES 8-5143 - 8-5144 QUEEN STREET

:Marshall .............. ~.75

T ISHOULDHAVE ~======================================~~ • I KISSED HER MORE

Wei comes T;~exE~~~ ~~ 4.50 ·Truck Transportation·

SADNESS

of B.

New Hotel Edwin O'Connor 5.75 H s c :cHAIRMAN OF ouse ays omm.ISS.Ion' A ~pokcsman for t.he New- 'THE BORED ' f

!oundland Board of Trade ~aid Edward Streeter 3.95 ' ~ tod_ay that after years ~d\'O· STORIES FOR catmg morl! hotel space, mem· R d • A hers of his organization gen· . LATE AT NIGHT e<O m n t . crally welcomed confirmation Alfred Hitchcock 15.95 · m e a 1·0 ns re ~~~~t.Hotel st. John's was to be THE MURDERERS

'fhey S)l

.:auclcar test · ·cnntrol. U.S

He added that in this con- Harry J. An slinger 5.30 D • • • nection the Board had been CRUSADE AGAINST l·sapp·otntl ng pleased to work closely with CRIME .l i\lr. John Spence the promoter 1 • it rlt'amer and supp:y to him as well as Jerry D. Lew1s .. 5.95 ~a

Red Cross R. :Mews, E. K. House, Dr. C. D. offi_c_ia_ls in charge of existing THE RADIO 1

Kean, Import Motor~ .Ltd., facti 1

h 1

"The recommendations of the I needs, as we are being allowed be the test for proper allocaFco ;

C •t I . 1,1es. w a ever necessary A}IATEUR'S N f dl d C . · · ·

5 • t Chcivers Foods Ltd., Traders apt 0 mformahon could be gleaned . 1\ ew oun an ommtsston on l to do elsewhere, Newfoundland I of transportation re;oucces.'' 6

OC te Y Financr. Corp, Ud., Long Bros., ~~ give as fair a picture as pos- HANDBOOK, a•rruppoc1knttTnrgansportation are dis· I will not get the benefits of an I The commission m tts retY,: _··.-.·.· .. _··., pe ,~

LIST NO. 3 Edgar 1\lil.ter, Dr. Wm. J. Hig· T stble of the actual need of 1960 Edition 4 OO , , · · and discouraging,'' int:grated ra~l-highway sen·ice , said agreed charges wnuld bn 1

Tht Canadian Red Cross gins. Dr. and Mrs. A. c. Hun- o-morrow sleeping and convention accom· • ... ............ . E.K. House, Newfoundland area whtch the railway is prepared I major detriment to lh• ecor.o-· ~iety, Newfoundland Di1•is- ter, The Big Six Ltd., J. W. modation in particular. DICkS & (O Ltd manager said Wednesday to give. It is disappointing to 1 of Newfoundland. ' . '! ion, gra!Pfully acknowledges 1\lcGrath Ltd., H. J. McDougall, Earlier the Newfoundland ., • The Canadian National Rail- i note that the Newfoundland i Mr. House said the in1e;~ • Ute following donations to its S. 0. Steele & Sons Ltd. ''A 1\IATTER OF MORALS" Board of Trade had pressed Jh ways area. manager made the 1 commission does not advocate 'gators had assumert "a;w~ D • 1962 March Campaign: $5.00 each-Cecil A. Thomas, with vigor for the extension of e Booksellers statement following publication the principle of equal access to I charges are unfair means o! u r I'

$200.00-Job Brothers & Co., Dr. J. Gordon Lynch, Hon. s. It takes all kinds of people to established hotel facilities in Newfoundland of the com- r trucking operations for all par-I competition for traffic. and n . . . I Ltd. J. Hefferton, · Wr. Lovelace make a world, a business, a love "but, apparently, budgetary con: Spin · mis~ion's findings and con-: ties, including the railway, as; intended to drive compeli:C" . ,

$75.00 each-Sir Leonard C. Ltd., Dr. Hazel N. Peisley, Max affair or a movie and "A Jllatter siderations precluded the. au· 8_4425 or 8_2008 or 8;3191 elusiOns. I does for instance the Royal ' to the wall, rather than ~~~ ; Outerbridge, London, New York Parsons, Dr. J. V. Coyle, L. W. of Morals" which opens lomor- th~rities concerned taking any The report advocated confin- 1 Commission on Transportation· money. ··orT.\W.-\ <CP' It Paris Association of Fashion Janes, Coady's Coal, W. S. row at the Capitol Theatre action to date, "the spokesman ing the railway to between : which recently reported to the : "But the company i< nn r! :•·rou shut up.'' Ltd. Rowe, 1\!iss Patricia Giovannet- through United Artists release added. Expressing appreciation st~tion iervice and preventing federal government. The latter i cord as being prepared at ;:; hrs none of )

$50.LIO each-Bonavista Cold ti, Dr. George P. French, Dr. proves the point. of what had been done with , it from engaging in direct com- report recognizd that freedom i time to defend an agm~ . 'nwse were · ltorage Co., Ltd., Brooke Bond R. .J. Simms, J. C. Parsons, Dr. In this picture which intro· limited facilities he concluded • ~etition with . other trucking to enter the trucking field

1

. charge rate before the Boardcl ~~h~\~~~~~n: Canada Ltrl. Robert Lawton, E. W. Best, H. duces the magnetic Norwegian with the view that the new • ftrms. The ratlway. hu been should be a feature of Cana- Transport Commissioners a ~ 8 rowdy c

S30.01h-Peters & Sons. C. MacD?nald, A. T. Goodridge, knockout, Maj. Britt Nilsson, venture argued well for· free Good I seeking a franchise to continue 1 dian transportation and that\ the basis that it i! comftl· ' . $25:00 each-1\!r. and lllrs .. T. R . .Mannmg. ~oney is involved, ·mystery is ente~rise without detriment to j operating highway vehicles on' efficiency of operation would satory.'' "frninister Ru

I. Batrd, H. B. C. Lake Ltd., 0. mvolved, murder is involved established hotel service and M • the Island. ----- • ~linis~r ~ r.. .. Vardy. _M~. and ~{rs: J. c. HAS NEW SYSTEM ~ith sex l motivating force, with advantage to the commun- orntng, I "All we want ia l fair chance 0'0 s in Newfoundland. lit poitd Diefenbak lri~ve, !ll:ffhn & ~ Netll, The r\'EW YORK (AP) - Pan egged on by a master criminal ity at larg'e, N . hb to compete and provide aood ea ays out that in 1911. ilte. prom~ of wast :hodna!L c:sh Regtster Co. of American World Airways Yet "A Matter of Morals" is not I It is understood that • model et.g or service," Mr. House said. "lily (Continued from page 3) had well over 100-thOU!Ill .Commons \1

n2~ ~ . 1 · _ si~ncd a m_ulti-million dollar ~n ordinary crime thriller, nor of t~e . proposed . Hotel ~t. Pleotc con older .,. Jut own opinion is that these find· these of Canada. He suggested acres in crops and no"' iu impertinent It$ · h' u~ :~d.

1fanada wtde clectrontc reservation sys-~ts the murder which gives the I .Tohn~ ts to be dtsplayed m ohar ... yourfri111d11ad ings could prove detrimental to that in many instances pro- or.ly 20-thnusand acm . .Hdt) \!arlin •

..,:a~s tps, · · .usse .' Mcrtt I em. The system will rent ho- film a special interest, an ordin· the wmdows of the rooms of the nrtghboro. If we""" h•: the Newfoundland eeonomy if gress in the fishing industry of 1

it was useless to hope for )li if que: •-tuh~nceC Cto.,(DEav,td B)atLrddJr., tel rooms and autos and cal!:h I ary murder, As a matter of fact j Newfoundl~nd Board of Trade. ~~'.:r::.U= .. ;::w:!.., implemented in ~heir present those ~ountries con be directly vale indh·iduals j() rome f~ it was """ P u o e as ern I p•ssct dC s h k It' 1 lh' b ' L·- -'1 , form" d t · rt ·• 'It· I llOOO h H F · " lh r. w o rna e mu tp c I no tng a out "A Matter of 1,.... ... • •. • related to central government war o setze t>ppo nrJ~c,M ·' c 1ene1' low ·

1 eac - on. · W. 'reservations planning to canrel Morals" is ordinary i Jl!r. House has served for support. He felt that further I ope_ned up by bog-<trai~ing n· t

•tw t, .' ~hnE BB A;g~l, d L. H.j o_ne at the _last mim!te .. Internn·[ The story, written' by ,John D. TO Attend i some time as manager of CN support in the re-development penments. ~!icil a~wlc • · · lC ar s, Dr. !tonal Busmess l\laclunes Inc., Hees starts with an riff b REG. T. MORGAN operations in Nemfoundlancl of our fishing industrv ou"hl The St. John's South mrmb!i qgestion that ,I,.. 0 N. Co~ro~·. Dr. Jacob Land, will construction the device, to I idea,' the plot ravels it If·. cat INSURANCl and is well-acquainted with the now to come from Ott~wa. ~ said that subsidized hou!mP ~re "cxercbin~ . ... c. Cume, D. Grant :Burnell, be In operation by DecembP.r one b'g . sc mto P. ower Grl· d T....,.. luHdi ... Ouc\- •• transportation industry here. ' Referring to proposed Gov- urgently needed in St. Joh~·· ~ll\·es th~ir ric

' · · · '· the climax is a real off-beat DIAL 8_0370 . 8_7758 ''There is a very real pos- : ernment assistance to the farm· Corner Brook and Grand F11:l ··t IIBMrt C. Dawe Mayor H G l!l6~ ' 1 sequence after another, ... stun~er and the r~st, starring sibility that restriction of the I ing industry, the St. John's particularly in St. .fnhn's. F;' . c·' h Patrtck O'Neal, Mogens Wieth Confer railways freedom of competitive South member felt that if a ur_ged the Government to ~~ : a rg

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UNION OIL'S "E.ARLY BIRD" OFFI:R

Ill erder to accommodate our custo'llers Union Oil _ .C11mpany is ~a king a NEW "Early· Bird" Offer.

Ev~ D~hlbe.ck and introducing ' ence NO BAD BUTTER action as contemplated in this' ~eed mill is to be. established I tam Buck~asters rirld ' . ; .. : . !'fa!·B~ttt Ntlsson is exceptional OTTAWA (CP)-None of Can- report would have an adverse i Ill the province it should be now occupt_ed br_ 1!he Anr.: ·~ :ts Interpretation of each in· Premier Smallwood says thai ada's surplus butler held Ill effect on Canadian National . located at tide water in the r Forces winch WI I. :1'.0\'P ' .• ;_;_ D diVldual role. Newfoundland will be rcpre· stock in 1961 was lost through employment in Newfoundland" portion of the province with ~ort Pepperrell: . ·

3nd I<!; Ill

Tlhle plot is based on 1

unique ~::~~~eed 1_nr.t

0nttext week's con- ~~f~la1~~nd';ryad~ ¥~1ienis~:~!~e5s satF·d. Mr .. H~use, ' dtlulet1_0hneavieHst ag:diculhtural pro- ~e~~:~l to ~~~v~~~Uo~:n/~;':.:. . E

met od of extracting a million awa on a pro- · tgures tssued recently by , . c : e sat t ese con- . - . · . . '; . do_ liars from a big business-man posed national power grid , . He said the oldest butter now the railway indicate that CN, stderaltons would fix its lo- housm!( proJeC~. HP •ate .ttt;

th h' but .on cor.dition that present in government storage dates has nearly 6 000 pi j cation at or near St John's there are now m St John!~ Eugene E X.S., wa,

WI ou.t ts. knowing anything negotiations between New- back to August, 1!l60, the Island 'ar . egm otyetesl onf and although he has h.ear'd Pep: most two thousand homr! ~ about It unhl the deed is done. f e mn a o a o . . b d h d h h ""

' ' . · fme of tbe f1rst 30 customers each day weekly will be eligible for 100 gals of Stove or Fuel Oii Free eaeh week. We are giving away 100 gala a week, 400 gals a month.

And on the way surprise fol- oundland and Quebec on power . BIRTHS I more than $21,000,000 a year. P_errehll mentt?ned as a possible avcecry a ds tape an tt ~ t,ho;::; lows surprise, thrill follolvs ~evelopment in this province . He said the railway had turn· stt~ e felt tt would not be ommo, a e ~orne en ,. th ·n will not be jeopardized. d t th h' . smtable since a f d ·11 and peopJe. . rt ' until your guess il as The Premier told the House COXWORl'HY - Born at St. ~ea o e tgh:Vay vehtcle' as a should be located at :e -~~t ll!r. O'I:ea advi~cd the ;c;

good as the. next man's as to yesterday that the Minister of Clare's Mercy Hospital on ?S of creatmg a ~ore close- where arvin ships can p d' ernment to .e:ive tit~ admi:.;

Thm·sda 32-ycar-old ~I Auhurn and da~·s inr l1'

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Pleue try to be one of the first 30 customers eaeh .. ,.. . In a fuel emergency, always call

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what happens next. In the final Mines, Resources and' Agricul- March lOth, to Mr. and Mrs. ~r tn!egrated, efftctent trans- charge directly inio the mi\~· tration building at fnrt P!i ltenes you are rushed into a ture, Hon. w. J. Keough, will Edward Coxworthy (Catherine P 1 tat:~n company.. . ll!r. O'Dea felt that Long Pond perrell to the city of St. Jct.:t series of titilating experiences attend the conference. Dolomont), a baby boy. l .n e past, mamfest fretght in Conception Bay might be for a city hall and ~he mo:!! that lea.ve you. wondering wide- p · , 1. · t D' f rams rushed goods to North more •ut't··ble rovt'ded h allocated for a new cily hl. eyed Wlth excitement, ha/~~~te·~ 1 r:f.~ e~re~~e~n~:k:t: SORENSON-Born at Kaiser Sydney, after which they were bour •'a ·tt' p fft. e har-. could go to housin"

Ev.en the locale is unusual as tend and "r. Smallwood sa'td Hospital, San Francisco, Cali· ferried to the hland and dis- make • tcht I thes adrl~ su ftctent ~o Ref•rring to c:r;r-al ~e1· m h "' f r · M h 11th t M' h 1 t 'b t d t · · · e an mg o gram • ' ' · ovtes go, t e Norwegian ·city he inforined the Prime Minister 0 ma, arc • o Jc ae rt u e o_ mtermedtale pomts more suitable. found]and, Mr. O'Dro ,3id !;, of Stockholm,. beautiful, exeit-· that he was now holding dis· and Margaret (nee Dowden) by way-fretghts three times a 1 Mr O'Dea call d f d. t the province will ~non we:! Jng a~d ver~ .dtfferent from our cussions with Premier LaSage Sorenson, a daughter, 7 lbs. week, . . Gove~nment lead!rshi~r totr~~- fa~e the fnrt that lhr town. A~ertcall Clites. of Quebec. and would not like 12 oz. The ~~tlway was able to speed prove the farming industry in ~Vtndsor is becomin;: a.' . !A Matter of Morals" .'was to have these talks jeopar- VERGE-Born at the Grace ~p sen tee l_ast yea~, by replac- Newfoundl~nd and urged the tn the form ~f bad ltntmn;. I•'

directed by John Cromwell and dized. Mr. Smallwood was Hospital, March 13th, to Graham mg. way-fretghts wtth highway Governmer.t to give bolder and soctal condiitons and Ill he2•· produced by J~hnD. Hees, who replying to ·a question by Op- and Ethel Verge (nee Grouchy),· vehtcles. ~he trucks distributed more imaginative leadership also wrote the screenplay,. and position Leader Greene when a girl. goo~s dati~ to many inter- in the economic and social REFUGEES FI.EE Steven G. Hopkin•. the Legislature resumed sit- mediate pomts, eliminating the fields of the province. KAliiPALA L'.CJIHb '

tings yesterday afternoon. ~wo-day delay for goods arriv- He agreed with the Minister tersi-Refuge~s are flec:ng ; , All provinces of Canada have DEATH mg between train movements. of Finance that Newfoundland Uganda after a new oulbre;k

been invited. to attend the ot- In_ addition, the CN trucks is more richly endowed bv tribal fighting in thr nciirt:·. (SPECIAL ADDED

ATTRACTION) tawa conference on the pro- MORRISSEY - Died sudden- , provtded free pick-up and de- nature than an~ other ~Iarit'tme·· ing Belgian tm't tr•-rilon" r

d t I I ' Ruanda, accord in" to rrpc:

pose na ional power grid next Y at Corner Brook on March , tve_ry of freight and express for Provin~e but he felt the pro1•• ~ k · t Q b h 13th I b f renchin~: here ~Ionrla•. ne :~ "MARY HAD A LITTLE , •. "

·- wee ou ue ec as refused , John ll_lorrissey. He leaves usmes_s irms and merchants in_ce was not doing enou~h ublic of Ruanda •rill• 111e kt:; to attend. . • to mourn wtfe, three daughters.! on thet_r rou_tes. They did not w~th he~ opportunilie~. ~lr. dom of Urundi [Qrn1 ~ the s~: ' ".Mary Had A Little .. .''

whtch also opens tomorrow at the Capitol Theatre through Lopert Pictures Corp~ration, is not,, repeat, not a nursery rhyme! And what Mary had was not a little lamb, although ex· a~tly, what it was her husband dtdn t know; her ooy friends didn't know and even her doc­tor didn't know. However In this sauc~ sex ·story, just orf the

· boat. from Merry. Old England, they all have a great deal offun

Three Arrests Three arrests were made by

City police yesterday. TWo men were arrested for

drunkenness and a woman was arrested under ·warrant for theft.

·sHiPPING The Harbour Pilot reported

findlpg '!.lit. , that only one ship sailed yestcr-Pert and provocative Agnes day, that was the Nova Scotia.

·Laurent plays the Mary of the The Bedford II was the only movie's title. With Jack Wat- ship that entered port. The lee ling, portraying a penurious that Is moving in towards the producer, she pl(lts to fool a Harbou~ Is so far not interrupt­psychiatrist into thinking she is ing shipping moving in or out pregnant . so that he can, of St. John's. through hypriotlsm, produce the PI-IY_S_IC-1-ST-1-''1-P-RO...,,V-ES world's must perfect baby, To- " gether they prolluce, instead, WASHINGTON <API - Phys-the world's most ·perfect con· icist Leo Szilard, 84, ·who in 19o0 1 1 h thought he might die ot cancer

and two sons at Corner Brook; n:ake stde trtps to deliver traf· 0 Dea satd that farming has gian trnst territor~· nue t~ l! father antl mother at St. I fic.s _u_f_fe_re_d_a_d_is_as_t_ro_u_s_d __ e __ cl __ ii.:.:le:._:c:ot_:n:::_c ~independent .Jui_Y t_.. _

Patrick's Mercy . Home; three Those situated off the routes, -~ b:?t~ers, Gerald at Gander, however, were able to pick up Wtlham and Walter at st~ goods at the stations every I John's;- three sisters, Gertrude l~eek-day, rather than three (Mrs. Wm. Schropp) at New Innes a week. , Jers~y, Adele (Mrs. Peter Among the. centres enjoying I Doolmg), 11~ary (Mrs. Charles the faster deltvery service were Cahill) of this City. Funeral Clarenvill, Bonavista Gander notice later. Corn~r Brook, St~phenvi!l~

Crossmg, Grand ·Falls, Port aux

TV Bas~ues, Argentia, Carbonear, ~ewispor~e, Bishop's Falla and

REPAIRS mtermed1ate points. 'Mr. House said "it would be

a sad thing if ~·c: had to revert REASONABLE RATES to that slower, more costly less

efficient means of handling Newfoundland traffic. Under our present system, the people of Newfoundland are enjoying faster and cheaper freight and express service than was tver

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1 tation agency could offer a ser· vice as fast and reliable as that ' whic~ the railway was ready to '

A. H. MURRAY & CO., LTD. Machinery Division

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l.HORWOOD LUMBER .CD., LTD. ! I·~ ' . PHONi 8-3011 r. , I: ·:marln.l2.14.1fl

us on and llarity, as their res- witilhi a year, said Monday J1is pective f I a n c e s, landlords, symptom · have vanished. S·ll­polieemen ·and even the ghost lard, a 11aUve of Hungary,· 1s of William Shakespeare alUry one of the fathers of the atomic to get to the bottom of ·things bomb. He was strick£!n • some

, · and resolve the mystery of years ago 'Yilh cancer of the Mary. · bladder.

· provtde tb~ people of New· ' 90 CAMPBELL ,\ VK foundland, he said. I f · } , • "If we are not allowed tn ad-

A tcr tours J;>hone 8-7313 just our services to changing

Gravely Tractors and Snow Blowers.

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