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- lI'ords OD I C ,en! a of the world', " In a selill ;cluslvc!. d 1I'0men II rc·lh·c their . playing tbt the lor Stur)' It sc key newi' hclr own ek a dl!ferlnt aln you 1;l1lI. l asslcnmenL twist. c ,-arltl)' ot, u read ODe, d thf Weekly'ls 01 WI d " estru cti OD-.::!I cientist· eace arns THE DAILY NEWS "t . i'I,:: , .i. I ! :\: .' 1':' I'; " ':1 t" II': amiable .at , r, 1 ·,,::';,1. 1 '1 I i' I Vol. 64. No. 142 ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1957 , (Price 5 cents) Charles Hutton & SODI,:11: eds Hopeful Reach reement . With West Soviet Union still aims to reach an agreement with the 'c;! on ending nuclear weapon tests, Moscow radio said Tuesday night. An anonymous commentator complained that some Western newspapers reI\' the wrong conclusions from the remarks of Soviet delegate Valerian Zorin the United Naloins disarmament talks Monday, Zorin sharply criticized the Weste:rn proposal that scientific experts be- il1l1ncdialely drafting a syslem of enforcing a moratorium on the tests, this would be a "waste of time," , ' SOllle Wcstcrn sources got the im pression of a stiffening Soviet attitude reaching /l compl'ol1,1ise in the London talks. The Mosco,\- radio com- t(\1' in an English-lnnguage, broad cast said:- York Boal Marblehead Race "Mr. Zorin had good reason for his remarks, It should be clear that without acceptance by the powers of an undertaking to stop nuclear tests; the work of the 'ex- perts draftlng a system of con- trol would be pointless. "I! such a committee of cxperts ;\,\ 1l'1'1 _ The trim 58-I Six Canadian all out of were set up and got down to work, Ich00nrr :\ina was the first I' NOI'a Scotia, compcted, it might create the false Impres- , to t!lr lini,h line hcre IIANnICAPS VARY slon among the public that there bad bcen some sort of an agrce- 3tj,mile Mass. The time handicaps. workcd out ml!nt to stop\tests when actually ne'can r,1CC, Shc arrived according to the size of the yachts, there has been no such thing. at ;:10 p.m. Tuesday. 51 mnge from nothing for the Sea PRACTICAL PROPOSAL and 10 minllies after leaving Lion to 13 hours and 57 minutes "It was bccause of this that the SlInday. for thc lilUe Mambo out of Marble· Soviet delegate criticized the only ntd \kiPPcl'cd by De. Fales of Nell' York, the out oj thick fog at the mouth and the Iin· off tile ;o;Ol'a Scotia Yacht , on an 18- wind. behinli was the scratch head. 1'hc Nina apparcntly led the das- practical propesal made by the Western powers, sic from the start. although most "But does that mean he brought of lhe race was clouded by fog. the disarmament talks to a dead. U.S. coast guard vessels and the lock? Certainly' not.," Canadian navy escort Cormorant followed the yachts. The cOLirse The Soviet commentator de runs rOllghly out of Marblehead, scribed ,the disarmament issue as across the 247-mile Gulf of Maine, "compllcated and many - sided," l07'mile Nova Scotia south coast "At last It seems there Is a over the Bay of Fundy and up the I but he added: . , to Halifax. faint hope of its being sorted out. The Yachts, their expert na\ojga- thread has been found that tors not distressed by fog, en- !tIght get the whole tangJe put of the 33 class A and countered favorable southwesterly right. I mean by that the Soviet were nllt cxpccted here winds most 'of the way, An official proposal on a stop to, 'n\lclear laic Tllc,dny cI'cnirig, The winner probably won't be declared ,weapons tests." ",: Lion was automatically , hI' the l\ina. The Nina I 26 niinutr and 20 second in the official race time. \';al bellcI'ed to be' until all have arrived here be<:ause Western disarmament negoUat: , an hour off thc race record; of the handicaps. or5 were' studying Z()rin's speech. COMMONWEALTH TRADE, I er arl S re ropose EUROPE Angeles-Actress Ingrid Bergman's 18-year-old daugh- ,tel', Jenny Ann Lindstrom, departed recently on a trip that brought a reunion ': with her she hasn't seen' sin'ce 1951. Sownwith':Jenny'(i'ight) 'are:her Dr. Peter Lindstrom; half brother Peter, Jr., '15inonths;' step- ',mother, Mrs. Agnes :r,indstrom. 'While the rest of the ,family vacationed in Europe,Jenny flew to Paris, to visit her mother.-(IN Photo), Ottawa Report: F or' Discussion;:; , I -I : ;" In September i:;· OTTAWA-CP-Canada may propose the us. of two specific instruments-tariffs and capital-to promote increased Commonwealth trade, well- t .. informed authorities said Tuesday. ' Canadian propm;als will be worked into a draft :i I agenda to be plal:ed before the Commonwealth fln- :;. ance ministers' conference here next September. I 'I ministers will decide, mainly on the basis ,I I \ of the agenda, whether to proceed with a full-scale, 'I, : :j Commonwealth trade and economic conference next : i' year. Officials said Pl'imeMinlster Diefenbaker un- ' dertook to prepare the agenda when he proposed the new trade get-together at the Commonwealth prime ministers' meeting in London earlier this month. 'The cxperts have just startcd ------------ work on the agenda. Here are parjng I{I hammer out firm tarif; "I somc aspects or thcir thinking 50 I prefcrences to member countries ,I far: I she became angered and whippet 1. Increased tariff protection will up walls of her oW.n. Tha: I I undouhtedly haVe to be used to was Just before the last big weld the Commonwealth into a monwealth trade conference II morc powerful trading body 1932,. .. . ' ," I ringe!l br higher tarir( walls. OffiCials said that this time 2, h 101 of inl'c5tment in Canada, for one, would mOVe cau' ',1; such dollar countries as the United tiously on t!lE tariff front, prob' I Statc, will have to be redirected ably consulting With the U.S. ancll into lhe soft currency or sterling her views befoTe I I area markets of the Common any tariffs agams i ., wealth. hcr neighbor. 3. Canada's plans to ncgotiate The view here is that while thl " new trade pac\; with Australia l!.S,. ll!.ay. tariff protec anil'New Zealand may be shelved, l1omsm, . may particularly if it becomcs evident around to give some kind of ap, the Commonwealth is ready to pro- proval the argument thar I cecd with the signing of a new strengthenmg of the Common:' over-all trade pact. :I'ealth would help free worlc. l I 4, !llain aims of Canada would be !n the struggle agamst commun'l ' to set up a permanent Common. Ism. .. . 'j olish War Or Oueen Elizabeth Open Parliamen t Will wcalth organization to watch and . 'The othcr major problcm IS that advisc on the boosting of Common. since 1947 when. the General, wealth trade. One body might be Agrecment on Tanffs and Trade known as the Commonwcalth dcvcl()J>ed, c;anada and SOlP! council to deal with the Uow 0 the r of goods. Another might bc an in- hal'c wlllttled. taTiff pre,fcrences In vcstment organization to deal with a move to bUild up a bigger world; the {lOIY of Commonwcalth capital.. trHade. ff' ' I . t d t' q I ace Destruction Oll'cl'cr, a ICla s POIn c ou' HARD FEELINGS 'tImt GATT, while opposing impo- : AI! thcse mOI'cs might, of course, sition of any nel\' preferences,!: calise some hard feclings in the docs allow restol'ation of old prcf.' O'M'AWA (CP)-'l'he Queen Will.\grcct us as we take up our duticli lor the first pel'nlancnt English set- Unitcd States. Canada's top cus- erences which had been eliminated! formally open the first session of there.. \ tlemcnt in the U,S. lomcr, anel among other non,Com· or redurd sinCe 1!11!. restor· i Canada's new Parliament on Mon· "It will be the first occasion in She will fly to Jamcstown from I mOl1l1'ca,lth countries. alion movcs a new day, Oct. 14, dUI'ing a five·day history when the sovereign has Ottawa on Oct. 16 and is expected Back m the 19305. II'hrn the U,S. round of tanff bargaining willi: Ry II.\t, \\.\Rltll'i!ll'ON n Stall Writer A511, :\,5, (CP) _ Earl Ilu,;cll, noted British and mathematician, must aboliSh war or be I mc"age h, the Interna. of scicntl.,ts here , the SS·year· PrIZe winner said any ar must ine\'itably be. nuclear war and a nuclear be "an immeasurable ., lour scientists from 10 and Communist nations here to tr)' to find to prevent such a catastro. Ircr and frank discllssion in a spirit of real Il'Iendliness," he said. EXPRESSED HOPE He said he Is hopcful thc)' will agree on an announccment <If reo 'suits before the four - day talks end Wednl!sday. "It would be nice to achlevc something." Top nuclear experts from the United States, the Soviet Union, Grcat Britain, Japan, Red China, Poland, Australia, Austria and France, are attending. , They spent a, hot sunny after· noon around the conference table in ,the P Ii g was h kindergahten classroom at the local Masonic Hall. In the morning about half the group met In committees; the rest talked earnestly In groups of twos and threes on the lawn of C)'rus Eaton's summer home. Mr. Eaton, a Cleveland indus· trlalist, Is hOSt' for the group. ' Earl Russell said almost two i t years have passed since the late 5 DD possible for the con· Albert Einstein, joined him and to escape consideration of eight othcrs In a publle warning que,tion of the aboli· of the dangers to humanity if an· RUssell directed planning conlerence and drew up Poor health prevented attending. Tbe scientists his words from a tape re- .. ". he said, other world War should occur. ,own age is faced with the either of solving this prolr 'That statement urged a confer· or of w;tnessing the des true. cnce of scientists to assess the haz· of all those finest achieve. ards of atomic war. ' 10 I' The meeting in Pugwash is the r the very highest meeting Mr. Einstein and Earl Intellect, courage and Russell sought. The years bctween labored duro had hrought no real change in the WAYS situation. RUssell other ways STOCKPILES INCREASED effects 0{ nuclear weapons tests. "Il is first necessary, then, to lry to establish what is dcfinite. and to separate It from what has to be inferred or conjecturcd. "If this mectlng could make clear tOO scientific facts with re .. gard to such questions, and tbe place where cettaiD knowledge ends and hypothesis begins, It would perform a useful service." He revealed that th escientists first planned to meet In Delhi, In· dia, as guests of the India Science Congress. Cyrus Eaton had made It possible at Pugwash by his of· fer of a meeting place and by helping pay the cost of bringing the scientlsts I{I this quiet Nova Scotia fishing and lUmbering vil· 'lage. Mr, Eaton Was born on a farm near here. RED' CROSS APPEALS GENEVA (Reuters) - The league of Red Cross Societies has begun an International emergency appeal for tents to shelter 350,000 victims of recent earthquakes in Iran. visit to Ottawa. It'will be the first I personally presidcd over the open. \ to' arrive in Washington latcr that hcard thc Commonwealth was pre· Gatt mcmbers. visit to Canada of a reigning mon.. ing or Parliament in Canada. day for a formal threc·day visit --- : '. arch since 1939, \ "It seems wholly appropriate lasting until Oct. 19. On Oct. 20, ( ,. P The announcemcnt from Prime Ihat this historic event should take a Sunday, she likely will have a ommumst arty Mlnisler Dicfenbaker's office Tues· place on our Thanksgiving Day, day of rest in Washington and visit day confirmed that the ,which will make it possible for NclV York City thc foJlowing day opening of the Parliament elected I many morc Canadians to see hcr I before returning to London. I " June 10 would be timed to coincide majcsty on' this occasion than Governor·General, Masscy, now Pans Exp us/·on wilh the royal visit: would otherwise be the case." vacationing in Britain, had lunch The Quecn will arrive in the cap., The Queen's last visit to Can· privately Tuesday at' Buckingham ital on the afternoon or Saturday, ada was in the faU of 1951 when Palace with the and Prince M I M I k Oct. 12. and leave by air on Wed· as Princess Elizabeth she made a Philip and it was assumed they 0 otov ' a' en ov nesday morning, Oct. 16, for a six.. five-week tour across Canada with discussed the approaching royal " day visit to thc Unitcd States. Prince Philip, visiting every provo visit. .' The announcement said that in ince They also visited Washing. . I By ROJl{'cESSOYAN, IS a former premier and foreign view of the shortness of the Ca- ton that time. The prinCe came . .fall's Canadian MOSCOW, (AP). :- The Soviet min!ster. Mal. en k 0 v nadian visit,' Her Majesty will be to Canada alone four years ago, VISit WIll be hmlted to Ottawa" government s offiCial newspaper Stahn as Kaganovlch h.as., unable to visit any place other visiting the west coast and North. there have been hopes that thc I 'Tuesday cleared thc way for the held top mdustrlal expert asslg·, thnn Ottawa, ' ern Canada, ' 1 Queen may be able to make a I expUlsion of V. 111. Molotov, ments. , The Queen will read the' speeeh The only Canadi,m visit by a I ?lore extended lour of the country Gcorg!a Malenkov and Lazar The three have not been leen from the throne, written by the rcigni'ng sovereign was in 1939 In 1959. ' ganovlch from the CommuDist publicly in _ this week. government, to opcn the session. when King George VI and Queen, OPEN SEAWAY party, . Moscow radIO said week they Apart from that ceremony, how. Elizabeth :.... the' present Queen I Last' sear :'Ilr St Laurent in- In a full-page editorml, !he go;' •. attended party. meetmgs, on ever, details of her visit have not Mother-travelled across the cOlin· vited her to conie Canada that I -two days after the action agawt yct bcen worked out Th' Quecn I try from May 11 to June 15 in· f' th fr' I . f tI III\\,oked Lenm s 1921 IDJunehon them was announced. and Prince Philip expected to cluding a three-day trip to Wash, or eo SICI3 openmlglo .Iellhat in,cases of-violation of party CAJUPAIGN EXPANDED make the transatlantic crossing by ington While in Ottawa the Kina 'I" Qle 10- 1 ' Ill:;cipJine the central committee The campaign of denundation air and stay lit Government gave ;oyal assent to several 0 rePlor ers la t Iteh tUCh en I is 'empowcred .10 USe extreme' against the ousted leaders ex· .' nug agree u reques s a·s C I d' I . dd Tu d Premier Niko- House, reSidence of Governor-Gen. passed by Parliament. "'t Ih I . C d meaSUres Inc u tog expu slon pan e es ay as ' eral Massey While In Ottawa ISSUED INVITATION IISI o. cr. p mann a. frUIT, the party. lai A. Bulganin and Khrushchev, YUGOSLAVS FLEE WELCOME 'OPPOIlTUNITY ... F ' .. I St L That InVitatiOn, however. has not Without mcmbership a victors in the upheaval, travelled IESCARA 1t I ,ormer prime milliS er , au- been' formail" accepted . , .' ..',. C h 1 . ki , a y (Reuters) Mr, Diefenbaker's statemcnt rent issued an invItation to the _. . Soviet cannot partlclpatc m leisurely zec 05 on a Yugoslav refugees, said: Queen to come to Canada this year The dccision by Prime any or on a go?d,wllI VISIt to Prague ... In fIve family groUps, arriyed here "I am confident that all parties I after it wa, s learned that United Diefenbakcr to couple ·the October 1 party ,a.ctlVlty. amounts The Guette! after crossing the ,\drlabc in an In rarliament \vllJ welcome this, States officials had invited her to visit with the opening of parlia'j to polihcal anlllhilalion. the SOVICt Wnters Union, hnked open MondaY,j1ight and asked' unique bpportunity to have her attend ceremonies at ,Jamcstown. ment means abandonment of his Molotov,' Malenkov, and Kagano. Molotov, Malenkov,. Kaganovich, __ . _ ". part's ruling Praesidium by a Dmitri T. Shepilov. dropped Khrushc ' hey S' ay's unanimous vote of the central tcrnate member of ,the, Praesulium : committee. in the purge, with two, of the worst --------...;;..,;.;,J.,;. crimes In Communist ideolol}', must be found for settl.' "In fact," he said, "the stock· betwcen nations. The piles of nuclear weapons have in· be to lessen mu. creased; new nations have joined between them the ranks of tho;;e producing those w; he hopes the weapons - or trying I{I produce L' . sclen\lsts secn in the them - while serious misgivings Y , e mceting "will prove the have been expressed as to whether which gradually a' sense even the continued testing of such ' ' Threw Them Out " The central committec's an- "revisionism and nihflism." nouncement July 3 referred to the In the dictionat1, re- 1921 Lenin crcdo on discipline, Tuesday's left little vision ism is any attempt t4 inter- doubt that the minimum fate fac. pret Communist ideology in a way different from the existing party ing the Stalinist triumvirate is ex· line. Nihilism is equivalent to human problems will weaPQns rna), n()t result III By HAROLD K. MlLKS largely factory workers, at Zillna. ALL STALlNlSTS ' I loudly with disregard for listen. ,: .... y ••. ,. the present futile age t4 the population."_ PRAGUE, CzeChoSlovakia (AP) He and. Bulganin, along with Its Communist party and gov- ing ears. which, nothing The British philosopher said the "We took the black sheep', by the fAntonln, Nevotny, Chech Commu- ernment lea!1ers are aU old Stalin, can result." Pugwash meeting Is' 01 great 1m· taU and threw them ouV' nist chief, were on '8 5OO.mlle trip Ists. Thus Khrushchev must have But whUe there are vocal anti- here did no mOre PQrtance because it brings to. That Is 'Nlklta Khrushthev'. ex- rom the' Sovlet·Czech border to found some diHlculty on his long there are many ar d - out ways to continue gether for the first time leading planation of last week's Moscow Phague. They are' due Iiere today. ,train trip with Novotny, explain- cnt followers of Novotny and other con1aucts between scientists scientists from many countries purge. He gaVe It t4 a Czeehoslo- Khrushchev gaVe his endorse. Ing the Kremlin's anti-Stalinist Czech party leaders who, are just na ons and points of view representinll all shades of polItical vak audience TueSday as he and ment t4 Novotny as "one of the purge. ' as to debate that side of do of 1m- opinion. ' Sovlet Premier Nikolai Bulganln great sons of the Czechoslovak the picture. ' He hoped there would ' The meeting was private so the arrived for a week's visit. ,people." " ' Below the stiff \ aDd larger such gather: sclentlsts, representing only them· "It's no secret what happened ' \ the Ctechs are surpmmgly obJec· Czechs make no secret of their selves, could spe -'- with' complete In' the Soviet Union recently" Czechoslovakia, recognized in tlve in discussIng their national in if th' I ti C "" 'w n. t h t bl' d l·t· . desire to y clr re a ons h F. Powell, "nlor frankness and informality" ' . said Khrushchev. "We al\nounced the est as one of ,ute s aunc es pro ems an, po I ICS. .' with Western Europe. of t e Brillsh delegation and "I believe that ,Informal ex. it ourselves. We had some blaek pWars of communism in Eastern On Prague streets or in beer 'them hope Khrushchev's purge of "Oallrm:3n, said Tues. changes inay achieve more than sheep In a good herd.' They Europe, Is "a nation of drarftatic the people Stalinists will be followcd by are "going ex. formal resolutions at the present thought \hey would take over contradictions. Politically; ,Its up. foreigners II1thout the fear or tim- li U Ii th t Id f ilitate Hi th wer and you know how it per crust is made up of fanatical Idity common In Moscow. za a ac "".III:i\llln 5 was e first stage." POd d Communists much more difficult IndiViduals who speak against relations With France. 'of how 1II.Inl5 . Earl Russell said there Is no en e , , ". . v,' t German .. the Umted Stales , agreement' amonll seitntlsts. aliOut ' 'Khrushchev drew cheers from I{I deal With than XremUn burllau· the Communist reglme are no." es ..." are conductlnl I 'IOml'i;problem., particular!): thelh., erowd be .. .. addrelilngtcrat.. They', declaim,openlJ andalld otil: er naUons. , t , " pulsion from the parj>;' anarchism. : DEGJtEE OF SATIS ACI10N Red Star, voice of Marshal Whether the party leaders, Georgia K., Zhukov's minister .pf headed by Nikita' S. Khrushchev, defence. called the aciUvities' of will be satisfied with the political the ousted leaders !'the destruction of their opponents re- crime tgainst the motherland and mains to be seen. t' '" . agalns its fUture genera Ions, " "The party cannot tolerate those who do not carry out the will of , the majority, Who do not place the ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. interest of the party above every- 'The can opener has gone modern. thing who trY to bring dis· An can. openerfeature,d sension into its ranks and who plot at the 27th of the Nation,al against its unity." . Housewares Asso- Molotov, MaIenkov and KaganI!' elation .opens ,all sizes of cans vich So far haVe becn, stripped of, automatically, ,shuts .itself their high' party, and government when the job is All Mrs., PQsts but not dismissed· from . the Housew1!e has to do 11 attach ladles Dr the ,rty itself;- Molotov can.,

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lI'ords OD I C ,en! a n· of the world', " In a selill ·;cluslvc!. I~ d 1I'0men II rc·lh·c their . playing tbt the brcak~

~. dlg~!n~ lor

~~cst Stur)' It ,sc key newi' thclr own n· ,ek a dl!ferlnt ,aln you 1;l1lI. al asslcnmenL c twist. Th~ ic ,-arltl)' ot, ·ou read ODe, ad thf serle~ Weekly'ls 01 "h~rp

WI __ d

d.

"

estru cti OD-.::!I cientist· eace arns

THE DAILY NEWS ~ "t . i'I,:: , .i. I !

:\: .' 1':' I'; "

':1 t" II':

amiable .at

, r, 1 ·,,::';,1.

1'1

I i' I Vol. 64. No. 142 ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1957 , (Price 5 cents) Charles Hutton & SODI,:11:

~~-------------------------------------------------------------~------------~----

eds Hopeful Reach reement . With West

LO:\DO~-AP-T11e Soviet Union still aims to reach an agreement with the 'c;! on ending nuclear weapon tests, Moscow radio said Tuesday night.

An anonymous commentator complained that some Western newspapers reI\' the wrong conclusions from the remarks of Soviet delegate Valerian Zorin

the United Naloins disarmament talks Monday, Zorin sharply criticized the Weste:rn proposal that scientific experts be­il1l1ncdialely drafting a syslem of enforcing a moratorium on the tests,

this would be a "waste of time," , ' SOllle Wcstcrn sources got the im pression of a stiffening Soviet attitude

reaching /l compl'ol1,1ise in the London talks. The Mosco,\- radio com­t(\1' in an English-lnnguage, broad cast said:-

York Boal Marblehead Race

"Mr. Zorin had good reason for his remarks, It should be clear that without acceptance by the powers of an undertaking to stop nuclear tests; the work of the 'ex­perts draftlng a system of con­trol would be pointless.

"I! such a committee of cxperts ;\,\ 1l'1'1 _ The trim 58-I Six Canadian yacht~, all out of were set up and got down to work,

Ich00nrr :\ina was the first I' NOI'a Scotia, compcted, it might create the false Impres-, to crn'~ t!lr lini,h line hcre IIANnICAPS VARY slon among the public that there

bad bcen some sort of an agrce-3tj,mile ~Iarblchcad, Mass. The time handicaps. workcd out ml!nt to stop\tests when actually

ne'can r,1CC, Shc arrived according to the size of the yachts, there has been no such thing. at ;:10 p.m. Tuesday. 51 mnge from nothing for the Sea PRACTICAL PROPOSAL and 10 minllies after leaving Lion to 13 hours and 57 minutes "It was bccause of this that the

SlInday. for thc lilUe Mambo out of Marble· Soviet delegate criticized the only

ntd an~ \kiPPcl'cd by De. Fales of Nell' York, the out oj thick fog at the

mouth and acrO~5 the Iin· off tile ;o;Ol'a Scotia Yacht , ~nchor;t~e on an 18-

!outhll'c~t wind. behinli was the scratch

head. 1'hc Nina apparcntly led the das- practical propesal made by the

Western powers, sic from the start. although most "But does that mean he brought of lhe race was clouded by fog. the disarmament talks to a dead. U.S. coast guard vessels and the lock? Certainly' not.," Canadian navy escort Cormorant followed the yachts. The cOLirse The Soviet commentator de runs rOllghly out of Marblehead, scribed ,the disarmament issue as across the 247-mile Gulf of Maine, "compllcated and many - sided,"

l07'mile Nova Scotia south coast "At last It seems there Is a over the Bay of Fundy and up the I but he added: . ,

to Halifax. faint hope of its being sorted out. The Yachts, their expert na\ojga- ~ thread has been found that

tors not distressed by fog, en- !tIght get the whole tangJe put of the 33 class A and countered favorable southwesterly right. I mean by that the Soviet

were nllt cxpccted here winds most 'of the way, An official proposal on a stop to, 'n\lclear laic Tllc,dny cI'cnirig, The winner probably won't be declared ,weapons tests." ",:

Lion was automatically , hI' the l\ina. The Nina I 26 niinutr and 20 second I~o",nce in the official race

time. \';al bellcI'ed to be' until all have arrived here be<:ause Western disarmament negoUat: , an hour off thc race record; of the handicaps. or5 were' studying Z()rin's speech.

COMMONWEALTH TRADE,

• • I er arl S re ropose

EUROPE B9UND~os Angeles-Actress Ingrid Bergman's 18-year-old daugh­,tel', Jenny Ann Lindstrom, departed recently on a trip that brought a reunion

': with her m9ther'Wl1~ she hasn't seen' sin'ce 1951. Sownwith':Jenny'(i'ight) 'are:her ~father, Dr. Peter Lindstrom; half brother Peter, Jr., '15inonths;' step­

',mother, Mrs. Agnes :r,indstrom. 'While the rest of the ,family vacationed in Europe,Jenny flew to Paris, to visit her mother.-(IN Photo),

Ottawa Report:

F or' Discussion;:; , • I -I : ;"

In September i:;·

OTTAWA-CP-Canada may propose the us. of two specific instruments-tariffs and capital-to promote increased Commonwealth trade, well-

t ~ .. informed authorities said Tuesday. ' Canadian propm;als will be worked into a draft :i I

agenda to be plal:ed before the Commonwealth fln- :;. ance ministers' conference here next September. I 'I

Th~ ministers will decide, mainly on the basis ,I I \

of the agenda, whether to proceed with a full-scale, 'I, : :j Commonwealth trade and economic conference next : i'

year. Officials said Pl'imeMinlster Diefenbaker un- ' dertook to prepare the agenda when he proposed the new trade get-together at the Commonwealth prime ministers' meeting in London earlier this month. 'The cxperts have just startcd ------------

work on the agenda. Here are parjng I{I hammer out firm tarif; "I

somc aspects or thcir thinking 50 I prefcrences to member countries ,I far: I she became angered and whippet

1. Increased tariff protection will up t~rifr walls of her oW.n. Tha: I I undouhtedly haVe to be used to was Just before the last big Co~ weld the Commonwealth into a monwealth trade conference II morc powerful trading body 1932,. .. . ' ," I ringe!l br higher tarir( walls. OffiCials said that this time

2, h 101 of forci~n inl'c5tment in Canada, for one, would mOVe cau' ',1; such dollar countries as the United tiously on t!lE tariff front, prob' I Statc, will have to be redirected ably consulting With the U.S. ancll into lhe soft currency or sterling ~ettin~ her views befoTe acta~ll,: I I area markets of the Common ImPQsl~g any ne~ tariffs agams i ., wealth. hcr neighbor.

3. Canada's plans to ncgotiate The view here is that while thl " new trade pac\; with Australia l!.S,. ll!.ay. o~ject ~ tariff protec

anil'New Zealand may be shelved, l1omsm, . sh~ may b~ brough~' particularly if it becomcs evident around to give some kind of ap, the Commonwealth is ready to pro- proval ~~ the argument thar I cecd with the signing of a new strengthenmg of the Common:' over-all trade pact. :I'ealth would help t~e free worlc. l I

4, !llain aims of Canada would be !n the struggle agamst commun'l ' to set up a permanent Common. Ism. .. . 'j

olish War Or Oueen Elizabeth Open Parliamen t

Will Oct~

wcalth organization to watch and . 'The othcr major problcm IS that advisc on the boosting of Common. since 1947 when. the General, wealth trade. One body might be Agrecment on Tanffs and Trade known as the Commonwcalth w~s dcvcl()J>ed, c;anada and SOlP! trail~ council to deal with the Uow 0 the r .c0mmon~\'calth countrl~s, of goods. Another might bc an in- hal'c wlllttled. taTiff pre,fcrences In

vcstment organization to deal with a move to bUild up a bigger world; the {lOIY of Commonwcalth capital.. trHade. ff' ' I . t d t'

q I

ace Destruction Oll'cl'cr, a ICla s POIn c ou'

HARD FEELINGS 'tImt GATT, while opposing impo- : AI! thcse mOI'cs might, of course, sition of any nel\' preferences,!:

calise some hard feclings in the docs allow restol'ation of old prcf.' O'M'AWA (CP)-'l'he Queen Will.\grcct us as we take up our duticli lor the first pel'nlancnt English set- Unitcd States. Canada's top cus- erences which had been eliminated!

formally open the first session of there.. \ tlemcnt in the U,S. lomcr, anel among other non,Com· or redurd sinCe 1!11!. ~ut restor· i

Canada's new Parliament on Mon· "It will be the first occasion in She will fly to Jamcstown from I mOl1l1'ca,lth countries. alion movcs .ma~· ml':~ a new day, Oct. 14, dUI'ing a five·day o~r history when the sovereign has Ottawa on Oct. 16 and is expected Back m the 19305. II'hrn the U,S. round of tanff bargaining willi:

Ry II.\t, \\.\Rltll'i!ll'ON n l'r~l~ Stall Writer

A511, :\,5, (CP) _ Earl Ilu,;cll, noted British

and mathematician, must aboliSh war or be

I mc"age h, the Interna. ~nfmnee of scicntl.,ts here

, ~\le'da)'. the SS·year· PrIZe winner said any

~ ar must ine\'itably be. nuclear war and a nuclear

be "an immeasurable ., • lour scientists from 10 and Communist nations

here to tr)' to find to prevent such a catastro.

Ircr and frank discllssion in a spirit of real Il'Iendliness," he said. EXPRESSED HOPE

He said he Is hopcful thc)' will agree on an announccment <If reo 'suits before the four - day talks end Wednl!sday. "It would be nice to achlevc something."

Top nuclear experts from the United States, the Soviet Union, Grcat Britain, Japan, Red China, Poland, Australia, Austria and France, are attending. ,

They spent a, hot sunny after· noon around the conference table in ,the P Ii g was h kindergahten classroom at the local Masonic Hall. In the morning about half the group met In committees; the rest talked earnestly In groups of twos and threes on the lawn of C)'rus Eaton's summer home.

Mr. Eaton, a Cleveland indus· trlalist, Is hOSt' for the group. '

Earl Russell said almost two i t years have passed since the late 5 DD possible for the con· Albert Einstein, joined him and

to escape consideration of eight othcrs In a publle warning que,tion of the aboli· of the dangers to humanity if an·

RUssell directed planning conlerence and drew up

Poor health prevented attending. Tbe scientists

his words from a tape re-

~ar, .. ". he said, other world War should occur. ,own age is faced with the

either of solving this prolr 'That statement urged a confer· or of w;tnessing the des true. cnce of scientists to assess the haz· of all those finest achieve. ards of atomic war. '

10 I' The meeting in Pugwash is the r '~uch the very highest meeting Mr. Einstein and Earl

Intellect, courage and Russell sought. The years bctween ",,"um"nilJc'es~ni~.~,ve labored duro had hrought no real change in the

WAYS situation. RUssell ~airl other ways STOCKPILES INCREASED

effects 0{ nuclear weapons tests. "Il is first necessary, then, to

lry to establish what is dcfinite. and to separate It from what has to be inferred or conjecturcd.

"If this mectlng could make clear tOO scientific facts with re .. gard to such questions, and tbe place where cettaiD knowledge ends and hypothesis begins, It would perform a useful service."

He revealed that th escientists first planned to meet In Delhi, In· dia, as guests of the India Science Congress. Cyrus Eaton had made It possible at Pugwash by his of· fer of a meeting place and by helping pay the cost of bringing the scientlsts I{I this quiet Nova Scotia fishing and lUmbering vil· 'lage. Mr, Eaton Was born on a farm near here.

RED' CROSS APPEALS GENEVA (Reuters) - The

league of Red Cross Societies has begun an International emergency appeal for tents to shelter 350,000 victims of recent earthquakes in Iran.

visit to Ottawa. It'will be the first I personally presidcd over the open. \ to' arrive in Washington latcr that hcard thc Commonwealth was pre· Gatt mcmbers. visit to Canada of a reigning mon.. ing or Parliament in Canada. day for a formal threc·day visit --- : '. arch since 1939, \ "It seems wholly appropriate lasting until Oct. 19. On Oct. 20, ( ,. P

The announcemcnt from Prime Ihat this historic event should take a Sunday, she likely will have a ommumst arty Mlnisler Dicfenbaker's office Tues· place on our Thanksgiving Day, day of rest in Washington and visit day confirmed ~peculalion that the ,which will make it possible for NclV York City thc foJlowing day opening of the Parliament elected I many morc Canadians to see hcr I before returning to London. I " June 10 would be timed to coincide majcsty on' this occasion than Governor·General, Masscy, now Pans Exp us/·on wilh the royal visit: would otherwise be the case." vacationing in Britain, had lunch

The Quecn will arrive in the cap., The Queen's last visit to Can· privately Tuesday at' Buckingham ital on the afternoon or Saturday, ada was in the faU of 1951 when Palace with the Qu~n and Prince M I M I k Oct. 12. and leave by air on Wed· as Princess Elizabeth she made a Philip and it was assumed they 0 otov ' a' en ov nesday morning, Oct. 16, for a six.. five-week tour across Canada with discussed the approaching royal " day visit to thc Unitcd States. Prince Philip, visiting every provo visit. . '

The announcement said that in ince They also visited Washing. . I By ROJl{'cESSOYAN, IS a former premier and foreign view of the shortness of the Ca- ton ~t that time. The prinCe came . ~tho~gh thi~, .fall's Canadian MOSCOW, (AP). :- The Soviet min!ster. Mal. en k 0 v su~ceeded nadian visit,' Her Majesty will be to Canada alone four years ago, VISit WIll be hmlted to Ottawa" government s offiCial newspaper Stahn as ~remle~. Kaganovlch h.as., unable to visit any place other visiting the west coast and North. there have been hopes that thc I 'Tuesday cleared thc way for the held top mdustrlal expert asslg·, thnn Ottawa, ' ern Canada, ' 1 Queen may be able to make a I expUlsion of V. 111. Molotov, ments. ,

The Queen will read the' speeeh The only Canadi,m visit by a I ?lore extended lour of the country Gcorg!a Malenkov and Lazar ~a. The three have not been leen from the throne, written by the rcigni'ng sovereign was in 1939 In 1959. ' ganovlch from the CommuDist publicly in _ Mo~cow: this week. government, to opcn the session. when King George VI and Queen, OPEN SEAWAY party, . Moscow radIO said ~ast week they

Apart from that ceremony, how. Elizabeth :.... the' present Queen I Last' sear :'Ilr St Laurent in- In a full-page editorml, !he go;' •. attended party. meetmgs, on F~ay ever, details of her visit have not Mother-travelled across the cOlin· vited her to conie t~ Canada that I ~rnlllent new5,p~},lcr Jzve~h~ ag~m -two days after the action agawt yct bcen worked out Th' Quecn I try from May 11 to June 15 in· f' th fr' I . f tI III\\,oked Lenm s 1921 IDJunehon them was announced. and Prince Philip ar~ expected to cluding a three-day trip to Wash, ~S'etarI or eo SICI3 openmlglo .Iellhat in,cases of-violation of party CAJUPAIGN EXPANDED make the transatlantic crossing by ington While in Ottawa the Kina 'I" t,al\~rence teaw~r ta~e Qle 10-

1' Ill:;cipJine the central committee The campaign of denundation

air and stay lit Government gave ;oyal assent to several hiIJ~ {.I~ahete 0 rePlor ers lat Iteh tUChen I is 'empowcred .10 USe extreme' against the ousted leaders ex· . ' nug agree u reques s a·s C • I d' I . dd Tu d Premier Niko-House, reSidence of Governor-Gen. passed by Parliament. "'t Ih I . C d meaSUres Inc u tog expu slon pan e es ay as '

eral Massey While In Ottawa ISSUED INVITATION IISI o. cr. p ~ces mann a. • frUIT, the party. lai A. Bulganin and Khrushchev, YUGOSLAVS FLEE WELCOME 'OPPOIlTUNITY ... F ' .. I St L That InVitatiOn, however. has not Without part~ mcmbership a victors in the upheaval, travelled

IESCARA 1t I ,ormer prime milliS er , au- been' formail" accepted . , . ' ..',. C h 1 . ki , a y (Reuters) Mr, Diefenbaker's statemcnt rent issued an invItation to the _. . Soviet ~Itl~~n cannot partlclpatc m leisurely t~rou~~ zec 05 on a Tw~nty.three Yugoslav refugees, said: Queen to come to Canada this year The dccision by Prime ~linistcr any slgn,lf~cant gov~rnment or on a go?d,wllI VISIt to Prague ... In fIve family groUps, arriyed here "I am confident that all parties I after it wa, s learned that United Diefenbakcr to couple ·the October 1 party ,a.ctlVlty. ~xPu~slOn amounts The L~terary. Guette! org~n,_,of after crossing the ,\drlabc in an In rarliament \vllJ welcome this, States officials had invited her to visit with the opening of parlia'j to polihcal anlllhilalion. the SOVICt Wnters Union, hnked open bo~t MondaY,j1ight and asked' unique bpportunity to have her attend ceremonies at ,Jamcstown. ment means abandonment of his Molotov,' Malenkov, and Kagano. Molotov, Malenkov,. Kaganovich, fu_r:p~O_li_l1_~~I~a_s~~_u_m~' __ ~_~'~m=a~j=~~~~o~~:n~oo:r~P:ar~l:ia:m:e:n:t~a=~~V~a~:m:a~~:~~g~lh:e~f:~:u:~:~~g~~~H:O:4~~~0:~:is:e~f~6~r~a~S~Q:~=m:b:e~r~se:s:si=oo,vich.hagbe~:loo~dbmthemdfur~forel~n . _ ". part's ruling Praesidium by a Dmitri T. Shepilov. dropped ~5

Khrushc' hey S' ay's unanimous vote of the central tcrnate member of ,the, Praesulium : committee. in the purge, with two, of the worst

--------...;;..,;.;,J.,;. crimes In Communist ideolol}', must be found for settl.' "In fact," he said, "the stock·

betwcen nations. The piles of nuclear weapons have in· be to lessen mu. creased; new nations have joined

between them the ranks of tho;;e producing those w; he hopes the co.~pera- weapons - or trying I{I produce L' .

sclen\lsts secn in the them - while serious misgivings Y , e mceting "will prove the have been expressed as to whether which gradually a' sense even the continued testing of such ' '

Threw Them Out " The central committec's an- "revisionism and nihflism."

nouncement July 3 referred to the In the Kreml~'s dictionat1, re-1921 Lenin crcdo on discipline, Tuesday's underscor~g left little vision ism is any attempt t4 inter­doubt that the minimum fate fac. pret Communist ideology in a way

different from the existing party ing the Stalinist triumvirate is ex· line. Nihilism is equivalent to

human problems will weaPQns rna), n()t result III dam~ By HAROLD K. MlLKS largely factory workers, at Zillna. ALL STALlNlSTS ' I loudly with disregard for listen. ,: .... y ••. ,. the present futile age t4 the population."_ PRAGUE, CzeChoSlovakia (AP) He and. Bulganin, along with Its Communist party and gov- ing ears.

which, nothing The British philosopher said the "We took the black sheep', by the fAntonln, Nevotny, Chech Commu- ernment lea!1ers are aU old Stalin, '"laSlr~nh. can result." Pugwash meeting Is' 01 great 1m· taU and threw them ouV' nist chief, were on '8 5OO.mlle trip Ists. Thus Khrushchev must have But whUe there are vocal anti-wor~en here did no mOre PQrtance because it brings to. That Is 'Nlklta Khrushthev'. ex- rom the' Sovlet·Czech border to found some diHlculty on his long Communis~, there are many ard-

out ways to continue gether for the first time leading planation of last week's Moscow Phague. They are' due Iiere today. ,train trip with Novotny, explain- cnt followers of Novotny and other con1aucts between scientists scientists from many countries purge. He gaVe It t4 a Czeehoslo- Khrushchev gaVe his endorse. Ing the Kremlin's anti-Stalinist Czech party leaders who, are just

na ons and points of view representinll all shades of polItical vak audience TueSday as he and ment t4 Novotny as "one of the purge. ' as ,wil1~g to debate that side of do ~omething of 1m- opinion. ' Sovlet Premier Nikolai Bulganln great sons of the Czechoslovak the picture. '

He hoped there would ' The meeting was private so the arrived for a week's visit. ,people." " ' Below the stiff par~y,leatiers~ip, \ aDd larger such gather: sclentlsts, representing only them· "It's no secret what happened ' \ the Ctechs are surpmmgly obJec· Czechs make no secret of their

selves, could spe-'- with' complete In' the Soviet Union recently" Czechoslovakia, recognized in tlve in discussIng their national in if th' I ti C "" 'w n. t h t bl' d l·t· . desire to ~ns y clr re a ons h • F. Powell, "nlor frankness and informality" ' . said Khrushchev. "We al\nounced the est as one of ,ute s aunc es pro ems an, po I ICS. .' with Western Europe. ~lany of

t e Brillsh delegation and "I believe that ,Informal ex. it ourselves. We had some blaek pWars of communism in Eastern On Prague streets or in beer 'them hope Khrushchev's purge of "Oallrm:3n, said Tues. changes inay achieve more than sheep In a good herd.' They Europe, Is "a nation of drarftatic hall~" the C~ech people appro~ch Stalinists will be followcd by

are "going ex. formal resolutions at the present thought \hey would take over contradictions. Politically; ,Its up. foreigners II1thout the fear or tim- li U Ii th t Id f ilitate Hi th wer and you know how it per crust is made up of fanatical Idity common In Moscow. ber~ za o~ a 'Y0~ ac

"".III:i\llln 5 was e first stage." POd d ~1 • Communists much more difficult IndiViduals who speak against relations With Brltal~, France. 'of how 1II.Inl5 . Earl Russell said there Is no en e , , ". . • v,' t German .. the Umted Stales

, agreement' amonll seitntlsts. aliOut ' 'Khrushchev drew cheers from I{I deal With than XremUn burllau· the Communist reglme are no." es ..." are conductlnl I 'IOml'i;problem., particular!): thelh., erowd be .. ,W'a~ .. addrelilngtcrat.. ra~:" They', declaim,openlJ andalld otil:er naUons. ,

t , "

pulsion from the parj>;' anarchism. : DEGJtEE OF SATIS ACI10N Red Star, voice of Marshal

Whether the party leaders, Georgia K., Zhukov's minister .pf headed by Nikita' S. Khrushchev, defence. called the aciUvities' of will be satisfied with the political the ousted leaders !'the graye~t destruction of their opponents re- crime tgainst the motherland and mains to be seen. t' '" . agalns its fUture genera Ions, "

"The party cannot tolerate those who do not carry out the will of , the majority, Who do not place the ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP~ interest of the party above every- 'The can opener has gone modern. thing el~e, who trY to bring dis· An el~tric' can. openerfeature,d sension into its ranks and who plot at the 27th exh~lllt of the Nation,al against its unity." . Housewares Manufa~turers Asso­

Molotov, MaIenkov and KaganI!' elation .opens ,all sizes of cans vich So far haVe becn, stripped of, automatically, 'an~ ,shuts .itself o~ their high' party, and government when the job is flDls~ed. All Mrs., PQsts but not dismissed· from . the Housew1!e has to do 11 attach ~e ladles Dr the ,rty itself;- Molotov can.,

, '. , .... \ • _~ • • • <, \..... I I ',' .. ' •••.

... --.- ....... -.- ... ,-~ ....... . , THE DAILY NEWS, . .. .... t.-· -- .

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ST.: JOHN'S, . NEWFOUNDLAND The,Dai·ly News t. Clare's Hospital

o Erect $700,000 Nurses' Home - Tra ..

ONTREAt·FIRM IVEN CONTRACT Contracts for the construction of the new St. Clare's

Hospital Nurses Home and Training School were last week to the successful bidders. The build­

will cost in the vicinity of $700,000.00 to construct equip. ,

nell' Home WIll be situated Road on the

propert)' immediately ad­Ihe \\'e~t side o[ the It will measure 90 by

leet in pl~n and will be a and bascment structure

concrete ,of con­Thc hewe will

an Indiana Lime­bearing the inscrlp-

'R LADY OF LOURDES . Intern all)' all structural

be 01 fire,proof can­throu~hout.

hundred student nurses b! prol'idcd with aecommoda­On the First 1Ioor the plans

lor a spacious entrance

communicllling ""lIh an oflice And connter, wait-

m. mens' coat room, office. and a large

room, The resident chap: pril'tte luite is ~bo located fl~M. '

, 5/(ono. Third and Fourth rom run assiGned ex·

t~ th~ !tudent nurses' , E~ch room Is equipped

buiit,in \\'f,rrlrobcs with re-

ceued desks and bookshelves for private study.

Classroom, lciene. labDratory and demonstration instruction rooms have been arranged In the basement area. This area also has a library and I commodious recreation and lames room with lunch bar and serving kitchel A laundry has been al~o provided.

All floors will be lerved by an otis passenger elevator In addltlon to two fireproof .talrways alia provided.

Mr. John E. Hoskins, F.R.A.Le. Is the Architeet for the building. The general bull ding contract h15 been awarded to Me!SfS. J. L. E. Price and Co. Ltd. of Montreal and St. John's. Plumbing, heating and ventilation work will be in­stalled by Messrs. C. A. Hubley Ltd. Mr. G. C. Cahill hal received the eltclrlcal cDntract.

The buildlnll will be completed, ready for occupancy, by mld·sum­mer, 19:18. His Grace the Arch­bishop will bless the .lte of the new School of NUrsing at • ,.m. on Sunday, July 21st.

r:r r '. .~EDNES~AY, J.ULY 10, 1957

• • • School Inlng At Bonavista:

Fishermen Vote

.. "

"f; i \f Protest

There was labour trouble at Bonavista yesterday as members of the Local of the Ncw[oundland Federation of Fisheries voted to go on strike.

I:: ,! :.d "

Officials, of the operating COI~::· pany said last nigh't that the stril jl.: will be of short duration. . .: :'

Strike

Meanwhile R.C.M.P. oUiee" The fishermen are protesting

against the sale of codfish to the local processing plant, by the crews of longlincrs, who, the fish·

-, ermen state, are bringing in so mueh fish that they are taking the market from inshore fishermen.

were 011 hand yesterday to remir . the fishermen of their duties du " ing the strike. It was stated th' the action of the' fishermen ' , ! . !l!aeing a rope across the harbol :-' to block the entry of longliners I' •. : iIlegai. . t

-----------~--------- :., r-----------------------------------------~; ~:

Youngest ,Member House Co,mmons

MR. JA:lIES McGRATH, III.P.

Thirty members of the House o[

Commons who we,re elected on

June 10th arc under forty years

o[ age. and. o[ the thirty young

men three are only tWent)',five.

Mr. Jamcs )\cGrath. the Pro­

gressiVe Conservative member [or

SI. 'John's East is the youngest

membcr in the house by three and

a half months, and will not rcach

his tw)!nty·sixth birthday until

J;muary, 1058. .TA.MES McGRATH, M.P"

, t I

icer Ca:dets Summer Camp

----------------------- ," t '

.1. .A" • W. Bennett, Maritime Provinces Is under the CD .• the commander o[ supen'l5ion of Major J. M. Mul\l­Command Summer Camp, gan of Hallfax,~assLsted by Capt. R.

X.S,. bas e~tended his H Maher of Sydney and Lieut. G. to the 68 mem- C. Beal, Kentville. The consider­

Can~dian Officers Train- able enthusiasm shown by the can-PI II'hn arril'ed here reo didate! u they do range firing,

uo!ler~o twn weeks o[ throw grenades, go on route infantl), training. In hl~ marches and learn infantry tactics

of welcome tn the futm'e c~rrlesthem through two weeks of of tt,t CanarllanArmy some of the toughest and mnst Brita~irr Bennett r';.1 exactin~ military training as the

m that Ihi! 1I'3! 1hr.lr instructnrs attempt to cover the '0 .ct a !ollnd Rnd required subjects in 14 brief d~YK.

m!1iI'TI' croundlng, Rnd In order 10 qualify for the ~c~i!i ~cl ~ui of the cau~sc Queen's Commission, it I~ nece~­II mnrh a~ thr), put inte, It. sary to attend two summer camps cml!l~t~ h~'~aying that in each of two weeks duration. The hr~"I!1 ~icturp Ihe militia course being gil'en now ~t Camp

m heromin: increasin~ly Aldersliot i~ therp-fore broken up ir, Ihe defence of ollr I In II) two grnups ,,·lth ~3 candidates

f~r Ihn mll~t be ready tn takin~ their first year and 15 In !n~ le,d ~lIr rrsrrl'CS in thc the ~enior' group. Tho COTC train-e! In emcr~enr)·. ing i~ considered to be the senior

cOll'rse in Camp Aldershot and the in'lrllrlinn rrin~ ~h·t'n In iarge size of the classes speaks well Ofhcer Cadets representing for the future of the mUlti. In the unill Irom ~1I {our of the Atlantic'Provincel.

FOUR NEWFOUNDl,ANDERS, who played il prominent role 'in the establishment oC Re:;ponsihle and Repre­sentative Government here, are to be honoured by ha '.oing bronze busls of them placed in the House o[ As~e111~ bly. Top Left:-John Bingley Garland, :F,'irst Speaker undel' Responsible Government. Top Right:-Patrick F. Little, First Premier under Responsible Government, Bottom Lcfl:-Dt·. William Carson. BoHom RiglIL:­Patrick Morris, who wel'e prominent in the struggle~ ,for Representative Government in Newfoundland. The' bronze busts of all four are being made in Ireland and are expected to be delivered before end of July. '

Visit Local Thl! \'essel Is something new C . d·: B

tlon, arriVed in St. John's rester.! . rlay a!ternnon on the annual presl. F th dentialvlslt to the various branch, a er es of the Association. He is ac· companied by hi! wife and they ,

Cotter's, Type

Is In longliner type fishing craft with ana Ian ar complete mechanization of fishing below decks to speed up and im· A • te

prove operations. Fish .are hauled SSOCla IOn in and carried by a conveyor'lnto 'I E C L II Q C I the hold which is'lnsulated and can. " r. • • es e,' .., pres·

are registered at the Newfound­land Hotel. "

'Members of the Newfoundland Branch will meet with Mr. lind Mrs. Leslie this evening and to­morrow a special reception will be held' at the Newfoundland Hotel at 5 p.m., and will be followed by a dinner party.t Murray'. Pond

Silver Jubilee, BAXK-Thc new forty longliner built . and

here ,last week by Grandy complete!\ her tests

acd iailed fnr Burin. The will carr), out fi~hhignpcr­lor Fi5her), I'roducts Lid.

.3t Burin \Inti! the plant at I gops' inlo operatiou. '

talns ice . lockers ,for cooling pur, dent of the Canadian ,Bar Assocla· poses. A thre.e man crew will oper· operated by Captain Dona\'an of ate the longlIJier which will have Bonavlsta. The success of this type a capacity of, fifteen, Iho'usand of boat will be fO,lIowed. with in· pounds of fish. Powered by a 966 terest as it may well rel'olutionize horsepower Kelvin engi'ne slie longliner type operntionsand has a cruising speed of nine knots should Ihis tYII~ of bont live up and Is equipped with radio lcle· to expectations ils exprctcli that a phone and a fatlulnieter. . lIeet U[ ,similar CI'lIft 'w!ll he con· . The vc~sel will be owned structl!d in tllP nrar future. ,

Club house. . Mr. and Mrs. I.esHe plan to

leave Iwre on 'I'hursda)' to continue their trip nn their visits to the r,.;snciations.

~O~E TO SEVENTY' MEMBERS ~i the ,Ca~adi~~ 'lffic~rs Trai~ing Corps from the four Atlantic PrOVinc'es fr~mprCs~nUy. attending Camp Aldel'shot, commandc. by Brigadier J./).: W. Bennett, CB~,·CD. Shown above Of!ice:f~ to rl~ht preparing,~ fire the S'fEN machine ;Jrbine are Office~ Cadet G .. C. '!Itorgan, st. J ?hn's; St Joh ,adet L.,~. ~t~r1ing, St. John's; Officer.'Cadel G. N.'Neary, Buchans, and Officer Cadet,D. M. Gillett,

,ns'-lCanadian Army P~oto)"" . :,:" ' " " . " .. .' __ :.. .. '_ ... __ ,_ .... : .. ,~., ... ,_ .. _ .. " ...... - ____ .. , ,,'_,_' . • . .

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Re\·. Falhcr John A. Cotter, Parish Priest of historic Ferry· land parish observed the twcnty­firth anniversary o[ his priestly ordination June 29th. Father Cot­ter was ordained in the Basilica by the late ·Archbishop Roche. .Tune 20, 1932.

Hin IiI'St appointment 1\'.15 as I

curate at ~!I. Carmd. salmonier'I' A Iter three years scn'ice at ~II, Carmel ',Ie went to St. Joseph's i

iiI. John's. Here he acled as chap, lain to the General and Fever Hos· pitals and the Penitentiar)·.

His 'next assignment was as v8sistant priest on Bell Island. Our·

• ing his four years-there he intro, duced the Children 01 ~lary and I St." Anne's Sodality which are now' flourishing Institutions.

Father Cotter spent four yeats on Bel! Island' and was then trans· ferred ·to st. Patrick's. S1. John's, where whilst carrying out tlie usual parish duties [or nine years he acted as Master of Ceremonies and Director of 51. Anne's.

From SI. Patrick'. hc was ap,' pointed Pastor 01' FCl'ryland 'Par· Ish where he ha's done' exception'

a\ly fine work. He has' buill a fine school.chapel at Aquafor1e ,and a new school at Calvert. In Ferry· land itself a three·room top storey has been addell to Ihe Convent School. . Father Cotter ee\~bl'atet1 ~Ia,,~

Sntul'd~)'.June 29 al SI. Pius X ehapel here in Sl. John·s. and the

Two . ',I t

Drownings I!:I

Are Reported I , I I' I'i: '

• i ~ I

,Two more drowning fatalitics werc reported' r yesterday.· , ! I

From Westel'll I3ny clime ",(lTd that two-yeur-old i

ROlluld Slatle was dJ'owlled when he fell o,'er an· ,[ emhankmcnt into fhe wfltcrs of thc ha;·!lI>ur. Tht 'II " body of the Iittlc chil;l WilS later l't:cl)vcl·cd. I I

. A dcln,Yc(lrcporL frolll .Joe Batts' AI'I11 stated Oiat ,I 'sixteen-rear-olrl Ronald Uearl. ~on nf Mr. and Mrs; 'I Sidney ilead (If that place, iust !Iis lifc hy drowning I whclI he (cHinto lhe WUICl'S of .i I1c3I:11:.· Ilond. . :\

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i'~Cost Of Living i Coming nown~' I The Great Ea~tel'n Oil ComJl"lI~' i .111l1nUncrd to their customers ye,· i terday a reduction of one·ha [[ : eellt per gallon in 1he price o[

furnace fuel oil, diesel oil. stove oil and kerosene effective Monday, July 8, 1957,

, I ORANGE PARADE POSTPONED

Pt~rf)onal The \rcddin:; will take pl~cc a'

TOI'oa\1I un .Iut-' 20. of Lieutcn~n'· ruth Greene ~,A,. to Captain [I, ~1. E~snll S,I\ .. 01 SI. John·s. :rh·' ceremony \l'ifl be performed b: Celenel Wiseman a former COlT. mander 01 the Salvation Army II· Newfoundland.

.---+ - .-- ---~

NHd. Skies Wlm:'Esn.\Y, Jul), 10 •

The annual parade of the Loyal: 'S'lIIri,,~ •••• " " 4:13 a,)11. : Orange Association which was! ,Sunset •. '. .. " 7:a3 p.m. : sc~eduled [or Sunday. July 14. has I '., . TIDES .' been postponed. Further announce·: HIgh ..••. 6:17 ,a.m. 6,17 p.m, ' ment as (n when the parade will I LOW. •• ,12:22 a.m. 12:36 p~m; lake place will be made at a later II . ".':' date ' - , .. ,-

. - , ,', -, MORE LOCAL NEWS: I'nrish celebration of In;; annl\'er.,' , 4 " "ory was nllsen'c!1 SUlld~y .. t Frrr),·' ON PAGE 1 ' land. =-====1

DURING OUR .. GREAT

JULY . CLEARANCE

SALE Of SUMMER

MERCHANDISE

fOR ALL THE

FAMILY.

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'Ili'i \ I

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... :

l'.

":. . I .i· ~, • I .11· ~ ..

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J.. ~ ~ l ,I : t, ', . . ""~'~, I~ ________________ ~~ ______ ~ __ ~ ______________ ~ ______ ~::::::::::::::::::~ ________ ----____ ----__ ----~--------------____ ~~~!1~~~~~~~~!l~ :'i:I ,~, THE DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUll

• =:-----.--_.- --- - .- _. ---_._. ... . - -_ .. _._.-...... " : "I Hear They're Working on a Bigger Paper Missile'"

THE DAILY NEWS In The:· News . . . . ---.. -,---

Newfoundland's Only Morning Paper By WAYFARER

The DA[~Y NEWS !~' a morning !laller rslabUshed in 1894, and pubUshed .t the News Building, 35~,359 Duckworth Streit,

. St, John's Newfoundland, by lIobinson " Company, Limited,

JlJE~IBER~ OF THE CANADIAN PRESS The Canadian Press is eliclush'ely entitled

to th,e use lor republication of all news despatches in this paper credited to It or to the Associated Press or Reuter. and also the local nelVs published therein.

ThIs Newfoundland Of Oun 'We delcct in the leading edi·

torlal in Saturday's 1'elegram the literary style and scolding' voice DC an old mentor and critic, This is nol said reproachfully. We are delighted that this old friend wilh whom our acquaint· ance goes back to the days when we Iirst, with the poet's shining morning face, went reluctant!;

, ,

l'EAIILY SUBSCRIPTION RATES All Press lervlce and feature &rUcln In this paper arc copyright and tl!elr reproduction

Canada " •• ,""' •• " .• ,' $10,00 per annum is prohibited,

/ to scbool, continues tn wield a trenchant pen. But since he has read Into an article In this col· umn something that wasn't there, we feel that In the Interests of popular understanding we should discuss the subject In more de· tail.

prime the pump to a point where . its capital investment is far greater than the annual Olltput in terms oC money, In lact, even If • lot more pump·prlming were necessary, government will not ~e able to ulldertal(c It, EVen IC the money markets wcre easy even if government bonds couid be sold freely at low interest rates, OUr present and necessary rate of capital spending would ~xhaust our borrowing capacity In a very short period, And what we have will be needed to build up our social services to the essential minimum stand­ards, There will be little enough In the future for spcculntlve or pump-priming expenditures,

United Kingdom and all . Fortlgn Countrlel ••••• ,$14.00 p,er annum

Author11ed II .econd class mall POlt OffiCI DepartmeDt, Ottawa. •

Member. Audit Bureau Of

Circulation ••

Fortune's Appeal To have been lifted out of econimic

: uncertainty into a state of apparently .1 stable prosperity only to be hurled' back

into a condition of worse uncertainty is a Il1lgic fate {or any community, The town of Fortune has suffered that fate in

, full mel1SlIre, I;'rom the momcnt the filleting plant

'. began to operate, Fortune's future seemed SCfme. Ane! the to\\'ll grew -as many jobs in \'Clriol1s types of ser\'ice industries \\"(,I'~ created by the basic cntcl'prise,

A population with a hard core of well­paid \\'or\o:el's in an important industry

. ,was able 10 support a progl'essive town council. a bakery, a garage. and II variety

, , ,of othcl' useful projects. But once that I:;i I . basic enterprise closed down, the conse­'.: l. ; quences extended to all the fringe em­: /;' ,:\ ployment that depended on it. ); : n Now the local council has appellled to ,:; : i~' the provincial government for action to " Ii' :; ,bring about reopening of the filleting .1 ; plant, But the Government cannot oper-

, :1 ale it, It must seek private operators. ,I Booth Fisheries have 50 far failed to ful­:! rill the expectation that they would take ; o\'er. What can be done?

. 'I: . . Failing all else, anything government ;::. , may do to keep existing plants in opera-

tion must be done. But the time seems to have come when a large measure of co-ordination and co-operation should be required of all fresh-fish operations in which the Go\'ernment is a major inve5-tor,

GO\'ernment doe5 not possess a bottom­le~s pUI'se. In fad, while the money mar­kets remain a5 they are, it has no spare cash fol' industrial investment. Yet, cash or no cash. the people of Fortune lind Grand Bank, whose plant is also threaten­ed, need constructive aiel,

It is not possible any longer to think of the needs of the fresh fish industry on an individual basis, They must be consider­ed collectively in the • light of production and marketing, It may be necessary to form some kind of an integrated opera­tion to put the industry on a sound foot­ing. That, at least, should be a matter

: I for careful study. . . '.''; , .

The Rough Road 11 iii perhaps superfluous to sav anv-

thin~ more about the road between S~al' Cove Bridge and Holyrood. All that could be ::;aid about it has been said in good round terms by almost every driver in Avalon, Most of them may be think­ing chiefly in terms of pe~sonal con­venience, But there is the larger issue of the safety and efficiency of highway travel.

For some ine:o:plicable reason the Com­miosion of Go\'ermnent omitted this sec­tion from its paving programme, Like poor little Buttercup, the reason we'l} ne\'er know why, But omitted it washy the Commission and neglected it has been since that body folded its tent like the Arabs and sileritly stole away.

The neglect was not total. The present G<lvernment has widened a section of the road and done some rough grading, But it remains a bumpy, rocky break 1n the 01lly goo~l I~jghway ill Ihe province o\'er which people h;l\'e 10 wellve lind wander in a manner that might slIggest thal they 'were all dl1lnken dri\'ers.

Since this road will noL Iorm part of the Trans-Canada. it. may be thought that its improvement will not be justified, But that would be illogical. The coastal road around the bay will continue to be important, It will always carry heavy traffic and for sound reasolls of safely Ind economy, it ought to have a high priority on the list. of highway improve-

, ment pr9jects.

~oSO Wheat Policy . '. Mr, Diefenbaker has come out strongly against the American giveaway pro­gramme which .willpetn:llt the disposal Qf grain surpluses at the expense of Can­ada lind other nations which must try to 5~11. in the open market •.

The prime minister II ItatemlBt ii .bar-. .

b Now, regardless of the fact that ed y many Canadians, regardless of this Is an age of partisan pre. party, But it has been left to a Conserva. judices and sensattonalism, we tive leader to put it. in blunt language. He like to believe that there are still h b d h' a lot of people who are interest-

as ase is complaint on the fact that cd in the basic facts of life about it represents a breach of the General New!olindtand presented as far Agreement on Trade and Tariffs, better as possible in uncoloured and un· knowll as GA'l'T, varnished form, !lIost Newfound.

. landers today are prosperitv's But It could pe voiced on other children in the scnse that tneir

grounds, Countries having so much in conscious memories do not bl'inll eOln11l0n as the United States and Canada' them back beyond a time when eh lei k' the N,wfoundland economy wa~ • OU .' 8ee' to aVOid, inju!ing one on a st~ac1y upward march, Thcy anothCl s economy. It IS a matter of know htlle about the tragic vit al importance to America that her fluctuations of th,e ~conomy ~(>. II' - 1· 1 b . fore 1940, And It I~ too eaSily

a le~ S IOU d e strong, But their basic accepted that what 'Is must al.

Now We have no desire to be an alarmist. We sec no need for anxlely If every citizen takes an Intelligent approach to his' re. sponsibiUtles, There arc far too many ~o~ay who sccm to think that this IS a world given over to so, many nours of work as till! prICe to be paid for many more ho~~s ~C recreation. But nil chihzatlon, .no society, has ever ad\'anccd without the help of the courageous anrl ~clf-sacrificing ADd patriotic effort of a hard core 01 its citizenry, These ara the pe£lple who behave in accord. an~e with that old aphorism whlch too few know, Ihe one that la~'s that we pas! through this world but once and must not

strength must flow from their economic ways br, But it is much more ~tabi1ity. When the United States does likely ~o he perm~nent if ~'e 50,mcthing to impair the economy of a ~~~wlt~~:r~O;~(he~e::n:~:~~o~: ner:lcct the opportunity to dll ------.-._-.- .... ---.-.-.. - .---.. -.. - ..... -...... ---.----.. -.-.-... -.---. ----.-.-.- .

now any good thing or anv kind. ~~~ !c:aln::~ shall not pa'ss this FiQal Report On

Now we did not ~y at any time -Edson friendly nation, she injures the western them, " alliance.

What is astonishing is that in a world in whi~h so many scientific ~iracles are constantly occurring, it is impossible for the business and political brains of great nati~l1s tq find ways ?nd means of dealing senSibly and economically with surpluses. An international holding and selling or­g,anization ought theoretically to be prac­hcable. Something of the sort will have to be worked out one of these days if good friends are not to fall out or democratic strength is not to be undermined by ina­bility to find a better system of economic

that Newfoundland's primary in· Few of th;;-;ho seem to "Quoddv" PrO]" ecl In Washing dustry is a thing of the past in pursue their course in complete • By PETER EDSON Iplte of our evening contem. lelfishness have Bny knowledge By ARCH MacKENZIE porary's aCCUsing InCerence, We of what gratitude they owe to Canadian Prell Staff Writer did lay very plainly that the the few Who devote much of their ST, ANDREW, N,B, (CP) _ NEA Washington Correspondent Newfoundland .economY remains Ume and such ability as the ha Sometime in 19aO Canadian and _"'S., ...... r.-.. ~~·..,·· .. =f=;,,--=,.,;;_."'""'=':F".,,'"''':f=:,""''==· ... ,'''''~~· .... ·:. vulnerable. We feel that this to the betterment of ma~kin~~ United States eXperts expect to ' would be clearly understood as Few realize what a m' hI have most of the answers regard. E C t M F the foundation for united effort . could be given &ocia:g a:d pus~ ing. the feasi~ility of the off- conomy u say. orce to tighten and strengthen its de. nomic progress in N wf dleco agam·on - agam Passamaquoddy USI ' fences, "This Newfoundland of, If all Its 400 000 ~ oun and tidal hydro-electric power pro- l'1 To Start From' Scratch Ours," a phrase h' h th _ ',~eop e were pre· jeet In the Bay of Fundy.

co-operation.

title of a lecture ;; ~~e ;:~, Dr~ ~~~:d's:~~h :~rf~:~ ~wn way, to The "Quoddy" annually, would Moses Harvey more than 70 B t l' t 0 posterity, add, perhaps 2,000,000,000 kiLowatt years a Is' u Irs we must know the na- hours energy to Maine and New and &0~~~1 s~r~~t~~~ex economic tUre of the, problem. Thereafter Brunswick, capping a long incu­gress \',i11 call [ ,Its ~ro. w~ must fmd leadership which baUon period and the abortive of Ihe best and or t~e ha~es.~I.ng W1~1 encourage, exhort and even sart by the Roosevclt adminislra­mind mos cons ,ruc lve drive us to measures th~t on a tion, The _ project, begun In the

Th be cl~r:; ha~~. ,~~t n~t.hmg can cumulative basis will make t\lis 19305 as a relief one, died {Or lack

e . Russloans Say No I I Idl~ I I as Irst been Newfoundland or ours a place in DC {unds. . accura e y lagnosed. which happiness and content. Quoddy's eost, sti11 unknown,

Zorin, the Russian repre:;entatl've at N m,ent will go hand in hand alw3"s :vill dictate i!5.life .or d~ath. I. Is dw one thing we must under. th 'I t t f h b I the London disarmament conference has I ' WI progres5, In the course oC ,mpac on elil!' mg ~5 ene,. a I· ,sand IS the tl'lIe nature of the the next week or two, we shall Ity to compete Inth aJternatn

l'eveal~d Moscow's rejection of the . economy, Another is that there ~et forlh in this column what we power sources such as ~t,eam a~d American plan for a trial suspension bf Is .. limit beyond which gO\'4'rn. think are thp. facts, What we be. the presence ~r probabilIty of 10-

nuclear tests and a halt to production of ~:ons~e~~r;.ot f~e tOfls~~:;rI~:,\~ lim t,o he ,the \'ulner,a~lr. spots, ~~~~:iin~ ;~:tol::, 4'nergy are con· th~I1TIOnuclear weapons, some day atand nn its own feel. and whal. III ollr OpinIOn, may JMME~SFi TlDE1l

G t be the be~t way to approach a W ki 'tt f th 1

The repudiation of the American pro- ;;;;;n:;;ve;;;r;;:;niiiim;;en;;;;;ea;;;n;n;;;otiiic~on;t.iniiiu;;;eiiit;;;o_b~e~tt;er~fu;t~ur;p.~, mo;=;;;::;:;;;; tern~~io~:l ~;:'in~\'~~mr!sione ar";

~~~~:~~e :;LF.~~; i!~=r;~wi;iOthe;;I;;S;y=i~g- E~::::::;~:;;:::" ::: west that changes in the Soviet high com- twcen lI1nine and New Brnnswkk, mand have not been the prelude to a -_~A~=~~"~i~(·II:I·CII!_II!Ip.==!!B:l ___ .. _ra"WLII'I2iiI_m131.. nn area or mor~ than 100 square

ft f' 1i MdERICAN CLAIMS i miles of water slamped from the

SO er ore1gn pO . cy. 14 died in farm fires. Fundy 'Bay shoreline. wased by But whatever the language in which (St, Catharines Standard) some of the world's highest tides,

R " 1 It would be Interesting to know OFF THE TRACK The trtechanics are 'Simply in USSla s dec arations may be couched, how many Americans there'll be (Winnipeg Tribune) theory,

the simple fact is that nothing that has in the year 2294 who'll be brag· The Gallup Pole came a crop. Deer and Campobel1o Islands, happened since the war in that mediae- ging to their neighbors and per in forecasttng the results oC lYing across the mouth oC the bay.

friends that their ancestors came th D i' I' would h I f m th t f 'val dictatorsip has changed basi" inten- e om nlOn e ectlon. The week e p or e sys em ° '" over In the Mayflower II way before the election the poll pre- lock gates creating two "pools" sions or aims. back in 1957. dlcted that 45 percent of Ontario -one refilled bY the tides and the

The virtues ~f the Russian system will votes would go to Conservatives other refil!ed from the first 1,>001

be AN ADMISSION BY MAE and 43 percent to the Liberals, and dumpmg its ,water out mto

~e~~e~ith :;~~~e~! :~pl ::ee~~. i~:::;:~ It I~TO~~~todlirf~~rtramto) under. It ~dded, that SUPPOl'! for Conser- ~~~lIl~P~~v:~: b!g::n'a ~~!e~e~~~~ , vallves m. O~tario "ap~eared to than the. fi;sl. Generating units ~sm has not been all economic or lIocial stand why long perods of 5i\~nce lOliC some of lis steam m the lat· woult! be eslablished to take arl-

'l'L 1 and Isolation follow Ule instal· ter days." . success. lIe on y way to make it a suc- lati f ' \'antage of the water movement, , t d 1 lIon 0 CommllQlsm In any "lien tht resul~s were in after estimated at about 4,000,000,000 Cf:>S IS 0 rag tIe w 10 e world down to country. the v~te, it was Iound Ihat COil' tons dailr. the Russian level. III China, for instance, willIe Jervallve candldutlls had been COSTl.Y SURVEY

Nuclear weapon:; haye minimized RlIs- the Bamhoo CUl'tain was fh,nlv gi\,en oill per cenl of th~ total The phn was reyi\'ed, largely sin's con\'entional armed might and caus- clamped ~own between 1949 1111;1 111111 Lbcl'als :17 perccllt, at the insistence of power.hungry

1954, BOO,GOO anti.Communists .'l'!Ie Gallup Pull's lIatollal pre- Maine, A "surl'ey to end all sur· ed a deferment of an~~ decision to wage WI!re "liquidated." dIctions also mi~sed the mark bv \'cys," for whirh the Ullil('d State~ a war for world domination, Now the Mao Tse,tung, Chinese Chief a considct'able margin. The pl'~' set a.ide $3,000,000 bp-gan la~t Russians want time to trv to gain their of Stale, gil'es out Otis figure 'election Corecast was Liberals year_ The money will be cri?dilcrl

" with the customary Communist would receive 48 percent and to Ihe U.S. ~hare of cost~ if the ends by other means, That is something explanalion: "We in China Conscn'ath'c5 34 percent. The plan proceeds. It may be finishe'd that must always be present in the minds have bad to u~e force in dealing actllal vote gave Liherals 42 and In 18 mo~th5, . . . of those who try to do business wl'th tIle' with the enemies of the people," Con~erl'atives 40 percent. FOlln~alJon condlhons nt likely • N h dalll ~lt~5. UP. bei"~ te;t~d by tyrants in Moscow, ow. owevcr, his regime reo drilling boat~. Aboul 60 variations

sorts w "persuasion Rnd educR" have been nR rrowed down to lour cation." By persuasion, he pre· Y 'thful or flye favored on~~, 'engineers

STRENGTH FOR THE DAY lumaply means' the slave·labor on told a recent two-day meeting VOWS ~.mp8 where the motto, accord- B " ,.ere,

" ' 1n& to ForeLgn Minister Chou En. usmessmAH Other pertinent data such as Is. 1t a good tlllng for people to take . Iai, Is "reform through labor." . WI currents are being Collected hand

vows? One estimate gives this force as PETERBOROUGH, Ont. (CP) In hand with a ~urvey which will This is not a discussion of the virtues 10,OOO,OOO-.trong, The president, vlce·presidentand forecast what use may be made

'I f f t I ,.. sales manager of a new, unincor. in the immediate area-a de-~r ,evl sora erna orgamzatlons or re- USE OF FERTILIZERS porated manufacturIng firm here pressed one-of New Brunswick hglOu5 orders, hut only of the vows taken (Owen Sound Sun-Times) have one thing In common, They and in Maine of any power pro-by indidduals lo do some rfood thing or, For thr pa~t few rlcc8lle~ the Are each 11 year,~ old., duced, New Industries would have

to b t' f d . I!t 'I us~ of Ierti1izer~ has doubled ap' Coopfran Manuraeturtn~ Com- to be fOllnd.· .

a S 11111 rom OIug some eVI • proximately evcry 10 ye pan." was ~et up hv Cooper Holt The fisheries induslry, (On·

WASHINGTON-(NEA) - An exercise to say!

gove~nment a million and a half dollars a month is practtced by the U.S. Information Agencv with erable anguish and pain. . '

Congress cut the agency's fund:; from the] 13 it had in fiscal 1957 to 95 million for i958. This is cent. Most agencies caught in this year's economy wringer ha"e a\'eraged only a 5 per squeeze.

President Eisenhower had asked for 1'44 million ~ars for USIA in the fiscal ~'ear bcgii1ning Jul~' 1. ~ng to exp~n.d its operations, At one point, Co It to 89 Imlhon, v .. hich would ha"e made a real its opera tiO!1S.

.Activities in the Middle Eas!. and Africa mal' I:f creased as 1heseare the new critical areas. Far East . grams will probably remain at present le\"eI5, down a little,

Voice of America broadcasts beamed at Iron tain countries \'lill be continued full force and ference,

A lot of libraries and information centers will to go, A lot fewer U,S, books will be purcha>ed and tributed, . .

About the only program that will be stepped up be foreign language training, to make USIA more effective in areas to v.rhich they are assigned,

There will be a lot less transferring of llllUlll:'~ specialists from one country to another and a lot moving around of their families, to save travel

'1'0 the extent that these cuts will make USIA ligJ1ter, leaner shop, wi.liless waste, t.here is now that the cuts were a healthful thing. Bul no denying, either, that the volume of U,S, ,,,"""" :senices, to counter Communist propagand3, will greatly reduced in effectiveness,

The assignment to determine what not to do more was given to Deputy Director Abbott \\ He called in his 12 depal:mental heads, 'l'he~' far 1:J da~'s and far into] 3 nights in a conference where telephones and call-outs ,,,ere banned, 11 oped Into one of the hottest sweat-box FS5i(1D~ in aucratic history. Examples:

Bob Button, head of broadcasting, held it fooliSh to cut down on. television, the newest and growing information medium and one of the mo;t

The weekly "Report From America" sent out ive, to over 100 TV stations in 34 countries, has been successful. But it's going. to be curtailed.

Turner Shelton fought for his moving picture gram, whose documental'ie~ ha\'e reached mi11iom:ol pie Rll O\'er t.he world. But it'fi going to get Ihl' ~X, There are lil1me people who cCI'tainly largely at the urging of agri~~l~: Fl'a'ncis Sargenl alic! DOIlI(Ia~ Hi: eerned primar.ily wilh the. impact

shOUld not' take ~uch VOWR. AI'. soon as turai collclll'K and extension nan, recently to keep themselves o~ young herring lor ~archl1e ca,n-

h workel's Icachinl( heller farmin busy rluring summer holidays, 1I1ng, h.a~ been the mO.lt co~m. I I

t ey take ,a vow, they immediately begin It hM h 'It til' h h ' Il, 1n Coopfran',~ heac1qllllrlm In lent crlhc oC t!le Q~lOdrly proJert. rc )ergs Halnper to want to do the thing tlley h v d h : 1111• d Is fane oC .the the Holl hMemcnl hand lolion A three.year flshcfle~ Kurvev, to '

Extra P()\ver For St. Jo]m's . . . ' a e vowe r e~lca In u~try inlo A Kuh, anti. perCume' are 'manUfacturer! 1\'~ich Canilda has gil'en $~oO,ooo, F' I

not, to do, 01' they filld i1 almost impossi- st~ntlal on~ thaI pr~miBe.,~ In ane! lahellcrl, . '. Will, ~;lIIgc. the proirct'~ influence j]S Ier)' ble to do the thing they vowed they would 1l10W milch bigger a~ ltm~~ goe.1 'I1len al1thr~e rompany excr- on InJmcrhate .nnd nearhy water~ . do, When people' find that vowS' h.we on, It has. heen of \'a~t Import· utives..:..with the ae!rliliol1 oC 111'0 oC ,hoth countrJC~. Ireherll! comw;! dOll'n the north h ance" for wlth It food.rll~il North other line~ .1 ~ 0 a p anrl razor UNST~ATlY Fl.oW,. eBst I'o.ast or Newfoundland are -The nell' steam planl

t is adve:se eff~ct upon bhem, they Amelica would already have a hlarle~)-pedrlle the' Itoods from Engllleers, in f'shmahnc an an- hamp~rlng Ihp'inshnrefishery ;iOd the So 11th Sirle by th~ ;hould have nothmg to do with vows. hard tme In. be !el£.supporting door 10 door, nual o.utput of prl'hap" 2,000,00il,- !wo fishermen lo~t \'aluable fi~h· land Li~ht and Pn',H

But many people-proba.bl" most peo- R,nd the rest ~! Ihe world would Profils ;to, into Ih compan:: 000 k ~ I 0 :1' a t l hours., .~ay thaI. I~g gear, on Sunday,. . ~\i'o ycar~ a~o, i~ EchtOIl I!! J IIkcly bp. scrlously clouded by !'a(e, a hole In the Holt'. furn~ce Qlloddy ~ ould bp, nelthH .the Mr. Michael Kelly of l)al1ipl'~ mtn operation next werk.

pIe-find that vows occasionally lak'm the threal oC Rlarvalion, pipe cnverrd b,v a picture, before !ar~est nor, UJe smallest of ~Im- CO\'r; ane! Mr. Ches Stron!! of Old . . . al'e a support .lo good behaviour and a . ' bcinlt turned over In th~ local lIar I:e"erahn~ plants cl.l~\\'herr. Pf!rhcan had their cod Irap~ car· l}If1clals 01 tbe compl"f . d t t ' '1 Tn FATALITIES ON THE FARM Cancer Socitty I:irt fund. i !llat output compam wtUJ the rled ofC hy an 'iceherg from Bu~- ~c"tcrday that tes~ \I'm

e erell agamlrt eVI, e' voW often (Edmonlon Journal) . Raw material b purchaserl from .46,3M !<WH produced In ~1l Nell' ley's Bight, JVhere the trap~ were c.u~ last, week ane! prwd· furniehes just'the normal reinforcement The fact thlt 66 perlons were a drugldst. Arter mixing. holtlin~ nl'lmswlc~ in 1953, . set, ,and Mr, Kelly's nephew. ~Ir, r.,l!!,factory. one needs to get habits of good behl!-viour killed In ,accidents pn Alberta Is carried (lut with the aid of. an w~!re~~t~e:e~~~:m pl~~t\ ~~~: Patnck Kelly h~d considerable It was stated that shorlJ~ established in his life. The taking of a farm. last year underscore. the ~:m sy:~ng:ut:~d trOS~iir taken electric-for "firming up" 0/ pro. ~~m~~~e di.r

e I~r~s :: rr~~n !~e water in the company's VOW may also be a door which shuts bt!- need for the farm ~afety cam. n c S ler, vldlng an even ~~v over the II'ld saved from eompiete destruction~ has necessitated ooe'ration hind one and prevents retl'e.at, Wh'at ,palsn,. Partlc\llarly dIsturbing Is CHANGING HOI.IDAYS sys~m. but the first two men could find steam ~lan,t at this time. t~t nU,mher of childreD who More and more Canadians 31'" THIes vary by Ihe day" month, no trnce of their g~ar liP to Mon, n~ posstbi1~ty of a ~horta.ge some of us need, under certain circum- \\ere kIlled, losing patience with Ithe curiOl" season Dnd y~ar for o.ne !lung. For day afternoon.' . Il~C power In the clly thIS stances is J'ust to have the pO's'sl'b'I'ty r Tractors, .not fire, are ~tm the ".uslm or c".I"hralln~ ". t' "another, no hdal p,l'oJect ~uld 01· , . . . I I 0 . chief killer on Alhena fums' I)". ",'f' ~.: "'t'C °dna Dh~" Crr Ihe same rO'1'I'!~nl ll~ak floW.' A cod tr~p cannol lIe replaced to the Indrpenrlent fishrrmrr. retreat cut off If W" cantt &0 back we ' . ' n" near "I'"na I, ,\~ a" "< of hrir 1 t . rl [. , I . th '5 nno I I h d . ,.. ,LIII!i. year, 111 persons wer.e reo lo~t ~11 '.:..:sId . i' a . 0 p an on a river. am :'~ ~', an", anr a ~55 of a\'e alreacly been hamprrp

must MO forward, -and WI do. . ported !dUed b)' traetors, while R 1 me~nmll. ney B.C. sInce tide5ebb and flow twice a lnl~ lan~ com11lg at the beglnnini: latene5~ of the sprine and \ _,_'-__ evew. ay. of the fl$hiDg :lalon iJ disa.llrous· mer fishel')' •

'.

the FUes of the News)

ADDISON BOWN ON THE TRACKS

than fifty of the tlf mining OIl

IsI.nd, one. of the sights consl5te~

of ears movln& face tramways from

They were a operation In

ore from to the

Gigantic and sports for the kids.

. '

lell

i

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1

l. 5etria, I.,. ~"'

'nt

I .se to sa,'e month is ~. with

-ica may be Far East

le'-cls,

:h Ilda.

( I1nference nned. It ~~i(ms in

lower John's

r.m plant er~!~ '. h)' the :lrl rOI\'~r 10 p. i~ ~chenuled . next week.

:h, rompa"f II t,~b ",era te k ~nr\ pro\'ed

ed that sh~rtall company', ted it this tImr. of a shortage the city this

nrl~nl fisher;"'!!" ~ been hi mperrd . :he apriJiJ'''d.

DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 1957

eWspaper 01 Rell

History Island

Develop Land Along Seaway

TORONTO (CP) - Large-scale development In connection with ·the St. Lawrence sea~ay project bas given a new look to the 55-mile stretch or land from Corn­wall to Brockvlllc.

Ihr File; 01 the Daily ,"CII; I

S\,I 110150:-: BO\\'~ 0:'1 THE TR,\CKS r Ihan fiCt~· of the ~ixty­

:r.O! o[ mining operations Bland. ~ne o[ Ihe most '.ht. consisted o[ the 11. • • I of cars mOl'lng a .ong tramways {rom mmes

Thtl ' were a necessary apmtion In orner to.

the ore from one ,Ide to Ihe other, but

_.hl • .rtra\l'n car~, moving at rale 01 speed, were !c-

for the loss of many , thron~h the years. They

radII' har\'c~t of human , oif children In early . in Ih~ fult flush of or womanhood, as welt "ho were well along on

01 life. Neither age. nur nationalil.\' mattere!l '­

mowcd do\\'n as well non.emplo~·ee5 as well

Ccmaln as well as

0[' the line~1 things the • 1 Wabana has done

Icm. \\'a~ 10 change the 01 !urlacr Iransportati(ln, ~ •• ci!<mdrn in 1~5(} !n ~t dlr!!'! Irucks which ID

, I' I,r\\' :11:n I\'a~' 10 a cn,· "'Irrn, In the long reign "~,:I em. the llU01hcl: of

likrn Ilil bc)'ond counlln;:. (~rnclH:(1 ~\'rrlpok~d onr

(,mutinn Ihc)' taiiNI :ir iram\\'~Y~. Th~ rp­

th~t thr.' were rCi:m!rd 111~'r'I'=hf.re~ ,ancl for

'Hlr. lI,rm therr \I',~S d· Iht !tP,p,.tion of lakl~g :1 e II," ,1,cI makinA the ·,:lur· ri~~nd (r. Ihe cars r.'tl1c-r loOt. ,In ab,ence o( r~J:]s :ht nClnt and the '111\1'5

10 ;''.i':Y~ Ie the SitU'lt \In. the (~C'ln~ 01 Da\'!lh,m l~ 1913. th~ only road con· 'hl 1\\'0 ,retion,' lI'a,; :lie M)' I! !'anry Hill ~o 11::,t , tramll'ay~ wtll'e , .II ~~,i ~undr~' as a;', l'!­qui:ktr means o( commun·

~--------------~ 57th. In

Peter and }'Iatrock In the Pink During the la5t three years, 'Un. Bell Island placed third' In fivc 'resldential arca~ .- Wales, the'Red Lion, the race being won Aullsvllle, Farran Point, Dickin" by the Torbay men in the Gllard, son Landing and Moullncttc-hAve

Miss Lila Rees, daughter of Geo. vanished, subm erged' under the Ptrsons' of Freshwater, wal mar· program to alter the river's rled on May, 3 to Walter Ree~ of course which has also wallowed Lance COVil. The ceremony took up several smaller, communities. A Series place at St. Mary's Church and Two new towns have sprung up

-----------, was performed by Rev. W. C, -Ingleside, which ,adjoins Osna· 12.year·old son of Sergt. and Mrs. Roath. bruck township, 1:1 miles "''est of J. B. Cox, was k!l1ed by ~n ore car A man named Walsh of Bacon 'Cornwall, and Long Sault, seven on the East tramway, He WIS en- Cove Hr, Main, was injured on miles northwest of .Cornwall. gaged as·a postal messenger duro the, Euphrate~ while crossing the The program has taken slices ing his summer holidlYs carrying Tickle on May 6, When one of the from other historic towns, notably messages from the telegraph o{~ blocks supporting the derrick Iroquois. in the centre of the de­flce at the Front to the Mine •• It boom snapped and the boom fell velopment area. was toM o( him that he bad jump- to the deck striking hIm on the Relocating people affected by ed down R well 14 feet deep about head and knocking him uncon- the program ha~ been one of the 13 months before and saved the sclous. Another man named De- major problems. The Ontario Hy­life of his sister who had fallen laney was also Injured. ro 0 .Electric Power Commission in. Catherine Power, daughter of has fmanced the new towns, pro­

The Methodist minister, Rev. A. Thos. Power, died on May 13 at vlded ~bopplng centres, 11Ouses, M. Bamford, wrote to the DAILY the age of 74. churchcos and 5ehool~ and ~Io-NEWS after the tragedy urging Lieu! Colonel Res' head of the cated Industries. thai the 'road be completed from sall'aUdn Army In Newfoundland, ,. By the end oC May the eommls­Court House Hill to Scotia Ridge. dedicated the new ICtadel on the 510n had already spent more than A survey for that route had already Island on May 15 $30,000,000 on rehabilitation work. been, madc. He argued that the' " B.6 I'IOVING JOB proposed road would do away with Geo. Pullaon, carpenter on the· Some 6,500 people were sched-the necessity of people having to NorwegIan ,ore boat Ellen, feU in- IIled to be relocated when the usc the Company's tramways as II to the ship 8 hold and, ha,d one of project began in .1954. More than short cut, and would provide the his legs ,broken. He \IllS taken to half oC these haVe been moved people of Lance (;O\'e with a much st. John s where tbe NorwegIan shorter route to the Mines. C~nsul, Tasker Cook, arranged (or

That summer brought the first Ius admission to hospital. mention o( local hast-ball. There Sergt. Cox was appointed a lI'er~ many Canadians on the staffs member o£ the Methodist Board of the two compani,s Rnd they of Education on June 21 In place lI'ere l!reatl~' Interested in start. of Samu;1 LeDrew, retired

An exdbitlon known as the Fes-11I'al IIf Empire w~s hrid in Lon· don th~i' )'~ar anti the ;l.o'·~ Sro:la CompanJ sent an exhihlt wbich was afterwards T'l'c'~r.tell .)y Mr. Chambers to th~ Tp'~'~,nieal Insti· tute at Kensington. ,

Eugene H. Rees was appointed a D~puty Surveyor of Crown Lands on July 19.

inl( the game. It was to become a 70 reslden~3 made an excuulon ~eality in the next few rears, In to Hr" Grace in June 29. A ioot,. the meantime. football remained ball lame was played at Shanon Ihe fa\'ourlte loeal sport. A meet- Park with the te~m there ane end­ins of the Football League tnok ed In t draw. A dance took place place at the Scotia Offlce on May In the Academy Hall It nl!;ht NEXT: Other Events oi 1910). 30 when Magistrate O'Donnell was elected Presrdl.'nt, There were three teams in the series Domin· Ions, Scotlas and Waban'Rs, Two City l.eague pla)'ers who had se­cured pusltlons with the mining companies, took part. The cham· plonshlp was won by the Dominion team' who wore the colours of red and ilrry. Waban as ,had won tbe series In 1908, and Scotlas In 1909. N. BlIrkp was referee for the 1910 ~eries, and the champions we\'e

fJlmtUllAND fJ&~ GO

Ih:ou;h thi; history, which Burke. J, Nugent, J. Dall'e, W. to be fal'llIal and aecur- W. 7Ilarlin (Capt.), M. Tierney, W.

, lUll' the brighl red rib. White, II. B~tchanan. H. Nounan, '~dden death. hoth in the, H, Barnes. (': Robel'ts and J. D,

I;d on llie ;ur!arr, A prom· I ~turphy (goah,e). litr \1';1, cuI "horl in W .• r. Higgins informed the Sl.

.' pI 1910. whcn rhnl'le~, I·lohn·s Regalia Committee when , : they were drawing up their pl'O'

every Car and: ;!I'umme that year. Ihat a CI'~1V from Bell I~land would he taking

sold at Munn I part. The Iron Isle entered In the

I Russian Rye . Grass Good Fodder

PULTENEY, Alta. (CP) - A chance conversation with a fed­eral seed inspector four years ago on the possibilities, of Russian wild rye grass bas set August Lange off on what he hopes will be a profitable job oC grass seed-ing. .

Mr. Lange now has 200 acres oC Russian wild rye grass, de~ scribed by two experts as among the finest in North America. '

, Most of the atand b five feet D·' S' I A Dative of Ottawa, the tall and' in bloom. In Saskatcb- eSlgns tamp old art is t began working Dwan where experimentation has etamps as an- apprentlce been going on for years, seed pro- By JACK VAN DUSEN graver at 16. At 19. he had ductlon bas been practically nil. Canadian Press Stalf Writer', syndicated cartoon fealure

Last year. Mr.-Lange had a dis- OTTAWA (CP) .!!. George A. used the money gained from astrous experience. He started'to Gundersen, tall grey-haired art spare-time venture to attend combine the ripe grass, yielding director of an engraving firm, re- Onlario College of Art in TOl:on111.'1 20 pounds of seed to the acre and cently designed his first Canadian In the 30s he studied then selling for $175 a loo,pound slamp. while working for Ihe U.S. U"'Oft.,,'

sack. After 3 'h hours, a hail ;\1r. Gundersen, who has been of Engraving in Washington, he storm destroyed an estimated an engraver since his teens, de- studied during vacations with the,':, $60,000 worth of sced, signed the live·cent stamp issued Arts Students League of New

The crop is doubly valuable be. tast m 0 nth 10 commemorate York. cause after the seed is harvested, David Thompson the eKplorer. NOTABLE STAMP the leaves begin to ~row to pro- WOl'king in a modern office off His first job when 'he went vide livestock feed. They reached a basement playroom in his west Washington in lD48 Was to a length of 32 inches last year. ' end bungalow, he now is desiRn. grnve the plate {Ol' a stamp

The grass is rated as a fine fur- ing n stamp for Bermuda and per· sued in honor of "3 century of SO far anp the last' are expected age crop, being extra'high in pro. [ccting a thre~·color system for friendship between Canada and to mOVe in the fall. . I' t h' h h I More than 400 houses have been tein a~d vItamin. A, whic,h is prm mg s amp~ IV lC e lopes the U.S." moved to new locations bodily by maintained even mthc winter. \\'in~ b~l:oco~~~id~~ig~~~Si~i;'mps He has engravc:l plates for giant house 0 moving machines. It. roots to a. de~th of 12 fe.ct per- stamps on a free.lance basis for Drivers of the machines say thcy' mllU.ng gro\\ th m dry areas. , for Mexico and Sarawalt, a British Bolil'ia anrl Iran :md has done can lift a house so teadily that Th.ls year. ~~r. Lange took p~e. protectorate west of Borneo. portrait plates for Venezuelan if a glass of watel is placed on ~atUlons .. He hned up 18 combm· He planted the grass four feet currency. an inside table before lifting it IDg machmes ,to ha~vest the seed apart with a protective crop of Mr. Gundersen's biggest project' will be unspijled when the opera. on a moment s nolice. wheat between the rows. Weeds was design of the Thompson r' tion Is completed. HARVESTING IIIIPORTANT I had to be removed by hand. To. stamp, issued June 5, 100 years ,:

Last month a shopping centre, Th.e grass must .be .harvested day, th~ Lange farm has a pure, after the explorer's death. He;: with 29 stores,'was opened in the wlthlO hou:s after rlpcmng to the clean stand of grass, necessary read "everything the Ottawa Pllb- ',;1 new IroquoIs. Others are under proper po lOt. The se~ds shatter for top quality seed. lie library had on Thompson" be-, , : construcllon in Morrlsburg, Ingle- ~aslly and' even a wmd can do The high quality of the grass fore starting the design. ' side and Long Saul~. , ,'11eavy damage. has been known since 1926 when' The blue, five-cent stamp shows

Two primary schools and a sec· ~!r. Lange started Ollt by gath' l th~ Saskatchewan gov~rnment ob- a bearded Thompson using a ondary school hnye been built in ermg seed from seven different I t3IDcd seed frllm Rllssla, but seed quadrant alongside an unCurled Iroquois and a new public school states and provinces in as little,' production was negligible because map of Western Canada where has been constructed in' the sur- as 14·pound lots IIntil, he had the grass there would not head the explorer made most of his rounding Matilda township. Four enough to seed 200 acres. out. , discoveries olher schools are under construe- ' . tion, two In Ingleside, two in Long Sault .

Two churches have been built In Iroquois and two others are under construction. Three are be· ing built in Ingleside, two in Long Sault. ,

To aid municipalities in the area in" future planning, the On­tario department of planning and development has been carrying out surveys checkinlt on such de­tails as soU capabillties, location of existing Industry, populatlon distribution, existing land use, transportation, educational and recreational and power facilities.

The ,Highe~t Quality .Developing and Printing

c:omes from

TOOYON'S Photography and Photo finishing has been our

only business for 52 yrs.

TOOTON'S Nflds. Original 6 Hour Photo-Finishers

In by 10 o'clock ) Out by 4 o'clock

Gigantic Sala ~ i ~nnu~l f\'~nl ~t Quidl Vidl for : the Imt time In 1910, The loc.l

and sports equip.: mw "'0k p~rt In the Fisherinen's for the kids i Race. rowing I!~~inst Torbay In the

THE MILDES'T BEST~TASTING CIGARETTE

, Guard; Outer Cove in the Bille

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~, i

Phone 8·0,100 ROYLE

Phone ,

2367

EXCAVATING o Water S .CO'. Ltd. .P~ O. Box 9,1 0

· Parking Lots • Asphalt Paving • Service Station:s: . '.', .

· Tennis :'Co'urts" • Sidewalks 'Dri~eways i· "-

Provided on Request 'Free Estima'tes and Recom'mendations

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I., t, . THE DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY ,

'l~------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~~-~-: • , ,

'"' ... _______ • __ ~'-#~ •• _ ..... ~ .. _. ___ r__'--___ 'OO:_-f-p.----r---,---~.- .. -.--~---

FOR ·THE LADIES Personal . Chit.Chat ',I: ,:' SITING CITY Mrs., Chester Harria oi Marys. ;1 ;," Mrs •. Victor' Robinson of Tor. town. I~;.I!'I':I Ontario, and her two ... r ......... ----------",,··, " .... ---.. ,----...... --..... --------.---.. - ... ----~-------- ,

1;~;I~r~i'~~I~n, Kim and Rodney arc '1/ ; U the elty on holidays and )' 'I ' the guests or ~Ir. and Mrs, !il"1 : Whiteway, 215 LeMr..rchant ·f I ~l.! :11t()ap·

'!I'I , 11,1, BUSINESS I ' .1 . : : 'Mrs. George Jones or Little ': ';ii.l', Bar Islands was \'isiting the city

· 1; '! : /In busincss and lcft yestel'day to 'I; ;i return oome. While herc she was

· i.::;j' tllc oC hel: «\lnt, Mrs. Edgar '1/ . 2 BraZil Squal·e. ' " . :', I

· HII!

; ~ ~;'. ii' ;! 1

· .,fl' r.' · " ,'r· o.!, ., '.

, --I •• "",n,.", DANCE

There 11'111 he a grand dance SI. p;:.trick's Hall, Carbonear .luly 11th., the el'c oi the

hollda~·. The Commanders orchcstra will suppl)' the music and therc will hu canteen ~ef\'lee.

YISITING }'ROM ENGLAND MIss Brenda Bury of York·

shire, England, Is \'Isitlng here and is the guest of Dr. and Mrs. E. Wilson, Osborne Street. Miss Bury Is a portrait palntcr, and since coming hcre has pRinted sevcrul portraits. One of hcr paintings 15 on displil)' al 'Gour· ley's salon, Water Street.

\,ISIn:J;I Fno~' GnAND BANK Mr. and ~Irs. Stanley Handrigan

or Grand Bank \'isitcd the city this week to attenc1 the cercmony nn Monday night' when their claughter, ~Icl\'a was commission· ed In the SI:.ll'ation Army Cur work at Bonavista.

VISITING 'd' 'I' , ('d ,I: ' 'I' , . l;·'

.1' 1:1' '

Mr. and ~trs. Harold ~Iaddlck 'VISITING FROll OTTAWA and their two daughters. .Iane

: Miss A\'alon Roberts, daughler and Susall, arc \'isiting here from " or Dr. and Mrs. Charles Roberts Brazll and' are the guests or Mr. (oC Ottawa arril'cd herc last week :lladdick'~ pc,rents, Mr. nnd Mrs. to spend parl of her summcr H. ;\1.. ;\Iaddlck, Lindcn Place.

,I va'clltion with hel' aunts, :III'S. :llr. Maddlek is with the Depart· ; W. R. Cranc and Miss Gladys· ment of 'l'rade and Commerce ·1Iobcrt5 at their summer home and has recently been 'Iransfered

, 'at· Topsail Pond. to Chile.

;LEFT ON HOLIDAY VISlTISG FRO:l'l HALIFAX '. ";\[rs. E. R. ~Ioody, Empire "A\'enue and her two children 'len here recently by T.C.A. to spend a holiday wi th her brother, !IIr. D. Smith in :'Ilontreal.

ATTESIlED lIEETlN(JS :lliss Gladys Robcl'\S, l't'o\'lnl'ial

pt'csidcnt 01 t he Business anti l'roCes~ionnl Womeu's club, rc·

,turned hume I~~t Thllrsd~y, SIll! i spent her "acation un a boat trip I through tht' Great Li~kcs. Duri.ng : her trip' to the mamland lhss : Roberts attended the meetings oC ! the' National Board or the Busl·

,Mr. and lIlrs. Anrdew Ander· son and thclr two childrcn, Jean and Charlie,· are visiting the city . llnd are the guests or Mrs. Ander­sun's p'nrents. iiII'. and iIIrs. Lloyd Chancey, New Portugal tovc Hd. Mr. Andel'soll is' manager of the Cnnadiall Bank or Commerce, main brunch at HlImax.

ness and ProCessional Women's Club.

FRO,I BOST(I~ 'I Mis~ loa Lo\'ctt .tlld hrl' ni,cep.. . \ Miss llarcelle Delancy arrived

, ' ., here on Salllrda~' ft'om Boston '10 visi4 lliss Lol'ctl'~ sister. :llrs.

I'Ro:Il Gni\~)) ),',\LLS ~Ir. Arthur Hoddinott, proprie·

tor of \lIe Pnrr:goll hotel at Grand Falls is visiting the city on business.

FROM PORT CREDIT

, 1 ".1ack Thorne. Forc.t A \'enuc. :lliss , . I ]):I\'ett nlso plans to spend R\yhlle

: I with hrr mother. Mrs, Bridget

:llrs. E. C. Cross oC Port CredH, Ontario. is "i.i1ing Ihe cit~ and is stavin~ with her ~oU·II1,law and d·aughter. ~Ir. Hnrl ;III'S. F. W. Russell. porlllpl Covc, ~oild. ~lr8. Cross' sister, Miss "Imam Chne. who was \'i~itin;; here len on Saturc1a:, b~' the :-;,S. Bareal.leu 10 , return to her llOme al Gl'lmsbY'1 A rcr.l· I'relt~ wedding look

, > Lovett at Aqucforl. Ontario. place at St Palrick's Chllrch, Wit·

"ISITING FR();i"LONDON lcss Ba)' on Wcdnesday, June 19lh, , I ARRIVED l'tIOSllA \'

~!rs. Lewis BRrtlr.tt. llicle[ord Place, arrived home by the cx·

. press on ~Ionda)' Irom the main· ,. l.md, where shc .was on a busIness

1\Irs. 1'. T. Polel, anrl her with Monsignor J. W. O'~Ia~a of· thrce children, Robert, Cheryl 'fldDlIng whcn Mllry Margaret

. 't" St John's ' and Gary are YISI m~ • d . onl)' daughter oC Mr. and Mrs.

,. and holiday trip. She attended , mcetln~s'll[ Ihe Dominion Board

irom London, ontarto!. an are staying with Mrs. POICI s mothcr, ON HOLIDAY Mrs. C. Pl'clty,' 71 Cr..mpbel1

II i .., I I Avenue. ' , : i ! oC the Woman's M 5 son a r y !,' I Society at Toronto, and sp~nt -',; awhile with relatives at ,l\Iontreal. 86th. BlltTlIDA Y

. :;, .. 'I' Her sister, Miss l"lorencc Thomp· ~Irs. Elizabcth Parson~ of 76 ,I,j :: son, R.N., who Is a nurse at the Barter's Hill Is cclebratlllg Il~r

;1 101 . 1; ~Iontrenl Gcneral Hospltlll, reo 86th. birthday todn)·.Mrs. Parsons : Ii):. :; turned with her and will go to was formerly of Grccnspond,

. '/ :,1 ' i, Brlsus' this week to open the Bonavlsta, Bay a1!d came to St. ':j ,I.: ,1: Camil)' home' there for the. John's about tl\lrty.elg~t ycars '; summer months. ago and has bccn IIvmg .hcre

, '" ever sincc. She Is now. IlVlllg VISITING FRO~I TORONTO with her daughter, Mrs. John

;\liss ~Iary Harris arril'cd here Harding. Hcr many friends' send from Toronto on ,~!onday and is birthdap grcetings and many spending R felY days here with happy returns; rclatil'C~. She plans to go to )Iarystown at thc, end ~l the week to spenrl a holld;·Y With her brother ann .ister·in·law, Dr. and ._---_._-

MR. MYSTERY from

WALSH'S BAKERY is 'worth $89.00.

OYER OPEMTION ,The many friends of Marjorie

:llulletl, nge 10, who underwent an operation at the Gencral Hospi· tal last weck, \\'111 be glad to know that she is over Ihe' opera· tion and doing fine. :llnrjorie's mothcr, lIIrs. Hcnry Mullett Is also In St •• 10hn's from Wesleyville, f,ndls sta~'lng with Mrs. EdwIn ;llu l1e II , Coronation Strect.

Miss Jeanette. Peet, Portugal Cove Road. of Harvey and Com· pany's ,office staff, lind :lIIiss Dorothy Andrews, or the office staff or ·the Department of Pnb· lic Works, al'e at ~ present spend" ing thclr summer vacation with Mrs. ~Ielrose WaYM ,Grand Falls.

An aura of freshness follows ft shampoo. Your hair also can have a faint fragrance. A few drops of cologne or toilet water In the final rinsIng adds a pleasant, but not overpowering, scent.

So, you've read where rich desserts are good for persons trying to gain Weight. This is true. But If desserts milke your skin break out. better SUbstitute something else in yoUr weight.. gaining diet. Also, eating rles· serts before a meal Is still ont, i\'hclher rou're lhin or r~t. 11 kills the appetite for R well·balanc· ed mcal.

lU cDonuld-Tobin lfledding

\\'iilimn Tohin of WHIm Hal"'\ of the groom, wa~ maio of hon· was united in marriage to Francis oll.r "nd Miss Annie McDonald, Joseph, snn of the latc ~II'. and alSll a sisler of the groom, and ~Irs Thomas ~lcDonald oC KiI· Mrs. Patrick Tobin, sister·in·law ~rid' , • of the brinc, wcre bridcsmaids.

c. .. The bridijl party wore gowns of ~liss Bridget McDonald sistcr hlue and shrimp colour;

SU~lmer Separates Easy On The Upkeep

Summer separates that take n minImum oC ~are are tiles by Glvenchy in a blend of dacron and cotton. 'White batiste off the shoulder'blouse willi lantern sleeves Is .worn with balloonIng harem' skirt.,:Stripes are bluckon'p!,l~ blue chambray..-:-By GAILE DUGAS,;NEA. Women's

Arter the wedding the bridal party and guests motored to Park· Le' where the reccption was held and the' usuai loasts honoured.

The honeymoon was spent at Hodgcwater Line. The happy couple now reside at Kilbride.

A Bright Note!

'7357

, . WOO ,APPETITES WITH' SOUP,

Lunching under sunny skies, by the Ppur aspargus soup .hade of a lacy willolV tree. From such gumbo soup and ",ater, happy times come the fond memories welt. Pour into 2 or 3 bowl, of June, so dear to uS,alt.

Spread the table with simple fare. TRIPLE CHICKEN Summerap~tites are wooed by appetiz· 1 ron (l U ClipS) cond("ltj ing plain 'vittles"-like hot savory chicken gllmbo soup IOUPi and makIngs for cool, green salads. J ron (/3i CliPS) cOIlcmcd

When you eat out on the porch or in chicken wilh ria soup the yard, you're eager to keep it easy. Jean (I3i cups) condtr.s~l What could be easier than a pilt of soup? chickw noodlr soup Next to it a tray of sliced tomatoes Z SOU/Hans tmltr and cucumbers. green anions, radishes, cottage cheese and/or ham strips. Then it's every man for himselfi fix and mix your salad any way you like. And there's oil and vinegar to dre~s it. Take some potato chips to crunch with soup and salad. "

The pitcher is brimful of clinking icc cubes and amber-clear tea. J US't a reach·away is dessert: the glass dish heaped with sliced peaches and straw· berries, Around it, chewy nut brownies,

Stir up a memorable soup to match the memorable day. Start with the good, ever·faithful soups from cam . Add one to another-far extra specials like these:

GARDEN GUMBO 1 con (/3i ClIPS) condenmi cream

oj aspargus soup 1 ron (1}. wI's) condewud

,Helun grmlbo soup 1 soup·ron !L'ater

Pour soups into pan; sti, (For extra flavour. vou sprinkle in some sWOct basil). Simmer till good into 4 or 5 bowls.

.auce, meat saucc whole kerllcl corn. illio a one·pall 'paghetti, meat sauce, frying pan ovcr your simmer a hit. The 0._ .. '-.. : .......

to plea, "Let's eat, Round out their eggs, pickles and butter sandwiches. , watennelon. Pass fig cookie!, ' .

-Between Us Worn By RUTH MILLETT

'BIG, STRONG MiL'l' ASKS has to get out of SO~IE POINTED QUESTIONS oecasionally. When he

with the boys in the In answer Ul I recent column neglecting her and th,

asking some "big, strong man" to II When she has little 10 explain to us women why men. feeling low. When be is behal'e as they do, a "big. strong' has a grouch. man" from Chicago asks a few "When she buys questions oC his own. don't really need it's thi:

He writes: "Will some poor, inno. too good a bargain to cent female kindly explain to I1S When he buys men why it is. could do without he

"When she leaves the dresser man talk him into a drawers open or clothes on the br.d "When she \1'0':01'''''' she has 'not finished.' When he ,he i, hein;! firm, does he 'is ~Ioppy an drlisorderly. after them he is being

"When 1\ lIan yells, he is act· Or even a big bull)'," ing like a baby. When a woman cries. she has been. hurt.

"When he does not wa nt to go out. he is unsociable. Ii she wants to stay home, il's became she is exhausted or has a headache.

She's Firm "When they do go out against

his wi.hes, she says she had to drag him. When they go out against her wishes; she claims she went 50 aSllot to ruin his evening.

"When she plays 'bridge In the afternoon it is 'beca use she simply

SHU-M deans all WRITE·

'l,q~~'l Happy little birds add, their .

/

' bright "note" of color - embroi· dered on kitchen towels! Make

Beauty Briefs I them ,bluebirds, or canaries' if a Warm soap suds. I1sually will

. sunny yellow is your favorite! clean comb,! and brushes_ A par· I I~dilor. . Pattern 7357: Transfer 0:£ silt UCIllarly grimy brush may Deed

motifs, abollt 51f.:x71/:: Inches. Ide sterner measures.' Add some am· motifs,' about 51i'x71'.1 inches: Ideal monia, a' teaspOOQ. or two, to your for' quick shower gifts, bazaars! suds. Swish brush through this. ~ •. For Cabins, etc.

. :. For Children'.

Rooms. ...

~. For· Space Sc-ving

:. For Year Round

. Sleeping.

,

Ho'}/ much ,Ieepi!1g sptlce haye you in your home or \ummer cabin? ' Little or much it can b'e doubled by, the use of our comfortable S~NK S'EDS, guaranteed unbeatable for all. year round sleeping comfort~

JOHN CLOUSTON • LIMITED

172 bUCKWORTH ST~ DIAL 8.0341

, . Excellent AppeJizer' Course,

In 'Snack~Mix: ' , .-Send TlDRTY·FIVE CENTS iii. Follow with a cool water rinse

coins for, this pattern (stamps can. and shake brush. To avoid crush· not be accepted) to ST. JOHN'S iDg. bristles, stand brush in glass DAILY' NEWS, Household Art 5 with brisles up. • Dept, 60· FRONT, STREET WEST, .. TORONTO, ONT. Prinl plainly A Imld touch ~ a comb 10 a N AM'E; ADDRESS 'PATIERN new hair·do is wrong. Thosp. ~1JMBER. I I tight little eurls may have looked

A bonus {or our readers _ hl'o good on Shirley Temple, but DOt· FREE patterns, printed in (Jur I on the a~erage woman. .Brush!ng ncll' Alice Brooks NeedlecraCt actually IS good for a hair setting Book for 1957· Pl~s a wonderful because it loosens lhe set And' variety of design~'lo order _ cro. makes it appi!ar more natural. chet, knitting, embroidery, huck weaving, toys, dolls. others. Send 25 cenls for your copy of this ex. citing NEW needle book-now!

jbuylnr shampoos for your par; ticular haIr problem Is relatively

I simple. Mo~t m,anuf~cturers lable their products for dry, ol\y or normal hair. However, one thing 10 note when huying shampoos: IIny shampoo sholild be mild and not sling thp. scalp.

garlic salt. 1 teas(lQon celery salt, 1 teaspoon onion salt:

.', Mix the dry cereal. Ihe. prelzel _ ~-'..<" .. ";';i""~"""'~. ow.;;",",". "", I sticks broken In, .maller pietes,

RREAKF,\ST CEREAL ~nack,mlx Is II nutrllhllls offerIng to go and the salted peanuls in a large with ~old slimmer drinks Of' fruit juices as an appetlzercourse. oblong baking or roasting. pan.

• ' . . .'. . \ Heat buHer, or margarine 'until BY GAYNOR MADDOX, se\'eral weeks man alrhght con· I melted; stir in the Woreesteshire

~or servi~g with c,ol? summer tainer.In refrigerator. '. sallce and seas(Jnings. Pour over lriJlk~ or With fruit JUice 'sa3 an Cereal Snack·~l1x '(2 'quarts) . the cereals and mix well, Bake appehzcr course, a break!ast ,One ~nd one·half, cups .hr~dded· in a slow oven (300 ,degrees F.)

I cere~l &~ack.mlx Is . a. nutritious rICe, . bite sIze; lY.l cups, shredded stirring every 10 minutes or so,

I offering. " . " Wheat, bile size; 1'h cURs, re,ady- for, about a half hour or until light·

Cereal snack·mlx Is a basic. e· t\J-eat ~at' cer~al,.2 cUps slim pre· Iy browned. One clip of oven. clpe-~de.vcloi ,you OWl! speCial tz~1 slicks, 1 c~p, salted, peanuts, toasted ice cereal may be added .varlahon by ehangln~ the .season. skinless,; onc·thlrd cup butter or to the ingredienls if desired, Cool m8s. C~rry powder IS an merest· marg.apne, 4 teaspoons . Worces· before serving. Store in airtight lng ad~ltlon) •. It keeps, well' for ters~lrecsauce. Y.i, to.,lteaspoon container; ... ' '. . "

City dwellers may hide their hair under the latest creations. But a comb Or hairbrush tells the secret of soot·filled hair. In sum· mer it Is wiSe to protect your hair from too much sun. And summer usllally calls for more frequent shampoos to keep locks ~Ieamin~. '

FOREMOST,' Alta. '(CPl-Honcs or' a rinck·billed dinosa1lr. helieved to ha I'e, existed 6~.OOO.OOO ~'ears a~o. have been uncovered In this southern Alberta town. 50 miles southwest of Lelhbridge~

Dr. W. Langston Jr. of Ihe Nil. Cound excellent femur and pelVic tional Museum o[ Can'ada. has bones or the prehistoric reptile.

'Dr. Langston' and his assistant, George Blanchard of Otta\\'a, had been excavating for dinosaur Cos· sils in the Nobleford district. 25 mile~ no,thwllst of Lethbridge, when evidence of tlie specimens in this' area was heported.

The duck·billed dinosaur bones were first discovered b\' fOllr dis· trict men hunting for indian arti· tacts. ., -.,

lSc PARKER

MONROE L

.. ' viSeS

ELECT

, ,

:HICKEN sou, ,psI a>ndenJ(4 nbo soup . ,psI condtnJed ;, .ict sou/> , ps) condensed 'dit SOliI' ,·alt.

Into pan; stir to ,,'our. ~'OU

ne i\\'ect till ~ood and ·k

. 5c

,13

!~~~~ ______ ~~~~----------------------------------------------------------~------------------~----______________ --!1·m"tr~. •

ainst ,u ercu osis a In att e . ro ress

E te S·' t' IIftOIIbl' eollduot III the lUrVey. the Individual'. attention on the To henlth education falls the every part of the Province, whose IF d · L Is

ut xe·cu Ive tlIre a· ry TlIrouPllut their .tay .t the Tuberculos!s prdblem, and to en· added task of combatting campIReo' whole·hearted support of our Healtjl 1 e eratlon oca ~.. Northern Bale, our naff received courage his support of the TB cncy, which today threatens the Education, Case·Findlng and Re' l

the fullest .cooperaton from U.S. preventive programme. In every Tuberculosis Campaign just as ser· habilitation· 'programmes, and I Are Decreased' A.F •. and R.C.A.F. personnel III' community visited' by the M V. iously a~ ignurance and fear did in whose· generous support of' the I

dy'lses, CO' ntelnued V·lg·I·I~n(e ·.R:o"~rtDtn~·~t'rwt'nOe~wt:h~e:oa~:;::elY~·:e,:A:~n:n:~tUrna:C~uree·. "Christmas Seal" talks.were given the early days. Annual Seal Sales, have vitally in· Thirteen Locals of the New· ~ in through the public andress sys. REIIABILITATION fluenced the success of our work. Coundland Federation of Fiahel"-

~em, and heallh films shown. Si~. J!l the new concept of Tuher~u· (we are particula~IY, grateful to men. have gone out of existenci liar work was done in commUni' 10S1S cor.trol! more and more ~m· our Seal Sale Chairmen and that since the organization WIS formed

staff and Iqulpment. A generator ties vhUed by Ihe X·ray bus. AI· phasi! 15 bemg place on RehullllI· great band of voluntep.r workers live years 8"0 an official of the was'supplled for the survey .in together 25 health films. were tati~. This vital:y ~mportant pre· i WIthout whose assistance the Seal i Federation ;Ia'ted last night. He .'

uII meeting of the N.T. Ind, travelling along thl trans. nearby Happy Valley where the IiCreened. for s0!1'e 14.000 viewers. ~'cnuve me::!our~ ag~Jnst the dnf~~e \ Sale could never he attempted on 1\ "aid thaI reason for this reduction n· a~~ld en Monda)', July 8th, Canada Highway, conducted JIUl". current WII not lultable for our A serleS of lilustrateq lectures IS now taking Its flghtful phrr. m I so vast a scale. was the increasing trend towards I;;

sanitorium. The following veys In 22 communltlu between unit. ' . on Tuberculosis was ?ivcn to stu· the Tubcrculosi~ con t r 0.1 pro·, Our very sincere appreciation is I centralization which saw the resi· I;: 13th Annual Report of Ell: there and Stephenvllel.· Included Excellent cooperation was also dent teachers attending· Summer gramme, and gradually closln~ thc \ <1lso extended 19 the Press and denls of many small communities :.1, , secretan', W. H. Davis:. were luch large centers as Grand received from the Itaff of the ,School at Memorial Uni~~rs!tY, gap in th? .'cure' pro~ess. . Radio, as well as tq Ihe doclo.r;. mo\·c 10 more populated areal. t . indeed hapPY to be able Fall., Windsor, Bishop'. Falls, Grenfell HOlpltal at Happy Valley, and 10 sluden~ nurs~s afflhatln~ R.ecogmtJon of thclr valfle has nurses .. clergy, teach~rs, SCTVlce It W?oS also slated that the·~ .. that 195A.~7 was another Buchan!" Norris Arm, Springdale, who X.Rayed the recalls whim at the SanatorlU~. ~lts or healtn rapl.d!y ~ncrease~ demands for He· i clubs and to~vn councils. throu~h·. I'ederalion presently eonsists or I;,

year for this A.. Botwood, Point Leamington, Bad. trouble developed In the genera. literature were dIstributed at the hablhta~lon serVIces, and the task out the .Provlnce for thClr conlin.! some 240 locals wilh a member·.: i. cutee'!"UI the fact that ger and Harm,on Field. However, tors. . close of these Icct.ures. . of meetmg these demand~ has not ued and I'aluable cooperation in IShiP in excess of 6,000 fishermen. 'i. i:·

Campailln Is the programme on the West Coast The survey was completed about pos~ers advocating commumty been a~ easy one. DesPI,te many our many projects. All members have registered for :;: I·· l't5 greatest challenge. could not be completed as planned the middle of 'November and was cleanliness, were sent to all town frustrating problems, a \\onderful '" d 1 t f I 1 I Ihe Unemplovment Insurance for· I.'

d I II II . tl P . ·C ..' b h b d h' h II I e are ecp Y j!ra e u a 50 0 ' '. • ..

, lalllng death rates,. mo • 5 nce Fa weather made road con. an outstanding IUCCeu with a to. coun~ S In Ie . rOVlnce, or PUIr JO as ~en one W IC re ec s lhe De arlment of Health which fIshermen which IS payable 111 ' of treatment, ~horten. dltlons bad, and It was ImpoHible tal of 1,806 X.ra)'s taken. IIc chssplny during ~lean.Up Week. g~eat credit on I\~r: E~gar House, has be~n a wise and constant January, 1957.

perIods, more to operate the Mobile Unit satll' In the nc:ond week of Decem. The .lullest pOSSible use was Dlr~ctor of RehablhtatlOn, hiS able friend, encouraging and support· . . . •• nilaIRiUcll1tiaOb"ilitation, and the factorily. The undertaking WBI, ber, our survey ,taff proceeded to made of the Christmas Seal Cam· assistants Miss Sara M. Coady and in the Association's efCorts from Represen!ahves . of the Arthur

)'e

ar of part of the nevertheless, a very successful the U.S. Naval Base, argentia, to paign. to further the Health E~U. Mr. George. Greenland, and M.r. th; verv first. It is I feel sure to D .. LIttle fIrm \l'hlc~ h~s been r.

Sanatorium, all go to one, with 22,003 persons X.Rayed conduct a Ilmllar survey The cation Programme. Valuable In. ~tan Cullen, Supervisor of ~ehabll. th • d' I 1 f ' 'h' h h' , ,tamed by the PrOVinCial Govem· h b Milch credit II' due the S I' rt I' formation was embodied In the Itatlon at the West Coast ~anator· e cor lao re a IOns II IC ale I ment to assist Deputy Minister Ar-

that ~rrat progress. a~ een ClubB and CllristnlRs' Se I ervs cle Shame cbou theoui cooPde.rat onfflwas Christmas Seal appeal letter which ium, Corner Brook. Later this eve.,' nlwahys reXlhsted betweenf us, th3kt i thur Johnson of the Department of

a;aln!l TuberculOSIS. At the a a e 5 own Y e comman mg 0 cer, , t t ' h . th P ." H '11' d I '1 d muc ° t e success 0 our wor 'E .. I ' . • II • may Committees who did w d rf I C tal D E MIt h 'd h' \\ en 0 e\ery orne m e ro ... • mng It r. ouse WI gIVe a c al e I b t'b t d co nomIc DCI'e opment m a Jur·

tibml'lend :;~;I'~:;~~i,c I~e~he ,less job of organizing thea su~e; l~. p::so~cl.· I~ t~f. n s~srvcRn '\I 5~: ince. Radio and Press .were, ~s report on the wo~k of his Division can e a tn u e . . 'ley oC t~e new industries, are dUI S cally A house-to h u X t k y, usual, most generous With their during the past ~ ear, Our expression of grahtude here thiS week.

lide of Ihe picture. mce W H AVIS was ~ nd • 0 se canvas. ·rays were" a cn. services, and carried a wealth of CHRISTMAS SEAL SALE would not 00 compl~te without It is understood that they win TuberculosiS Ass()o • • D 0 Ilcted In the larger com. The M.V. Christmas Seal" made euucational materinl for the six Deep satisfaction was felt at the f r ce to the Association's good confer with Premier Smallwood' I

.. nl'"ellI1 thr community, Secrtary of T.B. Association munltles for the purpose of de. another nluable contribution to weeks of the Seal Sale. outcome of the 1956 Christmas Seal ~e. e ~n D G J Wh It E u· and Director Generll Gordoll!' ~"d ef!ecti\'cness of , U"ering health literature Ind Ie. the Case.Flndl~g programme duro However, 3 great. deal remains Sale. which brought returns.of $9.2,. tr!:n Seer~tar; or the ~!aenadia·:c~u., Pushie hefore beginnin, their J1Il'-. : "

drpcnd on how fully I becn made, and postpone, shU cllrlng pledges of support for the Ing 1956. Begmnlng operations at to be done in the fIeld of health 52092 Apart from the fmanclal b I' A . r nd hi, vel' early next week i the 8ra\.it~.· further, final victory over Tuber. Survey. All doctors, nurlle., Catalina, Trinity BIIY, on June 21, education If the obstacles present· be~eflts involved, the Campaign's r

ercu fS:~ t ~~~l~~on~h: art. al· '. ,: . 'I T"h,'rrlll.o~is prohlem, and culo.h. clergy, teachers, Town Councils, and working Southwards, the boat ly delaying victory in the TB success reflected the peoplc's confi· me s a' d a t a. t' wl'th th or "ork of flghhnj1 TubereulOlil ill ' '. , ,I' • . Vt' If Offl d th . I't d " i . way~ rea Y a asSlS e' th' P ..". . " , the part the)' mllst p ~y It Is clear t~en that the Vol. e ,are cera an 0 er com· v Sl e .. 3 eommun hes as far as Campaign, are to be. remDved. lienee in the work of the Assocla· derin:1 of Seal Sale and Health IS rovmce. . .

1!luton i' to he loum!. untary AssocllltlOn must Intensify mUnlty worken, gave the pro· Sunnyside, X·raying all adults, There cannot be thl\. shghtest cur· tion, and dispelled the fear that Edura'tilJll ma'prlal and with 2ny Respectfully submitted, m;ut ~f r\cHrl)' ~hol~n that Ita efforts to keep alive in the llramme their valuable eoopera· and thosl young people who had tallment in the prdgramme until complacency was undermining in· llroblem atrectlng 'the weIIare of .,.._ ..... _..... W. H. DAVYS. ",'.' i~ the same insidious general public that great Crusad. tlon. A special word of thanks shown a positive reaction to the that stlll·dlstant tlmc whcn no one terest In the fight against Tuber· our Associ-lion ....... _ .. _-- :;1,

il alwa!'5 was. and that a Ing spirit which made the cam. Is extended to the Anglo.New. B.C.G. vacclnation'test. The same refuses to attend Mass Surveys, culosls:However, a full report on • • • The talk of the Town! I .. , : luf!trin~ and nll~el1' are palgn against Tuberculosis one of foundland Developnient Company, territory had already been cover· no patient leaves the Sanatorium the Campaign wl\l be given by Last, but llY no means Ipast, I Munn Motors Christmas . II: and inilil'idnal a problem the most glorious in history. This the Buchans Mining Company, Ind ed by the B.C.G. Nursing Team. against medical advice, no employ· president James R. Ewing, General would like to extend my verv Eill' I '\

when the T8 incl?enrc task Is much mpre difficult now the U.S.A.F. aqtho~ltles at Harmon Through the ?olnt programme, er resents hiring a person because Chairman of the Seal Sale Commit· cere thanks to !he Assotiation';. in July. The greatest stile . I ! ralPI were much higher. that the enemy bas been driven' for their excellent I5sistanee, ~,833 examlnahons for Tubercu· be has had TB, and no person, lee. staff here end at Corner Brook. of cars ever held in St. ':!

empha;izcd too that underground, thall It wa. In the which greatly faclUtated the work losls were made. The work con· through Ignorance, or disregard of APPRECIATION p.nd of course. on the M.V. "ClJrJ.;t .. : '/ il ~til1 "cry much days when Tuberculosis stalked of the survey •. The Mobile Unit tlnued on Into Bonavlsta Bay until the basic health rules, disposes }lefore closing this report, we mas Se~I," ~hQse loyalty anrl ,II, John's. Free Gifts for the !!'

UI. II indicated hy the fact unchecked .In our midst leaving discontinued operations on No- August 18, when It was Interrupt· himself to Tuberculosis,. o~ en· would like to sa! a since!,e 'thank I dustry are n'ost l!rat~f~·in;t. ane! Kids too. See us to-day. lilt 6P9 :\rwfoundland. misery and death In its ·'wake. vember 10, and returned to lit. cd to permit the "Christmas Seal" courages a relapse of hiS disease. you' to those faIthful {mnds In reflect a rEal dedlcnbon to the

. At SI. .Inhn's, Making our people realize thr.t John's for the winter months. to go to Northern' Labrador. The !'II. Anthony and the enemy has not been destroyed, As part of the plan to X·Ray nurses had gone on ahead by plane this nllmber 266 and keeping them alerted to the all Newfoundland workerl on to start the B.C.G. programme.

mdlmtl!IIOn!. Going on the need to continue the fight, repre. Bases of the North East Air Com· 'flIe. area to be covered Included Ihal lor rl'ery known sents a challenge which the Vol. mand and R.C.A.F. Bases In the those communities from Goose }lay

three otht'u untary Assocatlon must meet and Province, two members of tn. As· to Naln. Unfortunately the "Christ· II't have. figure overcome, or otherwise relinquish soclatlon's X·Ray staff went to mal Seal" lustalned considerable

Ihould convince even the its job unfinished. Goose Bay, Labrador, October 111 ~mage when she struck a rock (omplmnl thill there Is stili • Fortunate!)', public apathy to- to conduct a M8I!1 Surv~y. Nelo, Just I! she was approaching Naln,

rmr"oir 01 Tuhercular wards the Tuberculosis problem t1ations had previously been enter· and had to 110 on dock at St. An· io thi~ Province, and cannot yet have reached d·angerous ed Into with Brigadier General C. thony to be repllired. It was

I/Illin 10 a~~\Inle that the proportions In this Province, lince B. Root, Deputy Commander Head· nearly two. weeks before. the boat hI! ~prn rOIl/Jllcred. Such re~ponse to all projects under. quarters NEAC, and Brigadier eould resume her work In North·

~t this decisive ltaken hy our Association Ialt year General J. B. Knapp, Commanding ern Labrador. Despite this let· or Ih. camllailtn, could ler'\was elfCcllenl. ' Officer, U.S.A.F. BaJlt!, Goose Bay, back, how.ver, the undertaking und.rminp what ~aln~ tlave CASE FINDING RIJ well u with Group Captain E. was • great luceess. In each of

\

An extensive Case.Flnding pro. M. Mitchell, Commanding Offic.r, tli. 11 eommullitles ylsited re-gramme wa~ carried out on land R.C,A.F. Station, .GoOIN!. The.e &pons~ WI. ~cellent, reflecting

MR. MYSTERY from and by se., using the new mobile gentlemen had, hetJrtlly endorsed the fme organizational work done . I X·Ra)' Unit on loan from the D. the programm., and pledged th.lr. by the nursn and d!lCtors , of !~~.

lSH'5 BAKERY is partment o( Health, lind the Auo. ~1:.lpOrt. On arrival, It wa. found Grenfell :M~rca1 Mission, hy the

$89 00 : clatlon's M.V. "Christmas Sea!." that all preliminary IJr'ganlzationel varioul mlIMon.arles on Labrador,

, • i The )!oblle Unit began opera. work had been tak. eare of, arid and by the Seal Sale Ch~lrman of tlnnft at Lewbporll on July 211, every provlslorl mid. for the that area. In the combmed pro- . gramm., 1,1199 examinations were

" HE had to do ft," you tan bet HE'D do it

ELECTRICAlL ~ !.

• •

~

THE AVERAGE MAN WOULDN'T LUG HEAVY DAMP CLOTHES TO THE CLOTHES LINE AND HANG THEM UP TO DRY MORE THAN ONCE. IF HE GOT STUCK WITH THIS LABORIOUS WASH DAY ORDEAL HElD FIND AN EASIER, BETIER WAY, BUT QUICK I •• , SO WHY SHOULDN'T YOU?

THE EASIER, BETTER WAY IS THE REDDY KILOWATT WAY, OF COURSE t MODERN ELECTRIC CLOTHES DRYING LET'S YOU FIT WASH DAYS INTO· ANY SCHEDULE YOU CHOOSE-AND IT'S A JOB REDDY DOES EVEN SETTER THAN NATURE,·

• MODERN ELECTRIC CLOTHES DRYING IS ONLY ONE OF THE MANY GOOD THINGS ABOUT LOW-COSt ELECTRIC LIVING, . EVERY DAY MORE AND MORE PEOPLE A~E GETIING MORE AND MORE FlEASURE OUT OF LIFE BECAUSE THEY ARE LIVING BTETER , • • ELECTRICALLY I

..

LET REDDY HELP YOU

, CHEAP, RELIABLE ELECTRICITY IN AND AROUND· ST. JOHN'S

made. The "ChrlltmBB Seal" returned

to Bonavlsta Bay and completed the Survey with examinations to· ~lIing 9,352. She then proceeded til Notre Dame Bay, where she be· iaD X·rayln, Dn the north side, and worked ealt ward as far lIS

Little Bay Islands. From there the boat went Into Green Bay, but wal unable to cover the area as planned, becilUse of the Autumn winds, which made it difficult to operate the X·Ray equipment, and unpleasant for the people coming aboard to be X·rayed. Howeve~. the "Christmas Seal" wlll return next month to X·ray along the eastern side of Notre Dame Bay, and to complete the programme in Green Bay. Nurses from the De­partment of Health will go on ahead to do B.C.G. vaccination.

TO SUMMARIZE THE 1958 CASE.FINDING PROGRAMME

. Examlna· WIDter·Spring St. John's S~hoo1s Pepperrell Air Force Base Sealers ••••••.••••• I I I •••

Whltbourne Boys' Home •• Buckmaster'. Field •••••• Summer.Fall

tlonl 3,617 1,876

226 102 572

X.RYiY BUS Lewlsporte to Stephen vllle,

22 communities .•.•.... 22,003 Memorial University and

Vocational School •..... 891 M.V. "CHRlSTMAS SEAL"

Trinity Bay, liS communities 4,833 Northern Labrador, 11 ~m

munitles ............... 1,999 Bonavista Bay, 56 communi·

ties ... • • . . . . . • . . • . • . • • 9,3112 Notre Dame Bay and Green

Bay ••.••..••. '.' , • . .• . . 2,477 MISCELLANEOUS SURVEYS

Goose Bay, Labrador. USAF B a 6 e" RCAl<' Station, Happy Valley .......... 1.806

Argentia, U.S. Naval Base 4,528

Total .............. 54,282

HEALTH EqUCATION It is difficult to measure pro­

gress In the field of health educa· tion, but we are confident that progress IS being made, slowly perhaps, but surely •. We 'see its effects In the changed attitude of the public towards Tuberculosis, In their greater response to Mass

B.C.G. vaccination pro· grammes and other anll·Tubercu· losls projrets, anI! In thcir readier acceptance of the ex·Tuherculous on their return to a normal place In the IIle of the communily . , During the past year. advanta~e was taken of every. opportunity to glv,e our people the true facts about Tuberculosis. The Mass Sur· vey programme which covered, geographlcally, nearly half the Province, provided an excellent educational media. Radio. an· nouncements and talks, press re­leases, and the dlstributiun of all' proximal ely 1711,000 plccc~ of health literature tended to focus

Polliwogs II I II and Pennies - ..

"Dad says having fun is part of growing ~p •••

and so is saving. It's never too early-

or too late"":'to save, he tells us. So Vicki and I both have Savings Accounts

at Dad's bank. We're all saving· . .' "

regularly at THE CANAI)IAN BANK OF eOMMER~E 765 BRA·NCHES ACROSS CANADA READY TO HaVl YOU

, Main Branch"~""'''''"I'''''''''''''·''''"'''''''''''''.''.''''~'''''·' E. E. EWING, Manage, Hamilton A~el')ue and Cashin Branch ... :: .............. .J. E. JOUDREY Mana"",

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CObaIl m~ Coch Will 100 Cody·R.e. 1812.1 Coin Lake 1000 Coldolrm 10700 C Bellekeno 3750 C CIlIIn.n 1300 C Denll.n 3375 C Den wi. 615 C DI,covery 600 C Fen 2!l55 Con GUll .. 1500 CG Arrow 5110 C HalUwell '7525 Can' How.y 7110 C Marben 1000

stock : Market Report I Aumaque .2000 10" 10" 10" I !lull Cdn 8000 15

. 14 14

Aunor 600 190 190 190 !lull RL 3MIG II> 61> 6"-1,; Avilla 31100 8,1 e.-I. Rurch.1I 26500 60 51 51 -7 Bank.no 1000 301> ~O;; 30;' - I> Cdn Allori. 1033 12v.. 12 12" -1" !llnkn.ld - 2000 9 9 I C DynD 970 1~ 1~ 135 -" BlnUI 340Q, ~ 45 IS C Malar! m 29 29 29 -1

W.I nory Expl IlOO· 69 69 69 Candore 92111 l2 49 ~9 -3

'01 •• ·, HI.1t La. cli .. Ch',e Buka 1100 3l • 35' .3~ I Can·Erln 6.10' '52 SO SO ..... ' M.tNES B·Duq 1000 78 71 77 '-1 Can·Mel 2171 310 365 385 -10

~o

54 " 54 -1 Cop Corp IDS 103 103 -2 Coul ... 55 'SO 52 -1 Crtllnor 12 12 12 Crowpal

107 103 105 -2 Dnlne, . !I 23 !I +1 De Cour 29 28 29 -2 De Cour wi. um 19\'0 1911.. D'Eldona $lilt· It 11\. - Ii D.lnlte 270 261, 270 +5 Diadem 170 160 160 -10 Dom. ",

91,~ 9;; 9;; + ;, Donald •• 30 30 30 -1 Duvan 90 II , 15 -3 E Amphl

280 '275 :110 +5 Ea.t sun 40 40 40 , -4 Ea.1 Asb

+1> Ea.t Met

~oo 'I:l .• 9100 6%

2000 14 23500 19

200U 7"" 525 ~O ~OO m

2366 12 3700 106

126.100 14 x700 IS21': 3500 19 4%00 29 2000 10

700 m lOUD 43

17600 25

37 3'/ -iI 60 61 +3 14 14 18;' 18';" - ;, 7"" 7""

40 40 71': m-""

11 11 -I';" 100 106 -3 121': 13"" 1m 121': + ;, 10 18 28 28 -2 10 10

360 365' 41 43 +3 23 21 -2

1

THE DAILY NEWS; WEDNESDAY, JULY

OUT OUR WAY r

REMEMBER. "THIS IS A IO'POLLAR BILL! POf\l'T STOP TOTALK."TO A>JY' BOP'{··DOI-I·T STUFF "THE CHA/J6E IIV AN'{ PDCK8 WITH A HOLE 1>.1 iT"

WATCH OUT 'IOU DOIJ''T DRDP ,.HE BOTTLE OF MEDICINE. YOU'RE 6E.TTIIJG AT THE ~U6 STORE" BUT MAIIJL'f """"T LO~E '{ouR. CHAI-I6E!

\.

COlI M and 5 1060 'f3;; 22\4 23 e Marrl .. n 7000 o 67 67 ..... Eut Min 9050 28h 270 :!80 -2' 7500 ·'Im 12" 12" Beauna. 3400 110 103. 10l -S C.M.t wll 100 ~O ~O -ll

Delrh.r 448271 2117 211 283 -2 Captain 2500 2B 26 26 ..... 2800 IW aoo 610 -35 3000 11 10;; 10" '10 ,,),!)1oO 191" 1911. - ~ _ .\1111. 11 1111. I.

2200 131> 133 133.-3 4taD' 611 53 53 - 12 2100 In 165 167,-1 7100 129 120 120 1000 70 70 . 70 -I lSOO 20 20 20

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e MOlher 1400 55 S5 5S Con Nlehol 1500 9' , 9 -I> Coni Que 1000 aD 60 ao C Red Pop 1000 17 17 17 C R'lIeourl 11600 120 114 115 '-5 C' Sannorm 90IIIl 10 9;; 10

Belbl.m· , 1600 !BI 166 168 -1 C.rlboo 00 50 lO' SO -5 Bevcon 500 16 . 16 16 Ca .. lar 1885 ·.NO 630 NO +20 Rleroll wll 150 110 110 110 Castle 175 480 460 460 -10 Balek ,BaY 1000 as' 85 8.' . Cayzor 200 ~ 3£0 ~ -5 Bou:r.nn 1700 58 58 58 Cenl Pol 7801 215 100

Con Sud 23952 166 126 136'-20 215~ +1'

Brllund 8500 48 16 46 Chesklrk SOOO 11;; 11 11 nroul Red AOO 74 74 74 Chlb J.e 2200 224 210 220 -I Brunlwl,k 215 67~ 670 670 -5 Chlb M 200 199 199 199 'C Tun .. l.n 4100 22 22 . 22

Conwe.t 1150 llO ~50 550 Bullad 2100 11 10 11 Chlmo 900 1J5 112 112

,

YOU-ARE IN AN ENVIABLE POSITION! Right now your '53, '54 or '55 car h~ its highest .trade-in value of the year

at your Meteor dealer's. And what a wonderful deal you can make on a

Magnificent Meteor. Naturally, we know in detail why Meteor is such an

excellent value. But we don't expect you to agree-until you drive Meteor

younelf. That is the only honest way to HI what Meteor gives you."

Compare Meteor's exclusive Balanced-Ride, crisp, clean sculptured styling

and mighty V;S or 6 power. Compare Ivery feature. But the names. are not

important-what these features give you-is important. Before you buy any . . - -car-drive Meteor first-and see first-hand the

car that thousands call "magnificent." \

Visit or phone your Meteor dealer right

nqw, for Ii rewarding demonstra- I

tion drive. You will be

pleasantly surprised how

eSlY it ~ to o~ a

Magnificent Meteor today.

---

-1

Eldrieh EI Pen·R.y El. Sol. Eureka Expl All Falcon F,radny r ...... wt~

F'west Tuna

Drive Meteor first! t • '

~~

j-tI ;[frlflti/~'V-8 or 6 . '

,t

..

1500 22' 9100 %4 7600 28 3100 60 90tl0' II 107l III 3105 224

100 133 15500 17

CAT.I, ,YOUR MERCURY-LINCOLN-METEOR DEALER NOW! , . '

·,MUNN .MOTORS .. , J~IMITED, CORNER 'OF BLACKMARSH ROAD AND BENNNElT AVENUE DIAL 1008

, .

20 21 27 ~8 32 JIV.

210 J33

16

; . '

22 24' tz 211 +1'. 60 -2 32 -2 3"1/~ - ~4

220 133· +J .15~ -II>

I ~·ed !{Irk 9UO 1m lSI> t5~ Fl. Can 32jO 145 B3a 83l _10 Franeoeur 3.i00 11';" It II -1 I··roblshcr 3215:75 21m 266 -S Gallwln 4200 14 13'~ 13\~ _ ',~

Galkeno 2166 108 103 lOR Geeo Min.. 307 $1m 14,. 14'4 Genex 1500 22 22 22 Geo SciOli . SOO 79 79 79, - I GianI YK 275 455 455 4;5 Glacl.r 400 130 130 130 GI.nn Urall 1Z700 41 35 35 -7 Gold Eagl. 2100 7'.. 7\h 7\2 Gold 1I1an 2600 100 100 100 +2 'nrah BUI ~008 17 16';" 17 +3 nl'lnduc 900 250 240 :z.IO -S nre),hk 7800 U 40 40 Gulch IiSOO IB 17 17 -1 Gunnar 3397 t:l8~~ 18 1R'\~ + ~4 Gunnar wit 1160 SIOI': 10 101< Gwlllm 17jOO 8 7 8 - ~ liard R.d, 4000 13 13 II lIar.~lln 30110 25 ,; :u; - I. Headway 7000 61. 5~· 59 -1 111gb-Bell 100 168 168 168 _4 lIoyle 1530 500 555 5;'5 -J5 lIud Bay 6-\1 $67',. 67 67 - 'I, Ind Lakr 2000 16 15~ IjH, - 1.'l Int Nlck.l 4198 S99 971. 97\:1 _2'" Inl R.n 1000 21 21 24 Irish Cop noo 112 112' 112 .I.cobu, 407:. 1~4 117 117 -8 Jaye Expl 4100 45 41 45 + 1 .Jeanette 17078 SO 4Il :10 ,Irlll,a. 7SIlO 20 18 20 +2 ,loUet 3000 42 4n 40 -% ,TonsmtUt MOO 15 l:i 1.'i ,Inwsoy 2132 76 75 7.\ Kenvll1. 2000 7';" ". 7'. Kerr Ad~ 910 SIH. 14 1m.;. t, Krrr Lak. 1500 122 120 120 +10 Kllemh. 4200 180 lAO 180 Kirk !llId 1600 12 12 12 - 10 KIrk MIn S~"7 00 90 00 -I Labrador z165' S231': 23 23 Lake Cln 130tl 128 123 128 • ~ I. Dul.ult 2,\30 122 116 118 -<; Lak. Ling 10011 12 12 12 +2 I. Shorr 810 73D 725 n3 _15 Lamflq,ue 15rJ :2.50 7,j() liD _9 Leitch M~O 132 12<1 128 -2 Lexindln 111.iOO ~I 29 :2 -1 I.L 1.00 1300 31n 30:' 303 LolnrR'a 3172 R!l 11 1\ - '1,.2 Lorado 1373 120 H7 117 l.orado ~i. 7::;0 T1 T1 77 1.o1llhl 711"1 12 12 12 -% Lyndh,1 aOIO 32 30" 32 +1 1~:'I·m. '1000 7 ~~ 7!2 nl :\lt1t'a!',U 17:>0 215 11:1 21j ;\lr\\:rlon ,iM 4.i 4;' 45 ~I,cfle 1000 10 10 10 l\latlscn 3011 1~:J n;; l:'~ ... 2. ~1.larll.. 2:.00 168 107;, 165 _3 Mane.'1 V 53BO 20 l~ 19 - I· Maral~n 11000 31 30 :10 _I ~I.rltlm. 2700 13.1 130 132 _3 ~Iarlln 1000 . 13',~ 13\: 13\ • ~1aybrun 2800 39 39 39 -1 lldnt",. Jr.. $1\,1 1121, III -2 :llcKen fiOO 18 1& 18 McMar IIJ(lQ 10 10 In :lIeWat uor,o 41 39 39 .\1entnr 3(lO:Jl':\1:\1 :lIerrlli • 21:'0 130 135 13. ~ I :llela Uran :'00 15 15 I~ + I Mldrlm 8900 1:'3 150 lj3 + 1 MIlliken filjO 320 310 llO -10 3\1nda I 000 9\~ 9','. 91. 31in End 12150 II 31 31 ~ :Illn.Oro !Jon 15 15 15 3!ogul 1175 135 129 129 Monel. 4000 75 75 75 -I Nama Cr 3300 43 41 41 -4 New AI~.r l~OOO IH~ 10 10 -1'1.1 New ANlb 1323, Yo 36 ll; New Cal 1300 28 'lI ,8 + 1 New Deihl 12400 IH 105 lOll -8 N DI'ken );00 148 142 142 -8 N liard :11100 30 2.') :!9 N IIIgh SOOO ~1 19 21 + I New J ... n 1100 10 10 10 N KelDr. 2f\00 I~ 1~ 15 -;; N e"lund 935O:IIl 05 oj -I N MaD 7300 8.1 77 RO -Ii N Mind. 30GB 23 2.1 23 1'1 Mylama 2225 14 12 l4 ",I Newnor 300(1 8 R R - 10 N Senator 1000 7 7 7-1 :-.lick Rim 7500 310 296 ~R -1% Nlpl"ln, 700 220 l19 219 -1 N'or.AcmlJ l.~OO ~'2 2J ~l -" Norgold 2f)1lO 20 20 20·-1 Normdal 100 415 4l:1 415 +5 Norpa:'{ ,2jOO 110 92 .102 -9 r-;oTS)'nc 79;)00:>1 41 4A -4 1'1 Rank 11250 127 liB 120 -5 Nortll,p f!.J51 6\1'; AA5 6.~~ NoraI' A "'Is 1625 50, .\8, ~Oj + IS :\udul 500 35 3j 35 Ob .. ka 1000 R· 6 R 11 ORamR 2000 10 9\i !P,~ - 1,1; O'Leary SSOU 36 3j 3j -2 Opem 710 !1P1 11'~ 111,~ - lh Oren.d. 3100 31 34 3\ +1 Orm,by 2000 41 41 42 +2 osilkn 1.100 41 41 41 t1 Pac Ea.t 5100 . 15 15 IS -!~ Pamour 1000 15 45 45 -I Paramaq 2000 9~ 9';" 9~ Parbec 4000 8 7 7 Pardee 5680 79 75 77 Paler 11100 75 66 75 + 13 Perron 3'jSOO is 72 71-l Plek Crow 2350 110 107 107 -1 Plteh,Ore 12000 10\! lW, 10';" Placer 100 SIO;' 1&1, 10,. - ". Pow Roo 1%00 70 75 76 Pre.lon 5050 775 760 770 + 10 Pronto 735 6QO 570 600 + 20 Pros Air 12000 210' 19l ,198 -17 I'urdex 7500 11 10 11 Que Ascot 1666 211 'n 28 Que Chlb 1109 110 103 110 Que Cop 1000 68 68 68 + ~ Que Lith 1120 820 800 800 -30 Q M.tal 'nIJ 208 195 208 +20 Quemont \lDO $lJVi 13'-. 13'~ Radlore 2100 68 8l 85 _3 Ralnvlll. 1500 68 85 85 ..... Rare E 2500 55 50 55 +1 nayrock 3800 145 141 145 Reeve. 200 120 118 118 -7 Rex,pnr 13600 54 50 52 -3 Rio Rup 1500 12;; 12;:' 121> Rlx Alhab 1200 55 55 55 -1 \loch. :lSDO 2U ]& 18 -1 IlD,kwln 184015 159 tiS 116 -II nowan Coni 3500 111> 101-> \)1. +1 St Mlcbael 5OII:?2\:1 22\" 22',,, - V. San Ant .200 51 51 51 Sand IlIv 50000 40 ,36 38 -I Sheep Cr 1100 60 60 60 + 4 5herrllt 4S17 SlID 551 560 -15 511 MUl.r 1132 68 63 68 -1 51.... 2100' 80 80 80 Soulh V 2000 3.~ lO 35 +5 Sldeo.a 1600 37 36 36 -2 Stanleigh 460 480 460 460 _10 Slanlgh wto 520 325 :r!5 325

" Stanrek 565 32" l20 320 ~~ Slarratl 42300 19~ 17 17 ~, Steeloy &Soo 7\~ 7 7-1 St,ep II l467 S2OJ. !!O!i 20 % H. Sud ConI 2000 10 10 10 -I Sull1v'n . 2600 280 275 275 -5 Sur! Inl.1 1001lO 61. 61> 61': + ';" Sylvanll. 7700 175 163 169 -5 Tandem 8000 13 121': 12~ Teek.H 1900 2:!8 '10 220 -I Tiara 7666 15 15 IS - I> TomblU 25800 81 72 . 72 -11 Trans R.. 3000 26 26 26 +2 Trln Chlb 1500 26 251': 2.lv.. UII·Shaw 42175 78 70 78 U Mlnln, 200<) 21 21 21 U Asb .. too 1775 650 635 635 -15

. U EoIcIla ISO) 13 12;; 12;' - ;; Un K.n" 100 4~0 4SO 450 U Monl 5000 1m 1m 121': Vandoo 350tl 131> 13 13 -1 Pato ISO 385 385 385 Pend Ore 100 210 240 210 -10 Yukon Coli 1200 55 65 65 H

ACIII. Gu Ajax' AP Cons Am Leduc Anch"r ARlElo·Am nalley S A Bailey S pr BanIl

OILS 9000 18 171> 1100 9D 85 1000 51 50 -!GOO 31\. 31 2.100 m. 171>

100 Sl3!> 13;\ 1220 1$6Vo 1611

40 .32 32 309 280 275

4800 100 96 9.10 300 295

nrallO Rrllalla Cabon,a Calalla Cal Ed

32400 170 80

g g)l tt~1I CS 011 wls CS P.te

6000 III 126 330 ,m. 35

2D2S 340 310 200 215 215

:700 m 120 9187 7BD 73Q

1m-I,; IS -8 ~1 311~ + ~ 17\. - I> 1m - \. 16' •• 32 +!.

280 -3 99 +3

295 -S 120 -55 134 +4 35 -;,

340 213 325 +.~ 780 HO

:rr1'_WJLt~~

THE WO~R'f WART .'''''' "".", . '1·1. - . .&....-- -- ..

Waterfront Directory

I freight for the usual few days.

AT AYRE & 50;';S

I The ~1. V. St. Barbe, of Capt. Banbury will I for' Saint on

ON DRY DOCK------I The Dredge P.W.D. 400, the \

5.5. Algerine and the fishing trawler Blue Haze. •

-AT DOCK

The 5,5. Random is discharging TIlE NFLD. GlIE.\T the balance of the cargo, and STEA:lISIIII'S after the cargo is discharged will 101.V. Perth loading at sail for Halif;:,x. July 10, Toronto July

The ~!.V: Elmer Jones has now lI!ontreal July 15 fur St, several inen workin on the ship ~LV. London loading rot and is expected to be ready for July 17, for Botwood the Portugal Cove - Bell Island M.V. DUNDEE service at the end of the month. ton July 18, Toronto

AT nORWOOD LUMBER CO. Montreal July 23 for Sl L"D. MV Lunan lor.ding at

The Rober J. Knickle' in charge July 25, Toronlo July of Capt. Samuel Blackwood is )\ontreal Ju\)' 29 [or 5t. discharging a cargo of lumber NFLD. CAN. "T"''''';; anr! after the lumber is discharged Belle Isle II Icaring will go on dry dock. July 9, dUe st. John'!

AT Jli\IC DOCKYARD s"iling July 13. The ~I.V. Seabeacon; the ;\Iarinc Bedford II lea\'ing

.ToJhnson in charge of Captain July 13. due SI. John'l

.lohnson will 1000 a cargu for sailing July 17. Norlhern ports. I Belle Isle II Ica\'in~

AT STEERS LTIl. 16, due St. John's July ~he ~[.V. Maxwell. Corkum of, July 20.

wll\Ch Capt. Murphy IS the master Bedford 11 leal'in~ londed a cargo for northern ports 22 due St. John's iul), including and will sail. todny. Ju'ly 25.

AT CANADA PACKERS LT~. Belle Isle H le:1\'in~ The C, and A. ~rown of which 124, due 51. John's Jul)':~

Capt. Blackwood IS the master July 27. ' londcd a full cargo for the usual Bedford II leal'in2 northern ports and expects to be 30, due 51. John'5 Aug. I • sailing on Frid;:,y evening for the Aug. 2.

usual. northern ports. Belle Isle H leavillg AT T. IIALLETS LTD • 2. due St. John's Aug t

The N. and. C. Ralph of ~hlch Aug. 6. Capt. Ralph is the master IS. at FURNESS W,\RRES the above wharf and will be taklllg NOl'a Scotia due July _____ ~_. __ .___ J1alifax leavinll Halifax

due St. John's July 15.

~g~ ~~ ~lt 1~~ ~~ 8~~ ~~: teO Li \'erpool July 16. C Dr t:mp 620 67 "7 67 Newfoundland lcavi

g ~~~!ln ",Is 1~~~ r~ ~ i~:: July 13, due 51. Cdn Dev 12120 II-IS 830 BIU -s Leaving for Halifax

g ~~~hGa~r 3~~~;~ f~ ~: :io July 20, due Halifax C Hom.,td 715 270 %fi9 270 +% Boston July 25. c lIu'~Y 2250 m 20'l 20'. -', July 26 and Halifax c Hus\ty ""t~ 4:1 SUI,'; 1417; HI.": - '2 C I'rD'peel ::11:5 410 390 3M -10 St. John's August 1. Conodus. 1000 5. 53 55 +10 same day for Liverpool, Conro 7COO 13 ' , 13 IJ -I C Allrn"'" 7IlD 13';" 12 12 -1 Nova Scotia leal'ing C Dr,,"on 5700 an 4~ 4~ -1 July 27, due 51. John'! C E.,t Cr 7i~ 51 50 . 52 r H l'r C ~lIe Mae 141R 4911 m 1~0 H Leaving or a I ax Con Peak :000 10'." )01~ 101.. August 3, due C We.t Pel. 3(JO $10\. 10 10 - 14 Crt. 011 R210 61'; .\90 590 -20 and Boston August B. Crrr ,,\.0 17;;0 31S, JIO ~IO -15 ton August 9 and Del·.l'al 17300 212 ~o ~38 -.1 Dome E.pl 960 '1212 12 1m + II 13, due St. John's DUI", Hno lfi II lfi -I I Sailing again same day icr Far&:o 115(1 17 16 lfi~ -llh Gon I'et A 100 S%5 ~2.1 52j -~ pool. Gr 1'1.lns 400 sm, 37'.; 37'h - ~. FURNESS RED I!h:llIvood 11300 13 4'l 42 -2 I ·1' Home Oil A zSO '181-> 181.1: 18". Fort Ava on S31 mg 110m. 011 B '410 1m. 18\4 IB1\ Halifax onlv for annu"1 lIumbor 450tl J7j liO 170 -lnO ..,' • ,lump Pnd 6500 ~3 ~I 52 -1 Fort HamIlton leal tn. Jllplt<r 1900 211 233 2:18 -5 June 25 for Corner r.lb Pel. 1050 2%5 ~'20 223 k L ' LI P,t~ 8~00 17 16 16 -11.l. New oYr. cavmg

~l~~:'Old m~ 5~1~ ~~ 4;~ ~~ 10, Saint. John, N.B, Mer Pele 1\23 sm. 14'h Hi. -". fax N.S., July 17. MldeDn 40700 145 1:r.J 140 -5 Johns' July 19 leal'ing Mill Clly 3228 29 28;; 2m I I'f d N' Y ,. N Brislol !l00 63 63 63 -4 I a I ax an ew or ... N B Dom l850 305 298 m -Ii CLARKE STEA)ISHIP N Ch'mb 1930 2Z5 215 ~20 ,....5 'I' • N CO~I 3050 53 50 33 +l Novaport in port !aIIC, N Ga. E.pl, 6025 224 215 215 -10 (Bay Roberts). N Superior 2000 215 210 215 -5, • NCO pr 3n $36\> 36\, 361> Gulfport leaVing Norlhld 1500 60 55 60 12 dlle St. John's July I~ Provo Ca. 16005 345 333 345 +S Jul' 18 Reef Expl 3000 12 12 12 -1 y. 'Rlehwll 2000 205 200 205 _3 Novaport leaving nook)' p.te 7083 60 55 60 +3 19 d St J h' J h' Roxana 60tl0 19 18;; 19 , Ue • 0 ns U. Royallle :nO $201t 20 201. + II July 25. Seurry 3340 . 360 335 360 • Seeur Fr.e 6853 705 690 700 +5 Gulport leaVing South U 100~ 35 10 35 +5 ~O due St. John's Aug, Spooner 2392> 63 61 fi3 -2 ' SI.nw.1l lSl09 144 140 143 -2 I Aug, 5. . Tex Cal 1000 8.1 ~ 83 +1 Novaport leaving }Ionlrel

i~:~:.E~n I;~ i~ ;:0 ~~ -s 7, due St. John's Aug, 11 Tr·Em rt. :939 31 30 30 Aug 14 (Bay Roberts). Triad. 011 3880 800 770 7Bl -15' • Un 011. 4420 310 333 335 Glllport leaVing Vule.n 1000 eo 80 £0 -, 16 due 51 John's Aug. lVa),ne 1000 22'" Xl;:' 22'" + y.' • Wospae 6625 37 33 35 -2 Aug. 22. IV ~I'YRIII 6800 235 :!2Il ~30 "". -Refrigeration. W Deealla 5125 2.15 218 255 +, CONSTANTJ"'E IV Naeo 3100 202 196 200 ..

Curb M.V. AvonlVood sail' Dalhousl. 12000 39 36 Je +J •.

IIASKS July. 13th., arrIVIng Sl-SS Comm Imp Royal Tor·Dom

50 1m. lim 57~' - 10 18th. ' 231 150 491. 19~ - II. V d 407 $55 55 55 !II E enwood m m~i n~i n!~ \n July 20, Toronto July

INDUSTRIALS July 27. Arriving St, Alumlnl 319~ $SOI. 49;; 49'. - 14 1.

~ngk~~: ~ s~m ~l' Ji~ = ~ GULF·" NORTHERS D 1IlaRn.. 600 SI4'4 WI. W~ -" COMPANY IJ St.el xd Zl05 S28 2m m. - '.' Inland 1545 sm.· 111-> m. - 1-> P.E.I.-St. John's Nor Slar 1350 S15~, lSI, 151> MV. "Fergus" due SimpSOni 350 $!7;i In. 17l, - " WaInwright 200 420 m 415 -10 July 9th, sailing from Walkers 210 S76;; 71 76~ + \'0 town and Pictou July 13th.

Total 801... 1.813.000. John's July 16th.

Furness, Withy & Company Liverpool St. John's Boston Halifas S~

Ie to Bu. &: to to St. Joho'l Bostoo Ballfu St. John's

"Newfoundland" . 19 June 25 June 29 "Novo Scotia" June 26 Jq1y 3 July 9 July 13 "Newfoundland" July 13 July 20 July 26 Jul)' 30 "Nova Scotia" July 27 Aug. 3 Aug. 9 Aug. 13 "Newfoundland" Aug. 14 Aug. 21 Aug. 27 Aug. 31 "Noya Scotia" Aug. 28 Sep. 4 Sep. 10 Sep. 14 "Newfoundland" . Sep. 14 Sep. 21 Sep. 27 Oct. 1

Persons contemplating passage to 'Europe should make well in advance.

Air Passages arranged by B.OA-C. - K.L.M - PaD

IUrways -Scandlnaviao and conoecting Airlines. CODsuit UI regarding your travel problems.

FURNESS TRAVEL OffiCE NFWFOUNDLAND HOTEL

"

SECTI

Leading M ,elM III

,LAMS ,

-~I

"",:,,_i ,

'j' f '

\ ,., '·t I '\'/ I i I - _. I f "')i I . J ~,~:-- ,

,

~------:.----~-::.:-, , "'1',1 ~

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'. GREAT ,lSlIIPS loading at r~lIto July

15 for St. loading ;,t

'lotll'ood \ EE loading at Toronlo July ," !!3 for SL !o,~iing at

,ronto July .. !!!l ior SI. ',~. STEA~l

11 Ical'ing ~1. John'! I~.

ka\'in~ Halilu ,_ 51_ John's JU.l .-

;; WARREN ,~ dlle July ;~~ Jlalifax

:'s July 15. 11,\' 16. ,and leaving .! SI. .Tohn·s . Halifax and

Halifax July 25. Leaving Halifax Jul~'

,U~u5t 1. Sailing ~ Lil'frpool. :ia Ical'ing ~ SI. John'3

lIalifax lue ,\u~ust B. 9 and . John's n same day for

leaI'ing lIfontrul :ohn's Aug. 12, ,JY Roberts). . ,a\'ing Montreal lohn's Aug. 20,

;ORTnERN CO!llPANl' .

-St. John's Sefl'lCf rgus" due St. \ailing from ictou July 13th. • 16th.

I HaWal St-to

: St. John'. 25 June 29 9 July 13

26 July 30 9 Aug. 13

:27 Aug. 31 lO Sep. 14 27 Oct. 1 should make

incs_ ~lcms.

FFICE

SECTION /.1 The . Daily News· SECTION II

~ __ --------!.-----~--_~ ___ ~TH:!!:,E~D~AILY NEWS/.WEDNES~~X/.~_~~/_l,_9_57 _____ -_-______ --JI..;..----------\~eferee Reports . ~ Agn';,n: .

• nlng Run

rtake st. Walked

Pat's

As Feild

For 6-5 Win /i.'rtdillg Midu;,uy BItt Scott W ook· --:-. --.-----

('liS 1" nv~t01ll Of Ninth "Rookie" Team Is nC~~e Blues with one out, got the Named For Bie: bases loaded In the third l'lnd U

Ploughman forced Cook off third G 0 F °d for the second out. Clarke loaded arne n rl ay PI n° the bnses again on an infield 'hit ' __ ' • I ans lscussed and "Scottlc" couldn't gct the bali Coach Duey Fitzgerald named 'F TIM' across to Dal'c cfiapman and free his lincup for tlie big bascball' or rae l' eet pr..sscd the run home. "

hi., rccord to Both teams werc scoreless In game on Friday afternoon whcn hriiii:lI1tll' in relief the fourth but the Patricians went the Rookies of 1957 meet the 0 J I 27tl

. r !lillie "·herler. !lh'lng out front 5.3 in the fifth as Walsh Orglnals of 1947 In an exhlbl- n u y 1.

\'01111: pitchin~ six r·nd innin~; in relief ovel'· r~t'; 4·1 lead. as the

h,ld to ~~ to grcat kerp nllH' and nnb

~n; wil h n 6·5 "ictori', , SClitl wilh the

\ .. ,llkcd the lI'inning

r:lIl. nnr hit. three wnlks, collected the only hit and the tlon baseball game at the Ball ; h)t;m;ln nlld stl'uckout, only run off Young as he led with Park which wlll be part ,of the The SI. ,john's Branch of the , n double to, left and scored as celebration, of the League slOth. AAU of Canada held a special

lI'a' ~iI cn a Iwo run :~r ou:,l'I. hut J:a\'e Ihem

a' .Iack Ilr,rvc~' fir't cireuil clout oi Iwer the right cenlre

bm~; lI'ilh one IIInll aboard ur Ihe hail ~amc in Ihe sec·

, :lIin: into the third up IC;III oll douhle 10 lei! In ('ha;lic \\';t\,h :lIId Johnny

II;.; hit hy pitched ball. Rc~ Dillun who replac·

, RiIlic'\ bbott in the fo:loll'ing a painful linger

, toublrd 10 left field scor· and .. \bhott. nnd with

, Nil Iiont 4-1 Coach brou;ht Young on to put

Dou;: Squires' throw to third on Annlversar~. meeting last night with represen· slop Walsh went Into the outfield. Coach Fitzgerald has. named tatives of the Fcildian Athletic As­

Thc Ulues t~al1ing to Ihe eighth Doug Squires as catcher WIth ~at soclalion to discuss details rela· APt back in the game f .. S Tolson J-!urler, Ed. Woolgar and DIck live to the first 1957 track and Chapman led with a single to Kearney as moundsmen. Playing ficld meet to be held on UtC Feild-cenlre and slolc second and ad· the Infield will ~e Bob Linegar, Ian Grounds on July 271h. ' I'anccd to third un t\l'O sueccsslve Tony Manning, \ JIm Ryan, Lindy . Thc meet is being sponsored by 11'0111;5 to Young and Tiller with one Crocker, Dave Ward, Jim .Tllek· thc Feildinn Association and will out. Cook grounded Scott's second man, Bob Hudson and Lloyd be held under the guidance of Ihe pitcl1 to Mike ~Iart\n at shortstop Cook .\I'llh Harry PryJomski, Geo. AAU of C. who 1111'01\' wild of the plate and Crewe, Ed. Denelf, Joe Quinlan Various details o[ tile meet were Chr.pnmn and Young scored on and John Molloy patrol1\ng the discussed and the committee to Ihc pIa)' to lie up Ihe ball game. pastures. The team will be man· handle the COIII'SC during the day

lioing Into the ninth the Pa· aged by George Adams. were as follows: trlclnns scoreless. since they ~01·1 An Investigating Board eame Field Captain-To A. Delahunt)". Iceten number ill'e in the fifth up with an acceplable choicc o£ Timekeepers-Joe Healc~.. Jim snw ,'!clnry slip from their grasp umpires' and behhid the plate Higgins and Jas. Clancy. as Clarlte walked and Dave Chap- c.,lIing the balls and strikes will Equipment Manager-Reg Yah-mall struck·out. Tolson Chapm!)n be Harvey Clarke with, George sley. ' ~opped t~ shortstop Martin and Perlin, on first base, Billy McCrin- Judges o[ Field Events-Gil

,Squires smgled advancing Clarkc dIe on second, and John Howlett Davis nnd Ron O'Toole. on third. Bill CaUaban and Jim other Judges - Bern Molloy, Browne will be loul.ball viewers Ferd Hayward and Lconard Lev· along the boundary lines. itz.

FIRST ROUND TEAM P W Felldians •• • •• 5 5

I, Pct. n 100II 1 800

Recorder-BlII Canning. Announcer-Jim Browne. Registration for the junior and

seniol' track and field meet will be received at the Feildian Grounds on the evcning of July 22nd. between seven Rnd eight o'clDck.

Football Season Tickets A vailahle

O'Keefe's Incident:J, I .' : j;< I

- 'I~;I

: The referee'. report ell ID ':i11/' Incldent which eeeurred In" t the Guards-Holy CrOis foot- "I',:· ball game Involving Frau :' :)j" O'Keefe of Holy CrOis wa.-rB- -' 1\ , ceived by the League yester- ., ,!:, day.

In making hIs report referee John Doyle charged O'Keefe with ungentlemanly eondaet

St. Pat's- Blank Feild" 2-D ,To Take Leadership By One Point i

and recommended luspension -' .. 'for one league game which hal'·:' .}, already been. ierved by:.,;" O'Keefe while his team battled ' .. ~ I with St. Bon'. to a scoreless ',' tic on Monday night.

Ungentlemanly ronduct It­cording to the League rulintcl require a penalty of CRe ,am, -suspension.

.'

Ted Kill'OPP And BiU O'NeU Scor,e MaJ~ke,;s

S1. Bon's-Guards SI. .Pat·s came lllrou.gh with a but he was calico on ~cvcl'al times goal In each half last nighl and to quench a Feild attack.

The game was under the contlol 1\111'eet In Foothall held the Felidlans scoreless to

win the second game in the second round in Second Division £oot­ball.

Ted Knopp beal Max Burt late in . the first half and Bill O'Neil registel'ed early in the second haH

Ihe winning goal and an insur· ance marker.

of John Doyle and he was called iU upon to blow down a [ell' minor TI'" E ° offences. The win for Ihe ; .Irish lIS. venmg last night puts them in the lead as they hold a one point edge over The Guards and St. Bon's take St. Bon's and Holy Cross who split to the ,soccer pitch tonight for the' their game with a scorcless tie. third game in the second round for The Guards, winners of the First ~ the Higgins Trophy. Round will be making their first It will be the seeond appearance· appearance in the second ruond for the Bluegoald as they opened Ihis evening. the second round with a scoreless

I. q-I

, tie with Holy Cross while the In the first half the young Irish Guards will be- making their initial

bOY5 put their youth and speed to T appearance frtsh from their Insur·, good advantage and had the Double ED K'· \np Blues on th d f' d' ,,: ,- I ance Round championship.

e e enslve urmg B th t h most of the first half. In was Burt go~1 mouth ~11'1 ()'!~eill mo\'ed 0 ~ams !'lay. ave I?me, in the nets and good, work of big qUlc~ly 10 put il iiI an opp.n spot changes m their hneups tonlgh~ Gordon Anthony along with Gour'l to give Ihe Irish a 2.0 lead. but up to ~ress hour the onh· . ner on the fullbnck line that kept There was no more scoring in chang~s whIch were. known was Ihe junior Irish from scoring l!Iany I the game but the Irish had several that Jim McNamara ,,:111 be abs~nt , times. O'Neil had several closc good chanccs but Burt answered [ro~ the Blueg?lds h~eup havmg . chances in the initial haH but on IIhe call o~ duty. The Fcild al. rec~lved a knee mjury 10. the game two occasions he booted the leat-I though bemg pressed startcd to agamst Holy ~ross. R.lght half hcr over the crossbar. I playa marc open brand of ball in Tom :llu~hY WIll m?ve mto centre

. the last half of the frame but John half poslllon replaclIIg McNamara Th_e fmt goal of t.he game came i Browne although only beinr. call cd while Len Coughlan will shift.

BILL O'NEIL late m. the haU, but It was a pretty, on scveral times handled whatever from thc forward line to the half-one With O'NCllJ and Knopp gell-I came his way. line with College student 'Bob

Both teams had changes,in their ing in. on it. O'Neill sent a dr!I'c Don Morris and Graham Young Marshall holding down' his first: lineup with Joe Browne moving from Just lelt of the centre SIde came close once to tallying for the position on the team on outside:

! , ,

I I , : !

;'"

I I I

1): I , !

" "

I ,;

'I' , ,

I I

into centre ~alf position and in his o[ the 18 yard in the F.eihl zone Double Blues but "Sox" Phelan right. ' first try at Ihis spot In senior ball and Ted Kno~p moved m as the broke up thc play in time. Gordon The Guards will definitely he', he played a slar game and may be ball was. headm~ towards the n.et. Goobie in the dying minutes of the without the services of fullback 'I' :' I

the pivot man for . the Irish in Knop~ dlrected .. lt ~ast Burt to gIve haU ha~ an opportunity to push Hobie Pike who is out of town' 'I I

future contests. On the Feild Bern the Imh the \l1~nmg goa~. , St. Pat 5 ~ut front 3-0, but Burt and this may the only change. I I

I I

HARVTY CURKE fire.

in t\\'o :11Id lInc third to third. Young walked to load the IlP hlllr I'lInS, three bases and with 3 and 2 count on

Holy Cross ., .. 5 4 St. Pat's .. .. .. 5 3 2 600

4- ,200

Season tickets for the balance of the football season are now available at the foot'uall pitch and are se\l1ng for the price o[ $7.50.

Thistle made his first appearance Stan Breen, Jlm Bambl'l<ige and made a mce stop on Goobie's Pike's place will be filled by Erwin '\ and held down outside right posi- .Toe Cooke foug~t d~speratelY to drive. 1I10sbacker. ' tion. hold of[ the Irish m the second Play becamc somewhat disor TI l' d It'

I I .

ed one bomeL" and Tiller Scott couldn't gel the big walked, two, hit' one one over and Clarke walked home struekoUl two. with the winning run.

Guards •• •• .. 5 1 St. Bon's •• ,. .. 5 1 Mt. Cashel .. •• 1\ • I

'" ' 200 4 200

the distance for the Fin ... 1 score Felldians 6 ..... St. SECOND ROUND bllt was in trouble all Pat's 5. TEAM P W L Pct.

, with the exeeption of the t·elldlal15 AB R H E St. Bon's •••••• 1I 3 0 1000 lourth and sel'enth- in- Tillcr .. • _ 4 1 _ 1 0 Holy Cross •• .. 3 :\ 0 1000

the Blues were retired Cook .. .. •. •• 2 0 0 0 Feildlans ., •. 3 2 1 666 " d . I Simpson ........ 4 1 0 0 St. Pat'l •• .. .. 3 I 2 333

nlCC mnin~, an pick ng up Ploughman •••• 3 ,1 l' 0 Guards .• •• •• 3 0 3 000 !iut \cH Seotl ga\'e up six Clarke •. •• •• . 4 1 2 0 ~It. Cashel •• •• 3 0 3, 0110 on s(l'Cn hils. struekout eight D Ch 4 0 0 0

h . apman ....

t ;,\l'cn free passes. T Chapman 4 1 1 0 CHAMPIONSHIP STANDING Blues \l'innill~ their second . I ..... 5 0 2 1 TEAM P W L P t t h

· h D. Squ res •• .• •• c . o t e current round as t e W. Wheeler .. .. 1 0 0 0 Felldians ., ... 8 7 1 875

run lI'a, wr.lked across H. Young .. .. •• 2 1 0 0 Holy Cross .. .. 8 7 1 875 thcnt~c\l'es with the SI. Pat's AS R H E SI. Pat's •••••• 8 '" '" 500

The sen son ticket entitles hold­ers to all SI. John's Football Lea· gue games but does not admit a person iree of charge for the All Newfoundland football games which wili be played here in St. John's this season.'

Anyone requiring a ticket may purchase same at the box o[ficc at the Ayre Athletic Grounds' on playing nights.

Holy Cross Jl's. Practice Tonight

h Ii d h d k' St B . .. - Ie mcups announce as I .a a~ .~r t~vorF 1?1~ a~. reen ga.mzed ~n bolh sl.des f~r a few night for tonight's game were as

The Irish had the edge of play II as a t 0d~erl e [ cd I f p~ mg onk

ml mutes III th; dymg mmutes of follows:

throughout most' of the (lame bul a grea ISP ay 0 e enSLVe wor t Ie gallic but Just before the final 5t B ' G 1 J G th II the Feild put up a slrong defence as the Irish kept up their attacks. whistle it got bac kto normal but . on s_ oa, oe a era.;. with Burt in the nets being called The second ha\[ was only [our min· it was too late for either team to fulls,. Jack Gatherall and. KelVin , upon to stop many close range ?tes old when the Irish got their change the scoreboard and the Grant, halves, ~en Cou~hlan, Tom, I drives. John Browne in the Irish Insurance marker when Steve / game ended with'the Irish taking ;llurphy nd Da~eBarrett, forwards, , uprights was not as busy as Burt Angel set up a nice play near thc Ihe win by a 2'() score. Bob lIIarshall, .Frank O'Grady, ~oe ________ .-:..._____ _,_____ Slaney, Gus RIchards and Damian ,I

Golfers' Warm,-ng Up For The Ry~~·ardS_GOal, Stirling Hoddi- 'II ; noll; fulls, Gerry Smith and Erwin )Iosbaeker; halves, Don Ash, :

$ 5' 0 C d Charlie Snook and Abbie George; I

2 0 0 · 0 . G If forwards, Ray Wilkins, Cec Jen- I , ana Ian pen 0 ~~~' ~i~~o~orth, Roy Jenkins and 'I Players Iisled above on the: i

Guards lineup are requested to" in the Championship Walsh .• •• .• 4 2 2 0 St. Bon's •••••• 8 4 4 500 and in picking last L FlO 0 0 Guard 8 1 '1 143 . "agan •• ,,'.. s .. .. •• .

im~ortant win. The work' 2 1 0 0 lilt ChI B I '1 143 J. Abhott •• •• • • as e •• •• Clarke in cenlre field J. Withers ••• ; •• 4 0 0 0 REMAlNGING GAMES

The Holy Cross Junior football KlTCHENER, Ont. CP-Spank· decided to do some cutting aiter open than the par 36 back nine. team will . be holding a workout ing breezes shipping along the the first round. Those with scores TlGH1' COURSE til is el'ening at t)le Shamrock tree-lined fairways of the West· of 85 or higher will be sidelined "It's a pretty light course, es-

conlact team manager Gerry Smith, ' at 4035. .,

, n$ was notelld'orthY, n. Abbott •••••• 0 0 0 0 (2nd Round) , hi- one hande run· 1 St B -, H I C . h , II . I Dillon..... .••• 2 1 1 . on s vs. 0 y ro,I~, tOnlg t.

eM on JackIe Wlthcrs ong 0 I Mt Chi F Ild' t

'h h Martin........ 3 0 • as e n. e lans. o ng t centre. Clarke ad 1 G d St t' .. Harvey,....... 4 1 0 uar S VI. . Pa s. putout. t.. his credit and I Greene .• .•••• •• 3 O. 0 0 st. Bon's vs. Fe ldians.

01 centre field staved 3 0 0 0 H to· C 5t P , r

., \. J. Quinlan.. •• .. 0./ ross vs. . at s. alnclan ral les. 0 0 G d' h

h I SI Scott' .• •• .• . 3 0 uar s ys. Mt. Cas el.

c,~c 011 larry mp- Umplres:- Kiss, ."r ... ser, Wil-,

Grounds. mount GoU and Country Club ior Thursday's second round. pecially Ihe last ninc", said Ar-As there are several vacancies Tuesday caused plenty o[ trouble There will be the usuai cut to nold Palmer of p'a" winner of the

on the team yet to bc filled the for the scorse of goJ[crs warming 100 lows and ties [or Friday's play Cnnadian Open at Toronto two· I ' NEHRU SEES JUL,lANA i

coach rcquests that all Ihosc elig. up for the Canadian Open and the and to 60 lows and tics ior the years ago. I UTRECHT, Holland (Reuters)- , iblc lor Junior foptball with Holy tolal prize moncy of $25,000. final round Saturday. The lasl three winncrs of the Indian Prime ]linistcr Nehru coit. . CI.OSS and Interested in trying for Most of the players werc trying Estimates of the winning total open arc on hand for anolhcr lerred Tuesday with Queen Juli-a, berth should be at tonight's shots over and over, and practice score varied. Norm Himes, Wcst- crne kat the title and the $3,500 ana. Nehru cilllle to Holland fol- . practice. round scores'mennt little or noth- mount pro, forecast 272, Doug top monc~·. The), arc Pat Fletchcr lowing the Commonwealth Prime ,

drive to the bull pen With'S ba!cs lo;,derl took "Scottie" !lams, Dulfy. I t p' t' 'J ,. of trouble in the sixth and Scorer: G. Murph~·. • a s UnlOr TONIGllT'S GAME '

catch a, he robbed Har-, St Bon!s and Holy Cross' second B h II P ·b· , the ,mnlh stopped the rou;d leaders In the baseball lea- ase a rac ce

gue standings meet tonight at 7 went scoreless It! the p.m, at the Ball Park ~nd this £Lx- St. Pat's Junior baseballers will

went down In order. Cec tUfe should prove a crowd pleaser. climax their open workouts at St. safely 10 lead of[ "Duey" Fitzgerald will be send· Pat's Field tonight at 6.30 and

.More Sport­On ,Page .11

inlI. Big Al Bcssclink of Gros- Ford of lIfahopas, N.Y., leading of Royal Montreal, who ended a lIlinisars Conference in London' singe'rs, N.Y., came in orr the money winner on the pro tour, 40·ycar famine for Canadian pros last week. ' course moaning, "I must have shot guessed 274. 50 did Bill Mawhin· by winning in 1954 at Vancouver ~. ~I'. ----100-it was both the wind and my ney of Vancouver, whosc forecast Point Grey; Arnold Palmer and SURVIVE JET CRASH I! i bad play." " of' 278 for the $29,000 Opcn at Doug Sanders, the young' Miami THE HAGUE (Reuters) - Two :

The draw for today's I1rst round JlIontreal Islcsmere last week was golfer who won last year at Mont· Dutch Meteor jet fighters collided I . shower 164 names. Several right on the nose. rcal BeacDns£ield. in the air and crashed Tuesday, ! scratches appeared likely. The Westmount layout o[ 6,444 Sanders was an amateur then the air force announced. Both ,pi- "

With such a large field, the yards has a par of 71. The front I and beat Dow Finsterwald in a lots,using their ejection .eats,: Royal Canadian Golf Association nine, with p'ar 35, Is 'more wide playoff. He has since turned pro came down ufely 'near the :Btl.'

two run attr.ck, stole Lng Jim C;:.rey after the big one, any member deslrious of playing Ihird as Dick Cook and In an endeavour to jump out In with the "Irish" should get out

fanned. Bob Ploughman' the lead, and in all probability this evening. Coach Charlie Doyle 11'\11 give the Foliowing tonlght'l practiee,

Clarke's si 11!!lc through Itt his lefty Jed Gam-_ ass gnmen 0 Coach Ron Scott will name his scored Tiller and berg. representatives for 1957 junior

e\'~ncd matters In ° schedule which gets under way 3! Dillon walked and Regatta Meetl, ng early next. week. . .,

run tied the g&l11e were down In order The weekly meeting of the' St. BaseL II U ° ,

hair. John's Rcgatta Committee wlll be . JJa mplre s ,Patricians added two more held this evening at the City Hall MOT ° h • n the second as Walsh lead starting at 8.15. eetlng omg t a doublc and AbhoLt was hit As business of utmost impol·t·, . , l~tclhCd ball. Dillon doubled ance Istci be discussed all memo

c eer tq score both run. bers are requesLed to attend. The Recretary of the St. John's , Umpires' Association Gordon Kiss

all Sh ' advises tbilt· an Important meeting

g OW Mon N·ght o[ the board will be. held this • I evening at the BaJl Park immedi-ately following - the· scheduled iller B t · ' game between Holy Cross and St.

ro hers Returning B01;~' members ate requested to . since II' be in attendance.

thi Ie announcement lo'connor will join Coree's in a WresU' S coming Monday rock·em sock-em tag team bout p ·

al Stadi~~g ~ard at the Me· adalnst the Miller Brothers. In ractIces ~een a stead ~aSt made there II thel" I,st appearance, In St. John's • In Ihe Stadl s ream of pea- the Miller brothers provided lots The Macpherson junior football

sale ticke~m IAookdlng for of thrills for wrestling fans with team will hold a workout this lor To;' .. ! sma~\ I their dIrty underl1anded methods. evening on the School Grounds

has arran uJ"namite And they also earned themselves starting at seven . O'clock. The mal men I~e;h f~r four of the local fans hatred for the saine !;oast requests a full turnout of Ihr£e big b c

t us ness to dirty style' that is used by Gene players. '

au s Monday Kinlskl. Meanwhile, Farmer Boy The curtis Academy junior foot­ball team w\ll hold'a workout this evening on the 'upper pitch of Ayre Athletlc Field. The practice starts at . seven o'clock and all players are ,requested to be on. time.

and Pat O'Connor' have earned popular team of Pat 0'. themselves a permanent position and crooning, Farmer Boy In the hearts of most fans Jor their

a relurn appearance clean cut style of wrestling. , In both singles and H's sute to be a knock down

glan border.

and joined Ule tour. The course record at Westmount

for competitive play is 65, liz ' under par, held by several play· ers including Gerry Kesselrin" local boy noW playing out 'of Tor· onto Downsview on the moner .• Ir-cult. . I

Local gol£ fans will be pulling I . for Gerry on his former 'home i course. There will also be much . ' interest in Moe Norman, the Ir- ',' repressible Kitchencr youngster: who got into' the bc;d graces of,,' the Royal Canadian Golf Assocla- .: . Mon. Norman, winner of the last· two Canadian 'amateur champion- ~: . ships, turned pro when there was, ' talk that his !'Imateur standln, ,t"

would be revoked. ;" 1\1ost o[ the pros in last week's;,,'

tournament -at Islesmere are _en· ( tered in the current Canadian;' Open. A new arrival was Frank:,' Stranahan, former l!IIllateur star ' from Toledo, Ohio. Stranahan .has just returned to rejoin the pro tour after competing in the British !?pen.

WEATHER' Sunny, clouding oYer thIs ,

evening. High today 73.

TEMPERATURES

Ottawa ....... :.. 66 a:5 B match against the hated drag out night, with wrestlint! fans O'C rothers, Ed and Big Bill screaming and jumping from the ~I.~nnor will take on Blg start of the first gong' to the

r In Ihe lead of re- finish . of the. third and main _it~nd ~'armer 1101 ~!1l event. That's Monday night at the

Ed. Miller In the see st. John's Memorial Stadium for ~rtlfminary tVtM. Th' three big matchea featuring Farmer

101 IDd _..... eft 1I0y, Pat O'Connor and the MLUer rvr- Pat JIIotIlll'l, 1M iDd iii JIm.

. NICOSIA,Cyprul (Reuters) Thlhty 'passengers on boar d an Israeli Air Line DC·a escaped In· Jury Tuesday.' when they crash; • landed at the RAF base'at Akro­tiri. The landlni wa. aUributd to til_ WOUb\ti.

THE GUARDS senior football team will take to the .field tonight in their first game in tlle Second Round. Fresh from their first ,Round Ichampionship the Guard meet St. Bon's to try to move up with St. Pst's who lead the League at p!-,esent with the only win. The ~uards team,which eoppetlthe' Insurance Round hon· ours and the Stead Trophy last week, t:ead from lef '0 right, front row:~Lef 'Clarke,' terry Smith, Don Ash, Roy Jenkins, Ray Wilkins, Don Winsor, Ron Sr . (Property Manager). Back row, left to right:­H. Coultas (Team Delegate), Cee Jenkins, Fred Nortll: lrling Hoddinott, Abbie "!;corge; Charlie Snook, Hobie Pike/Ed. Noseworthy. Absent from the photo is Bill Jackson (Playing Coach), Robert Chaulk, Rex Smith.

"

Montreal •.•.•..• 70 110 Moncton •••••. _. 53 '/8 Halifax . • .. • . • . •. 53 76, ': . Sydney .... . ..... s.4,' 84 • SI. John's ........ 55 74

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, ,'.,/! W'llh MAJOR HOOPL.E --"-" .----. ~ • I •• I •••• _ ... _r_'_,~ ,. ",1. ~ ..... _ •••••• __ ••• _ ..... -.......-... _ •• ___ a_.. .• t :: Programmes' On .7ne Air' I ;, ·Today. •• f.

:1 ,'1 )! (I ,;' :" '1' i' :'!

CJON WEDNESDAY, ,uly 11th

i 'rl, i,l • 111 1' ,

"'il: I

•. lIO-Bob Lewl. Show. I.3O-Nfid. New.

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UII-NeWl Ind Weather. For. cast.

'l.OO-{iew. Ind Sport!. 7.15--Canadian News and Sports. 7.SlI-Round the World News. 7.35-Weather forecast. 'UlI-New. Summary. B.DO-Nfld. News. 8.OII-Provlnclal Weather. 8.1ll-ShlppiDi Report. 8.2O-The Bob Lewis Sbow. 8.25-Klddies· Corner. 8.30-Nnd. New .. 8.S5--Complete Weather Foreca~t UO...:.The Bob Lewis Show. U5-MlIl'IIina Mmy·Go JlowIcL D.DO-Provlnclal New •• 9.D5-Juke Box Relvew. 1I.30-Newl. D.30-New. In a Minute. 9.31-Juke Box Review. 9.45-Women's New •.

IO.OIl-News in a Minute •. IO.OIl-Martln'. Corner. 1D.15--Ma Pepper. lO.lIO-Newl. lO.31-Who Am 17 lO.4fl-Juke Box Review. IO.45--Eleven lor the Mone),. IO.55-Juke Box Review. ll.OI-The Story of JaDe Arml·

tage. 1l.3O-ewa In a Minute.

, 12.Dl-Topa Today and Yesterda,. 1.OII-LocaJ and National Hew ... 1.05-Weather Forecllt. l.lll-Ne ..... l.35-EditoriaJ Comment. 1.40-Sporta Review. U5-Art Baker's Notebook. 2.DO-Newa. 2.00-Ne\'er 'Let Me Love You. 2.15--Thls Man's Family, :l.30-News, Ma~inee. 3.01-Housewlces' Club.

" 4.0U-Gen. Provincial New •. , 4.05--Ranchlime,

.: 4.30-Newl, Ranch Paft7. 11 5.00-News, The Record Shop. '1

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ClON·TV ST. JOHN'S-CHANNEL I

·5.IIO-Open HoUle. 5.3O-ChU.ren'l PI'1II1'I1110 G.ot-Howd, Doody. &.30-Newl IDd Weather. 8.45-SlUDmer Theatre. B.IIO-MII'II Saller.

CJOX·TV AIGENTJA-CIIANNEL 18'

i.SO-Rlt PI1'''e. lMlt-Kraft Theake.

lU4I-T. Ie ABlloUDM. llM-NeWlo llJe-Lite Show.

. __ ._-,--_...:.-_-------'---

Math.matical Maz.

ACIOSS 56 Journalist, Ernie"":'"

,I Combine 51 Coif mounel numbm

• Funetlon or D9WN trigonometry 1 Vlpen

8 Distinct part 2 Song for two 12 Prosecute 3 Decide 13 One-spotl • Dillner course 1t Carbona ted 5 Refrigerator

beverage e Tidier 2~ Number sa Lightly II Favorite 7 Worm .; study (ab.) 40 Genullected 18 Agreement 8 Escort 2,' Exchan,e' 41 View

Dt tenure II Mldda, premium 42 YO\UII dOlI U CIvil War 10 Unemployed 28 Missile 43 Forest ox

IfIItl'al 11 Small 21 Dec:laratlon 44 Slertd tmap ,0 Heredity unlta children 28 Pontiff 4B Indl,o 21 Free 1'1 Glvel out 20 Very (Fr.) 47 Great LalIt 22 Pitcher It Exerclst 31 Weirder 4SAucllon 24 Glrl's 23 German river 33 Kind of Ingle 50 CUt off

nickname ZeMetrlc

measurell 2T SeIPort (lb.)

·30 SpryeT 32 "Ixed part 34Fuet

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" 35 Get aWlY 38 Garden tool '37 Bellow 31 Shoshonlan

Indllni ,40 New Zealand

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13'1 41 Sainte (ab.) 42 POlitical

writer, Tbornal -

4S Flower

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clusler. .'1 Emphasize SIAl' 12 Accumulation

atwaler' IS Man'. name 14 Nothing II Seasonln.c

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. e.OO-N~wl and Weather. II.OS-Bulletln Board. 6.lD-National New •• 1I.l5-Sports Parade. 6.25--National Nell·s.

J'IU

6.SD-Top Tunes of Our Times. 7.0l-Rlght to Happiness. 7.l5--Programme Report. 7.30-ews.

~ Jill ]II

~ 51

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lD,30-Here Comes O'Malley • lO.45--A Date with DenYI. l0.55-Newl. l1.0D-·Burton'. of Banner 5t. 1l.I5-Juke Box Jamboree. l2.00-News. 12.05--Ramblln' "It!! Recorda, 12.30-News.

B.05--Sundlal. B.30-World News and Weather 7.00-News Highlights, and Wea·

ther. 8,OO-Breaklast Club. 8.1ID-Mak. up Your Mind. 8.45-Rex Koury • 1I.00-It Happened Lut Night.

IO.OO-Coffee Time. ll.00-Turn Back the Clock. 1l.25-Sports D~tectlve. 11.30-Pepperrell Juke Club. IUD-News and D.B. 12.30-HllIbilly Matinee. l.OIl-Behlnd the Story • 1.15--0ne· Man's Family. 1.30-Musical Express. . U5-Amerlcan Music Hall. 2.00-VOUS Music Room . 3.0D-Sports Page. U5--March of EventL 3.3D-Baseball. 5.3D-Pulse. B.OD-Sports Today 8.15-The New Yorkers. B.30~2Ist 'Preci!lct. . 9.DO-Groucho Marx. 9.SD-Recollections at Thirty.

IO.OO-Flnal Edition.

-JUDY HOLLIDAY RICARD CINTE IS

"FULL OF LIFE"

. Judy Holliday teams ard Conte in what called hilarious &£firmaur.: fact that. jn this chan'it. babies still come in th; • fasllioned way. The new film, . 1..01Ulmhi.

"Full of Life" opens the Capilol Theatre pollt::oin Opera star caloni m~king his scre!D Jud)"s exuberant (alher ' who takes over the which Judy and husband are perplexedly, proudl)' their first·born. .

As an expecantant

I Holliday reportedly performance ri~her and lightful even than hlr blonde" chr.ractrrizatiQr.! films as "The Solid Gold and "Born Yesterday,"

lO.3D-Fred Robbins Show. 1l.OO-Muslc 'Til Midnight. l2,DO-Sign Off.

.. I she won an Academl' . -------~------------~---;-::::;;;.:th,;ii· ;;;.;;,F.;:;;;''ith,; fancies, fenrs, oh;e!si,~

apartment bUlldmg. I found the whims of her hies sed •

.. Paramount

CoP/rilh! 1956 br K.nd.H f"t" C_. Dill,ihloj ., NlA Sto,ie .. loe. ~ . By M.il CHABER. ..;.....,.

KIRK DOUGLAS~; "LUST FOR LIFE"

XXXIV For once Gianna was feeling

100. badly to challer and I was just as glad. She sat in the front with Piero and I st.t in the back with Achille. I could tell that he was dying to talk to me about the

A picture to win outstanding I thing nea~est to. his. heart, but acclaim opens tomorrow at the i h.e wouldn t start It Without some Paramount Theatre, It is MGM',· Sl~~ from me." . "Lust for Life," unfolding the Later, Achille,. I told him gripping story of the wolrd·famous and he nodded. painter, Vincent Van Gogh. Kirk It was shortly after !I o'c1.ock Dougias portrays the remarkable when. We arrived in Rome. Plero artist whose life IOnli career was like an?ther par~ of myself. vacillated between hope and de- '~!thout ,,skmg, he. first dropped spair in his fanatic ambition to Glanna at a hospital and ex· put on canvas the lanLiscapes and plalned to her that we would people of the working classes • of return her car to her .Iater in the B Iglum France and his nlJtlve evening. She was shll 50 upset,

e , she did nothing but give us a Holland. pale smile and trot obediently up

The story probes into the strange the steps of the hospital. Piero and confused character of Van swung the car <.round and drove Gogh, explores the tensions .Whlch straight to the street where made him a bizarre eccentrIC, de· Achille .lived. picts his relationships with a num- "I will come to see you soon, ber of women and his turbule.nt Achille," I said as the boy got friendship with the fellow arHst out of the car. "lIIaybe tonight, Paul Ga.uguln, which left its mark maybe in the morning." . on a man destined to be I~nely, "Ali right, ltllle," he said.

"Including the man from the American Embassy," I SOlid. "I should cail him, but It won't hurt him to have one more night of troubled lieep. It'll keep him on his toes."

"I have told them there are still some loose ends," Piero said, "and that I will report in later. Where to, MiLo?"

I gave him the address. We drovi across Rome with·

out talking. When Piero· finally found the address, I was lur· prised to lee that it was a mod· em apartment house. I IlUppose I shouldn't have been surprised.

Piero turned off the motor and looked at me. I think from his guessed. "You want me to go up?" he asked quietly.

"I SUPPose you should," I said. "I have no a.uthorlty in Rome, but I think it might be better if I did it."

"I understand," he said. Ire· membered then that he'd had the same experience and that he probably did understand. "I will wait here for you, Milo."

name a~d presseLi the. bu~to~ be· coupleLi with Judy'! neath It. Almost Immediately ability ::os a comedienne, the buzzer 50unded [o~ me to Hollywood· and advance come up. I had thought It would, something to cheer be that way: I "In "Fuli of Life:'

I had noticed the number be.j. a struggling writer Who

side the name. I went up to the things, wants a bit of ' third floor and along the hall quiet toround the until I came to the ~oor. I meet a few bill!: pressed the button beside It. '. money as docs a

The door opened and WIlma termjt~.ridden it Pianta was ~ml1ing at me. I under Judy's weight.

"Hello, Milo," she said .. Her I ate parents-to-be mk \'oice was soft and femml~e. Papa Coote's eX'L mer", "Come in." She stood to one s!dc I a bri~klayer pl&yed b~ as I entered. "You are t.he fIrst I tan Opera star Sail'ntor'! person to enter here beSide m)" i in his screen debut. self," she said. , They persuade Papa I!

I looked around the room i with them to fix the and I could see why. All four i Papa decides he'! waUs or the room were literally l-rounLi and "help" covered .with. kniyes. There was bab)" Song-loving. every kmd Imagm&ble, Iro~ a and self.opinionaled, tiny two· inch dagger . to a giant ceeds to make a pest thing that was almost a sword. so far as his son is They ",(ere all arranged to ma~~ and things start decorative patterns and In a w,,~ EuthusinsticaLly It was beautiful. In another way, Judy. Pllpa decides it made the muscles of my place in the living stomach contract. ,he fixes the kitchen noor .

"I brought lome brandy,' I sists Richard put down offered her the bottle. Papa's account of his

She drank, Then wiped the· Ringo's adventure with bottle on her &kirt. Afterwards Italy. and generally she handed It back.. I' suit himself.

"This one" she s&ld, po ntmg to an old !t~ined knife on one of "Full of Life.:' the walis, "is the one I used years greutest. boy ·glrl ago." since spm.the.bo~t1c, , .' , ,I \,

. '.':'j' ;: . '11<;:., ~~ '. ;,;. .

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.. U 'I!"

8.00-~ew5 . 8.01-Best On Wax. 1I.01-Fred Waring Show 9.3D-News In a Minute. 1I.31-The Three Suns.

·U5-New,.

12.35-Ramblln' with Recorda. I. Ill-Sportscast. 1.3D-News. U5--Ramblln' 'll'ith Record •• 2.~5--New •.

misunderstood and unappreciated. Piero sent the lillie car dart· Finally, the narrative tra,ces th~ ing aWRY from the sidewalk. As development 01 Van .Gog~ s wO!k, soon as We reached a pll>Ce where leading to the Iabt years 111 ~hlch there were public phones, he he achieved the fulfillment of h!s pulled to the curb.

I had brought a bottle of brandv from Gambero's bar and now i took It, uncorcked it and raised It to my lips. I wiped the top on my sleeve and offered it to Piero. "I remember We used to drink thi.!! "'ay," I said, "even though the contents during the resistance days weren't always this old or this mellow. Will ,OU drink on the house, Fiero!"

"~ Ragana," I said. tailored for ~hS5. She nodded. "It drank a lot of Richard Conte IS said to

Fascist b I 0 0 d," She looked harassed husban.d , pleased for a minute, then her Togeth~r they lO)'on;,r face fe1l into F,lmost childish I what happens when boy lines. "What happened to us" to make "Full. of !.i~e··

:' .. : II '; I"

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1O.00-News. apple Nut .

10.01-The Fat Man. 10.3D-News In a Minutt. 10.31-Smilin' Ed McConnell, IO.45--National New •. 11.01-Sparts. 11.10-Houseparty, News. 1.00-Queen and Sign Off.

VOCM WEDNESDAY, July 10th

8.3O-Breakfllt Club, New .. 7,3D-News. 7.S5-Breakfast Club, 7.OIl-Newl. aOll-Breakfast Club. 8.30-Hlt of the Day •. 8.30-Newl, Breakfut Club. I.OO-Date with Deny •• D.1I1-Fox~o'e Street. 9.3O-A Date With Deny •. U5-Hearts In Harmony.

lO,OO-New8. 10.05-A Dat, With Deny .. --

NOW PLA.Ylt-iG .. . i~:'l'~" ... .

....... ~

Kirk DOUGlAS

• ' II Vinc:fItt YI" Gogh

OISl'firUJJ'-CINEMASCOPE'and METROCOlOR

. cO'I'«r11ll

Anthony QU INN James DQNAlD • Pamela BROWN

willi Everett Sloane _Pu,w ....w.. . __ . -=:.,~ .. VR_'

Also-NOVELTY EVENING SHOW!-'J P.M.-~ P.M •.

-'" MATINEE: :I P.M.

ADMISSION PRICES FOR ·THIS ENGAGEMENTI IVl::NING-ADULTS ••••••• ?Iie. cmLDREN ........ 1Ie. UTINEES-ADULTS ........ iOe. CWLDREN ••••••• 1It.

---:- NEXT ATTRACTION ROHERT WAGNER.....;JEFFRF,Y HUNTER-ROPE UNGI: In "THE TRlIE STOI' OF JESSE JAMES".-. ACTlON.­THRII,t~~SUSPEN~E.

.'

. ,

S.OO-Dollars on Parade. ".W-News. 4.05-Rlilnbow lanch. ".55-Newa. S.OO-Clseo J{ld. 1I.30-Melody Man. . II.OO-New. and Weather. fI.O~Melody Man. lI.l5-Sportseart, 1I.20-Melody Man. U5-News. 'l.OO-Dark God. 'l.l5-Muslc from the Showi. 7,3D-Rendezvous with Records. B.DO-Top Tunes or the Day. 9.45-Newl.

10.00-1 Was a Communist for the FBI.

artistic genius lOt the cost of hiS HI must cal! in," he said, "and life. I make a r~port. The." I ~i1l be at

. . ture your sen'lce, my fnend. Seldom has a motIOn pIC • "I have to make a call, too,"

depicting the Itory of a fa~ous I IBid Penon been given the authenhcil)' - We' both .'ent inside. He took

. Lif " It scenes, " of "Lust for e'l k B inaga one phone and I took another one ranging from the b ea or lum at Bome distance from him. My coal·mining district ~ ~fs g first call didn't take Ions, just enough where Van Gogh rna e ome In time to get an ,address. Then I crude' drawings, to his I hus cafes went out to the car and waited. Holland, to the art-eoll5cffeldB of After a few minutes, Piero of P&rls, the sunny ow. came out and got behind the Provence, where his creaUv:n~ed wheel. "Everything is In mo. Auvera, where hi. Iif~ d t~ tion," he said. "There will not be· ers reached thei~" Ijea th I~ctual much sleep in the Interior huild· were filmed large"'h n ret lived' Ing tonight, I can t~lI you. But locales in whlc ht e ar 15 the news will be good to many

He nodded, took the bottle and drank from It. Then he, too, wiped thl top on his sleeve and handed it back to me. I took the bottle and got out of the car.

"I'll be back soon," I told him. "Take your time, Milo," he

said. He had leaned back in the scat. "What is It you Americans say? Rome was not build In a day?"

"Or rebuilt," I saold.

Milo?" ample o.f mone-milklDI (To He Continued) nesf.

--------

IO.30-0rgan Encore •. lO.45-NewI. 11.00-Sporte.!t. l1.l0-Forecall. ll.1~Club "1190," 12.00-N."., 12.05-Club Il00. 12.3D-.Newl.

and worked. people."

When Director Vincente Min· ~I~:;:====:;::::;;;;:;;::::;~~;:::;;;;;f nelll and Producer John Houseman ,..... " electedKirk Douglas for the role

I turned and went into the

1.00-C10sedon.

~ Vlncimt Van Gogh they were actuated not only by his staoture as a dramatic ltar but also by hi. unclnnyphy&ical resemblance to the painter. Similarly, Anthony Quinn who plays the role of Paul Gaugl~, looks strikingly likl the chMacter he portrays. Also In starring roles are .lames Donatd as Van Gogh's brother.

•• VOUS

WEDNESDAY, Jllly lOth fI.OO-National Anthem Ind ~ip

On.

---------- -----...... '-TODAY

MUSIC - SONGS - ROMANCE

SAL MINEO IN

"ROCK' PRETTY BABY~'

With-JOHN SAXON - LuANA PAnEN .. ..

·A/$o-NOYElTY-!.1USICAl.

TIMI;S OF ~HOWS . EVENING SHOWS: '7 p.m.-II.IIO p.m.

MATINEI-S P:MI

"OMISSION PRICES fOR THIS ENGAGEMENTi !VENING-ADtLT8 ••••••• ne. CWLDIEN •••••. • Me.

MATINEES-ADULTS ...... !lOe. CBILDBEN.· ...... Zk:

NEXT' AnRACTION. AUDREY HEPBURN-FRED ASTAIRE' In "FUNNl FACE"-MUSIYONGS-YISTAYISION. '

eestIok &nJUnd while i run ~ ami throw. a

ACE RfPORT~RS OlEN YOUR EYE'S

A N editor'. few worda on a slip 01 paper have lent I reporter on tb.

kail of the world', biggest Itory. ~Oll', ill I .eries of Star Weekly exc\usl\'!s, Ie. newspaper min Ind women of th. century will n·live tbeir HBigg.it Story," ••• playing tbe hum:hM, work· ing the breaks, quntioninr, riskin" .Iegiag for facti ••• waiting I

Ac:tually the Biggest Story' II iwacfed wben. tbee. key nrwipap • • en report their own experiences. E.cb week I di£ferent writer will t& tertaia you with hili or her ptrsor.al .uipmlllt. All have I \Uliqul !Wilt, T'h.,. win coyer I wid, nriety or tub­jeeu. When you read one, you'll want '" read the leries. Thll week'. StIr lVHl:l, Ia OIl tale almost everywher&

Now YOU CAN BUY JaVel. in either DRY FORM or LIQUID

You may !bid that you like the Dry Form best for lOme jobs and the Liquid for others. Both Ja.-ex Liquid and Dry fOl'JllJ are equall,y efficient.

. Whichever you buy • •• LIQUID or DRY you get the famous

Jav~1 5·IN·1 Action! 'CLEANS. KILLS GERMS • BLEACHES REMOVES STAINS • DEODORIZES

.. ~

To

DAY m 1:'\ FE"

OUR EYES

on a dip o! lorter on th. t It:lry. Now, '1 exclusives. romen of tht ~ir "Biggelt mcbee. work­inr, rilkin" ,iring I

It Story' II r newlpap'"

Ixpcri.:\cet. ritfl' will ... i2er perl on" Itnique twilt.. lriety of ,ub­

.. ":~'l'~"~" . "

,1957 ... •

ea ue • merlcao .IO·S - tar ame Archie Moore

R II Will Defend· Title a· y. c LOS ANGELES (AP)-The Cali-

. fornia Athletic C4Jmmisslon Tues-

Ill' JACK !lAND score and the 6·2 lead was cut to at. St. Louis. day . moved swiftly to decide LoiilS IA.P.l-A dying 6-4. Stengel threw six pitchers Into whether or not Archie Moore will . h innin~ rail)' by the Na.. WALKED BELL the fray, everybody except his defend his world light heavyweight

To Casey Changes Pitchers'

H,old Off National nr~.glle lell one rlln short When Pierce walked Bell o[ own Bobby Shanlz. Alslon used championship against Tony An·

. al ('a!c), Stell~el's Amer· Cincinnati on four straight pitches, five, wllh starter Curt Simmons thony of New York here Sept. 11. barely sal'ed a 6.5 Slengel decided he 'had enough. of the I hillies taking· the loss. The commission called a hear-

the ~~Ih all.star gamc., Don Massi, anolher· .Iefty from ·TwcntYo{lne of thll National's Ing to be held at Sacramento, ha\llill~ against the Vlc\'elaml, came to the rescue. 25·man squad got Into the game Calif., today. The· hearing could

Ihal h.d ~rrn him lose rive Massi slruck out Milwaukee's Ed· and ID of the Americans. provide more rireworks than the W\'iol1~ ~amr5 •. changed die Mathews as Alslon leL Lhe Ilu~· I nthe clubhouse Aiston defend· proposed fight. .

wildly in Ihe nmth u~11 ger hit away without bunting with cd Bell for trying to make third At least Lhhee established pro· Grilil. hi! own . New Y

1 ark I men 011 first and second and 'no- base on Banks' single. "I think mot~rs In the state are expected

. hulll'r11 ~~r. finally c oSC( body nut. The third strike was 1\ Bell. did the right thing," said AI· to rlg~t a~Y appllc~ti?n for a pro­rn ~ rl~n~rr(lU5 line ~Ir\\:e beautiful slow curve that drifted ston. "It would have been pretty Il!0ter s beenc~ by .5mger F:-ank

by L'hic~go's llm\1le across he plate \l'hll Malhcws stood uice to have the tying run on third smatr.a and hiS ~usmess adVIsor, looking. with onl" one out MI • d' Hcnlj (Nakl Sanlcola. 'h' , . ,. . . no so ma e Clavton Fhye 5(!crcta ry oE the

look f,ver ~I\l'r C Icaso S Banks, then smashed a sinsle 0.[[ a perfect throw to get him." comniission, said that formal pro· had blown lIlost o{ a !IIalzone s slo~e into le[t field drlv· tests against a· Sinatra - Sanlcola lead. With Ernie !ng home FOIles. Bell stormed R· d licence have been filed by the

01 Chic3~o Cubs o~ second mto third only to be cut down by ecor S Hollywood Legion Stadium Club rcprCfenlil1~ the t~'lDg run, 1II1noso'5 throw In a rally.breaklng and San Francisco promoler Ben

Waller Alslon called up· piny. ,ST. LOUIS (AP)"'Llfetime all· nie Ford. his own Brooklyn .clutch. hit· AlthouSh Banks had raced to star batting records of the players The Olympic. Boxing Club of Los Gil Hod~c" as a plOch hitter. second on the throw that got Bell Who participated In Tuesday's Angeles has already verbally. op.

threw a ball. to Hodges Grim came qn to get Hodges. . 24th game between the. rival po~ed the promotion and will join Ihen came in with thc next The victory boosted the Amer· major leagues: . . In the fohmal proles

ts.

Hodges ripped a low liner Ican's margin In the series to 14 American League The commission called the hear-Ihat !OllOdc(\ hkc bad news 10. It was only the second win . AB· H. Pet. Ing Tuesday aller these develop.

Americans but ~tlnos\l for the American, however, since Maxwell, Det ........ 1 1 1.000 ments: it in {or the final lJut. 1949. Skowron, NY ...... 2 2 .667 Moore and his manager, Charlie

ETR.\ INNINGS Almost forgotten was the sensa. Mlnoso, Chi ........ 10 Ii .600 Jonston, and Anthony and his pilot, mi~hl hal'c played extra tional early pitching of Jim Bun. Williams, Bost .... :. 39 13 .333 Ernie Braea, agreed to terms for i{ Gus Hell, Irying to go nlng, the 25.year'old Detroit start. KaUne, Det ........... 12 ~ .333 the IS·round match: Moore would

to Ihird on Banks, sil'~le, er, who pitched three priect Inn. Fox. Chi ....•• ,... 17 5 .294 re~elve 40 per cent. of the gate re· been cut dOll'n by Minoso's ings to earn the victory. I1~ant1e, Ny......... 21 6 .286 celpts plus an undlvuloed guaray;·

to rrank )Ialzonc of Boston 'In fact, Detroit was a most 1m. \\ertz, Clev ........ 7 2 .286 tee, and challenger Anthony, 20 mid!t o{ Ihe rall~'. portant factor In this American Berra, NY .. ........ 30 7 .233 'per cent. . ,

o{ Ihe men on &ecl)nd League success. ~lIenn, Det .. , ....... 11 2 .182 In. New York; ,Julllls Helfa.nd, 'II lout the Na. FINE C \TCH Kell, Bait .......... 23 4 .174 pr?sldcnt 0; lhe World. Champion.

\\1 I 01 e \. ' _ J. Nalzone, Bost ..... 2 0 000 ship B a x In g Commlltce, savc noll' h~d onl. a .m~n on ~I Kaline, In right field, made McDougald Ny.... 3 0 :000 Moore a stay of execution insofar and 11\0 g.one. Grim 5 job a flOe laping ecatch on Brav Red . ~ as declaring his title vacate~ 'for oul 10:' i~lm ~nd he came Schoendlenst's long drive to the . . N tional League lack of defending it in 13 month~.

~ll11oso s help. right field wall in the sixth. In FOIles, Pitts ......... 1 1 1.000 Helfand said he was assured 'I

,

SAVED BY THE BELL-New York-Welerweight To ny Dibiase is as flat as the proverbal pancake after being decked by Gale Kenvin of Valley Stream, N. Y., in the fourth round of their skedded .10-rounder at St. Nick's recently. Referee Mark Conn, partly hidden by Kerwin, motions him to a neutral' corner. Dibiase was able to co~e out for the fifth roun~ when Conn'S count was interrupted by the bell. It wasn't much use however smce Conn stopped the f1ght at 1:21 of the fifth and gave the TKO award to Kenvin over

his astoria opponent.-(lN Photo). bi~ runs for Ihe Amer. the fifth Kaline had forced heBit. llays, Ny ........... 12 1\ .. WO Moore at least 1I'U sincere in 01 Ihem uncarned-In ating Frank Robinson of Cincln. :llcMillan, Clnci ... "2 .500 agreeing to I title Bcrap.

top of the ninth 0([ Clem La· Bearing down against pinch hit. Aaron, Mil .. ....... 7 3 .4.29 the Brooklyn bullpen pitch· nati at second after making a fine ~o~ged' B{OOk •••• , 12 4 .333 \

10 han put the game scoop of Mathews' smash IS he TC '1 ID~. ·i'· .. · .. '· 6 2 .3.'3 M T hI Dr·e'ss·.ng Room Ch tt H D Will Not ""h. "m.d, tho .,," t"p", th' h.tL Roht"".," .;,~r.t~· st:~' .:::.:::. ~ ti :: ore rou e . a er ap ay

fourth pitchcr for Sten. afr:id ~thed jballl woul4 be cauglll Banks, Chi ;.... ..... 5 1 .200 I I I d ST. LOUIS (APl-A jubilant NATION LEAGUE

an wal e ust ong enough to get Balle~', Cincl ....... & 1 .167 n re an . . had snuffed out the Na. caught at second and Rob Mathews Hoak Cincl 1 0 000 Mmme Minoso, who thought he By AL DOPKING A t A H ·L p. lone prcl'ious threat in the r hit ' •...•• , . NIGHT I.EAD· arrests· b"t wOllld have "a vac.~tio.n" Tuesday ST •. LOU.IS (APl-"The .0Ilt·1 ccep " · Ii. rexy d h I k t th

0 a • Moon. St.L .......... 1 0 .000 ~ but produced tile,' n ng d t d th b t th A an a( slruc ou ree Yogi Berra, suffering through a Clmoli, Brook ....... 1 0 .000 DUBLIN (Reuters)-TrooP5 lI'ith I .,m I run an s an mg lOS a ou e merlca.n, . tl" ." h' I... I. tlw hoi' 'N'" .I'm;'. fb>.I~ '''''' M.th,w,. 8m .. .. 8' .M Ii"d. h"".". "",d., ,,,,d,d!' ."m,<o~~,g th"'~ ,,, th, Am- ~.,", "~!t-S .... To"d.,. w .. th~, TORONTO (CF)-H.p D.y. ,,,- Am,ri,,, H,,'" Le.,,, ho .;

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and eighth. . In his first all.star run In hls ninth . a camp conlamm!( 60· SUl'pectcd I encan Le"oue, maj be the good pltchme• 1· mer general manager. coach and not accept the league presldenc

,",' hi •• t,,, t. tho .mth: ,.m. with •• 'o,t, ',It .. ,,,, Bill m'mho" ,I tho " •• W'd t",h R. h"k ,h"m C.",· st",.1 ... " It w.~ m""" lV.lt" At,t" p'''' with T,""" M.p'. Le." ,ff,,,d ·hlm. Stan ~Iusial. playing his Skowron's double In the sixth. An aura of freshness follows I public Army, rounded up in a sur· \ for AlI·Star ga~es. talkmg.m the dressmg room. of of the ~ational Hockey League, Day. 56, said his future pIal ",t "," , ... "'. A ",wd " 3D'" !h.t p.1d • ""'m",. y", h." .t" '" h", prl .. ,,,,,om .. t ,,'''p. It w .. tho , .. , AII·St .. ",m. tho N,h,," Le.", At1St", ,~t >oid "'"d" h. h .. I""m.d Ib, ". ,till I, 'h, m.kl" bot he ,.

"",. It,,., ,I Now y"k. g"" "t. " $122,027 "" ,to" • ,.t,t , .. ,,,.... A ,.w _ d",p' M,,, ... p.,," '''' ",,,t.d _ I" tM M., ... hld Ch",g' Whit ... It" tb., b,d h .. , h"t" 6-5 by ,. I fused to say where hockey fits i:. '1 Fott ... p,,,,, out "'" '49 .. t I. hrl,bt """,I" .. tlw " "I"" ".totlri .. t" " tho "",.t tho .. mp. .t ","h, C,,-' So< "1I"td,, ,.,,,. I,,·-tb. "" tb. CO .. , st""t-m"",d Am- ",," Y .,th tho D''' ..... ~. .. U. "td b, h.. "t yo( d ..... · ',' 'Id 't hIli' M final rinsing adds a pleasant but rag·h. Tuesday floodl'l"hls '''ere I·n. time the .Amerlcan, League. had erican Leaguers. . \ unliappy as any of. th~ NatIOnal I whether to cut all hi's ties will :

I Il'\ pi c, e mg a'll two teams played their third game ' b ~ b f T d "5 t hId Le guer H h t f th not overpowering, scent. stalled to foil attempled night wun, .e ore ues ay s.U' . rlUmp. The. payers &Iso. p~alsc t~e a. s. e. was I Dr rce hockey. in which he has played ,. breaks W hen the seventh lIIn1ng Cilme AmerICan League pltchmg, parhc· runs 10 the ninth. 1 prominent role for 33 years. ' 'I

Prim'e Minister Eamon de Va~ and t~e Ame~ica~s were leading u!arly the job .or starter Jim Bun- \ . Alsto~. passed it orr by, sarlng

He said in an interview } I lera Monday night took power to 3·0, Mmoso said, I thought I w~s mng of DetrOIt. Simply, lately, Clem hr.sn t pitch· mailed his refusal a week ago II arrest and hold persons without going ~o have .a vnca~ion.1I Alston praised Billy Loes! the. ed a~, good as he has done in the Saturday. trial under provisions of th Of But m the mnth Mlnoso had to Baltimore hurler who relieved \ past. . He would not commit hims,·. fences Against the State Act~ . gel bar.k to work, doubling. ho~e Bunning in the fourth. Loes once ]n .the ninth !nning t~vo runs further.

The roundup of the IRA sllspects wilat proved I~ be the \:II~mug played for. Alston's Dodgers. 1 were m. Hank Foiles of Pltt~burgh The Telegram sa)'s Day rejeetll' -the biggest ~ince the Second run.. Then,. Wlt~ .the· NatlOn~1 The Nahonal Leaguers took. the I was on. second and Bcll on first af- a virtuai "name.your·oWJ1.terml World War-rollowed a me<!ting of staging & nmth:mnmg .ral.IY, ~IS defeat ~vithout any outw~rd slg~s t~r a Single and a walk. ~lston de· . offer from the AHL. 1

de Valera's cabinet. perfect throw ~Ipped Clncmnatl's of e~ollon. 'fhey p~ured mto thClr clded to let Mathe~s s~mg away Lou Pieri, AHL director fe I The IRA Is an extremist organi. Gus Bell at third lor the second dressmg room qUlctly, most of \ evcn though the Sltuu\lon ~ould Irovidenee, returned home Tue I

zation pledged to unite Ireland by out. them with little time to catch have called for a bunt. day from a vacation in Maine 1\ force if necessary. In recent' Exc.ept for lIIinoso thou~h,. the trains or planes back to their own "I t~ou~~t about bunt.ing," AI· learn of Day's decision. monlhs It has made violent raids AmcrlCa.n Lea. guers weren t m a teams to resume the hot pennant I ston said, b~lt Mathews IS a good "We did e\'crything we cOuld I into the counties oC Northern Ire- cclebratlllg mood-they were stm race. left handed hitter and leC·handers encourage him to take the job, \ land, which are politically part of ,~ec~ing the effects of that ninth Alston defended his strategy in don't bother him." The Telegram quotes Pieri in the United Kingdom. I mlllllg scare. the ninth inning when the Na· It . turned out lefthander Don telephone interview. "There WI FED UP WITH IRA Stengcl used the sudden col- (ionals rallied for three runs and Mosslof Cleveland got Jtla1hews no question of the terms, salal \

The premier Is said t~ have I lapse of White Sox ace Billy had the tying run on second when out on a called strike. Or anything except Hap's beit made it clear he was fed liP \;'ith Pierce in the ninth as a signlll to Dodger Gil Hodges pinch·hitting Willie ;\Iays, the New York available. I was very dis appointE : the IRA. He said it had tried 10 I resu!"'e his campaign for a ,rule for tcammate C!em L.abln~, .I!ne~ ~i .. nt speed merchant in ce~ter· and the league will be.. : take the law into its o\\'n hands' barrlllg the usc o[ AIl.Star pitch· out to Minnie ~hnoso m left held. fJeld, Sized liP the defeat qUickly The Telegram says It learne; and brought in prol~sh Crom the II ers as starters immediately be· Minoso, who replaced 'fed WiI· for all hands. Day also rejected an altemath' British gOI'ernment and govern. lore the Il!id.senson ~Iasslc. Iiams or Bosto~ in the bottom of "They just g~t away f~om liS part·time post which was off~rl ment of Northern Irclanc1. .. "Bully JUst. got tired," Casey the eighth, earlier had thrown out early and we Just couldn l calch when he turned down the full-tim

Polltlr.a1 qtlartj!rs here said nn. said "r..nd it's no wonder-he GIIS Bell, who tried to go .. II the up-but we tried." 1 proposal. other renson for the 5\\'OOP mh;hl just pitched, ~alnrday." . way ·to third. [rom first o~ a .--0 -----------.

have been gOl'ernment fears that . SWINC, TO POWER? single by Ernie Banks o[ .Clucago serious border incidents mlltht Does the American League vic· Cubs. prop up Friday, July 12/ ",lien tor)', ij's second in the last. eig!lt DID RIGHT. THING . I Northern Irishmen. celebrate Or. All·Slar games,' mean I SWIng III . "I think Bell did th,.. right RJlScmen's Day. . the balance of power thing," the Quiet - spoken AI·

The majority of Nortbem Trlsh ."Nmv, this was jusl R nine In· ston said. "It would have been are Proteshnh while ~olllhern I nlns gallle," the Yankee manager I pretty nice to have. had that ty· Ireland Is RaDIan Catholic. answered. "We have a lot of good ing run on third base with only

On Orangcmen's Day the Prol- youns pitchors coming up though." one out. I had wanted him to go estant Norlhern Irish celebrate The menfiol\ of Jim Bunning, ·for third if it looked like he had their British conncctions. the winning . pitcher, brought a a chance. "It.. took a perfect throw

Political quarters said the gov- wink from Stengcl.. throw to get him and MinosO made ernmen~ fe~red not only possible "I'd Say h'e pitched real good." made it." . . . IRA raIds mto the north but re- Bunning pltchcd a perfect three Bell himself said In the dress-venge raids by the Northern Irish innings as thc starting pitcher, reo ing room that he thollg~t ,?C was Into southern Ireland. tiring all nine men he f£.ced. The safe but "I guess I wa~n t. .

25 i: year o{lld Detroit righthander Bell, who ha,!,m~red 1!1 two ~uns was dandy with I fast bal! and in the seventh IIlDlUg With a plIlc.h sweeping curve.. double, consoled Hodgcs on hl9

Bunning, a six.foot.three player line !Iut which ended the game by

~. you'll want ' week'. lUI' .':

t everywhere.

LONDON (Reulers) - Petition forms to Ihe Queen signed by nearly 40,000 persons were taken to governmeJ1t offices in London Tuesday asking the government to stop hydrogen bomb M!sts pending International· a g r e e mcnt. They were left by Mrs. Lucy Masterson, widow of a former cabinet minis­ter.

from southgate, KY., said he saying:" . wasn't liS nervous Tuesday as he "It was just hit too hard. It Just is before a regular season game. stayed up too long.".. .

"This was great sure but it Frank Robinson, Cmcmnah out-jqst doesn't mean ~s mu~h to me fielder, figured in ,me of the odd· as a regular season game." est plays of the ufte;noon. Whe~

h I Portugal-Bullfighter Vitortano De La Serna is thrown into the air by s orns of a bull at Lisbon's Campo Pequeno Arena.' Horrified expressions can een ~nhthe faces of spectators in the background. Luckily, the matador es-

Wll out serious injury.' .

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ROAD' CLEARANCE UNCHAN·G,ED·

, . .

Thirteen Locals of the New· foundland Federation of Fisher· men have gone out of existence since the' organization was formcd live years ago, an ofEiciltl of 1hc Federation stated last nisht. He said' that reason for this reduction was. the Increasing trend towards centralization which saw the resi· dents of many smali .communitie5 move to· more populated areas.

It wi15 also stated that the Federation presently consists of Bome 240 10ca~ with a ·member· ship In excess of. 6,000 fishermen.

Alt members have registered for the Unemployment Insurance for fishermen which is payable In January, 1957!

Tc .. mmate Ai Kaline made a Ed Mathews o[ Ml1wauk.ee ~It neat stop of Eddie Matthews' hard to right field in the fifth Ill' fifth.inning liner and threw to ning, Robinson started for second second to force Frank ,Robinson. and then rctre.at~d. He wabsbthdrot~n The Cincinnati star had held up, out by Al KaJmc, who sta e e thinking. Kaline would catch the ball on a sharp bounce. drive. . DID REAL WET.L

"It was it real laugh pJay," Ka· "There were no OIl.tS and. I line s"id. The young rightfielder didn't want to be runnlllg," Roblll­said he didn't fake a .catch, just son said. "Kr.line cha:ge,d t~at chargcd the drive as hard as he ball real well. He dldn t miSS could. He stabbed it just after it catching it by much and. then I hit the ground. would have been doubied up."

Kaline had 2 for 5 including an Robinson's decision possibly nip-important two.run single in the ped a fun in thc fifth. He had sin­ninth. • . gled and Mathews had stroked a

Bob Grim of the Yunkees, who liner which would have easily retired pinch.hitter Gil Hodges on gone for'a solid single had Robin· a' driVe to Minoso with the tying son been on the move. run at second in the ninth, said he Clem Lr.bine, the relief ace , was "just lucky," who has fallen into some bad days

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,:.\! 'j}: _ THf NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY f'l,t', • ,i~-----------------------------""------';"------------:----_.....;~---~---------..;.;.;...o,.-...;;.;;..-:.:.;.-.::~~-~:...:......:..:..:..:.:~

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North and south vulnerable Sou", Welt North East 1", Pass 4'" 5", 5 " 6 '" 6 ... Pass Pus 1 '" T ... Pass PaM Double Pus Pass Pa .. . Optllm,leed-+ A -BY OSWALD JACOBY

Written f.r 'NEA Service Today's hand has enough ire·

lowrks for any Fourth of July. It decided an Important team match some years ala and decided It thoroughly.

Thl bidding Ihown here took place at table one. West decided to play possum with his freak hand and did ovemll. Naturally he WI.! lurprised to hear hi' part· ner bid five clubs and eventuallY raised him til seven .clubs Ifter North ]!Ushed him,

When North went on to seven ,paties West doubled hlpplly and laid dDWi his Ice IIf diamonds. Declarer ruffed In dummy and racked up 2,470 points for the doubled grand slam. Of cllurse a club lead would have beaten him but West wa. looking It 13 earls only.

At the other table West adopted oppasle tactics and leaped rlgbt to five diamonds over the opening spade bid. North bid five spades. HI only held two jacks, but 6-6-1 distributions don't groy; on trees.

East raised to !ix diamonds and South it got back to South, he doubled, It looked 81 if I good· sizer penalty was coming up nnd ' he did not think he could make I

lrand .Iam. Poor North ,ot his hand on &

heart and West ruffed and spread his hand for the diamond grand slam. A plus of 1,770 since hi! Iide was not vulnerable but I

11'081 profit of 4,140 when 'added til his partner'l Ilro!lt at the other table.

I have llwa~. blamed North at table tv;o for hb side's de­bacle. He should never have let the ftpponents play the hand

'\ since he must, ha\'t known that . thert was lome ehanee ,for his

\ partner ta make the vulnerabl,e zrand slam and no chance to set

,the opponents . anything more than • fls,h cake.

Q-The bidding hu ~n: North East South Wut 2 • Pass 8 , Pass 3 N.T. Pas! ?

You, South, hold: .KQ.T10Da ,,32 .114 ",743 What do you do? A-PII$I. Your partnn lUI!

heard 1/our three·sparl~ bid. TODAY'S QUESTION

After your three-spadl bid your partner h.. raised you to [our spadeJ, What do you dll?

A Tl!We1' TomO!'101D

Battle In Senat~ 'On Civil Rigbts

WASHINGTON ,(AP)-A Senate battle of historic proportioos be­gao Monday wh~n, Republican leader William Knowland o[ Call­/()rnil moved to call up the ad­ministration's elv!l' rlght~ bl\l.

I 'J'he' bill was ImmedlaLelz ~t­, tacked by SenaLor Samuel ErVin

(Oem. N.C.) as the "most drastic and indefensible" legislatillD ever submitted 'to Congress,

I Southem senator~ are deter-mined t. try to kill it as they

! have all other civil riZhts ~ellisla­'lion in reeent yUr!. A fUihuster

rna,. develop from this effort. Senltor Lyndon :8. Johll!on of

TexII, the Demoeratic leader, said Iwl 1118 been informed by Knowland no other business' will be allowed o-efore the ~nate un­tU the civil rizhts issue is settled exeept for measures of "extreme urgeney" IIr bills that could be handled by unanimous eonsent.

Senitor Richard B, Russell ,(Dem. Ga.), the leader of the : S f) U the r n opposition. jumped , I(ulckly inlo Ihe fray '\\'ith ~n R~' I ~el'tion that bnckcrs or thp. civil Lrigltls biU havp. tried to "make

\' Ihr south the whipping bor of the

na tiOA." I "They are tryinJ: 10 make us a : bear, heinl! poked At all of the' I timp to make it dance!

I "W~ \l'ilI resist-we will rcaist," Knoll'land has said he will force

the Senate inlo round· the ·clock se!slons i! It became apparent that southerners were trying to talk the bill to death.

The bill would empIlIreh the &I­\erney.general'to take into federa courts the Mse, 01 persons whose civil rights were deemed violated or threatened, and to protect their Interests by seeking federal court Injunctions. Tlwse disobeying in· junctions could be tried by a judge for contempt, without I jury.

11 would also establish a special division In the justice department to ilandle dvil rights case~ Ind II'ou)c1 seL up a bipartl~an com· mission tn make I hl·o·year study __________ .... ~-_.;...------------....;.----I If elvil ,I.htt prllhlems. :

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~hops

...

• ~ •••••••• ri ........ ___ ... _._ ••••• _ ....... . - ... -_ ... __ .

, .

Eledrical Appn.nclI Gift Shops Jewellers " . Pidure Framing ~

LARACYI Al\T SUPPLIES R. J. COLEMAN Lm. BAINE JOHNrroN KEMEMlllANCI mop THOMPSON'S ART mop

DUSTBANB COMPANY, Lm. I" IOND rr. • IJ'RL~GDALI ft. "."'oundlalld'. Clean.1It

CUU, (Jam., TOJa. JEWELLERY W'll_ Colour and OII·Palnt-

word. Obtalnabl. at A'-er .,.,... ... Nov.ltl.: Cout'. Carda 101 WATEI ft. bill paint".. rtqU.at .., rut. Efficient ,servl_ I. 1. COLEMAN LTD. IQ Wa .. It • DIal 11. for .U oecillolll Wh.n .eleetf':f, • Dllmo.d Pa.1 ParlOlII.

I11.tL 10S7 " ••• 61 DUCKWORTH ft. YOUR FlUGIDAJU DIAL Itli DEALU JH&I, ... IbIi ." our p vate I>lamoud DIn INN

• ooth. DIAL UII

Confectionery HlAP Ir ~:.. " G-r-oc-ers---- ~,----- Photography uREiim).j',i=====:: w=t .. )(~:r~:1:.,.... __ ~' _____ Matches

CONFECTIONERY tlapa, Switch_, L1lhtlq _________ GARLAND'I m1D1O

CI,arttt_, lPruit, Jet er... ".t.UII~~C8I". "'WALSH BRYMAY .. PL!ASAN'I' "I. ,. tGlllplel' Un. tC AUTO ACCESSORIES

al",m In 110«* Dl!L tIlU

IJId Drinka. DW. .... 1_ .IN LEADIM .AFETJ MATCHEI Wtddill:~"tot~ortnJta '"~ ~,. Geld lint... &JlOClKY LINlllI. ... .......... ~ 1-

..".. Streea. Dial .1IM ~ ....... .,. . "iii ~~.: 7CIII .... ftANK XelUJIAU L'I'D. .. C ,MNlal Ph..,. ..

Electrical Service. .• "ATKa rtf. wUr ..... It. Dial II"·" Parts (Whole) Contradors Nfl" W. BURTON

Armltult BUILDE .. or Worb BODERN HOIIIII

38 lIodernllllll, ltemodtlllD .. Bambrlek Jtep&lr Work.

Street ." IAMarehut Roe .. »\1\ mI.1 DIAL em

JONES IL!CI'IIC --""'t • PUICO'I'I' II.

DU.L MIl. .,....u ..... lIoten. 4am!:b1tenl IroeI ... III _ 014 AppBueIL

em ILECI'lUCAL -- JJ.,1C'I'Ilc.u.---....... Insurance . COMPANY, LTD. IEIlVlCl , amzOtl'l"l aBt'ftIeAL rol '!'RlI BErr IDVlC&

&JeTKICAL WOD ..... eal c..... . IN TOWN .. "......... -CALL ".. ' .. 111m'., JIf""""" ..... IIM

JlAItOLD SNOW ----. Ir 'ON, LTD.

ERVines

CHtIl\CHILL'S ___ _ SUPERMARKET

~.70RTUGAL COVE .. ~ ...... IOU caD buy ,.our noeerl_ jult at eb"p u in St. John', lIIeI lIav. tl1em dellver.cI t. JOur door without eharelL

lV. Ii" D.P.8. ltam,. ,

Garbage

Meat Wholesale CAMPlBU'1I )fIAT JlAltI[ft

Ift"~ -=-~DVCII

ll lIBAn: Br PACDU ftYPBODU~ , . cr, JroIlmI ft/lIIaOII

PACIONO COJIPAlft POIUt uC BEEr PJlODUCTI 'PlIOjfJl "' •• 1 .. WAD. II.

CMmACI--------~ -------------__ DISPOSAL , De.JOII Ila" • ,arba,. JIb. .... 1 probl.m In ,our ba .. IIIIIt or ,ardenT I JOU hava, .U JIIIII·' and ,our wtJriee ..tun.

Meat Wholesale H.C.n~-------

END BAKERY--' m fiNEST BREAD, tillS an4 PASTRI. I... fI N .wfolUlClllII'

........ m.ftIf ... "_IIBU_ ..... ............. Contractors Supp".

j' .. ~6=t='---' -H-ar-d-w-are--s.t-o-re-J-KtI ....... G. ..

I'Ill LIM til,.. ,uti. .... fl. W.l'I'D II.

:JW, tal

WlIolua1t Pr .. Pak ... h, ..,aI rama 1114 ]51_ , ... 1:: Cuta .nd CarCUI " .. a ". and Puddlll,.

DIAL .7.

IlII O'Q1 IIIAL 2.r

l1NlTED NAD. AND-­rOUNDRY co,, LTD. Meat Markets

CAMERA mo, --­IT LONG'. lOLL

DIAL mIL

lULL LINI O!' PHOTO IUPPLIES ALWAYI

IN BTOCK..,

Paper Products THE LAWRENCE __ ---,

NFLD. co ... LID. X"" Locati081 .·Ill DUCKWORTJI rr.

7aper lAd. Paper ProdueU, WHOLESALE ONLY DIAL'~. TOI

Publishers VENTURE PUBLICATIONS

, Ctamlve!al Publl.hID, 04-AdvortiJln ••

KaIUlD_ Pamphl.ta, :Jrothur., Com pin,

Jft'll'lPlpm, Prolllmi MAL.., P.O •• OX K-MU

Recruiting FLY wrm 1lIE R.C.AJI'.

ror full Informatica DIAL un

lOYAL CANADIAJr

Scales

Am fORCE aeC:rultfn K Unitt 1'7 WAUK ST •

rOll .l un nmm& ... the NAVAL

UCRUITlNf OFFICER AT

123 WATEll IT. DIAL UUI

FRED V. cimOON Lm,

. TOLEDO FOOD .t.n 8CALE MA(:aINU.

Jaeetrlc Kent IaWl DIAL 111M

Service Stations

1~51

Stoves·

R W. BARNEt ---..., Dr .rrOcz.

IOITON Dim OILBUllNEU

lIiImedlate Deliv., DIAL 11711

TRASI lOUNDItY LTD, liZ W.lT:U IIf. Jlullh~, ..

MAID or AVALOtr ud

UGALltAHe • DIAL IIU • " ..

Taxicabs A·I TAXI-----,...-I

CALTD An. Jttu. 11M • '''' ADrwbll", /.1lJ plHe,

Any tim •• II 1I0UB IEBVICI

PALMER'S ----~ ACE and SUPER TAXI --. SERVICE STATION

TOPSAII, ROAD lOR THE MOST zmcmtrr "WASHING "GREASING IERVICI IJ( TOWM CALL

TIRE ltEP.URI .lCE .. !lurra TAXI DIAL uti DIAL I&H . 11M

RAU,WAl' -----..... SERVICE STATION

Gre... IDd on ChaD,_ Auto Aeeelllorlu.

OPEN 141 HOURS DAILY DIAL 10111 '.

Tile Floors NO OOW1L ____ •

'----------, PAYMENT i IAIY nlUll i

. I ,-"

; .\ I. . :.j .

,!: t ·i

I ' , 1 'I .,

I : .j

., , , ,

., ; I

I

:" 1

',I ; \

1 I

I , !

Parlours

IWIn.TON ATINt/II ... thIa .nd VlDtilatkle. •

.anetut a1 ad "'bIfeNIIt( 1tte1.

IUL .It Florists JIM MtII.DI---­... JUIIIlV.l'I'D ...

PDJmim.L lOAD DLUNet

_Jt.i:t ap-tNatt Xttt Market

CALL M. I CUOT roNSTRUCl'IO~ I

AND 8UPPLDI I· L----~ .

Radio-TV Repairs Service Stations JI, ;

Customs Brokers f

P. r, COLLINI----. HI Jmr IOWB •• .ICLWITI ~ 4LL

CUITOJD WOM --------------~ Mill Supplies

ILECTBONIC CENTRE t.l". oil UDIO JlBCEIUIII aEPADtED IT OPERTS

.u1Nlt~ .. Fut 8.mea.

c.u.L 'JIlS or MID .. CAMPBELL AVL

MABSHALL MOTORS -. ---:.;., rIlK fIIB.

IJUII'anteed IBldnn C~ia, 1l1owouu. BnUlitl.

Under Inflatfon. CaB MARSHALL MOTORS

Water !It. Dfai 80811

I I .

Tobaccos !' I

I

F it 'St WM. HOIIWOIlTHf -- SHEPPARD II ------. ~.lIrtl ill __ "" __ · ...... ortJ ____ -H-e-n-'-ng----- LlMlTBD G-U-A-T-I-ASTE-RN--On.-- IERVICEITATIOX,

IUI..,... ,.. GEORGE WASHINGTON

DiJtributtd bJ J'JIANK

)[eN'AMAllA LTD.

I· ! II " \ .. ,i ., I.: !I!

1 •

PERMANEN'l1. -~---___ _ 1" PATRICK n. D J" m.TIHG,lOLft MId lro'lJ COMPANY, LTD. TIRE REPAlltINCJ

DIAL DOl e leatessens JMPIU ram ft'OIII TAPII ud DIEI, • WASHING .,. 1M Jr dint ..... III .11 "ATEll n. . UPADI TO lIADIOl, T.V. JATl'ERY CHAltGING

jEijUiniiTii;":::i==:: - _ft . . DIAL .111 AND ALL ELECTRICAL GREASING

DIll l1a .. ,

'IIUDrI---_ IELl1. PArI'll! 1M ...... __ 'JJ. c.1IIJIOf---- APPLIANCES. DIAL 1101

ftUDl'lllJ'f" rail. DELICATIIDN. I: ...... ft I:t If .. ,." IOW_ II. »UL 10&1 .... 1tur 1111 ))mIl1II_ ......... ... .ulloa ud IlJllritD- III M1CKWoatJI ft. -.- , IIAI. 11ft ~ual\l7 Inll'ti\l •• tI. -. DIAL 7tf7 110 .... , • Oils, LubnOcatlO nil

100 .... , DAY. A ".. • .~=~.. II,.

cYCLESTOREJ

" IftINODALI ft. AI ItteI 1kJ_

Chain Drive '!'rt.,tl.

IIAL .. "

Materials

.............. 11 ......

Drug Stores CONNORS DRUG rrou . LUDDI" (lOU .. IDUI'

a. be 1btaI ... lit

IONNORI DRUG ITOAI 1M "AID II.

DIAL ....

Fire Insu, .. --------- DNEIT tI.OUIJ'OIiI, _ ...... -

, . ,f.

LIMlT&D IIICL\ft AVfOlIAfJt

W.A.IK.AlI COMDlTiOJOM8 /

.. ".lID II. IIAI. ftII

'--_______ 1 _________ (I,.l. JlVlLIl, L1'J).---' ILt1fDIlfl ... ""'I'DfI

TR!ATM PRARMACI I LOCATJOJ!M& t .... au. Aft ....... ",lNai -,lUll ut

...... ' ...... ,l1li..,

Fish Stores I IIIftUCI'OM .... a-.s.11t11

ern ,. _-~-. • .." ..... -.t' ..

I.l.1ID&I. ~-" •• 1IW1lM

ft, ... 'OPIAIL Q. J. all 7OIr1ldl1llt ..........

" .. IOJDTJ LTD.-­.... .le ...

"ulo-.lP( .. fMI'IOI. OILI (CAJlfDA)

lI1'D.: . ......... Xu" ....

JUL.

'lints . nANlLYM PAINT rrou l . ..t.INTt roa .901'

rtIItPO ...

1:1 for "'111 paiDt job. . pItt. ~tHlt. IloO. flit II!rftet aU 801111.

~ PINN1'WELL JlOD

J.U)JO m.nrJlON--­

naVie. (NnD.) Imt ..... 'r.1'~ ..... _ .... ............. .,.lL _ ...-.. _, Wo,III.,. _.

JACK'J ItADIO mop---. LONG'I IIJLl,

amrar UPAI1UdI:K .. IADIO .nd T,V.

.... lIrtt In Auto Radi_ DIAL 'lUI

WEST END ___ ----'_ TELEVISION'

'l'V·lladllH:ar lladio JlQIln . ,'1'05 WATER STREET

CALL .865 At JftIht, Da7, Bolld.,. .. hela, far Faat Service Illd

Guarantied wort call 77271..

~1IIt1ta1l IUIo -

"Ill - 11111. Dry Cleaning ............. , ,...... Hearing Aids Pianos .0_ Organs Real Estate Maten'als --------- A. W. IROWN .-----...

DOWNS DRY----. ------"1". - A. L COLLII ---..... I CLIANING LTD. 'FurnlOture Movers HEARINC Pint pd OrBIII Ihowrooll: BAL ISTATI At'I!HT , CDYtrill1 It. Johll'. with CLAS5E1 . yo~r~9~~AD • PA'I1UCK minT

ralt, E1fidlnt 8em... . CALL 'l'BONB JON It IAJIILTON An HOUSEHOLD MOVEN- 8. W.IHOItT hIMI7: ,w·oter.It., Hr. (Jra ..

DI!L .... ar IHIPPERI LTD. DIAL lIlY •• 01 881

Electrici.ans .' WAIl1NI, DIESEL .­EL!CTluCAL ENG. , .

roDA'fUO PaUl ... er.tm" 1Id-.­

AlMu for Alll.d V .. -UMi. I'.c.mll ....... .... "55; Offk:t MIll ..

, LlDDW'I

EXPRESSLm; 11;1 DIHmWOUII •• !f!!!L .... !lei ,="u __

r==. :-ft . .\. ... ~;,., ........ UIIIW v .. .....

. D. a. r..J»RZW, XUI'_ 0lIl •• MIl, WueJao~ ...

Home Industries Photo 'Suppftes. WHOD JIRTHDAn

, A1l.ANTIC mMS AND-' . ........, . _dIIIa. artIaI. ELEC'l'RONlCl LTD.

.... MONIA If .. til. ItIt ~amer .. alld I'lliIII, will ... Meter., na.h Guu,

J:n1arger Aceeum .. , . DIAL 1tT1

Recruiting

ARJrt IEClUmNG

rrATJOJII

WWATDI'I.

DIAL lOIN

GALWAY'S lRVING--'" SERVICE nATION Cwo IIlI.IItH! It C.VI Ittl • t GREASING, W' ASHDfCl,

ImdONIZINa 0lIl 8ptclaHt,.. DIAL .....

Shoe Repairill9

Truckil19 WHEN YOU w.urr J,. nua

'I'II0Jf& .. 81N", DUCEING IDVICI

.,na,"II. IL 'Ph ... 11M Fnrnlhln ••• PI.II. "0= IIpedaltn liN en .. ,. BIrL

MODERN mOB Upholstering HOSPITAL

Now 11th' tfcl. to M" 70ur . STANDARD BEDDJNO mOM ]lEPAIUD COMPANY, un.

. THE MODEI.N WU Two LoeatiOlU: ftClALJITI I ON WATEJt rr. 17PBOLSTDIN

",. Jlowrlnp IIId ....... laitor-mad. III, Ceof_

DIAL ''''

. Snack Bars ,

ED'S LUNGH ___ _

»IAL an.

Used Cars ADELAIDE MOrO!~­

LIMITED

WELL COOKED rooDi rul DELIVERY OOU!TEOUS IIEBVIt3.

roR A CAR yOU CAl' DEPEND ON CALL

ADBLAIDE MOTOR. LTD. DIAL 3011

Soft D'rinks =

Wood-Coal Denvery - -AJJ,DID AGENCIES--- MIKE'S COAL AND

FIltISRII WOOD DELIVERY wttb Freo Trieolour P'laabllt. DIAL nil

CALL &615 ALLIED AGENCII'Ji W. Gh'e ths P'uteat Semet . . lD St. John' • 11'1 New Gower SL '

Designed 'For Our . , Readers'· Convenience •• 1 . '.

'. . . ... j -_. =---=---: .. -::-.... -~,,:

, f , I I ..

• i·

i , ~

;, I : ;

\

FOOTBALL To-night 7 p.m.

DIVISION II

ST. BON'S VS_ , ..

GUARDS PRICE 25 CENTS-CHILDREN 5c.

GRANDSTAND IDe. EXTRA

Newfoundla.nd Services

PASSENGER NOTICES ST. JOHN'S·LEWISPORTI

S'ERVICE M.V. Bonavista for regular

ports St. John's·Lewisporte Ser-' I vice will sail from the Dock Coastal Whar.! noon to·morrow, Thursday.

CONNECTION GREEN BAY I SERVICE

Train "The Caribou" leal'ing I'

St. John's 5 p.m. to·morrow, Thurs· day will make connection at Lcwis· ! porte with M.V. Nonia. for regular I ports Green Bay' Service.

THE DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY

Als~ BIRCH J,UNK.~ and KINDLING

CALL

Coady's Coal Dial 4249 6 SPENCER ST.

For the BEST in FUEL janlB,lm

FOR SALE \

Motor

Station Wagon in ~

\ c~ndition, . abo pall!

\ Willy's Station Wagon.

\ DIAL 90231.l.

__ ~4_. ____ - - -

! I PLUMR ~jr.

P. M. FREIGHT NOTI.CES

FREtGHT LEWISPORTE· CORNER BROOK SERVICE Freight Ll!wisporte - Corner

Brook Service for forwarding via Lewlsporte and 5.5. Springdale

, will be accepted at the Railway Freight Shed to·O::ay, Wednesday

Public Notice 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and to·morrow,

to nil tn·\ ~ SYSle::s

'Phone tan:'>4.1~·

See Munn Motors big ad for particulars on the i

Grea! Car and Truck Sale \ now In progress. __ ~=.~.o~--:'=~~ • Thursday II a.m. to Noon.

'I'enders are invited and will be, FREIGHT SOUTHERN received up to close of business LABRADOR PORTS, ST. on Tuesday, July 16 for the install· JOHN'S TO GOOSE BAY ation of' Electrical Services in the Freight for southern Labrador Studcnt Union Building at the ports St. John's to Goose Bay Memorial UniYersity. per 5.5. Kyle will be accepted at

Plans and specifications may be the Dock Coastal Shed to·morrow, inspected in thc oUice of the Chief Thursday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Engineer of this Department and copies obtaind on deposit of $25 FREtGHT NORTHERI':I,.

\

With the Accountant. This deposit LABRADOR PORTS will be returned when the plan!; Freight for Northern Labrador and specifications are returned j{, ports per 5.S. Kyle for transfer

PA~IS, France-George R. Pearkes (center), Canadian Minister of Defense, Is shown with General Lauris Norstad (lem, Supreme Allied' Commander in EUl ope, snd Dann Wilgress, permanent Canadian represen­tative to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, dur ing the visit oI the Canadian officials to Supreme . '

1

a reasonable tender is made to M.V., Trepassey at Goose Bay Te:lders are to be accom~anled will be accepted nt the D~ck I

,by 'an approved, accepted eheque Coastal Shed to·morrow, Thurs ay in the amount of $250 as a surety 9 am. to II p.m. that the contractor will enter into a contract with the Department if his tender is 'acceptcd. This cheque will ,be returned to un· successful tendercrs when the con· tract is awarded. The successful tenderer will be expected to de· _______ -"----posit further sums to bring his total deposit up to 10% of the amount of the accepted tender. This sum will be returned to the Contractor 90 days after the ac· ceptance of the completed eon· tract.

Tenders are to be submitted In sealed envelops addressed to the

ST·ART NOW TO BUllO

'YOUR FUTURE . unders!~ned ~lth the ~ords "Tend. Three great years in the Canadian

er ~or EI~ct:Jc~: Sen;lces, Student Army can make you a better man. Umon BUlldmg written, Icross H . a steady job with all the the face of the envelope. ere IS

The Department does not bind advantages. Itself to accept the lowest /)r any _ VARIETY AND ADVENTURE tender. • EXCELLENT TRAINING 'BY

EXPERIENCED INSTRUCTORS R. MANNING,

Deputy Minister of Public Works. jlylO,13

PLJblic Notice

• GOOD PAY AND PROMOTION • SPORTS AND A HEALTHY

LIFE • FREE MEDICAL AND DENTAL

CARE ' • 30 DAYS HOLIDAYS WITH

PAY A YEAR .

If you are 17 to '40 and fit, make the next three years the greatest years of your life doing a worth· while job in the Canadian Army. These years will prepare you for a fine future ln either the Army or civilian life.

!iONI~~N. gnglmul-Qucrn Elizahrlh H is sllOlI'n with the British Commonwcalth Minlstrrsat- nllckin~ham Pabce where b1t>h;\hmstrJ's were dinner guests of Ille fllJc!t'1l. Front, left to right: Dirffp,11baker. Canada; ~lel1i~i('s. Australia; Queen Eliza.

edt: anld Desih'a, Ceylon. Background, left to right: hlacmiII an, Greal Britain; Louw, Soutli Africa; Suhrwardy, Pakistan; ~Va Icnsky Rhodesla.-(I.N. Photo)' Phone or visit your local Army Re· ___ --:-_____ . ___________________ ...:...__ Tenders ,~re invited Rnd will be cruiting Station or mail the coupon

': CLB' B · C '8':U . ke 51 persons lost their lives In tragic received up to close of business on below. ill eglns am,p eglO. lulr log H. eavy' Deatb. fires. The'Canadlan average is one Tuesday, July 16,. for the In· Army'Recrultlng statloa

P hli death In 30,000 of population. In stallation. of. Plumbl.ng, Heating 431 Water Street, •

I At Hr Gra U c Exams T II L I F' · Newfoundland last year the aver- and Ventilation ServIces ,I~ the St. John's, Newfoundland, I · ce ;,. 0 oca Ires age w~s one death in 17,000. Temporary .Classr?om .BUlldmg at T I 8·0:t94 " The Junior Tralnln" Cor 5 of Public examinations, which were . \ ' Ihe Memorial Umverslty. e.'

, '; the Church Lads' Brl/d 11 written all ol'er Newfoundland for' Provmclal Fire :lfarshall Ryan KASSEL, Germany (AP) _ A P!ans a~d specifi~ation5 may ~e Please send me, without obliga!lon, '!i Battalion. Invadcd H;:bo~r ~~a~~ Grades ]X and X. are now belnr'a~edllatsttlnllghltl'tbatb 2~1 pcr~lons Second World War bomb dis- Inspected In the office ot the ChIef details on Army career opportuni-'I . "estrrdav to spend the n xt • marked In SI. John's. ·~~e os Ie r \es y I re s nce covered In thc heart of this West Engineer of this Dcpartml1t and ties. : days unrler caUl'as on theelr ~~~n 134 tCAchers from various place, 'anuary, 1957. German cit~· during excavation for I copies obtained on deposit of $25 I grounds at Bear COl'c. P In Newfoundland went to WOI'" He also stated that In 1956 New· a new bililding \l'as neutralized with the Accountant. This deposit NAME ...................... - ........................ .. , ApprO);lmat~lv onc hunrlred and yesterday morning at m~hop 'Felli 'lundland's fatalities from fire enrly' Tuesday after several hun- will be returned If a reasonable ADDRESS ...................................... ~ ..

fifty lads arr a-ttendlng camp this College to mark the 1957 publh .rere higher than any other prov- dred frightened families had been tender is made. ,CITY/TOWN .................. ~ ............. - .. year. whJC his under tbe guidance examination papers .. ' \1 mce of Canada. Last year, he said, removed frm the area. Tenders are to he accompanied PROVo ................................................. . of Captain David A., 0 Edwards. Thousands of papers will be --- by an· approved, ,accepted cheque iT~EiiLiEiPHiiONiiiEii· .. i .. ·i· .. i .. ·i .. i .. ·i .. ·i .. ·i .. ·i .. ·i ..... · .. Camp Commandant,' and Lleut. markcd betwcen now and the mid· in the amount of $250 as a surety John V. Rabbitts, Camp Adjutant. die of AU(lust when the result~ 'S U MM E R that lIle contractor will enter Into

Next Sunda)' is Camp Sunday, from the. examinations will prul!. t,~,,:,j,',: a contract with ·the Department If MR .. MY~TERY from when the mcmi1er~ of the CnmJl will able be relcMed to the pulllle. "It his tellder Is accepted. 'I'his attend corporate rOlnmunion at 8 ~) cheque will be returned to unsuc- WALSH'S BAKERY is n.m. :md \1'111 para tie to St. Paul's R ,I V I ~' FLATTI ES cessCul tenderer when·thecontract $ Church for dil'ine service at 11" teeOl ( 0 ume hI 0" I is awarded. 'I'he successful tend· worth 89.00. a.m. ]11 the 3[(I'rllooll at 3 o'clock 0 A" I ti:2J erer will be expected to de· ~!!!~~!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!~,

: a Drum Head service will be held f n'nl'ld I posit further sums' to bring his ~ on the camp grounds. ' , LAOlES, step cooly the fash· lotal deposit up to 10% of, the , • It was reported last night Ihat lon·\V~.y ,this Summer in amount of the accept,ed tender.

The lads arc enjo"lnn themselves' I' It f t d FLATT J .. the volu'mc or airmail moved by I Ig I • 00 e' IES. Pick 'Tllis sum ,will, be ,returned to the , ' and are well aftcr ,their first night l' t p . . I . I from smartly t d t I ',as ern rOVIJjCla Airways duri"~ crCR C 5 Y CS Contractor 90 days, after the ac·

c season mt c ose, was the . cr· Ig ca lers and ccptance a! the completed eon-in camjl. In our report tomorrow th j I d I l'n SUlnnl I' ht I tl we will 31lYise thc memhcrs oC the highrst on record. cool nylon mesh in colors staff who arc takin~ care o( the I "'HITE PO\\'DEn BL tract: , . .Operatin~ frOJmG<1nrlcl' the 10c.,I" UE, Tend' ers ·re'to be subml'tted In lads In camp and other acth'illes, PINK d PANA'I \ n which \\'111 be h~ld during their alfrWHYI'IS clelil'crhcd ovcr ao.ooo hailS , to ;n II I. Sizes scaled envelopcs addressed to the I 0 ma to lIort crn communitir~ in • undersigned with the words "Tend·

say. Newfoundland and Labrador. This • d Carryon C.L.B. Keep the flag compares with approxlmaiely 17,- er for Plumbing, Heatmg In

flying. 000 bags delivered In 1956. . I Ventilation Services, Temporary Reason for the Increase In traf. Cl~ssroom Building" written across

fie 15 sr.ld to be the extended Win-I • the face of the enveolpe •.

D trr conditions In thr. north. In The/Department does not, bind epart.ncnt !n5n thc airmail ~cn'ice concluded! Itself to accept the lowe~ or :!DY on ~lay Hi, while lhiSj'car the opcr· II tender.

M e 1.1 ation~ were carried on' (or Rn e:\l.ra R. MANNING, , OVln~ nOUf)C month <15 cold weather held fast'i J)ellllty lI11nlstcr DC Public Works. the I ' The Provincial Departmcnt o( the ice on ponds and inlels. ' , jl~JO;l~ , Welcome Wagon

Highroads moved yesterday from . During the balance of the ~ca· Hostess the top floor of the Gourl House son malls will be dellvcred by CNR

. tn the ground floor of Watcr coastal boats and the small charter- $2 98 Fo'r' Fa'st' Taxi Wi" Knock ,on Your Door Street, and trucks outside the ed boats whlch operate around the I . with Gifts and Greetings, Duckworth Street doors of the C03st. \' S . 'bullding were loaded with d~5ks ____ .___ erVlce from Friendly 8~siness and lar~c cabinob 'for the short PETITION' QUImS ". -$3.95 HOTEL 'TA' XI' N • hb d Y u , L()NDON' (nClltcrs) _ Petl'tl'on elg ours an 0 r trip from the top floor to the bot· , tom. rorm~ to ihn Queen sil:ned hy Civic. and Social

nearly 40,000 persons were taklln . ,',DI-al 2424 -,2410 Welfare Leaders The tea50n the larger desks and

equipment had to be moved by truck was because the stairway

iIf\ill:lli . and passage way leading to the lower floors were too narrow, to

'move the articles without 100 much confusion.

. ,

to government offices In London ~ . 1!IimJrbe' . h f Tuesday asking the government 10 ~"" ... J. . ~ On t e occasion 0: stop lil'drogen .bomb tests pending '.' ' UlIIWf, t. " .. ' . , QUEEN'S ROAP The Birth of a Baby, lnternationnl . a g r ee men!. They _ • ' were left by Mrs. Lucy Masterson, ... J.~L. ' Open 6.30 a.m. t,o 2 ~_m. ' Arrival~ o~ Newcomers to widow o[ a former cabinet minis· I 1 _________ 1 C'lty, call 2503. '1'; ter. 1..-_____ ... _____ ..;...;.... ___ ..;.... __ ...

St. John's Municipal Council

TENDERS FOR LAYING HOUSING INTERCEPT! ' SEWER EXTENSION

Tenders are requested for the work of ~'ft.;_o."

cast iron pipe sewer from Bonaventure Avenue Elizabeth Street, thence through the Memorial grounds to Irwin's Road. '

Specifications for this work are available oi

office of the City Engineer:

Tenders must be submitted in sealed marked "tender for Housing Intercepting Sewer tension," addressed to the City Cleil< and del~c;ill,:L his office not later than 9.00 a.m. on Wedne5cay,

24, 1957.

The lowest or any tender not neces.arily

jly8,10,15

FOR SAL No~ '10 Winter Place:

(Residence of the late J. S. Currie)

This house, located In a desirable area, IS' In

condition.

For further particulars Dial 2178

may25,tf

St 0' INSUR .. eers· AGENCI

\)\~\; S()()1'

KI EWSP

I 18 23 '28 HElP

SOM are

MERCURY

MUMM

Requi

• BOX 21

agon in

ol~o parll

ion Wagon.

L 90231.L.

'"n and l\'l,n systellll

me 5578F )RESl ROAD

Ineil

'NTERCEPlING

ork of placing ~ Avenue norlh ;morial.,"',u .....

,pting Sewer and deposiled Wednescoy,

~LE r Place i. Currie)

in a most excellent

ticulars

:78

)URANC GENCIES

"

~_N_EWS, ~~ESDAY, JUL~ 10, 19~!: __ ~ ____ ,---...;~_ .. ______ ...-;._",-;,·':""'-__________ ~~ ____________ -";_~1,

KINSMEN PAPER BINGO

SERIES NO. C 1 TO.DAY'S NUMBERS

I 18 23 28

N 42

G 52 . 46

H£LP KIN HELP OTHERS

SOME NUMBERS Ire b,tt,r thin

oth.rt ! For flntr dry clunlnp DIAL 5J55 COUSINS (NFlD. LIMITED

o 66 69 72

MERCURY ........ , .. , ........ , ........... $1700.00

MUNN MOTORS, LTD. . .

IN STOCK

~XTERIOR BOND PLYWOOD FOR

• SUBF'.OORING • ':ONCRETE

• SHEATHING

FORMS

llterior Bonrl Plywood Is your answer to large area co\'p.r· I\!. III waterproof qualities have been proven and It ~('J1s

utrpmply rconomlcRI price. See your nearest dealer or write dired for further Information.

>.

HUG·O :lIMITED ROOprlNG and CHIMNEY SERVIC.

RI!SIDINTIAL, INDUSTRIAL, "WE STOP THE DRIP-WITH .

ONE TRIP" 460 WATER ST. DIAL 7840 . .

PROOF READER

anted Imm.ediately : Apply

THE DAILY NEWS

Required For Major Construction Project EXPERIENCED OFFICE MAN capable' of tak' . In9 complete charge of OHice.

EXPERIENCED PAYROLL CLERK •.

TWO STENOGRAPHERS.

have at least three ye~rs experience.

Apply to

Products (Nfld.) Ltd. p,o. BOX 2161, TELEPHONE 92141

ST. JOHN'S

CLOTHES make the man If CHAff mQkes th clothea ,

. WM. L •. CHAFE, Tailor . .., . .

.. HOLD 'WOR1H ST.

CARD

Dr. K. H. A. Marshall

WILL BE OUT OF TOWN UNTIL AUGUST 4th'

CLUB 'OPEN

5 P.M.

TO·DAY

. TENDERS

" are asked for the erection of foundation and

· frame,' including rough floor slabs and co!,,­crete spadrels for. the 'church of England' Regional High School,' Pennywell Road, St.' John's.' .

Plani and specifications are, available on de- . posit '0 f Fifty Dollars at the office of the Architect.

F. A. COLBOURNE, M.R.A.I.C., .. 5 Church Hill St. John's·

ST. .THOMAS' SUNDAY SCHOOL

will hold its

ANNUAL piCNIC _. on\ FRIDAY, JULY 12th, ~

at R.C.A.F. TRANSMITTER FIELD, TORBAY ROAD. Trucks will leave for the Field at 1 p.m.

. Teachers are requested to meet 01 Canon Wood Hall THURSDAY 8 p.m., to make final arr~-"g~~~~

_-----------••• 0_"

Wanted Immediately EXPERIENCED SALESMAN

Apply 'in writing to

Canada Packers ttd.

,

':. NEAL~S :. .:.-.lMSTOCI( MARKfT·,

AUCTION Wednesday, July S'

11.30 a.m.

40 Head Chqice ' . Butchers' Cattle

1 ~ Young Pigs Ex "Fergus" from P.E.!:

,BINGO I BINGOI AT HOLY ,:ROSS AUDITORIUM·

to·NIGHT' TO-NIGHT

CARDS SOc

• ATTRACTIVE CASH PRIZES, PLUS

BANK NI(;HT.

DANCE ST, KEVIN'S PARISH HALL, GOUWS

THURSDAY, JULY J H', MODERNAIRES ORCHESTRA

WANTED ~;lENOGRAPHER Apply

GREAT EA.STERN OIL CO~ lTD. WATER STREET

Velvet Horn Club

WITLESS

BAY

jlylO,d,13 ._--_ ................. - ..... -

OPEN TO·DAY

9 a.m. to 11.00 p.~. '

Food at Its b,st

Baseball .,

jlylO,ll -=.~:..----------------

FOR SALE 27 It. CABIN CRUISER

Carries 18 passenger~ comfortably. Sleeps 5 people, 93 H.P. Gray Engine '(very little used). Hull. and all equipment in perfect condition. This is a planked boat built in Nova Scotia in 1948 and is a real sea boat. BARGAIN, FOR QUICK SALE-TERMS.

Apply to . D. M. CLOUSTON clo TERRA NOVA MOTORS LTD. jl~'LO.41 ... _--_ ..... _ . .. _ ... _-_ .. - au

Conception Bay Notice

GARDEN'

PARTY JULY 28th

jly3,10,17

NO DOW~~ PAYMENT EASY TERMS

, Now Is u.~ time for your new

TILE or L.INOLEUM FLOORS.

. Also MINOR REPAIRS CALL .

Registered Nurse \

Req~ired for Work at

SUNSHINE CAMP CH1LDRENiS REHABILITATION CENTRE:

Apply in writing or in person to:

IAN G. KING Executive Secretary I

Sunshine Camp Associathfn 193 VVATER STREET

TO·NIGHT AT 7.00

HOLY CROSS .

The area from SEAL CO,VE to CARBON EAR is a Fran'chised area only. FLEETLINE BUSES are permitted to'pick up passengers for bus fares In this area. Only passengers that can give proof that they paid Bus fares in any privtlt.p. Cars or Taxi will be paid $25.00 (up unttl Cabot Construction

and Supplies Ltd.

DIAL 4065 ._---_...... . .......... _--VS.

ST. BON'S July 25th).

Dial 5658 Duckworth St.

Fleetline Bus Ltd. After hcurs call

MR. JAMES ADAMS. 7931H

I STADIUM DIAL 3262

-SALE AND TO RENT

Quantity of typewriters, add· Inll machines and cash reglll­teu '0 rent 14.50 per month. These machines are camp lei .. 11 overhauled.. Prices ranie

I Beautician

'

-MO-NA-RY-A-N n-eau-ty·-Sal-on,-=-T.A-. SCHEDULE' Building, Duckworth Street, I Jpeciallzlng In all methods . WEDNESDAY:

· from $25.00 to $100,00. Dial permanent waving, tinting and ROl.um SKA'l'[NG, 8 to )().oo cu\lng. Open Tuesday' and

· ~62F. je21,lm

Thursday nights. six operators. THURSDA YI Dial 5477 for appointment. S'r,\D1ml nANCE.

Barber' CASH PAID for comics, mlga· :dnes, pocket books, accordl· onl, guitar', gun" typewriters, 'HE' CENTRAL BARBER SHOP lewlng machines, men'. We are now operating six dothes and footwear. John D. chairs. You can be assured Snow, 9 New Gower St. of the best possible service

Princes Orchestra, 9 to 12,30. FRIDAY,

ROLI.ER SKATING, 8 to 10.

SATURDAY: ROLLEn SKATING: 2 to 4 afternoon; 8 to 10 night.

ImJune20. plus the hast possible walt· tng. 24 New Gower Street. ,Now is the time to buy!

Insurance opp. Allelaide Ml'tors, If you

P I: FOR RENT INIURANc ...... owrln. BrDth- prefer app"lntment service It's Christmas in July at

If Limited IJ\IUranee Depart· Phone 523t·A . Munn Motors Ltd. Free ment.--Fke, Automobile. Mar-""::" WES:':':T~E-N-D-C-O-A-L---SE=R:-:-V::-:IC::E:- h d Ine and all Casualty Unea. gifts for t e Ki s too! I

Shop with basement, Telephone 5166 or 5167. CW. Snalf) Coa~ :n,O{] bag: 3 ~::.::!::.::.::":"-:::~:::=-::;:;;;;;;- bags fClr $275; 4 bags for

central business section DEPENDABLE FIRII INSUR· $3,50; (I bags fOI $6.75. For - ANCI-Don'l risk yDUl' valu- k d II d' I 92959-A

Churchill Park. Avail. able. kI "Ill"" • few dollan., . qulc c ve~y 18 Our fair-rate. rellable polle)' 29 Pearce AVI·nue. lanll,1m

able early in August. livel immediate protection. .' Wall Washing I 'Phon. 1lU21 or write I. J.

Write Box 46 C/Oi Daily . Latty. P.O. Box GOII, rtDl.tf WALL WASHING-Walls Cit.", I R ed by new mDrhine. Results

News. ' . Cent.ct I,"H FOWLE , Jte..' perfect; lave~ palnt.-New· jl .8910 11 Bouf bulldlni, for Fire Auto- Method Rug and Wall Clean·

Yu, " , ' mobile and Plate O1an InSltJ'o IUICI. Cl.lms, promptly leW· . ers, Freshwater Road, 'Phone eeL Thone '55S1-P.O. Box 91033, . 8g25.1m a· HEW METHOD RUG CLEAN·

•• CURITY I, the ~'lI!nce Clf ERS. Rugs and C 8 r pet I Inaurlnce." The Sun Is out made to lnOk like ncw. Vo~ ." to give the best possible Schrader Dror.ess adds years

· aeellTlty and service In re- to life of rugs Cleaned In

GREAT EASTERN Oil & IMPORT CO., LTD. Radio, Televis\on, Washers,' Refrigerators. D'eep Freezers

Electrtic Rangcs, • Floor polishers.

Gramophones, Public Addrcsr. Systcll!S,

, Tape Recorders, REPAIRS AND SERVICE

. '5UNES DIAL 3001 to 3005

WATER ST. jan26,ly

TO RENT , R' ,

Superior spacious dwelling situate at No. 21 enllie s Mill Road. Furnished. Large detached garage. for further particulars and appointment to. view apply,

The Eastern' Trust Company PHONE 2027 jly8,9,lO

275 WATER STREET

Wanted Immediately .. A STE~IOGRAPHER.

Apply to

McDONALD WHOLESALE DRUGS, .LTD. forest Road.

SALES OPPORTUNITY Here is a Sales opening available 10 a .man between '25.38, married, presently- employed but I.ook~ng for greater income possibilities. Position provides group and retirement benefits ..

In replying pleas! state age, present, posit~on, s:lIing

~xperience if any, and number of years reSident In St. lohn's.· P.O. Box 809. jly4,6,B,10

IPfct of all classes of Insur· home or at our plant. Phone anee experienced." W. F 91033. N~w Mr.thod Rug

, 'Caldwell, Provincial General Cleaners. Fres~water Road. Agent. 1 Temple. Building,· --'-

Help Wanted-Male MAN OR WOl'llAN to take over NT established route in 51. J{Jhn's OFFICE TO RE for nationally advertised Wat· . . ' . kins Products, No money to

1951 R 0 V E R

$700.00

8alr~ Motors ~td MERRV ME!TING ROAD

DIAL 80318·9

Duckworth Street, 'Phone Miscellaneous 2485. ,mlso ... iiUITARS - Hor~r

-"I:':NV=I::"S-T-I:-:-N~R:'::E:-::ST=-.:-" -::SI-II-p- .Button Stop Accordeons ami Harmonicas. Richmond Sax!) comfortably. We Ipeclallte phones. Boosey Clarinets.-In repairing and recondition- Charles Hutton" 'Sonl, P,I) In, ,11 types Springs and reh3.1!Ild .' Mattres!es. G l' II' ant e e d tOBERT DAWE • SON, Flr~ work. . Mattressel for ·back Bnd Autllmobill.' In~UJ'ance

'ailments I r,>eclalty, 'Phone Be safe, be sure, Insure, Tele-6«9 '. or' 3361, . Standard 'Dhonp 28112. p,O Box ~ '~eddln!! Company. LId" ROY:l~ Bank Chambers, St. Flower Hilt. feb20,tf John'L

Invest. No expericnce need.ed as . we train you. Minimum earn· One heated office on WcMr Street in the heart of ings $60.00 weekly. Address your application to F. Granger, 350 Ihe business section. st. .Roch, Montreal, Quebec.

jly3,10,17,24 . For particulors apply . OVER a million {Ins of Wllde;'-s-' . l t C f ~~~~:~~ :r~~~~\eti~~dto h::~ I' '.The Eastern. rus· o~~any ! fcrers from stomach distress, . I ET

lntiigestion heartburn. At .. 11 I. PHONE, 2027 275 WATER STRE dl'u~gists, jlyB,9,10

.'

..

, :, t i 'I,t

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t.1i· I

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. : 'il . .. j

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I : ';

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I I

I

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i

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,

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Gints Wellinpon , JUST ARRIVED

TWO SMART NEW STYLES.

~ . GENTS' EMBOSSED QUARTER WELLINGTON

Sturdily styled with smart plain-to,e Calf •

leather upper with diamond design , embossed quarter. Adlustable instep

# . "

'trap. Metal "pull.on" loops. Compo-

sition soles and heels. Black. Sizes 6 . '10 11.

• GENTS' PLAIN QUARTER WELLINGTON

featuring sturdily c<lnstructed plain Calf

leather upper and. quarter. Metal

"pull-on" loops. Leather soles and

composition heels, Black. Sizes 6 to 11.

.'

$10·50

"THERE 60ES A BUNCH UP THAT D~W'-l'LL HEAP 'F.M BACK. DOWN TO "TH' FLAT I

BROWNIE Siivv CAMERAS These snapshot cameras make color slides too' . ' ,.

Just imaginel These r.m~rkable cameras make al/ three-kinds of pictures - .black.and-white snaps, Kodacalor. snapl, and colouUdes wllh new Kodak Eklochrome 127 FiI/I1. Easy too - .urn a "Y,r '0 the type of film you're using Icolor or biack­

'flnd,whit.) •••• hen iust aim and shoot. Lowest prices-everl

~~OWNIE STARFLASB$9.85 BROWNIE STARFLEX $11.50 . . .

TRADE· IN YOUR OLD BOX CAMERA TOWARD A NEW BROWNIE ST~R DURING OUR' EARLY-BIRD SALE.

Public Notice/ ,

OF THE

..... II1II001 Tenders are Invited and ~ilI be i h: D' d

received up to close of business' The Day C nst Ie . on Tuesday; July 16 Cor the install- Jim Bishop ................ $3.95 ation of Plumbing and Heating Th 0 . t' Man Services In the Student Union e rgamza Ion. Building at the Memorial Univers- William H. Whyte Jr. '6

itYpI~ns and specifications may be' The Scapes oat . inspected in the office of the Chid Daphne Du Maurrer.... 4 Engineer of this Department and Blue Camellia copies obtained on deposit of $25 with the Accountant. This deposit F ranees Parkinson will be returned if a reasonable Keyes ................... , ... ,,_ .. 4.50 tender is made . . TC'Ilders are to be accompanied The Town

by an approved, a~cepted cheque William Faulkner ...... 3_95 Irt the amount of $250 as a surety F F Th M t . !\... that the contractor will cnter in!o ar,. ar e oun alrt • coniract with the Department if Pen k his tender.!s accepted. This cheque J h· M 5 00 will. be returned to unsuccessful c n asters ............. , . tenderers when the . contract Is Inside The C.I.D. . lwardtd. The successful tenderer Ev-Chie,f Superintendent will be expected to deposit further sums to bring his total deposit up Peter Beveridge ........ 3.75'

. A Remarkable I~p~qvement in. the Weather has greatly advanced all Farm Crops the past

week an~ to help their ~rowth further we suggest a few

applicptions of NITRATE OF SODA, lithe magic grower" 10

. speed along produce for marltet. .

"A LIMITED SUPPLY NITRATE OF SODA AVAILABLE

EX OUR WAREHOUSE" -

'PHONES: 5143' - 5144

to 10% of the amount of the ac- Battle For The Mind -----------..:..~--------------cepted tender. This slim will be II returned to the Contractor 90 days Wi iam Sargant ........ after the acceplr.mce of the com- Fire, Burn ! pleted ,contract. J h D' k 0 C

Tenders are to be 5ubmiltcd in 0 n Ie snarr Bellied envelopes addressed to the I The Wonderful 0 undersigned ,?ith the word~ "Tend- James Thurber ........ _ ... 3.9 er for Plumbmg and Heatmg Ser- .. vices, Studel\t Union Building" D' k '& C L d written across the face of the I( SO., t. envel0p.e.

The Departmnt does not bind itself to accept the lowest or any tender.

R. MANNING,

The Booksellers 'PHONES 2008 - 3191 - 4425

Depllty Minister of Public Works. I _____ . _________ _ j~,13 _ I The Greatest deal in Car

. .. History is on at. Munn Boy Scouts .. Motors with Christmas in

· ··t St J 'h ' July featuring Free Gifts lSI • 0 n S" i for the Kiddies. About two bundred Boy Scouts, I ' ------

who ar.e. camping at Mackinsons 'Op'en FI'sh Plant for the fIrSt Boy Scout Camporpe In Newfoundland, arrived in SI. A C I' John's .yesterd_a~ morning by spec- _ t ata Ina lal tram to VISIt for the dol'.

They went in groups 10 Bm\>- It was announced yesterday Ihat rings' cafeteria and had their Fishery Prodllcts Limited" have lunch, and then' .went in srr.al! upened their new fresh fish pro­I!roups, escor:eoi by a SI. Joh:l's cessing plant at Catalina. Seoul to visit historic plilces in The new plant, which is mod­the city until 4.30 p.m. when they ernly equipped, has a capacity for met at the Stadium and visited for processing 150,000 lbs. of raw fish a while. per day. Employment will be pro-

Chartered buses were on banll vidcd in the plant for 100 per­to tnke the visitors from the Stad- Ions. ium to Bowring Park, where the The company plans to purcha~e boys were the guests of the Mayor !ish from local longliners and in­and City Councillors for ~upper shore fishing operations. before leaving here to return to their tamp. .

Boys from SCOllt troops all over Newfoundland are included in this group, many of them are visit­ing here for the first time, and the few hours in st. John's were a great thrlll to the first corners.

Fifty of the SeD'uts from Mackin­sons camp went to Carbonear yes­terday .while the others were visit­ing St. John's.

ALLOW USE OF PENS TAIPEI, Formosa (Reuters) -

School authoritles Tuesday gave scboolchildren permission to write ,,;th· foreign pens instead of the traditional brushes. Elementary school chlldren, Iiowever, will be encouraged to use brushes.

Ma!dstrate's Court , . A woman was before the !\Jagis­

trate's Court yesterday morning

FIRST The original

mutual innstment fund in Canada i.

IIIIIItt, IACGlllMlIt liMITED ........ .,... ...... ,....

and was found guilty of 'being I------=:=====_ drunk on the street and breaking WEDDING ANNOUNCEnlENT

TOKYO, Japan--Haru "Candy" Sueyama, 23-year-old Japanese girl, holds the riage certificate which made her the wife of GI William S. Girard. Under ese law the 21-year-old army specialist third class, from Streator. lllinoi;, Miss Sueyama became man and wife when she registered the required with a Japanese ward office in' Tokyo. Girard was unable to be prc~ent ' he is under "administrative restriction" at Camp Whittington. 40 miles Tokyo with a Japanese manslaughter indictment hanging o\-er his head. pair plan to go through a religious ceremony in the C~mp chapel Friday

a plate at the police station. She was sporting a black eye as she stood before the bar.

noon with a Methodist minister officiating.-(IN Photo). ' SUTHERLAND-BADCOCK-On -----------------=--.:...---.:...--------­

She said that she Wa! not drunk, but had only a few drinks of wine, and complained to the Magistrate that she had a few drinks and was talking to some friends· when the first thing she was surrounded by a "crowd of rough policemen." .

Sunday, July 7, Miss Betty Ann Badcock, only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Badcock of St. John's, was :\I1arrled to Dr. D. L. Suther­land, son of the late Mrs. Suther­land and Dr. R. S. Sutherland of Pictou, N.S. The marriage cere­mony was solemnized at Gower Street United Church by Rev. Vipond. Dr. and Mrs. Sutherland will be leaving shortly to spend a two week honeymoon and vacation in 'England, Belgium, and other partl of Europe.

BIRTH

Mrs. Squires, the matron at the police station said in evidence that the woman asked for some­thing to eat but was too, drunk to be given food for a whlle, and when she refused the request, threw a soup plate and broke it. The woman said that she had no intention of breaking the plate but --------'---­"it 'broke right easy on the con· crete-a deJicate plate."

She was fined $10 for the sec­ond offimce of being drunk on the street, $2 or 2 days for breaking

THISTLE-Born at GracI Ma­ternity Hospital on Tuesday, July 9, a daughter, to Dolly and Edgar Thistle. .

the plate, and was ordered to pay DEATH carnpensation of 75 cents.

Four others arrested for drun- McRAE _ Passed peacefully bnnes! were fined from $2 to $10 away at St. ·Clare's Mercy Hospital each.

The rest of the morning se~~ion Tuesday morning, Mary C. McRae, was occunied with civil cases and leaving to mourn husband, two minor traffic cases. 'sons, Arthur and Jerry and one ~___________ sister and brother. Funeral from

Good Morning, Neighbor PI... could., 1M jut th ..... your &leadt 1M De'Pbori. If we CUt MID. you Ia an, we, wIdt your 1a._ceprobJeal, JIIIt call ...

REG. T. MORGAN INSURANCE

Tlmpl. Iullding. DuckwOflh SI 01.1.7.,771&

her late residence, 27. Monkstown Road 10.15 Thursday morning to the Basicila.

TEE SHIRTS

. -Sizes 2 to 6.

All shades.

To-day 29c. each

, At the

So Right and So WEATHERTIGHT I

Quallty.bullt of thick, a.phalt­Empregnated felt, conrad with bectutl!W mineral granules for extM weathw . proteetion and fir. He1atance. Can be applied ri;ht o"er your old roofin;. Rich lolid colon and style-perfect blends. Call or drop in for !WI-color booklet nnd information.

J

A. H. MURRAY & Co .. Ltd. ST. JOHN'S

1'0111 Mana,. .It" DoltJlu ••• •••• "..rIen ..

eds