collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/pdfs/dailynews/thedailynewsst... · ... ,.s 1 - t s 'jr...

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,.S ... 1 - T s 'JR 'ICE · P.1nc: 'heir tirr is % t '" :,hakesptart :rt !I. HEATING BOILER . iomestlc •m sa111e ' guaJ'IIItee generator! · tCTS with ConcOO cal HeatinG 5pots, bt· olete sys.:N Jmes. os 0 5 YEARS· LIMllt DOYLE'S THE DAILY NEWS COMPACT FIRST < I )1 NEWFOUNDLAND COD LIVER OIL , Terra Nova Moton Ltd. t"Olli'fAISS A and D asavubu Delnands Recall Of UN Delegate, Daval .l.' -- * -- . --. ---------------------------- muinba Forces Pro-Reds Repel Royalists '',.·; Manono At T a Vieng Staging Area I By ROY ESSOYAN I aced by pro-Communist Pathet Travellers from Tha 'fhom and 1 ILLE - Reuters - President Jos- VIENTIANE, Laos <AP) - Lao forces moving on it from, Paksanc r c p o r t c d defence: Kasa\'UbU Saturday demanded the recall of Pro • Communist f01ces have the north. 1 forces, massing there since lnst Nations representative Rajeshwar Dayal seized the Initiative again In the; . So neither threat appears; week lor a projected drive Laotian civil war. The rout of 1 1mmed1atc. 1 northward against rebel · held 1 iodin [rom The Congo. royal troops from the Ta Vieng RERELS ADVANCE I Xieng 1\houang province, were 1 Minister Justin Bomboko said that staging area looked Sunday like I 'Pile fact that ··ebel units were· jittery and confused. I l a major setback to government advancing on important The deparure of some sccur·: charged Dayal was "at east partly re· plans for a counter offensive. fronts sent shivers ol apprehen- ity police and troops from Vi·', for the United Nations' failure to main· Laotian p 1 1 o t s carried on, sion through Luang Prabang,: entiane for Savannnkr.et in the 1 upy law and order in The Congo." however, making strafing and battle-scarred Vientiane and the vsouth fanned a fear the govern-\ atll 101111 cement was made as militant sup· rocket attacks on the rebels in mllltarily i m p or t a n t gov.: mcnt was preparing It• evacuate j . Ta Vleng with their whole alr ernment bases of Paksane and the city, but oflicials said 1 0 [ jailed former premier Patrice Lum- force-lour propeiler·driven T-6 Tha Thorn, which guard the l 1 the fear was grounuless. brcal'hed down the neck of UN, Belgian and the southeast Asian country narrow waist of Laos Laos is wedged between Com· t roops in u•idely-separated parts of training planes sent to Soldiers and civii1ans dug. munist China, North Viet Nam ' " from the United States. fresh trenches in Luang Pra-: and four non . Communist na· I Congo. Capt. Keo Soutsana, 27-year· bang and Vientiane. Sunday.; tlons. · sent the recall de·; old commander of the squadron, in a Jetter to U:-l Secre· [ to bring a third force-the army said one truck was de· s • s k . General Dag of the breakaway Katanga re· stroyed In theTa Vleng airstrip t • bct mentmncd no hme gine-into the tense situation. but fog prevented determining 0·( I a IS S ee I The Congo's central Leopold· effects of the fire the . a polcutial\y ex·: viJle government held Lum· units which drove out j IIAVANA-Two teenaged Cpban soldit•rs their uniforms as they prettare to take their situatiOn over the umba in prison at Thysville as s 1 ome I,Fooold 1 1 500 ht government B I e p • • 1 turns behind an anti-aircraft battery on thr liar 11atcrfront. Guns of this type \\ere place4 · ' centre n anono m • a third f th countr 11 ed roops r a, n g · t t ' t t · I t h h · province, I . 0 e . y s pp There's a threat to Vientiane e g I a n a r I I0 n ! a. s ra egJc pn n s I out Havana. -( u PI Photo). - . mto the control 11f ht< support· · 1 90 '1 - ·-- · ··· - ------- - an uneasy truce was m I ers. . · In the Red vtc.ory mt. es . after a six . battle Fears grew that ai> attempt northeast of this administrative I s d v b h I ttl ween U:-l troops and I might be made to free hlm capital. And the royal capital of I . I urren ers 0 s rg n quest . . . backed by I from the :own, 125 miles Prabang st1ll was men· . BRUSSELS (Reuters I -: to the ve. rgc or ci1·il war 10, 1 ' U · tribesmen. south of here. glUm Sunday was faced With !Is years ago over the return of ex- I T p ol stJtf, Gen. Men· Lumumba has been detained D l f oost far · reaching constitu·: King Leopold, have bPcn sharp- 0 0 ICe Lpssou to Manono since Dec. 2 following his cap- emons ra e ti_onal problem in its 130-year I cned by . the current . 25·day I R T d work out a settle· lure by troops of army Col. Jos· history as were made stnke agamst. Flrm1sh·dom·: COCHRA:\'E, Ont. ICPI -A eopens ues ay the, At the cph Mobutu. Agal"ns\ (an ada by Socwllst teaMrs . from 1 mate? Cathohc·LJbcrat govern·. man holed up with three guns t:nt. a l :0.: spokesman 1 security chiefs were under· that the country be re- 1 ment s austenty bill. . , and besieged hy Ontario Pro. rem for cements .were stood to have argued with the orgamzed as a of two. The strongest 1n south-, vinciai Police Ol'<!l"n 1 ght sur- to the besieged! government here t.hat only Lu· WASHINGTON _ CP-Wear· states. porhons of. the country, or· 1 rendered quietly satu,·day after- 1 b I T he states wo ld b f rm d 1gmaliy wa · a1med at forcmg 'CP' ·- .\n in· at ely pending the p;,thologists' mum a's release wou d avert ing blaek armbands and chant· . u e 0 e . s ' 1 noon. of by the 1 bloodshed and serio•Js disturban· lng "Down with Canada." a the of the_ two nattonal· of the measure: While a cordon of armed PO· into the de:•< iT of :llrs. examinotirm of the forces has threatened Ices. well-organled group of some lhes whteh comprtse Belgmm- whiCh rece1ved Lower House · lice waited tcnselv an uncle of A he! an. I It of her t:; STILL nEI:'\f. HELD th 3 600 """ Fr h k' g passag Fr"day night ''I · · ·' children is e\pccted to rrorcn ,\bel .::!-: t·;lr-ohl un- 175 anti-Castro Cubans Satur· e. · •""" enc spea 10 I e. 1 · 1 " ar\"ln Jourdam. 21. walked Is Product day expressed tratitude to mamly Protestant \\alloons m 1 The btll now to the sen·: into the house when he had TT:csdn,·. Their !.<·dies were emplu,·r, 1 J:Jilorrr ,·r ... was the President Eisenhower for aiding the south and . the ate, where votmg IS expected to i hcen barricaded Sll•t'C i p.m. found :<fter fl!"e dc,l:eyed t:wir on!\· occtlp"nt of the shacl: to and criticism of Prlnle FJem1sh • speak1ng. predomm·1 take place next mout:1 It would 1 Fridny and walked' 0111 with .. :_,"_Y shack at \onu </ue .. r-ra1:.· tile f!;"'""' still was Ml .. tster Dieefnbaker for per· antly Roman Catholic Belgwns attempt to recoup Belg1um·s, him. - l!eiuo: ht•:d he:·e '·'" urovinciat " · th th I h ·c I It I 1 l'ru1 J>:ltho:<>;":.,h ha1e J!Oiicr. mlttin& Canadian trade with In e nor , l'conoml a3 R rcsu o Members of !he OPP, who Cub . . . I Congo s mdcpendence by, had been refraining from open· been a:.'1.psirs on \'o<l11"·':h ,, hem' Leld on a Nudear· ... :;e wrote Mr,' Dlefenbaker The Walloon·Fiemmg dlfllcul·l hrgher taxes and reouced wel·: ing a gunfight, too:: Jourdain the remains of <'r<Trl to •r:: cornnt•r"s 1•::u-r;,nt. lr. Quehec no ties, which brought the country fare benefits. into custody on a chorl(e of in·. to detcrnunc dctntls of .the C;ltt.ie c:111 he lnid in cases ol · ----./..-· · ·-··--.. · -- .. · ·-· · -- tent to prevent lri.v!u) apprehcn·, and limes of rlc·rln. I heu· re· 1 iuirnt it hef.Jr" :111 inque.ot ill moral of Castro but we A • s simt. po 1 rts 1 a_rc tcxnccted lr. lt1c con 1 ,. " ldd bu!. !lCr,o,Js conhsidehrc 1 dd received no reply Whatsoever," merlcans top Three shots had IKen fired petertm inlC tu nr 1 r>en 1 . to tff!C w:tll<''l"C' r:m e .c MORIN !APl - Tile about Fitzgerald l>th president of the States, is that he is a of fr,e nuclear age, tal!le ltl In the years Pearl thinki11g today has dtt pi l' conditioned by were the ye&rs ol hot told war. nf brand new and ol burge. 111P'Jilation. and or social, and economic earth· throughout thP world. is tough, realistic, . arrived at a . he acts swiftly and 1uthoritv highiy. disciplined. With singte-mindcrlncss, he total attention on the at hand. tn effect, he it unrlcr a micro- he is as efficient as a dril·ing, tireless. an or· man himself with the to organize a or power. at 43, comes to the after 14 years in Along way, he these principal ll((erist!iCS: I from the house Fndne m_·q. ... " 1 •o Tee o ,,. po 1cc on on er' ::·urn :! cor· traditions and philosophy of the said Eduardo Gonzalez, a Cuban ' .. 1 , 1 American political S''&tem. He who Jives In New York and when police tried tr. take in CT.! 1 l t . .r_u · r •I tl ' · t · on\r.r. 1 1 · ' 1 u 'ght ' .Jourdain, who prCI'TOUsly had '' '"·' 0 11 ' :"' ' os '.'.";Js ' 1 '-"'"' P e1 Is reported to have read every· heads the Cuban democratic rev· chased out his mother and five findings so f::r h::r:e hccn d;1.,_, ::'!o in the c 11 :·.- stages ol thing Winston Churchill ever olutlonary front, dedicated to s • T k t 1 I' · · 1 I' tl · ·· t" • ' · t th t other membNs of the fnmity. .<rcre "' Po'"''· rro\ me::• H' ""Tee Tilles L.::.:on m o e wrote. He quotes from the the overthrow of Premier Cas· an e r did rr,·ca!. l:o.\c.". that the Greeks and from writers of lro's regime. , OVIe Police .lounlai1: will he autop;.ic.< sl10wecl \lr, r,,o· of \"oshm·•!1l, daughters classical literature. "Castro will fall within a few given a mental cxarr.'nnt:on. was dead before lho fi:"t· s!1rlc:!. -\Irs <;Jad,·s \la1' 1 "'" ;md '1rs. 3. The organizer. months" said Gonzlaez as he Hr· <lid not s:11· ·<ht 1 :l':· !he Gertrude ·:<JW their The much • admired political joined in the Cuban demonstra· LONDON - Reuters - Rus· Minister Viktor Bakavev accus· He was taken intr· custody harP !ot cr aJ,!e to fnther brief!v ond said team _that helped Kennedy, over tlon at the Canadian Embassy. sia said Saturday three United ed American ships and planes of' with the helo of .lim I he c:"''" or her he is in .':>irit<. towermg. obstacles, tc the Dem· While a detail of some 30 pol· States warships ordered a Rus· "systematic provocative action" his uncl_c and neighbor,_ who dc;:th y110 , 011 ,_ Irving. 18. and A\. ocratic no. mination and then to lee office- patrolled the area, sian. tanker to halt in neutral against Rus:;ian ships wnlkcd Into I he barTTcnded Tl · 1 1 1 t 1 11 1 th t · d •• · h f{ tt· t 1e mquc.- o :' ' o e r as ;111, ant e \\'o marne victory tn the election was Cartbbean \\'aters and accused The new RtiSSI·an note sal· .I ousc a er sc mg up a mce · the demonstrators-men women u ThurscJ:,y-the ,i:Jy ·,, bodies o: nrc the ""t'" Vosburgh largely his own Cl'Palion. He and a few chlldren-.;.arched ·the U.S. of a "gross violation "the lanker was met by _an ing with Jourdain. anTI l·e 1 1: rhi!· cb!ldren who sun·::·c All were listened carefully tl' advIce lUl and down a sidewalk to with of the principles or freedom of patrol shrp wh1ch Police armed with .rilles and. d<en were exhumed h:: polirr- a11 a,· from the when the from all sides. But the final in 500 feet of the Embassy. navigation on the high seas." wh1thout any kgrountds tear gas guns were hehind the but ·adjourned almJst imrr:c:li· fire ·broke out. decisions were his own. He can The Russian news agencr t at the tan er s op a once uncle but the weapons were not · - · · · -- --- - - ... ------- be expected to operate in the Tass said the Russian protest and that "before long another, d' same oattern as president. o• f b k was handed to American Am· two United States warships ap-1 usc · French Die Mystery Rocket 4. The tactful touch . . . . . . . Je en a er bassador Llewellyn Thompson proached the tanker and also Kennedy has personal in Moscow' by Deputy Foreign demanded from the captain of 1 3 charm. He does things grace- G H Minister Vasily Kuznetsov. . the Sverdlovsk that he should fully, with style. He 18 tactfully oes ome Moscow Radio said the Sverd stop." persuasive. lovsk was intercepted after There was no Indication on 5. The detached man. KINGSTON, Jamaica_ AP _ leaving the Cuban port of San· yhelher the vessel did stop. One of Kennedy'e most lm· Prime Jrtlnlster John Dlefen· tiago, where it arrived Tuesday The note dem:111ded "immediate pressive qualities L his iey baker left by air for Montreal with a cargo of Soviet oil. discontinuation • of such action calm. If he ever· gets rattled, The protest came two days and "punishment ol those guilty he doesn t show it. Confronted Sunday after spending what he after Russian Merchant Marine of these actions." described as a "wonderful" with a surprise or b problem, week's vacation in Jamaica. he simply goes flOker-face. 8. The realist. · Kennedy seems In circum· stances to be given to self-de· luslon or to lookln2 away from unpleasant facts. He Is a SU· Dlefenbaker was accompan· led on the BOAC flight by his wife and by Senator and Mrs. Wllllam Ilrunt of Toronto. In Rioting :St. II A M t I ys ery killed in New rioting: . as President Charles de Gaulle's: \I'ASJJ!\GTO:\' -- AP -Rus·1ed that the whuie tlnng was reform and self-determination; . . rocket. in . the 1 ''pure invention" .. !\'o other plans for AJ.neria became law: l'actftc-tf 1t IS that-Is >!Til a Russians were talkrng. Sunday. o 'mystery ;1s far as the Cnited A .<pokesman for the New I is concerned. •Jersey nstro obscrvalron cen· preme realist. Tht many-sided man These are the rharacteristles soaks up informa· ot Kennedy at work . · Before leaving, the Prime Minister commented that Ja· malca was a most )leautlful Is· land and the hospitality of its people waa unsurpassed: f-ight settlers and live Friday night ;,n air force: trc said "we've been monl· ]ems were hurt and a settler I station at Shcmva Island, loring all night and haven't kidna])pcd in the which J Alaska, reported detecting on: picked up a thing. H there is broke out Saturday mght m! its radar a mbsilc·like object Isomething up there it can't be suburban Baraki. I out of 1\ussia south- i tran>mitting or else someone a S!J()nge. He reads in· When he is not working. he Is And if he can't get an man fully re- wants from something laxed. He gives the impression . he gets hold of an of controlled tenslll'l. on the subject he Is He likes to swlrr fish, golf, H He. has a quick, and play tennis. e g1ves evet y siJln of . a preo;\dent 1\"hr. will do Montana ranks fourth In size cmong the states of the Un· The thoughtful American. · ion, being outranked by Alaska, soeeches show a Teus and California, In that for thr history, order. ·. Nfld. Skies and coid Light High. today 23. TEMPERATURES: 1 Yesterday's, Toronto llontreal . .. . .. .. 20 28 lloncton .. .. . .. 7 17 Halilax .. ' ..... 9 17 MONDAY, JAN. 18 · Sunset today .. 4:38 p.m: Sun rile tomorrow ... 7:43 a.m. ·New Moon tOday , ...... 6:00 p.m. TIDES Syillle ..... " . 20 25 St. 19 23 High . 8:33 a.m., 15 p.m. ...... 24· 26 Low 12:25 a.m., 1.02 p.m. MONDAY, JANUAIIY 11 An ardent fisherman, Dlefen· baker Impressed the Islanders Wednesday by landing a 140· pound blue marlin during a deep-sea fishing trip. WAS MISQ1JOTED Dlefenbaker told .reporters Sunday hil statement at a press conference Tueaday on Can· ada'& policy towards the Ol'i!an· izatlon of American States had been misinterpreted. At the Ume be was quoted by Reuters New1 Agency u saying Callada baa no Intention of joining the OAS .. What he had ntually said, the Prime Mlniatet added, was that ''at the moment there's no de· cided intention to change our attitUde with regard to the OAS." Send:.Off . OTl'AWA- CP-Mrs. Frank J. Leahy's frlend.J on the staff Prot• I . PriN!IIIIIa& l&ar . of tbe Commons gave her 1 ,on, ow 1n eaat . 11·15 loina·away party Friday. Chief 11111 hlp .. """ · " .... """' · p.m. of the clerieal atllf of the '1111. 11 IQ soutll " .. · · · · · " • · • " ·" · ... ll:&a p.m. lilb jourMJI ltclion, abe is re- -, U lht aUhe -t Marl, btlnl tirlnJ aUir a Parliament HIU . t 111ft frNl Cite J:anll." · CltMl tbt 11"'1 baek to 19U, !All u._ l'WwfOillldllnd furUier t\lan .that ef any other ataffer. . . WASIIINGTON-Scene In the House Cha01ber during the count· ing of the Electoral votes, contained In the mahogany bo1 shown right foreground. Lewis Deschler (back to camera) Parllamen· tarlan ol the House, hands a ballot to Vice-President Richard Nixon who announces the results. · Seated beside Nixon Is Speak· er Sam Rayburn. This will mark the first time in 100 years that the man who ran aecond In a Presidential election has been required to make the official announcement of the outcome ( Ul'l I' hot <II f, b t 1 h 'eastward over the Pacific J would have hrard it by now." . The t rce sc. t ers w 0 were r Ocean. I That seemed to rule out a new k11led-onhe Wlhth slated The station oaid it couldn't satellite. Experimental space b th 1 roat, ttle 1 °t cdr wo f romd tell whether it was a ·, 1·chicies usually send back ows no 1e 1ea -were oun d. · 1 · . . . missile or an at some 1 ra 10 s1gna s. bcs1de their burned-out car. Soviet space feat i One indication that the Rus· Several hundred Moslems, Hours later the Pentagon . 1 sians might be testing a long. carrying knives and urged on! said there had been no further range missile in the was by veiled Moslem women, roam· reports. I that three Russ1an sh1ps -.vere cd the streets or _Baraki in· Viktor Bazikin. director of sighted earlier this weel; hrad· flicting injuries on eight per the Plnn•,tarium, snort- I ing for the usual target area. sons. . I Swelled Head l(asbo STOCKHOL'i - AP - If 1 you're getting bald, says a ! M • Swedish doctor, it may be be· . aj 0 r cause you have a swelled head, resulting from the fact tbat Launches Offensive your brain . and skull failed to · · stop growing. after' you grew: HAVANA tAPl _ Fidel Cas·j tro nrmy officers had surrounded up. i tro's armed lorCls. the rebels and were r.eady. to This is a theory advanced by cd a major offcrsJ••e agams.t i move m after the shelling. :·He or. Olaf Smith, a Stockholm surgcnl band; open'"'£ 111 South, sa1d forces 1,1Sed surgeon, who told a con· Central Escam· mortars and arl!tlery. •. ferencc he can treat the con· bray Mountams, reliable reports I ---·---- .. ··- dillon by an operation reminis· said Sunday. . cent. of the Indians' scalping The repo:ts SJTd nr of Sign Pad technique., The idea roughly is I the where anll-Cnslro .; to loosen the skin on the . rebels are bd1e1 ed concentrated ; . ! Is under heavv bor:1bardmenl. ' OTT AW A-CP - Prtme Min- and let the ha1r through. 1 Hundreds of were eva· 1 ister . Diefenbaker will go. to In 30 nperalio.ns ol this kind I' cuated from mountains be· Washmgt?n Tuesday to date, Dr. Smrth elatmed, 25 fore the offenstve beg&n Fnday, the U.S.·Canada Columbia patients reported their hair I the reports added. treaty, stopped falling out and five! An evac11ec sJid at,out 10,000 I Prune )\Jmster Green sa1d St · said their hair grrw thicker. : mililiamcn commanded hy Cas. I urday. p, \ _____ .... ,., ..... ,,. _____ _ l ! . ! I .. I. 'I ' ' . : ' I i,. I I . ' ' ' ' I. I• ' . ! ' ' ' I : ' . ' r ! . ' I .. . ! : i "

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Page 1: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ... ,.S 1 - T s 'JR 'ICE · P.1nc: 'heir tirr is % t '" mL~eries. :,hakesptart :rt !I. HEATING BOILER . iomestlc

,.S ... 1 -T

s 'JR

'ICE

· P.1nc: 'heir tirr is

%

t '" mL~eries. :,hakesptart

:rt

!I. HEATING BOILER

. iomestlc •m sa111e

. ' guaJ'IIItee • . generator! ·

_apprO'f~· : !tCTS

with ConcOO !cal HeatinG ! 5pots, bt· olete sys.:N ::Jmes. os

.0 5 YEARS·

c.~. l~U. LIMllt

DOYLE'S

THE DAILY NEWS COMPACT FIRST

< I )1

NEWFOUNDLAND

COD LIVER OIL ,

Terra Nova Moton Ltd.

t"Olli'fAISS

\'lTA~IINS

A and D

asavubu Delnands Recall Of UN Delegate, Daval .l.' -- * -- . --. ----------------------------

muinba Forces Pro-Reds Repel Royalists -·~---'',.·;

Manono At T a Vieng Staging Area I

By ROY ESSOYAN I aced by pro-Communist Pathet Travellers from Tha 'fhom and 1

ILLE - Reuters - President Jos- VIENTIANE, Laos <AP) - Lao forces moving on it from, Paksanc r c p o r t c d defence: Kasa\'UbU Saturday demanded the recall of Pro • Communist f01ces have the north. 1 forces, massing there since lnst ·~

Nations representative Rajeshwar Dayal seized the Initiative again In the; . So l~r neither threat appears; week lor a projected drive Laotian civil war. The rout of •

11mmed1atc. 1 northward against rebel · held 1

iodin [rom The Congo. royal troops from the Ta Vieng RERELS ADVANCE I Xieng 1\houang province, were 1 Minister Justin Bomboko said that staging area looked Sunday like I 'Pile fact that ··ebel units were· jittery and confused. I

l a major setback to government advancing on :w~ important The deparure of some sccur·: charged Dayal was "at east partly re· plans for a counter offensive. fronts sent shivers ol apprehen- ity police and troops from Vi·',

for the United Nations' failure to main· Laotian p 1 1 o t s carried on, sion through Luang Prabang,: entiane for Savannnkr.et in the 1

upy

law and order in The Congo." however, making strafing and battle-scarred Vientiane and the vsouth fanned a fear the govern-\

atll101111cement was made as militant sup· rocket attacks on the rebels in mllltarily i m p or t a n t gov.: mcnt was preparing It• evacuate j . Ta Vleng with their whole alr ernment bases of Paksane and the city, but mo~t oflicials said

1 0[ jailed former premier Patrice Lum- force-lour propeiler·driven T-6 Tha Thorn, which guard the l1 the fear was grounuless. brcal'hed down the neck of UN, Belgian and the southeast Asian country narrow waist of Laos Laos is wedged between Com·

troops in u•idely-separated parts of training planes rec~ntly sent to Soldiers and civii1ans dug. munist China, North Viet Nam ' ~ng1~IC!>C " from the United States. fresh trenches in Luang Pra-: and four non . Communist na· I

Congo. Capt. Keo Soutsana, 27-year· bang and Vientiane. Sunday.; tlons. · sent the recall de·; old commander of the squadron,

in a Jetter to U:-l Secre· [ to bring a third force-the army said one re~l truck was de· s • ·~· s k . General Dag Hamma~sk·: of the breakaway Katanga re· stroyed In theTa Vleng airstrip t • bct mentmncd no hme gine-into the tense situation. but fog prevented determining 0·( I a IS S ee

I The Congo's central Leopold· effects of the fire a~alnst the . a polcutial\y ex·: viJle government s~ll! held Lum· c~mbat units which drove out j IIAVANA-Two teenaged Cpban soldit•rs ~dju't their uniforms as they prettare to take their

situatiOn tm1n~, over the umba in prison at Thysville as s1ome I,Fooold t~ 1•1500ht government B I e p • • 1 turns behind an anti-aircraft battery on thr liar ~na 11atcrfront. Guns of this type \\ere place4

· ' centre n ~~ anono m • a third f th countr 11 ed roops r a, n g · t t ' t t · I t h h · Katan~a province, I . 0 e . y s pp There's a threat to Vientiane e g I a n a r I I 0 n ! a. s ra egJc pn n s I ~oug out downl~wn Havana. -( u PI Photo). - . mto the control 11f ht< support· · 1 90 '1 - ·-- · ··· - ------- -

an uneasy truce was m I ers. . · In the Red vtc.ory mt. es . after a six . ~uur battle Fears grew that ai> attempt northeast of this administrative I s d v b h I ttl ween U:-l troops and I might be made to free hlm capital. And the royal capital of I . I urren ers 0 s rg n quest

. . . Iorc~s backed by I from the ~:arrison :own, 125 miles Luan~ Prabang st1ll was men· . BRUSSELS (Reuters I -: Bel-~ to the ve. rgc or ci1·il war 10, 1' • U · tribesmen. south of here. glUm Sunday was faced With !Is years ago over the return of ex- I T p r·

~\iel ol stJtf, Gen. Men· Lumumba has been detained D l f oost far · reaching constitu·: King Leopold, have bPcn sharp- 0 0 ICe Lpssou w~nt to Manono since Dec. 2 following his cap- emons ra e ti_onal problem in its 130-year I cned by . the current . 25·day I R T d ~~to work out a settle· lure by troops of army Col. Jos· history as ~en:ands were made stnke agamst. th~ Flrm1sh·dom·: COCHRA:\'E, Ont. ICPI -A eopens ues ay ~•ren the, f~rces. At the cph Mobutu. Agal"ns\ (an ada by hv~ Socwllst teaMrs . from 1 mate? Cathohc·LJbcrat govern·. man holed up with three guns t:nt. a l :0.: spokesman 1 security chiefs were under· Wallo~ta that the country be re- 1 ment s austenty bill. . , and besieged hy Ontario Pro. s.l~ rem for cements .were stood to have argued with the orgamzed as a fed~rRIIon of two. The ~t:1kc, strongest 1n south-, vinciai Police Ol'<!l"n1ght sur-r:~t.ed to the besieged! government here t.hat only Lu· WASHINGTON _ CP-Wear· states. ~r.n porhons of. the country, or·

1 rendered quietly satu,·day after-

1 b I The states wo ld b f rm d 1gmaliy wa · a1med at forcmg ~IOo;THL\1. 'CP' ·- .\n in· at ely pending the p;,thologists'

mum a's release wou d avert ing blaek armbands and chant· . u e 0• e . s '1 noon. of ~lanono by the 1 bloodshed and serio•Js disturban· lng "Down with Canada." a o~ the b~sts of the_ two nattonal· Wl~hdrawal. of the measure: While a cordon of armed PO· que.'~ into the de:•< iT of :llrs. examinotirm of the r~mains.

forces has threatened Ices. well-organled group of some lhes whteh comprtse Belgmm- whiCh rece1ved Lower House · lice waited tcnselv an uncle of A he! Voshur~h an. I It of her t:; STILL nEI:'\f. HELD th 3 600 """ Fr h k' g passag Fr"day night ''I · · ·' children is e\pccted to rrorcn ,\bel \'os!Jur~:, .::!-: t·;lr-ohl un-

175 anti-Castro Cubans Satur· e. · •""" enc ,· spea 10 I e. 1 · 1 " ar\"ln Jourdam. 21. walked

Is Product day expressed tratitude to mamly Protestant \\alloons m1 The btll now go~s to the sen·: into the house when he had TT:csdn,·. Their !.<·dies were emplu,·r,1 J:Jilorrr ,·r ... was the President Eisenhower for aiding the south and . the 5,400,~i ate, where votmg IS expected to i hcen barricaded Sll•t'C i p.m. found :<fter fl!"e dc,l:eyed t:wir on!\· occtlp"nt of the shacl: to refu~ees and criticism of Prlnle FJem1sh • speak1ng. predomm·1 take place next mout:1 It would 1 Fridny and walked' 0111 with ~ .. :_,"_Y shack at \onu </ue .. llc~. r-ra1:.· tile f!;"'""' still was

Ml .. tster Dieefnbaker for per· antly Roman Catholic Belgwns attempt to recoup Belg1um·s, him. - l!eiuo: ht•:d he:·e '·'" urovinciat " · th th I h ·c I It I 1 l'ru1 inci:~l J>:ltho:<>;":.,h ha1e J!Oiicr. mlttin& Canadian trade with In e nor , l'conoml o~ses. a3 R rcsu o Members of !he OPP, who

Cub . . . I T~e Congo s mdcpendence by, had been refraining from open· been conduct:n~ a:.'1.psirs on \'o<l11"·':h ,, hem' Leld on a

Nudear· ... :;e wrote Mr,' Dlefenbaker The Walloon·Fiemmg dlfllcul·l hrgher taxes and reouced wel·: ing a gunfight, too:: Jourdain the remains of th~ <'r<Trl to •r:: cornnt•r"s 1•::u-r;,nt. lr. Quehec no

ties, which brought the country fare benefits. into custody on a chorl(e of in·. to detcrnunc dctntls of .the C;ltt.ie ch:n~r' c:111 he lnid in cases ol \f~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~t1~~r.i~~J· ~ · ----./..-· · ·-··--.. · -- .. · ·-· · -- tent to prevent lri.v!u) apprehcn·, and limes of rlc·rln. I heu· re· 1 iuirnt cleo~• it hef.Jr" :111 inque.ot ill moral sup~r~ of Castro but we A • s simt. po1 rts 1 a_rc tcxnccted lr. lt1c con1,. " ldd bu!. !lCr,o,Js conhsidehrc1dd

received no reply Whatsoever," merlcans top Three shots had IKen fired petertm inlC tu nr1r>en1. to tff!C 1rmr.ort1 ~nl w:tll<''l"C' r:m e .c

~REDIAS MORIN !APl - Tile

about J~hn Fitzgerald l>th president of the

States, is that he is a of fr,e nuclear age,

tal!le ltl m~turitY. In the years ~ince Pearl

H~ thinki11g today has dtt pi l' conditioned by

were the ye&rs ol hot told war. nf brand new

and tacti~s. ol burge. 111P'Jilation. and or social,

and economic earth· throughout thP world.

is tough, realistic, . Havip~ arrived at a . he acts swiftly and

1uthoritv ~ highiy. disciplined. With

singte-mindcrlncss, he total attention on the at hand. tn effect, he

it unrlcr a micro-

he is as efficient as a dril·ing, tireless. an or· man himself with the

to organize ~thers, a or power.

at 43, comes to the after 14 years in Along tll~ way, he

these principal ll((erist!iCS:

I from the house Fndne ni~n' m_·q. "~'; ... " pro1·m~n 1•o Tee o T· ,,. po 1cc on on er' ::·urn :! cor·

traditions and philosophy of the said Eduardo Gonzalez, a Cuban ' .. 1 , 1 American political S''&tem. He who Jives • In New York and when police tried tr. take in CT.!1l t . .r_u · r •I tl ' · t · on\r.r. 1 1 · ' 1 u 'ght ' .Jourdain, who prCI'TOUsly had '' '"·' 0 • 11 ' :"' 10 • 0 ~ 1 ' ' os 111 r~' '.'.";Js '1 '-"'"' P e1 Is reported to have read every· heads the Cuban democratic rev· chased out his mother and five findings so f::r h::r:e hccn ~rpt d;1.,_, ::'!o in the c 11 :·.- stages ol thing Winston Churchill ever olutlonary front, dedicated to s • T k t 1 1· I' · · 1 I' tl · · · .· t" • ' · t th t other membNs of the fnmity. .<rcre "' Po'"''· rro\ me::• O· H' ""Tee Tilles L.::.:on m o e wrote. He quotes from the the overthrow of Premier Cas· an e r did rr,·ca!. l:o.\c.". that the tr;~·:cd,·. Greeks and from writers of lro's regime. , OVIe Police s~id .lounlai1: will he autop;.ic.< sl10wecl \lr, \"od,.:r~h r,,o· of \"oshm·•!1l, daughters classical literature. "Castro will fall within a few given a mental cxarr.'nnt:on. was dead before lho fi:"t· s!1rlc:!. -\Irs <;Jad,·s \la1'1"'" ;md '1rs.

3. The organizer. months" said Gonzlaez as he Hr· <lid not s:11· ·<ht1:l':· !he Gertrude ~,;,ckc:·h·; ·:<JW their The much • admired political joined in the Cuban demonstra· LONDON - Reuters - Rus· Minister Viktor Bakavev accus· He was taken intr· custody P"lholt.~i<ts harP !ot cr aJ,!e to fnther brief!v S~I•Jr·l~v ond said

team _that helped Kennedy, over tlon at the Canadian Embassy. sia said Saturday three United ed American ships and planes of' with the helo of .lim \lcCiw<ke~:. dclmni:~c I he c:"''" or her he is in ~nod .':>irit<. towermg. obstacles, tc the Dem· While a detail of some 30 pol· States warships ordered a Rus· "systematic provocative action" his uncl_c and neighbor,_ who dc;:th y110 , 011,_ Irving. 18. and A\. ocratic no. mination and then to lee office- patrolled the area, sian. tanker to halt in neutral against Rus:;ian ships wnlkcd Into I he barTTcnded Tl · 1 1 1 t 1 11 1 th t · d •• · h f{ tt· t 1e mquc.- o :' ' o e r as ;111, • ant e \\'o marne victory tn the election was Cartbbean \\'aters and accused The new RtiSSI·an note sal· .I ousc a er sc mg up a mce · • the demonstrators-men women u ThurscJ:,y-the ,i:Jy • ·,, bodies o: tl;;u~hters nrc the ""t'" Vosburgh largely his own Cl'Palion. He and a few chlldren-.;.arched ·the U.S. of a "gross violation "the lanker was met by _an ing with Jourdain. ·~Irs. \"o,hur~h anTI l·e1 1: rhi!· cb!ldren who sun·::·c All were listened carefully tl' advIce lUl and down a sidewalk to with of the principles or freedom of A~encan patrol shrp wh1ch Police armed with .rilles and. d<en were exhumed h:: polirr- a11a,· from the sh~ck when the from all sides. But the final in 500 feet of the Embassy. navigation on the high seas." wh1thout any kgrountds dctmande~ tear gas guns were hehind the but ·adjourned almJst imrr:c:li· fire ·broke out. decisions were his own. He can The Russian news agencr t at the tan er s op a once uncle but the weapons were not · - · · · -- --- - - ... -------be expected to operate in the Tass said the Russian protest and that "before long another, d' same oattern as president. o• f b k was handed to American Am· two United States warships ap-1 usc ·

French Die Mystery Rocket 4. The tactful touch . . . . . . . Je en a er bassador Llewellyn Thompson proached the tanker and also Kennedy has ~rent personal in Moscow' by Deputy Foreign demanded from the captain of 1 3

charm. He does things grace- G H Minister Vasily Kuznetsov. . the Sverdlovsk that he should fully, with style. He 18 tactfully oes ome Moscow Radio said the Sverd stop." persuasive. lovsk was intercepted after There was no Indication on

5. The detached man. KINGSTON, Jamaica_ AP _ leaving the Cuban port of San· yhelher the vessel did stop. One of Kennedy'e most lm· Prime Jrtlnlster John Dlefen· tiago, where it arrived Tuesday The note dem:111ded "immediate

pressive qualities L his iey baker left by air for Montreal with a cargo of Soviet oil. discontinuation • of such action calm. If he ever· gets rattled, The protest came two days and "punishment ol those guilty he doesn t show it. Confronted Sunday after spending what he after Russian Merchant Marine of these actions."

described as a "wonderful" with a surprise or b problem, week's vacation in Jamaica. he simply goes flOker-face.

8. The realist. · Kennedy seems In n~ circum·

stances to be given to self-de· luslon or to lookln2 away from unpleasant facts. He Is a SU·

Dlefenbaker was accompan· led on the BOAC flight by his wife and by Senator and Mrs. Wllllam Ilrunt of Toronto.

In Rioting :St. II A M t Fr~;c~~~~~~~cu,~e:~~ -;e~;~:~~: I ys ery killed in New ~loslem rioting: . as President Charles de Gaulle's: \I'ASJJ!\GTO:\' -- AP -Rus·1ed that the whuie tlnng was reform and self-determination; si~'s . myste~y . rocket. in . the 1 ''pure invention" .. !\'o other plans for AJ.neria became law: l'actftc-tf 1t IS that-Is >!Til a Russians were talkrng. Sunday. o 'mystery ;1s far as the Cnited ~ A .<pokesman for the New

I St~tcs is concerned. • Jersey nstro obscrvalron cen·

preme realist. Tht many-sided man These are the rharacteristles

soaks up informa· ot Kennedy at work .

· Before leaving, the Prime Minister commented that Ja· malca was a most )leautlful Is· land and the hospitality of its people waa unsurpassed:

f-ight settlers and live ~los·\ Friday night ;,n air force: trc said "we've been monl· ]ems were hurt and a settler I station at Shcmva Island, loring all night and haven't kidna])pcd in the rioting~ which J Alaska, reported detecting on: picked up a thing. H there is broke out Saturday mght m! its radar a mbsilc·like object I something up there it can't be suburban Baraki. I strc;~king out of 1\ussia south- i tran>mitting or else someone

a S!J()nge. He reads in· When he is not working. he Is And if he can't get an eas~·movlng man fully re­

wants from something laxed. He gives the impression . he gets hold of an of controlled tenslll'l.

on the subject he Is He likes to swlrr fish, golf, H He. has a quick, ~een and play tennis. e g1ves evet y siJln of .

a preo;\dent 1\"hr. will do Montana ranks fourth In size cmong the states of the Un·

The thoughtful American. · ion, being outranked by Alaska, soeeches show a Teus and California, In that for thr history, order.

·. Nfld. Skies ~Y and coid Light

High. today 23.

TEMPERATURES: 1 Yesterday's,

Toronto llontreal . .. . .. .. 20 28 lloncton .. .. . .. 7 17 Halilax .. '..... 9 17

MONDAY, JAN. 18

· Sunset today .. 4:38 p.m:

Sun rile tomorrow ... 7:43 a.m.

·New Moon tOday , ...... 6:00 p.m.

TIDES Syillle ..... " . 20 25 St. J~;........ 19 23 High . 8:33 a.m., 7~ 15 p.m.

• ...... 24· 26 Low 12:25 a.m., 1.02 p.m.

MONDAY, JANUAIIY 11

An ardent fisherman, Dlefen· baker Impressed the Islanders Wednesday by landing a 140· pound blue marlin during a deep-sea fishing trip.

WAS MISQ1JOTED Dlefenbaker told . reporters

Sunday hil statement at a press conference Tueaday on Can· ada'& policy towards the Ol'i!an· izatlon of American States had been misinterpreted. At the Ume be was quoted by Reuters New1 Agency u saying Callada baa no Intention of joining the OAS ..

What he had ntually said, the Prime Mlniatet added, was that ''at the moment there's no de· cided intention to change our attitUde with regard to the OAS." •

Send:.Off . OTl'AWA- CP-Mrs. Frank

J. Leahy's frlend.J on the staff Prot• I . PriN!IIIIIa& l&ar . of tbe Commons gave her 1

,on, ow 1n eaat . 11·15 loina·away party Friday. Chief 11111 hlp .. """ · " .... """' · p.m. of the clerieal atllf of the E~ii· '1111. 11 IQ soutll " .. · · · · · " • · • " ·" · ... ll:&a p.m. lilb jourMJI ltclion, abe is re--, U ~of lht ~ aUhe -t Marl, btlnl tirlnJ aUir a Parliament HIU

. t 111ft frNl Cite J:anll." · CltMl tbt 11"'1 baek to 19U,

!All u._ l'WwfOillldllnd ~~&~Herd) furUier t\lan .that ef any other ------;.:.~:.:.:=:::::_:==::-----•lconnii'OIII ataffer.

. . WASIIINGTON-Scene In the House Cha01ber during the count· ing of the Electoral votes, contained In the mahogany bo1 shown right foreground. Lewis Deschler (back to camera) Parllamen· tarlan ol the House, hands a ballot to Vice-President Richard Nixon who announces the results. · Seated beside Nixon Is Speak· er Sam Rayburn. This will mark the first time in 100 years that the man who ran aecond In a Presidential election has been required to make the official announcement of the outcome

( Ul'l I' hot <II

f,

b t 1 h 'eastward over the Pacific J would have hrard it by now." . The t rce sc. t ers w 0 were r Ocean. I That seemed to rule out a new

k11led-onhe Wlhth ~ slated The station oaid it couldn't satellite. Experimental space

bth1roat, ttle 1°t cdr wo f romd tell whether it was a Iun1~·range ·, 1·chicies usually send back ows no 1e 1ea -were oun d. · 1 · . . . missile or an att~mpt at some 1 ra 10 s1gna s.

bcs1de their burned-out car. Soviet space feat i One indication that the Rus· Several hundred Moslems, Hours later the Pentagon .

1 sians might be testing a long.

carrying knives and urged on! said there had been no further range missile in the Pa~ific was by veiled Moslem women, roam· reports. I that three Russ1an sh1ps -.vere cd the streets or _Baraki in· Viktor Bazikin. director of sighted earlier this weel; hrad· flicting injuries on eight per the ~loscow Plnn•,tarium, snort- I ing for the usual target area. sons. . I

Swelled Head l(asbo STOCKHOL'i - AP - If 1

you're getting bald, says a ! M • Swedish doctor, it may be be· . aj 0 r cause you have a swelled head, resulting from the fact tbat

Launches Offensive

your brain . and skull failed to · · stop growing. after' you grew: HAVANA tAPl _ Fidel Cas·j tro nrmy officers had surrounded up. i tro's armed lorCls. hav~ u.nlea~~-; the rebels and were r.eady. to

This is a theory advanced by cd a major offcrsJ••e agams.t m· i move m after the shelling. :·He or. Olaf Smith, a Stockholm surgcnl band; open'"'£ 111 South, sa1d governme~t forces 1,1Sed surgeon, who told a pres~ con· Central Cub~'s rU6ge~ Escam· ~ mortars and arl!tlery. • •. ferencc he can treat the con· bray Mountams, reliable reports I ---·----.. ··-dillon by an operation reminis· said Sunday. . cent. of the Indians' scalping The repo:ts SJTd nr ~rea of Sign Pad technique., The idea roughly is I the mountam~. where anll-Cnslro .; to loosen the skin on the ~ku\1 . rebels are bd1e1 ed concentrated ; .

• ! Is under heavv bor:1bardmenl. ' OTT A W A-CP - Prtme Min-and let the ha1r through. 1 Hundreds of pe~sant.s were eva· 1 ister . Diefenbaker will go. to

In 30 nperalio.ns ol this kind I' cuated from t~" mountains be· Washmgt?n Tuesday ~o ~1gn to date, Dr. Smrth elatmed, 25 fore the offenstve beg&n Fnday, the U.S.·Canada Columbia R1~~r patients reported their hair I the reports added. de~elopme~t treaty, ~ell~ stopped falling out and five! An evac11ec sJid at,out 10,000 I Prune )\Jmster Green sa1d St

· said their hair grrw thicker. : mililiamcn commanded hy Cas. I urday.

p, • \ _____ ....,.,.....,,. _____ _

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•• THE DAILY NEWS, ST .

'!Do It Now." ·c~mpaign Chartered Accountants Boosts Winter' ·Jobs

Board .· OJ" Trade .' AI Chairman of the Whole· Co ·rorget our forefather's In·

-·ltle !lec:tlon of the Newfound· ju'n~lloh that ''hard work hurts 'tand Board of Trade, I suggest nobody". Perhaps less talk and that during the Whiter months more hard work, physical and eftry homeowner, every em· mental, might serve a more ployer and· every private indi- useful purpose now than all the ridual make a point of hiring economl~ ''shots In the arm" sGineont to tidy up, clean up, and pontlllcnl pronouncements rtpalr, rebuild or repaint all or that seem to be the fashion. part ol his or her premises. Is thera any sound reason

·In moat countries Spring why the majori,ty .of men nnd eleanlng !a a ·tradition-good women In .Newfoundland can· tradition, even thOutlh It be un· not contribute In aome way comfortable for the man ol the to ·the Winter Works Cam­bouae. In. Newfoundland, we polan. Almo•t . everyone can wcnild be' Wl!\1' advl•ed lo do either plan to have a nocel· aomt of our aprlng cleaning 1ary job done or put aomeoM

: aew.:...partleularly In the'· bual· who want• to work .. In to)lch ·Dell houae whieh will be too with aomcone who wanta a · buiJ next spring to think about job done. cleaning, repairing or anything 11 woutd seem that the aolu· elll exeept aervlna the cus· lion to the problem of unem -.r. ployment as with all problems

Wt talk thete nay~ about dependi upon hard thlnkinQ, a pHIIUrt and tension, tending little planning, and some cQn·

At thlt time of the rear OJS individual!: to.aee, lf pos· number of our· fellow New· slble, bur these men are gain· foundlanders lfnd themselves fully employed. , out of work not due to any In employing these men we fault of their own brt due to· gain in a number of ways: . the seasonal n'ature o the work 1. J!lbs may be completed performed by the · Industries with more dispatch and with i which employ them. more attention in that the,

It Is certainly In the Interest tradesmen are not distracted ol business and each one of us with. other dem~nds for their I!

servaccs. certed effort. This Is all within 2. Materials a. rt! :nore easily I the scope of everyone, big avallabtt .nd In some cases at buslnellmcn and small home· more reasonable cost than in owner alike. In fact, the cu· the rush season. mulatlve effect of 'tho think· s. More money is put in cir· ing, piBnnlng and eltort of culntion and 1 am sur~ that we small businessmen, homeown are all aware that more money ers and individuals upon any in circulation means more busi·, cv.,J 4: Xo. 37) voung anct old enjoy one of· -l~>itr<l tht l'JllJil, a mnuuded, w11 ttith :-,• a,,t, 11 ·, .,

campaign Is lor greater thon ness and In turn more prosper j ··nel'eneL. n·1·enez, Ia glace Lonada\ rno~1 popular po.<timc·.'· · •urrcy Ji~•·Iused. The Macpher-lmg Wolf-- P Andre··. k . \\' I . •I, ' that of bli bualncu. lty for us ~II. I o'rst pas .ieS<'7 forte pour vous ' atmg. hen surh unfor 'on Srout ~roup announced that: doch, G. Phili1p, 11 ,;•

On behalf ot my collcngucs\ 1 would therefore hNrlily porter." ·n·.at is tlw French ~unnte occurrences tal1c place .. lhey wished to extend a "vote I drewsl; w,. O'Bn,;, of the Wholcaale S~cllon of the j endorse the winter work cnrn· lor ''Cnm~ h tl'k, c·Dme back, the r rlrowniu~ brct•mes a thrcntening of thinks" to all the people i Bon's) ~wnrmer';-f Newfoundland Bonrd ol Tra~c palgn and suggest that ench fo 11'<' 1sn't stronr cnou~h to hold postlude. wh·> ussi~t~d in the function, i say, C. Lush K \ubie . who perforce muat and do con·· us luspect our homes and uusi you." A lillie French boy, I Som~onP J't•fs out on thin r:'l'l'Ciallv As<1stant Scout ~las i tic (6th ~t John\ -r:' tribute to thll ~ampalan, ma~ tj ness. premises with a view to Henri. 'h'"'"'u these words to· '.cc, at hr.·" b.' !11: falls m, lh(' :?r llill F~·wra of the 2nd St. I Goose ~1st .Km>m1 n., n urge everyone to do llkcWISr .. rffl'ctmg af possablc some ol h1s can·lr" ".ster, who sudden· told water n..anh, lm legs. the. l:d .vards 1 runp. ; hng (St 1 hom;:; l;> -wlth the remark that If Jess: our repairs or conslrut·tion. ly fell into "· thinly icc·covcred current m~v CJI'I'Y him under • • • : Haggins ( tst 51 l:•.n·s,.· than half our population would! during this ulf sea;on. pund uc•;~r hi' I home. 'he ace. 1.0:\E S('OUT A \L\RDg : I ins, A. llc,;r.,•iJ:;r; ' provide but I eouplo of d•ys: F. D. WOOLGAR, In tins ,,.,,sun of the year. ke lle quick' -!tut think tle~rly~ ,\:\~Ot:NCEIJ 1 .lohn's) H1hr-\l' work, there would be no unem-~ P.re,ideut, Institute ol ''?vcrs nw;l 1d the local ponds. Cecide upon :1 safe way of ~av Jan. fi -l'l.c Exccu~ive Com St. Joseph'~) hrot ploynlcnt for a month-DO lT Chartered llccounb:JI> II'w'r pres,• Ill 1s thc• danger of mg the \'ltlnn :111 'SI!•nl·r ot :-;ewtoundland. .1looney 1.lrd St. Be· NOW. · of Newfoundland. . 'he icc's ,·ollop~ing, whih• holh 1 If you r:m rcaeh the l'iclim 't:.tcd I~r,. 1oday that three !'ark). ··I

---- · · -- -· --- -··---·----- (rom the •hr•re with a oplc or l.<,ne Seoul~ I• ave been decided · District of <;,,H,lcr a coal nr a rope, do so. Tic a ,'\s wmner.' in a special Lone . Cla~s-D. Jonc<. A. · loop in the ropr for the l'ictim :,,·.Jut Cunlt·~L The three Lone I (2nd St. ~!artm'>L

I i L_.··.,·

---·--........._. ' . ---·---~~--

••• ..... ,,,,.,,.· f/ti~~~

>~· .J {'•'.~}o>;.>·.'c ;~ , · ' '.~

,, ~''i'W 0.%.3} ':·:: .. ;,)!~~Q

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·~ '$Nj

Emoy Cu!IOrn Sedan

to put his hrm throu~h. -it will . Sr·lUt> arc F.dw:;rd lluire, Will· tor-J. Staple, B. tc hard fur h11n to hold on with · 1:11n K;ng >ncl Tlwmas lluirc. Matthews (2nd ~t. numh fingrrs. A ladder, or a . The tlnce boys Jive at Long District of bp!rq. hum;an ch;lln ;,re Hlso acceptable' £1:,r1Jo.ar, ~ small community on i Fir;t Class-.!. K1:cr,fl

\ method~ for r<'scue. Hot liqui.ils.: lh~ coast •Jf Placentia Bay. Iiams (2nd Jluchar.s, · ·dry clothes. nnd rrst or~ am· • • • • structor-D Sm1th : pcrativc ~ltrrwards. !\EW I.O"E SCOUT Cove). Ambulance

When alt•nr. continue mo1·e· . HEGISTERED i ~lacDonald, J. ment of ti!C legs Is important, • Jan &--- l'h third Lone Scout Pike, .I, Harris. L. i when fallmg throngh the Ice .. from (J)ll :>h~r. in cle1·en months. 1cy, K :.lullins. r2r.d Cling to th~ icc, attrmpt to h~s been rr~istercd in the New· : Cnmper's-A. llud~ell. ~Jidc your~elf unto the Sllf· loun<ll~IHl da\·asion of the Inter· 1 ~!. Gill, H. Yatr' 'Jst · rounding arc, or brrak your •~:,tiona! ~,·,,ut ~lowment. He is J District of Trini!y ·'•,;': way lhrour,h thin icc to shore,· (;iill'in Co<>P''' Provincial llearJ. !Class-D. Gcor£e. R. continuaJiv .moving the le~s. RS · qu;.rtcrs hJs cxtl'nded an offi· j :>1 Hillier (!st. 111 the bn•u't stroke while swim· : c1al weko•n~ to the new Lone· Class-Y. Geor~e. R. ming. H<~y sc,Jut. 'Reid, w. Reid.- n. (u~.~

• • • Old Sh>~r· i< H tiny v111aJc on Dildo). J Peid (hi D.:~: A SUI'I'l'\' of the national daily I lie far s;de of the coast of;·. District of .Port a•J

newspapers ma~azincs. and Tranaty Hav. across from South' hgton and Lafc. Pooks, dbdo,cr! the fnl!owin~ Dildo Hoa,t ~honey, T. Toh:n. P. interesting news events: · • • ! f !st. St. Strphen's,

Calgary i\P) - Christmas; SO \'0!1 TillS!\ YOU'RE 'ville). scrms the time when Jn.vthing: 1'1 EVI:R i District can happen urd lilt I!• I~ left to i The third 111 a feature series i mer~-J surprise tnr post office. Along, of sel'en. Bay). with dead l;•tters and wron~Iy 7. There :tre 10 hl:~ck >ockings District of l.abra,hr ~ddre%ed c:mls. Calgary poet and 10 wlli'.r stockin;:~ in a -R. !llake 1s1. llarr:• office wur~t·r;; al<o hal'c a wom· drawer. tf ,.l!ll reach into the ' ANSWERS Tfl an's pur.,e. Thc• woman, appar urawcr 10 ,h·,, dark. what is the ' Answers to ti;e r,·~:t: ently in a ruch to get her latr· · r.nnimum numlJer of stockings. think you're cle":r. mnilin~ cards on thrir way. 1ou must tokr out ueforc you: (7\ Three. You~:::· mailed cn·rythin~ she hnd in ~re surr .•t ha1ing a pair that , a pnir after lakin: o;\ · hand, inclllll:n~ her pur;;e, her match'! I the third one mt:st . light bill Jnr! hrr g;;s bill. · B. Take tw.· apples from three, the black or the wh1et

Lon :ion, England ( l:l'l )- apples and what have you got? , :~Jrradv removed. The Royul ~o<·icty for the Prr· u. 1 have two minutes in : (8) Two applrs of r· vrnlion of Arridents h:1s ur~cd •;:hich to catri' a train, and two · (9) Too hJd Y"" house wi1·r·s here tn cut dnwn 1'1ilcs to ;!o If 1 go the first :You used up all yo:~r nn Chmtmns hospit~lity wlwn ; uilr at tht r:.tr of 30 miles per: the fir't mil" the milkmnn calls. The Society 1 our. at whilt rJtc must 1 go ",\ RI\T nt:Rrl" ur~:es tnc laclir~ not to 1!i1·e the . th .. serund male in order to Antl now un:il '''' '~'' milkman Chn~tma~ drinks this' <atrh thr trJm" Goorl·hyc, (;,,od 1.•:(; year. 1 Hcprorlu('c•d from an article Scout!nr. and rr"'"'"'''

FEATURE ROOM TO SPARE ... space for five adults in every Envoy I And lots of headroom (34.4 inches in the front seat, 35.1 inches in tho b~ck) •• , lots of leg­room (40.4 inches in the rear, 42.4 in front) I

..... ...., .,

TI:\IE iS~o Paulo. Brazill - I•Y John Henr) Cutler, in Rea<J. : "llE PREPARF.n·· After Pedn' Serafina, 25, !irrd , c r's Dige't f.cdside Library). i two bullets ir.lo his l1e:Hl nnoth· .\nswrrs lll'ar enu uf column. ' ~r two into the left lung, hit ; • • • · Q I himself over the head wath n: SCO'CI t:.\tE!\IlAR SAI.ES I ra hatchet. and hcgan workinl! on' 1::\('f.J.LE:\T Resusc'ltaticn his throat w1th a saw. nei~h· Jan. f!--A ,nics studv this hours rushed him I• 8 hospital lltormn~. 01 thr lOG! Cco;at Cal

• -.. '. ----~ ,,;-_: _, J

IIG, BIG REAR WINDOW ... better

HANDSOME APPOINTMENTS ... the attraotivo Envoy instrument panel groups all dials and controls for maximum convenience-design is extra-stvtish, too I

ROOMY TRUNK ... lots of luggago spuco for all the family's gtlllr I Envoy's big trunk (19.3 cu. ft. or spaco) holds evorything you need on a trip I

where doctors pronounced him ''tidPr> d"lio>ed that the selling St. J(Jhn Ambulame In good con~ation. . of the twelve pJgr, full colour, Headquarters 1\a; p:::

• • • ,·alendrrs Ju,• risen consider· lntcrestmg aln1s:r"td 6th ST .IOI!f''S TltOOP "II" ably. l'ru< iii('Jal Hradquarters . descr•bing the · mm:.' ', HOLD fHRISnus l'r\RTY i .1dmrd rna' interested Cub :method of artii,m! C<EWS REVIEW fDcr. llil-- Parks and ~rout Troops >hould :~nd the corr<·:·t ll:o~r.el

The 6th St. ,lohn's Troop "ll'' .mica· lhr rn!•·nder> Immediate· Boy Scout• cnrled the bi·crn : II'. arises. trnnial year of the 6th St. ~ · • • • tS. John Am<·ui'w John's Scout Group tonight at • BOY SCOl.'T Tm' SHOP A · ~'irst Aid Classr; has its $2.000 Lodge, ncar Sugar : st:CCESS :years taught the I Lon[ Pond. three miles from St. . , . . . ; and the Scha[.,•r : .John's, with a sprctarular, fes . J.\:\. 4-:TI.c tnGo ~o; Seoul · flcial respiration 1nth live, nnrl cnlourful Christm~s :,hop, >lallonl'd at !\cwfound. 'results and nuw meeting anti party attended by land ~lnl'rnarnt l!ra~quartcrs. ·description of th1s 28 Srouts ami 10 Leadrrs and . rriNicd ~n " r~7rd ~· report :also known as Ural nol'er Scout<. I Ia\ twod undrc a~a aes we~e 'tion. For Obi'I•JUS

Cameron Hopkins, the "fresh· · ~~m etrr ~ssJslan~e ~;mg pt e . docs not lend it-elf man" Scoutm;,ster, and Assist· ·. ii'IS liii~S ~l'f!Otl 0· ff' ae. hro· practice in clJ>' ns do ants, Rex i\1nrtin and Hobert ··ancaa tdoylSro~I dace w;s ~s methods but qy; Dr. T:~ylor. concluctrd the two and : to cxten t I at• ·s an gralatu e ·Crawford, Chief one-half hour meeting. The . lo the. om mess farms and pn· : cr of St. J,,hn ' new Lodge-wt without an offi· vale cttllens for donations of ·Canada, "!has should cia] name-was decorated with new and usrd toys, and fmanct· I lowed to detract fror.a a huge Chri-tmas tree, rlrcssed nl cont~lbUlH•r.s.. ·that it as of 1·cr~ great with six tv lights. and tinsel. Tile O>coi~ Offace. al<o ~tated ] a llfe·saving mN>Ilre Preparrd crmpetition~. and Pa · that Tov ·hops of 3 samtlar I real emergency. The trol exhibitions were held. Re ' lnnd were oprratcd 111 Stephen· I mouth" methorl freshmrnts followed • \'tile nnd on Bell Island. i known to St. John fifli

~-:-: vision all 'round with the big glass

~ .. •' : ~. area (front and back I) in the

BUCKET SEATS., .standard on the Envoy Custom Sedan, these con· tinental bucket seats are an

• • • - I · t The five man Bnboon Patrol ,. . . as an altcrnai!Yt 0

-Rover Sc nats-werc in at. · ltOGER A •• (,U, WINS Glh ST. I methods and in cer\IJ :L·: . : I' ' '

~;~.:: •,· ' -

.. ·'

'. . ~--' -~- -~ . . .. :: .. :; . -~: -----..:• ... _,. ..... ..

new Envoy l . Envoy ''plus" I ·

FOUJII·DOOJII ACCESIIIILITY ••• makea It Blly in, eaey out -In • every Envoy I Envoy's four big doors make Envoy the most con-vtnlent car In Ita clasa I

~TO WONDI!l the Envoy is acclaimed as the best car value in its 1 ~ field.! 'Envoy's nimbleness .. arid manoeuvrability' put it in a

· class by itseif ...• Envoy's convenience and styli~g ensuro. un­rivalled value in every Envoy .•. Envoyvalue'isful/ ~aluel Get tbe fult.atory about Envoy eeonomy. ;·: low,.low initial price .••. low, low upkeep costs com bin~ with outstanding gas economy. ••• see how .easy it is to be the ~roud .o~ner of a· brand-ne~ .. !OY.I.Set your Envoy dOaler t~y;..... the foil-value Envoy!

.· ·J \ ~ · (~ tW. .,_I• Ulrrl con)

FUll VAlUE

.. , .. '.' ..

ANOTHER GENIRAL MOTORS VALUE

U.lcm8101..0i& -II PIODUCTS of diAD" UIIRD, IT VAUXHALLIOIOIS liMITED, 'tUTON, ENGlAND. PARTS AND SIR VICE FROM COAST TO COAST I .... ' • . . '·.. • • • . ,. • • . E-361A

~----~----~------~·--~..-SiiYOURLOCALINVOYDEALIR------------~--------------

___ N MOTORS. LTD, . .

ST. :IOHN'S", NFLD. DIAL 5047 (

, ,,

' . . .'!:: . ~ ::_ ... -~: .·, •A. , ~... ••.....:.

tcndanre. ' . JOliN'S 'fltO~P "I~" PATROL I may even be the Colour ~li<lc•s. presentation of . I.FADhln A\\ ARD I chtJice, especially

camp and winter Patrol Compc· : Nov. 24 - 11 clayed Hcportl:- I ally is an Infant or . tltions en>ued. David Small· '\n exrcptaonnlly effacaent SIX· ~ Every person taktnl wood, the Scuut selling the most , teen year ol•l Q~ecn Scou;, ~.r I John Ambulanc~ filii Christmas C'~trds for the Troop. ! the 6th St John 5 Troop B ·' course has the Oral and th~ T~ndcrfoot, a I so attain· ' Roger An~~!. h~s w~n the 13· tlon method mg thnt dl~tinct!on, were pre· ; ~ear-old Skaoper 5 Dark Trophy and receives a cup)' scnted with awards. • :-0 tnple oasr: award .cmblemat· crlptive leaflet •••••nl:lll'

Cameron Hopkins, Scoutmas.. ar of Scout •nr profacaency as 8 rernlnder of the tcr of the Troop for eight Patrol .~~~d.,r-f?r the 1960 be applied should the month~. was presented with a Troop ll S(·ouhng season. . arise for him to do SO. gift, bought through contribu· 1 , The lruphy: presented to the . The Oral tions of the Scouts of the : ~th St. John:~ 111 1948 by the method consists of. Troop. ) Skapper Sh1p 26 Ottawa, was re directl.v from the

High wir,ds, heavy rains, and ~.aa~eu as Mn award to ~ Troop the lungs of the Bllppery conditions prevailed B Boy Srnut 10 19~2. and mouth or nose. 'fo during the late afternoon and was prcsenleo Wednesday . at efficiency of the . all night, thu~ causing difflcul· the Ccntcnnaal Speech Naght essential that the al 1y In transportation of the 38 of Pra11ce .,f Wales College t~ casualty is clear of mel!) hers pre~ent, to and from Roger, holdrr. of fave Que~n .lion and free of ~,nk! . the city. Scout badges his Red and Whate there is a complcfr ,ell

'A survey conducted near the Cords, the Bronze Arrowhead, the mouth of the end of the meeting disclosed and currently a Troop Leader the mouth or no;e that only tv.·o members of thr of the 6th St. John's Troop "B" casualty." Troop were ~bsent from th~ !loy Scout~ I year end C\'d1t, 1

• • • ftiACPIIEP.SO!II SCOUT GROUP

CIIRIS1'M J\S J\CTIVITIF.S

Dec. 26- The Patrol Lea tier& and Seconns, rPportedly twelve. today condu(ted a Christmas party for the younger people of Baulfn~ South, a tiny east coast town n~ar St. John's. The Boy Scoms were at their new cabin un the Bauline Line, scheduled to hold a Court ol Honour · Annual Meeting to ntght. Forry.fwe children werP present fur thP early afternoon festive evt nt and received gifts One hundred and twenty pco r·ll'-rcsldcnt~ ••I Raulin~> South

• • • AWAR!lS GRENADE Kli.I.S

Jan. 6-~'ifty.five awards were CO!'ISTANTI~E chosen 1s •hF most outstanding d a 7().year-old mnn an. ~ for NovemtJN and December, in llx were killed ~"1" co-opcr~tio~ with the Policies, grenade flung Into I Organizatton and Rules of the here In eastern Atg.rJ National Organization. person.q were iniured

These &1'-'ards are listed be· ____ .....---' low: CLAIMS SPEED 1 Distnets ol St John's: Bush· LOS ANGELES Af man's Thnng-B Templeton llst u.s. Air Force rricit' St. AndrPW'> • Gold Cords-B. 8 wo•lil speed r.e<t>rt Templeton !tst St. Andrew's). B • 58 Hustler jel Green and Gold Cords-D. Pol· new rnore than ~~~ lie (6th s•. John'H "C"), First hour with A payi~31l Class·D Pultlt (6th St. John's pounds over a ·'C"l. 'iecnn.l Class.J. Farrell , couraa Thursday. I'I>C , Is! Sl Jn~~rh'sl: J. Chapman. 'in October 1959 c!atrr!il 1 Norm. F Lintleay, C. But ! new K3ll miles 1n ,

Page 3: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ... ,.S 1 - T s 'JR 'ICE · P.1nc: 'heir tirr is % t '" mL~eries. :,hakesptart :rt !I. HEATING BOILER . iomestlc

'~· ...

I

. \~1.

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·' to the quit: 1're clever.

' ~ce. You might '!t·r Inking out ~ nne must

or the whiet · l'lllOVed. . " apples of ·• had you . ur ~II your!' m i I 1'.

\ It 1\'E. OERCI" . .,, nnlil we mfet

\:ood Luck, ~n·l rrmrmbcr,

·p \1\F.O".

Jf. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND The Daily News MOI ... JOAY, JANUARY 16, 1961 , • ._.

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Lost .From Boat "No Impending Split Bowater's Produces \ "Liberals Will Return" Premier Smallwood Says rf(lerick Norman, a fishem!an from tlie Black- . In APEC'' Johnson Says I p :.·

F )4>ad, is still miss~ng, up to press time. On I 314 098 T afternoon, his small boat was found Arthur Johnson, president of 'here is. . ons aper I Premier J. R. Smallwood, re· : rally, that he is confident that

the Atlantic Provinces Eco· Three h1gh ranking officials ' : turned to St. John's ~'riday Ihe Liberal Party will be re· outside the Narrows. Rescue units have nomic Council, said over the of APEC havr resigned in re· . N Z ·~ from a trip which took him to \ turned to power when the _11ext

to turn up any sign of the man. . weekend !hat there Is no im, cent weeks 11nd this has led to MO~TREAL, Jan. 13- 80' 1 traha, ' ew cal and and South Ottawa to attend th Liberal election is held in Canada. He

EMPTY Wh tb all b t o pending split In that organiza· the speculation that the organ· waters Jl!ewfoundland Pulp and I Afncad . . national rally and th•~n to New 1 ;aid the r. lly was "an educa · JI()A.T : en e Snl oa was c me ation, despite speculation that ization wa~ foundering, Paper Mtlls Ltd. last year pro·: Bcsl cs , newspnnt, the mills I York for rii~cussion; with fi·jllon and mspiration." '

it was discovered that the outboard. motor · Mr. Johnson said that these duced 314,098 tons of ~a per 1 produced 35,090 tons of export nancier Jolin C Doyle. . . · -issing • .• it is thought that the man may resignations are definite! not valued. at abuut $46.5 milhon, i sulp~Ite pulp and 8,000 tons of i The Premier said, about the . About his talk with Doyle he "p .&.. · • I' d Bai·e ve· fte mdicative of a split u :f the accordm.g to figures. released to-: pulpm~ paper and other pro· 1 ______ would say httlc except that: 11 reached for me motor as-It s 1ppe away,· Council. P day. This was an mcreasc of 1<lucts. . . 1 i ,·oncernc<l fu•ure ore develop·

he lost his balance. On f 'h 1 t 45,575 tons .over the !959 f•g·! The· m1U worked a s•x·day 1 Greeti'ngs To : mcnts in Labrador. d h RC b p 1 Conf . e 0 · c roug Ics contro- ure. • week during 1960 and a spokes- !

At 3 p.m. Satur ay, t e MP Har ~r atro erence versies APEC wcath~red re- Year-end statistics for the man for Bowaters said that the! : Mr. Sm;q)wood will o!fici.Jlly was searching and dragging the area, but ce~tl.y was when certam AP~C big newsprint mills at Corner prospects look good for similar 1 A I , . open the Bai<· Vcrte resource;

' along with the Navy helicopter out .of Ar- 0 ' T d offiCials e~dors~d the granting Brook,. Newfoundland, were an· full-time operation in 1961. t antic . con[erenee at 10 a.m. today.

rlll.lcd to find any trace. pens 0 ay of a pendmg ~tcence to Man- nouneed through the parent Bo·l Orders this year are expect-llJ?e Central Atrways for a rer- I water Corporation of North 'ed to total an estimated 315,000 , .

, lam air route. A · d h 1 t r , · t f b t p The Bate v rte ourccs I E p . . . menca Lt . ere. ' ons 0 ne>\sprm rom a ou rovinces d ' I t • . e res. . I astern rovmcial Airways Average daily production dur- \ 160 customers. • e Y S naugura Ion conference wtll be offiCially were also seeking the charter . I ·

LIJ.~"'A· . opened tQday at 10 a.m. in the and they had the support of mg th~ year was 1,018 tons of!. As part of a pr~gram of mi\1 IIALIFA~-~!ajor - General , Sir Robert Bond Auditorium at Newfoundland's government newspnnt. In Deee~ber a n~w j•mprovement dunng the ye!r M. P. l'!ogert, Gcnt·rai Officer.

Tv For S h 1 'I Confederation Building, Later, after Newfoundl~nd. record was set With a d.aily I three new gro~ndwood storabe 'Commanding Eastern Command, • C 00 S Th 0 f h b 11 1 • 1 1 d average of 1,057 tons. Prevtous .1 tanks were butlt at a cost of I Wednesday offered "ood wishes. e c n erence as een ca - . I'IO ent y oppose Apec's sup- d · A -1 f 1960 $! 5 '11' Th t · t ' .,

' ed by Premier Smallwood and 1 t f MCA APEC · hd recor was m pn ° 'I · mi IOn. ey wen m 0 use ·for 1961 to the pe•)ple of the

No Report Wood Alcohol

Drinkers ar•M Canada will: voted outstanding player and will discuss the future of this! ~~~rbleosrs.Ino an' d the dwfift rcw i when the dailY average wasl·last month. Each of the tanks j Atlantic Provinces. In a state- I · f t h 1 c d' thl t f 1959 ·n · ~ 1 ercnce l O'i5 tons were bmlt at a cost of $1 5 mtl· · ,1opur1Umty o wac ·1 ana Ian a e e o • WI area in relation to several huge : of opinion was settled ' ' · . . · 1 ment Issued to the press, he· .

in;ucuration of Senator , tell his story. mining d~velopmenls now going I } · · · ~bout 60 percent of the news- hon. They went mto usc. last 1 said, "at the beginning of the· r-;u report ha~ as _;-et .heel' ,. nr1cdv as President Alternating with the personal th rl th t f 11 prmt output IS sold to custom-,month. Each of the tanks IS 50,Kcw Year it is anpropriate for 1rcccii'Pt! from the RC.\!P emu·

F. "r · · · I on ere an ° ers 0 0 ow. · th U 't d St t I f t · d. t 35 f t h. "h I · ,. 'D t · L b · • t'n,rrr' States on Wed- profiles e\•ery second week, the I The Department of Municipal' T v· . ers In e. ni e a cs on ong. ee In lame er.. . . ee lo , :the soldiers of the Canadian; e cctu;n a ora. tory 10 Saco< January 25th, at 3 p.m. rurrcnt evrnls segment has 1 Affairs recently made 8 com· 0 _ IS It term cont. acts, and m~stof the and has a capac II} or about: Army throughout Eastern Com-: vtllc, r-;cw Brunsw1ck on Ih•

l.r!nulnrl.tano standar~l time. lined up such varied and inter· plete survey of the Baie Verte . ' rest goes to Great Bnta!~·-~u~~-250_ tons of _5r~~-~d;\'o_od: - :manu to offer good wishes to; cause. of. death of ~wo lo~~~·r 11 anotl,rr step m the I ~stmg toptcs as astronauts, Cuba area and thi~ report will be: N f dl. d ; i the people of the Atlantic Prov· .last "eek at Ba1c \ crte. of rBc:rv·s. Canad~an &nd_ Ca~tro. and the United ~vailable to delegates attend· I ew oun an : c N R- A 140 Mt"llt"on !tnces. The history of_ the Army It is presumed the men died Tclrca't s senes to brti\C , Nations. mg. I • : m the Atlantic Pro1 mccs IS as from dnnkin" wood alcohol bur

or interest and i.m·l Until ~;bruary l~t, CBC-TV The conference will lasf !or : . . . . . , - ··· .,. .. ,.J~ I 1 old as the province> themselves, I a Corner BrZok autopsy ra 1ted bolh national .and m· ! prese~!s Whe~e History Was 2~ days and will close Wed- · '.i' o t • In 1960 and our soldiers have . moved 1to show a definite cause. Sp~cl-

to Canadian stu-~· Mad~, a. contmuat10n .of l~st nesday just prior'.to the re·l ,., pera IOn forward m harmony. w1th our mens of the mens' internal or· Last week. CBC cameras years sern·s. on. Canadian hiS· opening of the Legislature. country. W1th changmg t1mes. gans were sent to sackl'llle r11 r

abir to afford t~ VIewers I tory, and this Will he followed 1 Chairman will ~e. the Hon_ Dr. ~ONCTON, .Jan. 16--Can- Canada, the United States and 1 the .role of armies changes, .and; further study. mstght mto the I by a month-long S_!!que.nce of, F. w. Rowe. 1\llmster of High· adian NatiOnal Railways was a abroad as a gmde to mdustnal·, mclttahly troops must be nd1s-. .

rlutil's of the Queen's telec~.sts c~llcd "They Ltnk the 11 ways, Green Bay, Opening ad· $140,000,000 operation in the isls who may be thinking of posed to meet new tasks. The: } he men ar~ Leo '·Iynes a1;d

-··•'"'"''" m Canada, when Land • which show how water· dresses wjl] be given by the Atlantic Region last year, Vice- expanding operations and arc 'coast defence forts are no Jon., s._l,cst.er _Drolcr. ll}nes b a Vanier spoke ways, railways, roads and air· 1 Premier and the Hon. Dr. I President D v. Gonder revealed I undecided where to go. ger manned, hut the great Army' B1shop s 1· ails man and Dro·.er

trn minuh·> lo school child· • lines help to unify the whole I' Rowe. ' today and said 1960 likely would The CN has made such sur- station at Camp Gagetown has was a re>1dent of Ba1c Vert c. l(ross the nation. I of Canada. go down as the year CN began veys of some 40 of the main' grown up. In carrymg out their · t~i~ series of school Begmmng . Ma~eh. ~th, •. the j 1 in earnest to tap its tremendous cities. towns and areas in the' role of, defendmg our country.

. srrn each Wcdnes· hal£-hour pmod •.s diVIded ~nto R d A d G speed potential as a long dis· Atlantic Provinces in recent! Canada s soldiers throughout at 3 p.m. m New· two parts. The first "In Fteld I 0 n un lance carrier. years and they hal'e been credit- I Eastern Command make a great Struck

i• designed pri· and Forest". filmed on the AI· ! • Looking back over the 12- ed with helping to attract new contnbutwn to the economy 1 lessons taught berta Game Farm, deals with i (I b T M month period, t.he region's chief industry. :of this area. but, as most peo· By Car (lf the senior ele· i the indigenous Wild life of C.an-! U 0 . eet executive said nearly $90,000,- . On the Sydney. N.S.. snbdi·, pl.e know, It IS not only Ill the

anrl 1111110r htCh·school. ada, and the second senes, , 000 of the total cost of opera· v1sion. a SGOO,OOO track 1m prove·. economic sphere I hat our sol· it c~ntaius mueh of in- ' "Homes tJf Long Ago", show~ I The St. .John's Rod and Gun tion went out in payment to I ment programme was conclud- diers contribute to the com· A rmddlc·aged woman r~si· 1nd 1aiur for the home- how environment determined i Club will mpet this week and

1 more than 26,000 permanent em- ed in !960 and another $150,-: ~unihes In wh1ch they hve .. dent of Blackmarsh Road >us·

Tt.i! week, for cxam_Ple, t~e type ~.f home and way of.'l special gue~t will be Dominion ployees and pensioners in New looo was spent on miscellaneous: !\ever have more fnendly. rc·l tal ned slight InJury to her r:ght Jar.m) 1Bih. the spothght l!fe. of ~rimihve Indians and, wildlife of.liccr Les Tuck who I Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Princc,track workin Cape Breton. ilalwn~,.eXIStcd b~twcen soldiers,ankdc _In a traffic accident _e,

be on (;}cnn Gould, the Esktmos Ill C~nada. . /will address the membership on , Edward Island, Newfoundland. Abo dun~g .the year a new ,and ~111hans. Ma) this long ron· iter a). p•amsl·co~poser . who I Booklt•ts With full deta1Is I general wildlife in Newfound· COMMODORE P. D. TAYLOR a.nd that. part of Quebec that I Canadian NatiOn~] - produced: tme 1 .The woman was struck hy a

"'"'""k'~tcd to mternallo~al about these ll'l~casts are avail-, land_ 1 HAMILTON. Ont. _ Commo· hes m hts temtory. f1lm on the ~!anhme Provmces, :car at the intersection of Churdt in ju.<l ~ few years. Vm- able to home VIewers and may I The mectin~ will be held in . d p D T 1 C d' g I The balance had been spent was completed and had tts • . • illtll and Duckworth Street Tor~ll will ask Mr. Gould be obtained from The School Room 101 at Memorial l:nivcr-1. Oofrf~ . N. aly oDr ... omman ·~Ilion new facilities and equip-! premiere. Designed to stimulate. 7\ ''a·JlY Act~ ve I' shortly before 2 p.m. She was

1. th d B d ts D t t C I tccr ava Ivistons, WI t . . d d' th t . t . d t . th ~~ . , J.Vll ~ him•~ If. 11s unor o ox ;oa ca~ epar me~, /n· sity annex. make a tour of naval reserve I men , tmprovmg a.n. cxpan mg .. e our~s m us ry m c b :m- 1 . conveyed to the General llo.,pi· manner. and 1the ups aB •and t:p!rtmcent, t.ana 1Sa

1n ) The date and time will be 1 establishmrnts in the Atlantic plan,t. and mamtammgk andhoP· t1hmes, t 1e hlmc 1sd nowd e

1m1

g! ]•'ol· '11't'rsf :1 tal hy the driver of I he car.

coll'1l.< of a mus1ca career • roa ens m, orpora IOn, . advertised. 1 . 1 Q b d . eratmg 1ts trams, true s, s Ips, s own across ana _;r--an te · 1' Cmrla , John's, or Telephone 7181, · l'hrovlm~cs anr ~eJ cc unn~ hotels and communications in United States on television and

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. ! The Rod and Gun Club is I e a ~er part 0 anuary an the five provinces. shortly will be seen in Europe. Fis/zinf! T D" . Charlr• G. Bes!, co-~IS·: CONSTANTINE [Reutersl-A composed of hunters and fisher· 1 early ~ebr.~ary. ·. _ Not included in the totals

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w1Ih Dr .. Frcdcnck 170-year-oid man and a child oi men who Dre interested in the, Durmg .h•s tour, which starts 1were the figures for Eastern Th~ 1961 \routing sea,on · of ln~uhn, Will .be fea· six were killed f'n«ay by a conserv~tion aspe.cts of wild·' .Janua~y 2•1• c.ommo?~re Tayl?r I Transport Limited and sydney . Frozen . r.pcncrl yr.s!l·rday and many A H • t 1

on Fc~ruary lsi: and on I grenade flung into 8 crowd !Ife In thiS pro~mce and de· : Will VISit. na\al .diVISions tn 'Transfer, trucking firms which . ardent fish~rmen braved the OSpl a !5th. Canadian foot· here in eastern AI~:wria. Five vote. much ()f their time to im· · Quchcc City P,.Q., Samt John, are subsidiaries of Canadian , cold and >r.ow to try thm .

qu1rlerhal'k Russ Jackson, persons were injured. proving the ~ports here. I N.B.; SC _J?!ln s, Nfld., HMCS National at Sydney, N.S. and . · favourite nonds. I lntere:;trd Bell Islander' -.rho

The ----·---- ; Cabot J?IVISIII~ from Jan. 25 to Truro. Not included either\ Waterll"nes Some C'l!~rprising individu· would like to sec a hospital on

C Man 27, Halifax. N.S., and Charlotte· were rolling stock purchascs 1 als, antieip"ling the need for I the Island ha11· bern in1·itcd to opper town, p:~.l ]] . SUCh as the !55 S\ee] flat cars; · fre:;h bait thi' time of year, had : a special 'liCl'lln~ m the lin loll . J:Ie WI al.so ca on ~entor ordered from the Eastern Car: St. .John's was plagued with worms 'or saJr ;,nrl they did a ~ this week.

~~~q.i,;f'IY<"f,~f"&>Wil\'~~~flll~~~~~~~~!l'l!fl!l 1• CIVtlian ufflrwls and presidents Dt'vi·st·on of Domi.ni'on Steel and. f t I' hri.<k trade Saturday and Sun· I' • h . · . · h . many rozen wa cr mcs over - . . d . . I of. t e umvcrsitles m t esc, Coal Corporation at Stellarto~, I the weekeJtd and inany house- ! day morning, , The meet mg. Will be un er · ·Cities. . . IN.S. for use on the company s holders had to attempt to thaw' The season l1:1s been closed the chairm~nship of J. G. Roh·

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Accompanyi~g ht~ on the Newf~undland lines. out iced lines with blow torches. 1 since September 15 but is now bms of Bel~. Island a~d pre· ::our Will be LICul. C?r. W. H. The highlic~t of the year an? Severe frosl and little snow 1 open until nc.xt September. IImmary 0~7~usswns 1' 111 1:*e 1 MacDonalrl, his flag lieutenant· a milestone m Canadian ml to blanket 'h•• pipes is causin"' A u· 1 t tl _ place on t. L Important top.c. . . . . I - n. ccor lnr c repor s Jere IS · commander. transp~rtahon htstory, Mr. Gon· worry, especially those people," iair thic~nr,s of icc on most

der said, had been the open· I who have water lines close to. ponds and htllo• snow in the ing on Novemher 2 of $15,000,· I the surfa~e ,,, the ground. wood< Patrl"cl"ans 000 Moncton Yard, the nation's -_. __

Reprcser.lalives of Dosco, service clubs and other or~an· izations ha·:e olso been invited.

\first automatic classification, ·

G h · t~ig:rtel~[i~~ '~/~~e p:~~!~·~l Fined $200. To Be Gt"ven Vie vi at ermg speed potenttal. 1

1 . Canadian National Telegraphs 1 A Bell lsbnd resident was

I Grace the Archbishop who has running from Sydney, N.S. Island Frid~y. 1 With th~ ~pproval of His $9,000,000 microwave network fined $200 for assault on the Of < ....... IL · ;,Jso extenden his Gracious across Cabot Strait a~d New- Tt'ie off~nc~. against another 1 .._., Operations pa.trona~e, thr P~trician Associ· foundland to St. Johns, was a resident of Bell Island, occur- 1 atton Will hold Its commumon spectacular development when red near Christmas and the man '

M d J · f h Employees of Canadian In-. tra1·ellcd from Sable Island on

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supper on on ay, anuary III ,.Irst came upon t e scene. was later 1rrested and brought dustries Limited at St. John's· the east coast where special 23rd. • ·This past year more of tis before court ' 1·n ' .

In lhe· -•r never-ending re- shape of a buman body ·wltb dl·

Program aimed at de- menalons and surface area cor. btotter protective responding to the average male

lor membel'l of the pbyilque. He may be heated

Mass will be celebrated at potential was realized when !50 will be given in February a ;,explosives are being used · d ']! 1 h h 1 "raphic review of various as- ·

1 seismic cxploratiolt for otl. to

1 the Basilica at 7.30 an WI voice or te ep one c annes on i b

I be preceded by confessions one microwave channel were' Poi"ICe BlOtter pects of the company's opera-1 James Island, B.C., where ex-from 6.30 tu 7.30. Those at· placed in actual service. As a I !ion during the past year in a I plo~Ives arc milde by the com-

1 tending will receive holy com- result the company is able to . 'full color motion picture film 1 pany. This IS the tlmd succes·

· t th ff N f undlanders the SIX arrests were made by 1' "C-1-L Todav-l960." stvc year C-I·L has gn·en Its mumon a c masses. o er ew o 1 . · · . · b t d t ]. ble com·. City pohce over the weekend. ' The half hour film stresses. employees an annual renew of es an mos re 1a . . . . · tl h lh

Supper wlil be served by the munications service in the' Four men were arrested for growth and expansion of C-1-L Its . operatiOns 1roug e Patric~an Ladies . Associati?n world. . I drunkenness, one for assault durin the past year and covers i mediUm of motiOn pictures.

1 followmg the service, and will 1 N f dl d .d and disorderly conduct and one activities of all of 1ls eight OP·J Producer and director of . he held in the St. Patrick's n ew oun an ' d eonsi er· given in charge for being crating divisions and unusuaii"C.I-L Today" was ace Can· :

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l Hall auditorium. The special· ~bl~ profre~~ w~s :~ e ~ pro· drunk and disorderly in the product end uses. During pro· I a dian producer, Tom Farley of I, guest spea~er will be the Rt. JBec sk 8 d p. t 0 n s, B orner home. duct ion of the film, camermen Crawley Films,. Ottawa. 1 · , G h · · t roo an or aux asques . , ; Rev .. T. Me rat • panest prtes and work completed at Claren· · t.'

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. "~ Wttless Jay-Tors Cove whe~e ville, Terra Nova, Alexander !Jus reputa.wr. as a speaker ts Bay Lewisporte and Bishop's

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I so well known · Fall~.

This event Is the outstanding • Industrial surveys were com­: one in thP. annual calendar of pleted of Fredericton, N.B. and ; the Patrician Association and Newfoundland with emphasis

it is expected that it will be on St. . John's, Corner Brook, attended by 'lbe usual large Grand 'Falls and other main

1 number of the ex-pupils and centres. These will be publish· : friends ot St. Patrick's Hall. ed in 1961 and circulated in :---------------------------------------------

1 ,305 Men In AND Logging Canips

The A.N.D. Co. woods haul· Production by operating Di· ing operations are progressing visions for the week were:

of the temperature difference 'fabourably with . 38,000 cords Badger-11,400 cords. between bim and his environ· being hauled during the week Bishop's Falls-9,700 cords. ment This iB not true of a ending Jan. 12th; 1961, bring· Mlllertown-8,700 cords. human· subject whose heat pro· lng the total hauled to date to Terra Nova-8,200 cords.

FOR EXTRA STOUT MEN Size 44- 52. Size 46 - 54.

PAINTERS ~lENS ALL \VOOL

·' STRIPED TWEED

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OVERALLS PANTS of White Cotton Drill with

bib and shoulder straps. Worth $7.95 _

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personnel at the through a range · of tempera· 1 of Aviation Medlclne tures, dressetl In the teat clotb­oun1 a ·valuable ally- mer, and l11e inaulation of the

duction would result In active 175,500 cords or 5:1% of the During the past· week, 1,600 perspiring ·In the same environ· total cords cut. ' cords were delivered by trucks

Special $2.44 Sale $].77 i' ., ')

man " ment. There are, at present, 1,305 to Rushy Pond Brook, the most clothing determined by mwur-

to}lper man was develop. in" the ener"" required to The copper man is not, of men engaged in hauling on the of which was transported more

ffSJlonsn to th • e• •·ourse, a perfect re.placement four Woods Divisions. ' than 23 miles. . ' e need for· maintain the man ·at a given

h rehable device to re- temperaturt'. for 'the human test subject. His uman t t chief deflcleneies are that he en - es subjects in In a typical experiment the

. VIJ'onment experiments copper man will be dressed In does not penpire, does _not 18059 Men Out tlu· in,ulation quail: fl . .1 1 . b move and Is completely un·

• fab - 3· Ylllt SUI • 1 eepmg a& .or emotional. Each of these factors

t•by dffos~i~gw~~~andes~~: some. oth .. r item of ~~techv~ bat • bearinA on the heat ·bal· " lhp eloltuae and . set up Ill .. ~ny ance of the human and cannot

· r•ew ~lothinK a,nd room where the tehtperature j be easily.'duplieated. On the lei lh1Pm to rold. This ran be eontrulled within r~· , olther ha"d,· tile copper man 1·8

Employment Of ....... • way, rond11 · · to bt 1 h •· The followJna. fi"ures repre· -e CIVe aou e IITrit&. Uslnll t e cop. ~~re ~onvenient .than human ~ " -.0: tbe lllbjecta 10 Jlill' 11 11; rolcl weathtr elotb- ....... • sent the numher of unplaced

..,.I'Ullnt thlt a ........ II· 1 . rubjectl and ha& proven to be applicants registered at the "'-~~ • ...,. lM .m&y be tiJted II l'fllattveb" . . f ] 1 tru

-....:It"Wif ._.,,_.. ...,..._ ,_ .... ..... • ... a very use u ns ment in Unemployment Office as of 12 ...__ • .....,.._ .,..... "'""'"'_,., .. , .... ee .... e . . . d ,.,_.,, . ..,.,. -•Is ~- ~ ~r•d to lfttliltain .maJU' W&yft 1n the evelopment lanuary 1961, for last week

·. · !&lbl~ W tile. ,lilt 1~t\lre il a func:tion i of protec~!Ve clothing. 'a11d for the same period last

year: UNPLACED APPLJCANTS

12 Jan_ 1961 5 Jan 1961

l4 Jan 19RII

Male Femah 18059 1606 17010 1484

.17018 1374

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WATER ST~EET STORE

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Page 4: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ... ,.S 1 - T s 'JR 'ICE · P.1nc: 'heir tirr is % t '" mL~eries. :,hakesptart :rt !I. HEATING BOILER . iomestlc

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THE DAILY NA,WS ... . Newfoundland's Only Morning · f'aper ~... .. -

' . · · YEARLY S\HiSL'RWfiON KAT~

.,.

Canada . 312.00 per annum Unlted Klngo.l.1m

end all forcillJI rountries $14 ()(} per annum Authorized as secnud class mlli.l, Post Offi~ Dtopartment, Ott::.wa.

The DAD t NEWS is. a momin!! paper estabh-hed In LSW, and pub· llshed at the ~Jew) s,,lJdinp;, 355-359 Duckworth Street St. lohn s,· New toundland, bv Rubln.'-'n & Company Limited.

. Mf:MBE1l OF TilE C,\NADL-\N PRESS

M1e Camtdi:m Pre~s is exclusiveh -~otitled to tt\1' use tm republication 1t 111l news •iesp~tt.:hes in this pape~ :n:ditt:d to It or tv the Asscv:inted t>ress or Reuters and 11ls'o •he loca I olews publistu•d therein.

All Pres) Servke~ and teature article~ in th1s pape1 lll'e copyrisxht ed and their reproduction Is pro­hibited.

• MP.mber Audit Bureuu

of Cin:ulaHon.

----------------------~--~-----MONDAY. JANUARY 16, 1961

:•

Planning A Stitch In Time Baie Verte is a fairly flourishing

township at the head of an inlet which is a narrow fjord that pene­.trates deeply into the northern ~ontour of the peninsula that sep­arates White Bay from Notre Dame .Ba~·- .

Its chief claim to fame until re. cently has been its importance as a 1ogging centre but it promises now .t.O become one of the most import­.ant mining towns in Newfound­land. Soon the first steps will be taken towards the construction of a mill to produce asbestos fibre in )arge quantities. Nearby is the Rambler mine where the Boylen interests are going to operate in

• conjunction with other copper­mining activities in the neighbour­·'hood. .. Within a radius of about 25 miles 'to the east is the new· fishery cen­tre of La Scie, the prospet·ous mine !It Tilt Cove, and the fishing com­

'munity of Nippers Harbour. To the southeast is Burlington, an­other logging town.

A road runs from Baie Verte directly south to the Trans-Canada Highw.ay and connecting roads either now or soon will enter the Baie Verte road from all the prin­cipal communities in the peninsula.

All these things add up to a sim­ple fact. This Baie Verte penin­sula is about to become a major centre of industry and population that may make it the main metro­,polis of the north.

That is ~hy the Government has , decided to call a conference today 'to make sure that the growth of this new development region will be

orderly, efficient and progressive. To the conference have been in­

vited all who have a direct interest in Baie Verte and the surrounding region or in plannin_g on a general basis. There will be representatives of provincial and federal depart­ments, of local government in the Baie Verte area, and of other inter­ests that may have something to contribute to the discussion of how

· to make a stitch in time save nine. We have seen what happens and

what tremendous social and finan­cial problems can be created for want of planning. Look at St. John's which grew without plan­ning until very recently and at the satellite towns that surround major industrial centres in other parts of the province. In all these places frightening difficulties exist. These include congestion, substandard buildings, narrow streets, problems of health and sanitation, fire risks and other perils. There is squalor. There are the special consequences of this condition reflected in the social fabric.

Well, the object o( the confer­ence on Baie Verte is to see what can be done to prevent this kind of thing from occurring in a new de­velopment region. All aspects of the question are to be canvassed. Ideas are to be sought and discuss­ed. As a result of all this, Baie Verte's development may be a kind of pilot plant which will establish the pattern for expansion in other areas to which rapid change may come. It is a good idea that should produce useful and valuable conse­quences.

A Banker Speaks His Mind The new president of the Royal

Bank of Canada, W. E. McLaughlin, has dealt forthrightly with the problems of monetary and economic

·policy in his address at the bank'~ annual meeting.

One thing he has emphasised is that where the hard core of un­employment is reacheo as a result of structural faults in the economy, monetary and fiscal policies cannot help. Then is the time to face the hard facts of "failure of labour mobility to keep pace, through re­training and through movement to

' appropriate areas and industries, · with our rapid rate of technological . change. We .shall have to face up , to our inflated costs and slow growth in productivity which to-;~ether account for the greater part :nf all the· ills that are currently 'l>lamed on the exchange rate or on l· . •.

the monetary policy of the Bank of Canada. These real, and apparent­ly chronic, problems are the true cause of abnormally high levels of unemployment in good times and bad and of . the general malaisl! which has been accurately labelled 'high level stagnation'." ·

Mr. McLaughlin discounts the alarm. over Canada's excesive eco­nomic dependence on the United States and seems to think that un­necessary tinkering with exchange rates, trade balances, and capital flows, would incur the risk of in­cidental disaster to Canada's long­run economic development. His appeal for a commonsense :view on monetary and fiscal policies will, it is to be hoped, strike a responsive chord within the area in which such policies are made,

'Seturity. In Laos ~ ,. .. "!!

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R In 1954 the efforts, of, Anthony , ian Communists and the .~nited ~den. and the· outcome of the Gen- States sends rocket-armed . a1rcraft

· @va . Conf_ere!lce. disc~uraged ~n ,-to support the pro-Western regime. dventure by. Mr. Fost.e.r Dullesh:n. Th.e only way of making sure that e dangerous art of bt;nkmans 1P . remote and primitive and almost d Pr~uced a. peacefu. settlemept · childlike Laos does not become a the In?o-Chma question. . ' causa belli is through international

That ~~d. not dete~ Commun~t discussion and agreement. That is forc~s w1thm the re~!On fr?m su · the course that wisdom dictates. vers1ve and aggressive action. ~n · , . neutral Laos, a local Communist group has been actively abetted by neighbouril)g Communist states and United States pOlicy has been aimed at countering these moves by · suppt)rting a pro-western govern­ment and providing it with mili­tary and economic· aid. ·

Tlwe .. ia probably little doubt that Cllina has been promoting help for the Laotian Reds but it is also realmllble to aesume that China is u much perturbed by American flttertst in Laos ae the United States il by Ch!Dtlle inter\lentton. It fol­.low• th&~. the ~enslblt courte to. ··fellow IIJo~vjve tbt Gtne\la con-6tnace and. reach an agreement . 1rN will underwtitt the lndepend-

~·,:=1:i~~~I.~Wn· w· the taot-

ESCAPE FROM TIME T. S. Eliot

No one can au very far in the dls­cornlna enjoyni~nt of poetry who Is in· capable of enjoying any · poetry other than that of his cwn place and time,· It Is In· fact 1 part of the function of education to help u• 11 escape-not from our own time. f:.r we are bound by that - but from· the Intellectual and emotional llmltati~n• of our own time.

PVTTJNG 0~ THE BITE Cot~ Brtton Poat

A . mu who made ' racket out of tu•llll dop lnt~o' bitJna him and then eolleetinJ dainaPt from the owners wu Hnttrlctd to • year ID a Tokyo jail.·

• '1'ht . eourt found Yosbl9 ltaukl guilty ol collectiaa 11ut41. of •78.33 from nine dol .,.._. dail )ear. Not • prince!)' pri~ fDr belq bitteD by !line doaa.

. ' .-__ c•;;,,·.L, • .··.: :. 1~.

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHl\'S, NFLD., MONDAY, JAN. 16,

I IN THE NEWS 81 Wayfarer

NEWFOUNDLAND IN 1961 Newfoundland is rapidly approaching

the end of the twelfth year of Confed· eraUon. It was assumed, when the agreement on terms was made, that this would be the full period required ~r complete readjustment to the ;,ew stntus. The so-called transitional grant was devised on that basis with the chief accent on the first three years and with the amount reducing gradually there· after until its extinction by the end ol March·, 1961, However, the real testing lime on a financial basis was thought to be the first eight years and it was on this conviction that the Royal Com mission inquiry under Term 29 was pre· dicated. Now, as we are about to enter the thirteenth yenr of union, seems to be a good time for a quick and relative­ly brief examination of where and how Newfoundland stands in 1961.

These past twelve years and more particularly the past ten years have been a period of social and economic revolution. We have a young popula· tion. About 200,000 are children under 16 yea?s i>f age. Nearly another 100,000 are persons under 3 years of a~e. This means that far more than one-half of the population hove no personal recollec· lion of what things were like at the end of the war. Stili fewer remember the direst days of depression from which the upward climb began slowly in 1937 and reached the climax of full employ· ment and unique prosperity by !943. That does not mean that there is neither misery nor poverty any more. But the great majority of the population have forgotten for the most part the trials and tribulations of a little more than 20 years ago and have adjusted their atti· tudes to what may be expected of a more prosperous and more progressive society,

What has happened, in effect, is that one of the most primiti\'e societies in the world of western civilization has been pushed almost by jet propulsion into a new order. Chan~e has not heen gradual. It has been explosive. If we base our comparisons on twenty years a~o. the contrasts are almost fantastic. If we go back another five ye~~s, they are totally fantastic. A little while ago some impressions of the Newfoundland of forty years ago were set down in this column. Twenty-five years is a much shorter time. And twenty-five yf ars a·;lO, there was little more in the --- -·----------~

way of public and social servicea than there had been fifty years earlier • Wants themsr:ves were simple for two reasons. First, the money did not ex· ist to satisfy them. And secondly, there was no standard of comparison. Liv· ing to itself alone, isolated from lhf main stream of life in North !\meri· ica and Europe, a kind of halfway house in which people had lived ln Insular loneliness with few hopes beyond the achievement of the means of getting three good meals a day in the immed­iate future, Newfoundland had no standards but her own aod small means of improving what she had. That was how thin~s were until 1935 when the first foundations were laid for a sya­tem of modest public services.

But nothing that happened between 1935 and 1949 were adequate prepara· lion for the years that followed coD federation. Misery and want were abolished for ali but a. few by the steady rise in material prosperity. People ate better. dresseC better nnd were better housed. The cottage hospital system improved medical services. Isolation bc~ran to break down under the com· pietion of the narrow. gravel roads to Grand Bank, Bonavista and from Hali'a Bay to Deer Lake. But we were still in the early stages of the development of a good system of puhiic services when the great constitutional change came at the end of March, 1949. It waa not until then that a real sense of security was experienced( that the means of sal· isfying many long-deferred wants be· came available on a public basis through the new welfare and social security sys· tern and on a private basis through cash earnings and instalment purchasing. It was not for another few years that it hegan to be realized that better educa­tion, extended health services, roads to cover the province, water and sanita­tion facilities, electricity and many other things were within the reach of most and coming within the reach of more. All this, in a way, exploded on us. The combined good has been incal­culable. On the other hand, its swift­ness has had an effect upon our sense of values. Where do we stand at the end of the first twelve years of union and where may we expect to go? The articles to follow wil not pretend to provide answers but represent an at· tempt to appraise the situation as a pos· sible foundation for more scientific study.

What Others Are Saying ·si'rlOKE SCREEN Vict(lri~ Colonist

Gloomy port~nt• of an age when space is so littert'd with haphazard satellites tha! 11 looks like a junkyard are provided by tv.•" United States law· yers who havP ~tudied the question for two years.

But this attitudt' dircounts man's in· genuity. Before sp~ce is littered like a junkyard-and 1f we keep up our pres· cnt "progrtss-the atmosphere closest to the earth will be so opaque with smog that the rubbish way out yonder won't be visible.

fillS ENGLAND New Stat~sman

As a woman wht. enjoys watching sport, 1 get VPry embarrassed when footballers hug and kiss each other on the field after a goal i~ scored.

Now when I go to see a Rugby match, thi~ never happens When somebody k1cks a goal or score! a try, both sides just get on with the game as quickly as they can.

Why is there this big difference be· tween footbailel'! and Rugby players?­Letter in People.

BAJiHSJIING BARNACLES Ship Shure News

A new system developed in the U.K. for keeping the und~rwater hull of a ship free from marine organism oper· ales from within tht ship and saves fre· quent drydockll\g F uur small bore )'VC emission tubes !!istributes a toxic vap. our onto the undPrwater structure in the form of bubbl~s which rise around the hull. The toxin used Is CW80B which def.troys or deters a! species of fouling crganis.ms.

-------SEASONAl. SALES NOW PREVAIL

Wind~ur Star The pre-Christmns seaaon is a period

of spending rt1th~r than saving. The post-Christmas sea<on i~ one for saving · in spending. Tht latter is now upon us. ·

Canadians n~n't normally a1 race of misers. Our whole economy on this Chlltinent is gr.ar~d to high spending. Should it ~low down, this results in ff'wer orders for thP factories and less

.work for our wcrkmen It may seem 1

daffy sort of economy that depends on Sllfnd-thrlfts for stability; but there It is.

There still »re peuple however, out of .necessity or n9tur~tl Instincts, who always are on the lookout for a good l>Rrl!ain. Some rely on seasonal sales to atock up on tht'lr needs. And they are adept at knuwlnp a real bargain from a phoney one.

Some parent' h~ve gotten into the habit of giving thetr sons and daughters lwho have reacned the age of financial discretion) money rather than presenta for Christmas Thl'n these can take ad· vantage of the sales to buy what they WJBh. '

Those whu take tult advantage of the sales know hllll' muc)1 they can save in 1 year. Those wh" j!lllt buy whe11 the whim or need olV~rtnkes them never know how mu~h extra they spend.

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FE()ERAL DlSTR1CT Moose Jaw Times-Herald

The creat111n ot a Federal District embracing Ottawa, and the immediate area, presents a prc.blt•m because it has been develo:led and expanded on the basis of the entt'rpri>c of those who live m the city, 3ssi~ttd by the Government of Canada. It is not an impossible cltange, but one fraug~l with many diffi· culties, if the ~uggested Federal Dis· trict is to l:e the administrator and owner of ail the property in the dis· trict.

A NEW NIGHTMARE The V~ncotwer Sun

As if the bn•gain atom bomb didn't give us all the r.ightmares we can handle, scientists of hath East and West are pushing re£rarch that may lead to something wurse than the biggest nuc­lear bombs.

The new h~rror :s r.alled anti-matter. In nuclear and thermonuclear explos·

ion, a small amuunt ot matter is turned into pure energy In the explosion of ~n anti-matter del'icc, apparently all the matter wonld be translated to a flare of energy such as our solar system has never seen.

Fortunately evt'n the preliminary steps in this development are stagger­ingly expensive ar>d we can hope that e'lerybody go~s bankrupt before every. body just plain goes.

--------FRANCE·~ LJTILE SHOPS

Franct' Actuelle If the kintl cf ~hvp you're looking

for in France isn't on the corner, it'1 probably only p~rt way to it. A smoke, a drink, a c~rf~t' or a snack is par· ticularly easy to fmd, since 171,152, or cne out of seven of all retail establish· ments in the ruuntry. sell tobacco or drinks. Then rome grocery stores (137.-888); hotels ana 1esrauranta (108,754); material and clOthing shops (69,875); butcher shops IR8.17JJ, beauty parlours and barber shops (55 909); bread and pr.stry shops < '>4.812); laundry and dry· cieaning es•nhllshrr.ent~ (21,152); news­dealers, stationers and bookshopa (18,· 079); drugsltlreP (} 7,518). There are only 227 departmPnt-type stores in the CCIUntry.

THF:\' BEUEVE IT Nf'w YLrk Times

Cuban revolutlunkry leaders do sin· cerely believe i11 the danger of an armed attack, some day ,r other from • the linited States

It Is difflcult f,r Americans to un· d~rstand that others can honestly believe things about us whi~h we know to be false. The fa1lure '' recognize this fact has been a co~ns1~tent weakness in American for!'tfn Pulley. We never could believP. tt.ht the Ruuians, or the Cliinese, or so~me J.atln Americans, sin· cerely thought us npa ble of the things they accuaed us "'· Yet Russian and Chi· nue and, In tlus ras~. Cutan policies hAve sometime~ t.een based on 5Uch

mistaken belief•.

11 lt Wqn't Be Long Now---t~; Child Moves Violently Now

• WASHINGTO EDSON Ill

HOUSE ltt'LES comtJTTEE IS CONGRESS' \\'IIIPI'Il':G BOY

By PETER EllSO:'<i \\' ASHINCTO~, < ~ E A 1--Cor.~re,,.

ional defenflnr> "f tl;e House Hule' Committee m<oi~li,in there's an awful lei of mJSintorma~um and malarkey in the criticisms uf wh;.• i' does and doc> 1101 do.

Even Prof ,<;,,n,llel If. Beer of liar· vard, presirl><nt ..t Anwricans for Dcnw· era tic Action -which 11ants the rule< committee rdorm!'d . >:~ys he wo11hl rave no obJ~r•i<lT·~ to it if 1! 1s used •s a responsih'r Jr,n .:1 the Con~rcssion Ji leaders and l~f \'.'i11tc House.

Under its pr""'' t cha1r:n.1n. .Judge II:Jward W. s·nith tll·\·a. l. the commit· tt:c is the !a .. ountP whipp1n~ hoy in Congress. c.,n~''"<tonal leaders and chairman of C••mnllll• <'o who dor.'t want to report our n~w hilh lor which there t> some pubiw de111:1nd blame the1r own shortcoming> ~,. i~ !\nd m<iil'idual con· gressmcn whu ~a\·cn'l a chance to get some constitl!,....rd'~ or pressure group's pet project throt!~h (ongrcss like to say it's the rule~ ron,lr.ittrc's fault.

The !2-m ember committee- e1ght Democrats and '"''r P<·publicans in !hr. last Congress-Is ~dmi!tediy dominated l;y conserva•tve<. One plan to liberalize· it in the Kennr·dy ad1:tinistrat ion is to enlarge it anrl ;,pp"'"' enough "!'>lew Frontiersmen" so thai its majority will clear more piorer.ring legislation.

Americans for Drmorratic Action held a one-day meetin~ 111 Washington at year's end to t•ry for reform of the rule~ committee, ::hm~ 1•:ith repeal of Senate Pule 22, under wh1ch t:lihusters arc con· C.ucted agatnst civJI r:ghts and similar legislation.

Examples mo't frequently mentionPtl of the commitlt•e's sidetracking of pro· gressive legJSiatiun in the las! Congre~s include mintmum w:.~e ra1sc, federal aid to school run<trurtion, aid to de­pressed area:;. medic;,' care for the aged. and housing.

Those are the 'in· measures which Kennedy wants the nc·w Congre>S to act on first. A IO<Jk <•l 'he records. how· ever, shows tne rumm>ltee not solely re· . sponsible for the sor~y record of the last Congress in tncs~< fields.

The comm!lte.e hc.d hearings and granter! two rule~ on minimum wage bills. This iegislaticu d:ed in conference bEcause the Senole ·•·ouid not accept th~ House. ''l:r~ion a no vise versa. But the committee harl nothing to do with that.

There were threP school construction hills before the Ia'' Congress. The Sen· ate wouldn't accept tl;e House bill and the committee. knowi•1~ that the Senate btil faced a veto Jrom Eisenhower, re­fused to give it a rule for House con· sideration.

What real!y killed the measure, how· ever, was a Housp Jmendment which would have clenieC: fo<nds to school dis· tricts not In cutr.Pihnce with federal court desegr~ti.·n orc!ers.

On social security amendments in· eluding medtral e~· e for the aged, rules committee appmvd tne bill which was referred to it fo1 c!earancc. But this biH was wat~rPd dr wn in the House and further amended in the Senate. The final biH satisfied few peopl~ and isn't work· ing well so far.

A revised bill w1Ji have to be offered in the new Congress. But responsibility for this can't J:oe piEced on the rules committee .

The House Rull'~ Committee must l.icar respon>lbility for sending an omni· bus housing llill bel; to committee for

. revision. The re&son given was that there was nlreadv 100.000 authorized public housing unit:' for which . there was no deman!l an•l that there were three billion d,,!Jars m slum clearance funds still unused

This action was In line with one of the rules commltlE'e':! duties. to prevent passage of fau1tv l~<gislation. When 1

rPvised, sca\P.d down, stopgap housing bill was reported back to the committee

Drpres~erl ;1rf'd rtl(1r\'(<or~ert · l;otlon. cle~rcd r.y tlw ruie; a11d Sllhsqu"rtl~ D·t.'"··d wa:­Ec;enhowcr. ll''ten <r.e Senate ''' err1<lc the retn tioc mea<ure J;ut th1s We· 11.1 hu!: ot th rJ:I!

m1ttec.

Statistil'ally. <hp Rule; · i lite 86th Con:•r••ss he:~ hemn;s hill> and gn:~ll•~ rulrc on·lJ9. il rtcnied rul1•5 on we< t ;rho:tl t:on, nmnih11.:: t~ta1~1n~. erluc21i0ri "r.d ;uncndm .. nt- IL' thr fnrr1;n .: rary scrric~ a<·ls. Tne Ia;• tw? s1Jb~rquentty· p:'l:o:.SNJ.

On Sena1...! b•1J .... )i(tl~e Ru\~i

111tttre harl P·cptr-~'" fr•r hearir.~! . ol which fn•1r wee c p»ed on ,

:-:cnt ealcndJr t·~fP"'=" rhc r:.~~~s

n>itt:·c could ad t'n <h<' oth~r 15. \'.ere granted o~ H •r.d a ru:e 111ed on the firol drprrS>ed am; tl·,ou~h a la!cr m(·: ~u:c wa~

Auld Lang Fift~· p~r rent cut ·in electr:c

The l\ewfo'l~lrll,nn r.:ght & announced ye~terti'v ;, rerlucti~:

10 to 512 cent~ I•Pr Kil<•wall in F.lertridty--'h•• ('OIO'nemal a.so lowered

SE\'E:'Ii J)RO'\':-': ~·~:,en yo·,:; J hoy and m ~<r!< drowned !a•: wren an .1 ~~~i~hride. the:: cra>hed thru•t~l, the ire on the about a do7.~n mile, helow

ART TO 1.0~00!1/: At a Ire Society nf \rt hr.rl Thur<dl! it wa~ derirkrl In <entl two hibits to th~ Jn,pr.~i,.: ln<titu:e !ton London: >!J nlrl paicting b! J,;mcs Ewin~. and •·The ~~~!~ l\egro" by ~I·· Te~ D1m·er.

(,1 "' ,.

BROKE:'~: PHOI'F.I.I.OR: a!ternoon llnwrtn~ Brother; l.:i n;essage statinr, !.h~• •he S.S owned by the Amc~ica~ Shippirl was 360 milPS Sou•h-Ea;t of Sl wllh a broken pr~pell~r The tug Zte" made prump! response steaming thronrh thr Karro~J

p.m. or 50 min~'" after the had been reeri\·~d.

JANUARY l~th. 1~1! . JliEW GO\'ER:'IIOR: The r.t1

nor of l'ewfour.rli;md will be don 1\!aeDonaid. a former coil v•ho tor the pR~t two 1·ears heij post as regional f:J~l rent roller I!· \'tales. He wilt ~nrreed Humphrey W •lwyn whose term of offic~ e,q:ires this

• • •

in the Mercrant NJ"Y 1 entertained on Thur~.tay night ' a party of ·City . arti<ts, who most enjoyahi~o ~rogramme.

Connolly wn~ Ma••er of with Miss Mary Slo~& hcr•ompan"'. cuntributing ~dng, ~tis,:

dus, Raymor.d G?.lldgher, n~dy, Tommy Blird. John the inimitable hdrly Smith.

YOIITJJ 1\fUST SER\'t: 1\tontr .. al Star

The U.S. Sraf't~rv of Deft~ f\kNamara. 1~ hnly 44. our Defence. Mr H~rkn~ss. is 57. retary of Labur. Mr. Arthur i~ 52 while r.ur Mlm~ter of Starr, is young~r by two yeaTS· Freeman, at 42, tecomes

. Agriculture. whiiP our Ministtr culture, Mr Hamilton, is 48.

The U.S. Pos\m~sttr-GeneraJ, is 46, but our Hamilton, is only 41. LastlY :!5-year-old Rc.b~rt KennedY General while t•ut Minister Mr. Fulton, is ll:P '~hird her of the Canadian cabinet •1

as a the Ita gropjing that hac since I

countrY ago. , time so

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Rt in~ te1

Nc . 101

in1

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1/

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;,.. Rules Colmmlll tw:rl hearings

cuk' on· 119. · ., w<·l t school . ,,·,m~. i'ducational

lo· tl~r foreign and Tne last two

· · " f~r hearings ,., c p~ssed on the

· ··f··"< the rules · C'n the othe'r 15,

14 ~nd a rule ' rlr pr l'ssed areai ~~v: ~H!'Et was

Lang

· · rolw a re(luci:IOJr • rr Kil!•watt in

<·ommerclal ntes

• • ''"'': !-:even youn& ••r!< drowned lui

their

'" mpr rtsponse tl'h thl' Narrowt , '"I'" after the ''i\'Pd,

does ht feel about Joe Louis? What were his readions with the Nazi What was his wartime role? Here is ••

Story Max Schmeling Never Told Bdore In Hollywood 'PERILS Of<' PAUUNE'

NEVER LIKE TillS By ERSKINE JOHNSOI>; Hollywod Correspondent

·Hold BackT oys For Rainy Day.~ 1 seve~~~:i~~!!~!s "··"·: reported to city pollee over the weekend. The icy condition of l he streets was responsible for :nost of them.

NOTE · Max SchmeUpg's two fights Louis are part of boxing s great story in the

J~t Schmeling's personal history since those ~ egarded as far from great by most people. 15 r bave been made about his alleged role N zi party, as a friend of Hitler and as a propa-~or the Nazi cause. In the two-part series be­here, the German tells, for the first time, his.

of ~he story and veteran reporter Bill McCor-

0 0 • 0

By BILL McCORMICK Newspaper Enterprise Assn.

YORK (NEA)-This is the story Max kept stubbornly to himself for 16 years. are you telling it now?" the man who was

as heavyweight champion of the world and as a paratrooper in Adolf Hitler's Wehnnacht

1 am weary of be· me they say something like,

15 a bad man," answ· Max Schmeling says. he never

tht Hamburg business· was a Nazi, but of course there gropJi~g (or the English never was a Nazi in Germany." tbat had bect~me stran~e "It Is true no one admits he smre he l•t boxed 1n was a. Nazi. That makes me not untr)' m1Yfe than 22 believed when ·I say I never

~go "I am tired that joined the party and that I 1 · writes of worked with the people who

··~.-.:.·

Newspaper Enterprise Assn ! HOLLYWOOD (NEA) - 0 ! stage, offstage and upstag. • The perils and headaches of i; ternational moviemaking havin failed to record anything quit( like this. But young comedian Marty Ingels swears to it in a note from Munich.

"When I arrived the hotel clerk gave me my key and

, told me about a 'beautiful II fraulein' in the room next to mine. Well, it was Saturday night and everybody (with the 'Armored Command' film com· pany) had a date except me. I decided to pay this beautiful fraulein a call and make a few points as a 'big movie star , from Hollywood. Then I'd ask :

· for a date. 1 "I combrd my hair, gathered

up sc>me photos of myself with Jerry Lewis and confidently strolled up to the door and knocked. The door opened and ; I almost swallowed my tongue. 1

i She WAS a 'beautiful fraulein.': She was Esther Williams, here in Munich working in a movie, too."

J

In collisions on Elizabeth .\venue and St. Clare Avenue and Lime St. only sli~ht dam· Jge was incurred by the cars mvolved.

A two·car collision at the in· terscction of Duckworth St. and Church Hill at 10.20 p.m. Sat· urday resulted in $400 ·damage to both cars.

At 1.45 p.m.- Saturday 1 car parked on MilitarY Road sUp­ped its brakes and hit a power pole, doing considerable dam·

1 age to the car, no damage to the pole.

At 1.55 a.m. yesterday a car parked in Trunk Lane, off ~!on roe Street, went ahead· on the icy surfa<:c and coll;l!~d with another parked car. The damage was slight.

At 4.55 p.m. ye~terday a car suffered considerable damage when it collided with a hydrant on Pine Bud Avenue.

--------

. Fires nesldes shaping modeling compounds inln !ishrs or.d dishes, cans nnd oollles nnd dtcoratesthls litllc girls wr,,p, it around the surface to make pencil caddy and cnndleholder. OH, 011, WHAT BOB MIT· City f1remen r•:sponded to

MITCJIUM is saying about i KAY SHERWOOD I make much of an 1:nprcssion at lhrce calls yesterday. , working with Cary Grant for , . . . holiday time hut 11 Will be a The first was at 2.25 p.m., a ' the first time In "The Gra$S Is : Spmt some of the Chmtmas' real treat after tl:e hoopla lades call from the city dump where 1 Greener." Ask him and he'll :toys. mto ndmg as msurance' away. . some person had seen the

tell you: agamst the ramy dJy n fretful.' Jo:wr since our )<>ungcsl came .,moke and fire from burning

SCHMELING, on the night of ftis greatest boxing triumph,' explains to NEA Sports Editor Harry Grayson (right) how he knocked out Joe Louis.

"We get nlon.g finc-1 just house·bound youngster walls for home from ,chool wilh an un· Chrislmas trees and phoned the sorta stood in awe of his '1:010· a~uscment. Tills IS sound ad· quenchnblr enthusi~,m for mod· f1re halt. mand of his own personality.". VICe handed out every yea; t_o eling, I've kept ~ome kind of Two other calls were an oil

• • • :the homem:Jk~r but one pomt. 1~: modeling compoun:l on hand .. burner giving trouble in a A speakeasy of the 20'~ was . seld?m discussed. WhiCh to)s · Popular JS gifts and welcome house on Kenna's Hi! land a call

rock in' on the sound stage. Lc · Its darned hJrd to m~ke some anytime by almost an~ age are from a home on Major's Path jazz hot, the clink of g!a~s. fascmatmg new mcchnmcal . man the sacks of wet , lay strips of where some clothes in a box

in training as a Webrmacht para­He was discharged in 1943 because of an

suffered when he jumped in the Nazi inva­

ol Crct~. ·,

Joe Jacobs is at center.

resented and despised Hitler, never hated or was bad to any· one. I. was In the army be­cause I had to be. Like many Americans, ' said Schmeling In an 'interview while he was In New York recently.

"In 1943 I was discharged because of Injury when I para­chuted into Crete in 1941. I was assigned to vi&it American prisoner of war camps to speak about sports for II)Orale.

''I made good friends with an an American colonel named Delmar Spivey in an officers' stalag near Berlin in the last part of 1944. I obtained author­ity to have him and two other officers as my guests in Ber· lin. I pledged they would be back the same evening.

"After we had eaten and had some brandy I had-as you say -scrounged, I took Colonel Spivey aside and asked if lie knew how the war was going. He said not exactly, so I show­ed him on maps where his sol· diers, the Germ.ans and the Russians were. He asked why I did this. I told him so he and

his men would know which way to flee if they were able to

TO BE DONE ATYOUR HOUSE?

0' ADDtTtONAL ROOMS

PAINTING AND WALLPAPERING

0 GARAGE OR CAR PORT

0 PORCHES

0 PLUMBING

·o FURNACE

0 FINISHING OFF ATTIC

0 BASEMENT PLA YROO~

· 0 POWDER ROOM

0 BASEMENT FA'.LOUTSHEL TERS

Q STEPS 0 SINKING AND IMPROVEMEIH OF WELtS

0 M~SONRY . 0 FLOORS

0 ROOF

0 INSUlo.A TIOt{

OCUPBOARDS 0. BATHROOM OR KITCHEN FIXTURES

0 FIREPLACE. 0 STORM WINDOWS AND DOORS

. O BUILT·IN COOKING AND REFRIGERATION Em~~ 0 ·SCREENS AND AWNiNGS

0 ELECTRICAL SYSTEM

0 FOUNDATION WALL~

0 All nlleratlont., repel•• tot•loflor and lnlerjor of tho

home, garage or butbulldlng,

ll well u purchase and lnzlallatJon o1 bullt·ln equipment

DO R NOW! with an. NHA ~011 improvement loan, available tbroa&h your· bank

llepaymant: Loans are repayable in monthly

t•nstalments, together with Interest, for periods up to en years. . •

~teto Landlords: This year, tor the first lime, these in ~s are available to owners of rental. properties, c udmg apartments. ·

~More Details: lnqu;re at ~ur.ban~,·end htve th~ k •• ladone this winter when men and materials are ••!I ble ..

FARMERS-Inquire about Govtrnmtnt·backad Farm Improvement Loans avail• eble through your blnk up to $7 ,5/)() end with up to t~n ytars to rfPIIY· Loans (or equipment, llv~stoc:k. as well IS I wide: fiiiQI 0( /IOmt Improvements.

. . IBIUtD 1Y AU1llfiiiT'I OP · MINIITIB 01 LA.BOUIL CAlf ADA . . .. -,. ~

• I .(

' . :· •·)

escape. 'He was f:(rateful. the popping of corks as guys disappear Without Bngmshcd colorerl clay, can> of pli:Jhlc.: had caught fire. There was \'Cry

"I was not what you say and dolls danced the Charles· cnes trom 1"' owner . who 15 dough.Jike materi:1l '' hich will little damage. 'verrater'-traitor. I was sick· ton. All in a typically smoky : complr:tcly unsympathetic to any nir dry to make a rigid object.' -------ly afraid Hitler was mad, so in· night club atmosphere. The: i~ca to put Jny of hl.s toys aw~y. Punchir.,g, poking. and sh:Jping a·. Definit:on of a diplomat: any sane he would either kill all smoke, coming from a tea·: 1 ve. made that mistake. \ou figure is a> fasc:n1ting to an husbanrl who can convince his prisoners of war or hold them kettle, had a sweet ~mall. 1 cant kidnap the ne: bab~ doll adult or a 12·ycar·nld as it is to' wife she looks fat in a !tir hostage," said Schmeling. Some of the extras on the set' from her crJdlc. T e Jumor G· aptah mfn rcy o ;~r hlo ra wst coat.

Then Colonel Spivey, accord· for ''The Big Bankroll," star·: :llan would he on your trail 10 8 a 4·year·old.

I t S h I. t ld h. · D 'd J tnce. : h I ng o c me mg, o 1m. an· rmg . av1 anssen, were com·: Sometime> your youngsters I w:Js happy to a1e rom a caddy for the kitchen or den other American colonel, Rus· plammg. ha e ei,·ed ·n to :Jd,·anced tc:Jclun~ fnend wne new su~· desk. Pinch and smooth it close sell Spicer, was under sentence "What IS that stuff you're f' v ;":c . g\ s 0 b.l'l' gcstions for usinn our new gift to the metal. While tht dough is of death for mutiny in a POW burnin"'l" Director Joe I'ew·. 1?r 1

11elr mtthcres s. or th~ 11 'res. cans of this dou'~h·!'t;e stuff Ilc'- t'll d d t b · "k d rou 1.c w1 savm~ ese 0 ,· . · ~ : s 1 :Jmp, ccora c y prcssmg

camp at Barth. man as e . rain , dvv surnriscs 15 than an ail s1dcs the frce·han:l so:t so sculp· embossed designs or objects on ~e asked me If I could do "What we always bur~ to . in ~r y,:hinin~ ,01111 oster is in no turmg. you can p;,t 01 roll out the surface. Scqum:.. rhine·

anything for blm,' the 55·year· smoke up mght club sets, sa1rl g 1 t t" :t h ·'his ment"l the stuff. wrap 1t around stmple stones, pretty buttons. tiny shells . ff '!'It 1 moo( o s rc c " b I I . old, beetle·browed athlete con· spcc1al } eels man ·' 1 on, powers to fathom " difficult a>es t 1en ( ecora•c 11. :Jrc a few of the thing, we have

tlnued. "I said I would do my Olsen. Gum o!J~anum and game or puzzle 011t a scientific \\'mp a sheet around :Jn empty saved up to use Soft drink bot· best and talked to some people cath~dral charcoal. . cxpcrimrnt. iuicc can. for cxa:npk ~nd yo11 tics. treated in the same manner In the military and foreign of· . In other words, k1ds, church \\'hat 1 <lo hide awa' :Jre th•: have tlir hcginnin·;> ol a prncil make fine candleholders. flee who didn't like 11itler. 'incense. ·familiar playthings rniw or o!d• ·-~--··-.. -- -·-------~-----Then I went to see Colonel ~--··--·---- .. --- ·- which offer more th:;r a mo· 6plcer. to tell a lie, a man who was mcnt's dirersion. The test for J •

''I asked the guard to le~ me highly regarded in the sordid , successful r.1in~ nay surprise is' alone w1th htm. He was 10 a fight game at one who never· how !on~ 1t will hold 1ntere>t. I dark room, sitting at a table broke a contract or a vow. But :llany of the jazzy little novelties' with his head in his hands. I this was a man fighting for the· that find their way into Chri>t· · told him he would not be under esteem and respect of his fel· mas stockings won't pass the sentence of death the next day. I low men, for his reputation. · test. The sentence was lifted. just as I Was hi~ story true? l'olorin~ b.ook>. >tcr.cib. c~nb. my friends said it would pe. , crayons rate hi~h on the tc>t. A

"That is my sL?ry and here

1

(Ned: Checking the facts.) new box of crnyons may not is a letter which proves 1t --·--- __ ...... - ------·

true.'' The letter, which Schmeling i

laboriOUSly translated, WaS from 1 a German in Munich. It told of ; the Munich German's business · visit in America with Colonel · Spivey, now General Spivey,~ superintendent of Culver Mili· I :·< tary Academy in Indiana. It! said that Spivey had spoken of 1

Schmeling having saved the life [ , .. of Colonel Spicer when he was

I under sentence of death for i . "anti·deutschen ansprache' (lit· era! translation, anti·Germlin '· speeches). :

"You can check with General! Spivey," said Schmelir.g. ''I haven't seen him since the war .. "

What did Schmeling believe caused atl the talk about his

I not only being a Nazi but a friend of Hitler's?

''In 1936, after I knocked out J oc Louis, I was ordered to be 1 received at Hitler's house," he ' answered. "What could I do? He was a complete dictator. I was good propaganda for them. Don't forget, a lot of Amerl· cans were Hitler's guesfs, too.

"The best thing that ever happened to me was when Joe Louis knocked me out In our second fight. U I had ·won, the Nazis would have made a god out of me for propaganda and made me a member. of. the party whether I wanted or not.

"1 never said those bad things about Joe Louis and A:t­yan supremacy. That was prop­aganda made up for the second fight. When I met Joe for the first time after he knocked me out, that was six years ago, he told me be knew then that J never said those things , but that he bclic,•ed them at the time. We are friends, I never hated him. We were just two fighters.

WINTER IS THE TIME FOR HOME IMPROVEMENTS wait for '" ... _ ... ,.,.

"I never disliked Jews, cer· tainly never did anything· to hurt them but tried to help as much as I could under Hitler," Schmeling Insisted. ''My man· ager, Joe Jacobs, was Jewish

Imperial Oil's uNewfou:ndland Scene" composed and includes many traditional

Newfoundland airs. Altogether, the film cap­

tures Newfoundland's beauty and the robust

and I stuck with him until he died In 1940 and that didn't make me popular with the Nazis.

"After I was injured in Crete I gave an interview to an American newspaper man nam· ed Flannery. I told him stories In German papers about British llllstreatlng prisoners In hos· pltal were propaganda. 1 told him I hoped his country never came . Into the war because I didn't think I could fight against my second home.

Imperial OH made t~e movie "Newfoundland

Scene" in 1949 to. document some of the

colourful phases of life in Canada's newest

province. Since then, millions of people

around the world have seen the film. It was

chosen by Canadian Film Awards as "Film

of the Year" for 1951 and it won a prize at

the Edinburgh Film Festival in 1952.

The actors in the film are the people of

· the outports, going about their daily tasks.

The musicaL background was especially

spirit of the province's sea-going people.

Imperial Oil is proud of "Newfoundland

Scene" and of the fact that through it mil· lions have come to know more about this

historic inland. Imperbr Oil is itself a part of the New·

foundland scene --a part the company _expecta

to continue to play in the years to coma. "When that story was in the

papers, I was called for court martial. If It hadn't been for my good and powerful friends In the regular army and foreign office, 1 would have been shot."· ·

It was an · intriguing story from a man I had knoNn for 25 years and never had known

9 ,IMPERIAL OIL LIMITED

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Social-Personal -Column-

WAYFARERS MEET SAINT ANNE'S PLAYEIS Members of the Wayfarers On Friday, Jan. 8, "The Saint

theatrical group will hold a Anne's Players" 1t11ed the aeneral meetlllg tomorrow three act comedy "Calm Your­nisht, Tuesday, January l'lth, In self' before a larae and very the rehearsal studio, 288 Duck· appreciative audience at the worth Street. All members are Marian Hall. requested to ·attend. The Players eonsisUnl of "The Man In The A

' John Mansfield, Bill O'DrlscoU, BIRTHDAY GREETINGS Helen Keating, Marian Lewis, Dog Suit''

Happy birthday to Ronald Lillian Connors, Larry Laracy, ·, PeDDey, 12 Falkland Street, Joan Connors, Tommy Power, ' who celebrates his 14th. birth· Cyril O'Driscoll and Helen Dal· day today, Monday, January ton did a very fine job with ' ' 16th. Birthday greetings come the play and the writer, along I from his relatives and friends with others to whom he was

'1'0 IONAVISTA ·Mr. John Bradley of Bona·

vista, who was in St. John's during the past week on a bus· !ness trip, returned to his home

~o;'!1:na s;~~!:a:t :ile K~:~~ Bridge Tourist Home.

speaking, hopes ~at they will not stop with this one play but continue to render us with others.

Of course by no means do we tend to forget Barbara Wade, Keating and Jack Keat· ing, who added to the entertain· ment with songs and recitations

FEELING FINE CONGRATULATIONS Mr. John Moore, 19 Colonial Congratulations are being ex·

Street, who underwent an tended to Mr. and Mrs. G. W. emergency apendectomy recent· McCullough, or West Terre ly, is stiJI a patient at the Grace Haute, Indiana, USA, who are Hospital and is reported to be the proud parents of a baby coming along fine. He has the boy. The mother wae the form· best wishes of his many friends er Maureen Mallard of Lime for 1 quick recovery. . Street, St. John's.

ARTHRITIS SCIATICA LUMBAGO

GOUT

Lost Shoes

f

· Piggy-Bank

EMI*i,Y? . (all Niagara for extra money. Up to" $2500.00 sometimes more.

IIAIARA fiNANCE COMPANY LIMITED

FASHIONS

Coat For The

THE DAlLY i\EWS, ST. JOIT~..:·s. NFLD., MONDAY, JAN. 16,

Tropics!

, .. f>·-- ... ~4'-~ ··'::-· ;:

. '· ·' - " ,,

TRO-GUIDE 11

For Mondey, Jenuary 16

Pre~ent-For You and Yours ..• Both negative and

! 1c :i~pcctli; but both :trr of m i I d nature, w there·, no

came tor concern~ or elation, for that ma:ier. Ju<t go along doin1: !he best you can and rherell be no Call\e for com· plain!. Thi' may not be a 0ood time for making calls as the out· look could be advme for com­mun.cJtions.

Past ... Archaeolo,!!il'l< di~~i~g Future .•• A new in the la~e" of ancient ci-.iliza. the world's languages ltonv in the Euphrates Valley un· made. Earlier st"dit1 :uveced m •ucccssion a IJ1er o[ shown tlut !he num\:er · gracian culture 8,000 years o!d, guagcs i< 2,796

" I r y c r o[ herdsmen culture r inc t 1ongues, I :'.trlO year< old, and a lJyer of hosts of minor ,x.,·mon culiure many centuries smvey is expected lo Iii! oldo . motel)' 3,000 langu,,,1,

The Day Under Your Sign ARii; {Som M"'h ll to Apr;ll9) LIBRA ISop!.ll to Od.lJ\ I .!.· ttr :rnpnr!.1ut L.:!:·1r(~ •~~:1!1: l···n,,m:• i,.Hin: ~ !.ll,r:·o~ ·~-- 'i!"f. ~--~~~ ,-.1·•-t the: ~t01r• grl't )<:1'! 111 a'\1,1, ;l'll: (l.ll•tr51 \lllrlru;:: 11'7"'-,·:.:·.t ·

TAU111SIAor;ll0hMuy;O} '" . ' '.1:::, d:"rt:'l<'tl c-nH r.~--~.:n~ :1 s~tit\!5 SCORPIO (Od.1l b ~b(.1q 'I• I ·;.; !.' [.•:: ~--~~I' j \•1•'11\;;l(:, 'r t ~({ (11",<1~1(·'·41 $J\t'', : .'I• •

. :uu-!J IM4t11 h J~.;ne- 211 r: _, : ···:·k o~r.•l :,r,,. 1 :~-fl. . ; L-. 11,. ;r.b hO."' Jl·:,t lio:::r•r' !1.t c:.•.C ITTARIUS {No·1. ~?to

,'II \lof,tll f'\ft,ll K l'.'llH''• H-•·., • •' tn t\"C I'U/ c.·~:"l • :·.

ER iJune 12 to Ju!'f 21] ,,: r·t: IIII•Lrt JL~•n 0'> · .• ·:~; .... - .:o. :: .:~r! :-.h:1i'<l ,, ... r \ .. .- n· ,., CAPRICORN IDtc. 22 b

,.,"J i .nc art a(ll\c- pct~•la:•t-.d c: ~()J, <.r~ \.:'rl.: out c.! wty t'lriJ LEO I July 22 to AI..'). 211 ~'.:::c tlniC ... !1!1 rrar..r! •. .\ : r ··m :·,.~~·~I' •r· :1 o!!"t·:t lu! ~c• tr AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to F1~. J!) 11f: ·-.ay u\ :me J'"ltJic..ru~~~ 1:1 }c:.zr J~.,r.·c rt~tnt_r"'il ~011 tnust titt ft:~ .Jr :. 11: ?.ns. ( Qtl1•t.Cf "-•·~~ 1l:t; Utt

VIRC.O (A,~. 22 lo Seo+.lll PISCES I Feb. 20 to M•rch J)) y, ,, }'~~: l~tnt::c ::r~ Hllr·l !;-• !~IV• J:,. t.a•II•"U~. (""nccrr::"l;:' I!IY l~lt .·..; c.ut of t11r ~1-t:.•::t.C !::J' a!;,. Ct;J. tcrt~t\ 1 J'HI•~H 1 arly h~Jr.:tll er•~o

We, The Women

Aroma .To Live ... Perking Coffee!

RY RUTH !'r!ILLETT i fers you a cup or colleo . Wei!, what do you know. Now in a cup with the .. : they're advertising a percolator, hope you don't ob'~ct ~ 'that makes coffee "fnstcr than coffee" she is, to be me ~ instant." How anything can be

1 you a cup of coffee. ·

faster than instant, I dont know,, But when she ~a1s. ··u even in this age of speed. Bnt · excuse me a morr.e~t l'E · lets r.ot worry our heads about 1 put on a pot of co'fte · ll1nt problem. j wonderful fragra~ce ol

One of the most plea,ant things. coffee comes drirtin• .r, a!JOut b_rewing up 1 pot of _coff~e

1 kitchen, the gesture "or .

1s he;1nng 1t gurgle, smellmg 1ts. seems to have more wonr!Prful aroma whilt it gaily 1

perks away, and waiting im· That this is.so is · · pntient!y for it to reach just the · the phrase we still use. · : ri~hl degree of strength. i and see me when you . The sound of a pot of coffee: coffee pot is alwa·.s perking on the slo·;e i~ as heart. old time invitati~n . warr!'ing anrt comfortahle as the· been bettered. .~nd 1t

I sount: of a fire ~rackling in an ly to be replaced b) 1 oren fire_rlnce or the quiet pat.

1' make coffee faster tha~

ter of r<~tn on lhe ro.•f when you Nope, one of the niw: are ·.; nrm and co<r inside. I about a cup of coffee ~

\\'hen a friend or neighbor of. • while it perks.

Fashion Key To Spring

New Dior Designer Will Stress Elegance

Dial 5181 · Z • I

GEAR STRt:B'f

l\ECEJVJNG

I ADELAIDE

~~-.-----------·

ps

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\ now JnVI:ntn ...... · 1nguages .,:r "udies ·• number ''I>

>:gn

· \Ott must .,. . J! thry

. ~ to March 201 •tr.:n;:"' nr ioilt r J1nU1cia1 cnu,

• -1ve

Dffee! " cup of coffee .,, 1th the ,!Jn't object to

... is. to be sure . of coffee. ' o she says, "U

.•. a moment I'll ro rot of coffee'' 1111! frngrance of

: .0s drifting ;n ·e ~esture of have more

' is, so Is ·· we still use,

::1e when you ean. · is alway! on."

invitation bas "ced. And 1t bu~

replaced by "I · ···e faster than ·ne of the nicest

: p of coffee is lbl · "rk~.

• 'Signer :gance

~ 1ptcd" the Dior colllectlll

· ;: and London. the Paris Bohan Ia an

~ in the subtle . orl fitting.

111 up, ita mort •t the averare fit by the ,, of Dlor contlllllll world·widt

ily il · "h sticks - roll~

covonnabe r~pared mustlrd pickle rel!Jb

. pepper :n onion, thinly tomato, thinly ·s1ener rolls ·;·rn and toast ·•hine -~le

DAlLY f\EWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., ~IONDAY, JAN. 16, 1961

for Him·

Are Tops

Headwear Picture

I

·Alicia Hart's Hair Care

I

The Mature Parent

Defining Child's Nature May Curb Development

7

'

MRS. MVRIEL LAWRENCE : The~e are people who suffei i In her childhood wten other from what psychiatrists call an 1 children were tol·J thev were "alienatedid entity·· - a >e;:reg-

llazy, talented, stubborn or fat. 'a joke. ~Irs. G was told that she was 'at~·.! ::r.d limited :dea of them­"helpful." When she cleared the' selves that locks thm away

Special Styles For Teen--Agers

dinner- table, found h(r father's from the rest of their naturol. cye3lasscs, helped :1er little sis· Like Mrs. G, they liv~ in only ter into her l1igh chair, someone. nr.e rocm of the m:.III~le qualil· would comment admi"ingly on ics which compo'e out wond~r these services-and her mother ful h•:mnn nJt~re.

'would say: .. _ --· -

Modern Mixes Take to Butter

Household Hints ly, beat It with a rotary beater

\ just before serving. 1

' I '

It seems like we clean our walks for the sake of the neigh- : bors who don't clean theirs.

· ccpt, be sure to ask her I least one date in retum.

I I

for at 1

I• '

lt isn't good manners a person how he votPn.

: own private business .

to ask 1

It's his I

~I b qui!~ ali right to use more ' one pattern ol china when lie ent~rtainin~ a large

but try to use only one on the tahle at a time.

offer a ch1ld you do not ride. ~lost chillren are nel'er to accept a ride

ll!angers. ~nd your motive lf a girl you've never dated in-be mi.sconlrued. I vltes you to a dance and you ac-

lf you Invite a couple to din· 1 ner In a private club, arrive : ahead ol time so that you can I greet them like a proper host I and hostess. 1

I First Checks Of Spring

'

, 1 first hmt. of .... in thne· navy and white .eparatea. Trim Capri 1114 .... ,.leu mp,Mi nat (left) are blend of Cretlan and wool.

lklrt (r\abt) Ia ...ae fabrie l1 permanently box-pleat~ and worn

..... "" jecbj. .

Warm, pretty, fact>-flatteringt Go off to work or on a date In these smart softieS.

Each has a sinKie crochet foundation trimmed with strands of yarn, tacked at intervals. Pat­tern 7367: crochet directions for knitting worsted.

Send THIRTY-FIVE· CENTS On coins) for thi! pattern

II <stamps cannot be accepted> to ST. JOHN'S DAILY NEWS, Ho11,11ebold Aria Dept. 60 FRONT ST., WEST, TORONTO, ONT. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER.

BuHer Begins A Wonderful Soup

Gourmets to · tho contrary, French onion soup ~;;m be made without atoclc. No aU-day pre· parations, either I The trick Ia to start with butter-In a frying pan, to which you add sliced medium - sized onions. Lightly brown them, then spooD into in­dividual casseroles .until each

., p<~t Ls a third full. Add a bouil· Jon cube <or a teaspoon of beef

. extract), fUI up with boiling wa­ter, aeason with ~ dash of good meat sauc.e, clap o>n the lids and · pop into· a medium oven. An hour later, pull the:n out, lay rounds of buttered eye toast on top, a sprinkling of grated cheese Parmesan' ill bestt Back go the pota Into the oven until the cheese brown5. The:t let your I hunary auesl' &o to it I

,

.,.,.-~__,.,.,, ...... ,~-~T~-~ ·-~ :: · /~;t..:•- }. ;t· <_:~ In these days of wo•king wives

nn:l crowded ~chedules the com· ~ 'o,/:

. :

' rri·:cs are a culinary gift the crcati\·e co••:: takes to ·.-·n:·fq\~1-:m<l the~ adds her "''''\ Plt!e flourishes.

01·en readv refrigerator bi~­cuils are given :hat real appet­izing homc·marle toUCh with ~ol· den h1itter Dip each biscuit In 11"~!'"~ h~ttc:·. on·an~c on bak· ing sheet, snrinkle lib<rally with :c:·· :•,·r. rr't:·v or pe(•pv seeds. ections niH! >rrre 11o11. with plen­Bakc according to p; ckagc dlr· ty of hutter. of co•I~or

Butter Prints

Thosr wnnccrful. n'd-fa;hlnn­crl patterned h:It:or ~·ints >erm 'n h" ip :.ho!'"t ''i!l'll:: or. Ollr ho•Jsew:1rc ro'.1r.t.•1 '· Rw i ... ~':"~n­,; ·: ,;·;n ,ln. 'T0"'t !~o~·c::-oho1dc;

ha\'e nl lP:':;t one frwl; '1!' ~poon

' :• '"''''·"I :~eltrrn-rravhe a coffee s~onn with arr.oriol rle->i~n 01~ the h.1n~le-o1 a tin~ animal-o flower' Dipoed fir;t inll) v:nrm \\':Jirr. i;\C'!"' £l~n:·r·~~.":':'rl on n~t< of hulter-.they'll im· print <l!lractin• desi~n'. It's an extra tourh for 'he hhle that tells famih· :mrl fr',,nrt> how you like to plea>e them:

Butter On The Half-Shell

That ho~irta,· coll~ction of 1a';e shore shells cGn hccome an in-teresting ninner·nar;v feature n-;vt tinH1 \'OU rnl:::'rt;:in Ear.n oral she!l of goort s:n. stuo:k on f~l'L r.f ~n·;-t\1(\r ~h~:J<:.- . .,nd nrf'S· ~f"l' Yfltt"rr "!ot ~ o::et o! d;linty. indil'idual huttrr-risl:r< \.\'he~ ~ \Jit d 1ht.' hn-:;!·; hislor.v i~

>haron with ~:1rsts •n this 1ray it says "\l'rlcome: · nw·~ than ;mv wont" cnn ~

NOW ••• AT WHITE S.ALE PRICES

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e Buy now for big bonus January savings.

• Choose from the widest selection of Cana­dian-made sheets ever.

WHITES " STRIPES • PRINTS. FASHION BORDERS·PASTELS

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Page 8: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ... ,.S 1 - T s 'JR 'ICE · P.1nc: 'heir tirr is % t '" mL~eries. :,hakesptart :rt !I. HEATING BOILER . iomestlc

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!

rand Bank News· which wu llvln& proof of tile warm feeling ol ·mutual faith and cooperation between the three major cobareaationa In this community. SUFFERS PAINFUL INJURY

Mr. Thomas Stoodley of this town Is at pnsent a patient at St. Clare's Merey HoapiW, St.

~~~I)O(IIIl~tlllad: over these yean John's, follflwinl an accident readUy realize and aee sustained early last week. Mr.

l1f~;ie there hu been consider· Stoodley was detained at the i thanae, and Improvement hospital for several days but

our town. Although those of his condition is not serious. · who live• here from day to The accident occurred when

cannot fully appreciate the Mr.· Stoodlf'y accompanied by ...,!l .. ~'"" sl&nlflrance and actual his wife and son, were en route ~~~t11111nge for the. better towards to St. John's. When near Ar·

lip tu date conditions that nold's Cove Mr. Stoodley was occurred here In that de- attempting t11 fasten chains to

_,: : .ecle and a half, it Is the re· his car's rear wheels on a sUp· ; =::··;•arks of Grand Bankers who pery incline. He was under· :: ·-: :l!ave been away for years and neath the car adjusting the ~: ·.who have returned on vacation chains when the car slipped off ~·.~":who notlc• It most. Their com· the jack and slid down the hill

· S.:: .' pUmentary remarka on our tor over thirty feet dragging ;? . : progress always gives us an Mr. Stoodley along with It until :=:·. J~ner feeling of pride and eon· it came to rest on the edge of :;.,;· ·~ntment. Since Confederation a bank.

· ;:: · tiewfoundhmd has experienced Mr. Stoodlry's son succeeded ~. tremendous Jlrogress: we are in again getting the car jacked = )iroud that in that time we have ! up and extr;cated his father .

kept pace with such ·progress He was taken to the Whitbou'rne • · ~rhaps not so spectacular or Cottage Ho~pital where It was

i:; · rapidly as some areas, but we thought that his Injuries were • .. .have adva11red considerably. serious. He was transferred to ... There has been great changes St. Clare's Hospital where fur-

too, in our eronomic setup in ther examination revealed that our fishing industry. Roads the injurie~ were not as serious

• have lifted thP obstacle of par· as first thought. : •. lial imprisonment of many of Howev€'r, Mr. Stoodley Is :::.·. Y.Clur people and in so doing have thanking his lucky stars that he ~ 4ncreased l>oth their educational did not receive fatal Injuries · ' and recreational outlets. Better in the accident.

living conditions are being en· STOREHOUSE DESTROYED joyed by \IU" citizens, through AT FORTUNE

- , the civic improvement pro· A small store house owned ;. aramme of our Town Council by George Mavin at Fortune

-:- •-1rond the acquisition of modern was compiP.tely destroyed by appliances pnd conveniences. fire last Friday afternoon. The However,--we have still to go a fire was caused by several chi!· long way Y€'t to attain an equal dren who were playing In the standard llf Jiving comparable store. with the 3VerMge Canadian cit!· The childrpn got an oil stove zen. But, we feel that our pro· Ignited, which when it got go­gress, of ~luw, is sure, and ing, caught the roof of the

: during 1961 we shall work to· building, Following an alarm gether towards such a goal. the town firr. brigade respond·

Again, as we start another ed but were unable to do any­year of reporting on Grand thing due to the hoses being Bank happrnings we state that frozen. Howrver, a volunteer our aim is tu record from week l.>rigade using garden hoses and to week event~ in the old home ~now were successful in confin· town, particularly for the in· ing the fire to the storehouse, formation uf those Grand Bank- which was ra1ed to the ground.

• ers away from home. To them No insurance was carried. all, wherever they may be, may It was fortunate that Mr.

.,we extend greetings and best Mavin's house, which was close wishes fcor their future hap- nearby, or other buildings in piness .md success. the congested area did not be·

At this time we would like rome involved. which if so, to express 011r grateful appre· could have cnused a serioua elation to all who have helped conflagration. in supplying us with lnforma· SEA CADET PARTY

.... lion tor this column. Being hu· Sponsond by the Sea Cadet man, we som1-tlmes miss up on Committee and the Officers of certain news items, and for the Corps, members of R.C.S. these, and uur other omissions. C.C. "Atlantic" were given a

·' we express our regrets and party durin~ the Christmas feek our readers indulgence. holidays. Tbe event was held

·May we :~g~in emphasize that on Thursday evening, January opinions exprrssed through this 6th, in the theatre. column arc solely those of the Special guests at the party writer and WP take full respon- were the young lady friends of slblllty for them. May we SO· the Cadets. 'fhe entertainment

• '. J.~ 1...1!'\11~ J. ~'I!J...,l1 ........ • ... , ..... ,, .... l.-•

News Around Joe Batt's Arm

SOCIALS On December 16, the annual

school concert at the Central High School took place. All pu· pils 1rom four· to eight iQclu­slve took part. Tea, candy and Ice cream were served.

GANDER NEWS Gander R.anks

18th in Canada

Gander Home

And School

On December 19, the annual GANDER-The total aircraft .ASSOCiation ~chool conctrt at the u.c. movements for Gander for the achool took place At the end month of September, which is GANDER--At a regular meet. I)( the concert Santa Claus : the latest figures available, was ! mg of the r.~nder Academy I paid his yearly visit and pre· 1 2.510. Tho~e figures normally i Home and School Association ! sented each o( the children with released 3 months after the ! on Wednesday, January It, a 11 gift • month in which the traffic oe· ·~ committee was appointed to

' _ ~urred, shows Gander ra~!:ing study furtn~r the means of dis-On December 28 the mem- 18th In total number of aircraft posal of fundc now on hand by

ben of the I.O.B.A. 'held a soup movements for Sept~mber 1960, the Association. . ~upper and end party. The 50., •n Canada. CarllervJ\Ie was No. M1ss Barne~ gave an mterest-clal was well patronized and a 1 with _15,29fl. air movements. ing talk on the ~ec~nt confer· YVES JASMIN very enjoyable evening was fhose f1gures mclude local fly. ence of the Provtnctal Branch 1 Establishment of 3 Public ~pent. ing clubs, and military traffic, of the HomP and School As- ; Relations Office in ils exponding

and the figures at RCAF train· sociation held at Grand Falls. i Quebec and Allantic Provinces On DecP.mber 14, 1 pretty ing bases are normally higher Delegates from Gander to that , market is announced by Ford

wedding was performed at the than civil. aerodromes. , conference were Mrs. Strong •,' Motor Company of Canada, E IRCRAFT · ld limited wilh the appointment of

Mercer Memurial Church, when SECOND LARG A 1 and 1\!r. Gou · I Yves Jasmin of Mont reo I os Mon-Eunice, dnughter of Mr. and Gan~er, howeve~, has a high ager, Public Relations, for the« Mrs. Andrew Brown became the place m neavy a1rcraft move· GANDER Th R 1 p 1 regions. Formerly Associate bride of Alcxandr~ Cull The ments, it b~in~ second in handl· t \" d' -d eJ oya lulrpie Director of Public Relations for

, , . . • · g 'rcraft weighing over 160 me 'e n~s av, anuary , n Molson's Brewery, ~fr. Jasmin Rev. Eveleigh offle~atlng at the :::m a;b M t 1 C d ,' their lodge ro~m for an infor· · was born in Montreal and has a ceremony A reception was held s. · on rea • ana as 1 1 ~ Th · th wide background in journali1m at the L.O A Hall. where some largest city i~ first in this dept. !"a mee 1r." · IS was e · and public relations ac·livilics. His Jhree hundr~d guests attended. i and Toronto 3rd with Vancou· ,Jr~t t~eetmg ttnce Ch[.Jstm~s appointment was effective January

r I •

Th b 'd d th I ver 4th The above figures in· an e regu ar mee mg IS 2, 1961. This announcement was e n e an groom were e ·. . · scheduled for January 25 at · ' receplants of many valuable elude A1rport traffic, but do not. , . . •, : made by Donald H. Carlson, T"~-or.\WAY tN THE SKY- 'I'L" ,,,.,., 1,.,.,, .. ,, .... :. '" "'fts h' h h d th h' h. take into account Aircraft pro· w~tch tlr:ne a membership dnve' DireclorofPuhlic Relations Ford l"'",.,""' tulll'r Jilt< J.,ddly tro:ll " Yal:ou rnolln::"" ·, ,·,,. .,1 , w IC s owe e 1g . w1ll be d1scussed The Royal Motor Company of Ca~ada · esteem that the couple were. ceedmg overhead. When over- . ~· , l'"'l or " ,y,,,.,, '" ilo''' '"''"· foot! a lid [1:1·1 '" " ....

ld I b h . C I head traffic is included with Purple presently have a mem· limited. Mr. Jasmin's head· ,pe, nn ''"' l.""''·H:il~: 1':11::1•11"" :\alion:d Tt>l••gr .. l "· :·• he n y t e commumty, on· . hership of 35 quarters will~ in Montreal. '"' "'"·k t, .. 11v.,1,0 1:r:.lltl l'ratr'r· .. \lla., and ;Jo,. y. · gratulations to the happy pair. the above figures, Gander stands 1 · 1 hnfll•>r. I'.'IH·n '""'"~"t•·d la!l· ;, 1~";1, tilt· '"''''"'~· ·•

' - among the bu~lest aircraft hand-. '"·'I d•·f•·n•" ""'' ··ivll,;:n l'o::.n:llll:r::ti<>rl' Jill~ i ··•.·.--;

DEATHS . iing centers in Canada. : Harry Fol kard ond liP! r·lllll:d C'l:ilC< :tlld Will ii:IJlfii\P lt'lo•!'l:•oll• ·'!i•: :~ Deepest sympathy is extend· Gander Gardens '''"' II'IIIW:tllon' tlorou~htlll[ U:t· ,.,,l:llli;on north·.·· .

ed.to the famil~ and friends of AccJ·dent Rate . S Leaves Gander nr ''·" "''11 ... 11,.. ""''r""'''· 1' '"".'"follow the.\~.·,, i. Mr. Richard Retd who died on chedule For ! I lhe Cawt '"" Xalio10.1l Tel•·crapl:s now Oll''r:ll•·· December 29 In his 77nd year. ' GANDER-lllr. Harry Fol-, "''II"""'·" 'Y''"'" :i,l::'"' ~~·~nw: .. \ '·· :.:l•t :-· ' L f G d M k d St t• orr· f B .. hI \\"h,Jt ]~ hd:0\f'd lo ~, ... !hP 1()11'~•· t •• I I ••• ,.,

Interment at the u.c. Cemetery, ow or an er onda Jan 15. ar • a 10~ l~er or fillS I n l::e "ori•J. 1:'1 IIIII• .. : lli\\t':· '" 110'.\n :.1 :·o: : I Rev Evelei-gh offlclatl'ng . . y, • I Overseas Airways Corporatton. · GANPER D t t 'on.:'IIJH'•I 1'1 1!11:-> ~::-.trJ,J. .'lnJo\', .,, L·-. .'.·" · • - esp1 e wm ~r 9.00-10.00 a.m RCAF Section. has terminated his employment i ro•t 1,..,, 11 ,,,.,, ... 1, C:;r;,.1, 1. " ,, ·

Deepest sympathy is ;tlso ex· weather, and bad road condl·l HockeY. I &t Gander. and left Wednesday 11, 0 , 1011 tll!k c~pc<l"d '" 11 ,. , tended to the family and friends ti~ns, therP. have ~een only two I 4.00·5.00 p.m Pee Wee Hock·: 'light for London, England . .\lr.: of Mrs. :Mary Welcome who mmor aCCJdPnts m Gander re- cy, Leafs I'S Wings. I Folkard has lived m Gander I --died on December 30, in her . cently. ?n January. 10 a truck I 8.00 p.m. Exhibition hockey: : for 6~-2 ycm ... ~nd has r,Iaycd ,\CQl'ITTED OF .\HSO:\ :\Ell seventy-ninth year. Interment! backed mto a car _m the com· I C'ee Bees vs. Gander All Stars. I plano for the Sohdalrcs Gan. 1.0\DO\ ICP• - .. \ former OTT \\U ',, took J;!lace at the Church of mercia! area causmg approxl·l Admission: Adults $1.00; Chll·: der's popular orchestra for tlw railwa,· clerk 11 Js ··l'prim:~ndcd ~bcl.e:111 n! n, .. : .. England Cemetery. Rev. Reid mately $50.00 damage. On Jan· dren 25c. I past li years Frida, by a Supreme Conrt be indncll'd "' n:::; ., -. officiating uary 11, a car backmg out of a I BOAC staff in Gander has now juri~<· lor 3 suicide :1!1empl 1r.c·., t n:!ed < •· ,

· driveway on Fraser Rd. was hit I dwindled to five employees wh:c:, !eel 10 his l•nn~c IJl•in;~ :; .'lr. 'l::cl.t · On December 22, 8 surprise by an o~coming car, extent ofiTrain Accident from a one time total of \4. blown~'"· be~t "·'' a<qn:u,·d by r:~:inns p:1.<11r:'··

party was tendered to Mr. and damage IS unknown. • BOAC now employs 2 Station 3 jurr ·of sctt:n~ !ire 10 tlH~ tier· \l:~nt~:ne· !!· Mrs. Walter Ludlow, on their At Gambo Officers; 2 engineers and " hou.-r. Hn:wld Gordn:l Simpson .. \ I. Gnfli!h ·.·: •· · "golden wedding anniversary." secretary. 23 w;,, chnr~t·d .1ftrc a g:" c,. "'"•'· 011 ' 1 in l.•.:·l ... · Some twenty guests assembled II Mosquiot" Crossing The residents or GJnder arc. ;JI~sinn II' r e c I; c ct his rented at the home of Mr. and Mrs :sorry to o;ee :.rr. Folkard lea,·e hn:~sc Oct. 4. Jn,rlin~ him llltn ;, 1!.\1.!1' \\ . \!' Arthur Ludlow and a very en- Duchesne GANDER-Details are still; Gender and w1sh h1m the 1er' nei,!hlo~:rin~ Jot. Ju,r:,, <'·""'1:. ,.

sketchy. hut it was learned • best in th~ fnture. Ill II lit· '/d "' · :t ·, Joyable evening was spent. here today that the train hit a ; ··· ----

Birthday greetings are ex· tended to Mr~. Bertram Decker who celebrated her fifty-eight birthday vn Saturday, January 7th.

The students and teachers who were home for Christmas holidays have all returned to their respective duties.

Schools rt'opened oo January 9th. The. pupils have had a long holidfty this year, and have taken advantage of the ex· tra days to practice up for the hockey matches. The old cus· tom of mummerlng still persists and the children and adults do enjoy drt'ssing up in quaint costumes snd going from door 1o door asking for admittance.

By 1961 Vauxall at Gambo Cross·' AUTHOR DIE~ PAGUERETTE VILLENEUVE ing Wednesday morning. There· NEW YORK f.\P' - llen:-y

were four people in the car \lorton Robinson, o2, nutlior nf but no seriou~ injury resulted. The Cardinal and oll er no1c·l'. The extent of damage to the car ·died Friday in hospil::il !rom

PARIS CP-Romantic Paris is succumbing to another femme­fatale-this time a Canadian girl of French-Indian descent.

Burning black eyes, long glossy hair, a tiny red mouth and a slender but well-turned figure are the marks of Mous· tique, a rising star in French television.

Six months ago, Moustique­the name means mosquito-at· rived in Paris with 35 cents in her pocket and a few friends in the city to help her get start· ed.

was approximately $500.00. complications resulting !rom

!n1rn~ ..;u:ferrd !;1st 1111,nt:1 in :1 ball:ll:lr. Tile Cartlm~,:. -.1!11ch !lw rdit:on< nu!oli.,hrd h)· Simon in ::\ co~llll :·ie::, :--old iOII 1100 in wa~ :nth:i.~...Jll'd in and ~chuo:ter :md non in p::~pcrhound

11 lan:.;u:1~t'~

arotl~f':· li~:i.-

ch:1mhe:·s .J;m. ~~~<~

topics for tl~h:tl• .. c:·irnm;J! ion in t::1' .,:-:~

punbh1~1ent. :- 1':'1: churc:h, dri\'in~ 1 · ........ .

.-:cJ~oo\ nnd ro pin~.

licit the assistance of all our. programme ronslsted of the The snow plough has been r~ader~ in supplying in for~~- movie "Fighting Lady," which • kept busy for the past week lion e1ther from group achvl· was followed b~ games and owing to 1 recent snow storm. ties, or from the personal dancing. Later m the evening &phere for future columps. the Cade•.s served. sandwiches

In November, she slopped traffic for a mile on the busy Champs-Elysee while ardent Frenchmen sought the auto· graph of the city's latest darl­ing, who was having her picture taken for a magazine.

The Christmas Season is and refreshments with the party now over! 1t has been a pleasant coming to a £Uccessful conclu·. and happy holiday period for slon shortly after midnight and most of us The Christmas enjoyed by all who were

· trees, gay decorations and col· present. · oured lights, etc., have been OBITUARY taken down, shops and homes )\os• Riggs have resumed their everyday The death of kose, widow of appearancP; schools have · re- the late Bertram Riggs, occur· sumed classes, business houses red at her 'lome here early Frl· are buy taklnl!- stock and open- day morning, January 6th. De· . lng new accounta for another ceased was seventy-five years

· year's busines! as we return to ot' age. <1Ur everyday activities. The late Mrs Riggs had been

The dragger fleet have re- ill for about • month, but had sumed operations after the been previously enjoying fairly Christmas holidays, DuriRg good health. For many years the past wee!. four of the five she had been actively assoeiat­of the local fleet of Bonavlsta ed with womtn'a work In the Cold Storage Co. Ltd., returned United Church here where she to port with their first trips j!ave faithful service. for 1961; the fifth ship, the The. funeral services were "Fortune Star" was held up in held on Sunday afternoon, Jan-

• · • port for over a week because 11ary 8th. R~v. W. J. Baker ··· ·· ebe waa unable to get a full conducted the funeral services

erew, but sailed the latter part with enterment In the United llf the week. All the draggers Church Cemetery. reported very atormy conditions Dceased Is survived by a son

·· on the banka which Interfered Frank, and a daughter Grace, • with their fl~hing operations. Mrs. Abner Rose, both residing

i • · The following catches were here. TIJ them and to other . ) , .. , · tanded, "l!lue · Mist" 140,000 relatives and. friends deepest

pounds, "l.urkimee" 190,000 sympathy Is extended in their ;. · · ·.pounds, "Grand. Bay" 160,000 sorrow. :: ·.: ,\ ,Ounds, and · "Grand Duke" PERSONALS

'.

· 190,000 pounds. The motor Vtllel "Merllyn Clair" loaded caak and ·boud fish and bar· rtlled herring here and In Pia·

~ · . eentla ·Bay this week and has sailed tor Halifax. All other of the local coasting fleet_, are tied up ·In port for the winter sea• aon. '

Laat ·week was observed as ''IV eill of 'Prayer" In the com­~lJ. The servlctS were aim· ilir u thoae carried out In all Protestant Churches acrou the

V ~iDee and the Dominion: 'The conarrptlon• of tbe

•J,nlted and· Anglican Churches ;rJJld the Sal.vatltn ArrJty joined

.ill Ute sen•lces which were held : . ~·. ·;:: · temetely In the Salvation

• CitadP-1 and the United · . urch with Captain Thomp-

• and Rl'v. W. J. Baker·d• 11\rtrina the all'lllont, tach .In

otbl!r Chureh. hrYieet ..liiiiii4NI let· St Alban' a ehureh

to lie tancellecl due to tile ,_,.,.._ U..t In Tlbbo bad been

·w It,! -... ,from Lam• .. ~roB. COD·

Clilll"iiatlou. of tM llttaded

.• Jllit wllidt ...,. fll. lll\l&rUUI' .ftltlt 1o aU, ud

Miss Beatrice Buffett and Meaars. Andy Crewe and Archie Evans . have returned to their studies 11l Memoria\ University.

Mr. Georg• A. Welsh, local Manager of the Canadian Na· tiona! Telegraphs, was at St. Johh's lut week on of!lclal business.

Mt. Gerald ,Patten, Fisheries Ofiicer, returned to duties in the Bonne Bay area last week.

Messfl. Mar. Matthews and Frazer Fllllett of the United Chureb Academy staff, who spent part of their holidays moose hunt1n11 In Central New· toundland, . returned home lui week IUCCCSsfuJ Yllth a COW moose.

Messrs .. Harold Tlbbo and Eu11ene, Nurse have resumed their studaH at Mount Allilon University at S.UVUie.

Mr. ai!IHITI. Wilfred Barbour, who apent the Chriltrnu Season at St. Jobn, returned h«lme last weekend.

M.r. Clarencf W. Handtipn 11 at preaent at St. John'• on a bullneaa vtslt.

SHIPPING Draa en "Blue Kilt 11,"

''Luekimee," "Grind Bay" and Grand Dulle" i.rrlved from the

'I

The many friends of Mr. W,alter King will be sorry to hear of his recent illness. Mr. King was admitted to Fogo Cot­tage Hospital January 8. We wish him a speedy recovery.

Mrs. Mark Harnett of Barr'd Island had the misfortune to fall and brPak her arm on Jan· uary 6th. She was treated at Fogo Cottage Hospital .

Mrs. Lydia Harvey returned home from Twlllingate Hospl· tal, where she had undergone lreatment fur a fractured hip.

Mr. Bidkar Newman left here by M.V. North Liner for Twll· Jlngate where he will join his wife who recently has been dis· charged from hospital there. They will sprnd the winter at Clarenvllle.

How did success come to Mostique Duchesne?

Born at Jonqulere, Que., to an Indian father and French mother, Moustique's striking features and attractive voice made her popular with towns· folk. .

WENT TO:MONTREAL

She followed the footsteps of her equally talented sisters to Montreal where Charlotte Du· chesne wrote songs and adapted Indian ballads remembered from her childhood.'

Moustique m.ade her singing debut in El Cortejo, the city's beatnik centre.

"Because of my association with bohemians, Montrealers imagined I was not serious in my work."

Feeling rejected, ahe sold her belongings and bought a· steam· ship ticket to Paris.

Almost from the start, she PROBE ABORTION RING met success. A Canadian friend

TORONTO <CPl _ Posslblllty told her that French television of a large • scale abortion bUSi· was looking for an Indian worn· ness operating here 1~ being in- an to play the lead in a series vestigated by morality police parodying western films . alter finding a young woman In Moustlque, summonmg her critical condition In a private courage, went to see producer home. )t was reported as many Pierre Cardinal. Though she as 200 Illegal operations may had never performed in a have been performed lr the city theatre o! sung before a cam· in the last three years. Police era, Car_dmal felt she was per· arrested Thelma Patricia Porter feet for the job. . 43 on three charges ot attempt· She hurl~d herself mto t~e ed, abortion task of playmg the lead role m

'· 13 half-hour shows, which began in November. The hectic pace

NOMINATION APPROVED sometimes demanded that she WASHINGTON <APl - The work 12 hours a day.

Senate judiciary committee Frl· THE TEARS HELPED day approved wit bout objection "1 burst Into tears at times the selection of Robl!r• F. Ken- but, according to the director, nedy, 35, to be U.S. attorney . it is at these moments that com· general In the cabinet of his edlenne is the most of herself," F. Kennedy. The action was in· she said. "What a· b\lslnessl" brother, President elect Joh11 Sequences In which she was f_prmal but clears thr way for suppoied to be on horseback ~lck formal appriJval once the were dubbed. ·in at the studio pmldent • elect 13 Inaugurated and she never saw a horse, al· and can send the Senate his no- though she loves to ride. mlnatlona for cabinet positions. Besides television, Moustique

· has made her debut as a singer

banks,· dlJcharged, · and sailed again.

M.V. "tderllyn Clair" 'loaded cask and boll, fish and sal)ed for Halifax.

M.V. "Pauline C. 1Winlers" arrived from Sydney with gen­eral ear11o.

M.S. "Slr Humphrey Gilbert" was here over the wtekend.

M.V. "Burin" landed general cargo here last week.

in a small Parisian cabaret. She balked when the management wanted her to wear an Indian eostome.

"My performance Is not ·a circus," she said. "Indian bal· lads are folklore which merit respeet."

She won her point and wears a robe. Her repertoire includes Indian laments and nostalgic lullahies and some songs writ· ten by her sister.

. . \'o

' .

If you're a husband, and· perhaps a father, it's a safe bet your most important 1961 resolutions concern your loved ones.

That's why your first resolution should be to consider your lif~ insurance pro­gram. Is it adequate to provide for your family's future - will it provide higher education for your children - will

~-~ '·····~ it provide sufficient income if you die . . . or become disabled?

The Dominion Life man is qualified by training and experience to advise you on these points, in. line wi.th your particular needs. Call him soon to help you with the most important thing facing you for 1961 -the protection o( your family.

Wheri it comes to insu~ance ... it's ...JQ . for L'i Lf},

ASSURANCE C 0 M PANY ~~~:o,~~~~~~· •c DOMINION LIFE

ST. J9HN'S- LE~ A. WlLSO:\, C.L.U., Brauch \lanager, 321 Duckworth St.

]

'J'he sev Hod

Se .flyil

first d Bre~

the o Irish vi l{enne~

single s res pi<

with his the tot

scor

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DAlLY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, JAN. 18, 1961 I ,

Hand Feildians ' .

Of Season; First 8-4

Breen And Byrne· Tally Three

JI~I BYRSE

ST.\\ BREEN

.: ...... :-. .. ',,;",..., .·•

PE'l'lm ROBERTS, Prince of Wales goalie (center) kicks a drive from Vic l'ar~ons (at the hluelinc) awav from his ~rcasc in ttle first period of the opening game of Senior Intercollegiate Hockey at tlw Prince of Wales Arrnn Satmday afte;noon. Bob Dowden (No. 5) of Bi!;hop's College has John Winter of PWC watching him while ;\Icc Ydman of Bi~hop:; mons in on the plav. The Prince of Wales

took a G-1 win. (Royal Photo Service) .

CLUB ·DARTS Jim Drover Has "Hat Trick" H" P.O'M. , H.E.W.A. · Frank SkiUington . By BILL BUTLER

IUohn> L'lub Darts opened lOO,'R.E.W.A. John Neary 134, I DAILY NEWS Sports Writer J_._·

19111 !mnn at the College Ned O'Brien. 100, Star. Prince of Wales, defending 1 ! !a<: ~tonday night. The 9.00 p.m.: Can. Legion 3, K. 1 champions. of Senior Intcrcol· , '. ·

wefk\ :.rtion saw several ~~ C. 0. Wally Tiuard sevens, ! legiate Hockey, opened the · ' ar.•l r!··nty of top scores: I Bill Tibbs twenties, Sid Molloy ~~~ague with a~ impr~ssivc 6-1 :

·s UOUNDUP fours. Can Legion, Jack Cun· VICtory over B1shops College at hn. 9: 7.30 p.m.: ningham l\0. Can. Legion. the Prince of Wales Ar~na on .

Pat; ~. Feild 1. Joe i TEAl\I STANDINGS Saturday afternoon. Jim Drover . 18\ !'at :->cilson 1B's. St. 1 W L Pls. p_accd the PWC. victory. as he

. Rar \1 msor 2's Feild. \ Holy Cross 5 1 5 ftred three of Ius team s goals. 1

100 Feild. Cec St. Bon's 4 2 4 While Drover was accounting i 117. st. Pat's Can. Legion 4 2 4 for half of the PWC markers, 1

H,!l' Cross 2, Star 1. Star 3 3 3 Dick Yabsley, Bob Williams ,and ; o·n.mnrl! ll's, Jack Tay· REWA 3 3 3 Do~ Warr were notchi~g single

1•

18's, Holy Cross. Charlie C.N.R.. 2 1 2 tallies. Earl Marsh ftred the four<. star. Ned C.L.B. 2 1 2 lone Bishops goal that ruined j

102. John Neary 135, K. of C. 2 4 2 the shutout bid of PWC goalie , · !f18 S!,r Charlie Richards , St. Pat's 2 4 2 Peter Roberts. ,_,_, · I · Holy Cross, I F. C. Service 1 2 1 CEREMONlJ',S

Guards 1 2 1 Mayor H. G. R. Mews took

Jan. 10: 7.30 p.m.:

l ~r C 2. St. Bon's 1. Jim 1 r, ~ncl l's. K. of C.

o·~hra nine St. Bon's. lturphy 120, St. Bon's. Leo

100. K. of c P m: R E \"A 2. ·· F d. . . . . ,., . . , e ·

Ctl'tl ~m·ice I Ches. Stev· en~< Hal Andrews ones, A. Ton: Efford twenties, Mtl:c Hall 140, Alex But· · ltm Birmingham 100 Frank Skiffington 102,

Feild 1 5 1 part in the opening ceremonies Highest 3 Darts before the game. Introduced

T. Murphy, St. Bon's 140 by S. C. McCurdy, Principal of 111. Hall, F.C.S. 140 Prince of Wales, the Mayor

Hlp Slagle Leg dropped the puck between cnp· C. Richards, Holy Cross 413 tains Ian Campbell of Prince

Bleil S Legs of Wales and Alec Yetman of F. Skiffington: REWA 861 Bishops College. The captains

MOlt GamH Ftnislled introduced the various members D. O'Donnell. Hqly Cross. of their teams.

TOP TEN AVERAGES 1 Bishops College were short· J. Cunningham, C. Legion 111.10 handed when Marsh gave them R S I C L B 16 94 a shortlived lead .Jt 3.27 of the

. ne grove, . . . . J. Neary, Star 18.86 first frame. Vit Parsons fed F. Furlona, Holy Cross 111.~1 Marsh a clearing pass and Marsh

Jan. 11: 7.30 p.m.: P'. Skiffington, R.E.W.A. 1!5.22 turned on the s~eed to beat A. LaFosse, CL.B. 14.06

2: Can. Legion 1. Bob onrs: Art Lafosae C.L B: Wally Tizzard

CC .. legion: Roy Snelcrove LB. I Pm: C.N.R, Vets 2; 1 Dave Wareham 14's•

Mor • • ~an 3 s, C.N.R.; Percy 12'~. Guards. Gordon

P~re~ Kelloway 138 Da\'e Wareham 109,

· hn. 12: 7.30 p.m.: HG!y c ro;s 3; Feild 0. Dick

4' 1 s and 4's, Bill Wil·

1~·7 Holy Cross. Bl11 BUd· 12t' Graham Noseworthy

'. Ray Winsor 120, 110' Tucker 134 ~-

Cross • -· · 0 PTm : St. Bon's 3; St.

· om Murphy onea John ones· • St 1 Dte Murphy · 'Bon's. Cee Goobir

II Norris 120, St. Pat's. ut,t-, 140, St. Bon '1.

'- ta: ,:_, , ... : liar ~; Itt

. "'o's W.A. 1. John Sttr Hat CbuUe NUJe~Jt

·. · Andrews loun ' '

~- Pelley, C.L.B. 13.42 N. O'Brien, Star 13.29 H. Gosse, ti'.c.s. 12.98 J. Brennan, K. of C. 12.80

·SCHEDULE

To·Nidll: '7.30-Fed. C. S. VI Guards 9.00-CLB VI CNR Tnesday: '1.30-Feilldans vs St. Bon's 9.00-Holy Cross vs REWA Wednesdiy: • UO-SL Pat'• va C. Legion 9.00-Star VI Guard• .Tbunday: '1,30-K. of C. vs CNR

9.00-Fed. C. S. vs. C.li.B. Friday: '1.~Felllda01 VI REWA

11.00--St. Bun'• .va. Leelon.

Jl:\1 llROVElt

f i.i 'l I: . '

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XXVII was about 'to leave. On Frld I D 20 lt was Cliff Hoag. "Mrs. ay morn ng, e~. ,

two days after she had talked Hamillon? ~ou sound· all out to CUff, Janet looked at he~ of breath." -

• ~ben calendar, hardl) bellev· "l was just leaving for While lni that It was almost Christ· Plains. I suddenly remembered

that Christmas Is plm~t here, m~imly, she knew that each and my cupboard• is bare." She day newspapers had announced answered him gaily. He had not the narrowing of shopping forgotten. time, that streets In the village "I just wanted to tell you were decked with greens and that I have talked to Knobby that store windows featured tin- and Hank Jones. 1 honestly

· ael and bells and cherubs along don't think there's much to go · with th~ir speeia Uties. · on."

The stores would be crowded "Oh." Her voice lost Its buoy-with last-minute shoppers In a ancy. "Thank you anyway. Arc festive mood. She recoiled at you planning to go to White joining them; but there were Plains soon?" presents to be bought. She had "First thing next week. And been so preoccupied since her I'm thinking of the best way to vialtto Jason that the holiday tackle Mr. Lyman." He sounded had seeined far away. embarrassed.

She told Johnny and Bruce Later Janet threatened· her she planned to go shopping, but way through the crowd to the would pick them up at the toy department, lucky to spot Christmas play rehearsal being a clerk returning from an er· i1eld in tjlll church after school. rand or the rest room and so

AI she waved them onto the to complete her ·purchases for school bus, she added that the the boys in far less time than back door would be open in she had contemplated. She told cue rehearsal let out early and the girl" she would ch~rse the someone offered them a ride things and gave her name and home. She watched the bus . address. The girl looked up lumber out of sight. The skyl· from her salespad; her eyes wu overcast, and there was a traveled appraisingly over moist smell of snow in the air. Janet's face and body before

Finally she finished her shop· she bent her blond head again ping list and put on her coat, to write down the Information. vowing not to be e;(travagant. "Your packages will be waiting

The phone rang just as she at the front door. Madam,"

NOW PLAYING

Also -· UP-TO THE-MINUTE NEWS

TIMES OF SHOWS:

EVENING SHOWS: 6.45 - 9.00 MATINEE: DAILY

NEXT ATTRACTION LANA TURNER - ANTHONY QUI.NN in "PORTRAIT IN BLACK" - !viURDER -SUSPENSE - EXCITE!\·IENT.

TOMORROW

Special Added Attraction

. W1JBilDI(rli.Jil ,...

... ha!fl.e grealhess.

1 o~· ·WllWEs-g

PRo f:cjl\ ~E. ftcul"ao~l

... DIRK .. • BOGARDE

''LIBEL" -- .

TIMES Of SHOWS EVENING: "GREEN FIRE" .., 6 O'CLOCK-

9.20 •. ' "LijJEL" - 7.4() .. ~ATINEE~ 1.30.

UtT .rib TODAY

OUR BOARDING HOUSE ~~~------~--~~--~~~

WES<'~ RIONT, You

with MAJOR HOOPLE

SAY t E6Ao, MARil-lA, I COM"LE'TELY fOR.-E~,AH,IHAi

15, 1. COLlLt:lf\.l'T Rt!:.K. DRI\JING f-IlM AWA'/ W\'H-\ SUCH APPARENT 'DISTRUST/

FURNESS, WITHY & CO., LTD. Llnrpool Ill. JoiiD'a

tl " llfl &

Ills tell to

8l Jollu'a Bosie11 "Newfoundland" Jan. 18 "Nova Scotia" 'Newfoundland' Feb. 13 Feb. 22 "Nova Scotia" Mar .. 8 Mar. 15

Ballfu Jan. 24

Feb. 7 F.eb. 28 Mar. 21

Ballfu si. JoiiD't to ~

St. John's L'pool Jan. 28 Jan. 30

Feb. 11 Feb. 13 Mar. 4 Mar. ~ Mar. 25 Mar. 27

AIR PASSAGES ARRANGED BY: B.O.A.C., K.L.M., Pan American Airways, Scandinavian ·r.W.A: and cm1necting

. Airlines. Persons contemplating passage to Europe by steamer should make bookings well in advance. ~ Consult us regarding your travel problems.

FURNESS TRAVEl OFFICE NFLD. HOTEL PHONE 5623 . .

'

TilE D.\ILY \E\\S, ST. JOII\'S, :\FLD., \10:\DAY, j:\:\. Hi, 1%)

OUT OUR WAY By J. R .. WILLIAMS

OH,l eEG yOURPAJ':DO~ .. I IHOU6HT

AN AIJ6LEWORM HAD CRAWLED' ALON6HERE!

Cl.:\l'nE E. n.\WF. Ron. Tr~astll"I'T

Hog Cholera

We build better with

rn©~l1min rn~al1IDa~@~ LET US I"ROV. W&

SAY. YOU MONEY

We'll show you Butltr

buildings nearby-introduc:e you to owntrt-

thaw you hcts and

fieuru. Call ut today I

ENGINF.ERING

'IOU'RE 601"-16 10 BREAK 'TrlE HA"--DLE OFF TtiE PNJCAKE

11.JR"--E R SOME DAY, :,HOVEL. 1M'

!:5~-JOW WITH J---1 p::::::=.::~~ IT/

.1'-'v-''----t

Different v· In Vatican

Gl"IJ.T\' OF l'f.R.IlRl TORO'iTO < 'P · -

CLARKE 1'··· .. ····.···· .. ·· .. · K1.

,. _, - ' .. _._ '

ALL-WINTER SERVICES

to

NEWFOUNDLAND Direct Service

HALIFAX to ST. JOHN'S S.S. \'0\'APORT S.S. :--.;Q\'APORT ............ . S.S. \'OVAPORT ....... . For mformatl~n ~nd l(£sen•ation, Pst office--;T. 101r, !" i'IFI.O ret. 5483 · 80350

or 2151 Telex 016 - 258

HARVEY STEAMSHIPS

I.TD .

FROM THE PRINCIPAL CENTRES OF

ONT ARlO and QUEBEC MARK YOUR ORDERS

TO SHIP

MUIRHEAD FORWARDING LIMITED

All rates attractive especially where VOLUM~ is offered. A good service backed by experl'

Comrr -nwealth-wide organization.

ST. JOHN'S 221 New Gower St. Phone 2634 or 51 ~9

CORNER BROOK Western Termlnols

Phone 4-4972

Route 11MUIRHEAD'S" TORONTO-HAMIL TON-MONTREAL-LEVIS

'

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Tl

Page 11: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ... ,.S 1 - T s 'JR 'ICE · P.1nc: 'heir tirr is % t '" mL~eries. :,hakesptart :rt !I. HEATING BOILER . iomestlc

:can h .... ··1! ~tory, ronflict of \' atican,

"ill

: h ,. •·o n l rovus ·donlvaf 1

• ew ., m the ·.~ '" it was .,,pl1rations ,. l1111rR1rat

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· "" Supr~me 11 11f the Holy · pnmt. "l'ie,ia,tiral · o11n1· '"'r. 1959. :"I :n the apo,tol!r order

...,.,. Frio•" was ·wjurv at 'thE "" into thP York Township ·'"'pendcd

· ""ommende~ ·in~ Pridcncp thai ;:nmicr:.ted !rom

':; had spent ' rr.ncentrat;on

<E ~{TER

:Es

.\ N D

·~'S

Jan. 19 "­Jan. -'

Feb. 4 'l~ ;;~-t OUf nP3r·

~NTRES ()f .

2UEBEC 'DERS

DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, JAN. 16, 1961

For Prompt

and Efficient '

OIL PELIVERIES · c

FURNACE FUEL and ·STOVE . .. .

3007, 7469 3001 &;oMut Aow,. Convenient , Contract

I .

THE GREAT EASTER·N OIL Service ·. COMPANY LIMITED . . ' ' . .....

January 16th.

Newa ol the Morning News and WcatlleJ

Cluck i)ei'OliOn!

.\l.IJU· :'ollWS

1~.U!'>- -Stork Club 10.15-Jlm Amecne Sh1 w 10.55-News ll.U!}-Jim Ameche Show 11.15- Western Jlmboree P.hl. 12.00.- Western Jamboree \2.::10-News \2.35-Hamblln with Recorda 12.45-Fisherman's Forecast 12.50 -Ramblin wltb Recorda US-Sportscast L2(~Ramblin with Recorda 1.45-So The Story Goes. Z.!IO-Jim Ameche Show 2.55-News

3.02-Western Jamboree. 4.00-News In a Minute 4.05-Ranch Party, 5.00-News In 1 Minute 5.01-Bob Lewla Dance Pari) 6.00-N ews Hl&hllghta 6.ol-Weather 6.US-Bulletin Board 6.10-Natlonal ·New• 6.15-Sports · 6.25-Ever Battery New• 6.30-Club Q3 7.02-Ciub 93 7.45-Don Jamieson's New, 8.01-Best from the West 8.31}.-Natlonal News 8.31-Best from the West Q.OO-News Highlights 9.01-Nfld Soiree. Q.40-Salt Lake Choir.

. . .

• JACOBY ON BRIDGE

JACOBY TEU,S SYSTEM BASICS

·~-5

BY OSWALD JACOBY At the 1960 fall nationals

Curtis Smith, a young bridge teacher from Austin, and the writer finished second in the' open team and then went on to win the open pairs from the largest field in bridge history.

Power. C<•nsumers

tn the ~lorning Pops.

3.0a-Prlzes and Problems on 4.00- Western Jamboree. 4.30~Boll's Bandwagon. 4.55-News

IO.ol-Jury Trials. 10.30-National News 10.4S....:.Sports 10.55-Letters and 1\lcssaces. 11.00-News Highlights 11.01-Muslc In the Nlgbt

While I have won many tour­naments before (this was my 38th. national title), this is the 1

first victory that I can ascribe 1

almost entirely to system. Curtis and I had worked for

~everal months on what we are calling the Jacoby-Smith sys-J tern. It is designed for every 1 one from beginner to expert i and I am so certain o{ its I superiority over all other SYS·

callrd Sheppard . School Broadcast.

~lcBride.

Choice. llroadcast

Day Serenade Bulletin

Program 1'\ews and Weather

Hunter Show. Randenou.s

HIO!nlnl•on Obs. Time

Randezvous School Broad-

~.\J(}. Bob's Bandwagon 5.~0--Supper Serenade 5.50-Fisherman's Forecast 6.00-Bullclin Board. 6.10-:\lovJC News. 6.15- -Sportscast and Travel

Guide. 6.:!0-Supper Serenade 6.45-News 7.00-Shillelagh Showtimc. 7.30-Shillelagh Showtime. 8.0()... -Cream 01 The Crop 9.45-News.

10.00-VOCM All Time Hit Parade

10.30-Eventlde ~edi!Atlon1 1D.4~Sports

~.01-Sign orr.

CJON-CJOX TV , terns that 1 am going to discuss I

__ M_O_N_D_A_Y_,_J_a_n-ua_r_y_l_G_th-.- it thoroughly in these columns .. 10.45-Cartoons. The system as a whole is; 11.80-Romper Room. much s_i_m .. p.le_r __ . than __ __11~

1 12.80-Local and NationaJ News. - . 2.00-My Little ftlargle. 2.30-Chez Helene, NORTH 16 I 2.45--Nuuery School Time. • K Q 10 2 3.00-The Verdict Is Yours. 'f J 9 8 3.30-Jiow to Marry a Million- :~~ 32

aire. WEST ST 4.00-0pen House. EA 4.30-Reflectlons. 4 J 9 1 oto A 8 3

of the Air. Theatre.

11.00--Big Top Ten. 11.3a-Ciub 590 and Newa. 1.00-News in 1 mlnu.te and

.Al073 .K62 5.00-Junlor Roundup. + 10 9 6 + Q 7 5 2 6.00-Popeyt Theatre "' A 5 4 olt 9 B 6

6.25-World of Sport. SOUTU (D) Lynn Show.

Broadcast !rom the Albums

News

· Calls. Program.

it From Here. l>ationa I News,

and Talk. 0 Canada. The

January 16th. We~ther

:-ure11k!ust with Bill with Bill

and Watrrfront

10 Fruit moltu.k 11 PrepoJIIion

12 EssenUal being 19 Roman broDJe 21 Take Ill 2322 Deponent tab.)

Most paln!ul ~ C!Aulsbnt <ab.) .._. _____ .., eopatn'a

river 2e Large plant

Sien Off.

CJON MONDAY, January 1Gth,

A.M. 6.ao-- The Bob Lewla ShOw 6.35-Weather Forec.1~1

6.40--The Bob Lewla Show 6.45-Headllne News anti

Forecast 6.~0-The Bob Lewis Slurw 7.00-~ew& 7.05-Loc~l Weather ;.20--The Bub Lewlt Bilow 7.35-Com)•lete WeatheJ 8.05-- Weather 8.15--Sblpplng Report 8.20-The Bob Lewis Sllow 8.25-Kiddles Corner 8.40- The Bob Lewis Show 8.55--Just a Minute 9.05-Muslc for Million• 9.20-Jerr; Wiggins Show 9.55-Jane Gray Show.

tO.O()..-News In a Minute lO.ot-Martln's Corner 10.15-Housewives Choice. 10.30-National News.

; 10.33-What's Cookln'. 10.35--Housewlves Chole.e 11.10-K itchen KlaUer. 1135-Nfld. Qub 11.45-Moncyman. P.M. t2.;l3-Town and Countn 1.00-Ncwa. 1.05-Weather Forecast. 1.35-Don Jamle•on't

Editorial 1.40-Sports 1.1~Art Baker's Noleboelr 2.00-News Highlights 2.03-.Jcrry Wiggins Show 2.31-Jcrry Wiggins Show

Answer to Prevlout Punlt

29 Sweet seereUon 30 Comfort . .a UndUuted 31 Meat dish 44 St••mp

49Preu

3S NauUQI chain 45 Melod,y 38 Health ruort ol6 Bear 39 Ebb ol6 Tenth (comb. 42Encounten 101111)

DO Domeallc elavt 52 Threefold

<comb. form) ss strtpllnr M Elcepe (slanll

8.30-News Cavalcale. • 6 5 4 '7.00-Wantea Dead or Allve. 'f Q 54 7.30-Interpol Calling. + A K 4 3 8.00-Talent Showcase, olt K 10 7 8.15-National News North and South vulnerable 8.30-Father Knows Besl Somh West North Eael 9.00--Don Messers Jubilee. 1 + Pass I Ill Pass. 9.3~Danny Thomas Show, lN.T. Pass Pass Pass

10.00-.Jafk Kane Show. Opl!ning lead-• 3 16.30-My Sister Eileen. 11.80-Festlval '61. 12.00-Enqulry. 12.30-Local News Headlines.

STEAMSHIP MOVEMENTS

American systems. We don't use weak two bids. We don't use most of the other so-called weak wonder bids that look good, but don't see mto work.

The basic feature of the sys­tem is that we open practically nll 12 point hands while in other American systems the minimum opening bid is set at

113 or 14 points. Thus most CLARKE STEAMSHIP CO, tables passed today's hand out "Novaport leave Hali.{ax Jan at the nationals. Curtis opened

.Jan. 13th, arflVe St. John's Jan. the bidding and while he was 16th, leave same day. held to one no-trump, the plus

•Novaport leave Halifax Jan 'was all he needed for a good, 19th, arrive S1 John's Jan. 22nd, score. leave same day.

"Novaport leave Halifax Jan. 27th, arrive St. John's Jan. 30th, CARD Sense leave same day. 1

•Nov~port leave Halifax Feb. Q-The bidding has been: 4th, arrive St. John's Feb. 7th, North Easl South Wesl leave same day, 1 of. Pass 1 Ill Pass

•Nilvapurt leave Halifax Feb. 2 of. Pass 3 + Pass 13th, arrive St. John's Feb. 1 4 + Pass 4 'f Pass 16th, leave same· day. 5 of. Pass ?

•Novaport leave Halifax Feb. You, South, hold: 21st, arrive St John's Feb. 16th, 1!1AJ876 ¥A654 +KQJIO "'0 leave skme day. What do you do?

•Novaport leave Feb 21st, A-Bid five diamonds If you arrive St John's Feb. · 24th, feel pessimistic or six diamonds leave dame day, If you feel optimistic .......

"Refrigeration. FURNESS WITBl' AND

COMPANY, LIMITED Newfoundland leaving Liver·

pool Jan. 11, due St. John'• Jan. 17. Leaving for Halifax and Boston Jan. lU, due Halifax Jan. 20 and Boston Jan. 23. Leaving Boeton Jan. 24 and Halifax Jan. 28, due St John's Jan. 30. Sail· l11g again same day for Liver· pool.

Nova Scotia leaving Boston Feb. 7, due Halifax Feb. ' 8, leaving Halifax Feb. 11, due St. John's Feb 13. Salling again same day for Liverpool.

Newfoundland leaving Liver­pool Feb.. 1&, due St. John's Feb. 21. Leaving for Halifax and Boston Feb. 22, due Hall­fax Feb. 24 and Boston Feb. 27 Leaving Boston Feb. 28 and and Halifax Mar. 4, due St. John's Mar. 6. Salling · again same day for Liverpool.

TODAY'S QUESTION

You hold the same hand and your partner opens with one heart. What do you do in this case? • 1

Answer Tomorrow

BARBS BY HAL COCHRAN

It's remarkable how much game gets away from hunters. Quick, like a bunny,

• • • It seems like we clean our

walks for the sake o{ the neigh­bors who don't clean theirs.

• • •

Nova Scotia Iuvlng Liverpool I '-------==--:.u...-' Mar 8, due St. John's Mar. 14. Leaving for Halifax and Bos­ton Mar . .111, due Halifax Mar. 17 and Boston Mar. 20. Leaving Boaton Mar. 21 and Halifax Mar. !II, due St John's Mar. 27 Salllnl a1aln aame day for Liv·

erpoo~ RED Clt088 60JI.AL ftADElt leaving

Ntw Y'ork Jn. 17, Halifax Jan. lttll. ll'ri•IJII ~t. John'• Jan. U. tAivilll J1n. 24Jh. !or J.r: latia, . E:onltr- llrook and New· Yllft.

. ~MI of rMUlh, you · .,. .... •·men for doing his ..... .

Definition of a diplomat:· any husband who can convince his wife she looks fat In a fur coat.

The babysitter is often the only assurance of an evening out for the parents of young children. The sitter chosen should be a reliable, healthy type who Is fond of children. The phone· numbers of fire de­partment, police and the chil· drl!ll'l doctor should be placed by the telrpl1one, as well as that where the parents may be reached, In emergency.

PRISCILLA'S POP Bv Al VERMEER

1-16

THE STORY OF MARTHA WAYNE

I

MORTY MEEKLE

: WHATDOWJMEAN, ' '>OU'Re A MEMBER

OF THE Of'P051TE 6EX--OPP051TE' FROM WHAT?

S\"CG 111~ TI'JIMS" 1 ~ ~,I..S"()IS K\Co'JIJ OOL 'I 1'0 MMSirl.VES, OCN1T ~ott, QIJAUf'IEll1ll SA'/ 6~A.Cfi, sui'I'05" t oo ntw "oHo£S/

OP~Te FROM

'YOU­'IOU'Re: A

BOY.

WELL THEN, t;;JNC€ '/OO'RE. 'A GIRL- AND I'M OPP0'51TE

FROM 'tOU, I MUST B6 A MEMBER OF THE OPI'O?ITE

'3EX,100- RIGHT?

FRECKlES AND HIS FRIENDS

SHORT RIBS

ALLEY OOP

CAP.T AIN EASY

IS<)~R~V.51R---IT SUD OFF Tr\E SILL Vii-lEN l RAISL'?T,-IS WINDOW TO ASK YOU A QLIESTiCN/

/

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• :t61 bt r.u.-T ~~- fit,. V t. PIL Oft ,.r,.,,f~

IJ

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"We're all '~t-now release tilt cat!" .;~

U.'l. P1t. Off,

By W. SHRUGGS

! '. . . '-.:.: I

. -. . . ~- -:.

!ly DICK CAVEll ................ . ~ ...... ..-

IT <SEE/1'6 LIKE AN UW~EG::S~RILY

CO/.If'LIQI.TED ARR'.NG;EMJ:Nr.

i'/6

' I

; ; - I

.. . ·~:~ I

·---. ---'

By MERRELL BLOSSER

C 'till'' l">a••l' ltto.

f-16 , .. ::t~·~ ;;l toiL

By FRANK O'NEAL

By V. T. HAMLIN

............... ,. l'S. ,,. ""

By LESLIE TURNER

-... , ....

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Page 12: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ... ,.S 1 - T s 'JR 'ICE · P.1nc: 'heir tirr is % t '" mL~eries. :,hakesptart :rt !I. HEATING BOILER . iomestlc

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11 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., ~JONDAY,

· · · · · · pr l .. well• in·non-porous··plllstlc·po1s. '

Minister. . ol Welfare ! Pb~~~s c, ay Pots: ~i:;~;',"'~::~~~=.~~r- ·~.~~ Paramount Donor's Association; The Pohle;,.

) \ • ' •. ' ' • 11 . . . - . . ... I I W~en plants fatl to grow m Tomorrow New Methods fltr Funds . Association will

rlfe:,_conference on assistance ,.but It was also agreed that !he;! OTTAWA _;_ Green-thumbed. plastic pots, D'r: Ch"lin said, the ing a !Vleetinv tt able·bodted persons which actual number. was ·conslderabllhousewiv.es 'who · Insist. that fau\t usually lies with the grow-,----------- n wu b'eld 011 Decem bar 7\h,-Sth ly less than was generally imag·,, house plljnls will thrive only in: er who forgets that plastic pots i GRACE KELLY- OWEN SOUND, Ont. CP- the first year of Donors' .'is· , ing at 8 o'clock and 9th In the Sir Robert Bond I ned. . . porous clay pots are making a 1,retam. water much longer than STEW ART GRANGER IN This city has just begun the sociation operation their final Pat' 5 ' Audllorlu~ · In the ConCeder a· · . Throughout the Conference It mistake." · . . ·those made of clay. Overwater· "GREF.N }'IRE.'' second year of. a program that totals '"c~eded anything ever • t A tlon 1 Bulldmg· Indicated that wa&_ ~vid~nt that most heads ol According to Dr. A. P. Chan,~ ing plants in p!astic. pots.lea~s Filmed in CinemaSco~e at~d takes a revolutionary. approach realized before. I vendure ~e. 110me ·.of .. th\l delegates. had· er· !amthe~ would prefer work:1of the Plant Research Institute, I: to root rot and other sot! dts· color largely on locallons m to the support_ of .chantable and Association officials say they, ten ance 15 rone~us .. Ideas ~egardmg the when 11 wa~ obtamable and· I Canada .Department of Agricul-. cases. • · , Colombia, South America, never I welfare orgamzat~ons. . believe the plan has several ad-1 abu~ of pubhc assistance .. t~nt t_hc. m;uor cause_ of the; ture, plants will grow just as;- On the other hand clay pots !.before caught by a Hollywood

1 Instead of charttable agenctes vantages. A membership sub·

1lle~ appeared. to be a Wtde-1 h1gh mculcncc of asststancc to · , , · :present problems of their own · camera, M·G·M's "Green Fire," banded together to make a scription card is sent to each apre~d reeling .t~at many I nble·bodicd persons was lack of . ~because of their porosity, he I opening tomorrow at the Para- 1 drive for fun~s, Owe~ . Souni:l bousfhold, listing 19 agencies pe~p)e: werf recervmg assist· employment. The Conference the construction Industry and' stated. These are the growth mount Theatre, unfolds even 1 has a Donors Assoctatlon, a expected to conduct campatgns ance ·who were not entitled to unanimously· adopted five rcso· for this reason we should take I of algae (usually seen as a ' more adver.ture thrills than the group representing the people. for funds m 1961. l AUTO PARTS It el~er be~ause they were un- lutions-thc fjrst of which~ ailvantage of every possible op· i gtccn, slimy scum on the outer i African-made "King Solomon's who give the money. i The donor, at nis leisure, can: ------....:.:: willifll to work or _because, was: ! portunity to create work of a ·surface of the. pot) ant\_ the Mines.". Formed in the fall of 1959 un-.dctermmehow much he can af· ~ 1were at the same llme em· "It ts felt that as far a~ :constructive and productive extra water needed to compens-[ Whereas t'Je latter film cen· 1 dcr Chamber of Commerce spon-[ ford to gtve over a pcrwd of fiO)'ed on a 'Part-time basis or ( Is uscfull~ and economic· 'nature during the off .. season. 1 ate for cvnporati~n from the

1

. tered on the search for a dia· i s?rship, the asso~iation held its j 12 months and allocate his tecel•lnll Unemployment In- • allY possible, work of a I have much pleasure in sup·, pot surface. Plasltc. pots do not mond cache. the new drama, ~ f1rst annual mee_tmg '" October, 1 money to the agenctes uf h1• aurance. constructive • and pr~uc- porting the "00-IT-NQW", have the algae problem and do starring Siewart Granger, Grace 1 1960. By th!lt time the associa-

1

chotce. , . • Before . the C~nfercnce. was tlve nature be s.ubslltut- campaign sponsored by the, not require watering so ire·\ Kelly, Paul Douglas and John · tion had enrolled 700 members DONOR HAS CHOICE

many hours old, It was cvtdent ed for able-bodied· rc· ·St. John's office of the Uncm-: '1~cntly as clay pots. .1 Ericson. revolves about the ef· who contributed $35.000 to the Unl1k•' Untied Appeal cam

tbat .lbese reports were, to say 1 lief." . I ploymcnl Insurance Commis·: Plastic pots. ~Jid . Dr. Chan, forts of a mining engineer to support of 18 agencie-s during 1 pa1gns, there Is no budget cum·. ~e !east, ttr~ssly exaggerated. i Our economy ts based on! sron of Canada. . also are much ltghtcr m wetght,' find even more fabulous treas- the year. · mrttce to allocate funds to agcn-lt was admttted that there· seasonal cmploymt•n !especially l B. J. ABBOTT. :more colorful and arc a•·ailable: Jre in the form or Colombia's The association came into be· ctes or to tnm agency budgets, were. Isolated cases of abuse' in the fishin?, industry and in [ :Minster of \l'clfan•. 'in mnny attracti\'e dc~·"~s. famed jcw.el fJf Green Fire-the 1 ing after the Community Chest .. because the Donors' Association· Bl!ILDING MA

--· ·-.. - · ... ... · · Pmerald which. rcpresen~ed only erght: has no ;ct obJcc_ttve. If a donor, ___ . ---·---Stewart Granger, as Rian 1 agencte£, was dtsbanded. It has 1 wants ~II of his money to go,

NIGHT DEMO!'l'STRATION IN CUBA HAVANA, Cuba-Approximately 4,060 commerdal workers, mostly women, marched on the national

palace here, late January 4, demanding firing squads for terrorists, as the Cabinet met in a . late session inside. President Eisenhower, January 4, warned Cuba to keep hands off the $76,000,000 U.S. Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in a blunt follow·up to the severance of diplomatic relations with. the Castro regime. Castro has hinted in tl.'te past, but always stopped short of saying he would try to get the Navy ~J by force.-(UPI Telephoto). .

-.....

..... ~ --1--.. --. ·- -·

....... , • • I

l I . j · LA~Laotian,Premier Boun Oum (L) interroga.tes two 'prisoners of war who were said to be .North .VIetnamese. POWs RTe Nguyen Ve, 18 (L) With a wounded leg, and Ne Tong, 36. It was reported ~anu.ary 9 that Soviet planes hav_e resumed flying in supplies to the Communist Pathet Lao guerilla forces which:eOf!trol the Plain ofJars in northern Laos. {UPI Radiophoto)

' ' . ' ..•

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~;;2;ti~~;.t,,;;~1f ~J~-: "' . - I'

~.­·~,. '···

'itchell and Paul Douglas as • begun tis second annual mcm- ·lo one agency, that IS where It CHESTER DAWE 'ic Lco~ard, are the part~ers 1 hcrship appeal. . 'goes . . . S)JAW ST. and '

ho attempt to operate the de- USE DOOR STIC~ERS . An rndmdual must make . a For all your •rtcd CarrPrP mine in the face ! The 1960 total or. $3~.000 rats· , total dona:10n of S!OO to ohtam , Requirements rr f superstitious and intimidated cd by the Donors Assoctahon, memhcrshrp 111 the assoctatwn. SUlfiJ_g1171 • atives and n;urderous bandits. was $7.000 more than the best ·and the nght to vote at the an-' -------~ ;race Kelly is Catherine Know- ever achieved by Commumty nual mi·et1ng. He may make his, 1nd ownc•r of a nearby coffee Chest. It was below the tota1

1 donatiOn In a lump sum or by.

•lantatiun." With .John Ericson ! requirements of all agencies in 1 ~ostdate<J ,J;cqucs over_ the. year. ·nacting her hrothcr, Donald. ;owen Sound and many had to 1 So~e ;r.dustncs have mst1tuted

It is tncse four principals, conduct a campa>gn for their; pay~oll deduction plans for em·

ELECTRICAl APPLIANCEI

vho become involved in a story. funds . , ployees. b" · d 1 · However their canvassers. In 1%0 tolal exp~nses were

~om 1fnl•.ntg af vedn liirc, rdomanbcet, . were dirccied to pass up houses 12.5 per cent of the total collect· 1 con tc o 1 ea s an a a · 1 • d .1 · t t ·1s If h' h . where there were front door i c , les; than Sl.OOO, because all c agams n~ urc 1 c , w 1c I . 1 . . h h · f th · 1· • k h · f d r slicker.~ proc aiming t at t c. o c assocta IOns wor was ·ehac eRg .a powcr-m u~. ~ tmax 1 resident was a participant in the "on a volunteer basis.

qAJNE JOHNSTON COMPANY, LTD.

Agency 243 Water St. Dill

YOUR FP.IGJD.\IF.i DEALER :v cnth l~n givc~up 1 ~ ~~cam I Donors' As~ociation. Founder of the associatron is

or the .ret•nld tre ant . 0 'Ys And although they had to con- G. 1'. :\'elson. an American who -------.. Ipd et c~r.era 1 mfolundam h' 1~! duct fund-raising campaigns. is vice president of an Owen HEAP & PARTNERS

.'~ c\ 0 ~,Ivcr alf ~oth w_ •c, several agencies found that in :;;mtnd firm He was pres. dent 'NFLD.) l TO. rca ens o engu a crme s: - .. _, _______ .. · --- of the Communi tv Chest when

c()ffce plnntatlon. . it di,handed and .he recognized· . Among •he thnlls and ex·· Capt. tO} ·the nc·~d for a new approach to

cttmg events contl'lbutlng to the whole program of charitable tlus denoument, made doubly niving. effective as filmed in the en· o --------.,-

targed vistas of CinemaScope.. Now Playing :.re a jaguar attack in the pic· lure's opening scenes, ·an .am·' bush by tandits hidden in a village on stilts on a dugout' hea'ring Rirrn and Vic, the lat-

W i\I.T DISNEY'S ''JUNGLE Ci\ T" IN COLOR

ter's rescue of his partner when , . . . llian's life i~ imperiled by the· Some ol H·c f1rst farmhcs of i mine cave-in, Donald's death Amazoman tunglc socrety arc , \\'hen he 1s struck hv a loosen·. in troduc•:d 11> Walt Disney's •·d bould~r. the fi1;a1, bloody ; new Tcchnirolor True-Life Ad- ' attempt of tl•e bandits to take ; venture. ''Jtu:gle Cat." Many , possession of the mine, and the ; of them ore strangers outside climatic cpi,ode of the blow· '1 their own part of the world i mg up of lhe mountain, one of ~nd arc ncre brought to the the most hairraising ~hots ever! theatre ~crccn for the first . made for :• motion picture. I time They are close neigh- ·

Stewart Granger, whose rug. bars of thP savage jaguar, , i ged film assignments have made I ruler by mi~ht over other pre- I

: his name synonymous with ad· I datory brasts. and bards and venture, is ccmplctcly at home ~ reptiles m tlre \'ast green tcne­in his new role as Rian, a man ! mcnts ulung the mighty nver who knows what he wants and ' in Brazil. ~~·~~~~~~~~~

1 is willing to put up a tough ! This. round-up of extraordin- 1 -j scrap for 11 Grace Kelly gives ary anrmil; l!fe was ftlmed by i a sensitive. forthright and ap- ' naturahst-9hot .. graphcrs Lloyd , WfOUNDLAND

SERVICES I pealing toucl1 to the part of, Beebe, Jam~s Srmon and Hugh, Catherine. who holds her love I Wrlmar durmg two years rn the , for Rian in check until she can

1

ram forests of the Amazon. ! I he. sure of his character. Paul Briefly id~ntificd, the roster 1

Douglas contributes a down-to- of camera captives includes the PASSENGER ~arth humur to his chacteriza-11 followi.ng creatures: ' . N·OTICES f ion as the rough-hewn but , l\ION KEY TRIBES - \\ l11lc . good-nature<! Vic .• John Ericspn i the jaguar and other predators : CO.\"!'IIECTIO!'Ii B.\ y RC:\ is effective in the role of Cath·j prowl the forest floor, the many PLACENTIA BAy erine's brother eager to a ban- : s1m1an breeds rule the treetop · 8 30

. 1 · 1 ld Th th t 1 . Rcf;ular . a.m. tram o don their co!fce plantatiOn for wor · cy are e na ura · . V d ·d . J !8th · · · f "J gle c t " . Arr.entia \ c nes a}. an. .,

the thrills vf emerald mmmg, 1~ comt:Ts 1?ATI'I~n A ta · 'will make connection with ~I.V.

Winng Matcna!s. 1\'~1 Cables, ~lotor•

Lamps, Switches. fixtures.

WAREHOUSE:

-:ROSSIE & CO. LTD. Agenls for

UNDERWRITERS LLOYDS.

LOW RATES DIAL 5031

HARDWARE

GREAT EASTERN 0:. COMPANY, LTD.

REPAIRS TO H.\JJII.~

AND ALL ELEL APPLIAi\CE:

DIAL 30Ul tolOO. and there are excellent support- A!li ·, ·. •- s range, un- f h B R 1111: portrJy-,1, on the part of ~ainly beast that lives on tcr- . PHiopedale B or Vt c l ay tl un , GROCERS

i Robert Taf~r. as Father Ri- mites and other ants; one of · acd·entia ay. . !esse · wei Ia Jeri ' · bl 1 t ·con It tons permit mg. ,,., sa1 . ! pero, the padre who saves Ri- natures pea rca c c Jarac ers i . 2 30 Ill l Hr:ALEY

' l'C h h · tt k d b who surv•1·~· largcl'· hecause from Argcnlla at · p. · · · " · ~n s 1 e w en e IS a ac e y , · · •, , the jaguar. Murvyn Vye as El : he isn't on thP jaguar's regular. eo;o.;~:ECTIO!Ii SOl! Til COAST . Moro, the bandit chief, and ' menu. SERVICE Charlita 3s l sultry native girl; IGl'i\N.-\-A giant·size<l liz- Train "The Caribou" leaving infatuat~d with Rian. ;:rd, a hold-over from ancient St. J•lhn's 1.30 p.m. Thursday,

Andrew !>!arton, ivho co·di· : time. . Jan. l91h .. will make connection . reeled "King Solomon's l\lines," : TAPIR-Ha~mless vegetarran, at Pert aux Basques with M.V. has achieve<! another brilliant distant kin of the rhinoceros, Jlona·.'ista on the South Coast

INSURANCE AND BR

success in (lirecting the action- i who frequents the water hole • Scrvi•:e. ' JOB filled adventures of "Green : margins uf the jungle where' rire" and in, camera-capturing i he is easy p:·cy, both for the FREIGHT ~OTICES the eye-fiilin~ locales of the 1 gr~at cats and the big boa con· mountainous country of Colom- , strrctors. · fllEIGHT SOUTH COAST bia Armand Deutsch produced. : _COLLAm:o PECCARY- A: SERVICE · Special added attraction at I wtld pte of the JUngle whose . . . the Paramount Tomorrow Oli·

1 sharp tusr:~ and fighting cour- ; Freight :s ~cccpted datly at the

via De H:rvi!land In "Libel." · 1ge spell extreme danger to Ratill"ay F re1ght Shed for ports

Water Street Dial 2ti5s-41~3

REG. T. MORGAN •NSURANCE WilTED

Temple Bldg., P.O Bt~ 341 Duckl\ortb SL Dial 80370 or :iii Olivia de Havilland, two-time ' most predators, discouraging :on the South Coast Service. but

Academy Award winner, and ' even the jaguar, unless he is i in of'ler to guarantee movement, --~::-;-;:-o;:;:;;iiC'f Dirk Bogdrde. England's top extremely hungry. i hy this tnp of the S.S. Bar i film per~onality, arc the stars BOA CON!':TRICTOR- The : Ha:c~, fre•g.~t must be at the : --------of "Libel',' d film version of' giant snake-thm~ whose .COils Rarlv.ay Fretnht Shed not la~e~ !M. CONNORS LTD., the Londun and Broadway I once whtpped abo.ut tts vtcllm than ,!·0° p.m. Tuesday, Ja u ; Prescriptions Pickup stage surc%s. A Comet Produc- can strangle the hfe out of·al· ny .llh. : delivery service. lion filmed in l':(lgland. thC' pic· : most any other JUngle creature. i ---------:: ·iure is released by Metro-Gold- : Dramatic highlight of "Jungle cw ! AYLWARD'S DIAL wyn-Mayer. ·1' Cat". shows a boa in mortal ; pHAJt~,\CY

Bogarde, Jnst seen with I.es- combat With a mated pair of , . Cor. Monchy & Empirl lie Caron in "The Doctor's Di· 'I jaguars defer.ding their young. ·

: lemma," play~ a remarKable , THE SLOTH-Strangest of. P.'.' ,_ · ,.._ . Di\RKDALE i dual-role in "Libel," a drama : the Amazon tree dwellers. They iili; PRAR:\!ACY I of mounting suspense, and emo- h~ng upside down and ~~ve --.. - ---·- ·---- EliZ3belb Aft. ' tiona! intensity climaxed by a with the sluggtsh . P.rectswn I vr.rsion of the crocodile, some- ! Dial 9!120 sensational courtroom trial. which gtves them thetr ~ame. ; ti~e:; also called caiman. A I ---

This trial takes place when They eat, sleep, ~ourth an car· , voracious monster of . the .-------Sir 1\!nrk J.oddon sues for h_bel ry thetr young Ill t IS topsy ~· swamps who ts a constant dan· after a new~9apcr. has pubhsh- 1 turv~ posture. One of the pte: ger to all its forest neighbors. td a lett~r 111 whtch the hand· 1 ture s tense ~cenes shows a fe . C!.PYB,\RA-Stolid, slow- . some youno British Baronet male sloth and her baby chased . . b. ~ 1 · f the I • ~ . . . · gmg 1g rouen , cousm o has been pointed out as an tm· by a nun::ry Jaguar. . · North Ameriran beaver, though · Poster he lPTtter was written JACARE- South Amencan "th t th I tt , 't nd ·n ' • ' . WI GU e :\ er S WI a I · 1

by Jeff . Buc~e~ham, one of Is the accused an impost~ ~ dust!'Y. i three Bnt•sh pnsoners of war or not? Whllt turn does the i OTTER _ Competently and 1 who had· .escaped fro":' Ger- trial take when counsel for the 1 playlully at !.orne in the waters · many. His fellow prrs~ners newspaper introduces a fright· of the Amazon and its tributar- ! were Ma~k and Fran~ We ney, l!ning witnes'? What impclls :cs as in other parts or the · a small-lime bdor wtth an un- Lady Loddon to take the stand world. . I canny resen.blnnce to Mark. and how does her testimony I TOUCAN-Weird, big-billed Dirk Bogardl plays both these

1

1 effect her husband's fate? bird. !antdstic denizen of the roles. . , The answers to these qucs· 1 tr~etop and tease-target. of the

In the tension-packed court· lions are not resolved until the I mtschtevuus monkey tn?es .. room Buckeham accuses Mark, final moments of "Libel," one PI RAROCI.J-A gtganllc atr deela~ing. him .to be Welney of the most suspenseful dramas gulping f;>h ot the jungle wa and assertine that the ex-actor Pver brought to the screen. ters whose flesh tempts the had been respunsible for Mark's Playing prominent roles with ~recatory· !andlubbcrs- a de­death and hu<l then assumed his Miss de Havilland and Bogarde hcaty toT Jaguars. identity. caJ.TYing the impw are Robert Morley and Wilfrid Mt\CAW-Ilesplendent ture to the· degree of marryi~g ~yde-White ~~. t~e opposing cred dandy of the jungle. a Mark's· fir.ance, Maggie (MISS :awy~rs. at tire· tnal, and Paul , gaudy and garrulous gossip ol de Havilland) ·Masste 111 the role of Bucken-~ th h

· h · e green uwers. As tht trtal proceeds, the am. · · · • evidence mounts against Mark "Libel" was directed by An- P.\RAKEE1'S-Natives of the and even hi~ wi(e comes to be- thony As11uith and was produc- bird breed much favored as lleve that the . man who has ed by An&tule de Grunwald. cagEd pets in far or! lands. ~hared her brd and board for The film is based on the play • , · . several vPars is not the man by Edward Wool!, with the SI.ARLF.T IBIS-Stately pmk ~he , had ·known before he went l screen plav written ~y Mr. de I plu~~d members of the stork away to w~r. · . Grunwald ~nd Karl funbcrg._ fam I).

SIGNS

DESIGNED AND

PAINTED

Etc.

KEATS

SIGN~ Phone 953AJ TOPSAIL.ROAD

Montana ranks fourth among the stales 0~,. ion. being outranked · ~ Texas and California. order.

Kl E

1

MOl

Bl

Mass Bapti Follo· Audit Spec! M.A.,

c

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PARTS

!NG

R DAWE LTD ST. and TOPs!!i J!l. your Bui] ·qlllrements e ~ UOI61-9117!l

:LECTRICAL '. PPLIANCES

~. PARTNERS • LTD.

.\laten~lli. Wire ~!otors

Switches, Flxtures, elc.

'Ol:SE: PRINCE'S ..)IAL5085

!E & CO., LTD. Agcnls for

llFRWRITERS AT LLOYDS.

LOW RATES DIAl. 5031

OCERS

~LEY

.!RANCE NO BROKERS

3ROTHERS & CO. LTD. Water Street

Ilia! 265s-41%1

f MORGAN : 1:-ICE LJIIDTED ··I~ Bldg., P.O. Bot ::II Duckwortb SL llial 80370 or 1151

.'ARD'S DIAl pllAJlMACY

.\!oncby & EJDplrt

JALE pllAJlMAC1

Elizabeth A,e. Dial 911!8

SIGNS DESIGNED . AND PAINfEO

e OUTDOOR ·siGNS

e TRUCK, Etc:.

KEA

SIG

KINSMEN Boys Club

BI'NGO SERIES 41

TO·DA Y'S NUMBERS

I N G 0 21 45 54 75 29 36 53 65 16 41 57 70 19 40 56 68 26 42 60 62 28 33 46 64 18 31 49 63 30 39 55 72

44 51 71' 35 47 32

onsollltion prizes to first 20 to complete the "L". Down the side and across the

Kin - Help Klddl•s

123 PROWSE AVE. MODERN 3·ROOM BUNGALOW

living room, modem tiled bathroom ~itchen; full-sized basement. Otl heat. Owner leaving town.

Just off Bonaventure Avenue: I

A MODERN TWO-STOREY HOME

C.· Ham,yn & Son Limited

Dial 7351 • 2339

BURNS NICHT OLD COLONY CLUB, JAN • .25, 1961

Special Speaker: . , C. Arnold Patterson, DOSCO, Montreal

(t.:nder the distin~uished patronage of His Honor the Lieutenant-Governor, the Hon.

Campbell Macpherson, O.B.E.

Tickets obtainable from members of the Committee (tel)

(Undu the Distinguished Patronage of· His Grace the Archbllhop)

THE PATRICIAN ASSOCIATION

Annual Comrn~nion Supper MONDAY JANUARY 23rd.

~lass 7:30 p.m. at Basilica of St. John the Fthtlst Confessions 6:30 to 7:30. p.m. Ao ~we.d by supper at St. Patrick's Hall · S ud,tonum served by Ladies' Association. 'lpeAclal Speaker: Rt. Rev. R. T. MeGrath, ·'. ' p p . . ' ' . Ti~hts Ball dn sale at ortlte of Principal St. Patrick'a Sundaayn J from members executive. Sale cloata · • anuary 22nd ~16,21 • . •

CLOTHES MAKE T+IE MAN 1' CHAFE MAKES THE CLOTHIS.

Wm. . L. CHAFE 4 , TAILOR

HOLDSWORTH ST. ·ST. JOHN'S

Attention Boys We ha . • Carri ve . opentngt for Dally · Niwl Saturdn, on · Daily Routes. Also on It Will avs and School Vacation Periods •. lion. pay you to investigat" our proposi·

-_.. ,_ ... l

CONFEDERATION CABS CONFEDERATION GROUNDS

8 a.m. to 12 p.m. Confederation Building PHONE 94071 PHONE 95011 Ext. 524 dee21,1m

ST. ANDREW'S SO·CIETY requests that all mcmhers be p1'cscnt to attend the funeral of the late James Baxter, Past President of the Society.

The funeral will be held from the resi­dence of Mr. James Templeton, 52 Empire Avenue, THIS AFTERNOON nt 2.30, to St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church.

166th (NFLD.) FD. REGT. RCA (M) I

There will be a Kit Inspection for all ranks at 1945 hours MONDAY, 16 January, 1961.

(Sgd.) E. A. HARVEY, Lt. Col. Commanding Officer.

------- ---·- -- -----

FOR SALE USED LUMBER

DOORS WINDOWS

FIXTURES etc.

ALL SALES .EQUIPMENT CONTRACTING LTD.

Cor. PENNYWELL RD. & ADAMS AVE. or PHONE 92000, 92009 After hours 96240, 90695.

The

Daily News NEWFOUNDLAND'S .

MORNING NEWSPAPER

For just 7c. per day or 42c., for SIX Day~ Per Week you can have Delivered to Your

Door or Place of Business, EARLY EACH

MORNING-

The Latest: • World News.

• Local News.

• Social News.

• Sports News.

• Entertainment News.

e Shopping Ne~s, Special Sales etc.

• General Information.

e Stock Market Reports.

PHONE US AT 21n • 78 • 79.

WE WILL BE GLAD TO ARRANGE DELIVERY.

The

Daily News CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT.

Where To Stay Balsam Hotel

BARNES nOAD Eltt:h\Cd In •h~ Heart of

the Cit·.

Qutet, Comfortable J\t:no• phere.

For heRervaUoru. and In !ormation.

NOTICE UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY

I Major Guaranteed Lighting Com· I lng Is .. seeking exclusive repre·!

: Three weeks after the date sentatlves for the provmce. The ; • hereof, applicatiun will be made: nght man Will be prt•moted to · ; to th~ Board of Liqu r C nt 1 I S~perv1sor and then to ~lanager 1

. 0 0 ro wtthm 12 months. Selltng ex· by the. understgned for a Tav· I perlence necessary. r.eference>

. ern L1censc to sell Beer and: necessarY. Customers are stores. :Wines on premises 9ituated at I factories~ offices, motels, service i No. 39 Cookstown Road, St. I stations etc. in your 1arca. lligh I.Tohn's. 1 est commissions palrl weekly on I Dated this 6th. day of Janu· ! all orders received. 35':", of : ary A.D. !961. . customers repeat y::~r after · ' l year. Full commiSSiO:ls paid on

Dial 6336 1 JIIGIIER LEVEL TAVERN, , repeat orders. :'-lo c::sh invest· l per: WILLIAM WILSON. ' n;ent.. Fu.ll facts from Cert1f1ed MRS. JODN FA<JEt J nDI6 23 .' Electnc Company Dundas, Ont Resldcnl Manageren ·;a:;:::,::'::::::::::::::::::::::::::::==: I janl~,-14,16_ __ _ _______ _

1 ~m~3J~.ti~~~~~~~· I NEW m. •1100 nu<. CLEAN - f f t ERS-·Rugs and Carpet or as made to look lil:c new

f«l' IN5IITID aT 1H1 U.C.

Von Schrader process adds Taxi Service years to l!!e of ru~; Clean

ed in heme or at uJr plant. 'Phone 91033. New ~1ethod

HOTEL T AXJ Ru~ Cleaners, Fr.:shwotcr Road.

! Dial 2424-2410

l QUEEN'S ROAD Open from 6.30 to 2 a.m.

FOR RENT 3 Offices

39 NEW GOWER ST.

Heated.

Phone 5058

Wall Washing WALL WASHUoG - Wallt

1 cleaned by new mach1~e Resu!ts perfect: saves pamt -Ne.,. 11ethod Rug and \Vo.l Cleaners. Freshwa!er Ro3d 'Phooe 91033

OIL Bt.:R:'i'ER REPAIRS and mamtenance. Furnaces, Space Healers anol Ranges. Phone 91BB4L. dec7,1m

-------1 FURNIT'JRE REP,\IRS-Re· i

pairs to spring.filled mat- 1

tresses, Chesterfidd su1tcs i also rebuilt. Fifty years' . experience Kea:s Mattress i Factory, 16 ~!ount Royal l Avenue Dial 927;,3 or 2656. I nov30,tf

-===··---~ :FOR ALL '~'OUR £xterlor ! r 1

. and Interior Pair,\ing,

SEE THE NEW WILLYS

JEEP (2 and 4 Wheel llri\•C)

AT

McKINLAY MOTORS LTD.

\.eMarchnnt Rd. Ph: 419H

-------------------

Paper !Janging, Cleaning, 1 Roofing, etc. 'Phone L. ! Howell, 739 'H or 3752A.

, TilE CENTRAL BARBER

1 SHOP- Wo arc r.ow o[!erat· lng 10 chairs, you con bo assured of prompt, e!fici· ent, s~nitary service. No ' waiting problem 24 New I Gower Street opnosite Ade· lairle Motors. Ltd. ---- -------- .

Rcguired immediately

A Housekeep€! for a small institution. Be

Modern Dry Spruce Slabs

Birch Junks

. Excellent worl:in()' condi-, ,.., i tion. Hefercnccs rcguir· i ed. I live ·ory Splits

Electrically ! Hard Coal Dry fir Slabs

~- • Grate Coal

i Apply P.O. Box 782

ST. JOHN'S.

t~~~~ ~ ~~~ : North Sydney Coal

I Cheap Reliable Eleclricit} ,, PHONE 93030 STRAYED In an3 Around St. John'l

11 janl2,lm 1 from Cowan Avenue, on<' '-----.---------~~~·all-white Samoyed Dog

-------- ·· Anyone knowing the

DON'T MISS THIS ONE where-abouts of this dog please contact: ·

TRI • LEVEL JI~l HOLDEN SMITHVILLE CRESCENT at Cowan Avenue or

Dial 93941-A

GREAT EASTERN OIL & IMPORT

CO., LTD. Radio. Television. Washers. Rcfriitrators, lleep Freezers

Electric Ran2ea. Floor P(ll\sbcrs. Gramophones

Public Addr.,ss Systei!IJ.

:DINING ! DANCING ; NIGHTLY i

w'jtiJ,liJ:I·a':',j'"

"\'~a :la is p•• 'ly t:ood pito tection, hat I'll he glad to get batk to our dry and com· fortable do~ housr~"

• • • :\ow there is :t smart pup­he lil;es a dry, warm and com fort:>'Jlr home. If your home nerd' new roofinr,. siding, in sulation or other remodeling for <'OI-:Jfo:oi---<''"~C In and sc~ us.

Spaghetti with Meat Sauce,

French Fries or \lashed Potatoes. Kern<·! Corn

or Brotcoli, Homemade Halls or

French Bread, Tea, Coffee or \lilk.

$1.25

TO-KIGHT

7:15-JUNIOR HOCKEY

Holy Cross vs Guards

U.OO-SENIOR HOCKEY

Fcildinns vs St. Bon's

Admission: llcscrvcd Scats 75c. Bleachers and Gen.

Admission 50c.

I'\ow vou can own a New :Modern Tri­Levcl llomc in one of the top-notch areas in town. Ready for occupancy, this beau­tiful home contains spacious kitchen with the latest of conveniences that will make the ladv of the house feel like a queen. Lar~e living room with fireplace, dining room, three bedrooms with lar~e clothes closets (the master bedroom has two large closets); lovely bathroom with tiled walls and floor; laundry room with set tubs; toilet. ·den; garage and concrete base­mertt. Oak floors. Baseboard radiation heat. Fully Insulated. Grounds will be · landscaped· and will have concrete walks, etc. Many other wonderful features too numerous to mention. Call rl~ht awav.

Tape R<·corders KEi'AIRS AND SERVJt.:J.>

; UNt:S . -~---

STAN CONDON

IEPAIIS . OLOUIZIII ··~-firestone

11111

Nfld. Armature Works Ltd. ~AMBRICK ST.- DIAL 7191 • 7192

D1AI. 300 I 1o 3005

WATER STREET ,an26 1 v

·C._ L. · B~ Old Comrades As~)OC. The Annual Mectin~ of the C.L.B. Old Comrades Association Lodge No. 1 wtll be held In the Club Rooms, WEDNESDAY, January 18th. ~u~g~8.Wpm. · •

All members are ·asked to be present. C .. W. D0\1INY,

Hon. Secretnry,

1 9 s 6

MET~OR

1 $700·00

jBaird Motors Ltd: MERRYMEETING ROAD DIAL 8·0378 • 8.0319

-~~ .....

Prornpt Delivery 0,''; • STOVE OIL · · I FURNACE OIL ~· " HARD COAL • SOFT COAL • IRO~ 111JREMAN

JIEATitiiG EQUIPMENT

' ',' '. l . l . ' j ' .. \

'•·I . r , . I . . ' ' I I,

l

''

,•

'

I .. '

.. : IL 1 I . I'! I . '·

t :

I' ! '.

i ~ . i ; ~ ·-! . ' ! . I . .. ' .-; L·. '.

. i ~· ' .

'

Page 14: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ... ,.S 1 - T s 'JR 'ICE · P.1nc: 'heir tirr is % t '" mL~eries. :,hakesptart :rt !I. HEATING BOILER . iomestlc

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F-E·E-D-S BRAN DAIRY RA TIOtj . LAYING MASH MIDDLINGS CALF MEAL OYSTER SHELL

ALSO

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CRACKED CORJl HORSE FEED LAYING MASH (PELLETS)

PIG 'GROWER SC·RATCH FEED SO's & lOU's

CORNMEAL

1 HAY

Scraps or 3 Colors

OF THB

OK . LOVE AND MRS. SARGENT

Virginia Rowans $4.95 : 1 THE CHESS PLAYERS .,

: Fances Parkinson : Keys . . . .. . . .. . ... 5.95 I ' THE NIGHTINGALE I 1 Agnes Sligh Tum- , 1 bull .................. 4.50 \A SILENCE OF DESIRE

Kamala Markan­daya

POMP AND · CIRCUMSTANCES

Noel Coward I THE SAT ANIST

Dennis Wheatley 3.50 . THE ROME ESCAPE LINE

; Sam Derry . I TAKEN AT THE j Drram·co m c·tr !' c afghan, FLOOD

T. & M. WINTER LTD. DIAL 5]01 - 5102 - 5103

yours for the makin,:. You'll i display it proudly to friends and I John Gunther · family. BYRON AND THE GENERAL MERCHANTS ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND

Main!y . single ~rochet .forms. SPOILER'S ART these •''<·mch flowers. J01n for: afghan or TV pillow Use a Paul West ......... 4.001

• large hook; do in .VIJ~ scraps or i FROM SEA UNTO SEA,

G d S S • • CeeBeeS WID ~ion~olors. Pattern •439: dlrcc·: w. G. Hardy. . 6.00; uar S weep er1es, i Se~d. TIIIRT\'.FI\'t: CE1"TS, THAT GREAT 1

A d Defeated . un comsJ for th.s pattern LUCIFER I

S ' B II I I d 6 3 n I ~~.am~~~~~~10l ~~~~~cep~~~w~~: ~~~rgaret Irwin .... 5.50 top e s an .. - i Jlllousc~old Art~ Dept. 60 FRO~T THE MACKENZIE BUCHANS _ (Staff)-Thc

1ST:, \\E.ST, TORO!'ITO, or-;r. KING RECORD

. . Conception Bay CeeBees won, Pnnt p!amly NAME. ADDRESS,, . • • BELL ISLAND-( Staff) The .Three goals tn JUSt over three and lost a game over the week·

1 p,\TTERN J~;mlllER. . . J. W. PICkers gill ll.50

Guards Junior Hockey team mtnutcs tn the latter stages of end as their tour of Western 1 PICK OF PUNCH sweeped their two game series the second period broke Guards and Central Newfoundland con· , I Bernard Hollowood 4.25! with the Junior Bell Island All· into the lead to stay. Houn· tinued. On Saturday night the St Bon S Drop i Stars as they stopped the Is· sell's second marker gave the CeeBees lost to the Corner • o· k & c L d I landers 6·3 at the Bartlett Mem· Guards a lead they held. Fred Brook All·stars 7·2 and on Sun·. , , I( S O. I , orlal Arena here saturday night Htckey set Hounsell up at ~5.16. day night took a 7-4 wm over 1 St KeV ·n S 12-4 1

ill a rough, fast exhibition Ed Vatcher htt from Hickey the Buchans Miners. 1 • f Jh 8 k 11

J:ame. The Guards took the at 16.01 to make it 4·2 and _Dave On Saturday Corner Brook· . e 00 Se ers first meeting of the home· and Batley converted Hounsell s re· took a 3·00 lead in the first I --

91

home series 7·1 at the Prince bound at 18.55 for a 5·2 score period and were out front 6·0 BELl, ISLAND (StaffJ-The Spin 4425 or 2008 or 31 at Wales Arena Friday night. I as the fmal frame opened. after two stanzas. Ed Kays and St. Bon's Scn10r lntercollegmte

Henry Hounsell scored twice Dave Butler completed a play Gerry Dwyer scored twice for hockey team registered a 124 for the Guards with Earl Pol· with Earl l'ollett at 14.10 of the Corner Brook with Ed Lawr· exhibition victory over St. lett, Ed Vatcher, Dave Bailey third with Ralph Glover sconng ence, Frank Walsh and Mick Kevin's High School at the and Dave Butler got the other from Gerry Lahey at 16.51 to Walsh getting single goals. Bartlett ~lcmorial Arena here goals.. Bill Ford had two Bell have the encounter end 6·3. George Faulkner and Allan on Sunday afternoon. The visi· Island tallies while Billy Referees Stan Connors an~ Dawe scored for the CeeBees. tors were leading 6·2 after Glover accounted for the other ~ic J:iunt handed out 16 penal· Tbree penalties were called the first period and held a 9·3 Island goal. , ttes m the game wtth mne of in the game with two going to! lead after the second frame.

Hounsell unassisted At 8.52 them gomg to Bell Island. ~II Corner Brook. The game drew 1 Gerry Doyle paced the St. got Guards underway in the were mmors except a ten mm· 2000 fans to the Humber Gar· Bon's team with four goals opening frame but Ford tied it ute misconduct lo Jack Drover dens. CeeBee defenceman Jim while Hubert Hutton added up on Tom :>!yers' pass at 10.30. of the Guards at l4.40 of the Kennedy injured his shoulder three tallies. Tom Owe~s and

Jack Drover set Earl Pollett thtrd frame followtng a mixup in the fixture and left in the Wayne Rowe scored twtce for up at 6.50 of the second stanza involving players from both third period. the winners with Graham Holli·

. for a 2·1 encounter but Ford's teams. Taking a 4·0 lead in the first han adding the other tally. second marker of the night on The Gu.ards returned to St period at Buchans the CeeBees Dan Stone, Bill Ford, Kev a play with Myers and Ray Cole · matched the two goals of the Galway and Gerry Lahey ac· had it 2·2. · John's on Saturday night. Miners in the middle frame. counted for the St. Kevin's

60 Bantam Three penalties were called with , markers. two going to the CeeBees. I Referees Stan Connors and

A

: Players Sign Columbian Darts Starts Tonight

Alfie Hiscock and Jack Faulk·/ Vic Hunt called seven mmor ncr got two goals each for the 1 penalties in the fixture with five WELCOME· WAGON CeeBees with Fred Pardy, going to the St. Kevin's team. Lindy Faulkner, and Mike St. Bon's outshot St. Kevin's Kelly notching singles. Frank 26 to 24 over the route. The HOSTESS

1

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOII!\'S, 0:FLD., ~!Oi'\DAY, JA~. 16,

IN STOCK -

' . CHEESE

ONIONS

TURNIPS

POTATOES

RAINBOW TEA

WALNUTS SliELLED

DES ICC. COCONUT DALTON'S CHERRIES

KELLOGG'S CORNFLAKES

GEORGE NEAL LIMITED ST. JOHN'S

So Slimming PRINTED PATTER~

............. -... AlWAY$ ......... 1

WAIT.., to!' YOUR SIGNAL

OATE SET TORO:\TO •CP·-

· ol Edinburgh·s monwcalth S t u j.,. will be held in Cana:a

. to June 6, 1~1r,2, ·1 nounced Fridav. ;"~· persons en~a~ed 1n · nadians will br a:t0;;

Canada study deai:n; human con.<equent!; trial changes in ,;,e · 11·ealth and Emnir~. , Philip started the . · at Oxford in 19\~ acl tend the Canadiar, oct

'I KII.LED . RUTL.\:.ID, \'! :;,p .

· liilled my mother, ! I - go to the li:Jcary I

i the :'<orth C~rolina coast, Atlan. wouldn't let me:· Trc:. 1 tic fl·•et headqu~rtcrs reported. police Friday quD~rd 2

I There were no ca~ualties, a old Geoffrey Pete: spo~esman said. Thr Keppler adopted son of a sustained superfiri:JI damage, the tiona! minister, spo~csmnn said The Johnston murder warrnn: sustained damage :D her bO'N and blal stabbing of ' was ordered to proceed to Char· · drich. 39, in l1er

: lesion, S.C. :Thursday night. I -··--

NO RED TAPE OR SPECIAL INTERVIEWS

when you use the I.A.C. Merit Plan

for time purchases

AD ha~~dac a.rn'"B"' .. arc completed on our isu when you bur oa (J Merit Pia a. We v.·ork Of

the derails of your pu:W. io iu5t a few mi~~rtl­theo it is youn, 10 tUI bomc aod usc immtdil~

Walker, Tubby St. George, Bili St. Bon's team returned to St. 1

Scott and Claude Clarke scored John's after the game. ' Will Knock at Your Door 1 The dress you'll reach for! :.·':. The Canadian Legion spon· D d It' t d ' Rangers-E. Kean (Capt); . for Buchlms. . h G•f d 0 t'

1 e1•ery ay! s so smar an .

:.ered Bantam Hockey League J O'M c h Wll I Is an ree tngs . s 1·1 m ml · n g, Step. in button·'· !E7· _.. ,.nnn . Shnno, D. Meaney, . ara, . Tonight the CeeBees play t e j Iff :"\ •uuU ( DISPQC

.Signed up 60 players at the Keels, Alf Snow. Gander All·stars at s.oo p.m. (urll"ng NoteS from Friendly Business ing makes it easy to get into-, ~'V, • ·~~ \\\t-~1 \. J ·Stadium

011 Saturday morn·· Black Hawks-E. O'Neill, while on Tuesday night they'll Neighbours and Your ) no oeed to muss your hair·do.; ...... ,~ lll\

lng. Capt; T. Manning, Jas. Tobin, play the Clarenville All·Stars. r· · d 5 · 1 G , Easy·sew. 1 ,!' · ;} 3ives you a lithe,;~ It was expected that 100 •·v R ·t Ed Bruce D ~tVIC an OCIO roup. I Pr1'nted Pattern 4716: Half! I I

' · os~t er, · • · h f ' ' Leak proof • :\o I f h N Dl I •,•ONDAY, JANUARY 16th. 0 t 'o o I ,. 20' 22'' ' payers rom t e avy v · Kelly. "' · e occas1 n : :Sizes 14'fz, 16\-2, 8,,, ~. iz, t' :.:•.·; l'owerful motor. slon of Pee Wee Hockey Bruins -J. Brennan, capt.; RCAf LOSe TO ' British Consols Trophy New Comer to the City,

1 24~. Size ~~~ requires 4'!1. yards i ;,: lubrication , Self

would be on hand ((; sign up. E. Buckingham, w. Spurrell, R. • Playdowns Th B'rth f B b '35·inch fabnc. I L ' Continuous feed )t Is possible that 40 players, Godden, Wm. Kearney, J. Pal· 6.30-9 e 1 0 0 a y, Send FORTY CESTS (in coins\: F:,.;..;-· - ' ·tn tbelr last year of Pee Wee, frey. · A• 1• 8 4 (First Named Skip) PHC>lE 94865 - 90943 (stamps cannot be accepted I fori ., 3 £1\SY STEPS :wm be brought up to Bantam. Leafs-G. Kielcy, Capt; G. 1r lnBS • c Rockwell vs. :-<. P. Rock· and 3582. this pattern. Please print plain·,

1 ~

Whttlen, P. Fanning, B. Ever· wei! ly .SIZE, NA!\'IE. .~DDRESS,: t~,'_.: If · · .

! · Hood Tied ard, L. Reddy, F. Evans. J. Burgess \'S, W. Allan. T S Send order to ANNE ADAMS,! 'l'lml •• Cold

Canadiens-F. Wadden, Capt.; GANDFR, (Staff)-Airlincs F Snow vs F, P. Baines. DEA II TYLE NUMBER. Water

E. P. Evans, A. Curtis, L. Fen· •·roke out for seven second R: Bartlett vs. T, Williams. CAKE _ Passed away sud· I, care. of ST.. JOHN' D. AIL.Y' , ~·lip startut1 nell, C. Morris, H. Browne. ~eriDd goals on Saturday night J. P. Cheivrrs vs. W. Piercey denly at his home 60 Bonaven· · NE\'rS, Pattern Dept. 60 FRONT· ~~ ~.- • IIWitdl F F• Rovers-W. Dawson, Capt.; to defeat RCAF 8·4 In a senior A. J. Lush, bye. ture Avenue, at 5 p.m. Satur· ST., WEST, TORONTO, ONT. / · ···-- . (J) Feeo "' toodwasJ<

> or lrst ~. GI~:~: t D;~~~. M. HDwlett, ~oacr~~s gah~:e. atR.~~.F~a~~ee~ Umpire: ~~{o!~;tt. ~:yh~e~~~~n~.~~~~d ~~~e~r~f·~t DESTROYERS COLLIDE I lc A HuB LEY L ;;: • Royals -C. Mallard, Capt.; all four pPnalties in the game C. Rockwell vs. W. Allan. 2.30 p.m. to·day, Monday, to the NORFOLK, Va. ( AP> _ Two • • ~:: W Manning, P. Browne, J, Mur· with Beddard going off on N. ·r. Rockwell vs. F. Snow. Newfoundland Cathedral, thence U.S. destroyers, Johnston and I f.;Hood pulled Into a first place phy, John Fitzpatrick, John three of them. j J.P. ChelVers vs. F.~· Bames ·Anglican Cemetery, Forest Rd. KeWer, coliided early Friday KING'S ROAD .. , PH. 3916 lit! with Magnificent in the Clarke. R.CA.F. held a slight 2·1; J. Burgess vs. W. Ptercey. I Wlhh~ile~e~n.::ga~g:ed~i~n_::ex~e~rc::is~e~s~o~ff~l~~~~:=:~~:=:~~==~=::=:::::-::-::::=:::~ lflvy division of Pee Wee Hoc· Maroons-D. Kirby, Capt.; edge after the first frame but 1 A. J. Lush vs. T. Williams. QUINTON - Passed ~way at _ t~ on Saturday morning as R. Westcott, Chas. Parsons, J. the Airlines broke well out ' R. BartlPtt, bye. Toronto, January 14th, ~rs. I ~y dee'fated Nelson 4-1 at the Dunphy, F. Gallagher. !ront with their seven goals in Umpire: p G. Ledingham. Florence Quinton, aged 72 $!~diu~. Both leaders have· Red Wings-W. Dyke, Capt.; the middlP. stanza to held an Results of Satur!lay Night years, widow of Eleazer Quin·l

· ~ wms In two starts. J. Chafe, M. Power, K. Kear· s.3 lead after two periods. Games ton, formerly of Charleston, :~:Jim Fowler gave Nelson an ney, B: Fagan, T. Ronan. R.C.A.F. got the lone marker c. Rockwell 12; .J. Burgess 9. B.B. She leaves to mourn five ~Jy 1·0 lead but two goals by Hurricanes-F. Foley, Capt.; of the final frame. N. p Horkwell 7; W. Allan sons, Charles at Princeton, B.B.,

Parsons and singles by Ed. O'Neill, J. McDonald, Leo Bill Dyke paced the Airline 11 . Harold, Clyde, Rex and Don at Smythe and Wayne Sturge Moore, Joe Fitzpatrick, J. Bar· victory with three goals while F. snow 7; J. P.C heivers 8. Toronto; three daughters, Lora Hood taking the win. ron. . Angie Carrol scored twice with F, P. Baines 10; w. Piercey (Mrs. Samuel Yetman) and

_ythe picked up an assist ()n TONIGHT'S GAMES Leo Lann .• n, Sceviour and John 12. Rosalie at .Toronto, Mart~a j rge's goal while Dave Wall 8.00-Bruins vs Hurricanes. Bussey adding single markers. R. Bartlett. 7; A. J, Lush 11. (Mrs. Reg Qumton), St. J~hn s;,

_ BiiJ Ennis had assists ·on Leafs vs. 1\ed Wings. Bob Dean got two R.C.A.F. Saturdats Mixed Bonspiel and one br?ther, Harold Stmms. ~h of Parsons' goals. 9.30-Canadiens vs Rangers. goals with Kelly and Martin won by skin, F. A. J. Laws; at St. Johns. Interment at To·

· :=:rhe schedule for Pe~ Wee Rovers vs. Royals. rounding out the scoring, mate, Mrs. M. Lush; second, ronto. ji.:mes for lhe remainder of the ,. Rangers vs. B. Hawks. 'Airlines held a 43·23 advant· Mrs. M. Ward; lead, Mrs. R. ~ek was released last n1ght: 2ge in the shflts on goals with Ryan. ·;.Tqesday: MONDAY, Jan. 23rd. both Lush and Chevalier play. -------. ing well between the pipes. To· ; ~:::o:-spllfires ,vs Jets 8.00-B. Hawks vs, R. Wings. night ·the CreBees play the "- U~Magnlflcent vs Hunon Bruins vs. Maroons. C,nder All·stars at the Gander ,. Leafs vs. Royals. • ~ Gardens. · ·<, 9.30--Canadlens vs. Rovers. ;, "'''aanday: Rangers vs. Hurricanes. :~::::_Liberators vs North All players participating must '•. Star be In possession of' membership

cards. These are obtainable from ·~J~mmandoes VI Si11nal· the Financial Secretary; Knllht

of Columbus tonight. Please let us. have your co-operation In this reprd.

Hoop S~ores

Breeds Mallards SAINT JOHN, N.ll. <CP>­

Fred Jlowland, a 16 • year • oid student, Is conducting a conser·

1

vation program In a shed at his! nearby South Bay · home. He · breeds wild mallard ducks.

The mallard family now con. silt& of 10 drakes and 10 fee males. , Fred also nllll three dom· estlc ducks. He plans to breed more mallarda In the spring llld release ~m w.1en they can care for themselves.

The project began in the fall of 19S9 when four m&llard duck· lings ambled to his home from

Mrmorial, the Intermediate the St. John Ri\'cr. attracted by hampa, were a topped 63-4'7 by a the do me st I c ducks. Fi'ed

;quadrGn team but' milt tbetr IIUI'8ed them . on· their natural aeeond ~~~~ 85-M. The Blnlor food until they became accus· ,AJIStan lost to the Ar!lentla tomed to a diet of clurken feed. ·iellil •s.at 1114 •1·37,, Last May, 38 eggs were laid.

Two city basketball teamt ravelled to Argentia .over tbe

·week-end for pmea with , the Amerlean personnel.

. •

.r . •'

Minor Officials MONDAY'

1st. Gamr. 7.15: H. Murphy, E. Woolgar, C. Chaytor, D. Reddy

2nd. Game: Ed. Pearce, R. Short, R. Jackman, B. Fahey.

WEDNESOAY: !st. Game. 7.15: J. Reardigan,

Ed Clements, Eric Burt, B. Shaugharus.

2nd. Game: H. Murphy, A. Miil~r. J. O'Toole, L. VaughRn.

FRIDAY: 2 p.m.: Ed Pearce, E. Wool·

car, r. Chaytor, D. Reddy. SATUJtDAY:.

8 p.m: J. Reardigan, Ed Clements, Eric Burt, B. Shaugl~aruc.

------Seventeen hatched and one was later killed, possibly by a rae· coon .

. J

FUNERAL NOTICE ---------------------1

BAXTER - The funeral of j the late James Baxter will be held from St. Andrew's Presby·\ terian Church to·day, Monday,/ January 16th, at 2.30 p.m. In· 1 terment will be at MI. Pleasant Cemetery. (No flowers by re· quest).

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