collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/pdfs/dailynews/thedailynewsstjohnsnl... · 2014-08-04 ·...

12
' NEW SMALL PONTIAC ACADIAN Nova Motors Ltd. TH·E DAILY NE (;3 'tHE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, MAH.CH 1.5, HW2 (Price: Holds To Weapons ' resen 1sarm. EVA (CP)-The 17-nation disarmament conference began its ala brief session Wednesday with the Western powers holding of an ogreement to halt the spread of nuclear weapons the atomic club. · n and British officials conceded this limited attainment ew -----------'--:-------------- --·-· PUNO, Peru-Great Britain's Philip is treated to a different kind o[ "derby" than those haclt in England, as a brace o[ howl('r· hatted be-pigtailed girls pcrfon11 as native dancers in Puno. Peru, l\Iarch !llh. The husband of Elizabeth is currently on a tour o[ Latin American countrics.-(UPT Photo). --------------- ----------------------·-· ----- --------- Ullfi'OI."' ._,,,,. far short of the official goal of agreement on verified gen· Rowdy T Attack t \lith orm; r)' due ,JulY 1. SI ament and a nuclear te s! ban. they said it might restrain the atomic arms race and open up for more difficult disarmament measures later. Unemployment Question -A J h H Gl ·---1 The real hnrgaining will he- c F. Sh k. .stronaut 0 n . ··e.nn h . gin today when a new. three- testing next month unless a finn auses 1St· a 1ng ans 1p U .. plan. and probnbi)· pact tests is si"ncd, I I t t I . · · .. WAS}II".'GTON I API - mittancc to the pmty. ! 1nl s ar e( cursmg. 1 a !''Val Russian program. are In line with this, an aulhori·l ·' I d h tl t S . l I naut John H. Glenn Jr. was One Of the gang threw " beer ' Glenn ore ere t e you IS r, P ace laid bclot·c the delegates. T Je tntil·e source said Rusk is likely ISp ay t C,il\1 into the yare! and Glenn 01'· 'lem·e and, after they retort;_d_ session, like all the resi, will to stay in Geneva until he sees . cursed and an attemp was , h l d t I h . · a enco•m dered him to pick it up, ',with derisLve remarks, he. sam 1 be be ind closed doors, wit 1 nn whethe1' or not there is anv real : , 1 rna e. 0 s ug lm m n · · 1 th 1 ·Rruu•r.<• - !C I agreed communique issued after prosp"cl of g"tt'lng ,, 11 ·,. 1 , 1 .e"- 1 OTTAWA-CP-Dcputy Sp.-:laker Paul Martin· ter wtth rowdy teen·.agcrs .at the him 10 seconds to do so. Words i he would recon e tcencc ,.,,a,ll'"'tl nl't"'lZine " " " '" " h h tt d ' 1 "t 1 ,·erc cxcll,"nged, bttt the "Outh i number of their car and call ; .. , ' "' . each meeting. . ment on tests and will cnu itad his hands full. order in the Com· i c urch es at edn 5 m. h"tr " ' r rl the l I The U.S. and Russia wel·e not 1 ave I f . tl d l ·t . \" d d f L b M' S . I IVa. last n ur ay mg , po ICC oheved. j police. . ol , unanimouslv named permancut weet Je me IC en ° ncx , 'fC ay ter a or tarr e_rupt;t Wednesday. . . \\;hen Glenn emcr"e'd fr.Jm A boy jumped in front o[ the I, o! the In ·,ndditioll to the hl'"·lht·nc• 'm a fisi-shakmg display when Liberals lum I Police Sgt_ Warren Slske smd the hclnd or the I licence plate to obscure it. A; nrnbmnns tp m · t \" d d . . t . . 'tl 'ti b t I t 1 th 1 - 1 ·s l"h'lt happened· bov.·s say the, were to th_c Glenn pushed him .aside, one, o_f I . a ., c ncs ay s 32 mmu e pn- on tests Rllsk 1\'lfJ "1•. 0 WI I en Cisms a ou unemp oymen s ' ' . : l t I " " " 1 Gl d g 1 · £ l y at 'teen centre at the Ltltle Falis 1 the een-agers s11Ung a . 'k I' S \'. F ! vale session in accordance with 'have furthcl' talks with Gro- : Paul Martin (L-Essex East) led the attack with ' enn, nrm a mc 5 a United rrcshvtcrian Chu!·ch. 1 who promplly on I kto tt.het' questions East- 'charges that tile unemployment situation in Canada : Thinl;ing that they :the. boy's the October there had es !WoO Ia IOns on er m. tl t f · d tr' 1 t th \" h \ l' t c,· 111sc trouble there. Glenn !lrrn·e, unttf other pet sons c.1me hfJ!T. . 1 h tries and Britain-the tht·ee ma· IS \C wors o any 111 us 1B coun ry In e ,,astern went to a orne tn 1 r on o maJor a_unc es .on jor nuclear powers world pick up his daughter from a to the church to assist his pa'· i the church to help. orb1tol mformalton 0 1 h h f ·. th A . d : . teen a"c pat·ty tor, Rev. Frank Erwin. At the,. Glenn then went th< 'lt 'h•l• from 11 , 01 . 1 d n Y ours e 01 e e co_n· lie tl1al tlnemploy- · o 1 d 11 d 1 h t " '" ccuse . I h r I church. Erwin had asked the c mrch an ca e po ICC. u f.erence op. encd, Rusk <llld Bnt· · ment figures for February are Upon arm•a e 01101 a f th 11 sh p 1 . , Sc rctarv Home 1 . 'tll ld b . were unemployed across Can- rowdy grollp of youlhs who 1 p. hovs. who misbchal'inc. 1 the !ted be ore ey · dr· :'.1m cnrrying I Of 0 • ada. . parcntly had been refllsccl ad- to .lcal·r tlw centre. One or llwm i ri' __ ·e_rl_. --------- . . . '. . spy:'r . Gmmyko for the second pre· PI u m i with a Canadian Labor. Con· What consultahon had there ____ .. ______ ... _ .laJ11lng equ I 1 ,_. tl t' 1 been with labor and industry to 1 · con erence u1g: .1rce mce mg. . 1 · grcss delegation and becau>e r d t h t t · · 1 s d N s . . I f th I Later. a llnhsh delegate smd :supplementary labor estimafts w a rammg was I y ney . . Cl 1 . 0 e ! another such meeting will be I are before the Commons ' 'i'l am\ repj I held this week, some time alter p h When J. W. IL::_:: There were many cases of : tn,.tcornn.a lonaas· ! ttohdayl''ss opcn,in!(R from US 1-ng Bonal'isln ·. T. will in. gate I came to training in obsolete skills. Why I train people on woodworking ... "olti ·all·· 11 1 c .•. am l1ss,a. 1\larlm s md ;\lr. Starr ... ,' .,'',.,. I le PI or· : At the meeting, sources said. shouted at him· ' "You may when the industry was a dis- Production Halts At DOSCO. · Steel Plant . .. -, < oo c osc · k d · · appearing one• · · : R11s an Home concentrated on Fla. (/\PI-The Fed· :push some people around, but. · :';:ltd tiwt .\mcl'ican · t1:ying to change the Russian 1 era! :-Jarcolics Bureau accused 1 you can't push me around." Frank McGee <PC - York- '" ro• 1 1 . 1 .. ,til v1ew that the proccduJ·es o! m·1 the Cuhan Communist t·cgime : SIIAI\ES Jo'IST Scarborough) accused 11r. Reg. •· · • II nr 1\ a 1 · · ' £ k' " f lh t . r s . 11 1 . d tematonal mspectwn and con· Wednesday of pushing opium 1 "I don't frighten very easily," 1er o ma mg one o e mos which the . West !eels nre into the United States from Red ! he added, shaking his fist and irresponsible that 1 ":on< 10 c I vttal to any disarmament China in an attempt to de- 1 pointing at l\k Pickersgill, have beard since eom 1 ng to this r!Grmalir,n. are merely an excuse lor cspwn· the North American j :'fir. Starr said any suggestion house in 1957." ·. workers in alt key ,]cpartments · company promptly announced it walked off their joi>s in the was forced to bank the one first plnnt closing strike since operating b!Hst furnace. Bank- :;:e following as· age. . . _ . contment and acquire important unemployment figures nre Mr. Regier had slandered SYDNEY ( cr 1 _ Production There IS httlc douht thai 1t U.S. dollars. bemg withheld was "wrong, school hoards and departments came to a halt at the Dominion )or. r. 11rl Dec. 22 <nnoun1·o'rl satellites hul '\rither .>at- f\!n •n mtematiomtl , ann h o t h were .. om an iull · in a re· Kcnncdl' '' 11 2i . US,\F tarr !' i ·1 q "secret were l<nmched and 1%2 Delta and 1962 · te!pectively. But :10 II'J' given. recpnt launching "lem't satellite" ubans U. S. 'l'P 1 - lmmigra· Fairclough sa:d that "as far as I 11 ho defected 11 rhncr at left !or the Tuc5day night .. 33 41 ······ 28 41 ······· 2.'\ 44 19 3.1 ...... 14 ,\fi ..... 23 40 is on this issue that the success The art·esl five Cupans who false-and the honorahle mem· of education across Canada Steel and coal Corporation's o! the con!crcnre depends, since posed as refugees and attempted ber knows it vc1·y well." "up, down and sideways.'' steel plant Wednesday after all othe1· pre1·ious ne::otiatiJns to sen·opium and cocaine in the Erhart Regier <CCF - Burn- hal'e broken dtwn on this point. Miami area is proof Umt the ahy Coquillam) accused lhe ing was expected to be com· 1!1-Hi. d Still working wns the coke pleted hy 8 a.m. Thurs ay. . The Wcs.t ugreed that fu· presence of Red in Ha· government o! irresponsibility ture nego.ttallons should be con· vana hns a \'itnl new in committing to dueled w1th 1 n the larger frame· nnrcolics traffic to the U.S. construction of new vocational work of ge.neral eastern shm·e, Chal'les ·Siragusa, training schools "without en- hut would like to sec the U.S., assistant commissioner of nar- suring that the public Is going Bril.1in and Russia !orm a sub- cotics said here. to receive some real value for committee to the tests. . The dissemination of opium the money." · The ISSUe• has ·even Ill free countries is an ''Integral The technical school in Burn- n:'ore tmmedmcy than part of the cold war" being a by, B. C., had some "ridiculous disarmament since President waged by the Soviet Union amt and fantastic" courses. It had Kennedy has announced tile her Communist allles, Siragusa one com·se in exterior painting, U.S. will resume atmosphel'ic said. while thousands of painters ovens department although A company spokesman Cease .• f. 1 re Talks M. ay duclions in this steelmaking it was impossible to tell how phase were likely. Only -mn;n- soon the plant could get back tcnance per,onnel nnd those to normal operation even if thf · to banl;ing the plant's men dccirlcd to return to wod: · · k No. 3 blast furnnce were work· at once. Xormally W ·ln· . d up Th I. s . We· e ing in the main plant hhl sneral dn:·s be- \\ ' d d lore proper h e a t e ncs aY. 1 The plant employs ahout 2.dn0 including some 500 office worK· A union spokesman said therl EVIAN, France !Reuters) - covered details the interim pe- crs not af!ccled by the was no indication the men The Franco-Algerian cease-fire riod between the cease-fire outs. · , · would return to 1\'0t·k to allow talks, now in their second week, an Algel'ian . self-determination The unauthorized walkouts !or it union and company meet- were reported to have run into vote, under areas: 1 began l\londay in the rod ann ing on the issue. stocky going Wednesday during 1. There Will be' a temporary bar mills where workers re- The blast furnace which pro- a 3o/•·hour meeting, conference executive of 12-!our French, fused to work !or the third duces raw or' pig iron is the observers said. four Moslem insurgents time 'since last fall in protest key operation. The molten iroil The b servers, quoting lour other Moslems. The :VIos- against or efficiency the open where the sources, said the com- !em president and European experts. 'fhe \;orkers blamed mam steel conversiOn proce.;s P,OSitwn of a temp_orary execu- vice-president are yet to be the company's efficiency men for 1 takes place. hve to rule Algena after the picked. schedules which said m- · ------- cense-fil'e was among the stum· :SUGGEST NAME creased \l·ork . load per man ! N Appeal bling blocks. 2. Alongside the executive while culling the workforce. 1 ew French sources, however, be- committee will he a French high Blast fumacc workers. mainly ! By IIAHOLD lieved a cease-fire proclamation commissioner, probably Gen. tllose llandli'ng SllCil \'l'tal mate'- r will be made sometime this . Canadian Press Staf Writer k . Billotte, R . prominent I rials scrap and ore, walk•!d Within a matter o! weeks,· tllf wee m separate announce· Gaulhst. off Wednesday morning. The US d · · t · I · ments from Paris and Tunis, , . a m1ms ratwn is expec It the Algerian insurgent head- ---- lo launch a new appeal among quarters. c d• s t• the NATO powers for a tradf The·prescnt and final phase ana tans .mugg, 1n·g· embargo against Premier Fide of the talks. on ending ·the 7lh· Castro's Cuban regime. year Moslem insurrection has The new appeal, it is under- . stood, would be, taken up witb 'Dang. erous ·In Indochina Since '54 lives of all NATO powers at ont ny DAV.E !\lciNTOSII and already deal\ with on time in Paris last month. A f OTTAWA (CP) - . Reliable spot by their commanding a!- ctlon sources said Wednesday that liccrs cannot be court-martialcd TilE COUNTRY PARSON : smuggling in Indochina by Can- in Canada on the same charge. adlans serving with the Inter- They said· the Canadian arm;' WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- national Truce Commissions officer involl'ed in \he case was dent Kennedy said Wednesday there dates back some seven discovered smuggling gold and Soviet dropping of metal chaff years. had been . summarily convicted in the air corridors to Berlin Js Tbey said the smnggling o! by his commanding officer. The "a particularly dangerous kind gold by Canadian servicemen sentence was believed to be a or action." began not long alter Canada fine tog_ether with a reprimand Kennedy, at a press confer· along with India and Polaud, which world hold up any pro- enee, said Soviet harassment of became a member of the trucg motion. Western planes in the airln11es commissions in Viet Nam, Laos I RETAIN COMMISSION represents the kind of move and Cambodia in the late sum- This officer, according to mil- that can h!ad to counter-actions mer o[ 1954. Most of this smu;l- itary law, cannot be tried i.Jy that could only "intensify" the 1:ling was between non-Commn-) color\ martial on . the same ol- dan!lers. nist South Viet Nam and Com- I fence and will retain his com- Kennedy said that 1f the So· munist North· Viet Nnm. Smu1:·1 mission in the army, the viet Union t;eally desires 3 gling 11[ opium between La95 said. ,.,;. :-ts peaceful settlement of issues he· and South Viet_ ,r-(am 1 However. if this oflic<'r ha1l ..... PARIS-Police Pmfcct Maurice Papon (extreme lc.ft) ana Director of Municipal Police Maurice Legay (second from left) view· the wreckage of booby-trapped car March· lOth, after it blew liP in front of a mrding hall in Issy-Lcs-Moulincaux. The' explosion \n this Paris S\JbUI'b, dudng the morning as people ritshcd to do their shopping, killed two policemen, a priest and 50 p_ersims. tween the East and the West, it later. 1 also smuggled opium and thi' .. "Even 1\'llh the A bomb, man . would seem to him that· it wouid Other. info1111ed sources ;ai.J I coulrl he prol'cd he cculrl i;c ) ncl'cr ha' a more de- bene! every cf!ort to avoid inci I c·u;rbt 1 tl'id h:• r:ourl martial for a ot>;uctivc \\'Ctpon than the one I dents, . ghng m Jndochma lnte last year 1 !erent ol!cncc. . , he s alwa;;s had-hts tongllc.'' ' . ----.--- ......... _ ........ .--. ·' ., I 1, i l I. ·l. : I , 't ,. I I j I

Upload: others

Post on 23-Jun-2020

1 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · ' NEW SMALL PONTIAC ACADIAN Nova Motors Ltd. TH·E DAILY NE (;3 • 'tHE DAILY NEWS,

'

NEW SMALL PONTIAC

ACADIAN Nova Motors Ltd.

TH·E DAILY NE (;3 • 'tHE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, MAH.CH 1.5, HW2 (Price: 7-C~-nts)-

Holds To

Weapons

'

resen • 1sarm.

EVA (CP)-The 17-nation disarmament conference began its ala brief session Wednesday with the Western powers holding

of an ogreement to halt the spread of nuclear weapons the atomic club. · n and British officials conceded this limited attainment

ew

-----------'--:-------------- --·-·

PUNO, Peru-Great Britain's Prine.~ Philip is treated to a different kind o[ "derby" than those haclt in England, as a brace o[ howl('r· hatted be-pigtailed girls pcrfon11 as native dancers in Puno. Peru, l\Iarch !llh. The husband of Qv.-~cn Elizabeth is currently on a tour o[ Latin American countrics.-(UPT Photo). --------------- ----------------------·-· ----- ---------

Ullfi'OI."' • ._,,,,.

·~be far short of the official goal of agreement on verified gen· Rowdy T e~enagers Attack

:u<t i'rlill~ ~Ioml;r~. 'b \lith i form; 1-itor)' due •nt ,JulY 1.

·arii'ISI

ament and a nuclear te s! ban. they said it might restrain the atomic arms race and open up

for more difficult disarmament measures later. Unemployment Question -A J h H Gl ·---1 The real hnrgaining will he- c F. Sh k. .stronaut 0 n . ··e.nn

h. gin today when a new. three- testing next month unless a finn auses 1St· a 1ng ans 1p sta~e U .. plan. and probnbi)· pact bannin~ tests is si"ncd, I I t t I . · · .. ~ WAS}II".'GTON I API - Astro-~ mittancc to the pmty. ! 1nl s ar e( cursmg. 1 a !''Val Russian program. are In line with this, an aulhori·l ·' I d h tl t

S . l o· I naut John H. Glenn Jr. was One Of the gang threw " beer ' Glenn ore ere t e you IS r,

Pace laid bclot·c the delegates. T Je tntil·e source said Rusk is likely ISp ay t C,il\1 into the yare! and Glenn 01'· 'lem·e and, after they retort;_d_ session, like all the resi, will to stay in Geneva until he sees . cursed and an attemp was ,

h l d t I h. · a enco•m dered him to pick it up, givin~ ',with derisLve remarks, he. sam

1 be be ind closed doors, wit 1 nn whethe1' or not there is anv real : , 1 rna e. 0 s ug lm m n · · 1 th 1

·Rruu•r.<• - ~ !C I agreed communique issued after prosp"cl of g"tt'lng ,,11 ·,.1, 1.e"- 1 OTTAWA-CP-Dcputy Sp.-:laker Paul Martin· ter wtth rowdy teen·.agcrs .at the him 10 seconds to do so. Words i he would recon e tcencc ,.,,a,ll'"'tl nl't"'lZine " " " '" " h h tt d ' 1 "t 1,·erc cxcll,"nged, bttt the "Outh i number of their car and call ; .. , ' "' '~' . each meeting. . ment on tests and will proh~.hty cnu itad his hands full. r~storing order in the Com· i c urch es at edn 5 m. h"tr mo 1?~· " ' ~ ~ r rl the l m~crl I The U.S. and Russia wel·e not 1 ave I f . tl d l ·t . \" d d f L b M' • S . I IVa. last n ur ay mg , po ICC oheved. j police. . ol J~unch1ng , unanimouslv named permancut weet Je me IC en ° ncx , ~ons. 'fC nc~ ay ~ ter a or ~mster tarr e_rupt;t lrcp~rted Wednesday. . . \\;hen Glenn emcr"e'd fr.Jm A boy jumped in front o[ the

.;~roCJitl~ s~tellhl~es a~d I, co·chairma~ o! the confel'en:~c In ·,ndditioll to the hl'"·lht·nc• 'm a fisi-shakmg display when Liberals pepp~red lum I Police Sgt_ Warren Slske smd the hou~e h~ hclnd s~me or the I licence plate to obscure it. A; nrnbmnns tp m · t \" d d . . t . . ~ • 'tl 'ti • b t I t 1 th1- 1·s l"h'lt happened· bov.·s say the,1· were ~o_ing to th_c Glenn pushed him .aside, one, o_f

I. a ., c ncs ay s 32 • mmu e pn- mc~t1no on tests Rllsk 1\'lfJ "1•. 0 WI I en Cisms a ou unemp oymen • s ' ' . : l t I " • " " 1 Gl d g 1 · £ l y at 'teen centre at the Ltltle Falis 1 the een-agers s11Ung a . 'k

I' S \'. F ! vale session in accordance with 'have furthcl' talks with Gro- : Paul Martin (L-Essex East) led the attack with ' enn, nrm a mc 5 a United rrcshvtcrian Chu!·ch. 1 a~tronaut. who promplly p111n~d on cl.~·~e~ ~~~~ :onf!~~nc:Ol:ycd tl~~~~ bt~!.~reeo::~ I ~\' kto ~~ tt.het' questions o,~ East- 'charges that tile unemployment situation in Canada : r::e~ ~;~erSII~~~s~1f~~o:;~.b~~ll~\i~!~;: Thinl;ing that they mi~'lt :the. boy's arm~ again~t the .~;n

October there had es !WoO Ia IOns on er m. '· tl t f · d tr' 1 t • th \" h • \ l' t • c,·111sc trouble there. Glenn !lrrn·e, unttf other pet sons c.1me hfJ!T. .

1 h tries and Britain-the tht·ee ma· IS \C wors o any 111 us 1B coun ry In e ,,astern went to a orne tn 1 r m~ on o

maJor a_unc es .on jor nuclear powers world pick up his daughter from a to the church to assist his pa'· i the church to help. orb1tol mformalton

0 1 h h f ·. th A . d : . teen a"c pat·ty tor, Rev. Frank Erwin. At the,. Glenn then went i~to th<

'lt'h•l• from 11,01.1d n Y ours e 01 e e co_n· lie ~lllplled tl1al tlnemploy- · o • 1 d 11 d 1 h t " '" ccuse . I h r I church. Erwin had asked the c mrch an ca e po ICC. u f.erence op. encd, Rusk <llld Bnt· · ment figures for February are Upon arm•a e 01101 a f th

11sh p

1. , Sc rctarv Home

1 . 'tll ld b . were unemployed across Can- rowdy grollp of youlhs who 1p. hovs. who wen~ misbchal'inc. 1 the !(an~ !ted be ore ey · dr·

:'.1m ~~~re cnrrying I ~et s~,.~~tn For~ig~ • ~Jinistcr Of 0 • ':~~~~et·~' ~~eetin;ca~V~d~sJ~; ada. . parcntly had been refllsccl ad- to .lcal·r tlw centre. One or llwm i ri' __ ·e_rl_. ---------. . . '. . spy:'r . Gmmyko for the second pre· ,· • PI u m i with a Canadian Labor. Con· What consultahon had there ____ .. ______ ... _

.laJ11lng equ p· I 1 ,_. tl t' 1 been with labor and industry to 1

· con erence u1g: .1rce mce mg. . 1 · grcss delegation and becau>e r d t h t t · · 1 s d N s . . I f th I Later. a llnhsh delegate smd :supplementary labor estimafts ~:ededo?u w a rammg was I y ney . .

Cl 1

'~n~la .0 e ! another such meeting will be I are before the Commons ' :~· 'i'l am\ repj I held this week, some time alter p h • When J. W. Piekers~ill IL::_:: There were many cases of :

.,.rFrrl~J·,a tn,.tcornn.a lonaas· ! ttohdayl''ss opcn,in!(R st~.tcments from US 1-ng Bonal'isln ·. T. will in. gate I came to training in obsolete skills. Why I train people on woodworking ... "olti ·all·· 11 1 c .•. am l1ss,a. ~Jr. 1\larlm s md ;\lr. Starr

... ,' l.~_ .,'',.,. I le PI or· : At the meeting, sources said. shouted at him· ' "You may when the industry was a dis- Production Halts At DOSCO. · Steel Plant

. .. -, < oo c osc · k d · · appearing one• · · : R11s an Home concentrated on Ml.'\~11. Fla. (/\PI-The Fed· :push some people around, but. · :';:ltd tiwt .\mcl'ican · t1:ying to change the Russian 1 era! :-Jarcolics Bureau accused 1 you can't push me around." Frank McGee <PC - York-'" ro• 1 1.1 .. ,til v1ew that the proccduJ·es o! m·1 the Cuhan Communist t·cgime : SIIAI\ES Jo'IST Scarborough) accused 11r. Reg. •· · • II nr 1\ a 1 · · ' £ k' " f lh t . r s .

11 1. d tematonal mspectwn and con· Wednesday of pushing opium 1 "I don't frighten very easily," 1er o ma mg one o e mos \o:~~~ ·,.,," 1111 j~11° 5~n~l- t~ol which the . West !eels nre into the United States from Red ! he added, shaking his fist and irresponsible speeche~ that 1 ":on< 10 ~; 1 c ~atcllite· I vttal to any disarmament ~~~;1 China in an attempt to de- 1 pointing at l\k Pickersgill, have beard since eom1ng to this

r!Grmalir,n. are merely an excuse lor cspwn· mor~11ize the North American j :'fir. Starr said any suggestion house in 1957." ·. workers in alt key ,]cpartments · company promptly announced it walked off their joi>s in the was forced to bank the one first plnnt closing strike since operating b!Hst furnace. Bank­

:;:e th~ following as· age. . . _ . contment and acquire important th~t unemployment figures nre Mr. Regier had slandered SYDNEY ( cr 1 _ Production There IS httlc douht thai 1t U.S. dollars. bemg withheld was "wrong, school hoards and departments came to a halt at the Dominion

'· )or. ~l r. 11rl Dec. 22 <nnoun1·o'rl satellites l;~nrhl'd hul ~ave ~U3it<. '\rither .>at­f\!n •n mtematiomtl

, ann h o t h were .. om an •lit'~NIIy iull · launchin~, in a re·

Kcnncdl' '' 11 ~·H 2i . US,\F

tarr !' i ·1 q "secret were l<nmched and

1%2 Delta and 1962 · te!pectively. But :10

II'J' given. recpnt launching "lem't satellite"

ubans U. S. 'l'P 1

- lmmigra· Fairclough sa:d

that "as far as I Cuhan~ 11 ho defected

11rhncr at Gand~r. ~eek left !or the

Tuc5day night

.. 33 41 ······ 28 41 ······· 2.'\ 44

19 3.1 ...... 14 ,\fi ..... 23 40

is on this issue that the success The art·esl o£ five Cupans who false-and the honorahle mem· of education across Canada Steel and coal Corporation's o! the con!crcnre depends, since posed as refugees and attempted ber knows it vc1·y well." "up, down and sideways.'' steel plant Wednesday after all othe1· pre1·ious ne::otiatiJns to sen·opium and cocaine in the Erhart Regier <CCF - Burn­hal'e broken dtwn on this point. Miami area is proof Umt the ahy • Coquillam) accused lhe

ing was expected to be com· 1!1-Hi. d

Still working wns the coke pleted hy 8 a.m. Thurs ay. .

The Wcs.t ~ws ugreed that fu· presence of Red Chinc~c in Ha· government o! irresponsibility ture nego.ttallons should be con· vana hns hrou~ht a \'itnl new in committing ~179,000,000 to dueled w1th1n the larger frame· nnrcolics traffic to the U.S. construction of new vocational work of ge.neral disnrmarTje~t. eastern shm·e, Chal'les ·Siragusa, training schools "without en­hut would like to sec the U.S., assistant commissioner of nar- suring that the public Is going Bril.1in and Russia !orm a sub- cotics said here. to receive some real value for committee to di~cuss the tests. . The dissemination of opium the money." ·

The ~cst·ba~ ISSUe• has ·even Ill free countries is an ''Integral The technical school in Burn-n:'ore tmmedmcy than ov~r-all part of the cold war" being a by, B. C., had some "ridiculous disarmament since President waged by the Soviet Union amt and fantastic" courses. It had Kennedy has announced tile her Communist allles, Siragusa one com·se in exterior painting, U.S. will resume atmosphel'ic said. while thousands of painters

ovens department although ~c- A company spokesman ,;~td

Cease .• f.1re Talks M. ay duclions in this steelmaking it was impossible to tell how phase were likely. Only -mn;n- soon the plant could get back tcnance per,onnel nnd those to normal operation even if thf

· • a~signed to banl;ing the plant's men dccirlcd to return to wod: · · k No. 3 blast furnnce were work· at once. Xormally ~ b~nk~cl

W·ln· . d up Th I. s . We· e ing in the main plant hhl [lll'll~cr \;t)\~5 sneral dn:·s be-\\' d d lore att~ining proper h e a t e ncs aY.

1 The plant employs ahout 2.dn0 a~ain. • including some 500 office worK· A union spokesman said therl

EVIAN, France !Reuters) - covered details o£ the interim pe- crs not af!ccled by the wal~- was no indication the men The Franco-Algerian cease-fire riod between the cease-fire ~nd outs. · , · would return to 1\'0t·k to allow talks, now in their second week, an Algel'ian . self-determination The unauthorized walkouts !or it union and company meet-were reported to have run into vote, under ~1x areas:

1 began l\londay in the rod ann ing on the issue.

stocky going Wednesday during 1. There Will be' a temporary bar mills where workers re- The blast furnace which pro­a 3o/•·hour meeting, conference executive of 12-!our French, fused to work !or the third duces raw or' pig iron is the observers said. four Moslem insurgents ~nd time 'since last fall in protest key operation. The molten iroil

The ~ b servers, quoting lour other Moslems. The :VIos- against schcdulin~ or efficiency fce~s the open hear~h where the Fre.n~h sources, said the com- !em president and European experts. 'fhe \;orkers blamed mam steel conversiOn proce.;s P,OSitwn of a temp_orary execu- vice-president are yet to be the company's efficiency men for 1 takes place. hve to rule Algena after the picked. schedules which t11~y said m- · -------cense-fil'e was among the stum· :SUGGEST NAME creased \l·ork . load per man ! N Appeal bling blocks. 2. Alongside the executive while culling the workforce. 1 ew

French sources, however, be- committee will he a French high Blast fumacc workers. mainly ! By IIAHOLD ~!ORRISON lieved a cease-fire proclamation commissioner, probably Gen. tllose llandli'ng SllCil \'l'tal mate'- r will be made sometime this . Canadian Press Staf Writer

k . Pterr~ Billotte, R . prominent I rials ~s scrap and ore, walk•!d Within a matter o! weeks,· tllf

wee • m separate announce· Gaulhst. off Wednesday morning. The US d · · t · I · ments from Paris and Tunis, , . a m1ms ratwn is expec It the Algerian insurgent head- ---- lo launch a new appeal among quarters. c d• s t• the NATO powers for a tradf

The·prescnt and final phase ana tans .mugg, 1n·g· embargo against Premier Fide of the talks. on ending ·the 7lh· Castro's Cuban regime. year Moslem insurrection has The new appeal, it is under- .

stood, would be, taken up witb

'Dang. erous ·In Indochina Since '54 mLffi~~rn~£t~~~:~£~I:~ lives of all NATO powers at ont

ny DAV.E !\lciNTOSII and already deal\ with on ~he time in Paris last month.

A • f OTTAWA (CP) - . Reliable spot by their commanding a!-ctlon sources said Wednesday that liccrs cannot be court-martialcd TilE COUNTRY PARSON : smuggling in Indochina by Can- in Canada on the same charge.

adlans serving with the Inter- They said· the Canadian arm;' WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- national Truce Commissions officer involl'ed in \he case was

dent Kennedy said Wednesday there dates back some seven discovered smuggling gold and Soviet dropping of metal chaff years. had been . summarily convicted in the air corridors to Berlin Js Tbey said the smnggling o! by his commanding officer. The "a particularly dangerous kind gold by Canadian servicemen sentence was believed to be a or action." began not long alter Canada fine tog_ether with a reprimand

Kennedy, at a press confer· along with India and Polaud, which world hold up any pro­enee, said Soviet harassment of became a member of the trucg motion. Western planes in the airln11es commissions in Viet Nam, Laos I RETAIN COMMISSION represents the kind of move and Cambodia in the late sum- This officer, according to mil­that can h!ad to counter-actions mer o[ 1954. Most of this smu;l- itary law, cannot be tried i.Jy that could only "intensify" the 1:ling was between non-Commn-) color\ martial on . the same ol­dan!lers. nist South Viet Nam and Com- I fence and will retain his com-

Kennedy said that 1f the So· munist North· Viet Nnm. Smu1:·1 mission in the army, the som·c~s viet Union t;eally desires 3 gling 11[ opium between La95 said. ,.,;. :-ts peaceful settlement of issues he· and South Viet_ ,r-(am he~an 1 However. if this oflic<'r ha1l •

.....

PARIS-Police Pmfcct Maurice Papon (extreme lc.ft) ana Director of Municipal Police Maurice Legay (second from left) view· the wreckage of booby-trapped car March· lOth, after it blew liP in front of a mrding hall in Issy-Lcs-Moulincaux. The' explosion \n this Paris S\JbUI'b, dudng the morning as people ritshcd to do their shopping, killed two policemen, a priest and inj~red 50 p_ersims.

tween the East and the West, it later. 1 also smuggled opium and thi' .. "Even 1\'llh the A bomb, man . would seem to him that· it wouid Other. info1111ed sources ;ai.J I coulrl he prol'cd he cculrl i;c ) ncl'cr ha' cr~ated a more de-

bene! every cf!ort to avoid inci I C~nad!:'n soldic_r~ c·u;rbt Em:~g- 1 tl'id h:• r:ourl martial for a d•f-~ ot>;uctivc \\'Ctpon than the one I dents, . ghng m Jndochma lnte last year 1 !erent ol!cncc. . , he s alwa;;s had-hts tongllc.''

' .

----.---......... _ ........ -~---·' .--.

·'

.,

I

1,

i l

I. ·l. :

I , 't

,.

I I

j I

Page 2: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · ' NEW SMALL PONTIAC ACADIAN Nova Motors Ltd. TH·E DAILY NE (;3 • 'tHE DAILY NEWS,

I I ,

I I

• ,!

i

I

~!

1 o\•

•I

I

I I

.~ )

I' '

'

I. I

·I '· I

I

; I •.I

I

!: :I :• ::

; ~ . I :I

:I

.! :

I I

: : II 1 ''I I' :!

'I \• ;I.

:· 'p

I . I

' ':

;

'· ,,

I'

I"

.

'i I

'I I

I. I •'

I I

I

I·! I I

!

' ,·

I

. '

'I

I•

''

''

I I

I ; -I I.

II ./,

! I

I I

'I

; '

I

.I ' '.

I; I I

I; •'

I II'

:I . I ! I.

I

1.' ~I,

'. '. :'I ; .,. '

2 , THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOl-IN'S, NFLD. THURSDAY, ~IARCH!5 ~----------------~------~------------------~----------~, ''Con" ce' rt T-rl·o~~ Search for FreedCri"sl (4) Let My People Go THY'WiLL BE DONE, .---------=-=-:-::r

Here Next Week

THE NEW YOHK CONCERT THIO will appear in St. John's at Pitt's Mem­orial Hall on Monday. and Tuesday, March 19th and 20th. Sponsored by the Community Concerts Association here, the trio promises to be an out­standing treat for local music lovers. Shown above are, left to right, Paul Boyer, Flute; Ardyth Alton, Cello; and Cynthia Otis, Harp. Whoto by Kerr)

0 Pl-lARAOH In the story of man's search for freedom, the

tl1apter dealing with Egypt reveals a society in \':hich our conceptions of human liberty were totally alien. We know little of Egypt's begin­nings. It emerges on the stage of history fully developed-and static, .

Egyptian law and government were conlained Jn one thing-religion (whose ethics were highl. ':!'he king, or Pharaoh, was god and his word :I!Jd that of his minislc~s was . lnw. This ~cspolisn-i was possible because the people held Pharaoh in awe. He was not just another mail like themselves, but divine. Who could question his authority?

Yet Pharaoh himself was not iree. He too was bound by custom.

One brief change occurred about 1375 B.C. Then, Pharaoh A\;hcnalcn attempted to sub­stitute the one god Alen for all the others. He encouraged a break from the age-old tr~dil!ons hi art, tellin~~ his painters and scul!;tors to depict life truthfully, just as they saw ;l. But after him, the old gods and the old \Yays rc·

·turned. Closely tied with :Egypt is the story r. C I: r~.~l

and a .people's quest for sclf·tlc'>elopmci1l. An important e1•ent tool; place a£tcr ~los~s k.d 1ed hi:; people forth. !lis father-in-law, .'cth:·?· advised him to pick able men as rulers o( thousands, of lJUtH.ireds, Of fifties and of ten~; "And let them judge the people at all sea~o!l~. J"ater, however, Israel abandoned the rule of

Ni~G:-ri:~(

ju11::es for ll!~t of ldn::;s. Lil>;c IIamm_ur;:lli. ,the i:-~·.·s ~r0 ~,..~ , ... ~

people. C";Jec:olly l·:c Ten Co:·,u- •. : ·• were «iirin~ly inspire'! ~.1:r.! c'·crn;t'· '" ·· .Jew!:, the calamities \\'ili 1~il ~fl (,'· -1 •1::'cl'

l It . l ".. , , I wen~ t Je res\1 Cl! I 1c::r \':;iiful •'i·.,,.;_: ·· . f J . . · "'- .... .;.cr.r"' the comrnanus o . cno\'an. . ....

.l~v:i~il nal~nn:1llifc e:it:-_,1 ,,•,:!\ C"r :··~~~~ disecrsion. but ti1cir etli;~~~:i '.\'fll;l~·:·:: · <·.:-. . . . . ~ t, . . l to l)C ::u.occa. .n n•;(·r .1·~ c:·:·.~~l:·.c_:- L~· 1 :-c:iwhr;i. And llw i<;e(J ti1::t \;~ :i1. r ,·, · p20plc arc !irl~)jC( ~ to :1 ··1::,- ·r·:· ,;_·: ·· ~--0~ lltclr cr:n n~--~:ir::.; ~lJll ~.:•Jllt.!~·.i .. : ~J · · ' SU~\.:~CU. in;_; ag'~S.

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

!lliddlewest and the Pacific states in 3 months with unani· mous critical and audience ac· claim.

many style~ and periods, the Washington Post and Times Herald's critic wrote: "Even her references to the classics

{YGrady ForesteD's' G~;.est

'SQJr.:~~esd~ I A;rHft

"S ,. '\' \L S"L'.\1'10:\, • .. ·\r·-were unhal'lmcyed." Mr. Greg O'Grady, Prcsirle!Jt u .• · "" ' CIIAHACTER SKETCHES PAUL BOYER, the young of the Royal Canadian Legion· gentia, Nfld., ~IJrch 13-Dttc•

ARDYTH ALTON, hailed for Philadelpllia-born flutist of the No. 1 Br~nch. st. John's was· to NaYy learn work and a f::,t her "intelligence, taste and New Yorl; Concert Trio, was in-· special gt•csl at a special cxecu-' aircraft r,•:ay. two :\ewfound-discriminating music-making'' traduced to the world of music live mectitl" of the Nfld. Over-' lander.; from the Cottage lie.;- from a rt'. :r~ ,· by Washinf!ton, D.C.'s Evening by his mother, a professor at seas For~st~y Unit, which -.. as. pit~! at Harbour Brc\on 1:erc pre,; '''·': t·.,·o Star, was born in Iowa and the Curtis Institute of ;l!usic. held at the C.N.R. War Veter- · deltvcrcrl ~afely to tne RC\F of thr~ '!· ::', i' .. !

, educated as a scholarship stu· He himself won a scholarship ans Club Hooms on ;\larch 9th.~ Station_ at Torbay :·or hospitali- · .Jo!11:·, ',: ; l;,,,n I dent at IH1th the Oberlin Con· to that school, and studied the '!'lie purpo5e of the meeting , zatwn m St. .Johns ycsterday.

I servatory and New York's Juil· flute there with Wiiliam Kin· was to study re(Jorts received 1 Th_e i-Ja\·y helt_r_optp~ and the liard School of 1\!usic, where she caid. from Ottawa in connection with 1 twm engll!e uttltty aircraft "At­did gradu~te work. Among hei' While lie was with the Army, benefits ~nd pensions for the: batross'' (~~·1), im·?li'Cd in,th2 teachers was Felix Salmond, he toured the United Stales members of the uml. . mercy mis-ton, fie\\. a ~om.Jill· with whom she studied for five and Em·opo with the U.S. Army :\!r O'Gradv assured th~: cd dtstance of 2-lO air m:Ics. de­years. Field Band. After his dis· mcml~ers prese.nt that the can-\ liverin~ the paticnls at Torbay

Beginnin~ her career under charge, he returned to the adi:m Le•.'IOn would oi\·e them : m less tha~> four hours. The New York Concert '!'rio, I highly original program Irom of the inslruments. The pieces I the auspice5 of the National Curtis Institute with an addi· all' the ~support they could. I Argenti1 was notified by the

and Tues1tay of next week at a rich repertory of music com· range frorn the classic masters · 1\lusic League, Ardyth Alton tiona! ~eho!arship to study com- 00% of the 3500 men or this RCAF Torbay at apprnx1mate- ant Ciltllt!il:ter."

··Jt \\;1~ ttJ::J~r~l~r·J··

'·by hot:~'!" ::r t~~c:~~ that t!w D~w·t\' · i:nn (; :u::::::~ ·~::d · .\lcl' c~. l!t>~:k:: hate ina ted to : ~·rY~ clL ·

]11'•!"~ a :-tl:·;~~::il:i

~1~1~•nr tP llit' (~[ftc: c1l mi~i:1 ·,r::l

whidJ plD>·:; here on ~londay I posed fnr this combination, a> of the eighteenth century to went on to concertize through- position with Gian-Carlo ~len- unit across 1\cwfoundland were ly 3:30 P rn Tuesday that the Pitts .\Iemorial Hall under the well lts transcriptions from contemponu·y composers. out the forty-eight States ancl otti. Through this second tal. I compelled to stay in this par- Pro1·incial Department of auspices of The Community more fJmiliar works. Although This divrrsily is possible he- Canar!a, ~~ recitalist, as soloist ent, he !Jeca_me associated with llicular UP.i~ and not allowed Health h,1J requested an air­Cot!ccr!; ,\ssociation, is an this ceperrory contains a great cause each of the artists in the with orchestra, and. as a mem- the Angel aires Harp Quartet ito join any other branch of the lift of the two patient; to Tor­unique L'nocm!Jle in the wot·ld deal of appealing music, untii Trio is not only an experienced ber of the Columbia Concert as comooser and arranger. armeu fon·es. These men ha\·c bay. By 4:00 p.m. the statton of .music tuclay. It brings to now it has been almost entire· ensemble playN', but a 1·irtuoso Trio. 1 In his capacity liS a IJutist, been as vets after 15 vears. A hclico')ter was airborne. with a its au<liCIKes the seldom-heard Jy neglected in our concert soloist in his or her own right. ~ stylist of great lechnic_al he has been a member of gener;I meeting is to he caller! i':"""Y UF-1 flying communica-cnmbinilti,m of harp, flute and halls because of the unusual lndividualiy, together, and as achie·;ements as well as arhs· Thomas Scherman's Little Od· in the near future. The mcm·l lion guard. . Then in .\w•.!'~ ·.ce .. cello-a c:1~mbcr orchestra in nature of its instrumentation. members of other concert try, ll!iss Alton has earned the chestra, t!I~ Philadalphia Little bers from other branches will After landmg at Harbour miniat!li'L' "'fhe effect of thi~ In addition to ensemble num· groups, they have played additional distinction of being Symphony, and Rudolf Srrkin's attend thi' meetin" and will be . Brewn. the 'copter picked up comhi:J.rtinn." according to the hers for the entire group, the throughout North and Central one of the fell cellists to play Marlboro (Vermont) Summer 1 notified by the P~ess. I ~!aria Se:.ton. 70, suffering uitics, "Is beautiful ind~cd." Trio's diverse and entertaining Amcri~a; and Europe. "new" music, as well as rarely Festival Orchestra under Alex- ·from an intestinal obstruction. .. Certaint::. the Trio afforrls an repertoire includes composi· 'l'he 'l'rio, in its first season heard baroque compositions. antler Schneider. He has also DEXIES REPOR'r I an~ ~Ir .. John Spencer, ~9. 'uf· a fornnl :::·. :t::l:u" :o unusual l:~tcning cx;;criencc tions also for the Ilut~ and eel· just completed, set a record for And, of 3 recent National Gal- inade solo appearances and LEOPOLDVILLE, The Con((o .

1

fcnng from an mternal dtsordt•r eipal r_-.•1111':;1 of ~:. with ::·c,hness for 20th chntury lo, cello and harp, harp and concc~·t appearances, 37 appear- lery recital, where as usual played chamber music during <APJ-~ources close to the go·,·. and brought them back to Ar-: appuint '" · 1

c;m. IL~ mr1:1bers present a flute-us well as solos. for each' ccs, 37 apprarances through the Miss Alton played music of the Marlboro Festival, and has ernmenl Tuesday denied r~- 'I genl!a. Br•tl~ per;,ons are fwm. our

-~:

~

··":: -...~ ' !·

-- ·-- ------- ·---------- participated in numerous cham- ports that former deputy pr·~· ~hlltown, :\fld., a comnJttruty ber music recitals in New York mier Antoine Gizengn had been 11 about 20 miles from Harbour and Philadelphia. In addition, poisoned. The secretarial of tile Breton. ~lr. Spencer's son, he has collaborated in the musi- Asian-African Solidarity :l!o,;£ .. John. accompanied his father cal activities of Carlos Salze· ment in Cairo charged Uwt Gi-l to St. John's. do's Summer Harp Colony at zenga was ebing poisoned by: The UF, after returning witi1 . effectil'c.' Camden, r~!aine. his captors. Gizenga is held on the helicopter from Harbour, It i' ll! ·: r·looi ,

Combimng musical adminis- au island in the Congo River by Breton, was on the ground ex·. found!Jr:·, (;n,•:;rr~~~f~' tration with a performing car- central government authorities. actly eight minutes to transfer: the ll•:r:.:·tn:~:;: 0:

eer, l\!r. Beyer has also held an The sources confirmed that Gi· the patients from the 'copter ' De' e!•:n ::,·::: 1J3;

executive position with the Mu· zenga is ill. Ito th_at aircraft for further h" !':•.• · \r· ... f,1::::rlia:i sic Performance Trust Fund. i transler to 'forbay. T·rad'-' :" :-rn•l'nt 1

CYNTHIA OTIS, the lovely ARRIVES FOR VISIT I The CF, piloted hy Licuten-harpist of the New York Con- WASHI:'-/GTON <AP) - Pr2s- ant F. W. Wulf. US:\', and Lieu- 1, n :n • :·:~;en: cert Trio, is a splendid example ident Ahmarlou Ahidjo o[ the tenant J. G. Gahafer, l'S:\, arHI which 1., •·; ;1,,>i a. of an artist born and educated Cameroon R cpu b lie arri1·ed with i\'ary doctor tiru!cnant entirely in America. Born in Tuesday for a two-day official N. C. Lysler, (~!C). l'S:\, on Connecticut., she was eight years visit and w~s met at the air· board, tourhed down at Torb;1y !O<PHI! ::I·' B·· . .:·d t' old when ~he began the study port by Prestdenl Kennedy. at 8:00 p.m where the paticnto ~::lll pw of her ~hosen instrument. When would :1c Iuken to General I-!os- ;.J::re!r i-!r':. she was only sixteen, sh~ was the first harpist with the dis· pita! in St. .John's.

•; ' I '/ 1 .I ;q I

.... selected to appear as soloist tinguished Little Orchestra So· The helicopter was piloted with the N.Y. Philharmonic cicty and a featured chamber by Air Controlman Chief D. L. Young People's Series in Car- player with the Rudie Sin(oni· Barnes and LCDR N. L. Edwin. negie Hall. Her teacher dur- etta. As a solo recitalist and USN. and the crew member \l'ils

' :1 ' '

I

·I ' 1:! ,.

: . I

'I i: . : 1;.

l .. ' . . '

II ;If_;

I " ~

:-·I- ; ' :! ! ,,·, , II: . II i \ i . I 1 , II• , •,'·I' ' , I l

' i j . ' '; ' j

'~··,·. ':I· .. ' I I I' ' '. j; · .. I·' ! I

' j • ' ~ I t · 1 • 1 · .I . i! I' I ' '. I'' , .. :: !:>~! j' i'. :·; ii :I.

l. \ til . It ... j. ~)'. I. I r , ·: : ~ .: . • ~' ,.. '

I I' ' ' t "' . J;;: . 1 : · I ,L . 'J ··•· .:, . 'I ~~ ~.-.::. ',1

') I . 'i 'l' ,· .. -:: I . '. ! .' ' !'.:· ... ~

'• I • .~· . : i' ~-,q

t~ serve you and your community . '

Your generous donation will continuo the essential Red

Cross services and programmes provided for your com· munity. Your dollars will keep the Red Cross active and alert, always willing to help you and your ·neighbour. Through your consideration the traditional work of the Red

Cross will be carried on whenever and wherever there may

be a call for people to help people. A strong Red Cross

means a better community.

You will share ln every act of mercy-vital work for people 'of all races, creeds and political beliefs across the street,

across the nation and across the world.

This year be ready and willing to give your share when the

Red Cross volunteer canvasser calls. Your donation or pledge will do so much for so many.

~youR RED CROSS· NEEDS YOUR HELP NOW NEWFOUNDLAN·o . n~~VISIO"N,

' (

·CANADIAN _.RED CROSS SO·CI~TY STREET EAST ST .• JOHN'S, NFLD •

·ing the intervening years had a member of the Harp Trio, she Wi!lia~ F. CJrroll. A1·iation ·Pratt. !-':·1 1 ~:r.; been Lucile Lawrence who has perfOimed through the ~!achtmsl> :\late Tltird Class. the Prc;:~'~·nl ar.d nurtured Miss Otis' exce~tional length and breadth o. the USN. , ~Iana;1.·r ;,c mc:n':e:; talents at the 1\lannes College United States. of Music. A brilliant talent to hcgin

Following her Carnegie Hall with, !.!iss Otis has brought to "debut," Miss Otis realized a her instrument the highest long line of successes. Among standards oi artistry, conveying these hal·~ been performances lyricism dnd remarkable nuan­with the Philadelphia Choral ees of sotmd on her harp. The Ensemble Society, the New Ha- myriad ~er,sations and scenes ven, Hartford and the Little that come alive under her fin­Falls symphonies, the Collegi- gers have led the great Carlos urn 1\Iusicium in New YorJ; Salzedo to speak of her as "a City, and coast-to-coast broad born musician and a sensitive casts over NBC. She has been artist."

CONFISCATE TICKETS ~EII'SI'.\I'Eil )L\S JERSEY CITY, (APl - Pres· ' :\Ell' Hll\1\ I,\?

Police arrested Harry T. \'e,,,,. Hnt•. 1>'1. n ,;Jff b!e, 29, Tuesday as he drove a ; .\ell' )'0!':; T:r.:e, for truck containing Irish swcco- died ~!ond:,c· d a stakes tickets valued at $6,500,- l hart been dim:or ff 000. Police said the lickcls <111- i Yor~ Tinw; nc11S

parenlly had been brought o\·~r j JD;j ann · · .· by an unidentified ship. Ve.i.:- 1 in r;u10u' · hie was arrested as he ,\·as I inclurli:1:: ti1~t of leaving a harbor-side terminal. I aging cdi:o;.

----------------------

Lion President Dave Perry of the Mount Pearl-Glendale Lions Club presented t~- ~ewas the Amalgamated School Board, Mount Pearl, a new fire alarm system. ~resenta 1~lub haS ~ently at the sc_hool in Mount P~arl, making_ this another ?ne .o~ the many proJects t~hc school; m for the benef1t of the commumty. Left to nght are: Melvm M1ller, Secretary 0 . rnan qf the White, Chairman of the Board; Rev. C. W. Russell, Treasurer; Cyril Noseworthy, Ch~lr ·pal of the Pearl Lions Safety Committee;. Lion President Dave Perry; and Stewart Toope, Prtncl ·

Sf· JOHN'S,

I sit I

con mayor,

the Rev. llr. N. Jacknu

of lt.c Bell Is]; r.s.w.A., ~!r. l

: 5 .. cretary of

TablE itio,

petitions wei Legislature

two came 0: Trinity !\

J(umbcr We people of Hate

Within ar ~ Trinily N ort (f!nnection with

network. Th• North, Ar

out tha

rry In lc

Jahn Guy wa; 'icy grip ]ate 1 licklc ferry lu

h operate he for more th: blocks the ma

ion Ila~·­icebreaker L•

unabl the hea\'\'

Guy. The L freed to ships

area. said th

Woo Tall

. harbour Pi one shi] this was

.Hc!yrood arrived ;

1

Page 3: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · ' NEW SMALL PONTIAC ACADIAN Nova Motors Ltd. TH·E DAILY NE (;3 • 'tHE DAILY NEWS,

. : I .. ~

l Bt'.l:'d lilt>

:-

~·JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND The Daily Ne.ws THURSDAY, MARCH 15, l'Jol

lsld~ Committee Prime Minister

, \tcGr~lh. )I.P. for i Mr. E. Bur~ey, recording secre. ''f.;;l. )las announ~ed t~~y of the ~oc~l, 1\lr. J. C.

ihnislrr John _D~ef· Nicholson: d1stnct director of ,, pre;•·nl~d ll'lth a the .u.s." .A., lllr. ~- Neary,

1 0311 a.nl. s•n ~larch president of the Office Work· .. : ;a;va. from a com· ers' Union on Bell Island and

House Approves 1T o Exempt Carol

Bill Pellet

, Co. From S. S. Ass.essment : 111 hr 1hc people member ol the town council, ···anti. :\,:wrounclland, )Jr. Rich;ml J. Greene, M.B.A.,

\ thr Frtlrrnl G.O\'· :llc~bcr of the Newfoundland · ,

1 lhr crm·c 51 tu· ! Leg1slnture for Bell Island. , A bill which would exempt 1 taining to the Carol Pellet · tax would be a most serious

: ~.';· .• in !hat minin~ I The delegation was intra· i the Carol Pellet Company from : Company was given second I impediment to the expansion ,:•,: ·~r.,•rt' a further duccd to the Prime Minister by . Social Security Assessment on 1 reading at yesterday's sitting.: and success of the two plants ; ~"· :1"' work force 1 ~lr .• lam~: A. M_cGrath, M.P. ~or I · certain phases of their opera- ! l\lr. Smallwood said that un·: which will operate in Labrador.

"'""n,,•tl h)' Do· 1st. .John, Ens!, Bell Island hes · lion in Labrador was approved i der the legislation the four The Premier pointed out that . :,.~; .. ;nd l't>ill Coqwr· 1 in :llr. l\lcGrath's Riding. Prime 1 in principle in the House of ! companies operating in La bra· the four companies would not , ~·;,:,1 : fllrlher ag~:ra· 1 ;\linister Diefcnbaker spolte to ; A~semhly yesterday afternoon. I dor would be exempt from Soc- be exempt in their mining :.', :a,•mpJ,,y1111•111 prob I the delegation at length, ami '1 The bill ~vas coupled with ' ial Security Assessment on cer· i operations but only on the two .. ,., l·l:liHI. wht•rr hun· expressed concern and S)'IU· 1 three olhers now before the 1 lain phases of their opera! ions. :plants and the Labrador rail· .. ;·:·::n·,,r, art• present!)' i p.athyJor the D~ll Island lahour I Ho'usc which would exempt the: He said that the whole of the i way. The Legislation intro·

•· •• 1 s1tuntwn. He said that the Fed· ! lro11 Ore Company ol Canada, : ori~inal capital would be, duccd yeoterday will also con-•.:~.·;;:i.,n ,·nn>i.<lt•d of ; cn1! Gol'crnment was willing I' ·the Carol Lake Company and; exempt am! any extensions or 1Iine any municipal tax on the ·:·:; ma." 1r, Dr. \\', i a1~cl .Pr~pnred to do everything 1 , the Labrador Hailway Companr: expansions but replacements to l four companies to not more . thr Ht·L T. E. : ll'lthm 1ts power to find a so· from similal' taxation. 1 these expenditures would be 1 than the rate of 40 percent. ,,. '\ Jackman, presi· 'lution. AT A GENERAL MEETING of the St. John's Brunch Lndies' AUX· Premier Smallwood outlined: taxable under the Social Secur-! :O.Ir. Smallwood explained that .··.:i i;,•!l J;Jand local ' Following the meeting with · the purpose of the four bills · ity Assessment Act. the Wabu5h Iron Company is ; , 1r .\, ,lr :--;. Cran~. the Prim~ :Minister, the ·dele· iliary of the Rf.lyal Canadinn Legion held on Monday, March 12th, but only the )cgislalion per· • The Premier explained that a

1

ah·ead_Y exempt in acc.ordancc .•. ;,,~ 1, 1 , 1 r~ 0f the local. . galion m.•t with Labour ~lin· Mrs. G~Jl'()on Wnrren (right), Provincial Presidmtt of the Ladies' -

1 gasohne lax of 19 cents peri w1th 1ts agreement w1th the

'· ---·-- ister, the Hon. ~lichnel Starr, Auxilhll'y, pr.~sentetl Mrs. George Ash (left) with 11 Past President's T k 1 gallon is now applicable to! Government of Newfoundland . . and ,\lini;:er of ~lines and medal. Mrs. Ash was President of the St. John's Brnnch for l!JGII . rul' ers 1 "Bunker C" fuel. He said the: lie said the hill today will put r bl TPL'hnical Surveys, the !!on, J. \s companies in Labrador now i the Iron Ore Company at Lab· a e Flynn. The meeting was chair- and l!Hil. uses some .10-million gallons of 1 rador City on an equality with

eel hy tht1 Bon. \\'i11iam J. -------- bunker fuel a year and they: the '\rabu.sh Iron Company,

nrowne, Solicitor General of p e 0 1• Bl•ll 0 b • t would not be able to usc this· The Opposition :\!ember (or 't1'ons Canada. '!'his meeting lasted! remter ut tnes· · eec fuel if they were obliged to Bell Island. Dick Greene, want· h~·o ho.ua·~. and a widc·ranging ! j . pay Social Security Asses;mcnl. · cd to know what would hap· d1scnssaon took place, dealing ' :\lr. Smallwood said the 1 pen to such an exemption if

. :i:::: .. n• \\t'l't' tahlcd ; with all aspects of the Bell • The St. .Jolm's Trucker's As· exemption would apply to the: the companies decided to uti!·

. :.::-i,lllrt' yt•;tmlay :island sitl!Rlion. For I ncr' eas e ltl sociation object to the release' concentrating plant, the section ' ize hydro power from Twin .. :·.•~' c:1lllt' from the : The delegation concluderl its made hy Canadian National of the Labrador Railway and 1 Falls. 11r. Smallwood said that ' T:":i:y \'t>rth and :meetings on an encouraging Railways which can only be de·. the proposed pelletizing plant. ; if the companies decide to J!::~:h,•r \\'t•>l. note .1nd expressed satisfaction signed to put pressure on the' He felt that imposition of the utilize' hydro power, ~cwfound·

:· ,-~.· ,.: llatt·h~l Cove. with the manner in which the A bl seats Government of i'i'cwfoundland ---- ·------ -- land wilJ ret!eive 50 cents per ·:. W::h:n and Lore· Prime !llir.ister and members of .• sseJn y - and to forle the Gorernment! S:h.lpS Neaf' horsepower. ;;:~::~ '\,<rlh want a his Cabin~t had receil·cd their _ to ignore the findings of a com-, --------

.. ,·:ic~ Wltil thr main r~presentallons. pctent commission made after

:·,;.~Nk Thr memh~r i lt is hop~rl that discussions The tllllllher of seals in the make Harbour ~lain a single I ally had forty seats He said :many rublic meetings_ attended l F -}'cr:.\l;r,:h~~ ~It\;~ ~~illafo~~~~;~~ral·Provincial level .Nell'!lll!ndland House o{ As· riding, This distric,t is now rep· that four of the six new scats' by ~.N.R. and other mtercsted B .I . Patch e~ve· s 0·' :·,. ('" " ' scmbl.'· will be incrensed from resented b.v two members. The provided in the legislation ar~ ·parties. U ~ '.":"~ ~Mllf' \\'()rk has 1 Tl b f tl T k g thirt,\··six h1 fort,,·.two scats if Pr~mier ~aid there is a power· old districts, these include · Ic mcm et·s o Ic rue·. ·· c~ thr r••nrl and the ' · · h I 0 I G s k a bill nnw before the Ilouse is ful case to reduce the riding. Hcrmitag~. Bay De Verde, Lew- er'~ Assocwtwn ave no re case tt .. ,~: :t ~~~mplt•ted. 1 U est pea er approl'ctl. The Leader of the Opposition, is porte and St. John's e~st, and to make except to eon~ratulate a141a .. · a.•o lahlcd a Premier Smallwood outlined James J. Greene, adjourned the new seats are Labrador the CommissiOn and Its staff The sealer> Algerine and WY '··:n tile pcnpl~ of . delails of the bill when he the debate during the second West and St. Barbe South. ·on the manner in which the Kyle were waiting improved Hi~hways ~linistcr Dr. F. 1\'.

· :·;~: fo' additional j At ConferenCe , spoke during second reading in reading stage and is expected :r.Ir. Smallwood pointed out . hearing; were conducted par- weather yesterday in order to Rowe will travel to Ottawa l:,~:n t;:~l('P ~cf~~~j i ' the Lcgi,htturc ycstcrda)' after· to give lm views this afternoon. that the re-distribution bill if : ticularly the latitude given get nearer a large herd of seals : next week to hold important

~/ 1; , 11 ; 1;ffll'i~nt ;0 ~ Paul Johnson. Managing ! noon. He said the six nc\v scats In mo1•ing the second read· passed in the Legislature will ' every person which appeared on ice off the mouth of Hamil- · ilbcussions with official:; of . ~ . 11 0 . 1 r l arc: St. John's East Extcm, ing Prcumr Smallwood pointed not be cffccti1·e until the nex: ; befm·e it and to commend the ton Inlet, Labrador. ; various Federal Government de· • ::e r0.111 m 1at com. 1rcc or, • umson Insurance Of· f Labrador West. Bay De Verde. out that Newfoundland origin· provincial general election. Commi»ion for the thorough- Rough >cas and high winds ' partmcnt;.

ices Limited will be guest Lewisportr., Hermitage and St. --------------------------- ncs> of the Ileport and in P~· were preventing the scalers ., illr. Rowe is expected to !ea,·e :.·' rr1i1ion l'ame from spcakea· toda•· at Ill• 'l'r't' 1

• '' " "" 1 m es !larue South. pedi!ing the filing of it. ·from getting within killing dis·: St. John's for the Xation's . ~~ ~lradll\r> in Hum· General Insuran c r G Cl k ''··'' haro ."I''' Tt'ljli"SI· ' ce on en•nce nlr. Snwllwood said that the • ar e H there are any difference~ lance but the)' arc expected to ' Capital early in the week.

' " ' . in the Nova Scotian llolel, llali· + l · 1 1 b f th \ b • 1 1 1 1· · .::;~ ~~~n·rllm!'nt as· Gorcrnme1:t has takt•n. great 11· uc 1 t te mem ers o c > s- e ail e to reac 1 t 1c sea 1ng 1cc Among items of business to be ··: rra,1 rnaml"ll.•!IC". , fax. stretches r.f terril on· in tht~. sociation have they will be sub-\ loday. ; discussed are the Roads to Re·

' " ' ~lr .• Johnson's topic will be · · 1 · • 1 1 • d 1 tl G t eXJstmg ( lstnt'ls of St. nar Je

1

B d s h Sh 1 m1ttc o Ie .ovcrnmen Several other ~ealing ships i :;ources Program and construe·

"The ..\gene>· System" and he d 1 g t eec QWS h l II I 1 l an t 1e Southwes! coast and U e p , .. -t roug I Ie norma C tanne s arc in the same area, apparent· i tion of the Trans-Canada High· will address approximately 120 cut tlll'lll in two. He said the and not through press releases .. !y all trying to get to the herd . way across NewfoundlartJ. delegates. The conference has t 1 b 1 1 sea s were I len a ancel out c £ • d : which, several rcporl5 ha1·c stat- . It's expected the Highwa) ~ been c~lled to bring an inter- along tracl.tional lines. G·ovt. 's on 1 ence , cd. is a very large one. , )Iinister will be absent !rom estcd msurance people liP ~0 I 'l'he Pn•mier explained that i Ice· Report The Algcrinc yesterday rc·: the province for several days, date on recent developments 111 the St. Jolw's East Extem dis· the insurance industry. I trict will b~ the "out-of the In Nfld. People ported its position as 15 miles · -------

A\1 l ' south of Round Island in the

Still t 10ug 1 only a onc·day con· city" section of the pxisling Q C ll

r 'd f t ' I I Inlet a.n.d. s_aid winds were hi;;h : ne 0 l.SI·an· erence a WI e range o op~es , St. .John',; East distri1·t and the : J,!JI:d-l'orl\l"al Col'e of clos7 interest to insurance 11 old St. ,J,1hn's East distri!'\ will The L1hcral member for arc to se~nrc ~mployrncnt dcf! ])Pile Isle Norlhca,l-Thrcc· Gnd \'lSibthly poor. ' J

... r:u, 11 a, s~ll held 'men Will be discussed. All, take in ~omc of the St. ;.John'~~ ('aa·boncar Bay . De Verde, pended en th~ economy 0 i tenths sloh il'r.. Visibility lhrr.c. Halifax based ships and pos· · One enlii>ion was reported 111

, ::,r.1a: .. 1\'rdncsda\'.! ,\!aritime prol'inces w!ll have 1 Centre distril't. I l!e~rg(; c.:larke, says that last Cannda ~ 5 ~ whole. 1 1 t I r.rllc I sit: Snttlhwr.sl - Ten· sihly several Nurwc;:;ian scalers, city P•llir.: ycstcrda~·. : f~ 1 r·. lias not be :n · rcprcscnl<~lil'es. atlcmhn;,: and I i\1!'. Smallwnml said that lht: l·nd<IY s oudget speech was 3,11 i\lr. C '11' r "6~'CCI t 1" '~r

1 t~111l" r·ln><• parker! icr. Visi· arc also ill !his same area and, This wa~ ;J lwo·car lllbhap

c:cr,1!r · lwlwccn l~e: these Will mcludc agents, Lahradnr Wt·~t Sl'rtion, inclurl· rxprc~:il•lll 11/ the governments h,a,·c more. people em}lloyed 111 1 hi1ih: nnr half mitr. . killin~ will bc~in as 'oon as. !hat ion kp1ace on t.'arpai'i;ul

,; ,1,rr than a we~l~ J branch managers and adjusters. ing llan.lilton Falls nnd! tlw l'nllfldencr. Ill the ~rogrt•ss ni C1

atnn1da t

1mwy .th

1a11

1 c\'CI1' 1 11 ~"1 f'111rc: ('~pr !laul<l -- Trn-lcnlhs of the ships can get nearer the !load al 1.1~ p.m. Ttm·e wo~s . lhr· n!ajor portion : ~lr. Johnson is scheduled to grent llllnm;: t'l•ntres wou II Ill'· Ncwfounclla"d anrl lis p~nplc. Jll tc a so prnn rl o.u .Ia le ' lw:n·v l'!o<~ pa<·ked il'r.. Visi- , icc. , nnly minor dama~c.

:;::·~" Ba.r. I' nddl'ess a luncheon meeting at come one of C;lllad_a's .~realest Mr. Clarke was speakmg Ill nncmnln~·mrnt role rs h~e:tlcl'. bilit;. rioht I --·----------·--~------ ---th f I 1 I I 1111' Budget delwtc when hP The Cat'IJtincnr Bnv De \'erne : 1•1· ~. ·1 I I 1. t Ill i .:::takrr l.ahnHlor ha~ e con crencc. . . na ura t·,·sourt"rs ' lstr~l'ls. : . , - . 1 , . , . owrr, , anr -· en- rn ~ , b

ll .,,.,,1,1• 111 llreak 1 Mr. Johnson JOined ,Johnson The _L~waspnrtc rhstnrt takcf sa1r! he IS ccrta1n thnt the member felt. that Canac a>' f 1 . " h I c • c . . f •. h I t 1. I I I . . I () travv II'C. ,,umcrous ergs ar~ ou

hcan iee to act I Insurance Offices Limited on part ol the tlistrii:ls of liantlcr, ~llmslct· 0 l•.lnnncc ,'H 1111 k~:ros~ na wna P'1'0 ' 111c IS n~ <<ntl ffr~wlrrs. Vi>ihilitv ri"hl. i

The i ahrador ~e- I a permanent basis in 1948. Un· Twi!lingale and Green Bay attcmpletl to lndc anytlnn~ an~! ccpmg P<'Ce WI( I I lc grm?t 1 . Twlllinffatc-1\'ind \Vesl b 15 !

I ' der his uuidanee the Compan•·'s while the Uermihgc district that the rennuc ancl expend!- o[ the labour forcr. He pnlnt-1

.. 1 .1.t ; 0 .1 t 1 tl r' 10 'lip, in the Bay b ' ' ' (tire tlltc\•,· hot!I cap'1tal ,·1nd •cl o11t that 1·11 1957 the gross ""1 Jl 1 ~.· ~ m. 1 es, en· en 1'. 0 , s h • · . ;:~a · ' annual premium income has lakes the ens tern section of ' ' 11 t1

grown from $350,000 in 1953 to B. urgeo and the western seC(· current account hac! hcen national product WOls four and , lCRI'Y ICC.' [It e scad l'lllllll~lg, : , ow~ng

lntrcduttiD~ Signs Of life . , ;aid !hat th~ icc· well over $1,250,000 today. wn of I~ortunc. spelled out clearly in the I a half pnr cent whiclf he said I ICe hrcl.akllng upt an! . mo\'lng : ~·

, . wa' nearing Bel! l\ speech. economists had suggested was I very s ow y eas wart 111 mass. l \ledne;day and was lllr. Johnson was born in St. dr. Sm::llwood said another . B . l v· 'bTl fft ,

John's in 1929. He was cdu· district. would hal'e to be ere· The Deputy Speaker mad~ • the minimum. He said the pres- . onav15 a - 1s1 J 1 Y I ecn 1 The Wildlife Division of the by the rugged, irregular terrain · · at:cmpt to free the cated at Holloway School, ated if thp House decides to reference to the announced ent rate w~s one and a half per I mtles. Tcn·lenths of close pack·

1 Department of 1\lines, Agricul· of the Island.

frrr)·, special assistance for fisher- cent and he blamed the Diefen· ed local ice. Scattered bergs · ture and Hesourr.cs, tips its hat The car1bou were hand rear. Prince of Wales College, Mount men and expressed the hope baker Government for the slow· I and growlers in vicinity. I to residents of Mera;heen Is· cd and nearly tame when rc·

----i:"::iii\V oods Allison Academy and Mount AI· PenSiOn Plan that the plan will be proceeded down in the economy. He sug. Baccalicu Island Lighthouse 'land. Six caribou, released on leased. Residents of Merasheen lison University. ~ with in close scrutiny and that gcsted that Prime Minister -Winds southwest 5; visihil· 1 this Placentia Bay Island last are to be congratulated for

During 19~0 he trained at the i the assistance will go to those Diefenbaker and Finance Min- ity 20. Close pacllcd ice in all 1 August in a ~ransplanting ex· their cooperation in this ex·

1 the ion was ·Club haS l schooli .te nne rrnan Q the cipal_of

Talks Resutne

on Fri· Negoti· March

pru~rcss has S1nnc. important

HI lo he re~olved P'Tiy 11ill review

the intel'im period. . a~reetl that no 1 will he released

Pirty at this time.

~l%ur Pilot reported one ship left 'port ~h:s was the otl tank· '1Yrood, The Pi~rre

lrrll'ed at 10.00 p.m.

Head Offices· of the Canadian 1 F M H A '(It, deserving. ister Fleming woulcl write a directions. A body of open periment, have remained un· periment tc build new herds of Fire Insurance Co. and with or . . ... ., ~!r. Clarke pointed OUt that ?ook entitled "How to antago~; I water approximately !i to 7 ·, molest eel by local ~e?iden~s. our woodland caribou. several other large insurance most of the people in his dis-l1ze people and lose customers. miles wide stretching from ! Th~y seem to be thn\'lng m I . . organizations. A select committee of the trict engage in the fishery par- He felt thut there should have Split Point to Cape St Fran· I the1r new home. Two were I F11'e c~nbou were also re·

Newfoundland Legislature is ticularly ir. the Bay De Verde been more co·operation in view cis · 1 seen and the tracks of a third 1 leased on uninhabited Sound

Consumer expe~tcd to he set up to give Old Perlic~n and the Grate~ of the fact that the British · I spotted from the air yesterday 1 Island. Four of these animals further study to a bill which Cove region He paid tribute to Government is thinking about Cape Spear - Wind south· i by Lloyd Russell of ihe Wild· I were spotted from the air in will enable members of the the various ·organizations which entering the European ~ommon I sou!~ west. Visibility 15. Band rlife ~iviston. They a~p7ar the sa~e. survey. Wil~lifc !lien House to participate in a con· ·arc contributing to the econ· Market. Mr. Clarke sa1d that of 1ce south southeast of I qmte nealthy. The rcmammg are dehgMed that the1r umquc tributary pension plan. omy of the district and men· Canada had returned to the · station. Approximate cover· , caribou, it is expected, were [caribou introduction is showing

Details rrf the pension plan tioned specifically tl;e Earle lax jungle and he rderre~l to age two-tenths. i hidden from aerial obseiTation signs ·of ;;uccess. · for member£ ol the House with Trading Companv, Quinlan the Coyle affa1r and the failure ------------------------------------

The total index rose by 0.2% from 116.4 to 116.6 between January :tnd February as a rc· suit of higher indexes for food, shelter, clothing and houschuld operation. The other commoditi~~ and services index wns unchanged from the prev· ious month.

Sub-group indexes for .Janu· ary and ~'ehruary arc shown he low:

long slandm~: were announced Brothers nml AverY's at Grate's of the ~o\·ern~lcnt of Can.nrla in the Legislature ypstcrday Cove. Ile said that in the main lo negotwtc w1th. the Unatcd afternoon. the worl•ing force in his dis· Stales on lhe tar1H structures.

Provinrial Affairs ~linistcr trict were ohliged t.o leave home lllr. Clar~c fell that on~ of .Myles Murray snid there were to !(~t work and whether they the most. Important. subJects two fal'tors gnvrming a mcm- ·------ covered m the Budget ~<pceeh her's digibility for pension. Hr.,. 1 • was the gevernment's expendi-must have Sri'Vt!rl ten \'cars and . nterVIeW lure. He told lhc Honse Utat contrilmlr.d to the plai1 for that · when he wns tearhing ~rhool at length of time ;~nrl he •must $16.00 a month, if anybody had have reached the nge of sixty L •d Off told him nhout l.he new Me· befol'!! I'CCl'il'in;: his pension. al moria! University, the new high

.lan. Feb. Unrler tire plan no member • · schools and the technical fo'nvd . . ..... .. .. 110.0 110.6 would evca· have a pension of schools he woulrl have found Shelter .... 115.2 115.3 more than $2500.00 a ~·car and Ml•ne .. ~ S it. difficult to comprehend. He Clothing · · .... · ·· 109.7 110.3 It would take seventeen years ,.. felt that the benefits (fl. he llouseholtl Oper •.. 112.1 112.2 sen•ice for n member to reach derived from the Government's Other Commodities the maximum. education program would have

and Services .... 132.8 132.8 ~lr. :r.turray described the The registrar of trade unions more effect on our future lives

NAVY SERGE 54" SPECIAL $2.75 yard

MELTON CLOTH Green and Brown

54" SPECIAL $1.95 yard Total ............... 116.4 116.6 plan us the most modest of all in Newfoundland, T. A. Blanch· than all the mines together.

~------------------ provinces in canada and he art!, said yesterday that the pointed. out that Newfound· special interview committee land, Prince Edward Island now on Bell Island was sur· and the .province of Manitoba prised Tuesday that they were are the only provinces of Can· not swamped with unemployed

WHITE FLANNELETTE Employees Be Paid Off

ada without such a plan. miners, as had been expected. He pointed out that if. the On Monday a total of 261

bill is approved a member of men were interviewed by the the Ho11se would have no other committee but on Tuesday only alternative but to pay into the 126 turned up.

t pension plan. lie said this The men are being interview· would. take 9bout 6 per cent ed to attempt to flnd out if of a member's indemnity of 33. work can be found for them. hundred dollars. A week ago over 600 Bell Is·

Argentia Opposltion ·Leader Greene land miners were laid off by

tbe remainder being Canadians. said the Ill an was n radical Dosco and had very .little hope To he ofClcial 1.3% Amcricims depal'lure from tradition for or finding new employment:

~fi W.Harbert, Com· k~r of the Naval

ienua, has recelv· 0f a Navy-wide

1 funds, effective 1162, the number

tlnployees at the Ire ~aid by appro·

Will ·be reduced MI. This repre­~~ S3 employees,

e Americans and

and 6.1% Canadians. Newfoundland and he Ielt it The committee will remain on The reduction wll! not afCed deserved· non-partisan study by the island today, however, and

the 343 employees paid from n select committee. will continue to see miners. non-appropriated funds. As far as it•ls known this Is the only. Premier Smallwood agreect reduction anticipated. In Capt. with the Opposition Leader on Harbert's professional opinlon, the suggestion of a select com· the· Naval Station at Argentia mittec being set up and indi· wlll'be here for many years to cated he would make such . a come. motion.

" I

The committee urges all min· ers who were laid off to see them as soon as possible so that necessary data can be col· lected with a view to finding employment.

Died Of Injuries RCMP said yesterday that 1

they arc fairly sure now that John -Morrissey, 38, a Bowatcrs Mill employee, was killed when he slipped from a barker rna· chine in the mill.

Morrissey died Tuesday and his body was found about three hours after he was reported missing by his shift workers.

Apparently the unfortunate man had been oiling a part of the machine and fell to the floor, sustaining fatal injuries.

The man was married and leaves to mourn wife, three daughters, two sons, mother and father, three brothers and three sisters.

l!'uneral notice will be an· nounced · later.

2711 ONLY 39c yard

FLANNELETTE White, Coloured and Printed 3611 49c yard

l •

Page 4: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · ' NEW SMALL PONTIAC ACADIAN Nova Motors Ltd. TH·E DAILY NE (;3 • 'tHE DAILY NEWS,

; ;

I .

: . . I .

I I '

I ' ' i

t I I

'. I•

. '

I '

I;

'

''

,.

' I

' ..

: I ,. ·'

·- .THE DAILY NEWS Newfoundland's Only Morning Paper ·.

. ·' tEARLY SUBSCRIPTION RATES

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

· · United Kingdom and all foreign countries . $14.00 per annum ,.·

1 Authori?ed as second class mail, ::Post Office Department, Ottawa.

The DAILY NEWS is a morning paper established in · !ll04, and published at the News Building. 355·359 Duckworth Street, St. John's, Newfoundland, by Robinson & Company, Limited.,

~1E~IBER OF

TilE CAI'lADIAN PRESS

'l'he Canadian Press is exclusively .~ntitled to the u>c for republication of all news despatches in this paper credit· ed ·to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also the local news publish· ch therein •

All Press Services and feature articles in this paper a1·c copyrighted and thc!J reproduction is prohibited.

Member Audit nurcaa ·, of Circulation ·'

THURSDAY, MARCH 15, 1962

----------------------+----------------------------------Has P·o.pu,atron Slowed Down?

.The population of Newfoundland on census clay in J unc, l!J(iJ, wn:; 457,000. Thai is below expectution based on the rate of inercase in tl1e first years of Confederation. It means that in June of the present )'ear, a~suming the newly reduced rate of increase. we ;;hull have 463,000 and that we shall not reach

. the half-million mark before 19611. In the last pre-Union census, the

population was :J21.000. That was in 1945 and it showed an annual rate of :increase of one per cent during the' preYious ten years. This indi­cates that population in the spring of HJ49 was about :1:15.000.

In June, 1951, the Canadian counting of heads showed that· the Newfoundland population h:~cl reaehed ;~61,000 or an increase in little more than two years of 26,000 or.12,000 a year.

· · Fi\·c years later, in June 195fi. the federal census revealed a popu­lation of 415,000 ot' an a\'erage rate of increase of 10.000 a vear. On thnt basis, the figure for· 19(H should have been about 465,000 and fur June, 1962, 475,000 ot' thereabout.

However, it would appear that the annual rate of net increase be­tween 1956 and 1961 was only a shade mw B,OOO and this seems to point clea!'ly to either a growing net loss through emigration or a decline in the birth rate. The death rate has been relatively low all through this period.

This is not an unusual situation.

Canada on a relative basis. This indicates a general rise in the rate of natural increase in another few vears ~ince the tendency in New­foundland is to mari·y young. But recent reports have shown a fall in the birth rate and the mal't'iage rate. In other words, there will be a lower level of increase for a few years and, assuming that economic conditions will keep down the rate of emigration, we may expect thereafter a new rise in the annual net increase of population.

As things stand, we have had a a5 per cent rise in population since 1949 and this translates into an ad­clition of about laO,OOO persons. That iH equal to the national aver­age rate of increase, net immigra­tion included.

1t means also that while we acquired a population of ba;·l']y 2:i5.QQ(] in the first ;{50 years Of Oltr

history, we have virtually doubled that figure in the subsequent 50 years.

There is little doubt that we shall achie\·c the half-million mark by 1966 or 1967 and, always provided that we can develop our economy to take care of the natural increase, we should have close to a million people by the end of the century.

I : There is always a tendency for population to increase rapidly after a war and then to decline. We ha\'e now the youngest population in

With almost 500,000 people to­day with the highest average of personal incomes in Newfoundland history even if that figure is the lowest in Canada, we should now have the basis for a substantial complex of small consumet· indus­tries that can survive by its sales to domestic consumers.

'. I '. I I. '

I I: . ·'!.

" :• . ·•

' : .: I Trade And The DoUar ' ' :I ' I I ' ' I ~ ·,

' ; I I

In his first report as Go\·ernot· price stt-ucture. And if prices should rise generally, the useful-11ess of the discounted dollar in ex­panding exports will be under­mined.

. : 1 t , :1

·of the Bank of Canada, Louis Ras-• · •:' · · · · minsky has commented on the re-. i ·! 1

.: 11 [ d~ced value of the Canadian dollar • ; : :; ! and the opportunity it has afford-

1 • • ·! , : ed ·the country to make useful eeo- The fact is that the present cur­rency policy is an expedient th<~t is designed to cope with an important problem and give time for the ad­justments needed to provide a pr~r­manent solution. Currency manipu­lation is at best a temporary de­vice and in some circumstances it could also be a costly. one. The hope must be that Canadian indus­try is trying to take maximum ad­vantage of the protection and stim­ulus it is now providing.

I • 1 • : l'tomic adjustments. He h<~s not

. ' :·: .I:' i Q:itte~. l~~we~er, to ~bse{\'~ I t~at ,. 1, :! . :~ ! t e ?nee mde ms to eb 1e, c . or

1 . . · maxm1lltn a vantage to e c,envec :, 1 , ; from the discounted dollar.

·:, · 1

~, . ; Holding the price line is the i ; , :11 , 1 l problem. Canadian industry is very

:: ,• ! : : · , i sub~~antially dependent on imports 1 . : ·1 1: . i of certain raw m~terials and parts , I . 1 : and these are costmg more because. ;

1 ! • i': ,oUhe lower dollar. In time, they

•' J .::; ) ~us~:. have their impact upon the

The Source Of The Funds . ~ ! ' l !?·1" . :

j:,. ;:: . :..;-:...;;.~

. ; ;! }'. tJ?\t; .: .:( il1 • ·~·.·~~-~~~<·

:i · · I~. l:j ~';1tegardless of the use that poll- H must be borne in mind thal 1 !. , I' 11: · ;j:, :ticians may make o( dominion- what Ottawa provides comes oul l I! :1:1. rfii.t<iv~cial fiscal statistics for o[ general taxation and is an

f; Jd. : 1\i · : J ~~:tY, purposes, certain important aeknowledgment that' in certain re­:: !I!.: ! ~~h -,!, ~~ ~ave always to b: consider- spects adjustments are neC'es~ary '· l' 1:, li ~ ·1::f. ett ,.Chief among them Is the fact ·to :provide a minimum slundard of I : h. : · ·• ;('I that the division of taxation rights: opportunity for all the· Cana. dian ; •. Hi 1:;: ;li• in .the B.N.A. Act makes all prov- people. That was the principle be­: 'l;.:i :: : ,If inces very largely dependent upon hind the equalization system of 1956 · . ·~,ii ~·. ' :: the federal government. As condi- which has, now been abolished. In ; .' \:!i . i 1 ·!.:; tions have changed an~ new needs ~ewfoundland's case, t.he contribu-.! i::l; )(\!i. have t;merged, successlVe govern- , tlon of the ne_w provmce. to . the

' ~: ; : '. ·1 rnents m Ottawa have endeavoured general secunty, strateglc well-T !:!i!~ · :f:, '\Vithin the framework of the C'On~ beil}g and 'economic expansion of

! f! '! 11' ·:):ij1 stitution or through its amendment "the nation has added immeasure-

1 ' · i:'ii: to meet them. ably to the stature of Canada. What · ·.·'~ T~is has been achieved chiefly is disturbing is the failure of main­

t: sine~ Newfoundland's entry into land· Canadians to rea1ize how uniop by improvements in the tax- much greater our contribution sharing and tax-rental agreements, could be if certain basic needs such

; the uncondi~iom1l assumption by as a first-c)ass road network could Ottawa of certain social . security · be met at federal cost. services such as family allowances Party politicians will undoubt­and old age pensions, and the ex- edly continue to make their com­t~l11:i!O!l of conditional grants in the parisons from time to time and to for.m · of shared costs in a variety serve their own ends by making of p~Jblic services. To' these the such comparisons as odious as pos­prpent government has · adde:l sible. But without denying that in s~l recognition of the economic its special grants to the Atlantic ai\a~~cial disabilities of the Atlan- Provinces the present government tic'·.J?rovinces by· providing· direct in 'ottawa has established a new uneonditional grants. and generous. precedent, it is easy ......... . .

THE DAILY NEWS. ST.

• • • Add Nitroglycerin ·arid Stand Bock" 'II

• CONTINUES HUNT 1\larclt Ia, 19-17: Flying very low th.rough the

~IAJOR CASlllN IS SUED murky," overcast ~~~ sea~c~~ An official of the Supreme planes were ctrclm., pe

C url ye>tcrday approached and valley tundra on the toug~ :ll~ior Cashin, National Conven· . 150 miles ~etwe~n ~h~tbase ~~e tio;l member, handCll him a Cape Hamson . onlg o~ sim Jlc innocuous looking docu· lookout for dtstress stgn_als mc 1\u3ut from the writ ~!ajar thal may. te.ll them the loca1t~~~ c· shin learned that he wa> be· of the miSSing u.s. Army p i!~ sued 'f<a· libel to the effect an~ its crew of t~ree. l\!e~n· th;t in a speech b~fore a public wh11c ground part1cs traveh.ng

' . .f the National Con· hv dogslc<l had arranged to ftre sess1on o ' ' · · f th m on the vention Fcbruar~· 28th, ~lnjor ro:k~ts 1 ey ca \. h 5 Cashin ~poke falsely and nm· mtssmg plan:. _The p une hr:e licious]l·, "'thr.t CommiHsion of now been mlsst.ng for t Governincnt was brought hy days on a routtne fhght f~om_ briberv and corruption indirect· the lonely outpost, Cape ar 1.. "an' d recorded of the three rison, to Goose Bay. ·'' 1 If: ljj * plaintiffs certain whereby t ICY SEEKING APPLICATIONS "were greatly prejudiced in their credit, and reputation, The Labrador Mining and and brought into public scan· Exploration Co. Ltd. are ~ee;;. dal, hatred and contell)pl.'' ing the services of diamond lllajor Cashin is being sued by drill helpers for approximately Chief Justice Sir Edward Em· four months work at Labra· crson, Jud.ge lion. Harry Win· dor. Applications will be re· tcr and Chief Clerk James Alex· ccived at the Employment Ex· ander. change.

- Letters BAD CONDITIONS ON TilE

TORBAY WATERFltONT Editor Daily News.

Dear Sir:-The lime is fast approaching for the Spring fishing to begin and the fish· ermen of ·Tapper's Cove, Tor· bay. find themselves blockad· ed by tons of rugged rocks and debris caused by the river that went on a rampage this wint cr. The whole beach where the fishermen have to launch their boats has been plowed away by the flooding river that cut a trench foul' feel deep through the beach, making til impossible for the fishermen to launch their hoa ts. There is a great pile (lf stone left by the highroads de· partment still piled up in Tap· per's Cove. This pile of stone on the western end of the beach was the cause of this damage done by the river. The river comin{l down hit this pile of stone and went on an easterly course, plowing through the fishermen's beach. This was a very poor piece of work done by the Highroads Depart· men! who should have this river piped and 'all this great pile of stone levelled off before they finishel last. Fall .

This is really hanging up our fishery here in Torbay !or the coming season. The fishermen want to buid their stages and can't do so until the place is

· levelled off, especially the · re· moval of this stone and "don't wait for Spring. Do It Now," to give the fishermen a chance to build their stages for the coming season. The road along the cliffs is in a disgraceful condition also, down at the Big Beach at the western end !l! the Bay conditions are very bad and it will be a real set· back to the fishermen of the Battery on the western end of the harbour in 'forbay. I must say here that the Federal Gov· ernmcnt who have been throw· ing so much money down the drain pipes is so backward in the building of a breakwater and canal at Torbay to help and smooth the rou~h seas that have been on the rampage down through the years. After all, the Torbay people are tax· payers like all other Cana· dians but don't get anything done on their behalf. 'fhe members just come back for votes, make promises and never

To The fulfil them. I wonder will they ever wake up and be of some service to the people of St. .John'> East who helped to elect them. And when I say St. John's East I mean the Battery at St. John's, Torba]o', Logy Bay, Outer Cove, !ltiddle Cove and flatrock, Pouch Cove and Bauline who arc the for· gotten people of St. John's East.

JACK DODD. St. John's East.

WHAT CAUSES CANCER? Editor, Daily News.

Dear Sir-For a layman to say that medical science has been making the wrong ap· proach in its attempt to dis· cover the cause of cancer, is to lay oneself open to ridicule. Nevertheless, I am willing to endure ridicule, and ~ know I am inviting it when I say I be· lieve that if the cause of can· cer is ever to be found a new approach must be 1!111de.

The smearing of tobacco tar on the skin of rats will never rcvear the cause of cancer, be· cause such a practice is only a stimulant to the growth of can­cer rather than a means to de· t~rmine the cause of cancer­the cells of which are already in the rats.

To determine the cause of cancer, medical science will have to go back to the remote age~ of t.he earth when in· organic matter first evolved into organic matter o[ the vege. table and animal kingdoms. Let me try to explain what I mean. But by doing so I shall have to ask your indulgence while I briefly outline the development of vegetable and animal cellu· Jar life, and what seems to me, to be its logical and evolu.tion· ary relation to cancer. During remote geological per·

iods of the earth, the atmos· phere contained only nitrogen. There was no free oxygen, so there could not have been animal life on earth at· that time, since animals, being · anerobic, need free oxygen to live. This being so, we are safe in assuming that the first form of organic life that appeared on earth was plant life, because plants, being anaerobic, can live without free oxygen. But ani· mals, being aerobic, need free oxygen to live; and since the rree oxygen in the atmosphere

1\larch 15, 1929:

19,800 SEALS PANNED The reports from the sealing

steamers yesterday showed an improvement on the opening day. On the Front the Imo· gene killed and panned 15,0~0 and in the Gulf the Thehs killed and panned 18,000. The total number of pelts report· ed on board now is 6,000 with 19,300 on the ice. It is expect­ed that when the reports are received tonight that a con· siderable number will be added.

ELECT EXECUTIVE 'l'l1ere was an excellent at·

tendance at the adjourned meeting of the Fish and Game Protection Association in the ballroom of the Newfoundland Htel last night. Business was merelv the election of the executive for the ensuing year. Thirty-four names appeared on the ballot sheet and of these twenty·five were elected.

Editor -must have required millions ot years for the plants to produce, animal life must have appeared long after the appearance of plant life.

Animal life has resulted from the gradual transfor· mation of anaerobic cells into aerobic cells as a consequence of the changing conditions; that is. the oxygen constantly pour· cd into the atmosphere by vege. tation. As the oxygen increased, the anaerobic cells gradually became a greater factor in the composition of the air, and these cells had to accustom themselves to it, until some be­came more or less aerobic, and finally, entirely so, and by their vital functions actually supplied carbonic acid to the atmosphere instead of oxygen.

But ,the most important fea· ture about the evolution of eel· ular life, from the point of view of cancer, is the fact that, be· tween the anaerobic cells and the aerobic cells, there exists a vast intermediate class of cellular forms which have more or less the eharacteristics of both the anaerobic cells and the aerobic cells, such as the fungi, ferments and bacteria.

Doctors often speak of the "roots" of cancer and, If this is an expression corresponding to objective reality, rather than a figurative expression, it is evi· dcnce which shows that cancer cells have the predoinant char· acteristics of the anaerobic cells, became anaerobic cells draw tHeir substance through their roots.

This gives rise to the question as to whether all the cells in our bodies have anaerobic ten­dencies or· whether some cells are true aerobic, while others are true anaerobic. If the aerobic cells cause cancer, they are cannibals because they eat their kind, but if the anaerobic cells cause It, they are para· sites because they eat their ,kith and kin.

Anaerobic cells are plant cells, and they have reached full development, so have the aerobic cells, but there are millions of hybrid cells which are half plant and half animal, and these never reached· homo­geneity: they still retain some of the characteristics of both the anaerobic cells and the aerobic cells, and these may be

(Continued on page 5)

enough to forecast that measures designed to equalize social and eco­nomic opportunity in all provinces will continue to be part of the pro­cess of increasing understanding and maturity in Canada. If the

standards of the market place were the chief criterion of the relation­ships between the central govern­ment and the' provinces, the out~ look would be less promisi.11g' for the nation as a whole.

NFLD. THURSDAY

IN·'THE NEW - By Wayfarer

OH, MONEY, MONEY !

-Whenever I look at th~ figures of a new

cial budget, I r~call t~10se lm€s of Ogd~n Nash go something ltke thts "0 money, money, money, I am not nece'"a··I

' of those who think thee holY, · ·'' '1 ~· But I often stop to wonder how th~u rm~st "

fast when thou com est in :;o ~.:',wh· .:'Q I suppose, in a way, these l.in2s n1 e ·1;0: .

'applicable to the past few years of prGI"in~:ial Money may be going out fast but it has be~n . · in pretty fast as well. However. thr~ h 1e h'. when the pace of inflow must skr. · ,·,,. ... , ·;' some rather special sources ha\'e heen · ·. exhausted. These are, of course. tl:t: TCiT,J ~;J the Atlantic adjustment grants, and the old . tion grant under the tax rent:Jl a,greemrn;. 1 mean that we are going to lose an~' of the· we have been getting from these sour~e>. ;,rl" . that they are unlikely for some time to pt~l"ide ditional revenue. That mcc:ns '·'·e shall ha\·e to to other means to keep up with the ri,!n" public services. The best means of <ll. ~~ would be a growth of the pro1·incial crononw so present •1xes could produce increasing ""'"''"" ..

But let us see what it i~ all ;,bout ;, the Budget tells the star:·. F" our years a,; we spent less than ~60 million en current a·r. count. This coming year we shall spend G~ million. Four years ago we had a m·enue of $75 million. Next year we exncct ~9'1 million. In those four years expenditure r.,, gone up by $30 million and rel"em:e by Sl5 million. The rise in revenue has been pan. 1y from local taxes. all of \'."nich hare brought increased returns. and partl:: from an increase in the Atlantic grant a:1d Iz,:·1. er returns from Ottaw<1 arising uut r,f high. er expenditures on conditiona! grar.ts. For example, as hospital and relief pa~·menli go up, more money comes in f:om federol sources.

But since 195B we haYe seen our re·•e'llle · $B million from the Term 2g a\rard and ~10': lion from the Atlantic grants. ln each year under the old equalization fund. our :cccip:s tax rental went up substantiall:· year after year. cannot expect any additions to the hmd; from any of these sources for a \\'hilc course. finality does not exist in · •nn .. nrn>:·:·

fiscal arrangements. NeYertheless. the pre>en: ernment in Ottawa has disposed of it; under tax rentals. has a! tered the equalization to Newfoundland's detriment. ancl ha.' ,·irtual:r the provinces that if they want more nwiie:' ttt': have to get it bv taxino their own citizens.\'."~ . "' therefore, coming to a crucial point · eration finance.

Four main factors cauce expenditures rise. These are the norm<~! a111:u;;i · ments due to the achieYement b:· cirii serr· ants of additional years of 5en·ice. the e~cra costs of maintena~ce clue to 1i1c new cG;:;

of upkeep resulting from cauital e~ tures on roads and hospitals. the r:;i::: co.'~! due to the increase in the population w:tn the obvious need to build more 'choo!; , hire more teachers, and the new chargEs ·. the servicing of the public debt "" a · · of new loans and additional comtruction the buv-back svstem. The impact oi all things· is bring'ing about an an1 ,ual · _ in expenditure which has al'eroged S11:

million a year in the past fell' •:ears.

This fact is further comnlicatccl i11· the ing demand of the people for additional They are clamouring for more ro2cls. more electrifh1tion and more of prett:· well in the way of public services. This IS .. ""o"""' the Budget Speech but the answer has yet to vided. Even, however, if there were to he a closedown on the expansion of se!·\·ices, nual increments would still bring on costs higher than we may appear at the mor:1ent in annual increases of revenue. There JS

problem of capital expenditure. This is . cause we are still sorely deficient in certa:~ social capital. It is needed also because Jt general income and, therefore. helps to yields of sales and gasoline taxes. The fact_ that the overall financial situation is becomtn~ difficult and that it must ine\·itably produc: aches for government. Until resource rerenue' to produce on a substantial scale. no · in sight for the next two or three years and. balancing is going to become more steadily

PRAY WI1H M! . . t rominent

Each weekday durmg Le_n ~ P . •orite can invites you to join with h1m m h1s fa\ er. Today, join with: LEY s.J.

REV. LAWRENCE J. :McGIN . : President, Fordham UniversJt) ·

b r1•rous. Dearest Lord, teach me to e gr. and

d . to "1\"C me to serve You as You eserve, "d tile count the cost; to fight and not to h'C d not to toil· and not to ask for rest; t? Ia h~r t~ alii for reward, save that of knowmg t a Your will.

· for (Prayer of St. Ignahus . . n of The

-Distributed, tprough the co-operatto er men's National Committee, by NewspaP Assn •.

AUgu't 29. 1961 sondrc Str

!o~r passengers tO a flight lO

and points nortl

· aircraft caught feel and he

th;t he was in d

undertook a 11 Pl"' emergency 1

a Iandin

He stayed in and hung ha II

door, fina aircraft close

it ran onto the

pmcngcrs est:a1 ·but they we

Roe until dowo. Roe , although

were for the saf. Later he · for the b

that could be he demonstrat'

stamina, to his injurie

1. The incredibl It !Uffercd in n landing called fa

highest possil ill! 1kiU in carr~ m the very best

pro!e;sional ~

Stc

EXF IN Til

it's a cotr l'ou can t1 ready to Whenever

S~RV!N<:

BARR! Servin

TEL., 8

Page 5: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · ' NEW SMALL PONTIAC ACADIAN Nova Motors Ltd. TH·E DAILY NE (;3 • 'tHE DAILY NEWS,

' ''

~EWS, ST. NFLD. THURSDAY, ~IARG1l 1962

• i

'Cradle Song' Slow, -:· '

Says Adjudicatnr . •.

By CASSIE BROW!\' J s_istcrs enough. His wit was,n~} -~~ " • • . . . pointed enough. He too h:;d the !' GRAND EAI:LS - Alljudt· ' tcndancy to drop h:s I'Oice a· ~

calor Norma Sprmgford cnll· ; the end of the sentence. ·_·. cised the Amateur Exploits : Sisler Joanna pl3,·c1 by Rub :i Drama ~lub .rroducti_on of "The: Woodford, should· have.;<hai;-'~ Cradle Song last mght as too , more bubble and vitali::·. _: slow and too meas~re~. : Theresa, played hy Elean·o . The play, sh~ sa1d Is a de· :O'Keefe, was too heavy, Th

hghtful httle p~ecc of theatre, : Director had not gi'.•en he a gently play, 1t reads beaull· : enough help in lightening th

1 fully.' seems easy to produce : h~aviness. "Her words did nc but 1s not. She spoke of three : "et off the pages. She was to • !rapes of wluch the selling of 1 ;tereotyped, her movemenis to- · the play was one. The play was 1 artificial" said ~liss Sorin! staged w;th curtains: wh~.eh ~s I ford. ' not. eas:, to. pia~ w~th._ It IS · She did not particularly l!kr dJffJCul_t ~a1d l\11ss ::.prmglord, II the fact that the Director had to ~amtam atmosphere With . used the poet. He WJs not an curtams. The play should have : integral part of the play, she been staged nsually. She want· 1 would have t:Jl<en it out. AI·

:~· '.\l~ hll'l' m 1\mgs .. l'Otlnio•·· _ and ,l<•ltH'tl EPr\

· ed to see . the wheel which was though the Poet r~d well an-d requJred m _the play. It :vas a with authority, He needed to worl;ablc p1ece of machmery, improve his diction. )fo,·ements ~ntl \~lthout l,t. the wonderful were generally good, but the 0 roupitlg of :-.iuns ar~und 1t as 1 Sisters were kept still for too a part of the stage. picture was , Jon~ at times. said :\!iss Spring. · los~. She d!d .not hke the gnll, : ford. At the opening of the ;

~., ... .'.,: ua~Ell\;! ;~~ a pilot :_il In '" yrars of -~ ·: 1 ,,~1 ~ \l'wtound· 1 wh1ch she smrl was funct10nal, . play. ,\li<s Sprin6ford e\prcss-

:-en ill'-: :{'~lCi no: rf'\ enue: (', t ·'!111''

r·:J }"lart~ · n hare ;\· fron1 ·.

:·. l ]~--" :.~. <l • ..., ... :

f•f hi~h-: : .l:'. For;;.

.. : "~- \ ,.;tlwrn t~uc· ; '' -~·1.,; .\rc·ll<' anti ~ r ,. ~ · . · _. 0 l''"n·d hun-PH

;,1; ~~rn;dll n[ ahil· :u~~:\ l'l a In t,: ~.;,

'':, l)r \!Jti 1 Bur wets ' --,: ~";Hirr Strum­

.;,,·r.lo"tl :n ,.,,mmand i . \ o::tr rnrrra:t under

• , 'it" P,tl~l;;h lio\'crn-.... '

1 but placed where 1! was. 1! ex· cd her tleli"ll\ at bcin" ;11 :\cw-', posed Antonio to the full \·icw , foandlanrl. o She said~ she wa5 . of the aud1encr. and place<! an thorou~hh· rnio,·in" her slav extra burden on him. The grill and th~ h'ospit~li·ty ;nd warmlit .

I should haYc been at the back or of o•Jr ,·ountn· :the set, and Antonio should not Toni"hl l·h~ Tlur·kma~t~r~ .

j' have hecn risible at all. While l'l~ycr; la't )'rar.; winner 11( ~!ISS Sprmgford lhd not OhJC<'t the neniOnal Drama Fcsth·a[

: to a ~ircctor .chan;;in;: scllin;:s. will d~ their production: A S.i'ARi\LING new millinery shop at Royal Stores .•• staffed h~.· COllljJctent. efficient and courteous salcsladics wi10 follow the ·>he did not like thJs particular "Death Takes A Holidav" .

- I change. Costuming was trapc · lloyal Stor.~s tradition of friendly, satisfying scrvic:'c. Already it's filled to overflowing with the most gorgeous hat creations, inter- i nuniber two. the Adjudi·:ator I •

Jll"l!ticd in the latest styles and in n gay prof!Jsion of colour. 'said. It was difficult for actors T k ;,;-·: ~~ [!liil hr l00k , --------- I to give OUt with personality ' a e · ~·:~:::~;·"··r~:r~·:~~:ij~~i~: At Ct•ty Hall - Letters To The Edt. tor ~~~~nw~1;:yal;ve;~k~~ T~~:t~~~.~:

Part :· .. ';· :.1~:11 til Egcdcs· I _ _ ers were not used to their cos· I 'ri 0a:n'.; north. •1 (C 1. 1 f 4) . . . . tumes and she had difficulty

. on IIlli~! rom page I cells of our bodies, These hc-JJmagJ~~ry rffuswns and 111 the , deciding who was who. She ·did , ;.:.r;ft rau~h: fire at : Plans at the estimated \'alue 'I tra!lic \'iolations. the cells_ wh1ch c~use cancer. I teroecious cells cannot draw nu- . sc1entHtc facts _-r have ~tated I

1 not think that it was necessary

In Drama Festival - ._, :,·t: and hr radioed of SI00,500.00 were rccom· , Council d~cided that there The m:ermedwte class of. nutriment from the aerobic I have dro~ped 1deas which \~Ill . to have the costumes exactly

-,: :r '·"•' in difficult)'. mended and passed at yester· , was nothing that they could do cellular hemgs mentioned abore cells with(lut at the time de· :attract abler mmds than nunc : identical to the rca[ thing a __ _ rlny's nwcting of the Town I in this ~atter. , are called hybrid forms of lif~, straying. them, because. being l'llll ca~lse ~hem ~o emba~k up~n : lot could be faked the v~ils I Three of the six drama groups

., .,,i: ,ol:d t·xprrit•m·e Council. tht•st• were for the con· ' The C1ty Engmeer. to look and there are numerous van· annerolllc, they are compelled a cour,e ut reseat-ch which Will 1 need not have been really I t d . th 1962 Renional - .: · 1'' lwar 111 the . struction of six lllmgalows, . intu a complaint from Mr. Alex. I eties ol them. 1l is out of these to draw their sustenance lead to the cause of cancer and I Opaque and she stressed actors ~n ere Fill!' ~ t G an/ Falls·

till'<'<' wall signs, and an acces· I W. Bursey which staled that a intermediate hybrid forms of through their roots which thr~ lis prevcnt~on or. cure. must create their own indivi- 1 har~emt~mse~a1:~e:for~ed in the sory hnildin;:. 'l'lwrc were also · trc_c, fronting the residence ol )life the \'arious species of hac- L'll1hed intn the ccllulnr strue· ~s a .f1tlmg c.!Jmax to what I 1 duality. · an~ual event. .::~::~·,llk ;llt Jll't'r~wtion­

n;tr~t'nr: mra~urt's

a l.111ding area, cie:rtvl~;· ~; i''"''ncer, to fast·

~~i:' .\lt,•r allempt·

plans for the extension and lOn Bonaventure ~venue, has :lena and . other saprnph):tlr lure ~r 11.1c protoplasm, and s~p , ha_' e sa1d m m; letter, I w~uld I Trape number three was the rcnoralion> to a home on ' its hranches cxlendmg out over · forms of life rle1·clop, which the \'Jl:tht)' out ol the aerolnc hke to for?1lll?te my lheor} of 1 stiff. formalized English in The festival opened at the , Portugal Cove Road and to a the side~\·alk. As ~!r. Bursey fact may account for the rliffe1:- cells, whi~h make up the ce.llu- . can:et', WhJch ~s lhl~: _ ! which the writer had translated . paper! own lllonday. tiroups house on Fre>hwatcr Road. : walks th1s way every day and ent types of cancer, s1nce can· lar (Issue o! our Iwd1cs, hnng- ~Jll~e _there Is a hwlog1ca~ re· . the Spanish play. "The Author" , which have participated lu date

Plans for the erection of a : it is very irritating to have to eer cells are parasitical as well . mg ahuut a cond1t10n we call , lal10nsh1p hetween the ammal i said Miss Springford, says the · include the Northcliffe Drama store and an apartment were . dod~e th7se Jagged edges. as some types of bacteria. ·cancer. : kingdom and the \'cgetahle play must be played slowly but ' Club of tirand Falls, the Amat·

to quench ! R:e ''"' h:nall)' be·

1 fr•u11 1 h•· waist • 5"~~"'• t.r !ia)ril 111 cnnlrol.

;: i hun; half-way out

nnt rct•ommcJHled because this D1scuss1on .Y~ster~lay at Ihe Anaerobic cells draw their 1 It mav sound ~tran~e to · k1_ngdom, anrl 111 accordance :he i> all wet. She wrnt on to . cur Exploits Drama Club ol build in~ at this place is _con· ' weekly Council mcctlllg brou?ht 1 nufriment from either thr snil, some pe;lPl~ to suggest that we W1th the l~w of hwgencs1s, man· • say that the wit and humor of Bishop's Falh and the Buck· trary to Zonin~ Rr~ulallons. up tl~e matter of th~ erechon 1 as in the c·?~l' of plants. or hy hai'C c~lls in our llodirs harin~ · k!lld has mhmted one_ or more . the pla,v Wtls lost. It was \·cry master·, Player; of St. John';, Tlw consll'lll'lion of an arecs· of bJII·board s1gns m. vanous I the decomposition of compounds plant charactcristics,a hill forms ol those parasJlJcal hy-: slow, 1·er.v measured. 01nd there The lattrr ~roup, winners ol­son· bttilrling on (;oodricw pla~es a~·otmd St. .John ,I, cont~inin~ it. as in the case of study of the lower forms of bnd cellular form,, cxlsllng be· was no \'!Ialit;·. last year's fcslil'al, prr:;entcd Street \\'a' al'o not rreommcnrl·. Council said !hat. tl han rc· I ana~rohcs, llul acmhic cells .. plant and animal life sho\\'; tween the homo!(cncous anaero· In Spanish people -shr c·on- thrir play "Death Takei A ctl he!' a use this is a prohihitecl CCI\'ed some COJ~lpla~nls abo~lt I of which lour bodies arc compos-. 115 that there is no well rl!'- lllc rells :md the_ h~mogcnr.ous , tinued emotions rise easily lo lloliday·• last night.

iLE'f, s.J. ersity.

, : uoor. IIIIa II)' land· 'l':r;lt r!n,~ to >horr. : ~~r. nn:H 1 hr h(•ach.

·,~nm :' IIUI and was .. :m ' llool. area. these Signs bemg erected 111 eel, :1hsurb their nutriment :fined line of demarkation br- aerohle cells. ~nrl It IS out of the the surface. She missed the

. , :\'0 PER~IIT 1 !'crhin areas, pa~ticularly ncar from the blood stream, without ~ween the plant and the animal hyhrirl cells that cancer deve· quick response, thr Yitality, , Over the next three Ol;;hts · ·-" ,.,.,·aped \\'llh· ' 'l'hc Buildin~ Inspector rc· 1 the Wa_r Memorial, and they destroyin~ the blood corpucles · l;ingdoms. So, cells havin~ lops. 1 and vocally, it was weak, actors pcr[ormancc~ \\'Ill he sta;!ed_ h~· -~:-':II lhr:· wPre una~lle ported that tlurin~ the inspcc· would, In future, keep a c_are· or the cullular tissue of our , plant cha:~cteristics ought to

1

. Your Trnl)•, 1 had the tcndancy to speak into: the St. .Johns Players, the Cor· · ,· .. Ror unlll. the fire lions of the ~lctropolitan Area i ft~l watc.h to see th~t such ~Jgns bodies. Or to put It in cxag· '1 be found in the human body, ; the curtains which absorbs the 11?r, Rro~k ;'la)·makcrs and _the .:•11. 11oc s .. hrst this past week it was found : did not. mterfere With the rtghts gerated form:. the aerobic cells ' in accordance with the Law of W. L. Buller. , voice. She had great difficulty I \\a) !arc Is oro up of St. Johns.

·: althou~h cl'lllcally that ~lr._ R. J. Coleman was j ol c1hzens an~ the. natural "cat" 'with their "mouths," 1 Boagcnesis, which is this: l Shoal Harbor. ! in hearing what wa< bcin;: said, I Adjudicator for the festival'

· for the >afety of his constructing a dwelling on }lar· 1 beauty of eerlam sectiOns. while the anaerobic cells "cat" I Every organism in its individu· . :some thing she didn't hear at · M t 1 actress Norma 1• Latrr he was flown , bour View A1·enu1~ without a : Permits we~e granted ~·ester- with their "feet." And remem- I al derelopment repeats the life! B • G i all. i ~pri~n~~r~ea . ' for tnc beot treat· : build~tlg permit. About a month ; d_ay for two Signs on the North bering what the doctors say history of the race to which it I 19 a me I or the PrioriES, pla)'ed by I • __ • ---

' could be had. AI· : ago it was found that l\lr. Cole· 1 s1de of New Gower Street but about the "roots" of cancer, belongs. So, if the law of Bio-I l' R t I Lorraine Cuff. Miss Springfo'rd :: demrm>trated almost I man had startccl construction I permission Is on a o~e year we arc led to beliere that those genesis is true, We must ha\•e acence e urns said she had a few good

stam1na, Roe sue· ! and was directecl to stop until term only and, Connell made anaerubic cells arc the villains rells in our bodies haring plant The percentage or big game moments, but did not carry · :J h1; injuries SeJlle_m· · a build in~ application was suh· 'clear, eo~ld. he revoked when which cause cancer. characteristics. hunting returns is still quite them long enough. Her speech· l~e mcrctlible agomes : milled and approved by Conn· the appllcatJon comes up for Let us try to visualize what In some parts of my letter I low, the Wildlife Division re· es were a little wordly but she !:lfmd in making his : cil. At that time work ceased, renewal in 12 months time. is probably the destructive 1 have drawn somewhat on my ! ports. This is particularly true should have enjoyed the play

Police 4 Arrests

Make .. callr!l fnr courage an1t the app!i1·ation was made. process which goes on when imagination, but in other parts :of the Corner Brook-Stephen- a little more. \ ~.;"~' 1 P0•·ihle _order . During thr past week Mr. those half plant. half anim~l I o{ it I hare stated scientific 1 ville area w_here 75% ?f hunt· The Vicaress, played by Three nrrests were made by ::·"" 111 mr)·1n~ 1t out . Coleman was again directed to R d F cells attack the healthy aerobtc facts. But I hope that in my , ers have ,faJ~ed,. to !"all a r~- Betty Thomas was too measur-1 city police yesterday. _. • ::. Hr) hrH lrachtwn i caese \\'Ol'k. After a check It I .ea y 0 r I turn, the reb~.\ JO!ahng a bJg ed. She had a good VOICe but One man was arrested for ,. le•; 1 ''~'' mman. : was found. that he _was again I game regula lion. These re· ! there was no snap because of consuming liquor in a public

·--· i 1gftorm~ th1s mslrucllon. ! turns are now more than a I the. too measured rhythm of place, ()n~ for drunkenness and I • • · · : St p t • k' J I m,onth over_due and l\lr.,_Ha:ry her speeches, she also had the one given in charge for being Stolen I 1 hr ~ounc~l. deClfled to ~sk . a r· I·C s· \\ alt~rs, Director of_ \\ lldhfe,l tendancy to drop the end of drunk and disorderly in the • the City SnhcJtor In ~~am1~e • _ ! warns that prosecutions may I her sentences. J homr.

;zrount!s for COlli'( actiOn 1M tht~ I bec.nme n~cessary. ' The Doctor playrrl hy Br.1m I ROlP ~rrcst~d nne man t'nr~olr: ;rdan '''a> case. Council also ma~le It Day t,ame m;;nagemcnt plans de· 1 Jlud,::ell riirln't pia~ wi 1h th~ rh~rzrrl with for.'{rr,,·. · 1n irnn1 of ~ hnusc clear that construction 111 the :pend to a considerable extent · ---------

. l'nu1·: hrt•1rcn nine ~!"unicipal hounrlarics cannnt be j upon the ~uccess of the JMst t rc!ntk 1~-~ ni~ht.

1 undertaken unless thr huilder season a~d upo~ the sex ratm

-:I~ 1' :rrrn 1n rnlor nncl · · f c ' th k II · L1cenc reltiJ'm rcceircs !1Cl'mtsswn rom oun· 1

1\losl of the night rlubs In Ol • c 1 . _ e . · 1 ::! liern!r number cil. I and around St. John's are just furmsh such mformatJon and ,

-----~ to be a popu· . ac~:xxl press agent

· llltno heed, u""•

· I b d f h ih d . so ~re of great tmportance to I In a leiter to the Council, 1' a out rea Y or 1 e ousan.' th \l''ldJ'f D' ,. · Th'5 I

· · · of shamrock wearers who Will e 1 1 e 1\ JSlon. 1 -; ~lcDonald's Truckmg Serv1ce b 1 b t' . th .. 1 f apathy or• the part of some 1

: complainin~ about poor parking tie c~ ~ ~a ~n~ 1~ e ~p~~~ S~ hunters must not continue. ; SJiaces ncar their lnading doors ~e .. r1,s. ) ~ ur ay nJg - ' lt is inlHesting to note that

at Steers Core and because of Pal~nck ~ 1 a~' d 1 d almnst all non-1·esident hunters 1 this lack of parking ~PUl'e they ~ck·or ~r~w lsi nl'e 1 ebxpet: e huv" filt•d th~ir rPturns Ap-' · - tu ta · 11art 111 1e c~ e J'a 10111 . . · : gl'( numerous lll'hls !rom the , l , II k parentlv tl•ese v1sllors to our i IH•Iic~. 'rhl·~· hu1wtl .I hat. Co~lll· ~s : Ul dy s Day fa 5 011 a wee • olwres iwre ~ greuter appreria· '

cil could do somclhlllg tu 1111· cut, . lion uf o11r resuurces than we prove the 11arking conditions In .Many or lhe 7lulls have 1ssur.d NewfounuJamlcrs. that area fm• commercial advanced llookmg5:

I vehicles or that their trucks _sure It looks hke ~veryont b provided with stickers that Wlll have a grand h~e-the

I w~uld allow the police some IJien decked In green bes :ud . d' t' h h king for the Colleens In their emerald :

1scrc JOn w en c ec dresses. Irish songs and music '

Beaver Trapping

will be the order of the day,

EXPERIENCED AID eoMPLETE TRAJ~NG FREE STOCKINGS!

Beaver trappers are enjoying a fairly successful ~eason, the Wildlife Division's Chief Biolo­gist, Tom Bergerud, said today. H ap~ears that may will reach lhe quota of fh·e beaver.

IN TIME OF SORROW

:;~ 1 comfort lo know that there is someone read can turn to at this time. We are always ·~h Y to offer you sympathy and advice, 'ene,·er needed.

!tRVING ALL RELIGIOUS FAITHS i

~ARRETT'S Funeral- Home i. 28 DICK'S SQUARE

l Serving the Public for. over 30 years. Et, 8·3696.;-Aft~r hOllfS 8·5756, 8·3696

24 Hour St!Pvlce

"

EDMONTON CCPl - The RCAF'~ 409 Night Hawk Squa- Beautiful ladies' nylon stockings simply by dron from Comox, B.C., Tues· saving eJilp_ty envelopes of

day completed conversion train· J ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ing in the CF-101B, Canada's newest all:weather jet intercep-tor. Earlier 410 Cougar 'Squa- FLEISCH MANN'S YEAST dron from Uplands, Ont., · and Start today to save your empty pack· 416 Lynx Squadron completed ages! For just 35 empties you get one the training program, which Jr'REE pair of beautiful long wearing, wlll ~ive the RCAF five CI•'· nylon service-weight or dress sheer lOlB operational squadrons IJy •tockings in lovely shades of Miami

Tan, Mocha, or Smoke Crey. Sizes the end o£ April. Lynx Squadron nre from 8)~ to 11. It's easy to save-will be based at Chatham, N.B. Fleischmann's now gives you on~

FREE package with every 3 yo11 buy! GET MORE SNOW Whenyou'vesavcd35emptycnvclapes,

· OMAHA, ' Neb, (APl _ A mail them, (state colour and size) with your. name nnd address; to:

blizzard paralyzed wide areas FLEISCHMANN'S YEAST NYLON OFFER or ·the Great Plains and sUb· f

zero cold hurt Wyoming's vital ~~~~~B~ax~#2~3~33~,~T~e~rm~in~nl~'~'AT'~',~T~o~ro~n~to~,~O~n~t~. ~~~~ livestock industry as the worst r winter In may years continuecl WHY FLEISCHMANN'S IS ~ in the United Slates Tuesday, FASTER, BETTER ••• More than a root or snow fell Grains in ordinary yeast are irreg· In Vermont and northern New ulnrl Com_parc the •mall, finer Ordinary Yeast

• h grnins tn Flcischmnnn'el They're Hampshire In an overmg t fi'ner, far faster-acting and notice· ~ storm Tuesday, Maine . had 10 ahly faster rising than ony other Inches of snow while some ~cast you can buy. Your baking

l8 tastier, mora flnvourful than southern New England sections aver before. Fleischmann'~ Ycnst

had more than an Inch or rain. I ~§~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ STUFF OF LIFE

Dost thou love life? Then do not squander time, for that Is !he stuf£ life is mAdP. of. J'

-Benjamin Franklin.

When you bake al home, use FLEISCHMANN'S NEW, FAST-ACTI~G YEASJ'

because it's finer!

Game wardens are especially busy enforcing the new beaver trapping regulations. This year only one trap may he' set at each bea\'er house and only one beaver taken per house.

I These regulations, if fol·

I lowed, shculd insure a continu· ing annual harvest of these ani· mals. It will' ensure trappers

I aga,inst such islandwirle over­harvesting as occurred in 1949.

I. In that year the heave!' popula· lion was so drastically dimin·

1 ished as In necessitate a closed 1 season for the next three years.

I Stringent conservation meas-ures became necessary. The one beaver per house regulation both protects the trapper's fu· ture income and maintains a healthy beaver population.

Trappers are reminded \hat only one licence may be issued to each household.

The Wiidlife Division is in need of beaver carcasses· for scientific study. Any of the following wildlife officers, if contacted, will :y-range to con­vey these carcasses to the

. proper authorities: Ephriam \ Balsom, Ciarenvillc; II! ike No· Ian, Salmonicr; Cecil O'Brien,

' Cape Broyle.

.. THE BEST IN THE HOUSE'~­~N 87 LANDS

CfanaclicPnCf/J· .. U"0UI1111blt

,. ,.. ... ,~"'"' OoJ"" ~·•tttru.;: ...,....," ~ ·"( .. ,.,,. t\;~t~ ...... ........ ".,..,_~

(Not inserted by the Board of Liquor Cimtrol) ·

'' '·

'

! ( ;

l - ' ! ' I . i

! .

Page 6: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · ' NEW SMALL PONTIAC ACADIAN Nova Motors Ltd. TH·E DAILY NE (;3 • 'tHE DAILY NEWS,

'i

,,

'I

I'

I'

'. I ~

I ''

I . . I ,

•· I

. '

I'

'.

I I

I I

,I

''

I.

I,

II

' I '

!

,,. :I

: I

' I

. I

:I '!

,, '

I

''

di.a:. JJAlLY N NFLD. THURSDAY ~lARCH

, ............................ ··•············ ·············~········ ... ~ ............ ·•·•·•·•·•···•·······•·•· ·•··· .............................................. :~ ~

t Social-Personal~ Canary Pudding Is Irish Favorite The Inside Track

\MRS. FAYETTE LATHAM fAll Knit i VISITED THE CITY • I . .

.. ' ..... ~ . ~ ~ ~ w ~

1~l i Column l~ By CAS·SIE BROWN

'

v ~ I I

GRAND FALLS WELCOME DRAMA GROUPS v ~ ~ ~

• • • \on Saturday afternoon, March BIRTHDAY GREETINGS I 24th at the Star Hall, Henry

Many happy returns or the 1 Street at 2 p.m. clay to Mrs. Stella Stratton of , The next meeting will be 1 Cowperthwaite Court who is held on Monday, J\larch 19th at celebrating her hirthdny today the home of Waynie Neville, March 15th. Greetings come 19 Falkland Street. from her family and friends. • • •

• • • . TO 'HOSPITAL

1\liss Sheila Murphy of Bell Island is at present in the city awaiting e•1trance to St. Clare's l\lcrcy Hospital.

• • •

1 GRAND FALLS - The city of

I Grand Falls is going all out to make Drama Festival week a

i success. Drama groups arriv· ing from point cast and west of the central Newfoundland town have been billeted in pri­vate homes nnd hotels u.1d I have been treated with the ut· . most cordiality, and ·hosts and I hostesses have gone out o[ I

their way to be accommoda~· 1

ing In every respect.

172 DUCKWORTH STREET

ONE LOCATIOIN ONLY P. 0. BOX E5166

Presenting The New BEAVER '

OIL RANGE

BUILT ESPEC~IALLY FOR AR·EAS WHERE THER.E IS NO ELECTR~!CITY-ALSO

AVAILABLE W~ITH ELECTRIC B'LOW·ER UNIT.

e TOP PERFORMANCE

e ECONOMICAl

e CONVENIENCE

e STYL~ AND BEAl)TY

Where initial cost is a factor and yet the last word in perform· ance and appe~rance is desired. 'You will find the FAWCETT· BEAVER in a class by itself. The BEAVER brings the finest cookery service possible into kitchens.

WRITE •.• WIRE ••• OR PHONE C.OLLECT

CAN BE SUPPLIED WITH. SHELF- CLOSET OR BACK GUARD AS SHOWN .

SEE IT TO-DAY AT-

JOHN CLOUSTON LIMITED 172 DUCKWORTH STREET •

ONE. LOCATION ONLY DIAL 8-5081

C.iHS. FAYETTE LATII.UI

, St. .John's Girl Guides were ho•J· ' ourcd on Sunday, ~!arch tlh, ·

v:h~n ~lrs. Fayetlc Latlwm ol 1

,\mwpolis, )Jarylnnd. l'i.itU·d . I he city. She is tlw reprcscnl<~· til'c of lhe Girl Scouts of .\m-

Lei me hil.stcn lo ;Hid. il~ not nil pal·ty·pi!rly, rehearsals at·e ;till goin!: slron;: ,,, groups poli•h · and finish their prnrluct ions for ' lheir pPrformnnrr. \'othinr. · rmt fa! llo pircrc; "' ~uirld.v ;;s ~ play th.1t has h~rn lrfl tnlr for R wrrk.

• Frankfurters and I

'Cheese Make

Sunday Supper BY GAY:oJOR MADDOX

Sunday night supper is a pleasant oldfashioned custom. Let's inl'ite a few con !(enial neigh· IJOrs and serl'e a hot but not elaborate chafing dish main dish. Teen-agers love this in· : formal way of eating,

Here's an easy one: :>.felt 1~ pound cheddar cheese, then stir in 2 cans or tomato soup. Blend and season Heat to bubbling point. Serve piping : hot o1·er toast or toasted En!(· !

lish muffins. · I

FRANK ANn CHEESE RAIIniT i <Yield: 6 srrl'ings)

1 pound frnnl", ~licrtl 10'~ ·O u n c e . c a n contlrnscd

cream of mushroom soup 17 cup mille !1 .p nun d .American chrr~c

1

shrclldc1l · \2 teaspoon prepared muslartl 1

Paprll<a 6 thlck·cUt slices French hrrad,

!onsted

Blend soup and milk together in top of blazer pan ol'er direct heat. Add cheese anrl mustnrd anrl plarc over hot water. Stir ~nd heDt until rheesr is melt­ed. Arid franh anrl heat well Sprinkle with paprib. Cover If n o t to be <en•ed im· mediately, Serve on toast .

BACKACHE Wbt•n kidners fail 10 ft'IIILI\'t" f'Xrt•:-;~ acltJ11 llllci wu~o.k.~. 1nwkachc, tin•tl [t!f']illo~t, t.li!ltUrlwtl r~·~L urtt·u follnw • J)tH!J.'~ (\:ldnt·y Pilhs :.tilntdutn lddm')'! to uurn1ttl duty. Yma ff'rl hrttcr-Plf'rJl hf"t.­tPr, work h11Ltn.

~rica. on tour of the Eask;·n Pro1·inccs of Canar:a. ~\'hi!~ !n St. .John's she met ll'llh di[i~:·. cnt r:roups. in the Girl Gwril· mol'emcnt.

mb~'ionrr )ii 'S Phil:!s . thr hon;r ,,f \b \\'hclan. il'a:rrlotd. Road. [r~ the a!terr.ocr, ll'IHil'd a Spe'm Pal'k mct'ltti~ \\llh Cr:1ne. T:~ .. ,ny 0.1:. with lhe Pro1·inci1: tl! j ;i:·l G;tidr \&.. lwrfl ~~r.~. L;:~1h.1m ~lirlr~ nf r;1:-iot1~~, .i.

(illidin~ in t}·,p rn:~~d :

For T~ursday, March 15

Present-For You and ours .•. A situation involving

repayment of a debt someone owes you may ncc<t diplomatic handling, but a•pccts denote that the outcome will be favorahk Accent is on work interests. Get .1n early ~tart as time lost can­not be regained. Pursue aclion I hat strengthens heart tie,;.

Past ... On March 15. 1916, General John J. Pershing was given command of 11.000 .nl­licrs and ordered tn proceed inlo Mr.~ico to carlnre rancho Villa, revolulionary M n i c ~ n lc~der. The expedition was!ruit· les;.

F11ture ... r ,..en~n vice '""II h< em~<iderab:r tailed, hut ~ot dt.e(!111imd

lirrlv. Fnr '''" thi~~ trurl.;in~ J1nr ~ir u•f\'i(('

In t~kc C'•l':< \!1t. ~ti!l toervi<X. whtch \-U!S

tcOO!uled ~Bet tri!J.

The Day Ynder Yotll' Sign ARIES (Bnrn March 21 I• April 191 U~RA l~opl. 7l 'J Flan11 n~t>d ~e rrvifinn l.ftd btru:he !,.,~·l"'M ~ .... !?,.,-:! '~Mue ~pt'f.U. ,l!rl;t!t !Urtinr norw. , o\d ~t:!f l)f'lt.> ,,.UL TAURUS (April 20 to Moy 20) SCOR~IO ,!":,'·,!!." .. Otbt"t~ rn.:w be too d.-m:\ndint~;. no dt li.tVo!' h'fl'!l:! .. t :~ M wh:at ]OU ca~ "With deM cM..cient.e.. ~IJ,.. n '-~~

GEMINI (Moy 71 lo Juno 21) 5~~~~~~~;1,~,~ Rely on II!Utegy 1t1 .-e~ wh.at ,.Otl 'IDIJt. '!,.rr;)' Scit:e jcr ' Be wary Jft early-momtng O'JI'lLaCl&o bome. •

CANCER (Juno 22,1• Julr 21) CAPRICORN !D..,. n ,~ u~ Bf:" hrlf1illl, hut don t ld ndters saddle lmrto'e rtb'\o~'l-: 1 r' ,.'c,,e;t!Jrl. Y'J'' with their re.!lpozuibilitic&. 11p.in~d {'>f th, r-u~ ft11'

LEO (July 22 lo Aug. 21) AQUA~IllS (J"· ll to Ff I" f.i~tm inst~d af talkmg: and you !I.IJ Yl'lu'll m~~~ h.~rt W1f!:~ pick np & nrr pro£itabte rugR"estitm. yrtlr D!in<i M yon:- bl.l!-·

VIRGO ]Aug. 22 to Sept. 22J PISCES jFrb. 20 to Don't'let l'motions lnd yotJ off ca tm· "You'r~ b·f:h~~rtoi. gents. Watch wordJ a.nd .actions.. tnit, lrtlt (\rltt't

LOOK .YOUR

,., ltl62. J'jdd

-- ·-----

new Let our stylists

the neW that mean5

lovelier neW

GLADYS/ SHOPPE LTD.

Cor. Prescott & Bo~~9s DIALS-4951- B·

Necess~ry Come in - No Appointment

,,

S1

Hockey

ua.rds Bi~

tacular midget! ,pecj!lard· and cente

Jl k the upper han too f the giants Ia!

0 the Guards t 4-2 victory ovE and a two gam best of seve

Guards spark·plu the •oals and set up

Billard aft~r al!ol first per10d_ g?

on 27 Fe~ldll ·o on speedY Da1

til Jose. and anot~· 111 c Bill 1\lartu

shot. and Bob Ba

the other Guar Doll" Squires at

hil p~y-dirt for t Blues.

rallied hack a! lix minutes and sic om control of · at 12.23 Gar Pl

, deflecting • hard shot. Ch

no chance on

playing

;>;a tiona! last night ag

Rangers, givin• Red Wing I

1 place in the circle tenanted hy

player, Ma

IJ.vear.nltl Howe tl !O&l of the seaso m in the 18th m

period· on a Delvecchio and

It was s club, ba

the fourth berth, was :

Richard of Mot reached 500 or

regular season Rocket finished

.... .... " ..

............

........ .... . ...

................ .... . ... .... . ...

F

Page 7: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · ' NEW SMALL PONTIAC ACADIAN Nova Motors Ltd. TH·E DAILY NE (;3 • 'tHE DAILY NEWS,

NFLD. THURSDAY ~lARCH 15, 1962

Hockey

ds Open Two Game Lead Big 4-2 Win Over Feild

midgets, I . and center (

the upper hand ; the giants last 1

the Gu~rds to : 4-2 l'iCI0r)' OI'Cr and a tll'o ga~e best of se~ en

Goard> ;park·plug •'I " ,.031! ~~d ;ct up a . ~qlard after allow·

Bil!ard, Pynn Star left early in the third after falllng to the ice with a twisted leg.

The Double Blues had a new face in their lineup in Donny Yetman, one of St. John's top performers, who had retired from the hockey scene at the end of last season.

Grab Senior Basketball (I

1

' I i

Brurns Sweden's . Goalie COLORADO SPnlNGS, Colo.­AP-Bostoro Bruins of the Na· tiona! Hockey League have placed Ler.narl Ho~~roth, sen· sational goalie of the Swedish national team on t:1cir ncgoti· ation list.

Holy Drop

Cross Win First>::

This was disclosed Wedne~­day by Lynn Patrick, general

Feildians Robin Short Scores 26

64-59 manager of the NHL team. Holy Cross led by the 26 1 1 outscored the Double Blues h:·

"This gives us the right to point scoring punch of their i two points 38·36. · negotiate with him to turn pro" playing coach Robin Short ! All but one C1·usader pla:.T; Patrick exr.lained long distance came up with their first vic· ! hit the scorcshcet. !'rank Butler from BostcJD, "He will come to tory in senior basketball last i hit for :;c·,cn. Ccc l'icr;on six our training camp this Septem· !night as they edged Feildians · and !-lou Jlralcy four. her. It. will be a terrific thing )64-59 at the Bishops gym. Fcilclians hac! ~!orns ~tarli1 if he can make it. All we need The win moved them into a : wil h scrcn, Dave \l'oolgar !ix is a good goalie and we dn second place tie with RC~!P,

1 Dou~ Yc'.m:.n fii·P. Hollie Spur

move up In a burry." each with one victory· and a rcll four. Max Burt and Pete The Bruins arc last in the loss. St. Pat's anrl St. Bon's Squires m.e.

National Hockey League race. arc tied for first place with I BOG SCORES Haggroth, 22, has turned in two victories each while United Holy Cross Jo'G FT PF Pts

· ''!ir>t prril>d gonl \'1\:iWI·•.·· ,',0r Nl ~i Fcildian

'·,n <nerd" Da1·e i .. ,_ ·t- • I

The GuDrds worked without captain Ray l\lurphy who was out of town on business and Ralph Skanes Gco([ Campbell and Bob Williams filled their places.

Gar Pyron was the best man on the ice for the Guards with his tricky passing and stick handling which resulted in two goals and an assist. Geoff Campbell ~nd Rollie Clarke al~o played we.!,

two >ensational performances AA and Feildians arc winless R, Short .. 12 2 <l 26· during the world amateur cham- in two starts. B. ~laundur ... 5 1 1 11 pionships here. He sparkled dur- Short ·.vho was kept to a limit B. Maloney . 5 0 5 10

.)7

'~Tl\ inri?.l • j ~, ! r

rn::r

lign

BEA >E LTD. t & &ond 51-

'·1:1•r. "nd anoth~r 1

.~10 Rill ~lartm'

;.,~r ,J;,>I I .' .~, and 1\oh Bad-

l .. •·

:!·; 1;1r rlhrr r;uanls l I•:G IIILLAUU ' vrn: ~qmrr~ anrll

\· pa,·-du·t for the · i! ·" · first game of the sc•·ies, put

the Gu~rcls out front before rprnrd 1hr game the pcl'iotl cntlcd as he bangc:;

.:crm~ dr11 t and . in Eddie Vatcher's rebound off · Gnlrrl! in their 1· the post (rom the door~tep.

, :nil fi0:1~ Squires The seron!l period belonged , ::rl nf rlrfrnceman tn the Feildians in territorial ·, : drirr And I play, but til C)' were unable to

.· , 1:rk intt> thr up~n beat Billai'!t on 12 shots, while '' , .. lard madr a des· the Guards counted twice on

: ... 10 me 11. just :;ix sl10ts.

break as he slid a perfect pass to Doh Dadcock who fired a heavy shot off Chapple', pad into the right corner for the fourth Guards goal.

In the final period the Feild· inns got one back off the stick of Lloyrl Cooke, but the goal came too late, 11 16.58 when Ralph R<>wsell put' a good pass on Cooke's stick and he gave Billard no play.

ral!Jrtl hat·k after Only nine seconds had elapsed Feildians not only lost the '" -~.inu:r> anri slow·l1 in the middle pcriorl when Gar game but the services of their :·e; rontrnl of the . Pynn took Jack Drover's pass starry captain Stan Breen, who ·I' ll23 Gar Pynn i and steppt•d around the lone received what is believed to be :.:;s. dcflrcting in I Fcildinn aefenccman to cut in a brok~n blood vessel when he

hart! shot. ChaP· I front and flip a backhnnder fell into the boards late In the the through Chapman's pads. seconrl fr~me.

Gar l')·nn was back with his j Gulrds also lost one of their · . .. p!,Jying his 1 third point on a two and one big player~ in Gar Pynn who

ing Swed~n's 2·1 upset of the in his first game against St. F. Butler ..... 3 1 1 7 U.S. nationals Saturday and Pat's sconng just 11 points C. Pierson .... 2 2 4 6 Wednesday night he was the big cut loose last night and with !tOBIN SHOUT B. Healey . . .. 2 0 2 4 reason his team knocked off de· some tricky moves under the. J. Lundrigan .. 0 0 0 0 fending champions Canada anrl Fciidians basket he led the at- 1 26 points was the best player Totals ... 29 6 17 64 virtually clinched the 1962 tack, 'lor Holy Cross as he set up l'eildians FG FT PF Ph

Bud Duffett was the best on the icc for the Doube Blues as he WOI'l:ed his heart out from the opening to the dying whistle. Doug House played steady on defence.

title. AI Haynes with a deadly one Short lor mnny of his points A. Haynes .. 9 1 1 19

Rangers Champs Referee~~pJ~~;;d Murphy .. On Bell ls~and GUARD~: Goal: Billard; de· I

fence: Jim Drover, Jack Drover I BELL ISLAND, ( StaiO-The Slaney, Clarke; forwards: Pynn, Rangers 'von the Bell Island B. Drover, Badcock, I. Camp. senior hockey championship bell, Butler, Wiseman, Vatcher, here on the Island last night Warr, Williams, G. Campbell. when they defeated St. Kc1•in's

FEILDIANS: Goal: Chapman; 1ll·7 to take the best of five defence: Martin, Henderson, series in three straight games. House, G. Brfeen; forwards: Graham Highmore was the Duffett, Squires, s. Breen, Yet· big gun for the Rangers as he man, Brocklehurst, . Rowsell, fired five goals, while play inc Carter, Batten, Cooke, Nose· coach John Kavanagh scored worthy. three. Graham Janes, two, Ed

arm set shot dumped 19 points and chipucd in with 11 him· lll. ~!arlin 3 1 !l 7 for Feildians while George self. Brian C.laloncy potted 10 G. Crewe . 7 1 !l 15 Crewe grabbed his share of rc· for the winners. D. Waolgar . 3 0 3 6 bounds under the Crusader The game was close all the D. Y~tman . 1 3 1 5 basket to dump 15 points for way with Holy Cross holding a It. Spurrcil .. 2 0 1 4 the Double Blues. slight lead and at the rnr! o£ the M. Burt 1 0 0 2 .

Barry Maund~r allhou~h first hal£ Icc! by one point P. Squire; 0 1 1 1 bcin~ overshadowed hy Short's 24-23. In tile sceonrl half they' Totab 26 7 13 59

Girls Basketball

United Upset Memorial ' .

-----:---------·-------------- Rees, 'Tom Myers, George Cobb,

Scores SOOth 11

1

, Leafs Defeat ~i:f;e:~~~:··n:a~y~~:ut::; 39-34 On Team Effort

Hilda Yetman Pots 22 scorer for St. Kevin's as he

, . netted a hat trick while .Jim Improving with every game i

R • h d B 44 I c d • 5 2 ~· Stone tallied twice. Bill Shep- United Collegiate pulled a • lc ar Y li.' ana lens • pard and Harry Stone had sin- major upset in the Girls High: gles. · School Basketball League yes· , The Ran~:crs held a ll-2 lead terday a ftcrnoon and ~poi led I

1 Hilda Yetman and Lind3 ,,.,,., I'''""'":r· . ' King took care of United scor

I' ing in the first quarter as the~ jumped to a 14·8 lead and il'

1 creased it to an eight point lea

Hi~ (;ordic Slll•:!i thr 51Hltil ~oal nf

!;: .\~lltLilo I liorkc,l' •·•••:,:.·•:e·:. ;a~l TH~ht a;:ainst

Geoffrion Gets 325th after the first period and in- Memorial University'.~ chance I

creased it to 7-3 in the second. o[ an undefeated ~ensnn when : In the third period they scored they took a 39·34 decision.

TOHO:'\TO (CPl - Toronto Maple Lcals, makin)l a frantic end or season run fo1' first place in the National Hockey League, W cdnesday night defeated the leading Montreal Canadiens 5·2

· ht ti d st K · • Not only rlid they throw a (Ole Poisonl Stewart of ~!mil· Clg mes an · evm s cog in .MUN winnin!( wheel,

I by half time with a 22-14 a• vantage.

In the opening minutes • the !hire! quarter a determ: ed 111UN team potted fo1•

R1~;Pn. ::i\'in~ the · . Rrd \\'in~ ri:;hl· 1;h in the elite .. ten1nteri hy only

pia) er. .\Iaurice

Howe turned of the ~cason in·

. l~e 18th minute period on a play

De:H:chio and War· ll was s"ored

.. club. battling lhe fourth and bmh. was short·

!.:.\ard of ~lontreal m:hed :\(10 or more

sca.oon play ;l(k!t lim~hcd with

··o "'' "I ""

Goals .... 7 .... 111 .... 12 .... :15

........ 4:1 .... 47

GOUDIE JIOWE

Assists Points Pen. 15 22 52 2ll 44 s:J •r w;) :n 57 3:! ()R fi!l 4:1 !Hi 74 ~9 86 7B

. , . "" ............ 49 46 Q5 57 . .. . . . . ...33

.... 29 ................. :38 .................... 44

·~ ................. 33 I .................... 32

................ 28 '~ .................. 23 . "" ............... 31

500

48 33 41 45 44 46 45 49 42

622

81 109 62 Gll 79 100 89 72 77 40 78 55 73 46 72 30 73 45

1122 1017

gers Edge • Ings 3-2

Penalty Shot Decider of the NHL to reach the 500 level when he scored late in the middle period. Only Maurice mocket> Richard or the Mont· real C a n ad i e n s hns scorl'd more. He has retired with 544.

Howe got his 31st of the sen­son the hard way, Red Wings were a man short when Gordie took a pass in centre ice and charged in, He was being rid· den Qff by New York play~r coach' · Doug Harvey when he flipped a 20-foot backhand shot through Harvey's legs and 'Into the 11oal.

The Madison . Square Garden crowd of 15,326 gave the 3S· year-old vetern a standing ova· tlon even though he had given Detroit a 2·1 lead. ·

Re!eree Eddie Powers ex· plained after ' the game that Bathgate was allowed to take the penalty s]Wt since he was the last man to handle the pur.k on the play. He retl'leved th~ puck after Bassen had knocked it away from Prentice,

real Maroons who end@d his four. . But Hild~ Yetman, Unit€cl's top caree1· \\'lth 32,. "Oals I Followmg !hr. Jl3me Arena

1 quick baskets to tie the sco

1 in a rousing, hard-hitting con· test that saw Montreal's Bernie Geoffrion become the fourth highest scorer In league history .

• " E r R 11 t scoring ace, took over from Toronto fell behind i-o 32 sec- manager '· ' · . usse pr~scn · Memorial'~ Marg Dawe a~ the

onds after the start when Gilles ed Graham H!gh~ore With • individual scoring leader as she · Tremblay took a pass from trophy for the highest scorer Bobby Rousseau, coasted in be· o.f the lea_gue and Fred Man.s- potted 22 points. hind Toronto defenceman· Carl field received the best goahe Jllarg lead Hilrla by five Brewer and rifled the puck past trophy, Both players perform· points 89·84 when the gamu Don Simmons subbing in !he ed for the champion Rangers. started, but was held to ten

22 all, but United soon regai • ed their scoring eye anrl he l' their seven point lead by three quarer time. The final q1i~•; ter saw )!cmori3l ou:smre ullli

ed 7·6.

Leafs, who have only five more games to play before clos· ing out the , regular 70-game schedule, drew to within five points of Canadlens who are shooting for their fifth con· secutlve league championship. Canadiens have six more games on their schedule.

A st:mding-room-only crowd

Leaf goal for injured Johnny Minor hockey night will be points by a hard working Unit· Bower held on the Island on Tuesday ed guards trio and fell seven

That advantage lasted only March 27, when the champion· points behind. two minutes and 27 seconds. ship games of the Pee We.e, The win by United Collegiate Bobby Pulford or Leafs was sit- Bantam and Midget Leagues bo?sted them to within_ one ting out an elbowing penalty wlll be played. Lou Rose of the pomt of second place Bishops when teammate Dave Keon beat Pee W-.e Hockey League execU·) C_ollege who trait the. Univer·

(Box Scores) United: Hi l'T

;;f.,' I i''!!') l:i "; \)i'j;;;;(r;,]\:~ I Yetman . 11 o · King . .... .. .. 5 1 ·Davis ............ 3 0 Adams ........ 0 0

lllLDA YET~lAN Drodge ........ 0 0 Jensen ........ 0 0

Totols 10 1 Geoffrion in a race for the puck live has received new uniforms s1ty squad by two ·pomts, but wi?ncrs as she dropped 11 at the Montreal blue line and for all Pe Wees. United must depend on an up· pomts down the shutc. wh1le whipped a sizzler behind J)c· The Pee Wees are hoping to set by either Prince of Wales! Darb Davis collected the re· ~lemorial: ques Plante as he crossed the line up exhibition game~ over or Holy Heart in Memorial's I maining six. Tuff .. . . .. 6 1 Canadien goal mouth. in st. .John's at the Prince final two outings for a chance 1 Joan Tuff was the top scorer ~larshal! ...... 4 Defe~ceman Bobby Baun of Wales Arena in prepar- at the silverware. 1 Co~ Memorial gathering 13 Dawe.... . ... 4

made It 2·1 for Leafs at the 12· ation for the coming tourna-I Lind• King, United sharpe· pomts. ten m the seconrl half, Press ........... 0 minute m~rk _and. Geoffrion ment during the ·Easter holi- shooting captain, hacked Hilda : while Lin;Ja ;llarshall netted 11 i Duley 0 came lip Wllh b1s b1g one-<~nd days. in the scorin~ t•olumn for I he; and ~Jar~ Dawe len. Totals 14 the last of the evening for Can· ,..._._.;___ -- ···- -- - -- -------·· -------

s 2 0 0 6

PF Pi ... 0 22 0 11 0 I)

4 0 4 0 J 0

11 39

1 13 1 11 . 3 10. 4 0· .· 2 0

11 :14 ---J.'

' '

of 13,840 saw one o£ the best games of the season at Maple Leaf Gardens and hardly :my one in the building realized w,hy the ~~ • year • old Geoffrion sc1·ambled into the Tnronlo net after ~corin!l ~ second-period ~oal that made it 2·2. ln ihe third pel'iod, Leaf~' Bohhy Pul· ford ducked into the Montreal net~ to retriel't, the puck Alter srorin~: hi~ lOOih ~:o~l In his ~ixth bil; iea~ue !ea~on.

adiens-al ~:22 of the second • ' .. t ' •

Bul the hig one belon;ed '" Gco!frion-hi~ ~~:;th in ~ 12-~ea-5on hiJ: leaJ;ue clltcer that put him behind ~ueh greAt! as the retired Maurice Richard with ii44, Indestructible Gordie Howe nf Detroit Red Winlls with 500 and retired Ted Lindsay, former Red Wing and Chicago Black Hawk left-winger, with 365.

21ST OF SEASON The Boomer's goal-his !1st

of this season-broke a tie for third place with the late Nels

Ladies Curling

pel'iorl. · Bobby N~vin. EddiP Lilz~n·

ber~er llnrl Pullord then took Ol'er for Toronto .

Nevin !cor!d 8t ~:~6 of the middle !ession on A oas5 from Litzenberg~r. Pulford- got hio lOOth at 4:30 of the third period on p8 ues from Litzenberger and Nevin and six-foot-three· Litzenberger tot his lAth of the season 11t 10:39 with Montre1l defenceman Lou Fnntinato in the penalty box for high-sth;k· lng, Nevin and Pullord got the assists on this orie .

Plante, with a 15·go~l bulge In the Vezina trophy race, made 32 saves. Simmons got in front of 34.

PeeWee Hockey TO-DAY'S GAMES In the Jirst game Sterlings

Natives vs All·Comers lead by the two goal perform· -A.M.- ance of Glen Duffett nosed out

Natives E. Reid M. Campbell P. Harvey A. Jeans

A. Allan L. Thi~tle P. Horwood E. May

All-Comers the Hurricanes 2·1. Gi!rard E. Goldstein Gibbons was the scorer for the

S. Baird losers. L. Crane In the second game Victory

J. Blair . on goals by Bob Warr and Ray ' French came out on the top

F. Pound side of a 2·1 game with Nelson. S. Doyle l\like Stoylc~ picked up the

A. Kirby Nelson marker. E. Halley In the third game Magnifi·

-P.M.-cent dumped York 4·1. Jim Cahill, Danny Bragg and a pair by Sandy Gibbons was the scoring order for the champs, while Del Kenny counted for the lone York q~ark~r.

Native~ K. Cheivers M. Dunne A. Boone F. Moore

All-Comers T. Rnckwel\ S. Stoneman

J. B'Field Moore B. Nugent In Bantam Hockey the Vik­

ings in a fast skatinl: game The following play in an or· dumped the winless Caribous to

dlnary bonsplel:- · the tune o£ 7·2. Noel Dinn

L. Thistle D. Clouston P. Bennett J. Feaver

S. Hiscock G. Parsons A. Hopkins M. White

C. Pratt M. Lush 0. Cornick N. Mainwaring

G. Hood D. Wills

J. Martin M. Hogg

W. McNamara o. Ayre

D. Templeton L. Shears

K. Hibbs M. Cox

I, Bartlett J. Herrick

again the big gun !or Vikings, picked up three of the seve11. markers, while Jim· Vavasour, Billy Lowe, Don Churchill and Blll Barron shared the other four markers. Mike Joy drew a pair of assisll and Wayne Jewers a Bln11le. Scoring for the Caribous was Cluny Ride· out and Bom Smythe.

The· following is the sched­ule for remainder of week:-To·Day:- ·

P.M.

the beer that's everywhere!

FREE HOME DELIVERY

ST. JOHN'S: PkoDt I. 11(5, i-1351; 1·,&14 GANnOB: 1;:, J, Orlflla Ll4., l·t311 GRAND FALLS: Jloo4 Bo'"rll" Ll4.,

Pbone ~141 JIELL ISLAND: Tom Murph7, Phone

2118 THE 11ENNE'IT ni\EWING CO., LTD,

.10 ~OF COURSE!

J'tJ ~;pet! Jt4 fatUI~!

' '

. ' . ' .

; :: ' . ''

' '' :

B a t h g a t e and Laforge M. Andersen matched first period goals tie· T. Shea

J. Stenta!ord H. Fraser M. Elton A. Long

4.15--Gunners VB Infantry 4.115-Slgnallers vs Black Watch 5.30-Vanguard vs Hood 8.10-Nelson vs tlriton 6.30-Bantani All·Stars

. :. I

. :· ... I fore Howe &ave Detroit Its abort P. Burns lived lead. •• N. Pumphrey practice

r.

I

.,

..

Page 8: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · ' NEW SMALL PONTIAC ACADIAN Nova Motors Ltd. TH·E DAILY NE (;3 • 'tHE DAILY NEWS,

' '

I . '.

" I.

I'

I I

'I

'

I·'

.I

.I

'I·

I! :i

·'

''

''

I'

. :I I ~

'I

''

'. "

! :

'I :I ; I

I ,,

'' , I

! I ,: 'I . I

,, 'I

1,. !: i

't! .· It. 1 .

'I '

,. ' I '

:. I I ~ 1

, ~ . . , ·' I I . ,

:• I ~ i ' I

I ' , . lj • •

. ~ : • : I : I ' t , 1: .' I' ' I I . : 1: 'i I I l . i ~ ! ,I . II j I · ·, !, , I

·' l ~II: II t :;· 'I' ! r. • .. ,, . I I ,I;. II

,, • : ·i : i. . j t\ ,' ~ , . I' . :~ i 1: ,., •. !:l . ' '· ..

·,, ,i·'. :r ·u I' i~ Y :.,·' ijll·j . : ~~ ·. I: . , . 'II'; :I' • ,; ' l ,: :: . ~ I; ' : I ~ I .

, i; 1 1: ~: · 1 ,''' ·:, '•:• l> '.' I;,

I '~

TilE DAILY NEWS, ST. NFLD. THURSDAY, \

1 '1utnal ,hccnmulating :tiS 4.10 ! :\tunal tncomP UiR 6.~1 : "'I :\merican o! 11nada 1 U15 l:!.fl!l 1 ltadi!:~on ~.!15 .U.i . ·:~The· Daily News

. . OUR BOARDING HOUSE With MAJOR HOOPLE

Montreal

;,·. \".,

Toronto ·· ' '

~JONTRJ·:AJ, CJ.O:;ING STOCKS B,- The Canadian rrr:sa

Asbesto~ :15 Fras~r :!ti 1.f Rnnk ~tnn1 70'.2 Hud Bav Min 571·a Bank 1'\S 78'> lnt Nick ~o Bnque PC :il tnt Pup fl~IL ' l8 Mass.Jo'er H1·azil !15 Nori\nda~

Chc!!ll•r 5300 29 :.!~ 29 + :1 lleath 3000 91':1 9!;, 9~i C Cement rr :t!J:>"' Pr!ce

3~P,..

13b I fit) It

9

I Crnt rorc 1000 A 8 I Headwa)' 4500' 35~'.1 JS 33 -J Cleveland 71"1 Pautln~h

, Chih·Kay llGn 16 16 16 lll;h.B•H 8(1(1 210 236 210 C Imp Bk C 68!> Que Pow 'Chlb M 100A sn M) 50 -2 UolllnR'Cr 630 $2:!~· 21~ 221.~ + :\J Cdn ihcw 121.'• RIJ)'III nank. X:i~M

Chhuo 46i00 BO 74 75 -! llud Bay 210 5:)7'• :m• !il~~ ,_ ~~ t.:rln Celan 35\4 Shnwln 23~~ Chrnn 110 1\0 410 440 -s llydra F.x l688 43 45 43 C lnt Power 13 Steel illh Coch Will 330 li5 510 5ll -3 lnsplraln ~8000 .11 42 17 1 3',2 C lnt Pwr pr 41 Tr an PL ::3

1o

·ro:~O!I.:TO (:UhUXG ~lUCKS Coin {.,akc 1000 l6 36 36 -1 Jso 7100 98 95 96 -1 CPR '26 Walker· 5!l~i 1\y The canadian l'rru Cmnh ~\ct 966 25 5 :!~ J WAilt 32200 J.\H. 3C) 33 -1'.~ Sent:rams 47'.7 CAf'AlliAN

Toronto ~:nr' I~Hhnn;r-;\lllrrh It ton\agas 500 83 83 63 Jay~ fo~~~;p1 1000 1~~ 12:h 1:!1.'1: .. \'J D DridJ:e :!2~~ ~On!. Pap -l-'2~" Conwl(':e tabulation of Wedncsd.1y C Rrltek t100 4li 4\-:z ·Hil + \2 Jnn1mlth 70:l00 :.!2 20 :!0 u.h.t

1 .. ~· :l~'.a Jooa·d 1:\0

nr~~nt J,tili ti.l!J Sa...e and tnn:o.t of Cnd;tda 6.:17 ti.% Suvervised .\mer. 8.':i:i a:;:> Super\'lsel.l Exec :15 41.93 SUI,CI'Visecl Exec .i6 iO. H SUllCI'\'Ised Exec .l7 fUI7 Supcrvl.!icd, Exec 58 7.27 7.34 Supcrdsed Growth 2. tR 2.2!l

. New York . :~ > • ·'' •'

:-1611' RORK CLOSING STOt:KS 87 The A!!!llltlaiP.d Prr!!S

Rr.lh Slt:t!l ~2~·4. Kennrcntt an~ Bor~: Warner 15!H :"t1onty W 3.1"• C and 0 .36'• NY Crnt J71-Cuns Edison 8014. Radio Corp liJ~2 1~1 Autu El ~l9~~~o Std Oil NJ .iH4 c;cn Elec 77~;.. Uld Alrcnft ~6~.~ Goodvear .fJ3 i- Vanadium :!4 ~~:-., marktd ~- :-Odd lu, xd--~x·<ill'l·l C calllnon 750 10 10 10 Kerr Add ~m 910 93~ 930 -15 I ··--- ---

ft'nd, xr-Ex·rl~hta, :\\\'-~Ux·warraUt!S. C Ditco\' 1100 H13 137 160 -4 Kllembe 500 215 27:i :!7l 1l )

Mutual Funds ' (it Nor Ry 4P.& Wstngse :li¥,

•to•t

fl:et. C~ill\l!e is lrotu rrt'\'IOUs board·lot c ll:tlll 16100 ·16 .tj 45h5+ 1.~ Lab Min 7.3.5 ,$2P~ :!i~· 2i'" : Jialln' '"!e. 1 c ~larcu• J.IGO 98 98 98 J.ake Lin~ ~non · 8 8 R 1'

'1:•1 C ~logul S6 91 99 !M -l J, Osu 70M uv, 13\'• 13'> · Sl\lr" ll!;h l,m\ l'lo~C! Ch'•r C Uorri'ion ~3;i00 70 fi! 10 + 1 t. Shore 300 :!58 2£11 ~88 --2

~UXE~ C ~lllt~bcr SOO ~lO :!06 206 Leitch 1700 165 162 tE5 't I

~droco.tlt' :J.l!l ti{lll j!}.i 1100 Con ~ll'hol :>OO ~ !1 ~ + t.t l.Cl\lll<hn 100(1 4 ~·~ :~•.';! :'llt:Tl',\L FlJ~US Mba 1·:'1'1 :!.·~~Ill ' 1 ' c !";urtldd :u:m '!I :H 21 -2 l.a!'a!o 15151) 19.; tS8 191\ ~ 2 By The Canadian Pres~

' .

lnt T T 51~8

Torgnto &<'t~d trntal ~l(lltJ ;_I~ '1':~ a .. ~~ Cfln 1\:e;::u... 300 12 12 12 Lcncourt $6500 1_., · 13 · lS!:i I'

Akaltc:1o ti•Jfl lfl 1n 1ft f:! ton' uu(! t0f10 35 :1.\ 3:\ -2 t.floll\'ict 1000 i 7· 7 -J ,f,ln "om ._,n11d .-\~k t\nlal n~tr ~li[J(J IR li 17 -1 l. flNI Pop tiM 7 j 7 :'\IIIC!!.A 1123 Jlj .11.5 lll All "- ~.- " !U.:fi i\Uilt "n I 1:1.1 H ,,'l ·11 Con•vc~t r.l)() 6:10 t;jO f,:\(1 Mal'fir Z.:iOO 41;, 4': ~I".. ~ ~".I All l'dn Uiv :1.·~9 10.:11 ~10:-iT A(:TI\'1-: TI;RO~TO ~TOCK!it A;n;lo llur 10!1 ~~,·1 fi.V1 !(,0 C.:uu':<' i~(l(1 11 ~;:; ·11 -2 ~11\dscn 40fl· ~17 21."1 2U 3 Brllubrnn Jl.7:i 3ti.6.'i JSUl'STnt,\1.~ An~: ltutl)'n .iOit 111J Ill:· :1':--'~jcmnr:~ 11M ~1~l" 19'a tftl~-'4 ~ta~::net uoo ~ ,\ 5 .. : 2 Canadian lnastmrnt JO.i2 tl.'i.i I ~tR PR 1:!:i21 ~20 1971. 2n ~moil ti.i:~O It JOll 11 C:rOWilat {101) i'"J i''.l 712- H:! 'fantR:"l U 15000 ., ~ 4 + '~ Cana!Und · 4:i.::!R H,;,:J Ctln B•·ew 9.i1t. St2:s~ 12'~ 121, i\rl'O'tl \q.~ !11!1:1 ,, II 1 ... ·~ (\l.~ro ~~·11 ' .. ;\ ~[aralgo .11)00 9 ~ 9 ~ham{lion :\tutual 6.31 6,9:1 Oom Tar 8!11!1 ~21~11 zn:. 211~ J.- Ia /al'C:\ t:IJn 1111 10!1 110 ··1 D::\erin( Hl.iOO 15 10 IJ + 3 :\[Al'fC1n J.iOIJ 11 101; 11 orporatc ln\'l'!llnr~ 10.4.1 ll.-\1 nu~:;rll fiO.iO SiJIH J:l J:V .. -~ .1 .. o\rjon ~;.en tu 10 10· ll'.\rr~on lO~'l :o 20 :zo llarltlm~ SO:iO n 7:1

2 77 +1 1 E~t:opean nnwoth 7.·19 A.21 C Husky j9.30 M'" 6'2 6~'1! -1. ~~

A .\tca•l Rw jl~l~ 22 :!I :':2 • 1 \l(' fOUl' JJ~O 7 I 7 ~lntn:ch 111'100 R 8 B 1 I"·. ·'""111 Shat·f'~ ::l • .i9 a.9t on.s AU C. c:.,,, :100 101 lt:! Jll~ .• 1 D:-er 11orn ~~::ol 22 1~'2 :!Ill +:1 MaUgml 7.50 $11'.4 1114 11'~- Dominion Equity lA.ti:i :~uu 1 Wa~·nf! t7iO~u t;.! 31\ 40 +2 AUin·RUI Jl.i~;l 7 , , ll'Ellona .;:rm 18 16 17 ~~ 2 ~la\'brun 1000 1J 11 11 "": ~ .... c tl... 17.91 l:t.•-:- Dacring ~8:500 l!i 10 1.1 ~.1 .\unor .,;)r) :llit) :l~·:l :1Jil I IJ~lhl r:ac 1VllU ·49 ~i 49 -1-ll:; McKen 2l00 161:2 Hi lfi - '~ Hrwt 011 an(1 Gal! 4.79 j24 Plac~ 42!J.i[) 73 67 68 -2 Ranl~~nn 4~~1 ~' ..,,~. ··1 ~ 1 1 Oelnl\t! JGIO -'3 4R 4~ ~lcWMt "3100 46 54 st. · Fonds Collcftll A lUi Yan Can 19000 7'• i iii .. t.~ Barn I :~0 1:1.1 ]'J·j. i'1J n:c:m:;n 300 Jij 37~ 375 ~tentor l'ORiOl 63 'on 61 -'. l·'onds Colleclif n j,jl 5 .. ;ti Tid«l lfU50 1:\i IJO 130 -3 larr Expl :13JJ ~.; :!.i ~ti Oamt' ,i;!j 52'6 ~J~., 2.:.~, _ l't Merrill 2930 7~ 7!l 7~ +3 Fonds Culleftif C fi.~9 :'\U~E~ ll•$e "Ictal 3~Cil a jl ~ ~~ ~ - 1:. llon:ilda · jJjOO 11 9 10 + 1 M!drJm · 3000 34 33 ~ 1 .+.1 ~roup Jnc. . .. :us J2j2jO 2th J! 23 .l 2V~ Ba,.hu JU:i!)'J 1:! 1U 1~ ~ 21. llu·;illt llllOO tot~ 10 10 - 1,2 :Min Corp 23j SlHI H'l 141' ... t· Uromh Oi and Gas 9.03 lOSiOO fiJ tiO 6:l -t 1 lea.\' Lod 7f0•1 .:;1~ ~1;! 31 2 • E Atnllhl sco st 01 ~~~ ~v~ )tln·Ore 9571 5!'.:1 ~ .~·· .:_ !Z Investor~ Gruwth 7.27 106900 l:rl 117 1:11 :13 !elhlm -t3fll :!..\1 ~30 :!:Jl -2 Ea::;t \1iJI 1u0 2111 ~to ::!10 ~toneta ~00 · T.! 7t 72 lnve!tor~ Mutual 13.2~ 103542 :;o ~91~ jQ

Be'<•ln 1''0 0 10 !•.1 :0 Eu· t Suit 100 171 174 174 +1 Mufli.~l 16300 JB 37 38 +I ----------------:__ Blbl.i :.!1..'~!:1 s a a Ehl.!t' uoo 1cn 1.17 13i -2 Murray ~~ tosrco 1~:.! 117 IJt ., 1:1 Bl:.kup :;!·::on ~:! ~I :!ll'l -11-_. f'ulcun USO $til 60~2 fiOI,-3- :14 :\'ama Cr 1000 12 12 12 +2. Dlal·~; lla~· h-1~.1!1 171~ l:!tl 1.\ -t2t;: F'wc.t T .530\1 U l-l U -1 ~at Expt .30JO 9~~ St.", IH~ + 1,~ Bouz:~:l j:l(:O ,ill :i~l ~\l -1 Fatima 7500 2·1:1,~ 2J. 21\~ + 1~~ ~eaton ~000 6h 6V.a 6Y~- ~2 Bralorne J(HI tliO Gti:l 6i0 + 10 Francoeur cooo 10 !11.:~ tH~ New Alger 2000 5 ~~J ·WJ Uuff .\nk !>!,• 3GJ ~91 300 , 11 Fro~ishcr uoo 14 1l IJ New Alh 201)0 29 28 ~8 + '> Buff RL I~Otl:l :; _.,, 41;~- 1-.: Gl'l·o ~tlnps 100.5 $28~it ~~:t;, 28!1 + t4 New Bid 1BjOO 13 1~1..2 13 - t".!

Ca1nm~t li:.OO 10 10 Ill Genl!!< ~000 13~'2 1:1 13 - h New Cal 1000 23 ~3 23 + 11~ Camp Ch ha .1::-ll C2:\ 52!' f::ll ·-.5 G:at ~tm:ct 18j'l 88 SS 88 + 2 N Goldnle llOrt C ~ L Cam!l RL \O;) ~HI~ H1~ Ul~ ·- It Gilnt \'K 615 970 9;,0 9;'0 +:!t) s~~· 1ID5(.'0 -4600 8R 86 8j c Tun;: 1900 ~'~ 21:, :!~9 +6 I GF ~lining 38CO :!0 19\~ 191,- ~·J N KeiOI'e tO.,lOO 8 ';t.-'2: n:- 1.-2 C l\J~:))'Ia ~CHI i P:; 7 Grandrny 1000 Ifill 16\i 16"'- ~ Ncwlund 13 .. 00 20 19 20 -1 C O.vnn if!H\ 1119 9~ ~:; -10 Grnnrluc 600 31~ 310 310 N Man 5000 tO JR~~ 40 +1 C ~Jalart :,·ou "1 Jl 31 Gron~•c rl• 4000 17 IS 17 -1 N Mylama 11600 36'2 3~ 35 + 'I C ~ lnra 9MO At:.: R lll-1 t- 12 Gulch 2(100 7 7 7 _ y., Sew nor lOOO 5 5 5 + 1 Cdn ~W llOWl 11•·~ t:l 1~~~ t- 12 GnU 1.1'/\d 4001.1 12 11~'l 12 + 1 Nickel MS 5149 ~3 47 53 + 1 C Slllra 20J 1111 lfll 1(11 Gunnar 1169 9Z5 900 925 + lS Nlp!uinll[ 300 145 U~ US CanErin • 'fi5'l :J 23 23 + 1 Gwilllm 4000 6 6 6 !\'or·Acme 8500 2~ 22 ::!4 -1 C>ytoin 10"0 7 ; 7 liARD Hock 1000 12 a 12 + 11 Normrlal 43l 295 202 2!!0 -l Cas~1.1r· !l::!JO Sll·,~ II\-: 1t:'i. HM·:"I-tln 13GOO 11 91-1 lf1~ + 11•., Sorpnx 19000 20 IB'.~ 19~"' + 1.-'l Ccn: !'at 1,00 17:. J;J 173 11 of l,akrs :1801\0 20 !A 19\2 + m !'! Coldolrm J07l 72 71 72 +I -----·-- ···--- --·--·· ----------- --·------- North~te 103258 610 58() 595 +15

N Goldert 1&00 21 21 21 - •; N Rank mo 52 ~ 511 -2 • Norvnlle 2000 911, 9'-" 91/, r.;udul 1:100 IJ"• JJI,> 1311 Oka Rare 1000 I I t -t O'Ltnry 1~500 17':\ 16'1 17 Op•mlfkl 1713 585 l7l S7l Orchan ~ 226 222 2:12

, Orm•br 11100 Jl ,10 :10 I O•Jokn lliZ!l. 69 63 61 +1

1 'DON'T Ll KE: \0 BAI<GE IN ON You FOLKS LIKE- "(1-\IS, f,\1~5. HOOPLe::, To-lE-MA:JOR INSIST51'i-IAI 1:

/-1ERE AND !-liS

I rar~m"q 18omi · R','i A 1 Patino M 500 !60 Bll Ill -1!

I PAx lnt tn8i5 3::1 Jl 31'.~ -1• i P•ymaot JOSn 11 IJ'I H + ,, Pee Expl 1000 12 12 12 l'Hch·Ore 22000 fil.J .i'l.t ~~~ +1'.: and NOW •

IS the time to visit us becaus TO-MORROW

.tl{)! THt CII!Sr Of THl WAVE j/ ~,H[[VJ~ PHESIEY- )8uJE . i HA{Yifttl! 'DliiWAJJII · I TECHNICOIOR' .~

See iEL VIS sing and dance 1HE ROCK·A·HULA TWIST!

Also-"UP-TO-THE-~IINUTE NEWS" TIMES OF SHOW~

,: ~VENING SHOWS: 7 O'CLOCK- 9.00 f ~lA TINEE: 2 P.M.

1.

,. '

LAST TIMES TOD·AY 11THUNDER OF DRUMS"

NEWFOUNDLAND'S FRIENDLY THE~TRE \

TO-DAY Is she a sinner ••• or a

realist In love?

llarrlnr Patrick O'Neal • Mcsens Wieth E•1a Oahlbeck • Mai·Brltt Nilsson

----- .. IUWI•Pij lllftT!CI!r,3.Ufl$r$ ..;..

Special Added Attraction •

TIMES OF

The Pidure Thai Gnk To The Bottom Of Things!

~HOWS

EVENING:-"A MATTER. OF MORALS"-6.30- 9;20.

"J\IARY HAD A LITTLE"- 8 O'CLOCK. MATINEE:-1.30

' '

NEXT . ATTRACTION FREDRiC MARCH BEN GAZZARA DICK CLARK.- EDDIE ALBERTin "THE YOUNG D 0 C T .0 R S" ;_ ROMANCE -SUSPENSE - EXCITEMENT.

Plnrer 2~0 S:!~•'1 2R'-• 2~~-- 1• row Rmt 500 a; . 37 :t7. -1 Prt-ston 235 l!t.\ 5R~ 58~ rros Air 1300 74 73 71 PurdPX HOOO tlil.1 :;1,; li -+ tt 1 Que Chib 14000 27 21 %7 " J Que Lah 22300 1 fil:-2 Iii. -I - 1 i Q ~Ictal mo 100 ~7 100 + 2 BaJian 11900 57 54 57 +1 Rayrock ~000 84 BJ 83 R .. lm 17210 10 9\~ 91'>- ~i I Rcxspar 7000 II 10 II Rio Al~nm 1224 1160 955 t6n Rio Rup 2~00 :i'h. 5''2• 31,.; .f. !_2 / Rlx Athah 360011 58 49 SO tJ Rockwln 2300 19 1! 19 1 Ryonor 1500 91t1 9H 9\i + ~l , San Ant BOll IAl 182 184 -l 1 Satelllto f!OO 24'.'> %3 ~1 -1 h ' Sheep Cr 9{)0 110 m 110 +2 I'

Sigma 300 510 &10 310 -10 Sllvma~ 12312 22 21\', :n 511 Miller 4040 J7 37 37 - liz SU Sland 1000 26 26 26 -1 Stanrck 60S 19l 111.'1 19& t 13 Steep R 6282 725 705 715 t 10 Sturgeon 87511 2! 21 2~ Sud Coni 95110 81> 7 7 -t Sunburat 85110 18 17 17\1- " Teck·ll t&OO 158 m !55 -1 'l'ema; 6110 100 100 100 + 1 Ttrrttory 25110 14 Ill> 131'. - \I Thom L 35110 . 9l 92 9l + ~ TombUl 56:1.10 l:M 115 121 -7 Torbrll 100 Jl\0 31\1 Jl\1 - l'o Tormont !03542 32 49"" 50 + l> Towas 2()00 9\1 9\1 9\1 - •.> Trans Rtl 5110 11 11 II -1 Trlbag 30011 60 58 lB • Trln Chlb 700 151'1 1511 15'.'> Ult·Shaw %U7lll 21 17'.> 21 +3 Un Keno 1149 83l 82l BJ! + 10 Un Fort 265511 20 18 18 -2 Upp Can 6300 163 ISO 160 -2 Ventures 1110 16011 SOh 6Wo- Iii Vespar l!OO 15\'.t ll'h ISV. Waite Am z117 B:tl 8~5 8:1-, Worntr 11000 H 13 131'1 - \0 1

W surf 1 2!00 18 17 18 - "•

I 1\'IIL,.Y 3Zl2,i41 :!ii\1 19 1'1 U'h 1\'r Hau R50 1tll 100 1011 \'aio J.rod ~lllO I" I~ 10

I \'k Rear ~!M 1"1 9! 11 : \'onnt HG ~111\11 1~1, l5'1 1:;'1 - t, · I \'uk•n• :!IJI! ! 4 I - "'l 1

1 1.f'nml\e ~~on ~1~1 :M ~ - l.li

rnrt-w Malar z~ I I I I Jiulolo 111111 m !I~ aJn Gasp~ C~p Dt't $Zll.t 1P, :!4~~ .._ ~~, \'ukon Con !0~ 19 ~~ 49 +l I

01M A!' Con! \100 !II ~ 511 -.I

' Am Ledno !JOII T 61~ All• - V. I Anchnr 21tl0 7 7 7

1

BaUey ! A :ZZI '30 '1~ ~20 1

BaU Mft pr :75 S2S'1 25!4 25l1 + ~-~ Danlf 110 HJ 10 1<3 -1 Data ISOO 8\'s R 8 1 ~ + ~~ Bralsa !100, !I; 5.1 AA __. Calalla !GOO :!5 23 ~ Cal· Ed 1d · Z10 $26~ 2&1/• :!iii< - a< C&lvert 10011 3ll 21 30 !1.2 Camerlna 430 240 !.40 240 + 5 C Oll Ldl lOOO ll3 1\3 1\3 -2 CS Pete !8511 385 375 385 + S C hlelln 800 9J 93 93 -! c Dell 700 160 4.10 4lo Cdn J)eY 1900 IDS 400 400 c Ex Gao 3000 164 • 161 tel +1 c Hlih r 2()00 21 21 21 C HomeJtd 362 101 !Ol 101 __. Cent Del 3762 770 760 760 Charter on BOO ·140 137 140 ' C ·L I Pete 2136 $27\l 27 27 -1 C Mlo ·Mao 1800 425 410 425 -! C Wut P 100 '190 190 190 Dome Polo 1300 SU% 12'4 12~ DU\'OX 57110 41!. 4 41'1 + 11 Dynamle 12500 4ll'l 40 4t + t· rar1• IJQIJ 330 32s :12.1 -15 Glaeler 4000 24 21 2f - \l Gr Plalnl 400 114'4 14\i WA Homo A 2065 SHU. 11% 14 - Iii Homo II B7& $11'/o 14 a - 'A H B on o eu $19 19 !9 Lon« • Ponnt 2500 33 32 32 Marigold 1300. 11 · 10\l 11 Medal 5900 271 2!16 260 -11 Mldcon 1000 :!6 26 2S MUI Citr 1600 m; 15 161,; t1'h Nat ,Pelo 4!00 3!5 3411 350 N Dll'i"" 4000 10'h 10 tn NC 0111 · 7.40 170 17ft 17ft NC!l wlo 1211 53 . . M :tl

NCCl rr '·'" .$27'1 27'i 2"' Okalta IMII II 11. ll + l<j I'•• l'•t. 122•. $11!> w• w,0- ;, l'amoll 5!011 44 42 41 l'ermn I!M 32~~ :12 32 + lit reruv otl ~n, 137 1:1ri 1:'17 -s l'etrol 12tll 511 • !! ~ l'illlllr• 723n 211> 22 22 - v. !'laeo 4ztSO 7:1 lo7 fiJI -1 Ponder 11'100 . 1{2.' R1 52 -1 Provo· .Gil 4100 ~M 2nl 205 -2 Quonto , 21!5 !~ 15 I! Rans'er · 2000 Ill I!Z ISS +S Sareee 1000 110 110 110 +I Socur Fno 39lD 6%l 610 620 +211 South . U 11700 17\l 16~ 17\lo Spooner . 4030 13~ 13 n - ~ Tidal · 18150 137 1!0 I!O -5 Triad Oll 20!0 IT! 1&5 16l -11 U Canso vi R2l 1611 \58. 1!0 Un ons · moo m Jlo 152 -1 Un jleef P 1750 2~· 25 qll +2 Union Oil 700 ,JJI% lll'o 'II Wa),. · 177020 42 38 4o +2 Wabumo 1700 70 Gil . fill · -2 l~st•tes JO!J. 7~ 1M 7115 +65

~In~{:,~~~· m~ 1~~ ~~; .'1: ,· _H Yan Coft 1!1000 71'1 7 -7'h + 'h

curb Dalhousla

.' ·, Mont NS C ll\lp Bk Royal Tor·Dont .

Anrlo Nnd Do> co Inland lnv Syn lftV Syn A ~!edmon Wootan II

I 011!' 22 !2 22 BANK~ ,

970 S71l-1\ 69'4 7MO Hi &ll sm> 11 7R•> + ~

c 1121 mv. 67!1> 61!\1 + v. c~ SM. R3'< B4 + 52 S66'.o ~61 > 66'h

lNDSTRIALS •100 $9~ Mio Mio

2011 Ill'" ll)o m•-% 200 Ill> Sl• . l ... t \0

t! 167 !7 S1 !!0 $GMt 84\', · ~5'4 +IV. uoo m 13 13 . . 950 121\0 21\4 3l\l + ~ '

Tol11 oale10 3,'113.000.

. (Stock Market report con·

tinued on page 12),

GOOD/YEAR TRUCK TIRE

HAVE NEVER BEEN

This is not . just another Sale, we repeat, not just another GOODYEAR TRUCK TIRES HAVE BEEN REDUCED BY THE FACTURER ••• We pass the SAVINGS ON TO YOU.

PLY TYPE I PRICE NEW PRICE

$ 20·88 SIZE

600 X 16

II

,

650 X 16 . , II

- --·~

700 ~ 17 II

750 X 16

" 750 X 17

" 750 X 20 .

II

II

-825 X 20

II

II

II

900 X 20

I

I I I

i .,

Call us NOW-arrange to have

your new GOODYEAR truck

tires installed by our fast and

' efficient Installation Dept.

MORE TONS ARE

HAULED ON

GOODYEAR TIRES

THAN ON ANY OTHER KIND

6

II

II

i 6 I

' i

fl

II 4

-8

It

8

II

8

" 10 II

12 ··~··--

10 ,

H , 12

12 (These new

Studd-ed Sure Grip

Rib Hi-Miler

Rib Hi-Miler (Nylon) -------~-- ·-

Studded Sure Grip

Rib Hi Miler

Rib Hi-Miler (Nylon) ---·---·

Studded Sure Grip

Rib Hi-Miler

Studded Sure Grip

Rib Hi-Miler

Studded Sure G_rip

. Rib Hi-Miler

Rib Hi-Miler

Road Lug

Hard Rock lug

···-·-- --··- -- ----Rib Hi-Miler

Super Road Lug

Rib Hi-Miler (Nylon)

Hard .Rock lug (Nylon)

Traction Hi-Miler

I

I ' ' I

I

OLD

$ 34.60

32.90

36.20 . --·-

19·84 21·84

-41~9o ___ ! 25·28 24·08 26·52

39.90

43.90

59.00

62.35

66.50

63.35

75.85

72.20

95.65

100.45

165.30

115.15

146.15

126.65

200.70

197.55

39·52 37·64

40·16 38·24 45·80 43·60

-----------57·76 60·64

99·84 69·52 88·28 76.48

121'20

-- -------107.42 are available at your GOODYEAR dealer and)

i'

'' •

aiAL CON(

LONG pOND E

y1 ~larch 15th.

News of the Morning NeWs and Weath!

Clock Devotion! •

stoppers i\CW5

Reports at Random

Janes , consumers

school Broadcas in the Mornin:

variety School Broadcas Heart Program

!\ C\1'5

"·""n'"r< Choice Broadcast

DaY Serenade Bulletin

Davis Show News and Weatl!

Hunter Show Rendezvous

Obs. Time

Rendezvous School Broad

Guest ' :iews and \\'eat

and Your Home Today

Bulletin w•m.em.arv Report

Yours · and Resources

for ~!ariner Forum

Symphony

Meditation Allen She

~eadlines Bill Allen She

Club Georie Cawdr:

Headline. Cawdry She

Cawdry Sh lleadl' 1

mea Cawdry She

Page 9: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · ' NEW SMALL PONTIAC ACADIAN Nova Motors Ltd. TH·E DAILY NE (;3 • 'tHE DAILY NEWS,

\

i '

'RICE J.88

)-84

1.84

5.28

4.08

6.52

g.52

7.64

0.16

g.24

,s.so ,g.60

•'

'· ~o.:.

---'176 t •

:0·64 19·84

~9·52

~8·28 ~6.48

~ 1.20

~7·42

NFLD. THURSDAY, MARCH 198!

R FUEL & STOVE OIL DELIVERIES

alAL 8-3001 to 8-3005 CONCEPTION BAY SOUTH AREA - DIAL

pOND EXCHANG:E ............................................ 227-2161

E GREAT EASTERN OIL CO. LTD.

And TV Programmes • JACOBY ON BRIDGE

\(~1

.. ·, :~.( ~\pftliOg ! ;.,,and Weather : , ' • I

.· n~1ck 1

·:·~ perllltoll~ • ., i:'?I'Cf' ~1·''

.. Rcp,,rtf ::; al R<ndom

•. ~.iu:nrr~ . s:~ooi Broadcast

:" the ~lorning

3.30-News Headlines 3.31-Sa~:e Brush Sam Show 3.55-News 4.00-Bob Cole Show 4.30-Ncws Headlines 4.31-Bob Cole Show 5.00-Supper Serenade 5.30-News Headlines 5.31-Supper Serenade 5.45-Fisherman's Forecast 5.55-News 6.00-Bulletin Board 6.10-Movie Guide 6,15-Sports Report 6.25-Travel Guide 6.30-Ear!y Evening Newa

Roundup 7.00-Sa(e Brush Sam Show 7 .15-Shellelagh Showtime 7.30-News Headlinea 7.31-She\leila::h Showlimt 7.55-Ncws 8.0{}-Cream of the Crop 8.3{}-News Headlines 8.31-Cream of the Crop

.::c:; CliPICc 8.55-News . !:e;,lca~l 9.31-Cream of the Crop ;;:• ilfl'IWIC 9.55-Ncws

·· , 3.:::wn · 10.00-Night Show . ! ~h"w · 10.30-News Headlines

\r•; ar.:1 1\'cather ; 10.31-NJght Show · li:1r.:rr Show .

1

. 11.00-Torbay. Weather Report Rer.dNIOUs 11.02--Big Top Ten

...... Ob; T1me , 11.30-News Headlines ·

111.31-Nicht Show

. , Rrr.1lrzwus A.~!. · .: i:h~"l Broad· i 12.00-Night Show

12.30-Ncws Headlines C:amte Tells a 12.31-Night Show

12.55-News Summary, Weather Trans

1 Report and Time

i 1.05-Sign Off

1----------------: ::. 1i:c ,\lr 1 CJON

Bro,dcast 1 TllURSDAY, March 15th.

· !rv11 thr Albums i ----------·~ A.l\1.

, 6.30-The Bob Le.,.,is Show. · lo::e;~ . i News, Sports and Wcatb .:~·''. ,,r,d II ''ather

1 er Reports

';·".)our Home 9.05-II!usic for Millions .::•~ I 9.20-Hit of the Day ' B;::ttm ! 9.30-Austin Willis

Rrport I 9.35-Weather Forecast ·; P.~p·•r:rr.

1

1 9.45-Doctor's House Calls · ) ours 9.55-Kitchen Glatter

·<:..i Rr-oun·cs , 10.00-News in a Minute ' :.,r ~l<rincrs \10.01-:Martin's Corner

· . rr.rmn 10.15-What's Cookin ,: Symphony l' 10.30-National News

10.35-Jerry Wiggin's House· wives Choice and News

. .... • . i 11.00-Robin _Hood Bulletin ,.,,l .. al :\r\1'~. 11.15-The Rtght to Happineu · and Speaking 11.30-News

;1::y 11 .45-0rehid for Gisele '~-0 C~n<da- 112.00-Bob Lewis Town and r----- Country, News and

· 1~d 1\'~ather l:U Alien Show

lledilation of Sport

Gl!i~

Allen Show O! Sport llocaiJ Tow~r. Torbay

Report) l:\ational 1

S.:! Allen Show . (IP&Ule

Cawdry

Rlldllnes Ca,·dry Show

1 Weather 1.05-Weather Forecast 1.15-News 1.35-Don Jamieson's Editorial

1.40-Sports 1.45-Art Baker's Notebook 2.00-News Highlights 2.03-Jerry Wiggin's Matinee 3,0{}-News HighlighWi 3.ol-John Nolan's Western

Jamboree 4.00-N ews Highlight! 4.05-John Nolan's Ranch

Party 4.30-National News 4.33-John Nolan's Ranch

Party 5.00-News Highlights 5.01-Art Andrews' Dance

Party 6.00-News HeadUnes and

Weather 6.03-National New• 6.10-Sporta 6.20-News. 6.30-Dave Maunder's Club 93

and News

---··. ··~=··· - '1\t:::::ZZ.

,JACOBY OFFERS NEW CONVENTION

By OSWALD JACOBY

This week's articles will deal with a gadget that is easy to add to your regular bidding methods. It is not too valuable because you won't get much opportunity to see it, but for the few hands it fits, the gad· get is flnwlcss.

In tuday's hand South has 11i points, stopper~ in all suits and a perfect book three no-trump respon~e. to his partner's open­ing heart bid .

It also appears that once he respond! three no-tn1mp he

8.00-News in a Minute and I · Best frmo the West

1

NOJtTH (D) otl7 II

8.30-National New1 9.00-Ncws Highlights 9.01-Nfld. Soiree 9.40-Salt Lake Choir 9.45-News

CJON-TV THURSDAY, March 15th,

10.45-l'astor's Study 10.50-Women's News 11.00-Physlcal Fltne&s Pro,, 11.05-Cartoons 11.15-Romper Room 12.00-Locai and Nation•!

Hea11llne News 12.15-Slgn Off 2.00-I 1\larrled Jlllll 2.30-Chez Helene 2.45-Nursery School Time. 3.110-Natlonal Schools 3.30-The Verdict Is Yours 3.55-Cross Section 4.00-0pen House 4,30-Memorlal University

Women's Show 5.00-Let'a Look 5.15-Rope Around the Sun 5.30-Razzle Dazzle 6.00-Captaln Jack 6.20-The World of Sport 6.30-News Cavaleade 6.50-Polnt of View 7.00-Yancy Derringer 7 .30-llave Gun, Will Travel 8.00-Belleve it or Not 8,05-Talent Showtase 8.15-Natlonal News, 8.30-The Detectives 9,00-Hlgh'ft'AY Patrol 9.30-The Nature of Things

10.00-1\ly Three Sons 10.30-The Defendera 11,30-Wresll!JJJI, 12.30-Sportl Calendar 12.35-News Headllnea ...

Weather 1%.45-Pastors Study 12.50-Sign Off

, AQJ'32 +AQ711 .....

SOUTH •Au , Kll

J!ABT 410832 , 10 8ol +53 4K975

+KJlU .AJ'U

Both vulnerable North !an South West . 1¥ Pw 2 + Pass

· 3+ Pas& 3• Pass 4 ¥ PUll IS "' Pall I+ ~ Pall Pa1t

Openln• lead-• K

has thrown a lay down dia­mnd slam out the window, If be should respond with either two clubs or two diamonds, he might also fail to reach that diamonli slam, even though he would have a chance to get there.

Hence, my own practice for the last year or so has been to leave thu standard three no· trump rc~ponse to others. This has left me with a non-working bid which I have put to use by using lhe three no-trump re­spon~e to a minor suit opening as an immediate request for partner to show how many aces he hlds.

This gimmick work~ beauti­fully when the right hand ap· pears and I recommend that readers wbo want to add some­thing new to their game get to· gethcr with your regular part­ners and ;;dopt it.

CARD SENSE Q-The bidding ha~ been:

East Snuth West North 1. ? You, South, hold:

.KJ2 ¥A652 +AQ3 ""K10,6 What do you do? A-Did one no-trump. You­

have 17 points, no-trump distri­bution, and two spade stoppers.

TODAY'S QUESTION Your partner raises to two

no-trump. What do you do now? Answer .Tomorrow

•BARBS• ., '"'~- ........... ......__...

BJ HAL COCHRAN When friends teJI you how

to cure a cold take It with 1

grain of salt and hope the salt will help.

• •• Smashups with autos are

often caused by people who drink any given amount.

"' * 1!1

If it weren't for pants pock·· ets and bank rolls most wives wouldn't gu through. near as much for hubby,

• • • A' beauty expert says women

lose their figures only because they are lazy. Tell this to the plump morher who Is raising six kids.

One of every 12 American is a· farm resident today.

The Greek physical philoso­pher, Democritus, propounded the atomic theory of matter a1 early as 400 B.C ..

PRISCILLA'S POP

.. 0 Today I learned

of cactus plants, . ' ............ __ -···--·-~-

I found they'll stick me in the pants·

:· By AL VERMEER SWEETIE PIE Hv NATHNE SELTZER

·r=~~~~~=-~~~~--~~~~~~~~::::~:

No half and half abour it.

And then they'll laut;~h about '1t.'

:1 :_s; '":iJ ./ . ~· ;

. '

•' .1)

r-l I

L. .l::~~.:.~.!~. ~ • . .,Peru:. ,•

"Nc, he's net doing the Twist! He's just tryin' to 1 ... keep his balance!" 1 ·- '- ______ ...... ..,-_________ . ____ ---' ...

THE STORY OF MARTHA

ALLEY OOP

SHORT RIBS

J?RECKLES

THE FIRST TH1~16 W&1glii 60!116 1'0 DO IS ~AVEi A 616 FAMI\.'1· PARTY SO 5\'Eii:YO!Jiii .

MEH CHET~/ !:_~Q

')'Ctl r:tlOW, IN A H.W '{6/IRS 11~ COU~P BECOME ~X1'1j~c"(,

. ---'·-- ---.

OH,1l1Ati? RJR c:oct'O!<: MANDJI3L.EI;;; DIPLOMA.

I THINK I'LL. HAVE TH SKY· HIGH' DELIGHT! IT HAS FIVE KINDS OF ICE CREAM, CHOPPED NUT5. BANANAS

. AN' WHIPPED CREAM!

Bv V. T. HA\fLIN

J\u FRANK O'NEAL·:··

I I • .;· ' •

DICK CAVALLI

m\li? WHE:RS ~ OOINQ TO HANCi ITA600CN A? He Gel? ONe!

I

J ·'

I' i.

l I

Page 10: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · ' NEW SMALL PONTIAC ACADIAN Nova Motors Ltd. TH·E DAILY NE (;3 • 'tHE DAILY NEWS,

''

I ,

I.

~ I •

' ' ' ,.

''

,.

'

. ' '· ;

I I

'I I

I

i I

., l ' I '

I.

.I . ;

I

I I'

''

' ! .

;I '' ; I

I! i 'I I :;! 1

. I

. , , I ~ : . ! I

J,' i :· •lt.'

1: ' I. .

.. ' ' ' '

' ' :. I I I I '1 I, !

'!i ! . 1 ··I

i \ .. ·I' ' j ! '. ~ I '

·)I r,:. , i r '

! . :, • ' I ,' {

i I . : '~ \

. . ' . : '

; 1

' . I

'

IIO ·~ -

--------------Female Help Wanted A-1 I - I

WANTE-D Lady

to do typin,g and general office work part time-afternoons

Apply BOX 101 c/o

THE DAILY NEWS marl4,15

I

F-1 -------------------Articles For Sale H

FOR SALE-1 new milch Cow. Apply Charli_e Mar­tin, Flatrock, St. John's East. mar13,14

WANTED by a young woman, SPECIAL-One Oll Range-full or part time work as 5188.88. Phone Des Stick Receptionist, ha1•e typing I at 8-4041 mar15,16 H experience . Apply Box -----102 c/o The Daily News SPECIAL-Qu~ker Oil Range

• B-1 I $80.00. Call Chris Andrews J

---------- at 8-4041. mar15,16 H Insurance D i

1 ----- 1 SPECIAL - Wringer-Washer J. J. LACEY 1 on!~·. selling at $19!li96-

1 ·INSURANCE Ltd. Now only $119.98. Ca I H, McGon-ie at 8-4041.

Dependable Fire Insurance, Prompt Claim Scttl?ments,

• DIAL 8-7035

mar15,16 H! ..

mar7,tf I FOR S:\LE-21" Slh·ertone

D TV Console ~!ode!. In good -C--R-0-5-.8-1-E-&_C_O-.,-L-t-d.- working order. Call Ralph

Walker at B-4041. : Agr.nts for ,. UNDERWRITERS AT mar15•16

,.

·:-· ;.,:• r • . ,

LLOYDS. LOW RATE~ lllAL 8·5031

.}08 BROTHER~ .·&COMPANY, Ltd. ~; . Water Str~l ~

D

. DIAL 8-2658 - 8-H23

REG.T.MORGAN INSURANCE Ltd.

D

Temple Bldg., P.O 01 1118, 3U Duckworth St.

DIAL 80370 ·or 8-7756 D

FOR SALE-Save money­Complete 13 fopt Speed Boat Frames already as· sembled. 'Better than a I boat kit." Phone B-6940. mar15,16

Special Event AUCTION

AT MY AUCTIOS ROOMS lri HENRY STREET

Friday Night Commencing at 7:30

FOR FAST HO:\'lE DELIVERY PHONE

8-2141 OR CALL AT OUR RET AIL STORE,

665 WATER STREET H

__________ ,. __ ,.,.,,. _______ I THE CENTRAL BARBER

Contractors M i Slllll'- We are now uperat-Department · of Trnnsport

St .John's, Nfld. ----·- - - -- ·· · .. 1 ing 10 chairs, you can be

'fENDERS I assured of prompt, efficl· em, samlary service No Sealed Tenders, addressed to)

Co wa(hng problem, 24 New undersigned marked "Tender 1

Gower Street opposite Adr- for Construction, Bear Cove i , 1 E ~'OTICES Laide Motors Ltd. R i Point", will be received up to 1 PASSENG R '' • ~-

STAY Do-WN WANTED TO·BUY..:..Old used ':too p.m. N S.T. 'I coNNECTION WEST nu:-. radios, parts, tubes, elec- · APUII. 16, 1962, l'LACENTIA BAY Ironic equipment, watches, etc. Higher prices paid, plus for the construction of a single 1 Train "The Caribou·· leaving

~~HEN ARMCO ' postage or freight expenses. : dwelli?~ and lig_ht_ tower, ~nd 1 ~t.. ,Jo~n·~ :2:.rn p._m. \o~nHJrrol:·: Send what you have to: i demolthon of ex1shng dwcllm)( i lor1da},. ;\l.!r~_h olhlh" .\Ill mah 'Io1vard A. Ll'ttl", B · t r nd light tower at Department· conneetwn \Ja Placcntl,t .June-' • onav1s a, a 1 • d \ " t' .-tl 'I\'

I' Nfld. I of Transport light station Bear: twn an ' r,,en Ia \II l ·' ..

BUILDINGS dec28,ly,ew. Cove Point, Newfoundland. /'·Petite_ F?;te'' on West Hun 1 ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;--;;-;;-;;;;;, Plans, Specifications and 1 l'laccnlla uay.

I other tender documents may_ bel CONNECTION SOlJTII (0.\ST f examined at the Engineermg I SERVICE VIA 1'01\T

G 0 Up PERSONAL I Office of the Department of· AUX Jt\S(!UES Transport, Water Street, St.l

' 1 John's, Newfoundland, and I Train "The Caribntt'' [cavin~

We can erect your Armco Building lnt ana save you money at the smne time. ~actory-produced parts cut job-site 'liMit, eliminate waste of matenals. Our ex- 1 perienced crews redu~ construcliOft ·

1 time and expense. Write or call for ttmo 1

plele Information. i lRMCb AUTHORIZED I

LOANS 1 copies obtained on deposit of 1 St. .John's 12:01 p.m. to-day, ' accepted cheques for $25.00 I Thursday, ~larrh 15th will mak,·

For any worthwhile purpose for

from one to three years

Canadian Imp-erial Bank of Commerce

ST. JOHN'S 203 Water Street

Hamilton Ave. and Cashin 115 New Gower Street

CARBO NEAR CORNER .BROOK GRAND li' ALLS

payable to the Receiver General, connection at Port aux Basque> of Canatla. Plans and Seteci-1 with M.V. "Bona1·ista" ou South fieations will also he on dis-~~- Coast Sen· ice. play at the Builders' Exchange., , , . .. (Board of Trade Building) at I co,N,NE,CTI.O~ SOUTII. ~.?·\S r St. John's, Newfoundland 1 SI>R\ ICJ, 'L\ ARG~.:\ I L\

' R. E STONE. I Train "The Carihou" leavin" District Marine Agent.: st. J~lm's 12:01 p.m. to-m•,'IT0\1~

mar15.16 S Friday, ::llarch 16th will make counection via Placentia .Junr­tion and Argentia with S.S. "Bar Ha1·en" on South Coast Service.

' v DEALER I Do not hesitate to call us, for ~~~~~~~~~~

free estimates. -Housekeeper

Available Shortly Clear Spans, up to 130 ft. width.

Applications are inviter\ from •

interested persons for the posi- ~_-.••.• ---_••-· 7 •.•• , ..• _-~••.•-"••:::;;·.••:<;·:n:·~,.."'7"7''''''~w~"" lion of housekeeper at Brook- t-·t<• "·• ·' ·· ·"•"•:.:-: .... ' ·· · ........... ·~· field Hospital, Brookfield. ! <: RED CROSS NEEDS YOUR HELP ·

~ . ,•

Salary is on the scale $2180- I. flM"§"W!Wf"f'?iThtM1\M! $2420 per annum from which • - - - - - · .

\\ill 1\unck at 11ith Ci1ts and lro11r Friendh· \eighlmnrs . CiYic and Soci;l On the ocr~1ioc \ew

1'1..-\\' ~11 J\'Tll!·: '.L

~II!li~!pr ~:;m· hcs . ;Hb'..: r:lih·n.;-s .1~d reprc . ..:t•rnin:.r th6 opcr~li in·~ c11p;0: . .'~£i conl'ib!i(llJ hr1,1rd '.l.n to nwd;:1~e th~ .. COllll'ilCI d~'D'J\o : .

J ' '· '

Tuc"h)'. The

IlDDY KILOWATT e $35.42 per month is deductible I for Board and Lodging. Uni-

ELECTRJCJTY form and laundry services are provided.

is CHEAP in Applications with full partieu. Iars, as to age, experience, etc.,

1

HURRY! H

HURRY! Applicances M-2

HEAP & PARTNERS (NFLD.) Ltd. Wiring Materials, Wire and

Cables, Motors, Starters, Lamps, Switches, Ligbtlna

Fixtures. 'tc. WAREHOUSE: PRINCE'S ST.

DIAL 8-5088 M-2

RADIO-TV REPAIRS

GREAT EASTERN OIL COMPANY, Ltd.

ST. JOHN'S should he addressed to: Nurse in Charge, Brookfield Jlospital,

- Brookfielli. LIGII "IIOWI. LEO~ARD !11Il.LER, ~I.D .• Ll oo • " ., ., , 1 .. 1 r , I Deputy Minister of Health,

I Cheap Reliable Elrctriclty I _m_a_r1_3_,1_5 ______ _ In and Around St. John's

R --------.. -·- ---

CANADA Housekeeper 'fENDERS

Get Your liekct nmr Big ·st. John's Lions

KLONDY SWEEP

Am·bodv can sell tickrts. .\oil' i1 (-hance Yon ma,· he the l11ch

Seller's Prizes - Bmer's ·Prizes

Auto Accessories I REPA.IHS TO RAliiOS, TV I

SEALED TENDERS address- ' Applications are invited from ed to Secretary, Drpartment at interested persons (or the posi­Public Works, Room B-322, Sir tion of housekeeper at Plact!ntia Charles Tupper Building, River- Hospital. Placentia.

Jst. Prize-1%2 ME!l(TRY m:n:orr ~ellrrs ]orizr. - SIIIOO.OG

21HI. Prizr-lnr.z THOll IH:I.l'Xf: . \\' ASIIEH-Illl n:n nnmt,·.\ Srller~ 11ri1r - 5l.ifi.'IO

:lrd. J1rizr-l!l62 nora-:ns .'L\.11-:~m:

MARTY'S RESTAURANT

301 WATER STREET Famous for flne fDoda.

Dial 1-7111$ TO.DAT'S SPECIAL

BOAST CHICKEN DINNER ss..

Last We-ek'a Lucky Numbtrs t'IU - t~30 - tU7

Where To Stay Balsam Hotel

BARNES ROAD

Sltuatrd in the heart of the

Inspection 7 o'clock e1·cnlng ol . sale. ,

I John M. Walsh ' 1 Auctioneer

15 Henry St. Dial 8-3169 or 90811

Lenten Specials Labrador Pickled Sea Trout

Labrador Pickled Herring Fresh Frozen Cod Fillet

Fresh Frozen Salmon Fresh Frozen Halibut

No. 1 ·Salt Codfish Strictly Fresh Herring Halibut and Cod Fillet

(when obtainable)

The Two-Way Stores Ltd.

ST. CLARE anil GOLF AVE.

City. 'Quiet, Comfortable

ph ere. Dial 9-2198-9

Atmos-• mar8.lmlh

For Reservations and information:

DiaiS-6336 MRS. JOHN F ACEY1

Resident Mlllllgeres!l. ·

m31,tf E·2

Where To Go

M. C. L.- I. Pitts Memorial Hall

TO-NIGHT, 'March 15

at 8.15 p.m.

OPEN FORUM

Subject:

·~rhat the Federal Gov­ernment. should pro­vide and finance a11 Medical Services."

Anyon~ ~aJ' participate·

in this d-iscussion. ·Visitors ·always· Welcome

(Enh:an~e- L01\g•s Hill, or . ·· Harvey . Road)

. . -E-3

--------- AND ALL ELECTRICAL Nfld.

Armature Worb

38 Bambrtc•

Street

Dlal 8-7191-2 1

Beauty Parlom·s K GLADY'S BEAUTY SIIOI'I'E

eor. Bond and Prescott Sts. Phone 8-4951-B-7898. Speci­alizing in cold waving, hair styling, cutting and tintlng, manicuring, facials etc., 14 operators, no waiting.

Prompt Delivery On • STOVE OIL • FURNACE QIL • HARD COAL • SOFT COAL • IRON FIREI\lAN

HEATING EQUIP~IENT

ADVERTISE IN THE

DAILY NEWS * * *

GET YOUR MESSAGE

OUT EARLY

APPLJAlilr.E-'i 01!\L 8-300 to 8·3005

M-3 side Drive, Ottawa and endors- Salary is on the scale $2180-;:;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;.~ ed "Tender For Wharf Repairs $2420 per annum from which

and Extension, Red Bay, New- $35.42 per month is deductihle fou~dland", will be received i for Board and Lodging. Uni· until 3.00 P m. (E S.T.), I form and laundry services are

GREAT EASTERN OIL & IMPORT

CO., LTD . Radio; Television, Washers. Refrigerators, Deep Freezers · . Electric Ranges.

Floor Polishers. Gramophones

Public Address Systems Tape Recorders

REPAIRS AND SERVICE 5 LNES

DIAL 8·3001 to 8·3005

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11, provide_d. . . 1962 Apphcahons With full particu-

. lars,as to age, experience, etc., Specifications and forms of should be addressed to:

tender can be seen, or can be Nurse In Charge, obtained through: Chief En· Placentia Ilospital, gineer, Room E-443, Sir Charles Placentia, Tu~per Building, . ~iverside I LEO:-.ARD MILLER 1 -I Dnve, Ottawa; D1stnet En· . l. • ~ .D., gineer, P. o. Box H-BOOl, Buck-, Deputy llluuster of Health. master's Field, Building 29, St. mar13,15 ------------------

. WATER John's Newfoundland; District, RECEIVES TREATMENT 1

STREET Engineer, Ralston Building, 105 i TORONTO (CP) _ Go1·ernor-M-a Hollis Street, Halifax, N.S , and General Vanier was in Toronto

can be seen at the Post Offices Tuesday for treatment in tire Jan28,1y

at Grand Falls and Corner orthopaedic clinic at Sunny-D S Q Brook, Newfoundland. brook Veteran's Hospital. Hos-

__ ...;;;;.,;ru;.,;;;j;gz...;;;,.-;t,;;;or;.;e;,.-;s _ _,.: To be considered each tender pita! officials said the Gov~r-M CONNORS Ltd $25,000. anti over must- nor • General ·received treatment

• " • . in the artificinl limbs depRrt-Prescrlptlollll Pickup and (a) be accompamed by one of ~-ment but was not admitted. He

dellve11 aenice. the alterna~ive securities !ost his right leg ahove the kne~ PRONE 8-2206 called for m the tender m the First World War and

Q documents wears an artificial leg, ----------- RETAIN SEAT

Rentals R (b) be made O!l the printed BLACKPOOL, England IReu-.-------;----- forms supplied by the De- ters-TI1e Conservative Partv Floor Sanders, Belt Sanders, partment and In accordance held onto ils parliamentary se~t Power Saws, Electrical Drills with the conditions ~el in a byelection in Blackpool Reasonable Rates Call 8-5016, forth therein. Notth Tuesday. Conservative N. etc. Reasonable Rates. Call The lowl!!it or any tender not A. M is campbell had 12,711 B-5016, B-7352. necessarily accepted. votes, Liberal H. Hague 11,73q

and Laborite Dr. Shirley Sum­mersk!U 8,776, House or Com­mons standing now is: Con­servatives 365; Labor 250; Lib­erals 6 Independents 1; vacant 8.

U-RENT Dlv. Harris & Hiscock Ltd,

169 Water Street, St. John's feb23,1mth R

Miscellaneous DO YOU NEED your Spring­

filled mattress re-condition­ed or your All Wool mat­tress re-picked, and recov­ered, your bedspring . or daybed re-wired or your furniture re-upholstered. If so call us. Items called for and delivered. Rates lowest obtainable. · Keats Mattress Factory, 16 Mount Royal Avenue. Ph: 9-2753

FOR YOUR Interior Painting and sparkling, also repair work. Our prices are rea­sonable. Dial 8-47673, F. Melendy, 112 Barnes Road.

B-73974. feb9,lmtb r

R

ROBERT FORTIER Chief of Administrative Services and Secretary

Department of Public Works, Ottawa,

CLASSIFICATION INDEX Male Help Wanted ............ A ·Articles Found .................... H~ Female. Help Wanted ........ A-1 Auto Accessories .................... 1 Domestic Help Wanted .... A-2 Garages .. _ .................................. J Positions Available ............ B Service Stations .................... J-1 Position .................................... B-1 Beauty Parlours .................... K To Let-Houses, Rooms, Fuel (Coal and Oil) ............ L

Apartments ...................... C Construction Contracton .... l\1 Wanted-Houses, Rooms .... C-1 Electrical Contractors ........ M- ~ Insurance .............................. D Electric Appliances ......... M · Clubs, Entertainment ............ E Radio-TV Repairs .... ~ ..... 1\l-: Where to Eat ..... : .................. E-1 Pianos - Organs . .. ........ 0 Where to Stay ................... .E-2 Auction Sales .... .. .......... p Where to Go ........................ E-3 Auction Livestock Etc, ... p Aut?mobiles ............................ F Cards, .................................... P . Tax1 .......................................... F-1 Druggists ............................... Q Cars For Sale ........................ G Miscellaneous ........ : .............. R

3-Jf

CASII PAID FOR-Comics. magazines, and .. ·pocket novels. John D. Snow, 9 N cw Gower Street, Pbone

Cars Wanted .................... " .. G-1 Legal Notices .......................... S · Cars l6 Rent ........................ G-2 Business Services .... : .............. 'I' · Articles for Sale .................... H Real Estate Agents" ................ U : Articles Wanted .................. H-1 Real Estate Wanted ........... V

LUXE n· ro:-.:sou: Sr!lrrs prilr - SlOO.Ofl

4th. l'rizr-1'0\\'Elt 1.,\ \\'X )lOWER St•llrrs prizr --- S~:i.l\0

5th. rriw-C,Ull'li\(; SET rmtsi•tin~ of two slet!pin~ bags. anti Coleman. Srllers pri1.c - 2;!.00 •

6th. Prizc-SUUPHISE CO~SOL\TIO~ $75.00) Sellers prizr - S25.00

Books ma,· he obtained I rom any Lion or bv phoniu~ S-O.liO Book of 15 fo.r $5.00

Tickets 3 for $1.00 SOc Get Your Books To-da~·

Drawing Date - 21st

We now pay

3% for 30 d;~y~

31/4% for ~H -- sgd~;s

31/2% fodJ0-1i9days

3 3/4% for 180- ~69

4% for 210 days or louger

THE EASTERN CAN SAVINGS and LOAN 170 WATER ST. ST. JOII~'S, .

PHONES 8-3335, 8-7241

CLAUDE E. DAWE, Manager

, I . '.__ The schools tum out ·lots of ',

students-and it's not hard to understand why, ' o ..iA e 1!6808. jan61mth · · R · Articles for Rent .................... H2- Real Estate for Sale ........... W j

Articles Lost ........................ H-3 Classified Display .. : ............. X. • .' 'l .

. '

' ·; ·,

'. ·· .. ".

I

'•,

SERlE~

TODAY·

I (r _i)

27 2G

CONSOLATII LE'

Kin -

Wa

SERVICE

AVALON ( WATER AT A

FOR

Further p

H. B. NICKE

W. CHIEI

(For Ne"

Page 11: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · ' NEW SMALL PONTIAC ACADIAN Nova Motors Ltd. TH·E DAILY NE (;3 • 'tHE DAILY NEWS,

lRY!

fK lp 'l

1•11 ,\TR no i .. t in!: nf d ColrmJn

" 1..\ TJO!\

00 ! 1 r11111 any

S-0:1i0

. $5.00 SOc

~TE

-- S9 d~~s

,r longer

CAN .OAN OJ Vi'S.

1[LY NEWS, ST: JOHN'S, NFLD., 11

0~~--------------------------------~------------------------------------------------------

KINSMEN BOYS' CLUB spaper BINGO SERIES No. 59 TODAY'S NUMBERS

I ,. ::..) ,,­-·

N 45 -H 43

35

G • 5:1 49

47 46

0 67 74 66 72

1(0:\SOL:\TION PRIZES FOR THE LEITER "T"

Kin - He!p K~ddies

Watch Repairs

~mON CREOtT JEWELLERS 11.\TER AT ADELAIDE PHONE 8·78Z9

FOR SALE wood ice breaker, practically

34" drum, 7 Y2 H.P. Electric Motor with roller chain and

Ready to go. Real bargain.

Further particulars contact:

H. B. NICKERSON & SONS LTD., North Sydney

CE OF MEETING Annual General Meeting of the

ers of the Great Eastern Oil Import Co., Ltd., will be held in

of the Company, 331 Water iHURSDAY, March 15th at

By Order, F. L. BURRIDGE,

Secretary.

WANTED CHIEF ENGINEER !For New Government Vessel),

- .. ""'c. 2366 BHP with 3400 cu. cargo space. Salary $5,200

plus overtime bonus. Excel­. plan and other emplo~ee

Home port St. John's, New-C Must rossess Second Class

10 ilitificate o Competency accept­. e Department of Tr~~:nsport of

. should be made by letter to Director, Department of Fish­

P. 0. Box 5667, St. Jolln's, ""'ll11d011anrl not later than March 23,

should ,include full particulars: training and experience.

. -

)

••

SISTERS 'Of SERVICE AUXILIARY

·COFFEE PARTY will be~held at 7 Garrison Hill on

SATURDAY, MARCH 17th

from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

The Old Mill Saint Patrick's Night

~ATURDAY, MARCH 17th

Big 8th Anniversary Dance

-with Leo Micl1aels and Irish Singalongs

by Sonia Clayton.

Informal Cover $4.00 Double

. Call for reservations: 8-7581 or 90026

TO-NIGHT Big Band Sound Featuring, C.B.C. Dance Band

with Mary Lou Collins

FRIDAY Big Floorshow.

TIRES REPAIRS-VULCANIZING

PHONE 8-7191 or 8-7192. for FAST SERVICE

Nfld. Armature Works Limited

BAMBRICK STREET

WANTED IMMEDIATELY FIRST CLASS BODY

REPAIR MAN for a large City Garage. Excellent work­

ing conditions. Fringe benefits. Apply to:

BOX 104 c/o THE DAILY NEWS

ST. JOHN'S LIONS CLUB

St. Patrick's Night Dance March 17th

Coral Room, Bella Vista Country Club

Tommy Byrne's Orch. Bob Lewis, f\:I.C. Tickets: $3.00 Double

Available from Lions: Dr. Larry Suther­land, 8-3438; Joe Cleary, 9-5922; Lou Fen­nell, 9-4793; Bob Bartlett, 9-0700; Eliza­beth Drugs or Bella Vista Country Club. marl3,15

H. M. C. DOCKYARD HALIFAX, NOVA SCOTIA

INVITES APPLICANTS FOR THE

APPRENTICE TRAINING PLAN Vacancies exist in the following trades:

Fitter (Mechanical) Electrician Machinist Sheet Metal

Plater

Entrance examinations will be held at centres throughout the Atlantic Provinces in May, 1962. Successful candidates will commenc~ training about 1 August, 1962.

QUALIFICATIONS

Age 16-22 (Inclusive)

Education: Grade X (N.S.) or equivalent (Minimum)

Proof of education must accompany ap-plication. ·

Apply .to nearest National Employment 1

Service Office not later than 16 April, 1962. marlUi

I I

FOR SALE QUA.NTITY O,f LEATHIER

&~ELTING

No reasonable offer refused.

Phone 83041

WANTED POWER TECHNICIANS

Applicants must have specialized training in electric­·al generation, distribution panels and regulating equipment which would include alternator detection circuits, alterator wiring and AC and DC motors, this equipment being used in connection with dis­tribution panels for generators up ·to 500 KW . output.

Applications will be accepted only from persons who have had at least six years experience working on various types of power generation distribution panels. Successful ~pplicant? will receive ~igh remuneration and Will be ellgible for usual frmge benefits including pension plan, hospitalization scheme and holidays with pay.

The work location will be in the Newfoundland­Lnbrador area and successful personnel will work out of St. John's

Interested persons please telephone 8-7071 or write to BOX 103 c!o THE DAILY NEWS. mar15,16

SALES CAREER FOUR MEN WANTED

by a National . Canadian Company. Full sales training provided which will

enable·you to earn large commissions

weekly. Car a necessity.

Phone 93272 between 10 a.m. and 1.30 p.m.

ST. PATRI:CK'S N:IGHT

DANCE St. Patrick's Auditorium

Sponsored by Patricians ,

Association

Septers Orchestra -

Tickets $2.00 Double Obtaina~le from:-

W. DALTON .................. Dial 8-0151

D. CONNOLLY ................ Dial 8-3394

R. DONOVAN ................ Dial 8-54923

ANK MURPHY ................ Dial 8-2570

ALSO AT THE SCHOOL .. Dial 8-2166. marl0,15

CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN IF CHAFE MAKES THE CLOTHES.

Wm. L. CHAFE TAILOR

4 HOLDSWORTH ST. ST. JOHN'S

TO RENT A HEAY;ED APARTMENT . '

Situated Squires Ave., (near Bowring ·

Pcsrk} consisting of 2 bedrooms, bath·

room, dining room, l~ving room,

kitchen (with refri~erator and electric·

stove). I

Dial 9-2174 durmg business houn;. mar13,15

'

-

THE DEER LAKE . ·~·

AMALGAMATED SCHOOL -~ REQUIRES

A MUSIC TEACHER

whose duties will include class group singing and the . formation of school choirs. Applicant will be required to work in both elementary and high sd1ool grade~.

TEACHERS

for grades Kindergarten to grade eight including teachers for remedial work in grades two to six. (Twenty-three teachers are on staff) .

Applications stating age and teaching experience should be addressed to the

SECRETARY,

Amalgm,nated School, Deer Lake. mar10,13,15

FUEL! FUEL! FUEL! FUEL! When you need oil Here's what to do:

DIAL

UNION OIL 8·2822 When you need oil-You need us I

.. ·:.1

!

y,our Own Business

A HeAtdy Andy "One Stop" ) • l

CAR-CARE CENTRE i

Selling ...

-·· Gasolines and "'1

i petroluem products ;

' . . GP.t in on the ground floor of a I

' FABULOUS NEW CONCEPT!

IN AUTOMOTIVE RETAILING i I

Join with "Shell of Canada" and "Handy Andy" in this~·

spectacular operation. Enjoy greater independence, , security and community recognition by owning a HANDY ANDY ASSOCIATE STORE. NOW 128 STORES in Eastern Canada and GROWING DAILY.

Excellent locations Now Available in

ST. JOHN'S, CARBONEAR, GRAND FALLS

Stock a complete line of SHELL Gasolines and petroleum · products, Automotive parts and Accessories, Sporting Goods, Hardware and Housewares for a nominal invest- · mcnt.

Enjoy the following advantages:-

~~ COn.J:PLETE TRAINING PROGRAM by . "Shell" and "Handy Andy" supervisors in:.: merchandising, display, advertising and ad- · ministrative guidance. ·

" COMPLETE INSTALLATION and Service Facilities.

~ SIMPLE ORDERING PROCEDURES from i our huge, modern warehouses.

o FAST MOVING ~vlERCHANDISE

MOST COMPETITIVE PRICES.

Applications now being accepted:-

at : •'

i . . .

ASSOCIATE STORE DIVISION . : ·'

8300 Devonshire Road Montreai 9, P.Q. ! • • ... -------------------------------~~. ' .

I

I'

. I

. I i '! . ·-·J;·.·

' . '

,.

; :j'' ' ' . ' . ' . j. : .~ H .. ~ j • : I" .. L· .! .

;· ..

Page 12: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · ' NEW SMALL PONTIAC ACADIAN Nova Motors Ltd. TH·E DAILY NE (;3 • 'tHE DAILY NEWS,

I.

" '

I,

,,

,,

·' ' I •

I'

I. I

I I

..

,,

,,

No.1 FEED OATS CRUSHED CORN

DATH.Y RATION HORSE FEED

SCRATCH FEED lOO's SCRATCH FEED 50's

LAYING :\lASH LA YIN~ MASH PELLETS

MIDDLl~GS .CORN!\ lEAL ,.

PIG GHOWER CALF STARTER 50's

ClUCK STAHTEH 50's

OYSTEH SllELL 80's

ST JOHN'S •

SPECIAL DEAL

FOR OUR FEATHERED

FRIENDS

4 lbs. WILD BIRD SEED

and

PLASTIC FEEDER

Both for· the low

PRICE OF $1.59

SEED CO., LTD., ' 4111 WATER STREET.

Phone 8·4328 St. John's

Paramount To-morrow

THE DAILY NEWS. ST. JOI-IN'S, NFLD. _T_HU_R_S.;,;.;DA:.;.:.Y,

AT 'i'HE[N. E. Office. ~~~ SIGN· Representatives ~~tl! On Bell Island ~~ T'::'E The St. John's National Em-a'lo.rn CO. · I ployment Office will have six ~;u OOK Representatives on Bell Island

from 19th to 22nd March to 1

interview 612 people affected by the recent DOSCO lay·off.

PT 109-John F. With a view toward expediency I Kel1nedv in World in completing ~he registration

and commencement of place· I 'War II ment service on behalf of ap- I Robert J, Donovan 5.75 plicants, individual notices

' THE SERPENT'S have been dispatched to the I noJL . 1\lincrs advising them of dates I

I'-' and times to report for Inter-Farley i\ [ow at 5.00 I view. Groups of slightly more

I COUH.AGE- I than 100 will be interviewed j

Tl S . f per dny, 1

le tm Y 0 I The interviewing process will Sir James Dunn be comprehensive and will in·)

I Lord Beavcrbrook 3 .. '50 elude the recording of ( 1 l per- --1111 1 BFNITO MUSSOLINI 'son.al data, (2) education and \

-' • 1 · \ trammg and, (3) employment Chnstopher i history (each duty performed I

, llibbert 5.00 ' in the mine and other employ· I 1

BEYOND OUR \men~). F~om thi~, and .oth;r I 1 SE• L\TES 1 deta~led mformahon, . pnma:y 1

1 and secondary occupaltons will Catherine I be selected for each applicant. ' ~Iarshall 5.75 This information is . vitally

I SHOULD HAVE necessary to the. select ton and referral of apphcants to em·

KISSED HER MORE , ploymcnt. Alexander King .. 4.50 I The St. John's office throu~h 1

THE EDGE OF 1 tl~e National Employme?t Ser-vice clearance system IS con· 1

SAD~ESS stanlly aware of mining occu· Edwin O'Connor 5.75 I pation vacancies throughout

'With Starflash Camera in your choice of Everything needed for day-and-nigh! snapshoal' Brownie Starflash Camera !hat takes Ektachrome t~~g, os well as black·and·w.hite and Kodacolor snopshats~r flosholder. Plus baftenes, flashbulbs, Verichrome Po instructions. Camera available in your choice of four~ .colors; coral red, skyline blue, alpine while, or jet

ALLFOR .... CHATRMAN OF , Canada. A)[ of the nations' 200

THE BORED ~!s D~~~~~~ ~~~~:ft~~;~~~fte e~~ 1 T 0 OTO N f s ELVIS PRESLEY IN Edward Streeter 3.95 sure that any- vacancies which I "BLUE HAW All" STORIES FOR cannot be filled in their local IN COLOR LATE AT NIGHT area~ .will be made available to:

. The Daily News • th' f 1 f d h k - 95 quahfted Bell Island apphcants.

There s some mg or every Al re Hitc coc ,), cG 1m· Z75 $41 41 u Ctevlto soo 52'1 52 ~z·• ' '• mem~cr of the familyd, ~n H~l THE ~1URDERERS c Kodiak tnoo llO 12s 121 -s ens 6800 121, 41'• m, • •; Wallis' spectacular an mere - • l' •0

' .. DISTRIBUTORS FOR KODAK IN NEWFOUNDLAND

Cannoama 10011 14 14 14 +2 Coml Solv 3100 l611 JSI. 36;1- ,, ibly beautiful "Blue Hawaii", Harry J. Ans mger 6.<J I carhrr 87000 19 17', 171> , 21> Con Edts 2300 Bl'.• BO'' aoo,- \4 J' I If 1 t f')} d T h I C USA DE AGAINST Ch•mnln)' .\3(.0 ~10 20:. 210 Contooner RIOO 28lo 281> 281o + ll the de Jg 1 u ' une- I c ec • R ' l ~~·~·~~.ntlrac 1 ~:; 7r• 7~'-' ,;'" -t~ ~~~\ "811 7;~~ ''~5,,'4ii4'•H 5,1:- :~ nicolor attraction opening at CRIME

MOSTRE.". no•tsr. •TUCK~ c· l'aper H:. $42'• 42'• 42'• + '• Copw Sll 19011 II''• ''~' II'•- le the Paramount Theatre. J D I . Montreal

5.95 "" thr eanllt\hlln rrr•r. Cnn Ga!l 1:!~ Sl!l'-. ]I'~T. 19'•- I~ Cr Zell ~601'1 ~Hi'• 561 .. ~>fi\•- •• Producer \Vallis. Director ' I CtT~' . I JC\VJS Mftn\rnt St~rk 1::\t hanu·-:.larc h 14 t'nJl'lll m 1000 30 2!} ~n Curtl!llli "r .!700 17 163t 17 + 1.-to ContPI<ir t>bulatlon or \l'otlne><la\' ll•lrcll 500 7" 7~ 75 H llrore mo '"'' jl'• w.- '• Norman Taurog and Writer THE RADIO

~~~~~'m.a!~rct:.,.~llt~l.rld ,!~\~~.~~~\!~~~~~;: gun;,rwlor 2~~ ~;~l' ~ 1 4 ;r4 :~~,• g~~e StaR 18;~~1 :4~: 4~ ~~~: ;~:l:: ;: Hal Kanter hit on the happy A~lA 1~EUR'S STEAMS li I P MOVEM~ \It than~• 1, rrom poe11ou, boarcl·lot n Lra•e ~:''"' •~ ~~ 6! -J llou~l" uno Jl'• n Jl •

1

idea of casting Elvis Presley as IIA'TDTIOOK rlonnt ••it., numont 101111 2~ 25 26 t 1\o Dow Chrm l!Wo ''II'• •o 2011 ' '• I l · 1 · t · n D \ STJ' \'l

Sri llnma~HIIIi 1000 28 2' 28 'llu Pont 6700 2il'• 2SI 2.52 + 1'• a uku c e·strummmg ouns ~ • . , NFLII. CA~AD, • ;. ·' . ~hotlbl .,r. 141', 1h w. '• ''""n"•'~ 200 $12'• w, w. ·- '' r·:a•t ~"'' two JB'• !8'• 38'• guide accompanying a group 1962 EcllhOll . .. 4.00 1 :.LV. Faul'ctte satling from Alcom~ Ufll (,',: ,,~~ ~2 l'ah J,;.{l(l !ll;~ !ll.; ~~l- 1'2 F.atnn ~u.- 1~0() :ts~, lfll~ 381,·- 'a ' r th d St. Alum 21" 11'1 5~3'• .w, 48':. . 14 l'Ann .\fill 2':o .!13 212 El Auto t. 90\1 fi.OI~ :19~11 .i91.- II or schoolglrls on a tour 0 ... e ! o· k & ( ltd I Halifax March 13th, ue """ ,. r ,p :·. H·1', 41', w, - •,, r'lrrl "'' wn 10.1 101 1n1 • 1 m P••• moo W• 21'• 24'• Hawaiian Islands. This opens I I( S O I 1 n · ~1ar h 15th J>nu, 111 <17'' \i'. 11'• . '• rnrol ;nmo 1311 r;o -I t'!mtn m•1 m .. 47'• 17'•- '• I ., • i • 01 s ' e · ~·b"'"' '"P -.; "'· n '• Funrly 212011 12 11 1~ •I For~ 28JDn IOl'dOO'' 101'• -1 the door for lots of fun, lots I 1 •Rcfng~ratwn a1·atlable. .\110> "''' ·'" .,,., .II ' 11-'t .. I. C. len L•kr 141110 l;n m IIR . • l'norh ,.,. ;9{10 26t, 2;•, w.- •• , of smging and dancing and lots The Booksellers I

ll•r.k """' ml SJO•, ~''• 701 ' . ··,,H••Hn•• I.IOII !l<l Bl R21•· -l, Gr.,·,··n llOI}.~ 1~811(10011 ?,!~,· 737°11,' 7730,;,• ~ l,' or autltentt'c Ha\Val'!'an scenery. 'Ft.:Jt:o.'ESS. WITHY & co .. {)fl). f;dl I'JWI11' lor.:. <i:i1t .I~ iR • 1• lolllnA"f"r l'i30 $2ll'. 211:1 2 • "I ., L .. n nnw ,\ pr ~·· •:•1 ll ;r -I lnl Helium :m 1211 400 400 r.en F~· 8100 84 8.1 83\it ., '• El . h h ngs in I I ;\lanche~ler Port due St "'"" •ter 11 1o ,. 7 ; . ', .rubllre 4100 l91 J7.1 3Ro -20 Gen ·Mills 420o 31'• JO'• 31'• , '• VIS, W 0 as more so 1 Spin , John's M;,rch 6. Leanng fur Rr.,ll 21oc; 1.n 3111 m -·!5

1

1\rcle) n to~oo 19 l'!• ~~·, -2'• GMC 28100 56•• 56 56'•- '• this film than any before, has

Hallb\ \!~' :. ~11r ~lot :l ~.nlin.; a;1 n lor Lt' cqml)l

.\TL\~TIC

York \\,;n h i3tn .John\ .\Lrch iG'lt .John's \Iorch 20 f0r

R\ oot m m .u•, Jll•- '• KctT A•ltt too n1 9!1 P!l -2o r.G •• •11nd••Tn"' 31;00oo !~ 94:•1.,' ~··- v. not one but two leadin~ ladies: 8-4425 or 8-2008 or 8-3191 1 Halifaf and Boston ~!arch 7, nr ror('·t 'Hll\ UJ'• 1:11,. tJ'• 'T '" l.i\h .<\tcrr u;~ ~Q 1'1 91';! ll1'i 11 •• .... 't ..... n 1 d H I"' ~I r l 9 and Eo Bl ro" 1310 116'• 16', lfi'• t.anoont A .;6o 112 1~ 12 Goodrich 1100 mo 62'• ti2'•- 01 1 luscious Joan Blackman, as a ue a nax • a c 1 ·. S· R • d CHI ro" mo ~ll'• 2l'· l1'· 1.1\h Corp 4J100 Sl2 II 11 Gr Pal~· 2!100 ~ 2'• l'• h H .. b t d BELf ISLAND (Staff) -I ton ~larch 14. Lcav.wg Boston' a P' ('an em us 53~ :w. JF'It Loh en A 100 ~!)I~ ~\~ 91,4- ,_.. Gran'd Un 640(1 267~ ~6~~ 252. '~~- Frenc . awauan enu y1 an J ' I 16 I H 1 { ~1 h C•n t.on rr 127 m•, 29'• 29'• , '• Lorado Jno 190 l!lO l!lO -32 Gt A r ln;oo ;7'• ;1•, 57'• • '• Nancy Walters as an attrac· ~ 3 . t t. 1 ;\larch · cue a 1 ax ' arc , IIT.;'\!Pl'C · c Dt•m ~"' jn ~l•'• zs•; 26'> Maclaren A ;~1 S24 21 24 Gt Nor R 1900 45\'. HI• <~'• + l'.J . . ' 1 Scene at • 0· pa) sa IOn on i 17. Sailing for Liverpool from · ·' lP -c1 Fndr)' z:r. sz3-, 23'• 23'• _ '• Mnclarrn R 11011 s26\• 26'.> 261~ GnU on 14300 H 13'• 44 tive, vacahonmg school teach· I Th.ursday, March 8. Hourly 1 Halifax :II arch 20, omits call 10 ut ~ folll'r1 D.w-n eM; m !23•, 23'• 23'·•- '• Mama! m ~ • P H11oumd'1nk•v ... 960000 1 .• 1',·~. 15~,, !741,1,. ,, er. We won't reveal who finaii.Y !laid cmplo.vees of Dosco, Wa-1 S J h , made .• '"P'd • Cdn Br>w :.r:,; ~12'• 12'• 12'• Marh ~~ 310<1 75 72 72 .• .,. ' • + • • El . b t tl t G d • ,1. . d I t. o n s. I[ 1 . 1 c h•m 421 17'• 714 7'•- I• Meleh pr 200 ss•o l'i l'i 1'1 lnt•rlnke 8800 28'4 27'1 %11'• >1 wms vrs, u te roman IC bana ,, tnes rece1vc pav rom 'I N' f dl d 1 · g L' amr 11111

'1'rnen

,. bk A •oo sg· 9~ "~ 'I Chi ~n 70 " 7o 1n1 B 290n --31 •so "'I 1 00 ~ · ew oun an cann Jvcr· t t:: •< • • '• • "• "or P '"~' "" "' ·" ·• ·•·: - complications arisin" out of , special supplementary benef1t 1 ill ·h 14 d St 1 h · a top trl'• 11n pn>t at c Hu•l·l' 19o 16•; 6'' 6'1 Merrill 2800 75 73 74 -1 ln1 Han· 5JOO 561o m> ~\\- '-> " 1 1

• poo J arc , ue .• o n s 2-c lonp Ilk m S63'• ~R'• 68'• • '·' Mid Cltlh 19000 35 30 3! H 1n1 Sick 1100 8Ho 81 a1 this triangle are highly amus- M • , fund, bu1\t up through Company I 'larcll 20 Lea··1·11, for }lalifax '· .. cu. 6\10 Sl!'• 15 ll'• f '• ~lin Corp 200 $11 14 14 In( Pap 20600 :18 m; 33 ~ •• . d th d t' I ornyng . u I c b " . • " Ott \poor-en ,, I'! cr Po" m s!J 13 13 +'I Molyh 11100 go oo 90 +10 CnJ Tel aooo W.l 54'.1 54~>+ •• mg, an e many pro uc Ion 11- ' Unton a~reement · · · ene· and Boston :March 21 due Hali· 0 · • • · ' c1 Po" pr 400 su 40'1 41 ~lnore 540 5!71'• 57 m:. + ~. Job .. M 6200 WI :IS 5m + .,., numbers colorful and tuneful. I · fits for unemployed miners • ' man e1 er lo be · c \hnonl R.IO !5'• l'i !'i Mt Pltasnt 83312 205 18! 200 -12 Kennecot !1600 82 8111 8111- •• ' N • hb i' 1 1 d d · th y . 1 · fax lllarch 23 and Boston March 1 dent of the 1\,r.n:ll Cdn Oil 207 532'o 32•; 32'<- v. Mr Dalrl.. 500 $9 ' 9 Kresge :iooo 32 Jill 32 + .... Surrounding the stars of 'I elg or nc u e t_rn ef pa em.e opes[, 28. Lea~:ing Boston March 30 Trads Cour.cll Tr./. cPn 20!9 s2s1' 26 26 Mr Rice 400 sm 8\i Rli- \\ Krothler 100 m:. 171< 17\\ "Blue Hawaii" are top players were no 1ces o suspenston o 1 d H l'f A ·1 4 d St CKI' !lev 2JO SIB'• 18li 181• -Olio Nat A Vtnd 200 :!liD 2911 290 Lib MeN L 9100 !Hi 16'> !6~•-% . PluM consider .,. .__ · f- · 544 , 1. G b an a 1 ax prl · ue · • 20 unior:< nnd jf(~ ro~hlln 220J 16'• 6'< G'o + '• Nallve M 1500 1~ 12 12 -1 I.o•w'• 2900 4414 43'1 4m Angela Lansbury, Roland Wm- that ••• -ur ln'-d• .,.•-d• service or · "mers, a e John's April 6 Sa11ing again 1 · C ·t~ 17811 •'" 21• 22 .. 1 h 1000 19 19 19 'I h Fld 1300 4-1· 44'' 44'' h d I · I ,_ ... " dd' B Ill I d d h' . ' 'tllll er ll> '1 m~ on ·'. ·- ' " 0"r c •• ars ' • ,, .• ters John Arc er an riS nelllhboro. 11 ... can ht~ .lla Jgan. e s an ' rea s IS I same dav for Ll'\•erpoo't ' ' ' Corona11on RGO !lOt, I01o IO'" N Jack I, 10000 16 IS\'2 1fi Merck 6600 93'1 93 93 + 1,1 ' • t' 'th · d f )' , • • Jt> nr11 f:l'ler ~ crcdll f 4D sw 141 141 ~ 1 NA nar• 2600 h4 A2 64 +1 \\pi• non 1100 m 130l'.J 131., + 1,1 Adrian. Wallis also mtroduces yau Ia any way w1 no 1ce \\1 mtxe ee mgs. Manchester Faith Jeat·inff c . D 1 Dlst Scac 2Dl sn•, 47h m; OP•m E•PI 6200 l7 3~ ll +I 111nn 11.'1 moo 7o 69!. 693i+ 11 b r f ppealing oung yourlnouru>Uprob~ I Alec Stanford, second from 1L1.1',erpooi"Jilarch' 28 dlte st" Daunt r: 10' 11' 0n e.s Donte Pele JOO Sl2'• 12'• IZo>- '• r. lnv 200 375 37l 315 -10 1llnn Onl !6CO ~4'h 24\:. 241o + 1,\ a num e 0 . a ' y Jtut call... I! II I I 'd ff T . ' . . enm~n. ',\ ·o n Drod£• 7:10 522'• 22'• 22'•- \1 Paud••h 2000 9 9 9 Mon••nto 9900 48!1 48. 48\

31. + 11 players, including Darlene e • was a so al 0 · wo .John's April 4 Lea1•ing for t'tl 1o,· ·•

11 Co•l rr 200 400 3;0 400 +50 l'omblna 300 $9'1 9 9 - 'I 11onl Ward 11300 34\" 33; 33 + I tl 'd ( 'f' d · ' 1 e In I ne · .U' ! .. , o Fudry w 167 61 67 Pllt Pro~ A 820 SIO'I m 1011 + v, Nn1 Avlat 100 m: m~ 21~- 'h Tompkins, Christ ian Kay, 0 1.er um fn 1 .1e mmers en- 1 Halifax and Boston April .'i. h1s n~rl'e •n .\nder'!l Dow Brew l5 S5l'• 55\o 53'• Porcupine 211i10 7'• n, 11; l'iat Cnoh 3ton ~~~1•1200, 122\i +Ill Jenny Maxwell and Pamela REG. T. MORGAN terrng pa,v stahon. f rlue Halifax Apnl 7 and Boston · The elde Andcr•er. Du root 130 131', 31', 31'1 Pow Cp lp 25 149 49 49 Nnl Dlst 6900 28'!1 28\o %11\1- \1 Edd)· ~~ .~ :100 m 33 33 - •;., Que Chlb moo 21 z., 21 +I Nat Gvp• 2SOCI 5ZI4 w• lW. Akert. INSURANCE I April 12. Reverts to Manches· FJcetnood 2i.~ S24:1.t 2·P~ 2P•- ~4 Que Cobalt 1~ 433 4-23 435 -10 N\• Cent 4000 ta~" l'nA 18 W 1)' wa ' ' takt'ng ht'• I L' ft B t

N•· "II 300 11• I•• t•··- " a .'s. s Wise. ml o T•mplt •• ,·rd,·-. Duck·-~ •· l 0 A Bo t• er mes a er os on. t:'ord US 50 Stoa1~ J05V_. 10314 t3~" Quf' Oil 19~0 2~1: 21".1 2\~ 1 """~ '~"~ 111 ·--v --.n-. ram Pl•y 52l Sl7'1 17 17 - \o tlue Smelt IOJOO 18 17 17Llz Nor Pae 1300 42'r.z 42 42 . PanavtslOn-Tcchntro or cameras I DIAL 8-0370 • 8-7756 I • • • w ang I Nova Srotia leaving Liverpool r.tdtn 137! SIJ'• l3'> 1m nuhy Food 100 2llll 210 24o -ID Ohio 011 100o 4~• 441o 41l'.J- 11 to the Hawaiian Islands for the 1 I , April 11, due St. John's Apnl Frar.~l 127S $2ril, 26''z 26~~- V. lluby Fno W lott ~s 55 :;s Outb Mar :'1400 23:14 231ft 23~i L 11. 1 All I Ft• r•t• pr 210 ~90 383 38.1 StL Colum 0603 720 705 720 +IS Porke Da ·14800 381> 31\1 :1.1\l ~ •1 location filming of the Para- eys 18. Leavmg for !Iahfax and Gi.Une•u 401.1 $JZ1":1 32'8 32'·•'- v, StL D'' Lds 3400 12~ t:lO 125 Penn RR 11000 17\•' I"• I"•"• ~ 1'- 1 Th 50th t t 1 I B t A 'I 19 d H }"[ 7 l'h•IP• 0 7200 591, .• 59 , .• 97 ,, + ~' mount re case. e s a e st d th t t . g , os on pn . ue a 1 ax G D•·n•m ns SJ2'• 321, 32'/z +'I Shoo save 344 ss•, R'l 8\1 + li P ,1 . ,. ~ , t •, h b t • unner an e cas, s arrm I -- ' , .1 21 d B t A .1 26 G~ war« 41" HI'• •t~vn o.•1 + ..., s ouraull 1ooo 17 11 17 h .. or xd 2600 gg,., 97'" 9BI. +. as never ccn ·seen o more 1 p 1 . k O'N 1 , 1 w· th B"'Ll ISLA"D (St ff) 1 "pn an os on pn · Gr. rop xd 1100 518'• IR'< IR~• Sparran 66lO 160 110 tfotl ~! Pit Plate 2100 •7 6!'i 66'l- '' . d a nc- ca , n ogcns te , "' • • •' a - n · B · llnmo n 1m sw. 14 !4'.- •• SPartan "t 56110 11 ~~ 41 +1 Proc Gom 7600 8~!i !21? 831• ~1•; eye·catchmg · advanta¥e, a~ 1 Eva Dahlbeck and introducing the 23·\eam ladtcs bowlinff Leanng oston Apnl 27 and Horne rf 1m 381 as.~ Jus +40 Sid Goht 2JOO 10 10 10 Pullman aoo l•'• m: 3711.- 11 one can almost !eel h1mself m . . . . . I 1 h " --- -Hud R•y m SS7'• 57'> 37'• + •,, steep n 300 715 715 715 +IO RCA 16!1011 63'• 1\31• n•~- '·' . . . llla)-Bntt Nilsson IS exceptiOnal · eague, a\ t e L.O.A. Alleys. ' tnop Tob 500 $17'• 17'• 17'1 ' "• sutllv•n ao11 !50 tlo ISO -1 Ral Purina . 1500 4JI? ~2'• 43, such colo.rfu) spots as Wa!klkt 1 in its interpretation of each in· I Buttercups are in ftrst place 1 S f' 111\p Toh pr 16l0 16'' AI,., 6'•- ... l'arhe J6jOO 33 Jl•,; 33 ., Repub Stl 5300 5Al• ,a•. sa;,+ 1,1 Beach Dtamond Head and the . . ' upp aes lnd .lceep 2056 SJ~'• 32 3! - •• Tazln 42000 14'> n•,; w,o + 1-1 Dey l'oh 1600 76'i 1m m, -1 ' .. : dil•irlual role. , Wtth 56 pmnts: Blue Jays and I tnt Pap ~~~ sw. 3''• 39'•- •• Tlh E•rl 13000 a R 8 Royal nm 73SOo 40 39h 39'• ~ •• hundreds o! other Hawanan Tl lot · b ed · Whites arc tied with 51 points A • • lnt Ulll 610 HI .W\ II - I\ Tllan 600 9!'. 9'> 9'\- 1-\ Sear. R 10100 8%>, 81 8%'• "I'· . ht th t t k t . t' ' le p IS as on a umque rrl I ng

a fn e-H':tl ,tructural Hnr..<orker hagen.

\l'andrr'u•t h'o:Z"' Canad~ rn t"\6 He Edmonton. hllimal, \'anrom e1· nrfore

, 1\'mnipc~ \nder<urr

malTlcd ~

~rant he1• ehildrrn lnl Ulll P• •s; S52'• :oil> 51\\- I< I Tr c Frm 200 3.\0 ;5o 356 Shell ou 2aoo •o•. ~% 40 .,. '.\ 51g s a a e a ouns 5 , method of extractin" a million each, for the second and third I Y

lnlrr rL :t:ll $35 n~ 8l Tran• ~~~ m Sll'• 14'1 WI > t; Socony 5f,OO H'• 5411 w. + 1 i breath away. I d 1 · " · · p · d S 1 l,aur r A :JM •23 2l ;!:1 _ ,., u A•he>~o• 6700 61~ 5111 595 _ 20 ~outh Pac noo 29 2B'• ~,.- ., : o Iars from a b1g busmess-man p~pptes, ~ns1cs an carets BELL ISLA:"om rst~fl) - ----- ·------1 L••h M 120 <2J'" 23•, ~1•;, • •; \'an~or lit 1oo m J25 3Zs Sperrv n 16700 221.'> 22 22 - 1.1· , without his knowing an)·thing Wttlr one more game each arc ' Foocl ,upplies are heino hrought MB rn Rl.<i ~~01.- 20 20 \'afl~U,.rd 1000 91h: 9Y.& 9\~- 'h Std Br~d 1400 6714 (161j Sill.&-~ . I I 4 I ~ M•rtllm, T 610 122'1 2~1• 22'< •'4 '\'nuzr 1011o 100 190 !9o •IS Sid Cal 76CO 58'• 19i, Sll'o ~ '' about it unti} the dead is done. runmng c ose or th place. ) here by plane these days. The ' ~~ ... r 330 m•, t.l'.\ 13'"- •, • wend•ll 2.1110 2;;, 21> . 2~ Sid I~d 3100 ~·· 54'~ ss1~- '! Cap I• tO} And on the way surprise 'fol- 1 first mail for 3 da1·s arrived Mas." r ;t,p tYI $107 107 107 Wefite~J 200 S9l~ 91,4 91A- ~ Std N.J 26400 ;~4'• 53'• 541•..,. 3• M. R . -Mlron 6p l600 SlO'o 10 tOto+ '• Stud l'ack 9400 go,; 91,1 9'1-'• lows surpnsc, thrill follOWS lners eg1ster • :Monday. Moloon ,\ 41\0 12''• 29l, 29'> • .... Clo•lna •• ,.,, Indu•lrla)!o 136,8001 Sun on '\DO 50\ol 501i 501> + ... th 'II t'J . I Monr Tnt lOll U8 RB 83 • 3 mines and olio !106~. Texaco MOO 59 sa;, 36\1- % N PI • rl • un 1 your guess IS as -

TV ~nunda 20!J S60'1 ~91> 60\l ' •• Tex Sui 6000 21'1 211i 21' i OW aymg good as the next man's as to I - B ,.

I .\.~ Lr 16l S230, 23'• 23\> ~ .,, ' il'J~~~~ ;: ~~~ .~~:.~ ~8~:~ +" \Vhat happens next. In the final' BELL ISL. AND (Staff) ·-Six ow mg

'

·!.. i rr•laecrrrete ~.20·,tno s5124B1\~ !48~1 ;"s'•.~ -+ '\·,"' I s ... ..,... t t f II D t I • , ,. • , Thnken 100 M ;s•> Mlo +•I scenes you are rushed into a i .cprcscn a tves rom te ep. BELL ISLAND (Staffl-ln 'J. ~;:''(;,r; pr 1~3 1~77,, 4~';', 4~;, • i;~e~ar~ ;~::;, 1t~.., ~~~ 1~i:t~2'"' "A MATTER OF ~lORALS" series of titilating experiences 1 of 'Labor opened an office in club bowling, C.L.B. is in fint

!. Que Pow 1os S3212 321-. 3m- I< , Utd Atrc J60o 47•~ 46\4 16\1 +li that leave you wondering wide-\ the C.L.B. Armoury here Mon- place, with Young Britons sec· •' i Que Phon xd3110 $l7\; 47 17'>- >i U1 Cor xd 1700 8!, Blo B'h +!I · · day ~lin •rs Wh ff t d 1

RE:\.SO~.\BLE GUARA~TEED PHO~E 94

. '• Rollman 150 s11 14 11 NEW YORK CLOSING STOCKS us Gyp• 1200 96'l 95'1 96 It l k II k' d f 1 t eyed With excitement. 1

' ·. ' 1 0 were a ec - on · 1 11 : nno A\' c 611.1 16'1 s•, G•>- li By The Auoclated Prm us Rubb !04110 59'' 3Bli sm- ,_ a es a m 5 0 peop e 0 Even the locale is unusual as ed m the recent lay-off of 612 A 24-team mixed doubles I

1 nolla•d A J8j lin'• to•< 10'•- '' New York stock Exehan1e-,lareh 14 us Sleet 27000 m• m~ 74\1 ~ 1 make a world, a business, a love m d th ff t d · 1 · 1)' Rothman• Btl 110'• 10 10 - 11 xd _ Ex·divldend, ... _ t:x_rluhls, Vanad 1000 21 2311 24 + 11 ff . . d "AM It movies go the Norwegian city en .. an ose a ec e m a eague IS now ready to start I , . Ro)·al Bank aSJ m 83'• OJ'• xw-Ex·warrant•. Net change Is from ~ Un Tel · 6400 M~ 39;1 391'.- '·' a air or a movte an . a er of Stockh~lm. beautiful exct't- preVIOUs lay-off. 3-years ago, bowling at the L.O.A. alleYs I

Royallle pr 100 121>1 2112 24\o previous tlay•, clooe. lleslh• El 14600 37\• 36'.1 37\l + ~I of Morals" now playmg today I ' ' ar beinrr · ·t d 11 th' All 1 · - · ·1 i Salada r JOO stl>, w. n•.- 1; Nel wootll'lh 3loo s3•1 82 m1 +I t th C 't 1 Th t th ffl ing and very different from our e . ·' reg1s er~ .. a IS w 10 <re to bowl 1n tlus

!;.;:· Shawln 2514121 ~3"• 2.1'•+ '• stock SaluHlrhLowCio"Cit'•• a. e ap1.0 eare rou,, 1 American cit'tes. we.ek.·, for the posstbthty of ob- league arP asked to contact tile

Shaw 4p 210 $40~4 39~-1 40'1• + "'' ·\Cf~ lnd 1~00 74'1~ 73 . 7311- ;J Total ule! 3 670.000 Untted Arhsts release pro\ es I t I t' Sicard 30~ S8l• Bl• 8'4 • 14 Addr.., 9ioo 1a 16 76 _2 ~<. ' ' . "A lllatter of Morals" was ammg ~mp ?Yment elsewhere. bowling alleys either in per· • Slcrd &p xd 1000 Sll 21 21 + l'.J Allegany 1600 1112 11•;. 11v. _ ~. the pot~!. . . . I dl"rected by John Crom\Vell and A. l_so regtstcrmg a. re young men son or 'phone 3289. This is

I 1 j Soul ham 27.1 S30h 301> 30\it + 1 Allis Ch 7~ 20~1 20io 201•- 'I• In th1s p1cture whtch ntro h ; , f • stert can 10a2 $86 11.11> a5Y. -1\o Am can 12600 151, 4511 4m . 1 . - produced by John D Hecs h In t e communtty, many of necessary to arrange a schedule 'Ph e , , Texa<o c 75 s.;7 56'• 56''- v.' Am cyon Irooo 47'lit 47 4ll'.l + \1 duces the magneltc Norweg1an ) 1 h · ·' w 0 whom have not vet held jobs to suit' all pla"ers · •\ftcr hours on

I ' • · T Fllt A m Sllh 5311 l3'\i -m Am Mot 9Joo • 1&~• ,6,. 1611 knockout, MaJ'. Britt Nilsson, 1 a so wrote t e ~crecnplay, and · · · · · ' -

1.! , ~ 1 Tr C Corp 27SO ~~. O~it g;s, .. 1,~ Am Smell 2400 60'14 59~, 59)1 + % Stev G H k . , Walle Gil' xd m sso !ll!i 5S'•- ;, Ant std 4Joo 1111 tsv, 17 money is involved, mystery is en · op ms.

I I•' \ \\Coaol Tr 2%; ~10'1 191< 19\l- ~- Am Tel 12200 132l'.J 131l'ol32li ~ 1-\ provlous day's closo. involved, murder is involved ; .1 ' Z•ll•r or 160 ~~~ 49 49 + ;; Am Tob 2300 911> 93 94 Net , · h·1 l'ANAlJIAl'i Ancnda 1900 49V. m•; 491\io ., 'lit ~loot Bal .. Rl1h Lo" Clo., Ch'1• with sex a motivating force, (SPECIAL ADDED .1 : • I Max ~00 3t 31 31 Arm>lg Ck IIOO 72,1 7D'I 71% • H• Anocon 300 1·16 7-16 7ol6 -1·1~ d b

I.; i .1' - .\It• Tn~ \ nl5 JH, Jt'o HI nabcock linn 52 ,1, ll'l 52'> ., •1 ncu Phone 100 5511 m. m1- \i egge on Y a master criminal. I ATTRACTION) . ''MARY HAD A LITTLE . , ." : 1 ·' ·i .\on R 11•11• ~J 9 9 9 R•lt Ohio . 3110 32'• 31'1 Jlli Brozll 3\o 311 211 211-% Yet "A Matter of Morals" is not

• ·'I ·' ' Ameron :!.IOO 3 3 1 Relh St••l 27400 13 42\4 4211 ~Ar ~~ m• 3:' 3R~~· 338 11 3,;1\1,1::=-s."'l6 an ordina~y crt' me thrt'ller, nor I ,, --· . . ' l •11 An Am Mol >!100 315 3Jl 345 + l norlng MOO 521• ~m sp~ ,.., " • 'I 1r d

l .l'ji ·~· An1honlan 1~011 9 n 9 ~ 'h llor~ War 2800 m; 13'1 4o1i- 'h Cdn Marc 1200 l'h Sla ~· is the murder which gives the ." arr .a A . L!!tle . - ." , , . 1 Ailsa Trl mo .110 31)0 ~In -l nuc,v Y.rle 4200 20\I 191, 19,1 + ~ Cnn MS IOOO 2~1 2.011 2MI film a special interest, an ordin· i . ' a l' ' J .\mo 70flll ~ 5'o ~ - h nnonowlek 23100 l6'• 36 36 - l'.J Chesebm 1900 58 57'.1o 5H• + % whtch IS now pla"mg today t

I i' :1 • AUr:uatu• t~H 10 39 40 Hurl lnd ;aoo 25 w, 21v. Crtote oon 40'11 4n 40\lo • 'h ary murder. As a 'matter of fact, 1 the Capitol Theatre, through , ' · llal.or looo H'h 11 14•.; Cahtm xd 1600 16h.l&11 16'1 + v. Dome Ptl Z7rlll ll'o II•> IIIIo + I> nothing about "A Matter of I c 1 es orpora Jon, IS " I : : ' I Al'alnn 700 ~ll'• l.l'i I"'' Dnrrlh• JIOO<J '"l' 47'• 18'' ; ~~ De~··P•I :lOll I, lo 'h Lopcrt PI ll r C t' .

, !'; .: ·,; Rat•n~an rooo 7'> 1•1 1•.; __ It C•n llry •Roo 26,1 w, 26 _ 11 llolllnl•r too 201. 201, 20•1 + % Morals" is ordinary not, repeat, not a nursery Reatrlee &'ln 6 6 6 CPR 2700 2411 24'1 24'i 4 ... Imp Oil 400 47'io 47% m• + \i • I I f A d h t 'I h d

1: 1 \ 1 lluu.. ~oo lll foil l4l ,s c .... 11 20oo a 1;, m- ,, no N A 1900 102'1101!< 1D2l> +II' The story, written by John D. r Iyme .. n w a "ary a was

:·J · 'l Bornll• uoon 21 23 24 corer •rr 1600 39Yo 30\l 3910 +1, Ma .. ey F 3300 IJ\1 13 13 - 1> Hees, star•· Wl'th an off-beat not a little. lamb, although ex· ' I . ' , Burn\ Hill ~100 • 21\'a 21 21 - 'h C•l•n"• 11100 IJlo 43V, 43l'.J t llo Mtad John lOll 127 12 8 127 - ~. .., tl h h h · , , ·~: ;·, ·1 i c Floor B ~oo Sll 13 13 + ,, Chrysler 13500 5814 57,1 5711 _ ,1 Moly 600 28 :za :111 + li idea, the plot ravels itself into a~ Y, w at 1t. was er us.band

1 , 1 , 1 1 , '; c corllerlts 9110 sm 6'1 ·&"1. Clllto svc 3900 56\; ;ov, !Silo- 1,1o ~~~ ~~~ 5~0015;'M 3rl6 3 ~·f16, ·:;_!-~ one big sequence after another, d~dn, t know, her boy fnends

: : < 1· ·l ~~ Pac Pete 7400 11'4 14 14\1 the climax is a real off·beat d1dn t know and ~ven her doc-

I"J ; ; ·, j; ~:~~~· •\1~ 1711 7:1 -~~~ + II · tor didn't know. However, in / ; ; ' I •. ~ ·- FREE OIL - FREE OIL .- fREE OIL Preston uoo l;< Mlo 511 +3-16 this saucy sex story, just off tbe , , -: Technclr 4200 20'h 111'/o 2DV• + !~ b t f M , ·. ·ti! Tmo Lux 1000 1!1> 1!1/o 1514 oa rom erry Old r.ugland,

, • Total ••I••· 1,360.000. they all have a great deal of fun . . ~~ NEW WHERE THEY GO finding out.

1 .... :· . ·uNION ·oiL'S "E.A""LY BIRD" (Ottawa Journal) Pert and provocative Agnes .. : · 11\ That report that the last of Laurent plays the Mary of the the professional mourners had movie's title. With Jack Wat·

, I

' . ,.

OFFI:R tn order to accommodate our custo"llers Union ·ou Company is making a NEW "Early Bird" Offer One of the first 30 customers each day weekly. will be eligible for 100 gals of Stove or 'Fuel oil Free each week. ·we 'are giving iway 100 gals a week, 400 gals a month. . · Please try to' be one of tbe first 30 customers each day.

In a fuel emergency, always call

UNION. OIL FIRST ·.8;2.822

-·· ----~--------~ : .... ..... ' I • ..

I

I.

died must h~ve been wrong, Old , ling, portraying a penurious professional mourners never producer, she plots to fool a die. They just join the Lib- psychiatrist into thinking she is erals. pregnant so that he cnn,

••• YOUR RED CROSS·

SERVES YOU AND

SERVES FOR YOU

' ,,

MalCORMAC'S GEAR STRt:F.T

RECEIVING OFFICE, I ADELMm: :;TRI'ET

DIAL 8·518~ · 2 · 3.

through hypnotism, produce the world's most perfect baby. To­gether they produce, ·instead, the world's most prh'fect con­Iusion and hilarity, as their res· pective { i a nee s, landlords, , policemen and even ·the ghost : of William Shakespeare all try to get to the bottom of things

·and resolve the mystety of ,Mary. 1'

. '

POLES Length$ 1c eo feet 10 ao ~et

11M8ERS;-II.C. FIR, W~TERN HEMLOCK, BIRCH AND oAK. from 1 inch pl•nk to 16" x 16". Lengths 1o A() feet. .n<lt.

TREATED AND UNTREATED. SAWN AND DR£SSED TO o,....~ ~~NTA TREATED POLES- LENGTHS 10 ~n FY.

All materials to C.S.A. antl Treatments -to A.W.;A. SiJeei licatious

ASPHALT AND CREOSOTE DIVISION

NEW SMALL

,~e ACAI Nova Mot

spent a grca1 test ban agn·•·1

U.S. Amhassal

• rtng

up.'' of your hu::ine«

~ere amon,l! hurled across the [[

Thursda\' ' exchange · 11 I

Roland .\liche milrl rebuke Diefenhal;er .

l.elertbal;er accu"'d ol wasting the tunc

11 ith "irrele1 questions.··

ti.,--Essex E. · questions were w~s up to Spe;

and not

impn ask q

1CP

lhe charge Ch~rles T

iail phy::ician he examined

lias ment~ll)' ill of standing tri•

arreoted 1\'rdm charged 11 ith as

a woman's a man had po

her. :llal!istra!c that the m

overcast, With Wet snow. }

lttn • 1

Peratures Min 1

Night

33 28·

" 25 ... 19

•• 14 ••• "•' 23