First Anniversary . Used Car Sale THE...

12
First Anniversary . Used Car Sale Now On. Terra Nova Motors Ltd. YOLo 70. NO. 76 ,.bitrate rARIS (Reuters) Striking miners Sunuay cnlled on de Gaulle to break silrncc and. arbitrate person· .... t: ( . : 1-' , • ..,.::-) "\ < - .I. ..... .• ••• 0. 'J p •• --..... -=-.. ... -- ... THE DAILY ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, MONDAY, APRIL 1, 1963 Ousts Water SL Elizabeth Ave. 12 PAGES All forms 01 rnsurance . SEVEN CENTS Bloodless Coup Expels Y digoras CP from AP·Reuters the bitler wage dispute the state· French coal industry O'· •• ",re 1. GUATEMALA CITY - Guatemala's armed forces deposed President Miguel Y digoras Fu- entes Sunday and expelled hi mto Nicaragua in a coup avowedly aimed at eradicating Com- munist infiltration and subversion. The 67 - year . old presi(lent- Tanks rumbled in the capi· himself a leader o[ the Central t\ tal's streets and warplanes American anti·Communist· anti· droned overhead in martial ac· Castroite movement _ was bun·: companiment to the Sabbath died aboard an air force plane: pealing 01 Roman Catholic by erstwhile military followers: church hells. Thc nation reo who now contend thcy can do I ported ralm. . "·,··· ... .... .." ... ,I ,\ speaKer of the Socialist il;'! rnion told a meeting of .2Wl mincrs in the market .. of :llcrlebach, in the big 'lie roal district. that if de ,-,011::111111,· ',','11, reallv the "suvior Fl'illf('C" it lime he in· ., •. City Bus Strike Starts Today a bettcr joh themselves in com-' Col. Enriqlle Prralta Azuroiia. batting thc menace. Ydigoras': 54, Ydigorlls' ddence minister ,>Ife accompanied hjm into ex· "ince Dec. 6. 1!160. took over ile. 'chiel executive with powers 10 lI'im of mincrs in the 1.01" I'l'ol'incc. which claims de Ydigoras a lormer general' rule by decree. who would have completed next: pllll'OIl saint ,loan of I , ii' pitrt of its heritagc. look I pl:illl'rlll to nl'ge their men· I :' III l'olltinllc the strike \lll' i ,\ lot of wnlklng wl\l be done hy SI. .Juhn's I'cshlrnts as :I surllflsc strike of the hus which may last weeks, brings all city transportation In a hall today. The Com\Jany's garage. is fillcil with idle huscs as a result of a hrcllkrlown In negotiations between the Union and the Company. The litet Ihat strike may lasl several WI'I'ks will be a blow to many cSllecially those without cars who live R long distance from their places or work. 'Io those of our readers who are likely 10 be in au)' way cffede!1 hy' tht' strike we c.1II only say very quietly, "April Fool:" There will be no shike spring a six·year tet'lll in the PROmSES ELECTro:.:s prcsidency. to which he was Peralta. who in thr past elecled by Gualemala's Con· helped Ydil(oras crush a series !!I'CSS Feh. 12. He essen· of riots. rc\'olts and assassina· tlit'il' demands .vere i . lied. i at all. lially ran a military regimc . with only one ch'ilian in his cab·' inel. 1' ------_.----- , f .......... ." "" .... , __ Says U. S. Will Have More . (, . •' · ·· ...... .,. .. .' .' · ...... \.\, .. .. . •• .• '.' ...... L Peal·son Braces For Forum Talks 1 Autos Than Adults In 2000 III !lON IIASIIIGIIT expect ill I'. Pearson 10 be (he I 1'.I:\COLlVER tCPI- Liller.11 main target. IVASIII:-lGTON (API-A mas· bc measured in the trillions of SEES LAND SHOUTAGE the work. play, tranl and I' Pcarson rested Waltcr Gordon. Liberal cam. sivc report on U.S. resources dollars and the "middle • in· But unless, forest, range and . living space of a well·hceled I I suys that the' United Statcs in come" family will have $11,000 crop lands are put to multiple II population, H5 pet· cent I wpekend at a Vancouver paign chiel seeking re·clection I lodge where he in TOl'Onto DlIl'enport. told a the ycar 2000 will have more a year to spend. uses, there will he a nct than that of 1960 the research· I'rcOI'Crill" from a minor I press conference here Sunday privatc aulomobiles than adults Th t . h t I deficit 01 land in 2000 AD [01' ers lound. ' " and atomic reactors will pro. e mos set·lOus s 01' age I - 'There '11 bc more t and bracin,," for what I. that he doubts whether fill'. 101'cseeable the report sal'd I'S TIlE COUNTRY P "RSON' \1'1 mo or vide more power than coal. " ... i vehicles than thcre are drivers ofiicials arc sure will be I Pearson can be g i \' en "11 land elho room fo popula I I The stud)' 01 U.S. national . - w I' a . . of age 20 and up. but man'y of attempt to bt'cak tougher lime" than in Hamilton needs alld resources was re. tlOn, now about ex· : the cars arc Iikelv to bc mid· his meeting in the forum, last llonday night. . leased Sunday by Resources of pected to be 331:000,000 m 2000. '1 gets and some be able to i GIVES OPI;>;ION Crop land Will be ample 1 h I I " 'I the Future Incorporated, a pri· ' ,take to the air or the \\'aterwal.'s I I::xpecting the worst-namely, "T at was ol'gan ,I r. because the average farm acre , 'd h \'lIle research group working. _: ! if the computer·controlled tral--I ". alteml)t to howl dOlVn Mr I Got'don sal "I may a\'e a 11'111 goO to 100 nt I YDiGORAS FUE:>ITES ......... ,>'ith Ford Foundation lunds. I I' II' 0 . per ce } 'I lic on turnpikes - ,," e t s too' , ''''''''0''1 _ the Liberals arc thought about it" but he saio I,ESTER n. PEARSO:>l IMre lood than It does now. I h t II h 'fl k I " ,heavy. ... . ,._< ".'A' (In pre.speec en cr· Ie as no spec I c nolV eugc. i It said lhat in lour decadcs IFarm surpluses will continue ! There will bc enough water., .•• •••. '" I as a crowd soother. Asked 10 comment on MI'. Tuesday night, thell east to· U.S. income and production will for many years. ! ol'CJ'·all. In the east it will taste lion plots. pledged to surrender have imported Canndian- i Iiiefenbaker's Saturday night illontreal and 'foronhl and his worse, having been polluted and the presidential after clec· conduclor Percy Faith I announcement that the remain- own riding of Algoma. East in! J yfu' IRe' '. file 0" n i Ihen ]lllrified. And milch of the tions--at n.n Califurnia to lead a 47- j' iug impOit surcharges imposed Northel'l1 Ontado. . west will have arril'ed at a lhat he said will be held 11\ an local orchestra. Inst .June were being Iifled, Mr. If' d t' I' I" .... •.• 1 difficult choice-either 10 cur· e eell\'e, emocra Ie c Ima e. . The cal'ernous forum was the I lie\" e I' have 'Proven R',ght' tail irrigation 01' to stop grOlI" It was he whu told a press con· .... ing economiclllly for lack 01 frrcnce that Ydlgoras had been .;. ..... of near·riot when Prime I been imposed in the first place NEW YORK (AP)-A plucky industrial water. exiled to Xicaragua. •. I;n;doo Diefenbaker spoke-or and It's high time they were Brooklyn girl, rescued with her · "' .... .. ,,* to-in the 1962 campaign. removed." By JAMES riEI.SON pilot after surviving 49 days in TI t' I' I C[ospl'tal allthorJ'(I'es sal'd two I (P P' 'I" 1C coun ry s gross na IOna .- had a much better reccption' MI'. Pearson's itincrary for OTTAW A C 1_ I'IInc "IIIIS' the Yukon [ollowing a plane wounded in shooting in the .. ,..... •• .;. 13sl week, despite heavy I the balance of the linal wcek: tet· Dielenbakcr said in. two crash, held a tearful, joylul reo "An honest bartender willi output will almost quadruple by downtown area late Saturday 1 1 .,'1111' This year the Liberals will take him to Winnipeg I spceches Saturday that Llheral union with her fllmily Saturday. do the world more good than, 2000, 10 a total of $2.000,000,000.. niuhl. Peralta hlamed the , ... ".,,'oi'- .... L I Leste Pe'lrson acctlsed I "01 th ,,, H I KI dishonest preacher." : 000 o[ 191iO huyin:: puwer. ,. cae er 1', ., 1. mo cr. e en allen shootin!! on misunderstandings. ...... _ .... + . ....... ·,···E,lgravers Vote him of lying ahollt Canadn's i cried from a mobile stretcher Peralta said the only resist- Bomarc bases. but that hc i as she glimpsed her mother, End SZlrcllal·Ues : ance til the armv takeover Sat- proven right hy Hobcrt 1 Ida. at Idlewild Ilirporl. . (j i lII'day ni"ht was 'the pl'esidential mara, U.S. secretl\l'Y of dl'fener'l ''I'm coming. I'm . : rcsidenc:' He said troops sur· .. , , "I told you the Bomarc was 1 the mother as she LIVEIlPOOL, N.S. (CPI- Fi·, unilalerilily thp fIsh·; rounded it and a tank brOKe no longer an elfecth'c instru· Iran to her daughter and rm· nance Minister Nowlan told an i ino limit tn 12 miles. It IIllW is! down the main door. Two per· mcnt, and :III'. PearSlln said the i braced her. election meeting hcre Saturday th e 1 sons were wounded in the clash. prime minister lied. Those me: "My preciolls darling." Illur· night "let no. one delude you .:..I_e_.:...-__________________ _ To End Strike · ',," :"" ..... his wOI'ds I wish I could Illllk: nnll'ed the mothcr who had this is II'Ot a stable government" .• -h ...... ' ... ·.,·. \1:W YOIlK. (.API-. The last I roted. Last Wednesday. in Il' into :Ill'. Pearson's heart I()[hy." I waited impatiently a fog·de- and announced the end of sur· the Iflur strlkmg UllIons \'oled : boisterous session, they tlll'lled I Dicfenbaker spoke to an'layed plane. ". charges on imports imposcd "'" ... ' «nce Sunday 01 .1 nell' I down a settlcmcnt by a vote of afternoon rally in Simcoe and "You're a gift from God," last June during the dollar .nllll", ,,,.t with New York City' 191 to 111. Sunday's reversal at a night election meeting in MI·s. Klaben cried as her tears crisis. ending a 1I4·day was 213 to 104. St. Thomas' Ont., hefore flying of happiness mingled with her of eight newspapers. The contract is within the back to Ottawa early Sunday. daughter's. "J missed you so '''U .. """.,,, of employees same framework offered the lIe leaves by train today for two much. Now I have you agalll." , . : ' • • '.,. ..... " .. "ij" .. ...... Whlutdlnwn .' " '"" .. · .' '\ ': returning to work at the eight other cralt unions. days campaigning in Quebec. Helen arrived from Se31tle papers, The Times, In the case of the printers, The Conservative leader said with her brother Arthur of c ... ., ., ,,' 'j ..... - t Daily News and who launched the strike with a that Mr. McNamara's testimony Weatherslield, who' had ·AII four planned walkout Dec. 8 against The before the congrl!ssional com- flown to Whitehorse, Yukon Tel" publleatlon. :-vith their Times, Daily News, Journal mlttee, made public Friday provo ritory, to join her after her res· editions. The American and The Wol'ld·Tele· cd the Diefenbaker argument cue. , ",... .. t tllllnnct'l\' , . ' _h ' ....... papers will publish gram and Sun, the settlement that the Bomare bases at La Also present for the rcunic-:1 provided for $6.51 the lirst year, Maeaza, Que., and North Bay I"ere her sisters, Ruth TePel· $6.12 the second, with a $4 wage should not have nuclear war· baum and Linda Klabcn, and Increase in each year. heads now. . two other brothers. Martin . _ :', !.. ,,\l nndm' .• - .... II was the second time in a , .- .. " .. ...;,.,.... that the engravers had '. ' 1--;::-------=---- · .... " ••• : ........ of e"ery 10 American '" t.· .. , ..... •• I have television sets · , ••. , and 1 in B have two or more setl. }"irsl "wooden nickel" was h)' the Chamber of Com· mme of Tenino, Wash., in 1932. A load of 75 to 120 pounds the air mllst be supported car,h square foot of wing ....... 4 .... _, .. ar., 0 na airllnf:f. 1'or III years, Wadi Haifa, , .......... Slid an. had no rainfall. A I'crage home in the Los , cs metropolitan area cost owner $17,000, according to estimates. Sunny with few cloudy periods. High today 211. Temperatures NII/ht Do, HELEN KLABEN Robert. Aller an interview, stretcher was wheeled to a wait· ing vehicle for a trip to Colum- bia Presbyterian Hospital. Her five frostbitten right toes may ha ve to be amputated. The hos· pital said only diagnostic tests were on her immediate sched· ule. "The experts will tell you Canada has made the quickest recovery of any nation in the world. Our credit is' standing higher than ever before. , . ." Prime Minister Diefenbakcr also announced the repeal of the surcharges at a political rally Saturday night in st. '1110:1'135, Onto The finance min i s 1 e r was speaking at a Progressive Con- servative rally here in support of Lloyd crouse, member for Queen's Lunenburg in the last Parliament, who is seeking reo election in the April 8 fcderal election. Both he and Mr. Crouse at- tacked Liberal Lea del' Pear· son's announced intention of ( Canadians Win ,$930,000 By TilE CANADIAN PRESS Residents of Vancouver and Richmond Hill. 0111., cleaned up Saturday on their Irish sweep' stakes tickets as Canadians won $930,000 on the results of the Grand National Steeplechase at Aintree, England. MACM1LLAN WELEriSKY WelensliY Raps P.M. , Min Mill Vancouver boasted two people with tickets on Ayala, the 66·10·1 winner. They each won $150,000. Richmond Hill,' a small Toronto· area town. had a winner and a second-place ticketholdcr who won $60,090 on Carriekbeg's per· Kaunda said he and Nkum· He said he had ! . .. , LEOPOLDVILLE':"N;) ',matter wlult the weather is like on day in Canada, on AprilSth. it's ., ..... 33 33 certain members of· the Caul\dian Army votiJlg. ill 'the Congo will have it hotand humid. Canadian soldiers here and other parts of thc,world will their ballots hetween April 1 and 6. Here, discuss- St. 29 39 ing the ejection notice are (L·R): Sgt. R. A. Carley, Newmarket, ·Ont.; Corp. Garnet Cramp, Meaford, ______ .1I0nt., and Signalman R. D, Corrigan, Edmonton, Alta. (UPI Telephoto) formance. bula would "definitely take part have lunch Saturday with In all, five . Canadians had in the forthcoming conlerence.·' .. first.place tickcts, twll had sec.' '. AfrIcan R.; A. onds and two more won $30'POO I Southern Rhod.esian Butler· earher It was ImpOSSible each on the third.place horse I Winston Fieldsmd Saturday 'hls for. me to. eat the food of people Hawa's Song. country has made formal appli- who betrayed me." v,', " '\ J

Transcript of First Anniversary . Used Car Sale THE...

Page 1: First Anniversary . Used Car Sale THE DAILYcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...The Com\Jany's garage. a\)(I\'I~, is fillcil with idle huscs as a result of a hrcllkrlown

First Anniversary . Used Car Sale

Now On.

Terra Nova Motors Ltd. YOLo 70. NO. 76

,.bitrate rARIS (Reuters) Striking

miners Sunuay cnlled on de Gaulle to break

silrncc and. arbitrate person·

~I:::.~'" .... t: ( . : 1-' , • ..,.::-)

• • "\ < - ~. • .I. .....

.• • ••• • 0. • 'J p ~ •• --..... -=-.. ~::-,. ... --... ~---,,~'

THE DAILY ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, MONDAY, APRIL 1, 1963

Ousts

Water SL Elizabeth Ave.

12 PAGES

All forms 01 rnsurance .

SEVEN CENTS

Bloodless Coup Expels Y digoras

CP from AP·Reuters

the bitler wage dispute h~s paraly~ed the state·

French coal industry O'· •• ",re ~Inrch 1.

GUATEMALA CITY - Guatemala's armed forces deposed President Miguel Y digoras Fu­entes Sunday and expelled hi mto Nicaragua in a coup avowedly aimed at eradicating Com­munist infiltration and subversion.

The 67 - year . old presi(lent- Tanks rumbled in the capi· himself a leader o[ the Central t\ tal's streets and warplanes American anti·Communist· anti· droned overhead in martial ac· Castroite movement _ was bun·: companiment to the Sabbath died aboard an air force plane: pealing 01 Roman Catholic by erstwhile military followers: church hells. Thc nation wa~ reo who now contend thcy can do I ported ralm.

. "·,··· ... • .... ~ .. " ... ,I ,\ speaKer of the Socialist il;'! rnion told a meeting of

.2Wl mincrs in the market

.. ~: ,,~

of :llcrlebach, in the big 'lie roal district. that if de

,-,011::111111,· ',','11, reallv the "suvior Fl'illf('C" it w~s lime he in·

., •. ~I''''~~'''''" City Bus Strike Starts Today a bettcr joh themselves in com-' Col. Enriqlle Prralta Azuroiia. batting thc menace. Ydigoras': 54, Ydigorlls' ddence minister ,>Ife accompanied hjm into ex· "ince Dec. 6. 1!160. took over a~ ile. 'chiel executive with powers 10

lI'im of mincrs in the 1.01"

I'l'ol'incc. which claims de

Ydigoras i~ a lormer general' rule by decree. who would have completed next:

~11;~lIl1lr'; pllll'OIl saint ,loan of I , ii' pitrt of its heritagc. look I pl:illl'rlll to nl'ge their men· I :' III l'olltinllc the strike \lll' i

,\ lot of wnlklng wl\l be done hy SI. .Juhn's I'cshlrnts as :I surllflsc strike of the hus tlperntor~. which may last ~everal weeks, brings all city transportation In a hall today. The Com\Jany's garage. a\)(I\'I~, is fillcil with idle huscs as a result of a hrcllkrlown In negotiations between the Union and the Company. The litet Ihat Ihl~ strike may lasl several WI'I'ks will be a s!~vrre blow to many cilizrn~. cSllecially those without cars who live R long distance from their places or work. 'Io those of our readers who are likely 10 be in au)' way cffede!1 hy' tht' strike we c.1II only say very quietly, "April Fool:" There will be no shike

spring a six·year tet'lll in the PROmSES ELECTro:.:s prcsidency. to which he was Peralta. who in thr past ha~ elecled by Gualemala's Con· helped Ydil(oras crush a series !!I'CSS Feh. 12. 1~5a. He essen· of riots. rc\'olts and assassina·

tlit'il' I\'a~c demands .vere i . lied. i at all.

lially ran a military regimc . with only one ch'ilian in his cab·' inel. 1 '

~.-- ------_.-----, f ~ .......... ." "" .... , __

Says U. S. Will Have More . (, . • ' ".(.'It~~""""" · ·· ...... .,. .. ~t~~I\~

.' ~ .' · ...... ~, \.\, ..

.. . •• ~',~\jIf .• '.' ...... L

Peal·son Braces For Forum Talks

1

Autos Than Adults In 2000 III !lON IIASIIIGIIT expect ill I'. Pearson 10 be (he I 1'.I:\COLlVER tCPI- Liller.11 main target. IVASIII:-lGTON (API-A mas· bc measured in the trillions of SEES LAND SHOUTAGE the work. play, tranl and I' Pcarson rested durin~ Waltcr Gordon. Liberal cam. sivc report on U.S. resources dollars and the "middle • in· But unless, forest, range and . living space of a well·hceled I ~ I suys that the' United Statcs in come" family will have $11,000 crop lands are put to multiple II population, H5 pet· cent hi~ur.r I

wpekend at a Vancouver paign chiel seeking re·clection I o~ h~liday lodge where he in TOl'Onto DlIl'enport. told a the ycar 2000 will have more a year to spend. uses, there will he a nct than that of 1960 the research· I'rcOI'Crill" from a minor I press conference here Sunday privatc aulomobiles than adults Th t . h t I deficit 01 land in 2000 AD [01' ers lound. ' " and atomic reactors will pro. e mos set·lOus s 01' age I - 'There '11 bc more t and bracin,," for what I. that he doubts whether fill'. 101'cseeable the report sal'd I'S TIlE COUNTRY P "RSON' \1'1 mo or vide more power than coal. " ... i vehicles than thcre are drivers ofiicials arc sure will be I Pearson can be g i \' en "11 land elho room fo popula I

I The stud)' 01 U.S. national . - w I' a . . of age 20 and up. but man'y of

or~allized attempt to bt'cak tougher lime" than in Hamilton needs alld resources was re. tlOn, now about 180,00().~OO ex· : the cars arc Iikelv to bc mid· his meeting in the forum, last llonday night. . leased Sunday by Resources of pected to be 331:000,000 m 2000. '1 gets and some m~y be able to tOl1i~ht. i GIVES OPI;>;ION Crop land Will be ample

1 h I I" 'I the Future Incorporated, a pri· ' ~ ,take to the air or the \\'aterwal.'s I

I::xpecting the worst-namely, "T at was ol'gan Z~(. ,I r. because the average farm acre , 'd h \'lIle research group working. _: ! if the computer·controlled tral--I ". alteml)t to howl dOlVn Mr I Got'don sal "I may a\'e a 11'111 goO to 100 nt I YDiGORAS FUE:>ITES ......... ~'.H ,>'ith Ford Foundation lunds. I I' II' 0 . per ce } 'I lic on turnpikes - ,," e t s too' , ''''''''0''1 _ the Liberals arc thought about it" but he saio I,ESTER n. PEARSO:>l IMre lood than It does now. I

h t II h 'fl k I ~. " ,heavy . ... . ,._< ".'A' (In pre.speec en cr· Ie as no spec I c nolV eugc. i It said lhat in lour decadcs I Farm surpluses will continue ! There will bc enough water., .•• ",_~ •••. '" I as a crowd soother. Asked 10 comment on MI'. Tuesday night, thell east to· U.S. income and production will for many years. ! ol'CJ'·all. In the east it will taste lion plots. pledged to surrender

have imported Canndian- i Iiiefenbaker's Saturday night illontreal and 'foronhl and his • worse, having been polluted and the presidential cha~r after clec· conduclor Percy Faith I announcement that the remain- own riding of Algoma. East in! J O· yfu' IRe' '. U· file 0" n i Ihen ]lllrified. And milch of the tions--at n.n tll~spCClhcd d~te,,-Califurnia to lead a 47- j' iug impOit surcharges imposed Northel'l1 Ontado. . west will have arril'ed at a lhat he said will be held 11\ an local orchestra. Inst .June were being Iifled, Mr. If' d t' I' I" .... ~.,. ~'I"', •.• 1 difficult choice-either 10 cur· e eell\'e, emocra Ie c Ima e.

~., ~.Jv...i~.. . The cal'ernous forum was the I G?:~h~y sa!~~Uld lie\" e I' have 'Proven R',ght' tail irrigation 01' to stop grOlI" It was he whu told a press con· .... ing economiclllly for lack 01 frrcnce that Ydlgoras had been .;. ..... ;;~....... of near·riot when Prime I been imposed in the first place NEW YORK (AP)-A plucky industrial water. exiled to Xicaragua .

•. I;n;doo Diefenbaker spoke-or and It's high time they were Brooklyn girl, rescued with her · "' .... \~ .. ,,* to-in the 1962 campaign. removed." By JAMES riEI.SON pilot after surviving 49 days in TI t' I' I C[ospl'tal allthorJ'(I'es sal'd two I (P P' 'I" 1C coun ry s gross na IOna .-had a much better reccption' MI'. Pearson's itincrary for OTTAW A C 1_ I'IInc "IIIIS' the Yukon [ollowing a plane wounded in shooting in the

.. , ..... .;..,~ •• .;. 13sl week, despite heavy I the balance of the linal wcek: tet· Dielenbakcr said in. two crash, held a tearful, joylul reo "An honest bartender willi output will almost quadruple by downtown area late Saturday ~:: ~i,: 1

1.,'1111' ~. This year the Liberals will take him to Winnipeg I spceches Saturday that Llheral union with her fllmily Saturday. do the world more good than, 2000, 10 a total of $2.000,000,000.. niuhl. Peralta hlamed the

, ... ".,,'oi'-.... L I Leste Pe'lrson acctlsed I "01 th ,,, H I KI dishonest preacher." : 000 o[ 191iO huyin:: puwer. ,. cae er 1', ., 1. mo cr. e en allen shootin!! on misunderstandings.

...... _ .... + ........ ·,···E,lgravers Vote him of lying ahollt Canadn's i cried from a mobile stretcher Peralta said the only resist-Bomarc bases. but that hc I\~as i as she glimpsed her mother, End SZlrcllal·Ues : ance til the armv takeover Sat-proven right hy Hobcrt ~Ic)\a· 1 Ida. at Idlewild Ilirporl. . • (j i lII'day ni"ht was 'the pl'esidential mara, U.S. secretl\l'Y of dl'fener'l ''I'm coming. I'm comin~." . : rcsidenc:' He said troops sur·

.. , , "I told you the Bomarc was 1 c~claimed the mother as she LIVEIlPOOL, N.S. (CPI- Fi·, unilalerilily extendin~ thp fIsh·; rounded it and a tank brOKe no longer an elfecth'c instru· Iran to her daughter and rm· nance Minister Nowlan told an i ino limit tn 12 miles. It IIllW is! down the main door. Two per· mcnt, and :III'. PearSlln said the i braced her. election meeting hcre Saturday th ~ e 1 sons were wounded in the clash. prime minister lied. Those me: "My preciolls darling." Illur· night "let no. one delude you .:..I_e_.:...-__________________ _ To End Strike

· ',," "7"P!"~ :"" .....

his wOI'ds I wish I could Illllk: nnll'ed the mothcr who had this is II'Ot a stable government" .• - h ...... ' ... ·.,·. \1:W YOIlK. (.API-. The last I roted. Last Wednesday. in Il' into :Ill'. Pearson's heart I()[hy." I waited impatiently I~r a fog·de- and announced the end of sur·

the Iflur strlkmg UllIons \'oled : boisterous session, they tlll'lled I ~Ir. Dicfenbaker spoke to an'layed plane. ". charges on imports imposcd "'" • ..:.;.,;.;.~ ... ' «nce Sunday 01 .1 nell' I down a settlcmcnt by a vote of afternoon rally in Simcoe and "You're a gift from God," last June during the dollar

.nllll", ,,,.t with New York City' 191 to 111. Sunday's reversal at a night election meeting in MI·s. Klaben cried as her tears crisis. ending a 1I4·day was 213 to 104. St. Thomas' Ont., hefore flying of happiness mingled with her

of eight newspapers. The contract is within the back to Ottawa early Sunday. daughter's. "J missed you so '''U .. """.,,, of employees same framework offered the lIe leaves by train today for two much. Now I have you agalll."

, . : ' • • '.,. ..... " .. "ij" .. ~ ...... Whlutdlnwn

.' " '"" .. ,,!,"It~"""'· · .' ~".'I\"'- ~.:\.~

'\ ':

returning to work at the eight other cralt unions. days campaigning in Quebec. Helen arrived from Se31tle papers, The Times, In the case of the printers, The Conservative leader said with her brother Arthur of

c .~".T'j"'~'lrt ... ., ., ,,' 'j

"""l"~"""'-"" ..... - ~", t

~ribune, Daily News and who launched the strike with a that Mr. McNamara's testimony Weatherslield, Co~n.. who' had ~hrror. ·AII four planned walkout Dec. 8 against The before the congrl!ssional com- flown to Whitehorse, Yukon Tel"

publleatlon. :-vith their Times, Daily News, Journal mlttee, made public Friday provo ritory, to join her after her res· editions. The American and The Wol'ld·Tele· cd the Diefenbaker argument cue. , ",... .J.";.l..~ .. ~ t tllllnnct'l\'

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'"t~ _h lofi~"* ' ....... papers will publish gram and Sun, the settlement that the Bomare bases at La Also present for the rcunic-:1 provided for $6.51 the lirst year, Maeaza, Que., and North Bay I"ere her sisters, Ruth TePel· $6.12 the second, with a $4 wage should not have nuclear war· baum and Linda Klabcn, and Increase in each year. heads now. . two other brothers. Martin ~nd

. _ :', !.. ,,\lnndm' .• - .... '-:"',~"" II was the second time in a , .-.. " .. ...;,.,.... that the engravers had

,.",~: '. ' 1--;::-------=----· .... " ••• :........ ~ine of e"ery 10 American

'" t.· .. , ..... •• I have television sets · , ••. , ,..:~.. and 1 in B have two or more

setl.

}"irsl "wooden nickel" was i55U~d h)' the Chamber of Com· mme of Tenino, Wash., in 1932.

A load of 75 to 120 pounds the air mllst be supported car,h square foot of wing

....... 4 .... _, .. ar., 0 na molle~n airllnf:f.

1'or III years, Wadi Haifa, , .......... ~1*"'~. Slid an. had no rainfall.

A I'crage home in the Los , cs metropolitan area cost

owner $17,000, according to estimates.

Sunny with few cloudy periods. High today 211.

Temperatures NII/ht Do,

HELEN KLABEN

Robert. Aller an interview, Hel~n's

stretcher was wheeled to a wait· ing vehicle for a trip to Colum­bia Presbyterian Hospital. Her five frostbitten right toes may ha ve to be amputated. The hos· pital said only diagnostic tests were on her immediate sched· ule.

"The experts will tell you Canada has made the quickest recovery of any nation in the world. Our credit is' standing higher than ever before. , . ."

Prime Minister Diefenbakcr also announced the repeal of the surcharges at a political rally Saturday night in st. '1110:1'135,

Onto

The finance min i s 1 e r was speaking at a Progressive Con­servative rally here in support of Lloyd crouse, member for Queen's Lunenburg in the last Parliament, who is seeking reo election in the April 8 fcderal election.

Both he and Mr. Crouse at­tacked Liberal Lea del' Pear· son's announced intention of

(

Canadians

Win

,$930,000 By TilE CANADIAN PRESS

Residents of Vancouver and Richmond Hill. 0111., cleaned up Saturday on their Irish sweep' stakes tickets as Canadians won $930,000 on the results of the Grand National Steeplechase at Aintree, England.

MACM1LLAN WELEriSKY

WelensliY Raps Britain~s' P.M.

, Min Mill

Vancouver boasted two people with tickets on Ayala, the 66·10·1 winner. They each won $150,000. Richmond Hill,' a small Toronto· area town. had a winner and a second-place ticketholdcr who won $60,090 on Carriekbeg's per· Kaunda said he and Nkum· He said he had refllsed~.lo

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~:~~~~l'::::::: ~:: LEOPOLDVILLE':"N;) ',matter wlult the weather is like on el~ctioll day in Canada, on AprilSth. it's ~ol~cton ., ..... 33 33 certain members of· the Caul\dian Army votiJlg. ill 'the Congo will have it hotand humid. Canadian S:d~:;"'''''' ~;.;: soldiers here and other parts of thc,world will ca~t their ballots hetween April 1 and 6. Here, discuss-St. John'~"::::: 29 39 ing the ejection notice are (L·R): Sgt. R. A. Carley, Newmarket, ·Ont.; Corp. Garnet Cramp, Meaford, _~ ______ .1I0nt., and Signalman R. D, Corrigan, Edmonton, Alta. (UPI Telephoto)

formance. bula would "definitely take part have lunch Saturday with pr~e In all, five . Canadians had in the forthcoming conlerence.·' Mi~ister' Ma~milla~ ~nd Cen~at ..

first.place tickcts, twll had sec.' '. AfrIcan A[.falr,~. Mmls~er R.; A. onds and two more won $30'POO I Southern Rhod.esian Preml~r Butler· earher It was ImpOSSible each on the third.place horse I Winston Fieldsmd Saturday 'hls for. me to. eat the food of people Hawa's Song. country has made formal appli- who betrayed me."

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I-THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, APRIL I, 1963

8 Win Awards' Feile" 'New ·"Boss" Of Hawaii Is

Former Stateside School Teacher

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Hawaii's modern successor to famed Queen Llloukalanl is-for all thlngs-a Minnesota .com housewife and ex~teacher. points out the April Issue . of Ebony magazine, now on the newsstands,

entered politics In 1954 be· coming. the Urst . woman momber of the Island's. County Board of Supervisors, She Is a Democrat.

She Is Mrs, Helene Hale, newly elected "mayor" of the island of HawaII-the first ~vomun chief executive since 'Quecn Lilioukalani who reigned nearly a century ago. Actually her title Is not mayor, let alone queen-but her duties as chairman 01 HawaII County add up to those of mayor of the largest of the Hawaiian Islands,

Her husband now' "seems content with leaving the public spotlliht to his wife," Ebony says.

"He made speeches fOL' me when my own schedule be· came conflicted," Mrs Uale says in Ebony, "He also generally kept the home fires burning."

E bon y spotlights the ",'iI'acious woman politician whose "maverick campaign upset the island's political apple cart."

· "A sll'ong believer i n political equality of the sexes, the new lady 'mayor,' who combines her role 85 pollticlan _administrator with that of a housewife and mother o( two. believes and demonstrates that a 'woman's plnce' need not be the confines of !lcr home," Ebony says.

· Mrs, Hale's political victory was an upset. not only because she Is a woman but because, says E bon y. she violated

. "I'irtually all the estahllshed rules of the 'Big Island' political game, She stubbornly re(uscd ro promise her sup·

· porters patronage; instead promised to get rid of certain 'unnecessarv jobs.' For good measure, she threatened n

· wholesale purge of incapable, · appointed country brass. For a person who was nol a native

· of Hawaii' and not related to eny of the leading Island families and who In addition admitted being part Negro, part Indian 'and a few other nationalities,' such campaign. lng, it was felt, could only lead to de(cnt."

As it turned out, It was the ,,"oman's touch that made the di!ference, As a woman, she took a personal approach in campaigning and. notes Ebony, "island politicians feel that her personal' approach not only clinched her election but is her highest card In any intramural squabble that might develop over any reorganization of ~ountry departments,"

: Neither Mrs, Hale nor hc~ teacher husband, William had ~ny idea that she would cnd IIp 85 "mayor" whcn they tame to the Island 16 years ~go, In fact, he hnd poUlical ambitions before she did, run· nlng unsuccessfuJly in 1950 lor HawaII's Stale Constitu· tional Conventlon. Mrs hale

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SORE 'THROAT'

The "home fires," the article notes, included taking care of thc couple's 6.year·old son, BillY, and overseeing their coffee farm and weekend retreat In Kona. The Hales have another chlld, an lij· year.old daughter, Indira, who attends Reed College In Port· land, Oregon,

Mrs. Hale, like her husband,' began as a teacher. Alter receiving her master's degree in English from the l'nlversity or Minnesota. she taught at Tennessee A £ I College-until she met and married the col· lege president·s 80n, Then, 16 years ago, instead of dreaming about tropical Is· lands, they moved to HawaII, and Mrs, Hale helped made ends meet by selllng children'S books from door to door until the young teacher couple established themselves on the island. Mrs, Hale Is a niece o( Mrs, Ralph Bunche,

i"·UIIt"'IIt,'I.,tlUII,.ITIt111111111"tlllllllltrlll.UI"1

~ We The; ~ ~ " . ~ Women I ~ ~ TIIINK TWICE-THEN, DON'T

By RUTH MILLETT

Think twice before you­

Pass along a bit of gossip, even if you know for a fact that it Is true, (Would you want that kind of story spread about you or a member of your family?)

Make a fuss about service, (Sure you aren't just throwing your weight around?)

Monopolize the convcrsa· tion when you are in a group, < Are you really that fascin· ating?) ,

Tell a white lie just to save face, (Chances are you wlll be found out-and then, wun't your (ace be red?)

Refuse to let a friend do you a favor, (Friendships are nourished not only by favors given, but by favors grate(ully accepted.!

Run yourself down, (Sure you aren't just begging for compliments and reassur· ance?)

Olfer unsought advice. (The fact your advice hasn't been sought may indicate it Isn't wanted.)

Tell one of your favorite anecdotes. (Sure you haven·t told it to the same persons before? If it's a favorite story" you probably have,)

Put another person in his place, (For this you will

NEWfOUNDLAND'S fRIENDLY THEATRE

----------------------­,

NOW PLAYING IN ONE UI;UIIJI v .... , ••

they faced the dangers wilderness and lived a great adventure!

. WALT DISNEY

n-c:1HA'It'OtO~

wh1u PIDGEON·Giil's PAYANT·GENESt. Also -UP-TO-THE-MINUTE' NEWS

TIMES OF SHOWS EVENING SHOWS: - 6:30 - 9;()()

. MATINE£: -1:30 ,

: NEXT AnRACTION

',~

.Lashf -POLlY'S POINT.ERS

Safety awards are being pre· sented to 80 Imperial Oil truck drivers In the Atlantic Provinces in recognition of 9,500,000 mil· es of acciden't.free driving, W. W: Shatford, Atlantic Region' lIlanager, announced recently.

WRINGER WaLJu.J.:.~1 .AtDI

DEAR POLLY-Alter w~sh' ing permanently pleated skIrts, gather the pleats together carefully, Slip a clean, old nylon stocking down over the skirt and hang up to drY. The pleats will dry close togeth.er and be firm and neat-conme.

DEAR POLLY-Often we girls grab our car keys and dash out with no purse, I find it comforting to know that tucked away in the back of my key case is a doUar ~or gas five cents for parlung meter and a dime in case I have to make a phone call. -E, S.

DEAR POLLY-MY grand· mother, who cannot see very well but dearly loves to sew, was forever losing her scissors and dropping needles and pins, We hit on this idea. which was a boon to the whole family, We bought a yard and a half

Included in the annual a wards list are eight Newfoundland drivers In four communities in the province. Actual mileage driven varies from short· haul driving to the long·haul tractor· trailer deliveries made under varying weather and road con· ditions. .

The average mileage of the Rward.winning Atlantic Provo Inces drivers is about 120,000 mUes or five years of accident· free driving. Their 9,500,000· mile total is equivalent to some 350 trips around the world.

The awards consist of jewel· ed pins and plaques. Imperial Oil drivers in Newfoundland winning the awards are: R. J. Hunt and A. Hawkins, Stephen· ville Crossing; A. Tilley, Claren· ville; E. M. Collins, A. Manuel, E. R. Budgell and W. H. Mac· Lean, Lewisporte; and C. Snel· grove of St. John's.

The pergrine falcon is can· sidered by some to be the fast· est of all flying birds and ob· servers have credited it with a diving speed of 180 miles an hour,

FROM $119.95

~I ,; ; '~

• Big 9 lb, capacity .j

• Handles and timer all ~ul i~ front ,".1

• Underwater lint tra~ ~\J • Deluxe Safety Wringer <; • 3 zone washing al'lion .. • Large cushioned :011, . • 5 year warranty on mech··

an Ism, '

See JACK CAHILL a: I.

JO~N CLOYSTONLTD, .•.. ONE tOCAT,iON ONLY;)I.

85081 177 DuckwQnldt!, ;,

The Newfoundla~ )n of Labor said '.vas .. amazed at l~ ;rocity of the aUae Ie employees of We jal Hospital" by 'nd health ministel cGrath . in the HI :l1bly Frld~y.

The federation tateJ11ent that "to

)btaiD a small wal to the actions of a ~unman, as Dr. M portedly did, Is I ~ause decent peopl

EPA's Sf Dart Art I

The second of E incial Airways' I Dart Herald aircr down at Gander St its trans·Atlantic from the factory i

piloted by Capt. and Capt. Ben Ri~ Gander, the aircra:

. from London to GI of Prestiwick, Sco vik, Iceland; Greenland; and FI N,W.T.

or narrow ribbon' stitched a pair of scissors to one end. Next we stitched a small pin cu shion at the other end with pins and several needles in it. She hangs this around her neck when she sews.-E.R,

Rivers, wind and other nat· ural causes carry some three billion tons of material from the land into the sea every year. ....--------

~

Commenting Upl Capt. Cooper saie ney was entireh and the aircraft pi fectly."

GlRLS-I can see all right, but scissors and pins really play hide and seek with me, too, -Polly.

DEAR POLLY - The ladies who have quilted bedspreads with flounces will find ironing them simple if the flounces are ironed first. Then put the spread on the bed and iron its top with the stea~ ir~n. The bed serves as an Iromng board therefore the job is faster' and easier.--J,S.

I1ASTRO.GUIDE" For Mond~y, April I

Present-For You lind . Yours ••• Indecision seems to

plague people today. Botli fav· orable and' adverse aspects entcr tbe picture, so anytbing can happen-and probably wim In gcneral, afternoon hours are most favorable, so schedule af­fairs for then. This is not an auspicious day for' contaCting people. Postpone appointments if possible.

By Ceean The arrival of Dart.Herald aircra ed due to poor England, Howe\ training having I out during the I Gander using the which arrived th

'! EPA will now in " new aircraft intj

Newfoundland Ap peets to introduc the Labrador sel April,

"These new P seat Rolls Royee aircraft will set l

the standards of Canada'S newest: has no doubt th gers will now e dented standard (

Elegantly fashioned by Petite Coq uette to suit the most discriminating tastes, white all-wool fully bonded coat designed for subtle warmth, Italian collar gently leads to a double breasted bodice, Wide black patent belt accentu­ates the fitted waist to fall in graceful fullness,

DEAR POLLY-1f you or any o( the girls have gained [\ (ew pounds (as I have) and YOU wear a girdle with stays, i am sure the stays have jab· bed you in the sides many times, Take a piece of mole· skin root plaster and stick a . piece of it at the point where the stay jabs. This will bring enough comfort that you can get by for a while with the same old girdle, Works on strapless hras too. Don't laugh. TrY it first.

Past ••• Aside from a surmise FUture .•• When the fir$t U.S, , that cavemen "bOwled," bowling astronaut steps ooto the ~oon, I historians can trac:c tbe.history he will be wearing a .space suit ! of the sport back to ancient with bellows·like joints at the . Egypt. Bowliog was SO 'much a shoulders, elbows, thighs, and

'part of life thcn that a bowling knees, The bellows 'will permit \ set was placed in a pyramid. freedom to move about. I

1 ",-

~ The Day Under. Your Sign" ! ARIES IBom M.r.1t 21 10 April J91 LIBRA ISopt. 2i I~ Oct. 221 . I

convenience," an man said.

Pol;c tf"llIIIII11111111t1lllll1ll1lllll1ll1lltllllll"lllllltl!1IIII'!

I Thought Fori I The Day I M -= = ~ -There is nothing so falal 10 character as half·finished tasks. -David Lloyd George.

never be forgiven.)

Compiain about how un· fl'iendly you've found a new town or neighborhood. <Give others time to take you in. How about your own (riend· liness? )

Make any kind of promise without (ully intending to keep it, whether it is convenient or not. : Broken promises can't be mended.)

Low·rate any member of your family or any of your in·laws, (That's the worst kind o[ disloyalty.)

Manner$ By MILLETT

If you make an un­expected callI make it briet ;

Most common musical instru· ment on the early Ohio fron· tier was the fiddle or violin,

Fires in . the U.S, caused severe burns to 1.8 million persons during 1962,

NOW PLAYING Sisler, sisler, oh so fair, why is Ihere blood all over your hair?

SMH ARTS ~'tt'B" ASSOCL\1ES AND ALDRICH PRODucnON

~VfR HIlPPiNID TD BA8YJAN~r

......... and Joan Crawford . Also-UP-TO-THE-MINUTE NEWS

TIMES OF SHOWS

EVENING SHOWS: - 6: 15 9,00 MATINEE: - 1 :30

----,------------------~----------~ NEXT AnRACTIO'li

GEORGE MONTGOMERY - GILBERT IROLAND in. "SAMAR" - ADVENTURE -THRILLS - SUSPENSE - Also "HOUSE OF

The Lord our God be with lIS, as he was with our fathers' let him not leave us, nor for~ake us: that he may incline our h7arts unto him, to waik in all 1115 ways, and to !;ecp his com· mandments. (! Kings 3:57·53),

PRAYER: 0 Lord, master of our lives, heip us to find (he true joy which comes from Thy promised peace. Possess our soub by Thy spirit. 1nd and hallow olIr ]i1'CS ill service to Thee. In the Savior's name we ask. Amen.

FIRST U,S. CONVE!,;T, First convent in the United

States was established at Port Tobacco, Charles County, ~ld. Four nuns estahlished this first American headquarters of the Carmelites in 1790.

When washing shirt collars \ and vou know how stained they can get) put shampoo on the grease stains, Shampoo is mnde to dissolve body oils and I find it works wonders on my husband's shirt col· iat·s.-Mrs. W.E.C.

G lRLS-t! any suggestiuns made by other readers are against your state laws. for· ~et them. For exampie, where forest fires might be started you could not use the milk carton flares suggested in an carlier column. Nor would one use such a flare (unless set in a tin can or other container!, if there was the least bit of wind blowing.-POLLY.

Ddrr to moods of other. rawet" than Don't be .idclraek~ br in~fturt,~r.! .j ICt.. inl'OlTcd in a futile argument. 'When you .bould Ittck 10 bWlntl!. : Eastern Provi

, TAURUS (AprillO to MIY lOl SC~RPIO (Oeti23 to N ••• ~II ~'~~ said in a stat err I Clear ap leeumul.kd work il'ou would Tenllon ab.1" an,L :oulf bo"n to... 'J has been advl'sed

faTOnbl,. imprw your kI! the result. 0[. your c: on" ). GEMINI '(MIy2i 10Jlmo 21) SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 ,. Doc. 211 '.'1 Omaha Insurance Walch a knden.,'" tWde __ 11> .. )'011 )f .!f .... d .d, .. tcCl"'.tb~l·h'ch mtb"\'" i l'ndl'Vl'dtlal tra\'el an !i.n.i,h, And .don't be urctcu. IUaur.&, more tCSpXU1 llt7r l:I'a I 1

CANCER [Jun. 2210 July 21) • ~:.~~~~J~n~b!a~/:.J:;.~~) .. 'J cies issued by t B ..... ,e of Jokdt<r. ~T. And dOlI t .t.ble income and thlnce> are .. "11,,,< I for passengers ,lfe '0 ' •. !he tcmptohOO yoursdf. AQUARIUS (Jln.2t to Fob. 191 .' class two servie lEO (July 22 10 Au~. ZII Thean ••• r to lOme problem,.,.' com." Youma.ylUTe1"pbrttSantl"em1thoug'h ,ou' irom. a strange source 3t tbis time. ~. multi-engined ail it is out of ........ Help wb.m y,", ·an. PISCES (Fob, 20 t. Mlrch 20) h' I' , VIRGO (AU9' 21 io SIp!, 21) Sin", uper;C<lCC il such. K<Ut tmb~:, T e aIr mes Cut down "'pen .... particularly on..ail ,,,.k "",nsd from. 1''''''' ,,110 -' that similar pol actiTitia \h2t Me ISOt essential. had some. Fidelit~r Casu a:

NURSE TELFER DIES

BOS,TON (APl-Elizabeth Tel fer, 74, retired head nurse of the Gorgas Hospital, Panama Canal zone, and for years op· erating room nurse for the noted Boston surgeon, the hite Dr, Frank H, Lahey, died in Rocky Hill, Conn., Friday, Word was received in Boston. !Iliss Telfer was the daughter of Dr. and Mrs, Robert Telfer of Saint John, N,B.

~ 1963, Field Eat.,pri ... , Jne.. Company were I _____ i and "this means

Provincial T ~ No performance of a cc·1 righted play may be gil"11 without permISSIon, cv:.'\ -----though the pel'formances ": free to the public., .'

There arc about 900 gld: blowers in the United State; !,

;

J9l $3~

Deer fawns are devoid : l' telltale scent, enabling th!: the better to avoid maraud::' By ERIC A predators, "1 Finance )lini: '1 cer tabled the

of Newfoundl:!: .. i . ended March 3

.j Report of the ] in the House 0:

nesday. Adual revel

em current a count wn~ ~ pendlture tot ·103. The tim 471,870 was f Issue and &1

the amount and through rowings. It is inter.

thnt the revel ~ounts was than estimate dated fund 51 hire totalled ~ an estimated : services 10tall1 inc~ease of $! estimates. ,

Chaytor-Vatcher I

Wedding

Provlilclal nue' produe TIle ·ga.ollne 134,021" In I 909· over tht Social:. 5ec~ ;(sales tix) . 07" an .lnel1 over. the, . prl

. IlIIurallCe pr blsurance co and' tbe .11 $87,312.

·.~otcir vehi Constable John Roland and Mrs. Chaytor follow ing their wedding which took place at the Da~'111~"

St. John the Baptist, Rev. Father Myron officiated at the double ring ceremony. Miss Genevieve nolly was soloist and Professor Rees organist. The bride is the fonner Carol Ann Vatcher, daughter

. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Vatcher,. Portugal Cove. The groom is the son of Mrs. Helen Chaytor and the Gregory Chaytor, St. John's.' Attending the bride we re Geraldine Vatcher, sister of the bride, as of honor. Rosalind Codner and Anna Chaytor were bridesmaids, Bonnie Murphy waS flower girl Rickey Barnes ringbearer, Duties or best man were carried out by John Ryan, R.C.M,P., George

: GREGORY PECK ,- ROBERT MITCHUM -. POLLY·. BERGEN in' ,"CAPE FEAR"-. :oRAMA~ E.XCI'fEMENT -,THRiLLS: . t

... WOMEN" with SHIRLEY KNIGHT­ACTION - THRILLS -" ·SUSPENSE.

• and Wilbur McAdam, R.C,M,P" ushered. The wed ding reception was held at Bidgood's where guests attended. Gerald Angel, uncle of the groom, was toastmaster, The honeymoon was spent. Central Newfoundland and Canada. Constable and Mrs, Chaytor have taken up residence at where Constable Chaytor is stationed· with the R.C. M. Police.

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Page 3: First Anniversary . Used Car Sale THE DAILYcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...The Com\Jany's garage. a\)(I\'I~, is fillcil with idle huscs as a result of a hrcllkrlown

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r Federation t " -.Laslles ·Back· -At Dr. McGrath

The Newfoundland Fedel·a· .11\ of Labor said Sunday it ras amazed at the extreme Tocit)· of the attack made on IC employees of Western Mem· 'ial Hospital" by NewCound· !I(I health minister Dr. James :Grath in the House of As· .1Ibly Friday.

hard. critical look at their minister of health."

A strike for higher wages has been called for April 5 by Local 488 of the National Union of Public Employees, represen· ting . about 110 hospital work· ers.

The federation said In a ,:l(cntcul that "10 attempt to ,hlabl a small wage Increase i:l the actions of a murdering ·;unman, DR Dr. l\lcGrath reo ported\)' did, I·.; enough to '~use decent people \0 take a --_.--

The federation statement said a work stoppage of maids, kitchen help and slmllar em· ployees, "with due precautions being taken to see that neces· sary services are maintained," can hardly be a threat to the lives of the sick, as Dr. McGrath would have the public believe."

EPA's Second Dart Art ives The second oC Eastern Prol"

:IIl'iat Airways' Handle)·.Page, !lort Herald aircraft touched· 1

t\:lll'n at Gander Sllllday to end iis trans·Atlantic ferry flight I from the factory in England.

J[ospltal help In Newfound· IBml get $10 to $14 a week les·.; than the wages paid hos. pital help In the other Allan· Ilc Provinces. the federation pointed out.

"The wage.lncrease asked for would cost our. govern· ment about $5,000 a year and the Fed era 1 government would PlY double that amount," the statement said.

Piloted by Capt. Roy Cooper .II1Q Capt. Ben Ri\·ard, both of The money would be paid to lIancIPr, the aircraft was flown Newfoundland under the Hos­(rLlm London to Gander by way pital Insurance and Diagnostic "i l're.,tiwick, Scotland; Kefla· Services Act, and "the money I'ik, Iceland; Sonderstrom, spent by our government would Greenland; and Frobisher Ba)', be extremely profitable to our :'i.II'.T. economy as a whole, because

Commenting upon the ilight el'ery dollar spent by our gov· C.1pt. Cooper said, "the jour· ernment would bring $2 Into ncr was entirely uneventful I the province. ~n;1 the aircraft performed per· The federntion statement fcetll'," charged that hospital help and

Tl;~ arril'al of this second nurses subsidize health services Dart.Herald aircraft was delay· 1 here "by being forced to work cd due to poor weather in, for extremely low wages." En~land. However intensive II It said the medical profession training ha\'ing been carried does not subsidize any services. out during the lnst month at. "Even as far back as 1959, Gander using the first aircraCt I doctors in Newfoundland were which arrived there March 2, the second highest paid in Can. EPA will now Introduce these ada, with average earnings of new aircraft inlo Its trans· over $18,000 a year." N c,l'fOllndland April 8, and ex· pects to introduce them Into the Labrador service by mid· April.

"These new pressurized 50-seal Rolls Royce turbo prop aircraft will set a new high in the standards of air travel In Canada's ncwest province. EPA has no doubt that its passen· gers will now enjoy unprece· I

dented standard oC comfort and I convenience," an EPA spokes· man said.

The Newfoundland Lahor Federation statement con· eluded: "Teachers, nurses and others know what to ex· pect If they try to do more than humbly beg for an In· crea3e In wages. Surely. there Is a more decent. civilized way to deal with a just de. Oland for a wage Increase than by meeting It with a virulent. vicious attack and repressive legislation."

Policies are Valid Eastern Provincial Airways

said in a statemcnt Sunday it has been advised by Mutual of Omaha Insurance Company that indil'idual travel accident polio cies issued by them are valid lor passen~ers travelling EPA cla" two service flown with nllllti.engined aircraft.

The airlines' stalement said that similar policies issued by Fidelity Casualty Insurance Compan)' were previously valid and "this means that insurance

Provincial Taxation

coverage for passengers travel· ling on EPA scheduled services is similar in all respects to that oblalnable on other sched· uled airlines."

The charge was replied to by Premier J. R. Smallwood in the House the following day when he staled that EPA carries full and complete coverage with Lloyd's DC London and that el'ery passenger is insured for $100,000.

1962 Revenue: $34,891,342

Ry ERIC A. SEYMO\JR tal $20,218,023; Atlantic Provo Finance ~linlster E. S. Speno inces Grant $7,500,000: award

cer tabled the Public Accounts under Term 29 $8,000,000 and of Ncwfoundland for the year grants-in·ald, $13,861,181. ended March 31. 1962 and thc The Auditor General says Report of the Auditor General "Expenditure on capital ac· in the House of Assembly Wed· count in 1961·62 totalled· $19,· nesday. 813,753. This amount was orr·

Actual revenue rllT the year set by capital account revenue ~n current and capltnl ae· accounting to $8,141,765 which connt wa~ $94,2611,593; ex· Includes $5,444,656 representing pendlture totalled $105,740.· the contributions from the Gov· 103. The .Jlfferr.ncf! of $11.· ernment of Canada toward the t71,870 was financed through cost of: Trans·Canada Highway, ISlue and sale of t,rmds In $1,435,030; roads to resources the amount 0' $10 million $794,272; College oC Trade and and through tempnruy bor. .Technology. $2,674,540; hospital rowlngs. construction, $540,814. T~e cost It Is interesting to note to the province o[ net capitnl

that the revenue on both ac· expcnillture for the financial rounts was $8,554,39!l more year 1961·62 was $11,671,988." than estimated. ·The· consoli· LOANS UNPAID . daled fund services expendl. AudllorGeneral G. W. D. ture tolalled $9,036,044. against Allen. C.A., In his obser· an estimated$B,'137.900.,Supply vatlon! on contingent lIablll· ~ef\'lces totalled $96,704.419, an . ties s~ys "Since the close of Increase of $9,412.219 over the the financial year 1961·62 the. estImates. .... . . following concerns hne fall·

Provincial soureei of reve. . ed to make. payments In reo nue prodl,lced.· $34.891,342. spect of bRJik loans guaran· The ·gasollne tix yielded S6 •• · teed by the government. As a 734,021. an Increase ·of $937.. rfault. government has been 909 over the. prevlolll . yelU': required to, make go~d lis Social· security .. a .. essment . gUlralltees of' the following (sales to) ~ y.lelded .$13.417 •• · lOins as weU II three other 077, .n.lnere~·of$2.752,1'J4 JOIIIS .Inregatlng $29,888.63; over. the. previous .year: F!re, .. Bonavl.ta Cold storage Co, Insurance premiums $2~~.380j '. Ltd.. $120.801; Brlgus' Knit· Insurance companies. ,2'JOj'l9l1thig'Ml11s· Ltd .• $28,000; New· and the entertalnlllen.t tax) 'oulldland HardwoOds Ltd., $81 ,312, ,U5,OOO; Newfoundlind Flbr·

"Joey"thell

Big C'hanges In 14 Years

by News Staff Writer

It was no April Foo 1, Premier J. R. Small­wood contends.

The man who climaxed his drive to bring Newfoundland into Confederation 14 years ago says the documents making the island a prov­ince of Canada were signed March 31, 1949-a few minutes before the stroke of midnight.

Those 14 years hal'e been "the greatest in all of Newfoundland's long history," the 62·year·old premier said Sunday.

Greatest Gift He reiterated a sentence he has made many times

in his 14 years as leader of the lOth prol'ince:

"ConCederation with Canada is the greatest blessing under God ever given to Newfoundland."

Joey, as he liked to be called during his conCeder· ation campaign, today is still his energetic, fist·thumping self-who can bark out words with the rapidity of a well· oiled jackhammer.

Appearance Changed But his physical appearance has changed somc:what,

and an em'lier photo by Karsh no longer portrays Premier Smallwood of 1963.

The rimless spectacles have· become dark horn· rimmed. The pin stripes have gone fmlll his suils. No longer a smoker, the long cigarette holder is out of place. And his evcrpresent bow tics have becomc morc conservative.

Island changed Newfoundland has changed, too.

Mr. Smallwood said since Confederation Newfound· land has seen more progress, more expansion than in any other period of her more than 450 years of history.

He said the standards oC living and public services are higher than ever before, and she is "far, far bettcr of[ than .in all her history." He admitted that there has been problems, too.

The province will continue to grow, expand and improve, the premier predicted. Since 1949, the popu· lation has increased by more than 100,~0.

Commemoration Thu town of Gander, where Mr. Smallwood launched

his' campaign for confederation has plans to erect a monument to the premier, and to re·name a town square to Confederation Square. This will take place when the nation celebrates its centenary in 1967.

Premier now

the Basilica Motor vehicles' and . ·drlverB ply Ltd •• $250.

licences provided $2,511.5.33, " "In addition. Government has an ·Ihcrease of.,$MO,35krentals received· fOl'mal,dem~nds for androya1tles' ·on . mineral' leases . payment of, bank .l()ans \ guaran· Yielded, $1\103,576;'i . decrease teed on. behalf of the. following of $222,155; .. B,oard"of Llq"or co.mpal\les:· Fishery, Ptoducts Control •. third. bl&heat .rev\lnue. Ltd". $500,000; Gaultois· Fisher; . produ~er •. provided :. ,~;355,025, les Ltd., $50,000; Atlantic Films III· . increase 0("1;022,625. '. ' alld' Electronlcs L.td.,. ~30,ooO.

The.;Government ·.of ··CllnadaPayment of )bese three ae-

tCOl\tri~uted . $5i,235;488 . to :tlie counts has 'riot, been inade ·by Dial 'eurrenL.aceOt1nf' revenue' the . Government." ., .

The Daily News ST. JOHN'S, NEWFO._U_N_D_l_A_N_D ___ M_O_N_D_A_Y.:..-, _A.P_R_IL---.:1 ,_1._9_6_3 __ .....:. =-._=.. =-.::.:..:.~=_N:::...§~H_IN:::..E_~

• II

ISSln • IS ermen

An intensive air and sea search was carried Oi.lt Sunday for two men missing in a small fish­ing boat on Newfound­land's southwest coast.

cue aircraft and two Department of Trans­port vessels were call­ed into the search Sun­day after Albert Wells, 29, and Sandy Coley, 21, both of Isle aux

Morts, left that place to pick up their fishing gear two miles away.

..

Dower in

A Search and Res-

High Winds Hit Sealers

Gale force winds arc playing havoc with the Newfoundland sealing fleet.

A report II'om Em'le Freighting Services, Carbonear,' owners of the Kyle and Terra Nova,~ Sunday night said that only I scattered seals were being taken during the past three days owing to the adverse weaLher conditions.

The coal·burning Kyle was situated off Francis Harbor Labrador, Sunday with more than 15,000 pelts aboard. 'rh~ Ii

Terra Nova, smallest of the Newfoundland fleet, has 1,700 seals. Her last reported position was about 35 miles east of Belle Isle. I

, Labrador. Bowrings' Algerine was reported in loose ice off nound

Island, Labrador, and she was carrying 10.000 pelts Saturday. The Sir John Crosbie, owned by Chimo Shipping Company

Limited, largest of the fleet, also had 10,000 seals Saturday. However, she is in breaking ice and only scattered seals are heing taken. From now on the young seals will be taking to the I water, and will be hard to kill.

HIl nling in the Gulf of SI. Lawrence and on the Northern Front closes April 30. All four Newfoundland sealers are oper'I' aling on the front.

TilE WINNERS: Smiling happily. lhc winncrs pnse with their awards after the final play of thc Regional Drama Festival Friday night at the Little Theatre, Memorial University. Front (I·r·): Tom Cahill, hcst director; Estelle Wall, bcsl supporting role; Flo Paterson, bcst

The RCAF Lancast­er failed to find any trace of the 25-foot open motor boat up to dusk. The federal government icebreaker Wolfe and patrol ves­sel Cape Freels also joined in the search and were still in the area up to late Sunday.

The fishermen left Ise aux Morts, a small fishing commu nit y about 10 miles from Port aux Basques, 11 a.m.

A Search and Rescue spokesman said high winds of 40 miles an hour were whipping the waters.

All hope has not been abandoned for the two men. There is a possibility they may have gotten to land after the storm came up.

Florida Captain Tom ])ower, whoJeft

St. John's Nov. 11 aboard his 33-foot sailing boat lor West Africa, is in Florida for repalrs to his boat.

The Dally News received a postcard from the solo mariner Sunday from West Palm Beach where he is spending several days making repairs to his ketch.rigged Newfoundlander.

The card read: "Best wishes to ail once again. This has been a full·time job since de· parture so I have had little time for photos, etc. Stop over here for a while. More reo pairs. Regards, etc. Dower."

Captain Dower, a 44-year-old bachelor from Grand Falls. is alone on his 5,000 voyage to West Africa.

He took four months· food supply but did not say how long the trip wl>uld take.

The adventurer left here IJI 1959 on a similar voyage but his boat N ewfundelander was wrecked in a storm near the Canary Islands. '

actress; David Buckle. visual presentation; Ted Henley, best actor. Baek (l·r): George L. Palmer. director of The Lark, and the H. A. ~Iofl'issey Award: William Needles, adjudicator. (Royal Photo Service)

Regional Dralna Festival Ends,

. Every Group Pic ks Up an Award By CASSIE BROWN land gave an elegant, easy por· I Ted Henley as ~Ir. ~Ialcolm I Needles felt she should not

The 11th Regional Drama, trayal, although she seemed a I tackled an enormously heavy I have been on the verge of Festival ended here Friday little too normal to suit the ad· . part with great success, and' hysteria every moment. night with the St. John's pro· judicator. It was, he said, a was outstanding as the Major The director, Rex Tilley, re, duetion of "The Lark" win· charming' performance, never· in the second play, Mr. Needles ceived mild criticism from tht ning over the other three pro- theless. said. His movements on stage adjudicator. He did not point ductions and keeping "Char. werc good, it was a character up the situations as they really ity" in this section of the provo Sheila Power as 1Iliss Coop· stUdy that made the strongest existed, he said. The play had ince. er gave a very efficient. cool impression on the adjudicator. few peaks and many valleys.

The festival was an oul. performance. She was a lit· Bert Dawe and Patricia and was undoubtedly, one III standing success, playing to a tie too coolly detachcd, lIIr. Vickers as the lovers played toughtest undertakings of the full house every night. The Needless woulrt liked to their scenes most naturally, bul week. ' adjudicator was mild in his have seen the other side of could have been much more at criticism and high in praise her nature with IIlalcolm. the ease in the second play. for the players who .had put man with whom she was· in Irma Duspres as Miss Rail· in much time and efI<irt on love. ton·Bell gave the impression

The awaJ'ds werc then pre· sented, with George L. Paw· er receiving Charity for "The

(Continued on page 5) each production. . ;.," ~ that she was disturbed, but lIlr. His public adjudication o[

"Separate Tables" was ncces· sarily brier. It was a play about fOllr people who had reached it slate oC desperation through loncliness, and" it was one of the toughest undcrtak· ings DC the week.

l\1r. Needles said that the settings P1ust have a very unique atmosphere, and he felt that carpeting was need· ed· in the dining room. The· sitting room looked more like a bedroom. and he felt that this was due to the wall· paper which did not look surnclentl~ old and falled.

The lighting gave good cov· erage but was a Ji.ttlc flat. costuming was good and make· up excellent.

Joyce Saunders as Mabel registered strong in a small part. Mr. Needles felt she'd been around the place for a long time and was bored by it all. . Kathleen Manko

Matheson gnve a performance as a very self· effacing woman. .Jill Tilley as Mrs. Railton·Bell gave a highly dignified . performance, and Grace Ricketts as Miss Mea· cham exuded e<:centricity­scoring he[(Vily in part two.

Susan Tilley as Doreen was flip and brash, and the audio enee could sense the boy· friend . waiting outside. Wal· ter Godden as Mr. Fowler gave n . very .natural "Chips" perfor·

MEN'S 'N' BOY'S LAIMINAliED

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of_,l26,828.Tbif.amount was' :Blggest6uUays (expenditure) .. , ... rnade·,up:Jls·frillow.:'.ltatiltol')' ·OD . c.urrent account wenfto ,...:-,;..---------....;,----------' .Qbaldiea:.l.8~,.: . tax· . ·ren· .. (Continued ,on' .page 5)

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TIlE DAfL}t' /VEWS Newfoundland's Only Morning Paper "May I Quote Yout' Edson In

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Canadi! ........................ $12.00 per annum

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The DAIU NEWS \s a mt'\'lIlng papel establishE d In 1894 and publlshed al lhe Nows Building 355·359 Duckworth Street, SI. John's, Newfoundland, by Robinson & Company, Limited.

~lEMBER OF

THE CANADIAN PRESS

The Canadian Press Is eKelusivelY entitled to the use [or republleationof all news despatches In this paper credit. ed to it or to the Associated' Press or R~ute;'s and also the local news pullllt!l· cd therein.

AU Press Services nnd feature articles In this paper arc copyrighted and thp.lr reprodl1ctlon Is prohibited,

Member Audit Bureau

01 Circulation

?lIONDA Y, APRIL 1, 1963

Into The' Fifteenth Year By what somc anti-con- new hospital beds, the improved

federates said rather addl\' was prOVincial welfare services, still a neat contrivance, Newl~l\nd- less the resource exploration and land was said officially to have development that have been become a Canadian pi'O\'ince at significant features of progress. one minute before midnight 011 Confederation laid the founda­l\larch 31, 1\;)49. By this de- tiolls. Canadian social security vice, it was suggcsted, the tran- helped. So did conditional sition was prevented from ac- grants of one kind or another, quirillg April 1. with all its But the drive and idcas, the im­special connotations, as its natal patience to overcome in a few day, But all that belongs to l~ veal's the deficiencies of cen­remote past. Forty pCI' cent ot imies, the crcdit for most of the the population arc quite ltIHI\\'are ,~uccesses and the blame for the of ,IllV constitutional status olher mistakes alon.~ the way, belong than' confederatioll for the\' to the man who led Newfound­were either infants in arms 01' land into confederation and has were vet to be hom whell COIl- heen the first and only prcmier fedenition was officially inaug- the province has had sincc mated at noon, exactly four- union, with a term of five more teen veal's ago toua\', \'ears still ahead before he has

No\\' we enter the fifteenth to face another election. He is \'ear of the most remarkable era too controversial a figure to be in our Ion),!; histor~'. The argu- assessed objectively in his own ments about who gaine{l most by time hut he has sparked the sa­the union have died awa\,. There cial revolution that confedera­is no present nced to revi\'e them. tiClIl made possible .

By EARL L. DOUGLASS D1SAPPOINT1UENTS

We orten complain about the face that there is little excellence in the world. No matter how diligently we seek the excellence, no matter how high a price we pay to get it, frequently it is nat produced. Big names that nre supposed to know a good deal turn out to be quite mediocre. People we trusted to do a fine piece of work lie down on the job and loaf away many hours. Books i.ighl" reommended turn out to he dull. Plays and concerts which had fine rCl'iews leave one with the feeling that hoth money and time have been wasted in attendance.

But we must always remember that we life 'in an imperfect worln. Furlhcr· more, when people have anything to sell they point out its good points, never its bad. There may at times be unver· tising which is consciously dishon!'s!. Jiost advertising. howel'cr, is an at· tempt honestly to prescnt what manu· r{,cturers or merchants believe is a product as good as if not netter than the one described.

A great deal of life's disappointment comes not just from the mediocrity of the things we buy but from 0\11'

mediocrity of judgment. our determin· ation to hal'e certain things just becmlse we want them although they may not be as fine as manuCacturers and mer, chants claim they are,

Let us always rememllCr that thc im· perfection of this present world is lodged in us as wcll as in other" Olll' disappointments are frequently clue 10

our own bad judgmpnl. Think morc. Examine carefully. Take

time before making dccisions,

Bible Quotation

Give me nolV wisdom aIHI knowledge t., go out ann come in before this I)COI)I~, for who can rille this thy people, that is so great?-II. Chronicles 1:1~.

• • How happy is the nation whose l;ing

prays for wisdom' A humble king 11'110

trusts in God means more in term~ of security to a nation than its bombs 3n(1 missiles,

Gems of Thought lI1an is not made for defeal.

,-Ernest Hemin!\"'~)' • • •

You are never 50 ncar to I'ictor)' a~

whcn defeated in a good cause, -Henry ,Ward Beet'her

" • • A wrong 1110t il'e inl'olves defent.

-;lIar)' Baker EJ(,,' (: *

But that Newfoundland has ae- There are problems still. There quired man)' benefits is beyond has never been in Ottawa a full cavil even if some important ilppreciation of Newfoundland's faults remain to he corrected. right to better communications The greatest benefit of all is. of and the constructive results for course, the fact that a floor has the whole nation that would been placed under the standard come from proViding these and of living of a people who. all assisting in our economic de­through their centuries of stmg- vclopment. There is the fear gle had never been unaware of that too many people are de­the taste of the bittercst dregs of pending excessively on social misery and privation, The Ii\,- secl\I'itv. There is the matter of ing standard is not high today iinancinp the rapidly increasing hy comparison with that prevail- costs of the public services which ing in other provinces. We still must be supplied for a swiftly have far the lowest avera.~e of growing population. There is the He conquers twice .who upon victory per capita personal income. Btlt high level of seasonal unemploy- ol'el'comes himself.-Francis Bacon,

there is a tolerable minimum ment in spite of the fact that • • • I There are somc defeats morc trium· iving standard even if part of it there are more people regularly phant than yictories.

luls to be found in uncmploy- cmploycQ than ever before in -~[jchel de Jlontaigne ment insurance and what is our .histOlY. But there is also euphemistically referred to as the fact that too much of the social assistance. The thrcat of support of the economy comes hungcr has been banished. The from public spending and that children arc healthy and well- much more has to be done to clothed. The dietlU'v' has i1l1- build up the value of our output

• • In many a lVar it has been the van·

quished, not the' "ictor who has car· ried off the finest spoils,

-Hal'elock Ellis. •

EMULATION Port Arthlll' News·Chronicle

It is reported the Russians can turn out "threc·ycar·old·' hrandy in three months. In thc prohibition era we used 10 tin it here in three rial's,

~. . . .JUST 'WITHOUT'

Sa,katooll Star·Phoenix A fel\' wecks before election day,

Prime ~Iinistcr Diefenbaker named three new eabinet ministers, one as minister of forcst!')·. and the others without port· folio,

If there is enhr.ncement in the nt·w cabinet apP"llltments, it is in ke~ping

with the present posture and practice of the gOI·ernment. We cannot think of any act bclter tlesigned to emhasize the Tories' presenl political misfortunes than the coupling of ministers without portfolio with a ministry without policy,

• • • ~IEET JIR. CAOUETTE

Toronto Star !Iaile Sclassic, Emperor of Ethiopia,

Lion of Judah, well remembered for his gallant and passionate efforts to save his country from the invading forces of :lIussolini in 1936,36, has indIrectly en· tered the Canadian election scene.

The emperor this lVeek sent Social Credit Lender Robert Thompson a letter of encfJuragement: Jlr, Thompson was for several years (1946·51) in Ethiopia as an educational dircctor. In his Icttpr Haile Selassie expressed his confidence lhat Jll'. Thompson and his Social Credit pat'ty have a major role to play in Can· ada's future,

We wonder if Haile Selassie knows that ~lr. Thompson's co.leader. Re~l Caouette, is an admircr of Mussolini'?

• • • OLDER WORKERS

Sault Ste. Marie Star proved beyond belief.' The aged of goods and services. are providecl for ill comfort. Some of these problems are There is access to better educa- our own and some of them are tion and hospital services. Hoads national, and it is part of the have gone where they were weakness of confederation that never dreamed of and such there has never been enough amenities as clectricit\' and consideration at the federal waterworks are spreading into level of the differences between many remote parts of the coast. provinces, the inequalities of in-

Seize the present; trust the future as little as you may.-Horace,

• • • Remember that it is only this present,

a moment of time, that man lives. -~Iarcus Aureiius

• •

Knowledge that age is becoming less and less a barrier to employment and the qualifications and capacity are what count is something from which they too can draw a measure of satisfaction.

Much of what has occurred come and opportunity, and the was not contemplated when importance of concentration on the terms of confederation were building liP the weaker regions written, At that time, there was in terms of need rather than . of 110 comprehension of the low equal distribution of federal ef­standards· of social services, the fort on a' sh'ict per capita basis. paucity of social capital, in pre- Canada has yet to learn how confederation Newfoundland. to make the most of its human We had been content with what resources and how to extend the we had. because We made our· national effort to the places own standards in accordance where it will do the most good. with what we could afford. But But there is little doubt that con­with confederation, a new basis federation has created a new

The future is no more uncertain than the present.-Walt Whitman, ., • •

The present has a right 10 gill'ern itself.-Oliver Wendell Holmes. ,. • •

To those leaning on the sust:lining in· finitp, today is big with blessings,

-Mary Bal(~r Eddy • • •

Look upon evcry day as the whole of life, not merely as a section; and en· joy and improve tbe present without wishing, through haste, to rush on to another.-Jean Paul Richter. ., •

No principle is more noble, as there is none more holy, than that of a true obedience.-Henry Giles.

~ . . for comparison emerged. We Newfoundland not only in ma- Wickcd men obey from fear; good had been living in some parts of terial but also in intellectual men, from lov;.-A;istot!e.

this prov!nce in th~ nineteenth terms. We have come to a very century and 'perhaps in some important staging post in our areas in the eighteenth century, history as a Canadian province And in the past fourteen years, with much achieved and much principally in the past six years, yet· to be done. How we ap­we have exploded into the mid- proach our tasks and what con­dIe of the twentieth century. structive aid we may get from

Confederation alone did not Ottawa in the process will be of J>roduce the' prov~ncial . roads, great consequences in the next the regional high sphools, the two or three years. ' .

Obedience is not truly performed by the body, if the heart is dissatisfied.

-Saadi • • •

A room hung with pictures, is a room lmng with thoughts.

-Sir Joshua Reynolds • • •

I would no .more quarrel. with a man because of his religion than I would because of his art.-Mary Baker Eddy

\. ...

It's never too late to learn-and the probability is that in the years imme· diately ahead many more men and wo­men in their siKties and seventies-eager to remain producers as well as con· sumers-will want the chance to prove it.

The increasingly rapid rate at which the proportion of older workers in the labor force is rising is only one reason why the rest of us should wish to en· co urage them.

• • • FRENCH IN SCHOOL

Brandpn Sun Accordng to the 1961 census, the per·

centage of Canadians capable of speak· ing both French and English is little more than 12 per cent. This figure, little improvement on the situation in 1951, is a sad comment on our supposedly hicultural nation, Whcn it is appreci. ated that 67 per cent of English·speak. ing Canadians and Ig per 'cent of French·speaking Canadians are incap· able of communicating intelligently with each other it seems hardly sur· prising that the nation has difficulty in aeiheving aliI' cohesiveness and unity.

don, however, formal French classes begin only at grade eight although this year conversational French classes have been introduced on an experimental basis in two grade five and two grade six classes.

wno IJISCOVERED MIERICA~ London Times

Vikings lived in Newfoundland in A.D, 1000, 500 years before the arril'al of Columbus. :Ill'. Helge Ingstad, the Norwegian explorer, stated in London last week.

He said that on an expedition to the northern tip of Newfoundland completcd in the autumn of last year he and a leam of international scientists excavated a number of old sites in a terrace of sand at Lance aux Meadows. Among the finds was the remains of a house, 60 feet by 45 feet, with five rooms and a primitive smithy with traces of iron working un· known to the natil'c Indians and Es· kimos of that time.

"From the evidence we hal'e it is overwhelmingly likely that this piace was a Norse sitc from a time before Columbus," lIlr. Ingstad said. The find., he considered, lent weight to the old icp· landic sagas of pro·Columbus Norse VOl"

agel's to America. Tests have been mnde on the finds,

among which are large nails and frag, ments of bronze, but these have yet to he analyzed. A final statement on the expedition will not be made until Ihe work is finished.

.JOB A NUISAXCE Ottawa Journal

Says ~Ir, M. J. Fenwick, an official of the United Steelworkers of America:

"Only when the art of leisure is in full flower, and the job relegated to the nuisance category in which it should be, can man come into his own and revel in the enjoyment of a full life."

What the "full life" would he full of would be bouses built by men who thought building a nuisance, furniturc made by men who thought making furniture a nuisance, medical care by doctors Who thought healing the sick a nl1isance, entertainment by entertainers Who thought entertainment a nuisance, hockey games by hockey players who thought scoring goals a nuisance, fo01 cooked by cooks Who thought cooking a nuisance.

Some revel. • • •

PECULIAR STATE Montreal Star

The peculiar state of mind which makes mountains Ol1t of molehills seems to be taking increasing hold in Quebec Province.

It is exemplified in the move made last week by an agency of the Quebec Government - the French Language Bureau-to abolish the word province in relation to French Canada and to substitute the word state in its place.

U will be recalled that a few years ,go some Quebec M.P.'s wanted the des, ignation Dtlminion abolished because they considered it implied subservience to England. It was, they said, a relic of colonialism.

They even tried tu abolish tbe name Dominion Day, a reversion to the primi. tive idea of magic in names.

Washington By PETER EDSON

WASHINGTON '(NEAl-Extension of the Selective Service law for another four years is breezing through Con· gress, hut withl blinders. It is a straight renewal of the act expiring June 30.

Apparently no one sat back and toot a look at this as part of the whole "youth" problem. The toughest part ~f

the nation's biggest problem-unemploy· ment-is the unemployment of young people and the disturbing high school and college dropout rates,

The draft act doesn't touch the,e these problems.

Nobody wants a Hitler Youth Corps or a Young Communist League. with el'cry youngster registered and assign. erl to some service. But ~hort of that, it may take an awful lot of good mar.· agement to handle the U,S. youth prob. lem of the late 60's,

In 1962 there were 700,000 young people out of school and out of work The number is expected to grow to a millioo by 1970 unlc,s fomething is done,

American Farm Bureau Federation. carrying out a Ill5ll policy resolution. testified this year in favor of drafting men aged 18 to 22 instead of 23 to 26. as is now done, :lIat! Triggs. AFB legis· lative counsel. testified this changr would caUse Icss disruption. .

Bllt an amendment to this was deCeat· ed . in the House,

Selective Service now registers aboul 1.4 million young men a year. Only 120,000 arc draften,

The older men are taken first b~· caU5e the armed sen'ices don't WlMt draftees competing with the 600,000 volunteers tbey recrnit every year. aged 17 to 22, The draft law acts as an incentive to younger men to enlist and get their military service over,

Also, Selective Service System wants to give men up to 22 e\'er~' op, portunity to complete college. [)~fer· ments are given to teachers and ,kIll· cd technical workers as well.

U.S, Armed Forces are therefore tile biggest empioyers of youn:; men.

The five youth programs proposed by the Kennedy administration would soal, up only 40,OCO to 50,000 unemploye,l youths a year.

This won't begin to solve the proh· lem.

The Peace Corps now has about 1 000 volunteer men and women under 25 on its rolls, The number may be 4.000 b\' the end of the year.

The men will hal'e to report to theil' daft boards afler their two years of service. Peace Corps director Sargent Shriver wanted it that way so that the organizalion wouldn't be a draft· dodger haven. '

* * ItA '",Ll .. '" t. ... luu,--,AP)

a jury 11

James T> Gallick, a. Biltimore and Ohl' pl~yee, a rec~rd ~ j!\dgment on hIS elall lie . was severely II \VtIen bitten by a bug i£lgnant ,pool near wIi worked. "31 .. ~~L3st montb the U

pJ!eme Court ilpheld t diet· in favor of the ffeight yard conductc bid been in hospita 1958 ... ~ Abe H. Dudnik, the

Who carried the' ~ase Supreme Court, died Of cancer. He was ~ , :1

1lhymlB }OT'l'AWA-(CPI is the latest we.apo

,Jused by the RCMP ~Jrevention. :l\l The talcnts of the l';ycrse:writers are fea F ~a hooklet issued Tu, ) the force to enlis~ II ,:,the general public "::rng crime. :1 The IS.page pu 'lllustrated by drawi light vein, is desc

. itcStP Commissione Harvisicin as "a hel ~ooklet designed to reader aware of un 'reas of invitation t, ential criminal." ; Commissioner Hal'1 In a foreword that of lawablding citize tingly aid and abet 'growing "industry" which is costing

'millons of dollars The booklet, tiUed Your Commt/oity", Gn preventing' thef Ind burglaries in I business establishm ; Typical rhymes il

sos: " •

The manpower training and develop· ment program no'w has about 3.000 young people enrolled. This will grow,

Now under consideration by Congres, is the youth Conservation Corps.. 11 would recruit 13,000 the first year.

'j DARWIN, Aus j(AP)-Hall'. cree: iUetownship'700 n ; wflSt of' Darwin ar :rains have isolated ']since early Jan iweather. people s:

~ ~be mid·Aprll befe 1 Jean ' eet . there' by · }th ere Is no ra i1ro:

The proposed National Service Corp; -the so·cailed domestic Peace Corp; -would recrnit only 100 workers II ... first year, 5,000 by the end of the third year. Less than half would' he young people. ,

This ratio also would apply to the 40,000 I'olunteers in the proposed Home Town Service Corps.

All these programs are meeting Rc puhlican opposition. Rep, Jer.ry Sord .01' Mirhigan, GOP Policy CommIttee chaIr· man, and Rep, Peter Freylinghuysen Jr, of New Jersey, speaking for GOP Edu, cation Committee members. oppose the Youth Corps because it would cost S100 million the first year, $260 million when in full operation.

As alternatives they propose "a stuny of laws and regulations restricting youth employmen!." It sounds a little like seeing if child labour and minimum wage laws will stretch.

Second, tbey would expand the voca· tional education program which already costs $54 million a year.

Third. they would eKpand the Man· power Retraining act to permit use of more than 5 per cent of its funds for youth.

Finaily, they would expand opportu· nities fur youth employment by the Na tional Park Service and the U.S. For, cst Service.

A LOOPHOLE St. Thomas Times·Journal

Most restaurants and dining room.~ In Canada and elsewhere display signs that say: "The proprietor is not respon5ible for the loss of hats or coats," The sign is invariably exhibited near the coat rack.

(Recently a cl1stomer lost .a fine over· coat in a London restaurant, and not· withstanding the potice sUI!d the owner of the premises for compensation.

Counsel for the plaintiff maintained the mere fact the proprietor provided a coat rack was an admission that he undertook to take care of it. • Counsel for the defendant contended

the rack '\Vas put there as a convenience

., '! But Ire thl ~ f Hill's Creek alar ! this is 'rugged Au

The. first tel! i the flood. boun d ' ; storflkeeper to ·l supplier wai scnt 'lread: ' . J "Please air frei ~ 1 'Mother

.1 i MIAMI, Fla.-1 red·haired mothel , been sentenced 1.4

i in jail for th 1 death of a man

· I hounded her on

! Judge Ben Wi lsentence Tuesda J. ence May Bosqll 'she pleaded gui! slaughter in t~ Francis Garofalo.

. Stea a.ARKE ~ERVICEI

·S.S. Novaporl Nova Scotia

S!. John's. ·Refrigeration.

FURNESS, ' COMPAl'O',

Cairndhu . lea .,' .... " •. 31. Due'~

Sailing for 1 '!

Beechmore h .29 for Sta

~~:alifIIX and St. Saint. John, leaving Hali

John's. Due Sailing for

;~jl.lve·l'Il;)/l1 Apr. I Re

April 3 HaUifax Bnd Bosl Halifax April 6 •

11· for Sa Hallfax and St. '

Interest In' . The . Fishery Art is either a plagiarist or a revo·

lutionist.-Paul Gaugun. Every time I paint a portrait' I lose

a friend-John Singer Sargent.

Obvously one positive step that can be taken is to broaden and improve the French teaching program in our schools. Premier Duff Robin took a slep in the right dircction recently When he announced that the department of edu, cation's advisory board has been asked to introduce French in grades one, two and three.' At ,present it is optional at grade four level and upwards. In Bran·

Now, it appears, the Word province is to go because it implies subservience to thp rest of Canada.

. to customers, but it did, not imply that the proprietor undertook to take :are of the articles hung upon it.

The judge gave a verdict for the dc· fendant.

John Ap Halifax April 11 Nfld, Due, St. J Salling for Live · • Re!rigeratio

.. , . Since fish' was the basis of rea~hed its peak of'pre-war pro­

!rNfoundIand's ' existence' for duct~on, it was' empJoying 1,-. I \lnfurie~'iand:w,e live on an is- 500,000 workers and harvesting'

land adJ~cent ,to ,the ',most,pro- seven million tons of fish a year. . Iific ground fish resClurces',in the·. Opp:ortllllities • have 'been more world, we Hke to think of our . re,stt;\c,t~d:,since the, ,war b~lt selves, as a great fishing province. Japan relliains:. a lead!ng factor

so in the processing of fish of many kinds, Her. people have kept· well abreast of the most modern 'fishing techniques and her' industrial chemists' have made great advances ;possible in the processing area.' These are

facts· that call special attention to. the news that a small team . of Japanese industrialists will visit Newfoundland this week to dis­cuss fishing opportunities in this province. This visit could have important results.

This playing with words will amlJse rather than distress the rest of the country. It is important only because. it testifies to Quebec's feeling that it hasn't been given'its due place in Con· federation.

But he left a loophole in the law for customers to take advantage ·of .. , If ). customer hangs up his coat he 'is . still' responsible for looking after it.' U' hI hands it to the', walt,!!r }Vhb.then I\~ng; it up, that makes "the proprietor. re.~pon·

, But 'when 'the Japanese fishery not only in the catching but al-

(1 ' . I Q

Whatever the merits of Quebec's ap· , peal for' equality in Confederatlon, they

gain no dignity from such manifestations of the inferiority complex.

sible. ,'.', , . t .....

Now you know the,: precaution . you should take when you gO' to eat. 'in ~

_ restaurant.

Page 5: First Anniversary . Used Car Sale THE DAILYcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...The Com\Jany's garage. a\)(I\'I~, is fillcil with idle huscs as a result of a hrcllkrlown

of

YO\1nl! ~rhool

l'or!'s \\'ith

a:-,,!;!n·

"r that · ,,'t~ man· el t 11 proh·

The ·NEWS Spotlig.hts * * *

Wins Judgnlent, * Dies

CI.EVELAND-(AP)· - In 1959, • jury awarded T. Gallick, a former

and Ohio em. a record $625,000

on his claim that \\':\5 SCI'erely infected bitten by a bug from I

pool near where he

La;! month the U.S. Suo Court upheld the ver·

in favor of the former \'ard conductor, wbo

bee'n in hospital since

March 20-before he had collected a cent frDm the railroad - Gallick died, He was 61.

Gallick was supervising switching of freight cars In Cleveland's Flats section in

1954 when an unidentified insect bit him. Dudnlk charg· cd negligence on the part of the railroad in permitting vermin and an insect·ridden pond to exist where Gallick was required to work.

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOU"DLAND, APRIL I, 1983-5

Polio's Master Sees New Medical Worlels T 0 Conquer Newfoundland~s . . '. . ' Get Fellowships;:

among IB4 pre-<ioctoral fellow.. ships announced by the Cart­ada Council last wt'ck. .i

They are Peter FranCIa Ncary of Bell Island and At· thur Michael Sullivan of si. John's.

The council said its limited financial resources prevented it frotn helping 490 other ap· plicants worthy of assistance.­

The fcllowships will ellabl~ : the succcssful candidate to .. ; study doctor's degr~e in the

humanities, social science and fine arts. The two Newfound· landers were winnl)rs in social sciences.

Dr. Salk's "quest for fundamental tniths about life, health and disease" goes on. Ile's director of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in San Diego, Calif.

Financial assislance to each ranges between $1,500 and $2,500, plus travel costs where necessary, for a year of study and research in Canada anc' abroad. I -----\ Hold Big Reilly· 'i ~'lHln~

,,:' \\'ork. yr to a .\be H. Dudnik, thc lawyer

rarried the case ·to the _"nrPllll Court, died recently

cancer. He was 58. .

Gallick's entire system be. came poisoned, lawyers claim· ed. Both legs were removed and his artns were withering at the time of death.

He is survived by his wifp. and a stepdaughter.

luomentous broadcast by Dr. Salk, left. March 26, 1953, was' first word to the world that an cxperirnental vaccine gave p10misc that dread polio would be conquered, At right, Basil O'Connor, president, National Foundatlon.l\Iareh of Dimes, which financed vaccine rcsearch 1lrogratn.

Proved safe in 1955, mass production of 110\10 vaccine began. Here, Dr. Salk receives citation from Presidcnt Eisen· hower for his historic achievement.

A decade ago, just about the quickest way to strike terror in a parent was to say that a poliomyelitis epidemic was brcwing, Today, 10 .;.!ant years later, much of the terror has been bt;nished - the end producl of dedicated work by Dr. Jonas Salk, the applications of millions of

March of Ditnes dollars to research, and the w'despread use - and availability - of the Salk polio vaccine, pioneer of polio preventives. Para· lytic polio, though not ,wipcd out, is no longer a major health problem in America, However, f;l'. Salk's work goes on. 'l'he Salk Inostilutc for

Biological Studies, now under construction at San Diego, Calif., is expected to open later this year. Under Salk's dircction, the "quest for fundamental truths about life, health and lIis· case" wiI go on. The institulte is to be staffed hy experts in many fields of tnedicine.

\ Jim McGrath, Progressh'e ca!\didate of St. John's East. held onc of the biggest po· Iitical rallies cver secn in the head of the bay at Conceplion Harbor Saturday night.

, i,:,·:\tion. t "I'lution. ! ,\:·.lftim: ::~ to 26. !':~ !~\g\5·

t'h:1np:r

.:' :\hout nnly

",:,~ hr· " .. ': 11'1 lit

';\li1.000 · .\ ~·ear.

, .. :" :l~ nn '::1,;,1 anel

:-:'~·!-t('m

\" l'r~' Of" 11,'frr·

;:'<1 '~Ill·

"(n

o!'Ll:-Ol,d b~'

"1l1rl so a" :1~~\\o~'("1

"'.1' proh,

I",\:t .~ ono , !I'~' '~j on .' 4,\1\10 Ill'

:: :,1 their \ ~';lr:; of

.. ~ Jr~rnt

"\) th;ll

" draft·

Ii (,1','lnl" . ",t 3.000

. :1~ (roll'. :, i'l,n!:rr" '·,1l'ps. It

.~ Yt"l;\f.

:\ h'C' ('on's .h·,' Corp~

\)rkt'rs thf" nf the

\' ,I:lld 'he

:l,il' \(l the · ",,·,1 \I,'ml'

· .. ,,·CIl11g Hl' :,'\' SOl'll of

~': \ 1 l'(' 4.'hair· ... :11\1\',1'11 .Jr. : ,;,11' Ellu·

'\\'I'0<c the i'"l ~'\l~t 5\00 ,,1\:,'11 when

"I' ":\ st\1d~' rr,tridin~

· :11\' a lillie ,',,; minitnutn

"i the I·(lea· .. : .. h alrcadr

" thl' ~Ian· ,::nit lISe of :' f\lnlls for

l'.d ,'pportu· .. by the Na · I' l' .s. For·

. ,urnlll :1 ( rOOm~ In .1' ,igns that

" responsible " .. The sign ',' the roat

a finl' o\,er· nt. and not· ,I the owner

:;,ation. ':' maintained ,r I'fo\'lded a ion that he it. Int contended :\ l'on\'enicnCe ".It imply that to tnke ~are

: t . n for the de·

A large crowd attcnded tile . \ Will Add rally at thc Parish Hall there. Rhyllle Fights Crime (llTA\I'A-(CP) - Poetry

L' thr latest weapon being ll;ed by the RCMP in crime

rrr,rntion.

lei include the following in • section called, "You Could Be The Burglar's Next Victim": Filing 'Your IiIcome Tax Returns \ ' - ress 5t:~~rd~!~i;r~~~cesp;;cw:snfil:~~ elcclcd to the Housc of Com·

The local District Taxa lion weeks after, ~ctUl'llS are filed I Ta.xp~yers .are 38kcd to b~al' i local Dist:ict. Ta~ation Office \ Chamber Meet m~~tcil? s~~:~ers for the mec[· Thr talents of the neMP's ,erie.writers are featured in ~ bookl~t issued Tuesday by thr forcr to enlist the aid of thr genml public' In fight· Ing crimt.

The 16.page publication, mumated by drawings in a light vcin. is described· by nnlP commissioner C. W. Harrision as "a helpful hint booklet designed to make ·th~ mder aware of unsuspected are~! of invitation to' the pot· fnti~1 criminal." C0mmissioner Harvison says

in a foreword that thousands of la\\'abiding citizens unwit· tin~I)' aid and abet the fast· p-o,I'ing "Industry" of crime '\'hich is costing Canadians roillon! 01 dollars a year. 1'hr booklet, tiUed "Crime in Your Community", offers tips on prp\'entlng' thefts of cars and burglaries in homes and' business establishments.

Typical rhymes in tbe boOk·

Of Air is available All over the place­But jewelry and furs Just need safe space­When you leave hotne Shut all windows with care Or the thief may just leave

you Nothing but air."

The booklet urges the pub· lie not to adopt the attitude, "let George do it," in sub tnittlng information to the police whieh may be useful in apprehending criminals. Un· der a drawing of a dejected criminal with feet and hand~ in medieval ~tocks, the pub. lie is advised: "When you immediately reo

port unusual incIdents or some person to the policc, you may be preventing the commission of a crime, there by protecting yourself or the Iivcs and property of your neighbors."

Office provides the following before the Nohce of Assessment \ thiS m tnmd when aWaltmg I fOI' If the mqulry IS sent to the I Newfoundland Board of Trade' mg were W, .J. Browne (PC· infortnation as an aid to tax. and any refund duc are maile.d their refunds or Notice of As· Data Cenlre it will be returned II president 11. S. E. Hope will SI. John's East Extcrn I and pro· payers who have yet to file to. taxpayers. In so~e cases It i sessment. to the local office for a reply speak to tnembers of the Corner l'incial party leader James J. t.heir 1962 Returns and to those Will take longer, e.g. m the case \ to be tnade to the taxpayer. All Brook Chatnber of Cotntnerce Greene, taxpayers who have filed their of improperly prepared Re· The Returns al'e han~led at Returns are sent back to the at their quarterly meeting to· -------Returns and are awaiting their turns or where, for any reason, the Data Centre on a first in· \ District Office for, filing as soon tnorrow. Visits lodge notices of assesstnent. more infortnation is required. first out basis, just as soon as 3S they are processed. ;'11'. Hope will be accotnpanied

Ta1Cpayers using tbe T1.short Any returns on which tnore they possibly c~n be, and i.t will . . . . by board executive manager form arc advised' to read the infortnation is required are reo not ~elp to wflte that office to The flnal.date for fJlmg T1- Anthonv Ayre who' will repre· tax guide provided with the'Tl turned to District Office and· s~e If the ~roc~ss can be hur· Ret~rns_ wltho~t penalty, is sent th'e board at the annual short form and those using the when the itetns concerned arc fled. Any mqUlry about your I April 30th as m other years, tneetin of the Newfoundland Tl general form the instruction' cleared, they are returned to returns. assesstnent or refund b.ut taxpayers are re.quested to I Industr1al Safety Association sheet provided, and to make the Data Centre for processing. should always be made to the file as soon as pOSSible. I and Worktnen's Cotnpensation sure that they have all their in. Board. Mr. Ayre will' make calls formation slips at hand, e.g. if Reg,"onal in connection with ec,verage of they had tnore than one etn· PrOV"lnC"lal Taxatl"on Corner Brook plan'1ed for the ploycr, T4 slips should be at. , :I!ay issue of the Newfoundland tachcd covering all employ· I (Continued from pagc 3) Journal of Comtnerce. ments during the year. I,ark", and the H. A. ~Iorris· '

SI'ml'larly clal'ms for charL., I (Continued from page 3) ! for governtnent buildillgs $548,· i

scy Jubilee Drama Festlva W If 517689678 II lth '46 G . table donations and medical ex·: Award o[ $100 for the Direc. care,., " ~ 'ea , I 6, ~vernment Bouse repair' Ma Penses must be supported by 517,532.193; EducatIOn, 517'1 and mamtenance, $27,728; light I ny

tor of t1.le winning play. 238309 d III'gh ' sn 4~4 d f ' receipts. In the case of tnedical ' ,an wa~ s tJ, - ,.: an power or government I expenses, all receipts should ' , 267. I buildings, $293,49n. I . A I . .

Preferably be listed in order o[ Tom Cahill of the. Corr.er i On capital accollnt Welfare! In Health. patient serl'ices.: . argc and cnthuslUstlc

at Meet

Liberal candidate for st. John's East, J. P. O'Keek S:i\· urday visited the Sunset Lodge here to discuss the issue5 of his campaign with the scnior citizens who live there.

He also toured the Pouch Cove and Flat Rock area in a sound truck.

~!r. O'Keefe will hold a large rally at the Queen Elizabeth Re:::ional Higb School in Fox· trap tonigh I where Premier J. R. Smallwood will be main speaker. Other speakers will be p, J. Lewis and Dr. Cliff Jo~', tnetnbers of the House for Har· bor iIlain.

os: "Just Send Beer" date on a sheet of paper to be ~rook Playmakers recP.lve!l the 1 utilizcd 524,351; Health, 5982" non·government, nnder hospital audience attended a PC rally attached to the return. Claims 'l~omp?on Trop~y for the Be~t. 542; Ellucation, 52,144,932; insurance program, cost S3,961,'\ for Satn Walt;rs recent1~ at

h Id Dlrectlon. HIS group did I alii I Highways 87708947 The 872 Op l' t' n f th G I Channel. :'11.1'. \\ alters, candidate

for personal exemptions s ou I " ' ." • e a to 0 • e enera fit' . B . B be carefully completed and all 'Rashotnon.. . biggest budgetary outlay went Hospital cost $3,203,213 inc!ud.1 o~ e ec Ion m urm· urg.eo, of the information requcsted on TI~e cReglofnal Dtlepubty tChpael~' to Education \\'ith lIealth sec· II ing $2,191,014 for salari~s. Food 5th aid thatt·thge ~utnber allttentdlHng the form in respect of these tnan s up or Ie cs . ond. Both Health and Welfare totalled $402,967 e mee In lIas exce en.. e

l'HrHSTER FILES APPEAL WINNIPEG (CP)- Rev. Alan

Hasson filed an appeal Friday with the Manitoba Court of Ap· peal against a court order pro­hibiting hitn from preaching at Norwood Presbyterian Church . Jtlr. Hasson asked the Appeal Court to quash an order against him handed down last Friday which reversed an earlier, tem· porary one allowing him to con· tinue at Norwood after his lIlart:h 9 dismissal by the Win· nipeg presbytery of the Presby· terian Church in Canada.

DARWIN, Australia­(AP)-Hall'l Creek is • cat· tie township 700 miles south·

we-st of Darwin Rnd monsoon rain! have Isolated it by road !inct early January. The weather people SaYs. it· wlll be mid·AprlJ before anyone fan ~et there' by' road, and there 11 no railroad.

IS possible cartons o( can· ned beer in place. of usual perishables. Desperate. Town out of beer."

claitns should be provided. fortnanCe by a tnan went to Ted arc departtnents which I'e· In Welfare th~ cost f m' repo~ted wonderful receptions Taxpayers pI'eparing.a T1. Henley. of the AVlOn Pla)'e~! cclve substantial support in I taining and operating t~e B~;~ throughout his whole riding,

Short . Form' ,wI'th a taxable in' for hiS portrayal of t money from the Federal go\'· Hotne and Trainina S hI' and forecasts success at the

Major in "Separate Tables". _. ," c 00 w.s i polls April 8. :~e u~ ~! ~gU:; i~~~r:r'~~~ The Regional Chairman's Cup e~~~e~:;ding profits of the i ;~~:079; the GirlS School, ~25,· Cyril Pelley, ~C candidate for Food on the next plane

was replaced by 100 denen . cans of beer. Provincia1- Tax' Table supplied for the best performa~ce by, Board of Liquor Control totalled In Highways, tnaintenance of Grand·Falls·Whlte Bay· Labra·

d a wotnan was won by Flo Pat· 1$4 679 716 70 com ar d with d db' ,dar spent the past we~k can· with the T1 Short form an erson for her portrayal of Saint I ' , ., p e, roa s an rldg~s cost SU,070,· vassing the Labrador coast by Since then there have

been telegrams each we~k or so, among thetn:

thus avoid the actual tax cal· J . "TI L kif \ hieh was S3,684,901. Some of the mcrease 726. Snow clearmg $1 566r975 . I culation. This table is compiled Dan I~ d I~y a;he' SVt John's could be attributed to rising On Trans·Canada liigh;vay th~ al~ ane. t b d t G so' as to allow for the Federal ~~esen C nd th Wayfarers in II costs because of the devalued I SUtn of 82,652,361 was spent. B \ W~St: orm ~:n I a ~ose

But Ire the ~ people of lIall's Creek alarmed? No, this is rugged Australia.

The first telegram from the flood.bound town's only stortkeeper to his Darwin !upplier II'~I sent Jan. 10 and rpad:

Jan, 21: Operation Beer highly successful. Desperate again. Can you repeat this week plus fouf bags potatoes, one bag unions? Feb. 6: Please repeat beer,

plus four bags potatoes, one bag onions.

Tax Abatement and to include ayers, a e, dollar This brought ttl t1 ay u e wea er las c car· the old age security tax. Hav. cEo,otPer.ations I~~~~sthe Metnorial The' hire·purchase imtallment TCH since 31 ~I:rchou 1;r9 ~~ etd L

3nbd

hde reCs~tltned his flight

. . d t th I t x enslon er. I C f d t' B 'Id' a t I $45497893 ' 0 a ra or I y. 109 arrive a e correc ax· TI Go r or's CliP for the I on on e era Ion UI 10" cos " II t t' t T . d' ·t I Ie ve n : 7830 f h u··· e spen some Ime a wm able income and fin 109 I ess best supporting role was won i S6 , 7 and or t e Illl'emty . Losse~. uncollectable accounts i Falls last week. Mr. Pelley re· than $3000. it Is only necessary by Estelle Wall of the North. \ $829,319.. " etc., written off by the govern· I turned to Gran~ Falls for the to turn to the table, find the l'ff Dratna Club for her role In expenditure 0'1 EducatIOn tnent for the year ended March k d t u It is estimated that Ameri·

Feb. 18, Town stm thirsty. I bl d

c Ie' t h ' I . I wee 'cn 0 resume canvass of cans drink about 400 million a~"licab e taxa e incotne an of Julia in "The Country Boy". eac ers sa anes cost t Ie Tre~s. 31, 1962, S428,724. the Grand Falls·Gander area. cups of coffee dailv ..

"Please air freight as many Require more beer. n'ote the amount of Federal and The Harvey Rose Bowl for I ury $1l,29~.192, ScholarshIps -------------------Provincial lax applicable there· the best visual presentation waS and hursal'les aceoun~ed for I CALL ELECTIONS to, won by David Buckle, stage! $459,796 .. Transport~llon . of I· L~~IE. Togo (AP)-The Togo Hold Monthly Meet

Jllotiler Killed Creditor The Federal Tax payable manager of the production school chIldren to regIOnal hIgh i ca~met. Wednes?ay called new . should then be entered on page "Rashotnon", sch?ols and bOl\rd schools. C?st .1eglslal1ve el~eltons [or ;'!ay 5. one of the Tl.short fortn in the . Just over S400,000. ProvIsIon The new Nahonal Assemblv will The monthly dinner tneeting \ to the meeting in the person

~tI.UII, Fla.-{AP) - A red·haired mother of five has b~en sentenced to six months in j ail for the poisoning d~~th of a man she said hounded her on • $100 loan.

. Judge Ben Wmard passed ~entcnce Tuesday on Flor· rntt ~Iay Bosquet, 34, after she pleaded guilty to man· alaughter in the death lIf Fr"nri~ Garofalo, 53,

Testimony showed Garofalo charged Mrs. Bosquet $20 a week Interest on the loan. She said she borrowed the

$100 without her husband's knowledge after she wasted her housekeeping money. She testified she slipped sotne in· secticide into Garfalo'5 beer at a tavern.

"I only meant to make him sick and scare him," Mrs. Bosquet said.

space indicated by the arrow The trophies and awanls and distribution of school sup· replace the House that w;s dis· 0.[ the Credit Granters Associa· of ,,!iss Joyce Bishop of City and Ihe Provincial Tax should were presentCiI by J\lrs. plies cost $755,304. solved after the assassination hon took place in the New· Radio and ~Iusic. be entered immediately below. Fabian O'Dea, wife o[ the 1.:nder the Attorney·General's of President Sylvanus Olytnpio. foundland Hotcl here, March 'rhe meet.ing was under tb~ The return tnay then be COtn. Licutenant Governor. W. F. Department salaries of local head of the Togolese Unity 27 with 32 members in allend· direction rf the ladies and a[· pleled in the manner indicated, Galgay, Deputy Chairman of constabulary cost $645,9:14. Pay· Party. anee. ter the various commiitees Ilad

If the taxable incotne is, in I the Newfoundland Drama mcnts for RCMP services $737,. At the eonclu~ion of the presented their reports, Mrs . excess of $3000, however, or if I,'estival Society, stlid the 538. RECRUITS WORKERS el'cning tneal. minutes of the Florence Barnes introduced the it is any atnount and you have plays had been of high cali. I ,Spent on arms an.d ammuni· WIN~I~EG. (CP) - A .Luth. Fehruary meeting were read guest speakcr for the evening, additions for tax adjustments or bre "aried cntcrtainmcnts, I tlOn for local pohce, forty· I eran mlnlstel frotn Iceland and confirmed. Presidflnt .Jack the Hon. R. F. Sparkes, who dednction for Dividend Tax and displayed special talents. eight dollars: The Fire Depart· wants to recruit 40 Canadians Thorne reported on the con· gal'll a most interesting talk. Credit, it will be necessary to . ' \ me nt's operations including sal·: to work in the fishcrics indus· sumer credit conference held Mrs. Vera ~1. Alcock propos· calculate the tax cotnpletely. .,. His Honour tlte Lieutcnant aries cost S408,90~. Dieting and i try in his country. Rev. Robr~t em'lier in ~!arch at Halifax, ed a vote of thanks to the

Steamship Movements The various steps involved are Governor the Hon. Fahian I attendance on prISoners in st.l Jack of the northern IcelandIC and arising out of his report a speaker. shown on the form and thcse O'Dea, Q.e., closed the 11th John's. ~ail cost $6,109. In ?ut.: area of Vatnsnes said here Fri· panel discussion will take place -------should not be too difficult to Regional Festival, congratula. port Jails the satne serVircs . day a .two.ye~r employment pro· at the April meeting, with Steve follow .The Federal Income Ta:< tfng the winners and tnetnbers cost $2B,2~0: \ gratn. JIl the lIldus~ry .would pay Frenc~ a~ting as ]\\oderator, rates are shown on the form of the casts for giving such a In Puhllc Works account is I unskilled and senu·skllled work· and Will mc1ude those who at·

Only itnportant river in the Unitcd States to flow in a northerly direction is the St. John's River in Florida. and when these a.re applied to grcat deal of pleasure to one sharing the cost of heating I ers the equivalent or about I tcnded the conference. dARKE CABOT

SERVICES, LTD.

'5.5. Novaport leaves Hali· fax, :\ova ScoUa on April 4th. 101' 51. John's.

'Refrigeration,

FURNESS, WlTHY .. COMPANY, LIMITED

Cairndhu leaving Halifax ~I.r. 31. Due 'St. John's Apr . 2. Sailing for Liverpool same day. ~ .

Beechmore leaving Boston ~hr. 29 for Stalnt John, N.B., Balifax and SI. John's, Nfld. At Saint John, N .B., ·Mar. 30, ~nd lesl'ing Halifax Apr. II for St. ,John's. Due St. John's Apr. R.. Sailing for Gai'ston and LI\'Crpaol Apr. 9.

. Heerlng Rose I ea v I n g LIl'erpOOI ~Iarch 28, due St­John's April 3. Leaving for lIalifax and Boston AprlJ 4, due Halifax April 6. Leaving Boston April 11 for Saint John, N.B., Halifax and St. John's, Nfid. At Saint John April 13. Leaving Halifax April 19 for St. John'~, Nf1~. Due SI. John'n AprIl 22. SB~hng ~or Liverpool lame day.

Refrigeration. . . - .

NFLD •. CANADA STEAM· SHIPS LIJllITED

• Woodcock sailing from Hali· fax, N.S., for St. John's Mar. 26. Bedford 11 sailing from Hali·

fax, N.S., for St. John's Apr. 1. • Woodcock sailing from Hali·

fax, N.S., for SI. John's Apr. 5. * Woodcock sailing from Hali·

fax, N.S., for St. John's Apr. 15, • Woodcock sailing from Hall·

fax, N.S., for St. John's Apr. 23

•. Refrigeration.

SET MAY DATE orrAWA (CPJ- The fourth

national labor • management seminar will be held at the Uni· verslty of Mont~eal ]\fay 15·16, the National· ProductivIty Coun· cil said wednesday.

HEADS U.S. CHAMBER WASHINGTON lAP) - Ed·

win P. Neilan, of Wilmington, Del., a bank executive who earned his first dollar as a car· penter's apprentice, was named president of the United States Chamber of CommercII Wednes· day.

your income, the resulting cal. and all. Pepperrell AFB, $109,671; fuel $3,000 annually. A new member was welcomed

culation represents the Federal Income Tax on taxable income and should be entered on the first line under "Calculation of Tax".

This figure will also be YOllr Basic Tax, if you have no ad· justtnents to add nor Dividend Tax Credits to deduct. Frotn this Basic Tax there must ~be deducted the Federal Tax Abatetnent of 16% and to this amount must be adde'd the Old Age Security tax to give the total Federal tax payable. All that remains with regard to the Tax Calculation is to add the provincial Tax and in the case of the province of Newfound· land it will be noted that this tax is 16% of Basic Tax and therefore will be the same fig· ure as the Federal Tax Abate· ment. .

Insofar as It Is applicable the above remarks relate to taxpay· ers 'using the Tl General forms also. They will have to supply the additional Information ask· ed for, of coUt:Se, depending on their type of income and In all

For Jet Age comfort: EPA's DART HERALD SERVICE! Starting in April new prop-jets from· famous Handley Page will speed you to all major points in Newfoundland and Labrador. Smoothly. Silently. Note the high wings which give a glorio/ls,unblocked view. Like to stretch? Contoured seats (in twos, not threes) offer extra space, more leg room. Go Dart Herald on· EPA - the must comfortable distance between two points!! EPA 'F

. SERVIN~ ALL OF NEWfOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR

/

'n the Inw for ;,~e of .. U 3,; "at he 'Is sUIl" iter it. If Jle .

_ JOURNALISTS STRIKE PARIS (Reuters) - French

journalists Wednesday nIght an· nounced a 24 • hour "warning strike" today In provincial pa· pers throughout France 'follow· Ing the breakdown of pay talks. The journalists seek a 20·per· cent 'salary increase, a IIve·day week, a fifth wcek of vacation and retirement at age 60 in·

cases they will have to ealcu· .... late th~ir tax, sInce there is no Tax Table. provided with the Tl.General form.

Whlle all returns are to be filed at the Data Centre in ot· tawa, . any taxpayer who reo quires Information or assistance in preparing his Return should contact the local District Office In the Sir Humphrey Gilbert

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Page 6: First Anniversary . Used Car Sale THE DAILYcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...The Com\Jany's garage. a\)(I\'I~, is fillcil with idle huscs as a result of a hrcllkrlown

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\ II-THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, APRIL 1, 1963

HAS WINNER IN 4·2 GA I .. ~: ;

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Howe Leads Red Wings DETROIT (CP)-Detroit Red Wings eame from

behind twice Sunday night to defeat the injury­criPlllcd Chicago Black Hawks 4·2 in the third gllme of their Stanley Cup semi· final. The Hawks, who reo ceived lrcmendous goal·keeping from old pro Glellll Hall, leacl the bl!st of seven set two games to one.

Hall, who beat the Rcd Wings but the Hawks were refused 5.4 and 5·2 in the opening games without their big guns, pnrtlcu. at Chicago, was [antastlc at larly Hull. limes as he made a total of 14 The Red Wings swarmed all savcs against only 19 for Terry over Hall, forcing him to make Sawchuk in thc Red Wings net. 17 saves in each of the first'

Hall kept the Hawl,s in the nnd second periods and 10 in came for t\\'o periods but the Inst 20 minutes. yielded a pail' of goats In 11' But. while Detroit did all the space of 41 seeconds In the shooting, the Hawks clicked third scssion thut broke a 2·2 !lrst on the scorebourd-at 3:41 dcadlock. ,of the opening period-and 0.'1

Stan ~liIlita, thc lwnl·skating their first shot on the Dctrmt Black Hawk ccnl1·c. scol'cd both net. Chicago guals thllt put the Mikita beat Sawchuk with a Hawks ahead 1·0 in the first knee-high shot from the bluc­period aud brol;o a 1-1 deadlock line thllt appeared to be pal"

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Canadiens 2-0,~~ MONTREAL (CP)-Toronto Maple Leafs, rid.:~

ing the payoff touch of Bob PuHord and, tight goal. ~~ tending by Johnny Bower, shut out Montreal Cana· ,',' diens 2-0 Saturday night and spurted ahead 3-0 in J their Stanley Cup semi·final series. . ;;!

Attendance WIlS 14,773, I and whipped a pass to Shack. >

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De MUI

,Although the fourth game in \ coming up on the play. Eddh ' the best.of·seven set is to be almost fell when he took it. ~: CANADIAN played here Tuesday night, the He went to one knee, recoverc' \ • ht t 1 defending cup champions flew and rifled a high shot into m "1 arday mg a home to Toronto right after open side from 10 feet out. J ~uards,to clinel Saturday night's game. A drop pass by Montreal': ?; Irophy. The win

"WhY shouldn't they have Donnie l\Iarshall while the C~ ';, For the seeo Sunday at home?" said coach nadiens were trying to organizc 'J

Punch Imlach. in their own end led to Pulford'! .1 with three goals His club was outshot 32·22, goal. :-/0 Montreal Illayer w~'1 lach. Jad!: Cran

But the Canadlens squandered there to take it. Pulford mom:. j 'ther. Guards gl a flock of opportunities with in and belted a low 15·footer that ,r errant play in close . .\Vhen they caught a corner. :1 ,little for the fj were on target there was Bower CHECK WITH VIGOR I Guards fell behi! to blunt the attack. The Leafs, backchecking with i) b

Pulford, who celebrated his· I'igor, .tood off Montreal the ".} he first frame l

27th birth day Sunday. exploited I rest of the way although yield· J It 4·3 after two per a couple of l\Iontreal misplays ing a wide edge in play. i jad two tallies by ) to set up Eddie Shack for' "We just stayed on top t,1 ; leing the only sco Toronto's first goal and score them," said Imlach. "We cheek.] Ihird frame.

late in the ~ccond. tially screened, Ed Joyal of the, Gordie Howc, who slipped Wings was off for tripping anJ

~\I'a)' from his convoy. Eric I the goal m a I' ked Chicago:s ~ ~cslcrcnko of the Hawks, hud 5cventh off thc power play In

n hi!! 35th hirthday. lie scored II this serics, HOLY CROSS won the Invitation Boys' Basketball Tournament at MemorIal UnIversity over the weekend as they defeated Memorial 6o.:h, Members of the winninl4 team that also won the High School Senior title are (left to right), first row: Dave Wilson. Otto Byrne, Fred NoHall" Jjm Walsh, Dave Healey: second row: Rev. Bl'. Whelan. coach; Frank Buck,Ed Hurley, Percy McDonald, Mike Bam­brick, Tom Healey, Kevin Walsh. (Staff Photo)

the second himself. ed them into the Ice. The,' ,! Goaltcnding at h It was the first shutout in couldn·t get untracked." 1'1 !he rink Wil

S good Stanley Cup play for Bower who Bower's finest mo\'emen\!" ~regory of Legion was making his 38th appear· came in the opening perill.l' leal top stops but i once in, the post· season playoffs. when a 5·minute major pena!:!~, !lei! Winsor whu

Dctroit's fil'st goal. assisted on two othcrs and gencrally had a Howe scored his third of this bi~ ni!!ht. . i )'eul"s IJluyolfs at 10:36 of the

Parkcr ~I neD olin I It Alex> middle period, IIc was sent into Faulkner mtd Bruce ~lacGrcgor I the clcar on a pass (rom Doug

ALEX FAULKNER

Holy Cross Capture Tourney Title Hoop

Holy Cross, recentb' crowned I game, scoring 21 point~, '49·28 win over Foxtrap In the: their first mppmg Bell Island champions of the senior High' Bishops College won the> first game of. the tournament. 21·20 and Holy Cross won their School basketball league after consolation gamc drnpping Fox· i ~Iemorial dropped Bishops 30·27 second dropping Br. Rice 42·26 an undefeated seaSOIl, took an. trap 41,26 with John Gaultan I with Dal'e Russell scoring 15 in on :\lcDonald's 16 points. other championship Saturda), pacing the wa)', scorinll 171 the second game, The final scheduled gamc as they went unbeaten to' win points, Leo Stem was tops for i Foxtrap IVan their first, saw Bishops get into the can· the Eastern Newfoundland Tour. Foxtrap with 11. I dumping Carbonear 45·23 in the solation game with a 48·22 win nament sponsored by the ~Ie. . I third contest with Fagan scor· over Bell Island paced by thc morial University Athletic de. Following the. game an All· I ing 16 fa I' the Winners. ~Te· 11 points of Gaullon. ' partment. Star team was picl;ed hl' ~II'. moria I cume up with their sec· Holy Cross had little trouble

Leach of Gonzuila liigJI School. ond win in the next contest and ill the championship game The Crusaders c1o,ed out th~ They lI'ere Perc), ~!cDonald, 1 again it was Dm'e Rilssell lead· building up a 33·1;; lead after

tournament in fine style drop. Mike Bambriek anti Tom 1I1~aley I ing them to a 38·31 w;n ol'er the first half and scoring an-ping the hosting :\Icmorial tcam of Holy Cross. Da\'e RIlsscll of i United, . other 27 in the second half with 60.27 in the championship 1I1clllorial and ~John Baltzer of i ~[emorial scm'jng just 12. game. Big Percy ~lcDonald Bishops, Hc prescnted them' Holy Cross won their first Besides ~lcDonald's 21 in the paced the Crusaders in nil of 1 with individual awards. ; r1roppinl( Carboncar l'Iil.h a big big game Tom Healey alsll had their three wins with his hi!!,! Peter Furlong scorNl 12 ! 66·28 scorc, ~lcDonalri coming a hot !thot scoring 17 points and gest show coming in the finnl ! poinls to lead Br. Riee. 10 a lup with 20 points, Uulled won :\like Bambrick dumped 12,

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\,-:1 IUt. He had lmal: r. In Murphy, GOM D tnd Terry Haire p; t,' Itops in many ell '.-' lie was tops .

Don Crnne op,m, Icorlng at 7.59 0

rerlod after ~E pade the big mo~, ~ad it 1·1 at 8.14. ,assing effort w Ind John Gover leading 2·1 at 16.1: ,iurphy started h

, performance on C !. pass for a 3·1 sp:

1l was a 4·1 L \ Ige at 1.56 o[

! frame as Donovl trom Malone. II Ikating .Iack C Guards back inll Playing his best rear Crane hit .u~: pn a Bob WIIlII Oave Butler sco [rom Ian Campb-

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The setback ieft Montreal win· to Shack for high sticking RaIPiJ'I less in seven consecutive cup Backstrom and a minor pcnaH, 1 games. Last season the Cana· against Carl Brewer for boldm; . i diens blcw four straight to gave Montreai a two·man ad" t Chicago Black Haws in a semi· vantage for 6q seconds. .J, finai. In succession he blocked c1me, ;

HARBOUR 61 George Fnulknl or the S. W. ~Io Stadium here for the 100 ba 1llayers who wi here for the r tam tournamen l

week.

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scored the othel' Detroit goals. FIRST PLAYOFF GOAL

The counter for Faulkner. the only :>;ewfoundland·b01'l1 playcr to makc it as n regular in the :\ational Hockey Lellgue .. was his first in playoff competition.

It was the win ncr and came at Ii: 02 of the third periud, ~lacC;rcgor gut his lit 6:43

and the Howlls. II' h a had pushed Ihe Wings around In Chicago last T u c s day and Thul'sday nights. didn't have a chancc from there in. As a

'i mllttcr of fact. they wel'e lucky J to escape with only four goals :j scored against them, and they · havc Hall to thank for that.

Burkley ami banged a low whiStlel' bctween HaU's lcgs.

Mikita put the Hawks ahead 2.1 at 17:33 whcn he picked liP l\en Wharram's rcbound from just outside the goal crease.

Thirty.two seconds later, the Red Wings made it 2·2 while Ab :'IlcDonald was olf for hookIng Howe who had slickhandlcd through the Chicago defence and was dumped as he wns about to shoot, Defenceman Howie Young, appearing (or the first - Bnd Inst - time in the game. blnzed a shot from t~e point and MacDonald batted til

the rebound.

Shack scored at 13: 14 of the in thrusts by, Jean Belivcau,; second period in the wakc o( a GilIcs Tremblay and Bobby ROilS i breakaway by Pulford and the seau, scrambling for his balance : hard.driving centre put the fin· while making the stops, Coach·;. ishlng touch to it with an un· Toe Blake of JIIontreal called It ! assisted goal at 14:16 in thel the turning point in the gamr., .\ 'I third period. penalty to Rousseau (or holdlll~ "

Pullord blocked a shot by \ '.im Horton eased the pressure 1 Jean Gauthier at the Toronto \ later. ': blueline to shake loose and set In the two opening :!amC5 it ;' up Shack. He swept around the Toronto, the Leafs won 3·1 ane ~ Montreal defenceman to pick up \3.2,: tbe puck and drove' in alone on .II win here Tuesday for To,·. ; Montreal's masked goalie Jac· onto would make it a complet£' l ques Plante. reversal oC the 1960 final sc:ic; '~

Instead of shooting, Pulford between the clubs. the last tllne I tried to deke Plante. But- the they met in cup play. The Can goalie . wasn't fooled and adiens swept that one fou: 'j.

sprawled to knock the puck straight for their firth cons~cU'.

The players, the Island, wil a two day 61

tbose living in Harbour Grace Iccomodate a requested to ner.

Columbi Darts Action in

The Hawks, badly depicted by :~ the abscnce of three injured ~, regulul's. couldn't do m u c h ; against the powerful skntlnll I Dctroit club that hammered

,I away at them [rom the opening ',' faceorr.

The crowd oC 13,241 went wild early in the third period when the 26·yeal··0Id Faulkner, ana· tive of Bishop's Falls, Nfld" smacked the puck past Hnll 'IS

it bounced off a Black Hawk defenceman's body. MaeGreg· or's counter came when he tipped in a low 40-footer by defenceman Warren Godrrey. -";'1"

away when Pulford directed it tive cup title-. toward a corner. SAVES:

No one was there to cover and Bower 11 10 11-32 7 6 i-20

i Club Darts Lea night with the

,i The Hawks were minus Bohby :j 1Iull. their big gun who suf· " fercd a broken and badly lace·

Pulford pounced on the rebound Plante .'::, .. '

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. .. CURLING NOTES ·i , ;1 ;1

" winger Ron Murphy, out with !; an infected ankle cut, and

The fourth game will be played hcre Tuesday with thn mth in Chicago Thursday. A sixth, If ncccssary will be played here next Sunday,

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ST. JOHN'S CURLING CLUB J. Kielley, N. Batten, E, B, Squires, !\Irs J. Brown. L ii' defcnceman AI MacNeil.

I. MacNeil· of Sydney. N,S .. "Now, wc're moving," en­thused coach Sid Abel in the Detroit dressing room. "Our kids (Faulkner and MacGregor) came up with the big ones for us,"

To.Night's Games: f-7.00-8.30 10.00-11.30 ~ · >' suffered two cracked ribs, also

011 ThursdllY when the two clubs staged a bit of a hrawl.

Coach Rudy Pilous of thc Hawl;s called for help from the farm and derenceman Ron tng· ram from Buf£slo Disons of the American League and 1\!urray Hall. 29·year·old centre anJ right winger from St. Louis Braves of the Eastern Pm circuit, played fairly regularly

Faulkner said he "sure likcd that· goal - U's the first In Stanley Cup for me. O! course, that Gordie Howe helped me."

PRESENTS TROPHY-George Crosbie, Presid ent of· the Newfoundland Margarine Company, pre­sents the Good Luck Bonspiel Trophy to John Pike, skip of the victorious Grand Falls Rink. Looking on are (left to right)) Mrs. Vi Pike, Danny Goodyear, and Mrs. Carol Goodyear, members of the Grand Falls team, (Gander Photo Shop)

SAVES: Hall Sawchuk

17 17 10--44 5 9 5-19

Pike Rink'·,·

English Takes Eighth Victory

GANDER (Staff) The Gander Airport Club was the scene of a very colorful bon· spiel from Friday to Sunday inclusive, sponsored by the GOOd Luck Margarine Company,

Competition was very keen between rinks from Corner Brook (skip. Rocky Schulsted), Grand Falls (skip, Johnny

Alex English got his eighth Alex gained 25 point9 for St. Pike), and Gander (skip, Jim Dominion Ale TV AIl·star Bow· Pat's to have them leading the Hogan). The Grand Falls rink ling victory on Sa'turday While .Club race with 800 points while .remalned undefeared and were Bernice Cook regained h~r title, Feildians got twenty points from the winners of the beautiful English defeated GarrY Wis· Mrs, Cook and 15 points from Good Luck trophy and individ· combe 774-687 while Mrs. Cook Garry for second spot on 365. UBI trophies . were awarded stopped Gert Bailey 679·553. Guards have 305; ~olY Cross each player of the winning rink.

Alex fell behind in Ih£- first won 115 and St. Bon shave 25, The highlight of thl! event (MIme with Wiscombe posting Next Satur~ay :Joe :Wadden was the arrival on Saturday 280 to 246 but In' t!.p second of Holy Cross Will fnce Alex' evening of George Crosbie frame Alex won 222·212 to cut English while Mrs. Bailey, of president of the Good Luck ten polnt~ offthe le~d, In the Guards, will return to ehal· Margarine Company and his third fram~ AklL had a fine lenge Mrs. Cook. sales supervisor, Harry :May aoo i/hlle Garry hit 195 and • and, Mrs, May, and Mr. Coffin Alex won the show by 87 points. Ohio'S first· library, wIllcli sales agent for the Grand Falls

. Mrs, Cook broke from the began operating as early as area. • first frame v'hldl she' took 214- March 1802, was at Cincinnati. A very successful cocktail 200 over Mrs. Bailey ... It was , party, sponsored by Mr, Gcorge 28~144 In rIc second frame .. Crosbie, was held In the Gan-for the winn:!r and she lost the Roof of the U.S. Air Force der Airport Club, followed by third. 200·209;, The totals saw Academy In Colorado has 17 a dinner which was catered to Mrs. Cook walt a 120 piil' vic· spires rising more than' 150 by 'the ladies of the Gander tOty:"- feet Into the alt. Curling Club, At the dinner

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Members of the participating clubs were: Corner Brook Club: Skip: Rocky Schulsted, Vise: Mrs, Dr. Dove, Second: D. Moore, First: Mrs. R. Schuls· ted. Grand Falls Club: Skip: John Pike, Vise: V. Pikc Scc· and: Danny Goodyear, First:

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Carol Goodyear. Gander Club: Skip: Jim Hogan, Visc: Emma Despres, Second: Pat Gallag· her, Fitst: Jan Gallagher.

The Good Luck bonspeil will be held in Corner Brook in the 1963·64 Curling season.

Hockey

which was chaired by Cy Row­sell ,Mr. Crosbie presented the grand trophy and' the individ· ual trophies to the winner, and gave a very interesting talk to tlie group on the reasons for the Good Luck bonspicl, and how happy he was to be able to contribute something to curl. ing in central Newfoundland. Both Mr. Pike and Mr. Shulsted thanked Mr. Crosbie on behalf of the Grand Falls and Corner Brook rinks and also the .Gan· der club for tbe hospitality ex- Briton dropped Huron 3·1 in Ian Kirby came up \i·ith the tended. Following the dinner the first game of Pce Wee lone Vikings goal. a ,very silccessful dance waS hockey at the Stadium Satur- TODAY'S GAMES held in honor of Mr, Crosbie day to ruin the losers chances 4.30-Black Watch vs. Gunners and the visiting curlers, I of taking over first place from (Army semi·finals)

On Sunday morning the bon- Magnificent. 5.1O-Hawks vs. Rangers speil came to a close when Robert Penny scored two for 5.50-Carlbous vs, Terra Novas Mr. Crosbie skipped a rink Briton and Davc Rowe the other 6.30-Pee Wee AIl·Stars vs. against Corner Brook The party with Ricky Steele scoring the Long Pond then proceeded to the Hotel lone Huron marker. TUESDAY'S GMtES Gander for luncheon. At the The second game saw Hood 4.30-Hood vs, Nelso,n luncheon Mr, Crosbie proposed move Into third place when .!i.lO-Tcrra Novas vs. Crescents a toast to all; the curlers in. they battled Yorlc to a score· 5:50-Huron vs. Magnificcnt vited, and this was responded less draw, The tie to York put 6.3D-Hawks VB. Terra Novas to by Mr. Ed. Goff. President them out of playoff rontention, of the. Gander Airport Club; The lone Bantam game was who thanked I1lr. Crosbie for a 2·1. victory Cor Eaglcs over his patronage on behalf of curl· Vikings. Frank Ring Rnrl frank ers in the area. Smythe scored for Eagles· and

For maximum visibility in the foggy northern waters, Danish ships bound for Green· land are painted bright red,

H. Wylie, M. Finn, A. Shaw, A. Foster, Mrs R. Tapper."; Miss M. Fagan vs Mrs. R. Geo. Phillips, lIIrs S, Bartlett rl Moyse, J. J. Murphy, A. Blair, C. 1. Merner, Mrs D. \l'i!;<, , Miss L. Bindon. Dr. K. Marshall, A. W. )Iatt.

F. Snow, F. R. Noseworthy, Donald. ~}; F, Phillips, Miss M. Bartlett L. J. Goldstein, lirE. Df! vs J. E, Butler, R. F. Martin, > Clouston, Miss 1_' Sutton, Di~ C. Taite, Miss A. Penney. Mathieson vs E. F, Kenncdr ~

G. K. Knight, J. A. Meehan, K. E. Ellis, R. Pumphrey:' R. MacGillivray, Mrs. E. Batten Miss M. Rose. , " vs Mrs. B. French, D. S. D.avis n. Templeton, Geo. Tessier:: Mrs L. Thistle, R. Cole. L. Foley, Miss M. Templemat;

Mrs, K. Cheivers, V. Burns, vs Mrs. C, Pratt, P. G. Ledi~i' J. Johnston, Mrs. H. Winsor vs ham, W. G. Moore, Mrs J. Ellu~, A. J. Lush, H. Roberts, Miss J. P. Cheivers, E. Boone. ~I~ ;-J. D. Winsor, Mrs. E. Levitz. M. Hogg, Miss G. Lahey vs )Ir.,

G. M. Stirling, Miss C. N. P. Rockwell, A. Earle, ~IW Whelan, Miss B. Wyatt, Miss P. J. Brakefield·Moore, Miss )!" Higigns vs Mrs. Lester, F. W. Corcoran. f' Graham, R. C. Shears, R. Le· R. Levitz, B. Rockwell. )lis". Drew. D. Pin sent, S. Bartlett vs N. P;.

B.30-10.00 Rockwell, Mrs M. Marshall, MrV R. J. Kent, L. Burdock, F. J, Blair, Miss M. Ryan. '

Oakley, Miss L. Ryan vs C. J. . I Doyle, J. G. Green, N. J. Saturday's Mixed Bonsplf, Vinie-ombe, Miss N. Ash. was won by the following:- ,

J. Herrick, E. Brakefield· Skip, J. Herrick and R. Hog! Moore, Mrs. L. Forbes, Mrs. mate, B. Bowerin and B. Jak K. Knight vs V. Reid, Miss M. man; second, R. Cole and MrS Kielley, B. Jakeman, Miss P. K. Knight; lead, K. HaweD. Bursey.

W, Piercey, G. C. Mac- NOTE: - Tuesday nlgl1l'! Namara, Mrs. E, Halley, Miss 5chedule will appear In I~ M. McGeachie vs T. S. Clift, morrow's DAILY NEWS. Mrs: S. Doyle, Miss P. Taite, n W. J. Ryan. The PacifIc Ocean COI!i;

one· third of the surface oC lh G. Giannou, Mrs. R. Kielley, Mrs F. Moore, Miss J. Ander· son vs C. F, Dearin, R. III. Dundas, Miss J. King, Miss N. Wellman.

A. Cox, A. G, Crane, M, 1\. Wallace, Mrs. L. Roche vs F.

earth.

Bark, canes, foliage, fiui' and grass are on the menu ~. African elephants; which !c!~ 16 hours out of 24.

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-8 1.-Bisons vs 2.-Leafs vs 3.-Royals V!

4.-Hurrican, 5.-Rovers \'

-E l.-Red Sox 2.-Giants V! 3.-Dodgers 4.-Maroons

, 5.-Rangers

',' : BALL' lfembers 0

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6-3 Victory Decides Title

Murphy Has Three, Winsor Brilliant By BERN BENNETT

CANADIAN LEGION climaxed their first year in Junior Hockey on Snt· lfIla~' night at the Stadium, scoring a 6·3 victory over defending champions r,ual'£is. to clinch the City's Junior cro wn and the Mutual Life. Memorial l'uJlh~'. The win gave the finals to Lcgi on three games to one.

l~ur the second game in a row tentn captain Mike. Murphy paced Legion ,.jlh three goals while Milte DOllovnn, Don Crane and Bill l\lalone scored one tnch .• lllck Crane notched two G1\l1l'l1s' murkers with Dave Butler posting the Itlll'r. Guards got grellt netminuing fr om Neil Winsor as he kept them ill the

;lIttlc (or the first two period,~.

~E DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, APRIL I, 19fj3-'I

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t;\l~t'lls fe\1 behind 3·1 aCter Ill' fir,t frmnc but got close II 43 "ft~r two periods. Legion lail two tallies b)' )Iikl~ ~Iurphy tring the ollly scoring in thc tlird Crame, \;lIalt~ndin!! at hoth ends of

:11(' ri Ilk was good wit h Eric ~rl"~or)' of Le!!ion hul'ing three Iral top ,tops but it wr.s gonler ~ril \\"insor who really ;;tood Ill\. 11,' had brenl: away grabs 111 \lmph::, Don()l'l'n. ~Inlone Inti Tl'l'!')' Hairc IIi\!; othcr top Ilop, in man), c1(1;~·ill dril'e3.

Only two minor pcnalties werc called in the gamc with both going to Legion and none having any bcaring all the score.

Fo\lowing the game hockey president .lim Vinicombe pre· sided at the presentation o[ the ~lutual Lifc :\lemorial Trophy to Lcgion captain 1.1iI1C Murphy

CANADIAN LEGION won the Junior Hocl{ey cllampionsltip with a 6-3 victory over Guards at «Ie Stadium on Saturday' night. l\Iembers of the winning squad are, (left to right), first row: .John Gover" Hubert Hutton, Mike Murphy, Captain; Eric Gregory, ROll Lush, Terry Haire, Bill Malone; second row: Gl'cg O'Grady, President of St. John's Legion; Al Harver, Manager;. Sean Squires, Mike Donovan, Orv Matthews,Al Hiscock; condl; Gerry Gibbons; sticl.boy; ROil Burry, Leo Fagan, asslstant·coadl; Don Crane, John KenUl!dy, Cec Piercey, WendeU Gray, Cce Mor gnll, Manager; Gus Fagan, Property Manager. (Staff Photo)

by Tom~li11s. I Referee: Gordon Duff. Linesmen: Sib Quick and Don

Yetman. LINEUPS

I,EGlON: Goal: Grcgory; de· fence: Hutton. Squires, Crane; forwards: Lush, Murphy. Matt­hews, Donovan. ~Ialone, Haire, Piercey, Kennedy.

Boyle Trophy Finals Open ilr lI'a, tops.

!lOti Crane ()p~n\!d t!:e Legion Iroring at 7.59 of t h(' initinl lcriod after ~lik.~ Donovan IIRdl' the big mo\e Jade Crane lad it 1·\ at 8.14. ~I:llune on n IB"ing effort with Donovan 11111 John Gover hud J,~~lon ~alling 2·\ at 16.1~ r.11d lit 19.50 IllIrph)" started his lime gr.a! performance on On' :'Ialthcll's' la', for a 3·1 sprcad.

It was " 4·1 Lc~ion advant· I~e at 1.56 of the middlc l~all1c as Donovan countcrcd Iro:n ~Ialonc, It was hard Ikatin~ .Jack Crane gelling "nards back into the contest. rlaying his best gamc of the fear Crane hit unassisted at 7,09 ,n a Bob Williams pass and !lave Butler scored at 14.34 Irom Ian Campbell to havc it c1o~c at 4·3. --_._-------

Need Homes For

NEIL WINSOR

1\Iike Murphy lifted a 1001'­ing backhander from outside the Guards' blueline and it took a bnd hop to go behi",l Winsor at 11.03 to give the new cham­pions a two goal' spread. lIlur­phy rounded out the scoring at 10.44 as he slipp~d the puck into the open nNs aftcr Don Crane set him free .

Miners Recovering

GUARDS: Goal: Winsor; de­fence: Winter. Kendel1, Piccott, James; forwards: Campbell, Butler, Wiscman, Wan, Yabs· IcY, Bradbury. Balodis, Crane, Wllliams, Lambswood.

SAVES GREGORy ........ 6 5 9-20 WINSOR. .. ...... 6 9 7-22

st. Kevin's Alumni Win BELL ISLAND (Sta£[) - The

cx.pupils of St. l<cvin's High School whipped a visiting Fox­tmp team 13·5 in an exhibition hockey game herc at the Bart­lett Memorial Arena yesterday afte1'nooll,

Guards Meet Feildians

The Senior Hocltey finals open at the Stadium . tonight. Defending champion Guards and Feildialls start a best of seven game series for the historic I Boyle Trophy. er has Eg Billarll in goal with

'fhe same two clUbs clash· Rollie Clarke, i\lax Howell, cd in the Boyle Trophy finals Joe Slaney, John Winter and last year with Guards gaining another 10 be named today their third victory on the slated for defencc. award. It was their fir,! win Uob Badcock, Ian Campbell on the Uoyle since 1935. The and Ray ;llurphy will skatc as Feildians last copped the one attacicing unit while jun-Iloyle in 1927. iors Don Warr amI Dick Yab.

First put up for the City sley will cOIilbine with Gar League in 1904 the Boyle has Pynn and the other combina· becn won by St. Ilon's 26 tion will be Bert \Varr, Ed. times (or the most wins while Vatchcr amI Geoff Campbell. Fcild Wltll eight titles are Tols Chnllman is set in goal second. The Terra Novas won for Dick Parsons' FcBdians as Won it seven times and Cres· Uill l\lartin, Nev Hcndel',on, cents six. Guards and Vic· Lloyd Cook and Doug Housc torias have three wins each f0I'111 the defence. with st. Pat's and !lIe Royals Doug Squires, Ross Keep· winning' it twice and Holy skate on the "big" line for -HARBOUR GRACE, (Stam

r.por~e Faulkner,( Rlanager of the S. W_ flloores Memorial Siadium here necc1s Iwines for the 100 bantam hockcy "la),m who will he coming hm for the provincial Ban­tam tournament lIurln',( Easler werk.

BUCIIANS-(Starn - Thc Buchans Mlncrs arc on the recovery and should be ready for thc stnrt of the postponed N AliA finals on I1rlday. The finals with the Corner Brook Royals was sci IIBCk a week because of an outbreak of In· {\uetl!e here lust week.

Bern Fitzpatrick paced the hosts with a four goal output fol· lowed by Bill Murphy with three, Pat Fitzpatrick two and singles by Gerry Lahey, Frank O'Brien. Vince Fitzpatrick and Phil Lac· kie,

Reg Jones seorml a hrace '01'

Foxtrap with Jim Batten. Edgar Kennedy and Bill Fagan scoring singletons, The SI. Kevin's squad got nabbed for the only minor penalty of the game.

MIKE MURPHY (]em, captain of the Canadian Legion Junior Hockey team, receives the Mutual Life Memol'ial Trophy from Tom Mills after Legion won the championship with a 6-3 win over Guards, (Staff Photo)

Cross oncc_ Feild as T0111 Collingwood, The Guards finished on top Dal'e ;\lorl'is and Gordie

of the regular schelule this ~lcNab form another string past season with 14 points, amI Uill Coultas, Bob Nose·

--------.---- while Feildians gained ten. worthy and Bob Dowden arc

Thc players, frolll all ~\'er the Island. \\'111 laile 1mI'I in a two day series "OIl a\l those !i1'lng in the ~Icinity of Harbour Grace Bml willing to afcontOllale a boy or Iwo are requested to contact I~aulk· lIer.

Five mcmber" of the MIners were hit by the 'flu with playing coach Nell Amadio anti IUort Verblskl hospltali· zed while Ell Keliy, I1red l'arlly and Tony lIeall wcre conflncd to bed_ Amadio nnd Verblskl nrc cxpectell to bc relenscd from hospital to· day.

PIans call for the Miners to lea ve hcre on Friday morning "OIl travel to Corller Brook by train for the finals' open. cr. Tbe first· two games In the best of seven games ser· les will be played a t Corner Brook with the remainder set for here.

Saturday afternoon Booth 1\Ie­morial {I'om st. John's doubled Bell Island's Salvation Army High School squad 6-3 and fol· lowing that the St .• John·s Pee­Wee AiI·Stars dumped the Is­land's peeWee AU·Stars 4-1.

At 5 o'clock this afternoon an aU-star Bantam team will be selecled at the Bartlett Memorial Arena.

Lions Need One, Drop . News -Tely

The other club, Canadian Leg· the other \lnit. lon, ended with six points. Tonight's game starts at

Guards and Feild actually eight o'clock with the dates clashed six times with their of the rest of tbe schedule lnst meeting ruled out. The to be announcell today. Guards had 7·0 and 6·2 vic· tories before Feild came back with 3·2, 2·0 decisions. The Guards won the nex! contest 4·1 and their ruled out game ended in a 1·1 tie_

Uoth teams released their lineups last night.

I ,Dc,minion Ale \ Darts ,Action

Guards' coach Howle Meek·

N E WS·Te I)' 51 a 1'1 cd t he game I r;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;\ Power, Butler Tally' Three

The schedule for Ihe week action in the Easlern Divisio of the Dominion Ale Provinci: Columbian Club

Darts League The Londo'n Lions moved I period in the game, old

within one game of t.he ;lIeI"I smoothie Cyril Power continued cantile Hockey championship on i his great hockey performance

HI.gh School Saturday night as they upend· for the ~EWS·'l'ely scoring

Goulds Need One cd a shorthandcd NEWS.Tely three times and setting up the

Action in the Columbian squad 7·5 at the Studium, The other two. Pee Wee Crane and Club Darts Lea~ue contlnues to. Basketball Goulds need one win in the victory gave !l,e Lions a two Doug AspeU posted the other night with the schedule being: Southern Shore hockey semi· games to one edge in the best losers' scores.

-8.15- finals when they skate against of five games finals for the ------------I.-Bisons vs Jays Bishops college can wrap up Petty Harbour Nort:l at the Ash·Bishop Memorial Trophy. 2.-Leafs vs Canadiens the junior high school basketball Prince of Wales Arena tonight. Free·wheeling Ron Butler 3.-Royals vs Hawks title this afternoon when they The teams clash at 9.30 with paced the decision with three 4.-Hurricallcs \'s Bruins meet United Collegiate at the Goulds having copped the first goals. firing his third tally into 5,-Rovers vs Mets United gym at 4:30, game 6-2. an empty cage after· NEWS-

Greetings To· Alex

-0,30 _ Bishops lead Br. Rice Celtics Meanwhile the Illst game be· Tell' goa leI' Dec Murphy had I.-Red Sox vs Tigers by two points and both teams tween' tbe Southern Shore and been pulled for an extra attack, 2,-Giants vs Cubs have one game remaining. Bis- Conception Bay South AII·stars cr. Don Murphy, .Ed Shapter, Alex Faulkner got the win-3,-Dodgers vs Pirates hops flnlsh today and Br. Rice wl\l be played at the Arena on Fred Wells and HUll n.j. d,' ning goal for the Detroit Red 4,-~laroons vs Indians tomorrow against Prince of Tuesday night. Both teams have added one (~ach I' .. I:' I Wings against Chicago Black 5.-Rangers Vs Wings Wales. 'a victory each in the series, Playing with only two rest Hawks last night nnd among the _______ _=_ _____ ~ ________ ...:...... __ ....:...._=_ _____ __..:.. __ ~_=_______ _ _ greetings he received for his

efforts was a telegram from the people of Harbour Grace dis· trict sent by their provincial member, Claude Sheppard, MHA. .

1\11'. Sheppard sent the fol­lowing telegram:

"Harbour Grace district, with all of Newfoundland, congratu­late you on first winning goal in NHL playoffs and wish you continued success. in which my· self and family join."

. Firemen 'And K of C BUliards

with eight players but lost Phil Currie with a gash that reo Goal Y8lm'es quircd four stitches in the first two minutes of action.

Scoring the first goal of the The times of the goals game NEWS.Tely had it 1.1 scored in thc two televised after the £irst period but fell NHL games over the week·

end: behind 4·2 after two framcs, Both teams got three third SATURDAY NIGllT stanza tallies with the seventh 1. 13.14 London marker· going into the SU;Dltl~IGHT empty nets,

Referee Jack Reardigan call. 1. 4:31 cd ten minor penalties in the 2. 10.36 game with six going to the 3. 17.33 Lions. The winners fired 48 4. 19.40 shots at Dce ~lurphy in the 5. 6.02 NEWS.Tely cage while Lions' 6. 6.42

Darts Association with the 0

ficials also Iisled is: TONIGH1'

7.45-:\Iount Pearl \·s. {;aribc -UNF

9.15-Canadian Legion at Hi" view-:\lt. PC2rl.

TUESIIAY 7.45:"'Columbian at r.1t. Pea·

-Can, Legion (end of first round)

9.l5-Can. Legion at· Caribo _Hillview

FRIDAY 7.45-Club at ~11. pml';Ca·.

bou 9.15-Caribou at Hillview-:-C): ,

goalie Fred :\Iercer was tested 19 times.

The fourth game of the finals will be played at the Stadium tonight starting at 10:15 with Gerry Smith and Jack Reardi­

K ole. Billiards Club Darb l : ' With six games playcd in ~

gan as referees,

Patricians Basketball All members of the Patrician

Inter.association Basketball Lea· gue are asked to allend. a meet­ing tonight at the school gym· starting at 7: 15 sharp. All play­ers are asked to attend.

The meeting wm be followed hy a senior basketball practice.

thc second round and only 15 The Club Darts League \\!

left for the completion of the finish its regular schedule e i . schedule Spot secHon holds a week and the games are:. ,,;,.' 224 point lead in thl' K. of C. TONIGUT : •. Billiards tournamcnt. 9,00-SI. Bon's vs. Holy Cro:\ !

This week's schedule: .. WEDNESDAY'~ . 1I1ONDAY 7,30-Holl' Cross "s. RE\\' A!

vs. J. 9.00-Feildians vs. Sytar 8.00-T. Colford (S)

Barron (P) g,OO-J. Jackson ·(S)

Mason (P) WEDNESDAY

B.OO-T. Harding (S) . O'Brien (P)

TUURSDA .:' vs. T.7.30-SI. 'Bon's vs. Guarcds

9.00-CNRA vs, K. of , . The league's KnockOlit

. ies will be held after th~ E; VS. ~ I d ern Division is comp ele., .

9.00-J. Mahoney (S) vs. E. O'Neil (P)

10.00-C. Connors (S) vs. T. MacDonald (P)

THURSDAY ". series A .

W L FA and R. HOlln and B. Jake­

Cole and Mrs.

Winning two out of three games onSaturd3Y night the Firemen now hold a 216 point lead over K. of C. in their annual billiard tllUrnamenl. T, Harding of K. of C, got the lone win for his clnb defeating L. Andrews 212-146.

Bay Finals IIARBOR GRACE -(Staff) .

-Work commitments caused the fourth game of the Con· ception Bay Senior Hockey finals to be postponed on Saturday night. Now the Vic· toria and Harbor Grace teams will clash' at the S. W, l\Ioores Memorial Stadium here to· nlgbt at 8.30.

B.OO-H. Kelly (S) vs. N. Wadden (P)

9.00-G. Kirkland (S) vs. W. Beer (P)

Toronto . 3 0: 8 lIiontreal 0 3:3

(Toronto leads 'besl:iif-sE semi-final series 3·0) ,~< K. UawcO.

nlllh~'5 appear In to· Y NEWS.

, BALLY HALY won both the Ladies' and Men's titles. in.the Avalon Bonspiel over the weekend.

!I~mbers of the winning Ladies' rink are (left.to ri~ht)first row: Cynthia Lundrigan, Tessa Shea, 1(a:1 ~.lbbs .and Mary Dune. Standing' are, the.M,en's winners: Bob Hudson, Jim Hopkins, Ray Galla.e;her and ~lll Allan/ (Staff Photo) .

"

, J. . ,

L. Soper of the Firemen dropped G. Kirkland of the Knights 221-127 and Chief W. Caddigan got the second· Fire· mcn's victory ol'er Knight P. Dobbin 136-130.

TON1GllT 7,30-,J. Baslow (F) V~ D. J, I

. \ French (I{. of C. \ . O,OO-D. Caddigan (F) \'5, T, I

Brewer (Ii. of C.).

Harbor Grace leads IIle best of five games series (or til( nlammy'ii Bakery Trophy with two willS to one by Victoria

10.00-S. Clancy (S) vs. J. Ben­nett (P) . Series Ii ;:':

W Il:F FRIDAY B.OO-P. Wakeham (S) vS. D.

Pendergast (P) 9.00-H. Murphy (SI \'s. T,

Brewer Sr. (P)· 10.00-I{. O'Neil (S) \'3. l\.

Kearney (P) SATURDI\V

Chicago Detroit

Chicago leads semi-fin;!1 series

n ~J-A. Harding IS) English (P).

\

Howe. Dctroit Mikita, Chicago

L. Pilote, ChicMo Wharram, Chi.

2 {'12 . 1 210 I

best-ol-sl

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II . .:1 II-THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, APRIL 1. 1963 I I

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IN HIS FIRST 60 DAYS, AS PRIME MINISTER

MR.,' PEA·RSON WILL GIVE US:

o

·IA· ,~

CA,LL MAY

"If on April 8 the Canadiari People give me a cleal' mandate to fOl'm a 'majority Govcrillnent, then we propose to take immediate action. We will start right away to clean up the mess left by six years of indecision and delay. Everything .eannot be done at once. But I pledge that more constructive t11ings wiJ] be done in the first sixty days of a new Liberal Government than in any similar period of Canadian History." Mr. Pearson at Hamilton, Ontario, March 25, 1963.

PARLIAMENT 16th

"1 pledge that Parlialllt'l1t will hc called to Jl}cet in Ottawa Oil Thursdav, ~J ltV 16th." ~Ir. Pear­son in his spcech at Ilamiltoll, Ontario, ~Ial'ch 24th, 1963.

~ - - ~ T -.;: , • '" .. : ~~~ • -. _ ' ~ ~ - • - ~ -" • - ~;--~ , ._' ,.', j •••• _ ,'.\~ ~.~.!P' I).~' {;,1'!1'~ '. t ... ,\r, .••• "'~ 'j ";;'.~' __ ~_. ___ ._ t \ .. _. ,._+ ....... _~·_~.:,~ __ ~_~ __ ... ~_~." __ L ___ -.:.::~ .. _:_."._ ~:" ___ .. _.~ .... ::~_""

A NEW LABOUR

:\/inimull1 wage of $1.25 an hour for all em­ployees on fcderal jobs, including johs 011 I'on­tract. 40-hour wcek. Fortnight's holiday wilh pay each year. Other improvements.

END THE MUDDLE

DEFENCE

,

CANADA WILL JOIN THE ORGANIZATION OF AMERICAN STATES

MR. PEARSON MEET WORLD

TO LEADERS

An All-Party Defense COlllmittee will he ap­pointed as soon as Parliament llleets, so as to rcmove defcnse matter:; from partisan politics.

Canada will thus take her place squarely with the countries of North, Central and South Am­erica to promote mutual defense and trade.

Mr. Pearson will immcdiatel\' Hv to London to mcct with Prime Minister :\lacmillall to discuss all aspects of Com­monwealth trade and the European Common \larkct. He will invite Presidcnt Kcnlled" to meet him in Canada to discllss defense and trade pJ:oblcms.

- - - - _.- .- - ~--- _._." --~-- -"- ... ~ ~ ---J ," ."~ • ': _"_ .~. ':. _' ~_ .. : ....... ~~J. < • _ .......... :" .,~, .. :,.f~

NEW AGENCIES TO GET CANADA MOVING A·GAIN

Mr. Pearson will set up a New Department of Industry, a New National Development Corporation, a New Na­tional Economic Council, and a Special New National Agency to help area development in the Provinces where it is most needed.

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HON. L. B. PEAHSON, O.B.E.

LEADEH OF TIlE LIllEHAL PARTY

JOSEPH P.

O'KEEFE

RICHARD CASHIN

FOR

ST. JOHN'S WEST

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Tire Jllperior I

~ Washable·

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.• lI.oo-CBC News and • B.!O-Weather fi~port '~ 8.13-CBC sports Rep 1 B.IB-Musir.al Clock \. P' ·.i B.56-Program rev Ie' :, !l.uu-Morning DevoU, ~ 9.15-Archers .!9.30-CBC News and I Report ., 9.40-PrcYiew Com:r.! 19.45-Max Ferguson: iOolO-Iris Power iO.20-For Consumers iO.Z5-1nterlude iO.30-Nfld. School 11 lO.45-lI1usic in the r iO.55-CBC News il.OO-BBC Variety 1l.30-Nfld. School ( h.45-Regina McBrid 12.00-BBC News

12.lO-Natinee With ·i2.15-The Chuckwai '"12.25-Announcer's C ,;lZ.30-Farm Broaden <h2.45-Mid Day Ser, .1 l.OO-Doyle Bulletin .! 1.l5-Record AlbulT ,.'j l.30-News and W~ ,,~ .q l.45-Tommy Hunte (',: 2.15-Musical Renri, r; 2.:m-Dominion Ob! ,J Signal. <i' Z.30-Musical Rcnd :j 2.45-Atlantic Sch( , .; cast '. 3.15-John Drainie ; Story .j 3.30-CBC News ; :i,S3-Trans Canad, .\ 4.SO-CBC Rr.giona ,\ 4.33-Canadian ROI 14.40-Johnny's Spo i 5.0~·lI1usic in the

· :1 5.3O-Fisheries Br · l5.45-lIlLlSic From • ,,6,OO-CBL: News 'l6.05-1nlermezzo

:·1 6.40-Pr()gram Pr! , ~ 6.45-Campaign RI :' i 6.50-Freetimc Pol ... cast-P.C. ,i7.00-CBC News a

· :: 7.15-Light Music .j 7.30-Frectilne Po ! cast-P.C. i 7.45-Doyle Bullet ~ B.I5-Assignment " B.45-Freetime Po · cast-NDP. · B.55-Weather fOl

9.00-Songs of ~I 9.30-Summer Fa

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Page 9: First Anniversary . Used Car Sale THE DAILYcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...The Com\Jany's garage. a\)(I\'I~, is fillcil with idle huscs as a result of a hrcllkrlown

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFC·UNDLAND. APRIL 1. 111~:J-~

PI;JSCILLA'S POP, Bv AL VERMEER SWEETIE PIE Bv NADINE SELTZE.Il-1

PAINT UP FOR

SPRING WITH

The superior fuUer·I.Je plint

Sup!! Washable· Super Suubbable ~ij;{jliliJJ. FROM '

THE NEW PAINT DEPT.

THE GREAT EASTERN Oil CO.,· LTD. WATER STREET

'funing Time on

TWO FOR~IS OF STAYlIIAN BID

I I

, I .. •

eBC ~iO:-;D,\Y, April 1st.

4.33-John Nolan's Ranet Parly .

6.0D-News Highlights and Weather.

6.03-Nntiona! News 6.10-,Sport<

1l.31-Night ShoW 12.00-Newl 12.30-News 12.31-Night Show

By OSWALD JACOBY I ~------N-O-R-T-I-I-----2-'7 I

• 98653 I ... 7 ;,v-Cllt- l'Iews 6.30-Dick Earl

7.00-NewsHlghllghts. 7.1l1-Dick Earl 7.30-News 8.aO-Jamborec

7 :15-)lusieal Clock 7.55-Collnt Your Blessings B,oo-CBC News ami Weather 8.!U-Weather I\~port 8.13-CBC Sports Report B.lB-)!usie.al Clock S,5&-Program Preview i,oo-)Iurnmg Devotions R 15-Al'chers 930-CilC News and Direct

He port HO-l'rcl'iew Commentary Y.~5-~!ax Ferguson Sh~w

1O.lO-lris Power LO.20-For Consumc!'s L025-lnterlude 10.30-Nfld. School Bl'oadeast 1U.45-l!llSic in the morning ]t1.5ff-CBC News llOO-BBC Variety 1l.30-;\nd. Schuol Broadcast I Uff-llegina lIIcBride I~,OO-BBC News 12.lO-)latinee With Willis 12.15-T1Ie Chuckwagon 12,2ff-Announcer's Choice 12.30-Farm Broadcast 12.4ff-)[jd Day Serenade l.OO-Doyle Bulletin U5-lIeeord Album 1.30-i'\cws and Weather 1.4ff-Tommy Hunter Shuw 2.1ff-~!usical Rendezvous ~~9-Dominion obs. Time

Signal. 2,30-)lusicnl Rendezvous 245-Atlantic School Bl'ond·

cast ~.15-John Drainle Tells A

Story l30-CEC Ncws :l33-Trans Canada Matinee t3l1-CBC Hcgional News 4.33-Canadian Roundup 4.40-Johnny's Spot S.ot)..·Mu;lc In lhe Air 5.30-Fishcrics Broadcast 5.4ff-)I,lsic From The Albums (i.Oll-CBL News ti.'Jff-lnlermezzo (iAO-Prugram Preview li,45-Campaign Reports f,,50-Freetime Political Broad-

east-P.C. 7.0ll-CBC News and Weathel i.15-Light Music 7.30-Freelime Political Brond-

cast-P.C. H5-Doyle Bulletin RIS-Assignment 0'45-Freetimc Political Broad-

cast-NDP.

B. t5--Jamboreo 8.SO-National New. D.i, - Jamboree 9.0D-News Highlights 9.40-Nfld. Soiree

lO.OD-National News IO.lS-Pick of the Pops lO.4S-Sports 1O.5S-LeUers anti Messages 11.Q1-Paul Hershon's Music In

the Night 12.0l-Paul Hershon's Musle In

. the Night 12.30- -National News 12.33-Paul lIershon's MusIc In

.-lhe Nighb ~~~~~~-------

v 0 C M Dial 590 lUONDAY, April 1st.

6.28-Sign W' 1i.3l1-Bil: Allen Show· 6.4D-Momlng Meditation B.30-News and Weather 6.';S-World of Sport a.55-News 7.00-Bill Allen Show· US-World of Spott 7.30-New, 7.3S-'l'ravel Guidi! 7.36-Bill Allen Show 7.4S-World of Sport 7 lifi-N pow, Cl.ocal) B.OO-RCAF Tower, TorMr

(Weather Report) B.03-Val Earle News, national B.OO-BIll Allen Show 8.l5-Sports Capsule B.25-0gllvle News B.SO-Hit Tune 01 the D., B.35- World of Sporl D.4D-Bill Allen Show B.5S-News D.OO-Mornlng MedItation 9.03-Bill Allen Show 9,SD-News Headlincs 9.31-Bill Allen Show

lO.OO-News lO.OS-Stork Club 10.OO-The Russ Clarke Sbow IO.30-Ncws Headlines 10.31-The Russ Clarke Show IO.40-Jolly Miller Contest to.55-News

R55-Weather for Mariners g.OO-Songs of ltv People 9,3ll-Summer Fallow

IO.OO-Distinguished Artists 10.30-CBC National News

Il.OO-The Russ Clarke Show 11.30-News Headlines 1l.31-The Russ Clarke Shnw 1l.4D-Clnderella Nfld. Folk

Song Quiz 1l.41-The Russ Clarke Show 1l.5s-.:.Gordon .:Iutier News P.M Roundup and Speaking

Personally IO.45-Freetime Political Broad-

cast-P.C. II.OO-Universlty of the Air 12.00-CBC Sports Scoreboard 12.05-5lgo Off-O Canada -

The Queen

CJON ~\oNDAY, April lst.

12.00-The Russ Clarke Show 12.3D-News 123S-The Russ Clarke Show 12.4S-Flshermen's ForeC8S\ 12.5S-News I.OO-Blue Star News US-World of Spon 1.2S-The Russ Clarke Show 1.3D-News Headlines 1.31-The Russ Clarke Show 2.UU-News Headhnes 2.01-Prlzes and Problems 2.30-News Headlines 2.31-Prizcs and Problem.

6·~!J--l'he Hob LeWl~ Shuw, 2.5S-News por1.i 3.0D-t'ne Bob Cole Show

9·~5-Music for Million. 3.30-Nclvs Headlines. R.3ll-Austln Willis 3.31-The Bob Cole Show 93S-Weather Forecast 3.55-News IH5-Doctors Hous~ Call. 4.00-Bob Cole Show 9.50-Nfld. Klatter '4.S:i-News Headlines.

lO.08-News In a Minu~e. 4.55-NeWB and Weather IO.I5--Jerr,v WIggins House· 5.00-Bob Cole Show

wivc& Choice' 1I.3U-News Headlines IO.30-Nathmal News 5.4!)-Fisherman', Foreea.1 lO.33-Jerry Wiggins Hous& 1I.5S-News

wives choice II.OO-hulletln Boaro 11.00-News Hlghllghts 8.l0-Mo',le G'Jllle IU5-Llfe can be Beautiful 6.15-Sports Report 11.3S-Town and Country 6.2S-Travel Gulde-11.45-Town and Cuuntry 6.30-.EarlJ Evening New. 12.00-Who's T1:at Singing ROWldup '2.0S-News Hlghlll.lts and 7.0D-Flelchmann's Riddle

Weather 7.15-Shlllelagh Sbowtlme Bob'Lewls Town and 7.aO-News HeadllnCll Country Show - 7.31-Back to the' Bible

1·06-Weather FOreeR!! 7.1I~1~ewl l.3G-Don JamLeson's Edl. 8.0D-Crclm of Ihe ::::op

torlal • 8.311-NeWI I·:eadllnel l.40-Spcrts· . 'UI-Cream of th~ Crop ~.45-~t, Baker'. Notebook: LD.OO-Nlght Show 3 ::J~rr,): ~ WilKins Matlne.· lO.3~NeWI Headline. . . _,l'IJ.WI ··.Hlghllght.' . ! ",031~Nlghr Show .

!.Ol""Juh~.·.~,Nolan·s Weltern 10;4~ World of:~port .

12.5S-News Summary, Weathl!l Sports and Weatner Re­Repurt and Time

l.a5-Sign Off

CJON·TV MONDAY, April 1st.

IMS-Pastor's Study 10.50-Women's News H.OO-Physlcal Fitness Pro. 11.10-CartoBns 1l.IS-Romper Room 12.IS-News and Weather 12.30-Slgri Off . 2.00-J\Iayor of the Town 2.aD-Chez Helene 2.4S-Nursery School Time 3.00-Slng Ring Around 3.l5-Frlendly Giant 3.30-Loretta Young Show 4.00-Take 'I'hlrty 4.3l1-Scarlett IIIll S.OO-Captaln Jack 5.30-Razzle Dazzle 6.00-Top Cat 6.30-Worhl of Sport UO-News Cavalcalle 7.00-0ur Man Higgins '7.3O-Seotland Yards B.OO-Talent Showcase US-National News· 8:30-Father Knows Best 9.00-Don lIIesser's .lubllee 9.30-The Men ami the IS5U~S

lO.OO-Garry ~oore Sholl' 1l.OO-Feselval 12.30-Ncws nOlI Weather 12.40-Paslor's . Stully 12.45-Slgn Off

• K 1042 .76

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Bolll vulnerable Soulh West North East 1 N.T. Pass 2,y, Pass 2 • Pass Pass Pass

Opening lead-. K

There are two general forms of Stayman: forcing bid and nouforcing bid.

Mine is of the nonforcing variety, meaning that in most cases my two club response shows a good hand but I may also use it with a bad onc. . Illy partner MUST rebid two of a suit over my two clubs ir­respective of the strength of his no_trump. If Ilis rebid is two diamonds it says that he does not have as many as four cards in eithcr spades or hearts. If his rebid is two spades it tells me he has at least four spades and mayor may not have four hearts also. If his rebid is two hearts it tells me that he has at least four hearts and docs not havc as many as four spades.

If I pass his rebid it is ob-vious I have a bad hand ami

I that the rebid suits me. If I go , to two spades over a two heart rebid or to two spades or hearls over a two diamond reo bid I still show a bad hand and partner is supposed to pass and let mc play at two of my suit.

North has an ideal hand for this form of Stay man. He has no interest in game and no in' terest in letting his partner play one no·trump. He wants to play two hearts if his part· ner holds four hearts, othcr­wise he wants to play. two spades.

He responds two clubs. South goes to two hcarts and plays it there. He will surclv make his contract and may make an over­trick.

This Is the only way North and South can show a profit. There is no way to make two spades or one no-trump.

For 64 pages of informative bridge poluters, order a copy of "Win at Bridge With Oswald Jacoby." Send your name, ad­dress, and 50 cenls to: Oswald Jacoby Reader Service, care of the DAILY NEWS, P.O. Box 489, Dept. A., Radio City Sla· I

t:ou, New York 19, N.Y. I

. CARD . SENSE I

Q-The bidding has been: East South West North 1+ ?

You, South, hold:

BUSTLE BACK? - Silk fabric gathered low at the back gives the effect of a bustle to this evening gown seen recently In London.

,f.AQD76 '1A42 +42 oToK76 What do you do? A-Double. You are prepared

for any bid by your partner. . TODAY'S QUESTION

Your partner responds 'one heart to your double. What do you do now?

• BARBS· By IIAL COCHRAN

To avoid stubbing your toe keep your best foot forward.

• • •

Answer Tomorrow

-HONEY'S FLAVOR The flavor of honey Is deter­

mined by the aromatic sub­stances found in the nectar of the flowers. Many different spe­cies of plants produce nectar and the nectar from each spec­Ies may carry with it an indivi­dual color, flavor and aroma.

A Kentucky man, arresled for dl:unken driving. claimed the officer ~mel1ed hair loti!!n. The court dcclded he, not his hair, was plastered. CIIANGED NICKNAMES

• • • Arkansas, admitted to the In most parts of the country Union in 1636 as the 25th state,

the mercliry Is much llke a lot first was known' 'as the' "Bear o.~ ,peoPle.' ... \._ Ju :.st.· .can.'.t get ,~P,; State." later' as '. the uWonder

."'. St~tc,l~and' was' renamed by

OO;~e~ .R~~IlJh,tI. - ". lO.II5-:Newl" .;': , 4·~obn Nolan'. Rilnell 1l.0l1-'l'urbBY Weather Rept'n

. You may thhika girl Inweet the 11153 stat~' general .8ssem' cnollgh to cat, but don't tell bly as the "Lond of Opportu· Ifer. You'll wind up in a res· nlty," according to the Encyclo-.. : Party. . .' 1l.Ol-Blg Top Ten.

UOo+Matiobal New.; 1l.3U-New8 He-dUn. . taurant.. paedla Britannica.

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CAPTAIN EASY A FI~e WArcHMAIJ HE I~I

Be~Te/J UP ~y YOUNG PIlNK? ,"AIJD HIA\ A~Dl

BEN CASEY

RIGHT, BEN. FRACTURED HUMERUS ••• CONSIDERABLE

NEcROSIS OF Tissue AROUND -rHOS",

FINGERS. !:'f:-~'l)~;:;:;

BUGS BUNNY

ALLEY OOP

WHERE At..l r GOiN'? I'M G01N' UP. SCl~... . \',',\NTA COME

J-\!.O\!S?

fRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS

'10RTY MEEKLE

• \Kl), til/., I.~. TJ.lI ... U,S. "t, Olf.

_ .. _-

"The reason it took me so long to bring them is 'cause ; \1 dropped them on t~e floora~t!had .to. pick 'em ~~!"!

HE CAN'TTAKE ANESTHESIA TWICE_ WE'Ll.

WOR,K SIMULTANEOUSLY.

Bv LESI.IE TURNER

By NEAL ADAMS

--------Hy LEO!~ SCHLESJNGER~.

. ·---i

I GUESS TIi' ' WEATHERMAN WAS RIGHT! H6' SAl" iH6'R6"P BE GUSTY

WINDS T'DAYl

BY V. T. HA~ILlN

... AND ACCORDING TO YE'>'H. lH' KNIGHT'S CODE, TH' BUT VICTOR HAS TH' RIGHT )OIJ~E" 10 DE5PO:I_ TH' ,:0

VANQUISHEI?! ~,IGHl! ,

by MERRILL BLOSSFn

BY DICK CAVALLI

eXCU~M~ MiZ.~;

I JIY5T" WANTWTO .66K Ya.i IF. ..

NO! NO!! NO!!! ANDTHAT~ FINAL.!!

I FEEl.. UKe A DIRTY NO-000D FINK.

SHORT RIBS

I PUl-l.. ON TrioSE< OARS "fou, npCA eTPH\I!

liy. f!1tANK' O'NEAL

oH, SHUt UP, 'IOU 'lLll.GAR BOATMAN!·

': '/ ,

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I I

Page 10: First Anniversary . Used Car Sale THE DAILYcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...The Com\Jany's garage. a\)(I\'I~, is fillcil with idle huscs as a result of a hrcllkrlown

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.. 10-THE DAILY NEWS; ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, APRIL I, 1963

TV .oNotebook .

She Tool{ A Dive To Discover Acting By . DICK: KLEINER I fine films. I when she went to I Hollywood

~apitol Today

WALT DISNEY'S

Newspaper Enterprise Assn. I was in a teleplay with Miss NEW YORK _ (NEAl-I! II Baxley-and Suzanne had the

took only one part for Suo lead. zanne Pleshette to get th~ "I was worried," she says. stars oilt of her eyes. "In fact, I cried about ·It. I Her first professional rol~ felt I didn't deserve it, and

was in' Barry Sullivan's old . Miss Baxley would resent me. serIes, Harbourmaster. She She didn't; she was just won· and Paul Burke,. who is now derful to me." the star of Naked City, were • • • clinging to a buoy out In the At 68, Walter Brennan has ocean, They were supposed all his emotions' under con· to dive Into the water, and trol-except one. And that Suzanne admits she was one might have given him scared. trouble when he narrated

"I'm a good swimmer," she The Tall American - Gary says, "but that water was Cooper, except that producer murky and rough. I said to Donald Hyatt was aware of Paul, 'I .think I see an octo· his weakness.

this script he narrated migfit have set him off. "Hyatt said to me befor~ I

started, 'Walter·,' he said, "don't read page 46 - ,;top before you get that flr.''' Brennan says. "So I stopped. And a good thing, to~. I would have broken dl)wn. As it was, we talked fo!' a while and I had a chance to compose myself. Then I did that page."

"BIG RED", IN COLOR

"We need a man who is dignified, but not aloof-a man of strong character who you can sympathize with without feeling sorry for.

So said Walt Disney after reading the script of "Big Red", the story of a fourteen· year· old French Canadian boy whose love for an English Canadian's prize Irish Setter leads thl! boy, the dog and the man to high

APPROVES MARGARINE adventure and susperlse in the TORONTO (CP) The Ontario French.Canadian Wilds.

government is expected to intro Disney sent Pidgeon the duce legislation this session end script, and the talented actor ing the ban on sale of colored immediately agreed to go on 10-

. ~;

Th'e Shadow' 'Men Where Has

Been Hiding . By HAROLD SHEEHAN I

NEW YORK, (NEAl-The newsman doing emergency tele· vision reporting during New York's newspaper strike duti· fully read the script:

"And on Wall Street today the stock market was character· ized by a certain softness-but showed signs of internal tech· nical strength .... "

At that point he broke intu laughter, looked sheepishly at the camera and added, "What­ever that means!"

Small

Since

........ ~,','; . .. :

May, '62?

pus down there.' I figured The one emotion he cannot .... If he wouldn't go in, I control is that he is pronp to

I mar gar i n e, but informed cation to Canada, the country sourccs Friday said the move of his birth, to play the part may not come until after Eas. of English Canadian sportsman ter. Published reports Friday James iIaggin, in "Big Red", said Agriculture Minister Stew. his first acting assignment for

In a sense, his attitude to· ward Wall Street jargon reo f1ects the suspicions which many nonprofessional invest· ! ors feel toward the stock mar· ket. The man in the street to· day appears reluctant to put' his money into a market which burned him one year ago. No·; .

wouldn't have to go in, either. tears when he reads or ~cars But we both went in." something sad. And,. since

After the assignment, Suz· he knew and loved Cooper, anne went back to her drama teacher, Sanford Meizner, and said, "Is that . what acting is?'1

"I'd had stars in my eyes up to that point," Suzanne says noW, "but no more. I thought acting was all pure and beautiful. It isn't, but I stilllo\'e it."

Since then: Suzanne has progressed slowly and stead· ily until, today, she's one of television's highest paid guest stars, and a growing figure in the movie industry. She's in "40 Pounds of Trouble" and the fortilcoming "The Birds," both good roles in

PI,ESHET1E: She thought she saw an o:topus.

"I fought for a few years to be an ingenue, but all I got were character parts. Then I got an ingenue role­and for a year or so that was all I go!. So I had to fight to get out of them."

While Hnrbourmaster was her first part as a mature person, she did have a small ."1~ in a Broadway play' at 10-a revival of "Truckline Laic," which starred Richard Boone and Barbara Baxley,

Strangely, her first part

art has prepared the govern· Disney. ment legislation and recei~e.d As gentleman dog breeder the approyal of the Progresme James Haggin, in the Disney Conservahve caucus. story, IIIr. Pidgeon returns to

. I motion pictures, after several Crater ~ak.e, oreguon, ,IS the years on the Broadway stage,

de~pest lake 111 the .S., meas· with a stirring portrayal of a urlDg 1,932 feet. lonely man, bereft of his son,

who helps a young French· Canadian orphan alta in his goal. .

body wants to sacrifice dollars on the altar of "internal tech· nical strength."

One of Hollywood's most re· spectcd actors, Walter Pidgeon was born in East St. John, New Brunswick, he was prominent in dramatics, as well as on the soccer and hockey fields.

Soundings along Wall Street show that the smaller investor is still moving cautiously after the crash of May, 1962. One man who is not shedding tears is stockbroker Robert Boll!, member of both the American and Nell' York exchanges. . "The market is probably THE LONG WAIT: Im"estors maintain vigil . at )1

more stable with the small in. brokerage office during last year's slock market vestor playing a reduced role," said Bollt. "He is usually the first to panic.

• • • Enlisting in the Canadian

Army in World War 1, he WIIS about to ship out for France when he was seriously injured "The trouble is," said Bollt, in a gun carriage accident and "the small investor went down had to be hospitalized for 17 with all those 'hot rod' stocks months. last year. He was captivated,

lieves, like Bollt, that the small I "Our assets have investor is scared out of the I nirel), and our memnCN:m market easily during a crisis II risen to a nell' high of -such as the one last year. shareholders. Oddly, Samuel thinks that the Samuel does not feel

THE DAILY NEWS IS After the Armistice, Pidgeon for example, by anything which

went to Boston, where he work. had to do with electronics. The ed as a bank runner for a short market was overbought and time before joining the Copley oversold .

small investor's insecurity OI'er! "cstors have gotten Oler securities works to the benefit i'singing which many touk of mutual funds, such as En'l :\Iay and June o[ la,t .' ergy Fund. They are more cautiolls .

"After the blast of a year Ilhey havc been in a long. ago," said Samuel, "many in.' in his oplmon.

KI~ BO~

Newspl SE~

BI 12 6' l~ 8 2

11 4 13 1

I I

I 21 16 27 30 IS 2·1 26' 2.j

20 consolatio

A F AMIL YAFF AIR! Players. His debut caught the "Of course, in the past the eye and ear of Fred Astaire, small investor had been en· who promptly recommended chanted with other types of him to Broadway producers, stock. It used to be railroads; Jl\lt feeling he was not yet ready before that it was oil and air for Broadway, and learning thdt lines.

vestors were taught a lesson. Samuel concedes tllnt . In effcct they said to them· economy in general is sti~l .. selves, 'I got sucked into buy· I hitting on all cylinder.'." ing a hot issue and lost money; i though anto sales are cxc~::.,. 'Cards availahl1 so now I'll get into a mulual' he points out that machine EMPIRE CO:\ fund and let the pros manage and steel production as l my money.' as housing construction EDvV ARD'S 1:

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THER'E'S SOM:ETHING FOR EVERYONE

FOR DAD there's up-to-the-minute world, national and local news -

views cnd on-the-spot reports of major sporting events

land finan~ial stories - hints on home repairs, etc.!

business

. FOR MOMtb'/:e are' reports of local social activities - club news -

. ideas on foofi, homemaking and child care - and, of course, there

are dozens of adverti~tlm'e~tsto help her shop/better for less I

. . .' .

FOR YOUNGSTERS there's a wealth of information on current events

- school news...; the, popular cartoon strips - entertainment guides I

. . .

Where else .can.YOll . find . ·so. much entertainment and l education , : ' , . . " " .

for such a: smrul .. pri~e~to 'please every member of the. family I • 'I' .' . .,t,. .

, ' ' .

THE DAILY NEWS . ' .. ~ , .. ' '. .'. '

DELIVERY'· .1

"., '

<".~' ..... " . < .

:.: ~ )., .,', '., . , .. •

Elsie Janis, whom he had met "r remember once when the While she was entertaining at sf.ock of Seaboard Air Line Army. camps, was looking for a Railroad shot way up because singing partner. Pidgeon ap. people mistakenly though fhey plied for the job. He was a hit were buying into airplanes in· during the six months on tour, stead of steam engines.

• • • ,down. HOGAN'S DH "The amateur investor now I Samuel, howel'er, share, '!:

bas come to realize that he can· seems to be a mandatv1\'

a success he later repeated in "Tbe next big infatuation a London revue, "At Home". will probably be with Aus· His return to Broadway was as traUan land. r understand that an established star. everyone in Sydney is a geolo-

gis!." Inevitably his stage success led to film offers. He sang in Another Wall Street author· films from 1930 to 1934. Then, ity, Donald C. Samuel, presi· feeling he was being typed in dent of Energy Fund Inc., be· Hollywood as a singing star, he WIN RECOGNITION returned to Broadway for two ALBANY NY A , .. ( P)-Chiro· successful years, and then reo praetors Friday won a 5O.year sumed bis film career. battle to win recognition from

It was at this busy time in New York state as the assem. his career when the distinguish· bly gave final legislative ap . ed actor, whose philosophy is proval to a bill to licence and "Life's too sho,;t t~ take tim.a regulate chiropractic in New out for worry, . ~Isplayed hiS York state. The assembly vote all·around versal1hty both on I of 99 to 39 was the conclusive and off the stage .. He was as I step in the chiropractors' battle I m.ueh at ea~e plaYI~g. checkers inasmuch as Governor Nelso~ I With a studiO electrlclan as he Rockefeller submitted the bill lVas at an Ambassador's recep· and definitely will ·sign 't tion. Although he was sev~ral I . times cited as one of the tell INDIANS INCREASING best·dressed men, he never OTTAWA (CPl- An Indian owned more than twenty suits child born somewhere in Canada I at a Ii.me. Pidgeon gained a next month will boost Canada's' reputallon as a ,~a~ented ~~tor Indian population to 200,OOO.be. 1

on stage and a mce guy off llieved to be the number of In. stage. .. dians who inhabited Canada

Today he. hves III a tw.o. when the white man arrived. storey Sp~l1lsh ~tYle. home III Disease and conflicts introduced B~verly Hills IVltll hiS secon.d by Europeans resulted in a Wife, Ruth Walke~, ~nd ~IS drastic decline in Indian popu. d~ughter Edna. HIS first Wife lalion. By the beginning of this dl;,d .when ~dna was born.. century 'it had fallen to about

Big Red stars Walter Pld· 100 000 geon, Gilles (pronounced Jeel) ,_. _____ _ Payant and Emile Genest, Win· Oil and gas wells of 15,000 .. ston Hibler co-produced with foot depths are not uncommon. Walt Disney, Norman Tokar di· rected the Buena Vista release.

lAC's Volume Of Business Up

MONTREAL-An overall in· crease of 14.1% in volume of business for Industrial Ac· ceptance Corporation Limited was recorded during the year ended December 31, 1962, ac· cording to the company's al!' nual report issued recently. At year end, total receivables out· standing stood at $606,202,618, an increase of 13.5% over the previous year. Total consoli· dated assets, not including those of The Sovereign Life As· surance Company of Canarla, reached an all·time high of $669,876,558, an increase of $63,286,045.

Net earnings, amounting to $11,756,186, were down 6.2% from the previous year; gl'OSll income, at $82,385,384, was down $1,966,451; and earnings per common share dropped to $1,85 from $1.99.

ume and average premium rates of a second subsidiarY, !\Ierit Insurance Company, caused a decrease in premium income of 15%; and despite an im· proved loss ratio, the company operated at a loss.

The consolidated statement did not include the accounts of The Sovereign Life Assurance Company of Canada, purchased by lAC in late December 1962 for $3,784,350. A separate sov· ereign statement was included in the report and showed $7,090,041 in total income; $30,. 254 in amount transferred to shareholders; and $46,091,226 in total assets.

During the year, the number of lAC common shareholders increased by 2,576 to a total of 9,760. Of the new ~hare· holders, 2,535 were Canadians. At year end, 90.2% of all sh.re· holders were Canadian, owning 78.2 of the outstanding shares.

On the outlook for the forth· coming year, the report noted:

not del'ote all his time . to' timism alllong Wall "r·,,,·c,. watching the stock market. He In another six months to gets his nelVS third·hand and, year he sees the market pic:: in general, is blown around by up-with perhaps a federal' the winds. cut helping things out.

"What happened to all those A's imd B's I was gettingi .•. The teacher moved them six desk.s awayl" ...

Fruit Cocktail ACROSS 41 Improve

1 Palm fruit 42 Prices 5 Smyrna - 44 Wheel of a sort 'i!~~ 8 Pome fruit 48 Baldwins or IJ:

12 GenU'S of true Jonathans alil'es 53 Range

13 Bustle 54 Rodent 14 Masculine 56 French stream

appellation 57 Civil wrong 15 Green 58 Number

vegetables . 59 Consumes 16 Philippine 60 Female sheep

peasant (pl.) 17 Biblical name 61 Armed conlliet 11 Slumber 18 Placid 62 Very (Fr.) 19 Seine 2() Scantiest DOWN 21 Limb 22 Compound 1 Diamond. 23 Most

ether domeslicaled 24 SwIndle cutter's cups 24 Shank 28 Armed fleets 2 Nautical term 25 Wife of Zeus 33 311ip (myth.) 34 Malluscrlpt (ab.) 4 Comfort 26 Direction 35 5 Weird Sisters 27llebr .. w month 36 6 Miss Lupino 29 First man 37 7 Peanuts 30 Dri\'C\

8 Equal 31 Prayer ending 9.Otherwise 32 Transmit

~~~~~~10~\~Vinec .. u~PS~~3~7B~i_rd~

The report, sign~d by Board Chairman G. E. Wemp and President J. H. Ranahan, attri· buted the decrease in profits to higher interest costs, higher ilnderwriting standards for the casualty insurance subsidiary, and lower charges on the pur· chase of certain receivables. In addition, expenses were up $1,157,396, due largely to the operiing . of 52 new branches by lAC and a subsidiary, Niag· ara Finance Company Limited.

"While the fields of con· sumer and commercial financ­ing, lending and insuring are extremely competitive, your company feels that through the large large branCh organization, experienced personnel and new sales plans, it is in a strong position to compete for a sub· stantial share of available business. It is anticipated that, as a result, your company's reo I ceivables will' be at higl1er' average levels throughout the. \ year than was the case in 1902. : ,.-______ ..... ...;..l--

The' report noted a 12.6% increase" in' receivables for the parent company at year end, as well as the continued profit·

I able growth. of Niagara Finance Company Limited, which was reflected in a 20.7% increase in volume. A decrease in vol-

This factor, together with higher. insurance premiums and the' :b-:,;-j":'--I--I!-4._b..:. possibility of somewhat lower relative moriey costs, should offset the lower rate of income applicabie to some categories. of· receivables, with the net effect of producing a satisfac· try year," ENTEltPRlSE

..-. -.-~ .. :- .... '.- .... '"

To claim Bin! on

Help Kil

OURe L~

315 DU~

1 D C(

MEEI IN

YI 4: HOLDS'

CLOTH IF CHAF

r There Meetir

NEWFom

KILBRIDI

Tu«

Page 11: First Anniversary . Used Car Sale THE DAILYcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...The Com\Jany's garage. a\)(I\'I~, is fillcil with idle huscs as a result of a hrcllkrlown

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~\llt'n ol'er m"n~' to~k

',,' "f last ,,' l'alltions

:ll' 1Il;lrkct ,I federal

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4oB,Ist 41 Viper 4311incr .\-1 llclicaey 4, In a line 46 Wilherd 47 ~I.k.s lace 49 Versilier 50 falsiller 51 Italian

KINSMEN BOYS' CLUB

Newspaper BINGO SERIES No. 74

B I I N G 0 12 I 21 .,~

vi 50 63 o· I IG 31 59 69

15 27 40 53 66 S 30 ,15 74 0 IS - 33 Ii "1 .....

'" ·JC' _J

42 J ., 25 .J

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20 consolation prizes for forming letter II Nil

Cards available from-DIPlHE CONFECTIO~ERY, DlIc:kworth St. EDWARD'S DHUG STORE, Water St. West HOG:\;\'S DRUG STOnE, New Gower St.

To claim Bingo Phone 8-7269 by 10 p.m. on the day published.

Kelp Kin -- Help Kiddies

OUR OFFICES ARE NOW

LOCATED AT 315 DUCKWORTH STREET

1 DOOR WEST' OF

COURT HOUSE

MEEHAN & .CO. LTD. INSURANCE AGENTS

Wm. L. CHAFE TAILOR

~ !·IOLDSWORTH ST. ST. JOHN'S THE MAN

THE CLOTHES. CLOTHES MAKE

IF CHAFE MAKES

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

NOTICE There will be a Specia I Meeting of ALL CATTLE

OWNERS Sponsored by the

NEWFOUNDLAND DAIRYMEN'S ASSOCIATION

in the KILBRIDE PARISH' HALL, Waterford Bridge

at 8:30 p.m.

Tuesday, April 2nd, By order of the President,

JAM,ES HOLDEN, Secretary.

,~- .'"

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, APRIL 1, 1963-11

WELLS DRILLED W~~~~! ~~us:'E~~l~~: DR. PRUITT'S. BODY

Last week of SPECIAL

Cold Wave Reg. $15.00. 1,. NOW $9.00 ,

LORETTA'S BEAUTY SALON

DIAL 8·23112

By

Deep' Well Drilling Co.

Dial 9-4246 Terms arranged

,m,w,e,1mth

NOTICE feb2,2mths. -=========::; We the undersigned, hereby

.- give notice that three weeks LEARN TO DRIVE Female driver with 15 years

driving experience, now ac. cepting femnle pupils. wishing to learn to drive.

after date, we will apply to the Board of Liquor Control, for a restricted private license, to sell spirits and liquor at our Club Rooms, 210 Lelllarchant Road, to members and !:uests only.

Phone 916214 • _~,:"""",!,~ ____ --, : ST. JOIlN'S SURINERS CLUB mar26,1mth I mar21,25aprl

Preliminary Notice

ST. JOSEPH'S PARISH

Easter Fair in conjunction with

St. John's Baseball League

Star Hall, Henry Street

Commencing Tuesday, April 16

25 GAMES FOR $1.00

BIG CASH PRIZES PLUS BANK

CASH WHEELS GOODS WHEEL AND OTHER ATTRACTIONS

Easter Specials on

COLD WAVES Reg. $20.00 FOR ................ $15.00

Reg. $12.00 FOR ................ $ 8.00

AND AS AN EXTRA SPECIAL

Reg. $10.00 FOR ................ $ 6.00

LEONARD'S Beauty Salon OVER LEONARD'S PHARMACY

WATER 'ST. WEST DIAL 8-3872 aprl,3,5

,~:.

" R.C.A.l 7!~

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE

R.C. Anthony Insurance Ltd. Imperial Oil Bldg. Elizabeth Avenue

TiEL. 9·5079

CITY OF ST. JOHN'S

OFFICE OF THE CITY ENGINEER , .

NOTICE Applications for Master Plumber's Licenses will be received by the under­signed up to 5:00 p.m. FRIDAY, April

, 5, 1963. ;

E. 'G. POMEROY, Secretary, Board of Plumbing

;examiners. aprl,3,5

I ,J

two year lease. Dlml 9·2958 after 6.30 p.m. mar20,tlt

CASlI PAID FOR Comics, mmgazines, pocket novels, and books. John D. Snow, 9 New Gower Street.

THK CENTRAL BARBER snoP-We arc now operat­ing 10 chairs, you can be assured of prompt, efficI· ent, sanitary service. No waiting problem, 24 New Gower Street opposite Ade· laide Motors Ltd. R

-GREA T 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 LINES

DIAL 8·3001 to 8·3005

WATER Jan2B,1y

STREET M·3

Rentals Floor Sanders, Belt Sanders, Power Saws, Electrical Drills etc. Reasonable Rates. Can 8-5L16, 8·7352.

U-RENT 16!} Water Street, St. John's Dlv. Harris & Hiscock Ltd,

Insurance

J. J. LACEY INSURANCE Ltd.

Dependable Fire Insurance, Prompt Claim Settlements.

DIAL 8·1035 •

CROSBIE & CO., Ltd. Agents for

UNDERWRITERS AT LLOYDS.

LOW RATES DIAL 8·5031

JOB BROTHER!! & COMPANY, Ltd.

Water Strett DIAL 8·2658 - 84123

REG. T. MURGAN lNSURANCE Ltd. Temple Bldg., P. O. BOx IG8,

341 Duckwortb St. DIAL 80370 or 8·7756

Beauty Parlours GLADY'S BEAUTY SHOPPE

cor. Bond and Prescott Sts. Phone 8·495Hl·7898. Speci· allzlng in cold waving, hair styling, cutting and tinting, manicuring, facials etc., 14 operators, no waiting.

Drug Stores M. CONNORS Ltd.

Prescriptions Pickup and delivery servica.

PRONE 8·2201;

EJect. Applicances

HEAP & PARTNERS (NFLD.) Ltd. Wiring Materials, WIre aDd

Cables, Motors, Starters, Lamps, SwitchC!. Lighting

Fixtures, ~tc. W ARE BOUSE: PRINCE'S ST.

DIAL 8·5088

RADIO-TV REPAIRS

GREAT EA!!'TERN OIL COMPANY, Ltd. REPAIRS TO RADIOS. TV

AND ALL ELECTRICAL APPLIANCE.';

DIAL 8·3001 to 8·3005

Statutory Notice In the matter of the Will and

Opcn nightly 5 p.m. DANCING, DINING, FLOOR SHOWS and DANCE SHOWS

"BOSSA NOVA" Frce Instruction 8 to 9 p.m.

Monday Thru Friday Nfld's Unique and Intimate

Night Club Call 8·7581 or 900~6

By Kenneth O. Hay Copyright 1963 Distributed by

by Kenneth O. Hay Newspaper Enterprise Assn.

TilE STOny: Th;: 110liee Dr. Burns, the medical ex-lieutenant accnscs ;Uatt Bacon aminer, said that Pruitt had of knowing things he is not' died of a broken ne<jk. te1ling the police. "Were there any other in·

" • • juries on the body of the de· XVI ceased?" the county coroner

'~;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;====;;;;;;~ Since police court was held asked: I- on Jl!ondays and Fridays, the "Yes, two," the examiner

TONIGHT 8 o'clock SR. HOCKEY FINALS

Guards VS. Fciidians

Balcony .. .. .. .. 75 Cents Gen. Admission .... 50 Cents

Tickets on sale today .

municipal court room of the said. "He had what appeared suburban city hall was avail· to be a bruise on the left lower able for the inquest. I mandible. near the chin. There

It was a brief affair, merely I was also a laceration, a deep to determine, if possible, the I cut, in the scalp on the right cause and manner of Dr. Ches· side of the head. There was tel' Pruitt's' death, dried blood in the hair, indica·

Corbin Bradley testified that ling that the wound had bled." Pruitt had been missing since "Could you tell by the natur~ Thursday. Jack Clague ex- of these wounds how thev plained the time card system were inflicted?" and was at loss to tell how "Not how they were inflicted, Pruitt could have heen found except that one of the officers on the plant grounds after his fro m the police laboratory

'-;;;;;;::;==;;:;;==;;:;;~ card showed thai he had I came up with an interestinJ .; punched out at 5:12 p.m. Ilheory and some evidence to

CARD

Dr. A. W. 1-Blackler's

Office will be closed

'until April 28th

See Burt Trask

"Nothing like it has beel! substantiate it." pulled in the 12 years I'vc "Yes, doctor. Sergeant Alsop worked here," Clague said. is here, and will testify. Couid

:1.latt told of finding the body. yOll tell when death occurred'!" He said that his investigation "We know he was alive Jt had led him to believe tint about 3:15 o'clock Thursday Pruitt had ne\'er left the afternoon," ,aid the medicll grounds, that there had been examin.er. "I would say that he some sort of forgery Or sleight lVas kIlled afterwards up I,D of hand in the punching of the as late as carly Friday morning. time card. About 3 a.m .• I'd say. If we had

not known that he was alive in mid·afternoon, I might just as easily have said he was killed anytime between noon and Thursday and 3 a,m. Friday."

"Thank you, doctor."

For These Good Police Sergcant Alsop wa. called. He told of making ex· Buys I haustive fingerprint and blood tcsts in Dr. Pruitt's office.

1962 Rambler, White Walls, I ~ "Did you find anything?" th~ radio ................ $1850.00 ""I I coroner asked.

1957 Pontiac, like new, with, , "There were numerous fin. radio ... ~ ............. $750.00 '-....;, I' gerprints," said the officer.

1955 Vol!mvagen, radio, re· "Mostly Dr. Pruitt's and mem-conditioned. motor licensed for _ hen of his staff. The F.B.I. has 1963 .................. $375.00 : prints of all workers on se.

1959 Volkswagen, with radio,! i curily proj~ct5. But one arel Deluxe ................ $850.00 I Mo"'ern ; had been Wiped clean."

1962 Volkswagen, 3,000 t LIJ ' "Where was that?" miles ......... , ...... 81450.00 I ll'vr->_ ' "On the right side of th~

1960 Pontiac Sedan, radio, : room. as you cnter the door,

se~~6~0~~~li~" .~~. ~~;;,$1450.00 i E~edU'~c~ Hy! i ;~1Sa t~~::~1 :~:~\~e~o~~leca~~·ttl)\~ radio, ................ 81150.00 I ~ · of the top shelf is about til")

1956 ~lorris, Goo~l running _ : fe.et from thc floor. It h.ad been order, hcensed for '63 .. $275.00! LIGH ""VII 1 Wlllcd, also al! arca llist b~

1952 Chc\' Dc.i~xe, one own~I"I' SJI. ...... Y t,,,, I (I i ne,lth it on the second shelf. very good condItion, has power i "I examined thc books and glide, ideal cal' for hegin, i I (hear lleliable lil·rtricit;\ I' found discolorations on the ncr ................... $450.00 I, (11 and Around 51. .Iohn s : bindings of s2veral directly

1960 International Pick.up! -- : above and belclV the te? shelf. . . . . .. .......... . ... $1250.00 ; I applied tests to the hindin>!.'

1962 Valiant, hard top, ' 3nd to the shelf 'and fouml bucket seats, radio, white walls :races of bleod." wheel discs. Bargain .. 51995.00 : "Even though it had been

D· I 9 7777 .',bed clenn?" I a • ;'Yes. Our method will show or apply to : "'aces of blood even after lt

98 BON ,\VENTURE AVENliE I hls been washed several mar29,3i

Hamilton Hotel 123 - 125 Hamilton Ave.

Catering to Permanent

and Transients, For re-

servations Please dial

8-5636 augl5,tmth

NEWFOUNDLAND" , 'SERViCES," , ' ,

, times." I "Wha t did you d;?duce frolll : tlwse findings? ' i "From Dr. Burns' medicdl i report, it appeared as if there

I I had been some sort of alterca· ! SEE HARVEY'S FOR: I' tion in Pruitt's office. A blow ! I was struck. It ,looked like J I 0 Top quality Oil and Coal I • Fast-same-day service right jab, 01' possibly an upper·

• Free spill.proof fill ! cut. It landed on Pruitt's jaw, connections i at the place where the jaw WdS

• Low-cost burner service I bruised, either knocking hilll • EASY CREDIT TERMS lout or causing him to fall. As Phone 80151, 80152, 80153 he fell his head struck the top

shelf of the bookcase. The weight of Pruitt's body plus

\ I ~..... l • M: • ... : :' t ' • " .. ,

the acceleration of his fa!l broke his neck."

"Would death have been in· stantaneous?"

"I can't answer that. Maybe Dr: Burns can."

• • • The coroner turned to the

doctor seated in the municipal court room. "Since this is an informal hearing, you can an· swer that from where you sit, doctor. You are still und~r oath."

Estate of Charles A. Neal, 'PASSENGER NOTICES II' late of St. John's in the Provo ince of NelVfoundL1nd, Elec· CONNECTION WEST RUN, I

INSIIJRANCE

"No, said Dr. Burns. "Not instantaneous. Pruitt might have lived two or three min· utes afterwards."

"But for a\1 practical pur· poses it was instantaneous."

triclan, deceased. PLACENTIA BAY All persons claiming to be Train "The Caribou" ,leavill'!

creditors of or who have any St. John's 12:01 p.m. Aprill will claims or demands upon or make connection via Placentia affecting the Estate of Charles Junction and Argentia with M. A. Neal, late of St. John's in V. Hopedale for West Run, the Province of Newfoundland, Placentia Bay. Electrician, deceased, are here· by requested to send partieul. CONNECTION BAY RUN, ars of same in writing, duly . P~~CENTI'~ B~Y '" attested, to the undersigned Tram' The Canbou lea~m" Solicitors for the Administrator St. John's 12:01 p.m. AprIl 3 with Will Annexed, of the will make c?nnection via PI.a- I •• ~iiiii~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Estate of the said deceased, on eenti:i Junction and Argentla I or before the 18th day of April with M.V. Hopedale for Bay A.D. 1963, after which dat~ Run, Placentia Bay. the said Administrator with the TICES Will Annexed ,will 'proceed to FREIGHT. NO , distribute the said Estate hav- Freight is accepted daily at ing regard only to the claims Railway Freight Shed for ports of which it shall then have on South Coast Service to Port had notice, aux Basques, but in order to

Dated at St. John's, Nfld., guarantee movement by this Canada, this 7th day of March, trip of M.V. Nonia freight must A.D. 1963. , . be at the Railway Freigbt Shed BROWNE, RENOUF, MER· , by 1 pm Tuesday April 2nd.

CER, COADY &, RICIIE . . , Solicitor for the Adminl· strator with Will Annexed of the Estate of Charles A. Neal, decemsed.

Address for Service: 170 Water Street" ' St. John's, Nfld. , marll,18,25,aprl

I,

Prompt Delivery On • STOVE OIL

"FURNACE; OIL

• IRON FIREMAN HEATING EQUIPIII,ENT

"If you want to define it that way," said Dr. Burn.

The testimony continued with statements of various people who had seen or talked to Pruitt the day of the murder. Matt listened, but learned noth· ing really new. The motive was the important point, he decid· ed, and he didn't think the motive had anything to do with espionage. More than likely Pruitt had dIed from the effects of a blow struck in anger.

The coroner'S verdict credo ited Dr. Pruitt's death to a blo .... inflicted by person or persons unknown and that the act prob­ably was felonious.

(To Be Continued)

ARSONIST JAILED

\llONTREAL (CP)- Maurice Perreault, 28, was sentenced Friday to seven years in peni· tentiary for setting fires that caused $30,000 damage at an east-end shopping lcentre last year. ' Evidence . showed Per­reault was paid $1,000 to do. it: But he declined to name the per, sons who paid him. The def~nce lawyer said Perreault had been threatened., '

I I

i. :(\ , ." , , i ;,i

, .

" i ' "

, ' , . -: .

,

Page 12: First Anniversary . Used Car Sale THE DAILYcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...The Com\Jany's garage. a\)(I\'I~, is fillcil with idle huscs as a result of a hrcllkrlown

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,1=-THE DAILY NEWS, ST, JOlIN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, APRIL 1, 1963

Chllrch To Rev.

"SHATTU(,;~'S TRIMMED NAVEL BEEF 200's and 100'5

PEA BEANS Bags-lOO's and 50's-Pkgs. 2,1-1'

SPLIT PEAS Bags 100's and Pkgs, 24-1's

GREEN PEAS Bags 100's and Pkgs. N-1's

RICE Bags 100'5 Whole and Broken

RICE Pkgs,' 24-1' s

Lads' Brigade Tribute

Callon A. B. S. Stirling

For complete

COVERAGE and

Prompt Adjustment of Claims

CALL REG T. MORGAN

INSURANCE LIMITED

Temple IIltlg" Vuckworth St. DIAL 8,0370, 8·7556

jan19,lmth,dly.

- AT THE! II!"'"~ SI(}N aa i:E !

AND Co. 00,11 LIMlno It. I

I THA VELS WITH 'I' qIARLEY-ln Search I' of America ,

John Steinbeck, ,,$5.95 ! HAPPINESS IS A 'I

WAHM PUppy , Charles M. Schulz 2.95

i ~IACMIL,LAN-I Portrait of a Politician

Emrys Hughes"" 5.50, I-IEHMANN GORING A:--JD THE TlIlRD REICH

Charles Be\dev" 7.50· THE DEADLOCK OF DEi\lOCHACY­

,----... ---.- Four-Partv Politics in America

James MacGregor Burns."",."", 6.50,

COMMON SENSE CHEDIT $

IN-STOCK

KELLOGG'S "

CORN FLAKES

RICE KRIS·PIES

SPECIAL "K" ALL BRAN

GEORGE NEAL LIMITED DIAL 82264 - 84440 - 83420

Charles ;vIoITOW Wilson, .. "

THE HOUSE OF WOHDS

't75 ' ==================::J 1-----------------------I Loval Dickson 5.50: THE ADVENTUHE OF LANGUAGE

Wehael Welcome New Citizens

erraNoy

"* ..,

SUSp Don~

Yo

YORK (AP) o[ the city thn

vigor. Monda nine major t newsstand spa,

time in nearly (01

5,500,000 cop presses to hers 114.day strike. estimated the 1

at more than ~

A Girsdanskv , "NO HED H1BHO~S

four morning 7,2.5! HARBOUR GRACE-A very i ~Irs. William G Hunl had as rri~nds and neighbuurs. to the stam

I impressive ceremony was held arrived at Harbour Grace [rom I The ceremony concluded \\'it~, Five evening d

Chaplain to Avalon· Battalion of the C.L.B. in Newfoundland rile Bugle sounds "Fnll In'', to King's College, Windsor, pararle to conduct the 'Prayci'

WELCOME WAGON \ John E. Quirk, 7.00; at the Court House !,ere March Germany in 1954 to work wita God Save the Queen and lh~ Monday. Ba 127, when ~lr. and i\lrs. George Koch Shoes plant. The follow· court was closed by the R.C.flP after 16 weeks ,

lads; , I Ontario, to flll't!lcr his ~tlldies. portion of the progr<lmme, and Alas! 'tis a ~ad paTllelc. i On the completion of IllS stud- all ranks were greatly pleased

HOSTESS 'IA MONTII SOON GOES

I Dict~'ich and .:\[I's. W.il!iam Hunt ing year she married William constables. nearly 20,000 recClved their certlflcates of Hunt, of Harbour Grace, an At the conclusion of thE njl,oyel!s.

One of our Comrade,; lies dcad I ics in 1902, he was ordained to when he was presented with his lads', the Priesthood by the late 50 year Long Service Medal

Yes, one of the Church Lalls' Bishop Llewellyn Jones, and during the 70th anniversary Brigade served as Assistant to the celebrations of the Brigade in \~il1 K~ock at V~lll' ~oor"1 Storm Jamesoll" .'3.95

With Gifts and Greetm~s ~IY FHlEND FLOHA lrom Friendly. Business i Jane Duncan",,, 3.50 Civic and Social Groups TflE GLASS-BLOWEHS

Canadian citizen~hip [rom Mao;- employee of the· Town Council I ceremony ~Ir. and )[rs, Dietrirh shuldown beg; Istrate G. E. Tnckctl. here. They have two children. I with their daughters, Mrs, Rich, a strike by 3.U One of OUl" members, Hev. Reverend (later Bishop), WiI· Newfoundland. 'rhe Hel'. J, H.

Cano Arthur Botwood Sun· I liam C. White, in the Parish S. Burton, the General Brigade derland Slirling, ; at Henrt's Contenl. Secretary, was here to make

Has pa!sed the last "Outpost", I In the interests of his Sac· the official presentation.

The court was called to order ~layor Sheppard welcomed ard Frichte aud husband, aod Tnternalional 1 by RC,M.P. constables Pender- :\11'. and :\Irs. Dietrich and ~lrs. \ J[rs. lisa Herman and her gast and Estey after which Hunt as members of a great daughter entertained seven;1 of clerk ~Irs. G. W. Simmons ad- Canadian family on behalf of I their friends at their Watrr No more will he parade with' red calling, Canon Stirling Few men in the ,history of

us I worJ;cd in a number of com· the country were looked liP to On the ~ccasion of: A Novel about the

The Birth of a Babv: French Hevolution But with the Heal'enly Hosts. I munitics around the Island, and revered any more than

some of his charges betng was Canon Stirling, and, thc The funeral cortege wends ils i Whitbournc, TWillingate, Bay Church realized the Iremendous

New comer to the CltV D'lphllc Dll PHONE 8-4664.8-7682 }.iauricl'" ,5.95

way 1 Roberts, Heart's Content, and influence he had on its work, Along the crowd thrOnged! finally the Church of SI. Mary elevated him to the dignity of

streets, I the Virgin in SI. John's, from n Canon in the Cathedral of The coffin covered with the which charge he only retired st. John the Baptist, a well

Union .Jack, but n (ew years back. He was deserved honour. ' While muffled drums too beat. inducted as Rector of SI. Cahan Sth'ling served SI. Hark! listen to the Dead.:llary's on lI1ay 11, 1919, and 7>lary's Church as Recto)" long·

~!arch saw his Silver Jubilee there as er than any other incumbent, Played so slowly by the Band, Rector, and was to sec ,his and lived long enough to sec And our thoughts arc of our Golden ,Jubilee as a Priest the beautiful new Church of

_ Comrade, before he died, He Was Senior SI. ~Iary the Virgin erected 011 Who has been called to a bet· Priest and Canon of the Cath- Craigmillar Avenue, ami the

ter Land. edral, and, although retired honouring 01 his name by for some years now. yet was making the Auditorium of the

The "Last Post" has now almost as active as if he was in Church the "Canon A. B. S, sounded, service again. Stirling Memorial Hall" .

And tears drop on many a Beloved, rcvered and respect· In addition to the 70th . f ({amllton ,\ venue Extension breast. ed by all classes in the city, Anniversary serVices, one 0

As th4l cI'ening was fast fleeing, always gave his all in the in· the last C,L.B. functions he PIIONE 95300 We left Our Comrade at Res!. I lerests of the Master whom I~e attended was the C,L,B. Offi· ----- -.----He has "rought the good !served, and he was fearless I.n cers Annual Dinner and DEATHS ' Fight," his toil is o'er the pursuit or his duties_. HIS Meeting in "His" own Hall. --- -- --"- .... ---

I I f th R ADA~IS - Passed away at And with us will no more I advice was sought on numer· Such is a lill eO· c e· I . bl ~ Ch I' '·t, Patrl' ck's Mercy HOllie on

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dressed the court. the town of Harbour Grace, not Street home. One daughter The charge to the apllli· only as fellow citizens but also I Chrystal resides in German~'.

cants was made by the magis. trate who spoke to them of IT b citilenshlll in general, saying .17. ar or Grace iBriefs that tbis was the highest han. our that could be bestowcd

HARBOR GRACE - The an· : illness. He is regarded <IS one by a country on auy in. nual congregational meeting i of the most interested hock~y dividual. lie told o[ the two of St. Paul's Anglican Church 1 fans in this town. priuclpal ways by which peo· was held here ~larch 27 with • " • pIe become Canadian citizens dl I -one by birth allll the sec. Rev. L. A, Lu Ow presiding. Birthday greetings are extend·

Reports presented by the se\'- ,ed to Kathy Oke who celebrat· , olld by naturalization as was I ·tt h d h I being dealt with in this cere. era comml ees s owe t at a cd her birthday here jlarch ~7,

successful year had been COlli· She is 3 years old. A party

I 1II0ny today. pIe ted both financially and was held in her nonor. In this latter way, the per~ons : otherwise.

lIIust have resided for at least The election of a Select Yes. five years in Canada, must try resulted as follows: then make application to the E. L. Oke, rector's warden; court satisfying it that the ap- Chesley Butt, people's warden; plicants have done all that is select vestry members: Harold required of thelll when the T. Parmiter, Frank p, Shep­court may recomment that pard E. Lerov Janes Frederick citizenship be granted by natur- Jane~ Wesle~ Crocker Walter alization. Shep~ard Leslie V.' Chafe

Addressing the three appli· Thomas Snoll' John Noel Joh~ cants, Magistrate Trickett ex· Payne, John Tilley, )!ax Tapp.

"Pair" is properly applied two things which or comlete each other; Ie" can mean any two.

editorials, Ihe ... . expressed hope t

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Washington, \I' secretary Pier the. present a

the industry to ( for a broad stu I , economics. He

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, plained the oath of allegiance, Organist Frank P. Sheppard saying that in repeating the and sexton Reuben Sheppard )!assena area. 'rhe dernon.strat'laI ,":,ords of the oath, they pub· were re'appointed; hall commit- or are members of the r----­

stand, ous occasions by members of cord of t liS venera (! \1l'C ,- -

'TI11 the 'l'nlmpet sound the I his Parish and also by others man, who, forsaking all othcr. Satmda):. ~larch 30, John 'Assembly , I on all kinds of questions, and followed religiously in the, ~dam5, m Ius 75th year. "Leav:

For the "Roll Call" in yonder none ever went away without footpaths of his Saviour and I mg to mourn three dau",hte;s Homeland. I the frIendly and experienced Lord, carrying Ilis word wher· I and two sons, Funera~ ;Il;~

- counsel. that was his to give. ever he went. The Church I take place from Carnell 5

To sa~' that the Brigade, not I Keenly interested in the has lost a well known, revered neral Home, 2B Cochrane St .. only in SI. ol1n's, but all ol'er ~'outh and his proper guidance and respected Priest, well at 2,30 p.m. Tuesday .

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hely. renou.nce all loyally and tee, Fred Janes, William Oke mi~tee for Non.Violent Actiun scrVlCe l~hlCh they may have and Maxwell Tapp; cemetery I the United States and, , been obliged to offer to any com~,ittee: Waller Sheppard I Canada, the Committee of other go:ernment o. power. and I hOlllas Snow, Delegates to . which have staged peace '

. ':Havmg bec?me Canadian the Diocesan Synod which and other demonstrations ~Itlzens you bmd yourselvcs opens on June 10 are Leslie where. III common loyalty to Her V. Chafe and E. Leroy Janes. _________ _ lUajesty the QUeen in com· Further business matterE

Newfoundland ,in common with in Ihe portals of Righteousness, known, respected and belove.d PEPPER _ Passed peaceful­the' whole community, was he became actively associated by the whole country, partl' Iy away at her son's residenc~, shocked at the annou~cement with the Church Lads' Brigade cularly in SI. John's where 8,15 a.m. ~!arch 30, Anme or .. the sudden passing of the [as a Company Chaplain on he spent the greater years of Peppel' of Bay Roberts, .widow Reverend Canon Arthur Bot· June 26, 1919, and a number his ministry. of .James Pepper. Leavmg to rood Sunderland Stirling would I of years ago, on the death of No more will Canon Stirling moul'll one son, Robert, at

At The Sign or The Book. PIIONE 8·5001

aprl,4,B,1l I mon gooll. concerning church and ~chool The oath of allegiance was were discussed before the

then administered and the ap- meeting concluded with Bene­

IF YOU ARE NOW TAKING A LAXATIVE ONCE, TWICE or

'THREE TIMES A WEEK be:l'utting it mildly. I Ven. H. Gosse, he became parade with us, but with the home; one daughter, Dora, of ~~~::':~~ .... ~~ ...... = Apparently in the best of, Battalion Chaplain, and was Heavenly Hosts. No more will Halifax; three granddaughters

health right to the last, Canon I presently on his second four we hear those words of consul and one brother, A. E. Mercer StIi-ling had gone out for his year tem in that office, giving and advice, for the voice, so of Bay Roberts. Interment to­usual walk On Sunday when the his some 44 years as a C.L.B, well known and loved by us, is day at Bay Roberts. end, came suddenly for the Chaplain. silenced forever until the Great man who was literally known In the Brigade he carried Day of the Resurrection. PARSONS - Passed away to'~practicallY everyone in the out his dnties and upheld the The Battalion, some 400 suddenly at the residence of city; , ideals of "El'ery lad a soldier strong turned out under ~taior her daughter, Mrs. Harvey Wi!·

,'Canon Stirling, in 'his early of Christ". He was a frequent J. M.' C. Facey, the Ba~talion Iiams, 143 ,Empire ,Avenue, dllY!, realized a calling to the visitor at the Annual Camps at Commander 10 pay their last Frances Anna, widow of the lID»' Order of Priesthood, be· Topsail, Trinity and Harbor respects to the Battalion Chap· late liarl'ey Parsons. Lcaving ga,n; his priestly studies at Grace and his interest In the lain who had served them well to mourn two sons, John and Qu~en's College here in SI. Brigade never waned. He was and soundly for a long time. Edward; two daughters Frances John's, and subsequently went always at his post on Battalion The service at the Cathedral (Mrs. Harvey Williams) and

-'- saw the sacrc(1 ediface filled to Lucy (Mrs. Douglas Pope), ~,~ capacity and many ex·members and five grandchildren, al?o

FAST DIRECT FREIGHT SAILINGS and former friends of the late one brother, Harry Noonau, III Canon were to be secn at the Clinton, Ontario. Resting . a~ service, I Okc's Funeral Home, 125 QUidl

,. ' ;< :>:' From Hauru, N.S .. t~ St. John'a, Nfld.

ship Leaving Halifax Due St. John'! Vidi Road, whence the funeral

The Brigade preceeded the will take place at 2,30 p,m, on hearse to the cemetery and Tuesday to the Anglican Ceme·

APRIL '1 lined Forest Road on hoth tery, Forest Road,-(tel). ~ .

Ml.V WOODCOCK .. ", ............ , ...... APRIL 5 sides as the funeral cortege

APRIL 17 wended its way with the Canon - '

MJ.V WOODCOCK ...................... ,APRIL 15

MIV WOODCOCK ....... ,......... .. APRIL 23 t\PRlI. 25 to the final resting place.

MalCORMAC'S RECEIVING OFFICE,

1 ADELAIDE STREET

GEAR STREET

BIRTH

To Mrs. Stirling and thc otlier members of the family goes out t!1e deepest heartfclt

-_ sympathy of every member of the Brigade, ' not only on the Avalon Peninsula, but through· out Newfoundland, and we hope that the great God above will sustain them in this hour of distress.

TV REPAIRS DUNN - Born to IIIr. and Mrs. Fred W. Dunn (nec Gillies), at st. Clare's Mercy

REASONABLE RATES Hospital on Friday, lIIarch 29, GUARANTEED WORK 1963, a baby girl.

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,.1----------------,

plieants received their cerUfi· diction. cates of Canadian cilizenship * ~ '* ... rHEH rou SHOII!D lur tR rooA1l from the clerk.

~[ayor H. R. Sheppard was called upon to address the new citizens, he congratulated ~Ir. Dietrich on having celebrated his 63rd birthday here March 24, and also, as a master bar­ber, he will this year celebrate fifty years in the barbering business. Mr. and JIrs. Dietrich came from Germany in 1957 having lived in this town since, operating a barber shop aud l\lrs. Dietrich a beauty salon.

)!isses Vincent and Frcw of the Laxative Tablet with tho the Junior Red Cross here, GENTLE DIFFERENCE visite~ the sch?ols this week Take gentle.acting Nt ••• N.t" .. l

and dlsc~ssed With. t.h~ teache~ Remedy! There is no letdown, and pupils the aetlVlhes of thiS uncomfortable after-feeling. Nt branch of the Red Cross 1V0rk, I an all.vegetable laxative. For

" * • I 70 years, Nt has been giving The friends of William "Cap" I pleasant, effective relief ovemi!:bt

Martin will be ple.ased to he~r ." ...... ~ It tonight ... that he is recovermg frolll hiS ~~~~.... tomDrrDw recent illness, "Cap", though . r past four score years had been ~ H. pr r;" a regular attendan~ at t~e a£GUlAR.QlOCOLA;iC~~TfD' Stadium up to the hme of hiS '

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