Scviets Rap acml an - Memorial University of...

16
- OF RSDAY K W ne.Vf Ltd. THE NEW SPORTS MODEL VAUXHAL,L with Stick Shift and, Bucket Seats NOVA MOTORS (1962} LTD. Scviets Rap kn'RoU! . d Twist r" ,lullS :\1IL1.ER "1 ; 'W 1 Bculcrs 1 - Igor i · r., folk dancinll . ,:1, Ileld :\orlh .\merl. I ,i,h'ncrs spellbound. says! ',.,: a11l1 rock n roll arc I '. ,II!,I intellectually ilcad, ;nlcrl"iell' published in .,C, ,':'Il1Mnt newspaper Iz· ; :Il"da)', called. " \. '.<In of ncll' Russian ,'\prc"inl! "comradely I I ,.' rl" i ,:'" "Ill nrss, , ! ',""'Yl'\' company \'is· I : ,\merica in l!Ij8 lll1d I - :"'1 year, both times: :: :lu<iiencc" anrl drall'ing: .' ," rrl'iclI's I ", lain\l)'" praised the, .' ""I "aid Ihe twisl and: - , : . ,,:1 "pxpress dirty feel· I '. .<"'\,,'"' \ :1' ..•. ("-. '.'-.' .• ...... :.' .. . .' .. 1 r ... : ' .. - " '-I , In Rusk Arrives For Talks On Defence Pact . , acml an Door' Left· Ajar For Summit With Khrushchev '.: :' lI1stinctsand po\'er!y I ' :., and spiril." 1,:Sr.\PE 1 UNITED NATIONS,' N. Y.-British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan is ,""". who has been work· I shown chatting with acting United Nntions Secretary·General U Thant in' LONDON-Reuters-State Secretary Rusk flew WASHINGTON-CP-Prim'e Minister Macmil· , .. !a'II' popular SOl'iel, J ff h h II I d I I I I '11 .. :,rl;nilled tha the West· I lis 0 ice ere April 26t. Macmi an la unc 1 wit 1 T lant. Macml an into London Sunday for a defence pact confcrenee Ian and President said Sunday they are ready to and told reporters the United States had the back- consider a summit meeting with Soviet Premier ing of West Germany for its current talks with Rus. Khrushchev "whenever there is an indication that sia on Berlin. ' '. such meetings would serve thc interests of peace and · "., c. (s arc dynamic, per· met with President Kennedy on the 28th and 29th.-(UPI) .; II'ho live "ioy.! ------- ',. fantasy of escape, , 'r .-:r 10 hlame if our lOran Afger"la '" ... :ual'trd b\' the dis·, , '-: ", n"mi,m rock 'n! ------=--- Rusk arrived for talks Mondav with undcrstanding." . the foreign ministers of counh'ies belonging "to the In a joint communique windin)!; up a week·end ,-, 'hr twi,I." h e said" ."·,I'"r with R healthv F ' h ' their, rene ," nIUMC\' and r \" ythtn::" ; ::'::'f'ai:n h:lS he en under I ".. ,nme month, here to, '"nile Soliel hallroom ! C ltr ITt 0 . r A' d f of Washington talks, Macmillan and Kenncdy dealt Tr 'oops' 'I nfleltra' te j tb: :::n P:: .. ,I . ! stacie to a Berlin settlement now was Russia's re;. hope that Britain's negotiations to enter the giant .' . fusal to recognize the vital interests of the West in economic alliance "would be crowned with success." ;11 iln attempt to hreak I :,:. on mnn)' Rus' ,1' Ihe innu·, 0' Il'estern dance I S : e . . Berlin. . The two questions-summitry t and the Common Market-were e ( I 0 n The U,S, state secretary de· the major ones tackled by the ' fined these interests as the preliminary talks before the leaders of the big two· in their presence of the Western powers CENTO meeting, Cilth meeting since Kennedy 1 By BOROWmC ',,:' on jerk.: ORAN, Algena 0' Western shake music i backed Iroops infIltrated ';Inn-trOllS rock 'n roll \ heart of Ihe European sec· hil\'e aJ'peared in 1 !ton of Oran Sunday and cut It .' in Berlin al]d completely free Me1l\bers of CENTO are Brit-, took off!ce. were parked al intersections of cafes' were cI'oll'ded and juke· \ access to the divided city, ain, Turkey, Iran and Pakistan, MacmIllan arranged to fly lin the Rue du General Leclerc, the boxes in burs blared the lalest Asked if the West, German The United "States is an associ. to Canada later in the after. city'S principal thoroughfare, tunes, But there was no frateI" government was prepared to go ale member, noon, French Infantry set up loaded nization between the soldiers along with the latest U,S. pro· Main point in Sunday night's The joint communique. issued machine'guns on the Place des and the settlers in their Sunday posals, Rusk said: "When we Rusk.Home talks was expected while Macmillan and Kennedy press. I in two with barbed wire enclos· IIll'es and machlne:gun positions, lIalltrncks and armored cars Victoires, a rallying' point of hest. have discussions with the So- to be the deadlock over the ap. sat down to a While House the Secret Army Organization, CITY IS SPLIT viet Union on these matters, we pointment of an over.all ' com' luncheon concluding their meet. Timers (ome Back which opposes Algerian lnde· An'ival of 2,000 troops Suttlr· do so on the basis of allied mander to take charge of ing, the two chiefs made plain pendence. day from A I gel' i u's interior agreement." , CENTO's'miiital'y staff, they, are, hol<\mg the way open ossemblymen were relurned un· opposed, two elections were postponed and 'six women wlll be selected later for the 156· Oran commllnder Gen, Joseph raised Katz· strength to 12,000 EAST GERMAN VIEW The post was at for m;etmg l\hrushchev, I Katz intends to invest the en· I men, Ihe minimum necessary He said he did not think the last' year's CENTO ministerinl No INITATIVEj I ,scat assembly, :'i ,!,PI:\DI, I' a k i s tan, , tire city p,rogressively ,10 ,sloP for, :he I East German Communist reo council meeting in Ankara; 'fur. i It however, the oPPOSlltIon CIty, IS gime harl 10 be recognized to key to improve co.ordinationin i neither nor pe,an StCb tl ers I\' 0 atve lccn [e· 1·IIl·olleant' e: I <, all f make any further progress on planning, Y, has, allY unmc k late 1111 18'1 fymg e governmen, em no IOna IS zones 0, In· Berlin, S' t1 th' h I hvc III mmd to sec' a persona S d wd spilled out of f1uence Ince len el e as leen a t Ik 'tp tI S 't I d r I , _ Local councils ,half ,the wmners were :li;,tan Saturday \'oted 01lt i Ident!f!ed as' persons; ac· :!"I'rmcol old politi. II1\'e In polll!cs before un ay cro s Atltllo'rl.tl'e., b"I'I"I'" Katz' pion I L RdUSkl1 mel FS' oredign Secret",')" conflict of opinions on holl' the a WIle ?vle e , I the churches and milled Brounu t ,0, I"" '"f'lt t t'h' or orne un ay night in' militarv command would work, !he commumque saJd i Ihe armored vehicles, Sidewalk 0 progressive y In I ra e e '. millan and j Kennedy "took note I helped rlln the COlln. ,,',nor m;trtial law im· · ;", ago, e, '.\ national assemhly '.' "'{'{'ted will contain a "mi>"r of former politi· :J"'. the hope o[ . Hamm,ers At Recolrd European part oC Ol'an may of the opinion recentiV ex. take a Plonlh, P M p.' t T pressed by Chairman Khrush· During the n i g h t. Secret o"ln S 0 chel'," This presumably refel' Army commandos fired mOl'tar red 10 Khrushchev's I' e c c nt, shells into· the bat'racks of mo· statement that summit meet· I bile gendarmes and into Mos· N . h D I 't ings not be uncertain un· I lem settlements of the Boulan· Itt',rt ern ·eve o'pme- n, less there is some advance whenel'er there IS. an quarter, The number of l'ie· V dence that such conferences mdlcatlOn that meetmgs fresldent Kenno.<},f ' __ ,\),uh Khan to find :::rn to help rule this most .... :. II! '1oslem conntric5, , !-ibn will contimw to , I qrnnc preSidential sys. By ARCH MacKENZIE OTTAWA (CP) - The first tims, il any, was not known, . "should not prove sterile," would serve the 01 A th 't' d t h t I [ tl peace and understandlllg,' tied in with the decision to be· . u 01'1 les a ,By ALAN DOi-lNELLY I in this gat e II' a y to north, ThIS re erence apparen y COl\li\IOJl/ i\tARKET VIEWS gin rolling in Newfoundland Moslems and SIX Euro' PRINCE ALBERT CASK ern Saskatchewan emphasized was 10 remarks Khrushchev <> tI C M k t which remained staunchly Lib; peans we]'e killed in Oran in (CP) Minister' Diefen: I northe]'ll measures made in an interview with . n le ommon t al' e 1 9 ues d - three day s of the Liberal party's election campaign , " "I!' RO,OOil local conn., -while low· keyed - n -':'"'."", pak.: pattern likely to last until June Ie ' 't tt k S tiT I - . '1 'd t d lion, no agreemen was c 81me eral when the dam broke in Irom a ac s un ay, wo baker pointed with pride Satur in his sp' eech to an ovcrllow Gardner Cow es presl en an I fl' t' 't t [ . or thc Europeans wcr slain by' ' , , d't f L k' . d Ion t Ie con IC mg meres s 0 195A, I' e, day night to his government's audience of about 000 in the C I 0 00 magazme :,n Britain and the Unitcd States, 'I'. Oill1liflO I){'ople took IIA, . .• It'" I for i41 -:\:<. i The tempo will quicken, Ham· 2' Die In Ship ""mi>rr<, Se\'en other· mcring al Ihe government rec· '------- ol'd will be stepped up, The final days will see Ihe, byways abandoned for a quick series of final meetings in major centres, But the parly message al- NORFOLK, Va, (AP) - A ready is plain, So Is Ihe Image Norwegian passenger . cargo , being projected by nat ion a I ship and a Greek freighter col· leader Pearson after one day In Ilded in dense fog at Ihemouth Prince Edward Island and two of Cheaspeake Bay Sunday, Two in Premier Joey Smallwood's persons died and Ihree were in· Newfoundland. juried. Today, following a weekend In ,All the casualties were aboard Washington with other former the Norwegian vessel, the Tar- Nobel Peace Prize winners of antel. She was slashed open Ihe West who are guests of Irom water line 10 deck when President Kennedy, Mr. Pear· hit amidships by the bow of the son is back on the road-Tor· Greek ship, Hellenic Splendor, onto lirst and then Ibe West Tugs Cought to save' the T1r· coast. Then he he!Jds, eastward antel from sinking put their ef- across the Prairies and Into the fort was halted lemporarily vital arena oC ontado, shortly aller 4 p,m, when the Few surprises are expected vessel ran aground four mile's in the party platform, It's east of Cape' Henry, .. about complele except Cor the SalYage vessels began ellorts final, details of Ihe Liberal to pull the Tarantel Cree and party stand on defence-nuclear resume Ihe low. _ J-'rcnch Premier arms or no nuclear arms for HAD 59 ABOARD I' Id k his Canadians, The two deaduboard the Tar· nmp ou rna es NO WIIOLESALE "PROMISES . antel were 11 mana'nd a woman to Ihe National Each Pearson speech 50 far -the latter presumably a pas· , ,\pril 26th, oullin· hns said no promises arc heing senger, Of the' 59 'aboard Ihe .lIn< lor "rance's future, I I 1 J t h I I What the Norwegian ship at the time of lnt .\hn·an "'ar draws to I lallC e ou I\' 0 esa e, , Darty orrCl's is the producl oC the collision - 12 passengers warned Euro· four years ofsludy and reo and a crew 01 47-25 2343 re· bat· he says. moved hy a const guarci culler Algerian In The campaign. lake orr ashore, I Ihal their efforts ---- in \'aln and oHered a chance to resettle In if they choose, with aId (rom Ihe IIOV' , F,orest ,Fire' Razes,· Eighteen Ho'm:es' . GLENS FALLS, N.Y. (AP)- There was no immediale :'\oslerns, northern development program, 760 . seat Orpheum Theatre, pres.ltient o[ Des It was learned that :I!aemilian ,Speaking a newly.n,om. Party of!icials said neglstcr and , : and Kennedy devoted more time mated candIdate for Prmcc persons were unable to gctm, The saId State to this subject than any other Albert constituency, he also un- "All ovcr the' north today IIrc Secretary n,usk s :a11l5 in their talks which began Sat. veiled his first promise of the' developments the like of which I on ilerhn WIth Amhassa- urdav mornin" and lVere can. election campaign - a special have lIcl'er been seen before," I dol' Anatoly had heen tinue'd briefly lunch 5un. Enumeration Starts Today By DON IIAi-lRIGHT OTTAWA (CPl-The federal enumeration s tat s Monday with 67,000 workers counting the heads that will be eligible 10 choose'the country's next gal" ernment. . The count wi\l be completed next Saturday and the voting lists wi\l appear soon after· ward, They are expected to show about 9,000,000 persons with the righl to vote in the federal general election June 18, The I a sit Parliament was chosen in 1958 by 79 pCI' ce,lt of the 9.131,200 persons who commlSSlOn to h e a I' Indian he said, reported to Macnllllan by Ken, d ' . grievances and propose settle· 'The Canada 01 1967-the een·, nedy the two aiiowever the discussions men! Of, long·slanding Indian tennial ycar-"is going to he heads the Import· were said 'to have been without treaty c1mms. tremendously different from Ihe ance of mamtamll1g Ihese and friction on this subject, and to Mr. DicCenbakcr, back home Canada of 19.;7 when the pres· other between East have consisted more of detailed ent government took office," and West.' explanations' of the vielVs oC then had the franchise-biggest STRESSES LOCAL TOPICS Macmillan and Kennedy, 1\ c each side with an eye to work· turnout since reliable figures Mr, DieCcnb'aker c e n t red communique continued, "reaf. ing out accommodations where were first kept' in 1911" plenty of atten\ion on local firmed their willingness to can· possible later on as the Com' BASICALLY TilE SAME topics too, standing beneath a sider meetings of heads of gov· mon Market progress continue!, Voting qualifications this lime banner which read: "Welcome ____ __ ..o.. _____________ _ are basically the same as they Prime Minister and Mrs, Dief' were in 1958, enbaker (John and Olive to Havan!l I us).',"" a The law says that an eligible The p I' i m e minister's an· voter is one who on April 19- noun cement of his government's the day the election writs were intention-if returned to offiee- issued-was al least 21, and to appoint an Indion. claims who is a CanaJian citizen. or a commission was applauded by' British suhject' who has lived in his audience. which included n Cpnnda for a year, number of - .•.. ------- ' ...... ... ---------.----- .. - - .. ---.--- ._------ - ... --_.- Police Arrest Anti- G,ovt. Demonstrators . . HAVANA (AP) - Several per-' seemed to be a signal, !hI sons were reported under arrest! demonstrators unfolded banners . ,Sunday for staging the first I with for the anti government 'demonstrn· of, prISoner! .. lion in Havana since last fall. i Police q 11 I C k 1Y mored ,n, Hardly had Saturday i broke up the demonstration, short demonstration 'died down,! and led some of the demonstl'3' than the second shakeup within i tors away. . . a month was reported in the I This lVas the first .report of leadership of the integrated reI'· i a . demonstration, ag31!,st olutional'Y organization, Cuba's I mler regime. SInce antI' only political body, I Commul1lst disorders last ,Sept, Wilfredo Castro, no relative 10. About 4,000 . perso)ls In, a of Premiel' Fidel Castro was Roman Cat h 0 II c procession fired as the sec· turned innto an anti· Commu· retary.general in one oC' Cuba's nist demonstration, !ried 10 most populous districts, The I march on the. presldenl1al pal· Communist newspaper Hoy said ace. Before pohce broke up the Sunday he was accused uf Il!arch, one man was reported inaking false arrests and using kIlled and a score of marchers the revolution [or his personal were wounded, A wind,' whipped forest and estimate of loss. . J benefit. He may face tria\. ------ Accounts of the Saturday . STATESMAN DIES SlIlny and cold. N. W, 15, High 40. T cmpefatUres MID Mil. . Nlllht Dal . ....... ·61 ..••• 43 ••• 1 ,' .. 40,·' 44 •• ..' •• 33, 34 , ...... 39 56' 48 33, brush fire that deslroyed The fast·movlng flumes black· homes and Injured ,20. persons' ened an area' four miles' wide In a suburban area on the nortb· and eight miles long, western outskirts 0[, tlj)s,' west; Officials, said most of the ern New 'York city' of 18,000 was homes Ihat were were repOrted under control Sunday, not: insured.' . , " , Four persons .were taken to hospital wilh minor . burns , and FIREMEN STAY , 16 olhers recelyed·· emergency , Rain w,ettcd down Ihe treatmlmt.AII of· the Injured erlng' ruins Sunday and lire· were firefighters. ,';., lighters . were ,standing by to Hundreds . 'persons , were prevent further outbreaks, 'forced' to flee, their homes' and ',The fire, 'broke· out ' Saturday a pUblic schooj' was oPened to aflemoonand' nipidly spread provide emergency sbelter and through Ihe hamlet of Bennett· foOd. villi and Into West Glens Falls, " I . tOKYO-About ISO members of the' Japan University, 'Student: Associa- lion (Zengakurtm) staged a of the U.S. Embassy here April 2S.th and were met and driven off by waiting police dot Here police and students tangle in' battle which left, some dents injured but no serious injtftics were reported . ..;..(UPI). " .. , night demonstration were con· DACCA, East Pakistan, AP- fused, but this was the stolj' Abdul Kasam Fazlul Huq, 92, witnesses lold: '. the architect of East Pakistan, A crowd had . assembled at died Friday after Ii lengthy ill· the Intersection of Galiano. and ness, fazlul auq was one of the San Rafael streets, one of Ha· leading; members of Mohammed vana's busiest, for a rally in Ali Jinnah's AlI·India Moslem connection wit h this week's League and was the league's May Day celebration, 'president from 1916 to 1921. MINGLE WITH CROWD About 50 de m 0 n s t r.3 tors , mingled with the crow'd, which included Saturday night shop· ,pers as well . as.' Cubans as· sembled for the tally. At what Shi.ce 1890, the U,S. House of Representatives - bas protect· ed . itself, against filibustering by strict rules'to cut speeches short called "cloture rules." .',. , :'-;1, .r. ; .f

Transcript of Scviets Rap acml an - Memorial University of...

Page 1: Scviets Rap acml an - Memorial University of Newfoundlandcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ""mi>rr

-

OF

~ook

G JRSDAY

CK

5

)n~ W )ne.Vf

Ltd.

THE NEW SPORTS MODEL

VAUXHAL,L with Stick Shift and, Bucket Seats

NOVA MOTORS (1962} LTD.

Scviets ~ Rap kn'RoU! .

d Twist r" ,lullS :\1IL1.ER

"1 ; 'W 1 Bculcrs 1 - Igor i · r., \\'h{J~e folk dancinll . ,:1, Ileld :\orlh .\merl. I ,i,h'ncrs spellbound. says! ',.,: a11l1 rock n roll arc I '. ,II!,I intellectually ilcad, :,~ ;nlcrl"iell' published in .,C, ,':'Il1Mnt newspaper Iz· ; ~,.' :Il"da)', ~Ioisyc\' called. " \. '.<In of ncll' Russian

,'\prc"inl! "comradely I

I ,.' rl" i ,:'" "Ill nrss, , ! ',""'Yl'\' company \'is· I ~, : ,\merica in l!Ij8 lll1d I - :"'1 year, both times: :: :lu<iiencc" anrl drall'ing:

.' ," rrl'iclI's I ", ,~; lain\l)'" praised the, .' ""I "aid Ihe twisl and: - ,

: . ,,:1 "pxpress dirty feel· I

'.

.<"'\,,'"' \ :1' ..•. ("-. '.'-.' .• ,.-:~ ...... :.' .. 1,~.:rrE1~ ncr~~::lj . .' .. • .'~ 1 r ... .l·~ ~.,: : ' .. - " '-I

, • In

Rusk Arrives For Talks On Defence Pact

. ,

• acml an

Door' Left· Ajar For Summit

With Khrushchev '.: :' lI1stinctsand po\'er!y I ' :., and spiril."

1,:Sr.\PE 1 UNITED NATIONS,' N. Y.-British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan is ,""". who has been work· I shown chatting with acting United Nntions Secretary·General U Thant in'

LONDON-Reuters-State Secretary Rusk flew WASHINGTON-CP-Prim'e Minister Macmil·

, .. !a'II' popular SOl'iel, J ff h h II I d I I I I '11 .. :,rl;nilled tha the West· I lis 0 ice ere April 26t. Macmi an la unc 1 wit 1 T lant. Macml an into London Sunday for a defence pact confcrenee Ian and President said Sunday they are ready to and told reporters the United States had the back- consider a summit meeting with Soviet Premier ing of West Germany for its current talks with Rus. Khrushchev "whenever there is an indication that sia on Berlin. ' '. such meetings would serve thc interests of peace and

· "., c. (s arc dynamic, per· met with President Kennedy on the 28th and 29th.-(UPI) .; ~l'opir II'ho live "ioy.! -------',. ~ fantasy of escape, ,

'r .-:r 10 hlame if our lOran Afger"la '" ... :ual'trd b\' the dis·, , '-: ", n"mi,m ~f rock 'n! ------=--­ Rusk arrived for talks begin~ing Mondav with undcrstanding." .

the foreign ministers of counh'ies belonging "to the In a joint communique windin)!; up a week·end ,-, 'hr twi,I." h e said"

."·,I'"r with R healthv F ' h ' :l~"il1>1 their, :;ex~lal: rene

," nIUMC\' and l~olal1Qn r \" ythtn::" ; ::'::'f'ai:n h:lS he en under I ".. ,nme month, here to, '"nile Soliel hallroom !

C ltr ITt 0 . r A' d f of Washington talks, Macmillan and Kenncdy dealt

Tr'oops' 'I nfleltra' te j b~'i:k ?jh~:::':rp::t t~:: tb: :::n P:: :l'~:!~~~ .. ~~;~~::n~:~~c~ '~~ c~:~!~~: ,I . ! stacie to a Berlin settlement now was Russia's re;. hope that Britain's negotiations to enter the giant

.' . fusal to recognize the vital interests of the West in economic alliance "would be crowned with success."

'~: ;11 iln attempt to hreak I :,:. on mnn)' )'oun~ Rus'

,1' Ihe "corrtlptin~ innu·, 0' ~nme Il'estern dance I

Europ~ai1 S : e . . Berlin. . The two questions-summitry t and the Common Market-were e ( I 0 n The U,S, state secretary de· the major ones tackled by the ' fined these interests as the preliminary talks before the leaders of the big two· in their

presence of the Western powers CENTO meeting, Cilth meeting since Kennedy

,~ 1 By ANDRE\~ BOROWmC ',,:' on "con\'ul~i\'e jerk.: ORAN, Algena (AP)-~rmor.

0' Western shake music i backed F~ench Iroops infIltrated ';Inn-trOllS rock 'n roll \ t~le heart of Ihe European sec·

'-':1'~" hil\'e aJ'peared in 1 !ton of Oran Sunday and cut It

.' in Berlin al]d completely free Me1l\bers of CENTO are Brit-, took off!ce. were parked al intersections of cafes' were cI'oll'ded and juke· \ access to the divided city, ain, Turkey, Iran and Pakistan, MacmIllan arranged to fly lin the Rue du General Leclerc, the boxes in burs blared the lalest Asked if the West, German The United "States is an associ. to Canada later in the after. city'S principal thoroughfare, tunes, But there was no frateI" government was prepared to go ale member, noon,

French Infantry set up loaded nization between the soldiers along with the latest U,S. pro· Main point in Sunday night's The joint communique. issued machine'guns on the Place des and the settlers in their Sunday posals, Rusk said: "When we Rusk.Home talks was expected while Macmillan and Kennedy

~·:.f~ press. I in two with barbed wire enclos· IIll'es and machlne:gun positions,

lIalltrncks and armored cars

Victoires, a rallying' point of hest. have discussions with the So- to be the deadlock over the ap. sat down to a While House the Secret Army Organization, CITY IS SPLIT viet Union on these matters, we pointment of an over.all ' com' luncheon concluding their meet.

Timers (ome Back

which opposes Algerian lnde· An'ival of 2,000 troops Suttlr· do so on the basis of allied mander to take charge of ing, the two chiefs made plain pendence. day from A I gel' i u's interior agreement." , CENTO's'miiital'y staff, they, are, hol<\mg the way open

ossemblymen were relurned un· opposed, two elections were postponed and 'six women wlll be selected later for the 156·

Oran commllnder Gen, Joseph raised Katz· strength to 12,000 EAST GERMAN VIEW The post was e~tablished at for m;etmg l\hrushchev, I

Katz intends to invest the en· I men, Ihe minimum necessary He said he did not think the last' year's CENTO ministerinl No INITATIVEj I

,scat assembly, :'i ,!,PI:\DI, I' a k i s tan, ,

tire city p,rogressively ,10 ,sloP for, e~?trol ,o~erat!ons ~n :he I East German Communist reo council meeting in Ankara; 'fur. i It I\'~S Imderst~od, however, the oPPOSlltIon ~f ~OO'OOIO EtI~O'1 ~ott CIty, \\~ICh. IS sP~lll\nto gime harl 10 be recognized to key to improve co.ordinationin i t1l~t neither ~la,cmlil~~ nor ~t~n'l pe,an StCbtl ers I\' 0 atve lccn [e· 1·IIl·olleant' e:I<, rteml~t all f ~s'l make any further progress on dcf~nce planning, ~e Y, has, allY unmc

k late 1111 18'1

fymg e governmen, em no IOna IS zones 0, In· Berlin, S' t1 th' h I hvc III mmd to sec' a persona S d wd spilled out of f1uence Ince len el e as leen a t Ik 'tp tI S 't I d r I , _ Local councils throll~h'l ,~b~ut ,half ,the wmners were

:li;,tan Saturday \'oted 01lt i r~mhl~ Ident!f!ed as' persons; ac· :!"I'rmcol man~' old politi. II1\'e In polll!cs before 19~8,

un ay cro s ~ Atltllo'rl.tl'e., b"I'I"I'" Katz' pion I L RdUSkl1 mel FS' oredign Secret",')" conflict of opinions on holl' the a WIle ?vle e~ e , I the churches and milled Brounu t ,0, I"" '"f'lt t t'h' or orne un ay night in' militarv command would work, !he commumque saJd .~[ac· i Ihe armored vehicles, Sidewalk 0 progressive y In I ra e e '. millan and j Kennedy "took note I

'I~O helped rlln the COlln. ,,',nor m;trtial law a~ im· · ;", y{'ar~ ago,

e, '.\ national assemhly '.' "'{'{'ted will contain a "mi>"r of former politi·

:J"'. n{'~pile the hope o[

Pears:o~n . Hamm,ers At G~o~vt. Recolrd

European part oC Ol'an may of the opinion recentiV ex. take a Plonlh, P M p.' t T pressed by Chairman Khrush·

During the n i g h t. Secret • • o"ln S 0 chel'," This presumably refel' Army commandos fired mOl'tar red 10 Khrushchev's I' e c c nt, shells into· the bat'racks of mo· statement that summit meet· I bile gendarmes and into Mos· N . h D I 't ings ~hould not be uncertain un· I •

lem settlements of the Boulan· Itt',rt ern ·eve o'pme-n, less there is some advance evi.l;rn.me~t whenel'er there IS. an ,~er quarter, The number of l'ie· V dence that such conferences mdlcatlOn that su~h meetmgs

fresldent Kenno.<},f ' __

,\),uh Khan to find :::rn to help rule this most .... :. II! '1oslem conntric5,

, !-ibn will contimw to , I qrnnc preSidential sys.

By ARCH MacKENZIE OTTAWA (CP) - The first

tims, il any, was not known, . "should not prove sterile," would serve the m~ere~ts 01 A th 't' d t h t I • [ tl peace and understandlllg,' tied in with the decision to be· . u 01'1 les announc~ a ,By ALAN DOi-lNELLY I in this gat e II' a y to north, ThIS re erence apparen y COl\li\IOJl/ i\tARKET VIEWS

gin rolling in Newfoundland el~ht Moslems and SIX Euro' PRINCE ALBERT CASK ern Saskatchewan emphasized was 10 remarks Khrushchev <> tI C M k t which remained staunchly Lib; peans we]'e killed in Oran in (CP) Pri~e Minister' Diefen: I northe]'ll 'develop~cnt measures made in an interview with . n le ommont • al' e 1 9ues

d-three day s of the Liberal party's election campaign

, " "I!' RO,OOil local conn., -while low· keyed - sholl'~ n -':'"'."", rrl'rr~enting pak.: pattern likely to last until June

Ie ' 't tt k S tiT I - . '1 'd t d lion, no agreemen was c 81me eral when the dam broke in Irom a ac s ~ un ay, wo baker pointed with pride Satur in his sp' eech to an ovcrllow Gardner Cow es presl en an I fl' t' 't t [ . or thc Europeans wcr slain by' ' , , • d't f L k' . d Ion t Ie con IC mg meres s 0 195A, I' e, day night to his government's audience of about 000 in the C I ~r 0 00 magazme :,n Britain and the Unitcd States,

• 'I'. Oill1liflO I){'ople took IIA, . • .• It'" I (jlin~ for i41 -:\:<. i The tempo will quicken, Ham· 2' Die In Ship

Col~ision

""mi>rr<, Se\'en other· mcring al Ihe government rec· '------- ol'd will be stepped up, The

final days will see Ihe, byways abandoned for a quick series of final meetings in major centres,

But the parly message al- NORFOLK, Va, (AP) - A ready is plain, So Is Ihe Image Norwegian passenger . cargo

, being projected by nat ion a I ship and a Greek freighter col· leader Pearson after one day In Ilded in dense fog at Ihemouth Prince Edward Island and two of Cheaspeake Bay Sunday, Two in Premier Joey Smallwood's persons died and Ihree were in· Newfoundland. juried.

Today, following a weekend In ,All the casualties were aboard Washington with other former the Norwegian vessel, the Tar­Nobel Peace Prize winners of antel. She was slashed open Ihe West who are guests of Irom water line 10 deck when President Kennedy, Mr. Pear· hit amidships by the bow of the son is back on the road-Tor· Greek ship, Hellenic Splendor, onto lirst and then Ibe West Tugs Cought to save' the T1r· coast. Then he he!Jds, eastward antel from sinking put their ef­across the Prairies and Into the fort was halted lemporarily vital arena oC ontado, shortly aller 4 p,m, when the

Few surprises are expected vessel ran aground four mile's in the party platform, It's ,1~st east of Cape' Henry, .. about complele except Cor the SalYage vessels began ellorts final, details of Ihe Liberal to pull the Tarantel Cree and party stand on defence-nuclear resume Ihe low.

_ J-'rcnch Premier arms or no nuclear arms for HAD 59 ABOARD I' Id k his Canadians, ~ The two deaduboard the Tar·

nmp ou rna es NO WIIOLESALE "PROMISES . antel were 11 mana'nd a woman to Ihe National Each Pearson speech 50 far -the latter presumably a pas· , ,\pril 26th, oullin· hns said no promises arc heing senger, Of the' 59 'aboard Ihe

.lIn< lor "rance's future, I I 1 J t h I I What the Norwegian ship at the time of lnt .\hn·an "'ar draws to I lallC e ou I\' 0 esa e, , ~, Darty orrCl's is the producl oC the collision - 12 passengers

t1~~, 1I~ warned Euro· four years ofsludy and reo and a crew 01 47-25 2343 re· Ii~htinc la~t·dllch bat· s~I'I·ch. he says. moved hy a const guarci culler a~~inst Algerian In The campaign. lake orr ~t andbr'ou~ht ashore, I

'l't'D~lrncp. Ihal their efforts ----in \'aln and oHered a chance to resettle In

if they choose, with aId (rom Ihe IIOV' ,

F,orest ,Fire' Razes,· Eighteen Ho'm:es' .

GLENS FALLS, N.Y. (AP)- There was no immediale

:'\oslerns, northern development program, 760 . seat Orpheum Theatre, pres.ltient o[ ~h.e Des ~romes! It was learned that :I!aemilian ,Speaking ~s a newly.n,om. Party of!icials said anoth~r ~oo neglstcr and 1~'lbune, , : and Kennedy devoted more time mated candIdate for Prmcc persons were unable to gctm, • The commun~qtte saId State to this subject than any other Albert constituency, he also un- "All ovcr the' north today IIrc Secretary n,usk s ~\lrrent :a11l5 in their talks which began Sat. veiled his first promise of the' developments the like of which I on ilerhn WIth SovI~1 Amhassa- urdav mornin" and lVere can. election campaign - a special have lIcl'er been seen before," I dol' Anatoly Dobry~m had heen tinue'd briefly ~hefore lunch 5un.

Enumeration

Starts Today By DON IIAi-lRIGHT

OTTAWA (CPl-The federal enumeration s tat s Monday with 67,000 workers counting the heads that will be eligible 10 choose'the country's next gal" ernment. . The count wi\l be completed

next Saturday and the voting lists wi\l appear soon after· ward, They are expected to show about 9,000,000 persons with the righl to vote in the federal general election June 18,

The I a sit Parliament was chosen in 1958 by 79 pCI' ce,lt of the 9.131,200 persons who

commlSSlOn to h e a I' Indian he said, reported to Macnllllan by Ken, d ' . grievances and propose settle· 'The Canada 01 1967-the een·, nedy a~d the two gove~'lIment aiiowever the discussions men! Of, long·slanding Indian tennial ycar-"is going to he heads agre~d ,o~ the Import· were said 'to have been without treaty c1mms. tremendously different from Ihe ance of mamtamll1g Ihese and friction on this subject, and to

Mr. DicCenbakcr, back home Canada of 19.;7 when the pres· other eo~tracts between East have consisted more of detailed ent government took office," and West.' explanations' of the vielVs oC

then had the franchise-biggest STRESSES LOCAL TOPICS Macmillan and Kennedy, 1\ c each side with an eye to work· turnout since reliable figures Mr, DieCcnb'aker c e n t red communique continued, "reaf. ing out accommodations where were first kept' in 1911" plenty of atten\ion on local firmed their willingness to can· possible later on as the Com' BASICALLY TilE SAME topics too, standing beneath a sider meetings of heads of gov· mon Market progress continue!,

Voting qualifications this lime banner which read: "Welcome ____ ~ __ ..o.. _____________ _

are basically the same as they Prime Minister and Mrs, Dief' were in 1958, enbaker (John and Olive to Havan!l

I us).',"" a The law says that an eligible The p I' i m e minister's an·

voter is one who on April 19- noun cement of his government's the day the election writs were intention-if returned to offiee­issued-was al least 21, and to appoint an Indion. claims who is a CanaJian citizen. or a commission was applauded by' British suhject' who has lived in his audience. which included n Cpnnda for a year, number of Indian~, - .•.. ------- ' ......• ---.--~--.-- ... ---------.----- .. - - .. ---.--- ._------ - ... --_.-

Police Arrest Anti­G,ovt. Demonstrators . .

HAVANA (AP) - Several per-' seemed to be a signal, !hI sons were reported under arrest! demonstrators unfolded banners

. ,Sunday for staging the first I with inscriptio~~ callill~ for the anti • government 'demonstrn· relea~e of, p~hl1cal prISoner! .. lion in Havana since last fall. i Police q 11 I C k 1 Y mored ,n,

Hardly had Saturday ni~hl's i broke up the demonstration, short demonstration 'died down,! and led some of the demonstl'3' than the second shakeup within i tors away. . . a month was reported in the I This lVas the first .report of leadership of the integrated reI'· i a . demonstration, ag31!,st Pl'~· olutional'Y organization, Cuba's I mler Ca~tro's, regime. SInce antI' only political body, I Commul1lst disorders last ,Sept,

Wilfredo Castro, no relative 10. About 4,000 . perso)ls In, a of Premiel' Fidel Castro was Roman Cat h 0 II c procession fired as the organization'~ sec· turned innto an anti· Commu· retary.general in one oC' Cuba's nist demonstration, ~lIld !ried 10 most populous districts, The I march on the. presldenl1al pal· Communist newspaper Hoy said ace. Before pohce broke up the Sunday he was accused uf Il!arch, one man was reported inaking false arrests and using kIlled and a score of marchers the revolution [or his personal were wounded,

A wind,' whipped forest and estimate of loss. . J benefit. He may face tria\. ------Accounts of the Saturday . STATESMAN DIES

SlIlny and cold. N. W, 15, High 40.

T cmpefatUres MID Mil. .

Nlllht Dal . ....... ~ ·61 ..••• ~.39 43 ••• 1 ,' .. 40,·' 44 •• ..' •• 33, 34

, ...... 39 56' 48 33,

brush fire that deslroyed 1~ The fast·movlng flumes black· homes and Injured ,20. persons' ened an area' four miles' wide In a suburban area on the nortb· and eight miles long, western outskirts 0[, tlj)s,' west; Officials, said most of the ern New 'York city' of 18,000 was homes Ihat were de~troyed were repOrted under control Sunday, not: insured.' . , " ,

Four persons .were taken to hospital wilh minor . burns , and FIREMEN STAY , 16 olhers recelyed·· emergency , Rain w,ettcd down Ihe smo~lq: treatmlmt.AII of· the Injured erlng' ruins Sunday and lire· were firefighters. ,';., lighters . were ,standing by to

Hundreds o~ . 'persons , were prevent further outbreaks, 'forced' to flee, their homes' and ',The fire, 'broke· out ' Saturday a pUblic schooj' was oPened to aflemoonand' nipidly spread provide emergency sbelter and through Ihe hamlet of Bennett· foOd. • villi and Into West Glens Falls,

" I

. tOKYO-About ISO members of the' Japan University, 'Student: Associa­lion (Zengakurtm) staged a ''ban~bomh''demonstratjonin ~ront of the U.S. Embassy here April 2S.th and were met and driven off by waiting police dot squad,~.. Here police and students tangle in' battle which left, some stu~ dents injured but no serious injtftics were reported . ..;..(UPI).

"

.. ,

night demonstration were con· DACCA, East Pakistan, AP-fused, but this was the stolj' Abdul Kasam Fazlul Huq, 92, witnesses lold: '. the architect of East Pakistan,

A crowd had . assembled at died Friday after Ii lengthy ill· the Intersection of Galiano. and ness, fazlul auq was one of the San Rafael streets, one of Ha· leading; members of Mohammed vana's busiest, for a rally in Ali Jinnah's AlI·India Moslem connection wit h this week's League and was the league's May Day celebration, 'president from 1916 to 1921. MINGLE WITH CROWD

About 50 de m 0 n s t r.3 tors , mingled with the crow'd, which

included Saturday night shop· ,pers as well . as.' Cubans as· sembled for the tally. At what

Shi.ce 1890, the U,S. House of Representatives -bas protect· ed . itself, against filibustering by strict rules'to cut speeches short called "cloture rules."

.',. , :'-;1,

.r. ;

.f

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THE DAILY N Ni,'LU, MONDAY.

,

Gander Masons Hold Children/s

. -~ANDER-The Gander

some Lodge held Its day on Easter Monday i basement of their bU'lld~ L· db Ing In erg Ave. Almost on ?red children turned up e JOy three hours of ment supplied by three carto.ons and many other tracho~s. Candy, ice cream soft drmks were Jerved as as hundreds of Easter eg­a.1l of the children, This isS first venture of this ty the Gander Masons, thilPe the first year that the of the new buildin" ' for such a party, The chUdren were treated dance on Easter ~Ionday in the basement, and ments were ~erved.

Twillingate Presbyterial U.C.W. Meets

The two giant boilers seen above will provide the heat for the new multi­million dollar hospital under construetion at Gander.-(Staff photo}

ANSTY'S FALCONS runners up in the Commercial Hockey League Championship at Gander. Front row, left to right: George McMillan; Bill LehI'; Eli:r.5 Hollohan and Dick Perry. Hack row, left to right: Harry Janes; Jdm Haire: Luke Lush; Cyril Duggan; Dick Smyth and Smoky]. Curran, Coach and General Manager.-(Staff photo), ,

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

GANDER-A meeting of executive of Twillingate byte rial United Church was held on April 11th p.m. In the ladies Fraser Road United Hall, Gander.

"

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PERNAL L AN , from

"CANADIAN I M PERIAL BANK OF COMMERCE

Today, when you can buyaJniost~gyOU meanaoffinancingyourp~chase, 'want'ontime'.youmay.nothav.thou~htoftheae ') .. _ .' .," ,,': " , advantage. of om PersonalLoenPlan. . "'" I WIth aBBnk of Commerce Personal Ulan you

, .\ ean obtain your money quickly. Repayments are I. WITH A ' .. SONAL I.OAN YOU HAVE CA." ON HAND . arranged to fttyour own budget, Best of all, you'll "~ •• ;y()uhavethetr~OintoehopandCbargain" , .

.. : I whereVer yOU wish,.i '. ,I" " ; I,. 'find, y~Ur lOcal- branch manager helpful/unBer. " ..' ,'.., ' Btanding.~d'interested in having you for a cus-

, :" WITH' A '1ItIONAI.LOAN·YOU: PAY: LOW ,ncfERor' '~tomer:'ltis'allpart of a tradition we started 25 . . .: , ~~ •• YO"'l1Ie the ,most practical and"econo~ciU ;)e~& ago~s th~ very first bankto offer a Personal

'.' : :, : •• ~ •• ,- 4 >." •• ~ .'.: I I '. • ., '. - ':, '. " '. • -. • ,

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LOan ,Ian to C~nadians. "

When y,ou'd like to enjoy the practical, econom-ical difference between hoping and having, always make your first stop the Bank of Commerce,

. Over ~60 branches to serve you lIIjilll.a1ll

t' ~', .. rlY,;~.'"

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. I?ue to the very POor ,dl~lOn of the roads in the trlct more than half the be~s were unable to Ladie! attending from Gander were from LeW'''nn.' Portervil)e and Gamba,

The meeting began with short devotional period ed by the presidcnt, Mr!, A LeGrow, follOwing which . business of the mecting conducted as follows.

Appointment of m~mbers committees and to tive, nominating members serve on committees of presbytery, acceptance of cation for 1962 and on necessary expenses,

Delegates to attend ence of United Church men meeting were also pointed.

The president read a from the president of ence U. C. W. Infonnlng that Miss Florence Murray MIss Marlon Thomphon visiting the Newfoundland byte rials late In May and conduct schools for leaders ing a two day stay in each byterlal.

It was decided to hold next executive meeting ~ambo, on April 30th, when IS hDped that I full will be able to attend,

Women Prospector

TIMMINS. ant., (CP) -Elaine McKinnon's philosophy "if you can'l lick them, them," '

That's why she's a prospector.

Her husband Donald is tsry • treasurer o( the Prospectors and Developers soclation.

Since Mrs. McKinnon walking-she used to hike miles to work e\'crv when she worked (or a lawyer-it was all ea5Y joining 'her husband in his ays in the bush in search minerals. '

Prospecting was at lirst hobby for the couple but it has become serious

Mrs. McKinnon, naturally, Is Viola president of the pectora and Developers tion, has nine claims In Shaw Township w hie b slaked wIth her busband.

"In a couple of weeks we start drilling and that muns lot of work," she said. DAUGHTER TO JOIN

Next winter the will be joined by a on their prospecting TheIr nlne-month-old Donna has already become customed to spending mOlt the day outside with her

"Donna has very straight I and Is quite big for her age I know she will be good snowshoes," said Mrs, • non. She produced a pllr moccasins, handmade bY Indians, that Donna will, Dn her fIrst trip.

Mrs. McKinnon, who "being warm is half the of outdoor living," quilted jacket, high boots, IIrey woollen socks and a white parka colorful embroidery made Indian at Moose Factory Jarnea Bay.

Her preference Cor walking a matter of choice, not sity. The Mc){Jnnons c;lrs but she prefers to on foot "regardless of weather, rain, shine or . "I think thIs might be tile reaSOll5 I enjoy nMlnee!l: ao mUch. Bush life world Of Its own, no traffic. }.Iso food has a ' all Its own."

KINGLY OPINION An unremitting opponent

tobacco, .KIng James I of land once wrote itA custom loathsome eye, hateful to th, nose, luI to the brain, the lUngs and, In .Unldng fume thereof, resemblllli the horrIble I Ian smoke of the pit thl bottomless." .

ST. JOHN'

r C'adet

omo "Sele Tuesday, l\Iay 1st , day in tl

of top . da. Fal

Air Cadet has been design, Cadet League a:

for the spec, providcd hy R,C.A.F. ea

," ..... .: •. - Day" of careful s, selection co

pro\'incial 31'

to choo~c mo ing Air Cad

ify for special

'Two hundred ar ca dets will be iii

scholarships of actual fly addition. th up to 150

qualified lads I

Lobster Is Mis

The scarch \Va: tinned Sunday for irest coast Newfol

fishermen wh( attend his trap

and scare States Ail

Harmon have b waters of Par Chcsley Youn

report said I gaff ha\'c

is the fa

Algel Turns 8,620 Bowrin;:'s .cal

!crine has COlliI'

ing her more til ulen on the ~ Ihi! !pring,

Tnc final cour the vessel secur -which will gi' tu of the Algel proxima tely ~20U

The Algcrine, mind of Capt. C St. John's, spen'

hunt. Shc of 60.

The crew killt leals but on Iv h; ber was picked mil'ed back 11'01

owned relg.ntlrlg Ser,'

She arrivel with 15.

of the total she rnemben (

Kyle rccei1 t.ach from t he I'

Four Four calls II'

lity firemen ,·c Shortly' after

terday morning to Geor:

I car was on only slight dalll

thh \\" 's ~ak~1

',~ulishl~d by , calls

U!!ective oil bl and a

Cbimnev wood. Damag

Itork was sligh

]

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thrte 1)' other i~ cream ~TTt'd as ~ste:- eg:s :1. This is thiJ type

:1S, Ibis the

te 'ial leets

; ambo. )C~ln willa '~riod :::t, ~11'S. A. t: "'hich m~etln&:

lDws: r members to member~

lt~~ of ):~nce of ~:ld dh.cuo .• 1

! to hold m~tlng

30th. when t uI I .. n<'11 Ii ~:tend.

nen ector

eloperJ .alItlJ In

which huabllld. ! weeks .... I that muIU !re said. JoIN the )[eJj3a1lO

in thereoL horrl1ll·

the pit dIIt

;

ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND The Daily News Mor-iDA Y, APRIL 30,1962

C'adet Week

onlorrow Will Be '~Selection Day"

a~', ~Iay 1st will be an in the RCAF quota. The five, day in the lives of weeks' course will commence of top Air Cadets early in July at clvlllan flying

Falling during' clubs and schools ~paced across Air Cadet Week, :llay the country and successful

i.l> bern designated by the graduates will qualify for the ,'adet League as "Selection Air Cadet flying badge as well .. for the special training as' pril'ate pilot licenses. · , prol'irled h.l· the league Two hundred cadets will be

, .' Ihr n.C.A.F. each summer. chosen for a seven weeks "Sen· .;drrlinn Day" culminates ior Leaders Course" tu be held ' .. ' of carrful screening by at RCAF Station, Camp Bar· ·· .. r 'election committees .1t deu. Operate das a "junior staff

.'~ ~ro"inrial and national, colle~e", the course will train I • • ,

I', 10 choo>r more Ihan 650 ,rarlel~ for future pOSitIOns as ·""nctiIlC Air Cadcts II'ho will I ,··'ficers and instructors with :'.i; for special rewards in . the squadrons.

, A lotal of fiftY'eight cadets • ,~ hundred and fifty of' '\-ill be hand.picked for the

At Titov Gander'

Russian spaceman. Gharman Titov said Sunday at Gander he was looking forward to his visit In the United·States. .

The short, stocky and jovial cosmonaut chatted freely with a small group of airport of· ficials, children and visitors while on a refUelling stop.

The Ilyushin·IS turbo prop plane carrying Tltov, his wife mIn 15 other Soviet delegates look ofC for New York at 3.30 p.m. NDT. Tilov Is to be a guest at an International conference on space research in Weshing· ton.

Rcfcrring to his 17 orhital fli{;hts' around the carth last August, Titov said he would like to make another trip. "It's like an infectious dfsease . . . out others should be given the chance."

HEDGES ON DETAILS

Carpenters Sign Wage Contract

/

With 'Loggers The Newfoundlander Federation the carpenters and the Interna­

of Labour again expressed the tional Woodworkers of America view Sunday that the province's (CLC). 15,000 loggers should be given an The contract was negotiated on opportunity to vote on which of behalf of the loggers between the two unions they want to repre· paper companies and carpenters sent thcm. last month despite strong 'opposi.

TllC Unitcd Ilrothcrhood of Car· lion from the IIVA and local pentcl'S ami Joiners of Amcrica unions. At that !.ime the Feder· (CL(, signed a wage and work· alion also called for a vote. in~ contract Saturday on behalf DISPUTE DEEPENS of the lo~~cn; wilh the ;\nglT i The conlract ~ignin~. JnnU\Hlc, Newfoundland DC\'clopll1ent Co .. : cd Sat\lrd~y hy A. V. (oopcr, :In Ltrl .. of Grand [-'<llls. ;":cwfolllld· i exec\Jti\'~ of Ihe carpcl~tel'~. IVa,

1 bnd ;lnd indicate~ tile ;l~reemcnt ! !he. I~tcst ?c\'clopmcnl In the .I\1~' 'would also he ~I~ncd hy BOll'a· l lsdlcllOn r1I5','lte bctween the cal· i tcr's Ncwfuulldl,lIld Pulp and penters and the I\I'A. hulh ')f I Papct' ~liIls of Cornci' Brook' i whom W:Illt, 10 exclusi\'cly rcprcs·

I Prc.,irlcllt Esau Thoms flf thc; enl the loggers . · .;;:l'I, will be granted nCAF league's top award-a goodwill ':~ 'l'holarships cOl'ering 35 "cxchange visits" trip to o~e .:' I,f actual flying instruct· of eleven different countnes

In addition, the league will under the Air Cadet inter· . up to 150 scholarships national cxchange ~isits scheme. i~3lified lads not included Return parties of cadets from

the United States and Europe

He hedged on giving details of his space flight, saying only that the mission had been\full· filled and that the mechanical systems had fUllctioned perfect. Iy.

CORPS CADET Betty Oakley is shown wclcomin~ Lieut. Colonel W. Ric~]. 'Principal of The Salvation Army Training Collc~~, ~oronto, an,d speCH)'.} ~uest and Leader of The Salvation Army Youth CounCIls, St. John s,-(RPS ,

[-'edcl'alion said Ihe lo~get's I ;11'. Cooper said the contract I should be givcn a choicc bctween i ratified Fr~da)' hy a meeting of ! ---, ; representatlve loggers at Gl'and I NIl Falls. woul~ be sign cd to·day by J C oe Bowater's and the Newfoundlapd •• I Contractors Association which're·

I presents pril'ate wood·lot owners.

Lobsterman will I'isit Canada as gucsts of the League and RCAF.

Names of the prize winning candidates will be announced h~' Air Cadet League Head. quart~rs. Ottawa, early in May.

In addition to the above ac· Trr ~carch was being can : til'ilies. 6500 Air Cadel~ will at· ::~td Sunda~' for a 38·year·old I tcnd the annual summer' camps · roa5t !\clI'foundland lobst I to be held this year at RCAF f •• hmncn who left Friday: ~lation, (;reenwood, N.S.; Saint. l:ttnd his traps. I Jean, P.Q.; Trenton, Ontarioj

P and searchcrs from the land Vancouver, B.C.

Is Missing

I Slates Air Force Base H:,rl11on ha\'e been searching I

'.! lI.llers of Port au Port Bay I NOP To (hc,ley Young of BosII'ar·

\ report said the man's hat I ; :aff ha\'c been found.!

lhe falher of ei:;ht :

Algerine Turns Out

Contest 4 Ridings

The New Democratic Party will cuntest foul' of the seven :'\ewfoundland ridings in lhe forlhcomill!: general election, said Ed finn. lender of Ihe parly in Newfoundland, last

8 620 Pelts 1 ni~;:~re is a possibility that , 11he party 'will have candidates

::)',\nll~'s ~caling I'cssel AI. I i~ .one or more of the other

Speaking through an lnter· preter, Tltov said the length of his stay In thc United States was uncertain.

'I'Hov was clad In 8 light blue ch'liian suit. His wife Tamara, who airport observers classed as "the prettiest Russian wo° man to land at Gander yet," wore a yellow coat with match· ing brown accessories.

Before leaving the Gander terminal building, Titov was summoned to the tcleph·one. He spoke for fh'e minutes with Dr. A. A. Aroutunian, Soviet am· bassador to Canada who was forccd 10 land at Stephenville, Nfld., Sunday, because of weat· her conditions over Gander. Stephenville is 195 miles south· cast 'of Gander hy air. .

John _ Howard Society Appeal

B t B tt' But details of the contract will er U S I not be announced until the sign.

Manager Bert Butt, Conservative

Candidate for the Federal Rid· ing of Trinity·Conception an nounced today that Joseph C. Noel of Carbonear has been ap· pointed as his Campaign :llan· agel' in the June 18th election.

IIII'. Noel was born at Fresh· water, Carbon ear in 1923. He

t ings arc completed, he said. =

McGrath Kicks Off Campaigl1

is associated with Noel iIlotors James A. McGrath held. his and Transit Limited of Carbon· organizational meeting Saturday ear and is active in community afternoon at the P.C. Associa·

1 and social activities in and tion clubrooms in SI. John). I around Carhonear. Mr. Noel is Campaign workers from evcry Secretary Treasurer of the settlement in the rural porliun Sponsoring COlllmiitee 'of the i of st. .John·s East \\·.ere.IH·cscnt Aid Cadets of Canada' Assistant' for ~Ir. McGrath's campaign Secretary of the Carboncar Ki· : "kick·off" mecting inchltling a wanis Club. Treasurer of Ihe' iar~e numher of c\elegatrs fi'om Carbonear ~Iasonic Lodge. : Bell Island. A total of 98 dele·

For many ycars ~Ir. Noel was' bales registered for the meet· associated with the firm of W. inll. ,I. lI\oOl'es Limited and is well' Following a business Illcet· known among the fishermen in . ing a silcial hall! was h·cid. Trinity·Conccption. : Special' gucsts induded lion.

ha~ completed discharg. rJ(hn~s. . . :: hrr more than 8,000 seals I Namc~ of I.hp; cand~date5 for

:,:, 0 th Northem Front the l'arJOus rldmgs Wll!. be an· , n e I nonnced at intervals durmg the

•. ~pr~ng. '. Ilcxt couple oI weeks. ,./ fmal count sho~ed that I' It Is definite however, said \ rs,cl . secu~ed 8,620 pelts. ~Ir. Finn, that NDP candidates

A criminal in jail may he just a caged menace, a rehihiltat· ed criminal however, is a threat removed.

In this particular branch of the work of the John Howard Society much progress has been made, The Society is now conducting a campaign for funds and asks generous dll· zens to send their contributions to P.O. Box 905, st. John's,

'RECEIVES AWARD-The Provincial Commander. Colonel G, Higgins, is shown above rescnting the General's Award for the Corps, Cadet Essay Contest to CaSel Bctty Stockley from Twillingate.-(RPS),

Mr. Noel. in taking the im'l W .. J. Browne, Solicitor Gcn· porlant post of Campaign Man· , era I of Canada. Scnator Joh:n G. agel' for Mr. Butt ia. confident I Higgins. ~[r. James J. Greene, that the Conservatil'e Party will i lIUI.A., Mr. Albert Furey. win Trinity·Conception with a i ~!.H.A., Mr. Richard Greene, big majority. He $tates that I )\[:H.A.. whose prov!nc.ial dis Mr. Butt is well·known in the I tncts are located wlthm the riding and his background is boundaries of the Federal Rid such as to make him an ideal ing of SI. John's East. Three

wlll gll·.e ~ach memo will contest two St. John's rid. r of the A~erme 5 crew ap· ings, Humber.St. George's'SI.

.S~OO. Barbe. and Grand l'al1s.Whi~e Aigenne, under the com I Bay.Labrador of Capt. Charlie Kean of r ___ • ..;. ___ _

John's, spent- six weeks in hunt. She carried a crew

fiJ. T~e trrw killed about 15,000

~i:! but only baH of the num· :t: \\'J~ picked up. The ship

cII back from the hunt last

~n Injured Collision

Flight To . UK Returns

A 42·vear·old mule resident Inr onl~' olher ~ewfoundland ' of Twilllngate received head in· Board of Trade members and

in the 1962 hunt was the juries and a broken leg when their wives who have been ownl'd .by the Earle he was struck by a car while visiting the United Kingdom

;'""1";,,,, Sen'ice of Carbon· crossing LeMarchant Road at are scheduled to return to She arrh'ed back from the 1.40 yesterday morning. Newfoundland today.

with 15,000 pelts-half I The man.was conveyed to the

members of the coal.burn· Dr. McDonald and Dr. Cowan April 6 on a business here and

t~r total she had killed. The I Gencral Hospital. examined by The group of 86 lell

",'Ie receil'ed about S270'1 and detained. . ____ ..:.:p_le_a_su_l'_c_tr_l_p. _____ _

from the hunl. I CNR-Calling Tender Four Calls I

Four ralls were receil'ed t,1 !Irrmcn yesterda~·.

byiFor Waterford Bridge Canadian National Railways of reinforced . concrete abut·

is calling for tenders In con· ments, piers and deck, and nee lion with construction or a steel fence panels in the build· new highway bridge over the ing of the new bridge. . Waterfurd River here. The Instructions, plnns an~ forms hridge Is part of the more than of cuntract can be obtained $I.(WO.OOO expunsiun prugrulII Irom the Regional Engineel"s for CN's SI. John's yard.· Office at Moncton or the Area

The bridge wlll be the third Engineer's OCIlce at st. Jolm's. to be bullt as part of the pro· Closing dute for tender! Is Muy

John Enters

, .

Guy

Dock The Bell Island·Portugal

Cove ferry John Guy is at pres ent on drydock in St. ,Tohn's.

The ferry will rec'eived her annual overhaul and refit, be· fore rcsuming service on the nine·mile tickle between the two points.

While the Guy is on drydock -which will be about one week -the service will be maintain cd by the smaller ferry Kipawo.

Make Police 18 Arrests

I Eighteen arrests were made 'by city police over the week· end.

Ten men were arrested for drunkenness, two for impaired driving, one for opcrating a motor vchicle with no licence or muffler, one under warrant app.tI'(~ntly insane, three given ill charge for ueing drunk anti disurucl·Jy In the home, and one given In charge for assuulting wife and curryJng a dangerous

S~ortl)' after 8 o'clock ycs· ~;j,Jr morning firemen were lttd 10 George Street where I fU was on firt'. There was t::) ~Ii~hl damage. At 11.40 last I:tl lh~\' wt're called to l!;;;l'; Bakery where tlust t<~d an electrical dUct had ~~: fire. The blaze was eX· \:;Ji,hed by a hoosIer.

gram to expand the Newfound· 17;,,' ___________ w_ll..;,uJl=-o_n_. _______ _ land capital yard from I93·car --' to li14·car capacity. Already one highway bridge spanning the CN tracks is nearing complet· 500 Attending . Rotary

Motorcade for Prime Minister Wednesday

I representative for the riding in other Conservative candidates the House of Commons. in the forthcoming Federal

election were also present: Mr. Bill Smith, Humber St. George's

Dragger Mr. Bert Butt, Trinity·Concep­tion,lIlr. Alex Stacey, Burin·

The central (ampaign head· Duckworth Street. down Pres· Burgeo. Mr. Terry Trainor was quarters of the Progressive eott Street to Water st. west d . f th t' d

on 'Vater Street to Crai~mi1lar Ashore an chalrman 0 e mee mg an Conservative Party released the ~ 111 111 G 'tl 'I f th St b f I AI'enue, to Cornwall Avenue, rs. c r~ I, WI e 0 e • details of the route to eo· J h' E t d'd t h

east on Le~larchant Road, Hal'· 0 n s as can I a e was 05' lowed by the motorcade from t Torbav 'I'erminal when the vey Road, Military Road to Refloated ess. d

• Newfoundland Hotel. 'All those present· reporte Prime Minister of Canada, Hon. f th .. d John G. Diefenbaker arrives in The motore~de will trav.el rom elr varLOUS areas an St. John's on Wednesday, May. thrOUg~ the elty at .ten to flf· GRAND BANK-The dragger there was unanimous agreement 2nd. . t~en mdes an, hou~. m order to Red Diamond VIII went ashore that a hard.working, aggressive

The Prime Minister arrives gIve st. .John s CltJzens ev.cry inside the entrance to Fortune I campaign is in the making for at TorbarTerminal at 4.00 p.m. opportumty to. greet the PrIme Harbour early Saturday morn 1MI'. McGrath, the same kind of The motorcade will leave the Minister and hls party. ing. The ship was iffitering I effo~t that. swept Mr. lIlcGrath Terminal at 4.15 p.m. The ., port when her steering meehan· I to victory m the Federal cam· motorcade' wiJI drive to the city El'ery OPP?~tul1Jty WIll be a~. ism went out of order and the! paign of 1958 with a majority 01 vI'a Portu~al Cove Road, New Corded the CltJzens ,o(~ St.t JOdhn s dra""er went on a shoal on the nearly 9,000 votes.

~ to meet the Prune., mIS er ur'l bO.

Cove Road, King's Bridge Road,. h' ··t B d tile rallv north slde of the harbour en· mg IS l'lSI. es es . Ordnance Street, west on in the C.L.B. Armoury on W cd· ' trance. M

nesday evening, the Prime ~lin· The dragger wa~ inward To anage . Addr. ister will be on Water Street bound from the banks and had . essmg and the waterfront on Thurs· ninety thousand pounds of fish H V II day morning .Those parlici· aboard. appy a ey

C1 b paling in the motorcade and KI·Wanl·S u othcr motorists along the rotlle The dragger was successfully i will refrain from sounding r~floated at high tide Saturday, Arthur R. Colbourne of Step­horns in the area from the top afternoon. The tug Kelligrews : hem'ille has been appointed of \Jammon Avenue to Prihve was sliccessful in pulling the I town manager of Happy Valley, of Wales Stred. 'I'hi! is a has· ship into de,'p water on the i Labrador.

Captain Nicholas Bl'ango, U. S. N. Chief of Staff, Airbol'lle Early Warning Wing, Atlantic, will ue the guest speahr al the St. John's KiwBuis Cluu's wc~k· Iy dinner here tu·morrow. ,

April 28-May <1 Is being ob· served by Kiwanis International as "Canada· U.S. Good Will Week". It will commemorate the 145th anniversary of. the signing of the Rush·Bagot Agreement, signed April 28,

pitul wne aod unnecess~l'y first attempt. Examination nf I Mr. Colhourne. who ,pl·evious· nobes are Jtriclly pl·ohibited. the dral!g~r indicated no IllY worked at Harmon ,.\ir t'orce Coopel'alion of eili~ens would ~eri()u5 dama)!e h,1d been call~' Hasp, will cummcnre his new \.II! gl'~aUy "Pl'l·~ciated. ed. i dulies May 15.

SPECIAL PURCHASE ion.

('.her calls received were a ~t:til'e oil burner on William I~ltt and a fire around a t-'::n~y woodwork on Duggan ~~"!ft. Damage to the wood· t1:1; \\'a~ slil:ht.

Thr. seI'ond hillhway hridge' i~ pari or the ~amc thorough· farc hein~ constructcd by CN

, 10 link Watcr Slr~et ~nd the i Soulh Sidc n~ad .in r!ace of

.\ :1.', ycar.old woman resident . Mill Lan~" which I.~ bem!:. abo

Convention' Here S . 1817,' It demilitarized the oon 'boundary between the United States and Canada. Sleeping Bags By Car

. 'hr~ Sireet wa~ taken to the : ~lIrh~d hylhe yard's .cxp~ns!on. ~rr.1 I\ospilal and found to 1 Contractors are belll!: II1Vl~Crl

;1. head injuries when she to tender for the construcilon 'i. hurt in a two·car collision ";1 look place whilc car No.

while making a Icft turn Balsam Street into

's Road collided with car . 11619.

accident happened at ycsterday afternoon. At roeneral Hospital the woo was found to h31'e . suf. an abrasion on the leC!

of her head. She was de· for obserl'ation.

Last Day. On Income. Tax

,1),\ay is the deadline for the .l!ient of Income ·tax and the

oUlce in. SIr Humphrey Building will bea busy

with lut·minute returns made.

,l'~nallies ueprovh!rd for who do not make an In·

W return by Aprll.3D.

Fishermen's Centre to Open

The Fishermen's Centre in the King George V Institute, Water' Street, Is to re·open to fishermen shortly.

The Centre opens In ,Slarly May and closes late In October. Last year more than 10,000 from many countries vislicd the centre.

The Cenlre, which was organ. lzed . by the St.. John's Rolary Club for visiting foreign fisher· men and local fishermen. as well, Is piace.· where the men' can gather after working hours for 'certain forms of recreation -such, as' music, . write letters, read books, play carib.

It open'ed In' ~950, 'and each year the' cenlre . needs about $.,000 Itl operate. . The :.funds are raIsed ,from donatloiu, by local bUsinesses. '

51. ,John's will soon see the long he rememhered. The morn· largest convention evcr held ins scssions will be devoted to here. The. 1962 District Assem· addressed and discussions by blv Conference of the' Rotary highly qualified Rotarians . ciub take5 place .June 10th )'uesday afternoon every visit· through June 141h and is ex· ing Rotarian and' Rotary will peeled to be attended by 250 be guests of members of the men and womcn Irom the ~lari· famous group system of the Rot· time Provinces and 150 RotaI" ary Club of st. John's'. The lans and their wives for a total guests will have an opportunity attendance of over 500 people. to see some of the historical The visitors will occupy, all of and beauty spols of SI. John'sj the Newfoundland Hotel and a enjoy typical Newfoundland large part of the Kenmount dishes and visit in the homes Hotel. oC mcm bel'S. Wednesday after.

An extremely Interesting pro. noon will be free for shopping, grom has been arranged by golf nnd visiting and prepar· the conference committee under ing for the big' event at night, the chairmanship of past presi. the ball in honour of District dent Darroch Macglllivary. Governor H. K. Wyatt, recept· There 'will he two big reeept. ion, dinner, entertainment to ions: one by the civic govern· be followed hy danelng. ment and the olher hy ~he pro· Mrs. Ernest MacDonald, wiCe I'incial government. There ·wlll of the local president of the he three very special speakers: Rotary Club is head of an active The Han. J, n. Smal1wood, Pre· committee to provide enter· mier of Newfoundland; Col· talnment for the visiting wives, onel the' Hon. Sir Leonard' or Rotary Anns as they are Outerbrldge, former Lieutenant called. Governor of Newfoundland, and This is only the thIrd oeeas· Mr, H. G. R. Mews, Mayor o( Ion on which the Newfound· the city of si. . ,·John's. The land Club have heen hosts to a delegates will be officially weI· district, confer~nce. The last oe· crimed Ip Newfoundland by the cnslon was in 1936. Many of the Hnn. Campbell Macpherson, visilors will he comin~ 10 Nr.w· Lieutenant Governor of New· foundlnnd for lhe firol time and foundland. . hove expressed great interest iQ

The lour day affair should viSiting this province. .

Captain Brango's attendance at the dinner meeting in the Newfoundland Hotel here will honor the occasion.

Other attending will· include Premier J. R. Smallwood and military and civil representa. tives from the' United States' and Canada. .

GNIR Paving Contract

PORT AUX BASQUES.....; Canadian National Railways Is calling tenders for the paving of the Station Road and park. ing area at Port Aux Basques, R. P. Puddester, regional en· gineer announced today.

The half·mile long road leads from the Traris·Canada Highway to the station and ferry tel" minal. It was last paved anum· bel' of years ago, and it has been decIded to renew the vav· ing.

Plans; forms of contract and specifications are available to bidders at the Regional En· gincr.r's Office in Moncton Rnd . 'ihe Are~ Engineers Office in 51. .John's. Closing .date for ten· ders is May 15,

• Adult Size •. Green Rubberized BoUom • Warm Kasha

Lining

• Full Length Zipper

8·95 ONE GALLON CONTAINER

• Assorted Coloured Plastic

Ideal for Ca":!ping, Boating and • Feather-lite

P', I 1.19 len es etc.

, I i ' ,.

Page 4: Scviets Rap acml an - Memorial University of Newfoundlandcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ""mi>rr

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,I ., " ,. I j' , " •

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I , "tHE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFL..,., MONDAY. APlUL 30, 196~

fHE DAILY NEWS Newfoundland's Only Morning Paper

Th~ DAILY NEWS Is • morning paper established In 1894. and published It tbe News Building, 355-359 Duckworth Street, St John's, Newfoundland, b;f Robinson & Company. f.imlted.

ME~IBER OF

THE CAl'lADIAN PRESS

"The'~~,s G~odRea~n'-"to B~lieve This Is Risky!"

The \ Canadian Press Is exclusivel1 , ' entitled to the U3e for republication of all news despatchel In thl. paper credit.

'~""~l..r" '. ed to It or to the Associated PreSi or

.: YEARLY SUBSCRIPTION RATES . .:. .. eulda .M.................... $12.00 per annum

United KIngdom Ind all fore!p countries .... $14.00 per annum

:; Authorlzed.s second class mill, ;:: Post Office Department. Ottawi.

Reuters and also the local news publlsh-ed therein.

All Press Servlces and featUre artic1et In this paper are copyrighted and tileD reproduction It prohibited.

• Member Audit Burel.

.f Cltculatloa.

MONDAY, APRIL 30, 1962

..... ----------------------------------------------------,Relations With Labrador

A resident of Happy Valley hap· pened to remark a little while ago that the people of that community had little affinity with the inter­ests. lr<lditions and sentiments of the i~lal1r1 of Newfounrlland.

It cl'lllld. (1{ cour~e. be l1sked why they ~hould hl1\'e <Illy real sense of identification'! While it is true that along the coast of northern Lab­rador the Provincial Division of ~abrador Affairs has assumed on a pa lernalistic basis the functions formerly performed by the trading posts of the Hudson's Bay Com­p,any. and while it is equally true fhat most of the social services in Happy Valley derive from the Gov· ernment in St. John's, remoteness' 3ncl pa~t ~'ears of neglect have harcli.\· been conducive to a close a~'lll'ialion of ideas.

If that be the case in Happy Val­le.\·. what is the situation likely to be in Western Labrador where Quebec influences run s t ron g, where distances from the core of acti\·it~· in Newfoundland are maxi­mal. and where community life tends to become highly self-centred because everything re\'olves around the single industry of an isolated region?

Newfoundlanders who settle in western Labrador may hold for a time to the prideful traditions of their native. island. But a new generation growing up in that area will be as remote from these tra­ditions as if they were living in California. In their own self·con· tained world whose communi· cations with Montreal are better

::than those with this Island, in a bi·lingual society, they will be most likely to think of themselves as be-

longing to a new country with only the traditions they may establish for themselves in their lodge in the wilderness,

This may be an inevitable situ­ation which nothing can avert. On the other hand, ·it does seem also to impose certain obligations 011 the Government of Newfoundland who should foresee the trend and seek as far as possible to underwrite the conditions in which a sense of identity with the history and de­velopmel),t of our Island could be maintained.

There should be frequent visits from political leaders, educationists, and others to talk to the people. of Western Labrador and prove to them that there is a direct interest in them and that they are citizens of the Province of Newfoundland. Newfoundland history on a realistic basis should be taught in the schools. The closed circuit tele· vision station of the region should carry a number of programmes de. signed to establish this sense of identity. Regular visits of high school children to Newfoundland for specially.conducted tours of the principal centres of the Island shOUld be arranged. The alternative is a complete loss of any sense of association and this could ultimate­ly have political repercussions. (

It is desirable to mention these things now because whatever needs to be done should be planned soon. The longer the situation is let alone, the slimmer will be the pros· pect of maintaining any sense of provincial identity, And if its main­tenance is a good objective, no time must be lost in giving it. a solid and enduring foundation.

The Twelve-Mile Limit Slrong arguments have l~tely

been ad\'anced in favour of the arbitrary extension o[ Canada's ter­rotorial waters to a distance of twelve miles.

The force of these arguments is · incontestible. The three-mile limit is an anachronism, a relic of the days when the maximum range of a cannon was three miles, It should ha\'e been generally abandoned years ago in acknowledgment of changes that have since occurred.

The fact remains that Russia has arbitrarily established its own tweh'e-mile limit and that Iceland and Norway have taken the same step for the protection of their in-

to Newfoundland lies in the nature of our bays and the fact that for­eign fishing vessels can penetrate deeply into these inlets and still keep within the terms of the three­mile limit. That is a manife~t ab­surdity which should not be toler­ated,

Of course, no practical limit can do much to preserve the fishing resources of the Grand Banks against the kind of intensive prose­cution by large modern trawlers that is now going on, There the question of international regulation in the common interest must be sought.

· shore fishing groun~s, Little Ice- But the fact remains that the · land has been able effectively to, twelve-mile limit would help great­:. maintain her unilateral action in ly to increase the security of the

the face of strong opposition from Newfoundland inshore and offshore the British Government. fishing activities and it is the simple

:. A particular reason for the ap- duty of the Government of Canada :; plication of the twelve-mile limit to provide the required protection. '. '. :: :: .. ~. , ;: ~.

Official- Regimental I-listory : Much has been written from time The pity is that we have had to ;.to time about the citizen soldiers wait nearly fifty year~ to have the tof Newfoundland in the first world history prepared and printed. It rwal' but nothing has ever come of should benefit, however, not only t;plans for the preparation and pub- from the choice of its compiler who :~ication of an official history of the is a distinguished Canadian war ~;Royal Newfoundland Regiment. historian,Colonel G. W. L .. Nichol­r: However, a good deal of res~arch . son, bur also from the perspective f:must have been done and the in which the operations of the ~ecords must include most of· the Regilnent may now be viewed. ~imporlal1t despatches that rel.1te to The ne:-v history will fill. an im· gihe activities or the regiment in pOl'tant gap in t~~ bibliography of 'Scotland, Gallipoli, England. and NeY'foundl~nd, an~ it might. con-

Eranee. Much of the local material tain to advantage a prefaratory nd personal storlesof interest to chapter in which would be sketched he compiler of an official history the history of the original New­

• ~ .. houldalso be. available, ~n putting' loundlalld Regiment which fought his part of the st~l'Y together the so,well.inthe defence otMontreal 'ritings of the 'late' Caplain.: Leo and Upper Canada in ·the ~merican urphy ,should be, particularly War of IndepEmdenc'e and the War

.~uablt. '~ .,' . . of:1~~~-14. . .

, ,

-- Auld Lang Syne -April 30, 1947:

Weather: Clear, becoming overcast this afternoon, light winds of 15 m.p.h.

• 0 •

AVERAGE U POUNDS Young harps bcing discharg·

ed from the S.S. Eagle are aver· aging 41 pounds. At six p.m. yeslcl'day a lola 1 of 6.283 pelts had been landed. this ind'lbd 4,866 young harps. l,1~O bed· lamers and 297 old harps. It is understood that the vessel will finish discharging on Satur· day. Flippers on sale yesterday were fetching $4.00 per dozcn.

. * ~ • THACKERY CAN BE

REFLOATED Captain Wright and Chirf

Engineer Barlow, O.B.E., offi· cers of the S.S. Thackery are optimistic teguarding the reo floating of their ship orf the reefs near Lumsden. E(forts to refloat the ship will be made in the near future and the tug Foundation Josephine and the salvage ship Traverse, which will be used in the operation

are now in port awaiting orders to proceed to the position of the grounded freighter. . *. III \

APPOINTED CANON On time Curate at SI. Mary's

Church, Rev. Herbert L. Pike, a Newfoundlander. has becn appointed Canon of Chelmsford Cathedral, filling the stall of King Harold. His appointment follolVs outstanding services in bombed areas dming the wal' years. Rev. Pike left hcrc some 15 ycars ago after duties Rt St. ~Iary's. and also as Warden of Feild Hall.

• • • SEALING VESSELS ARRIVE

HERE The motor vcsscls Swile and

Young Hood. which prosecuterl the seal fishery for their own· crs the Fisherman's Trading Company, Port Union, arrived in port yesterday morning and are now discharging pelts at .Toli's Southside premises. Bc; fore coming to this port both vessels harbored at their home port during Sunday. The Swile hails for 3,400 pelts while the

Young Hood for 1,800. MARKETING PROBLEM

* • • BEING TACKLED

A considerable programme for agriculture has been plan· ned for this season, said Di· rector of Agriculture Gills, in­terviewed yesterday by the DAILY NEWS. chief among which might be considered the effort to revive the agriculture socicty movement. The depart· ment intends to encourage this rcvi\'al chicfly along the lines of marketing, in the hope of assisting this sid~ of agricul· ture. .

• • • "SEABEE" ON MERCY

FLIGHT Far over the forests of north·

ern Ncwfoundland this morn· ing skimmed the "Seabce" of the Newfoundland Aero Sa!cs Flect, with Capt. Erie Black· wood at its controls. Object, another "mercy flight". this time to bring a sick woman from her lonely residence at Jack­son's Arm to hospitalization at Gander, .

- Strength For The Day-By EARL L. DOUGLAS

WHAT'S TilE RUSH

We are accustomed to the warning, "Stop, look and lis­ten." AI railroad crossings we give it some attention, but as a general admonition regarding our everyday activities we pay ,light attention to it.

In other words, we are all 100 likely to make hasty de­cisions and 10 plunge precipit. antly into course of action. There are occasions when we have only ~ little time-per·

.- What THEY WANT BRITAIN·

TO JOIN FIRST The Montreal Gazette)

European political unity has, for the time being, been stalled by a complex situation from which Britain,' not yet a memo bel' of the European family, is most likely to benefit.

France, West Germany and Italy produced a plan for a loose European confederation at the recent discussions in Paris. Belgium and the Nether· lands brought fonvard a plan for I more closely integrated Europe. There seemed to be a deadlock between the rival plans.

But the real intentions of the Dutch and Belgian negotiators

- wcre probably reveiled when they asked that no decision on political organization be taken until Britain had joined the Common Market, and was ready to participate in political dis· cussions,

Belgium anri the Netnerlands seel]1 to' want British partici· pation to be ensured, as a counter-weight to France and West Germany, belore they will accept political union. This seems to be their real objective because, Ironically, Britain is more favorable to a loose eon­federation of Europe than the Dutch-Belgian plan for an inte· grated Europe. And the Dutch and Belgians seem to be pre­pared to make many concessions to French wishes. provided

, Britain is a party to any agree. ment.

The result seems to be that President de Gaulle Is being given I taste of his own tactics, He can achIeve his plan for a loose confederation of Europe, but only If he gives way to the Dutch and the Belgians, and makes possible Brltlsh' portlci. pation, In effect, Belgium anI!. the. ~ctherland~ seem to be. .saylng . that President de Gaulle's plans are assured if Britain I! brought in, and condemned if she il left out.

haps a split second-to make a decision, But in most de­cisions we can take a reason­able amount of time to mull things over.

We speak 'of hasty marriages. Such rclationships entcrcd into hastily frequently lead to the divorce court. We can all reo member times in our lives when we made a hasty business de· cision. or decided upon some course' of action which we later regretted. Tbere is such a thing of course, as spending too much time in thinking about an issut. until we become introverted and

Others 'Are CANADIAN FRENCH

Milwaukee Journal Canada's first bilingual dic­

tionary goes on sale this month. This should be welcome news for many Canadians, especially those French in Quebec who are constantly complaining that their language and heritage reo ceive little recognition from the rest of the country.

For Years, many Canadians have relied on imported French­English dictionaries to over­come language difficulties. But these offer little help with the peculiar brand of French that has developed 'in Canada.

• • • SENATE AGE UMIT

Victoria Times Mr. Dielenbaker is merely

placing an age limit on the Sen. ate without providing any quali. fications of character or ability. If he is not prcpared to RO farther than that-and no primc minister has been willing to do so-then he might wisely consider the appointment of 5cnators for a term oC years, reo newable after the age of 75, if the incumbent is sti\1 physic· ally and mentally vigorous.

• • • CARS AND BUSES

Kingston Whlg·Standard Planners are agreed on one

point-you cannot superimpose one cily's solutions on an. other's traffic problems. Each must have its own plan to meet its own peculiar problems. As for the private vs. publie trans· portation controversy. it.is clear that both are essential and each has a definite role to play In our society. It is obvious, then, that all planning must be de. signed to meet the require­ments of both.

MISS CANADA Peterborough Examiner

We are all for beauty con. tests, but the attraction Is di. minished when we kn6w there is someone in the background countine the profits. LOllically,

morbid. But more often we are on the side of too hasty a de­cision.

What's the rush anyway? Is it not true Ihat in making most 0[ our decisions we can at least take a little time? If this is true. then let us not make the mistake of precipitant, or per· haps reckless, action. An extra hour, an extra day. an extra year given to reflection on some vital issue may someday pay bi!: dividends.

A little reflection and self­restraint now may save a lot of trouble later on.

Saying -the Miss Canada competition should comprise the most tal­ented and beautiful girls in the country, Without wishing to be ungallant, we' suspect tbat this has not been so. Perhaps it is because many prospective contestants withdrew when they discovered that they were sim­ply being used to make money for someone else. Besides. it does seem odd that the fran­chIse for the Miss Canada Page. ant is granted by the Miss America Organization.

* • • ATLANTIC GRAIN SUBSIDY

(Halifax Chronicle Herald) The grant of a temporary

special subsidy on the transpor. tation of corn into the At'antic Provinces by the federal gov. ernment is a sensible supple. ment to the policy of assistinJ( the movement of feed grains into this area.

The new five dollars per ton subsidy shOUld help to restore to the eastern Iarmer the com· petitive position he enjoyed with Ontario and Quebec live­stock and poultry producers befor~ last summer's drought in Western Canada, and heavy grain sales to Communist China, combined to nullify the government's 22-year·old feed grains assistance policy

The potlatch orice was the winter's main soc i a I event among Indians from Orgeon to Alaska. Dancing, feasting and singing led up to extravagant giving in which the host often . improverlshecl himselk and his clan in a franzied bid for prestige.

GERMAN LEGEND The forget·me·not Is the sym·

bol of friendship and tme love, In 'German legend, "forget me not" fy a lover who drowned· trying to ge: the flower 'for hIs sweetheart.

Sque~ching Steel Price Clears Aid For Congress

By PETER EDSON

WASHINGTON (NEA)-There was a lot than the three-tenths-of-a-cent-per-pound and decrease in the price of steel involved in the troversy between President John F. Kennedy and Steel Corp. Board Chairman Roger M. Blough.

Even though the three-day showdown fight between big government and big bUsi­ness has been suspended by an armistice, several fundamental questions of economics and politics remain:

How free is the free enterprise system to be? What is government's proper role toward

iness?

Are the national interest and the consumina lic interest more important than maintenance ~f free enterprise system-meaning the rights of management and free labor to do as they please their own interests?

"The public be damned' philospphy is now dead. It was given this name 79 Veal'S a.((o by railroad empire builder William Henry Vanderbilt when he was asked if his New York Central wouldnt have to put on a luxury train to match a Psnnsylvania flyer.

The fact that these two railroads are now atill~ a merger ust to survive indicates how have changed, Survival is also a principal issue th\,! new wage and working conditions contract bein.q negotiated between the railroad and the railway brotherhoods under the changed ditions of reduced employment through ";;';JlIlV1U~II,a change and mergers.

There is no such thing as a completely free economy any more. Employers cant dictate wages or prices at

labor can't strike for all it can get, the public damned in between.

Over the years government has imposed restraints on business monopolies and chi­canery, on complete irresponsibility and strong-armed lawlessness by organized labor.

Many people will argue that neither straints has gone far enough yet. But capitalists and labor statemen have appeared time to time. They have recor~nized the futility strike violence and price conspiracy alike. And have acted accordingly. the public interest served first.

In the recent wage-contract negotiations there was every appearance that capital and labor leaders had grown up and matured. At government insistence they had settled their differences several months before the existing contract expired.

A costly stc-ike was avoided by labor and iness dislocation was avoided by managcment. public interest was further sen'ed by an '," ·o.o",,,'nl

which did not freeze the wage cost level but did yield to inflationary pressures too much.

Everybody seemed happy. Government. labor, management and the whole business community all broke into sprin:~ songs of peace and 'continued uninflated prosperit)'.

This condition has now been restored at least. after big steel marched its prices up the in defiance of government and marched them again in deference to the national interest and opinion, with a strong assist from a gratifyin.':! festation of independence by the Inland and steel companies operating under the best of a competitive, free enterprise system.

Before these events of the past weck. the Kennedy administration had been suspect of antibusiness inclinations. It had first con­cern was increasing economic growth rates, creatind full employment, reducing the im­pact ot business recessions and industry­cripplin~ strikes.

Before Congress now is a portfolio of legislation affecting business. It includes tax ion with new incentive and depreciation all. foreign trade expansio? with o~~er im:enllve.s protection against unfair comp~tlhon fr0f!! abload, complete overhaul of transportation poltcy to. business and a bill to create a private corporation operate space communication satellites.

With the steel price controversy resoh'­ed, the Congress can legislate on these issues in a calmer atmosphere. If decisions had been taken in the climate of a government. business-labor.public interest war. everyo~e would have suffered. But big business as Its own worst enemy would have suffered mo!~.

Air Cadets Visit Here

On TUe.'!day morning at ap· proximately 1130 a.m, RCAF and cirilian busses rolled into Station Torbay carrying Air Cadets from 567 Clarenville Squadron and 589 Carbonear Squadron.

After lunch in the combined mess tbe Cadets were taken on a short tour of Sl. John's by FlO Bob Love, the Asst/Senior Air Cadet Liaison Officer for Newfoundland, and FlO Ken Kimball, the Air Cadet Liaison Officer for Clarenvl\le. While one Squadron of Cadets toured SI. John's the other Inspected a Search and Rescue Lancaster, which was placed on Static Dis· play Cor the occasion .

After ~upper the Cadets were once again kept busy, this time with sports In the large Station Recreation Centre. Under· the leadership of FlO Kimball, and ,

FlO Lou MacAul~)'. th~ spent three very hours at Volleyball. and swimming.

The next mOl'nin;: alter hearty breakfast, the . were given a flight by an RCAF Dakota Halifax, Nova Scotia. cadet was given about 30 utes .flying until the closed in making furlher ing for the day impossible.

At 2 p.m. after lunch, 84 ed but happy air cadets cd busses once again, on the long journey carrying with them memories of their day 011

RCAF Slation.

SATURN'S STATISTICS

Mean distance of the Saturn from the sun Is d 885.9 million mile. an . periodIc time (time for the planet to make • plete revolution around sun) is 291,2 years', .. illlnJ11.' to the Encyclopedia

Plan

thOl OU (

(Last of Three By HAROLD S

NEW YORK, (l'I on the !

Is an iron public this ye

250 times as cigarettes as i' cancer drives

It is upon ciga medical mel

blame for is growing

DUmbers. present odds

living a lung can< 20 to one_

_".·l~.,". will gl This abo

of Str: ~lll:anasee, Fla., U

One reason for ~lity among lun! time is because t like some other body, cannot be tirelY. There is J

llitute. Surgery which

cbeck the spreal lise through R 1 las no~ been hi /III.

How. then. cal It combatted?

• • The anSWer, s

thorities on the i

pie: Quit smokir Or, if you can

away, have chcsi frequently. says Grant, of the Ar society staff.

In addition tl olher influential zations hal'c t cudgels against duct on which public spends S ally-about twici eign aid cxp American Publil the National Tul dalion and the Health Service warning flags 0

Just what is II First of all.

prol'ed 1 hat tob tually causes th statistics as COl however. are II

The incidcnc, c!r among hca\' Iween 20 and 31 15 it is among not smoke

A youth en tareer of heaw J one-in-12 ch: Illy dyi ng frot The odds for Ibout one in 30

Chances of c disease increasl portion to ci: per day.

Incidence of risen with the IDee of cigare few decades.

Incidence of eomparatil'ely persons who Imoking for a

• On the olhel

Gre~ In 1

QUEBEC-T the Fisheries of Canada hal apeutic values ducts which " unique in the human life anc

Dr. J. L. R addressing Ii lJJceting of th, til of Canada 'ery importan linerged from IIrDational mE I:onths. For instanc

fries product! International ~igc; fish pos Important anc tuents for Which onlv a prodUcts .cont

'4Also'," Dr. P(}Ssess some ties that are ing underslor !till being act Illay prove to Prolong3tlon I

health. "FiSh conta

the essential Protein, its fa have some c are shared b~ Parable avail:

Fish is in triUon for 0 of being just lood, Dr. Kas

"Fish oils ienerous pori

. bts and nu II laturated" fa 1bls highly 1

Of Illost fish 0

Page 5: Scviets Rap acml an - Memorial University of Newfoundlandcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ""mi>rr

-ess

:ciown busi­

,istice. :omics

::ning :~C'e of ~:s of . plcasc

I :'cars :illiam i if his I, (In a

f!~·cr.

l'CS

\lbJic

1~t'(\,t'd

~,i chi­, and

.: l:ibor.

':!~-\~ir'ln~ ::,,; and ·.::tured. ~ctt I C'n

~ Cr!"C the

:'~ ann c';; C'nt.

. ;~-:;};cnt. ~1.:!'~nc~~

,(""I!1CS of 'Qrit\'.

£ DAILY NEWS, ST. NFLD. MONDAY. APRIL 1962

Plan For Survival: 3

,A.lthough Cause Still Argued, .Capitol

Now Playing

;y ou C~ Fight Cancer Of Lung ,

"DOCTOR IN LOVE" IN COLOR

. Alter the highly successful 'Doctor' films, Betty Box and Ralph Thomas now produce their perfect prescription for flrst·rale entertainment. . • the super·tonlc labeiled "DOC· TOR IN LOVE."

d.ast of Three Articles) ~)' HAROLD SHEERAN ~I:\I' YORK, (NEA)-Super­

"us,;.'" ,;eO on the lung cancer · •.. ,~lrm is an irony The Amer· · <;~ public this year will spend

'""t :!50 times 8S much money ,ci~arellcs as It will donate : cancer drives ':: i.' upon cigarettes which

"l~" medical men pile much , .. tht blame for a disease

.::ch is growing sharply In •. -"hrrs. . F:t.'cnt odds against sur­

: ,,:n~ a lung cancer attack are ,.~ut 20 to one. AboUI 45,000 \~r:lran~ will eel the discase

· • ~!lii2. This about equals the ;"Jlauon of Stratford. Conn.; ::I·lhmr. Fla .• or Quincy. III.

.. ,1"t reason for the high mar· If ~monl: lung cancer vic· . ;, because the lungs. un­,orne other parts oC the

· I.". ran not b~ removed en· :;~\ There is no pla~lic 5ub· r.+ ~: r :;r:rry which attempts to .A thr ~pread oC the dis· '" !hrOIl~h A stricken lunl: ~ ~"t hren hi~hly succcss·

'::,,, then. can lunl: canccr • :'mhatlNI?

• • • Iht anSWer, sal's many au·

. :";!:Ir~ on the subject. is sim· : ~ Quit smoking.

):. If ~'ou can't stop pufCing ;.,:. h~\"r chest X·rays taken '·t;"rn:ly. says Dr. Roald N.

· ;;,~:. of the American Cancer · ;"r" <tarC

. '.

"Doctor In Love", featuring a brilliant cast, Michael Craig

.. ' gets of( to a roaring start and never lets up, even under the anaesthetic, In this crazy com· edy of the medical profession at its maddest. Health is reo served for the patients when the doctors nre sick-love sick!

In this, the latest of his best sellers, author Richard Gordon introduces • new type of doc· tor "hero" portrayed by Mich· ael Craig-a riotous follow·on

. 'from his recent comedy hit "Upstairs And Downstairs" by the same producer director team, Betty Box and Ralph Thomas. ;

Leslie Phillips "carries on" in. his inimitable comic style.

The story tells how these two medicos become Involved with the beautiful, slightly serious Nikki, played by Virginia Mas­kell, and t.he fluffy·headed. skit· tish "Kitten" Strudwick, played by Carole Lesley-not to men· tion two strip·tease girls (they have to be !een), Joan Sims and Liz Fraser.

Throughout the picture, like a gigantic cloud edged with silver, looms that formidable, bellowing, likeable figure. Sir Lancelot Spratt, again played by the Inimitable James Robert· son Justice.

'.;~ ';,dditio~ to the A.C.S" ''',7 mfluential health organi· :,' ,'no hare taken up the

X.RAY PLATE at top showl normal, healthy lung. At boltom is Illng with tumor circled.

Reginald Beckwith helpfully adds to the confusion with one of the best of his impossible characterizations. ;;;rl, against tobacco, a pro· searchers are critical of the

: .. : on which the American smoking·lung cancer statistics. ." .. ,:" ;pcnds 57 billion annu· Tobacco interests hm'c spOn· 1 :.-lbout twier thc U. S. for· sored some surveys oC their !:~ ;.i,1 expenditure. The own. Their argument runs:

· . '.~.r: '("an Public Health Assn., More smokers may be dying .:. ~:.:.onal Tuberculosis Foun'l oC lung cancer, but a higher

· (1::011 and the Federal Public ratio oC divorced and single ":i::h t'cl'rice harc hoisted persons also die oC this disease ,;.,~,n;: I:a~s on smoking. I (as they do, curiously. of atmost

· .. !::;. II hat is the rclationship? ! all diseascs) than m.arricd pc~· 1"1:'1 of all. nobody has l'ct I pic. Yet nobody claims that dl·

:. '. ,'d 1 hat tobacco smoke ac· I vorce is R cause of lung can· ...• .i: ('au~cs the discase. The I eel'.

r.: .tlrS as compiled by ACS While the incidence ~( lu~g : ·r'rr. are thcsc: I canccr seems to have rtsen In 7hr inCidence oC lung can· I line with tobacco consumption,

~: I "lOng hca\'~' smokers is be.! it mny be that modern diagnos: "~fn 20 lnd :10 times as great tic methods are recording the r.: I~ among people who do disease more accuratelY. It is :. ':;Ioke possible that many deaths which

.\ )'outh embarking on 8 wcre once attributed to tuber· ~m of heavr smoking stands culosis and other respiratory J ::lr·jn·12 chance of el'entu· ailments wcre actually caused if d)'ing Irom lung cancer. by what we know today to be ~:! odds lor nonsmokers are lung cancer. r'J: one in 300. Concentrated tobacco sub· Q:anccs of contracting the stances have been used to. in· ~'m~ inrrease sharply in pro· duce cancer on the skin of ani·

';::tion to cigarettes smoked mals. But this experiment is , ~; day. meaningless, say the tobacco

Inrid~nce of lung cancer has people. Thcy point out that ~'m with the popular accept· lung cancer has never been in· c:! of cigarettes in the past duecd in the laboratory with

ACS, consider cigarette smok· ing the principal cause of lung cancer In the United States. A nd until people become con· vinced of the facts and wish protection from the disease, says ACS, many thousands will die needlessly of lung cancer.

Meanwhile, the public can· tinucs to puff up a storm. and lung cancer-the leading can· eer killer among men-threat· ens additional thousands.

(End of Scr!cs)

Deaths per 100,000 men 'estimated

29

35*

'37 '42 '47 '52 '57 '62

Supporting (if that is the right word) the stars of "Doc· tor In Love" is a host of the craziest film favourites.

Here, at last. is a production that carns with flying colours the screen credit:

'Nfl II with most wind­

shield wipers is they catch so I ~ parking tickets. .• ~ .• J

EARLY EQUINES

· !". drcadc!. normal cigarette smoke, They :"mpora Inl"idt'nce of lung eanrer is say that with the right methods' . , up the !~·:r.~ar~ti\"eiy low among those skin cancer can be induced

Deaths from cancer DI the luna: in men havp increased more rapidly than deaths from any other caUsej almost 500 per cent in 25 years • If men wDuld stop smoking ciga.! relies, most cases of lung cancer, could' be prevented.

Horses first appeared on the historic scene as domesticated animals about 3000 B.C., when mounted Invaders from the north brought them into the valleys of the Euphrates and Tigris, according to the Ency· clopedia Britannica.

: hem "~"""" ;-r<on' who have stopped even by concent ... ,ted tomato man and halibut. He said that one oC the more

significant developments in the export market was the reopen­ing of the United Kingdom mar· ket In 1960 after being virtu­al.IY denied entry to it for 20 years.

< and l~ul:.n~ lor a few yean. juice and some forms oC sugar. • • • However. most scientists close I

'cc:\. thc ::,pcct of . :-~t can .. ':h ratcs.

the im­::~dust~·-

:, a ,('n t i\'cs ,,;n a broCld. "Ec\' to :orporation

.' On Ih, other hand. a lew reo to the probiem, according to I

~Great Therapeutic Values He said that Canadian west. coast producer. had provided U. K. buyers with several ad­vantages, including price pro· tection, .tandardization of qual­ity, of method of packing, of

Various Fish Pro'ducts Qrr:BEC-The chairman of

Fisheries Research Board ~ Canada has cited the ther­I;tutic values of fisheries pro­iltl.! which "may prove to be ::·1ue in the prolongation of I:-:.n liCe and health."

Dr. J. L. Kask, of Ottawa, I::rming the 17th annual :!!lin~ of the Fisheries Coun· ~ of Canada. ,aid that some

important conclusions had t!rged from national and in­r.ltional meetings In recent ~:ths.

North America and two thirds more than 300 delegates attend· grading. documentation, labell· of our adult males. Ing the Annual convention. One ing as well as terms.

"Hardening of the arteries of his points was. that Canada's, This had generated confi· (arteriosclerosis) is caused by fishermen can probably expect dence In the west coast pro­a scaly deposit on the walls of Increasing competition on high ducer! on the part of the U.K. the arteries. This deposit is Beas fishing grounds Including buyers. As a rqsult, the pro-. largely composed by choleR- some which Canadians .have ducers have in the first two terol. a fatty crystalline alcohol come to think of as their own. years of operation come close and its chemical cousins. He added: to reaching the pre·war leVels

"If We include in our diet "But Canada has successfully of halibut and salmon tonnage.

;\. resoh'­~sc issues :ions had 'crnmcnt­e\'cl'\'one

1CSS ~s its ~ed most.

For instance, he said fish­t!\ products are gaining In ::"'rnational nutritional pres· tI!: fish possess some rather ::»rtant Ind essential const!­~':l! for human nutrition l~:th onl\' a few other edible

contain.

a reasonable amount of fish met outside competition before, It has been extremely effective oils. their characteristic types To meet the fairly certain new in meeting competition from oC unsaturated fatty acids are challenges we can and most cen· Japan, the U.S. and Norway, said to Inhibit cholesterol for- talnly will take even better ad- Mr. Turnill added. . mation In the blood serum and vantage of our nearness to good Speaking about the export even to encourage lessening of fishing grounds and of our in- market opportunities for fresh its amounts In the blood and on short and .inland fisheries. and frozen fish, Mr. Kinney the artery walls. This is a very "And our substantial and In- said that the large U,.S, frozen Important therapeutic property creasing knowledge ahout inter· fish market 1s substantial now and gives further reason for national fish stocks will be of and is growing: that opportuni­rating lish high in the human great help in inevitable future ties are there for Increases if diet." negotiations with other nations." quality Is maintained and im-

Other speakers during the Mr. MacKenzie dWelt on the proved by research finding new -------

I.

Dr. Kask IBid; "fish .Iome therapeutic quali·

that ar. only now becom. understood and which are

, h~inl: actively explored and prove to be unique in the gltion of human life and

contains some or aU or ~!!ential nutrients but Its

its I.ts and Is -vItamins JDlne charaeterlstlea that

by few foodl of com· availability and cost." II Important in nu· lor other re.lOIII than

just a ,Dod all around . Kuk 1.ld, and added: oils or fats contain portions of what chern· nutritionists call "un· " fatt,. Iclds •••• It I!

highly unsaturated nature fish oils tbat keeps them ••. Ind helps to keep InjuriollJ particles from

in the blood serum and lodled in the walls

the blood vessels. 'This flctor II very import·

to people who have a ten· to hardening and narrow.

of the arleries 'whlch leads cardlo-nscular trouble,

In turn .11 the cause of the d •• tba of all aduU. in

course oC the second day's ses· salt export markets. He. point. ways to lock·in the sea fresh­slon Included: Gordon C. 0'· ed out that. with low~r produc- ness of frcsh fish into frozen Brien, manager: Fisheries, Ot· ,tion costs than Canada, 'Spain products: that it Is always nec­tawa, .T. N. Hyland, Van· anrl France. in particular. "are essnry to have the Industry pro· couvcr; D. MacKenzie, Halifax: able to underquote our export· mote to the trade the produc~ E. R, Kinney. Gloucester. Man.; ers in many of those markets and the profits that can be Re­E. Turnill. Vancouver: J. stew· ·whleh are Important 'to us and cured from the sale of Can· art. Black's Harbour, N.B.; K. this poses avery real threat to adian frozen fish. Campbell, Vancouver' and A. our industry, Mr. Freehet told the dele-CunninghRm, HallfaK. EXPORT MARKETS gates that Canada must have

MORE' WIDELY KNOWN "Temporarily. lat least, the new vessels with the best Mr. Hyland laid that the Important Cuba market Is not equipment and new fishing iear

economy,· flavour Ind conven· taking any Canadian salt fish, and techniques if her fisher­lence of fish and sea fooli were and, In fact. Is buying very little men are to be leaders to other becoming more widely known to of thlltraditionally basic food countries on fish catching oper-the Canadian .consumer. lrom any source, The loss of allons.

He laid that only 10 or flf· this market to Canadian export· Mr. Campbell said that export teen yearl ago Industry memo ers and to Norway, which was opportunities for canned sal· bers were concerned with the the other principal supplier, mon depend on how canned sal· numerous handlcapa which wer~ meant that other outlc;!ts must mon Is treated by the European encountered In the selling of be found for much more of the Common Market policy. when it !Ish and fishery products world's production of lilt fish. Is ,established. "I {the tariff Is throughout the country. "I. be· However, Nova Scotian export· nll or low, we can probably lIeve that inost of these have era were successful In shipping maintain our position in the either been completely over· some 44.000 cases to this market U,K .. and possibly find oppor· come or that they have 1m· in the Oetober·December per· tunity to Increase demand in proved to. the point 'that they lod .•• '.'" 'the booming E.E,C. nations. A can no longer be considered as IIfr. ~,fllcKcnzle' felt optimls· high larlff on the other hand major obslacles. Some of these lic about export markets for could mean the loss' of redud~ problems, he said, were trans· all khlds oC fish. IIis optimism Ion of our present markets hi portation, wide dispersal or a wos based on world popu· the U.K. and on the Continent." relatively small population and lallon increases over the next MI'. Campbell said lie saw .facHities for marketing pack· few decades. little 'prospect for Improvement aged frozen· products. Mr.· Turnl\1 discussed export of sales to such countries as

Mr. ~'Brlen appraise~ Can: market opportunities for w~st Australia. New Zealand and ada', fisherle. position for the coast products, including aal· South Africa.

. " .

\ .

NEWFOUNDLAND WELCO'MES

J.OHN G. DIEFENBAKER PRIME MINISTER OF CANADA AND NATIONAL I.EADER OF THE PROGRESSIVE

CONSERVATIVE PARTY

ARRIVING TORBAY . AIRPORT 4 p.m .

MOTORCADE from the AIRPORT

THROUGH THE CITY of ST. JOHN'S

8.30. p.m.

ON

MAY 2nd

NOMINATION CONVENTION

FEDERAL RIDINGS OF

eLB A R M o U R Y 8~30 p.m.

51 • JOHN'S EAST an d ST. JOHN'S WEST

C.L.B. BAND IN' ATTENDANCE T--~I-"-'-It-I-I,-,-t-"-~I-'-I-'-'II

I MEET THE , ___ "_I.-______ . __ ,_n_I._!I~ •. -:--.'.,

I: CHAIRMAN ! , 1 I James ~~;.AGreene . 1.-.. _---_ .. _-----"--_ .. _,-"_ .. _ .. _ .. 1

-"-"-~'-'"_U-"_'I_"_"_'I_"_'~_'I_I'_'I_"_'''-f

HEARthe .

Hon. Wit J. Browne Solicitor General of Canada

- and-

James' A. McGrath . _-"--'._1_11-"_11_11-"_1_,_"_,_,,_,"_,"_1.

MAIN

! CON'SERV ATIVE . I I CANDIDATES FOR I ·1 NEWFOUNDLAND I '_"_"_"_"_II_._II_"_._If_II_"_"~'I_"_II-ata.

r--"-'LW-E'-'TELEVI"sio N-'-'-", AP'PEARANCE I

. of the

PRIME MINISTER CJON TV 8:00 P.M.

I WEDNESDAY, MAY 2 _'.-II-n __ I_l_.,_I_II_._. ______ II_.I_~

SPEAKER THE RIGHT HONOURABLE

I I JOHN G. DIEFENBAKER

. EVER:YONE WELCOME . ...

'.

._- .~.-.---"-----.---------

! . ,

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I !f

I ./ •

,

FROM HAUF,\X :.D~R. McArthur, Halifax, N.S.,

".q:in Lbe city on business I'C' eenlly and was rcglstered at tlie ~Kenmount Motcl,

TODA \"5 BIRTIIDA YS Many happy returns or thc

day to Llewcllyn Bragg, Bcll· ~ .• Ann Ingcman, WilHam Gu'kell and Shirley Murphy, ~'ho cclebrate thcir birthdays today, April 301h.

Harold FlfIeltl, Port Rextolli lI1ichaei Hawcu, lIolyrood; VII" ginia Payne, Cowhead, St, BRrbe; Lorraille BOOIIC, Ste· phenville; Patricia Thomas, Lethbridge; Clarice Regular, JlUng's BIght, Whitc Bay; Cora Young, Flnt Bay. SI. George's; Melvin Frcake. Birchy Bay; Donna Harnum. Corncr Brook; Norman Brcntnall, Gamba; .Iudy Anderson, Irishtown; Wm. White, Carbonear; Alicc Brake, Creston; Felix Martin, St.

H,\PP\' BIR'flll>AY Vincent's: Tony O'Toole, Point Happy birthday to Janet Au Mal: Fergus Brown, SI.

Lcallne Horwuod. Karwoud, who Jo~eph's, I'.B,; Wade Piercey, celebratcd her 5th birthday ycs· Hopeal1; Thomas Caines, Loircs, tcrday, ,\pril !!9Ih. lircelings ~!ary Margaret lIead, Glen· come Irom mommy, daddy, bro' wood; Lawrence Fahey. Bell Lbcr Jcffre)', allll from all her Island; Slyvia' Kean, Weslcy·

ville; Sylvia Dennis, John's Bcach; Elvis ~\itchell, Middle

coasins.

%1 YEARS OLD Arm, Green 'Bay; Ralph Clarke, Happy btrlhday to George! Chance Cove; ,Juanita Park,

SwecLaPllle who celellrated hIS i Lark Harbour; Clayton Turtle, 21>1 birlhday yestcrday, Allril Shcarstown, Bay Roberts. 29.h. Grcchngs come I1'0m IllS

't}-\\'orkcrs. r

TO BOTWOOD Phillip Williams and Waller \

Cull of Botwood, who II'cre in I the rll~ lasl week, ha\'c nolV relurned to Ihrir homes.

A Thought For Today

I •

I If thin/:s alwHYs wellt I\TOII~, no 19 n:,\RS 01,11

Birlhdil~' gl'cclill~s to ~liss. Judy Whilfen o[ wan .I\en')·· I merlin~ Road, who cclchratl's i h..r 19111 hirlhday lo·day, April:

one could cndure it;' if they al· ways II'cnt wcll, cI'cryone would hecolllc arroganl.-Sl. Bernard.

311th, lirrelings COlllC from, . :molll, dildo sislC'l' ami her I wo : TAKE IT fIIOM KATIIY hrothrrs als~lcr fricnds, I

Til COR:-;EII nnOOK . ~ ClIde Rose, ~1. .1. Colford,!

E. Uoyd Buguen, J, D. Roberls : and ~1. Fllzpalrick ha\'c rclurn,! cd to Comer Brook after at·: tending the :\ :r.A. Convenlion I

in St, John's last week.

1I.\1'P\' lllRTIiDA Y :'Ian~' happy rcturns of Ihe

day to Jim Soper who celebratcs his birthday today, April 30th. Greetings come from his many friends.

RETUR~S 1I0:.m Gi!orge Short of Fogo return· ~ :Jiome over the weck·end after attending the N.T.A. Con· \'ention in the city last weck.

BIRTHDAYS Birthday greetings to Corhett

Anderson and Palsy Aylward. who cel('brated their birthdays y('~tcrday, API'i\ 29th,

RIm CROSS This list is submitted through

the eourtc.sy of the Canadian Rcd Cross:-

Gcncral Hospital: Holiy Shinnick, Rivcr of I

Ponds. doing fine; Paul Pitt· man, Corncr Brook, feeling fine, still in rast; Jane Law· rent'e, SI. Jacques. feeling finc; Janet Hart, I'iiley's Island, condition is satbfaclor~'; Bonnie fudge, Brigton, doing fine; Ah'in :'Iarks, Grole, Hermitage Bay, had operation two weeks ago, quite satisfactory: Mrs. )linnie Pike, Red Bay, doing "ery well; John W. Follett, Freshwater, no change in condi· tion; Alfred Pippy, Pope's Hr" just over operation, fairly good.

Home For Aged & Infirm: Mrs. ~Iartha !lliIler, Trinity,

T.B., much the same, liP In chair.

Sanatorium: Dianne GOJld, Little Bay East,

feeling fine,

SUNSHINE CAi\IP The following Is a \lst of patl·

ents nt the Sunshine Camp who are reported well and happy. This list Is submitted through the courtesy of the Junior Red Cross:- •

'-ASTRO.GUIDE"

Dad, Lend An Ear

BY KATHY PETERSON

Dcm' Kathy: I'm 15 years old but I look like a little girl with my pony tail. My hair is so iong I can almost sit on it but my dad won't let me cut it. All my friends have' short hair and I'd like a chance to experiment with mine, Whnt can I say to convince him It would oe bet· ter?-Pamela G,

Dear Pamela: Learning to con· trol.her own hair is nn import· I ant part of growing up for a' girl. The . early teens Is lln ideal time to experiment with a roller here and a plneurl there. Keeping It long means that a girl misse. basic train· ing.

Long tresses aren't easy to rinse proprly and therefore It's harder ,to keep the scap heathly and every strand shiny, After the long job of setting and drying, the weight of the hair pulis out waves in no· thing flat. This Is frustrating, ,

'rhe purpose of a hab- Rlyle should be to fmme the face. Worn loose, ilair as long as yours just surrouns It without doing the job of eampaslzing outstanding features, You are all hair and no face.

Pony tal\s can be attraclve hut are severe looking unless you have bsang or short detailing in front. The elastics most Illrls use cause II halo of broken strands. Some doctors suspect they can cause a balr· line to recede.

The real 50lution Cor you WOllin . be a shoulder length cut. It can look long and feminine while being manageable, Curls will frame the face and it's easier to set suceess!ully.

Your father wouldn't be Impres· sed by the fact that long hair isn't fashionable but perhaps some of the things we mentlon' ed here will justify that hall" cut. I'm on your team,

.By Ceean . fof Monday, April 30

-'

!.

: Presenf-For You and Yours ••• The picture is more rosy than it '\\'as Sunday:' In· telleelual .bilitiu ue under ex­cellent radiations. If yoUr job permiu, you will enjoy lpending some time out·oi·doors, Sketch a rural scenej take a walk in Ihe woodsj do something that is not routine, Health is e~ccptionally Vo·cU·upeclcd.

~'I , ( , •• , • •

past ••. On April lOr 1900, Casey (John Luther) Jonell was at the tbroltle of his locomotive in the most fnmous occident in American balladry. The crash Dtcurrcd ncar Vaughu, Miss,

Future •.•• Weird robots arc being delligned to explore the moon. One ilx·lcgged moon ve· hicle will look something like a malformed grasshopper, Its long neck and head will' be a soil· sampling drill and its· ieelm will be radio antennas. '

The Day Under Your Sign :-'RIEStBoTn M.r:h 21 I. N,iI (9) LIBRA IS.pl. 23.10 Oel, 22) '. . Q,nflitt of opinion is nawnl. Rut"" f!dra demand~ m3Y he made. Lut don't Din,s out la tho: t-eu adraJ\uC't or .11. let S'tulure Eel )'OU do"n. Rtb~1 .

TAURUS IAprii 20 10 MIl- 20) SCORPIO (001. 23 t. Hov, 211 Kat friend's ftnaltbtmleJt'C.ln In emtf. By,p.ut tlie url;e to !par IS rJdllt~onl arc rmct. \'ou know .'«bo thtl' afe an)'''''J'' eltt'l1ent for LUJlneu. De on your tau. 6EMltlllMly21 t. Jun. 2\1 SAGITTARIUS IHov.:n t~D •• , 21t . Carter prtttire tab. III' up!urn ud The h.1ft tlku rrrcedtnccl AntJel)l3te fftw1tlal cai .. it IlmOM • certainty now. an ~nJ01Jble. el'cn.lIl, with. bved ~ne.

CANCER (Ju .. 22 to July ZII CAPRICORN (D", 22 t. J.n, 201 Your rtptlution could be'llot &t:.ke. B= DQ juJt IS lOU ""lIh. Alredl f3\'or toO!! .ure act~ are circutlupr:.t. Dt: dIscreet. Ic1iY'ities, bu&in!SI ROO flcuonll.

LEO (Jult 22 I. Aug. 21)·· AQUARIUS [Jan. 21 t. F.b, t91 n.', h ptC&:runish abOut .maTI apcnd.l. lle Illre :reu hve all the (acu, or 70LI _ CooWIIu """."",. " .. "nil. m,y.bbmc olbm unfaIrly. VIKO fAUll, 22 .. 50 ... 22) PISCES IF.b, 20 to March 201' . JIonfoy no. ... 'rft" I" the :\,lriO d:nt. 10,· De JlIideJ h "OW' hud Instud or ),I)dr ........ iWPp rout,. butt "&AWlS' 'emotions. \'o~'U Itt _bat )"0\1 'Want:

e 191!;1, 'Fh:'d !A'''rn~I'''., ln~ = r=._

Wettlaufer Butler Wedding

TJIE.DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. :MONDAY. APRIL 30,1962

The Well Favourite DANISH DELIGHT Child ~Iost people who have evcr \ isit·

I cd Denmark come back l·av· THESE STEPS WI"L PREVENT' ing abollt the marvellous Dan· I THE ANEMIAS OF CIIILDHOOD ish pastrics. The Dillies 'laVC

BY HAROLD THOMAS HYMAN. M.D,

A haby or youngster with 5111'

low complexion i~ not neccs· sarily anemic. He 01' she may mercly have a "house color" due to insufficient exposure to sunlight 01' . to such bundling when out of doors -the rays never shine on the face.

And anemia is not a disease. It'S: a symptom. Its prevention and correction are dependent on find the the cause and elim· inating or controllin!! it. ~Icrely , giving or prescribing a "blood tonic" is like bailin.~

. '. 5toppenng the leak. . I

.\ a boat. without lool,ing for and

. '[ Here arc specific thinl!s Ihat call II hc done to pl'evcnt the anem· las of infancy and childhood:!

I

a sweet tooth and it ain't lin· common to see a tray filled with a variety of pastries, served at breakfast. The 11'0,

men takc pridc in their bak· ing, but for anyone who lacks the time 01' ~kill the bakcry shops are crammed with dclicious lluns and cakes.

This recipc for Danish Almond Ring is a Canadian adaptation I of a Danish sweet hread. The flaky yeast pastry requirl!s! time to make, bul Ihe extra. effort required is morc than ~ repaid hy thc enu result. !lc·1 fore baking, the pastry is fillcd : wilh a delectahle sweet grollnr! : almond mixture and fas!lioned I into two rings. In additioll 10 i making a lempting dessert. the. rings can also he scrved as a: speciat Sunday hreaktast treat. ' ur along with stemin~ mugs of ' coffee to Ihe winter sports; crowd. - I

Ha\'e pai'cntal bloods tested for· incompatibilities before or immediately after conception 50 that nccessury steps may be taken to deal with the an· i emia 01 the newborn that somctimes results from des·

DA:-IISII ALMO:>lD nl:'\G ! Yielrl-2 rings I

Two.third cup milk i

2 tablespoons ~ranulated sugar I' !, teaspoon salt .

Recipes buard or canvas and knead un. tiI smooth and elastic, ,'lace in greased howl. Grease tup Coyer, Lct risc in a 'var~ place. frcc from draft, 30 min. utes, Pun c h down :laugh Turn out onto lightly ·!loured board or canvas and kncJtI un. m smo?th. Roll out dOllgh in. to a ]2·mch squarc. DiI'ide Ihe "'. cup chilled butter. or mal'. garine int~ 4 eqllal pDrlions. Cut I portlOn of the bUlt~r or margarine into sm~1l ~ieceJ' dot over centre third of rolled: out dough. Fold ol'er one side of dough 10 cover Ihe ;lI:lter or margarinc; press e(b, to. gether to se,,1. Cut anolher portion of Ihe butter Or mar. garine into small pieces :dot over foldcd dOIl~h. Fold orcr olher side of dOllah 10 ("".w hultcr or mar~arinc. Pre's eu;:cs logether 10 'ea\. . !lc. pcat Ihis rolling mHI II/Idi~~ oncc. t IIrning the clolld, " 'rB'; ;mJund before d'Jtlin~ it "ilh the remaining buller or nm. garine. noll oul r'1J1'~h ':110 a 12·inch square. Fold 11"0 no, posite sides of dnu"h ~o Ihe centre, thcn fold in half '0 hr. ing open ends to~clher. ~.I'rap folded dou~h' loosel)' in li~hl' ly·f!oured waxed paner. Chill 45 minules. noll oul. fohi and wrap dough again. Chill 3 01 4 hours o\'crnighl.

2 lab!espoons hutler or mar" Meantime. make liP fil1in~. Put . truction of many of the baby's red blood cells.

garinc almonds through food chopper During prcgnancy. mother should !, cup lukewarm waler' using mcdium hlade. Comhint

concentrate on iron·rich fonds I teaspoon granulated sligar almonrls. the I Clip "u~ar and to ward off a malcrnal an· 1 eDl'elope aclh'c dry yeast or dry hreml crumhs. Beat !he emia Ihat will, in turn, affect 1 1 cat(c compress ~'east remaining e~;: and cream ,0, the rapidly !!I'owing passen!!cr., 1 well·beaten egg . ~ethcr slighlly. Stir illt', al· Jron.rich foods include lean i 3 cups fallout) pr.sifled all· 1 mond mix t II I' e. Slir in JI· heer, kidneys, calves' and purpose flour mond extracl. chicl(en livers, pork, lamb I; teasllOlJn "anilla I chops, e~~ )'olk, ~rccn pea" 'j Cnll chilled buller Or mal'" Di\'idc chilled ,Iough iulo ~ equal lima and Iddney bean", apri· garinc purl ions. Relurn one portion 10

The mai'l'iage took place Fchruarv 17, 19Ci2, (!~: Evelyn Bt1tle~' to Gerald Wettlaufer, at Calvary Evangelical Cinlrcb, Kltchener, Ontano, Attend­rllts were Carl BaJ'1les, Gladys Hutler, Dun Wettlaufer ami Hov Wettlaufer. Flower gid was Glenda Wettlaufer, Best man was Bah Wettlaufer, an~l maid of hono\1l' \vas Susie \Vettlaufer. The newlyweds have taken up rcst­cl~J\ce in Kitchener, Ontario. The hric!p is the fonner Evelyn Butler, daught. er of Mr, and r-.lrs, George Butler of Kelligrews,

cots, raisins and pruncs. narc· 1 cup btanched atmonds reft'i ~erator. noll out olh~r ly is it necessary 10 take <0 I cup granulatcd sugar portion into a recl,lD~le In x called tonics containing iroll: !; cup fine dry hread crumh5 it" inchc" Spreao half of Ille salls, And oilly I'ery exceptio. \ I egg almond filling riown .'cntr~

.nally is anything gaincd by ad.! !; Clip c,'com Ihird of dOIl~h. ~!ake I" p~r· dilion of \'itamins, mangane<e I I, teaspoon almond extract nile I slits in no ugh l'nJtin~ o:,t colbat, lil:er extract or folic' . from each ,ide of fiilin~ 11ln acid. Only if !lIe slomach is Scald milk: stir in Ihc 2 tahle·· mal,in;: strips ~bo"t I in~:l completelv intolcran is the: spoons sllgar. salt and 2 tah;e·: wiele. '"{)l~ ~trip, <11 :1II 'ln~!e gil'ing of· iron shots warranleu: spoons huller or margarine. ~ o\'er filling, "lIeJ'll;I\;n~ Inml or justified. ' Cool to lukewarm, sirle to sidc. Place nil a :1',,15·

cd haldng ,hccl <lIHI fonn inlo a rim!. Scal end;;; \·:('11. [1~.

Jl~at lI'ilh olher Jlorlion of ,lolI~h. r.rease tlJlh. ('olcr Lei rise in a warm nl,,('o. frr~

11'0:'1 d"oft. (LIII!I rlo"I,'"" ill

.hulk-ahout 1 11lJur. P,ake in a mod(1r:ltf~h' hot O\T'tl I :)i:' ('~,:;.

F.I ~o In :lii minlll". Fm't rin':!s whilp Wllrrn wilh t!lI~ fill·

lo\\'in~ Cnnfe"tionr~" lciw! ~nd. if c1e,il'c!l. spril1hir '.Iilh ~Ii\'ered ;llmon~s.

Plastic Tape Creates I Indoor Game Fields

Look! Jiffy.Cut PRINTED PATTERN 4784

I As soon as possible, fced the in· ~Ieanlime. mcasllre 11I1:c·.val'm fant with supplcmentations "i water inlo a large howl: <IiI" iron.rich fonds in pmccd fnl'm, i in Ihe I teaspoon 5 u .~ a 1'. ;

Prevent a "boltlc·ancmia" hy. Sprinklc 01' crumble with ye;l;:l. . early lise of mashed mcals !lri Let stand 10 minutes, tlIen stir: vcgetables chosen from the' well. Stir in lukewarm milk· list above. nilrcl\, is it nrc.'! mixture, Ihe well,he"len e~g, cssary to gi\'e 01' prescribe I ilnd I', cups of thc flollr. Be:lt! blood tonics. Anti the simplest until smooth and claslic. .~tIt1 and least irrilant Ionic is a \'anilla and heat in well. Grnd· i

chemically pure inll! salt uall\' work in sufficient addi· i

whose effectiveness is nol :!I' tion;,l flour to make ,1 soft: creased hy addilion of \·ila· dou~h - ahout II., cups mOI·c. mins, liI'er extmet. folic 'tcid. Turn Ollt dough onto flnured 'CO:"ln:t:TIOf'>'EI'S' ]/'f:'\'; manganese or' cobalt, Onl.'l I ----------------.• -­

under most IInusual cil'clJm·. cur if tlIe color delermimllioll stances is it necessary to givc· is dDnc with blollin~ paprl' a baby iron shots, althou~lI oc·' Errol's in inlel'pl'ctalion m1." casionally a transfusion may' be encountered if the la1101'3t·

Comhine 11'1 Clips ~irl ~'I :1'iI17 .sug.tlr, I", 1C'~lsp(lnn r:l11i":J ::11111

1 ~ tr.~snonn ~lll'nnJ1'l ~\!Pt:t

with sufficient nJiI~ In il"<r ,~

b . I t I icing of sprc,~(Hn!:! Cl)ll~l~tcncy.

e reqUIred 0 ge a spec( Y ory technician is unaware of· effect. rapidly changing slandards.

during thc first year of lifc. TJ Treal infections wilh dl'u~s olher a\'oitl both errors. hu\'e the Homemakers than the sullas or ehloramnhe·, blood examined h\' "our dor·

nicol (Chloromycctin 1• These I tal' 01' by a lec1l1iicfall whom and relaled antihiolics m~\' i lion of the report 10 YOUI' doc·. If uld paint or stain I:"r;i,~, :n damage the bone marrow f3~- lie trusts. Leal'c intel'preLI" "bleeding" Ihrou~h a I'ell

lory whereas penicillin and I lor and to 110 one else. This i paint joh. apply Ihin t;)J!, 01

equally effeeli"c miracle drugs ~ JJI'ul'~dnre may il1\,uh'c an ali·' fresh. whit,> she:;,'!' (11 'hE do nol. i dilional tce, but. in the long I clean s(lI·lace. Th- ,'W'!:l(

, rnn. il will prohably sa\'e )")'1 will scol in the old ;0 ,'0'] r.'f.

A~!:a::di~~il~!~ e;~c~~tl~i:\~no~!~~; time, money and worry. apply Ihe nell' color

,::':::;11,. ;,,;,' 'h" 'h' ~"I'" •. 'moA

.-. ;i;;;;aawa;;a&m~e----,iam;;;;a:z:Jl/-1--' ence of an anemia be confirm· ed by the findings of a qualifi· ed laboratory. TcchnicHI c,'· I

rors are almost cerlain to oc·! -----------_._--

1I0pscotell comes In alit of the rain to be marked Ollt on the playroom Ooor willi washable, waterproof colored plastic tape. In background-a ticktacktoe pattern.

Jiffy.cut blouses. Pin pat· tern to !abric-presto. Cut out complete blouse instantly, Top slacks, skirts. BY KAY SHERWOOD

Vigorous indoor playas the rainy Saturday alternative to vigor· ous outdo~r play is one 01 Ihe

,ineseapahle distractions in homemaking.

I sympalhiz.e with the youngsters who hopefully ioad, (lockets with hopscotch chalk,' roller 'skate key, marbles and· extra . kite string only to have the week· end fun rained out. Nothing takes the place of running off steam In Ihe fresh outdoor air. Ha\'ing 8 few ideas for llluscle· stretching Indoor play can be mighty helpful.

A cle~l'rd cm'port, ~aral!1! 01'

hasement area ollel's m a II y chances for peppy play. Cllmbln)( ropes, swings or tra' peze can he attached to o\'er· head. beams, with an old mat· tress or tumbling mat under· neath as a cushion. .G alOe fields can be painted '01' chalk· ed on the floor.

But such space isn't essential. 0111' children stretch muscles on a doorway gym bal'. One 01 the brightest idear. 'for game fields we've tried can W 0 I' k anywhere-In bedroom, play· room. kit c hen, on wood linoleum, tile or carpeted fioor.

The trick is to lise colored plastrc tape to mark 011 the field, The tape may be peeled off' without damage 10 Ihe floor surface, or It may be left in position as long as 'yOU like.

We set up a hopscotch field on a wood floor. If you layout '8 course on a tile floor,. the square 'mnrklnl/s can serve AS

R ~ulde lor' sUekinJ: down Ih~ tape. On other floors use a light chalk' line, a wooden .yard.'

'.

stick or ruler, to guide you to a neat design,

Besidcs 'hopscotch, other pos· sibilities are shuffleboard, ring fOI' marbles, and 8 new floor gume of that olll favorite tick· tuckloe. A fdent! of mine suw Ihls pluyed lit a schuuI lind says it II'UI'ks as well at home with a gl'OUp of youngsters of . DS'

sorted ages. It has the adoed advantage oC being fast and active.

For Ihis la,vout. cui a large ticktarklop pallcl"l1 (fOUl' or f!l'e feel squal'e). Children are rlil'idcd inlo Iwo teams. the X's anrl Ihe O's.· There should he at least four players on ellch leam who arc irientified with placAl'ds made from shirl eardhoards and hung around their necks on string,

When the, game is 10 begin, teams line up on opposite sidcs of the pattern and decide which side goes. first. The first X or

Printed Pat t ern 4784; Misses' Sizes 16 top style m yards 35·inch; middle PI.: low· er 1 ',~, ,Jiffy·Cut.

Sent!· FIF'l'Y CENTS (in coins) (stamps cannot be accepted) for this paltern. Please print plain' ly SIZE, NAME, ADLlIU;SS, S'fYI.E NU~J8~:U.

Send oruer 0 ANNE ADAMS, care of ST, JOHN'S DAILY NEWS, Pattern Dellt, GO FRONT ST" WEST, TORONTO, ONT,

o jumps into a square. Then . II memher from the other team ..

jumps inlo Another square, Specd i~ imporlant.. Younl!~· ters must nol step on lines or coach each olher .. The game continues until one team has three in. A row, Then it's time to start a new round.

Incidentally, colored plastic tape comes . in wonderful brignt colors. If you take pains. to layout a. gaJ:1leficld neatly, the design odds interest and color 10 a playroom floor.

IN A SPIN OVER MONEY? T~ll~ it over with a Niagara Loan Advisor, It's hiS .Iob 10 help you! Niagara loans are made up 10 $2,500 -.and Drc usually completed in less Ihap a day. Remember. you will nlways be

. Clcome al Niagara. ·w· .

. NIADARA FINANCE COMPANY LIMITED ~ I >It La'gul AII.Can~dlan Consumer Lo.n Comp.ny

=31.:35 Durk,,'orth f;trhl Mione: M.7lt67 186 Watfr ~tr,.,.t. I'hone: . lIotTltU and AndrrlOn Au. P"nne:~·llj8

~ub·OUlu In Plllcel1lh,: • rlnrf'IIUa Tndtnl' !lldl'. rhlln,.: :\3

(Ol'"n Monday~ And TI1I!I~day~ !) ft.m. to ~ p,m.) Branche.! in Grand Fa Is and Corn!r Drook

I •

EXCURSION FARES GOOD TO MAY 31st, 1962 See your old friends, your falilily-enjo), a change-of-scene. Trawl almost anywhere in Canada on TCA ECONOMY ROUND-TRIP EXCURSION DAY SPECIALS..:..both weekday and weekend. It's one of. the biggest and best h'av~l bargains ever-~vith BIG savings all the way I On some routes you travel Monday; Tuesday or Wednesday on WEEKDAY EXCURSIONS-good for 24 days, , . on other routes you travel Saturday or Sunday on WEEKEND EXCURSIO~S-good for 23 days,

FOR EXA!vIPLE"

ONLY $171 00. to GANDER (Weekday Economy Excursion Return) ,

Ask your Travel Agent fori:XCURSION details or phone, TCA at 8·7011 , • Travel must be completed by May 31st.

. "rRANSaCANADAAIR LINES ~ 'AIR'CANADA'

For rcservations and tickets sce ..• HARVEY'S TRAVEL AGENCY

Confederation Building-Dial ,94093

FURNESS TRAVEL OFFICE Newfoundland Hotel-Dial 8·:;6~3

COl ...

Canadia! Hostt~ (

HR. GRACE. Grace Canadial IVas host to the telm on Monda 23rd, at their ] clubroolTlll on I

presidellt, C Janes, was the t occasion and Wt Ilees and other

At the head dent Janes ant comrade Edgal ~ajor C. Shcp~ guest speaker; O'Brien and F loW, Mag\str·te n. Ross Shepp: !oawlor, RCMP. the Stadium, ,uests include!! ,nd a represe Daily News an ~any Legionn: present inc\ud the First War:

A delicious ved by. the wi v paires to whic tuJl justice.

Following t Queen, the pre

. of seven frar ,ction shots ta Regiment was Club by Maj( member of the President of J,egion. Tne pictures

comrade E. L presented a pi in which he hI

The. main II Ing was give] Sheppard. M.f the Interests practical ma~ to cout to, .nd youth bel Canadian Legi he was most CeeBee.'l were Dn this OCCS!

bour Grace L Referring t

this ancient I pioneers wht courage and lea ago when western seas i unseaworthy comparison ,hown by the contest for I orial trophy.

They had this season I ,tion and co they had pia: won hlgb pr: who had willi

Major Shel although the a!lather reat! 50n he felt t: be brought b the Harbour where it had two yelrs. Congratulati

Faulkner al praised their age in the hall conteste'

Coach and ner on beh, thanked Maj( kind wo'rds !

the honour this accasior their cantil minor hocke their sponso tam Hookey hockey had Ifess and the future area. He i preciation 0

pllshment of during the t

A vote 01 Ladles for lIer served 1 by Comrade

Stadium Moores on t torate than~ their int.rel for the help lams whom lIlaterial for lor hockey, coming visit Buchans whl .,.Inst tel !owns and ~ Uonal expel ed after by

Following the dinner for a social followed b) elude a ha~ attending.

Inter·( Kiwan

HR. GRA anniversary tbe Carbon \YII held a: ~, April 2 ~m the Jl \'Ialted theil:

'l'hese II l«ck Perry t'll and wif1

. Gtor,e Sin: IUaa Iverse tompanlst I Ill. the evel

Guests of . PUt I

GI'eI B .. Butt

Page 7: Scviets Rap acml an - Memorial University of Newfoundlandcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ""mi>rr

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rHE DAILY NEWS, . ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. MONDAY. -APllIL 30,.1962 - . i

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Conception Bay New5.' Canadian Legion Badges Youthful

Talent Seen at St. Francis

Host t~ CeeBees Presented to IIR. GRACE. - The Harbour GO I G °d_

Grice Canadian Legion Club I r UI w. tas host to the CeeBee Hockey Ilam on Monday evening, April :lrd. at their newly renovated c1ubroolllll on Harvey St.

PresideRt, Comrades E. L. Jlncs. was the chairman lor the t«casion and welcomed th~ Cee· Bees and otller guests.

HR. GRACE - Durin, the HR. GRA<;E-A very pleas· Afternoon Tea which WI. ~eld Inl presentation by the Cath by the local uloelatlon of the oUc Youth Club of this town of Girl Guides In tbe Central Hi,h the "twixt Teon" was seen at School auditorium on WednBl' the SI. Francl$ Auditorium on day. April 23th. the. followin, Tuesday evening, April 24th. Guides were presented with The programme was a de· their Second CIIIS Badges\ by 1I1lhtful one and It Is felt that Commlnloner, Mn, W. Oke, the youth of tbe town-should WIth l;apt. Mr •. Jean G. Davis be encouraged. to come before and Lieut Mrs. Arch Crocker the fooUlghla more often, also attending:-Llllian Peddle, The programme was as fol· Maxine Janes, Phyllls Bl1r)" low.:- . :iylvla Blundon, Cynthia White, . Francia Wells, Alice Little· Donna Martln. Proflclenc¥ john, Mrs. Wells, Patricia Nagle Badges were awarded to: Pata)' .t'ete Thompson, 'fom Kehoe, Rogers, i'hyllls Barry, Sylvia Elizabeth Wells,· Maureen Col· Blundon, Elaine Alcock, SlIIrlra lin., Rodney Wells, Jr., !\lett tetman, Hetty Arehlbald,' Hope Cleary, Specks Howard, Leo LudlOW, .I!'lorence Mardn, Max· Moriarty, Mr. Wells, Harry Ine Janes, Lillian Peddle, Jud)' Hunt, Gwendolyn Todd, Ber· .sneppard, Heatller Cron, and nice Co1l1n.,·· Iiorls Mansfield, oadges were also awarded to Maureen Moriarty. .

Har.bour G.race South'tady Laid .To. Rest . . HR. GRACE, '- The funeral

of the late Mrs. Clara Sheppard took place to SI. Peter's Ang' lican Cburch on Sunday aftet~ noon and tlie service was con· ducted by Rev. L: A.Ludlow.·

The late Mrs. Sheppard, tM former Clara Noel of Hr. Grace South, was hi her 70th year. Sbe passed away at the resi· .' dence of her daughter, Mrs . Heber Noel, Topsan Road, . St. John's, on Aptll 19th, and leaves to mourn two daughters, Myrtle (Mrs. Heber Noell, of St. John's and Phoebe (Mrs, Ernest Parsons) of Hr. Grace South); one Bon, Robert, and two brothers, Hedley and Mar· cus Noel at Hr. Gracc, as well as 13 grandchlldren •

To the bereaved family sym· pathy is extended.

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At the head table with Presl· dInt Janes and Vice·Presldent comrade Edgar Wiseman were )Iajor C. Sheppard, M.H.A., the ,uest speaker; Rev. Monsignor O'Brien and Rev. L. A. Lud· loW. ~Iaglstr·te Trickett, Mayor ll. Ross Sheppard, Sergt. Kevin j,1wlor. ReMP, and directors of the Stadium. Other Invited ,ue,ls included Dr. K.. Saltman and a representative of the Daily !'Iews and also of CJON. )lan)' Legionnaires were also prescnt including veterans of the First World War.

11 delicious dinner was atr­ted by. the wives of the Legion· pireS to which some sixty did

~a~bour Grace Cilnadian Legion Club wer~ host to CeeBee Hockey Team April 23 at their club room. Canadian Legion Ma]or C. Sheppard, M.H.A., gave themam toast and i!! seen here while delivering his address. Chair­

!Jonna Payne lCook), Jud)' ~e.jgner Costumes - Alice .sneppard (Citizen and Laun· St. John.

Contribute to . man was E. L. Janes at right of the speaker. . j.U justice . following the toast to the

dress). ~ . Properties - Sheila Hare. 'l'ne Local AIlIoclatlon wu, U Make·Up-Judy Lynch.

$Isted by the Guld" in the StIge Manager - Leo Ryan, Q-Jfen. the presentation of a set e! se\'en framed pictures of ttion shots taken of the 166th ~I~iment was presented to the Club by Major Sheppard, a t:tmbcr of the 166th and a PasL President of the Hr. Grace

.urv!ug ut 1~1lI and ~IIO\Ydd tnat Charle. Chafe. Ule tramlnl whllcb they are r.. lIedroom furniture was loan· cemng IS Deanng good fruit, ed thfougb the' courtesy of R . and tllat the UUlde movement Tetford of Hr. Grace.

Many Causes --'

Easter D~y Services

Masonic Festival Sabl1n Vac'cine HR. GRACE. - The annpal ~

BGbsledding, hockey, skating and skiing arc events Included in the wintcr Olympics

It,ion. Tne pictures were acceptcd by

Comrade E. L. Janes who then pmented a picture of the 57th ID which he had served,

The main toast of the even· In, WI! given b)' Major C.

I,. Sheppard, M.H.A. He spoke of Ihe interests being shown In practical manner from coast to cout towards community and youth benerits and by the Clnadlan Legion, and said that he was most hap'py that the CteBees were being honoured on this occasion by the Har· bour Grace Legion.

Referring to the history of this ancient town and to the pioneers who had displayed courage and fortitude centur· Ie.! lEO when he had sailed the 1mtern Has in small and often unseaworthy craft he made comparison to the forll tude Ihown by the CeeBees in their tontest for the Herder Mem· Gila! trophy.

In thiS town is making good progress and il de.erving of anore support than I. being lI~U Irom tlle general public.

It WOUld be well to think of (ne Uuiae movement as one (Ilat IS weil worth support and Interest for It Is also well to UunK of tnose Guides of to­aay a. the women of tomor· row.

Personals HR, GRACE. - Dr. Norah

Elpnlnl(one of Corner Brook sanatorium has been a recent guest of Mr, and Mrs. M •. P. :)tapleton. They are also be· ing visited by their niece, Miss Rlla Connolly, of the Corner Brook Sanatorium ~taff.

Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Sheppard, St. JOlln's, returned home last Sunday alter .pendlng Easter wllh relauves at IIr. Grace.

Miss Phyllis . Stevenson· of Corner Brook is spending her vacation wIth her parenti, Mr. and Mrs. George StevelllOn. ,

St. Paul's Sunday School

HR. GRACE. - At the ~n· nual anniversary service of St, Paul's Sunday School held on EB.ter afternoon, the following prosramme wu presented.

Rev. 14r. Ludlow was ·pres· ent to open with Prayer and Superintendent L. V. Chafe gave .a report of the work of the Sun'day School during the past year.

(Programme) "Earth is Waiting fIJr the

Easter". Ellter Welcome-Klndergar·

ten •. . Excreiae-Llttle Euter Sun· beam.

Acrostic-Easter Day. . Recitation-Four Wishes, ExerclBe-Seven Lamps ()f

Easter. Song-UEaster Has aMes·

sage Too", Exerclse-"Splces for the Liv·

ing Lord." . Choorus-Vlctory. At the conclullon of the

HR. GRACE. - During the dinner given by the Hr. Grace Canadian Legion Monday eve· nlng, President E. L, Janes called attention to the several good causes to which this Branch makes fegular contrlbu· tions.

Apart from the help given by the Legion to hockey and especially the Bantams, gener· ous donations have been given during the past year as In pre· ceding years to aU collections in the town.

It is well to know that tIle Legion Club Is fully a ware of the needs of other organiza· tions and gives willing aid whenever called upon.

OIllOANS Four of seven U.S. presidents

who have died In office were from Ohio: William Henry Har· rison, James Abram Garfield, William McKinley and Warren G. Harding.

-------programme prizes were pre· aented by Rev. L. A. Ludlow and a collection waS taken up for the Church of England Or· phanage, .

HR, GRACE. _ All churches were well filled on Easter Day for the commemoration of the Resurrection. Masses were said at the Cathedral of the 1m· maCUlate Conception and SI. Joseph's Church at Riverhead, while at St. Paul's Anglican Church the service of the Holy Communion was celebrated at 6 a.m. and the Holy Eucharist at 11 a.m. At this latter ser· vice and at Evensong at 7 p.m. the choir rendered special Eas· ter music.

RElv. W. Vardy officiated at both 'morning and evening ser· vices 'at the United Church and here also specIal music was rendered by the choir.

At SI. Paul's Sunday School the anniversary service of the school was held at 3 p.m. and a programme was presented by the children. This has been the custom since the opening of the Sunday School In 1888, and each year sees a large 1Iumber of parents and friends present.

At the United Church audio torlum there was also a spec· ial service with a programme

lIIasonic Festival for the chil­dren of the brethren of Lodge 476 was held at the lIIasonic Hall on Monday evening, April 23rd, with the usual large crowd attending.

Following a round of games, candy and fruit was distributed to the children. .

CIIANGlNG A little more than 5 per cent

of the U.S. population was clas· sifeil as urban at the first cen· sus; the 1960 census, almost 70 per cent of the population was so defined.

GREG CLARK HONORED OR ONTO (CP) - Author

and columnist Greg Clark has been made a life member of the Outdoor Writers of Canada. The award marks Mr. Clark's: 5 years as a newspaper man.'

Longest annual migration of any b i r d is the 22,OOO·milc flight some individual Artic terns fly from the Artie region to the Antarctic. '

by the pupils of the Sunday School. Programmes will be given in a later issue,

'Q-How is Sabin vaccine given? FILIBUSTER PROTECTION

. Since limo, the U.S. House A-Sabin. v~ccine is given by lof Representatives has protect­

mouth. It IS In the form of a I ed itself against filibustering cherry·flavoured liquid. very by strict rules to cut speeches pleasant to take. short called "c1oture rules."

. From Halifax. N.S .• to ::;1 •• loiIl1'5, Nlhl. Slup Leaving Halifax Due St. John's

BEDFORD II ................................ ~[A Y 5 BEDFORD II ................................ )[A Y 12 BEDFORD II ................................ ~[A Y 19 BEDFORD II ........................... " ... ~[A Y 2,

• Refrigeration Space Available.

lICk's COYI, St. John'. Phon.: 2031

•• N. COLE, Splel,l Representatlve, Roy,1 I~nk Bldg., St. John' •• Ph: 2217 The)' had been unsuccessful

Ilia nason but the determln· I~on and coura,e with which :jey had played the ,ame had lIII hl,h prabe trom those IDO had witnened the contesla, Major Sheppard added that

llthough the trophy had found l!Iother mtin, place .thlB .ea· Ion he felt that It would again It brought back to its place In :he Harbour Grace Stadium IIhm it had .been for the past

Mr. and Mrs. Lornl Wakelin left lut ~elt for the mainland where they wll\ visit for lome weeki.

Mn. Chesley Gme and two children of WhltlJourne spent Easter with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Stevenson.

get twice the car with CONSUL 315 11'0 years. Congratulating the coach, Oeo.

raulkner and his team, he praised their stamina and cour· ale in the games which they :ad contested.

Coach and player Geo. Faulk. m on behalf of his team thanked Major Sheppard for his kind words and the Leilion for the honour done to them on this occasion as well as for their continued interest In minor hockey this season and their sponsoring of the Ban· tam Hookey team. Bantam hockc)" had made much pre· Il'tSS and promised well Cor \he future of hockey In this lila. He expressed hi. ap· prtciation oC the fine accom· plilhment of thoie of his team during the hockey leason.

A \'ote of thanks to the lldies for the excellent din· Itr sef\~d by them .wn given by Comrade E. L. Oke.

Stadium Dinctor Alec. D. lbores on behalf of the Dlnc· 1mte thanked tho Leilion for litir Intemt in hockey and b: the help Jlven to the Ban· U!s whom he saw as good Llterial for the future of nn· i!: hockey. He lpoke of the ":ning visit of the' Bantams to »Uchans where they would play "'inst teams from Inland tr.rns and said that thlB addl· ~nll expense was beln, look· td lIter by the Legion.

Followinl the conclusion of the dinner the guests mlnlled for I sodal hour and this wa • fOllowed by a dance to eon· dude a happy event for all attending.

Mrs. Graham Noseworthy Is a patient at tbe General Ho&' pital where she Is receiving treatment on her hand.

Major C. A. Sheppard, M.H.A" visited Harbour Grace and near­by place. last Monday.

The many friends of Mrs. L. V. Chafe will be pleased to learn that she is recovering from a severe attack of tbe 'flu.

Mr. Donald' Crocker, son of Mr. and Mn. Arch Crocker, who had taken a .Ix months' course In engineering af the Vocational School, St. Jobn's, has retutrned to Hr. GracB and Is now servmg as an appren· tice at N. E. l"lsherlcs Ltd.

Mrs. Harold Ash has return·. ed {rom Charleston, B.B., wh,re she attended the funeral of her father. Sympathy is extended to the bereaved family.

-,--Dr. George and Mrs. French

and Mrs. }t. Lester oL St. John's, spent Easter with the parenti of Dr. French and Mrs. Les· ter,' Mr. and Mrs, Woodley· French.

Mr. and Mrs. Newton Morlan and cblldren visited St. John'. this week while Mr. Morgan was attending the N.T.A. Con· ventlon being held there.

Mrs. E. F. Goodland·i. lpend· Ing Easter with her diullhter., )irs. K. Marshall and Mn. B. Hawakins, It· St. John's.

Mn. Ross Sheppard visited SI. John', last week, Inter-Club

Kiwanis HR. GRACE. _ The tenth Weddi~g .

lanh'ersary of the formation of A nounc"ment the Carbonear Kiwanis Club n ., tal held on Wednesday' even· HR. GRACE,-Tbe mmlale Iq, April 28th, ud Khrulllll of Mln Marl .... t Joy". Quinn, "-III the HadIour GracI Club dlupter. If 'Mr. and lin. ~ttd their nllghb\)ur!Dg club. Rupert Qulnn·of Ha~bour Grace, In~ese included KiwaDlalll to Roland Hill Winsor, 101'1 gf .,~ Perry and wife, Cliff pet,. Capt. LIlli.' Illd Mr ••. WJnior • '- lod wife, Art Ash and wife. of st. Jobn' .. will take' ,lac" at

Sinyard and wife, and the United Church at 4.30 .p.m. Inllen wbo acted u ae- on May 11th with. Rev. W.

. 'IIIIIIIIILlt for tbt programme Vardy, B.A" B.D. offlci,tlnl. eYlllinJ,

Cuelll of tbI Carbolllr Club ~ PUt PrtIIdtet mwialu Issu.. Summoni. .. Gl'tIIIIt, X.u, Ind Mr -~ B. Batt, caDdldate for the . DR. GRACE. - Tbe H~bour ~1Yt . CollltlrvatiVet in Grace Town Counell·h .. lilued ; ~t~ federal electiOD lor 'Rveral .ummollle.·for non·pay-..... ~1&oII. DlIDt of lax arrear.. " . . .

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GET A COMPACT CAR ... guard GET AI SPORTY CAR ••• Consul .your family budget with low initial features sporty extras that cost hun­price and 35 miles·to·the·gallon dreds of dollars more on other com· economy. Get five passenger room pacts, Bucket seats, four·speed box, ,and extra big luggage space. Get disc brakes-speedway acceleration smart styling. From Consul's' con- with a 56 hp. short·stroke engine tinental grille right through to its. 'that goes up to 5000 miles between raked backed roof it's every inch ·.oil changes and passes gas stations a low cost, high fashion, compact 'with a carefree air of"see you some­family car. time friend, but don't wait around"!

j"

Shown also is the sporty hardtop version -the two·seater Consul Capri. See them both at your Ford British dealer.

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Ccnaul 315 Deluxe"':WhitewaJi tires'optlonal extra • i.

MUNN . MOTORS LTD . G'EO. G .. R. PARSONS LTD. • 1

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,; , .' , · .' · ;,' : '. ~ : St. Jonn's-phone 94061· Spaniard's Bay. Corner Brook ST.JOHN'S.. HR· GRACE . GRANDFALLS

! SUB-DEALERS' Ph 91011 Phone 256 Phone 2245 ' . , . qarenville, A. Duffitt Elliston, Tilley's qarage one :~:: I_':"_"';'~;"';""_~""_._ . ___ . __ ";",::=~:",:,::,:,:;,,:-~:,;,:::,,,;,;,-----,,;,---,,;,-------""';---------- ~;:;i

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Page 8: Scviets Rap acml an - Memorial University of Newfoundlandcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ""mi>rr

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s. THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. ~lONDAY. APRIL 30, 1962 --.. .. II' •• estiva l.wanlS

. .,. ', . Inners USIC

. GENiaAL SCHOLA,SHIPS YEAR 1962

Robin . Hood Flour-$2oo.00: Presentation Convent School, '$100.00. Carol Lane, Grand Falls $100.00.

Bowatcr's Nfld. Pulp & Paper )U\ls. Limited-$loo.OO: Prince o[ Wales Co\lege Glee Club.

"Cream o[ the West" Scholar· ship-$I00.00: Lurraine }o'ar· rl'll ..

Kni:;hts o[ Columbus, ".N.C. HJ:l-$100.00: Margaret Ann Whillle. . ~lacVon"ld \\I,holesale J)rugs

Limitcd-$loo.00: Wayne Skill· ncr $50.00, Keith Noble ~50.0U.

Sella tor C. C. I'rall, O.B.E.­$IOU.OU: (i,egor), Sarllan.

Rotary Llull of ::i\, .Iuhn's­:;>1O\1.0U: l!;lrry North.

RlIyal Stores Ltd.~$100.00:

Vo:.s Clarke. Ayrc & ::ions Ltd.-$50.0U:

E~ic Chalc lllr. Grace), lie:a Sigma l'hi, li·Alpha

Chaptcr, Bela Sigma l'hi, • \IIM3 Chaplcr - $50.00: Can· stance ~Iarshall.

Il~'ta Sigma Phi, Gamma GUlllcr, Beta Sigma PhI, Phi·

I Ai!ma Challter - $50.UO: Lynn C~~;lnnin;..:.

tela Si~ma Phi, Zi Delta l';laptcr - :;;25.00; Helen ~Iar

. JayceUes .- $25.00: ··.Edwlna Noseworthy. . I .

Junior Chamber of Commerce -$25.00: Sharon Dillon. .

Lidstone. Sisters':"'-' $25.00: Leslie Lake.. I

S. Milley Ltd. - $25.00: Joan Marlc Wallls. . ,

Earl B. Noble-$2.'i.OO:Tessa Hutton, . . '.

E. F. Peters - $25.00: Lor· raine Bcehan. .

William Sopcr-$25.00: Kcvin . Noble. •

Dr. Waller Tcmpleman­$25.00: Elizahcth Conway (Bell l~land). , . •

Dr. Waller Templeman'­$25.00: Catherine Walsh (Bell Island).

SI'ECIAL AWARDS

Kiwanis Chtb oC St •• 10hn's Grand Award-For the most outstanding performance or the Festival, ~200.00 . cash award and an inscribe~ mahogany shield. At the conclllsion or the competitive sessions, the ad· judicators will confer and sc· lect the performance which, In their opinion, was the outstand· ing performance of the 1962 Ki· wanis Mllsic Festival: Divided between Our' Lady of Mercy Glee Club and !Ilcrcy COllvent School.

linN. Uritish Americ,1ll Oil Co.. KelligrcIVs Soiree Award -

LHI.-3511.00: .Ioni ~!ul'phy. Cash award of $50.M to the winning entry in Class 13-

Brookfield Ice Cream Ltd.- Family ~Iusie, n class intro. ~~(1.011; Ann Roche. • !Iuced 10 fostcr and encoura~c

Charm ,1(,lI'eller), - . $~O.OO: . music in the home. Presented Anll Cahill $25.00, J031\1e ~Iur· Ill\' the KiI'.·anis Club of Kelli. Ilh)' S~j.OO. • grell's; The Harrington Chilo

litrald S. 1l(1)'\r Lld.-$~O.OO: dt·en. ~Iar\' Lou t·arl'cll. · "Good LUCK" ~!ar~3rinc- Gnld ~lcdal for the best per· ~u OU; Barbara ()':'\cill. . fllrmancc in each of the follow·

lIHSS CAROL BROTHERS took two 2n(1 place awards. In Girls' Solo (16 years and under) she at­tained 83 marks and in the Folk Song Solo :rcceived 82 marks. , .

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"(;ootl l.u(·k" :llargarinc-: ing ~roups in piano Classes":' S~IU.OO: .Iudy ~!urphy ('I'nll~ilj\).: I al Ptano Solo ~(Bal'oque Sect· I

l;rrat \::~"tcrll Oil & Import I~~), Cla.,scs 10~ to 107:, Ca~ole Co. l.ltl.-::;~(J.tlll: Bren(l. Dllnu,! 1~lng; (h) ytano Sole (ClaSSical . ~"5 01' neHrl\' \nn Ahhhtt ' SectIOn,) Classcs 108 to 113: \ iln ,.. . J) • r . C· B 1 () P'

t'~' 00 : ,rcgory ar Ian; c, lano oJ II' :. . t. t· I t(I-~5t) 110' . Snlo (Ilomantic Section), Class·

MAHlE LOVEYS (lef!), lind SUSAN SPARKES won 2nd place with 84 Illarks in Piano Duct (10 years and under).

alH' " n. • . ~. . '. 114 !1P J h R'I d . Ann Ru;nholdt S~~O(), :llaurecn : ~' s~(), (~'! 01 n SOl it' ( »,

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'.' ,'1. 011 llano .010, I o( ern ee IO~ , . o Bllcn ..• ,1. '.. ,. : C1as~cs 12() to 125: Karen QUln. ~Ir~ ... k"'I.r IIllu.h :;. $~O.u.O. ,ton: (c), Piano Solo (Jllnior)

~~nr\~lr\·.r <. (lnnl~lI,1' S~".(I,O; SI. Sect ion I. Classes 126 10 130: l\Cl'tn ~ ~('hool. l'"\llds. S2~.OU.. nll~alind Hamlyn. Donated by

Impertal 011 Ltd. - S50.011. the ((iwanis Cluh of St. John's. Susan Kennerly $25.00, Bl'lan McLeold $25.00. Merit Insurance Company

Imperial Tobacco Co. Lttl.- Trophy-To he awarded to the $50.00: Graham Cook $25.0U, group gil'ing the best perform· 16th St John's Company Girl anee in Chot'al Speech. Present· Guides '$25.00. ed by. Merit Insurance Com·

)Iemory or Jame~ C. Pratl- .pany: St .. PillS 10th School, fSO.OO: Ruth Murphy $25.00, Grade 2 Girls. Joanne Corbett, $25.00. !lemory of Douglas H. Gosse­

$50.00: John Roil $25.00, Ruth Pitt $25.00.

Purity Factories Ltd.-$50.oo: Clristopher Williams (Bay Bulls) $25.00, lIIaureen Rllm· ioldt $25.00.

Zonta Club--$50.00: Rosalie Fowler $25.00, Judy JI!urphy f25.oo (Class 131).

Beverage Sales Ltd.-$25.00: Carole King.

Business & ProCessional Woo men's Club - $25.00: Karen Quinlon.

Canadian Federation of Uni· , "ersil)' Womcn-$25.00: Cynthia :1

Whittcn. Canadian Tire Corporation.'

A~50~'iate Storc-S25.0U; Lloyd· Ahhott.

Chalker " Co. Ltd.-S25.00: I

John Piercc)': i Cornrll )Iar~illivray Ltd.- I

S25.00; Catherine 1I0;:an. ' Cros< & Co. Lld.-$25.00:·

Judith C!lok . , I !..Ir:: G. Hcnlcy, C.L.U.-.

!-2:i.UO: Sally )Iahcr. i Charlcs Hutton &. Sons-.

S~5.00; 'carOl Ann Ryan. I

Music Festival Association Trophy-To be awarded to the group giving the best perform· ance in Junior Choral petition, Classes 25 to 36. Pre· sented by the Music Festival 'Association oC Newfoundland, Inc.: Mercy Convent School and Presentation Convent School to be held by each for six months.

l.O.D.E. Beothis Chapter - : 52.1.00: Patricia Connolly.

l.O.D.E: Caribou Chapter-525.00: Peggy Manning.

I.O.D.E. Sir Humphrey Gil· bert Chaptcr -' $25.00: Paula

PER~I1SSIVt; PARENT _ Molher cat is the picture of parental Indulgence as her kitten clambers over her in their Ottawa, Canada, home.

I ANN ~f~RIE OAKLEY won 1st place honours iI, l!le GIrls Solo CI~ss 78A (12 years and under) with 84. mal'ks. Ann IS a student of Presentation Con­vcnt.

Clarke.

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1rlIZANNE STANFORD,. 2nd place wjth -7.7. marks, .NORMA ll.A1\TLE.T1 pJa~cd 1st in' clitss 81A Girls' !

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manners

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Take a hint. The person who I talks little when yon phone is I no doubt hoping you'lI make i the call. brief.. . . I

If old pamt or stam perslsls in I "bleeding" through a new' paint job. apply thin coats of fresh, white shellac to the clean surface. The ~hel1ae will seal in the old so you can apply the new colot'.. .!

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N~WFOUNDLAND/5 I:ARGEST TIRE REP.4JR

& RETREAD~NG SERVICE f j1"\\ II') P A. c:: ~ ~)" at:= E R v fi. P'~I,.."" r'11 iO.2 -

TRUCK-EARTl"~MOVlER TiRES

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And Every Smart Salesman Knows It!

There's a good reason why so many local

service firms and suppliers use our classified

ads so consistently. They sell! Through our

want ads, you'l'9 sure to' reach that someone

who wants to buy, because so many people do . .

make a hab)t of reading our classified section

regularly, There, your advertisemfmt quickly

reaches more people at one time, yet costs you

. only penni-es per day I

WANT ADS To Place 'Your Want ~ds

CALL 8·2177

The Daily News Solo, Class ,123, 14 years and under.', Solo (9 years 81,ld u~der) wlth 85 marks. Norma is a I

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~mnlissilone~ I

regular Tl were enliv( and athlel

import: Christmas I

annual b: :dinner, ani

the Outerbric a

the Cadel! :lUllllncr trainil Corriwaillis, N (

Britis . Wayne

Arm. E. Cove. G. ) Carl Best

~wolrthY. Bell

D. ~el'ford, 1\.1

Grand Corner

D .• T. Bu' R. }o'. Pee

a.. Williams, B .. Anthony, t Drover. D Rompkcy. R E. J. Well! leave for (

M. G. C. E. Pa SI. John

, Mill will leal

5 "lay Cadets

Brook, I Sl John'!

of May Squadro

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SECTION II THEDAIL Y NEWS SECTION II i

ST. NFLD. MONDAY. APRIL 1962 '\ .

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Vniversity Naval Cadets

-~ ABOVE is the annual group picture of the Memorial University Naval Training Division - Front row: Cadets G, B.' • the youngest Cadet; E, G, Reid, best senior Cad,et, and D. Noseworthy, best junior Cadet. Second row: Cadet Captain

E. I,udlow, S/Lt. Riche, SILt, Hallett, Lt, Gushue, Lt. Skanes, SiLt. Conway and Cadet Dycr, President of the Gunroom. row: Cadets Parsons, Foley, Andrews, Myers, E. R. Williams, Hutchings, Clarke, Peet, Butler, Simmons, Hiscock and Pin­Fourth row: Cadets Drover, Drodge, Jenkins, Rompkey, Wheeler, L. E, Williams, Wells, StrieklaJ1fl, Power, Warren and

BEST SENIOR CADET-AlCdr. C. G. R. Parsons. nCNR, Commanding Officer, lIMCS Cabot, presellts to Cadet Emest Reid the award as Best Senior Cadet for the training season HI61-62.

between mountains and sea, I , among them Agropoli, San

P amount I Marco, and Palimuro. otber ar I episodes were filmed high in the mountains against awe-in·

To-morrow I spiring scenery, .... ·ith the pic' 'ture's climax taking place in action filmed at sea in small

Morning Devotions

l"OR ~IAY

"THE SECRET OF fishing boats and schooners. 1st. Rev. G. FOI'.'ID": I\lOlIiTE CRISTO" , "The Secret of !I~onte Cristo" 2nd. Rev.' L. Critch

, was produced, dIrected and 3rd. Rev. R. S. Sheppard - photographed by Robert S., 4th. Rev. Dr. L. A. D. Curti:

A swashbuckling, action·filled I Baker and l\[onlv Berman from 5th. Capt. B. Davis adventure drama designed to a screen play b~: Leon Griffiths. 7th. Rev. T. F. Honeygold entertain everyone, from the __ 8th. :Major A Pike

I age Of. eight to . ei~,hty and Special Adde.1 Attraction. !lth. Canon A. B. S. Stirling more, IS unfolded m The Sec· 1 "~Iagis Boy" in Color i lOth. Rev. A .. 1. Barrell ret of ~Ionte Cristo". new Metro. An entertainment treat for; 11th. Brig B. lIallett Gold\\,yn:~laYOr rel~ase filmed i YOUn~5ters an? grownups alike.: 12th. Rev . .T. F. Ayl'is on a la\ Ish scale m Eastman- ,:'Maglc Boy" IS one of the most 14th. !lev. F. fenerty co'or an? Dyaliscope. . ! delightful feature·length ani· 15th. Rev. L. W. Mchan~v

The pICture has an mter·, mated cartoons ever brou"lll to 16th. Hel·. R. R. Eabb • national cast headed by Rory, the screen. 0 17th. Capt. A. J3~rfoot Calhoun and also starring Pa·' Unusual characters and set. 18th. Rev. G. Camp tricia Bredin, .To~n Gregso~, tings, a story.replee with excite· 19th.' Rev. W. Aloncricff Peter Arn~ and Glanna ;\!arm ment, adventure, magic marvels 21st. Rev. D. Genge

,Canale, With Ian Hunter, Sam and daring deeds as well as 22nd. Rev. A. ~!ont<omc:b Kydd, David Davies and Francis humorous incidents and a li:ting 23rd. ReI'. A. W. Fudge ~Iatthews in featured support· I background musical score and 25th. Rev. F. G. Weir mg roles. an imaginative use of color all 26th. Rev. II!. Genge

The story tells of a group of combine to make this new 28th. Rev. P. Penney adventurers, • including. two Metro.Goldwyn.Mayor release a 29th. Rev. E. D. Kendall beautiful girls, who sct out for rewarding experience. 30th. Rev. J. ~[cKim

successful training a tiny Mediterranean island in The story concerns a little 31st. Capt. R. Chapman Ihe Memorial- U"iver- search of a king's ransom re- I bo! and his sisler livin" a hap· . · ~ Dh'ision came to ported to be liuried there and 1 py life in a mou~taino;s coun. N.B, If ro~ c~nnot (111 :.·our

on Thursday night, 12 of what happens when one i trv and surrounded by the I p~ace on thIS list WIll ,.you , 1952. when A/Cdr. G. G. party .sets its~lf against an: animals of the forest, whom please arrtwe , fO~ a, sul~::~:I!: ~mnn'. R.C.N.R., com.! other m the rIvalry to possess they have made their friends. o!', c?ntac. "CI. .' . "11C_.

· Officer, H.M.C.S. Cabol fraction of the trcasure·h.unting Then comes danger in the form Kmg45 Bndh,et ~~[ad . (~hoDnc to Cadets E. G. Reid a chest full of gold and Jewels. of an evil sorceress in com. 8266) so t a • ornlll~ e·

D \'o;r\l'orthy the awards Set in the carll' nineteenth manel of an army of bandits votions" may contil~uc th!'ou~h ;minr and Junior Cadet century. it is an excitement- who pillage the countryside and I the ~onth of ~ay WIthout lIIter·

: e1)', Following even. filled tale of deviltry, ror.:mncc. : burn the villages. . , r~ptiOn. Than you. \;ir:rr;. the gunroom presi. lo~a1ty, and treachery, when: The little boy, named Sasuke, i

)1 ro, D)'er on behalf of thieves fall out and honest mcn I resolved to vanquish this enemy I d d f' ! I 1 t b . k 'th th' ..', own to e ea . presented a gift to laC 0 e qUlc WI ell' takes lessons m magIs from an ,

· .1. (;ushue. Commandin" slI'ords., . old herniit and becomes a mas-I 1'1 . I I . '> Ie alii III a c la!"lcers III r ntel. , There arc half·a·dozen full· tel' of legerdemain The scenes . 'I . B " d' I' It . . I f' I . "TI S .. . "I' ""IC ov arc a C 1" 1 III · ~ Ih •. year 13 First Year sea e Ig It scenes In Ie ec- 'I m wl,llch he learns 10 hurl tlmn·

l, I ~ I' '. '1 d' n .' rttl

\\rr~ added 10 the roster ret of Monte Cristo." One is a derbolts, to fly through the air, } lemse \~~' hm~ \l Ino I H •• I. e ~I\r \'adrls were promoted tou"h·and·tuillble free·for·all in to defv the law of gravit" ill awn,. IV IC las.a lallowlIlg o . . . . . . . ,experience' when II IS earned . ,""ioned rank. tile bar of an English tavern. walk1l1g up ternfymg mountalll I '. bib' d

A tl ' I d I I awa" v an ea" e ut IS ,al'e rr:ular Thursday night no leI' IS a swon uc to t 1C I crags. to ol'crpower the forces I b ·S . k Tt '

\\t're cnlil'cned by many death between Rory Calhoun I of fire and water and to per. I f Y ,. ~su ·c. b 1ere a~e a s!ll a

I 11 ' [' 't' and Peter Arne in the banquet· form other astoundl'nn fe"ts of .ro.ltlcst·cmTe ~ar,. mothn :ys Wt·IO .n\ all elle ac LVI ICS, . h I f d'- I I" 0 ." llllL a e arzan m elr an I~S

important being thc 111;( a lome leva Ita Ian magIc are among the pIcture's d . t f tI' Chmtmas social. the trio castle. A third takes place when fascinating moments an tat' vanefyt·ho 0 .1el' Irck'~re.

C Ih . h h' " sen a 1\'es 0 e anima ·m"· :.nnual ball. the Untd. a oun fIg Is IS way ~\lt of Now eqlllpped to face the for· d 0

dlimer, and competition an ambush, taking on three midable sorceress. Sasuke joins om. ::~ 'Julerbridge Trophy. men at once. And for good forces with a nobleman of the Forceful dramatic contrast is

after eKamin. mensure there are three excit· region and becomes involved in given this animated cartoon in lhr Cadets will proceed ing encounters between a gang a series of action·filled adven· the scenes in which Sasuke is

· training and cruises of bandits, soldiers and the tures in which he is given op- shown at play with these animal allis. :'>Iova Scotia and party in search of the hidden portunity to make use of all his friends and the later sequences

, . British Columbia. treasure on Monte Cristo is· magic tricks. In the vivid eli· of his conflict with the evil Wayne Ludlow, Joe land. max, the forces of good and evil enchantress in which both use

Mill. E. R. Williams, nEST ' C . d' The picture's backgrounds are as represented by Sasuke and their magic powers" rOle, G. A. Power, Tor's JUNIOR CADET-A/Cdr, G. G, R. Parsons, RCNR, omman mg as spectacular as its action, with the nobleman, and the wicked Carl Best and Donald 'Officer, HMCS Cabot, presents to' Cadet Donald NoseworthY.the award as scenes filmed on location in sorceress and her bandit ca- "Magic Boy" is a Toei Pro·

duction for MGl\I release, in Big Screen and lIIagicolor. Bell Island, Conrad Best Junior Cadet for the. traininO' sea.<tlO, 1961~62. little fishing villages and towns I horts, ,clash in' a spectacular

R. Hutchings, ~.>. in southern Italy sandwiched battle in which the latter go D. V. Wheeler, I--...... r-----------------------------:~-------------------.....:..-----------------N.D.B., Leonard

Grand. Bank, P. M. rorner Brook. H. An·

D .• 1. Butler, R. J. Jen­P. t·. Peet, E. G. Reid,

lWllliams, J. D. Simmons, I. An1hony, C. ~!. Drodge,

Drol'rr, D. G. Foley, R. R. W. Warren

· .I, Wells of St. John's lfllr for Cornwallis on 9

~l. G. Dyer, R. W. l'. E. Parsons and E. R. Sl. .rohn's and .E. S.

~liIltown. Bay d'· i will leaVe for the West

5 ~Iay. Cadets John Lewis,

Brook, and Michael Pin· John's will leave at

of May for the Fourth Squadron in Halifax.

At Library THE VIKINGS AND NEWFOUNDLAND

. }'rederick Pohl in his Allan·

full cooperation of the New· foundlandGovernment.

tic Crossings Before Columbus FRIENDS devotes Ii lengthy chapter 'to "1 have some' 'friends, some the voyage of Leif Erikson to 'honest friends, Vineland. Leir and his men And honest friends are few; first reached an Island which Illy pipe 'of briar, my open fire, he names "Helluland" which A book Ihat's not 100 new." . means Flat Rock Land, . The -Robert W. Service quoted in actual site of Leif's landing, Canadian Quotations and Phras· says Pohl, "was probably Flat es.· , Rock Cove. about fifteen miles north of St. John's, Newfound· PUIIE FOOD

Barents and Frobisher to Peary and Byrd .

A prefatory note says that the ten have been selected over others equally as brave and as brilliant because their' accom· plishments, faiiurcs; and cour· , . age are symbolic of the whole pageant of arctie exploration, These te'n wanted to cOllquer: "Some found death. Some found victory. All found immortality."

land." This Identi[[cation, sug- To he absolutely cerlain YOll . OLD illY1'US gested by Hjalmar R. Holand, are buying meat from healthy ,'No race has ev'cr possessed, !its the narrative of Leif's voy' animals. choose meat inspected a mythology comparable to age In ali particulars, says and stamped ~'Canada appl'ov, that of the Greeks", says Freid· Pohl. cd." rich Pfister in an introduction

BA An artlele ·In ·the current Is· This is th~ advise contained to his book Grcek. ,Gods and

. R BS. SUe of t~e Atlantic Alvocate' in the Consumers' Assoeiatiori lIeroes. And he points out that also touches on the early':Vlk· of Canada 'Bulletin for March, to the Greeks their gods.-and

, Ing voyages to NeWfoundland. available at'- the Gosling, In an heroes were a living·. power ..... ~ W. R. Callahan teUs us thALal:' article on, How to Buy Meat which . accompanied the m

cor~lilg to Dr, Helge ··lli'gsia~ and Poultry'. Meat and poultry throughout their ~ lives. And - - "there Is' absolutely' no., doubt . are graded for quality accord· though the myths themselves

is a good time to plant .that the .remains .!If houses· .or. Ing tii' Choice. Good, Standard ¢ontained terror andd~spair, hultis Indoors, and pot. 'booths' ten mUes west of Cape' 'andCommercilii grades. But murder' and grief, the' poems

10 you. Bauld In 'The Straits' of De lie'. I he canilda Approved mark In· whicli .. described these acts and • • '. Isle are proo£. of Norse settle'" dlca~ lhat the meat has been emotions ·libcrated men from

lime when wouldn't it be m'ent there as much. 19:500 Inspected to insure its being their sliffering.: If we' could keep olJr yelu before tlie discovery. voY~·freefromilisease,. . Professor Pfister's study or

off of vacations? ' ages' of Colu'mbLls and .cabo!."'; • --'-0. the various m)'ths is intended • • • Dr. 'lngstad's expedition 'has'· :C" AnTS HEROES . to be read, for pleasure and to

• ,.~he word been' working in ,close .co,nnec., ::,Whliti,; Battleground, by Ed· Introduce the layman. to a In.IAd of extrlc.~,n tlon .with the. Royal, Nqrwegla,n ward FI, Dolan, 'Is. the story o( force whieh stiiI influences life

. th'.lddl.to the den; I Unlver!ity. and .the Norwegian Ihe conqUest oftlte Arctic by' as well as literature. in Ihe IliIJ like ··JuWIII teeth, Seafaring' Museum and. with the "lIm outstanding . men, _ from western world.

. \ .

, •

. mmn;;;;mimm:m::::m:1H:mm:mmmmmm:;;m::§:mmmmm::mimmmim:mijimmmmmm::mm!immm!i!im:m:::;m::m:m:::m:mm;mm::::mmmll::miii;~~;;;;mmm:;!llmllimm;m!!l

I • Hi How long would $25,000 last? I::

It seems like a lot of money-more probably than would produce, and for how long, just ask the you havp ever had in cash at one time. But from . Man from Man~facturers. He has a measuring the viewpoint of a widow with three young chilo device called a Security Graph that will help you dren, the question is not how much but how long. view the life insurance you now own in a new

. Ii! How long would it provide food, clothing, sheller light-no obligation of course. • ill

'111 and the other basic necessities of life? Would it I~ i" bridge those important years when the children ... ill ill ll! need their mother's full-time love and carc? , !li m Viewed from t~is standpoint, the $25,000 begins !!! iii to shrink. Let's say, with careful budgeting the iii m ~ HI widow might manage on $300 a month. At this !I! Ii! rate $25,000 would \;lst less than 8'years, iii

!r\' This approach to financial security provides a m j: :z: ill .. practical meas)Jring rod for life insurance. If you'd m III like to cheCK how much income your life insurance d II ~li.i

Ern Ran e . G. L. French .

Hi • R""'M";~ R,,"~"~II"·' iii . ST. JOHN'S ST. JOHN'S 11' Tel: 86372 :: • Tel: 86372

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10 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. MONDAY. APRIL 30 . ,

, .

Yankees· Show Power - Move Into F-Irs·t Hamilton HAMILTON

winger Lowell

Sunday's Games BT THE CA~ADIAN PRESS New York Yonke68 won a

doublebeader from Washlnaton Senators Sunday as tho' ,Yank· ees took over their usual first· place slot in tho AmerIcan League and Senators remolned In Ihenr accustomed last • plnce position.

In tbe National League. Cin­cinnati Reds rebounded from a 18'3 bentlng at the hands of St, Louis Cardinals in the opener to halt a St, LouIs winning slrNk at Four game" by win· nlng tbe nightcap 4-3 and drop tbe Cardinals out of first place,

In other American Leagud acUon, Detroit Tigers bombed

t s Angeles Anllel. 13·0: Chi· Igo Whllo Sox took 1\ doul)!o.

Baseball Standings

'IIy TilE ASSOCIATE DPRESS American I.rnglte

~el\' York Chica~o Cle\'cland Detroit Baltimure ~linnc~ota K:1ns;,~ ~jty Basion Los Anglc~ Washington

WI. PcL GBL 10 5 .637 -II ; .611 ~~

9 r. .600 1 H 6 ,;;il IIi 9 i .562 ]II!

9 9 .;;00 21~

9 10.474 3 i 9 .43fl 31:'

7 9 A3fl al "

2 t3 .133 8

!'iallona! League

Y'ittshurl:b San Francisco St. l.ouis Los An~clc~ Hou~lon ~mwaukcc Philadelphia Cincinnati

York

II' L Pc\. GBL 13 4 .i65 -14 5.737 -

11 4 .733 1 12 n .600 21:

7 U .467 5 n 10 .444 5':' 7 9 .438 5\~ 8 11 .421 6

- 4 15 .211 10 3 13 .188 91"

place Indian!!, as White Sox Jack Sunford and Billy Pierce, .'. !let a 3·2 victory against Kan· sas City Athletics.

Thorburn, N,s. them ahead of the now . third· I Wes Covington. . I .. jumped lo within one-hal! gllme each threw three-hit shutoutsi ot New 'York, one·hatt game for San Francisco as they took I ahead of Cleveland, two from Chicago. Ken Hubl)S

Johnny BUlhardt pitched his of Cubs was hit on the ear by Hull' Wins

goals Sunday t~ lead Red Wings to a 5-2 vicUi Edmonton Oil Kings in t?e

, game of the Memorial nals.

way to the (lut'lIama .Chlcago. a pitched ball and was takcn defeat 01 Bo~ton and veteran to hospltnl hut . apparently suf-Early Wynn re~olved credit for {enled no serious injury. Willy the nIghtcap wIn" " :l111Y5 homered for Glunts In FOUR TiGERS HOMER lhe nightcap.

Fourth • place Detroit Tigers Pittsburgh Pirates m 0 v e d were bolstered In the win Over bnek Into the league lend 06 nlnth'place Los Angeles by hom· they defented LOB' Angeles Dod· ers from Jake Wood, Billy Bru· gel's 0·1 and 1-0. Dab Friend ton, AI Kalina and Dick Brown. took the opener for the Plrnt~B I

Leo Thomll8 and 'Bob Rodgers with a IQur·hltter ami AI Me· irl''''iit', each homered (Or the Angels. Bean pitched a seven'hit shut- :' Phil Regllnwo& tho winner ahd out In the second gome. Dick' Dcan Chanco luffered the loss; Stuarts homer accounted for the .......... "'.", .. BlII Skowron

BaltImOre Orlolol, In fifth accounted for the nightcap's -"" place, slammed four llome runs only I'l1n, of tho top league !pot with a

hender from BOalon Red So", two by Jim Genllle, to defeat BOGEn MARIS 2,1 victory, San Franciaco winning the first H and the seventh • place Klln8~1 City. S t d 'G Glnntsrouted C91chCo Cuba 11·2 sccond B·I· Baltimore Orioles StRrtor and winner Milt Pappas tie and two from John Goryl, . a u ray' s ames and Mllwaukeo Braves had a defeated Knnsas City Athletics and Russ Snyder also bomered Cieveland rookie AI Luplow four· run ninth to post a 9-3 win 8.3' nnd Minnesota Twins top. tor OrIoles and Bnltimore scored homered .In tho opener nnd In· against Houston Colts.

eletla Boyer

HULL, QIIO. CP - Hull·ot· tawa Canadiens coosted to an 8-2 win llVel' Kingston Fron· tenacs Sunday to take a 3.~ lend In games In the best·or· seven Eastern ProlcsslonallIoc· key League finals.

The series now shilts to King. stan tonight with Hdbs ncedlng only onc mol'c win to retain the leaguQ' title.

Billy Carter sCOred two for HuH·Ottawa while Keith Mc· VroBry, WAyne Doddy, Jean Gauthier, Jim Roberts, Fred lIl1ts and Dob Ellelt got the others.

pled Cleveland IndIans twIce, six runs In tho sevonth to break dlans' Chuck Esselllan also In Saturday lIames Meta ex. Yonkees honded Washington 0.4 and 7-3, open the gomo. Ilomered. . ' ploded for a slx·run sixth In· Senators n 10·3 thumping 1n the Don Cherry scored both KIng.

In other senior circuit action, Sixth'· plnco Minnesota ~Iso 8t. Lou I 5 Cardinals, with nlng to tlown PhllIlcs ~-6. In AmerIcan Leaguc. League·lentl· ston gods. Now Yot'k Mets moved up to wont on a home • run bmgc Kenny Boyer driving In five othel' National Leaguo contests, Ing Cleveland IndinnR nipped ninth place lis they spm Ii 118 they. humbled Cleveland, l'Uns,. cosily took tho opener nlghtcnp's only run. Minnesota Twins 0.'7, Los An. doubleheader wIth Philadelphia TwlnR slammed six 8010 hom· against Reds but Eddie Kasku's CIncinnati Reds 5-4, moving In geles edged Detroit Tillers 7.0, • Phillie!, winnIng the opener 8·0 ors In tho nightcap orr stnrter ninth ·inn'lnll ~omer accounted to first plnco on percentngo Chicago White Sox posted the Columbian jClub nnd droppIng the nightcap 10'2' Rnd losor Gary Bell Dncl re'for Clnclnnntl s n I g h t e [I p points us Los Al\g~les Dodgers sume score over Boston Red Houston Colts edged out the lIovor Barry Lntman with olosts squeeker. knocked Pittsburgh PIl'Oies out Sox ill a 10· inning strugllie and 1I111wnukee Braves 3.~; and Sun from Lenny Green, Do~ Min Bob Purkeywns the winncr Baltimore Orioles held on to 'Darts Schedule Fmncisco Giants shut out Chi. cher, Zarro Versailles, Bill Tut· for Reds as Vadn Pinson anti cago Cubs twice 7·0 nnd 6.0 Gordy Coleman nlso homered

Pittsburgh PI;atcs won the for Cincinnati in tile nlgl1tcnp. first game of a tloublehea'der nt Lindy MeDnnlel was the loser. Los Angeles, defeating the Dod. Lorry Jackson was the first· j:!el'S 6·1 game winner. FORD IN GOOD FORM Roman Mojlns broke n 3-2

The Yankees bounded past ninth • Inning tie for Houston Cleveland inlo the league lead with n homer to give Colts on the strength of Whitey Ford's their win over Mllwnukee. Hal tight pitching In the opener for Smith bnd Jim Pendieton also a 3·2 win and a display of thoir homered for the Colts as .Jack vounted power In the second Forrell WIlS the winning pitcher. game as they knocked off Wash. Don McMahon WIlS the lower for ington . with homl!rs by Clete the Braves, Frank Bolling hit Il Boyer and Bill Skowron. solo homer. for Mllwaukcc.

Senators wcre losting tbcJr I New York Mets fell bnck to

Probable _ Pitchers

By TilE ASSOCIATED PRESS Probahle pitchers for today's

mojor teague games, won ontl lost records In parentheses:

Natlonnl League Plttshurgh (Mizell 1·0) at San

.@.;;.,<' ...... Francisco (Perry 1-0). Chicngo (Curtis 0-1) at Los

Angeles <RIchert 1·0 or WlI­Ilams 0-1) (N). 12th nnd 13th consecutive gam~s I last placo by losing In the nl!lht·

during the day. Roger Maris cap to Phlladl!lphln. A. Jacltson homl!red for New York in the was the winner for New Yor!t. 'III.;~....a",;.t:Mb;".~ ..• ~"'''''oiIL: first gamc. : Phlllies eamo bock In the sec·

Milwaukee tS p.a h n 2·2) at Phllndelphla <Hamilton 1-2 or Locke 0-0) (N).

Chicago's doubleheader win l . __ Vada PJnSOD. ,..;..;,- lond game with bomers ~y Tony over the Red Sox also moved Gonzales, Don Demeter lind

American League No gnmes scheduled.

WILLlE 1\] A YS

PASSENGER ,

TIRES

,

TO·NIGll'f'S GAMES , (KnoockoutSerlea)

7.45:-Rovers vs Dodgers

(Board One). Mnl'lIons vs Jays

(Board Two). Indians vs Blsons

(Board Three). Hawks VB Rangers . (Board Four).

9.15:-Playoff for 2nd and· 3rd places

In regular series: Leafs vs Maroons Rangers with a bye

The series now mOl'e Guelph for the next S

games Tuesday, Thursday Saturdny. Fifth game If 8Bry, will be ployed 'In ncr MayO. . The travel • weary club, who eliminated Whent Kings In the llame of a rugged just Inst VVednesdny unnblo to match the squad after tho flnt

Wings have been claiming the Easlern IIl1e Tuesday. TAKE EARLY LEAD

The winners led [.0 mlnuteA, boosted It to H two periods lind shared thlrd·perlod goals.

Enrl Helskala nnd scored the olher goals.

Doug Fox, who ~aw tlon before nn Injury centro Phil Dutton In th! ond period, accounted for Edmonton goals.

Dutton WOR asslsled from ico with blood ~[r.'lml". his face aller he broken noso and a cut eye requiring e i g h t when he WBS high Wing defence man Ron

Harris receiVed a major ally and It was while he that FolC put his teom seoro sheet for the first

Holy Cross Baseball

Holy Cross senior team wlll hold an practice tonight at gymnasium starting at all players are asked to special errort to attend.

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Uf. tim. guarantee agaln.t dif.et. 'in :'workmanlhip and ' , material. .,". . . . ' .' ..

KIND 197.95 107.42 900 x 20 . 12' Ply Traction HI·Miler

'Road Hazard. Guarant .. al . listed above.'

Reconditioned Avail , Ask, about our .

TIRES You .... lf " ~eheading.

750 14,-of our. F,alt . ,,~. Service

, ' x All. liz • ' . ,

. . Mountin .. 1 ..

$4·95 Icich ,\ ; Pasllnger. and , Servic.: . . Truck. Tire.

'~ .. I,

I , '

, . . /\ . j

.THINK-and you'll buy GOOD;f\iEAR

-- . ' , , .. . j •

..

Dro 11

John's 5; Gander Brook 12; Bo Falls 10; Bue 6; Harbour (

BUCHAKS. (Staff favored SL Jol

walked off with straight AlI-:'\elV

title here when they tlef Coast dh'i,ion Falls, in lhe

game 6-2, Wavne Bradhut tc~m. supplied

punch, as he ~c and sct,up anc , the allemat, the other Iyo n

Falls, who !}-2 the pre~iom

John's in the tit out front wit

of the first : took advan John's def! his way in tally, but

his first of f 0\

let at the th: of the second

John Byrne . . Bralibulry was. bac

45 seconds lalc[ type goal, fro

circle after Byrn set him up.- I

SAYS: "Th e YM CI . steadies our yot .It gives them a sense of values. based on home, . church and ffien

the g A TV sel, splendid cor blended by

. individual \I land. Avail.

The

(Not . Inserted . , .!' ."

- .

Page 11: Scviets Rap acml an - Memorial University of Newfoundlandcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ""mi>rr

1962 -

,. Edml~nlc i-d

1· .. ~.

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. MONDAY. APRIL 30, J.962

t. John's Bantam . AII-Nfld., Champs Drop Grand Falls 6-2 In Championship Game'

FRlIl.\Y. AI'RIL 27 ~rand Falls 2; Corner Brook

, , ,

Bradbury Top Scorer represent tl}e East Coast in the championship game by defeat·

. ing Gander 5-0 on Friday on goals by Noftnll, Byrne, Bob Smyth and two by Bradbury and then defcating Harhour Grace 10·0 in Saturday's match.

11

" l{llmll1:", ,;",hans 4: Betll'ood 4. I Bueh· Wayne Bradbury and Noel Dinn were the big guns in the 10·0 decision with Bradbury scoring three times and drawing four assists, Dinn, the hard· working rearguard, drew four assists ..

won pme with marc shots :oall.

Ildtl!n,,~ ~1 John's 5; GamIer O.

cut ,hI ~

Ron I major :ie he "II team on . first time.

ross jail

'. (,'rner Brook 12; Botwood 2. . \;r.l1ld Falls 10; Buchans O.

l;.\l~d~r 6; Harbour Grace 1.

!o'.\ Tl'UU;\ Y. APRIl, 28 \,:·.,r.d Falls 6: Botwood O. ~I .Iohn's 10: Hr. Grace O. (,'rnrr Brook 13: Buchans 1. ",nil Place I East· West

r..:-::c : Gandl'r 4; Corner Brook

\ ';;,;npionship (;amc (Ea~t·

I'. (.; ': St. ,John's 6; Grand Falls

"; UL\:,\S, (Slaff) - The o~,C\) (a\,ored St. ,John's Capi' l ,:' walked off with their sec· .

. :c1 mai~ht All·:licwfound:and ','. ~ry title here Saturday . :!\\ when thel' deCeated the ;\ rq Coa~t di':ision winllers,

Billy Lowe was runner up to Bradbury with two markers, while singles went to Fred "Flukc" Noftall, Bobby Angel. John Byrne. Billy Lacey and Frank Hickey.

Gn1l1d Falls on the West Coast rcprcsentation by hlank· 'ing Corner Brook 2-0 and Buch· ans 10·0 on Friday and then stopping Botwood 6,0 on Satur· day. CHAMPS-The St. John's All-Stars won the Bantam All-Nfld. Hockey titlc Sahlrday night by dcfeatil1!1'

Grand Falls 6·2 in the championship game. Mcmb crs of thc winning team arc: front row (left to rj(Jh0 Gcrard Gibbons (stick-boy), Bobbv Smyth, Bob Fre nch, Harry Roherts, Jimmy Power, Wayne Bradburv (captain), Noel Dinn, Fred NoCtal!, Pat English, Bill) Lacey. Back row: Ron Shannahan, Bob Angel, Frank Hickcy, Pat Rtlyal, Andy Churchill, Don Sell ars, Billy Lowe, John Byrne, Jim Vavasour. .

Or IWIl:el:balI";';;ll(\ Fall>. in the champion· :1 1\'::'1 ::amr 6·2. .

, HI: Wayne Bradhury. eapta;n WAYNE BRADBURY NOEL DINN

Waync Bradbury of St. ,Tohn's I topped the scorcrs with 13 points on five goals and eight assists. The lone injury to the \. Caps was to Andy Churchill who received a bruised elbow . The Capitals will arril'e in SI. John's on the 10.00 train.

STANUll"iGS· S1. John~s Swimmers Finish ~: Ihr tram. supplied the ~cor· ,-. punrh. a~ he scored fOllr

in there was no douht al the team started to apply terrific

Grand Falls rounded out the second period scoring.

Eastern Division GP W ],

and ~ct·up anothrl'. .lim ___ ~~·'r"\rr. Ihl' alternate captain,

l'j~r,1 the nther t)'o marker •.

pressure. . Jim Power opened his brace

on a play with defenceman Ron Shannahan at 5.57 for a 3·1 lcad and Power's second from Andy Churchill and "Fluke" Noftall had it 4-1 before Pardy from Green and Kennedy for

In the final period Bradbury added two .insurance tallies, his iirst from Power and Lowe, the second from defe nceman Noel Dinn, who picked up his sevcn assist of the series, tops for the playolfs.

SI. ,John's ..... 2 2 0 Gander ......... 2 1 1 HI. Gracc . . 2 0 2

I

, ~.:::.

IW

Y .(~ . ,

:S

-;.52 --8.24

-7.76

-9.52

6A1

17.42

\;rand Fall~, who were stop. s.:! the prl'\'ious ye~1' by

. ,lohn'~ in the title mall'h, :::o\cd out front with the lone 10al of the first period as Kennedy took ad\'antage oC a hOle SI. John's defensive play to work his way in for an un· wisted tally. but Bradbury "'Ilh his first oC four tied. the tame 1·1 at the three minute mark oC the second on a play ~llh John Byrne.

Bradbury was, hack a minute lnd 45 seconds later on a Stan Bmn type goal. from the face· et! circle aCler Byrne and Billy lO'l sct him up.: From th~re

m POPUUR

ED SULLIVAN SAYs: "The YMCA steadies our youngsters. It gives them a true sense of values .•• values based on home, family, church and friends. ..

Westcrn lJivision Grand Falls .. 3 3 0 Cornel' Bruok .. 3 2 1

2 the annual telegraph SWimming I I Wayne Murphy was tops for I 5th-25 yards Backstroke.:'.lO· st. John's won the right to

Buchans .......... 3 1 2 Botwood ,... .,. 3 0 3 o meet sponsored by the Bo),s' 1 SI. .Iohn's against Bell Island 112 years: 1. Jim Hibbs, 27.0;:

-----------------------:----------- Clubs of Canada in so far as I I taking three first places with 6th-50 yards Breast Strbke,

C'lty Inter-Club the only two Newfoundland en· his time of 1.05.1 in the 100 13·14 years: 1. Dave Conway, All-Star ·Bowling

,

"The Big Bear" Jim Carey came through with a 269 in the final frame of All Star Bowling Saturday night to overcome oldlimer Alex English's 35 point lead and repeat IS Men's Bowling champ for the second straight week, . .

But more important then Carey's victory was the ten points he earned (as winner)

I Cor Holy Crosl as It kept them lout front of second place Feild· I ians, I While Carey picked up 15 , points for the Crusaders their

lead over the Double Blues, de fending All Star champSI was Cllt by five points, when Joan Phillips collected 20 points on her way to her sixth straight win.

IO-WmGIIT SHIFT I •

,. Tests confll'med what A lot . of the beller golfers instinct. ,ively have felt and practiced·

for some time.

Joan gained five points for a second frame 251 and added an' ther five for her 710 triple plus ten points as winner of the show, While defeating Lillian Vatether of the Guards by 70 pins,

While Joan Phillips and Jim Carey, the two winners, were adding 20 and 15 points re· spectfully. Mrs. Vateher gain ed ten points for the Guards with 272 third frame and being weekly winner, while Alex Eng· lish collected five for St. Pat's as weekly winner.

(Standings) Holy Cross.... •• •• •• 350 Felldians .... •• .... •• 325 St. Pat's .. :, •• .. .... 205 Guards.. •• .. ...... 110 St, Bon·s.... .... ...... 65

these tests were made under the supervision of Mrs. Nanette McIntyre and Dr. . Raymond Snyder of the UCLA physical education department. Golfers from the Los Angcles Open took their swings with each foot on the platform of a dif·

tries are concerned as t~ey yards free style being one of 54.0; 2. Kevin Husk. . . wrapped up a total of 99 pomts the best in Canada. Jim Hibbs 7th-50 yards, Backstrj)ke, winning every race while the and Ted Williams took two 13·14 years: 1. Mike Collins, Bowling I eaguo little practiced team from Bell first places each in the under 138.8; 2. Irwin Melamed. <

• '.. Island had 17 points most of 10 years dil'ision while- Mike ~50 Yards Backstroke. iO.12 them coming with th~rd place Collins won two in the 13-14 I years: 1. Ted Williams. 41:ti 2, finishes as they had. Just one .. ! year old brackct. Steve Melam'l Wayne Clarke. ..~. SCIIEIJULE FOR 'fillS

WEEK second place. Pomts were I ed eame first in one 15-16 year, 9-100 Yards Breast stroke' 15· awarded on a 5·3·2-1 for iirst . old e,'cnL ! t6 years: 1,' Sll've Mela~ed, secon~, thi.rd ~nd fourth p!ac~s'i LIST OF EVENTS AND 11.2i.8: 2, Jim Fitz;:erald; (BI" 3;

To·Nlght:- WIJlle wmnmg the provmclal·: WINNERS Andrew Squires. Alleys 1 and 2 meet hands ?o.wn the. SI. ~ohn's ; 1 151.-25 yard: Frc~ Style. 10- I 10-100· yards Free Stroke •• 1~

8.30-Feildians vs Victurians youngsters fll11shed flith III the . i 1 12 years: I. ,hm Hibbs, (SJ), i ycars: I, Wayne Murphy, 1.05·1: 9.45-Mun. Worke,rs VS c.ight entries across Canada. The: .. :.) 1 19.1; 2. Wayne Jenkins. I 11-100 Yards Breast Strok.e, 16

Canada Packers tnnes from all centres were I) 2nd~'i0 yards Free Style. years: I, Wayne JlIurphy, 1.29. Alleys 3 and 4 telegraphed to JlIontreal where, .. .' .. . . . 1 10.t2 years: I, Ted Williams,: 12-100 Ynrrls Relay; Junior:'! S!.

8.30-:-Ayre's Te vs Palmer's Te I they were compared. r.·· .......•..•.. '\ 34.2: 2, Wayne Clarke. ~ ,John·s. Husk, Williams, Clarke 9.45-Simpson·Sears vs :\!ontreal's East· End Boys >oj, ., .. "::,, .. ,.,:.:, .. ;p 3rd-100 yards Free Style, 13· ; Conway.

Munn's Te Club finished first with 72 14 veal's: 1, :Ilike Collins, 1.18:: 13-200 Yards Relay, Senior: 1 Alleys 5 and 6 points in the 17 races that were WAYNE )iURPJlY 2, Steve :'Ilelamed. 'St. John's: Squires, Melamed

830-Avalon Telcphone vs . run off in the various centres. I i 4th-100 yards Backstrokc., Legge, Collins, . Fenco Engineerin" DovCl'court Boys' Club from I place with 37, Niagara. Fal s , __ _

9.45-Amherst Te vs Dei-Tile Toronto finished second with I Boys Ctub ~as fourth With 1,8 & Terrazzo 63 points. Hamilton BoYS' Club and 51. .Iohn shad 12. Toron~o s

Tuesllay:-Alleys 1 and 2

7.15-Ramblcrs vs Marconi Tc 8.3G-Royal Tc Vs Horwood's Tc 9.4u-Rovcrs vs AI'alon Tel.

Allcys 3 and 4 7.15-i\fld. Brewery vs

Highway's Tc S.30-Imperial 'l'c \'S ~Iarshall's

Te. . 0.45-1I0Iy Cross vs C,N.R,

Association. Alleys 5 and 6

7.15-Fry's Engillecring vs Marshall's Tc

8.30-Simpson·Sears vs feild· ians

9.45-Maple Leafs vs lIIunn's Tc

Thursday:-

and lIlontreal's Point SI. Char· Woodgreen Club had two pomts les finished in a tie for third while entries from Calgary.

·Billiarcl Tourney 1 The second round of the ~"1Y 11th. : Billiards, Tournament which! -B.OO- i I was recently released has been, A. Hu.',ey N. J'. Wadd~n I I completely revcrsed for the I -9.30- 1

;:ames at the Central Fire A. Stevenson ,I. Gatherall I Station. May 12th.

-8.00- !

The first ;amc of the round C. ~ell'ell H. K£lly i starts at the Hall tonight when -9.30- ! A. E. Andrews from K. of C. J. Simmons J. Collord j'

cues off against Capt. Sooley of ~Iay 14th. the Firemen's Club starting at I -8.00-So·clock. Following this round I E. Butt F. O'Toole the John R. O'Dea trophy will 9.0G-be presented to the winning E. Jones J. Fitzpatrick

TH EY RE-GREW HAIR!

P1rase .end donation to: Man. lZrr KO)'al Bank of Canada, II'rst End Brancb, Water St. !\. John's,

They showed tha t with top profession'sls there is no pro nounced shifting of weight to the left foot at Impact with the ball. And· not nearly as much shift on the follow through as usually Is advoca t· ed.

As reported In Golf Digest,

Alleys 1 and 2 7.15-Holy Cross vs· Amherst Tc 8.30-C.N.R. vs Del·Tile &

Terrazzo 9.45-Royai 'rc vs Palmer's Tc

Alleys 3 and " 7.15-IIi!:hway·s 'l'c vs Rovers 8.30-I!'enco Engineering vs

team. !\lay 15th. -8.00-

(2nd Round Schedule) To Night

Firemen K. of C.

E. Boone '1'. Brewer Jr. -9:00-

Chief Cadigan P. J. DolJlJiu

: IN 12 MONTHS 1N3MOtme

Unit' Spcciulisl Here Tuesday

'. " , "

"Come on folks ••• the ·.game's starting'" .. ' A TV set .. an armcbalr and "Black' & Wbli~'. make i. spl~Ddid combination, 'Black &:. Whlte·.iJ a superb 5~tch, blended by CllpertS from' a 5e'e~tio", of Scot!aod's finest individual whiskies. DI,tillCd,blcod¢ aod. bottled In ~t: land. Availahle in various sizes, . ,:.: ...

.. The Se~ret is in the Blending . , ' ., ... : ..... : .: . ' ..... 'j

··.BLACK" WHITE.· SCOTCH WHI$KY'

"BUCHANAN'S" , (Not ·inaerled b)' the Board of Llquo~ Control),

... •

. Canuda Pucl(~l's 9.45-VicIlH·jnns vs Maple Leufs

Al1~ys 5 find Ii 7.15-Nfld. Brewery vs Mun.

Workers 8.3G-Imperial Te vs AYl'e's Tc 9A5-Ramblers vs r'ry's Eng.

of. .. The only thing harder thOri IIreakirl\! a bcic\ hoblt 15 to keep, from telling eVCrYOll8 how )'CU C!!~l!'. ,lIlA.

C. Sooley -B.OO-

A. A ndrcws· -9,00-

D, Costello '1'. Hal'din!!

A. Hayles

1\Iay 2nd. -8.00-

S. J. Simmons -9.00-

A. Go'sse . . J. Murphy !IIay 31'd. -8.00-

C, Sheppard 111. F. O'Keefe Jr. , -9.00-

C, Ayres

R, Nell

IIlay 4th, -8.00-

J. Simms I

B. Rose -9,00-

Z. Andrews W. Beer

C, Sooley

May 5th. -/1.00-

J. W. Mahoney -9.00-

W. Andrews A. J. Grouchy May '7th. -8.00-

BOB GOALBY Combine IIf. cups sifted icing W. Mitchell E. Beer "7. 0 per cent' on left foot'" sugar 1'. teaspoon-vanilla and goo-

¥! tc'aspoon . almond extract - . Whelan rerent s~t of scales, ,he shift. with sufficient milk. to make an D. Gosse 111 8th T. !ng of weight, .as· recorded by Icing' of spreading c~nsistency.· -':~OG-' the carefully balanced. scales, age of 70 per' cent of weight J, BastowF. O'Toole wBs: burned by. movie cameras; . on the ;.left foot 'with drivers, . . -9.30-

A majority 'of the profession 81 per cent 'with eight irons. O .. Ryan T. Brewer Sr. als .had. most· of their weight· The accompanyIng photograph May 9th. on: the· right foot at the 'start of llob Goalby at 'the end of -8.00-of clUb, contact with the ball. his follow through shows that M, Cook J. Grouchy Wlth the driver, the average Ill,uchwelght is still' on. his -9.00-arrived· at hnpact with only riglit foot. W, Cadigan A, Harding· 47,25 per cent of weight to the . These tests would make it May 10th. left; Wlthan eight iron, 44,13 seem that a great deal of trou· . -8.00-per cent was to the left. . ble experienced by weck·cnd D. Cadigan J. Tobin· . At the finl8~ of the swlng,golfers is brought about hy t\Vp i .. ·-9.30~ the professionals had an aver milch shifting of Weight. F, Brien H. Murphy

j ,

~Iuy 16th, -lI.OO-='

G. WootHol'd -9.30-

P. Cullalwn J. Bennett

J. Bennett

IIlay 17th. -'-S.OO-

D. ,J. French -9.30-

Will Show Men and Women How to Save

Hail' and PI'event Baldness OTTAWA, Ollt. New' homl\

treatment methods for saving hair and improving its growth will be demonstrated in St.

or dryness, foli:cle clogge~ with sebum or seborrhea-can . be corrected by the Roberts ·home treatment if caught in tUne,

W. Hillier· M. Ryall' ,John's Tucsday, May 1st at "DON'T WAIT UNTIL IT'5 TOO LATE" 1I1ay 18th.

-8.00-M. 1. O'Keefe A. G. O'Brien

Mean distance o{ the planet Sa turn from the sun· is abou t 885.9 million miles and its periodic time (time required for the planet to make 8 com· plete revolution around the sun) is 29lh years, according to, the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Now is a good time to plant flower bulbs indoors, and pot luck to you.

the I\ewfoundland Hotel.

Trichologist B. Moore lIill be in charge, representing the dynamic Roberts Hair & Scalp Specialists organization. He will personally examine hair· worried men and women from 11.00 a.m. to 9.00 p.m,

This new treatment is neither "mail order" nor "cure·all". It is adapted to the individual after a personal examina tion and progress is checked at regu· lar intervals by a Roberts Spec­ialist.

WHO CAN BE HELPED?

Will the new Roberts treat· ment cure baldness? "No·" For We cannot help men and wo­men who are slick·bald after years of gradual hair los3. 'But

. if you still have fuzz and your scalp is still creating hair, you can at least save and thicken what you have. Some conditions such as "spot baldness" usually have complete coverage if eaughf in time! .

Baldness won't wait for doubters to be convinced; you're going to keep right on losing hair 'til you're bald-unlei5 you get your scalp in h8a1th~' hair·growing condition i;:ain, .

EXAMINE YOU FR~E

We want to make It: dca. that you incur absolutely l1l charge or obligation by cbminr in for an examination. ..

Your . only obligatiOD; 11 II' yourself. We do not pcee p. ·cases that will not respo~d. .

. . GUARANTEE SATISFACTIOl'

, The Roberts Specialistj! will

giva you a writtengu~antee that you must be satisfie~with· in 30 days or It will cost you nothing,'

For a free examinatiob' a~d discussion of yoUr hal:c~ pro\). . lems ask the desk clerk tir Mr. Moore's room number. .Ite doea , not make appointment!. 10: come at your convimlendi!.

.Other conditions· that usually . ~ ••. bring on excessil'e hair·loss- Examinations are given dandruff. itching,ol'er·oiliness, private,

-----_ .... _-.. _-_ ..... - + ·~---_I ______ --...

.. j':. :

Page 12: Scviets Rap acml an - Memorial University of Newfoundlandcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ""mi>rr

. \

12 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFL)). MONDAY. APRIL 30, 1962 ,

" , . OUR BOARDING HOUSE with MAJOR HOOPLE being erected and it is under . stood Mr. Martin will be in charge of the same. This~howa another progressive step in the town of Lewisporte. Lewisporte Notes

WEATHER honour, Betty chos. ballerina Cove Radar Station; Mr. and XI 8~ per cent. , ,Warmer, finer weather now pre· length, nylon and lace· of .Ilaltel Mrl, Malc:olm EvelelJh, Mr. and I~ils and snow piled high 31'ound pink, and carried a bouquet IIf Mrs. Fred Locke, Mr. and Mrs. lie sidewalks and driveways, etc. pink and white carnations, with Don Noseworthy, Mr, and Mu. tas now shown great signs of dis· white veil and head piece to Howard Colsh, Mr. and Mrs. AI· ippearing. match the brlde'l. Her brides· 11\11 Normore, Mr. and Mr •• Lorna Spots of grass can be seen In mAids were Yvonne Witcher, a Chaffey, Pallor and Mrl. Rowe,

carious parts and altogether the cousin on the teaching .tar! of Immediately after the CIl'emony

In conclusion, Mr. Williams thanked the School Board for their .upport, the teaching staff for their untiring eUorll, tbe head teachers of the Ele­ment&ry Schols, the .tudents for their co-operation, the Home &: School Association, and all others for their Interest gen· erally In all school activUes.

ligns of Spring are evident . . . Blrchy Bay,' who wore mauve Ihe bridal party motored to Notr. lnothcr sign is the indoor clean· nylon and lace with matching ac~ .Dame Junc:llon and back to Chef· ng, painting and house cleaning cessorles, Bnd Donna Freak. an fey'. restaurant, where a large I sure sign o[ Spring. . . House· aunt of the bride's who chose number of ,uests enjoyed a de· rives are elltremely busy, and pastel blue lace and nylon wltb lIclou. .upper. The guts were Incs of white clothes and blan· matching accessories, The lillie beautifully dIsplayed, and admlr lets etc, are to be seen giving ring bearer W8! Yvonne Freake, ed, Best wlshea ar. extended to II'crythinl: around the appear· a cousin of the bride and Beulah Mr. and Mri, Head for many jpce of Spring. The pavcment Freaks another cousin of the yelrs of future happiness to· illS stood up I'Cry wcll, and espe· bride's acted as flower girl. Both gether,

Following the Principal's reo port, the Vlce·Prlnclpal read the list of donors to the Scho larshlp Fund, the sponson of the different awards offered, and the names of the success· ful candidate. and award win· 0311), at Ihis time of year do we looked very attractive dressed In

ia~' a bill Thank You for the white and accessories like the pavcment from :-lotre Dame Junc· hrlde. Ray Ivany and Larry Iln and around our town. Frcake were ushers and escorted

WEDDING BELLS Walerman-Head'

The Pentecostal Church on Ifain Street was decorated reo !ent1~· when at II p.m. Pastor A. Rowe united In marringe, Mar· Inric. youngest dnughter of Mr. Ind ~Irs. Alfred Waterman, Bo' ~·atcr~ ,\I'cnue. Lcwis(lorte, and I\'~ndcll, ~on of l\lr. and Mrs. !)Jiver Head of Comfort Cove. rho hride look in!: very heauliful "'a~ It'd up the Church aisle escor. ted hy her father who gave her in marria~e. She looked \'cry )(\\'c]y)lresscd in ballerina length ~'hite -nYlon, net and tulle, and :arried a white Bible with White ribbon and lace streamers. She I\'ore a finger li(l I'cil and match· lng :hend piecc. She was attended by her ~ister Betty as _ matron of

the guests to ribbon bedecked pews, The' groom was supported by Scott Hynes of Arnolds Cove, Leo Hodder and Auslln Freake, All wore black suits and black ties. The bride's mother wore a beige suit with white hat, music was supplied by Miss Myrna Wolfe who also played "0 Pro· mise Me" during the sll!l1lng of the ~Ignlng of the register. Miss Wolfo who Is on the teaching stafr of Pentecostal High School here Is a lovely singer, but was suffer· Ing from II cold, and unah1e to sing to her olVn accompaniment. The hymn "Father like a Shep· herd lend us" was' sung during the service. Guests of honour were Mr. and Mrs. Simon Hod· der and daughter Judy. MrS. WIl· liam Freakc, of Boyds Cove, Mr, and Mrs, Stuart Haley, Comfort

TO-MORROW A 'AiULOUS QUIST ,.OR srCIII!T TII!rAJj!!!!~~

~.:~':'-:- THE SECRET ;~1;' ~' MONTE .,

~''''','' ;~:.R~RY tAlH~UN

Special Added Attraction

TIMES OF SHOWS

E\,E~I~G: "SECRET OF MONTE CRISTO" 6.30 - 9.15.

"!vIAGIC BOY" 7.50.

~fATINEE: 1.30

LAST TIMES TO • DAY ~/ADA"

NEWFOUNDLAND'S FRIENDLY THEATRE

NOW PLAYING

11 out of ... _. '0 doctors recommend

tiD I •• Al~o-"UP-TO-THE·MINUTE NEWS"

rIMES OF SHOWS

HOLD ANNUAL SPEECH ners. NIGHT Donors to Scholarship Fund:

The annual Spe!ch Night Lewlsporte Clinic, Dr. W, Pol· programme of Lewlsporte lock, Dr. M. McVicker, Dr. Amalgamated School was held. H. G, Wood, Dr. Gerald Hewitt In the auditorium of the Reg· Dr. Fred W. Rowe, United lonal Schooilln April lIrd, at 8 Church W.A. (East), Steers Ltd, p,m, Hodder's Esso Service Station,

The Assembly opened with Lewlsporte Wholesalers Ltd,. the Ode to Newfoundland fol. 1\lff's Ltd,. S. F. Forward &: lowed with Prayer by Rev. A, Son, A, T. Woolfrey ". Bros. B. LeGrow, B,A" B,D. Ltd., Lewisporte Loodge A.F,

Charlie Simms, chairman Ilf "A,M" Anglican W,A. (West), Scholll Board, welcomed the SalvatIon Army Home League, ratherln,. He refemd to the Nfld, OutfittIng Co. Ltd" Car· new Ichool and paid tribute til naUon Lodge LOBA, The Jub the pioneers who had pressed Uee Guild, A Friend, Mr. Mel­forward for lucll a .ystem .s vln Brett, Notre Dame Agen· we now bave. He compared the cics Ltd., Lewisporte Drug statistics of 19111 with those of Store Ltd" Lewlsporte Motors 1962 In regard to Ipace and Ltd. pupil population. In 19111 there Ltst of prize winners 1960·lll. were eight classrooms and an Scholarship, commitee: enrolment of 3111 pupils, Now Grade VIl: First position $10,00 • \{lTIA .wOOJSI1lI~ m: IIll aJa1Jl Julia Rosc, made the most pro· population of practically 900. gress; $10.00, Rose Gosse. made Mr, Simms thanked the Prin the most progress In Arithmetic; cipal, W. Williams, and his $5.00 each, Jerry White, John staff for their co· operation, Prince, Randy Russeli,. Marion

Simmons Randolph Whltewny. Mr. Williams then presented Grade' VIlI: First position

his report. $10.00" Roland Collins, made the In opening, be welcomed the most progress; $10,00 Pats),

gathering and congratulated the Moyles, highest average marks in Scbool Board for their initla· Mathematics; $10.00, Eric Moore, live in the planning and com- highest' marks in Frcnch; $5.00 pletion of the new Amalgamat· each, James Locke, Christine ed Regional High School, and Lcyden, Wayne Fudge, Gordon said the magnificent auditor Rowbotlom, Graham Peliey. ium was magnificent' for luch Grade IX: First position, $10,00 a function a. this. Baxter Woodford, made the most

Th, Principal explained this progress, John Sutherland. high· was really the third program to est marks in Mathematics: $10.00 be held this year for the stu· Grayson Butler, 75 per cent in dents of these schools. The French; $;,00 each, Loroe Brett, elementary school children had Errol Collins, Ronald Hodder, held their programes earlicr, David Manuel. George Martin, at which time prizes and dlplo- Roy Parsons, Bessie Welis, Edith mas were awarded. Burt, Alice Freakc, Patsy Warr,

Mr. Williams compared the Nancy Ivany, Katina Peckford, Ellzabeth Porter, Sandra Snow,

enrolment flgur... In 19117 the Marian Welis, Marilyn Williams, total number in attendanee Caroline Hobbs, made the most were 1168, now it Is 832, an in· progress In Latin. Eric Dwyer. crease over the dropouts of 164. Grade X: First position, Har. "This," explained the Principal, vey Bennett, made the most pr~· "has been necessary for the gress $10,00, Kathleen Peckford, School Board to find two new highest average marks In Mathe. classrooms each year." Contln· matics, Allan Janes, 75 per cent ulng. Mr. WilJlams said that In French, John Hodder, Peter rooms are now available for a Penney. Malline Woolfrey. science lab, a library, and a Town Scholarship $200.00, Har· gymnasium, and the Board vey Bennett. plans spending $10,000 for Lions Club Scholarship, Educa· equipment available by SeptclI1' tlon Student, $100,00, Judith Bud· ber. den,

The Principal's report dealt' University Student other than with variou. projectl which are Education, $100.00, Judith Rus­being carried out regularly In sell. the School year, such IS Edu- Eli Rowe Bursary, $2~,00, Don· cation Week, Publlc Speaking, aId Manuel. and Sport!, Including the an. Canadian Legion Scholarship, nual Sports Day program, ,$30.00. Most progress in English

Mr. Williams emphasized the Grade IX, Katina Peckford. point that it Is useless to at Mr, E. Benson's prize, highest

marks in French, Grade IX, $5.00 tend organized hockey unless a Baxter Woodford. community has a rink with.t Highest marks Grade X, $5.00, least I roof over It. Harvey Bennett.

Regarding the euidanc. pro- Confederation Scholarships $100, gram in the School, the report Maxine Woolfrey and Harvey laid that It II hoped that in· Bennett. formation would be Ivailable to The prizes given by the schol' aU stUdents about the various arship committee were presented professions which pllpllJ hope by Mr. Scott Woolfrey chairman to enter. of that committee.

''I think It is Important for The Town Scholarship was pre· a student to want to do 10m.·, sented by Mayor Harold Starkes, thing. If he hal a goal in mind the Lions Scholarship by Mr, C, he will :have an incentive to DwYer, the Eli Rowe Bursary by do well in school. He will Colonel W. C. Benson, Canadian strive to Itudy' tllose subjects Legion scholarship by Mr. Don which lead' to matriculation" Manuel and Mr. E. Benson's There is evidence that In many prizes by Mr. C. Williams. places .tudents' are not utillzlng Trophies for sports day were the improvements provided, ell' presented by Mr. E. Williams and pecially In the last decade; to donated by Home and School As·

soclation. The awards were ns reach their full potential. The folloW:!: 1st. place singles, Sid. fulure of our Province de Pends upon the kind of educa. ney Peckford and Neil Woolfrey.

Highest number of points, boys tion our youth receives, and over 16, Gerald Sar~ent: Boys not upon the lize' of the school under 14. Roland Colllns; girls they attend," Mr. Williams 14.16, Patsy Moyles. said. The name5 of the successful , The percentage of passes In candidates In the public examin. the public examinations were ations were then presented their given: Grade 11 80 per cent; certificates by Mrs, H. Manuel Grade X 80 per cent, and Grade and tlte large number accepted

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same, one's thoughts went back to the years gone by when If three or more kat for Grade XI exams the school was considered a large one.

The following received certIfi· cates In Grade IX: Clifford, Brett, Larne Brett. Grayson But· ler, R.ex Coish, Terry Colsh, Eric Collins. Derrick Cull, Robert Cur· lew, Eric Dwyer, Larry Freake, Clayton Gillingham, Ronald Hod· der, David Manuel, George Mar· tin. Bryce Noble, Roy Parsons, Sidney Pecqkord, Scott M. Por· ter. Gerald Sargent. Arthur Smith John Sutherland, Alvin Wells, Howard Wheeler, Baxter Wood· ford, Ncil Woo!frey, Robert Young, MarilYn Banfield, Edith Burt, Hclen Dwyer, Alice Freake Caroline Hobhs, Lorraine Hoddl· nott. Nancy Ivany. Kathleen Jen' klns, Bernice Marlin, Kathleen Oake, Katina Peckford, Elizabeth Porter, Vivian Russell. Elizabeth Simms, Sandra Snow, Patsy Warr Bessie Wells, Judy Wells, Marion B. Wells, ::'vlarilyn Williams, An· gela Wornell.

Grade X: Harvey Bennett, ot· to Burt, Rex Frampton, .Tohn Hodder, Donald Ivany. Allen Janes, Donald Manuel. Richard Norman, Kevin Osmond" Donald Pelley. Herbert Pelley. Melvin Penney, Peter Penncy, scott Por­tcr. Samuel Roberts, Reginald Smart,Gordon Snow. Winston Woodford, Vera I\,bbolt, Eileen Burt, Clara Dwyer, Cynthia Dwyer, Hattie Freake. Henrietta Freake, MarilYn Kinden. Joy Kin­den. Isabel Jones. Marilyn Lane. Karen Manuel, Mildred Mercer, Agnes Parsons. Kathleen Peel,· ford. Sandrn Peckford, Shirley Pilgrim, Dianne Porter, Nellie Russell, E. Irene Stuckless and Maxine Woolfrey.

Grade XI: (Order of Merit In Honours) Judith Ann Russell, Hedley Hart, Marie Russel!, Ray· mond Ivany, Roger Porter, Joan White. Judilh Budden and Brian Peckford.

Matriculation: Melvin R. Brown Franldyn .lones, Douglas W. Martin, Beulah Martin, P~u­line Haye, Golda Price, June Roe· bottom, Jannette Snow.

Certificate~: Ray Cole, Clar­ence Fudge, Chcs Ginn, Benja­min Lacey, Donald :Io!anuel, Da­vid Nicholas. Austin Penney, Har· vel' Pike, Martin Poole, Donald Young, Jean Manuel. Joan Wil­liams. Margaret Woolfrey, George B. Hayward, Franklyn Leyte, David Wheeler, Daisy Froude, Geraldine Martin, Harry North' cotto

Captain W. Loveless of the Sal­vation Army then Introduced the guest speaker. Lt.·Col. W. C. Brown, Superintendent of Educa­tion for the Salvation Army in Newfoundland. Following which Lt.-Col. Browne gave a very in· teresting address,

Beginning his address, Lt.·Col. Brown expressed pleasure at be· Ing present and thanked the ;:'ew­Isporte School Board for the in· vitation, He contrasted present conditions In this town with those he saw forty·five years ago, This upsurge satd the speaker chal· lenges those responsible for edu­cation, but he was thankful they had faced up to the challenge BS was evident by the present edu· cational advancement. He chal­lenged the pupils when he said. "To· day If we are to get to the top and find our true places In the sun, we need to educate our· sel ves as highly a~ posstble.

C. N. RAIL\\' A Y The new pier and wharf under

construction for the past year hy C. N. Railway now nears com. pletion. and it is hoped there will be less inconvenience than last summer In loading and dischar". ing the coastal boats, ..

@~ 'fAKE A

--oo:-.-.ilJ QlJlCK LOSS 2,

The Branch trains have now been curtailed to come into effect in a few days. It is un. derstood there 'will be no train here to stay, just the gas train from Gander which will also handle mail from East and express from N. D. Junction Thi.s train will have Gande; as its headquarters, thus mo.t of the men hitherto on this Branch will either be POsted elsewhere or laid off. It is rumoured the Round Hou<e will be close~, but rumou~s are there wlil be increased work on the freight hand lin" seefl'ice than last summer. It this is correct, then the num,

ment. Finally he expressed the wish that 8S the pupils go out In the world their Christian charact. er, their courage and resource. fulness be sufficient for all their problems.

Mr. Charles Simms thanked Lt.-Col. Brown for his excellent address, The evening concluded with a play "Paul splits the Atom" presented by Sidney Peck. ford, HedY Frelriech, Isabel ,1onM, Wayne Fudge, Billy Hod­der and Sidney Peckford. The play was directed by Mrs. Mar· garet Rose of the teaching staff The Glee Club also sang ~ever~1 songs directed by Mr. A. Welsh with Mr. D. Tilley at the plano, The singing of the National An· them brought n very pleasant evening to a close.

ber of men handling irei"hl the S.A. Home League Room at will be a large number ;ou B p.m. April 10th. Mrs. W. men will welcome this gooil Pollock, Commissioner, opened news. 11 does bring in the cvi, with Prayer, after which the denee of rapid change .as com minutes were read by the Sec. pared with not too many yean retary, Mrs. Chas, Stuck less. ago when one had to go by boat

There were 23 members pres. or train to leave or eome here cnt. The Commissioner said the but now with highway cOllllee: 70 do~en packages - of cookies tion everywhere trains jUst had been ordered for Cookie come and go with freight ~lId Day which will be held during I oil whil~ passengers travel by the week from May 16th to the car to Notre Dame Junction 29th. Mrs. ChiS. Sttuckles& gave an.yway. But we who have be~n a very interesting report on raIlroaders love to watch and 'her attendance to a Confer hear the good old train pass, cnce held at st. John's in and brings back to mind the March. Mrs. Pollock expresses days of long ago. "thanks" for card and elft TE~CIIERS.lItEET While she was ill, A special meeting of teach·

Congratulations were express. ers was held on a recent date cd to Mrs. Helen Woodford and at Pentecostal School in Lewi!. Capt. Trudy Randell for the porte with teachers attending

"GROUNDSWELL" Thinking Day Program which from Windsor, Pentecostal Hi~h The play "Groundswell" was - they had prepared in February. School and Lewisporte.

staged in the Community Cen· A gift on behalf of the Associ. The business of Ihe meeting Ire last Saturday evening at ation was presented by Capt. was to discuss common proh-9,30 and the building was fill· Trudy Randell to Miss Dorothy lem,s and .exchange view! on ed 10 capacity and was greatly Ford for her outstanding work various tOPICS. Mr. Steve Bow· enjoyed. 11 is not usual for the and interest in the Association. ring gave an Informative talk Lewisporle fans 10 watch and Miss Ford in accepting the eift on the Grade XI Mathematic! enjoy a play such as "Grounds· expressed surprise and pleas. course. well", and large numbers at· ure at being thus honoured. Mrs. Fielder of Lewisporte tended Sa!llC, LEGION INITIATES NEW gave a talk on lesson planning,

The Play presented by the ME~fBERS Following the meeting a thick· Northcliffe Drama Club of At R recent meeting of the en supper was served and WiS Grand Falls was under the Lewisporte Branch of the Royal greatly enjoyed,after which direction of Mrs. Ncala Grit· Canadian Legion held on Friday, an informal discussion on ,In· fin and from the beginning of April 6th, nine new members eral topics was discussed, Therr the first Act until the curtain were initiated:rhe President com· were eight teachers from Pente. fel Ion the last Act, all watch. rade Ray Downton admitted the costal School at Lewisport! and ed Rnd listened with kecn in following person, as Associate five from Windsor. tercst. members: Messrs. Don Leyte, LIONS ELECTION RESULTS

All the characters were ex- Norman Forward, Fred Bennett, Election night in the Lions Club tremely good, but Cliff Allen as Honour~ry Members: Dr. reBuited in the following memo was ellceptional. Joan Ralph Geral~ HeWItt, Harold Starkes, beu being elected for the eoming as the Mermaid did an except- Charhe Fudge, Lew Eveleigh, year: President: Sidney Hodder; ion ally fine job as did each and Jack Simmon$ and L. W. Pelley. Vlce·President: Lloyd Noble; 2nd,

After the cercmonles a buf!et Vlce'Presldent: Harry Starkel; everyone taking part. The lunch was served by the ladles 3rd. Vice-President: Jamea Wool. Pigeon Inlett~rs sang .everal allldliary. frey; Treasurer: Leonard Cull; Newfoundland songs and the PRESENTATION Secretary: Scott Woolfrey; Tail old Reel was danced to the A supper meeting of the Of- Twister: Harold Starkes' Lion laughter and enjoyment of all ficial Board WBS held on a ;e' Tamer: Ed. Reid; 1st. Y~ar DI. present. cent Friday evening In. Memo~lal rectors: Peter Tiller and Win.

Lewisporte patrons all enjoy- Hall, The purpose of thiS m,eetmg stan Lock.; 2nd, Year Directon: ed the Newfoundland Play, was to hon our Mr. E. Rideout, Clyde Snook and Rig. Wooifrey. about Newfoundland people and Recording Steward of the board. written by I Newfoundland The supper was served by the playwright. The Club came at United Church Women under the the invitation of Lewisporte supervision of Mrs. E. Randell. Lions and fans are thankful to Immediately after the supper, the Lions for .. very happy Rev. A. B. Legrow who was chair· evening. mnn for the evening welcomed

OBITUARY Clifford Shearring

Death ,comes sometimes after months or even years of suffer­ing and daily expectation, other times in startlil)g suddenness with no herald of its approach. In th~ latter form it came to Clifford Shearring of Stanhop1l Road on Thursday last in tbe early hours of the morning,

Cliff, 85 he was familiarly known, had been in the woods the day before, watched the late ahow on TV, had I lunch and went to bed and died al most immediately, His wife was the only person in the home and was greatly shocked when about! a,m. she discover· ed her husband was dead In the bed beside ber.

Cliff was a very qul,t per· son. One of the humble souls of earth, the deceased wa, al· waya happiest when helping others, and any favour asked was considered an opportunity to help his brother man. A man of great ability for Instal· lation of electricity, plumbing, and a handy man around town, he was well known and ap­praised as beln, conscientous in tverythlnll he undtrtook to do,

He was laid to rest in the Salvation Army Cemetery and funeral service! warp conduct· ed by Capt, W. Loveless where the Citadel was filled to over· flowing with additional chairs havb~g to be placed to accom· modate the large crowd who paid tribute to another dtl· zen.

Cllfford, wbo was 62 years of ag'e, came to Lewlsporte from Three Arm., Green Bay, In 1919 and has resided on Stanbope Road ever since,

PERSONALS Congratulations are extended

Harvey Bennett who was suc· cessful In winning $315,00 in awards for Icbolarships in hi! last schOOl year - as I Graue X scholar. Harvey is studying Grade XI this present year and his many friendJ wish him continued succeSI, Harvey is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Alex, Bennett of Main StreeL

• • • Miss 'Fern Osbourn. who hal

been a very highly esteemed member of the ltaff 01 S. F. Forward, levered ber connlC tions with the firm after !il'l happy years and will on May 1st take up dutln witb her uncle, A. Norlheott Ltd, But wishea for many mort happy yean Ftrn. We ml" you.

• •• Congratulationl art enended

Mr. and Mrs, T. E. Wheeler of St. John', on the recent birth of a son. Mr. and Mrl. Wheeler resided here for a Jlumbrr of years and their many friend! extend congratulatioJII.

• • • Mrs. Jim Elliott who was ill

for several weeks with a slipped disc, Is now able to get around slowly. Best wishes arr ex­tended for a speedy complete recovery.

The many friends 01 Mr5, George· Gale will b, hapPY to know fhe Is feeling m ucit bel, ter after beine bospit.lized al Botwood lor a whB,. )[r;, Gel, was also confined to beu for leveral daYI .t bome,

Best wishes are .lItended to Mr. Morley Russell who cdc bra ted his birthday on Apnl 16th, alao tl! Judy, dauihter at Mr. and Mr,. Norman Forward, wbo c,l,bratedber birthday la$t week, Sev,ral of Judy', young friends gavi her t ver, h,ppy 'urprlueparty at be' bOllle on Mala Street and bad a very enjoyable evenin"

• • •• Mrs. Bert Jenkins, loin. ' I •

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Lt.·Col. Brown referred to the equalization of opportunity for .. ewfoundland and said that Re· gional High Schools, a new Trade and Technical School, Vocational School,s bus transportation, and nigbt schools are all affordin;: greatlir opportunities. He con· tinued "While this stronl1 effort Is being made to provide equal opportunity for all. we are be­ginning ,to see ,how foolish to waste academic education on those who are not academically· mInded. A changing world said the Colonel now presents a chal· lenge to leaders In 1111 phases of our society, hut If's up to the In· dividual to chan~e hi~ evil think· in~ and rescue himself. If we ex· pect then to meet the challenge of our changinl{ limes, ~s to keep our rishts and pl'eserve our lih· erty as n frce people. then we must. see to It that our young People sce and know the truth and are prepared to Bet accord­Ingly, We belieVe that this truth becomes known to us througb the true foundation. laid by Him who claimed himself to be the true way, the truth and Ihe life. The foundation laid by Him we believe '10 be the tnte foun' dation.

, He leaves to mourn besides his wife (the former Violet Baker of Black Island), an adopted lon, Jack; two bro thers, James of Grand Falls and Augustus of KIng'. Point" an aged stepmother, Mn. Laura Shearrln!:; .Ix' stepbrother., Jack, Cecil alld George hen, Raj' and Harold at London, Ont~rlo, Henry at Stanhope, 10 whom deepest sympathy i, ex·

those present and the hymn 372 was sung with Mrs. E. H. March 3s organist for the occasion. Af­ter the prayer which followed, Mr. Legrow outlincd the purpose of the meeting and ask Mr. E. Rideout to stand while Messrs. Malcolm Freake and E. Randell uncovered the beautiful easy chair which was beautifully col· oured in brown and ivory. He was escorted to the chair by Mr. Woo!frey, chairman of the Com­mittee of Stewards whD paid trio bute to the work of Mr. Rideout has done In the service of the Church. Rev. MI'. Legrow In his remarks referred to Mr. Ride­out's service of twenty·seven years 85 Recording Steward, Be· fore this he was lay supply at the Charge in Campbellton, and has been lay render in Lewis· port for mnny years. His Chris· tion character and service to St. Matthew's United Church will long be remembered by many who have left this town to ,reo side elsewhere and by those who attended the presentation. For many years his voice was heard in song as a members of the chair, and in prayer and praise at every service. Owing to the illness of Mrs. Rideout for the past year or more. he is unable to attend the services IS olten as he would, like to do so, but his' interest never wanes, and when the opportunity presents he is still active in prayer. Mr. Arch Northcott and others paid tribute to Mr. Rideout and said his life resembled II pine tree, so straight in his Christian liv­ing, so strong in the faitb, so brave and good and true. Mr. Rideout rising from the comfort· able chair ellpressed deep appre· clation for the lovely gift and said he felt so unworthy of such a I!~sture, but could only ~ay a sincere thank you. Mr. 1'tldeout has passer! thetbree scorn yean and ;ten. hut fifty·lour years of that life has been spent In ser· vice to his Master ~nd has $lll· tained him in 011 hii life and he looked forward to many yiars of relallMlon In the beautiful chair, but was at prese!lt too busy to relax very much. Best wishes are extended Mr. Rideout -and when the time 'comes when re­laxation Is a must, may he then enjoy the rest at eventide of the chair and the -present of Him whom he ha, served for 10 many years .

B. LeGrow, Mrs. Winston LockE and Mrs. E. H. Marcb went to Gander recently to attend EJ.cuUve meelln, of Twi\lin gate Preibylerial United w'0 men. It I. underltood they will gO- to Gambo Jlut week to I~· tend another meeting wben 11 II hoped all thole who were before unable to attend becad!l of bad roads will be jble to be present.

. ,FRY'S 'ENGINEERING CO., LTD. In closing the speaker extend· en his congratulations to the prill'

~palNGDAL! STREET PHONE 8.W31 c1pal and stal( and the graduat-... _______________ ~ ____ ., Ing· clus on their line achieve·

tended.' -'

GIRL GUIDES ASSOCIATION NEWSY BRIEFS . A meeting of the local Girl A' new bakery on the land own.

Guid. Anoclation Wll held in ed by Mr. John Marlin I. now

Birthday lI'eetings art fJl1endd ed Mrs. W. A, Taylor, Mr .• 0 l.lr.. E. H; March, Mrs. John Carpenter and all who celebrate birthdays in April.

THE: DAILY JI -F~

LONC -THI

Radi~ C B

1tIONDAY, .

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.. 9.15-1n vita tiol 9.30-CBC Ne 9,3D-Direct F U5-Records

10.OO-Archers 10.15-lris Pow 10.25-For Con 10.SO-Nfld. Sc 10.45-Muslc II 11.00-BBC Va 11.30-Nfld. Sc lU5-Regina 12.00-BBC N( 12.10-Announc l2.15-Farm B 12.45-Mid Dal l.OO-Doyle I 1.15-Don Me 1.aO--CBC Ne 1.45-Tommy 2.15-Musical 2.29-Dominio

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Orches lO.30-Beyom l1.00-Univer 1l,30--CBC ~

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~ MONDA'

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nIE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. MONDAY. APRIL 30, 1962

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con nee. .. " just

I ::hl and u,·tl b\' Junclio~ al"thN'n ,tcM and

I, ~!OSDAY, April 30th.

4.00-Bob Cole Show 4.30-News Headlines 4.31-Bob Cole Show 4.55-News and Weather 5.OD-The Bill Allen Show 5.aO-News IlcadUncs 1I.31-The Bill Allen Show M5-Fisherman', Forecast 5.55-Ncws

3.00-N ews Highlights I 12.45-Pastor's Study 3,Ol-John Nolan'. WesterD 12.50-5ign Off

i ... __ -----------------I. • Jamboree ------

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I on ,rn· rd. Thtre ,:T\ Plntr. r~rt. and

ESt'!.TI Lion. Club ne menr ile earning )" Hodder; 'r.llle; tnd.

SUrke.; ,:nes Wool· ;; .. d Cull; ~:ty; Tail ;';C5: Lion

Yur Di· and Win· Dirtcton: Wooll~.

~c;

, c~ttndtd " \I·U Jue· ~lS.00 in .ipS in his

I Gradl s Itudyinl: . ~·ur .nd "ish him Eu"\·.)" il Mrs. Ale,..

ItL

It .. DO lIu r .sta.med f of S. F. :er tIInnrt

dler Ii,"' :1I DlI 1I11

with her Ltd. Jut

nr. happ)" u you.

'I Ulll1ded Wheeler of

:ecel1\ birth :~ '\\"heeler Dumber of

. a ny friend! c.r.J.

who was ill ;:.h • alipptd I ttt around n Irt rx· "~ rDmpktc

::is Dr )In. 11 h.pp~· 10

I: much btl· ,lpi\.JUud ,I .... hilt. Jllrs. :Intd 10 bed : home. utlndrd til

;1 wbo celc 3'· an April , ·dauihttr DI :<111 rlfYOlrd. her birthday .1\ of Judy', t her I ,·en· ;rty It hel trnt I" ali ~blt e\,ellin.· •

•• ns, )In. ,\.

\. illllon Lotkt [,nil went to to .ttend 10

;: of TWiUID United Wo

:ooi tiler wi .t week to It ltin, ntll i t who ::ttnd beta be able to

~.: , I.

.1 , :

..

r , " , Ii

i.jll-t:BC N eW5 4.00-News Highlights • ; 35-Tup of the Morning BOO-CBC News and Weather S H)-Weather Report

4.05-John Nolan's Rancb • Party JACOBY

ON BRIDGE 4.30-National News 4.3S~Tohn Nolan's Ranch

Party IC!:.. , .• SRi ._a:::. 1

R 13-CDC Sports Report fll8-~lusical Clock POll-Mornlllg Devotions ~15-lnl·ltation to Worship ~ oll-CBC News 9.36-Direc1 Reports 9.45-Reeords at Random

6.00-Bu1!etln Board 6.1O-Movie Guide 6.l5-Sports Report 6.25-Travel Guide R.30-EarlY Evening News

5.00-News Highlights 5.Gl-Art Andrews' Dance SOUTJI HAD 13

Party CARDS ANYHOW

IO.OO-Archers 1O.IS-Iris Power IO.:!5-For Consumers IO.30-~fld. School Broadcast 1O.45-Muslc In the Morning 11.00-BOC Variety ]J30-Nfld. School Broadcast 11.45-Rcgina McBride. I!!.OO-BBC News 1!!.1O-Announcers Choict 12.I5-Farm Broadcast 1:!.45-.\IJd Day Serenade !.OD-Doyle Bulletin J.15-Don Messer 1.30-CBC News and Wealher !.45-Tommy Hunter Show 2.15-Mu5ical Rendezvou. ~.:!9-Dominion Obs. Tim.

Signal 2.30-~lusical Rendezvous ~45-Time out for Melody ~.l5-Jo~1D Dralnl. 'rells •

Story 3.3D-CBC News and Trani

Canida Matinee 4.3O-CBC News 43S-Thl Bos McMullin Show 5.00-Ylisir in lh~ Air ~lO-Fi5herles Broadcllt 6.00-cBC News 605-lnt~rmeZIo

Roundup 'l.OO-Sage Brush Sam Show 'l.l5-Shillelagh Showtlme 'l.aO-News Headlines 'l.31-Shillelagh Show time 6.30-The Bob Lewis Sho" 'l.55-Ncws B.OO-Cream of the Crop B.30-News Headlines 8.31-Cream of the Crop 8.5S-News

lO.OO-Night Show lO.30-News Headlines lO.3l-Night Show lO.45-World of Sport 10.55-News 1l.00-Torbay Weather RePl'1't 11.02-Big Top Ten 1l.30-News Hecdlinat 1l.31-Night Show A.M. 12.00-Night Show 12.30-News Headline. t2.31-Nlght Show l2.55-News Summary, Weather

Report and Tim. 1.Oll-Slgn Off

CJON MONDAY, April 30th.

UO-Program Preview UO-The Bob Lewis Show, 645-Supper Guest News, Sports and Weatb· 7.OG-CBI. News and Weather er Report: ' 7.15-Light Music B.Otl-Muslc for Millions 7.30-Toptl Today 9.20-Hit of the Day i.45-Doyle Bullelln 9.20-Hit of the Day 8.15-Parliamentary Report 9.30-Austin Willis 8.20-Byline B.35-Weather Forecast 8.:!S-lnterlude 9.40-Jerry Wiggins Show S.30-Hour of St. FrancLs 9.45-Doctor's HOllse Calls R.45-lnstrumentally Yours 9.55-Kitchen KlaUer 9.00-Summer Fallow 10.00-News in a Minute V.30-Winnipeg Chamber lO.Ol-Martin's Corner

Orchestra l0.15-What's Cookin IO.30-Beyond our Ken lO.30-National News I LOG-University of the Air to.3t1-Jerry Wiggin's House-11.30-CBC NaUonai News, wives Choice and New.

Roundup and Speaking 1l.OD-Robin Hood Bulletin Personally 11.15-Life Can Be Beautiful

1%.OO-Sign Olf-O Canada- 11.30-Newl The Queen . 1135-N!ld. Qui.

---;,;;.;~;;.;,;;;..----- lU5-0rehld From GLsele

YDCM MONDAY, April 30th.

------------A~~. US-Sip 011 8.30-NeWl and Weather 8.35-Georl' Cawdry Show UO--MomlDI MeditatioD Uti-World of Sport 6.55-NtWl 7.!IO-Geor,. Cawdry Show '7.15-Wotld of Sport 7.3O-New • 7.3S-Travel Gullll '1.36-Georlle Cawdry Show 'I.4S-World of Sport 1oM-Nen (Local) 8.00--RCAF Tower, Torbl1

Country, New. and Weather

1.0~Weather Forecast l.15-New. Uti-Don Jamieson'. Editorial UO-Sporll

I Music. in the Air ACROSS 41 Chlf,'

1 X1ad of hom 44 PrOreulOllI I MUllcal "My 48 Seed VPle! .

Gal" 49 Splclc lMulleal IYl\Ibol no Strike

12 Singing volee 11 CeremollY 13 Be obfliited 52 Malt bevense Ii UnuMI 63 Prollg 15 Horll color 114 !!equlrl 18 Tiny 15 EapoUJI 17 Serf 116 Uttered

6.OD-News Headlines and Weather

6.DS-Natlonal New. 6.lO-Sportl . 6.20-News. 6.30-Dave Maunder', Club 93

and News B.OO-News in a Minute B.01-Cream of the West and

Sing Along U5-Best From the West B.30-Natlonal NeWs 9,OO-News Hlghllghl! 9.01-Nfld. Soiree 9.40-Salt Lake Choir 1I.45-Dosco News

10.OD-Nalional News fO.15-Piek of the Pop I lO.45-Sporl!

CJON·TV lIlONDAY, April 30th.

lO.45-Pastor's Study IO.50-Women'. News 1l.OD-Physlcal Fitness Prog. 11.05-Cartoons 11.15-Romper Room !lMHI-Local and National

Headline News 12.15-The Money Tree n.18-Local nnd National News 12.30-Slgn orr 2.00-0h Susannah _iii. 2.26-IUoney '11L"

2,3O-Chez Helene 2.45-Nursery School 3.DD-Dlckle Henderson Show 3.lO-The Verdict is Yours 3.55-Cro55 Section . 4.00-0pen IIOIISI 4.30-Muncy Tree 4.33-Cannonball 5,OO-Frlendly Giant S.15-Slng Ring Around S.lO-Razzle Dazde I

6.0D-Four Feather Fall. 6.15-Captaln Jacks Birthday

Show UO-The World of Sport G.ao-News ClValcade 6.So-Polnt Ilf View 7.0o-Bachelor Father 7.30-Grand Jury I,OO-Johll Nesbitt',· Pauln,

. Parade B.lli-Natlonal New!. 8.30-Father Knows Best. 9.DO-Don Messer's Show 9.3e-Danny ThllmaB ShllW

(Wtather Report) 8OS-Newl (NaUona\) 8.0S-Geore. Ca"dry Show 8.15-Sporll CaPiul. 8.25-New.

18 Arguel DOWN ~~ CIOY~lllllm. 1 Poet 20 Rmul 220besl :I Tropical plant 22 Nonnowerlng

37 Fastened 3STune

8.30-Hit Tun. of the 01, B.3S-World of Sport 1.4O-<ieoru Cawdry Show' U5-N.wl 9.00--MornIDI Meditation 1.0000eorl' Cawdry Show UO-New. Headlines UI-Georl' Cawdry Show

lO.OO--Ncwa ID.O$-Stork Club IO.OI-BiIl Allin Show IO.30-New. Beadlll1ea IO.Sl-Th. !Ill AlleD ShDW lO.N-NI'II'I 1l.OO-The Bill Allell Show U.3&-NIWI Headlines lUl-TJl. Bill AlItD Sq" l1.5&-NIW'I PJI. l2.OO-GtorJ' Cawdr)' Sbllw 1Ue-NIWI . IU5-Gtortt Clwdl7 Shilw 110-11I11in11t1l'. FOrleu! ~ ... L~. CawdrJ Show 1.lJ-World of Sport UO-.lfIWJ (Loea1 Sum'ma1'1l 141 OIorJe Cawdl7 Sbow 1.00-H.... a.dllne. Ul-PriRa ud Problem. UD-N ... alldllll" Ul~ Illd Probleml 2. HtWI I.GO-Th. Bob Col. Sbow UD-.N .... HeadlineJ Ul-ftt Jolt Col.· ShIlW '

23SlyleDftype 3PJerce with. plant 26 Qulle .rew ~nl!e 23 T!er. . 30 MusIcal work .. MUllnt 24 Gem 31 Withered cOIPPo.llIon. 25 Ponder 32 Anger SPlinted 28Burn 33 Existed 81ntlmldatel 27Irr!tat. 3t"nthu.llslII 7 Sin lin, PelS1 28 Operatlc '010 35 L:lnded 8 Make 29Permlls

\I Endure .31 10 Sea bird 34

Nurture 3S ~~~~~N~umbeftr~~~~i'

of 0 DuUnell oCt Repllr 4ZGrtal Lab of3 MOlllullca

damage .. Singer. Nit

"Ktnl"_ (5 Pen name ot

Charles Lamb 46 RaJah'nrUI .7 Hurrltd 49 Crow

By OSWALD JACOBY

This week's series will cover II

common mistakes in bidding and play and I will start with a humdinger.

South's first mistake was his four spade bid. With a solid five card suit he really should have let his parlner play three no· trump, although four spades should have been just as suc­cessful a contract.

His second mislake was 10 nlsh ahead wilh his play with· out planning how to gather in his 10 tricks and his third and most serious mislake was to puli trumps too soon.

He won the opening heart in dummy, drew four rounds of trumps While discarding. a heart and a club from dummy, led the dellce of diamonds and

WEST ,'1854 .84 t J'I3 oItQ742

NORTH (D) 16 '108 • AK.6S t QI05 .~l09.t1

EAST 432 .QJIOII? +AK "'KJ83

SOm'll 4AKQJII .32 t08tH2 "'5 No ODe vulnerable

NDrth Ea.t Soutb West 1", 1 • 14 pass 1 N.T. Pass 34 Pass SN.T. l'a51 4. Pas. PaSi PaIS

Optnln, leaa-¥ 8

stuck In dummy's ten. East won with the king and played • second heart to put South In dummy again.

A low diamond from dummy lost to the ace whereupon South ·smlled happily and said, "Overtrick coming up, part· ner."

He was just as wrong In his analysis as in his play. East led a third heart and South had to use his last trump to ruff. Now he cashed dummy's queen of diamonds and suddenly found that the only other irick he could make would be the ace of clubs. He had no way to get to the two 1I0od diamonds In his hand.

If South had bothered to plan his play It trick two he would have led I diamond from dummy without caring about who had the high oncs. He would have continued diamonds each time he got In and there would have been no defense tQ heat him.

CARD SENSE Q-The bidding has been: \

West North East - South 1., . l.t. Pass Pus 2 • Pass Pass 1

You, South, hold: .t.9S.J53 +AQB7GoItKl04

VVhat do you do? A-Bid two spade,. Yeur

partner won't play you for much becaul. you Ji,ssed the flnt tlme and you .urely have enough to compete.

. TODAY'S QUESTION You hOld the same hand .

Your partner haa overcalled with a no trump nlltead of I spade. What do you' do?

Answer Tomorrow

EAIlLY· EQUINES Horses first appeared on the

historic scene as domesticated animals about 3000 B.C., whim mounted invaders from tlie north brought them into the valleys of the Euphrates and Tlgi'is, according to the Eney· clopedia Britannica.

Children can handle most or the things in the modern. elec· trlcal home, Ineludina parents.

\1

13. - --P'" "·,"1 r r .\ ", po D SWEETIE PIE By NADINE SELTZER-

THE STORY OF MARTHA WAYNE

ALLEY OOP

·SHORT RIBS

I ,

.

FRECKLES AND

. MORTY MEEKLE t

.., ,

HANNIBA\,.o Ie; ON 1-115 WA'I ~ROS~ 1'f1~ A\.PS Wrfl.\ A

}\UHPll£D ~,el'"AH1s ---

Bur INO'-JoT1HAT BIG SHIEl.D BE AN AWKWARD THING TO CART

AROUND?

.iTh at's· Judy's doll! She was supposed to lean it here for me to play withl" .

He SAYS 'THIS WILL Be A WONDERFUL OPPORTUNtTY F~ A RISING '(OUNG 5C!I:NTIST LIKE

605/-1, NO!TI-lE" SI-lIELD'S 11-\E BEST PARr OF­THIS GET-UP!

By WILSON SCRUGGS:

By V. T. HAMLIN

BLOSSEH

l'---Pi ~I

i. ; i . I . , .. I. I'

[ L . I

Page 14: Scviets Rap acml an - Memorial University of Newfoundlandcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ""mi>rr

.• ,

14

. Insura;l~;--D I

J. J. lACEY INSURANCE Ltd.

Drpendable Fire Insurance, Prompt Claim Settlements.

DIAL 8·7035

CROSBIE & CO., Ltd. Ag~nts for

VNDElllfRITERS AT LLOVDS.

LOW RATES UlAL 8·5031

JOB BROTHER~ & COMPANY, Ltd.

Wlter Slrc(: OI.\L 8·2658 - 8 .. m3

REG, T. MORGAN Il\SURANCE Ltd. Temple Bldg., P. O. Box 168,

3U Duckwortb Sl. Ol.-\L 80370 or 8·7756

w. U. KNOWLING l~SURANCE

Fire . Auto . Casualty PH: 8·2902, 8·7811

158 Wat~r Street St. John'! mar6,lmth D

ELlW.POGERS AUTO FIRE

lifE

GROUP All Classes Insurance DIAL 8·0021 ·8·2135

Res. 9·1601

INSURANCE

STA01UM TO·DAY % p.m. and 8.15 p,m.

ROLLER SKATING

Where To Stay Park View Hotel 118 ~nLITARY ROAD

Centrally situated on the Bus route. Offers the best accom. modation. For resen'ation and Information:

Dial 8·2557 mar3.cod,1mth

Where To Stay . Balsam Hotel

BARNES ROAD

Situatrd In the heart 01 the City.

Quiet, Comfortable Atmos· phere.

For Res~rvations and information:

) '~'DiaI8-6336 MIlS. JOHN FACEY,

" aestdent ManagerelL

£02

Articles For Sale H "

.rADYERTISE IN THE.

~DAILY NEWS . !..~ ~".

* * * GEr YOUR MESSAGE

OUT EAftLY

51.00 WEEK TIRES

BATTERIES AUTO PARTS

FISHING EQUIP, SLEEPING BAGS LAWN MOWERS

RADIOS, etc.

DIAL 8-6127

• ,.. .... t'D

FLOWER IIILL

s. W. ~HORT 8 Adelaide Street Phone 578·2637

mar31,1mth

SLIVERS and KNOT HOLES ·~-I''''''--_---e=--:S~~----

"Boy a Home built or mod. ernized with HORWOOD Top Quality Materials is a Happy liome J"

• • • And If YOU want to be Happy with YOUR building or Modernizing, then you should demand Top Quality Materials -:- and we aim to provide just that and at Reasonabl Prices. So before you build or remodel, see us for experienced help on building matters.

WATER STREET WEST PIIONE 8·3011

BARGAIN BASEMENT 6' Pee.' DINETTE' SUITE

BargaIn Priced at

:$,'39,95 , .

... , .,

3 Pee, CHESTERFIELD • •• f

U5ually$249.95

N0W·$18'·95

BAINE, JOHNSTON & COMPANY, LIMITED

243 Water Street DIAL 8-2101 (5 lines) BARGAIN BASEMENT

H.

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JO.HN'S,· NFLD. MONDAY. APRIL 30, 1962

Cross Country Tires

---------.., WANTED - Comics, mugu· M ! Rentals R zincs, pocket novels,

. ,; ----- guitars, radios, guns,.slight· ! 1"1001' Sanders. Belt Sanders. Iy worn clolhcs, footwear. Power Saws, Electrical Drills John D. Snow, 9 New !ltc. Reasonable Rates. Call Gower Strect. aprl2,lmth '8.5016. 8·7352.

Contractors ------_._--....

-

I COSTS' !STAY DOWN iWHEN ARMCO

U·RENT Div. Harris & Hiscock Ltd.

1G9 Water Street, 51. John's

r--------.I PASSENGER NOTICES

Reg, List Price $19.95

HANDY ANDY PRICE ...... $14.95

ft Ply Nylon $1.00 Per Week

1 Flower Hill Phone 8·6127

apr1G,tf

FENCING Green Lawn Fencing Single Scroll 36", 42", 48" Double Scroll 36", 42", 48"

, BUILDINGS GO UP

We ean erect your Armco Building last an4 save you money at the same time. ~act~ry·produced paris cul/ob·site work, elIminate wasle of materials. Our e .. perlenced crews reduce construcliOil time and expense. Write or call for corn-I plete information.

I

Special Offer (For Limited Time Only)

on

PAINT JOBS Expert workmanship guaranteed

Brookfield Service Station

and

Body Sh.op Cor. Topsail Ro~(l & Cowan Ave.

DIAL 9·2381 apr30,lmth

I ST. TERESAA'S PARISH

SPRING DRAWING

Winning Tickets !

Tenders "'OR PAVING AT PORT

AUX nASQUES, NFLD,

Sealed tenders, marked 011 the outside "Confirlential­Tender for Pm'ing at Port aux Basques, Nfld." and ad· dressed to ~Ir. R. P. Pud· dester, Regional Engineer, Moncton, N .13.. will be re· ceived up to 2: 00 p.m., At. lantic Daylight Time, May 22, 1962.

Plans. specifications. form of contract and instructions to bidders may be seen, and form of tender obtained, at the following offices: Area Engineer-

S!. John's, Nfld. Regional Enginecr­

~Ioncton, N. B.

I CONNECTION WES'f RUN I'LACENTIA SAY Public Notice I Train "The CarilJou" learing

151. .John's 12:01 p.m. Noun April ! 30th, will makc conncction via Tcnders ar~ invited and will

,I Placentia Junction nnd Argcntia. be received up to 5 p.m. on '~with ~l.V. Petitp Forte for Wcst: :\[onday, ~Iay 21st, for the can. : Hun Placcntia Bay. . struction of a Vocational Trade

CON:"IECTION ll:\ Y RUN 'School at Clarenv~I~, N.nd. PLACENTIA BAY' P~ans and speclflcallons mal'

T'" "'['h' C 'b " I . . n bc IlIspccted at any of the fa I· • I.llll e an ou CaVill., lowing places-

St. John's 12:0~ p.m. Wednrs· I :I!anagers Limited, Woolworth d~y, 11ay 2nd wI!1 make .connec· 'Building, St. John's, Nfld. hon VI~ Placenha Junchon a~d . Nfld. Board of Trade, Sl. ~~~~nha for bay run Placentia John's, Nfld. . -.

• 'loronto BUilders Exchan~e, . ~1. \'. 1I0PEIlALE SAII.ING Toronto, Onto

:\'OON ~!A Y 2nd ,Saint John Builders Ex· ~LV. Hopedale on the Grecn change. Saint John. N.B.

Bav service will sail from the' Moncton Construcliton Assn. do~k coastal Wharf Noon Wed·: :'loncton, N.B. ncsday, May 2nd., Halifax COllstruction Division,

I Halifax, N.S. 8.5. :>JORTIIERN RANGER I ~[ontreal Builders Exchange, SAILING NOON )IAY 2nd. • )Iontreal. Que. S.S. North~rn Ranger for' Copies rna." be obtained from'

ports 51. John s to St. Anthony: the CI:;.cf Engineer of Public will sail from the Dock Coastal Works on deposit of S100 witl, Wharf noon ~Iay 2nd. . . the Centr.,1 Cashier-cheque to . CONNECTION SOUTH CO,\ST' bc made payable to Newfound·

SERVICE VIA PORT AUX land E.xchequer account. This . Farm Fencing

Chain Link Fencing

Barbed Wire

Lawn Gates

I C » I ARMCO

IV . AUTHORIZED

DEALER 1st. Prize.... .... .... 8710 I

Plans will be loaned to bona fide contractors on the deposit of an accepted bank cheque made payable to the Canadian National Ilaihva\' Com pan)" for an amollnt of Twenty·five Dollars (S25.00), which deposit will be refund· ed when the plans arc reo turncd in good condition.

BASQUES sum Will be returned o~ return Train "The Carihou" leaving of the plans and speclflcat~ons.

SI. John's 12:01 p.m. Thursday, Tenders are to be. subnllltcd ~Iay 3nl. will make connection all the for":, and. In the en· a! Port aux Basques with ~r. V. velopcs pro"Hled with all blank "Konia" on the South Coasl spaces filled In.

2nd. Prize ........... 11231

Do 1I0t hesitate to call us, for free estimates.

3n1. Prize .... .... . .22858, Servicc. The Dcpartment doc. not

J. & S. RYAN 51-55 Job Street

mAL 8·4991 124 Duckworth Street

DIAL 8·2480 apr18,lmth

Auto Accessories Nfld.

I

Al'ailable Shortly Crear Spans, up to 130 ft. width.

J. J. HUSSEY LIMITED

179 New Gower Street, St. Joh1l's DIal 85795 . 8:70 I

I

.. _--_ .. __ .- .-.-~ .. --

HOLY CROSS

CAR SWEEP

Winning Number

37678 Armature

Worn 38

Bambrlcll Street Elect, Applicances M·2 ~'/,~~~~~~~"

Dial 8-7191·2 1

HEAP & PARTNERS Miscellaneous R (NFLD.) Ltd.

Beauty Parlours K Wiring Materials, Wire and ----=------- Cables, Motors, Starters, GLADY'S BEAUTY SIIOPPE

cor. Bond and Prescott Sis. Phone 8·4951·8·7896. Speci· alizlng in cold waving, hair styling, cutting and tinting, manicuring, facials. etc., 14 operators, no waiting.

Lamps, Switche.s, i .. ighllnll Fixtures. ,tc. .

WAREHOUSE: PRiNCE'S ST. DIAL 8·5088

RADIO·TV REPAIRS Fuel (Coal and Oil) L GREAT EASTERN OIL ------------------

Prompt Delivery On • STOVE OIL • FURNACE OIL • HARD COAL • SOFT COAL • IRON FIREMAN

HEATING EQUIPMENT.

MOTORS CARS

COMPANY, Ltd. REPAIRS TO RADIOS, TV

AND ALL ELECTRICAL APPLlA N CE-<)

nIAL 8·300 to 8·3005 M·3

Authorized Service ,Depot

Westinghouse

Electroholme and Symphonic Emerson Sales & Service

Power & Chafe Television

62 Prescott St. Dial 8·4490 apr16,lmth

GREAT EASTERN OIL & IMPORT . CO., .LTD.

DO YOU NEED your Spring· fliled mattress re·condition· ed or your All Wool mat· tress re·picked, and reeov· ~red, your bedspring or daybed re·wired or your furniture re·upholstered. If so call us. Items called for and delivered. Rates lowest obtainable. Keats Mattress Factory, 16 Mount Royal Avenue. Ph: 9·2753.

CASH PAID FOR-Comics. magazines, and pocket novels. John D. Snow, 9 New Gower Street, Pho~e 86808. jan61mth R

TilE CENTRAL BARBER SHOP-We are now upera" Ing 10 chairs, you can. be assured of prumpt, efficl. ent, sanitary serVice. No waitin[! problem, 24 New Gower Street opposite Ade. Laide Motors Ltd. R

aTY or ST. JOHN'.

St. John's Municipal Council

Public Notice

Tenders will not he con· sidered unless suhmitlcd on the form supplied by lhe Railway Company and in ac· cordance with instrul'til'lls to bidders.

bind itself to acccpt the 10\\·

FREIGHT NOTICES cst or any tenrler.

FItE!(;lIT GREEN BAY SERVICE

Freight for undermenlioned points on Green Bar Service,

R. MANNING. DCPllt~· Ministrr.

Drpartmcnt of Puhlic Woo'; '. SI. John's. Newfoundland. apr30my2

The lowest or any tender not nccessnl'ily accept~j.

II. C. GRA YSTON, Vicc·President.

per :II. V. Hop eda Ie wi Ii be ac· F;';;';~~;;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'r I ccptcd al Dock Coastal Shed,

Moncton. N.B. apr30, my2,3 I

~!onda).. April 30th, 9:00 a.m. i to 5:00 p.m. and Tues'iay, May!

,----------, 1st 9:00 a.m to 5:00 p.m.-I Exploits. Black Islands, Twil·1

A

WELCOME WAGON

lingate, Fortune Hr., Cottrells II

Cove. Lcading Tickles, Triton West, Brighton, Pilley's Isld., Roberts Arm, Port Anson, t

! Lush's Bi~ht, Springdale, Beau.: mont, Little Bar Islands. Little, Bal' Wild Bi"ht Harrv's HI' : Ju(:kson's Co\'~' King's' Puini: I Rattling Bronk, ~liddlc Arm, ! Burlin~ton. Nipper's IIr., Snooks I Arm, Tilt Cove, Shoe Cove,'

,LaSde. HI'. Hound, Wuodstock, i Horse bids, King's Bight. Yleur ide L),s, Coachman's Cove, Baie iVertc.

FREIGHT ST. JOHN'S -LEWISI'ORTE

Freight for undermentioned I points SI. .John·s to Lewisporte I Scrvice, per ~l.V. Trcpassey will I be accepted at Dock Coastal I Shed, Wedncsday, lila), 2nd 9:00

HOSTESS ! a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and Thursday, I May 9:00 a.m. to noon.-King's

\J,'11 K k t, D : Cove, East Port, SI. Brendans, \ I ~oc a \ our .OOT: Fair Island. Wareham (Indian

with GIftS and GreetmgS! Bay). Grcen5pond. Valleyfield, from Friendly Busincss: Wc,ley:ille. ,Musgrave Hr., I N.· II a d Your Ladle Cove. Carmanville, Fred· l C1;! 1 10UrS n crieton, ~Iain Point, Gander Civic and Social Groups Bay, Victoria Cove, Horwood, On the occasion of~ Sta~ Harhour. Seldum, Tilting,

,Joc Batts Arm, Fogo, Changc New comer to. thc City, Islands, Island Harbour, Port

The Birt.h of a Babv.

PHONE 8-466·1, 90943

Albert (Hcaver Cove), Boyd's Covc, Herring Neck, Twillin· gate, Hillgrade, Carter's Cove, Tizzard's Harbour, l\loreton's Harbo11r, Bridgeport, Summer· ford. Birchy Bay.

~··f..·.·'CN·;··· ..... " .. ' . ~ ... .

.,. ." '. ... . .. ,.

JC~nadian National .', .

Tenders Construction of reinforced

concrete abutments, piers, and deck, and erection 01 steel fence panels in connec· tion with construction of Highwa~' Bridge over Water ford River, 51. .John·s, Ncw· foundland.

Scaled tcnder marked on the outside "Confidential" "Tender for Highway Bridge over Waterford River, SI. J olin's, Newfoundland." and addressed to ~lr. R. P. Pud· dester. Regional Engineer. Canadian National Railways. ~Ionclon. N. B., will be re· ceived up to 2:00 p.m. At· lantic Daylight Time, ~!ar 22, 1962.

Instructions for tendering may be seen at the office of the Regional Engineer. ~!onc· ton, N. B .. or the Area En· gineer, SI. ,John's. Ncll'· foundland. and plans and specifications and form of contract may be obtained on the depositing of a certified cheque made payable to the Treasurer, Canadian Nation· al Railways, ~Ioncton. N. B. for an amount of $100.00, which will be refunded on the return of plans and speci· fications in good ~ondition witbin thirty days after award of contract.

Aiuxlln• ( II x X II

~XXXXXlCXX.XXX~XXIII lCXXxXXXlCXXXXXXXX~ x QxxxxxxxQ XliII UI XXXXXX Xft

WHO ElSE WANTS A NEW CAR!

Radio, Television, Washers. Refrigerators, Deep Freezers

Electric Ranges. Floor Polishers.

Gramophones Public Address Systems

Tape Recorders .

The following motor vehicles will be sold at an Auction to be held at the Municipal Yard, Freshwater Road,. on . Monday, ' April 30th in5t., at 12. o'clock noon. STEAMSHIP

MOVEMENTS

Tenders will not be accept· ed, unless submitted on forms supplied by the Railway, and in accordance with instruc· tions for tendering. The lowest, or any tender not necessarily accepted.

H. C. GRAYSTON, Vice·Presldent.

Moncion, N. 13. apr30my1,2 -- . -.- -~-----.--

ANNOUNCER DIES

~ IT "OW WITD ..

LOW.COST L1FE-I"5VRItD,

IxI' xxx xxx x xxxx x XXXI x xxxxx xx~· x X X X xxx

X X X X X X X .XX xx~ XXXI' X X x

'ixXX X xxxx Xx Xli X X X X X xxx X xxxx x x x ~)()IX ~ ~ ~ XI

LOAN

THE .BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA

REPAIRS AND SERVlCll 5 LINES

DIAL 8·3001 to 8·3005

License No. Make. 49804 .............. 1950 Oldsmobile 42129 .............. 1952 Dodge 25694 ............. 1948 Plymouth

WATER STREET Conditions of sale are as fol· Jan28,ly M.3 lows:

'-=:::=::::=::::=:~~~:::=:====' Pay men t to be made on day .., of sale by cash or certified

DrugStores Q cheque. . __ ":;":";;:IZ.'::':;;:';;::"_~ Vehicles must be removed M. CONNORS ·Ltd. within two days of sale.

Prescriptions Pickllp and E, B. FORAN, dellveryservice, City Clerk,

PHONE 8·2206 apr28,30'

CLASSIFICATION. INDEX Maie Help Wanted ............. A Articles Found .............. " ... .H-4 ·Female Help'·Wanted' ........ A·1' Auto Accessories .................... 1

. Domestic . Help Wanted' .... A·2 Garages' .................................... J . Positions Available ............ B Service Stations .................... J.l

Position ....... ~.~ .............. ~; ........... B.1 Beauty Parlours .................... K To Let-Houses,>Rooms,' . Fuel (Coal and Oill ........... L

___ ~~~"--'~~-.. . APD,tments ...................... C ' Construction Contractors .... M .: B'c. . t i .Wanted'T""Houses, Rooms .... C·l Electrical Contractors ........ M·1 " Insur~nce' .......... t ... : . ....• ;' .. '. ... :.D 'Electric Appliances .......... M·2 ,Modern CllIbs, Entertainment ... : ... : .... E . Radio-TV' Repairs ............ M·3

.. ' Wh~e)o .. Eat ..... · ...... ~.,;~ ....... $.1: PIanos - Organs ................ 0 , .'.,' ':Live . Whereto. Stay ........... : ........ E,2 AUction Sales... .. ........... P

. .. .. '. Where' 10 Go' .............. ; ... ~" ... E-3 Auction Livestock Etr.. . .. P·I Electrically' .!Aut~m9blles: ................ :.~~ .• " ..... FI Cards ....... : .............................. P 2 i. . Taxi ...... ,~ .................. t"".".~.t ...... .F·l. D.rugglsts ................................ Q ·u=tIM~· ;'. Cars F.or. Sale .............. ; ......... G·: Mlscellaneou9 ....................... .R

. LtG. ·,5 •• '-•.. Cars . .W. ,anted ..... ~ ..... ; .. :.~, •. ; ... G-l Leg~l Not.iee~ ........ :.: .............. 8 ,'.. _ Car9 to., Re,nt ............... , ......... G·2. Busmes9 ServIces ................... 'J

. "i , .• , .... ! , .. , 'i , Art!c1es CorSale : ...... ; .. ; .......... H ~ Real Estate Agents ................ U

f Cbeap Bellahll! Eltctrlclty IIArt~r.les Wanted ............ , ...... H·J Real Estate Wan~ed ............ " In .• n,d Around SI. John's i Artlclcs for ·Rent .................... H2 Re~1 .E.stale for Sale ........... W

. ArUcles Lost ....................... 1l:3 Classlf.led Display ................ X

P. S BUCKINGIlAlII, • Audiotician

Otarion Hearing .. Center

338 Duckworth Street. St. John's

Phone 8·7907, 8.61505, 8·4808 P.S. We have free batte.ry

. delivery.

{1ap~ ~ilJtk

of>~ Minutes and I'll Show

You The Way to a New World DI Sound Throulh The Modern

Mincle 01 TarEel Helrln,

• f, .. A_rfi'mr'rJt MtaJur.m,,,'

• A ••• I.,.Ir n. , ••• ,. or "'''.'''.' " --. apr26, (1m)

CLARKE· CABOT SERVICES

·S.S. Gulfport due St. John's April 30th. .

*"L.S. Dundee sailing from ~!ontreai May 2, arriving SI. .John's i'liay 6; Icaving st. John's !.lay 9th.

·S.5. Novaport loading at lIIontreal May 8th; arriving SI. John's May 13th; leaving SI. John's May 16th.

·Refrigeration.

NFLD, CANADA STEAl\ISHIPS . LnIITED

M.S. Bedford II sailing from Halifax April 28th, due St. John's April 30th.

1II.S. Be.dford I!sailing from Halifax May 5th, due St. John's IIlay 7th.

M.S. Bedford II sailing from Halifax May 12th. Due SI. John's May 14th.

III.S. Bedford II sailing from Halifax May 19th. Due st. John's lIIay 21st.

M.S. Bedford II sailing Crom Halifax l\!ay 26th. Due SI. John's JlIay 28th.

GUJ,F & NORTHERN SHIp· PING CO., LTD,

''Fcr~us arriving St. John's April 30, , .

1II0NTREAL (CP)-Armand Goulet. 64, an announcer \\'ith radio station CHLP for 24 years, died Friday. He was a brother of Bernard Goulet, a permanent member of tbe Board of Broad· cast Governors.

Sen. John Ruggles, of 1Ilainl. led the 1836 fight Which in' duced congressional action to set up the U.S. Patent Office. Ruggles' invention was d/· signed to add traction to rail· way locomotive wheels,

Acc:arding to some ~ the wa., to Oflpl'OOCh the girl with a past is with a present.

.'URNESS, WITHY·& CO., LTD· Nova Scotia leaving LiverpOOl

April 11. due St. John'. APri~ 18. Leaving for Halifax aD Boston April 19, due HaUfa~ April 21 and Boston April 26 Leaving Boston April 27 and Halifax May I, due st John'S May 3. Sailing again lame day for Liverpool.

.

DAlLY r

KI Be

New!

B 12 6

15 4

8

20 CON

Help

PHOI A IBr~e in the 1470 fe( Railway Comme: your eh

J REAL: i61 R

apr27,3()

TH1

Tender SEALE to con Francis Office, receive

for the erectiOl huildin ft. of B ment a Plans ~ from t Dept. «

Buildir Office, payme be re£l the do Thela sarily

I 1

.pr30m)

Tendl City ~ accorc avails p;ineel Bids j

forP~ of til{ Wedl The 1 1c:ceJl

Page 15: Scviets Rap acml an - Memorial University of Newfoundlandcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ""mi>rr

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: ...... may : ~r 1<>1· •

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.:\\(\ wl!h '~:rGUC to r'dliU:ld-

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Iliers. ::nn of C"=-tnrC'·

: C~, of : \r .:I'r· : '. :\c\\'·

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\ BridJ:1' " c~. St. ::~ .. and

i' Pud· '-c:ineer. ::2:1\\"ays. : ~ rI'­I'm. ,.\t·

:or. ~I;r

:f'nd('rin~ ,.flire of :~. ~lonc­.. ~ra En· , !'cw· ;.",- and form of :,:~rd en

('rrtHird :. :0 Ihe 'i ~ ... tion· ,~ .. ~. B.

qOO.OO. ':ndrd on "nd spcci· "~ndition

," after

~c accept· : on forms ::-"ar. and ~ in~true­_::~. The "dc:- not

,·:'TOS. president.

-.---: IllES 'I-Armalld J:lncer with faT 24 yean. " I brother ~ rrrm.nent cd ef Broad·

'. of ~Iaint. .rhich in'

1 zelien to '.; rnt Office. , 11"11 dr· ::on to rail· ·Is.

&CO L'I1" :lgLh'~ Jolin', A~ [ialilU -dut HaUl" en April ~ ~nl 27 , st. Jolin'. ;:l:l1UM! MY

[HE DAILY NEWS, sr. J9HN'S, NFLD. MONDAy. APRIL 30, 1962

KINSMEN BOYS' CLUB

BINGO Newspaper SERIES No. 61 10DAY'S NUMBERS

B I N G 0 12 29 39 46 61 6 28 44 49 71

15 26 31 58 65 -4

30 40

55 70

8 73 64

75 72

20 CONSOLATION PRIZES FOR THE' LETTER "H"

Help Kin - Help Kiddies

PROPERTI'ES FOR SALE A lar,;epiece of commercial land situated in the Watedord Vaney. It measures 1470 feet along bv the Canadian National Railway. Ideal site for a warehouse etc. Commercial site on Shaw Street. This is your ('hance to get a good site.

Apply to:

J. T. O'Brien REAL ESTATE AGENT & VALUATOR 161 Reid Building, Duckworth Street

DIAL 83330 or 82551 Ipr27,10

THE TOWN OF LEWlSPORTE, NEWFOUNDLAND

Tenders For T o~n Hall Building SEALED TJ;:NDERS, properly marked as to contents and addressed to Mr. E. Francis, Town Manager, Town Counell Office, Lewisporte. Newfoundland will be received up to Noon, N.D.S.T. on •

14 MAY, 1962 for ~e supply of aU materials and the erection of a Town Hall Buildln~, the building havin.e; approximately 2160 sq. ft. of flo~r spa~e. plus 800 sq. ft. of ~ase. ment area. Plans and specifications may be obtaIned from the Local Government Engineer~ Dept. of Municipal AffairS, Con£edel\tl,~n Building or Town Manager, Town Council Office, Lewisporte, Newfoundland on payment of a $50.00 deposit which will be refunded in due course on' return of the documents in good condition. . The lowest or any fender need not n6ces· larily be accepted. .

E. FRANCIS, Town Manager, Town Council of LewisporJ',

apr3Dm7'

WANTED For Cartwright, Labrador, a married coupl.. HUlband to be Principal of AmalgamattdSchooli wife, House­mother for Lockwood Dormitory, 20 or more children. Anglican. Adequate .alary~ attractIve living quarter., com­pitt. malnt.nance, travel expense •. Institutional training or experience' requlr.d. Duties to . commence last week of August, 1962. Apply

INTERNATIONAL GRENFELL ASSOC., P. O. Box 5219, St. John's

apr30,my2.4

Teachers Req~ired FOR BADGER

AMALGAMATED SCHOOL . One Vice-Principal First or A Grade, able to teach French for Grade. 7 and 8.

One male or femalt teacher for Grades I and 2.

Dutie. to blgin September lst, 1962 Government salary. will be augmented· by the Board. .

Apply Itatlng· qualifications and e;: .. p'rl,nci '01-

. F. C. BUDGELl,

s.creta ry. Treasu rer, Amalgamated Board of Education,

Badger, N.wfoundland. apr2'f.1I0,my2

TIRES REP AIRSNULCANIZING PHONE 8·7191 or 8·7192 for FAST SERVICE

Nfld. Armature Work. L1mittd

BAMBRICK STREET

. WANTED F'REIGHT SALES

. REPRESENTATIVE For established Steamship Company.

This· is R permanent position requiring a responsible; conscientious worker who is • self-starter capable of working on his own initiative; and with some office and coriespQndence experience.

Apply iA writing to: P. O. BOX: 1195. ST. JOHN'S, NFLD.

apr28,3D ..'

.. ' 'SEALED TENDERS,addr'llId to' the

. . uncli ... lln.d and marked "Tender for ., a.ddlriB~·Dr~perl'l, A"tllori •• , Fur';i~

St. John's MunlclRal Council tUN and: Iquipmtnt, for :Women'.

T. E'N D'ERS . '. .tllelilnce, Memorlar. University. of . . Newfoundland, will be' received In

Tenders are invited for paving on various. :. JloomAl08,' Mimorial University of . City streets. Th.e work must be done 10'- Newfo~ndland' up to 5:30 p.m. Wed~ .. accordance with ~lcations which are . "lICIoy~. May 9; 1962~ _ available at the office of the City En- '. ~~cifi~ti~n~ , may, 'be . obtained on ~r. .. '. 'wtlttin:ctppjication to theunderaign •. Biehm ~ed eDvelo~s markec1··,.,ender , " . ~:, .d,_t;.oom A.10I; Memorial Unl"erl-lor Paving must be delivered a~ the office I' .. The I . I .. t d I . t of the' City Clerk not la. ~ID 9!.~. ~~m. .'. '-'::. . .' n~~~~ril!::~::r.~::d ~~d:~~tbe Weclaaday, May 16, 1962... . .,,: . -, - - . , ' '''', . The lowest or any tender not neCesSarUYI:.' . .." }Ic~pt.d on .. all orf any .portlon of the

do " ' .\ ., 1.:':..l;'r . I(j~ ...... '" ",~. ": ~', I.": ,-I;, .:1", ,", "".,,~. (, " " '

. E." B.FQRAN;·,·;i " :'., ", .. ! .. DO~ALD C. BARTE~,. i:':'

C~ Chrk . Bursar. . --_.... .' \ . .pr2o"" 28 3O"'vU -'." . - . . _...,-y- .... J , ~~ J . • '

, . . I . . . 1

, , . '''",

. '.

'TilE STORY: Arthur Sch· neider, president of a Boston manufaC&urlng firm, calls on John Putnam Thatcher, vice president of the SloRn bank, to discuss a trust fund which will be distributed at the death of Schneider'S aunt.

'.

One of the heirs Is missing. • • •

Chapter 2 It was therefore almost six

o'clock when Thatcher return· ed to his work to find Its other­wise virginal surface embellish· ed bY a note frilm Miss eorsa

LODGE ST. ANDREW No. 1139 S.C., A.F. & A.M.

Ladies' Night WEDNESDAY, 'May 2,nd, 1962, 8:00 p.m.

MASONIC TEMPLE .

Tickets ................ $2,50 Double Obtainable from membe.rs of the Enter·

ment Committee phone 62595.

l~

.~ ....... ~.

I indicating that he had an ap· I "He has," replied Thatcher I pointment with Kenneth Nicolls I grimly, "and I want to knOll I at 11 o'clock the next morning! why," : and by a memorandum from' "We can't locate one of tlH

., Nicolls himself. As he picked; heirs to this trust. and he's fu : it up, Thatcher reflected that I riolls at the possibllity of a .de ! the famlliar yellow papers re- i lay in distribution." . presented a rush job; Nic~115 i "Better start at the begi!1 had obviously been galvanized: ning. I don't really underStand by the imminence of his direct I why Klaus Schneider shoUII:, contact with the august' head I hal'e set up such a smal! trust of the trust department! He if he was a man of substance.' settled down to read. Nicol1s nodded as he sortcr

" ••• The terms of the trust some papers. "It really was i

do not permit' any distribution sort of gamble. The old mo! of income. AI! income is to be had collected some insuranc( reinvested and added to the in 1932. He was a shrewd pus principal. Upon the death. of inessman and decided to takl the last surviving child of a flier in the market. buyin~ Klaus Arthur Schneider. the when prices were at rock bot entire trust corpus is to be dis· tom and tying it u p for a sub trlbuted to his grandchildren " stantiallength of time." Nicoll~ (or to their issue in the case of warmed (0 his subject. . , death). The grandchildren' do \ Thatcher broke into what wai" not ahare equally but take per clearly going to be an cnthus· stirpes: - Ihat is. equal seg· I iastie description of market be· ments of the trust follow the /1 havlor since 1932: "And you'r~' line of each child and the . sure there was no desire fa grandchildren take as repre-! skip the children." . !. sentatives of their parent rath· I "Oh. no sir," Nicolls repilc'd. cr than as individuals." . "The Company - Schneider

Thatcher grunted his dissat:! 1lanufacturing Company":"" was isfaetion. He resented Nicolls' really the bulk of his very sub· painstaking definition of pcr stantial fortune. They started stirpes. In his opinion. his sub- out with textiles. then-branched' . ordinates should leave that sort out into indusrial cloth." That· of gobbledygook to the law de· cher must have looked blank.' partment and say what they because Nicolls added. "Things: i·

. mean in plain English. i like felt linings for paper ma·: I!':' -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, " . . • KIa'll s Ar t h u r S c h 11 e i d er i eh inc S , and m u sic a I i nsti-u· : r died in 1933 and was survived, ments. It's all very specially: ( .'

Wholesale Grocery Manager . Required by It well-established Newfound­land firm a Manager for a wholesale grocery business at st. John's. Applicants should have at least High School education. This position offers a good salary plus group insurance, medical plan and pension benefits. . Apply in own handwriting, stating quali­fications and experience to:

BOX·3Il c/o THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S.

All replies will be held in strict confidence.

FOR RENT Two Selfcontained, Two Bedroom, Fur

nace Heated Aparbnents, situated at Har­

bour View Avenue. $75,00 and Penetan­

guishene $70,00. DIAL 84445

Under the Distinguished Patronage of His Honor the Lieut.-Governor, the Hon.

Campbell Macpherson, O.B.E.

10th Annual Production •

Spring Smiles and Whistles WITH AN ALL-SCOUT CASTE Bishop Feild College Auditorium

MAY 2, 3, 4 and 5 For Reservations Phone: 84080, 84191,

94975 '- or c!)ntact R. C, Lester, H. F. Bren'nan,

Eric Bartlett, H. W. Stone, V. Peddigrew, Hubert Ash, A. R. Thompson, J. Kennedy, A. O'Brien, C. A. Evans, Wallace Thomp­son, E. Nightingale, F. Goosney, G. Lewis, A. G. Lindsay, D. C. McKay, F. A. Coch-' rane, M.J. B?rke, B. Kelly. -------

CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN IF CHAFE MAKES THE CLOTHES:

Wm. L. CHAFE TAILOR

4.HOLDSWORTH ST. . ST. JOHN'S

FUEL! FUEL! FUEL! FUEL! U~on Oil Early Bird Offer Still i~ Effect

When you need oil Here's what to do: .

DIAL

. UNION·OIL 8·2822 . . .

, "

by all of his three children. The: made, you know. Well. i(l al1>'~. i.-elder son, Arthur Schneider.! event. the business was left 0\1(-: '1':' .• senior. died in 1942 leaving one: right (0 (he old man's childrep.: son, Arthur Schneider. junior, This trust was no more fillin '3 : ~,' and one daughter" Grace Sch· little gamble." . I':l neider Walworth. The younger "And you've been haridli~g, 1'_: son. Carl Schneider, died in the investments?" ;::'-1936 leaving one son. C. Robert "For the last year and a half,; j':

MschneHidjetrd' The only ~aughter, sir," Nicolls said enthLisr~stH It ., ...

rs, a Schneider Hendel" cal1y. He rubbed his jaw Ill'a; son, survives; she is 70 years somewhat sheepish gesture. "It; i '" . old, and has one son. IIlarlln E. I was my first independeJ;U; .!c,: \." _ Henderson. . count." '.- .: I

"In addition to the trust,'. "I'm sure you've done e~c~I·· which in 1932 formed a very i lently by these people. ~etter insignificant portion of Kiaus I than they deserve. But what 1; L: Schneider's assets, the grantor, want to find out about is this' l'.'. left a family business to his ~ mi~sillg heir business. Now we f: three children. Voting stock in ! have the old man - Klaus?- : : Schneider Manufacturing Com· I setting' up a trust for his t··· , pany was left to his two SOilS. 1 grandchildren. Right?'" '. 1:'.<· . and non·voting stock was left Nicolls nodded and Thatchcr.· r'" to his daughter. A year after i continued, "And there are four: \ .'. the grantor's death. Carl Sch· grandchildren who do: not, !"., neider sold his interest to his share equally. Now they are-'" r· J. brother Arthur Schneider. "Robert Schneider and' 1IIar: t .. t: senior. The president of the tin Henderson, who get $100,- fJI Schneider Manufacturing Com· 000 each. because they ar~ onl)'. ,~~~ pany is now Arthur Schneider, children. And Arthur Sclinei: " . junior, and l\!artin Henderson del' and his sister, who get $50, is vice·president in charge of I 000 apiece. Of course, 1C"Rob, sales and distribution." crt Schneider turns out, tQ be

Thatcher glanced over the dead, and has no heirs,:. t!wjl; Inst page again. "The children lIlartin would get $150,UOO,'aild: of Arthur Schneider, senior. the others would take $75.Q09. and Hilda Henderson 'have aU each.'" ". ::: been in contact with the Sloan "Yes," said Thatcher. ;'!):QU: Guaranty Trust" The "all" said the bank had been: botj;: confirmed his fears that the' fied of Hilda's condition. Whll Sloa~ was involved with far too told us?' Arthur Schneided~: many Schneiders; and he was "No, sir, Martin Henderson; still In the dark as to the rash Hilda's Dilly child wrote me at promises that Arthur Schneider the 5unnestion of tbe family (presumably jlln!or) had ex· lawyer~O So I wrote back asking torted from N'ie·'rl'~. him for the addresses of the

* * ~ other heirs. Well, a few' days: He swept the memorandum later, he called me up' and:

together and pushed it int6 his asked me to lunch. At the Pa~ brief case. Not quite what he villoll," he said, dwelling 'wlth wanted. but to do young Nicolls obvious pleasures on the reeol.: justice. he had pulled the in· lection. . formation together qui c k I y $ • * _ enough, considering that he had Thatcher exclaimed wrath; no idea why it lVas wanted. fully, "if Jl!artin Henderson And presumably 'he WOUld' out· lives in the city, and Jl!artin grow his enjoyment of techni- Henderson gels a double slice' cal jargon .

Most of the doors he passed of the trust, and it's his mother stood open on dark and vacant who is dying, why is it that i~·. offices. Five o'clock was. the sufferable ass, Arthur Schne!· nominal closing time at the der, who erupted in my office SI04In Guarallty Trust, and at as the spokesman for . t1lis five o'clock secretaries and file whole pack?" clerks firmly saluted their sU'1 . Nicol!~ couldn·t hel~ ,grin· periors and the trust depart.' mng. I suspect he ILkes to ment was left to those who had look on himself as the heM of to stay. " the family. Then, of course, he

The frosteci glass' panel which is the president of Schneiders.~' bore the name "Kenneth D'I "Well, never mind," Thatch· Nicolls" was" Ii g h ted, and er suid. "Tell me about your sounds of activity came from I lunch. At the Pavilion, 1 think within. On an impulse. Thatch- : you said." er tapped briskly. It appeared that Martin Hen·

"Come In," Kenneth Nicolls derson had communicated with called without interrupting his Arthur Srhneider. who. li'lell' tie·knocking. near the Schneider Manufac:

turing Company in Framing: Instead of a soberly attired ham, illass. And Arthur Schnei~

young banker. mature of judg· der had communicated with his ment and devoted to duty- sister Grace Walwortb, . who; what he had hitherto been pre· sented with _ Thatcher beheld. lived in Washington. an embarrassed young man "I thought I had explained. whOse blond hair contrasted everything carefully," Nicolls painfully with a red face. elcaI' said ruefully, "but the· nex~ ly In a dilemma about his ex. thing I knew, I was getting posed shirtails. telephone calls .from Mrs. Row;

"Do you have a minute ~ to 'Iand Walworth." He made an; spare, Nicholls?" he asked him, expressive gesture. '.:

"Certainly. sir," the younger "She said..." prompted: man said hastily. He would be Thatcher. late meeting Joyce, but nothing could be done about that. From pure nervousness he made an ineffective pass at smoothing his hair.

"It won't take long. I trust," said Thatcher without sarcasm. c'rd just·llke to hear some more about the Schneider Trust that you handle." lie looked severe· ly at Nicholls, wso shiften awk· wardly, then continued,' "I've had an incomprehensible inter· view with Artllur Schneider that I hope you con explain.

"Well, it's hard to say; Shl!; was .furious that she sboulcJ have to wait to find Robertj~'she was' furious that we hadh?t found Robert. And that.',WaS abOut 8U' I could make f.O~~~

"What did you say?" 'ii1lR er . asked with genuine /i9$ patlty; Not everybody can -dQl wi.th hysterical women. .~: ~;1~

, ".'. "To. tel! you the trutb:~ll'

just made soothi~g noise.,.:_ (To Be Continuedf"

And. why don't you sit down?" IMP-ORTANT DEVELOP""ENT The question of tucking his P.

shirt in was. settled, Nicolls . One of the most important thought confusedly as he obey- developments in' space aU~n· cd Thntchcr's Injunction. . omy during 1961 was a deter·

• '. '. ·minatlon of the distance jo. the Nicolls pulled folders nut oisun by probes and radat\.\~Ia.

• his desk. "Has' he been both· distance was recorded . as 92,· eri'ng you too?" 925,000 Iniles.

, " ,

,'., ~

, .,-

.. _-------"--.. -------~-.-.--- .. -=---,------,------------

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"Sh,attuck's" Trimm"ed Navel . Beef,

EARRELS & HALF BARRELS '

Fat Back 'Pork BARRELS & HALF BARRELS

Fertilizers and. Seed Potatoes

"~Lion" Brand Hayseed 50's

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h T of the eyelid. In general. AS I piration Is govcl'ned hy a

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J. J. NEVILLE i A GIRL FRO!'lI !LUBECK I Brllce ;\Iarshall .. $3.25 'II

395 "MIIL'rON i\ VE. I PHONE 953UO ,I NINE HOURS I

apr3,lmth . ' . TO RAM A I

Pinafore ~-f-'H-uck T1~~n~b ~~~~tK 4.95

1

Rene Havard .... 3.00 i I KNOW MY LOVE I

i: i ~:I~ Catherine Gaskin 3.75 f ~ THREE OF A KIND . Nevil Shute ........ 3.75

I SEEN DIMLY I BEFOl.lE DAWN

I Nigel Balchin ... 3.25 AIRLINE I DETECTIVE , I Donald Fish .... , .. 4,25,

...... ' .. ,.: .. ~- I HOMICIDE TRINITY !

I Rex Stout ............ 3.50:

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FANNY AND THE REGENT OF SIAM

R. J. Minney.... 6,00 . E DISMISSAL :

Thorwald 6,25 i ,

. . . THE DAILY NE,"VS, ST. , NFLD. Y. ,APRIL

Ask Gran-rna. • • • •

she knows

WHY OUR OWN BREAD

has stood the TEST

"38 YE.ARS" serv ; ng ,the of Newfoundland homes

TRY A LOAF - BE CONVINCED! Faulty Diap ragm . iming you may know., the rate o[ rC~'1 , central olfice in the brain,

Upsets Breathing Cycles The act of breathing in (inspir3' t tion) is signaled along nerve I

Ill" I\,\ROLD TII()~tAS HYMA:oi, I s,its arU\,md he gasps [or hl'eat!11 cables to the diaphragm which ~1.11. like a ~ISh Ollt of water. C~n t is a sheet of muscle that, ~CP'I .'

somethmg be done to help )lIm? arates chest and belly Cal'll,les.

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5.00 !

OUR OWN BREAD BEST BY TASTE TEST

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Q-~t~' Ii!I~en'year·old son ~"cns I~spil'alion is begun when th: I " complaining that he can't c~t· A-Ordinarily, this condition Is dmphragI? contra~ts.. N~~ 3.75

5.00 i

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I ! For the clergyman no douh: eh his breath, He's been ex· attributed to an adolescent nell, mally thIS contractIOn IS um·

T H E PA SS I N G SC E N E . ~;s h:!f~\~~ ~oho~r~~, o;[~;!~'e:> amined and we'I'e been lIssur· rosis that's outgrown sooner or form. both leaves of the . d:a, l'd there's nolhing IITong with laler, On a few occasions, phragm acting in uOison. his heart or lungs, I've watch· I've examined youngsters by' When, for whatever reason. !ile ed him play haskelhuli in the fluoroscopy during an ~ttack, "timing" is off tempor~r'Jy,

. we ail cuuld help that man 0: : the cloth. live an even happie,

. : life if we were to ~il'e some school gym and he seems to What seems to happen is a the, perfee~IY }ealtl~r person, Ii!' perfecll)' ali right. Bm. paSSing disturbance of the din· registers thiS catch your son Ltd.

By ERIC A. SEYMOUR , thought and consideration to ili. . calling and what it repmpn:,. \\ hcn he gets home and just phragm Illueh like a fluttering speaks of and that you obser;'~, Right for now and

days ahead-a pretty pinafore ers

SEED POTATOES DUE TO ARRIVE

MONDAY FOUNDATION A

. (THE HIGHEST GRADE)

SEED' POTATOES • IRISH COB~LER

• GREEN MOUNTAIN

... KENNEBEC

• SEBAGO

DUE LATER. NEXT WEEK

A CARLOAD OF AARON VICTORY

e BLUE . POTATOES

* BOOK 'fOURS NOW AS OUR SUPPLY WILL BE THE ONLY CERTIFIED, STOCK AVAILABLE IN NEWFOUNDLAND.

SEED CO., LTD., no WATER STREET, Phonl! 8-4328 St. Jo.hn's,

416 WATER ST.

, PHONE 8-4328 ..

ST. JOHN'S

If you wilt explain the mechan· ism o[ this disturbance to him and assure him, of its mellie,,1 unimportance. perhaps lIe'lI lake it in st~ide until it self· adjusts, As it SURELY WILL,

of huck, in white or.color. We mllst not overburdt'n Oil,

It's easy huck weaving, Pat· clergymen, neithcr must \I'e II'.' tern 7126: children's sizes 2, I Spin Tribute To Clergy . ~Iost church goers, when they' sa,tisfied wit~ the Illca~I'<' 4, 6, 8 included,. Pattern, IIi·; 8-4425 or 8-2008 or 8-319J S t' f I th bl' I attend a place of IVorslup, gll'e stipends on whICh somc of llit'; rcctions for pinafore;' easy·to· omct Imes we fetCh te pu die, litlle heed to the manifold have to live, f II h f h k ' are. no a ware a e remen·, , , a ow c art or uc· weavmg. , . "' ~ dutieS the minister had to pel" . .

Send TIIIRTY FIVE CENTS ous mfluence and the oreat Imd

· ~ form in order to be readl' to' Tuday we take pnde III ,"10' tl'n coins) for, this pattern portanee each clergyman hoI s· d t th " 't' in" ollr clernt'mcn and hili' b ,. . . I" ( . con IIC e service III qllcs Ion. 0 0' . Q-Can anything c done to ~eep (stamps canllut be accepted I to III the commumtv, ~ misters 0 P . t they will find their fellow'ma,

nails from splitting? I've Wk· ST. JOHN'S DAII,Y !l;EWS the gospel are t~ken for grant· ; ret~arlllgb sermons d muts a little more charitable a ]i'll' I Ii 't' d r."1 G d 'd h d d some IIlleS e onerous CSpl e , ., en ge a n. VI amms an .• t· Homebold Arls Dept. 60 FRONT' 00 e. T ey never email too th 'd f' Id I more understand in" and ',I'ill' , i· r b t th ntin e Wl e Ie a c el'gyman r:o " clum nJec IOns u ey co • ST" WEST, TORONTO, ONT. much and not too many are Id "k" more "raciolls C[er"vmcn a'r' t I't I kno," It' "olaf , d bt' COll roam over In piC ~mg a e ' 1:'1. .. • ue 0 sP I , ., s. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS 1M. over·pald, In fact we ou m , It' or 't '( human !ike the rest of us all'i

medical Importance but It'S PATTERN NUMBER. ornlng,! the last analysis if any man of ~peclt f~P~C. 'U ne~~ssl; \. could do with a Hille 1ll~;C re an awful nuisance when you I N hb ! the clolh has too many of the' lhas 0 Ih,lhn Wltlh Ie BCbxI I spcct and certainlv re~1 COil. catch threads and other thin"s 1 'I el'g or I Idl ' " I' C osen w Ie mus ave a I . ..,'

. , ~ Legislators nrc the only ones ,war y possessIOns so ea"er; I' I f d t' R I I' . Nre"ational supaort 10 Ihm 01· and get runs In stockmgs. " b h fica Dun a Ion. e a 109 ollr " , . . . who can pass bad bills and gel sought after y t e rest 0 us.. t d I" 'II Ch' . forts to preach the No'pri ~Ilri

PI •• .e .oadder w Jwt '''h'l h t t' presen· ay IVIng WI I rlS ' " " A-I don't know whether, at this away with it. that ••• ,our frimd. IIId " I. e w~ may ear cons a~ I tianity as laid down in the Bible I help liS over the often rou;:h stage of the game. anything ~:~t:n~~w:.:v"~i r~mblmgs o,r more moneyhan is not always a an easy task., road to a better and 1II1]1'e.

Can be done other than to keep S?me you~h,s don't seem t,o wourl""' ..... ceprob'--. hIgher salaries from teae ers, F I' g h rt '1'" tChristian.like life. I th I th t th t ' ....... I various union men and others. ee. In. s are u so ~asl " ye , " your na'ils pared down to the rea IXC at I. S e all 0. as. J .... call ... t t d J

d I I k ne'Her ~et ha've we heard that a mIlliS er mus, rll'c to,IllC I' quick. YOII see the damage suppose to lave t Ie PIC ·up. • J I d I h f d 1 • • • " clergymen will not preach on alar .w len ems t~o, ~any I

has alreadY been .done to your . i certain Sunday unless their of hiS !lock, are ba,ckshd~n~ or , SEAL AGA~NST, DIRT nail bed, pr?bab.lY by an initY count is ~'~1nd 2."S~~~ o[ th~ i REG. T. MORGAN stipend is increased, they are hvmg a little rlOlous J \Voo~en ,clothespms pICk 1IJ1 Ii.,'; or. more hkcl~, ~Y, chern cal benefits derived from the puusc INSURANCE Dedication does not belong [Y, willch IS transf~rred to c1othl-. burns from .Iong :cmtnwed ~<:c are opposed by the effects ~f . ", •. Duck .. ~ SL entirely to anY'religious order, Perh~ps ollr clergy today ,are, Seal II'oO?en PillS by ~praYlli~ of some nml, pohsh or ilut:)~d lobacco that recently has been OiAL 8·037U • g·7156 We find it in many walks of too lem~nL They are c~rtallllY them WIth shellac, flOm an removers. ~:nce the nate eli shown to cau~e a rise in olood I r( but the real sirrnificancc 1I0t afJ'ald of work-their kmd aerosol can. The dirt \l'1I1. '1'11

~~:ri::!n~:sl ~/e~~~~~~r~ ll~: p~essur~ presumably I~ro~gh j Children can handle most of o~ ~edication is founl when as. of spiritual endeavour whi~h work into the wood due to tl:" cessories may not be followed shmulohon of ATCH seCI etJ~Il, the things in the modern elee· . t d 'th a r lel'"vmcn, I embraces so many facets of hv.: sheline coat. by noticeable improvement, Bllt So you'll have to add the debits trical home, inclllding parents'l . soc'~r:pp;; up ~n ctllat" dedica. ,ing, Cal,ling o~ the sick, at

and credits to figure your own r I h t I II for _____ _ as there's nothing else you elln balance sheets, tion arc many factors, not the I IOmc or I,n OSPI a ; on ca . do you migh\ give It a try. DEATHS least of which is the minister's' em~rgencles around the clock: An unremitting opponl'lll ,,1

Q-I have high· blood pressure I and my doctor says I "ught 10 I relpx and toke things easy. Well, the best way for me to relax Is to sit and smoke. Hut YOIl and other doctors ~ay smoking Is bad. How come?

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A-There'S no doubt of the sooth· Ing Influence o[ a pause for a smoke In the day's occupations 01' ·aggravations. BUt' it's ,lie pause that refreshes, not the the smoke except insofar as [t

. Is an excuse for taking a oreak. Like calling' time during a fnnt, ball or basketball game. On stalling fo knock the dirt out of spikes and adjust the uniform

when the bases are full and Ihe

MalCORMAC'S GEAR STREET'

RECEIVING O»'FICE. 1 . ADELAIDE STRm~'T

I . DIAL 8·5181 . 2 . 3.

HEALE - Passed peacefully unselfish approach to minute facmg up t? ~he m,ournful ,tas~ tobacco, King James I of En" away on April 30th, after a details, Some services per· of c?nductm~ burial servlcc~, land once wrote anonymously: lin"ering illness, William Heale i formed by a minister could off~rmg ad:lce when It IS "A custom loathsome to the

I (Bi'uy Hill), aged 47 'years, I very well be handled by lay· s?ught especmlly ?ver some so· eye, hatefut to, th nose. harlJ1' ,Leaving to mourn his wife, I men or women, However, in cml problems whICh secm to, ful to the bram., dangerous ~~ . Phyllis; three sons and two' small churches very often it is ~ount as the year~ go.~y; handl'l th,e I,ungs and, III the hla,' i daughters; three brothers. Har !. the rector, pastor or curate IIIg the gen~ral dlreellon o~ the I stlnkmg, fume thereo~. ne~rr:,1

. Id Donald and Robert and I Who has to shoulder additional church afi3lrs where sometImes I resembling the horr~ble ,t)~' ~n~ sister,' Mrs, Frank' 1.1ur· chores or the job will not be little temporary feuds maY':b lan

t smloke" of the Pit that JS

. St Pt' k' I' I d arise I ot om ess . . phy. Restlllg at . a rIC s aecamp IS Ie . . __________ _ Mercy Home. Funeral notice later, "l\lay his soul rest in peace,"

By J. R. WILLIMIS WHAT? EA, ,He:RE'

WI'TH HIM "TRYING ,0 STAND A PIECE OF ,oAST OIJ EIJD WITH "THE NOR:TH WIIJG OF THE 6Re:AKFAST'TA6LE? I GOT A PUJCHEP EL-60W AND A BARKED

SHIN--iH,I>iT:5 EfJOUISH!

Give Your IlomeThe . . ','

BIRTHS

PEARCE - Passed away on Sunday, April 29th, Charles H. Pearce, aged 42 years. Leav· ing to mourn his wife; two daughters Lorraine and Arlene; one son, Charles; also his father, Horace Pearce of St. John's. Resting at Carnell's Funeral Home. 28 Cochrane St. Funeral.at 3,30 p.m. tomorrow, Tuesday, 10 the Anglican Ceme·

RYAN-Born to Frank and teery, Forest Road. (No flow·, Phyllis Ryan (nee Fitzpatrick, ers). . '. R.N.), Qn April 29th, at the 1 PE'ITEN'P d d G I I b b 'I' - asse away su •

race Hosp la ""a a y glr, d J S d'· A 't 29'h .' .' cn yon, un ay, PrJ I ,

BLACKWOOD -: Born at >the Elizabeth E., wite 'o! William J. Flower ,Fresh· Look

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With , "

Grace Haspital on' April 28th, Petten, aged 35 ~eal's. Leaving to' Dr. and' Mrs, H. J.' Black· to mourn besides her husbanc1, wood, . a son;' her mother, Mrs, Elsie Pike of

. St. John's, Resting at Carnell's ...

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NOTE OF THANKs}o'uneral Home, 28 Cochrane St" untit 12 noon on Tuesday. The funeral will take place from SI. Thomas' Church at 2,3U p.m, to the Anglican Cemetery, ~'orest· Road,

Mrs. F'rank ,Jackman, •. forin· erly of Grand Falls. wishes to tbank all those who sent Mass Cards, flowers; letters and' cards ·£if symp!lthy during her bcreav~, ASH _ Pas~ed away at the ment in: the ideath of her' dear General Hospital on ISaturday

, .

: hu~balld.; .Special Ulanks: . for I April 28th, H. Gordon 'Ash, aged asslSta~ee 15. extended to Rev· i jU years,of 59A LeMarehant erend Fath~r Lacey, Portugal, Road. Leaving to mourn four Cove, MonSignor H?g~n, Grand i ilaughters, Millie (Mrs. Fred Falls, and Mr. Wilham C~UI,.l Mayst), Mabel, Estelle (Mrs. St. John's. .,,': . John Burden), Grace (Mrs. Clif •

. --..... - ... ---- f()rd Pynn), all of St. John's; A~, H,. MURRAY &' CO., LTD.

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. ':;bn:R 'TIlE • MA:.rCHLESS ,~, : ," . : Donald at Montreal, Albert at

/ Machinery Division

:~OND fUBiLEE.cQ~sT (1f.it1lrw"Ponns Are AV,ailable .her~)',: ,

" ,~'," " .';.~. , -',. ~ .. J." .: ~">;"I., '.1,'

'. T·. :.Y.· , :,.' . " R, .. E p. AI,·,R.S.. ~~~~~~S~tG~d~~n~~:.t'A~~~~::: ,. ,'... st. Catherines, Ontario, Jonas

. REASONABLE'.i,R.A TES. at Don Milts, Ontario; one s!s'

GU.ARA· NTEED' ·WORK ter, Mrs. George Martin, of St. .... ... ( .. ,.... .' John's; also .21 grandchildren

Distributors' of SKF . Bearingl~. We ',have ,the largest. stock for immediate' delivery •

ALSO

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.. ,. . PHON~ '.94'123. 'and '. two" gre~t,grandchildren .. , '. ..::,'" ,'.' . . Resting at Carnell's.:. Funeral, .' . ' , . ' "'; ,:' ,,,, : .• ' . .:'J. 110'me, 28 Cochrane Street', un . '. ·:EleetrOnlC: " 1i112 1I00n OIl.Tuesday, May

" ': .... ~. ,~,,;. ;',i '" .,' 1st. The"luneral-'wiII ': Ce:nt'lie~td. . ;;1: place [roln ,t~iu Snlvation OOCAMPBELL.tVE :'1 Chapel, Sprmgdale

. • , .' , • ,: 2,30 p.m. to the S, A. Cernet,ery, Aftediours 'P.borie'8-731~ Bhickmarsh Road.,

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