THE DAILY NEWS &~ Leader. Terra Nov• Motors Ltd....

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. . '::-::'":·; .. ... ·1 ._ , .--.!. _;· ... : ! 1 ....... ·, ·• >i' ; ... '! .. '-: .. ''!_· ..... ; '; ·- . ..,. . ; .-.: .. _,. ·:: ... . . ' ·, . '. ·' ... . : .. ··.\ 1 ...... . ······ ' . .. ·-. VAUXHALL VICTOR C1n1da's Import Leader. THE DAILY NEWS . Terra Nov• Motors Ltd. Vol. 67. No. 83 THE DAILY ST. JOHN'S, NflD., FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1960 (Price. 7 Cents) Charles Hutton & Sons OICe rea aJor r1can tron Pierre Voters St. \Viii Go To Polls· * Arrest More 1,500 l'lt.:Hitl::. St. l'irrrc rl .r;:•don 't I' 1 \'lllt•r.< in thc•C lr:::dl blJnds II':Jl to thr ::ound::)' to c;ect a IK'\1' 14- m. ,,·lJ:r I coundl. T:•c I'Otl'l'S lla1·e not 1>1 il 1 ol r;tndidatcs. ll'ilh t•:;':-. 1;, men in ti1c n;ee for thr li .<ili>. FLnri:•:n of ih:'l•l 11 •: ol Srtntor Iknri \ who lrd l'l'!'igllCI· ll'lltll t:u· t'Ollllt'il Ja..;t ,, .. ,::·:·. rh,• t:ilh. i:< J. :::II or!. ll',:drr .,[' tile Ulill· r.rl . · 01\':,.,:illn" :,:.·oup. , \: hr.'l. r•·>ith·nt> <•I tht'>e i,. 1 ''1•··. oif L'ltibl f'. \'t•\\.toun:Lnnd. t•nn 1 .,, · on thl'ir h;lllots il' t:u• tl;,ircaux .,':{irh ha· I;;Kl'll the "Un· protc;t whal he described as dqn·t•sscd ct·onmnic conditions resulting from the de1·aluation ,,r the franc and lack of sub- ;idb from the central govern· mrnt in l'aris. The resignations left foUl' councillors in office until era\ elections. They included two l'laireaux ;upporlt'l'S and li''O so-called opposition coun- cillnr,;, Lr Baillry and one other who is nnt a candidate. Sentenced To Death i<''l lor tk dP:cl'CP of the LONDON (AP)-A 26·)·ear· and old scrap iron dealer, Jim Smitb o: lhr trrritory." was .entcncl.'d to 1leath Thur• " >mall ;:roup of l'olrrs day for the murder of a police· ... ;n r•n ;in;- aux )larins ma:1 who died in a traffic •,ti:or>' hlanc-ha1·c an op- tangle. P••rim;its to their op- The policeman killed was P<•;ltion hy rlct·ting Lebailly, Constable Leslie Meehan, 34, Than South - Police · more thm1 L}IJIJ men and women at :\yanga Town- -•hip here Thumlay in what was probably the b!ggest mass rnnndliJl in Sonth African hi1tory. it was announced Thursd;l\' ni!::ht. A saicl 1.52:5 wcre not 2lHI rcportcd. All hut 162 Wt're rrlcRst'd , aftl'r ,, .• at a policr station. he sai1l. daimcd after the raid they had broken 11 mRjm of defiance of the white · From C;Ipetown, Durban;----·· · ·- ·---------- .. and Port Elizabeth re· toria\ly that "the word apar- porl, that the '1tuat!On was , tht'id racial pra1·tirally normal or mo;e : irretrie1·ably come to grief'', nearly so than at any time ln : South Africa's relat· the 10 days. . . i ions are in the neW!· '\. 1th all the prmc1pal : paper said. ' African leaders m .1a1l and . Police. backed bv troops ! police up lower i into l\'yanga at dawn: , echelons. 1t seemed that the 1 made widespread arrests and : longest demonstration in re-i seized crude weapons in a : cent years a'(ainst the govern-\ house-to-house search . ot thrcl' candidates for the who, court was told, was 1 The icebreaker arrived in St. John's Harbour yt·sterday afternoon at 3 o'clock, brin,ing with her thf t 1 '" i>land to the council. trafuc duty wl!edn bhla aus-1 membel'll of the ill-fated "Terra Nova'', which was crushed by rafting ice and went to the bottom ln Hamilton Inlet Tho• other two are union sup- p1ctons were arouse Y a ear ff L b do M d "I h 28 h Th f 3 11 d d d · · ' l""rtrr>. :driven past by Smith. o ll r, on ay, " t • . e crew o 9 were a save . an manage to save thc1r as well. ; apartheid segregation 1 There were no offic:ial r• ! pohcy may be ended. 1 ports of easualties during the ; TPh I!Ontinued 1 raid, but screaming c:ould be i to. call up 1ts .forces. The ' heard in the area. One Negro : Witwatersrand R1fles lnfant:r j said some men were "!mocked . Reg1ment JUSt been mobil· I about'' bv police before beinl i ized and stationed at the air•! arrested." f'OR :'lil:"n: He sprang to the running An off1ctal of Canad1an Red .Cross was .on hand to. the sealers, but needed only to supply cigarettes and lin Si. Pierre, whrre there bmtrd of the mo1•ing car and some food for mne member. leavmg by tram for Lems porte and Gambo. R:·c aht>ut 2.500 1·otcrs. there told Smith to stop. Smith speed· High praise was given by the sealers, for the crew of the "Labrador" and for the Earle Friighting Sen·ice, the He nine l' nion candidates. ed up and Meehan was brushed ownen of the "Terra Nova'', who were on hand .to trans port the sealers back to Carbonear, 1 port near Germistown, east of The men and women we ... I .Johannesburg, presumably for j rounded up, bundled tnt. , movement where;•er needed. · truck! and driven about three Senator Claircaux. from the machine by another -------- · . ---- --- . ----- -- .. · -------·---·--- ; The p_ro·.I(O\'Nnment miles away to the Philippi rnairman of thr olrl council. car. fell to the atreet and wa1 fnr the ninr On smallrr struck and injured fatally by a \llqur!on, with some 35Q voters, , third car. are three Union candi- i Killing a policeman in Ute ltatrs for the three seats. ! prrformance of his duty fllb Sen a .. or Clairuux said Thurs· · into the rare category of eapi· d<t)' the fact therr is only one tal murder in Britain, punish· nrn-l'nion candidate indicates· able by death. that the or the islanders support him and . The Crown Smith hi.. 1 had stolen goods tn car and He led rc>ignationq by I was eager to a\'Did belnc ques· 1·1 councillors last Jan. 14 to; lioned. Says Test --------·------------ On Agreement Ban Imminent Gaulle's Oratory De Enthralls Parliament Farmers Riot paper D<e Burl(rr noted edl· I police station. ----- \ PRESS NOT WELCOME All A '1 Re1>orters were kept out el' · 1 '\yaoga during the raid. This reporter was stopped outside "'t•stake ti!Wn at !he height of the 011er· I'll : ation anrl a guard tommented: SEXS. t"ranre r APl- Ten "The press are not welcome thousand angry farmers battled VA."\COCVER. CP-lt here:· LONDON (CPl __; Presfdenl Hall and flanked by scarlet-, fixed or floating bases from, riot police Thursday night after all a mistake. Trans-Canada. polit·e spokesman the Charles de Gaulle held both coated yeomen d[ :!1e ;:uml,: which these of death I a ma:;s agawst · Air Lines Thursday. · raid proceeded "without inci· Houses of Parliament In rapt de Gaulle got prolonged ap-' can be launched, be placed un- pnce·flXlng It did not intl'nd to sen•p a . dl'nt". and no resistance wu silence Thursday as he pledged plause from members of the 1 der surveillance. . · vaguely all'oholic drink on ' cnrountercd. France to give up nuclear House of Lords and House of I HAPPY TO STOP I Authoritir; reported 12 polir·e · regular flights o! its ·.new' "With few exc_eptionJ, weapons when other nations do I mons. . . "France Wl>Uld Io; her part, officers and three demonstra· • trans-contmental Jet polirc rn so. !-ranee, he sa1d, des1res above· be very happy to g1 ve up the I tors were injured. Police said' on thP mlroductory. up the ag1tators, terronsts and Heralded by a fanfare of all that nuclear weapons he de- •tests and the capital expendi·: some officers were cut bv hurl-. flights. . ' gangsters who had been ear· trumpets, he delivered a 20- stroyed and the n[ I lure she has undertaken in or- ed and some . . ":"he SPI'\'lCC or the sweet marked for said tht! minute classical oratio;'l from death" that earry them be plac- der to provide herself with the from tear gas apparently, c1drr, w1th an content comn:nss10ner for south memory-ward-perfect Without a ed under sul'veilbll'l· .. \nd s.lt' means possessed by others, as thrown by the demonstrators : of 2.6 per cent. was stopped Afncan police, Col. I. P. S. OTTAWA. CP-External Af· where disarmament will also &Ingle deviation from copies believes that East and West soon as these others to · · , Wednesday on orders from. Terblanche. fairs :\linistrr Green said · be diRcussed, and to make a distributed in advance. can live in peace h•;:clhel. 1 have them available." The rally at Sens was one of: :\lontreal hrodquartcrs. It He said the operation was •l'h ·d h t gr m nt tJ·ip to r.at 1 ·n ,• merica starting Legislators afterward spoke HISTORY AND ORATORY l What France expect of peace '1s farm meetings throughout was rcplacrd with non-a!- launched in the or ur• av t a an II ee e " I 1 d 1o!' ·dcr 1 b'd' 'd t (}{ 00 cessation of nurlear tests , about :\'lay 21. with. awe or his delivery an_d . De .Gau!le's combinl'd · !hal it. should not widen di·: France Thurs ay. 2_00,. 1 co,1 1c c1 ·• . 1 res1 en s . among the United States, · :\Jr. Green been optlml•· , classical French. _One ealled his 1 htstory w1th. p_crhaps · nor pmson wounds-: 000 farmers massed tn a natwn· : fhe 2.6-pcl·<'cnt d_11nk. was ho had )IV· Bdtain and France is· tir about the disarmament ne·l memory "fantasllc." . smce S1r \\ mston! "mclud111g those suffered by the w1de show. of protest. The on fhghts. mg ll1 a of tenor. •·imminent.'' , goliations since the time the 1 Standing under the ancient. Churclul_lrousE.>d the free world, German people who were yes-. farmers. l'la1111 the cell·, Fnday and 1 offiCials said . ,:'\egro men. and This "l·cry fact'', he told the weer in the planning! beamed roof of Westminster 1 '? ac!10n 20 years .. terday our enemies hut who· mgs,. a1mrd at kcr_pmg do:vn • here .\londay 11 be part II ran commons external ' [Churchill, 85 and feeble now, arp to<la)' a l'ital part of the the mnll: of 11\'lng for t•Jty of q•rvll'C w1lh meals the dunn:, the raid, rommittcr. prorides "great He repeated this 1tand Morr•ISOD I was there to honor his West and our common ally." are eating away farm for, llrst .tel p.assen_gcrs. to hope" ror an f:ast·West dis· Thursday, making it stronger, all)' Thursday, ' After rcf<'rring to his last prollts and many farm·, 1 hat stmterl B. officials Pollee. 111th armament agreement at the if anythlnl{. De Gaulle's theme was thai risit to Britain, in wartime 16 ers towarrl bankruptcy. won?cnng f:Jr Prs and h unchcons. 11 E'nl 10nation talks now going on Paul L·ESSt'X Britain France ha,·e a t·om- years ago. he a)!rred he and· . , . . . , sernec of. hqum· in the a1r.: room of tht · . 1 · · Released mon rlestm'· to work for P(''t<"' Cht<rch 1 ·11 had h· d th · d'Cf 1he r!Pmon .. trahons elsewhere 1Attorne,·-c,cncral Bonner de· shant1es 11h1ch serve as m Gene1•a. said Ml' Green's opt m1sm is · ' c. a e1r l er- . . - . . . · f h 00 · h b't t The 1·ommittce wound up its ' it bl but that •t isn't It brought him to this statement, ences. , were spmted but peaceful. 1 e1ded rt was a federal matter. , or t r 2-5. 0 Ill a 1 an s. commen a e I f F h · , ., h ! - ------ -----------, EYEWITNESS STORY wnrk for this parliamentary 1 warranted by progress so rar S : o .. rene a1ms_: . . 'But see, e said, "how 1 . 1 A 19 _,•ear-old irl lv Gan • except perhaps for a in the talks, which began M. {Allan' France that tills hme works _to display what mat- u S. - Canada w·lll I azi said she sa! rtport from :\!r. Green after i March 15. Canada is one of or :. peace can be attamed only If , lers .:V•Pe out what counts, i townsfolk who had pass- his trll'els to two continents .. the 10 negotiating countries. leased Thursday fe_ar of sudden an- I for httle.. . I I' es from those without them. :\lr. Green wlli leave for, 1\tr. Green said Canada does I the National Parole Board is fmt . hunched his She said a policeman stand· Tuesday to at- not want the United Nations t rol This mvolves the hm1lahon cha<r w1lh Lady Churchill be· p t p I I ing 0 top of armored ear trnd. the two-day to be pushed out of the dl•l 33-year-old and control of armaments by :side him, tears. When rese n roposa I a Ioud- flf v..estern foreign mlmsters armament picture. Hamilton Ont. ste !worker b?,th camps. . : de Gaulle fm1shed and after I speaker: "Hev Kaftirs if you on diSarmament proposals to ! was set f;ee fr:m Cape She, Wishes above. applause ended. he slow-! bave no you be placed !he East-West It would be he said, 1 Breton county jail, RCMP i that stocl,s of. 11ea-: descended f:oor of i. _GENEVA. (Reuters) _ A, Conference it 1 cannot go out. We beat meetmg 1n May If sec:etary General Dall I officers appeared with a new 1 be. that mstalla-; the nail, bowed to S1r .. JOmt Canad1an-Amerrcan pro-. was 'the most reahshc poSSible" i you if you do not briM your Hi. could put hls I warrant wa! issued under the: lions llbere are made be ,and. stode slowly out m_to the .posal recognizing historic fish· and it had hren a diplomatic' books.'' PLANS TWO TRIPS \'Jews the 10·natlon , 1 . 1 11 t , used for purposes, that· sprmg sunshme. Churchill fol- I ing rights is expected to be: feat to get canada and the: The minister plans to at· armam1mt eommltte.e on how i in Ham· I and me rail l'apahle nf . lowed. ·No one mover! uotil: presented Lo the Law of the· U.S. together. The said did not trnd :"<:\TO foreign ministers' the would play 1ts part in 1 ilton last week, was wen as the· both had gm1e. :Sea conference today. i . ., i see beaten. She n1eeting !\lay 2 at Istanbul, a disarmament pact. sentenced in 1948 to six : · -- Canadian delegate George, _Drl'W, Canarla . out to go to the hos· ---- months ln jall and a $500 fine I D b R h Drew and United States delegate t. m1ssioner to the Umter! Pltal. She had a wound on her Plot T for operating an Ulegal Jlquor . eac es •Arthur H. Dean are was. rlescnh·i and her . 0 Still. a e to withdraw their rival pro· lng the !om! plan "a leal, f1 om a pollee beallnl!ln a r•ld I comprom1'e" 'IIonday At the time of the original · . · posals in favor of the com- · · · · case, he was charged under 1 . promise plan. both the federal excise law H If p e · 1 The new calls Ior a ;K Ca P M and the province's liquor act.: . a wa Oint 'six-mile territorial sea and an warne stigates t it was learned. '1 v outer six-mile fishing zone in 0 r an age r ' Whether the aeeond war· . . I which foreign countries which rant was served could not be · 'bave fished there for five years fri E ·' I A. learned immediately. Morn- ' , would be allowed to continue t •• . , son, however, was free. OTTAWA, CP-Taking up, uf eight-day budget debate ;doing so for another 10 years. can ven 5 ARCH :\tacKE:-iZ!E i • had declined to. HALIFAX, CP-A warrant an argument that has been which also saw Herman Bat·: Previously, the u.s. had: Canadian Starr V. rlter Identify himself despite his 1 for the arrest of ,Tohn Allan pressed by CCF members, _len, I.-Humber-St. Georgc·s: souoht perpetual historic fish· i OTTAWA, CP-A report of' wife's efforts to get more In·· 1\lorrlson issued under the Hon. ,J, M. Macdonnell PC· charge the government with I ing., rights in the outer zone, .'\CCRA. Ghana. Reuters-' pressed,'' he declared. bar-room plotting to kill a: formation. B'ut he prom· Nova Liquor Act will Toronto Greenwood sa I d indulging in "a wild spending : while Canada harl insisted a . Prime :\Jinistcr Kwamc Kilru- · The beginning of 1960. he senior Nat.lonal Harbours 1 ised to appear in the Montreal : not be served, deputy Attorn·, Thursday the i £oastal state should have ex-1 mail warned. Thurs.day that as : said, saw Board oUic1al was relayed . court next Tuesday when the ey-Generai John A y Mac- should spend mm e to ra1se 1ons" smce tak•ng office in • dusive fishing rights for a runt long as Afncan :'\cgroes are I on the pcace·lovmg people of dramatically Thursday to the six men wiii appear. . Donald ·said here · ! standar;ds of under developed . 1957. . 12 miles offshore I denied the privilege of "one· , our continent." Commons Committee lnvestl· If he recognized the two : night J countries and less on arma- · "! don't think this g01·ern· PROPOSAL. DEADLINE man, one-vote,'' then insecu'r.! TWO SWORDS OF Jating toll operations of Mon- plotters he would tlp the I ' · ments. . ment will be in power long The 87 .nation conference be· ity, resentment and revolt will ' DAMOCLES Cartier' RCMP he had told Mn. Beau-! 1 ... He told the Commons that : to pay the expenses gan :'>larch 15 . Voting on the I prevail. . · There were "two I det. . I RedS PrO OS ! if we So as. now arc, : ?f excurs•on Tory- I proposals so far submitted to· I In. one of the speeche_s I swords of Damocles hanging V.lth suppressed emotion,' Meanwhlle, Mr. Beaudet p e I 1 think we 11 fall.. . I ISm ' Mr. Batten sal d. ! day is the deadline for new I of hiS career, )<krumah cash· . over our continent and 1\'C key witness Guy Beaudet, 1said he has arranged for po· I . was growmg econnm1c When the promises made by: ones--begins Wednesday gated recent events in South must remove them"-South Montreal port mahager, re·Jllce protection at his Montreal A Cl Sl t dlspartty I the Progressive Conservatives The new proposal will need. Africa as "a brutal massacre" Africa's racial segregation pol· ported he had been informed h. ome .through the RCMP and ean a e and poor. nah?ns. The nch : before 1957 are reviewed "you a two-thirds majority - 58 I and the French Sahara nuc- icy and Frenrh atomic tr'sts. Of the plot In a lunch-time municipal Town of Mount . 1 a1·e gettmg rwher alld the 1 can almost sec the sky darken· l t b d t d t lear tests as "an act of stub· ---·- ... ____ ·---·-·---· --- telephone caiJ Thursday from:. Royal Police. . GENEVA CP pro I pcor desperately poorer." ling with the flapping wings or t e as par born and inhuman defiance." 1 •'W'W"W'"W''W'W"W"W'W"'W'• his wife. i His statement Thursday was, posed Thu;sday to wl:e I _He spoke in the .rourth day coming home to 0 Ill e a , a · _ His attack came before 300 i An anonymous caller Wed· I the most sensational turn yet slat clea and tak the 1 o- --: / roost." and observers from ' f .f -'ea f 'Ier nesday night had told · Mn. in the railways committee confer· and negotiate Instead on the The Conservatives had prom- i of helper to underdevelop_cd governments and political par- ! t' t' J, Beaudet by phone that two hearing which has been eeek· e'nee back to Its starting point basis of the United Nations 1 ised to cut taxes, interest' I countries has one that "cnes tics from all parts of Africa : men next to him ln. a Mon· ing information on how the Soviet Deputy Foreign Min: Assembly resolution of last rates and spending. Since out to be played now." attending a three-day "positive I treal bar were discusslnl bridle operated and what part lster Valerian A Zorln claim· Nov. 20. 1957, per capita payments to Canada was spending bil· action'• conference for peace I eventl which resulted in alx -lf any-political Influence ed,aucb a procedure offered That resolution, which re- the federal government rose lions on defence, much of it and securitY, in Africa. I (ormer bridge toll eollecjors played. the only escape from the dead ferred the two plans to this $20 to $334 last year from j for weapons that become obso- , 1 being charaed this week with The bridge, operated bY tbe end street in which the confer· conference, was unanimously $314 In 1951. Jete before they are ready to 'So long as any group on i theft. harbon board by alll'eement ence flnda itself after almost approved in United Nat· NE'!V ROLE POSSIBLE be used, continent denies prin; ' RIPORTI PLOT "He reported tbat the two Bleil were plattlnJ to Jdll file'' uld :Mr. Beaudet. "Ht said if J •• wile, rd Jtt pro'iectloa." with the province and Mon· four weeb of work ions. But there iS one obvious ln his speech, Mr. Macdon- c1ple of one-man, cnc-ro.e :,l!r. treal, installed an automatic · · snag in using It as a negotl· nell, minister without port· But another great deterrent uses its power to maintain its toll collecting aystem In Sepo He called on delegates to' atlng platform. The North At· ·folio from June, 1957, until to war would be raising the privilege, there will be in· tember, replaclna toll collec:t:· abandon their eron purposes !antic powers and the Cam· August, 1959, said Canada has living standards in the Jess security for the. oppressors ors. Revenue•lhot up inuntdi· debate on.the rival Soviet and munlst·bloc countries disagree played an important role in fortunate countries, Mr. Mac- and constant resentment and ately. Weattrn tllaarmament plaDI on the document's meaning. both war and peace. The role ddnnell said. revolt on the part of the op· I Cloudy wiih sunny inter· ;•als and Iew snow flllrric:·. High today 35. ' Toronto ........ · 36 Montreal. .. .. .. .. 35 Moncton ........ 38 Halifax ........ 38 Sydney· ........ 35 St. John's .. .. .. 37 39 42 4!1 52 . ' :1':-.. -• ...: .'! ... / .. : ' .. ,.! /

Transcript of THE DAILY NEWS &~ Leader. Terra Nov• Motors Ltd....

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VAUXHALL VICTOR C1n1da's Import

Leader. THE DAILY NEWS ~~. ~- .

&~ Terra Nov• Motors Ltd. Vol. 67. No. 83 THE DAILY NEW~, ST. JOHN'S, NflD., FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1960 (Price. 7 Cents) Charles Hutton & Sons

• • • OICe rea aJor r1can tron

Pierre Voters St. \Viii Go To Polls·

* Arrest More

1,500 ~r. l'lt.:Hitl::. St. l'irrrc rl ~· .r;:•don 't I' 1 \'lllt•r.< in thc•C lr:::dl blJnds II':Jl ~o to thr ~·•II ::ound::)' to c;ect a IK'\1' 14-m. ,,·lJ:r ::eu~r: I coundl.

T:•c 2.!'~11-odrl I'Otl'l'S lla1·e not 1>1 il 1 l'itoit~ ol r;tndidatcs. ll'ilh t•:;':-. 1;, men in ti1c n;ee for thr li .<ili>. FLnri:•:n of ih:'l•l 11 •: ur'·~trirl'~ ol Srtntor Iknri \ ,,.lJ'£'~11>: who lrd 111~!'-t- l'l'!'igllCI·

1in:~~ ll'lltll t:u· t'Ollllt'il Ja..;t ,, .. ,::·:·. rh,• t:ilh. i:< l'~ul

J. :::II or!. ~ ll',:drr .,[' tile Ulill· r.rl . · 01\':,.,:illn" :,:.·oup. ,

\: hr.'l. r•·>ith·nt> <•I tht'>e i,. 1 ''1•··. oif th~' ~·onth\\'c!-t L'ltibl

f'. \'t•\\.toun:Lnnd. t•nn rr~blt•t· 1 .,, · on thl'ir h;lllots il' thr~·

o··~"'C t:u• tl;,ircaux ~roup .,':{irh ha· I;;Kl'll the u;~nw "Un·

protc;t whal he described as dqn·t•sscd ct·onmnic conditions resulting from the de1·aluation ,,r the franc and lack of sub­;idb from the central govern· mrnt in l'aris.

The resignations left foUl' councillors in office until ~en· era\ elections. They included two l'laireaux ;upporlt'l'S and li''O so-called opposition coun­cillnr,;, Lr Baillry and one other who is nnt a candidate.

Sentenced To Death

i<''l lor tk dP:cl'CP of the LONDON (AP)-A 26·)·ear· ~··,onu;n:.. and ,,ll'i;~l iutrr~sts old scrap iron dealer, Jim Smitb o: lhr trrritory." was .entcncl.'d to 1leath Thur•

\''~1~· " >mall ;:roup of l'olrrs day for the murder of a police· ... ;n r•n ;in;- I~ll' aux )larins ma:1 who died in a traffic •,ti:or>' hlanc-ha1·c an op- tangle . P••rim;its to r~~ister their op- The policeman killed was P<•;ltion hy rlct·ting Lebailly, Constable Leslie Meehan, 34,

Than CAPETOW~. South .\frica-Rcutcr.~ - Police arre~ted

· more thm1 L}IJIJ ~cgrn men and women at :\yanga Town­-•hip nl';~r here Thumlay in what was probably the b!ggest mass rnnndliJl in Sonth African hi1tory. it was announced Thursd;l\' ni!::ht.

A polil~ offi~ial saicl 1.52:5 pcr,on~ wcre <~rrc~tcd­not 2lHI a~ ori~inall~· rcportcd. All hut 162 Wt're rrlcRst'd

, aftl'r ,, .• ·crnin~ at a policr station. he sai1l. Polin~ daimcd after the raid they had broken 11 mRjm

strr.n~hold of :\r~ro defiance of the white ~tm·emmenl. · From C;Ipetown, Durban;----·· · ·- ·----------.. and Port Elizabeth r~me re· toria\ly that "the word apar­porl, that the '1tuat!On was , tht'id racial ~egregalion h.a~ pra1·tirally normal or mo;e : irretrie1·ably come to grief'', nearly so than at any time ln : South Africa's oversea~ relat· the _Ia~! 10 days. . . i ions are in ruin~. the neW!·

'\. 1th all the prmc1pal : paper said. ' African leaders m .1a1l and . Police. backed bv troops ! police ro~nding up lower i ~warmed into l\'yanga at dawn: , echelons. 1t seemed that the 1 made widespread arrests and : longest demonstration in re-i seized crude weapons in a : cent years a'(ainst the govern-\ house-to-house search .

~nr ot thrcl' candidates for the who, th~ court was told, was 1 The icebreaker ~Labrador~ arrived in St. John's Harbour yt·sterday afternoon at 3 o'clock, brin,ing with her thf t 1'" i>land >.~•at> to the council. 0~. trafuc duty wl!edn bhla aus-1 membel'll of the ill-fated "Terra Nova'', which was crushed by rafting ice and went to the bottom ln Hamilton Inlet

Tho• other two are union sup- p1ctons were arouse Y a ear ff L b do M d "I h 28 h Th f 3 11 d d d · · ' l""rtrr>. :driven past by Smith. o ll r~. r, on ay, " a~c t • . e crew o 9 were a save . an manage to save thc1r belongm~s as well.

; me~rs apartheid segregation 1 There were no offic:ial r• ! pohcy may be ended. 1 ports of easualties during the ; TPh go1·er~ment I!Ontinued 1 raid, but screaming c:ould be i to. call up 1ts . forces. The ' heard in the area. One Negro : Witwatersrand R1fles lnfant:r j said some men were "!mocked . Reg1ment ha~ JUSt been mobil· I about'' bv police before beinl i ized and stationed at the air•! arrested."

:'Ol~l: f'OR :'lil:"n: He sprang to the running An off1ctal of t~e Canad1an Red .Cross was .on hand to. m~t the sealers, but needed only to supply cigarettes and lin Si. Pierre, whrre there bmtrd of the mo1•ing car and some food for mne member. leavmg by tram for Lems porte and Gambo.

R:·c aht>ut 2.500 1·otcrs. there told Smith to stop. Smith speed· High praise was given by the sealers, for the crew of the "Labrador" and for the Earle Friighting Sen·ice, the He nine l' nion candidates. ed up and Meehan was brushed ownen of the "Terra Nova'', who were on hand .to trans port the sealers back to Carbonear,

1 port near Germistown, east of The men and women we ... I .Johannesburg, presumably for j rounded up, bundled tnt. , movement where;•er needed. · truck! and driven about three h~a<lrd n~· Senator Claircaux. from the machine by another -------- · . ---- --- . ----- -- ---------~ .. · -------·---·--- ; The p_ro·.I(O\'Nnment new~-) miles away to the Philippi rnairman of thr olrl council. car. fell to the atreet and wa1

fnr the ninr ~~ats. On smallrr struck and injured fatally by a \llqur!on, with some 35Q voters, , third car. th~re are three Union candi- i Killing a policeman in Ute ltatrs for the three seats. ! prrformance of his duty fllb

Sen a .. or Clairuux said Thurs· · into the rare category of eapi· d<t)' the fact therr is only one tal murder in Britain, punish· nrn-l'nion candidate indicates· able by death. that the orerwhrlmin~ majorit~·, or the islanders support him and . The Crown co~ten~ed Smith hi.. ~roup. 1 had stolen goods tn Ju~ car and

He led rna'~ rc>ignationq by I was eager to a\'Did belnc ques· 1·1 councillors last Jan. 14 to; lioned.

Says Test

--------·------------On Agreement

Ban Imminent

Gaulle's Oratory De Enthralls Parliament

Farmers Riot

paper D<e Burl(rr noted edl· I police station. ----- \ PRESS NOT WELCOME

All A '1 Re1>orters were kept out el' ·

1

'\yaoga during the raid. This reporter was stopped outside "'t•stake ti!Wn at !he height of the 011er·

I'll : ation anrl a guard tommented: SEXS. t"ranre r APl-Ten "The press are not welcome

thousand angry farmers battled VA."\COCVER. CP-lt wa~ here:· LONDON (CPl __; Presfdenl Hall and flanked by scarlet-, fixed or floating bases from, riot police Thursday night after all a mistake. Trans-Canada. .~ polit·e spokesman ~aid the

Charles de Gaulle held both coated yeomen d[ :!1e ;:uml,: which these -vehicle~~ of death I a ma:;s dcmon~trahon agawst · Air Lines ~aid Thursday. · raid proceeded "without inci· Houses of Parliament In rapt de Gaulle got prolonged ap-' can be launched, be placed un- gov_e~nment pnce·flXlng f~rm It did not intl'nd to sen•p a . dl'nt". and no resistance wu silence Thursday as he pledged plause from members of the 1 der surveillance. . · poh~les. vaguely all'oholic drink on ' cnrountercd. France to give up nuclear House of Lords and House of I HAPPY TO STOP I Authoritir; reported 12 polir·e · regular flights o! its ·.new' "With few exc_eptionJ, ~ht weapons when other nations do I Co~ mons. . . ~ "France Wl>Uld Io; her part, officers and three demonstra· • trans-contmental Jet ~ernt·c- polirc su~ceeded rn r~undmc so. !-ranee, he sa1d, des1res above· be very happy to g1ve up the I tors were injured. Police said' o~ly on thP mlroductory. up the ag1tators, terronsts and

Heralded by a fanfare of all that nuclear weapons he de- • tests and the capital expendi·: some officers were cut bv hurl-. flights. . ' gangsters who had been ear· trumpets, he delivered a 20- stroyed and the "1•ehid~s n[ I lure she has undertaken in or- ed ~tones and some s~ffered . . ":"he SPI'\'lCC or the sweet marked for ar~esl," said tht! minute classical oratio;'l from death" that earry them be plac- der to provide herself with the from tear gas apparently, c1drr, w1th an alco~ol content dep~ty comn:nss10ner for south memory-ward-perfect Without a ed under sul'veilbll'l· .. \nd s.lt' means possessed by others, as thrown by the demonstrators : of 2.6 per cent. was stopped Afncan police, Col. I. P. S.

OTTAWA. CP-External Af· where disarmament will also &Ingle deviation from copies believes that East and West soon as these others ~ease to · · , Wednesday on orders from. Terblanche. fairs :\linistrr Green said · be diRcussed, and to make a distributed in advance. can live in peace h•;:clhel. 1 have them available." The rally at Sens was one of: :\lontreal hrodquartcrs. It He said the operation was •l'h ·d h t gr m nt tJ·ip to r.at1·n ,• merica starting Legislators afterward spoke HISTORY AND ORATORY l What France expect of peace '1s farm meetings throughout was rcplacrd with non-a!- launched in the interesl~ or

ur• av t a an II ee e " I 1 • d 1 o!' ·dcr 1 b'd' 'd t (}{ 00 cessation of nurlear tests , about :\'lay 21. with. awe or his delivery an_d . De .Gau!le's sp~ech combinl'd · i~ !hal it. should not widen di·: France Thurs ay. ~bout 2_00,. 1 co,1 1c c1 ·• .· • . ~~~-a 1 •r:~. res1 en s . among the United States, Ru~· · :\Jr. Green ha~ been optlml•· , classical French. _One ealled his 1 htstory w1th. oralo~y p_crhaps · v~siOil.~. nor pmson wounds-: 000 farmers massed tn a natwn· : fhe 2.6-pcl·<'cnt d_11nk. was ~) a~~a. ~ ho had ~ee.~ )IV·

~ia. Bdtain and France is· tir about the disarmament ne·l memory "fantasllc." . 't~nmatc~ed smce S1r \\ mston! "mclud111g those suffered by the w1de show. of protest. The ~e~1·ed on m~u.gural :'~t fhghts. mg ll1 a re1g~ of tenor. •·imminent.'' , goliations since the time the 1 Standing under the ancient. Churclul_lrousE.>d the free world, German people who were yes-. farmers. l'la1111 the p~lcf. cell·, Fnday and 1 ~A offiCials said . _Shou~J~g ,:'\egro men. and

This "l·cry fact'', he told the t~llc~ weer in the planning! beamed roof of Westminster 1 '? ac!10n 20 years a~o .. terday our enemies hut who· mgs,. a1mrd at kcr_pmg do:vn • here .\londay 11 ~\·ould be part suea_mm~ II om~n ran lhJou~h commons external affair~' ~!age. ' [Churchill, 85 and feeble now, arp to<la)' a l'ital part of the the mnll: rn~t of 11\'lng for t•Jty of sl~ndard q•rvll'C w1lh meals the ~t:ect~ dunn:, the raid, rommittcr. prorides "great He repeated this 1tand Morr•ISOD I was there to honor his wartim~ West and our common ally." worl~crs, are eating away farm for, llrst rl~ss .tel p.assen_gcrs. acl'or~~ng to ~>yelll~!lesses. • hope" ror an f:ast·West dis· Thursday, making it stronger, all)' Thursday, ' After rcf<'rring to his last prollts and dnvm~ many farm·, 1 hat stmterl B. ~· officials Pollee. ar~ed 111th rev~tlv armament agreement at the if anythlnl{. De Gaulle's theme was thai risit to Britain, in wartime 16 ers towarrl bankruptcy. won?cnng ~hout ~1eences f:Jr Prs and h unchcons. 11 E'nl 10nation talks now going on Paul ~Iartin L·ESSt'X Ea~t Britain a~1d France ha,·e a t·om- years ago. he a)!rred he and· . , . . . , sernec of. hqum· in the a1r.: throu~h P.'·~ry room of tht · . 1 · · Released mon rlestm'· to work for P(''t<"' Cht<rch1·11 had h· d th · d'Cf 1he r!Pmon .. trahons elsewhere 1 Attorne,·-c,cncral Bonner de· shant1es 11h1ch serve as home~ m Gene1•a. said Ml' Green's opt m1sm is · ' • c. a e1r l er- . . - . . . · f h 00 · h b't t

The 1·ommittce wound up its ' it bl but that •t isn't It brought him to this statement, ences. , were spmted but peaceful. 1 e1ded rt was a federal matter. , or t r 2-5. 0 Ill a 1 an s. commen a e I f F h · , ., h ! - ------ -----------, EYEWITNESS STORY

wnrk for this parliamentary 1 warranted by progress so rar S : o .. rene a1ms_: . . 'But see, e said, "how

1

. 1 A 19_,•ear-old irl lv Gan • •e~sion. except perhaps for a in the talks, which began M. Y~NE~. c,ri)'~ohn {Allan' France bellev~s that tills hme works _to display what mat- u S. -Canada w·lll I azi said she sa! p~lic: sepa~· rtport from :\!r. Green after i March 15. Canada is one of 14~~~~~~jd ~o~~icti:~e or :. peace can be attamed only If , lers ~nd .:V•Pe out what counts, i ati~g townsfolk who had pass-his trll'els to two continents .. the 10 negotiating countries. leased Thursday nlgh~a;f[er t~e. ge~era! fe_ar of sudden an- I for httle.. . I • I' es from those without them.

:\lr. Green wlli leave for, 1\tr. Green said Canada does I the National Parole Board nr~,llat!on. is fmt remoye~. . C_hurc~lll, hunched ~~ his She said a policeman stand· Wa~hington Tuesday to at- not want the United Nations t rol This mvolves the hm1lahon cha<r w1lh Lady Churchill be· p t p I I ing 0 top of armored ear trnd. the two-day confe~ence to be pushed out of the dl•l gr~~t'~u:t pa~ t;~ 33-year-old and control of armaments by :side him, wa~ ~ear tears. When rese n roposa I shout~d thro~~h a Ioud-flf v..estern foreign mlmsters armament picture. Hamilton Ont. ste !worker b?,th camps. . : de Gaulle fm1shed and after I speaker: "Hev Kaftirs if you on diSarmament proposals to ! was bein~ set f;ee fr:m Cape She, F~ance. Wishes above. ~11 1 t~e applause ended. he slow-! bave no refer~nce bo~ks you be placed bef~re !he East-West It would be h~lpful he said, 1 Breton county jail, RCMP i that stocl,s of. nuc~ca~ 11ea-: 1~ descended t~ th~ f:oor of i. _GENEVA. (Reuters) _ A, Conference sou~ce~ sai~ it 1 cannot go out. We ~·ill beat ~umm1t meetmg 1n pari~. May If U~ sec:etary General Dall I officers appeared with a new 1 ~ns be. destro~e~, that mstalla-; the nail, bowed to S1r ~mston .. JOmt Canad1an-Amerrcan pro-. was 'the most reahshc poSSible" i you if you do not briM your Hi. ~ammerskJOid could put hls I warrant wa! issued under the: lions llbere the~ are made be ,and. stode slowly out m_to the .posal recognizing historic fish· and it had hren a diplomatic' books.''

PLANS TWO TRIPS \'Jews ~efore the 10·natlon dl~· , 1 . 1 11 t , used for oth~r purposes, that· sprmg sunshme. Churchill fol- I ing rights is expected to be: feat to get canada and the: The minister plans to at· armam1mt eommltte.e on how i pr~o~~~·:on, ~~~~s~~d· in Ham· I rock~~s and me rail l'apahle nf . lowed. ·No one mover! uotil: presented Lo the Law of the· U.S. together. The ~irl said ~he did not

trnd :"<:\TO foreign ministers' the U~ would play 1ts part in 1 ilton last week, was orl~Cina\ly, carr~mg the~._~~ wen as the· both had gm1e. :Sea conference today. i . • ., i see ~n)one beaten. She wa.~ n1eeting !\lay 2 at Istanbul, a disarmament pact. sentenced in 1948 to six : · - · -- Canadian delegate George, _Drl'W, Canarla ~ . h_1~h ~~m-, a~lOI'ied out to go to the hos· ---- months ln jall and a $500 fine I D b R h Drew and United States delegate t. m1ssioner to the Umter! Ki~g-1 Pltal. She had a wound on her

Plot T K·~~~ for operating an Ulegal Jlquor . t· eac es •Arthur H. Dean are expectcd/~om. was. ~rpnrlerl a~ rlescnh·i h~ad and ~elb o~ her Ie~~ . 0 Still. e· a e to withdraw their rival pro· lng the !om! plan 3~ "a leal, f1 om a pollee beallnl!ln a r•ld

I comprom1'e" 'IIonday At the time of the original · . · posals in favor of the com- · · · · case, he was charged under

1 . promise plan.

both the federal excise law H If p e · 1 The new propo~al calls Ior a ;K Ca • P M and the province's liquor act.: . a wa Oint 'six-mile territorial sea and an warne stigates t it was learned. '1 v • outer six-mile fishing zone in 0 r an age r ' Whether the aeeond war· . . I which foreign countries which

rant was served could not be · 'bave fished there for five years fri E ·' I A. learned immediately. Morn- ' , would be allowed to continue t

• •• . , son, however, was free. OTTAWA, CP-Taking up, uf ~he eight-day budget debate ;doing so for another 10 years. can ven 5 B~·. ARCH :\tacKE:-iZ!E i • Th~ call~r had declined to. HALIFAX, CP-A warrant an argument that has been which also saw Herman Bat·: Previously, the u.s. had:

Canadian Pres~ Starr V. rlter Identify himself despite his 1 for the arrest of ,Tohn Allan pressed by CCF members, _len, I.-Humber-St. Georgc·s: souoht perpetual historic fish· i OTTAWA, CP-A report of' wife's efforts to get more In·· 1\lorrlson issued under the Hon. ,J, M. Macdonnell PC· charge the government with I ing., rights in the outer zone, .'\CCRA. Ghana. Reuters-' pressed,'' he declared.

bar-room plotting to kill a: formation. B'ut he ~ad prom· ~ Nova Se~tia Liquor Act will Toronto Greenwood sa I d indulging in "a wild spending : while Canada harl insisted a . Prime :\Jinistcr Kwamc Kilru- · The beginning of 1960. he senior Nat.lonal Harbours 1 ised to appear in the Montreal : not be served, deputy Attorn·, Thursday the .govcmm~nt ~pree o~ uncqu~lled ~rop01i- i £oastal state should have ex-1 mail warned. Thurs.day that as : said, saw "ruthl~ss outrage~ Board oUic1al was relayed . court next Tuesday when the ey-Generai John A y Mac- should spend mm e to ra1se 1ons" smce tak•ng office in • dusive fishing rights for a runt long as Afncan :'\cgroes are I on the pcace·lovmg people of dramatically Thursday to the six men wiii appear. . Donald ·said here · Th~rsday ! standar;ds of under developed . 1957. . 12 miles offshore I denied the privilege of "one· , our continent." Commons Committee lnvestl· If he recognized the two : night J countries and less on arma- · "! don't think this g01·ern· PROPOSAL. DEADLINE man, one-vote,'' then insecu'r.! TWO SWORDS OF Jating toll operations of Mon- plotters he would tlp the I ' · ments. . ment will be in power long The 87.nation conference be· ity, resentment and revolt will ' DAMOCLES -~real's Jacque~ Cartier' RCMP he had told Mn. Beau-! 1 ... He told the Commons that : enou~h to pay ~rr the expenses gan :'>larch 15. Voting on the I prevail. . · There were "two thrf'at~nlng Brl~~e. I det. . I RedS PrO OS ! if we So ~n as. ~e now arc, : ?f ~~·s excurs•on i~to Tory- I proposals so far submitted to· I In. one of the ~a.Jor speeche_s I swords of Damocles hanging

V.lth suppressed emotion,' Meanwhlle, Mr. Beaudet p e I 1 think we 11 fall.. . I ISm ' Mr. Batten sal d. ! day is the deadline for new I of hiS career, )<krumah cash· . over our continent and 1\'C

key witness Guy Beaudet, 1 said he has arranged for po· I . The~e was growmg econnm1c When the promises made by: ones--begins Wednesday gated recent events in South must remove them"-South Montreal port mahager, re·Jllce protection at his Montreal A Cl Sl t dlspartty .bet~een th,~ weal~hy I the Progressive Conservatives The new proposal will need. Africa as "a brutal massacre" Africa's racial segregation pol· ported he had been informed h. ome .through the RCMP and ean a e and poor. nah?ns. The nch : before 1957 are reviewed "you a two-thirds majority - 58 I and the French Sahara nuc- icy and Frenrh atomic tr'sts. Of the plot In a lunch-time municipal Town of Mount . 1 a1·e gettmg rwher alld the 1 can almost sec the sky darken· l t b d t d t lear tests as "an act of stub· ---·- ... ____ ·---·-·---· ---telephone caiJ Thursday from:. Royal Police. . GENEVA CP Ru~si pro I pcor desperately poorer." ling with the flapping wings or v~ ~s;-r~ati~n t t~v e as par born and inhuman defiance." 1•'W'W"W'"W''W'W"W"W'W"'W'• his wife. i His statement Thursday was, posed Thu;sday to wl:e th~ I _He spoke in the .rourth day ~hickens coming home to 0 Ill e a , a · _ His attack came before 300 i

An anonymous caller Wed· I the most sensational turn yet slat clea and tak the 1o- --: / roost." deleg:~tes and observers from ' f .f -'ea f 'Ier nesday night had told · Mn. in the railways committee nati~n dl~rmam~nte confer· and negotiate Instead on the The Conservatives had prom- i of helper to underdevelop_cd governments and political par- ! t' t' J, Beaudet by phone that two hearing which has been eeek· e'nee back to Its starting point basis of the United Nations

1

ised to cut taxes, interest' I countries has one that "cnes tics from all parts of Africa : men next to him ln. a Mon· ing information on how the Soviet Deputy Foreign Min: Assembly resolution of last rates and spending. Since out to be played now." attending a three-day "positive I treal bar were discusslnl bridle operated and what part lster Valerian A Zorln claim· Nov. 20. 1957, per capita payments to Canada was spending bil· action'• conference for peace I eventl which resulted in alx -lf any-political Influence ed,aucb a procedure offered That resolution, which re- the federal government rose lions on defence, much of it and securitY, in Africa. I (ormer bridge toll eollecjors played. the only escape from the dead ferred the two plans to this $20 to $334 last year from j for weapons that become obso- , 1 being charaed this week with The bridge, operated bY tbe end street in which the confer· conference, was unanimously $314 In 1951. Jete before they are ready to 'So long as any group on i theft. harbon board by alll'eement ence flnda itself after almost approved in th~ United Nat· NE'!V ROLE POSSIBLE be used, t~is continent denies th~ prin; '

RIPORTI PLOT "He reported tbat the two

Bleil were plattlnJ to Jdll file'' uld :Mr. Beaudet. "Ht said if J •• wile, rd Jtt pro'iectloa."

with the province and Mon· four weeb of work ions. But there iS one obvious ln his speech, Mr. Macdon- c1ple of one-man, cnc-ro.e :,l!r. treal, installed an automatic · · snag in using It as a negotl· nell, minister without port· But another great deterrent uses its power to maintain its toll collecting aystem In Sepo He called on delegates to' atlng platform. The North At· ·folio from June, 1957, until to war would be raising the privilege, there will be in· tember, replaclna toll collec:t:· abandon their eron purposes !antic powers and the Cam· August, 1959, said Canada has living standards in the Jess security for the. oppressors ors. Revenue•lhot up inuntdi· debate on.the rival Soviet and munlst·bloc countries disagree played an important role in fortunate countries, Mr. Mac- and constant resentment and ately. Weattrn tllaarmament plaDI on the document's meaning. both war and peace. The role ddnnell said. revolt on the part of the op·

I

Cloudy wiih sunny inter· ;•als and Iew snow flllrric:·. High today 35. '

;~.\\FERATURES Toronto ........ · 36 Montreal. .. .. .. .. 35 Moncton ........ 38 Halifax ........ 38 Sydney· ........ 35 St. John's .. .. .. 37

39 42 4!1 52

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r-- -·-·- ·- --·1 .J From The Files ~ I Part 4 ' "\Of The Daily News _f l C~~.~~~ _55 J

By ADDISON BOWN i M.V. London out of Lake~ I about May 15, for St. John's via .:\lonlreal. 1 '-··---~--------- -------------- • •- ------••- • .. • ·-CLARKE STEAMSHIP CO. I I•ISAL I'IE:Il:i, 19:47 year,, "1\'ahan;l. ':io11 re a al~" the lllt'nt1Je,·, ol a~,tow High liner lea\·ing Halifax' The pioneer merchant of Bell Cork1•r." contained the folio•\'· · J"odge, L.O.B.A.. .,igncd by

Apr. 8, due St. John's Apr. 11, lsland. J. B. Martin, died in ing tribute to "R. 1~." Annie Seward. \\'. ~1. a!trl leavini St. John's Apr. 11 (for: December. Beginning with a Thr1ma l>lackmorr. Rcc. Seely. Montreal). :small store at the Front in the. "And there's ~lr. l'hamlll'rs. the Tile marridge loCJk place at the

•:o~ovaport leave Montreal . early days of mining, he built~ bos> engineer, cnu of the year. April 13, arri\'e St. John's· up a flourishing business which. He planned CJUl thl' lre;tle. and :\lr. and }Irs. l.eonord Day April 18, leave April 20. i eventually grew to three 5tores. I likewise the pier. ,·eicbratt>d titcir ·;;olden wedding

"Gulfport leave Montreal with branches on the Green and; He planned out the t1'"11;; .Yay anniYcrsaQ· on Dec~mhcr 18. April ZO, arrive St. ,John's , at West Mines in addition to the' and track;. ca't and ·.re> . !tel'. .I. A. )!ei!dcn of the April : . leave April 27. ·large general business which he And c\ erything workt'd in hi> l'athcdr~l Parish c~lebratcd

High;mer leave :\lontreal ·conducted at the Front. . mind for lht be,l." l'hrbimas 'r r rices at Sl. April 27, arrive St. John'J: In his young days Mr . .'dartin l'yprian·; in the illne;, of Rev. May 2, leave May 4. I was an accountant with the firm. AI the time )lr. ChamiJ~1·; :'\. S. :'\od.

I •Refrigeration. \of Shirran & Pippy on Water first set f110t on Bell Island to Thr .\rena opcnrd fryr the sea·

NFLD. CANADA Street and was sent to Bel! search lor thl' 'P"' wh~re llw >an on Chri<tma:- l!ay hut the STEAMSHIPS , Island as manager of their storr ore samplc.s came from 1 they theatre> wer~ >till rlosed o,, ..

1 M.S. Belle Isle II sailing from 'when they opened a busines> had hren given tu him by ~!r. in;?. to I he rp1dcmtc of

1

Halifax April 9th, due St. John's: after the bel!inning of mining Shirran of the tirm of Sl1irran diphthcna . 1 April lltb. I in 1894. E\·entually be became' & Pippy l the whole area was 1

M.S. Bedford Jl sailing from owner of the dore which he • covered with trees. Predpito:L' ;

I H l'f A ·1 1~ h d J'ft' t f th t I (!'iEXT: Wintrr of 1938l a 1 ax pr1 .. t , ue St. 1 expanded and enlarged in after c 1 s rose ou o e wa cr. an! John's April 14th. 'years to become thr leading the north side I;JCing the mouth,

M.S. Fauvette sailing from l business establishment on the· of the Bay was too rough to Halifax April 16th, due St. I Island. i permit of loading ships. It was

1

John's April 18th. In those early days and for • not an inviting prospect hut Better

Than Ever :M.S. Belle Isle II sailing from 1

ma,.y years afterwards 1\l.r. Mar·· ::vt:r. Chambers set to work and Montreal April 21st., due St. tin acted u hanker for the; reared a monument in the John's April ~lb. 1 community, carrying m a n·r. ;:real induslr)• that will ewr FURNESS RtD CROSS LINE I thousands of dollars in cash to· perpetuate h1; name and ~a me. LOS A:'iGELES. 1 AP J-Jiar·

The S.S .• Guernsey, leaving change the cheques of the work·' The surlace layout whlcn he riage Wednesday i; bf'tter than , New York April 5th, leavin~ 1 men. Both mining companies. made at that time, ll'ith it.> en•r. a marriage coun,;ellor

I St. John, N.B., April 7th., Hali·[. paid by cheque in those years. i system of haulage tracks and fax April 11th, arriving St. A regular bank did not come to small cars propelled b)· cables. sa~~t. he adds. only if a bus·

I John's April 14th. Leaving St. I Bell Island until the Bank of· sur\'i\·ed until I he 1950's. band and wife work at 11. John's April 16th. Accepting I Nova Scotia was established ' As ~lr. Chambers wandered A modern girl has her grand·

: frei~ht for Corner Brook at all :there in 1912. ·over the Island on that first . ma beat as a life partner, Dr. : ports. ~lr. ~lartin was also the co· visit he lost his way in the Jam~~ A. Peterson says, be·

founder, with George Neal. woods. Breaking out into a cause today's wife a bigger wholesalt merchant of st. 'clearing he saw a house and hand in thinjls.

I T Fl John's of the Bell Island knocking on the door to enquin' "\\"h dt· th d eal•n 0 y · ' · . . · ... ·h b . b . en gran a ~r ;:ot un er ..I . Steamship Companv which serv·' uls w erea outs was mel ~ a th th h b d d I .. • . . . . e w~a er. e roo e a one.

. rd the tra\·elling public until: y~ung man • who mnted him Peterson sa\·~ "Toda,· a man

[n Tu·o Weeks 1955 and also kept the Island: w1th true Newfoundland hosp1- h b. th h. · bl

I " supplied with freight by sea' tality to 'step in and ha\·e a cand hs are! 0 ~sth hpro elm~

, -- : fmm the capital. Their Iirit cup o tea. at c ance meet· He thi ks rt I ·h .

1

f .. Th h an 1s p easures WJ IS w1 '·

' ' • · f · · · h · ing was the beginning of a n men a m I( , TORO~TO fC.Pf - Re\. Call elf~ was t e ~team tug PRO· . . :;tronger and more contented :\!ajor. 24·year-old Anglican '!'in- , G ~ESS which had previousl}ll fnendsh1p that . led to ,John . as 1 result.

· ister from Labrador, walked mto phed between I.amaline and St. Connors becommg the trusted , , the office of Central Airways here: Pierre. The MARY w11 also. pier superintendent of the: ... ---·---and told the manager he bad just: brought to carry freight around 1 ScDtia Company in after year~. i Looking chic if you h·a,·el a

' two weeks to learn to fl~·, • Cape St. rrancis. Th!ir last · He was the fat hE'r of .lames L.. great deal isn't easy. But it ; After 10 days-or 32 honr.~-of ·ferry, and the m011t popular of· William and (jus ('onnors and he1t1s it you keep clothes simple,

training he was told he had made all, was the MANECO which, the grandfather of the l'onnors take enough accessories to allow 'thl' grade. 'was speeially built for carryin& ~brothers, son> of the lat• J. L. frequent changes and are care·

"::"\obody else ha~ e\·er passed motoc cars. i Connors. whm;e names are Ill· ful about hal'ing shoe~ polished this quickly rere," said fl?b i t.:apt. J. C. Colbourne was. ~eparably linked ~ith hockey <everal times a week.

· Wong, the ma~ager, ~~ the a1r·: taken into the Company after 1 Jllit as tbeu lathers and th~tr , port on the 1s!and m . Toronto

1 its inauguration. Being 1uperin·\ uncle.s' names were promment!Y •

1 h~r!J?r whe;e Rev. MaJOr took 1 tendent of the Dominion pier at I iiSiiOCiated w1th football m h1s mstructlon. . f that time he acted 15 ships' I earl!er years. . .

The reason for h1s ll~sle. ~s I husband for the 1teamers at : \\· e could ~to on recounhnl! that he wanted to get h1s pilots . Bell Island. other facets of Bell Island's li~e.nc• a~ quick]~· .•~ possibll', \ J. B. Martin .,...u associated in' fa~rinating history in thos~ g11'1ng h1m more l~me to shop other ways with much of the • early years but we m:~.;t now .

. around fnr an a1rcr~ft w!th. early history of Bell Island. He ·return to 193i and the closin~ , whl<·h ~o tra:·el about h1s pamh 1 wa, actively connected with : erenl~ of th~l )ear. The Grim · ~tretchmg 2.i0 m1le~ along the th~ building or the original Reaper was busy i!K·all~· in De· L.ahrador. !'()liSt on both 11des of, :'ltelhodist Church and wa~ 3 · ccmbrr, the following residrn'-' .

; h1~ Mary~ Harbor ha5e. ! memher of the fint Road ~ being called away: - ~Irs.

1 BROAD PARISH ; :Board. A monument to h~ me·: ~lichael Stoyles. E. H. Rec;:, • The broad arPB h~ ~erves ~nd ; mory remains in Da\'id~on Al·e . Doris Gosse. F'eter Hawro. ~~r~ .. , the lnad e Quat~ transportatiOn ' ue h' h b 'It th , : Han·e\' Noseworth" and Ro•~ • .. · h d I n , w 1c was Ul . roug., a . · . . ! r~c1hhe~ '_VerP. w at prom~te marsh b!!tii'Pen Court House • mary Healer. The hotly of Pet;r

I h1m to d~1de to ~rome • pilOt. I hl!J d th S 1. R'd 1 ·Ezekiel. aged 28. was found m

In s~~mmer he used to trl\"el by an e co 1a I ge, arge. · · · 1 h• becau•p of his interest and a surf are dam on Decl'mher

, boat and dUTln~ the last wmler h · · b _; .;_ 1 20th after he had been missin~ I hE' u•ed a dogl;led with seven I as smce ecome one '" "'e s· ' . . . . • land's leading thoroughfares. ! 24 houn;. :\Irs. R1chard Neal wa~ ,

huskies. 1 t" I ... Another prominent person· • taken to the Fever Hospital , It was a s ow me ••od o ,.,,. . · i ··th lei f '

ling about for a man wha had age conne~ted With the early I \liTh sc~ C tt· h ld th . grown up near Harmon Field, ~ays of mining also entered I e I F il :lies de C el~ , the U.S. air base at Stephenl·ille, mto rest that month in the I a~ntua t~h .at .. e than f llonc.er ' N f dl d person of A. R. Chambers, who i tua mon WI u e o OW\M ,

Hew olufnt chan . " ff' . I In St died in hOIIpital at New Glas· ! taking part:-~largaret Pike, I e e urcu ll leta s . I J 1 D 'I H k' A '

John's, Nfld., know his feelings gow. He was the second man· 1 ea~ e ~ew, l' ax aw ms, · j

and they gave him permission to ager of the Nova Scotia. Ste~l ! Ta) lor, Ml~~~ G. Nor~o~e, E. 1 investigate costs o! buying a & Coal Company, &ucceedmg h1s I Case, M. ~arew .• D. H1ggms, I. I .Plane. fat11er, R. E. Chambers, in 1003,

1 Tucker, Vi. Wh1le and H. Bug.

"I had alwavs been Interested and was manager 1t Wabana 1 den. . In flying," Mr.' Major said, "and until 1908. ! Joh~ ~!urphy wa~ marned to when I checked into il, it seemed . Gene\lele Oonn~ll) · Thr en· . that the best way to reach the .The ~lder Chambers was the • ~a~ement was announced of 1 area was to use 8 light, cheaply plOneer engu:eer and hrs1 Dora SomPCion to ll"rott1 Rtll : operated plane wilb IJOntoons In ~~~~nager at Vi aballll 11fter .the ler ot t.on~ l'u!l'l. ami h~1· c~· , summer and skis in winter." . ,dl.covery uf the or~ dePil>~i>., 1\'urker~ st '>Jih<1ll 1 uh~ 11 , I

There Wt'l'l! many flying, ~h-~':_l_~rno~li-~ong·-~1. tile e&rly store 111JJe ilrr a fJJ't;cnlati .. u:

'I schools closer to hOme but thP ' I.300·mile trip to Toronto seemed :

I worthwhile bl>causr of the repu·1

I tal ion of the Toronto scbool. . The coastal charge is Mr. I BIG I

:\lajor's third assignment. He 1

. had a parish at Fortune l!ay. 1

'Nfld.. ju~t after ordination b. : : 1908 and next ~m·ed in jail~ and I 1 hospital~ in !it. John's as lnstitu·: I tiona! chaplain. I I !

Travtl notions hal't changed · 1 in the jet age. Women who us· i 1 ed to wear slacks lor air travel i

CLOSE OUT SALE · now aret partisans of the wool '

knit dress. There's nothing like it for emerging from a plane serene end uni'umpled. ·

A light coat of shellac on parch· . ment lamp~hades will not only i ' shade hut m~kr It spot proof. •

Oust and film tan bc remo,·ed with a damp doth. The shellac shm\)d b~ thin enough to brush on easily, 1f neccss·ary, it ~hould

: IlL' diluted with denatured al-l ~nh~l'or -~=~hylated spi~t.i. -·- _

WE HAVE TO VACATE THE. PREMISES

SAVE 50% TO 75% Child's Men's and Ladies' Wear

Everything MUST GO

L •. G •. STORES , 344 WATER STREET_, NEXT TO NEW POST OFFICE BUILDING

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ST. JOHN'S, NIWPOUNDI.AND The Daily News FRiDAY. Af'!W. e., l't~'"

~

ce a ro ow First Iceberg For. Season i Reported Near Cape Freels

ARGENTlA - The first of j

the 1960 crop of icebergs to I u • fi d 1 d make its appearance off New. t t roundland is about fifteen mil~s nsa IS e U gmen eastward of Cape Freels and IS

travellin& south-southeastward

at about twelve miles per day. F d I o· . d Under the watchful eye of the un 5 Iscontinue International ice Patrol this ' medium sized forerunnel', about : three hundred feel _long and i Supplementing a statement: made between Automobile lnsm·· one hundred feet h1gh above · made bv Premier Smallwood last : ance Companies operating in walPr, is followed by abo~t one : week, Hon. L. R. Cut·tis, Q.C .. · !llewfoundland and the Gorern· hundred more between ll and : Attorney General, announced on : ment, the Insurance Companh•s the area off Belle Isle. )lost of. Thursday pm1iculars as to the: will in future poocess and pay these ber.gs. according to Ice . changes proposed with reference any and all claims formerly pay. Patrol search planes, are ~ocat- i to claims for damages formerly

1 ab\e out of the "l'nsatisfied .Judg­

ed West of the 53rd mend1an paid out of the "Unsatisfied Judg-' ment Fund" with the lo!lo\\'ing of longitude. which means trey l m~nl Fund.'' ; changes: 1

will remain along the shores of 1 The Unsati<fied.fu dgment Fund. tal An amount of not more than I !l'pwfoundland and the northern was financed by licenced drirers · $5000.00 for damage to pro-slope of the Grand Banks. Few who paid $1.00 per year when' pe1·ty resulting from any one I of these first arri1·als will wor!; · securin~ licence. This payment accident: I ea,;tward and be carried down protect~rl l'ictimsof per~ona) or lb) An amount of not more th~n into the shipping tracks at the prop~rty d1mage caused b)· un-, $10,00n.oo on account of in-"Tail-of·the-Bank." This means in~ured ;md irresponsible dril·ers, I j~ry to or the death of one 1 slow bfginning for the hH:·t·· to th~ followin~ limits: ', person. and national Ice Patrol which com· 1a1 An amo~nl of not more than. lc\ An amount of not mor~ Own menced Its operations on :\larch

1 $1000.00 for dama~e to pro- 1 $20,000.00 on account ot in-

lOth. pe:·ty resulting from any one' jut'y to o" the d~1th of two The International h·e Patrol. accident: or more persons in ,any one

a force of planes and ships of • b 1 An amount of not more tlmn arcid~nt. the Vnited Stales Coast Guard. ' ~iOOO.O~ on a•count ol injury In the case ol property dmnar:e maintains a sun·eillance of the : to or the death of one per- the first $250.00 loss will be de-shipping tracks across the . mn. and duclibiP. Grand Banks and :\ewfour.cl'anrl : 'c' An ~mount of not mo1·~ than \'ic1im., of hit and run drirrr~ waters to ad1·ise bariners of t:1e ~10.00~.00 on account of in- will be similarly protect~d. This

• t n era 100 r

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A lar~c ic~herg typkal of the many ·whidJ drift ~onthwanl pa'>l :\twfonmllaml wains t•adJ ~Tar. Of the fiftt•cn lo twcntv thomand which mt• t·aht•d mmn:!llv frnm (:rccnland glal'it•J's. onlY an aiCI'Ht:t• fi.r:<m' nf ahuut -UIIJ sun·in the thrct;·n-ar jounwy to the Grand Han h. ;rhe !waviest icc her·~ ~ t•ar ";ls 'in HI:!H wlwn t.:l52 icclwr~s wrn• ~h:htt'11 south d ilw 4Sth Para!kl. Th~ h:h:~st was in ln:'i)) \\hen onlv nut' w:<s t·ountnl. In this pich1rc tllt• l'.S. Cn<Jst Guard cnltcr ''\1.'t"'iwind" is shr111n i•1 th· f,,.,_ .. ·r<:''''<l. Tlw lir,t it·r·h~·:·t: lor the vcar i~ llll\\' m·:•r Cap:· Fn·l'k

haZ31·ds of icl' whirh annnaliy , jur;· to or the dC'~th ()f two is ·a se~rice lhal the Tnsur~~c? ,·isil these waters betwrcn the or morr prrsons In any one Comn~mes ha1·e aqreed to ~II'P • months ol :.tarch and July. Thr accident. without pa•·ment or P.n'' let' wha·~-Patrol was established in 1913 The l'osat isfirrl .Ju1ament Fnnd soe\·er, This wilt exo1~1~ wh,· ns

(Continued on page 9) , also protected \'iclims of hit and from Ap:·il l~t. t%0 the St.na fcc --- --·- - -- r11n drivers. has not b~en coll~ctd.

Finn Named PRO for CLC

ln the case of properly dam· i flgP t~e first SLOO.Oo loss was , deductible. ! Under an agreement recently

l.~~i,Jation ntifyin~ this a~,·~c· m"nt will he presenter! at the coming .;essio.: o! the Le::islatmc.

Board Of Trade I-Iears Address On Income Tax.

Cl,. \11:..~ i A:\ IS in tht• finals of the Hutary Speak-Of f. Lclt to right:- hurst l\t·id, llaroid Cual~' l11·innn 1, Hubert Wednesday night members • After a stimulating quest ion Pr•l\\'SC. and David Moores.

. nf the Xewfoundland Board of: and answer period, 1\lr. Fraser 1

__ .. _________ .... ... ________ ---------· .... ________ • • _______ _

Trade attending their regular i concluded with a brief hut • , 1 monthly meeting were mo~t I thorough review of the proce· No FoundatiOn 'B t d SJ d t ~v· enthusiastic in their comments! dure to b.e followed fnr filing , '~ ll1 ('\.f't.~ 'i'U · ~ ~- · I lT't (' about Guest Speaker. Mr .• T. personal !RCOOJ(' lax returns. i i \,It' 'fW ~~ iii. 11. w I a l.J Douglas Fraser's handling of! In his at·knowledgm<'nt to' OTTAWA !CPI ---Pn~llll:r'Lrr·. the timely topic of "Income· !ITt·. Fraser on hrhal! of thr !;rnr<·al \\'illiam Hamilton .<airl Tax.'', . ! members, :'\11'. Rnssc!l. rrc~i- in the Cmnmon, Thnr~day thrrr

. .· , . . 1 clcnt of lhP ;\cwfnnnrlla<HI was 110 Inundation to a rrpnrt Aftr1 ~ b11r1 l(rnrl ~I mt1 O·. Board of Tracie said th~l hr that a mailha·~ <·ontainin~ in·

durt10n to both terms, uwome, only wished H wrre po.•sihlr rnmr tax rrfnnrl ~tatrmrnls Public Speaking

c. P. Penney Honoured By OU Cnmpany

-

entia Triple False Alarm

The firemen, police and am. bulance w~rc called oul on a fal;c ai<Jrm at 4.30 a.m. Thlirs­d:~y to the junction of Andcr­>on ;!llcl lc,lwbcth A1·cnues. Fir,[ ihe l>i'<'lllt'll received il

eall "'"' as lh<'y 11cre leal'ing tl:e :'"·"1'· lhl' police arrived, 11wn lht• atnhu!anee ..

T!J,. ltn·nH·u J:aturally ans· \~t·r~·(l ;1 t il'l' t'dll. th~ pnllte th;,t ;, lJn•Jk·lll \\ J.; bt•ing ::,;t~1gcd

:wei tla· aJnhuian<:l~ th~t JH ac· clllclll had occurred. A spokes· IIW< tor lh• F1re Department

· s;rid il ;Uc!l a 'phone call bad lll'('llrH·d uurin~ the day be· IWl'l'll the hours of 9 a.m. and ti. ;t ;rould he po~,thle lo trace lhc crrll, but afl<'r midnight, il " not P'"··ihle lo check tr!c­Jlholl<' <:tit:, •.rhil'h hal'e hr<•n matle h:· mcompelrnl persons.

The liremcn are al'cragin;! fili<'<'ll f:rl;e alarm; per month aud to he called out early ill the mornin~ \lith ~treeu in. such a bad condition means the trucks need cleaning when the men return to the atalion1. Tht•re is also the possibility of parts being broken on the \'e· hiclrs.

New World Gibralter

OTTA \\'A (CP1-James :'lfe· l;ralh. PC-St. John's ~t. ~ug. .~•· .. !Pd Thur;c!ay the go1·crn· nwn: turn Xewfoundland intG 1 h<' "Gihraltcr of :\orth Amer· t<·a" hy monn~ O:anarlian mill· tar:· pc•l'"mnel into bases gii'Cn un b,. the Americans.

In. t!Je Commons budget de­hate. he ~airl Pepperrell air h:ose. nc:tr St .. John's, is being closrl! by the U.S. on Sept. 1. Withclrawal of the Americaft

·personnel wouitllca1·e a vacuum in ~orth American defence. It also would be a severe hlow tG thP economy of tlie area. Soma 1.2110 dl'ilians workPd at lhll ho;~ nnd their annnat pa;-roU lnletlrrl ahn11t S4.5ifi,()()().

Fin~ rerm"nrnt h11ilrlin~, wrrp ~rat up rtt 1hr'! hrtl'P, )1r. \Tcl,r.o1h nolerl. Thry inrin~erl " ;rilnol. ~ ho,pil<il •nrl li\IIU

and.tax. :\!r .. Fraser dealt , 111 to ftn.t'o.l'.fillind out the forms hac! hrr 11 slnh'Jl)a;t mo111h in· Tiw~<innr•rollhr~pcak-rlf[ 1-.111 :-;,.;"'"\ "f 1\.,lll•u•d 11,-h t ll:" "' \1· ,.11;11·>·" P f'l:lll\f".' ;-('!iit'·l f;tlJIIrr:-. partlcu_lar ll'l_t the que.~ 1011 , a•. 1n 11~h •s. -,, ..• _tCill.rl~ t11 the N~_wf1 , 1111 AJ, 111 J. i11 1111· flllal, nltilr .\11 \rll'· ."uhic·l'l "''· ".\r•· \r·wr"'""'·

,., '" J1 ~ • ·-- 11 " ;:t ::u• r~1d nl .\l.lrdl lrntn liir n[- -----------'or. capital 7ams .. "The _yard·. (Continnrrl on pa~e 9) Azrllu' Drnnir, L\tonlrral· f<)llliclland l'uh1•1· Sprakin~ l;~ndcl·.< I'IH.•inlt.'· l·nrr:·"' ,,.

0 nf l'rr-,':·ni 01 <i·r ,,,.,.,,1

ED, f'lNN, Jr. H1rk b~· Which capital gam. as ·---------........... c,\, ll"ill·.·, ··.··k"cl .'It·. 11 , 1111.11 n11 f'nntp;t, ;pon<nrrrl il)' lhr fln· and i11" '"llll'l\hal h11:nn11r"n:- , . Cia d J d . 'd f d t t bl t d' ;') 0.: .. n·.., ,- ·' n I ::hltTI1 Oii iltl"l ltll)'Or' i "on1p:1n::. u e o om, prrs1 cnl o oppose o axa e ra mg, tar,· Club nf St. .John';, atHI ,·c>in rtrc·larrd \!lilt ·"''" lnunrl·

thf Canadian Labour Congress, pr~lit is determined is based" I New Wharf· For ~bout thr rrportrd thrfl and hr!rl ;11 tile Hnlary rlinnrr on landr•r; ',lrrr "<ill in::. nll liwir ., l""ili"n l:r i1>1d '"-''d ,.,,. •!:r toda~ announced the appoint· satd :llr. Fraser "on one or •aiel hP had sent a ropy of a Thur>dily. al thr \rwfnnnrl· t:mnir; too 1anc·h." 1 " 11 ~ l"'r:nd nf il•,:·':r :-ri\r.-. \!:·. ment of Ed Finn, .Jr .. Corner. more of four crlteria-rir~t 1'\ewfounrllanrl m·w .• pi\prr to lrl f'rnne,· '"'' o:w ''' t br on~in.d Br"~k Nfld .. as publi~ relat'IOIJS the original intention of the I c b lit :RC\'enur \tinistcr :\oll·lan llhi•.-1 land llnlrl, wa~ 14 ,·rar 0 Tl•r lll<·rting ""' np,.rwd h·.- d:n·c';"' ol :h .. c•t:nnan:. ;~n.l, in

~· ' amp e on t . I t '- t th llarold ('oat~<. a (;ratlr ~ .\l'lin~ l'rP<irtrnt .fil.l l'ar\;r<. · I I I' 1 -on,.ultant to the C'LC. .'lr. illl'estor, second. the relation- jron amec a s ory a.,ou e l~t~a. ""' •·:<'·.· "' IT'''"'"·

Cancer Drive

• .• h f I d I tl S\ I \ o'' who ;)~ ...... {'(l 1hr JH'Ot·rP::ill:.!' II". ' .. Jodol·n sa1'd that ~.·lr. ''1'nn ".,·11 shi" of the transaction to the 1 r 1. ' 11 I'll of 1 ~' · · ;unr< · n~ 11 In ;,· ' 1111"1 to :·w "·"''"'•" reo·-

' .. -----~-------------· ·-···-- ~-- P .. ('r to llw (_"\1:-lil'JP.lll llr t!lf" .. I I l t' rll K' f•h r"'n"l be roncerned with actil'itirs of, prospectil•e taxpayers normal' OTTAWA-A contract for .~::!1.- . 11 ,,._ \lr. tlrrh 11.,ott .. ,,. 11 ., ;11 . 0 ~ 11 ' 11 " 11 11"1 ·.,;I- ' 11 "' 0 '). "e \lr. Hr ry tn.::" · r ·" "' l:be Canadian Labour Congress. business, third, tl c nalurr anrl '298.50 has been awarded bv the K" • Ob • u s , lrnrlu•·~rl 111 ,, ellnl~>tallt' ., 11 ,1 ''" 1111'" 11 )' of ~.Jc. 1'•'"11 ":• ., '" 1;~ rl:;q; t'a!lCCI' Sncirt)· ~-)s I hat In :'\ewfoundland. where he bas type of a<scts illi'OI\;ed. fourth,. Department of Publi" \\'or'ks to IWaniS serving ,IT:n·, nl '<'I'll,.;,,,,, prr'id<'lll. nnlr a wrY fr'A' reports have

1 f • 1 their ,;uh,kcts. hr• 11;1< ;11-o tllr rrcipirnt of a cnn;e in fr~m the small~r com· txlcnsil'e experience as a news-, l1e number and requency of: the Cape Horn Construction Com- • o 1 11,_,:imnn:<lt '!"Ill th· , 1 ~ 1 :·. Tli:• . . 1·0 with paperman. I transactions." ,, pany Limited of Sl .. John·~ for , Othrr· r11n1e-tan1< w•···~ l·:r- 11101,. tl'," f,,,.,_ 11 ,,1 lhr 1,1·r.·.rnlalion munilir;. In ronncc 1 n

~;.War Amps Key the recon~lruction or a whar[ at d <H'<t lll'id. a \1i) r;:r olti I ;,·ad<' ' lhr Rerl C'rocs Dri,·e. but he is

I Campbellton Newfoundland it was c . Goo·d W"lll Week 11 olllfknt uf );i<iwps ('ollt·~r. of i1 pnrtahll' r::c\io. ;J! t!l(' >'lnlC quite optimistiC because the announce by the Hen. David J. · St. .lo m·;, w w<r <ll >.Jrt·t "a' rrnr . T d ana a · 1 1 1 · tll11(', 0 hr:Htlif!l: honqll<'l \~(1._ t 1 is up

, 1 Walker Minister of Public Works. I "Is \\';1r Ever .Ju,li[i:<blr" · "'~' · ,. . 1 1 1 h ~ .. ti."J.OilO.OO i·<. tile oh_1·ecth·e -,f ag I ' nl lo \Irs. Penney. · ' · . 1 . · . . .. , . 11 · 'thr rrlmn~ prc-rr rnt ,lil< err. ·' The company submitted the loll· Kiwanis Club of St. .John's mrPtings nn U.S.·Ci:nada c;ond D.lllrl \tomr,. a Jh ~r .. l 0 r un~h\c to all••nd lo rrrri1r hl' thr Dri·•e. which will conlin11e

j~: Service est ~i~ of eight in .response to ad- I will ohsen·e U.S.-Canada. '\'ill \\'rek, telephonic inter- • l:radr. 11 slurlenl :'t the -~t~llr•rl ~ift in pt•r-nn ;~s h~ h:~s hern until thr· end of April. Li!st

F 1960 v~rl1s1.ng for publtc lenders. ~he' Good Will Wt>ek from April' r·h:mgc hclwren U.S. and Can- (, h~trr:n :·:radr,n:' "!, ~/'.~H'~; confinr<l 111 hi- home wilh illnr<·• ,·e:~r's ohkr1i,·e of 560.000 00

Or ~or~ IS scheduled for compleiJOn I 24th to JOt h. It will be oil-' ~rlian Cluhs as the fratur~ of ~ 31 · 111:'"' ' 111 ~.1' 1 ~ ":'; .. 1' '~ 1 ',' lor· llw I'"·' I ·.n•Pk. ;, ... , cxrcrdrrl h)· S3.7~0.00. anri m SIX months. SCI'V~d in mo.,t nf lhc 4 500. ~:wrial mrrlin~s · OJCIII'l'l'll " a (,nod I·. rill< ;\\ 1.' 11 • an 1 'wilh I he upward trencl. hor'r-'

· Included~~ the conll·acl P1'!ce. is 1 communities of the United ' club<, nra1· 11H' horrlrn, and l:nhcrl. /'l'llwsr. a lh Y'''"' old .Jud~<·s "f 1 :w cnn:r-l wrrr 'ilrP hi~h I hi~ yrar·~ will h~ ~X· Did you ever lose your cariPresident of the War Amps lhe demolitiOn of the exlslmgl States and Canada in whit·h i st,wf'ial. puhlidty.r•\·cnl!i, 'ud1 <:rartc• 11 s~J.Hienl of 1111' .\m~~- 11 , .. 11 ,.,, .. 1,1 l'ttl. \lr !tarry r.r· ·crrMrl a~ well_. .

ke,,·~ 1Assoc1·at1'on Alan L Bell 1'sl wharf at Campbeillon and con· Kiwa11is Clubs are lot·ated ·as rad1o and T.\·. addresses g.omalcd Schonl. Dcr< Lilk<. Bit will take ' ' struction of a new I shaped I · · · ' ' whosr 'llhiret w:ts "Is \\'a1· nouf anrl \li.-s (;r;n·P l.a)·man. 1 The womrn s \7.

Then you know something Honorary Secretary-Treasurer. ,. . and will _be dedicated to com·: ell'. . . . , , , . ·, :.. ,. .: · ' (Continued 011 Jlo~e 9) plii<'e Apnl 21>t. about the lost car key ser\'ice Newfoundland motorists re- wh.arf. ~70 feet long a~d 20feet memorahng the 143rd anni· : Locally. tlus Club w11l. as 111 Ll ct ,Ju .. ttllahl.. --=======

; ,·of the War Amps of Canada. newing their licences will re- Wide wtth 601 foo~ .. doc.kmg f~ce. versary of the signing of the: the past .. honor the nr<·a~ion .. i ,, For 14 years the War Am- i w Plans and specJf~cat!ons ll~re Rush-Bagot Agreement (which: and has Ull'llt'd ~lr. Wilham !

i;-:putations Association of Canada !eh~ceh ~hey arar:~~~eJ8~0 f~r prepared. by the District Engm. demilitarized the houndat·y' '!· Christr•nsen. L;.s. l'nnsul. · • has been operatind a vast Dom 1 · p Y eer ~ Office of the Department of 1 between lht• U S and canada) (,enr•ral to h<• the gu••st• spl'ak- · .-.'-. . . " · on Y 3~ rents. It IS hoped mort Pulll'c Wor"·s S11 ,· '10 f the ·• · · · · ' , •. lnlOn·Wide sen ice of finding . . . 1 . "'· • pen 18 n ~ . 1 r·r at a dlllnN to be lwld at , ;;: lost car keys for car owners. 'l'o I Nell found land motoflSts Wl_lll wor~ Will be under the ?lslncl: Lot• a I observan<·es, . whit·h l'epp••rn·ll :\ir Jlurce BaSt' Of- i tdo this, thev sell lillie car key s.upport the War Amps thiS Engineer: 1\fr. G. r:. Kmght of I a!'(' sp;~rkplugged b;· ~~~w;m~s fit·•·rs l'llll>. on .\lou<lay tht• , :•:tags to motorists; last year lO,·I)ear. - St. .fuhn~•· ______ .. _____ Clubs, mrlude spt•rlal Klwan~<: 25th of ,\prit al ti.:;u Jl.lll. !ligh 'f.:: 128 sets of lost keys wt>re re- (l'ontinucd <lll 11a~c !l)

~~tu:jn~ ~;:rr o::::s.than 71 i I Federati.on Of Labo' r Head i. t:onslruction :~million car key taes will he • · I ~~~m~~~dt~~ ~:~·~!~ :r~to~~~~- Ch . NBWW I 'C • • 'I Boom ~; !actured by war amps. Not only t t I ~~doe• the key tag service keep i arges n ap lVI y -----~: 3~ men eainfully employed, bull . . ! l'rnta~on l'nn>lrurtion C(IJn ~!;all the profits go toward the . . . . . pany, Ltd., ~lnntrral, hns hrrn ·=· bealt\'olenl work of the War' Current negolialions between· the members of that or~anJzatJon. tile nver hy the Gol'rmmcnt. ~nd awardrcl thr J:rnrr~l rnntral'! at ···Amputations Association of . the paper eompanirs and the who were conscripted into it with hccau!'C thPyha1·e faith that we an unslatcr! amount. for ron-.· Canada. : ;:o..r,ewfoundiand Bro~~er~ood of; no choice of their .ow~. enjoy, sh~l.l e1•entually succeed in re-, ~!ruction of foundations. r':'.,' • Allan David Piper, who wears' \\oods Worker~ a~e desagned to no~~ ~f the d~mocrahc rights end 1 st_o_rmg their rights as Canadian 1 for _crushr·.'· ~!ant an_d admllllS·: ;·two iron hooks in place of the aelude the p~bhc. the Newfound· prll'lleges enJ?~ed by the m~m- 1 ca~1zcns." 1

11·at10n bmldmg at Carol Lake, ! hands be lost in the grenade kind Federation of Labour char11- bers ofany leg1t1mate trade unton.: 'If anyone doubted the loyalty I Newfoundland Labrador. Ten- 1

:; explosion in 1942 is General ed yesterday. In spite Of the rule imposed 1

· of the loggers to the legitimate dcrs were received by the own­.:.· ~anager of the W~r Amps Key In a prep~red release, the Lab. from the top by the NBWW, trade union movement," Mr.

1

1 ers, Iron Ore Company of Can­: Taa Service Pi er said today our Feder~!1on stated that work. most Newfoundland loggers are ! Daley added, "The NFLD was ada, until March 15. · that the sysiem ~~ sending out lng condthons for the loggers still loyal to the union which they 1 willing to open ltsbooks to illspec- With the town site at Carol

1 . dupUcate key tags in the same were In reality b~lng dictated by chos~ to re~re_sent them in a free lion, without, of course, revealing taking sha~e _and a large num­. mailing Is paying off real dlvl- the pa~r .compames, without any election, sa1d the NFL. the names of the Joggers concern· ber of bmldmgs scheduled to

dends becau~e many Canadians bargalnmg whatever. "In the eastern division alone, ed, since to do so would be to lay be built this year, the new , hava 'two c~rs, and in most "Current talks are a mock~ In the ~amps controlled by the' th~m o~n to the hardest forms min_ing projec~ is fast becoming h b lh h b d d 'f of the due process of eollecllve A. N.D. Compan~·. where· the 1 o .f repnsal" from what he term· a hiVe of mdustry omes 0 us an an WI e bargaining," President L. J. forces of repre~slon are hardest, ed "the people who hold them in '

have car keys. Daley sal\!. "The only people re- more than soo Joggers have paid captil·ily." 1 On ~londay work started on ~· T~ key tag~. are sent out pr~enled are the companle~ and their per capita tax to the NFL "The time will come and: lhe railway spur line of 42 •• IJ'Itil. The recapJent Ia expect- the Government. The loggers are 'since the bc~lnnlng of this year," neither this present Gove~ment I miles from Mile 224. The rails :· eel to ·mall back to the War not represented at all." said Mr. Daley. "They are do· nor the paper corporations can which were made at Iron Ore : · AIJ!ps 60 cents for duplicate • ing this ·in spite of the fact that stop it" Mr Ooley concluded ,. Company's foundry in Seven Is· ;;:: ur key taas;. 3~ r~nts if only Mr. Daley. termed this the lat· they realize we cannot offer them "when' the ·loggers will aqai~ land arc hein·l! welded. The k: one ke~ Ia~ ts requlr~d. The 1_est phase in the "sellout. of _lhe direct as.~islance at present. but ha1'e a real union to represrnl road hrrl is smooth as a hilliard J.: mon!y lA sent ~o I he War •. Amps 1 Newfoundland logger~ whtch was only carry nn lh• ~enr.rai battle! the-a union recognized as .sur:ll: hall and thr ~rarle 1s no more ;:: K•Y Tag Servt;e, 140 •• erton I engineered last sprln~ by Pre· for theit· basic ri~ht, as human; bv I he trarlr union mow•men! of· than one ami a half per cent. 1

(Street, Toronto 7.. 1

mier Smallwood in collusion with br.in~~. Tht)• are cloin2 it out of I Nnrth .\m~rica-a union whirh! Extra hrar}' tics ~re hcing usrrl 1

·

;e: , th~pap er companies."· , a ~en~e nf Jnyall~ hec~tJl;P wr. will :;.oil·r th~m trur rPrrr.<rnl•·' anrl thr~e are firm);· imhrdrJprJ. ~= Lt. Col. the .Rei:- Syrlnry .E.:· A ~tud~· of lbe ~onstitulion oft took 1111 th~ li~ht for thPm ~~~~: lin11 in flllllrP nr~ot:,tion~ withiThc ~Pill' line is rxp~rlrrl to hr [ ·.Lambert, O.B.E. 15 Domlmon the NBWW, he &aJd, shows that! year, when they were sold down: the paper companies." ·completed in three weeks. •

/

NY L 0 N.S CHANNEL 5

51 GAUGE-15 DENIER Glomourous Nylons • in FASHION-RIGHl

SHADES for Spring. Replenish your Ho;icry

Drawer while the pric.'! is so low -

45 2PAIRS

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.THE DAILY NEWS tlewfoundland's Only Morning Paper

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The DAILY NEWS is a moi'Dlnl paper established in 1894, and pub~ lished at the News Building 355-359 DuckWorth Street, St. John's, New· Eoundland, by Robinlon & Company Limit~ d.

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The Canadiu Pres• i1 "exclusive!) ~titled to the use for republication of all news despatches in this paper credited to it or tn the ,\ssoclated Press or Heutt.rs and also the locaJ O'!WI published therein.

A \1 Pre" •ervice and feature article~ In 1 his paper are copyrl~tbted and their reproduction Is prohibited.

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of Circulation.

FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1960 •

Libraries And Reading This is a week iu which special

attention has hecn directt>d to libran· sen·ices in Canada. But· this kind of publicit\' is. not a mw­week·a-~·ear operation in ~ew­fonncllaml. The Cnsling ~kmorial Library has lonl! been sponsorin~ wl"rli.h- prnl!rammrs drvoted to the f'ncnma;:rmrnt of thr dt'ITlop­ment and IN' of libmn· scn·i<:cs in 'rwfn11ndland. ·

Lonl .-\nmlrrr wa.~ <1stonbl1rtl in ICJ.).') to disco\'rr that St. Johu's was withont a pnhlie lihra;.,. al­tlmH~h he admitted that its pnwi­~inn wa~ hr,·oncl thr immediate linanrial capi1ritv of goYermneJtt at t hr time. Hut dl'\'dopmeut came lairh· quil'kl~· aml the go\'rl'll· 111rnt's contribution to the eentral, re~ional ami tnn·cllin~ lihran· .;er­' Jl·rs no\\' amounts to about 8160.000 a war.

Lihraries · are. of eoursr. indis­pensable as soml'r.s of reference to students of all kinds. Gosling has done a remarkable joh in building up a first-class reference collection of use to scholars, re­SParchers, prrsons in need of tech­nical information and universitv and high S('hool students. But one nf th~ principal functions of a lihran is to encourage reading for plt'asme and cultural gain. ~luch ha!' heen done in this firlcl although therr i~ some reason to believe that then• is more popular interest in rrading for entPrtainmPnt than for mrntal ~timulation and the aerpli­sitinn of a mature understanding.

Then' was nrH'r a time when ~ood hooks were easier to atquire.

The development of thr paper hack has brought a tn•mt•udous variety of good literature within easv reach. And while the public librim· will alwavs remain an im­portailt somce of hooks, it has the additional responsibility of m~k­ing itself the focal point of a vlg­ornm movement to encourage reading as a cult ural exercise.

The radio programmes and dis­russians that ha,·e been sponsored II\· t hr ( :osling ~ h•morial l.ihrar~· h(wc hern a valuablr contrilmtion to this wry special sphere or lihran· work lmt more needs to llf' clmw. ·Too manv minds are being stultified lw excessiw concentn~­tion on the· wrong kind of paper­hacks. Teenagers are reading a great deal of rnhhish because too little is being done to get them in­terested in better hooks. ln a world in which the good citizen mnst he a thinking and informed· citizen, the tendencv to vield too easik to the distractions 'of popular etiter­tainment in many forms is disturb­ing.

Good books can also be enter­taining books. In an age when the working week is dcclinin~ and people have far more leisure it would impose no heavy hmden on the average person to read at least one good book a month. Library committees should redouhle their f'fforts to promote an idea of this kind for their pmpose is not mrrr­lv to make hooks of aL kinds anlil­ahle hnt to stimulate interest in the Pclucational and cnltmal lwndits of ,good rcadin~.

Chronic Unemployment Arguments continue in the

House of Commons over the true fi!!:ures of nnemplo~·ment hut the serious thin~ appears to he the chronic nature of that prohlem.

It rna\' he true that each vcar sees a irowth in the size of· the workin~ force, On the other hand, population seems to be risin~ at a faster rate. That is particularlv true of certain regions of which the Atlantic area is one.

The severitv of the Canadian winter is, of course. a recurrent factor in the creation of seasonal nnemplo~·ment hut not to the ex­tent that this condition is now oc- · curring. 1 n fact, the size of the prohlem in recent years· suggests 11. hasic flaw in the Canadian econont, ..

In the case of the Atlantic

re~ion, special attention should he given to the encouragement of secondary industry as well as the exploration and development of natural resources. But a special study is needed on a national basis. No prohlem can be easilv solved unless it is fnllv understood. A searching analvsis of the natn;·e and location of industry is the first step towards the discoverv of a satis-factory remedy. '

As thin~s stand, there is little indncemeut to prospective immi­grants. Canada must prove it is a land of opportunity before people w!ll leave Europe to scr.k a new life in the dominion. The whole question ueeds bipartisan discus­sion in the Honse of Commons because it is a matter of great and even critical national importance.

A Boost For Senator Kennedy B,· his \'idnn· owr Senator

lhnnpln·r, in the \\'istonsin prim­ar\' <.·outest, Senator John J..:enned\' has grcath· impro\'r~l his positioi1 in the eompelition for thr D('tno­cratic nomiuatiou in this ,·ear's presidential coutt•st. ·

One obstacle confrontinrr Krn-..... nedy was the possibility of religious prejudice. He is a Roman Catholic

· and Wisconsin is predominantly a ! Protestant state. But it Is a tribute ! to the good sense of the majority : of the voters that they were not in­l fluenccd bv sectarian sentiments. l The fact' seems to be that Sen- ·

ator Kennedy obtained. hi~ major­ity from_ a good cross-section of the state. To get the votes he did, he had to appeal to hath l'qral and

, urban areas and their varied ; populatiom of farmers ahd trade 1 unionists. . Havin~ done well in both· the . Wisconsin and New Hampshire 1 primaries, lte is off to a very good • mrt in the race for the preside~;~tial

nomination. But unless a candidate has been ahle to whip up enough support to he nmninatell on an cad\' haUnt. he rna\' become a Yic­tim ·of later compi·omiscs.

The Dem~lcrats are dcsperatrh· in uted of a candidate who cai1 rally both the partv and the float· ing vote to enable t1lem .to heat the [~publicans under Vice President Nixon. At the moment, Senator Kennedy is their most promising entry but he will have plenty of co:npetition along the road to the convention that will nominate the Democratic slate.

liST IN DIPIAT Next to Lincoln, I believe that

Adlai. Stevenson'• apeeches are the o!l].y speeches made by a politician that can be read long after the cam· paign is over and still make sense and reveal the literate ~epths of the man. , ,

In (act, Adlai Stevenson, AI Smith, and Theodore Roosevelt were the only defeated candidates who had some· thin& to uy.

IN THE NEWS By . Wayfarer .

NOTES AND COMMENT The disabilities of the Atlantic

provinces have been much in the news as a result of the recent vlslt to Lon· don of the premiers of Nova Scotia. Prince Edward Island and New· foundland. The subject was also dis· cussed by Mr. J. w. Pickersgill in a paper delivered last month to the Kiwanis in Ottawa. This took the form of a roncise as!essment of the majol' problems of the eastern prov· inces and emphasised the importanc1• of trying to fiml a ronstrurlivl' means oC raising li1·ing standards in the At· !antic r~gion. In fact, ;\lr. Picker~gill went so far a~ to say that the brst wa)' to celebrate the l'rntenary of ron· federation would br to bring about a marked improvement in this direction.

The Atlantic provin('es ha,·e p1·ob· lt'ms but \rwroundland has the bi~t· ge~t probkms of the group. The rea· sons nre obvious to an~·one who has made enn the most cursory compara· tive study. The high cost of tran~·

portation is most extremely felt in this pro1•ince {or three major reasons. One is distance frorr. the sources of suppb'; the second is tl1e high cost of local distribution because of perimeter dispersal of the population; and the third is that we produce only a minute pe1·centagc of our consumer needs.

Thr :O.!aritimr Provinces arr 5mall· Pl', morr cnmpart. murh more densely populat('d with the population spread o1·er the f'ntirr land rnas~. and ~elf· ~upporting to a very ~ubstantial dr· j!ree. They can produce a high per· rrntage of their own food supplic~

basic contribution to the Canadian economy in the field of primary in· dustry and resource development and potential is perhaps greater than that of the three Maritime Provinces. In our newsprint mills, our mines, our fishery and our sources of hydro· electric energy, we have a great store· house of wealth. These arc making a major contribution to Canada's ex­port trade and will makr a greater rontribution in the future. And If we were ent;tlrcl to special as,istaner only on the basis of rcciprority, wr would be justified in looking for a far more positil'e and enlight!'ned ap. pmal'h by Ottawa to our · rronomir·. sot'ial and financial Pl'Oblrms.

There is mueh that the federal gorernment should do and t•ould do. It could remove some of the burden of transportation costs h> a system of ~qualizalion. It should ~ive exten· sil'!' assistance to the ex;Jloration of our basic resources. 1t should com· pensate us for our failure to share in the transportation benefits dPri\·ed by other provinces from confederation by paying a much larger share of the cost of completing thr Tnm·Canarla Highway. It should think in terms ·or decentralization of secondary · indus· try in order to make good use of the great store of first-class human rP· sources in the Atlantic provinces. And it should agree that 1'\'l'ry l'itizcn of Canada should ha1•e accrs<> to a mini· mum tolerable le1·el of puh!il' sr1·drrs ~~ 1 national right, regarrllcss of ra· pacity to pay.

hl'('ali.'C nf a good r;~tc of agrirultural WP rannot Pxpect e\·rr to raisr nur de1·e!opnwnt and thr)• llavr quite a !ivin~: standards to the lt'vel of those substantial mraMll'e of secondary in· rnjoyrd in the industrial regions ol dustr~·. Their publie sen·iccs l'O>l the dominion but the trrmrndou' di~· lr~s because they are more higiJ!~· t·repaneies that now e~ist should "~ rm1rentrated in smaller areas with lr\·cllcd out. l\ewfoundland's a\·~ragc good <·ommunirations. ,\nd in a"scss· nf ~1·sonal inromc.< is less tl1an half in~ thcil' transportation costs. thrY that of the national average. Some ha1·p lhr ad1·antagr of highway com· 1·om;>~n~ation should be furnished petition with the railwa~·. On top of through contributions to the raising all thb. tl!ry have a much more effi· of our standards of basic public scr· l'iNlt sy>tem of public services be· vices. This is not a request for rausr thry have been building these charity. ln fact, if we were not pre· up with federal help over a period pared to play our full part in raising of eighty years in which lime ;>;ew· our own standards, we would not de· foundland was battling alone against ' serve help. But there is no rnom in poverty and recurrent depression and a federal entity for the gross inequali· all the ills that were the heritage of tics that n&w exist in Canada and a centuries of historical repression. far more direct, positiYe and intelli·

Yet the measure of Xewfoundland's

What Others YOUTH AND CREDIT

!Calgary Herald) :llany Canadian youngsters arc huy.

ing on credit these days-supervised credit we arc told-but still the easy payml'nt plan. They are good at PlY· ing up.

It is a good thing in itself that tren· a~r1·s an• a good crrdit risk, as A

Canadian ~urvey has shown the)' are. Y ct it ma)' condition them to be·

li<'l'f' that life can be lind on crrclil and that our standard of life 1'an be had for a down paynwnt.

I~ it desirable training for young people to be brought up lo plan to li1·c ahead of their income~. even out· side their incomes in an atmosphere that suggests that. for a small down payment. life can be very easy?

TAXING CHILDREN (Wall Sl. Journal)

A big to·do is blowinl! up in Xew York State o1·er th~ tax eollectm·s' attempts ·to make parent! include earnings of their children-teen-agers' baby-sitting or caddying, for example -as part of the parents' taxable in· come.

Understandably enough, many moth· er~ and fathers are aghast at this idea. They point out, among other thin~s. that it is a sure way to de· stroy any incentive the children might have and thus Is probably a contribu· lion to juvenile delinquency. And indeed there i~ something of a reduc· tion·to·absurdity air about this bus· iness of taxing the little children.

But without t.ePtting into the deeper philosophical implications, we would just like to• ask a simple practical question. WhatevPr gave the tax· takers the improbable Idea. that Junior's earnings add anything to Fathl'r's?

~APLE SYRUP (Owen Sound Sun-Times)

Among foods that are highly Can· adian in taste and in sentiment are maple ~yrup and maple sugar. :\nd, with th~ season just a bout to start. the actual situation in regard to these 't:ery tasty products of the bushlot is WOI'th considering.

Recent years have seen a consider· able reduction In m)lple syrup mak· lng, though, at the same time. there have been developments which en· courage Its making on a large scale. To boil down takes a great deal of wood, a fact which Is much more im· portant than Is the actual work of tapping and 11athering the sap. In re· cent years of course the "dead wood" In most .buahlots has been greatly re· duced, as have the bushlots them·

. selves. Actually the advantage offered by

this 'product of Canada's national tree are not used to anything like the ex· tent possible. In the first place therr could be a much greater harvest. though ~pme years, of course, SI'C the season very brief and unsatisfactory. see the season very brief and unsatls factory. And, too, purchases of maplr syrup are generally thought of In gal lon cans, a situation which not only

gent approach is needed to bring the nation to its full stature.

Are Saying brings down the price to the proclu· rer hut also' provides an o\·erly large supply for the consumer, a disadvan· tage in many homes in this present day.

One of the great handit•aps under \';hi!'h thr ,-yrup making trade suffers. hnwrver. if the vast amount of in· fprior grape ~.l'l'ttp sold during thP yrnr and thr fact that mueh of lt is 111errly "maplP fla1·ored" syru;J. Though ~ul'h s)·ru p is marked. man)' rio nul realize they arr getting somr· thing entirely different from ma~Jie

syrup.

DRUG PRICES Edmonton Journal

The "ethical" drug manufacturers claim that drugs prescribed under their generic namp are not so safe and pure as branded drug:s. Surrl)' it is a simple matter for the government either to nrify or disproi'P this claim. Are not the pharmacy faculties or Canadian uni· versities able to assist in testing both branded •.hd unbranded drugs if the. fedPral food and drug department is inadequate? It is a legitimate function ·of go1•ernment to prevent the exploit&· tion of human illness and suffering, No layman can say with certainty that such exploitation is or is not taking place in drug prices. Under our free enterprise system, manufacturers, wholesalers and retailers are normally frpe to set any price they wish for any product. How· ever. the glare of publicity is helpful In discouraging abuses. It is surely time for the government to tell the pUb· lie what it has found out about drug prices and profits in Canada.

:Jtrength ~or $odaq By IAJIIL L. DOUGLAS

T·HE ISROAD WAY THAT u:,\Dt:TH'

A great English preacher once began a Rermon with this story; "The other day l was going down the street." he said, "and I saw a drove of pigs follow­ing a man. Tbis excited my curiosity and I decided to follow. I did so; and, to my great surpriae I saw the pigs fol· low this man into the ~laughter house. 1 was anxious to know how this was brought about; an 1 said to the man, 'My friend, how did you manage to in· duce those pigs to follow you there?' -'Oh! Did you not see?' asked the man. I had a basket of beans under my arm and I dropped a few as I came along; and so the pigs followed me.' ''Yes, said the preacher; "and I thought,, so It Is the devil has his basket! of beans un. der his arm and he drops them as he moves. And what multitudes he induce~ to follow him to destruction."

We recall the words of Jesus that th! ;road and crowded thoroughfares lea1 .o destruction. And. of course, there i: 1 reason for this. The evil a! ways ha. :·•as som~ inducement which causes wea~ ;ouls to be willing to follow him.

Mariy years ago in the Chicaeo stock:

'\

THF. D.o\IIY N~W~. ST. jQHN'S, NFLD., fRIDAY, .M'P.1r. 8, 1960

liT t' II es tng ...

'fo The Editor THE BUDGET AND MEDICAL

EXPENSES ~:ditor Daily \rws.

Dear Sir-Tlll'er pPr ~ent of taxah\r inl'omc used to tw romidcrerl a rN· sonable deduction from nll'dical and hospital !'Xpenses. Since lhe same percentage was rl'tained la~l spring after the deductibility of essential hospital costs was cancelled. I looked to the budgl't for a substantial reduc· tion in percentage.

Our Govemmcnt appears to turn a deaf ear to mass appeal for tax aiel and to cater to the slightest whim n! the upper crust. Since hospital ex· pense was so rreently excluded. there was little justification for raising by 51000 the maximum amount of medical expense that can be deducted.

A picture is worth a lOOU words. they say. A hospital patient for 1~ days had a private day nurse for 13 of those days. The staff nurses be· gan raising eyebrows the fourth day and guessed it was an insured p3· tit·nt.

Deductible exp£>nses and allowances when applier! to a !!faded tax arc gro~sly unfair. On low braeket in· camP~ the government pays 14r~ of the n.cdi1·al expenses, but on a tax· ahlp incomr over S25.000 it pay' 50'; or morr. \\'hen the cxprn,cs an• ro\·· errd bv An insuran1·c plan. as many are no.w·da.v~. this tax Aiel is like found money.

;: ours trul)'. JOH~ GILBERT.

Hano\·cr. Ontario, April 5, 1960.

MR. TUCKER ·AND THE B.N.A. Editor Daily Xews,

Sir-ln his report from Parliament Hill on sunday, :\Jr. Tucker made some pious avowals of solic1tude for the British Jliorth America Art.

These barefaced. tactless and hypo· critical mouthings of the Whig mem· ber of parliament would he wry amusing but for the tragedy brought to Newfoundland and Canada !'Ieven years ago when his Whig antecedents bulldozed that masterpiece of Jegisla· lion, the people barricade against !'X· p!oitation, to clear the way for the skulduggery of the confertrration swindle.

It took the nine prm·inces ntarl~ ten \'ears to bet·ome fully aware of the ·high handed machinations or \\'bigger)' in that disgraceful am•ihila· lion of their constitutional right~ and takng a tenth member into their union without IllY attempt being made to learn their wishes in the matter. But when the enormity of the dishonour wrought in their name was fully un· derstood their reaction as reglstPred in the last Federal election, was swift and dcvisive and a great tribute to the national int('grity.

It has takPn xewfoundland a little longer to come to the logical conclu· sion that confederation could hart been aehieved in accordance with thr terms o{ the B.X.A.: by negotiation and agreement between the Xew·. foundland Parliament and the Can· adian Parliament and with the full knowledge and consent of the Cana· dian people. Our union to Canada thus attained by our elected represen· tattves would undoubtedly have re­sulted In an Infinitely better deal for Newfoundland under a contract, the integrity of which would be above reproach. But the few who promoted Confederation, were afraid to play the game according to the rules and

yards, there was a steer which always led the otber sti'Crs into the killing pen. He was referred to as "Ole Judas." The counterpart of "Old Judas" is still to 'Je found in almost every community :md within many soda! circles. Watch your own lives and the lives of your ~hildren lest "Old Jud11s" gets in his evil work. And, sorry as the truth i~

to confront, "Old Judas''is ·sometimes a female.

HORRENDOUS JESTS

Bv HRUCE BlOSSAT .Tu~t rcc~nlly at Idlewild, Xew Ynrk.

a \orlheasl Airlines plane wa~ rl!>laytd an hour and a. half on a ilight tn ~tiaml. There was nothing wrong with th~ air· craf1 ll was simply anotber 1·ktim of a fake bomb ~care.

Authorilie' official!)' count 200 such ,<·arrs in the last couple of year~ or so. Some say, however. that the total is

closer to 600. Obviouslv .the hme ha~ long sm;e

come to ca.ll a halt to this warped bU· man beha1•ior.

Airlines cann<Jt even accurately meas· ure the great co~t to them of plants de· Javed on the ground. planes recalled to. airports. baggage painstakingly

,earched. and so on.

ThPse same delays and interruption! of flight ha1·e meant incalculable incon· vrniencl' and perhaps some loss of con· fidence among thousands of air paasen·

gers.

Possibly the cruelest of all the:'l' hoaxes was perpetrated again&t I •e· cl'nt flight which was bearin ~ to sou! h· ern Indiana tbe bereaved relatil·ts anti friend~ of the ''iclims of a stiil-mysttr inu~ Ell'rtra crash.

A bomb has not bern ruled out a.• the eauSP of that accident. As the grief.strirken went to memvrial urvirts for the ''ictim' thr:v twere asked to bt· lil'\'e for a while that their plane mi3ht he destroyed b)' a bomb.

These are unspeakable Acll wl\ich seem to make a joke of the threat of death. We need the psychiatrists to tell us why hundreds are driven tG auch behavior.

Fortunately, Congress is sbowin~ signs it bas had enougb of these inuni· ties. At present a penon guilty of a bomb hoax is subject onh• to a 51.000 fine and a year in jail. A new bill b~· fore the lawmakers would raise the finr to $5.000 and the sentence to five yean in prison.

The mea~url' warrant~ early !nd speedy consideration by both houses ol Congress.

I nthis bnsy a~e the nation'• alrlinr' have tnough harassmrnls a~ they 1eek to fly thrir planr~ safely and tffirient

ly.

Tht'l' ihould not hnr to suffer the rni;;gu.ided indiridt:&i w·ho at tl!h rlirk of a telephone dial can put fear Into their passengen' hearts and add unnet· essary dollal'l to their rost burdtn

His kingdom Is an •v•rlutillg kln&clom. and his domination i• from geaera· tion to &tntratlon .-Daniel &:3.

God's kingdom is not limitPd by timt t.r space. It goes be~·ond boundariu that man rna~· set. It reaches nut into eternity with life as the main rharacttr· tisic.

this unsportsmanlike attitude was ex· pressed by the leader of t~e motley crew, when, In answer to the question of a student at Memorial University as to why he did not seek Confeder•· tion according to tbe terms of the B.N.A., simply replied "we'd never get it that way."

Before long Newfoundland wiiJ have the opportunity to express at the poles our abhorrance of Whig shirtlness and 1 slnl'erely hope their condemnation will not be less emphatic than that of thll, Canadian people.

Show me a Whig who dares to open l;is mouth about the British North America Act and I'll show you one who is not only a brazen faced WhiJ, hut also one who does not posuss even the rudiments of diplomRcy.

ASBESTOS WONTRliRX.

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THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1960

..

Spring Coats by the world's leadrng

manufacturtn enables the Eatter

Parade to begin at the '"Landon." Coat

aa shown in sl%11 S-1 4 by Gordon.

s79.as

Other Suits range from Coats from $69.95 to

1 .. ' j

Detail makes a Costume e.legant. This Spring Suit

styled by Mal Ber 1s

only one of many in

sizes 8-18 and colours

of Beige, Navy, Green

and Brown.

. 95

$19.95-$89 00. $139.00 in the

''London's11 2nc;J. Floor Fashion Department .

/

· NCirmon Hartnell, couturier te Her

Majesty the Queen. Extlusive to the

London. Size 8-16. In Beige, Willow

Green and T oupe .

sS&.as

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5! Tl-:~ DAILY NEW~, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., FRIDAY, APRIL t 1960

For Springtime: Cost,·me Or Suit?

Be Cool And Pretty

Smooth Pineapple Bavarian Is Grand Wind .. Up To Meal

.. Between

Us Women

ly RUTH MILLETT

You're IK'Wiy en;:aoecJ? Then it's likely you've declded on the day and hour of the weddin"­proposed! · But don't make ;n. nouncement of the d·ate yet.

: and maybe you did so before he 1 First comes a l'isit to the cler"l'· . h ~ · man w o'll perform the cere· I mony. I. Why should this l'isit be made

as ~oon as po3sible'.' a 1 It's a regulation in most

churches bl To ascertain that the mar­

riage win conform to church rules

c I To resen•e your chosen date, or the next most suit· abl~ one available, before engraving your invitations

2. Who makes the call? HAPPY THE PAIR WHO HAVE al The newly engaged couple COl\1:\tO:S . HOBBY INTEREST logether

b 1 The bride-to· be and her 11 is usually not put·e luck. mother, or either alone

when a man who enjov.; huntinrr C1 Church custom determin~~ • ~ thL:-some require a visit and fishing has a wife who is as from both parties in an in· enthusiastic about such sports

ns he is. 1 tended marria~e. some do not

In fact. in most marriag•s 3 Sh 1 th' 1 b d' · luck has nothing to do with it, · cus~~d~ any mg e se e 1'-nor does any foresight on the a 1 Ani' church rul~s concern· husband's part. Few yo u n g ing' f 1 0 r 3 1 decoration.'. men bothet· when thev fall in;

.. love to inquire if a glrl knows 11 music. and dress restrie· lions of the bride and her

how to handle a spinning rod or 1 attendants : a gun. . b 1 !'lot during this visit 1 In most cases, Wi\'es learn to 1 "h h 1 11•1·11 · l'k h t• d 1. h' 1 , Cl n' et er the c ergyman 1 e un mg an 1s mg a ter 1 11 d th t' the), a ·ed be th · ~ en e recep 1on.

rt' marn - cause elr 4. Is it usual that anv fees for · husbands are hunters and fisher·· church use, the or~·anist and 'men. , . : And being smar1 the wives the cl~rgyman be arranged st

Some girls favor the costume for S)lring and some the suit. So ,\n:~. i~~., 1,_ .• _,.1•

ers have gi\·eu them both in \·ery handsome \Ct-,;ions. A linel~··textured .\meri· ~an wool tw·eed in black and white (left! is used by Arthur Jahlnw for a suit with brief box jacket Sl'l just at the top of the hipline. Suit has witle, notched rollar antl the shorter sleen length. Silk linen ro~tume (ri~;ht) b~· Cr.n Barra~k rnmbines sheath with waistlen~th jacket. Sheath has sCCJop neckline.

that time? . figure that learning a sport their 1

-----·- -·--·------------ ------- ·-- -----·--------PINEAPPLE Bavarian, creamy and with I bright strawberry : husbands love not only will give a 1 Don't forget

I I I bl Later is the tlme garnish, is a dessert delicate •• spr ngt me. them man)' happy hours to- ~----------- --- ------·----· -- ·-

New Overblouse Idea a ether but also add to the shar· c1 Generally, yes, for the lirst \

B G.\YSOR 1\L-\DDOX WATERMELON WHIP SALAD ~ · I two onlv Ea •. tycr dt'nner •.ltoUld end ll't'lh ' U'ITH MINTED PEARS ed mterests they can talk about. I 5. What reservalions ~hould be .

·' , " ' Some wives. of course, don't 1

made now•. a dossert as delicate as spring· 11 tYleld: 5 •ervlngs b th t t k t · t b

, 0 er o a e up a spor JUS e· 1 a 1 Hotel reservations for th

SIZES '2-:»

1,./A,,;. -~~~~

! time as lo1·e!v as fresh flowers. i Dissoll'e one package water· rause the sport is one ol their 1• ~

' Pine~pple Ba,:arian fill; the bill. 1 melon flavor getatin in boilinl( husband's consuming interests. : wedding trip EASTER PI:SEAPPLE. water. Drain one :-lo. 2'' can. And some husb-ands don't en·. bl Rh~:eelr,v~tt~oncsat:ri~hr. afocrluhtlt~tt·

8.•\'.-\RJ.-\:S pear hah'l$, Add cold water to ag th · · t ac· .. · ,. cour e etr Wtl·es 0 date and the cor1·dct tt'nl". t:\lakes 6 to 8 servings) juiee to mak~ I cup. Add pear th h t• d r r

I company em on nn mg an lor th~ reception. Disso!Ye one package pine·; juice and l tablespoon .emh on fishing trips because they prefer With a bridal shop to

·apple f!aYor gelatin in 1 cup boil·: i u ice. Chill. unt~l sl1tg tly the comradeship of a group of· cl their dres<es. ''iew

B · h . . . . ing water. Drain one :-lo. 2 can, thickened. ~eat while 0 one men on such e~peditions. Some •· ~tg ten )our \\Ork • a · da) crushed pineapple, resen·- egg until shff. Beat thickened m~n like to get away alone now· ·'n•wrrs

or:d "an this cnsp charmer. in" sHup Add syrup to gelatin • gelatin until light and foamy.· and then. and a hohb\' the wife 1. b. c: 2· c: 3· a: t ~: ~. b . Sv.-ee~e-art neck, patch . pockets mlxt1ire. ' Chill until slightly Beat eg~ whit~ into gelatin. doesn't share gi1·es ihem that TODAY'S ETIQUIZ MEMO fan uf accented ?~ e).elet_ or thicker.ed. \\'hip gelatin until, Pour mto 8-mch ~quare pan kind o[ opportunit)'. The contribution to the l'lerg,·-ace. r !mg. :c=as)·sew m >Um· light and fluffy. I and cllill until firm, ~bout 3 But it is a short-sighted wile. man who performs the wedding

mer s gay ,·anet)' of cottons. ',· \\'hip 1 cup heavy cream. hours. Tint pea. r halve; . with whose husband !ores a sport and ceremony is ne,·er mentioned be f d I I h h forehand, and it, size should hp Printed Pattern 4586: :'llisses' Fold in whipped cream and 1 green oo . co onng. 0 w tc a wants to share it with her who

Si:e< 12 14 16 18 °0 Size 16 cup crushed pineapple. Pour In· drop of mmt fla,·onng has been turns htm down flat. She wtll in relation to the simpli~ity or tak~-s 4'·· y;rds' 35-in~h· fabric. to 1',-quart mold. Ch~ll u~til: added. Cut gelatin _into squ~res. miss many hours of happy com-~ elaborateness of the weddmg. P~inted directions on each pat· firm. l!nmold and ~arms~ With I Scn·e on lettuce With B mmted. oanionship and 56 will her hus· I r-------

tern pari. Easier. ac~~rate. fresh strawbernes, tf desired. pear hall. jiland. I So. the wile whose husband I TtUE

~nd FORT\' fEXTS I in coim 1 : wants to teach her to hunt or £1. •• I '~tamps cannot be accept('()' lor . fi>h ought to at least try to en· I this pattern. Plea5c print plain. 'joy that which holds so much M I !y SIZE, X.-\~1E, ADDRESS, fascination for her husband. i., I a tu -..n I STYLE :\T~BER. f t::i

Send order to A:'\:'\E AD.UtS. I ~~~·~.0~a.~:~n ~~;\~ ::.:~;~ Brazzi And June Allyson ·1 Parent 1

1 ST .. WEST, TOROXTO. OXT .

PEARL'S LUSTER Put On Togetherness Act . Take 8 lcw.tcs extra dm·· I . \lothrr·nf·prarl i~ in thin . . ing shampoo time lor scalp mas· By MRS. MURIEL LAWRENCE

ta:·er~ that tran.<mit ~nd 1'1'· · 5age. S!o11·1y lather shampoo By ERSKINE JOHNSON ° • • . into vour hair, rin~e and then' PARESTS' HURDU: IS TO

flrct li;ht. The~e ma,,;· blend· HOLLY\\'OOD. (:-/EAl-H.ol·' BRIGITTE BAR o.o T ts 'rigorously towel hair and scalp MAKE CHILD UNDERSTASO fd rdlrrt!On~ pt·ndurr the )\·wood and Grapel'lne bcmg pagrd to laugh tl up as dt··· Fin,·sh of[ with vour ra,·orite. REALITIES dP!Icate luster of the pearl. • d. · • R k t t ' ' ·

Rossano Brazzi starring on a a come .!enne m · oc ?. 0 I ha.ir conditioner-rubbo.!d 5par· ---- -·-·--- -·-------- .June Allys on TV show is one Fenwick , the sequel to The ina]\' into the end~ for manage- At li1e years of age How:ml

for Hollywood's "When We ~louse That Hoare~·· on eli- ahllhy. Then set.· regards himself a5 a person of :llect Again" book. After co· rector Jack Arnold s future : boundless power.

· · 'th J · le book. !\lost sexy blondes can · F ,. ,. k h . starrmg WI une tn a mo\· pi medv ays Jack be· . rom ,,ew or co~es a n~w He is conrinced that t cRn LOW COST PAINT REMOVER

several ,·ears ago, Brazzl was · ay. coh.l '• 5 1 . 'h · rolling mirror !ip~ttck. The bounce 011t of bed in the morn·

t d · •· h ould get cause w 1 e "mos comic& a\:e · oil 1 1 g ld · Tht· fee lin~ of sttring is rrflct:led in this antt(JUc m;:, ;u· p •'" quo <' as sa~ In I e c f . . ·"th bl d . mtrr.or r s ou rom a o .en . ing after insufficient sleep. Hr along without her very well.. P7r ec\ ttmmg, 'Ill " on es or Jewelled case that contams: thinks that he can stuff himself on a white poli,hed cotton- ba(·k~nnmd. Thb nwrhlnn'r h~

Remo,·ing old paint can be a long ud tireeome job. But b.ere'a b.ov. Gillett'a Lye can help you, at a fractioD the coet of prepared p~tint zemo,·en. Dialolve 1 can of Lve ill 1 qll&l't of water. In another c:ontalaer, atir 4 heaping table­IPOOIII of corn atarch or flour into 2 qUiftl of water. Pour this mix· tuN vary slowly into lye aolution, 11tizriJ1c oonatantly to Jllftke a ihick pute without lumpa. Wear· iD1 Nbber glo\-es to protect II&Dda, 1wab the paste on painted llllface in a thick. even coat. Cover only aemaU area at a time, ud pjoon aa aigna of drying ap· liMit llicrape off with putty knife. Old p8int will come off with it. For dozeDI of other time and IIIOMJ-ving til'S, write for {ffl! 10-~booklet: Standard Branda L~~,.:(O Sherbrooke W ., ),f .

d H th t . i It I per ect !"o~e~ent. i the li~stick. Click·change refills. with candy and ret~ in his RP·: Mae Shore is rut with com·ertible collar, rnll·llJl slee•·c, and She screame · e rea en ·also f1t the case ' . , bl slit sides. Fabric is drip·dry.

: ed to sue for a misquote and A 1t1r anca w•• 1 sktcl by 1 _·_· _ : pettle , for suppers ••ege~ a es.

June had some snappy wards 10 lntarvitwtr what she do•• 1 , dt· 1 . f He thmks that he can ktck u~ -----· ___ _ _ _ .. _

1 h h fi d 1 1 ne ImP c ean.~mg o your without becoming afraid that ll'e

I w en • • n 1 • wom1n 1 1 complexion i• the most import·· 'II h d h' H th' k h I p }} ' Q • ' ·nice >tlla,h o.' eo'or. I puty wtlring the uma drall, I h I th . 0 be t I wt a an on lm. e m ~ e' i Tht 1ctrau thought for 1 mo·, an w:s 1° ~ da~ .. tr: :u Y[ can change the 50 cents .in our 0 y S UIZ me nf Or:rntal pt·•nls

I mant ancl then replied: "I look 1 1!1:nu ac urer as m, uc~ ,a, purse into the .$2.95 r('qlltrcd to • . ,,flrlurrl lnlor-. "outrl 1 h~ht, greaseles~. s c 1 en t 1 E 1 c. purchase the airplane hangar 111 COST IS THE SAME \\II ETHER .<otne on one wall

.\ ~roup·

Ill rlf'h. h~ hand·

I over 1nd na who looks bet. 1 cleansing 1 o t ion that remo\'es 1 · d GOOD OR B.\D COLOR IS • • • ttr. If sht does, I ;o home." f hidden dirt and makiup, un·l the toyst.ore wm ow. ! USED Dear Poth · Our 60·,·rar.ot'l

, to say, too. :'-low it's June "pre-j , • • • .· 1 cl?gs pores an~ then rin~es off And w~en. hroughl. up against i . -.-. . house has ·such long wmrlolll< 1 senting'• Rossano, and the air '~ell, at least one mo\te I wtth ease, leaymg your sk.m soft, our restnchon ol ht~ boundle~s . . . B'l POLL! (RA:O.H.fl . 1 thai 1 must make curtains 0 ,.

Its filed with the sweet smell producer, Jack H. Ha~ns, IS clean and clear. A. spec1a! for· pow.ers he may roar w1th fru~·: . ~car Polly: The walt~ of my dl·ntwir, Rui 1 nc' cr k11ow of togetherness. after the family e~terta~nment I mula or the same Io.hon has been tr.alton and anger. It shouldn tjlmng room are mcdmm green what style is best to cut the win-

• • • trade ~y, he sa~s, 1gnon~g sex made up for dry skin as welL dtsturb us very much. and dl'apes are sandalwood. I dow hei)!hl. il'nlltd you please No M •rUe the re·lssues of a.nd VIolence m a . science· __ 1 need new col'ers for an open 1 tell ml'''-~lrs. c. .1 G.

"l- L~\:e~ Luc'··• will NOT be I fiction film. The picture is I Spnrse, straggly brows appear Unfortunatel.y,. so~e parents I arm maple CCJuch and !'hair>. n,,,,r ~lr: r .! (;. Drap~rie> titled "I Do ~ot Love Lucy "I "Dinosau.rus." . fuller after a deft ·application of I share Howards tll~ston of .bound What arc ml' best colm· bet'~ that meet at the top anr) are

Yes' ~tvrtie the acto~s Engulfmg the screen w.tth I eyebrow pencil. In applying the I less powers,d .They li rr:tt him t Please keep in mind that money I •• t i•acl; 1\ ill help l'lll the aren't' i~ketlng during the 1 blood, argues Jack, ~mptted 1 pencil, make your strokes short 1 to delay ~ !tme an t en g~~. is at stake.-Mrs. R. K. · height of your "indow,. Deep strike ~hev couldn't aa:ree on,~ theaters. So he says he s given I and feathery and work upward mad at hi~ re{usaihto .f1e\ up 1 ~ 1 Dear Mrs. R K.: .~lwa;·s , al;:nccs or cornice boards also bill! · 1 · 5 his film what he calls some and outward, following the dir· n~rsery sc 00 • . ey. uss a remember that good color costs would tu:·n the trick

Daily Recipe L\CY COOKIES

cup ftoJr ~~: bps. bakin!! pO\\'dC'r ; tb.,p>. ma:~arine or butter 1 Ct!Il 6Hgar 1 cup ,-l!rcc!·:l~d coconut 1 tsp:-'. lemon e:\1 r~ct 2 e':!~ . ..:. :'o:paruted .3 cap; cotntlakr< . \lix io;::ethcr all dry ingredi

r•tt' rxcc;,t t h c coconut and corn· flake·. Crc~m sucar and short· ~~ing and a:ld c.~::! yol:~s. Add rln- in~re:li:nts to thi.• and then add tlir roCOillll. cornflnkes and :emun I'XI '3( 1. r'O]d in ~aten , .. ,~ \\!lite.;. Drop from teaspoon o~Ln g1·ea,2d bakm~ tin. Bake fin• to ~en~n min~1tes in o,·er qoo d1.''.!r?r, F ..

t itec~.' in )'.!: :e•, and check~ in lTi'•P l>l1c:; and white: checks in minin' nrc :--izr. and giant, ma~nifi<>d cilrc\' are all news Litis <princ :\rwc<t [a,hion idea i< pen !me >tripcd ~hirtin; hlnu•rs \\iih p'l.<irl check suits.

\'r-.h; r~111rn a.;. frnorirc_., for ~trl< 1h:< ,urin:. I:xt ·a ~hort 1 ('.t, ,1rc r--pcuaJI,- :noti with ca-:tal ,;,trt,·. tapei·cd -r.,nts and t:1ilot cd h!~~;-.~ '·

Sc;nTc, ''ill ;l(l'l a p:1lc .1cccnt tn tlte hi a·.~ and na1 ,. a! the :--~'il(;on. or .:i' !:' a sharP. bright .. rr tnucl\ to pale co:orcd co~tumcs and cn<rnlhirs. So mat11· of thr nc"' eo!iars and necklines just >C2lll In drman~ that ex!ra fillip of rini<h 'o hcalttiful!;· done with a ~ay 5tat·~ Lhat ,.OJ wilt want to .•lcct a numhrr of them as im· portant sprin; acc~nts.

01whiou<es once a:;ain st!'al Lh~ spntti~ht in spnng hlou~e­lincs. The short cropped Ol'er· hlouse anrl split lrr~ls are well r~prescnterl in 'olids and prints to cn·ordinate with pleated skirts. for ,. aria t ion some o1·er· hlnu,:e.< arc ~ct on ll'aistband~. Other fashion< indude tuck·in blouses with ~oft bow~ !I the neckline or emhroirler~d details .

. , ng, ille 5' • "unusual family flavor" I' ection of growth. Never draw a him for not eattng hts supper no more titan !Jnd. 111 would · _.......,.,....___________ - touches. He lists them as a hard, continuous line. vegetabl~s though th~y have ~I- help if you had mentioned your

. ; "'' lovable rascal dinosaur (the -- · lowed him to st.ufl htmself. With 1

1·ur: color.\ Tan draperies smmd ~-::-~=~=-::~=~=------:::---::::----., .-t~i.i\ olollo S]J"C·'!'t DinoMartintype,Iguess)and New spring hairdos have em· c~ndy. They w~lallow/im~u 1 \'er~· dull with soft gmn walls.· 11ASTRO-GUIDE11 By Ceean

'. e.,·-.- \iJ " ~· 1 a eave man playing it for erged from the winter cocoon kick them. and 1 en :-"0n er w !..j Perhaps a print or plaid that: -----------------=-----1

P • • laughs as well as Vic Mature styles as butterflies reports Vic· ~e b~rsts t~to a dpasslo~ oft we~;_'! combines tan. green and your, • I M ~Yi• heroics. tor Vito, a New York hair sty. mg If repnman ed. s 0 ts I rug color would be vour best bet 1 For Fridty, AFril i lftllpp I Iff J~n. Sure, there'! a heavy-a list. Most spring fa\'orites, he dema~ !hat the 50h c~~t~ ble for s!ipcm·ers. A bowl of fruit.' M ,.;....: tyrannosaurusrex-butHarrls edds, are the shorthaired ver- change. Into $2.95-ott' 3 ;: some flowering plants and 1 Preseni-For You and - "'r.t/ 1.\ would like you all to know: sions. ways Is very utpse mg. t e colorful book bindings would add 1 Yours; .. If you experience irri.

t.l. 1 Jl lt. lC "Sure, he devours people. cau~ such paren s. ca.nno ac· dashes of color to the room. ,I 0 W d te H d h f t~tion, try to lor~ct it. Take a • But we don't photograph It as comm. o a owar s w_1s ?r e • • • 1 Groucho· M•rx, 1 spiritualism th 11 th conciliatory attitude if things are

a slx·course dinner. Theaters, tlevottt, Other night she holt· magic. purse, . ey WI el er Dear Polly: I have venetian 1

!Jjft together inlo 11 bowl 2 c. once-•lfiH

p1111ry flour er 1 ~ c, once-•lftell e11-pwp ... "ur 3 ,.,., tMelc .. ldna

Pow4er ~lip. •all

.. ' ~ c. 1renul.-. •u•r

Combine =, 1-llln•IN•ae · . . ~ c. wtll-llralnotl

•-tlau•hM ,._,.. . '

~ c. 1yrup from

Sprinkle witll mixture of 2 lb1p1. granura..tl

lUgar Y:. hp. ;round

cinnamon

Bake in mod. hoi Ol'rn, 375°, 15 to 20 mins. Remo1•e from pans at once. Yield: 12 muffins.

after all, like to sell popcorn, a~ologtze to htm or g~t anp-y hlinds in my bedroom. Which I Up!et on the job, as t~y're apt too.'' ~tth ~hemselves for dtsappomt· is more appropriate to use with I to be 'under current radiation.<.

tnll htm. them. nylon cur1ains or pastel Let your personal magnetism MIKI CONNORS of TV's II · ·

I II b In his new book Psychoanaly·) draperies•-:ltrs. Housewife., . 11

ca atteot<on to your 1nnate "Tia:htrope" aer es w I e De M H r \\ h 1 ability and ,.~u·n make rapid starred in 1 film, "The Dark sis and Zen Buddhism, my ar rs. ouscwt e: tc t, ,

friend Erich Fromm writes: do you prefer? One is as ap· Window," bY producers Rouse propriate as the other. B 11 t and Green. · · · Earl Holli· entd .1 111nca 1 nd when tht "The child . does not accept what on earth makes you think i man's great name lor that lazy qu .. tions?" c•m• fro m• •;a. 1 reality as it is. but. as he wants~ you must use pastel drnperics? mongrel just added to his qutltlon•?'' came trom 1 .·d•·: ti to. be. If hts wt.shes are not 1 • • • . "Hotel de psree" series- 1 f If 11 d he g t r d the "Useless." p.,latl" rel1tive on t lo~hng j u ' .e ~ s ur10~s-an : Dear Polly: I'm an aritl rea-

• • • lhetl Groucho nkod: Yes, 1 functton of hts fury Is to force der who would like to share a.

whtt:s the popul•tion of the world (through the medium 1 decorating problem. We have a: Dorothy Loudon's big Las Akron Ohio?" of his parents) to correspond to very attractive black bedroom 1

Vea:aa click, after se\'en years ' • • • his wish." suite with copper hardware.

~ w~~lnJew a~or!~ebro~~~~ Hollywoodites Are Talking This is a simple statement of ~ails are p~ach .with white c~il·

Bains.

Past .• , Haney W. Cu•hing, American ph) sic ian and aur· geon, wn born on AprilS, 1869. He was known all onr the world as an authority on brain surgery •

Future ... The electric po..,·er output of thi\ country haa dou· bleJ ererv 10 r•e•r• ~ince 1900, w we mu!t build a~ muclt aen· erating, tran<mi.,ion and con· sumtr equipment in the next I 0 yean n we ha~e built in the la!t ~0 years.

jiii!Hppla V. c. milk

nge t f I About: im ortant truth If we cen mg. Carpebng IS gray shadmg her more engaa:emen of ers ' The big Insurance pay-off an P. • · to bl~ck But we haven't chosen thanl shetl can facceptth. Hr;, ~~ly. l!ecause of Ty power's death I' aacnced P!d~~~~::.~~g offe~~ing~:~~~ bedspre~d and curtains yet. exp ana on or e over· . h f.l · f "Solom ·~ · R · If 1 d 1 a t· nil!ht'' fame treatment, "I'd durmg t c 1 ~mg 0 • • : 1 overwh~lm us dissolve when we 00~ 15 r.es u a~ e ehan •

The Day Under Your Sign W. c. cooldne ell

,:;. }\lip. vanilla

• . iea well in flour mjx. e ·and add liquids _,,~..-, . ....:.,rw

. at once. Stir just · altlil dry iniredients 11,. moistened- do .not «'tr·lfl~. Three-quarters fiJJ rreastd muffin cups.

\ You'll serve it with pride .when you ~ay-

. "I made it myaelf-woith MaA1c!"

f I b. on and Sheba . A staggermg 1 hal'e .to deny children their furmture has an Onental look. never per ormed n a II 22n 172 1 We als need a color suggestion room before 1 think I'll play $1, "•. · · · · · ' omnipotent wishes. Then we · 0 • • ·

· 1 C !' Daniel Taradash, who 1 can deny the wishes with kind· for an easy chatr.-Mrs. A; H. S. the .~os Ange es o lseum scripted "From. Here to Eter· I """C I!eat Mrs. A. H. S: Pamt the next. l!'lty" winDing the big walls while and the ceiling cop-

PROMISED AND hoped for: "HaV.:all" screenplaY writing per. Then hang white, floor· Bing crosby replacing Gary job .... paul Anka's new nose length curtains edged with w~ite

·as the fourth Crosby "boy" -"rigging" by a plastic sur· I braid that has Greek key d.~s1gn when Lindsay, Dennis and geon .... PaUl Newman and \·-- : in copper threads. I A,·atlable; Philip open in Las vegas 'na Balin playing a love

1 If you're lcmpted to \rare · in mo~t department storrs. I

April 19 !or a month's engage· scene at a drive-in theater for stove grease to clean later, rc· ! The whit~ tailored !lust rnrfle, mr.nt. J bet Gary flipped , the rilm, "From thr. Terrace" member that ~rease atll':ltts hcnr~th " quiltcl! white sprc~rl. when he heard the news. Confu~ing, huh? Kids will su~ . hugs. Also, ol cotn·s•. it is much coul!l hare a hanrl of thr hriltrl.

• • • jl denly he askin~t. "What ha,I· : harder to re,nn~·e alter it has f.mNalrl ~11'Cn roijnn 1·rh·ct on It's llting told 1ilout Mrs. pened to the 1111!vie?" · been le!t lor a lime. I the easy cha1r should make a ·

ARIES (Born Marc~ 21 fo April 19) HuJ ,,;1 ll'e fir.e pOnt before 1ianin1' aiiF ll'g:d d0Cl'tnen~.

TAURUS (April 20 lo Moy 20) . You u.n't force lll imlt il olhWI art not ready for action. Dide )-cur timt.

GEMINI IMoy 21 Ia June 211 By-ra~J amu!l.eP1«!nt in favor of puU[nr in liOme utra. dfort on the job.

CANCER (June 22 fa July 211 ~ornrf.,ing may hprrn tht wilt ~bJdm .t.onr he111rt an•{ ai\·e )"llu •~I{ confadrnec.

LEO (July lZ to Aug. 21) Yflur.~~~rr' m.H JJO'"' & probl~ tht

· ~'flr,'t h~ I flO') CHJ' t~ tf)J,·r,

J

VIRGO I Aug. 2l to So pl. 2l) \ f,,...,,, "m!i~· eor m1r ~ff·~ :O'l Ilene· L~S to rtt•!~.l to ~\'lu.r old jr·b.

LIBRA (Sop!. 2l !o Oct. U) You !c:d a littlt. tr'J11r~ lth \'OUr oH l!:ll, 10 100 v~1t ;mr\ hAn~ t.rr:'t fun,

SCORPIO (Oc!. 2l Ia Nov. 21 J IJort't r~":!.d ju~~ (OJr rntcru.ir.m~r.!. 1hert: ia mur:t to De l~;a.rntd.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 fa Doc. 11) You n.n adc\ aub~a:ntia11y t4l JOUr rt-­IOl.lrcu, but it will take. sdf·ucrifiet.

CAPRICOitH [Doc. 21 II Jon. 20) The tmex[lf:c.ted eta 1»e apected Mll', An ucifii'IJ cl::a~:

AQUARIUS (Joo. 21 lo Fo~. ••1 A m.J u-l ur ~rt •I da,·, 1l&n &'COd and rut hid. .\u:rnt ortrmi .. m:

mCES ( Fo~. ZO to More~ 20) G~· luth out rof th,. ws:. thtn 1M H ;1JU Uld tn)O'y I It~· w~'o:~~.

e 116~. li~H lnt~rri!!tJ, Ine.

., :,.-i . . ·.t

. ' .. '

., . .. •'• I •

·,

. . . . ~ .~\ -~ . . .~~ . ~. ·'· .. · ..

·,. • ' I

'' ' . .

... · .: ....

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., FRIDAY, APRil. 8, 1960

Applauded By All

PIINTED PATTERN 4700

lfZII t-17 .~ ... ~

1V Notebook ''GRA:\fPS" JOE E. BROWS

CLO\V!IilSG FOR T\' CIRCUS

BY Dll'K KLEISER NE\\' YORK-ISEA•- Joe E.

B:·own·s appearance on ABC's Times .<\ll·Slar Circus, on March 1 31. was he sars 'a labor of lol'e.' · The pro~ra1n 11as fil~ in Eng- I land, and Brown went there to · A d. do the show ~cause ol' his great n In Ian affection (OI' clrClL'l'S,

T' .--------------------·-------

Social-Personal

1 - Column - :~~ 0( IIRA:-;E ~'f. W .. \, 111~ e"nl'iudL•d. A social ho~ r nehr:me Sl. LHlllt•d Church followed, w1th c:ater1ng heinl

·"man's A>soetation ht'ld an done by :\lrs .. r. Newell's gro. :t·n meeting in lhc Lecture , ·~-

.·.til Tuesday :\larch 29th. at 8 AFTt:R XOON TEA

He Llt'gan his carl'l'l' as a cir· f £1 cu~ acrnllal. From thrre. he fi UeDCe BE APT\' went into comeuy. · f m· a reason bt> explains succincll,l':

"How come I went into com­edy·• Did )'Oil gel a good ]ook at

furry has hPen calh•d a highl)' ll..:11th Pxp~rts sa;· that after ~piced lndinn stew lha1 is nol Ml .io it is lwalthier to keep <lim 111\ll'h t•ookrd in lhe kitchen as and tlw l1est 1\ill' 10 do this, concocted in the imagination. 111~1· adl'i~'l'. i.< lo. e~t plenty ol Fi•h. fo11l, fruit, me~! or vrg. tnut. \r~N.thlc, and Pl'olein>.

.i ~ps On Carpet Stain Removal

Pe1'11aps you don't manage a :1:gh: dub 11r a restaurant. But a< a houoekeepe1· you may m~el I h~ saml' l':trpel-cle;ming proiJ­lrm. that rrop up in surh plat~'-

''lhe Recipe · .,ile Box

J>.m The special feature of this The Women's A~sotiatinn of llll'etin~ was the shol'iing of a Gower Street United Church tr.nc!n~uc throu~h len coun· held a very successful After·

',;)tries o)· ~lr. H K. Wy.1tt. The noon T~a and Bake Sale. on .• P1 c.<i<lent :\Irs. H. D. Ptkc Ill· :\londay. ~larch 28th. This ,Wil$, lroduced ~Jr. W~att and abo ICI')- well attended. anrl the rl!· • t•xlendcd a warm welt-omr to >Ults 1cry gratifywg. ~lem~ers ~ :he olhcr guests and nwmber'. ami guc,b >pent a ple<Jf••lr

J:ETTU>Ql'ICK SOt:!• (;OOll WITH fR.\CKERS

A'1 lhl' f:hluon 1101: I h.til• th\' 1111lr 111rlr >Hilnr ,.,,:,,,· tho "rape,;· ~-our ,JHlulclrl' allole a s: rra~ or a ·ht ,1:h lli1 im· <!1.1pe loo ;unl!lr [i~Urr' - ll·nnt ha·•.lin~ ·u~~r ,,, I :mpu·r 11111'

F'nnled Pallel'll 4;1'1!1: .lr \li'' S11~< ~- 11. 1:1. l'i 1; Sm 1:: tak\"\co ~·· .. ~:ard, :lj.mrh

Prm:t't'l !11, r.·t•nn• nn t'a• h pa:-IPrn part r:as:rr. a~_.III'Htr.

Srnd t'IF'fY n:Sl'S oin lOin• r ,, amp< l·annot hP al'l'rnl~d • In" !111s palir1 n Plra-e pr:nr p!;dn­h S11.E. S \~1F., .\llDRESS, snu: :'\1':\tRF.R.

srnd ordrr to :\:i:'\F: .\ll \\IS. rart of ST. .lOllS'~ ll.\11,, "F.W.~. Palttrn llrpl, 6fl FROST liiT., WEST. TOROXTIJ, OXT.

Tamper-Proof Bottle Caps

' nrw type of moulrlPd boltlr np t< now on the market. Thi• ll~l~ethylen~ <'OI e1· i< ~peri ally df'!igned to di<l'!HI"a~r small rh!!d!'l'n from oornm;; ~ hollle rontainiiiJ: pill< or other medit·~· t1on~ whil'h ..ould h,, harmful 1f Improper]~· all mini> IPI Pd

The ,.;~, erly-cnthlrurtPd l'ap !• ~o mould<•rl thai a lr~t ,trip indicate,; wlwther t!1ere has lwrn tamperinl! ll'llh th<> t·onlen!< on it~ Wa\' to 1he DUI'P" \\'hPit read~· ·for use. thr ~trifl is ln:·n 11tf the co1 er and 1hr 1·ap l• pnerl 'IJl lor oprnin~ T !1 r rn,~>r i• h~'d pPrmanentl~· on thr rnntaintr and lhr l'ap m;"· hr ftp~ne-.1 and do<er! R< oftrn a< n•ees~an·

o~~nin~ tit~ rap rr<tl'irr> "adult'' <t1·~n~tn anti 11 i< thi< !r~tllrf which •hoillrl kr•p ~n~rr ~·nune finRrrs from pr,·in~ ""d~ nr a lllf'd'llm-drn,Jt~· pol\'. ~lh)·l•n•. th~ umqup c lo<u1 r i•

m•• 1\is,cr~" \L'Illall~·. the s11 itt·h was madt•

·when h1, partner in an acrohat•c rlnn su;:~t•.<tert he don a ronwd~· w<tunw an,t mak1• np. liradu· a:ly. lw l)('~nn lo mHke a lew iol,p, 10 Ill lu,; urw appearalll'l' If lhl' su~~estion h~dn't heen mad~, .lor E. Rro11 n nught nr1 r•· ha1 ~ found his 1 ole as romcdwn.

'>ow. with a ~··and carrpr h1•· hind hun. hr'., thinking nl rr· th·im:. "It'< a linr idra." he •a~·,, "and Ill l1r rradl' for It 11 hrn I'm llltl " ·

\l·.•anwh•IP, '1'\' I' . ,•.

~ ......... ,, - unct• ;~n

acrobat, alwu,·s a down, f1lm tm· a st•ri~, whith 1\0UI•l hr ,. a 11 e r! "F-.lr I !1r 1. o 1 e ol <;ramps" lie \lnn!rt pin~· a re· 11red dl·l~ctil'~ 1111h a daughlt•r. a pn'it-cmnn ~on-m·:ow, and two ~ranr!childl"en. • ll1m1'n actually ha. r1~ht ,grunuc·hildren. 1

1\'hv hal rn't tht• ~real BI'Own tal~nl< h~~n harne~scrt lot· a series until nn11 ·•

"I know how to s~1· ·;o.;o: " hP sa•·• ''Tl1e onr;; 1'1·e been ofler­ed ha•l'n't hern right The erl ot a tamih· ~how isnt in the wril· m~. the ~e:m,!l 01· the tlirel·tion. II'~ 10 establishing chantl'll'r~ 1ne pubhc ratrs 11bout The rharactrr:< ,·an't be too lifehke­nubod•· wants to look in 1 mir· 1'01' all tlw time-hut they can't be too gro1rsque. t>ither."

II~ thinks he has found th<' <'hand~r he wants to pl,l\' in 1•1t- pro.wct<c>rt ~rrie<. ~h·an11 lu!e, the1·r·, thr dt·cu< show, llhll·h tml< .Jop 1•: Rro11 n back whPI't hP Wth ~ ~·flar.;; ~~n.

prr<l n•t\· be in~ used in ranada hy a l~r~r rtn1:: mnll'tfacturt>r lor bolt !e< coni ainin~ pill>.

The hinl(f>d lrallll e of tnr rap a:-o >nln·~ t h o < • annoying momen1< 11 hrn an orrlmar~· ho1-11r- lop roll, lrlumnhantl)' undrr thr ba;in Thr hmRr hold• the c·CI\ er in n1 Jl'~ anc! mal,p, it Pa<y to l'rtap thr hot!.t• 1mmrrl1atrly :tllr,· u,e, lr"l'lling the dangrr n( <Pi!!<.

etable ... just about any !ood c.an • • • h' sut·cesstull~· U'CU in a curr)·. r.ood ~roomin~ anrl Jl<'I'<Onal

~!o<t Canadian< still haw a. <"a:-~ '' a '1~11 ui nr~aniz·•lion trmicn<·~· to t•on<idt'l' a Clll'l'l' di<h :,nd in>pit·rs cnntldt•me from a. sonwlhin;: r~otic 0111~ htghl;· nlh<'l'>. •Pircd. :\etu:tll~· it i' 1 t'r~· prar· • • • !teal and !'an bt• s.'a,oned a, hlandll· "' the fmni11· wi<h<•s curry· Ht her lci<ure, ~to"c il ln m~N and al':ual!y la,tcs just "' ~oncl wlll'n 11 urmed up a day or two alt~r eooku,a. '!'hi; mran. a hUS\' hOli>CI\ tit• ('~11 fl Cililr~ l'urray at her lelslll'r. storr 1l in Pte n•f•·igel'ttor. and reheat 1\ from hrr family and guests.

:\ lit llr chicken goc< a I on~ 11ay in tod.ly's recipe for l'hil';. en Curr1· Casserole. Both lell· orer rhfcken and cannrrl chicken solto a1·r u<ed in the rerip~. alon;: with pinrapp]p ti~hil< to form a l ontra.t in lim or. Shreddt•ct co· eollltl addrd t~ hu\l~·recl lm·arl numbs makrs a most unusual toppina fOI' lhr di;h. S~n!' thl' l'l\1'1')' with rhulnry m· 1 hotlJl?d pic'kle. anrt a ,!lrern ~alad T11r I'll ored des.<rrl to ~~n e 111th 1\IITI' is sumcthin~ .'lmplr, 'uch :t• fi'l' .h ll'l!it ~n.l dJrrs<'. ('HJCKt:\' Cl:RR\' ('.\SSt;ROI.F

rlcld--fi ,,fl lng, '!12 rut!' t•uhed ronl.t·rl thlt'l.c·n '• cu~J l'hopprd rr'e''Y · • c· IJl ('hoppr·l nn1nn :l ta>liP'}lOons hutt~r or m:• ·.

. ~ lo ~ tea,}mnn< run,. pow<lrt' 2 lBnii: 1 approx Ill olllll'P" (lilt !1'

c·nnilrn,cd rream ot l'im:,. r.t 'our

<·an ;mpt·nx 10 011111 hr-p·n?:nlplr tinhil<

t cur' C'O:tr-.r soft hrrad el'llii1D· 1, , up <hrrcldrd cocon111 2 lahl~'poons hnllrr u: mar­

~annr. mrltrd f'"~lwt: o1 en to ~.;u d••g F

lmodrratrl, PNp~l11 1 duekrn clf'Pl'\" ·;md

onion. lloat thr 3 tah!psponn< huller or margarine. .~clrt prr· Jlilred l'lee1 y and onion: sprinkle· with curry po11drr {'nl'er anrl look Oltl' low heat. slm·ing Ol'· •·a-ionall~·. until leJ:P!able; arr I endl'r hut not hrownrd Bl~nd in Sllilp. Drilin pineappl" thor· onghly and sl ir il and 1 hr 11:·e· pared dlit·k~n into th~ rniT~' >ii:ICe. Turn into a 6· cup cass­erole and h:1ke in a pre-heated 011'11 3tJ minutes. ~!Pant I me. fomhim• h1·rad

<rumb<, coronut and the 2 table­spoon< m~lted hultCI' or ma•·g:n. ine: stJrin',lt> ol'er hot l'a~>e"olr B1•l\\lil lo O\'Cn anrl hakr until torpin~ is golden-about IS min· utes lon~er.

rp/1/IB'ti MAKf FRIENDS

Whrn on~ Pf>l son in ~ !(roup rpreiles a phono <all, other· should rnntin:1r thrir l'OII\ rr~a-11011 It'~ hi~hly 1mp1oper to monitor what i< hring said

If mur l1~o1· '""11" nih and "'1 r 1 n g' attC"I' li\·e da~· .... \on s1Hllllti 'h:tllll/110 it PI Crl' filii I' cl.1'... TIH'I'~ .. ,.,, ... C't 1'•1'.-. about !1011 oft<'n 1·nu ll('l'd a shamruo. Som'' \\ n11~rn 1werl a 'hilmpuo onl)· at ;m iniPl'l:tl ot ri~ht 1l:i:•' Otilt'l' 111'1'!1 nne oll~nrr.

l!t•••t• i< n n01 nJ ronlinr for rc· : 1 m·in~ lll'a\) an!; I,., with ~uil'::

IPslllis. lt~lllOIP IOU <hoes nnrl >toeki•l~' Tlwn <it on the ed;:e of a straigh: ch:~ir 11 11h ~·our le~t on the floor and ) 0\11' It"'' Pli'· pc·ndleular to it. l'l~t·e a wntin~ natl on t!·r lloor ahnut 20 inci• • in frnnl of your fe~t. ln•rrl Ill~ I'C'I\11'<' o' a pencil bel 1\l'en lhl' hig- and s~cml'! to~, of yon1· l'i;:hl tooL \'ow extend vonr n~ht !e~ <~nd toul'lt lite tip of lh~ pe1ml to lhe piid lh l'n1atm:; yon1· anl,]t'. drn11 1~1 ~r tirt]e, elol'kl' l·<'

I 'on! inm• mtt •I )'o:l han clr.l'-'·ll ~l 1.11 rlP:o: ~r.~ tht•n e:irr 'ihll'

~~·r: aPklr a ,, fJr!Wtlt m th(l' opnl) ... I 1H'. kPPI) fhn (IXC':·ci.;ing ltw! , • cllrl'l 1 ittn Throughout th~ n•n· "p'J pfrl at eel ~nd :1rclwd.

• • • J";)IJ~\1-~ 1 ... ;l nnmhPr' onf' tHl

l'!l1\' o1 twm '' a! rUJ\' :l!..!t• P t''ltl clam~':!'· tlw fn•..i1 !ook.., -.f 1 hr lt'"'J\.1''('!" ll1dl\f1 !h('l 21rl m :!0', pn~o:~~··f~cPri .and t'a\1'-r lhr ~~~m of a llliil\11'(' \roman tn t.~;~..!

Tmw <p~·nl >lerpin~ r"·lore< Pw !'o'ot :rud tr\li:tr nf ~o•1r -kin. acH· sp~ri,'r In )'Oilr e)« and ;!'o~" to ~·our hmr. [.

\lhrn lral<'ling, 11·, a ~ood id<•a lo h~1" powder and :ill-lick in raeh handha:! rOll t:1 1 ~r \':ith rm1. I• ,, 1!i ,,l\1' 1h;. trouh!r of rhan~­in~ llw-c •wcr«ni·~· tlems from on1' piP·!' lo ano1her. nn·l t'lnnin­al~s !he r;sk of f6rg~ltmg them

Too-hi~h and too-wicle hrow lllll' makt•s tl1e r:'rs tonk small. T:•ke cnn• '' ith !hat 1•yehrow pen· I'll.

To I'P•Iurr rn,pnr« of 1 rilinll ,,,.,., ,t lll'l\lrrn sheets of ',1<1xed paper.

UNIVERSITY HISTORY f'olllHird h1 tht' ::O.Iil'lll'•OI,l

Tt•• rilonal L.r;:1<laturr In lR~I. thr L llll'l'r><l~ nt \11111'<' •II;~ 1\~S (•l<l'ed fi{lllJ 1!160 Ill !Alii hr<·au'l' of ~n rrnno.nlr cll'plt··•inn. tile ('11'11 \\'ar· anrt lnrli~n upn,ing.. 11 had 18 <tudr•JI.< on rropc•nmg

\ny nf !he honw-deanm~: Jli'O· I'l'dtu C< usi>rt on other 2ood l'nt·· ''"" IHH k a< 11 elt or bett~r on n) l11n tarp~tmg_

F11 "'· t ilrt_1 l' gt•nrt ~ll rult·" ron· <'l'l'llln~ 'Pili- and a<'('id~n', -·t :Jk• pl'nmpt act ion; im·

mr<hatP <.'are "'~' ('~ time and trm1b'r:

.. -,('l':l!le. hlol or <Oak 11p thr <pi'! ll'1ll!! 11 ... -~:{·. (·Iran r:t~~ ot' a u·lil'io ... p r.poll!.!f'l.

-ton. Ill' lhr arc.~ of lhr 'l'i'l. ,. o ': trn:n th .... rdges to" ard I hi' eenlre \!I -tam- hill~ a lendcncl' In

het llillt• more permanent · tl1r lon~cr tlwy stand. Al<o, colo•·· l<'•s l,q.hd< li'•~ smnt• drinks-or annn·tl, m· hahy accidenls-ilr-1 f']op colo,· nn slandm~. So blot llfl fh.' !iqmd as soon as ~·ou ran.

l'tull iuite. l'ola, ~~~- m111l. <:ll!11 • ~ras..; ... tain and similar 'lam, ,trr t·r;dill· remo1cn with a di:utc• 'olution of a detergent. Di,•ol\1• a l<'aspoonful of deter· gent 'not <nap 1 in a tllp of luke· 1'. ;nm 11 at,,,. and appl•: il •tlillm~h· In the <pof. Spon~~ lh ~ f:w'·1 d ~II'PLI :uut !'in ... e h\· 1\ t:}h~:! "ith a clean cloth nr 'llOII~t' d.l'lltWnrd I\ ilh J-I~C· \',~l"P1 \',~ttp· On· un ll\"cec:-:

mni··l11rP 11 ilh li''lll'< or eloth' Jr.'; • hnth 11 ;t-hab'r and prr­

m:t>ll'nt ·, n\U•Ianl. merrhtno· tl1I'Oil";(' ::~n i -. milat anti.sPntic~.

"o'lr" nncl h1oo·l. 'I' r1ihtain mall'' •at, til~l ;H t l1k• rh·e• ,:,., P!"lll( 1'' ...... p~·u1rnt 1 t'tl'atnwnt '' 11h rll''t'l',!.:('lll :md \\.J!Pr' wi;\ ''li'lt:-:,1/t' HI~\ lO:u .. ch:ln':P FO!' lj~L~ ,. Pf' nr · ... Ja;n !br ... J;.J!'.;; or (I

nt n P ~ fJnt!l r.l).! c:ranr:r m;~~ hr I P0\111'' d

l'O'-m"llf'l\ o;.hoe noJi,h. t"f.'l\'O'l

riH"\\ltl'! ~lllll ;tnd ,Ql r:.~~· roor! ... -'II(' h(' .. f I'P!llO\ rd \\ ifli (l h011 't1•

holrl ~nnt remm rr or d1 ~ ·rl•an­in~ <nh·cnl

\'v!on ca"nrl fihrr, are tou~h an~ clmahl~ Thr\' ran hr ·-cruhlnl 11 it h ::oocl drtrr~ent' and snol' l an hr rr'1JO\ eel with .. ,,,. of lh• a1 ml:1hlr homr-l'lcan· m:: c:nh{'nl' ,, ithn.tl rt1 ar of chma'li'H: lhr ftbn•' Thi< fart alon~ neconnt< for the incrra<in~ tr- • ,,f nylon cam~ling in storr·, ni::bt club<, rest3nrant<, hole!~ ad homr<. 1

Onp further noint about all •!ood carnPI<. Thei·· backing I• · •na'•th· or iutr-11 fllw~ that will •hn~k if P,oosrd to e'<crssh·e moistli''r 'il'lon 11 on't shrink Rut it i; important 1o ~uard ~~ain•t too much Emtict in yonr l'lt-anin~ <oh1tion 1o nre1en! any da1P~~~ that mi~l:l nthenyi<• haonrn to ll•r l'arpet backint: :hrnugh <h11nka~r

If I'OU l'r n n" of I h P man1 \tnr; icans 1nak111~ a hrs1 t 11p lo

J:uropt• 111t. ,p,·m~. rem~mher · thai ElliOPe~u lwatin~ i< not tik~ our• ~.I en •11 sprin!(. IOU.ll need \\arm elollw~ anrl. c~n~un1r, a < Ullp!e nl wool ,·,mlt~an<.

Tho! little kettle, simmering ;tenth· on the range, ~ings a wng or c~nne<l condensed s 0 u p. Diluted 111th milk or w.ale•·. 11 ,,•nds thron,!!h the mr an aroma hm c1 to IJrat. Ladle <ome IIllo -onp holl'ls or mu~, lor a ' ket:le qn1<!i" sla11 on an" nwvl flo!l out the cracker ·han·d ',lith its generous snpply of em<·k1••·s. Dtg deep Pull out a han<lful­tlcrfr,·t partnc1 s for the soup \ ou 101 r ,o llllll'h.

Ca:111ed soup r1nd rt :1Lh. •r Lllll> hi11atlOLh ;we cxt1cmely popdlal' These go stc::d~"

SOl'P Cream of ~lushruom Chicken Ve~clablr (,rccn 1>ea wtth Ham ~lmeslrone

Old·fasl11oned \'rgetah·,, '' 1lh Beef

Turkey :o\oodle Tomlllo Old·Faollionecl Tomato lllc'P Cream or \'r·:c: able

CR.\CKERS Tri,cuit '1\'aten Pol ato Cracker~ O~·strr Crackers Ptna Ci'ackers \\'Ileal Thin• i'lwc<r Cral'l.ers \'P~C'tahlP Thms R!llt<'l' Thins Prettl''' Th~·:-.e ~OIL!> eumbm:1t•nt,,

pli!s 1 - m;tke <ol'd lut. crackers. Inn·

SE.\GOI;o.;G SOLI'

- 1 llilh

('omhme 1 can '1111: oun< r' nt'l 11Pi~nt• clam ch<lll'lll'i \1 1\h 1 l[lJl 110 fluid OUil((">~ COlld~n<.:Pd ("T \_1 J nl Of C(>!C'r~· l.i.(l\1!1 111 StlLJCe~

fl<lll ·\drl 2 <11'1)1 (':Ill< tmlk Ill'

\1 a!t't' lll•al: "t1r 1111'.1 anti then \lakr- 4 lo 6 sen 111'"'

SOl'T' C\S \DI.\'\ \ ('omhinr 1 l'.m '\Ill, fi.t•cl

oun' l' f t ondel,"t)o•l tllr!,t·: nood:t• •O'IP, 1 can •tO', fluid oun1 I''' ronclensed vrgetahlr soup. and 112 soun r.an... water in ... aure· piln. Heat: stir now and lil:n ~lakes 4 se1·nng<.

SOl'P C1. \HIS :'\0 Sl: \SOS So 1 er>nlile is soup a' an ,Jp·

rwiizer. sntH k, :111d eookm~ lll· ~l'ediem, that it know' no ~L·a­son. And did )'ou know thai a •·a•·uum bottle of soup often finds it,elf going

to 5chool or work on winter 1\eek-ends to 4-IT club meetings to pools and beach~<

('OOK IT 1!\' A Sl\JLLF.T In answer to m;m~· reque .• t­

receh t>d from unr Home Econo­mist friends. r<~~h is,;ne w11! fca· 1ure. "wrap around menus" -di<hes made entirely top-of· ran;e. in the o1~n. or 11ith ~ small appliance.

You'll he plra<rd with the''' elPctnc sk11lcl menu< 3nrl • C·

l ~ 1)('10.

srPrt-:n \T stx smrunrr Wein~r Chili Green Sa1a1i wnh P.ipr Oli1 r• Stewed .\prirot' ',\ 1th Lrmon

\U:I:->t:R CIIII.T

The Look Of Fashions From 'Big D' Prehra1 l'O\ererl rlcctrir s\..11·

let to :120 drgrer• F. · :1:10 de· ~re~s F ~!ell 2 tahl<><poons hut· ter or marglrinr. .\rlrl 1, pound weiners, cut Ill ,,.inch pier"'· '' cup choppect onion. 2 tablespoon• chopped gdeen pepper. and '' tf~Spoon chili powder: cook un· til weiners are brown. sl;r oft~n Lower temperature to 220 dr-

, grees F . 240 degree< F' . Add 2 fans '20 ounces each' kHin~,. beans. drained. 1 can !10 fhud

1

· ounces l condensed tomato soup .. ' 1 teaspoon dnegan. and •, tea-, , spoon Wort-e!tershire fo• e•·:

cook 12 to l!i minute<. ~Iii once' or twice. ~~a~tes 4 to fi sen ings.

SEI,ECTIOS'S FOR TUF. SKJLJ,ET

~ear Ea~t ~ll'alballs G1·een Beans Colrslnw Skillet Baked .~pplrs

C't·eam S'E:'IR EAST :\tEATB,\1.1.5 Combine 1 pound ground heel.

•:. cup fine orv bread crumb•. 2

I tablespoons milk, and ·~ tea· spoon salt. Shape into IR meal· balls: set aside. Pt·eh~at cover­

: E>d electric skill~! to 340 <1cgnees F. ~felt 2 table<poons shorten· ing Brown meatballs and 1 can !4 ounces\ sliced mushroom>. drained Reduce temperaturr

1 to ~iO degrE>es F. • 2~0 degrees • F. Drain of! PXCess f1t. Pour

I in 1 ctm 1101, nuid ounces J l'On· densed onion soup and I cup

I water. When boilin!( starts.

1 slowly add 12 cup ricb·c m1 ~ki!J0~ i 1 sure it is col'ere~ ~- 1qu1 . :

Co•·er boil ~ently about 2.i min·' utcs nt' until ric" is tender. Stir now and then. Makes 6 sen·in~s

}'a;.bioas by Dallus designers offer 1 girl everything she might want, from Suit with a neal, straight little jacket (center) is in Uallan silk, is lined In fluffy ruffles to the predse tailerinl that many American womea favor. Glnl· sluk. A Miller· Cupaloli design, it has yoke banding which ends in soft tie. The - i lla• checks In (lert) Ia &hi~ little lirl dress with pinafore top and tiered llklrt timeless Chane! look Is interpreted (rigbtl by Justin 1\lcCarthy in his three- . A sound rule or fashion always, eqed In llally rlcknct:. Tllere'a a matchiDI aliDshade for this Jo JIIDior deal1n. · piece costume. Straight jacket tops brald·trlmmed overblouse 'lind pleated skirt 1 is to buy the very best you be-an '

1 afford. Don't succumb to ar-BY GAILE DUGAS I the dress with the tiered and with emb!'Oider)' and tucks. 1 with eyelet embroidery 'and lace I Dallas designers have used two: gains or markdowns. just ror t_he'

DALLAS-I NEAl-Deep In the ruffled skirt, in the collections. !'•, •:' the ·classic .shirtwaist 1 for a really feminine look. More prime color favorites, beige an~ sake of a b a~ g a' n. Quality 1 lleart of Dallas, fashion colors I But there's a Jot of excitement dress has blossomed fGrth with; of these show up in pastel colors white, in combination. There. counts, both w1th yourself and· are subtle, ehecks are big and, o\'er big checks done in lexturt>d ,: t.·•mmmg~ this year. Far than appear in the black or white 1 two team up in sfripes. Beige with othe1·s. sweet, and ruffled, Bardot-type weaves. over colton sulls with from being the neatly tailored fal'ored in seasons past. I ~enerally are lighter here and 1!111hams are going slrong. ~ d1·essmaker to u cItes, over blg number of the past, it ha~ turned But black and white cbmbina·: lean to the chamJlagne shades. Pale green is a pretty spring

Tllere )I no single "look" 5tem- sleeves and enormou~ white 1 llirly-girly, too. Some shirlwaisl5 lions are slmng !n the prints fm· Ivory and ~old are !hP two ex- eolo1·. Trv il in a ca<hmere mini from the Dall811 collection~. 'linen collal'5. What'~ know~· as' and sleeveless, have V neckline< which Dallas is famous. There lrenws of this school of coloring · ardigan. 'm a 1 r hi n ~ pullo1er Tile elas,sie Chane! look is re-' the patio dress in Dallas •the· anrt tots of lace or lace insertion are black and 1\hile plaids as ·u;d l:nlh are u ~-1 r:~··~r ~lo,·r~ :md pleat'" <~i:-1 This is thr fleeted right nrxt door to the sun dres.1 el.~ewhere) i.~ back in r.< I rim. w_.,l r.nd. nf com·,~. thr ~i<:nl ''1· in company 11 ilh b•as.> or 1t•·io t.llal c·1 ··a I c s the tn1ical. 1ult with the cropped jacket and, full force this year, all done up: Sheath dresses, too, are g1·aced checks in the .same combmation.' b1onze. Amencan look. l

Vocal selcct.on, h~ sirs. \\' aJtcrnoon. 0<1klcy ancl :\lios Brenda rur-1 hN• aceompauicd on the Plililll HR!IlGt: Si:SSIOS . h.1 ~Jrs E ~lawt·r ~deled ~real· The St. John's Uuplicalc (!!Pr~ I; 1 o 1 h~ cnj n~ nH"nl vf the 11 111 he holding a Hnd;!c Sc~­. ::dwrn:·!. ~a\'e a \ole ol tf1:,n!·-.. ~Jon al 7.00 p.m. ~aturday at ·., }jr \l'yalt lor his I'X~I'ilrnl the :"'',\[oundland Hotel. Pt;,o· t1L.1.s atHI commentar:. .\ltt:"r a <.ct o!~ are m a1d of ti;e Rc'd .-i10r1 bu'llll'>< period 1h1• mel'l· l'ro:;.

nn: enrRru. l'HE rnoss ,\SIJ THE PUBLIC

I'OXS('IEXU:

1\Y 'rilE Ill;\', Ell\11:\ T, D.\IILHERG, D. B.

II the Chn>tlan 1·hurclt '' In he true lo the ~ood 11.!\\... of t.od 111

.lesus Cht·bt il 11111.-l lro1n llll:r lu tune .peak n!tt holdly on ·ollie IJI the ~rc~t Hlc-uud-dedth , ...... u ... ·co of our timr.

We mtikC a seriouc.; mi ... t~lke 1t 11 r think that .les't' conlin~d hun self onl\ to such 111Giler, a· pt'il~cr. ~omlort. pr~ll' ol mmcl. and I he lite 1'\ crl.hllll.; II 1• 1 l'lh' that these <~>P<'l I, of ht' nH.~ ..... a'!e Ionm \ar~l' 111 the t'OO­

'enl of thr tol\t' :zu-.pe' .· .\lat· tht'\1. ~lad •. Luk•' atl'l .Jolm \'.<' \\OUld not 11~\( 1 it o!llCJ\\1'-e

1\'hu •' there lh,ll h:h not ,rood m nerd of ._IH h words 41" · rny Sl!ls IJc fOJ ,1\'l'n thnp ' illld "LC1 no! \flllr [}Catt IH• 1 iltth!t'd \t'

ll"iit;,e lit 1;od. iJ!'htrc a!'o m mr···:

Thf ~l· :tl"r J'lllllOt'lat \\old" tc, Ill' ('!l ... hr:n<'d m 1hr !Hdll.tll he:tr: !Otfl\(~r Tht tt•lt~tun o 1 h ... .~ ... \\ tli :1\\\ a! .. he ;1 ... u,ll eme·~ PC I·

'Ollill ta11h. Hut tt ha. ~:.. pttbile 1 onnol a

tum~ nl~o ThP Ltllt{' \dHI .... .~\­

or l'illlll'il"• <nld pn•al'iler' · II h~ don't ) ou <1~; o11t .ol nolttic', ptOOf)mtc .... and JI\1Prt1~1-

lional alia1r< and ,tick to lllf' ~o-r,· I''" :m, a 'cry lumte·l 1 1ew of the Chi I•\.

m: IS Rf.PE \TI:I:(~ TilE :mst.\KE ol .-\doll lht'"1. ,.·ho ,,uri lo P~'ior \lnrtln '\it•moel·

to ... m :thnnl tlH.'!'Ie i'·"ucs w;~:-, 11 h;u · miul'rdlcd lu, oppoil!'lll;,., 1111h 1he r~suh that they delh~1·· od him up to Pilate on the 1 ha•·~r that he 11 '" a sub1 er~h e p:o!l1n;: the 01 crthWII of ('ae.,ar.

I' I; FOLI.UWERS FOU.OW· El> IllS 8R,\YE EX.\.'iPJJ:. , .. , 11 e hu• ; m the .Jeru,alem t·ont .. ··pn<·,, uf the Pal'lv church. " dr<.:II!Jt•d in lh~ 1:i! h chapter

nl the boo~ of .\<1<. a carefully worded repurl that "as adnJltcd hr lhc churl'h lea1el s pres~nl. ·a dcfind four important is·

s,j('· :Jlfecting th~· lift' of the t 11.!1'lh: 1he >P\ -tandarcfs of lhiJ IH·\\ taltn Jt .. •llPtarv 1 cgulrnion~ and 1h aitillulr toll'arrl idu!atr:, ;t ... 'H-\1 as !O\\atds 1:1'2- arlmi ... ,:on nl <.;enll.t'< into thr d111rch l'.ill\Oitl oh>t'l'l ;~nee of I h.e :.Io":-1\l: Ia\\

Tow \\P ar(' ·~·mnh·•l In "·':0· · ·~ ,• ·:~.'1 C' l'tn• ... pt,.Jtttai mrtt·

l~"r'- ·· Tt ~1r' P.t.t the' \\f'f(• th.· 11o.:'· dr:1dlt'd p;111h1'. i•<Ue, of l :L•' tLl\

It ""' h•.C.lll•C till'"''"' T~'lil· 111 ·nt l"!ui .. tr~JI' ... ;::!!?.dh- l"i .. kPd il't'lt r.anw :tnd n•J')Ilt;fio,1 fnr •ho s:Jk<· nl .lrsu< l'hri•t lhn' '.\O

, \{' O':t hentr:J,!!e Of telt~l(tll\

hber! \ tod 1'

I ;oci fut ht1l th(lt \\ C' -.;honici hP t'i:lilldl'd ~~dill ill ih~ )'Ok{' Of.

llondagr 11 :wn fo1· freedom dirl l'hn·1 m;•ke II' tree. <.:hn,tians ni th~ "Oth cQtll n· ~re calld up· on to 'Jlcak Ill the .•am~ holcl, o

nn~mg tonr:< «s did the he· l1e1 ers in the 1 ,[ century.

lcr when tl•e hiler p· •lr -'ed Such que::-tlon< a< worlcl peale, a~am,t Bitler', trealnwnt u! lhe lllli1·er<al d•-armamenl, the end· .lrw'. "You tnke care of your in~ of the homll tests. an·! th~ own hu<me"" 11 hich is gel! in~ l'ftllallty or ull ra<'e< he fore God, p~o!'lle into hea\cn and I will are 1he l!fr and death issnrs of take cme of people while they our ;:eneration are her{' on earth." Did~lor' al\1 ars 11 ani thr

ll\era~t) citlll1l1 to lc:ne thing- ... lo the rxpcrh. polittc~l. m1litar~ or otht•l'll ise But Clm•tianit1· tre·l[< \1 i!h rc'rpct lhl' \ iCI" of I he common man

TIIF: Cllt:RCII D.\Rf. :>;OT BF. SI:\IPLY THE F. CliO of the· l'cnta~on. the state departmcnl, !hn Clwmher of Commerce, the lalmr union•. o;· :mv other ~roup or in,tltution. It · must weak 1\ llh a I'OICC Of lh 0~ n-a I'OICP'

that \\II: h;11·e in 11 the anlhuri· 1'1\1\C mc•'age of lh~ Word of·

If II·~ stud;· 1]11• :\1'11 Tf's\a· nwnt 1nlelligenlh lie ,hal] fmd I hat •.1 hat real!~ '<'Ill .ll'•lh tn th(' uo."" \\.1~ !11 ... out-.pokpn l;od \ t''\\ ... on publ:c ;Jfftur .. Amon~ tbc:f' \\l'IP tllf• qu ......

tum" (oncrrnin;:- thf' lt'\' 1 1

Samaritdn :-of'~n::;..;ltton J ...... ;w, liw p;1~ mcnl of thr temple 1;1\ 'ilt' olht'l'l a nee of the Sahlwth ia11 · .. the hmitat.ons on lhr lio•nan l un~.:rnpt ion :~ ,\ .... rtnd 1 h ,.. <:atu< of lhP Genliles 111 I h r km~dom ot (;od

What 1he ~lan nl t;d'ilec·

(), Hatolr\ f"onr.t' phJPip .. , ''"('· lt•nih :·t•t1rcrl p;.t .. :or uf thr f•• ... f 11.1~\J ... \ Chntl'h of ( ~('\ rJ,,•!d, \\ ih ("l)mu\('tr<·. n;:\11 in <.,~I 1 11~

In " nun: ·ll'l>: confNrnce 111 ihr

II hen .le·ll' I old In· fn:lo1• en · 1h.rt tht·, 11en• to he the il~ht of·· l he "ori<l he old not me~ n 1 h~L the) he the t~•l l1~ht'''

Big in pride and inside-the nimble 1960 Tau nus

11' u wlrrlwr! S ,u·h r 'nl i 119 rar" .' T\\ o spirited stat ion "agou~ anci three ~leek ~edan~. e1·ery one brautifully crafted itt Germany. All-welded unit eons! ruction gi \'es you extra saiPI y-lct~ tall people J(t>\ in without a ~qiWPZP. Ask) our neighbourhood Taunus dealer fur a gas-~a,·ing tlts· l'U\cry dm·e soon .. Just tell him what you warrt.: ehoo,r from two wagons and three sedans with the American gear­shift you're u,etlto.

Sf]J-.: rGL'R TAL'.\TS DEALER THIS WBEK

MUNN MOTORS LTD. ~~ACKMARSH ROAD ST. JOHN'S

DIAL 94061 {5 lines)

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8 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFlO., FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1960

had a flourishing carrying would seem to lie and that i~ 1 in inwrm•ing their economy 1 Atlantic region alone. The. FIRST ARRIVAL

Pickersgill Emphasises trade all over the world and I the British West Indies Feder· and raising the income of their' people of lhe Atlantie Pro\'·. ~10.'\TREAL. •CPI- The Em they sold their products all ation and, indeed, the West people the better market we: inecs an: benrin~ their shar(' press or t'rance i.; to be the first over the world. They have ex· Indies -generally. will have for Cannoda and pal'·! of th~ C1nadian contl'ibution. plss·~nget· ves,el to dock in Mont­actly the same geographical I am one of those who be· ticularly [or the Atlantic re-' and it is a large one, to ll1e real thi~ sea;on. The Canadian advantage today that they had lleve that we ought to try to gion. development of the undN·d~·· Padfic liner b due here Aptil 1 nint'ty years ago. Yet little establish a free trade area be- But the West Indies are nol wlopl•d Ilr<•as of the world .. 11ith 6011 pas~~ n.!( e rs. The u~e Is being made of that geo- tween Canada and the British the only area in whirh trH1le Bill tlw :\llantie I'P!(iun i' rr~i~httr ~lanc·h~:oter :\Iiller un­p;raph!cai advantage, Indeed, West Indies Federation and from the Atlantic Pruvinl'e> ( ':llla<la's own undt·r·dl'I'<'IOp· · ll!a:bl 12 pa""ng~rs h~rP ~larch progress seemed to be In re· that we should ~eck to bring should be stimulated. The 1·~- <'tl an•a. Tlw dt·lelopm<·nt uf ::o. hut tl1e ~lll)ll't•.>s will h~ the verse when the Canadian Na- the West Indian Federation moval of dollar r.-strietioHs til~ .\tl:tlllk n·~itJJl ;, ~~~ w• lir,.l :111-pa,.,,•ng:·r '''''"'' to ar­tlonal West Indies fleet dlsap· within the Canadian monetary should re-up~n maH_v C'<>Ju · ti1"'~1 task culti11~. tur till· •l' 1w1•

Atlantic Provinces' Place In The Economy Of Canada peared a year or two ago. Ur· system, just as Nt!wfouudl:mtl uwuwralth markets :wu Latiu ,,li,·"tiuu uf uaLiuud pulil'i1·'· i

gent study should be given to was In that system long bef(lrc . Alll~l'i<·a slwul<l al:;u u~ " 1<-r the possibility of lot•ating t!X- Confederation. \\Jureo\'er, im , tile til-ld f••r II••· ll<-l'l'\OIJIIL< 111

-Contlllued from Thursday'• lasue be satisfied to leave the flsller·l plication of capital will not .J>OL'!.Induslries in the Atl:mlic J>ortanl though it is tu providt• • or trad•· with :\lle~nti<·l"<~H~tla. da1·" ;d""'t II"· ,,.., , .• :1·. '" men with the low Incomes I come from privati' ~ourccs :. Provim·es ln the hope of reviv· l'cunumit ail1 to Asia and .'\lri- 1 1 lwlit·w llw mo>L 11rg•·ill ·. <'l·~·l>··:,t•· u,.. l'<'llll'•"u·!· "' ·t'u,,.

U tariff protection, which Is tbey now have. But the fish·. alum>, and there is tiLl' most ur· 1 ing both the old l'al'rying trade I •·a. it would be an even gre;~ter 1 pruhil'm of national '"''."''•P t. ,;'"r:il '"" ,,., ''" , ... ,".·' I:'"" . 1 form of governmental in~er· lng industry cannot give a dt>·; gent IIPrd for a national plan 1 and ~et·ondary t>xport from: advantage to Canarta to pro·· menL in l'~nada torla.'· i' t:w "'''\'. S<~rl'i:: lilt· l)i'•t wac· "f .. \'cntion In the economy, is JUS·. rent Canadian ~tandard of; for the int('gratrd drl'clnpmrnt i this area. 1 viM that kind or aid for un· 1 prohkm or l'ai,ing tilt· lt•\f'! of :Ill "'"uld bt• '" 1:.'"' ~''''!".'"

'tif!cd in order to dt~·e!op a~d: livin~: to the ri>hennrn with·' of the Canadian Atlantic fish- I ThPre is om' rl'gion with an I derdei"PiopNI arras to thr 1 e•·onomil' :wth it.v and llw lr>l'cl p·;-,;bi<• ,t,·p lo mak" ·'"''" maintain stcondary tnrl~strJe~ ·out a massil'e application or, rt·~· in thr firlrls of prorlul'tion,' rt•onnmy romplrmrntary to \\'r.<t (ndirs F'Nll'l'alinn. Thr nf illl'lllll!' ol thl' .\llantic·l'r11\· thai llw proplr ": tlH·.•<' tnur

_in Canada, 'urel~ thcrr t~ .111!'1 capital to thr inrlustr)·. whi<'h prorrssin~ and markrtin::. ; the rr·onomv of Canada whrrr 1 morr wr ran no to link tlw' inl'"' In an ,,,.,·~rtahl<' t·an.1· prol'inr•'' IJ)· :%· ll'ill 11;,-,r

· a~_~tron,;: an argumP~I for ~OI'· ~will ;:rratl,\' lnr1·rase thr. nnt-. At thr timr or ('onfrrlrra- 1 thr ~rratr~i immrdiatr oppnr- Wr•t )nrlir~ rln>rly with ('~n • rli~n >lanfi;ll'li. That rannnl "'l""t rco-nn "1111 till' rr-l'l~nl, . r~nmrnt.almterv('.nhnn to ~rr put per man. That mas•·i\'1' ap-' linn, thr '11al'itime Pt·o,-inrP~' tunitirs for thr ~trowth traclP.: aria anrl to takp "thr initiatil'r hr rlonr h.' lhr p('lfplr of th<· of l11c nllwr ' 1"' Jll'lli'IIH·r•, '"

that tht d••trihutton nf tho~r i -- . . . . --- ---- ------·-- ... ___________ . __ .. __________ __ ~Pcnndar~· indu~tri~ i' in thr i iJitrrr~t rtf all put~ of the na- · tinn and nnl ju~t nnr nr two J:l'n~raphirally favourl'd re· J:ion~. ·\'ow thtre are twn di'Ykl'~'

which have been sugge5led fnr · the stimulation of secondary 1

industry in the Atlantic prov· i incas One of these was sug·; •ested by the Gordon Com~liS·j sion. and it was a capital Grants program which would have the deliberate purpose of diyerting pu bile capital into this region in order to stimu· late economk growth and therebY to reduce the lack of I balance between the Atlantic 1 region and other parts of Canada .

The other de,1ce Is one "'hich ha~ been used. 'll'ith ~omr success. in the 'l.!nited ; Kingdom; and that !~ the pro· 1

,.i~inn of fiscal incentive~ _to tbf' location of new industr~es in areas where old industr~e5 are declining. and where tn· dtl~trial de,·tlopment would be a -long term advantage, but : where the sbnrt tf'rm prospect· : i-.e gain is not great enough; tci attract risk rapital unle~s: there i> some sperial advan· ; tage to compens.atP for the geographical d!sad,·anta-ge . B~th these de,·ices should be <'Cnsiderrd urgently, because bc•th will probably be needed to give the stimulus tn eco· nomic de,·elopment and to the J(rowth of healthy secondary , industries v:hich. once well! rstablished. could probab~:; j rom?ete on an equal basts 1

with industries In other parts of canada, particularly if the transpGrtation problem is also solved.

S'DC<'ial measure5 are also needed. and needed desperate· ly. to deal with the two oldest indu~tries of the Atlantic area, coal mining and the fishery.

In the past. coal mining made a larger contribution to the ecollOmy of '!\ova Sco!la than any other Industry. Un· happily coal mining in Nova Scotia and elsewhere in the world has been a declining In· dustry. The situation of ~e \'ova Scotia mines Is growmg ~mrse ~ach year and in the past three years t~e decli~e has accelerated rapidly. Un· fortunately. special measures ha ,.e not yet been taken to promntl' the de\'E'I~pmt>nt of •erondarv industries Ill t.hf' f

inain r<:lal mining a~Pas of 1

cape Brl'tnn. Pictou and Cum· 1

~rland Counties wherP . a 1

t.rained !about f.orrP IS 3\'1111· f

a hit tor alternall\'1' .work. 1l 1S I not t.no \al-E' to do tht~ now, but ~rti'ln should bP taken And l tak!'n urgrnt.ly. That doe~ nol 1

· n11'an that coal mining should di!a['lp'.ar. There should be a point at which the indu~try t"ould he stabilized and sureh· i that point has arrived. i ~fany millions of dollars

ha,·e been poured Into subven· tion rrom the Federal Treas· ury to reduce the cost of Nova Scotia coal so that it would be competitive with American coal in Montreal and Eastern Ontario markets, and there is a talk of send in&: Nova Scotia coal to ontario to develop electric power. But surely it would be better to use the· coal to develop power in :>;ova Scotia. And it should be worth trying subventions on the scale required to make coal competitive in :\lontreal and to lllarantee them o~er a p~r· ind of ~·ears to 1ndustr1~S which would use the coal m thP. Atlantic Prm·ince~. Such ~llh\·cntion~ woulll ro~t the ;\a· t1onal Trea~ury 111'1 morf' at'ri 1

, :; . > ,.ould N! lmildin; up I hi' M·: <: :;.·,~tk ·rr!'nnn1Y ra.thP.r than 1 ~·~~~:Ui, economy .,; c~ntral C~na- : ; : .• ... And thrr, i~ rP.rtainh· " ;

MotorTrsnd ~magazinee& names corvair

OF THE

--------------------------------1960's "most significant engineering advance"

* corva1r BY CHEVROLET

"Four-wheel independent suspension" • , • "air-cooled alumi­num engine" ... a rear-mounted transaxle "allowing a flatter floor and lower roo(line" ... These are some of the praises heaped upon Corvair by the editors of Motor Trend-thl world's largest general automotive magazine-in announcing their coveted Car-o{-the- Year award. But, unless you've driven a Corvair, you can't appreciate what this engineering achieve­ment means in combining small car economy and ttgility with big car ride and room. Drop down to your Chevrolet dealer's, take a trial drive and judge the Car of the Year for yourself.

LOOK AT ALL THE THINGS CORVAIR GIVES YOU THAT OTHER CARS CAN'T!

PraclicallJ flat Roar • , , front and rear. Room lor your fut, ever. if you are silting in the middle. Who but Corvair remembers your feet?

Fold-down rear seat •.. !hal opPnS 11.6 wbic jr('/ of -'lcraqe .'nace besides wl,a/':. in 1/;e tru11! .. Stc~nd· ard in every model, two- and four· aoor.

TU I!EFI.0.\'1' 'I'K.~\\'l.ER S'l' l':!·:l:t:J-:. Sl l'i1•,w PI

.\hJI:.·!un •('1'·--.·\n t•llurl "ill b1 lt!:!.!P lo rd:n:tt t!W ll'~l\\:~·1' S~"O· 1 "''d. 1rhi<-h '"nk in the ha•·hur hl'l'l' ~Chi :-;umwt•r altf'r l'ilnnin~ un a ro:·t.: .. \ <~in rli\'Pr from \l11nt n·.-1\ \-... m:1~\in~ rt ~:,nTey o( 'hn fl'i-l'.1 >r ))1• ,,,ti-~:~d ~nd proud In hP ( ':J:n;~rli~n.:

.,· ._-~~-·:. ~" f"r a ma~M''" mr.rea~e tn: ;:;~•.. . ~urr.h int" n,w u~e~ for .

1 1;.~ ;~ 'a]. t'·eryone i~ hopi~;.: that· ·; ~· : _. t :Rand Cnmmis~ion wtll pro- t

.. ·;:-ride pirt of the anAw~r to th~ . :. · -Pt'ohltm of the coat mining in·.

.4/nu.5t inslo"l lr'lflt , ••. from !I! airplanc:·t!·re heater. Ynu don't ba,•e to wail fM the engine to ,.-~rm 11!' -Cot:'L·air's healer warms in 30 sc.;onds,

4-wheellndependent ~uapension ... thai givl's P.Ach wheel its own coil ~pring and ita own lmP.e action. RESULT: e. smoother, Dafter ride.

A GENeRAL MOTOR.; 'tAL!IE

•,

du~try. • j t turn now to the fishery. At

the present time, the greRt . fishing areas of the Atlantic coast of Canada, which are amon1 the richest in the world, tre 'being frequented by the flshlnl fleets of every marl· tline nation in Europe, lnelud· lng Russia. The fishermen of

; :- • all these nations can cross tl\e ~,;~;Atlantic and exploit the flsh-1· · ~Y profitably and yet the fish·

erml!n of Canuda, living right ·ht'~ldl' the f(Siu•ry, h:IVI' the I

~ h•w<•st lncllmf's ut' any f!i'Ulll> ' : • • · Ill l'ana11l1tllN. It ts tru~ that I · .. •.· ... 1111 ~:umpl'all uatiuns subsidl' · · , · till' li~hery ih ohl' way or . · ·'.~ > :irwlltt-1'. CnhBJIIlily fur us. s!•V·

~~£';!'·at of them at·e subsidizing ~e fish they are now 5elllng r . tn competillon with l'lsh {rom ~-~:'l.twrr.unrlland ann :\ova ~entia ' .i~ t'1" : ;-.::t:..,•-"1 ('RiliHJi~n

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L~ r;:;J::·. lu Iii: IIUL" ~all 1', e i

•• * *• ** *•* * *···· *' *•. • ·•* ... •*, . •#. ···~ 1\1 * •• ........ •* ........... * •• * • -*•. • . * ••• * .......

No fuuing with antifreeze , .. or water or radiator repairs or "·ater pumps. C.onair's air-cooled en~:inc h•• 001hinM to ~~~ with '•m.

Rear·enalne turtlon .•. that comes with th1 enalne's wei1hl btarinP." down on the rur 'tllhetls. Wh~ be a stick In the mud (or c;now or ~~u~M With ~nythm~ else when you Cllll diK 10 01111 II Wllh Cuh.<tiJ T

Con·air 7011 4-door Sedan - onr of rhc fow~ Cormir tnodcis with Unistnlt Body by Fisher.

Cormir, "Car of !he Year,~' at your fond autlwri::ed Cftcrrul··i rlc~:ta·:~ I _~:A.

_____________________ __...:..........__

THE HICKMAN MOT() RS, LTD . WATF.R STREET ST. JOHN'S . .

--..... =-=--=-----= ... ----.. ~-=-·---~-""""'~ ........-. \','atcll ~ite !:lte•:; ~ililW- Tue~tiay nights OY!!i' Cf3C:·TV, ':heck ~our local paper for lime and listi_ng.=·~=-=·-==---....,.--..... ----. ·._..,.M '

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THI! DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1960 ' . ST. JOHN'S, NFLD.,

, Obituary I P I I

ing authorities on that subject. B d £ T d I • f E I/ ;'II&'::JU ;S

1

1 Bo(CtOwlllionuneddfroSmtpuagdee3)nt ce atro T~c~A!~;~.s~ts :::~~~T~2~8 1

oar 0 ra e . Vadim' s Film. Too SpiCY or . xport l('on~~;,'c:l' ;~.nJ-~W..11 (Continued from page 3) . :Greenwich !\lean Times, Ice (Conlinuerl from pa~e 31 ranking Ci\'il anrl ~.[ilit~ry

BASDRA CHURCHILL I members or the l\lemot·lal a~ kaln a[lefrmtahth Toll'TtAhNeiCtragolnC Patrol Radio Ar~ntia com- w~~·~;;;~~ f~ :i:: ~~.~~~ill~~ in a . Brl.gl.tte's· Ex Laments The Censors l'Cf)l'C5Pilt~tii'CS nf both. roun-Sepl. 26, liMO-Feb,. 19, 1960 University Education Faculty, sm ng o e manus the air waves when, tL'i"' will he in nttenrla.'lr~.

who said the contest was a April 15th 1912 with over 1500 simultaneously on three fre- brief report of the work of the Forty year·; a;:o. lJ.S.·Cana· l cannot sa~·. and I will not say' very close one. lives. The patrol is supported· quencies, Station NIK broad- Board since the annual meet· By ROSETTE HARGROVE ila Geod Will week was (stab· That abe is dead-she is-iust While awaiting the judges under tbe terms of the Inter- casts the latest ice information ing h~ld in February, ~lr. Ru.s· PARIS-(NEA) - That fam Jishcd as a project of Kiwanis

.., · 1 c f the sell eJted several matters m i , • away, · decision Mr. Wyatt gave a nahona on erence on · for Newfoundland Cabot Strait which his organization has, o.us hench export, . t~e sptcy International. It was during

With a cherry smile and a wave brief resume of the alms of Safety of Life at Sea, by six· and Grand Banks' Waters. Dur- used its influence in the best: film, may soon. be hmtt~d to this 11Cck 143 years a;lo <April of the band, · the Youth Service Committee, teen nations of which Canada ing the rest of the day Station Interests or the community 1 home ~onSUJ_IlP~ton. or dtscard·; 28, 1817) that the Rt•>h·Bagot

She hu wandered into an un· which was, he said, to encour- is o1 member. 11~. the "ears" and ''mouth", Additional ferry service and e~ entirely If movi~ producer· : .\greement was signed. a docu-known land, age the boys and girls to SHARE COSTS of the Ice Patrol collects ice, hotel accommodation, provis- drrector R~er Vadim ts. ~or-

1, ment which virtually dimili-

And left ua dreamint~ how v~ry stancl, on their own feet by The cost of the patrol is ap- weather and sea temperature ion ror im,roved facilities re· rectly readmg the handwntmg tarizcd the boundary brtween fair ' expressing themselves. portioned by each n~tio.n's data from ships at sea and pro- latlve to harbour deyelopment on the wall ?f ~res1dent C~ar·l the U.S. and Canada by .call-

It needs must be, since sne He !banked all the news share of the merchant shippmg vides special routing for ships and traffic conditions, ar- tes de Gaulle s Ft!th ~epubhc. ing {or a limitation of :-laval JinJel'l there. media for the publicity given, tonnage within .. the. Ice Patrol on request. From radio infor- rangements for meetings with The 32·year-old Vadun, ~o~ed l'cssels .on the waterwa)·s and

And You-0 you, who the and for the additional cover- area. Long famthar m tlte N~w· mat ion obtained, a plot is main- United States and corporation as the ex-husband of . Br1g1t!e instructing those io.-hi<'h were wildest yeam age of llve and filmed T.V. A foundland area, the OJ"ilanizallon tained at Ice Patrol Headquar- Purchasing Agents, and the Bardo! ~a v:ell as for hts movte deemed necessary to interfere

For the old-time 1tep and the speelal thanks went to the of the International lee Patrol ters of ships' progress as they {ormation of an Economic talents, md1cates that he can in· no wa~· with the pea~eful glad return- lion. Campbell 1\lacpherson, consists of its headquarters .of· cross the ice regions. It is re· Liaison Committee of the go under the moral censorship pa~sage of mcr~hanlmen of

Think of her faring on, as dear Lieut. Governor and Manag· fice at the U.S. Naval StatiOn assuring to a master to know Board to cooperate with the imposed by the government. either countrv. This agreement 111 the love of There, as the lng-Dirertor or The Royal at Arscntia where is also local· the course of his ship is colt· Government authorities to en· "ln Holl~·wood, you know ex· I could be terininated by a. six·

lo\·e of here; Store~. and to Mr. E. Hick· ed .tht! Al.r Detachmen!JI and I stanliy watched and the Inter- sure that :>~ewfoundland ~oods actly how far you can go so I I months notice on thP. p~rt of Think of her still as the same, man of the A. E. Hirkman and Radio Statton, two patr~l cut- I national lc.c Patrol stands ready, and services are to th~ fore, am seriou.sly thinking of going "either signer. It \\'as. thi~

1 sa)·; I Co. Cor ~ponsorlng the out of lers and an ~ceai~ographtc ~es- to warn htm 11 hts shtp stands I particularly with regard to bU~· to work there if things get I document which made P.osslble She is not dead-she is just town guests. sel. Commencmg m ear~y feb- into danger. 1 !ness affecting the Province worse here," he says, , the 3000 mile unfortified hor-

away! Dr. Allain Frecker, Minis· ruary, a watchful eye ts kept Ice conditions the patrol must: and the welfa~e of its people. Vadim primarily is disatisfied I der between the two countries ter of Education, then ga,·e a over the waters to the east of contend with, vary drastically with the government's treatment · which has ne\·er been violated.

On Friday February 19, 1960. ~hort address on hls recent ~ewfoundland f~r .the firSt from year to year. Of the fif. Before leaving, members of of his film, "Les Liaisons Dan-. . . the sudden and tragic news of 1 trip to Carol L~ke, which, he I s1gns of ap~roachm~ Jce and to teen to lwenty thousand ice. the :'\ewfoun~land Boar~ ~f r.ereuses." (Dangerous Affairs) : A hght coat of ~hell~r on. parch-the death. by drowning, of I said, compared 111 comfort and sound the signal whtch formally bergs which are carved annually Trade attendtng la~t mgh.t ~ which wu almost banned by I \' ADIM· Wh t 1 . 1 f ~.! ment lampshades. Will not only Sandra Churchill, daughter of modern con~·enience wlth _anY com~ences the se.asons patrol. trom Greenland glaciers, an n~eeti!'g were .shown a. spectal the censors and has failed to ' · a e se 1 ~ e 1•

1

shade but make It spot . .rroof. Leslie and Louise Churchill modern mlhtary base in !llew·[Archc lee was first detected average fioure of about 400 sur- 1 U.K. mformatwn film m tech·, receive a French export license.· 1 r 1 it d l f" d . h , Dust and flim can he remo1eil flashed over the wires and th~ foundland. . this year at Bel~e Isle on ~larch vi\'e the ~three year jour.Ley · nicolour entitled: "Bristol-', The show is packing the custom-: re 3, 11~ Y . ar 0 ,

0 til . }" 1 ~ ; with a damp rlolh. The ~hellae radio from Labrador and the The winner, Harold Coates, third. To date Jl has advanced alonu the Greenland and cana· Port of many Trades.'' Apart, ers into French movie houses 1 llP\Ild rance. d t.e rde~_hon h. should bP thm enou~h to brush on

' , d t t" f I t B J' l I d d ~ . . f. . t t . th .· . " . . . cou not un erst an t e ~I· ·t· If c·n<sa,·v .,, •houl• news certainh· came as a great recel\'e a grea ova ton rom a most o acca 1esu san an 1 d.ian Arctic coasts to drift south 1om 111 eres m e surptism., i The film as well as other d b h .. 1 : easi ~. ne . ._ . , , . " •hock to ti:: large number of I members of Rotary. and when extends seaward for fifty miles. i of the 48th parallel of latitude diver~ity of artil·ity In Bristol. avant.guarde productions also ~~_llte., an (~ 1. e l' :angero~1.'. be diluted wtth den~t?red al· friend• who knew her in life asked by CJO:'\'s Bob Lewis, The ice boundar~· consists most- (roll• ·hly that uf Cape st. Fran- -a port handling o\·er seven 'has suffered at the hands of 50 1 .urs . "ras hi aFtift h( HR 1101

1 r1 ~ !· i coho[ or methylated spmt~. · ' if T ,, d h' . . ld f 1 · f 1 b · 1 • o. . .. . ·11 . t r . ar 1 • cue any o t e •1 t epu J rc s . ·· · --not to talk ol her dear parents I . . ma P; IS ~et' ous, sa ' ly o oose strmgs o s o tee 'ct>). Uus ugure ts the number mt ron ons o cargo a ~e - 'many Jacques Pterres, and in<lilutions .-- - -- - - -- - .. '!i

who now mourn her all too 1 rather candLdl)', Jt had, a bit. but north and west of thl' ; by which the Ice Patrol mea· memhe1·s :were moved by 1·er· ' Pauls, wbo are mayors or pro- .. ·"\\"h . · 1 ft th ,,. h k I c l 0 R : · ti I udden and tra"ic passilli' I He was pleased about going to Funks it is close packed and, sures the se\·erity of an "Ice· bal and pictoL·al references to 'vincial French communities " I aht tsf r d en,. e as ~ I 0 . t

" ,. 1 Ott d " 1 t - x •f dl d' h' t ·. 1 • , . . · on y I e ree om o portr.tl 1 Born Sept. 26. 1940 •. Sandra tawa. ank wtas Dalnfx obusk ~ beav)'. berg year". In 19a8 only one i. e~ t~un a~.ths tths ortf!a a> 'Thts censorshtp never would: relations hetween men and wo- I . . I

ChuiTbill got her early edu- ge a crac a e en a eJ C \FT berg was sighted south of the· soc La ton 111 e amous have happened under the d h · '· abo t T 29 " ALSO t'SE AIR R, . . . 1 w t c t p t hiclt ld . . . men an even t at seems en- 1 comes a..

cation at the Prince of Wales ~ erm · "line", wnereas last year, 1n I es 0.un ry 0~ -w 0 1 Fourth Republic, Vad1m lament-: dangered now •• . 1: College where after 5 ~·ears, ~hen asked if he thought •·or aerial search Ice Palrol11959, the count was 691 of though tl ls. ca.mes on a pro- · ed. I "F h · 1 . b 1 Burrouns TEN KEY she graduated' from Grade XI' :\'ewfoundlanders were really I use· planes of the US Coast 1 which the majority drifted onto· gresslve trade m the full rea-l Vadim'• contr01·ersial film Is' k ranfce 1 as a wal~s f~cn 1 511

I Ph"si•all fit he said "Yes • · · I 11· t' that "th kev to the I 1 nown or ter compete re~· • dd' h' at the age of 16 years in 19~7. . ' .. ', Y ' , ' 1 Gua~d Air Detachment at Ar·l or close by. the coas~ .of t~e tza ton e . · < • based on a 19th. Century ~ovel: dom regarding all forms hf · 3 mg mac tniS She then went to the :\lemortall ~Jr. I m afraid I do. genUa. Those Douglas DC4 a1r· Avalon Pemnsula arrmng tn' success 1~f a prortth rs ba. !!d 0

1111

1

1

of debauchery. The book IS re·. creative art \\'here o·h where .. ., • · · · - 1 · · · d b L 'I 1 the qua tty o e sernce d d 1 .· b i · • • • '••n GIAY t: nn·emty tn 1958 . and 1959,. :\Jr. Wyatt then awarded the craft pamted a brtlhant. oran~e

1 near reco~ num ers. as.t "ay, •i ed ,, gar e a.• a c as,tc Y man~·. 1 do we >land if France is gotn•( • 11 N •

where she was studymg for her, Shield to :\lr. Coates. whlrh and whtte are fanuhar stghls tni2Eith 200 tcebergs were stghted I pro~ d · Updated by Vadim, the mo\'te, to follow the lead of purita•Jical 1'1 1 Degree in Education to further, is held by his st•hool 01·er the Newfoundland skies on rescue I in llonavista Bay and in June I incl~des several nude scenes es-: countri.es?" ftt her for her chosen pro.tes-: ~·rnr, and presented the run· and lee Patrol Inisslons .. They bergs reac.hed the headwat.ers I . . . . senltal to the ~ory. 1

sion, that of School-Teachmg.l ners up with prizes. are permanently based 111 Ar-. of Placen\la Bay for the ftrst1 I.ooklllg ch.Ic. If you tra\'el a. "I am sure It would pass! DROP DIVORCE SUIT In order to get some practical • gentia, and roam the waters he-! recorded occasion. The 1960 i great .deal tsn t easr. ~ut rt an~· American censorship board 1 :'lEW YORK, , AP '-A dil·orce experience that she needed, • I tween the Grand Banks and 1 seusun has commenced some·; helps If you keep clothes stmple, ·if I eut out a couple of the [suit by ~frs. Tina Onas~i~ was la;t September she went Teach- I FISHERIES REVIEW Belle Isle searching as much as 1 what more auspiciouslr but the' take enough accessones to allow more realistic sequences," he

1· dropped Tue~day becau~e she has

lf'li at Xorth West River in! OTTAWA <CPI-Biologists and: 4(),000 square miles on a single • treacherous numbers of bergs: frequent chan~es and are ~are; said. , entered into a separation agree· Labrador, where she intended.: engineers from lhe federal gov· [ !light. They are the "erei' of olf Labrador Coast cait never: ful ,ilbout. hal'mg shoes polished Starring in the picture are ment with Aristotle Socrates On· ·~ · • m flit IT IR!Elt staying for a rear or so and' ernment's fish culture develop-; the patrol. ! be relied upon. I se\•eral hme~ a week. : Vadim's second wife. Danish·; assis, multi·millionaire shipping see them at • cmr 'am then to return to the Unil'ersity' ment branch Tuesday be~an a' The cutters, two \'rsscls as· 'IHE l'OlB1AXDEl i ------·-------- I horn Annette Stroyberg an~ 1 magnate. ~Irs. Ona5sis. 29. will to complete her cr~dits for her: week-long meeting lo re1·iew signed from regular Coast. The Patrol Commander this Patrol. .Jean-Louis Tritignant, who ~hare cus!ody of their two child- i l::ducation Degree (B.A. Ed.)· !heir work and plan lutm·e pro-· t;uard service in the 1Jnitrd rear arid nrwiy reported is, To all of thn~e who ~~n·r wooed Bri-gitte awa~· from Va- ren. Alexander. II, ami Christina.

NATIONAL OFFICE EQUIPMENT LTD.

!'andra catne home last iecl~. Includes on the agenda are Stale~ remain on stamiby at l'ommantier Ro,s P. Bullard,' with tht Jntrrn~tional I!'P Pat·, dim only to lo~e her in the l'nd 9 but thev will !i1·e with the· Chri~tma~ to spend the Fcsti1·e, fisherie;; pro hIe m ~ a~sociated thl'ir home purls until their ser· U.S. l'oa~t: Guard. of Boston,: rol. there i! hut onP. mission ttl her present husband, Jac· ;.other. ~ir~. On:mi~ neither i Sea~on with her parents and with watPr·u~e sdll!mfs, the ef· vires are need rd. Theirs is to :lla~;achusells. ,\s Commander and one motto . , , the Safely ques Charrier. l asked nor r~ceived alim!!ny or, fami!)·, and it turnt'd out to b~ feet on fi>h of spraying foL'P.:>ls patrol and guard thl' soutltem of lite lnlernati(Jnal lee Palrol, ·of Lifr at Sea. l Vadim notrd that themes are· ~oun~~l fee~. it 11·a~ di~clo~erl.

ALEXANDER STREET ST. JOHN'S

DIAL 7402-7665· the la>t onf she was to spend for ppst ronlrol, pollulion, reslo· reaches of the ice when. and il", Commander llull~rd is cltat"3ed! ---------­with her loved ones, for. on her, ration of natur~l spawning areas,, it menaces the main shipping with the ice oboervation and! rrturn to :"ionh West River abe • operation of fish hatcheries and, tracks. The ~:utters now ba;,e at information of almost a quar· · • IIi> later to become im·olved in, the transplanting of oyster stocks.! Argenita, hut before World' tcr oi a million square miles of: a most tra11ic accident which I ------- · 1 War II it was St. John's and! ocean. Commander Bullard is nJ to claim her life. 'Student Body Df lhe University' such fine old ships a's the: no stranger to Newfoundland;

During her years at Prince walked by the c~skct both in I TAjJPA. :'IIOJAVE, Po:-ln!AR·' wat~r> h;tvin·~ served on con·: of \\'ale5, in additil)n to ha\·ing aud out of th~ Chun·h. Frbnds i TRAIN and CH.IH1PLAIN hring' \'OJ e.;cm·l patrols out of St. Honours in all Gradt>s, shf bl'· and p~ople of ~11 WJll;, of life· h3ck no;talgic m~morirs to old ,fuhn's aiHI .\rgL•ntia during i came keenl,v interested in. t•ame to pay their last revennd' limns. Wurlil War 11.

1 ~port.s activities particularly' and liincer·e re~pects to the! The infant sl·ieiH·e fl[ Ort•ano· The C(Jtilmauding Officer of: Basketball and •'itld ll•~ekc~. memory of one who had ix'cn · gr·aphy i• old stufl lu the lc~ I he air ::roup at Argentia is She became the ~lascot for the taken Horne as such an tarly I Patrol, which has been condul'l· 'Cummaml~r n:~nnelh K. liood· ' 4

\arioWI team> at the College as. ag~. :in~ marine research "ince 191-\. win wito is making his last pat·' well u being Cheer Leadet·. ' To het· sorrowin)( mol her and· The Coast Guard Oct'anographk' rol hpfore clepar<ing for the Her popular nickname being father. LDuise and Leslie and I \'esse! EV~:RGREE~ embarked , t:.S. l'oa;t Guard Air Station at "Wow·wow", w h i c h became 1 the other members of the 1 April lsl on its first 1960 sur- : St. Petersburg, Florida. The plainly "wow" when she atlend·! family, the deepest heartfc•lt, wy to chart the axis and vel· I Ice Jnfomtation Officer at pal· ed llemorial. Strangely enoUGh 1 sympathy of the whole com-; ocity of thr Labrador Current. 1 J'ol Headquarters is Lieutenant ~he never h!arned to swim. and· munil)· was extended on lh!'ir ·This little known but highly · Commander R. P. Dinsmore it wa~ probably the lac·k of this irreparable loss. ::'\o rnorr will 'r~speclt>d dut)· of I he h'e Patrol' making his sixth patrol. Senior that was largely due to her her familiar mir!• hr hl'al'd by, prol'ides a mPans of prediL·ting, Ocranographer.< hcadiJJ2 the neath. Apart from her academic; her friends and loved ones, no iceberg drift.< and determing ;l'ienlifir prc·:,ram are l.ieulen· · ac·111·ities, bhe found time to more will >he 'peak to us, for operations rel(tlirements in an· ant P. A. :\!orrill and llr. !-'loyd 1

1en·e her l!a,Mr by being. for it i> the ~las<rr's will that the· \'a nee. Ice Patrol occanograph- • ~1.. Soule o[ Woods Holi', a time. lircrctar~ of the Bib!!' \'Oirt' so loved and so iamiliar, rrs based during the "oft-sea- )la:<sachu;,etts. ~!r. Soule, a cap· llass al We•ley rhurch. a work be stilled fore1·er. . son", at the Wood$ Hole: lain in the Coast Guard Resene m whi<•h she was deeply in·, 'Oceanographic Institution Cape • and well known to many in the ltresttd · "Death i~ but a p~th th~l must: Cod, ~l~ssachuctts, maintain n ' Sl. John's area from pre-war

lnt~rr~t~d in ~11~ loving b, trod, \'ear round studv of ice and 1 rla1•s is a vateran of twenh··four thildren •. ~he alwar' had a ,_If man must e1·er pass to God."~· ·physical oceanography of the lc;. Pairols and was. decor~ ted b~rp~· sm1le for everyone. Dllr· 1 Grand Banks and Labrador Sea 1 dunng the war for hts services ing thr summer she went to I J.V.R. and are among the worlds lead- 1 in the arrtic on the Greenland Summer School in the mornings and worked in the afternoon, I and this year she went out and 1! took a school to save enough , money to go back to :\lemorial : and finish her Degree work. At one time recenlly, she, in com. : pany wlth some other· girl ! friends, went on a trip to the 1 · U.S.A. and saw a bit ·of that : 1reat country. \

On the fateful day, that 1 which was to happen was pro- ' bably farthest from anyone's I mind. ami rame ultim»:tdy as a ar~at shock. ami sometbinK llhiL·h L"311IIUI be rt-llltdit'd.

Lift ha.~ t.e~n li~··ntd to a CarLit-q. and lhe l.onl ll1c l:ar dentr, o.nd tad• day Itt ~u•> lurtb tu )lt('k fl't>tl !IOWtl'> lor Hia tahk and nothing !Jut the belt will do. and. on t'eh. 19th. He included Sandra in His bunth or Flowers for Ibis , ocea1ion.

We mis~ her ~mile u down tilt road we will go, but her 1111mor'· will lin1er as the years · 10 by.' She hu run her last race. htr toil i1 o'er. She ha~ ' fousllt the good li.ght. and will : ao mort stand until tbe Trum- . pet will sound the Assembly in yo!lller Homeland where ~he ; baa JOne to her Eternal Rest.

Had Sandra not been' so un­fortunate, she would have lind in the fullnelll of life, would have 1one on to set the Dellt'ee whirh ~he wantrd, and •would ha,·e b~en installed in a ~chool \\-ith the childrPn she rightly lovrd. hut it was m~ will that ~ sht- bt rut down, whilst yet in i the prime of ht'r youth, for, , wbat men appointA, God disap- 1 point~. 'I

A~ a I Htimony of the lO\'e , and !'!'teem in whleh ~h• WAS

held. It took two hcars~a to i cam· thf' nr.~r 100 floral tri-: but" which came in from j1

e\'m·wl1erf. sent 11 1 tribute to ~ lo1·ely ynung personality, · and there were also a larse j quanti!)' or IPtltr~. card~ and : eables poured in from the many trlends of the family In IJ'It• ful remembrance and •YIDPitb1 at IG untldlely a death.

RENOVATION

CONTINUES

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Tbe funeral aervlce wu held at We~ley United Church, and · tlte sacred edifice was filled to , rapacity ft1r the very touehinl I and solemn service. and a :

GIW'Cl af Honour from tbe ''~••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

,

"MY ~ANH"

OPENS _MONDAY in the new Confederation Building

THE Bank of Montreal will open a full-time .a. branch in the new ·confederation Build­

ing on Monday morning, to serve the banking needs of the Gove~nment of Newfoundland, employees in the building, residents and business men in the area.

The new B of M will be open Mondays to Fridays from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., and on Fri­

. day afternoon~ from 4.30 tb 6. You are cordially invited to make use of our services as may suit you best.

Business accounts, personal accounts and household chequing accounts are some of th9 many services provided ..• helpful seriic!!S that make life a little easier-a little smooth­er. For help in all financia I matters, see the 8 of M.

Come in and see us soon. We shall al· ways be glad to discuss any financial prr;b­lems you may hove and to offer you the use of the Bank's services. A warm welcomtll awaits you at Canada's First Bank.

BANKERS TO THE GOVERNMENT OF NEWFOUNDLAND SINCE 1895

BANK oF MoNTREAL

Confederation Building Branch:

A. RICHARD BELL, .uanagn

CANADIANS IN EVERY WAlK 0 f l I F E SINCE

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10 THE DAILY NEW£, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., FRIDAY, APR!L 8, 1960

FROM ST. 'JOHN'S "HIGHER LEVELS" SHOPPING COMMUNITY

HERE'S WHERE

YOU

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• ATTENTION MEN •

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THE DAILY NEWS, 'sr. JOHN'S, NFlD., FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1960

;~;;;;;~;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;~;;~;;;~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;a;@;@;@~@;@;@;,;a~p;3~p;S;p;3;p;a~, ~~tiM~iliesm~liliakh-1hm1se ~~ ed cottage with miniature! Another "must'' on ~.far· garden, bookshelves and 1 garet's guided tour for her furnishings. Princess :'liar-, fiance was to see the two garet was the guide. N'ot far: large flower-pots each con­behind ho1·erecl Princess' taining a myrtle tree grown :\nne the "tenant'' of Y Bwy-; from the rcspectil·e wedding

1 tim Bach. wearing a smart. houquets of her mother and

PRINCESS MARGARET and

This II the fourth' rl 1 series of six

articles about Antony Armstrong-Jones,

the . fiance of Princess Margaret.

JONES1 THE PRINCE OF WALES : w<'cl thf Earl of Rmse the i al~lmu.:h ~h: is ah~<ty~. hll\ ·I

; fullo11 ill!-! 1 rar. Sinet• thrn ~he 1 ermg brlnlll. thr S<"cncs. was I AND UNCLE TONY : lms sprnt · most of her time~ one of the first to lw told of On~ of thr most . rwitt•d; ;11 lr_c·laml. li\'ing in the tinv

1

, the engagement that surpris­of Prnll·c~s \lar"art•l s l'lost', Yi!htl!t' of Bir•. She is vice· ed the world. rl'!atiiC'~ mt·r ht·r t'll.!.!a)!C'·: pn•sidc·nt of tlw Ro,·al Horli· MARGARET'S MAID nwnt to :\ntouy .\nnstrnn!!-. utltural Sodrt~' of lr"land, ~I Rnb\' is Princess .\largar· Ju!.l{'S is tht> rl_rn·n-yt·ar-old 'fad that has intritt-•ed ~lar- rt's maill Her husband is Pnnt·c nl • \\ alt-s. . 1)('\!t-r. ga1TI wrr mndt, fur wher· a post office telephonist. Thc,· k11o11·n a> Cl~arl!-s, ~or tltt•' t'\W :\nn's future daughter- live in a little cottage in th~ n~.m ":l~n wtll ht•. ln.s Ill'\\' in-law li\C•s the rooms have Mews behind Marlbnrourrh \. nt·~e lt>n(~l ha

1s \\

1.t•ls

1h t•t

1nt·

1 to ht• fillt•d with flowPrs. Honse. home of the l~te

nrt~l\>~ls:. · t:tr c·~ ':1' ~ ~ 1:1 lln)l:c boughs of cherry bios- Queen 'lary. Ruby can al­lhts ~'' t s tht m ~omt thm!: m. som werr arranged in the ways pride herself upon bt>­cnn~mon. . • Yast•s at Hoyal Lod~t\ Wind- ina a real "friend at court"

Ch;~rl<'.'. "lte~ IS c·n~·n·ntly 1 ~or, at :'llargaret's request for to~>her ro\·al mistress. She

a huankr at Lhc'' 1 ~ 11 St-html,; the fir.~t wrek rnd spent with drramed itp manv . of lh<' h.c<l tn . l1llltc·ut lumsc•ll hy Tun~· since• their engagement. wai'S bv whicl; Prhcc•ss t"'t ht'lll\! tn!d tl((' ~oorl. It is from his mother that :'llar!(aret could mert Tom· '~''"'· llt·. cnmt haw_ het:n '1 Ton~· inherits his artistic, Armstron!t·lones outside the· hlllt' l'll\'!lln'. of h_ts ststc-r, h'ndt•ncit·s. t.:nnwn as one of palace witliout raisin~ thr .\nne'. ''h~•. mth tl~c~r latlwr the· mo;;t elc~ant hostesses suspicions of either p;ess or l'mwt• l'luhp had 1°11 u'il tlw she is intensl.'lv iutercsted in public. She even hoc>l>ed tw" ly cn!,!;t'~t·d t·ouplc· ami llinl'!t•rnth ct•t;tnr\' art and 1 theatre tickrts in her own thr ~ltH'cn_ \lt•tht•r 011 Hny;tl, ;lrc:hitrctnrc, pursi1its she has! name for the~. Ruhv ma,· I '"!l!t'. ~\nul-or. happily sharC'd with her! not he remembered h\· his·­. I on~' lathc•r .. H•:""~,d hrotht•r. Olh~·r \lassrl, fam-: tor.v but ~he played a wry

( h1 rn I.lo~ t\ .\ llnstl 011 -:~ rd stage• dcstgnrr. She per-1 real part in a most su~ pris-1 .!•.'""'· a "t·ll_-to·clt_1 <,lueru .• sonally had hopt.•d that Toll\· ing romance. l ·""'"e·l 1-·•·HH>r tnal lawy<'r) 1\oold ha1·c he('n an architect · i, iutc·mc-ly proud ut hb fort· instt·ad or ~ photographer. PRESS hr.trs.. . . . . . . . Still a ~·outhful_. virile loo~- lt was typical of thr St'llti- j

:\s ~ l.tl\\ c r hr IH.ulc . •1 mg man at stxh·, To1w s 1 me •• tal Queen :\luther that tMIIH' wt>tlilll! nn. antomohllt• fathrr, honrymoonil~g in Ber-l ~largaret and Tony mmld olll:ldt·Hts. lit- mos.' nl.!t·n ap_- muda with his third bride, first meet rress photograph­lH'drcd nn h_t·halt nt 11."111 ' was 'rrv exrited at the news ers from all parts of thr .l.tll''' .~:om~Jillll~'s.,. ~~~ pm'.'ltt: nf tlw ~nga~t·ment. "I newr world as an engaged couplt• !lit· Ius kt rn mh 11 st m ~,us thcnt~hl I d ht' father-in-law at the Ro,•al Lodge, Wind­~"""m~s ahnosl to ~ passwn. to a princ:t•ss," was his first sor, for tl1is was the placr . 01 Ius tlm•r ma;na~~·'· thr comlllt'nt. that King Geor!o!c \'I regard·

f~rst two t•lldt·~) Ill_ eh\'Ol~l'(', :\lthou~h he \1'1\S ha,·ing: ed as the family's real homc .. 1 "") wa~ a _tl11ld ol the hrst 'what hr dl'scrillt'd as a "won-1 In 1931 King Georgr \' ; of tht·sc·. !Its m_ntlwr. :\nn d<'rful lime" with Jenifero~ga\'e his son and daughtrr-in­:'ll.tssl'l. ~ sllmmnl! hnuwttc•, his ;31-\·t•nr-old hride, he con-flaw, 'Bertie and Elizahcth' as tlc-hutantc-. . was . tht· n_nly : frss('d io wishing that he had I they were known in the fam­clam:hter nl Lt. Col. l.Pm~<lrtl. hren hat:k in London for all· ily circle, Royal Lodge for \lassel who owm·d an est at!', tht' rxcitmtcnt. a country home. Tht> yonn~ in Snssrx. \ Robina Gordon, 42, tetter couple, officially titlrd tht·

DIVORCE · knnwn in Buckingham Palace Duke and Duchess of York.

Lodge thrir dtildren, Eliza. and playing in Y Bwythn brth and Mar!taret spent. Bach, the little house givcu many happy hours gardening them :ly the people of Wales.

Tony, hoasting a long line, riding outfit. One d.av Prin-, sistc•r. Soon there will be a of Wdsh ancc·stors, was crss :\largaret mav hav(' a' third. taken on a special tour of in-. little girl of hn m;·n to play. WEDDING BAND

To l'ompliment the unnsnal mb~· and diamond engage· nwnt rin~ set like a flower whic:h Tony ga,·c her, \Jar·

1 !!arc! will h;~\C a \\Coding haud madt• from !!old minrd in the \\'elsh mmmlaim.

Tlds b an •lltl lratlition

1 "ilh the· British Ho):al Fan~-

1

ih: I hat thr gold lor thc1r ,;ania~r· h;llllls cnmr lrnm \\"ale-s. \\'hf'll thr then l'rin·

1 ci'SS Eli;.alwth "·a~ about to ~ tnarry L!. Philip \luii!Jlll;tl-

1, 1 ,.,,_ a lar~l'J' anunml of '!ole!

l ilan wa..; JH'l'4.'"isarv \\it\ prr•­

; "·ntccl hr·r h' 'tlw kindly 1 \\'!'Ish.

/ ''Tlwrt·ss riJClH!.!ll for t·., ,,_-• i said the a)w;\I'S tluJu~hl111l

I Elizalwth. "\\'e c:n '·"·e some lor \lar~arrt.''

I It is a pll'asin!.! thon,::ht

that tlw two rn\'al shtPrs 11 i1o I ha1c alwa\·s h;·t·n c-.h·cn,c:lv

.

do:•l'. will' >h;llT tlw ,,tii!C !,!ole\ lor their "·1nhnls ,f inatri1111111'.

il'l 1%(1 '\r·11· Tribune ltte.

(In the fifth article

of this series, ap-

1 pearing Monday, Mr.

Langley Hall reveals

Antony Armstrong-

Jones's attitude to·

wards other people.)

PRINCESS ATTE;o>;DS PRE:\IIERt:

In J!};jj the seninr :\nn- 'and Clarence Honse domestic were destined h1· a trirk of 1 LOSDON-Rritain's Princess Margaret receive• a bouquet of flowrrs from 11-year-otd arthritis vit·tim Kathleen Dt1steed ~ln>it~·]mtrs"s marriw.~t· tn cirdt•s as Huhy, is seldom fate to become · King and: as ~he arrh·es to attend the benefit premiere o£ the play "Once :llore With Feeling," here :II arch 31st. The performance was to Ann ·e,.l(]ed in dil,n·:r. Shr sern in thr royal limelight Queen of En~land. At Royall benefit the Border Crntre for Arthritics. The Princess was ar companied by her fiance, Antony Armstrong-Jones. (l'PI Photo);

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27 Deelaratl011 28 French eap 29Ft>llowera 31 Fur·bnrlnl

animal :13 Tally 38 Usber 40 !Uwk·llke

blrdl

TO-DAY

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dl 111111 (lb.)

MICKEY ROBlEY· STEVE MAMIE VAN DDREI

SPECIAL ADDED A TTRAaiON

TIMES Of SHOWS:

MNING-"BIG OPERATOR 7 O'CLOCK-9 • .45. "FIRST MAN INTO SPACE"-8.30.

MATINEE-2 P.M.

NEXT ATTRACTION HARRY BELAFONTE - INGER STEVENS - M!l F!RRER in "THE WORLD, THE FLESH AND THE DEVIL N - DRAMA - SUSPENSE - THRILLS.

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., FRIDAY, APRl 8, 1960

RADIO PROGRAMS High-Flagging rr--------~ 7.30---New!. By Taxi Drivers i.l Paramount I 8.00-Breakfaat Club. I 8.30---Network Time. TORONTO ICPl - 'High-flag. Today I 9.00-It Happened last night ging," a practice by which a.' 1

10.00---Coffee Time taxi dril'er can cheat his ooss b'' 7.30-rCBC News 11.00-Tu~ Back the Clock neglecting to regi~ter parts rir !WICKI-:Y ROO~EY 1:\ '1.35-Top Of The Morning 11.SO---Protram Twelve tip5-!lr entire trips-on his "Tilt: BIG OPER.\'fOR" 8.0B-CBC News and Weather P.M. I meter, has been countered by, 8.15-Musical Clock 12.3B-March of Eventa one Toronto cab owner in ingc.' A hard-hitting, uncompromis-

CBN FRIDAY, April lth.

11.00-Morning Devotions 1.00-Arthur Godfrt.J nious fahsion. ing drama that might have 8.1~Program Preview 1.25-News Mickey Key, who starl1!d driv· been lifted directly from to· 8.20---Piano Playtime 1.45-Quote • Unquote ing cabs 25 years ago and now day's newspaper headlines is 9.36-Direct Reports 2.00---Viewpoint . runs his own fleet, del'ised the. preseuted in ~IG ~l's "'fhe Big 9.45-Records at :Random 2.15-Couple Next Door 1 plan. It im·ol1·es an intricate wir·. Operator,'' witb :'>lit key Rooney

10.00-Arcbera 2.30-News . ing system under the upholstery giving a memorable perfor"· 10.15-lria Power 12.45-$porla P111 l of passengers' seats-a total of mance in the role of a vicious 10.2!1--For Consumers 2.~Panorama 1720. tiny electrical currents. racketeer wbo has won control l0.3B-Nfld. School Broadcast 3.30---News If the cab drh·er does not tu1·n of a labor union. · 10.45-:Muslc in the Mornillil. 4.00-Spollight on a Star 1 on the meter within 20 seconds: Also in leading roles in the l0.5B-:Musie in the Morning. 4.3B-Polka Party 'of the lime a pas>enger is seated, CinemaScope production a~ U.OB-To Catch a Falling Star 5.00---Word Play ; 1 delayed·action switch short-cir· ·Steve Cochran, Mamie van 11.15-Nfld. &hool Broadcast 5.30---News i cuits the car engine at the dis·· Doren, Ray Danton. Mel Torme,

•11.45--Regina McBride 5.45-Checkin' !11 1 tributor, and the engine stall~. '.Tim Backus Jackie Cooaart , 12.00---BBC News 6.00-Capitol Cloakroom : "Th: high-f 1. a g g i n g dril-er. Ray Anthony' and Ben Gage. . ~ i 12.1B-Annol'ncers Choice 1 6.3B-Checkin' In (Cont'd) doesn t have lime to g.et away While tbe story sweeps a : 12.15-Farm Broadcast 8.00-Broadway is my Beat from the. curb." ·~ays Mickey. . !oCarchlight on a hoodlum who;

This is the scene in CBL's ''certs featuring works by Cann· 1 12.45-Mid Day Serenade 8.3G-People au Funny . The dmer who cheats m tins throuj!h intimidation brutality Parliament Street studio in I dian 'composers and little·heard i l.OB-Doyle Bulletin 9.00-C?uld this be You! fas~ion c~n·t start his engine and even murder, h~s become Toronto, when the CBC Sym·

1 contemporary compositions, in 1.15-A Love to remember 9.30---HJgh Sc~ool Procram agam until he pulls down the makers point out that it ia not

: phony Orchestra presents its •'addition to items from the 1.30---CBC News and Weather 9.45-Nal'y Swmgs flag to engage the meter. ·meant to mirror the entin i coast-to-coast radio broadcasts I standard drchestra repertoue. 1.45-BBC Variety. 110.00---Final Edition ·REWARDS DR";ERS world of unions, the majority ·on Friday nights. Since being I This programme is heard here 2.15-National School Broad· 110.15-Sports Final 1 ~ return for t,le assurance he of which are efficiently and organized In 1952 'the orchestra) at 10.30 p.m. Fridays over CBN cast

1

, 10.30-Jack Paar c?n t be cheated. Mickey p~ys honestly run. Although it is a h · tn 400 d th l I CBC t k -----------··his dmers 8 bigger shaJ·e of the s·ory of an unscrupulou gang•

i as &lven more an con· an e oca ne wor . 2.45-Tommy Hunter Show !"take,'' 60 _per cent instead of <t,er "'ho hi'de•. behl'nd th~ Fl'ftb I 3.15-Kindergarten or The Air: CJON th l " w ,, ~

3 3nN d T e usua. 50· ,. . . Amendment, "The Big Oprr· I U.S. DEFENCE SHIFT 1 :MELBOUR~E tReutcrsl-The · .,_. ews an rans Canada He sa he do -n t v.ant to do 1 , . · l s.. . e.. . ., . a tor" i~ also the stor'' of the

WASHINGTON, tAP I - Presi·1 Australian Army has asked the 1 Matinee FRIDAY, April 8th. llu< but h oh !lagomg 1 ·uch ' det Eisenhower Wednesday for·' federal government to buy Can·a· · 4.3B-Variety Hour · · an-~ctepted 1~a~t otthe tax~ ~usi· figl~t upon the. ~art of uniont

1

mally approved shifting defence dian-built de Ha\·illand Caribou 5.00-P.M. Theatre ness that he could not get drivers agamst lbl! lliSidlous element. , funds to speed production of Po· transport aircraft, says the Can· 5.3B-Fisheries Broadcast A.M. to work for h1'm an•.· other wa~. Mickey Rooney is sen u I 6.3B-Bob Lewis Show. ' ' L. 1 I Jarls aubmarines, increase the berra c o r respondent of Mel· 5.45-:Music From The Albums. Micke~.· has offered a $75 prize Ill e ,Joe Braun, a crook who. 8.35-Weather Forecast. d size of the six Alias lnterconti· bourne's Herald. It was believed 8.00---CBC Newa. .. to anv.· of hi.o; drivers. who can has takrn over a union an · 6.4B-Bob Lewis Show. h h h · nental missile squadrons and im· that under the Australian defence 6.05-Intermezzo 1 beat the s1.·stem. Se1·eral of his w o, w en e comes up b•' 8.45-Headline News and f prove the ballistic missile warn· reorganization program now un· 6.30-Supper Guest . driyers ha1·e tried to collect. he ore a Senate Im·estigating 8.50-Bob Lewis Show. · d ing system. Eisenhower also ap- der way the army will use its own 6.45-Curtain Time. ! said, hut no one yet has sue· Committee, hi es behind th1 proved a program not previously I transport aircraft flown by Aus- 1 7.00-CBC News and Weather 7·00---News. 1· ceeded. Fif1h Amendment. H1 hal

I. A' 7.05-Bob Lewis Show. announced-revised defence de· tra 1an 1r Force pilots, instead 7.15-Musical Program One of the dri1ws said he now made one slip, however, by part~t plans to order substan· of using air force Douelas C·47 7.45--Doyle Bulletin 7·3B-News. works harder and makes more rlenying that he has ever mel I ' Sk t · t 7.35-Weather Forecast. tally more nuclear reactors for 1 y rams as a present. 7.3B-Tops Today money because he doesn't ha1·e or seen one of his murderous

Poltrls submarines that will be I -------.. ··--· 8.40---Public Libraries 7·45-News. to spend his time !iguring vut henchmen. O!;car Wetzel <Ray 8.05-Weather. Bilked for later. I stamps. The firm would redeem 8.30---Musical Interlude , '?.·ays to beat the boss. Dantoni. But two 1mion mem·

B. 8.15-Shipping Report. b B'll G'b s c It the stamps in cash but the cus· 40-Kitchen Corner -------- ers, 1 1 son ( teve oc · N 8.2B-Bob Lewis Show. I MO TREAL, !CPJ -A super· tomers would not collect the 8.55-Weatber !or Mariners. 8_25-Kiddies Corner. OTHWA. 1CP•-Canatla i~ to ran) and Fred !'ilcAfee tMel

market chain has agreed to par· mone''. They would agr~ to 9.00-Ask the Weatherman continue train in I< :-;orwegian Tormel, have sPen Little Joe II. · t · aid · ' ""' 8.40-Bob Lewi5 Show. 1 , ICipa e 1n a student · campaign have the mone1• turned over to 9.1B-Vancouver String pilot~ foranother four ~·ear~. the talkin~ to Wetzel and unless i at a Montreal high school under i the Nor t b mount High School ; 9.15-Repertoire 8•55-Just a Minute. :external affairs department an- th~;.· can be per~uaded to keep :a pro 11 r a h involving trading 1 F'und. 1' 9.25-The Quick and the 'Dead,: !1.00-Xews. 'nounced Wedne,day, This i> ~ th~ir mouths shut. l,.ittle JM .

TO-MORROW

Also - UP-TO-THE-MINUTE NEWS.

ONE EVENING SHOW DAILY STARTING AT 7.30.

MATINEE 1 P.M.

LAST TIMES TODAY "MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT" - Also

"RETURN TO WARBOW"

9 tl5-!tlusic for Milliona. , 9.30- Songs of my People 9.20---Jerrv. Wiggins Sll.ow. I second extension Canada's can be com·icted of perjury. • : 10.00-Cit.izens Forum 1 XATO air training program for l0.3B-Beyond Our Ken 8.55-Cliff'a Kitchen. Xorwa;.·. The department also an· When bribery fail~. Little loe

.11.00-Musie Workshop 10 00-News Highli«hlll. : nounced recentlv ~imilar tontin- USPs more. brutal methods. Hi~ Roundup and Talk. 10.01-Martin's Corner. ued training in 'canada for Dan·· men pick up ~[cAfee and the.~

12.00-Sign Off-O Canada- i lo.3B-The Right to Happineu .. ish pilots. , toss h1m out of a car w1th h11 '10.35-National News. I--.-.. ·---- :clothes aflame. This doea not

The Queen. 10.55--Housewives Choice. 1 1.00-Ncw.<. i deter Gibson from offerin;:: to

YOUS 11.00---Music for Relaxin&. 1.05-\\' eather Forecut. : testify against Little Jo4, 11.01-The Rev. Matlbews. 1.15-News. 'whereupon the latter seeks to

FRIDAY, April lth. 8.00-Sundial

6.30---Newa

11.35-Nfld. Quiz. 1.35-Don Jamiesoll's Editorial . win his silence by kidnappin,; 11.45-Moneyman. Hll-Sports. :his young son (Jay North) 12.00-News Highlights. 1.40-Sports. What happens from thi.~ point 12.01-Town and Coun1r1. 1.45-Art Baker's 1\'otebook. on makes for a drivin&, sus· 12.33-Town and Countl'J. 2.00-News Highlights. penseful and action • filled

2.03-.Jerry Wiggins Show. drama. 7.00-Ne'll'l

CJON- CJOX TV FRIDA\", APRll. 9, 1960

10 . .(5--Cartooos. 11.00-Romper Room. 2.00-Quality Theatre. 2.30-Chez Helene. 2.45-Nursery School Timf. 3.00-Life With Elizabeth. :1.30-Great Gildenlee,·e, 4.00-0pen Home. .(.30-P.M. Party. ~ OO-Picture1 with Woofrr. 5.30-Minnaw on the Sa~·· 5.45-Follow Me, 11.00-.Annie Oakley, 11.30-NeW! Cavalcade. '7.00-Sheriff of Cnehi!e. '7.30-~ ~ncl Aady. 8.00-This il Your Mu1ie . 1.15-National News, 8.30-Bachelor Father. 9.00-Saher of London.

10.00-Four Just Men. 10.30-F1yin& DDCtor. 11.00-J uliette. 1UO-'Thia il the Story. 11.30-Cavaleade of Sports. 12.30-New• Headlines. 12.31-Sword of Freedom.

3.00-:'l;ews Hi!!hlights. 3.01-We~lrru Jamborre. The role> pby~d b~ l\lamie 4.00-New.~. Vau Doren and ~lei Tonne rr· 4.01--R:uwh Part)·. ·veal a »triking l'rl·s~tilitr on 5.00-Xew.i. 1he P"rt of both pt'rturmrr>. 11.01-BDb Lewis Dancr fart~. ~lis~ Van Doren, who hns made 5.55-Donblemint Show. , a name for herself as a sedn· 6.00---News. 6.05-Bulletin Board. 6.1B-National :o;ews. 6.25-Xews. 6.3B-Cluh 113. 7.0B-Xews. 7 01-f'!ub !13. 7.30-:'\:ew~ . i.45-Don J~mi~!0n'; .':P,.s. 8.00-Xews m ~ ~fin:Jir·. 8.01-Best from th€ W~sl. 8.30-National 1\'ews. 8.33-Brst frnm the \\'est. 9.00-News Hizhlights.

1 9.03.-Nfld. Soiree. ! !:1.4(1-Per~onally Speaking. 110.00-News Highlights . 1 tO.Ol-The Falcon ( 10.45-Sports.

1

1tl.55-Music in the Xight. 11.00---News Highlight~.

1 11.01-!llusic it\.. the ~;ight . 12.00---News Highlights. 12.oi-Music in the Night. 12.30-News. 12.35-Music in the Night. 1.00-1\lews. 1.00---Queen and Sign Off.

ti,·r charmer, now enacts a l)'pical ~·oung Ameriran house· wife. married to Cochran and the mother of the kidnapped rhild. Torme. who rose to fame As a crooner. has a strong ora· matic charaelerization as t/IP union memher v.·ho re!u~es ~~ hP r01wd by thu~s. Ronne~·. wh~ r;HI ~"itch from romed~" to drama at tiw drop of a ~rnpt. recpntl)· Frnred ~n• of hl5 big. g,st hits a~ the k11l~r in "The LaM ~filr."

. 'The ~i:; Op•riltn•" an A 1-: ~~rl. 1.ug~m1th FrorhJrtlon m , a~soriation w1th Fryman Enter· : pri~es, wa~ pron•1r~rl by Rttl Doff. Charles H".a~ directf'd

i from a screen pl~~· by Robtrt l Smith and All~n Rirkin. hased

II on a story by Paul Galhco.

SPF.Cl.\L ADDED I .\TTRACTIOS 1 "First Man Into Space~ I

r---------,. fA71'{"1(;,c.w'":<.'~ --- --------- ~· FlYTCA I Everybody is talking about it !-everybody is reading about it i -and now :IIG~I i> releasing an

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'wurhl uwr~ tb"u tlial pr~><11ted · ,u lhi.s :;,·it"u~o.·tl "~.h t:'JILUrt JrJ.ma . uf th~ UH.bl t.bll:tdULl.) Jllb~iuU vi all lllue, lh~ all~lllf>l ul luon

. to ~xptore uut,·r spate. New,. pap<•l' ht·~tllint•> have blaZUIWU

, the rect>nt launching of Russia's •·tunick." the multi-stage cosmic rockrt now suppO!Ordly orbiting around th• sun. and lhe rxperi·

: mPnls 'l'ilh ~urh C.S. long. ran~e m~>site~ "' .\lla~. T•1~n. ~.!inutrman. S n • r k, PolariE, Thor and .Jup11rr.

The n~w Federal •P~r~ agenc:· ha~ ~elrct ed 110 r•ndi· dates for pos~iblf' ao;i-;:nm~nt as the test pilot of the nation's

i first space capsule.

( The National Aeronautics and ' Space Administration has an· no•mced the placing of an oroter for the nation•s fir<t ~p•cr r•· hirle rlr;ignrd to c:>IT,I' a l""l'

in(o m·bil ;no1111d thr r:n·:h. Sueh men n;;; L1p:. f\o~1rr1 \I.

. \\'hitr and 1r>t p:lnt ~: .,11

. Cro~c:tirld ill"C' plttnniq2 fr1 · "?

~s thP fil''i •p::ce trJI'drr:. 111 :the nrar futnrr. I I Wh;>1 this rockrl 11hnr ·1w: ! hP lil~r ami what 1i:~ 111:•:1 ···~1ry pilots i1 mi1:; ha1·r In endlll<' I'<

• an alt<'lllpt to pf11Piri1tr li•~ ~mystrrir~ of iht' unkTlfl\''11 t;

: >holl'n in "Vu··,t \lo>1 i'lto i Spact," flil ,\mill·~:;JOl(llf'd rl'O·

durtion for W;,], stan·in2 ~IU· I shall Thomp~rm and · ~li1l'la I Landi, with Bill Edwards pia)· 1 ing the title role of the dare·' · devil test pilot.

"First :\tan Into Space" was , directed by Hobl'£1 Day from a ·screen play by John C. Coop~r ' anti Lance Z. Har.~rl'al·~·· 11 ~ wa~ produced h~~ .John Cro,·d'l.ll. 1

and Charles F. \'etter, Jr. :

i~~:>:~-<1: 1:nT~::I . ' ': ... , ...... ·-_,, l;'t

t~~ItE? ~::.f\(:1 ~-i~-~~- ;·r-}i.,.~ :.~ .. 71:~~~._ ....

.. ;.:~·, ~-.. p :·;· ,~ ~ •.· '::.. .;·,. '

t-j;f~: L .. ~~: :· .. i~-f:t ~··.;·.~~ .. ·:·.:: f;·;i,y..-~,

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~:·~~~~·<-~ ' ... ,"),~, .. t-. .'; ~~~·- .'f i:_~·~·-~::~­;. · ... \"!; \~

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THE ~AllY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFlD., FRIDAY .. APRIL 8, 1960

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

National Library Week; Read For. Pleasure, Profit At Your Library

Eden's Memoirs ter Dulles.-than of Eden. Says Lake Lebarge

Woodland <:aribou Make Comeback

b h . h Ll t ' TOR0:'\1'0 ICPl -C. ~1. Woodhouse reviewing: the Hon. Lord Morrison of II cremated Safn l\lcGee."

Eden's M~moirs in the ~ationat i Lam et m t e ~ en~r, 'Un· .· . _ and Eng.tsh Rniew pomts out derstandab,y, Eden m hLS book A new copy of Robert Scr· · ear1hou, almost cxtmct 50 years that though Anthony ldl"n "!or becomes cross with John Foster J vice's Collected Poems has just a)!o, arc making a comeback in sheer knowledge or foreign ar- Dulles who, as I observed a• arrived at the Gosling. Northem Ontario. flirs and experience of dip- the time, would help us in the Now That' April's Here The lar~c. ungainly creatures Icmacy had no rival in the pre- morning at the Suez eonferen- .Now. that April's here gar- that weigh between 200 and iOO sent century except Curzon" ces with good ideas, only to let den·lovers are beginning to pounll~ ami arc distinguished by thi.l was preciseiy the activity us down in the afternoon." Cer· turn their thoughts to growing their long legs, broad hooves and which \\'as to spell his downfall.· tainly British policy in the things. They are planning their manerl necks once roamer! the Was this thP fau!t of th~ oc· · Su~z crisis foundered on the garden on paper, reading cata· area from Great Slal'e Lake to c?.sion or o! t:le man~ Woad·' lack o! American support. logues for seeds and shrubs, ;llcwfoun:lland. bouse note; t:tat th~ ~l~moirs 1 The :\icmoirs make plain why nurturing plants for.later trans- But their numbers dwindled reflect Sir Anthon~··s allitu:lc Sir Anthony Eden acted as he fer to the open garden. Ol'~r lh~ yrars with firearms tak-that he is not cai:cd \1]:01\ to d:d. His reasons are implicit in Inspiration may be had from in~ ~ hca,·y loll. l·ustit~ h.nt'"'f b·co:use e1·ents t:te first part of the full title the New Illustrated Encydo· :'\owd

1lhc h populattiohn ha

1s ldn·

' ",'· · ' · . • . creosc o I e 110111 II' err .an s' sp~ak for hlcmsc:l';s. c( t.1e book, In the usc of the pedla of Gardening, the first d F . t , 1 .. ·t . 5 • .. ·I· ru'l Ci • Ed regard 1 f ~ h' h · .1 bl an ot e.< s ,, m1s e1 pooner In Bo11!:s a:td .Eo~:n::rn Pro· 1• OlC s · '- • rc.e. en . . · vo ume ~ w ~c IS al'al a e at I told the Ontario le~islatur·e his' fessor George E. G. Catlin ro:n· d th~ l~JO s as a repcttllon of . the Go~lmg w1th all sorts of :n· 1 depal·tmcnt is ronsidcrin~ ~n Pares Eden's lmlliant O"'U· the 1930 ~; he sow Nasser, the I forma lion on almost everything

1 • 1 1 •• ·I · d h s · h' . ·open season on an e.wcrunc a pat~cy . of t!le Forci:.n Oliic~ 1;1a11 1 ~\ lo sCJZe . t ~ uez ~ou can I tnk of tn .the garden: 1 brsis.

with h1;; sub3eque:1t tenure 0 , l.ana .... s .another !Jllle~. he saw [ mg world that. begms w1th A. , Ll'IITED Hl'!'\TING ofitre a~ Prim~ ~l!ni;t~r .. H~ ;';__as ~.c ~· s. rclallonslup wtt~ 1 from the planlln~ and care of! "Our hiolo~i.<ts arr 11.orkin;: n~s the t1•:o c:nnot ~.f. rli\',)T· • l\tlru.'~C·~~\ as another ax1s Althaea-;-or Holl~_hock-to the hal'(! 011 del·rlopin~ technique:; for. red: "Jf wt• ?r~ to t•r, 11 z;• th" ~cmbuallo.n ~o the . Romc-Bcr· drscr!pllon of Ansaema - .or· a carillnu inl'cnlm-r and it i~ Prime :1\inistrr n >h1·l·hnr1 lm Ax1s 1o~ ~-oriel \\ar II. Jack-tn·llle · ;u~plt. and With' llr:ll' th~ 1 ·r ~rr cnou.zh animnl< the ;1·ound.< nf rnr crtk"m . R ~~m __ , for ~lfn numerous l01el~ Illustrations. Ito eon,idcr a rrstricterl kill Ill' forcshadowl'tl in th~ F'nrri~n · Jud~m.>: by I h.~ rrq1!rsts that ---------- ; hunterS:' h(' said. · :;~cntar,.'' ~·~;lrn ><•)'.< that ro:1tc lo the Gosun~ l.tbran·.for :17 DROWNF,;U : \lr. !'poonrr s~irl.th~ arrn that thou~h Erlr 11 ,,.,,~ "a good thr w~rks of ~obert Serv1c~. n~UR.I\:-1, Iran tReuler~'-Fif· t11i~ht he r. .. -- ., l•• llllnlin;: Is European "he w~s nr1·21•• earl)· thPrr ts somcllun~ about this ty-se1·en persons were reported' nortll of the ... 11 C:"IR tr:.ck i or la:r. a ~nod At:ant~an: "un- ba!lader thai .appeals to most drowned in the P~rsian gulf Wed-; w:1ich runs . from La!;c j

likr \\'in; ion Churchiil and n;en. Two of hls poems are par· nesda~· when .t~Ir motor l~nnth A'1itibi on tht· .. tchcc born~r f

Harold ~!ac~lillcn he did not llcularl)' popular .. One tells was wrecked m a storm. F'!fteen through Cochrane. Kapu,kasin~ 1 know hi> America." about the happening at the per~"'· lnrludmg the sk1~per, and Hearst to .a point north of

1

Other re1·iewers are in th':. )lalanmte sa1oon where • • • survn·ed, the newspaper Kethan Lake :'>lipigon on the west. r e ~pert more critical of reported. A violent storm has Earlv fn Fchruan· a !1.000· America-that io:, of .John Fu"· '·Bark of the bar, in a solo been raging in the ar~a all week square:mil~ area bet1i·een the Sr----- ... ----- --------- ~ame, , and the Abadan area has also 1·cm and Winisk rirrrs runnin~

THE

Sat Dangrrous Dan :ltcGrew. been bla~keted hy a hea1·y. du~t · 72 miles fro 11,_ th• Hudson B1y And watchin~ his luck was his storm whtch has reduced l'lolbtl- co:o>t w~~ sun ered hy the de-

Ji.ght·o'·lovc ity to 20 feet. the newspaper sa1d. parlmcnl. The lady that's known as Lou." · .\ sampl~ m-ra of ahout one-

ROCKVILLE, Ont. 1CP 1- An ei·!~th or the rrdon w~s corer·cd · The other tells of a man from J Ontario government conservation b1· flyin~ lanes one mile wirl~ af the South who went North· to of!icer said Wednesday night two ei~ht . mile int~rrals parallel to "moil for gold" but couldn't get I American hunter~ ~vill he charged t~~ co1st. used to the cold climate and ro1· the illegal k1lhg of 93 ducks i\lr.RE 1:-; snniER how he finafiy got warm , , , 1 on Ribinson Island in the St. Law- f'rom the s111·,·e,· it was con-

I I renee Ril'er. The isl3nd, 10 miles Cltlc!ed there are about 10 cal'ibou 1 "The Northern Lights have west of here, is on the Canadian for erery 9.1 square miles during

s~en queer sights, side of the rirer. The ducks, part th~ winter. Sine~ many mi;;rate But the queerest the)' ever did: of a migrating flock flying o\'cr rlt•:·in~ the ('ol:l 11·eathcr. th~ sum-

- see j the ril·er, were killed Tuesday. ll'~r population is bcli~red to be Was that night on the marge of :.lames werewithhcld . I• · ···~r.

EXCITING ACCELERATION Juu feel theAnglia 101E go, go.~n. Z.ern 10 60 in less th;1n 30 scconJs. And plenry of re~,;rve power for overuking.

llCCITINO MANOEUVRABILITY Responsive steering and a tumin1 circle of onlv 3~ feet. Clear aU 'round visibility make:~ parking ia tight comers a cinch.

• ,\ ia rhri>tian•rn. a~e slx an~ hrr ,istrr 'tar~rrthr. 10. start C:maolian Uhrary Wo•rk off ~·ith .a lh·ely rearli~g srsstoa .. Ia

'J'nrnnin. With thrm is llr. J. llnb~· Kirld, t·hairman nf ran:lrlian J.iho ap· Wrt>k. The pro.~ram ts brong obsen~d tn rommunltle5 lhn·u.~lwnt the t'nuntry ,\pril 3 to !l. and ;, rlrsi,urrl to 110inl up thr nrrr-·.it~· .for a hr:trr·rrarl, . ~~H~r·:n~or~rd (ana~a. Thrmr nf l'anadian Library Wrrk this ,·rar: "llrad for Plra,urr. r.rarl fur l'rnftl.' Rr.H.l lor Pro.'rrss. lht c •• oslm.~ :'ttrmonal ].ibrar\' hrrc and libraries throu~hnut .Sr\\louurllancl arr par tid pat in~ in Canatllan tlhrary \\ rrk. The~e hbrancs desenc morr ~atronage. ilizens should read at lrasl two bnoks a w rrk.

:Week, April ~ to Q, puinls up . 1)011 protccttw boxes th:tt were Th ts the importam·c of books of all: earned post fr~e by the m:nl oug kinds-many of th~m not on men of Canada. The)· amounted

·paper. ! to two tons of mail every work· \\'hcl~n~r people in ~eneral ,tor the purpo~e of surgery; and

10 MINUTES

llCCITINO ROAOHOLDING Independent front-wheel suspen­sion with h\·draulic shock absorbers irons out'bumps-givcs you 1

•mooth, surf', safe drive. Talkin~ books for the blind · ing day of the year. speak of the tmTotie problem it distrngut,;hes them !ocal anrs. are now. bringing pleasure to : The average hook require:< or talk ahout narcotic; 1 hr~· arc the tic;. whir h. hke no,·acam.e, thou~ands of people across twrlrc hours of reading tunc. referrin~ to a special ~roup ol art used to deaden the patn In

. Canada-without the nccrssity . Sumetimrs the author read.< all drugs. TIJ~,e nan·~>tics proper local organs. The word anrsthe· ot learning to rear! by touch. ·or a purlion o( hi,: own 1rork. arr ICr)· complrx drug.' of alk:t· tic is a Greek 11ord wbtch at· YOU EVER SPENT

BEHIND A WHEEL

I!XCITINQ ROOMINESS l'er­fectly planned driving po>llion lt.\'CS ~U I degree of (umfort never bcforo experienced 1n light car mt'ltnrinjt. And ~\·en the tallr"t pass.t"ngen can keep their hat!. on!

PEi.LXE A~<;Ui\ 1058 1r'hrlt •idr1: all FIHt a:·tHiahil a! tXHa ~-GIJI,

.................. ,.,,.,_ .. , ... ..., .............. .

.' ..• ,.;. .-~···.; • ·.::::~. ·.·:O:··.lt,\·~ ·:~·. ;to

As soon as you settle into the sporty contoured seat,

you know the Anglia lOSE is excitingly different. You

look with satisfaction at the dashboard, the controls­

placed with you in mind. Instinctively your foot finds

the clutch, your right hand graspN the sports-type

4-tpeed gearshift. You and the car are "one'' -and

~u're away! Driving the Altglia 1 05E is an exhila­

rating experienre. Ask for a' proof-drive at your

British Ford Line dealer's,

PROOF-DRIVE THE woRLD'S ?~tod(J?(atrJtqLtGHT c~R ANGL.'&1r""l

t'IIIP.!"fer CON,VL. zr~.,.·•

CH.CK THIS EXCITING VALUR AT YOUR BRITISH FORD DEALER'S

George G. R. Parsons Ltd. COR. ELIZABETH AVE. and PORTUGAL COVE RD., ST. JOHN'S NORTH PHONE 91011 {41ines)

Munn·. Motors Limited BENNETT AVE. and BL~CKM~RSH ROAD, ST. JOHN'S DIAL 94061

· Atwlomv of a ~lurilrr and Jl;m·y Truman. ~lr>. Jo:le<~owr loid .<trut·tun· and th•·ir rfft•rl' taches a ne~at!nn to the word IJoclor z'.hil·ago, two ll'oilin·~ Hoost'l'ell. Thomas ~!ann and an• not '" bt• t•quatrd with thr nwonin~ srn;;,\ton. All lhP.

I lwst ~ellrrs thl•sc di--ly:', arc Somrrsl'l ~lau:,2;ham ilt'(' amon~ :-;in~pll' nr:!alli(' compoul)r!:-: ~urh ;-mc:-tlwtH·.s \~Jl! produce $!Upnr among the Talkin;: !looks now tho.'r II lw took t imr J rom an '" 1 h,• ,, ,11,, 1 11, ,1 1,., "ttd :~lrohol. ami a 11 of U1e n"rmun wi II re­ohtainahle Irom the Canadian t'Xlremcl;· bm;y life In pertnrm \\.hen Ill' u.-r :h•· ••.on! :1arcntic ritter patn and rlcarlcn >cn>alion.' :-iational Institute for the tins sernce for the si~htle». to l'lllt•r ;ill d<'Prt'>Sin£ clru~> so m 11 '<'P how thr>c. t~rms ar~

. Blind's natinnol library. :\o less While the talkin~ book was we ,hnuld hr careful to cli.<tin· mi:--.Pd in mraning;. ihan 8ri.OUO n•ccmb. rovrring pilin~ up a quarter crntury of gui.-h hrtwern th<t ,implc anrl J::thrr anrl chlorofonn !re rrrr)' imaginahle topit• from histon·. otlwr important Cl'<'nl!, lhr cnll>plrx nan·olie:· holh prorlucerl commercially Tlw Dian· ol Anne Frank to . wcrP takin;z place in the l'.\'IB Opium (, 11,.., fir.•t in a11y lis: fnlln ;dco,hol. and ~re rlo;ely rc­thc work~ of Churchill. awail 'library. r:ach year ,aw a great· of twrc·olit''· 1· 1, a >lwkr brown Jatrd 10 it in chrmic<>l struc. hliml rradt'rs :lll acro.<s l'anooia.

1 Pr number of readers an<l more past" ohtaine•l lrotn thir!;enin·~ turc a'ld effects. Alcohol is an

i Surrly an achirremrnt in the , hooks tu he read. Tn mrrt thi.s the .iuicc of a t'rrlatn kine! of rlh\'l lt1·<!roxide, C2H.'iOH. and ·short spaer n[ twent~·.fivc : dollhlr ~rowlh mmlcrn ;torage poppy whirh flouri,IH~ in rlh~r ·t, the ethyl o1·irl~. >ears~ Today tlH•sp unahrirlger! methods were intro<luced lu in- Hllllhras\ Asia. Its dCI';Jstatin~ 1 ('2lf.'i\~\J. Ethrr is produced , oral. cdit.ions pre.<ent eal'h book crease lh? space area tn. thr effrrl upon the human prrson· h) a ,<imrlr disltll:~tion of the to l1~trnmg re:ulrrs as dors lh~ nalton;~l llhrary hmg hl'fotr. II , :tlitl· wherrn.·r if, u.<r is tolrr· alrniwl ll'ilh c!iltttr sulphurie

1 pt•intrd page to thr. >~•ring. .tnnl·rcl to CNlB's nrw hradquar- ' 31 .,;1 h:" lllacle it ,. 11 oull:ow in· "'··id. t'hlnrnln•n1 "prmhlt'Prl hy I Th~ hnnl;' are rrad hy llrn~rl· lt••rs nn Ril)"l'tew AITtllte. lln[,· 111 .,,1 of tile ron nine' nf l!w. lreotn'-:: "'•·niJnl wtth Fl3<:k~d i w~~· slilr~ and intrrn;Jflonally lthrrr. 11·hcrr !1,0011 .~quarr feet. wnrl<l. The lr;Jifio· in 11 1 ~ ,,. I om< :known ;Jnnouncrrs from ril<llo , ~;11·r thr lthr;.ry ;Jr!Ntll;llc flo•JI , profltahlr I hot 11 h"' l>crn h:or<l Th" I"! 0,· nn ,,,~!1' . r-:. : antl TV hoth in Brit am ~ncl , sp;~rr, ronlrl lhP 1'0 1'1'1<'~ fully 1 In ~talllp out. Tbet·r i' \'PI'.\' Jt;~u:.l' th• rirtl~' 11·h•rh mtzht . Unitrtl Stairs. Thry arr rrpi'O· rxpanrl to kr~p p~ce w1th the ·lillie ~mnkin~ i11 thP w•·,tem ~he inrlurlorl. 11 inch1rlrs t>r.ly t durrd on •li.;c unmatched for 1 1argrr rc:nlershlp. _ :\\'owl<! whrrr nwn· rrtined thr mnrr fcmtltar. and p.1rti· /quality. l'la)·ing at 33-"J rpms Rrt·ently two nrw 'rrncrs forms of na•·c 11 1iv adrli,.t;on O('· c·ularly tlw>e which hav~ popu. :on microgrooi'C records. the h;1ve hl'rn added .. Vnl111111~er cur. Ahoul l\l'r•nty different ,Jar >i~nilica1:rc by the fact of

talkin1o: books provide twenty- readers worktng ll'tlh ~he hlJ- · ;tlkoloicl cllrmieals iltT <kri\·ed thrir a1·aiL\bility for sclf·mcdi­fivc minutes reading a side. rary are reading on dt.;c and . from opium. the mosl impor- ration. ,\ doctor who specializes

Today long.playing records tape .the te:~t h.ooks requested , !ant of which arc morphine, in the administration of ane~· are no norelty, Almost e\·ery. by blind umvcrstty shtdcnts. In ruileine and hcrnin. Tht· fir't thesia i1a< related that he IJ

one has a record player and the last year alone 30 rolun- twn of thrsr are wideh· IL't'd hY familiar with thr usc of at least builds up a sizable. collection of leers recorded 5\l book.; for 19 . pl\\si .. ialls for lht' ~Jl .. ri;Jtio;1 tltirly It,.,. diff<'l·ent anesthetic his fovourite music. Recorded 'studt•nts. The)' mmlc 2n1. t:•Pt'<, ur ·pain and sullt•rine. \u 0111• olru~;. ""·'t of thr•e haw bern plays and stork; are s~tld com- ! and H52 souudst·riber il~>c r<'· o·:m t•aleul;~ll' tlw ,.;ollles ·nwy d1s1•011•rt•d by syntlu•lic ch<'I111S·

I mercially and at the moment 1 quiri11g 8:16 l'olunl<•t•r re:ultng hare brought in sueh :tilo-ria· try and llt:lll)' nt thrm h:11·e

selections from )'OUr favourite ; hnurs. lion. A l:rr.~t' ~moum of the"' .sPPcialilt'd u<l•>. H<'>l':trch work· readings are gaining in popu- ; In 1958. the lih.rary "'' up a opiates an•. ho11 ewr. dwnncl· r•rs in lht· dntg busin~ss ha1·e lartty, Yet long before the , nell' serv1ce on l•rcnch talktng led to tlw illirit dru;.: traffic made !"I'Cl'l' etfort to d1scovcr a1•crage disc dealer could sell 'books. l: n rl "r arrangements and hecomr· a lrrrihlt· scou1·;:r• a rlru;: which mi:!hl take the the spoken wont. talking book.s ! with Umnn Des A1·rugles Dt· In lhO>C' addlrlt•d to tlwi 1• u.-r. · plat·o• of morphine in mccli<'al were in circulation amnn)l lhr Guerrr in l';n·is. 1':\'111 i• IIIli\' Thrrr arr .'<'l'c•r:d rla<S word.< praC'Ii<·r ;nul not barr thr rl'n si~:htlrss. In fart. the fir'[ I'P· prnviolin~ tnndrrn Frrndt title; ll'hirh rail for <ll'fillilinn >n<l ~''t'' of ,.j,IJI'f""' 11liwh th~ ~rareh nn the lon~·]Jlay rrrorol on first qualit~· rct·nrc!s fnr pnputat· otndrr.<tonclin~. ,\n~l· opialr r 11 tool.< :-n f.r th<,l' b>r• was :-rt in motion to hring · Frrnl'h I':Jnallians from ro;r-1 In ge,irs arr r!ru~s whieh rrllrH cu1f hrrn rnl trrh· surcr.;;fnl. hlinrl prrsons thr hooks of· roast. Sr1·rnty litlrs arr nnw pain. Aspirin is lht• mo<l llt<lrl~· (']'n R~ ('~ntinur<l) rl·rr)' clay rlrmand. llrsr~rl'h rirculatin~ and mnrr an• on llw known a tid u-rrl. h11l llw word 1 Thi; rnlumn L' rn111rilrt! ~:· took plat·e hnth in Unit~d . ll'il)'. Librarian~ .'lair lltol in abo appli<'s to thr ll;e of nu>r- thr :O.:PIIfmtn•II"IHI Trmprr~nr• St~trs ~nrl England anrl horr lhP nrxt two year> thr l'rcn,·h phinr and nn\'arr:~inP. and a Frrlrration to whllm rn~tunr\ fruit in both countri!'s in 1934. section will prond~ " wulr. number nf nth1·r dru~s. All'nlwl ma1· hr arldrcs.,cd), CNlB had recm'lls the follow- ran)!e of choice to suit rvrry is cxt~nsil'cl,· u.-rd hrPau~e of · ing year.

1

· reader. , its anal~csie effcl'l. Sedath·es -·----· ··-··---. .· . In 1958 Edward G. Brown ltlO m; .L\\EIRO, I.~Pl-1\'a·

Readers both bitnet and sJght- : look o•·cr the ll'brart·aii's chaJ·r. are drugs which induce relax· t h k b l . d d . d ·n b r a lion and sleep. Thcrp arc ers ac ·crt up e 1111 a am 111

c WI remem er t~e 1rst two 1 A graduate of the University of several of these designated by Brazil's northeast dropped Tucs­books CNIB recetved, . They 1 British Columbia, he is the only the term barbiturates. Because day -and engineers working to

Lwerte 8bot.h by_ Jame1s Hillon-d blind Canadian to hold a degree of the dangers of addiction and save it praye lor dry weather o~ G on~o; m :re v~h~ecor. 5 in Library Science from the overrlose, in many stales they lor another fh·e days. The Ban·

an oo · ye • r. . tps m University or Toronto. Building cannot he snld without a doc- abuliu Dam in Ceara state has three. Those early d1sc were a on the ·services alreadl' under· been· under threat of a break far cry from the suave Hi Fi · 1 tor's prescription. that' ,1·ould floo1[ 100 miles of/ · · w:u·. ~Tr. Brown introduced I 1e F.ther and ehlnt·oform al'l' the platters ?f ~oday, but they were Frenrh talking hook depart· rill•r valley an![ wash nway the b~~mnmg of what many ment. He also began a Br:Jillp' two. ~est .known. gcnc.~·;t ane~; homes or 70,0011 people. The auth.ortttes term. the greatest magazine for children which thrltcs. 1 hr term orneral known human death toll in three service · eve.r devtsed fo. r blind 150 blind bo•·s and girls are means that the~ at'e t:lkcn tu weeks of flood disasters stands s Lh t c t ' cause complete unconsciousness I at 33 persons.. mce a , 1rs run enjoying every month. -----·-- -------

1• •

twenty-fiVe years ag:o1 nulhons i or Talking Book rrconl> ha1•e' Unrlcr hi~ dirccliHn thr port rd. Th;~t is 1111~· rcsrnrl'h in · Tra1·ei tltllion~ hal'c ('han::~rl 1 come off the prodUl'lion line to, Brailing o[ Cana<lian anrl other th~ tal kin~ book field i" 'till in the jet age. 1\'otnrn who us-1 he swallowed. greedily hy , Braille publications is expand· : ;:oin;: on. For example. in Eng- ; P.d to \1·ear· slacks :f9r air tral'el j thirsty blind listeners in c1·rrr · lng. Rut in spite of quickrnin!! lanrl plan~ are· in h:ntrl to put nnw are partisan~ o{ ·Jhe wool part of Canada. In l!lr,8, aerorrl· interrst in Braillr. "There arc a ll'holr hnok on a sitt:le lap~ .. knit dress. Ther~•s not!tin~ like 'in~ to lihrar.1· fi.o;urrs. hlinrl · ci~ht t<llldn~ book l'''<Hler., for '" take the pl::n· of r~··ori:ls. in . it for enr·r~in~ rrom ·a pl;'J"

Canadians read 700,000 rc~ot·ds. every Eraillist", ~lr. Bro1fll re· l the not t<Jo distant future. ;;erenc and unntll\llled .

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· ~rnvincial:

. . ;nt;.,,,,,,. Gil :O.IcDougald rap~ on t~alll·

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protective hclmrt.

-····- --- --

Optioned CJ\:T\\.-\ Tl. AP - ()ut·

:Baseball: fieldN .Joe Gaines Thtlr~day

: wa~ optioned bY th!' Cinr:n-

1: nati Red~ to Portland In thP

Padfir Coa>t Le:~gue. He : played with Sarannah in thP . South Atlantic League last i

I

·Braves Win Sixth Straight ' · season. Don \ ew::omhe. \'!'tcr:tn

right handed pitch!'r, will bP out of art ion for from two to four rlars. the club ~)il: 'H1'1 '3 irl after ('xamining 2 groin injury. :-<ewcombr ieft thf' dub in thl' south \\' cdt!~srla,· afiPr the pain became so ;!rrat he could not pitch.

Bv THE CA:\ADIA:"' PRESS , Howanl hit home run~ tn pace ' . the Dnri;.wrs. who got _,even The :\Lit waukee Braves were a· rum in the s~rond innin~.

bit shaken Thnr:.•lay when icc: R(tn santo, borrowed from the right-hand<'r Lew Burnette had: Houston farm to Jill in tor tilt• to leave an exhibition !(arne injured Sammy Drake at with Cincinnati after hring hit third ba;e. p;H·Pd the Cubs on the left wrist by a line with a home run .

. drive. ' But x-rays showed onl)' a few , blood vessels were broken alter Tony Gonzalez smashed a ball '

1 off the heel of Burdette'~ glo\'C. , ' Burdette gDt credit for the ' 1 Braves' sixth straight \'ictory, ·

1 7-5. at Columbia, S:C. He is ex· · I peeled to pitch the second , 1 game of the season next Thurs· 1 day, after Warren Spahn opens.

1

' But things still were not all : : roses for :\Iii waukee as 24-year· '1 old right-hander Joey Jay was I . sent horne for examinati?n of : 1 an 1iliJJg back. There IS no 1

I indication when he'll be read~·. . Elsewhere, the New York

l Yankees scored their third 1

I straight victory, 2·1 over De·! troit; newly acquired Don 1

I :'oiincher hit two home runs and 1

I drove in five in Washington's I 10-5 victory over Kansas City; I Baltimore edged Pittsburgh 9-8; San Francisco beat the Bostoo Red Sox 4-2; St. Louil beat Cleveland 1 (). 7, and Los An· geles Dodgers outlasted Chic· ago 14-12 .

ADCOCK'S SIXTH HOMER Joe Adcock's sixth spring

homer, a two-run shot off Cal

I McLish, sank the Redlegs. Hank , Aaron also homered for the Braves while Ed Bailey and , Willie Jones had two-run hom· ers for Cincy. '

Bob Turley, erratic all · spring, gave only one hit until the 1eventh inning when the , Tigers scored on a walk. double and a single. Rhyne

I Duren finished up and held Detroit hitless. Bobby Richa~d· •

1 son homered for the Yanks. : i Mincher, who came to wash· · ' ington in the deal that sent I Roy Sie\'ers to tl:e Chicago 1 White Sox, had a two run

I homer in the first when the Nats scored six times, and a three-run blast In the eighth . Bob Allison also homered for : washington while Joe Morgan I and Marv Troneberry hit I round-trippers for the A's.

Gene Woodlinll crackt'd a 1

two-run homer for the Orioles and Jackie Brandt had four hits. The Pirates' Bob Friend, named to pitch the season's opener, was touched for 12 hits. Dick Stuart and Bob Skinner homered for the bucs.

Matty Alou, brother of the ! Giants outfielder, Felipe, had ' two home runs and batted in

1

.

three runs. Lou Clinton hit one for the Bosox while Woody Held had a home run and sin· • ale for the Indians. Bill White i and Ken Boyer each had three hits for the Card~.

Duke Snider and Frank ~

'

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a better buy-because It's better bu!!f

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' ' TH! DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NfllD., FRIDAY, APittl. I, 1960

B~ THE CASADIAS PRESS : Final: 1

WLFA Montreal I 0 4 2 , Toronto 0 I 2 4 · · !Montreal leads best of se,·en •e·j LOOKING UP-Salary ICIUabble behind him, Mickey Mantle ries 1-01 I at St. Petersburg, Fla., looks forward to his biggest season

a A Pts. PIM with the New York Yankees. That would take a lot of doing. Kelly, Tor 3 7 10 • 2

Geoffrion, Mtl 2 7 9 •I· c 1• N ~lr:;~~~~~ci.~:~ ~ ~ : ~~ ur 1ng otes Moore, Mil 5 2 7 2 1

Olmstead. Tor 2 ' 4 fi 0 · Howe, Det I 5 6 4 MIXED BONSPIEL

1

V. Rei~ J. Burg~ss Pulford, Tor 4 I 5 2 Saturday April 9th. lin. M. Lush :\frs. c. A. Pippy Regan. To1· 2 3 S G l-4 ~Irs. MacGray Mrs. L. Forbes Stanley. Tor 2 3 5 2 Sir L. C. Outerbridge Duff, Tor 2 3 5 t C. F. Horwood F. E. Hue H. P. Carter

Dr. Josephson J. Meehan

------------ . C. I. Merner

JACQUII PLANTI ---------------------• 'T. Griffith~

Toe-Mighty Happy Man CANADA MONTREA-L (CP) - Coach to give the players a cllance to

Toe Blake waa a miaflty happy DepartllleJI& of ra•llc WorD, man Thursday night after Mon· relax.

Ottawa treal Canadiena defeated Tor- He said he was definitely ut·

TENDERS SEALED TENDERS address·

ed to Secretary, Department of Public Works, Ottawa, and en· doraed, "Tender for Wharf Re· pairs, Bare Ba,-, Newfoundland", will be received until 3.00 p.m. \E.D.S.T.),

onto Maple Leafs 4-2 In the first isfied with the team's perform­game of their Stanley Cup ance. final. . "They got the breaks," he

Happy because Canad1ens , sand. "Sooner or later we're had won, and happy, too, be· going to get them." cause the game waa over.

"It looked as if we were tir· He Bald Montreal's fourth

Mrs. Wilansky

G. Stirling

W. G. l\loore I

H. W. Kelly, Miss M. Garland Mrs. M. Whelan

D. M. Lowe T. Dunne

M. Whelan

Mrs. C. J. Doyle

~ W. Wi111or Mrs. s·toneman R. J ohnstDD J. Bell

D. Stoneman Mrs. M. Dunne Mfl. W. Carter W. R. Winsor

H. P. Conroy Mrs. French

Chas. J. Doyle C. Tobin

Mrs. G. Sparkes Mrs. K. Hibbs W. Coughlan R. Gallagher

WEDNESDAY, MAY f. 1960.

ina out there towarcb !he end

1

aoal, a deflection by Leaf Tim of the aame," Blake aaid. Horton of Henri Richard's shot,

A. Hallett "They're going to be touah,'' "took the steam out of ua Mrs. C. Pratt he said, referrin& to the Leafs. when it appeared we might be Mrs. 0. Ayre

Piau, .tpeeiflcationa and "Think so?" asked a report· comln£ back." 1 Mrs. W. ~lacNamara for1111 o1 tender can be seen, or tr. · G I' h 1 F. Snow Mrs. D. Wills can be obtained throuah: Chief "We didn't take It euy, did oa Je Jo nnr Bo"·er ~as 1 T. Petten Mrs. Pound Enaineer, Harbours and Rivers, we?" wu Blake'a reply mean· j asked If Horton had anytlmli Spare-P. Pollard G. Wells H Bulldl . · • to say after the aoal. w p d ' ' unter nr, Ottawa, Ont., 1nj that Canadiens had put "H ., B , . oun · Dlttrlct EnJineer, P.O. Box everythilli they bad into win· e swore, was ower I H-80111, Buelanaster'a Field, nlng and appeared to be fadlnll comment. luildlna 31, It, John's, Nfld., iD the third period. • -----­Diltrict EDaiDeer, Ralston Build- The atmolphere In the MOD· Chueh Service inc, P.O. Bol 8'111, Halifax, N.S., treal clreulna room wa• quiet llld can be aeen at tht P01t and buaine11·like u the Habs B lin Lea Officea at Corner Brook, Grand shed their hockey gear quickly OW g gue Fall• and Hare Bay (Bonavilta and headed for the ahowera. Bay), Newfoundland. They appeared tired and &lad

To be eonaldered each tet It was over. There wasn't der mill&- much exuberance.

(I) Ill lellOIDfllllld b7 oae WAIMER·UPPII of tbe alttrnnive ncuritl" Acro11 -the Forum Ice, the celled for iD tile tender docu Leala walked Into their drell· menb. room muttertn1 to them·

1 b) Ill made on the printed Team Captain Geor1e fOfllll •upplled b7 the DepU'I wa1 flnt In, uylng m ·nt and In aceorcla11re with to ''TIIat'a juat the the conditlona nt forth thel't! warmer-upper." .

MONDAY, A111rll 11th.

Alleya 1 encl 2: 7.15-St. Thomas'

Wesley "A". Alltya I end 4: U~Cochrlne Street "A"

VI. St. Mary's "A".

STEAD TROPHY Last Nlgld'a Winners

Skip, A. Cox, Mate, Mrs. M. Lush; Second, R. l.eGrow; Lead, Mrs. M, MacGray.

Skip, F. E. Hue; Mate, M. Whelan; Second, Mrs. M. Ward; Lead, Mra., M. Whelan.

The final playoff for the Stead Trophy will start at 7 p.m. tonicht. All teams con· eerned please be on time.

Tonlllllt at 8.30 Whipper Bill Watson accompanied by Newtoundiand'a "Timmy" will visit tbe rink. Curlers please be tbera to ilvt , them a hearty welcome. .

;! , ID. No one appeared to be lllten· ·1.»-Gower Street "A" vs. ...._ CLOSING ION!IPIEL

i• 'l'be loweat ,. any ttnder not l.nl. 11 the L11f1 kept their neeelllrily acr1pted. own feellnD to them•elv•.

IOIIIT FOITIII:I, . Coach Punch Imlactl barred ~ adlf t1 A .. lall&ntlve newspaper men from the dren-

ltnkll uj llrl'ltarJ. 1111 room for • minute or two

Church ef the Ascen· sion "A".

Alleya 5 entl 61 7.15-Salvatlon Army "A" vs.

Kirk. 11A".

. --. . Saturday Nl&ht

'J--1.15 Men-J. D. Anderson, J. P.

Obeiven, T. Dunne, A. Hood,

1!

our oa s core ··-----· ------- ·-----·-------

niPERIAL T.C. won the City Inter-Club Bowlin!( Cha mpionship at Holy Cross Alley.~ last night. ~!embers of the winning squad are, left to rigbt:-DoH Mcadus, Jim Dooley, Jim Gosse, Leo Gosse and Don Oldford. •

(Royal Photo Servsee)

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~1'~------------------------------------------------~------------THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFlD., FRIDAY APRIL 8, 1960

..... . · ..•. ,.!.-,,_.,-,w'fi'U' ..... ~

SALE I USED

WASHERS I A fine assortment of used washers - oil

checked and reconditioned by our Ser­vice Department and ready to bring you many years of useful seryice for a fradion of their original price. AND - you can get full credit for what you have paid on one of these washers at any time within 3 months if you wish to trade it on the purchase of a new

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$39.95 UP TERMS $4:00 DOWN -

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Available in a cho1ce of attractive colours. the stain resist­ant tables are sturdily built with double chrome legs and e,~ansion leaf. The chairs are comfortably padded and upholstered with durable washable plastics in colours to match the tables. These handsome chrome sets ore avail­able in a choice of four chair or six chair combinations.

s49.so Up TERMS AVAILABLE

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The complete line Is now availoble to you,

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·.THE GREAT EASTERN OIL COMP~Y, LIMITED

/ Jacoby ron Bridge I

I. THIS WAS NO

. ORDINARY DECK I I BY OSWALD JACOBY , South looked at his hand and

I. chuckled. His first thought was to ask what the bonus for five aces In one hand was and then

I he had a better idea. He decid-1 ed to bid th& hand and evPntual­lly contracted for the grand slam in hearts.

West doubled and South re­doubled. He could handle that king of trumps if it were only once guarded.

West opened a spade and South won the trick. Then lie played his first ace or hearts

I and when both opponents fol· :lowed he was home. The only heart left apparently was the king.

, He player) a few tricks in tile, side suits for purposes of c"n· fusion and then led out his

. second ace of trumps. 1 West looked puz~Ied for a

WEST

NOR.TH .H .76H + K R 6 2 .KQ9

E.\81 • Q 10 R 6 4 .KK2

• KJ 932 .3 •• J ~ ... J 86

+ lOH 3 • 10 7 2

SOl'TH (01

/t.A • AAQJ 1098 • ·' Q 7 .... 4

Bolh Yulnerable !lnuth Wt~t l'l'orlh E .. t 2 • T'a'~ 3 • Pa~s 7 • Doubl• Pa~s P~" Redblc Pass Pa•s Pass

Opening lead-• 6

moment. "Doggone it: I thought that was a sure trick,'' he re· marked before producing the king of hearts.

Then he chuckled a bit him­self and added. You had better j

• find a third ace of trumps ! somewnere if you want to make :this hand because I was dealt i an extra king."

CARD Sense I Q-The bidding bas been: l Xonh t;ast South West ' 1 • 2 • 2 ¥ Pass 2 • Pass ?

, You, South, hold: i .Q9:J ¥A~9S7 .K65 .32 i What do you do? , · A-Bid lhree spades. If you : want to overbid a trifle and jump to four I have no criticism.

TODA Y'S QUESTION Instead of bidding two spades

yDUr partner rebids to three clubs, What do you do now?

Answer Tomorrow

Spiritual Birth

1 LONDON, (APJ-A divorce :court judge Wednesday reject­. ed a wife's explanation that I she save birth to a child con-

I, ceived by the spiritual bodies of herself and a man.

Mrs. Olive Day Bull denied ever having sexual intercourse with the co-respondent, Adrian de Payneville.

She told the court that on V·E Day, 1945, there wa~ a pa.ssionate meeting some placr between her and de Payne­ville'• astral bodie1.

At. tile result, she said, a child was born-13 years later. Mrs. Bull said ahe met de Payneville in the flesh for the first time in 1956 while &he was doinll 1 house-to·house canvas for a reli-gious sect.

As their friendship deepened their spiritual discussions be· came a bond between them.

The husband, Albert Edward Bull, said be returned home on

' one occasion and found de Payneville with his wife. De Payneville was dressed in 1 brown robe, white rosary and crucifix.

The judge gave Bull the di· vorce and custody of two chil­dren born earlier in the mar­riage,

He also ordered the co·res· pendent to pay £100 in coats.

WELCOME WAGON HOSTESS

Will Knock at You~ Door with Gifts and Grutlngs

from Friendly Busifless Neighbours and Your

Civic and Social On the occasion of1

New Comer to the City The Birtn of a Baby

94865, 3582 or 90943

PRISCILLA'S POP

BUGS BUNNY

THE STORY OF MARTHA WAYNE

4LlE'l' OOP

rAPT AIN EASY

lOOTS AND HER &UDOTES

',1.~~~·-:, -~ U.1~.~ ~..;y:;,· C~l=®..t"E~ S~!S'l-\\l\.. .~U~\ V\1:-~'E 't-u.l\~~ p., ~\'L'E\ 1 ~\:IS· ~b) 1. ~'~'- 1.'tl\ 'bO •c.,,.~~ 1. c~·,.

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MORTY MEEKLE

FRECKLES ANO HIS FRIEND!

~00 ... ~ 'O'E\\'=R ':>'E.'C IJ.M~\ ,, ~%~ 1.: 11"1 "\'CO ~'OO~S\

Bv AL VERMEER

By LEON SCHLESINGER

ly W. JHRUGGS

A\lD'IOU "AVE A o,I.~CE STUDJo-Ait~ iYK.TLY fiJ SI<(0!.1CS OF MY liME!

lv V. T. HAMLIN

ft USLIE TURNB

ly EDGAR MARnN

00~, '-;0\:1 ~\tl 1..>0\~ ~ ~I'Zo'E'. 1\ 00(0\ ('1.-p.,' G~EI\\ ~E \\\

By DICK CA V!tt

WHO WA"'> IT THAT <?AID: "A LITJ'LE LEARNING t<; A. ~NGEROU? THING''!

'Y MERREU BlOSSER

. , ..

TH;: DAILY N~WS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., FRIDAY, APRil 8, 1960

CCII'!'•I~t 1- lt:t ~ Pr1r.a 'r¥htt. D~J.IIII!II•IIl ~ NIA S•r~iu, l~~t.

I

XXX! • "Slop lt. I ran't take any j lie heard het' ga•il, "Are you mot·e." He saw then· that she

11ut of ~·om· mind?'' was ncar the breaking point. "Somtthing about ~·ou both· She was lh1• weakest link;

trtd mt right from the 5tart. not l'iersun as hr had thought, Your voice. You'd disguisQd it but Ruth , .. Ruth Compton, in Ra~·town and 1 didn't make or whatei'N' het• name was. I thi' association berausc nf the Slw would tell him. she would 1

ws~· I mrt you on the train- talk. if he pushed her just a a lone girl. an no~ ed by n lillie more. She would break, 1

trl\'rlling salesman. It could ~·e~. but she would talk. She I not hal'e happened beltl'r to would spil) out the name he Jl lull anr suspicion 1 might had sought for so long. hal'!• had " • • • 1

"1 don't knnw what ~·ou't•e llr 1ulkrcl aroun(] thr 11 in· talklng about"' doll, real'ltcd behind the ~bade

"Put on ~ome rlothc•." and again t'atsc!l the window. l therP wa.~ a momrnt·~ si· Ill' heard ht'r mmt• tllrn and

ltncr on hrr part. thPn hr. hi' lookt•d hat·k. She wa• hpard her rummaging ahtnLt 111 walt·lung 111m. an almost dal.t'd th~ dark and strpprd hat·k tn look 111 he1· I'Y~''· 1

th~ wtndnw. Hrat·hlll~ brhind "Coood night." hr 'aid. , tht> •harte. he pu~lwd dol\ n lihP did not rC'ply.

17

Community Development by Wickford Collins

PART SIX: CONCLUSION ed demands then we have no 1 die Tomorrow \I ill he inherited There is a lot that can be alternative but to fall behind by our children and unless ~·e

done by the ordinary c1tizen and struggle along on an ever arc to raise them to become re· to develop this country, If 1 decreasing standard of ]i1·ing. c1picnt~ of social welfare bene· every man ptlches in his maxi· 1 It is our responsibility to , fits or to move out of this Is· mum effort much can be a1·· 1 plan for the future <o that our' land, we must pian for the im·, l !'omplished. But unconnected chtldren can lind in this is· : pro1·ement of our economy so ·:l aclil'ity may !liVe a lop·sided land·provmce some way of that they can h\'e and work

1 result where lhe cure may be earning a decent living. Jo'ot' in ~ew!oundland. worse than the tllness. Co-or· · centuries New!oundland has History will judge this gen· · i dtnatton of arli\'ity can take

1 been a stagmg post: a stop· cration not by how much It ,

place at the commumty Jr,·cl ping-over place between the earns or how much it enjoys. and from there it can gro11 ('l'adlc and the c\'cntual em· modern hfe. hut bv how much to the top lc1 el of the l'roL·in· ploymcnt tn a foreign land 1t has c·ontnbulcd to the' fu. !'lal etlort. It is 111 the !'Om· We must try to 1111 1ll'lll c our LUI'!', If 11 leads ~ eabiJagp •• muity that initial!\!' and dnLr rt·onumy to 'II• h 1111 Pxt~nt hkt' !'XI~tcrwe nf hLin~ fot· to· mu<t take hold and it i• lhe th~t our l•lnnd \\Ill b~ more rJ~1 lh!'n JUri~mrn1 Will hare

r Crnnmunit~· DcL·elo,>nlt•nt com than a tran<Jt .. am)> all cady been pa"erl.

I mill!'£ that •·an hP 1h!' hn•Pd· ll IH· !'anuot p1 o\ i<!l' f'm Thr,c arlll'll's h<t1 e b~~~~ an 1ng g1 ound tor the~e e--eut1al plo) men I lor our <"htldt r·n Mlempllo explore some of the

I latlnrs. thrn out· lll'l\ llll\f'l''lll \1 Ill po,,tb:iilil's open t., U'. It i1> Tile C'onununtty Dr\ clop· lw Itothm~ mrH' than a far· to he horr•l that nth PI' mind~·

tJtp \ltndnw. \ t·nwhn~ wa• 1·omm~ out lit <IO<ld \\attLng Shr strul'k nf tlu• hntrl. but otlwn\ lsr no

a m11t!'lt o!'l!' >.11\' hun Bol•kc•r pu<hcrl Sht> apphrd tt to the 11 lt'k nl I'B't thr t·owl!oy. pulled oprn Stock Market l{eport

men! CommittPc 1'<111. and 1111'\' for lht· produi'IHIIl ol \1 til takp llil llw •ean·h until 'itoulrl. t•xplore thr dtffl(·ul· t1 nmed 'II<'J"lalH< lor «'XIIIII't lhr bulk of olLJ ~dull popul(·

1 t:l's that lwd!•Lil the l'l'"nomtt· lo \1:11nland and "'"'' \lhtlt• lton '' dt·•·ottnl! a Jar~" part

1 .~1'11\\tit ol the commlllllt; and \It' lllill'l'lll:\ln "' llllPiliCI'hh· of 1ts ltmf' to srckutg >uiutl!lns J.'nn1 the natn c ah1lit1, ti1al rcl as PH' I fot' many or lltt''~' tu rtul many problcms.

• kr<roscnr lamp and Jlnkkel', thl' front door ol the hotel and htrnmg, •aw lltal she had put \\as 111 sanctuM·~·. I I'll a bathmhr, Ttw ntght hotel 1•lcrk sal In

She ~tralghtrnrcl and •aw ~ l'Ot kin;: ehmt·. dnlltll!, Bok· tht mattt>rl han· on thr l!•ft ~.cr pa•sl'll him and entered •:lit' nl hts hr~d. the ~·~k<'d thr ,;aluon. hlood and dll'l on lm far~. :\t lilt' n·ar of thr room

Toronto TURil~Tn rLO~I~G ~TtH K'l

ll:r Tht" ('aa~&dlan Pu\• 1 un1111u swd; t:xrh.m•'t' \rnl 7

IQuotntjun-. m u•nto, uulr~!'; nuutwcl ' odd lut. ~d t:x- llJ'Illencl: l.l I ·,

},o::lu~. X\\·-l'x 'nrran\!1)

I 'h ''·II \1t ,, 01

,,,.rllll \11•l.1 loin \!1111\f'il "Tnlm ,, iln1 OIL 'Ill \\JJ,..lit

r 'hn1:1\ '' '\ .. m.1 l'r

has a\11·a~·s hren rrtmled a~ sprrta!Jsts one nt our rharattei'I'tks. thr De\'elopmrnt on 1 largt' soluttons \\Ill appear. Thr <calc is 111 the hands or the ma,,n c weight ol opinion r~· ~o\·crnment, but ner.' com­sultmg from an bland-wide , mumty can hate II< o\\ n de· nrl\\ ork of these l'nmmittecs Yclopment plan To dCl'Jdc \IOUld. in Limr, frJ('US so mueh on Its plan the people m the

Shr rxdatm~d 'oltl~. 11err at least a dn7.l'll men, "You'\'!' h~rn hurt''' most or them >llttn~ or Mand ,,.,k ''1 toln \ ou I 11 n< •hot '• 111~ around a pol•rt ~amr. As

toia\n Htch 1 nw ('lo'" \liSt.~

"'' I \.It } ••. ,,, fh'at :\1 , 0111

\.1\\ !.HI

" 1 attention on olll' problem~ community mu<t fn·,t tbmk, - ~ that arl'Pptahlc an'\\ ers \\ ould probe, inn~sttgate and enqutrr.

~j =~ ltaLr to ue found. We must rliscms our prob· ;,

~he luokl'll around. hrt' l'l't'~ lung as the ganw t•ontinurd ~~·::~"; ,,, 11 falltn~ upnn a ptldJI'r and tlw salonn would ~lay open. l•h"<"• howl nn tltt' \\ ash•t and Shr Bukkt•r ktll'll' that ' ~·"'"' • .. • o\IC:ttnl

1' ~~a S1i :;~. ~-; , 2 ;\t \\ t ,,I ~l'\ 1'1111

~ lll\t'll '

\ loold• \H"

'll.tn1

'2~11 -7 It'' a great mistake to think ll'ms publicly: atr our 'iews "' -t that in an army uram• and and make sun· that we do our '

• n ahtlil,\ a1·c the prerogati\'cs o! own thmk1ng, rather than -3 the genet·al<; in a country. a< bhnd!y acccptmg th!' o;Jmions

• v.rnt to tt. ~ut a towrl and Ill' \\l'llt towarrt th!' ~amc 111 R"' poured w~trr t1nm tltr plll'hrt' Bt•lm·t• hc l't'al'hcd 11 t•lt•tcltr.r lm 1·'"1' • • 11 :\l•llhl'

mto lht' brl\ll Trn\1. \Utlt·hinJ.: tltr game. In< R""·'" ".\11 right" <hr 'aiel t111 L'l'rl Ill' aruntrcl as he saw "'""

A ' \ \!t.uh;.t Hr t'l'(l«t•rl <tnrl •at on the Bnkkcr

far rdcr ol tilt• h~rl She rlall "Smt;rhuch did, ) r•. · Buk· hrrt l lowrl mlo tlw watl'l kl't' rl'turtrrl and wa•hrd the rlricd blmtrl F'.w1n~ h>~n. al'nh< the frnm hi< latr. s:u~ worked table. •al 1':1111 Sn.•:·. lit• , . .,. r.:trl"full,l. ltrr tnlll·lt ILI!ltl clalltlr!l w!wn hr •:m· Bokkcr.

Hr <ald. flllall)'. "Thank'" A fl'l\ gulrl t'OJI\, 1\'Cl'r 111 "I rl do a< murh to• <tnnllw". front o1 Sha~. a thm parkrt Thrrf' \Ia~ <Ill! IHI•llllt> Ill o( ):lt'rnha<"k' llr ,urtdcnh

ltrr tnnr. llr •atrl. "I ):Ill'•> Jlll'ht'cl l!atk his !'hall ".lu<l ~ thur wa• no !•hant I' h11· II• to ' moment. ~t·ntlrllll'n, · ht• said hi' frirnrl~. Rt~ht from tJll' to thr l'al'd pla~'rl'• . ~tart-'' Ill' 1\alkrd to onr ~icll'. •li!·

"Y!Iu d1dnl tr~ ·· nalltng fot· Bnkkrr to lulltlll "I tnrd, · Bo~k!'r •ate!. "I "\\"hnt ha11penrd. Phil''" hr

trtrd 1·ery han!." a<kl'rl whrn tlw~· \ll'l c nut of \

~'1)11

" ou ramc to llit,\10\\ n to Par• hot nf the group around •"" rake up old fu·rs, dig up thr pokrr ,gam!'. '''"' •krlrton~ that Wl·re beltl'r lrlt "I caught up 11 ith ru·r>un ;;,',~; bum•d. You-killrd 1\\o nwn." --anr! then 1 "a' amhu,ln•d on '""' 1 •••

•·onE'", Bokkcr ~orrrc·trd. thl' ll'il\ ha1·k" 1 ~ :.'.:·•; •· .,,

''Two llll'll WCI't' killrd," "\\'h1;. -Who. Phil"'' "'"' " 1 11: Q~ :j-l

"I dtdn't kill Bill (iray•on" "Who but Trow'• nut there ·;,,, I' I 1.'"• 1'1

-hr pausrd-''thr mnn whose 11a• ~nnwnnr wl!h h11n" "" "• 1" "' I I 1. l~IIU W 1() l(l

I <trr )'011 I' aJmt'd to ul'." Shav lJ'Il\1 ned. "Atlt•J' VOII l~'" "' "' ·'

'0

" '• J

Sht made a small 111esturr, lf•ll t1i1• allt•rntwn. 1 went ,;11'r ~"'" " 11 11

d . I h I l I .3,j~~~ l.l.i b. b 1 • l •~n11R.~tng tJ n c 1r tn tlw .Hlll. Tlwt ,. wao; a mfln 1',tiJ :uu :Jn11 ,1!(\ He said. "\\'ho a1·r LUll"'' \lith him--hi!( ht'lll<PL'. Tmw '~'"'' 1.' '" '" "lt'K tao latr rnr that·· ral!l'll him ~lill'hum, or ~Ill· ::::~ ~~ 4

" '''

''It', brrn nothin!( hut lir.<," l'!tt•ll ot· sunwthing Ilk!' that." I&~' Bnkkrr 5aid. "You ~aid you "Charr :\lel'IJem!'' Bnkkel"s c lien""" ~~'.' WPrP Gray,on's si.•ll'l". ... " r~·r.~ IICIII ba(•k tu the group ,. umu-.<r "'"

"Y d 1 ... h 1 t' t'fn 1"'' ou ma e me 1e. s e I<'· around t 1e table. But :\lec·hem · !'G Arww ;7;u MJMd. "Yo11r continual PI od· was not thet'l'. lle wa~ pro b. c Hatt•»•ll 101100 dinlf and qur•tlonin~. How alll,L' in Bokker's bedroom 1'011 11""•l ;"' · · c .\lathrn flur• rould I remember \\hat I'd 11 a1tin~ <mtMs ~~.; •aid. You neLer left oif que•· "lla\'Eo ''OIL s!'r 11 To111 Cl!af. t' ~1 """ 1 "''' I I ... d 'l k h fM'."' ~ t '1t•rJt .. un ~.~ur• I !'In< nl n now w at 1 '. l' ""•h•r """

lVI• ~aying or dotllll." ":'\ot lll the last c·ouplr nf 1 ' 111 \•'"' '"'·'

".\11!'1)~,'' Bokkrr •aid. 'TI'e hours. llr dropord 111 arour.cl t: ~~.~~h~~•r ~;;;' w•nted just one ansiiN-onr nudntght." Sha,,· suddrnh,· c n.,,.,. .• , H•"' ;•,

(' ""•UliWim lft{•'t 11 •

lln•wPr In on!' question. Jrnttld lllllt·rd. "l'l'r hPcn haL in~ the 1 "" s,rt 1,• • ;:

111>1 J[l't 1t from (;raL"<on. 1 deL"il'• ot\ n lul'k. PhiL !--I'm 1 """"' ''"" I · t np-\tan 111M

f'OU dn't lll'l it from Trow and lh·st hit I' a\\ lll't' Cit~. Brokr." I nprwnrt ' 1"• t rouldn't J!C:Ot it from Pirr<onn ·· in thP "amr ~pol as whrn wr t lt"!>lr~ur '\I(\ ·~ ' S · ,., 1 1) 'ratnn :!:lutl .,.

top Jt. •le rxrlalmrd. (To a. Continued) no t'OUl ;on 12 ------ -- • -- • -· -- ll l"t Hm n ihl"t.O

ll Eldon& oon ))om• 10;;, 5l11 1 A Onnalda 1\00 ; 2

' tlu\'an I~UU l:l g ~mphi l:iOO ~~ ~ t:aJ.t Ml'l R!'IO \"oil

.. ; : ' J

ilflll 9P.I~ 1.1 :\jl

~) !l :n J :\~ :\l i I

11111 ln1

.3 !R I"

1-:a~t SUU \H.!"1 J:.J I F.ldPr 2R(IO 1.!8 I! I

Votes In Prl.mary j;~~~1, ~g; :i:";f·;II'·-~ Record Flood Of

I Froblsh•r •460 Jb8 16~ w. • 1 Gaitw1n 1900U 1 :'i1 ~ 7 • i

1

1 a .. ,n Mmu ;nn Sti'" li1" 111i .. :.a Gtnto~ sooo 111 9-1 ~ !i1 ~ -1 Geo Sc:lu 16!10 90 81) 8~ -· 7

MIL'"AUKEE A f .._ I Gnl !\1:nct 3tlOU !?i !'\ :!7 -t 2 n ' ( P) - Com· )ler cent o me Iota two-party lllant " 110o "''• 11'• 11'•

Zt•nm,tc {'arh

Rulolo Pend O~e \ u}.;on ('un

19 ,,~

1~1

" II~

••

!!M 4SO 4biJ ..!1i

I> ou•

1'11 l.:!l

..! ~· ]U~

811

'

- 1 t

13 I

Mnntrcal

~t·.•c.r,.nl'\

ll nd· t'

n11m r•• r lltlllll<'lt!un

'" 30 ' .!II

. ' ' "'

New York ~I \\ l OHii ( l o .. J~(, en 1H h.•

f\1 Thr- t an.ut11n J'r,.•• \lun\\ \\ " c rnt R.ul!•l t n1 r ~td o11 '\; 1 I lei \1111 ilfl \ ,ln~r1nun \\ ('~1111: ('

1\• nnr• ott

Toronto ',,

.. noun ~i•., Jj"U()II ~~q

I il!~l !-111 :.'!1h \ll\111 ~ j' 'I 1;39,,(1 ]1!1 1~1

-~:; hhlor~ -;m·lnding ours- has ol others. Puhll!' debate is nn Onec ~ year, It Is ncces~ary +I often sh0\\11. 1hc grcatl''t abtlt rxll:llcnt wa)' to e'po•e pruh- lor the ll"ab~na Bo~, rtub ta -~ t1· may bl' the pn'<<'S<lon of I I'm' to tilt• light of , <>a•nn. haLe a Dotll' to Door L'anras

the humhlc't t·llizcns. Thc ll pub itt' dcbo~i<• 111 our dill i 1•H Fund>. Lost ) ear the Bell Communitv IJr\'rlopmenl Com· L'llltlc' dtrl nothlll:! )11ore than bland l'llilllnumt;. 'ho~'>rd their nlltl!'l' t·an bl' the oiY,('llrt' •hem us lh!' '•Z<' a1Hl natur .. nl lntei'C't Ill. and ~upporl ol. tht h;wkgruund from 11h1~h thc•r out· P('<mnmo~· p111iti<'m- thrn Illl~s 1 luh hy g111ng l!Cncrously, future lpadcr• 11111 elllrl'J.!P \II• \IUUid na\'r achanH•d ~ 11 "11 nl·cr two lhou,and dollart

'• "IIH l'l' lh~1 t·an 1rr1•ilr thP lon~ "a' on the road to a hal 11 •1' rat<cd dunni! thr C<<nLa• tt:mnng a111l opportunil\' thai ant<'rl <·•·onnm~ '"'1 .•••ar. llhtch Ill' Jolt 11a~ 1 \IIi I In .ll;.! llt0Lll to thr front l'ubht· rlriJdl!' 111 t·om•nuntll' ;o•od dim! .\t a 111Crl•ng holtt

3'

H't• an• h<'JJ '= to a f11,·m ol ('Oil1JnJiit't's \\ 111 .;.;hi.\\ up our un l'hm ... d,J\' \lrtrch 2Sih, tt o;,;h~ JH' ...... that not unh nltdiP.., slw. \(·,Jmin~ ... ~lJHl ",II mdu·:11c \\il.;;; dct·iderJ 1n .:-Pl S:lturday1

ll' und<·l'l''timat!' o11r 11\111 l'.ht·tr our q~llllatd< arl' lcJ\1 .. \la' 14th a.< lhp natr lor th' t·,mahtltl<r• a< tndtLJrlual- hut .. ,. tl1a11 lhu'l' 11 f otht•t PrO\ Ill 1\n)' l:u11 t'llllr•·tton tim 1car ''•'"'l'' u' to nrht•tilc thr l'f •·r·, l'uhl>t rtrbat1• 11 .11 ,1]"1 All 1\l' a'k al th1' tunr 1; I hal lort' ol olll' tt'llnll·\t'llfound· a1uu-.• our mlt•re,t antlprnmt till• grnrrou' proplr nl Brll I~ Ianete,- 11 \I<' arl' to pl<>~l'>:''' 11' to 'l't• 11 i!r•rp 111• 1 ,01 Ill!· l.n1d bt,n· 111 n11ntl tho elate, '"' 111<'1 ltaLr taJth "' n11r tel ptn\(' oul""'"' Ell'l') "'l'llllC "·'.'· 14th. and do thr1r •·rr} }(1\\·tOUntntnl'IH othC','\\('.(' \\(' nr PXPI'('S':Iflll lllt'll'cilng 01'\\ ... hr ... l "hen lhr <'1111\a ...... tr r,,Il:-; ""''t .1lwa~> looJ, ln lhl' out· P.t)ll'l, radto a lid tPie\ IS LOll Til~> ts Ilo~s 1 l~h \I' celt •trlrr to cuntrul and dll'l'l'i our •hould b!' user! to locus allen .11rus• l'anart~. ~ncl the ~talf nl In ~s. tLon 1111 our .. ,·on,lmk· and , 11 • 'PLenty eight club' in fort) TmH'• anti rtonulllll' pattrrn• ,·,al )troblem' '\lam· an am~- lour communthc> hope lltal

arc l'llllllglllg raptrll,\' and 1i we ll'Ul' -tate<man ha< soh ed all adu:ts In each community w1t •. a1 P to 'lll \in WI' nmst l'han~e tlw problem' of this country luke lime out to 1·isit the Bon·

~;, 1\ tllt them. The great!\· in· tiler a <'UP of lt'J in the In!· Club in their ~ommunity. Thl '~"• t·n·a<etl soda! \\CIIal'c ben!'· elwn. •un·•nllulcd b~ ram1l:.• or trlea of Bo)s Cluh Week is n01 " ' ., , ftts I rom thl' ('anachdll go1 em· b:. fl'l('lld<. !Jut 1t ,, onl,\ 1n the monc~·raJstng but rather 1

9:, nwnt were su!ftewnt lo ea'e realm of publtr dt'l'tl,,ion ',Leek set aside to think of tilt ~:.:: u' 1nto Confederation wtlh Ill· that fnuttul Hll'as 1'111 !'a)l Bo~s Cluh work in the com

cn•a,ed mcuml's anrl lht• nc1·es· turr the im:1gmation of .the mull!t). and not only to thml ~adl' lund, to ftnanre govet'n· people. 11 mo<s has gathcr,•rt about II. but to come to th1

,,,, ment budgets In ·~g .. UJ pop on our nLIIHis IJccause of apa- chih and see what goes on Tht ulation was small and our till' an dthc tll'll~ged state that \'.'aham1 Bo)s Cluh 1< open rlaiiJ 1• ants \\err few. but now \\e eomcs from Immediate :11'0'· for ''"tors from 3 30. ,'j 30 an1 hal'(• acrPplerl the im;JI'Cned penty and I\ ell bemg, th~n !tum 7.30 p m .. P.OO p.m St.•ft ~limdatrt o1 liL"IIl:.! a• normal l'ontrn\Cl''l~l dtsc·U"Ion \\ill at•d 1oluntcers are clomg thru 311rl 11 I' <crk a <till highrr hplp to -hak<' ltHI'r that mo•< utm•"t tn hrlp bmld ~oocl rllt <I,Lilrtard anri 1\<' ha11· an 111 If 1\l' l1a1c no tltott2hl <>lit lo :rn' of thr ·fulure "' th1- <•>Ill

l'l't'~'!'cl appPitlr tor moll' Rllrl "''""' IIIII' dllh hrr:HI 11r "Ill llllllllt; Thf' rlonr ,, npe 11 •c " h!'ttl'l' ~11\CIIlllll'lll '1'1'\il'C' Jj ht· oll 1111' ,l '111011 Ill the man ,lOLl COme ancl <hOI\' :n111' f)(

:r. 0111 prncJUl'tHP f'il:lilCit\ h~o;; \• ll) cai.;; allc( rfllllk' llF'11 1 1\ :cr~c.;t Ill fhP flo; ... nr )•HI1

n. I rot kf'pt Pill c• wtth our lilt II'CI... twl.l\ 101 trPl11 j t P\\ h,. ma~· <"omnnrmt·. .,,

,,

SIMCA: styled in f'larist~· exciting to drive, comes

COmpletely equipped! Thisisthebest car value 1n

'liSh"i 11 19

~_(j.ll - ,:J 2•

Canada today. SIMCA r::~mbines high styling, superb perform· ance, true top economy, an~ it is family size. Standard equip.:'-

• "

jl2 - ].I.

1' It ~ 1:: :.j ., 1

pi Pte unofficial return~ ha1 c votr. tlla•,.r 400o 21 ~' ~· ma~nifted the \'ictory Senator I At the democratic conventton I g~d~~v' :,~ i;'• g i~ -:-i

, \rm• Gas !;I'HIO 1!l l':' 171 , ~ :! 1 l menton every SIMCA inr::ludes deluxe interiors, rustproofed, UniGard constructior, electnc· windshield wipers, automatic·

choke, spirited four·speed transmission, and a heritage that J11hn F. Kennedy or Massachu·, lhts summer 761 vole.~ will be' Grou~uo 2>on 10!1 1os to; · s arllil rhalktd up in the tmpor· needed to nommale a candidate, 1 g~~;~k ':: f' ;•' ~ • ·- '• tant Wisconsin Democratic pre· Senator Hubert H. Humphrey '!Gunnar a11 "" m •••• 30

•idenltal prtmary. of Mmnesola gathered in 372,· g~~~~r~ "1' ~;~ '!,, 2~., ~~., -~ From thP greatest no or! of 034 votes. four l'ondressional Hard Rll<k 2000 12 ' L)'' ' 2'' ' I'

& H Yi "00 !I i 1 ~ 9' ~ 2 Yotes f'Ver calli m a Wiaconstn districts, and 10 \'Oil's at the 1 H•:.i· L~tu 40oo •• ; R'•· •'• '' prtmary, these results came l.os An~eles com·entlon next H<Odw•J toou - · ~·· 1"• ~ th h J I H h Hn\linK"r 21,0 S"P .. ."!41; :w2 ~~

rou1 : u ~·. ump rey drf'w 44 prr Hud Ha~· ;u:i ,,..,, ~ 4:'.'• 4···'1 - 1 1

Krnnrdy racktd up 478.90l rent of the Democratic and 31 'Jnt Molv ·,oo ~n 1 1

f h I lnt X1CI\fJ :!tR!l S~ln W2~~ 10l 1• • :\'

\'ot~•. 1ix of 10 Con~tres~tOnal per rent o t e total ballot. lrl•h c•op "n" n• \~4 m s thstrJrts, and 20 of 30 VOIPs a1 Kenned1• and Humphrrv each trnn B•! ·~;" l 11 ' "" ~00 5

• • 1 1 :nun 42 l2 "'' -· thP. Democratic national ron· had another ''l vote «oinJI in .t'"YI•it• . 6/)'IO 12 ,j "' 1 T!!ntion. HP got &II per cent of from national committee mem· · .lo<obu• 4100 111 m 1 :s _,

L- .faH E)lp) "t'fll Jn ,m Jn the ·total democratic 1 otr; 40 ,.,rs, l•nt••• Will 10 , ~ -1

I JoJIP.t llOU !3 13 ~1 - 1

Protest Against ~ate Campaign·

.1nn!imtt'ft ~bOO 141~ 121., H .. .!1 :

.lOU"!!\' !01)1) Jl :1-J :!:i. • 1 KtD\IIIP 1000 ~ ; - 1 1

Krrr AdL1 4tilft s~z:-.(1 1.!1 4 2.!1 " -- ~" 1\tlrn\ (' "'t' 71}(} 411 iO 4K ... 1 Kirk. !\hn ~lf\ :\rl :1.~ :\i KJtk •rm1 n 17·, .!~ ~l 1~ •!

I J,alt .. ('1n 1800 ~~ 7! 67181

-~ (, nufu.ult ~,-,tiD I> ~) ,)

L 01iU 1~1)1 17 18 1q -+ ~ I ). SIUift' :l~U 401 -41~ 4Cil

t.aniiR J :un ao 711 ftrl .. l l..ealt'h ::!t6jl) l~l Hi' 1'1~ • 4 l.exjndln 1000 ~ 3 l LJ~ IC 25G 180 1P.o 1811 l.arana :'12fl0 117 ,-; ~i l.arado 71000 32 :tO''.a 311'2 .. a,

BO~X (APl-The West Ger·rchel', who repeatedh· assailed • LJn~hst ~'100 1• IZ 1 ~''- '• • Jyn:-c 4000 II'• a Ria man &overnment protested what he called rising militarism ~...... 700 26Q 26~ l"'' '5

agam~t the ~omt hale · Ger· ~it~ West Germany, ~ought to ~~:·~!t ~~~ 1~ 1.; L1~ ~ t. 1 many campa1gn Wednesday 1n give the Frenc.lt publtc •·a com· Mad .. n 14000 m .nn l'~ - ~· a note so sharply worded it ralls [pletely distorted picture of the.! ~·r:.;:. ~'000 7 ~ 7 _: 1''

juat short o! a breakoff in dip. political attitudes of the Ger. M:nmt = -:,; '! 11 lomatic relation•. man publie and the German I::;:.. 11 ~:! .~·· S:'1 ~~~~ _ 1

The note was deltvered to the government." 'Martin """' 3< l« l! -1

Sov1et foreit~n office in Mosco~ I ~:1:10:,~ ~~~~ .t!!~':O. i~·, 2~~: + "' . by Ambassador H1ns Kroll. J - --·- -- ---- - - -

The West Germans singled out for special attack what was FURNESS ealled the eampal&n of slander ' WITHY & CO., LTD. put on by Premirr Khru.ahchev in hll recent vllit to France, Uverp1181 st. Johl'a Boatll Rallfas l!l, John'a , their atrongest eontlnPntal ally, *' 1o Rra lr to to to 1

"The federal &overnment of St. John'a BoRton Halifu St. Jobn'• L'pool i Welt Germany" the note Aid ,"Newfoundland" Omitting eall i

, ' UN s u.. A A "cannot believe in the aincerity I ova co a pr. 9 pr. 11 f b f d s 1 f "Newfoundland" Apr. 13 Apr. 20 Apr. 26 Apr. 30 May 2 0 1 e pro eue ov et e forb "NoVI Scotia" Apr. 27 May 4 May 10 May 14 May 16

to ~elu tenalon JO long 15 the PPrson! contPmpla!tnJI passo~te to Eurolll! Soviet Union Heks throu&hout •hould make bookin., well to advance. tile world to awaken hatred and AIR PASSAfiES ARRANGED BY: B.O.A.C" K L M.. PAN h01tillty 111inat the German AMERICAN AIRWAYS, SCANDINAVIAN. TWA. aDd people." ~onneetlng Airline.~. •

This kind of l&nl\llllr 11 rare· Consult us reprdlnll vour travel "Problems 1J uaed in eommunieatloas De· tween toYemm•nt• malntaininll oormal lilplomatie relations.

The note said tll•t Khru&h·

FURNESS TRAVEL OFfiCE Nt:WFOUNDI.AND BOT~L ' 'PHONE

'

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

51!1

\1" ('wl., ;ou ~~~" lfl1 2 .t•r ~ -.·. -\lmmc' HI.~J 2t.n ~50 ~611 •\m l.etHtr 'il '' q n ~ Mutual Funds fl·11h.·' s' !! ~n i.:11 ;oo ion - o H..ul S ,~fP.I /,1\ '-Ill: IR !II Ranif l'ttla 112 110 11 l • ·~ r.ri: •• lla 301 :!:Jn ..!:l!l ~ u ( alillla j:'loOtl 411: 4i ~7 t a! l"tl Wo S'f114 H • '::! ~ C ,11\ an l"on ltlO :l:l"l ,t.!i J2'i Cah('rt 1'1Jil •' ~~ ·)~ l

c 011 1. ~h :>!no !fi :n ~fi • • l

("' Pl'h' .)UI} :i~O "i-111 , Ill II ( ('hlefln 2Mi10 I I "1 112 114 - 3 (lin Ill'' !.,;·) 1:u Hll :\'n 10 C' E...: Gotl ilOO no Z~fl :!.!\ - ~ (.'HLI k\ :!~h~ 1 I·' j\jl 7in 1;.

l t: SUpt>lJOC' •2i SH'-1 ll''t 11'a - 3-. ( rnt 11 .. 1 2'li ;,H• :'iM af) ( o:ntnOJI 1()(11J ll:\ Hi ll"i - 'I} ( ll•·a~::un I JhOB ~7 J'; l"i - Jl '1.

\11 t tl11 lum \II Cdn f),, '\meoJIL'<Jtl Gtu\\th R1auh1 an ( anadu111 ln\e!iln\f'nt l ii.nafuml l'hampwn \lutual l'ummoml~o~IUi Intra l !lrllOfol\f' In\ P..,tOJio

l>om Fqull~ Jll\ Fjr!rt 011 f'und t'u1!("t 11£ (~I ouprd lnt c.m,. (oriiiiiKII lmumr .t,.(I'Hm

(rll.ll.I'P ~rl Cirm' til (}JI llJUI (i~"

lnH~!IIOJ ~ t.r0\11h Fund r \11l' Mar 30il 26~ 265 25~ (' \h•o,.l PPIL' 1200 1)1 3n0 "'00 - 10 111' e~tul ~ ~i<lhlit\

CrPt' ,,.t5 !18 li68(t 24n 2l7 !':8 .. 1 1 t\t>~~tnnr [lnmr Ptte :l~t~l 820 IWl 3111 111 I "'\"e-r<t~t' Jo'und ()U\ I' X -\ 00 fll... fol-::: hi '1. - t: \tutual ,.ecumul:e~1Jt1~ Fnntf IJvn.umr 11!lrl t:lfl I.!' 1::'~ FarRo .!Oil 190 3(}fl !90 C~r l1l:.lln'l !~II S11l1 ~ !11 1.- 101 4 '•

Homt" Oil A 190 su.:. w~,. lll,•- 1 "

lln.,w ll1l B 1.!~1'1 !1101~ W 11'1 H 8 01l G 18H 1131 ~ 12'• ~~~. -- ·., lump Jlnd JOI~ ~2 '22 22 - 2 L1 Pt'tr lhOO 1 11 11 -1 t.on.: Pn1nt :non fii 63 h:l 'lo.rh:old 4. ·l~Kl 111o !l 9 Ma)'f~Jr 1IJIJ 1:!0 l!Q 119 --i ,\ftdal 2:t\B :!M 201) 200 -10 Mldron 26M 4q 4R 4!f

\1utual lm om,. Ft ml \nrth o\mt'r }und vr C..:an RadhMJtl Rc;:::ent Fund sa, 1:" anti hn tr.r SUIICnl:;.f'd \ntel Fur.d' ~uprr\ u;ed bMI'(' ~s

!'luprrvu;cd 1-:xec i6 Sllpt'n tst>tl Ee~ i7 Super\ lb~ Growth Fun It Supenh.ed Income Fund TV Electrontc flmrd lm M.tnH"nt Fund

• -·- -·· -· C'"".C '" -- "- c

1 fil J ~ l

7 "' ,, :l'.l

FURNESS RED CROSS LINE SAILINGS TO AND FROM

NEW YORK, SAINT JOHN, HALIFAX TO

ST. JOHN'S, NEVVFOUNDLAND

S.S. GUERNSEY Lv. New York .................................... April 7 Lv. Saint John. N.S. ......................... April 11 Lv. Halifax ........................................... April 13 Ar. ~·t. John's ...................................... April 16 Lv. St. Jchn's ......................................... April 19

Will cell at outports as inducement conditions permit.

offers and

Accepting freight for Corner Brook at all Ports. For rates, etc .. Telephone 2073-5890.

Furness, Withy & Company. Ltd. ' . .

~ J ~ .l .;

fi'••• 6 Zll

1' ;, I 1-' 07 6 Hn j ";'l

I ,,

RH l ,)II

I"

holds 14 vvorld's records for performance. Test drive one today. It's a wonderful experience!

Suggested retail prices start at

$1817. East Coast P.O.E.

'Optional equipmont, trallllportahon and local t.axct extra Parte and service coast to coaat, Ca,.da and U.S.

The Royal Garage Ltd.1 64-68 HAMIL TON STREET

ST. JOHN'S; NFLD.

Marshall Motors Ltd. 686.687 VVATER ~TREET

ST. JOHN'S, NFLD

.. ~, . . ...;. ' :.'". . ': ~;. ~::'::~ ..... ~ .... " I ': • :

l'r• .... ,: . - . . • ·y • •

·\ .. - .: -~·. ~ r • I '

\· . -· .. . :- : .. ~ .. <.

' .... ; \ ,. . . ~--~· -~

.... ~ ~

~. ·~·~: .... ~

.. · .. ~

"'""1...:. •• :·! '· .· '';

. . . ..

·-. -. . ... ~

-. - ..

. : i : .. '. ,_ .. .,. ...

. . --~ '~ . ' .. •'.\ . -. -: ..... '

.~ :. . ;: l

- ·-

.. '

.. ..,. .. _ olf· .. ---··· ........ ,...,., ---- - -

_18._---------------------------~·-------__ • ___ , ________ T_H.~_D~~~:-~~~-ST. JOHt--!'S, N~lO., · FRIDAY, MR'I_ S,~O

TPndtr~ for Construction and 8a!'t Cnur~e and .\~.phallic f'Jl'f'mf'nt on Trans-Canada llighuy

A.B.C. CABS Change of manage·

ment.

Now managed by

Mr. Ro11 Antle DIAL 2126 or 4040 * 24 HOUR SERVICE * * ALL NEW CARS "

Notice of Application For Divorce

NOTtn: i~ lu·reb)' gi,·rn that NELLIE f'llANCf.S flTIAKF.. of lhr City of Halif;1x. in the Pro\'incc o( l\'0\',1 St·ntin. P~rk· er. will ~l)PI)' to tht• Pnrlia· mrnt nf Canada. nt ti1r fll'cscnt or next following ~~~'ton Lhrrr·

Newfoundland Services

PASSENGER NOTICES

('{ISNJ·:C'J'JI)~ 11.-\ \" Rll~ .\~II \\'t:!'i'f Rl.'S 1'1..\('DiTI.·\ IH \'

Nftd. Armature Works

llr;;ular R.IO a.m. train lrar-111.:! St. .rnhn's .'IPmlay, Ap1·il 11th.. will makr rnnn•.•clion at i\I'J!rnlia with .11o>tor """•·ls for thr H:r)· Httn anti WrM Run Plact•ntia ~:".1·.

~~m~a!r1~2~.1~m~~~~~~~ of. for a Bill of !li•-nrrr from

-= I ~r;_~~~~at~~- '~~;-LJ:i~~-1 ' 1d~M~~ FREIGHT ACCEPTANCES

Bli!LDING MATERIALS CHESTER DAWE, LTD.

Sl11\ W ST. and TOI'S:\11, RD i•'or all )·our Building

Re•llllrcments raJ: 8111!il-91171 .Jolm'~. in the rro;·ince o! · FRt:H;JIT SOl"fH CO.\Sl'

, Ncwlounclland. on the grounds . SER\'ICE . or adullrl'\', Frri~ht is al'rrna·d dail\' «I DRU . DATED· at Ottawa thi~ :3t•d lhr ll;oilwa~· Fl'right Shrd. [111• G STORES da,· of Fcbruar\·, A.D .. 1!160. · rr~ular pons Soul it C•mt Srr· -----------

.MiRSKY. SOLO.WA\', .-\Ss.\I.Y \'io·e but in urdt•r to guat':H:It•r CONNO~S DRUG STORE & HOUSTO~. : lllOI·cmrnt h)· thi.< tril) of thP · l .. UIBERT'S COl'GH SYRUP

77 Metcalfe Slrct>t, 1 ~I.V. Bon~\·isla ft·ri;!hl, lllll'l hr ran llr obtained at Ottawa 4, Ontario. i at lhr Railway Ft·ri~hl Shrd not CO~~OHS HHl'G STORE

Solicitors for the Pelitionu. · later lha•1 1.00 p.m. Tur"rlav ::3t \\'.\TER ST. . m'\riB.!!5ap1.8 April 121h. · · Ot\1. ~206 ------· ----·-·- --· ---~· .. ·------

ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES

llAINE JOHNSTON COMPANY, lTD.

,\~rncy Department 213 Water St. Dial 2102

YVL'R FHlC,II}AiflE Dl-:.-\LER.

I i Apartment I For Rent I Self-contained, private

' entronc;e consisting of kitchen, dinette, bath-

room with shower, large living room and

THREE BEDROOMS,

furnace heated- en

' Bonaventure Aven~e

I bus route. Rent $115 I per month. For op-

I pointment to view .

Dwal 2222 illoi:Ai

.

WANTED TEACHERS

Principal for two room school at Hant's Harbour to

teach grades nine, ten and

I eleven, also primary teach­' er for grades one and two . i Teachers residence will be ; p:·ovided rent FREE for prin· I cipol. Interested parties

H--tA_P_&-PA-RT_N_E_R_S ___ 1

please forward applications

j

FOit S.\ U:-l.ar~r !J.ll.) c·oi­)P( linn of po . ..;1:t_:_:t• .~t;unp."i.

\\'p !'ti!l bu~: l'lllliit:~. m:1~a· ?.inr' and pn,·[:,•t nnn•ls. .Iohn D. Snow. !I ';e·,t Gmr .. r Stn•t•l. mar~fi.lm

\[\\' ~IE'I'IIIID l{rf; !'LE.\:'<1-}:~~-rru;;..: :llld Cnrp:~t rn;;dr h1 Jnok lih· nf'W \'<)n ~~,...: 'cr pm.._''''S ~;,ifl~

~-,·~ll':' In J:lr• of I'll~' ('/p;m­

l'fl in ho:•F' or ;11 t•nr p:;<~lT.

'f'ilO!H' !)JO:n. :'\!".': ~~hthtHl

HI'~ Clt•onrr>. Frc.-lr.\oiN Ho:1•L

Wall Washing 1\',11.1. ln~HI:\r. - wan,

cl('anrd b~ new mar.hi!•e-. fle·-.;u!lc: n;-J'tec! ~:We$ p~llnt -\r•W 0 trlhnri f! 'I~ anJ \\' :hl C!ranrr~·. f<'rc:~ilw.,l(lr Ro'ld 'Phone ~lfl.\3. lll:U:,It[)

I Fl'lt'\l'rt Kr I:U'AII:~- l!o• I p;111.- lu ,.pr'n"·fille·ll n~:rt i frt> . .:. . ..:~·~. 1 ·h • 1t't·fif>hl sultt•:

al..;o n·lnlilt. Fi~ty ~-(•;p;o;

f'\lll'l'll'•l~-•·- ~;_,.,,ts '1i.lltn·~·

F~dur~.-. lH \1oull' l:u~a\ :\\t'

lL\1. ESTATE -- Valuator of rily. farrm anrl nulpor pro· p•rlirs. 0\'H 40 Yl'<ir"· PX·

P<'l'iPIH"t'. .lohl·l q_ u'lln:'· Cl'il. Aul'linllt'•·r :l'.d H~·:1l )o; .... tl'l' ~'-~t'll; !l! .. l !JO;;L!.

TI!E n:~Tit.\1. K.\I:JH:H

l. l'Pa!Pcl trndrr~ will IX' rc· cr"'·~ri ll;t In :\oon April :list. 1!lfi0. for lhf completion of sub· ~:radr. applitation ol granular ba~t cour~r and application of ~1ni courses Hot ~lix Hot Laid Asphaltic Bituminous pa1·~mcnt M the following 11 mile >ec-

Where To Stay Ba~s!!m Hotel

B.\R!'ii:S !lOAD Situated in 'he Hea1·t Df

(NHD.) L TO. I to the Chairman U.C. Board Winn~ MaiN'i:rls, Wire and of Education, Hant's Har- '

~·HOij-\\' t' :tre JiU\\. orH·r· a~inr.: i·i·Jtt d,a11·..:. You 1\lll iH' ~·,:--qn·d :1! th1~ lw~t

lHI~ ;\)It• -'l'l'\il't' pitt~ lhti

J,·.~ ... ! p•b-.thlt· wati :n.~. 2-t '\t•w c;o\\(•r S!r,·~·t, opp. .-\d1·bidP \l•11nr~ ; lion of Trans-Canada High·

;:wa~·;-from Salmonier Linr· ·l!od~:ewater Line.

2. Plans and specifications . mar be inspected at the RDads ~rau~hting Office. Court House ·,St. John's, u.nd copies mav be

the Cit_-.

Quiet, Comlortatle Atmos';· phere.

For Rcscn·ation~ and formation.

Dial 6336 MRS. JOH!II F.\CEY Resident Manageress

m31.tf

obtainrd upon application to the Re\'enue Cieri of this De­partment upon deposit of $25: which sum will be returned to ~~~~~~~~~~~· tl:e tenderer if the plans and 1 51.00 STOPS $1.00 specifications are returned to' THAT Rl'N:S~NG TOILET th:> Department. . At last~ ~

3. Tenders must be made on· •imPI• toslcal · fcnn · d d b h D Inexpensive 5 torOrt e Y I e epart. , ~·a> to rtnalb mE-n! :r.d must be submitted and posllil·•h · J d 1 slop lllat nm· 111 sea c enl'e opes addressed ntng rotlet. 1

to the Deput~· ~linister · of :-;., .• , · Fall ·

ll:~~"a' s. The word~ "Ten- ~~\~~olyAd~f~~! dr;·., for Granular Base CO'li'SC ~ t)ow of ~•t••

1\fttr t-arh and .\,phaltic Pa\·in·! Salmon- llu•h>n<. K•rp• ier Ltnc to Hodgcwatcr Linr" to;lrt •ilrnt ~hrn not in "''· Con>OIW!

· n e!l '"alrr-fil, ;~~LI taile!s-euy t( arr to be written i:H:ross the in~tall nnn r('l~t.u:f' pr~rotid. ~r,C"r· f:.c·r nf thr Cll\·rJopr. fall Stm,•• Sox ~!3. St. ,loh•'s, Mid

Save your Energy Use ELECTR!CITY

,.:Nt=• .co ....... ,, .... ,,.

~. The t~ndcr n•u<t br i'IC·

cr·~~fl311tcd h;· an appro\ cd r:rr- ! 11f:rd rhNJUC in the amount of Jr', of thr t~ndered pritc. O!' 1 ;;i·r~nativrly a Surrly Compan)· l

I C ~ap· Reliah;e Electric;ity I In ami Around St. John's

I

For \'EHTIC\1, T.\1\Elli'F

I~~ Fnnd l:t thr Jmount 0{ at ! Taxi Service lrJ~l 10'~ of the tendered 1

pr.~o·rTlt~ ltr•partmrnt dor• not 1! HOTEL TAXJ

. bmd it.;c!f to accept the low·

I I I I I I I I I I I I 1 I I I

B\:IWOIHI, En~l:md. '.H'• Bntain d:timrd ~ m:•.ior hrl'~k­throu~lt \\'t•thtr<di1.\ .. ,,ith lite lir,;t SUCCC»11!\ fli~hl nf a phtV.' th~l lakes oil and land, ,·rrlil·ally. Tlw plan~ i.< the .iet-po,,·~rcil s:··t, olh~tVI>r known ~s th" ··nv'n~ harrrl. · • Thr mnkrr.>. Sho;·t · :111d llal'ian~ l.imilr.n. 'nid lln•l i1p:orl

"H or any tPndrr. ·! Da·al" J.Al~-2410 , . f. ,\, K~IC;HT, "Y ~

:\ ne. puty Minister. ! QUEEN'S lOAD --9rpt. nf 1-{J;.twa~·>. 8t. J11hn's. Xfld • 01ltD fro111 8.30 to 2 1.111·'

Jprt8 1 _ • _ _ _____ ,..

I from .,h·iJ usr;, lhr Sl '.l m~kr;; I P'"::ihlc ll1r rlrlrlnpmrnl or \qr.

pl~nr,; itlflrprmlrnl of ntn~< ~v· '

:. ;• :

REQUIRED IMMEDIATELY SECRETARY TO GENERAL MANAGER

Qualifications: Expert Shorthand and Typing and general S.ecretarial Experience.

.

We oHer: Permanent employment with all usual company benefits. Salary commensurate with abilities.

·=· Please apply in writing to: GENERAL MANAGER,

l'ahl: s, ~lotnrs Slart.rrs, bour, stating qualifications. L;mtps. Switrhrs, Lighting · ap~.lii

l'T, JOB\'S :\Pl'RO.\!'UES (:iliJDIHSlOX) REGlL:\­

TlO.Ss, t!l5;i.

On ~!:m·h 2~th. l9ti0, an amt·!:llnwnt to lhr abow nolt•d ·

· Re-~ulal ions was pubhshetl in

Fixture.<. ric. 1\'.\ltEHOt'SJ-:: l'lti!';CE'S ST.

UIALi>0~5

FIRE !NSURANCE

CROSBIE & CO., LTD . A-.:enl• lor

l'.SIHJt\\'III'J'I-:IlS AT LI.O\'DS.

LOW HATES J)JAJ, 50:11

the :\ewfounclland Gazette. The HARDWARE STORES · effl•rl of the anwmlmrnt is to· -----------1 inrrra.'e I he dimrnsions of rt·>i· · <ienlial building lots to be c!P- HARRIS & HISCOCK, lTD • n·lopcd 1111 un>rl'l·icrd land in General Hardware ·,ubdi\'isio~15 malic under thr Dhtril>uturs for Sunlre~m Regulations. Elcctt•iral Appliane~s .

The new minimum rtimt•nsion; Sports goods and Sport.s :trl' as follows: wear fur all ncrasions.

ll) !.nt Fronla~r on Road or DIAl 5016 Slrrel l:!;i trrl.

121 Total ;lini:num ;on•a of lot 20.000 ,quarr lrl'l.

I~ 1 .ltinimum drplh of In I 12.1 frt'l.

,\pplteation; lou· ~uhrl11i<inn appro1·aJ in lhr on•a afr,.,·trd h; 11w Rr:;ulalion~ ~hnuld hP

ERNEST CLOUSTON, LTD, ~lcCLAH\ Al'TO~IATIC

Wo\Rll All! CU.:\DITIO~I~G :!lo WATER S'l'.

DL\L 41R3 ---kADIO-TV REPAIRS

:11ldrr.->t'ol In llw !Jirc·•·lor nf --------·- ----- --­l'rhan at:ol ll1mol 1'\ann:n~ llr- GREAT EASTERN OIL p;lrlm<'rlt nl .llunil'ip;ol :\ff:>ir, COMPANY, LTD. .111d Snptll.<. HEI':\IHS TO IL\ll!OS. TV

.1. 1 .. SFDIOI'Il, A:\D ALL ELECTRICAL Sr('rfl.itl'.\', Prori•wii11 Plannin~ ,\PPLi:\~CES

.\d\ i"ll'v lluarrL 111.\L 3001 lt~3005

TENDERS For l'pnstruetiou alii! llasr Caur~e and :\s[lbaltic l'a\'e·

nlt'nl on 'l'rans Canada lli~hWilY

1. s.•:ol<·ll l•'IHit•rs will IH' n·· •·,·iH·d til) \\) :\pril :!H. lBtiO (or

GROCERS (Retail)

HUTCHEN'S GROCERY m:.\T ~1ABKET

:,:; Wiiliam ~trrrt J)ial 11;0 Rllol 60112

l. HEAkEY l'ro•s RoRd' a11tl W•lrr St reel

Uial 3026

INSURANCE AGENTS AND BROKERS

I JOB BROTHERS ' & ftl. I.TD.

Wat~r Str~et

llial ~6!oK-H'!~

WANlED Girls

for our Seed-packing

Department. Apply Ia:

MRS. POWELL Gaze Seed Co. 410 WATER STREET tl~li.R

TO-DAY'S SPECIAL

1957 D·ODGE 4 Door Sedan

Low mileage

$1400-00

McKINLAY MOTORS LTD. LeMAK/-IANT ROAD

. Statutory Notice ln tlu· m;~flr--1' of tlw r·:'-t.lh' .:;

1Jn1·:o(T ('. 'lnut;;,lll, lillr ul St. .lnhn\ In thr Pro\in;·r nl :\rwfuuncll~tlfl. lhil Srnarol, clrr~:osNI.

r\11 prl''d)fl~ C'\;-tiPlill;! !11 lw t'l'l'ciilnrs of n1· who harP :ol:\

claillls or rlpmand~ upon nt· ;t!.

reclill:! llw l':oilalr o1 llcw:tn• C'. ~lou!an<i of St. .Jn:m\ afon•-

; >aiel. Ci\'il S~rr;onL oll'rl'a,t•cl. ar·r l'l'qllirt•ol lo St'llll p;o·t iru·

· l:tr~ tlu)t't'uf, in \\'1'~1 iil'.!. duh· I

\ ~ttl:s~t·d. lu tllt' undt·!'"'i~lh.'tl ~olortlur l<ot' tho· Aoil''illhlratl·i, .

:of 1ht• ~aid t':-;talt> on ur lh·fll!'t· . lite :Wit. d:11· ul .\on\ -~]I l!ltill. allt·r ,;lollh t],,:·,. Ito~ .\<1·

tlw l·oJnpll-tion of :'lubgr;uh•. iiP· MEEHAN & CO · ; u•illi<lr:oll'i' will ~,,,..,.e.t lu lllh-alioll ul' ~I'OIIIULII' li•\'PIIIn~ 1' \ Jill• 01 k1 o th St · • : • I~-- II' 1 r • iii<lrilolllt• the >:Oi<l ••,l:ll~. lo:n

• 1-1mr><' :ond al>"lie:otion ul twu Jl'r J MIJ4c ·o•• r ~ • u-o •• ing l't't-,:onl unl)' lo llu~ ebiru< McNAMARA INDUSTRIES LIMITED cour.<rs Hot ~Hx llot Laid of \lhil'lr she •hall tlH·n h:o1~ A"phaltic Bituminous pan•nwnt: REG. T. MORGAN I had nutier.

P.O. BOX 910, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD .• or PHONE 94011 on the lollnwinl{ Sl•ctions o[ INSU8A;IICE LIMITED I ~. ' • ~ 0 1 "f " \ l

O'KElTI>~ ntR:>;EI\ - !'nl~· (hl-"·l u.;t-T.-a :~!)e . Tulip ~~l'. B:d.~-:ti•!dt·:-. tj'h:. <"rt•:un l·ie .. l.~t_·:d S:tlmo.n 'jfk .. \'11:·1; h;:•!• -r ..... h.ltk 4!lr., :~· \' .· :r:;l'.. Holo;:::na :~:k. pet·_ PLOJ'i~;•il Tud,··.•: Sprt'illl :! lor :t!r. I· HE I:~ Hally }lo~ food Btty I ~~1·t 1 Fr.,.: Di:d :;:l:!ll. \\'r de· r\o·r F!:EI·:. h·b:'ll.(•tJd

C\~T llW'\ SOUl' W.\'\T­th:-Et•-.! jii'H:;·~ _,!.!:\t'll.

l IJill'd :\;lil ;.ttlll f-'llli!Hl!'~-.

IL n1:lt~tn .-\r"nu1· Phuta· }:11171. ~dr. ll. Jlq•.\:-P,

a ')·!.t: R

1 ISE a hrrhal 1:1\athe fur

quicl;. n<ie•t of nnl~t:p;t!inn.

lu:;IJii:--J~t·~'. iiHlig(•:...: ioa K;;q>·., llr-rh l';oill--1.'. 51Jc. :rnol Sloll ;rl :rll olru~~i>l.' .

r:-c.,,.~7 "-' *' ~ifrtitiii . "' i·;I:P•'· I.',IH·I;·r•r

o\ I i·· 1.11::. 1."1 II' ·~hll'l\ ~llq \\lJ;,t rr:~l :-.PI'I.'P'f? 1:;: llnre. 111 to. ~~;l~' I

ll11 •.n11 11HI'.\ \11:1 c.1n \1:.·.•· ;I tuu.- IW'.\ _\lutor,,l;l ' l'\I ... [Onl - df'.-il!IH'd {';Jt •

Badin for ~ ottr ~.,.-e:ll' tur :1.~ t lo'.r a~ ~-l~_~c.. ,

Chon:-.t' rrum Tran ... hlur modt•l..:. dPli!X(' :\f(Jn\lal i:llld t l'u<hlntltun "''' 1

Wt,.\1 itH:t1\ ot 11loi~e 1011

.... }hlp [1w~ t 'unJc in ~nd I I t;dh it 0\t';' Willo "' l<i•l:oy. I

----------Neil Kelfand 1 S 11·.\ SEll\ llT ~'1'\THI\

'I ho• llbto• 1> ilh !be Hnuhin~ H·.\ Si~ll.

Waldegn11·e an<l (;~ur~e PHOSt: 6~!!1

nil II t~ Tran,·l.'anada lli!!hw:oy:- . TeDJple llldg., P.n. !lox lfiR, . Tl;oll'd :rt s.·t. .1111111\ this 2nth I -- --- -- ----··· ·······--· ·- litwl ··- N~llon:J\ !'ark E•:·' Dial H0~711 or 17.'i6 I . r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~§:=~=~=§:§:~====~§§==~ l. Pnrt n. ~'"' nr.. 1 o·r:•··'·' 311 lhu·kworth Ht.

1' ;oy or :ll:orr·h An. l!l(ill.

f,!)unrl:n:.· 5o milo; . ' IS.\.\(' ~n:trn.n. Q.C.. ·

. ' '•; .... ' .. t •· 1:· . .. · . ··:.·

THE UNITED CHURCH OF CANA.DA

HOLY WEE.K SERVICES MONDAY, April 11th-Wesley United Church. TUESDAY, April 1 ~h-Cochrane StrHt United Church. WEDNESDAY, April 13th-George Street United Church. THURSDAY, April 14th-Services in all U.C. City Churches.,

• Services commence each evening at 8 •. m. and will be

broadtatt ov11r Radio Station V.O.W.R.

and

"THE SEVEN WORDS FJtOM THE CROSS"­

IN GOWER STREET UNITED CHURCH -G:OOD FRIDAY, APRIL 15th

I

12 NOON TO 3 P.M. (llroadcoil o;;et lhtdio Station C.B.N.)

~ \-l"rn>l r-rk I\~,, Bo•tnri. ~M:-U~B~IL':"I;--(~j"::R~o~c=.l::o'~II~:R~I~A-- ; i'lolirit .. · for ,\dnoini:-llatn:>:. I •1 I E ··t t . APT-'HF.~:;. uy - ,._ •;..>•v ~r •2\ •' a ~11 ·1 Pial ~H'O

1.\ ·' <i" 1 31i5 itorl.·•.nrth r.,.,t a~~ o.n m• "'· 1 §19 At \' JJ '·''- ··· ' 1 z. fht•> a•1rl 3PE~tf•c>iif!l1.;: t~ · nur 99! :"t Jnhn·;, ~:e,.·ft••mdlanr!. !MY br. !!'Hl"ct•!l at th~ Rnarb DRUG STORES cpl.ll,l4.c2

~t~·~~~~~~~~· ~~~JC;~~~~~r~:;;u~: M coNN~R~. 11n : St~t~-t-o-;y-Notic~! I; obt~·.,~~ •tpon app\t(atmn tq the I. • 3 • w' \- .. ·-T· ' I .R'-IE!IU~ Cl~rk of titis D•part-. h ·,.TER § • I -- i • Dial 220!l ; Tn th• l!l,lfl•r nl lh• ll'•JI a!•rl : 1 mPnl np~n depo~!t. of ~~.:i.CJO · -~=~ ...... -...;,._, __ _ 1 - P<l~lr 11f ~1.11)' t:lit>hrth Wil 1 whtrh mm will be returned to ; AYLWARD'" 1 • 1 1 1 r · I the t~ndrrPr if the plans anrll ,, '"" .~n~r · a P " St. ,lfllln ~-/specifications are returned to PHARMACY in. lhr l'rflvi~{r "' 1'\r,.·fnnnd· the Depart~ent. Cor. Monch_y & Empire Ave. lanll, ('anada, \l'idow, d~fea~·

3. Tenders must be made on Dtal 90070 rd. forms provided by the Depart- PARKDALE . All prrson~ clatmin.~ to be '

lmcnt and must be submitted in creditors of or who ltavc auv ~ralcd envelopes addressed to PHARMACY claims or demands upon or ef-

1 the Deputy Minislrr of Higl1- Eliz3beth Ave. feeling the estate of Mary Eliza-; ways. The works "Tender for Dial 91120 beth Wilmot Angel, late of St. i Asphaltic Paving, Port Bland- MURPtlY;S ------ John's, in the Province of New-fore! Access Road-National foundland, widow, deceased, are Park Jloundary and National DRUG STORE hereby requested to send par-Park Boundary-Alexander !lay 119 Military Road ticulars thereof in writing, duly. Station Road" are to he writ· Dial 6446 attested, to John Bartlett Angel, ten across the face of the en- Esq., 146 Hamilton Street, St. velope. FLEMING'S John's, NcwfoundtDnd, the Ex-

4. Tenders must be accom- Dial. 92937 ecutor of the will uf th~ saitl panied by a Security Deposit 265 Peunywell Road llec~asetl, on ur h~fure Ute Hlll .. , !!QUal to 10 per cent of the tt'nd- · •l•) ~f .\L,y A.U., t!l~u. blkr: ered amount uf b Uiu boud in FREIGHT SERVICE · l>ttido ~ale the ~·tli J:>.c.tHol'

1 an "trou<orol uf atl<~>l 10 Ptl' Celli i TRINITY S·OU'fll \»II ~i'OC<~11 tu do;trilnile the i of ttullH<d blnlhltlt. · Frum St. Jvlm'a '1a I o~iJ e;tate h;,·•ing n~gard only : .. 5. 'rloe ~Jepartmtul does not II Wbltl.uu•·n~ to Old ·Perllcin, 'to the ;•bim; uf wlokh he >h>tll . ltlllll rt., .. !l to arceJol rite Juw· . Nortb Shore CU)II~Illion tht•tl havo· h:•d tu;tice. .

It_·::_ Th•••. s.ervi.ces co. nd. ucte. d. by: . t·~·l (Jl' any l!•!ltlt•r. to ('arhuui•at', . llatt•d "t Sl . .lulut·, this 51 h .. ~ C A. KNU:JJ1', Tnwks ~lsu avaibble for 'da)·. uf April. A.IJ .. H\(ilt.

• t . THE .UNITED .CHURCH OF CANADA IN sr. JOHN'S. . llf'llllty ~linis(fl'.: long haul sen·oce. i COOK, B,\UTI.I-:TT, l'll.\J.KEit . I DeJt~t·tm.,nt of Hi~hways, · Bates lleas(•nahlc. I . . ami :\1.\RSH,\U., 1··================:;::;::=============::.! St .. lohn's, Newfoundland. . For ro ... tlirl' tn~n··•natiun i>n\it,ilot•s for the Executor. i"' apd,B Dl,\L 936p3K I <1[)8,15,~2,29 ~)

~-~

Prf>mrt Delivery · ~ron: nn. • ITr.:-.\fT OIL • II u:n PM I, • HIFT I 0,\L • IRO"\ I lllf'f\" . IIBTI:W. f.QHf:\IE:0.1.

LAND SURVEYS LAND APPRAISALS

DRAUGHTING WHITE PRINTING MIMEOGRAPHING PHOTO COPYING

TYPING

Gerry Halley Surveys Ltd .

TELEPHONE 90876 ·

OLD MILL NITE CLUB

Lounge and Dir.ing

Rc.oms.

OPEN NIGHTLY 5:30 P.M.

The bl:st in good food

~ ot ?opular prices.

m DANCING NITELY CAlL 9002-L

For in:ormation and

reservations.

$l_IVtR$. and KNOT HOLES

door . . . Hut YtW (HI!'

dour~ :11:tl \\ i ::dm"'·· fi nrl fl'om u;u· \.1 ~-'-:l' :-. nel~ .\'Oil tilll ~f'lrf·l

.iu .... : lh(· ril.!h~ d'wl'~ rtncf wi:-1 d11,, .. lu li~-'h!Pn up ::.nn hr~..:.h!t·n np your homP or h::-.int•....... (·nnw in r.rul ~Pf'

ttw111.

,.HORWOOD ·r

. LUMBER ··Co., Ltd.

\\'A'ITII STI:EH WEST Pllll:\E 311!1

FOR SALE

1958 Vauxhall VICTOR (Super}

4 cyclinder good condition,

new tires, radio and seat

covers. Terms arranged.

Dial 90810

FOR SALE 1959--6 cylinder outomCJiic

Austin with built-in rodi,

~2000.00

Phone 4793 .. H 01 npply

60 CARTER'S HILL.

S\.\I'KS & nt:\I'E! THI:-.iJ-:RY K ll.HIII.TI)\ :\H::'<in:

on\ ~ tH \'S 1'1:11 wn:K !II :tu a.m.

St·n t'd 61ml Lh·l iH'I't•cl t1aily. '"U!u• -"Pt'1'l~il 1bll~ ' onxr an<l umu: IIEI.l\TH\' St:it\'ln:

H :w :o.tn. 'till ;\lirlni~ht

DIAL 4556 ! mar:lO.l mth '

1 9 5 8 VAUXHALL

(VICTOR)

$1200·00

i Baird Motors Ltd. MERRYMEETING ROAD DIAL 8-0378 - 8-0379

GREAT EAsTERN­OIL & IMPORT

CO., LTD. Radio, Television, Washerl, Relrigerators, Ul't'p rreezen

Ell'etric Raugrs, Floor Poli.sh~r$, G ramuphilllf't

Public Address S)·steDJJ, Tape ftecuJ·ders

ltl!:I'AIItS AND Sf.R\'Il:l! 6 UNI'S .

IUAL 30111 ·to 3005

WATER STREET ian26lv.

~ ~··~·.-~ !: ' -:-· . ...

•, ,,

. · ..... . -. ·~

:~.:;~·;·· •,J.,

_.:~ \

'.' -;.,? ---~--i ~. . ~ . .. _, ·-·. ··./

• • '..\:. ... ~ ~ 1· ' ' " : '~ . ; :t

·1. ·.·t i .. ·;

-: I'·

-. ··1 . . I ..... , ·• :· · ...

~·· -~~ , .

. ": ~

.• •'1.

;~~> t

; . -,

:i . . .;f. :··}

· .. ~-.. ·!

. . . ' . - ... ·.:

· .. .;, ~ ' ... , · .. I . ~ ~

.: . . :. ' '. ~ .... . -:.._ .'"

•,

THE DAllY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1960

'

KINSMEN Boys Club

Newspaper BINGO SERIES No. 28

TO·DA Y'S NUMBERS

B I N G 0 12 19 33 52 73 11 22 43 49 66 8 17 44 58 71 7 30 45 39 65 2 26 40 48 62 1 18 36 so 72 6 25

38 53 64

3 24 75 61

9

All consolation prizes have bHn claimed.

Help Kin Help Klddies

Bavt It E1pertl)'

Repaired Btre

CRRONOM.ETEU

AtJTOMATICS

CALEN .. AR

AU Gh·en

lmmtdiale .\ttention

C.O.D. OBDEIS WELCOMED

SIMON LEVITZ & SONS LTD. all WATER ST. ST. JOBN'I

FOR QUALITY PAINTS AT REASONABLE PRICES

YOU CAN'T GO WRONG

WHEN YOU SHOP AT

JARDINE'S PAINT and HARDWARE

PMONE 5567 165 WATER STR.EfT

DEALER FOil MATCHLESS - SHERWIN-WI-LLIAMS -

BRANORAM HENDERSON.

TRY US FIRST.

YOU1LL BE SATISFIED-PROMPT DEUVERY SERVICE.,

This Week's Special CUPS and SAUCERS .................. 15c. Each

WANTED TO RENT Wanted by young married couple with no children, a .. furftished bed-sitting room • and bathroom.

Dial 94263·A (after 6 p.m.) ------· .. _________ _

TEACHERS The SalvatiCJn Army, Board of Education at Grand lank requires teacher$ for the following schools. Duties to begin in . September.

Grand Bank: Teachers for the Primary and Elementary ;rades and a Grade nine teacher. First grade te~chers preferred'.

Fortune~ A Primary and an elementary teacher. Seal Cove, Fortune Bay1 A Principal.

Interested teachers please contod Sr. Capt. C. ThCJtnpson, Cha.irman; Grand Bank1 1tating age ctualificotiens . and ex~rjence. ..... }

The Regular Monthly Meeting af Terra Nova Council, No. 14~2, Knights of Columbus, will be held on TUESDAY, APRIL 12th, at 8:30p.m.

Business: Exemplification of the Second Degree of the Order:

Candidates are requested to present them­selves at 7:30 p.m.

By order G.K. P. J. KAVANAGH,

Financial Secretory.

OFFICE ASSISTANT (Female)

Required by business in Churchill Park Area .

Shorthand not required by MUST be good typist. Willing to accept responsibility and capable of dealing wit~ customers both by phone and in person.

THIS IS A GOOD POSITION FOR THE RIGHT PERSON.

Apply by letter ONlY, giving detail5 of quali­fications, previous experience if any, to:

tOX No. 505 c o THE DAILY NEWS. ap8.9 ·

TYPIS.T Wanted immediately by firm of Chartered

Accountants, an experienced ACCURATE 'TYPIST

hoving passed Grade XI examination at least.

Knowledge of typing financial statements pre·

ferred but not essential.

Apply t01

BOX No. 107 c/ a DAILY NEWS. apB,SI

FOR PUBLIC· INFORMATION The offices of the Department of Pro·

vincial AHairs. The Registry of Candi,ional Sales and Bills of Sale ·

HAVE NOW BEEN TRANSFERRED TO CONFEDERATION BUILDING

Telephone number ..... ~ ...... 950 11 ap8,11

I YOU CAN'T BEAT I SIMPSONS-SEARS

Just Arrived!

HARMONY HOUSE (THE GREATEST NAME IN PAINT)

S.ATIN WALL FINISH WASHABLE, ODORLESS, NO PRIM!R REQUIItED IN 19 BEAUTIFUL SHADES-250 Gals. WHITE.

RN$0W! ~··· Reg. $2.15 qt. NOW I $1.29 qt.

SEE YOU AT SIMPSONS-SEARS.

Not in1erted by B.L.C.

SALK VACCINE PROGRAMME

A free service sponsored by the Department of Health assisted by the Nfld, Chapter of the

March of Dimes.

The Department of Health advises a REINFORC­ING DOSE for all persons who have not received Salk Vaccine during the past 6 months.

PRESCHOOL CHILDREN-Clinics will be held by the Child Welfare Association.

QUEEN'S ROAD CLINIC (Phone 4084) MONDAY-2.00 p.m. - 4.30 p.m. WEDNESDAY -March 28th to April 29th, FRIDAY-

SCHOOL CHILDREN - Will receive vaccine at their respective schools from Public Health Nurses. Parents consent is necessary. 28th March tCJ 29th April. Phone 7131.

ADUlTS-This programme .. commences . towards end of April. Exact dotes to be announced later. For further information contact March of Dimes. Phone 6414.

REMEMBER - 7 out of 10 ca5es of Poliomyelitis in 1959 were in children under 5 Y.ears of Age .

PlEASE RETAIN THIS NOTICE FOR FUTURE REFERENCE.

mar25apl

APARTMENT FOR RENT

Self-contained heated Apartment consis.t· ing of living room, one bedroom, kitchen and bathroom, located on Circular Road.

For further particulars apply,

The Eastern Trust Co. 275 WATER STREET PHONE 2027

WANTED lly large and well established Newfoundland firm

Sales Representative for

Central Nevtfoundland, Notre Da~e and Sonavisto North Arec5 to direct th!

Sales of Building Supplies, Paints, Cnurch Furniture, Heating Equipment etc.

Thil f'OSition could give good living and prospects to man of ability and energy.

Car e55entiol. Write to P.O. BOX 609 c o Daily New~.

All enquiries highly confidential.

WANTED­BAR TENDER

AND WAITRESS GOOD WORKING CONDITIONS.

• Apply

P.O. BOX E-5256.

FOR .SALE· 62 MONKSTOWN R.QAD

This property (formerly .owned by the lcte Sir Albert Wals~) is FREEHOLD, two storey, plastered and insulated throughout, oil-furnace, radiation. full-sind basement, garage, large garden at front, side and rear of house. 1st. floor: Living Room, Den, Dining Roam, Kitchen, Pcntry ond Toilet Room. 2nd. floor . .5 Bedr~oms, Bathroom, Linen Closet.

Hardwobd floors throughout.

Inspection by appointment only. PHONE 9-3821 or 9-1068.

ap8,12

Advertise In The News

I I I

I

,I

;~~ . ~"":x

TEACHERS Wante' . '.

Applications a;e invited by t~e An~l~can _Soai~ · of Education, 8,FII Island to f1ll pos1t1ons m tn. .. : Primary, Elementary and High School Grades ~i the ;allowing 5chools: .~ ~.

... ... : .·.· ,•·

1. ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS: .:,r.

(a) THE BEACH SCHOOl, (3 room~) Grad~~ I-VIII The Front, Bell Island. . ·

(b) ST. MARY'S· SCHOOL, (3 rooms) Grad~:: I-VIII, lance Cove, Bell Island. :,;1<

(c) ST. STEPHEN'S SCHOOL, (3 rooms);:·~ Grades I-VIII, Freshwater, Bell Island. ·'

(d) WEST MINES SCHOOL, (7 rooms) Grodts I-VI, West Mines, Bell Island. · · ·

(e) ST. AUGUSTINE'S SCHOOL, (19 rooms) Grades I-VOI, Wabana, Bell hland. .

( 1) Vice-Principal (2) Other Teachers.

2. ST. BONIFACE REGIONAL HIGH SCHOOL (a) Commercial Teacher. (b) Other Teachers.

Please apply in writing to: A. R. PROUDFOOT,

P.O. BOX 909 BEll ISLAND, NFLO. ap'i.R

TYPIST REQUIRED·

ap6)i

Preferrably with knowledge of Shorthand.

PHONE 9-2178

---- ---·------------

WANTED FOR HOWLEY AMALGAMATED SCHOOL

PRINCIPAL A or U Grode French Essential.

VICE-PRINCIPAL lsi. Grade or better. TWO ELEMENTRY TEACHERS

One to teach Grades 1 and 2. One to teach Grades 3, 4 and 5 .

Hou:;f.s for two married men available, with all modern convenience.

Apply to. WALTER GINN,

CHAIRMAN, HOWlEY BOARD OF EDUCATION •. ap"7.:~i

WANTED STENOGR.APHER

(Female)

Attractive we~ges, good working co"clitie~na, Must have experience.

Apply in writing los

Blue Peter Steamships Ltd.

PUBLIC NOTICE BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS Of

PUBLIC . UTILITIES '.·.

NOTICE is hereby given that the Avalon Telephen. · Compony, Limited, has mode t~pplicotion to the Bor:~rd of Commi~:;ioners of Public UtilititJ for permission to issue:

$2,000,000 7:( First Mortgage Bonds $2,000.000'

This application will be heard al Cl sitting of the i se~id Board on Friday, the 8th day of April, 196~; at 3 o'clock in the afternoon, in the Soard ~oom of the soid Soard, King George V ln~titute, 11$: Woter Street, St. John's. ' ·

I

All persons intesested take notice and gover" .themselves accordingly. · ; :

'' Dated at St. John's, Newfoundland, thi:; 6th day 1

of April, 1960. ·

BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF PUBLIC I UTILI TIES.

/ ~~8-------------M~~~-~~-TL-E,_c_lerk. __ ,

. '

I

I • j I . I I

......

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

20 .. ~

·.

MILLEY'S LADIES'

UNLINED

KID GLOVES New HAND

BAGS

SAMPLES

Values up to $3.00

51.25 pr.

$1.98 and $3.75 . ·:·

New Skirts PLAIN, PLAID and FINE CHECKS

Sizes 12 to 20

New Blouses

$4.75

TERRYLENE ond NO IRON COTTON Sizes 12 to 20

$3.25 and $3.98

S. MILLEY LTD.

TV REASONABLE RAlES GUARANTEED WORK

tolna"" It Is practl•

An ovorago p11t on Y""

111-n.

A. &niC lOOM .__ IIIVIh of ·tho framoworlc II alreHy Ia pi-anaHic room Ia an oaono111lcal way to provide ntra llvlnt apace. An noro1• attic - 1011 lie built with no ....., .._...

Living comfort and the market value of your home can both be lncreaud by o well planned modernizin1 program. Each dollar 1pent acids more than a dollar to the value of your home. s .. or call VI for full detail•.

Nothing ,adllls 10 much to tho value of · . yo11r homo, and tho'JIIoasuro tho whole family gotl from It, as a modorn kitchen. Tho avorago kitchen 1an. bo 111odomlzod with no money dow•

A MODliN IAIAII Tile r .. ale yaluo of your homo 1an Ito lncroocod canaldorably with • modora tarqo lll .. ltaod for tho now, lorp .. ,., An ovoral' 2-car tarqo can bo . llullt'wltll ao 1110aoy lloWIIo

.!

HORWOOD LUMBER Co.; Ltd. -HORWOOD LUMBR CO., LTD.

Wciter Street W•t . Phone 3011

'· • I

Annual Speech Night

SpePrh ni~Zht w~.• long anti· ripatcd by the resident~ of Joe 1

Batt's Arm ~nd Barr'd Islands. and was well attended, over 400 people being present.

OF .THB

OK. The dignitaries present on

stag-e included Rev. James I Reid, .~uest speaker: :\Jr. Reg·. TRUSTEE FROM THE in~ld Eveleigh, chairman An· TOOLROOM ghcan School Board and other . board members: l\!r. Bertram Nevil Shute .......... $4.50

1

·

Decker, chairman United FUEL FOR THE flAME School Board and other board AI W h ' 25 1

, members: 11r. Al'thur Ludlow, ec aug ........ .,, I President Home and School CLEA ,

I Associati~n: the st:~ff or, the Lawrence Durrell 3.75 I · Central High !lchnol: Mr. Fred· 1

• crick Buffett, Print•ipal, or~ani THE STRANGE ONE 1

. zcr and chairman fot• Ill<' p•·o- Fred Bodsworth .... 5.50; : g-ram; ~lr. Gordon Clarke, 1 THE WALK DOWN

1

, · \'lcc·Principal: i\li~.• Elizaheth : N STREET · Russell, :\!iss Kathleen Luri· 'MAl

1

low, :\1iss :\lona lloffc, :\!iss ! Ruth Moore 5.00. , llclc~J Head and ~!iss Gertrude THE DIVIDED LADY !

Hcwttl. ' 00 The program w~s open!'(\, Bruce lv1arsha1l .... 3 .

, with a corrtial wci<:omc h)· :\Jr. I CIDER WITH ROSIE , Bul'lct t, who briefly ot~tlined Lourie Lee ... . 3.50

the reasons for ha\'tnp a ! ' speerh night. This was roll ow- : TREAD SOFTLY IN LOVE I cd by the guest speaker's ad- I Renee Shann ........ 2.25'

! dr~ss. Durinv his \'cry s~imu- :STILL GLIDES THE STREAM I ' latmJt talk, Rev. R~td pumted ' out the purposes of obtaining ! 0. f. Stev-enson .... 2.75:

an (•duration and related it to · PASSAGE OF I 1 rl'ligion. Following this. :\lr. : E : A bl

E1•eleigh delh·ercd the Roarrl r.c m er . Chairman's report in which he THE REST TO

pointed out the recent ~tl1o~l The life cx~endit~rE'.s in the wa~· of in·: Wolf tcl'lor pamtmg, ete.

Other items on till' Dl'fii!!T.lclll

' included spcccllc' h:; , IX. X and Xi stud

rcadi11g of pot•ms an · ing of a 011e at·t "nrnl'nllf

eneral Reilly 7.00

"Rumonr Htin~ Ha.rl[.,lll'<flllt.'l.Jl lllffri:!!Ei:mllij: : adapted l'cn;ion • the :'\rws" b\'

r or Powder­

: Th<' 1·a • , by a girl : rla~~. ! Brown. i One

Role ·"-'""-·"· World

.-~IllS M .. /Ajl'rifie .... 3.50

I

I

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., FRIDAY. APRil 8, 1960

NAME THIS HORSE

and if selected by the Judges you will be the proud owner of this Prize Winning Race Horse. The rules of the contest are very simple. Applico· tion Forms can be had at all Tobacco Stores when you buy a Package of LONDON DOCK Aromatic Pipe Tobacco, there are also Five Hundred other prizes. Entries must be Post Marked not later than Midnight April llth., 1960 and mailed to "Kentucky Club Derby Doy Contest", P.O. Bo>t 16 F. Mt. Vernon, N.Y.

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Grade XI: :\larjoric ,Brown, .Tames Combden, Roland Han­cock, :11ary Frcake, Elizabeth Hyde, ;\farj orie Penny, Roland i

In loving memory of my dear daughter,

MARION POLLARD, who died

' Powell and Guiding and Brown C. A. HUBLEY LTD. ' Commissioner Sullh•an gave a I' . very nice talk on LOrd Baden

I Owl Morris entertained with • RO'"D PH 391

1 Penny, Hilda Penton, Janet 1

1

1 Roebotham,

The ttJimax of the evening 1 was the announcing of the 1 names of Miss and lllr. Central i

' High. It was in dee(! a very ex- 1 ·

citing moment when Hazel 1

Decker was called forward to be crowned as Miss Central High and Gc·orge Downton as Mr. Central High1 Both were I crowned by Rev. Reid and each presented · with a gift amidst cheers, shouts and ap­plauses.

I Previous to this speech night i

an "Open House" was held at an Open House was held at the Central High Schoo) on Wed· and friends of the children were invited to visit the class· rooms and watch the children at work. This was heartily wei· corned by a large number at·

1 tending, After four o'clock the visitors were treated to a cup of tea and lunch by the high elass girls. This was enjoyed by all. Thus ends another Edu· cation Week at the Central High School of Joe Batt's Arm and Ba~·a Islands.

Overblouses once again steal the spotlight in spring blouse­lines. The short cropped over· bloll8e and split levels are well represented in solids and prints to cO«dinate with pleated skirts. For v a r I 1 t i o n some over· blouses ll_l'e set on waistbands. Other fashions inl'lude tuck·in blouses with soft bows at the neckliDe or embroidered detai!J .

April 8th, 1958. "It's lonesome at home

without you, And sad the weary way; For life is not the same

for me, Since you were called

away.

Ycl again we hope to meel you,

When our days of life are fled,

In Heaven, with joy to greet you,

Where no farewell tears are shed."

R.I.P.

.:....Inserted by her mother, Mrs. Josephine White, also her two children, Lorraine and Tony Pol· lard.

Children's TEE

SHIRTS NOW ...... ·49c·

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Our Building Supplies Department can supply you with

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