ebels c onttnue uprising ubacollections.mun.ca/pdfs/dailynews/thedailynewsstjohnsnl... ·...

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- ' I' many rzed for >. SEED. ·\ .. ;Jt'!! dire. . ",. to . erl·<lm ... ! n11lh. .\dd :. . ( ;-{·;!m ... aucc .n:liudual 1: ·: and F. ., c"n"""· it :nqwt:.nt pari . ,·r. .upplying , 1 (d n1!1cr II l1hrly. .. r '\ .... (,\ rrnrocnt ·., · ('n-nunrnl in whrn ne RE PUMPS HOSE and types) INGS Ltd. Rc ......... . ebels C •• onttnue Uprising uba AIR SUSPENSION THE DAILY. NEWS Vol 65. No. 8.5 ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, THURSDAY, APRil 3, 1958 (Price "I cents) Charles Hutton & Sons a1 wa s nions erve ore ' se Severe Storm Cabinet OJ'B\1';\-CI'-A labor relations headache up for thl' federal cabinet got a little \l'(llncsday with l)lle more powerful dcnmnds on the major railways. may ha \'e to find a solution even tu· the series of negotia· !!tween the railways and their unions, !liO,OOO.OIIII n year or more at stake. tht brolhl'rhood of: here' morl\•es. Hits Maritimes HALIF AX-CP - A storm which cauglrt the Maritimes by surprise splattered up to six inches of wet snow on the area Wed· nesday, leaving a swath of general disruption. :ley areas were deprived of pc>wer i when a main transmitter line, I which brings power from Hali· fax, snapped orr. TRAFFIC SLOWED Traffic slowed to a cra\\1 in most places when the atonr. caught motorists by surprise. 011 !he ra1l"nys for. The CPR announced Tuesday ll cen: pay boost is going to start laying off fire 1 ' men next month. Blown by winds of 50 1 At least two big ships, one tht ' Empress of Britain, were pre vented rrom docking at Halir;u for a time as high winds buffetee miles an hour - \\ith them outside the harbor entrance occasional gusts to 70- j The gusts died down during tht who;t• mem·j RESIST TQ ULTIMATE Sj))tS coul<l cnppic. The firemen's union has lndi· •enml ;tnke.l cnled earlier It will resist such Ollpt:tr to the a mol'e to the ultimate, Including am:((l on!)· by · a strike. afternoon. the storm belted the I There was no accurate estimatE Maritimes and Nova of damage as repair' crews eon S t . • ' particular 1 to survey disrupted aerv· co m m ' I rccs. mwrcntion. · And the big contract dispute be· rr : tween the railways and the non· most of the day. Poles : Many points couldn't be con· and power and tele· ! lacted because of communication' ::t BRT', (\tom · operating unions seems headed In .... , o: •eric• of j the same direction. A conciliation 1 ;a ,,, tlw board has been sitting on the is· · thr sue at Montreal, but there is lit· union; ; tlc expectation that it will h I , I ! failure. p one mes came eras ' In northend Haiirax. a three· ing clown in many areas ! lon truck slid thr?ugh slush ana under the weight of 1 snapped a loot-thack power pole :)l.O'' ; 1•:ork out a solutron. · 1 1 before smashm:; through . ha•r r<llmalcd; The new demands or the rail· ..• op" drm;.nds- t road trainmen sen·ed on the "' ahnur z.;!railways Tuesday. 'take In about NIGHT at the Studios or Ratlio Station VOC:\1 members of the St. .John's 1\insmcn's Cluh soggy snow. window of a men's wear About 80.000 people in lhc south store. The dril·cr said the shore of the prol'incc were! steering \l;cnt and his brake! wilhottl communications lor <el'·! were useless on the slippery l'rat hours. Man;.· Annapolis \'al· I pal'ement. No one was injured. run 10 around: IJ.500 or Its 19,000 members. The held the Grand Drawing in their Sweepstake. The ticket was clrawh hy I\lr, J. E. But· pear. · olher 4.500 arc employed on West· · tr.::•:•d ,. 11 11 lhP ern lines or the CPR. and orr!· ler shown above passing the winning number to i\lr. llarolc:l Lake as other members of the Kins· I ,Tornadoes Hit the Jo, ouwli<r dais nere said Wednesday sep· men's Club look on. The winning number was 2508 ancl the lucky \\'inn!'r is !\Jr. /\. of !ll :. I. ••ho arale negotiations been go. Grenfell Avenue who can have a $1,000 or a trip to Florida.-( Daily Photo). a hdtl' 1n· r lng on ror them for several i ---------·---------------------- .... ---------------- balllin: l months. Including about the same: rhr:r mem· wage demand of a 25·per·cenl' IN EURQP£ on loco· increase!. . North Texas Steal Wire Storm Repairs •L'P· - i TOT,\L DARKNESS lt!a)ed ,·Nnplction 1 darkness for 12 hours and some iO'tr lim which people were a. week without elec· · Goulrl' noad · tricity. Two major repair jobs re· lkN ;rorm main. both on the Goulds Road. 1 The power company said dam· \'ru 1n111ulland 1 age estimates are still lncom· laid ·!etc. 1\Jeanwhile. the Avalon Tel· .rei · cphune Compan) has announced :o thr :round i th;at installation· of ·a new dial (oatt1! "n:1 I telephone s)'stem on nearby Bell 10 thar "'ra. lslnnd will be de 1 aye d two har1 111 or .. months until "sometime in June" ; because or storm damage. ' m;nt ' "We'l'c just about completed ;wl'\ttu. repair jobs. There are just a few deakr h"rr who isolated areas to service and the anrl ''"I' the . job wiiJ be rinlshed," 1 telephone t rn r l. •d•icla 'olficlal sui d. · b11'i"'" •·•lah. · Relllsland was one or the hard· arr in• •'" i ;;>I. est hit sections of the storm· struck Avalon Peninsula. Some '" 1101 a! · 2.300 W R ban a Ore Company ----- Experts Say The Recessi 11 0n I WICIIITA FALLs. Tex. rAPI-· Both tornadoes hit during the 1 T_wo W night I evening rush The one fro!'! htl th1s north Texas caty. 'the northwest mrssed the m;un May Continue '8 ' Curtis Cook, managing editor of: business district by about three Th · h 195 'the Wichita Falls Record-News.j blocks. ro U g ' said one man was trapped in a Don Warren. a reporter of the : cal'ed·in building near the down·J Wichita Falls Record News, in· ' town area. I terrupted a telephone conversa· ---------------------- 1 i Police said they belie,·cd many: lion with The Associated Press to SEE A other persons werejdiveunderadeskasthetomado ll<its I FI"re'?en Called . trapped. They launched a search runnel roared close to the neW3· . oi stricken drcas. paper buildingm Cook said one tornaJo (3111C in He said it missed the building FRANCISCO- AP -A iTO fish Market DELAY JN · u. s. i fromthe southwest. hitting the b.l' a block and was roaring along 1 western nart of the cirv. The Sixth Street. 22·car Southern Pacific train 1 was hit by two siowslidcs in 1 I . , other _came from the i He said hi! had no idea or the the Sirerra Nevada earl)' Wed·' City f1rrancn were cailcrl to: GI:::"E\'A 1,\1' 1 -Thr bu,mc,s 1 thrcr•." thl' rrpot'l ,,wt. "tlwy n"rthii'C>t htt lhe of or the num· nesday .. About passenflers I West End Fish o.n i in the llnitcct. Stalr.s is j ltnally lo tall in line.·· . town .. _. __ ... · ber of abroad escaped injurv Two New Gower Street at 1.30 thts 1 hkely lo cast 1ls shadow on 1\cst- 1 fhc Amel'lcan rccess1on 1s ex· tr I I ·d· • • 1 morning anrt upon arrival found ern Europe lhrouj!h most of l!l'i8. 1 peeled to affect Europe hoth <h·l: UNITED CHURCH a nmen wrre repor e lllJUr· the store filled with smoke. the United Nations Economic reclly and mdirectly. the com· ed I lightly. · . . I Commission ror Europe said 'mission s a i d. American pur- ------- . __ Floorrng near stove m the chases from Europe are likely ln ' was smouldermg but arter The !'Ill'· decline, and a similar in I Report M·ssl·onary mineu were thrown out or work some axe work firemen got at vey said a u.s. economic rcm·at' U.S. purchases from 0\Wseas n I for more than two weeks when the root of the trouble and ex· "secrns u n t i k c I y before the! will reel u c c lhcil purchasing pc>wer lines to electric pumps lnltinguished the tim· autumn at the earliest." It sug-rpnwer in Europe. :A d M •nt nance Fund the submarine mines were &eV· ber before any SeriOUS damage gesled lhat Europcnn !lOI'el'll· . . I n a I e ered. resulted. ments could cushion lhe impact _The surver pam_ted a 1 Subsidizing Canadair by an immediate relaxation of re· picture of. econom:c 1 TORONTO I.CPI - The !9j7 average oE $1.04 a week in 1956. strictire measures such as credit thhe ·Sflatcs.: total of the United Church of Dr. Mooney eaid that since 1950 controls 11 ere. 11 sar · 1 e ec tne 0 per· c d · · d · l $791 401 h bee t 'b ted t · 1 sonal incomes "will be increas· , ana a mrssronary an mam en· , as n con n u o The 400-pnge report wnrned · . · . ance fund is $5 7Hl 846 almost overseas relier in addition to mgly .. felt on consumer expend!· rour times higher' it was in grants to Yarious church boards. \lve pohcaes or most West lure. · 1940. church treasurer Rei!. Vic· A $1,500,000 fund has been raised pean not .. only .Caaled 1 The report suggested only a tor T. Jllooney said Wednesday. to wipe orf the church deficit, !n their purpose but contrrbuted 1 marked increase in u.s. foreign " ... We find it well nigh im· $5.000,000 has been raised for the m n? Sl!lall way to the present 1 investment might give a "major possible to finance the needs of ptnsiOn fund, $000,000 for the decline.'" the <European· stimulus" to the American econ· the church ... " he said in a training school end many mil· lldStosn I' lies or its parent United Stales , Staff ll'rilrr company, G e 11 e r a 1 Dynamics - Comptlenll Corp., may be able to sell scores say the of the turboprop C01mopolltan ln · 1s snl"idiz· 1 world markets. \lontreal. to JIYBRID CRAFT com- I The plane Is a hybrid: An w . . . i American Convair alrrrame and dt; th•' t I he 1 British Eland turboprop engines. OO:part· 1 The government was dickering 10 · ' with Vickers·Armstrong of Brit· 1 to twtn·l air. for purchase of eight to 15 for RCAF I Viscounts for RCAF Transport . . Command. These VIa counts 'h lth thts start. . would be similar to those In the " 1 !alts facrii· Trans-Canada Air Linea passen· Scores ger fleet. Air force sources say the RCAF wanted the Viscounts and not the Cosmopolitans. Tbey say the reason ror this was that the Viscount is a proven aircrart. Stores or spare parts will also hnve to be before the Cosmopolitan can be put into eratinal service. The first two lanes scheduled ror del11•ery to the RCAF In June, 19;;9, continuing employment for Cana· dian workers. Canadair employs more than 10,000 workers. Canadalr's big_ derence project for the government hns been pro- duction or hundreds of Sabre jet fighters ror 12 RCAF squadrons in Europe and ror West Germany, Britain, Greece and Turkey un· der Canada's mutual aid pro· gram. economacl expansaon.. omy during the current year. statement. lions more for church expansion. Western E u r o P e s economrc "We have not yet come · 3ny· The recommended goal for the growth rate last year rcll below I where near reaching our peoples 1959 missionary and maintenance 1955 le:el fo,r the second year Crackdou;n potential or giving," Dr. Mooney rund is $7,000,000 which will re· successton. surV<'Y pre- said. The United Church was quire the church to make 1n dtcled that the rated low on the list for per a\"Crage increase of more than year major 1-.uro- cnpila giving. Resident members $600n000 in each of the next t.wo peon mdustraal countnes - Bnl· ::-o;Ew YORK - AP - The or the church in Canada ga\·e an years. ain. Frnnce nnd West Germany- City School System disclosed Production of the Sabre is "are all likely to accentuate the Wednesday that it has sus·. h nearly at an end. Canadair now tendency toward stagnation ... pended 1.125 pupils in the last To Reorgan,·ze T e AS!IURES EMPLOY!'tiENT ' is producing the rour engine that was visible in lhc second hair few months in a crackdown on The Cosmopolitan contract was Argus ror the RCAF's Maritime or 1957." troublemakers. announced Feb. 11 by Derence Command and a trensport vcr· ALL FALL IN- LI:O.'E : ------ s • / C d •t P t Minister Pearkes soon arter nego. sion or this plane ror Transport "Although the other I \\'est i' .Jupiter's rour moons. which oc I a re I ar 'y liatlons with Vickers-Armstrong Command. The dcrcnce depart· European I countries mny ror a Galilco discovered in 1610. were I . ': were dropped. He said at that ment has eight or these big trans·j time succeed in a! the first heavenly bodies dis·, Wl:'IJI;IPEG C•CPI - Social lime the contract would assure ports on order. course difrcrent from these 1 covered with a telescope. I Credit Leader Solon Low said 1 Wednesda;· the first slcp in rc· I Khrushchev · IN CUBA organizing nis party's rorces will immediate!)'. 8 . "All our rormer MPs will be ! GRANTCHESTER England- Expecuttioru R- ntr1h j which in recent months has pub· . in the capital then and a de· ·Reuters _ Cecil Warbuton on us s e Rebels ' May c a II G en· era I St r I. ke' ! _ ... ended state and the Rusalan leader. . we hope wall be held shortly, ed Nations Association _ a• · Fosler Russell, 85. started correspon· h.c s_aid in an "I'm just the 'age of 104 1 by dence with an open letter calling prckrng up the prcces to rebuald · lhanallcs.'' on President Eisenhower and By DAVID ROWNTREE tor was unseated just a rcw Cuba. clash. Batista beefed up his the house aller the hurricane le!t·wing Khrdshchev to forget their pc>ints Canadian Prea1 Slaff Writer weeks ago. TOURiSTS UNSCARED army and police. Castro support· has blown." talesmen or dtrrerence and remember their Fidel Castro, the tough moun· SLOW WAR Another reason the climax has ers spread warnings of violence Mr. Low and 18 other Social points of agreement. . lain fighter who Is trying to This Is lo be the fight to the been so slow in coming is that and the call ror a general upris· Credit members lost their seats The volcanic soil iJ rich an• the crops are good on the . of l\lount Etna, Siclly, Italy. He summed up Wednesday by topple Fulgenclo BaUula as pres!· finish, Castro says. He has been Bntisla's political enemies .in lng. in Monday's general election. declaring that both Dullea-who dent of Cuba, Is coimUng on a getting ready for It for 15 months Havana are divided among them· The government counts on :he This left the party without a rep· 1!---..--------: replied Cor Eisenhower - and general strike to help him do it. while he conducted a trouble· selves and niany have balked at act that the majority of Cubans resenlativc in the Commons. Khrushchev are "rival fanatics, What he has In mind Is· not a some guerrllla war in the moun·. siding with Castro in a rull·scale ilon't want a civil war. The reb- "I have enough to keep me each blinded to obvious facta by strike In the eeneral sense-the talns of southwest Cuba. civil war. els hope to ignite the explosive busy ror a while yet," Mr. Low mental bUnkers." labor unions In Cuba are con· The reblllon has been a tong The rebel cause in Havana atmosphere under the surface said. He leaves today Cor Ottawa u Replies from Moscow and trolled by Batista appointees-but time coming to a head.· and other parts of the country calm in Havana. to "clenn o•rt the accumulation 112 Washington were "extraordinar. rather a political and revolution· Aside from keeping tension has been pushed Corwnrd by uni· Batista has been playing. for or 13 years work in m)' orrice 104 1 ily similar ln tone," Russell ary strike, a sort of general up- high, disrupting communications versily sludenls and other Castro time. lie desperately wants to in lhe Parliament buildings.'' wrote. . . rlslng of the people. and causng trouble ror the local sympathizers by sabotage, kill· hang on to power until his lerm "We shall start regrouping our 25 "Both, in words, acknowledge The aim would be to paralyze inhabitants, the guerrlla phase of ings and bombings, in oHice runs out nearly a year forces and I will have a con· 19 that a nuclear war would defeat everything. All who sympathize Castro's war didn't bring him One objective was to scare from now. ile set back elections ference with the provincial or· '2 the purpose of both ·parties with the rebels would staY away much closer to the presidential tourists and thus reduce one or from June 1 lo Nov. 3. ganizers," he said. "Although we equally, but neither draws the from . work, as a minimum. palace In Havana. Batista's biggest sources or in· If he can put down the revolt, have no members in the new 2 moral that the acerbity of their Others would take on more mill· On the other hand, the ract thai come. But the tourists kept com· Batista hopes to rig the election Parliament. the movement is not 1 disagreements must be lessened tant roles. was unable to capture or ing-at least until just recenly. so that a hand-picked successor dead. basic devotion is still Weather Cloudy with flew flurrief md intermittent rain an•· ;,ow. High 40. TEMPERATURES .ydney .. ..... 32 !alifax ....... 32 ·london . . . . . . . 34 'lontreal . . . . . . 33 Toronto 38 38 35 36 47 55 2SS this ascerblty Increases the lt Ia a 1trale1Y that worked ln kill the rebels shows that they Tha was when both sides were can lake o\'er. This is what the there and it's just a matter. of likelihood ol nuclear war." Venezuela, wbere JDother dicta· bad a rtrm hold on southwest makitrJ ready for a decisive rebels hope to prevent. · regrouping and reorganizing." •--------- 1 :, I I I. ' I • I .I ! i:' ·: I 1 i ;I I• 1: 1:. L I i: 1 ' ' ' I ' .. I '' . '' . ' '. . '

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-'

I' many

rzed for

>. SEED.

·\

:·t·ilntl~.

:;:,·mhr~tnC'.

.. ;Jt'!! 11:~0 dire. . ",. to packa~e . erl·<lm ~auce

... ! n11lh. .\dd

:. :n;1imn~ -. ( ;-{·;!m ... aucc

.n:liudual 1: :1rni~h

·: ~li~~ and : -~~~n dr~n?ca~ F.

,., c"n"""· it . :nqwt:.nt pari .. ,·r. .upplying

, 1 (d n1!1cr II i· l1hrly. .. r '\ .... (,\ rrnrocnt ·., · ('n-nunrnl in

· ·'::~~·~d~ whrn

lne

IRE PUMPS

HOSE

and types)

RINGS

' Ltd.

Rc ......... .r.?~ ~I ~ '· .

ebels C • ••

onttnue Uprising uba ~~ ~''

4~~ AIR SUSPENSION THE DAILY. NEWS

Vol 65. No. 8.5 ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, THURSDAY, APRil 3, 1958 (Price "I cents) Charles Hutton & Sons

• a1 wa s nions erve ore

'

se Problem~ Severe Storm Cabinet

OJ'B\1';\-CI'-A labor relations headache up for thl' federal cabinet got a little

\l'(llncsday with l)lle more powerful

11nin~ dcnmnds on the major railways. may ha \'e to find a solution even tu·

the prr~rntly-tangled series of negotia· !!tween the railways and their unions, !liO,OOO.OIIII n year or more at stake.

tht brolhl'rhood of: announ~<·d here' morl\•es.

Hits Maritimes HALIF AX-CP - A

late-~eason storm which cauglrt the Maritimes by surprise splattered up to six inches of wet snow on the area Wed· nesday, leaving a swath of general disruption.

:ley areas were deprived of pc>wer i when a main transmitter line,

I which brings power from Hali· fax, snapped orr.

TRAFFIC SLOWED Traffic wa~ slowed to a cra\\1

in most places when the atonr. caught motorists by surprise.

011 !he ra1l"nys for. The CPR announced Tuesday ll ~r cen: pay boost is going to start laying off fire 1 ~ndn;. ' men next month.

Blown by winds of 50

1 At least two big ships, one tht ' Empress of Britain, were pre vented rrom docking at Halir;u for a time as high winds buffetee

miles an hour - \\ith them outside the harbor entrance occasional gusts to 70- j The gusts died down during tht who;t• mem·j RESIST TQ ULTIMATE

Sj))tS coul<l cnppic. The firemen's union has lndi· ~a •enml ;tnke.l cnled earlier It will resist such

Ollpt:tr to the a mol'e to the ultimate, Including am:((l on!)· by · a strike.

afternoon. the storm belted the I There was no accurate estimatE Maritimes and Nova of damage as repair' crews eon S t. • ' particular 1 ~inued to survey disrupted aerv·

co m m ' I rccs. mwrcntion. · And the big contract dispute be· rr : tween the railways and the non·

most of the day. Poles : Many points couldn't be con· and power and tele· ! lacted because of communication'

::t BRT', (\tom and~ · operating unions seems headed In .... , o: ~ •eric• of j the same direction. A conciliation 1;a ,,, tlw r~ih• a~·s board has been sitting on the is· · :~c:ud:::c thr bi~ ~ sue at Montreal, but there is lit· ~Piratin; union; ; tlc expectation ~ere that it will

h I, I ! failure. p one mes came eras I· ' In northend Haiirax. a three· ing clown in many areas ! lon truck slid thr?ugh slush ana under the weight of 1 snapped a loot-thack power pole

:)l.O'' mrmher~. ; 1•:ork out a solutron. · 1 1 before smashm:; through th~

. ha•r r<llmalcd; The new demands or the rail·

..• op" drm;.nds- t road trainmen sen·ed on the "' ahnur z.;!railways Tuesday. 'take In about LA~T NIGHT at the Studios or Ratlio Station VOC:\1 members of the St. .John's 1\insmcn's Cluh

soggy snow. '~lass window of a men's wear About 80.000 people in lhc south store. The dril·cr said the truck'~

shore ~rca of the prol'incc were! steering \l;cnt and his brake! wilhottl communications lor <el'·! were useless on the slippery l'rat hours. Man;.· Annapolis \'al· I pal'ement. No one was injured. run 10 around: IJ.500 or Its 19,000 members. The held the Grand Drawing in their Sweepstake. The winnin~ ticket was clrawh hy I\lr, J. E. But·

pear. · olher 4.500 arc employed on West· · tr.::•:•d ,. 11 11 lhP ern lines or the CPR. and orr!· ler shown above passing the winning number to i\lr. llarolc:l Lake as other members of the Kins· I

,Tornadoes Hit the Jo, ouwli<r dais nere said Wednesday sep· men's Club look on. The winning number was 2508 ancl the lucky \\'inn!'r is !\Jr. /\. Lewi~ of !ll :. I. ••ho ~~ot arale negotiations ha~e been go. Grenfell Avenue who can have a $1,000 or a trip to Florida.-( Daily New~ Photo). a hdtl' \lil~l' 1n· r lng on ror them for several i ---------·----------------------....---------------­balllin: r"•lw~y l months. Including about the same:

rhr:r mem· wage demand of a 25·per·cenl' IN EURQP£ on rl1ei~l loco· increase!. . North Texas

Steal Wire Storm Repairs

~l:d. •L'P· - i TOT,\L DARKNESS lt!a)ed ,·Nnplction 1 darkness for 12 hours and some iO'tr lim which • people were a. week without elec·

· Goulrl' noad · tricity. Two major repair jobs re· lkN ;rorm main. both on the Goulds Road.

1 The power company said dam· \'ru 1n111ulland 1 age estimates are still lncom· l'om~nr laid ·!etc. 1\Jeanwhile. the Avalon Tel·

t~an ~)'" .rei · cphune Compan) has announced :o thr :round i th;at installation· of ·a new dial

(oatt1! "n:1 I on~· telephone s)'stem on nearby Bell 10 thar "'ra. lslnnd will be de 1 aye d two

har1 111 ~r or .. months until "sometime in June" ; because or storm damage.

!8 1~ ' m;nt ' "We'l'c just about completed <~rprr ;wl'\ttu. repair jobs. There are just a few deakr h"rr who isolated areas to service and the

anrl ''"I' the . job wiiJ be rinlshed," 1 telephone t rn r l. •d•icla 'olficlal sui d.

· b11'i"'" •·•lah. · Relllsland was one or the hard· arr in• •'" i ;;>I. est hit sections of the storm·

struck Avalon Peninsula. Some '" 1101 a! · 2.300 W R ban a Ore Company -----

Experts Say The Recessi110n I WICIIITA FALLs. Tex. rAPI-· Both tornadoes hit during the 1 T_wo ~ornado~s W edn~sday night I evening rush hou~. The one fro!'! htl th1s north Texas caty. 'the northwest mrssed the m;un

May Continue '8 ' Curtis Cook, managing editor of: business district by about three Th · h 195 'the Wichita Falls Record-News.j blocks. ro U g ' said one man was trapped in a Don Warren. a reporter of the

: cal'ed·in building near the down·J Wichita Falls Record News, in· ' town area. I terrupted a telephone conversa·

---------------------- 1 i Police said they belie,·cd many: lion with The Associated Press to ~ALSO SEE A other persons pos~ibly werejdiveunderadeskasthetomado ll<its s~wursUdes' I FI"re'?en Called . trapped. They launched a search runnel roared close to the neW3·

. oi stricken drcas. paper buildingm • Cook said one tornaJo (3111C in He said it missed the building

SA~">.' FRANCISCO- AP -A iTO fish Market DELAY JN · u. s. i fromthe southwest. hitting the b.l' a block and was roaring along 1 western nart of the cirv. The Sixth Street. 22·car Southern Pacific train 1 •

was hit by two siowslidcs in 1 • I . , other torn~clo _came from the i He said hi! had no idea or the the Sirerra Nevada earl)' Wed·' City f1rrancn were cailcrl to: GI:::"E\'A 1,\1' 1-Thr bu,mc,s 1thrcr•." thl' rrpot'l ,,wt. "tlwy ~r~ n"rthii'C>t ~nd htt n~ar lhe dolln· 1 ~mount of d~a~:e or the num· nesday .. About 2.~ passenflers I t~e West End Fish ~larkcl o.n i rccc~s10n in the llnitcct. Stalr.s is j IJ~ull(l ltnally lo tall in line.·· . town ar~.:._ .. _. __ ... · ber of casualuc~. abroad escaped injurv Two New Gower Street at 1.30 thts

1

hkely lo cast 1ls shadow on 1\cst- 1 fhc Amel'lcan rccess1on 1s ex· tr I I ·d· • • 1 morning anrt upon arrival found ern Europe lhrouj!h most of l!l'i8.

1

peeled to affect Europe hoth <h·l: UNITED CHURCH a nmen wrre repor e lllJUr· the store filled with smoke. the United Nations Economic reclly and mdirectly. the com·

ed I lightly. · . . I Commission ror Europe said 'mission s a i d. American pur- -------. __ Floorrng near th~ stove m the Wedne~day. chases from Europe are likely ln

' ~tore was smouldermg but arter The commi~~ion's annu~l !'Ill'· decline, and a similar dcrlin~ in I Report o· M·ssl·onary mineu were thrown out or work some axe work firemen got at vey said a u.s. economic rcm·at' U.S. purchases from 0\Wseas n I for more than two weeks when the root of the trouble and ex· "secrns u n t i k c I y before the! will reel u c c lhcil purchasing pc>wer lines to electric pumps lnltinguished the sm~ldering tim· autumn at the earliest." It sug-rpnwer in Europe. :A d M •nt nance Fund the submarine mines were &eV· ber before any SeriOUS damage gesled lhat Europcnn !lOI'el'll· . . I n a I e ered. resulted. ments could cushion lhe impact _The surver pam_ted a J;loun~y 1 •

Subsidizing Canadair by an immediate relaxation of re· picture of. tmmedtat~ econom:c 1 TORONTO I.CPI - The !9j7 average oE $1.04 a week in 1956. strictire measures such as credit P~hospe~~s 1~d thhe Ud"' 11~d ·Sflatcs.: total of the United Church of Dr. Mooney eaid that since 1950 controls 11 ere. 11 sar · 1 e ec tne 0 per· c d · · d · l $791 401 h bee t 'b ted t · 1 sonal incomes "will be increas· , ana a mrssronary an mam en· , as n con n u o

The 400-pnge report wnrned · . · . ance fund is $5 7Hl 846 almost overseas relier in addition to l~at th~ ~nli·in£1ationary reslric-~ mgly .. felt on consumer expend!· rour times higher' th~n it was in grants to Yarious church boards. \lve pohcaes or most West E~ro· lure. · 1940. church treasurer Rei!. Vic· A $1,500,000 fund has been raised pean ~overnemls not .. only .Caaled 1 The report suggested only a tor T. Jllooney said Wednesday. to wipe orf the church deficit, !n their purpose but contrrbuted 1 marked increase in u.s. foreign " ... We find it well nigh im· $5.000,000 has been raised for the m n? Sl!lall way to the present 1 investment might give a "major possible to finance the needs of ptnsiOn fund, $000,000 for the decline.'" the rat~ 0~. <European· stimulus" to the American econ· the church ... " he said in a training school end many mil·

lldStosn I' lies or its parent United Stales , Staff ll'rilrr company, G e 11 e r a 1 Dynamics

- Comptlenll Corp., may be able to sell scores source~ say the of the turboprop C01mopolltan ln · 1s snl"idiz· 1 world markets.

\lontreal. to JIYBRID CRAFT ~orill com- I The plane Is a hybrid: An

w . . . i American Convair alrrrame and dt; th•' t I he 1 British Eland turboprop engines. 11i'~~ OO:part· 1 The government was dickering

10 · '~n· ' with Vickers·Armstrong of Brit· 1 to twtn·l air. for purchase of eight to 15 for RCAF I Viscounts for RCAF Transport

. ~· . Command. These VIa counts 'h lth thts start. . would be similar to those In the " 1 !alts facrii· Trans-Canada Air Linea passen·

Scores

ger fleet. Air force sources say the RCAF

wanted the Viscounts and not the Cosmopolitans.

Tbey say the reason ror this was that the Viscount is a proven aircrart.

Stores or spare parts will also hnve to be provid~d before the Cosmopolitan can be put into o· eratinal service. The first two lanes ~re scheduled ror del11•ery to the RCAF In June, 19;;9,

continuing employment for Cana· dian workers. Canadair employs more than 10,000 workers.

Canadalr's big_ derence project for the government hns been pro­duction or hundreds of Sabre jet fighters ror 12 RCAF squadrons in Europe and ror West Germany, Britain, Greece and Turkey un· der Canada's mutual aid pro· gram.

economacl expansaon.. omy during the current year. statement. lions more for church expansion. Western E u r o P e s economrc "We have not yet come · 3ny· The recommended goal for the

growth rate last year rcll below I where near reaching our peoples 1959 missionary and maintenance !h~ 1955 le:el fo,r the second year Crackdou;n potential or giving," Dr. Mooney rund is $7,000,000 which will re· I~ successton. ~he surV<'Y pre- said. The United Church was quire the church to make 1n dtcled that dunn~ the cu~renl/ rated low on the list for per a\"Crage increase of more than year ~he ll1r~c major ~\'est 1-.uro- cnpila giving. Resident members $600n000 in each of the next t.wo peon mdustraal countnes - Bnl· ::-o;Ew YORK - AP - The or the church in Canada ga\·e an years. ain. Frnnce nnd West Germany- City School System disclosed

Production of the Sabre is "are all likely to accentuate the Wednesday that it has sus·. h nearly at an end. Canadair now tendency toward stagnation ... pended 1.125 pupils in the last To Reorgan,·ze T e

AS!IURES EMPLOY!'tiENT ' is producing the rour • engine that was visible in lhc second hair few months in a crackdown on The Cosmopolitan contract was Argus ror the RCAF's Maritime or 1957." troublemakers.

announced Feb. 11 by Derence Command and a trensport vcr· ALL FALL IN- LI:O.'E : ------ s • / C d •t P t Minister Pearkes soon arter nego. sion or this plane ror Transport "Although the other I \\'est i' .Jupiter's rour moons. which oc I a re I a r 'y liatlons with Vickers-Armstrong Command. The dcrcnce depart· European I countries mny ror a Galilco discovered in 1610. were I . ': were dropped. He said at that ment has eight or these big trans·j time succeed in pursuin~: a! the first heavenly bodies dis·, Wl:'IJI;IPEG C•CPI - Social lime the contract would assure ports on order. course difrcrent from these 1 covered with a telescope. I Credit Leader Solon Low said

1 Wednesda;· the first slcp in rc·

I Khrushchev · IN CUBA organizing nis party's rorces will be~in immediate!)'.

lt~trs1 8 . "All our rormer MPs will be ! GRANTCHESTER England-

Expecuttioru

R- ntr1h j which in recent months has pub· . in the capital then and a de· ·Reuters _ Cecil Warbuton on

us s e ~~~: ~~n:~oph~~~;h!e~~s~ se~~':!ry~~ Rebels ' May c a II G en· era I St r I. ke' ~~lii~~a;vil~o~~c~a~e;t~~~rd,~'llic~ ! ~~~n:~t~~ri~~:;·e~ ~~e su;~:. _ ... -··~ov ended state and the Rusalan leader. . we hope wall be held shortly, ed Nations Association _ a• ·

Fosler Russell, 85. started correspon· h.c s_aid in an inte~view. "I'm just the 'age of 104• 1 by dence with an open letter calling prckrng up the prcces to rebuald

· lhanallcs.'' on President Eisenhower and By DAVID ROWNTREE tor was unseated just a rcw Cuba. clash. Batista beefed up his the house aller the hurricane ~tw ~ le!t·wing Khrdshchev to forget their pc>ints Canadian Prea1 Slaff Writer weeks ago. TOURiSTS UNSCARED army and police. Castro support· has blown."

talesmen or dtrrerence and remember their Fidel Castro, the tough moun· SLOW WAR Another reason the climax has ers spread warnings of violence Mr. Low and 18 other Social points of agreement. . lain fighter who Is trying to This Is lo be the fight to the been so slow in coming is that and the call ror a general upris· Credit members lost their seats

The volcanic soil iJ rich an• the crops are good on the slop~ . of l\lount Etna, Siclly, Italy.

He summed up Wednesday by topple Fulgenclo BaUula as pres!· finish, Castro says. He has been Bntisla's political enemies .in lng. in Monday's general election. declaring that both Dullea-who dent of Cuba, Is coimUng on a getting ready for It for 15 months Havana are divided among them· The government counts on :he This left the party without a rep· 1!---..--------: replied Cor Eisenhower - and general strike to help him do it. while he conducted a trouble· selves and niany have balked at act that the majority of Cubans resenlativc in the Commons. Khrushchev are "rival fanatics, What he has In mind Is· not a some guerrllla war in the moun·. siding with Castro in a rull·scale ilon't want a civil war. The reb- "I have enough to keep me each blinded to obvious facta by strike In the eeneral sense-the talns of southwest Cuba. civil war. els hope to ignite the explosive busy ror a while yet," Mr. Low

19 ~7 mental bUnkers." labor unions In Cuba are con· The reblllon has been a tong The rebel cause in Havana atmosphere under the surface said. He leaves today Cor Ottawa u Replies from Moscow and trolled by Batista appointees-but time coming to a head.· and other parts of the country calm in Havana. to "clenn o•rt the accumulation

112 Washington were "extraordinar. rather a political and revolution· Aside from keeping tension has been pushed Corwnrd by uni· Batista has been playing. for or 13 years work in m)' orrice 104 1 ily similar ln tone," Russell ary strike, a sort of general up- high, disrupting communications versily sludenls and other Castro time. lie desperately wants to in lhe Parliament buildings.''

wrote. . . rlslng of the people. and causng trouble ror the local sympathizers by sabotage, kill· hang on to power until his lerm "We shall start regrouping our 25 "Both, in words, acknowledge The aim would be to paralyze inhabitants, the guerrlla phase of ings and bombings, in oHice runs out nearly a year forces and I will have a con· 19 that a nuclear war would defeat everything. All who sympathize Castro's war didn't bring him One objective was to scare from now. ile set back elections ference with the provincial or·

'2 the purpose of both ·parties with the rebels would staY away much closer to the presidential tourists and thus reduce one or from June 1 lo Nov. 3. ganizers," he said. "Although we equally, but neither draws the from . work, as a minimum. palace In Havana. Batista's biggest sources or in· If he can put down the revolt, have no members in the new

2 moral that the acerbity of their Others would take on more mill· On the other hand, the ract thai come. But the tourists kept com· Batista hopes to rig the election Parliament. the movement is not 1 disagreements must be lessened tant roles. B~tlsta was unable to capture or ing-at least until just recenly. so that a hand-picked successor dead. Th~ basic devotion is still

Weather Cloudy with flew flurrief

md intermittent rain an•· ;,ow. High 40.

TEMPERATURES .ydney .. ..... 32 !alifax ....... 32 ·london . . . . . . . 34 'lontreal . . . . . . 33 Toronto 38

38 35 36 47 55 2SS ~ince this ascerblty Increases the lt Ia a 1trale1Y that worked ln kill the rebels shows that they Tha was when both sides were can lake o\'er. This is what the there and it's just a matter. of

likelihood ol nuclear war." Venezuela, wbere JDother dicta· bad a rtrm hold on southwest makitrJ ready for a decisive rebels hope to prevent. · regrouping and reorganizing." •---------•

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THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, APRIL 3

2:----------------------~~'----------------------~----

C H II a~use, he said, and he waa Op·

• N ,_,,...W -·· '' •

space for others would then expect to get the same privil· ege, and asked where would i:

1• ty· a posed to giving the loading

· The regular weekly meeting read by the City Clerk, Mr. E. nections with the Council. ·He . the condition remedied. : en~h It I · d b k f th st John's Cit· Council I B Foran 1\layor Mews offered considered every member of I LOADING ZONES 1 e rna e~ was re .erre ac ~a. held 'at City Hall~ on Wed· I congratul~tlons to Councillor the Council and the staff of !".request from the firm of. to th~ Traffic CommiSSIOn for a

Activities · At nesday at 9.30 a.m. Tucker on his election to the the city as his personal friends ~V1Iham J. Cl~uston Ltd., fur a' r~por · GILL PLACE ·Mayor H. G. R. Mews was in '1 House of commons and said he and would not fofi!et" the happy loading zone sign In front of I

the ·chair and Deputy Mayor would be sorry to see !he hours he spent working wlfh their property on Water Street Deputy Mayor Higgins asked James D. Higgins, Q.C., and 1 Councillor leave the Council. them. was , rcfcrre~ from ~he St. ! that the City Engineer have a Councillors Carnell. Tueker,l ~layor ~lcws said that the APPLICATION FOR GARAGE Johns. Traffic Commlmon. T~e: look at conditions around Gill Nightingale and Henley were

1

councillor has been most con. The application or Jacobi Commission su?~ested on 1ts i Place. Residents In the area, present. sistent and loyal to the COIH1·, Somerton ~or p~rmlsslon to · Jetter to Council that the rna~- , he reported are upset over the

CONGRATULATIONS . ell and offered his best wishes .

1

build a pmate ·garage. on his 1 ter was one Cor ~h~ Council; condition and claim that the The Council meetint: had · for a happy term at Ottawa. property on Jame~ Street. was, and not the commiSSIOn. I embankment is becoming an

just started when Councillor I Mr. ~iggins added his con· referred to the City Engmecr Discussing the problem of increasing menace. James R. Tucker arrived, and . gratulations and the other coun· !or a report. loading zones on Water Street 1· CARS LEFT oN STREET as soon aa the minutes were : clllors added their good wishes. AGREED ~r Alec Henley said that th~ · 1 k d h

\

. •. · . Councillor Heney as e w at

W tch for Tuesda 's Thanking his fellow Coun·. The Council agreed that an c1ty would be getting . r1g~t control the council has over

• a Y. , clllors and the Mayor, ;\k Tuc· · order issued to William Sum·: back .to. where It started 1£ thts ~ people doing repairs to cars on Datly News and $~00.00 tr · kcr said thnt he had done his i mers of 127 Forest Road tp :e·! permission were granted, for the public street. He reported

·cash prizes. Enter thl . utmost at the Council and I move the dump cr<:ated by h1m 1 soon ther~ would be no place: a car left for 01·er a week

d 't" J' S ·would continue to do his best at the ftar of h1s property left on \\ ater Street for park·! while repairs were going on

new an exct tng tg· a\\

1

at Ottawa In the interest o! should be .enforced, The notice In g. The loadi~ zon~s had :and that another car had bern · Contest. Newfoundland. He regretted, he expired on March 31st, and been abused and permit~ had ·left on the sidewalk for two L apr3.5 said, having to sever his con· aciton will be taken to hP.Ve been removed because o! the weeks. The attention of the

I police will be called to these • ~ . . ~ '· r , ..

Very Jarse selection­Religious, Rclalion, Jm·enile. General.

c

Wonderful

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Sc to 1.00

EASTER EGGS

F!LLED WITH CHOCOLATES A nrfa·lou; novelty-hollow chocolate egi(S fi!Jrd with chocolates .

49c, 89c, 1.20, 1.85

Pagl' & Sltaw ·cREA~I-FILLED EGGS 5c., lOr., 49c., 70c., 1.40•

PL:\1~ ~IILK CHOCOLATE EGGS

Hie•, 29c•, 59c.

COSMETIC GIFTS

• Perfumes • Colognes Choose · from CHANEL, RUBIS· STEIN. MA GRIFFE, HOUBI GANT, YARDLEY, DOROTHY GRAY. CARON, LASVIN, LEN· TH.:RIC, COTY, ETC.

'

FOR EVER YON

('cl\ophane wrapped Easter Eggs with ...

e CARTS e CARS e PLANTERS e FIGURINES e CUPS and SAUCERS e BANKS e PLUSH ANIMALS e FILlED BASKETS e RABBITS, Etc.

CHOCOLATES Sp~ciall)" wrapped for Eastrr ~V· in~. Choose from American and (an~dian. Pa~P & Shaw, Slack ~!agte. and ~loir~.

1.00 to 7.25

mailers.

I IMPR01'EMENTS TO RJVER BANK

Councillor Carnell reported that he had been called on by a committee of three, headed

1 b'' Mr. Darroch Macgillivray. : with ~uggestions for the im· \ provement of the river bank o! 1 Rennie'~ lllill River. and an of· ' fer to go on a fi!ty-!ifty bast~ on the co~ts or these improve· mcnls. Mr. Carnell tabled the Jet1er with suggestions brought

1 to him by the committe~. and ;

I recommended that some o! the :

, suggested improvements be ' 1 carried out. ~ ' The letter tabled wa~ re!er· ' red to the City 'Engineer . to ' bring in a report to Council. I

; STREET CLEANli'iG I

A question of what i~ being done to cle,an up the city wa~ I n<k('d by several of the ~nun·

1;'1GHWAY TRAGEDY-On Sunda~'· March :lOth .. l~t:iH. dfath down a young dog named "Dolly", who was the pt•t nf a young Verda Palmer. of Topsail Rd. Verda was sick in hed '' lwn her was romping with another canine frien\1 "Lassie". ww. hit h1· a pickup near her home on Topsail Ro nd. The pick-up rlrilw. ·who is viously fond of pets, told the photo ?!rap her that hr frlt like self. The photo shows the dead dog '"Oolly'". her pal '"l.assir". and S. Palmer, mother o£ young Verda Palmer. who owltl'd the dog ..

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cillor~. and the City Engmeer , • r··ported that already !he Labor Relations broom~ and men ~re out trymg, ·steamship tn clean uP the streets. El'ery ! B A . • • ~tre~t in th~ city i~ dirty. th."' oard CtlVIhes En~meer ~ald. ~~~~ the ere"~; :\EWtUl':'\llLA:-ill C.\!11.\DA are working at nt~hts In •nme · The :\ewfoundland La hour . STEA)1SHIPS ~rea~ to try and ~et the ~and. Relations Board, at its 64th Belle isle II due St. Joh11, gra,·el and dirt cleaned1 up. i meeting held on :lionday anrl April 4. sailing again April 5

PLAiS ! Tuesday, 24-2~. ~!.arch. 195A. Bedford 11 due St. John', Th r !lowing plan~ were· granted . cerhflcallon t? thr April 3. sailing again April 5th

e d 0 , Port Cmon General \\ orker> Belle Isle II leaving Halitax approve : 'U t'on No 24~02 f 't f \ 'J 9 d S J h " ·1 · "'m Clarke. lol no. -43 Cam·. n · 1 • or a um 0 . pn , uc t. o n s Apn Her StrPe1. hnncalow. ! t~P.l~)dees ("of rt>hery Products 11, sailing again Apllll 12. · 1 H \tercer. 106 J.c)larchant 1Tmh1 c h. at.a .1na. 't Bedford II lca\·ing H~lifa\ R~ad, .c.oncretc walkway. i . e a11rgamm~1 ~nl to com· April 11. due St. John's April

A J easel' Le:\iarchant Road. pme a emp O) ees except fUR~ESS WARREN LISE 'altc~ation~ i~ bmment. 1thh~ fmana~ers. sup~rlntrndchn.tsf. Nol'a Scotia due Boston Apr

1 Hubert J. Squires. Jot no. 37; c ~~ engmee_r. asststant c 1e 3. Lea,·ing Boston Apr. 4 and :University Avenue, bun~alow. i en~dmeller.h offtceb ~taftfh. foremk cnr Halifax Apr. 9 due St. John'>

I P .. Cowan Avenue. an a t ose a Ole e ran o Apr. II. Sailing again same day

. .uoores, 1 foreman f L' I pri vale garage. ' Th B. d d d t h or l l'erpoo .

c1·ril Daniels. lot no. 40 · . . c. oar amen c e err· Nesroundland lea,·ing Lii·Pr Burke Place. bungalow. . Cllhcfallo1 ~. onl.rr,,?r kllaker;'; ?nd pool.! April 11 .. due fSt. .Jol~fn'>

R r. H blel" waterford on ec Loner) ·~or ers . ._ r.wn. Aprl 17. Leanng or Ha 1 ax Brid e Road," exie'nsion to ~ar· Lo~al 3~1 .affectmg Purity Fac· ~ r.nd Boston April 19. due

g tones LtmJted. The amenrlnwnt : Halifax April 21 and Bo>ton

I' 1\111 r·):t .\p:-1i 311. t!iH St !:-;·i:Jr . .: ,·~.Jm ~!d\ &

• :'\<'\ ::prlrt ~~~~1:; ;II;,, i, dar· ~; J~:: 1 s<il:n: a;,;n )ill Jl

•(iu!lj:1Jrt !~a~:.:; \loy H. due SL J. · .-.ail;n~ tJ:.:c:n ~Itt 31

.. :\o' ,,pr;n lecq:z ""'' 21. rl:J~ 51. J > SJIIln~ O:"r. ~tal;:

.. Gulii'Ml ~~4~1·.! ~tar 28 . .i~r· S:.

po~;. A. Trask Ltd .. lot~ 11;11- i excl.uded the "hiscu,t,t and con- April 25. ~al'ing ~oston April ~o-21·22 University Avenue, 5 fcctJO~c_ry sal~smen from the 25 and Hahfax Apnl 29. tlue 1-

1 · I bargammg untt. St John's ~Ia\' I Sailin.,~ again

l\ln ~a ows . . • . ,, . E "r I .d value: S102.800.00. T~~ B?ard also amended the same day for LiverpooL nN .. rn ·>:

s lma e cerhfJcatJOn onlrr of Burm 13. due St. John's ~lay 15. Sail J.e;,ru:: \'f·., ASSIST FROM RCAF \ Wo~kers Uni~n. Xo. 24560 af· i NOI'? _Scoti~ leaving Liv~rpuol ~~:h , .. ,,:: !co~

OTTAWA CCPl _ SomP 40 , fectmg Bona1·!sta Cold Stora)!e 14. salhn~ ag:un Apnl I;>. ~6. H: :'"' 1~::: :0 Ill" ~F

1 wl11 be !tach· 1 Com pan~· L1m1ted. Grand Bank. Belle [sJe 11 leaving Halifax .loin'' \! ·' 1,.

d · t~er~nne A" Fa to, The amendment exclurl~d the April 18. due St. John's April c .to .e ,er~an If ore~! . "assistant to the chid engin- 21. sailing again April 22. ;.ssl~~ m ad\ancrcl . ope;a on eer" from thE' hargainin~ unit. Bedford II Jea1·ing Halifax tramml! nr Sahre Jet rt~:hter' In hoth rase~ the rompanl' Apnl 19, due St. John's April prlots, the Mfenre department filer! the application for amrnd· 21. sarling again April 22. announrrrl Tue~da;. The per· , mrnt. u.ARKE STEA~l~IIIPS ('0. ~~~.nnrl aiiRch_Pd to the German I .\"f:ll' APPLICAT/0.\'.c; •Gulfport lea,·ing ~lootreal A1r fore~> .~nil he o:a.w_n. from , BEFORE THF: BOMln April 16 due St. John·, April

~;d':l '•· . '~ It:.! II." \L · ~-.. ~ .loh11'. " · ~Hh :.'r 1: :(·\ : Arr• 1 ~:· ,. :e ~·

thr R\ A F' . atr rlm~1nn In International \\'nonworker~ nf 20. ~ailing again April 22.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~~~==~~~~=~~===~=~===~=~-P'~r~a~n~ce~an~d~l\~e:::st~G_:er~m~a~n~y-:_. _ America. Local 2·255 h:t,; filNl •Xol'aport Jea1·ing ~lontrcal ;;pplication for certification on .-\pril 23, duE' St. John'> April the followin!Z employers: 2ith. ~ailing ajlain April 29

I.e."'": ;o~ H-: · ton 'l· · J ~.,e n~:: o::~·r: ~;;rr:e ~ay

pnr.l

/

•·

without filling

r'J'ODAT'S lf'&cfOUI bostesl eaten to her ~ l\]llbf preference for light. food and

driDk. And today'• delicloua, pun Pepil­tbe wboltloml, ljpl iefrMinntnt - il the hlthlna touch ~ her hoepltality. Nmr heavy, never too sweet, Pepsi refrelbel without filling. Pick up a carton or two.

~_._...~i~ ®0.\ the~

refreshment

Dc~ter J. ""illiams. \\'ootl, - -·- - - __ .. __ Contractor. Deer Lake: Bruce W'arm·ng R'e . u·('('lther :-lichols, Wooci• Contractor. " Deer Lake; Eli Wagg, Woods , • c~ntractor, Deer Lake: Allan: Fire Hazard W1seman. Woods Contractor. I Deer Lake: Nichola• J. Bnk~r. i The Department of ~Hnes anrt Woods Contractor, Deer Lake: Resources gives the followin~ Dorman Rideout. Wood• Con·' n11tice: tractor. Drrr Lake; ilerhert . Due to the prfsent weather Cooper. \\'oorl' ContraciOr. euntlilitllf, anti the rapid in· 111•'• · "''

; Dl'er Lakt; (')ril Turner. \\'oorb crease in t It e fir~ h:.tard 1 Contrnctor. Drt•r L;~k~: Adol· thron~hout the pro1·ince mmor ~o, .. : 1 phus Diamond. Wood,; Cnntrar· 1 forest fires ha1·e already oc· /tor. Deer J.akr: Thi~tl~ & Sons 'cm·recl. Perhaps fur th~ first : Bale Vrrt~: B:ri~ Veri~ !.urn· tim~ in the hbturv of the pro1 · ! ber Co. Ltd .. Boi~ Vrrtr: Crcil inc~ two fires ·occurred in Ball, \\'ood< <'onlr~ctor. Derr ' ~larch. The general public b Lake:. Ernest King. Wood:: C'nn· , requested to exercise l'Xtremc tractor. Deer Lake:. Albert Wool. :care in the lighting of fires for ridge, Wood~ Contractor. Deer . burning brush' or for any pur· Lakt: Herbert Reid, Woods 'pose whatsoever. Contractor, Deer Lake; Herbert I The Forest Fires (Amend· r.ri,:url -Reid, Woods Contractor. Deer ! ment) Act, 1953 authorizes the winrl. fir.e and. Lake: Herbert While. Woods ; Minister to make regulations to' bility. 1ce mono~ Contractor, Deer Lake: Herbert 1 prohibit lighting .of fires out· : Cook's Purehase. Wood~ Contractor, I doors during any period speci· : wtnrl. no report Hawkes Bay: Naaman House. 1 lied in the regulations. It is I BeliP. i>Jr:-SI')' Hn:kes ,Bay: Cla)ion Jones : hoped thr.t with the co·opera· calm. ,·J>~blhl~ Woods Contractor. Corner l tion of the general public it par~ .. r. irP all Btook: Wilson Fud~:e. Woods ; will not be necessary to enforce Prwt lrr.,Jur~···: .• Contractor. Corner Brook: ' this pro1·ision o! the Forest Batte Peter Kennedy. Woods Con· Fires Act. wr>t 1rind. h 1•

1·11

tractor. Hawkes Bay: Augustus Since now In early spring unlinutcd. l(f 1

R. Colbourne. Woods Contrac· many people have important Carl" tor, Comer Brook: James Swy· jobs to do involving the burn· ' wind. fine and prs, Woods .contractor, Stephen· ing Of brush and other. debris, unlih'itrd. . fl..,. ville Crossing: George Warr it is hoped that It will not be 1 Hoped::.ll'-~ 0 ~ Ltd., Springdale: Stanley Eve· necessary to prohibit the light· 1' Port saunders--> leigh, Woo?s Contractor, Deer ing of fire• at this time. Unless, . Cape St. Lake; Sprmgdale Construction however all persons using fire ' --~ Co, Ltd., Springdale. use ext~eme caution It may be Lo ers'

necessary to bring the regular g2 Ministerial lions Into ertect. I "

P 1 Clo~es Timber ersona s Thr Jn•w'

j . t\nc:lnSr\\

• - ! SPANIARo:siiA Y, April 1- ~rrr.t comr~r;~· Charlcs-Edouar.d Campeau, a Mr. E. L. Hickman wu 1 vi~· Fall-. "1,' 0,.r~' .

professional engmeer .who had ilor here Jut week from St. in thr r,f, ii~r.• for so.me years bee~ d1reetor of . John's. Mr. Hickman, who wa~ L~brar R••1

1r,1 plannmg for the Ctty of Mo~t· I accompM~ied by Mr. Raymond minrlrd t_h31

0 real, has been elected to ~ar~a· LeGrow, brought with him the St. John~~ cfrc~ ment for the St. James D1str1ct magnificent hockey t r 0 p by 12. 10 da. receirel of Montreal. which Hickman Motors Limited , BaJI~ts not be

Mr. ~amp~au ha~ long been have donated to the best player d;~te 11111 tiel the seruor V!ce-pr_estdent of the lin the Conception Bay North 1. .rhe coon on CPAC a~d. chatrman of the senior lelli!ue. Mr. Hickman and · Wlil beglll Quebec DIVISion of c~.AC ~nd : Mr LeGrow were the guest! of · Hth. in 1956 succee_ded Sir ~nan 1 th~ local branch manager, Mr. · Eric-Go!;t· Dunfield as n.atJOnal. president ·Harold Gosse. and Mrs. Gosse. Mr. f'<heritl of CPAC, wh1ch offtce he now I .. ---- -· ster or ~rt as holds. • bcr." Local members or CPAC weekend · His abilities a r e highly are interested to see whether ~Jr. and )fr! r thought of in ~lontreal and he recei\'es one of the addition· RPr. nr.o~ ol Montreal newspapers refer to at ministries which ~r. Dlefen· to St .John! him u beintl "ministerial tim· , baker will have to give Quebec. busine!S·

. Sf· JOHN'

re1 rcha veli~

Josep )ast nigl

in the Ne (NALCO)

companY a were sold fc Governmen·

bas miner fc

of the directors was I after the pur·

. H. G. HiltOI the board of T . of canada.

)Jr. Hcrt a;;ociate rr

·of Pickanrls ~I 1 of Clel'clat

J. Williams clrctrd dire•

replacin: of t hi'

J. R

oCficcrs elt were ~Jr.

or the hoaro ~tr. \\'illiam;

C. Hu

Hillon lntl )Jr. at Ihe comolrt io

that \\'ahu, "promt the I'XI

llett Na

: ,') ~~-~1\Jn~

' ""' ~t. John - "" \Ia~ 6. i' •rl !('f1\ int "" ,. Jot.n1 L . r. \Ia~ 13

! l~ar.r.~ c jf' ~:. Jt•1;;

.• ·"': n ~Ia) 30.

.~ .

. '· ... \' t'\\

:-;· < r;t

1,.

,. r:

:ntSS·

. ~T. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND DUily News THHRSDAY, APRIL 3, 1958

• rem1er nnounces a co ares

----------------..,-----------------------

rchased By 'Magistrate O'Neill Raps Juveniles lin Interests "We're hearing a lot Clbout ju,·cnile dclin· qucncy."' i>Iagist!·atc Hugh ONeill said in court here Wednesday. ''but it doesn't matter if a person is 17 or 70. if he takes a car, it's wrung and he's a menace on the roads" .

.... c: ·"''l'l'li Smallwood of Newfoundland : •·• i .. -~ !tn::ht that the Pro\'ince has sold its · ··. ::K :\cll'foundland and Labrador Cor­

.... 'i.\!.L'O' Jo Canadian Ja\'elin fot· account . ·· -,::llV''. and \Vabush Iron Co., Ltd. The · ~;:r ,,1;d f(\r Sl.200.000. a profit of $300,000

He wa~ rcprimandin::: two · ·· ---·--------­young lads. aged 16 and 1 i. I'. ere missin~: from the glove who were before him on a comrartmcnt.

: G•''er:m~rnt. ! Sh~~t -a;;d Tube and Interlake :.:.• 1111\t'ral and Iron. nncl is operatecl by 1'~1.

,,·:<r"l"n· for ~"~'· In June. 1957, Wabush leased ,.,11 p1:le; Ill :\1'11'· from NALCO and Canadian

charge of taking a car without One of the lads was char"cd the owner's consent. with a second offence when" •m

~·· 3 n rl Labrador. Javelin substantial Iron ore . •:' on,:m:llty incor- propcrtirs in the Wabush Lake ., :hr c•"rrr:m~nt of section or the concession area. · ~~ :\rll fnunrllaml In an October, 1956 agreement · rhr 1d::,rri.1l and Strel Company of Canada and · cr1r:opnwnl of the· l'ickands ~lather received 1r.ri tn ct•·~t·lnr tl> other iron ore properties in

Th~ boys had taken the car.· February 25 he took a 1956 ~ 1!lJ4 Van:.:nard from where Chenoiet from Gower Street rl was parkrd outside All3n· without the owner's consent.

, dale Apartments on )larch 6. The boys were each put on 1 After JO)'·ruhn~ around town probation lor two \'ears and ' till'~· finally colliderl with a nrdercd to pay compensation r parked truck on \\'illi:~m Street between them for the mis.;ing : nnd abandoned the rehklr. article~.

The owner n[ the \'an~uard. The magistrate pointed out th~ area under lease and un·

,,f rhr \.\L!'O rlc1' concession from Canadian who appeared in court, >aid 110 :o them that thcr conld ha1·e d:,ma·-ze had hcrn rtonr bnt :. hcrn sentrnced to· three months

I pocket knife and tire ~an~r· ir< jail on ~a~~-c~rn~. ·----· ,·,,11:rr· '"" twirl int· Javdin and :o;ALCO. · ;!'r• th· ptllrlla-r .at· ~lr. lliltnn and ~Jr. Jackson . H ,; 1111'"'' rh:m· >:tid that dnrinj: the past ~·car. :·t ~.·:.rd "' Thr Strrl thr group had conducted a · ,, ,,11.- ': L~tnltl'd l;tr.:e amount of exploration

'· 11:· II :·h··n l'. 11ork in the \\'ahu;h Lake area, ic. N. R. Announces

Schedules J···'l·:;.:r m.ttlit~in~

·' r.,\ ,11 ,:. ll:ttlrrr ,1; , • ,,i ,·:nc~ .·:,1. ;.!lfl

, :· i \r :> .-~- ... ; } .. n ot ' ( (. :•· ~ r! 1 ~'I'\·: "r. 4 •t

••. ~1 ;'I :\::,\'1 '',:.: ~ h :"('(' .. :~.···rl ~·: th1' l'rr1dn­. · .1. R. ~malt.

• .. •"•1 rl,,. ('!' ;t:~rl l._ n. 'Q'.: .\1· .l•lhli ('. Pn)·l_~. .. r (.;r:~·d::-n .h\;olln · .. ; \I• (;~til''" \l~.d;.

.. ; ~J:;.l1:~~rl Rif'li"~· ~\: ;~:('1 h:J .. :'ln intrrc~l

·~~alrtd m('mhf'r~ of ~-~r~ 11 i" !' 1i1nnrrl t:r .l:.1rhn and

on th~

and that man~· sturlics had brrn m:·rlt· to dctra·minc the fca!'i· : t•ility of mml proje<·t~ in· 1\IEI\InERS of the E. A. Daltct' Club of the Can ad ian National Institute Cor the Blin1l held their ~~lrr1l in the pos>ihlr Mrdop· ff nwnt nf that orcbody of pro· annual mcetin~: on Apt·il !st. The new o iccrs arc as follows: Left to rigJtt-lsahel i\larlin, 2nd dul·tion. Vice-President; Edwanl Doone, 1st Vice-President: Thomas Carmichael. President; Miss Edna :\1.

Thn ~"" >taterl tlwt. while }\cough, Secretary; i\Irs. 1\lat:garet Carmichael, Treasurer, and Miss Elizabeth i\'Iadden, Past Presi· no dciinite plans could yet he ~nnounrrrl. their work h~d dent-( Daily News Photo). pro,·rd up lar~e rcserl'~~ of· ·----·----------------------- ---·-- --

~~~;:~ i~~~ ~\'~~~~it·ac~~ce~~~;t~~~ BLIND INSTITUTE Deadl1·ne Far for itsr bv the iron and steel · ·--------------• I

;~~~~s~::~~:~~!~~C:}rJ~tr:~!. Annual · Meet·1ng Of ~ .. sleeper Space to hr ma~e h~for~ co11';'1Crclal

I

:Easter ~10:\l'TU:\. .\pril :!-Fastci·

~chcdulcs. more cunrl'nicnt ar: ri1·al and departure time, and greater usc o[ srlf-pruprlleu railin~r units are included in

·the forthcoming: \<·!Ionian :'\a· tiona! Railways spring t1mr· tahle change>. Douglas \'. <ion· drr, Vice-President and General ~tanager of the Atlantic Region or lhc company. >aid hr>r to· day.

Halifax and ~tontreal wm opcrote on a one hour li1·e minures fa:.ter timct::·blc west· bound anu a 30·minute one east· bound. Two hours. 45 minutes writ be lopped ocr the l\laritime cxprrs> schedule westbound and two hours, 10 minutes east· hound.

~~~~~~:.~~~:~OI~[J ~;i~n."':~;:::. The E A B:ak e r c I u b 'Is Advanced cfi·m· rlrrt•·•l :.t ;\,\1.('0 roncr>~ion, the~· ~tatcrl; • • Notice has heen given : ·•rcr llr llJII•"'· that a stt·nn~: effort would l,c made h,1· the new particip:mts by the Railway that

!'cwfonndlanrl tra1cllers witt en in)' a furthrr imrror0mrnt in tr:·in ;en·ice to ~lontrcal a•t<l too the Umtrd States !'ltr:·tilr with thr timetable chan;<•, on

Another inllll\'ation will be the inclusion o[ coaches in the consist of lhc OceJII Limited ~lr. Gonder stalrd. This will pl'rmit hours f~;trr tra1·e1 for p:Nenger's hrt1rcrn the t.:nitrd Stair< :urd the ,\tt;.ntie prm·· inc~·' ;ttlll within lhr pro1·incr. <:n:odt trarrllct'' 11ill he ahlc to II>C the 01·ran !.united. tl•c Sl·vti:on and the .\l:mtimr F-x· pre..,.

-~ : 1 ~r ).,•:~nl of ,ji.

·.~~ \\":!Ji .• m~. prr~i­!h~lon. :1

·• :!(l:r<:-~ ;~·~~·n To· ;·· !r:~' tt)l :\tr~1'P iJlld

: ~! II It Ta.r·

10 rrn<·retl in a prompt and The ;1nnual merlin~ to[ the cil)''s lrading arlbts were of a· ~Irs. Arthur Johnson. pre;idcnt the 1leadline for pick-

ortl"r·h· mann"r' wr'tlt • pro~~··m E. A. !:Iaker l'lub of the Blind hi!:h calibre and were rnjoycrl of the J,adies Auxiliary, ~lr. . I . ' ' " ~ " 1 II 1' d · ma up s Ce)llll," car rc· 1' 1 t. [ 'I 1 t 1 n[ expl,.ration and fk 1·rlo!lm~nt. was. II'< . ue> ay . cvcmng. b~: the club members. The com· Hugh Cole and :.tr. James Rear- " l'~1·e 11nc rom .I n:t ~'"'' o hc>t <uitrd to the cxtcnsh·r Aprtl 1st rn .t.hc Institute for mrttcc reports were t;;blcd and digan. ser\'ations at St. John's St. .John's rctlu~cd hy :!~ hour.: r~"ion. the Blmrl. ~lllttary Road. The. included the following: lcgisla· ~lr. John Baldwin. a long chan~cd to li:IHI A.:\1. la>t tall. will hr <'lit hy 1:·11

In di;cu•>inl! the ftttur~ of meeting 11·~.s presided over by lion. publicity, education and standing member of the club Ticket Office has hecn hour.<, 45 rninutr' from ~~ rhr tlr\'rlopmcnt pro~rmn. ~lr. ~li~s ~;Iizabeth )tailn!•n. prcsi· refreshment. recreation a n d thanked ~lr. ~larshall and hi!' .John'> to ~lontrcal. :\r"·[onnd· Hilton saitl. "we tlo know that dent ot the ~tub. Allet· .\!iss bowlin~. All report> showt•d assistant [or helpiQg in the on d:w of departure, in· land pa;,rngcr; 11111 he a;;\:· '"

· April 2'i.

thl•rr arc lar-ge quantities of ~laddrn hail w!'lcomcil tlw that grcat oll'i1les had hcen election. He .also tonk tlti> op- stead of 12:00 Noon a~ ntakc the connl'ctton at :\n11;1 iron or~ on thr :\i\1.('0 prop· special J!Ul'SIS the srcrt•tary wa; tnildc ilnd success allaitwd dur· rortunity to thr.nk the out·goin~ o Sydtwy with the railntrr >1'1'1' !'"

.J;,,.k,oon rrties. a.ul it will b~ our pur· caJlrd Ullnn lo read th1• rninutl'> m;: the yt·ar. exet·util·e for their work in .the formerly. ;;nd .11 Truro wit:t tht· lJn·:on •'r 1 r,,·~,:,.~'"" 11

[ :lw .po,;r In drtrrminc what other of the la~t annual nwt·ting The prc~idl·nt in hl'l' rl·marks p:t>t year and wished cwry sue· ·- ----- t.imitr1l. Iron minrrals :md timbrr l'alue~ whi!'lt w1•rc arloptrd on mot inn. t•n•lur>ed the Mll'Ct•ss attained I t'~s; lo the lii'W cxeculil'c. Tlll'>r. p ] If l':t;s<·ng<'l'> lr"n•lln1~ llt't n·:·•r ! f f"' ~ (1 ~

:·:;!rr ':•ll•lllt>lh .IIIII rxi>t. and to find thi~ out R~ The ,;ecrct:u·~··s rc~ort fur the hy the club as tlescrilH'd in the sentinwnl,; wcre hrartly nrlors·' nsta -ours ~l'II)OUJldland :rn<i Bo-toll and /'t~ h·~o.ary ,_{t_) ':'\ !:tr rw!nril•i"u promptl)' as practical." period ending ~larch 31st w~• 1·;;rinm n•ports and ll't'nt on to. d b~· all in attndance. other Lnit~d Stat~s clltl's \\ill

. :.re:,. ,11d •hat ~Jr. Bilton further ~tated then pre~cntcd. This report saw how pleased she wa.; with' Before the meeting conclud<'d For ]Jo]t.da,'S enjoy a 25 hour 15 :nrn1tte Th:• fnl<OI; in tht• Boy> Public

'''"'! lor m.·.t~ to that as in I he case of Wobush, showed that considcr;;bic pro· the co-operation receil'ed from ~Irs. Arthur Johnson. president ] faster train sen·ice westhunnd. , . . h d b h. I . II h f II . If. h L d. A h · d. · h sr,·c:~::n~ l'J~: 0 :l 1'·ill be he.d :·:tc<lr. '"inrn~ i·1 thr Iron rn.. thr operations at· ::re_s~ . .a cen ac re1·e1 m a er e ow exccutll'e o 1ccrs: of t e a 1es uxiliary; ~tr. R.: 0 1 • y In t ~ op~o>tle trcetlon. I <' thi< altrrn••r.n ., 1 thr , .. c~:;t·:

;rr:,om. :>:AI.CO will he undrr the dl·! actiVIties and that ~!iss Theresa and club members. She took the. L. Storey, Superintendent, Nfld. Good GFrfo~/·~~ D~-\ statutory t~avelhng tlme from Bo>ton 1~ 1r~l'tin~ of the St .• fohn's Rotar)· !·c~ ('o '• owned. r~rtjon of Pickands ~lather &: ! ~owe~ dc~cr~ise spec!al men· opportupnity to thank all those, D!vision, CNI.B; ~lr. H. D. Dull, holitlal', Post OCfice hours will i'\ewfoundlnnd _wtH he slashc.l. Cluh. Pll. Yenn:>tmrn Co. 1 liOn In wmnnu: the ftrst pnze who gal'e so freely of th~tr 1 Ftcld Supervisor, and ~lr. T. J. he as· follml·~: h:· 21 hours. I~ m1n~r5e>. . roorr fi;Dli'ls arc c ·mr.:tin~ -·--· ... ·-- ___ .. I for hand sewing in the ~lari· time and talent to entertain the' Ingraham, Fifl<l Secretary, ::at'C 1 11 irkrt will hr oprn ~I thr ['our h·nu·s ;mrl ~j nwnrtr~ [1•r t~r t 1 p l~o::ll!Jr; _,·hich in·

ll ' c hlllP. llanrlicrnft E~hrhition,, Bakrt' t:luh and cxtendfd her' l'ery brirf adrlres>es cun~rntu· r..P.Il from 11 ,_m. to 1 p.m. at'C hrut~ rut off lh•· t1mctahl~ du:'rs a r:1id triP to ett~·::~- iiS

e tt S Omment 1 othfr •.ncmbcrs ohtaincd ~econrl apprc,·tatum also to the Ladies' Jating tlrf' members flf tl1e rluh ~0 ~tonr1. nrrlrr husinr" w:ll from :o>rwtnundland h ll.tltf.·\. ~nr<t 11 f tlr" o:tn••·a r:ot:n·

o plare 111 lr.athcrwork, knillin~ Auxili<•l'.l', OIIR o([icials, llr·. ';.nn th~ir exeruti\'1' for their hr trans~rlr~l. Thr lnhhy in Thr rtap-rrl lrmr from )l.lllfax I' Iorio in . Ad'T'ltu•·r 011 c~ti 1.: 1 ;. and h;,~l(rl~J'. ~lis; Ncilir rill·· .In mrs HranligaJI and the e,·er: achic1·ements in thr pasl yrar thr c:.r.n anrl r;a,1 Ellil rn,t?.l lo :'-lt•w(toundlonrl "•II hr r~· ,1 11 !' .. Tho trip i11dntlr' ron·

N l S I ~:m·ald ohtalltcd ~rcond pl;tce ill faithful pref~ and radio. :ann wi~hr1l th4' new ~xrcutivr Statinu will hr nprn nntil r, ducr•l lo)· "' 11

" hoour,. . ol•or:•·•l t••ur. ..r tloou,r, nl

1 ! 'l co a· c the ~laril_imc sprllin~ enlltc~t. The clrrlioll o[ officrr~ was' el'cry wccrs~. The m~rlin~ a1l· ~.m. :\II nthrr nn''"' pmllt• in n~ilinrr ;rnwr. wlwlt ,,.,. 1,_,.1,.,,."''· ~""'""· ,•rin~ , 1,,t ( . · ~1r. Ilcntus Rn>~ hrou::ht S)lCt'l~l thrll rtonrhrclrll hv ~lr. l.rslir · ,tornen with the sin~in2 of lhr thr ritv ,, ill hr rloo>rrl. Strrrt l'r<>~"Pri '" popular hrtllr•·n s1 ·~ mrr:in~ ·:nrr·nonrnl je;.,:rr- "'

d~l>linction to lhe chth hy will· ~lim•hall. fir~l l'ir.·chairman, o! National Anlhetn. Lrltrr 'roxc~ <rill he rtr:orrd "' nr1· a lid Tn1r•o ' 1111·r 11 '"''

111 ·.t<>rt·. t•uwt• ... 1 •. ;,II·: •1111'1"~"'

I hem. Sl.~tlll,ntltt l1:1d hr•n pa~~· 1110 ~ the "Lady Kemp" troph~· the 1'\rwfnnnrlland Roartl or usual. Thrrc 11ill ltr no lrttrr ln;tlnr·r•i '"'1 f;;ll. lrill lw "1w

1 11 1 1 1o '"I' .1 ,,.,:nl: >rrc

1:tr·.

,;_, \r·,\ :rquullnnrl . l:r,· t;..lk•·d o{ '\! !ll>:.liol\•1 \.\1.(11 ::· .'"hll \r..,k thl' •.;:r•:t:n:. ;,: \!'W·

·,._ ·~r·J:h :·~ :riHI<•r. ':': Hr,l~( !i. .. pon,or('d

· ·~ ·~\ :tnd .. !up 1hr

1•d ,.,.Pr to the mini~ler of li· for t!lc hi~hr~t sinj:le <roore lor :\lana~cment. CNIB. and result· B . } f, ) carricrdrlin·r~· <rn·icr. ~tails ate'! thrnu~lo 1" ll«ill.' rl:lll) "''I' '" "" ""~·- m••tirl'tJ lli<nl'C. bowhnt: thrOUJ!h.out ~anada; his rll r.s' follow~: ' unga o'v JUllC{ will hr rccri\'Nl atl'l dr<pateh· imtc;o:l n[ <iX da)> a \ICC~ It "'h"ol<

Comment in~ on this ~lr. ~1al· scr?nd co~sccutll·e Wt~. President - Thoma~ Car·· 'crl a~ n<ual. will lr:•rr S)·thwy at H :lll "Ill colm Hollett ·sairl. "I am ~riel'· E.ntertammcnt promlcrl dill'· mkharl. L ( N' ht EASTER ~IO:'.'n:IY ADST arrirr ~~ ll•lii~x ;d :L~i In oor,·er [oil' rhr lt•c·l """''!' rrl and greatly shocked that lng the year by some of the 1st. Vicc·pt'csidcnt-Edward. as 12: Easter )londay i~ a st:dulory p.m. lertl'C there :tl

11" p.lll. l(l llloh till' tnp hr ~HISI llr

the1· h~ 1·c heen <old bAcause 1 BoonA u h 1. 1 · '· 1 · ·11 l and rrarh S)rlnr)· ill ID.5U ~.m '"trrn •cilr .. of a~r illld n ~ro:d~

. . ' -- -------- ---· -- -·--- -- c. ,o If~)·. ll'l[hf S~l'\'lCC II' I ll' . I . I hail lll'rn as~ure 1 th•t n f for all tl 1 _, 1 h · ry d \'' 'd 1 ,,. · h G p 0 E t E 1 It will :ol~o connrt·t 111th I II' ':t ~tudent. Otherwise. ltC 1

'·tn· . . < " o ur· te anu ras ern gt ven ~n . rcc-prrsr en - ·' ISS . A thr"A room l•un~,,lo 11.. on grnn t e o. . .. .:~> .n< · · 1 1 1 tiH tt ( ld h -'

1 · 1 t b 1 \I t' " ~" Orran J.imitrd ill Truro 111 lOt I 11 rr will rrceiw one hundrr<

•r il ~mp wou r maue o over a~ cnncrssrons to argc sa e . ar rn. Blackhead Road. owned b~· )Irs. Wc•t F.nd and llan·r)· Road un· -rll the :\alco shares.'' companies !rom outside. Se1·rrtary - ~!iss Edna ~1. Beatrice Arlams was compll'tcJI,' til 1 p.m. ~lonl'y nrrler husi· rlirel'tion,. 1

Comnll'nlin~ further on the "1[ tlr«'.'' ttltA •. Ol'"t'JIItli'Jltl K h I 1 rl I 1 'II 1 t 1 'l'l Tran•' lim<' hrtween Su lit') . , , , co11~ . rc·c rr e •Y ace ama· "lilted bl.' fire last ni 2 ht. The nrss wr lr r:u~>:Jtlrl . "' · 1 ,,.]t. ~lr. llnlll•ll sairl that ther·A ·""' ,'111,\' mt•nt·~· [11r tlrr."t' ·.··ll,'IJ'I'.' t. " .. G J> 0 1 co t I' 1 1 II· i·lld llali[as will hr rrdur<'d '' ' " ' ' IIIII. . l>l,•l''e l>r0°'" Ollt ·•t 8.5() Jl.nl. "Ill) o. • • ant r.;" •,JH 10 1 Jll''

,\t tociay·, lunch('OJI :llr.

I. not I' n f t [ 1 11 ·1 · 1 1 'I' \ • ~- • - · ·1 r. lotrr· hour~. 511 nunull'' lwtw<'<'ll , • 11101 " t' "'"are uo o wn111 cum]wt·r· r wrlr tIt' . n· .. rsurr•r -- .lr,. ~lar~arrl IY.·ts 11 .,.131."_,1 •...•. ,l·e at to. ••. "·'''· "ill Jt•nr:lln oprn Ulllr. • p .. m. I n I

. tl. . I tl · t · [ 'I " 'I 1 1 " " ' ,,, " 1 t s·,·llrlt'l' and "um·tnn loy ;,'\ ;o « 111 us prllltlll't' 11'1~1'«' ~· ur·.r IJil't'PS u stn•r·, .• r .. <;mnlt'Jao•. . ITwo tmeks frurn tlw \\'~st End.A l'llll~plt·lt• 1..1\t'r rai'IWI.''''I.''· . · 1

'"""') lor )'1'1\ilfto inrli\'ithr~l mny t'X)JIUrt': JIJJII1•1t said." .\It'. ~l:rrslr;;ll 11 as a»1,1cd b)' Station unsWl'l'!•ll the call whil'h · r•r)· writ Ill' llt:l.llt' 1111 ~~·srtlPnlwl minuf<o~ w<•,tlooulld :ond •:: •

4

••• ·-- -· -· ~-------- ------------- • • • • • 1 walks. :1 IIIIH'Illllg dl'lt\'t•ry otlly thl'Pt' hmlrs. -l!l llllntlt«·". t·a:'!t: was phoned In JUst b~lure nlnf' r IJ . d . 1 I'·. huuml anu h!·llll'"" S1•hl<'l

Thuma< S .. \. Freeman wrll pre· ,idt• at th<· tunrhe.111 with 'l'<'ri:rl gll<'>l> inrluding Dr. Fn•d l!<lllt'. \tini,lt'r o[ ~:duca· lion alun~ with parents or the luur :;prakPrs. ~tr. llerh Wyatt i.; chr..i1·man of the Speaking l'onte.'t ('ommittre o[ th~ St. John's Rotary Club.

c~~ADt !\!\' , • • • Th L • _NATIONAL RAILWAYS has practically a new sleepmg car on the tracl<s at the

~f ~Wtsporte wa.:; .put on the rails al. out 20 ye11r~ ago, .and since thnt time hns marlc on

hlil ah?ut three tnps across country per week, so that tn 20 years the tar travelled about es. Ftve weel<s ago the "Lewisporte" was taken to the car repair shop for a complete job

th Stationery headboards were )Jut hetween all the seals, new cnr)let wns put down of ere e cur, foam rubber seats and mattresses and new upholstery covering in a pleasant

•n tntn, to match the new paint colour, are the first things that meet the notice of the oh·

lotke :;mr: the car. The picture shows, left, Mr. T. J. Dalton, Pnssengcl' Agent, and Mr. iustth

1.e sleeping 11nd dining car upholstery department, standing hy the Lewisporte,

•ke a new car through and tltrou gh.-(Daily News Photo),

o'rl k I (JJ) ll~IIW~S ttn IIIIS:f( w;l 1\.... • I . ·)o Ill' · . : StJ·p~t ll•ttfr hoxe' will ~~·. :.nd Saint .John h)' uru· tlotU': ~

Firemfn used 'loafer from· 1 1 .. 1 -1 1 '11 1 n 1· 011·nut1•s we<lhonnrl 31111 t'tght , 1 . 11 1 1 •· · -1 1 · c Parft as "'"·' . mat s 11 ~. . ... ~e1eru l'oe s n. t re llClnr Y Pus I r~cril'ed and despatrhed as: huurs. 20 nunute_s ~·3stlnuntl.

some from ther,r 500 gal. truck I 1 : The Ocean L1m1ted hetween ----to control the blnze. The bun· usun ·--------~==== rmlow, l'alued at $2500, h::.ti no -­insurance. :'tlr~. Adam~. a widow was li1·inl! alone ~nd hart left. lhr hou~r at 3.00 Jl.m. on April;

! I. No cousP had heen riPtrt·min· · 1 rrl up to press time. There were ·no injurir~.

. Moores Wins EIC Prize

~lr. Gr~ham ~loorc~ of Car· i honear, ! third year enginc~r- ~ ing ~tudent at ~lemorial Uni· I ver~ity, was presented with a 1 $50 cheque ~s winner of the : Engineering Institute of Can· : ada prize. Mr. G. E. Knight. 1

dis1rlct engineer, and chairman : of the St. John's branch, pre· · !'rntc<l Mr. ~loore~ with thr

, cheque at the Junior En-gin- . , :ers' seminar which wa~ hrlrl i 10 thr. lrcturr thratre of the ; nnil'ersity on Wcdnr~day morn· I ing. . I Thrw cns!inrrrin~: slurlcnts I cnmrete<l for I his ~rizr. ~nrl , ~:a1·e papers· hcfore the En gin· ' I rrrin~ lnslitutc on ~larch lOth. I ~tr. Moores spoke on "The : , Brar anrl the Bull," !he hi~h '~ntl the low o[ the ~tock market: · , ~lr. Jam~s Duffett of Stephen l'illc spoke on "The Alaskan Highway," and lltr. Basllllloore!' . of St. John's il3\'e ltl~ paper on l '"fh~ St. .John's Harbour Dr· J

l l'elopment." . , The three paprrs were l'crv '

1

1 11cll written anrl presenlrd and ~lr. Graham ~loorcs rccciv

1 erl the hcst mark lo win thr

I. pt'i7r, whirh II'~< n1·rscntcd on \\'ednesday momin2.

RABBIT SPECIAL STUFFED EASTER RABBITS In o voricly of bright colon. ·

ONLY 45' 75' 1.19

EASTER BASKETS

Containing small Chick and Easter Chocolate Egg.

19' 29' 39c

A WIDE VARIETY OF •

EASTER EGGS 'N' TOYS

LOW PRICED

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_,. ________________ _;__ __ ,_ ______________________ THE DA_I~Y NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, APRIL

''For a While There I Didn't, bllt 1 Sure· THE DAILY NEWS Newfoundland's Only Mornin_g Paper

The DAILY NEWS Is 1 morning paper established In 1894, and publlshed at the News building, 355·359 Duckworth Street, St. John's, N~wfoundland, 1Y,1 Robinson & Company, Limit· eel

In The News See Him Now" · ,

By \VAYrt.RER

LAST NINE YEARS ; I

~IEMBERS OF niE CANADIAN PRESS Tuesday was the ninth anni. versary of J,:onfederation. At noon on April 1, 1940, lion. Colin Gibson presented a col· lcctive citizen certificate to the people· o! Newfoundland. \\'as it only nine years a;o that black tics were worn, flags were flown at half·mast, and a group of young anti· confedet·atcs talked about a mock funeral for the spirit of Newfoundland independence? It seems so far away at this time. For nowadays. confeder· ation is a fact of life over which no disputes occur ~net to which little thought is gi\'en.

The decision on Term 29 Is of vital importance. This was a contract designed to over· come omissions in the finan· cia! arrangements o! union. The Term gave Newfoundland ci.~:ht yccirs, which was a time not nearly long enough, to make good the deficiencies in the public sen·ices. The con· tract was that Canada would underwrite the ability of New­foundland to maintain the levels and stanrlards of public sCI'I'iccs reached at the end or eight years. But these levels and standards were even then much below those of the poorest of the mainland prov­inces. If. therefore. the full aware! is made under Term 29, it will still mean no more than the securing of standards known to be inadequate by Canadian criteria.

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The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to thr usc !or republicatiOn o! all news despatches In this paper cred.lted to It or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also the local news publish· cJ therein.

\'EARl.\' SUBSCRIPTION RATES

All Press service and feature articles In this r~per are copyright and their reproduction is rrohibitcd.

Cnr.nda .................... $12.00 per annum tlnitcd Kinr:dom and all

Foreign Countries ...... $14.00 per annum Authorized as se~~nd class mail Post Offices

Dl•part.ment, Ottawa.

Member Audit Bureau or

Circulations.

THUHSDAY~ APRIL 3, 1958

Rough Raad Ahead A rough rcac.llies ahead of the new

Government of Canada for· decisions haY~ to be m:lde on many complex problems and they will tall for Lold­r.ess. cou:·age UPd \'ision.

There is. oi. ('Otll'se, the recession. Spendmg 011 public works is the pt·omised sr.luticm but it will not be

·as simple as \;l<.t. Coupled with the stimulation of r:mployment through public spending will be the necessity of keeping price~ under control.

Deficit financing for an~· purpose H' inflationary. If it should be at­tended by new rounds of wage and price increases. tt may become a dang­erous rather thun a useful inflation. Go\·ernment may be required to enlist the support of organized labour in holding the co3t line.

There is also the prospect that new pennanent charges on the nation: r.l reYenue will outrun the income prospects of the next few years and ex tend the period of deficit financing ·or comp~l the ultimate increase of taxation.

These are all complex problems whic·h will require the application of the best minds the Government can harness to the task and the wisest rounsellors th:lt they can bring to their assistance. But the real chal­lenge ma~· be to the moral courage of the government. The next few months mm· be a se\·ere testing time for :'o.Ir. Diefenbaker and his col­league~.

Rebuilding A Party Less than a year ago the great

:teecl of Canada was a powerful op· position to repair the party imbalance ond gi\'e new effecti\·eness to the part that parliament plays in raising the standards of go,·ernment.

He would ha,·e been a bold prophet at that time \\'ho would have dared to suggest that t\\'el\·e months later the need \"ould be greater and that it would be the Liberal party th11t had to be strengthened.

But turnabout has come. The Con­servatives will dominate the new House of Commons as no party has e\·er done before and the strength of the combint:d oppo~ition in numbers and quality is the lowest for genera­tions.

The Late Blockade The ice blockade of the northern

hays usually begins in January and lasts until the end of April and some­times much longer. In fact, in recent ~·ears it has ·been nearly the end of l\Iay be~ore the coastal ser\'ice could get properly under way. This year hope existed that the open winter would be followed by an open spring. But the northern ice has ci·owded into White and Notre Dame Bays and the opening of navigation will ha\'e to depend on continued offshore winds.

It would appear. therefore, that we cannot expect an exceptionally early revival of trade with the north· find this raises once more the import­ance of highwa~· communications that will allow the winter and spring blockade to be minimized if not O\'er­come. We simply cannot spend the money we ha,·e for roads without ~;P.tting up a proper order of priorities so that the maximum sen·ice ma\· be p.i,·en to the largest number of pe~ple. This is a matter that will need care­ful consideration before large ex­pansion of the road ser\'ices L:an be wisely undertaken.

More Propaganda The Russian announcement of a

voluntary ban on H-bomb tests has been treated by the United States and Eritish governmt:nts with the con· tempt it deserres.

It is a propaganda mo\·e and noth· ing else, designed to influence thr frightened nnd the trusting, and it is nlready having its effect on that section of the British Labour Party which is completely opposed to nuclear armament.

'The United States has contended that it will continue> to test bombs in its desire to perfect H-bombs which are "clean." That is, of course, bombs whose explosion does not create the deadly radioacti\'e fall-out.

But in any e\·ent, unilateral ,\Clion . is not the way to bring about nuclear disarmament. The Russians know that the onlv useful means of achie\'· mg this enct" is by international agree­ment. That means inspection and supervision which Moscow is e\'idcnt· ly not willing to accept in any circum­stances.

• • • We would guess that more

than· 20,000 Newfoundlanders who were too young to \'ole in the 1948 ref~rcnda were eligible to mari; a ballot last ~londay. Few if nny of them have more than a superficial unclcrstnndin~ of that grc3t constitutional controver>y Qf ten years ago. And it will not be l'ery lm~g before h~lf the voters will be people who have grown to adult life os citi~ns of Canada. But the interesting thing is that. hy and lar·~c. the a1·erage Ncwfoundbruler thinks o! him>clf as a :\'cw­foundlander first. He is aware of the fact that he is a Can· ~clian citi1.cn. He knows that Ol'erali policy is decided in Ottowa. llr knows that Ottawa is a place from which man;· blc»ings r.nd some foolishness flow. But he has not got quite use~l to hearing himsrlf de· scribed as a Canadian and ht· still refers to people from thr mainl~nd ~s Canadians as if. h~· this description. he were markinc them out as diff~rrnt from himself. . . .

Confeder:>tion has hrou~ht mam· hencfi~s. Th~t will not he ;lrniccl. I.rft to her own resol'rcrs. :->ewfouncll ~nd con lrl not haYr nrovidcd all the sri'· \"ices Lllat ·make up the present ohli;:ations of a l:lr~c 1•·rstcrn n~tion in a welfare.mindcd world. The sociol imn:-ct o! 311 of them has vet to lw clrtrr. m i1Jccl. The,·· ha 1·r hrou:•l1t chances in our ll'a\' of life atlll OUr star.<Jard Of tiYin~. Dut hasic financial problems ha,·e wl to he scttlrrl ancl t•·acle has hrcomr too onr·sidrd. These arc thin<:> yr1 lo bl' cDnsidPrrcl in the light of

• • • The trade question Is more

comple;;, To begin with, it Is not a simple traclc question but a large economic prob&m. Commerce between Canada and ;";ewfoundland since union hJs hcen lar~eiy exemplified hy the influx of mainland carpet ba~:~ers who seem to re· gard !\'cwfoundlancl as a salrs­n1an's paraclisc. They take the cash and let Newfoundland business not only carry the credit but al>o make the in· \·c>tments. >ometimes with gorernment help. that will create the income, that mah the sales th01t fill mainlanrl q]efmen's ordrr hool;s. Can­ada hul's no more from New· fonntll~rtl than she <licl before union. She ,ells us four times as much.

• • •

China's Minorities:

By W. :\. E\I'ER

:\'obody can ~·et say what The attitude of the Peking the natural resources of Xew· Go1·ernment to national minori· four.clbncl are capable of pro- ties continues to harden. ,\ during hut it is clear that up year ago ~lao Tse·Tung was in­to noll' the Government of Can· sistent on the need for patience r:cl1 am! the industrialists of ond conciliation. He warned his Canada ha\'1' not paicl much comrades against "Han<haul'in· at•cntion to thr productil'e i>lll". The "Han" are the ethnic rconom~· of this prol'ince. Yet Chinese as distinct from the it is herr th:1t the key to our ether nationalities in the Chi· fntorc Iii's. Arc wr to be nl· r.ese People's Republic. ~\'a,·;; 1knendcnt on thr low in· But noll' all the e\·idcnce cun~cs of a primary economy ~vailahle - mostly from the or r.an somrthin~ be clone to Chinese Communist press-is increase snhstantia!ll' the that, especially in Tibet, the meii>Hre of onr industrial t>~· new line is to use harshrr met· n;msion: It is in thr answer to hods to combat •·continuing tl1's n:ll'ticular question that !oral chauvini>m" and to "con· tlw cl(·lilwation of o\!1' h•turc so!ic!ate the unity of the Father· is most likely to he !onnd. land."

Nuclear 1'ests B:v BRUCE BIOSS,\T

A good many people bel ic\ e :he:·e w::; · disarmament until the great natiO!~s sett!e it' some of their major outstandin~ diiferer.ce;.

Others belie\·e that the ki :ld c·f '"···n-..: .. essary to strict enfon:cmcnt cf tLa:·ma:r.er.: one reason or another impo>.'lble to ach:ere.

For a long time the Soric! L'!~io:1 ha; sign that it would allo\\' effect:\ e it~il:ett:o: check against nuclear tesb. mi;itarr · elc. Ironical!~·. now that a pll:<oiblt: .ch;~r.ge tude may be in the \l'ind in :<.lo>uJ·x. tf:e . seems to ha\·e become immcn,;eh· :nore than b2fore. Some of our expert.'. 1~ot

ward Teller. fathel· of the H-bomb. hare

their total effect. -- .. -------·---- -·---·.. - -- · ·- -· · ---- This. it is clenr. is bel· a use r.ation;~li;t ani! regional oppos­ition 10 lhc central government has been arowin~: and hos reach·

ing that there can be no foolpr0oi in>rectio:l today, that Russia could if it \l'iol:ed experiments so ~ecretl~· thnt the1· l':ould mo~t exhausti\'e checks 11·e co~1ld deri!e.

He has not explained IWII' "'' !1 te;:; concluded. But ~ome ha\·e indit.ttcd ther ! What Others Are S • \

aytng i rd the point at which Prking is held underp:rou!ld. Hence om 11''. n hc~inning to he alarmed. 1 · · The nationality question is nuclear exp o~ion of Ja~t SeplCi!l~Cr :s of ~r.e n:.turall;· most acute in the importance as a gauge of \\·hat the Rusi:ar~ outlying prol'inces-Tih~t. Sink· t rv to do to c:hw t us on dis a m~;1 :1~C'!!t. ,\ SEW SOLUTION

Hamillon Spectator Tlw dct•per thinkers ~ecm

agreed that th besl HY:ution tu the recession would llc If we would each buy a new Jwu;e.-and two cars to ~t'l away from it in.

\\'J:">DOWS 0~ TilE WORI.D

St. l'atharincs Standard The United Nations heorl·

rtuarlcrs in :\ell' York has 6.780 windows. Just an m· clicJlion of the role of the L':-\ in keeping an eye on ti1c

STILL U~D!:R SSOW Brantlord Expositor

A heclalinc tells us ifs time to look at our lawns. Through the picture window, we hope.

l~ng and Lnner ~longolia- • . wherr non·Han nationalities 'Cnfortunat; \;:. the \\·hole !Lcl~e:· of tr.e hal'c heen in the majority. They bilit~· of /~net tc.>ts. induclin:~ 1!1e Atorr.:c hal'e in th epast enjoyed a con- Commi~sion's initial rejJOl't on t!~l' Scptem':t:

l\'ATCII I'OR TilE S~IELT sidcrahlc :<mount of ~clf·~m·-Sudbury Star ernmcnt of a loose kine! which has now become mired in contn>\C'r"::.

In our section of the coun· hr.s allowed them to mana-ge For one thin·~. Pruf. Harr.s<~n B:o·s~ · II'\' we east a sicicwise glance thrir own .a!f:<irs in their own r' T I l . . d · fo:·nia Institute o cc Jno oe!··· ... _.,~,~ wor;:~ at the nrril'al of the first way. Flul now they arc subject · · · ruhin. ~lore important 111 to twn pressures. There is the A-bomb. is amon~ tilo~e \'.'i!" d:<.:::·ee ~~~ this area is the "smelt sea· c:ctermination of the central •-:len \\'ho insist nu.clear tc~h ';u: :·e h:cide~. son." hcsc tn,ty little fish Goi'C'rnmcnt nne! of the leaders ,\~ for the AEC':; l'C(JOrt. tt s:: ted t~at start to mo\c shortly alter of the Communist Party to ~!other Nature breaks King impose on them the same <oc· derground burst \HIS reported J:- <1n ea;til \\'inter's grip on the lakes and ial and economic pattern that wave no more than :250 miles fro:11 ti·.e te!! streams. has been imposed on China this now turns out to be inaccuro~tc.

-- proper. And there is the plan-S~L\LL·TO\\'S LIFE cu::.us IS WAVE LESGTII5 ned :<ncl increasing migration Scientists who que~tioncci t!:;; repo:1 .. Durham Chronicle \\'innpicg Tribune of Han from the crowclrrJ prov- their vie\\'s to a Senate committer.

whole world.

In D\lrll•m most workers At present there are no inces of e~stcrn China into the h r • S · 1 J " ctttirY disclosed t at L •. st~l\l''l~ .:au •. own llll'ir own \Iomcs. They fewer than se\Ul W<'l'e lengths "l'xten>iw are:~> with rich nat- • . have large gardens and !arg~ , used t~; :he . police of the ural resources" of the outer waves from the Jl:eQda under,;: our:d te;:"' lardeors. Because th~Y don't Greater \\ :nmpeg area. Dur- pro\·inccs. this countrv and ::!.:lOO miles ufi ::1 ;\;;loka. Spend an ]lour tr•vclii'ng to 1nr, the Jail break a few I · d I 1.. t · t 11·a• " CO\f1li"'IST PRE'iS CO\' llO\" 1as COilCe ec t'ts 11'~.1 S acc:nen · work in the morning and an- months a~o. two escapees · · ·" ·· · · ' Ol

·her hour gcttig home at were actuillly.challcngecl by a DE~r.r..·s "BOtrRGEOIS Without trying to a:;~c.,; the blar.:e lo: b Eff ~AT/0;\'ALISM"

. '. The C.C.F·. has been reduced to a

}mall grC\up oi eight members who do not include those brilliant and

night they hac ilvs mhbmdwh subur an cruiser car. orts Hence the manifestations o! error we can all a''l'Ce the mi:'t~:.-e was night, they hal'e time for 10 apprehend ·them were sty. cli>content ancl . resentment goes 'right to the h~art of the J>~tte of

'•

astringent criti~s, Mr. Coldwell and Mr. Knowles, both of whom were

~ · great and effective parliamentarians. The Liberals have only 48 mem-

• hers whos~ leadership incorporates no giants and who have much to learn about the role of a successful and

I :~·, useful opposition. '· It has now become a matter of

necessity that the Liber~ls should strive to rebuild their strength and

,, ; . . . bring into the party men who will '· t>dd to its stature and become . the

: -.~· nucleus of a genuine party revival.

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No blame attflches to Mr. Pearson for Monday's debacle. Defeats al­

;:.: ways lead to a search for a scapegoat. • · But if Mr. Pearson lacked the ~· •• · dynamic of a forceful leader,~ his ·- policies were those of the party and

.. : ::. · not his own. He is not an experienc-

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:.: ·I ~.; ed politician and none of the few re­, •, I ·~: • ·• · maining members of the last St.

! Laurent cabinet has shown a capacity for solid and biting criticism. \They performed in the last parliament more

. . . as gadflies. than as a good opposition. I > They may improve with .the ex-

i t

l. \· perience they will acquire in the next :-:· five years. But their great need is ·;; ~ to iring into the ranks new men who : ·: possess the vigour, wisdom ·and in­~ ~.>pirational qualities that will restore ·:. the prestige and authority of the 1: Liberal party. This is even more a • national need today than it was a

~·ear ago when the Liberals were con­. fronted with the combin~d ·opposition of Conservatives, C.C.F. and Social Credit.

Strength For The Day B~ EARL L. DOUGLASS

THUI.tSDAY-DAY OF FELLOW­SHIP

Jesus was a loyal Jew. He en· tered with great sincerity into the religious rites of his people. Thi.~ was the day of the Passover Feast, <md he indicated ~hat he desired to eat it with his disciples.

They kept ~e feast; and when the meal was finished, Jesus instit­uted a. sacramental rite which he commanded his followers to ob­s~rve through the ages. He took bread and wine, and declaring that they were his body and his blood, he told his friends that they were to eat the bread and drink the cup in remembrance of him. Paul in later years was to declare that as often as believers ate this bread and drank this cup, they were showing forth the Lord's death till he come.

What was this sacrament? It was the symbolic setting forth of the basic truth of our religion, namely, that Jesus Christ by ·his death saves the sinner from his sin. There is nothing magical about the accomplishment of this great end. It is the employment of a spiritual principle-the principle of self-effacing love, which when. it operates shakes earth and heaven and hell with its significance.

This do-eat and drink. Yes, but more. As He gave himself complete­ly to God and to his fellows, so we, in our service to him, must do the same •

home workshops and other oc· mJed when other pollee cars amon2 the Tibetans,' the ~!on- .. 1 A · 'I ·d nt of usma four d1fferent wal'e ~ not secret tests are in fact no,:;to.e. cupat1os. .• any res1 e s " . r.ols ond the l'ighurs of Sing- " other small towns come in lengths got mto the act. iang. The Chinese Communist wa\·e is easy to conceal in the "p:·;!lding from the surrounding cities. press reports them in order to R · S'b · In the small towns the sit· To The Edi"tor condrmn them as outbreaks of usstan l ena. b moe~

h t d'ff t Ob••t'ousl~·. sound polic.\· cannot e uation is somew a I crcn · bourgeois nationalism. '

IG!IIORANT AREAS But 1\' deo find for example Americans cannot make wise judgments t I'R.\ISE FOR MR. DUNBAR

Sudbury Star :llan•r leaders in municipal

and government affairs today owe much to lhe wise advice and guidance they received from George Dunbar. Fish and game associations can

gii'C credit to Mr. Dunbar for hi ssympathetic understand· ing .ol the need for conserva· tion as he listened to their representations while minister of the game and fish depart· mcnt.

In every cabinet position he has occupied in the Ontario government, lllr. Dunbar has filled the post with dignity and respect. Through the years he has earned respect of all people.

that even :O.Ion.gol Party mem· policy, unless information the gol'ernmen Dear Sir - lllr. Harold !lor· bcrs h~l'e complained that in II te

wood in his column in to·day's Inner Jllongolia the majority of _:sa~~f~~e:_:.:to~r.::_e:_p~or~t~is~th::..o::.:r:..:o:..:u~g:.:..1:.:.~:..·_a_c_cu __ r<~_·-~ "Telegram" insults the bulk of the Partv executive are Han the families in Newfoundland. and the ·Mo'ngol members are portions. { p ·s lie says, in referring to Premier "seldom able to express their It is now, according to the J1 afl Smallwood~ "The only places wishes"; that "the Communist "Peking People's Daily", to .be 1 O\D(\:\ •CP'­where he still commands a big Partv as a whole Is a Han "stamped. out". The policy sc;ih;•d as 1he most majority of the people's votes part}·" and its "cadre policy" is adopted m 1952 and then !or ~lr collrrtion of are in the most remote and "Hanist." This last refers to a a w~ile abnn?oned for a '!'ore shown in r.nrope ignorant areas not reached by widesoread ~ource of grievance. flextble one 1s to be rel'lved. m·11.1·11" <·onur.er.t newspapers.·· d " h t · t The "ca res 11' o are sen m o It is to 'rely on the army and fashi;n and rur

He furth~r says that "in all the pro\·inces to organize and the southbound cadres." 'The collection places where The Evening Tele- carry out Party polic,· are not so Pekin.g is now faced sim· a recention in the gram and The Western Star 1 "d · tl · Han but on Y pre omman ~ ultaneously with three problems. of rnslitul France circulated regularly the Premier come !rom the north and the There is the recasting of eco· sic:cd orer by suffered a crushing reverse." east where the control of the nomic planning wiht more at· D"s'·· wife of th:

As the two papers mentioned 1 t d t r ' P ~· centra govern men an ccn ra tcntion paid to agriculture and bas~ador in. 3ow· by him have a total circulation h' · t 1 -' ""' partv mac me IS s ron~es · involving the moving of vast th" diplomatiC COaJII6DI•r·

of about 30.000, going into th~ Th' 1 r th th c IS s one cause o e o er numbers of workers from the soc1· "t\,' were number of homes, the 56, h' h · · h ' unrest w 1c Is causmg muc cities down to the country and guests. . homes not getting the paper anxiety in Pckinl!. It is re-gion- up to the mountains. There is Scren Canadian he mentioned are ignorant; this al, not national. The discontent the suppression· of "rightist" fron1 ~lontreal is what he infers anyway. This H r th ..... -·.

h is amon~ the an o e west tendencies in the Government Toronto. are

WIIF.RE IT BELONGS is t e greatest insult by a New· di · 11 d' Port Arthur News-Chronicle foundhmder to Newfoundlanders and south, Ira ttona )' tstrust. and the Party. And there is the collection. A In these days there Is too and will certainly go down in ful of Peking and inclined to "stamping out" of minority crcatins.

history. My father was a fisher· stand up for their local rights nationalism and Han "paroch- expe~ts fro~ed prevalent a tendency to shove m•n and we never had .new·s· nnd interests. This is being at· ialism." also 1s ~~clu · Onto the schools responsiblll· " t k d d d d "" Papers when I was growing up, ac e an con emne as That does not imply that the \·RICIS1 D~~"

·tics which should be discharg. " hi J' " L but we did not consider our· paroc a 1sm. regime facts a crisis. But it • !i J. cd in fuc home, beginning selves ignorant. TROUBT.E SPOT AREA OF cloes mean that there is .a situ· pEAPACK. h; froimf ltnh!cancysc.hools, receiving A FISHERMAN'S SON. rORMERh. RE1 VdC?LtTib t' ation serious enou~h to require fred BrP

11• "'0• lb'

BELFAST ICPI-A!Ian Batham The ~:eograp Ica IS r u 100 all the attentibn, energy and rics ~or peg Jone;. this human material after is making final preparations to of htis "oarochialism" is sil!· resources of both Go1•ernment Pucldln·hcad .t 1 Jlr early habits of indulgence al· sail a !Z-ton ketch, the Falcon, ni!icant It runs in a wide belt and Party. This is the key to day in HoSP1 n\ ready have been formed, fall from Northern Ireland to Van· r~om Kansu in the north·west many developments: and may native of onta ' to produce young people nor- com·cr. (where Pekin<: radio reports It have a bearing on the sudden as a newspaf'!r.:::rlll mal in the eyes of the law, He will be accompanied by his as rather widespread) down to decision to withdraw from North old Chicaso 1 the blame Is much less on· wife and 15·year-old son. The Yunnan in the extreme south· Korea the 300,000 "1•olunteers" turning to sonS · fuem than on the home where family will sail across the Allan· west and across to the s~uthern who were the elite of the Chi· - , t h (or the moulding process belongs. tic to the Panama Canal and then Provinces of Hunan, Kwei·Chow. nese army. \\a C d

One Is left to ponder how· north to Vancouver. Kwang-Si and Kwan~·Tung-thc Daily NeWS an ever, what value to place on The Bathams say they want to focus of the revolt of the twen· . ·. .. · s the modern educationists start a new life in Canada be- ties against the northern war ~lount Ararat, ttadlhonal SI.c cash prtze ·.tiD, theories with respect to "lnte· cause the first important' phase !orris. 111 Kwang-TuM itsel.f o! Noah's Ark, actb~lly !s a vol- new and elC

1

gration" and "adjustment'' on of their family life-the bringing (of which Canton is the capl· cano. Its last eruptiOn, .m 1840, Contest. which so much emphasis Is up of children-has been accom· tal) parochialism is admitted to caused great loss o! ll!e and placed. plished. have reached "Intolerable" pro- property. apr3,5

-BAY.' ~lotors was I

to M of the Sh the HarbOI

Centre o of last v indefinil is nece~

rccri\'ed ir on Thur>dal then he has

that he I' sufficiently

in the pla·,·ol which is i ndec

be won for t ,·cars to he 'it is awarde

accumulatinl! me one sc~ies in Bay ~orth sc

ure

·~:'-0~ree \\

[, , c' h iclden. 1 . ::1 terl that I, ;, :1 earth

I .: 1, th~ test I~ . '~c. i ·.: 1 !~ report I:~~ 'C.

i··'' had I . n~u:d test I! .\lacka.

·~ 1 cnt was (' hlame for

NEWS. S~~ JOHN'S, I"FlO., THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 1958 """' ---World's Largest

Spaniard's Bay· Newspaper History OKOTOKS.~~a~~~Roc~ R . ll t. Birthdays . 0' Bell Island ~~~~;io~~. ~~~~· o~~~v;rofri~

Shower I eco ec zons :J ~~8~ii~;ss::ili~~rga~1:::.18 town II It Is the Big Rock west of

~.\Y \J'III 1-\!.,:,,:·· I.:Jnilrd

,,.~ ;,,,. I•· h:JI'!' · ,,., .. ~ 1,, '! ·. nwid

;, 11·r ~:;.';';'tawn :~r ·ll.·""' 11r l.rarc

ca.t:r •'" Thur~· 1: J:,·' 11 rrk h.1d

R il • SPANIARD'S BAY, Apr 1- Okotoks-acknowledged to be the e ect'lons Congratulations are extended 2 world's largest erratic rock .. " to Mrs. Wallace Jewer whose [F Th F•l Part Composed mostly or quartzite

birthday Ia on Thunday, April rom e 1 es I or a nature foreign to this area, 3• (h 52 it is an estimated 18,000 tons In

Mrs. Lewh Sheppard will Of Th D "I N ] . apter I weight and Is divided n two celebrate her birthday on Sat· e· aJ y ews parts. Such masses are known to urday, April II, and a pleiSant geotogsts 88 erracUc rocks. day Ia wished for her by her A number or these rocks lie ' children, Gordon, Gall and • By ADDISON BOWN here and there in a scattered line Wayne, · along the edge of the foothills

Sam Vokey wlll have a birth· from the northern part of Alberta day on Saturday also. 'B est to Waterton Lakes In the &auth. wishes come from Mom, Dad FIRST AIR l\lAIL. was preached by Rev. P. J: 1 rctary, and J. F. ll!cEvoy as Their origin is undetermined, and the family. Bell Island received Its first Kennedy and the usual courtesy' team capt,ain. but It is thought t~ey floated .in

On Easter Sunday the foJ. air mail on Feb. 1, 1922. On that call was paid on the clergy. The I A prize ·distribution was held: on icebergs on 31} mland ~lac1al lowlnl! will have birthdays: dille Major Cotton and Capt. play "Rose of Killarney" was : in the c. of E. Beach School on ' sea. Of these, B1g Rock IS the Mrs. Bert Christopher and· her Beimett broke the Ice blockade presented in the Star Hall at I April 24. largest. brother Stephen Seymour, around the Island by air. They night with the following tak· 1 Three deaths occurred in Indian pictog~aphs may be seen J~tmes Barrett (14) and Mary flew from Quldi Vidl Lake to ing part:-Capt. L. c. ~lurphy, April:-~lichael Dwyer, 83; beneath protectmg ledges and the I Chipman (14). Happy birthdays Bell Island, dropped news· Belle Jackman, Bessie Connors, ~Irs. ~!arlin Fitzgerald, 78, and Blackfeet have a legen~ of how to all .four. . · papers and were back In St. A. s. Murray, Ambrose Hickey, Kitty ~Tay Power (assistant at the. ~rea~ roc~ roiled 10 anger,

On Easter Monday llfr. Rob· John's alter a round flight of Jas. Delahunty and P. T. Mur· the Mines Post Office), 17. ~~phttmg.ltseU 10 hal~ and bre~-ert Peddle will be 73. Best 20 mjnutes. phy. The B.!. Amr.teur Company mg of£ m smal)er p1eces, which wishes come from Joe and That was the speediest mail J T L t J p • 8 t d "Th L' hts 0• L \may be seen lymg about. Mabel and from the boys, Don, · · aw on, · ·· ~·.ve I pre~~~ e e 18 on· In the past, bufCalo pastured in Robert and Calvin. delivery on record to the Iron lecture to the Star Societ; on

1 don m the C.L.B. Armour~·. on I the vicinity and the smooth

Happy birthday wishes are Isle up to that time. Copies of March~~ on.thc r~cent de>ei?P·l.:l!ay 24. Cast:-Mrs. W. L1~d- bu!led surface of the lower walls d d M S 1 N 11 the DAILY NEWS, Evening ments m Insh history lead1ng I say, R. W. ~heppard, ~!anon 1 is thought to have resulted from

exten e to rs, amue e Telegram and Fishermen's Ad· up to the Treaty that brought

1

Godden. Anme !llurphy, !lladge I generations o! the anirilaiJ rub· whose birthday Is on Easter voc~te were taken to the plane bo th F St t R R 'I L C 'I h R I h 1 d w a u.t e ree" a e. " . " · •• ews, . . ·• urp y, a P ',bing their long • haired bodies Mon ay. · direct from the City presses Costigan sang Asthore .... ~d

1 Burnham. Chas. Peddle, H. J. , along its sides.

Beatrice Gosse will have 8 and !!own to the Island im· Capt. Leo Murphy rec1ted 1 Gover and P. T. !llurphy, I When settlers came a achool birthday on Tuesday, April. 8· mediately. A mechanic In the "Dawn on the Hills o! Ireland." . On ~fay 27 a drowning f<talily was built about a mile' away and llfany happy returns are WISh·\ plane passed the bundles to The Pathe Cilm of the P::os· i occurred jn C~nception . Bay. i named Big Rock. Okotoks, some 1 ed for her by Mom, Dad and Capt Bennett ~ho dropped sion Play was shown for three 1 One o! the mamland mmers, I say. was named for the rock­the family. \them' over the side from a height nights in the Star Hall In Apri1

1 Jos.cph :ll~~on or . Avondale,\' Okotoks In Blackfeet meaning

To Levi Chapman ~0 best I of 100 feet as the aircraft circl· to large audiences. Choral num· 1 wh1le relurmn~ to h1s home for stone. .

I , ,·· . !

·: ,:'! I; ,, ... " . '

., . '·

''

. :c·!•'·:· •, \. The :: ,..-.,~~~r.r he·

~-;r:t':t.•.,;! ~!';'l'·ir.; in t

·· -~ r::·:c· 1:, ,.rl'ninz

wishes for a happy birthday 00 ed low over the Island. Resl· hers were given by lllrs. E. 1 the week·end m a motor boat, Geologists from many parts ol Wednesda}', April 9• from his 'dents were aeen to pick them Gosine, F. F. Janline, R. R.

1 feli overboard and was drown· the continent have inspected the 1 I

very good friend, Noel. up and read them. The tempera· costigan, Ralph Burnham, J. B. : ed. rock. ture that day' was 15 deg. F. 1\lurphy and Chas Peddle. j The R. C. Parish set up a com·

1 Currently, the weckiJ news·

. ~~;-~ ~C' ·• , ht l'll in

JESSE 1. GOSSE

SPA:-IIARD'S BAY, April 1-1 ing oursleves with such luxur· Note of Thanks The plane did not attempt J. Company C.L.B. gave a mittee on ~lay 28 for the en·: paper. High River Times, I! ca!"· I Corrcspoudcnt's Note: The les nod delicaslcs as my mo- to .land, and another ten years concert in the Wubana Nickel largemcnt and improvement of 1 paigning to have. the provincial

1;;'.\:' Jo110U'ing is otkcn from "Recol· , ther was able to dig up, went were to pass before the first on April 17 under the direction the cemetery f~r which a pie~e! gove~nm~nt establish the rock as .••. • •• ,. " ••• ~:· .,.1, lt'ctio•zs nnd ReflectiOI!s,'' an; pell mell through the large SPANIARD'S BAY, April 1- airplane landing took place o~ of Bandmaster :llartin. The fol· of ground had JUSt been acqu1r·, an h1storzc spot. .

HlltO!JioarapiiJ! bu J. J. Gosse, :kitchen to the yard where we Mrs Violet Chipman desires to lthe Island. lowing took part:-H, J. Gover, ed. )lagistrate Power was chair· I "r\ot e~·en the greatest erratic· •'<' :• ,. :, ... ,~ :' fiw l>om in Spaniard's Bay on July ! played games of a sort boys of tha~ all her friends and neigh. The Star of the Sea Assocla· C. w. Skanes, Capt. L, c. Mur· mun and the members were J. ?n earth IS safe fr~~ the maraud· · ·: ., : f··::.,:>•,':~:~:~:. 13. 18i9, ,,tr. Gosse is now liu· our age were accustomed to bours for the many acts of I tion held Its &nnual meeting on phy, Chas. Cohen, Jean Lind·! :1!. Greene, J. A. Hugh.es, J. L. mg hands or man.

i110 in the United States, $pend· 'piny. Thoroughly fagged out in kindness known and unknown, Feb. 5, P. F. Power was elected say, Mary Petrie, Betty Lynch, I Connors, Jas. Bowdrmg: 1\1. ,.----------1 11111 Ius summers in Massaclllls· I the middle of the a!ternoon, done fo~ her and her children i :President and Gus Connors, Sec· !11illicent )iews, Mrs. J. J. ~!il·

1 Kelly. R. D. Walsh. P. F1tzger· ~

: < ·.~: ::: .. .: ;•,,int• ctrs o11d liis 1cinters in Flor· ca~h of tis trudged wearily during the Illness of and after retary. ler, Mrs. w. Lindsay, F. F. 1 ai~. D. Steele. W. J. Power, S. "i ,, •. ,., '" •!·.·' Con- ida.) I home. There we obliged to have the death of her loving mother· ::llusic results that year .featured Jardine and R. R. Costigan. 1 Fitzgerald, Thos Power, E. C. !:1 \.·:· · ·• ::a,:· '''a 1 , a nap, thanks to the wonderful fn.Jaw, Mra. Jemima Chipman. the names of th~ followmg local The Band held a concert in! Newton, J Kelly, J. J. Carew

)I\ HO~IETO\\'~. Spaniard's ; mothers who knew what to do, A eclal thank "OU to the pupils: - Jumor (honours), the C L B Armour" on Easter 1 and M. Cahill. ll2 acres of llay mv birthplace ( 1879) was sp • p • a s~ali .community of perhaps : I do not recall my first school I sympathetic rector, Rev. C~~~~ Allee Kent, Eileen M~ws. ass, ::llond~y. n'ight, with the follow· ; ground had been purchased for '' ihousand people whose ex· da)·s which ·must have began T. E. Loder, and to the ch Mollie Stoyles, Maggie K:nt, ing bandsmen taking part:-F. ! the extension to the cemetery. tremely modest hom~s were :a year prior to my first party, organist, Mr. Lewis E. Gosse. Bride Barrett. Preparatory ( on· 1 G dden T N Shave A Skanes · The Wabana Town Council

:spread out ol'er n wide area, 1 Looking back now it was a ra· ours) • Lillian Ta~·Jor. Prss, w~ Fa~ar', c: w. Skan~s. A. s: i resigned in a body that mo~th c;~rh ha1·ing its own pasture i lher trying nnd fea~ome per· b" Mary Barrett. b ~lurray T Lucas S. RatCord,l but tne Front Council camed I and ~:arden plots, nestling i lod for those of us wbo were 0 Iluary Daniel Dwyer, well·known ca · H Ha~m~nd, T.' Skanes, J. 1 on. . I among the hills. or In many • in the lower forms. Trying, be- man, passed away on Feb. 20 Sh d s Peach N Batten The B.E.S. Corporahon donal- I

i r 1 Y .\Dnl 1- instances, close to the shore· :cause the school was a country --I.... at. the age of 75. Solemn R~· G e:i~~ K. Head, J: H~rvey, M: $500 t~ the Newfoundland \~ar: line, permit ling eas1· access to · one·room a Hair with home· qUlem Mass was sung by his T:ll ' :.1 Skanes and W Memorial campaign then hemg I the water, the larger boats, :made benches. 8 or 9 feet long, MRS.' JEMIMA CRIP3fAN nephew, Rev. Fr. Savin, assist· s1 ey, The. band were in thei~, conducted by Lt. Col. (Rev.) T.

d · d · h b k I ' d nedy. B t 1 in June that the ohJeclive need· ridin~: anchors. or the smaller :of the same height for all kids, SPANIARD'S BAY April 1- ed by Frs. McGrath and Ken· n~~w~niform~. ::>!angle who was a~le ~o report 'I

nnes tic to piers or attached · ~n Wit out ac s. can very Mrs.· Jemima Chipman passe A Concert was given In the S.S. Mary, Capt. ourne, s~ i ed for the erection oC a suit· . ~ f:·.· '' ::.

1::( • : 1 ,'~\~ to buo~·s in a protected har. well imagine what efforts must peacefully away at her home In C or E. Beach School on Feb. of[ from Bell I sian~ on. Ap~ll 1 bl ~lemorial at St. John's had

c>e;:·:· .. 11

.. :, • llzr,,· buur. Located in n l~rgc bny 1 hal'c been made In scrambling Spaniard's Bay on Monddy, 20 to mark Shrove Tuesday 15 on a two wee~s ermse m 1 ~ e · tl 'ned · c~lled Conception Bay and up on those most uncomfort- March 24, following a lengthy Iunder the direction or the prin· search of seals, w1th J .. C. Col· I e~r:n 810!~ent at Wabana by

.. r rc F.,., .. !'·lrd:l\'. about BO miles west or St. : nble scats and letting one's legs Illness. She was seventy-seven. I cipru R W. Sheppard (no\\· bou~ne and a ere~ of e1ght. On J Pwa~ reported to have in· John'~. the c~pital, is not di· ! dangle. In addition to that, She leaves one daughter !>~ary • · h H e or As· April 26 Geo. Neal Ltd.. rc- 'I une Th t recti)' open to va~arles oC the : hal'ing to hold a slate and a (Mrs. John Sheppard) in Bos- ;~~~~v~: !n:e foft~~lng took

1 ceiv~d a message Crom Catalinr. crer'tc~tpostl:~ ~~~ton,~~~:::

: ,\tl:mtic Ocean. There I grew i pencil on our knees for long ton, a laughter·n·law, Mrs. Vlo· art·..::.Hlram Bennett Elsie . statmg that the Mary had ar· ers a d Lo a'n were among 1

· UJl. played and went to school i periqds and not permitted to let Chipman, three grandsons. PSkan.es Hubert Bennett'. Edith I ri.ve. d there in a damaged cobu· 1Itahnd alno•d'lnggore that month. A: until rcacihn~: the age of around nud~e or speak to another kid t d hters· two brothers • d d t Her propellor was e·l osc •

1 <'ighteen. ~ly recollection of my to move over so as to give one A~hu:u~nd Humphrey Nell' Warrllow, May Bennett, M;; li~~~~· to be damaged by ice and 1 big contract was ~eported to first renl pari\' when I was con· a little more room. In the two b f h and Parsons, Gordon Bennett, U· t f St John's ha\'e been secured 10 Germany.

· .•·.·rlnrnrl "a h1:~ bo~·" ,•nd could : lowest grades, no provision was and a num er 0 nep ehwsld bert Butler Warwick Bennett a tu~ w;,s sen rom d' · d I The ~lethodist Station Sheet ' ' .. " nelces Her funeral was e on 'N to tow her It was 1scovere 1 • f R w 1 .\:': 1i 1- ;u:sociate with other bo~·s oC 1 made for desks on which one Wedn~sday afternoon from her ancd ~~~[: R or:UO:n~am and 1!. later that the ~!ary had her tail , showT·edDtheD na~e DoD ~~~ B!ti \

m)· own· age or six, was a par· I couyld lean occasionally; !hat late residence to the Church · • · t d th Cor· shaft broken and had lost her Iter . · un • i C . ,

'l~[[\!f." ("!1'"/!Cf/. ~.l.~1.1?.1l"S f' \ \'

\\'e!r.(~-~:1'· 11nd

~<lr on Easter Mondav-a tra· prl\•ilege was accorded to the of the .Holy :Redeemer where ~oarknleti?on'rsesptrafe!se,nt ethe fu~eral of propellor .. She reached c.ntasleinnat lls!Ar.ndneasn~.IP. oNrteu•gr~·. s?ls~tee.r of i.

ditional el'ent nnd a· thrilling ! higher grades only. It must 1 d b the .. " 1 Th c b t 11as g ·' • " '

h• of e1'oht or ten ki'd fri'enrls the teacher, generall" a man, rector, Rev. Canon T. · er. J ~~ Gre~ne at St. John's on! to tow her to St. Jo. n s. ·• ·, 5s ·Feiton at' Dorchester. '" ~ ' She was lAid to rest In the fam· · • · ' \ The C.C.C. Athlellc Associu· o ·

SMOKES FOR CANADIAN

MILITARY PERSONNEl serving wilh the

United Nations Emergency Force In the Middle E•st

Sl~ sends 400 EXPORT

CIGARETTES or any other Macdonald Brand

Postage included Molt order and remttlonce lOt

OVERSEAS DEPARTMENT

MACDONAlD TOBACCO INC. P.O. Box 490, Ploco d'Ann ...

Moo~eal, Qu., Tht. ohr to aub(er! to any chan1t

In Government llegutatloMo '.!:,:>":~ :.t !1 :a. IT''\

:.! :" l•l ;un.

one to m~. The parade consist·, ha1·e been fearsome, too, for the serv ee was rea E tad ::'tfrs Ill J Greene mother of under sal s. c a h • I :llr F F Jardine was married

in the nci-;:hbourhood. rlrmcd was obliilcd to handle from lly otot besides remains of her I:'.!~~~ ~~~r of the Sea paraded I tion elected their oC!iccrs on\ :l!ass(S;~T~:m~~g of the J;y our mothers in the oldest ; forty to fifty youngster~ of all husband, Levi Chi oman, and . t St .,1.chael's Church on St. April 21, with ,J. fiT. Greene·~~11 -~·=:· jP~a~~~e~)~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~iiiiiijijiji; ••nd the oddest clothes that 'grades. According to theory h Alb 1 both of whom · 1p · ·" d p T ~lurphl' sec could be found. including hiRh I ~nd tradtllon be was supposed P:~:~~n se!!r~l years al(o. To Patrick's Day. The panegyric presi ent; · · · ·.:._ __ · hoots that had Ions been dis·

1 to be a strict discipli_narian as 1\lrs. Violet Chipman and her·

carded perhaps b~· other boys .. to behaviour and achicvement: three chll<tren who are moum­. Those werl' wrinkled, hard, otherwise no child COUld be ex lng the Joss of a dear one, we hrown and lull o( hole$, through peeled to learn anything. Those oC!er our sincere sympathy,

·· ~:~ :1ni1'" ~~ <:~ cl n p.m : b~t~;(• ~··:·: '"nr.rm

hr."•".: :.c.d Srr·

11 hich. in many cases, our heels desks that I referred to were "lllay the souls of the faith· and tot's were exposed to the also homemade (by a local car· ful. through the mercy or God, clement~. el'cn in that early penter) with a slanting top and rest In peace." sprinl! mornin~. \\'e pro1·ided oqua1llng in length to the -------ourseh·cs with worn out tin benches. lt was, therefore, pos· pans, kettles. etc .. tied around sible to seat several kids on rur ncrks or bodics. Represent· each but there was no fooling ir.c drums. we banged them or cribbing, otherwise one

' ! ::

•t 11ith nnv sort or n stick we would !eel the weight of the. roulrl fii111 as we walked along teacher's small willow stick on

c!:· !I : .- · · ., ... .,~ the lanes and· byways, singing the arms or legs. Strange as It ·.~w .. , .. ,.: •.! s,.,. quite )ustily the songs we knew might seem, the teacher resJg.

1 not alwa1·s in the same key; nated a boy every so often to ) rt!n·r ,, I but at any rate we made a lot bring In new switches when .,f, S n f':n'·"'~. ol noi~e nnd en.ioved ourselves. others had been used up. The

)!)' mother had prepared a teacher never hesitated at the · 10 · ~ )lorn· luncheon of brrad, jam, cake. least provocation to use them

. ~nd a drink using hot water, on boys and girls alike whether c\iiCI'· lemon S\TUp, damson jam, Or '

·black cu'mnt jnm. Arter stuff· Jn the lower ,.or the higher

e Suggest You Try

OUR OWN .

ATE and NUl BREAD

The black hat Is the favorite for wear with prints usually med lum or wlde·brlmmed And fot a real lift and party feeling tum to a flower hat.

forms. During the cold winter days

the school waa heated through the medium of a big rectaniU· Jar stove set In the centre. Each child, big and little, was ex· peeled to bring a stick of wood when the teacher announced that the stockpile was running low. It was not unusual 'to see· the kids with a log two or more feet In length under his or her arm, together with a slate and other school material. Children who lived quite some distance

I from the school brought their

I lunches in paper bags, and for drink, a bottle of tea.

I One could see all sorts of . bottles stacked around the. big, black, and sometimes rusty, stove. Caps, mufflers and over­coats were hung In the outer hall, hut there were no rub­bers or overshoes as these were

I not heard of In my day, Every· one then wore high leather

' hoots reachlne just below the kneecap and required a "boot jack" to remove, Once in a while one could 1ee a kid wear­ing a pair of 1ealskin boots and I very well remember my first pair; a local cobbler took the measurements of my feet and made the boola entirely by

1 hand. Tqese aealakln boot1 1 were very soft and comfortable · around the lets, but the soles, · like the calf and split leather •1· sort, were of heavy leather,. and the toes· were fitted with eop.

I per to prevent scuffing. This was just · another way of stretching the pennies where pennies were difficult to ac· quire.

(To Be Continued)

Watch for Tuesday's Dally News· and $500.00 in cash : prbes; &ter th( ·new and exciting Jig·Sal\ Contest.

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

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THE DAILy NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, APRIL 3, \91 ------------~------ ·----- ----------------. ----- . - ·----=! 6

.:; -.. Personal Chit-Chat -----------:..._..~------------------:- Dcem·ate

¥ FOR THE LADIES * ,< ,. ~

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College, and begins at 10.30 a.m. Those who wish to go and take their children will find an or, ganizcd group o£ Spencer girls ready to take care or the small Severe Sack ones while the mother have their coffee. · .

I •!. zRETURNED HOME ls Gen~led by

Miss Florence Sopcc o! Terra I SJ } L'

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:· Nova Motors, and Miss ~lary I •ape y Ines l\r.1·anagh or the Law o!rtcc o( Emerson, Stirling and Good· · ridge. arrived back in the city R\' GAILE DUGAS last week alter sp~~dinj: _their 1 New York _ •NEAl _ There

, ~~~m~~l 1·acatlon I'ISitlng fnends will be slim drc~scs in the J~:i8 Ill r·londa. _I Er.stcr parade hill they will be

: shapely slim dresses. C.G.I.T.

bst wrek the C.G.l.T. or · The chemise will appear on Cochrane su·crt United Church . some extremists in the trnc sack held a sUPiler meeting ~~ the , I'CI'~ion. Otherwise. t h c r e';

:dose or thrir mission study. 1 much confusion about what a ~~ · The supper wa~ served hy the . chemise is. Actually, the che· ;. Al.'C ~IAUREES POWER rhin~st' bovs or the congre~a- . mise is a shapeless sack or a • • H:lPPY birthd~y and best tion and 0'nc or the Chinese · dress which hongs loosely from ::wishes arc being extended by ~it·ls r·trnderl the supper in . the shoulders. It docs not con-. her friends to Air Woman first Chincsr costume. Corm to the natural contrours of :·class :.Iaureen Power on the • __ ! the body. :-occasion or her 21st birthday on "·\CilOS c\LO 1 · -·:Easter Sundnv April 6th · • · A shm dress which follows the : · A raduatc' ~f st. Pa.trlck's fJ-'f.l.OW~liiP CLUB 1 contours or the body and Is _fitt· . · C .s 11 j . d th RCAf' Thr rr.ulnr suopcr mcctlnJ: 1 ed through means of dartmg, · lnon~~~i s Aeftt'~m:nmpl~tin~ an of thr M"cnn~1old Fellowship_, seamim: or shaping is simply a

. : . I. h rtuh n( thr Y\\'CA heM at the I l'ariation or the sheath .no mat-extenstle course a. SU!lP ~ tee · • "\"' rluh Rooms on Thursday: ter 111hat it's called.

. nlclan In Trenton. Ontarto. shr ~i'th ~l"rch. 11·as prrslded over ! : went to Co~d Lake .. Albma. 1 hv the president. The Attend·: There arc lots of shaped drcs­·; where she 1s now stt·tJOncd. . ~nee was Jarl!e and lncludrrl thr . ses with t:entlc lines ond a shm ·= !\tauree.n is the daushter of 1 followin!! ~uest~: ~Irs. II. w. ! lo~k. for the most part. the . :\~~s .. )lane Power and th~ late Quinton and )Irs. Ed::ar Pitt· ! wnlcly p~catcd .~k1rl _a11Pc~rs. ·: \\ tlham Power of St. Johns. nDn ,-it·c nrr<ident anrl mcm· 1 howe1-cr. JUst as It docs m sp~lll~

'I .. r I ..... ,,; . A R cl r rr : suits.• And so rlors the Wl!il'. • KIH'I'IID\\' GRI>E1'1!'\IiS I trl 0 t lr ' ~" onr 0 I·' tl · I <ki·t mosth· in silk · . ' . ' 1 ret or~. rrsnrctll'ch·: \le<rlamP< ~a. ICt e< · I · •

D1r~hday ~rcetm~s ~rc cxl!·~u~- r.nnton Flntlrr. Ruth r.illard. pnnt,; lor dressy wear.

~'\h) 1 ht~/~:.~d~ ~':u:~~~~~:-~ 1;.::,; , ('l'l'il t.c~lr;suricr and Harold · These. slim orrssl'>. man;-_ ot r cr __ .r. c.. . ':.. . . ;-..r,.·cll. , them wllh bloused to1» or hlllr

Hll11t·rl!!•·-. ;n(l a;-l,~; 11~1: Ill:;: I" 1':} , ll \.:~l)t!;t_:

IHI!Hilar ~·:'1·:;,p(o:> Ct•:: · Sf'1 I'- '111:1 f..J~.· Ut(i<r•r.O

p;.t' ··r:l :· ;] r .~;\·~ ''li"-<:.

cclebJ~tc, Ins btrthd,-_. toct~;: Since if 11·a~ the annual tal· half-belt~ at the wai~tlinc .. l'ill Apnl 3rd. Grcclln~> also to h~> rnl ni~ht 1 he hnsincss ~csslon look their bi>st on Easter Sunday

. mother. ~lt·s. )Jar~a Lc~r~;'·: ,, ~s bri"l in ordrr to. ocrmlt under little. ii~ht furs. Some of :: 11_ho celebrates hcl. 80th 111

11 ~- thr l'ariou< item; whtch had

1 these arc shaped stoles. som~·

:· d~) Easter )lunda;· 11.11 P. 'hcrn co'11rihnterl h•· member~ arc tinl' shouldcrcl'.cs t1crl wtth

There will b~ lots ol shaprly tlrrssc;; ~rrn rin F.astrr Sund~y this nar. · From Han·c~- Rrr'n's sjlrinj: r·ollection romes th1~ J:ra),' honrtc onr·rlccc drrs~ (left) with a two-piece look . Stendrr iuscr'> ol white linen at neck and strc1·c look lresh ro:11l prrtty. The blouson ap(lC~rs (crntrrl In this version hy .

A driP Simpson. Fahrit• i' hlal'k·antl 11 hi_le l'hrek. wnr't.rt_l. stan<lawal' t·otlar is tir<l \\ ith black ~ro<~ram ho;~. l·•:nm ( r_lt Chapman· co mrs this shaprly floral notion prmt _< n~htl ,IJ

I le I P·1nk n 1·rrn bmwn and hri~c. llrt'" has sulc-tlrat•r~l s 1at s o • ~ · rr · · 1 · skirt ;1nd scoope1l nrcklinc desi~nrd to show ~. )C\Il' r) · ·.birthday. ucir1 pl~red on rlispla1· antl bif; chiifon bows. some arc little

·sold for the benefit of club jackets with the o1·al look. ;: BRID.U SHOWER • ht'1d<. ~I iss ~l~rioric Pall 1·cry - -----· -·

· - . On col t hr new »hoc .:otor< "

:: )Jiss Anna Wabh of the elfirientl)· nerlormcd lie rluti~~ 1

:-Gould~ Road was gn·cn her or auctioneer and the r~snlts,· · third bridal sho11!·er l~st nisht of hte sale were 1·cry ~ati~Cac. .. at the home of u r~enu. A 1·ery toro·.

AMERICAN MENU Puzzle · Bone. It is a lo,·eiy off-white ~enol T\\ E\T\-1!\[ that matches or mates ,,.1th dw 1 more '"' .1 ron:. c: off-white>. play> up creamy ltct~e Brooks \r,:dlwa!: Doubly Smart

PRINTED PATTERN · happ)l t1me was cnJoy~d by all The n~xt meetin~ · ~~ the who attended. ~lt>s \\a Ish 11'1ll ! club will be held on April lOth.

.. married to ~Jr. Robert Carll Barnes In the near future.

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It can he worn all the yea~ ruur.rl T110 comp'·.·tr >a·:c:r; <1 with black. \\lth all the lugh col- tetl r':!Jt ,~ !he b({\ _ or;, as well a> pastel>. It takes ,·an•''' "' <!,,,,,~, ,,_,

· its name from its bleached-bone ,,·ant ·to orne;·· ... ' . appearance and is really stunn- tin~. rmh:'ot~rr;-. h;u

WEDDISG A~I\'ERSARY i .Thinking It Over

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I ~g. ~t'ilts. lO"Y' r_.c_H; __

Their many friends o!fer con· 1 ·gratulations to ~lr. and ~Irs. J,l . S. o~eworthy of 89 Gower St., .

who will celchr<·te their 41~1. 1 '·11·cddin1: anni1·cr;ary this ll'cek. ,

'J'hcl' were married at Cochrane i Street Chul·ch hy thr Rrl'.:

·.Gcor;c Bond on April 4th. 1017. \l'e all ha1·c tasks to perform ..

· f.,\STER ll.\7\CF. ~Ian~· of the thin~s we endeal'or · · The co-ed l'lub ••f thr \'\l'l'.\ to do require us to enlist the help will hold theit' E~•ter Dancr lor of others. We must dcle~ate a

'mrmhrrs and friends on \\'ed- portion of our responsibilities to , ncsda;·. ,\pril 9th at the Y assciates. \\'e must moti1·atc ·club rooms. Hal'l·ey Road. . people to want to do their lobs

without our hol'ing !o usc author· LE.\\'ISG FOR 1-'LORIIlA'

~Jr. and ~Irs. A. ~1. DuTfy. Cornwall Heights. were· due to ler.l'e here yesterday by air Cor Florida but owing to illne;s wert' delayed and now plan to !eal'e here on Saturday !or their annual ncatlon.

, • I tty as a pressure.

~lan;o tasks arc passed on to others because we do not want to do the jobs ourselves. Too many of us practice the questionable process of ''buck passing," AI· though we assign duties, we must no~ shirk our own responsiblties.

E1·en In the spiritual actil'ities IN HOSPITAL ?.r lile. Jayme~. are incline~ t~

);ews ha~ reached here !rom pass the buck to the cle ~gl· CANDIED lemon slices give R hint of lh• llal'nr In ~tore for the lucky partaker5 of lhls tern pttng E~ster Ra1·artan pie.

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Hallft·X that )Jr. Clyde H~llett. men. Some expect the ordamcrl formerly o( Burin, .was injured mtntstcrs. of the nat!on to do .all I 'd 1 ~I dal· when thr praymg, prcachtnJ::, teachmg , 1,. FIAT nan acc1 en on. on . and witnessing for God. We must RY GAYSOR ~tADDOX ' 1 rnot hoilin~• until 1·~rv thirk. COMF. l':\DER •

his car ~1·ent of£ the road. and 1 learn that th~ task or spreading i The delightrul tang and Ira-: ahont to minutes.· Arlrl. a little he s~sta1ned a b~okcn leg, brok· . th~ message of rcll~:lon i~ a task 1 grancc or lrr~hly squeezed lc- of the hot mixturr to ~ h~<tlrn "tmnr unrl~r my hat~.. ~in~' en rths and a dtslocatcd shoul· lor rl'eJ'\·one. 1\'f must all accept mon juice a<lds zest to this ,,,e.:<'~!: ~·olks and then sti1· into thr Sanm11' to son1cthin~ whir·l1 he· der. He Is n~w rccrll'ln~ treat· our ~piritual responsibilites. Un •

1

coal !~aster p1e. ll'_s a_ beautiful remninin~ fillin!!. Cook m·er hot would ·like to <·;~tch unrfcr hi< men! !n hosptt;ll lll Hahfax. )Jr.' Jess we all work tog!'ther. thP rirsscrt mth a srrmgtlme dell· ll'atrr 2 minutes longer to cook hat. If yon wo<~ld li~~ to ;r~ · Hollett ls t hr son or Mr. Harolrl oprortunil\' of Lent will be tost. cacy. , ; e;:g yolks. Adrl 1 teaspoon ;:ra-. what Sammy would like to cat he . Hollett of Burin and nephew of ' 1 Fresh J.emon Ba1·arlan Pie I ted lemon rind and 3 tablespoons join ail the numbered riots to-, 1\lr. ~lalcolm Hollett, of St. : . -- . r the tl'leld: 6 serl'ings• butter or marganne. Coo I. ~r>ther. start~ng \lith riot numher John's. H h ld H' · So ftcsh. so Cl~ttermg r~~ zc Soften I enl'clopc unfla,·~rcd Pour into a 9-inch unbaked pas- one and cnrhng \lllh dol lnunher -- ' ouse 0 lnts square·c~t neckline ~0 ~he, re~ 'sclatm in 14 cup cold water and tn· !<hell. Col'~r with mermgue (\1 enty-two II I< a HI')' small GUIDE BROADCAST j blown sktr~- Pnntc d atb~rn t~· set aside. Beat 4 csg )olks un- and bake ir1 a preheated slow word. Complete this picture "ith

The Girl Guide weeki)' hroad· 11 you hal'e budding sculptors clud~s a fJa~ket t~ ~~n c we a~ I til they Hre thick and lemon ol'en t32:i degrees F .I t:i-20 min- your crayons . cast will be heard this evening, on your hands, you can help sal'e num er 0. Paces j~~ 1 colored. Gradually beat in •, ute~ or untti brown. Serl'e cold., ------- . Ins at 8.30 over radio station 'house and purse with a plastic It ro: ts~nr;f.ttsum~ •• :. :\lisses' ~up sugar, •, cup freoh lemon ~l~rlngne: Cornhinc ~ egg whi- · Diet to haste and rPpent 10

CB~. and will he earred by the· modeling material that's wash-, .:rm ~ / ~rniR ~~~- Si;e j6 JUtce and 'z teaspoon salt. Cook k~ 111th 1s tea>poon sail 3nd leosurc .. \\'omen :•Ito rl1e1 '" a Lone Gutdes. ahle-as well as tolored. I Stzes 1••. 1 · kt,: 5~ - · •ants 3~. o1cr hot. wut~r or l't•ry low heat ht•al unto! suft pe.tks ur~ fomwtl hurry ftntl droppmg fHlltntb 'ud-

- , 1t•nsemh11 ta '' · " > . 1nnttl moxturc t·oab a ntclal • <;ndu:olll' '"'"' in 0111·-tlnnl c11p <it-oil' l<'lii'C' tlwtr 'ktn· lwn~111~ ·

('OFH' PARTY I l>ouhh• chin· 1J,1. run~e to inch; 1' 1l'U1_nl t•mllras!. . ·I 1,. t spoon, ;ohuout 10 minnt~s. stirr- I , 11.:ar ;11;ol t'tll\ttOII<' ht•ating until in f~l.ls and cn•:olt•' a gaunt luol.

'fit~ 'sP"I\Ct•r ('IIIli hdi~s ;ore' t'l'""l~ sll''llli\1: Ge~tiY JHII '•II l'nnkt tut·~·ettons un e~•t' ·' .,lltt: t·ons!llntly. llentUI~ hum stiff Stlle;o.l mt·r P"'· fl:tkt· H> Fur '"''' ;owl long,.,, la,fing rt'· ' , , , , -~ . " . . lt•rn part . 'lsn•r ill'l'lll ~ ~. I t I . . I . ' . . I . lwhllng ~ cufft·~ p;,rt)' tlus .nntl~r dun tu minimize 1111ltatt~r- S 1 l't.F'I'\: ·('(·'STS lin coinsl .":U. ;om stir 111_ ~~~~~~~~~~ gl'lutm 1 tlill·<·trtl :ouo1~. '""' lo"' "'''2111 slu\\ )'. · £ 1 ·I · I' tl ·.·I k· d .~lit " ' sl11r11t~ to tltssull'e "dultrt ... - -· -- ---

}.ast~r In t•larl' n t u• 3111111.1 . Ill!( till'. ''"' Y Jail uo s ruun · 1 'tUtltfh cunnnt ~~~ 'll'{'fl•tl:'lll lor 1

Ill 1 . 1 ·: 1 ('I o11 .t I '1'1 If · 1 ·1 . 1 ·k " · ' . · \'Ill ttl elliOII 1'111< 11 11011 • •

P~rf'' tak<·~ )llat·P on TuP~dnv ·loundntilun is oJllllit'd, Blend 1,1 · Sl'/." · .. A•tL' AUJHU:ss. uux 111 1~. 1 •rgulst_lutltllc en. -~"~l J::u~trr t·at'd p:1rl)', ~~ ''" ~~, Pt " 1~11 surrrt> ruug., or <Ill this patt1·rn l'h•ase pnnt plutn- · .1 . 1 ,. t · ·k I

' · ' · · 1 · I' · .r., .. ~ ·• , . ., · I em• 11· 11 t's un 1 1ey stonu 111 ·April 8th at Uishop spenc~r, curetuly ulong JUII' me. s:T"I r· NIJMilf.lt '1-1· k. l' .• 11 1. · '· • • I • :. I j • s ·"0 Jleti'S,· ri'Uuua y Ut'UI Ill'

Seud order to ANNF. ADA~!.; 1 ~ CUJI s11ga1', Foht i11to lemon i core or ST •. JOliN'S .UAIL,\ mixture. Quickly fold in one­NEWS, Pattern Del, 60 FRONT third cup hea1·y cream, whipped ST., WEST, TORONTO, ONT. Turn into a cold, baked 9-inch ·Doctor Jordan ·says

pic shell. Chill until firm and

81 F.PWIN P. JOIUMN, M. D. AlLY read~· to sene. .Just hefore D sen-in~. ~,:arnish lop as rlesircd with whipprrl cream and candi·

'IIHtntATISM' LMIU, (0\ERS \'AR!£H nf ~trs.

C'l'LAR 111.1.~

one ronHnon t.1·p• of mu~cular 1

I r>·l kmon slices. 1,ain an11 at:hinJ; i~ that whkh RECIPE Frr~h J.rmon Mrrfngue Pie dnelops whrn a prt·~on has been 1 1 1\'icld: 5 Arn·ln~tsl ·

CHOCOLATES

r1AIOTIIER EA~Y ~0# 711[

FIVE ROS

UlGltSH sp.LLY LUNN

f!LE

. hed Flour . Roses Ennc · ilk

7 cup' fl'l'e 1 cuP "' buH!I

l liP· 1alt 4 lb•P'· 114 ,epa tO

1 lblP• ,ugar 3 el!9'• . powder

4 ''P'· bak11'19 . ~it-1 . Rub IJu!ler ~~.

• dienh three ,,mel- I eg9 yrftl Sift dry ,ngre . of f,nger•· sec diefli-

blender or lopS . in drt i~Qrc . postl')' '\k and shr POll' ill

~ty add "'' hilt'· ·t lhorougu ' . d egCJ w !oO' · ·«ty wh•ppe I I cl

f ld in shn 30 "''"" t 0 !lin tins. So~e bulfered mu

,lct•pin>: nr ~ittins in 11 drafty 1

. i Comhlnr t cup suJ;ar. one- I ,1 ; Ia!'~. This can be most sPI'ete. llhird cup cornstarch and 'i tea·'

;)n· EDWIX P •• ICIRilAX. ~t. D. OccRsionally somconr wJkcs, spoon salt in top par.t or_ a double l'

This recipe is one or hundreJs

to be found in the rc"i~cd.

illustrated Five Rn~cs GuiJe

to Good Cooking .

• u,• with a muscular pain in the j rHOCOLt\Tf. .SPt\StSH I ho1lcr. Blend m 14 cuo of cold :- Mr~. T. has CIS~Prl me to "rtlc k 1 ld h' 1 k CREt\M '1r•tcr Stt'r ,·n I' CliP h t nee· or s \OU cr w tc 1 ma ·cs 1· 1 n • . • s o

;1 :abo~! the dlllcrcnt _kmds ol ~h~u· turnin:: the head impossible.\ I tbsp. plain gelatine , water. Cook Ol'cr low direct 1 · ' ~mattsm. a comphcatcd_ task tn· Usually. hoii'CI'cr, this kind or '4 cup cold nulk . heat 10 minutes or until thick,'

;deed. * , . . . , rheumatism lasts for only a lew I 2'• cups scalded mtlk stirring constantly. Add one-:: Rheumattsm ts an old-Cashton·: hours or days. · 1'2 squares unsweetened chaco: third cup fresh lemon juice, !~d name. but even no wthere ~re I Infections and toxic conditions. late cover and cook over hot water •:tome muscular aches and pams are common sources or trouble: 2 eggs, separated ;which cannot be blamed on an~· muscular aching frequently iol· onc·third cup whtle susar i~e!lnlte Corm of arthrltl~ or neu- lnw~ a ~c1•cre sorP. throat. lnflu- '·~ tsp. sal.t F h' T'

. ' .~ltis. a~? for wht.ch muscnld~ rr.zc. rheumatic kver and simi· 1 lsp. I'An!IIH . . ·old as IOn Ips ~heumau.,m ts still the hcs, lar :;encrnl diseases. . . . 1 ~oak th: ~clatlnr. m. th1 (1 ,r. fabel. ' IS TilE lon;:-lnstin~ l'm'Jeltcs · m1lk for " ml~ntcs .. ~cald 1 · ' !.iil·e both \'our reelin~;s and \'. ~!any oth~r. names. _howcr~r. · sel'crai dillr.rcnt types or. treat· \2''• enos of mtlk with thr !Ill· , your apprarance a lift with a hat :.such as m)o?ttts .. m~nfascth~. mEnt may havr. to be trted be- sweetened chocolate. Rcat'"!11~ · \\'hclher cloche or roller they ate 1 , myalgia. pannJculltls. hbrofascl· !orr relic! can h~ ohlaine~. · smooth. Srparatr. . th~ (~~s. I ali rlcsigned lo !latter and are •1s. ne.uromvosts. htmba~o. per , Hot haths or other Corms o( beat thr. yolks untll h::ht :no I colored to suit the spring and :arthrllts. pP.rineunts. and lrn<l heat. !{arclully chosrn exercises, lemon colorrrt: add _the . sll.ar I summer outfits. ,mils ar; ~!so used m much. lhc , Rnd sometimes massa~e may be ~ncl salt nnrl hr11t a~nm. ,:dd a\ • __ .:;ame liS). • ol benefit. ltttic of lhr hnt m1ik mtxturc, l\lany of the new cloehrs arc _: I_n many .ca~r.s t~r. muscular' Jmmobili1.alion with splint or mi~ wr~l ancl poll!: hack m to the i slop-sidrrl to cary out the lines :.P_ams st~rt ~udde.nl; and ~ome· cast is occasionally hc.lplul. ~ilk mtxt~trc. Sltr and cook lin· ol the chemise. with shich they ?tmes 111thout an~ apparPnt rca· The usc or paln·kllhnJ: ctrus:s ttl the mtxt~re coats the spoon I team so beautifully. .

.. : -f;On In such cas~~. tl they do mav have to he considered. I <about !i minutrsl. Add the sol __ ~ot rlisapncar withoul tr!'atmcnt. These must he tnkrn with care. , tcnrd r;clatine ann stir till dis-· The nretnn can rithrr snar ;a sr.arch h~s to bP carrr.<! 1'11 ' :and milder ones, such as aspirin · soh·cd .. Rrmol'c f~om b_c he~t: hi::h. nr it scarcely roll crt at all. 1?r some d1sta~t sourer or mlec- : arr. safer than stron~ ones. adri vamlla .anrl chtil untrl tt. nc- 1 The Rrrton drprnds more on its ~Jon. such as mlrcte:l tonsils or 1 Liniments or counlerirritants, ::ms to sri. Fold tn lhl' st•_flly lines than its trim for smartness. .,abr.cesoed teeth. such as th<• olrl-fashloncd · mus· heat en r::~: whites and pour mto ----- --· ----~ HOWEVER. lhct·c is no sin~lc lard pla~lrr. will sometimes help a serving dish .• Let chill until Watch for Tuesday's l'J'ause which clln be picked out but should not be used too long set. ser1•e with cream, This is a Da'ly N 5 a d $500 00 ir ~nd It Is often hard to point to as they may give relief while delicious dessert, light, spongy 1 e~ n ' h ·any delinltc source ol trouble coiJccaling a serious condition. and flavorsome. , cash pnzes. Enter t ' Fortunately, the majority o1 1 Most or us ha1·c had one or 1 new and exciting .Jig.Sa\\

)hPm appear lor a ~hort ftnlc 1. more atta~ks ol "rhcum)ltism" Turh~ns lnr thosr. whn likr C I

~nd then ~o awRy without lcav- nnd ha1·e reconrcrl; tints the thrm. Arc sort as a cap or shap- !1 ontc~t. I!!~ any ha~mlul cf!ccts. long term outlook js usually good cd hi&h. · apr3,5

j

AT EASTER TOO I

"@milu -tW 'lo& ;f};;;~!~ So ~~y "hnPP.l' F.a~~~~" ,.·ich chcse superb qualicy chocoL.tt• ... C~oose from Can•da's lat~t"' seltcuun •: • gaily packaged for Easter.

Gitce and Enjoy Smiles'tt Ch11cldts

EASTER NOVELTIES ... llunnie•. roosters. tJ:J:'· hcno, chicks in pure milk cbocolace-acuacli•·cty boxed.

Send for your copy right now. Just mail your nome and address ond SOe to:-F. M. O'l~orv ltd, St. John's, Nnd.

FIVE ROS CANADA'S MOST RESPECTED NAME I~

('10 Jl'

f • "';:su~:~E;~yo~;M116

the Bible or God­

n the Cross. o scripture. 1 t words. were

~ld Testam~nt. h d Jjeen H1s c a ail the II'~

The Bt were fused.

The sacrr are inse~

or Jesus c through the pl until ror the h page or that

in red. was not or

there " Word. th

without who would be me or the wiles

people inte apart from t

can gi,·e mea Seren Words is a commo

the words of and writers.

with little or authors. So

ha1·e be the wor

• • F.-I a

of 24. I : f;,irly popul

1emai offers ol them ha1

. . '

SE

1 hundreds

,eel,

,cs Guide

ng.

NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLO., THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 1958

neSeven Words From The Cross Dll t"IIEil SASS 1 utterly empty this makes the and give the new birth and be

r ~£'·· · . Gospel? How trnglc would have continuously operative In the life 1 <a)·in~> of .Jr,us ~n been the words to the sick of the ol the Church and of the believer, •r ~~~~~ · (~nlr to be knoll n palsv "Tnke up thy bed and the Spirit who was to guide, com ··~,~~~~lOrd' of the Cross. walk'' - how tragic If behind fort and produce fruit. Here is

:<' 1n confu;rs people these words there had not been th~ great climax ol the Cross. ,1310 th<~t ench word I the living Word H I m s e I f. the Indwelling ·Word, the Holy 'manv words. Bt.tt "\oung man. I say unto you, Splrlt. If any man have not the ·~rr·d.1n~rr nml tlus, aris~!" How pitiful these words Spirit of Christ. be is none of

1~1ntr~tion . on the i to the Widow of Nairn's son - If His. Again and again this .truth rJ.• ntaY dun our I behind them there had not been is trumpetted In the New Testa·

~~dull our apprrhen~ton 1 the Incarnate \\ord. T h e y ment-. ,ed thrrr "ords t~at 1 would have been a perfect pres· "Any my speech and my preach·

ottrrand 11ithout whtch I crlption that could nel'er be lll· lng was not with enticing ·words .~rd' can hal'e no led, a glorious piece of music of man's wisdom, but In demon· _ and ~hese three 1 that could oe1·er find a player, a stratlon of the Spirit and or

lrJ~I\i~lr \lord-name· 1 man·ellous blue print of a cathe· power." 1 Cor. 2:4 . ,_-rip:urt'-tht lncaCrhn~tc • dral that could ne1·er be buill. Likewise the Spirit also helpeth • Lorrl .lesus nst i But behind all the words to the our Infirmities: for we know not /\dwrlhn~ Word-the: sick and the sorrowing and the what we should pray for as we :1~1 . . I sinful. behind them all was the ought: but the Spirit 1tself

· ~' trt B1hlr 1s the lnf~l- Sal' lour Himself. You may lis· maketh intercess ion for us with . of God ln that dtrc , ten a thousand times to the groanlnss which cannot be ut·

tti Cro;;. ,l,•;us turned , Sel'en Words from the Cross, tered. Romans 8:26. This i .;r:pturr. Tw~ .. at least : they will be nothing more than sav then, Walk In the Spirit. and il•tt!;, -..we taken from 1 sounds to you unless you know, yc' shall not fulfil the lust of the te;:301r:l! Thr Book : belie1·e and are receil·ed by Him flesh, But if ye be led of the (ltln Jli• cnn>~~nt ~o~\·

1 who is the Word. Spirit, yc are not under tre law.

thr ""'' wa; wllh Apart from Thee all gain is loss, If we live In tht spirit, let us al· The !l1ltlr and the All labour vainly done. so walk In the Spirit. Galatians

'1rt fu;•'ti '"~ether at 'Without me ye can do nothing. 5:16, 18, 25. But the fruit or the

' T!:e ;ami1n' and the ! Without tr.~ Incarnate Word the Spirit is love, joy, peace, long­, are in>•·rarahl~. T1te i se1·~n words are shadows with· sulfering. gentleness. goodness,

11 Jt$u; t'hn;t fl~wc.d ! 01•1 a substance. a ca.sket with· faith. Meekness, temperance: :!:N~h thl' va~e; of (,od s . out treasure. a body \l'llhout life. against such there Is no law. ;::I ior 1nr l••·l;t•rrr today ' Then t.he~e was at Ute Cross And they that are Christ's han ;~+' ,,f th:t: "'"'k ~~·ems : t.h~ _lndwclhng Word. the Holy crucified the flesh with the ar­'l rid Sllll'tt, In Romans 8:9 and I fectlons and lusts. Galatians ·~~., n••l ,,nJ~ tlor Inial-: Pet1•r \:It, we read of the Spirit 5:22·24 .

. thm ""' abo the of Chri~t. and In Philippians I: 19 So often we associate thP 1\orJ. 1hr Lord fhm· we rrad of the Spirit of J~sus Spirit with Pentecost. But had

,;,~.out '""'m rhe sr1rn Christ. Wht•n we rratl of the there been no passion. there had 1 o.~id bt> nw:ut:u~Jto;s. ~~ Spirit associated with Je~u~ In been no Pentecost. To the ~I· d 1t.r '":,•, ,,, tlu·. del t1 the Gospels the rrfer~nre is to . ders at • Ephesus. Pauul saul. . ~p:~ inttt ,.,,,.rl m thP ~~·nt spcnketh the words of God: jl "Hare ye received the Holy 1;311 {tQt:: 1no· Word who thr Hoi)' Spirit. In John 3:~~ we Spirit. sine!' ye beliel•ed? How r~· P'" n:r:1:un~ and ·•ft• rca•:: "For hr whom God hath 1 b!ten we say of a Church. ~"~ \\,d·. In ~,·,·ular sent spraketh the words of God: \ "Th~re seems to be no spirit in :. a r.•n:n: .. :~ 1h1n~ We for God gil'eth not the Spirit by . it. It has all the paraphernali~

••• rrl• 111 pl;~lo,ophers. mea sun• unto him." .Now on the I or the traditional Church-but II d :.n:•:, hut "C read Lord focus~~d on tlus same ly lacks the all-important thlng-d !:::~< ··~ r.o awnn·n~>s Cro~> in his clo>lng words. our tlte Spirit. But in the Christian 1.:tm ~ ... !nil. innmmr Spirit wh~n e !'nirl. "Father in-jlife there is· only one Spirit, U1e

r.~'c rco·n ,mat rtl in to Thy hands I comm~nd my Holy Spirt. When He s In pos· 1~e ··• ,orr!' t>f .lt•,;u; >pirit... This was the Spirit who session how different, everything

rr ~"in~ the wM to return at Pentecost. the is-the praise, the prayer. the Spirit who was to take of the medltallon. the reading of the rle~th amL rr>urrection of Jesus Word. the lives of the people.

Sketches bJ

BEN BURROUGBJ

~~--------------· I "LEARNING TO LOVE" II:IIOR'S ~on:: The Family Council consist• of 1

a psytbiatri>t. three clergymen, 1 newspaper editor 1 1 Love Is a thing which cannot tditor and cwo wrlaers. t.:acb article Ia 1 summary ol ·be • . . derived by just book mr bistory. The CouociJ repons 00 problema &hal ~ learning • • • It only comes to

1«1 dtall with b)· re~ponslbl~ .a&eocle~ and counselors. , ~ho~e who know ...• the mean· , , . .· ; ~tr. L. F. speaks much of how ~ng of deep yearnmg . . . love

' -1 .. moil JUIC lllllt: things "look." Freda "looks" 16. ·IS,. product of the heart ••. • II' ' 0 . . . the man "looks" as though be Ill formed by smiles and teara L F.-Thr' louk nd!CU· i doesn t w&nt a family, they ; • • • aome flnd It very quickly

' "look" ridiculous together. But , • • . while others search for, what about the way things 1 years • . • faith, hope and

, , a younJ: rcall)' are? ~1r. L. F. has not I charity are things • • • which •· ~· .~ I .h"•r always given himself a chance to ask help make up Its bond • "·:·.) popu.ar and hn1·e ' any of the real quc6tions. \and those who truly love will_ ~:.'"! offt·r•. of mm1age. t Does this man, after all. want i find . . . the key to far beyond :·_t .. tm ~"~ ~~~~~ from a new family? What about the .•• aelf-sacrlflce can ~lso pave

•. :'/r:f.. httl I nel·er care of his two adole~eent • , • the ~ay to lo~u caress ...•• : r.r •"II lo ~n) of fhilrlr~n: \\'ill Freda be expect· .•• for we must giVe before

· • c~t~ I mr1 .:. ~, tdowf"r ~a, t·•o rh1ltlr1'n of

ll I 'l'rt ~1m 1n ron· ttl~ hll<tnr<, anrl hr :•.:n~ of a•b>;: me o111

I "li .• I rrrtP\1 ,,, h3l'C

•:th h1m I\ • rl1 <covered !•;l11 r.f '~' rl''f·r~nre tn ~" .,. b·.~ • llorlrl of

·~- tt.1'l~li'l

•t:• ''"'·"rr' rq~. hut i~ 1!ycu: lh• d1ffrr~ncP in I !rPI nn;r :h~t 1 can ar.ro".~ ~l.<r. hut m1·

II! mabnt thr mo.;t . urro;r ~nd hnve

l!l:e ihrtot' ~~<~lll>t this

. . . \F -II !w n~ht ha~ a ··It agp 1111h ltlu 1w .. r·

th:ldn· .. t .. lll:okP arl· :o l Nl "l:o~ lnuk< ~ 16 lh;~o l~e1 rt·al "g~~

~' 'ld! i.1 \CittH&· kr.o., lloll:in~· bl>out ' '""II ":,ut a

~ T~.~ II. alii 11111ks ~S ·~ JN ~.•lot• '" Itt free

, hiU:>fH lilt·\· luok tomlwr at:d I h:t,·e bc~n in

lr~ t.m colbl>•e o1·er

cd 1o he a mother to them? I! we take • • • of blissful hap­so. do~~ she realize the burden P!ncss •.. lo1·e ne1•er Is one­and rl',pon~ihility she is taking I s1ded ••. It falls, then soars on? Does Freda fullv realize I abov~ · . : but great Is the thal ~he ll'ould be ma'rrying a expertence. . . • of learning man who 1s ~pproaching midrlle how to lo~e. agl' anrl does she understand thP full implications of this 1

fart? St I G d The full an~wers to thm ; 0 en 00 S quPstions may held Freda to are · , thP prohlem in a different I Fence IS Caught li~ht. But the questions may \'ery well go unanswered If the LONDON (CPl - The sign In parents prefer to remain In a the window of the electrical ap· state of near collapse. pllance store read: "Get your re·

)Jr. and ~lrJ. L. F. should celver here." recognize that. despite her ap- Scotland Yard officers dropped pearanre. their daughter is not In, spotted some famUiar-looklna 16. Their tendency to treat her radio equipment and had a word as if she were a teenager could. with the proprietor. however. hP a factor in pushing He was given a 21-month sen· h~r toward an older man. who tence for receiving stolen goods.

Watch for Tuesday'~ mak:-s ht•r fe~l more 11rown up. whilt• at the same time servlne •·~ a substitute par~nt. Daily News and $500.00 ir ,The United State> bought the

1 cash prizes. Enter tlu

\ trgm l~l.at~ds from Denmark 1 new and exciting Jig·Sa" for 25 mtlhon dollars during I World War 1 as a safeguard I Contest. :rgatnst German. occupation. apr3,5

1 ha, horl lo many · · for marriage. i she chO<o!~ a m:;n

1 old enough to be . 1 ~·ould hf a1hamed , 11 my IOn·in·law. ,

rdu<td to let this : our. homt ~~am And

htm nnt;idP, What

~.. . ~ ... :..'

... r•B••nt-For Yo1 and f::

•·ould put up with

• ') • .. t

!\Jt~ . ! ltts. CIL. -- Th! hys- ! ll!ai ~parent! Is drh·ing I

t~ t tnto the arms of · ey oppose. What

has she wheo the f bellel·es she loves Is I

II rom her home? le~e hnteria also pre· ~ Freda and her I UOII\ • I

1111 &tetng some of l!l r,robl~rns lnvolv­

•. onshtp. ··-

-~ ••• Yoo may be CIIW 1;.

to help IO!Ye a property l llm1DICIID, Be lUte to ld proper

advice. Doo'l rely on your knowlec!Je u a mistake be coady. Don't try to

up eettlem111t ot illlanciiJ ltin:tatioo. Hute mesDI waatt. "

. The Day Under Your Sl~n '

~R;,f.j j&o,nlooltteh 21 to .&.,r;t lOJ UIAA IS•~I. 2J to Oei. 22) IMn t ~ lrd lllrl)' ~1 - who lau lloo't Itt clt,.r ~ltton .. ...,.. .. lefonu, · fttOI't. lttiVrt ttmf thll Jf.lfJ dt). Nlft dftulrtd to TCIU iB CflahdtaOI.

TAURUS (April %1 to t.l4y 20) SCORPIO fOot. 23 to Nov. 21) S.~t~tOilt 1011 !brow 1014 nttr on JOOf SUd .. :roar on owo fMt, dao'l Lim, bat doDI 1oM follb Ia Jowao!l. ... lodtptadtoL

ft.Cay2tfoJ•e211 SAGmARIUS fNov.'2!1oDtc.2!1 1~,,tth1t ~I"' Uoold lro lith Ytntlon plaat. C.O.Idar 111 IA'it• Bilow -u•l J llp0Ctt4. taU... to rill& IO!Dtolll.

~~~l~ (J•OI 22 h hit 221 CAPRICORN (Dtc. 22 to Jtn.lf) J! .~ ~-~~~~ M.S.. Olaallalt htU... 'l'ilh plaoqro !>I' lo• - - ............. ·-· dltol 10 lola,... ... 1_,.

AQUARIUS IJ••· 20 to Fob. II) II loolri.o, lor o ••• lolr -taolt1, dtlo II tbt "' whto , .. ••r lilt it. PISCES (Fob. 19 to Melllo 201 DoatHI;., b lf1DOD1 r1 ;,.t t-lrJ 10 It that ••r· Sbow orr"'"'"-

b&

Coats, Suits and Dresses all re·

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~he '111.oael Sltop '.fta. ~ .... e.,. ..... ,. ...,. """'

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THE DAilY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFlD.,. THURSDAY, APRIL 3 ---- .. I , ·19!(

• 1 . i

. ' . r :1 I ..•. i I ..

• • 1

. ·l; I toe:~

. '

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·:·

. ' ' I fOROl<T\1 CL\I~ISU •TUCK~ I .\\Ill• 1000 ) 1

.• l'• 5\> , l B1 tbr C1nadlu Puu r:urn .. t :otttl 37 11 :161 ;a JV~1·· '1 ilhte. xw-E."t·warranl~.) H"r' ue · JjOO 12 12 1:: -1

''• t-Odd It, xd-Ex·dhldrnd. u· t·:,. I Uuy l:xp JJOol 67 Mi 6i ~P' I Ru:.t' Mc.ab tnO:J :.!0 :o :lll

llte• Slln Rl&h 1.11• ('I elf Cll'&t D1u.ka aliJO 20 18 %0 + 1

T llf. • 8111llllll 4910 23 :Zl 23 -l

oronl<J :r: mes ~~~~~:,.. ;~ t~ ~~ ~~ -5

,d,O<Jit liDO Z!O 2!8 2110 I z n.!hhn 4103 tOl 100 10.\ 'koltello 23900 48 41 47 • J lloHon 3,;00 tJ tZ tor \lba Expl 12000 3 111 ~~~ B:rroll 37f.O 101 IOZ 102 -3 "'om 2001 114 1J1e tl'• R!tlolt "b :!:oo 3.1 32 3l •l \laom dtb uo 198\4 98 !'c•. t 1'·• n:dcon ':'~0.1 IK ti' IR .,-1 "f•m "II 2310 460 450 4lR Cu••••• :1;113 ·lO •• 4n -t fr.t 11 Vk .\00 6 6 6 -1 Uoy.nr.r ~0!11 10 9',;a fl 1 ~ ~Utn·Ruf 1000 2.& 2:\1 :J 1 1 Oralcrnc r,;on :,.v1 lZ.\ ~U · 23 tubtUe 2000 6 ti ~ r ' C1n TCwnl r.~d lr.'J.O ~9 53 :.J .\nac-on 2000 Mt 49 ·\9 -1 I.\F.U!l~JillS1 1.,.:?? ·~\;: 1':~: \nJIO Hur 300 tlO ~0 tn null ,\nk J:,:JO R2 Rl ~l

1 \rcadla 2400 17'"' 17 11 .; 1 nru:t:-"·kk ll"l•l 2~:. :HJ -12 \rea 1000 61 f\8 til\ -I I nuh 11'. ZlJO 1 7 \umocho 500 H 11 u I can>P C~lb >:~·• !>SO )JO ~Jo - JO 'umaquo tsono Hll-: 10 ID c=-nw m. ur.~ 3'.\ l'OO so7> -) '\UftOr 1200 23S 230 Z.1l . :\ Cdn A .• :orh• 10111 ~ -~ ti -I ----------··-------

Furness, Withy & Company Ltd Boston Uallfu1 St. John'• to to to

Lh·crpool Sl. John's to to Ills&

!\t. Job n's Bo;ton Halifax St. John's l.IYcrpool

"Ncwfoundlan<l" "Nova Scotia" "Ncwfoundlanrl" "Nova Scotia" "Ncwfonndl~mt'· 'Nova Scotia"

~lar 21 Apr II A~r 25 ~lay 1 i ~Ia)· 28

~Jar 15 ~h•r 21 ~lar 25 ~lar :!7 ~!at 29 A!)r. 4 Apr. 9 Apr. 11 Apr 19 Apr. 25 Apr. 29· ~lay I ~lay :J ~l;1y 9 )Jay 1:1 ~lay 15 ~lay :!1 ~lay :!7 ~lay :11 .!ne. 2 .Inc. 4 Jnc. 10 Jne. 14 Jne. 16

Pcrsom contcttt.llaling pas~a::r to Europe

should make booking~ well in ath·ancc.

AIR PASSAGJ::S ,\flRAN<;JW BY: B 0 i\.C. 1\ L ~1. PAN A~IERII:,\N AIR\\'AYS. SCA:-Ot:\.\Vt:\:'1:, T II'A and con· Decting Airlines.

l:onsult us rcc;arding your travel prolliems.

c Urn• 1930 1ft 87 17 f l t\ln 'fhor .l~ R 7 R C•n-Met moo 14u m m --4 C·Mrl wls 7SO 6U 58 IK -2 t:httiklrk 2000 c 7 7 - 1,3 Chlb Joe 3600 '" 3R 33 -I Chlmu !CO 41 46 48 -2 ('o<ll Will 21000 289 Z.W 231 tl codr·R«" 1000 u 1s 15 (.:011' Lake 100 1011 ltH'l lti~1. Cu~d•lrm .9000 32 31 31 18l Co11lala1 1000 !a 51 58 • I C Ueta G J(HJ() 10'1 Ul1.l lU 1.01 .. 1'1 C C•lllnon 500 12 12 12 - 1

' C Dni1on 7~bl SIJ1, 13 131

,

c Uen wl• t5981l ~)5 410 m .l 1 C l>l!lVVery l4tll) :1l ;!Gl :lti:'> -5 I C io"cn 9H 5l Sl ~:; 1 c UulllnC'Il I HUll :;9 :!8 ;:a -2

I Con Jlowr)' f.UJ 100 :oo ~Oil • t.i C Mnrbt'n 500 25 :!~' z:; · :l C ~la.n·us 2)~0 53 ;,;~ ~It · I l Con ~~ and S Jtll S17~• 17·, ti· 4

i C Mo~ul ~I:!U 1U t:ai 1JU --11

I C :\1orrhon 1500 :!0 19 :!II · 1 C :\lo.thrr JJOO ~ti l6 :-," 1

1 c :"\orthland J:llli.l :\4 :n :H · 1

I Cun Sud IIJOO 8..1 liU Kll I I • 1 c Tun~:~lcn !lJIJll 11 tn li'

I Co·;\l;ln 4(11.Ml 1.· ~ R ';' J -· •: 1

Cup Corp ~J)IJ :!4• 1 ~J 1.: :: i'. ~ . ::'"

1 ('uulce l8!lil ti.\ bJ ti:\ - '}

I ('u .. c:o 4.ll.IO lh1 ~·., !1 1 • .; r•:.!•J C.:oprttnd lHfi(, Hi t:.J 1:;~ --1:1

l ll'Ara,uft ~()00 IJ\;t\'•.t-, ~'a •lnll• 1900 4, 40 49 --3

: Oomr t tjOO a~S 1 .t tS•a 15'• ~ •,. I Oonalda :noo 121.'l 1~ 12' ... I l>U\ ltR •4700 1-1 til! 14 I 1-: Am(lhl ~ i'J i'• 7'" .

I. i':aot sun tllO 200 l~·· !Vol -tn I 8ast :\lrt .\1\fl R ~ A

· 1-~asl ~Un lllh) :Jjl ~ :N ~ :t.l• ~ .. Jl:: Elder 1~·~11 ti7 t.~. -··:! Ftalrt•n :HIJ SZJ~. 21 1 ~ ~Pz -l'•J E,;pl ,\11 :w:.oo ltl: :!0 11 Curri:A tili1JYI ,.~ .,. ·•1 ••nrtul:ly h3tU 1:!1 ~~~ 4 ~~~ --!' rli\ (.".1n , J··~J 112 11'· II'•- ·~

IF'ranr~cur 1~ :\t 1 :.• 01 !11 1 --1 14

rr(lbhlhrr 17i~ 1~2 l4i .~2 - -l GaHwin fl~l R 7 1 -- 1 Gu·o ;\Unr~ JJtl Sto·•· Jnl. JQ3, : •,.

; Gene'- .iOO 11'1 1 •'~ ll'1- ':: Want \'K ir.n M.5 r.oa ,;u.·, , S

' Cilncl('r l~llil t90 IPS l!ltl , (i(('l\ Uran 3000 13 12~12 ! Gold :\1an ~l1o :n 31 :u -+ 1

I Grotndroy y.q :!~ :!9 ·!~ Granduc Hln JO:l 103 tOl -2

Guunn<tr Gwttllm Tarrl Rurk Har-:'otin

,llll!ifiU J Jlrachvay llralh

• UR BOARD!' It HOUSE With MAJOI? HOOPLE ------------·~ -·-----------~- ····----..

·' t::.m :!n(ln lil'lfl r.nn

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10'10 :!.!n:,u ' . :'•·t•l

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Grr)hk R6!)tl 18 17 I~ c -- ·- -- ·--·- --______ ___;_,_ -------------------

Th! 58 r;~irla~"~t Club s .. lj11" -h,..w• lful Vl'f lnw f'lll' .. ,f n r rT1

her of For.;·~ tl..,f' !'.n Lc~·· ~rr,"·

58 FORD offers Built-in Value i. . '

1 :r . ' .:~ '

·'

•.

I'

at no extra cost to you!

HERE ARE THE FAC.TS:·

In the low price three

Ext,. Value I Ford's new swept-back. baD-joint front suspension is specially-designed to soak vp the bumps ..• give 1 eofter, easier ride on even the roughest roada.

Extra Value/ Ford's roof and body insulation is the best in any modern car. Heal, ~ound and weather are thoroughly damped out for a far more quiet, comfortable ride.

''. ( '• ifs Ford that offers you these

Extra Value/ Ford's gianL-grip, double-sealed brakes bring you added confidence. Double sealing helps keep water and dirt out of the brake system for longer life..

Extra Value/ New Magic Circle steering fakes the work out of wheel-turning. responds quickly and smoothly to a touch of your finger. Parking's no longer a problem. and driving's pure pleasure on any road.

... :·;r'

•' <

...

'' I

I ! .I

.. '·

9 extra value features as standard

equipment in every model!

l.ooltlNG for value in the new car you buy? Then look to

the 58 Ford! Deep down built-in .value that means smoother running, longer life and far greater economy too! Straight,

"down the-line" value that's part of every Ford you buy, &om the low priced Custom 300 (the lowest priced car of the low price three) to the brilliant, 4-pasaenger Thunderbird

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IOOD. See why we eay that for extra built-in value at no extra

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See your ~,

EDSEL~

EJtfr-. Value/ Deep, resilient foam-rubber padding lines the front seat of every Ford car. Greater comfort for paB!engera is tbe result ••• le88 driving fatigue on long trip1.

Extra Value/ Variable rate rear suspension cullt "aquat'' and "dip" on fast starte and Jrtops. Keep11 you on a11 even keel through the sharpest tutna.

Extra Va,luel New, deep-offset hypoid rear axle is an improved Ford design. Husky yet low­slung, it permits a lower car level without sacrificing interior leg room.

EJdra Value/ Ford's front hinged hood is designed for 1111iety and easy accessibility to engine. Reduces danger or hood's fiying up while you're driving ..• cute time and labor coste during repairs.

Extra Value/ With the new 'Inner Ford' ynu ride deep down inside the chassis for greater comfort and stability. The frame is welded, braced and bonded to Corm one incredibly tough unit.

dealer 58 FORD SIXor.V-8 the going is grear'

GEORGE G. R~ PARSONS LIMlT~U ' HARBOUR GRACE GRAND FALLS 'ST. JOHN'S

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Nfld -Canada Steamships U~. FRtiGHT SAILINGS

M.S. "BEDI'ORil II" HALIFAX - ST. JOHYS

Lea1 ing Halifax: April 2nd .............. Due St. April lllh .. .. ....... -Due St. I ., \9··· April 19th ......... , ..... Due St Joht~; ~pril April 28th ...... ., ...... nue St. J,> n ·. · May 6th .. _ ............ Due St. John>

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For rates. space and other inform•1100 Dial zi9. HARVEY & CO., L TO., Generol A~nts~, Joh.11,

R. N. COLE Special RepresentatiVe, • · Dio/ 2207 ~

THE ROBE'H REFORD °C~MPAM. LTD .• M MONTREAl and TORCJNT~5

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The Daily News Eat

WALSH'S ( HOME MADE BREAD I

tNSORANCE AGENCIES LIMilfD

Oiol E0027 51. John'· THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFlD., THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 1958

Bay lHarvey Howse's Gordon Duff Civil Service \Pee Wee tOwn Drop Hr. Grace 'Mother Passed , May Play In Hockey Playoffs lancasters One Up

1 • . Away Tuesday Semi-Finals . Open Tonight 1

• •

9 For First Of Three.l~c~r~no~:Cal~h~c~~~~~~~~~ H~~~ pr~sc~~r~;r~n~:!~~ i~1 at~c A~~d: Th_e scmi·~Of the Civil j In The Semi- Ftnals •· , All Nfld. senior B finals here at, .John's CIVIl Service Hockey Semcc Hockey League opens I

Ti· ,.r,. de· Graham Sparkes pushed the In the last frame both teams, St. John's and who returned. Lcar,uc .and a member of the 1 tonight a~ the Aren.a. B~ck·, By WILSON BUTLER· ! Next games in the Leagut " 11 ,,

1 iht• !'on· Tigers out in front 5-1 a minute came up with (our goals. \home by plane Tuesday after· I St. Joh'l s Referees Assoctall~n, \ m~sters w11l tan.gl_e w1th ~tsh· 1 Lancastcrs of the Airforcc: are .scheduled !or Saturday

·\,•rlh St·nior after the second frame started Neville Pike opened the scoring I noon when he recctvcd word I G~rdon Duf'r, may s~e action: encs _at J.30 "htle . Nat10nal; D~•·ision mo,•ed one up in thetr morntng when at 8.00 ~.m .. 1t ;o"·ct d••;••r to and two minutes later Weldon at the 1.40 mark but Graham

1 that his mother was seriously 1 w1th t_ne Guards_ s:mor hoc~ey. Healt.•l wtll face off w1th ~!ental \best of three semi finals with! will be ~avy pla~of!s w1th the

· ·h. Bll 11

m11s Parsons made It 6·1 after he Sparkes replied for a 11·6 score ·ll~ is receivl.ng the sympathy_ of[t~am t~ the .semt·fmals agam.stl Hospttal at 9.00.. . the Spitfires yesterday as thc)·l~tagnificent meetmg th.e Yor.k

:~t~,,,;-1;r;tcc combined with Sparkes and after combining with Gosse. At hts mnny frtcnds on the passtn~~s •. Pats wh1ch starts here ml Buckmasters fm~>hcd.on t_op.shut them out 3 too. In the! for the second game ID thetr

~~ I ·';~:Q 11

:t: ol'l'r then Gosse hit for a 7·1 score a the five minute mark Graham of his mother who died mid·! St. John's on S~turday n!ght. of. the league with F1shcnes I second l(ame thr Victory and the' semi finals with the :O.Iag~ific~nt :~·1• · minute later. It was Parsons Sparkes seore\1 his fourth for night Tucsdny night shortly Duff was registered wtth the 1 thtrd. :'If ental were second and 1 Nelson halt led to a 2 to 2 tic\ one up having won. thc1r !1rst ,.

1

••• ,,1 111

tour a~:aln doing the scoring at the the gnmc. RO>' Abbott of H.r·l after Hnfl'cY arrived home. \Guards team yesterd.a~ and· Health wer. f?urth. . 1 aHcr !hirty minutes of regula· encounter 7 to 0. _The second ,. ·"' - 7.40 mark ror n 8·1 score. Hr. Grace put Hr. Grace back m, The Dally News joins with the • there ts a strong posstbtltty that I The scmt-hnr,Js w11! feall!re; tion time and ten minutes 0£. game for the mornmg Will see

· · ,·:r,: t\H' 111 ~ nu~· 1 • h t f h k 't b f tl I · f I !f · l

oc•·d ,i, nwr<' 111

Grace got back in the scoring the game with two quick goa s. : t:~ncral public in cxprcssinl! · c vc .eran o many oc. ey, 1~o est o . 1rec games scncs ·sudden death 0,·ertime. the Air orce p ayo s continue • H anti """"'

1111 at the 8.40 mark when Garland He comblned with Williams at~ deepest s~·mpathy to I he bcr·; wars "'!" be bark 111 the m1dst 1 w1th. the \l'tnners fro~ b?,th: Singles by Wayne Bradbury,. with _the ~iberator~ and the Jets

:•;rc 111

the Ia> I combined with Thomey !or a the 8.40 mark and seven sec· :caved lamtly. I or t~c tcc lanes before the ser·, mectmg for the crow~. Fts~eltcs, Wayne Gul!i\'cr and Russell mecttng 111 .the first game of .. ·,;·acr ct•uln ,

111Jy 8·2 score but Gosse gave the onds Inter went unassisted for 1 1cs 1s concluded. . .• arc dcfendmg ch~mp10ns 111 the: Winsor gave !he Lancasters; their semi !ma!s at 8.40.

, ~; t·-llr 111

!he Tigers n 9·2 margin two min· a 12·8 score. Ches Mercer was 1 s p C" • I The Guards lost one of then ; league. · ! t~_cir 3 lo o win o\·er the Spit· I'

,;!.r Thry' ('OIIIICCI· Utes later. Neville Pike rallied the next scorer for the Tigers t. ats ~eniors : \'aluable players on Sunday I i !ires as they counted two goals ' tn the .,·cond for the third Hr. Grace go&) at at the ten minute mark nnd :when flashy !orwa.rd Dotl Lo~k· I in the first period and added A d w·

FJ·' ' . the eleven minute mark but three minutes lr.ter Graham p t. T . I t ! hart left. St. J~hn s and rctUI n·l c I. N i the third marker in the final I war Inners ~:·::~;s kol : h r \\'eldon Parsons went unassl;t· .Sparkes got the last goal (or the rae Ice OllH! 1 I e? lo hts m.atnland home m I ,ur ID2:, ews . half. Bradbury olso picl;ed up I :;·;~.r ur,t

11in in ed for ~ 10·3 score. At the fif· Tigers with Eric Pynn coming I The st.' Pat's senior hockev ':"cw Brunswick. . . . , I a single assist on Winsor's goal.., Looking back over the regu-

.. :,,

1

,. ,,rr:r· ol tltr trcn mmute mark Fred Wll· back !or Harbour Grace to have ! team will hold a workout thi.s · ~ report l~st ~lght dis~loscd 1 7·9 . . The first goal for the Lancasters odr league schedule an_d gather .. ·- ~,1 ,1 1> Iiams netted one for Hr Grace the scoring end with the Tigers · t !h 51 r 1 . that the Gun• ds 11 til be rc,tster· 8pcn champtonshtp. ·came with just 32 seconds ~one tLgether the award wmner we

ot:h 1 :"1w,·!don unassisted and in th~ last out in front 14·9. i c~-~~~~g ~II ~ . actum s art tnt~ ·lng Se\'eral other players for the ·llickman . Hall I i~ the game as BradbUI'\" sc~rcd sec that Aiden Murphy of the ";'" an .. ! lor a ' minute of play Garland got his The next and second game of: ad t. . k P a) ers. a,rc rrequcs "'I setni·finals but thts could not' Presidents I'S. \'icc·Prcsulcnts unas·istcd The second noal :'llinnificent has come up with ·j N~nW•'' · . . d 1 e o ma c a spcetn e fort to · li {' d p t p . s hour • 9 1 • , - - ': ' , • h · d h "'- llcrw Inti a second of the mght unaSSJte ·the best of three game series, att nd c con lrmc u 0 res · • •· came at 11.49 as the Sptthres the h1g est pomts awar at t c ~:t\dlt wl;;l,• ·T,ml to hal'e the perio~ end 10·5 for j will be played on Saturday:' e · _ ---"-- : :T. ~· Clouston -': G. B~arns: were short handed with Lauric! :>:a''Y divisi~n with ten goals

cr • . ·count· Shc:-.rstown. night. · · ' . . H } C} 1 r. Slcntafnrcl ~red Btshop, \'-'i!lar sitting out a two mir.utc I and stx asststs for a total of . ~· .G~;:r f::~r Har· . . . :~~.the u.me t~ \'~ry ~ho~t. and OC {ey tamps : V. Clou<ton Clar G?dden' elbowing pena!tv and the final: sixteen points, two better then ' ... J.k -r- •. as JVR Tourney game. Th1s Will be col)l!cted. It t~ a fa1rly bt~ JOb gcttm~ the , s. Cannon (;err~· Kmght marknr for the ·Lancasters was, his runner up Joey Picco of the

Xr,tllr t•l' "• · ft h b t th I h t II d d d 'E • F., I · • ' .. · . 'll tm~ llhile a er eac game, U e en·\ C ar S a. rawn up_ an rca )'.; ntraJn or , scored with just seconds ]c{t in· York. In the Army DIVISIOn, . 1 •d Ho' \hhott trance ~ees i\1U~T accompan>',. The ltst of cntnes to date

1 Jl_ P. Cart~r 11. An.g~l ·the game. :Harris Flight of· the Black

ar. h - ~ rr ·d Starts Tuesday the vartous entms. lis as follows: ' ! R. B. \loyse \\. \\elr I th ·ccond name !he Vic· i Watch. has coped the honour 1;~~ ,:: ~~; 1 ,-;~h · Prize.s, which are now on the ; LADIES SI~G~ES :Home \ Gco: yacDonalrl R-. Bartlett: tor~ an~ t~lc i\els~n battled to a: with seven goals and one assist

E. - Timc,i; getting short for the way, w11J b~ awarded to ~II who ,st~lla Cartre. (1ert•c l.r;ter.: J_ 1atte IL C. Hcrdcritw~ to two tic alter p!aying1for a total of eight points, one :hr , .t.c nf ,tart llf the current edition of g.ct to the !mals of the ftve :ec· :"\cl~l.e ~ester. Ltlltan Vatchcr .. _ :>:cw~ouncl!ancl hockey rl~am·' . 'thirty minutes of regulation! b~tlcr than the runners up

:hr , .,111

. and the 1959 Jndil•idual Bowling I lions as .:oven as t~e aggreg';'te. )In I~ C'1 ock~r. Bc,lh ~TatthCI\'5. ptons (rrat~d Falls, left the ( ap.l·! ~. P. Rockw.rl_l .. ':en. Brett time plus a len minute >uddcn I\\ ayne ~terce~ of the Jnfant:y

P'"':h ;lwt> 011

Tournament which hns now ~~here "111 be pmcs for h1gh •. \fE.~_s ~1,\GLES t'l by !ram ~:est_erday for th~lr:Carm.cn Rockllcllll:n''.conro: drath .\·crlimc period. Xc!son and Gerald ~arren of the-S•g· ·: JJ.;a nt.trdn becn in existence since 1945. smgles and three frame; for \\. ~l?mssc~. J. Lane. J. home!own b,rlllgmg back w1th 1 S~d fhompson 1. \\ oorlford ~ftcr taking the lead twice in nal!crs. . ... ~h,•ar,:''"n Jccl _ All bowlers interested should I single an.d double efforts. so Constant!nc.. ~·. PoliW. D. them !h~ ~lid. hock~)' trophy l \\. ~lacDona!c! r.. r\ngcl ·the game were unable to come _I· or the Atrforce D1v1s1on

· , i thr Jir>l ~el th~ir entry in to th St.l there WI I! be no shortage ?f · Pett-rs, F · Crocket. Dr. B. ~lttr· after takmg four of ftve games, ·up with !he winnin~ ooa! as wmner we see Wayne Brad· .'r·~-~0 ,t •nr rnd p,

11·5

Alley, where Joe Quinton 1prlzes available and !hey '':'ll phy. E. Pa1·nc. E. Pol•'('r, against the St. John's Capilals. J ~-II :c:an· \loonev na1c his,team a bury of the Lancasters way out

.J ·::no· ","" 14

.9

is accepting them on behaiC of ~c. presented after the ser1es , ME.'Ii'S ~OUBT.P.S )I any friends. or the. squa~.' .1. B. :'\orri> R. Goude•·! 1 to 0 lead· \lith fil'c minut~s 1 front with twe!1·e points. made .•. ~tl(ird . the tournament. !1mshc~. • , \\ · Jtlornsse~ F. Pnller. E. were on hand ;.est erda;. to sa)! . 1 r . rwo d i and thirtv-nine seconds _gone m, up of eleven goals and one_ as·

,_,_ · Ou't' ~ 11

d As is known. the Tournament For tntcrcst, last years cham· I Epstcm·J. Cranshaw. R. Lahe~·· ~farewell to the team ann when ~· ~· ,~·u\·-~ '· 1'00 ° I tre first· period ban~in_g in. sist. runners up to Bradbur) :•;:;~ed '

1,;,t ·tune will get under wa>· on Tuesday plons are as follo~s: . . . t'': Lawlor. G. Everard-G. ~1:11'· ; !he squAd arri\'ed at Bishop:s: ,r. \\'~ ~a' · R Simi~~· Dnnn>' ~lcGean's' pass."' Darry: were Eugene Kenny of the Jets.

. ::;'::.me tllth llr. night. Aprll Bth, and t h e In the Sln~les 1t t~ L1lhan 'lin .. J. _Lane-F .. Crocker. Dr. B .. Falls. at an early hour lh1s 1· ax e '11

• m i Seaward lied the score for the~ B1lly Lowe or. the North St~rs - \hrd for fi,·c entries will have to be In by Vatcher and l\!tkc ~larttn. In the: ~lutph~·E. Pa~ne J .. Spratt·G. i mormng a motorcade to Grand C II·Il 1 K P tt Vic! or\· at 12 38 assisled by, And Frank Hickey, each w1th

r.~~;· prnaltll': in SATU.RDA y night at the latest Ladies' Doubles it Is Berncc 1 Power. , • Fa~ls was scheduled lo b_c held.; V R~:d ·,\· \vi::or i Terry 'Jenkins ·and Gerard Han·: six points. .

, •or nmtor of· ,0

as to enable the charts to Cook and Neva Johnston. The , L.4DIES DOUBLES - Grand Falls took thetr hon· - _. _ · 1 lion Nelson took the lead: For the goa he awards wt ' 1•1 • be drawn up for the play in the Men's Doubles It is Geo:ge Ta)'· S. Carler·L. Vatcher. K. Wad· t.Urs by winning four games 1

1. ~- ·ci·ri"ellr: G .Jo~!·A~c crson i a"a.in earl I' in the second period ha\'c Justin Bennett of the ~lag·

, tnt>k ihr lrAd five sections o( the Tournament. lor and John Constantme, and 1 den· F. Pound. \\". Parsor.s-1. , o\'er St. John's in five games. · Pgan .co - .tc. a mara, ~ Brian ·Gibbons counted. as·: nificent in the Navy Division

11 the two minute Entries wJJI be at the rate of I ,the ~!ixed it is Stella Carter 1 Locke. G. I.est~rs. Lester. R. :They 11·on the first two game>· 1 . Cl • . \\' T'JI aistcd bv ~leGean but Viclon· :with an 0.60 average, in the

Setil:c Plk~ wrnt 50 cents per entry per person, and Will. C?one~·· .ln thl' Ag·! ~lacDnn?ld-F. llt_tch~••s. '1. Gul·: on their home ice _bY scores ~r! D Ti~~;~ers R Fr~n~~ ~icd !he. s~orc ag;in at 6.09 a's Army Division it's Jose_Ph t•rntr fire ;ec· and this simplr means that U I gregate 11 IS Lllhan Vatcher: lagc-~1. Babstock, ~- Barnes·' 6·4 and 8·1. Here m S!. Johns I C " 1 n · H"" . Seaward tallied unassisted to, Cnckard of the Comandoes wtth

::~ Spark.c; tied the · vou will be entering the singles and Joe Wadden. ·E. Corbett.· E: O'Bncn·C': Bar· they dropped the opening pme, · ·B ernrr · 8 j ~o~tns! force the game into 0,·ertime. t a 1.00 overage and in the Air· l'm• wtnl out in and both doubles, then It will .LUJ!an Vatcher an~ B~h ~lc· son. ~lr~. Blatr·~lrs. Le\'117. ~1. hy a 4·3 score but came back~ D. rccn . . e\me I but neithe< of the teams were: force Divis~on the award goes i2s mark when be

51.50

!or one person, like- Kinlay both h~ve 11\0 "ms. on Ru~s~JJ-P. Ca1c, B. took·J., to take the fourth and hfth · "- llallrtt .l. \lcCarth1• able to capitalize ns both goalies, lo Rober~ Conway of the Lan· . Chr! )lrrcrr com·, wise ~·our partner In both the J.V.R. Sm~les Trophtcs, Ph1!hp~. , :games by scores o[ 7·1 and 1·1.. C. K.' Howse p_ L~din~ham 1 proved 10 be unbeatable making e;.st.er \\'llh the perfect record, ~m !corin~- SHcn doubles will have to pay his and, If they are tn the Tourna· , • r.fXED DOVB!.P.S . I R B "" 11 \\' Kelley several great stops on break· hal'lng yet to be scored upon.

W!; Go;sc gave entrance fees at the same rate. ment this year and should be 1 \\. Dtllon-F. Cook, ~lr. anrl B s h d } 1 · a,"s . - B ·,1 h. . v - , The awards ror the most t~entle· :rad whrn he For bowling in the alley it will proclaimed c~ampions, I hey I. ~Irs . .J. Lane. S. Carter-W.I an tam c e u e I R. t ll~r~\?o~l· ~· .. urp ~ \\BT~~ game will now he deem·' manly players and the most im·

and \lith one . be the cost o( bowllng and 10 will be outright owners or Coon~~·. :'llr. anrl j!rs. F. Croci;-~ . pare. . .uun.. . d t t nd will be re·\ proved player award hal·e yet to :~the game Ches cents for prize Cund, maklnl a these beautiful trophies.. i rr .. T. Carroii·G, Lester. A. AI 4.30 p.m .. Wmgs vs. Har·l S! ttstr Champtonslu~ravlorp~ay;do a~o;o~~ a: possible. be named . i:

1 ~I ~arne. : totrA or NINETY CENTS eaeb Please get your entry m no11·. · Smllh·B. Cook. _____ nets. en a or _____________ _: .. ____ -------- -····- ___ _

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D FRIDAY a.m.-GOOD FRIDAY DEVOTIONS • , a stu dio service conducted by the Rev. Goldsmith. a.m.-A MEDITATION UPON THE CROSS • , from England, a program. of meditation and music

on Christ's suffering. ' a.m.-THE CRUCIFIXION, by John Stainer. Excerptr. by the Whitehall Choir, with John Von der

Gucht, tenor - Denis Noble, bariton e. a.m.-SACRED HEART PROGRAM .• Father Cervantes speaks on the theme "Thy Will Be Done

on Earth", music by the St. Louis Seminary Choir. o'cletk-CSC NEWS.

p.m.-THREE·HOUR GOOD FRIDAY S£RVIC E •• from Gower St. United Church: Rev. J. Winsor, Rev. H. M. Dawe, Rev. L. A. D. Curtis, Rev. P. J. Hemmerson, Rev. J. A. Goldsmith, Rev. F. E. Vipond and Rev. A, S. Butt will speak on "The Seven Last Words from the Cross",

p.m-CSC NEWS AND WEATHER. Ill p.m.-GREAT RELIGIOUS SONGS-James Melton in a program of music for Passiontide and

Eostef. p.m.-THE BETRAYAL TRIAL AND CRUCIFIX ION-o drama of Christ's condemnation and ' . .

Crucifixion, WJ.. TCHED HIM THERE , • , music fc r Good Friday by the Renaissance Singers of

~~ Montreal. p.m.-"THE LIFE OF c'HRIST", by Ch_arles 0 ickens. From Gonder, Charles Mordel will read the

Passion sequences. P.m.-ANTHEMS OF FAITH ... from CBC Corner Brook, a program of great Church Anthems. p.m.-GOOD FRIDAY INTERMEZZO .•. a program of seosonol music from Grand Falls . p.m.-esc NEWS. p.m.-HOUR OF ST. FRANCIS . . . the sklr y of Mott Talbot, a man of charity. p.m.-EVENSONG FROM lHE ANGLICAN CATHEDRAL ••. · p.m.-RECJT AL - Helen Marquis, occompo nied by Ignatius Rumboldt, will sing o program'

of sacred and inspirational selections. · p.m.-ERIC ABBOTT AT THt ORGAN . • • Mr. Abbott will be heard in o program of Good

· Fri~oy music of great composers. · . p.m.-THE COMMUNION OF SAINTS .• , from BBC, o pr,gromme about the significance of

Saints in the Christian Church. _ p.m-ORC'HESTRAL PROGRAM .•. music of faith and confidence. p.m.-THE DARK DAYS .. , from St. John's, the sp~cial Good Friday drama feature about the

people associated with Christ's last days on earth. P.m.-esc NATIONAL NEWS AND NEWS ROUNDUP.

CBN CBY CBG CBT

Falls

•.

Corner Brook~

Gander Grand St. John's

10 p.m. to 11.30 p.m.

"The Dark Days" A PLAY ABOUT PASSIONTIDE

Adapted by John Holmes

CARMEl MARKLEY CHARLES MARDEL JOHN HOLMES FLO PATERSON MARILYN STONE PETER GARDINER PATRICK DRYSDALE

,_

BY CARL DELOZIER Produced by Dick O'Brien

-WITH-

PAUL O'NEIL DENYS FERRY RUTH PERKINS ALAN VANNAN OL WYN DRYSDALE

FREDERICK DAVIS

AND OTHERS

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. -10 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDA~,-~ _J. 19~

return to the two-party system factors. undoubtedly. For one tMr. Diefenbakerl will ha1·e an party has had on the province of is ext~nded numerically. Yet tr.is 1

am·thi . -... in Canada may carry some bles- thing, the dynamic personality of almost monolithic majority; a Quebec ~ver since 1887 .•• 'The is what the people of Canada is perhg lh sings of Its own. Prime Minister Diefenbaker . . . majority providing him w i t h second Is that he. has won the wanted. and it places on Mr. Dief· . 1·tctor .ans clostr

Calgary Herald Clnd.l - Cana· linally, in our opinion, the nation· power and opportunty to work four western provmces, long thr enbaker and the Conservati1·es in [; ~ or D·,lgf.• dthiaensspesctatancdleln

0fathweegtrodcaatyestbpc

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11rt: w

1tde tchontcagious set_ntiment.h'Let'.~ gre

1a1t. thi

0·ngs for c1~nh~da. B~t .as s_tronghold of the maverick par·, the responsi_bility to P.revent the \to~o oi ~~~htit~ b .

g ve e onserva 1ves a c ance · we m I&t mono It IC maJority ties • . • abuses of ll1g • maJOrity govern· , otrah· "' tha., ,,.. ical upheaval in the nation's his· and its corollary, "After all, the there lurk perils - the perils, of l\lontreal La Presse nnd.l - ments from returning to Parlia· ll'i . election.-,

Ollawa Citizen (Ind. Llb.I-Thc help. tory ... One thing stands out In Liberals had 22 years of power." forgetting its sour~e. of at times The biggest surprise is without ment. : Lih •nnlpeg Fr,t government, unless ·It· exercises calgary Albertan tlnd.l _The blinding brilliance-John Dlefen· Medicine Hat News tlnd.I-The ignoring its implicatons. doubt the attitude.of Quebec prov- Quebee L'Actlon cathollque , aJ· ·un- in~

Eclitoria{ Comment On Federal Elections great restraint, wlU be able to next four years promise to be baker stands today as the living vote Monda; was a tremendous Quebec L'Evenment Journal ince ... _That she should elect nnd.l- Quebec followed the gen·: h~t it

111

uaUy . ride roughshod over the com· more difficult than the last four, ,symbol of Canada ••• tHe I car- testimony of faith in ... John !lndl-The Canadian electorate Conservative mem)>ers to 50 of· eral trend .... Except in the 11111

.. a . · mons. It will be Interesting to sec in both domestic and lnterna· rles on hl.s shoulders the greatest Diefenbaker, all but unanimously made a non • equi1•ocal manifes· her 75 seats despil~ a long ot.jta~t days of .the campaign :\!r.l nant reeli ... ':~bow much the Conscrvatll•cs un- tional affairs ••• We have some responsibility ever vested In an voiced. Liberal Leader Pearson tation of its confidence in the Con· tach~ent .to the Liberal p~rty D1efcnba~er did not try to seduce • \atiles hn~ ~as

. ·der Mr. Dlefenbaker cherish those doubt 1 hat the Conservative Individual Canadian •.. That he must be stlil wondering what hit scn•ative party . It is here and tradition lS one of those thmgs the provmce ... He made com.! derne's. a.1r.g ~. ·.:rights of Parliament about which party has the capacity to give w111 cherish and discharge that him <butl it Is highly unlikely any now evident that we will have hat could not have been foreseen mitments only of a vague and\ fair ~haso ion;. I'm

they were 80

sollcltlous In their canada rour years of good gov· responsibility with true greatness other man could have done bet· in the next cabinet a represen· on the eve of the election ... In general nature ... Quebecers will, Canada ~ce ... own bleak days of opposition .... ·crnmcnt ... One bad mistake i3 the prayer of mllllons. ter ••. against the man of des- tatlon which will be more pro- any case •. Quebec has given th

1 remember nevertheless that Mr ·to the as been

This defeat, In spite of its shock· and the Canadian voters would Lethbridge Herald Und.I-The tiny. We are confident he <Pear· portional to the importance of our Conser~a!Ive party such a vote Diefenbaker. has promised to re·! sh~"'· romt lne dimension~. should do the Lib· turn on them just as they did In situation resulting from the 1957 s?nl will fill the role of opposi· province •.. Thus ends a period of con!Jdence as to expect more spec! the nghts of the province I thr rirh s ~h.er~ erals no permanent damage • • • 193:i. election was unsatisfactory. But t10n leader as well as it could in our political history, a period consideration than sh~ was ac• a.s guaranteed by the constitu- days or att;re aJ11 1\lr. Pearson has nothing to apol· vancouver Province Und.)- neither Is it healthy to have the b~ f II !.e d under the circum· of political instabilty which cer: corded In the last cabmet. lion and declared himself in fa· hart: hon~~~r ha

11

oglze for. Brillsh Columblans ... have seen Commons so unevenly balanced stances. tainly was partly responsible for Quebec Le Solell Und - Mr. vor of Canada's two cultures I F 1 · . Kelowna B.C. Coprlcr (lud.l- the party which Is their provln· as .•• now. The governing party Wlnnlpe~ Tribune !Ind.) -The !he economic recession which we Diefeobaker can interpret Que· Torooto Star lind. Llb.l _: i wa~' 1~0~lon ThP almost complete oblitrration clnl government obliterated fed· must exercise great restraint . . Conserv~tJVe Landslide Is a p~r- have seen take disquieting pro· bee's vote as proof of Its cOilf!· Canadians have a penchant for . u~ph for of the CCF an~ Soci~l r

1·r

11it ~rnliv can thev be blamed for the opposition must make up In sonal tnumph for Prime MiniS· portions during the winter. dence, but he must not forget It slrong go1·ernment. and an clec.lll is :llr.

" parties In the West. the only! wondering ,0

what extent, and skill and energy w~at it lac~s In ter Di~fenbaker, and It presents The Liberal era is over ... tlie is also a.ma~ner ~~strengthening toral system that is apt to trans. I or ;11 ,. . place they had found fertile soil. when. the rep e r c u sslons will numbers. Prime Mmlste.~ D1efc~; him with the. greatest challe~ge spectacular event of Monday's the provmce s claims In favor of late their wishes into tremendous I hallo'' r • suggests that the Canadian vot~r rcnch Into their own legislature? baker •.. given the chance ?f his l.ife. With such a foilowm.g vote is the votes of Quebec prov- a return of its taxation rights, majorities. Having finally \'oted ida·~ ·k or a has decided be has had enou~h VIctoria Colonist Und.l _ The he sought . • • must use his m Parh.amcnt he must walch h1s ince. It had been said since June clainv; which Qucpec has battled to humble a too . powerful 1 ib·: 1 ~,: . "''t'~ hi! It or of splinter parties in federal pol· largest Parliamentary majoritv strength wisely. . • . every move to prove constantly that Quebec held in its hands the for on the provi~cial scene ~or eral g~vernmcnt last .Tunc, thcv: fnr ~~~"' 0a!P: tiey Illes at least ' In the hlstorv of Canada wlil Prince Albert Her11Id lind. I- that he can remain "a great dem· fate of the Diefenbaker. govern· y~ars ... The fight for provm- now have made a con~cn·ath~ 1 til"'. "o"l:tft~taktt

Nanstmo Free Pms llnd.l- call for restraint and st~t~sman· Prince Albert tis I jubilant today ocrat" in the face of such power. ment ... This is false. Even c1al auton~my now moves to a 1 gover~ment far more powPrful.lin:r thJ; i: .;o The Conservative landslide vic· ship now on the part .of the over the victory of Prime Min· With the def~at of th.e leaders of· without Quebec Mr. Diefenb~ker second le1el. _tL~ true level. and 1 than 1ts predecessor was ... · rt;m~m .~fLied tory could well mean the end of I prime minister, the cabinet and lster John Dlefenbaker:s Cons~rl'· CCF and Soc1~l Credit whose two could have governed for f.I v e the people wil.i ask more !h.an: Our _chie~ regret over ~!onrlay·~ i l'auront .• d gre;~ ,the CCF and Social Credit part· I nll rank~ of the partr in the new alive party ln•lltonday s elcctJO!I. groups may Wither ?n the branch years ... For Frcnch-Canadl~ns: words, they will expect positive I electiOn IS that it nuts I cstrr. a t·· r SoD

·: ·~es In federal and provincial • Pnrliamcnt. It Is clear ... that a And yet. thcr~ can. be no doubt and .el'entualiy vamsh from the 11·~ ha\·e no reason t~ beheve action. . 1 Pearson on the ~idchn~s ~f · .h~ '•·m~n' o·Js •o~1 ~ ···lielns of the fltture. The election I subsiantlal body of Canadians that _the ~mashmg l'lclory, l~rge!y polillcal scene . t~1s nell' gol'crnment '.nil be an}' Quebec Chronicle •. T~legraph. international scene. where ~tate~· ah;.,. 11 ·,:>nw ~:fer~:·. · of the Diefcnbaker gol'crnment

1Jiked Prime :'l!lnlster Dlefcnbak· fashiOned by the 1\!P for th1s rid ottawa .T~urnal f!nd. C~n.l-:- 11orse than the precedmg one. . !lnd-PCI - Perhaps 11 Is to b~ m~n of hi~ calihre are alwal'< mor<· d rct .,t,r.,~ l't

: couln also mean thr end or 1hc; cr's pro~ram and the l'ision of lng. raises problems of trcmend· For the tlmd parhes tins. It :'olontrenl Star !Ind. I - There regretted that thr rc~ponse ... ·too rcw and were nc,·er ·, 11 . . ' 111 ~ ··' 1n · ~plinter parties and the return of

1 Canada mature enough to make ous magnl.tude. \\'e prar he 1 would seem .. is. journey's ~nd: has ne\·er b~~n anything in ~he twas so. strong .. One or the hig: acu1cly need~d as now. ·

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,·:;.' ':a! an the two-part~· svste~1 in rmwln. it~ own de~lsions and ir ~eed !Je may he guutro with _the wisdom . com~letc cxtmcllon for. S o c 1 a I, whole ion~:. h1storl' or .. Canad1an i complamts agamst former Lib·. Toronto Telegram !lnd.l _ \ ~.;,:., , · ,·,, '":' ~. a• Y: ~lr. Pearson Jo~t II rt!tc rice· 1 1~ own m

1stakcs. The Liberals. the days ahead will demandiCredJt. a mortal bl011 for titejdect10n~ Ill.~ Monda's resultsieral government~ wa~ that the1ma>SIIe majority brin;:s 11 ith il lihrr··. ', ,.,.­

lic.11

> on a pro~ram arrnngrd in 1

h)· contra~t. lost ground by ~heir 1 Snskatoon Star . Phoemx lind. I ~CF .... the rlramn ~f. the da~·. ~ · .. :\lr. Dwfenhaker desci'\'~5ilarge representation in Parlia· ·new and t:rrater rr~non>ihilili"' liu· ,::,,. ·;; '·!!~c. ha>t.I'-R ,tor>. ~ap aimed at ar· i raw prinl'ipics ~l'ith promise~. of! Llh•~Whnt acrount~ fnr thi~ dra·! It;. real a~perl of poht_Jral re\'0· r.1·ery c~nr.ratulat10.n ... !Ills; ~rnt tended to make tile oppo>i· for llir Dirfenhaker ~:orrrnmrnt h•" · 1 ,;;, '

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1" r~.tm~ the [1 1 efcnhn~er un:<ur~•'. a tnxpn)·rrs holiday and th~ hke. !malic s1!rge o! suppo.rt for thr•lut10n. was thr rr~ult .m Qneher f1.r't arhw1rmrnt> IS that he M··lion of no cffrrt. \\'herr 1h1s 'it· . . In thP annal> of roltltF "· It came too late to he of much F'ront a lon~·range ~tanrlpomt. a • Pro)!rr.>sll'e ('on~en·alii'P~ 711an)· 1 •••• In the new parhamrnt. hr mh1l~trrl the hnld th~. L•hrral uat1on was bad AI lhP time. il thP Oidrnbakrr triumph 0,rrrd< ---

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NfWS. ST. JOHN'S, ·NFLD., THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 19Se l1 ==------------------------------------~--------------~ By W. SCRUGGS

r Stove Oil and Fuel Oil one 7469 or 3007

~is Page Is Presented With The Compliments Of

Great Eastern Oil & Import Co., Ltd. ------------------· i 11.00-News in a ~linute. \ 11.03-Thrce Gcnct·~tlons.

io Programmes 11.30-Honour Your Partner. li.K,_Swi!t's ~lonev ~lan.

1 12.00-News in a )iinule. · 12.01-Town and Country. 12.30-Ncws.

~----- 1 I \.55-News. 1:!.31-Town anrl Country. 1 12.01)-~argaln Hour. 1.00-Local and :-<ational : 12.15-Ramblin with Records. Headline i"cws. ! l~.:m-i\:cws. 1.01-Town and Country

______ ' 12.4~-Forcca~t. 1.05-\Veathcr Forecast.

.. l(>ril :lrrl. I 1.15-Sportscast. 1.15-Jiicws. . I 1.30-~:ews. 1.35-Edltorial Comment. ~~"-' ,1 ,1·nlll'' I 1.45-)1 u~ic Slars of the l'cn· 1.40-Sporls. c: t.lc ' •· tur~·. • 1.45-Arl Baker's Notcbor.k. ~~11 ' •1nd ll'c;•thcr' ~ on-·1 ex :~nd Jinx. 2.00-News in a ~linutc.

C1•·rk. ~ .,,.. 1 Sh · Sh 2.01-. \\'hat's Cookt'n'. ~· 1..- m< ow opptng ow. I ~.J~-i\cws. 2.03-The Story of Jane 3.00-Llollars on Parade. Armitag.e 4..00-:-:cws. 2.15-A \\'oman Confesses 4.05- Westernaircs~ 2.30-News In a ~linute. 4.55-:-:cws. 2.31-~latinec. 5.00- \'001\ Don ~lesser 3.00-:\ews in a ~linute.

Show. 3.01-\\'cstcrn Jamboree. 5.:10-Supcrman. 3.30-Jiicws in a ~linute. 5.45- \'OOI'S Don ~lesser 3.31-Westcrn Jamboree.

Show. 4.00-Gcn. Prov. News. fi.OO-~ew> and \\'cathcr. 4.05-Ranch Party. 6.05 -Supper Serenade. 4.30-:\ew5.

Hr.•n I'• ,,. 6.15-Sportscast. 4.31-Ranch Party. 6.2~-Suppcr Serenade. S.IJ0-1'\rws.

P~-'t 6.45-~CIIS. • 01 Th G \\'' . ·~r._.u' 1'h•Oit'C. ! i.OO-Brcak the Bank. ~· -:Sh~w. et·ry ~~sms B·: f>rr:tktluwn. i. 15-Hank Snow Show.

3 I( t 5.30-:\cws.

'''-·• .. - i 30-L'rcam of the Crop. 5.31-The Record Shop. r:.• ~.·:<II:. de. 9.~0-0id Fa\'OUrites.

B " ·,

1 , 6.00-Ncws.

""' •• • 1 !1.4:>-:'\<"·~"~ J'r.·;r:.nHnr. 6.05-Bulletln Board. ; 10.00-The Ad1·cnturcs of Co:.sa 6.10-Jiiational News.

~t"' ~nd \\'rather Nora. r 6.15-Sports. e~oo:rammc. 1 10.30-• 'lull ''590." 1 \I " 6.25-News.

· an' · •He. ! 10.55-News. 6.3n Top Tunes of our T1'mc. ~rhool Broad· . 11.00-Sportsrasl .,-7.00-Ncws.

· ll.IO-Forecast. 7.01-Ri~ht To Happiness. ll.l5-Ciub "590." 7.15-Passing Parade.

1.00-:\cws and Close Down. 7 30-" . nell'S. 8.00-:\cws. ~l;.tinec.

•JACOBY ON BRIDGE EXCJ-:I.LE~T Pl.;\\' SA \'ES l'O~'flUCT i

I I

By OS\\'ALD .JACOBY I , \l'ritlen for :\EA Scrl'ire I : \\'EST openl'<l the ten of I

hearts and r·flrr dummy Jtlaycd . low Ea;t played I he sel'en spot i :and Pc»imistic Pete won with · · his 'lueen.

"I guess cl'erylhing will be wrung as usual." he mumbled I and proceeded to l~ad the tcu , uf clubs and l~t it ride. East 1

, lalse·cardcd with the king and returned his singleton trump. Pete went up with the ace, led his low club to dummy's ace l>llrl continued with the jack. I

. Ea>t playe<l low but Pete sim· ; pi:· 'li>carded his losin~ heart. i

. This Jwld Pete's losses to one I trump, one diamond and one club and he made hi;; contract. I'

r~te wasn't playing with mir· . rors. He harl simply executed a I nicr <afrty play. Suppose \\'est I

·had held thr queen of clubs. He I '-''oulrl h~·l'c taken a trick with i it hut now dumm\''s nine or I

. clubs would be high and would I furnish a parking place for PNe's losing diamond.

Of ccurse Pt•tc could have l taken ancl l?st the tn~mp fi.

, nesse an <I st11l m:; rle h1s con· 1

; tract h~· gucs,ing the location \

VOWR 8.01-The Best !rom the \\'est 8.30-Ncws.

l'iURm(O) .QJ6

2%

....

Pro;ram. Pial hou>~. forum. Ft•rum ~ rw!.

~'''"'"" Chamber

TIIURSOAY, ,\prll 3rd. PJI. iA'i--Or;:an ~lusic. 8 00-Holy \\'cck Scrl'ice from

St. Andrew's Presbyter· 1an Church.

9.00-0rgan ~~~~~ir. • 9.15-The (;•·r· · .' ,., .• ,,ture. 0.30-~lusical :.tomeuts. 1 9.45-H;;mno lor Iii< .,uict

Hour. 11.00-\\"cather and Closedown.

CJON 1'11URSO.-\\', :\prll 3rd.

8.31-Bcst from the \\'est. 9.00-:'\CI':S. 9.01-Bi;: Six Program. 11.15-Nflrl. Soircr. 9.30-l'hapcl b)' the Side of

the Road. 9.45-Dosco 1\cws.

1MD-News. : J0.01-lJntold Stor".

1

10.30-Jiiational ~c.ws. 10.45-Houseparty.

1

11.00-News in a Minute. 11.01-Sportl. 11.15-Houseparly, News.

vous

WEST 4K4 • 1098 .9875~

"';53

• K52 • A 10 4 ...AJ98

EAST .3 .AJ743 • KJ 6

, "'KQ62 SOUTH • A 10 9 8 7 ~ 2 .QG • Q3 ... 10 4

Both vumerablc Snrlh EaU South 1 ... t./,. West

Pass Pass Pass

I N.T. Pass 2. loll Pass 4 4 Pass Pass ~ Opening ltad-¥ 10 ~·•

e .• · · 1 ht llUU LC\1'15 l>nOW, o.:lU-Nfld. News. TUl'IISIIA Y, April 3rd. I I

6.3:--\\'eather FoN'c~st. 6.oO-:-;ational Anthem and of the dull <111e~n but · Pete: 6.45-:'\ews and Forecast. Sign On. <lot·~ ·nut ii~e to guess when he ' i.OO-:'\cw~ ~nd Sports. 6 5 S 1._, . do~sn't ha1·e to. I 7 h :J - un< '"'· . .05-Local Weat er. 6.30-\\'orld News and As Pete says. ''EI'crything b ' 7.15-\\'hnt's Conkin'. Weather. bad e1·erywhcrr."

.\pt il 3rd.

7.20-Bob Lewis Show. 7.30-Round the World Newl. ! 7.30-World News and Supply., 8.00-Breaklast Club.

7.35- Weather Summary. I 8.3G-Herb Anderson Show. ' 7.45-N.fld .. N~ws and Weather.; 9.00-lt Happened last night.

8.00-.'\fld. News. IO.oo-Colfce Time. Q-The bidding has been: 8.05-~rov. Weather. ll.OO-'furn Back the Clock. Sllltlh West l'\ortb East 8.~5-S.hipping Report. 11.3o-Juke Club. l ~ · 1• Double Pass :·3~:~Wddle~, C?rner. 12.10-World and Local Newa! 'vou. South h Jd·

·, ", · .-ews. 1 and Weather. · 0

: 8.35-\\ eather forecast. 1 12 20-Jukc Club Continued · •z • A Q • K Q 7 a 4 "'A to 96i 8.4~Bob Lewis Show. 12:30-Hillbilly Matinee. · 1 What, do you do? , 8.4;r-Mornlng Merry.go.round. . 1 OO-Behlnd the Story 1 ,\-Btd two clubs. \ ou have

ll'nh Denys. ~~ Banner

9.05-Jiluslc for Mllllolll. 1·15-0ne Ilion's Family ' a nice hand but don't want to Box J 9.30-News In a Minute. 1:3o-Strike it Rich ' : defe?d against one spade and

__ !m~ree:.__ 1

9.31-Westward to Music. 1.45-Grand Central' Station. i aren t stron~ enough to jump. for Tuesda 's 1 11.45-Laura Chilton. 2.oo-New Yorkers. , TODAY s QUE.STIO~

· Date with Den~s.

• ~ 1'0.00-News In a .Minute. 2.1li-lllarch of Events. ; Your parlner, ratscs you to . and S.100.00 1r 10.01-~lartin's Corner. 2 .30-:'>Iu~ic Room. 1 thr~; clubs. \\ hat.do you do

Pnzes. Enter thl 1 10.15-Golden Madonna.· 3.00-Ntws i no I\. miling Jig-Sa\\; 10.~0-:>;ew~ in a Minute. 3.oS-Music. Room (cont.). I (Answtr Tomorroll')

• 10.31-Stnrtlmt. 3.311-News. : IO.~~-Eie1·en for the M.JneJ. :1.35-St_cwurt Fo>tt•r Show. I 10 .. >5-Juke Box Review. 4.00-l\'ews. oBARBS

· - · · -··- · · · 4.05-0pertt1 ion l::ntcrlainllll'nt. I

4.:10-t'ht>rkin' ln. \

3 S~mmeu (frl

4 R<.·,qn~ tool 5 Abiuru 6 Fanch sector i ~to1hcrs

I Latini R ~lamfc;t ~Tete< 11mo~

t comb. form) In·'"~"' ~;, IJomc<tlc sla\'C 13 Greatest II Hops' I:IIns 28 Rodents quantity 12 Require 29 Jndil·idual~ H Mim1cker

I I~ Rocky :lO r'orclather 4~ Granular L"l P:nnatl, :16 Trap~ snow

1 21 Ptncttatcs :17 Aull!llenl 47 Apporti • n She has 38 Rc~RI 4R lll~h coW

•PPtmd in residence 40 Soucy •- ol films 4t Nimble 51 Educational ;! ~•nus or birds 42 VIctim of Aroup (ab.)

• tmple leprosy 53 Hostelry -JL p

" ~ ~ ~ ~ ,, ~z

BY HAL COCIIIIAN 5.00-News. J

5.15-A\·med Forces Digest. , 'fhPrc are times when what 5.30-Capttol Cloakroom. : e;;ts ,.0 u gil·es Y u 1 . 6.00-News. ; "' o u ce1 s.

I ~ • •

6.05-Spotlight on ~lusic. 1• We're alwa. t' 6 30-Ncws ~s ex pee mg our I

6·35-'l · · ' tracher5 to do their share o(

, ·' USIC. · · · I 'I ! 7.00-Sports Today. , r~l~ln~. our .c II drcn propcr.ly i 715-B b d n " . 11 h1ch •.s A !me reAson lor rats·

• 0 an . a.· 1111: the1r pal'. 7.15-Armch~tr Adi'Cnlure~. ·, • • 7.30-Bonk nel'iew of the Air. 8.011-Hclcn Jla~rs. 8.15-Scicncc Editor. 8.30-Sa~a. 11.30-Jack Brnny.

10.00-Final Edition. 10.30-l"inal E<lition. 10.30-Robert Q. Lewis. 1l.OG-Music Till ~lldui~hl. How much the TV dancing

· 12.QO-Sign Off and National girls arc paid depends greatly 1 Anthem. : <ln the figur.c.

• • •

THE STORY OF MARTHA WAYNE

CAPTAIN EASY fi..~·;~::- .. - . . N 140C" .,.~. CJP~EC! CCA.'l' MeLH· ! PIS,$1PA.TUJ(S ~!!A.T ..... Flt~SSU~ei : 1',1.\!K~ !>f'ft,_V ~ COOLA.•;T 8ETl\'EE:J.I 1•E: SWE.I-111J(; : ce~~~\1~ NC$1!- CON! I<'<P THE- l~NE!t ST:iOI. S~!:LL

IF COI./TitOLS OOJ.I'T T,I,I<E: HO~D, ~UICICt WfLL BUilN!

ALLEY OOP

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS

BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES

~~ "(''.o\' Rlt>E,

tiE~. '&Ji I ~i'l:R Rl:l~ !>.t>:MI\..E "-llW \~ l.'t'l E'JER. "!'0 \..OS~ \IJE\61-fT ~

PRISULLA·s POP

~1':> R0£>.0 WORR ~R'i: MA '>ZE.So P. 6\ R\.. i\-1\R':.\','~ C.OI.l\...DN'T <:.~RE t-'11: 1\ Ql.li\RT Ql: t-'11 \..R, (.0\)\..~f'l,

~W? ..-'"fl~---_:

HY LESLIE TUFNER

·--·-

BY V. T. HAMLIN

By MERRELL BLOSSER

By EDGAR MA~TIN

BY Al VERMEER

If." 1'·,

!

~1 rr ~

CJON-CJOX ·TV

A writer contends l h a t Americans girls work too much. We'll bet the ol' kitchen has never noticed it.

15UGS BUNNY By LEON SCHLESINGER ..

._ 118 iD

- 111

Ill ~~ p fG IK 0'( .....

ll ...... .....

~0 ~I 111 11'1 ~5 rx. I~ ~I ~I ll r

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'l'lltliiSOAY, ,\pril 3rd. 2.30-0pen House. 3.00-Nursery School 1'ime. 3.15-Matinee. · 5.00-Chlldren's Program. 5.30-The Lone Ranger. 8.00-Annle Oakley • 6.30-News. 'J.00-1 Search for Adventure. 'J.3~The Early Show. 8.00-Meet McGraw, 8.30-Cllmax. 9.30-Muslc Makers '58.

• 10.00-CBC Folio.

111.00-News. 11.10-The Late Show,

____ .. ·--fl'ri.O~f: IJOWN UNllf:R

, !11liSBAi\'C:, Au<lralia < Reu·

I trr~) - A cyclone Tursd.1y ~truck Mackay, on the north·

I cast Quren~lancl cn<:·SI, disrupt· I ing communications ~nd smnsh· I in~ a railway station and many power lines.

Watch for Tuesday's Daily News and $500.00 ir cash prizes. Enter thl

, new and exciting Jig-Sa\\ 1 Contest. apr3,5

!UGSY'S BEANE~ ...

- -------~·--···...._ ·-..-· .... , ·"" .-,,.,.,, ,.,.W"'.,..._ ... ;-.-:.."'WII"..:o.l•o. ... ' ' .... ~···:,•.ro

(PUn:! ) THESE BOTTLES Ef<TAINLY GET NFAW

THE END (J; THE

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12

SATURDAY

.. , ..... ~. DOLORES

MI~HAtlS · O'~ONNRl "~..:ct '' •·u:••••• l(lllllol'l.l'ft

DAVID WEISBART • H!NRY LEVIN • WINS10N MILLER ........ , ...... ""'"· c ' c

Also-UP-TO.THE-MINUTE NEWS

TIMES OF SHOWS: E\'E:SI:SG SIIOWS: 7 O'CLOC:K-9.00 •

~1,\ TINEE: 2 P.~l.

ADMISSION PRICES FOR THIS ENGAGEMENT1

EVESING-ADULTS ....... 75c. CHILDREN ..... 35e: MATINEES-ADULTS ..... SOc. CHILDREN ...... 25e:

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

LAST J~MES TO-DAY "MAN OF A THOUSAND FACES"

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, APRIL3 '

Capitol Saturday

"NIGHT PASSAGE" WITH JAl\lES STEWART

. AUDIE MURPHY ·

I Paramount The ...

Saturday 1 . · ·

- .. i-·~~-:~t-B~L-~~~-~~-~E-:S-IN-- Mature Parent 1

A magnificent six·star action - 1 picture filmed In the most Pat Bonne and Shirlev Jones I thrilling color process ever combine their golden voices and MO~IENTS of CIIJLD·PARI::ST fever had so recent1/ made Jlus· brought to the screen opens ::int· refreshing personalities in INTIMACY CAN'T BE bed and distracted-and between urday at the Cr.pltoi The1trc "April Love," Twentieth Ccn- PLANNED him and Chuck there flashed one

I with the presentation of Um· tury·Fox• story of youth lui ro· 1 -- ol those moments of completed versa! . International's "Ni~ht mance, which opens Saturday at :by MRS. l\IURIEL LA,WRENCE intimacy which, piled up, build Passage", which has hmcs the Parr.mount Theatre. j That ~ornmg Chucks ~other our love for another person.

II Stewart. and Audie ~Iurphy Five songs by Paul Francis 1 phoned h1s lathe~ at ,the off1ce to He thought. "This is extraor· : , head!ng its six·star cast. Webster and Sammy Fain I announce that h1s !mal mca.slc dinarily satisfying. I shall read;

-------- -- -·---" -

SATURDAY 1 The film Is truly the most brlgten this storv of young love I had dtsappearcd. That evem~g to Chuck after dinner every I exciting package offered out· and the ~uthcniic lJeauly of ! ~~~ h~~~~:~~!d 1f!~~in~J·~ht~~: ni~h;:~ld. He read to Chuck The saga of the McLaine brothers, door fr.ns In a decade, since -1t scene~ f1lmcd on the lush store and bought "The Wizard of h h h ted r d £ 11 combines the talents of two breedmg ~arms of Kentucky, Oz." After supper he read ~~n~~ng \fe~~ e~o a~~s pr~:tio~ who 0 owed different f1.,;1• topflight action heroes with n plus excltmg, ~.arness races and 1 Chuck several chapters. manager. He rend to him when 1' d b d'fc t I ··~

: unlquo story screened in Te~· ~ Co~nty ~a.~r sequences, g1.vc 1

!leaching the point where he would ha,·e preferred to rend 1 lVe Y 1 1eren aws, 1 nlramn, the new wide scre.:n Apnl Lo\ e an up·to·thc.mm· . Dorothy tries on the magic shoes his newspaper to himself. He 1 b t t d l ; process, never before used in u.te cppcal. The young. nt~rac- ' o! the squashed Witch o£ the read to him when his stomach U Wan e t 1e same

I. a movie, which has more clarity hve cast headed by the na!lon's , East, he paused to turn a page. was upset by a dient's fa\·or of I

and warmth o£ color than any Numper One recording star, Pat · Chuck said intensely. "Hurry up, a rich lobster lunch. But the process to date. • . Boone, adds freshness and Daddy-go on. go on!" moment of completed intimacy

Colorado is the background charm to George Agnew Cham· His (ather raised his eyes dirt not return. of this payroll robbery thriller berlain's novel from which Win· from the hook to look into the Finally he faced this-and the wltb Stewart and :\lurphy ln the 1 ston :lliller fashioned the screen· familiar !i\'e·vear-old face I hat stoory hour was discontinuted. most two-fisted portrayals of 1 play. The songs which Pat : -- · A week Inter he and Chuck their fabulous picture careers. :and Shirley sing arc "April 1 Crest Farm, a showplace of were waiting for the cars' oil to Murphy becomes a villain in Love," and "Clove in the -:Ilea· i the Blue Gro':Os country and be changed at the garage. Sud­this one for the first time lntl dow," "Give :\lc A Gentle Girl" • one ol the most successful denly he remembered a packet Stewart Is a hero, but bot!, "Bcn!onvllle Fair" nnd ·"Do It ·breeding farms in the cou~try, of butterscotch in his pocket. j play in a relationship which /Yourself." :served as the home. of Shirley As Chuck accepted his piece, he . rcm;:,lns a secret until the aurli· Producer David Weisbart and J_oncs and Dolores 1\llchaels, the said incredulously, "Gosh thanks

I ence finds it out toward the ·Director Henry Lc1•in took their s1s~ers whom Pat, a boy from Daddy" - nnd abruptly again middle of the story. company of stars and tcchni· Ch~ea;;o, transplanted to the there was between them one of

Never has U·I assembled such cians to Lexington, Kentucky ;.fnrm, ro'!lances l~ the s.toiJ:· those unpl~nned moments of a perfect big name cast for an for the outdoor scenes which Pat, who mducted mto the mlrl· completed mt1macy wh1ch. arid· outdoor film as for this exccp· Cinemutographer Wilfred Cline, j cacies of harness racing a~d ed together, enrich and deepen tionally suspenseful robber·kil· A.S.C., photographed in DeLuxe becomes a su.ccessful sulky dr11·· oul' !o1'e for o~e another . ler yarn IITittcn by Borden Color to enhance the O\'erall ! er, under Shirley's tute~e. A These are v1tal ,moments be­Chase. 'Chief of the gang to bcautv of the production. Crown :championship trotting race run tween us and a child. But they which l\lurphy belongs Is Dan - . at the famed Lexington Race· come by themselves and can Duryea. whose smile has more 1 thrllling glamour girls. ! way furnishes an exciting climax ne,·er be made to. happen. venom than a snake's fangs. An · Producer Aaron Rosenberg' and brings fulfillment to Pat's So we are foohsh to trr a~d outstanding performance Is gi\'· 'went all out on this production 1iove for Shirley. . !llak~ them happen by mamtam· 1

Also-UP-TO.THE-MINU7E 1\EWS

TIMES OF SHOWS:

f.\'E:'\1:\G SHOW:': ; PJI.-~ PJt

~1.\TI:'\EE: 2 PJI. en by young Brandon dcWildc, 1 to give It unlimited wealth of I Dolores !>lichael~. the first mg r1tuals of ~~?~Y ho.~rs. gam,es 1

the boy who was so good In :background by sending the com·. gradunte o£ Twentieth Century· a~d oth_er hac~ 1' lties ~~t~ a chd~ , "Shane." In this film he's an

1· pany to the Rocky ~lountain ·Fox' new Talent School, has 1t'h en YiP 1a\e cease 0 en)o)

C I ·' ' · 1 · h A th em ourse ves. 1 ADMISSION PRICES FOR THI unwilling member of the robber I area ncar . Durango, o orauo,. the co-stamng ro e .w•~ ,, r ur Indeed we stop them from re·, S EN\.l,~GE!I!I gang. for all extenors. Cameraman i O'Connell, of "PICniC and curring when we do I E\'El'ii:<IG-ADl:LTS .

On the distaff side, Dianne i William Daniels. a master of i "Bus Stop" {~me, an~ other Onlv experience p~oves this to I . · .ij,, lllllllRES ... .

Foster, as Charlie, the waitress, 1 wide Hreen color. too,k full ad·; !llembcrs of the supportmg cast us. But young parents can at

1. "ATINEF.S-ADULTS

who lo1•es 1\lurphy ln vain only , vantage of the magnlhccnt pan· mclurlc :\latt Crowley, Jeanette/ , . 50r. liiii.IJRES .. .

ito find th.at Stewart is her i oram;1s. Tremendous ~r~clit goes Nolan and Brad_ Jackson. , Watch for Tuesday's I 1 mnn. turns m ll finely shaded j' to Director James Ne•lson. a "Apnl Love 1s Pat Boones • • . I characterization. Elaine Stewart discovery of Stewart's, who 1 second starring picture for Daily News and 5500.00 tr. i as the wife of railroad mogul made his motion picture debut· Twentieth Century·Fox and. as cash prizes. Enter th€ . Jay C. Flippen. has a comc·hith· with "::o;ight P.assage" r.ftcr. in his first, "Bernar~ine," the new and exciting Jig-Sa\\ . er look for hath Strwart and mnnv years of d1recllng Broad- teenagers fnvonte displays an ' :\olurphy which estnblishes her wny 'stage and tcle,·ision produc· ingratir.ting style of acting and Contest. I as one of the screen's most tions. 'singing. apr3,5 i

LAST TIMES TOaDAY "LAND UNKNOWN"

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111:~ Drinks. We Give Goocl SeniCI',

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Office 2274 Rea. 4357

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Agency Department U, Water St. Dial ttoz

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HEAP & PARTNERS (NFLT\) LTC

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144 Patrick Street, Dial 2852 S76 Duckworth St., Dial 3911

% Locations:

FIRE INGURANCE CUUSBlE CO., LTD •

Agents for VNDERWRITERS AT

LLOYDS. LOW RATES

DIAL 5031

__ _....D-.IA•L•5•08•5 --FISH STORES CCNTRACTORS

For n1l your PAINTING, ROOFING, and CJDMNE\' ELECTRICAL SERVICE REPAIRS.

At !easonable rates. PHONE 934SOH.

CONTRACTORS SUr PLIES

UNITED NAIL AND FOUNDRY CO., L1D.

HAMILTON AVENUE Heating and VentllaUOD.

Structural and Re·inforclnl Steel

DIAL 80171

DRUG STORES

CONNORS' DRUG STORE LA.I\IBERT'S COUGH. SYRUP

can be obtained at CONNORS DRVG STORE

334 WATER ST.

ONES ELECTRIC 80 PRESCOTT ST.

DIAL 6426 Specialists in Motors, '

Generators, Sterun Irons and all Househoi•J Appliances.

ELECTRICAL 5E~·. VICE RIDEOUT'S ELECTRICAl.

SERVICE Eledrlcal Contractor

408 Water Street, St. John's, Newfoundlant! •

Phone 8344

ENGINES

E. and 8. BARBOUR LTD. Dlslrlbulors of:

Kelvin lllarlne Diesels Kelvin Ricardo Gas Engines

Full Line of Spare Parts. nz · 474 WATER ST.

CITY FISH SHOP 36 PRESCOTT ST.

DIAL 22%6 Service, Quality, Variety

FURNITURE MOVERS

HOUSEHOLD JWVERS & SH'PPERS LTD.

TORBAY ROAD Packing, Crating, Shipping Agents for Allled Van Lines

T. C. HIBBS, Mounger Res. 6455; Office 90061·2

LEDREW'S EXPrESS LTD Ue DUCKWORTH ST. ,

Local and. Jona tllstance movtn~~: parklna. craUDe and ehlpplna. Momben ol C.W.A. and M.M.T.A

AI<DII for Unlltd Van lin ... D. B. LeDBF.W. MANAGER

Olllee t!JG, Wareboate SO.'H

GIFT SHOPS

HARDWARE STORES

HARRI~ & HISCOCK LTD GENERAL HARDWARE Distributors for Sunbeam

Electrical Appliances. Sportlng Goods and Sports wear for all occasions.

DIAL 5016

HEATING D. c. BISHOP

127 NEW GOWER ST. DIAL 3:n7

Clmplete Plumbing and Heating Service

ERNEST CLOU:i.ON, LI~IITED

McCLARY AUTOMATIC WARM AIR CONDJ'l'IONL~G

210 WATER ST. DIAJ, 4183

HEATING

MATCHES

BRnfAY SAFETY :\lATCHES

Distributed by FRANK Me NAMARA LTD. Queen St. Dial 5143 . «

MEAT MARKETS

JIM uHIELDS Cor. FRESHWATER and

PENNYWELL ROAD DIAL 3469

Complete up·to-date Meat Market

PIANOS and ORGANS

A. L. COLLIS Piano and Organ Showroom:

TOPSAIL ROAD Dial ~90ZA

Factory: Water St., Hr. Grace P.O. Box 358·'

c. A. HUBLEY, LTD. PHOTOGRAPHY PLUMBING and BEATING ~~ .... ~~~ .... -.--

CONTRACTORS GARLA~u'S STUDIO Rep. General Electric 76 PLEASAllo'T ST.

36 Kings Road Dial 2918 DIAL t958

HEARING AIDS BEL TONE HE,' lUNG GLASSES

BEL TONE HEARING GLASSES

CALL S. W. SHORl

HOME INDUSTRIES

Wedding Photos, Portraits and Commercial Photography

CAMERA SHOl' 87 LONt:'S BILL

DIAL 7612L Newfoundland views artistic· ally mounted and framPd. See cur selection.

PAPER PRODUCTS

REAL ESTATE

1\0TICE For Appraisals of Real Estate

and Auctions in pri1·ate homes.

DIAL 90317. JOHN D. O'DRISCOLL 1'\o. 1 Bideford Plact"

SERVICE STATIONS

I ALMER'S SERVICE STATION

TOPSAIL ROAD • WASHfNG • GREASING

TIRE REPAIRS DIAL 3518

:\IARSHALL MOTORS FISK TIRES

Guaranteed against Cuts, Blowouts, Bruises,

Under Inflation. Call MARSHALL MOTORS

Water St. Dial 800~1

SHEPPARD'S SERVICE STATION

TffiE REPAffiiNG WASHTXG

BATTERY CHARGING GREASING DIAL 2109

SEttVICES

SERVICE o OIL FURNACE o BEFRIGERAIORI • WASHERS 4 BASGES

NORMAN DICK LTD. DIAL '166 WATER Sl

SERV1CE FOR PIANOS AND CRGANS

STOVES

R. \\'. L.-\.ll,~£5

TRASI- FOl1~'DR• 3nZ II' A TER II. ~lan::lacturm ~

~ti!D or a&l

Rf.GAL R.t~Gll DIAL S-Ill ·:Ill

~I. I I > 1 • I ! ·: ,· i' ;;:~ , • : ·, CHURCH SUPPLIES

DIAL UN DIAL 4611

LARACY'S REMEMBRANCE SHOP

Gifts, Games, Toys, Noveltles, Cout's Cards

for all occaslo111 DIAL 4265

WHOSE. BU\THDAYi Certainly a handmac;e article from NONIA il only tbe Best

will do.

THE LA \VRENt.E NFLD. CO., LTD.

New LocaUon: Tunlnr ""d Rtpah101.

Ovrr Thlrt)' years• e:~~:perltl'lce aa•uru eompettnt lfr'\'lcln1.

•• • , 1 .: i :. EXCAVATING : .• ~. ·. [ I , COLONIAl STJ\1IONERY : ~ :':~' .. ~ I ; L1MIT£D DOWNS DRY EXCAVATINI AND ':r·· 1

: •1 1 :: Complete Church Furnish CLEANING LTD. GRADING GROCERS

' ' · ' • •RN• d R 11 1 Artl 1 ~overing St. John's with Heavy l!!qolpment 1<1 Rlreo t . •. I :i ._. an e g ous c U F Effl 1 t S I Graden, Crone Treeka. : : ' I • • DIAL 4552 ast. c en erv ce. Cnllbed Slone, Rood Or•••• deUvo"'d B. wALSH · ' .: ·I ;: tlla WATER ST. tc HAMILTON AVE. 13'00 .P:fu~:in EXCAVATIII'o BEST IN LEADING

':~ I ;: DIAL 69115 co. LTD. GROCERY LINES. . , • Pbeaa, 1417-tUI ·11 :,.' CLEANING Walor st. Well 91. Joba'L You Choice of what you need I ELECTRICIANS DIAL 6160

.. ··.f :: COMPOUNDS FLORISTS 785 WATER ST. WEST

f MARINI!:, DIESEL AND ~BURCHILL'S

DRY CLEANING -·------HOME CONTRACTORS Hmm IMPROVEMENTS

NO DOWN PAYMENT EASY MONTf!LY PAYMENTS • Slonn Saahe1 aad Doore e Add that extra room1. • Modernilt Your llltchtD8

Contaet W. B. PARSONS LTD.

Lonf Pond Road Dial IIIOIS'J

JEWELLERS

%09 • 211 DVCKWORTH ST. Paper and Paper Products

WHOLESALE ONLY DAJL 6268 · 7636

RADIO-TV REPAIRS

GREAT EASTERN OIL COMPANY. LTT'

REPAIRS. TO RADIOS, T. V AND ALL ELECTIUCAL.

APPLIANCES . DIAL 3001 to 3005

E. R. ROGERS 1S McFarlane s•.

'Pbone ~61

SNACK BAAS

ED'S LUNCH DIAL 5370

WELL COOKED FOODS FREE DELIVERY

COURTEOUS SERVICE

SOFT DRINKS ·. :) . R. ). COLEMAN LTD. . ELECfRICAl ENG. HOW~E OF FLOWERS SUPERM,~RKET WEST END TELEVISION

., DVSTBANE 24 HDIU' Servlct for Repalra Serving St. John'• PORTUGAl COVE THOMPSON JEVlELLERY T.V.·Radio-Car Radio Repair~ ALLIED AGENC-IES i: :; NewfoundiP.nd'• Cleanell from "l locations: You can buy your grocerlr~ 303 WATER ST. 705 WATER STREET F REs B 1 E . · :· word, Obtainable at to Moton, Geberatora and 317 B.W..JLTON A VENUE j t h I St. J h Wh. en selecting a D1'runond CALL 6865 '"'llh F Trl 1 F1 bU !~ . · R. J. COLEMAN LTD. Household Appliances. DIAL 80059 ~~ ~~~e e~e: ;ellvered n~~ Rln~; see our private Diamond At Night, Day, Holiday or " reeCAL~0s~;~ 81

II' ''1 m US DVCKWORTIJ, ST. l\L\1. 11" SO% WATER ST. your dC>Or wltbout charge. 13oolh. Sunday for Fast Service and ALLIED AGENCIES

' I : OL\1. 1411 DL\1. '7410 We pve D.P.S. Stamps DIAL 450% Guaranteed work call TmA. !17 New Gower St.

USED CARS

..... ,ft.<O'II I~· ~-------------------------------=-----..:... __________ ...,. ______________________ __ ' ), ' . '' i ::t ~ ) ;· .•• II I

'' I . f. ~ . '" "j ~:: ~ ;·

Designed For ·our Readers' Convenience -------------------------------------------------------------------------~ ..

---- - -----~---------·-·"--·~·-- .... , .. ,

fiSJIElliES RE BIOLOG'CAL

TECH Nit (~I

ucations are MPh Biolo;•e~l at t e qualificatiO ~pon ol' (be scales ANT ,

ASSIST ASSISTANT

duties are ·r· tl·orrs de Q~all IC3 h

'liative. goo i P l I sea when nc ~de positiO!I w be taking thc•r

Applications. l:.i\ ~or~ing expenc tions and the n~ {erences (not rc Muid be sent ~oard ol canad; ,\pplicanls shou Grade X and Gr

results of ~ will be

when th

VI

YOU CAt

GROW

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DEBEt~

AND TRl

WRI'

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N01 N

33

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1\EWS

s _,, PJt.

It LDIIE:\ .. ..

tiLilRES .. .

CARS

• 13

¢ DAILY NE~S, _ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THU~SDAY, APRIL 3, 1958 .. _, (

I

'

I ', I '

r

,I ,,. I

I li.

·nn·s ttJ:~I-:.\RCll BOARD OF C,\~ADA f]i!IE 01:;t'\l sTATl()~, ST. JOliN'S, NFLD.

JIOL • · ..

tfCHNI&IANS REQU;RED 1 \1.\I.E\ FULL TDIE

.••. '·' .1~,· inntc .. !or ~hrce full time positi~ns ~~; .. •Ja·.0,, •.• 1 s;:1li'"'· Sal;H'Y prr ye~r. dcpclllhng ; :~.1 )'1 '1\,:~1 :;,,.,,, 1o he gin at some point in one of •'~ q,. I

~;;~,-~~.f':\T r~:rll:'\ll'IA:-1 <21 S27gQ.J20-3150 .1::1:T·.1\;•· Tl-:cll\'ICIA:\ (!) .$2280-120-2640 \~:, ~ .. ·, .• ,

1, etrt' :.• l>,i;t hiulogists. in _lishrrics work.

~~. ·• •• ,.. 11v•T\'d arc: Grade XI. mtelhgencc. tn· ,.: : :.':·.·:;' ., ·., ,•,~1 condition ~nd the abili:y to work · :·.,,· -~ .... ' ... ,.,, .. r,·. Applications !or the lower ; ,,; :" ~:: .... :! h• ,·,cccptcd fn•m students who will ;::i. r: :·:~~ .. , .:·.n!!• XI e~amina:ions in June. ~f :;~;:.eo •··' '·

• •• • -·::1•::·. ~: .. :·~ a~··· m!'ritnl st~tus. any prc~l~us

V:~-. (\"v: .• · ..... ,.,Jucallonal ~n•l other quahhca· '::t;!d ;!~r ::. 1 ~:"; cnrl arldrmcs ~r at least two rc­:::.:.; ,.:.•: ,._..,·.,"·;. unc, 1f po;s!blr. ~r a teacher) :•' :{,. ,,.,. : to th•• Director, I· 1shcncs Research ;:_:.:; ~; \ ... _:,;,1, Biological Stat ion. St. ~ohn's; N£1~. :.•·. ,., ,_,,·.,t:rl indurl~ cN'lll•crl cop1cs of their !~;;·.t~~.! :::-.u!l' XI n;ar~s or of G:·~dc XI and of ., .. • .. · .. , .. ". !t·:!wr ,•xanun::uons taken. Tbesc re· "t.:":·:;; :.~ :·,•tun:cd a111l all applicants will be ::::• ·';;~,·a uu· positions h<.,·c b~cn !illcd.

------------CLOTHES makt the man If CHAFf

makes :he clothes

v:M. L. CHAFE, Tailer A HOt D ·woRTH ST.

YOU CAN MAKE YOUR MONEY

GROW FASTER BY EARNING

ON EASTERN. CANADA

BENTURES .... ~R ANY TERM OF FIVE TO TEN YEARS

INCLUSiVE. 414% FOR THREE AND FOUR YEARS. MONEY SHOULD EARN MONEY.

NOTICE ·.-

To be sold by public auction, pursuant to an order of the Chief Justice, made in an action entitled Her l\lajcsty's Attorney General !or Newfoundland and John C. Newland, Liquidator of Fortune Bay Products Limited under the Winding.up Act (chapter 206 of the Revised Statutes of Cannda, 1052) and the Rc~:al Trust Company as Trustee for the holders of bonds of Fortune Bay Products Llll)lt· cd. with the approbation of the Chief Justice, by Joseph Fitz­gibbon, undersigned auctioneer,

thirteen point nine feet to a point marked "D" on the said plan; thence along the Inside face of the aforesaid Public Wharf North slxty·slx degrees ten minutea West ehrhty-six point nine feet to a point marked "E" on the said plan; thence by land owned by Lake & Lake North twenty· eight degrees forty minutes East sixty·eight point nhte feet !{) a point marked "F" on the said plan; thence by the public right-of-way South fifty-five degrees East forty­six teet t~ a point marked

East and relating all bearingf. therein thereto Commencing at a wooden stake placed at the Northerly corner of lam: owned by George T. Dixon Limited thence by land own· 'ed ~~ George T. Dixon Limit­ed South twenty-eight degrees forty minutes West sixty­eight point hlne feet, thence by the Inside face of the Public Wharf North sixty-six degrees ten minutes West seventy-two feet, thence by the inside face of the Public Wharf South !orty·three de· grees thirty minutes West six Point three feet, thence along the afor~said inside face of the Public Wharf North forty­six degrees thirty minutes West sixty-two point one feet, thence by land owned , by George T. Dixon Limited North forty-six degrees East eighty point six feet, th~nee by a public right-of-way South fifl!l·flve degrees East one hundred arid ten feet to the point of commencement the whole containing an area o! Nine thousand, six . hundred and sixty-eight square teet.

HOLY CROSS A. A.

Easter Sweep·

at 127 Hamilton Avenue, St. John's, on Friday the 6th day o£ June, 1058 nt three o'clock in the afternoon ALL THOSE pieces or parcels or lnn!l situat· ed at Fortune in the Province of Newfoundland and more par· tieularly described as follows:

1. ALL TIIAT certain parcel or tract of land situate lying and being on the point of Beach In the town of Fortune afore· said being a land Jot adjac­ent to I he public wharf at Fortune premising that the face of the wharf along the North side of the Western Arm at Fortune has a magne­tic bearing of North sixty-six degrees ten minutes East and relating all bearings therein there!{) commencing at a wooden stake' placed at the Northerly corner of land owned by George T. Dixon Limited thence by land o£ George T. Dixon Limited South fi!ty·scvcn degrees thirty minutes West seventY· six point fh•e feet thence by inside face o£ the Public Wharf North thirty-one de­grees thirty minutes West twcnt)·-one feet thence iJ!: in· side face of aforesaid Public Wharf North twenly·nine de­grees forty minutes East thirteen point three !eel thence !urther along the In·

. "G" on the said plan, thence by the concrete deck' on the bre;.kwater South flft~r-elght degrees thirty minutes East fifty-one point one feet to the point of commencement; the whole containing an area or Five thousand eight hun· dred and thlrty·two square feet (which said piece or parcel of land Is more particu· Iarly described on the said plan or diagram as Lot Num· her 1, and being delineated In Red): ALSO ALL THAT certain parcel or tract or land situate, lying and· being on the· Point of Beach, In· 4. ALL THAT piece or parcel of Fortune, aforesaid being a land situate and being at land lot adjacent to the Pub· Fortune, in the Electoral Dis· lie Wharf at Fortune, afore· trict of Burin, In the said said, premising that the face ProvJnce of Newfoundland of the Wharf along the North abutted and bounded as fol· side of the Eastern Arm at lows, that is to say: Com· Fortune has a magnetic bear- m~ncing at a point being the Jng of North sixty-six degrees South East corner of the Pub· t~n minutes East and relat· lie Works of Canada's con· ing all bearings th~rein, crete gutter thence running thereto, commencing at· a along the Public Wharf (con· wooden stake piaeed on the crete face l north fifty-three Nol'lherly corner of land degrees West one hundred owned by Lake & Lake Limit· and twenty-seven feet, thence cd and marked "L" on the along a timber approach In said plan; thence by lando an irregular line South owned by Lake & Lake Limit· seventy-eight degrees forty-six ed South forty-six degrees t minutes West sixteen point West elghty·four point three 1

1 three feet South forty-six de-

feet to a point marked "M" grees fifty-six minutes West on the taid plan; thence along' twenly·four point nine feet Inside face of the Public ani South fifteen degrees Wharf North forty-one de- eight minutes West fourteen gre~~ West forty-eight point point nine feet_ thence ruri· five feet to a point marked nins South sixty·six degrees

side face of the aforesaid Public Wharf North sixty· eight degrees live minutes East forty·nine point· three feet thence by a public right­of·way South fifty-five degrees East seventeen point two feet to the point or commencement the whole containing an area or One thousand, five hun· dred and sevent)·-one square feet.

"N" on the said plan; thence 1 forty·flve mln·utes East along 1J!1 land owned by Wright · the Public Council Road, Freeman Lake and Hul>ert thence running North sixteen M. Lake North fifty-seven d~grees thirteen minutes degrees thirty minutes East West along the Town Council seventy-six point five teet to Road twenty-one point five a point marked "0" on the feet to the place of com-said plan; thence by a public

1 mencemcnt.

rlght-of·way .South fifty-five 5. ALL TIIAT piece or parcel degrees !ast thirty-three of land situate lying and be-point seven 'feet to a point ing on the Point of Bench in of commencement; the whole the town or Fortune in the containing an area of Three Province of Newfoundland thousand two hundred and and bounded as follows: On twenty square feet (which the r>iorth by the Goverment said piece or parcel of land Pier by which It measures I is more particularly describ- Ninety-two feet more or Jess, ed on the said plan or dia-~ on the South by proper\~ of i gram as Lot Number 2, and Lake & Lake by which It : being delineated In red): M easurcs One hundred and . AND ALSO ALL THAT cer· twenty-nine feet more or less, I tain parcel or tract of land On tl\e East by other land of situate, lying and being on the said Lake & Lake by the Point of Beach, In the which it measures Thirty·two town of Fortune, aforesaid, feet more or less and on the I being a land Jot adjacent to West by property of the Town the Public Road to the Wharf Council of Fortune by which , at Fortune aforesaid, premia· it measures Thirty-two feet i Jng that the fa~ of the Wharf more or less. !'

(1) 42280-BLANK , (2) 48851-BLANK

(3) 3911 8-BLANK (4) 35292-BI.ANK (5) 2133-leo Cantwell, 23 Patrick St. (6) 38930-BLANK (7) 39014-BLANK (8) 440BO-BLANK (9) .36476-BLANK

(10) 44222-BLANK (11) 15281-BLANK (12) 26992-V. Walsh (1 3) 37245-BLANK (14) 34877-BLANK (15) 41180-BLANK (16) 18607-BLANK (17) 18612-BLANK (18) 14571-BLANK (19) 40751-BLANK (20) ~857-BLAN.K .

Winners may claim their prizes by calling at O'REGAN AGENtiES LTD., 86 Hamilton St., from 9 to 11 o'clock TO-NIGHT and SATURDAY MORNING or 'PHONE 80154.

FISHERIES RESEARCH BOARD OF CA::-1:\DA BIOLOGICAL STATIO:>\, ST. JOHN'S, :'1/FLD.

TECHNICIANS REQUIRED (FE~l:\LE' Ft:LL Tl~IE

1. Applications arc ilwitcd !or thre~ lull lime positions at the Biological Station. Salary per year. d~pending upon qualifications, to begin at some point in one of the scales o!:

ASSISTA:!'lT TECH::-IICIAN (31 ... S3270-150-3i20 ASSISTANT TECH:'\ICIAN (2) . ,. $2790·120-3150

2. The duties are to assist biologists in the laboratory ph~ses o! !ishcrics work. Quall!ications desired arc: Usually at least 1 year Uni1·ersity (but persons with high Grade XI standing and further training iJ. other f1elds may apply), intelligence and initiative. For the Grade 3 position the possession o! a University degree will be an advantage.

3. Applications, giving age, martial ~tatu~. any previous working experience, educational and other qualifica· lions and the names am: addresses of at least two re­ferences (not relatives, one, if possible. of a professor or teacher under whom the applicant has studied) should be sent to the Director, Fisheries Research Board of Canada, Biological Station, St. John's, Nfld.

. Applicants should incbde certified copies of their Grade XI marks and of ~he results o£ highe1 examina­tions taken. · These records will be returned and all applicants will be noti!ied when the positions ha\·e been filled.

m31.ap3,8

tVANTED TO BUY BIRCH LOGS

and

1" BIRCH LUMBER For Specifications and Prices

Contact

I I PLU~IBING & BEATING

! P. M. Donnelly '

' I

PLUMBING aad BEATING CONTRACTOR

Installation and Repalra ·to all types aystema.

'Phone 5578F 48 FOREST ROAD

tan24.1J

GREAT EASTERN OIL & IMPORT

\ CO., 'LTD. Radio, Television Washers,

Refrigerators Deep Freezers. Electnc Ran~ers. Floor Polishers. Gramophones

Public Addren Systema. Tape Recorders.

REP AIRS AND SERVICE 5 LINES

DIAL 3001 to 3005 WATER ST.

;an26.h.

DON'T GAMBLE

I •• WITH FATE I

ln, ~ ~~~t~ : \ ~~ PROVINCIAl 1 INSURANCE AGENCY i J-JIIINE Jm : CLAUDE A. DAWE: ' 164 WATER ST. i P.O. 801175

\_ - --. . .. - -

> •

BO~ ;f's qoo

Dutclt Rpple Ja~ ...

iu~ \eFEATURE

FLAVOR

I '

DEBENTURES ARE EASY TO BUY AND ARE AN APPROVED

TRUSTEE INVESTMENT. WRITE OR CALL .TO-DAY

Eastern Canada 'ngs And Loan Co.

2. ALL THAT certain parcel or tract of land situate lying and being on the Point of Beach, In the town of Fortune, in I the Electoral District o1 Burin, in the said Province o! Newfoundland, being a land lot adjacent !{) the Public Wharf at Fortune, aforesaid, premising that the face of the wharf along the North side of the Eastern Arm at .Fortun~ has a magnetic bear· ing of North sixty·slx degrees ten minutes East and relating all bearings, therein, thereto, commencing at a point mark· ed "A" on the plan attached to the Conveyance from George T. Dixon Limited to the Company dated the­day of November A.D. 1932, registered In Volume 250, Folio 221, of the Registry of Deeds Cor Newfoundland said point "A'' being located at lhe angle where the curb along the inside of the con· crete deck intersects the West curb, forming the sutter for draining the said deck; then-ce along the said concrete gutter South twelve point two feet to a point marked "B'' on the said plan; thence by the aforesaid gutter South forty·four degrees West thirty-two point nine feet to a point marked "C" on the said plan; thence ~' the Public Wharf South fifty-six

along the North side of the TOGETHER WITII ll b lid·, Eastern Arm at Fortune has . a u a magnetic bearing of North [Ins~. erccll~ns, ma~hlnery and sixty-six degreea ten minutes eqUipf!lent Situated m or on the East and relating all bearings said, p1eces or parcels of land or therel:1, thereto, commencing attached thereto. . . at a wooden stake on the Parllculars and. cond1t1ons of North aide of the rlght~f· sale !!lay be obtamed from. the way leading to the Public Aucllcneer at 127 Ham11ton Wharf on the Point .of Beach, Avenue, St. John's,_ or from P. said stake being twenty feet Lloyd. Soper, Sollc1tor for the plus or minus distant from Plalnllff, Department of U:e At. the North West aide of the torncy General, St .. John s. . . concrete deck behind the Dated this 1st day of April'

At the 25\h anniversary o! the Dominion F e s t i \'a I here Mr. !lope-Wallnce will choose the best play and best actor from among , eight groups chosen to compete by regional adjudicator Richard West.

CANADIANS FOR 70 YEARS , ••

NOW READY TO SERVE NEWFOUNDLANDERS

AT 164 WATER ST.

3335 P.O. BOX 175 degrees twenty minutes West

wow sSOO.OO IN CASH PRIZES

The Daily News JIG SAW CONTEST IT'S EXCITING! EASY TO PLAY!·

EASY. TO ·wiN! STARTS TUES~A Y, APRIL 8th

AND FOR 47 CONSECUTIVE DAYS

public breakwater on the A.D. 1958. Point of Beach and marked ·Joseph

Fitzgibbon "T" on the eald plan; thence by the aforesaid rlght-or.way North flfty·nine degrees forty­five minutes West ·eighty­point seven feet to a point marked "U'' on tile said plan, thence North thirt!J·slX de­greer five minutes East filly­eight point eight feet to a point marked "V" on the said

Audloneer. .

For .Fast Taxi plan; thence South flfty.sever. degrees Corty.five minutes East thlrly·two point five feet ' to a point marked "W" on the said plan; thence South thirty-two degrees thirty minutes West eleven point nine feet to a point marked "X" on the said plan; thence South sixty-five degrees fifty. five minutes East thirty-seven teet to a point . marked "Y"

Service HOTEL TAXI

' Dial 2424-2410 QUEEN'S ROAD

Open 6.30 a.m. to :!

on the said plan; thence South eighteen degrees five minutet West forty·seven feet to the point of commence­ment; the whole containing an area of Tbree thousand nln<! hundred and thirty-three square feet (which .aid plate or parc:el o( land is more partlcularly deacrlbed on the said plan or diagram •• Lot Number 3, and being deline­ated fn Red).

3. ALL THAT certain p1rcel or tract of land altuate lying and being on the point of Beach In the town of Fortune In the Electoral District of Burin In the said Province of New­foundl•nd being a l•nd lot ad· jacent to the public wharf at Fortune afor.esaid premising thit the fa~e of the wharf along the North aide of the Eattern Arm at Fortune has a magnetic bearing of North sixcy,&lx desree• ten minutes

------------~---' The zumpkln is a hybrid cross : between zucchini squash and ' pumpkin. -----

Reindeer moss, a type of li­chen, Is the principal source of 1 food Jor the caribou reindeer of · the Arctic.

The first U. S. Soldiers' Home was established March 3, 1851, at Washington, D.C.

Boys have more common colds than girls until after the age of 10, according to researchers.

The word "hygiene" comes from the goddess of health Jn '!

Greet ~ythology. .

Watch for Tuesday's Daily News and $500.00 ir J

eash prizes. Enter th( new and exciting Jig~Sa" Contest. apr3,5

NOWt Weekly Service From Mo.ntreal to St. John's

• Complete Insurance Coverage

• Through Rates via C.P.R., C.N.R. & C.S.L

• Refrigerated Cargo . ~pace to St. John's

• T~o~~cing and Expediting Service .

Every WEDNESDAY to ST. JOHN'S commencing April 16th,

S.S. NOV APORT and s.s. GULFPORT.

For Freight reservations contact

R. SELLARS, Special Representaiive

'Phone 5483 or 2151

Harvey & Co., Ltd. AGENTS - 'PHONE 2151

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FLEMING'S PHAR~IACY.

%6S Pennywell Road Dial 92937

ELECTRICAL · CONTRACTORS ST. JOHN'S NORTH ·

J. V. DAWE ~5 Hoyles Me.

. No fire when we wire. Dial 90001

FLORISTS . ST. JOHN'S E1\ST --

ALLANDALE NURSERU:S,

Churchill Park Dial 91051

GROCERS (RETAIL)

ST. JOHN'S CENTRAl..

W. ABBOTT 2! Lh·lngstonc St.

Dial 4953

NORMAN DOWNEY 45 Sew Gower St.

Dial 5727 ---1\IORECOi\IBE'S

GROCERY, 20 Cah·cr St.

Dial 3728 --- ----,:CALVER'S GROCERY

196 Duckworth s •. Dial 2739

!; BELBIN'S GROCERY .• S5 Quidi Vldi Road

Dial 5775 BULGER'S

·' CO:'it'ECTIONERY. ?P Kln~·s Brld~:c Poad

Dial 6926

HUTCHEN'S GROCERY :IIE,\T ~1ARKET, 53 William Strw

Dial 7450 and 6062 ---- ---·-- .._

ST. JOHN'S 1\'EST

H.R.CLARKE Topsail Road Dial 92295

L. HEALEY Cross Roads and Water St

Dial 30Z6 . CHARLES O'KEEFE

69 Hamilton Street Dial 4447

INSURANCE AGENTS AND BROKERS

:St. John's r=ast

STAN FOWLER 2! Queen's Rd.

P. 0, Box 63 Dial 5531

JOB BROTHERS & CO. LTD. Water Strrct

Dial 2658, 4123

l\lEEHAN & CO. 1'.A. Bldg. Duekwnrth St.

Dial 70t6·7047

REG.T. MORGAN Tcmplt Bldg. Duckworth St

Dial 80370·7~56

UNITED UNDERWRITERS,

Temple Bldg,, Duckworth St Dial 80370·77511 ----- ··-Sf. John's West

CROSBIE & CO., LTD Woolworth Bldg. Water St.

Dial 5031

BEAUTY PARLOURS

St. John's Central ____ .. ______ , __ AMBASSADOR

BF..\UTY PARLOUR 24G WAter Street

Dial 3089 --- ----

~t. John's North ------.. ~--MAM'ZELLc'S

BEAUTY PARLOUR Elizabeth Me. · Dial 90199

NU·VOGUE BEAUTY PARLOUR

Rowan St. Dial 9105

St. John's East

GERTRUDE'S IIOUSl; bF BEAUTY

67 Queen's Rd. Dial 640~

1\IARGUERITE'S BEAUTY PARI.OUR

4 Prescott St. Dial 6398

SFLD. HOTEL BEAUTY PARLOUR

C3\'endlsh Sq. Dial 7385

I BUILDING SUPPLIES ST. JOHN'S CENTRAl.. '

W. BURTON & SON 54 l.c~IARHCAST RD.

Dial 6929 Res. 9166H

ST. JOHN'S CE~TRAZ.. - .. ---------HORWOOD

l.U~IBF.R CO., I.TD. \\'atf'r lit. W. Dial 3tlll

DRUG STORES ST. JOHN'S CESTRAZ..

1\t. CONNORS LTD. 334 W A TEl! ST.

Dial 2206

St. John's North -··----·-AYLWARD'S

PHAR~1ACY Cor. Monchy & Empire A\'e

Dial 90070

DUNN'S PHARMACY

Cor. Mayor aad l\1errymeetlng Rd,

DIAL 7388

i BINDON'S PHARMACY

Cor. 81)1Javeoture aad Empire Ave, DIAL 5928

KENNEDY'S DRCG STOltE,

~04 Duckworth St. Dial 2381

PARKDALE PHAR~IACY,

Elizabeth A\·e. Dial 91120 -----------

MURPHY'S DRUG STORE.

119 ~lllltlary Road Dial 6446

THOMPSON'S PHAR:II!tCY,

45 Quldl \'ldl Road

Dial 5991

St. John's West

JOHN J. FEEHAN 490 Water St.

Dial 3531

PATRICIAN Eas~er Sweep

PRIZE. LIST lsi PRI7.E.:_No. 28834-Bl.ASK 2nd PRIZE-So. 60862-BLASK 3rd PRIZE-No. 12561-BLANK 4th. PRIZE-No. 31746-BLASK 5th PRIZE-No. 49017-BLANK 6th PRIZE-No. 21752-BLANK 7th PRIZE-No. 72795-BLANK 8th PRIZE-No. 26750-RON GUNSON 9th PRIZE-No. 67856-BLANK

·lnth PRIZE-No. 49176-BLANK 11th PRIZE-No. 30986-BLANK 12th PRIZE-No. 95·12-BIA\NK 13th PRIZE-No. 23636-BLANK Hlh PRIZE-So. 20903-D. T. CARNELL, P.A.F.B. 15!11 PRIZE-No. 13430-BLANK 16th PRIZE-No. 2740-BLANK 17th PRIZE-No. 20901-D. T. CARNELL, P.A.F.B 18th PRIZE-No. 47652-BLANK 19th PRIZE-No. 15m-BLANK 20th PRIZE-No. 14804-BLANK 21st PRIZE-No. 17985-BLANK 22nd PRIZE-No. 27331-BLANK 23rd PRIZE-No. 66319-BLANK 24th PRIZE-No. '41583-BLANK 25th PRIZE-No. 15128-B. QUILT\', 7 Prescott St. 26th PRIZE-No. 9576-BLANK 27th PRIZE-No. 31592-BLANK 28th PRIZE-No. 44351-BLANK 29th PRIZE-;'1/o, 13639-CAN'T ~USS 3ath PRIZE-No. 38847-BLANK 31st PRIZE-No. 49016-BLANK :!2nd PRIZE-No. 56092-CARm:LITA 331'11 PRIZE-No. 41387-BLA~K Mth PRIZE-No. 95257-BLt\NK 351h PRIZE-So. 15347-BILLY BUTT, Topsail Rrl :161:1 PRIZE-No. 7672-BLA:-iK 37th PRIZE-No. 18639-BLASK . 38th PRIZE-~o. 16865-BOBBY JACOBS.

. 208 Empire ,\ I'CIIlll 3flth PRIZE-So. 70H5-BLA111K 40th PRIZE-So. 67746-BI.ANii:

l'nclaimcd Lucky No. 43938. Claimed Lucky !'\o. 20186-Tcrry Carter.

24 Brazil Square. Prize wlnnf'r~ plf'a•t call at The IJominlnn

'ladJinery & Equipment Co., Ltd., 56 !'lew Gower St !Tel)

NEWFOUNDLAND SAVING'S BANK

CLOSED GOOD FRIDAY, APRIL 4th

OPEN EASTER SATURDAY, APRIL 5th, 9 to 12 a.m.

CLOSED EASTER MONDAY, APRIL 7th.

OPEN SATURDAY, APRIL 12th, ~ntil 9 to 12 a.m.

• INTEREST AT 3% SINCE 1834

BUYERS SELLERS

SWEEPSTAKE In Aid of the Lions Club Swimming Pool

2 - 1958 METEOR SEDANS

t • • T.V. REPAIRS I

Watch for Tuesday's Daily News and $500.00 ir. cash prizes. Enter thE new and exciting Jig-Sa\\ Contest.

ONE TO BUYER - ONE TO SELLER

in beautiful two-tone finish

,, ·. i l I j : :: ~ 'I

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CITY ANTENNA SERVICE. SOc. o ticket-3 for $1.00 ·- $5.00 book of 15 Tele\'lslon Antennas In· stalled. Parts sold. Phone 92761 or 90173. apr3,5 rebl4,eod,tr

(One prize per person)

TWO APARTMENTS FOR' RENT

'

CHOICE LOCATION-158 PATRICK STREET NEWLY FURNISHED, REDECORATED

AND CARPETED OIL HEATING-SEPARATE ENTRANCES

E~ch has: two Bedrooms, Living-room, Hallway, Bathroom, Kttchen, complete with. electric stove and refrigerator and :~mple closet space. ·

• Apply •

THE ROYAL. TRU·ST CO. ~

BANK OF . MONTREAL BUILDING 'PHONE 5196 WATER ST. ,P.O •. BOX 2080

'

flltUUIIU 111 Wattr lt. Dial 111u•

NOW JUST

HOURS To, wash, dry,

beautifully finish'

and return your

SHIRTS

DIAL 5155

twin LAU!'\DRY ASO

DRY CLEANING SERYICE

P.ublic Notice '

1 Applications are inl'iterl for' 'the post of Officer, Grade 1\', · (male). in I he Assessment Di· l'ision. Department of ~·uni· cipal Affairs and Supp!~·. The salan· for this post commences

' I at S2970 on the salary scale i S2970·10D·3740. i

The duties o( this post con· si~t primarily of Assessing pro·

1 perty in 1•arious municipalities I

1 !or purpose o! taxation. The .

I successful candidate will be re· , quircrl to undergo a period of· ! trainin!( in Assessment proce· 1 durc. Extensive travelling is' i im·olved. Candidates should:

I have Grade XI education. A: 1

gcod knowledge of Building: I Construction is desirable. 1

The successful applicant wlll 1 be required to furnish the 1

names of pre1:ious employers and two other references. and to · undergo medical examination.

Application in writing, stating age, educational qualifications, experience, etc., should be ad­dressed to the Civil Service Commission of N~wfoundland, Newfoundland Sa1·ings Bank Building, Duckworth Street, St. John's, so as to reach the Com­mission on or before the 16th day of April, 11158. En,·elopes containing applications should b~ clearly marked "D·I\l·A & S·l25."

CHAIRl\IAN, Civil Service Commission,

j mar29,apl3 ·

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!Save Your I Energy Use : ELECTRICITY!

· COM PioN Y LIMIT 1.0

, o .•••• ,. • \1,.10 ........ " ... ,.

Electricity In and · Around St. John's

Cheap, Reliable ----

Arkansas has had fil·e consti· tutions ( 1836, 1861, 1964, 1868, and 1874) with the present one ha viW! been amended 42 timu..

A .

NEXT WEEK

The Easter Fair AND

Bingo ST. JOSEPH'S AUDITORIUM

SIGNAL HILL ROAD

PRIZES to SPARE

at the EASTER FAIR

·for Sale Or Rent Business stand on Duckworth Street, next

door to Bank of Montreal. Freehold

property.

For further information 'PHONE 5866

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

St. Bon's Old Boys' Association

Members of the Associoton end ell ex·pupils ere

requested to assemble in the Basilica on Good

Friday at 1 a.m. for an Hour Vigil. ·' (Sgd.) T. M. DOYLE, Secretary

Macy's

CARD

H. J. Ml

Statutory

In 1hr m.111tr or thr .John Jo,rph ~1. John\ in thr. :"'r\\~ounrlland. rrtir~

prntrr. rltrmrd.

.'\:1 Jlr:·.,q::~ ri~.r.::-.;

rrrditor~ or or '.l:~~ :rt claim; or drrr~"Cf fcctJn~ tnr t;:;:e .Joseph Rnri:w John·;. aiorm:d ·

. pcntcr. tkrr~.ed are ·quested to >er.d

--- ' thcrco! hi \' riting, ,

GUARANTEED SALARY Permanent opening for man between ages 28 and 40 for salaried position. Retirement benefits, Group Insurance and Hospitalization benefits included,

Give full particulars as to age, experience, education and years of residence in St. John's .

BOX No. 1. core Daily News. m22.25.2i.!!9,ap 1.3.9

-------·----------·-------------

IEPAIRS IULCAIIZIII

... CGUIO ..

firtstont , .•.• ·-Nfld. Armature Works Ltd.

lo thr unii··~;tcr.ed·.: j the Admt":·!;;:or <f · of thr '""I r.i'\£Nd !orr tlw ~: 1 1 •!Jr r( Hl5B ;~f!Pr "J!J:rh d:i:e .-\dmiu: .. :r Jl11!' v.1~l . <li::-lrihH!t• 'h• r::J:t ~Jrtl onl! :o lilr· <'!J;~ thr,· tht·n .. ~1 .. !! h31r

llall·,! ;J· S:. .lo~~.'~ ~ ~a,r ol lt..r,·'L .\D. II~

Stad· Sched

THURSDAY: 8.00 .m -\IODEL 4.00 n.m.-o.>.•

I I I 7.30 p. m-ST. P

BAMBRICK ST. DIAL 1101 • 7192 . 9'00 p.m.-r.r.~ ------------------------

·wANTED FOR EMPLOYMENT WITH THE UNITED STATES

AIRFORCE, GOOSE BAY, LABRADOR

• r· 10 ACCOUNTING AND COST CLERKS

at $3390.40 per annum.

Mol~ or female. Permanent employment. 40 hour work week. Periodic pay incretses. Annual and sick care benefits. Interested applicants ore re­quested to apply in prson to the USAF Represen-

:FRIDAY: nu~r.o

9.30

SUNDAY: nnst:n

. tative, core of Notional Employment Service Building 28, Buckmaster's Field, Dial 7386 or 80327. • MONDAY:

------------------- 8.00 a.m.-~1.

WANTED IMMEDIATELY.

A -SHORT -HAND TYPISl Beginning salary $2100.00 annually.

Apply

BOX 4 c/o Daily News ·

KIN ewspa

SEI TO· D)

I 17 19 16 29 30 28 20 21 25

HELP

92655 • ORDEI

Ul

STOl Sacr

Gl THEM

FRIDAY, J

reasc

HARNt AOTOMC

FiRE INS Burglary,

Expe ae SAl

WH

'Rll

del del Shi

1""1>11 PO!ta~e \ rq l'.llalo~ue

1•1 'lid colour · ~ ... (' !I t

:n11ndla \\'rite

a diu hedul

Y: I.U~f.D

KINSMEN per BINGO

SERIES s TO·DAY 1S NUMB~:;s

I N G 0 17 42 47 63 19 41 57 75 16 39 54 62 29 40 51 64 30 43 46 61

28 45 49 70

20 31 50 68 21 38 56 65

25 32 52

74 59

PRIZE $1,000.00 HELP KIN HELP OTHERS

STER POULTRY FROM

ANLEY'S MEATS , ... ,, __ Grade A Regular; 10.14 lbs. .... .. .............................. 6Sc.

-Grade A. Evise. ~14 lbs. .. ...................................... 79c.

'M:I-·urc de A. Evise. l-4 lbs. .. ....................................... 69c. Also a c~:~mplete line of VEGETABLES

including BlUE POTATOES .

ANLEY'S MEATS 92655 • 92664 38 GOLF AVE.

ORDERS DELIVERED ANYWHERE IN THE CITY

lli~ CHOIR OF COCHRANE STREET

UNITED CHURCH

PRESENTS

STORY OF THE CROSS l Sacred Cantata For

Good Friday THE MUSIC BY DUDlEY BUCK

f~fDAY, APRRIL 4th1 at 7.30 p.m.

~~ening Announcement th' lrty years experience in the Insurance

I have opened my own INSURANCE

hat 164 WATER STREET, ST. JOHN'S

1 e name of

~arnum lnsur.ance Agencies fer th 8 e est possible Coverage at most

reasonable cost see or call

HARNUM - DIAL 4069-P.O. BOX 780

1:l0M081LE INSURANCE FOR All au E INSURANCE FOR EVERYTHING

rglary, Theft, Plate Glass, Liability, Expenses and all other Casualty Line!

ae SATISFIED WITH lESS • WHEN THE BEST COSTS NO MORE

.. -------P, EXPERIENCE · utility man requires full time employ·

Dancing, Dlning-Nitely. Steaks Specialty.

Mon. to Sat. 5 p.m.-1 :t.m. ~ Brookfield Rd. Tel. 90026

t ***********· ~ l

ment. Ten years experl· ences, excellent reference. Phone 3989, and ask for 1\lr. B·orden. 'l1Br21,12i·

MAID WANTED for domestic work,' in a home with two adults. Home with evt!ry modern conveniences. Only outport persons may need apply. Aged from 25 years and up. Middle age person, pre(erred, reference requir· ed. Anyone in!erested please call in person to 91 Cornwall Avenue. Wili await ior outport personF to call.

---------• __ m_ar_21_,t_f ____ .. _

Velv~t Horn Club

TO-DAY

CLUB OPEN

9 am. to 11 p.m.

FOOD AT ITS BEST

I CHIMNEY SWEEPING-Re· 1

liable chimney cleaning, modern elel!tric~l equip· ment. Furnaces and ranges a speciality. All work guar· at!leed. Dial 2134 tkeep the fireman away Irom your door).

Barber ---·

THE CENTRAL BARBER SHOP. We are now operat· lng six chairs. You can be assured of the bes·t possible service plu1 the least pot-

! sible waiting. 24 New Gower

Crystal Palace Street, opp. Adelaide Mo­l tors. If you prefer appomt· • 1 ment service 1Pilone 5367.

EASTER MONDAY NIGHT ! P 1 AN 0 AND ORGAN · Mickey Duggan's Orchestra ~NING-For prompt ~er·

Dress optional. v1ee contract L. Gould1~g, 135 Newtown Road. Dial

Tickets $4.00 double. 90370. feb25,3m.

Sparkling Obtainable at 22A. Golf : • Avenue or at the Club.

FOR ALL YOUR SPARKLING and Painting needs. Spark· ling a spedality. Dial6013L, G. Crane. febll,lmtb

Dial 90024 apl2.3.5

iM. C. L.l. BEAUTYLAND, 129 Queen's

Rodd SPECIAL - $15.001

Cold Wave $10.00; $12.00, Cold Wave $8.00; 1\lachint Perms $5.00 and up. Open Evenings. Dial 6534. I

ANNUAL

For

Better

Hearing

\Vrlte for Free Booklet on all dimensional Hearing to ACOUSTICON O'BRIEN CO

Hearing Aid Consultants, 190 New Gower St.

(Corner Brazil ,Square) Dial 5264

WANTED SMAll BACHElOR

Apartment : Or room with grill. Also \1

: require small space on 1 ground floor or basement.

Apply

Box 41 care The Daily News.

1 3Pl2,:1,5 -~-------------

~;;:::::;-~--~~~~ F. A. LINDSAY NO DOWN PAYMENT .

Add beauty and colour to your home with

I

(UPHOLSTERER)

Will be out ·of town

Until May 6th VINYL RUBBER and

ASPHALT TILES ; apl2.3,!1

The Aristocrat of Flooring For Estimates on

HOME REPAmS CALL CABOT CONSTRUCTION

& SUPPliES LTD. DIAL 5658

nar28,1m

Repairs

REP AIRS TO ALL MAKES of Washing ~lachines, Floor Polishers. Vacuum Cleaners, etc. For prompt service Dial 6013·L, G. Crane. !el>ll,1mth.

eLAND SURVEYS

e WHITE

-----··-. ---·-·--

I

Will Pay $1'80.

for the Loan

of a Black 'S'

Dial 7732

WILL PAY $180.

For Black "S"

IN • MODEL SWEEP

Dial 92492A . PRINTS

\ Newfoundland ·1 I Services

I I MEETING

All members urgent·

NEW METHOD RUG CLEAN· ERS. Rugs and Carpet made to look llb new. Von Schrader proeea adds yeara to lift of rug1. Cleaned in home or at our plant. 'Phone 91033. New Method Rug Cleaner•, Freshwater Road. ·

90 ALLANDALE RD. : PASSENGER NO':'ICES I : SLEEPING CAR 'PHONE 90876 I . RESERVATIONS

Gerry Halley Surveys Ltd.

I ~=======~·~ Efrective April lsi, all sleep·l

· ly requested to attend ACTUAL JOBS in Canada,

U.S., So. Am., Europe. To $15,000. Travel paid. Write Employment Info. Center. Room C·74, 470 Stuart St., Boston 16.

ing car Reservations must be 1

NOTICE ~picked up before 11.00 a.m. On· stead of Noon) on day of de· parture.

ROCK EXCAVATION

I Rock boulders or cliff removed. Done safely and guaranteed, regardless of the nearness of buildings. At a cost available to all. Also shallow well drillina.

A. CH~RTRAND, DUNNVILLE, P.R.

'l'llone Mr. George Bonnell, Dunn•llle.

At St. John's call 6700H

"INVEST IN REST.'' Sleep comfortably. We specialize In repalrlna and recondition· lnll all type• Springs and Mattresses. Guaranteed work. Mattrmes for back allmenh a 1peelalty. 'Phone 6449 or 3381, Standard Beddinll Company,· Ltd., f1ower Hill. feb20,tf.

Wall Washing

•1 ATTENTION BONAVISTA Notice Is hereby given thpt B~ANCH .PATRONS

'Rohert Smith, or~ the town of Effechve April 3rd, comhl~ed \Grand Bank, in the Province of Sleeper-Buffet ;ar operau~g 1 Newfoundland, Master Mariner, between St. Johns and, Bonavls-

1 wiil apply to the Parliament of 1

. Ia will leave St. Johns Train I Canada, at the next ur follow· No. 1 at ~ p.m. Sunda~ and : ing sessio . thereof, for a Bill of i Thursday mstead of Tram No. ~ Divorce from his wife Sarah 1 51 BB at present. j Mayo Smith, presently ~esiding CONNECTIO~ WEST RUN I at 392 St. Clarens Avenue, In PLACENTIA ~AY . the City ot Toronto, in the Regular, 8 a.m. tram lea.vmg Province of Ontario on the St. Johns tomorrow Fr1dar, grounds of adultery. ' will make connection at Ar·

genlia with Motor Vessel for Dated at the City of St. the West Run Placentia Bay.

John's, in the Province of Nef'l· ~ ---------. WALL WASBING - WaUa cleaned by :~ew macblne.

Mona Ryan's Beauty Salon

Speclallldng In HAIR STYLING AND ALl TYPE!! OF PERMANENT

, WAVING. Open from Tuesday to

Saturday.

Dial 5477 .

1 9 5 1 R 0 V E R

$250·00 I

1 Baird. Motors Ltd. !

I

Result• perfecl; saves palnt.-New Method Rug and wan Cleaneu, Fresh· water Road, 'Phone 91033.

.ag25,1m.

foundland, this 1st day of April, CAN.IDJAN 1~8. =--

D. w. K. DAWE, N'"''IONAL Solicitor for the Applicant. A & apl3,10,17,24

THE SEVEN WORDS FROM THE CROSS

A THREE HOUR SERVICE IN GOWER STREET UNITED CHURCH

GOOD 'FRIDAY, APRIL. 4th 12 NOON TO 3 P.M.

UNOER THE AUSPICES OF THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCHES AND THe UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA IN ST. JOHN'S.

BROADCAST OVER C.B.N.

To The Voters Of St. John's West · DEAR FRIENDS:

I wish to convey my sincere appreciation and heartfelt gratituqe to • all those who honoured me with their confidence by re-electing me to the House of Commons as the Member for. St. John's West.

I olso wish to thank most sincerely all those who, during the election campaign, worked so hard and so faithfully to bring about t~e success-ful result that ·we obtained.

May 1 assure you that I shall al.ways remember with pleasur~ our hoppy auociatiom during the campatgn, and that I shall do all m my power to protect and promote the interests of Newfoundland and to deserve the confidence placed in me. ·

· Yours sincerely, WIUIAM J. BROWNE.

The MODEL SWEEP ($15,000 IN CASH PRIZES)

11 Contests l.EF;

CONTEST -MODEL SWEEP Each Contest worth $200. Tickets SOc:. eaet!

Now available at your favourite neighbourhood Store or 'Phone 5782 or 3590 or 5203

Contest No. 14-Ciaimed by MR. WYLIE WHITE, Hamilton Avenue. ·

AT 9 O'CLOCK THIS EVENING OVER RADIO STATION CJON

J. M. DEVINE of the BIG 6

WILL DELIVER HIS ANNUAL EASTER MESSAGE

ST. THOMAS' CHURCH

t GOOD FRIDAY SERVICES

10.00 a.m.-MORNING PRAYER AND SERMON. 12 to 3.00 p.m.-"THE WATCH BY THE CROSS".

Meditations on the Seven Last Words conducted by the Rector. Broadcast VOWR.

7.30 p.m.-"THE OlD, OLD STORY". The Life of Jesus told in pictures.

--------

BUNGALOW FOR SA.LE Situate· on Freehold land, Sunrise Avenue, Glen· dale. This modern BUI'IGALOW has two bed· rooms, living room, dinins room; modern kitchen and bathroom, Garage attached, furnace heated. fhis property is only two yeor~ old and has been recently painted end decorated.

For further particulars apply

WILLIAMS & CUMMINGS LAW OFFICES

333 DUCKWORTH ST. DIAL 2020, or 6972 after business hours

TERRA NOVA COUNC1l. No. 1452

All available members are requested to attend the Basilica at 2.00 a.m. on GOOD FRIDAY for the observance of one hour Vigil before t~e Altar o~ Repose.

By order G.K. A. CURTIS

----·-·--

LAST CALL HOLY CROSS A.A.

Easter Monday Dance· HOLY CROSS AUDITORIUM

Chris AndrewS" Orchestra $3.50 doubl~ ,;

Tickets from Doc O'Regan, Bren Jackman: Mike Woods, Bill O'Reilly, J. Simms, Dunn'! Pharmacy, Toe Byrne and Byrne's Snack Bar·~ Water St. West ..

----· . ----·-- _ ... - .. ,_ .. ________ _ ' . :· F.OR SALE

Premsies having all modern fixtures and con~ veniences located 20 Bond Street consisting of; dwelling and shop ·and including shop fixtures~ equipment and stock. ~

For further particulars apply to ~

CURTIS and DAWE ~ BOARD OF TRADE BUILDING, ST. JOHN'S ~ (tel) MERRYMEETING ROAD

1

. DIAL 80378•9 L--S:.;t;_. J;.:o..,hn..;'s~, _N_ewf....:.~u_n_dl_an_d,;_' _A;_pr_il_3_, _19_58 _ __.. ________ .-.J

apl3,mon,wed,fri,tf ~·

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16 THE DAILY_ NEWS, 5!. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSD~~· APRil

~--------------------------------~-..~------~=

••• don't waitl make

·n Select your

AIRS N···ow

• LUMBER FOR

material from our ANY 0 U lSI 0 E *•• •tock. of nationally ~i~ 0 R INS I 0 E

. known ~rands 'eJoo REMODELING JQB .• ...

TRIBUTE I I --- ,

CAPT. JAMES DAWE. On March 20th last, there

passed peacefull)' away at the Grace Hospital, 'Captain James Dawe of Coley's Point. This an· , nouncement was read with deep 'I

regret by many thousand, not

I only in Newfoundland, b u t' Victory At Sea throughout the Dominion and i . ... d

, beyond, for during a lifetime of I Lteut. •.om r. i as~ociation with Newfoun~land'~ I P. K. Kemp .... _. .... $6:50 1 ,pflman: industry, the fisher), Archibald The .ArctiC I m all 1ts aspects, he had be· 1 •

I come widely known and re· 1 Archrbald Lang

1

: spected. i Fleming ................ $5.50 'j At an early age, he had com· h k f h Sk

· manded his own crew in the 'T e Boo 0 T e Y i Labrador fishing industry with A. C. Spectorsky $14.95 i :manly courage r,nd fortitud~. In S f R' h I success he was humble and in treEn 0 IC es 1

: rcl'~r~e. he was brave and Gabriell-e Roy ... $4.50

: strX~g~n example of the latter. Fall of The Curtain · 1 well remember that summer · Peter Motte ......... $3.00 I at "Independent". harbour. on Anatomy of a Murder I'

. Labrador when hts elder broth· , cr and almost the entire crew Robert Trover ....... $4.50 i

, of the vessel "Mr-ritimc" wcr.c Our Miss Williams I 1 dro•·ncd. as a result of th1s . I tragedy, the entire community : Tasha Beining ..... . $4.00 ' . , was !llu!lged in. grief a_nd almost Green Light 1

1

frustratiOn. Sktpper Jam. as he was familiarly known. took com· For Adventure i mand of the situation an_d Oddm [/'one ...... $4.7 5 : ~brought order out of chao>. h1s ' . action and t-tlitud~. on that oc· North From Rome 'cas ion. created, in my teen age • Helen Macinnes . . $4.00 , mind. a spirit of hero worshiP · ·

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F R E E • :that continued and has been , A History of The i ~nchanced froiJl that day to .the E I ish Speaking ~~·~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ present. : ng i Skipper Jim, throughout his Peoples -·----;lifetime. was lo1·cd and respect· I S'r Winston S 1 been successlul. : J • • i cd by all with w_hom he ~am~ 1

• ' $6 50 H F I The young woman 1owcd that 1 11JUlll'lJOn . in contact. In busmcss de~·hngs,! Chur~ht/1 .. .. . . ope or ' if she is able to sec. "I Will ar·: . he detested anything bordering :Space Fli~ht and G :range to donate this one good eye; A • . l • , on the _shady . or unorthord~x

1 • • • • I Blind irl 1 to the eye bank upon my death~ !!'3111~[ lllOU

1 and saad so m no ~~ccrtam :Sa, :1lhte Veh1c es ; so that some other person 11 1ll. I ~ terms. In matter~ pohll~al. he ! Beard and Roth-er ham, BOSTO:>; '.-\P •-A IJ·~·car ";lim·lm turn. be gil·cn a chance lor: PI'+ eters C\'H reason~d 11 1th log1c and ' $3 50 : oul'' may ha1·c ended for ~!Iss i sight." '-' \ was n~ver swayed b): catch cr~es · Gertrude Atkinson of Sl: Stephen, 1 Her sight started lailin_g when 1 Amll·:ri~TiH'RG 0:

, and his _part)' loyalty. nc\er k ( L d ':\.B .. thanks to the sktll or sur· she was 15. She worked m 1mlls: ~uprcmr f'o;:rt in "1,. I had <I pnce lag. ~IS Church hfr o;c s & 0 t . gcons and a person she nerer 1 and restaurants to 53\'C ~10n~y! >Cried \\'e(!•wsda\' r::r-~ ; was an ou~standmg example of I ., • will. know.. . so she could consult_ spec1ahsts tn: ccrs of tlw ~calarers 1l

! rral affecllon for the fa1th of , Th B k llerS I ~llss Atkmson. 28. underw~nt a , St. Stephen, Fredcncton and 3o.l· at L:nion I u f1 to I his forebears and the tribute ; e 00 se cornea transplant Wednesday at . ton. I on marine .. :ha"le!

paid b)' the Rev. Guy Fowlow ~lassachusetts Eye and Ear ln·l Here she learned of the eye· cncr erupted Tu~'dat · at the funeral scr1'ice, for this Spin 4425 or 2008 or 3191 lormary. The diseased cornea ot I bank and doctors arranged for a: . . · · n:tL :;Horwood Lum.~er co. <.'Jlristian gentleman. wa~ I'CI')' ·-- · her right eye was remo1'l'd and transplant as soon a~ the proper, . Police d1;pmed a li. appropri;-te and well mcrlled.. replaced by a healthy cornea 1 corncar became al'atlable. ! picket hnc ::hort~

Water St. West The members of the ~lasomc TV from a dead-person. j : )Uncllon was smed order. The Lo)·al Orange As· . It will be two weeks before she The famous Santa Fe Trail I posted a ~nard on lhe sociatior. and the CEAA organi·l I knows whether the transplant hascc1'cred 775 miles. enforce the court ordtt.

R t zations of which he had been 1 REPAIRS . epol; a life long member, attended 1

Dial3011

:Stock Market the funeral in~ body tog~thcr! REASONABLE RATES TRY with mnn1· relalions and fracnds' ''MONADCH" PAS FLOUR

Dm• 2~00 30!• 29'• 29'o- h 11· l'nlun 67oo 1m 11 1: - 1• that Prf.·Clically filled St . .John [ GUARANTEED WORK " Dol ltud lou 20 20 20 ll'<olh•• 28800 61'. m. 51:'• -3 the Evangelist Church · where 1

B~~,.se·~ ,: ~;l: iX~: mt: ~ the service was conducted h~· ' E 7313 ' liEK YORK cLoslsG ~rocKS •• ,, .. , 21100 ~•·· 11 ll -"' , .4 11~er:~al• the Rev. Isaac Butler assisted! P H 0 N :,

111 Tbe Auoclaerd rrtt• now Chern 8l00 '"1• $2~. $2 -1\· -:I II """ ... ' I h I !lew \'ork 8Jork Esrhanal'-.lrrll Du Ponl ~100 176 174'• 114'> -11; by the Rev. Guy Fow ow. I e

rt~~:,. . .:"t· •. ~~;.;~;~.1~ 1dtnd, xr-Ex· ~r':f.:::' L ~ ~~~., 1~ 1' ·~: -1'• AJIERIC.\I'i cLostsG ~rocKs former ~ector who dcli1'cr.cd an I s,1 El r NG 13100 2~ 28'• 21~, 1 IIJ The A~torlll•d Prm appropraate addr~ss. :

A~~·l~d ··~ H~~~. ~;. c~;:, c~·~: m:::~·~. . 7~ ~~"' ~~r· l~lo- ~-, rl~h~~·~~~E!~!·.~.~~~~:nro-Arrll z_ Thus was laid to mt. a. kind)~· ' c t Lt'..J Alltcan.v 12AOO 1'• 1'• 4\,- •• t'ord R600 1()1. 391. 39 _,,1 k 8 I Ill h L Cl c~~· neighbour, a revered fncnd. a I en re u. A:UJ Ch tOJOO !3 %3~. ZHI - ,, Gtn Eire: )Of,O(I 603ta 59'. sa~. - a. ftlot • et r ow O~f' ar . d ~ t d h b d I Amenda ::1200 89 ," 87 ..~.. 87.1, _ 1 ern FOOds 1000 .5~~. S~h .54s., _ ,._ Am Marac: 900 6 fil, 6:.4- '• lo\'mg an \1evo e us em • Am Can 1100 m, 47 131,- '' G•n ~1111• 600 69'• 6~ 69 - 11 Ana<on 1200 9.!6 '•. 9·16 \father and brother to whnm · 90 CAMPBELL AVE Am C)·•n 9io.> -4~~~ "'3'" -131 1 - ,, Gt~a ~tot 18100 J:\•. J.\ 3~ 1 1 nrad'l ~oo fit, ~14 ~\•- 111 • • ' . d d : • Am Rad Jn;ou 12~. t2•· 12··· 1 Glidatrn J-'(10 30' ~ 30 lO - s;. BA uu ROO 373 4 3.~ J,•,- '• · smcere sympathy ts extcn e , .. , Am Smelt 3!00 43'• 42•< ·I~'• _ ~. GOO<Irlch moo fil w. ~~ -1'•11\unk II s 900 9'• 9-'• P'•- '•I together wilh the pra1'er: · A, ter hours PHONE 6401 A Am Ttl l11t•o 1;.; : li.·, J1.:· 1 _ 1,1 Goodytar \200 1:!'• ;o• 4 iO'I -1 Burry Dis 200 ·P• t1..a "'1.w • •• 1

1 Am Tob lOO<I Ro 80 '• 80,, • '• Gr ral~• ~ I'• I'• 1'• Con So 011 1100 • • • •1·1 ":'Ita\' hls soul r~st 111 pracc., -'tmco Sll !lOO ·~ .,.., 4h·- •, Gl sor Al' ztoo ll'• 31'• Jl',-"' Can AU 011 3200 '''' 4$· 16 011 - '• d ·• · light perpetual shine ---- -ArmltJ (k 17VO :!7';• ·)i'~ J1', Gulf OIJ ~~()(I 1081 4 101 107 -11. 4 Cn Mnrc 4M l 14 .!111 21• .... '• an m ... ~ ' -.\t(h T ..$1 9100 18'• u 17- •·, lloml',lk J"oo 39'• 39lt 39'4- :'1• Ch•11 rbro 2M so~, am, IW'· 4 - '•I upon him." BIRTH RtbC'OCk J!)OO :a•• 21~. 27'•- 11 lllud Ba)' 400 ~4 43 n - C ~~ and 5 100 IP. lR 18 - :'Ia 1 .. ·-- ~- ... ----·

Rail Ohlu ~()()() 11'• 2J'• ~]·, -· •• lntcrlokc 4()0 zo•. 20h 1"'• ... !o Crtole ~~ro ~n •9 •9'• -1'· w.n.D. ; DOWNEY-Born at St. Clare's Atth Slttl 26900 38'• l7>t 37'• -.~1 Jnt flu, 2300 3-'7 34114 l4:!"- -1 De\'•PAI 1400 114 l :J.lG 13-lh .J, Roeltlr Alr 1!lROO 391,. :IMa Ji''l .j, , ... lnt """- t41Ptt 1S!.• 28'.• 28'•- '• Onmc E~P 900 9 a 11·16 &l, ,.. ':crry Hospital. ~larch 31st, to Rorr "'ar aoo :!tP· ... 2a :•a - ~ .. ,Jnl ~h:k :.!ifiO i-4 1 ~ t'Jia 73'4 -11a Duke- Pow 200 3~~. 331 " :t:P. \!r. anrl ~[rs. \\'illiam Downct·. lludd. )Ut :uoo J4l,. H• 1 H': lnt l'ioP :\!'INI !ll ~9 89'• -1•:~ '1-:1 Bonet 1400 29 1• 2912 29l• .J

Burl M1111 81&1 II'• II'• " . lnt Trl .;1!WI Jl'• ll'• ll'•- '• t:ord A 200 76' •• w. 76'6 ' Ad. d. 'iO Patrick's Street, a daughter . . ca.Jumet 1M IP7 11'• ,, •• ~ '• .rullu• """ 7fi1Nl ,;,4 ., .. ~. :":l\ ... - 1:. •.ord s 13 7~ f6 '~ , ] ll ICalor . '

Can 1':-• ·~ • KtnurtCII .f:oo- Phi;. lt4't I' I'• -l ford Ltd 1-400 !i 5 ·• ' I ______ ... Can J I ~ll('l(t 1-''• w. 2 11·~ 1,,.,.: ~r Ghlfld Jnrwta 4. 9-lti ,., '!·I· I~

•t"'"' 11 ,.,. '• : l.nt·.1 ·. 11w 1 llolllnctr ~00 1l'• 2.l ':1 - '~ 1 Of D llEATIIS crh•nr.sr , • .,, 1 1 •• 14 1 ~lar~otlttll ~If) :u ,. 3& numiM m 33 52'• ~1~ ... • '•. i t•ama ~- ·· - ---·--·-fh~, nhto \1•111 I"~'• '"''• ,,,_.. ~. · '•rH·. 1 ... p, tmu on JiOO 11' .. "0~ .. 40"• -· • GUSHUE-Passed peace(ully O.rrtltr J:Anll 'U'• ,;J. ~~··, .. 11.: ~linn .\U1 L'" • . ·-·~I lnt f'f'1• 1900 l61 ~ :153

• :\.>11-

1a.1 I

uuu sre J~ ~~·. w. w.-a ,.,.,,., Ch ,,. • JQ'•· Jurllor 7()1123·1~ 2'•23·16 IF 1 F• ] lawavalherhome53GowerSt .. Coml Soh· ~,... In ,.,,,, I"''- '4 . ~ton~Smr 11()1\ J:,• .• 31 J~ _,,I L Shn, I~ ,.,, ·I~ l\z- '. 1 estt' va Ina s I on \ve·lncsdal' Apnl 2nd Mrs. COni rA t~ 44•, 4?1-; 1"13. 1.\•1 ,\\ .... ,, :!.• .. ;!I I ~P··- .• ~1AIII Jhr .oo 7 6~~ 7 + ~~, I . '·' I

Contain :.'111\11 ·~,. II\'. J"'• I \tU (i\\h l!W\'1 ,HI;: j:\1. 35'•- ;•. Ylffilbl goo 31l'.i 301a ~l· Ehzabclh F. Gushuc. aged 89 ~-•• , C'•n ... , •.• '! - '•! ~~~ :;:·:, •;:, ~~~\ ~~~'• ~.,;: ~: ~l~~)'b~~~P 2ll~oo 24:~\3,: 2~ ;:t HALIF1\X ICPI-Philip Hope·. yeal's. Site is sur1'i1'cd by one c:r .... ,. Ztll 1!1011 ¥'• ._ ••·•- '• ........ 1''» 11'• n•• tJ•·, ·• '• Snt Prlt 3002:-1~ 2. 21·16-I·IG Wallace, British drama critic and ison Arthur. one daughter "ary L... ' ~" '" 2011 l' l'o ~·•- 'I Sal Ruh 200 13'' n•, ll''- '• 'II d' d' h d r· .. '!:,. ·. _,. ,d L , 3,:~ ·"'• Jo'• _ "• SJ 1.\nc 23Cil 20 19'• 20 -11 broadcaster, WI a JU 1catc t e (~Irs. Joseph Brown) an tvc

' oh" m ••~' J", w• 321 ~ - '~ ranl•r•• .1oo t'i .''' II< Dominion Drama Festh·al finals grandchildren. Funerai will nuth :\tar ~-.oo 23'-. 22~~ -t2ta- •• Plonter 6100 I !1-16 J,.Jii 17.16-1·16 · d I' 1 •. ,.,. ,, "'"" :1•. •~ ;, _ '• Prall·L ~ w. w• ~~~-• + •• here May 12·17, 1t was announce take place from Carne! s Funer· rtnn RR J800 II'• II'; 1m l'mton :tOO ~. l13·16 s 11-:~ '' Wednesday 1 H 28 C hrane Street on l'!l\·Ps u bt'.("' U'" 42 · .a2 - '-' Shtr Wm• t('ll, 1461'2 l461'.z 14~;1 :.~ - '' • , • • • a orne. oc l'hll:" lt11r "''"' "'' <9 w; + '• sn P<n o 100 ~''' 33'' J3•; 1\tr. Hope·\\allacc 1s cnllc for Goorl Friday at 9.30 a.m. to the

'1 l'ltl !'late lllOO n 6~'4 6~'• -7 st ou Ky 1200 ~' . l2'' 11 • '' the '!\lane hester Guardian and B·1silica Interment at Bcl\'e· Jlullms.n 1"'10 47141 47 47 - 'l T('chnclr n.rltl r. ~... :P, ~- !. , . . . I I ' . .

I Radin t11rp ~·oo :n ll'i 11•0- ,, Tr-Cont WT 1100 1: tP. lo'• f1me and Tide. chairman o 1 1e dcre ccmcterl'. nrrub st 91M 1!>'• 39 l9. - '• lin Gu 1~ 100. 79 79 79 + '! BBC's Sundar morning program LE\\'IS ·I'"SS"d p"acefulh·

• Rontl llut -4tl201J 41'~ 40 401,11 - ,,, Waro Air ....., 2'• 23il 23• ·- '• • • • I I - '' ~..: ~..: • seiro noe 331)0 26 2o>; 26 wr Rorr m.o I'> 17·16 I' I+ 1·16 The Cnllcs, and pres1dent·e eel of : •tway Wednesday night. April ~~~~~~:.' sl~oo 10:9 10;; 10;~.;--~ Buffalo tonjlu~s--;ere con· T~e Critics Circle of Great Brit· :2nd, Elizabeth, widow of Cap·

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~perry R 13900 JRO> 17'6 11•4- ·~ sldered •acred b,. tile Omaha am. 1

tain John Lewis of Holyrood, S.ol Rrnn~· 1300 1R', '' 181; - •• 0 J The 47 • year • old Oxford· . . Sid ou cal 621111 47 4&'• 46!0- 10 Indian~. according to the En· . · . . aged 87 years; Jeav1ng to mourn . Sid 011 Jnd 6lOO 40'1 J9'• 4n -~> educated Londoner 11as adJUdl· 1one son Phl'll1'p J Le1v1·s and-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ std 011 NJ 21100 l!'; M m> - 14 cyclopedia Britannica. f h D · · F t' · I i . ' . · 1 Studs Pock 221)0 314 3'.> l'> calor 0 l ~ ommlon . cs l\ a n six grandcluldrcn. The funeral Tuaa co 9100 113,1 6212 63 ... '> 1949 when 1t was held 10 Toronto. I will take place tomorrow Good

1

'[}.~· c~:;;r l: 2~(! 2~:! 2m:~: Watch for Tuesday's HP is exp~rienced in both Fre~ch ! Frida'' at 10.30 a.m. fro.m her, Uld Air 4l00 l7 l6'> lll - \i • and Enghsh d ram a, havmg , '· ' . '1 '!• carb 11000 Blll.l &614 1161< Daily News and $500.00 1r worked with a French radio sta· sons restdcnce 18 Bonaventure ts Gyp uoo 711• lo>. 70',- 14 h . · Avenue by motor hearse to I twenl c •oo 2lt; 231~ 23'~ cash prizes. Enter t ( taon and represented The T1mes 1 1 Rl P I Ttmhn 1600 Jl 34'< 34\4- v. ne\~ and exct'tt'ng Jt'g-Sa" of London in Paris Ho yroo<.. . . i us Rubbtr 5600 32 321> 3214 - •1 .., • PAR'! ITER P"ssed eful· t:s Slt<l 20900 l7'< ~7 57 In recent years he has report~d ·• - ~ . pcac I \'onadlum aoo 1130'4 ln'l 3o•; • •• Contest. theatrical evenls from London to ly away at St. Patnck's Home,,

==========-:--:W::alktra lO '27 21 '27 · \V'll. R p 't d 87 Moscow and has lectured 10 1 J 1am : arm1 cr. a~c . 1

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Sweden and Africa .. He was Brit· [years; lcavmg to mourn hts wtfe, 1

I ish delegate to last year's Inter· ! two sons and one daughter. : national Pen Club Congress in Funcra. today, Thursday at 2.30 1 Japan. p.m. from Okc's Funeral Home, :

1 7 Prescott Street. I

IN MEMORIAM

RICE In fond and loving

memory of

ELLEN RICE

Beloved Wife and ::\fothcl who departed this life

April 8th, 1951

-Ever remembered by husband William and ~aughler Theresa.

WHITE-Passed away at the i ·1 General Hospital on Tuesday, '

• April tst, Elizabeth, wife of 'I

i the late Kenneth White, former· '!Jy of Pool's Island, aged 57 vcars. She lcal'es to mourn two :

'sons. James and .Job at st. I John's, one daughter, Hazel 'I

(~Irs. Thomas Sheppard), Pool's Island. mother. ~Irs. Rachael Bugdcll of Grand Faits: three brothers. two sisters and six grandchildren. The remains will be resting at Carnell's Funeral Home, 28 Cochrane Street from where the funeral will take place at 3.00 p.m. on Saturday, A['ril 5th, to the Anglican Ceme·

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!~ tery, Forest Road.

Good Morning, Neighbor Pluae CODijdtr Ill jun lbat ••• your frtendt iDd nelahboro. If- con help you In MY way willa yollt leuuraouprobltml, Juat call ...

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