terra nova motors ltd. vol. no. the news, st. john's,...

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6 CYLINDER. VAUXHALL THE BEST COMPACT CAR '>F ALL THE DAILY NEWS . Terra Nova Motors l...td. Vol. 67. No. 26 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1960 (Price. 7 Cents) Charles Hutton & Sons rioters mise a sign saying "Vive Live Live 111\Sil, from ht•himl 11 harl'ir:ulc erected on a street ncar the university ht•n• Junnm·v 25th. :\luj. Gen. Jncqucs :\lassu was recently re· lit•' cd of milila•·y :uul civil commands in Algeria by French President Charles dt• G:miiL·, lo whose modt•rnte AIJ:crian policies !lfassu and his MI\>Portcrs were npposcd.-UPI Radiotclcphoto. --------- ------------------------ --·------ Japanese TOKYO 'M'' -,\ :.:as 000 feel down in the 1ninc. Rrs- ' ripped a coal been able to penetrate only to tbe · mine in Ho!;kaido early today. 1,200 toot level. men were tratlPed but. Deadly gas fumes were report- were brough: out alh·e four ed )louring out of t:1e mine and hours later. · the1·e were fears of a new ex· plosion. 1\)·odo news agenry •aid the e:;plooion occ••r•·ed at 1:50 a 1m. in the :'\o. 2 mine of the Hokkmdo Coal t"ompany at Yuhari in northern Jat,.,n. A spokesman fo 1• the Hokkaido Coal Company said eight . men cl'awled :o safdy ,;oon after the blast. A ninth. staggered out nine hours alter the ex· The .Iapan Broaden'! C'om- plosion. cuers wearin:; gas mnsk.< had The official. the fire ·was· pany said blast occUlTed 3,· raging deep underground. ---=------- Rescue Chemist From High Ledge! I MOXTERE\", Calif. 1 API-Dr.: The sur!ace t!•er chiefly! l.inu.; Pauling, ;a-year-old Nobel: blu shale, slippry. and danger·\ prize chemist, was res· · ou!. cued unharmed Sunday from a 1 GOT THE JITTERS treacherous ledge on which he 1 "I got the jitters," D1·. Pauling : !lad been trapped for nearly 24 'I said. "I decided to slay there un· : hours. til I was found." The outspo!<en opponent o( nu- ' It was a little before noon Sat· clear bomb tests will' in excellent urday when he got in the pred icl· condition w!!en a searcher led 'I rncnt only about a mile from his him from his .;ea-cliff perch over· cabin. He owns 160 acres adja- :ooking the Pacific. 1 cent to Lo.; Padres :o;ational For· He had s:arted out for a walk 1 est and spends an occasional m o r n i n g from his . weekend there when he can get nearby two-room cabin and !ol- 1 away from his duties at Califor· lowed adeer trail until he be-: nla Institute o! Technology, Pasa· came lost. He was on a steep cliff , dena. where he is a chemistry rising from the shore of the Pa- ' pro!es;or. rific about 80 miles south o! :lion-; Ills wife notified the forest ser· terey. ! vice Sa:u•·day nigh! that he bad He climbed-clawed. actually-· not eome home, and that she was until he found himself trapped 1 afraid he might ha1·e fallen and under a o1·erhanging rock' been critically injured In some about 300 feet abo1·e the water. I isolated place. Pope John Raps Communists Dodds said be will call lor the ban in Pat·Jiament this week. Dodds said Saturday night: "These so called h!Sls are anct co•lly and re· quire no initiali\'e whatsoevrr. are made on the parade ground, not by !dssing a stl'iptea.;e star or gelling a s!low girl's garter.'' Originally the Initiative tests posed such problems as travel· ling 200 miles without rations and only one .;hilling in cash. Recently t!le officers setting the tests have been showing their own initiative in develop- ing tasks which they think will arouse more enthusiasm among the men. Nfld. Playu rene '' ear own" Burma Election "Free And Fair" T erritorials Leave Barricades * Israeli Troops With Arabs Weather- Overcast with snow; freezing drizzle in the afternoon. High 26. · TEMPERATURES Montreal .. .. .. 17 Moncton .. .. .. 12 Halifax .. .. .. . 2fl -sydney .. .. . .. 14 St. John's 25 24. 3() 35 .32 27.

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6 CYLINDER. VAUXHALL

THE BEST COMPACT CAR '>F ALL

THE DAILY NEWS ~~· ~- .

Ji~~ Terra Nova Motors l...td. Vol. 67. No. 26 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1960 (Price. 7 Cents) Charles Hutton & Sons

.\LGIEI\S-Hi~thtwin~ rioters mise a sign saying "Vive :\fassu~, Live Live ~ 111\Sil, from ht•himl 11 harl'ir:ulc erected on a street ncar the university ht•n• Junnm·v 25th. J';~rutroll\> :\luj. Gen. Jncqucs :\lassu was recently re· lit•' cd of hi~ milila•·y :uul civil commands in Algeria by French President Charles dt• G:miiL·, lo whose modt•rnte AIJ:crian policies !lfassu and his MI\>Portcrs were npposcd.-UPI Radiotclcphoto.

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

Japanese TOKYO ~londny 'M'' -,\ :.:as 000 feel down in the 1ninc. Rrs- '

~xplosion ripped throu~h a coal been able to penetrate only to tbe · mine in Ho!;kaido early today. 1,200 toot level. Sixt~·-two men were tratlPed but. Deadly gas fumes were report­Ci~ht were brough: out alh·e four ed )louring out of t:1e mine and hours later. · the1·e were fears of a new ex·

plosion. 1\)·odo news agenry •aid the e:;plooion occ••r•·ed at 1:50 a 1m. in the :'\o. 2 mine of the Hokkmdo Coal t"ompany at Yuhari in northern Jat,.,n.

A spokesman fo1• the Hokkaido Coal ~lining Company said eight . men cl'awled :o safdy ,;oon after the blast. A ninth. staggered out near!~· nine hours alter the ex·

The .Iapan Broaden'! in~ C'om- plosion. cuers wearin:; gas mnsk.< had The official. ~aid the fire ·was· pany said th~ blast occUlTed 3,· raging deep underground. ---=-------~-~------------------------~-------------~

Rescue Chemist From High Ledge!

I

MOXTERE\", Calif. 1 API-Dr.: The sur!ace t!•er wa~ chiefly! l.inu.; Pauling, ;a-year-old Nobel: blu shale, slippry. and danger·\ prize winnin~ chemist, was res· · ou!. cued unharmed Sunday from a 1 GOT THE JITTERS treacherous ledge on which he 1 "I got the jitters," D1·. Pauling : !lad been trapped for nearly 24 'I said. "I decided to slay there un· : hours. til I was found."

The outspo!<en opponent o( nu- ' It was a little before noon Sat· clear bomb tests will' in excellent urday when he got in the pred icl· condition w!!en a searcher led 'I rncnt only about a mile from his him from his .;ea-cliff perch over· cabin. He owns 160 acres adja­:ooking the Pacific. 1 cent to Lo.; Padres :o;ational For·

He had s:arted out for a walk 1 est and spends an occasional ~aturday m o r n i n g from his . weekend there when he can get nearby two-room cabin and !ol- 1 away from his duties at Califor· lowed adeer trail until he be-: nla Institute o! Technology, Pasa· came lost. He was on a steep cliff , dena. where he is a chemistry rising from the shore of the Pa- ' pro!es;or. rific about 80 miles south o! :lion-; Ills wife notified the forest ser· terey. ! vice Sa:u•·day nigh! that he bad

He climbed-clawed. actually-· not eome home, and that she was until he found himself trapped 1 afraid he might ha1·e fallen and under a Hlr~e. o1·erhanging rock' been critically injured In some about 300 feet abo1·e the water. I isolated place.

Pope John Raps Communists

Dodds said be will call lor the ban in Pat·Jiament this week. Dodds said Saturday night:

"These so • called h!Sls are de~rading anct co•lly and re· quire no initiali\'e whatsoevrr.

"Soldier.~ are made on the parade ground, not by !dssing a stl'iptea.;e star or gelling a s!low girl's garter.''

Originally the Initiative tests posed such problems as travel· ling 200 miles without rations and only one .;hilling in cash.

Recently t!le officers setting the tests have been showing their own initiative in develop­ing tasks which they think will arouse more enthusiasm among the men.

Nfld. Playu

rene '' ear own" Burma Election "Free And Fair"

T erritorials Leave Barricades

*

Israeli Troops With Arabs

Weather-Overcast with snow;

freezing drizzle in the afternoon. High 26. ·

TEMPERATURES

Montreal .. .. .. 17 Moncton .. .. .. 12 Halifax .. .. .. . 2fl -sydney .. .. . .. 14 St. John's 25

24. 3()

35 .32 27.

2 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1960 ~-----------------------------------------------------------~~~~~~~~~~~~--~--

CONCEPTION BAY NEWS CJON- CJOX TV MONDAY. FEBRUARY lsi, 1960

1 0.45-Cartoo~u.

I Belvedere Orphanage 1Ch · · c ·b · 1 nstmas ontn ut1ons I 11.00-Romper Room.

of the pains of parting and 2.00-Piav of the Week. • death. Suddenly the great 2.30-Chez Helene.

truth dawns one one that at no The Sisters of St. ~lichael's D. Hall. 10 lbs. of Candy; ~lr. J. Obituary Installation. Hme And School

2.45-Nursery School Time. o h B 1 d t r 1 'G ,. ' rd 2 (' rt 1 of Or Of Off• M t' far distant dar-for those rp anage, c ve ere, gra e u · . ...raw.o , a 01 s -leers ee Ing WILLIAM HOGAN . around UB and more-"The lone- :1.00-My Little Margie. i ly acknowledge the roll owing: anges: :\Irs. ,J. G. Crawford, ". CARBONEAR - The passmg some grave awaits our own." 3.30-Amos and Andy. ! contributions towards theIr i Christmas Cake: ~Irs. T. R.

- CARBONEAR - _The Home of time Is likened to the closing Will Hogan was an ardent 4.00-0pen House. Christmas Tree ~·und. 1 Jackman Mrs. P. J. Conran, BAY ROBERTS - On :\lon- an~ School Asoclauon of the of one page and the opening of Catholic and outstanding sup- .4.30-P.M. Party. His Grace ~lost Revcr~nd P. ·Turkey; ~Irs. Leo 0':\tara. Tur-

day January1 211th. under the ~mted 1Church bA1cadem1y1 held another .. After writing chapter porter of Church, School and all S.OO-Let's Look. J. Skinner, C.J.~I.. D.D .. 30 lbs .. key; llr. and Mrs. f. :\1. Cllllirmansh p of P.:\1. Reuben Its regu ar mont Y me~ ng on after chapter tbe histor)' D[ a deserving charties Why write S.l5-Sciencc all around 111, . of Toffee. \O'Leary, 5 lbs. of Chocolates; lt:ereer, with Isaac Samways as Thursday, Jan. 28th., wttb t~e town, a people of a ~amily, it I more of 8 loving · Father and I ,60 $331.00-R. C. Parish, Grand: Miss Shan llaher. 14 lbs. of Installlftll Manhall the newly Prl!llident, Mr. E. L. Powell Ill is closed and laid astde H b d 1 . 11 . • 5.30-Youtl • ~·ails, per Ro.>v. W. P. Hogan. :randy; )lr. H. t'. Fanning. Box

r h. th h 1 · · us an , save o say 10 a sm- 6 ()(J Jet Jackson . elected officers o Das mg e c a r: , In the early eighteen hun· I ceril)', _ Requiem aeternam • - · $100.00 earh-~lr. c. Sage; of Apples; Charles Hutton & Sebomberg LOL No. 45 of Followmg routine busmess I dreds 8 young emigrant, Pat d . D . . Et L 6.30-News Cavalcmle. Newfoundland Brewery Ltd. . Sons. Box of Apple•: ~!r. A. J Colry's Point were duly install· the matter of a ltunlclpal Tax HOo!!an left Ills native lrrbnd 1l onta e1

1' 01m1~ 1 eR. ·. uxtpe.r·1 7.110-The Rifleman. $50.00 each-Very Rev. :1-1. F. Tobin, Carton o! Oranges: T. & r d . k " pe ua urea e1. eqmcsca m . d

ed. as follows: o.r e ucatwn was Ia e~ up, and located on our shores. He, pace. . , 7.:liJ-Sword of Free om. Hares. P.P .. St. Alban's: Park· ~1. Winter Ltd .. 4 Boxes of Ap W.::\t.-Abraham Thompson. With. illr. Hudson Davts, as set up a homestead and follow- i To his sorrowing wife Alire, 8.110-This is Your :\lusic. er & ~lonroo.> Ltd.: Rt. Rr1·. P. pies: Stanley Elliot Ltd .. 5 lhs. l.P.M.-Reuben :\lercer. 1spec1al speaker. He gave some ed his trade as a butcher. He 1 Colford 11;hom he married in i 8.15-National News. J. Bromley, D.P .. P.P .. St~phrn· of t'and~·: llr. S. Hooke~·. 1 lb. D.M.-L1ewellyn Bradbury. general Ideas, etc. on the matte.r [married, raised a large fami1~·1 1909 and who lovin~ly took care s.:lll-Lawrence Welk Show. ville: llr. Walter J. Blackmot·e, ·or Candy; lliss Cathy O'Keefe. Chaplain-Clayton RII.Bsell. and th~n the assembly was ?I· and established the success full or him to the end, his son- • J b'l , Grand Fall~; Too tun's Ltd.: :\lr. 7 lbs. of Candy; Royal Store~ Reeordlftll Secretary-Samuel vlded mto three ijroups, With j bu~iness kn.own as Hogan Bro~. [John, daughters _ }ladaglen, ~:~O:~~~n~le~~::.asu ~h~~~·. • and !\-Irs. llapharl <1'!'\cill;' Ltd .. Box of Apples; Be\·erage

llawe. . a convenor for each. E~ch · whtch is still controlled by hts !\-Irs. Bouza nne: Gert, Mrs. ltJ.IlO-R•'vel'l.Jo,•tl. ·Knights of Columbus. Notre. Sale~ Ltd., 5 Cases or Drinks: Dlreetor of Ceremomes-Har· group discussed the queshon I decendants. I L h· p t . . , 1 Th . ! Dame Council NQ. 205:!. <:rand Hon. !'. J. Lewis. 2 Turkeys;

R II d ft r th v It d th . d h ync , a rtcJa, " rs. omey' 11110 'I , '60 . I I S B 'feY usse . an a e e. re·un e e If ever a famtly earno.> t e 1 and his )'OUngest daughter Peg . -·• ustc • ! Falls; Sports \\'eekl~· Program. The Brot 1ers o t. onavcn· · Financial Secretary-Herbert [1 pros and cons were consldc;ed 1 title of bard. and honest it was ; !1-lrs. Bailey, we offer sympatb; j 12.110-The Town Above. I Two in One Contest. Halifax, turcs College. Box of Apples: l.ussell. but, as the hour was geth~g the Hogan family. Hard because ·and rav that God ma. comfort 12.:10-~ews Headlinrs. • :'oi.S .. per :lt.r. Leo Carew. Brownin·:J·IIan·cy Ltd .. 4 Car·

Treasurer-John J. French,: late: there was nothing deflmte of the fact they worked from •.th r: ·; th · grief ~ 1

12.31-Dntcline Europe. I sao.OO-W. ,J. llurphr Ltd. tons of Biscuits; :lliss Alice P.M. I dectded une way or the other. early morn till late at night and i e 1 etr A. FRIEND _______ . . . _______ - --· ---· $25.00 earh-.1. B. :1-litrhell & O'Brien. 7 lbs. of l'anrly: Ki· · 1st. T.eeturer - Clnrence I The meeting closed with the honest they feared God and i • · 1 A lL{S , Son Ltd.: Gordon Buticr Ltd.; wanis Club. Large Carton ·or

.Gretnland, PJt. usual social hour. We haven't gave value for monr1· received.: RADJO p R QG R l Vli i •:· ll. O'Lcar; !.let.;. V<•r;· Rev. Fancy Bbcuit.s; ~lis>e~ E.lil:abctl ·2nd. Lecturer--Geor~r Roach.! heard whether or not the mat· Todav we moum the last of s•:w TV STATIO!\' , •. lleaney, 1 .P .. \\ mdsur: llr. and Bnde ;lia~h. 4. Chtcken; Sr. Commltteman-Ciarencc: trt' of the tax will be further • that g~ncration-thc ·ta~t of a \1'1:--iDSOR. ~fld. •CPI -Vice· 1 .T. P. Kiclly, :\ickcl Tlware: Fort Amherst Sea Foods. Box of

11 I d. 1 · · 10.55-News 1 h La a e. 'I tscussc! · I family of three ststers and fii'C president Don .Jamie>on of the :\fld. llargarine Co. Ltd.: The App Ps; Bon llarc e. ·r;!e · · Tyll'r-llurray Thomp~on. )brothers-Will Hogan was true: Xt>wfoundland Broadcasting Com; CBN ll.OG-Big Top Ten. Bennett Brewinl( Co. Ltd.: ~lr. Santa Claus Doll: East End Bak·

.. S.ntint>I-Charle~ S. French. 1 c • E t lo lhe principlt>s instilled in· pany announced ~ere recently[ II.05-Ciub 590 Ronald S. Ayr~: llr. and ~Ir>. ery. Christma• Cake and a large . Auditon - Cecil Greenland, I oming ven ! ~1m by his. parents and his. n.i~ht th~~ the DC\\~ te.~e\·ision sta-. :110SDA ..... ~·ebruary )st. ' l.!IO .. r:tose Down James Higgins. Cartun of Yule Log Cakes;

·Albert ~reenland, P.:ll. I BAY ROBERTS _ The Girl <hurch. \\.hrn the summon? 1 lion a.t (:land Fall. 11111 go on the. 520.00 each- Vet·;. !ll'l' .. J. r. !'rank ~Jc~amara Ltd .. II lbs of · ~ommtttee - Stanley Snow. G ld L 1 A 1 t' will b ! rame In llts 83rd. ~·car. forti· I a1r w1thm t!le next 10 days. :llr. I i\.}1. CJON Hogan. P.P .. :'>orth Ri1·~r: T. A. Bbcuil>: The O':-ieill Famih·. Ralph Gilbert, .Jacob Frt>nch .. 1•U1/ o~a f~soc a 100

1 ~: ficd by Hoi)' ~lothl'r Church~ Jamieson said the new station l 7.3G-CBC !'\ews ~lar:Xab & Co. Ltd.: ltr. aml Box of Applt's: llr. ami ~Irs. F. - Albtrt Greenland: Allan Dawe, 10

110g .~~~a I er~~on ll ~~I 8 ~. ·and comforted b~· his Pastor,: which his company wilJ ope1·ate! 7.35-Top or The ~lorning MOSDAY, f'ebruary 1st. • )Irs .. John R. Parsons: ~lr. Cyril G. Pre•ton. Side of Bacon: :\lis.;

·William L. Frenrh. I ~a~l ry • ~ d "d · ·Fa b 1: 11 5: Rt. Rev, Msgr. Peddle and his , -CJC~·TP - will sen·e the cen-; 8.00-CBC News and Weather· 6.3G-Tbe Bob Lewis Show. O'ReiiJ)·; A Reverend Friend; Barbara Thompson. Box of

. Sick Committee - Reuben '!lOath 0~ 3 e nes ~~· . ~ r a~~ I nephew, Re1·. Father Joseph Ho· tral Newfoundland area. 1 8.15-Musical Clock 6.35-Weather. i llrs. D. J. French On memory Apple~. ::O.lr. W. J. Caul. 7 lb~ ,Mercer, Stanley Snow; Lewis t' 8Th' P·.~11· b mf 11s1sumd b.: gan, he accepted God's Will in • ; 9.00-:\lorning Devotions 6.45-Headllne News and: of the late Henry and l'atltcr· of I' andy: A)·rc's Supermarket "'- h· S I D · cen s. 15 111 e 0 owe ~ 1 II h 'l't ' · · · · 2 f l 10 lb r ~ac • amue Rile. a eard part)' beginning 8.30 a .. um11 :· ~ REQUEST HOSPITAL : 9.15-Program Prcncw Weather. I me Brownrigg). ' Boxc.< o App es. s. o

p m · I \\ 111 Ho;;a,n ne\·er lost the l TRURO !CP) _ Commission- 9.2G-On Parade. 6.5G-Bob Lewis Show. I Sl5.00 earh--'lr. J. \\'. :'ole· Fruit Cake and 2 c~rtons of

In Hospl'ta} · A'uction and Bridge will be I chance to pomt out-that oth~rs : ers of Colchester County Ho;pi- 9.30-News and Direct Reports. 7.05-Local Weather. . Grath: Georsc :>\eal I.td. Fancy Biseuits: Standard :Ill~. plaYed. Good prizes. Admission may learn-59 years ago, he,, tal here t 01 d coun:y council 1 9.36-Records at Random 7.3G-News and ~tinitorial. $10.00 each-·~lis.< Catherine l'o. Lt:l.. Barrel of AJl)l!cs:

· · · · _ 50 'cents. Patrons are asked to I like many others shared that ; recently the county needs 8 new 1 9.45-Records at Random 7.35-Weather Forecast. :O'Regan: Ben T01lk Ltd.; Dr. A. lliss Patricia Donnelly. I Doll: BAY ROBERTS -Her manv please bring their own cards. wander .lust that brfought ~o I ho~pita'I, They recommended ai10.00-A~chers 7.45-News and Minitorlal. W. lllackll'r: :\lr. E. L. l!i!'k· Patricia, Ralph and ~largarct

·iriends will be happy to know' many )OUnil men rom our: 300-bed building to replace thei10.15-Ins Power. 8.15-Shippin~ Report. man: ll. D. Shear> Ltd.: Dr. Ann Donnelly. Bag of ranrly: JUs. John H. lterccr. who wns I BAY ROBERTS, Jan. 28- . shores. hut proud was he ~f the 1 prescn~ 105 • bed hospital here,II0.25-For Consumers . s.OG-Groucho :Marx L. o·:-.~ Conro;·: c. A. Jluhlry ~ir.'. ~1. .J. O'DonnelL Christ-

.· bll d t 1 t'" G II L'ttl To Ch ..._.11 elebrat s I fact that he returned 1SJ hts na- which could b• used as a nurse;' 10.3G-Nfld. School B1oadcast 8.30-FB! in Peace and War Ltd.: Charl~s fl. Bell Ltrl.; ~lr. mas Cnkr; llr. and :llrs. Prtr7 pita! on Saturda'' and under- her first birthdav (lodn\') I .e • ·• e " ' ·· resldenee. ... I s 1 c en. . 1 9.0G-CBC Radio Works op · o tn '· ;· : ulllc · o ns on · . ·' < • ' ·' • • ,

0 ge 0 en er ue .race os-~ 1 e ' an ur""1 c e t1'" Carbonaar \"iter • l'tl'"l; • ·110 •5-CI'ff K't b h J 1 L' A re B·· J h t J 'Ia hat· ~ lb" of CaltCI\" ·rtt'· wtnt surgerv on' ~!onday Is re· Thursday. Happy birihdav gre~t· i hood was to be ·had as ~oocl as 1 _ 10.50-Music in the Mo~nmg. . 11.3G-Entertainmcnt u.S.A. & L'n. Ltrl.; Royal Aeraterl· Rumbold! Girls. Box of Apple;: ported as fe.eling fine All wish. ings come from ~lonuny and 1 anywhere else by workmg for 1 E:lfPLOYMENT FOR \,000 . ll.OG-To Catch a Falhng Star; lO.OO-Final Edition \\'at .. r Co. Ltd.: The Pupils 11f The Royle Exca\·atin!! Co. per her a Jpeed~· rec~ver)' to 1 Daddy and ·grandparents; it. .. . , . .I ST. JOH_N'S, ~f.ld. •CPI--: One 11.15-Nflc~. School. Broadcast 10.15-Sports Final St .. Joseph's Academy. \\'imlsor: llr .. J. Fleming. Turkey: ~ir. 11· lth I Ch h'll He w,ts a famtl~ m.m. any thousand JObs wtll be avatlable 11.45-Regma ~lcBrule. 10.3G-Jack Paar · P. C. O'Drisroll Ltd.: ~li» A(!· Fred Wadden. 2 lbs of Choco· ·~ · urc

1 · 1 ~hing for the good of the f~m·, for Xcwfoundlanders at Carol. P.M. 11.00-~tusic 'til :'tlidnight : ne' l'. O'Dra: Hon. W. .1. laic>: ~!r. and ~Irs. C. I. ~!er·

lly was. not too much for htm .. Lake, Labrador. this spring, C.1-. 12.00-BBC News . 8.20-Bob Lewis Show. Browne. )[.(': }lr. Fabian ner. 14 lhs. of Cand;·: Brook· T.h~. wrtt~r well rem~mbered , lud,.. House of the Iron Ore Com- 12.1G-Announcers Ch01ce 8.30-News and ~initorial. O'Dea. Q.l'.; \lis;es \Jary and field Ice Cream. i 1o gallons of Vtstllng htm on that terrtble day 1 pany of Canad said recently. 12.15-Farm Broadcast 8.25-Kiddies Corner. ·Jean S11mmers. c In mcmon· ol Ire Cream; Barrctts \\'hobalc. October 14, 1942. ~vhen t~e [~Jr. House 1.~ the proyincial repre- 12.45-:\lid Day Serenade 8.40-Bob Lewis Sbow. ·John P. Summers). · Carton of Candy: llcGuires Bak· news of .the loss of hts son \\II· sentative of the company which: t.OG-Doyle Bulletin 8.55-.Just a .Minute. ' 55.00 earh-llrs. A. E. Hick· ery. 2 Jbs. of Chocolates: :llrs. !lam, W1rele~s Operator on ~he: is in the midst of a $150,000.000' 1.15-A Love to remem,ber 9.00-News man: :\IJ·s. F:. :.1. l'nwpcrlh· Jame' Organ. 2 lbs. of Choro· lll·fated Canl~ou, reached htm. !·Iron ore development at Carol: 1.3G-CBC News and \\ eather 1.05-Music for Milliont. · waitr; Dr .. 1. 0. Fraser: A late> and 3 Jbs. of Bisruits: Rt. The overflowmg outburst of Lake. 1.45-BBC Variety. 9.3o-Gerry Wiggins Show. :Friend; .\lr. W. Angus Reid; T. Rer .. J. C. Stoyles. D.P .. P.r .. grief that day was clearb• In- ·-- \ 2.15-National School Broad· (Continued !rom page 13) I Hallett .Ltd.; ~!r. L . .T. Brett: Curlin;.!. 2 Boxes of Appl~s: dicative of the l!lan's character 1 cast 9.55--Ciiffs Kitchen. i llr. and .\lr.,. S. Long; llr. anrl Cl~nry & Co. Ltd .. Box of Bis and lo\'e of family. 2.45-Tommy Huntt'r Show 10.00-News Highlights and •llrs. Claude E. Dawe: Dr. R. runs: llr. and :1-lrs. !i. J. lie-

We laid him to rest :\londa)l I 3.15-Kindergarten Of The Air . ~!initorial. I (;ushllt': ~!iss Briue O'Reill;·; Donalrl. Box or Apple•: Chi!· ~or~ing, January 25th, in ~he 1 3.3G-News and Trans Canada 10.01-Martin's Corner. i ~tr. P. F. Collins: 'Irs .. J. J. dren of ~lar;. College o! Our htllstde ceme,tery overlookmg ; !l!atinee 10.15-Right to Happiness. 1 Coady, Burin; ~lr. T. II. Haw· , Lady of ~!ere)·. 35 pair~ of the town. Gazmg from th1s vant· 4.30-Variety Hour. 10.3G-News Highlights and 1 kins: ~lr. James ~1. Brad· ~Iitts and 4 lbs. of Candy: Hoi;· age point at the landscape 5.30-Fisheries Broadcast :'>linitorial. , shaw, Q.C.: Long Brothers Name Society, St. Patrick's clothed with a pure white mar. 5.45-liusic From The Albums. : 10.35-Houshewives Choice. ; Ltd.; Fred V. Chesmr.n Ltd.:· Parish. Hamper of Fruit: Rc1·. tie of snow, made mo•e h1· 6.00-CBC News. 11.00-News Highlights and • lliss Norah .J. Power: 'lr. anrl )!other ~!. Bernard. Pre•enta-

lllant by the rays of the Jan· 6.05-!ntermezzo Minitorial. i )frs. J. S. Canning; Higgins & lion Convent. Box of Apple~: luary Sun, one ponders without; 6.3G-Supper Guest 11.01-Rev. Matthew. i Higgins, Q.C.: llr. William .T. W. Alan Kennedy per ~lr . .R.

(t\NJ\OIAN WHISKY

• (Not Inserted by the Board o! Liquor Control)

arriving at a solution. the why 6.45-Curtain Time. 11.3G-News and MinitorlaL 1 Fagan: ~!r and :\Irs. P. J. Da1·idson. Carton or l!aple Pro--------------------------------------- -- UG-CBCN~a~WN~ff;11.3~fld.Qu~ l~nt;M~. ltaey Goodrhl.:d~ts;~~.L.~~r~.4~.

7.15-Musical Program. 11.45--Swift Moneyman. ! ~trs. R. K. Kennedy (In mcm·. of Candy: Two Way Stores. Box

' ,

.:.·:;:

... ~ ... . .. . .. .

!" :.·.

! : ._ ..

' ., '

PSP helps you laugh Wldt smiles all around! Dad just made tht= ~t the -1d down payment on the family's first home. How ~ did be do it? He saved for it with hi~ BNS L. L. Personal Security Program, •• 't .,

Next project they•n save for with PSP is .... ~ "'t'\ '7. s~ ~ze . Junior'• colleae education. Dad knows PSP is ~...1.- d.~· the aurelt way to save.

With your Personal Security Program you e d '/ lit a uvinas aoal, then reach it with SO equal "'~ monthly payments. When ·you reach your ..1.: ea aoal, you receive the amount of it, plus a cash . . e bonus. And as you save, the full amount of your goal is life·iiJsured.

Find out all about PSP

... tha !!!!! way to aa~• Glt thll fr11 bo~kllt 11 any branch of the BNS

-THE BANK OF . NOVA SCOTIA

:IIITWo~tK'OF OFFIC,ES ACROSS CANADA 'AND IN LONDON. NEW YORK. CHICAGO. JAMAICA. CUBA. PUERTO RiCO . DOMINICAN REPUBLIC • BAHAMAS • TRINIDAD • BARBA!.:OS • CORRESPONDENTS THE WORLD OVER

\ FIVE ~RANCHES IN THE ST. JOHN'S DISTRICT TO SERVE YOU.

7.3G-Tops Today 12.00-Newa Highiights and i ory of llary L'asey): )Irs. W. J. 'of Apples: )lammy's Bakery. 24 7.45-Doyle Bulletin Minitorial. i fitzgerald; llrs. )lary P. Hi~·: lbs. of Fruit Cake: The Rahal 7.15-Musical Program 12.01-Town and Country. 1 gins: Dr. G. Brownrigg: Dr. J. ·Children. Box of Apples: Can· 7.30-Tops Today 12.3G-News and Minitorial. G. Lynch: ~!iss Monica Doyle: arla Paekers Ltd., Carton of Or· 7.45-Doyle Bulletin 12.33-Town and Counlt:J. Dr. and ~Irs. L. A. :lliller. anges and Box of Apples: ~lr. 8.15-Raw?ide 12.35-Town and Country. $3.50-~lis~ Eileen :llahrr. .John Simon, Bell Island. Box of 8.3G-~Iustcal Interlude. 1.00-New• Highlights and i 53.00-~lr. Gordon Okr. Toy~: The :llisses Bartlett .. 3 8.4G-Hour of St. Fran~l~- Minltorial. ! $1.00-A Friend. lbs. of Chocolates: ~!iss• AngPia 8.55-Weather for Martners. US-Editorial Comment. ' ~!r. G. F. Estrs. Arg~ntia, 22 De1·ine. I pair or ~Iitts; l!iss 9.0G-National Farm Forum. 1.4G-Sports. :Christmas Stockin.l(.<; G. H. Hogan. Paramount Theatre. 9.25-f'arm Forum News. ~.44--Art Baker'• NotebOok Woo~ & Co. Ltd.. !'hri,tmas Free Shows: Pepprrrcll Air 9.30-Vanc~~ver Theatre. Z.OG-News Hi!!hligbts and Decorations. Pap~r Servio.>ttes Forre Base. Operation Santa

. IO.OG-Hawan Calls. Minitorial. . and Trav Co\ws: ~!r. anrl :llrs. Claus. Christmas Party. ~rnrr· 10 30

'' • ver Cham'"-r Or · P. :\!. B~·rne. Turkel", S. ~lillr1· ous inrlil·idual l!ifts for ebil· I · - an.ou "" · 2.03-Gerry Wig"'m Show. · · · h tr II' • Ltd.. 14 lb, .. Jam: \lr. r. w. dren, also 13 Dozen parr~ r.:

113"Cc Bee~ Na. t' 1 N a.OG-News Highlights and Calrlwrll. Box of Apples: socks, 24 pair, or shoe.<. 22 i . .,_ a Jona ews, Minitorial. Roundup and Talk. ; Chit>\·rrs Foorls Ltd .. Carton of pairs of Slippers. 46 dr~s~e5. 6

12.00-Sign off-0 Canada-The 1 3.ol-Western Jam~oree. ·Biscuits; Halley & Co. Ltd .. 6 Dolls and I Carton of Cut-Out Queen. !:l:t~:~~:;,oav~ty~ews . pairs of Pillow Cases. :llrs. · To)·s: The Jolnt Srn·ires Per·

YOCM MONDAY, February 1st,

6.3G-News and Weather 6.35-Breakfast With Bill. 8.55-News 7.00-Breakfast with Bll: 7.30-News and Waterfront

Directory 7.35--Breakfast with Bill 7.511--News 8.00-Torbay Weather 8.05--Breakfalt with Bill 8.25-News 8.3G-Hit Tune of the Dar 8.33-Sportscast 8.4G-Breakfast with Bill 8.55--News 9.00-Morning Date 9.15--Linda's First Love 9.30-Morning Date

10.00-News 10.05--Stork Club 10.lli-Jim Ameche Show. 10.55--News. 11.00-Jim Ameche Show. 11.15--Western Jamboree. 11.55-Newa. P.M. 12.00-Western Jamboree. -12.3G-N ews

I

12.33-Rambllng with Records 12.45--Fisherman's Forcast 12.5G-Rambllng with Records l.lli-Sportscast 1.2G-Rambling with Records 1.30-NeWB UII--Pmlng Parade (John

Nesbitt) 2.00--Jim Ameche Show. 2.1111--Newa 3.0G-Dollars on Parade 3.511--Newa 4.00-Bob'a Bandwagon 4.1111--Newa 11.00-BoB's Bandwagon 11.30-Supper Serenade. 11.50-Fisherman's Forecast 8.00-Bulletln Board 6.111--Sportscut and Travel·

guide 6.30-Supper Serenade 6.4!5-Newa 7.0G-Sh1Jlelab Showtimt 7.15-Shillelagb Showtime 8.00-Cream of the Crop 9.45-News

lO.OG-VOC:\1 All Time Hit rararle

10.30-Ev~ntid~ ;).leditations 10.45-Sportscast

; Rose ~Lason, Box of Apples.· son!.rl of Buckmaster's Field, 4.3G-News i Tin of Bisruits and a Friut Chri-'' mas Partr: Tile Naval 5.0G-News Highlights and i Cake; Brooke Bond of Canada : B a s e, Argentia, Christmas

Minitorial. ·Ltd., 10 lbs. of Tea: Harris ~ 1 Part;-; CJON. Christmas Party: li.Ol-Bob Lewis Dance PartJ. Hiscock, Box of Apples; Pratt 1.MacCormac's Dry Cleaning. The 5.55-Wrigleys Show. Representatives, Box of Apples: i Dry Cleaning of Children's 8.0G-News Highlights and J. J. Duff, Box of Apples and j. Uniforms. Coats, and Dresses to

Minitorial. 10 lbs. of Chocolates; ~fr. Max the value of $188.35 also gifts (Continued on Page 12) J. Lawlor, Box of Apples: )fiss of Clothing. ·

SPECIAL! Girls' Nylon Dresses

(With Slip inside)

Assorted colours - Sizes 3 to 6x.

Reg $3.95 ............................................ NOW $1.77

Girls' Panties Assorted coiours and sizes.

Reg. 49c ...................... : .............. NOW 3 for $1.00

AYR~SOOVEi

ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND The MONDAY. FEBRUARY 1, 1960 Daily .. ' '-.. ~ ~

.

. ;Close Out At- Pepperrell ~·

Btise Movement Disrupts Education·:~ May Hurry

Marriages And Up More

Adoptions

·-··--·-----

Killed In Rev. Brother Doherty: ---------·-~·----------

Well Known Accident A Reuters dispatch from City

Died

. '

• 1 us 1 Rome states that 30-ycar-old B)' ERIC A. SFY!>IOUR 1 Anot.her upset i~ occurrh1g for 1 ~onth~ may hr. too. shorl a !I me· ... Government ant the St. Hohcrt Anthony of St. .John's, Man1· of the military person· 1 Amcncans who ha1•e made the: 111 wh1ch to fmahze all tlw Johns area. The man)· >aft• I· Educator lias nPl stationrd at Peppcrrell AFB !, ncccssar)' plans to adopt chit·, many problems now confronting · lite units at Elliston, La Scit•. ':"ic\\'foumlland. was killed in

S • h 1 · 1 1 1 !lome ycstcnl;ty in a car acci· will ha\'C left here before !>Ia": dren here. However, the Wei· 1 the ha~e authorities, ·• t. :•nt on)' am m .a H'a< o1· ' · 'II h h 1 f b 1 d dent while n•tm·nini: ft·om a for 1 new assbmment. This· fare authorities may waiver the: \\ e stl :we not carl rom. must c atlac tc to some ccn· dav'.; skiing trill to ~lount Tel'·

mo\·ement, howel·cr. Is occasion·; year·of·residencc rule in order; Wushington that the base is be· tral hcadquarlci'S. : mi.nillo, northeaot of Home. l'o· · Dt•:1th rame p,.;,rdully hul .. ; Qui~l and unassuming .. Broth· rd by the decision to put the' to accommodate the l'isltors an.d

1 ing a.bandonctl .. This would be; ···-· ~-· 'dd tl 1 nwrcifully to Ht•v. Brolhrr Lt'" rr Doherty's claim to greatness

base under caretaker status b)': permit them to carry out the1r! the fmal act and complete ·the; T U d · lit:'·.1sa11'd. 1

1he ctar. ski c am 3latlht•ll' U11hcrt;· at St. J';;tril'i:' will rc>t on the results achiM'· .. ' I h t J' br k' g f t' b t lh . 0 · fl ergo rr.l!. ICI 111 0 a r~e. '! II 1 3! 1 d ' h' l J'g' ' d September and has therefore up.: mtention. n I e pas 1ve years· ea m o 1es c ween e 1 1.1 1 1 , 1 \ tl f ·' crcv onte. on .. :lillian· ·'. e m 1; roe as arc 1 1ous c u, 1 00 h'ld le a e " r. ' n wn,·. son o Jl .ll h D I . . I t f tl k' • aet the plans of the military as.cose. to 3 c 1 ren were ---·----·--- 1 Treafmeilt .,,. "t 1 h 11 , 1·1 . . ev. rnt er owrty was m m ca oro 1e young, a wor per·

well as ch·ilians. I adopted by base personnel. The All HallOWS I ~~·ul:~;k· l~l~c~ "';" ·~::t::~~:~;1 ~~ · sixtpixlb ;·cnr :mrl has hl'<'n formed in the hidden life of ~tan;• of the Americans have: total adoptions si~ce the early . · . . a nwmhrr of the llnler of th1· ~ ·· the classroom. Gifted b;· nature

children at school on base or at days of the hases 10 Newfound· ST. JOII:-i'S !Cl'l-A five· the 1-ctl.rral lm!mgratwn Depart lri.-h Chri>tian Brollwr> fot· ·. ~·~·'L .... · (''vr ~ with a kind and thoughtful dis· the Univrrsity. At the base at, land is not available, but .the: s h I' ~·t·ar·oltl buy from St. .John'> ment smc~ 19~9 : lie was crlll· foriHII'o wars. A nalivc or '· :1 po>ition. made holy and cflica·

b t h b r I C 00 S 1959 l~ft durin• the wcel;cll'l for ruled at Clarcn\'llle >chool an:l 1· ·I ·11 \· s ,. n Ih l't.<ltls h,· " >tLtiiJ·ous co·OP"ratl··on the •11d of Deccmbrr th~re were nu. m cr mus ave ccn a1r Y 1• " ' • 1 1 'en 11 e. ·''"'a . :·o ta. •I'" ~,. ,,. • . • ' 'I' t t 1 t t 1 at l'nm·c of \\'a es Collrgr am · 226 in high school and :113 chi!-, h1gh. i oron ° 0 um rrgo rea lltl'll . Dnlwrl,. elilrt·cd tht• Ot·det· ";· ·-·· wtlh ;:race and a con;tant de· S · 1 h :for a heart condition. Billie' .lh•awnal Unil·croily. lie then Tl 1 ·. 1 l'l · !' 13 11 · \'oledncss to the requirements of dren in the elementar~· srhool.. orne marriages ma)' a so e · M • R 1 entt•n•fl the servicr of thr :\t•w- tt· rt> 1 . ms tan ro 1ers tn .,_._.·

phi-' 56 tn kindergarten. We do .JlUshed .ah~acl in this area be·: USIC ·8SU tS ·Coombs. who has suffered with . . 191!1 and ret·c1vcd his carl•.· !he 1\.ule or hi> (ongrcgalion, not know how man1· arc at the fore the fum! closeout of l'cp· heart h·ouble since birth. will foundlan.d t ustom~ 111 HHS m:fl .trainin·~ at Uw :'\o1·itiale ,;f Brother Dohcrly exemplified 'in Unh·crsity but som~ of the par· : perrell. Americans stationed be accompanied hr his molhl'r. 'when Lo~lfederatton ·came 111 . ~lamaroneck, :\c•11' Hol'h!'ile. no small degree th~ claim to •nts 11'1'11 lea"n thaJr ch•'ldrel1 1 all O\'cr Ncw·fotlnLIIand ha\•e, runds rais~d h,· nci"hhor~ in :the followmg year he was trans- ·New Yorl· Saint. Scholar. and Gentleman. ' ·~ ' ''' I · · 1 · · J· · · 1 · · h '1 d " · k · ferrr.d to the Canadian lmmi· 1'' '· . here 10 fl'n'••h the tnrm Th1's · doW11 througl1 the •·ears mar· ore 1135 rcCNVCI ~rstcrt .t) can parhes c pe ma c the: . l!l'nlhl'r Dohert,· taw~ht 1n Brother Doherty lca\'CS -'to

• ~ • ' ' 1 C 1 T · · r · J' · 'bl · gralton Dc11t and ser\'ed at · · shows the regard the friends ried an estimated 30,000 New· I ro~ tIC rnuty College o , mr Ule trip puss! e. . ; . , :schools throughout Canada all'i mourn two sisters in Religion, 1 f dl d Th 1 llus1c Lon1lon England th"t 1 - -· -·~-· G.mder and ,tt l!altfax. :>:.S. 'tl u · 1 St 1 · r · s 'l E 1 11 s t C 1· from the south of us ha\·e for' oun an ers. ese marr ages · • • • " ~I A tl . . . 1 ·f 1 . te mtec a es. at Sl. .om> r. ·' .• s e e. acramen o. a I·

our .greater ~eat of learning, will continue because Pepper· I the fourteen stud~nts of Alii New t . r 11 1,0n~ ~~~~ rm;s erC( : Colll'gl'. Victoria, B.C. V:mrou. : fornia. Sr. :11. Crcscentia, Brook· ---·--- rell Is lei'S than a third In mili· Hallows School, Corner Brook 0 .mnnnJ m • am rom · 1·er College B.C. Briscoe )!em· lyn, New York, also two sBtm,

'East h t Th · E . there to Vwnna. Austna. Dnr·l . ' · . .

Police Blotter tary personnel at th~ moment i. ;1w .o wro eD corb~ xa6m1hs .

1 AppO~llfiD"'lll .

1 ing the Hungarian rrvolution he: ~nal School. Ke~1t. ~\ aslungton. in;· .. l:mu:.r' :11. :n u:2t a.m. :lliss Rosemary Doherty. Kent·

compared to Ar•enlla Na\·al, 10 "USlC on eccm er • .li. C 1 1 h . 1. ·St. Bonal'enlure s Colie"e St. Under !he gt·nllc and continual ,·ille. No1·a Scotia; :.frs. Wini· ~ ' 1959 h d "A f 1 I 'was attac 1e1 to t c C:lllac tan ; ~ · d Station and Ernest Harmon I • a ""e.n success u · 1 , b . . . . ,. . :John's. ~rwfoundlancl. :Ill. Cash-' administration o! the Sisters of fred Gass. Phoenix, Arizona, an

AFB I The followmg is a complete ~IONCTON CCPl-Edward l'. · F.m ass} 111 \ lcnn,t. In 1958 .11e '~I nors' Sc·hool and fo the bst · ~lcrcv anct the S!aff of St. Pat·· one sister·in·law, :\Irs. Agnes Fourteen arrests were macle

1 In 'all probahilitl' much of the: list of successful students:- lllonayne. trainmaster for the 1 was atta~hetl to tile Camtdtan 'nine ~·(·;~rs was. attncht~cl to !he rick'; ~lcrcy Home. Brother' Doherty, Camrose. Alberta,

bv citv police Ol'er the week· I h. . I t 't P 11: I CNR assistant superintendent at • Embassy m !lome and scrrcd as . t· ff . f St P· tL,. .r.· II· ll S h I Dohert,,·'s last dal.·s on earlh: Funeral will take place ·.ft".m • d • b k I h • i · p ~s•cn asse 5 a epperre 1 1 s· h • F II Nil I 1 T Visa Officer there up to the· 5 " 0 · a tc, s '1 c 00 · " rn · A rea 1 own 5 0115 5 X ar·l will be sold through the usual: Junior Division IS op 5 ·a 5• 1" succrec s · . ·' . ·Durin" lhr p::>l fin• 1·e,rs were ma:le as comfortable as the Christian Brothers' .}lesi· rpst~ ~or drunkenness, one for I Crown corporation handling: Dal'id :\taddock HlO i ·~· Clean.· .·"'~0 retired. a~~e~ 50 • tune of Ins deal h. ·Jlroth~r Doherty Wils an in;•alid. human eare could make them. dent llt. St. Francis. to the.~a-rectl\'tng st~l~n goods. one ~or such matters. It will he a big 1 Jane Broadbent 98 )cars sentct . .'h~ r~lilla~ 8,11 ' • Deceased was marric11 in Vi· :md his ph~·sical health ~rell' Fortified hy the Last Rites of .silica of St. John the Baptist. dr~nkrn dr~nng. Olll' lor .nn· job. i11tlc~d. taking ill\'rntory, Patricia ltobertson ...... A7 nounred. A n~l~l'r of St. ;lohn')~· enna iot 1957 to Sail)' llu~hcs of progn·"iwly wor>c chu·in~ lho llnly ~lolher Church. adminis· 11·here Requiem ~!ass will. ~be P~lred drn·m2. lhrre for '·a~·· \'aiuing and makinl! ready for .lud~· Hynes .... 9li :.1r. Honaynr JOIIled the l NR •3 Lo~ Au~t·les. Calilornia. an em- la5t t• . ..-o )·cars. A "'mi-ho;pilai lpn•d h1· Rc1. Fatlwr J .. f. Pow· relchratcd at 11:30 TuesdaY ranry. anrl two under warrant: final dis1lo;al. E\·cn thr 'nine Carolyn Fieri ........ 94 ;·t•ars ago. ployt•t•s of the L'.S. Emhas,y in r:H' at St. l'alrick's ~trn·;· 1•r. l'hilplaiu. and ~urroundcrl hy morninl;!. Burial will be at'J!el· for forger)'. · .. · _ .... _... Philomrna llawro ........ 8i .... · ... ... the Auslrian 1·apital. Two ehil· 111nnH· for the pa;;t ;·l'ar. Br. his Brother; in llcli·~ion. Broth· ,·crtere Cemrter~·. :.lay God baYc

Tenders Called For Projects At Argentia

F Josrphine Lake H:l 50 YearS Wl"th St. dn•n. Hal. a~P<I 1wo yrars. and· D<!lwrl:.·, ill lwallh rulminalrrl rr !Joherl)··, end w~s peaceful. mercy on his soul. and ma·~· h~ ireS Patricia \\'ells . 81 :.larjoric. agNI 6 month~. arc in lli> d!'alh on Sun<l:!y morn- and ><'r<•nr. rest in prar~. _.

City firrmrn rereivrrl only two call~ ov~r tht• wt•ekend.

; both on Saturday, an overheat· : rd stove pipe on Shaw Strert • and a rhimnr)' fire on Queen's : Road. Thrrc was no damage . ·reported.

lt•ft to mourn tiw dt•:tth of a 1

.. • ··-----·- ~-~ .. ---· - .. _ • ---· -..:

Preparatol')' Dll'lsion J h A b I kind and loving falhrr. To th<• Ed 1 TV A d .! J>aul !licks 100 0 n m U ance sorrowing rel:tlires the NEWS ucati•ona ssesse ·~ Belt)' fitzpatrick .... 100 extend., its dreprst sympathy. ,;.-! Patricia Hil·kc)' 100 Din VOl' K:'>iOW THAT ----.. ----·- .. ;

Paula Holmans ........... 1011 ' Wl'll over lOtiO persons \\WI' J b 0 1 A >llrvry undrrtahn by thr Somr saul work progre;,ed One of the chief benefits: ill Joa,, Cousins · 95 · trained in First Air! durin~ the 0 5 pen ET\'. 58,. author1·11·es. 15· tha•·,.it J B tt 88 Nl'wfoundland Traeher~· A,,o. too !JUiekl.'· and too much was ~<• oan enne ·past year by St. John Abulance., · ··• To the successful pupils and dation to show the strength and erilmmed into or.e T\' class-· permils children in areas ser).··

and this training wah done; 1 • · d b \' t 'f ed'·

E d S • their teachers. the Presenta·. FHEE u N th , wrakncss of school tcleYision, room peno<l. But on thr other· e y T to ge a um orm ..... Tendm have been ~ailed by: n s esston 'tion Sisters. we offer our I • - ' p or .rel'cals that.lcachrr.s arc almoH h.r.nd:. rhlld_re~ ~ere. heard ,t?. cation. One of the prob!e"s

the Department of the Na•·y •• , . heartiest congratulations. . Tl· YOU h 1 . h unammousl~ m fa1our of edu· ""l· Oh, 1\e _a\1 that on T\. faced by unh·ersities is that cJ!f· Bure~u of Yards and Docks for· li~LIF,\X (CPl-The mlno.ra· ' . l<lt !1 e P ,"'111 c: Positions are now availalllc ca1io11al TV. and remembered thetr lessons. ferent schools ha•·e. educ~~d construction of an undcrgrounrl ty Liberal government remam· ~sed to furthur the wo.rk of the for orth r h· Th oc u The study was madr during One ot the most popular sug. the1r students to Yanous ley_els power system between manholes ed in power Saturday as the nn· 1 March Of Dimes St. John Ambulance 111 New· ati;~s a:e 1~f ~s~~~illcd enatt~r; the monlh of September. Ia.< I gcslions made was that the of intelligence. : .:. 62 and 48 at the United States nual llaritlmes universities stu· I· · fofun~land. and t~c furlhcrance i p d · 1 d . C · 1 · 'EI . l'car. when school> were closed. children should be given work' It is unfair to the pup. lf:s,

d II t d I o this work will mean the I an me u e. arpen ers. ec· · · . d . . . . Naval Station, Argentla. ent par amen woun up •

1

, . . . . !ricians. A ua Svstems Meehan· :There were sotne ou~~cslions to do at tl:e end of each pro· seekmg a m1~ston to unl\·erst y. The estimated cost of the two·dav session. (!lilnth Listing) trauung of more persons 111 i · H t' q E ·. 1 R · 'encountered on !he surw1· of' ~ram and the work could be that all apphcant.o; do not ·ha\·e

' · · 1 1 · 1 ti 't'irst Aid work and the pos· 1rs. ea mg qUipmen epa1rs. 1 • • c • d d project will be between 5100,000 ·•lost control'ers•a e~15 a on 1 $100.00-The Dominion Steel' sible snvi of ' , l''' .I Diesel Electric Genrrators Oppr. i parents anrt tearhrrs reactions.' checked o~ the nexl days pro· the_ same chancP. at. a goo e ~· and $150,000. Closin~ date for. was a CCF~sponso~ed bill call:: & Coal Corporation, Bell Island. I sib!· ·ou;~wn more 1 es, pos 'i a tors. Healing Operating Eng in·!~- ·· .. _ ... _ .... _ ----- - gr~m. Thts. w.ould. help ~am· cat1on. Some applicants. h?;o hida will be 3 p.m. EST, March · lng for $1.~~ mlmmum houri) : $25.00 each _ The Bennett ) ) _:__ . eers and Plumber Steamfitters. 1 A N D w d : tam the ch1ld s mtcrcst 111 a reccl\·cd better tra~nmg m h1~h B. 'wage for cil·•l servants. ex~hul·: Brewing Co .. Ltd.. Bidgood's , 1 1 00 S . senes of lessons. . school b~cause the1r school 11as

. : lng the a.rmed forces and RDIP. ·Wholesale J,td .. Cornwall Drug _Tha.t. St. John Amb_ulaJ~c~ ; lnterestctl persons should re- ' • • In contrast to rarhcr educa· .10 an area where. teachers we.re . The work. generall~·· Will co!l·; ~he btU w~s. opposed by the Co. LIAI., Trade Printers & Puh. mamtams 8 24 hour servJ~~ port· to .the National Employ·· 1 lion rxpcrimcnts ~vith radio. thP ple~ltful and equ1pment readily

s1st or the construction of s1x i off•c•al oppos111on, the 20·mem-1 r h Wlt.h an Emergency Ambulanrr men\ Offtcc. Bmldin~ No.6. X a·. "'aU I MOVIng lclenswn cxpenmenls ha,·e: a,·a•lable.

(electrical) manhol~s and ap·: ber Progressh·e Conservatives : ISS:~~O-l •w's H ~~ ,\l'l'e whlch. last year. w~s at thr 1·al Dockyard. Water Street. St.; 0 been rrcci\·ed h)' students and An equal opportunity lhrou~:1 proximate!)' 3.700 linn! feet of The CCf' and Christian Atheist. 5j5'15 •1:~ 1 C ·.·I'· · ·LPgim ~cene of many acc.ldents and John's for interview. !rae hers alike with much more equal education is more readil~· underground conduit banks parties supported the 27·mrin · · - e anatlan 1 f1rcs to convey patwnts to the ... -----~·-~--- F bl , >ttcr~c". obtained throuah the usc of hearing from len to a single! Liberal go1·ernment or Rick. Bl·anch No. 25.:._Fo;tune. .llospil:ll for Tre:ttment. avoura y T'ne rnut·alional scrirs now educational Tv." duct conduit bank for power and 1 Cashin of St. John's. Nfld.' 51.5·00 eae~l IW!d; Al.laC~· i - M• A ·- ... _ ~--1elephone sen·iee. 'throughout thP session. ; thesla Associates. D. c:. Bishop.: That dan~cr of accidents is lners ccept . :~i~l~~~g~atr~~e:~ooo;cc:~,io;;l~t;~~ T s

·----------·----.. -· .. -·-·- ·---·· _ $10.00 ea.ch-:-11. D. Robrrts .. el'er.vwhrre. and thai tlwrc 1 Th .. A.:\.IJ. co. woocb haulin~ l'l'l' 1 h h h . . Failed 0 lop T.rade Specmhhes Ltd., Fret! V. should be a Qu:llifiell Al'dt•r in R d , . '. appear o e I r e~111111ng ·

I S t Of W• t 1 L d t operations are IH'o~re>oin~ fa1·. or more r~lcn.<ive usc of edu- A car ownerl by a re~idrnt of n uppor .In er . L Jesman t . EVERY Jtome. re:uly to com hal • ecommen a iQRS nur<~hly wilh 4~.1Hlll ennis hrin~ calional T\'. Le~larchant Road and parked S5.00 each - Thos. Mt•lralf, that dangrr. for. sa\'in~ li1·es 1 hauled durin•~ tho week enrlin:: .. ·- -. on Cookstown Road was dama~·

Wilsil Ltd .. J. & S. Ryan liard· ~hould bt! EVEHYBODY'S hus· · .lanuat·y 29lh. hrin~in~ !he tota·l· eel between 8 p.m. and 9 p.m. Employment Campaign ware, H; E. Nicol l;ld·: Unity: inrss. so II~LP Sl. Jclhll AmiJu. ~ B~~J.I. ISLA:\D I St;l!'fl--\'ot· haul~d to dale to tnto.on t•orrls: unemployment I Saturdav h\' a rar which failr.i J,OBA No. P86, Old.' t•rilcan. lam·c to trnm you ~nd nthrr> to ing by sL•c·rrt hallnl at the nl' 5t c• of the .<c~~on ~ olJJrC·. :to stop.' D~magc wa~ estimated

S2.00 - Bruce Chafe, Pelt)·, take your part as, tf, and wht•n .IJnion Hall. Rentll'll Slrcel. 1111 tivr. ~• · The !'iewfoundland Branch or sal~s of the products· ran be Ilr 1te•·"ssarl' f" 1'. at ..,o. • . I'· ,;, • • 'Thursd:ly and Frillay .• lannaQ'! l'rlldudion h~· "l"'l':ilin;: Oiri- lgures -·--·· ....... --The Canadian llanu!acturers : maint~lned. You can assist your· $1.00-~!rs. Stephen J.toms.. - 12ath anrl 29th. fifty-eight p~r· 1 ~ions tnt• the Wl'ek w~t·r: R~rl· · F" .Usociatlon is pleased to Invite [fellow Newfoundlanders em· Lower Islan!l cove. ~ore ~nd more p~·rs.ons Hr I cent of the members of Local :·grr. 12.000 ccmls: 'lillcrtown.' I Irsl )'our support of the efforlS of ploy~d In industry by buying bemg tran~ed each Yl'ar. hu\ the 4121 (U.S.A.) AFL. Clo .. : 11.000 cords; Terra Nov~. 10 .. ~ . . . the Advlson.• Committee of the Newfoundland made products. need l.s shll ~reat for more to voted to accept the terms of the . 000 cords and lli;hop's Falls. ' 11tc fnllowmg flgurrs sho~ I Performance Winter Works Programme. The You can also assist others to Colli.Sl.ODS be tramcd, and such a pro~ram I new working contract wi:l• the· 9.000 cords. . the number of Jnplaced apph.l Association knows that "when buy Newfoundland products by by St. John deserves the wh?le ore company as recommended 1 rants as of Januan.· 29th, 1960. i GANDER (Staff)-The first everyone works, everyone bene· hiring them to do some worlc hearted . support of the entire by the Conciliation Board. During thr P~~t Wl•ck 1,650 · for last week and for the same · performanceof Gander's pan· fits". now while men and materials Several collisions were re· commumty. cords were dcJi1·ered by truck I period last year:- tomine "Dick Whittington'' was

are available. The wages you ported to city pollee over the At a meeting held prior to to Rushy l'ond Brook. the most I 1960: held Saturday afternoon in St. There are' numerous OC· p&)' them Indirectly help you In weekend. All were.two·car col· Please give when the St. the voting, president D. I. of which was tran5porled more Mall' Female Joseph's Academy auditorium

eupatlons In manufacturlns that return, regardless of your OC· llslons In which except in one John collector calls, and make "Nish" Jackman recommended than 23 miles. ThL~ is thr )(!'rat. Jan. 2n ........ 18.331 1.598 and attracted an attendance of ean be successfully filled all cupatlon, for you are helping to case, minor damage was sus· it extra generous for their members that the best thing to est quantity for one week since 1 21 ......... 17,974 1,540 BOO children. E1·ening perform· d_u_ri_n_g_fu_e_w_ln_t_~_m_o_~_h_s_l_f_fu_e_c_re_a_~~~-r_c_b_s_~~g~po_w_e_r_. __ ~~~~-e_d_, __________ G_~_d_e_n_J_u_hl_~_e_Y_e_a_r_. ___ ~_d_o_w_a_s_a_c_ce_P_L_ the !levclo~~tof ~~a~~ 1009: aM~~llbeh~~~n~~

--· ·-- delh•ery site. 1 Jan. 29. . 18,752 1.561 . Tuesday and Wednesday,

I l.

-. __ : :,'· ;; .

' . . . . ..... \ '

. ,.

'· ~ ""-~ ......... - ... .:. ........ ,, .. , ................ ~ .. .

P!~UELL ~OSP1~ AL-~e average .month~y ~ork load at. Pepperrell Ho~pital: ~i1thorize!l bcc~s, 411; hos1>itul mlmissions,. 1:1~; surgical opl.'ra· Uou,.ll3; llhoratory prbcedure,- 2;887;. tmmuntzabons, 1,014; · average bedl occupted, 29; outpatients trentiT)cnts, .1,964, dchvcnes, 19; llhnrmacy ,.......,._ fllltcl, J.l78. . . . . . . . . . . . . . '

"" I , • ~

: . .?' . I

WE'RE LOADED WITH BARGAINS FOR

EVERY ON£

HELP US- CLEAR OUT CLEAN OUT

ON S.AVINGS NOW!

~ THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1960 ~~~------------------------------------------------------------------------------------··------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~------~--~~~-.~

THE DA1L'Y NEWS 'llewfouDdlan~'s Only Morning Paper

\'EARLY SUBSClUPTION RATES

Canada .... .. . $l~.ll0 per aun111n Unilt•d Kingtlom

and all forci~n c-ountrirs ~ ll .no per annum Authorized M second class mail Pnst Office Department, Ottawa,

TI1e DAILY NEWS is a momlll! 1aper established in 1894, and pub­·shed at the News BuUding aM-359 >uckworth Sh-eet, St. John's, New· mndland, by Robhulon. & Company, .imited.

MEMBER OF TilE CANADIAN PRESS

The Canadian Presa is exclusively ~ntitled to the use for republication of all news despatches in this paper credited to it Ol' to the ,\5SIJCiated Press or Reuters and also the local news published therein.

:\II Pres' • ~r"ir.~ and feature articles in this paper are cop)T;~hted and their rt.produclion is prohibited.

•• I ·. ' I

Member .1\udil Bureau

of Circulation.

\10:\D:\ Y. FEBRU.\R\' 1. 1960

A Limit On Public Spending ""hl'tt hr al·knm,·ll'tl~t·d tlll' annual

rlit·y ~nhtni--ion ol thl' . Ctumllian LtlHinr Cttn~n·ss. \lr. Dll'frnh;~krl' m.Hlr thr uul·.,pokl'n l"tHIIIIJrnt that it '"'uhl t·osl a kii1g's nmsom to put Slltnl' of thl' pruposals into rffect. \lr. l01lo•in. in his rrply. said th<lt soch1l ad­~·.n"""' an· a nl'l'l'ssit~· ami that labour i< willin~ to ntakr its (•ontribution In

I hr t'llst. But thr "hulr «jUl'stion has bt'l'Ome

a n.tlion.tl prnhkm that has tn he eon­~hlt·n·d in tht· light nf what the nation l'nll a II nrd. Tht•n; is a limit ou what l':ln hr d<>nr on any basis ami that includes t·ontrilmtury schemr~.

l'ro'.!rr~' in social secmity aud wd­far.r ~t·n·icrs has hren rcmarkahlr iu the past fiflrl'll yrars. lu mauy rcspt•cts, the Cul;Hlian s1·sll•m is onr of thr most atll"allcC'd it; aJI till' world. But the (;O.~t It;" hrl'n high and is !-(rowing anmmlly hi::lwr as popnlatinn increasrs nnd mm·c ftt;1l morr proplr ht•t·onJc the hencfic­i.tric•s nf l"<lrinus statutory p;~yments.

That is particularly true of family al­l""'""·c·s a11d old age· pl'nsious. These t.tl..r a gtT<th•r slin· each yt·ar of :my incn·as<' iu thr !(I'IISS nathmal product.

E\pan>iou of social st•r,·krs on a rnntrihutniY ha>is would add mt•rr In tllt' hurtll'l; of federal costs anti th1•rc i$ nn wal a~sunmcc that such ~cl!!'tll<'S

would meet gencr,\1 publk appron1l. People may wl'li feel that they sh.:·uld he allowed to exercise their own db­m•tion about bow they spend what remains of their incomrs after tlu~~· have paid their taxes and their cu •• h i. butions to unemployment and health insurance, pension sch~mes and the like.

That there are phases o£ welfare and sol'ial security in whicb further pro· !(rcss is desirable may be true enongh. But Canada has come to a point where she must re\'iew the gains that have been made, assess the efficiency of her social securitv svstem, estimate its in­creasing cost· an'd determine what she will be able to do in the next few years without imposing new tax- burdens on the econom1•,

The cr~tclal point is that a country cannot li\'e be1·ond its means without harm to the 'national interest. And that harm ma1• take a \'arietv of forms, inl'lmling loss~s in foreign tr~de through inabilit~· to compete with other nations, higher taxes at all l1wels of go,·ern­mrnt, and a general reduction of the lh·ing standard. Welfare services will undoubtedly imprO\'e as the wealth of thc nation increases but the\' can he hastened onl~· at great risk to the funda­mental well-being of the people.

High Cost Of Sharing Tltc point made hy the ~linislt•r ol

lli~hw;1ys last wt•rk that thr prorincial ~harr. of the l'ttst of fedcral-prol'incial projrcts slwnld he geared to capacity tn pay i~ entirely suuud and reasonable. 1t has h£•m frequmtly 8iscumd in thr~c cnlumus.

·n,c, Trans-Canada Highway Agrre· nwnt is an outshmding example of the iurquitirs ill\"ol\'cd in a fifty·fifly ar­r.m~t·mrnt. 1t J1as im]lOst•d on Xew­fou;ttllaud a hurdt·n out of all propor­tinu In hrr ability In carry it. \\'e found in ICJ3(i that we then had to complet(' . mon• milt•s nl" highway than the total mill'ill!l' of all the nthrr agreeing pro\'­illu·s -C'XCl'pl Ontmio. Th;lt was palpab­ly ah;md. Hut the only alternatil'c to atTrptancc was to stay out of the

agreement and we could 110 more af. ford to do that than we could to meet the cost that would fall on us.

Ottawa may imagine that it is gen'· crous when it offers these fifty·Hfty schemes but that is an illusion that a1·iseos out of the fantastic notion in the nation's capital that all provinces are equal in wealth and standards of ser­vices. A provincial go\'emment dare not rcfme to take advantagd of these offers but the poorer provinces, in accepting the arrangement, assume burdens of increasing C05t ·which ultimately may impose crushing financial obligations.

Rcn\ t'quality involves consideration of need and capacity to pay. It is about lime that idea penetrated tl1e official mind in the nation's capital.

Jobs In Western Labrador Then~ will he a thousand jobs in the

~p!ing on the cxmstruction operations at . the Iron Ore Company's dc\'elop· lllftlt at Carol Lake. Prt'fercnce will be j!i\·rn to Newfoundlanders who qualify, fur the jobs that are avaihlble and many of them mny very well find themselves in _a preferred position when the con· sth1ction stage has been completed.

' '

'1'h£"re should br many men in N(•w­foundland who will be anxious to take a4'·antage of this opportunity. It may be desirable, however, that the nature ol th!! jobs that will be offered and the (]~lifkations n·quired be widrl~· pnh­lk·jzrd.

It is pn1hahly tht• ease that applica­tions arc already pouring into the Iroi1

Ore Company's employment office In St. John's and that the necessary infor· mation is being sent out. · But having regard for some of the special circum· stances that now exist with respect to the employment problem in Newfound­land, the idea of making known the categories in which men are wanted and the minimum qualificatiois in each category might be particularly weful at this time. H.owev~ this may be, it is certainly

to be hoped that special opportunities · will open tip in Western Labrador for , unemployed miners on Bell Island and perhaps for cer!ain classes of workers who are now employed at Pepperrell. 11R•sc. new jobs could not open up at a more opportune time.

Welcome To February .t>ld winter seems swiftly to be slip­

pilig away. January is behind us and thC.. \'ernnl equinox is ouly seven weeks away. The days are already showing ~ceptible increase in· length and that is te'ncouraging In spite of the fact that the worst of winter weather may Ue ~ad. ·

a little faster than it wa~ m Janulry but not so much so that the level of employment is increased: to. a material degree. This year, If the weather re­mains suitable,' it should 1ee the termi­nation of the hauling of last ' year's pulpwood cut to the river banb. And that iJ about all. ·

):ebruary can be a fickle month. It CIJl produce sudden and prolonged The only . ~al significance ot th*ws but it can also 5pawn bitter cold February In this flnt year of . the an~l howli~g blizzards. The chief s~tis- sixties' is that tbla is Leap Year and so fa-;lion it hrin"s is the knowledge tltat the month .gains In extra dlly. That

i ~ means that. We must I Wait another thcr year l~ fld\'ancing ··towards its · · .~enty-four hours before welcoming' sp+ing., · ·

from an economic standpoin~ it has March as . another impo'rtant Stepping

!itt! to offer. The ,PRcc. of comn1erce is_ stone towards 'the long·awaited ·spring.

. , \ · ..

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

In The • News By WAYFARER ·

NOTES AND COMMENT

It is small woncJ.cr thnt a group "or French·Cnnadian journalists have vlgorcusly protested the seizure of Time Magazine of January 11 on the grounds that its to\·er illmtrntinn was obscene. The cover in question re­ferred to the principal articl<! in the magazine. This had to do with the almost cxploiiil'c l(rowth of world population. To !\!ontreal's jm·cnile morality squad, the objectionable fr~· tu1·~ was the inclusion in tlw <·o1·cr d!!sign of two African women who wrrc naked (rom the waist up. Th<'Y wr~·e part of a composite painting that represented the women of many races. But the ~lontrcal police hnl'c their own ~pcclat nctions of what con~ti­tutcs decency, ln one of the m:st l'icc·ridden l'lties of Canada. with ~rmcd ball!:its .running louse. mug. ains a daily occurrence. gambling ' . and prustitullon rampant, it might be thought that the police force, pal'· llcularly the morality squad, would hal'c something better to do. In an~·

c~·cnt, Time's cover was decorous by comparison with the salacious co\'el·s of books that arc exhibited on c1·ery :\lontreal newsstand.

• • • This incident brings to mind some·

thing •that happened here in Commis­sion of Ga\'el'nment days when a man named Price was head of the Customs. Life :\lagazine had published photo· gt•aphs shcll·ing the birth of a baby. )lr. Price took it upon himself to act as a rcnsol'. He stopped the suh· scription copies of the magazine in the post office and allowed their de· Hl'ery only after the offending section had b~en remol·ed. This was one of the mcst high-handed acts of customs censorship of which we hare ever heard, In this case, it was an actual invasion of the rights of ,J;ubscribcrs t~ the ·magazine. Newsstand display l':as not involved.

• • •

also e1•cry picture in every pub!!· cation that shows the slightest hint of cleavage. All these things are in much worse taste than the pictures of native women in their native clothing. \\'hen stu;lid policemen can arrogate 1J themselves the right of censorship t'n this ba~is, there is something badly r:ron;: with the force to which they '>cl:mg.

• • • But while wc sec nothing wrong

with this Time r.orer that caused so much consternation in :Hontreal. we '~C a good deal of wrong with the ta~tc 3l1d discrct ion of the editors or Life who have dcmted the first ten pages or the main bod,l' of their issue of January 25 to the story or an un­fortunate ;.·oung girl, heiress to a large fortune. who eloped with a married man. Life makes pretensions to being tlw world's leading picture magazine ami the photographic chronciler of our time. Bill in this particular case, its editors showed a sad lack of propor­tion. The case history was pathetic but the only thing that appeared to justify the extensive treatment it re­ccil'rd was the fact that the young woman in question mlj!ht be the ulti­mate heir to a consldet·able industrial fortune. The story itself is a sordid one and nothing in it deserved more than one page buried in the back of the magazi~e as an illustration of the neuroses that affe~t so many young people.

• • • \\'hile on the iillb,icct. we are get·

ting continuous cause to wonder at the persistence or the circulation managers of a 1·cr;.• wide range of periodicals. Onc,'s mail today always includes three or four special offers and subscription rates in these offers arc now being reduced to the point where the publishers will be virtu­ally gi\•ing their products away. The letters rome in an endless flow. We tried once to stop them by writing to ask that our name be taken ofi the mailing lists but this produced no results. "' e sUp!)ose there is a pay. orr. Of course, the purpose is to make the books yield their profit out of ad\'ertising alone but the cost of send­ing out tht>se special and extra special and once in a lifetime offers must be quite high. They are 1 particular problfm to recipients who have to buy incinerators to dispose or the multi­tude of these communications that are

News In Review By DAVID ROW:-ITREE

Canadian Press Staff Writ~r French democracy hung in the bal

ance the past week. Die-hard opponents of President d~

Gaulle's offer or sclf·dctermination to Algeria's Moslem majority rioted in Algiers last weekend. Twenty-four died and 136 were wounded as French· man fought Frenchman in an in.~UI'·

rcctio11 sparked by the remol'al a week ago Friday of Gen. Jacques Massu, commander or an army corps at ,\lgier~. Massu had criticized de Gaulle in a newspaper intrrl'iew.

De Gaulle resisted all attempts to modify a promise that he bclic1·es can end fil'e years' bloody rebellion by :O.foslcm nationalist~.

There were indications that the president's attitude commanded wide support in France.

Howe1·er, cracks wrre appa{rn_t in the ~olidarity of de Gaulle's cahmcl. After a hast,v yisit to Algiers where he unsuccessfully sought to end the trouble, Premier :\!khcl Debrc was said to have cffrred to resign.

Dcbre and others in the cabitwt oppose putting down the insurrection bv armed force. Hundreds of French s~ttlers remained behind cobblestone barricades in the heart of Algiers. The government prepared to outwait them-it ordered its civil and mili­tarv chiefs to leave the city.

The stakes were high: 'I say in all clarity and in all simplicity that if I fail in my task, the prestige, the rate of France will be compromised.'' de Gaulle said in a radio speech ~Ton· day.

STILL AN OUTCAST The exccutil"e council of the Can·

adian Labor Congress has denied mcm· bership. in the International L'nion of :\Hne, Mill and Smelter Workers lnd.

:\fine-1\lill was expelled from the old Canadian Congrss of Labor because of Communist domination and the CL~·s council said in Ottawa Wednesda~· it still considcts that the union contra­venes anti·Communist clauses in the congress constitution.

The CLC meeting also urged rcco~· nition of Red China.

When the union c~iefs presented their annual legislatil·c demands to the government. the prime minister said it would cost "a king's ransom" to implement their program on taxes, foreign and farm aid. He promised to consider the submissions but gal"e no other encouragement.

NAMES IN THE NEWS

financial reports on companies he ccn trolled. He could be fined $10,000 an~ imprisoned iive years.

Back from a trip to Canada, Begin aid llraudling, president of the Board or Trade, announ~ed Thursday Brit. ain will end controls on dollar·area in1ports of fresh, chilled and frozen· fish and other goods.

ALL HOME COMFQRTS Two prisoners in jal! at Bonn. West

Germany, digging a hole in ·their cell; J disco1·ered the one below was occu· pied by two women prisonhs. Thf men wrigl(lcd through to join th~m l"ot· a "romantic cn~ning," a prison of-ficial said.

The four now are in new c"ens­~olitar\' ones.

GRAMMAR BY NUMBEitS "One of the first things a atudent

i< tau~:ht.'' sa~·; language Professor ncn Baker. "is the definition of a·. noun and a \·crh.''

".\ noun r~ defined as a person, place or thing .. Then a \·erb Is dt· fined ~s~aming an action. The. word ·action' i~ a noun, but it's not a ptr-son. place or thing. ·

•·:-; o wonder the student gets eon­fused.''

Baker. assistant professor of J.:nc- · !ish at the linil'ersity of British Co­iumbia, beliel"es that a system devised b~· Donald Dashwood·Jones; a West Vancouver teacher, can end the eon; fusion, It is being tested in vadeu·s classrooms in B.C.

The Dashwood·Jones system uses 'ymbols to represent words in a sen­tence. For example, I is a noun or pro­noun. 2 a 1·erb, C a linking verb, J) a determiner, and so on. Studenlll are taught what comhinalion o( symbols may or may not be used.

COLCNIAL AFFAIRS Bel~ium agreed Tuesday to til'e

the Belgian Congo independence Junt 30.

Talks on independence for Cyprue broke off in deadlock Thursday. Brit­ain while resisting demands to reduce the size of the military bases she will keep. offered to tri;Jle financial as­sistance to the new republic. Inde­pendence, scl \or :\larch 19, may now he delayed until i\Jay 19.

II ostile demcnstrations greeted P1·ime ~linisctr :\lacmillan In :-ryas· aland during his African tour. Forty Africans were arrested in one near riot.

FOREIGN FUNDS WELCOME

On the strength or what the ~lon·

treal ju1·enlle morality squad has done in the case of Time·~ cover or .January 11, It should now protest the delivery or set:; of the Encyclopaedia Britan· nica which have been donated to ~lon· treal high schools until certain illus· trations illustrating the articles· of are have been remo1•cd. Out should ~·orne almost all the plates that show examples oi Greek and Roman as welt as modern sculpture. out should come in one's daily mail. '

The deepest di\'e into the oceans by men was made last weekend by scientist Jacques Picard and Lieut. Don Walsh of the t:. S. Xai'Y· They descend­ed in a bathyscaph se1·cn miles to the floor of the Pacific oH Guam.

Trade :tlinister Churchill says for­eign in,·c,tmcnt has hehJed Canada <>xpand more rapidly than would hare been possible with Canadian sa\'ings alone.

What Others GOSPEL TO MOON

Peterborough Examiner A Methodist Bishop in Washington

. Ul'les his church to make plans for carrying the Gospel to other planets. For the moment we suppose, it will have to be done from a Russian rocket.

. SUPPORT PRICES Charlottetown Guardian

Washington has announced that cur· rent support prices for U. S. dairy pro­ducts will continue through the 1960-61 marketing yeat· beginning April 1. These rates are $3.06 a hundred weight for milk used for manufactur­Ing purposes and 56.6 cents a pound for buttlerfat. This will be the third consecutive marketing y_ear that sup· port prices have been continued at these levels.

ARMOURY VS. SCHOOLS Vancouver Sun

We wonder how many taxpaying dti· iens belie~·e that an armory is more Important than a school.

The question concerns Ottawa's in­tention to build a $3 million armory

·in Vancopver. The Federal authorities can find money for that putpose but provincial and civic governments can't find the money for new schools in Vancouver.

Wouldn't It be better to postpone the armory's construction and lend the money to the social authorities.

CAN'T CALL TUNA Windsor Star

There Is something significant in the resignation of Finance Minister Antoine Pinay from President Char· les de Gaulle's Cabinet in France. i\·lr. Plnay represents certain of the forces which promoted General de Gaulle to Power. The rightests In France were anxious for Gen. de Gaulle to take over. His principal opposition came from the Left. But now some of the rlghtests ·don't seem. too satisfied with lhe result of their manoeuvres. Pos· 1lbly they cannot call the tune as they had hoped. ·

ESKIMO'S TEETH Toronto Star

Lo1 the E1klrito is to have fluoridated drinking water. The. .council of the Northwest Territories has decided that fluoridation cOuld be the antidote to

. Jrowing tooth dec~y among northern Indians and Eskimos a: they grow more exposed to civilization's 3oft foods.

· The ~orthwest T~rrltorles " displaY· ln1 a more proJl'enive attl£ude than the Frost Rovetnment in Ontario, where civilization's soft foods and tooth decay are the order of the day. Except in nine Ontario communities, fluoridated drinking water for munl· clpallties Is blocked while awaiting the lackadaisical study of Premier Frost's three·man committee on fluori­dation.

The committee has spent a year

Are Saying studying a problem whose answer is common scientilic knowledge around the world. That fluoridation is bene­ficial, not harmful.

With that noteworthy group of span­sore we now have the ?\orthwe5t Terri­tories council. How rar behind the !\' orthwest Territorie$ will Ontario continue to Jag?

MA ON A PAYROLL Brantford Expositor

How many of the married women who go out lo work really want to? 11 ow many can honestly say they enjoy doing double duty and don't feel the strain of it? How many do It in re­sentment and desperation.

One or the franker sort has been opening her thouphts to public Yiew in a . newspaper. She says, "Going to work means doing half a day's job before YOU even }eave for work , .. cooking oatmeal ,seeing that the cat is fed, the beds are made, that Johnny has a clean shirt, that Mary's hair is neatlv combed, that ·the box lunches are ~eady, that the meat is put out to thaw for supper, etc. l'd rather stay at home. and I believe mllllons of other working mothers would too."

Then why do they do It? They need the money, or persuade themselves that they do. "Today's economy" is the whipping boy chosen by the work­Ing mother we have quoted. But is It altogether today's economy? "It's not fun to raise a family with the wolf at the door," she writes. But who brought · the wolf to the door?·Jfe didn't come of his own accord.

He arrives with the bills and the bill collector. simply because people have stopped waiting for things ·till they can pay ror them. Grandma was no stranger to the wolf at the door when pay was far lower than it Is now, but on today's incomes, ·the -highest ever, she could have kept the wol! a mile away, She wouldn't, for Instance, as· sume because the family next door had certain things not exactly essen: tlal to a reasonable living 'standard, that.. she and her family must have them oto. She had the moral backbone to set her own spending pace ge_ared to her Income, and not to let some· one else, least of all the money· lender5, decide it for her .

But that's th WilY it Js. To 1et the things they won't wait for, people must have cash for a down payJIIent and the instalments. They plunJe, often deeper than they oUJht to, Then they need more-Income and the only way to get it is to put mother on a payroll. So out to work she goes, the only member of t11e family doing double shift. But let's not blame "to· day's economy." In m6st cases the conditions that send mother out to work have been created voluntarily. She is, in fact, doing double shlft by free choice. ·

Diana Barr;.·more, actress daughter or the late John Barrymore, died in ::\ew 'rork :\londay, aged 38.

Financial wi1.ard Alexander Guter­ma was found guilt~· in :\'ew. York ~\'ednesday of conspiring to withhold

Replying Tuc~da~· in the thron~

speech debate to remarks by Oppo5i­lion Lender Pearson about the trad~ deficit and indebtedness to the U.S .• he said. "we should not complain about our almost unique capacity to

su1lplement the savings of Canadia11s. through borrowings in the United StatQs market.·· ----- -----------------·--·-----· ··- ---

E'dson In SURri\ISE SWITCH COULD DERAIL VOTER REGISTRATION PROPOSAL

By PETER EDSO:O. NEA Washington Correspondent

WASliiNGTON-(NEA> - President Eisenhower's apparent cCfort to side· track for this year congressional con. ~ideration of the Civil Rights Comrnis· sian's recommendation for last-resort federal registration of \'Oters caused much surprise here.

The President's reason was that Con· gress already has before it the admini­stration civil rights bill on which hear­ings were held last year. In answer to a press conference question, the Prcsi· dent said he hoped other proposals would not enter into tbis project.

"The "l)th"er proposals" he is object· ing to is one that would authorize him to appoint a temporary federal voting registrars. They would be empowered to certify to state election officials that presidential and congressional elect­ions, by reason of race or color, would get those rights.

As recommended by Civil Righu Commission, this machinery would be

• • set up to carry 1t out: • Nine or more residents or any poli·

tical subdivision would first have to make affidavits to the president that they had been denied the right to regis

Washington giog," it meets with objections .

President Eisenhower told his press conference be had no objection to fur­ther study of federal registration. But the doubt he raised was that it might be unconstitutional, This is what threw civil rights advocates for a loss.

The question of constitutionaiil)· was examined pretty carefully before Civil Rights Commission made its recom· mcndation.

Article 1. Section 2 of the Colistihi· lion providrs that the qualifications for voting for election of congressmen shall be the same as qualifications for voting for members of the most nu· merous branch of each slate's legisla­ture. Article 1, Section 4 authorizes federal protection of l'oting in federJI elections against any interference.

The· 14th, 15th, 17th and !Uth amend­ments support these rights in various detail. They bolster the contention that while state constitutions and alate Jaw establish \'oting· qualifications, this . right is based on the U.S. Constitution. This has been upheld by Supreme Court decision.

Strength For Today By EARL L. DOUGLASS

ter and vote in their state. Recently as I &at in the lobby of a These affidavits would be referred modern inn built after antique pal­

to the Civil Rights Commission for in· terns, I noticed a great. sagging beam vestigation. Those found valid would be in the center of the building. Certain·. certified back to the President. He ly this beam would hold up . nothing. would then be authorized to appoint any 1'o all appearance it constituted grtat federal officer or•employee in the di.'- icopardy. It might fall at any time. trict to act as a temporary registrar of ·\\"hat I did" not know until aomeonP l'oters, under stale law. told me was that the beam was only a

This registrar could be the clerk oi thin veneer casing. Beneath that cas-a federal court or a local postmaster ing was a steel girder. There wu nil~ . He could certify qualified applicants to the slightest danger that the second . vote in any federal election, but nol · floor would fall down on our heads. The for state official$. sagging beam might convert Juch an

Ttmporary re1istrars would be em· impression but the 1teel airder pre· powered to act until the President de· vented any trouble. termlne.d their aervl~es n11 longer nee· There are individuals in the world esnry. • , which look like sauing beams, but

Senaten Humphrey (D·Minn.), Javit.s very often these indlvidualJ have with­(lt-N-Y) and Mone (D-Ore), have in In them the support of an ·unyielding lrDduced bllb to carry out this recom· rurpcllie which is as •tronll as a tteel mendatlon. girder. JesUI' declared that tile meek

The hope has been expresstd that shall inhert the earth. What ,an . ab- · Congress could act· on this In time to surd statement, we would ny. Yet it make It effective for the 1960 elections is true. The meek are eertalnly not But Southern senators oppose It and belligerent in their attitude, but watch would probably filibuater to prevent them and yoit'-will see that in the end it. they get their way. And they Jet their

Rep. Emanue·l Cellar CD.N.Y.l hns in way· because they know what they want. traduced a· bill which would autboriz~ They are definitely set on what they appointment of nonresidenta of" any dis ·· believe: Within a nature which seems

lrict to serve as federal registrars. But soft and yielding is a purpose as riJid as this would iptroduce "carorLhat· ~s steel.

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLC., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1960

Personal Chit-Chat

Here's Hair~Raising Tale of a Wigged Woman,

Household

Hints

"ASTRO-GUIDE'' By Ceean -----..----For Monday, Febru~•/ I

Pre:.e11r-For You and yours , .. This is • fine day, with accents on family relation. •hip, partiwlarly between parent and child. Lunan ruling food otuff1, canned got>ds And thing< ealculated to please the ta~tes of the puhlie are in e~cellent ospect today. Study of phys;c,, "'trot. oiy and all form< of the occult are VDder favorable radiations.

Past ... The Supreme Court Fuiure ·. :;hnl. 1 .·.:: ''i'ed de\ic:\ containing ~ra~ H ed

held it< fi1'11t msion 170 yean may be 1 a< t c n c d around the ago today. On that oame date nee b <>l gra7ing cat!le, Sceu 75 yean later. a Negro lawyC!!' wiR fall out .1\ the cow ooises or wu the first of his nee to pr;.c. Jo"·ers hr.r :.::•.!. r~~C~d;,,~ the tice before that court. j)Utur<.

The Day Under Your 5! ~:~ Aa!ES I !oro M•reh 211o A~·il 19\ (1nr thtnl.:in;:- will oht'l:ltl" trf)IJhlU anrf •fM'rd •r tht: t~~·llt! you •11.nt. TAURUS (April20 to M•y 20) Hurt aff11rt1 ll.k" J'fK~tnc• :tl"lrl J'(l':r I"I.UIIC M:IJ be c::lttl)' ~n.

~EI.llt-11 IM•r 211• J ... 211 Consc•"'tiuus rfinrt anri :Httl'llton t.o dt. !ad1 will hnnl r~t~Tn.

CANCEJl (June 22 to July 21) H .,fiU I!'W'L: {nr troul,\~t, !OU'll fu~oi it, ~ don't sti~l.: your ntck (tnt,

LEO(July2llo ... uq.lt) . . E!.c:ttn•mt m.;],, .. ._ tl1t rl:ar stunnhhnr.

! Sofn<othin( M.&)' orcur to hot~trr JDUf 't#;O,

VtR~O (Auq. 22 to S.pl. 22) ..

I])M't rl•~o~·•llt :a.rounPI tn tht ~rn:njl!. :\clt•itv tn the \"1rxo chut " ~Jl) Ln ~t fi.aJ,

Titled Persons

ACI.OS~ DO\\'S

LIBRA (S.pt. 21 lo Oel. ~'I lh·~\..: m•~{h t.nt w-y hill" •l•r:~ l"''lfffflt nrli1tinl'l\ :aHr-:t yo\t • .\T~.J ~tui.1.nct.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Th.m:~ s'tou'•l ::o ah:-J::" ,uo-:(KI'hl)' ~ 'l'!d"rl 7flC.I at«-r dear of ur~'{'l')nSiblt ~rt·.

SA~ITTARIUS IN ... 22 to Dec. 21) fort,.!lrHv n's ••·i~ ~l')u. He nuhou~ •hr.ut ~U~~,.n c!tlMite!o of f-oltcy, .

CAPRICORN ( D•e. 22 to Jtn. 20) !'o~trm" m:a• 1:., lot) .... ·ar:C a htd" (1111'· \:ball'!~) ctf'l J"ttt- st•nd ~oo.tr "rot:ntl.

AQUARIUS (J ... 21 to f•b. 19) '.\l)l'r"' rahtllt\ )"011, anrl w\1~1·, "''~'W'. '"'-~ un': {'Ut your fu'l,t .. r on t~· r.aUJ«.

PISCES (F.~. 20 to M•rei 201 ' .,., rr.,v f,r.r1 fno:n_,c 'r>Ufit;t. F>ct MU't 1ht-y Mt-i't try to ''tou~h" ;rl')tl ((:If a tt..af\.

Manners Make Friends

1 Eugli~h !luke l On~ or Henry A former VIII's W1ves

Hussian lit!~ 1 Always 9 F~rmK 3 Human ·

)"fench Ulle Emp<ror 12 State 4 Lock or hair

liArtlcle 13 Demigod 6 Dispatcher 11 Tree 7 Region 15 Turpentine 8 Miss O'Grody 25 Solemnly state 46 Roosc\•cll do• mixtures • n Drink slow!$ 9 Elastic 26 Enter 47 Russion 18 Eaten away 10 MJ:dure 28 Ta~te mountAins 1g Former 11 Small demons 30 Soent 4R Charle• Lamb

Japanese titles 16 Summons 31 Cape 50 Close 21 Blacksmith's 20 Mohan;medan 33 Lt-~s u~uat 51 Italian dt;r

equipment holy etly 35 Entc!tammenl 52 Japan••e 23 La prey 22 Mountain 40 Rnwm~ outcasts 2( To: nymph 43 Cun·ed plate.; S5 Middle 27 Goes astray 2i Container 45 Skiing place (prefix) 29 Plant shoot· 3Z Opposed 34 Consent 31Musical

composition 37Musical

inltruments 38Pitcber 39Entranee 41 Transfers

(ab.) 42 Spread to dry !:=-+-+-44Curves 46 Garment

maker 49Ann bones &3 Constellation $4 Sleaziest $8 Former Lell

mone1· ~7Cows SIIFacts 59 Drink msd•

with malt 60Droops 61 Discord

1odl'ess

..

'6 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1960

·-·---- --,

Feildians Riding High; Defeat St. Bon's 3-2

. Take League Lead; Carter Outstanding With Squires Out Front In I

Scoring With John Carter playing a great game and Doug 1

· Squires scoring in the third period the Feildians took over the lead in Sftlior Hockey on Saturday night as they edged St. Bon's 3-2 in a fMt clean encounter that drew a full house to the Stadium.

Stan Breen and Harold Ryan gave Feild a 2·0 lead that ~tood up mttil lnte in the second period but Frank Power and Tom "City" Murphy had it even as the final stanza opened. Squires' Jlonl was the decider and also I mo\·ed him one point out front of }.lurphy in the individ· I \lal scoring race. ,

While Cnrter was mnkin~ thr hi~ stops for Feildians ! ut onr end of the rink. St. Bon's !lOl another great game 1

·hom 'lcr\' Grcen ut the other t•ml. With p:ood passing most of the ~oalic's work cmne un dose-in shots or screen-

ed drh·es. Ft'ild lead St. Bon's hy one point. JOUN CARTER 1\IERV GUEE~ ... - .... - ......... --- --- 1m ·After a scoreless first per-·- ...... · --- FRANK POWER of St. Bon's races for the puck behind the p:unl in Saturday night's S~nior Hockey game. Ju.

tod. N~,. Henderson tipped a. tall~· of the year after Inter- i Stan Breen of[ In his own zone :tallies and nine points .. Feildian Carter Feildian goalie lies on the ice after making a save while Da\'e Barrett of St. Bon s and Stan Breen of Fetld pas.~ away from Joe Slaney to. r!'pting a clearing pass. He • and Breen went down the port, Stan Breen along wtth Jack . ' • 1 ' Feild won 3•2.-Ma" Mercer Photo. send Doug Squires down the! went across the Feild zone ten side with St. George hanging j Withers of St. Pat's have seven

1

lrad the play at .r~lg::l:_:t·:__:~:.:__----.:__ ___________________ -:-_~--:~----:;:;-left wing for the Fcildians .. r~ct inside the bluellne and on. Breen headed for the cor· pDints while MacKenzie of St. ------- .... Practl"ces For Squires went wide and pass. ' rc~;stcred on a low screened ner but sent a relay to Squires Bon's having six, N H L ed to Stan Breen unchecked backhander that went into the standing at the far corner for The game was fast and clean • • • fh·c feet out for a low scDring ~ cDrncr. the tap.in and a 3·2 game. with only one penalty. It s~w Th" W k shot early in the second frame. I Tom "Cit)''' Murphy tied It I St. Bon's drew their goalie I plenty of nice passing and With Ed d B B . I IS ee . Harold Ryan's second goal up with his ninth score of the for an extra attacker in the a large crowd and a close score, Can d• rums• . Edgar Squires, Asst. Secre·

or the ~eason made it 2·0 for 'schedule. Noel Sparrow pass. I last minule of play and came I was exclt!n~. ~ack of goa,I·! a I ens ge y ' tarr Df the St. John's Hockey Feild. Ryan stole the puck at . t'!l to Bob ~lacKenzle at center close twice. Dave Barrett I mouth ftmsh plus Carters l League. has released the prac. his own bluelinc and raced ic<' and ~lacKenzle tipped It miSied the open corner just ! standout performance were t~e , · lice schedule at the Stadium down the left side, cut sharply ahead to ;llurphy on the Jell two seconds before the final i big St. Bon's problems. As m r· d B ch· 0 w k d for the following week:-

~~n~eer ~~~~~;n~ig~ftl~~t ac:;~~;:: ;~~~ght ~:~;p~ir ~~~~e;i1~~n~. ::~:rthe 1~ot~:~m:i~~ttl:~u~:: ~~~~i:l~~er :c~~e~~~t da~~ ~~~ Ie y Icago ver ee en P.~.Oiutay, February 1st. O\'t'r Mrrv Green·~ fallin~ difficult angle with Carter: a 4.4 tie. ! play while Duffett. Breen and 6.15-Senior All-Stars. body. mol·ing slow on the drive. l His assi~t and RDal gave· Squires were on the ice and' BOST0:-.1 I API _ B-'ton Bruins' ices or forwards Larry Popcin battle for fourth place. Tuesday, february 2nd.

T\\'0 goals in just ov~r a min- The winning goal came just: Squires ten points in the. scar- ·the ''Terrific Trio" saw plenfy BOSTON IAP•-Boston Bruins and Eddie Shack. lost forwarrl Toronto buiit up a 3·1 le.1d on 6.15-.Junior All-Stars. ute tl'l'ned it up for St. Bon's. after six minutes of the third ing parade while Murphy · o[ action. shattered the nunted Montreal: camille Henry who suffered a goals by Bob Pulford, Dick Duff.' 10.15-St. Bon's. Frank Powtr hit for his fourth period. Bill Martln 1tarted ·picked up 1 goal for nine i Carter's best slops came 0'1 · defence for live first period goals fracture of ;he left forearm Jatc and Bob Baun befor;:- :'\esterenko Wednesday, februar)' 3rd .

. Bill Gillies'. break but he also • then held on grimly to outlast ca:; in the first period. and rookie :1-lurray Balfour turned 6.15-Senior All-Stars. m~de the btg sav~s on screened . nadiens 6·5 Sunday night. Vic . Henry, the smalloet player in on the power late in the final Thursday, February 4th. dmes and close·Ln plays. Re-, s:a3iuk of tne Bruins turned in· t!!e league at 150 pounds, had frame. , 6.15-Junior Ali-Star1. placed by Tols Chap~an at the a three-goal perfDrmance before slammed ,nto the right post of. SLCINh.KER. GEtThS ONE . T d 10.15-St. Pat'.

Intercollegiate tnd of the Junior &ertes, Carter IS 909 National Hockey League: the Detroit net on a goal attempt. ! tcago s D er scorer "as 0 • Friday, February 5th.

St B ' A d Of , turned in his fourth great game fa~s. 1 He was rcmo\'ed to st. Clair's. Sloan, who score~ the only goa~! 6.15-Feildians. " 0 n s ss u re . in fi\'e starts. An overnow crowd who came. Hospital where x-rays revealed Of the second re; tod. . . 7.1S-Guards. • I While Carter was great Merv ! partly to pay tribute tD Boston the break. 1 ~ess than ~~~ mt~ut~s kre- Saturday, February 6th.

Green played just as wellj defenceman Fern Flaman roared • TIES THE GAME mamed when · e,tercn.<o 00 a 1 6.15-Feildians. • • ! blocking five sure goals. Again itself boars at the Bruins on-~ Prentice's tying marker at 7:37 'I pass from kdefencemthan Elmer!' F t D B h 4 1 h · d t f h' k I 1 ~- f' t o · t 'f 11 .· b A ·t St tt 1:\loosel Vas o near e cDrner o . . Irs • rop IS ops e receiVe mos 0 IS wor siaught 0 t.oe II'S 2 mmu es. I 0 0\\lllg a pass 'I 1 ra on I h . d d th You can gtve yourself a qmck

• from the "Terrific Trio" and Losers of sel'en straight to· and a sho! by Ken Schinkel. both 1l Lea:s cage an . ease ef racial while in the tub by coating ' was sparkling in each period. I Montreal and able tD win against ' rookies, went o\'er prostrate De-i Pllfk .o~er ~heh outst~e.ched pad 0 your face with petroleum jellv

Bill Martin and Len Cough- I Canadiens only twice in nine troit goa be Terry Sawchuk. j neTml m er 016nn02y ~wekr. . The steam will permit the jeliy

d f ' · · J' k ' p t' · f' t t 11 . ten at : • as o a gam . Bluegol S Control Play 'Wl"th Jan were the game's top de en·· prevtous starts. the Brmns c tc · 1 ren ICes trs a ) on passes d . i~ k t th L f·' t to sDak in and smooth your skm. sive players with Tom "Cit)•" I cd off three goals in the span of. fmm Stratton and Andv Ba:hgate 'I rho\eB .e puc a d.eB etaB, lfn e ·

• 1

• d Th 1 ft t 14·28 f the d · · 1 It w ere ower save u a our . . Summers Good 'Aga.·n Murphy as ~he top St. Bons '3hm~nut~s. fll stecso~ &. ey e I' Na' ·., ok t ll~on3 2 penod e ~was on hand to tip it into the' Ne\'er soak !abrtcs with a per· fDrward whtle Noel Sparrow 1 t e tce m ron -v, ew xor :.a mg : · . _ , 1 corner of the net for his lJth tally. manent finish .. Scru~ the very

St. Bon's assured themselves of first place In Senior also played well. Doug Wool· INUTE!I The Red W mg talhes !trot 11 hen f th I soiled places wtlh thtck suds be· hi f' f th ' FRANTIC LAST M defenceman :\! a r c e I PronD\'ost ' o c season. 1 d . th . the Intercollegiate Hockey with a 4·1 victory over Bishop! gar saw s trst game 0 e But it took sta.~iuk's third goal f' f ' h I Chicago faltered badlv early in ·1 fore aun enng em 111 us-

year on the Feild defence while at 12 04 of the final plus ;orne' tred aRlO· ooter pas.t dt e unprD·! the game when PulfDrd and Duff' ual manner. ·College at the Prince of Wales Arena on Saturday after· T d G'll' issing from · · tected anger netmm er Gump · . --·--------: e I tes was m frantic defensive efforts In the· Worsley Pronovost' g~al on: scored, eut from the second per-. .

noon. The Bluegolds opened the third and final round i the St. Bon's lineup. dying moments to steve off the passe; irom Norm tnman' and, iod on, had the be.ter of the! the seasDn, scor~d the New of the regular schedule upping their points to nine while ... . angered visi~ors. Gary Aldcorn, was scored while! play. Bower was force~ to make' Yo~k goals, both 1n the second

d I B. h th B th t ba Lineups · MDntreaJ got of! the fioDr In JDhn Hanna was ser"t·n a en· 1 40 saves ID 30 for Chtcago net-1 penod.

aecon P are IS ops own rce. 0 earns ve one Feildlana-Goal, John Carter:

1

championship style. Claude Pro- all . ' g P ' minder Glenn Hall. I Leafs grabbed a HI lead game remaining. defence, Bill Martin, Nev vast and Dickie Moore scored 1 J · r i , earlr in the first period on

Bob Neville, Don Crane, Dave Spurrell 111d Mike Henderson, Dodo Breen, Doug two apiece and Ralph Backstorm 1 39 :e~o~~s korvt~ncd~~:n:a;;i:J 1 , BOSTON It::) 32 ~ronc~ ~;~,Stewart's ~oal and for the re~t

Donovan were the St. Bon's goalgetters while Dave Dale Woolgar, Max Burt; forwards, I got the other. . on a goal by 3efence!llan Bill Ia~ s~ored ts n }~ ~ of the penod Worsley kept hts ~

1• Stan Breen, Bud Duffett, Doug In addition to Stasiuk, Boston Gadsby, but Detroit ~etaliated 1 ~fne "s~ 1~:d 5t~as~~e-~~;ak·:~ Sa~:: teammates i~ th~ game with

hit or Bishops. Graham Hollihan of St. Bon's stayed out Squires, Harold ,Ryan, Ralph I got goals from Flem Macken,· quickly to take 8 2.1 advantage 1 urdav ~fternoone in a 3_2 win for: some fantashc sa~e~. front in the indh·idual scoring with an IS!ist. Bishops R~rs~ll, E~h; ~1erce~~u~lo{ Don ~lcKenney and Guy Gend- · on Gordie Howe's 241!1 goal at 1 Boston Bruins Dl'er Detroit Red 1 TORO~'TO ( CPl-George Arm· College got another great perfonn111c:e from their goalie MIKE DONOVAN ~~~ st e, 00 gar, 0

-

11 ro~. ton's Horvat~ and Mon- i I :23. Aldcorn upped ~he ~etroit' Wiugs. strong's goal late in t~e third pe·r

"Fo"" Summers. . . , trea~~ Jean Beliv~u remlined! lead to 3-1 at 10:07 wtth hts 16~h TORONTO ICP) - George iod with the :Maple Leafs a man St. Bon's with their fast skat· I carr,ied the puck lnstde the ~t. St. Bon's-Goal, Merv Green; I tied sfor NHL point scoring! go~~ICAGO (APl-Goals late I A.rmstrong's goal late in the ~hort S~turday ~~ght ~ave_Toro,nto

lng forwards passing well dom·J have plenty of balance on the Bons bluelin~ and from a ~tf· defence, Len Coughlan, NoeJ! honors: Eash registered an as- I· th !' 1 . d 1:, E . N ''hird period with the :Maple a? uphtll 3-2 \tc:or~ 0\~r _New lnated play throughout the en· squad and this waa the big fae· Iicuit angle htt Dave Dale wtth! Hutton, Joe Slaney, Jack Walsh:, sist to hike their totals to 65. m e ma peno ~ . ric es· i.~afs a man short Saturday:\ ork Rangers m a ~attm~al counter and held the action In· I ture In obtaining the victory, a pHs standing right In front of~ forwards, Noel Sparrow, Tom I NEW YORK ICPl _ A third· tere~k~ ~~~ :\lu~a~ k B~lfo~~ 3.2 victory ovrr New York Ran· i ~ockey Leag~e garne.,hhtch /m· 1ide the Bishops territory for I The Blue Golds just kept ham- the net. Dale just reached out I"City" Murphy, Bob MacKen- I period gDa\ by Dean P~entice ena. e leago ac aw ' I • h " Toronto an uphili , tshed dramabca1Jy w1. Le~ • a the greater part of the game. me ring away at the net until with his 1tlck and deflected the zie, Bill Gillies, Dave Barrett, j gave New York Rangers a 3·3 tie: ;0

3 t~e th~ Toro~t\~lap~ ~Pafs1 1 ;~;s \n g~ ~ational Hnckey Lea· 1 man shoyt and Rangher netmhmder The driving St. Bon's crew, I they poked the dlse Into the puc~ Into the cage~ Cy !>fc· Frank Power, Eric St. George, with Detroit Red Wings in theiri ·· 10 ~ ree·w ee mg a!wna gue game which finished dra·l Lorne \\orsley on I e bene ·

who are making a runaway with cage, Gettigan, the St. Bon I goahe. Jim McNamara, Damien Ryan, ) National HDckey League game' ~ocke_) h~eague game hP'e Sun- matically with Leafs a man j W L T F A PI the Senior lntercDilegiate dh·is- Graham Hollihan, leading point Defenceman Don Crane scor- Tom "Bell Island" Murphy. I Sunday night in Madison Square 1 a~mgd · dl k k h I f short and Ranger netminder ; 5'

ion at the opening of the third getter in the League aeemed to ed the winning goal while Bis~- • <rilrden.

1

. e ca oc ept ~ e .ea s I Lorne Worsley Dn the bench. Montreal 31 9 9 186 117 71 and final round got a lot of. be dilli!ing a little harder than .ops were a man short at the &IX ~_eferee. ~ordon D;r:f d Prentice's goal was his secoml In secon~ place, a pot~t ahe~d j Ron stewart and Frank Ma· Toronto 22 18 8 127 132 52 opposition from the Red and anyone else on the St. Bon's minute mark on a pretty 1olo mesmen. Peter u Y an or the game. 0~ Detrott. 'J'!te Haw s, . w 0 hovlich scored the first two Detroit 20 18 11 133 133 51 White goaltender, "Fox" Sum- team to eam a star and pick effort. Crane alopped a drive Charlie Field. I The injury -riddled last • place I ptcked up their second tle of Toronto goals while defence· Boston 20 24 6 167 175 46 mers. up an assist on Bob Nevllle'a In the ceneral direction of his Summary Rangers, winless In their la>t th~ week-.end, droppe~ two man Harrv Howell and Dean Chicago 17 24 10 132 140 44

The red headed netminder tally In the first period. own goal and raced for the I nine games and without the serV·I pomts behtnd Boston m the Prentice with his 20th goal of New York 11 28 10 137 185 32 was spectacular throughout the Don Crane and Mike Doheney other net. He danced past the First Period: - __ ___:_' _____ _:_ __________ _ contest making many great starred on defence for the Blue two defencemen and deked the Scoring: none; penalties, none NO G T • ht d wards from building up a big ond stanza tally on a solo rush. Into the cage. 1. Feildians, Stan Breen (Nev liVes to keep the St. Bon's for· Gold with Crane getting a aec- goalie before slipping the puck Second Period: a me onlg Caps Are Regi.stere searing lead In the early part Bob Neville opened the acor- Bishops were nabbed fDr two Hende~on, Doug Squires) U7; There will be no Senior Hockey game at the Stadium of the game. lng for St. Bon'• In the first f the games thre penalties 2. Feildtans: Harold Ryan, 1440; • d • h b post· 1 , •

"Fox" had no chance on any period with the assiat going to :anded out by ref~rees Syb 3, St. Bon's, Frank Power,18.21; to-night. The Guar s-St. Pats c?~tes~ as .e~n 1 Hugh Fardy, Secretary of the St. Johns Jumor and o~ the goals that were fired past Graham · Hollihan. Holllhan Quick and Jack Reardigan. 4. St. Bon's, Tom Murphy poned on a request from the Patriclllns Assoctation due Senior Amateur Hockey League, registered 54 local play. h1m, one of them coming while carried the puck on back of the (Noe! Sparrow, Bob 111!ac- · to the death of Rev. Br. L. M. Doherty, a teacher at St. 1 ers to plnv on the two Crty teams entered in the All-NOd. his team had a player In the Bishops College cage and then Dave Spurrell and Mike Dono· Kenzte), 19.30. Pena ties: I • k' H II S h l . · d Ted sinbln in the middle period. dumped It out in front. Ne~lle van rounded out the scoring for McNamara, 9.58. J Patr•c s n c 00 • 1 Playoffs this season. The registration was rna e to

Earl Wicks, defenceman for wd jll.!lt standing at the side of the St. BDn's crew In the final Third Period: St. Pat's requested the change yesterday and the league Withers of the NAHA over the week-end. the Bishops squad also turned the mesh and had no trouble period. Spurrell picked the low· II. Feildians, Doug Squires, ' contacted the Guards Athletic Association who were in Fardy listed 30 senior play- ----------In a fine performance for his in beating Summera. er right hand corner for his (Stan Breen, Bill Martin), 6.5o. agreement. With the change the schedule of games for ers, the limit, with 24 junior al- Bud Duffett. Doug Squires and squad (etting plenty of WDrk Bishops caught the Blue target on a blueline drive at d G d 'II ready practicing. The juniors Ralph Rowsell were registered from the high flying blue and Golds a little off t!Uard early In 3:48 while DonDvan registered Penalties: none. the week had been moved up. Feildians an uar s WI can of course move up to the from Feildians while Guards. Gold team who kept knocking lite second frame when they after stealing the puck Inside now meet on Thursday night while St. Bon's and St. Pat's senior team if needed. had Fred North, Cyril Ivany, on the door. J registered their only goal at the the Bishops zone and beating Carter 31 ~ill play on Saturday night. Three senior goalies were Warren England and Art

The poweriul St. Bon's team 40 second mark. Alex Yetman, the Bishop~ goalie from close ln. Green 28 Frank Wall, President of the Patricians' Association, listed. Merv Green of st. Pearce named. Forwards from Bon's, Ron Skirving of Guards St. Pat's are Jim Byrne, Bart

expressed the thanks of his Association to the Guards last and Pat Barrington of st. Pat's Ford, Jackie Withers, Lloyd night. ''We are most grateful for their agreement for the are the netminders. Kelly and Charlie Walsh.

Th d f · A break down by teams has change in the schedu.le", Mr. Wall told the .NEWS. e seven e encemen regts-tered included four from St. Bon's with ten players on Guards, two from St. Bon's and the senior Caps. Guards have one from Feild. Slated for blue- nine while there are six St. line duty a(e Bern Goobie. :1-!ax Pat's players and five Feildians. Howell, Gordon Butler, Hollie The first practice for the team Clarke, Len Coughlan, Noel is set for the Stadium tonight. Meeting Rejects

St. Pat's Motion Hutton and Bill Martin. Despite the fact that Howie

Up front St. Bon's had Ted .Meeker was eligible to perfor111 and Bill Gillies, Dave Barrett, for the senior Cap~ his non

I Frank Power, Tom "City" ~lur· registration means that he will pity, Bob MacKenzie and Noel not be d9ing so this season at

1 Sparrow named. Stan Breen, least.

The much talked about St. Pat's motion to the con· i H. c c h N d stitution of the local hockey league was r~jected at a Sat· oac es arne urday morning meeting of the league, • '

The first business of the meet· . ing at the Stadium saw Ralph meetings wtth ~olyer leaving The Holy Cross Athletic Assiciation announced their Colyer Guards delegate moving [ and Meekerd staymg. 1 various coaches, managers and delegates on Sunday morn· that the St Bon's motion of I The ~or amateur was n- .

' b 1 k serted mto the name of the mg. several weeks ~o. e slr c en local league and it will be. Robin Short will assume the from the records. as It was un-1 known as the St. John's Junior coach!ng duties for seniDr have Jim Colbert as ~is man­constitutional. ThiS was secohnd· and Senior Amateur Hockey baseball and senior basketball. ager. Harry Ennis will coach ed by Howle Meeker the ot er Le No manager was named for the junior football squad with .

~ - . Guards delegate. :i~~· most of the St. Pat's the senior baseball team with I Sam Pretty as the manager .

,. ' ·' •• :­: HOLY CROSS A.A. announced their coaches for the co'm ing season on Sunday. Named were, left to right, st_and­; : •. 11)11-Duey Fitzgerald, Harry Ennis, Mike Woods, Sam Pretty and Robin Short. The Association's ·_executive is .. .-~atecl:-Jim MacDonald, Gordon RyaU, Joe Ashley, President; Wally Dicks and Bill Barron.-Royal Photo Service.

' .

League president Jim Vinl· motion being defeated several Wally Dicks as mana'ger of the I Three delegates were named. com be refused to accept this small parts adopted. ·Guards, St. junior baseball team to cDa7h Mike Woods will ~ontinue as motion as It was out of order. Bon's and Feildians voted yes I George Sorensen. Short wtll hockey delegate, while Cec Joy The Guards delegates then in· and very few items In the mo· · have Duey Fitzgerald as ethe and Gordon Ryall ,m npre· formed ·the chair that they lion while Holy Cross were 1 senior. hoop manager. . sent the football teams. The would be voting against all the about even on negative and af. I Jumor basketball coach Will track and hockey cOaches to-. amendments and therefore 1 flrmatlve votes while St. Pat's be GeDrge Sor~nsen with Duey gether with the baseball and there was no need of their slaY· naturally voted yes on the com· , have Duey Fitzgerald as the . basketball delegates and the ing, They were asked by the 1 plete motions. There were 15 l Andy Samuelson returns :u ~e J se_nior baseball manager are

President to remain for the · sections In the motion. I senior f~lbP.ll coach and he U still to be named . •

TH! DAllY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., SATURDAY, JANUARY 30, 1960

For Stove Oil and Fuel Oil Phone 7 469 or 3007 This. Page Is Presented With The Compliments Of

The Great Eastern Oi~ & Import Co., Ltd.

FIRST SALE-Bob Smitb. an executive member of tile Canadian Legion, buys the first tag for Pee Wee Tag Day which was held on Salunlay. ~laking the sale is Fred Noftall. Others in the photo are, left to right:-Billy Lacey, Bob Smyth, Derrick Gill and Pat ~lurphy.-Gordon 1\lorris Photo.

Girls' Hoop A d w· 8 3 Jacoby Ea.~.e .!?.~~g~!.,.l '.~ .. ~:~~ "' M mon~~. tho G: F•lh On Bridge

awin~s into. action tonight at' Andcos defeated the Conception B:w CceBecs on Snhtr- · the :\lemoml Gnn with two . . · · games scheduled. day lll!!ht. 1 he Amlcos stopped the CecBccs S-3 on Sat- UL\~JOSD SLAM

In the fir>t game slated for lurclay at the Grund Falls Stadium after taking a 9-7 ''ictory ; liARD TO Rt:ACII 1 p.m. St. :\lichacl's will take: on Fridav night. I on a team from Prince of Wales.· · ' ___ ...;..;..;.._ __ _ The second games has the J As in the first game on Frida'' the third period told , NORTH Grads meeting the :llacCurtis · · · · 21 &IJuad. · ; the story·. II was 4·4 after two permds on Fmlay and on ; . • A 10 9

Plnying nights for the I Snturdny the CecBees made it 3-3 ~oin~ into the final i, : ~9~543 League. are :llonday.~ and Fri-

1 frame after trailing 3-1 in the opening stanza. Five un-\ "'"! 6

day~ w:th doub.leheadcrs . bc~n answered goals in the final period told the storv for Grand · · WEST EAST pla)ed In the fwe team circuit. · 4tl 52 • 7 63 The other team Is ~lemorial. Falls. • Q 7 2 ¥a 53 1958 winners of the crown. Last . • • • 10 4 + 9 7 year the League was not operat- 1 Alfte lhscock scored twtce for the CecBces on Satur·

1 "'A K Q J 8 4 "' 10 e 5 s 2

ed. so .the llemoriat squad are j dn~· night while Alex Faulkner had the other marker. Ray . . SOUTH (D) d, .endmg champions. Pichette ami Clobie Collins both had a pair of goals for i: • K Q J 8 4

the Andcos. To-night and to-morrow night the CecBccs 1• : ~fl~2

Curling Notes will play the Buchnns Miners at Buchans. · "'None

Both vulnerable South West North Eut 1. 2 ... 2. Pass

Pass Pass Pass

:I"' Pass 3 • : 3• Pass 4•

The mixed bonspiel played· 7 + Pass Pan

O!lenlnilead-lolO on Saturday was won by the. G d w·tl PI team skipped. by :llrs. L~ster: uar s I ay 'll~th a margm of 23 pmnts.l 1 )!embers of the team were:- I----. ........ -...---.-'

Skip-Mrs. Lester. j • • • , By OSWALD JACOBY ~late-A. G. Crane. Dcstntc rumours c~rculntmg around St. Johns over the 1 Today's hand is a bidding Second-S. Herder. week-end the Guurds senior hockey team will complete the i problem and like any bidding Lead-lllrs. Boyd. Leugue's schedule, the DAlLY NEWS was informed last 1 problem is simple enough when

Simon Levitz Trophy night. Ralt>h Colyer, Athletic Director of the Guards 1

1 you look at ali the hands. '11 · • • ld h NEWS 1 h. As you can see, South has no

The following ls the scherl· . At 1 ebc Assocmbon, to t e t tat one t mg was trouble making seven diamonds ule £or the Simon Le\'itz. certain and that was that the Guards will continue to play because he can discard two of Trophy series which continues· in the City's senior hockey league. North's hearts on his long t · ht spades. At seven spades there o-mg :-

~ 00-9 oo :\n cxeculi\'e meeting of the Gnurds A.A. was held is no parking spot for those '· · , · . . I d f 1 ~1 two hearts and South must fall

F. Bishop D. 111; Clo.~ston. 011 Saturday mght but nothmg was re ease rom t 1e back on the heart finesse which ~\;, ~?~rrweil V. · ~\ i~s?~ meeting. A further re1:10rt stated that the Guards senior I fails to work for him.· R. Copeland c H Davr~s team held a meeting on Sunday afternoon. Agnin nothing This hand was played In a

T · · · 1 d duplicate game and the bidding C. · Thompson H. Wylie 1 was re ease • shown in the box is that of the

1 only pair that got to seven dia-9.00-11.00 • c H c ro R B ~~ · , . monds. L: G~ld~~i/ . . . oyse I Practi"ce Corner I IC you re tall and .slim, you Ail tables started with South's r. E. Hue 1

1

shoul~ have ~ hatrdo tl~at I one spade. West's two clubs G. Stirling R, Templeton i doesn t a~d height. If .you re overcall and North's raise to T. Sten!aford A. Foster 1 small, don t make yourself look two spades. A couple ·0r ·South' E. L. Hickman J. E. Butler j . . 1 top· heavy with waves and curls. 1 players merely bid four spades.

-- :lla~CUi'lis basketb_allers Will . while a couple more jumped Inlertown Ser~es · I practice at the Curlis. Academy To remove perspiration stains right to six. The rest tried the I

During the ~laydowns of the Gym to?ight. Anyone mterested from blouses, try applying a bak three club cue bid. lntert~wn Series o,f both . the! in mnkmg a berth on the squad lng soda paste to discolored At this point North's three Ladies and .:o.le.n s sections 1 is ~skcd to attend the workout areas. Let the paste remain on diamond call is correct. lie does members may mv1te guests to I Which wili get under way at the stains for fifteen minutes, i not have tbe diamond ace but the club. I 8 p.m. then rin.;e, I he has a maximum spade raise

DODO BREEN of Feildians, right, pokes the puck off Frank Power's stick In a close play at the Stadium on Sabtrday night. Power had only Breen to heat and had Cotten pi!St the Feild defenceman when Dodo htmed to poke the puck to the comer.-Royal Photo Service.

. .

and what may well be the rigbt . I cards for his partner. 1 ' South's three heart bid is

I more exploration and after North· jumps to four spades South is certainly going to a slam but even here it takes con­siderable imagination to see the diamond possibility and go to seven in that suit.

1Card Sense I Q-The bidding has been: South West North East 1 • Pass 1 ¥ Pass 2 ¥ Pass 2 N.T. Pus

? You, South, bold: ... K J 5 4 ¥A 10 6 t4 3

.KQ 32 What do you do? A-This is a tough one but I

fivor the unusual bid of three spades to suggest a spade game if yolll' partner happens to hold four spades. You have already limited your hand by your two· heart bid.

TODA Y'S QUESTION You bold the same hand and

your partner responds one spade to your opening club bid. What do you do now?

Answer Tomorrow

fHE STORY OF MARTHA WAYNE

,. APT A IN 'EA'St

ALLEY OOP

K)OTS AND HER &t.JOD1'fS

~\...\... "(C;U ~\J'e. 0. "0'\"1:'&. 'E~ loY\\\-\ ~t..~~

BUGS BUNNY

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIEND!

MORTY MEEKLE

PRISCILLA'S POP

I

~\-\~';:lc;. ~~~ t-J~c:>.~\t.~ s~~~-:'i<.1 ~ a::.l~...:i:'\0~ C>t. U\ ~\~~.

o;z.~. 'O'E ~"*=-·-

ly W. !HRUGm.

I 1 '.F.SliE TURNEII

Rv V. T. HAMLIN

By EDGAR MARTIN

~t:>.\ 't'C ~~'-'-~ '-'"'-'S ~\..'C ';;"C. ~~ C%­~~·os. ~R\'C.t) ~ ~'C<..:l\~\\C:..~\~~ S\U-~~

By LEON SCHLESINGER

!/ C: '""r"t: ~:~ ·-: ~·; •..

/'' &J()S"l'S t SEANEltY

BUT YOU ARE /IIY BeST fRIEND, SO O'fA,'{ .. • .ht DO lr JUST THIS ONCE/

OI<'AY, BUI I Juo;T CAN'T' I?EEM10GET VCOR NECKTI S'

RIGHT ...

'y MERRELl BlOSSER

By DICK CAVELl

E)(CEPT FOR 'TllAT, IT., A PeRFECT LIKEN€?';;.

lv AL VERMEER

- ------ ----'----------- ------;,· _,.., .. __ d...,.IIIIIM~I .. ~!Ifllff,. 'flif?"~J'_j,ttfi~ll'f'Jr.:.~·,.·•··~.:t.'Jfifo'H\Ii'.••~···'t:'·'"''••• -..·P,~.,,._ ., .• ~ ... , .. ..,.._,.,,., ,.,. ·-~··,.-.. •f\.••t o.l!o.~~,...,..,,_-,;,., • .,.~ ...,.,..,."(.;"1'''' 'I' .: .,.._ ...... , .•• .,,po. 'f"· ·li"· . -~ '\ ... ' .. -.• , •• r;,, ,. •• -... ~ .... -;.,~:llf ·-~·· .• "·~. _ .... .,, .. : _ .... £ .... ·'0: -;;....t . .,. ···"· .. ~ _, •• •,_~ ...... _,_, .. ,:!~~.;-~ -.-. ·-·.·;·• ....... _ .. ~\~ .. _ .. ~-· ,._ ~ . -, L.·JI,;_._.:r,·~-!.:- _·-.:..,{,.-.-. .-•• -:------~·-··:·.-.r.-. ~·~~·.,:...· •. l .... ;,- .... ··-~·-······\~.-... ~ .·,.· ... ·,•r._:._J<_, .......... ; •. ~:..~ ,._,.t:-···.:,;.~---~L-- -...____.·,· - •. - ----·-·- . -•. -··· .•• •.l'- .,_ .... ,~-'~~··-·~::.·~.,--!'o--~,--~ _ _!..·•'•'!yl:-__ f;~-~ ......... ":1:;~!.· ..... -7,.;-

:. ~ \.~ .~. , . . ·.~.

8 THE DAILY NEWS,. ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1960

1-,-.-.-

1 Capitol I Now Playing

CLINT WALKER EDWARD BrRSES IN

"\'ELLOWSTONE KELL \"'

Newfoundland Services

PASSENGER NOTICES

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1 Train "The Carib on" leaving

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'>t. John's 1.30 p.m. Thursday, GROCERS (R t 'I) :~ebruary 4th., will make con· 1 e a 1

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Take three or tclcl'ision's I ·with th~ M.V. Nonia for regu. CHESTER DAWE l TO : HUTCHEN'S GROCERY ~~~ ~~:~:~~/~~so;~liti~~·~~:~:~ i lar ports South Coast Service. SHAW ST. and TOPSAIL RD MEAT MARKET and exciting story of frontier: FREIGHT ACCEPTANCES For all your Building 53 William Street days and film it among some or I Requirements call Dial 7450 and 606! the most spectacular mountain I FREIGHT SOUTH COAST 80161-91171 : L. HEALEY and desert scenery in America! SERVICE I Cros1 Roads and Water Street and the result is a colorful. I Freight Is accepted daily at DRUG STORES Dial 3026 dramatic motion picture. pack· the Railway ~"reight Shed for , ed with action and suspense. ' regular ports South Coast Ser I , ---------

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Capitol Theatre. The film re· fight brawls wilh drunken sol· not later than 1.00 p.m. Tues· 334 WATER ST. creates the story of America's diers and make a stand against 1 day, February 2nd. DIAL 2206 :a~~· iJ!i Sealed tenders, addressed to Ph"l" W II & march west ward and the sa1·· Indian warriors. j RESTRl TEO C',\RGO Dl'al 265• •123 the undersigned and marked · I t p a a~e warfare wa~ed h)' the In· " C • : I ELECTRICAL .-. "Tenders for the Construction' l d dians to defcnd their tradi· · Long John Hu~>cll has the 1 .SHIPPERS PLEA~E, NOTE. of the Superstructure and, SonS t . tiona! huntin~ ~round,; against hi~g('>t changc·ol·pa~c of. the I Oils and other restricted cargo APPLIANCES ! MEEHAN & CO. Operator's House of the Pia· the ·inl'ading white man. trw. tor he pla)·s <.all. Stoux: ~r ~e~ul:rr po~ls So~~h Coa~t :., ·A-IN-E-JO_H_N-ST_O_N---~· T. A. Bldg., Duckworth st. centia Lilt Bridge", will be, 10 George St. Dial 2321

"i'cllo11·stone Kcll)·'' also ~·nr ~hirf. and the lransforma-~· erl'lce. or orwar mg .~·•a;" Dill 70~6·7147 received by The Placentia ORNAMENTAL hrin~:-~ to;Nhcr for the firot lion 1s startling. He makes up. A~gcnlla and M.V. :'rlar~outa 1 COMPANY, LTD. Bridge Corporation Limited. IRON time in a motion pirtur~ three "" I he pcrlrct Indian warrior I will. hr accepted at the Rall"'3l' Agency Department r/o Foundation of Canada En· of TV's greatest fal'orites, each. type: le~n. hawk.faced and ut· Fr~t~hl Shed Tu~sdny, Febru· 243 Water St. Dial 210% REG. T. MORGAN gineering corporation Limited, H.l>,ND RAILS of them a star in his own in· 1 tcrly bchel';1blc. In fact, Russcnl ar) 2nd., 9 a.m. 0 5 p.m. YOUR FRIGIDAIRE 11NSURANCE LIMITED Post Office Box N·574, St. C G ELDING cii\·idual series. They arc Clint· ~!''cs a pcr~ormancc as an In· DEALER. I Temple Bldg., P.O. Box 118, John's, Newfoundland, until'! AR & AS W Walker, who has won a Ire·. d1an that w111 long be rcmem· ~':';::"-;-o;:o:-::;::o-::=;:~-- 3U Duckworth St. one p.m., Newfoundland Stand- AND CUTTING menclous following as the star' llercd. HEAP & PARTNERS I Dial 80370 or '1758 ard Time. Mare~ 281~, 1960,, GENERAL BlACKSMITH o.r W.a~ncr Bros.' "Chc~·enne" 1 Andra ~lartin portrays the In· (NFLD.} L TO. shortly after which time the ' i V •r•cs. Edward Bnncs. thr . ,. . tenders will be op~ned. i novll,lm "1\ookie" of .. 77 Sut,;ct Strip., 1han 1.111, around whom much Wiring Materials, Wire and MOBILE GROCETERIA On and after February 1st.,

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d · . : of the drama and action re· Cables, Motors Starters, Dial 93C90 I' an .. ~ohn Ru»rll, the popu,ar YOII'e$. This beautiful \'Dung ac· 1960, Instructions to Bidders,· Dan. :,'roop of "Lawman.'' ' ,., . •. Lamps, Switches, Lighting Store At Your Door Specifications. Drawings. Form:

Tt.:.l• role is a swit •'t for I' tr,s,; m:.."s 1111 mto llr 1110"t nt· Fixtures, etc. or Tender and Form of Con-. "•f". . c, ug tracti1·e Indian maiden ever WAREHOUSE: PRINCE'S ST.I-----..... ~~~-

Chnt \\ ~lker, b1g~est actor. phr· · brounh~ to the screen and plays DIAL50B5 ! DRUG STORES tract mav be obtained by ap-. ~trally. tn Holll·wood. He stands " . h . --------- plication· to one of the follow-s fe-• 6 . h · t 11 . 1 23• iter scenes wit great emohonal · --------- . . f ,.. rl E .,. me es a . we1g IS o appe 1 · i M CONNORS LTD ing: Foundation o cana a n pounds and looks CHry inch a a· DE A MEN FIRE INSURANCE 1 ' • ~inming Corporation Limited. tough. mountain man of the Ra,r Danton. one of Hall,·· p RT T OF THE ---------1 334 WATER ST. Arlmiralt'.' Buildin~. Watcr.

' 1 Dial Z201 · 187~'s. . wood's better young character U.S, NAVY CROSBIE & CO., LTD. Street. St. John's !olewfound· . His f1lm not only marks Ed actors. plays the role of Sayapi, Agents for

1 land or to Foundation of Can·.

Bnnes' first starrinl( role in a a minor Indian chief who holds PROJECT: Contract NBy UNDERWRITERS AT :AYLWARD'S ada Engineerinl! :.~rporation: Western, but Is probably !he 1 a murderous hatred for a11 1, 26746 Construction of Under· LLOYDS. ; PHARMACY Limited. Room 1000. Hl80 Sher· · first lime he has e1·er been off whites. He is the real villain of ground Power S~·st(!m, U.S. LOW RATES Cer. Monchy & Empire Ave. brooke Street West, Montreal. , the pavement. "Kookie'' doesn't the story. Others in the cast Naval Station, Argentia, New· DIAL 5031 Dial 90171 Quebe('. .:et a chance to park a car in include Rhodes Reason Claude foundland, ----------. A deposit In cash or by this period piece about frontier I Akins. Gary Vinson and Warren SEALED TENDERS. marked --------- DUNN'S certified cheque n;arked pay· days, but instead goes Western Oates. HARDWARE STORES able to The Placentia Bridgr:

as to content addressed to the PHARMACY Corporation Limited. in thr i undersigned will be received HARRIS & HISCOCK, LTD. Cor. Mayor and amount of Firtv Dollar~ (550.00) :

TO-DAY'S SPECIALS

1950 VANGUARD

1953 VANGUARD

1953 VAUXHALL

STADtUM TO-DAY 2 p.m.

GENERAl SKATING

8.30 p.m. GENERAL SKATING

Admission . . . . . . 50cents Spectators . . . . . 25 cents

TUESDAY, FEB, 2 2 p.m. SENIOR HOCKEY

ST. PAT'S vs. GUARDS

Reserved . .. .. . . . 7 5 cents Gen Admission 50 cents

Tickets on general sale today and to-m~rrow, Tuesday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

DIAL 7324 FOR

HOME DELIVERY

• Barbequed Chicken "Ribs"

• Also complete plate Dinners.

• Sandwiches a n d Salads for Parties etc.

• All Delicatessen Specials,

I Orders S:i.OO nr m·cr rlc !i1·crcd Free ol charge;

Bell's Delicatessen 566 WATER STREET

For Fc:s~

Taxi Service I

l until 3.00 p.m. E.S.T. General Hardware Merrymeetln& Rd. will be requir~d. which amount 1

Dial 7318 TUESDAY, March 11, 1960. Distributors for Sunbeam will be refunded upon the re· Electrical Appliances, I turn of the above documents. ·

1952 PONTIAC

$25·0'00

McKINLAY MOTORS LTD.

HOTEL TAXI l

THE SHOWPLACE OF • NEWFOUNDLAND •

----·------------·---

NOW PLAYING From the moat orlpplno· ·an~

dramatic bnt-eellerl

IUDIIEIIIEPIIIIN ··FRED ZINNEMANNS,._,..,,

THE I UN'S ITaiiY flCHNicOlol

Also - UP-TO·THE-MINUTE NEWS.

TIMES OF SHOWS:

EVENING SHOWS: 6 O'CLOCK 9.00.

MATINEE: 1.30 P.M.

NEXT ATTRACTION SOPHIA LOREN- TAB HUNTER in "THAT KIND OF WOMAN" - DRAMA - SUSPENSE -ROMANCE - Also "THE MAN WHO COULD CHEAT DEATH" - SUSPENSE - THRILLS ACTION.

--------... ··-----··-··-·-·-

a: NOW PLAYING

Als& - 11UP-TO-THE·MINUTE NEWS".

TIMES OF SHOWS: · .. ~ EVENING SHOWS1 7 P.M. - 9. P.M.

. MATINEE. 2 P;M.

NEXT ATTRACTION RICHARD IURTON ~ CLAIRE BLOO~ i.n "L~OKj lACK IN ANGER" - DRAMA -·SUSPENSE ..._. ROMANCE • 1• • THE CRii\CS' PRIZf · PLAY: OF: NEW YORK AND, LONDON THAT SHATTERED , TRE CONVENTIONAL WORLD. . .

I I , Plans, specilicatioll5 and tend· Sports goods and Sport3 in ~ood order. withm fourteen

: er forms will be on view at wear lor all occasions. . PARKDALE (14) da~·s of the date fix~d for i Builders' Exchanges at Halifax, DIAl 5016 I PHARMACY the submission of tenders. H Dial 2414-2410 ! i Moncton, Saint John, N.B.. Elizabeth An. not returned within this period ..

I Montreal, St. John's. Nfld. I Dial t1120 th d 't w·11 be forfeited Board of Trade, DCL Branch ERNEST CLOUSTON, LTD, --------- · ~ e:i~s1 bo~d or certifled I Offices at Halifax, Montreal 1\lcCLAR'l AUTOMATIC I cheque in the nppropriatr LeMARCHANT ROAD

I and Toronto and may be ob·j WARM AIR CONDITIONING ! MURPHY'S amount !pecificrl in the "In· ~~~~~~~~~~ lained from DCL Plans Section, 210 WATER ST. I DRUG STORE !!ructions to BidMrs" must 1 =

:No. 4 Temporary Building, Ot· DIAL 4183 119 Military Itoatl abo be provided. After the .---------1 tawa, Ontario. · Dial UU eontract has been si.:ned. the · I A security depo~it or 1 bid HEATING ! bid bond or eertified cheque : ! bond In the amount of 20~ FLEMING'S must be replaced by a per· i

GREAT EASTERN

OIL & IMPORT CO., LTD.·

of the tender price must ac- C. A. HUBLEY, L TO. 265 Pennywellllllatl formance bond as specificd in · company tenders. PLUMBING and HEATING Dial D2!137 the "Instructions to Bidders"

CONTRACTORS The Placentia Bridge cor. · Radio, 'relevision. Washers. I Estimated Cost Range - Rep, General Electric ooration Limited shall not he Refrigerators, Oeep Freezers ; $100.000 to 150,000 (U.S.), 36 King's Road Dial 2910 FREIGHT SERVICE bound to accept the lowest or Electric Hanges,

~·A:'M,K~:tRJss. RADIO-TV REPAIRS TR;~~YStS.~!~ vi• any tende~~ behalf ol F~~r0:m~~~~~:~· Offl~r In Char"e of Co Public Adrlrcss Sy<tems.

u " n· ---------- Whitbo·-e to Old Perlican, 1 1 B id strurtlon Area Pablle _, The P acent a r ~e Tape l'lecordcn Works Ofllre, New Ywk, GREAT EASTERN OIL North Shore Conception Corporation l.imitedl KEI'AIRS ASD ~~RVlCE

to Carbon ear. " 'Room 633, Federal Office COMPANY, LTD. Trucks also available for Foundation of Canada 5 u .. t:s Bulklln~. 110 Church Street, REPAIRS TO RAD!OS, TV long haul srrvicf. F.ngineerinj( Cllrp. l.td., .DIAL 3001 to 300!1 New York, 7, N.Y. AND ALL ELECTRICAL Rail'S Reasonable. r.. G. LEROUX, P. Eng., ' W ,'\JER STREE:

APPLIANCES For further information ''ice·President. , ian2tUv. DIAL 3001 to3005 DIAl, 790S·H. j Rn30,3i ... ___ . _ .... _

-··--··---------- ···--------- . --·-----------~····

! i feht,2

1 QUfEN'S ROAD :

l_o~:-'=~-~~~~~~-~J '

.. BEllER • +: '

,:, : . ·~y:s .. Ar· -:L .~:.~Q-~J~D:'-~}::.

'~: .; ,. ~ . . t.:.: ~ .

1 9 58 AUSTIN VAN

$1300·00

Baird Motors Ltd. MERRYMEETING ROAD

;, CONSULT US FOR SPECIAL RATES ON QUAN'TITY SHIPMENTS ar: 111 ~ ar: ..: E 0 ... 1-:z: " -.... ar: ...

= ! -li: Ill u z 8 •

-

, Collecting and Delivering freight at any Paints in Conception Bay and St. John's

INV.No.soo Conception Bay Freight Forwarders CARBON EAR - ST. JOHN'S

Terminal ....................................... . Shippers . ...................................................................................................... .

Truck ............................................ ..

COI1 5•1gned to ... . .. Date ........................................... .. ............................. ~··~~::~::..~:·:_:_·~:.·~·::·······""'''""~-"'"''"' .... ~· .... ·_ ... - - -·- - ···-~~---·---· ____ ... , .. __ .._ ___ ......... -No. P~gs, DESCRIPTION Weight Rate :_Fr_e_ig_ht_ A~~a_n_c: ! Prepaid i .. _co_ll~_c:t _

NOTE:

I <

I

Commencing February 1st, 1960, we will be open to accept

Freight for the above points including Trinity Bay South. St. John's Terminal for reservations "Lawrence Carriage Factory";

Carbonear "Phone 583". We accept C.O.D.'s and will collect.

Freight insured against all hazards.

Daily Service, Freight trucked at Reasonable Rates.

len than 2000 lbs. must be delivered to above

Better Service means more Business.

Shipments

Terminals.

1. SHIPPER'S COPY 1 ~::e~e~ ... ~~:~ .. ~~~~~~~ .................. / R.~.~~~~~~ .. ~~~: .. ~~~~~~·~····················

FREIGHT ACCEPTED·UNTIL 5 P.M. EACH DA·Y I ANY FREIGHT RECEIVED AFTER

1 P.M. WILL BE FOR

FOLLOWING DAY'S DELIVERY •

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

't

..

THI DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY,- FEBRUARY 1, 1960 0 .. ' '

.

KINSMEN Boys Club.

Newspaper BINGO .

SERIES No •. 23 TODA Y'S NUMBERS:

B I N G 0 8 21 45. 60 67

10 23 36 55 65 2 16 38 58 66 1 30 31 51 75

13 24 37 49 61 7 19 ~5 48 70

11 27 .. 3 53 73

4 29 40 64' 12 2S 44 72

14 18 62 9 26 41

5 20

Help Kin - Help Kiddies ~·-~-·----··-·--· -- ·---··--···-- ------------

WATCH BROKEN? Ha\'e It Expertly ttepalred tlere

CBitO:'IiOliETERS .U:TO~ATil'S

CALE:\D.\R

,\U Ginn Immediate Mtentlon

C.O.D. ORDERS WELCO)IED

SIMON LEVITZ & SONS LTD. 511 \\'ATER ST. ST. JOH:S'S

. l' - ••

CARD

·R. Austin Parsons, LtB. Barrister, Solicitor and Notary

258 DUCKWORTH STREET, ST. JOHN'S

TELEPHONE 3174 P.O. BOX E-5309

-------·-·-·••"'"'""_. ___ , ________ , ___ _ FOR ·RENT

Third floor, heated, semi-furnished Apartment situate on Monkstown Road, consisting af three bedrooms, living room. kitc:he:1 and b,athroom, Separate entrance. Rent $100.00 per month.

ALSO

Four bedroom furnished House situate 416 Hamilton Avenue, a~ailable for approximately seven months. Rent $120.()9.

For further particulars apply:

THE ROYAL TRUST CO. P.O. BOX 1300 PHONE 5196

·St. Thomas' Anglican Church ST. JOHN'S

Will require the services in the near fu.ture of an

. ORGANIST AND CHOIR DIRECTOR

Applicants please write, stating qualifications to:

REV. S. J. DAVIES,

St. Thomos' 'Rectory,

KING'S BRIDGE ROAD, ST. JOHN'S.

GEORGE CANftlltG LICENCED CUSTOMS BROKER

·Prompt and efficient service guarant,e~ . ·Office at

JOB'S ,COLD STORAGE BUILDING . . off Wa-r Street next to Marshall Building· , e DiAL 6885 P .0. BOX E5089 •

I • ,

There will be a· Special Meeting of Terra Novo Cocncil, No. 1452, Knights oi Colmubus, in the Club RoomS', on WEDNESDAY, FEB. 3rd, at 8 p.m., .for the purp:~;e of exemplifying the First Degree of the Order.

FOR BUSINESS ., ,l

. · .. ·~ Candidates are requested to prP.sent them·

selves at 7.30 p.m. '.: AUCTION By order G.K.

A. CURTIS, Recorder.

ON •• t.

'-·-.. ----·---.·---------·-------·- ---------

NOTICE THE ANNUAL

MEETING .. of lh'e Civil Service Co-Operative Credit Society Ltd., will be held in the Cathedral Parish Hall, Queen's Road, at 8:00 p.m. THURSDAY, January 28th.

I All memb~rs are l'aqussted to attend.

A. DWYER,

Secretary. _<!! _____ _

CARD PARTY AT BELVEDERE ORPHANAGE .

TUESDAY, FEB. 2nd, at 8:30 p.m •

Usual Valuable Prizes and Free Door Prize Patrons are asked lo bring their own baskets. Tea will be served. Jan26.feb1

Patricians Asscciation All executive members of the Patrician

Association and ex-pupils of St. Patrick's Hall are requested to meet at the Basilica on TUESDAY, FEB. 2, to attend the Funeral

J Mass of Rev. Br; Doherty at 11 a.m.

FRANK WALL, President.

COLUMBIAN CLUB VALENTINE DANCE, MONDAY, FEB. 15

FOR MEMBERS AND THEIR FRIENDS

DOUBLE $2.00 CANTEEN SERVICE

limited number of tickets available from John Murphy, Gee. Whitten, Fred Wadden, leo Baird. Ank Murphy, John Buckingham, Dick Squires, Joe Cleary or from the Club Steward. •

ENTERTAINMENT In aid of

Lions' Swimming Pool Fund GAIETY AMUSEMENT CENTRE

TO-NIGHT at 8:30

CARDS ...................... $1.00

$695 IN PRIZES

PLUS BANI< WITH $400

1-EPIIII RLCIIIZIII

............ f'tresfont , .•.. \

Nfld. Armature Works Ltd. 8AMBR1Ck ST. DIAL 7191 • 7192

.Wednesday I I I I

!

Feb. 3rd

!Villa Nova

Manuels •

1.30 p.m.

~25 Head Choice

Butchers' Cattle

.~.rmnscJ!rn/J (.·, ~~-~-·~

-~~' TIU/1[[,:.

f'OR S,UE -Highway pro­pet'ly belonging to ~Irs. Annie Bal\en, Brigus Rd., Bay Roberts West. One acre or land, good house, barn, cellar and excellent well. House ready to mm·e into. Price $6.500 cash or nearest offer. Write )!rs. Annie Batten. c/o til Thursfield Crcsc~nt Leaside, Toronto, Ont. jan30,leb1,2,3,4.5

' -XEW liETIIOD Rl'G fLE;\N·

I. t:RS-Rugs and Carpet . made to look lille new. I Von Scl, der prort'ss adds ! years to lire of rug>. Clean­. rd in horne or at our plant.

'Phone 91033. New ~lethorl Ru~ Cleaners, Fr,·shwater Jlond.

Wall Washing WALL WASHJ!.;G - Wall•

cleaned by new machi~e. Re,;u!ts perfcrt: ~a,·es pamt. -New lfethod Rug and Wail Cleaners. t<'reshwater Rold. 'Phone 91033. octB.(If)

tEAL ESTATE - Valuator ot city, farms and outpor pro· perties. Over 40 years' ex· per1ence. Job.t 'l, O'Dris· coiL Auctioneer and Real

WATER STREET ST. JOHN'S

1910 1960

HALF A Cit!t~ffURY DEDICATED TO SERV~CE

Support The .. Golden Jubilee Financial Campaign

YOUR HELP IS THE INSURANCE

TO CONTINUATION OF THIS SERV!CE

NOW IS YOUR CHANCE FEB. 1st- 6th

ST. JOHN AMBULAtjCE

Where To Stay Balsam Hotel

BARNF.S !tOAD Situated in 'he Heart of

the Cit;. Quiet, Comfortable Atmos­

phere.

J..OO·K JL1r~ains in Hehui.t Washers, Frill~es. l:anges rte

ALSO Appli;m~e and Oi! h:,atin~ rr;Ktir~. 'T.\1.1. • \:>\YTDIE Jl.-\ Y OR l'iiGHT"

GEO. IIFfl'HI~GS

& t'O. II ~rw (;owPr ~L

1'110:>\E 4116-.\ nr R01.i 1. CATTLE

AUCTION AT

Byrne's Farm TORBAY ROAD

·.

Estate }.gent. Dial 90312. For Resen·atiml> and in-'fHE CENTRAL BARBER formation. 8

..:· 11.30 To-day,:~-

SHOP-We are now oper· o· I 6336 e ating eight chair.<. You Ia . Modern can he assured of the best ~IRS. JOHN F,\CEY

Monday possible service plus th~ Resident Manageress L" least possible walling, 24 3! , 1· IVe

Ill '. 26 Head Prime

1\'cw c:ower Str~el, OPJl. El • II ' Adelaide l.\loto~s._ ____ ,____ , •••••• - u •••• -;-, .- • • • edrgca y . I Butchers' Cattle

: FU~NITURE R~PAf.I1R1 sd·- Re· ff FORWARD'S I L-RIG~II •-~-. B -pan·s to sprmg- 1 e mal· ~~~~C........ J h A tresses. Ch~ terfield suite> A • 0 n yrne

l ro L and OIL l '0 ....... v L I .. '' l ' • also rebuilt. Fifty ~·ears' ~ ""' experie11ee. Keats ~tattrcs~ ~ ' . I Che.:~p Reliable Electricity I AUCTIONEER ~~::o~1i: ~~o~~6~oyal Ave. ~ . Dial 90633 J In ar,d Around St. John's : DIAL 7631 or 90131 '

dccao,rtm!: ____ .... ----~ 54 STAMP'S LANE 1. --,-------------·-·-........... ----------J · Help Wanted - Male , ~~.:.-.:~ ·: • • • • • :·· '"-!~ ·~I ; CAN u.<f a man Willing to :THE GRFATEST BLANKET I 1 deYote' 7 hours daily. Pos- OFFER EVER :

sible minimum e~rnin::~ 560.00 weeki)'. Age no handicap. Gooj r~fcrcne::s must be supplied. Write Mr. F. Granger, 350 St. Roch St., lltontrcal, P.Q. feb1,8,15,22,29

I rs~O'r-tWN~;,-~-;;n.t;s; 'I w1th a · I I NEYI-:R . t'AIL SWIVEL I

ADAPTOR I , I (Ten Year Guarantee) · !

w~ w~nl a reliahle agent in this district to take orders on easy credit terms - no experience required. Can­ada's leading blanket man­ufacturer is introducing a beautiful new line of lux­urious "Havana" blankets­run double size - in four rich pastel colors ~ yellm·;. !lluc, pink, and green. All four for only $32.95. Full retail price! Write to-day ror beautiful free sample

I installed cost . . .... ~1.50 1 · 1 Postage Prepaid ... S'LOO 1.

:dt and start earning gen· erous commissions immedi: atclv. Address: Barnett's I.im'iled, 615 Main Street,

TAl(£ rtl'tl OC/T !'Off. '0/.0 MILLO"'

~~

. ' ..... ,, '

·,-'·~;.

. • . • I

I l

'I NEVER·FAIL SERVICE I ·1 Box 283 'Phone· 5876 I ! St. John's, Nfld.

~~--~----.-------' Saint Jol).n .. N. B. ian25,fcbl,8 Not inserted by B.L.C.

"'

• • • I ' . ' -. -,...

..

. . • I

l ' i • • I •

I I

10 • - .... 1 - THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, FEBRUARY l, 1 ~60 1

The . .

6 GOOD REASONS

, Why You Should Help

St. John Ambulan<e Serving Newfoundlanders

For . .

YOU'LL DISCOVER A NEW WORLD

OF FASHION HERE

* COATS. SUITS, DRESSES.

* SPORTS, SPORTSWEAR ACCESSORIES.

We have lowered prices on a tremendous selection cf everything.

e CONTRIBUTE TO THE ST. JOHN AMBULANCE.

THE MODEL SHOP WATER STREET

.. ' , .

' . . . . . • - A '' •

SEE OUR FINE SELECTION OF BETTER •

BUY USED CARS

MA.RSHALL MOTORS LTD.

FOR STOVE OIL AND FUEL OIL

'PHONE 7469

OR 3007

TNE GREAT EASTERN OIL Company, limited

WATER STREET

H·elp The St. John Ambulance ·sAVE LIVES

GER.ALD. S. DOYLE LIM·iTED

2

• Over 20,000 ~e~foundlanders Tra~ned in First Aid,

Home Nursing and Child Welfare in the past 50

years. ·'.

First Aid Units and Posts Operated at Public

Gatherings. ,. ...

3 · All Training Given Free-Anyone May Enroll in

Classes.

4

5

Civil Defence Training in First Aid and Home .

Nursing to be Given by St. John Ambulance.

Services to be Extended to all Parts of New·

found land.

6 A System of First Aid Posts · on Newfoundland

Highways.

REMEMBER • c '~

More Die as a Result of Accidents than all the

Infectious Diseases Combined

Play Your Part in this Great Work of. Saving Lives and Reducing the ill Effects of Injuries

and Sickness

Support You1,.

St. John Ambulance Association .

\'Make A Contribution Now .~· .... ' .. : ~ . ' . ...

···::.f GIVE GENEROUSLY "Fifty"·Years Service to

. . . -. Newf~undland.

FOR 50 YEARS THE

St. John Ambulance HAVE SERVED THE PUBLIC OF

NEWFOUNDLAND.

Give Your Support

The FINEST

In HARDWARE AND

SPORTING GOODS

IS AT

HARRIS & HISC·Q·CK LTD. WATER STREET DIAL 5016

,.---!

The Management and Staff OF

StJohn's M~·m~ri~~ S-tad~um WISH TO THAf\!K THE

for their s!!rvic~, wh:d1 they supt=!ied

FOR A FE\V CENTS~A D.4Y •••

Ycu ct:n ha'le t!ce 8-E~ST piote::tian

mcr.ey ca!'l buy ••. a

f.t1ERIT Insurance •. Pc~!cy

AT LOW rREFERRf:D R;Sr< RATES

Contact your MERIT ln~u~c:m;·:a ~A~n tc·t!~y

AT ·.

239 WA HR ST. . D!AL 276.8. • 3687 - 7246

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

'

'. . ....

.. I • •. · .: 1 .. , .... _f, . ..... •,

' . ~ '

I '• ;

I • ' ' • •

. :. ' .

'' I I I

-'

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLO., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1960 --·

PRINCE OF WALES RIN·K BOARD·AND-MANAGSMENT

WOULD LIKE TO THANK TttE

ST. JOHN AMBULANCE

FOR THEIR PAST SERVICE

. . ... .... ._ __ .: - .. . . - ~

- . - -

GOOD LUCK TO THE

St. John A1nbulance

NFLD. MARGARINE Co., Ltd. Manufacturers of Good Luck Margarine

LeMARCHANT ROAD ST. JOHN'S

With graditude for many hours

of Voluntary Service in the

interest of Public Safety.

HARVEY & Co., Ltd. Established 1767 serving Newfoundland·

trs for one hundred and ninty·three years.

COMPLETE

-STOCK of.

FIRST AID

SUPPLIES. at

_ ... ___ .. ....-..~

M. CONNORS Ltd. WATER STftEEl . ··

. .. '• . . ;· ~ ... . .

. DIAL 2206 ..... , . ' ~

' '• I

CERTIFICATE OF GUARANTH

WHEN YOU'IUY A

' . IWE CRESCENT DIAMOND RING

)

T~ls Dlamqnd Ring contalna a Diamond FfH.frOJ'II

lmperfectlona. It Is of fine colour, cut and ltrlllonce

SEE ( .

THOMPSON'S . \JEWELLERY

WATH STUET DIAL 4-'02

50th YEAR OF SERVICE ·MUC""

II

CHEIVER'S FOODS

'

LIMITED WHERE

QUALITY AND·

SERVICE IS

OUR WATCH WORD

CAMPBELL AVENUE DIAL 94706

. ..

. . - ..... -- ... -- ...... - . . . - -~. -­. . . .

STAN FOWLER PROVINCIAL GENERAL AGENT

24 QUEEN'S ROAD P.O. BOX 395

DIAL 5531

Representing the following Companies.

American National Fire Insurance Co., New York.

Great American Indemnity Company, New York.

Hartford Fire Insurance Company.

Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company.

The London and Provincial Marine and General Insurance Company, Limited,

All Lines ot Insurance - Except Life.

Fidelity Underwriters of Continental Insurance Co.

John C. Hamlyn REAL ESTATE AGENT

FOR THE BEST ••• SEE THE BEST

DIAL 7351 - 2339

Lilt your property for prompt, efficient service.

REPRESENTATIVE

ARNOLD !. HAML YN, DIAL 7351

FOR ALL YOUR

INSURANCE NEEDS

THE NUMBER 1"0 CALL IS

4 1 3 1

A. E. HICKMAN CO.~ . L TO. INSURANCE DEPARTMENT

,,

...... -, ; . -. .-·

~- . ·~: -~

.. .;. . • '""7 .. ~·

. ·- -~·~ ! . ~ ;.- . ~

. . . .... '·

12 TH[ D.AI!.Y NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1960

"Horsey" Fruit Juic~s · ORANGE ORANGE

JUICE ............... 24-20 ounce JUICE .... · ........... 12-48 ounce

GRAPEFRUIT JUICE .......... ·.24-20 ounce GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ........... 12-48 ounce BLENDED JUICE .............. 24-20 ounce TANGERINE JUICE .... · ........ 24-20 ounce .GRAPEFRUIT SECTION) ....... 24-15 ounce CITRUS SALAD ................ 24-15 ounce

CONTACT US FOR PRICE ON QUANTITY lOTS.

T. & M. WINTER LIMITED PHONE NUMBERS 5101 • 2 • 3

DUCKWORTH STREET

! WILDER STONE

OF THB

OK

[ . John Legget ........ $3.95 I ' .

I' DEAR AND GLORIOUS PHYSICIAN

1 Taylor Caldwell .. .. 4.50 ;

, CAT AMONG THE : i PIGEONS : Agatha Christie ..... 2.50 ! •

ALL THE DAY LONG Howard Spring ..... 3,50

i :

STATION WAGON IN · . SPAIN -1

Frances Parkinson ' I

Keyes ..................... 5.50

I POOR NO MORE ' 1 Robert Ruark ........ .. 6.50 1

I : THE BREAKING POINT . · Daphne Du Maurier 4.50 ,

MORLEY CALLAGHAN'S ! I STORIES ....... .. ...... 6.951

TRIUMPH IN THE WEST I =-~~-~~~~~.~. ====~~~~==============' Arthur Bryant .......... 6.00:

Johns· Manville Sales ~~~~.K FOR THE ' lesl1e Ba1ly ............ .. 5.50 · . '

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frl always wanted a good picture of her"

Give Him

A Portrait

Valentines

For

Day

•• • •• • •• • •• •• ••• •• •••

A PORTRAIT, THE BIG HEARTED LITILE

LITTLE GIFT IS IDE.ALLY SUITED FOR THAT

SPECIAL SOMEONE ON VALENTINE'S DAY • ., ····· . . .. . .· ..... ... ... . . ... . .· ····· ... : ~··· : : .•.. .... . .

~.· ~·:. IT'S EASY , •. IT'S INEXPENSIVE .•• AND IT'S THE

RIGHT GIFT TO GIVE ANYONE.

STUDIO 'PHONE FOR AN APPOINTMENT ••. SOON.

DON'T DELAY 'PHONE 6333.

d 959 MAY THIS HOUSE BE I A E' . I 1 SAFE FROM TIGERS n :• arnlngs n Alexander King ...... 4.50 I Radio 7.45-News 1 Try ~oin~ barcfoa· for an hnur \\'hen you waik lll"tairs. doni· 8.00-Ne~ in a Minute. i or so a da\' at home. Your teet !Hill your;cll un hy' the lmni~tcr

d Dicks & Co., Ltd. i Programmes 8.01-Bcst from the West. ·are so co.nfincd all lhc lime 1m line your hod)· slightly lor·

All Time Recor . The Booksellers : .ci["*:~~u·~ .... " 8.30-Best from the West. , I'OH'rr outdoo:·., th;~l thi> "air- ward. pl:>tC one loot on the st~r 9.00-News and Minitorial. ing'' will help th,. cirrula- alMc anrl Jltl<h with youl' bac~

Sets 9.03-Nfld. Soiree. , tion an1 gii'C you " ~oo<l deal of !not. You'll find th;~t this wa! 9.30-Blackwood Bros. Songs: comfort. )'OU more wi h ~raer.

Spin 4425 or 2008 or 3191 ' 6.05-Bulletin Board. of the Gospel. ' -·---· · · ·

!l.40-l'ersonally Speaking. •••••••••-=--------,l,.lin> . )tannllr :oaks ami 11150 W~I'P $t6,71!3.000, an ln·1 000 in 1958. ~al',lll'.!~ >t'l nrw hi~h n•c•nrcls crease of ~t.002,000 as compar· It is anticipated that capital in 1950. ''· n. l'i>hcr. l'hairman. eel to 1958. 'expenditures in 1960 will <~llnouncrcl today in issuing the. Expenditures for additions to ,

1

amount to approximately $35,. aucliled li~urrs for the yc:~r. and impro\'cments and replace 000.000.

!'<rt urnin~' in 1959 wrrc ments of Johns.)lanl'illr proper· The printed annual report to ~~.1 fo\6.000 or S3.74 per share' tics amounted to S17,083,000 in l stockholders will be available of rommon 5tork on an al'eragc 1 111511. compared with $12.514,· 1 about February 11. 0f ~.-151.462 shares outstanding. I In l!l58 rarnin~s were S23,374,· ·--------~~from Halifax, due St. John's· ~110 or s~.83 prr share on an . January 29th . ;.n•ro:;c of 8.255.t li shares. i sTEAMS H I p i :\l.S. Faucette leaving Hall·

Sak.1 wcrr S3i7.562 000 in · , fax January 30th, due St. 1"~~. compared with $331.'143,· John's February 1st. oro in t958. MOVEMENTS M.S. Bedford leaving Hall·

"Thc>r rrt·orchi', ~lr. Fish~r fax February 1st, due St.

6.10-National Newa. 6.15-Sports. 6.30-Ciub 93. 7.00-News and ~iinitorial. 7.01-Ciub 93.

TV REPAIRS REASONABLE RATES GUARANTEED WORK

9.45-Dosco News. 10.00-Ncws Highlights and

Minitorial. 10.01-Famoll~ .Jur.l' Trials. 10.30-National News. 10.45-Sports. 11.00-l\'ews Jlighlights and

~linitorial. ll.Ot-:.tusic in the Night. 12.00-~cws Highlights and

· ~linitorial. 12.01-~tusic in the Night. 1.01-Quccn and Sign Off.

:PHONE 94123; I vous

.•latcd. "were arhirved despite. John's February 3rd. l'tc ad\'CrfC effects of lonj!: Electronic ~TO~nA \', }'ebruary !st. >.rikrs at twn of our plants and I C~AR_KE STE~MSHIP CO. thr ~cnml slowin~ down of the' 1-llghhner leavm~ St. John, FURNESS WITHY AND MacCORMACS Centre Ltd, . A.~!. ll:,tional rronom)' caused hy the . N.B., Jan. 26: H~hlax Jan. _29, C~MPANY I 6.G~-Sundial prolonged strike in the •tee! in· ; due St Joh.n s Feb. l, sailmg Nova Scolla due Boston Jan. Dial 518.1 • 2 ·. 3 90 CAMPBELL AVE. 6.30-!\cws dt:•:tr,·. · ·Feb. 2. , 25. Leaving Boston Jan. 26 and Aft h 'PHONE ~313 7.00-Ncl\'s

.. 0 · f'h .. ,.1 h .· . : ".'lovaport leaving Saint John, I Halifax Jan. 30, due St. John's er ours ' 7.30-News . .. , .ur .1 !,1 ~.a~~ ~l>lncss, 1\'.B. Feb. 9, due St. John's 1-'eb. 1 Feb. 1. Sailing again same day • GII!AII' ST. BIRT-HS ____ i 8.00-Brcaldast Club . • r. '\.,rapt~!) du~111~ ~~~!l and 12. due St. St. John's f'cb. 15, for Liverpool. · --------- . __ 1 8.30-Gaylen Drake r ll:t~llntc ' 11 stanlla Y to sailing Feb. 16. . . ' DEATHS DUNN - Born to )lr. and· 9.00-It Happened las! night r~rmn~s and sales. ; HighJiner lea\'ing Saint John. Newfoundland ~eav1ng, Laver· I .. _ .. ___ ~trs. F'red '-'1• Dunn Cncr, 10.00-Coffee Time

"\\'c continued our pr0gram N.B., Feb. 16, Halifax Feb. 19, 1 pool Fe.b. 3. due St. John 5 Feb. CHAFE - Passed peaceful· Gillies). at St. Clare's ~lcrcy 1 11.00-Turn Back the Clock ~r dilw~ification and expa1ision 'due St. John's l''eb. 22, sailing 19. Leavmg for Halifa~t'lld :o~· ly away at 2 a.m. Sunday, Hospital on January 31st.,' 11.30-Program Twelve ,. itft the acquisition of a perlite Feb. 23. . ton Feb. 10• due Hall aJC e · January 31st., •Lilla. widow of a baby boy, : P.:'\1. l•usincss." 'S. ,J. Davies, King's Bridge 12 and Boston Feb. 15. Lear~ng : the late Robert G. Chafe. aged . SIMMS - Born to :lfr. and 12.30-)larch of Events

. . Road,, (Phone 2~64), so that Boston Feb. 16 and , Ha I ax 172 years. Leaving to mourn· )Irs. Ray Simms (nc>e Qui!!·. 12.45-Sports Page Before t.a~rs or. all. kmds 1"~lormng Devotions" may con· Feb. ~0, due ~I. Johns Feb. ·three daughters, five sons. two . ley), at St. Clare's )lercy Hos. 1.00-Arthur Godfrey

.lohns.)lan\'llle earmnj!s 111 19591 tinue without interruption 22. Salling agam same day for I sisters one brother and a pita! on January 31st. a baby 1.25-Ncws were ~62.754.000. whi~h was! through the month of February. Liverpool. ; large ~umber of grandchildren,· girl. ' : 1.30-Bob and Ra~. ~14.684.000 more than Ill 1958. :Thank You. . . Nova Scotia leaving Liverpool also four grea•grandchildren. : CHALKER - Born to .Janet, 1 1.45-For the Lad1es.

nil·idc!Hls paid in 1959 total· I •Nol'aport lca\'lll¢r Samt John,. Feb. l7, due st. John's Feb. 23.! Funeral will. take place from wife of Grant Chalke~. o.n: 2.00-The Search. l~d $16.685.000 or $Z.OII per 1 N.B.,. Feb. 23,' Hall. ax Feb: .26, I Leaving for Halifax and Boston ; her late residence, Petty Hr., January 31~1, at St. Clare s 2.15-Couple Next Door ~harr. compared with Sl4,345,. , due St. Johns Feb. 29, sa1hng Feb. 24, due Halifax Feb. 26 . at 2.30 p.m. on Tuesday, Feb.! Mercy Hosp1tal, a daughter. 2.30-Ncws 000 or ~2.00 per share in 1958.\ ~Iar .. lsi: and Boston Feb. 29. Leaving i 2nd. I ---- 2.35-Panorama

H1gh!mer leave :\larch 1st. Boston Mar 1 and Halifax lllar . 3.311-News All tax~s In 1959 amounted llenve Halifax, N.S., !\larch 4th, 5 'due St John's Mar 7 Sail: I DOHERTY <RPv. Br. L. l'tl). 1 IN MEMORIAM 3.45-Jnnior Miss

tn !i31.138.000, of which S21.· 1\ arrive St. John's March 7th, l~g again. same day f~r ·Liver· -Passed peacefully away. o,n! ~ 4.00-Spotli.~ht on a Star

330.000 were Je\'ied on United leave !\larch 8th. 1 January 31st, at St. Patmk ~ I SHAPTER 4.30-Hawan Calls. States and Canadian income. In I "Novaport leaving Saint John, poo __ Mercy Home, St. John's, Nfld., 5.00-Word Play 1958 taxes were $24,696,000, in· N.B., :l-Iar. 8, Halifax Mar. 11, C~nada, fortified by the Last; In fond and loving 5.30-News rluding $16.850,000 levied on In· due St. John's :lll!r. 14, sailing 1 R1tes of Holy lllother Church, 1 memory 01 my dear 5.45-Checkin' In rome. :\larch. 15. ~ Rev. Br. Leo ~Iatthew Doherty 1 huband, 6.00-Meet the Press

! 'in his 66th ~ear. .Leavi~g. to 1 GEORGE J. SIIAPTER, 6.30-Cheekin' In (C.ont'd) The payroll, including t>m· NFLD. CANADA STEAM· ; mourn two Sisters m Rehgton, who died February 1st. 6.00-Capitol Cloakroom,

ployee benefits. in 1059 was SHIPS LlMITJ:D I Rev. Sr. M. Crescentia, Brook· i.957. 8.30-Johnny Dollar. SI:I0,417.000, compared with 1\i.S. Fauvette In port. On: . lyn, New York, Rev. Sr. M. "And while he lies In 9.00-Family Theatre. Sl35,704,000 in 1958. Wage in· i completion of discharge will · Estelle, Sacramento, Calif.,·, peaceful sleep, 9.30-Romancc in Mnsic. 7rcases in United Stales and · <all for llallfav. I t th · ·

I ~ A a so wo o cr ststers, M1ss 1. His memory 1 shall al· 10.00-~·inal Edition

:·anadi!n plants and mines dur· M.S. Bedford en route fi'Om Rosemary Doherty, K~ntville, k p'' RIp 10.15-Sports Final n" to-g d 6 8 •. way ec .- . . • 1 ~ J a\'era~e . cents per I rlalifax, due St. ,John's Jan· . Nova Scotia. Mrs. Winifred 1 ' 10.30-Jack Paar hour. or 3.8 percent. uary 25th. \ (,.ss, Phoenix, Arizona, and -Inserted by hl~ wife, i 11.00-)lusic 'til Midnight

Depreciation and riepletion in 1\I.S. Brlle Isle li en route : one sister·in·law, Mrs. Agnes )llnnie Shapter. 12.00-Sign Off

FURNESS; WITHY & CO., l TO. Livrrpool St . .John's Boston llalifax St. John'!

to to urs & to• lhlifax

ICJ lu

St. John's Boston St .. John's L'pool

"\'m·~ Seutia" ''\'t•v•foundland" Feb. 3 "::\o\'a Scotia'' Fch. Jj "N~wfoundlanu·• )Jar. !I "Xon Scotia" .:.tar. 23

t"ch. 10 Fch. 24 :liar. 16 :.tar. 30

Frh In :.tar. I ~lar. 22 Apr. 5

Frb. 20 :liar. 5 :l!ar. 2ti Apr. 9

F~b. 1 Feb. 22 :.lar. 7 )tar. ~8 Apr. 11

Pcr~on' eontemplatmJ! oas!.c:lc to Eurone &hould make bookinJ!s w~ll in advance.

AIR P/\SSAI.ES ARRANGED BY· B.OAC .. K L ~l.. ,\MERICAN AIRWAYS. SCANDINAVIAN TWA. connecting Airlines.

consult us regarding vour travel problems

FURNESS TRAVEL OFFICE

PAN and

NEWFOUNDLAND HOTEL I 'PHO~t: 5623

.-;:

CLARKE ALL-WINTER

SERVICES [;·· - to Newfoundland Weekly Express ~-ervice

Direct from Maritimes to St. John's, Nfld. rrom HALir-AX EYJ:r.Y

~· FRIU:\ \'

from SAINT J"HII...1 EVER\' r~~ 1'"'1 Tt::SD.\\'

arriving ST JOHN'S :Vl::n\' . . , ~tONDA\

R. SELLARS CLARKE Special Representative.

Tel. 5483 or 2151 For Freight

Reservations Contact

HARVEY STEAM· SHIPS LTD.,

Agents,

"First in the Gulf of St. Lawrence'

·Doherty, Camrose, Alberta. ~~~~~~!!!!~~ ----------Funeral will take place at = 11.30 Tuesday morning in the Basilica of St. John the Bap. list. Burial will take place at

•.. l

DALTONS FIRST IN QUALITY SINCE -1834

RED GLACE CHERRIES GREEN GLACE CHERRIES

CUT MIXED PEEL CUT MIXE.D FRUIT CUT LEMON PEEL

CUT ORANGE · PEEL CUT. CITRON PEEL PINEAPPLE RINGS DICED PINEAPPLE 1

CRYSTALIZF.D GINGER MARASCHINO CHERRIES

GEORGE NEAL LIMITED ST. JOHN'S. . 'PHONES:

• 1

.-·,

.. '

Belvedere Cemetery.

BOYS' SWEATERS

$1.79

e PLA'"E GLASS e SLIDING GLASS

DOORS e MIRRORS, All Sizes e BEST _QUAliTY

CAI.L FOR FREE ESTIMATE

A. G. BARNES Ltd. . -----.. ....,...... ' ~--BLACKMARSH ROAD . , .

' "

D!AL 9:J6iu

'

OUR MACHINERY DEPARTMENT SPECIALIZES IN

CAP SCREWS AND ALL FASTENINGS. T~ANSMISSION EQUIPMENT. VEE BELTS AND PULLEYS. FLAT BELTING. SAWS. MANDRELS. AND ALL INDUSTRIAL MACHINERY. I

Our Building Supplies Department can supply you with

everything you require for Home, School or Public Building.

A. H.' MURRAY & Co~, Ltd. ST. JOHN'S