12
... :1d Sc :aids :rty , h llllllliOD .1ndrr. -..1-:atin!:. . 1-Scmor ). DOYLE'S THE DAILY NEWS FIRST NEWFOUNDLAND - COD LIVER OIL/ ferro Nova Moton Ltd.· ·, ·. CONTAINS VITAMINS A and D gerians Ready .U.N. MOROCCAN TROOPS PULL Talk Peace OUT OF KEY KATA NGA CITY pARis-Reuters-Algerian rebels who have warring against French rule for six years rtJtd'' to talk peace with President Gaulle scrret contacts, according to repo/ts during the week-end. ' The reports came as the first deerees in the Gaulle plan for greater home-rule for the African territory were published in the gazette. men in Tumsia inform.,living there as free citlzen.s. !hat rebel leader Fer· TOASTS KENNEDY IS ready lo negotiate 1 As to the attitude of the new French prrs•dent. But; A.merlcan admlnlstrat 1on, charge •ll no ctrloinl)' here that i d a!faires Cecil B .. Lyon, after 1 wonl<l brmg an President 1\eunedy at an :roc ·"gerian " ;.1. . Amen can Chamber of Commerce now i.' i11 a position; dinner Friday night, said: . ,,rh Ia;,, hnowing he: ".I think the authOrities In tile .• , 1 1 rm ,,wprr' of the Umted States have tcblizcd that a; :1 mult or the i de Gaulle is the who should ,0tr '" •,11nr ol his be left to soh·e the problem of/ I 1n th,· .Inn. 8 re· ·Algeria and left to solve It with- out outside interlerence." mcrcasingly I The results of Jan. 8 re-' t\Jt hr riln "'':;nl on thP.I !erendum also hroke the. back of n•ost H:l' and nil·: extremist settler opposition to . J:1d major-J political changes in territory nfflrrrs in any 1 and t11us saved a lar,:e proportion wh1ch allows 1 of Moslem sentiment there !rom <r'tkr• tu continue going over to the rebel cause. lgian Strikers - - Pro·- Lumumba Men Round Up Whites ELISABETHVJ LLF.-Reuters-1'he United Nations Sunday said its Moroccan force has pull· ed out of a key Katanga city, unable to stop the fighting between Katanga police and rebellious Baluha tribesmen The withdrawal of the UN force left the African section of Luena under Baluba control and the European quarter, inhabited hy twelve whites, under Katanga police contriJI. In another de\•elopmcnt, a touring t:N con· ciliation committee conferred with Katanga Pre- mier ::'11oisc Tshom he. A UJJllnll'nlcd. hul imm<·<hately he;;on ro•llld· on the "The 1 up ot11er white>, r"ainly more we hal c been lorceu lo g'''"'· make is not a good one." . The an- The !lalubas hale lhr 1inticc. nounccd Salurda)' Lurmun- and arc eommilled to !hem' ha followers had tortured .lm· at <'IWY eric an misswrarics ;1l Buk;11 11 111 The town i; a :;cy point ' Kin1 prorince :md n·ore !!tan tiC midway between lhr K whiles look m c:-; he'd· , cnpilal here and lhc linilcd at Sl:mlcyl'llle. l.un·um· \'aliuns · held iJa;e al 1\amina. hn's in Oritnl;d pro- The troops pul\.;d out \'ince. of t be city l'C'ntrc nnd The \\ hile5 ilhcmsrll·cs <lr<Hiltd !he r.1ilroad lo\lo11·cct the Iran ;fer ol Lwn· To Work .... ........... .. I slat ion and airpo:·t. umh;; from a j:ul nr:u· •Reuter> 1 - BeJ.; higher taxes and curbed welfare. The withdrawal c:,mr in the Congo capitol of lc sinkers were 1 benefits. : LONDON-Members of the British Royal Family arc shown as their train arrived at the Liverpool St. wake of anneals In P10 L\ from. thi< city· nub a11 ay. bad to ''or< today, but' But it has brought to the sur- II station from Sandringham Jan. 16th. Left to ri.,.ht are:-Prince Philip.' Princess Anne and Queen EJiz. lcr:·ificd white re:;idcnls i'l Kilu. The l''l' did succc;'d in pmenc ru;l fighting face long differences b h h ld' . d I h h • • ? ,1nd Onental r .. r pro- !he ll«luhas who T<IIOmhc lor the lutun·· Socialist between the Flemish majority In l a et , • ? mg An on her ap. T e Queen and Prmce Ph1hp left London Jan .• Oth for their :teet ion against a ,\'J' .•: of terror not to fire un l'nitcd :\ation;-c.'· the northern part of the country I state VISit to lnd1a and Paklstan.-(UPI Photo). :launched by of Pa· corted tr;;ino; passin; l!l'.:rnlo11ork mder in the; and the Walloon minority .in the ---- -- 1' trice Lumumba, the Congo's im- !.\lena. LJst week S11edi'h l''l . i hAs led to Socialist pro-: 'World's Enemy' : Q Rl. des . E lepha n·t T fnclay llt:mlar by :he strike co- I posals that the country be made I I u ee n 0 released 12 llclgia·l< all<'!' pay- has who attacked a train !hey commillce 01 Socialist •a federation of two states. I , ' men I of nca1f! SIO eoo ransom were gu:ll'ding. In •he southern, I The, separatist thelllt' Will re- .BY CLARE . , -------·- .. . part "' the coun·J in 1 four·bour meeting, PEKING - The Chi· . , lhr Older were die- I Recep· t ·l·o· ·n ·l·n· J a .I pur c .I ty I E c'o no· m; c c r .Is .Is . La Louviere and! representing Walloo'IS and Flem- of peoples of the whole ! I llhstimated b;.< the sod· i ish to study the proposal and· world. 1 150:JIIO workers. j sul?moned a meeting of Walloon I The' declaration• published Sat-! Q d . began Dec. 22 .un- 1 uruon leaders !or Jan. 29 In Na. · urday, Will approved at a full By GREGORY IMESON •harajah's jnngle retreat nt Awai · ity olficials into conlu- A • t C agamst I mur. I meeting of the party's ruling cen- JAIPUR India meutersl -' Madhopur to rest lor two I sion h•· ionorino n I' ailino car. wa I " u a al ohc Ltb I ' Th 'tt • · · · · ' · J J o r-. n ,._ . 1 · era gov., e comnu .. ee s tral earlier last week. Queen Elizabeth, mounted on bel ore their 11 city after n \'is it to a model village. .,, p:.an1 lo n·ake up for stressed that slnke .is sus- 1 JJ.foot·high elephant, the tallest tour. · hclore the rec,plion and stroll- C4ngo with · pended, but the hght oontmues." : live-day sessiOn 10 in Rajahstan, Sunday rode into A planned tiger ht•rt-the oh·. ing down a country lane amid RIO DE .J:\:-.:ElRO (1\cutrrs) but few c1 cr up '' ilh 1 K- da.ys this city of pink-stone castles to, ject of protests by British ani-· 50,000 cheering local larmers. -!lrazilians arc anxiously him . ackles Big Job 1 e ore res! f s E 10 i attend a royal rccertion given mal lovers and India's non-\'io. . . · awaiting the return here of the · lie slooprd off in Lishon for ! augural appea.. or 0 as by the Maharajah of Jaipur, one lcnce party - dclinitely on. Before arrll'lng. here the royal country's number one emgmo. few homs No\'. 9. ;mired ,n . and West to anew the of India's richest mrn official sources said. , couple attended Sundoy mormn,g · President Janio Quadros. London :-.:o\'. 25 and had a eye . quest for peace. , The Queen and 50-year·old MODIFIES ORDERS church semce!; 10 :-.ell' Deihl' The 43·}·car-old reformer left operation in the British capibl · · · h · h d · 'It d '' . Anglican Cath(·dral Church of , Once agam. the Cnmcse Com-. ma ara]a ro e m a g1 -an · For the receptiOn, the maha· . . . the country Oc!. 29-Dnly three :\ol'. 22. · munists declAred solidarity; red plush howdah atop the black rajah, an old polo • playing· t weeks after his imprrss:l'e clcc- His abocncc has cau,.cct llllll'h with the Soviet Communist Party 1 elephant for 300 yards from the' friend of the duke had ordered· a]en rad rnsa · oug. a tion victory-on a secrecy- di>Salisfartio.1 and unrest in po· and gave full suppnrt to a Mos-, gates of the maharajah's palace· guests to don traditional silken: 11 muu, 1 Hnslstded onl accumpan)h·mg shrouded visit to Eur<•pc. : litical circles hut supporters say . 1 . 1 1 · . . 1em. e 1 t 1e same w en 1 1 · cow declaration for peacelul co- o 1s en ranee. costumes w 1 th red turbans. But f p .d 1 E' h . t Now heading home aboard a I he Br:m ian prop e arc approved. by world Following them . came . the. he mod.ilicd his orders alter some cJrgo ship: he will enc•ntntcr a lied_ he had reason lor Commumst leaders tn November.! Queen's husband, Prmce Ph1fhp, complamed they no longer had· .. 1 l g , calm pohtrcal sttuatton on lw; 1 awa). By JACK BFLL :campaign. . . ''th . ion another elepllant and a pro· such costumes. 1 VIS I wo years ago. : return but wilt find himself in : ------- 'API _ A 1 . 11 is a young cabinet, befitting d The 1 c. ·cession ol four other rlephants. An estimated 100.000 Presents for the Ro)ai Family. the middle of an economic crisis i YO!Ing t.eam_ fill.ed with the coming to full polt'tlcal power Canger . or 1 e '?.na The Queen and the duke flew 1 1incd the eight·mtle route from. !rom Rajahstan State include:! alter his January 31' inaugura·, ommumst movemen. •s e re- . h 1 N D lh' b f r b . 'f 11 q d · t' t' · .lht Job it is 1 or the generation which fought . . . ., M i 1 Lenin rom ' ew c 1 c o e ·. e.! the mrport as the royal couple : or 1e . ucen, a consts 1.ng. 1on. . . K. To Tour moving in to run the ·,the Second World War In the ol 9 0 b p . gmmng a three · week swmg' arrived greeting the Queen with of a sk1rt and san blouse w1th · Inflatwn and senes of wogc I 1St I eo ogy prac ISe y reS d I d' th l b ' 'J b d 'J d Jd. 'k . h b . ·' . h ' 1 ranks ·n th , · h 1 . , . d d 1 C aroun n 1a, e 1rs Y a' waving hands and the mahara-, ace or ers nf st ver an go stn cs a1·e ecn m1xcu w1l a i Farm . Belt FrankEn D. or e .ower ec eons Tllo 5 10 t en 1 reigning British mmwrch to in-; jah with folded hands held be- thread; for the· duke a cJlico business recession cat:scd hy ' tater bea 1 ·ers took charge n 1 st 10 ugos alta. dependent India. 1 £ore the face. :quilted winter coat. : uncertainty as to the nature of i Ylh visions ol remolding, It is •. brainy cabinet. 1t has the reception. they went; The Queen and her husband I Prince Char:e .. ,·ill et 8 t. i-. the new president's expected . By ROBERT .. way of life has an 1 three Ph! Beta Kappa key hold· by tram !or 80 mtles to the rna-· threw Brtlish and Ind1an secur-1 1 1 g bl l'P, ; !rnanml reforms. !Reulero 1 - :>irkrta rlhinet promised such ers in State Secretary Dean J t• R k ca £'young p . n no cman s. Quadros. who fa1or:: cxten·, Khrushchev is said to be plan· tht task· ol pointing the Rusk, Defence Secretary Robert es 1ng emar c d out It .an,d rmcess ' nne a sion of free enterpr:;c and more ning a whistle·slop tour of the the new rrontiers McNamara and Agriculture Sec- I ana a . Has Neat gtrl s dn·ss .. ,tnlant liberal trade policies, is regard- Soviet farm belt W!lhir. the next J.ohn Kennedy spoke retary Orville Freeman. , (a.USeS Kl.lll·ng :\n ;ew 10 sl \er toys an ; ed as a friend by conservative. lew days to stimulate the na· ID the presidential A LOT OF HARVARD- a stlver p ate. businessmen. i lion's lagging agricultural pro- sk F But he also is a shrewd poli·; duction. By and large, il l.s a cabinet J t · Th S · t · t ld th To Make witb 1 Harvard· acctnt. Besides OAKLAND. Calif. <API - Po- yway or. e s tician who presents himself as. c ?''IC prem1er o e lice said saturday a wife's jest· JfK ReCei·VeS one of the people. He hasiCommunrst Party. Central C?m· the new president bimseU, four lng remark that a former fiance praised Cuban Premier Fidel, m1tlce he w1ll VISit the UkraJDI!, Hay. members studied at Harvard . h h Castro and hinted a• closer re- . nprthcrn Caucasus and Georgi<•. either 111 undergraduates or In &Jred her. daug ter may. By ROBERT RICE j them down from the clouds to Q K lations with Russia and China. ·and also is considering trips to the graduate acbool. They are caused shotgun slaymg Canadian Press Staff Writer ! their final approaches and to a Report n v 1 h th . . '1 d I Treasury Secretary Douglas Dil· her marme husband. 1 Brazilians have followed Quad· o onez e vtrgm so1 eve OP· t OTTAWA (CP)-High in the i safe landing. ros' footsteps all over Europe 1 ment areas in Kazakhs· ., lAJIEs NELSON Jon, Attorney Gefteral Robert Blonde Mrs. Sharon Clark, 18·1 clouds, Canada has a neat high-· Data processing equipment is . --. . , tan and the Sovtet I• dr East. Stall Writer ICPl-i'be Conserv- eothusiastic over the they hnl'l! to make new Canada United 011 Columbia River Kennedy, Postm111ler General w 111 quoted by officers. as say-, network !or high·speed jet being used to ease the non-con- WASHINGTON (AP)-Pr_esi-' GRAIN CARG() I The latest extracts of his J. Edw'ard Day and McNamara. lng she teased her aircraft: . . . trot workload of the specially- dent Kennedy met with top for- f BRISTOL, England 'CPl - A 1 speech Tuesday, which were puo- The thing bin Army Pte. Walter Clark, 1}, by, The Jet skyway Is like a su- trained controllers, but so far eign policy advisers Sunday 119,000 . ton cargo nl Canadian lished by the governf!lent neW>· · lack.tl those of saying Charles Gal)ahl'r 21, was I per-highway on the gro11nd. It Canada hasn't. got into the field . and received a secret report on :grain has been from paper Izvestia, the pre-. Eisenhower's and Roosevelt's the father of nme-months·ol<i links the big cities of this coun· of highly-automated control de· i Soviet Prenier Khrushchev's I the new Greek freighter :\1kitas mier as saying he intends to· had before l.s a woman member. Sandra May. try as well as major centres, vices. I talk with the t:.S. ambassador' Roussos. 1t is the 'ar 1est cargo "criticize shortcoming> wherever him just across the border in the 1 Minute-by-minute air control in Moscow. ! ever landed at Avonmouth docks. I sec them. so don't complain:• count it th FOR had Francee Ptorklns at the "I· said It lust lo shake United States. I is still in the hands of . ' - athievem t as e helm of the labor department. up," Mrs. Clark confided. The aerial expressway is part 1,000 controllers at major air· ! Kennedy <lso chose a number ,-------·---------------. Plllcritm len In a Eisenhower choose Mrs. Oveta Clark, who hitchhiked - 550 of Canada's air traffic control I ports. I of new sub·<·abmet offiCials, rn- i ei.PIJ!ded o I Culp Hobby a! the iu·.t secretary . t set·UP which keeps, an eye on ! "Development of. new con· cludinf: a undersecre•ary of I, . ••· in , of healJh,_ education and welfare miles from a ""'. alnes, and 1 when that department was let ·San Diego, was diSarmed 10 the planes from take·off to touch· : cepts and equipment throughput the navy whu used lo he in llrovmces. I up backyard of his . wile's home down. . . I the world are being continu- nedy's Second World War I'T treaty, lnaugu. 1 ' . ft th h tl F ld By radar aad radio, ground I ously monitored," says R. W. 1 boat squadron. 1 1 en the South S k K ed ·I k•-' 1 bor 1 a er e 8 00 ng r ay. t II k t t th 1 0 dd h' f f · If' fll'tl' 111 at. enn y p c "" a awyer . con ro ers eep a'. on· e o , c tc . o the a1r tra 1c The undersccretary-to·be is ! :W and help to Arthlfr Goldber1 for labor eecr• He Is held without bail on a planes. gmdmg j control diVISIOn of the trans- · Paul Fay Jr., a San Francisco 1 01 IChemes are tary. murder charge, 011 the1r mter-c1ty runs, leadmg po:t department. I businessman and a Repubican. 1 ""'"""-"as the Dlefen- Fay stopped by at the White 1 .. Marit. imes. Sn. ow.s. torms Cause Heavy . Damage ,IIIJ MiDiater Die(. In anolh<:r action, Kennedy .. ::::;:n vlalcm HALII'AX ICPl-&low driver Sterliq BuriCe were found vlnces. Nearly 15 iuehes of snow ; highway between Port appointed a special three-man term., into bqe drlfte by bllh wlada aaft and·only slightly cold 'about an1 high winds resulted in moun Howe and the New Brunswick panel to study the problems of It lllrbi ol for DeW whlltltcf. acr-. tile MerWmel 110011' after .leaving the tainous drifts. The wind which border collapsed after it was bat- ethics in government and con· -., either Canada FrldiJ, WdmiDc .lt leut oae Sourl1, P.E.I. · hieh school for at times hit 911 m11€s an hour tered by the high winds and fliet of int•?rest. ill lllator. :,...r· lorelaf 11 pcreou to lbelr bomee early the previotJs filled in the roads faster than tides. The' new president's foreign or b. 111m11r .-.a . M flour• iD 1 afternoon. A snowplow crew plows could dig them out. policy session with Secretary of Ytl ·beta Rfleal.lua. fotmd the. atuck bWI. Flames raced through build The coastal are;Js of Nova . State Dean Rusk and Underscc- lhiWtll b)' A, T. · CtneAI, o1 Borclon, The bll8 waa found about 300 ings in Scotia, Newfound· Scotia als.o suffered from the 1 . retary Che! ter Bowles was his , tlale . P. .E.I., ..._.1 -. WI& JV:dll from the warmth aDf! com· land. and Prmce Edward lslan:i storm. FISh houses were knock- , ftrst major one on state depart· ..... ID ::, M TYo !!! 11 of 18 a to cthausm$g 50 d 0 a 00 magTeh to!Hlllng mo.re i ov 1 erF' andd althongShthe 1 1 mcnt probl•!ms and strategy on r...- .._. ., ..... ·• _ -. ....., ue ...... e ar ness . an I , . ere were no m,; ay o un Y an ,.,u ore, how to deal with "iobal. troubles . ..,., w-. cleleriMd llld wind wll!pped snow. Junes. 'tcppled. Boats crushed 1 " : ._. _., "-- the j BRIDGE COLLANI'SEH ·. , agamst _,the shore. oa 00 magc was 1 , in,. £ro 1 mh KC:u 1 ba 1 an 1 d.Laos to•t' . , ._..,.,.- _,. _, .,... -r- 1t t .... ..,,aratme pro· In western ova Scot1a a expectc" to exceed $1 ,000. ca rng wr 1rus 1c 1ev. Weather Nfld. Skies MOI'!DAY, JANUARY 2S Cloudy, sno11 flurries; : Sunset today •. 4:48 p.m. cold. N.W. wind> 45. High Sunrise today 25. ... 7:37 a.m. TURES: Moonset tomorrow •.•. 1:10 a.m. ( Yesterdny's I Toronto .. .. . .. .. 10 !liontreal .. .. . .. . -6 15 2 First Quarter today ....... 12:44 p.m. TIDES Moncton . .. .. .. . 14 9 High: Halifax .. .. . .... . 9 20 12:09 a.m., 12:29 p.m. Sydney ........ .. 4 17 Low: St. John's 20 25 7:07 a.m., 7:24 p.m. MONDAY, JANUARY 23 Prominent Stars Sirius, rises ............................ 6:19 p.m. rises ..................... ; ...... '7:28 p.m. Visible Planets !VIars, in the c1st ........................ 5:42 p.m. Venus. low in ·.vest ........................ 8:26 p.m . ., '' ' ' !" L j'. I ! t\ . . ! ,1 j:·; Lf· l.t )"·I ·''·' ,1 : ·' I ' I 'I ! . I ' ' .. ,, . : .. . : . ,: . fi. . • • l i\ 1··1 ···, . I . l I, ' I , . i r I, I I' I. i. I I

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Page 1: ,1 : .U.N. MOROCCAN TROOPS PULL OUT OF KEY KATA …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19610123.pdf · Talk Peace OUT OF KEY KATA NGA CITY pARis-Reuters-Algerian

...

:1d Sc :aids :rty

, -\.ltin~. h llllllliOD .1ndrr.

-..1-:atin!:. . 1-Scmor

).

DOYLE'S

THE DAILY NEWS rA~XHAlL ~MPACT FIRST

NEWFOUNDLAND -COD LIVER OIL/

ferro Nova Moton Ltd.· ·, ·.

CONTAINS

VITAMINS

A and D

gerians Ready .U.N. MOROCCAN TROOPS PULL Talk Peace OUT OF KEY KATA NGA CITY

pARis-Reuters-Algerian rebels who have warring against French rule for six years

rtJtd'' to talk peace with President d~ Gaulle • scrret contacts, according to repo/ts

during the week-end. ' The reports came as the first deerees in the Gaulle plan for greater home-rule for the

African territory were published in the

gazette.

men in Tumsia inform.,living there as free citlzen.s. !hat rebel leader Fer· TOASTS KENNEDY

1~ IS ready lo negotiate 1 As to the attitude of the new ~.., French prrs•dent. But; A.merlcan admlnlstrat 1on, charge •ll no ctrloinl)' here that i d a!faires Cecil B .. Lyon, after

1 me~tin~ wonl<l brmg an toasti~g President 1\eunedy at an :roc ·"gerian " ;.1. . Amen can Chamber of Commerce ;;;'~r now i.' i11 a position; dinner Friday night, said: . ,,rh Ia;,, hnowing he: ".I think the authOrities In tile

.• , 11rm ,,wprr' of the Umted States have tcblizcd that -·~,uon a; :1 mult or the i de Gaulle is the rna.~ who should

, 0tr '" •,11nr ol his be left to soh·e the problem of/ • I ~'an< 1n th,· .Inn. 8 re· ·Algeria and left to solve It with-

out outside interlerence." ~ hr<ollll.1~ mcrcasingly I The results of th~ Jan. 8 re-'

t\Jt hr riln "'':;nl on thP.I !erendum also hroke the. back of ~! n•ost H:l' ~ and nil·: extremist settler opposition to . J:1d ~ hi~ major-J political changes in th~ territory

,~~ ;~m' nfflrrrs in any 1 and t11us saved a lar,:e proportion <r:1~rment wh1ch allows

1 of Moslem sentiment there !rom

<r'tkr• tu continue going over to the rebel cause.

lgian Strikers

- -Pro·- Lumumba Men Round Up Whites

ELISABETHVJ LLF.-Reuters-1'he United Nations Sunday said its Moroccan force has pull· ed out of a key Katanga city, unable to stop the fighting between Katanga police and rebellious Baluha tribesmen •

The withdrawal of the UN force left the African section of Luena under Baluba control and the European quarter, inhabited hy twelve whites, under Katanga police contriJI.

In another de\•elopmcnt, a touring t:N con· ciliation committee conferred with Katanga Pre­mier ::'11oisc Tshom he.

A u~ ~pokesm;ll1 UJJllnll'nlcd. hul imm<·<hately he;;on ro•llld· on the Luen~ wit:Hir~w~l: "The 1 in~ up ot11er white>, r"ainly ~;el· more we hal c been lorceu lo g'''"'· make is not a good one." . The Con~ulcoc ~~~~·~n1mcnl an-

The !lalubas hale lhr 1inticc. nounccd Salurda)' lh~l Lurmun­and arc eommilled to li~hl !hem' ha followers had tortured .lm· at <'IWY opportunit~·. eric an misswrarics ;1l Buk;11 11 111

The town i; a :;cy r;~i\ point ' Kin1 prorince :md n·ore !!tan tiC midway between lhr K 1tan·~a whiles look rdn~c m c:-; he'd·

, cnpilal here and lhc hi~ linilcd quar~ers at Sl:mlcyl'llle. l.un·um· \'aliuns · held iJa;e al 1\amina. hn's stron~hold in Oritnl;d pro­The ~loroccan troops pul\.;d out \'ince. of t be city l'C'ntrc nnd ~ro:1peri The renri~als t1~ai1:st \\ hile5

ilhcmsrll·cs <lr<Hiltd !he r.1ilroad lo\lo11·cct the Iran ;fer ol Lwn· To Work .... ........... .. I slat ion and airpo:·t. umh;; from a j:ul nr:u· lh~

•Reuter> 1 - BeJ.; higher taxes and curbed welfare. The withdrawal c:,mr in the Congo capitol of l.co~uldrillc lc ho~dout sinkers were 1 benefits. : LONDON-Members of the British Royal Family arc shown as their train arrived at the Liverpool St. wake of anneals In P10 L\ from. thi< city· ~.uoo nub a11 ay.

bad to ''or< today, but' But it has brought to the sur- II station from Sandringham Jan. 16th. Left to ri.,.ht are:-Prince Philip.' Princess Anne and Queen EJiz. lcr:·ificd white re:;idcnls i'l Kilu. The l''l' did succc;'d in ~cttir.~ pmenc ru;l fighting face long • standin~ differences b h h ld' . d I h h • • • ? • ,1nd Onental ~ro·.-:nccs r .. r pro- !he ll«luhas who op~O.i~ T<IIOmhc

lor the lutun·· Socialist between the Flemish majority In l a et , • ? mg P~mcc An ~cw on her ap. T e Queen and Prmce Ph1hp left London Jan .• Oth for their :teet ion against a ,\'J' .• : of terror not to fire un l'nitcd :\ation;-c.'· ~IJ1r1 ~arneJ. • the northern part of the country I state VISit to lnd1a and Paklstan.-(UPI Photo). :launched by sup~orlrr< of Pa· corted tr;;ino; passin; lhrou~h l!l'.:rnlo11ork mder in the; and the Walloon minority .in the ---- -- 1' trice Lumumba, the Congo's im- !.\lena. LJst week S11edi'h l''l

. ~~fer~;~hlm~;~~nr~ ~:~ i s~~~h~ hAs led to Socialist pro-: 'World's Enemy' : Q Rl. des . E lepha n·t T pr;l~;e~ ~~:~~u~h~111 ~.'~n fnclay :r~s~~sl)~n~~~~~;:ll "t111~;;2~clca~~;::: llt:mlar by :he strike co- I posals that the country be made I I u ee n 0 released 12 llclgia·l< all<'!' pay- has who attacked a train !hey

commillce 01 Socialist • a federation of two states. I , ' men I of nca1f! SIO eoo ransom were gu:ll'ding. In •he southern, I The, separatist thelllt' Will re- .BY CLARE M~DJ>RMOT . , -------·- .. ~---~---

. part "' the coun·J pe~ in 1 four·bour meeting, PEKING <R~utersl - The Chi· . ,

lhr Older were die- I ~:u:d:~i7th~:~:a~~:e~~~u~ ~~~~;o~:;·~~th~a:i~a~~e~;! Recep· t ·l·o· ·n ·l·n· J a .I pur c .I ty I E c'o no· m; c c r .Is .Is . La Louviere and! representing Walloo'IS and Flem- of th~. peoples of the whole ! I llhstimated b;.< the sod· i ish to study the proposal and· world. 1

150:JIIO workers. j sul?moned a meeting of Walloon I The' declaration• published Sat-! Q d . began Dec. 22 .un- 1 uruon leaders !or Jan. 29 In Na. · urday, Will approved at a full • By GREGORY IMESON • harajah's jnngle retreat nt Awai · ity olficials into ~nxiou.s conlu- A • t C lrhadcrsl~ip agamst I mur. I meeting of the party's ruling cen- JAIPUR India meutersl -' Madhopur to rest lor two da~s I sion h•· ionorino n I' ailino car. wa I " u a ro~,. al ohc Ltb I ' Th 'tt • · · · · ' · J J o r-. n ,._ . 1 · era gov., e comnu .. ee s c~mmumque tral c~mm•ttee earlier last week. Queen Elizabeth, mounted on a· bel ore slartin~ their 11 • city after n \'is it to a model village. .,,

p:.an1 lo n·ake up for stressed that th~ slnke .is sus- 1 • • • JJ.foot·high elephant, the tallest tour. · hclore the rec,plion and stroll-~ C4ngo :c,~nue with · pended, but the hght oontmues." : T~e live-day sessiOn e~ded 10 in Rajahstan, Sunday rode into A planned tiger ht•rt-the oh·. ing down a country lane amid RIO DE .J:\:-.:ElRO ( 1\cutrrs) but few c1 cr eau~hl up '' ilh

1 ~e1kmg :ed~:sdtay K- t~o. da.ys this city of pink-stone castles to, ject of protests by British ani-· 50,000 cheering local larmers. -!lrazilians arc anxiously him .

hY~ungTeam ackles Big Job

1 e ore res! e~ f en~et~ s E 10i attend a royal rccertion given • mal lovers and India's non-\'io. . . · awaiting the return here of the · lie slooprd off in Lishon for ! augural appea.. or 0 as by the Maharajah of Jaipur, one lcnce party - wa~ dclinitely on. Before arrll'lng. here the royal country's number one emgmo. ~ few homs No\'. 9. ;mired ,n . and West to ~c~m anew the of India's richest mrn official sources said. , couple attended Sundoy mormn,g · President Janio Quadros. London :-.:o\'. 25 and had a eye . quest for peace. , The Queen and th~ 50-year·old MODIFIES ORDERS church semce!; 10 :-.ell' Deihl' The 43·}·car-old reformer left operation in the British capibl

· · · h · h d · 'It d '' . Anglican Cath(·dral Church of , Once agam. the Cnmcse Com-. ma ara]a ro e m a g1 -an · For the receptiOn, the maha· . . . the country Oc!. 29-Dnly three :\ol'. 22. · munists declAred t~cir solidarity; red plush howdah atop the black rajah, an old polo • playing· ~he t R~d~mgtto,~ In~ rat~ Pr~SI· weeks after his imprrss:l'e clcc- His abocncc has cau,.cct llllll'h with the Soviet Communist Party 1 elephant for 300 yards from the' friend of the duke had ordered· H~n, a]en rad rnsa · oug. a tion victory-on a secrecy- di>Salisfartio.1 and unrest in po· and gave full suppnrt to a Mos-, gates of the maharajah's palace· guests to don traditional silken: 11 muu, 1Hnslstded onl accumpan)h·mg shrouded visit to Eur<•pc. : litical circles hut supporters say

. 1 .1 1 · . . 1em. e 1 t 1e same w en 1 1 · cow declaration for peacelul co- o 1 s en ranee. costumes w1th red turbans. But f p .d 1 E' h . t Now heading home aboard a I he Br:m ian prop e arc ~alts-existenc~ approved. by world Following them . came . the. he mod.ilicd his orders alter some .l~~~ee: c~~:~hendurl~scna~'\~di~~ cJrgo ship: he will enc•ntntcr a lied_ he had ~ood reason lor Commumst leaders tn November.! Queen's husband, Prmce Ph1fhp, complamed they no longer had· .. 1 l g , calm pohtrcal sttuatton on lw; 1 stnyrn~ awa).

By JACK BFLL :campaign. . . ''th . ion another elepllant and a pro· such costumes. 1 VIS I wo years ago. : return but wilt find himself in : -------'API _ A

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. 11 is a young cabinet, befitting d The .~es~lutiO\satd 1 c. 11?81~ ·cession ol four other rlephants. An estimated 100.000 persons~ Presents for the Ro)ai Family. the middle of an economic crisis i YO!Ing t.eam_ fill.ed with the coming to full polt'tlcal power Canger . or 1 e ~n.erntha '?.na The Queen and the duke flew 11incd the eight·mtle route from. !rom Rajahstan State include:! alter his January 31' inaugura·,

ommumst movemen. •s e re- . h 1 N D lh' b f r b . 'f 11 q d · t' t' · .lht king·s1z~ Job it is 1 or the generation which fought . . . ., M i 1 • Lenin ~re. rom ' ew c 1 c o e ·. e.! the mrport as the royal couple : or 1e . ucen, a r~ss consts 1.ng. 1on. . . •

K. To Tour ~ moving in to run the ·,the Second World War In the Y151~ndtsml ol at~!' 9

0 b p . gmmng a three · week swmg' arrived greeting the Queen with of a sk1rt and san blouse w1th · Inflatwn and ~ senes of wogc I 1St I eo ogy prac ISe y reS I· d I d' th r· l b ' 'J b d 'J d Jd. 'k . h b . ·' . h ' 1 ranks ·n th , · h 1 . , . d d 1 C aroun n 1a, e 1rs Y a' waving hands and the mahara-, ace or ers nf st ver an go stn cs a1·e ecn m1xcu w1l a i Farm . Belt s~oce FrankEn D. Roose-~ or offlcO:rs~ e .ower ec eons d~nt Tllo 5 10t epe~ en 1 °.~mu- reigning British mmwrch to in-; jah with folded hands held be- thread; for the· duke a cJlico business recession cat:scd hy '

tater bea1·ers took charge n1st mov~cn 10 ugos alta. dependent India. 1 £ore the face. :quilted winter coat. : uncertainty as to the nature of i Ylh visions ol remolding, It is •. brainy cabinet. 1t has A!te~ the reception. they went; The Queen and her husband I Prince Char:e .. ,·ill et 8 t. i-. the new president's expected . By ROBERT E_LPHIC~ ..

way of life has an 1 three Ph! Beta Kappa key hold· by tram !or 80 mtles to the rna-· threw Brtlish and Ind1an secur-1 1 1 J· g bl l'P, ; !rnanml reforms. ~IOSCOW !Reulero 1 - :>irkrta rlhinet promised such ers in State Secretary Dean J t• R k ca £'young p . n ian~ no cman s. Quadros. who fa1or:: cxten·, Khrushchev is said to be plan· tht task· ol pointing the Rusk, Defence Secretary Robert es 1ng emar c d out It .an,d rmcess ' nne a p~as·: sion of free enterpr:;c and more ning a whistle·slop tour of the

the new rrontiers McNamara and Agriculture Sec- I ana a . Has Neat an~ gtrl s dn·ss .. ,tnlant Prmc~: liberal trade policies, is regard- Soviet farm belt W!lhir. the next J.ohn Kennedy spoke retary Orville Freeman. , (a.USeS Kl.lll·ng :\n ;ew g~ts 10 sl \er toys an ; ed as a friend by conservative. lew days to stimulate the na· ID the presidential A LOT OF HARVARD- a stlver p ate. businessmen. i lion's lagging agricultural pro-

sk F But he also is a shrewd poli·; duction. By and large, il l.s a cabinet J t · Th S · t · t ld th To Make witb 1 Harvard· acctnt. Besides OAKLAND. Calif. <API - Po- yway or. e s tician who presents himself as. c ?''IC prem1er o e

lice said saturday a wife's jest· JfK ReCei·VeS one of the people. He hasiCommunrst Party. Central C?m· the new president bimseU, four lng remark that a former fiance praised Cuban Premier Fidel, m1tlce he w1ll VISit the UkraJDI!,

Hay. members studied at Harvard . h h Castro and hinted a• closer re- . nprthcrn Caucasus and Georgi<•. either 111 undergraduates or In &Jred her. daug ter may. a~.! By ROBERT RICE j them down from the clouds to Q K lations with Russia and China. ·and also is considering trips to the graduate acbool. They are caused ~IS shotgun slaymg Canadian Press Staff Writer ! their final approaches and to a Report n v 1 h th . . '1 d I Treasury Secretary Douglas Dil· her marme husband. •

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Brazilians have followed Quad· o onez • e vtrgm so1 eve OP· t OTTAWA (CP)-High in the i safe landing. ros' footsteps all over Europe 1 ment areas in ~ibe~ta. Kazakhs·

., lAJIEs NELSON Jon, Attorney • Gefteral Robert Blonde Mrs. Sharon Clark, 18·1 clouds, Canada has a neat high-· Data processing equipment is --~- . --. . , tan and the Sovtet I• dr East. Pre~~ Stall Writer ICPl-i'be Conserv-

eothusiastic over the they hnl'l! to make

new Canada • United 011 Columbia River

Kennedy, Postm111ler • General w111 quoted by officers. as say-, wa~ network !or high·speed jet being used to ease the non-con- WASHINGTON (AP)-Pr_esi-' GRAIN CARG() I The latest extracts of his J. Edw'ard Day and McNamara. lng she teased her h~band, aircraft: . . . trot workload of the specially- dent Kennedy met with top for- f BRISTOL, England 'CPl - A 1 speech Tuesday, which were puo-

The thing th~ bin Army Pte. Walter Clark, 1}, by, The Jet skyway Is like a su- trained controllers, but so far eign policy advisers Sunday 119,000 . ton cargo nl Canadian lished by the governf!lent neW>· · lack.tl !~ those of pr:lde:~ saying Charles Gal)ahl'r ~ 21, was I per-highway on the gro11nd. It Canada hasn't. got into the field . and received a secret report on :grain has been ~n!!l:;ded from paper Izvestia, quot~s the pre-. Eisenhower's and Roosevelt's the father of nme-months·ol<i links the big cities of this coun· of highly-automated control de· i Soviet Prenier Khrushchev's I the new Greek freighter :\1kitas mier as saying he intends to· had before l.s a woman member. Sandra May. try as well as major centres, vices. I talk with the t:.S. ambassador' Roussos. 1t is the 'ar 1est cargo "criticize shortcoming> wherever

him just across the border in the 1 Minute-by-minute air control in Moscow. ! ever landed at Avonmouth docks. I sec them. so don't complain:• count it th FOR had Francee Ptorklns at the "I· said It lust lo shake United States. I is still in the hands of . ~ome ' ~ -

athievem t as e helm of the labor department. up," Mrs. Clark confided. The aerial expressway is part 1,000 controllers at major air· ! Kennedy <lso chose a number ,-------·---------------. Plllcritm len In a Eisenhower choose Mrs. Oveta Clark, who hitchhiked - 550 of Canada's air traffic control I ports. I of new sub·<·abmet offiCials, rn- i ei.PIJ!ded o encourag~ I Culp Hobby a! the iu·.t secretary . t set·UP which keeps, an eye on ! "Development of. new con· cludinf: a undersecre•ary of I,

. ••· Prm~try in , of healJh,_ education and welfare miles from Cam~ Pendlet~n a ""'. alnes, and 1 when that department was let ·San Diego, was diSarmed 10 the planes from take·off to touch· : cepts and equipment throughput the navy whu used lo he in Ken-~

llrovmces. I up backyard of his . wile's home down. . . I the world are being continu- nedy's Second World War I'T treaty, lnaugu. 1 ' . ft th h tl F ld By radar aad radio, ground I ously monitored," says R. W. 1 boat squadron. 11 en the South S k K ed ·I k•-' 1 bor 1 a er e 8 00 ng r ay. t II k t t th 1 0 dd h' f f · If' fll'tl' 111 at. enn y p c "" a awyer . con ro ers eep a'. on· e o , c tc . o the a1r tra 1c The undersccretary-to·be is ! :W and help to Arthlfr Goldber1 for labor eecr• He Is held without bail on a planes. o~erhea~l, gmdmg tb~m j control diVISIOn of the trans- · Paul Fay Jr., a San Francisco 1

01 IChemes are tary. murder charge, 011 the1r mter-c1ty runs, leadmg po:t department. I businessman and a Repubican. 1

""'"""-"as the Dlefen- Fay stopped by at the White 1

.. ·;Sm,~ Marit. imes. Sn. ow.s. torms Cause Heavy . Damage ~~~~~ ~t~~n~~~n;cti~iti~:.sy 11 ,IIIJ MiDiater Die(. In anolh<:r action, Kennedy .. ::::;:n vlalcm HALII'AX ICPl-&low pu~becl driver Sterliq BuriCe were found vlnces. Nearly 15 iuehes of snow ; highway brid~te between Port appointed a special three-man ~ term., into bqe drlfte by bllh wlada aaft and·only slightly cold 'about an1 high winds resulted in moun Howe and the New Brunswick panel to study the problems of It lllrbi ol for DeW whlltltcf. acr-. tile MerWmel 110011' ~diiY after .leaving the tainous drifts. The wind which border collapsed after it was bat- ethics in government and con·

-., either Canada FrldiJ, WdmiDc .lt leut oae Sourl1, P.E.I. · hieh school for at times hit 911 m11€s an hour tered by the high winds and fliet of int•?rest. ill lllator. :,...r· lorelaf 11 pcreou to lbelr bomee early the previotJs filled in the roads faster than tides. The' new president's foreign

or b. 111m11r .-.a . M flour• iD 1 afternoon. A snowplow crew plows could dig them out. policy session with Secretary of Ytl ·beta Rfleal.lua. fotmd the. atuck bWI. Flames raced through build The coastal are;Js of Nova . State Dean Rusk and Underscc-

lhiWtll b)' A, T. · CtneAI, 11.-~ o1 Borclon, The bll8 waa found about 300 ings in Nov~ Scotia, Newfound· Scotia als.o suffered from the 1. retary Che! ter Bowles was his

, tlale . P. .E.I., ..._.1 ~.ilfter -. WI& JV:dll from the warmth aDf! com· land. and Prmce Edward lslan:i storm. FISh houses were knock- , ftrst major one on state depart· -~· ..... ~ ID ::, ~ill M -~&~~:; TYo !!! 11of

18a tt~ine,1h·tn,dlalbkle to cthausm$g

50d0a00magTeh to!Hlllng mo.re i ~d ov1erF' andd bardn~e-althongShthe

11 mcnt probl•!ms and strategy on

r...- .._. .,..... ·• _ -. ....., ue ...... e ar ness . an I , . ere were no m,; ay o un Y an ,.,u ore, how to deal with "iobal. troubles . h-~:;- ..,., ~ w-. cleleriMd llld wind '· wll!pped snow. Junes. 'tcppled. Boats wer~ crushed 1 " • ~ : ._. ·~··•!!'!2..... _., "-- "-P~c.t h~dofwar~.~:~tn~t_Wllf. the j BRIDGE COLLANI'SEH ·. , agamst _,the shore. oa

00magc was 1, dran~:1 in,. £ro1mh KC:u1 ba 1an1d.Laos to•t'

. , • ._..,.,.- _,. _, .,... -r- 1t t .... ..,,aratme pro· In western ova Scot1a a expectc" to exceed $1 ,000. ca rng wr 1rus 1c 1ev.

Weather Nfld . Skies MOI'!DAY, JANUARY 2S

Cloudy, sno11 flurries; : Sunset today •. 4:48 p.m. cold. N.W. wind> 45. High ~ Sunrise today 25. tomo~row ... 7:37 a.m. TE~IPERA TURES: Moonset

tomorrow •.•. 1:10 a.m. ( Yesterdny's I

Toronto .. .. . .. .. 10 !liontreal .. .. . .. . -6

15 2

First Quarter today ....... 12:44 p.m.

TIDES Moncton . .. .. .. . 14 9 High: Halifax .. .. . .... . 9 20 12:09 a.m., 12:29 p.m. Sydney ........ .. 4 17 Low:

St. John's 20 25 7:07 a.m., 7:24 p.m.

MONDAY, JANUARY 23 Prominent Stars

Sirius, rises ............................ 6:19 p.m. R~gulus, rises ..................... ; ...... '7:28 p.m.

Visible Planets !VIars, in the c1st ........................ 5:42 p.m. Venus. low in ·.vest ........................ 8:26 p.m .

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Page 2: ,1 : .U.N. MOROCCAN TROOPS PULL OUT OF KEY KATA …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19610123.pdf · Talk Peace OUT OF KEY KATA NGA CITY pARis-Reuters-Algerian

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! THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, ~FLD., :\10!\., JA~. 2.1 __ ;..._ ____ ,;,.,_~--------------------·-----------'--···· ,

(VOL. 3; NO. ·.38) . U :-;I 0 N INTERNATIONAL I ~dian Boy Scout· Headquarters parents appreciate more fully 1 On Ja~~ary 18th, 1960, the PRESS ~Memphis, Tenn., D_cc. in the n~rlh section of Ottawa,· what Scouti~g is, and the pos·l

1 · fi'rst edttton of the Scouting 2ll-E!I•Js Presley has a Christ· Will be open on January 27th.! s1ble values 1t holds for the1r 1

···'triil appeared in the New· mas Card problem. He mailed The Chief Scout of Canada, the' sons. ; !oundland's morning paper-the· out 50,000, but . has received lion. Georges Vanier will al· i Newfoundland, probably the

•• "~AlLY NEWS". About forty: more than 200,CUO-and Christ·. tend and officinlly opNI. the' first part of Canada to introduce' ·, i~~es of th~ column have np·, m~s still b •four days off. I multi-thousand dollar building. 1 Scouting, i~auguratcd the Move·· "pelred In th1s newspaper since I riME (Los Angclcsl-Aftcr A Newfoundland Woll Cub,: mcnt here m 1010 on the West · ,'.:t~e.il. The great Scout news stor· filing for a divorce from her ,

1

· an British Columbia Boy Scout 1 Coast, three y~ars after it had •fCS< of 1960 were . reported in 1 14th. husband, Beverly Nma and a central Canada Rover, been founded m England by _\hem. The historic Colorado: A1•cry, 49. was asked w~at she Scout will. represent the. Domin· I Lord Baden Powell.

'•.Jamboree, its colour and slgni· planned to do next, rcphcd: "II ion at the ~ignificant event. 1 --···fieanee; the annual meeting of I don't know. I've been so busy I A trt>mendous totem pole, I ANSWERS TO QUIZ '"'th~: C~nadian Scout's Executive~ gctt!ng married and divorce~ I 1 rarvcd in British Columbia last ~nswers ,to the quiz: So you ··Jtounc1l; .Mr. F. J. Finlay's' to don t have a talent for anythmg :year, stands outside the Head· Thmk You re Clever: '•Newfoundland; GUwell Camp in· else." ; quarters on the front lawn. A 1 (10) In 59 minutes. If the:

:· \vestem Ne~foundland; human . i newly devised 1 architectural I basket is full in 6_0 minute~ it I . interest ston~s throughout the SCOUT GARY MOONEY

1 ovc~hcad piece sfands over the. was half full a mmute earher.j

.,.~,.~ .... , ..

' world, statistics and data 111 STUDYING IN 1 walk, lcadmg to the mam lobby I (11) Nme. (12) Never. The I '.prepared survey reports. . CON!IIt:CTICUT of the building. !ladder and ship will rise with

·,. · The Editor of the scouting 1 A ~·oung, Newfoundland Scout I the tide. Over the past 5 yea.rs the Shriners 'have taken the ladies and gentlemen on a tour o[ the ~·'Trail hopes that the many; from St. John's, is .studying at so YOU TIIINK YOU'RE "A RIVE DERCE" Christmas time to see the Christmas decorations. This year it was cancelled because nf "'Scouts in Newfoundland have: La Fall etc Scminatry, 85 New·! CLEVER ' · d h Jd 1 · d d " enjoyed the stories and reports 1 port Avenue. Hartford 6, in. The fourth in 8 series of Anti now, untll our trails

1

weather and it was ecided to o a party at S mne Hea quarters. "Can a a House • Present: 30 .. which have been P\inted in the I Conncticut this year. , . SCI'tn such articles. , cr?ss and we meet agam, Goo~ t>ntertained by 40 Shrine:rs and their ladies. Program: Welcome by Pres. Noble Bob Barrett; mo\'ies ··column. The Scoutmg Trail 1s Gary l\1oon~y, a St. Bon s. ( JO) The number of eg~s in • Ble, Good Luck, Good Scout 1 ed by refreshments (movie!~ with commentary by i'-Ooble Hon. E. S. Spencer, Minister of Fina~et,

prepared to consider all sug- ·Troop Boy Scout, was a Patrol a basket doubles every minute. I mg. and remember always: BE j Noble Bert Pye. (Royal Pitoto) cestions from Ncwfountlland ·Leader when he departed for, The basket is full of eggs In 1 PR_E_P_A_R_E_D_. ______ _: ____________ _ Scouts. 'the American Seminary. 1 an hour. When was the basket, ________ .;... ______________ , ___________ _

The last regular Scout column i Gary, an efficient_ Scout, a half full' j . ,. appeared in St. John's i_n 19~3. good 5tudent. and~ fmc athlete,; (1) A shepherd had 17 sheep., ·· 'It; however. very soon died out.j holds many Seoul Ill!: awards. ; All but nine died. How many I

There are a large number of -- • ditl he have left, · S.eo~ting columns of a type! TRAISING COURSE AT I ( 121 A rope ladder 10 feet 1

CONCEPTION BAY NEWS M.U.N. National Fund

. Organizing Co-mmit Be:rng Set Up A

Canada

''.fllrnllar to the Scouting Tra1IJ· GOOSE BAY ton;: is hanging o1·er the side! ___________ ;... ___________ , ___________ _

·which appear. i~ small, local, . A two d~y Basic, Training 1 of a ship. The rungs are a foot! \ paper&. InsuffiCient guarantee, Course for fourteen lack Scout·.apart, and the bottom rung is; L' Cl b s c w· Card Game of continuity has handicapped I crs of the Goose Bay Boy Scout I' resting on the surface of the! Ions u pen er Ins

· the pubhshmg of a regular Group, Ill an Amcncan Defence ocean. The tide rises at the rate ' D' t · B · T h ( L 8 A Scouting column .in large, na·l Base on the soutHern Labrador: of six inches on hour. When will' ISCOn I nue own ng rop y . . . rmou ry tiona! daily publications. 1 Coast has been scheduled for l the first three rungs be covered X · St k' BELL ISLAND (Sta£fl-Thr·l BELL ISLA :Om rsta£fl-The

~11 news reports relati1·e to Fe!Jruary lOth. and lith. :With wot~r? maS QC 1ng rink skipped by Gordon Spen- j officers mess of "J" Co., C.L.B. this column should be referred l\Iel Pound, a mne year vet· For answers, sec near end of BELL ISLA:"-iD (Staf!)-A cer with teammates B1ll Recs. I 1~111 hold a card game In !he to )'rovl~clal Headquarters m eran of Scoutmg w1ll, lead t~c column. spokesman for the Bell Island , John Doyle and Gorclie Skane1:

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C.L.B .. Armour)· here on ~Ion· Sb ~ohn s. course. the f1rst of 1! s type Ill i __ Lions Club states, that due to won. the Bownng trophy 1r: d~y mghl, January 30th, at 8

-- Newfoundland Ill 1961. I n;ssus FIGURES RELI::ASED criticism directed at members, Curling actwn at the rmk here. o clock. . The \ational F1111d for :.Ic-:,, ·~,, ' """""lice ha; A survey -of the national daily Baden Powell Hail, at Goose, The 1960 Boy Scout 1\lovc·. of the organization. the club: Runners up were the rink~ Five valuable prizes arc of· orial lirlll'crsllY of :\e\\'ft:and p!Pkd :t, t;;,~ 111 S: • ·

newspap~rs magazines. a~ d j Bay Will be the headquarters ment census figures of :-.:cw·, will no longer sponsor the skipped by v. J. Southey, as- 1 fcred for the card game. lond, which a1ms of ra~Sin;~ ha,; mrt ',\'11;1 '' 1110<:

books, ?1sclosed the followmg for the Clent. All mdoor acli·l foundland, disclosed laic on Sat·: Christmas stocking fund com·· s1sted by J. Penney, D. Temple·' iS~.iOO.OOU h~· public "dHnp a lid l'llcoura::a1 ~ rq"1' . lnteres.tmc news el·cnts:- Vllles shall he held there. I urday, perceptible increases in' paign. man and Don Skanes. . :1 NeWS Items 'lion fr·r the nell' t:nin•r.>ily·, thr· hu<ll>r<< ,.,,"""''r.:.

MONTREAL STAR (Cacn, total membership and leaders. 1 The Joy 1\lanufactunng co , · del'rlopnwnl programmr. " "On tior 11:"'":ar.d. · . Jteuter_s)-A 28-ycar-old farmer VISITORS TO Wolf Cuh~ rose up 50 from: and Earle prize Construclior , A k d F : 11101'111~ into high gt'ar. Sir lee.' haYe hwl ft::[,· :.

k II d h I d Hr.ADQUARTERS 5 e Or Leonard Outcrhrid::c 1:\al~<>nal 111 :-iontrcal a1:1: T·o.·· .• ··: ··was l e near ere yes er ay "' 1959. The unofficial figures for 1 S · H ke Co., trophies arc be;ng com·! · · ···When a World War II gr~nade Two vlsiters affixed their the Cubs now stand at 1.575.1 en10r QC Y peted for now al the Curlini:: : l'll:lirrran of the Fuml 1

. ,;ay,; hal't> he~un lillie ·I ·

: aploded. The explosiOn lnJUr· names to the Provincial Boy .l3oy Scouts rose from l.B.JB to 1 A t' rink. , HR. GRACE _ This corrr<·, that or~an1zin~ t>f co!lllllitlc•·., ~;fls 111 tho>c arra<" · . .ct; two other farmers helping Scout Guest Book at Hearl· 1,967. Sea Scout gained from 12, C I On , pondcnt would be glad to rc·. acro.<s Canada 11'111 he complct· nard said. :\ora s,o:la

the farmer unload crop from a qduarters during the. pas~ te9 .1

to 15. The unofficial total in · BELL ISLAND (Staff)-St. Persona 1 S 1 ccive items of news, social or I cct T~h:>'~;·i onal I' 1 1 a l n 11;1".~' 1 ;;'~1 ic~n~,;~1111111 ;w ~' ·:.cart. ays. · the movt>mcnt in Newfound· Kel'in's Sr. team gained their :personal for the Harhour Grace, · ' 1 ·ur.' 1 s >ee "' 1 " L. mer .. c

.. · ·.TIME (Salisbury, Southern The two ac!ii'C Scout Leadt>rs 'ian~, including .leaders, is 3,625 · first point in the Sr. league ser· HR GRACE - ~!iss Mar'·: 'ret ion of the ConceptiOn Bay: set "P. to ra!'e !he nr,·e,,ary !err worker.'. ar.d lthodesia)-When ~ police re· wen~ George Billard of Cha~· 'as compared to 3.4R4 last year.' ics by tieing with the West Dunne resumed her duties ~~:news. A 'phone call to 6184 at· funds .o p~·. t~~ cost of rr~r·t: lens 111 \\'cs:ern C;c;~ eruit was asked-durmg the flfSt nel and Bill Westcott from Bate There arc 98 active nroups. ' ~liners with a 6·6 score in last the office of the Avalon Tele-~llarhour Grace at any lime· mg hlllldm,s Cl ntaJncd 10 .he been approached tD a:: aid test "How would "OU arrest Verte " . . , 1 ld 1 1 1 · r second phase of an over-all de millrc chamnen ;n · • ' · Several troops notably m St.' last round act10n at the Bart· phone Co here on Wednesday. s 1ou t1erc Je anvtung o

• ~a hemorrhage?" he answered: NEW NATIONAL John's arc not i~cludrd in this I lett Memorial Arena '1\liSS Dun~c had been relieved nrws 111tcrcst would b~ apprcc· · l'eiopmcnt pro~r.lm <' 0 ' 1111 ~ spcctil'c areas. :· 1'1 would put my hand on h~m, IIE,\DQUARTERS census. as they failed to pay' · by ~!iss W. Morris durin~ he~ iated and will help to make I 522·000 000 and plan nell for "Two thir;~, m ,. ·•:'tlld. war mhim, and . cautiOn TO OPEN their registration fees at the 1 absence because of the ,]]ness th1s ~cctwn more interestmg to: complelwn 10 1 ~10 · dent," Sir l.c<:o:.:d ;;

bill!" The spectacular new Can· f 9 h · I M' L h the readers. ',. Bu1llimgs to be cons:rul'lcd response give:· ;" tr.e :-: . -----------· beginning 0 1 61. T c unregJs· I nOr eague of cr mother, 1\lrs. Alice Ill the second phase arc: four lar~c :'\ell'''' •,d',r.1 ~ .•. !rated troops would at nearly . Dunne who has now recovered student's residences. an ,\pplicd siJ011., !heir "., ,,·c~r';

~?O tfo thdcl tot1al membership of Hockey fhrom th

11e cffectskof a fall at her (uri ing , Scienc" nnilding. an Education dcSirahiltty ::::·'

. . "cw oun am . ome t ree wee s ago. : 'II' " 1 · c . · , r ,, .• :. . BELL ISLAND (Staff)-Thc · __ BELL ISLA:'W (StaffJ-Thc ·Btu<~~~-"' an< a cnlr.il Duun~ scssing a ir':. r;.:e · '•· SCOUT WEEK-1961 Minor Leagues hockey series I ~lr. Marice Walbournc has re·J rink skipper! by ~like Stoyles is, ~.3~10· 0 JJOhOc c1·1\st .olf tills\· sta~l·e " adcqualrl~· <taf:'<''~ <'.:

'II d t th B t · · -'~ 1 ' s arl ws '''"" ly equipped. -::u.1:r: ~ al Ho" Scouting and the 104th. leU Memorial Arena next week. 1ing a holidav with his family at Qlll in the British Consols pla1·-! male'· rear' ~lion t Jcl m1 1 "~1 1

1a1 own >oil. Secol!oil.•.tr.! ... Thc54th.yearoflnternation· w1 getun erwaya e ar··turned tohisshipafterspend-~inafavourablepositiontowin;'" 0 ·.,1 · 1·. •1 d.' ,, 1 11

' . ~ . } : t

, ....

· ' 1 1' 'II · 'I · . · , anr ore o >e reSJ• en > 1111 '· from mamland b1rlhday of Lord Baden Powell •our teams WI compete m Harbour Grace. offs at the Bell Island Curhnf: · 1 11 1. 1 shall be obserl'cd in Newfound·: Pee-Wee hockey games are to' Mrs. E. D. Freeman returne<l rink. , 111

1g'· 1 :1'"'1 fie en Jrcl P1_1asr 1" '" shows l\'11'.:·.·:· · · · b 1 d M d . f . . . 1 , 1 d 'sc '"' u e< or comp c wn 11· 1~oulit that tiler·· :' J •.··.

land from February lOth. unl1l e p aye on on ay a ternoon. home on Wednesday ~fter Vl51l· Sloy es. teammates .• eonar ! 19 fi~. · lerc~t and '~"'r··'"' , · February 26th. . . T

1h1reeBtca

1ms aLre competmg m~ her husband who 1s recuper- Clarked. I'Jc

1eh·sk

0•r. D.T1ck c

11arke.; Sir Lennard >ilid thiil ,,r~ani· prohlems of \, .. ,. r

Boy Scont Week IS meant to 111 1e an am cague senes. a!ing at the residence of his >econ w1 on emp eman. 1. f .11 . .1 . · · · h 1\''d ' 1 d 1 d . h , za 10n o comm1 ees '" s . new pr<l\'lllcr n: help the Canadwn people better 1 wo teams campme t e 11 • I son, Dr. E. 0. Freeman, St. ' ca . are till! cfeate m t e scr· ; 1 h . d 1 ·h · " . 1 · 1. r ·." · · tl Jh' · Tl ·k· t •.onsan escwereln.•ri\·J(mJraJon o ,,,, .. understand Scoutmg-to help gc eague. o n s. les ... IC nn Is now ~ wo-way I foundl.md is well underwa1·. 11 ''ro1·idc oppcr; :1:tir;

__:. __ ___;_________ POSlllOn to Will OUt Ill the fl. I . · . •

Oil bllmls, btc~ring the familiar Esso oual trademark, play an important pOI't in Newfoundland'• deuelopment.

Imperial Oil barrels

are a part of the Newfoundland scene

For 45 years, Imperial Oil has supplied

the highest quality petroleum producta

for delivery right around the coast of

Newfoundland/This year 1 Imperial will fill over 150,000 barrels with productS

for the outports.

Every year more gasoline, diesel fuel,

· heating oil, lubricants, and other oil

products are needed by the outporta.

Every year Imperial Oil expands and ' improves its supply and service fa~ili-

ties. Last year alone, the company

invested $1,000,000 in Newfoundland,

bringing its total investment to more

than $22,500,000. Through the service that it has pro­

vided over the years, llnperial Oil has

gained a place in the Newfoundland

.scene-a place the company will con­

tinue to fill in the years to come.

IMPERIAL OIL LIMITED

nals Sunda, l's expected :ill 1mrkcr cn!Lst· young \rwfo:l':dl ..

Th · k;t. t St 1 S men Is will he rumplrle h" the ccirc the bcnrf:l; of~~ e rm o mce oy es un· ~ · 1 . Th ,·. . · "

day will be decided in the semi·; enu_ot .a~~ar;_. _ e "'_'~nee_ ra~~~~-- .. -- _ 1 finals Saturday, .

The Stoyles rink can lose in ·four :-raori seals. the Sttnday afternoon game, \'olers '.Ito ;>rc n;o:·r than with another chance to win Sun- half c.1stc mn.<t rr~i,ler 111 a day night. :llaori sPat. Tho<e will! somr

The winning rink leaves 011 :\l:wri blood but l~>s than hJlf January 28th, for Corner caste cnust re.~ist21' 10 a whi!~

Sees In

, Brook. cleclor:tlc. Half caslc;: are al· • :lowed to choose one catc~ory ~r \:\!ROB I. ;.. 11: .. , '

'lh~ olhrr. Somali lr;H!I':

Maorl·s Race In rhc course of yr;ll'S !he warned herr , ..... :.1y :llaori memhrrs nf P;n·:i;nr.rnl: scale war m:

• have made nota hie contrib~tiuns Somalia ;:n·' r:th:o;:a l to politics. :llnori' a!r n:1tura! other .\fric;~:l .:ates

Dl.st•tnctt•on , spenkrrs with a fcrlinr for Inn· Abdullah. >r rc:;ry ·

I guagr. whether their o\\'n longue of the Somali natio~a: · or Er~lish. which almost all group of polil:r:ll

:speak fluently. Some of tl:e ped here on l1i; ,1ay

In Parll.ament ·finest orators P·u·liamcnt has :\frican confrrr~:rc ir known ha'c hct·n :llaoris. vika. He lo!d ;1 :enor.E:

The custom for n•:>ny years i1ad been sen! J'l tte h~:! By J. c. GRAHAM was :or onr :-raori to he in· ertin~ a ,1;11 · •. ,hirJ t~

AUCKLA:--lD ICPl-The clear· eluded in !he c<Jhinrl lhre;;tenin;: o\•'1' a ~o.-::• est case of racial distinction in RACK L:\ROR of land. nanwt the Hai New Zealand is Ill Parliameni. B:tt for SP\Wal dec;!drs an ing the 111'0 CO!I!llr:e'. ' But the -race concemed is the fonr .\faori memh:'rs have 111 · "Our trmpr:·: :lcC bfh~~ strongest. support of th~' system. fact hecn supnorlcrs o! the l.:l-. hP s:1id. hut ;Hided he ~ew Zealand's natil:c race bor party. When l..•hor is in 1 "roll hJck !he war :

the ~laori, elects (our memberi power one of them 1' usually, opian gll-crnml'ill has of its own to the BO S!at House choser. for lllr calnn~l. bul when, to a Somali oorr of Representatives. as at present a :\1ti•;nal rc)!imc alle,rlinn "inh:~01 an

When from time to time cam· is in office. the \laoris arc left mas~n;rr~ bv ils lrl'<'l!· paigns arc started for closer with no nominee hr cabinet lah s~id · · integration of races and· the rank. lie claimed :11.11 tlC abolition of any remaining dis· ~laoris. value 'hc•r. right ~ 0 had hcen kill~d an~;(( tinct ions, the question of the. elect thm own _mcrn~>crs. They since Christmas · Maori scats in Parli.1ment is: claim that special ~.aort mter ! reports in :\airobi_ sa:d seldom raised. The reason is· esL> still demand sv~rlal rcple·' malis were killrrl m lJO

! that the Maoris want to retain! sentatwn by members of the last September.

I their separate re;lrcsentation.. i ra~e . , .. . . . __ _____

In most other resp~cts while 1 Some douh'. 11 hdh~. a~ man; . -people and ~laoris are on a: as four ~laons. would gam elcc· I ~laximum lime basis of full equality in law ' lion regularly If all had to com·' d . k f arera't Where differences exist such a~! pete in open ,·oling with the: nnh s orl anda"s· •

• · 1 · · • · e1g t or en : · over land or fishing rights,· the. while majonty. I doesn't have to work. distinction is usually in favor of: ' __-the Maoris. 1 , . . Elephants do not. ISOLAT~D CASES . i \ oc:ng children_ arc often al· through their trunkS-. Oc~as_10nal instances anse. · nf l·lerg1c to ccrtam substances suck water up ·

d1scnmmallon in fact agmnst even heforc the age of two and then squirt Maoris, such as landlords de-~1 years, but tests can be made to 1l mouths cllning td l~t houses to them, or disrorer the cause of the allergy -·----exclusion of Maoris from a tour· and treatment can ' often be . h u 5 ing football team out of defer· i given to desensitize the patient, d R~nt~ 10b 1 t e·ee~ ence to South Afric~n racial cus· i even at an early age. I ~u le e 11

toms. These cases invariably 1 . 1 57. ____..-:_ raise· an outcry for complete I Foc.d handlers have a respon· equalit} in practice as well as sibility to the public to prevent The trunk of an In law. But the agitators seldom 1 dlstrioution of germs. If the J perform more f aJl1 take the case to. the logical worhr has a cold or if he has any other part 0 ~ C!Onclusion of a common voting I any l•!sion on his hands, he may except the human __ mil for all. . · sprearl infection. Hands should ---- e

The country is ~iwtcd into 76! be ·o~·asho~ frequently. All One of every_thrt iS electorates for wh1te voters nnrt: wounds should be covered with l women Ill hospitals four much larger areas for the I a dressing. ' give birth.

N 67

AJ-I.D. < tha

Jan. 19 of pulpW< l!lakeS a . detiverec

or 67% o! hich is 2~

Yl t' umt: las ,

The them• Sex In Confer•

II. S. . Frank

!'>ich . I. A. p Boer, Pr

Dr. Go Dr. I. :\.

obstetr "There

sex <

Perlin point of dealt 1

educatic ChristL Jewish of ori

Page 3: ,1 : .U.N. MOROCCAN TROOPS PULL OUT OF KEY KATA …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19610123.pdf · Talk Peace OUT OF KEY KATA NGA CITY pARis-Reuters-Algerian

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Sf. JOHN'S, NEWFC)iJN.inAND The Daily. News MONDAY, JANUARY 23, 196r

N.D. Haul-Off Is May ~.o To'6 Inches of Snow. WomanDiesln'Unemployment up by, i

C I ed Ice Ftelds H I. . w· d. ' Stallled ·Car I ...

6 7% omp et <·~·· ,,,, Bloo~•·"· of . T?. :.. ~~9., thi• win~.?.rn.h~ :, A middl"''" widow di•d 7 0 Over Last Week I Co. Woods Dept. I Hauling production by oper- th.e freighter St. · Adfesse, Is from asphyxiation after being I

that for the week ating Divisions during tho past shU undecided as to whether or way up from the eastern seaboard iJ£ the United stranded in '' car at La Scie in i The following figures repre· l Unplaced Applicants . Jen. !Dth .• !961, 38,400 week were:- not he wil~ take his vessel in States and from the Maritimes early tlus week· I the snowstorn that swept i'<ew ~ sent the number of unplaced ap-1 ,

of pulpwood were hauled. Badger, 11,700 cords; Miller· search of seals this year. end. It dumped about six int'hes of snow on cast· j foundland on Friday past. Mrs. I phcants registered at the un- 1 ~!ale Female ! ·•ktS a total ol 214.000 town, 9,100 cords; Bishop's 1 Last year the vessel made one ern Newfoundland. I'Mary Walsh of Gander was. employment off1cc as of 19! i dtlir~red to streams to Falls, 9,100 cords; Terra Nova, I trip to the ice and she returned / found with ~lr. and ~Irs. E. January 1961. for last wee!; 19 January 1961 18.165 1.670 ; I

.-,,r, ~f the total cords 8,500 cords. . ' with alioul 3,000 pelts and f • Blackwood iJ a c;~r stalled in and for the same P•~riod last 12·January 1961 18,059 1,606 1 ~~r~'is 22':'< more than at Amos Feener's Camp, ,Bis-labout 1,800 carcasses. Hurricane orce wmds, snow and drifts play- 1 a snowbank. its motor running. year. . 21 January 1960 17,974 1.540 '·: : •• ar hop's Falls Division, completed I . ed havoc with air, rail and sea schedules a nil They had been drivin~ to La :1- ....... · - ·- -·- .... - -·------ · --- ··- ---- ... _ .. __ bmt last yc . A 'd its .haul-of( on Jan. 17th which Three Newfoundland scalers many roads became dogged with severe drifts. Scic from the t.:.S. Radar Sta· F" I CCI ents '

arr. at present. 1,3111 brings to 9 the number of I' will be prosecuting the hunt Th • d' . ' rtonl nt Ca(l•! s,·;· John on the : Ire . n SCI'Cral traffic mishap,' were ,a•cd '" hauling on t te cn~ps which have completed this year: the Kyle, th'e Arctic . e tcy con ttl on of all roads made driving : nort tern 13a c crte peninsula ·

~i~i;ions. their 1960-61 haulmg. Sealer and Bowring's Algcrine. all the ntore dangerous as, at first, a light snow· All were un·:unscioti,ncs~ when Corner 81'001< ~~:~c';;~~~. to city police O\'et· .\he f I found hut ~·:r. and ~Irs. Black· ·;.~ ..

R G al , accompanied by lashing winds, the icc was wood were r·~vtvcd. ~Irs. Walsh Consider.1hlc damage·, :w:" ~Ao ... nl•ts 0110. ur ua ... d l.or Le'IYI.slatu ... e covered and almost impossible to drive over. . fniled to respond to treatment done to all cars invoh~d in I 1 J t O 1 ' A three hour fire r;,1·agcd the two-car colli>ions on Portjl~al

riSPECTS GUARD OF HONOUR-Above photo !lhows His Horiour, the· ble Campbell Macpherson, O.B.E., inspecting· tl1e Guard of Honour

ltl]lplied by Headquarters Newfoundland Area, Canadian Army, fo1· the open· ill of the Newfoundland Provjncial Legislature. The Guard of Honour was

1011t111anded by Captain L. E. P. Hemp· hill.

"'v"•orial Students Attend Confe,.ence

Busy Clearing Drifts The Department of Hig·hways ancl the l\Iuni·

cipal Council were early on the job Saturday morning trying to clear drifts and accumulated

snow from highways and streets on the Avalon Peninsula and within the City.

On some roads there were six to eight foot drifts and some streets in the City were impass­able until the first snowplow punched its way t•hrough.

Sunday the Municipal Council equipment was clearing snow off Water Street anc:l for a while traffic was slowed to a crawl as snow-loaders and

trucks combined to cart away the drifted accumu· lation. ·

- premises of the Town Laundry Cove Road. St. CJarc Ar.cnuc.

JJfay Meet To l)iscuss

. IlosjJital I

on ~lain Street at Corner Brook Long's Hill. :-;cw Gower Street. on Saturday night. on Saturd:1y. . . , .,

Reports slate that lhrrc 1\'<ls In a two·car collision on,.thr. muclt difficulty cxpc:·icnccd by Torhay Ro:1d at 4.15 p.m, Sat. the Fire Brigades as thcy.plied urda~. the dri•:er of 011e.1car throu~h heavy snow to reach was taken to the Gcnr1·~1. Hm·

I the burning structure. Snow pita! hut was found to br. tin· storms hare dump1·d a con· i~jurcd. He was arrested. ·for sidcrahlc amoun: 'Jf snow on drunken dri~·inc. • .. , the \\'est Co:1.1t / I ~··hen ll \l'a; A car owned hy a n·sitlenl of

The chairman of the Bc11 Is· rnost con~cstc, tlw fire bmke Lon~ Stt·cct n: d par~c~ ~:1 f~nt lnnd hospital committee said out to hamper all mu1·rment of h" house• Sa:t,rday ni:,':t '""

' Saturday that Dr. \lcGrath, Pro· on Main Street for ><Jnle hours. hit in !he rc~r h;· ?.notiuor, r~r. 1 l'incial :llin.ster of Health, has R.C.~l.P. here in St. John's the drr.cr of which lcf•. th~ · indicated tl1at he will he happy had no information concerning car and ran away. The ca1 was . to meet wilh the committee to this. hut 1t IS not rr~ularly rc· 1

d. d h ~to en. 1scuss ~ propooe ospital for ported to this detachment·. In a collisi•m b~t~rccn .a. ra-

: Bell Island This is the second major fire and truck on frcsh•ratcr· Road Strong mlerrst h,1s he en in Corner !lrook·Curling in the nt 4.30 p nt.. ;~ ,., oman p1"scn·

· aroused w'th the sug~estion p:1st three <lays, fir<· dc>troycd ~cr in the nr rrcei1 cd 2 bump · that Bell !slant! may get its own the premises of A. fiunph\'. the on her ltrad hut declined hos·

I. hospital and progress is being Fishplant at Curlin~ on Frida) nita! treatment The car·. "·as

carefully followed by the O\'er I night past. dJmaged to the e:;tent of $308. 12.000 residents of the Concep· dama~cs to the truck S50.

By Sunday night things were just about back i tion Bay iron mining centre.. I Pl·esS Soc t"a [ Another accident on Fresh· to normal and traffic could get around easily. water Road about the. same - · · ·· --- .. --- 'Old ~ . ·d , : time. also between a car and

S I omra es a truck. resulted in s3o damage

DO'\V fouls C.N .R. · ~ . JanllUI)• 28 to ~;~t~~·d;,2~~~~0co~~i~·ions·wcrc : Annual Meeting' . reported to police Damage in The CNR had difficulties this week-end due

1ne severe snow and windstorm which had swept

across Newfoundland.

Five to six foot snow drifts he tween Stephen­ville Crossing and Port aux Basques disrupted train schedules and the CNR ferry William Car­con was forced to lay to to await easier seas and decreased winds.

The West Coast has had a total of over 8·1 inches of snow this winter and hardly a day has passed since Christmas when some snow has not fallen,

. Buchans has about 22 inches on the ground and St. Anthony, farther North, has over 40

The :\ewfuundlan<l Press Club will he holtlin~: anothel' ot

The Anr:1ial ~lccting of t.l)e its popular winter social:; Jan.

1 C.L.£l. Ol1l ~omradcs :\>so.<'· ~a at the Le~wn Club Loun~e. · 1at11H1 Lo<l>c C\o I. was held 1n The laot c1·ent ('f this type the Cluh Rooms Harvey Road was 1ery well attended and 1t on \\'etlne;ual', .Januarv 18th .. is hoped a good 1urnout th1s

. and resultt~d as follows: week will mcticatc the support l'rc<ident, Comrade E. G. of the Club members a~a111.

, Pomeroy. re·~lccted 12th term: J!u;ic. dancin;: and other at· ; Vtcc·Presidcnt , Comrade II. tractwns will be featured and ; Hawkins. Elected; Treasurer. 1t is hoped that ;;n importnnt Comrade F'. Pcckford. rc·clectrd ·announcement rc;:arding the

'

lOth, term; Secretary, Comrade annual meet in~ aiHI. annual dtn· 'C. Dominy, re·electcu 5th. term. ncr will he made. I Executi1·c ~!embers: Com· Tickets arc al'ailahle from ; radcs G. Butler, T. Dcwling. G. the Executive and rrprescnta· '~lartin an,\ P.P.A. Wight. · tives in each news media.

I! Auditor::: Comrades A. Thomas (Life ?.!ember) L..

each case was minor.

Child Bittea By nog ·

A girl. aricJ 11 year!:. '.'.·Js

taken to General Hospital yc>· tcrday afternoon sufienn~ ·from wounds rceci,·ed 1•:hen sht" was bitten by a large do.~. propeTt'' of a nci;lthor. whilr pl~yin~ ncar Iter home on Goodrill~e Street.

be. merntcrs of the Student

1

sential. Schools should be gear· accept it, and ignore it · inch.es. llorcmcnt of the Mcm· cd to teach comprehensively Speakmg of sex de\'lates, he: -·--·------------------

l'nircrsity of Newfound· the biological and emotional said that deviation, homoseli· l!l!ndetl 'the SC~I Mari· i differcn~es in sexes and health ualit~ and lesbianism was due Adam o·. ·Lang .Of CNR

l Blundcn and G. Broomfield.

'

Fires F. W.

. Home Hutchings On Leave

The cluld >Ustaincd hiles on hrr otomac:t. fingers and 'arms . and has to return to the hos·

' pita! for further treatm~r.l. In l'onnection with tile 'at+

den:. a spokesman for ~he police said last night that many people arc under the imptcs·

lonference 1960. · sex hab1ts. 1 to disturbance or anx1ety •m L'ni1·ersity, Hali· When questioned .lJy the stu· . childhood, and male homosei; I

Drccmuer 27th to dents, Dr, Perlin said that in uality is more common than fe: Moncton A.ppol"nted I • City firemen received two : F. W. Hutchings of the Cana· Jewish families it was the 1 male. "A boy needs an adequate ' calls ~·esterday. d1an Armv and a resident ol

thtmr of the conference: woman who practised cunrep·; male model in the family. He I At 10 45 a.m. they. were call· Corner Br.ook. is 11ow home on In The lma~e of God. i ~iol~ control. ,"The bible says :experiences a period of homo· ~~O(>;CTO:'< Jan. 21-~l.oncton Clerk Stockkeeper and Fore·: c:l to a home on Suez Street furlough.

1 11 Th llc scrrcd with the CanJtlian Con!trcncr Leaders were ' 11 IS the man's duty to pro· •

1

sexual mlerest as part of h1s: nat~>·e Adam D. Lang, General i. man of Stores at Point St. Char- 1' here ar.. o.~erhcated 01! hurn· H. S Ililthey, D. J. Wei!, create, but it says n9thinr. about development into a mature I Storekeeper of Canadian Nat·: Jes shops, ~lontreal. (•r 1\'JS ~:1vmg trou 1 e. ere , r , eontmgcnt of the t.:nitd

Fnnk LJwson. M.D .. Dr. ·women having to procreate." male. This usually takes place 1 ional Railways Atlantic Region In 1951 'he was promoted to wns no damage. :\.ations 1n the Congo anti saw ~ichol>on. Dr. ~lac Lay, . J>,;ychiatrist R. J. Wcil Sllid I at about 14 or 15." ; here for the past year has been: Stores Inspector \\'estern He·. l.itllc <lam 3ge resulted wh~n much ol tlte unrc;t ecntercd 111

.I. A. Perlu1. ~Jr. Han~ A. 1 sex has become a cult of beauty. Among other things, D1·. !'lich- appointed General ~!aterints! gion Winnipeg and then sue·' t 1 . . . t nht f' · '" p f n . ' · 1 f d tl K' S · f tl R '] I . l a c Cl 1>10n se cauh 1rc m the Lcopold\'ille area where ltc fur. G ro

1. . J. R. Stokoe . A man falls m love with a. o s~n ~:1 erre to h1c 1

1nscy rc- pupcrvtsor d o,

1 1e. a1 ways 1 c,esstve y wasd ~torekccpcr at. a home <·n (;ower Street at 21 5 was stationed.

, or< on J. Kaplan. I thmplc and marries the whole por . t was an ones sllr\'e)'. rnme an "ountam rcgwns, I· ort Rouge an franscona. , 1-'. r ,t , ut the hlale Dr LA .. Perlin gmecolonist woman. lie said that anxiety. by n humble mnn,'' he said, "butl'with headquarters in Winnipeg.; In !958 he returned to head· P·"1'1· hncmdel PI

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b · · ~ • · 1 Ill' · d h · Th 1 · · ' . 11'1 1 t c ry poll'< rr ex In· ~. ;tetncwn. told students· rtddcn mod~m . man related t tc pu IC )umc o~ .'m m hob- e popu ar offtctal was hon- ~ q~artcrs. m ~Iontrcal to he uiohcr There ts a lack of sc~ · se~ual rclatwnslup to power nail hoots for ubhshmg unalat·: orcd here yesterday afternoon· Commod1lles and Pnces Analyst g ·

m :\orth American : nnd prestige ''or else he defends: able truths." 1 when Regional CN Stores De· I and that year attended the I ---

Soldier Jlutchin:s IS stayin~ with his fam1ly \\l11lc on lca\C in the \\'est Coast City.

. sion that it takes a long. drnwn · out le~al process to have a dog shot :n such cases. But an Act pa"cd by the lrgislaturc sever· al years ago states that when a <.log ltitrs a person the dog t·an he done awav ,;·ith without further ado. • ·

Ttvo

Keel3 Laid .and tl:erc is no ade· 1 himself from life and Got!; The conference covered all as- p~rtme.nt employees presented icompany's staff college at Len· TO Adj'Udicate 1

!ex education." :through isolation which Jeadslpeets of sex and religion nndl h1m With a coffee tallle and stl· ,noxville Que. His promotion to M I lliOJfett The keels of two new lon~· Perhn prc.lcnted the .Jew·' to anger. guilt, a feeling. of i was considel'ed highly successful l'er tray. Last night in' the Regional General Storeket•per : or ey fl 1., : lincro were recently laid ;,t the

fiOmt of I'IC\1'. Jewish fami- II worthlessness 'and warping of; by the students, ·.vho said I hey BrunswiCk Hotel he and Mrs.! here took effect March I, 1960. Drama Festival ~!ary<toint ship yard. .-\not her dtalt more !rankly with spirit." . . I had learned a great deaL The Lang were guests of Stores of·! Last night's banquet guests . M yo o~ B r· ves;cl Will be completed soon.

!ilutali_on than members of i He said that christianity had five delegates attending from ficials from St. John's Nfld. to: included T. A. Cook, St. John's . --. . ' . a r II u In There ~as been a number of the Chn!han faith, he said. I a great awareness of sex. Im·. Memorial were Shirley Andrews· Edmundston N.B. at a testi-:Nf)d.; Laval St. Pierre, Halifax; ISamed Saturda) 10 ?Halla as· same type longhncrs completed Jl\l'ilh religion has no con· i ~rtance. was .laid on absten-

1 St. John's, Ralph Mitthews, St. monial banquet at which anoth· ·A. Allard, fairl'iew; Bernard adJUdicator for the );cwfound: i __ :at th~ ~larystown yards 111 re·

or ongmaJ sin. I hon.. Jud1ac rchgwn wasnot so~ John's, Jeanette Badcock. St. er presentallon was made. ~Melanson and Frank Whyte, land cornpetlt!on of the Dorn ! BURl~. :\fld. (CP) -:- This. cent years. Sutno 1 d strict and others had a broader! .John's, Dea~e Press, St. John·s Mr. Lang joined the Raih~ay Sydney; Emil Doucet, Charlot· 1Gmo~Dr.~n~B~esll~l l\as D~lld;town in southeastern Newfound· I Right now there are 18 men

11 c ge was absor~ed I approach. i and Joan Anilrews, C('rn'er Brook. nearly 36 years ago as an off1ee tctown; B. S. Miller, Saint John; . ar mel • pro ucer, wn cr, • land, without a mayor and coun·l engaged on longhner construe· ~nd early by Jew1sh "Most Americans have sex In 1 They were the younga<t delegates

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! boy the Stores Department at J. M. Fontaine, Campbellton; E. producer of stage plays and ad-~ cil since last ~lav, elected one! lion and another half dozen en· · aught .by Jewish the head anti thnt's not the' attending the conference. Montreal after completing his LeBlanc, Edmundston all Store- JUdlcator. Friday. The form'cr mayor and gaged in cutting timber for the

lta~"~.;:bbts, ~oun~s- [place for it," Dr. Well said.'· / Mr. Hans de Boer, G~neral Sec. education at Saint John N.B. keepers and the following lllr. ·Gardiner will adjudicate council resigned dter a dispute vessels. With t. fam1ly. ~1fer Dr. ~raser N1chols~n .of Hal!·rrctary of the Stuuent Christian! and there he .. prog~cssed Stores Personnel f~om Moncton: in Prin~e Edward Island on:with the provincial go\'ernment Some of the longlin~s have

l!t! a slronBtble tra1mng fax. sa1d that western mdoctn- 1 Movement at Hallrax nrrlves in through vnnous ~os1hons m ~he I M1ss Andrea Thibodeau .. An· March 9-11; Nova Scotia on. over installation o£ a sewage been built under the F1sher1es :· under t ler education nation of shame makes a child 1St. John's on Wetlne.-<.Iay,' Jnnu· department servmg as Jumor thony Vtcnneau. R. H. Selig, W. 1 ~!arch 15-18 and JSewfoundland isystcm. New mayor IS ~lorley ·Development Plan· of the Gol'· . 1

san< mg of holy, ~oneeal its sex behaviour from j ary 26th, to address the SCM -, I" . 81 1

R. Morton. 0. Melanson, R. A. i March 22·25. i Hollett. j ernment. Perl: t ld l1ts parents, but he claimed that group at a dinner to be held at 0 'ce otter Gaudet, W. B. lilt !ton, .1. I.. A. 1

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frank':n; the students· sex. investigation is normal .be· the Bamboo Gardens. Mr. De llllclanson, M. S. Irving, Ralph to sex unashamed re· i hav10ur. and far from gettml! Boer will speak of hi• travels in . Kerr, H. E. Corkum. Fred

questions are es· i excited about it. parents should Africa and Asia. . E1ght .arrests were made by ; Sonier, S. C. Dobson and

Four arrests were for drunken- : I, CitY pollee over the weekend. i Murray Colpitts.

. . ·' ness, one for drunken driving, i ----·" .. - .. __ _

1 one for impaired driving, and' CO~IPLF.TF.S RECRUIT

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; one for theft. COURSE

I Obituary \ From the Giosgow Herald I ·friday, Jan. 6th., 1961.

HENDERSON - At Craig Dunain Hospital Invtrness, on 4th Jan. 1961 Emily Greig Hen· tlerson (formerly of St. John's, Newfoundland) helovcd sister o£ Alice, and Aunt of Mrs. Alexander Robertson, 37 Alta· dale Road, Inverness, Scotland, and the Rev. James Boyd, Gamrie, Banff. Service at Craig­ton Crematorium, Glasgow,! Jan. 7th.

OBITUARY Miss Emily llenderson

; Miss Emily llenderson was a I niece o( the late Mr. and Mrs. Charles Henderson of "Gowan Brae," Topsail Road. She spent many happy years in St. John's

I and was a great admirer of Jter 1 adopted country, and made Private Walter Coady, 17, I many friends while here. She son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter I returned to Scotland on the Coady, 68 Colonial Street, St. I p~5sing of her Aunt and made John's, has successfully com· 1 her h11me in Inverness, Scotlafld pleted a 20-wcck recruit I w1th her "ain folk." Mahy course at the Hamilton Gault

Newfoundland friends visited Barracks In Edmonton. Now h~r there and were assured tor a trained soldier, Pte. Coady a fine welcome. The writer and will be posted to the 2nd her many other friends join in j Battalion, Princess Patricia's sincere sympathy to her sister , Canadian Light lnfantr~· in Alice and niece Mrs. Louise' l·:dn)onton. lie attended St. Robertson and other members j1 .i'alrlrk's Hnll High !iehonl. • of the family. · (National Defence Photo) ·

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TilE DAILY 1\'EWS, ST. JOH:\''5, NFLD., \10:\'., }A\. -....;.;;.:..~~

THE DAILY ./VEWS IN THE NEWS By ~'Look--Uh---You Fellows Are Using · +he Wrong Technique" Newfoundland's · Only Morning Paper

S 12.00 per annum .~:United Kingd•lm *. and all forr.\J!n ~,;: countries S\4 OU per annum 1; Authorized Bl sCLiind cla~s mail, ; Post Office Department, Ott:wa.

The DAU l' NEWS ts a morning piper e•t»bh·hed tu 18114, and pub· lisb~ at th" ~ew• B•1ilding, 355-359 Duckworth Street· St. John's,- New luundlund, bt Rubln..\:n & Company Limited.

M~MBEP OF THE C:\NADl\N PRESS

The Canllt!i;Jn Pr.:>s is exclusively entitled to ttw u~c for repuhlicutiun ol all new~ ·!esJ)lltd1es. in this paper ~r~:dit~d to it 01 tv the t\ssllciuled Press or Re'Jters aud ulso the local .1ews· publlstll'd therein.

All Press Sarvice! and teature arhcb in th1s paper ure copyri~:ht cd and· theit reproduction is pro­hibited.

• I ~t.:mher Audil Bura1u

11 Circulation. .. _.. ____________________________________ ~ __ _. __________ _ ;:: MONDAY. JANUARY 23, 1961 '. .. • ~: ... A · Very Constructive Conference .. There was good c:ausc to be sccp­

ti~l in the beginning about what fObld be achieved for the comprc­ftensive planning of the soc:ial d~elopment of the Baie Verte pertinsula by a conference of more than 200 people.

was -possible for the provinc:ial planners to estimate the growth of population for the whole region over a period of 15 yea,rs. Their foreca:;ts included the growth of towns on a· rapid scale with Spring­dale and Baie Verte each having more than 5,000 people by 1976.

• NEWJ<'OUNDLAND IN 1961 (6) \Ve • have been discussing the major

public services in the light of current costs and future needs. When we come to roads·we arc up againt a neces>ity. A century ago, it was realized in Newfound· land that roads were indispensable lo development. Then the need was to open the counlry to agriculture. But lo· day highways have larger economic a111l major social functions and arc \'ital to proGrcs. The total mileage of motor. able road has been doubled since 1949 but the programme is not complete. Im· portant gaps must be filled. Much u'ed ron.ds must he paved for the sake of cffi· dency and e~onomy cf upkeep. Isola! ion in many areas has yet lo be brok.en clowa 'fhe Trans·Canada Highway will ncv1•r ful[ill its real part in the promotion ol provincial. interest; until il h;1s hcrn completed to the required otand;ml:-.

Wa11farer n•current maintenance cost. The finan­('ial burden is growin6. On :he one side is the urgent necessity of completinl 1 he hi;:hway system. On th•! other side is the necessitY ol finding the means by whicl1 the additional work can , he done and the increased maintenance costs provided. The sources of funds in relation to the obvious needs of the times will he considered in another article.

Another expensive item in th1 annual requirements of the province IS

the sul>sidiz.1tion of municipalities. As the number of local government units incrcasco and :~s their Ia>; co\lcclions rise, the provincial ol>ligaLons also in· t'll'u>c. Each municitJality receives from !he provinci:JI gov!'l"nmcnt a proportion of its l"C\'Cnucs calculated on a dimin· ishin~-: sliding scale. But the province has aho h;HI to a:;sumc sul,stantial con­tingent capital liabilities in behalf of ~omr local -;:uvcrnmcnls. In some cases, it may he ultimately necessary lor the province to carry the scnice charges on ;ome of these loans. Over and above lhis. special capital or rc~"enue needs hal"c to be met. The cit)· of Corner Corner llrook requires a much larger annu;d grant from the prJvincial gov· rnunc11l. ll;mlly any local council hal the l"CI'CnUe rr'OUrces that Will enable 1t to mrrt all the costs of providing ade· qualc municipal scrnccs.

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The fears, as it turncclout. were groundless. This was a very con­structive and V<!luable gathering which got right down to husiness, lQl\t little time in diversions, and ap~roached the whole problem fro1n a realistic standpoint.

It was disappointing that nobody from the Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation was able to contribute to the discussion but the housing question should be soluble through the present pt·ovisions for rural construction which allow building' of homes on unserviced land under certain conditions. Sev­eral town councils operate already within the region. By making pro­vision for a country or regional council, many of their problems could be dealt with more satisfac· torily than on a piece-meal ·and small community basis.

Roads still lo br htult include the ~cction between Port S;mndcrs and Brig Bay on the nortlmcst coast. the roal from Gander Bay inlo (;amb· Airport, lhc linking up ol additional communilies in the llaie Vcrtc pcnin· sula to the highway that goes to lhc Trans-Canada and a road from Roddi~k·

ton to Engler. The \WY fact lhat we have so grcnlly extended the hi~hw;•y system is a reason fur continuing road construction. We hare come very far but not quite fm· enough. Special 1lc· vrlopmcnl roads ;ore particul:orly need· ed, among them that from the south coast lhrou~h the main land mass of the island lo the railw:~y nr:~r B1shop"s Falls.

on"r thin~ seems apparent. \\'c have reached a sla~e where a measure ol stocl;l;~king IS required and when nil srrvirrs that .have set to be supplictl will he rated on a scale of urgency and appropriate priority. There arc certain t·osh in which l he federal government should h~ >haring to a mw:h larger ex· trnt. There arc others that arc im· porlanl and may nevertheless be de· ferred until the means of laking care of thrm can he found. The Slmple fact is that we cannot have all we want at once and that we must seck through all nwans that arc available on a reason· ahlc and logical basis to provide the in­dispensables and to set up an order of precedence for the provision of those thin~s which cannot be financed in the immediate fulurc. The consideration ol these things leads us to the overall problem of provincial finance which will he briefly rc\'icwcd in the next article.

What Others Are

A good deal of the credit must go. to the planning division of the De· partment of Municipal Affairs It was ready with detailed informa­tion on every point. And credit Is also due the chairman, Dr. Rowe, who kept the discussions ·to the agenda on an efficient basis.

It was, however, a most import­ant feature of the conference that it was dealing with questions of facl. At the recent welfare conference, too many abstractions were invo~­ved. That was inevitable because so much that was under discussion was a matter of opinion. The Bale Verte regional discussions centred around things that. could be deal~ with on a practica I level. Mineral development is, of course,

the primary factor. On the strength of the reports from the representa­tives of the Boy len and Johns· Manville interests, it was possible to assume that total employment in the mining industry of the region would reach 1600 and thi~ would rrsult in a . substantial amount of additional work in the so-called tertiary or service industries. The outcome of fishery operation::: at La Scie were less predictable. But with the Hall's Bay littoral included, it

The matter of local taxation was disclosed in the light of indications that this might be high if the cost of servicing land was to be largely paid by the users. ):Iowever, there is provision at the moment for the payment of taxes in kind and many citizens might well consider this a useful means of providing for their housing needs.

However, the important thing at the moment is that the intention is to take all useful and essential steps to provide for the orderly growth of the region and the major com­munities within its boundaries. The general decisions of the conference must be followed up by the appoint­ment of a nwnber of. committees to oversee all phases of the work that must be done. A good start has been made. The right follow up is now required.

Lumber Is lmhortant Industry Articles in the year-end edition ago by the Canada Ba.v · Lumber'

of the Daily' News reveal that Company about 300 men have been although little is heard of the lum- working. ber industry, it remains an import- The Forestry Commision indical· ant segment of the economy in the ed that there are' some large stan"ds distribution of ·labour and in total of pine on some of the timberlands value. , owned by the paper companies.

The Royal Commission on Fores- These have not been available to try which reported a little more mill operators. Whether any spec­than five years ago had suggested ial effort has been made to harvest that the maximum quantity of Jum· some of this pine is uncertain. Sixty ber cut on crown lands should Mt years ago, a Scottish , operator, exroeed 50 million board feet a year .. Lewis "Miller, whose name is per· The output is actually well within petuated in Lewisporte and Miller­this limit. In 1959, the last year for town, brought out Swedish woods­which complete' statistics a:-e now men to work in a large mill which available,,th~ production was above had' a capacity of 40 million feet a 44 million feet. .This h$d a value year but it was found that much of of well over three million dollars. the pine was · over-mature and

This quantity was sawed in l,fi91 would not lend itself to economic licensed mills; many of which are exploitation; amaH and crude. The license fet! in .. As things stand, the industry 1959 was $10 but this was increased seem!! limited to a production from in 1960 to $20 for ·the season. But Crown lands of not more than 50 ~bile the fee is low, the contribu· million feet b14r there. is scope tton of the .Industry to seasonal within that undertaking !or a con­employment is subst~ntial. Many • siderable improv'ement in quality in of those who take part lire . svlf· areas where good saw-logs nre to be employed but a few large mills are hat!: Mr. Chester Dawe .has set an also operated. For example, In the· example in· this respect with. the cuttin.R - and milling operations modern mill that is in use at Rod-established at Roddickt<>n t!Vo years dickton. ·

Progress ·.At Wabush terpriae at the ·Twin Fall$. It is mllldng steady headway to·w.rds its aOAT' of full development.

S.UU: BEIE BalUmort Sun

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But r~ch new mile of road that i, built lays ito special claim on m:ointcn ance funds. A dozen years ago even sudt much-used roads ;1s those hciWcl'll St. John's and Grand· Bank and ~l.

John's and llonarisla were r~g;m\rd only as summer highw:~ys. llcforc lon~ the demand for all provincial highways to be maintained as all-weather roads became irresistible. That has meant Jar~c expenditures on snow-clearance and often on repnir and reconstruction in the spring. The result is that h1gh· way maintenance has risen to an annual cost of 58 million. That coot will in· crease as more roads arc built. In fad. every million dollars spent on capilal needs involves a recurrent charge to service lhe borrowing and a further

EDSON • lll W ASHING'JrON

SPADEWORK FOR KE:":"<;EUn; POLICIES \\'AS EXJIAUS'fi:-;G TASK

By I'ETER EDSON

WASIIINt..:TON, (:\EAJ-As Prr,i· !lent Kennedy worked on ~is inangnrnl messngr, !here was r\'cry cxpcclation 1i1at he would oullinc complete!)· hotll his fon•ign and domestic programs.

Then would follow a whole series of congressional hearings at wllich new cabinet officers and independent agency heads will be asked to explain in detail what the new President's broad pro· grams mean and how they will work.

These sessions may run all through February while Congress and the new administration get acquainted and e'· lablish their working relationships for the years ahead.

In this process. nobody is going to be in greater demand II1Dn Secretary of State Dean Rusk. There arc crises to lace in Cuba, Laos and the Con~o. There are new Russian negotiations to begin on disarmament, nuclear test bans and United Nations affairs. All foreign aid programs have to be reviewed and re· vised. Days and nights won't be long enough to get it done.

WHEN REORGANIZATION of lhc olfice of secretary of slate was being studied by tho American Assembly last fall, two of the key questions were how to give ilim more time to do his joh and how to Improve his relations with Congress.

When the late John Foster Dullrs was secretary of state, it was estimated he had 6 to 12 of these sessions every month Congress was in town.

When foreign aid and military assist­auce appropriations were before Con­gtess, he often had to tell the same story lo four or eight diffe-rent sup· commitlees and answer similar question~ from as many commitleemen in separate se.~sions.

On the avcrag~. he spent the equil'al· enl of one full day a week talking to committees.

THIS IS THE PROBLEM the Amrri· can Assembly group of 75 State Depart· ment officials and cx·officials, · profcs· aon, business leaders and assorted ex­pert and thinkers put their brains to work on. Included in lhe group were Ruak: new head of state's pollcy plan· ninl starr, Gti!rge C. McGhee, new as­alstant Secretary of Defence Paul H. Nltze; new Ambassador to Londf~ti Da\'id K. E. Bruce and others.

Harlan Cleveland-dean of Syracuse Unlveralty'a eraduate school of public affairs, a former Marshall Plan admin· latrator frequently mentioned for a for· elan and post in the Kennedy adminis· lratlon-came up with the idea that there should be only one annual review of forel1n policy for Congress at the

ings, The plan didn't gel l'cr:' far.

IT W.\S RECO(;~IZED that secre· lJrirs of stale and their assistants are tunpurary-four to eight :fears at the most. Con~rcssmrn with seniority necC5· .'ary In get on foreign policy commit· tees arc far more perman1~nt-lO to 20 years of scr\'ice.

These congressmen arc channels of rummunicalion between the public and the State Department. Often the con· grcssmcn have a better feel of public approval or disapproval or a policy than career diplomats. Also. "it was consider­ed guod for the secretary to hal'e to ex· plain his policies and answer congress· men's questions about them. It made him think more.

A further disad\·antagc was cited in trying to ha\"c the secretary of ~tate

answer only to joint committees. They're lou b1g and unwic!dly. Jlavinc the secre· lary report only to party policy com· miltees to get tighter dis:ipline would not work c1thcr. It would mean merely an extra chore for the sec:ctary.

For when some new cri!is arose, Sen· ale Forei~n Relations ami House For· eign Affairs Committees would want to hear about it direct from the secretary, just as they have in the past. So it isn't likely that the present !ystem of re.' pcnted reports to Congress-cumber· some thought it is-will be changed.

Strength for Today By EARL L. DOUGLAS

LOOKI:\G UPWARD Arc !here people on ether planets?

,\stronumers tell us that there are a hun· dre!l 'tllou~an!l million llillion heavenly hollies. Around the innumerable stars 1nay h1• mnumerahlc planets, and on thl•.,e planch may exist liling beings.

If "u, arc they like us? About that we can only speculate: The flying saucer phenomenon is not to be :aughed ofl or tossed over one's shoulder. We arc probing the heavens, I! th~rc arc people on olhcr pl~nels is it not likely that lhey are probing also~ People who are ~ceplical about thi~ ~ort of thing lrl!

people who have never given It any ~tuuj'. Great scientists like Tombuauch, Oberth, Urey, and others 1o not dlJmiu ·unexplained celestial phenomena with a. shrug of the shoulders. The sceptic speaks from an abyssmal ignorance. No one has any real knowledt:e on tbiJI sub­ject, but wise men belle1e that of all the billions of planets which undoubt­edly resolve about stars resembl.IDg our own sun, life in some fonn must exist.

Home ownen iD Baltimore may re­lltlt "their property tuee, but few of thelll ever pay enouah to eoyer the coati ol ihtlr bueflW ill municipal aervlcea. The \IX 011 u 1¥11'111 boUle dOfl not btllll to ...., tM 001t or a child In deal. POUH Dd lire protlction, trasb ~· trltfle CDntroll and Jlbrary, lllllepJ Ill( .1'tett1Uoa prlvilel•• . • • Tilt .Jrll-... t~1t make up the mi·

; "bealnniDII of" i!ach session.

What does this mean tc• us phyaleally mentally, and spiritually? Physically It undoubtedly means that much more will be known about the heavenly bodlea In the next· few decades. M•!Dtally It may mean that our wisdom may grow In an unprecedented measure I~ life Ia •• widespr~a!l throughout tl1e universe as we think it is. Morally ;,nd spiritunlly­ahnut thrsr results we !l,• not know. Dut we can view the future with calm·

· ..._ teftelt an tilt eommertlal and lllhiiCrial atrveturta.. Tllese are wh•t ...,. ettt Wll'ltHII ttl tax books to !up· port f live!; Mid proaressive city i<iv· .....

It ahould be given to all committees con~rnttl with foreign affairs In joint aeslllon, The report made Mre should be aenerol and not in dcloil. The specifics wauld be left to undcrscerc· tirlts and assistant secretaries · ~nd lower experts Cor an~wer~ In later hear. .,.

JUST 1\'ATURAL Brandon Sun

California scientists arc trying to find why people grow old. In our case the years have something to do with it.

SACRif'ICE Woodstock Sentinel-Review

An eminent sociologist says love and marriage won't mix. Either most couples didn't know this. or they loved ca~h other so much they were 'l'illin;: to >ac­ritice their lol'e on the altar of matri mon)'.

TIIIR D IN AID Ship-Shore News

Canada ranked third and Holland fifth _in the list of countries \"ldUnlarily con· tribuling to lhe l'nitctl :'\ations aid pro. gr;.m for underdeveloped countrie; 1n 1959. (United Stales and the l'nitcd Kingdom ranked first and second; France fourth). Holland aho ranked fifth among 80 countries in the per capila contribution. the first fouc plac~s hcing taken by the three Scandinavian coun· tries and Canada.

WILL IT I.AST? Windsor Sta'

Ottawa's new mayor, Ci1arlotte \\'hit· ion, named Canada's ne,,·,icst wo1nJn of the year and r.olcd for l:cr hapicr-likc tongue. has taken a ;';ew Year's resolu. lion. It is !hat she won't he voted the noisest woman in I961.

~liss Whitton intends to follow as faithfully as she can the third verse of the 141st Psalm. That \'crsc: "Set a watch, 0 Lord, before my moulh: keep the door of my lips.'!

All the hest to Miss Whitton and may she keep her good intcr.tion. llul one can't help but feel that her resolution won't last out the monlh.

BREEDS ~lA:'\J..\

Toronto Financial Post There arc now good and clear reasons

why Ottawa should reconsider ils no­recognition policy towad Red China,

We do not say that Canada should accord immediate diplomalic recognition to Peking.

But it is high lime that at least we reco~:rize that China in isolation is " .threat to peace-and hring this fact of life home to the AmcricJns.

In the first place, we should talk more seriously with the Cnine!e about trade. There is now a three-mar. buying group from Red China in Canada.

Next, Canada should m~ke up its mind to take an independent stand at the ne):l V. N. sPssion on the question of having Red China membership put on the agenda.

Embarrassingly, and possibly to the regret of some of our diplomats and delegates, Canada meekly voted with the U.S. against inscribing the question on the 1960 U.N. agenda.

But ihe climate for det is ion on China 'is chunging fast. Red China member· ship is going to be placed on the agenda next time anyway, thanks to the African voles-and admission will come wiiJy. nilly in a year or two. It is obvious, also, that the Kennedy people arc doing some deep thinking about China-and they are going to make r.ome changes.

It is dangerous, let it be granted, to keep China outside the society of nat· lonJ. Just as an individual in solituy conflnemtnt can become mentally un· bal1nced, evtn maniacal, the Chint!e are indulclng In flntuies that are PlY· chotlc. They are, for example, flnnly convinced that they could survive a third world war (though they would be more vulnerable to bacterloloilcal attack than Industrial powers) nnd would hap. plly Inherit a desolate er.rth at the end of hoatllltles.

It Ia clear that It Ia no longer to U.S. advantage to officially Ignore the 600 million Chinese. Reco'gr.ltlon or Red · China by the U.S. will, however, take 1ome time If for no other reuon than the necmlty to reshapn U. S. public opinion which has been constantly bar· raged with hate-China c 1mpalgns.

ness, for a God of Jove ;-,1!es the uni­\"Crse and all thinGs ·~xist together under hia power .

It >Ccms \"Cr)" likely intlce~ th;: intelligent example set h' l'a:~a~a .. be welcomed pri1 ately I• I" ll:c · . administration wl11ch h~- hcen lnto a \'Cry tight rurner 111anks last atlmir.istratwn's 1Jca~-ir. policy.

I!.C's \'JEW Ul" B.\SIS Toronto Tclc'!l o:"

:\ ro) i:l colnmi~sion in Bntt,h bia joms the chorus of tiw-c ·•h mand a more d'H'iplllletl and:· curriculum. It reconlllltllli• 11:;: lie ;chcol pupil> he r"q:•.;rd 1o 1<: a longer day. a longer tcr:~~- ta;.e more IHJillt\\'nrk ;uHI r:·n~·· ·:1~.:: . hard core suhjrcb such ,, mJthrmalic.; ~nd F.1:~li'll

A:. J furl!1rr addition 111 :i:~ ciplincu life. lltl' rom:•, ... •:n

that pupils l>e told h; >lliloi ·: what clothin~ lo wear.

But life Js Jl•)t ~o -:.imp1l' ;~' !t~

tinl"\ion hctiiC~n hardnt'' .,,; :-:" would make it. If alllh:•: I· "".ru·.:

the heat gu;craiion L' lhal 11"·: ::. ru;:::~cd rnuu.:..:IJ. thrn tllr a!l''.IC'r..:

:ual;c them the lic:ll·liP ·;•·::r::-:.; re;or them up n;,Jitor.' formatoncs. Thi.- is :-:.rn:~~-

Thc ideal n:mcul11111 shotdd .:: . . pcoplr 1rh<> ;ore tou:h nu::lt•! '·.: produce i1 ll<1:1nn uf c:-.:·:!':·,e ncca~sarily lou~h TiH•y >ll,,:lld ::: n.undetl cil i~cn'. cd 11 cal i o na I a Ill!' addition to tile school d:1:: Jl<tl :er.: required.

!low ran the youn~ l'c-: c:'' re;H:h their moral and J!l 1 t :i ·r!:.:: tun~·.' Thl' ;m~wer p:·o;ui·ty E:• .: I

halanccd curriculum. ,lrc.•,:r.: :(,ols hut :tllnwin~ uppurtun::~c!

lhc mil to Jearn ~ct.• alkl:<>.iiC f:l;

Auld Lang Syne

tfrom the Files c•f ll:t· !>.,d1 ~r'' JA:'Iil'ARY ~3. 1!131.

Ool( ~Jenacc: Do~' tountl •·~. Cilv Streets after dark .,, :II. :he Co~ncil decided, be dc,:r".' cd. :te lary Committee reported h~r:~:

conference with the SI'C\ 111 ·with I he dogs roaming the <lree:! distribuiing the contents of pails.

• • • First 'Plane On Brll l•lanrl. The

'plane landed on llcll l>l:md at 33) afternoon. coming down on tht ion Farm at the back of :he Commg in from the Eastward. t~e .· made a pcl'fect landinf. This 15, first time in the history of tte a 'plane has landed thcrr. T~e from Mount Pearl occupied :en ·

• • • lllnesse~: The Mctlil'<ll Ofl:cer

llealth reported on the illnc;s of employees of the sewer and . staff at the Council meeting. ~0

cases of infectious diseases were ported for the week. At prcscr.t arc in hospital scl"cn cases uf and five of scarlet fever.

' JANUARY 23. !916. f

BOlt Launched: The launrhin> 1

new boat "Investigator The took place at Claren\"ille )rsterdal inK. The boat was built at lht ment Shipyards at Clarenl"iile for Department of Natural Resoorc!i

• • • Attacked By Dog: An atllck

strange dog caused Mis lsabtUt school teacher, Thorburn Road a terribly painful injury was aa the enraged animal tore 1

wound 4 . Inches across her ltg. matter was reported to the !&If

ties and the beast will be • • •

Herring Fishery: Tlie season~ ring fishery In the Bay of isJan been more or Jess or a gamble ~ fishermen hunting scattered scb(!O fi~h ~~ lhcy \Jppcarcd in various Th~ Fall herring fishery i5 no-'

to : of tl

over hE She lo·

beds !hat it · she of rai

The dt open, the P

of frig~ her m•

around l are ym

Yot said

night. ~ sort o(

that I

return realizec gently

rain. "T meeting

They b)' thE

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'ng

11 1' B.\SIS ram

-~ Bnttsh

· :: lw~t ~row

·,I ln'el'~rtual · ~.•uably lies in

stressing ; ·!:nrtun1ties . a:lrquatc play.

11f1 ·~

:h<' Uaily ~ewsl :!l. 1931.

<s found on :ark wrll. the dr~lro,·ed. the rtcd ha1·in' bill ~PCA in :~t: the streell atents of

.. wn on the ork of the ~:astw~. the .ding. This :<tory of tbe · thtre. The

rupied ten . .

NEWS. ST. ·NFLD., MON., 2.3, 1961

J.~~=-=o::::;...-=:;.u~· r--=L~~IY '

5 1s rUE rtR

1teppelln. I the actual plays, W ~ are shown

£\PL011 har~ rrrcntly come·-· In MONSTERS OF THE PUR- how to grip \he· baH. how to I IJOO~ •• Libr:or; for those' I'LE TWlLIGHT Ernest Dudley stand, how to control our foot·

GOS 10~\'i ,:ion 1 describes the first air-attacks work, how to make tbe different . 10 \' r·

5 OF THE ever made on a ~lt., from the deliveries - the noolc·ball, the

cal~ed Fr~yn -, urnt'r, con· viewpoints of attacken and .d~ push away, and the- follow-t• J& 0 ie< of ~p th1rty-two fenders. Much of the story IS through. 1~1 >W ~n wnn receive~! based on official documents, log· Day was five times Worlll's In·

a1rmmi\itJo'l' recognition books, correspond~·~,.~- and inter· dlvldual Match Game· chanlplon. , r:cremein bra;rry and de· views with German Zeppel!n READ THE LABEL t<ll''and/ Jnclurkd are not, commanders and the British fly. NEVER FORGt:T ro READ

I& d~ ;,·known txnloils of 1 ers who fouiht them. The work THAT LABEL w1rns the Food iht it ~nd t. ,,-:1ard Ches· also traces the history of these and Drug Directorate In a pnm r,~~~ ;e of lc~ser·known "monsters" frC?m th~ early days phlet which describe, how it, t<J: ~tJ> l\~ 0 ,,rth Camp of 'thei~ conception bv Count von checks on the manuh,clure. ~lc-!

,u.rvelorrl ,\w Gneisena'' Zeppehn in 1847. ensl.ng, labelling and adverUsmg ,!J(l 10.•ht. of 10 trct. racing BOWLING of food and drugs. · a ~~· (lak <nips nt mast Ned Day's method o! showing This directorate ts part of the I

t c . you' now TO BOWL BEil'ER Department of NalioMI Health I lh r h••'" c<•c~ further: consists of a ~cries of word .. de· and Welfare; Its busircss is •o

. '1 ~,c

10 1: ,' l'ra or the' scription~. with photograplu of see lhst tood sold ip Canada i~ 1

· 1!1 1 pure• clear and wholesome. and· that drugs may be . safely used for the purposes lor which they are recommended.

XXXI themselves from nose to mouth,

p!'ncd .h~r eyes think· "I can do any errands you need

~Ull sllll be nighttime. Janet." -11 m was a dark gray, and "I'll real\y go crazy cooped ~ed 01·rr on her side. to up here," Janet said. "I've just \)Irk 10 ;\CCI' when recol· two packages to pick up, and

of the mght before I'll come right home. I'm fine

01er her like a menacing this morning, Mother."

Shr Jookcrl at the clock "Let me call Marian. l seem

FROZEN .BAIT I In the Novemha; issue of

TRADE NEWS J. J. Quigley de-~ scribes the bait service used by Newfoundland fishermen. This . consists of. a numner of station· 1

ary depots, several 1 efrlgerated ; truck, portable bait-holding units, i and the vessel "Arctica." 1

Fishermen In the old days I days used to prese~va their bail by buying stocks of ratural ice. I Often, says Mr. Quigley, "they augmented Ice supplie~ by cut. I ling It from cliffs or Icebergs." I

QUOTATION •

. '

·---· .. ~-- ·- -· - ................ .., ... :....::: , ~rd51dc table startled, \o rem~mber that she was :;rthal it 11Js nearly noon. I thinking of going Into White • she heard the soft Plains today from something

cf ra 1n un the window· Gene said." Before Janet could Tie door to her room protest, Mrs. Graham had dial· &~en. and. she cowered ed a n,?mber and Janet Us· the p1l10"; 1n a resurg tent'd. . . . . wants to go to

"I wrote somewhere once that 1

the thlrd-r41le mmd was only i happy when. It w~s thmking with the majority, the 'second-rate' ' . . ' . • .. mind was only napp~ when it i PWC DINNER-Thrs IS an overall shot of the gathcrm;:: of more than LJO teachers. ;::ue'>ls ntHl lrrcaHis o[ the schools that attended was thlnkinl!." i the Annual Princ.c of Wales Jlnlloway School Dinner ;::i\·cn by the t:nited Church Colle[!c Hnard. Dr. 11. Roherls. Chairman of th• ·

t~~· :~~e'or Quol~tions \Board, was chnir'man for the evcninJ!. and he called upon sev<"ral ;::ucst spcakrrs to address the r:athcring. Also in attendance were •

of fn&ht uulil she recog· White Plains. 1 thought miiY· her mother's head peep· be Marian ... yes, I see. Thank

Jltlwnd the door. "Mother. you. Gene. As a matter of fact art 1ou doing here?" she seems quite well."

i·ou're awake," Mrs. Janet did look better than ~id. "Gene called me she had in some time.

n:lhi. He said you'd had All the way to White Plalna sort of scare and thought she rehearsed speeches. tried

thai 1 stay 1nth you for out veiled hints and open refer· or so unul you fell bet· ences to the night before. prae·

)Irs. Graham opened blinds tieing her approach to the !1rtld a hathrobe over the driver once she had tracked of tht bed • him down. If she met with no

not tilrrcily to the success In this quarter, she and ran outside in her resolved to flush out Frank

. A lew traces of snow on her return home. r:~~' to the ground. The She finally found a parking ud meltrd under the slow I place . some distance from her

driule of the night be- destination and set out on foot. The footprints were gone. She had been so immersed In rmd at the ground as her own thoughts that she did

!tanng mi~ht make not realize she was on the return to gi1·e evidence, threshold of the cleaning estab·

rr1hzed thJt her mother lishment, and she halted at itt ltntlr pulling her out of ~ide entrance to look around, to

n1n. "Thry're gone," Janet gain a moment's time in which llftUng her mother's blank to marshal her thoughts. She

Tbry musl ha1·e washed was aware that a Sunbeam de· by the time Cliff looked. li1•ery truck stood at the en·

herself to be pro· trance, that' someone loaded there with a cup of bundles and garments onto lt.

She glanced up and frou. ll'hat is wrong with

Don't you believe me? Oiff realile that there

in 1 he house last wouldn't Gene lis·

\\'hat has h'appened

people reserve for a ~ld in a tantrum. neith·

the charge nor af· 11. merely stating that

Gene had found her and no wonder with

h1d had to bear. Mrs. f.raham spoke. insinuai~d his warm

Janet's hand. She his soli hrad. jumping

. when ~he felt the bump ~~ head. ml'isible beneath ~''Y fur She started to Ill her mother to ask her

f!!l iL too. then knew that say no more. It seem·

that no one would to her. That they didn't her-at all. They thought

bid mrked under the of Jason's ordeal. No one

the present danger. She ~~ breakfast docilely while lllldt hrr plans. It was not lor Jason's life that she battled. "1 have to go to

Plains lhi~ afternoon " llid. '

• • •

• • • This was a fl~sh and bl011d

figure before her. It was the red-headed driver, tall as she remembered him. an ordinary man on an ot!linary job of work. She met 'l• eye1, and he raised his hand courteously to hls cap. In a respectful, ulut· lng gesture.

"Good afternoon, Mrs. Hamil· ton."

She stammered some reply, all her c~refuiiY laid plans in wild disorder, her one ·alm to walk past the cleaner'• u though she never. had meant to stop in. He said he would . be seeing her again, and she stumbled on, the blood raclnJI In her head,

The next step was to see Cliff.

She recognized Gerry's old car parked In front of CUff'• apartment and was · grateful. Cliff answerc:_d her ring, no an· swcrlng friendliness on his face. GerrY was on her knee• inside the apartment adjusting tbe holder for the Chrlatmaa tree that BlllY held upright. The three of them looked at her In polite inquiry.

BlllY was the first to re· cover. "HI, Mrs. Hamlllon ..

<To Be Co11tlnued) •

1'ne' U. S. armY rifle which replaces the Garand can fire 12~~ rounds per second.

It :has been estimated there are about 6001100 kinds ·or In· sects on earth. · ·-·- -----

ny Vincent SamuP.I. · ministers of the United Church, the Bnard mcmhcrs and tll('ir wi\'Cs.-(Royal Phnln Scnicc).

I ,

You expect more ... and et it Mercury's not made to be Jn '\~lcrybody" car.

It's for the few \\'ho demand special attention in

comfort and performance. They're alltxted to

'I I b " I I" I t 1c etter car )ec•use it o krs t 1e111 e;.;tr;wa·

gant styling-a i11ore spacious, luxurious interior.

More power, too . .'. thc'6t Mercury t.1kcs every

road in stride. Hclh Marauder V- 8 ennines J ~

letting~krcurysailup the biggest hiiL11ith ease.

:\cld to this ;\\~rcury's special attention to details

of qu,1li<; ... and you'll see "hy \krcur; li,-es

up to ib o\\'ncr's expectations. t\ nc,,· :-.lercury

c1n be yours ... if you c,we enough to 0\\ n ''the

6 better or." Warranted for

19 1t2,ooo miles or one full vear

' ... "hichc,er come~; f;rst. harness po11cr to make it meaningful and safe ...

NIBRCllPtY

' .. -·>-,

Tl-iE .BETTER

CAR

• >~;;{;t1~;;t;:§~!,,~;~ .'

Mercury Monterey 4·Door Sedan-one of Ford of Canada's fine cars ... built in Canada.

AT YOUR MERCURY·METEOR·COMET DEALER Ce1Wn lulu res &llus.trated or me-nlioned ;ue ltandlld on some models. optional Jt utn toston olher•

MUNN MOTORS. LIMITED •

' I

BLACKM'ARS<H ROAD - .Phor4 94061 SPANIARD'S BAY, CORNER BROOK

Sub-pealers: Clarenville, A. Duffin; Ellistqn, Tilley's Garage

/

...

:•

I '• ,• .

... ..i:• . "' '

, I

,., .,

. I

.. '·'

·.

··' I ; '

7 I

i .

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. '

I •

I' .. I •

l The Inside T mck By CASSIE. BROWN

'

Social-11ers(·)nal - ( :,,Itlmn-

Going To Work, Moth~ri

Ponder Effect On Ch

The

BANK oF MoNTREAL

ANNOUNCES

SpecUtTtltmh* FOR

11Sd Su.\iMeM" ~ TO WHOM:

FOR WHAT:

HOW MUCH:

Proprl•tore of mnnufaeturll\l· Nholeaala or rotalllrado, ond .. rvlca antarprlan ~av<nu • oro sa revenue not o•eoodlnl $250,000 per annum.

............................... ! ............................................... .

HOW LONG: MaKimum repaymtnt term: ·10 yeara. ~

UtI I I I I IIIU II II U I I UOO<OOOO ''''" <OUOOOOOO.<OnOOOIIIII flttft If ttlftltUf~tll

WHERE: · eotiA· At any branch of t~o

BANK or Mo e.u«4'JfMI'8aJ

lit. John's Brtndl: FREDERIC P.· BAINES, M111~11

Confederation Blda. Branch: · LL uiJIJI" A. RICHARD BE , '"

Eut End 8raocb: MIJIIJI' . J. HARnEY CUNNINGHAM, ~~ ,

£Iizabeth Ave. W. Branch: GLENN~!~· oucbJI!o tlf!ice1 abo at Blsbop'1 Fall1, Bof'I'UV"• IJ1t· Lomtr Brook. Corner Brook Wt51. Cw:lill-. DH1•1

Woodv Point, Gnnd Falls, BadFer, St. G~rg< ; Stellhenville, Stellhenville Crossin~ and \V ondso

t< e~ L'l"' WOIIIKINO WITH CAN.llliA~S IN EV!IW WAL

---------------·

E

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-

-~SOCJATION :-11an Ladiea

he holding t1on and

11 nuar}' 24th · Bishop Feild :•;Jer will be

~5.

Mother?

.1ther who 1$ · ~er or not to

· job should . Ptghs the . e her children by

· ;:aimt thost she ~y takinl a job.

anl<l&es 'h a 1 1·t !he ryn\r ooef

: ~nt to chi<dcen. .,·en be tht mort ·rs.

·~other w'1o is · on a job lot ::t.··& well tre <he isn't , hildren thaD : o &i,·e them

;TRIAL

.' ,...,uf.ctUrl ... • r•t•ll trade, an•

~"··· , ... s .... ~not ••c•••tnt r annun\. ........... ...• ,_ .......... ~ .,.,rov•m•nt ••

· tmprovom•~••'

'"' 121!1.000· '

»•Y"'ent -.. :" et tile • • 1 ,..

y ~EWS, ST. NFLD. MON. 1961

Bon's In _Second By Art Jackman Knocks !Chicago Win lr wice And feat~ng Bishops 4-1 Off Jack Cranshaw iMo"'e Up On Nlaple Le· a· ~~s-·

f&rst Round Completed Art Ja.:.•:tan knocked Jack Cranshaw out of ~ ' i II \ TV All-Star Bowling Saturday afternoon. After

th marker 11 k f h' C h • • b )' ; CHICAGO - AP. - Chica~o I son hit for the Bruins. a short re>t. Ill 11nt.t·:R , c · d wee so watc mg rans aw wmmng, ow mg

S B ' · Graham Hollt'ban complAte ' 'Black Hawks spotted Boston 1 Referee Frank l:dvari had The win w,a, l)utroit'o tlt1·1·.1 '. · sport> \\'rtter ~ fans were beginning to wonder if the "cracker· ' 0

· ~r''' dcd Bi,hops Col· · the St. Bon's scoring at 9.00 o! :Bruins a two·noal lead in the 1 one of his busiest nighh of the i;1 ntnc games against ~lontreal ~an . · In the last period for a 4·1 finish. jack" would ever be stopped, but on Saturday 'first period. then went on to 1 season calling a total of 20 l'anaclicns th:s sca~un and the dofe•l in semor . . . 8 . 1 d' ' • b Mike Doboney fed the puck to ))' b J k t C h swam11 the Brums ·3 tn a pen· 1 penalties, inc u 111g a I ivc-min· first on ~!ontrral ice. The 11ockrY at t c 1 some pressure ro mg y ac man sen rans aw \\'ale> ,\rena Satur· 1 Hollihan In front of the Bls- to the sidelines. . : alty·filled National Hockey' u~e minor against Chil';qo's Re~ 1\'ings won twice at home and

dc,pitc a brtl·, bops' nets and Hollihan beat ! League game Sunday night. Flemin~ for hi~~hstickm:: and r.Ja,·cd a tte in rach city. H chore hy Bish· i Winsor with 1 low ten footer. Mrs. Bernice Cook registered her third vic- 1 By winning. the Hawks In· ftghting. ·.·;as alsq their first win over

-··~11101 "" 1 Winsor 1 PENALTIES tory in the Ladies' section as she stopped Mrs. 1 creased tlwir hold on third place· Both teams near!'· lost VJ!ll· Hodge. cOroP111·pt;,~~l the f.irsi J The two clubs clashed in a 1 Jeanette Blair. ! to four points over Detroit Red nblc member:< in a coll:ciun he· l'IIICAI';O -- .\P . - C'h:ca;:o

1 1 ft Sl • fast, bard hitting encounter· '\\'it:'''· who were IJeatcn by :-.iew tween gualie Hall and Boston's 31.1ck Hawks pumped four r the loop am c · 1 with 11 minor penalties handed Jackman took a 32 pin lead in the first frame :York Sunday ~ight. The }l;twks · Bronco Horvath. Tile two ~oals into thr 1\'cw York Han-

.1 ,,.,nd p!aec . t ~ .... p e I out. Bishops aervcd six of the of his game with Cranshaw, but saw the 11-weck :trail sccond-piar~ Toronto by bumped when Honatlt was elm· ·:ers' goal durin" the occond

· rh3mpions. nne I sentence• with Alec Yetman I ot· ts ·n~ roll'ng p1 ck · t Clti · I th t t 1 k Oul front on two • winner move out front by 21 pins in the middle seven P n · 1 ~ a ' 1 111 0 • ;JrrtO< · en wcr. on ° a ·e a

areS\. Bon·s with a.' and Bill Wiseman splitting the l' h f' I f d J k ·1. Dou~ .\!ohni Rave the Bruins cago icc and Hall sk;~trd out to 5-3 victory in a National Hocltey

r•cortl :m second. 1 time in the slnbln. The first St. frame. Trai mg as t e mn rame opene ac • 1 a 1-0 lead at 2:39 of the first meet him. Horvath h; d to be Lc:J~ue ~arne Saturday ni2ht.

ho1n1e_'1011 IJoth starts. I Bon's aoal wa• the only one man hit-a mighty 300 score to win the game by 5!l I period with the first shot Bas· helped from the icc hut was II w:~s the Hawks' first triump ' countered with a man off. • I ton got at Hawks goalie Glenn' reported not seriously hurt. ·in ftvc game-' <!nd New York's

l)ohenrr l'rtcr Byrne, ' Having only one third as pms. 1 Hall. fern Flu man made it i DETROIT t APl-Dran Pren- · Lre first loss in ~ix gJrneo and 'r.rahat~ Bolli· I much work as Winsor, St. Bon's Cran!iohaw had 251, 2!i8 and 220 for a 739 total i z.u for Boston late in the first, tire scored three goals anrt Only the play of the R:m·

the, 1~~ ,~;;~~n g~~~~ ' JOHN WINSOR · goalie Ted Rice, never the less while Jackman was hitting for 283, 215 and 300 ; framr with a screened shot young Pat Hannigan two as the .~crs' bouncy lit fir nelnundet· "' made several big saves on dlffl- f h' 798 1 :from the blue line. · hustling :>ew York Rangers won Lornc Cu:np \\'orsley kept the

Sishor, period with Bishops having a cult shots and turned in a fine or IS tota · : A pair of gc,als by Bobby Hull a 5-3 "alional Hol'kc~· League Hawks from having a goal

1 1'1\'C is the I man in the penalty box. Doho· game. Mrs. Cook moved into the lead in iter first . paced a four..goal Hawks' up-: ''ictory o' H Detroit R0d Wings re.1st. The Ycteran ;zoJ!ie kick-. 0

1 ·date ! ney blocked a Bishops' clearing St. Bon's held a big edge in frame with Mrs. Blair, and increased-her ad van- 'rising in the seco.nd which put Sunday ni~h:. d out 49 C'h<cago sltots. whil·~ scorer th~ec as· I play and fired a low.screencd play but lacked goalmoutb tage as the game progressed. Mrs. Cook had 215• 1 the game away. Dr·side I! nil.· Prcn•ice ra:t his ~o.1! output I C!enn fbi! ;n th~ I!Jw!;s' cag~

toal~ ";1dwhilc Don: shot at the goal. The puck de- finish and this plus the top job ·who hit !or his 22nd an<l ~~nl to 13 with h;, cccund Oi~·rnpia 'was forcrd to ~ave only J!l 111 potnl~'l' has two, fleeted off a Bishops' defender I o! Winsor kept the score down. 246 and 228 for 689, while Mrs Blair was posting . goal~ of the se~son, Hawk'' sec· st~clinm ~.,, '"i~k in le<s than :; 11: 1• .

of p 1 ·.for fi\·c, with goalie Winsor geettlng al St. Bon's cleared the puck well 191, 212 and 211 for 614. This had Mrs. Cook win· . ond period scorers were Ab a ,-c~r !lis lin····,o·:·;. An~y t'tn::·~o·s St:1'1 'likita 0 ~c 11 • t~rec sc "i'~f PWC 1 piece of the puck but having !rom their own zone and put up ning by 75 pins. , :t!cDonald and Eric Ncsterenko. Rathgotc and r.rd SH!Ii,·an. os· ··: :hr sc0r:n~ mi:~wa~· in th~

Jim DroHr t '' it slip over the l1'ne a top forecheckln" displav to · Pierre Pilote, Ken \\'harram. <iq~d o'l ~11 t:uw of the ~n~.!s r, .. ,, p•·nd w1t;1 r." J4:h a 0 ; 1\ · f St Bon's : · · b ' Mrs. Mollt'e Grant ... ,·11 be returning to the · h Delane) ~ch · I Exactly six minutes later win the game. ., Ron :.Iurphy and Elmer Vasi;0 ·" the R~r.~rri winrd out a z.o •·f tile '"";o 1t. Hut ~:c·,.,· Yor~'s

points e. ·Roberts Alec Yetman evened the score STARS show next Saturday to meet Mrs. Cook, while · scored !or the Hawks in the firsL'lerio·! flrlrni• "~ad !Jr-cn ;o,·rnlctr knottrrl the s~ore 1oahe. ~rt7n the net: J at 1-1. Picking up a loose puck Mike Dohoney was the top I Mike Spearns will face Jackman. Mrs .. Grant had final period, while Autry Erick- Th~ Red Win~' lw. P m'.de a hrforc thr fr:lme cnJct!.

111tght cd"c. 1 nind ·at center Ice Yetman broke O\'er de!ender for the Bluegolds with he hit ucrn!ly of hh>in~ hro· Thr !!:11•:ks c':~ckd rt OPLll 11li6hl rd~c "1 nc 1 c r. the St. Bon's line and as the Peter· Byrne and Hubert Hut- a 848 to be picked for tile show with Spearns hit· 1 1 A d ~oal leack They b'r donr it in the nn•!dlc period when F.rl

. Roberts ha\~ccng::c~ defcnceman backed up he used ton as the standout forwards. ting 953 for his spot. 'Memor~aa n . thrrc times in 'the '"\ ci~ht 'T.ilw1hrr~cr. ~lunar Balfour, f;lll umcs :n .1°1 T a them as a screen to beat cage On Bishops Howard Hickman Rolling for Holy Cross Jackman gained 15 1 days and hal'e won only onr of: E:ric '\rstc:renko and ·Ken \\'h:1r· •00 arrra.r 11 11 e e cop Rice from 20 feet played well defensively while 1 · their las! II homr ~ames. ·ram all hcJt 1\'orslc_,.. l.ib,tt· • · : ~50 n fi,·e · po1'nts on Saturday wht'le Mrs. Cook got ten points · RCAf B ttl St. Bons 15 ~- _q 1 GETS WINNER Bill Norburg and Alec Yetman ' a e Ranger goalie Gu:np Wros-. berger and Balfour hit with t!te

m tllo outmgs. f were the top forwards. for Feildians and Mrs. Blair had five for the same , Icy stopped 41 Detrnit shot<. ! P.angrrs play in~ short-handed 1\'i!l.lor, fla;hy Bishops 1 Peter Byrne cot what proved LINEUPS club. t ParJter ~lacDonald and .!err,· ' The hest the Rangers could

Cj)p. has a 5.00 mark I to be the winning tally for the I 1 JO 4 4 J"te :'llclnyk had Detroit ahead 2·0 ·do· durin~ the sc·conJ pc~in<l ~wed ,,n trn times but Bluegolds. Stealing the puck ST. BON'S; Goal; T. Rice; de- I The latest standings in the Club Trophy race 1 ., , after _24 minutes of eel ion. But , was l'amille Henry's first or' his p:1yrd two wat games from a Bishops' defender he fence; D. Crane, M. Dohoney, D. 1 has Holy Cross leading with 255 points. Feildinns I Prenttce went to ·.mrl; ann two goJ!s for the n;~ht. lt cJ::1c

in thr young sea· ctrcled the nets to poke the McGettigan, D. Kavanagh; !or- 1 1 18. • t d G d 145 · t St ~lrmorial University _am_! the! scored twice. the ~o:tl< coming. with a !fa,·.{ in l!!l' ren;:lty Sl,, .. rda:· 1\'t'nsor con· I puck t'nto the unprotected cor· wards·. P. B"rne, A. Smt'tb, G. tave a pom 5 an uar s own pmn s. • h 4 • , I RCAF foug t to a 4· he Ill ~n ' lc~s than five minut<-:; opart in box.

t~ top hockey as he 1 near at 1.57 o! the a~cond. I Doyle, H. Hutton, G. Holllhan, Bon's and St. Pat's have 40 points each wit1t CLB exhibition hockey game at the : the second period. llenr: h1l "~"in in the fit·st :Bof the 32 shots fired' Ed Delaney made tt 3·1 at T. OWens, E. Delaney, W. Rowe, claiming five points.

1

Prince of Wales ~rena Satur- i Hannigon. a rookir with nnl:;. minute of play a>_thl' dcspcro::t' St. Bon·~ and robbed i 11.40 o! the middle frame. Tom B. Royal, T. Johnson. I - ·----------·-· .. _____ ,day mght. ~cortng Ill the game. o~e :::oal in 30 prenn1s g3 n:e< .. H:m~ers kept sbltng ;111!1 chc•,:,;.

· and llmr again oft Owens dug the puck from be· I · . I s c I s • ! was even with both teams get·: ~cnt Sew Yori< ahe;ul with a JO. i11~ i hind the Bishops nets and pass·, BISHOPS: Goal; J. Winsor; torm ance s en1or ; ling one ~oal in the first ~nd: footer early in the final period. TO!l<J:\To <L'I'! -- Bo,ton

Mor.e)' ~ot St. Bon's' cd out front. Delaney fired II defedce: B. Wiseman, H. Hick· · ljsccond periods and two in the Prentice completer! his llat tritl; Bn11n'. Wtllnillg their >ccond at 259 of the first ! through 1 maze of players for man. J. Leamen, J. King; for· thtrd. . two minutes later. taking " pa<.' consecut<rc g:~me lor the fir;t

warda; B. Norburg, E. March, k • 2 y D:~vc ~larcelt scored twice for' from Bathgate ri~ht at the flr· time thi.' sca;on. defeated Tor-

p G d G. Lewis, A. Yetman, B. Dow- H F t I ears . ~lcmoricl with Bob ~lcKenlle: trait net. Oil tO ~l:tple l.cJf> :J.I in a :'\.1· aces an er dPeonn.d,HD .. CrCohsabyieto'rG. ·P.DRufeft.edt.t, D. 0( ey,· Irs n I nnd Errol Rowe adding single I llanni~an put the ~JIJIC out tiorwl Hockey Lc:t~UC ~a me tallies. Henry Hounsell. ~like of reach at 11:24 mark. ~c:t111~ Sa:urd>y night before 13.~m

STOPS: Blackmore. Bill Ryan and Tols: off a shot with two Detroit pia:. .. bns. RICE; · ............... 3 3 3 9 CONCEPTION BAY HOCKEY ALSO HAL JED Chapman, had as~isls. For the • ers clinging to him ~s he fell, Coarh :-lilt Schmid!\ J;n''"'·

Wl·n Over Buchans WINSOR: .............. 12 7 9 28 . RCAF ~ ayne Wheaton tall red I Johnson wound un the· scorin~. check in~ trnaclOt"IY. poclc<l Saturday's storm had the T~mght Holy Cross and St.; twice and had an assist, while with Detroi~'s third ,, 0 ~! at the:r first 1ictory 11\'l'f T"rw1l•t

senior hockey game between Bon s wtll play m a 7.15 p.m., Gary Richards got a goal and; 14::l4 of the third p1·riorl . th11 season. It cam, Ill\ lite Guards and St. Pat's cancelled Jumor game . wlule Fetldsans , set up an<~ther: Ron Sweeney I s.\ Tl'RD.-\ \''S (;,nn:s · heels of a 4-Z Bo<on •: '" 1,; ,.,.

- Angie Carroll, tlllze with their two man ad· for Gander scor- vantage, Gander's goal come

and set up Bill Ire- after some perslstant dlgglnll two more Saturday by Carroll to get the puek Gander won their across to Gander's Capt Bill

big game drop· Ireland who scored hil second 6·3 here at Gan· goal of the evening.

. Gander again outshot Buch· lh ''"""'rl the game for I ans 11 to 8. Gander scored two

bt Hughie Wadden unanswered goals In the third 'l;p while Elson was period. Tho first by Peckford

Gander scored unassisted and the other by the Capt Hughie Bursey Brothers combining

~ Burhans took the with Carroll denting the twines tis own goal line and on a pass from Brother John . the wa)· for an unas- Tempera got a little hot about

1011. Gander outshot I hal! way through the period 16 to B in the first but no penalties were called.

Buchans were fore· 'I Bob Marks playing In goal n the puck at limes to for Gander made same great tht prmure. saves In this period once stopo

wa, c\'cn in the ping Clarke on a breakaway. Ptriod 11·ith each team Ern Layte played a fine game one. There were two In net for Buehans and was

both to Burhans. The . responsible for keeping the 01erlapped for 49 I score down.

but Gander couldn't! Summary: 1st period. I Gan· ~get ort;anizrd to cap· I dcr; Shallow (Kelly) 6.35. 2

Buchans: Wadden (St. George) 8.41. 3 Gander: Carroll

I <Burke) 11.25. 4 Gander; Ire· 1

land (Carroll, Burke 1 16.58. 5 • Bucbans Wadden 18.05. Penal­' ties: Gander: Elson (tripping) . 7.57 Buchans; Chaplain (trip· I ping) 18.37. Stops: Leyte 16, . Marks 8.

2nd Period; 6 Gander; Ire­! land (Carroll) 13.36. Buchans: ' Lush 19.28. Penalties: Btich·

ans: Scott (booking) 2.16. Bueh·

I ana: St. George (holding) 3.27. . Stops: Llyte 11. Marks 9.

3rd Period: 8 Gander: Peck· ford 5.33. 9 Gander; C. Bursey <J. Bursey) 17.55. Penalties: Buchans; Clarke (slashing) 13.48. Stops; Leyte 18, Marka 11.

r Se~ior Hockey - tStaffJ-While Lea~:ue Freddie Burke of DOT

IU~e in first Place In is leading the Individual acor· mgs and have the mg race. The staUaUcs for the

GanJor the ~oalkeepers league were released here re· er Sentor Hockey ~ leased here recently:

TEAM STANDINGS P W L T GF GA Pta.

. . ................. 8 . 7 1 0 38 39 14 . . ... ................ 8 5 3 0 . 68 68 10

.. .. . .. ...... 8 0 8 0 110 83 0

GOALIE AVERAGES

Airli~es . D.o.r. . .............. .. R .................... ..

. RC.A.F .............. .. .C.A.F · Total · ............ ..

······ ................ .

GP 8 8 4 4 8

. GA 39 114. 42 41 1 83

A 18 8

11 lD 3

12 7

10 'T I 5

' .

Avg. 4.87 8.'111

iO.IO 16.211 10.37

Pta. 41 28 ,. ' 28 28 • lt 18 111 14 13 la 12

I on Saturday mght. It was the and Guards Will face of! ID a 1· scored once'. and Chuck Hulme, ~10:\TREAL _ CP _ Parker Dctrlltl Red \l·m~s T:,"r. i:1y hrst semor encounter called 9.00 p.m. semor lilt. drew an asSlSt. \lacDonald's unasst>lcrl goal at mght.

_ off because of a storm in two B?th the Crusaders and St.· Referees Gordon Duff and< 19:2~ of the second period ga1·~ Leafs had won .-i:' ~"lll"i ;u:•!

Pee Wee Hockey Th p W H k h d years. The last cancellatiOn of. Bon s are out of the JUntor Joe Smith called four minor' Dclroit Red \\'in"s a 3-2 win lied three with n,,; 11 n prel'i

I, fe thee eel oc eky sc e · a game came during the sleet) playoff picture with Holy Cross penalties in the encounter with I Sat11 rda\· 11•nht ~~-,,r' \iontrcal' ou<h· . u e or e com ngwee was re· .· · 1 h'l tl . · - ·o · . · . · • · leased last night by lea ue storm of two years ago when 1 pla}tng sts ast game w 1 e te i three go1n1: to the RCAF. J Canarliens. whose f·mous th1rn Leftwin~cr ,r,,hnn: !;:•·:: t; c.r.! manager Wll!!On Butler·- g the power to the Stadium was Bluegolds wtll have one contest l i period hirl was snuffed out hi· centre Cbrlie llt·r::o ~ !n:·::lr'r

Tu d . · I halted. le,{t. The Crusaders won the· I goalie Terry Sawcl:uk and h.is Lr:tf ch2ttcl. Jed t:t" La"l·t"l• 4 3~s aHy. I c I St. John's was not the only first game 6-4 and the second! M·lnor· Hockey hard-chcckin~ mate' llrni1'5 to the win. 5·1s:B Ui~ UnesN V~ ancos spot to see hockey halted be· 9-5 With third round ending in' [ The Red \\'in:•s ;1e1-cr trntl· But·'!<. p'ayin~ .1 f:nc two

T.h dr on vs e son cause of the weather. No hoc- a 2·2 lie. i , nd Earlier "OJI~ h)' Alex De!· ~~'"'·· cJn1c·. f1:·cd :-.ro lhi:·d 1Jc:· urs ay· · ·11 b B'll '! I ' · ' · ~ ~ • key was played at the Harbour Ton.lght WI e I •• a ones At G d r I'CChio cnrl \turra\' Oliver wrr,• ind -""""- lu:. IIJih ;JJ!d !!til 01

:·~~ets v~ Lanlcasters k Grace Stadium on either Friday last chance to overtake Frank :an e I matched bv Jean Eei:l"rau and the sc~son. to I'.T:lP up the de Satur~~~:- epu se vs Yor or Saturday. The storm had no\ Brocklehurst in the individua1 1j Gu~· Gendt:on of ~lontreal. eision for Bruins. Burns ;:a 11 ·

8 45 l · S VI lnfan· ef!ect on Gander, Clarcnvtlle or 1 scorrng race. Malone has 24 PEE· WEE LEAGUE I }!acDonald scored the win : Boston a 1·0 lr;~d in the :ir;' · a.m.- appers Corner Brook with exhibition points while Brockl~hurst of St. p W L T Pts ~ ning goal when he intercepted: lleriotl. '

try, g~mcs being held on Saturday Pal's has. 25 pomls. Whtle! Red Wings 6 4 1 1 !l i a pass by ~lontr1'al's Die >tie· Dcf 1·ncrm;~n brn· llilim;; mgbt. Malone ftntshs up tomght, Bruins . 6 4 2 0 8 '~loore and drove a 12-foot hack· i ,cored Tornntn's on!r ~oal la: ..

C I b• D NOT TONIGHT . Brocklchu~st wtll see h1s last Royals 7 3 3 1 7 · hander past goalie Charlie' in the thu·d rc •. od 0 um lan arts City hockey league prestdent, achon agamst Fetldtans on Fn-. jJaple Le;lfs 6 2 2 2 6 Hod;,:c. . Gcmhle tur<1rtl c:,idc• 21i ;hot, Jim Vlnlcombe, told the DAILY 1 day night., . . : Black Ha·,.,.ks 8 2 4 2 6 \lontreal Canndiens played wlulc the Leafs' .tolmny nowrr NEWS that the Guards • St. 1 St. Bon s wtll have C} _j!c· I Canadiem; tl 3 3 0 6 without three injured rc.~ul:~r< IDndlrd :!3.

The schedule of games in the P~t's game wi.ll not be held to- I G~tligan in the ".ets t?mghl! Rangers 7 2 5 0 4 : -dcfcncem~n DouJ: H;uwy antl Rd<·tw Fran~ \'d'.an c:~!lcd Columbian Darts League for to- mght. The hockey league exe· wtth Don ~!ornssej, Ray Hal· I (Leading Scorers) · fomards Boom Bonm Geoffrion ,1 toto! of II minor prno\li"·'·

culive will hold a meeting to- Icy, Ed Quigley, Kev Holllhan • G A Pts. ·and ~!a reel llonin. _,o·,·cn 1,, I' nigbt· d f '- ,o,'l)l\ . . - night and the date !or the post· and Dave Spurrell on e cnr_e. ' \V. Price 12 7 18 Hod~e was hit hy a high shot s·T.·\'\. '111\GS

8.00-Hawka VI Red Wings 1 d 'd d T h 1 ld f d w II . , Bruins VI Maroons poned game wil be cct e . O· T e B uego s orwar 5 1 : T Dal'is 13 4 17 , in the third period and two \\' ;, ,. F ,\ Pt~ night's meeting will al~o deal be Gary Comerford, Pat Me-,, D·. Re"nolds 11 5 16 :stitches were ta~:cn in a cut \l 1 o_-, 1._, 1; I'~ 1.,0 1,·n Leah VI Royals T "'h 1 AI , . on rc.o: "·' "

9 O~C dl RD with several matters concern- 1 Donald, crry " e an, 1 D Pierc!· 12 3 15 ·over his ri~ht rye. Detroit'; Toronto ~I I I .': 1.) I 12:! ;;;.; 'J 131 12G 49 · R:~:er:m v~ 1 vers in& the A1J.stars. Felix, Frank O'Keefe, Peter: D~rek Jo~cs 10 4 14 , ~larcel Pronovost was badly L'hic; 1 ~0

vs urr canes! Dunne, Bob Pow~r. Bob God·! s. Cloutcr 6 7 13 shaken up in the ;ccond pcnod net roil 10 II

Curling . p t Bl k den and Bob Nenlle. . ! E Philpott 12 0 12 when checked into the board< '-:cw York · : a s an Holy ~ross wtll_ have Tobte: G: Mitchell . 11 0 11 , by :-!oorr. but came h,1ck a[ler i Boston

N I Gushue ~n goal w1th Len 1\!c- : D. Coffey ... 6 5 11 ·----- - ··

l; l H II I:; I 13!) ~.j

11 21 ., IC7 Iii 3\

otes I Grath, Bsll Barron, John Hutch- I J. Mullett 8 1 9 Grand Falls ings,. and Gerry Dtnn as hiS BANTAM LEAGUE I

TO-NIGHT'S GAMES

Simon Levitz Trophy 7.00-8.30

W. Tiller W. Weir R. Levitz

R. 'B. Moyse

G. MacDonald

R. French A. Cox

T. Williams

8.30-10.00 E. Warren H. L. Templeton J. Laws T. Dunne J. Burgess F. Bishop J. E. Butler W. Piercey

10.00-11.30 J. B. Norris A. Hallett K. Moir F. P. Baines L. J. Goldstein C. T. Thompson C. Hall G. Glannou

bluehne corps. · p w L T Pts ! The Crusaders will have Bill Bears 6 4 1 1 9 1

Corn·er Brook (Staff} -After Malone, Kcv Norman, John De· L. 7 4 3 0 8 tieing· with the Grand Falls h J b N tons ·· · laney, Ed S apter, o n or· Tigers 6 2 4 o 4 Jays 3·3 on Friday night, the man, Cy Connors, Ron Lush, 1 Cubs 7 1 5 1 3 Corner Brook Pats shutout the Frank Densmore, Bnan Morr- • (1 di S 1 de!ending All • Newfoundland arty and John Power as their' ..ea ng corg~ Junior Champions 3·0 at the forwards. i A Pt s. Humber Gardens here on Salur-1· SENIOR GA~IE I n. Perry . . . ll 2 12 day night. Feildians have defeated D. Hanrahan .. . .... 6 4 10

Derm Hayes in the first per· Guards three times In date in . B. Clouter . .......... 3 7 10 ' iod; Mike Brothers. in the sc- the senior. Feild have 6·3, 3·1 G. Greer~e · 5 4 9 cond and Derm Catnes tn the and l0-4 victories to their C. Pmt ............ 5 4 9 third accounted for the Corner d't . W. Pntchett .. ......... 5 3 8

k . h'l I' ere I • • D J es 4 4 8 Broo scormg ' w I e . goa se Tonight Guards will have Eg . · am · ........... .. Alden Ke~ugh was blocgmg the Billard between the pipes with I L. ~ranter .. ... ....... 6 2 8 18 shots .ftred at him by Grand Nick Thistle as his sub. Three L. Kane ...... · .. .. 6 2 8 F'alls. The hometown squad had de!encemcn are listed as the 1 R. Taylor .... ·· ... 4 3 7 36 drives at the Jay's goal wiili Drover brothers, Jim and Jack, I MIDGET LEAGUE i-Ray Noble as the top player for and Max Howell are slated for ! • P W L T Pts i -....._ the visitors. t' Cardmals 6 4 0 2 10 ,

The game drew another 1000 ac ~~"front Guards· will usc Ed . Orioles 6 2 1 3 7 1

fans despite the bad weather Vatcher, Bert Warr, Dave But- , Ravens . . 8 1 6 1 3 j Brltlah Con1ol1 Resulll here. Five minor penalties were ler, Henry Hounsell, Ralph f (Leading Scorers)

Sa&arday called In the contest. Skanes, Doug Chaulk, Rollie , . G A Pta. 1) C. Rockwell 8, J. P. Cheivers 16 Clarke, Bob Badcock, Arl : C. Gouldmg ~ ~ ~~ 1 F. P. Babtel 8, A. J. Lush 10 Cl •11 Pearce and Ian campbell. . : J. Fox 4 5 9 ! w. Allan ll, w. Piercey II arenvl e Tols Chapman is the slated c. Daw~ . I

F. Snow 8, R. Bartlett 8 Feild nctminder while Bill Mar· , D. Mulltns 6 3 9 N. P. Rockwell 9, . . tin, Nev Henderson, Ed Thistle, : J. Sqmres .............. 5 4 9

L. J. Goldstem 4 Drop Mental "Dodo" Breen and Bob Ken· : G. \\'tcks 4 4 8 J. Burgess 5, R. Bartle!! 11 I nedy will be his defence corps. • F. Lush 4 4 8 W. Allan 14, F. P. Bames 6 1 • Stan Breen, Doug Squires, . G. Power 5 2 7 N. P. Rockwell' 9, A. J. Lush 8 CLARENVILLE·- (Staff)- Bud Duffett, Dave Batten, Don · G. Sm1th . . ............ 6 1 7 F. Snow 9, F. Piercey II The Clarenvllle All· Stars de· I Yetman, Wally You den. Chum l R. Perry . . ............ 5 2 7 J. P. Cbel\!era 11, . feated Mental Hospital of the II Piercey, Bob Noseworthy and 1 M. Keane 5 2 7

L J. Goldstein 12 Civil Service .. ~ockey League Junior Thistle will skate as for· D. Ireland 4 3 7 8:1 in an exhtblhon game here wards for Jugue leading Feild. I -·-------

.As a · rtault of the above Saturday night. It was the I ' pmea a three-way Ue 'baa OC· third exhibition tilt of the sea- ! G d G d 1

curred between A. J. Luih. c. son between the two clubs and M·lnor off·lc·lals an er ar ens Rockwell and ·N. P. Rockwell. gives Clarenvllle a two to one

Behind every RCAF Aighl stands a well-knit team of skilled aircraft lt!'chnicians ••• supported by the whale complex orgcnizotion of a modern, efficient air force. In the RCAF, o vast network of superbly !rained men and women- engineers, clerks, docto11, ac• countonts, mechanical and electronic technicians, mtleorologists, and experts in many other fields - work together to put the right plane, in lhe right place, at the right lime. It\ an exciting Hie and one thot offcfl unrivalled opportunities -to build o coreer .•• 1o 1ravtl . , , to share tho comtadcship lhat COmM with tewnwork • . , to serve Canada.

IT COULD liE THE LIFE FOR YOU.

career with confidence in the R (A F

R.C.A.F. Recruiting 1Jnlt, ·Jt hu been deelded to play a edge In games. (To·Day) round robin:- Cy Hoskins 11aeed the: home· Minor officials for the hockey 9.3t>-RCAF Section Hockey St. John's, Newfoundland • . To-NI&bt-C. Rockwell vs A. towners with three goals plua games at the Stadium this 4.30-Pee Wee Hockey: Buckmaster's Field, '··"

J. Luab. N. P. Roeltwell bye. . two assists. Bill McDonald, week: . Wings vs Bruins ( 0 Alrmw 0 Aiiinf. 'l'ueacla1 Nl&ht-N. P. Rock· Don Sparkes and Alex Holloway TONIGHT: F1rst game; Ed G.OO-Jr. All-Star Practice 1 0 Alrwomen ·

.well VI the- lo1er of to-nl&ht'a got the other Clarenville mark· Pearce, E. Woolgar, R. Jack· I 8.oo .... senlor Hockey: 1 Pie~~ ~ail to me, wllhout obligation, -full particulars re91r6lng 111rok Jame. ers ·while Boyd "Sputnick". man, B. Fahey. RCAF vs D.O.T. 1 menl requirements and openings now available In the RCAF ,':~

Wedlltldly Nlaltt-The win· Penney accounted for the lone Second game; J .. Rcardigan, -- l Harne (Plme Print) ,.,., ner of . to•nil!lt'a pme VI tbl! Mentalacore. • Ed. Clement&, EriC\ Burt, B. Chaytor. 1 ~trtel ~ddru Province1 ____ _...._--::;

winner ol Tuesday'• game. . After Penney bad tsed the Shaugbarue. FRIDAY: J. Reardlgan, Ed. I ~~~c;iiiii{byg;i'de and provlnce)l-----~---"':'0·": In the event of. a tie a single game In the first period Claren· , WEDNESDAY: First game: Clem!·nts. B.' Fahey. R. Jack· ! ail Age1 _ _.___,..•··· ..

knockout w111 be played· on ville went into a 2·1 edge at the

1

H. Murphy, H. Clarke, A. Mil· man. · --Tbunday and Friday nights. first intermisison and scored lcr, J. O'Toole, L. Vauehan. SATURDAY: H. Clarke, II •

Thele aamel will' commence twice in the second and third Second game: E. Pearce. E I Murphy, Eric Burt, B. Shau~ . • t

at 8.30. frnmea. · . Woolgar, D. R~ddy, R. Short, C. barue. YAL CANADIAN AI~ FORCE

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Page 8: ,1 : .U.N. MOROCCAN TROOPS PULL OUT OF KEY KATA …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19610123.pdf · Talk Peace OUT OF KEY KATA NGA CITY pARis-Reuters-Algerian

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TIJE DAILY~ NFLD. \10;'\.

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Taxation In Canada ' ~ .

sldent corporations deriving In- Exemptions include complete · · Pan Three com\l from CArrying on business exemption of gifts of $1000 or

I Certain tn credits ·are also In Canada are taxed. on their less and a general deduction of 'extended to corporations. For taxable Income, attributable to $4000 from aggregate taxable 1 }960 and 1961, all corporations operations In Canada at the value. j p!IY deduct from their federal same rates as Canadian resident Estate Tax J&x otherwise payable a tax corporations. (Tax treaties wllh This ta)l applies to proper!~ jredlt equal to 9 per cent of some countries provide certain passing, or deemed to pass, at alleir taxable Income attrlbut- exemptions from tax. ior re- death; All the property of pcr­'ble to operations in Ontario muneratlon for services per· sons who were domiciled in

f.. nd 10 ·per cent of their taxable formed in this country by resi- Canada before their death must ·

come altributabiJ! to opera- dents or employees of the .other be taken into consideration, no ons in Quebec. In addition, country.) · matter where that property is

E. rporations may claim a credit Furthermore, the Income Tax situated; for persons dying do- •

ainst their Canadian tax for Act provides for a tax at the 1 miciled outside of Canada only ' rporation income taxes paid rate of 15 per cent on certain their property situated in Can- I'

foreign countries. forms of income going from ada is subject to tax.

t, Corporations arc required to Canada to non-resident persons. In computing the tax of a ! ay their taxes (combined in· It applies to interest, dividends, Canadian domiciliary, the value j

orne and old age security rentals, royalties, income from of the whole estate, whether 1

xes\ in monthly instalments. a trust or estate, and alimony. situated in Canada or in-forci;;n 1

each of the last six months With certain exceptil!ns this 15 estate has hcen determined, :

~"f their fiscal year and the per cent tax applies whether Once the aggregate valne of the

rec months following the the income goes on non-resident estate has been dctermind, nd ~[ their fiscal year, they individuals or corporations. One state debts and certain expen­

thust pay 1/12 of their estimat- exception is for dividends paid scs may be deducted. From the ect tax for the year. The esti- by a wholly-owned subsidiary resulting "aggre~:ate net l'alue," ~ate of the amount payable company in Canada to its par- there may be deducted the tjtay be based on the income of ent company abroad. Here the amount of a basic exemption,

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

~00f'L& IY'HN'-''""

IS 11-\'E PEI'<F'1::C.T SPOT fOR A

'OOIJI3l.E: \f-\REA\ LIKE: '{OU( PULL­lr-.l6ARAB8l'T OuT OF A 1-\.A.\ IS NO t-lARDEI<

\HAN FINDIN0 H01 WA'TE:R IN \HE MORNlN0!

with MAJOR HOOPLE

' '5 P~'ACTICALLY

A MAGICIAN'S ACADE:MY::.

· .fhe previous year or the esli- rate Is 5 p~r ccnl. (The require- which is increased where the : mated profits of the year in mcnt th~ the paying corpor- decedent leaves a widow or de- / w· t w k Ca • I

OUT OUR WAY

SAY, CURLY··HOW DOES THE BUCK FEVER AFFECT A

GUY WHEN HE SEES A DEER::

'I'CRE 60NE

YOU DG"'T . - • N HAve·

TO SEE A D.:ryf;; .. YOU GOT IT RI6HTNOW!

--- ~

pro~ress. In cat•h of the follow- a lion must be a wholly-owned pendent child, and also the,. m _er or s mpaign !I Paramount \II~ two months. they pay '" nf subsidiary to qualify for this 5 amount l1f any charitable be· tile rslimatrd halanre of the per cent rate is modified by quests to charitable organi- 11' President of the Aut nnw- nirptcs, winter construction is· TOmOffOW U . .-\t:KE STEA~ISIIIP lO. romplrl''"' oof ,, tax l'Omputed hy refcrcurc to sel'cral tax treaties with other zalions in Canada. After these I hilc T>calcrs Assoc. of New· no more costly than at other . • !';uvaport leave llaiJtax Jan /said fur ll;oiJh\ the profits of the taxation ~·ear. countries.) The tax is not col- deductions the amount left is founrlland Ltd., I have been seasons of the yc<~r. Business :20th. arrit·c Sl. John's Jan. 23rd. :>J.S. Bcl!f<ord 11 ~ lite sixth month following llcctcd on interest on bonds of, the "aggregate taxable value" asked to COfllrihule an ~rticle men in the know, have acc<'pl- lcav: same day. . Il~lifax Janu:.r:: 21 ,. · t~e end of'their fiscal year, the or guaranteed by, the Govern- to which is applied the ta~ in support of the Winter Em-~ ed the idea that construction. "FIVE BRANDED WmiE:-1" 1 ":\ol'aport lcal'e Halifax Jan John's .fJn11ar' z~,i-final return must be filed and 1ment of Canada or on interest rates. From the tax so caiculal· ploymcnt Campaign and "Do It alterations, and other work •:an i WITH SILVANA ~1.\NGA:'\'0 · 27th. am1e !:i:. John's Jan 30th,· ·~u·. 1\'nno!,n:;: the remainder of the tax paid payable in a foreign currency, ed may be deducted (1) a tax Now Plan". 1 be done in winter to the ad- leal'(' same day. llailfax .lan11ar·. ,,_, fpr that year. and the rate is only 5 per cent abatement in respect of pro- I think the' responsibility for[ vantage of the citizen. 'l\otdpurt leave Halifax Feb John's .l:ur:ar·.' 3::;· : Taxation. of N~n-resldents on interest on proyincial bonds. per.ty situated in a province that : &lressin;: the . urgency and nr.- Q Those of us who ha1·e year-: A realistic and dramatic story ~I h. arme S!. John's Feb. 7th -~J.S. Br·dfo ~d n" . A non-restd~nt IS liable t_o the The rate on•ray_altJcs on molion levies a succession duty, (2)! ccss1ly for Winter employment j round employment and ·:an of the sins and the loves of wo- ':\u1apurt leave Halifax Feb Halifax .J.11 ::1,,, 1j.

payment of mcomc tax If he picture f1lms IS only 10 per gift tax paid on recent gifts the ments the atlcntlon of the com- make a JOb for h1s less fortu·; men in war with a back"round lca1e s•me day_ John·, f'r·',:·,:~ 1_, '':

was e~ployc~ or was carry!ng cent. . amount of which is included in munity as a whole, and each 1 nate member of the working· of ~uerrilla 'f~ihting agai;st the 13th. arme St. John's Feb ~? bus~ness m Canada durm~ This tax is Wlthhc_ld at the aggregate net vatu~ of the cs- and every clllzen. . ! force, has a_ God-g1~·en duty lo occupying :-:azi forces in .Jugos· i 16th: leave ~a me day. . 11 .taxation year. For all prach· source by_ the Canad1an payer. tate, and (3) fore1gn taxes. II has been the practise lor [lend Ius _ass:stance m prOVIding Ia via in World War II. is told, *:\ol'apurt_leavc I.Ial~fax f cb. ~al p~rposes, the ex~ress10n It is an 1m personal tax levied No estate t•alued at less than some years now that all th1s !'and shanng h1s more fortunate, in Paramount's spectacular: 21st, arnvc SJ Johns feb 16th, ,ca~mg on busmcss m Can; without regard to the status o_r $50,000 is subject to estate tax. franchised automobile dealers, circumstances Th1s 1s not the! Dino De Laurenliis production, i lean· s;,mc day. ada mcl~des_: . other income of the non-res1· This $50,000 is not an exemp- keep their mechamcs and staff I responslblhly or duty of a few,: "Five Branded Women .. which! "l\ovaporl leave Feb. 21st, :

(a). mamtam_mg a permanent I dent recipient. No~-residents lion but it is the starting point emplo_ycd . throughout the year but of every clllzen of st. I opens tomorrow at tl;c Para-: arme St John's Feb. 24th, : B.' estabhshm~nt. m Canada, who receive only thts kmd _of for tax. It is also enacted that even m wmler. though the sea- John's at large. I mount Theatre. lleav•! .;arne day.

(b) mamtammg a stock of income from Canada do not f1le the estate tax will not reduce/ sonai slow-down m the trade I El'ert·onc can see the ad· I I •nefrirerat:nn. A Jlid~c '·'" ,, .. goods in Canada, tax returns in Canada. the value of an estate after tax could justify reductions in 1 vanccm.ents and strides the Filmed in Ilaiy and southern

1 FUR:'>IESS WITHY ,\~D · for~11 e mnr, o·f;,;·'·

(e) processing goods, even Gift Tax to less than $50,000. The basic I stnff. 'Government is making with I Austria umlcr the direct10n of: CO~IPANY umn:D ~Iayhc bec~u-c ~~_,-. partially, in Canada. , The Income Tax· Act levies a exemption which applies to ail The Federal Government this; education In building sch<,ois.' ~lartin Rill. "Five Branded \\'o-; ,. •w! undl· d, 1 , L man~· mor,. • ~~":!·::-.:~

(d) t · · t t t ·r · d d' · .. · h k · b f 1 G t · th .. b · rl ·'e 0 an eatmg Jvcr en ermg tn o con rae s ·tax upon g1 Is m or er to IS· estate~ of Canadian domJcJh·; year opes to rna ·e JO s _ or i Aftrr at , .ovcrnmen 1~ e 1 men oasts a. starrmg cast _o 1 pool Jan li, <luc St. John's Jan · · . in Canada. 1 courage transfers that would artes ts $40,000. Th1s basic ex-! 100.000 Canadians by the winter I people. and educallon and full j lnlcrnatJOnal . Importance: S1l- i 17_ Lcanng for Halifax and .-\ collr~r p1n(( .• 0 ~ ,,

The taxable _income of a non-: lead to a reduchon m the re- emptiOn of $40,000 1s. mcrca~cd: works programme offered to employ men~ go hand 1? hand 1vana ~langano.. Vera • ~l1lcs, 1 !los ton Jan. IU. due Halifax Jan., 1_alk1n~ roil•·'- ,-1:"

restdcnt mdli'Jdual . dcm~d I I'Cnucs from mcome and estate to $60,000 m .rcspe_ct of a de·; the Prov1nces on a. share basis 1f St. Johns 1s lo conltnue on! Barbara Bel Geddes. .leanne 1 20 ~nd Boston Jan. 23_ Leavmg: Somrllllll''. ·u "''1

from carrymg on business 1n taxes. The rates range from 10 ceased mal_e sur\'lvcd by a· of cost to the ProVInces .• and a 1ts march of progress. I ~loreau. Richard Basch art, Boston Jan. ~4 and Hahfax Jan f1nd o·.t: "n· · , .,,. ·. Canada or from employment in. per cent on an ag~regate tax- spouse, or m respect of a de·[ poss1bie cost to the r ederal It 1s unfortunate lhal we: Harry Guard mo. Steve Forrest. 28 due St John' J 30 S 1 - · Canada is taxed under the same I able value of $5000 or under, to ceased female survived by an· Government to two hundred have such a majority of unskill· ',Alex :'<.'1col, Carla Gravina and ' · s an. · al I wg aga1n same day for Li\'Cr schedule of rates as Canadian 28 per cent on an aggregate incapacitated spouse and a de· million dollars. !';ewfoundland ed labour in Newfound!Jnd.: Van Heflin as Vclko, fighting 1 pool. resident individuals and non-re- taxable value of oyer $1,000,000. pendent child. In both case~. is in a favoured posiliun to This a2~ravates the situation of leader of the Jugoslavi~n parti·.

~~ .\ut·a Srolta lea,·ing Boston

NOW PLAYING

.... ! ......

llOYD NOLANf::~ RAY WALSTON , DIIJ.IIlllllllll-~7.:! RICHARD """''-"'nn

TIMES OF SHOWS: \vEKING SHOWS: 6.45 _. 9.00

MATINEE: 2 P.M.

NEXT ATIRACTION ELIZABETH TAYLOR - MONTGOMERY CLIFT in "A PLACE IN THE SUN" -SUSPENSE - THRILLS - ROMANCE -

.Also WILLIA~l HOLDEN in "STALAG 17" : - EXCITEMENT AND SUSPENSE.

TO-MORROW '

THE MADNE~ OF LOVE AND WA~! Shamed in the etreeta ... tlihtlng for l\lrvival -AND

VENGEANCE!

Also - NOVELTY

TIME$ OF SHOWS

EVENING SHOWS: 7 O'CLOCK MATINEE: 2 P.M.

9.00.

..... ". . .

there is an additional exemption avail of this assistance, if we the unemployed. It can only: sans. 1,. ·b " 1 11 1-f· F' b 8 f $10 000 f I . . d d . . I I' d b lh t' , c '- ' uc a J ax e . . o , or eac 1 survl\'lng e- can o so tn a pracllca way. rcmet tc Y e co-opera loll: B d n tl n . 1 1 . ""o lca1-1·n" llal'lfa•· F'el> II d Sl

d t h'ld (' d 2l) ·· · [ S J h • f d . 1 t f b d · asc o 1e ote J\ u~ , o ·' . , ue . P:n en c I Le., un e~ · Clllzens 0 t. 0 n 5 arc or- an . 10 ercs 0 every 0 Y 10 · Pirr~ the title concerns ihe cx-1 John's t'eb 13. Sail in" a"ain Fmally, _the bas1c exemptiOn .. or lunate mas much ~s contmued provuhng full employment to 1 perie;Jces of flt·e beautiful girls 1 same dav for Liverpool. M o

$40,000 ts mcrc_ased by Sl5,000 construcllon_ of_ ma1or_ proJects ach1eve l>elter standards of of an occupied Jugoslat·ian. Newf;undland leal'ing Lit-er·. 1\'ht·n tiH; IJo.t

fo~ every sun·IVI~g dependent is b~~~g mnmla1ncd lhJs wmter. hvmg. town, whose hair is shorn by~ pool Feb. 15, due st. John's chorus line 11 !Jle; child orphaned by the death of llowcler, a. great many of our F. W. WHELA....,, the venegeful partisans when It I Feb. 21. Lcal'ing for Halifax iout of show htl'lcf<O the deceased. labour force a~d tradesmen are President Automobile i is learned that they have all i and Boston Feb. 22, due II ali-

The_ tax on_ tl~e _estates of m need of gamful eJ_~~ployment Dealers Assoc. fraternized with the enemy.lfax Feb. 24 and Boston Feb. 27, :>obod,· rlcr .. Canadian domJCJitanes IS cal· rlSht now. Is there a JOb around of NCid. Ltd. The Nazis unwilling to have 1 Leaving Boston Feb 28 and k' · h · . · culated by applyinn a nraduated · h 1 · f b · ' · · · ~mo ·mg w rn 11; :~'

b b ) our orne or Pace 0 USI· them around as a constant warn- 1 and Halifax Mar. 4. due St.: 1 _ d f " 1 f , • scale of rates. For an aggregate ness that you have been plan; • ing to other girls, drive them' John's ~lar. 6. Sailing again ra s rOJ .. I lr llr.J .. taxable v~lue of $5,000, or less, mng to have do~e next Spnng. Storm HitS out of town to live as best they !same day for Liverpool. the rate IS 10 per cent. For an If so, !suggest It Will pay_you can off the land. The events! :-..·ot·a Scotia leaving Lit•erpool aggregate taxable value ~f to do 11 now when. skilled , /that follow lead them to join I ~lar 8. due St. John's ~lar. 14. $100,000, the baste amount IS tradesmen and matenals are E t u ( :the partisans who punished /LeaVIng for Halifax and Bos $19,0~0 plus 24 per cent of any- read~ly available. These men as ern . .,1. jthem, but in. spite of . their ton Mar. 15, due Halifax Mar. thing between $100,000 and ar~ able to serve you better at many brutaiizmg expemnccs 117 and Boston ~Iar. 20. Lcavm;: $150,000. At $2 mtlllon of tax· th1s l1me, and often, Jobs can · :'-:EW YORK (.o\P} - :\. !lorm; they remain love-seeking, life· I Boston Mar. 21 and Halifa~ able value, the tax stands at be done at a lower cost. I that swept up 10-root drif;s m, embracing women. Their mov- i Mar. 25, due St. John's ~far. 27 $8_1~,500 ~nd the excess over $2 It has been sho"fn and prov-: some places disruptc? schools i ing, human, individual stories I Sailing again same day for Lit mtlhon ts chargeable at the cd that m this modern ajlc; and busmesses ano trapped ·are played out against the kind 1 erpool rate of 54 per cent. (For _the w1th advanced workmg tech- ; thousands. of automooiles. in the [of big-scale action fans han I FTRNESS RED CROSS · complete rate schedule see sec- . . eastern lmled Stales Fndny. 1 come to expect from the famed ("OR 'L TR 'DER 1 .-!' 8 f th A ) and the spec tal exctse taxes are ~ . · . . . . · .... .... eat mg Jon ° e ct. , levied on oods im orted into!. A snot1fal1 measunng ~ to 29 iproducer of such great h1ls as 1Nc·.v York Jan. 17, Halifax Jan

As stated above, there IS an C d dg dp d d. mches and accomoamed bv I "War and Peace" and "Tern-. lOth arrivin" St John's Jan b t nt ir f d r 1 estate ana a an on goo s pro uce . h . t : · n • a a erne _om e c a . . C d Th 1 1 . d strong wmds s ut down atrpor s pest."

1

22 Leaving Jan. 24th. for Ar taxes otherwise _payabie m res· 110 anda a. etydare no evJe • and caused cancellation of bus ge~lia Corner Brook and :-:cw Pect of provmctal dulles The 1 on soo ~ ex pot e · . ' . ------ . . ( G I S j' T I uns. \' OJ'k . abatement is a deduction of 50 a) enera _a es ax -~, The toll of deaths in traffic . . . . · NI'I ·D c \ · · · 1 •

f II f d 1 t /The sales tax wh1ch 1s al the . m depth m ~ew York C1lv be- ' • · • :'li:\D:\ STEA~1SII I per cent rom 1e e era ax • . . , aCCidents and from over-exer-. . . . · d . I niiTED otherwise payable in respect of 'rate of 8 per cent, 1s lev Jed on 1 I' . 1 Ol'elling snow re·lched 1 fot e 11 slackened at m1d - a~. . . ' · • .

th f t • 1 · f 10" m s 1 ' 1 Sl' g· " · d ·h'1pped up tO "~1 v \1 oodcock 10 port On property situated in a province c manu ac urer s sa e pnce o 33_ • m mb wm s w . . - • · · . that levies succession duties. goo~s produced or manufactur- Temperatures were expected 1 ~oot dnfts. and turned m1dlown

The property situated in Can- ed 10 Canada or on the duty- to approach zero during the; mlo .n wh1le WJidernes~. ada of a decedent not domiciled paid value of goods tmported

1

night in parts of lht> e8stern 1 S~1en long-d1slanre _bus com· in Canada is subject to estate tnlo Canada. For alcoholic beve- snow bell. Sub . 1.ero conditions , r,am_es .suspende~l sen 1cc. m the tax at a flat rate of 1~ per cent. rages and tobacco products, the I were forecast for somr sections, ~ew \ ork Cll) area: Funeral There is no deduction allowed sale pnce_ for purposes of the. of the midwest· with lows of 20 parlors cancelled semccs. Bur­against the assessed value of sal~s tax mcludes ex~tsc dulles I to 30 below zero in northern ials, a spokc.sman s~id, were ,

FROM THE PRINCIPAL CENTRES Of

such property except for debts Jevted under the ExCISe Act re-' 'I.Jntlesola , .. 1 l 'I . 'bl .. f d b 1 ·' · 1 comp e e1 y 1mposs1 c.

specifically chargeable to it. 1 crrc to e ow. . 1 The snowfall averaged a foot However, there is a special pro· I An old. age secunty tax of 3 ---vision which exempts all such per cent 1s levied on the same property of Jess than $5,000 ?ase as the 8 per cent tax bring. value and which also provides mg the total sales tax to 11 per that the value of the property cent. is not reduced by the tax to less Many classes of goods are than $5,000. The 50 per cent exempt from sales lax. One 1m­abatement referred· to above portant category is comprised also applies to thia tax on pro- of m_achinery and apparatus perty of decedents not domicil- used Jn the process or manu­ed in Canada where that pro- facture or production of goods. perty is subject to provincial The eqmpment to be exempt duties. must enter directly into produc-

Exdse Taxes lion.· To illustrate, a stamping

FAST DIREC FREIGHT SAILINGS

FRmt HALIFAX, N.S., TO ST. JOHN'S, NFLD.

M.S. "BEDFORD II" (:o:l M.V. "WOODCOCK"

M.S. "BEDFORD II" (xl 1\I.V. "WOODCO<:K"

M.S. "BEDFORD II" (x) M.\'. "WOODCOCK"

Le..,lll llat1fn

JAN. 20 JAN. 24 JAN. 30 FEB. I FEB. 6 FEB. 9

tn• It Jeba· 1

JAr-.'. 22 j

,~_,\ :--; z6 1

I· F. B. I , FEB. 31 FED. 8 FEB. II

The Excise Tax Act levies a or cutting machine used in a general sales tax and special factory is exempt from sales (x) Refrigeration Space A\'ailahle. excise taxes. Both the sales tax tax, while office equipment or

delivery equipment used by the p•••-••••• .. 1mc manufacturer is not. This

We build well in a hurry! AND aava YOU MONaY WITH

Commoi'Oial, lnduetrlel and oommunlty. Get a better blllldln1

economic: ally. Call ua today • tor facta and ltlllflt.

ENGINF.ERING e 25 SPRINGDALE ST.

(emption was established to. ~duce to a minimum the cf- , 'ct of the tax as a cost of pro· · ucllon. Similarly, most equip-: 1ent used by larmers, fisher- · 1cn, loggers and ri)ining com- I ·anics is also exempt. · ·Most building mater.als, food­tuffs, and fuels for lighting or eating are exempt from the; ax. as well as ·articles and i natcrials used by ·public hos· 'I

•ilals. The products of farms,

1 ·orcsls. mines and fisheries re to a large extent exempt. ~inaliy. a variety of items are nade exempt from sales lax vhen purchased by municipali· ies for prescribed uses. These •nd other exemptions are set 'orth in schedules to the Excise rax Act.

(bl Special Excise Taxes -The Excise Tax Aet also pro­vides (or a number of special ~~else taxes whleh are in addl· .'ion to the sales tax. Where these are ad valorem taxes, they ~re levied on exactly the same •trice as the general sales tax. \rticles subject to special ex· ~ise taxes include .automobiles, iewellery, cosmetics, toilet arti· .clcs, radios. record players and : television sets. Tobacco pro-

l ducts lind wines are also taxed under the Excise Tax Act. . (To ~e Continued)

' · ·, M.,.f.Oun4fond A8e~i.-· ~ . MORRAY AGENCIIS & TRANSPORT CO. LIMITED•

ltc1c'l Cove, St. John'1 'hone: 1011

. ' ''

' ....

lt. ~· COLI. Sptclol Atprfltr,tallt•, loyol lank Bfdg., St. John's, Ph: 12;07

FURNESS, ~fiTHY & CO., LTD. Liverpool Sl .loll D's BostDD

•• '-• HI• & tt• Sl. Jobn's Boste II

'Newfoundland' "Nova Scotia" 'Newfoundland' Feb. 15 I'eb. 22 "Nova Scotia" Mar. 8 Mar. 1~

Hallfas Jan. 24

Feb. 7 Feb. 28 Mar. 21

UaiUas St. Jnba'r . to 1<1

St. Jobn'~ L'pool I Jan. 28 Jan. 30

Feb. 11 Feb. 13 Mar. 4 Mar. 6 Mar. 25 Mar. 27

AIR PASSAGES ARRANGED BY: B.O.A.C.; K.L.M., Pan American Ainvavs, Scandinavian T.W A. and connecting

Airlines. Persons contem?lating passage to Europe

.bY steamer should make bookings well in advance. \ Consult us regardlnJ!: your travel problems.

FURNESS T~ VH- OFFICE NFLD. HOTEL PHONE 5623

ONT ARlO and QUEBEC MARK YOUR ORDERS

TO SHIP

MUIRHEAD FORWARD! LIMITED

All rates allraclive 01pecially where is offered. A good ••ice backed by ence. A Comr.· ·wealth-wide orgonizoli(ll.

ST. JOHN'S CORNER BRDC« 221 New Gower St. Phone 2634 or 5199

. 's Weslerr Termtno Phone 4-4972

Route "MUIRHEAD'S" TORONTO-HAMILTON-MONTRE

CLARKE

ALL-WINTER SERVICES

to

NEWFOUNDLAND Direct Service

HALIFAX to ST. JOHN'S S.S. NOV APORT S.S. NOV APORT ..... .. S.S. NOV APORT .................. .

.... "' .... '' .... . for informall~n and est office-~1. J 0 '6 S NFI.I 1 rei. 5483 . 80350

or 2151 Telex 016 - 258

UARVE\' -;TEAMSHIPS

LTD.

I IE.Servation.

. ---------'------------

Page 9: ,1 : .U.N. MOROCCAN TROOPS PULL OUT OF KEY KATA …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19610123.pdf · Talk Peace OUT OF KEY KATA NGA CITY pARis-Reuters-Algerian

' •.

ALWAYS ''Aff ... (,. -

. 'IR SIGII4l

CENTRES Of

:-'RDERS

· where ~oc.ked by ~ organi1ation.

~ORNER BROOK ~lern Terminals Phon& 4-4972

~KE -VINTER '/ICES

to

tAND

JHN'S . . Jan·

.... . Feb. Feb.

1961

BIG WAREHOUSE SALE I RECONDITIONED .... APPLIANCES I !

' ... , }.

!f. WASHERS- RANGES- REFRI9ERATORS- HEATERS etc.

!f.· CHAIN· SAWS AND OUTBOARD ~IOTC>RS. AT

GREAT ... EASTERN OIL ,- :.

' .. '( COMPANY, LIMITED 1.--1

January 23rd.

lie•• o1 tbt Mornin& Neo and Weatblr

Clock Del'otionl Preview

Cho1ce. Broadcast

Dl7 Serenade BuUetin

Program ~ew• and Weather

Bunter Show. JllDdtZ\'0\IJ

Obs. Time

St. Franci~. for Marinen. Fum Forum.

Forum !';ews. Chamber Or-

GaBERT STREET

9.00--Morntna Date t.l~Lindu Fint Love 9.30--Mornlne Date

10.00-Newa ' 11).05-Stork Club 10.15-Jim Ameche Shr.w lO.I!~Newa 11.00-Jlm Ameehe Show 11.1~Weatern Jambor .. P.M. 12.00-Western Jamboree 12.ao-Newa l2.3~RambUn with Record6 12.45-Fisherman's Forecut

1 12.50-Ramblln with Recorda l.1~portacast 1.20--Ramblln with Record• 1.4~o Tbe Story Goea. 2.110-Jim Ameche Sbow 2.5~Newa 3.00-Prlzes and Problema oa 4.00-Western Jamboree. 4.3o-Bob's Bandwagon. '-55-Newa 5.00--Bob'a Bandwagoa l!.aO-Supper Serenade 5.56-Flsherman'a Forecut 6.00-Bulletin Board. 8.10-Movle News. 8.15- -sportscast and Travel

Guide. 8.3{)-Supper Serenade 6.4~Newa 7.00-Dominion Newa. 7.30-Shil\elaah Showtime. 8.00-Cream 0[ The Crop 9.45-Newa.

10.00-VOCM All Time Bit Parade

10.30-Eventlde Medltltlou 10.4&-.c;portl 11.00-Big Top Ten. 11.30-Ciub 1590 and Newt. 1.00-Newa In a minute and

Sip .Off.

CJON MONDAY, January 23rd.

A.M . 8.3~Tht Bob Lew!J Sbow 8.35-Weatber ForecAil 6.40-The Bob Lewls staow 6.45-HeadUne New1 •ncl

Forecast 8.liO-The Bob Lewis SIIIJW 7.00--Newa 'l.~Loetl Weather UG--The Bob Lewll Aow 7.35-Com{Jiete Weathtl

Call,. 8.05-Weather Announced. 8.1~hlp!llng Report

1 ~ew~. . 8.20-The Bob Lewla Sbow and Talk. 8.25-Kiddles Corner 0 Canada. The 8.40- The Bob Lewl1 Show

' 8.15~ust a Minute · ------ 9.05-Muaic for MUUone

9.20-Jtl'l'] Wiggins Show 9.115-Jane Gray Show.

J1nu1ry ~3rd.

and Weather with Bill with Bill

and Waterfroot

10.00-News in a Minute \0.01-Martln'a Corner 10.111-Housewtvea Cholet. 10.30--Natlonal Newe. 10.33-Whll's Cooldn'. 10.16-Bousewivee Cboiee ll.1o-Kitchen Klatter. ll.M-Nfid. QuiJ 11.4~Monewman

• P.M. 12.li3-Town and Countrr 1.00-Newl. l.~Weather Forecut. l.lii!-Don JIIDIMon'l

IC.mish town l(lrtftl)

7 ''The LIUle Red-""

lid IRaUo i German river

to AnRlo-Suon 1trl

,. 12Gaelk'

~ 13 City In New

York state II Note In Guido's

•rale 28 Sandant tree . 20 Laud of Morocco

21 Ketp 28 Similar • 22 .. _ Woll" 30 Let IIi land

2S Come out 36lndian 24 War god of 37 Compass point

Grttct 40 Serpenta 2S Low nnd hUI 41 Dth1an 2t Hops' kUns 42 Weary

43Dyelng applrAtUJ

45 FUUp 4& Thlncs done 47 Pare 49 \Yu vlctorloui SO Mall bevera~e &21.eJal point SSFlsh

...

Editorial 1.40-Sporta

WAREHOUSE·

i

l---..... -~_...1 ·• JACOBY

ON BRIDGE -- _ ... mx::s

l.~Art Baker's Noteboolr 2.00-Newa Wgbllghta 2.03-Jerry Wiggins Show 2.31-Jerry Wiggin• Show 3.0Z-Western Jamboree, 4.00-Newa in a Minute JACOBY EXPLAINS 4.05-Ranch Party, TWO-BID OPENERS I 5.00-News In a Minute I 11.01-Bob Lewla Dance PariJ By OS\V ALD JACOBY i 6.00-News Hlihllchta The Jacoby two bid is used 6.01-Weather in the Jacoby·Smith system to · 6.05-Bulletin Board cover the very strong hands. It 6.10-National New• combines the advantages of the 6.15-Sports · old.fashioned Culbertson two 6.25-Ever Battery New1 bid· with those of the modern -&3D-Club 93 forcing two clubs without the 7.02-Ciub 93 disadvantages or either. 7.45-Don Jamieson's News Specifically,, our two dia- I 8.01-Best from the West mond, heart and spade open· l 8.30-Natlonal News ings are game forces and in 8.31-Best from the West addition to 5howing the bid 9.00-News Hlghlighta suit also indicate that we are 9.01-Nfld Soiree. either also indicate that we are 9.40-Salt Lake Choir. either void of or singleton in 9.45-News. some other suit.

lO.Ql-Jury Trials. The bust response to a two , 10.30-National News ~pade, heart or diamond bid [ 10.45-Sports i IS two no·trump, but we don't 1

10.55-Letters and Messages. I have to worry about getting the 1

11.00-News H~hllghts · no·lrump into the wrong hand. ! 11.01-Music In the NigbT I Since the opener's hand is un- ; 1.01-Sign Off. :balanced he is delighted to let I ___ ;..._______ i

CJON-CJOX TV MONDAY, January 23rd.

18.45-Cartoons. . ll.O~Romper Room. 12.00--Local and Nallonal News. 2.0~My Little Margie. j 2.3D-Chez Helene. 2.45-Nursery School Time. I 3.00-The Verdict Is Yours. S.3~How to Marry a· Million· •

alre. I •.oo-Open Douse. U~Reflecllons. '1

5.00-Junior Roundup. . G.O~Annle Oakley. 8.25-World ·of Sport. 6.3~News CIValcale. 7.00-Wanted Dead or Alive.

,--__:_ ___ -I

WEST • 72 • 10 6

NORTH (D) .3 ¥AKQJB75 +A32 •As

%3 I

EAST .AKJ9 • 93 2 + KQJ9C

"'KJ74 • 10 54 "'QJ03

SOUTH • Q 10 8 6 5 ·l ¥4 • 87 .9852

Both vulnerable North East South West 2 ¥ Pass 2 N.T. Pass 3 ¥ Pass 3 • Pass 3 N.T. Pass Pass Pass

Opening lead-+ K '7 .3~1nterpol Calling, 8.00-Talent Showcase. 8.15-Na&lonal News 8.3~Father Knows Best. 9.0~Don Messen. Jubilee. 9.30-Danny Thomas Show.

10.00-Jack Kane Show. 10.30-My Sister Eileen. 11.00-Festlval '61.

1 his partner play no.trump if

I. that is the proper. final con· tract.

12.50-N ews f.lt'adllnes.

: North has no problem ahout ·letting South play three no· ' trump. Once South has ~hown 1

1 some sort of spade suit, :-.lorth I 1 can count on nine tricks at no·

-----------trump. .As for South. he is tempted to ~o to four spades. hut the Capitol

Now Playing I opening two heart bid has warned him awav. Korth has a singleton or voi(L Oh,·iously. it : i~ in spades and six oppos1te I one nr none is not a satisfactor~· 1

· trump holding. 1

"PORTRAIT IN BLACK" WITH LANA TURNER- · ANTHONY QUINN CARD Sense Crime and passion, skillfully : Q-The bidding. has IJccn:

wrought against a background 1 North East South West

of &lamor, and brilliantly cap: 1 ., Pass 2 • Pass ped by one of the mo.st sen· 3 "' Pass . 4 ¥ Pass sational dralnatlc twists the 4 N.T. Pass ? screen has ever seen, now play· You, South, hold: ing at the C11pitol Theatre •AJ876 ¥A654 +KQJ10 •o as UniversaJ.Jntemational un· What do you do? veiled its superb suspense A-Bid five hearts. You do drama, "Portrait In Black." have two aces and • void eult,

A magnificent cast headed by hut It Is 1 suit bid b)". partner Lana Turner, Anthony Quinn, so you should make your normal Sandra Dee, Richard Base hart. Blackwood response. John Saxon and Lloyd Nola~ TODAY'S QUESTION delivered inspiring pcrforman· Your partner continues with ces to this lavlahJy.mounted pro· a bid of five no·trump. What do ductlon that must certainty be you do now? recorded ·tn screen annals Answer Tomorrow among Hollywood's greatest screen thrillers. ---

To producer Ross l!unter ani! ali·stlir cast. director Michael Gordon, ·who Sandra Dee, -llo\lywoml's top recently teamed ·to· create· tllat 1 teen·aged star, scores solidly as ~eat Doris J?ay-Rock· ·Hudson the soph{stlcnted young s•.ep· comedy_ hit, "Pillow· Talk,' daughter defending her fiance must go ·a ~major portion of· the John Saxon, gaining stature md praise for this masterpiece of I maturity in an adult role, melodrama. Hunter's declshm proves why his legion of fan~ to combine Uie stark qualities I adore .him. Lloyd Nolan, In a of murder and suspense with a cameo role, burns on the screen glamorous splash. of high tu- ian unforgetable etching of tile blon, sparkling jewels and tu~11 \husband marked for death. settings photbgraphed In color Richard Base hart· blends humor has paid. off handSomely. and ruthlessness lnto the '''le

Mill Turner's great artistry of the power·hungry corpnr-ln "Imitation of Life" is de atlon lawyer. . finitely aurpused by her poll!· Ray Walston· Is hilariou~ &s nant performance In "Portrait the !amity chlluffeur whose cars ill. Black." Lana's portrayal of are faster than the hones he the dlscpntented wife who cOQ· betA on. Anna May Wong, rt­splrea with a lover aealn~t hP.r turning to film after a 17·year husband Ia certainly or \ca absence, Is • welcome de1ight dem:r Award calibre. as the enigmatic Oriental house·

No len brilliant Is An•hony keeper; Virgina Grey scores 1m Qulnn'a powerful artistry In the l)re.~slvely as the frightened sc role of the lover whose world

1.cretary; and young Dennis

crumbles In the aftennath ot Kohler. as Mis~ Turner's ~~~~~ the crime he commits. Quinn shows rare tahint as a child wbo.ae fine talent Is al~t>adY actnr. . world-renowned, also blo"om• "Portrait In Black." emblnt·

, on the screen in hla first mocl ! ont·d hy the superb color ph•Jio

l ern.droS~; romantk role as ~'"" : l!raphy of nus.q~JI Melt;•. w~' dom's newNl movie heart-1!1"411' : ad,ptcd from a BroAdwuy 1nd

In fact. it is lmpo11ible to ht I London play by lvan Goff a1•d stow acting laure_ls for ."l'!•r 1 Ren noherts. whn also prcphrt•d trait In Black" without .a special :the taut and exciting s~r~~n word for every member of the 'play.

I

THE STORY OF MARTHA WAYNE

SHORT RIBS

AJ.LEY OOP

CAPTAIN EASY

BUGS IJUNNY

1-lE CAN 5EE THEM 50 WEU. WITr\ HIS £UPER.-500PY

TELESCOPE THAT HE CAN ACTUALLY, TELL ONE' SATeL­LlTf fF!DM ANoT/'lER.

I

l·.n

~ 1HI by t.rA.I,.., Y.l/. Rtl· V 'J. ,.lf_ Ctf, 'r'1•1'·~t! J'#C"r;!ll.

"l hear you and 'Regio:tered Mail' are engaged! That'1 · what you get for playing post office a~tr. hours!" .J

8y W. SHRUGGS

1-·~

By FRANK O'NEAL

t·.l3

,.. ''" •· ••• ...• .., •·r ··• •··-

By LESLIE TURNER

By LEON SCHLESINGER

·~=========== ~~~:!!:::~----- ----·-L~..:::-_:.0:_ :L_....o: __ ~:::B!:y :.:D-IC=K :..C~Az.;V_E~Ll. AND I'VE. DE;:CIDED

ro· ACCEPT

YOLl--ON ONE

CONDITION.

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. .· ________ T_II_E_I_)._\I_L_Y :\E\\'S .. ~T. JOII\'S. :\_FLD. \!0_\, 1.\~~ 21,

" .. F·OR SALE 'rBig ·Daddy" Gardiner Retiri~tg As

'Chalrin~ OfT orOnto Metro Council An Ar~~,,~~~~~~"~ Jeep EL;~~;;2;:;Y : . Br JOBH t.eB~C !ere with. your Independence. 'I "I've always had 1 project,"

t-nacllail 'Pnn S~fl ·writer ,wouldn't want tO, hnve to go he once ro.:fiected. "At univer· is CHEAP in r'fORO.NTO,'lCf'•..,:Fred Gar· around with my .hat In mylsltyitwastowlnthoAle;can~cr D·IAL 2447H ST. JOH~•'s jlllnei' said ·lie Uies lotlc. reason harid." : · MacK1mzle scholarship t wh1ch ,..,. l&Jid detorunr .. · · ; · . Wlllch' Is soroothm~ Mr. Gar· he did I and at Osgoode Hall i. "I only put. tbe axe to their diner Is never known to have llaw schooll It was to be gold. --· ----· ~-m~ds. ·when everything else done. · medalllst"-which he was. I w k c . LIGH c, POnnPB ~Ills." . A native of Toronto. wher~ he Next, he said, it was to es· WI"nter or s ampaign ""IliA 1_ Mr. Gardiner w.1s mildly rem·. has spent his whole life except; tabllsh a good low bcslness and i · . U " • • ,. • ' ' .. ' ' ' f

nstratlng against the generally,fol'· an overseas h1ttl! In thethe came up with one of the most' · . , d . . , I Ch R I' bl El 1 · 't 1 d ·suspicion that, at 66, he's; First World War with the Ca-lucrative prnctices In Toronto, .I ha~e been asked to sup~ort 1 mg one .ami no mat.tcr how ea~=o eta e ec rtct Y 1

. 1 ·the toughest man in the nadlrm Mounted Rifle~ and the practising every kinj of law. . th~ Wmter Employment Cam·· s•~all the> arc they V.ll.l help. In an i Around St. John'! ' He life of this community ofiR.oyal Flying Corps, he gradU·I His law business established. pa1gn spread through the ·_ef·) ~len a. little, to rclicl'c the~~~: I 1,~;000; · ~ ated In, political 'ecorromy from he started dabbling m municip,li. forts of I be Loc~l Campar.gn j cmplo> 111?nt ~rtuatron 1f ) ou 1

1 The persons he put~ the axe the tinll'ersity of To: onto. \politics. For 14 vc~rs he served: Comnnt!ee lll ~onlunclron ~~llh I ha~c them . ~~ne 11° 1~· . What. ' ~·on occasion take in just .about\ ALWAYS HAD GOAL , on the village cou~c.il of the: ihe National Wmter Work Cam· i alro~t that ua~~mcnt that, should

verybody with the tcmenty to It was there he n•dde an early posh suburban mumc1pnllly llfl ~argn th,roughout Canad~ from: be cleaned up, that hai111a) that tanste with him, including the I start demonstrating the Gar· Forest Hill before Premier St. Johns to . Vancouver. T~e 1 nee~' a ~oat of, parnt, the re·, members of the Metropolita'l diner principle of making his Frost tabbed 1him for his present! cause has ment and the need 1s · molal of snow at. the next . Toronto eouncll of •vhlch he Is: mind up about ;omclhlng and job when the legislature set up SeriOUS and there IS also need! snowfall. Ail little Lhtngs hut If I Chalrman. ' . i then getting it done. l :O.ietro. I of forceful words to brrng to i you employ ~om~ out of work 1

The heavy-set lawyer-politi·l · the attention of Canadians the 1 fellow c1t1zen to do those Jobs,,

lcian, who has announced that extent of. unempl~ymcnl and: •L 1s gorng to be a help. And: he Is quitting as chairman at I u· . . N 0 I the particularly disastrous cf.: there . must be hundreds olf

!the end of the vear has· been! . ra.n1um,• o·t n· y feels of seasonal un~mploy.·small JObs throughout the C1Ly 'the tougJi,flsted bo~~ of the rnenl. As a head of Unron of that need domg. Lwns any. ;:ouncll since. it .• ,.115 .set up in I casual work~rs 1 am· constantly. where ~lUI' C. never let anyone: .1953 to admlr.ister affairs of the I m touch wtth honest mdus· down. !\ow ts the ltmc to prove;

'City .. of Toronto and a dozen For Destruct I. on trto~s people' who are serwusly I' II. . Qd)acent municipalities I Ill .11ant of 11or~ m a. country 1 .For this he is known as Big 1 , wh1ch boasts of 1ts millions a~d: GORilON M. STIRLI:'IiG, . Pl!4dy. not neces~arily a term 1 . , tis prospenty. ~luch of the mls· 1 Treasur.cr •. Law ~odcty of or. l!ffecUon. I By ALFONSO .\lA URI I fpr bigger prospcc~; than the cry IIIVOlvcd can be lessened by I Nc\lfoundl.md.

·"I'd like. to think it's meant I B~ENOS A~RES, 1 Reuters!:- 1 industrial. re,·otution. which: the willingness to help. Ther'c: 1 am qutte ccrtam , that the: In endearment;" he said In an Uranmm, which Is hnked m started w1th coal. 'arc at the present moment: members of the La11 Soctct> Interview, "but on the other; !net and Imagination with the Johnson said: I small jobs to be done which can! would destre to be asso~1atct!: hind· 1 ·really dml't care. I r--·' ~c~dlv four-le!lct word of "Even by 1965, 50 per cent of put dollars where dollars arc: w1th the commendable efforts METRO HIS BABY ·our era-atom-Is fast becom· the new generation will hav~' needed, which can remol'e wor- 1 of the Wmlcr Empio;nnent ; Mr. Gardiner has b~n lgnor·. i11.~ 'I common ·lomeslic com· power supplied by atomic en·' ry from anxious mothers who: Campaign Committee. . . lng what individuils think about. modity. · I ergy. The time factor is the: find it difficult to satisfy I he I In the1r profess1on~l adm· him e1·er· since he quit a $50. I For the more research is done· I onlr brake on progress. It takes !needs of school children and; l'lltcs, Lawyers are confronted

:ooo.a-year law practice to take 1 the longer grows the list of 1 four to fh·e years •o construct; supply the multiple demands i datly wtth manr of the unplea­:on the $15,000 Metro chairman· possible peaceful ~es of the'lhe smallest nucle1r power sta.: for money. One thin€ is lacking sant results of uncmploymcut. :ship l!t the request of his friend atomic energy which it is. har· lion. • 1m many instances and that is 1 They arc qmte aware of the :Premier Leslie FrMt. whose nessed to generate. J ''Until that period of ex pan· I you are working a grave injus· i fact that the whole community 1 'o1•emment set tlp this first Meeting here recently, sclen· slon and experim~nt i> over. the! Lice by withholding work be·: suffer;; when many of 1ts ctlt· ! metrDpolltap coundl system on lists, geologists and minlni! en· I atomic era is on trial. There arc 1 cause you arc too indifferent zens arc unable to prov11lc for lhe continent. gineers from 18 Wt!~tern 'Coun·l a large number of nuclcarj to have it done. The will to, the normal requirements ufl O~lhe way he hU:I made some, tries, together with atomi~ ex·' power projects being built with 1 help it half the accomplish-, the1r families because of gain·.

enentles but. he hasn't paid 1 perts from Euratom and the, varying types of reactors. Can· mcnt. Our Union is affecting ful employment. 1

· mucQ 11t1entlon 'to this in driving, International Atomic Energy Or· I ada has anno~nccd that she will· improvements. ll keeps some· Usually 11 t,; necessary only· Public Notice

V/here To Stay Ba~sam Hotel

BA!lNF:S !lf/J\0 s::c:.terl In •he Heart ot

t'tc Ci' ·.

\.luiet, Comfor•3hle A~;nos.

ph ere.

Fur he.<ervation' and In· t~rmation.

Dial 6336 MilS. JOliN f' i\CEl' Resident ~I:Jnageress

Prompt Delivery On STOVE OIL

• FCrtNACE 011. • 11.\fiD COAL • SOFT fOr\L mo~ ..-mE,L\.'11 IIL\TI:O.I> f.()t:II'.\IE\01

---------------------- i

P.UTO PARTS (Whole);

Nfld. Armature

~i;;;jijjjiJ Works

~lflpii1]Ba~~rick Street. Uilllj ')ial 7191·2

lor iUCh things as 1 handso~e ganizalion: sought to estimate' have .a 200-mcgawatt rcact?r body's home happier, other to brmg a need before our pcO·I ,\pplicatioth arc in 1·ited to fill :sys. tem of roads, thP weldm;: I the Wests. uranbm resources I producmg power 3t an econom1c; Clubs, Untons, and Soc1et1es pic and the) respond magmft· four vacancies 011 the Ddnct CHESTER DA WE, L TO. :tosether of .various.·pollce an'd discussed the !uiure of 1lcosl _by 1964. C'ertamiy, t964~could also redecorate and im· cently. Let.u~.hope 11 wtll ~1e.Schooi Supcrrisory s:aff of the, SIL\W ST. and TOPSAIL RD; :foree.a· sewa'e aystems and the· atomic energy. promt5es to be the hreakthroughl prove. so m th1s tn~t,Incc. The tnlcn- Department of Education. for all your Building 1 othe'r ltems that go into a com· They came to some optimistic J ycal'." I If you are the owner of a twn of the Wtnter Employment 1 These exist in lh~ Denomina· Requirements cal! 1

;plell:: of ·12 towns and villages conclusions. allho~gh uranium Within the next 10 years, I:Je., house some room needs paint· Comnuttee ts to urge those of: tiona! Dil'isions of th~ u~part· 80161-91171 1 ,plus the' big cities. has . been f.Hling in price and; 000,000.000 will De spent on I ing, some floor needs tiling us who intentionally or lr.oughl·: mcnt as follows:- ·

·:My .monument i> that this. dropping out of ~I' on the:atomic power. ·and there must be a small rc· les.s!y put of! harin:: some re··no:.L\:'\ c,\TI!Of.IC 1 ; metro form of government has world market. /RECORD COST . :pair job which will help your: pa1rs made or renol'atwns com· l.':'\ITED Clll'HCII 3. d.emoliStrated. its the best solu· • "! believe that tl11s is the: fellow citizen who is not work·l plcted, lo do 11 now. . · ~lusgrarctown, Lcwi,porte, '

:t1on yet ,devised for running 13 H!.RD \ E~~S AREA~ 1 ·biggest concerled effort el'er · ing without any fault of his It has been emphastzed that Sprin~uaie ! abutting 8lld ·•autonomous com· The pres enht of 1 ~ con er-1· bro'Jght to bear on a single: but he and his famik feel that\ it is not a •·cto it yourself" cam· i Di;;trict Scl;ool su11cnisors -----------

: · · . ence Jesse Jo nson d1rector of 1 h 1 1 r· ld · th h' 1 f · • · ·1 th tl · · muntttes. · 1 • . · d' . 11 ec n ca 1e m ! Is ory o 1 want. Thousands of you own 1 pa1gn-qut c c reverse - 1c arc cla"ificd as Din•rtors Grade fJAINE JOHNSTON • . . I 1e raw materm:s !VIsion o · ·d.. 'd· J h c 't .. "d · 1 · ' '·· '· -· • "And It's my baby I brought the United States Atomic En·lmBankltm .• s~t'h $.3o ~oooon. 000 . :houses. Then there .arc per· I .omm•lftecl sa)s on teo! •.t V l'.'ilh salary scale $J8~0·100·. COMPANY, LTD . • It up from ·a I title boy,· Now C 1 . ld r am. WI .·.Nv, · Ill·, sons m pos1t1ons of mfluence · )ourse -nrc >ome un(lnp O)· SG160. ipeople come here from around ergy d o~~~slon, to a ,cor·. vested in nuclear JIOII'cr sta·l who could take their jobs less ed person to do it!" Aduallr., 1\pp!ieanls should hare a t'nt· Agency Department :lbe world to see how It works. 'I responahen d !ere hare lson:te e~n. \ions to be built In the next 10 serious!,· be a litHe more flex· it might be advisable fo:.· a 'do. I'C~sitv De"~c~ and a ;HIIllllcr of 2H Water St. Dial 2102

· years ea or t e uramum m·· d th ~I """000000' '' ·1 If' dd. h · n · YOUR FRIGIDAIRE :: WhUe he's satisfied he got 1 d 'years, an ano er • ,vw, · 1 ible and gel things moving. If • yoursc a tel to al'c some 1 I' Cars of successful teaching ex· ~things.· done anq 1r getting i ~~try. ! set aside for research, leads the~ the unemployed makes a dollar skilled carpenter 'undo' the 1 periencc. DEALER. :~round to normal' retirement I That Is because Ill the atom· I way. I he spends it on necessities and i ~lamar,e he has done and do the i Successful candidates will he .ege, he is not retiring. He is· r~ce years, when there wns ter·l The United States has Its own thereby the money goes round' JOh properly! 1 re~uirc 1 ! to take up permanent HEAP & PARTNERS :Joing back to his law practice nf:c bovelt~d~ct.ion/nd ~t ~o~l~: 10-year plan to sncnd $2,000,000, and round, that is of course if Lawrers arc urged. to make a. residence in tile Supervisory INFLD ) LTD ~t a t lme when many men no .. e c ec. e ln lme 0 e~e I 000 to $3,000.000,000 yu and I arc public spirited spec1al effort at th1s It me to, Districts to which they arc ap·' · .. · ·. . ·!'ould . be thinking oi armchair ou.t,' he sal.d. Uranium's "big fire" !n pro· enou.gh to think of those who prol'tdc work for some needy 1 pointed. : Wtrtng Malena Is, W1re and :~nd slippers. . . The mlhta~y demand now duction arc: CaMda. w1th re·: want work and if we join in j unemployed persons by pro·; Applications giring full p:~r· · C:~bles, M?lors Starters, ;~o1· ·THE MONEY has almost drled up anhd there 1 serves o[ 300,000 tons; S~uth 1 this campaign to do it now that ceedmg at once \l'tlh planned 'I icular;; concPrning academic I Lamps. Swttches, Lighting i: "I don't need the money;' l~ no doubt at.allth~t t e prlceiAfrlca, 285,000 tons; the Umled a less fortunate can be morei•mprol'emenls .. renovattons or education, profcssionaltrainin~., Fudures, etc; ,

ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES

SEE T~r

WILL

.\T

McKINlAY

. -' Tb rce 11 r~ks ,, . ll .. l."llf , 1· aq~ ' ' , uJlJIICal:l'n

: to the Boar•! or by the LitHlcr,:,r.~J ern Lt<en,c to '!'' Wines on prerm;,;' :'>o. :J9 ((u;"~,t•n. .John's

Dated "'" 6::1. (;, ary, AD. WGI. · IIIGI!Elt LEilL

per; 1\'li.LI.IJI jan9,16,2:l

Taxi

;said the well-heele1 Mr. Gar· of .. uranium Will dro,. t ~States. 184,000 tons; france. 1 fortunate. 1

repatrs to the1r hou.s~s or offt·: e3ching. cxperit•nce. age and IVAREIIOUSE: PRINCES ST. ;diner. an officer of a number The present mark,et price or 50,000 tons; and. 1\u.s•ra!ia, 8,500\ Think 11 Over. ccs and it is suggest,~d t~at: other relc1'3 nt inform:Jtwn · 1HAL5085 Regular 8.30 3 ~ ;~ companies, "but my partners uranium ore Is betv.een $8 ~nd tons. All the b1g ftve have al· W:ll. F. BREE:>;, those who manage properttes ·should he 1n the hands of the ) Argenlia \\'rdr.e!:J: ;want me back and they've been $IO a pound. relow $8. It Is bemg most infinite depositr or urn· i Pres. LS.P.U. ! for .clients or estates should en. Deput\' :llinistcr of Education I FIRE INSURANCE '25th., willlll.lke J:iving me ultimatu~." m!?rth~~k\h~~s.in the next 10 , nium which ha1·c not been esti·i I deavour to hare as much main· n0 ' l:;ter than february ~8th.: 1 ~t.V. Hopcdal~ for ;! So he has given the council years the nrlce will fall to $S 0 I mated. . ~ BOB BARTLETT, : tcuance work as poss1bie done; H.+,, ~0 that sucl'essful candi- CROSBIE & ro LTD Placenti:I !l:J)'. · . ;•bout a year's notice that he is Abo. th h . 1 f Delegates to the conference President Lions Club, ·now rather than wa1t unlrl the dates 111 , •• he in a p1wtion to _ ., • ~~uitting, to allow· plenty of time 1 P;~nd.th 1 ~ t e 'ifimnt n~ f I parted. ho1ve~·er. wit•• one ques-. St John's Nfld • spring. : ~i,·e am,ple notic,c t; tht'lr Agents for !for the selection of another!' 0·b ke n ~tsryf wt s.arB 0

1;1lon left unanswered. ;";o one' The lio~· Club of si John's: 'Boards 11f Education. UNDERWRITERS AT ··,hairman It will probably take get ac on 1 5 ee agam. u ·knew how much uranium the . . ' • · " J'Y LLOYDS CONNECTIO~

SEit\'IC 'abOut th~t much tlll'e to come these coming 10 year.~ are going: Soviet Union and olhcr conn·· gives lts support one hundred· u 't d ChUrCh neput" ~~ii.:t·is~~:> -~[ · J-:~iucation. • LOW R \TES up. with someone llf the horse· ito see some real los~es. So rar. I tries of the Eastern bloc hare.' P~.r cent to the atms of • I he. . n I e DIAL 'so:n

f F ~ · k . ~ G di ' there are no Important orders • . \\ 1nter Unemployment Com· . j a nl ~.~1 Tra 111 "The -----------·St. John's 1:n P~· power o re~enc . ''· ar ner. d . · ______ ··--·--·- ·1 Tl · 1 tl 1

·"Well. Mr Ga•·diner ob· for 1961. an , as far a, I can see.. • llll tee. te1rs 1s an _appea . Jat I Orphanag:e \.January 2tith 111:: d 'd 11~ · .. t 1 t th I there are not .]ikelv to be anv .. ·• -.._ i calls for sympathetic cons1der·

, S{)fl',et be r · · · 13 k easf edr.e: The world's two biggest 'con· ........... ...,..., ; ation. "Sympathetic" because

won any a~ o can t· . ' . • * '$ ..., 1 ld f 1 f • d t ,. i sumers of uramum, the Uruted A J IA\J 1 , ww wou you ee 1 your •

HARDWARE STORES : ncction at p,,rl 3J

----------- with S ~. S3r

aHes. 1 !king · h" ollie ·States and BritaiJl• purchased i HL 'H/4 1 I salary or wages stopped all of a· The following donations and f : tas a . ;~ ls ei~ oxide in 1959·60. By 1964 they· UJAIT, I' I sudden? "Consideration" be· gifts arc gratefully ackllowl· .Tucro~to·awa~i ~ 11.e hr~tr H~ )41,000 short tons of u~anium; ""'' HI TIN' 1 cause it is up to all employed: edged: d~k w!s. a~le!~ 0~ '/pnpea r~ an'~ I will have cut purchases to JO,. j IJ/11/D tJ/LWAJ • citizens of St. John's to' consider; $50.00 e~rh-Toolon's Ltd., h 000 tons. I fVVf\ UIU""' what can be done to remedy i Brewery Ltd.

. e appeared singular!) relaxed CUTS IN CANADA : matters. . I 525.00 cn~h-Th~ .llennett folrtha m:Sn 000runoooning ~n operation\ Canada, the world's biggest I I appeal to all Lions (as wei! I Brewing Co., Ltd., Gordon llut· · w a ~ I ·a-~rar curren k' · · II & s Ltd ~lr c \ budiet .and ; capital nrogram producer, Is ma 1011 plans to cut I as all Citizens . of St. John's

1

0e~R. 11 onN, fld . ._ 1 • "5 ~. • c' · •

o1 f!OO 000 000 w production down yPal" by year-: generally) to g1ve the matter te y, .• . . ,, ar ~al.me o.,, Th ' ·' ~ year. , f · from 12.000 short tonl In 1960 to • of temporary employment a Ltd., J. B. :O.IItchcll & ~.on, Ltd., •

:call~;s::,nn~~or~ifts ~es~arr': 1,100 tons In 1966. I 1 thought. Naturally, it .is not i F. M. O'Leary Ltd. • · j t . · dmi lstr ti 1 t But while the uranium mining everyone who can prov1de em· I John R. Parsons, T. A. J!arl"ah us one a n a \'e ass s. · ' 0 h ·' '!

t. tw 1e h companies will feel the pinch I ployment at a minutes notice $2 .00 eac -Mr. an" ·' rs. an , o · s nograp ers. one re· th Is bi 1 1 ' . & c Ltd ~limbt· anti on office bo ere a g uture or ura· but there are dozens of httle. o., . WANtS ·FEDERA~ HELP y. n!um and the atomic era with jobs that you have put off hav· Sl5.00 each-GeorgE· Neal

:HIJ ·bailiwick takes· lnt 240 Lt~io.oo each-Higgin:; & Hig· A

HARRIS & HISCOCK, LTD. General llarl'ware

Distributors for Sunbeam Electrical Appliances,

Sports goods and Sports wear for aU occasioos.

DIAl 5016

ERNEST CLOUSTON, LTD, ~!cCLARi AUTm!ATIC

. IVAR~I AIR CONDITIONING 210 WATER ST.

DIAL 4183 --RADIO-TV REPAIRS .~e ,mil~ of spreadeagled H k E • 1 bl gins Dr. George P Frl!nch Jlr. WELCOME WAGON

tommtll1lty which lnctudes Can· · •t ' · ' I HOSTESS ··;. ORly &ubway, a project oc ey xpanSIOn neVI a e w. Gr~uch~ ~.r. G.~:· Bro~ll· I GREAT EASTERN OIL tjMt· will· Involve ~ome $3M.OOO. r•s:g, •tY a 10 & ',11

SIC 0

''[ Will Knock at Your Door COMPANY, LTD. GOO when eurre 1 exte 1 Ltd., Ben Tulk Ltd., \\. J. Jtur· d -- ·. · .. ,_a . 1_,n d 0 ns onf phy, Ltd., Sir Leonard Outer-! with Gifts an Greetings ' !tEl' AIRS TO RADIOS, TV

t:~i-:e~i·::a;: .tryi~: ~ A R d Bl k R d bridge, C. A. Hubley L:d., Char-~ from Frier1dly Business JL'iD ALL ELECTRICAL Paise I $74,000,000 loan from the . s oa 0( s Are emove 'Jes R. Bell Ltd., John T. Che~se· Neighbours and Your APPLIANCES !fileial (ovemmimt, a deal,~~ ! m.an, Dr. A. W .• 1. lllac<ler; The I~-· . d . DIAL 3001 to3005 which· .. lle ·1s having-for Bill Woman's Assomttou, :--<oms I -•vtc an S~c1al Groups I 'Daddy~ remarkllb!e lack ·0r By GABE KAIMOWITZ and reportedly will field a team is fortunate to draw much more Ar~, per !llrs. 11. B. Poole, 1 ~} the occaston of: ; -----------,J.U~~&!I, _ · .. P,!!rtlcularly as for Newspaper Enterprize Assn. il) the minor American Hockey than half that number. Bamc, Johnston & Co., Ltd., ~1. ! New Comer to the City, 1 GROCERS (Retail) .JAIDy years he has been 8 big NEW YORK-(NEA)-Those League. Stadiums in San Fran· The surprise victory by the D. Shears Ltd. .

1

Th 8. h f B b i · wheel··ln the. Prlllfel!slve Con- In pro hockey do not have to visco (Cow Palace) and Los An· U.S. Olympic ice hockey. team $7.50-Burin u.c. aud Path e trl o a a y, • L. HEALEY

:HI'\'~Ive party. be hit on the head with a stick geles (the new Sports Arena) gave the game another boost End Sunday School, per ~trs.l PHC>.fE 94865 - 90943 Cross Roads and Water Street ~ .. "fve 'been .trying to CO!Ivlnce to know that league expansion are Ideal for the majors and hockey probably won't feel the J. Burton. . . 1 and 3582. Dial 3026 ~tllepi.tbat If w• could have this is Inevitable. spectator interest there Is los· benefits for four or five years," $6.00-!llaJor and Mrs. Rich·! -----~ .. .,.-----------Jriioney and· sPtect th•! ·work, 1 They're just slower about It, enlng money belts. Goren says. ard F. Atchison Jr. ; w.~I.S. Grand falls. Gam ish. ·would llelo relieve' uneniploy that't aU, than their playmates The Black Howks, with a win· Right now, there are no $5.00 each-His IJ.Jn. the: Woman's Bible Class, Miss llo· I INSURANCE AGENTS riiftilt here:''· . : : '. . binallo,thbeurkpertboallte'mfoosp1boarts-,..ll, .bobawse-

1• nlng team this year, may break American players In the NHL Lieut. Governor, Mr. Campbell gan, Paramount Theatre. G. w. 1 AND BROKERS

. Ht.'dtiefo't want to IO IntO the into the black after a lO·year but the game is being "sold Macpherson, Mr. James R. Snow, Exrlorcrs, Wesley·-----------mcin.Y market. for flior ·of. l!ooilt· lng-who .are dropping new drought In Chicago where the American" for those verygood Steele, Mr. J. B. Angel. :!\Irs. , Church, Young ~larrirtl Con· · JOB BROTHERS 1a1. 't~f blt.resf ,rate on Tor· teams and leagues into almost team was kept only by the grace monetaryreasons. James C. Grieve, 1\!r~ .. A. E., pies Club. Wesley Church, 1.1-. & CO. LTD. tintO'p' 1eneral·beiroWinl8. . ·. every corner of the United and enonnous pocketbook of Should the NHL expand, It Hickman, Mr. Fred J. Lewis, dies Orphana~c Aid. Bradbury's i Water Street .~·~tljer probl.•m he hu been S~ltest ·m· ay .• ..:..

8 two .. or ·three Jim Norris, And as everyone will be the first major change Fred V. Cresman Ltd .• Curtis & I Grocery, Stanley Elliott, I.td., 1 Dial 2658-4123 dainJ lorM th!nklqg. aJ,&ut ln .... should· know, new "angels" since the league was pared to Dawe, H. G. Puddcster. Q.C., Brownin~ Harvey, ~Irs. Ro<a .

. f'iqfllf:yewi b whether or not years before the National Hock, don't come in where "fools" al· its present six-team set-up in Mrs. B. Fearn, .Mrs. lsobel 1 While and 1\liss llilda White.:-----------1' fhmild be , all outrl&ht ey League expands but that read)( are losing money. . 1942 after sliding downhill Wylie, Royal Aeraterl Water 1\!rs. Marion Abbott, ~Irs. ~k · REG. T. MORGAN

_.lp~Qtloa of .'he municipal' year will come aoon." Quote Until recently, lee hockey, from 10 teams and two divi· Co., Ltd., M~. and Mrs. J. S. Grath, Jim Shields ~~·eat ~larkct, i INSURANCE Ll!lflTED .lll .. )etro; )t pr~enf theY He~b Goren, New Yor~ Ran1· professional or .otherwise, .in slons In 1926. But internally, Canning, Miss r.~. Howell, Dr. T. & M. Winter, Chievers Food>, I Temple Bldg., P.O. Bo1 168,

· .~; ·tbtlr ... own Individualities I trs press repraentatlve. this· hemisphere rarely pene· .the league has already expand· J. 0. Fraser, Vtclory Lodge Mrs. Howard :\lanston, Frank • 341 Duckworth Sl. !~~ •. ~liD- dvle. services such I· Pro hockey needs thl1 boost trated farther south than New ed by increasing its original 44- No. 277 L.O.B.A., Dr. Raymond McNamara Ltd., 11. F. Fanning.\ Dial 80370 or 7756 ~·{fie d~~infs,, :-, to Bet out ~~ the small type York (or perhaps Hershey, Pa.) game puer team schedule to 50 Gushue, Miss Clarrie Case, Mrs. Malll)lly's Ltd., Brookfield Icc I 111M Q:~t YET ' lbtlng to wlilch it Ia large)y and was virtually confined In in 1942, and present 70 to '49. M. Short, Mr. P. F. Collins, Long Cream, East End Bakery, Frozen --~~~~~~--' .Mr. Glli!iaer · · tbiuks' tbeyre ·confined. · the vast Western United States Where are the loudest rum· Bros, Mr. J. M. Bradshaw, Miss Foods Ltd., Barrett's Whole· DRUG STORES

·:ope .ftir ii~alpn1atlon. . . Expansion In the only major to Washington and Minnesota. blings of expansions comin~ Muriel El'ans, R.N., ~rr. F. H. sale, Walsh's Bakery, Arthur i -----------. . ~1 ~alii~ oppored hockey leaBUe pro,bably will · But television, courtesy of from Loa Angeles and San Hawkins, Mrs. ;'11olly Coady, P.l Parsons, ~Irs. Bartlett, llri~us; M. CONNORS LTD.,. .

I II\. CODvlnCecl tbat In come be(:l ause three main rea- CBS, In the last four years has Francisco were represented at C. O'Driscoll Ltd., W. Angus 1

1 Mrs. Elsie Fun.c, Brook Bond i Prescriptions Pickup and I :~up Wt have tilt sons he d acatnst It by l>JHL spread the hockey word and a recent NHL represented at Reid, Mr. L. ~J. Brett. · Can:ttla Ltd., Standard ~!ann. delivery service. Phone 2206 i

. for cioial the job ownen ~ being blown to the picture,· So leagues developed a recent NHL confab; Pittsb· $.1.00 each:.....Mr. Gordon Okc, facturing Co., s. ~Iiiiey !.ttl, : . ~." . . . . four wlild1. They are: la~k of In places like Charlotte and burgh, and Cleveland, which Anon. I Bcl'erage S:~ies, Two 1\'ay Storr', ~ YL WARD'S DIAL yQQ70

f ..... ~ to walk out stadium faellities, the pr~hibl· Greenboro, N.H., and a pro has a team in the AHL, have $2.50-Mr. W. T. llumphrirs. Ayrc's Supermarket, Harris ,!; . PDARMACY pllllllttl" Mr. Gardiner wes live co1t of breakinl ieven came was played In. Jackson· been heard. Donations of fruit. candy, Hiscock, Kiwanis Internal ion : Cor. Moncby & t:mplre Ave.

bid lillY advice for (about $701),000 and up per vllle, Fla. Goren thinks expansion will cakes and cookies, Christmas al, Mr. John IIIII, Henry anrll ~:Cl lito polltlea. teom for one 1ea1011) 1and the And an exhibition game be- succeed in the U.S. because "icc stockings, toys, etc.: Cabot Tow· E Soper, Royal Stores. Char ; ----------:--

~. "ll'l VW) Chlcaso Black Howkl. tween the NHL's Boston Bruins hockey, a fast action game with et Square & Compass Club, lies Hutton & Sons. Miss D. Hall.: PfiRKDALE •• • OC. • • • · and Toronto Maple Leafs drew the simplest of rules, makes Operation Santa Claus Redc!iff. I Canada Packers. ~Irs. Wm. l~ i PD!\R:\IACl' ~ li .U )'OU Plttlhrl lndlt 11 $20 mil· 10,000 fanR in allen Los Angeles. the best first Impression of any 1 ))arrington School. R~d Cross.! llishop. !lei'. Parmns. La Sci~ : Elizabelh Ave.

llllf·~·Er: .. , .... Uta ltadiWillllltable for ho~ey where a pro basketball contest major team sport." Grand Falls Kniltirg Club, I St. John'> Y's men's Club. I Dial 91120

\

South Coa:-t sw::e

Freight is the Rai!ID)' ports on the Sou:h but in order to · ment by t!Ii> Bonavista lrci~ht

f ,:->0 the Railway r,.,-· later than !:00 p:. .January ~4th.

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

nennat ISS Sll Road. RS. D. RS. D< worth RS. C1 Court.

A

Page 11: ,1 : .U.N. MOROCCAN TROOPS PULL OUT OF KEY KATA …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19610123.pdf · Talk Peace OUT OF KEY KATA NGA CITY pARis-Reuters-Algerian

l \\

.:.E THE

., 'I J ll

~ thas 6tb. do! ,l 1961.

! lit l.l:\'[t -: WII.Ll.\.\1

2:1

~ . . .1XI

'LR .. ,,.. "The

':·hn's 130 p.JII. .-. :-:-· 261 h \\'ill

KINSM-EN Boys Club

per ·BINGO SERIES 41

]OW\ HOGA~. 112 Gower Street: i:.\TJIEHI:\E \V ALKINS, 8 Ban­

n~nnan Strt't't. SIIIEL:\ \ll1RPHY, 40 Freshwater

Road. . D. PO\\'EH. 10 Allan Square. DOHOTIIY BAILEY, 139 Duck-

11wth Street. Cli:\1\LES SKANES, 22' Tu'nis

Court. :\l.lT. OS\IO~D. 124 St. Clare

,\l'tllUC. SOI'EH. 21 Halcigh Street.

IIEHBEHT ASH, 103 Long's Hill R. STEELE, 13 Bullcv Street. \1.\ Y \IYLEH, 55 Pl~asant Street.

\OH\1.\\ \ll'LLINS, 746 Southside Road \\d.

. L. 11:\ YES, 19 Kitchener Avenue.

.. \\\ BISHOP, 5 Central Street. . PATHICI\: WALSH, 255 Southside

!itldll. . :\D.\ PE:\7\EY, Blackler Avenue. . JOll\ :\\1 \III'\ SON, 97 Bond St.

\\l' HPHY, 3A. ~lacFarlane St. .1\. HE:\LEY, 260 Hamilton Avenue.

I31\DQ:-;, c/o Imperial Oil.

Prite Winner is:-

MRS. MARIE BENNETT, Blackhead Road

for new series now on sale.

Numbers will appear Tuesday.

Kin - Help Kiddies

ial Steak Nite ~URSDAY, JAN. 26th . · Filet \lignon Steak with French

or \lashed Potatoes, Green Peas or Rolls, Tea, Coffee or :Milk.

$2.00

I Steak House DIAL 80218

Annual \leeting of Shareholders of

the

UNDLAND MARINE INSURANCE CO., LTD.

be held in the Board of Trade Rooms 1112 :\'oon on TUESDAY, January 24 196 ' 1• when Annual Statement and Re-

for past vear will be. presented, and

of Directors.

FFICES TO .RENT IN

NEWFOUNDLAND ~AYINGS BANK BUILDING

A,lply at the Bank.

&G I ,· t · • A nRme extr~mely weD 0 Newfoundland car owners for

many year . . ~ow· s - mvttes~ you to j~;>in ,

..._ ... mg number of auto insurance who now know there IS a

Join us this year: We ;ar. never reJCret it. .

& GUARANTY Co. 'leli&llietlllb~

PBON£7035

. , ' '

.•

CONFEDERATION CABS CONFEDERATION GROUNDS

8 a.m. to 12 p.m. Confederation Building PHONE 94071 PH.ONE 95011 Ext. 524 dec21,1m ·

The Funeral of our late Comrade James B. Doyl..: will take place TUESDAY MORNING at 10 o'clock, from Caul's Funeral. Home, New Gower St.

All available ex-servicemen are request­ed to attend.

J. W. GOODYEAR,

Secretary, St. John's Branch.

KEN MOUNT MOTEL

- Due to the great acceptance of the

John Guy Room by the public of St. John's,

we would like to request our patrons to

make reservations whenever possible.

CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN IF CHAFE MAKES THE CLOTHES.

Wm. L. CHAFE TAILOR

• 4 HOLDSWORTH ST. ST. JOHN'S

FOR SALE WINTERHOL.ME e Main Floor-Spacious entrance hall,

, magnificently P,anelled. Five large rooms, servants quarters, 21;!! bath­rooms, kitchen and pantry.

e Second Floor-Self-contained apart­ment. Six rooms, large hallway kitchen and 3 bathrooms. '

e Top Floor-Suitable for conversion to a third apartment. 5 rooms and bath­room.

e Grounds-North by Circular Road-292 feet. South-301 feet. East by Rennie's :tvlill Road-106 feet. , West-96 feet.

with well-kept gardens. Two-car garage.

e Spacious full basement containin)!; 6 rooms. on furnace and electric hot water.

For further particulars apply

THE ROYAL TRUST CO. PHONE 5196 jan23,24,25,28

P.O. BOX 1300

Atte.ntion Boys We have openings for Daily News Carriers, on Daily Routes. Also on Saturdays and School Vacation Periods. It wiD P.ay you to investigate our proposi­tion.

The Daily News PHONE 2177- 78- 79 CmCULATION DEPT.

liP Alii ...... ..... f'jrtsfont , .•.•

Nfld. Armature · Works Ltd. IAMIIICK ST. DIAL 7191 • 7192

NOTICE A ~leeting of Local 740 Pl.umbers and Pipefitters,: Will be held in Victoria ; Hall TO-NIGHT at 8 o'clock.

Sgd. P. KENNEDY '

Dry Spruce Slabs Birch Junks Dry Splits Hard Coal

Dry Fi1~ Slabs Grate Coal

North Sydney Coal

PHONE93030 .Recording Secretary., jan 12, 1m

I

TONIGH1r BIG JUMBLE SJ~LE AT THE HOLY CROSS AUDITORIUM

at 7:30

DON'T :\IISS IT l -----~--

Manufacturers Representative For progressive manufacturer of plumbing cast brass and tubular brass products. The man we require ~hould at present be sel!mg to the plumbing supply JObbers. This .11 a good opportumty for the right

· man to butld himself and our company into a major factor throu~hout h1s terntory. Please write giving complete details, to:

JAMAICA MANUFACTURING (Canada) Co., ltd. PRESCOTT, ONTARIO.

jan21,23

The

Daily Nelvs NEWFOUNDLAND'S

MORNING NEWSPAPER

For just 7c. per dav or -1:2c. for SIX Davs ' '

Per Week you can bave Delivered to Your

Door or Place of Business, EARljY EACH

:\IORN1NG-

The Latest: • World New!i.

• Local News.

• Social News.

• Sports News.

• Entertainment News.

• Shopping News, Special Sales etc.

• General lnfc,rmation.

• Stock Market Reports.

PHONE US AT 2177 - 7B - 79.

WE WILL BE GLAD TQ ARRANGE DELIVERY.

The

Daily News CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT.

AUCTION I

·,

' J .. ·

AT

The Old Mill ' you may enjoy :·

:\LCHTLY DINE'\G" and 'or DANCING ,

The finest in FOODS and BEVERAGES <

at prices YOU CA:" AFFORD

:-\o cover charge ~!on., ~·ri Sat.: Orchestra Dance

Broadcast ... Door Prizes ' Sun.: Cincmascope Show Sec for yourself why

·'Villa Nova', I

The 'Old Mi II'.=. is St. John's

~lost Popular Nitespot nrookficld Rd. Tel. 90025 Manuels

TODA'f.' January 2:Jrd

SLIVERS and KNOT HOLES

1 12.30 p.m.

'26 HEAD CHOICE BUTCHER:S'

CATTLE1

·~lost of his proj(•cls wind up as Do-it HER self pro· ]eels~" , •. . . . \\'ell I h;11's one \lay of gel-­lin~ it done and now under. easy payment terms it is ca.<y to ha\'e the Home !,, .. provcmcnts you have heen wanting. CJII us lodav and I

FOR RE:-o;T - A hethillin~ : . room. 'Phon~ 6942-.\. ' ' m.tu

.~d ~oinr!. ·

.HORWOOD .··,LUMBER ·.Co., Ltd •.

\\' .\ TER STREET WEST PHONE 3011 ---- -........ ·~=~

1 .~E\V ~JE.'\'IIOD RUG <.:LEAN p ... ----------- -

ERS-Rugs and carpet fOR RE~•T

WANTED-Lady aged 25-40 to do light houscwo:-k and to live in. Two children. Apply slating sala1 y ex­peeled to !lox 598. <:ander. Newfoundland. jan 17 .Gi

made to look liltc new I~ Von Schrader proce;s add5 \loclcrn self contaiu-years to life of rug.< Clean· I ed in home or at our plant. ec flat in duplex at. 'Phone 91033, New ~lcthod 22 Empire A\'enue. Rug Cleaners, Fre1hwatcr CotJtains lar'.!l' sittinl! Road. ' ''

) OIL BUR:'>IER REP,.\ IRS room, din_ing room, two bedrooms, kitch­

. and maintenance. Furnaces, : Space Heaters and Ranges. ' l'll and hathroom to-

Phone 913B4L. dcc7,1m ,!.!;ether \O'ith gara~c . Ft.:RNIT'JRE REPAI!1S-Rc· Jkfrigerator a n d

pairs to spring.fillcrl mat· stove iucludccl. tresses, Chesterfield suites :\j)])h_ · also rebuilt. Fifty years' expenencr. Keals 'lattrcss Fa bi.i!l n A. Factory, 16 'lount Royal A \'COliC Dial 927;):! or 2G'iG 0 IDe a

• nov30,tf ! -----1 FOH ALL VOCR Exterior I and [otcrior l'air,tmg, : Parer Han~ing, Clcamng, 1 Roofing, etc. 'Phone L. 1 Howell, 739 'H or 3752A.

1

1 THE CENTRAL 11..\RBER SHOP-We arc now operat-

1 ing 10 cl1airs, you can be

. assured of prompt, cffici·

I ent, sanitary service. No wallmg problem. 24 New

' Gower Street opposite Adc­i !aide ~lotors, Ltd.

Wall Washing WALL WASHING - Wallt c~aned by new machi~e.

Result9 pcrlcct: sa·;es paint. I -New Hethod Rug and Wail Cleaners, Freshwater Road . 'Phone 91033.

· CAPIT STEAK H

. . . ' '

~[cat Loaf with Spanish Sauce,

French Fries or \lashed Potatoes, Hrussd Sprouts

or Wax Beans, Homemade Holls or

French Uread, Tea, Coffee or \Iilk.

$1.25

DIAL

. ·802 8

o- I ;. ' '' >''t ~. '' ', •

General Meeting· There \\·ill he a Ccu­

rral \leeting of the C.\1. E.A. in Hoom :23, \lern­orial Cniversit\·, at 8:15

1 p.m. Friday, Jan. 27th.·.

Anv music teachers de­. sirous of becoming mem­, hers please contact

\Irs. J. Stanhnry · 8:3 Rennie's \till Road . , ..

Phone 22633 •:

(Sgd.) DOUGLAS OS\IOND.

The One Millionth ·:

;Arl., -~-,'i.~- I : : ........ ~11< I __ ..,.:. __ . ~

I ~\ \ ( o· ~~~·.~ I ~. - . . ;:: ·;-=.~1 I """' ·----- .· - ... ~-, I .

A Really Big Car In All ' But Cost And Upkeep,

and the biggest value af just $1695.00. ~ WHELAN'S GARAGE

LIMITED· · Phone 4270 - 7619 :•

CORNWALL AVE. "•

Canadian Marconi Co. GREAT EASTERN · OIL & IMPORl

·:

PEPPERRELL AIR FORCE BASE

Change Of Ph1one Numbers Effective Monday, .fan. 23rd, new numbers are

_2083, 2084, 208!i, also 7071, 7072, 7073

CO •. LTD.· r Radio, Televl!lon, W uben.. Relrigeratora, Ueep Freeava'·

Eleclric Raoeea. · Floor Polubers, . '

GramupboDel PubUc Address systema, ·

Tape RecurdP.rs · · llEJ'AIRS AND SERVJt.:l .

6 lJNES DIAL 1001 te 1001

WATER STREET .an26 1 v

.. _____ , _________ _

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Page 12: ,1 : .U.N. MOROCCAN TROOPS PULL OUT OF KEY KATA …collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19610123.pdf · Talk Peace OUT OF KEY KATA NGA CITY pARis-Reuters-Algerian

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·cHOICE .· 'RIBLETS •. -lOO's:-·u.S.A; Stock. . . .

TRIMMED NAV~L BEEF Barrels and Half Barrels

ONIONS

. TINNED. SA·LMON 24-l's LOCAL PACK

,

l&M. WINTER LTD. DIAL5101 - 5102- 5103

GENERAL MERCHANTS. ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND

' •• ~~·· .!;.. •• '

TV REPAIRS REASONABLE RATES GUARANTEED WORK

PHONE -94123 Electronic

Centre Ltd. 90 CAMPBEll AVE.

\fter hours 'PHONE 7313

4.2.5

GOSSE - Passed pcaccruUy away at Harbour Grace on Sat­urday, January 21st, Mrs. Jane AJJn Gosse of Spaniard's BltY in her 64th, year. She leaves to mourn one son, Harold F. Gosse of Spaniard's Bay, two daught· ers, Sue (Mrs. George Sweet), Cambridge, Mass., and Myra (Mrs. Cyril Babb ), Harbour Grace, five grandchildren and one great:grandchild. Funeral from the Babb residence, Har­bour Grace this afternoon at 2 o'clock to the Church 'of the Holy Redeemer, Spaniard's 'Bay.

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THE DAILY t\EWS. ST. NFLD .. 1\iON

IN STOCK -

CHEESE ONIONS

TURNIPS POTATOES

RAINBOW TEA SI-IELLED WALNUTS

DESICC. COCONUT DALTON'S CHERRIES

KELI.OGG'S CORNFLAKES

GEORGE NEAL LI~~ITED ST. JOHt\'S

POllY'S QIIIZ by polly cramer I

Homemakers ·welcome r

Dual-Purpose Furniture 1

~easy-on PIPE WR .. Prevent Frozen

READY TO l'SE!

Stops cold water pipe sweati11.~ <lllll

Prevents outside ~a " ':·o.r,r·

corrosion. c-jt:t.c·:· ·. Keeps cold water cold. lfl/ ••111ac .....

ll olds heat in hot water "~ fl.' p E~p· pipes - Saves fuel. ·liBIHu~- "··

II . .,. ..... ""'' ""' \lakes a p1pes --1!~ ':,~; look neat. 4;"· •.. , Str_etch ta_pe takes ~:~· :.""' .,.·. '~--pamt easilv, does ~.<·~~; . . 1ot catch dust. _ .P';~ .. ~.::... ti}i !<leal for 4.~ ,..:---- ..... , . weather strip- '"'>it.··-..,._~ ·

.... l')i·.(~, . ~ ..

pinrr and ·---~• ma;~,. other /~~~~ '"Jt ~ :::.~;;::-

'(/· :;:,. ..... _.,,~!" uses. 1 -~ ... ~~.......... . . ""-' ......... ~ E ·~·' .,..., ~,.;. ~ ....... "'~ .... "'

,....._ --~~-"""·~ .... -... , . - ·--::-·>::. roc

--------·--SUPPLIES ENGii\IE

DEI?ARTMENT Can supplv \our needs for practically

Supplies.

We specialize in

SKF BEARINGS

VEE BELT DRIVES

all :\lachine and Eu~inrerin!

NUTS, BOLTS and FASTENINGS of all kinds

POLYETHYLENt WATER PIPE

NO-CO-RODlE DRAINAGE PIPE

COPPER and BRASS PIPE and FITTINGS.

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