12
-. .- . . .. 11ited istened air. in leW AY Shift Arter the getaway dl'iver re· stalled the truck with its hand shifl on the floor and its fortune in gems inside. he ahandoned it in confusion. Dem· olition men at work in the area, who had witnessed the ineili· ent. swooped in on the I'chicle lIml helped themselves 10 the gems. Authoritics Tuesday launched a trcaslll'c hunt to round liP jewels hidden by 11Ie 1V0rkmen. To the five bandlts who exe· cuted what star1ed out as the !,crfed robbery it was a dIsmal Foiled dimax. Not only did they end up empty·handed but they are the objecl of a police manhunt. 'FORCED TO CURn Shortly before 1 p.m. last Friday. the hnndils forcell an unmarked jeweler's slation wagon to the curb ncar the • Lincoln Tunnel. Inside 'were six unarmed messenger service employees taking the $3,000,· OO() in gold and jewels from a 47th Strect diamond centre to a downtown distribnting office. Two of the bandits who leap· cd out of a panel trnck that Jewel had forced the slation wagon to the curb wore policemen's uni· forms. The other three were masl(ed. The messengers were. ferred into the panel truck and handcuffe!\. Four of the handits piled ino the truck and drove it abollt three blocks beforc they abandoned it with the messenger service em· ployees still inside. The fifth bandit-dre,sed as a policeman-look over his as· to dril'e the jewelry vehicle to some predelermined ·Thieves' Getaway spot where it could be looted at leisure. Then, as police reconsthlcted it, the whole Ihing fell apart. The driver drove only a block in the station wagon. Time and again, he stalled. In des· peration Ihe driver appealed to workers tearing down old huild· ings. He explained he wasn't used 10 the mallual shift. MEN REFUSED The worl(ers refmed to aid him, presumably. because they enjoyed the discomfort of a man they took to be a cop. The driver abandoned the station wagon' - lIaving the $3.000,000 in gems behind. The workers took "ver. They drove the station wagon onto the demolition site and took a look inside. They helped them· selves to the gems, hiding some of them at the site and taking others home. The workmen made no at· temp to report either the rob· hery or their discovery of the loot to authorities. When police rcached the scene about $750.· 000 worlh 01 the jewelr}' missing. The rest wa! reclaim: cd. )Ionday nigh an unidentified worker told a private detective he had seen the rohbery and knew of a briefcase fuJI of gems at the site. The detective recovered the briefcase and turned it over to the police. About the same time, a man ina bar overheard a demolition man boasting about the wind· fall in jewels that had come his way. The eavesdropper tipped off the police. Polire said 25 to 30 men were at il'ork on the site and at least six admitted helping themseh'es 10 the gems . . _------------------------- .. Our New Indoor Showroom \ III )Ne w Cars on Display THE DA'IL· Y NEWS and Well lighted . wm Nova Motors ._Ltd_" _. __ 0 __ ',i \l) ,-- :..., , ST. JOlIN'S, ?\,EWFOUNDLAND, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 15)(13 12 PAGES SEVEN CENTS ---------------------------------- iMeany Backs 'Petition Alleges wH" ;liEW YORK. (CPl-The Sea· ,expected o( polil'Y farers' International Union on which future actions allainst . By ALEXANDER IARREI.I, 1backing Tuesday from the AFL'I the Canadian adions will be! CP-Counsel for the Seafarers' International I CIO's :IIal'itimc Trades Depart· rlased. Union of Canada Ind. gave formal notice Tuesday that it will 1 ment and a reitcration of sup·. The statemenl, Ollt seek an injunction against the federal go\'emment's trustecship port fl'om AFL·ClO Prcsident· details of steps to he laken by 'over fi\'c maritime unions. George in its fight the SIC and oher U.S. unions A petition for an injunction lVas filed in court officcs by against the maritime IInion l supporting it, is to come be· Joseph Nuss and is to be presentell before Quebcc 1 trusteeship in Canada. fore the (relegatcs today. i Supcrior Court November 21. The conventio.n IIF.I D UP The position alleges that the trusteeship legislation. passed passed With only one dlssenilng Tl . r" t t t last month by Parliament, is unconstitutional and violates pro' voice-that of t. he Intcrnational l , I [Ie I PI 0 ICY s.a I cmen . \t vas /' \'incial rights . A · .. f 'I" I' . ( ra tN lY a specla comnllt '. . " . ssoclatlOn 0 "aC 11I11S ,-reso·.. I H II 'd I 1 . th The petition was fl!ed on! notice of the petitIOn Is to be I r I' tl ;Ii '. ,Ill! a sal a I e av In e I . . . u JOn? c.on! • orr I IS . convention's tim!, pre.; behalf of Donald Roy of Ste. on JustIce. commlSSlon IOn, tiC I . f - h' I Dorothe Que secre1arl'·trca<· ChenIer amI Quebec 5 altorne" I . I nnte( It rom real' tie ". '. . . gO\'emment truslees lip am I [\ T d v 0 I urer of the SIU. ,general. Rene \lamel, as lVell le::ders of thc CJnadian lahor i oar lies a.. i Named as rcspondents were I as on the trustees. ! 1t is expected to recommend the board of trustees of the Article 114 of the codc reo :'Ieanl complinll'l1tcd Paul' adion alon!! Iincs mentioned to maritime unions. and each of' quires such notice at least : Hall. president of tile SlU in rcporfcrs hy Hall. who Ihe three board Jl1emhers- eight days in advance in eao(' the r.s. and hear} of the said then he hopes the .'tcps I ;'11'. ,Justice Victor Drycr of of a petition plcading uncons(i· I for his "doing a splendid jolll will include economic atti\'ity' Vancou,·er. chairman .ludge'tutionality of any federal nr . for his own anrl againsl cel'lain Canadian ship, Rene Lippe of ;'lontreal: and prol'incial statute . . the Dl'p.ll·t· ping in tht, form of se!ecnle Charles )Iillard of Toronto. a According to the petilion. 1llC'nt ailli repeated his pre\·inus· of Canadian rctired union leader. the federat tru.teeship is deal· opposition 10 the Can· I ill C.S. porls. I The petition dcclares thc ing with matters that fall inlo adinn g()\'crnment Il'11sleeship.; lIe also an rduca· Trustces Act also I'iolates the; the set out uuder Bul the .\ITD lion program to put the SIt: Bill of Rights and obligations. ·'property and cil'il rights" in T.\'"-BNll(' search wreckage or ol'ertUl'nell commuter traIn here XOI·. after til'/) hea\·ily·loade(l min, "1",,,hl'II inl" the wreckage of a derailed freIght tralll. At least 98 l.ersons were rcported killed and at Irast 1m inj11ft'rl.-'I·l'l Hadiotelel.hoto). . gates. rcprcsentinil 29 affili· viewpoint across and mol'Cs to Canada has assumed undcr ar·, the BNA Act "and as such (eli : aled unions with total enlist support from U.S. leg!;· i ticle .'i5 and 56 of the within th.e of : ship of nearly 1,QOO.000 'hdn't latil'" hodie.l. 1 Nations Charter to promote the prOVinCial legIslatures. , --.--.----- -.-. "observance of' human rights I SIU president Hal Banks and 'iei's Cilarge S. Professor '1th l' nIl'" I . I:u ... .,( .• _'\ iln hrpl1 : ",.:(,' ;1" a , : .• 31 Illl a .. J(u-,:;m ... :. T;t .... ":-, lI:r .1 Ii! iln:' .'. r: alC",l1 ni 111(1 ',,,,,""a, 11(1 ,-:.' m for ::. ;;('(ur.t" 1'1'- b 1101' 'l'a% whcn he was I mesled. whcl'e he is held or details of the ('harge. Embassy II'l're not permited to sec him. The alTrst prol'oked astonish· 1111'l1t in Westcrn quarters. lllluht was expressed as to Ihe hasis for an), charge against hlill. for Bal'ghoorn's activities '\I're Im'gel)' on the cultural 'ide and he did not even carry n camera. CHARGE A usual SOI'iet charge against .. :: antifil'rI foreign tourisls accused of es- I",,,y of i:i, Ilt'h.n. jlionage is photollraphing mill· !:,: 'urh Ill. installations, whIch can I-I b' t d' I ...... t,ran .'lIn I he nwan Sll lec s as or lIIary as .,., :n \t,r lold \\'"r a bridge. ::r':eica min,:1 ;). . Therc was speculation that and fundamental frecdOlm." two other union ap· It says the effect of the Act. peared in courl earlier Tuesday is to place the SIU. its adminis·· and had their preliminary hear· Iration. membership and assets ings on conspiracy charge,; under the control of the Irus· postponed to Dec. 18. tees. "all of which relates to, Banks. Paul Ernest Carsh matters under provincial juris, 1 and Eldon Jack Rkhardson ate diction as set ou in section 92! chargcd with conspiracy to com· I of Ihe British N orth mit assault in the 1957 beating Acl." . of Capt. Henry Francis Walsh. In accordance with the Que·' All three are free 011 S2.000 hec Code of Cil'il Procedure.' ca,h hail each. ------. -r--- Challenges State Law Against Birth Control HARTFORD. Conn. (AP) -llems." he said. "How do you Connecticut's 84.year.ol\ !Inti· I know about the use unless the birth control law was user tells you? I assume you ed .again Tuesday - this time i are not going to raid bed· in the state Suprcme Court of i rooms." Errors. I King the law on use of The slate's highest court be· co."traceptlvcs does discri· gan hearing arguments III a. mmate between marTled and case involving Dr. C. Lee Bux· ! unmarried persons and he ask· ton and Mrs. Estelle T. Gris· I ed: "Would it be a rellsonable wold, each o( whom wa.s con· I apPI'oaeh to abolish a.lI. victed on a charge of hem;: an . to prevent drunken drll'lng. accessory to the use of a con.: Catherine G. Roraback, cou.n· traceptive. . sel for Buxton and Mrs. Grls, Har!!hoorn was arrested in re· tnliatlon for a roundup of three llllssians Oct. 20 at Engle· \\'ood. N. .I., by U.S. FBI agents inl'cstigating a spy conspiracy Buxton and Mrs. Griswold! wold. attacked the statute as a •• Jatlan-Male llassenger in Iraln wreckage calls for helJ. as llurse (in white) works to free trapped student in coach . were convicted ,Jan. 2. 1962, i restriction on married persons' here Nov. 9th. White Hues are sllarks from acelylene torch hcing used to cut .roaches almr!. Officials said 133 l.crsons were I' about two months aftcr a bir:h i and asked the killed when two sl.eeding commuter traIns collided aller one hall into a derailed train.-(UPI Ra(liotelephoto). control clinic was opened III i to deCide whether a mamed Dn! llin 3R -18 3a 45 35 40 37 42 37 40 36 41 7:03 a.m. . 7:03 a.m. 15 . Stars ... l1l!! 6:15 P.m. lbol' e AI. Nlnds . t:50 P.m. Stril{e Fizzles nOME - (AP) - A Com· I munis·led general here, I obviously aimed at premier· deSignate Aldo Moro. fizzled : Tuesday and Moro set about : trying to weld a new centre· left coalition government. The powerful Communist·led Ilalian General Feedration of i Labor insIsted the strike lVas I aimed only at rising living costs. Non·Communist unIons refused to join, saying it was inlended to dIsrupt Moro's at· tempt to, form a government. The Communists have warned will cause labor trouble for any centre·left government. ! The strIke caused !lttle more Accuse Ousted Regime SAIGON-(Reulers) - South Vietnamese newspapers claim the Diem regime had held secret negotiations for a ecase· fire witli Communist North Viet Nam before it was ousted by mllltary leaders. The newspapers,· appearing on the streets Tuesday for the first time since the' Nov. 1 coup, imply France had a hand In the negotiations. " than a ripple in Rome's husy They report Ngo Dinh Nhu, day. The federation held a strongman brother of presIdent mass . meeting in the huge Ngo Dlnh Diem, met a Viet square outside the Roman Cath· Cong guerrilla envoy In a Com· olle Basilica of st. John Late· munlst jungle stronghold ncar ran. Pollee s.aid no more than here Oct. 18. Both Diem and 20,000, one·thlrd of the federa· . . tlon's predicted crowd, turned IllS brQlher were killcd in the out. coup. , I New Hal'en in defiance of the: woman who uses a contracep· . Sh · I statute. . I th'e commits a crime. I S - Al 0 IP n Buxton. professor of obstet· Arguing for the ·state. AEsist· Ir . ec pens rics and gynecology a1 Yale i ant Prosecutor Jos.eph. P. Clark University, is medical director I of New Haven C1TCUlt court. B I D · t IOf the Planned Parenthood Lea· I said that married persons ha.ve P 0 1 '1- tl- cal' att e IS res 5 gue of Connecticut, I allernatives - including abshn· ed the clinic. Gl'Iswuld IS ,ence-to the use of contracep· I Va.-(APl- the league's medicat director. I He said state. has the to remain an independent n\l·1 An explosion in one hoiler and The clinic was closed down hy I !lght .to. protect Its self'll1tcrest, SIR ALEC nOME clear power. He made it plain' fire in nnothcr left! the police 10 days after it opened. I that It IS to be •. and this would be a maJ'or issue in 3 t h' II t I .JUDGE , to protect the puhlle morality. 5 earns IP ercu es Ie ory . . I' the next national election due dead in -the water Tuesday 330' Chief .Justice John Hamilton . within 12 months. miles northeast of Bermuda, I King .questioned counsel for TUE COUNTItY PARSON 1£1 h S both Sldes Tuesday and com· Sir Alec's speech to the she to t U .. Coast Guard. I mented on what he called "the House of Commons and critic· Her c?rgo Illcluded 34 tons of 1 sweep of the strttutes." ism of policy made expl.o5lVes. . ! "The sweep of this thing, its. h)' OPPosItIon Labor Leader Nlllcty la;er she reo I prohibition of use instead of Harold Wilson opened a poli· ported. the fIre con· I sale, presenls policing prob. tical battle expected to in. '1 he coast ",ua.rd .the I crease in intensity in the had not menhoned Ill J ur., D d months ahead les. 1 epar e .. I In her first distress call. the i Cheers from his Conservative: ship, which has a crew of 42, i. '. I part)' followers greeted the I asked vessels in the area to BOSTON- - A M?Il'1 prime minister:"" a nobleman 1 stand by. treal man wanted III until a month ago-when he A coast guard airplane and with bDmbing and terr?rlsm I took his place in the popular· a cutter were dispatched to the to Le. Front de LI))era· : Iy·elected Commons. assistance of the 7,602·gross· hon QuebecOIS was ordered de· Sir Alec outlined a vast pro· ton ship. She is by the ported Tu.esday from the United 'I LONDON:""(CPl - Sir Alec gram for modernizing Britain's Sea Tramp Cor.porallon and States. -- _ IHI Douglas.Home, Par· industries and increasing social operated by Manne Managers Roger Tetreault, 23. had ask· 1 .. . liament for the first time as benefits but did not fill in the Incorporated of York. A a temporary st d prime minister. promisrd det:lils. He warned that these Ispokesman for Manag· lion on. the gr?,un s. e wou cam.e the could havl day night to let the voters lie· I programs would prcvent any j ers said a tug Will pc sent to be. to e ':noney cide whether they want Britain sub:ltantial tax cuts. tow the ship back to New York. cullon If returne 0 ana a. use I I , . . , " i 1 i !' .1 1 i i , : , , . I 1 I ., ". , ! , i , , " . , .. I i I: , I , .. !. I :. '.e·1 . I •. I .: I. . ; . , t I. L : ! I f :.1 I i ;1 .! , . . , ,. .' I I ! I , I .1 d I 1 I I I 1 Ii ! I ! I

Indoor Showroom THE DA'IL· Y NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19631113.pdfused 10 the mallual shift. MEN REFUSED The worl(ers refmed to aid him, presumably

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Page 1: Indoor Showroom THE DA'IL· Y NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19631113.pdfused 10 the mallual shift. MEN REFUSED The worl(ers refmed to aid him, presumably

-. .- ~

. . -~ ..

11ited

~

I' istened air.

;. in

, ( !leW

'AY

Shift Arter the getaway dl'iver re·

pcatedl~' stalled the truck with its hand shifl on the floor and its fortune in gems inside. he ahandoned it in confusion. Dem· olition men at work in the area, who had witnessed the ineili· ent. swooped in on the I'chicle lIml helped themselves 10 the gems.

Authoritics Tuesday launched a trcaslll'c hunt to round liP jewels hidden by 11Ie 1V0rkmen.

To the five bandlts who exe· cuted what star1ed out as the !,crfed robbery it was a dIsmal

Foiled dimax. Not only did they end up empty·handed but they are the objecl of a police manhunt.

'FORCED TO CURn

Shortly before 1 p.m. last Friday. the hnndils forcell an unmarked jeweler's slation wagon to the curb ncar the • Lincoln Tunnel. Inside 'were six unarmed messenger service employees taking the $3,000,· OO() in gold and jewels from a 47th Strect diamond centre to a downtown distribnting office.

Two of the bandits who leap· cd out of a panel trnck that

Jewel had forced the slation wagon to the curb wore policemen's uni· forms. The other three were masl(ed.

The messengers were. tran~· ferred into the panel truck and handcuffe!\. Four of the handits piled ino the truck and drove it abollt three blocks beforc they abandoned it with the messenger service em· ployees still inside.

The fifth bandit-dre,sed as a policeman-look over his as· si~nment to dril'e the jewelry vehicle to some predelermined

·Thieves' Getaway spot where it could be looted at leisure.

Then, as police reconsthlcted it, the whole Ihing fell apart. The driver drove only a block in the station wagon. Time and again, he stalled. In des· peration Ihe driver appealed to workers tearing down old huild· ings. He explained he wasn't used 10 the mallual shift. MEN REFUSED

The worl(ers refmed to aid him, presumably. because they enjoyed the discomfort of a man they took to be a cop.

The driver abandoned the

station wagon' - lIaving the $3.000,000 in gems behind.

The workers took "ver. They drove the station wagon onto the demolition site and took a look inside. They helped them· selves to the gems, hiding some of them at the site and taking others home.

The workmen made no at· temp to report either the rob· hery or their discovery of the loot to authorities. When police rcached the scene about $750.· 000 worlh 01 the jewelr}' wa~ missing. The rest wa! reclaim: cd.

)Ionday nigh an unidentified worker told a private detective he had seen the rohbery and knew of a briefcase fuJI of gems at the site. The detective recovered the briefcase and turned it over to the police.

About the same time, a man ina bar overheard a demolition man boasting about the wind· fall in jewels that had come his way. The eavesdropper tipped off the police.

Polire said 25 to 30 men were at il'ork on the site and at least six admitted helping themseh'es 10 the gems .

. _-------------------------

.. Our New Indoor Showroom \ III

)New Cars on Display THE DA'IL· Y NEWS H~ated and Well lighted .

wm Nova Motors ._Ltd_" _. __ 0 __

',i \l) ,--:..., , ST. JOlIN'S, ?\,EWFOUNDLAND, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 15)(13 12 PAGES SEVEN CENTS

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

iMeany Backs 'Petition Alleges

S!YI~co~t~~~,,,[;", wH" J~~I:n~~t:~~:~~ip ;liEW YORK. (CPl-The Sea· ,expected statemen~ o( polil'Y

farers' International Union ~ot. on which future actions allainst . By ALEXANDER IARREI.I, 1 backing Tuesday from the AFL'I the Canadian adions will be! ~IO!'I'TREAL CP-Counsel for the Seafarers' International I CIO's :IIal'itimc Trades Depart· rlased. Union of Canada Ind. gave formal notice Tuesday that it will 1 ment and a reitcration of sup·. The statemenl, scttin~ Ollt seek an injunction against the federal go\'emment's trustecship port fl'om AFL·ClO Prcsident· details of steps to he laken by 'over fi\'c maritime unions. George ~Icany in its fight the SIC and oher U.S. unions A petition for an injunction lVas filed in court officcs by against the maritime IInion l supporting it, is to come be· Ilal~yer Joseph Nuss and is to be presentell before Quebcc

1 trusteeship in Canada. fore the (relegatcs today. i Supcrior Court November 21. The ~ITD conventio.n h~re IIF.I D UP The position alleges that the trusteeship legislation. passed

passed With only one dlssenilng Tl . r" t t t last month by Parliament, is unconstitutional and violates pro' voice-that of t. he Intcrnational l, I [Ie I PI 0 ICY s.a Icmen . \tvas /' \'incial rights . A · .. f 'I" I' . t· ( ra tN lY a specla comnllt e~ '. . " . ssoclatlOn 0 "aC 11I11S ,-reso·.. I H II 'd I 1 . th The petition was fl!ed on! notice of the petitIOn Is to be I r I' tl ;Ii '. ,Ill! a sal a I e av In e I . . . u JOn? c.on! cmnln~ lt~ • orr I IS . convention's tim!, seh~dule pre.; behalf of Donald Roy of Ste. ser\'e~ on JustIce. ~hll1st,~r

commlSSlon 1Ilvcstls~ IOn, tiC I . f - h' I Dorothe Que secre1arl'·trca<· ChenIer amI Quebec 5 altorne" I . I nnte( It rom real' In~ tie ". '. . . gO\'emment truslees lip am I [\ T d v 0 I urer of the SIU. ,general. Rene \lamel, as lVell le::ders of thc CJnadian lahor i oar lies a.. i Named as rcspondents were I as on the trustees.

! 1t is expected to recommend the board of trustees of the Article 114 of the codc reo :'Ieanl complinll'l1tcd Paul' adion alon!! Iincs mentioned to maritime unions. and each of' quires such notice at least

: Hall. president of tile SlU in rcporfcrs ~londa)' hy Hall. who Ihe three board Jl1emhers- eight days in advance in eao(' the r.s. and hear} of the ~!TD. said then he hopes the .'tcps I ;'11'. ,Justice Victor Drycr of of a petition plcading uncons(i·

I for his "doing a splendid jolll will include economic atti\'ity' Vancou,·er. chairman .ludge'tutionality of any federal nr . for his own or~lnilatiun" anrl againsl cel'lain Canadian ship, Rene Lippe of ;'lontreal: and prol'incial statute . . the ~ladtimc TI';;U~S Dl'p.ll·t· ping in tht, form of se!ecnle Charles )Iillard of Toronto. a According to the petilion.

1llC'nt ailli repeated his pre\·inus· picl;etin~ of Canadian ve,~els rctired union leader. the federat tru.teeship is deal· 11~·.stated opposition 10 the Can· I ill C.S. porls. I The petition dcclares thc ing with matters that fall inlo adinn g()\'crnment Il'11sleeship.; lIe also su~gested an rduca· Trustces Act also I'iolates the; the categor~' set out uuder

Bul the .\ITD con\'~ntion Il~le· lion program to put the SIt: Bill of Rights and obligations. ·'property and cil'il rights" in

T.\'"-BNll(' \l'or~rrs search wreckage or ol'ertUl'nell commuter traIn here XOI·. 9~h after til'/) hea\·ily·loade(l min, "1",,,hl'II inl" the wreckage of a derailed freIght tralll. At least 98 l.ersons were rcported killed and at Irast 1m inj11ft'rl.-'I·l'l Hadiotelel.hoto). .

gates. rcprcsentinil 29 affili· viewpoint across and mol'Cs to Canada has assumed undcr ar·, the BNA Act "and as such (eli : aled unions with total mcn~hcr·1 enlist support from U.S. leg!;· i ticle .'i5 and 56 of the Unit~d: within th.e ~xc\lIsh:e powe~. of : ship of nearly 1,QOO.000 'hdn't latil'" hodie.l. 1 Nations Charter to promote the prOVinCial legIslatures. , -.~- ~ ,,--~ --.--.----- -.-. "observance of' human rights I SIU president Hal Banks and

'iei's Cilarge S. Professor

'1th I~spionage l' ~ nIl'"

,:~ I h,,~'!f'~ t~;n·~ . ,i,~ r~'l'l'r'li\ I:u ...

.,( .• ~ _'\ iln ;j:t~ hrpl1 : ",.:(,' r!i:"~: ;1" a

, : .• ~~: 31 rt;~~ Illl a '~-.. ~.: ~I:(' J(u-,:;m ... :. f'~j~. ~: :\'".\~ ;'~'j'n~~' T;t ....

":-, ~~. lI:r .1 Ii! iln:' .'. r: alC",l1 ni 111(1

',,,,,""a, pir~I"1 11(1

,-:.' m 'ln~('f1\\' for ::. ':~;f ;;('(ur.t" 1'1'­

i~ in\('q:~:lti~n b

1101' 'l'a% di~c1o,ed whcn he was I • mesled. whcl'e he is held or details of the ('harge. Embassy ()ffirial~ II'l're not permited to sec him.

The alTrst prol'oked astonish· 1111'l1t in Westcrn quarters. lllluht was expressed as to Ihe hasis for an), charge against hlill. for Bal'ghoorn's activities '\I're Im'gel)' on the cultural 'ide and he did not even carry n camera.

('mmo~ CHARGE A usual SOI'iet charge against

.. :: ~:"!'try antifil'rI foreign tourisls accused of es­I",,,y of i:i, Ilt'h.n. jlionage is photollraphing mill· !:,: 'urh f"'~ Ill. t"r~' installations, whIch can I-I b' t d' I ...... t,ran .'lIn I he nwan Sll lec s as or lIIary as

.,., :n \t,r lold \\'"r a bridge. ::r':eica min,:1 ;). . Therc was speculation that

and fundamental frecdOlm." two other union memb~rs ap· It says the effect of the Act. peared in courl earlier Tuesday

is to place the SIU. its adminis·· and had their preliminary hear· Iration. membership and assets ings on conspiracy charge,; under the control of the Irus· postponed to Dec. 18. tees. "all of which relates to, Banks. Paul Ernest Carsh matters under provincial juris, 1 and Eldon Jack Rkhardson ate diction as set ou in section 92! chargcd with conspiracy to com·

I of Ihe British N orth Ameri~a' mit assault in the 1957 beating Acl." . of Capt. Henry Francis Walsh.

In accordance with the Que·' All three are free 011 S2.000 hec Code of Cil'il Procedure.' ca,h hail each.

------. -r---

Challenges State Law Against Birth Control

HARTFORD. Conn. (AP) -llems." he said. "How do you Connecticut's 84.year.ol\ !Inti· I know about the use unless the birth control law was ehpll;~ag· user tells you? I assume you ed . again Tuesday - this time i are not going to raid bed· in the state Suprcme Court of i rooms." Errors. I King ~aid the law on use of

The slate's highest court be· co."traceptlvcs does n~t discri· gan hearing arguments III a. mmate between marTled and case involving Dr. C. Lee Bux· ! unmarried persons and he ask· ton and Mrs. Estelle T. Gris· I ed: "Would it be a rellsonable wold, each o( whom wa.s con· I apPI'oaeh to abolish a.lI. Ii~?or victed on a charge of hem;: an . to prevent drunken drll'lng. accessory to the use of a con.: Catherine G. Roraback, cou.n· traceptive. . sel for Buxton and Mrs. Grls,

Har!!hoorn was arrested in re· tnliatlon for a roundup of three llllssians Oct. 20 at Engle· \\'ood. N . .I., by U.S. FBI agents inl'cstigating a spy conspiracy ca~('.

Buxton and Mrs. Griswold! wold. attacked the statute as a \'OKOJlA~1A •• Jatlan-Male llassenger in Iraln wreckage calls for helJ. as llurse (in white) works to free trapped student in coach . were convicted ,Jan. 2. 1962, i restriction on married persons' here Nov. 9th. White Hues are sllarks from acelylene torch hcing used to cut .roaches almr!. Officials said 133 l.crsons were I' about two months aftcr a bir:h i activiti~s and asked the CO~ll·t killed when two sl.eeding commuter traIns collided aller one hall ~mashell into a derailed f~eight train.-(UPI Ra(liotelephoto). control clinic was opened III i to deCide whether a mamed

lii~ht Dn! llin ~lax

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7:03 a.m.

. 7:03 a.m. ~O\'. 15

. Stars ... l1l!! 6:15 P.m.

lbol'e AI.

Nlnds

. t:50 P.m.

Stril{e Fizzles

nOME - (AP) - A Com· I munis·led general .~trike here, I obviously aimed at premier· ~ deSignate Aldo Moro. fizzled : Tuesday and Moro set about : trying to weld a new centre· left coalition government.

The powerful Communist·led Ilalian General Feedration of i Labor insIsted the strike lVas

I aimed only at rising living costs. Non·Communist unIons refused to join, saying it was inlended to dIsrupt Moro's at· tempt to, form a government.

The Communists have warned the~' will cause labor trouble for any centre·left government.

! The strIke caused !lttle more

Accuse Ousted Regime SAIGON-(Reulers) - South

Vietnamese newspapers claim the Diem regime had held secret negotiations for a ecase· fire witli Communist North Viet Nam before it was ousted by mllltary leaders.

The newspapers,· appearing on the streets Tuesday for the first time since the' Nov. 1 coup, imply France had a hand In the negotiations.

"

than a ripple in Rome's husy They report Ngo Dinh Nhu, day. The federation held a strongman brother of presIdent mass . meeting in the huge Ngo Dlnh Diem, met a Viet square outside the Roman Cath· Cong guerrilla envoy In a Com· olle Basilica of st. John Late· munlst jungle stronghold ncar ran. Pollee s.aid no more than here Oct. 18. Both Diem and 20,000, one·thlrd of the federa· . . tlon's predicted crowd, turned IllS brQlher were killcd in the out. coup.

,

-~--" I New Hal'en in defiance of the: woman who uses a contracep· . Sh · I statute. . I th'e commits a crime.

I S - Al 0 IP n Buxton. professor of obstet· Arguing for the ·state. AEsist· Ir . ec pens rics and gynecology a1 Yale i ant Prosecutor Jos.eph. P. Clark University, is medical director I of New Haven C1TCUlt court.

B I D· t IOf the Planned Parenthood Lea· I said that married persons ha.ve P 0 1'1-tl-cal' att e IS res 5 gue of Connecticut, IVh~ch ope~· I allernatives - including abshn· ed the clinic. ~!rs. Gl'Iswuld IS ,ence-to the use of contracep·

I PORTS~!OUTH, Va.-(APl- the league's medicat director. I t~ves. He said t~e state. has the to remain an independent n\l·1 An explosion in one hoiler and The clinic was closed down hy I !lght .to. protect Its self'll1tcrest,

SIR ALEC nOME

clear power. He made it plain' fire in nnothcr left! the police 10 days after it opened. I that It IS to be p~pulated •. and this would be a maJ'or issue in 3 t h' II t V· I .JUDGE CO~mENTS , to protect the puhlle morality.

• 5 earns IP ercu es Ie ory . . I' the next national election due dead in -the water Tuesday 330' Chief .Justice John Hamilton . within 12 months. miles northeast of Bermuda, I King .questioned counsel for TUE COUNTItY PARSON

1£1 h S both Sldes Tuesday and com· Sir Alec's speech to the she to t ~ U .. Coast Guard. I mented on what he called "the

House of Commons and critic· Her c?rgo Illcluded 34 tons of 1 sweep of the strttutes." ism of go~e:nment policy made expl.o5lVes. . ! "The sweep of this thing, its. h)' OPPosItIon Labor Leader Nlllcty ml~utes la;er she reo I prohibition of use instead of Harold Wilson opened a poli· ported. the fIre ~as ~nder con· I sale, presenls policing prob. tical battle expected to in. tr~1. '1 he coast ",ua.rd sal~ .the I crease in intensity in the ~hlp had not menhoned IllJur., D t· d months ahead les. 1 epar e .. I In her first distress call. the i

Cheers from his Conservative: ship, which has a crew of 42, i. '. I part)' followers greeted the I asked vessels in the area to BOSTON- (AP~ - A M?Il'1 '~~;:::::~~'JY prime minister:"" a nobleman 1 stand by. treal man wanted III connec~lOn ~ until a month ago-when he A coast guard airplane and with bDmbing and terr?rlsm I took his place in the popular· a cutter were dispatched to the I~nked to Le. Front de LI))era· : Iy·elected Commons. assistance of the 7,602·gross· hon QuebecOIS was ordered de·

Sir Alec outlined a vast pro· ton ship. She is owne~ by the ported Tu.esday from the United 'I ~ LONDON:""(CPl - Sir Alec gram for modernizing Britain's Sea Tramp Cor.porallon and States. -- _ IHI

Douglas.Home, addre~sing Par· industries and increasing social operated by Manne Managers Roger Tetreault, 23. had ask· 1 .. . liament for the first time as benefits but did not fill in the Incorporated of Ne~ York. A e~ a temporary std o~ depor~~ ~h~ c:urc~ol~~dg~~oIS ~~ prime minister. promisrd 1\.~s det:lils. He warned that these I spokesman for lI~arlnc, Manag· lion on. the gr?,un s. e wou cam.e l~e the could havl day night to let the voters lie· I programs would prcvent any j ers said a tug Will pc sent to be. SU?l~ct to pht~Calc per~e. nO~I~f e ':noney f~r" cide whether they want Britain sub:ltantial tax cuts. tow the ship back to New York. cullon If returne 0 ana a. use I •

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TIlE DAILY NEWS LADIES' AND MISSES' COMBO BOOTS

Hubhcl' Pun·on Boots, Ladics 4-10, Black 01' Brown.

5.95 PI', ~lisscs 11-3. Black Dilly.

4.95 PI', A Page For Youth

ARKER & MONROE LTD •

. The Correct Way fo Argue \;l'!EW YORK-Winning argu· as weU as to her parents,) m~nls with your parents de-\ "Then you can go untell Dob, p'e~ds upon knowing right from What do you mean by saying lV~n::-':lhe right way from the okay before speaking to mel \\';j'l,lng way, Hand me thnt sulad bowl", ~:; Jlere's a tnlle:11 convcrsn· "Well, I Ihollght you'd be a ;d~n between mother allli Ilttle open'mlnded about it, :~u:~hler from the November (Surcasm hardly ever wins nrgu· ~wnlcen. " prrfcct ex· menls,) Bllt you're not, You

('\1111 shouting Is seldom con· vinclng.)

"Joan. I'm Warning you. Stop it right now," 1

"You nel'el' understand, you I don't evcn Iry 10 understand, All YOII do is sa)' No, No. No!" (Composure is lost on both sides now .,. an:! fin is the argu· mcnt) !~IIII' of whllt not to do, the treat me like a baby; you nevel'

~u~hter 1lI1lIHIgrs to make ,lIstcn to me , , ," "Joiln, stop itl" 'cl~ht ,mistakes in IInc shnrt "You're cer!:linly actin~~ "I won't stop ill You nevel' ar~ument, i likc a baby right this minute" listen, you never carc ".'

~XI , III a oo( of ears. ,; ):"10111, !!lIc,,1 what I Bob J'ust : "I Rill not', I alII Ilot'," E '1' II I I callc:l and asl,ed mc what color ------------­(ircss 1'111 lI'earinll Saturday.' That mrans he's going to buy I' ".

me tlOWCl's!" ~, ,:'That's wonderfnl, Joan, , ,Where arc you !(011l~7" 1

";"\\'cll, first we're "OlnS to .. ,t!

. '''Oh, woulel you turn that . 111'1'11 down to 230 degn'cs~1I

(\l01l'( bl'in:: Ull a problem whl'n parrllt is busy, IlreOt· I CUlllrd.)

"SI1l'C, Jlil'st lI'e're ~oing to \Ill' danrc at scl~1ol and then all I 111l' kids are goillg h"ek to /\11 )lilln's house for :t midnight I SUPlll'r." I

"!lut ,Ioall, You l;no\\' you, ha"c to he 1101I1l' at 12,30."

"That's what I wanted to tell YUII, I, tan't come home till 1:30:' (Whell a favor is wallted, as\;, dOIl't tell.l

"Joall, YOllr cllrfew has been 1~:30 for Ihe llast year. Here, Ilrain these brans while you're st:IlHUII!( therc." "Thcy're all ~oillg. I didn'l i

think )'ou'd mind just this ollcc'l l'.1'sidl'S. 1'111 15 already :ll1d all , mI' friends haw a Inter curfew, • 1 think it's time) had onc too." ! \:\ow the jll'oblem has grown; 1

it's not one late night, but u I rcgular latcr curfew,) I

"Wcll, I do min:!. Your cm·· [('I" is 12.30; that's whcn you'lI :

Roy Norman, Lcwisporte ._---_. ----- ... "-

be home:' "But ~lom! ahsolutcly all my ,

[ril'nds • ," (This kinrl of rca· I Come To Hal"rdressing Terms ,oning makes mosl parents see ' red) I NEW YORK - To get the: A sci rcfers tt rolling the

"I don't l'are ahout ~'our ,best results from a visit to the' rollers, pinning the pins,

. ".~ , For To

~ What's the rollghe~t, 101l"hc,t '

Hockey? Football? llarbles7 Chccke;;~,1rl played in t, Nope, neither, This is a sport'

which requires, nerves of steel th .( onknown to speed of a rocket, the agility of' a c~i~ rength of . not one angry bone in your bod\' p, solJd

The rules: Gct out there ;~(I t k ' . gh ' I . a e It If '

rou ,eomp 31l1, (If you can find - ' . d 'f th . . SOnteone to

an I ey WI)) hsten to you) or sit dOl"" d Essentials: Skates, pads, thick glO\:es a~el take'

can gct. one, a club, however. most cn' Itet sport With only a pair of skates, P pie take I"~'

The sport, of course, just piain old "en I ., thb f' o era IS lor e ene It of persons who plan lin ta"in and for the battle scarrcd veterans, • g

N o~, some, mflY not beliel'e that it is reali, say. We II take for example the week'nd '.' ' . Ju,t p~'

say where and I won't say when, but most ni':t • '. Y . th' I ," s a,1 au arrive, e Ice oaks good, you donn the h' ~ ,

d I th .a.I'

an g ance at e ever growing crowu, .. So far everything is okay (except for th

scrapes you receive? while waiting to get in), :It i, two corners of the ICC you can see the anxio'Js Q": the music sounds 50 you push YOllr way toware'''-,' face. l You have to push hecause the buildin; i! overflow). Now, at last you hal'e mada it, all '~;ll ~' so you think, '

After your heart goe~ back to its right ;:,~ st~mach settles and you stop shaking tthis all belllg prepared for the crowd of skaters) you mare the boards, . , .

With several impossible turns, dozens of . people ,Pushing and clinging to YOllr back you\! revolutJon and there you are, nerl'ous ;lI'eat just y.ou, your heart once more up in )'our mouth, te ~ fril'luls, I care ahout "ou," I 'I "lIut I already tolll 'lIob I h~\In ressel', learn how to speak A shampoo, often priced in

, IllS language. combination with a set, can l'nu~1 ,:" .. :.. _ (~nf~I:_~O _~I~~ I That's the advie.: fol' teen· Idugc from plnin to egg, mcdi· , HOlmY I age girls from the November cLlcd or other fnncics. If you. ,~T'fENDS COSFERENCE-Delegalcs to the ci~ht annual couvcntion of the Ncwfoundland The cIIlllmn, Bits a 1111 Pieces, ,Scl'cntrcl1, which offers Ihis skip the salon shampoo, thc Conference of the Unitel! Chnrch Young People's Union which took \llace here over the week·

1I,"nll)" scrn on the Youth Page I gllide tl! hasic beaIlIY'51.10P talk: cost of )'0111' set ma)' go lip. end, arc scen ahove wearing hats 10 shllw which hrandl of the YOllng People's Union they are lI'ill continlle ng;lin next \\'r.e~., A hntrcnt 01' restyling cut, A rinsc is nn extra process from. Thcy arc (silting I to r) Eleanor Lulie, ,,'c,\c)' Sti't'rl \inilcil Church; ~Iclvin Durdlc, nllc to variolls circumstance. it i means a dlf[crent 1001, from: t1wl adds highlights or manage- ht Uniteil Church, Cornel' IIrool(; .Iudy Halc, lIumhcr. Standing L til I{) Sarah Elliot, Gower I

Simple, scared 10 death. You make your way to a ,cat and look at

the icc and there rigbt in the center you see the trouble, More·or-Iess 10 hoys who srem to better to do than chase each other alollnl\ in I

l'IIUleI nol he rea~y fol' toda~"s I whal you havc, and it costs: abilill·. Streetj Ua"c Bradbury, George Sireet, aud S~'lvia Cosh. lJec!' Lak",-(SlIl\cy Photo).

c(lition so if you hal'c any items: l)1ore than: : . fllr 'it ~~l1d I'helll along to Jim I A 1 rim, whic his a "neaten.! A comb·oul ~s the. linal step" Annual Youth COllference

lIeld Here At Wesley Strntlon, care of The Dally I'ing" proccss that doesn't change' when your hall'do 15 put into i :"'icws. thc basic style. I place,

------

AlliE OF CIIESS-The Drama Workshop of Gonzaga 111gb School SatllflIay two one.actplays In aid I)f the school's cadet co rps. Characters from one of the plays, The

~_~ Game of Chess, are pIctured above, Thcy are (sitting L to R) BrInn O'Neill and Robert Con· !..'>o,way. Standing, Frank Connolly and 'Geoffrey Hlgglns,-(News Staff Photo).

~ ',t::_ .

Some 75 delegates from all ol'er Newfoundland gathered' herc at Weslcv Street United Church over !lie weckend for the eighth annual conference of the United ChUt'ch Young People's AI;sociation.

Themc speallcr for the con·, ferencc was Rev, J.N, \\lac·

'red Perry

OPEN SECRET-Featuring the Royal Newfoundland Regiment lIeadquoriers Band' amI players from the .school's drama workshop, l'I program was held, at Gonzaga 111gb School Satnrday

, , ,nlght. See~ aboY,e, Andrew Jones, Gregory Malone,' Paul ,Gard~ner, Norman Lono, William , Cooper, Cyril ,Ml1Is, M.HarJ'lngton and T" Thomey, all took -part in the one act play "Open

5ecret."-(News Staff Pholo», .-

I,ean, B.A., B.D., of lhe 1st United Chnrch in Corner Brook. President of the con­ference was Ted l'l!l'r), of Wcsley strcet Youn{: Pco[lle,

The conference ~o1. umler­way Saturday mOl'lIin~ when the various delegates al'l'il'ed at Wesley for registration follow­Ing which there 1I'01'e discus­sions combined with a tour of the Confederation Building.

Saturday night there was a banquet in honor of tile dde· gates and was aHendel1 bl' memhers of the. r'cr,!)' an;1 variou~ other Ilignitarics.

Church services held at Wesley were attcnded hy the delegates Sunday and werc fol­lowed by a fireside that even­ing, '~[onday night tic conference

wouna up with an official dos­. ing.

Themc for tile conference was: "The Courage To Be," amI was perhalls best rlcscrill· ed by nible Stlllly I,ealler Alec Smith who saill: "The Courage to be, !Irinr,~ to mind man's long Ilucst, since first he learned to tllink, or IV his· per Gml and comnlllllicate with his fcllows, to find out why hc is here and where lie is going,"

of the conference an award for the bcst hat was gh'en.

Rev J. N. MacLean

Dances And Parties

The Key Club-sponsored dance at Prince of Wales Collegiate which featured Cllrt )larshall and the Deltones, Saturday night was very successful, reo ports from the school sl!em to

, indicate_ i The dance, under the dircc-

During (heir stay in 51. ,10hn's 'tion of Jerry Morgan, was chair-the delegates were hillited cd hy John Bursey. around town in the homes of dent of the club. friends, relati\'es or in the Mrs. Lloyd Benson and Mrs, homes of members o[ thc five John Felton were each present­branches of the Young Peoplc's cd with a bouquet of flowers Union. by Don Austin, prcsident of the

Delcgates attendc(I from St. John's, Corner Brook. Decr Lake, Channel, Lewisporte, and lIumher. For the oceas· Ion each made a hat, show· ing the community or some outstanding point abou' the commnnlty from which they were attendIng. At the end .

KISS AND TELL?

NEW YORK:""lf you kiss a boy goodnight and . he brags about it to the whole school. try not to feel embarrassed, The mistake is his, not yours, says the November Sel'tenteen, And other boys haye no right to cxpect equal treatment.

club, at the end of the dance. Some persons seen at the

dance were Heather Dominey and Dave Butt, "Doc" Butler and Glenls Thistle, Jim Va vas· ollr and Pan Butler, Bill Keep· ing and Daphne Sellars, Brian West away and Margie Yarn, Clyde Taylor and June Thorne, Bob Hynes and Carol Ann Mor· gan, Gary Oakley and Ime Sullivan, Bob Young and Elaine Day, Hay Peterson and Ann Crummey.

Also Frank lfouland and Peggy O'Neill, Harold Hayward and Rose Mary O'Neill, Sylvia Rumsey and John Hickey, Bev Rowc and Roy Penney, Nelson Bailey and Lis Francis, Lloyd Rideout and Lynn Fogwill,

(I (~ "

Last Fl'iday a dance was held

fashion. or the 10, we'll say .four of th(,n: ~an skate,

ing six arc the trouble·maker" a, they ,kate after knocking a path through the skater;,

Suddenly a booming voiee echoes throughout guys in the center of tbe icc. stop that fooling

"That'll fix 'em," YOIl think, but if ),ollioak has changed,

The icc still looks good and you ,till wa~t to so you think skating closer to the homl; might to a certain point, hut here YOII suff"r from the crowd, You meet the clingcr, II'WOns who clilll back, arms, legs, anything, as the;" f~ll to the kll knickers, (Persons who have a pccuiiar \l'ay of no matter how you try to pa,s th~m you ,ilI'J)"1 iet the leg.) 1lany, many others,

O,'er crowdedness and too man:: IInchecked is what most of the trouhle boils dOI"n to ' , ' the normal, I suppose.

After a weekend of skating. ~i\(' me a n:ce o[ football anytimc.

-----_._-

Top 20 Hits Top 20 hits for the wcek ('1llling :-;0\,,9,;

by Billboard :llagazine are:

Sugar Shack Deep Purple . Washington Squarc It's All Right . Mean Woman Blues ' I'm Leaving It Up To You Maria Elena "" ..... Busted .. Bossa N I:a Baby ... I Can't StaY' :'Ilad At You She's A Fool "" " . Fools Hush In Donna The Prima Donna Everybody ... , ..... ", . " 500 Miles Away From Home That Sunday That Summer ' The Grass Is Greener" ,. . d the Talk To Me "'. " .... " ,,,' ' Sunny 3n , Papa Joe's ", .... ,," , .... ", ' Be My Ba~y" ." ." ... " .". ' .

at Macpherso~ Junior High: Yetman, Darc

School and was attended by a I Wbitc, large number of students, Gill, DoUg

Some persons seen having a Bob Rowe'Rita ball at the dance were Bill A~drc\l's, M III Davis, Keith Diamond, Bert VUlcent, j ;i;e Davis, Linda Armstrong, Lloyd Brace, .Ct~une Stratton, Dorothy Squires MeDante, Georgia Butler, Marg Granter, Lundrigan, Larry Diamond, Phylis Rideout. Derick .• Parnell Bursey, Judy Chaulker. rigan, RIC~rodg~ Ron Hiscock, Judy Pretty, Don ister, Art .' Chnulk, Barbara Stockless, Paul B'lIard. Andrews, Brenda Hynes, Arthur P3U"J ,"..tIl hn1all~ ';,." Ball, Marilyn Clarke, Gerald Mutt Green, Fred Hiscock, Daphne Bob. HO~bS~ Bowring, Cese Fraize, Marlon Tobin, pDt Bishop, Cris _ Coaker, Linda ence, \leY cowell, Heather Lane and Judy Evans, Sh Ruth Evans, Holloway, ~

I h ped ••

, Also Tom Brown, Ruby Pitch· Wa s, Gloria er, Keith Tizzard, Judy Best, starkes, I 'Irn Rick LeBlanc, Diane Best, Bob Evans. ~ ar"l, r'u "- ".'r

Button, Dora Warren, Linda tended .. a, __ It"n~ Taylor, Wayne Grant, Rose Daphne

I

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iant Trades College ens in St. John's

The Daily News ST. JOHN'S. NEWFOUNDLAND, WEQNEsDAY. NOVEMBER 13, 1963

realitv were it not for Newfoundland's Con­fedc\'ntion with Can­ada.

In listin~ the growth of the educational sys­!t'111 in this province timing the past 50 years hc said the gov­ernment noW spends more on transporting eh i1drt'n to school than was spent on the whole

educ(llional pro c e S 5 years ago.

He cited construc­tion of the new college as part of the stepped up educational develop­ment since Confedera­tion.

The teaching staff in this province has grown from 2,400 to 4,'100 and tl.1e student population has risen

from 75,O()() to 145,000 ill that time.

He also referred to the new fisheries col­lege 500n to he estab­,lished in the buildings of the old Memorial University as "the greatest school of its kind in the Western Hemisphere."

Federal Lahar Min­ister, Mac£achen, who

of the New College of

was a guest at the openin~ said the school was one of the finest he had seen in Can­ada.

He said stich schools will help overcome the problem of unskilled labor which run hand in hand with the serious problem of unemploy­ment in the Atlantic provinces.

In a closing remark to the student bodv Pre m i e r Smallwood said the college waS not a place to loaf but a place to prepare one­self for the future and he hoped the students would take advantage of the opportunity they were heing afforded.

A large hanquet was held Tuesday night in the college auditorium in celebration of the opening, Premier J. R. Smallwood waS special speaker at this event.·

PRESENTS Kf;Y-Premier Smallwood presents a duplicate key of the College of Trades ane! Technology to thc ~Iinister of Public Works Han. ,I. R. Chalker.-(News Staff Photo).

Placentia Residents

Freight Increased

Protest P,·operty ~axpayers ~f Placentia hare I It was reporter! that 189

pelltlOned tlmr town council. taxpayers signed the petition. protesting the continuance of; out of a total of 200 approach·

PORT AUX BASQUES-.. CNR : the property tax a~. the ~a~e col.: ed. :II embers of the tO~I'n coun·· freight traffic through hcre Ilccted hefore the l:nposltlOn of, cll were not asked to sign. fear· prior to Oct. 31 was up slidhtlv I the water tax. and refiuest that: ing embarrassment in the posi· more than three per cent °ovc'c I the. property tax h" re(h~c~d to ilion. the same period last year, a .les> than half the fOlmcl ,ate. Thos~ who signed were prop· CNR spokesman said Tuesday., The Iletition sa!!1 tbat thi; erly owners and payers of the

Last year. 242,000 tr.ns 0: i former rate was sct when the property tax who are liable a:50 ' freight were handled. 8,000 tons, revenue from the llroperty tax for payment of the water ta:-:. less than this year. In October I was used to drfl'a:: cxpcnrli. The petition continued "W f alone the volume was up 51'2 lures related to the wa ler make this request in consider·

ings accruing from new eMl' struction in the lawn, n, the increased I'alues of existing Ilropcr!y as ~et under the reo cent appraisement of proper· ties, C. the imposition of tbe water tax designed to cOI'er fu!ly costs of the water sys· tem."

An answer from the town council has been requested by NOI·. 30 in order that the mat·

i tel' may be given further study. per cent ol'er October last year.: system. ation of A the additional earn· ------------------------------

Viking Hamlet· Found Here Cannot Be Lei! Ericson '8 ? OSlO (AP)-The Vik-; Sodety in Washington NOI·.;;. an intrn·irw. "Bul ),oif E!'it·

. IJ If' 1 I "The find is great news in· son suilrtl Ilast :lclI'founlllalHl IIlg Hun et OUJ1( on: {leed and Ibe 5UPIlort they' 10 :\'01':1 Scotia and thclIC,· (lll

Newfoundland cannot he: have reeeh'ed from American III Jlassachns<'lls. Tomoc is Leif Ericson's, a special-I' scientists is most welcomc," Jlnb!ishin~ a hook at the • t tl t. .els of the. salll Jo Christian Tornop In Oslo Unil'crsity Pr('~s soon

3~~:~m'~n:~'s"i<1 TuesfScout- Executive The hamlet was found

by Dr. BeIge Ingstad and 7\ T d fi lUf his archaeologist wife,.1 ,arne or "1ere who for mall)' years have I beeB tracing Norsc Vik-: ing routes on their vov­ages to Greenland alid North America.

The apPollltmenl of Franei; .1 Kanll1agh as Prodncia! Scout Executive was a IInO!{n· red by the Deputy Chief Scolll for Canada, Commissioner L.

Th I Ira Of a H. Nicholson. M.B.E.. LLD ..

• I about L~if Eric~oll'S rliscovery

of America. Labrador to :\OIJ StotiJ and then,'c 011 to Falmouth in the time stated in the Sa~a." hl' claims.

Tornae base.> his acrount of Leifs \'oyage to .\meric;; en· tire!)' on the :\orse Saga. but where others dismiss certai:1 aspects. such as the distance i Hold covered. as poetic licence. Tor: noe demonstrates the feasi· bility of the whole \'oyagc as

! rclated in the Saga. N' ht Scottish

,

In City "The )\;orscmen had much Ig larger ami faster ShitlS than \ they arc normally gil'en credit A special Scottbh night PCI" for," he said, basing his as. [ormancc was given at the Sal· sUlllption on, amon~ other "ation ,\rmv Citadel. Adams

, things. recent exeayatious in : Avenue. 'i'ucida)' night. the l'iorll'cgian West Coast I Califo\'lli:tn E"angelisl Dr city of Uergen whcre parts 'Fred Zarfa, an:! his wife. of such shillS ha\'e been un· . known as the "Scottish :O:ight· carthcd. . ingaie" presented the :;pedal

! "It was thus quite possible I erent which jnc!uded Scottish ; for Leif to have sailed from· hymns. : ---_. ,-------..-:.------_._--------I

. (O\.\lI\~ ... Hl' 1101101' the Licutenant'Go\'ernor presents the colors of the ncw College : ':. T,-,h:· ... i,y I" till' presidcnt of the student council at the collegc.-(News Staff

. cy \Incoverec ces. R.C.M.P. (rctired) at the Third Viking seltlcmen near th~ flSh· Provincial Scouters Conference ing village of L'Anse nux Mea· held in Corner Brook Nov. 9 clows, on th~ northern tip of and 10. Newfoundland, last summ~r. Mr, Kavanagh is the son of

the late P. J. Kavanagh and IGuard~ I Found

Prisoner Woods Their discoveries were annuttn·

ced hy the National Geographic

I

ISCliSS Province 's Developm~nt : ':: \(:\!".111 1\1:111<1 <Ii.' lIIet'ling chaired by APEC Vice', ami city and town rep~esenta'l GamIer; Industria! •. :lI. S. E. .\ ~.(~1:lrl' 1'[ I!II' ",.! l'rcsilcnt Hugh K. ,loyee of I tives attcndcd. . . Hope o~ St. .lohn s, power, W. • "".Il,\" ["'.'l1l1i11ie ('orner Brook. They met to I Six committees were set up I W. COSSltt of Corner Brook; ed­:::: ).:'nllay III h.,1llmcr plan active programs for has- to look into p:ohlem~ and oP' ucation and vocational t;ainillg, "".tl!lll,j1131. ,ll'ueture tClling economic ane! industrial\' portunities faclllg major facets G. C. Eaton of st. John s; food :' \"'.I::ltl!1l!and. <lc\'clopment of the province. of the cconomy. They arc: products, DCln Isaacs of Slep·

:~:J.fn [r"lll al! pnrt, i In addition to APEC mem.' Transportation and communi ca· envillc; and tourism, J. C. JIIe· , ..• :r.(. 3:\I':Hl('ll the hers, unlversit)·, govcrnment i tions. hoade:! by Kins Forde of Carthy of St. John's.

J. S. Wright of Atlantic Provinces Economic Council dell~'ers the opcnihg nd~ress for the meeting

. G. t to form an organizational structure for APECin Newfoundland. Left to right are, . Allison Bugden,' Corner

St'!otalo d . '~k' r , Carboncar; Hugh K. Joyce, APEC vice-president for Newfoundland, Corner Brook; Wallace Richards,

It. ',~elson Marp, APEC executive vice.president,. Halifax; J. S. Wright; Claude ·K. Howse, St. John's; Ian' A. Mac: John' •

. . 'and Fred W. Russell, St. John's.-(Gander Photo Shop).

1\!ary Kavanagh of st. John's. He receivcd his early edu·

cation at St. Bonaven!urc's Col· lege graduating in 1951.

He was employed hy The Royal Bank of Canada until 1956 when he rcsigned to :lC'

cepl a position with Gilbert J. Kielley Ltd., a gen~ral contracl· ing firm

1\lr. Kavanagh lIas hern aetive In scouting since his early school da)'s both as a scout and as a lealIeI'. He lias parllcipated in Scout leadership tralnl'lg eonrscs, In IJle 1955 World Jamborre and III the 1957 Provincial Camporee. He was award~d the Wood I

Budge in 1961. I He is married to thc former I

Joan Lawlor and they have four children.

As Provincial SCOllt IlxcC\l· ilve Mr. Kavanagh will main· taln the Provincial O(fice in St. John'f, anrl· liaison be· tween the variOlls Scout Dis· trlcts throughout the Province and the Provinda\ Council ur tbe Boy Scouts of Canada.

Defector Off ,= or Halifax

Hans Hille. a 22·year·old East German seaman who defected i from his fishing trawler Mon· I day, will be transferred to Hali· . fax hy the immigration depart· ment· in the neor future, an im· migration official said today.

Hille, from the ship Mansfield ; walked into an oil company of· fice after the vessel docke:: here for supplies and asked for political asylum in Canada.

An inquiry will be held at \ Halifax to consider. his applica·

Jion. I

• In A guard and a prisoner. miss· ,nights in the woods.

jng from the Salmonier prison I Guard Harold Griffin and camp about 50 miles from here: prisoner Charlie Hickey left after they went astral' in I the farm Sunday to look at nearby woods while looking. ~t II snares. The RC:'IP •. search dOg~, rabbit snares. were found ahve planes and a hehcopter tOOli

FRANCIS KAVANAGH I Tuesday after two wct. cold I part in the search. -

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THE DAILY NEWS Newfoundland's Onlv Morning Paper

Th. DAILI NEWS II a mDrnlDI Plllo.l e.IDbll.hed In 1891 and ~ubll.h.d a. thl New. Bulldln:. 3.5·359 Ouckworlll ~I., St. John' •• Newfoundl.nd, by ~o~ln.o • • nd Company. LIn1lted.

MElIBEK5 or TilE CANADIAN PRESS

MEETING POINT 'rimmins Press

The Canadilln "reu IS 81ClusJvd) fntltled to the U.' for r.publlcaUon III all new. d •• p.tch~. In tht. pape, credit· ,d tD It Dr to the A •• oolated Pr... or lIeuler. and al'D tho local now. publlsb· ed therein.

People arc usually willing to meel each othH half wa)', but their judg· ments of distance vary considerably.

All Pres! Ser\'ICfS and feature I\rUeh~. In this pap'r ar. copyrflhled and thtlr ,..".lJdll"UOD ta Drohlbltc:d.

A PORTElIi'f'! ottawa Journal

teARt.! StJ8SCKII"rlU~ 1I.\'rCS

• At.mber .luJlIl n ...... .r cr,.mltl ••

It is unfortunatc that the winning ric· sign in a cOlllp~tition for a Canadian flag looks like an I,clipse.

Cana.da $12.(10 pet anllum United KllIlIdom and an

foreu:u countrie. SH.OO per annum Authorl.ed II .ocond cl ... maU by ,ne \,o.t OIfice Deparlm,nl, Oltawa and ,or paym.1Il of postala tn ellb,

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 13, 1963

A Great Step Forward The opening of the College of

Trades and Technology may very well be considered the symbol of the beginning of a new era in Newfoundland. It marks the emergence of the province into the modern age in a way that nothing ~se could.

This was up to a \'er~' ~hol't time ago a place of primar~' pro­duction and limited occupational skill~. Whell new a\'enues of employment were sought. they were considered in lerms of the nlass el11plo~'ment oJf unskilled 01'

semi-skilled \Vorkers. But we are no\\' in a world in which techllologieal il(h',llH:C~ h,~\'e been breathlessl~' swift. i\lnehines do the work. Men must he trained to operale the machines.

\V e ha \'e long known !lwt Newfoundlanders had n,ltural l'Ipliludes in Ihe al'qui,ition of skill~. The experit"1c.:ed anc! ~uc­cessful fisherman lHls heen al­\\'a~'s a skilled worker. The most successful loggers corne within the same categor~'. The major jobs in the great newsprint mills were gradually taken O\'er from

'. . the original staffs who came from abroad h~' j\ewfollndlancl­ers \\'ho got their training 011 the job. But to(la~' work cannot be held up while menleill'l1 how to perform it. Aile! if we are tn attract the secondar~' ille!L1~tl'~' we shall need to en1lJlo~' our wOI'king force in the future. a pool of skilled labour must be de\'eloped. It could become H major factor ill determining the development o[ the pl'o\'incinl economy.

Change h<1S come in

ways. The half-trained in cer­tain important trades are no· longer good enough. The me­chanic must ha\'e theory as well as practice. Efficiency in a vast variety of occupations will place a premium on vocational or tech­nical training. That will go for short-order cook~ in snacks bars as well as for operators of com­plex industrial machines. And there are many services that peo­ple \\'ill readily employ when t here are trained technicians to ~lI]lply them. The College of Trades and Technology has yet to reach the full range that will broaden the scope of the service trades and gh'e them an increas­ing \'allie in an expanding econ­t'nw but it is off. toa fine start.

Si~nific:flnt as this new College i~ of the increasing intensity of the modern revolution in Ne\\,­foundland, it is only a slarting point although an impressive one. It il1\'ol\,es an investment of about SG million in building and equipment as well as a great deal of nlanning of staff and courses. But its usefulness will depend on those \\'ho can benefit from the skills and training it can pl'O\'ide and their desire to take advantage of them. And as time progresses. the most vigol'OLlS rfj'orts must be exerted to make use in Newfoundland of the grad­uates of the College. The open­ini:'; is a wonderful beginning. No pains must be snared hereafter to build it into the source of a new d\'namic that ",ill speed the di\·crsification. the expansion and the rrosperit~· of a modern econom~' in this provinc':!.

Javelin A.ffair Premier Small\\'ood has 1()~L which had inexplicably remained

110 lime after his relurn from his scaled for a year. The Premier EmopeHn .ioul'1le~' ill gi\'illg hb has said that since the c.:harges personal explflnation of why he were the same as tbose of 1959, saw the Anwl'ic.:an Attol'll~' Gen- the ac.:lion was a breilch of the cral. Hobert Kennedy. over whal . S.E.Cs undertaking. is commonly known as the J ave- The Premier's visit to MI'. lin affair. His most significant Kennedy, he has said, was to comment was his inference that make him aware of this situation it has been more than a cuinci- and to suggest that if any action dence thal twice in four years, were taken, it would be in viola­while John Doyle and Javelin tion of an undertaking made by were engaged in intricate nego- the S.E.C. four years ago. The tiations for iron developments in action has nevertheless been Labrador, they have had to face pursued although the request of court actions. the defence to have the S.E.C.

nOUBLY FOOLISH SI. Thomas Timcs·Journal

To let a fool kiss you is stupid. let a ldss fool you is worse.

1\1 " (,.

yOU XAlIIE IT ottawa .Tollrnul

Is anything more embarrassing watching the boss do somethin~ you ,aid ('ouldn't be done?

UP TO 'rmDl Ottawa Journal

Lihcrul bac\;benchers II'ho want 10 speak more mllst prol'c thcy ba\'c some· thin!! worth saying.

nUlLT TO LAST ottawa Citizen

Canada':; own contribution to SPHl', research is the Alouctte. which now has begun its second year in orbit antI i> still going strong-indeed the scicntist~ expcct Aloueltc to be around for an· othel' 200 years, maybe 2,000. althOUgh it probably won't be communicating all that time. This product of the Defene? Research Roard IVas evidently built to last. a fact that should ~ratify e\·cry· one excclll th~ planned obsolescenee school of comm~rce.

lIIGll COST OF CltEDIT Belleville Intelligcncel'

Andre Laurin is an unpopuar man among some groups in Qucbec and across the country. these days. He is the former department store director who has turned a spoti~ht on Quebec loan companies .• \nd he docs not mince words.

Speakin~ of OIlC practice he says: "This is illegal. and practiced by most small finance companies." Of other lal\'5 he says. "remember that finance com· panies that respect the law ar~ rare."

And ~Ir. Laurin docs not restrict his hard words to the finance companies. It is SIgnificant that the Saguenay Bar Association decider! not to sue after he ('alled lawyers "the biggest robbers in the region" and ,II'. Laurin even kirks some of the nwli('at orofession for ,harp practices.

The reasons for :\[1'. Laurin', crusade arc important. Stumblin~ families lost in debt, he says. arc a drag on the whole community in which they live. He points to the cost of welfare. and he adds that such families are usually unable to huy anything because their whole inromc i, tied up in pa)'inq 'off debts.

PROS['EltITY Calgary Herald

Thcre should nO longr.r be any douht about the prcs~nl high standard of .IiI" ing in Canada.

Nearly 73 per cent of Canadian house· holds have automobiles, or roughly three of el'cry foul' homes.

The fact that most of these articles represent cxpenditures of sizablt. amounts of money \\'hen measured against household Iladgcts. must be R reo fection of a generally high level of prosperity.

In cvcry category the percentage of owncrship is increasing. For example, lelevision sets were owned by 86.7 per cent of Canadian households a year ago. Now the figure is 89.9 per cent. Electric stoves increased from 61.6 to 64 per cent, and electric refrigerators climbed from 93.4 to 94 per cent.

NEW CORPORATE IMAGE

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Edson In Washington LATI~ AJI1E1UCA SET TO HOWl.

I"OR MORE DOUGH-FASTER

By PETER ImSON WASHINGTO:-.l, (NEAl-The scroml

annual Latin American Alliance for Progress official review is being held in Sao Paulo, Bral.'l, the Ileek of :-ro· "'ember 11.

It is a much·needed international eon· ference But it could hard Y be held at .1 worse time.

The United States Con~re5s already is fOil I' months late in making authoriz· ation for this year's Latin American aid programs. :-Iothing has been done to appropriate money for them. So nobody linoWS how much will he 31'ailable to fight over.

ll.S. aid ha~ now heen sllspended to ~ of the 20 Latin American republics­Cuba, Haiti. Honduras and Dominican Republic. The rea~on is their political instability and retreat from democracy to\\'ard llictatorship. There is some con· gressional opinion that aid should be cut to lhem.

The 16 countries still eligible to re· l~~iI'e aid, in nracticailr all cases ha\'c not lived up t'O their promises 10 carry out full)' their part of the alliance' ('harter signed at Punta del Este. Urug· ua),. in August.l061.

They arc inclined to blame all t],cir troubles on United States administration of thc program. They are expected to propo,e changes at Sao Paulo.

Theil' principal gripe is that disbur.'e· I11cnts ha\'en't heen made fast enough. 'rhis overlooks eompletel), the fact that major economic dc\'elopment pro· jects lake careful planning and 1(J11~' Il'rm del'elopment. Actually, the money has been doled out a:; hst as it could be spent effectively if not prudently.

MOltE THAN S3 nIl.LlON has b~~n

committed to the alliance from Januarv 1961 through June 1963. It breaks dow~ into $1.2 billion grants in aid, $900 mil· lion in loans, $520 million in sales agree· ments under \l'hich $465 million is bcin~ spent in the United States, $350 mil· lion from the social progress trllst fund, S:J2 million for the Peace Corps.

On a C(iuntl,),·by,co!lntry basis ol'er the same period, this is the way the money has been made available in mil· lions of dollars on a descending scale:

~otiate that kind or agreement with the Latinos remains to be seen.

Though he has not as much experi· cnce in dealing with temperamental Latin Americans as he has had in deal· ing with temperamental Russian Com· munists, Harriman is in one WB\, an ideal man for the coming confere~ce.

He is forced to use a hearing aid no\\'. Whenever the Latinos start talkin" their usual nonsense about prescTI'in; their culture. hc can just shut. it off anr! not listen. Then he can tell them what the terms are.

In the beginning Alianza para Pro· gresso was as good an idea as the ~(ar·

shall plan for Europe. But dealing with Europeans and dealing with Latin Americans are two different things.

The :lIarshall Plan. in which Harri· man had a lcading role. succeeded in four years. With two of the 10 yrar, set aside for the Latin Ameriean 0(" I'elopment plan now gonp. drastk measures are needed to keep it ~oing,

EASY WAY OUT SI. Catharines Standard

Lotteries and sweepstak.~~ are hrin~ advocated for Canada on the grounds that it is easier to let people gamhle than to prcvent gambling.

SILF.NCE AND A nOOl{ ~fontreal Gazette

Quebec's Deputy Minister of Culturat Affairs. )11'. Gu)' Fl'egault had somc­thing to say about the need tn be alone to think. And it could not hare bern said better .

"We must learn again," ~Ir. Fregault sa),5. "to lislen instead of jllst hearing. Instead of being satisfied only to sec. wc must make an effort to look intn and undcrstand. We must, aho\'c all. recapture the habit of reading, of l>rin~ alone with a book. in a l'ecoI'Cl'ed atmosphere of patience and sil~nl'e. apart from the inferno of ,h'pid noi;cs to which we have heen rondemned hr· c~.llse of our indolence."

And what is the purpose "r ('(!lIcating people in schools and unil'crsitics if they Ihen cease to knolV what it is to he aJrne with a book?

G~ttillg apart and into silence lno~' be becoming increasingly difriCll t thr'" days. But it is harr! to see \l'h~t !dnd of civilization can sU1'\'ire without it.

"If our e:lrth>' hq;:~fI I): t:s ill'll? be (li!-';.()I'd'(~. \\{' h,:re a" God. a hou;e l1il' :J:ai, ~.:::

elernal in thl' 11 r"r"r ... · ill The tabrr:l;]C'>' '11.~1" 3 '£-~!'

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The story, as Mr. Smallwood give evidence on its earlier ar­has told it, goes back to 1959 l'rlngement does not appear to when the Securities and Ex- have been conceded. That is the change Commission of the United position at the moment. There States was probing Javelin's has been local criticism related affairs rlnd seeking to bring the tu the question of the propriety company under its {!ontrol. A of the initial agreement with the representative of the Commission S.E.C. and the Premier's person­came to Newfoundland and is HI \'isit to the U.S .. !'.tiorney gen­said to haye given the cabinet an cra!' But no comment can be assurance that no legal action re!!arded as valid until the de­would be taken if the regulatory cision of the court in the action control (!ould be established. This laken a,£!ninst Ilk Doyle and was arranged. Four years later. some of his associates has been prosecution was taken in a fed- handed down. This is expected eral court on the basis of a report to be within the next two weeks,

'rhe figures are averages. Depressc(1 areas will be offset by more prosperous aras, such as Calgary. whcre ownership ratios, and thus the standard of Ii l'in (!'. lVould be of the highest order. But. the figures are so high that even the luwcr extremity would cast an image of physical well·bcing that will be the Cnl';!

oE less fortunatr. countries.

Brazil 603. Chile 331, Colombia 255, Argentine 240, ~Iexieo 209, Venezuela 150. Bolil'ia 130, Peru 108. Dominic.n Republic 86, Ecuador 83, El Salvador 52, Panama 49. Costa Rica 35. Uruguay ~9. Paraguay 27, Honduras 20, Haiti 16.

._------------_.

A Hot Seat For The P.M. Sir Alec Douglas-Home is no

longer a prime minister without a seat in the Commons. But his victory in a by-election in Perth­shire has won him the hottest seat he has ever' occupied.

His majority was good but was nevertheless a· good deal below that of the former Conservative member for the. constituency. And at Luton, on the same day, a serious Conservative loss oc­curred. This is not 'an encourag­ing start for the new prime minister.

But it has cheered Labour and Sir Alec is in for a hard time at the hands of an aggressive op­position which already is con­vinced of victory in the next general election.

That does not alter the fact that circumstances can alter cases. If the new prime minis­ter gains a good press and if Britain suffers no setbacks dur­ing the winter, the Conserva-' tives may yet put up a better show in the election than seems likely at this moment.

'$ • * UP TO AUTO MAKERS

'1'01'01110 Star Th~ l,oJiry aimed at boosting produc·

tion and export of auto parts which was ,1nllClunced· by Industry )!inistcr C. III. Drury. is expans:onisl. not restl'ictice. 1t makes one wonder wbat thc· Ameri­cans-including Commerce . Secrelary Luther Hodges-have bpen making a1l the fuss· about.

But whether it will >vork, and hclp much towRrds pa~'ing Canada's annllal bill of more than l;500 million for autos and parts we import [rom the Unit~d States, depends squarely on the attitude of the big auto companies in that coun· try.

The effect can he two·fold: It could ~et an immedIate increase of parts pro· (iuction in Canada and. with bi~gcr pro· duction. it could provide cheaper Can· adian.made parts to the auto companies' as~~mbly lines in Canada. .

There is a stron\( dollars·aml·eents in· ducement to the big companies to makr. the policy work. But whether they will or not remains to be seen. They have ~fr. Hodges' angry incitement to get up on their him! legs about it.

The Amcrican auto comnanies, which have such a stake in this countrY, should realize that it is in their own best ,interests to mak~ the policy wnrk nnd hnlll Canada put Its economic honse In order.

In general the Latin !\merican govern· mcnts Jike a louder I'nice in saying where the money should he spent. What they have alw3Y5 wanted is one big pot of dollars from the United States every year for the Latin American coun· tries, to divvy up and spend as they see fit.

This is, of course, crazy. No U.S. ad· ministration, Republican or Democrat. will agree to it.

AT THE 1961 PUNTA del Eote Con· ference the United States tried to set up a panel of economic experts to reo view !llans and projects and to make allocations. This panel became known as "The Nine Wise Men."

But most Latin Amcricans thought they could get more money by making individual direct deals with' the United States. So the NIne Wise Men lVere watered down. Today they may be said to have evaporated completely as an ef· feetive agency.

The Unite~ States would not nol'.' be against having the Latin Americans play a larger part in managing the alliance. The orincipal conditions arc that they agree among themselves on what they do and assign top men to a group that would exercise tough discipline ovcr their own fiscal affairs ..

WHETHER UNDERSECRETARY of State Averell Harriman, who heads the U.S. delegation to Sao Paulo, can ne·

HERRl'S WORLD I

NEW YORK

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• •

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THE DAILY NEWS, ST .. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDT,AND NOVEMBEn 13. 1!lM-i'

MARY' L·OU HAS GREAT GREAT POTENTlAL; impl'cssed by ~Iary Lou's voice. [ The jllll;(cs nlso, lold I\lr. i l'pl\ will gPl thaI. IIflPorlullit: and suggested that: perhaps it I Epstein that they had not i If) study roie!! with her cOllsil lVas fortunate that she did not' hraTd a voice like Mary Lou's ; the great Eil~en Farrell, Per win the Miss Canada Pageant, I in a great while. It \\:as a haps her \'oice will some dR) [or tHey all agreed that she has· voice that the world should, I match tl1:lt of hcl' [ainous cousin

'L\RRn.I.-lit'r I'O~CI' ~hould be ",'r1d -, \lally ~C\\'~ Staff).

to the

Bv CASSIE BROWN . '

Steppin~ inside' the 'i'OI'bay Airport last llight followed by her sister Liz, Mary Lou Farrell happily waved a trophy and a doll at the number of well wishers ,vho had gone to the airport to wel­come her home from the Miss Canada Pa~e­ant held last week in Toronto. •

Looking prett\' as a picture, Mary Lou em­braced all her family, received the . good wishes of peop~ in the

airport, then gave Ollt the information that

~ OPEN

8: a.m.-5.30 p.m. Mnlu1ay Thru Friday.

9: a.m.-1 p.m. Saturdays.

r~~ Of a

Fire Basket valued at 59.95 or

Se! Fire Tongs valued at 512.95 With Your

Purchase of a

to study voice." she had won the 1st. talent award in classic-al singing.' .

In a brief Interview at the aIrport last night, Mary, Lou was still a little dazed IUhe reception given by the. audl· enre afteT her performance at the O'Keefe Centre. "When my song was finished, the audience dapped so long and bard, the orchestTa had to play the first four ban again to quieten tbem," she said.

Sydney El'stein, a business­man of SI. John's, an executive membeT of the Kinsmen, and ehainnan of this particular pro· ject, went to Toronto for the pageant. He told The DAILY NEWS that judges of the Miss Canada Pageant were greatly

Peter Laurini, the musical director of "Sound of Music" had missed lIIary Lou's per· formance, and heard so much about her voice, asked her to Temain for an audition. After the audition he told her she should go right to New York to start training. Her voice, he said, was mature and controlled for one so young,

I Moxie Whitney. another lead·

ing Canadian musician. audit· ioned Mary Lou and told her that with her voice slle should not remain in Newfoundland, but should start training im­mediately,

I asked, "Will you take up Eileen Farrell's offt.r and train with her?"

She !'ollid. "I'd go tomorrow if I could."

"And why ean't you?" Mary Lou Farrell said, "n's

I matter of money. It takes money to go to the States

Receive Record Prices

South COBst fishermen are I rccell'1ng record prices COl" their saltblllk fish this Butumn,

a great, great potential and: hear, they saId. ~ hut in the meantime. she was she should start immediatcly' ! happy to be home. "ll was to study and develop her tal· II It remains to be seen whether I all so wonderful." she said, ent. ,Newfoundland's ~Iary LOll Far·: "but it's nice to be hom •• "

A report from Grand Bank states the fishermen are reeeiv· ing $19.50 for a draft of sail· ,brlk fis~ de!il'e~ed at f the I WEI,COlttE JlO)IE-FamU\" fri~nds, and Kinsmen greet i-Iary 1.011 r'art'cll on her return home last night aCter the }lliss Pl.anlt. ThiS p~lced I~ onthe 0 th~ I Canada Pa"eant She hold~ in 11er left hand the tl'ophl' COl' the I:;t talent -award in classical sin~ing, II·rI Tom [(yan. prcsidrnt Ilg lest recC1V~ In e past I' b" • I' 11 S'd E ' , ' , h [lh K' sel'eral vears, of the Kinsmen Club: Elizabeth Ann Farrell, ,Jary LO.ll Farrell. Art lUI' farre , ) ney p,tCln, cxecutl\e mem cr 0 e IIlf'

Thi~ coupled with the ,!onli men, and chairman of the Miss Canada projecL-(Dally News Staff). catches of fish by Inshore fish· • ,---------------------- ,--

crmen promises to make this i year one of the most success· ful in the last decade,

Screen Valued at 521·50 up i Plan Increase ~-------------------------------------

60 SHEETS ONLY 4' x 7' BARKER 8ATHROOM

~il'\LL TILE '\\hilf [1101111('\ Finish with Black Groove

nr::, ·12c, sq, [Dot

ce 29c sq. ft.

A PRICED

40 SHEETS ONLY 4' x 8' Prefinished

WALL PANELS Discontinued patterns or slightly damaged.

Onl" about 4 sheets each colour. WORTH $9.00 - $24.00 SHEET

NOW HALF PRICE!

beautifully new! II(' 110111' 0/('/1 de(~()l'(tt()r

1m . "'" obIa'nelaire

, 11I.~1 AI, 1I>1\IIIllOARIJ tlHlI.U:WIlIU'

16" x 72" grille

Carson's load Canadian National Railways is considering' plans for increasing the number of accommodations on the William Carson, the CNR's ferry which pl~'s between

1 Port lUX Basques and North i Sydne;<', N,S., it was learned i Tuesday. . I CNR Clperations mana~er l!:. ,I, Healy said he hope:! plans! could be approved in time to I seeur" thP. dockyard here and !

provide winter employment. \ The Carson nolV has seding

accommodation for 296 passen- i gel'S, Plans are to increase this capacity to 500 passengers and provide more Toom lor cars,

The remodelling \Vould help relieve heavy tourist demands in July and August. The Carson is to go in drydock in January.

Moose Meat For . Veterans

TonONTO (CPl-A Remem· brance Day flight to Toronto from Gander, N£ld., brought a special cargo of choice New­foundland moose meat for Sun· : nybrook Veterans' Hospital here.

"Just in time for our annual game dinner, too," said • has· pital spokesman e>f the 625· i

pound gift Ralph Cowan, MP ; [or York-'l:lumber, got the mOOse I on a hunting trip in Newfound· land and with the help of Trans· port Minister Gellrge Mellraith had the meat shipped here on a \ regularTran~-Canada Air Lines flight. \

Statutory Notice I

Ladies! enjoy COin/Oft filled leis ure this fall in a lJair of iil esc delightful boots.

r ~~ .. uM! .. gUI'illlllilii"9!!I!!!I!iaM(jjIiJIlIl!iM'OiIIlili1iiIi!1

Ladie.,' boots made of hla~k p ~uede and calf leather with ' -stacked heel and rubber soles. They have adjustable straps made of elastic and calf leather.

Ladies' calf, leather boots !n beautiful antique brown with stacked heels and rubber soles. They have slashed sides and 811 elastic strap for' perfect Jitting. Tiley come in sizes 4 to 10 in

. AA & B fittings and pIice.d at ... " .. , ..... ,", ........ ~.95

They come in sizes 4 to 10 in medium fittings and priced at .... ,', ..... , ....... , ... M.95

Ladies' hlack calf leather hoots WiUl foam rubber soles. These boots have two decorative s!;ra~ with a bright gold ce>l· -.rert buckle which gives these '){lts a western look. They are

oilable in sizes 4 to 10 in "1m fittings and priced

, ... ~.! ........... '. ,S1.50

Ladies' beige calf leather boots with foam rubber soles plus elastic strap, interlocking buc. kles and slashed sides. They are av,ailable ill sizes 4 to 10 in medium fittings fdld priced Here's the newest,

TtiRIFTEST way ever to build SCREENS. DIVID· ERS, SHUTTERS, VAL· ANCES • • • 101 do,it· yourself prolects! New hi fashion hardboard in· slalls in minutes, 3 dec· orator pallerns. Just paint or stain to pleasel Complele accessories available. ,

24" X 72" grille In .' the, lIlaller Df tbe Estate of I ,John Burkl, la~ of St. John's, i ,In tbe Provinn Dr Newfound· , bnd, MUAiolpal WOTker, de·' cused.

at .. " ........ ,.".,."" .. Sl.SO

$7·75

Your "TREASURE HUNT" No.-Many big prizes unclaimed

Rad' 10 Game card free with purchase of $1.00 or more. ,

~pl. Free Parking 1~liable ~ Contractors Recommended

IYTerl1'\ f .. s or Home Improvements

Cour~ous Service

COMPLETE SELECTION

HARDWARE, PAINTS, etc.

THE BARGAINS ARE

All' persons claimin!: tn be' creditors of 01' who hal'e any claim! . 01',. d~mand5 upon or s£· i fecting, the .Estate of .Iohn, Burke, late.o( St. John's, afore·: said Municipal Worker, deceas· ed, aTe hereby requested to send particulars thereof in writ, ing, duly attested, to the Registrar of the Supreme Court, Admlnls\raior' of the Estate of Jolin Burke, COUTt House Build· Inl!, Duckworth Street. St. John's,. on or before the STd. dayo£ D@comber A,D:, 1963, after which date the said Ad· mlnistrator will pToeeed to dis· I tribute the said Estate having, rc~ard only to the claims of' which he then shall have had notlce.

Dated Rt st. John's ths 7th, day of November A.D., 1963.

ltEGJSTRAlt OF 'I'Iffi I . SUl'REMF. COURT, I

:.::--

Ladies' brown ca1f leather hoots with stacked heels and rubber soles plus slashed sides for easy filting. They are available in sizes 4 to 10 in medium fittings and priced at ............ $4.95

Ladies, these delighlfully gay pixie boolli lire just the rootwear acee!­snry you've been looking for to enhance that fall \\\ardrobe. Wby not drop in today at Parker and Monroe Ltd. and let (lur expert "shoe men" fit you \\ ith a pair and if you wi~h you may charge Utem e>n one of our convenient charge account plans.

J

.:i't

WATEB ST.' and LeMAR'CHANT ROAD· PHONE 8-4074-9 OPEN THURSDAY and FRIDAY NIGHTS llNTlL 9.30P.!\L

U5E OUR CONVENIENT CREDIT PLAN , .'lIbn Burke, decealed. I l' Admlnl~trator or the Estat~ of i

novlZ,13 . ~---------------------...:-----------------------,

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8-THE DAILY NEWS, ST, JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, NOVEMDER 13, 1063

TODAY'S

BOWLING SCORES Brought to you with the

compliments of I-'~='';'";''' "::'~-\ '--::-~-'I 'DOMINION ~1t~!-~, PALE 'ALE •

MEN'S CIVIL SERVICE BOWLING L~AGU£

Telchen:-O D. Barrett M. Colbert D. Martin

PO 180 148 426 152 139 167 458 2Sa 141 158 ~S2 219 1~~ 226 600 702 615 699 2016

(La.t Night'. Results) T. Rossiter

Health:-i G. Gover 166 120 170 456 D. FitzKihbon 202 181 188 571 N,E.S.:-3

• • • D. Whittie \57 180 200 5-15 G, Budden 218 281 106 605 L, Reel 266 :!l0 26(1 74-' I.. Holden 200 216 203 027

7Pl 701 818 2316 .1. sullivan 15/i 135 2611 li18 HJI.P.:-l J, Spl'~1I 158 182 230 ft70 'l'. Walsh 1111 249 106 ~65 I 730 814 857 2410 .1, Rcardigan 200 126 170 5011

1

1 (ien, IIOi)lital No, 2:-0 E. Hrnes 117 1110 lli2 450 N. cmtis 180 204 198 588 J. Collins 206 178 1110 M4 V. Whelan 172 153 120 4411

683 743 OU? 2093 'I B. Hollctt 178 169 230 577 • • • I B. Marshall 176 1,62 186 524

CIl~' lIa1l:-3 71Z 688 734 2134 11, Furlons 10!! 140 203 544 • • • E, ~Icrcer 216 101 146 543 1 Coastftl:-3 c. Ka\'anach ~()1 2li8 213 672 Stevens 172 200 206 578 J. Byrne 226 168 173 507 Hollowuy 252 2115 108 875

835 756 73~ 2326 Burley 106 106 150 114:1 Gen. Hospital No. 1:-1 Samuelson 220 216 163 608 R. Folletl 167 152 105 511 849 803 6117 2403 H. Pike 184 1110 1tl6 500 !lIra Depl,:-O L. Baker 232 148 235 615 I.. Soper 194 1711 16'/ 536 B, ~turphy 223 187 1Il4 liM A. Sel'cnson 160 169 163 492

006 646 700 2242 11. DRwe 126 138 170 443 • • • I n. LeGrow 156 163 166 ~R7 Jo'hIRncc:-3 I 630 845 677 1958 :'1. Ryan 223 104 160 577 • • • F. Dawe 150 21:1 287 640 Delence:-3 B. Lee 188 184 172 544 R. Dillon M. Spearns 108 25:l 180 6ilO E. Garland

250 309 193 761 23B 251 207 006 171 221 179 571 206 ~13 213 634 876 094 707 2662

7M 842 700 2400 R. King Iloclu:-D D. Crummell W. Brown '1'. Pottle

I. LeGrow 176 154 188 516

1:-0

l:':. Noel

187 01 168 452 1\10nta) No, 12? 100 220 427 G. Walters 12ft 169 142 437 ,I. Walsh 616 520 716 1B52 , W. Hart

• • w i F. Shea

250 230 230 716 218 102 176 586 228 170 160 558

188 1,"4 372 600 786 750 2232 lt1gh,,'.~'s:-3 I

C, White 110 t02 213 565 I

('. ~\l\ler 227 200 246 670 1", ~!mhall 226 201 233 660 .1. Hurley 203 165 241 531

i48 754 933 2~35 l'ollcc:-O ~. Gos~e W. English D. BiGgin 1'. Hurley

li\ 149 185 503 122 12i 156 405 133 172 114 41P 208 172 228 608 634 020 666 1935

1:: • "

Biggest Motor Event

, Car SI!O\l:-:! I By L. )lcD. F. Rodgers IB7 2:13 2:16 6311 The st. John's ~lotor Club C. Wilson 233 164 274 671 held their biggest navlgotional R. Hollett 253 190 104 637 rall)' of the ycar, n, 220 mile C. Richardson 199 liB 260 637, run, cOI'cring an area on Ihe

872 755 954 25Bl I' A I'alon Peninsula. Furthest ll'y.,\.:-l poinls visited were Whithourne, P. ?lladden 120 235 lfl5 550 I' Carbon cal" and Bay Bulls. D, Undcrhay 275 239 197 711 'rhere was a disappointing R. Graham 137 ]71 141 449 I cntr)" on!)' six cars and thcir R Thorne ~13 351 255 819' crews. The rally started at 2,30

. 745 n96 70S 2520 p.IlI., and finished around mid· • • • night. 'I'he winners were: 1st.

H. White and P. Rendell in an Acadian; 2nd, ll, A)'I'e and P. Lockwood In a Jaguar 3.4; 3rd, W. ScharIVey and J. ZeliaI' in a Pcugot.

CNT :'\0. :!:-3 F. Fry 174 195 17B 547 J. Smith 166 218 165 549 1l. Whceler 234 209 222 fill5 B. Clark 191 zoe 2110 591

765 82 7U5 2352

!'RETTY 50fT(

Congratulations to the win· ners, and it is interesting 10 note that the Srd. place \'ias won by competitors who have nevcr been in a navi~at!onal rally before.

FORTHCOMING EVENTS November 19th., Tuesday

night, a scavellger hunt, f~!low· ed by a dancc.

December ard.. Tupsday nicht, nacigatol's nightmare. A short evening nal'igational rally.

People wishing to enter these events plep8c 'phone the secre·

I tary at 98249. I

Injured Worl{ing

Hahs Out

, ilLO:-lTJiEA.L, (CP)-Injurcn ('111

: Montreal Canadien .Iars work· the e~n;;::emuler, : ~d all·out at a OIl'lninutc Ilrac atcd till III~ hil He ,tice session Tuesday. hut onll' tured ehee~\1 ~!!k Ii:

one 01 th~m, winger BlHy IIlcke. ,a cheek in' bone. ,wil~ be. r~ad~ to return to here Ihat i !,he :; . actlOt! llnmcdlatcly. hired. a~ Hle~

Hicke was Injured lasl Thurs· Ken Heard , tlay wh~n he was checkell heuv· president on.

ill' into tbe boards bY Chkugo's , he fitted '/iid ; Bobby Hull. He received a eon· I enable h' Ith i : cU5sion and a cut on the fore-' che~k I 1m to head that required 12 6titche~. I was n la~ f~lI)'

Hicke '~nd oth~r injured play· ' might ~Ia~ndlcat:tn ers, goalte Lortie Gump \VOl'S'! near I .' . ley anti win~er Bernir Boom' have' h~ Gn ~ald. the Boom GeuffrlOn, look en ;lrong 'and drilepn Sl.owlni at the wllrlwut. cd It' SInle the

Worsley was stoilping hullet 'r . HI musI do . 01111110 ani Ilri"t's frol11 IllS mate, an,1 ". (

f ' . . . 1 . k"1 t III rl'nlal' Geo tnun was gnpplng l\S "tit·· It",:'\,' n neir heller and gelhn~ more 'lI1tho!'. . ' "1(IOalllo(\I), itl' ino his shot. Worsley rllllp,I, "\\'e're d~in~ , a hamstring 111usele Oct. :ltl ill l'Xlwrh PH'uillfd: .

OPEN iN G the i\llII lllll Popp\' ])a \' A Pl)cal ~alllC at the S tatl i I II \I Oil \ 1 oIllL\\,' was C rctf, r O'Cra<h< (C1'lIt- 'a name at Toronto. Geoffrilll\ dlll\, "hul WE\! or" " h SI11~shed hlood ,""sse Is in his (11'11 pili nt, in !il! ,,; .

cr,) Jlrcsidcut of the St. Johtl's Ci\lli\diau Legioll i\s' he droll1)cd the l)ttek l)ct\\'CI'Il award donors :\1 hand wben he slopped a sh"l Toron\" and 'h)' tcammale J ean·l;uy Talbot point; ,',:l,e on t·"o '

Andrews (1c[1) lItld Ed. Kr.mer. Thc projcct raiscd &:3m for the Poppy Appeal.-lStaH Photo). • early'. in a game ~OV. 2 agalll,t II\th Chirago Th ! Detroit. hale 1"'1 their on!), '1'IIe other in,iured Canadien. \<, dale ag,in;t Ihe

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

Interestetl In Don Mcl(eJl..I. ......

TO[\ONTO CP - Toron(1I ~Iaplr Leafs arc interested in getting centrc Don ~IcKennc)' of New York Hangers and Leafs coach Punch lmlach says he'lI dbcuss a trade when the t('am, meet in a :'-Iational ((oekcy League game ThUl'sday in Nell' York.

"Definitely wc're interested." I said Imlach. who is also L(':;[5 I ~rncral mana~er. "\Ve'H :o:rc i what Hangers have in mind 'Tl!ur,doy. They\'c Aot 10 make somc kind of move and ii lIe beat them too Ihey'll be de,· perne."

·.nlh fllr on t~e ,: ,1I1fi 1\ c nt nO'J~l;;!. lt~ 11l1' :\II\. rnokit, 0-

to nnd:csler Gf I:e Lra~lI('.

111 :\~W \'orl .. ~('Ill'r3\ :nana;fr G!

er'. ·dld. "Iml"h approach me. We're ate ..

Hangers. with foul' wins ill , 13 starls Ihis season and heal en ill!rfnJ('iliate i on their 1:1~1 fh'c outi~gs. hal'r whcn Ihcy rr,cet

I, indicated ~lcKenncy 1~ up a, fir.lt game of bait for a trade. :.tclllorial ~,m.

: ",lcKen'ney, 29. is in his 10th ~ame \l'ill feature : XHL scason as a centre and :'lelllorial. kft \\'in~cr and has a total of' The Crusaders ~o~ ·goals. Acquired from Bos. gall\[' om delenii~ ton Bruins last February in a Feildians and the

: d('al involving a Irade for Dean :'leJllorial. feil~i~ I : Prenlice. McKenney has hecn' morial both hare

~lAC THE WAITER-Mcmhers of the prcss I Bucyk Is Sl°dell"11ed user! sparingly by Hangers this r('(·"rds and the season and lms a goal and two night's game will

and I'IIdio teams that played in the l'oppy Day Ap- : assists 50 far. : scrollli place. Tte peal gamc had tca scrvcd them hy Auhrcy ?\laeDon- BOSTOi\ (APl-Lrll winger go', II·game unheaten ~Ircak. Leafs arc said to be anxious ,tarts at i:15;b~l "ld ilt eente\' ice during thc fixtll\'c, Nevel' OJ)C 10 Johlln,' BUl'yk, the \('lIm', lead· I 4·2. to ~el a centrc as insurance Frid." night do thin!!:s half IlICIISlII'C, Mac had a tahlc covcrcd in~ ",,,rer 1:1>1 ,eason, hi" been I Boston ('Ollt'h ~li1t Srhmilll' a~ainst the rctircment of 36· hca1rr is on lap

" lOot to Boston Uruins for three: sa,'s he'll [lut (;uy l;clHlron in i year.()ld Bcd Kelly and the .de. 1 SI. !lon', and with II whitc clolh at eentcr icc and donned a spot- ' til five w("eks hccauoc of a sev· 1 [lu('vk's spot on the second line, parture of utility forwar:l Billy (he fll'st game, lcss whilc waiters' jackct for Ihe occasion, He wore ere shouldcr separation. 'will; Orland KUl·tenhach and Harris. They arc in a position le~c tangle With

O!lC of his famous h:~ts howcvcr, (Left 10. right): t.;~~ll~d~;.~t\~~I~'~l~(!ill'~(fe\h~:e~~~:~. ~nd)'_~c1~e!lto~, __ c. __ -----' 10 of!~r a def~_~ceman inre~rn.thc n;~h_l_ca_p._-hauk Pcltcn, Buck KlIl~, Dec Mmphy, Hollte \lar- ousness of llucyk's con(lition I LING N 0 tin, Bob Bndeoek, Bern Bennell, Kcy l\ol'lnnn, Jade ~Inn iay. Buty\; was. hurt when 1 CUR King nnd Mac.-{Staff l'holo). ' Illt hy dcft'n~ell\an Pierre Pllote I '

, . l1ale In the Sunday night game _ : in which Boston ended Chiea. . IlL Jo;e,h;OD,

GANDER BOWLING ROUNDUP Bally Haly Club 1St. John's C1ubf,g::'::;,:\· . I Wednesday Xm·. 13th. ' REGt;L.AR WE~NE~DAY H. B lIo,;!, ~

I ' ~IIXED 1I0l"SPlfl I'llwrll. r. Jor.£!: IS,

MENS' CO~nIEHCL\L "ll" 'ATC ;\'0. 1 .... ...• fi' W. French ............ 176 j.30.~.OO , ' I '(Giassware Prize:)' n, CIO(i;to~. A. STANDINGS I C:-\'I' :-in, 1 ....... : Ii' W, Well, .; .......... 175 S~lP;: .~V. ~l.c~amara, C. 1;·1

; ~let. COllllll .•• ,. .... .•.. II .1. Iliehunlso\\ "" ...... lUI ~Ol\l 0), ~l;, ",oO(i~ord, H. 1.. J. l!er;'i~~~::3~ob~~n. H. C. Otjl~';;", llcDonald. S B.A. Confederatcs .... Hi I not Clm'cttc' .... .... .... ' , (,odden. 1-.. \\ Ill1arm, :\. T P ( 1 I' T D'!':" " ~ Shears, G. Couragc: ,·S. '. . ·,.a ICY. . '-j 1I1c1', Const. .... .... Hi' 'l'L':\ Sales ..... " .. ".,. 4. IIIGH SINGLE. TO !lATE Il!oot!.. 'CI " " D Tel pIcton X plclon. S. Do,le,-nC~II) If I (' I,' '\' I" 1 ,I 1 TIl\rds: B. I'. Hor\\'oo(\. B. lel\er8. . ,11 " • . , , '. ...• .... , ,anI U • C( .,0. ., ... , ~ 5h J E tl Sllli!ll£ringale, EPA Turbines.,., ..•• ,. l4 i DO'J' :'-10. :! ..... ". .... 4 il1'1l·.~ (;ilingham " .. "" ~A:I Strong. (;. lleNalllara, .1. Klng.1 Ka.rpcC·ll l:ynrll e(' Well- le3n 830-1000 Town Council :\0. :! .••••• 14' ll.t '1" 'I .1' Ale" lIickman A. F, Cauie. W.· . Cc '. I. ... ' • "

I. (. el I .... "" .. ,.,. ,J) 'I' : Herrick X Wellman' "S ~Irs .'\. l·o,.·wn, R

ATe 2 ............ , ... 14 ("lmler'l''lX1 4, l!lGII TEA:l1 sr:wa.E . :-; mpc. i' . . . , .. " I 1" I 'I::' \ 0 •. • • •• "., ",., ~ I I S I' R SI P 11 ,~lo)'se, A. Crane, Rex LeDre\\'. Bi,ir. n. Stephe!l; I,'irc Delli .•...••........ 1~! 11~11 p~.;: '1' .... ...... - , . elcoIS~(SI:1 " lillrpc,, S·· 'or·', G. Brown. ler. L. Forbe;, P. HCAI" .... •... .,'. ..•. ~ i II', ~miln s .,a es .. .... .. .J' Gantll'I' Atarlcmy No. I 8:l2 I 11'00,(' ,.'. a~nmon~". IJ\11\l~. . Camos .... .." ....... J(l i DO I ~ll. 1 .... .... ...... 2 .J. L I Ike, S. DW)er, J. Andcl' R· I Roehr CuslOms No, 1..... ... III i CU~lnl\ls., ~~. ? .... , .. , .. .,' I!lGII 'l'EA:l1 }'I:O\F.\LI. I son, ~). ~;. ~;l'OO~~I.. r In r • DI~.I:·;i3;~~:;taUD,

ImlLDItNS Be~vcrs •.••••.•• ' ..•... 10 I Lockos LIe tit IC "" "" ., () Leollis. G. \\ allacc .. J. \\ Ill·: '-",,, Dalls ....... , ........ ' 111 i '1'01' r. AVEUt\GES : C:\l' ................. 2~25' iams. E. Williolm .. 1. E. Bah.! L ,:'11',\. Sparkes. D .

Feildians s:n\or hockey le~m Shell ....•...... , .•..•. III; , '. • ' erb. ~1. Goss, .1. Pcrlin. E. Wat·' es ~lonrc, H ROlle .

will hold an Important practIce I ACCOU,llts ••••...•..•..•.. 10 I B. Pillman ..•. "., .. " :~53 I (j;\!'I'IlEIl \\'O~IEN'S ,son. A. n. Carnell. F Pike. )1.1 e a v \I', lI"at50l. '~'

Practice "Teritola" shirls never need

'" " ironing, . ' .. $O,U5

THE MODEL SHOP LTD.

tonight at the Stadl ium, starting CNlt.... .... •..• ...• .. 11 .1. SlllIrpeggr ...• .... 21f1! HOWLING LEAGUE I' Crosbie, .T. Austin. 1

at 6:30 sharp. A I players a,re VolkslolliS .. " "" •... •• 11 .1. Parcell., ....... , .... 2Hi i "II" S'I'ANIlI:O\GS , ~.00·IO.30: ! A local rink leaves Cor asked to make a very speCial Hid.llIuns ParIs ••.• ..,.. Ai n, Sheppard ..... , ..•... ~Jol' Skips: C. T. Thompson, A. G. 1 ~lol1cton, N.B., today to

_-----------c-ff-ol-.t-l-o-a-tt-c-nd-.----- Ottl!r •....•• " •.•. .••. II K. Donahue ............ 203, i\lIe)' Cats .... .... . ... 18 Henley. T. Woodford. compcte ill the annual ~lonc· CN'l' No.2., ••••..•• , .•• ' Ii i : Simpson's ..••...•••.•.. 18 Thirds: T. Byrne, \\" Winsor. I tonian nons)liel. Sixty rinks DOT Mer. .... ...• ••••.. Ii, IlIGll A \'ERAGE • II Cessn;l', ...... ..•..• ,." 14 J. King, , frol1l across Canalla are ellter·

oct23,31nov8118

friendly -a ~OOd word for Scotch Whisky ••• the word for 'Black k While,' the companionable Scotch with smooth and mellow flavour. rile sec,,' iN in ,"e blelld. ing. 'Black & White' is blended from a selection of Scotland's finest Individual whiskies. , • blended with skill a~d care to make it the gentle Scotch that guests appreclatc and hostl and hOltenes serve with pride. 'Black & White' is distilled, blended andbottted in Scotland, Available in several sizes, '

'BLACK& WH ITE' SCOTCH WHISKY

"BUCHANAN'S" 8·m

(Not illll:rted by the Board of Liquor' Control)

'l'own Council No.1.. •• .• 6: ,Canadian Legion ......••. 14 ~pcoll(ls: J. Chalker, N. Good. I ed in the allnual cvcnt wbich Cit:, Motors Ply ... " •• ',.. fi i n, Pitlman ........•... 253' Glenwood .....• "' ..... , 12 ridlle, Terry Williams, Y'i will last {our days. Hickman's Scrv.... .... ........ Ii, i SI. Jo~cph's , ... , .•.•... 12 D.,\\'e, P. Viovannetti. Carm uockwe!l is the skip of Hospitnl ............ ".. I: I I Hnckt'ltcs ..•• .'.... .". 10 Leads: B. Granger, E. Criciltn,: tbe local entry witb D. Stc\\" Po>! OfCke No, 2 .• ,. .. IUG\I SINGLE Hoses ., ...• .. .... • .. ' 10 II. DOl'e, F. Good,!. Goodridge.', art ,lyre as matc, Noel Vini· lUI. Scotia ...• ..•• •••• 4: t Hoyal Purple .. , ....•••.. 10 B. Chall!cr, G. Lewis, Pal E.d.: combe as secolld and Non' Pilots .. " ".. .... ,," 4: C. lIarris .............. 310 I Pcluni:ls " ............. 10 monson. P. Edmonson, C. ~L muir as lead. Richnrd Ryan GOllliyenrs ........•• ,.,. 2 1 N. llpham .. , ... , .•..... 310 I Buddies .... .... • •.•.•. ]0 Henley, G. :\lcDonald. is the s]lare. Cily lIIo!ors 111\p. 2 ...... " 2 i • [corgel Me Not., ......... 10 --.--.-.----------------~----POl.lal Olficials .....••• ,. (J i J[J(;1l TEMII 1'1:"<1'.\1.1. I ~ips :... .... .... ..•• ... B ~-Bl_IIII! __ IIiIIIII .. ID---.... ----.--· .... ","

'fOl' 6 AVErtAGES

Jo'rcw, Cansos .......... 222 .T. ;\Ial·sh. Shell ........• ' 220 H. Jenkins, Town No.2 .. 2UO

I HeM' ~o. 1 ......... 3132 ~~~~\I);~:I\~~·S.::. ','::. '''.:::: ~ GOO' D,,"'Y' EAR Ij! .. • Sweepe!'s •. "' ••.. I "" '" 6

GANllIm W()~IliN'S Signals .... .... .... .... 6 JlOWI,lNG LEAGUE Hotshols ".. "', ..... ..... 4'

"AI! STASDINGS , W.A. No, 4 ..•• ••.. ....•• 4

I Co·Op, .,., ..•• • ..• '.... 4

Gandel' Ac!adcmy ~o. 1 .... 10 .Iets .,.. ..... .. .... •••• •• 4 Hillbillies .............. 10 nal1lbl~\'s ".. .... ...... 2 CN'r "" .... .... ..... 18 Butterflies •••. .. .. I •••• 2

lUGII SCORRS TO Di\TlI Hoyal Purplc No, 1 •• , ••• 16 Toll Nn, 2 ..•.•••..•• ," 0 'l'oytman's .... . ..•••••• , 16

IIillh Single Band P Women .... .. .. 14 R. Jenkins ........ " ... 369 B.P,I\. (Whippers) ...... " 14

. High 1'rl1,le , W.A. No.2.... .." " .. 12 R. Jenkins ....•• " •••.. 743 ' Kinettes ... , ....... , ..•• 10

Tealll Single Gand~r Academy No.4.. 8 Tllwn No.2 .... , .... , .. 10BB Controllors ...• .. ...• •• B

Team Triplc ' , Daisies .... .... ••.. 6 Town No, 2 ..... ' ...... 2B13 Post Office "., .,.. 6

• • • CNT 'foll. No.1.... •.•. 4

,NYLON

SNOW TIRES $14.95 AS LOW AS

Don Dove, ATC 2 ........ 2113 Ray Lush, 'fawn No.2, ... 104 Jack Burton, '!'own No.2 •• 192

IIlGIIEST 6 A \'ERAGES

C. Nixon .............. 217 V. Arsena\llt . , .......... 135 D. Sharpcgge .... .... .. 183 A. Whitro .... ...." .. 181 B, .J~ne~ ............... 178 J. Saunders .... .... ..... 163 J. Abbott .............. 163

~lENS' CO~IMEUCIAL "A" Eutons No.1 ....• ". 4 S1'ANDINGS Rollers .... .... .... ..... 4

\v.A. NO.3 .......... "" 4 Gander Academy No, 2 .... " C. Nixon .... .. .... ... 267 f;aton No.2.... .... .. 2 Gander Academy No, 3 .. 2 W.A. No.1 ............ (\ Flintstones .:.. .." ...... 0 C. Nixon .... .... .. ..

UlGII SINGLE

Clly Motors ,... •••• 12 RCAl" No.1.", "" 12 DOT No.3 .. ,: .... 10 Clander Co.Op ., •••• 10 Hoynl Bank ..•••••• ,' ••.. 10 nCAF ND. 2 .... .. ..... 10

lIIGII 'l'IUPLE

650

lIlGllEST A VERt\GE Hotshots .. .... .... .. ... 10 AllIed (... ".. •. I. •••.• 8 Navy "'"' ,' .. ,... t t.. •••• 8

IIIGIlES1' 4 A VEUAGES

G. Butler •• •• •.•• ••.• 185 C. Nixon .• ,j. •••• • •• , ... 2171 .. _~=~-.. --------"., .....

c o\la '~/il I. •

~ova scotia of ~o.scJsion of e

sole ~ 4.3 win over il . f three ga:n~s t

o hockeY at the Mena last 5

d 'nto .ICC' l move . I 1 ~ \

theY batt ell

w~ep t' and RCMP j to a 3·3 ~e a a·4 de· I first g~ , nCAF. d tile pace

with two Jones and Mike

singles. Eldo~ a brace for Fl'

Damicn Ryan chipped

lingle'Dare Connon)' wcrc Cabot's!

their gOill,; 1

• 1 bV .Joe AlicOIn"

and Peter B~'\'ne! Cabol helll b th~'Cf' I

. in the tlurd I Irghll'al'~ tied' It I gO~1 at the midway I

and Jim V~nWal't II

t\\'o goals and ~n RCMP with .Jun ,

John Sh'.ucr ad· Roy ,Juhnson,

Toni Licari and were RCAF's

-in the Feildian Cor Saturday is:

" .. ,',., .. of the ~ (rom ~[rs. Bern presentation II

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THE DAILY NEW;;, ~'1', JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, NOVEMBER 13, 1003-7

Double 1bps by p, O'M,

CLUB n~RTS 'tl"1 (;rrrning started the Bank·' --.--.----

\: \ ~ !,-~'(I I I ,! ,:' .; ... 11'1\ (If rrs off on lhe righl fool scor. ;\lonlla1, Nove\11ber 4th. J. Fillier, UNF ....... 12,~5

,.'1 i~;' "ill ,,1'1'1' ing an unas~istcd lllarker at \ (Early. Game) Bv P.O'M I!l ~, tillCt' ,;\:'"" ~,25 of the first, Drodge ticel Can, LegIon 2-REWA 1 STANDINGS

:(C '~"'I'\' 3t till' it onr. minute ialcr also on a THE Tom Howlett double 1, !lOll' Friday, Novrmber Btlt. ~.\::" "'~. ';" ta,t s(llo eCCort, Le,55 than two min· I bie 16, Pon Cofield 121. LP W L Ph, : ; WI'!' :/t'~'h' ,,'," 111.'5 later Drodge came up I COMPLETE Pete Delltuh double H, 10Q, Star .......... J8 . 13 5 13 : .: ~: .. \:;I'" h,1Ith',: with another solo effort to I' Bruce Rockwell 102-REWA. CLB ........... .18 13 ft 1:1"£ .'i~. ",. "\11' I'ump his Finance team into G H I C 11l 12 /I 12' .• j'I"o,l!ll. , 'OWLER (Late arne) oy ross ..... p,,, • 6.~ !It" the lend. CLB 2-SI, Pill's 1.' GlIarrls 21 12 !) 12

.~, (.11\1'. ., After a scoreless secont! I ! .. " r I Reg NorrIs do\tbt~ 8, 100, I.ar ,SI. Pat's ............ 21 11 111 11 f~ .... \ ••• 1'31"'.! thr I'~l'iod Dill Jones scored from • Andrews, double 20, 101), Ted, )1I1AA ............... In 10 :l 10 (,~t.~ .• ;" \1:t1\ Iwn ,lark Swiminer Hnt! Don John. Morton 102-CLB, 1 REWA .............. , 18 II" P

,~;':,:;. anJ \I'ke ston Ht 4,01 of the third. Mur.! Joe Evoy double 5, Bill hey UNF ...... " ....... 15 8 ? 8 ': !.,' : ... 't'. Fld,)" , I'h)' hit from Ralph Fisher and I' 5 Natural Roll 100-St. Pat's, K, of C, ............. 21 8 13 Ii', I'~~~ ;',:;;,.;, I,ll' Fi. Greening n~ n0, an;l, Greening _ Tuesday. November 5 Felldians ........... .15 7 8 7

. ":' Hun ,,!1\I'I'I'<1 camp uy wlt I us I unl markel', (Early Game) St, Bon's ........... 18 7 11 7 , . al n.Oa before Damlen Ryan i By RAY BLUTH Menl. Ho~p. A,A, 3-K. of C, 0 Can. Legion ... IB 7 11 7

St,t'l'ctl the finnl gonl for Fi. Tim Shea "ouble 12, double 2, CNRA .. 21 3 18 3 11311(\' at 11.40 unassisted, I'h~'5icnlly Don Carter is just i Cyril Gallop double 4, Kevin Hlgbest SIngle Leg: ': ;i

"Orl11all opcned Ihe scol'ing an ordinary hiC man lint! ac, Power 100, 100- Hasp ,W, Tizzard, Guards 453, for {'a hot with nn unassistct\! cording to the book he does Leo, !llcGrath 103-K. of C, lIIghcst Three Legs: dfort at 13,20 of the second' thines wrong. (Late Game) C, Crocker, Star 1002, twriot\, DliH C~lInoill' hit ft'olll 1 Since it cannot he lIltributcd Feildians 2-CNRA 1. Highest Avg. Single Game \leg Dillon at 2,OB of the third: to perfcction in style 01' ph~'si. _ . Art Cofield' double 1. 100, (3 Legs): anti Diilon rounded ont Ihe' cal devcloupment, to what can I SUPT. HRAKEFIELD-~100HE (ritrht) of the HC~IP acccpts thc chUllljllOn-1 Gerry PenderRast double 16, W. Tlzzard, Guards 20.89. Cahot scoring hefore Highways we credit Carter's superiority \ ,-, , , .' 1 Wes Perry lOG-Feild, 1IIost Games Finished: ,tarted at 4.40 from Connolly: in competition? i ship I L R. Hrmllc\' Trophy from Jack Walsh at lhc Civil SerVice 'Softhall, Frank Tizzard doUble 2, Frank W, Tizzard, Guards 6. :Illlt :'\orlllnll, : Churehi11 l00-CNRA, II1gh Score Last Week: ..

Two goals in 1:-11 seconds gOll' I Prescntatioll on Salttrd:l\' nighl.-(Slaff Photo), Wednesday. November 6. J. Roberts, Holy Cross, 9411, llighways hack 10 the galll~, . (Early Game) SCHEDULE Aucoin scored unassisted at 5.25 ! .. ~ .. _____ . I Guards 3-UNF 0, Thllrsday, No\,. 14th: 31111 lIanlon hit from Pat )Iar. Wally Tizzart! double B, dou· 7,30-REWA \'s, Guards, shall at 5,35, Peter Dyrne nolch· S oftb all ble 2, Dave Wareham double 2, 9,00-CLB vs. Star. I'd thr tieing marker at 8.55 120, lOll-Guards, Friday, Nov, 15th: . Oil a Charlie Ennis pass, ,Jim Fillier 100, Bill Dooiey, 7.30-Holy Cross vs, M. HoSll'

lIacgt'lI and Pierce scored for RC~IP in the first period lI'ilh ,Iohnson scorin~ the lonc HeA!' marker, Both squads >l'orcII nnce in the seconrl,: Shaner for the )Iounties and' Hcirl)' for the Flyboys,

"anWarl was Ihe hig man I fill' nC~IP in the final frame,: ,,'oring two llouls lind assisting I on the third, Liell!'i and Maillet' !l'nred [or nCAF,

Dallce 1'I1I1Is arc completcd for the

big Senior Soft hall League Christmas dlllll'C on Dec(!mbor the Corlll Hoom nn Saturday, I 7, '1'he evcnt will he held at, Pecembl'r 7, with Ihc 'l'wiilchl.: ers orchestrll providing the

122-UNF, . D,OO-Feild vs. UNF. . (Late Game)

Holy Cross 2-Star 1. Dick O'Donnell double I,

Frank Furlong double 2. Jcrome Roberls 121, 1I1l-Holy Cross,

Wally Brennan double 2-Star,

Hillview Darts" ',: League Action' Thursday. November 7

(Early Game) SI. Pat's 2-51. Bon's 1, Belle Isle took two legs from

Cec Goalie double 8. Hal Bedford In thc first game of Oliver double 6, Joe Evoy 100, Hillview Dart. last night. ,Jack Bill Ivey 125-St. Pat's, Ring won the first leg on dou··

Bud Russell double 1- SI. ble [Ollr to go along with his 105 . Pienty of pl'i1.C dunces Bon's, score. Jim Ring Sr.. won the

.slDled for Ihp. program Hnli (Late Game) other on double 16, Mannie

music,

tickets wiil he on snte at the REWA 2-K. at C, 1 Hanlon hall a tun for Belie emi lIf thi, week fill' $2,00 Iloit. Bruce Rockwell double 2, Isle, Peler Deutsch won the hIe, They may he ohtaincri Jim Tuff double 6, Frank Skif· lone Bedford leg on double fl'om Viner Withers, Dec Mm', fington 104. 100-REWA. five, phI', Ilrg CHligliic Ol' Dill nar. Bill Fleet doubie 17-K. or C. Bit! Quilty was the. whole 'I ron, Friday, November 8 show for NOI'a Scotia ill the

(Early Game) second game as he 1I'0n aU I -.-.~.- .•.. _ ..... --- - _. CLB 2-CNRA 1. three legs Ior them, He open· I Don Carter on telel'ision, no.' Art Lafosse double 4, Lar An· ej on doubie fOllr, followed tice how smoothly and effort. drews doubl~ 2, Ted Morton with a double 18 anti finished ]essly the hall is released be. 120, 100, Bern Pelley t02-CLB. on doubte lwo. Tom Duke had hind th~ foul line, George Crummey double 9, a lOB score and a tun while

While there are other factorn , ' , .' ' , " Pat Barron 140, 101. 100, Frank Dick Carroll scored three tuns, -there always are with trulv' It IS ~he t11~thmlc. natul al Churchill 100-CNRA. Les Hynes had a Jl7 score for great champions-l think on;!, spc~d WIth whIch Don Carter i (Late Game) the losing Weiling Doel. leadl.

DO~ CARTER releases the ball Hll1oothly, efforllcssly and lit natural speed.

bi!! secret of Dan's success lies : d~hvers the ball that makes I ' ~lontal Hospital AA 2- I NIId. took tWtI tr~s frOll1 in the naturai wav he rolls tll!!! hIm great. . Guards 1. North Pionerr in the third batl. lie doesn't" h'), to over.! DOS CAR'l'Im I Mike Farrell double 13, 100, game. Paul !licht' wun tlie pOll'er the pins with spel'd, lie I i Gerry Houlih~n double 20, first 011 douhle t"o ;1Ilt! Tc t doesn'l press and he doesn't If lJowling lunl a worhl Kevin Power 100, lOO-Hosp. I Cumby the st'n'llll nn duulJlt! force the hall. lie just winds Ile3\'YII'eighl champion, Don. Jim Learning double 5, 100" one. lie also had a 114 oCOI·C.

up that somewhat unorthodQ): aId James Carter would be Dave Wareham 140, Wally Tiz· Wally Br~mlall won the lone delivery of his and lets the, it. Tlte man with the lin. zard 100-Guards, leg for PIOneer on double luur, ball come out oC it nalurally. ,orthodox, seemingly awkll'anl TOP AVERAGES The final game saw Fort

A good rollin~ bali with nat. i style baH won just about ! B, Dooley, UNF ........ ~~,,~:'j ~~~~I~~n c~~~~tet~~ur~:~n ~~~~ ural speed creates action that f every tournament and champ· i SANDRA HAMMOND was crowned as "Mbs Civil A. Lafosse, C,L,B. spills the pins far more effec. lonshlp that Is worth wInning. W. Tizzard, Guards ........ 13.94 ble nine and Gerry :'-iewell on • I I I cl W P F i1di n 13 OB double one won the Hamilton

MimI (ll tlit, .\ntl\. al'l'cl)ts the first l)lacc \il'cly than one over which the: 1"lve Innes Ilower 01 tIC : Servicc Softhall" at the I ,l'a~ttl"s atlttllal daltcc an T.· J.lo~rt~yn' ,C~L,B,a .~.: .. ': 13:50 legs, Charlie Cook notdlCd the r I l ' 'I ' rolled loses control. And a hull; Your, Carler is the only man ,:.':: \Ir~ Ill'rt1 Ba ;er at t 1e CIVI ServICe; that is too fast will deflect, in.:, evel' to win the Notional In· I t' S t I '1 11 ~l '11··S Han1010t1d's I P. Deutsch, REWA ....... 13,07 lone Avalon leg on double foul'. prcscl1 a ton, on a un ay 11 g 1, 1\ S, I E, '''arellnm, Guards. . ... ,13.02 He also had a 116 three (iart -1:bl'lI!;llilili till S.','llltl'(!,'l\' nioht.-(Staff' slead of plowin~ through th!!! divldual AII·Stur title more ' M _ I I'j' I) I G J k n UNF 1300 score. Dave Haynes had a tun

, I' pins and loppling them, I than twice. lie did It four ',CSC()J't was Colill ~la<:l) 1CrS()II,-1 Sta P Hlto . ' ac so.. "'. \ I F, Furlong, Holy Cross ... " 12,99 and Harry ~lurphy a 121 score. 'l'he next time you watch times. .......! .. !.......--~..:.:...:.:.....:.;....::-....:..----------------

In '64 enjoy the way of life You'll el~oy the Chrysler way of life. Surging power You'll find that the handsome new Chrysler richly that accepts any driving challenge; luxury that knows fulfills everyone of its exciting promises. It ofiers no peer in rich fabrics, gleaming appointments, thick YOll a sense of driving satisfaction unlike any you full carpets; deep comfort from wide. firm scats; crisp have ever known. It beckons you to a stimulating, distinctive styling that's in a class by itself; that's the new way of life. The Chrysler way of life. Yours to Chrysler !Vay of life! . enjoy-starting right now!

~~ ~ WINDSOR

.CHRYSLER The car with tire 5-year-50,OOO-mile power-train warranty SARATOGA, 300 • CANADA L.TD. - NEW YORKER

.--, '

The Royal Garage Limited, ,"arshaIiMotors Lilnited, , Ktnft\ " d Ount ROG,d, Trans-Canada Highway, St. JDhn's, Nfl .

64.68 Hamilton Street, St. John's, Nfld.(

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8-THE DATLY NEWS, ST. ,JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, NOVEMBER 13, 1963

111.,It:"", "1fI'.li"~""IIIII'i"U'l"""""""'li."n"""'lltll'IIIIII"'"",'nllf'ltmta

Socia 1-Personal I -Column I

rOCKTAIL PARTY Pat and Jack Bruce of Ste·

wart Airforee Base, New York, U.S.A. were hosls to some forty people on Saturday October 1911l, at a farewell cocktail par'tr, for ~Iajor and Mrs. Ric· hard L. Uppinghollse, who are transferring from this base on October 28th. Richard will be stationed at Shemya, Alaska for the next year, while Irma LOll

~~~a.I~~~hi~eo~a(;~!lIal!~I~~ l~ll~e~ Ihe gllests werc some old Pcp· perrell t)'pes, sllch as Licut. Col. and Mrs. H. Bernhardt.' Major anI! Mrs. John Lumens, Major an:j lIIrs. D. Huntsman. Major and ·~Irs W. Upson,· Robert an~ Audrey Fitzgerald, ~Ir. and :llrs. E~. Curran, :llaureen Ryan, st. John's, Capt. and Mrs. Dick Snyder. Mrs. Snyder is the for· mer Flo. Coffin of SI. John's, ~Ir. and ~lrs. Art Fletcher. Urnl. Col. and Mrs. George Blcdnich. ~I\lch rcminissin;: nnd kin.! Ihoughts of the gond old Pcp\1N'rell days, were exehang· I'd during this most enjoyable farewell party.

• • • nSlTs CITY

~lr. and ~Irs. R. Glarine of Bishop's Falls were recent I'[sitors to the city and were ::u~ls at Karll'ood Cabins. They haVE! since returned home.

• * IjI

r.c.w, The Empire West Group,

t·.C.W. Gower SI. Chul'fh, will hold their monthly meeting at the home of ~(rs. Rex Austin, 43 Lil'erpool A I'enlle on Thurs· day, ~o\'. 14 at B.15 p.m. A very inleresting missionary pro· gramme has been planned.

• • • IS TOWN

~Ir. and ~Irs. G. Chafe and )(r. and Mrs. Wm. Colbourne of Sl. Alllhon~' hal'e now taken up residence in·SI. John's and were guesls at Karwood Cabins wbile waiting to move i.~~ \llcir new home.

., • iii

HAPPY BIRTIID,W ~Ianv happy returns 01 Ihe

day to Sally Nickerson. who celebrates hcr 14th birthday to· day. i\01·. 13.

• • • ASSIVERSARY

~(r. ami )Irs. Alberl Butler of Bcll Island. celebrated their 16th wedding annive),sary on )\onduy, ~O\·. 11. Congratu· lations and best wishes are cx· tended.

• • • TRASSF'ERRllD

~Ir. an:! Mrs. .Iohn Reimer and falllil~' have been Iransler· red from the mainland to the RCAF station, :rorbay, and are at present registered at Kar· wood Cabins.

7 YI~ARS OLD Happy birthday to Darleen

Wareham, Fort Amherst, who celebrated her 7th birthday Monday, Nov. 11. Love and best wishes come from her family.

* • • HAl'rY BIRTHDAY

lIIany happy retllrns of the day to Nathan Squires who cele· brates his birthday today, Nov. 13.

HELP FRO~\ AGED Long past the age of res

ponslbllity to the very young. senior citizens In a Home for the aged In St, John's, New· foundland. are doing what they can for the children of the world, A chequc for 524 recently received by tbe Unl· tarlan Service CommIttee of Canada wll1 provide milk and peanut bulier biscuits for hungry chlldreu in India. USC Jleadquarters is 63 Sllarkes street, Ottawa 4.

IIAPPY BIRTHDAY Mally happy returns of thc

day to George Phillips, who celebrates his birthday today. Greetings come from friends,

• • • AFTERNOON TEA 6

Pius X Ladies Ass()ciation will be holding an Afternoon Tea on Sunday, Nov. 17th. from 3 p.m. to 5.30 p.m. at Gonzaga High School.

• • • GUESTS IN TOWN

Guests at LeMarchant Lo:lge: lIIr. and ~Irs. E. Stoodley, Grand Bank; H. Potter. Halifax; D. Legge, Corner Brook; B. L. lIIagee, Halifax; Miss G. Short, Stephenl'iIIe; lIIiss S. Brake, Stephenville; IIII'. and Mrs. Jesse Collins, Hare Bay; lIIiss ~I. K. Smith, Goose Bay; C. Nor· ris. Macon. Georgia; J. Bentley, Warner Robins, Georgia.

Thought For The Day

"El'ery one then who hears these words 01 mine and does Ihem will be like a wise man who built his house upon the rock." IMalthew 7:24. RSVI.

PRA YER: Our heal'enly Fath· er, Thou who dost not like for any of Thy children to go as· tray, teach liS to accept by faith the grace oreered 115 throllgh Thy Sl)n. May our dis· cipleship lead others to build their lives on the dependable Christ·roek. In His name we pray. Amen.

TO-DAY STRANGE CONFLICTS .. . STRANGE HAPPENINGS .. . STRANGER EMOTIONS! ,'" , '

'Soecial Added Attraction tHE BRUSHARE IICIDEIT

THAT SHOCKED SOUlHwr ASIA -Ind the ,mIdI

TIMES OF SHOWS

EVENING-"WHERE THE TRUTH LIES"-, 6;30 - 9;15

"BRUSHFIRE" - 7:55

MATINEE-1:30

NEXT" ATTRACTI·ON 'ELIZABETH;"'TAYLOR-RICHARD BUR­

. :TON~LOUIS JOURDAN IN "THE VIPS"­DRAMA-EXCITEMENT-COLOR - PAN­.QRAMA;

EXECUTIVE: Members of the cxecuthie of the St. ,John's Girl Guides Area Council. which held jl~ ,mnual meeting Nov. 8. Seated (1-1'1 r-.irs. C. Abraham. area cummissioner: ilIl's. L. W. Dalton. recording secl'elary; Mrs. A. A Bell, treasurer; Ml;S. F. Griffin, secretary. Heal' 11-1' 1 1\1['5. F. Kirby, public reb­tions; Mrs. E. Reid, Mrs. G. Garland, Miss Furlong.-lDaily News Staff Photo),

Girl Guides Annual Meeting The annual meeting of the SI.

John's Girl Guides Area Coun­ci! was held on :'<o\,. 8 in the Holy Heart of ~lary cafeteria. iVlrs. C. Abraham, Area Com· mis~ioner, opened the meeting at 8.30 p.m. and welcomed ~Irs. It. A. hlurphy. Prol'incial Commissioner, and f,lrs. H. Cramm, chairman 01 the Pro· vincial programme study com· mittee.

Repo!'ts wel'c presented by the Treasurer. Secretal·Y. Camp A(ll'isor, Training Chait'man, Public Relations Officers Area Commissioner.

MI·s. 1-1. Cramm seconded th~ adoption of reports and in well· chosen words expressed her congratulations to the Area for an actil'e and interesting year.

,.

The following were elecled for office: :'111'5. L. W. Dalton. Secrt'tary: ~lrs. A. Ball. Treas· urer: :ltrs. E. Reid. Hospilalily Convenor: Mrs. F. Kirky. Pun. lic Relations Officer: ~h·s. G. Garland. Representatil'e to the Pml'ineial Council.

SPECIAL SPEAKERS: Brown Owl Maureen Rvan. and Ranger Y\'onne French, gave illustl'ated talks during the annuai meeting of the St. J ohn's Girl Guide Area Council held Nov. 8.-tDaily News Staff Photo).

CFUW ~ t, I' I • I I ... I. II., I'" T I ,. I: t' I' II .",.

~ ~

E We The ' ; ! ii II DiI'ision Tr<1iner's Certifi­

r.nte was presented to Mrs. 11. Power by Mrs. n. A. Murphy,

Followin~ the meelin~ ~!is~ M. Rl'an. Brown Owl. 14th 51. ,John's Pack. ~al'e a I'ery inter· e~tin)( rcpOl'L of her attend· at the Yonnl! Anult Conference in Saskatchewan and Ranl(cr Yvonne French· !:<il'e an iIlus' Irated talk of her experience~ while campin!! with the Girl Scouts In Japan.

Presents Scholarship • ? ~ ~

• • Women ;

Refreshments were served by the Hospitality COlll·ennr. Mrs. E. Reid. assisted by the

1st. SI. John's Land Rangers.

The regular monthly merl· ing 01 the ~t. ,Iohn's Clull. Canarlian Federation 01 Un' il'ersit~, Women met on Ocl. 28 in noom A 128 01 the Mis Bui1din~, Memorial Unil'ersity.

.II panel \\'a~ arranged on the lopic, Will Canada Commemor· ate her looth Birthday'? The panelists were:· Dr. W.F. Sum· mel's, Chairman; Miss S. Mc· Corguedale: lIIrs. W. M. Dobell and ~Ir. .1. Hewson. Thes~ speakers are members of the staff of Memorial University

[V"'''''''''''''''''.rvvr'''''''''-.....,..,.",~\ in Geography, Political Science

lfll963 • ~ History and French respectivc· T ( Iy.

~ ~ Mrs. Mercedes Marshall

~' 1 chaired the meeting warmly ~ welcoming guests and memo ;.'. d .

[-:tr~~.q· 1\ bel'S. ~lrs. .1.T. Stoker m· ~"Y,-'ii':'<:r' ( troduced each member 01 the

lIv"".r\,;,;:r-IJ'JUroJ'V'..;.z:;.;",..:,..:,.,---:: panel.

---====-

CAPilli NEWFOUNDLAND'S FRIENDLY THEATRI

-,-----------------------• NOW PLAYING

~:

&WALT II~IIY , ,

.. .., TlatNICOLOa

TIMES OF SHOWS EVENING SHOWS - 6;45 - 9;00

MATINEE: 1;30

NEXT ATTR'ACTION "LAWRENCE OF ARABIA" with PETER O'TOOLE - ALEC GUINESS - ANTHONY QUINN-ACADEMY AwARD WINNER! BEST PIC1;URE OF THE YEARI .

F Q I loll' in g the discuss· iI • ~

illn ~Irs. D. Eaton tlwnked Ihe sprakel's for Iheir instructilc and enlightening presentation,

~!iss ~!arsllal1 inrited the ;!lIesls 10 adjourn with the Cluh to the Social Room for refreshments.

This was lollowcd bv t h ~ Business Session. ,UteI' the minutes were read by ~Irs S. Papazik, a tetter was read from the International Federation of University women on behalf of Winnifred College in need of special funds. The Club voted a sum for this pu_rpose.

The st. .Jobn'~ Film COlin' cit wrote requesting us to be· come a member. This was agreed upon.

The Safetv Council 01 ;':cw· foundland aiso wrole solititing OUI' intercst. :rhi~ was gil'en attention.

~Iiss Olga Anderson. Pro· I'incial DiredOi' rOl' Newfound· 1,1110 drew our atlention to the question passed hy the Can· mlian Federation of University Women, namely, "What are we doing as 11 membel' of the In· ternational Federation of Un' iversity Women. A few an· swers followed.

A special feature of t h' i 5

meeting was the presentation of Ihe C.F.U.W. Scholarships cheque to ~tiss Shirley Sellars, fourth year student at Mem· orial Lniversity from the st. .John's ClUb by our President Miss ~farshall.

Al'1'an~ements rOi' the show­ing of the film Ramhi were

'(liscusscd. II will takc place I on Nol'. 2~ at 2 p.m. afHl .j n,m.

in the Little Theatre, Mem· llI:ial Unil'cn;ity.

JJfanners By MILLETT

,~ ~~

Get the most from

rOI:.\1'J()1\' \l'ILL WI.\' lIER THAT SECO;l;U PAY

BY RUTII MILLETT "The Uniled Stales is r~Jlid·

1;- hecolllin~ a double Jlay check counlry. It takes both II husband and wife working

to support a family under our present economic set . up," says ~lrs. Esther Petcrson. dir· ector of the Women's Bureau of the United States Depart· ment of Labor.

That being the case,. why arcn't we doing more to encourage our daughters as well as our sons to prepare themselves through education for the kind of work they like and have n talent for?

We dGIl't. 01 cOllrse. It scellls all·important to parents ffl!' a son 10 prepal'e himself to eal'n 11 Iil'ing at 1I'0rk he will lind satisl~·ing.

But a daughler? Wilh A

daughl cr parenls just assume that she will marry when she is through schOOl ilnd so it doesn't matter whether or not she is adequately prepared to earn a living when she finishes ller education.

Sbe probably will marry. But in a "double pay c h e c k country" what difference does that make? If she is going to have to work after marriage, she ought to be trained for work she will enjoy. instead 01 having to take anything she can get.

A college dean tells me she has !I'ied for ycars to con· I'ince the girls she' counsels that since it is vcry likely they will ha\'e 10 earn a llal' check for yeal's-cI'en if they marry-

-'w z;~:.,:::. .... .:;:.~ ........ ~ ... ___ ~ .. ~

Deal' Ann Landel'~: Thc he,1 \\'~I' 1 ". prohlem before the public is to write; \~.nQl' I~ hope you'll print my leiter and pcr~' lin t'r1!rt couples the gl'ief my daughter an,l '0 '~s sr!r!

. I 1 . n·ln·I." gomg t Irollg 1. " ' <1

After sel'en childless sears 0111' <laU-1 law became dbcouraged and decided 10 0 ~IEr 'la interviewed by three agencies and IOWal oP.1. Tte; Their patience wore thin after two )eal"~o be was understandably receptil'e to the 'lI"" 'I.m~

"Cs ton who had gotten tll'O gra),·marl;ct hahic,l anlj , with them. ,S

My dall;:hler's hushand agree<l I" ~(' Iho route anrl two months lalcr 11i(') I'r~eil'~rll.' , girl. She was the lighl of the;r lil'"- for ' , ,~ ~n

months .

Last ~Iay th(' hahy's ilatural mOlhcr I

I . f I I I I urn" '" t WII' r~nt (.001' am (em,l11r cd i1l'l' child. ~h;"~ ~he wa, llTallonal when ,he agrc('1\ In 'I'll her l.; .

f I "1'11 I' ''''j\ , crook' 0 . a awyrr. .\ :IP Ihe Iktait" hilt "1" and ,on·m·law were laken mIn ('''''I'I '11(1 '11 "

t \ (I~' :oJ;t

The 11I1l'!;cry door i., now locked alld II,' , ~ .f:lr~ ii :

rlest home I hal'r el'er <een. The)' ,re par' "d' '. , . . I l ' .'p. f'" Ihclr IIllsla (c. P case p1'1nl Ihi:'. Ann, '.,,'

-SIIATTEl: ED GI:'\~D)IO')rrlrl -. Dear (jrandlllCJlher: Y"IlI', il 'I I I

II tie f sHch leiter that has RIl\le:I1'I'd ill Ihi' ' I If'l • • • > 10 limn b~ It IS worth repealing. Than~ 1011 I .'.

d '. . , . or ~lIl1n. An a!tam let s hOlle till' 'err£'> a, • ' t I 'Idl' I a "elm('1 o ~ II ess COUJI es who lIrc Irllll'le I l -

. ' '0 la\( short cut. I

• • • •

Dear Ann: What's the matler wilh me? I', one miserable affair to anothrl'. I'll l0ll. "

\- ·Oll '''r . briefly and mayhe you can help. . "'.,

I quit ~rhoot at 16 10 malTl' " f"l'ei'I'cr " • :" I v.r.~

My mother thought he had monCl, Shc '.'·a; , , couldn't get my hands on it. The IIml'ia"" . ' ..

~~ la",fr ! months. . .

I went with another man II'ho fooled me for " hefore r learned he was mal'rird alld had four "",

h,~ ..

next fellow was married hul sairl hi, diloree \I~"I coming throu!!h "any day." I got di'zu~leri afler·· .. months and left town to go lire lI'il h m!' tOll5i~ husband.

Her husban', and I fell in lore. II~ rO:I~in about it and threlV me out of the hOIl~c. Xo'.\' this miserable town and my reputation i~ mud,

Why was I so loused up? Plcasp help me --HARD W,m

Dear Liz: It's not yonI' luck thai's hard-ii'l your head,

:llove to a city where no onc kn~l\s lOU. II'

solve to go with only respeclable people. II!! church groups and clubs where deeeni P(~'I meet. Stay out of bars and joinls. Replle! lIt. macaroni in YOllr spine with sterner stnlf .. 11l stop lookhlg for short cuts In Paradise.

• • • •

Drar Ann Lander5: II frirnri nl n',r! ',.h, i' funeral husine,~ ha§ a habit "'I1'rh 'nnn). m! If YOll tell me he is ri~hl ( will 'W,IO;:11' I~ nix

When this friend introducr) , der;)m~n hi ably sa)·s. "I would like you 10 kilO1\' Ilr. Qlltnlin wood. a Doctor of Dil'inily." Tll1~ 'nllnd-.? Ihat nI" blood pressure lakes ~ Icap clery lilt! I Whal do you think about this Iype nl inlrodutt~:~

-ANTI·PO:'IP A~D

Dear Anti.Pomp: I would nol sa)' lour Is wrong, but be is surely l1sin~ a gmt 01\' superfluous words. It would be simpl!r 10 A!. "This is the Rev, Quentin Collingswood:

One does not Introduce 3 dentist I! '11. o t " '~Dr Ro~ Farnsworth, Doctor of Denll' ry. or . i b

heim, Doctor oC Philosoph~'''not Ihat It ~oul I

incorrect, but because it would be a\l'k\\'a~

• • • •

n Himl nu cmo·~IF. hmrw h~',1 hl",1 hh~' h:r", • t 'nclal crutt" Do you lean on cigare les a. a "

mal' reg;'ct it later. Send for .\:'\\ • , h r r'qu"1 . "Tcena;:e Smoking." enclos1l1g 11'" y 011 . ..

in roinand a long. sclf·addrr.,,'rd PII',dW,

Ann Lander§ will he glao to hrlp 1'1111 \\Hh:~. lems. Send them to her in tHC of tl1ll nl.",l" closing a stamped, ~elf·addresserl rn'c1op~.

'.

they ought to give serious thought while in college to hal\' they are going to earn the pay check.

But since they haven't heard this kind of talk at home, they are har'd to convince.

The. will continue to be, too. until their parents begin to take the attitude that choos· ing the right career is import· ant for daughters as well as for sons. They are doing their daughters an injustice il they let them think that marriage will lIutomaticalh' free them from the necessity of earning a lil·ing.

The germ' of , "I'e '0 ,mall that It .. " U~'I more than I ~' • :he head of a'pln. bul thry do "'0 on noir,g ;llCl't1ed in . , spre3ding from, well. Part of 1,,1

war round • 1((I'e gramme 10 _ ; 'n the earl)' ,II!· I I II,iIi a'I'e is mO; '.' (.-. ~ ·P[~'~

lra,l likrl)'10 , Ii' ' YOIl hclp IIlIh/1S whrn )'ot! bU.

$ral.'.

o traveling vocation. , Don't be afraid to try s~thing new. Aspirin is the Resistered Trade Mark of Th. Sayer comp,nY,

"

-

on

CBC \ r, :-iuHlnbcr 13th. !

;

Scorebl)~rd

Clock Prel'iew

Dcrotions

Broadcast

('hoic,~

Broadeasl )IC5scr ShOll'

Bulll·tin AlbulH

. :\(","5 and Wealher , H.mlcr Sholl'

Rel~dezl'ous n~l_"; Time Signtl~11

"'I Ilendl'll _'I'; Seilen] Broil l

.1l1J01;1 .\blince I:l'~ional :\ l'WS

Roundup In The ,\ir

I'relicw ament HIll

In Tile El'enin~ . :iLlI" and \\'l'ilthl

\It,,je

Frontiel'S Inil'!''';II,· of the Ail'

Pops Orches (lnal News, and Speakinl

~Iuslc Program: Halif: ~ogram: Otta\

Page 9: Indoor Showroom THE DA'IL· Y NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19631113.pdfused 10 the mallual shift. MEN REFUSED The worl(ers refmed to aid him, presumably

""t lhr fiN , '·I'lunm. hut

lor 1\ rilint .\> .1 drtrrrflil

I'd 10 lakr 1

·h l'I'U~1Il found ". XOI\' I'm 'mk , i, mud.

h~ll' mr. ,IARn IXCI\

Knows ~'ou, Rt­r people. JuiD

Meenl peopl, '. Replaet that

rr ,luff. .hd adist.

sound, '0 nrry time 1 f inlroduction: cmCnlST

'a" "our lrimd ... a gnat I\IIn1

r simpler to IIY,

,trllll,\ as "Dr. ," or "Dr. Rostft· Ihat 11 "'ould be

br Rwkward.

"II' hhr\\' h~rw a ,odal .. fl1Ich: L'~llEnS'

: our rrqur!t 20 11\ riopr.

'I' \'Ill' with ~our . . ... r ,f Ih;, nC1,.,p1r·

(·Iope.

PIUSClLlYS POP By AL '-'En:-'lF.F.H '~WEETIE PIE By NADINE SELTZER

TEXACO FUEL CHIEF HEATING OIJ~

Fuel Chief is the cleanest burning oil you celn buy. Every bit burns-not a drop is wasted. Fuel Chief keeps your house clean and has no odour. Most important-Fuel Chief can't leave damaging deposits on burner parts and storage tank. And it's' economical-you get these premium benefits at regular prices!

Ask us to fit! your tank nowl Keep it full of Texaco Fuel for protection against dust, dirt and condl!'nsation. Then

hen you need more Fuel Chief we schedule deliveries so you I .... ''' ... run short.

DIAL 8·3001 (10 LINES)

[GREAT EASTE RN OIL CO., LTD. STlU~ET ST. JOHN'S

'\ "YOII can throwaway C.oldilocks! I bro~lght _ ~'--' '. a science·fiction book!"

CAPTAIN EASY By LESLIE TURNER

1ll.55-:\ews and Weather 11.1I0-Thc Gary Parr Show 11.:11-The ~Ierv Russell Show 11.55-~ews and Weather 1~.1I0-'Ihe Merv Russell ShoW 1~.:lU-:'\ClI's and Weather 1~.:l5-The Merv Russell Show 1~,.15-Fishermcn's Forecast 1~.48-The Mer\' Russell Show 1~.5;)-:'\e\\'s and Weather

7.30-News in Review B,OO-~ews Headlines U.OI-Jamboree S,30-News Headlines a,31-;J amboree I),OO-News and Weather 9.02-~efld. Soiree 9,30-News Headlines 9.31-Nfld. Soiree

lO.OD-News anrl Weather

FOURTH HANn OPENS WEAK

By OSWALD JACOBY

Chicago bridge bidding is almost the same as in rubher

! bridge. The major I\i[ference

\ occurs in the fourth haml opening on eithe!' the second or thirel deal and particularly on the second,

,' .• ·.<·:'111·tl 1.I5.-IVorld Of Sport 1.20-Thc ~Ierv Russel! Show I 35-Transportation Report

10.G1-National News 10.15-Pick of the Pops lO,45-Sports

On the second deal the Ileal· er's side is vulnerable, If you

. are in fourth seat and there 'have been three passes you should try to open the bidding, If you pass, there is another deal by the same dealer. J[ you open, the hand is played und irrespeclil'e of result your partner will deal the next ham\ and the \'ulncrability will have turned around, You will be vul· nerable and your opponents not vulnerable.

and Tra\'cl Guide I :1B-The ~Icrv Russell Show ~ OO--:\rll's Headlines ~.O\-Prizcs & Problems ~.:Hl-:\cws Headlines ~.31-Priles & Problems

~)!'! Pal'ade ~.55-:'\cll's and Wcather :IOO-Bob Cole Show :1 ;lO-:-;cW~ lIcadlines :l:ll-.Bob Cole Show 3.55--:-; c \\', and Wcather toO-Bob Cole !ihnw

10,50-Letters and MessaiI'~s lO.55-lIIusic In the Night aDO-News and Weather 11.02-Music in the Night 12.00-N ews. Sports and

Weather 12,05-lIIusic in the Night' 12,30-N ews Summary 12.35-Muslc In the Night 1.01-Queen anel Sign Off. -

v.n. A. R. South's fourth hand open·

:~:" ,!.L-;\~~ -l.:W-:\c\\'~ Headlines 4.:H-lloh Cole ShOll' 4.5,;-:-; ~\\'~ and IV C:lthcr ;;.(I(I-Supper Club ;;:IO-l\cIVS lIendlincs

WEDNEsnr\Y, November l3th.

6,aO-Program Preview and Musical Variety

6.45-Religious News 7.00-Fnmily Worship HOlll' 7.15-The Bible Slory 7,30-Chapel Echoes a,OO-French in the Air 8.15-Coneert Favorites II,OO-The Voice of Proph~c~' 9,30-Your Own Favorites 9.45-The LiI'ing Word

ing was one of these typical Chicago bids. He wanted to change that vulnerability around, He wasn't happy about his partner's jump to game. He did not really expect to hal'e

~ :ll-Supper Club .i.45-Flshermcn·, Forecast :; ~ll-Suppcr Club Ii otl-Rulletin Coard 1i.12-~lo\'ie :-; ell', G 15- \\" orld Of Sport Ii ~O-Earl)' El'cning r\eIVS

NORTU .KJ432 fQ85 + AI0 9 6

WgST (V) EAS1'

6

'. ;""1'~; .IlL'; 7.00- Flcis~hlllann's Riddle .5 .109 "AJ072 f964 +K,l5:l +Q87 i.la-Shillelagh Sholl'lIme

~,:l ': 1::":111 i :llI-:\cIVS Headlines lO.UO-Sign Off "'QJ97 ",AK863 SOUTH

.'.: .. ::Ilt'e

r,: .. :m.n: l!ili . h T, E\0t1ln~

: \1-\. J:~d \\"1 ,;:~lcr . \! ~:, ; ,

i :H -llacl; To The Bible R HI-Cream Of The Crop, n.o()-:'\cws Headlines

:\cws :lnd Weather \II.~;;- \l'urld Of Sport II O'J-nCAI' Towcr Torhay.

GJON·TV , WEIlNESIH Y. NOI'embpr 13th. :

" IVcall~er ~.cport I 9.55-I'astnr's Study 1111_. -llJg lop t cn JO.OU-Nlltional Schools --'-- --_.- . ----. ' 111.3U-Clte~ Helene

C J 0 N \10.45-NnrSery Schuul 11.1I0-I'ltys!r:al I·'Uncss

WEJlXESIl.\\·, :\ol'rlllhcr 13tlt. ,1I.15-WoUlen·s World __________ ,11.30-Cartoon Carnival

.\ .\1. 1 12.00-Sign Off ti.:!lI-BolJ Lcwis Sh(}l~ News 2,30-PIISS Word

Spurts and wcatller 3.00-Scarlett Hill stimllJary 3.30-Take Thirty

pu;;-lIob and Jerr .• ' r!1allcr 4.00-Jo·rlemUy Giant !l.On-~lusic fur llillions 4.15-~lIster ltogers 9.'>U- What's the Song 4.30-The Cisco Kid 9.:1I-Top Tunes and Go'den S.OO-Cartoon Carnival

!!its 5.30-Razzle Dazzle ".:l5-~!usical Charades G.OO-Jungle Boy

4AQ876 "K.l3 + 42-",1054

Bast and West vulllerable West North East South Pass Pass Pass 1. Pass 4 .. Pass Pass Pass

Opening Icad-+ Q

any pia\' IOL' galllc when hI' opene:I,· but he was willing ~o pay 50 points to get rid o[ IllS opponent's vulnerability.

When he looked at the dum· I my, happiness returned, . Not , only was hc going to get rLd o[ I that bad vulnerability he was

also going to show a nicc pro­fit. Tlte defense could only take three tricks and South scored 420 points,

9.:lR-Top Tunes and Golden 6.25-Photo Quiz lIits G.30-The World of Sport You'il learn the finesse and

IU,UO-:-';cws and Weather 6.40-News Cavalcade '\ other bridge tips with a copy of 1I1.02-Portia Faces Life 7.00-Robln Hood Show "Wln at Bridge With Oswald III.lG-Ask Sally West S.OO-Nations Business Jacoby." Just send your name, 10,! 9-Housewives Choice B,l5-National News ! address and 50 cents to: oswald IO.30-i'iclVs Headlincs S.30-Bet Your Bottom Dollar Jacoby Reader Service, care IO.31-Jcrry Wiggins Hous~· 9.00-Zero One this newspaper, P.O. BoX 489,

wil'es Choice 9.30-Red River .Jamboree Dept. A, Ralllo City Station, II.OO-News and Weather lD,OO-Perry Mason New York 19, N.Y. . I

1 II.02-News Bulletin n.OD-Festival 1I.13-Life Can Be BeautIful' 12.30-CBC News Cl,A'RD S'ENSE 11.30-News Headlines l2.45-News and Weather 11.31 . I.Oa-News Highlight~ 12.55-Pastor's Study

Hnd wi!'.lther, BuiJ Lewis 1.00-Sign Off Q-Tl1c bidding has been: Town and Country _____ _ South West North East

1 '" Pas~, 1 ¥ Pass 1.1l5-Weather Forecast 1.l5-News . 1.3:-NolV You're Talking t.4fl~fcm· Wiggins ?tl1t!uee 1.55-Att Baker's Notebuok 2,OU-News and Weather 2.02-Jerry Wiggins Matinee ~,30--News Headlines 2.31-.lerry Wiggins Matinee 2,35-Ask Sally West 2.4O-Jerry Wiggins Matinee a,OO-News and Weather 3,02-John Nolan's Western

Jamboree 3,3ll-News Headlines a.35-John Nolan's Western 3.31-Muslcal Charades

Jamboree 4,OO-News and Weather 4.D5-John Nolan's Ranch

Party 4,30-Natlonal News 4,33-John Nolan's Ranch

Party U6-Ask Sally West 4.51-John Nolan's Ranch

Party 5.00-News and Weather 5.02-Art Andrews Da~cc

Party . 5,3Q-News Highlights 5.31-Art Andrew's Dance.

Party 8.D1-Weather . Q,05--Sporu

C:apitol Today

2 + Pass 2 ¥ Pass 1 7

I, \' uu, ~ulllh. hol.l:

.,A2 ¥A2 +KJ76 ",AQIO 9B

I What do yoU do? --- \ A-Bid three hearts only.

WALT DISNEY'S Four heads Is a close second "SON OF FLUBBER" choice. A no.trump eall nf any

Versatile Fred MacMurray and attractive Nancy OlSon, who created the roles of th'e inven· tive professor and his fiancee in the hilarious laugh'I1It, "The Absent Minded Professor." arc re-teamed in Walt Disney's

sort Is not recommended. TODAV'S QUESTION

Instead of bidding two hearts your partner bids two no·trump over your two diamonds. What do yoU do now?

Answer Tomorrow

howling successor, Son oC Flub· .................. . ber, with only one slight change ' :' FIGHT : -they now play newly-weds.' :

As Professor Brainard, Mac-: T B • Murray is up to his old trick~, : making scientific discoveries WITH: that set the town of Medfield • on Its provincial ear, while his CHRISTMAS: exasperated bride, played by : Miss Olson, tries her level best SEALS' to keep things on an even keel. :

This wacky new comedy Is • MacMurray's fourth film as- :: ANSWER YOUR CHRiSTMAS:

:. SEAL lETIER TODAY • slgnment under the Disney ban· ' ......... • ........ . nero He scored heavily in such • .

RUllel\ 8.1D-Natlonal News 8tldlinu SbGW 6.30-Dlck Earl Club. 93

recent hits as "The Shaggy lar roles in "The Absent Mind· Dog," "The Absent Minded Pro· ed Professor" and "Son of Flub­fessor" and '.Bon Voyage!" . ber." The Broadway stage has

Min Olson' came out of s~mi· kept her busy between films in . retirement to co-star In Dis· such romantic romps as "Tun· ftU11e1\ Sh I 8.35--Mu.lcal. Charades

IInler c ow US-Dick Earl ElUb 93 ftlUselI ~hntest 7.00-Ne.wI and Weath£.t .

ow 7.02-Dlck Earl.Club 93 ~~y~~. ;~:I~~~::~~ ~~d l::t~~~: ;~w~~l~~~;""M~~:,n~la~~~" No

~-~~~~~~"~.~-.-~ .. ~-.. ~~ .. -=.-~-... ~-= .. -~-.=-~-~~~~~~~~."~~------~~ OH,I OON'T 1HINK (lOP'S CULTURflL RETROGRESSION IS SO UNUSUf\L!

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS

MORTY MEEKLE

Ir.,.;.;;··~"·-::· ::'--::-::-'-='-=---'~' 4-' --_ ... I • AE!l<AI.JAM LlNa:x.N W~

, J.I~ A ~ . LHE: GE';TTYoSBlJfa<; r'M ~ AD~ WHlt..e

'IOO'u.,. LfKG... Tl2AVS-ING 1lJ WAtSHII\'G!CN BA.~OFAN

eNI.€l..CJ£.n!

I

\

--......... -.-_ ... ---By MERRILL BL0SSEH

1 KNEIN EVER'( 6REA.1< IN THAT RUG!

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lO-THE DAILY NEWS, ST. J('/HN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, NOVElIIBER 13, 10G3 . '

.. Acetylene and

Electric Welding

Ji1\Y'S ENGINEERING LTD. ,! ,SpriD(;dale St. Dial g.203~

Contractors Supplies

UNITED NAIL & FOUNDRY CO., LTD.

UMllLTON AVE.

I HEAP & PARTNERS (NFLD.) Ltd • WirIng MaterlalJ, Wire loti

Cables, Motors, Starters, Lamps, Switche!, Lillbtlnl

, Flxlures. ~tc WAREHOUSE: PRINCE'S

DIAL 8·5088 "\V "

.' Building Materials _ Steel scaf~Oh1i~~~ ('rnamental ---------:' . , Iron Railings, Chain Link Fene· :CH, ESTER ,DAWE LTD·1In!t, Re.inforclng Steel, ele. i James R. Tucker Ltd. ..' For all your SulldlDg :- Requirements, 27 Springdale St.

ALL SALES • TOPSAIL RD. -- SHAW ST EQUIPMENT AND EI t' I f' t s

8.0161 9.1171 CONTRACTING LTD. ec rica IX ure

Bat'her Shop 1

CENTRAL BARBER SHOP ! I

General Contractors, Engineers,' Equipment Rental ••

TOPS:\lL ROM). PHONES: 9.2000, 9·2009.

CBS "DC! 1---------\ou.. Dry Cleaners

OPIRATlNG 12 otAllS I'iIiA\'Toiiili ~ to!"l!:!''' ~

~, SEW GOWEll ST. COppo.lle Adel.lde ~lol.rI'

Bakery -,---~...:---

OUR OWN.

COMET CLEANERS

For t1le Fastest most efficient Dry-Clean­ing and Shirt Service. Ph: 98017 • 98020

Drug Stores

M. CONNORS Ltd,

and Supplies Well Drilling , Phone 85171

jy3,tf

Glass

A.G. BARNES LTD. Plate. Safety, Sheet Glus,

Mirror and Plexlglass. 45 Ellackmarsh Rd. Dial 9·3690

Insurance

JOB BROTHERS & COMPANY, Ltd,

CENTRAL INVESTIGATION

SERVICE Handling all phases

of investigating. Maximum protectiOl. at I

minimum cost.

Dial 9-43524 or 9·43522.

P.O. Box 5672-East

T.V. Service

T.V. Service SERVICE TV Phone 8·6865

Day or night.

WEST END TELEVISIO~ LTD. 705 WATER ST • .\VEST

------_. --_._-

. ot:\2,dly, :iyr Murphy's

Texaco Service

Pianos and Organs

Rentals IlMIILTON STllEET nOUSEIIOLD UTENSILS ,. Gas • Oil lIardware-Sporting Goods. II •• Greasin~ • Washjn~

I Minor Repairs HARRIS & HISCOCK I. Accessories,

LTD. : DIAL 8,2702. 169 Water St. Phone 8.7352· seplO,lyr

A. L, COLLIS & SON Car Radios Tires

LTD. 1----------------Rcprescnting the world's rlnesl I

Pianos and Organs. ST. JOHN'S Hr.. GRACE i Dial 9·Z161 Dial 5075 I

PROPANE GAS I

PROPf'Nf bA~

CAR RADIO SALES We can install a new radio in any car from $55.00 up

. Jack's Radio Shop

71 Lonl's Hill PHONE 8·1448

INDUSTRIAL TIRE SERVICE

RETREADING VULCANIZING

Attention Contractors

For your Building Re.' I qu~re~ents, Paint and I BUilding Hardware see' us.

HUSSEY'S PAINT AND HARDWARE

177 NEW GOWER STUEF.'I

NEW NYlON ATLAS

ONLY $14.95 I and "

Radios Pick·up and Delivery ServIce KING'S BRIDGE

Better Costs

when

BREAD' Best by "Taste Test~'

Baked by ,

Prescriptions Pick1lp aDd delivery service.

PHONE 8·2206

Water Sh'ed DIAL 8·2658 - 8-4123

PROPANE APP~IANCES "

CHEIVERS PRopANE LTD. '

GREAT EASTERN OIL <.~OMPANY, Ltd.

Kcnmol'.nt Road. Dial 93331 , SERVICE STATION L TO.

Welf-Drillini-- 1 Phone 82146 I !.a1F."'

'EAST END BAKERY, LTD:

Elect, Services J, J. LACEY INSURANCE Ud.

Dependable Fire InsuranCft Prompt Claim Settlements.

I

"Ph ne ' 9-4706

REPAIRS TO, RADIOS, TV AND ALL ELECTRICAL

t\PPLIA"lCES DIAL 8·3001 to 8·3005

._.Pii;;;iii __ ;- ;::'~G.1:·r

I. -fO-UND-- 1-

Beauticians

GLADY'S BEAUTY SHOPPE cor Bond and Prescott Sts. Phone 84U51·1l·789B. Speck allzing 1D cold wal'ing, hair styling, cuTtIng and tinting,

City Electrical Co., Ltd.

(Electrical Contractors) Electric Repairs, to

Ranges, etc. PHONE 8-3767

86 Cascy Street

DJAL 8·7035

CROSBIE & CO., Ltd. Agents for

UNDEItWRITERB AT LLOYDS.

LOW RATES

Sen'ice Station

PALMER'S SERVICE STATION

Topsail Rd.-Dial 9·509~. Cold weather means "TUNE·UP TIME"

See us for Expert Servicing 0

ADVERTISE IN

THE NEWS AT .@eIttm{}

...-s. W. SHORT

A ,\IlEL.\JDE ST. R·%6S'l manicuring. (aciais etc~ 14 IJperators, DO l"alUnll, DIAL 8·5031 your car or truck. .. - -- -- --~~---~-- --- _.- -._- -- -~

----=----~---~~~iiiiiiililiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiliiBi~------·-----· ---,,---_'~~___ "" I NOTICE

~~lXl@~D~@ I lege! I Notke ••• 0 ••••• 000.0.

FREE HOME DELIVERY St. John's: Phone 8 .. 0251

Gander: K. G. Griffin Ltd., Phone 8-2387 Grand Falls: Bond Beverages Ltd., Phone 2146

Bell Island: Tom Murphy, Phohe 2186

DOMINION ALE

, •••••••• 00 ••••

Wm. L. CHAFE TAILOR

4 HOLDSWORTH ST. ST. JOHN'S CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN

IF CHAFE MAKES THE CLOTHES.

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE

R.C. Anthony R.C.A .•. , Insurance ltd. p~ Imperial Oil Bldg.

Elizabeth Avenue

;I rn&~ g,rnl?'1 , s,r. JOHN'S LAURIER CLUB I NOTICE ies herehy gil'PIl that \uti('c is hcrl'hy ~il'cll thai _ H l ' JOHN ~l. SDlON. of the '1'011'11 ;:.'Ilald \'01111:: of the TOWIl 01

ii3ii IG'OIJmD~'ii'5IO~~ ~~ I i of Stephenville. ill thc PrOlinC'l' Sll'pht'llIilll'. ill the Dbtrirt or • 1 i of :\ewfolllldialld. Laholll'l'l'. will ~t. (;corgl"; in the l'rol'ill','l'

~nnO@OOfifflr:.1i" ~'H'O" '" ,... I MUSIC _ FUN i apply to the Parliallwllt of Can, of :\cII'flllllldland. (;cntll'Ill:!I1 WI:!l!>U', T I ada, at the pre,cnt. next 01' "'ill apply 10 thl' Sl'nnlc "r

i following se"ion then'of for a ('anada, at the presenl or nl"~ 'ii'@ ! Bill of Divorce from hi, wife. flit II I'l' ,('"i(,n thrl'~or. ior :I . FROLIC t Emily Yvonne Simon, of lhl' rl"',,1t1lion of 1\i1'01'l'(, fro 1\ ii"

,City of 51. John's in the said \\'ifp, Beulah YOlln~, of Cll' ,Province, on the gl'Olllld of Town of Stephenville. in til('

TONITE 8:10 p.m.

On 'CJONlTV.

, VOTE

TO N I G HT i ad lilt cory. Di,trkl of st. (;eor<~o', in th" • i IlATED at the City of St. i'l'(}\'inr(' of Xe\\'foundland, 011

I John's in the Pl'oo;ince of Xl'\\' thc ;:I'Oll11d~ of adultery,

With: Myer Frelich, Chris Andrews,

Ralph Walker, Johnny Schliesmann.

9 P.M. - 1 A.M.

SOc. per head Res. Dial 8·4166

AMPLE PARKING

DINNERS and SNACKS SERVED

COME ONE - COME Al.l ENJOY YOURSELF etc.

nov12,13

CITY OF ST. JOHN'S

.

,Ioundland, this 7th day of Dated at SI. ,lohn', ill tilt' October, 1903, PI'Ol'ince of :\cwfo:md!:t11d, tlli.

! DO:-;ALIl W. D.\\n:. 3th day of :\o\'cml:el', A,ll : Solicitor for thl~ .\)lllliranl. 1%:1, \ ocI23,30no\'6,] ~ I--~--·"-~----· -,

INSURANCE

IJ,\\'\I) 1:. SI'.\ItKI>. soiil'itor fllr the Apjllie:ml.

nal'1 :l.20,2i,dec4

_ .......... :L==,

"HUMMEL" FIGURINES Bealltifllli~' design cd,

expressive and Jife,likl·. ~Iaclc hy Fr:mrisc,1lI :\III1S,

;~Iso Labradorite and ! Sealskin Jewellery.

G. J. GREENE VARIETY

STORE 254 DUCKWORTH STREET

Corner of Prescott ____ I Dial 8·0067

llul'2,lmth

I'rl'i~ht

T£L.9-5079 I I HALLEY X OFFICE OF THE CITY CLERK

ST. JOHN'S MUNICIPAL COUNCIL

NOTICE'

Bn'(lk Sen"ice • "ia i.c\\'i~pDrte , <ia!:' n[

~.~~~~~~_~_~~~~~1 flail\\",' Freight I • _________ • \O\f'lII hO[ 13tn"

ON NOVEMBER 25th nov9,12,13

SPECIAL $1,000.00 Down Payment Here is a two apartment bun~alow on a corner freehold lot, com­pletely landscaped. The rental income from this apartment is approx. $100.00 per month, You pay only $85.00 per month and move into this fine home.

,

MUNICIPAL BYE-ELECTION 196:1 Pursuant to the provisions of Section 15 of The City of st. John's Act, Notice iii ~lereby given that Voting Cards have been Issued and delivered to taxpayers listed on the Voters List. Any taxpayer to whom a Voting Carel has not been issued and delivered is entitled under the provisions of the Act to have his name added to the List and to Obtain a Voting Card up to but not later than the 14th d'ay of Novem­ber, 1963. For this purpose the said Voters List will be open to inspection at the City Hall during business hours on every lawftII day up to the 14th day of November, 1963, in order th~t persons legally qualified to vote, whose, names

, have been omitted, may have their names added to the List and obtain ,Votin~ Cards. No person shall be entitled to vote at the said EleCtion whose name does not appear on .the Voters List and to whom a Voting

, Card has not been issued,

City Hall, Nov. 5, 1963.

E. B. FORAN, City Clerk.

For Progress and Full

Time Service

'VOTE PORTER As Councillor at I

City Hall . I ON NOV. ,25th

nev13,15

SEE. , Chris Andrews

For all your Furniture & Appliances R. J. Grouchy

LTD. NIGHT OR DAY • ' Store Nb. 8-5006·7 Home No. 93231

aug 12.1mti:

)1.111.

fUNSI SOYS'

ape: SERiES

I N 26 43

20 31 ".J

Hl .)-

17 34 ·15

30 3E 36 .,r .JI~

41 .,: I.;'.

20 CO:\'SOLATH FHA~IE T

m Bingo Phor: on the do)

Ip Kin -

------

erella B H C

DUIl{

dent tilJ!T ,.., stdis

96709 ella I ELIZABI

Page 11: Indoor Showroom THE DA'IL· Y NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19631113.pdfused 10 the mallual shift. MEN REFUSED The worl(ers refmed to aid him, presumably

Better Li Costs

IUNSMEN ~30\'S' CLUB

r~O~" ~~uti BINGO

.. • -~ ,q No . 80 rfJ't~·~ ~I\\""

1 r~ G 0

~(l ,1:1 GO 61 :ll -8 G4

~(l ;)'.

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52 r>7 l7 :; I ,)

,I,) .=if) (n .,. I 57 .... :) . ~ II 1-

:;~ 5·1 j·I " ., 49 ()~ , ).)

,11 ~3 ',' 68 .," ,'"J 46 G6

:JCO\~()LI,TlO\' PHIZES Fon n:,\\lE TIlE CAlm.

S;,19 0 Fhone 8·7269 by 10 p.m. on the day published.

~ IOn - th~~p Kiddies

..... _. __ .. _--

Beauty Shoppe ~~Alf PRIC't C'~LD WAV~

DllIl(, !Jr it supervised stu­(hit 1lal'ciresser. Hair cut­til,:'; In- professional hail' ~!lli,t.

Reg, $12.00 {'O $20.00

Special For Only ~S, $7, $9, $10

CUiilNG AND STYlIN$ \\'e a~'II\,(' \·IJ\l satisfaction.

96709 Fon ,\X AI'POIN'nIENT

~m~erella Beauty Shoppe ELIZABETH AVENUE

WANTEn TO nUy-Itt;:ht Front Fender to fit a 1057 Ford. Phone 922724.

GIRL WANTED, general housework, own room, T.V. all modern conveniences, references required, will advance fare. Mrs. W. Sucher. 444 Trenton Ave., Montreal 16, Quebec. novO,12,13 ..

LEARN TO DRIVE FC1l1al~ driver with 15 years driving experience. nolV accepting [emnle pupils. wishing to learn to drive,

, PHONE 916214 i 1l0\'1,(1~~~

IFOR SALE 1962 Vo;kswagen

Sedan Price $900.00 Ph'one 94793

l1ov13 _.----_._-GREAT EASTERf\\

OIL & IMPORT CO., LTD.

R&dio, Television, Washers Il~rrlgelators, Deep Freelers

Electric Ra!l!left. Floor polishers.

Gramophones public Address Systems

Tape Recorders

REPAIRS AND SERVICE 5 LINES

DIAL iI·3001 to 8-3005

WATER STREET JaI\2B.lY

MERIT INSURANCE ANDERSON AVE.

DIAL 9-0011-2-3-4

Wm. SINNOTT Service StatioD MaDager

PALMER'S LTD. Topsail Road

• GREASING • WASHING • TIRE REPAIRS • WHITE GAS • OUTBOARD MOTOR OIL • ACCESSORIES

OPEN DAILY 1:30 a.m. to MIDNIGHT

PHONE 9·5099 oct5tosep17

Down Payment $2,000.00 NEW HOMES

you Juokin" r '. I 1 . I I I . t ,., 01 .\ WlllC, mt fee t lat you (0 nol have enou~h in' \0 make the dowil payment. Let us show you how we can put

(lUt' I 'J" I . )ou lJa\'c ~g\\ t I c.l1n lome for less than YOll now pay per month. 1 -,(JO(J.OO down payment we can put you in a new two

month )~llJgaln\\' and the cost out of your pocket will be $115.00 lI'oulllllc!uding light, heat and telephone, which is less' than

~ ray for 11 good apartment, and you have the satisfaction Inl epell.dent and also paying into )lour own hom~. For 'full

and tOlktll1~ easy, convenient type of home purchase, call our a With one of our experienced salesmen today.

WANTEID For the Batery Moel

ONE EXPERIENCED COOK Also

3 WAITRESSES. Apply in person only to THE KENMOUNT MOTEL

l1ov13,14,15

PIUS X LADIES' ASSO,CIATION will be holding em

Afternoon Tea on Sunday

Novem~ar 17th from 3 to 5.30, at Gonzaga High School.

Admission $1.00. lIov13

NOTICE The Annual Meeting of the John Howard Society will be held on WEDNESDAY, November 13th, at 8 p.m. in the Audi· torium of the King George the Fifth Institute, Water Street East.

The public is cordially invited to attend. no\'7,13

CITY OF ST. JOHN'S

OFFICE OF THE CITY CLERK

TENDERS ,

Tenders are invited for the construction of curb and gutter, storm drainage and auxiliary work in the Ross Farm subdivi­sion.

Plans and specifications are available at the office of the City Engineer. Copies may be procured upon payment of a $10.00 fee.

Bids in sealed envelopes marked 'Tender for Contruction of Curb and Gutter, Storm Drainage and Auxiliary Work, Ross Farm Subdivision." must be deliver­ed to the office of th~ undersigned not later than 9.00 a.m: Wednesday, Novem­ber 20, 1963.

1

The lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted.

nov13,14

E. B. FORAN, City Clerk.

CITY OF ST. JOHN'S

ST. JOHN'S MEMORIAL s~rADIUl\I COMMISSION St. John's, Newfollndlllnd

HOLDING SEAT CERTIFICA rES Holding Seat Certificates for the 1963-64 season will go on sale Thursday, Novcm­b~r 14 as follows:

Row A ................. : .... $10.00 Band C ............ 5.00 D ...... 11.............. 3.00 E ...................... 2.00

Previous Holding Seat: Certificates were valid for the calendar year. The new 1963-64 certificates are dated November 1, 1963 to October 31, 1964. Holders of 1963 certificates which expire December 31, 1963 may renew same Tanuary 2, 1964 at a mduced rate for the balance of the 1963-64 season. Certificates not renewed will be available for general sale January 4, 1964. The privilege of renewal will apply to the 1963·64 season only. nov2,4,12,13 '

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, NOVEMBER 13,1963-:-11

SUITE OF OFFICES, , THREE ROO~IS.

Heate,l. Second floor, 158 Water Sireet.

Rent $60.00 per month. PIIONE 9·08864.

nOI'13,16,IB

Reddy's Coal & Oil I

Distributor: J. Kenny.

. For Fast Delivery I I

DIAL 8·2804 - 8·70881 octll,lmth,dly ! ----------------1

w. D. RYAN 126 Duckworth Street

AUTOMATIC SPRINKLER SYSTEMS

Installations-24 hour Service

FIRE EXTINGUISHERS All Types

SALES and SERVICE

PHONES: Day .................. 8·3325 Night ................ 8.69361. nov12.2wk

Miscellaneous For Sale I

fj NEED A NEW

STOVE OR 'FRIDGE'

"

c: IXII r'B xY1I1 R ::I XII m~ i I

F' LJ::II··~ LOAN

THE BANK OF MOVA' SCOTIA

Parish Fair In Holy Cross Auditorium

(PATRICK STREET)

Tonight! Tonight!-$1305.00 IN PRIZES

Bank Game $500.00-52 Calls CARDS $1.00-1 st. Game 8.45 Door prize each evening ~;25.00. If the lucky holder is prescnt at drawing :>50.00 will bc paid.

All tickets pl\l'chased eligible for Grand Bank Night Prize 8500.00 to be drawn at close of Fair. Tickets 3 for 25 O\' boole of 12 for, $1.00.

Unclaimed numbers 14345, 3512, 2913 worth $25.00 each. Last night's winning number 15777 . Come to·night and every night this week and solve your many Christmas Gift problems. lIov13

WANTED A GAS STATION ATTENDANT Minimum education Grade 10.

Apply 0

Colonial Garage & Distributors Ltd.

APPLICATIONS FOR POSITION OF

Town Clerk

• ~. i

, .'

Applications are invited for position of Town Clerk for the Town of Deer Lake. Applicants will state their age and qualifications. Closing date Nov. 20, 1963.

. Applications are to be addressed to the:

DEER LAKE TOWN COUNCIL, Deer Lake, Newfoulidland.

Envelopes to be marked: Application for position of Town Clerk

nov9,13.16

SPECIAL BUY REDUCED

From $34,000 To $30,600 57 ROCHE STREET

TRADE YOUR PRESENT HOME ON nIlS ONE

This is one of the better built homes in the ncwer residential areas of the City. This magnificent home has approx. 1500 sq. ft. of living space not including the apartment which is another 1000 sq. ft. This Ranch style bungalow has a large vestihule \vith a lovely entrance hall containing the clothes closet with louvered secti~nal 11001's. A large living room with sloped tiled ceilings, large fireplace with built-in bookcase and large plate glass mirror trom mautlc top to ceiling. Excellent dining area separate from the living room. A beau­tiful large, well laid out kitchen with ample cupboard space and broom closet, double wall oven and counter top burner unit. The bathroom is of the most modern material and fixtures, with built-in vanity and colored fixtures. The three large b~dro?ll1s are !ll'ight and have more than ample closet space. The hcallJlg lS cast lr?ll ha~e­board radiation. The beautiful apartment is c011lpletc!v self conlum­ed and has a living room, large kitchen and 2 spacious hedrooms and hathroom. Tiled floors radiation heat. There is all atlachcd garage with concrete driveway and patio. The land is freehuld, fenced lind landscaped front and rear with lawn, trees, flowers and shrubs. We can arrange for you to trade your present home on ~hjs dwelling "'.ith a minimum of fuss and bother to you. For full parhculars on tradmg call one of our experienced salesmen today.

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Page 12: Indoor Showroom THE DA'IL· Y NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19631113.pdfused 10 the mallual shift. MEN REFUSED The worl(ers refmed to aid him, presumably

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HZ-THE DAILY NEWS, ST, JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, NOVEMBER 13, 1963

.,... .... 111.~....,,1' THE I LON!~~:)~~!!ter Pl'

iP~l:--tt SIGN, pc,' Corp. 425,

B!Ii OF, Brinco THE TORO~TO (CP)-Brineo $j,JO

biJ, $5,95 asked.

~W- 001 -

TORONTO Pa. 1nl 7,1700 21 22 22 + I\> Commonweallh Inl Lever 1'~ymR5L 5000 lH~ 11 J1 - ~ Corporate Jnvestors 1'<0 Expl 7.~S 5 S 5 Diverailled Inc A l'<crl.,. 593&.1 18 17 17\, -II> Dlv."lIle,1 Inc B Pl'rron soo 13!~ 13~1 131:~ Dlvldend Sbartll Pick Crow ,zlO, 50 30 SO nomlnlon Cnmp. 1'larOi' 275 $28 28 28 +'\ Domlnlnn ntl·.

'EOROliTO CLOSING stOCKS Pre.lun ~10 920 910 915 -20 Domlnlun Equity s,. The Cllnadlan Prr'1II llrus Air 3600 62 62 62. Dreyfus Inc,

"ronLo tUock Euhanlr-No\", 12 PUlciex 12500 1L 101,~ 11 European Growth Complete tabuJalion o( 'Iuuday tmns. Que AtH.'O\ 2100 '1 7 7 Fedtratfd Growth

,o\lons. Quolatlo"" In cent. unlc.. Que Chlh o1!5 17 16 11 +1 Flrsl Oil nnd G •• narked , .• -Odd 101, xd-Ex·dlvldend 1 Que Lllh ISO 20a 200 21)0 -10 ~'ond. Collecttr A ll'-Bx'rlghtl. xw _ Ex.warrnntl. Net Q\IU!otcm 400n 12\';' l2~~ 12~~ + +.iI Fonds Co-llee-lif B ",ann I. from Nevlou. board Jol clu.. Qu.monl 17l 511 11 11 + I. Fond. Collecm C n, .. I., Hlldln!'. 2100 SI 49 ~9 -2 Group In ••

Net Haglnn 1100 5l !il 51 Growth on and Gas It .. 11 B,I .. Hlrh Lo" Clole Cb',c Royrnek 1067 16 76 76 Inve,lo,," Growtb

)\1?oa:S lIeolm 3000 9 81, 81. - I~ Inve.tofl Inti \e.ra 1700 10\, lO ~O lI.cI'o. 100 185 IA5 185 1nve.tors Mutual

7.81 8.36 \ lM9, 11.~7

2'2.75 4.66 5.12 I 3.~3 3.76 I 3.76 4.M'

For complete

COVERAGE and

Prompt Adjustment

of Claims

CALL

nIRTHS I

\

' MOORES-Bol'n a~-th-:-Gr~c~ , I ICE STATION : Hospital on November 11th to 'I

: ZEBHA i Ro): and Marjorie Moores (nee

I Alistair ~lacLcall $3 T : .Johffe). a son. a brother for

• ,0 I Janet and Sandra. ,

iON SAFAlU 'r I Armand Dellis .. 6.50 CARE\\-Born to Patrick

INSURANCE LIMITED I \lONTE ., ,and Jean Carew. Nov. 11, 19fi3. IV • CASSINO- i at st. Clare's Mercy Hospital,

(The Historic Buttle) : a son, The mother is the for·

REG. T. MORGAN

Charles Connell 5,50 . mer Jean McLellan of Stephen· .

~dl'ocate 8970 725 710 71U lienable 200 200 :00 200 +15 Muwal Aceumulilln. LJnlco 50U 13 43 43 llIll AI~om \!198 $141. 14'.. \4\, - Mutual Incomo \kaltcho 4500~. 55!16 1110 nup 4000 6 6 6 + 1 N Am.rlean 01 Canada

. 3.13 3.36 19.65 20.05, 18.46 20.07 6.RI 7.U 4.99 5.45 4.6ti 5.09 6.52 7.09 5.55 5.90 6.91 7.51 3.79 4.13 9.51 10.13 7.0B 7.70 4.60 5.00

12.91 \1.03 4.00 07 5,:;3 6.05

\1.52 12.59 14.39 15.73 M7 5.52 8.B3 9.65 4.69 5.15 5.98 6.33

11.78 12.88

FOGWILL-Born tn Doug·'

~ : las and Joyce Fogwill (nee:

,HOMEBREW AND VIlle. :

PATCHES Ul Pitch 8(10 27 27 21 + I Rockwln 18500 40 3~ 39 -I Ono WlIllom Street Inl'OD 8100 16 23 211', -Hl Itowiln Con 1000 51', SI, W, + I. Provident Un 1500 1111 lOA' 110 lI),nnor 5000 11 61 11 - I, Pulnam Gro,,1h trJon moo 16 15 16 + Hi \ Solem 2833 31 28 30 -1 Radl .. on

Harry J, Boyle 3.9<:1 '~!endes) on Nov. 91h. al the I

\. Arcadia 10';00 4() 37 Jj T 1 San Ant ROO 20 2O:zn }tcnent \ Aroad Bw:OOO 11 14 '4 _I 5.1,lIl1e ~uoo t2 11 11 -I 1I •••• roh Invo.lln( III C Cop 500 82 H2 82 _% ~h.rrlll 2237 290 286 286 -1 Saving. 1n,'e.lm.nl

I THE NIGHT OF I THE GENERALS

. Grace Hospital, a son, 7 lb. 7 oz., a brotber for Allan.

'.nk,no loo.a 38 38 I Sll ~lIIh'r ~220 21 20" 20~ 1962 Efre. Fund Cd. \umaq 3liOO 6 ti 6 _ t~ ,SII Stand 22oo:!!1 29 29 -1 TV Eledronlcs Ulall \'k ,\/"10 I 7 7 'I Sl~l'nt' lR2:\ lin 1M 170, +4 j Tlmtd In\, .. "tmpnt \uMr 200 3;,11 :I~O 3:\n -lv I ~tilrl'fltt ~oo 1 61; 61,~ + ~~ II lInittd Arcumubtive b.nkfleld ,r,r.o 1:1 1:1 i:1 S\('f'lnr JUOO 5 4h ~ + h West Growth

5,6.1 7.54 6,311 6.49

~.I18 B.22 6.92 7.09

Centre Bldg., Church Hill Hans Hellmut DIAL' 8.ms Kirst "',' 4,75: __ ._ ~O~T,--~F1!I'\NJ\S_

~ .. e, 90011 19 10 ,10 Siorr II WI! ·115 110 410 -----Junat :)00 73 i:\ 75 _ I I SlUI''I!'C'I)!I 1:;1'10 11 17 17

oct25,tf .'FIFTH PLANET With many thanks to the

I, --I' Fred Hovle 'and Sacred Heart of ,Jesus. 'Blessed Ia.~ ~1etu l~!1n j13 'j 7 _ I', I Sullh'iln 200 1:i1 15(J 151 -14 I

Jiuka' l~:.!.OO In !I 9 _~; t ~l1nlmr .. t 991111 It tn'1 11 .. 12 '.OUr) J26t.!~ 2~ Z2 221., _ h Tt'lm,,:: BOO 1 71 71 +1 lelif'terrt ,:ii10 ~O ::o:!ll :rlllllll I~ ~OO 51 51 51 -: 3elblm !,~j 67'; 670 6~1I .romblll fiStMl 91l 88 90

~~k~~1Im 1m m14 l~~ :~l!: t: Geoffrey' Ho§le 4,00 Virgin ~fary and' SI. ,Joseph'

MONTREAL CLOSING STOCIIS ~~l~a~:n: 12m :~~ :~ ~;~ -.;: :: ! ADVENTURES OF AN I for speCial fav?:rs ~ranted. \ I MONTREAL

1r!\'L'on lHlmt 18 lil-=::I\ + 1,'l rnrhrlt 1000 30 3D 3.q Jlbl~ 2~,)(!ll Z.i :.!~11.:Z~ Tormont lifl031~!l 2!'l 2ft J\dcop tWII ~I:l 11'7- fi'" -+- ~~ Trlhas:: J~IOO 206 200 204 II.e\ Boy 111011 1l II ll'" I Trin ('hill ;00 11 1~ 14

-1 +3 +% +H'2 -8

Ablttbl 117 lbe 4~in.~~~~.:r... 28 ~~~~~ ~.nk m :m: im m:"': I> I ORDINARY MIND' Slbned. jl. D.

~~~~.~n~ Nal ~!I ?t~/~~~' MID ~;. ~~~H g~ ~~ IU~ 1m 1m + I. Leslev Conger 4.95 loula'1 DJ[t(1 n:! ,;~ 6~ I; ,\!ih('~tu!l i-l5 2i5 270 272 'ralorn~ :1(m 4111 -'(I:; 40.; -5 l:n ~t1f(i\d 2:'110 75 15 75 -II lrolJt Reef 4000 :!:I Z21.1:3 't 1 Ln J\('no 1930 4!1.) 4j~ 47:; &ruruwk 1M,),' :.;1(1 :\h5 ~iu tTn :\,,1itdle 9~jO 27 26 :Ill - ~ luff An" :!::!OO 2~5 2:!O :21 1:1\ hlrt :!~OO 10 10 to ~amflo rtl(,{)~, F3 Rt 10:1 t!Pll C"n 52:\;) 143 Uti 140 --J -amll Ch~b ".!I;~ :110 ~f\O 3(Jj -r 1 \ andllo MI'I 4 4 .,

&~~~ ~;nl ~tli l~t N~!~ t~~' ~~~~ \~.~; 2~~~ $~n, 'r~ 11k +" SING FOR YOUR Dnqu. PC 5314 Int Pap 36\'3 Sicard 35<0 191> 91. 91. - i,' STTPPER nelt 'S4 Ma".Fer 16 Slmp",n. 135 S371& 361. 371l + Ii '"

ll'0~~~.nl %7;7 ~~;I;J~hl rw ~I~~ ~~uI~t:1 l~ ~~ ~~ ;g ,. ". Pamcla Frankau 5.25 I ~aml' RL 1~:1 ~1.i 15 U \'al1/., 3~0~00 2~6' ./[10 "~: -4 • TunJ: .to(} '0 5n ~J \'jnl<nn .,,, 1 .. : ,",storia 9(1(1!1' ':' htz ~I-i \\:l'cdon 1i(l(lO 4 4 ~ - ~,~ ; .\t1~tr~l l~r,I' "t~ ~1'2 6',,- , .. \\,cl'ner ~jOOO 81~ 7~~ 8 +1t/3 : n~'n(\ ~25!l~ 92 !12 -3 \\ :\li\l.:If l~OOO r,l,7 5' 2 r,1,-}- "

C Steam,hlp ~1 Price 36\'3 Sle,l Coo 5385 $22'. :2'~ 221. + v. TIJE COLLECTOR C llnk Com 63 noyal Bank 72.... Slelnbg A 210 sm. ~', ~ 2m - 1\ .~ ., . Cdn Brew 101'< SI.el 22\0 Tor nom 1175 SOl 601, 6t J h F 1 4 2~ : I c Inl rowet 1m Tr C.n PI, 31\> T Fin A 925 SUl> 1m 111. + I) 0 n owes.. ...... . OJ Prompt De ivery On

• 'lalarL ~J~~ ';Z';: t:.?l~ ,,~I,._ I~ I \\. n(.'j\\'fr 40(\0 15 1~ 1:\ 2'!'lrl PO" pr ~~~ W~~~ADlAN 59 ~Cca~°'l!L I~;~ m" \~I' ~~l' THE T~LSIT • STOVE OIL ~dn :-0:\\' 1(l~C'!O ~1.1 ~': 4h _ I,: i \\('fot ~lIn('s .. ~M ",Oil :1,j -ton ; Sl1tl'iII 1('10 102 1(1! to;,! , \\llIro,\' 1.t0!l 157 l~~ l,i~ +4 :al1dllrr. 1l~:1 12 12 I'.! I \\'?tHY 113('11'1 17 11\ ]0 -1 "an' Erin ]H+'[) " Ii tl _ I~ I' \\'~ll('h 6~(lO 51~ 51) JI.~ ;.riboo ioOo fil 61 14 -I Wlndfnll ll,m 75 70 70 -I

s,,~raml 52' .. Con. Pap 3~ Tr MI PPL 595 SI4'.. .4" J41; INIIERITANCE D Ilrldg. 16'!' An, Am MI 189 Walk GW 800 159 ~9 59 + "'. 1 Dom Tar 17 Webh Knp 500 60 60 60 -3 C 1 ' G k' 45' • FURNACE OIL

I IV CO .. t 'rr 300 $15 15 15 - 3~, at lcrme as "m ,0 i W,.ton A 775 ~16 15-1, ml -'i BRIDE OF

I

IVsln A w15 750 $! 8 8 -I • IRON FIREMAN ~anlar ~ti 511'. t1T~ t11~ I \yr Hart l~?O M 68 M :."1 Pat ~100 110 10) 10ri _I ,~k nrnr 201,0 10' 1~7 1011 -: ~tnl Pore lOll,) 6 6 6 _ I,; I i'.ennulc ~~oo 2~ .. 11.3 22 . ! ~hfSklrk 7.1\(') '; til, ~I: Zvlapa 11000 I!I,~ Hi 16~ ... - 1,.1 I

Alsof ~A~~AN 15 t5 1 PEJ\iDORRIC IIEATING EQUlP~IE~T Ameran lO.mo 101~ 10 10 - L~ : AnK Am MI 3700 189 Ift2 189 -I Victoria Holt 4.25 ' Toronto

:ht~ttr :;,>1, 1.1 1~ I:l Oll.~ , :hib lin :r)M If1' z 10': 10''.1 .\m L('r1I1t~ ~~oo .tIl" 4 :hlmo' JQ\OO 9~ R8 92 .L 2 ! AnC'hnr tl~ 11 ~ 10 •. , 'orlt Will :H'lO .to:; ~(l0 ~(JO -10 I Asamj'.ra :I~~~\ .;~ !is ~·5 ~nnlh ~'('t zoo 1:,+1~ !9': Hit, _'-; Ri\t1 5'1 pr ~.J $ .. ,,:~ :~': :!,ll,~ + ~'8 .onla.:a.. .'rill j:J ~] 53 _~ I ni~tn 2~~n;\ 1 :II:! 3': :011 ~haw ~rq!l;10 z:;,~ :::l1"l-11~ ~RI E!' j,lft SIR 1'j~" 17;1, • C~lIl1ll"n "5rn til;' Ii'" (,11 I (C1ml'l'In~ 2/10 20~ 20~ 205 IS : 1>1~co" ;~,r'o sn· $til ~o Cs. Pete Int~n '! 10 .\10 ·UO .,. 'Z.5 : ren 11;100 1:\ H U -1 I (' (l('lhl :1911(1 ,13'1 :\211 520 'on <iillits ';1):'10 j; SI;: 51'l (; Ex W,C"ll~ 1700 103 )02 10l .. ·1 : Ham l~ll1 lnt" ltll;: 1~la (; Ith::h t'r ti~~..1.i 17 17 -1 • ~larcu!l -10811 1:!.i 1;:.' 1"') I Cent Pcl 17 H j(iO 7:m 7~O : '!\toJrui 111673 2:1 1!)7 202 -l~ Chnrtn Oil 1000 15111 1~01 1:)01 .&

~torrbM 68100 62 ~11 tiO .. 6 C Drn;:on 500 13 z 13.~ lJ '.l-l~ R"mblPJ' ~iOO 1:.!.\ 1~:1 J~5 C Wc'-t f' !OG J~~ 1fil1 1~ -,

AnK rip 25 13R 38 38 -.,

MOST ACTin: TORONTO STOCKS ~f!~~ t.l mg %~'/'27~" 2'7~h -5 THE COUNTESS 111 the Canadlao I',e.. Augu,lus 21H 27 ZI 27 1J arch Cost

stnrk Salu UI,h Lnw CIOIt Ch'lr I nand Ore 500 9 9 9

CPR ImwS~m~L~sv. 361. + Ii' Bateman 2~~ :'2~ 34 32~ A;-.;rCELIQUE 4.50 I

Soutllam 10100 $291'. 2m 29~' + ~i' Ri~~J:n 500 IS 15 15 +2 IN LO\7E Con Gu 8136 512 11~'.a 11111 '1 II. r";tlOO lDI,L 10~~ 101,~ - ;..:z 1 Cdn Brew 71 'S $10',' 10'" 10'.,' - ',:, BD~':"nlel.eu u , I .. 1 HI ~.. 35M 2:4.;-: 2Jl,~ :!lVJ - 1'J. S' G 6 :,-

OILS Burnl 11111 125M 20 19h 19',. _ I, er geanne 0 on 1._<:1 Stanwell Glacier Pe-rmo CS Petr llnlspher

~~~ f:\, fo ~~'''; :I\> g::::~o Chlb 'm 3~~ 3~ 3~ -5 THE KING'S 21880 41 41 41 CS Pete 100 435 435 435 ... 33 ORCFIARD 18t50 4~0 410 4

310l ',L ':21~ C Colllerl.. 100 $9\, 91. 91>,+"

17000 31 32 ,-. Cr Ded,e 200 395 360 395 ~20 A' 51' MINES I b 1'00 .60 355 355, + 15 !!neS l'1n I

~losher 600 IS7 lSI; l~fi or1 If :'Itil" :t1ac 100 425 425 425 -10

Re"C'ourt 10M fI 9 9 Ile\' Pal 2:WO I. 70 i_ ... ;-

:op corp 500 1,\ 15 1~ nllm. rrle 260 $I~ 14 II :of1.~'an 41 jfl(} tl 12 l~ + 1 llu\'an lOon 8 8 fI "T' v, I Croinor ~ouf\'an 4;6: 19 I;) 19 1''' ~)'namIC lOOl tG 'Il~ .,19 -I ·1.Duq :owlch ~,)(I 100 l~o 100' ~2 }ar~o 100 221 .2' 2'2\ 'usco

s;.1600 '14i; 29 34 +2 C In erur • ., M 326121 21 22 221. _ I, C S •• Und I~oo 1,~7~ !27g ~~ Turnbull 6.95 ' 209900 18 11 15\~ +4~~ Casvant 2 ......... ,., ..

174673 222 197 202 -18 Chem.'o~ ~OO 45 11 43 - (L d 170083 29 25 28 +3 g:~m~~1 G J: ,~ ~ ~ -7 DI'cks & 0 t :rAI~mt 9fO S1S'. 181, Jl\l' Fr Pete fir ft tOIl l~j, 29,' 2951, : ~1ogu\

:roinar UltiOO 3~1;: 2? 34 +2 I Glac\rr .. 3000 .~I~ 1~1 lO!~ - i· Tnrmont :rowf1at 2.\00 B ~ 8 Gr Plainl !ot) $I:,~l 1 ... ~ 121:1- .11

:UStll 20!l900 1(1 11 1~,L1 ... 4'2' Gr1doil 2100 ~2, 41~ 41:i~-2 )aerln, :'1(1(10 12 12 12 ': 11 n 011 G tM 51 p, lP. H',I )fEldonft 7~OO 912 ~h !H3 ..o.-ll~ :\1('ctill 590(1 ~~5 425 435 -5 )eer Horn 110QO 58 56 57 42' ,~IUt Cit)· 2000 F 17 17 - I> )'Ar.ron 1000 HI, 16;> 11", ); DOI'I.. 7500.5 23 2J -2 )elhl P.e .35QO 31 30 3i' -I );C Oil. 100 ZO~ 209 20!l -1 'elnite • !U9 71 71 71 sco wts H40:!2 22 ~2 +: ~n1Jon lZl!} $10~~ 10 In ~umae 11600 181} 1611 170 -15 "cl,",n 100 535 53\ 535 ~nOl.'· Wt. ,Ie60 80 M 30 H 'omp ~oo SZ71, 261~ 2fi3~ _" 11'amoi1 13M ~7 4i 47 'onaldl 5~OO 9~::z 9~'l flh l'rrnlo :!1B8f1 1~ 41 ·n £ .. t .Ihl 2300 200 200 200 Petrol 1000.. S2 52

~Wr .ull ~~ 2~~ 2~i 2~~ +~I ~~~~~ Ga. l~ro.~ 1;1 I~i I;i -1

MONTREAL ' MONtREAL CLOSING STOCKS

B1 Tbe Canadian Pres. Montreal stDrk Exrbaule-NIY. 12 Complete tabulation of Tuesday trans·

ACtiOns, Quotations in cents unlen mark.d S. z-Odd lot, xd-Ex·dlvld,nd, xr-Ex.right.!!, xw - Exlwarrants. Ntt t'hanJ~e Js 'rom' previoul board,lot dOl·

C Mogador 2000 3llf.. 341, JjI, + \> .,' C New P.c 4400 12 12 12 C Paper 701 $391, 39 J9 C Cononm 3076 53 50 53 Coulee 500 21 27 27 _1 Crodlt M G 200 S:21> 121> 121> tI Cr SI L.url 00 ~12~ 12~ 12'.. Dell. Eleo 900 211, 230 235 -5 D Explorer 1500 2& 25 26 -1 D Lease 1000 20 20 20 D Oilcloth 25 I!!!fiV. 2m 26V. Dumlsam 1000 133 III 133 -2 Dumont 1000 19 19 19 E.,I Vatn 2400 IJj 130 130 -I Emp Oil 500 2'" 21~ 2',~ Eqully EI 2200 ~ a 8 F.b 000 13 13 13

The BooksEillers PHONE 8·5001

DEATHS

WHITE - Entered into rest early Tuesday morning, Blanche,

turr~a ,1000::9 Z3 2:1 "t 1 Quonln UtO!) 2:1 22 23 faud.,. 700 In8 1M 1M -I n.n~.. 300 llB ua 118 fatimA f;:oon U~: 1:\ 14 ~arrt'e :wo 117 117 117 + v.. rmrof'ut 11'00 qt.,t 9~~ fill loiouth U ~ 0 9',~ In rrnb" 1113 6it 65 foil 42 Spooner' ,MilO II 10\1 11 ""

N,I Fiscal 300 $lI ! 11 +2 Stork 1.le. Hllb Lo" Clost Ch',e FUnt Rock 1000 20 2C1 2n -5

Abitlhl 595 SI9~' ~9 49'!1 + II, .'rlgi5lo," 400 7: 75 75 -3 AI.;om" 475 $j8~4. 581!~ snit;. - '::.. ' Fundy :000 6 6 6-1

In. salt.

I widow of the late Charle~ E. 'I White, M.S.M. Leaving to mOllrn Hamilton Avenue Extension

,foor sisters and one brother.! PIIONE 9·5300 ,.ltll'ln 1"25 fi 0; ~ _.1 ,Slanw.!1 .&2{1O 62 ~D 62 -1 ~et'o Mln'8 .11;0 S:Hil4 3() 30~;' T ~A Ted Corp :1117 ,,~o -115 480 .. , ~'ant YK 20.::! Sln~. tn~j 10'. Tran'J Can t~OI 1.5 la 114 -1 ,randuo 900 395 390 39; _5 Triad 011 3100 I~R, Il~" 14l" -5 , 'iulch 1000 fit: tll,~ 612..j. J' t'nlon on 120{l $l:,P, 1 ... 1 IZ" + \~ 'ulf I .. d 1",)(1 1 " 1 +,' Unl,phor 1700 34 32 m. - ;, 5UJlna; 868 825 alii 82:\ +15" 11 Vamm \'t 10(1(} l:m l~O 150 +~ ~ar.MI. 1000 01.1 RI, R"'" ' .. lin 011. 1917 110 ,\30 139 -I lIeadwl7 1000 1~ ]8 H"'" I'.! \\'t'~"ac 6~1 llYl IHl 1t2 + '1J Ruth 2000 .1', 4', I', _ I, \ W.bllrn. 6OJI) R:I 81 1l'Z-1 ~1~h.8r!1 fiOO 310 310 31~' -S' II' n,c.llo 10'.10 111 116 116 -5 Rollln~er IlIO i'~'i 26', ','. WII.hlre 21,0 212 212 212 -3 Bud Bay lJJ ,;9' :Ill" ;8', _ r" Y.n Can 12000. 5 4 ~ - '" ")'dra E. 5'"0 "''''' 'I' 2<!1 ' 1;. nA~K~ ;l j.. ..,":I..... " 1 - '~t 1106 $6JI: ~l 63 - ~~ Irl.h Cop 1000 27 26 26 -·1 Mon ' '1' ,L 71" I!!:I fl~:i;:; 227 217 22l -1 ~S 1189 512, 1.. " , 1I'0ite 3;00 16 15 !. _I C 1m Bk C !fi90 'G31~ 63~, 63~' 'acobu. ~3II0 18 IR lR _. l\ Royal 215 $72\" 72\, 72'1. la~. E'rl 2000 10 10 10 + I 'tor 1)0m .4257 ssm 6OY, 611'0 + "', lele' 1500 31 31 31 -t I 1NnUSTnIALS • '011;1 1000 23', "3 '3 l\ Alumlnl 35H $28 271, 2m - ,. lon.mllh mnll I~' ii" il :-T" C nrow 7160 SIOwl 101> 101. - II 'oulrl 41)<10 7l 72 13 + 2 \ no,co z85 $15'" m, 1m 'ow~ev : lOa ::!Sl.~ 2!1i :~ _ t.~ Hcn aakr 200 su~~ u'(: 111t? - t" Keele;' T 7650 lR" 18 13' \ + I" Inland 675 56~, 6... 61, - ,I ~eOl'iUo 101300 ~ 6 7 + I 'Ilnl' Syn .0 S56 56 l6 + 1 Ktrr Add U5() 8'() 6Z~ 625 Inv Syn A 131,9 SS!~~ 52 1 52~ + ~ Kirk ~Un 312:1 lr. 1~ 15 _ ') 111emhlna 18~0 $,1" 71,~ 7~, - I,~ Kopan 1~~7~ te; HI.~ 13t~ -1-1 Slmp~O"1 9ot; S37\-:t 36~~ 37;~ + '., Lab :'Un W 13-1si 3~~i :u:. .... S,i I Wnlkt'f.!! '2Hi~ U91,~ ~~~ 59l,1~ + "'2 L Dulaul! mo 760 73) 13,\ -20 \\'e.ton n ~IOO Slfil, W. 161, + I. L 0." 10{ll\ 18 I! lR FOm.IGN TnAntNG , 'hor. 2ot"! ""'0 • '0 '20 _. CRhol son 39 39 31 " _J.....' t '"0 Jl4 I~ 14 Lan;l! ~5on 2f,lj:!~ 2~ - I; Cruw~ Nu 300 $40 40 40

t:lI~h Am j~~~ 2~~ ,;~ I~ ':1~' ~~f~."; 200 555 55 5) +.,. L.~.hr.d 5.100 22', 22 21 -2 Advocate 100 720 720 no + 25 Lib I 100 SIl" 14" '4" " A".dla 1000 40 ~o ~o t.Le[:cn I~OO 1I~i"14~"14~ '=2'" G!'J G n wt UW 155 ll5 155.-1!1 Lorado 17A50 179 172 175 -5 IV",'on A z50 ,1m 16~ 16" LOU\'ld 90011 91,2 9 91z + 'h: r AUlmr 100 350 350 350 _15 LYndh.1 1000 8 8 R +" n.lillm 190 715 100 700 -10 Ma..... W3 290 285 2R5 -5 nratnrn. 200 410 410 410 -15 '! .. ' 7' • 7' Ch ,I r 500 20 20 20 + I , aeTtod zHO, 7" J r, C 100 1'S 175 175

t::~~~~ I~~ 21~ ~;~ 2\;-_I"L CC~"ngl~lnh.~ld' 341006 ~~~ ~~ ~rs .:H

Munrt 3000 4 4 ,I " • , .. , Man Bar 10011 III 16 16 C 110111 2000 161" 161~ 16\> + I> Marohlnl J600 97 95 96 C ~!oshor 100 155 155 156 -I M.roon 51100 9 8\, 9 C Morrl.on )000 60 60 60 /ofartlme paoo 51 48 IS -2 neer \1orn ~oo 62 62 62 +8 Martin 3300 fil 60 60 _I Lorado 2,00 191 188 190 -6 Matl~ml 3:1O S\I 11 11 _. V. nlckn,n 200 ~1O ~50 550 -20 Maybru. ~OO 8', 8\> B'" ~ '" )[...... 1000 293 293 293 + 3

~!c1nl).r. 900 11m 44', 45'" _ Ii ~I .. don IGOO 19 19 19 '3 McKen 23000 31 20 30 +2 NC 011 100 207 207 2111 ~ ~1.M'r W.o 8\\ RI> 81. Patino 410000 7170~ 1

77000 1~4 + 4

MeW.1 :000 21 21 21 - ~ SI",oe . ' Mentor lOOn 2.1 23 23 Sleep R 400 420 415 420 +5 M.mll 71M 7~ 7~ 75 + I UPI' Can 1800 147 1H 144 -I Meta Ur.. 6000 9 8',; 8', _,~ Un Keno 300 490 490 ~90 _10 ~!ll\rlm 2000 211., 201.', 201, - \', ~11n Corp 3160 $191,\ 191, 191> + LJ Tol.1 .01 .. : 4,\20,100 Mln.Orr 1000 6~ 51. 61~ Mt Wrlllhi 500 37 37 . 37 + I'" ,

Alumlnl 1994.28 21~, 2m - til Glon I.ak, 100 115 112 tl! Alum N pI 105 $lOll 40'l, 401. Grl"ol 500 160 160 60 + 3 An: 2iopr 7:; S~2~~ 52~1 52 ln51l1ratn 667 200 200 '200 ,\rg C pr 500 $91, ~i 9.31 lInt All.. ~OO 100 10 1

I Resting at Oke'5 Funeral Home, ---.----

125 Quidi Vidi Road. Funeral i at 2.30 p.m. Thursday to the I A.be.to, 160 S2Jl. 23;> 23\i Inl Helium 2366 I~ m Ijft + I

BoU S mpepr ~5 125'.. 25\> 2m + " I ... el 1000 1 7 7 _.' Dank Monl 1321 S63\. 63 631, - "" JubU.. ~900 215 230 255 0

Bank NS 199 $72 ml 7'11 +;. Klena 410 430 no 131) + 5 Banq CN 100 $SO 791. ro • Kelly D 13000 75 61 67 -5 Banq PC 625 Ssm 5:tI'.. 531, + \1 Kodiak Pt 1338 I 0 10,1 110 + ; Balh P 115 Sl71> 171': 1m [,au M"P 100 sa',~ 811 81\ - 1\ Bell Phone :507 554\'0 531'1 54 Laduboro 1900 110 101 1417 Brazil 663 275 270 275 +10 Lall L A 100''''' m "t BA 011 lS05 ,2m m. 2711 .. \1 Lam'onl A 600 $9'" P1\ 91< BC For.st 1505 52]% 231> 23;. + !\ Llnasldt 1000 4 4 4'" ~, BC Pow 623 52411 2t'1. 24')', Massval 1000 6 8 8 - I> DC Phon, 475 $~61> 561> 561> McAdam 12600 39 37 39 + I Bruck A 220 $151> 2SV. 2510 + \1 McKlney 10500 17V, IS 17''; + I\> Bruck B tOO $7V, 71> 71': - \> Mo, ChiI' 1000 to 10 10 Cal Pow 300 S2011 201. :01'. + Merrill 1000 77 77 77 + Can C.III 110 537 37 37 ~1Jl1ep.. wo 1j.4 III 141 C Dom SUI ISO $24'A. 2m 2m - V. Min Corp 1041 519'!' 19V, 191, - I. C[ Fndry 150 S2J 23 23 - I. Monr" 1;00 61, 6 • ." + .,., CSL 175 ,S7 36 57 MI Ple .. nt 33750 92 81 91 + 7

Can Win B 5110 sm. Ilo/, 12~1 Mr Rio. 500 Sill> 11" 1" - ;, CAE 1700 Sltv... ]011 101'11 - 'l N Forma 6i)7" " 4 Cdn Bro" 800 SIMI 101, 10\& Nal Ant V 700 1.0 ,160 110 +15 C Brew 8 p 310 S53 52~, 33 ... ~ Ne\\'TICh lO56 27 27 21 -I C Br Alum 400 Sm 81. Bl. - Ii NW An,ulel 2000 81> 8" au.. C Chem w 4')(1 600 590 590 -10 Norae J'ln 400 SUI. 11\\ ·,1", C Fndtn 150 375 315 375 -20 NA Rare 1000 28 28 23 -2 C 1m Bk C 637 S63I; 63\\ 63V. + "': Norlh E. 19700 221 20~ 20; -1 elL 100 SI8 \7l1 m. - I. Opemlsk. 100 775 715 773 -15 Cl Pow 1050 515'A. 15V. 1m - po.ce Rlvr 100 460 460 460 CI pow pr 190 5471': 471> 4m Pembrk Ele. 50 21 21 21 C M.rconl 700 380 115 380 Permo Gas 25120 41 n 41 cpn 6516 136\\ 361, 361> + y, Poreuplr,e 4500 4 JI' 3""" Cdn Pot pr 4S!2 1I3\\ 131, 1m - '\ Quo Coball 120 210 :10 21n , S C Po"or 340 $13\\ 13 131, + 14 Que Lllh 200 200 200 200 ... :; C.nl Drl 1123 750 750 750 Qu. Smell 1000 121, 12\, 12\,-1 Cherneell 3165 ,'31t J31.i 1m -" SIL Colum 100 230 230 230 Col cen 800 59% 9 9 -~. Saucon D 200 31 31 J4 -I Con M S 1565 129'" 2ll 29 - 14 Sllvr Sunlil 4400 48 17 47 -2 C GI... 145 112 12 II - Sobey 100 $141> 141~ '4L1" Coronation 300 ss\> 61. m 5 Dufault 8000 91> 9 9 Denl.on 400 SID 10 10 - ~ Svartan 4100 38 37 38 -2 D\Jt Se., 795 152* 52~1 521i Slalr EXPI 1200 220 2141 215 -I D Brldlo 1975 .17 1M\ I~~' - 1\ Surluga 3000 90 85 90-5 Dora.co 595 .6m 66" 66'''; - 14 Ta.he 12500 11 10 \1 D Glal. 915 sm~ 171> 171~ Tazln 2500 ~I> 7\> 7\>.l. ',; DOlco 177 Sl5l> 15" lru.. + V. Un 0b:1"~1 1000 61 60 !1 + 1 n 510re. 3SO SI61. 161> 161> VanllUlI'd 2000 61> 6 6'" I, Dom Tar 2555 SI1I. 11 17 York Spec 200 S6 8 ~ + \\ Dom Trxl 200 um 21% 2m + 'Tolal Sale .. ' Ind;.;;:w. 16: 100, mints

an~ oUs 274.400. Du ponl 407 $39% 39~ 39'h - ... Eddy Match 50 $371> 371': 371': + ... F.leon 2955 '55 5111 51" - II Fam Play 105 S19 19 19 Fle.twood 100 $11 21 21 + ~ Fra.er 260 '28" 28, 28 -,~ Frelm.n 900 "',1 61. 611 - %

----

EW YORK

Anglican Cemetery, Forest

Road. I Vote JACKMAN-Passed awav at 1

the General Hospital on • SUR' I A~ day, No\'. 10, Mrs. ~Jary Jack·

man, aged 66 years, widow of

Thomas ,Jackman. Leaving to

Andrews· For \

mourn one son, Gerald, at St. ,John's, and three daugbters,

Hilda (Mrs. Larry Field) at'

Springfield. Mass., Sheila (Mrs.! E. Power) at Maynard, Mass.,'

and Gertrude (Mrs. G. Georg~) !

at Columbus, Ohia; also two i brothers, Mattbew at Boston,',

Mass., and Gerald at Fer· :

meuse, Funeral today from I her son's residence at Kilbride'

to the Corpus Christi Church!

at 10 a.m. for Requiem Mass. I I

WILLIAMS - Died at St .

Clare's ~{ercy Hospital on Tues· day. Nov. 12, John A. Williams,

aged 72 years. Left to mourn

their sad loss are his wife, Mary Ann; five daughters, Violet (Mrs. Don Dowden), Eva {Mrs.

John Dowden) at St. John's, Hazel (Mrs. A. C. Button), Daphne (Mrs. T. Brown), at

Toronto, and Dellie (~trs. Samuel Hudson), Pouch Cove;

also one son. David, at home; two sisters, Mrs. ,Tane Sullivan

and Jessie (Mrs.\ James R.

Councillor

GEAR STREET RECEIVING OFFICE

1 ADELAIDE STREET,

DIAL 8·5181 • :: • 3 GL Papor 285 522 22 22 lIawk Sid 5560 56 !II! + II lIollln,er 325 $26;0 26;\ 261. - III 8l1JOlS IlNIS01:> 'lIIIOX MlIN. Bragg); three brothers, Abram,

Golden Eagle Reflni~! Of Canada lt~;

Hcquil{'S

An Experknted A~,. , ..... ~ (0 atllltiliistC'r ollieI' atli'ili", ilC<.'OLlllts pa\'ahJe, I it'ld\ ':Ie,', , gClIerai warehollse at tlte Ii I" <i"j' lillen'. II \ ;,:,~

Applicants 1Ililst Jil!' II itllilt Iloh'J'Ood.

.\pph (I)-­

CHIEF ACCOUNiANT

93 ELIZABETH AVE. 5T nov6,6i '

------- -._- ----_.

Your Sa,vings

For 1 Year and Upwards on

Nf/d. Building S Investment Lta,

(Incorporatl!d 1936)

258 Duckworth Street, SI. John', sep 1B, W ,s,lf

Variety Bit ACROSS

1 Mr, Downey 7 Moral

wrongdoer 13 Form a notion 14 Small space 15 Poetry

divisions 16 Fuller's plant

(v.r.) 17Trainer of

Samuel (Bib.) '18 Musical syllabte 20 Lamprey 21 Is displeased at 25 Per[ume 28 Pith 32 Need 33 Deceas@d 34 Fork prong 35 Billiard .hot 36 Bri~ged 40 MUltcline

mammal 41 Alien

50 Idolize! 53 Greater 50 Epitomize 57 All 5R Swaps 59 Looks rIXcdly

DOIVN l'SmaJf rodcn~' :l East Indian

woody \"iDE> :lItalian painlCJ' 4 Make lace 5 Ear"(.omb,

form) .2 ~ nitP~~lCti~ I; Arboreal b~m~,~:' Deeds 7 Demons :li; .r(JUrne~ II .. \nger ~7 SUI:1llraD 9 Educational 'qUlrrd ,br!\l

group (ab.) ~~ Cozyspot 10l'robosci< 30 Contain" 11 Swiss measure 31J:uroe<:'0 12 351;0 cil I~ja:.)

~7 ~vrnNl lot niton

43 Rocky pinnacle 46 Wine vmel ~?n"""""

:IS R"l~ out :i!l H~'.·f'r h3rri~r 42 of

Multl.M 127000 39 31 361.1 +'~ , MDrray M 20M 115 115 tl5 , Nam. Cr 11000 18 tm 171> - " Nealon 5000 131,; 13 13 - '" New A':or 4000 5'" 5 51), + \3 New Ath 500 26 26 21\ Now Bid I(l(l(} 5 5 5 NEW Y01IK CLOSING STOCllS Now Cal . 1\00 30 JO ~ -1 ~, Tbe A .... I.I.d "rtll

Horne A 702 S13I1 131', IlV. - ~I Horne PI %775 260 m 255 -10 lIud Bay 263 sml sm m. JlBC 100 $1411 1m 1m - II HUlky 011 300 $6\', 61\ m ImP OU 7SS S43'11 431', m. + t~ Imp 'Tob 100 Sl41. 11 14 -', Ind Ae .. p 1865 S2J\> 23V. 2J1h + y,

NEW YORK N." ~~r:hB'to~:'E"~~~~~I~S~" 12 I Nathaniel and William, all at

..,-Odd 1.1, .d-Ex-dhldnd, It-E< Poueh Cove; also 16 grandchil· right., .,,-ElI·warranl •• Nel .hanse '. dren The' funeral 'fill take from prevIous dl:;'. d05t. • I

Nel place from his late residence, ACF Ind Addr ... AlI'alny Allis CI. Amerada

4500 55~ 541> 55 + '" . b 15800 56\> 6W. 61\\. -H', Pouch Cove, at a time to e A. H. MURRAY & CO./ l Neweonex 500 ~~O 310 310 Belh Sltel 30\> Monly W 34\0 N Goldvu. J500 6 5~ 6 + '.' llor~ Warner 47 NY Cent 221, Now HOloo 8100 191 Isa las -6 C anti 0 67 nadlo Corr 9!;~ N Xelore 15110 1~ 1'" m Con. tAlI'Oft 8m South PaeUlc 34;> Nawlund 76200 20 17 18 _ \; Gen Elr. 81~' Std 011 NJ 70'1. N M,lam. ~\OO 14\; 13 '~'" +]1,; Goodyear 411', Uld Alrerafl 451'0 Now Rouyn 21)0()0 17 16 17 +1 Gt Nor R1 5m Vanadium 13 Newnor 49000 2.1 20 21 -2 Inl T T 491> W.,t'll'. 36\0 N . s .... tor 4500 1510 t5 1m + ',; Kennecotl 77

. Nickel MS 2500 22 21 21 +;> -----Nlek Rim 16,\41 IB '7\> \7" I .,,,,,. Nor-Acm. 600 12\, \21': 121> - .... I" Norlartlc 1300 11 11 II Norlex 13000 321, 30 31 -6 Normetll 300 320 ,20 120 Norpa. 3500 71> 7\> 1',,- I, N Bordu 51100 19 18 18 -1 N cold.trm 12511 60 60 60 I • MUTUAL FUNDS N Goldcrl 1500 17 11 11 + I; I

N Rank 24200 28 %8 28 + 1 ' '" The Clu.~IID Pre ..

Bid A,. 8.11 8.77 7.01 7.68 9.38 10.25

34.28 37.23 5.32 5.C2 7.38 1.09

lD.65 11.68

Northcal 20500 JI 33 33 -l All Cdn Com North Can 100 160 160 160 All Cdn Dlv NorthCale 12300 380 360 366 Amerlc.n Growth Oba.ka 1000 41> 4\> 41> -1 Beanl,ran Opeml.ka 1m 785 780 780 -5 Canada Growlh Drohan 3515 320 315 3%0 Cdn G .. and Energy Orellada 1000 8 8 8 -1 Canadian Invoalmenl Orm.by 9100 36\> 34 35 -I Cdn Tru.teed Pamour 4800 III 112 112 -5 Con.lund ParmaQ 116500 1m 14'" 15 + I,~ Ch.mplon. Mulual 1'111 no 2302 700 69~ 100 Collectlv. jIIul, ~alo 1000 275 275 275 -5 Commonwealth Inl."

Insured Winter storage

470 U4 43.61 45.79

6,03 U3 5.01 5.40 9.28 10,17

• OUTBOARD MOTORS • LAWN MOWERS

Charles R. 8ell Limited ST. JOHN'S CORNER BROOK

t'.·'

"

Inl NI.k.1 980 S6B\\. 67'1\ IH\ - I> Inl P.P 1591 J36\1 361> 36" + 10

900 101> 10 10 + \1 announced later. 8GUO 15Yi 1~;, 1,j~, 51. John's

Inl Utll 250 5231'. 231', 231~ + \, Inlet PL 575 5~11> a2 1l'Z1o - '. Jam.lca PS 8110 SloY. 1014 loY. t I,. Labolt 1050 $171'0 110/< 17~1 + ~I L.. FID 100 $131'1 13;0 1311- 1\ Loblow A 400 $'I 7\1 7\'a - ~ Loblow B 400 $'IIi WI WI 1Mb M 200 n~ 2D'II 20'\. + 14 Mac1o.... B 250 $2410 24;> 2110 + ~. MB PR 1220 125V, 23 251> - II Marlllm. T 1000 $22 2111 22 + ... Mao F 1590 SI614 16 16 Miron 6(11' 100 SU\\. II\\, 11\\' + 'A Molson A 25 '231', 28'" 28\\. - % Mol.on R 23 $291': 291> 2!l1> Mont TTII 10 $i03 103 103 Moore Cotp 1205 $5114 50'11 SOl', - ~. Mon. R A 600 $I~ 10% 10\1 + 14 Nfld Llgbl 1100 III 11 11 Noranda 5151 $3'/1> 31\1. 371> + 14 NS LP 236 S'l41> 211lo 24~ Olll1vlo 810 '141'0 II W,o Pae Pel. 1725 S12 12 12 + 'r\, Pa,. 11m 400 $1911 1911 191. + 14 Penman. 200 $28 281> 2BI> - \" Pow Corp 787S 1I00i 10\1 IW, - % Prl.. Bro. 3~5 536% 381!1 36~ - ~ QN Gil 180 $7% 7'11 7% Quo PhD., 50 $14 44 44 -1 Reynold. pr 230 $~\\. tm 95\1. + I

AI:\ Can 6300 72~~ 11~ 7''h - ~ 4300 411-1 4]1,; 411> + \0 6200 58 56\0 5714 + 1. Am Cyan

Am Mol Am Sm.1I Am SI .d Am SUI:lr Am Tel

'49700 22" 211. 2m - -. 3700 86'" 86 8m + ~I 2700 mil 17 17 + II 9200 30\-1: 29-1~ :i~' +

10900 133~ 132% 132% - '" 23800 l1'4 %7% 271> - '4

1000 411'. n 41 -9600 41Yo 4m 47% - % 2100 . 6W, 63 63 -~.

800 103'1', IIl'lIlo IIl'lI; - ~ 3400 52 51V. 51V. - %

Am Toll Amsted Ancnda Armco iii Ann.1t Ck Babcoek nail Ohl • Belh Sletl Bo.lng Bord.n DC)r, War Dos E4'IIOD Brunswl; Bu.y Erie Budd Co Burl Ind Bnrrah. Calumet Cornp Sou, Cn DIY Cdn Dr· ...

1300,31363M+" :0400 3011 301> 301> - ...

7700 36V. 35Y. 361. + ~ ~loo 64% 61% 64% + ", 2100 18 47 47 -~.

800 391. 391> 39li + v, 15700 12 11;> m. - %

'BOO ml 171> 171> - V. 3600 14% 14\1 1414 6100 41\1. 4M, 41"', + ..

15100 26% 25% m. 800 13\\ 13;1 131> - II

1400 104\1 103" 103\> -1 3400 2m 1710 27\1 + ... 100 fli 9;> 9U + "',

NOW IN ST. .TOHN'S THE FAMOUS

~rltu!ue CANDIES

Available exclusively from the following Drug Stores:

HOTEL, DRUGS' ELIZABETH DRUGS TORBAYDRUGS KENMOUNT DRUGS

TV REPAIRS We carry a large stock of a\l

MACHINERY SUPPLIES, We specialize in SKF BEARINGS

for immediate delivery· REASONABLE RATES GUARANTEED WORK

PHONE 94123 Electronic:

Also, V,EE BELTS AND PULLEYS REDUCTION GEARS CHAIN HOISTS AIR COMPRESSORS AND TOOLS

Cenh:e Ltd. no CAMPBELL AVE.

After hours 'Phone 9·6995

NOW AT LOCAL PRICES

MOLSONS CANADIAN LAGER and EXPORT ALE

FREE HOME DELIVERY.

TELEPHONE 8·2011-5 LINES NEWFOUNDLAND BREWERY LTD,

(Not Inserted hy Board 01 LIquor' Control)

NO.CO.RODE DRAIN PIPE G! COPPER AND PLASTIC PIPE AND FITTIN .

OIJ'r NeW I"

t-(e'W Cars ~eated and 1

Nova I ~-.. -

NO. 256

alt )\clUSLEl' Lebanon Al

Socialist Wedllesda: a Ba~hdac attribute, they hal

from tll conllnanc

Premier Al Sale:

C~ NATlOr>5-(AP). l ,,,

dash Ol'er "e

'flared wcdnesn~Y 'General Assembl)

committee. of cold W

have embitter in past yea

disarmament discussion-II

shoved aside involving tl

01 the Soviet Unit and the Unit

"Oc,.uu .... " the Frer touched off the ch for the floor to rei

soviet crit ici~m signin~ a treaty with the Bonn

Germany's role defence allial

a 5pecial target b,· the SOI'iet b during the di,an

dcnied SOl

the trealy was

grant nuclear secI He dec1~red that

or East·\\ ,·the threal wi, Berlin and the to it" and So' grant the (';en

tight to ~elf·d~ which is the (

in Europe."

K. V. ~ that he wante('

Ai CP) - TlI'c

Catholic stud

51. Vital Qut of school i . b)' their parI

to Manitoba 5C laws.

follow~ nolic!

School Board each would

$15 a mont continue ridi

bus fil'e or and frolD school.

whose the St. E

have PI'( Duff Roblin,

tannot afford Ih

Schick sai( a letter a from thl

Board teUin

a year pri,

b had beer

us free.

chairman 01

board, ~aid u~der the s

IS not pern taxpayers mone

Night 'J Min)

36 37

337 43 36

Skies