16
t - kgs, 'oils 'oils I. "9S. kgs. kgs. .sfs,' ' rrels lust) real, .,., ... . ,, •. ·,, ! e, I' ' . .' 10011 l1, I J! · .H. I\ ram h. s t, and .TO. uipment - - Ltd. ... THE DAILY NE s l067 rscd cars and trucks sohl far this rear. Why not "et by'ooURS from us too. T ra Nova Motors Ltd. er \ 11 , THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFJ,D., SATURDAY, 25, HJfH (Price 7 Cents) Amelia Re1nan1s Found? · ... r r ,F'\ rrl t0 ,. :. . •' ,' ,, lh(' 11111€" . :··' _ ;•'.1'H• Queen Dances vVith 1 I " ll!.il OllS ys S. Africa 'Hitltrite' Revision I .f ' ' Increase In Fallout Level Across Security Council Canada Border Reading We11t ·Fro Ill Demands l\1· Tml Ol'JIIl.TfiEE ,,omit· un1l.1. AP-Prime 1·::\'FOfl('!:S llE.\D HAND istrr Fri· For thr last two months de CAIRO,· United Arab leaders of the neutralist "h\e.,k" of na-_ lions relax in their arm-chairs during November l!Hh discussions here. 'l'al<- ing part in the ''exchange of views" me arc: Prime i\linistcr .Jawahadal Nehru of India. and President Gamal Ahdcl Nasser of the United Arah Rc- public.-(UPI Photo). day 11 ight in the pri,·al'y of hi' (;aulle has enforced what Lon· ' country home In 'don diplomatic refer to as a 1 omincr French Prr,idcnt de hand on Berlin. He !aid c:at1llc lhat the \\'e't n011' the Wr>trrn poll'ers should not · should ,erk negotiations with hurry to a conference table to the Russian:, on Berlin. Aides that the lured crisis. He wanted tht British feels the pros· i Russians to make the first eon· !1Ccls for a East· : ciliatory more. ··-- ··--· ----------------- - -- ___ ,,,. ... _,: .. ,. ... .. ....- . .,.,..,.. ......... ,.. ..... ................... . Republic \\'est conference prohahly arc Informants predicted that il · brighter than thcv have been the Birch Gro,·e talks go well P lor screral and de Gaulle will reS en C e De Gaulle arri\'cd hy plane give go-ahead I from Paris for a weekend of East · \\ e6t negotl• 1 confidential discus,ions with ations. W.arships Pacifists Inz1no bi lize on problems basic to ----:----- the whole Western diplomatic posture. Behind a screen of police· Chinese men. the two men wrnl at once 1 · to Birch Grove. .Macmillan'o I st·•ck To Georgian style house in Sussex · 40 miles from London. There, shut away from the St I" outside world, they sipped tea I a In and talked about Berlin and • , Ch" the movement for Western . -:-. mcsde European political and eco- 1 Commumst part} officials an Hope To u.s. Bases 1 intellectuals-despite the de· 'Stalinization campaign else· I where-have been instructed to study the works of Stalin and post his picture prominently in local meeting halls, reliable sources said here Friday. Peking art shops have brought out big portraits of the late So· With the layout of the bases. · l'ict leader .and arc the pacifists hope lo immobilize , alongs1d_e those of them throughout Dec. n by sit· : Lcnm and Chmese party lead· ling on runways anrl tying up · rr Tsc-tung, head of stat• communications. . Lin Shao-chi and other Chines! --·----·-· ·-··· ----· ·- • leaders. TilE COUNTRY l'AilSON : Since the Stalin image wa! : smashed at the recent Con1mu : nist party congress in Moscow his body has been removed frorn the mausoleum where it lay in state with that of Lenin; the "Hero city" of Stalingrad been renamed Volgograd and other ·towns in Russia and East Germany bearing his name havt also been renamed. · Few outward signs of ideolo .gical differences among Call' monist countries are evident here at the moment, but th1 issue remains the main subjec of conversation .at diplomatic gatherings. The agents made a map of the base, which has been disll'i· huled to demonstrators: sowinl! "I'm sure some fulks arc the main runway, the fuel depot. I no busy-but they're happier ihe aircraft hangers and the of· I than the ones who have nothing fice bld'l!k, . I to do." Soviet affairs observers in London said the Peking decision to boost Stalin was the clearest indication yet of the policy rifts dividing the Communi!t leaders I ., . ,- . . "' .... , .. ' ' I I .I I 'I I,. I:: ! I;. 'i , . ;I II '' I' ·,I ' I' '' ' I '!i ! ,, I. II!. ! . i : li I I I . ! ,: j it'! ! . ;I.! I I I ·. I il : : II.: ' ! t 1 r . . · q: : 111 . I .r. I I·; !i: I ! f i'l . i i I I I i \ .I· ' ' I I I •1 I! l . . ' I 'i i I ·1. :i ,. ' . I ' . L: I I' li :1, I ' I I . ' .

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Page 1: l067 THE DAILY NE s - Memorial University DAIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...l067 rscd cars and trucks sohl THE DAILY NE s by'ooURS far this rear. Why not

t -kgs, 'oils 'oils I. "9S. kgs. kgs. .sfs,'

'

rrels ::>~e~

lust) real,

.,., ...

. ,, •. ·,, ! e, •

I' ' . .' ~ 10011

l1, I J! ·

.H. I\ ram h.

s

t,

and

.TO. uipment

--Ltd.

...

THE DAILY NE s l067 rscd cars and trucks sohl

far this rear. Why not "et

by'ooURS from us too.

T ra Nova Motors Ltd. er ~-----------·------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~· f'~. \11

, ~fi1 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFJ,D., SATURDAY, NOVE~!BEH 25, HJfH (Price 7 Cents)

Amelia

• Re1nan1s

Found?

· ~-:··::_ ... -r~ r r ,~. ,F'\ rrl t0 ~ ,. :. .

('~ •' ,' ,, lh(' 11111€" . :··' _ ;•'.1'H• di~ilp·

Queen Dances vVith

1 I " ll!.il OllS

ys S. Africa

'Hitltrite'

Revision

I • .f '

'

Increase In

Fallout Level

Across Security Council Canada

Border Reading

We11t ·Fro Ill

Demands

l\1· Tml Ol'JIIl.TfiEE ,,omit· un1l.1. LO~DO:\. AP-Prime ~lin- 1·::\'FOfl('!:S llE.\D HAND

istrr ~larmi!lan ~tlcmptcrl Fri· For thr last two months de

CAIRO,· United Arab ft.~puhlic-Two leaders of the neutralist "h\e.,k" of na-_ lions relax in their arm-chairs during November l!Hh discussions here. 'l'al<­ing part in the ''exchange of views" me ~ling arc: Prime i\linistcr .Jawahadal Nehru of India. and President Gamal Ahdcl Nasser of the United Arah Rc­public.-(UPI Photo).

day 11 ight in the pri,·al'y of hi' (;aulle has enforced what Lon· ' we!l-~uardcrl country home In 'don diplomatic refer to as a

1 omincr French Prr,idcnt de clc~d hand on Berlin. He !aid c:at1llc lhat the \\'e't n011' the Wr>trrn poll'ers should not

· should ,erk negotiations with hurry to a conference table to the Russian:, on Berlin. ne~oliatc ~ flu;sian-manuf~c·

Aides su~gcstcrl that the lured crisis. He wanted tht British lc~r!cr feels the pros· i Russians to make the first eon· !1Ccls for a ~ttcceo,fttl East· : ciliatory more.

··-- ··--· -----------------

- -- -· ___ ,,,. ... _,: .. ,. ... .,.~ .. ....-. .,.,..,.. ......... ,.. ..... ···~' ................... .

Republic \\'est conference prohahly arc Informants predicted that il · brighter than thcv have been the Birch Gro,·e talks go well

P lor screral month~. ~~~cmillan and de Gaulle will reS en C e De Gaulle arri\'cd hy plane give ~ go-ahead f~r careful!~ I from Paris for a weekend of ~repared East · \\ e6t negotl• 1

• confidential discus,ions with ations.

W.arships

Pacifists

Inz1no bi l ize

~lacmillan on problems basic to ----:-----the whole Western diplomatic posture.

Behind a screen of police· Chinese men. the two men wrnl at once 1 ·

to Birch Grove. .Macmillan'o I st·•ck To Georgian style house in Sussex · 40 miles from London.

There, shut away from the St I" outside world, they sipped tea I a In and talked about Berlin and • , Ch" the movement for Western . PEKI~G-Reu.ters -:-. mcsde European political and eco- 1 Commumst part} officials an

Hope To

u.s. Bases

1 intellectuals-despite the de· 'Stalinization campaign else·

I where-have been instructed to study the works of Stalin and post his picture prominently in local meeting halls, reliable sources said here Friday. Peking art shops have brought

out big portraits of the late So· With the layout of the bases. · l'ict leader .and arc displayln~

the pacifists hope lo immobilize , the~ alongs1d_e those of ~!arx them throughout Dec. n by sit· : Lcnm and Chmese party lead· ling on runways anrl tying up · rr ~lao Tsc-tung, head of stat• communications. . Lin Shao-chi and other Chines! --·----·-· ·-··· ----· ·- • leaders.

TilE COUNTRY l'AilSON : Since the Stalin image wa! : smashed at the recent Con1mu : nist party congress in Moscow his body has been removed frorn the mausoleum where it lay in state with that of Lenin; the "Hero city" of Stalingrad ha~ been renamed Volgograd and other ·towns in Russia and East Germany bearing his name havt also been renamed. ·

Few outward signs of ideolo .gical differences among Call' monist countries are evident here at the moment, but th1 issue remains the main subjec of conversation . at diplomatic gatherings.

The agents made a map of the base, which has been disll'i· huled to demonstrators: sowinl! "I'm sure some fulks arc the main runway, the fuel depot. I no busy-but they're happier ihe aircraft hangers and the of· I than the ones who have nothing fice bld'l!k, . I to do."

Soviet affairs observers in London said the Peking decision to boost Stalin was the clearest indication yet of the policy rifts dividing the Communi!t leaders

.· I .,

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Page 2: l067 THE DAILY NE s - Memorial University DAIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...l067 rscd cars and trucks sohl THE DAILY NE s by'ooURS far this rear. Why not

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1 canuot agree with the findings of the Board either in principle nor in fact and I am. com· pellcd iu J tistice to the claims of the U mo~· to write a minority report.

Evcrvune who has been active in labour re· lations 'as it is called these days is acquainted with the handbook on that subject which is the accepted text book on matters relating. to labour relations with capital, daily becommg more strained because fundamental principles arc being brushed aside bv the method of in­terpreting contracts, as i_f these principles were of no si).\nificancc aud ol no consequence.

Firsth• it is dear that a contract made be· tween citpital and lahonr such as the one under consideration is a contract difficult to reduce to writing because there are so many com· plexities, so many different things to be includ­ed a'nd as vet few general expressions to cover a phase. Then it contains no one contract but a number covering each branch of work en­compassed. by the whole contract, . thereby addin.r difficultv to difficulty. Agam there arc tl~ parties io be considei·ed, you have a corporation, highly organized, with detail at its finger tips and specialized and on the other side you have a group of unacquainted w_ith the preciseness and niceties of a contract.

The facts involved surround the employ­ment of two men. The principle involved affects many men and many employments.

A contract of this· kind ·is somethin~ more than the settlement of terms of rates of wages, hours of emplovment etc. A contmct of this kind covers policies intimately affecting mat­ters in process of evolution and matters diffi­cult to reduce to precise terms. The contract under consideration has sections covering this "Somethiug more".

To attempt to appfy the same rules of construction to these latter sections would he applied hours of wages, rates of pay, etc., would have the effect of rendering them usc­less, inoperative, ineffectual and of no purpose other than mere "padding," If they are placed in the agreement these sections must have some purpose, Thcre'fore they must have a · more flexible and more liberal interpretation.

The approach used in this instance by the report of the board has been the approach of the Exchequer Court to a breach of the Income Tax Act. Let me cite ·these sections of the . 1 Agreement ur contract between the parties to show the injustice and inadequacy of that approach. Section 1. The Preamble (1.02) reads:.:....lt is the intent and purpose of the ·parties hereto that this Agreement will promote and improve industrial and economic relation~ ships between employees who are members of the bargaining unit of the Union, and the Company and to set forth herein the basic agreement covering rates of pay, hours of work, conditions of employment as specified hr this Agreement and working conditions to be observed between the parties hereto.

Section 2. Recognition at 2.03 reads "The Company agrees that when hiring_ new em­ployees to fill joh classifications falling within the;bargaining unit uf the Union:-

{I) It will advise them that the Union is the sole bargaining agency for such employees and that while membership in the Union is not compulsory, the Company will recommend to any such men to take out membership thus encouraging its employees to become members of the Union.

(II) Consideration shall oe given to former Union members, if available, and to residents of Bell Island".

. Section 4. Management at 4.03 reads as fol­lows:-: The right to select employees for train­ing programmes and for supervisory position is vested in the Company; ·

Section 5, Out of line diffetentials at 5.21 states "wben an Employee's regular occupa· . tion is. terminated every effort ~ball be made

; :I - : l ' .

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD SATUHDAY, NOVE.\iBEH ,1• ~),

SET UP BETWEEN

DO·MINION STEEL and COAL C,ORPORATION

LIMITED·WABAN.A MINES

AND

UNITED STEELWORKERS OF AMERIC.A

·A.F.L.-C.I.O. LOCA~L 4121

to place him in an occupation paying a similar or higher rate, providing he can qualify for such new occupation and also has. the requir· ed seniority". .

Section 7, Step IV Arbitration (1) reads as follows:-Any such reference to an Arbitration Board by either party may include any griev­ance arising out of the interpretation or ap­plication or alleged violation of this Agree­ment, including any question ·as to whether a matter is arbitrable provided always that it has first passed thro).lgh the gri~vance states",

Section .II.· Change in · EquiP-ment or Methods. 11.02 reads as follows:-' The Com· puny agrees to give every consideration to placing any men, displaced by such action on other work where possible.

Section 18. Reads as follows:-That the ful­fillment of this Agreement and that of an)_' subsequent joint Agreement entered into· shall he fully observed by the Company and the Union, and it is their duty to see that all such agreements are carried out both in the letter and spirit.

These Sections arc cited for the purpose of establishing that a paramount consideration is approaching any problem is the utilization of residents of Bell Island. The Company re­gards it as an obligation in the nature of moral duty. This moral duty is bmshed aside by the inclusion of such appropriate words .as. "where necessary". The obligation has been imported into the contract in many places as instanced above. Therefore not only has it moral signi­ficance but it has a contractual significance. I submit it is a policy confirmed by the parties by its multiple inclusion in the contract and it must have a bearing upon interpretation ..

The Company states its cognisance of its moral responsibility to the community but the responsibility detailed above is not a responsi­bilityto the community, rather the .obli~ation adopted in the contract is a responsibility to the Union and· its members repeated many times in the contract. In a general sense there is a moral responsibility but in several particu­lar instances the obligation is one established by the contract. I therefore conclude that this obligation exists by virtue of the contract.

A change in the operation of the Company was effecte~ by the introduction of mechaniz­ed methods. It is· the old story of machine repla~ing men, but it is also the occasion which brings into consideration the importance of the

·several inclusions of the responsibility of the Company to the Union and·its mem~ers. These words were not detailed to be brushed aside lightly as if they were mere general consider­ations of a light moral nature. They are plac-1

ed in the preamble to control· and they are placed in the several sections. to re-affirm. My

· conclusions will therefore be influenced by the · statements (1) that all ·such agreements are carried out both in the letter and in the spirit (b) that the Company give consideration to placing pf men displaced (c) the Company will give consideration to former Union members . if available and to residents of Bell Island.

. . .

Somewhere in the process of progress there was an understanding not too clear recognis­ing that the change over to mechanized methods would mean that men replaced should be made familiar with the usc of the machin­ery to qualify them for employment. The right to select these men was given to the Company. Therefore the provision of means of training and the selection were wholly Company mat­ters. No attempt was made. The Company seeks to justify on the ground that there was an objection that these men in training requir­ed full pay and therefore its moral obliga.tion ceased and its conh·actoral inclusion was ignor­ed. This means that until a training m'-lit is placed on Bell Island outsiders will be import­ed and the high obligation of the Company to the community cannot be satisfied but it has a wider significance if contained namely that in time none will be skilled, That is a sad situation not within the spirit of the agreen;ent. Section 20 (c) states "It is the intention of the Company to endeavour to improve work per­formance of all employees" smely a weaker phasing could not he worded to support a moral obligation. The intent natural right in the workmen deserves the declaration of a right. I cannot subscribe to the contention that the Company has hcen indulgent as it seeks to establish in its brief.

Now let us come to the facts and to the particular points at issue. Two machinists are hired C. Trenhold and D. H. 1\lcGregor. The Company deemed it necessary to have machin­ists. The contract gave it that right hut it was not an arbitrary right, it was a qualified right by the spirit of the Agreement. See Section 18.02 and by the exercise of a discretion de­terminable from circumstances. It is necessary therefore to look behind the decision .

These men were employed without notifica­tion to the Un'ion. This may not offend the latter but it disregards the spirit (Sec. 18.02). These men were1 selected from five applicants following advertisement in a Trenton,. Nova Scotia Newspaper. There was no advertise­ment in any Newfoundland paper nor in the Bell Island newspaper.

During negotiations between Union and Company it was the Company's contention that it took eight years for a machinist to quali­fy. · Mr. McGregor the union contends was 23 years old and worked in an unemployment In­surance Office previously. H!s qualification

• as a proficient machinist is surely open to question and hence the exercise of selection is open to question even upon the Company's standards, ·

The Union in its brief sets forth facts evid~rtced in negotiations indicating firstly that the check on files was not in fact a check on files at all. There' was evidence advanced by the Company to show how reasonable it had

. been for it sought in its files to discover a suit-. able machinist and could not find one. It was clearly shown these files in themselves were inadequate and had not been brought up to date. The Company had relied upon the memory of it~ officials to cover the gap. Files

arc used because mclrtory is insufficient. Tl· search throu[!h files cannot therefore }-. ··

" J. !'. ceptcd as a colllpliam:c with the obligation,·

Again the necessitv for tl~e importation wu hased upon the hack log of unfinished worl It appears that this must be a fiction as ti mine closed and there is nothing to show~ the machine work continued to reduce ~. backlog. ·

The need for these importatious was furtha urged because further production was nece~ sary. A comparison of production showedu increase in products for the year immedialelr preeeeding the importation (1961) as comp~. eel with the pr10vious year 1960.

I am· convinced local help of a satisfactcn <\uality could ha\'e been located. It ma1· l; t 1ev ,,·ould not have universit\' denrees b·,l the. 23 year old from Trenton with a ~·ocalio;: al training was selected and Gerald Bam~ \\'ith training in a vocational school as 1 machinist was not considered. For these aol other reasons I cannot accepl that the Co!t· pam· acted in good faith, rather their actioJ \\'l're in utter disregard of the policies presm-· cd hy the contract.

I am strong on this ]JOint of gi,·in~ the d~ placed men the first opportunit,·. A disregad in this direction can onlv lead to lridion, ~1 one seeks Lo usurp the ]~O\\'crs of 111anagemtLi hut the unrestrained use of po\\'C'r is an u2h force. [ do not ascribe this to the prem~ instance hut there is evident laek of ~ood fai± which urges one to disagree with th': findint: of the hoard that there was no ell(lence (·• lack of good faith. The facts speak for the~· seines and were not specifiealh- cDnsideredD; the Board in its findin<r~. h1 tlli, I do n':

,-. • 1

ask the Board to reorganize the inaclune sno; hut I claim there has been a 1·i,)lation of thr

ri<rht to select in that there are "·rious mr.'; si~ns and cert.ain h· there is a ,·iplalion of t1: spirit which is an integral part of the contr~d ln· virtue of its being so expressed in Seclit: 18.02 ami elsewhere.

Let me illmtrate:-The number> .,f men eel off in 1859 with nualificalious i11 the educa·

. 'I ' h ,tl tion and courses !rom correspuunc•nce sc. ~--wiih practical experience in dec! rr•1~ics, ~w.!· in" cnni]mJCnt and <raragc mr:c:luutcs, (a ·

..,, '1 /'1 • I of which was furnished) all indit-;tte t1at 1

Company's policv forces men to (lhtain suit~):; employment in other fields. T11" mechan~: engineers, two electrical en(!in<'f'il. ~11'0 m~ ing engineers are speeificalh- !tsted. heing within that class. EYidcncr was. that 'Gerald Barrett a l\!achinist \\ ho elmle.d a course applied for ap!)rentic.eship hl:: was mformed that the Companl' \\as ta i on very few apprentices for ten years. Hed refused work as a machinist on the groun inexperience. A company whieh dl'pends . its workmen to dig, delve and plilcess . le:l be prepared to advance ambiti,niS 1101 i

· I · I · I · Tl · rlcct was n. mt 1m t 1c1r emp ovees. 11s Ill'!.. d answered in mv O];inion bv the ~tatcmeuts the witness or the submission of the The names of the men listed mm· not he

·1 'tl one men hut they were comparab e "'1 1 d ··n~ those taken on. In any event as \'0\1 a ~~·t an employee he is not as qualified nsua . the man replaced but if you have 1~0 nd ' for advancemeJit you have stagnall?n a . satisfaction and that is the situation Prevails aiJd the situation which a .

• 0 't 15

ought to remedy if the letter and spT . fl objective of both parties. By th1e .a)e~t 1950 the Company put out of emp O)!ll

hundred men. Surely this lays a on the Company which has not been ed.

Dated at St. John's this 16th. day of . her A.D. 1961.

"i§··· 'F. , . I •'. • '·. , , 1 t

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

' 'T. . . '· .... . . . . .-- . ' , ... . .. ,_· '·

sr. JOHN

emperatur Frid~·Y;

er in ' ~ .. ~elteruay was what is

"a rare day" for No\" temperature at 3 1 airport was fift

-~;--""'o with the \\ nai(y 1\'c\\'s II'

that the same < the temperature wa

:'\0\'Ctnb~r. hOWCI' ~·~··unco unusually mild

flowers arc ng. EJrlicr this

mowers were used of new grass at tJ

which is still g is fresh looking a!

July.

Page 3: l067 THE DAILY NE s - Memorial University DAIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...l067 rscd cars and trucks sohl THE DAILY NE s by'ooURS far this rear. Why not

. ..

Da~ly News T JOHN'S, NIWFOUNDLAND ' 5 f SATURDAY; NOVEMBER 25, 1961

~------------------------~~------·--------------~---------------------------------------.,.,... i •

Concili-ation To Extend Winter Works Bowaters Union

}

r n t. Tl1• r._• l.·e ac: i gat ion,

at ion was hcd work. on as the show that tluce the

·as further ,\'as neces­sltowed an mrrd iatel\' t<; compar.

.at isfactory It ma\' be l'!.:l'CC'S. hut a voca lion· .rltl Barrell tHll as a ,. t lll'~e and

the Com· rcir actions ic~ preserr·

ill',: the dis· .\ disregard riction. · :\o 11a na ~rmenl. •. is an u~ly the present d !.:tHltl faith the !inding! ('\·idence ol tk for them· ,nsidrred br ,j, I tlo not J;tchinc shop I;J!iou of thr .• ·rinns mnis· b!ion of the t h c l'tlntracl

·d iu Section

, n f men lay· i 11 the educa· lcnce schools ronics, weld· unic'. (a list calc that the htaiu ,;nitable ·n mcdranical ·rs. two min· \' listed as Icc was given who had con· ·nticcship and

k. a I\. was ta Ill~ cars. He was the ground of

· 1 on depcn( s up ld )fOCCSS shOU itmS worker! · ot c:~lect was n f ~ l a tctnents o • ' Jl\' the ColllPa ."

· not he degrei c with one o ts \'0\1 advance · · !IdS ficd usua ! .

ProVISIOn ;c no d dis· nation au h'cb . w] t natiOn tracl ich a co~ the

' 't IS nd 'sp1n ff ill . the layo iS :mploymen!:us s a bea~charg· been diS

IIED:\L WI:\:SERS nt the G~mluntion Exercise~ c:if Psyc1tiatric Nursing Ai.des and ;\ttcndnnts at the Hospital for Nervous D1s~nses, hel~ on Thur~day ~nght

· \ l'ttort'ttttl Xurscs' Residence. (Left to nght):-VJ01et Parrall, wmncr at t.lc' m • • '11 1 of the Golrl 3lcdal for 'fh;)ory, donated by Dr. C. H. ~ottle. Mtss Parra a s~

, tc of the prizes for Them·y, donated by the Canbou Group of St. Johns ~~:~~~·Club. Ed\\'ard Hall, Valedictorian, is the winner of the Gold Medal r r 'oficicncv in Psychiatric Nursing donated by Hon. Dr. James McGrath, a~d ~nita p 1;mphrc~·. R.N .. winne~ of the Silyer Medal /or Proficiency. in Urad :-;urscs' Role. donated by M1ss. M .. A. Ln~ton, S.R.N., ~.C.M., Assoca~te Dircrtor of :\msin~: Education. Not m p1cture 15 Roberta r Ptppey, R.N., Wlll· r.!rllf the Gold i\lcdal for Theot·y, donated by Dr. J. F. '\aJS'h.-(M.M.P.) -- ---------·.-.

pe~·atMre

Friday; in '53

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1 Report \ 0! ~ssault 1 V1ct1m i : Catherine Stack, aged 47, of \ Outer Col'e, is in satisfactory

P•ttrdar ''" 11Im! is known condition at the General Hos· --~me da(' for :'\orcmbcr. · pita! in St. John's where she

l!J:.?rraturc at 3 p.m. ;tt : is receil'ing treatment for lllpJ!l ""5 iifty-four. · : 11 ounds inflicted by an uniden· ·. ·.•ith the \\'cathcr tified attacker earlier this · · Dlily ~r11~ was Ill· · wee!;,

that the same dJtc in The wuman was brutally as· t~f tcmprraturc was sixty- saultcd hy a motorist on the

· ~Iarine Dril·e early Wctlncstlay

• ouce A PLUMBE'R . ~ PLUMBEIU I'LL ~~VETriE ON!.V TV

, F~~~ :ROSTJ:~ . ... . '

Program

Mr. Diefcnbaker said it is hoped to make the winter works extension applicable' since Oct. 15,

Start $500,000 Hotel CORNER BROOK-Work has

. ~tarted on a new $500,000 ho· ! tel here. The Hotel Corner I Jlrook, situated on the Tram·

Canada Highway, will be open· ed .in time tor the 1962 touriat season if possible, says W. I. Hann, director of Hotel Corner Brook Ltd.

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Importance And Future Of Airstrip

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F ,,: · t THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN·s. NFLD.,.SATURDAY, NOVEMB,ER 25, lgB!

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L \, THE DAILY NEWS

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Newfoundland's Only Morning Paper

YEARLY Sl'llSCRII'TI0:'-1 1\ATES

Canada .. $12.00 per annum

' United Kin~dom and all f(lrcign connlrics $14.00 prr annum

Authorized as scl·oncl class mail, Post O!!icc Dcpnrtmrnt, Oltawn.

The DAILY NE~S is a morning paper established in 1804, and published at the News Building, 355·359 Duckworth Street, St. John's, Newfoundland, by Robinson & Company, Limited.

1\lEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS

The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to tbe usc for republication of all news despatches in this paper credit­ed to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also the local news publish­ed therein.

All Press Services and feature articles ln this paper are copyrighted and their reproduction is prohibited.

• Member Audit Bureau

of Circulation.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1961

Looking For "Wonder" Industries year or two to begin the task of ~reating a highly-skilled working force.

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It lla' been suggested from time to time 1hat if Ne\\"foundland wants to de1·clop se<.:ondar.v industr~· on a substantial scale. we should think in terms of light industries requir­ing special ~kills anrf pr!lclucin~ ~oods th:~t would not be handicap­ped b~· hi,gh freight costs in finr\ing world markets. Electronics has been considered a promisin.~ field.

But what is troubling a lot of people is the question of how to provide employment for all who graduate from these technical schools. There is, of course, a pres­ent shortage of skilled workers in many important areas. That de· mand, however, may be quickly satisfied. We are then faced with the problem of how to provide op­pqrtunity at home for the greatest asset any country can have-a pool · of skilled workers.

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It is now reported that efforts to achie1·e these .goals will be made on an incrc:1sin~ scale in Nova Scotia and :Ne1\· Brunswick. The aim. sa,·s a recent stafement, is to make ihe Tvlaritimes a centre of top-skill ';wonder" industries. To help achieve that ambition. new technic:~! institutes are to be estab­lished in both provinces.

Here in :Newfoundland we are probabh· ahead of the l\[aritimes in our l)l'~~~~nmne for technical and \'Ocational training. With the tech­nical college no~l' rapidly rising under 1he shadow of Confederation Building and with a -dozen new vo­C:ltional schools on the plannin.g board. 1\'e should be ready in a

It is possible that plans to meet this problem are now under consid· eration. These could usefully in­clude a small committee to exam· ine the prospects of utilizing tech­nical skills in what the Maritimes call the "wonder" industries. How­e\·er that may be, the fnct is that it will not be many years before we shall have more technicians and craftsmen than we ever had before in our working force. Their employ­ment ought, therefore. to be a mat­ter o! immediate concern.

The Prime Minister's Visit ' l ! The most notable thing about

!o.Ir. Diefenbaker's present tour of western nnd central Newfoundland

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, ~~ is thnt. apart from his brief visit for the unh·er;;it~· celebrations. it is the first time that a Crmadian prime minister hns come to New­foundland except on the eve of an

he could motor over the highway ft·om Stephenville to Grand Falls. This experience could conceivably encourage him ·to view with favour the Newfoundland claim that spec­ial federal aid is needed to com· plete the Trans-Canada highway.

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election. . Of course, it does a party leader

no harm to show himself a few months before an election to as many people as possible. However, much of !vir. Diefenbaker's time· will be occupied with visits to schools and talks to non-political gatherings. He is assured of a good reception and a traditionnl display of Newfoundland hospitality wher-

., • ever he may go.

Mr. Diefenbaker will, however, see many different kinds of New· foundland community and is cer­tain as a result to add much to his knowledge about this province. In the meanwhile, it may be trust~ ed that this present visit will estab· lish a precedent that future prime ministers· and federal cabinet min· isters as well should follow. There should always be good firsthand knowledge of the special character of the remote provinces as the basis of sound policy in Ottawa.

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Time is naturally important. Otherwise it could be wished that

New Deal For Dominican Republic When Columbus discovered the lasted until 1924 when a new COi1·

Island in 1492 he named it "La Es- stitution was established. panola" or Little Spain. That was In ~930 a revolution put General later corrupted into Hispaniola and Leonidas 'rrujillo . in power and in the port that has been known while he did much to improve the for some years as Ciaudad Trujillo economy, he converted the country and is soon to revert to its older into a ruthless police state in which name of Santo Domingo, Bartholo· murder and torture of political op­mew Columbus founded a city. The ponents were not unknown. He'also whole island was also calleq Santo practised nepotism on an extrava· Domingo and is now divided be· gant scale, making the country a tween the negro and French-speak· family concern. With Trujillo's as­ing Haiti and the Spanish-speaking sassination last year, some of his Dominican Republic. _ family tried to hang on. They have

been at last forced to leave the country and efforts are being made to restore constitutional govern­ment.

The island and its parts have had checkered histories, When the Hai· tians threw out the French, they took over the \\'hole island. The Spaniards returned twice there­after to their side and were twice expelled. F'or a time the people wanted the United Stales to take possession. The American Senate rejected the idea. But when local rule resulted in revolution after revolution and totnl disorder, the Americnns set up a temporary mili­tary government in 1916 which

It would have been strange if lib­eration had not released pent up emotions in the form Of mob at­tacks on the per~ons and properly of Trujillo supporters. But firm steps have been taken to restore order. The country will, however, need a stron~ c:overnment to main· lain peace and rebuild prospel'ity fm· the Dominican Rep1,1blic's 3, 750,-000 people.

The Pope's Eightieth · Birthday

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At the time of his election as 1950 at the age of 76 and Adenauer Sovereign Pontiff. Cardinal An- over 80, has been re-elected Chan~ gelo Cuiscppe Roncnlli was less cellor of West Germany.

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than a month away from his 77th birthday. Now known as Pope .John XXIII, he commemorated last month the third anniversary of his election ;md celebrates today the attainment of his eightieth year.

Pope J olm XXIII is a vigorous and active man who has given positive leadership in a troubled world. This, he told a formal gath· ering of diplomats a little while ago, is a world in which .grounds for fear exist for the future of man­kind making it all the more urge~t. that all men may use well the time given them to work for peace, civi­lization and progress. It is to be • hoped that he wlll be given him-. self many more· years to continue to serve his Church an'd mankind with grace and distinction.

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One of his predecessors, Paul IV, was elected at the age of 79 years

; , :; in 1555. There 'can have been few I others, however, who have come to 'I

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'' this .great yrrice when they were ': well beyond their ~eventielh yenr. ·' But this is a lime in which a great . age is not a handicap to rcsponHible

public office nne\ scrl'ice. Churc-1· hill was eleeted prime minister in

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Letters To The November 23rd, 1961

UNION TO PUBLISH DISSENTING OPINION

Dear Sir-I read with some surprise the publi­cation of the report of the findings of the Arbitra­tion Board in the matter of the dispute which had all the elements of a paid insertion.

This was published be-

fore the Union had re­ceived a copy of the re­port.

In addition it ga\·e scant publicity to the fact that 1 had filed a lengthy dissenting opinion.

Authorities wonder \vhy labour Unions are disin­clined to arbitrate bul in this act they have a clear 'nclicalion of the reason. I

Editor think the manner in which it was done was a lower­ing of the standards one might expect. Because of

·e step taken the Union ·will publish the dissent­

ng opinion.

Yours very truly,

\\I'M. F. BREE:-l',

President L.S.P.U.

Auld- Lang Syne N ovcm bel' 25, 19:11:

TASKER FETE The annual Tasker cele­

bration for children was held in Bishop Feild Col­lege Hall on Saturday afternoon and was the most successful party ever held. 450 children were present. In the evening an infonnal dance was held for the adults, to the music of i'vle~crs. Cowan . Dingle and Oliver.

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RESIGNATION Reports forecast a very

large meeting at the l\1a­jestic Theatre tonight. It is believed that the reso­lutions · to be presented will demand the resigna­tion of Sir Richard Squires within twenty-four hours.

• • BOXERS' BENEFIT

Four good fights have been arranged for the last boxing tournament of the season. The entire net receipts will go to all the fighters who partici­pated this year. Those soon to fight are Casey

and Lel\;is. O'Brien nnd Evans: Collins and Chaf­fev and Wilkins and Ben-.. ' son.

. November 25, 1946: SPECIAL SERVICE

Missionary and Thanks­giving services were held giving services were held at George Street United Church yesterday and Rev: A. R. Baggs officiat­ed. Special guest at the morning service was Rev. Buchanan, U .C. Mission­ary from India. Sir John Puddester read the eveti­ing service lesson.

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CONVENTION In private session Sat­

urday morning the Na­tional Convention recom­mended F. Gordon Brad­ley, K.C., delegate to the Convention for Bonavista South to be created chair-, . man, and asked the Gov­ernment to amend the Act so that this appoint­ment might be made.

PIN STARS Star:; of the bowling

week ha\'e been listed by :Mike Breen in his col­umn. Leo Voisev and Mary Jardine were tops. Leo posted a fine pinfall of 818. with 2:H, 314, and 270. Mary ran up ~cores of 702 and 617, which is fine rolling for any wo· man.

• * • NEW POST

Formerly a resident of this Cilv and brother of Mrs. E. ·'Ash. Avalon Ter­race, Mr. Robert Blackler recentlv left Toronto. On­tario, for South America where he has accepted an important position with Tropical Oil Company.

THE WORD OF GOD Seeing then that all

th.'.!se things shall be dis­solved, whnt manner of persons ought we to he?

-II. Peter 3:11. Since this world cannot

last. we must hasten prep­arations for the world that is coming.

- Strength For · Today By EARL L. DOUGLASS

VIGILANCE AND FIRMNESS

A scientist who defect­!Jd from communism re­cently said that his deci­sion to do so had arisen from the fact that the communists had ordered him to stop his cancer research. . Although the newspaper article did not say so, the reason probab­ly was that communist

. authorities wanted all scientific effort to go into the making of bombs. Under such a philosophy the thing to. be destroyed is not cancer but capital­ism. Let ·people die of cancer, reason the com-

munists, but destroy the prudent who have set up businesses, practice pro· fessions, and pursue em~ ployments which give them some economic stat· ure. The communists re­gard such people as crim· inals. Rid the world of the prudent and heaven will be established on the earth. Let the heavy hand of communism put less than one hundred men in charge of the world and all injustice will cease.

This column consistent­ly takes the position that communism is not a· gov­ernment but a criminal conspiracy. No Czar in recent centuries has ex-

ercised more absolute power than have certain communist leaders in re­cent decades. No ancient tyranny has been greater than the modern tyranny of communism.

Let us be completely unrelenting in our atti· tude toward this ghastlv evil. We cannot grow srJft and sentimental in our dealing wilh iL. We ha1•e to be realistic and ruth­less when we come upon a nest of rntilesnakes. We must. deal with commun­ism in the same manner and with the same vigor.

War? We devoutly hope not. But firmness, yes­eternal vigilance a n d firmness.

- ·What Others Are ·saying -THE SAME WATER it may pour them out dog to eject customers at 'The Sea of Galilee and again to fertilize the J or- . closing time. The dog be­

the Dead Sea are made of dan plain. But the Dead gins barking promptly at the same water. It flows· Sea with the same water 10.30 p.m., and pulls on down clear and cool from . makes horror, for the Dead· the trouser leg of any re­the heights of Herman and Sea has no outlet. It gets · calcitrant client. "People the roots of the cedars of to keep.-Himy Emerson don't mind this treat-Lebanon. 'l'he Sea' of Gall- Fosdick. · ment," said the owner. "In lee makes beauty of it, TRAINING PAYS fact, they come from miles for"the Sea of Galilee has (London E;vening News) around just for the privi-an outlet. It gets to give. The owner of' a· dN~ in lege of being put out by It gathers in its riches that .Winchester has trained his Kim."

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IN THE NEWS By Wayfarer -

THE RIOT OF 1932 (2)

I ha\•e carried this brief summary of thee\' of April 5, 1932, to the point where I have had t e:~ tr.oduce an observer among the crowd that had 0 ~ ered in front of the Colonial Building. His stog~

1 that as the crowd surged against the front doorl'j~·' Inspector General ordered the door to be openect'. :: instructed the police who were guarding it to ~" perse the mob with their truncheons. This l'e ,:, of the affair states that the constables laid : 5

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t~em mercilessly and indiscriminately. At the 5~. time, mounted constables in the courtyard tu ~~·: their horses into the throng, inciting some of~~ people to retaliate by throwing stones. At any 1.;

1

all ranks were broken. The lane that remained q

between both sides of the crowd was soon cl 0~; Now there was just a solid, seething mass ~-~. which those who like to get away from a !llace w·ro~ trouble is beginning could hardly extricate th~:~ selves. ····

1 d and strai ple.ale In colou te~~hia, Brown, rkirts in the com Green and Brow oNLY ........ ..

SHOI

. Inside the House of Assembly, there was one 1,, s1re. T.hat was t~ ~scape from the stones that ~.,: now vrrtually rammg on the chamber. Most Ill•~' · ··~ be:~ got out by way of the Glory Hole-the na~~· i ex1t f~·om. the cha~ber by way of an .even narro-,~ · .~.( and ctrcmtous sta1rway to the opposrtion room;'· , the basement. A gang of people, mostly maneer~ some women among them, clustered about both s'i .i entrances to the basement, armed with planks :;, 1

Lately I of study can lized there i: years. "ABS often many c son and may sometimes \\ and instead c get up, we ju ·won't really • ribly wrong. point is reali: for exnmple, taught in Alg tically impos:

stones. But they wanted ·certain members of 'fr; · ·' go.vernment, chiefly the prime minister. A friend,; mme faced them boldly and asked for exit for ,:; Willi~m ~oa~er. The crowd agreed. But the po:i~; s.tandmg ms1de the western door with drawn b~ lt~s. had only to show themselves to im·ite attack h sttcks .and stones. I shall not des<;ribe the raiding 2 0e pnvate r?oms of the elderly librarian, Miss ~lu:· ns. whose prano was taken apart string bv stri·· and whose personal belongings were strewn· all 0~ the place. There were many other incongru, .. · . h l ,. s1g ts, among t 1em a small urchin who had fo•··• the sword of !he S~rgeant-at-Anns and strapped: somehow to h1s wa1st. But the most extensive ment I have received on my own recent parctera:: on the subject is related to the aftermath in the e\·ening. Most of the crowd had dispersed but . had stayed to keep a watchful eye for the · · minister. I happened along that evening soon . Sir Richard had been removed from the building . pushed into a motor car at the lop of Colonial Strt!: One citizen has called to tell me that he had a disguise of a top hat and coat for the minister .

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the next day who were in get anywhen day because wrong, I don' is faking, bu think that a and complete just fooling . hare a bad h' would that P to you "You go skating ( wonder how get ready fo

,. an ache or p ~tay home fr from the pho .You would be going to. Ke~ tically one h John's class measles)!

M~· personal obsen·ation was limited to m~: I must al Squires in the car, surrounded by a mob. There ·.1~ 1 ''Going on tl talk about lynching and about throwing him in 1:1 ; maybe a hal harbour. At any rate, the crowd began slowlr to have somE move down Colonial Street. Here I disagree with teen years tl correspondent who has written his recollections : ara childish ~ length. I am in accord with most of what 1m · ing away fro ten but not with his challenge to my memory of ·; something ot E. (later Sir Edward) Emerson helping in the think you h< operations. I distinctly recall him calling to school day su <1.round him to raise him on their shoulders. This'. member that did readily and so, carried shoulder high, he ·1 have time af direct the crowd past the house into which it been planned to take the prime minister. Jly respondent, whose tale deserves to be recorded in bcause of the many interesting facts it contains. ~;aid that Rev. Father Pippy of Hoylestown ed for Sir Richard's transfer to the Colonial house. Rev. Mr. Godfrey of St. Thomas' Church, . ; others. held the door after the prime minister · i been spirited inside. It was Father Pippr who,;. with his influence over the crowd, contrired . .. Richard's escape from the House of n>ll:wc·.:r• · •

grounds. My own observation, as I hal'e said, · ' :: limited to the events on Colonial Street itself. I · \ keeping this special letter of a better-informed : witness for the time when the story ha:; to be ten in all its detail.

Taken out the back door of the house on ial Street, over back garden fences, Sir Richard ual\y found safety in, I think, the home of ~!r. r Godden on Waterford Bridge Road. He did n.o ,t ..••• sign at once. In fact, the general election that ed took place in June. But on the night of ~. 1 'r;·•~<:~ and for several days thereafter volunteer pollee trolled the city, groups of hoodlums raided one ' , store and tried to break into another, an uneas)' brooded over the town and the Governor did safe until H.M.S. Calcutta, rushed at full s~eed Bermuda, entered the Narrows. By that !Jme rl had been restored and the riot had become a P3

our troubled political history.

Gen1s · Of Thought . ''thO"'.

Grace is the ornament of ornamenh. \\'t "' beauty is Iifeless.-Baltasar Gracian.

Beauty without grace is the hook baiL-Ralph Waldo Emerson.

---Grace is but glory b~~n, 11.nd glory i~ but

pet'fectcd.-J onathan Edwards. ·---

What we most need i~"~e prayer of sire for growth in grace, expressed in patie~ddl'. ness, love, and good deeds.-Mary Baker · .

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"YOUR l

YOU SPENf

Gosh, vc up before I "s1 ing the past describing m but just thin! I do not mea this was nee< fore it is too

Before I also be a gar holiday, PU!= think that it Parents were of Monday. 1 ent" list on tion(

if you h to

SA

Sad movies He said he 1 Sa I Went tc They turned And turned ~nd just as

saw 111y da

..... ·s Grace is given of God, but knowledga 1

in the market.-A. H. Clough.

Though I we They didn't ~d so they laenheki A. hnost diec

· nd in the r. I started to . Oh h < Oh' o 'oh, s; ..... ter

There is no such way to attain to gre~ttlt ure of grace as for a man to live up to the 1 he has.-J ames Gordon Brooks. ___ ..... __ _

..... -Henry David

Nature's first an dlast lessons. teac h~a:Ur kind, an deven pride should sanction wha ures need.-Mary Baker Eddy.

He approaches the st~~-y-o_f_m_a-nkind ~~h ' advantages who is accustomed to the studY ·

• oh, oh s;

So I Ana got up A 111ama ,

nd said "W . And so t .k l . 0, I

S Just said ad- . •

Oh '"OVles s ooh,oh, 0 · a~ !llov~es ·

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1961

. he e\'ent' had to in: . had gatb. ts story t~ . door, the ~ened and :t to dis.

115 \'ersion laid about

the same ,rd turned 11e of the t any rate ained ope~ lon closed. mass from llace where cate th em.

.\·as one de. ; that were 1Iost mem. the narrow ·n narrower 1 rooms in ,. maneens Jt both sid~ planks and lcr~ of the A friend of

•xit for Sir l the police,

drawn hi\. .te attack bl' IC raiding of 1, Miss Mar. g by string. ~wn all 0\'er incongruous

' had found I st::-apped it tensive com· 1t paragraph 1 in the same ed but mam· r the prim'e 1g soon after building and

•Ionia! Street. c had loaned r the prime

. ed to seeing lb. There was .g him in the m slow!\' to •agree with a collections at hat wa& writ· memory of L. in the rescue

!ling to men lers. This they ~h he tried to ~vhich it had ter. My cor· ecorded in full t contains. stown arrang· :olonial Street · Church. with ~ minister had .ppy •vho als?, contri,·ed Sit of Assembly

a\·e said, was ~ct itself. I am -informed eye­ha~ to be writ·

1ouse on Richard

ne of Mr. E. He did not re· . that folloW· 1011 '15 1ight of Aprl 1teer police pa· ,ided one an uneasy ·nor did not fu11 speed that time •ecome a part

ought

.er of ferVenl r~ patience, Baker tddY·

~vledge is

y navid to teac hman r on what ou

- 'th 1nkind WI e studY of .

JOHN'S, NFLD., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1961

SALE! J 1 <trai~ht Skirts In the popular soft wool rna·

ptratcn a~l roto'urs of Emerald Green, Gold, Mauve, ttrial.. 1 Brown, Gray and Black. Also shaggy straight fi)!Chla~ thr l'omhined. colours of Purpl~ 'nd Brown, and 5k1TIS 1 nd Jlroll'n. Stzes 10 - 18. . b.~Lt . . .. ..................................... $3.1s

SHOPPING CENTRE 8 FRESHWATErt ROAD

bon jour ATTENTION!! J

Late!~· I hn\'e been trying to tell you what lack of stud~· can do to your future. But. now I ha_ve rea-1;,cd thrrr i~ another cause for fa1lures durmg the ,:;ars. ":\BSEi\'T DAYS FROM SCHOOL." Very often man:• of us stay home for the least little rea­<011 and ma~·be we don't e\•en have a little reason! ~omctimc:; we feel like staying in bed to get a ~est ~nd instead of having enough drive in us to make us get up, \\'e ,iust lie back and say "ah, missing one day won't rca!l.l' matter!'' But we are wrong, girls, so ter­ribll' ll'rong. And I think that once this important poit;t is realized there will be few absent days. Take, for ex~mple, the day you stay home, a new rule is tau~ht in Algebra or in any subject. It would be prac­halh· impn,sible for any teacher to go over that rule the 1;cxt da:-· in dass, for she has to keep the girls 1rJ~o 11·ere in school in mind, and we really wouldn't oct ani'\\' here if the same thing was taught day after dal' b~enu"! of absent pupils. Now don't take me ,11:onc. I don't mean that every pupil who stays hbme is fo.king. but the majority are. Do you honestly think that a girl or boy could be really ~ick one day and complete!:-· better the next? If you do you are iust fooling ~·ourself! Oh, I really believe that you hal'e ~ bad headache or stomach ache, but how quick 1rould that ACHE disappear if someone were to say to I'OU "You need not go to school today, you can ~0 ·skating 1 to the movies or dancing) instead! I 11·o:tdcr lt011· long it would take to get out of bed and ~ct read:· for this! So, the next time that you feel an ache or pain ask yourself "Am I sick enough to !lal' home from an:-' social activities, to stay away from the phone~" More than likely you will find that \'Ott \\'OU!cl be up and ready if it was a dance you were ~oing to. Keep this in mind and we will have prac­lltall\' one hundred per cent attendance in our St. John's classrooms , (unless you get mumps or measles 1!

I must also mention this (excuse the expression) '·Going on the Pip'' business. In grades one or two ma:·be a half clay was missed because you wanted to ha\·e some sort of game but when we reach our teen )·car:; these ideas should be out-grown. They are childish and immature! Imagine a teen-ager stay­ir.g all'a~· from school because she wanted to do 5omethin.~ outside of school. So the next time you think )'OU ha\'e something important to do on a !choo\ da-'' such as "see a movie or go downtown" re­membet· that the week-end is coming and you also hare time <Jfter school for such things.

"\'Ot;R FUTURE REALLY DEPENDS ON HOW

YOU SPEi\D YOUR TEEN YEARS."

Go>h. ~·au must think that someone wound me ~P before I started but I really wound myself up dur­mg the past two weeks! I bet that some of you are describing me as being "square'' this very minute, but just think and ask yourself who really is 'square.' I ~o not mean to be a lecturer but I really feel that th1s was needed to bring our teens to their senses be-fore it is too late and they are sorry. • •

Before I close I would like to say that it would als~ be a good suggestion if everyone got the same ~o!tcla~·. pupils and parents alike. I really do not •nmk that it would make that much difference if parents were given the holiday on Saturday instead of ~.lo~da~·. This certainly would bring up the "pres­e?t hst on Mondays. Put the idea intci considera­ltonJ

1f you ha\'e any ideas or suggestions, send them to

PAT,

TEEN EDITOR,

DAILY NEWS.

Song Hit SAD MOVIES (MAKE ME CRY)

(SUE THOMPSON) Sad "' · He ".'0 \'Jes always make me cry.

S Said he had to work 0 I I Tb went to the show alone. An~Y turned out the lights And ~urned the projector on.

1 s JUst as the news of the world startF.d to begin aw my darlin' and my best friend walk in.

~ough I was sitting there A ey didn't see. w~d so hthe~ sat light down in front of me. 1 alen e k1ssed her lips ·

A Illest died nd · ·

1 sta:~ the middle of a colored cartoon Oh ed to cry Oh' 0t· oh, sad movies always make me cry.

' 0 • oh sad movies make me cry.

So I Ani! got Up and slowly walked on home,

And mama saw the tears S 'd I An .at 'What's wrong?"

Jl·d_so to kep from telling her a lie S u,t said '

ad rn . ' Gh, oho~~s ~ake me cry. Sact m' . , o '·

OVJes make me cry;

I

I

SKATING OUTFITS Endorsed by "CAROL HEISS"

(World Figure Skating Champion) Constructed with leather lined white ca.lf ~oots and Sheflield steel chrome plated blades. Ladtes SllCS 4 - 9

$13·95 PARKER & MONROE Ltd •

,Skating At The Stadium

The dominating pcwc1· :~1 the S!.i:~iam on Saturday 11!;ht:> IS th~ ho:key game~: I bel that the:·~ are quite a numh:r of adu•ts who are glad of thb. C~t now a large numucr of skJ~crs ar;• seen at the Stadium on Fr!·· day and Sunday n:·~hts. So tt seems as if the t~cns still get in theil' regular sl;ating hours e~ch week and more than Ji';cly t> i" is added to the extra time sr-·lt at thr. games. · ::~·nc of those sl;~ting at the

s~ :::um during the weekend \\'."~·:-

Dressed like 17th century warriors, teen-agers of Geneva, Switzerland, participate in a night pro­cession climaxing a day-long festival cel~brating the Escal~de, on December 11th. The annual celebra­tion is held in honor of the same day in 1602 when a steammg bowl of soup saved the c1ty.

J P:T\' Powcl', Harold Squires, Paul.Hogan, Tom :.laking. Gord Hovcncamp, Bob Jacl;man, Lois Ennis. Kay Burke, Rosemary H~arn. Gertrude ~lackc)', Helen Hamlyn. Len Conway, Berilard Baird, Pat Flemin1, Jim Fle~t, Sonny Wilson, Shirley ~larllU, Pegg)' ~!aloney, Fl'ances Roche, Ann Rumbold!, ~Iamie Dillon, Libbv :\lacCormae, ~like Caul, Gera.ld Rice, Tom Power, Tom Owens, John Christopher, Pete Densmore, 2\!arion Coleman, Marion Dobbin, Catherine Bren­nan Linda Hamlyn, Diane Lane Len' Ralph, Bob Woods, Briall Lawlor, Bernie Bennett, Harry Walsh, Louise Godden, George Warren, Patricia Ridgley, Kay McGrath, Jeanette Walsh, Be~ty Dobbin, Emmie Langmeade. Jtm Power Jerome Dinn, Joan Bren nan, Betty Dunphy, Bonnie Fagan, Patricia Squires, Bett, Roche, Doug Fleming, Bob Dow· den, Leon Fitzgerald, Ron Ab· bolt, Jim Johnson, Bob Gollop, Rosemary Brennan, Theresa Putt Diane Ring, Barbara Neary Eile~n Buckle, Joan Tobin, Ed. Neville, Joe Mulrooney, George Green Derm Connolly, John Perry: Eg Billard, Pete Miskell, Sandra Kearse)', Pat Brockle· hurst, Sheila Hallahan, Loui~e Buckle, Joan Murphy, .Mane Hunt, Patsy Eddy, Rae Coultas, Cathy O'Brien, John Janes, Pat Hearn John Fisher, Joe Janes, Gordo~ Glynn, Harold Fitz· gerald, Gordon Fitzgerald, Gail )!cades, Barbara Bemister, Jean Wall, Joan Predham, Deanne Hurley, Cathy Webbe:. Ron Pearcey, Junior King, Ertc Pear· cey, ·ches Lake, Da~e R)'an, Frances Hanames, She1la ~lah· one)', Lorraine Osborne, Regina

Bits And Pieces

Around Town I really didn't say very much besides lecturing

In the opening column so it seems as if I shall have to do it here.

A touching event was held at the Gymnasium of Holy Heart of Mary Regional High School on Thursd~y night, November 23, as the pupils of grades ten and eleven of this year received diplomas fm· their last year's work. Special congratulations are due to Joni Murphy who received the Governor General's Gold Medal for first place in all the Catho­lic schols in Newfoundland. Also congratulations to Isabelle Gladney, first place in grade ten of last year and to Maureen O'Brien who placed first in last year's grade nine results. To each and every girl who re­ceived a diploma, congratulations are ~!so due.

Now for gossip, I heard during the week that

Bill an<! Gloria were broke up. I do not know who is the cause of it but I bet most of us can make a very good guess· Well I am not going to do any guessing here (I may be wrong) so try to figure it out yourself.

I want to wish a Happy Birth· day to Bob who celebrates his birthday today the 25th. I really do not know how old he is but I cnn make a very good guess, but guess work is not good enough. I wonder what we can do to make his birthday a memorable one, ma)•be the two Daves will think of something, they are good at things like that. Also Happy Birthday from Sharon.

Sheila and Ron still seem to be completely wrapped up in each other, I doubt if they know if anyone else really ex· ist1. Did she give you a good reason for not going skating on Sunday night, Ron? I think it was a considcra ble one and at least she went down ll}lectat­ing,

Tom and Phil are seen to· gether quite regularly here lately, Where you see Tom you see Phil and where you see Phil you see Tom. Do you think that this couple could be a prediction for a steady couple In the near future? I am not so 1ure, although I could be wrong, .

Jeanette Is going with Bo now. I wonder how long they last together, maybe IJy the time you rend this they will be broke up. Well everyone ha5 their own ways of going steady. Go out with him for a few weeks and then break up, Think It Ia a good idea?

A certain girl aecms to think that there Is no one like Junior. Wonder If he feels the same way about her. I bet he do, for how could he help it. The clrl I am •peaking of Is really \'try nice and I am positive that

the two would make the ideal pair.

Bill and !llaura seem to be going out together quite regu· larly here lately. Think they will last long? They really make a nice couple and I think they like each other a lot. I guess that is the main thing. But Maura, what happened to our "Young Maids Club?"

Rus and Bud are back to­gether again after being broke up fur two months. Gosh, they must really like each other to go back after that length of time. I bet that they will last longer this time than they did last time. At least everyone seems to think so. Wonder if they are right.

Dave seems to be all wrapper! up in someone hut no one scem5 to know whom not even the someone herself. Got any ideas.

Bob and Ruth make another steady couple for this week. They were really meant for each other and everyone realize this.

Joan and Danny are also go. ing out together but there is still some doubt about how long they wm last. Maybe they will surprise us.

Dave and Florence going out together was really an unex· peeled happening, But with the tcen·ageers of today every. thing is unexpected. (Guess it was the same way with all the teens through the. years).

Mary and Jerry arc going out together I found out, but to tell you. the truth it was entirely by accident. A certain girl forgot for a minute who she was talk· in~ to. Well I think that they will make a nice couple and I bet that they will last Jor R • long ·while if ~ certain person has anything to do with it.

Received a li~t of skaters at the Arena yesterday but it was too late for publication this week so I wlll use it next week. Thanks for the letter "friend."

Top · · Predictions . (By PAT)

1-"Run To Him" ............................ Bobby Vee 2-"Happy Birthday, Sweet Sixteen"-:-Neil Sedaka 3-"The Lion Sleeps Tonight" ................ Tokens 4-11Johnny Will" ............................. Pat Boone 5.:_"Commancheros" ........................ Claude King 6-"It's All Because" ........................ Linda Scott 7-"It Will Stand" ............ .,,, ................ Sho'wmen

8-"A Certain Girl" ............................... Ernie K. Doe 9-"Up A Lazy River" .... .... .... .. .......... Si Zentner

N . II J' F' 10-'iNever, ever ................................ 1ve tve

•~c ,:_,_..._,, t'l .. ~_•'''- ~·· ,•,• f

tops • zn pops

•• • • , ..~;· ~ t .. ~'' - ' l '. '.

1-''Big Bad John" ........................ Jimmy Dean

2-'·Runaround Sue" ................................ Dion

3-"Sad Movies" ............................ Sue Thompson

4-"Fool Number One" .................... Brenda Lee

~"Ya Ya'' ........................................ Lee Dorsey

6-"Hit The Road Jack" .................... Ray Charles

7 "C . ' " R 0 b' - ry1n .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .... .... .... .... .. .. oy r 1son

8-"Let's Get-Together" ................ Hayley Mills

9-"An English Country Garden" ..... Jimmy Rogers

10-1'Tvwer of Strength" ................ Gene McDaniels

N.Y. Becomes

Twistin NEW YORK - This city has

tumcd intc. a twistin' town. The latest dance fad has become ~uch an excitement factor that rtubs, hotels and e\·en rlime·a· dance palaces are featuring the twist.

In line· with the trend, The Roundtable, swank boite on 'the town's East Side, is going twist· in' all the way,

After Belle Barth's engage· ment ends next week, the club is switching to an all·lwist policy. According to )!orris Levy, head of the nitery, the twist policy starts on November 20, when Bill Black's combo and the Orchids come into the club as alternating combo twist groups. Club has been running Sunday afternoon twist sessions for the past few weeks and claims they have been most sue· cessful.

!lleanwhilc, Alan Freed has returned to New York, scene of· his greatest triumphs, and is opening a new club on the site of the defunct Camelot' Club will be called Alan Freed's East Side Twist. Operations be· gin on November 16, when a Philadelphia group headed by Georgie Young will start the twist festivities. Young's combo has backed record talent in the Quaker City at hops and dances and is reportedly a hot twist group.

As an Indication of the In· tensity of the twist publicity In New York, the .venerable Honeymoon Lane, one of Broad· way's better known dlme·a· dance halls, now has a sign on the outside of the entrance ex· plainlng tliat. you can. do the. twist there every night. The group that plays the music is called the Twisters.

REVIVAL TIME

Twist records appear to be doing rather welt during the twist revival. Chubby Checker's release, which was issued last week, jumped way up into the

. ' I'

:'<io. 55 slot on B~IW's "Hot 100'' chart this week. And re· cords by Joey Dee, the Royal· Tones and Danny Peppermint are getting sales in \'arious parts of the country. There · arc lew companies now who do not have twist albums on the market - many by society bands.

There are music veterans who think that the twist craze is merely a short·lived (ad. Buddy Deane, for one, of station WIZ in Baltimore, claims that "the twist is about as up·to·date as the Charleston." He claims the dance has all but faded from the Baltimore teen scene. But last Wednesday in Dempsey's restaurant in New York, where many music men gather, one lively promotion man was seen demonstrating the twist next to the crowded luncheon tables, and explaining how it was notl1ing more than the Lindy hop of years ago. The twist will also he featured in a movie now l!Oin~ into production call· cd "It's Trad Dad," which will feature a flock of traditional jazz musicians and rock and roll acts, including Chubby Checker, U.S. Bonds, Del Shannon and the Dukes of Di~ieland, as well as English artists Chris Barber, Alger Bilk, Kenny Ball and Helen Shapiro.

. . A PEDESTRIAN 'WHO · :.(fio-ss·ED oN .THE-YELLOW •• , If • • • '.' •, • ·.•

- • ! 'I . ·-..

· Dunne, Alice McGrath, Donna Goobie, Betty O'Leary, Kay Holden, Bob Burton, Tony Kelly, Roger Maunder, and John Murphy.

Skating At The Arena

Hockey Is also being played at the Arena hut they usually have General Skating after the games which is a treat for many, although the ice is not in the best of condition after a game! But everyone enjoys the skating, nevertheless. Some of those skating there during the week·end were:-

Paul Billard, Patsy Ridgley, Pat Malone, Patsy Ryan, Dar· roch Biggs, Barb Eddy, Gret Blllard, Donna Pike, Bob Bar­rett, Irene Power, Daryl Power, Theresa Philpott, Dave Tobin, Barb Buckle, Patsy O'Toole, Rhodie Martin "Gerry" Malo­ney, Dave Lawrence, Carol Hoi· lawny, Sheila Power, Mary Power, Carol Beer, Baxter Brown, Georgina Earle, Dianne Lane, Bruce Pike, J o Mugford, Vickie Rockwell, Derm Connol· Jy, Sharon O'Brien, Bob Law­rence, Don Hutchings, Tom Bar­hour, Ross Hiscock, Lil Hitchen, Heather Dominy, Jerry Jenkins, Len Pearcey, Charlie Morrissey, Patsy Eddy, Peggy Furlong, Furlong, Tom Hayes, Les King, Eileen O'Reilly, Ed Hayes, Dun· can Best, Gail ·H,yes, ·Patsy Johnson, Dave Simmons, Linda Atwill, Bob Simmons, Gerry O'Reilly, Dave Duff, Gini ;\lar· . tin, Richard Yabsley, Dulsie Horwood, Keith Darby, George Leaman, Wince Worthman, Bud Hunt, Ron Wilson, Dianne Pen· nell, Calvin Anstey, Dot Knight Peggy O'Neill, Jon! Murphy, Tub Sears, Rosemary O'Neill, Herb Abbott, Dave Pennell, Evelyn Austin, Don Churchill, Bob MaLee, Rose Collins, Frank Collins, Gloria Fry, Janet Vick· ers, Bob Young, Shirley Hu~~o sey, Les McGrath, Les Ryan, George Grean, Ruth Adams, Allen Warren, :Qave Saunders, Gerry Warren, Joyce Nose· worthy, Rolyn Mitchell, Tynett Rideout, Dave Butler, Vie Walsh Tony Spurrell, Mutt Worth· mann, Erling Biggs, Judy Pike, Andrea Pack, Shirley Smith, Dave Churchill, Dave Flemln1, Bill Jeans, Darry Seward, Alex Yetman, Ralph Tottle, Wayne Folkes, Ebon Ash, Art Pearce, Art Windsor.

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·. By CASSIE BROWN

Hello. ljatl I'll' firsl Christmas ;:low • thi' ll'!'~k. Don'l how why, Ull·

less· it was the ~hilclrcn dis~uss· in£ presents for different cull· sins, or nwyhc it was the one

1

crisp, l'nld d~y we had. What· ' c1•cr il was, lrlt decidedly christmass)' ... for a while.

ll;n't our weather simply won· dcriul?

PEOPLE AND TIIINGS For a new, refreshing out·

look on abstract painting (sez our Paul Sparkes) be sure and study the Art Page today. Paint· lngs are done by Ron ~lcCon· nell.

Saw Betty Thistle in a hit of rehearsal the other evenin~ for TilE. SJIADO\V IN THE GLEN, direcled by Jeremy . Burst. While it's Betty's first appear· ance on stage in a couple of

Wa~ a little early lor an in· len·icw one day this week, ·in the west end of the city, so hav· in:{ fifteen or so minutes to

CH\\.OS' e~nd MISSES' . WOOl lR\M SUPPERS

v.MSS . . BlUe and Red. ~ ' p.v'ai\abl~ 111 (j 10 .... $1·2.<J

DS' Srz.e - .... CHlL . ,4e ~nssES' .Sizes 11-3 · .... . $1 • •

. ·.'

For that special "made in Newfoundland" gift, remember we. have two shops. Jubilee Gmlds on Duckworth' Street, and .N.onla on Water Street. You JUSt simply can't go I wrong, ,

SAVE MONEY ,. . . .

......... ,., ...

THE DAILY NEWS;·ST.:JOHN'S, ·NFLD., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2.5, 1961

~ ' ' . . . .

ARCADE· LINGERIE, .SWEATfRS VARIETY STORE.

-~ ......

--· . ~

Social-Personal - (~())umn-

W.JII.S, GEORGE STREET UNITED CHURCH

The Senior Auxiliary of the W.:I!.S. of George Street United Church held their Thank-offer· ing meeting in the Lecture Hall of the Church on Nov. 9th. Mrs . N. W. Wln5or was in charge of the worship serVice. Special soloists ·for the evening were, Miss Margaret Pelley. and Mrs. Peggy Pittman. 1\lrs. Jean Tiz· zard accompanied both soloists. A film; . "The Secret of the Gift," proved appropriate and enjoyable.

The regular· monthly lileetin&

WELCOME nosrEss

Will Knock at 10ur with Gifts and from . FriendlY. d l\'ei~hbours ~nl Civic and Socia On the occasionthe New comer to

The Birth of a

PHONE 4664~. and 964213

. '

Chests Room

men only, this tall, Gershun, chest Is

accents, lliddcn r: chest away from

KA\' SHERWOOD In familY sharin! when th2 subject <

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·.,.;.,..n.t< to set a good e

are taught 11 and play equipmcn or closet and (

' ·space can be worked o cably. But to ask two

r .lo double up on dres ' space is to set rh friction. \Ve'l'c trie

JI;!E!ems so logic:~! and si tt.e bottom thrc your spouse wh

along with t But this dil·ision

into account t~e items to be stored.

soon the head is slipping his c

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DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD .. SATU.l\I)AY, NOVEMBER 25, 1961 1 ~~ ! - ~. -

Chests Give Home Room For Harmony

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1 r mrn only, this tall, h~ndso me chest of drnwers. Designed by •::non Gmlmn. riJest Is lin:shcd In nnllque1l while lacquer with j~l men:!. llin!l1·n ··~stcrs mnkc It easy for the homemaker to 11 ~1 rout ""~)· trom w:~ll. j

!i.\1' SIIF.Itlnlllll an:l shirts. T h i s leads to !l fam::y ;:::~ri::g hit a stro:~g words and s~parate dres

-~~~ ·o~·:r!l t~::o ~u\iect l•f desks I scrs. J •. ,~ l~.!· ,~~~5 ~~r~ l';,:1:0~ up. One, ::l:l ;; ::::: ir i; ,lifiicult for I E1·en though SCI'crcly tlmlted by ···~::; w ;~: :~ '"'"' ;·xamplc. the sm3ll size of most bed· ,. .rooms. furniture designers arc

:.·., ::J p:ay cr,·.•i:•m:nt. Sh::r· men only" chests and ward·

Your Pocketbook

BY FAYE HENLE Has any salesman suggested you

rent it instead of buying it? Latest figm·es show that 3 out of every 10 families now arc renters or a wide variety of products and that consumer renting is now a $100 million· a·year business.

When should vou rent? should you buy'!

When

1 You alone can answer these Qt~cstions, because they per· Claude Bede as Julius Caesar in the Canadian Plav tam to your own pattern of , , ; £ Sl 1. • • . • • J ]' · C · d' · • spending Here arc ers prduod.on o , 1anc~pea1e s u Ill~ aesar, aect· guides: · 50 m c ed by Tony Van Bridge, designed by Brian Jackson.

I . . which is scheduled for Thursday, November 30th, al 1 Figure how much II costs to own 1 Memorial Universitv Theatre.

I a product. Include the initial I ___________ :·_ · ---- · · · · · -- .. --- · .... purchase price and financing.

I charges if )'Oil are not pay in~ 1 Se A F Th B 1 cash. :-~ext. figure the cost or w prons or ose azaars ; maintenance. Finally. survey

the usc )'OU make of the par· MARY BROOKS PICKEN 1 slrin;; to each side of apron or. wrong side. Stitch ncckbanG ends to side edges of apron

.. ,:;·c:• are lJtdrt lo ;h~re 1

, responsible for excellent "for

::: :! r:c;:l ::nd i:e·,rGom robes. The l'aricty of styling, ":::1 "~ ;, ",';';d o:11 ami·J of woods used, of finishes is c1::·. BJI lo ~.,~ I'.I'O people 1 ~:real. In general, interior :~ :);:;,. ~P o:: drmrr or space is planned fot· specific. :c;: ~;m i• t~ •cl •he >tagc m3sculinc clothing - shirts, !:: :::;::0~ \le "' tried it. socks, bulky sports sweaters

and so on. of

"What is the good of sitting on the throne when the otl.er fellows givf! all the orders." The Dauphin (Jack Medley) asks Joan (Anna Reiser) in the Canadian Players' production of Saint Joan, by G. B. Shaw, which is scheduled for Friday, December 1st. at Memorial University Th~·ltre. The Pfays are sponsored by the St. John's Knvanis Club.

I ticular product, ! :\Iter visiting a number of baza·

t ars last fall, I found that there I For example, if you need a car are two types of aprons thai

II for year·round transportation. sell the best. figure carefully how much that

I car costs you on a monti1Iy Every once in a while you hem· I basis - repairs, insurance and a woman say, "I'd like a waist· gasoline. Query car rental line apron," hut at church baz-1 services in your area about the aars the one with a bit• that 1

monthly cost of rental, specify. fits over the shoulders sells 4 '

.lind outside edges of apron. binding over ends of tics, as ir. I, and ov~r ends of nelkband. as at J. Bind inside edge o( neckline, beginning at seam in back, as at K.

Smnc include mirrors 1nd buill· , In li~htlng-. Others have I F Th w

;~~; ~0 lo;~t:.l .m;l ;im:>le to space for tics. or e omen·. :;•:;~ t!.c ho::o~: thrc~ draw· I r.; :o yo:1: s;ou;c ll'hile you To conserl'e floor space, dressers r:.,;:l a!on~ •.n!h th~ top arc likely to be tall, rather !:;: Bjt this di\'i;io:l doesn't than wide, to make best usc of :,l! '::J Jr:o:!:!l t':c l'aricly floor space. r. ::m lo rc ;torrd.

1 \\';mlrobcs which nrc \ower and

: ;~::. the hc~d of . the 1 ll'i~ter ha.vc space for hanging ::~e :; ;.1?~111~ h~> cuff hnks I su1ts or Jackets. !J:jle:c~:ef;. 11 ;;I ch elwin

Moose Hide, Repairs And

Roofing

Shindigs cj ~i~:i!Jr sm:1ll items into

1· If n treat of this magnitude Is

t! :!:l·.rer whm you keep planned for Christmas nnd you ~;·.e; !:mes and jewelry, will have a hand In t.hc selcc· -------·-- OTTAWA <CPl - Women's ions, repair the leaky roof of

and some provisions for clcan·j Institutes are noted for the the to1vn meeting place or spon· yoJ yield to lh~ temptnt ion ing under and in back of them wide scope of their activities sor a sourdough shindig.

lion, another point should be considered.

1J t;;\ ol~s :.r.rt cn~!s into the should be made. I but few can claim to promote • t:;'.)' ~?Jcc; ne~t to his so~ks' Big dressers or chests arc hcai'Y the sale of moose hide cush· These are some of the more _;__;_ _________ : ______ ...;..._________________________ unusual nctlvitles reported by

D.C.L. •

pure dried yeast comes from Scotland

Where they mrke the Onest Bread in the world

It's QUALITY that counts particularly with Yeast. There can be no other reason for the ever·lncreaslng Newfoundland sales of D.G.L.

I Pure Dried Yeast. If YOU have not tried It yet-do so NOW! You'll get more delicious bread, tighter texture, more golden, orlspar crust, sweeter flavour and greater yield.

I tobleopoon Yoott (D.C.L Dried 8aklnr Yoall) i Pint Milk or Water (luke warm) or hoi( ond half

6 cupr Flour 6 tobletpoonr Suror toblt~poonr Butter I Err .

I ttaopoon Salt Pinch af Ground Nutm~ f1~ECTfON$, DISSOlVE YEAST ond ruror In porlofwottr, combine :~ 1 loteL~tt) lht butter and Pour, and put In o bctln, mob a ; l)w "'"'~ add tht Mille olld Wattr, 1nd Ytolt when dluoiYed, m~" .frl~flct a dowrh, Itt nl (or af;I)Jro.11lmottly 30 mlnutet. Then ft 1~ !11 Ol, C1mont1; 2 or, tucltmon '"'; 2 or. Sultono1; 2 o.r. rli~ 1 •111 '· let nt or>prolimotely JO mln~o~ttt to olmofl double tin,

'" bttc~lc Into lH'""'Ired pieces, roll round, ploct 011 c/eonlr ~~~ud worm bun croyJ, Cortr ID ~Jtcvent 1kln formlnr. Rise until :an:~~~ double tht 1/re. llnuh 1/rhUy a coaUnt of btOten err and

... '" a lood hot OYtlf,

IWEET DHOLLA BREAD OR FANDY TWISTS :i labfospoons YooJI (D.C.L. Drlod Bokinr Yoool) J cups flour I tabletpoon Salt ~quart Water (luke warm) 9 tabl11poon1 Butter I loblorpoono Milk Powder 3tabiOJpoonr Su,ar

IIGlf>oon Malt EJ<tract . l £1fs ·

~A[CfiON$, DISSOlVE YEAST In p"l of wofer, Combino (rub ~~~:CI!er) 8uttcr and the Flour, Pltue in Basin, make a hoflow, add '-'

1: tutor, ~rrs and crtam 1.1~ we//, Add Yeasl Wour and balance

4 '\uid and otJter lnlndfentl and moh olf iruo a pi/obit watm :~~r,d. Ltt ~tt li h::~tm, mob "'" ond lee ut f hour appro•. Tlltn m~ ~~~ Into klnd1 of twists ond shop~s dt~iftd, ftiu for JO

nvre., •n WGih twice, and bob In d moftrace oren.

EMRIDHED HOUSEHOLD BREAD I

I pachl Yeatt (D.C.L. Dried Baklnr YtGit) lOt cups Whlto Flour 2 rableopoonr Suaar I quart Wotor (fuko warm) 2 tobleopoont Butter I 1abl11poon Salt 2 tableopoonr Dry Milk I toa1poon Malt Extract (but not neceuory)

DIRECTIONS. DISSOlVE SUGAR In part of waler, >Ptinklt In lht Yeall and dinol~t. Ml• tltorouthlt ather drt lntredientJ, oddinr Yeort water ond ~a/Dnce of liquid, then fel ut for appro.llimocely It hourt until almost double slu. Then Jc11ead. lee Itt for IS mlnulet. Thtn cut up Into auicabfe 1/nd piece• to rise for 4S min11te1 In rreaud bread pam, cJnd bakt in a moderate oren,

GRANDMA'S WHOLE·WHEAT BREAD

f cupr flour (100% Whole·whoat fine rround) ltabl11poon Yoast (D.C.L. Dried Boklnr Yoast) I tabl11paon Solt I cup Malauo• 2i tobf11paon1 Butter · 3 tableopoonr Milk l'owdor li plnu Walor (iuhe warm) ·

DIRECTIONS: SPRINKlE THE YEAST Into o pot! ion of tho Wolot, tJnd dlnof_.t, #tub tot~ther Butter and Fleur. StJr/n~fe Salt, Milk Powder l-"10 mi•lnr pan, Add Molauts with bolonce of Wdltr. Add tilt Ytcrd solution and ml• 10 (uti devc/o,tlment, let Itt I hour approximately, then mob up drtd dlvfdt Into tuft.:~ bit sized pfecu. Then sho)Je ln.tht utual w•y. Rist for ofS minute• and bokt In d

modtratt vrtn,

the five Women's Institutes in the Canadian north.

Founded a year ago with the co·operation of the department of northern affairs, four Wls in the Mackenzie District of the Northwest Territories are busy sponsoring social and educa­tional projects .

The fifth northern WI, organ· lzcd rive years ago In Haines Junction, Yukon, has, success· fully campaigned for a school, community hall and library and sponsored bonspiels.

The success of the northern \VIs, including two inside the Arctic Circle, is related in Citizen, a publication of the citizenship department.

The m a g a z i n e saYs the women's groups h a v e done much to stimulate community life In the Isolated northern set­tlements and to improve rela­tions between whites . and In· dlans and Eskimos.

WI AT INUVIK

The newest WI in the north, and also the most northerly of the 4,000 institutes in Canada, operates at Inuvlk, N.W.T., the government's new admlnistra· tive centre In the Mackenzie River delta near the Arctic coast .

The other northern institutes are In Fort McPherson, south of Aklavik and Inside the Arctic .Nircle, and Discovery and Fort Province, both in the Great Slave Lake area.

The institutes have organized handicraft projects, hobby and fashion shows, health. lectures and recreational programs.

The F o r t Providence WI roopened a club house in a va· cant log cabin with a leaky of after raising money for the renovations. The group also started a library with books from institutes In the provinecs.

.Considerable attention is be· lng given to the production and sales of handicrafts, ranging from beaded moccasins to quill belts. The institutes found that the women of the north have a common · Interest in handi· crafts which serves as a start· lng poinf for getting a mixed group working together.

POEMS on parenthood:

Afterthought BY JANET HENRY

ing the number of miles you to 1. Locate pockets at convenient travel and the cost of gas. position for you and stitch.

Yours will not be a true survey unless your comparison is bas­ed on identical car models. You probably will discover that owning in such a case is pre· ferable to renting. If, however you live in a congested metro· politan area where you only have occasional use for a car, there is little doubt that you'll come out ahead by renting.

Consider a lawn mower. I've been told the average life of a power mower today is 70 hours. Sounds extraordinary, but figure. How long does it take to cut grass? You prob· ably will discover a new power mower will last three years. Now figure the rental on the same basis of hours. Compare the costs.

After you have made both these computations, ask yoursel£ a further question. If you had not invested the dollars in that particular purchase, what might you have done with those same dollars? Every purchase you make should be consider­ed as an im·cstment. Every investment should be made with an eye to making both your dollars grow and the en· joymcnt of those dollars in· crease.

Why would anyone rent? Why the trend? Unless it's a build­ing or manufacturing equip· men!, don't look for a tax ad· vantage. But, there is a subt· le trend in our thinking. Yes· terday we worshipped posses· sian. Today we worship com· petencc. When you rent you usually get the newest model. If there is any failure of per· formnnce, you merely return the product and get a new one in exchange. No repair bills, no annoyances.

TAKE IT FROM KATHY:

Short, Tall, Do Dance

BY KATHY PETERSON Q-My dad and mother are both

tall but I'm short for a boy. (5 feet 3 inches>. I'm IG years old.

Most of the girls I would like to dance with are as tall or taller than I am.

Is it all right to ask for a dance if your partner will be a few inches taller?-R.J.T.

Here is how you can make your own pattern :or both, blocking each out from the diagrams shown.

The apron at left requires only ~~, yards of percale or gingham and 5 yards of Was binding.

Straighten both ends of fcbric. Tear 3·inch tic strings from each selvage edge. Fold fab· ric in half lengthwise. Locate point A 1.2·inch from fold, as in diagram. Place B 61.2·inchcs in from A. Measure 7 inches to right of corner C !or D. Place E 4 inches from D, and F 11 inches beyond E. :1-!easure in 6 inches up from fold along bot· tom edge. !Gl. 1!easure 4· inches to right of A for H.

Economical of ,_,rdage, ......... ·--- .. --·-·· Draw curved lines from A to E.

F, to G. Connect H with curve as shown, for front neckline. For neckband, draw curve

Tall girls may need 1 lull yard of material to make the dis· lance E to F 151.z in<•hes in· stead of 11 inches.

At right: Several features re· commend this. It is me~pen· sil'c, requiring only I yard of 36·inch percale: it is easy to make, flattering to w~ar, and it irons easily.

s•:·aighten Iabrie. Fold on a true bias line, as in the dia· gram, with lo!d r.~::t to you. Place point B 7 inch~' to riqht of corner A. D is l~ inc~:l's to left of corner C. ·E 1nd F arc each onc·si:;th of hc~d size from D. G is nne·third ·hc~al size to lefl or D. Draw " curve from G through E to F.

Chalk off tics 21 inches ton~ m shortest point. and 21, inches wide as diaQram s!loll's. 7\lea· sure· in one line wh0rc tie \ras marked off from H for \.!) i:;ch· es away. L is l'i inch~s from J on left edge, and 6 inches from· K on right edge.

~fark cun·e from fold P, lo e:be of fJhric. then lo I. ~.L:rk un· derarm cun·e from 1 lo I. up to ccl~e. ~md aro~mcl to [old 2 inches to left or c.

Cut out apron; then rut

A-Boys, girls and dancing in· structors agree that it's most · comfortable to dance with a partner who is similar in size.

Even though this is the ideal sit· uation, there is no reason why you can't ask a taller girl to dance if you especially enjoy her company.

B /W.D

A ... ;• aa• ~e.taU tor ~~kln.g. apron~

from B to D. Shape pockets, cutting along curved lines.

neckline. Mark a pocket as at M. Cut out.

Lay this over piece cut from neck and cut second pocket of same size.

D.C.L. PURE DRIED YEAST· Back in the year nineteen fifty Would so much delight have

Those who refuse will wish they hadn't Inter on because, with tall parents. I predict that you will catch up to the girls In height and pass them by 'dur· ing the next few years.

Q-1 like a boy and I know he likes me, but when we're alone I'm tongue·lied. I think of a thousand· things I should have said after I have left him, but it's too late. Is there any· thing I can do?-D.K.W.

Seam narrow ends of ncckband together and bind outside edge of this piece. Bind poe· kets. Hem raw side edges and one end of ·tie strings.

Bind pockets across top. . Bind neckline, overlapping edges on left shoulder.

THE WONDER YEAST FOR MORE AN.D BETTER LOAVES Packed In Alum! nlum Foil Envelopes or ! lb. and 11b. tl,ns, A!k for II by name.

If your Grocer cannot 1upply you, contact:-

P. C. O'DRISCOLL LTD., Sole Distributors for Newfoundland,

P.O. BOX E5369, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND

prevailed If I could, perchance, Have been told in advance Of the lizards and snakes, And the bruises and aches, And the mountains of dirt. And the tons of dessert, And the scatter or toys, And continuous noise 'fhat "Baby Boy Henry" en·

tailed?

. .

A • A feminine chatterbox scares some fellows. You're sure this boy likes you, so why con·

Lay raw end of each tie string in three folds and stitch one

centrale on changing?

Relax, enjoy his company, and you'll think · of the thousand things you should have said on schedule. ·

Hem strings on sides and point­ed end. Pin string to \\TOng side at each corner I. Bind en· tire outside edge, beginning where one string Is joined.

Put on apron. Pin pockets In position. Remove apron and stitch pockets, double-stitching

top edges.

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Page 8: l067 THE DAILY NE s - Memorial University DAIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...l067 rscd cars and trucks sohl THE DAILY NE s by'ooURS far this rear. Why not

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ATTEND CHURCH

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------------------------------Sunday Services

Salvation Army

. . . . .. ;

THE !)AlLY :'\EWS, ST. JOHN'S. NFLD., SATURDAY,

Ye arc the light of the \\'oriel A city that is set on _a hill cmmot he hicl.

COURSE

-~l~tt o:H

: Mormon Elden Exhortation

C:llEAT ,\I'O~T.IS\'

'' I I 'A"9lican Church

Of Canada

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i;T, mCHAEL AND ALL ANGELS

St. Clare Me. (Sut~da}· next before Advent)

8.00 a.m., Holy Communion. 11.00 a.m .. Sung Eucharist; 2.30 p.m., Sunday School and Bible Class: 6.30 p.m., Evensong and Srrmon. •

Worsnlpping at Prince ut 1\'~les Annex-l.eMarchanl Rnatl

Barters llill (Barters Hill entranr·c l

l!ev. Wm l{urschinski, Past· •ll 5 Torba:v Road . I

(Last Sunday in Trinity) , 9.30 a.m., Sunday School: 11 ~

a.m.. fhe Service and Jnstalla· 1

S.U.f. Distl'ict Grand Lodge No', 2 in at~cndance.

ship-Rei'. Brown wili comhtct tion of Church Council. both morning and evening ser·

Monda)': l'ices. 4.30 p.m , Confirmation for

Boys. ST. PAUI.'S Wednesdar: 1 (Biackler A1·enuel

4.30 p.m .. Confirmation Class 7 p.m., Mr .• 1. D. Bourne.

First Baptist Church

-----·- ------104 I'ORTUGAt CO\'F: Rll. Rei', f C. Fenerty, B.A.

What greater work coid Lord do hut re;tore hi; to the earth through a !irir; phet !Amos 3:il,

Brin~ forth a hook lh;l hrlr !~ad u> out of · ·

i !Isaiah 2~: Ill ~('(I . :17: !.i·201 anrl ,r· 11p hi! once more "n thr earth.

; 2;4-t t1nd I.:;aioh 2.2·3 1 ,

I Since the drpm ''Ire lrt~. ·!rue ~o<pcl of i'hr.;t '.lac 1 ~ I 'r'· 1uni,·cr>al. ;1- thr pro1 .. ·• l told it 111H1irl fo!io"· thai I

·~· tora.tion 11·nulrl hr · Such :l rr<lor;ll '"n .1' th! 7.30 R.m., Jloly Communion;

1

II a.m.. ~lr. Geor~:e Pike:

for Girls. Thursday, St. And1·ew'~ Day: GROVES ROAD

7.00 a.m., Holy Communion. 3.30 p.m., Sunday School.

Sutulay Services: 9.45 p.m. Sunday School: 11

a.m., Morning Worship; 7.15 Hymn Sing and Evening Wor· ship,

All denominations use this altral'live efficiently designed chapel. It is built for the ·American forces stationed at Ernest Harmon Air Force Base, and is in full use for the greaier part of every Sunday.

sage of thr tl':1rrn "- 1 i Christ ~rr llar Sllr..c

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·1 A Letter From Friday: 9.30 a.m., Holy Communion;

7.30 p.m., Evensong and Inter· cession.

CHURCH OF ST, MARl' THE VIRGIN

FORT AMHERST 11.00 a.m., Mr. J. D. aourne.

Presbyterian ST. ANDREW'S

The Kirk

Guest Speaker at both Ser· vices: Dr George Hamilton. VOCM; 11.00 a.m., Morning

Worship; 2.45 p.m., Sunday School; 7.00 p.m., El'angelistic Service.

Divine Of

l Max Mercer Photc.)

-----·--. -.- Charles Dicken~

Magnetism Lost Opportun.ty te;h~·Ir~i~)·~~:::;~r~;'o~t Jesus F'onr thing> come not back, leal'in:: honw 1•' Jnin n:~ '·

The spoken word. in An<tralia, "Tr:: to no-~ . (Southside Road) (Sunday next before Ad1·entl

8.00 a.m., Holy Communion; 11.30 a.m., Sunday School -Blackhead Road; 10.30 a.m., Pre ind ·Post Confirmation Classes; 1,1 a.m., ~latins; Kindergarten Sunday School; 2.30 p.m., Sun day School; 2.45 p.m., Bible Classes; 4 p.m., Hoi~\ Baptism

,and Churci1ing of Women; 6.30

lllinistcr, Rev. Chas. I. G. Stobie, M.A. Organist and Choir· master, 1\lr. Robert MacLeod.

10.30 a.m., Bible Classes 11 a.m., lllorning Service; 7 p.m., Evening Service.

From Monday until Thursday, special E1•angelistic Services; with Dr. George Hamilton as guest speaker. Hearty singing -special music-gospel mes­sa~cs.

The sped arrow. . as you would ha•e them , Testi· I 1 The ast life I vm• and do no! hr ·

• RY REV. HR. FRED SASS fore, not because they had been I h P · 1 'r t'·1 fail ·on>rli~l<' ·

Monday: 8.00 p.m., Prayer Meeting.

Thursday: 8.00 p.m., monies.

Christian Science

Saturday: ·8.00 p.m., Rally, Seal Co\'e,

I ~ 1 b t b th h d 1 T e neglected opportunity. 1 te,· • · 1 t Youth In Luke's Gospel we have the success~s. u ecause cy a . . 7 . much 'hettrr lo! yol' 113 story ?f ,Jesus on the ;\lount of been fmlur~~: They wer.e drawn I Arab tan Pt 01 et b should fail 111 ol•rYin~ t.re

p.m .. El'ensong. Thursday, St. Andrew's Day:

,10 a.m .. Holy Communion,

You are im•ited to worship with us.

ST. DAVID'S Elizabeth Avenue at Portu&al

Cove Road Minister: The Rev J. A.

Corner Rennie's ~lill ltoad and Empire Avenue)

Sunday:

Church of Jesus Christ of Latter­

Day Saints Goldsmith. Directress of Praise:

CHURCH OF THE Miss Barhara Rose.

11 a.111 .. Sunday Service. Sub· ject of Lesson Sermon: "An· cicnl and· Modern Necromancy, I alias !\lesmerism and Hypnot· ~IORMON

ASCENSION Stewardship Sunday Moun I . Pearl 11 a.m. Morning Worship

ism, Denounced. 11 a.m., Sun· 1 Victoria Hall-Gower Street d~y School for pupils up to the i Primary: .

(Sunday next before Advent) Commissioning of Visitors. Ser· a~e of 20 years. · ; 10.00 a.m. Saturday at the Wednesday: 1 Y.W.C.A. · 11.:10 a.m., Holy Communion: 1 mon Slbject: "The 1\linisrry of

11.00 a.m., Matins; 2.30 p.m.. Reconciliation;" 7 p.m., Even­Sunday School and Bible ing Worship and Bible Study.

8 p.m .. Meeting. A Friendly Welcome Awaits Saturday: You.

3.00·4.30 p.m:, Free Readin~ Room.

Class; 7.00 p.m., Evensong, Sermon subject: "The Law, ~"thursday, St. Andrew's Day: Schoolmaster." _..'·_' 10. a.m., Holy Communion. CIIURCII SCJIOOJ.

9.45 a.m., .Juniors and Inter· Pentecosta I BROOKFIELD ROAD SCIIOOI N . ' mediates; I 1 a.m., ursery· _,.......,....,.,..,...,.~~=-.,..-

2·30 p.m., Sunday School. Kindergarten and Primary; '.30 Rl:TIIESDA TEMPLE

'Unl'ted Churc'" p.m., Sr. lligh Fellowship. 20!1 New Gower Street I 1 The Annual Every Person A. Q. Snow, Pastor, E. B.

Visitation will take place dur· Snow, Asst. Pastor. GOWF.R STREET iru: the afternoon between the Sunday:

Minister: Rev. R. W IJralne hours of 2 and 5 p.m. 10.30 a.m., Prayer Service; B.A. Assistant Minister: Rev. A You are cordially invited to 11.00 ·a.m., Morning Worship R. Smith, B.A., B.D. Director or worship with us. 3.00 p.m., Sunday School; 6.30 Christian Edttcation. Mr. A. E -- p.m., Prayer Service; 7.00 p.m., Heselwood. Organist and Choir ST. AIDAN'S Evangclislie. Director: Mr. Douglas ·osmond, Topsail Roa1l at Commonwealth Wednesday: L.R.A.l\1. A\'enue 8 p.m., Praise and Testimony.

9.45 am, Young People's Minister, The Rev. W M. Thursday: Bible Class In the 1\lcmoriai Moncrieff; Organist, Mr. Alistair 8 p.m., Prayer Meeting, Building; Adult Bible Class in Drysdale. Saturday: the Common Room; 11 a.m., sn:WARDSJIIP SUNDAY 8 p.m., :Yotmg People's, Mornln!( Wr.rship. !'reacher- 1.45 p.m., Commissioning Everybody Welcome •

'Rev. A. R. Smith. Sermon Sub· Scn·ict•; 2 p.m.,·5 p.m., Every· · -jcct "Where . the Currents of l't'l'son Visitation by the 1\len • ELIM PENTECOSTAl

Jehovah's Witnesses KINGDOM HALt" 4!1 Morris Avenue

Sunday, Nov. 26: 7 p.m., Public Address by J.

W. Hardy: "Youth's Opportuni· ties In this 1\lodern World;" 8 p.m., Bible Study: "When All Nations . Unite Under God's Kingdom." Tuesday, Nov. 28:

. 8.30 p.m., P1,1blie Address by R. Hardy: "What Is a C~ristian's Obligations?" Thursday, Nov. 20:

Transfiguration. (Luke ~~. And lly the dt\tne magneltsm of . est rule laid do'' n bl o~r in this incident I see the DIVI:•m .Jesus for latlures .. i\nd I for, , , , . th· that IUL1 ,nould I

, , , . . one am glad to thmk that tins men and 11 omen-no God 1 eckon , •111 ·., ,. 1r bco~; MAG~ET!SM OF' ,JJ:;Sl S F'OR , h · 11. th . b ed success. There had been no ~.T. amon" · 01 d . IIU~IAN FAILURES I lt"l'e "l lias t e reason. •1d CJi en I n" l'""'nn- an

• 1 • " " • • man ·thle to work his ll'a\' back \'ery s:u c "· • • wa"s found it difficult to believe there because of the1r successes, • _ . . . ... 111" hnpr-. t11at

' · 't · Id 1 · t tl t tl' -~to perf<t:t communton w1lh God. 1e1~ s.t , 0• that Moses and Eli tah were 1 11 ou lm e mean m 11 ' ··t ~n e~,,· aero em· . th~re on the ~Jaunt of Transfi"· was the reason. Had they been !lad tltere el·er been el·en one \~II c.'! ·n ;.0;1 "rle a illt.e

• 1 • · h tl . 1 • • f tl · such man-one man able to de· ~ou, "1< · 1 •• m·atton as rcpresentmg the Law . tel e >Ccause o ~~'\ successes, .· B • U'C 11 i> lh<' ,,r., . d tl P h t It . t. 1t meant that the mhmacy the)'· monstrate that he could deal 111th eca · . .11 hr. ·

an Je rop e s IS tue · · h' t tl bl to e1·er 11a< 01 111 1 th I 11! .. It . L ,I had on the )!ount was not for sm m IS own s reng 1, a e '·.· \ n d ue;;.,

a oses was mtg 1 Y tn all f .1 l'k If B t demonstrate that he could meet the 1\0iirl. · '~"'"' and Elijah was mighty in proph· po,or at ures 1th·e myse ·. u demons of the soul and slnv I teaches IOU the lir·l ·,';,·

Y B t I d th . b th II' ten I see em as smners · · ' · . · . 1 .111 crc.1 ,, . ec · u ta ts e~n c . ,. . t t , them, had there been one such wh1ch mt~ nun. d reason for their appeanng to drml n to the Sal tout • he s or) 1 t .· 10 be truthful ar. ·

. . . , touches and grips me. man, then there had been no 1 11es ·. .. .-ihl,. be .Jesus at that g1 eat moment, they Tl 1 t 1 t need for Jesus to hal'e suffered I to dull (,In P0·- · would surelY ha1·c talked with terc can le no argumen a lOU . · · y ··11 thcrrlorr '

· . . this, at least: no man erer won and dted. But there never had 1 ou " 1 11 lhm about the Law and the p1 o- 1. . . . t tl K' •d 1 been and never would be one better th~t I no . 1

phets. But they did not. ~lore· I GHSdlllay In o le r 'h"~ om, . o sttclt m"n 'fltere ,,.... tlt"t in imJlrcss upnn )nut!.e . , . •t , . . !I , f : o ly r·easoo o ts ta\'lllg " · "" u -hn-t.on o1et, t 11as ncvct te l\aY 0 d f rr ·th · man's natm·e which man could beauty ot the l ··t

Jesus to deal and to meet with ~h1 e ha tuc~css o ~ e, t e! e~~n n;t deal with himself Titere was as ti came 11om (hn,f ,rs men simply as "rcpre~cntativcs" J" urcd , ufsnGtesds, 01 sat e. e that between man' and God whi~h I and the impo>>~i11111~ nh_,;,·;~ f g \, rtlmCtlt g. Jes· ,mg om o o was no a gar- . . ,, 1·f ro11 . ·' 0 any ~ e . or 1 oup. . d t t h' h th · 11 onl>' could be dealt with from tn~ far WI on- · "

us was never •mlty of lrcatmg en par Y 0 w tc e socta Y • 1 t'l" rcsped 1t. "' d th • Idly essful ·ere God's s1de tear 'J · .. , ____.. men as "sample" or as "types". ~n. e 110r ~ucc . II . · -- ,

And fur\her, the idea that Moses I~VJted. ·!esus dtd not g1ve ~15 There was no other good enough S AI yst~! and Elijah were there simply as lime to Nicodemus because N!co· To paY the price of sin: · t • 0 . representing the Law and the d7mus happen~d. to be, a ~abbt ?f He only could unlock the gate 0 Christ Lo1·e's \'icttrn. Prophets would be something ~Is day, He did not gll'e His Of heav'n and Jet us in. I;igh completely at variance with the lime to Zacchaeus because Za~- u on the cruel Trre .1 t~ whole mission of Jesus. ·His chaeus happened to. be the bu~t- Jesus knew what was in man, \~at worthY recomp_e\ mission was not to the success· ness I?agn~te ?f Jench?. He dtd and He knew that every man . ine own chn,t. ful but to the failures. When the not ~tve H1s hme to S1mon the and woman needed the saving Make. m . 1 Pharisees protested because p~b- Phamee because he happened grace of God. And there is in All m life's blood 11 licans and sinners sat down wtth t~ be the. May.?r ~f Bethany, He Calvary divine ·magnetism for { ill fr.ll· Him He rc.nlied "They that be dtd not g1ve h1s ttme to the no- sinners. It floods the heart with P d times [or .

' .,. ' · bl f C m m because · d t k th t H k A thousan 1 a " whole need , not a physician, but eman , o ape au grahtu e o now _a e see s • ere too smal they that are sick.· I am not he happened to ?e .a nobleman me not because of successes but Ah, t~ill 1 come to call the righteous but and a generous d1stnbutor to the because of those sad failures 1 lore to !11 ·

' I . f th . ynagogue No 1 • d ht t 1 For all I I)' sinners to repentance." He had sc temes o e 5 • • whic 1 bnng a roug o my sou f!C~ come to seek and to sa\'e that these men were drawn to Je.sus Thy promise i~ my only plea, . at and 13bour which was Josl-and I cannot be- because they had n.eeds whtch, With this I venture nigh, My s\\ e , I. th t , th 11' t f they ·felt and believed .Jesus da) · ·t br 1eve . a e~en on e .nun ° ld t' f Thou ~all est burdened souls to Mv sole life. lei 1 b!'~ I

Life Criss·Cross." The Sncra-~1 uf the Clulrch; 2.30 p.m., Sun· 147 Casey Street ment or Infant Baptism will he day Church School; 7 p.m., Di· Wm. Oliver, Pastor.

Transftguratmn He was untrue cou sa ts Y. • Tl al'e tM · · · · · h t · t1 f I Thee To lore tee · j'hct. We Extend a Warm Welcome to His mtsswn. Moses and Elt The fact ts t a Ill te eyes 0 • A d die for Jo,·c ol to Ail. • jah were drawn to Him, there· Jesus there were no successful And such, 0 Lord, am I. n ,

7.30 p.m .. Bible Speaking and Reading crass; 8.30 _p.m., Min· istry Development Class.

~dministered, Broadcast Radio vine Worship. · 10.05 a.m., Old, Old StoQ

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* MUSIC

* THEATRE

the ea~el is R g1·aceful form. "Flight,'' a yellow airborne

:; 1•' ~ :·:rh hlue b8ckground. The lower painting is a good example of

:::.··; 11 ill;.;_ ~unple known shapes. technically and basically abslrad!

. , c.1r ;:! !he ll'nrk nf local painter. Ron McConnell..

(~II photos by Bill Sulley)

Th:s i• the · . · ponratt done by artist McConnell a few years ago. With the

.. • . . .

* PAINTINGS

* LITERATURE

\A New Look The Abstract

'i By PA lJ L SPARKES .McConnell's painting pleasing? j 1 It 1s a refreshing: outlook It is probably because it gives I 1 thilt i~ e\'idcnt in this pro· to the eye a blending of shape

II gressire painting. It is abstract and colour which is not foreign · ... but not the paint mess from what nature make! us I that seems to characterize so used to .•.. it deals in the ! many "abstracts" now-a-days. technical or basic way of see-1 flnsira!ly this is a simple ing something and the fleeting

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I : approach. Simple shares are \'ision in the mind's eye.

ust•d, cirelc, rectan~le. arc, 1 The picture shown on this eclipse, and the interesting re- page, called "Oasis" is certain­suit is an oasis for the labour- ly a simple composition. Yet it ing art critics. The work of holds much room for thought, St. .John's resident Ron ~lc- and for questioning. But the Connell: the "flat" systematic clean sweep of the elipse

1 and orderly cnncepts are some· shaped pool (in a desert) and I thing which we rarely come by the definite stand of the point i here in our sphere of paint- meaning the trees are clear in

• \ ! in~. ! thcm>ch·es. whrt her we can : llow do{'!' h, rxplain hi-=. ri~ualize ;,n O:l"l"i nr not, in j p.:ln•ln~·' .. :: i:- ~inrp 1 (• ••• : 11thrr won!". tl1r~· rin nnt pttch . li."C is 1,1:11lt> of ;imp\(• \\ r•:\: q; in:o H ''\\'ll;r{ in thp v:nr·ld is

l.nm1 11 :-.h.m"~ .. , we :1rr ~~·t·, thilt nd1 dn1ll:;! 11 qu~ndary. ling ""''"" t:·o:n ll<c mc.':Jdi~!P<S \ t\notiwr intcre,tn1;: type of

·1 ma~3cs of paint th;.t mai<c the ' picture IS also developed out of : paint·cam·as merchant happy the use of arcs and simple j • , , essentially, jJr. j!cCunnell shapes. What the artist calls ' is a1h·ancing ir. a new field of ''Spacescapcs" are globes on a

'.1 :painting. conccircd hy himself. background of the outer spJce. · •·: ! To r;ew his paintings as they There are seascapes, and land-

\. 1 are ordmarily displa;·ed on the scape,, so why not, the least walls. is lo become nnmediatc- complicated of all, a ~ace-

: I;· intere,tcd in what prompted scapc?

. ... \. i liH•m. preci>e, not . ahore m. II is r<•al lifr paintm~. >Urh

:and hanng somctlun.~ to rm- . as the portrait shown here. h;l' • i part los fell' ah>ll'ircls ha1·r). 1 a ~unlity of dark drama about

It is called •·oasi:'. · The blue small 1\'aler stands out against the bland background, and t!ce straight balanced "Palm'' shapes give an interesting

I :\Oil' this is nnl the only form ' it. The far·c has only the nc~r>· of ;,hslrart pointing. neither is '>nry line' from the rral. and

I il the ultmwte is the art. of 1' !he Jrkrne,rs a!'C near . cmme. hut rt is at least a plea>· . the darkened hal'k~romHI 11irts 1ng break fmm the utter]\' I the suhtect immediatrlv bd~rc poinlless painting whirh hottl~- I the l'iC;I'rr. hut po;sih.ly mor~ necks the field today. But then 1 art 'Appreciators' would · ~o it will he asker!, why is ~!r.l for" the abstracts.

composition.

, IN THEATRE: i .

Tech Course! To. Buy Theatre A new production course fur I which ha\'C been under way i some of the best talent in this A Great

, technical personnel of the the- since Novembe~ 2. With about : country. . . . · atre was started Nofcmber ,13 a dozen entenng the produc· I In addrtwn to l\!r. Gascon, R b dt

School Opera "The Ant"

Debagt 'at the National Theatre School lion course, which includes :who personally supervises the: em ran ! of Canada 1191 l\lountain St., classes in everything from . prnrluctinn courses and works ' 1 J\!ontreHI 'with 8 ceremony make-up tn directing, the 'with the student director~. and DR. STUTTGART-The Land Dl\. nt·,:;J·:LlJtll:]' ... 1 "' ,.,.

I which also officially marked school's total enrolment for its : his present staff there will he: of Baden-\\'urttemherg which """a,iron ol tl11· .il h ",·:I; .. 1 the beginning. o[ the second I second year is more than 75 i Robert Pre1·ost, prominent two years ago had alrcadv made tllC )(:J,ir:d TIJr·;l'n: i11 li':· ·~~ ·, year of operations for the talented young people from all Canadian the~tre rlesi~ner who a stir when it decided 'to pur- i renl url· heir! f'''"i' 1 h ;.,brr :<; school. parts of Canada. : has been wtth the CBC, the : chase a big collection of mod- • !11 21, th,. Jl•.·ul:-dw o::c:· ·."

The school's executive di- Mr. Gascon pointed ?ut that : Theatre~ du Nouveau i.londe I' ern paintings, is now going to : lih<·Jn in l'"''"'ld•,rl pre_,, : -d rector, .lean Gascon, one of entry to the school ts based , and at ::.tratford. , buy for its Stole Gollcn· a' lor tilt' f1r:·t 111n•· tlw rq)" .. ,

Canada's most outstanding strictly on talent. Auditions I .lean Roberts, former stage self-portrait of Rcmb~anrlt , "Die Amri.-1·" t Tlw ,\nt, b• t:u· actor-directors and head o[ Le at'c ~eJrl each year in every 1 director at Strotford on A\'on, :which is known only to art ex- i young Gc1 m;111 ''"111'"' -cr p1 '"I Theatre du Nouveau l\!onde, provmce by a board of prom· l England. : pens but not to the public. The I Jlonncfeld,-l'I',nl i • Jc 1

I>' <·• stated thai with the addition inent theatrical ad.iudic~t?rs ! ~lark Neg in, designer, :e· ; picture which was painted rlur· , llotheye~. the wcll-knuwn l< 1

of the production course, e\'CI'l' who select the most pronusmg ' cenlly of the Stratford, Ontano .. ing the last period of the mas·: man stage and film actress ap· phase n[ theatrical training you~g _actors and actresses for , property department. ter's life is ot present in the I reared as Senora. one of the now exists under one roof for admisston to the school. , Annette Gorcean, formerly possession of a British owner i title parts, in ~lax Frbcll's the first time in canada. 1 'fhis _ . bilingual school is : head of wardrobe dCP?_rtmcnt ond expert's helicre that it is ; i latest drama "Andorro" whirh

Students who completed ! nmquc m ).lorth Amerrca- ' :,_r the Strotford, Ontarro, fes· l'cry hi~h artistic l'alne. The· is going to hare its premiere their first year in 1960-61 were ! r\·en ~ore so now that . the , tn·ol. . Land nf Baden-\\'urttcmberg l at tl1e Zurich Theatre. joined by about 30 new stu- 1 prodncllon course makes 11 a · Their pupils arc practically has earmarked 2.400.000 marks

1 dents in the acting classes !. true "l~,bor~tory for I he lidng a_ "cross·s.ectwn .. 1:,f Canarl~. for the purchase of the 1rork. 1

theatre, said ~lr. Gascon. , 1 on~1ng f1 om a bti,ht-c) eel. 1 1· hut srnce thr total price Handle Founds

Two Art· Awards

I, : )ear-old mis~ like Eileen 1-'itz- t· t 't'IJO ll"ll D · 1 '

He cleclarrd that the result, , ", 1 . amoun s " ·'· 1 · " rube 1e : . , . ~croll of Torontn. to 30·) rar· ~l;1rk, rt wrll he nrcrs,arv to : ,nf the ftrst sdwol )ear harl old Enc nonkin. wrll knml'n ... , , .. · · . , B t I bPrl1 bei'Ond cxpc<·totion and ( . I j,}l. r another 1.~ milliOn lll.Irk>' eques , that the. two n;on.th~ the ~Ill· PI!'" cs~JOI1il ll~!clllllrral actor·. thrml~h prilalc dor.alion' if the! . i • · • II' w rs enm et m the eli· 1 and f JJ· 1 \\' t 1 ' dents >Pend eoch ,nmmc•r at , · " 0 ,!(en- ur tern 1 Cr~ . . , . i the Stratford Shaltespe.Hian: rectors course. wants to hecome the owner of· Dll. ~ll:'-:!Cil:-At Ib a!mual

Fcsti\'al had been of ex· 1 ! the pamtrn~. . mcctm;: _In ~!much. the lust~ry • . 1 b f' I I commiSSIOn of the Ba\'al'lar. ccptwna rne tt to them. 1 Korl Heinz Drastn a11d Rolf • l f s · h d G • . ' , ,.,car cmy o rrence as e·

At this m!lment. said ~lr. . erman Szymonski (arts); Walter Frank cided to take care o[ the pub-Gascon, the school is trying to the well·k?own Gcrma~1 actor lication of the literary bequest

DR. HANOVER -Following find permanent heodquarters who dwd tn August thrs yea~. , of the great German historian the example set by other Laen- in ~lnntreal and is engaged in Cr;ti•C_S (theatre); Boy Gobert for h1s I Leopold von Ranke. The com· der of the Federal Republic of a Canada-wide financial cam- I prcsentatton of t~1c. part of a 1 mi»ion furth•·r more a~recd to Germany, the Land Lower Sax· paign to rai~e $250_000 for the memhr1: of the SS-Lorps 111 thr ;rl up lwo nrw 11cparlmrnt:: ony has now also founded two capital cxpenrlilures which are nll";zes f~lm "\: IHI an•.you. Dr. Sorge'!" OIIC fnr lh•· purpn>P nf rnakm~ prizes which arc to be present- necessary to set up an experi· r· 1 ~ Ca_rl l·.h~rt. tnc turmer man- JH·•·parillnry arron:rmcntc. for ed ann~mlly by the Ministc~ of mental theatre and prol•ide 1.1 , Ill\ 1 a_~rn~ dm•t·tur of_tne \\'c>t ncr·. ;m rrlitinn nf ~r,utTrs on Get· Educatron. The two P,rtzes with a wide range of technic;JI . FB .. \:\1\l·TIIT-Tiw fnl· lr~1. Up1·ro I mu>rel, orHJ )lary man sorial hist1>ry of the nine-created rcccn!ly arc, the Low· , <'qnipmcnt. Jn".'.'lll~ ;rrtrsts ha1 e bern aw;mi-

1 \\ r~n~an. the famous chorco-, tcrnth and tll'cnticth century

~r Saxon Art Prtz_e and the • . I till' prrzcs of t~e. A>socr· graplwr. tda?crngl. ~lr>. Wig-, lllltlcr ProtrS>nr \\'rrnrr Colll~. Lower. Saxon Pnzc for . th~ Four more to~ professw~a], n. of German crrtics for [man wa> lurt,termore honmrrc1l, of Heirldher~ un 11·1·rsity; the

Promoboi.t of Young Artists, from the C~n.adwn Theatnc~l . u l: lngcbt:~:·; Bachmann 1 by her appmntment as honor-~ other one is to compile the sour-re)Jresenhng a cash value of scene have JOined the schools •. ~.lllll'c) for llw Tlnrllcth I ary mcmher of the Deutsche ces on German foreign policy 55,000 marks both. staff, which already includes 1 '..ear," a collection of essays; Opera in West Berlin. during the same period.

bad:~.oUtl<l I I l. II I d . ' anc pa e 11g 1 ig 1te subject there is a look of sadness

THEVISION: • a1nter And Environment

'·!~teet that .· . . .,j on fi•·e Brcn\ rro~ment i dtrcct mw~rnation. I usu:rlly relaxes by welding metal pieces , . wt:] he ~t-tsh. Colum-lwork from my sketche~. whirh Into thrce·dimensional forms. · Arts. Tux.umned. on , hal'c been done. direct from 'l'akao Tanabe, who was born · p

111 /~ 1:n), :-\o,·. ' nature a net dem·e my Jllspir- in Prince Rupert, B.C., teaches

, r.H·.1ork· .• S1 on the

1

' ation ,while enlarging upon at the Vancnuver School of Art, · J<ck Sl 11 them. ond denies the Japanese in-

Be llin 1"1., 111 \t; Ed D. C. Binning not onll works fluence some find In his work. •~-d Tak 0111 "' C.ordon 1 on canms hut in mosaic tile "I was born on the coos!, and

~~ ao Tnnah 'Ill ' q tho· c 11'1 and has t•rcntcd murals for have been surrounded by trees t· d! 11nrk 1 ., ''hat extent ~ 01 re· some ncwly-constrnctrd Van· and forests all my life. I felt

1o"1 11 , 1 . ~ annda:S 1 cou1-er buildings, lie is head I "I was born on the coast, and

'· 111 hit•nc<•d: of the University of British I used forest and trees as a l•ll(' ~f·t C'olumhia Virw Arls Committee.~ motif.'' ·

·.. , r-a :. Ill. B r. at !!is works ha1 1• h1·t·n t•xhihit!•d I' Paintings of all five artists . , 1 • 11 :1'

11 ''1;11 n·-ult rn ~;dlci ic•s in 1-:Jrrn]ll', South I will he shown accompanied by · . of tiJ, .. 1'~'' 111' t<•· Aml•ric·a. ('un:rdn and !Ia• Unit- a special score for woodwinds r· Hate., .la,.t 1' 1 \lith eel Stah'> composed by Paul Ruhland. •n••l1an pr Sh,ulholt. 1 r:nrdun Smith. who teaches Greg Barnes is narrator and II·1' lllllltlt•·p·Jint r· t tl l' . . [ .. I I ' H C '•nl·• , f ' . · J I a !!' 111\'!'I'S!tl• II Bntrs I lOSt IS enrv OtnOr ,. . ''Ill IIIli Sl. . . . . ' . Alernent .. 1 ' · t.u\-! t olumhra, wolk> amnnd the ~ :n'Pirt•!'h think I'm: I'. noels nrar lu; home e.1ch morn-! c 1 natme" h · f o ICr) · 1 · <' 111~ or inspiration. When he

IItle from · is not painling or teaching he

The program is produced in the CBC-TV Vancouver studies by Aria Saare.

• $2-MILLION WORTH OF CANVAS

NEW YORK-A young woman enjoys the "scenery" at the Metropolitan Museum of-Art here November 17th. A small part of that scenery, hanging on wall in rear, is Rembrandt's "Aristotle Contemplating the Bust of Homer" which the museum pur­chased at auction recently for $2,300,000. It was the highest priceever paid !or a painting. (UPI Photo)

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TilE f' \ Tl .Y NEWS, ST JOHN'S. NFLO SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 196!

/J~. ------------:----=========·- ... _, __ , '' ... - -·- ··-. ~ Station

....... .._...~-·----~- --·-·

-·Radi-o .And TV Pro ggrammes . ·· . '

CBC ~-~ATURDAY, No\'cmte~ 25th;

Ul. i'.au-cnc News. V.3S-Top of the Morning. 8.()(). ·CBC News and 1\'cath~r 8.15-Mttsicat Clock. 9.00--lllornm!l Devotion~ 9.15-Piano Parade 9.30-~lusical Program

10.00-l'nrade of Hits 10.30-Ncws. 10.35-Saturday Scssiun 11.15-Son;:s around the World 11.30-Sports College, l!.4S.,..Sacrcd Heurt l'rugran• 12.(1()-BBC Nell'S, P.tf •. !2i10-Announcers Choice

il2i15-Junior Farm Pmgr~m .. 12.30- ~lid Day Serenade. i .. 1.00-Doylc Bullet in. . 1.15-Musical Program

2.29-Dominion Obs. Time Signal.

2.30-0ff the Record 2.45-World Church News 3.00-Time. for Fr~nch 3.15-Chansonnettcs · 3.3Q-Saturdny fiandezvous 4.00-0f All Things. 4.30-Sites in Sound 5.00-Continental Capers 5.30-Unlvcrsity Review

:il.30-Sund•IY Morning

I Magazine 11.00-Gcorgc Street United

Church

P.~l.

12.15-CBC News and Weather 12.25-Program Highlights 12.29-Dominion Obs. Time

Signal 12.30-To Praise My God. 12.45-Rcgional Roundup

6 00-CBC News 6.05-lntermezzo

' 1.15-Musical Program

6.:.IO-Sup11er Guest 7.00-CBC News and Weather 7 15-llyms of Praise. 7 30-Girl Guides 7 •:!>-Du)'le llulletin. 8.15-Nfld. Sports itoundup. 8.25-This is my Story. 8.55-Wcather for ~lal'tncr~ 9.00-Saturday Nile Jamboree 9.55-National News

!O.Oa-NI!L Hockey

1.30-BBC News 1.45-Sunday Miscellany 2.00-Matters of Record 2.30-Folk Song Time 3.00-ln a Manner of Speaking 3.30-!llasters of the Keyboard 4.30-CBC News U3-Capitol Report 5.00-Religious Period 5.30-Project 62 6.30-CBC Symphony 1 111-CBC ~cws.

Canad•- 7.45-ln Reply i ,2,05-Sign O!f-0 ! The Queen.

SUNDAY, Novemhct" 26th. ~.~1.

~.•ll'- ·Nfld. Program from London.

. 1.311-CBC News and 11 catlwr 1.45-CBC Camera Club 2.00-:Mu~teal Program. '[ 7.30-tntcrlude ;;;:;;;;:;;;;=:;;;;=====::1 8.00-Young IIi ghro ads

· 9.01l-CBC News and \Vcathl•t 9.05-Montol'ani Show 9.3o....:.cnc News

8. 15-Notes and Comment. 8.30-CBC Stnge 9.30-Sunday Showcase

10.00-Talent Festival 10.30-Cr(tically Speaking ll .00-Carl Tapscott

BE WiSE MARTINIZE

Tbe most 111 Dry Cleaning l'hone 92186·1·5241 9 35-l'ost ~lnrl; L! K.

I 10.00- Weather

11 :lt,-CBC Nut1nnul N1?1V~ 11.40-Weekend Review anrl

Sprcial ::,peaker HUGHES-MAYl\'ARD

cu;,\NSERS LTD I 10.03-~lantuuc Gardener i lO t5-Neighiluurly News

t2 00-Sign Olt-·0 Canadn­Tht? Qut·cn.

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~This is the man from The Mutu~l Life

Perhaps ·your young son knows him. aa the

coaoh of the neighbourhood peewee hookey

&ea.m. He enjoys this because he enjoys helping

children. At work, too, helping people is his

prime concern. He's an e~tpert at it-a life

insurance counsellor. A valued friend.

The Mutual Life ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA The company with the outstanding dirJidend r1cortl

BRANCH OFFICE: T.A. BUILDING, DUCKWORTH STBEEI

R. E. Representatives in St.

\V. E. French "Ank" Murphy J. G. Qilinton 'fl. W, Roberts

!'hone: R0321 · 80322 4293

Good, Branch Mana&er. John's:

· W. J. Jaeksc.n h. J. Roberti D r:. Lawley R, V. Steele

M. W. Moores-Clnrenvllle. A. R. Moulton -Burl:

W. H. Stevcuson-l111rbour Gract~.

VO&M SATURDAY, Novcml:er 25th .

6.28-Sign On 6.30-News and Weather 6.35-J\Iorning Meditation 6.38-The Bill Allen Show 6.45-World of Sports 6.55-News 7.00-The Bill Allen Show 7.15-World of Sports 7.30-News and Trave! Guide 7.35-Thc :Bill Allen Show · 7.45-World of Sports 7.55-News (Local) 8.00-RCAF Tower, Torbay

(Weather Report) 8.03-News (National) 8.08-The Bill Allen Show 8. 15-Sports Capsule 8.25-News 8.30-Hit Tune of the Day 8.35-World of Sports 8.40-The :Bill Allen Show 8.55-News 9.00-1\lorning Meditation 9.03-The :Bill Allen Show 9.31--Thc Big Six Show

10.00-News 10.05-The Stork Club 10.08-The George Cawdry

Show 10.30-N ews Headlines 10.31-The George Cawdry

Show 10.35-News . 11.00-George Cawdry Show 11.30-News' Headlines 11.55-N ews 12.00-Gcorge Cawdry Show 12.30-News 12.35-Gcorge Cawdry Show 12.45-Fisherman's Forecast 12.55-News · 1.00-Georgc Cawdry Show 1.15-World of Sports 1.30-Ncws Summary 1.45-Gcorge Cawdry Show 2.00-N ews Headlines 2.ol-Snge Brush :iam Show 2.30-News Headlines 2.31-Sage Brush Sam Show 2.55-News 3.00-High Time 3.30-News Headlines 3.31-High T1me 3.55-News 4.00-High Time 4.30-News Headlines 4.31-High Time 9.15-Thc Living Word 4.55-News 5.00-Supper Serenade 5.30-New;; Headlines 5.31-Supper Serenade 5.45-Fisherman's For.ecast 5.55-News 6.00-Bullclin Board 6.10-Movic Guide

SYLVIA :MURPHY SINGS ON THE WAYNE AND SHUSTER HOUR Sylvia ill urphy has the regular vocalis !'s spot on this season's Wayne and Shuster Hottrs. She is married to C ~1~\i"\es Te: .. pleto11, moderator of CBC-TV's Live a Borrowed Life. The next \\'a\ue and Slmsler Hour \rill be seen Wednesday, Nov. 2.2 on CBC- l'V. ' I _______ _:_ ____________ _,_. ____ ----··- __ .. __ _

10.00-::\'cws Edwards U.05-llulletin !loan!. 10.05-Thc Old Old Story 10.30-Hymns we Lore \ U.lO-;.;atrunal ~cws. 10.30-Frank and Ernest 10.45-0rgan MusiC 6.15-Spnrts. 10.45-lliiJlc Talk 11.00-Guwcr Street United i 6.25-i\cws. 11.00-Ncws Headlines Church i. 6.30-C\ub 93 and Nrw~. ll.Ql-Church Service 12.15-~lusJcal ~laments · 9.00-:\cws Hrghlights. 12.15-Vislas of Israel 12.30-VD.W.H. Presents 9.01-Thn Gospel !lour. 12.30-News 12.45-lligh Adrenture O.:lO-Ncws.

Operating Soon

Cliff llierlihr, the of the CBC's radio . Corner Brook, saYS h• · the Cor?orat,ion's rei;. at St. Fmtan s will c•l lion shortly. ·

He said the station ready to commence as soon as a power h~'(' completed. · ~

The new relay , extend the se!'\'ices of lion CBY to the Sl. area.

Broom Sate "Fair"

An official or tl:t Pearl·Glendale Lions described the elub'a broom sale 1n tht , Hfair.'' l!~

An estimated 22 brooms were sold by of the club 01·er last

The brooms were tured at the Canadian institute for the · mop and mattress St. John's.

IReviva~ 15 • · ervu:es

Special rcl'il'ai bcin~ held at the Boptist Church, locatE! l'ille, each night from to Dec. I.

On Nov. 28, the · I he visited by the : ! the Baptist Federat:c~ ~ I ada. Rc1·. l;crard Ward~

I gina, Saskatchewan. ' The rel'il'al senices :,

l church arc bein• "

I Re1·. Daniel Dryer, thr Baptist · I area. ___ . __

I

. 6.15-Sports Report 6.25-Travcl Guide 6.30-Early Evening News

12.35-RCAF Report 1.00-Closc Down 9.31-Let's Sing a Hymn. 1~.40-Sunday Serenade 6.00-Mustc of the Masters 9.45-Ncws. I 12.45-Fisherman's Forecast 6.30-Hospital and other Re lO.ot-Thc Ba~n Dance. 1.00-Ncws Headlines ports 10.30-Na!Junal News. Roundup

7.00-Sage Brush Sam Show 7.30-News Headlines 7.31-Sage Brush Sam Show 7.55-News

1.01_wcekend Spurts in Rc· ; 6.4~-Dr .. Hitchie F .. Bell 10.45- Saturday Night House-l' view I 6.5;,-Da!ly Med1tatton party and J"'ews High·

1.15-News Summary 1

7.00-R~ligious Service from lights. · , 1.3o...:.scouting Trail , \\ esley Umted Church 2 01-Si~n Off. ij; 1.45-How Christian Science 8.00-0rgan !llustc SU~DAY, November 26th. ( '':

11.00-Canada at Work 8.05-The Cream of the Crop 8.30-News Headlines 8.55-News

Heals 8.15-Evenl!de Echoes rUl, t. 2.00-News Headlines 8.~5-The Question Box · 6.30-Sign On and News. !

. . 8.30-The Search 6.35- ~!arching wtth the 1 ~-:." .

2.01-Rev!Val, Ttme 9.00-Sunday Chorale Guards. . ,. . . 8.30-0ral Roberts 9.30-Nows Headlines 9.31-Cream of the Crop 9.~5-News

2.30-Sunday Serenade 0.15-When a Child Asks 7.00-Ncws. 'I l ~55-News 9.30-The Protestant Hour 7.05- Bob Farnan. · .~ 3.00-S,unday Serenade 10.00-Hospital and other Rc 7.30-Ncws. ~·

. 3.55-News ports 7.35-Road Show '• . · \j' 10.00-The Night Sho1v 10.30-News Headlines 10.31-Night Show 10.45-World of Sports 10.55-News

4.00-Sunday Serenade 10.15-Weather Forecast 9.15-When A Child Asks. I rr ·:~':'7:.·' ~:~~~:;ay Serenade CJON CJOX TV 9.25-News, Sports and Wcath·: ~/~ 5.55-News 11.30-~~;nday School of the ! ' ·':· /

11.00-RCAF Tower, Torbay (Weather Reoprt)

11.02-The Big Top Ten 11.30-Ncws Headlines 11.31-Thc Old Mill Show 11.55-News 12.00-The Night Show 12.30-News Headlines 12.31-The Night Show 1.55-News Summary, Weath·

er Report and Time 2.05-Sign Off

SUNDAY, November 26th,

6.28-Sign on 6.3Q-News 6.35-Morning Meditation 6.38-The Sunday Breakfast

6.00-Ave ~!arie Hour SATURDAY, November 25th. Atr. 6.30-Sunday Serenad~ ~ JO.UO-Ncws in a Minute. 6.55-Ncws 10.vl-Wcek in Review. 7.00-Sunday Serenade 111.30-King of the Carnival 10.35-Kf!d. Busmess Week. 7.55-News wit11 Capt, Jack 10.45-Critique. 8.00-Sunday Serenade 11.00-Spokcn French 111.00-Kews in a Minute. 9.00-Sunday Serenade 11.30-Sgin Off ·"11.01-Chapcl for Shu~ins. 9.55-News 1.30-Atlantic Football Con· 12.00-Ncws in a illinutc.

10.00-This is my Story ferencc 12.33-Partyline. 10.30-0utdoors in Nfld. 4.00-Church Ordination .2.45-l'rov. Roundup. 10.45-World of Spurt 5,30-The World of Sport 1.00-News in R jfinute. 10.55-News ij,UO-llug5 nunny 1.01-Longines Symphunette. 11.00-Weather Forecast from 6.30-This Lh·ing Word 1.30-News.

Torbay Tower 7.00-~aker City 1.40-l'arliament Hill. 11.02-The Big Top Ten 8.00-News and Weather 2.00-Ncws. 11.30-The Night Show S.15-Nationat News. 2.01-Xews Cvnference. 12.{10-The Night Show !1.30-Dennis the ~lenace 2.30-News. 12.00-Thc Night Ehow 9.00-Vicloria Regina 2.31-Road Show 12.55-News-\Veather-TJ'me 10 30 N 4.Jl-IIour of Decision. . - .II.L. Hockey

A LAP Fabian tries on a lander cap he landed at tour of Sweden. At . ing the delight of h:s Gille Hennir.g, 15, 1 . who will aprcJr ~ilh t:l his theater ,,•:ing.

5.01-Voice of Prophr~ 5.30-Childrcn's Sloll' 6.00-:-.1 ews Highii!h~ 6.15-\\'hen A Chil! 6.30-St. Thomas

Club 6.35-News 7.00-The Sunday Breakfast

Club

1.05-Ciosedown 11.45-Jnllettc 5.00-News in a Minute.

I 12.15-TBA ---------------···--=--:: 12.30-!'l'cws, Sports and

1 Weather. VOWR 8.15-The Good Life 9.00-Saturday Nile Jamboree 9.0~News Headlines 9.Dl-Pcoples Gospel Hour 9.30-Revival Echoes

SUNDAY, November 26th,

A.M. 10.00-Tell us a Story

10.15-Story· Time with Nancy

11ASTRO-GUIDE" ;~~;. ,For S•turd•y, November lS

Present-For You and Yours. , • Some discord il sug• se-tccl, but It f';ln be avoiaed if a zenuine effort is exerted to malDtaiD harmony, Cc-opo eratlon Ia practically nil, h01¥o ever. ·You may bo buller 1han you like, but "WOtk lte&dily ancl .follaw a clc4inltc pl•,n aDd ¥QU'll set resulta. New burdtDI m&y . be added, but accept auch .reo "';.: ~pOilliWiity cheu!u1ly. , . :··~!·/~~

·~r:.' :· i~ ....

-.. -.:--·· . -... By Ceean

Pa~ •• , Fote~)n. airnnes op. Future ••• Iu. 1790, 1he size rral ng fu. the v.s. have moro of the average family was 57 lhau. doubled li!DCI 1949, ]!y , ' mld·1960, over 60 forci111 •ir• ptnons; in 1900, lt was 4.6'; linu ··held ~vii .Aeronautics in 1950 it was 3.5 By 1980 Board pcmula for operation• ' • ' here, whercu ill 1949 there it is expt"cted to be 3.8 pl:rsollS, were but 31, reveni.tlg a lSO·ycer trend.

The Day Under Your Sign A~lES 11om t.ltrth 21 fo' April lfl LIBRA ISopl. 23 ro'Ocl. 22} . !!, aoldor for adrl11, bo 11\ltt 10 olalt 'Ib~ II a hectlt d1y, but remain e&llll ... lht tacll, mo tll<nl(h ll!lbarrualnr. 1111<1 rou ~·n oco>mplilh a ""' deal, TAURUS \AP.Oil 20 to MfY. 201 SCO~IO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) ·1Tfblt frl•nd 7 ~17 1111 1'17. ttil t!iMmdl Dltlllliuilh belwem pretense and r<~llly

m ptar 'lfNZ utdt tfll~ belcro ttldnr dmtr' action. • G;EMIHI(MtY. 21 to Jvnt 21) SAGITTARIUS !Nov. 22 fo Doc •. 21)

i II J;W woutdbkiiP :roar opirlls M1~, Don't be buhlulaboul blowin~ your owo

I noli! people ,. o complain about lire:. hom, but be u subtle as poss1blet

CANCER (Juno 22 to Jvlv 21J CAPRICORN (Dac. 22 fo Jan. 20) : E~•n though you Jeri your e((orts.a:tc U1 Co.worktrl •~em blc~scd with im[lircd

'a1n, peucnr~nce: wiU Pl1 eft. ideu no"', 10 listen attentively.

LEe (Julv tl to AIIG· 211 . AQUARIUS (J•"' 21 to Fob. 19) Du,lntu II llke aQ automobile-. It won't NeU in fmrortance to h~Yinr It good &[as lUll ltttl!-uctpt dowllblltl • II lalowlnr .. hen to j!UII tile viGtro

VIRGO I Aug. U to Stt6 22) PISCES (F1h. 20 lo.March 20) . !ueeu' ttktt dfcrt. Ta tllmb a tr«1 )Ott •Put lt!en fntct Jlfattke. Theorr ss flap DIUU rrup It• branchu, not U.s b1ouoms, bat lttlon is more to the point. ' ' .

~ 1961, Field Enterprites, lne.

'I SUNDAY, November 26th. , 9.00-Davey and Goliath ! 9.30-This is the Life 10.00-Television Chapel 10.30-Faitb for Today 11.00-Sign Off 1.30-Father l\lcGrath 1.45-Christian Science Pro·

gram 2.30-Explora(ions 3.00-llucklebcrrr nonnd 3.30-Wortd of Sport 6.09-Citizen's Forum 6.27-CllC TV News 6.30-Citizen's Forum 7.00-nlaverick 8.00-Robin 'Hood Show 8.30-Hazel 9.00-Paratle 9.30-Ed Sullivan Show

10.30-Bonanza 11.30-Closcup 12.30-National News 12.40-News, Sports and

Weather 12.55-Sign Off

&Jon SATURDAY, November 25th.

A.M. 6.aO-The Bob Lewis Show­

News, Sports, Shipping News nnd Weather.

9.05-Music for ll!illions 9.20-Star Time

10.00-News Highlights. lO.Dl-Top Twenty Five Tunes

and News Highlights, 1.35-Editorial. 1.40-Sports. 1.45-Art Baker's Notebook. 2.00-News Highlights . 2.01-Road Show and News 4.05-Ranch Party and News l 5.01-Rold Show and News . 6.02-Wcather.

- f " • • • . ,_·. ~- ., -; -- .' -

')AJLY ;\E\'

City~ Bowl]

r: ,\rnt. \\'orks:-3

Cook 222 154 219 185 180 244

Lumber Co.:-2 206 166 139 142 296 245 161 183 802 736

Garage:-1 133 246 158 197 156 180 195 157 642 780

Brewery:-3 Tobin 163 211 }!arlin 182 200 Feehan 229 224

182 269 . 756 914

129 166 190 158 178 177 192 331 •89 B32

Benrages:-3 Penwell 185 211 Ryan 183 219 Brownrigg 151 87 lve1 186 203

705 720 End Bakery:-0

William1 169 131 198 14jj 191 162 558 43U -lllyan:-2

· . Lee 102 1n~ Bemister 145 181

. Ryan 175 20f Churchill 183 26i

605 84! Telephone:-1

• • • IT'S TEA

~ ll:ght tf RCAF air te mp or fumwork _ ltr "'Per&lion btiween lhe w lite planes and !he

OIIIU on the ground POSJible. The

modern jet·age a "'de Yariefy 0

dott server!, enginer 11t ac~untan!J, 1

:~~oroligisll and e1perl lbi j /'lids combine lheit

! lltlb or tmda'sa

=~ 1 dtalltnging life, 11 1 -~~~h-llitd opportunil 1~ ~ow ' e career. For i If lltt .. rou t!n become •aillh ~rr Force learn" l!itlsl \WoRn bei.o!"· Ol .. . ecrutltng 1

: In the ..,·et Al lt'aTeamw' that Count

;-__ ...__ --

Page 11: l067 THE DAILY NE s - Memorial University DAIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...l067 rscd cars and trucks sohl THE DAILY NE s by'ooURS far this rear. Why not

-1ale

-

,J s~l"'·len r Placentia located in t from :'\0\·,

fiiC 'J.\lL \. \E\\''i, ST. J()I17'-J'S. i\'FI..D., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1_9..;.61------~--_...--­

. h' ' Alex Scores A~ot ·er 1

Sets Up Two More . rrn. :-;. r.-cr- ' ·

ROl'11 1·~le'~ three ~oals led I pkk Gal11 \mrrlcans to a 4·2 JD<b~~~~ itockrY teague \'ic­·'=rrl1 Quebec Arcs last

r1' g\!C II. ~tbl· . Rochester's sixth

ybr t ltseren ~ames, ga\'e It i~. as solo 1wssesslon of IJrrlrans In the Western · place . . standin~s.

blr srorrd two goals Gt.lll •• srro1uts midway

tilbiR ihe second perl01l to t)roa!h 1 •. 1 Quebec lead. ,,rrco~t p~t the ,\merlcans

Gtlll t111.06 of the O[tenlng tl1~! \ut ;\res catne back In II" ' d period as Claude cr ltron srorrd at 3:~2 ami !J\COIII g o•

ubadle at : ••. ~i\1 arne Gamble's quh·k

Thrn t I Ot b lh hat 10:37 and I : ' o 1!1

1,11 1ron1 Alex Faulk· tllb as• , . d Gern· Ehman.

111 an · flul~nrr addrd an insur·

1111 11111 11 i:07 ol the last

"rioll. 1 ·

ALEX l~AULKNER

10 for the season to date. Faulkner's thlrcl·pcriorl goal

added to his two earlier as· sists gave him 23 points for the season and second place In the AIIL scoring race. He leads the league In assists. Gllllblr'• ~oals ~a\C nm ---------- ----------------------------

City~Commercial Bowling League

Curling Notes Rangers Put Winning\ - ' I

!\fiXED CURLING BONSPIEL Streak O· n Lm· e Saturday, November· 25th.

(First named skip)

200-4.00

D. 1\1, Lowe C. I. Merncr S, B. Pollock A. G. Crane c. Wells Miss A. Marlin Mrs. J, Ayre Miss J .. Feavcr

F. E. Hut .T. E. Josephson W. A. Knowling F. Graham W. R. Winsor Miss J, King n. L. ~toddard Miss Armstrong

\' Reid F. Bishop F.' D. Butt Miss B. French l\liss c. Whelan 111iss B. Forbes Mrs. ~Jainwaring C. Taite

Mrs. G. Sparkes C. F. Horwood D', S. Davis G. Bnrnell T. Petten Mrs. J. Whelan ~!iss N. Sharpe A. LeBlanc

Winning games on the road is one key to success and it's a tough task even for the leading teams in the National Hockey League.

New York Rangers, who go lnlo the weekend schedule with a one·poinl lead in the stand· ings, have a record of four vic· tories in nine away-from-home encounters.

Montreat Canadicns, one point

Someone suggested to coach Punch Imloch of Leafs that his team wasn't doing too well in this category.

"Nobody's winning two in R I row too often this season," lm­lach replied. "That second game 1

is always on the road and we're • got as good a road record as' 1 anybody."

bnek in second place, can show STATISTICS PROVE IT only three wins in 10 games on the road, while Toronto 11aplc Leafs, h o 1 d I n g third spot another p o i n t behind, hal'e taken four of 10 out-of-town en· ga~emenls.

The Rangers hal'e two games

The statistics back him np a]. though Rangers have a chance to make a better showing-fiv~ victories in 10 away games-if they trip Leafs tonight.

Spares: Geo Phillips, Long,

4.00-6.00

on tap, in Toronto tonight and Toronto ha~ played back·lo-l\lrs. ble assignment with the cheer· back on six occasions Ibis sea­

day night. They tackle the dou- so~. They look a possible four at home to the Canadiens Sun· pomts from one dual encounter ing knowledge that thev won and three out of four on another home•and·away games on SIIC- OCCasion with I tie and a win. ~!iss B. Lester J. P. Henderson

Mrs. D. Wills F. Fiti!lntrick D. Bishop Miss K. Roche

cessive nights this week, blank·

St.· Pat's Bowling SUNDAY, NOV. 26th.

Men's League SECTION A

2.00-Cardinals vs. Reds Cubs vs. Giants

3.15--Phillies vs. Angels Dodgers vs. Senators.

4.30-Bravcs vs. Yankees Tigers vs. Red Sox

SECTION B 2.00-Vauxhall \'S Hudson

Meteor vs. Mercury 3.15-Che,·rolet vs. Dodge

Ford vs. Buick 4.30-Consul vs. Oldsmnliilc

Chrysler vs. Pontiac Mixed League SECTI.ON A

8.00-Grecn I'S. Pink Blue vs, Violet

11.15--Red \'S, Silver Orange vs. Yellow

SECTION B 8.00-Rockets \'s. Daisic!

Daffodils vs. Carnations 9.15-Tulips vs. Roses

Lup~r~ vs. Poppies

Bill Taylor Lea·ds .

Guelph \Vith 011e Goal, Three Ass~s;~~s

By The Canadian Press Bill Taylor of St. John's.

, r·(,'_:'/" ._,-.! ...

!

., .

.. ·' .

Nfld., led Guelph Royals to a 5·2 Ontario Hockey Assocla· Uon Junior A league win over ' Peterborough Pctcs last night by scoring a goal nnd assist· lng on three others.

In other league games ~Ion· !real defeated St. Catharines 4-1 and Hamilton lied Nia­gara Falls H.

A goal by leading scorer Pit Martin with less than four minutes to play sa\·ed the game for Hamilton. They are unbeaten in 14 !(ames. this season-this was their second.

Martin's llnemale, Lowell ~lacDonald of New Gtascow, N.S., was kept out of the score column.

BOWLING

Commercial

< .. . : . . .

; .• .. ... ~· ... 1

BILL TAYLOR

League ing Detroit Red Wings 4-0 at Coach Toe Blake of Cana· M M home Wednesday and then turn· diens was all smiles alter his Ore Oney (L t t R lt ) ing hack Boston Bruins 4·3 in squad snapped out or a sagging N d d a es esu s

T. Griffiths B. Rockwell II b _.f ,, h' d - 3 ee e .• "re's J.td.·.-3 · 1:. f'. Barnes:-t

)Irs. E. l\lay H . .May

the Bruins' home ice 24 hours spe Y n com eo rom-ue m •· "'' · 293 302 192 ~8'1 Mrs. 111. Whelan llliss Fitzgerald rictory o1·er Detroit Thursday G. Withers 229 205 195 628 ·C. ~tercer · · • ~Irs. A. Kirby 0. W. Kirby later. AY T\VICE night. Earlier Blake had been R.v BOB TRf.lfBEE A. :O.Iillrr 139 167 2i2 578 D. Brophy 169 267 181 617

!Latest Results) A. Andrews Miss J. 1\lorgan TllltEE PL ED~!ONTON (CP.1-The fed G J b· 220 226 218 664 ·F. Peckham 181 186 145 51l Montreal, Boston and Toronto bearing clown hard on his lor- eral government wtll ha1e to I •· aco .•

14 242 241 625 A .Holloway 106 230 208 634

''·or~•· ] n. Maloney 240 172 170 5H2 M. Whelan J. A. ~lcchan also play twice during the week- wards for not back • chec~ing. s. pen.d m. uch m.ore than $5 .. 1100 .. 000 \W. Enms 2 40 926 2495

· .·. 839 985 726 2550 .lrm. ~~2 '}';4 ~li 593 r. Dunphy 161 190 210 551 ~Irs, L, Gilliard ~Irs. C. W. Reid end. The Canadiens arc at home Aller the win O\'er Red Wmgs, If 1l 1s _senously cons1de~mg: . 72~ II . :!'tlld. Coal & Oll:-1 ~ 1 ~ 185 275 679 ,.1. Kelly 214 192 222 628 Miss L. Rose B. Bowering to the Bruins tonight. The Maple he said "el·eryhody worked hard plans to Improve the phys1cal 1Easl End .Bakcr}.-0 \\' Dawe

152 263 190 605 lP.O ~H ~40 flli4 'J. Connors 132 178 168 478 A. N. Other A. N. Other Leaf~ go to Boston Sunday and it paid off." fitness of Canadian.~ i~ amateur :K. Dun~ 169 189 135 493 .\!,.Dunne 166 212 222 600 ~R~ ~.iO tnn 81~ 747 732 770 2249 7.00_ 9.00 ni~hl. sport. says Llord Swmdell~. tH. W1lhams 119 178 157 454 :A Oakley 225 274 1!3 592 12 ~-~8 I .Detroit plays in Chicago in I! C~nadiens can rccapt\'r.e Swindells, ,·eteran Vancoul'cr Is. Clanecy 196 187 161 544 ,c· Andrews ISO 227 269 685 ~O:l nJJ" ·• ~lnrshall :\totors:-3

1 ,J. Bur~c>s L. Goldstein Sunday nis:ht's third game. the funou5 pace they set durmg track nnd field coach. ~aid the lA. Joy . 187 218 244 649, ·

732 9;6

7i4 2485 ll'•r<or.··~m·:-" 1 1 .. \\' Bu 197 187 204 588 ' p \' B 'I A L 1 If there's one thing tougher the earlY days of the ~ason, ~o1·e. rnmenl's P.lan to .. se.t up an I 671 772 697 2130; __ 13i IAR I ll · ho · rry · · urns " rs. · us 1 than winning away games, it's I

137m 148 11!1 II. Stcrcu5on 236 217 176 629 Mrs. L. Forbes ~Irs. C. Doyle winning back·to-back home-and· the other live team~ in the' adnsbrY .. coun~l! I~ ~~~~sale pro· . -.-. ~.\. Han•ey & Co.:-3 164 tin ~49 592 r. Crocker 152 294 IBB 634 Miss Chatwood W. G. Moore league had better wRlch out. !(rams 111 th this ~~m Is a good Bursey 5 Trucking.-~ , : w. Dalton 228 153 177 55a 1e~ :m ~~~ 6ni .. 1. Power 209 196 247 652 . away games. start, h~l I don t hehev~ th~y R. Bursey 249 245 237 73t; B Power 203 323 206 73~ GOJI R:ZJ ; 50 217~ 794 894 815 2503 W. Weir Mrs. M. Clouslon . d yet rcal1ze how much 11 Will N. Bursey 153 175 140 %R · ~i Walsh 189 221 207 617

:rarkcr & ~lonroe:-0 P. Lcdingham B. M. Jeans I s d R coli~.", . . F. :!ofcDonald 155 209 :Zll 575 (; · Pearcey 193 278 259 730 t.umbrr fo.:-2 iA. Bonnell 203 216 158 577 Miss Kicllcy W. Bannikhan econ oun ln ,rack and r1cld alone 1l E. Clemens 178 156 139 473 · 813 975 849 2637 ,_06 l"!i ,_ 37 609 D. O'Toole 106 178 208 492 llliss :0!. Devereaux would lake ab.out $2,000,000 a I 735 785 727 2247 D .1

N . • 0 " Mrs Brakefield Moore year to establish a 110und de-l J B 111'1 h n·-0 31 Y C'l\s.-13~ 142 109 390 A. Fitzpatrick 145 146 158 44!1 · I h velopment program. And no J. w·n· 1 c c ·166 193 164 523 C. Rogers 244 161144 547

2~6 245 215 756,E. Beer 205 221 165 591 K. Clouston R. J, Kent Starts T ntg t matter how much money was c' /·l~~s 182 160 188 53oiR. Jarkman 165 206 176 547 161 183 226 570: 657 761 680 2109 R. Bartlett Mrs. A. Dunne Q spent, the program would take A. s"'g

172 154 154 480 1 J. Antle · 135 169 153 457 802 i36 i87 2325 J, Winsor G. C. McNamara a few years to develop. Coaches G. '!.r~~n! 177 154 189 520 ' F. Crane 181 208 142 531

C.mgt:-1 , Council:-2 :!\Irs. B • .M. Jeans . . 1 and volunteers would be needed · • 00 697 661 695 2053 725 744 615 2084

133 246 239 6181 F. Cahill 235 314 159 708 Mrs. D. V. Burns The second round of junior defence: John F1tzpatnek, Bob before athletes could advance.

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D. Bishop 170 172 272 614 hockey starts tonight at the Abbott, Bob Squires, Jim Bar- NEED SPECIALISTS Nfld. T. & E. Co.:-3 136 180 232 568 H. ll!oore 184 205 158 547 R. Levitz W. W. Winsor Stadium and once again there reft; forwards: Tom Conway, "We now have 60,000 kids un· United Towns:-2 R. Johnston 239 249 181 669

... 195 157 134 486 R. Shcchcn 174 193 215 582 E. Brakefield Moore will be a twin-bill. The two Mike Murphy, · Orville Hong, der high school graduating age F. Hall 182 169 151 502

1 G. Wadland 268 203 241 712 ·;

642 iBO 785 2207 763 884 804 2451 lllrs. G. McNamara arch rivals St. Pat's and Guards Ron Lush, Ron Brocklehurst, laking part in track and field, 'I J. :!olason · 218 184 171 573 'L Noseworthy 146 205 131 482 ~lunlcitlal Workcrs:-1 Mrs. P. Wilansky llliss I. Sutton will clash in the first game. Bill Malone, Dave Connolly, Swindclls said in an interview. R. ~turphy 268 205 123 5961 T. Benson 216 251 333 800

Brtw)·:-3 ~1. Power 247 215 223 685 C. Cornick l\lrs. S. l\lacGillivary \'/hen those' two teams meet Jerome Gover, Ed Byrd, Terry "With dynamic leadership we ,V. Withers 226 173 186 585 869 908 886 2663 i 163 211 189 563 L, Power 150 200 137 496 A F t J E B tier they always play an action Haire. could tilt this to J.iO,OilO in the 894 731 631 2256 Canada Packcrs:-0 1 182 200 239 6211 J. Byrne 206 231 217 654 l\l~s. 0~. c~artlctt G.' E.' Kn~ght filled game as they did in the GUARDS: Goal: Earl Howell; first year and increase it an·' Cha>. R. Bcll:-1 lA. Pinksen 188 195 278 861 I 229 224 212 665 E. Hart 159 204 205 568 l.lrs. C. Cornick R. MacGillivary last four years. This year is defence: Jim Drover, .Jack nu.~lly from there: ! A. Chafe 15!1 160 175 494 0. Sullivan 227 206 202 635 . , 182 269 212 6631 771 850 782 2403 l\1, Wilansky B. Gillies no execution as when they Drover, Geoff Campbell, John In track .and .held we would i A. Cook 122 141 163 426 R. Noftall 158 180 154 49:.! 756 914 852 2512, played their first game i.n the Winter: forwards: Eddie Val-~ have. ~o bnn~ m at least 70 I A 1\o>eworthy 129 188 106 42.1. B Noseworthy 166 189 231 586

! Del· Tile & 'l'errazlo:-~ Spares: •W. Lo1·elace, L. Hud· first round they battled to 1 cher, Bert Warr, Jack Crane, . spec1a1ssts each. summer to tour 1 G. Kelly 172 163 190 525: 739 770 865 2374 129 IG6 187 482 1 D Hand 208 151 15., ~12 son, Mrs. P. Taite, L, Foley. 2.2 tic Iran camphrll, Dave Butler, i C~~ada, lea~~sng coa.che~ and 1 582 652 634 1868. Steers l.td.:-l 190 158 118 466 ·1

1 B: D'Angelo 220 204 136 560 St Pat's will put their four I Ralph Skanes, Bob Williams, II t(ll'lnJ: prachcal n~mlance to 11 -- w. Dwver 233 225 141 !'i99

l·,s 1"•7 221 · 224 205 244 673 ll.OO-II.OO · · I · 1 d D' k ,,,. athletes · c \ H bl .. 3 · · 576: T. RoSSiter • ~a me first round undefeated I Enc ~lou an , 1c Iseman. "Tl · h t d , : . ' . u e~ ·- · T. ~!errs Is 227 173 189 589 1~2 331 IB3 706iE. D'Angelo 196 227 215 638 J. G. Bearns J. A. Stoneman streak on the line while Guards. ST. BON'S: Goal: Cy 1\lcGelli· b lh 1e

3 .. ers ·mnden.ean~lor "sohm

01e11"ri 'A. Tilley 219 189 154 562

1\1'. Dawson 259 247 272 778

'89 832 709 2230 1 848 787 748 2383 'I 'I V I l · d f · Don Crane Peter 0 umo " ' · I T'll y · 18fi 225 °05 616 • 0 II 2 ~ 4 730

I "rs. A. Cox ., rs, . C ousto.n who have .lost two ~ames, won, gDan, e enKce.. H ll'h • R • be grouped in teams nnd sent r'' K1 e d

198 168 ~1 ~ 1 <

37 \\. Hey 51 245 .3

-- ~limn 11-folors:-O J. Hopkins A B1a1r . one and ued one w11l be gun- unne, e1'm o s an, aJ b d f . 1 t' 1 . cnne Y • ·• I 970 890 836 2696 Bmragel:-3 B. Casey 189 160 174 523 A. N. Oother A. N.' Other i nio\g for the big win with a Halley; forw•rds: Graham Kelly ~ roa F 01 '. 1 . 1'~ ernahtofda hex~er: W. Austin 141 208 190 539.~1eril Insurance Co.:-0

P 11 185 'C B 267 190 140 606 11 · '\ h d I' 1 ll h 1 H lt B b Ne1 'lie wnce. acll ses 5 011 e Jm ~ .. ~go ~·•o 2''74' er.we 211 194 590! . rowne Mrs. A. A an J. :-.'oms much slrengt ene mcup. S. u er ~ on, o v • pro\'ed and teams from other .,, ' •- - 1 D. ~1oore 137 245 17~ 554 . R)ln 18~ ~19 216 618 :B. Burton 167 17.1 281 619 1\lrs. J. Stoneham H. Coady Pat's have a !~ague leading six Wayne Rowe, Errol Rowe, countries brought to Canada. Harre):. & Co.:-·0 ~1. Bishop 139 186 186 !'ill ·Brownrigg 151 81 132 360 C. Warford 159 175 139 473 lllrs. A. Hopkins points tucked away and tonight Frank O'Keefe, Frank Ryan, D. Qumton 111 119 168 398 I c. ~!addigan 14~ 164 137 446

Iter 186 203 377 766 ·782 705 734 2221 Mrs. W. W. MacDonald will be out to get a strangle Gary Comerford, Terry Whelan "National indoor and outdoor I H. Bursey 127 226 124 4771 J. Cranshaw 292 219 280 791 i05 720 919 2324 Mrs. J. Blair Mrs. 11!. Diamond hold on their lead. . Bill Lawlor. ' · championships should be sub· i R .Simmons 190 200 209 599 713 814 775 2302

End Bakery:-0 O'Regan Agencles:-2 A. Cox E. Warren The second game will see sidized and universities as·tJ. Walsh 249 211 189 649 ~·ill1am1 169 131 133 433 A. Molloy 200 232 166 598 V .. Clouston Miss. J. Bcm1~tl third place St. Bon's meet the HOLY CROSS: Goal: Jim Fin. sisted financially so they can do 677 756 690 2133

198 146 109 453 G. Ennis 132 167 144 443 Miss M. Norris · M. MacLeod cellar dwellers Holy Cross. A lay; defence: 1\like O'Keefe, Pat the job now being done by those 1~1 162 173 536 H. Butler 217 187 254 658 W. Downey A. N. Other win by St. Bon's would move lJensmore, Roger Maunder, Jack in the United Stales." Bcnnrtt Brewery:-2 558 439 415 1422 J. 1\lolloy 194 193 208 505 CURLERS PLEASE NOTE them into a first place lie with Power, Jerome Dinn; forwards: . . . . . J. White 287 199 250 736

_ 743 779 772 2294 'l'here are still a eouplc of St. Pat's should the Irish lose. Pete Densmore, Pal Hearn, Swmdells said umrersJhe~ B. Oliver 216 2~5 214 655 1 s T d l han:-t prizes not picked up !rom lhe A win by Holy Cross will move Gerry Holden, Kel;n Norman, now hal'e many m~n who co~Jld G. McKoy 257 275 269 8011 accer 0 av

Lte ' 10~ 1n5 146 443 Nfl~. Brokerage Ltd.:-l opening bonspicls. them into fourth place one Mike Maloney, John Norman, do great wo~~ With Canad~an G. Wadden 190 214 192 ~961 'J • ll5 181 152 178 ·~·J. Norman 208 177 141 526 The list for Name Crests will point ahead of Guards ~hould Carl Stapleton, Brian· Moriarity at~letcs hut they Rre ~t~m 1 e.~ 950 913 925 2789 The organizers of the East· i· ! 1i5 ~05 219 599 L. Hnlwell 239 201 189 620 close tonight-those names who they lose to St. Pal's. Dave Ryan. hy lack of funds and laclhlles. Parker &; Monroc:-1 1 West soccer game in aid of ' :!

Cblrchill 183 267 263 7!3 J. Eddy 128 154 153 435 ha\'e not contacted the secrc- Guards ha\'e the Warr, Vatch· Birmingham 180 171 256 6071 the Poppy Day appeal will give li '.' 605 848 780 2233 i K. Barry 220 173 175 ~68 ! I ary will be omitted from the Er, Crane line back for to- A e ro B t• I G. Hallahan 234 254 21!1 707 i it a third try this weekend after ' I

Ttl!phnnc:-1 I 795 705 658 2158 list. n~ght's game and they have 0 w l ng lA· Oliver 210 14<3 283 641 i hal'ing the game postponed the J1m Drover and Geoff Camp- L. Sullivan 214 180 195 589. last two weekends becauu oi bell back on the defence lines. 838 753 953 25441 bad weather. Eric lllouland is another new· '(Latest Results) The game is .teheduled to '1 tomer to the forward line. Viscounts:-3 • Canadian llfarconi:-% take place this afternoon at

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Holy Cross will have two · · · Spitfires:-% 627 A. Hindroff 198 302 193 693 Shamrock Field starting at 2.15 , new faces in their lineup for P. Mugford 220 233 280 733 P. Daley 175 169 283

467 w. Brennan 146 255 173 5i4 p.m. Should the game be post- 1·, tonight while St. Bon's have D. Mugford 227 213 201 641 K. Daley 182 171 114

1

r. Littlejohn 145 151 229 525 pun~d this afternoon then it ·, ·.1·: !,'

In the .Jet A it' ge.,,

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t~~T t~;-:-----r~. . Or lOCAL RECRUiliHG Utili) ~T • .lnns·s. :-<n.n ,. ~ tl,l to ~~ "'':~ t~u b~n;t f'lhout, obligation, full particulars regarding training, 1 1 1 1 ~ 1 ' 1 In l"e RCAF. 0 Aircrew 0 Airmen 0 Airwomen I 1:<---... ___ I r:··------- ·---·---·-· --- I ':::----.._.. ·--·-- - I &.q,~llrg d ..... --.. Prov .. ___ • I

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one change. Holy Cross wlll E. Critch 135 135 135 405 E. Bennett 182 132 IJS 449 '1'. Hollihan 12 t !!09 143 473 will be rescheduled for Sunday : , SUNDAY, NOV. 26th, start with Jerome Dinn and G. Crilch 165 165 165 ~951' F. Bennett 1.30 142 225 497 610'917 73H 2265 •fternoon at St. Pal's Field, at I '

Alleys 1 and 9' ·Dave Ryan as their new men 747 746 781 2:1.74 66H 614 757 2040 'cl d d 'If l' . 1 th~ ~arne time A hockey a a me ·1.· ! ! I"

2.00-Cardi~~ls vs. Braves while St. Bon's will have La~easters:-0 Llghtnlngs:-1 638 1~~·"'~i~~ar:;s g ~~~·-;-0:1 1:19 4:i0 between the ~ame two t~arns :'!l ! i 3.30-Pirates vs. Redlegs Frank Ryan back in place of H. Langdon 188 211 243 642 H. Grouchy 225 172 241

40s J. White 184 154 IB2 5w 1 will be pla)'ed at th~ Stadium '! lj 1

Alleys 3 and 4: Tom Thorburn. St. Pat's will go C. Langdoi1 153 134 138 425 M. Grouchy 135 1:15 135 461

G. Raynes w5 15! IHU 4uu if baLi weather JU~I·ait. en i) \ I I • 2.00-Red Sox vs. Tiger• along with their same lineup J. racey 91 118 148 358 J. Mercer 181 97 183 L D 1 211 287 221 7:9 :sunday. ',!

3.30-Yankecs vs. While Sox as last game. G. Facty 180 243 145 ~58 C. Mercer 228 195 185 608 · e acey ll8B 6:~5 722 206~ ·q 1 I ,

Alleys 5 and 6: LINEUPS 612 706 675 1993 769 599 744 2112 il'j 1 , II ' ~2:.0~0-=G:i:an:t:s~=·s.:O:ri~o=lc:s:::S:T:.:P.:,A:T:'S:::G:o:a:I::T:f!~d=G=r=e~en; Helicopters:-% Sabres:-% ~p·~:-: tt 183 148 102 433 !\i • I ; I J' I H. Rowe 223 215 186 624 E. Legge 133 166 Hl9 43684311 n.' Cla,~k e 206 288 Z36 730 j:'i. !< i I'

R. Dowt 130 151 169 470 K. Legge 114 84 145 M B t 244 147 156 547 1 1

Faulty electrical wiring

can start a fire in a car

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ALL OUR WORK IS· GUARANTEED

ADELADE M~OT~O~Rs LTD. LAND ROVER, HILLMAN, STUDEBAKER, .

MERCEDES BENZ. NEW ~OWER at ADELAIDE PH: 3015

V. Eddy 158 214 205 1177 M. F1eld 162 186 178 526 :' . ur ' 1 if · . ! , . It Eddy 144 206 20R 648,C. Field 165 165 165 495 .L. Stapleton 101 176 160 527 llll·:'·lt.·. ~,. :lli ·.: !'

575 876 768 231!1 574 601 657 18321 824 759 604 2237 : .; Blenhelms:-1 . Be~~r&:-1 ; Model Shop:-1 ! :1!:. , · ; .1 I! ':

1: Rowe . 277 231 1511 6661B. Bishop 110 134 11ll 362 · S. Wilansky lt6 162 16.~ 443 i 1 1111

· 1 · s. Rowe · 136 136 124 3rl6

1N. Bishop 155 127 12!1 411 E. Bailey· 130 160 187 477: tL i ,, i · ·

C.· Tav~rnor 121 155 136 · ~13 Ki Cramm 139 133 116 ~8 ,T. Maher 162 123 181 466: -you . see goin§ / 1~:~!1\1 ....• ·: II, .·ll.:l·.:il·'l: I; r. Tavernor 180 177 205 M2 ln. Cramm 160 261 236 657 H. Husk 189 164 185 538: oi'C>Lfti llJI!lng cut ln:!p5ho1s of I 714 700.623 2037 564 65!\ 599 1818 597 609 718 1924 1 their gtOtdpoiarls. · M.&e i ~

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[~rt~!~;s:.:....z 131 1a6 184. so11 :)

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A. Kelly ·160 lS~ 196 511 . , T. Stanley 1.0 146 ,1~2 4511 \1

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C'·.Stanley 115 175·137 427 'II ,' ,:!: : 1!46 1!62 689 1897 . '. i . :·'.. ;

g~itl~~~bi~ 165 165 165 495 l .; : ' I :I x .. Dobbin 135 135 13~ 405 , ; . . • · .~ 1, P. Norberg 't35 141 178 454 · i; i · 1 i/ ; R.' Norberg 1952209'200 · 604 ; ... ·:··•:

63o 650 678 1958 · 1 ' : ~··,

/! )1fjl :· W.elllngtons:-3 . A. Hiscock 224 216 177 617 H. Hiscock 128 220 136 484 M. , Gibbons · 146 137 159 442 E. Gibbou 199 210 ·167. 1176

T T·T T:--0 F. Crocker M. Crocker B. Meadus D. Meadus

897 783'63!1 211!1

169 188 142 409 146 101 117 364 133 144 141 418 175 183 186 554 I

· 62J 616 576 1815 I

TO-DAY: (TIME) 3:25 ¥~M·. C.J.O.N.

TORONTO AT HAMILTON

AtK MR.I·A I'M WUR FREt 1-A FOOTIALL SCA!DULI

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INDU!RRIALS Alumlnl AUJlD Nlld C Brow

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Montreal I

MONTREAL CLOSING BlOCKS 1\J Tllr Canadian J'lrnll

Abollbl Alhe~to" Rank Mont R111k N~ finf!Ue PC nathuut A Btll

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pr m<, Steel 76 211, •rr C•n PL 21 46V• Walkor !9

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MO!IT ACTIVE TORONTO STOCKI 81 tbe Canadian l'reu

INDCBTRIALS !httk

~,oort 11lr1 Hlrh Low Clese Ch're

7rl55 sns, 533... 54~ ... + '• c l!u;kv Bl! Pnw Saladn.s Lob Co 8

7~!"17 $61'J. 6111 6 "" 111n $J!'II 11 lm - " 71i05 $lli~. 18 111•

7450 S103• 10 10 + 1/4

OILN Soutb U Un Oil naerlnt

»>O!R I! 14 I& +I :lllJ~l!.l U15 UO 1M + 1 moo ID 14 18 +4

N I>LI\ lr1 Norl,oi<L

J9900 2.1 20 11 -lh 16600 B1~ I I

MINt.S I.at Am CN Inca \ViiJOPy Har-~hn ntack By

711500 57 47 l2 +I .. j:i~lll Ill 131 .. 17 -r41:.1 Hi~:ll ~2 461fJ 10 +1 ~0950 :.!01, 14h 20 +•

202100 32 lO :II

Mutual Funds MUYUAL FUNJI~

Jly na CnldliD Pun Bid

AI Cdn Com I 64 All Cdn Dlv I 2~ American Growth I a .Ucaubran 33 23 Can1dlan Ia\ utment 10 &1 CanaflUtd 45 23 Champion )lutual 6 17 Commonwealth Inter. t 29 Commonwealth Levrraa:e I 30 Corporate Investors 10 22 Europ~•n Gro~th 1.36 DlveaUitd Inc. &trill J •. 45 DiVIdend Shaes 364 Dominion Equity II 00 Foderoted Growlb 5.18 Flrot Oil ond Gu UL Fondo CollectU A a l1 Fonda ColloctU D 142 Fondo Colloclll C I 77 Group Jne. 3 ?9 Growth Oil and Gu a 6B lnvutorJ Growth '115 lnvnLors Mutual 1317 Mutual Accumuiolln• 8 g Mutual Jn~ome S &3 N. American of Canada 10 97 Radts•on 494 Regnt 5 19 Save and lnVtlt of Canada 6 22 Supervls~d Amtr, 8 ~7 Super\ l!ed F.uc M f1 8R Supervlaed Exec 5! :Ill 21 Suprviud Extc !7 I 7l Supervl"d Exec !I 7 IL Supervl"d Growth 2 01 Supervlttd Jncnmt 4 "'' TV Electronic D U Timed lnv<ltmtnt fi ~~ United Accumutotlvo I! 93

Montreal

'

Ask 1.47 T 01

10 6J 31M 11.5! 17.49 e7a Oil g 10

1117 I 07 4!! ug

1531 56' 12! Ill 5.76 7.36 .14 9 09 7.7a

14.32 10 04 811

1U9 Ill 100 '79 151

T 11 211 46Q U'l 186

JO 69

IIIONTREAL CLOSING ~lOCIIS 81 The Canadln rreu ,

Moalrtal Block EJc11an&r---NOY. 21 Complete tabulr.tlon nf Friday Irani•

aet1on11 (QuotDtlona ln ctnl ualua morked 1. ~d lo xd-E• diVIdend, change lt from JIIYioua d•v'• rioae, xr-Ex rtchlo, ""' - Ex warranta. Net

, Nel IIDtk &oleo IIIII! Low Clen Ch'Jo

Abitibi m $;19'1 m> mt- It Acnd All ~0 112 12 12 Aleoma 35n 117% 4710 C7!\ Alum 2 ~r 37! 118\'o 41~ 13\\ Aluminl 3131 12m 28 23 - l4 AlhHLor 70 UH• m, SHi - ~~ nr T 4\'ap lBl 112~ 4211o 42\2 Anr T :t911l' >20 I!! 5! 55 All11 Steel 100 127\2 27\2 271> + \1 Bank Mont 1650 170\2 70V, 7010 Bonq N& 111.!7 179 7811 78\l- 1,4 8onq rc 123S llJ'h .10v, 53'> +3 Bath P A 22! S!! 53 ~· + Yo Hell Phone 1970 S38t 4 ~7~4 511 nnw l\l p 185 1!:1 :13 53 Onw Mer pr ztn S~:l '13 SJ Brazil 2001 l!O 345 1110 8 A 011 1210 SH3., 34~1 :14'1 RC Forool •!O 1121'. L%\1 U\\ HC Pow 165 IJJ<, JJ 3!\w - l'o Brurk A. 12.'1 Sln~.., 1014 JntA BUild Prod 27 S35 3.1 Jl - 14 Cal rnw :!0~ SrJS1 2:1~4 23~1- 1,-3 Can Cem lOll S2~ 2! 2! - 11o Can Cem Pr IM 5211 211. 23 C Oom SUI 147 S2!1i 2314 l!~i- It Cl Fn~l')' Ill 123 11 %3 C.!U, l7l 1!2 60 !0 -2 CSL pr •ll IIlla m; 131\ CAE 12! 12.1 ll 22 C~n Caloo 17l $3l 321'o ll C Ch•m 3!0 16 6 « + l'o C Frbko A •n SIOV. IOV. 10'4 C Imp Rk C m $6! 61'1 6RIO + \lo CIL <OO Sll\1 1411 1410- 'll Cl row pr 41! 1!7\2 3711 371> C Marconi 200 1!111 m Ill..! \lo cdn ou 220 um 341> 3111o- 111 ern 2&7! n.n. 25\i 2m Cdn Pel pr 24!0 Sl214 12;; mo + 1,4 Col Cell .10 410 410 110 Con M& 125 mV. 22'1 22li + Vc Con 'fc:-ct Jonn Jl5 31) 31~ C Cilasa lJO 2$1 23 28 Corb1, A liD $19 1~\l I~ Coronolinn - 3011 19'• ~II 9'1\ Cr CorJc 110 17! 76 76 c R Zoll A 4011 1221'1 :m .. 11\\ Cruoh tnt 12! 19 8 D Don,. P•t• ton 111 14 14 Dill Soar 280 146!4 4!Y• 18\i + ll. D llrldu l7l 12L'4 21 21 - l(o o Fndey m S&!• Ill' sm- 11o D Glua 200 N! U 81 -1 D Glau pr 735 11!\t 11 II D Stool 110 Ill II 11 D BIDrN 300 11410 11\\ lt\2 - \1 Dam Tar 1m 119\t l!'ii IIV.- 11o Dom r .. t 100 flll'o 1111o u;; - ,, Donohuo , 130 12111 23\2 :131" - "' D1l Pont 420 llal 27% 2710 + '4 llupull A 1!5 II I 9 - ~~ Eddv lol 100 Ill !3 3l +2'1. Jo'IL't!lWOVil 22~ tiB~· 191~ 191'4- :Y4 l'um I'll•)' 215 ild~' H~ 1 • IIi'• 1-'raaer 400 •:zt;l• 24 2ti Fr l'•t• pr wu m m m -tl t-'n•ut A 1H a:to•' :IU'' :wl.4 Uallnwau -4UII •~u 40 40 - \-~ U U)'nUn' 1tU ttHitl ~~~ :l !lHI ~ - 14 Umly Andy 371' S~H4 ~·Iii :t61~- •1 llondy A WI 1041 117 Ill• 17 llome A 1100 Jll'• 121> ISla + '4

nm '!)AlLY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S. NFLD., SATURDAY,

OUR BOARDING HOUSE With MAJOR HOOPLE OUT OUR WAY

NOVEMBER 25, l~l

By J · R. WILLI~

Wou MAY GcT'f'OOR. CI-IANC'E, FRIEND '""

Home R Horne PI H B,,y Co lud nay Imp Oil Imp Tob Jnd Accep tnt r.p lnt lllll lnt Ulll pr Jnter PL Jamaica PS L•batt

uao 112•~ :: \21 :l + \• l\0 <00 4011 IOJ 70l $12.,. ll\2 12\1 - \• 2'A IU~t $31,., ~1\~ .- ~,

ll34 141\o 49\J 491> 119ns SlH• nsa. 111 :z- t:. 1245 JJR :liSa J73,~, + ;t4.

504 f3'1 J.6!1!, 37a,, + IJt

325 $461 ~ 46~. 46\-1 + 1".1: U() 1&11,4 51'1~, 30~ %l0 $79\1 lib 79!1 - \1

:10 Ill 4l I~ -1 162! 117\• 17 17 - 1,1

A 3!49 12611o %! 2!"' + L'• Laur Flo Laur 200 Laur 61" MB rR Morlllme T Met &torn )!Iron rr Molson A Molaon D Mont Loco Mont Truat Nat Drur

pr UO 1S3 SJ ~3 + v .. pr 121 t%1'"' 11\1 2L\I

N 51 Car Noranda NS LP Ogllvi• Ont Steel Pae Pete Pitt Rtu renmans Pla~er Pow Corp l'rlce Br QN Gu QN GDI pr Que Pow Que Phone Reitman Roe AV C Rothman, Royal Dan~ Rorallte Royallte 61L Corp A Shawln Shnwln A Shaw 4 Pr Slmp1onB Sogomlnr• nnutham SS Sle•l Steel Can Stclnbr pr 'tor I>om T tin A TB Con PL Viau Wolk GW \\CoJt Tr WCnul vie Wntnn B Zeller" Zellrra pr

2705 $181!1 lB~a ]83.s + lw

z75 $22 :2 22 77~ SOI/4.. 0 !!I~~ + JA

2251) $8~4 8~, 81.4. 2800 129'~ 29 29 - ., uo s2s•, 2tw• 2tn.- •, .. 7!0 Stl I!' • I~ m $&l 83 Bl H 27~ .17~i 11 17'4. + 1 4

110 116 ll 16 -2!7! $16 !5 ~ + •• m 12111 21\\ ~l'f•- .,.. 10s sm.; 12 11 + ""

us $2 2Hl ~~~" •10 1121• 1m m. - 10 ms ll"lll• 2111o m. - ·~~ l10 $35 31\-i 35 + 10 210 m 21 :a +m 200 $6l " 64 -1

102G Ill ll 55 + l'o 1100 s&•i m 111 + 11o Zll m 51 51 205 'le 3Hi :16 mo m 12 12

lO Ill l& I& 1625 $6~ fill w. - !i 200 SIIIO ll',ll II'! 166 S!lla mi Bll'o- ~

100 1111• sam 81'•-% 700 Sll lOll; 1011

p 50 $10.! 102 102 :rm 12Jll 2JV. 11•1- v.

1.!5 S26'~ :!M.t 261:. 70 512 4~ 42 -1

150 128114. :!8 281,. + ~~ 232 IIIIo H H

1050 $32 31~. 31't. + t~ .200$9 9 9+\.fo lliO S76~1! 761'4 76 + ~~~

10 SlO.CI~ 1041/s IOWJ + h 75 SIJI)~, 69 69~4 + 11• 2~0 S~ft~1 S81/, 5S1a +11•

1040 12\ :w. 25 + ~. 10~5 S!J IJ 13 477 S$9 sa•. ,\9 + 14 ft56 Sl7V.. 171~ 17\2: + ~!J. 200 lUI~ 16'1 15\A- 'At , 1211,-.a 2tiiJ 211-'.&

l!lS S14 ~1 3 , 13._4 1110 14R oUJ 48 - ~~

eANAlliAN Llltrd

Alu 4~~ ~B II ll AliCD~ SMI tl 91 ~l hnt A Molv IO>o 3()11 2'7 29~ +I hnR IWd 100 $10 10 10 Arno 71100 to a•.. 911- •,; AUu Ttl 6100 17! 170 170 -! Auruolua 1021! 44 II val011 Bateman J3000 91h I t n .. uce 10n so 10 10 Btll<ebll 1150 23 :13 3! +I BibiJ 7000 12 12 1l - V. Blue Ron UOS IL!\io 12U 120,0 + 1,0 Blue 8 w 1&15 400 3~ 400 Bornlle 64000 14 1l 1!\lo Burnt nm 2000 10 10 10 +2 DuUcrlly II! 200 200 :100 c Dredu 1511 $14 14 14 - l4 Cdn D)no !00 277 277 177 +I c Kodiak non m uo m +2! C Pow or 100 sm 7% 7')i - li Canoram 10000 20 18 20 Contea11 1000 160 160 110 Cnnubo lOO 1 l I Carbcc 17!00 II :U 31 +S Cartltr Q m a 1 a Ctnl Mon !00 311o 3\lo 3\2- " Chtmalo,, )3.5(1 2&0 2~ tf!O + 5 Chell 6000 51> 5 5\\ + 'h Cbib Cop llOD lJ II ll + \1 Cbltnnan 2000 !Ill m 110 + l1o Cleveland SOO 8\lo l'h !11o + l1o Comlnga sooo 41'. 4 4 -1 Cono Que 2000 40 ~ 40 +I CQ Yon SOD 4\<, 411o 4\2 Copstrm 19400 J5 34 l5 + ;; D11lfrn lOOO 311 :\5 !5 -1 1lenault 100 117'-' 171\ 1714 Dome 100 smo 27lo 27 1o - '.0 D l!:nt !10 fl6'~ 3!~ !6\2 - V, D E>plor moo 70 !I !9 +7 D Loue 2300 60 60 60 0 Oilcloth Mil 122\1 22\1 22'1 numont 1110011 :u 23 ill -1 Fob 1000 ll 13 13 Fair•• :12s 11m 71 1'< 7114 + v. Fono 1000 2'11 211 2111- ll. J'ontaaa snon 7 '1 7 Fundy !500 1\\ 1 !\~ - V. PI ReiiAne !000 :M1 37 SA +I Fu!UrJLv 2l011 10 II II -2 Gupe moo 1 1 1 Gold All 1000 34 S4 24 lnl Coram lllnD 7 7 7 + 'h lnv Fnd 25 t41" H'h 44\2 , 4•> Jubilee 100 400 m 400 Laduboro 1700 120 118 118 -1 L Dufault 51011 t\Z'4 10\\ 121\ +I'Ji Lowney 100 f27¥. 27\2 271) Mauval ll50 I I I Meleh Pr tOO Ill 18 I.e -1 Mil Chip 11000 68 06 M -2 Morrill 600 M 63 II lllld Chlb 1000 25\2 24 21 Monpre 100 6 & 6 Ml Pltunt '1300 !0 4G lll Mr Dalrleo 130 $7\4 7\4 7'4 + l4 Mr Rice 100 SW. IU Ill + '4 Nat A Vtn 200 1511< IV< !\4 N Formo 16400 710 7 7 NRd I,Jpl BL 117 17 !7 N Joe~ L eon 121~ 11 12 N Sanlla1o 1000 3 21'1 2\\ NW Amul 43200 J6 3! n +1 NA nare 4700 51 so 52 -1 Obal!ki !1000 12 1010 II Opem Ex 35l71l0 12 51 !I +9 Opembk• 100 6411 640 !40 -10 Paramaq !000 13 13 I! -! Paudash 5~0 9'.> 9'h go,; Plll Gold JOOO l'h 6'h 61'1 Pllt Pr~ A 100 II0\1 IO'a IDI>- % I Prcuplno 11000 13 12 121) rrern su 1~() S'liA Jtl/, llh Qoo Coboll l072l lOO 47! 47.1 -2! I Que l.ab 100 4 • 4 - I! Que Smelt 12!00 15 I~ 15 1 ReX!Par 1000 IJ ll II -1 St !. Cnlum 4011 73! 7ll 73! Soueon n "00 1n1 llll 107 Shop Sovo 228 sa•, R\o •!i + ~~ &obeY 100 Sl7 L7 17 R J>uf au II 28100 2l 21 2l +1 SC Pow t rr !0 $12! m J2.l Sporlan 1975 ISO II! 1511 Sportlft wt 100 IS 4! 45 Tache )9:;00 21 20 20 Tazln 21000 13\2 IZ 13 -1 Tlb Expl !500 8 a 6 +1 Titan 1000 11 to 10 Til C Corp 100 179 79 7D + 'h U Aablllol 300 600 190 ~90 -30 U Prln 2600 DO I! 9! -1 U Towu El lD Ill 14 14 V•••• moo 210 101 :llO +21 Vn1111rd ~!illl II II 18 +2 Ventur•• 515 170 e•% 70 + l Vandor Ill 1400 :UO US 210 +I VIUinlo 5110 6 I & Wolle Am 400 77> m m +211 Wosle•l 210 fn'• 111 9\i + \io Wutvlllo 21000 • m a + 11

tlulldtd Alta Till< A ISO S371'o Y1 17\\ + 1 Camp Clllb :no 700 70D 700 +I Cl IDV 6 pr 2! 1!2'• RZI• 82'• + ~. Cent Del lll"ll ns 720 720 +I Con Gas so UL'>I 21\0 21% + 11 Ford lOU 1!60 110 lt:O Gatawar 1!00 212 210 21" -l Gaeo lollllts 100 12311o 2210 22\2 + \1 HUicrut Pf1 301· ;0! m Hollln•u 110 ami 2!1'. 2.111 + It HB Oil G :100 118 11 11 t % Kelly D A 200 IG\2 II> 61> Lob Co II IDIOO IIDV• 10'1 10'1, + It MO Papor ziO 127\> 271'• 2111 Moorr •~o S51''.1 54 54\1 + l Son AnL 500 l7l Ill 173 -4 Tnoo 1 ML 170! IIIli II' I Jll,o- 'i LIN Uu 1114U fl~ :11 ll IIPI lllio !<10 1!5 !It IIIII II

Clo1ln• talu· lnthutri:.IJ min•• 1nd. ou. l,HO,ooe. •

IS! LOD:

T~E M15-Fi!Z:E

Consolidate 1Common

THAT:£> AIJ O~D •A& tiiTTIN' 8UCI<EP01<1'' IJ.J l'ltOioiT C 'fORE LAoy L.OIIii'S Ha.JSE 50

SHE'LL TAl<E 'YCU JIJ ,._f.!' I'USS OVER 'IOU! I"ITI' ~E,&.D$70 LOvE .. BUT FER. AIJIMA~S

"Jt:)).' ,

NEW IIORK CLOSING ~TOCKB 111 Thf: ,\undated rrt~!\

Ntw York t;lncli. EnlulnJt-Nof Z-1 xd - t:x LIIYidcnd xr - b~ n~ht~.

Aggressive

Programme ~And Hand

Market' The Left

Siders XY.-Ex.warrants Nel change 11 from prevloua. dU'I clO!t

Ji rl S&oclt

\CI' lnd Alluony

~•1ell nlrh Low Clost Ch'ar 4HIO t!S 6t M - ~,

Allis Cll Am Can Am evan Am Mot Am Smell Am Sid Am Tel Am 'fob' Armco 511 DnlJcock Doll Ohin D•lh 6teel noeinll norden Dors War BrunJwk Duey Erie BUdd Co Burl lnd nuruha Calumd Can DrY CPII CIS!!: JJ Cater Tr Celanese Ches OhiO Chrv•ler C1tie.s Svc Clevlle Coca. Cola CBS Com\ Solv Con £dis Conlamtr Cont Can Con~ Oil Copw Stl CranP Cn Cr Zt'll Cnrtl95 Wr Dl • Scr.g Dome llow Chrm Du Pont .!aU Korl Saton Mfl F.l Autn L F.l Paso Ftr~•tn Ford Frueh Tra <ien n~n Gen Etec Gen J"d1 Gen Mills G~C Gen Tire Gliddco Goodrich Goodvear Gr Pah:• Grand Un GL A P Gt Nor n Gull 011 llom•Lk Uud Bay M Interlake lnl nus M lnl Harv lnt Nick lnl Pap lnt Tel .Johns ~I J(enntrot Kresa:e Lib MeN L Litton Loew's Maroh Fld 1\!cH•• Merck 1\!pll lion Mlnn li!M Mlnn Ont Monunto Mont Wrd Nat A•lal Not C•sh Nat D1st Nat Gyps NY Coni NY Nil Nor P~e Ohio Oil OUth Mor Parke na Prnn Rll Pbelpo n l'tiUeG Phllip Mnr Pll Plato PuUm•n RCA Ropub Sil Rcy Tob ll<lyol IJut .Sn.ra R Shell Oil Sheraton Sinclair Soca:ny South Poe Sperry R Sid llnnd SIJI Cal St4 lod SUI NJ stud Park

noo IJI/a m .. 21'•- '• I HALIFAX - ~ew Bruns!ltck I • • • , mou 21 20'• ~1 + '• 1 D . I f APEC , II t I By C,\ROL KEN!\EDY 1\0U!d automalical\1 .,,

'l60!l m. 41'• 48\• + '• 11 ec ors 0 111 mec a LOXDO:-i ( CP 1 - BJJI1sh mo· I horses 01 er t th • • • ~ I08GO 17'• 46'• 47 + ,, the Adnural Beatty Hole! Ill smnt tonsts ore due for a spectal \ Slmlla I, o e r,,, t moo 11 171> "'' • '• 1 h ~I d y :..: , 1 e. ?"tl r ~. 111 :\orth I~··· 900 621/, 61'• fi2 , • 0 n on on a • • 01 em 1 L - 1 1 head<Jche 1f Bntam JOins the 1 the lumbe " '

71\00 11 16'• 16'• lo consolidate the a"gressll'e p10·) • 1 rm" pra1ne ,., 26100 l!l'> IJJ'> 13 ,,., • '• · , " 1 • European Common ~!arket- wagons set a pattern cl .: noo 10~ 107'" I03'• tl"o. ~ramme del eloped hY. t le GO\· cspec1ally 1f the country JS 1 hand dm'in" r,_ 2mo n, 12 n erns 11 hen they met m Su<scx 1 hnked to the Contmcnt by a I A " 41oo 55'• ss•, ss>, • •· , 1 • ,1 lh .. , t " t more romantic lhecn ,. 11oo 26'\io 26 26'• + •• em ICI ' 115 mon " 5 1 on,., .a: I channel tunnel or bridge gests that :-Ia oleon t•. ; !

moo 4~·· <O\• ;t_ ~ ;, tendance of eli rectors IS anltci·l Vor then a long·shJrked ques· ro 1 th p"i u.~.~ • 9'00 4•'> 16 ' 4~ •- '"' paled for tlus important mcelmg" pe 0 e rt" ll \\Jih nut' 3600 78 76', 7•'• + '• • lwn 1s hound to artse· How quenng troops •htch -mo 46'> 4;·, 46 - '' declared Kmg Forde, Connell I' ICe 1 h 1 • · , t •11

24300 53., 52,, 5t'• + \• • "d t f X B , k 1 muc unoer can Bntons keep attac,;ed uncomentl~nall) 1, 500 lR 17'• 17'• PI edstl en °1r ' et w 1 unlsl 11 IC 1• /left on the road 11i11le all Eu· the right flank and n:arc'•,'

2100 121, t:•-\ 12'• • ,.. an 1e 11cn on o wge 1e a· 1 , t 5 d d , 1 h ···~ 11 ~ 00 ,3., 2l'• 23,, + '• t 1 1 API'C bcr n~ rope cxcep we en llles on t 1e r1g t of the road ll 1, • • e11< a nee o ~ mem s a " th hl -6600 3b\o 3!'' :Jii'' + '') 11 1 t d h

1 e r1g ? fuse the normal flo 11 oil"'·

1400 1:. u~. 1Pa- 1~ o 1er In cres c us1nessmen Th " , t · 1 d B t t ...: JJOO z~·, :J'' ~"• The merlm "Ill tak~ the form • e "o\ernmen Is a rca y u un i[ lralfJc thiC~Ett!: 21110 21'• 21'• 2l'• 1 f 1 d~ 1 . , dntlctpatmg the problems that the early 19th mtur~ r· 1 ~too 7'• 7 ,,, I a a pane lscussJon o reviCW I would be In ol ed h B t .. ' 3000 311'• w. 3F'e- '• ro oscd aciJ\'i1 1cs of I he SIX , ". v m a c ange users tn n am and tt! r: tooo 361. 36'• 3f'• T ''I P P \P"C ,. B k f1ansport ~itn1sler !'.iarples re· tment large!\ plea•ed "r 1600 57,, 5,,, ,.,, - '• mam, •'· •• cw runswtc com· . 11 . d lh t II 1 · · •

HM 48, n• ,., '• lt 11 d t n cen ) anuounce a a new se l'es \lhtch s1de lhe1 t" 2700 51' so':~,~.;= • lrm1

1 ee•. agJickulmc, c 1;ca 1~ • motorways and trunk roads The "keep left' col;' nuo 51 >2 s! -1' • Js lCJJcs, m;Jr e mg mem Jers up arc hemg desi"n d t y t d I t I • tooo to1 Jill 111\ • I I and loumt and IS dcstgned to , . " e ~- carr no rna e 311" un I 131i

IRUII J7'• J"'• '"'•- '• 1 1 1 1 • , 1 11 . t 11 : traffic on etlher Side, m case days no11 may he numbe;d 1.00 3•'• l"'' lo'•- '• 1 s imu a c sugges 1011 ' hi 111 l lh1s country decide to hangc s1oo ~~:· RB • "'''' ' '' 1 slill fu1 thcr sit cngthen these 0 • 1. 1 11 r1"1 t " s c 21110 :ZJ " :?J1 :s ' t I >I ~ 0..: 0 lC ~ l :;oo "'' "'• ~"• · '• 'pl:tns Repoils from committee' llul the cost of aiterin the 7700 l''• "'' "'• + '• chau m:m 11111 he rcceJ".ed 1 1 ld b g ltJOO Jl 1A JP• JJI ~- 7 ~ 1 1 1 ex1s mg se -up wou e enor· 3"" ~1 ,, 61 61,, + ,, 1 Speaker at 11e noon unc 1eon, R 1 , 1 d

!bOO " w, 63 '2 Is LPn Landt'\, Puhltc Rei a· • mous oa! 51 ~n~. cam~ers an liOO w, '"'' Jf , • '• • gradients, trafftc circles auto· m~ 4l' "'' "'•- '• ttous Office! of ,he Iron Ore ( o I mobtle dcstgn-all \IOU!d need HiUO 2fi1'. 2h1 I 21 ~- 1 • or CilrWda and Jmmedwte past I I

jf)(IO 741J 'j]~.;l,_J"• "I r I Ci l r,C)Ilngmg 21110 24~ w•,24c •-L lpJ·c,uenl 0 lle lam 1er 0 Buses lh<Jl now ha1e lheiJ' ~wo IOJ'• •o;•, '"'• Commr1ce of Sr1rn 1<1es. Quc· 1

1 II HOil r., ~•·· 11'• t 1 pa~sengcr en ry on 1e left non "'• !7'• P,- '• hec L:mdry 11111 commrn on \lould ha1·e lo be pro1 Jded 111lh

moo 2n'• 2o lfi thr g1 011 m;: snlrs putenltal for r 1 1 1 d d :uoo 491 4tP .. 4q1, 1 h" 1g 1 ·Jan oors. 127rn1 111.: u0 ~,., u 11 ~ t t- \t antic product~ m IS area . , oooo~~ Z4'' n, 2l'•- •, \]so ~ltcndiO" the luncheon 11 til • EOUC.\TION FACTOR

Jgano 27 \o 2''• 2''• • '' he members "of the Rolan· and i The Iota! btl! ,yould amount nioo 7~·~~ 71)3.., 71 -t- ~. c "oo 101 tn! 1nz•,- •, 1\m.tms CI:Jhs. the nonrrl of I to an esl1mated £30,000,000. mo Jh JJ"o "''- '• Tr~de anrl the s·1int John Pmll 'loJ' c·m the problems be

-45800 ~~31 34 5114 + 14 t 1 I ' • 4.

1600 ~7'> as•, H7'' , '• ~nd Industrial Dc1elopment Com· 1 counted only 10 terms of cash 1100 "" 41'• w, + '' miSSIOII I Every Bntish dnver and pe· J!JOO 7fiJ, 7fl1 ~ 7J~'R - ~~ I . 1100. 4~ 4!1• 15 - I• destrwn would need re-educat·

~J;~ 37~~· 372 ~~~ sun on W>'l "'' 1M, ~1•1 + ing 10 the new rule of .the

1600 6 :~t 1 69t" 6!Jl 4 -- .,.1 Texaco ~, •• ~"1 ~l12 ~~> ~1~ 4 - :" road - a huge psychologtcal 1500 44~ 4~1 4~1 - ~ Tcx Sui ,, _Jl~ ..... loj _,. I- ~ h II

12200 411;; .w• .u 8 + 111 Thtnkol 'i1nr' J'l~, J~ 39 -1'~ urc e.

3100 50.~ 491' 49 :.~. _ .~• TJrll'\\tr 2fi!Hl Jal~ ~fjs~ 1Q'"' Nobody knows exactly at " ~ 11 4 T1mkrn 2600 53 ;:,:!~,. SJ t- "~ • •

Joo ~P ... ~1 1 .1 sJ,,• + ''" 1 y,cn c :?fiiP 331_ 12· .. :~ 3 1 til~ l1 what s1gnpost tn h1story Brltam 2~~ 56~1' 57i,16 5~,' _ 1 l'n C.rh ;;n .. 131'• 12"'• m•, +~'• swung I eft whtle European

' '., l'tc1 \irr. ::!UO 41 11 4HR 4~'~ I . . 4200 !2'1 sp, s.~; + !'I Lid corp Hoo 9'• 9•> ~·• _ ,, 1 counlrtes took the r1ght·h11nd

'660r.i~0° ~~;,, 37~;: 761h- 1" \\al!i.cr lOll ,i '!;h., :: 17 ~>- "-'~I turn But there are some jn-

,;u JJ .~~ .35~~~- 111 W Un Tt>l ~linO J~"• 3'J'k ~911- l~ ."

147on ~:!8 561 -~o sa,M + P 1 \\esths El J27"0 ~o ·~ JaT 11 iiP T 11. genwus theories. ;~~ ~~:: :~~: ~:~ :t'' wooh,th •ooo 93 91 911,- 2•, I An off1cial of the Royal Aula·, 2JIOO 34•, 3l 31'• + ,,., mobtle Club says the "keep 1100 12"• 12'· 12'• + 11 I l " ht h .

2000 nn. l531n I53£w ... e t rule m1g a\ e or1g1· MOO 371 , J6'• 36'•- '• nated 11om the hazards of

900 45Y, 45 IS' • ·- \• [ [J" • th d f hi h lJOO w, 2111 21lo + '• ra\'e mg m e ays o g • 3900 BB'h 87'~ as•> ~I'~ wnymen 2~0 135 134 13PII w "• s d tl I [t

120oo 73,, 71 7J'!I< + 2

1

wor s 11ere 11orn on 1e e J.~oo ~l'• 'l'i w;- •• hip and a lonely horseman l,<no 5'o ~5'• !5'• Am:mrA,; CI.OSI~G STOCK~ IIOU]d keep to the Jeft of the

l hOD 32~ 32 321 " - \1 ny The Auodat~d Prru 500 w. 29'1 2'1'• + '• Nrt track to gil e his sword arm

:uJOO mv. m 131'•- h ~tork Bai" IIIah 1 nw c lm Ch'r• I full pia)' The hed"e would 7400 %6 25~• 2i7ia I Rl'll Phnnt FOO ~3~ 3i1 1 56 • o ~4oo ~~·,; M'' 5~·~-J.!i nralll 2200 J'• ''• 3'1 ... '• protect h1s unguarded s1dc. 5700 II% 18'> IR'• fiA ool 100 n>, " JJ'o Wa><oner~ used to s1t on the r;no 2 z 2 I nr hm Toh tniJ ~'• R " n' .. - 'it 1 • ~ • •

2!!01! 42'i 41'• '''' .1. \0 nunk lhll Mo Jn•. 1n•. JO',- '• 1 n~ht so they could wield thmr l200 19'' 19 l"• • '• HniiY n1• '"" ~'" 2r.•, n. - '• I Jon" whips "'ithout tangling

~tCHl 1!l''l 19 19 • + 1 ~ cs Prt(' l~OII z;, 2 11 tfi 2'~ -r 1• I "' . 1000 '"', J5 15•1- ,, C•n Marc l"M ' , ~', ,., - '• them in the load belund. When

11!00 11•11 ml 17''- '• Chmhro too 31'' 2l', 23 1• , '• 1 they met another l'ehicle in 1200 ~81a 5~(' liP• + ~M Con ~1S 211n 2 :ZP 11 22

2JOOO :~·~ 11•1 m, ~ •• r root• '11\flo "''• 4l'l 4''' ~ v, I he narrow lane~ they would 4000 In 119 m -J nr. Pnl 1oon • '" ' '" nAtur~lly pull over to the left 2~00 ftP~ &Hi fitl.4 - 1 • Onmfl Pft 2400 11~~ ,,.,. 13'" • 1!00 lV lR " -1•. '•' .J•I 1~no , , 2'• 2'• to ~auge the1r clearance nc· 7oM !li5ti ~~~_, ~~'1, ..... ~ .. ~.. 1 ~~ :~fl Ztlz '2~'" .. :wz- V4 curn:tclv ~~n G0-':11 5!1 EO",. +P, 1 Intr' on H!ln 11 471 4 471,_ ~. ' ~ •

uooo 84•,> ft.'l Rl + , . , , '"" 20"'' n•, 15'• 11 ,_ '' EUROPE DIFFERENT 2111111 31'• 31'> mi- '• I ins " A 7nn It!'' 1w, ttn•, + '• In Europe howe\'cr there 5500 t!S1"J 85~~ M1-4 + l'o~ JUj'lttfr Cf)fln 2~... :!1 2 2 !J II) ' ' swo 4"'• 4D•< <D'>io r. Shor. ;oo 2'' 2'• ,,, - •• wa~ a fashion for coach teams Jll{~ 20 191> to•, + 1< >l,.sry F uoo n•, 10'• 11 driven bv a postilion on horse·

14700 JS11t lEil~ :'W• ft.l('ad John l~~oo 15P' no J~n -17 • noo 47V. w. ~7'1- •1 Molu 4;oo 31'• 10 31 + p, back. He controlled the team 1000 25'> 2611 26'1- '• ~at Pet 2100 2 t.Lfi 2 2 -l.l• [rom the Jert rear horse. On

254M 231,.., 22.'1. 21'1!1 + l11 frn~ Lux 1900 19 1::1,_~ lR:~...,- 1,7 • 2100 B! R! !6 -1 Tr cont ut 1011 41 u " _ ~• encounlenng another team he 5100 53 52% 51 + 14 \loco Air 200 4'> 4't 4'> + I•

11000 !2 511> sm + •.. 1\r Hnrg 700 I I l t 116 28400 471'4 46'• 471/jj .... 1111 17400 ll"'l 10~11 11~~ 1- ~ Tnt <II o.;;~lro~ 1 GiO,noo

---------·----

EXPECT BLLOtT LONDON meutersl -

Bnltsh go1 ernment m 1

ment lo Parliament satd the btggest fallo.t iro~ Sov1et nuclear test !!r.!J expected next sprmj J' northern hemisphere B.t government sa1d 1t ~a! that no spec1al measures he called for to prot(d health of any sechtn o' Bntish population

WAS JUDGE'S 1\"IH MONTREAL ICPI - Jlu [

Gordon MacKmnon ~lftell !tred Quebec Supenor judge, died Wedne<da)' t"~ long 1llncu.

• hUll! for money? J!Jll

phone Benei01l Get the ca!h !01

want {a!t. One p~crJ call and on~ vis1t to ti:f office does rve!}ihin~ Call up or come in td.l)l

"YOU'RE THE BOSS' ... AT BENEFICIAL

305 WATER STREET Pltone: 8·0303

ST. JOHN'$

~ ~r~entl'l et.nh~~h e'l teJ•I tJI to ,sooa.. rNI 1o1n U!l u

BENEFICIA~ PINANCC CO. 0~ CAH~

Open Sahtrday 'Til

Actress Springtime in ACROSS 10 Mmullns

appellahon 12 She II a­

performer l Aclre:u,­

Hmla I She Juts

appeared on-

11 A1cendr 13 Wllh1land 14 lnlercalale 15 Witness 18 Type of boat 17 Mohammed'!

ron-ln·law n God (Lalln) 20 Colleague 24 Number 27 Continued

atorlcl S1 Accumulate 32 Holsten 33 Pertalulngtoa

South African cattle disease

sa Body part 38 Accosted 38 Feminine

appellation ag Tenn u11d In

fenelng 41 Cleaning

Implement 41 Eaat IFrl 45 Fairy fort 411 Speaker 51 Lure 54 Candles as School book 56 Trap 17 Dig~

DOWN l.Pr!IOD J Footed YIHI 3 Roater 4 Sul!lx 11 Ever troe'-l 1 Anima

doctor (col!.) 7 Davotee II El:plred t Euenllal

belnJ ..

13 Showered 18 LJeulenan!J

lab.) 20 Harass 21 Handled 22 Expunged 23 Wrinkle 24 Warbled 25 Wile of 34 VJclomsof

Cuchulalnn (!r. leprosy saga) 37 Medicos (ab.)

28 Feather part 40 Passage ill 28 Sacred bull or the brain

Egypt 41 Wllllclsma 29 Soft (comb. 42 Algerlln

form) seaport 30 DJrll: 43 Father

4~ Venellan resort

46 Frosted 47 Indian weigh II 49 Threefold

lcomb. form) 5ll Nallve met3l ~2 F1ber !mota 53 P1tch

BRITAI 14 days for less than

$410.00

..... ~················· 1 The Britilh Travel Association, 0 !Jrio !<N~1

Dcpl. 90 Adelaide Sti1Ct W., TorODio, n ~ I Pleue send me free, "Brilish Travel Kit" ,. I ················· .. Name •••••••••••••••••• ,,,............ ,, .. I ······ Street.......................................... . ... I c J'rt1Vinct .... • .. •" tty 0 0 t 1 I 1 t I 1 t 1 o I I I I I I. I I I I I I I I I I 0 ° ••••

&. •••••••••••••••••••••

FURNESS WITHY TRAVEl NEWFOUNDLAND HOTEL

For Reservations and Tickets see

HARVEY'S TRAVEL AG£HC~ , ]:luilding

Nfld. Hotel, Confederation

.- .- · .. · ' . .. '

FOR

Dial (

THE

TEAMS. f/FLD GREAT LA

srJ::AMSIUPS ' Highlincr loadmg

Nov. 25th for St. Dundee loading

Dec. 2nd. for St. •s s. No I aport !oad1

~Olllreal Dec. lsi, lor St , RefngeraUon. 'Jidrlgcrauon. GULF AND NORTH

SHIPPING CO., L'I •rcrgus leal e Chari<

24 [ea• e P1ctou, N arri'~e St. John's l' same da)'.

leave Chari Jca1e P1ctou, N

St. John's I same day.

leal e Char!< Jea1 e Pictou, N

Sl John's I same day.

leal e Charlt leave P1clou, N

St. John's I day.

NFLD. CANADA S' SIIIPS LlmTEI

II V, FaUI'eUc in po 101111leti•Jn w11l sat! for

Bedford 11 sal h Nov 18th,

Nov. 20th. Grebe en rm

due St Join

T( facts Dl

TONYC mGREAT 1J

........... OOOIW ·MTI

Also- UP-T

TIN

EVENING SI ~lA

Page 13: l067 THE DAILY NE s - Memorial University DAIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...l067 rscd cars and trucks sohl THE DAILY NE s by'ooURS far this rear. Why not

-·et .. .

[.

~ r:n c:~:lt

~·th .\rr.t:::; :"~Jr![' \l~tt:

. ~ tn of r:f~.!·

~- !~('ory ~;,.

" h~ntd !:~· ·.,,th his lO~ "~~~:h a!ua:~ I :n:::t:!y fro:t ". :n~rchrd !l

rQod to cr.' :o·.\ or lra!r:;

t~nc~ened 1!1 :rn!ury, ro;j. ;,nd !he Col

l~('.l~('d tht:;} t!~c~· !ook.

t • • ~o~e wa~ :1nti! 1!\~i Its ~ numbered

.HLOt:T utrr~ • -r.'. ln I sa:t­::cnt Th!.!rSdiiT io!lout irom t~ e 1 I ~eriu 111

spr:n~ i~ t~.!

here. But t~l

it "·"~ saliifi!d

n.

;r.·s WIFE CP• - Mrs. C.

, ~In a hW11 money? J111l

ne BeneficiaL : the CMh )"Oil

One phone t visit to the

cverythinl· :ome in tcdDyl rHE aoss­~NEFtctAL.

ER STREET 1: 8·0303 JOHN'5 " ,,. .. ..,., tlllll'l ~~·~ tJft tl ht~d.

:FICIAL 0 . o~ e.t.ll~

in

]

........

. . . . . . . . . . •' l::::t ••••••••••••• ......... TRAVEL

pl}.L 5613

·kets see

.AGENCY

pAJLY NE\\'S, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1961 13

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,-~P-RI~S-CI-L-LA-.-S-PO_P ______ B_y_A_L_V_E_R_M_E-ER--.?.:::::::~::;:::::~::::==;

FOR FUEL & STOVE OIL DELIVERIES

Dial 3001 to 3005 CONCEPTION BAY SOUTH AREA - DIAL

TOPSAIL EXCHANGE - 72161 OR

WALTER HENNESSEY- 72128

THE GREAT EASTERN OIL CO. LTD.

HAMS HIP MOVEMENTS 1no GRE.\1' t,.\1\ES M.V. Fauvette sailing from ' sn:.\)t~Uir~ Halifax Nov 21st, due St. Jnhn's r ····h\ir.rr ioadin~ at ~ton· NOI'. 23rd.

Jan. 10. Leaving fnr Halirax and Boston Jan. 11, due Hali· fax Jan. 13 and Boston .Jan 18. Leavinc Boilon Jan. 20 and Halifax Jan. 24, due St. John's Jan. 26. Sailing for Liverpool Jan. 27.

• JACOBY ON BRIDGE

-=-· ~ .;~·,·· ~~:h {1•r SL .I olin's. M.V. Bedford II sailing from 'oa~df~ i0athn~ o: 'lo.n· llalif,nx Nov. 25th, due St. Dec. ~r.d fur ~L John>. Johns Nnv. 27th.

· ~. ~ollport lnadut~ a~ J1~.V. F~uvctte sailing from . . D~t t>l. (,,, ~~ .John s. llahfax Nov. 28th, due St.

· John's Nov. 30th. M.V. Grebe sailing from li!Dn·

trcal Nov. 30th (subject tn weather and ice conditions) due St. John's Dec. 4th.

"' ]ra<r Plrll•tt, :\.S. Joiol'. t'URNESS WITH\' and CO~ ;;~·,, St John'• ~ov. 2'1, Newfoundland due Boston ',,~,cay. I :"l;ol'. 27, lcal·lnc Boson Nov. 28

. :tale Clwlottcown ~nd Halifax Dec. 2, due St. , J':rt<"" :--.·.~. Del'. .John's Dec. 4. Sailing again

1 ~;;e ~~ Jo!ltL' Drc·. 4. • same da.•· for Lh·crpool. 11 ~, day. ! Nol'a Scotia leaving Liver· . JrJ\1' \harlnttetown 1 pool Dec. 6, due St. John's Dec. i.lwr !'Htou. :\.S. Dec. 112. Lea1•ing for Halifax and

1:;:·.r )! ,lnhn·~ !lee. 1 I. I Boston Dec. 13. due llallfax ·e ;1n:r day· ~ Dec. 15 and <.aston Dec. 18. . .. ~rm L.i,arlolletnwn Lem•ing Boston nee. 19 and ' 1111 r i'Htnll. :\ .s. llcr. 1 Halifax Dec. 23. Salling direct

1~,, 1 St .lolin·~ lln !8, ; !rom Hnlifux for Liverpool, · n:::r day. ·omitting St, Jvhn's call.

Newfoundland leaving Liver· U:'iAil.\ Slt:,\M. pool Dec. 20. due St. John's

SiiiPS WilTED. Dec. 27. Leaving for Halifax faurr!tr 1n purt. On and Boston Dec. 28, due Hall· . wJI! ,ail for tlnlifax. fnx Dec. 30 and Boston Jan. 5.

B!dfcrd It sa11ing from . I.cnl·ing Boston Jan. 6 and H&li· Xor 18th. due St. i fax Jan. 10, due St. John's Jan.

· · ~,,, 20th ', 12. Sailinc acain same day for Grtbe en route from ; Liverpool.

due St. .John's :\"ol".! Manchester Faith leavlni · Liverpool Jan, 3, due St. John's

TO-DAY rt__ ' ..

llllll.onthilacts of theBEST·SELLERI

TONY CURTIS .. 1M GREAT IMPOSTOR . ~~~~·~~m~~OC~ltl[lt GMtM~~HlJ~rM~MAIY

Ahu -l"P-TO-TIIE-~IINUTE NEWS­

TIMES OF SHOWS

EI"EXI~C SHOWS: - i O'CLOCK- 9.00 \L\TI\"EE: - 2 P.~I.

.. NEXT ATTRACTION ~lRl L.\~CASTER with DINA f'llERRILL

.\CTJO.\ - THHILLS- SUSPENSE.

__ NOW PLAYING "THisliis REAlLY THE a1a sHawl" 1

MIGHTY BEHIND·THE· . SCENES DRAMA OF

~BTH~R CU,I'

WILLIAMS· ROBERTSON ON1.....SCoP£: ' COLO,.

Also "L' - P-TO-THE-MINUTE NEWS"

tVEt-il , TIMES OF SHOW~ . . ~C SHOWS: - 7 O'CLOCK - 9.00

Nova Scotia leaving Liver· pool Jan. 17, due St. John's Jan. 23. Leaving Cor Halifax and Boaton Jan. 24, due Halifax Jan. 26 and Boston Jan 3i. Leaving Boston Feb. 2 and Halifax Feb, 6, due St .• Tohn's Feb. 8. Sailing again same day for Liverpool.

ATLANTIC MARITIMES LINE Lll\IITED

ATLANTIC MARITIME LINES LJJIUTED

l>!.V. Aalesund lea1•ing New York Nov. 27tH, direct for St. John'a, arriving December 3rd, sailing December 4th

lii.V. 'l'heron leaving New York Nov. 28th, Halifax Decem· ber 2nd, arriving St. John's December 4th, leaving Decem· ber 5th, for Corner Brnok and New York.

Capitol Now Playing

TONY CURTIS IN "'l'UE liREAT ll\IPOSTOR"

'l'he innate Tony Curtis charm, to which must be added a smooth subtlety and deftness comes shining through his por· trayal of Ferdinand Waldo De· mara, Jr., world's brainiest big· time masquerader, whose fan· tastic hoax h pictured in Uni· versa! • International's "The Great Imposter" now playing today at the Capitol Thea· tre. Curtis' co-stan are Edmond O'Brien, Arthur O'Connell, Gary Merrill, Joan Blackman, Raymond Massey, Robert llli(l· dleton and Karl Malden.

Curtis, of course, was a log!. cal and Ideal choice for the Deman role. The star, a specia· lilt In sangfroid screen be· havior, giv~s hia impersonation with tile ume winning zest that characterized his good-natured mischief-making in "Operation Petticoat", "Some Like It Hot" and "Perfect Furlough."

The star's current offering, however, ha~ far more dramatic substance and downright heart appeal than either nf the pre· vioull vehicles.

Demara's true-life story, re· corded In Robert Crichton's re. markable book, basis of the acreenplay, has no cntmtcrpart ln the field or human decep· tlons. How this untrained, un· educated yet brilliant young hoaxter iUccess!ully hoodwink­ed just about everyone makes for fabulous entertainment. AI· ways one jump ahead of ex· posure, Demara assumed !dent!· ties of a college professor, a Marine Corps officer candidate, Trappist monk, prlsnn reform authority and Royal Canadian Navy doctor-surgeon.

Played with documentary can· dDr by Curtis and a fina cast, ac~lon eovers the entire span of Demara's hide-and-seek career. He Is first shown u a school teacher being placed under arrest by State Troopers, Flash· back, revealing boyhood pro· cllvlty for bannless deceits, !ea· tures Malden as the understand­Ing priest who senses the lad's frustratinn. ·

Suspense mounts as nne frau· dulent, but humanitarian, ven· ture leads tn another and Is climaxed by the "miracle sur·

:s:; !&- . - c::!!e:=:z£:4'

ANOTJIER SLAJ\1 MADE JIY BIDS

NORTH (Dl 4 AAKQ76~ ¥AQ86·! • 42 oloNone

WESr EASr 410 AJ93Z ¥9 ¥5 +AKQ9883 +JIO ... A K 8 2 ""J 10 7 6 5 4

SOUTH .84 ¥KJ10732 • 7 5 ... Q93

North and South \"Uincrabie North East South West 2• Pass 2¥ 5+ 7 ¥ Pass Pass Double Pass Pass Pass .

Opening lead-"' K

By OSWALD JACOBY Here is an actual hand from

one of the matches in this sum· mer's knockout team champion· ships which shows another gam· bling grand slam.

Charles Gabriel, silting North, opened two clubs as a force. Many experts today usc other lwo bids as weak hands, but reserve two clubs for ali rnckcrushers.

Dr. John Fisher, sitting South, had just enough for a positive response. ~The nega· tive response is two diamnnds.)

West did not know who was going to do what to whom, but be decided that a five diamond bid wnnld stir things up.

It sure did. Gabriel went intn a trance, Decided that he could not buy the hand below seven and that if he did bid seven the one sure thing would be that he wnuld not have to look at a diamond lead. Aller a 11, West was a great expert who shall be nameless and East . would never play Gabriel for I any diamonds iC he jumped to I seven,

So Gabriel bid se\'Cn and things worked out even better than he had hoped. To start with, West doubled. Gabriel did not rednuble. He fell that a redouble would give awny the fact that he was void nf clubs.

So he just passed and let we~t drop l high club on the table. Dr. Fisher ruffed in dummy and had no trouble set· ting up the ~pades upon which to discard hi~ two losing dia· mnnds.

CARD SENSE Q-The biddinl( has been:

Nnrlh EaRt South 'West 1 + Pass 1 .to Pass 2 N.T. Pass 3 + Pass 4 + Pass 4N,T. Pass 5• Pass 1

You, South, hold: .t.KQ1087 ¥2 +K54 ... AG

32 What·do you do? A-Ir you feel like gamb!lng

bid seven dlan1onds. If YDU feel conservative bid silt diamonds only. If you want to be scienti· fie bid five no-trump to ask for kings,

TODAY'S QUESTION You hold:

.AQ54 ¥AK54 +632 ... J5 How do you npen the bid·

ding? Answer Tnmorrow

geon's" llfe·savlng feat in the e BARB. s e Korean combat zone where he performed expert nperations on 19 hnpeiessly wounded soldiers. Scenes showing the incident are tremendnusly stirring. Memor· able, too, is Demara's near-fatal encounter with an Incorrigible convict during the penitentiary aequence.

87 BAL COCHRAN

1\Iarrlage broadens a couple, says a pastor. It also makes them short.

• • • ' Money laid away for the gas

bill often pays the phone bill just when the light bill is due.

• • •

Rnmance, too, plays a part In the atran&e chronicle. Miss Blackman, one of Hollywood's most talented glamnr stars, is the No. 1 &lrl In this depart-ment. She portrays 1 Canadian Some hotels have babysitter&, Navy nurse, TV'a popular Sue recognizing a crying need. ............. ~IATINEE: 2 P.M.

t\xA~~T ATTRACTION ~ith EFn~~E~ in "BY LOVE POSSESSED'' ~[~JIAI\I)s ''I Zl~l!~ALIST, J H., - JASON l.f:n~F··.J!~··.- IIIE BOLD BEST-SEL­

Ana Langdon, as the peniten· tlary warden's daughter, also falls head-over·heela for the persnnable young . mystery.wlz·

Curtis film an outstanding or· chcstral background. ·

Critical applause also must go to producer Robert Arthur, director Robert Mullican and llcenarist Liam O'Brien. Othcra descrvjng praise are clncmato· grapher Robert 'Burks, A.S.C., art director Alexander Golitzen and Joseph Gcrshcnson who I supervised the music.

.:\Cill·.~IENT AND TIIHILLS.

ard. · Advance Indication oC the pic·

tue'1 popular mood was an· nDuncement of Henry "llank" Mancini'• musical score, and the famous "Peter Gunn" TV theme composer has liven thil Tony

C::APTAIN EASY

THE STORY OF MARTIIA WAYNE

MORTY MEEKLE iliA! WA~ THe" Ft~

AND A6?0LUTa..'t' THe LA?T TIME: ! TAI<5"

EMMA Fl~l~ Wfll-1 MS!.

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

<

e1W t.lJ.,tM. TJA; . . r1.1. OfL

1'Iherc'a fi.tm in it 1111 right! I just opened it up ·- · . and looke1l'''

J!M OIANGrNG To ANOTt-IE~ CHANNEL-..

-·· -·--..............,

By W. SHRUGGS

Bv DICK CAVELL

; .

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W. U. KNOWLING 1!\SURANCE

Fire . Auto . Casually PHONE 2902, 7811

158 Water Stl'eet, St. John'.>

Burgess Bros. Cabs

DIAL 3212 and a car will be there for \'OU.

nov23,2mlh

~===~--·-·

FOR SALE . . .. NO. 5 ANDEHSON AVE.

. •'

.: .· .

·.

~ .~.·.

·: ..

This building has three large flats. · Flat No. 1, Five rooms and bathroom. Flat No. 2. Five rooms and bathroom. Flat '1\o. 3. Six rooms and bathroom. All flats have own entrances. Self-contained. For appointment to inspect Phone 5503.

Price giYcn onl\' ou inspection.

TAXI SIR?

CALL

BUGDEN'S TAXI

DIAL 7100 - 6224

PUBLIC AUCTION

The following repossessed cars will be

sold by Public Auction at

George G. R. Parsons· Elizabeth Avenue

on SATURDAY, November 25

at 11.00 p.m.

1956 OLDSMOBILE

1956 PONTIAC

1954 F.ORD

1955 PONTIAC

1954 CHEVROLET

1955 PONTIAC

1955 CONSUL

Advertise In The News •

--------- ~-----------., \V ANTED - Comics, Mag. MOTOR CARS STOVE OIL 1 azines, Pocket Novels and

Any Quantity Books. John D .. Snow, 9

xllUXXllx Adams New Gower Street.

oct:lO,lmth Servlce Station XX( ll

UX X KliXXXXXXXXXXXliXXXI 11xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

,!IX OXXXXXXXO XXX cxx xxxxxll xx

WHO ELSE WANTS A NEW CAR!

aUV IT NOW WITII A

· toW.COST LU'E-INSUHED

X X'JCXXX !XX XIlX xxxx xxxx X XXXI XX )( )( X X X XXX

X X X X X X X XXX XXX XXXX X X X

'~t)()(X X XXXX X ~

~XX~ ~ ~XX~ ~XX X X X X X X Xll' X XXXX X X X •

LOAN

THE BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA

NEWFOUNDLAND .. > •

SERVICES···<'·

PASSENGER NOTICE S.S, BURGEO REPLI\CING S.S.

NORTIIERN RANGER ST. JOliN'S TO CORNER

BROOK SERVICE 1

S.S. Burgco on St. John's to Corner Brook Service will sail from the Dock Coaslal Wharf NOON to·day.

CONNECTION CORNER BROOK . I.EWISPORTE

SER\'ICE Train "The Caribou" Ical'ing,

Sl. John's 12:01 p.m. Hunday,

1 No\'ember 27lh., will make con·

Adams Ave. and Pennywell DIAL 5831 or 80399

nov23,lmlh

'

NOT IN$UT!D 1Y TH! I.I.C.

I nection ·at Corner Brook with S.S. Springdale on Corner Brook Lewisporte Sen•icc. 1 1----------.

Bell's Cafeteria LL\HTED

CONNECTION WEST RUN PLACENTIA 81\Y

Train "The Caribou" leaving St. John's Monday, No1•ember 27th., will make connection via Placentia Junction and Argentia with i\I.V. Petite Forte for \\'est Run Placentia Bay .

CONNECTION BAY RUN I

PLACENTIA BAY I

Open 6 ·days a weclc-9-6 ~JQN;M Y: 9-~.30 FRIDAY: 9-9.3ol

Watch our window for the daily SPt:CL\L dinner.

IIELI.'S also cater for:­Private Parties - Banquets - Club ~~eels - Weddings etc.

For Rcocrvalions DIAL 7094

Train "The Caribou" leaving St. John's 12.01 p.m. Wednes· day, November 29th., will make connection via Placentia June· tion and Argenlia with ~I.V. ':-~~~~~~~~~~·

noi'IG.lmth

Petite Forte for Ba)' Run Pia· centia Bay.

CONNECTION Gr.EEI\' 8t\ Y SERVICE

Train "The Caribou" leaving St. John's 12:01 p,m. Wcdttes· day, November 29th., will make connection at Lcwisporte with :II.V. Nania for Green Bay Ser· vice.

FREIGHT NOTICES CHANGE IN FRI\IGll'f

ACCEPTANCE

FOR SALE

Reconditioned

Washers.

Dial 92693

Where To Stay Balsam Hotel

BARNES ROAD Situateu m the r,cart ot he City

Quiet. Comfortable A.tmos· ph ere

For Rt~rvationa and Information:

Dial 6336 !llRS JOHN FACEY. Resident ~lanageress

m31,ti'

J.&S. RYAN liARD WARE

51 - 55 Job Street 121 Duckworth Street

Dial 4991 • 2480

SPECIAL

LATEX PAINT 1 .'19 per Quart

£E~II·GLOSS

1.59 per Quart

TOYS - P.\IXT GENERAL HARDWARE

I nov20,lmth

1·~~~~1 i AUTO PARTS (Whole)

Nfld, Armature

Works 38

83mb ric• Street

Dial 7191-2

BUILDING MATERIALS

CHESTER DA WE, Ltd. SUA W ST. and TOPSAIL RD

For all your Building Requirements call

80161 - 91111 ---------ELECTRICAL APPLICANCES

HEAP & PARTNERS (NFLD.) Ltd. Wiring Materials, Wire and

Cables, Motors, Starters, Lamps, Switches, l,igbtinl

Fixtures, ~tc · WAREHOUSE: PIIJNCE'8 ST.

DIAL 5088

Effective immediately freight for ports Lewisporle·Corncr Corner Brook Service via Lewis· pole will be accepted DAILY at Railway Freight Shed. Clos· ing date lo guarantee conncc· lion with service will also be announced. Daily Acceptance for St. John's • Lewlsporle Ser· ,---~------· ----------vice ts cancelled. FIRE INSURANCE

SHIPPERS PLEASE NOTE: GREAT EASTERN Oils, Gasoline and other rc· OIL & IMPORT CROSBIE & CO., Ltd.

stricted cargoes per motor vessel Agents for for regular ports, St. John's to CO., LTD. UNDERWRITERS AT Battle Harbour, will be accept· Radio, Television, Washers. LLOYDS. ed at the Dock Coastal Shed Refrigerators, Deep Freezers. LOW RATES Monday, November Z7th., and Eleclr'~ Ranges, DIAL 5031 Tuesday, November ZBth., from Floor Polis.tcr~. 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. This wlll (iramophones be final acceptance for this Public Address SystLtna, Season, . Tape Recorders .

Rt:l'AIRS AND SEr.VICE FREIGHT ST. JOHN'S. 5 LINES LEWISPORTE SERVICE DLU. liOOl to 3005 .

Freight for ports St. John's W to Lewisporte Service per M.V. ATER STREET Clarenville accepted at Dock lanZ6,Iy · Coastal Shed Tuesday, Novcm· '====~~==~~=:! her 28th. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

FREIGHT SOUTH COAST .STRVICE · ....

Freight is accepted daily at Railway Freight Shed for ports on South Coast Service, but in order. to guarantee move'menl by this trip .III.V. : Bonavisia, freight must be · at Railway Freight Shed by 1 p.m. Tucsd.ay, November 28th •. · . SPECIAL FREIGHT ACCEPT. Public Notice

ANCE - S.S. NORTHERN , -RANGER Tenders. are invited and will

Shipper will · please ''note be received up to 5 p.m. on special. freight acceptance for Monday, December 4, 1961, for following ports per S.S. North· snow clearing and removal at ern Ranger will bll accepted .at the Memorial . University Dock Coastal Wharf Wedncs· Campus. day, November 29th. 9 a.m. to · Copies of plans showing the 5 p.m. and Thursday, November extent· of work, spec.ifications 30th., 9 a.m. to NOON. ~il· and forms of tender maY be lingatc, LaScie, Westport, Hr. obtained· on application to the Deep, Roddickton, Englee, Main Draughtill!l 'Room of this De· Brook, St. A'nthony, and Cqok's partment. Harbour. Ship will· sail' from Tenders •are to be submitted St. Jo~n's NOON' Dt\ccinber ls.,. in, scaled envelopes, . addressed and will proceed (rom ;Cook's 'to the· undersigned . with the Harbour direct to Corner Brook. woras ''!Tender for Snow-,Cicar·

• · ,· t · ing - Memorial University". The · Department docs not

biJ,ld . i~e!f 'lei accept the lowest or any tender. . · · ·

.. •R. 1\lANNili!G,

1 •• : • • • Deputy ~lin\s\cr.

I Department or Public Works, · I ·st. --John's; Nov. 24, 1961.: .

HARDWARE STORES

TOOL RENTAL Electric Sabre Saws.

Portable Sanders and Skill Saws.

Reasonable Rate• BARRIS & HISCOCK LTD.

General Hardware Sporting Goods.

ERNEST CLOUSTON, LIMITED

McCLARY AUTOMATIC WARM AIR CONDITIONING

DIAL 4183 216 WATER ST.

INSURANCE AGENTS AND BROKERS

)OB BROTHERS & COf\.IPANY, Ltd.

Water Strett DIAL 26511 _; 41211

REG. T. MORGAN lNSURANCE Ltd. Temple Bldg., P.O. "oJ 168,

341 Duckworth St. DIAL 80310 or· 7756

DRUG STORES

M. CONNORS Ltd. Prescriptions Pickup and. •' delivery service.

PHONE ~206

RADIO-TV . REPAIRS

GREAT EASTERN OIL COMPANY, Ltd ... REPt\IRS TO RADIO&'. TV

AND ALL F.LEL"fRfCAL PIAL :J~Ol to 3005

APPL1A"'CES

CARD

Dr. P. A. SPURRELL

will be out of town from Nov . .25th to

Dec. 2nd. nov22,24

LOST-A large sum or money yesterday aCiernoon. Reward offered. Dial 38335.

t'OR SALE-1 Black Cocker Spaniel female Puppy. Price $30.00. Phone 78723.

; TO RENT - One Apartment containing three rooms and bathroom; furnace heated, and semi-furnished; own entrance. Also garage. Re· liable tenants required. For appointment to inspect please apply to Box 1100, The Daily News.

VEL VET H.ORN ~ IIOARD and L;dgh;g mil· able (or an elderly couple. For information write to P.O. Box 111. c/o The Dally DANCE

1 News. nov24,2i

Saturday Night ! t:LECTRIC !~eaters, washing I and Sew;ng ~lachincs, .\lusie 1)\· Tom B\'rnc I Rangcttcs, Steam Irons

Vacuum Cleaners, etc. Re: Cover: 8.2.00 Double paired at reasonable rates.

Tete. 49073 Ron Chafe, 116

"FOOD AT ITS BEST' -·Bond st~~~L __ no\'22.1mth ---.. I L.\DIES WANTED-:U;k'~·;;p-

Winter Storage Garage

A \·ailable for one car,

99A Le.\!arehant Hoad

Phone 3813

Crystal Palace GOULD'S ROAD

Saturday Night i'\ovcm her .2.jth, 1961

Private Dance Club Closed

The Patrician Association

of '

St. Patrick1s Hall General meetincr: 11.30 Sunday morni~g.~· 26 Xovemhcr.

Place: torium.

St. Pat's Audi-

1~ S2G.OO a week doing Simple home sewing in your spare time. Write-Bunnys, Box 7010, Adelaide Post Office, Toronto, Ontario.

,n0\'21.6i

THE CENTRAL BARBER SHOP-We are now operat­ing 10 chairs, you can be assured of prompt, effie•· em, sanitary service No waiting problem, 24 New Gower Street oppor Ill Ad• !aide Motors, Ltd.

WAREHOUSE SPACE-For Rent approximately 600 sq. ft. ground floor, truck en· trance. Apply to , ~lcws Apartments, 20 Glenridge Crescent. Phone 6957.

FOR PRO~lPT and experi· enced service in Auction· ecrin::. Please contact John J. Fitzgibbon ,Auctioneer, 127 Hamilton Ave., Phone 3284. oct24, lmth

GLADY'S BEAUTY SIIOPPE cor. Bond and Prescott Sts. Phone 4951 · 7898. Special· izing in cold waving, hair styling, cutting and tinting, manicuring, facials etc., 14 operators, no waiting. ocl20,l;T

Business: Plannin~ for · Annual· Collection of the Irish Christian Brothers, SundaY, 3 December. . .

DO YOU NEED your Spring· filled mattress re-condition· ed or your All Wool mat treli! rc.picked, and rccov· ered, your bedspring or day· bed re·wired or your furni ture re·upholstered. If 10 Call us. Items called for and deli1•ered. Rates lowest obtainable. Keats Mattress Factory, 16 Mount Royal Avenue. Ph.one 92753, 2656.

UNWANTED HAIR Vanished away with Saca·Pelo. Saca·Pelo is different. It does not dissolve or remove hair from the surface, but penetrates and retards growth of unwant· ed hair. Lor-Beer Lab., Ltd., Ste. 5, 679 Granville Street, Vancouver 2, B.C.

All friends and support­ers welcome.

TO-DAY

10.30 a.m. Children's Skating 13 years and under

Ad . . ')'"' t mission .. .. :.i) cen s

2.30 p.m. to 4.30 p.m . General Skating

7.15 p.m. Jr. Hockey

St. Pat's vs Guards Holy Cross vs St. Bon's

Reserved ...... 75 cents Gen Admission 50 cents

Sunday, Nov. 26th 8.30 p.m.

. General Skating

Tickets for · J\!onday night's games Feildians vs St. Bon's, Holy Cross

· vs Guards, on. sale on holding seat certificates today, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

:~~~~ .IT MAY NQT BE

YOUR FAULT If you have an accident BUT it IS your fault if you pay more to have necessary re· pairs effected, Ask us for quotations first.

' . . PAINTING and BODY

WORK · A SPECIALTY

All our work· is 'guaranteed BROOKFIELD

·SERVICE STATION cm'd BODY SHOP

Cor. COWAN & TOPSAIL ROAD

PHONE 95410 • 92381

. ~;-' ...

nov4,11, 18,25

Increase Your Income Agents wanted, male or femalf., lo sell our complete lin• of fast selling, popular priced, Ladies' and Men's Banlon Shaggy Wools - Bulky Knit sweaters, direct to wearer. With an atlraclivt range of ladies, double Knit Orlons, suib and dresses of the latest fall and winter fasqions, full or part time, high commissions and X· MAS bonus. Write today for free working kit to: Jay Di•· tributor& Ltd., P.O. Box 135 Outremount Montreal 8, P.Q. nov4,11,18,25

NOTICE Notice i1 hereby given that It

is the intention of the under· 1 signed company to make applic· I ation to the Board o! Liquor I Control, St. John's, Newfound·

land for a license to sell been, wines and liquors from its hotel premises situate at the Wabush Lake Townsite, Labrador, Ne'IV· foundland.

Dated at St. .lohn'~ ill tht Province of Newfoundland this 24th. day o( November A.:D. 1961.

( Sgd.) M. C. K. LIMITED. · nov25,29,dec:r. ·

Prompt Delivery On • STOVE OIL • FURNACE OIL • HARD.COAL • SOFT COAL • IRON FIREMAN

HEATING EQUIPi'flENT.

\

I

Lounge 12 a.rn . Cl 1 TV t,unge 4.oQ 'P·illu BIG HAPPY ROLJD

r 0 ll . ~ NHsr Wtn: 2 Weeh H;l::,

NASSAU. 8AHN,1Ai' Enrr tallo~r~u

!ipl'!daJ nanu u ~ · Llu Rrotdut~

Cinema j~;cnpe t r.~. BIGGt:~'l Ht~·o ll< It

UNI~UE and INTj 11~tt Catermg to Pri\'ate

CAll 90026

"JEE Doing the

Work

McKINLAY MOTORS

LeMarchant no1·22.1m1h

WE'RE A~ CLOSE A~

YOUR TELEPH

! :"i' Cll' Phone numbm.

I Monday, N I will help you w ..

service in St. Jc::·l

80491 for lll lmic!l

)londay tD Fri1a~

9 a.m. · 12.30 p.m., l, !•

All other tim!! c1l

80492 Pamnger !!]H

Frei~ht sale!

Freight clair.1

.... ccounting

Purchaling

80497 Tic~et oHlCI

80496 Sleepln;;. dintn; 1~d

2294

5975 .4.ir lxprtH

2968 Exprm ralf' i'r.l lc!:!JtE>I

80016

2588 Area lbnlfll

80493 J)upa1chin(

80494 Freight Shtl

80495

80491 51nrtt

80498

80401 Superintendent d

2306 Coastal Deparlt

~

r<l~ BOl

Newspc SER

B 6 8 9 7

14 1 3

13 5

10

TOO

I 20 22 24 17 21 27 23

20 Consolation

Help Kin

·Expert ~

SERVIC

AVALON WAfER A'J ,

Tl

AN1

ACC

Flo\•

·~

Operators fo Classi

By the Iron C employment i centrating mi Project, Labn ~rusher Opel bon of mine car dumper c ary conveyors Grinder and control all pa associated eql Orerators (P1 h 24 process andling equ:

Applicants w perience' in t eq . utpment ot £0t absolut~l, ,lllployee be ~~~ policy; g F msuranc~ ~r further~

i. auld conta~ · l'ERSONN ·OFFICE!~

.·. lRONoru ' .. '9S LeMAJ .··· 8T..tom

llo1U,30Jec2 ...

Page 15: l067 THE DAILY NE s - Memorial University DAIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...l067 rscd cars and trucks sohl THE DAILY NE s by'ooURS far this rear. Why not

EP" IICLES

le World's /ork

iNLAY >RS Ltd.

I On[

:1E AS SE AS OUR ~PHONE

80491 Jl! •mitM

:.1y to Frida•

80492

~~t ,~Jf!

~r.t tlatm

80497

80496

2294

5975 .... ir Exprr!ol

2968

: 1rattie I

2588

80493 Despatcbin'

80494 rrtight Sbtl

80495

80491 litnr,.

80491

'ttl Area !nP

80401

c DAILY NEWS. ST JOHN'S, NFLD. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1961 . !]!!:.-----

:.

f{INSMEtJ Boys' Club

Newspaper BINGID SERIES No. 54 TODA Y'S NUMBERS

I N G 0 6 20 34 49 70 8 ~:2 37 46 62

9 2-1 33 65 .. 17 40 74 I

14 21 31 73 1 2i 45 69 3 ~;3 39 64

13 42

61 ~ ·14

20 Consolation Prizes for the Letter "X"

Help Kin - Help Kiddies /·\

Expert Watch Repairs

AVAlON CREDIT JEWELLERS WAfER AT ADELAIDj,_ I'HONE 18Z9

$1.50 WEEKLY

BUYS

S50.00 WORTH

TIRES, BATTERIES,

A:"iTI·FREEZE - TOYS,

TOOLS, AUTO

ACCESSORIES & PARTS

HANDY ANDY DEALER

}'lower IIIII Ph: 6127

WANTED Operators for Crusher, 'Grinding and

Classification and Process By the Iron Ore Company of Canada for employment iu a modern iron ore con­cen~ratin~ mill at Labrador City, Carol Project, Labrador. ~rusher Operators, to coi1trol the olJera-1011 of mine to mill automatic rai way, ~ar dumper crusher, apron feeder, prim­r~ conveyors and shuttle conveyor.

Grmder and Classification Operators, to control all parts of six Aerofall. Mills and associated equipment. Ouerators (Process} to orJerale all Jlarts o( ~4 , h - .Process spiral lines and product andhng equipment.

Ap 1· · ~ tcan.ts with several years prior ex-~en.ence in the operation of the ty/Je of qu•pment outlined above preferrcc, hut ~ot absolutely essential. l'mployee benefits include liheral vaca­i~~~ policy; group life, hospital and med­Fo msurance; pension plan, etc. sb r f1udrther particulars interesletl persons

ou contact: PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT, OFFICE No. 510, ~~OLN ORE COMPANY OF CANADA, . eMARCHANT ROAD . ·

no!I,J~!fN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND

NOTICE Successful bidders on the V.O.W.R. Radio Auction who have not yet picked up their delivery slips are asked to call at the V.O. W.R. Studio on Patrick Street, for them before November 30th.

* Star Of The Sea Assoc~at!on Monthly fees and issue of 1962 (White) ~lembcrship Cards TO-MORROW, SUN­DAY, November 26th, 1961.

E. J. MOTTY. Secretary.

TEAC:~ERS WANJ·ED For Grade I and VIII

Duties to begin January 8, 1962 Apply to the

Buchans Public School Board, MR. PEARCE KING,

Chairman. nov25,dec2

CLOSIN.G NIGHT

, PARISH FAIR IN HOLY CROSS AUDITORIUM

Patrick Street

EXTRA! EXTRA'!

CARDS .. .. . . $2.00 EACH - 25th Game ....... $1000.00 -

- BANK NIGHT PRIZE·-

ONE GRAND PIANO to be drawn at 11.30 p.m. TO-NIGHT. Tickets lOc. each.

Everything must go tonight. Come and solve your Xmas Gift problems.

Last Night's Door Prize-No. 28377.

Unclaimed Numhcrs: 6500, 11102, 2657, 13188, 4070, 29445, 30869.

YOUR LAST NIGHT TO GO OUR WAY

WANTED . .

INSTRUCTORS (TRADE TRAINING} For employment with the Iron Ore Com­pany of Canada, Labrador City, Carol Project, Labrador. Rec1nired to teach basic subjects in the mechanical and electrical trades and con­duct other training as may be required. Applicants should have a B.Sc. degree in civil, electrical or mechanical engineering and teaching experience, or be a technical school graduate with industrial training experience. Employee benefits include: liberal vaca­tion policy; group life, hospital and med­ical insurance; pension plan, etc. For further information interested persons should contact:

PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT, OFFICE No. 510, IRON OHE COMPANY OF CANADA, 95 LeMARCHANT ROAD, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND

nov25,30dec2

WAN.TED· CONTROL ELECTRICIANS

For employment with the Iron Ore Com­pany of Canada at Labrador City, Carol Project, Lahrador. · . To maintain, repair, calibrate and com­mission, process and power control sys­tems, recorders and indicating in­struments of the electrical, electronic and pneumatic types. · Applicants should be technical school graduates or equivalent and have at least two years experience in duties describ­ed above. Employee bm1efits include; liberal vaca­tion policy; gi·oup life, hospital and med­ical insurance; pension plan, ~tc. For further p11rticulars interested persons should contact:

PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT, OFFICE No. 510, . IRON ORE COMPANY OF CANADA, . 95 LeMARCHANT ROAD, ST. Jf"HN'S, NEWI"OUNDLAND

nov25 30dcc2

I .

.

St: Thomas' Women's Association

Annual Fall Sale CANON WOOD HALL

TUESDAY AFTERNOON, NOV. 28th at 3 p.m.

Fancy and Plain and Wool Work; Home ;Cookery, Novelty Stall, also Christmas Tree, Afternoon Teas 50 cents.

JUMBLE SALE To be held

MONDAY, NOV. 27th, at 7 p.m.

in St. Pat's Auditorium, Bonaventure Ave.

Admission ............ 5 Cents

Entrance on Bonaventure Avenue,

The Holy Cross

Association A meeting of the Association will be

held to-morrow, Sunday, following 10.30 Mass.

Special Business: Discussions concern­. ing Christian Brothers Collection; an elec~ tion of a Coach for the Intermediate Bask­etball Team.

Sgcl. R. B. DOWNEY, Secretary.

'lTY OF ST. JOHN'B

ST. JOl-IN'S i\IU~ICIPAL COUNCIL

TENDERS Bids are requested for the demolition and removal of buildings on King's Road. Specifications for this work are available at the office of the City Engineer.

Bids in scaled envelopes marked 'Tender for Demolition" must be delivered at the office of the undersigned not later than 9.00 a.m. Wednesday, December 6, 1961. The lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted.

E. B. FORAN, City Clerk.

FUEL! FUEL! FUEl! FUEL! When you need .oil Here is what to do:

DIAL

UNION OIL 2822 When you need oil-You need us I

Cln' OF ST. JOHN'S

ST. JOHN'S MUNICIPAL COUNCIL

PUBLIC NOTICE I hereby certify that at the Municipal Election held on 14th November, 1961 the following persons were elected as Mayor and Councillors for the City of St. John's to hold office in accordance with Sections 22 and 23 of The City of St. John's Act for the four years commencing 1st January, 1962.

Mayor H. G. R. Mews ............ Elected William G. Adams ................ Elected James D. Higgins, Q.C ............. Elected Geoffrey C. Carnell ................ Elected Alec; G. Henley ........................ Elected Walter C. Carter .................... Elected James M. Fagan ................. : .... Elected

E. B. FORAN, City Clerk,

Returning Officer. Dated at St. 'lloh111s November 24th, 196'1.

-. ·.;..• . ·', '·, .;

SISTERS OF SERVICE AUXILIARY

MEMBERSHIP . TEA will be held at 7 Garrison Hill on SUNDAY, November 26th.

from 3.00 to 5,30 p.m. Members may renew their membership. A cordial invitation is extended to new

members. Convenor: ;\!iss Gertrude A. Phelan.

CAREER OPPORTUNITY I~ SALES ARE YOU INTERESTED IN: - representing a leading manufacturer who is the

largest advertiser in the world, selling famous quality products such as Fluffo, Crisco, Crest to the retail and wholesale grocery and drug trade.

- an attractive starting salary with increases based on merit?

- unsu~passed profit. sharing plan, pension plan, ~ospl!al and medical protection, group life msurance?

- Company car which may also be used for per· sonal driving ? •

- unlimited opportunity for advancement in a firm where all executive appointments are made from within the Company?

A thorough sales training programme ? If you are interested and are an aggressive intel· li!(ent, young man; 21 - 30 years of age, please write giving all details of background and cxpercincc and include a recent photograph, to:

W. R. OTIS, Eastern Area Sales ~lanager, The Proctor & Gamble Co, o! Canada, Ltd., 1255 Laird Boule\·ard, Town of :llount Royal, Que.

ll0\'25,27 ,28

WAN.TED INSTRUMENT MECHANIC

For employment with the Iron Ore Company of Canada at Labrador City, Cadol Project. Labrador. Duties involve the maintenance of Automatic Rail· road Control. Automatic Dumping, and loading · control s)·stems.

Applicant should be graduate of technical school or equivalent and have three years experience maintaining Railway Signalling systems and experi ence with electronics as applied to signalling sys­tems. Experience in diesel Electric Locomotive Circuitry desirable but not essential.

Employee benefits include, liberal vacation policy; group life, hospital and medical insurance; pension plan, etc.

Interested persons should contact:

PERSONNEL DEPART~IENT, OFFFIFCE No. 510, IRON ORE COMPANY OF CANAD,~, 95 Le!IIARCHANT ROAD, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND.

nov25,30dcc2

Jon Canoe Rums Not a pot still product

Made by a New Continuous Distillation Process

which remons the unwanted Tars, Fusi! Oils ~nd Esters. No headache, upset stomach or harsh bile.

JON CANfOE The Rum for you

Smooth man, Smooth ! nov21,2mths (Not inserted by th•l B.L.C.)

CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN IF CHAFE MAKES ntE CLOTHES.

Wm. L. CHAFE TAILOR

4 HOLDSWORTH ST. ST. JOHN'S

FOR SALE

U 1tra modern dwelling house' on Cornwall Crescent, containing living room, dining room. large recreation room, kitchen, two and ·one half bathrooms, cedar closets, laundry, garage and other rooms which can be converted' to such use as would meet purchaser's requirements. House is new, modern oil furnace with baseboard heating. Mainly plastered throughout; floors are hardwood or tile; drapes are hung in living quarters. The lighting, plumbing and other fixtures in and th.e construction, design and decoration of th1s house are modem in every respect. Land is freehold and landscaped. Immediate possession.

For further particulars apply to:

CURTIS, DAWE & FAG~N Barristers and Solicitors,

280 Duckworth Street; St. John's. TELEPHONE: 2241, 4185

m,w,s,tf

15

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Page 16: l067 THE DAILY NE s - Memorial University DAIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...l067 rscd cars and trucks sohl THE DAILY NE s by'ooURS far this rear. Why not

."

i·: t. ',:I -::~·-:-·~5 __ ----:::--:--:-:--:=-:----::-=----;:=======::-:-~·-:...-----T-H_E~D-A_IL_.Y_N_:E_\_V_;,S,_s_T_ . .:.JO_H':=:~=·'=S.=N::r~::·L::D::··:::S::A::T::tJ=R=D~AY~'·::N::'O~\~'E:'~,::lB:E~H ~i, I'

! 'i How "Catholic DigeSt" Began 1 Fnnn Florida AT THE r~KECHiiSTMA~ '- 1 [ :mw. YORI\ 1.\Pl-Onc ·sum· St. Paul, a bushel basket ol Despite its 'nnanaial succc;s, I '71 '1.7: f ~~!!~!!tl!~-= S0JGF ;~ 1

' ~ T

I mer da~· in 19~6. Rei'. Lm1is A. po5tcnnls between them, and Fathe1· Gules says !rankly the 1 O L OU J LAST HE WHOLE YEAR THROUGH Gale~. a 40·year·old curate at began making pluns lor what aim o( the magazine is not to • u~~

:.. I St. ;\gncs Church in St. Paul, was to become the most SUC· make J,l!Oney, but to make more ~ THB GIVE . !: !\linn., decided to do something ccsslul Roman Catholic maga- Catholics. NEW fQ·LJ·AGE AND CO. • • • • · 1

1 about an idea that had been zlne in the world. "Our hope Is to show the rich LtMtno 00 K

I. nagging him more than two Catholic Digest, which ob· content of the Catholic faith by p bl 1· JYcors. served Its 25th anniversary with selecting the best reading mn· A T U ic Notice I j1 1 Hopefully. he mailed to about the 144·page November issue, terinl available so that those PL N S · ~~19.000 Roman Catholics across now is a private corporation who are mildly interested in • .MEMOIRS OF AN T - I

I L . I . 1' ' . 1 t . I' OLD S\,'E \T enders are invited and Wl'll '

! the . ·mtcd ~t:1tes a. l ummy grossrn~ $ii,OOO,OOO a year. Calho ICism 1mg 1 mves,1gate · 1 b 1

1 l'n,·cr nl a dtgest lypl' mag:1- honsls a paid U.S. cit'cltlation it more thoroughly," he said. D S 'Ll $! -o · c received up to 5 p.m. on . ~ Pj .E<,\S U· JlE, J>Y snow clearing •nd re1novai at 1 "'.

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zirw. its ,ug!~I·stt•d cunlcnts of 7al,178, ncwstand sales or Only about 15 per cent of the Mam.' New T)'j1CS to ong 1111 1

· ··· · '.iJ Monday, December 4, 1961, for I~ li>lt•d un tltl' lront. Het'ipicnb t:i.ll\JO n nwnlh, plus to forei~n contents or each issue is of a Choose From " '

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w.re :i'!;ed to :utri~c wlll'tlwr ctlilions ]ll'inted in fil·e !an· rdigious nature, :n1d about . THE BOSLOAD the. Confederation Building. i~ 1

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th,•y would sub,;crihc In this I ~~~a~cs and a hr:lille edition. lhrec·((Uartcrs of the l'eligious 49 t $5 00 · _ • Copies of plans. showing tlw 11'. · •, l.ind uf J>uhlivalion. EXI'ASJHm F.\CJI.I'I'Jt;s mal erial is staff \l'l'lllen. A c. 0 ' · i · Emily Kimbrough 3.9<J : extent of work, specificatior.s'l;,

'J' I I I 1' II I' 't l · · · ll 1· tl l l t ·.,· A"t' '(,'E'L ()l'• '· an.cl for1n•.· of tender mav be ob· ~ \I'll mont1s a cr • a tcl' 1 ·rom 1 s Je~mmng tn IC survey s wwcd 1a a JOLI one 1' " ,

Gall's and a dose lriend, Re1·. chanrl•ry basement it has ex- of every six persons who read Sec Otll' new shipment ; HUDSON BAY- lamed on application to the I ·

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P:1ul Bussard. sal in the base· pamied its physical facilities on I the magazine is not a Roman of the newest planters 1 I Draughting Room of this De· ~ j: mrnt of the bishop's hot1sc in six occasions and since t9:io has Catholic. 'T 1e True Story of parlment. 1• , ·----- housed " starr or tOO in offices for that just right l ~laud Walt- Tenders are to be submitted

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!> ' i occupyin~ an entire city block Pl./\;<; NEW SERVICF: '"Fashion Touch". 1' \\'i\li·,ttll .·' ".·\tie•\' · in scaled em·e!opes,. addressed ; in the St. Paul suburb ol Rose· TOll ONTO lCP 1 - The !il·sl \,, · to the 11 d · d · I' ! Aut!CJ'"Oll 1 c _, n crs1gnc wtth the -,. rille. regular helicoptet· pagsenget· ser- " -dlo words "Tender for Snnw Clear· f'.

In addition, the magazine has l'icc between Toronto lntcrna· 1 THE SPANISH · rng-Conlcdcration Building.'' ~

' a monlhly hook ch1b with j6,0fllll tiona! Airport al Malton and 1

•• CIVIL \VAR . The Department does· not ~ members. ar~rl ncx.t Fehruary 1 d?ll'nlo~rn , Tm·onlo. will start i ~ h1nd ttscll lo accept I he lowest : ~

TF:'\IlFRS · rl~ns lo bc~lll publica I ton of a lll'\ew \cars day. 11 was an· 1 Hugh Thomas 8.o0. or an~· tender. 1 ~ " ' ' ~cconrl magal.inr, 1l1c Ca)holic nounccd Thnrsday by the Air\ ·'!All"\ ('01\'\'0V R •y• 'li '•' ·' 1 J l' I I . ",.r-;NING, ! ...

~ . . -~-:-, Mnrkct. a slick-papCI' monlhl~·. T1·ansport Hoard. h lic~nre was I kl I Dr) t 'I" · "' ,.EA~.LD Tl;:\llERS adrh-r~-s· 1 \nothn rntct·prisc in the works 1 awm·clcd by the hoRI'd to a Tor-, Peter S Jan· anc & · 111

Y "mister. ~ rrl l<~ .s~~r~Iar~·. Department .1 ~ 1 . i~_ a ju~ior hook club offrrin~ \ ont~ firm to operate hrtwc~n its \ SEED CO., L TO., . Anthouv Ilunler .. :.l.50 ~~P~~~~~~l:~:l ~~tu~!i.c 1'9V6o1r.ks, ~ Publu 1\.0lk>. noon! B-322, ~tr I bw~raph1es ol famous Catho-1 h~ltport. on the Toronto woler· · · 410 W;\TER STREET. ! ABO~Il"'t (AJlLE 1· --- ~ Charles fnppcr Bmldm~. Rlt'· lie~. Iron! and Malton Airport.

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Cl ! ~ i crsirle Dril'c, Ottawa and en· ------ Phone 432~, St. John's S?\'0\V~IEN I, TY OF ST. JOHN'I f>

dorscd "Tender for Wharf Ex· A N L•t I T S l 7 9~ ~ ew I e' van • anccrson . <J 1~

tenoion, L'Anse au Clair, Lab· " radar South, ~ewfoundland.", 1 CROWDED CANVAS ;

will he receil'.cd until 2.00 p.m. \I The ~!emoirs of ;

(E.s.T.), N I I d Paramount . John sl~eneer ~

The rnost slide projector ,you can buy

r:'' 1[' Finest ·j 't . m~st automatit \ slide projector

ever built

l067 Used ca

far this vea

us soURS 0. ... · ·Nova n rra __ -·

- 68. -No. 264

New Guinea­WEDSESIMY, December 20, ew . s an. ' f:hurcJul\ . . 4.25 ~

1961. Now Playing Kms sTILL sAY 1 ~ Plans, specifications and THE DARNDEST ST .. JOHN'S ~

rr>rms of tender. can bejseen, or New Plans THINGS MUNICIPAL COUNCIL ~ fiifticJals here Nov. 22 man in uniform is in charge of to the camera is of the young rr

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~an be obtained through; Chief ·, 1 f' p;nginecr. Room E·443, Sir "TilE BIG SHOW" WITII Art Link etter .... 3.50 I Tenders ~ Charles Tupper Building, Ri\·cr· ESTHER WILLIAl\IS SEVEN H IVERS ·1 ~ LIMITED

side Dril·e, Ottawa; District En· LO;\ID0;\1 (APl - A young engineer all[] R geologist as I OF C 'v \DA ' ~ 00 k

Br1't' h I h t t d ' J' I t f • l\ 1" . 'T I . . d f l : "' ::inccr. 1'.0. Box 46 , Buc ·. rs coupe as s are a specta ISs o orm the m1dcu:. The spectacle, pagentr)' and · T·l \ ~I ·I - OO enc ers are mnte or t1e

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1'. master's Field. Building 29, St. nJO\'e to set up a community on of the community. excitement of circus life sweep , II~ l • ac en nan ?·. supply of Fifteen Hundred ( 1.- ; ~

DISTRIBUTORS FOR "KODAK" IN NEWFOUNDLAND

.John'~. C\fld.: Disll'iCt En::ineer, a remote away-h·om·il·all is· i "ll's not a Rollinson Ct'tiSOC across the screen as 20th Cen·! CLif roN fAD~ I:\\ s '50fl) tons of Sail. . ! Ralston Building. P.O; Box 875,lla~ld ~ale .rrom_ nuclear war. 1 \:entnre.'' he . declared. "\l'e tury·Fox brings to the public! F!HESIDE Dehrery must be m areord· :'ft. Halil;tx; and can be seen nt the: rhe) . I\ an! oO other .. couples •h_all u·ade w1lh other coun· "The Big Show," one of the IJ>E•\l)I~R ,1 0~ 1 a nee with specifications arail·. ~

YOUR CHRISTMAS PHOTOGRAPHIC Gifl GIVING HEADQUARTERS

Post Offices at Grand Falls and : ~nd ll~etr chrldren to JOlll them tnes." · year's most unique films blend· . ' ... ·., . ·"iJ . a!>le_ at the otfrte of the c1ty : f' C~rnrr Brook. Nfld. 1 !n their ,·entm;e to f?nn n hllle .. Stanhur,l' s;!id money will he ing the realism of life under, FL:\\II:.S C:0\11\G Engrneer. ! !

To he con;idercrl each tender! rslnnd state Wll~ then· ~wn gm·· · 11151 , for trmhng: the big·lop with a stark intra· i Ol'T OF TilE TOP •Bids in scalrd em·elopes l!.t.o:t;o.t:o••:o::uo.:o:.:o·t:o:.:o:i..cCHHCHct .1

I crnmcnt. makmg the1r Cll'n 1 "Erer~·ont wtll work while family drama of sadism. rnlh·. . . (' II' ~ _0 marked '''l'rndcr for Salt" must ------ --~-:·-- ·: --:·-- ··-- .. mtt>

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11laws and 1rading \\'ith olher, the children nrc cared for in a 1 d t Tl ·c 1 i\m111a11 .o tllS -··J he de!i 1·ercd ·1tthc orr1·(·e of til" ~ll:'\ERS KILLED

taJ >e accompantC( ,. one o 1 .· cssness an yranny 1e pt · · · ' 1 · J . . ~ . . . . coun 11c~. communal nursery and the ' . \\'II DER\l~SS A c c k nsurance the allernat11e .ecunt1es 1 Bemard Stanbury, 32

.year· wires will help themselrcs 10 turc in CinemaScnpe and De· i ' .• : ',. '-. 1ty I.er · not later than 9.00 BEI\Ll:\ L\PJ _ :o;ine Polish I·alled lot· m the tender j old business man who is father food from a central larder. Luxe Color now playing at' Tale ol the Cidl \\'ar a.m. \\ ednesday, December

1 coal miners were killed in an

documents. . of the project. is searching for "·\ . . .. the Paramount Theatre with ' R I ·t \\'· .. 1 "" 19!il. • i . . . th p I k . t i o· th he made on the printed· n 1 ·1 d · .n appomled cnmmtltec l\111 Esther \l'illiams ,Cliff Roberl· ,'0 JCl . ,uJen · ·'J.J The In_wc.,t·rrr any tender not .•x.ptosron _

111 c os a ~me.· a~ Jnner

· . i a 1 c Y IS an · 1 be 111 charge like A "orel'll· }1 ] \ ( 131' \" 'I)T 1 d S1 etochlO\ rcc m the Kalo11 1cc Jorms ~upphcd by the De· I ''The RoYal Gco~raphical men! a d .1 • . ~ .11 son, I'ehcmia Perso!!, Hobert .t ~.. \1 '' ncccs;an Y acccptc . i • • p<lrlmcnt and in ~c.cordancc l s.ociety has p~omised to help us I of a' sc~iou~ ~r;~r~lem~~~~~.111 h~ Vaughn and a score of power· 1 Glad\·s Schmitt .5.93 E. B. FOIL\:\',

1tlistricl on Tlmrsd;ry, the official: A spew.! ri>lwr mrel;~z

mth the . condtttons sell hnd a ~uitable. place-possibly I mi~llt be told to lcal'e the is· lui performers in key roles. 1 THE CARPET- City Clerk. I East German :\cws Agency 1 he held at 1lr• \e~<iuo:.::,:: forth thcrcm. m the sub·I,I,'Oplcs-1o ren.t ot· hnd" Here is do~h]c.!Jarreled en· _11 \rr,J,'nS · nnr2f>,27 :\D:\ reported Friday night. 1

1 Hotel on )tontl"' c1enin:.;1;

'I t I St h .. I· l' d h' 'd • cr ammcn' so mcmora c on , }I . 11 l' II . ~ g- N H • . . . . .... The lowc'l or any tender not II Jive on lrce, Stanbury said. ' · t 1

. 1 bl 1 >1 \•\.• .• n ---------·--·------ sored hr tl>e ln-urante Fe''· ~rcc>~~!'l y acccp e(. an 111;,: ac 1cr 1se IS 1 ea Eaeh coup!~ 11.011111 hwc lo' b th 1 11 1. .11 1 alO l tO I liltS .J. ,J t g lion of i\cwfounctland

in The Times ol L nd n ' I 0 coun ~ tat Hll( Ienceo 11'1 ' IE ew un lll s . 1 . . RORERT FOR'l'llm, "Wh ' l ld . . 0 • 0 ·... • ! 1?1.11 ur S2.8lln lo pay for I he in· carry away !rom the theatre a . DESPITE T I ~ . . . peCI<l spCrt>iC~ In II. t.; :t ~·hirf of ;\dmlnl~trath·e I.· ) SIOU .nt 1: • • "ork_. hrsl 11.1al mstallatiOn of lite commn·lsense of excitement on two !DlST.\1\CE E. H. S. Piprr QC.. t,e · •~_·crt·I'tn• •1111

Se"re.t•r•·. IItle Sally _said. ·I d lrke to mly-por1ablc hutz, food and II . l . h d· d . 1 d . i ' • 1

' ernl :tlana~cr ;uHI Cour.:::

nc"''''IIJicnt of. Public \V{Jrks, St b 'd h · ·• s 01 w Irs stx months 1 of some of the most umquc cir · · .. · · _..,.... l d I NB te ' an"' len •o n • .. ' I start a familY there.. •'or~ r . tl f' t . Cl e s. t c lama an sp en 01 I Will R Bird 4.95 tl \II c I

d an ury srt1 e wants two until they become scll-sulli-1 t .1 d . t1 .. I eas n Federation.

Ot·.awa. octors,. two tenchcrs, H minin~ cienl CliS ac S ever 11'1 ncssc 111 liS D' J & c ltd The meet in~ promi;e! I~ -- · country, and the tense tale of I ~(L~S. 0., . . .. . , . . I' one of much inle_ro;t.

a family brought to the brink .. __ _

• . . on Brand New -NYLON CORD

SNOW TRAVEL

Grip and Go ·in Ice and· Snow

WHY TAKE A CHANCE- and ex peri· ence the frustration of slipping and

1 sliding when NEW Snow Tires are yours at unbelievably low prices.

WHY TAKE A CHANCE- on the haz· ards of a retreaded snow tire when Brand New Snow Travel is priced within the limited budget.

FREE ROAD HAZARD INSURANCE

e NO MILEAGE LIMIT

• NO T~ME LIMIT

e NO REO TAPE

Let It snow, but first make sure that your car hos the big, husky traction of deep· grlp·bitlng SNOW TRAVEL that providef fast G-0, qulck S-T-0-P. Hundreds of knife· like edges DIG DEEP to pull you through SNOW and MUD for worry-free winter driv­mg. Wholesale Discount Savings at Canadian Tii·e;

ALL WITHOUT. TRADE

600 x .16 and . .

670 X 15

$12.95 750 X -14

$13.95

ol destruction by a father The Booksellers . S.\[\ l .JOllt.;: :\.ll. I(.PI-. The controrersy centres on 'will be pr;,ctkall:; lhe !<~ whose demand for implicit ' I ~pee tal game . hcenvc~ author· , how many and whnt type of ; danger to the pul,lic a• loyalty and obedience from his Spin <!..42;) or 2008 or 31!) 1 tzcd at the spl'lng sesswn of the · people will apply for the special · the open sra,on in the r,;· performing children culminates ~- :-iew Brunswick legislature at- i licences. Opponents of l he : D:\:'1/GEI\ TO DEER in his own death. llEATJIS

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hul ha\·c arous;d sharp d!sa·l measure suggest it will mean i George \. \\·e:ock c! Key figure in the ston· is ·-- -------·- ---· -·-

1 traclccl hltle nollce at the lime 1 year-round danger of persons Stephen, a 11 ce·prcs.d~Jt ~:

Nehemiah Pcrsoff, playing' the LEE - Pa,scd away at On 'greemcnt. ~mce the regul<Jr fall i heing ,shot i1.1 the woods. ! Xe1y Brunswick Outfiller> difficult part of Hruno Everard. tario, .Tmnes. son of the late . ht~~tm~ ~cason op~ned. . 1 A. Carle Smtih: a gan:'e ref-. sucmtron. s;\lll lhr ne·.r owner of one of Europe's ccle· George aJJ(l ~fan· Lee. Lc:I\·H~g 1 ~he nm:· regulatiOns pronde? j uge o~~rator, 7ard the hcences: tio~ls "_arc m1t;.. . . brated circuses. With more con· to mourn• \\'Ire. two dau~!ltcls., fot an. eJJhl · monl!1 ptedatOl·: mean . l'lrtualll a ret111:n. to the, ·I fatllo src "'~" ncpe <: · tempt than love, he dominate~ I ar,d one brother, ,Jack. at Corner ; h;mtmg season slarlmg .Jan. I. . anarchic hunt1.1~g condlltons of, forcemenl. ... Oi co~r;e · the lives of his children each Broo!;. Funeral notice lat~r. : \\ Ith . the usual sea~on ext en~!·; a century ago. . will shont a rlrcr if Jl ..

f h .. 'ft

1 . ' CONGDO="' Passed to his .mg ftom Oct. I to :-;0\·. 30. tins. A spokesman for the pronn· their ,i.,ht~ .\nd t d':;:·,,

0 W 0111 IS a "I e( CirCUS per· ' ' - '' . ld h'l't' f h l .. j '!d !'f 1 'd ' . " . . f 1

e f h , eternal rell'arcl. Samuel J. Cong· . ~rou mean pro 1 u ron o 1111 • c1a 11'1 r e ll'anch sal few of think thr.re "iii hr ;rra:t: =~

5°~meJ! ~ac;. 0 IV om mu,t ! don, on :\overnhcr 24th. at Sl : mg only .dunng September and· ~he :i:i,OOO licensed to hnnt dur· gcr to the puiO:ic.. . . • 11 or mac 1!S own wtsh for , Clare's :llcrcv llos ita!. He. Deccml~ct. . , mg the regular fall sca>on arc A dclu~r nl "i'm:rr.• • personal fulfillment to the , · P1 1 . • lluntmg predators 111 months l1kelv lo seck prrrlalor licence< in the "l<•lle•· '" n·.e ! needs of the cir tcal'l'' t(J mourn two l au~ llt'l's, · 1 1 . · • · · · · ·' · cus. :If· · (' ·

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1 anrl \fr; .. c. oscc lo oUter g;tmc IS nor nell'.· ~ranch chic!' ,\. T. Pr!lctirr ,,cdion; or thr Tr:r~r;r:~ · ·

Cll.ff RIJbcrl•on a• HI'ttno's ,-,}'· ,

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1· · .. 0r1 01 Jo'1111 ! l·or years about 2,1lu~l lrce per· satd the re<~sou for the ucw ;u·· ual anrl Tirm'. (;'nor o:

• , ,, . m. ·' ,, lOlii'\. Ollr sotts. ' n .t. . ·II , I f D . t . II l . favored son delivers a sen,itivc St· C .. 1

· 1 p 1 ·i k nd . 11 >-ll'll·1 ) • goor rom e· · ran~emeu rs 1at t >e former ,John f;mncd lloo conirolr:,y .. . ' . . : . · an. ~ r1 anc a 1 c_; a a i cemhcr to September - hm·c hounty syslem. <tpplying to Ralph ;\ (i;,, r. pre·: it::

performance as an acnahst and 1

Iarge c1rrlc of rclat11cs_ and! hren is>ucd to farmers. woods·: bears and porcupines. had the :O:cw Hron"~"tk f'•: · the on~ member of this confhct: 1 f.ncm~s. Rcqutern ~~~,~~ wtll .b: i 1~1cn and others. They were en·: proved incffeclire in chcckin~ Game Prolrdinll 1•>-:rf .. ed familY who ~oes not h\crallJ ccleb1 al~d at the llaslhca to·d.t~,! titled to can')' guns for des- i predators. • called the •pr. :;•' l'rl";e! ~ fear and hate hts parent. Saturda~, at 8.15 a.m. Inter-: trucl1on of predators and lor 1 Supporters or· the regulations "hones! endr;~> ,,, In .,,r;_r.

ment Will he at ~toun~ Carmel I sel.f · protection. Bounties were· contender! there would be no changes hrnrfi<1.1i to "~:;::!, As . Hilla:y Allen, ~·ealthy Cemetery. Funeral Will take I pail!. more danget· of ~etting shot in Da,·id Walke:· .• rc-!l-ir.r-1 '·

Amer1c~n Ctrl who falls tn lov~ place ft·om the residence of: Henceforth. instead of being the woods and u:'at the natural Andrews wrilcr. rlcc:arri ·, With Cl~ff and att~mpts l? d1· • C. J. Congdon. 104 Empire Ave.,: paid, hunters will pay a $2 li· balance of animal population should all makr mrY vorce h.1m Itom h1s a!l~gJance Sunday at 2.15 p.m. i cence fee lor the privilege of would not be upset. ~ I effort wilhin o11r pow1r II to the c1rcus, Es!her W1lha~s IS KENNEDY - Passed peace· 1 shooting bear, bobcats, foxes, Burt S. ~loore of Andover. a 1 suade thr pro·, inrial · graceful, charmm.g and d1r~cl. fully away on No\•cmber 23rd. raccoons, skunks. squin·els. por- retired hunter anrl noted con-1 mcnt to retr;;ct !his rr.~~ Her celebrated skills as a swim· at the General Hospital, Joan cupincs and crows. scrl'alionisl, disagreed. "There fortunate mc:t>~lrr.'' 111ing .champion are. given full Loretta, aged 28 years, beloved ' -play m the film during a se· wile of James w. Kennedy of I'm N t Leavt· ng, quence at the shore with her Corner Brook. Leaving to mourn Q lover. besides her husband, are father

Laurels go also to Robert and mother, Mr. and llrs. James Vaughn, .in the role of Klaus Rowe of St. .John's; five sisters, Have Some· Ca

, Everard, the rejected son of \he Ruth (~Irs Wendell· Bower) of family, whose vicious hostility Shelbourn, N.S., )!adge (:llrs. toward his father becomes chan· \\'m. G. Green), Edna Oirs. neled into a~ ambition to take G~or~e Coates), ~auli~JC (:.Irs.. B~ .1:\~IES ;1/ELSO\' , ! reporter eyed apprchensirely. 1 he didn't knn11 nrJth _<'-~·~: ~ over control of the circus and F~ank Green), (,Jadys (~Irs.: OTTA\I'A <Cf'1 - "Come rn,! Through the cadar course • pri,·ate meut;•1 ,,·orr,! t. oust .Bruno legally. The major I \~Ilson '-~owney), and one .bro· 1Jct .us drink ;~rou~rl \he lahl~-: the c~m-crsation was on ~hin~s: two cabinrt nrrni<tr:·;_ .11

conflict of wills in this high th~r •. \\ •1l nc •. all 0! ~I. .fohn 5• • : Hus1an style. satd \he So net; Canad~an - g eo g rap h 1 cally i "The >Ollp '' _I no '> ,., powered drama revoll'es around (\\estern Star, Cmncr Brook, • ambassador to· Canada. I Canad1an. : amhass<Hior '""' >J:.r.e .. the battle, -sublle· yet perpetual please copy), I Thus opened . an rntl'iguing J The ambas>ador said he i hare a new conk.. . . between father and son the I - :round of small talk as Dr. Am·: wanted lo !rare! arro>s Canada I' A pin~-chccl;ccl n' 1 '" 1~.

'.similarity in their sadistic na· •. : <Jsasp Aroutnnian e~Jterlained_ a 1

. by trin, lo see the whole conn-~ with >lrai~hl ili"I.Hir l11_r ·

:lures, and the curious justice 1 IN MEMORIAM 1

. reporter at lunch tn the Em· try on the ground. He harl a tray of :r:-cnl·h which brings both_ of them to SQUIRES hassy.. . . . i flown to and from the west drenched m gr.•'!

I ullmate destruction I Thc1 e h.1d hecn pubh~hcd rc- 1 coast, ;md spoke of Inc ,-asl·l ... , 1 • : por·ts that the amhassador was! ness of the Prairies and I he! '\'t:RY E~LII;t!TE~~'-~, I'

I. A!so outstanding arc Carol 111 Font! and l.ovin~ I hcing recalled to. Russia and it : :;randcur of the Rockies, as I "~frill roll<.: .. c.\p:a~~;· ~!! . Chmtensen ;is the younger Memory or a [)ear was ~uggeslcd lh1s II'<JS the ftrst I seen from the air. ambass;tdor. I he! ' :;r!

daughter of the Everard clan Mother, qucstmn that would be asked of "How do· you sec things in and rice nnrl rolled '" · and Margie Dean as an aerialist l\IARY SQUlltE.S, him. Canada, politically? When will of the \'inc." . ~;l who vows to break the power of who llC]mrled this life 'You can report me as sa>·· there he an election~ Do you "Urn ... !Oll n.eln · Bruno Everard. on Nov. 25th, 1960. ing I deny it," said Dr. Arou- think 1\lr. Dielenbaker with his leaves'!" . !'

Produced and · directed by James B. Clark and Ted Sherde· man, "The Big Sliow" offers one of the year's electrifying experiences in the theatre.

'May the Sacred Heart of tunian as he sat down at the cabinet-how do you say it- "Yes. The grope. 1 .~: Jesus have mercy on her luncheon table. "The first I will shuffle it?" them from Toronto. I

1~ soul." heard about it was when I SOUP TOO SALTY ' with yogurt. but there ;;

-Inserted by her daugh· tcr, tUrs.- Robert Snow

read it in your newspapers." The reporter replied politely sugar and some cir.nlll1 ' The ambassador, who took up that .he really didn't know. 1\lr. them." 10 (a'

his Ottawa post in January Diefenbnker would decide, and Then it was back 1959, was just going home on he didn't say much. dian politics. 1 ~ 1 .

~!!!!!!!!~!'!!~~!!~ leave. The normal term ol ap· "This is Armenian soup," the "How do. you ;cc r·l, . = pointment is about five years·. ambassador announced, giving Democratic P<rrly? ~ 10 ' \lr .. That matter dispensed with. it a name which appeared com· see the piclurc .1111h01· ;:d

the genial former head of the pletely unpronounceable. much Douglas~ Wha.t kind rill t~;; economic division in Russia's less capable of translation ·into ism da you tlnnk he 'in 1rf loreign ministry pas?ed the English. It was rich, yellow, How does :.rr .lodo 1r.1 ct: cal'iar, heavy brown bread and and flai'Ored with onion and dent Cltlude .lodoi~ o; r;,, ;"

and family.

TV REPA1RS

I REASONABLE RATES [ GUARANTEED WORK

huller. chives. dian L n h o 1· L011"1 ··

VODI\A, OF COURSF. The table talk turned to the ceed'!" , . 3 ~r1

"Today we are having At'· prime minister's trip to .Japan, Anolher t;rclflll re~l( rr.fl' menian foot!." he said. "I like 1 then to what he and Canada's I luncheon ended

111 1.1

Armeni<rn food, hut we hare a defence ministe1· had been saY· crackers and frr;h lr~:~;1 ; new cook. He cooks ~ussian ing. This also brou~hl d 3ri

'' CADADIAD TIRE IPHONE 94123 food." "! .think his 1:\lt'. Diefen· handshakes all ro:lll io Electronic "Now, your heallh!" 1l1c am· hakcr'sl statements hm·e pressin!( inr~wlron i

hassador raised his tiny liqueut· changed much," Dr. Aroulun- away some Ru>il'0

nd Centre ltd. glass of vodka: The reporter ian said. "~lr. Harkness, he -one with the bra

, followed suit. seems to be much. Jess-how do Sputnik. h 10n•1'!

j 90 CAMPBELL AVE At . the aiJ1h"~srdor's elbow you say it-bellicose. What do · "Tiwnk you for ~ r,,,dOl· I

' was D boltle of red wine and a you think?" tion." said the ~m ~:, 4fter houn~ 'PHONE 7~13 lull bottle of vodka, which the The reporter confessed. ihat was t'ery enlighteniO.· ....

I

'

ELIZABETH AVE~UE PHONE 90141

J. J. NEVILLE • PHONE 95300

395 RAMIL1'0.N A v r;, I• ... · '

' .

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coast.-(Uf

(

'Hope. ·I By ROBERT ;\IVERS

tAP J-A wi! rising from the jung New Guinea's wild 1

was ~potted I plane Sunday, re1

that Michael Rocke

smoke rose near a !OUth of the EU

in whose mouth U Rock~!eller's expe

of primitit·e ar

;~~t~~~~ hopes that made it to land afh craft capsized wa ~r a gasoline car

. used in trying to 1 to shore.

SA~IE CAN 90 per cent cert:

can Mike used.' 1\'asoinlr. young Ro( Du~ch companion, wrlh the capsized

was rescued .. six-gallon. red· g<

nown her~ for w after bein~ picl;

coast of Frcdrik

an ad

45.

T . crnperature

Mi Nigl

.... 42. ........ 32 ....... 33 :"·". ,- 39 • ....... 42

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