16
' ,, I, i . nl', ot ,, .. flj. and I IO T"fll\' .,hh ___ , -- -- -- " I THE DAILY NEWS I . pONTIAC s2794.oo available al ' Nova I Motors Ltd. Vel. 64. No. 131 ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19, 1957 (Price S cents) Charles Hutton & Sons SUFFERING: o,ooo A Year Job aits Bob Winters l1>!l\ I ! somewhere around the saine fig- - r,.·.- Wrilrr take aver the presidency ' _\\ .1rks of the huge Dominion Steel and 1 · 1 .. ,... 11ho lost his: Coal Corporation to succeed the · • · ., .rune 10 elec- I late president Lionel Fors)'lh. Ho · · wb in p•il'atc turned It down. i'·lY him about ni.-\RITIMES EMPIRE '. :i Heavy Toll In U.S. Heat Wave OHICAGO (AP) -- The season's I However, continued hot and first big heat wave started crark- humid weallier was fotecast for ing up in the midwest Tuesday , eastern seaboard states. after taking a heavy toll in the New York City's death rate Wll eastern half of the country from up 13 per cent Tuesday as the . drownings, storms and floods. result of foursuccessive days o1. · Relief was expected to spread 90·degree temperatures, No relief over most of the midwest oy to· was in sight in one of the worst day, but more scorching weather mid-June heat waves in history. was for the East. The mercury hit 92 degrees at Dosco's empire stretches largely . ' \.•1 through the coal and sled areas ..• !t•.unrd Tues· of Mr. Winters' native Nova Sea· 'f. h '" of the Ca· I tia. !Is heatl'o!fice is in Montreal. ·• nf Britain's \\'inters' home arcn is In the ·npJn), a cor- fishing area of Nova Scotia. His ,. in dcl'cl· ndlng was Queen's-Lunenburg. I, An Associated Press survey noon, 'cight-tenllis of a degree be- showed that four days of heat in low the 1928 record for the date. the eastern half of the United Monday's 93 broke a 66-year-old Slates resulted in at least 177 record for the date. deaths from drownings, heat pro- The health department nld strations and storms. Another 26 there were 645 reported deaths in perished in floods caused by lor- city during \he first three days rential rains for an overall total of the heat wave, compared to a of 203 weather deaths in four days. normal 570. ·.' rc;ourccs in With Rio Tinto, Mr. Winters will be engaged in the development of · :., out of of. such undertakings as uranium, ::.lilHlrr ul lhc iron ore and oil. The Canadian ..., !1:drnbakcr's , -subsidy of Rio Tlnto that he · •• ;d 11 r cabinet , will head was set up only last 1111\ b!'come ! and has had no permanent presi· :: 'dent since. He will be the first '·' The Rio Tinto company's major -:,,_;lrrl actil'ily in Canada is near Blind. .• ·•111 to Ont., R uranium area, It . : has suustantlal interests there In .,.... I thr Pronto, Northspan and .-, ·,1 l\1, · ·· ·1 Tur,.iay In These companies have an aggre- ·:n:;ti••n tl1at g;;te c;;pacity of 19,600 tons of ore · :!1r h:ghc.<l· I a d,,,._ Together they t"Ontrol . n :hr rnun-' :;boul.fiO per cent Blind River\ -:11cl hr 11 ill predicted capacity. ·' Tinto : Collcctil'c!y, they hold contracts .r allier ' 11orth S614.BJO.OOO for the sale of • Friday. ' ur;;nium to Eldorado and POINT ESCAPE 1 Heat near the 00-degree bracket Azout 1,000 passengers in .four was the rule from the trains bound from New Jersey [() river Eastward to the Atlantic. !t New York were stalled for more marked \he seventh consecutive than two hours in a stifling tunnel day of te-mperatures of 90. or below the Hudson River, A broken rheigher for many cities. power rail was blamed. , But the cold front was beginning Eleven paesengcrs iwere Ol'er· an eastward march across !he come by heat and of them sut midwest. to hospital. Europe Also Swelters PARIS (Reulers)-Norlliern The sky wa., generally clear all rope sweltered under a scorching over England. sun Tuesday while in Italy a gen- ! Despite the menace of the Po I era! flood warning went out a" the in Italy, dikes so far managed [() Po River spread death and de- hold back the pounding waters and \ struction. · protect the fertile delta flatlands . .. "'·trr-:Jn rn-; Ltd., tl1c federal go1·ern- . n1cnt's punh;;>inc agency for .... ;;tumir ... 1\tHilcl likely I' UIC.\L SIG"IFIC.\:\'CE · Tm!o hc;;1k \\'inters' appointment RS By HILBERT BLACK · I Now it is almost 8 p.m. His girl friend expects him to pic her · V!\la;:(ers in the a!ps Leaden skies finally gave w:ry Before el'ery traffic mi1hap there Ia a moment when the acci· ·up ;ol 7.30, and she's the type who doesn't have to wait for anybody.· worked to repair damage follow· to the sun _over the hard-hit Pied- de ill becomes unavoidable , •• the moment when the marked 1' Motorist B has to shower and shave, and it's a good 20-minute days of rain. . mont regwn after . . . . " . , . ; A general flood was mght had added to the v!clnns may become aware of Impending danger-too late to do ride to her house. C mon tra!fJc, lets get mol'lng. ·. ,,. , · th p d It til 1 1 . 1 flo d . ··"lers 11 ·ccp· 1 ng throu"" Al- thl ''" 't I · A d , . b h . 1 . 0 1\<'n 1!1 c o c as c c e o \In s 6 .. '1'. t!w 'hilt · hrad of Rio Tinto in Canada could f •r \lr. \\'ill· · h;1rc for this prov· '''c Commons lie has prol'en himself one allY ng 811\Jut 1 , . . At exact y 6:05 p.m. Motomt an :'!.otomt B are ot 1111 1 of the ain-swollcn il'cr continued pine valleys and th plains. To pollee and safely experts who Btudy the c<>Uscs of highway 150 feet of the intersection, one coming from the east, the other to ris/ after four of storms Damage to the as a result c•f :"cwfoundland's best friends in and street alaughter this is known as "The Point o! No Escape," from the south. They can't see each other became of the building i which killed 17 persons, in- of the rain and earlier unseasonal t ;.t the corner. 'jured !01l and caused 11idespread frost was put at more than 20 per For Motorist A It a day of sunshine and llshln!R, KJ'B!5 If there is a slop sign or a tr.:-ffic light, it will be ignored, hccausc :damage to northwest !taly. cent_ of tile Piedmont's pro- c ·lrr. hr hes the Federal cabinet, and is fully " " lli; ". dnt:blr Ihal, 3\l'arc of the mineral possibilities or :'\rwfounc!land and Labrador. Rio Tin!o, furthermore, is one of stains on irouscu and hot roasted over charcoal. A Motorist A is day-dreaming and Motorist B thinking about hi> i Pans was one of the ho\\l'st duclwn. 7 beauttru! summer holiday, date. Both are driving a little fast for road conditions. :'pots l_n Europ:, wilh tempera-! In llle Frencb Alps .. road_s Next year, he W!s ·himself, he'll remember not to dril'e so far The h g!im th other but they hne reached "The Point · lures ln tile high SOs. One man , open for the first \!me m fJve· ''r nwrc than the stockholders In the British :-.'c11 founclla'nr! Corporation,' , -n \hill ll'hirh l1as uncovered uranium pos- ' · .,, ''rh - a\ sihililirs in Labrador. .n cac, pses e - 1 died of sunstroke and !i1·e persons days and floodwaters continued_ to from home for the picnic. Now it Is almost 6 p.m. and th eroads I of No Escape. . ' drowned in the Seine Ril'cr 11·hile recede. One town near the Ital1an are crowded with other homeward-bound merry-makers. , There is R screeching of brakes and two children a_re hurlerl swimming to beat 1he heat. frontier was still cut off and the The kids ue asleep on the back seal, exhau5led after a day of violent!)' toward the front of the car. ll!etal meshes w1th metal. London's 82 degrees ll'as the main road to Italy through tht der Back-. Pay T 'st e In Supreme Court frolicking. Mom restl here weary head on the back of the front :Two cars overturn, mangling five humans. For them there may highest temperature 1n two mountains blocktd. seat. Motorist A opena the vent window fully and find& the slightly never be another date, another picnic. cool breeze relaxina-. R d H I N I B El t• T This yenr's Fourth or July provide! ror many anotht·r "!ong" e s e p ew y- ec IOn 0 There's a heavy date ahead for Motorist B this holiday even!ng. weekend, It's a time that can be f!lled with run and ueitement. He's tlred .rter the Ill-afternoon ballgame. The fellow• from the Po!ice hope that all th'oae enjoying the holiday will make special French .Preml·er I Be Held Soon . shop sure showed up the liD&' from th\ . ; , --·. , ., er!ort1 [() stetr clear or "The Polnl or No Escape.'' ·.• . '.f' - or' each election. But It is possible ... ·.: · ·'"'' rule is that such a change could not be .- '·· ::, :!1,. first elcc· implemented at once . . ·: : That is the tradition of the : o·.:t. , ish Commons, where a closure rule i ·n···' · is exists. But there, closure on de. ., to bale normally is done by agree· · .:. · "r:·<·hl a "01'· menl, and after the Speaker :: c::n limit agrees to its usc. >- ., ,,, do ' 1 _ . SO CIIECK , : ::,,. 1 ,.,,. 11 ," •.J 1 as In· lf closure is abolished here, the :, 1 :. ,;, ·- 'rcech. of 1 government would have no wny of :.::; \:; I stopping· a determined filibuster · at fo · ' by the opposition aimed at block· in11 progress on legislation. The onl)' recourse would be an appeal to tho people in an election, In a statement Monday, retlrlng Prime Minister St. Laurent said h!s Libera! party will not attempt "by obstruction to prevent the new government from carrying through Parliament the program It has placed before the people." "Though we shall, of course, ex· erclse our right to express our views freely on the measures In· troduced In Parliament." The present closure rule re· quires two days to take effect at any singe of a measure's pro gress.· On one day the government must give notice of.lthe move, and next day a Commons vote must approve of tho rule. The debate then continues until at least 1 a.m. that nl11ht, after which no new apeaker can the 'de- bate. encc. The work of will zna Hungarian Revolt Jolted Red Ch where one party Is In office and the other out of office. But this so-called two-party system is noth· ing but a. means of maintaining the dictatorship of the bourgeoi· sie." - . . • HONG KONG (AP)-Peiping ra- could be conflict between ruler dlo broadcast Tuesday the text 'of and ruled In a society which wu a "secret speech" by Mao T:r.e· trying to progress from •'social· tung conceding ·that Communist Ism to communl&m." China wu aeverely jolted by fue AVOID RUTHLESSNESS Hungarian revolution. . Mao Instructed Communists to The Cllinese Red leader admit· avoid ruthlessness and coers!on In ted the Hungarian events, "raised the ·"education" of elements like hopes that • somethlna- 1Im liar those who were happy ever the would happen In China." . Hungarian revolt. The sPeech was admitted "eer- • Pelping radio said Mao bad gone tain contN.dlcUoru exist between aver the text of the wetch and government and the masses" In made "cert11!n add!Uons." But soclallat aya\em. It laid down .a there waa no mention of rep om formula under) the Commun- previously attributed to him that ist, must continue their rule by 800,000 had been liqul- "persuaslon and education." . The dated In putting down speech was delivered Feb. 27 to olutionaries, China's supreme state confer· Mao dismissed the Hungarian enoe. . revolt of lut October as the work Parts of the had been o! "dome&tlc and fOreign counter; reported' outside China, particu· revoluUon'arles," which Is the Sov· larly in Poland. It eaused exCite· !et explanation of it. Whlnl he did menl among observers who saw a not operuy defend Russian for pul- darlnJ new' addition to Marxi•t Ung It dawn with troops,. he thournt in the notion . that ther warned those who were hopeful U . .• might help bring a bout changes in China. SOME DELIGHTED "Certain people In our country," said Mao, "were delighted when the Hungarian events ({Jolt place. They hoped that something·· simi- lar would happen in China, that thousands upon thousands of peo- ple would i:lemonstra\e In the 1treets against the people's gov' ernment. . This; lie said, is "counter to the Interests of the masses." "There were other people In our coontry who took a wavering at· titude toward the Hungarian ev- ents, because they were ignorant about the actual worla situation," Mao said. "They felt there was too little freedom under our peo- ple's democracy and fuat 'there was more freedom UQder Western pirliamertlary · "They asked for the a dppUon of the. two-party system. of the West, Mao .added that "our democracy Is democracy in the widest sense auch as is not to be found in any capitalist country." The Chinese leader said that "if the lmierlallsts should insist on launching a Third World War, it is certain that s-eVeral hundred mill- Ion more will turn to socialism." e predicted that ''the present situation in which the United States a majority in the United Nations and dominates many parts of the a tran- one which wil! eventually be changed, China's situation as a poor country denied her rights in International afiairs will also be changed." Hot In Ontario . TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario; blis- tered by a two-day beat wave, I! due for slight relief today. Wea.ther forecasters predict show- ers and UJunderstorms will spell an end to \he heat which has sent thousands of persons home from their jobs and schools. But the province crf Quebec, from Montreal to Quebec City at !east, will have [() wait for another day to get the relief now In sight for Ontario, Federal civil servants in Ottawa were permitted I<> leave work early as temperatures soared [() BS. Toronlil broiled in weather-equalling the previous high set ln 1929. Most suburban Toronto school kids got an early release from hot classrooms. City ball employees and 3,200 . Harris - Ferguson fae· . tory. workers left early. MHF · ol· !icc workers soon followed suit. High school students writine: their senior matriculation examJ. na lions continued despite the beat. I . . . . . I I I . I ,• i. I ' ! I ·I. ,, \ 1 ,• . . " I!' I ' r. I ', _(' '

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Page 1: pONTIAC THE DAILY NEWS s2794 - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570619.pdf · However, continued hot and first big heat wave started

' •

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ot

,,

.. flj. and I IO T"fll\'

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" I

THE DAILY NEWS I .

pONTIAC s2794.oo

available al '

Nova I Motors Ltd. Vel. 64. No. 131 ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19, 1957 (Price S cents) Charles Hutton & Sons

SUFFERING:

o,ooo A Year Job aits Bob Winters

l1>!l\ I ri\1..\~T ! somewhere around the saine fig-- r,.·.- ~urr Wrilrr 1un~-to take aver the presidency ' ;· _\\ .1rks ~!iniskr of the huge Dominion Steel and 1

· 1 .. ,... 11ho lost his: Coal Corporation to succeed the · • · ., .rune 10 elec- I late president Lionel Fors)'lh. Ho

· · wb in p•il'atc turned It down. i'·lY him about ni.-\RITIMES EMPIRE

'.

:i Heavy Toll In U.S. Heat Wave

OHICAGO (AP) -- The season's I However, continued hot and first big heat wave started crark- humid weallier was fotecast for ing up in the midwest Tuesday , L~ eastern seaboard states. • after taking a heavy toll in the New York City's death rate Wll eastern half of the country from up 13 per cent Tuesday as the . drownings, storms and floods. result of foursuccessive days o1. · Relief was expected to spread 90·degree temperatures, No relief over most of the midwest oy to· was in sight in one of the worst day, but more scorching weather mid-June heat waves in history. was foreca~~ for the East. The mercury hit 92 degrees at

Dosco's empire stretches largely . ' \.•1 ~ Scoli~ c~b· through the coal and sled areas

..• !t•.unrd Tues· of Mr. Winters' native Nova Sea· 'f. h '" of the Ca· I tia. !Is heatl'o!fice is in Montreal.

·• nf Britain's ~!r. \\'inters' home arcn is In the ·npJn), a cor- fishing area of Nova Scotia. His

,. i:zc~ in dcl'cl· ndlng was Queen's-Lunenburg. I,

An Associated Press survey noon, 'cight-tenllis of a degree be­showed that four days of heat in low the 1928 record for the date. the eastern half of the United Monday's 93 broke a 66-year-old Slates resulted in at least 177 record for the date. deaths from drownings, heat pro- The health department nld strations and storms. Another 26 there were 645 reported deaths in perished in floods caused by lor- t~ city during \he first three days rential rains for an overall total of the heat wave, compared to a of 203 weather deaths in four days. normal 570.

·.' rc;ourccs in With Rio Tinto, Mr. Winters will be engaged in the development of

· :., ~" out of of. such undertakings as uranium, ::.lilHlrr ul lhc iron ore and oil. The Canadian

... , !1:drnbakcr's , -subsidy of Rio Tlnto that he · •• ·~1 ;d 11 r cabinet , will head was set up only last ~·ear

1111\ b!'come ! and has had no permanent presi· :: T.~to ~lining 'dent since. He will be the first

'·' The Rio Tinto company's major -:,,_;lrrl mini>t~r actil'ily in Canada is near Blind. .• ·•111 to ha1·~ Ri1·~r. Ont., R uranium area, It

~· ~ . p;;yin~ : has suustantlal interests there In .,.... I thr Pronto, Al~om, Northspan and

.-, ·,1 l\1, · ~lillikcn ~lines. ·· ·1 Tur,.iay In These companies have an aggre-

·:n:;ti••n tl1at g;;te c;;pacity of 19,600 tons of ore · :!1r h:ghc.<l· I a d,,,._ Together they t"Ontrol . n :hr rnun-' :;boul.fiO per cent ~f Blind River\

-:11cl hr 11 ill predicted capacity. I~ ·' Tinto ~ob : Collcctil'c!y, they hold contracts .r :11n~ allier ' 11orth S614.BJO.OOO for the sale of

.· • Friday. ' ur;;nium to Eldorado ~lining and POINT ESCAPE 1

Heat near the 00-degree bracket Azout 1,000 passengers in .four was the rule from the ~!ississippi trains bound from New Jersey [() river Eastward to the Atlantic. !t New York were stalled for more marked \he seventh consecutive than two hours in a stifling tunnel day of te-mperatures of 90. or below the Hudson River, A broken rheigher for many cities. power rail was blamed. , But the cold front was beginning Eleven paesengcrs iwere Ol'er· an eastward march across !he come by heat and ~ix of them sut midwest. to hospital.

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

Europe Also Swelters PARIS (Reulers)-Norlliern Eu-~ The sky wa., generally clear all

rope sweltered under a scorching over England. sun Tuesday while in Italy a gen- ! Despite the menace of the Po

I era! flood warning went out a" the in Italy, dikes so far managed [() Po River spread death and de- hold back the pounding waters and

\ struction. · protect the fertile delta flatlands . .. "'·trr-:Jn rn-; Rcfinin~ Ltd., tl1c federal go1·ern­

. :· \L~·•achus- n1cnt's punh;;>inc agency for .... :n~l-p!ans ;;tumir m~lcrial.

... 1\tHilcl likely I' UIC.\L SIG"IFIC.\:\'CE · Tm!o hc;;1k ~lr. \\'inters' appointment RS

By HILBERT BLACK · I Now it is almost 8 p.m. His girl friend expects him to pic her · V!\la;:(ers in the lowerin~ a!ps Leaden skies finally gave w:ry Before el'ery traffic mi1hap there Ia a moment when the acci· ·up ;ol 7.30, and she's the type who doesn't have to wait for anybody.· worked to repair damage follow· to the sun _over the hard-hit Pied-

de ill becomes unavoidable , •• the moment when the marked 1' Motorist B has to shower and shave, and it's a good 20-minute 111 ~ days of rain. . mont regwn after cloudburst~ . . . . " . , . ; A general flood warro~ng was ~!ondav mght had added to the v!clnns may become aware of Impending danger-too late to do ride to her house. C mon tra!fJc, lets get mol'lng. ·. ,,. , · th p d It til 1 1. 1 flo d . ··"lers 11·ccp·1ng throu"" Al-

thl ''" 't I · A d , . b h . 1. 0 1\<'n 1!1 c o c ~ as c c e o \In s 6

..

'1'. t!w 'hilt · hrad of Rio Tinto in Canada could f •r \lr. \\'ill· · h;1rc >i~nificancc for this prov· '''c Commons in~c. lie has prol'en himself one

allY ng 811\Jut 1 , . . • • At exact y 6:05 p.m. Motomt an :'!.otomt B are ot 1111 ~m 1 of the ain-swollcn il'cr continued pine valleys and th plains. To pollee and safely experts who Btudy the c<>Uscs of highway 150 feet of the intersection, one coming from the east, the other to ris/ after four ~ays of storms Damage to the cro~s as a result

c•f :"cwfoundland's best friends in and street alaughter this is known as "The Point o! No Escape," from the south. They can't see each other became of the building i which h~vc killed 17 persons, in- of the rain and earlier unseasonal

t • • • ;.t the corner. 'jured !01l and caused 11idespread frost was put at more than 20 per For Motorist A It ~'U a day of sunshine and llshln!R, KJ'B!5 If there is a slop sign or a tr.:-ffic light, it will be ignored, hccausc :damage to northwest !taly. cent_ of tile Piedmont's ann~al pro-c ·lrr. hr hes the Federal cabinet, and is fully

" " ~(·;,r. lli; ". dnt:blr I hal,

·•:~;r. ln!~rma-

3\l'arc of the mineral possibilities or :'\rwfounc!land and Labrador. Rio Tin!o, furthermore, is one of

stains on irouscu and hot dog~ roasted over charcoal. A Motorist A is day-dreaming and Motorist B i~ thinking about hi> i Pans was one of the ho\\l'st duclwn. 7 beauttru! summer holiday, date. Both are driving a little fast for road conditions. :'pots l_n Europ:, wilh tempera-! In llle Frencb Alps .. road_s w~re

Next year, he W!s ·himself, he'll remember not to dril'e so far The h g!im th other but they hne reached "The Point · lures ln tile high SOs. One man , open for the first \!me m fJve· ''r nwrc than the ori~inal stockholders In the

British :-.'c11 founclla'nr! Corporation,' , -n \hill ~lr. ll'hirh l1as uncovered uranium pos­

' · .,, ''rh - a\ sihililirs in Labrador.

.n cac, pses e -1 died of sunstroke and !i1·e persons days and floodwaters continued_ to

from home for the picnic. Now it Is almost 6 p.m. and th eroads I of No Escape. . ' drowned in the Seine Ril'cr 11·hile recede. One town near the Ital1an are crowded with other homeward-bound merry-makers. , There is R screeching of brakes and two children a_re hurlerl swimming to beat 1he heat. frontier was still cut off and the

The kids ue asleep on the back seal, exhau5led after a day of violent!)' toward the front of the car. ll!etal meshes w1th metal. London's 82 degrees ll'as the main road to Italy through tht

der Back-. Pay T 'st e In Supreme Court

frolicking. Mom restl here weary head on the back of the front :Two cars overturn, mangling five humans. For them there may highest temperature 1n two ~·ears.: mountains wa~ blocktd.

seat. Motorist A opena the vent window fully and find& the slightly never be another date, another picnic.

cool breeze relaxina-. • • • R d H I N I B El t• T • • • This yenr's Fourth or July provide! ror many anotht·r "!ong" e s e p ew y- ec IOn 0 There's a heavy date ahead for Motorist B this holiday even!ng. weekend, It's a time that can be f!lled with run and ueitement.

He's tlred .rter the Ill-afternoon ballgame. The fellow• from the Po!ice hope that all th'oae enjoying the holiday will make special French .Preml·er I Be Held Soon . shop sure showed up the liD&' from th\ fro~t office~ . ; , --·. , ., er!ort1 [() stetr clear or "The Polnl or No Escape.''

·.• . '.f' - ·\b~lition or' each election. But It is possible ... ·.: · ·'"'' rule is ,.~.,· that such a change could not be . - '·· ::, :!1,. first elcc· implemented at once . . ·: : :.~ lli~lenbakcr, That is the tradition of the B~il·

: o·.:t. , ish Commons, where a closure rule i ·n···' · :!r~i:::natc is exists. But there, closure on de. ., d<t<·~m!ncd to bale normally is done by agree·

· .:. · "r:·<·hl a "01'· menl, and after the Speaker :: c::n limit C~m- agrees to its usc.

>- ., ,,, do ' 1_ . SO CIIECK ,

: ::,,. 1,.,,.11 ," •.J 1 as In· lf closure is abolished here, the :, 1:. ,;, '· ·- 'rcech. of 1 government would have no wny of :.::; \:; ~-~·;.:~:cr~hperJQd1 · I stopping· a determined filibuster

· at fo · ' by the opposition aimed at block· in11 progress on legislation. The onl)' recourse would be an appeal to tho people in an election,

In a statement Monday, retlrlng Prime Minister St. Laurent said h!s Libera! party will not attempt "by obstruction to prevent the new government from carrying through Parliament the program It has placed before the people."

"Though we shall, of course, ex· erclse our right to express our views freely on the measures In· troduced In Parliament."

The present closure rule re· quires two days to take effect at any singe of a measure's pro gress.· On one day the government must give notice of.lthe move, and next day a Commons vote must approve rappll~atlon of tho rule. The debate then continues until at least 1 a.m. that nl11ht, after which no new apeaker can en~r the 'de­bate.

encc. The work of c~binet..mak,ing will

• zna Hungarian Revolt Jolted Red Ch where one party Is In office and the other out of office. But this so-called two-party system is noth· ing but a. means of maintaining the dictatorship of the bourgeoi· sie."

- . . • HONG KONG (AP)-Peiping ra- could be conflict between ruler dlo broadcast Tuesday the text 'of and ruled In a society which wu a "secret speech" by Mao T:r.e· trying to progress from •'social· tung conceding ·that Communist Ism to communl&m." China wu aeverely jolted by fue AVOID RUTHLESSNESS Hungarian revolution. . Mao Instructed Communists to

The Cllinese Red leader admit· avoid ruthlessness and coers!on In ted the Hungarian events, "raised the ·"education" of elements like hopes that • somethlna- 1Im liar those who were happy ever the would happen In China." . Hungarian revolt.

The sPeech was admitted "eer- • Pelping radio said Mao bad gone tain contN.dlcUoru exist between aver the text of the wetch and government and the masses" In made "cert11!n add!Uons." But soclallat aya\em. It laid down . a there waa no mention of rep om formula under) ~hlc:h the Commun- previously attributed to him that ist, must continue their rule by 800,000 • Chlne~~e had been liqul­"persuaslon and education." . The dated In putting down coun~r-rev­speech was delivered Feb. 27 to olutionaries, Re~ China's supreme state confer· Mao dismissed the Hungarian enoe. . revolt of lut October as the work

Parts of the addres~ had been o! "dome&tlc and fOreign counter; reported' outside China, particu· revoluUon'arles," which Is the Sov· larly in Poland. It eaused exCite· !et explanation of it. Whlnl he did menl among observers who saw a not operuy defend Russian for pul­darlnJ new' addition to Marxi•t Ung It dawn with troops,. he thournt in the notion . that ther warned those who were hopeful U

. f· .• ~

might help bring a bout changes in China. SOME DELIGHTED

"Certain people In our country," said Mao, "were delighted when the Hungarian events ({Jolt place. They hoped that something·· simi­lar would happen in China, that thousands upon thousands of peo­ple would i:lemonstra\e In the 1treets against the people's gov' ernment. . This; lie said, is "counter to the

Interests of the masses." "There were other people In our

coontry who took a wavering at· titude toward the Hungarian ev­ents, because they were ignorant about the actual worla situation," Mao said. "They felt there was too little freedom under our peo­ple's democracy and fuat 'there was more freedom UQder Western pirliamertlary democr~cy. ·

"They asked for the a dppUon of the. two-party system. of the West,

Mao .added that "our democracy Is democracy in the widest sense auch as is not to be found in any capitalist country."

The Chinese leader said that "if the lmierlallsts should insist on launching a Third World War, it is certain that s-eVeral hundred mill­Ion more will turn to socialism."

e predicted that ''the present situation in which the United States ~nlrols a majority in the United Nations and dominates many parts of the world~ls a tran­sien~ one which wil! eventually be changed, China's situation as a poor country denied her rights in International afiairs will also be changed."

Hot In Ontario . TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario; blis­

tered by a two-day beat wave, I! due for slight relief today. Wea.ther forecasters predict show­ers and UJunderstorms will spell an end to \he heat which has sent thousands of persons home from their jobs and schools.

But the province crf Quebec, from Montreal to Quebec City at !east, will have [() wait for another day to get the relief now In sight for Ontario,

Federal civil servants in Ottawa were permitted I<> leave work early as temperatures soared [() BS.

Toronlil broiled in 9~egree weather-equalling the previous high set ln 1929. Most suburban Toronto school kids got an early release from hot classrooms.

City ball employees and 3,200 ~assey . Harris - Ferguson fae· . tory. workers left early. MHF · ol· !icc workers soon followed suit.

High school students writine: their senior matriculation examJ. na lions continued despite the beat.

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Page 2: pONTIAC THE DAILY NEWS s2794 - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570619.pdf · However, continued hot and first big heat wave started

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Guarantee on all "OK" Used Cars and Trucks

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THIS GUA.RANTEE IS NOT RESTRICTED TO MILEAGE-YOU GET A FULL J 2

MONTHS' GUARANTEE WHEN YOU BUY AN "OK" USED CAR OR TRUCK FROM US I . . I

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OPEN· UNTIL 1() P.M. EVERY WEEKDAY! •

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SALE NOW ON!

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hoped to 1

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on a 60,() ~-ould h.1

Page 3: pONTIAC THE DAILY NEWS s2794 - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570619.pdf · However, continued hot and first big heat wave started

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ST. JOHN'S, NF.WFOUNDLAND '· '

.. • • •

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rem1er I

lare's School Of Grace

Blessing The

for the construcUcn St Clare's Mercy Ho~o

Home and TriinlDJ ''re &lllrded thll weei 'u:c~llful hiddm. The ~ill ~nit In the Ylc!nity

00 to con1truct . and

paily News WEDr-iESDAY, JU~E 19, 1957 I . •

A. M. Duffy, M.H.A. St John's THE :\IARITIME COI"'FERET\CE on Soci~; Wclf~re, which began in St. John's. l1ciO R

Centre, charged last ·night that it dinner at the I\'cwfoundland Hotel last ni:4ht. \lr.'A. B. Perlin. associate editor of the Daily "seems to be extraordinary for the News, was the guest speaker, and outlined the history of :\ewfmllldland for the delegates to Government_ to be dabbling witlJ give them a picture of tl1e welfare needs and the reason for the backward dcl'elopment public funds in speeulat!ve atock".! Profrssor John S, Morgan or His statement was made when Mr. I the School or Social Work or in this Prm·ince. He Rlso related the work of welfare to the people here nnd stressed Duffy commented on the poss!hle j Toronto University, who was the necn to keep mRtcrial and spiritual val11es in their tme pcrspf'Cii1·e. Th~ picture payment to the Government for one of the. ~peakers at the - shows 1\lr. Perlin speRking to the crmfrrence, on the left is Dr. Doris Boyle, Professor of the Newfoundland and Labrador Marlllm~ Cnnrerence of Social 1 \!' · f ''' 1 Corporation in CanRdlan Javelin Work which opened yesterday

Sociologv. :~t St. Francis Xavirr Uoi\'ersity; 1\!r. L. R. Am rrws, Deputy . llllSter o c-Limited ahare1. at ~lcmor!al. University, fare, and Han. S. J. Heffrrtmi, ~!inister of Welfarr.-(Daily Nrws Photo).

Mr. Duffy warned that the Gcv· problems related to its many 'as-!--ernment would take a b!g risk. ir pect~. Also, to discuss the wage :HOll A Dona·ltue H accepted Jayel!n shares instead earner!, the taxpayers and their' • •

1 ~nd 1 former Mayor of the city 1]\,f" Cl I of Halifa~ left hrre yesterday by .lttllle osure · T.C.A. to ·return to lla!ifa~. I i

of cash· for ita NALCO 1harea. He! problems. T N S pointed out that the atock valua·l Financilll assistance to a · rela· RPtUfllS . 0 • • t!on of Javelin has dropped sha~p· · til'ely large group of dependent t-'

· A del~gation from St. Lawrrncc, ~lr. Donahue visited St. John's' consisting of ~lr. Donald Poynter, I

over the week·end and was one ~!r. Aubrey Farrell and Mr. T.\ A. Donahur, of the speakers at the opening Etchegery are in St. .John's to talk Nova Scotia, 1 banquet of the Maritime Confer· nvcr wit!~ the Premier the situa·

ly within just a week, He said Jts ' persons on an~·thing like an ade· The Hon. Richard value has fallen !rom $28.50 to as . quate scale came to Newfoundland Attorney General of low 11 $20.00. s · 1 \\' k h' h t10n at St. Lawrence now that

ence on Ocla or • 11 lC was; many o[ thr men are out of work held at the Ncll'foundbnt! Hotel i 011.i11g to the closing of tl1e St. on ~londay e\'ening. • I LawrcJlt'e l'illOr>par ~line!.

Lucky winner of the Medel. Sweep grand $5,000 prize is Mr. George Skinner, Eazil Stree•, here showing his l'iclory smile.

~!r. Skinner shares the prize with his son, Billy, Mr. Dick Nol~n of St. Clare Al'cnuc: ~!r. ~!ike Gl~nney, Pcpprrrell AfB, and Mr.

1 frank James, Pepperell AFB. I The lucky number was bou)ihl ', hy these people just before ticket I deadline.

Nfld. Skies WEDNESDAY, June 19

Sunrise . . . . . . . . 4:02 a.m. Sunset . . . . . . . . 8:02 p.m.

TIDES 1 High , . , , . 6:0'7- a.m. Low . . , •. 12:12 p.m. 6:52 ·p.m.

WEATHER Sunny and vmm. High to·

~ay: 70.

TE~IPERATURE\ ·

Toronto 72 92 ~lontreal ..... '. s:; 85 ~loncton ........ 51 59 Halifax .......... 63 76 Sydney '. ' ....... 44 52 St. Jolm's ' ...... 35 «

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·FOR :YO.UR MONEY! . .

e BOYS' BASEBALL CAPS

/ e BOYS' TOPS 'N' BRIEFS e liTTLE GIRLS'. RAYON BRIEFS

e INFANTS' RAYON SLIPS

· e KIDDIES' TEE SHIRTS

AND MANY MORE SPECIALS.

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Page 4: pONTIAC THE DAILY NEWS s2794 - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570619.pdf · However, continued hot and first big heat wave started

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THE ,DAILY NEWS Newfoundland's Onlv Morning Paper lri The

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The DAIL ~ • NRW8 Ia a mD!.'Din& 1'1,. t.tlablis;a.:d In 1894, and pub!lahed nt tbe 1\ewa Building, 3~~~~~ -Duckworth IJtr,e:, ~t. John'a, Ncwfo4adlaa:1, by RoblniDII II

By WAYFARER

NOTES ARD COM~IENT The controversy over the

Has anything been· found that justifies more lntenr.ive search In selected areas? And if not)!ing has come of Nalco's own direct or indirect activity ·in the conces· slon areas, what If Javelin's plan to improve upon this exploratory

-operation It lJ -possiple that

~mpany, Llmiled. ' ' .,. 1 Javelin-Nalco. Act has 8Xtcnded

n!E~IBER OF THE CANADIAN PRES~ o the session of the House df 'fhe Canadian Press Ia exclusively actltl~d · Assembly into a. more pub)ic

;c the uu for repubUcatloa ol aU ntWI domain, It . has taken on the ; ~ shape ol a party conflict in

U.S.S.R. .esNtclln lc thla papu credited to It or 111 which the real points at Issue are !he Associated Preu or Reuten aad alia th• likely to be obscured in a fog of

' ocal news pubUshed tber~la. political exchr.nges. Now what

Mr. Doyle may ha~·e ·disclosed intentions or given undertakings to the Government that have not been revealed. But it remains a fact !hut the House should not have been uked to proceed with the Bill until ali such questions had been fully answered. We write this without knowledge of what Premier Smallwood was to say or has said on the.· subject in his radio talk. But we do feel that this Is an issue that is only cr.pable of prop'cr resolution on· the ba1is of the kind of inlorma· tion !hat a Select Committee could have procured.

n:Aiti.'W .. .,MCIUPTJUN RATE!! Ail Preas .ervi~t and feature artlcln 111 c:uiada ... , . , , ........... $10.00 per 111num this paper are eopyriJbt 1Dd tbtlr rep_roduatiOI lh!lted Kln1dom anc aU Ia problblled. .,

P'ore11n Countries ..... 514.00 per annum • Menabet Audlt Bureau Of Authorized u second elau mall Post Of!lct 1 I Clmllatlo111.

De~artment, ottawa.

Troubled Peninsula. .-\ Jcputatiun ha> ~·omr from Fort1111C tn

talk with the Go\'rrnnwnt 11bout'the reopening tri the fillrting plant which wa~ the muinsh1y ol the lo\\'n 's rL'(lnomy. The prnple of F orhmc and ncip;hbm~ing L·rntres ol thr inshore fishery had roam• tn drprnd on this industr)·· Thri~

prr~l'nl plight is imlk-.llil c of the dond> th1it ha1 e gathered owr the Burin l'rnimula in the Jl•"l ~i\ nHJIIths.

This \\'as nlll'C' 'am011~ thr grrat fish·prnduc­in~ districts of the isl.u\tl in the d~ys when ;a!t l<•d wJs kim:. :\11 1'.\tcnsii'P shorr tishcry '"[1· pk,;l'ntrd till'. ~real drep sea operations whkh l1ad their hradquarlrrs in \larrstown, Hurm, Fortune a11d Cran~ Hank. But the bank fislwry h,.- cimr In nn rnd. ' Little hard·curc fish )s

mildc an1· morl' .. \nd without the frrsh-fish plants ~n·d the mines at St. lawrence, the con· sequences would h:ll'e been cnlamitous.

Hut the ForhmJ plant has been closed for months while the complex financial structure is adjusted to mnke possible a sole to an American operator. It has been generally re­ported that Booth Fisheries will be Teady to st~p in when certain legal questions hal'e been

. ·settled to their satisfaction. That creates some ; ·hope for Fortune if the people can hold out.

The prohle,m of St. Lawrence is different. · A demand e.~ists for the fluorspar that is mined . there but It cannot be produced to compete

with imported orr. There is justification here for the me uf a subsidy by the Go\'ernment in

· Ottaw<l to prrsrn r the chid centre of fluor­spar production in C<lalilda. One mine, tlwt owned b~· thr Aluminum Company of Can~dol,

· L'Oillinurs to operate to supply tl~;tt compan\''s own tlrm.111d. Its oprrutions ha1-r now become

· thr chief smm:c of t·mpln~·mrnt in St. L:1.wrence . and many \llll'lll[lloyrd miners m~y be com­~·,pellrd to lea1·c :'\rwfoullllland if the other mine ., · ca11nnt br reopened.

.\II alon!! thr nnrthnn sitll'.l of the pcnin· ;· .~ula. thr we.1t sitle ol Placentia Bay ;md thl'l :. rn;l sid!' of Forhmr Hn1·, conditions ha1·e been ,.·. . ;: grneralh· clisc(lll\il~iug. The herring fishery ~ ha~ ~t!'adily dcclinl'd, In Fortune ·Bny it has ~ ceased to e~isl. Sound Island in Placentia West,

where once nearly 300 prople lil·ed by catchin~ herrin~. cod aud lobstrr, is now R completely d~~erlf'd 'il1agr. People are lcal'ing many of the sm;dl co1 es of Fortun~ Boy in search of better sources of rmployrncnt.

;!: . B1· and largr, the.prospect is discouraging ~·and the only g1immcr of hope' for the youth of

thcsr communities ma)' lie in the del'clopmeut : of a great port at either :\lortier Bay or the now :: inure favoured site of Bay Despair. lt may br :·that the report of the South Coast Commission

:·mAl' hal!' snn1r l'O!lslrudil'e propns.tls In make. :. Rnt till' prnhlt'lll~ nf thr South Cnast ~ml tlios,, I·. lA I . . I I . t :::t.,·• r opmg 111 ot ll'r ('Oasla art•as Sl't'n! Ill Jllllll

;: "to 1till' llt'l'd n! ll st•arl'hin~ Cl'OIIIllllit: Sllrl'l')' :- whi• h will rt'l't'al thr llntrnlialitit·s of tht•;r ·. · cli,trich nr ,;ug~.;r.;l nwan~ hy whi<.:h lhl• (lll}lil· !: l.;tinns nl tin• _,nlallr\1 R111l pnorr.,l conununi­:; tir1 n,,,. ln• ahlr to rnrn a drt·ent li1 in~ nnd _.... . ' ::lint! ~ higl1rr standarv of soda! life elsrwlterc ~ in their n~tilc i.1laml. · ~ ----.:::n.:.----. .. .. .• ~ End Of An Era

it '' il> not until the anr\ouncet1\~nt was . made of tlie resignation of the Liberal prime

;: minister that the full force of the election re­·:·sults made themselves felt. Up to then, the ::_ Con.1rn·o11il·r.s krpt rubbing their eyes at dimen­:~ ~inns "[ lht'ir '1dnry 11litlwut achH11ly believing · in iL llul whrn \lr. DirfPnlmkrr wa~ ral1ed to . Hidr.111 I !all in ;tt'crpt t1u~ in\'ilalini1 tn fnrm a

;, r~hinrl, tlw rc~lizaliDn ~aane ~~ last that an L'la - had rndctl. -

soon be the first Conscrl'atil'e prime minis~er sin~e 1935. lt must hul'e been a very sobering thou~ht. It has brought heavy respensibilities, not the leust of them the t11sk of putting to­gether R ministry that can win public sympntl{y and support in difficult· circumstances. His biggest test may lie in the next two days as he seeks to bring into his ministry men who will be idJic before the next general eledion, not ton (ar a\\'ay, to earn .1nd command the ap· proval of the Canadian electorate.

-----0-----

Water Safety The cftorts ol the Red Cross to teach the

children o[ Newfoundland to swim met with a good measure nf encouragement last year when organizetl instruction WRS 1et up in about ten L'OI1l!llllnities. This resulted in about 500 young;­sters m,eeting the Red Cross swimming test out of 1,000 appllc11nts.

This year the programme is to be extended to another ten importJnt communities and much will depend upon the response to appeals. for goad swimmers to act as lifeguards and in­structors on a l'oluntary basis. ,

The basic idea is sound. It is shocking to discover how few Newfoundlander~ can swim in spite of the fact thnt so many of them earn their livings by or near the sea. And with &o many also going on the water for recreation, the need of organized Instruction in the tech­niques of swimming ·and life-saving requires no emphasis. •

The loss of life by drowning Ia 11~\'Y· ~!uch of this could be R\'erted if everyDne "-ho went ont in 11 boat hAd liome mcRns of keepin~ afloat .such as an inllllled automobile lire or a Hfchelt of s'ome kind. Carelessness Is too often a nlRjnr foetor in drowning accidents.

, The Red C. .1ss water safety plan is the first or!\anized step to he taken to encourage in­tere~t in swiJ11ming instruction on a prol'inre­wide basis. Everything depends on the number of volunle!'r workers who will lend a helping hand and it is (o be hoped the 1cheme will nowhere fail" for wallt of thi.l particular aervice.

----0-:-___._

Strength F ot ·The Day By EARL L. DOUGLASS

THE WORLD STACKED AGAINST US You can't mnke wrong come out right. ll:o

matter how you try to make it come out right, it just will not do so. Life iJ like a jig­saw puzzle. We mu.1t fit' the pieces-or the fadors of errryday life-into I hrir proper spa~t·s. They will fit only one spnce - no ullll'r. \\'hat i~ ri.~lat fits into thr pnttrrn of righlL'IHIIIIl'.'S. \\'hal i.1 wr<lll); !its into the pat-1<'111 ol c1 il. Yon t·annot make right fit into wmn~ or wron~ tit iulo right.

'J'hr JNsnn tor this i~ that there is R 1mss lll't'l' this uniwrsc and lw is a righteous boss. lie mnde the 11'orld. lie ~11.1tains it, He man­a~es its L~\'t'r)' dcl<til. 1\'othing in the worlu­ancl we helieve in the universe-happcm ex­cept a.1 the result of his command or' his per­mission. And He has fashioned his creation in such a way that wro.ng can 'nel'er come out right nor can right (!\'er come out wrong.

The earth doesn't epen and swallow us up if we do evil, nor dou a hea1~enly light aur­round us If we· do well. God's time-schedule iJ uiually quite long-very much longer than our patience.

Rut don't try to fit anything evil into a. pat­lt'm· other thnn Rn tWll pattern. A righteous Cntl has stnckerl a world agaiml us in th11t rr,prd-mcrcifully so.

' --------

are these points? It seems to us .that no valid opinion on the use· 1ulness of the plan to lease Urn· bcr rights £nd proapect!g rights to 30,000 square miles of Labra· dar and Newfoundland can be offered without more informa· lion. That was the initltol fault. The ' machinery rxisls in . the legislative structure. A Select Committee was set up to take ~~·ldence and make recommenda· !ions on the holida)' question. Ttrere was no goad reason why this could not have been done in the Jal'elin·Nalco deal.

• • • Now it mr.y be argued that it

is of small benefit to Mr. Doyle to acquire these concessions un­less he can find somethln~ to develop. On the other hand, be is only required to spend a , 1)1aximum of $200,000 a year or A million dollars in five years on exploratory work. That is a mod~st sum in relation to the vast region to be explored. Anci there i~ r.o reuson why the Go1·· ernment could not try either to farm out smaller concessions to companies who will undertake to spend a reasonable sum on in· tensirc examination of selected areas or to iUbscribe lor a five· year period to enough Nalco stock to allow it to do as much work r.s Javelin is required to do. We may adil that' we are more concerned with the tying-up of rights ol mineral exploration to ten thOUSand mlleA Of this island than we are with the Ln· brador realons although any prin· clple that is in1•oll•ed ha5 eq~lll application, regardless of where the alienated regions are local· ed.

• • • • ' Why should a candidate who

has polled just under ane·thir~ of the number o! votes cast in an

'election be required to ro'rtcit his nomination fee? The Idea of this fee in the first instance was to discourage people without serious expect~tions to lake part in elections. And the local stand· ard was, and, we assume, still is that a' deposit is forfeited only when the ca1\didatc polls fewer than one·third the' number of \'otcs cast for the lowest elected candidate. Thus, in a contest for a two-member constituency, if one of the auccessful c::,ndidates were to have 3,500 votes and the ather 3,000 votes, their op· panents would ror!eit their nom· Hard Work inatian fees only if they polled.

fewer than 1.3oo. vo;cs. _ For Females· A candidate who secures 32

per cent of the \'ales cast in an TORONTO ( CP l - Emily Gor· election has shown the existence don and Mrs. Donalda RoB Dun· of 1trong support which justifies field have jobs here that they his nomination. Yet that c~ndi· wouldn't recommend to other wo• date, under the Canadian system men-they're taxi·drivers. r.t we understand it, forfeits his "It's hard work and you don't nomination lee. And a candidate make much money, about $30 to is discouraged from entering an $50 a week," says Miss Gordon.

• • • election if he cannot have a "Besicles, you'd 5tarve on the · This raises the question of reasonable hope of getting one· lips." what Nalco has done during the third of the Iota!' pall even Thes are the only n1·o women )'ears It has held Its concessions. thouih he gets nearly one vote wllo were granted taxi licences Nobody was much concerned for every two given his opponent. in ~!elropolitan Toronto this year. llbout the1e concessions so long It is quite unust that a candidate, ~liss Gordan drives for a local u the Newfouqdland Govern· as in the case of Mr. Butler in firm, but ~!rs. Dunfield now op-ment controlled the company. Humber·St. George's, should lase erates her own fleet of three sta· But the fact remains that there his nomination fe when he has t!on.wagons an charter work for was some activity during the per- received as manv as 5,000 votes priva~ schools. iotl of l'(OI'ernmcnt control and against a little o~·er 10.00 for his NO WOJ.\'ES that a number of wcli·known l'ictoriotiS opponent. No ~ood Both agrcr that. talk of taxi American mining companies hnd purpose is served by lhi~ system. "ll'olves" in lh~ lire of a woman obtained sub-<:oncessions lor ex· One·thircl of the l'otes east for cabbv !.< a lot of nonseme. plaration purpo!ei. How mu~h the elected candidate is a much 'TI·e be~n driving lor rour work dirt the~ do? Are r.ny of fairer proportion on which to )'e~rs an•l hal'e :vet lo meet a them alill willing to continue? base nomination fee forfeiture. taxi woH," said Emily. "If you --------,-----.. ---~-~~-~\--------- know how to behal'f', )'DU don't _,..,._.,_,_._,.._caLZ--.:oor~ g0t pa.,e.< mad~ at you."

Sh~ works up ln 12 ho:1rs a day, .~ix da•·· R week. but seldom rimes · Rt night. "! don't think

In Washington By PETER EDSO~

NEA Washington Corrl'~pondent ....__. ... ~ .... ·~-.,.,,.--,:!'-.,.-~,.'-- -=~ ------- ·.,... =-"---·~""'

WASHI:-lGT0:-.:-(1'\EA)-Prcsidrnt Eisrnh11wrr at timl'l: his press .conferences to put in their pbcrs mrmh~·r< of hil ministration who dare to difft•r with him on :n .• ttm o[

policy. He ga\'e this treatment to his tlis;mn?mrnt \(l?~;ali1l,

Governor Harold Stas~rn, at his last mcc:in; 11ith Governor Stassen hnd been in \\'asltin~:to11 durin~ the

Nations Disarmament Subcommittee rc·crs•. The 11 nr:l hld passed around pretty generally that the l..'nitrd Statr1 •m;:c atomic weapons testing. willing to negotiate an a~rer111rnt with the· lltl~>i.m• "" 111

The President has no•1' t.Ont this gmu11d lrnm nndn St fret with a 1·en· brirf press conlPrrlll't' an'" n. Tl"' "··:' 11

effcd that limitation nl tr.,ts could IJl' at''"'" d """ "'[\Ill··: a~reement to ban I LIP of all atnn1ic 11 ''"I'""'· •:w1··r ["II lion.

Just how thi1 le<11t'l Gow'rnllr St.'."''"·. h.-.J~ .. i!<::t~ at the Lootlnn arms talks i' a littlr lwd lor II'"'"' ~""' 1·,,, Kt'l' point. it could 111.1\;r thr tall,, f~tlllo·.

Th~ Prr1irlr~a's n..tinn. \11 thi.s ill·l,,,,.' -What Others Are Sayin.g sliP say<. m.uked t;;nntrasl to his ha!idliu~: 11: .\''"'"·'' \ :1, .. , II Hrr b0••. T'hltip 'lcCarth,, a few weeks carlir..-.

CI:&:L.l.:.t-Ss.o:.~..:.::.:..:4..._-.::: •. :~_. ... ,.~..:.::--- ~:.:-=n.~· .. '.,;.-:;..~l'.::l:.t""--~ .. -·u..-"'.,....... ' .c.1id: ••r woulrtn't hirr. anothtr THE PUNISIIMENT LESSEI'iS moat of them not residents ol Jac· woman. Rnd I don't think lhev '\"hile Gol'crnor St;1;1rn h:ld lwrll "lcr•q·,,,.~ ''1' 1'1'

THE CRIME ques Ca.rtier-had been wrongly ;houlr! ~et taxi liccncn. T\us i5 a for a disarmament ~:::rrc'Jnrut \l'ilh the!;''"·'·'' ·(Mont~eal Gnette) char2ed and should be freed. tough husinrss and no pl~ce for the Joints ChirE of Staff bnd raised ,trn11~ ''·l'":,.·:- .l;.~·,st,

Fortunately the election• hst There was a caRe in the last II'Ol11en." MondRy took place with compara· provinelal election& when 12 men Emil1· however intend~ kpeping ing an~· deal the RIISsinns 111i;.:ht nnl hrp til·el)' new incidents of irregular· w~re acquilt@d, thbugh they harl hPr ioh a.1 ~ ~abbie. She starl~d At his next press conlerrnct' tllPrr~[trr. tiw l'!nirh ~ :r tty. But there may h~ 1ome rea· been curyinll in an automobile rlril'in• at a)!e 1t She first worked Radford's stand with a ringin;: plr~ for ll[lrll-l!'lr•kc:.~' 1 son to reconsider the type of pen· a collection of, weapons, includ· in a factory rluring the Second h 1 It

"'orld War, when she Jo~t her hU~· willingness to .me~t t c Hussians la '' ay. altles that. are imposed upon lnl! bueball bats, lead pipe~, iron " - \ • · 1 bend. She use< her maiden name The President did this witlwnl nH·nli(lll:n: . c.•mr' those guilty o! acts of violence bars, hunting knives and rusty •

In election time, or of anther \ITenches. lt was· held that no in husiness. name, but it wp.s just as brutal as a Jlllbllc Jt'prim.md .. Sbe became a cab,driver after ~

Irregularities. evidence had been produced in her doctor recommended that !he Another new Eisenholl'cr policy tli.tl m;;dr it1 ,·,:rpr: One of the worst c~~es to rise· court to prove tHat these weapons g'cl outside for her health. pearance at a press conference II'~ I thr i'rr·;i<k.nt"s

out of this election was that uf were for any use dangerous to bit d 1 "Women are e1•ery as goo ment that he did not see nwrh ad 1 anLl!C<' in trnnc n ·., an enumerator in the constilu· -public order. a! men drivers," says Emily. 1 Ll

ency of St. Lawrence-St. Goorgc. It cannot be said-and ought She praises truck 1rivers for road the differential which puts tighter restrictin111 nn tr.oc e "' He padded • the rolls with some not to be aaid-that any of these courtesy but says streetcar and China than with other Communist countries. 40 names of pereons who had no , judgments were in any sense bus dci•·rrs arc the greatest of- Ever since they came to town in HJ.j). s 1·crct.H~ nf Stale~ right to \'ale, or did nat exist. illegal or unjuslified. But it r d "T" ever oiv ~ou a He appeared in court. lie admit· would seem that the laws gnv· ber~ar,~.· uey n • e ' and Assi~tant Secretary Waite• S. Tiohert,nn. m charge ted his guilt. 'l'he sent~nce he erning election practices might ClllLD l\IE:-1.-\CF.S Eastern Affairs, ha\'e been insisting tlwn· rt111lcl br r.~ n•ceived was thrPe d~ys in jsii. e ~o altered a~ to defnie more On th~ other h~n<l. Mr~. Dun- on lr:ulr with TI!'d Chin:a. .

'l'lwre are two cunsiderlltions. cle~l'ly and more compl'Phensive- field has passen~ers that, in their · 1 tl . !311 I · •·· ·' 1 • 1 The President ~·11'S he will routitllll' I•• t'li ""''' '' In ll ielllence of 1111 ,;anu. n ly what constitutes un o fence. wa)·, can be dang~rous. · ·. 1 .. · l

\. I ' I II I . t t ' .· . ' . . I' I I l!r. l.l.•o the first pla~c. it ~et·m~ to i!il'e und to make the minimum 1en· ''\'ou ne1·er knoll' w len )'Oil re HOI\' JJn~ u s npnll'n so ."\lllt'lll:lll jlll'i" 1 • '

un iuadequule ptlhllt' t!cciar:~tion t~nces far more sen·re. going to !Je sprayed by a water· his new sl;Jtcnwut Je.11·es Dtdle> e11111 l\ul~t·l !" '' ,,,t '111 1

o! the st·riuusne~s ol the crime lnudPquale or conf11sing laws gun or h81'e a •Pid~r · dan~lfd · . .11 . I t. · 1 .1· .11 "' 11 11 11i<o Also, at 11"1 ~~-1!' I 1e Will.' ur tOIII!'.''"IIl<IJ ' ' commilletl .. If it is lu he ~ai1l and li~lil l<'llll·llt'l'< m~y ter.d to down )'Oil I' b~ck," sa)'! Mrs. D11n·

that tile right to Yotc is precious, rr~ale the pulic impression that lil'ltt. In rd,tx Cbina tratle pDliL'I".· if this right is supposed to be the election irr~gulariti~s are nothing C:irls are easv to manage, while Still anolht•r insLIIIl'l' o[ tlw !'rni•l•·"t'' 'l''i' tl: verv foundation of the democratic more than the antics of demo· boys are alw:~):s pulling hair and f ·11 · 1 tl 1 · •II ol tl e ,,lllll•""'' Sl'~lem, then interference with cracy, and not its ugly challenge. creating mayhem. con ~renee 1\' 11 otnw t'<tlllP a w H'l).. 1

• • 1 that right• ought aurely to be re· lt is not re&sonahlc that the steal· "!just roar at them," she says.- whether,the Army shonld he ~l!mlrd In L'<1lll~; 1u;r_ 1 1:,, 1 ill~ garded as a ver.v serious crime. era of loaves of bread ought to be and then Uley are subdut<l. . . m~nt of the 1.500·mile, intermedialt'·r:tll~r "1 "It 1 ··

'f li ~d· · r t · h hl '· Mrs. Dunf1~ld has been rlrll'lng · But 1 t e au 1t1an o some wo dealt with more ars Y uy ~o· . h 1 d . th l k' , I I . If t] l' •1

· 1, 11 1 ,,,HI 1n · score hlse names to an electoral ciely than those who wnulrl delib· smce s. e wa.< 2 an 1n e 85 Spe~ mg ~s a ~t'nera mmc . w n 11 ' J .11l

d f 10 y~an ha.~ driven 4!~,000 miln · l 11 11rl·rn rr• li5t is to he considered ~s n· entely den~· to electors the ree . range of op~ratiom wa~ not more t 1:111 ~"' rr;, 11 ' '· · sen•ln~ nothln~ more than three and orderly choice ol candidate&. 111 11146· ~he hought two ~hhon 1 1 "'~' • • wagon~ Rnd ,before she lm8W it, there wu no point in ih tr~·im!; to de1·•' np nn:rl-r · · days in j~il, then the crime ~an h dl b ld d l ft'!'ri'"'~~•o:..,,:r;s.·~,.,.._,.,..,.,..,,.,,,,,, she had mnre cuatomers than 1he . . f -1 will"' ~~~ ·

ar v e con5 ere very Ber · could handle. In spite of this prt'ss_ confrr~nce rbpplll~ n 1 1 •·· !R ou!ly.by society ltaelf. .JO ·The Edl'tor Xow with three station wa.:ons h".l gone ahead to launch surcr•sfnll~· thP f.rst l·~r~.~~hr• Insofar as the laws themaelves h t D r· Jd • f I

b anrl t ree driven !> rs. un 11 ahead of th• A1'r Force Thor. But the ultimat~ ,1te ot -are to be exemplary, teuhlnll '1 san "I don't drive much any- ~ example, then the puni1hment fit· ~,-~,.,=·-···"" more. I run the buslnesl." mi!sile research program was left in do•1ht. tlng this crime is very light. By THE C.J.O.N. GLEE CLUB l k I

0[ a pr!IS

the same token, the crlme itself Only once has the President had to Jac ou I ~ 1 · light Editor Daily News, ' A. B • maye 0 appear very ' tt r ference veto of a subordinate's l'icll'. ''!hen, In the second place, ~o De~r 'Slr,-Wednesday night I _ fffiY a e y li~ht a sentence eRn scarcely• act wu privileged to wiln~s~ PO!· • I h I '- I d .. .· ." Drfrnsr That 11'<1~ 11· 1rn ~ auc c as till" 1'' _ .. nz

For 111orc than twD dceadrs, thr Librrals {had h~cn the Gol'ernmrnt of Canada. El't'n ·:two week! ;~go thr~· II'HP thought ln he set for ~ ·;~ 11~11· tram nf office albeit with a smalkr ' m<~jmity. Ami thrt1 came the historic upset.

HMlVARD'S SECRETS (Saint John Telegrap"h.Jaurnal)

aK a deterrent. II enumerators •ibly the bc~t show that Ins Disbanded . wish to practice !rrc~ularitles taken place on our )ocal Ide· with the lists they compile, th~y vision screens since its i11cep·

, .. · 11 I ,. · . 1 (" 11 ,,1 fn1 IH C:hnrlc~ E. \\ dsnn s 1 ast at I 1c .,Jtl""·' · ·

Thr. peuplr, who had made that ~o1·crnmrnl, nnw unmade it. ,Perhaps the cnuse was jnst H

normal desire for duinge. Perhaps it was r)ue ~~ the feeling that the Conser\'atives should be gil'en a chance. Perhaps it Wll! due to the lccl­lni that the Libemls 1were an old and tireu puty. But be the cau6es what they may, the St.

~ Laun·nt miuistry was defeated. -~: A new man will now take over. He Is a ~.•killed stateman hut he hiL'l yet to prove hi1 =·talent to govern and he must ~ it In the diffl~ ·~cult clrcnmstancc.~ of I leader, of a· minority­; party. ~1r .. Diefenbnkcr · awakenl!!d Monday ~morning hopeful that he might b~come the _,.Jeader of -1 strong opp01ltion._'He went to bed .~t· m;ht. wUh til! uJUI .... that he would

Anyone who ·has eve·r att~mpted to clean out dn oln attic, ~tor~room, or even a desk, will ~pprec· a~le the prohlrm cnnfrnntinll Harvard Univeralty. 'l'hc Uni1•cr~ily's library reports that 7,000 51!\lare !crt nl hadly necd~rt apace ~uu Ill' pRcked with

·World War II secret rna \erial atemmlnK from project, the Unlveralty under contract with the

· U. 'S. Government. This material Includes 'a wide · l'aricly ol items ran11ini from. pmonnel r.acords

to i!cientists' notebooks· and blil "mock·ups", or models, buill of plywood. What makes tha aitu· ation pecuirarly desperate 1~ the fact that no one at Harvard bas aecurlty nnttrial •. Unlvenlty oUJe.

• Ia Is 'll1!ve been trying for~ yean to 'get the Items· declassified and disposed of. The &ltuation has been summed up by ~epresentatlve John E. Moss, chair· mab of a U. S. House su~ommlttee ~eekina tp atrlp away unneeded Govlrnment aecreey, in thue words: "Harv-ard thua finds ltnlf Jn ···situation where It Ia burdened with the .cost of atnrinl snd proteeu'n"c ueret material wblcb no o11e at Har· · vu4 cUI look .at."... ·· · · ,

I

cannot, inaalar as they take auch lion here. How~vrr, I was amazed 1 sentence into con.~ideralion, to learn thAt the performers were have much caute for uneuines5 nnt bein2 paid lor their srrvises.

Do you mean to tell me some of abnut the conse uencc.l. ·. the firm~ on Water StHet or

There would also ~eem some need to make. clearer the drfini- Hen the Touri~t Development

Department would not like to lions of what canstilllte~ elrctoral ~ponsor this show? _The New· lrre~:ularlttcs. Thi~ Is illu!lratert fnunoland Hene.~ could be filmcrl by the deci1ion made, thla week' and .•ant· to the •lainland ann lo fr-e 21 men who . had been the United States in orrler lu charo~:ed with violating the Riot 2Ive this province the publicity Act ln the municipal e!ectiona In it deserve~. I think

1 its about time

Ville Ja~que1 CRrller. we let the.~e people know we can In thla case, ·.the judgment wa~ · keep up with the best of them.

that such disturbances •• had oc· Every ewfoundlander should curred did not constitute a riot· get behind Mr. Jamieson and Mr. In the legal sense of the term. AI· numboldl and ~et a few firms tbeer was no riot, in the legal to sponsor this show erery few sense, the former· Mayor, Mr. monlhs and let the ·people who Julien Lord, had no aufflieent per:form a~t paid for the hun. cause for "readin~ the Act. II rlrens of hnun they have to pul fallowed, therefore, that lh11!~ iri for prarticr.. char11ed under the Act for lallina Yours trt!1)', to dlsperte within hal! til hour- SHARE THE WEALTH.

A;>;"EROID, S:tsk. (CP) - A llniquc phase of Canadian mili. tary history ha~ ~ndrd here with the demabiliatian of Aneroirl:s GOth armored liclrl battery.

dml)icn."

,. I I . I II . l Ifill Ill""""' .lr>i It was \Irs. \\ tlnsn II' 1fl l1 •J•'clrl ltr '" I I ride II II' Prfsideot had to t:\ke the Wilsons nn :~ p ane

The unit, formed in 1927. Eave thi~ ·com in unity ol JOO per<ons, ln. cat~rl nbout 150 mile~ southwe.•t nf R~~ina the distinction of beini the 'on!y 1 village 1n Canada with an ~rmy b~ltery of il.1 own.

The decision to disband ·rnJ. lowed nn announcement that .nP. ,\nrroitl Hmori~s. headquarters o( the 60th since 19ol8, woUld be rlosed down · after. belng eon. riemned by army engln~rs 11 un. !It for use.

August~. tn m~ke pe.1cr.

gallantry. During the tim~ tl1e unit wB active lour officers wfre qualified u lieut~nanls and nn~ lir.ulen~l\l was promoter! In c~r· lain. ;\t iL• dos~. the b~ttrr)· comprisen three officers ~nn 21 ti"thrr ranks.

The men or the 60th claim~~ ~Mther distinction,· dating back to 1931,

The battery, made up larsel~· In that year ~ 60th Qbtained of men !rom this commllnily and permission to hold a c'amp ·at listrict, went overseas during the nearby Lac Pelletier.' By hauling

O.P.rond World War u part nt lt!e their auna behind ancient trucks 17th lield regiment, ~th ar"'t>n!d throuJ!I the dust.bowl ~ this new cti1•i!lnn. · leeation. thp b~ltery s~t a precP.-

One of ll• member~; !i&t. !. deni as ltle lirst mechanized unit KIIIJht, r~ceived the · DCM for l!!. Canada. ·

Pas~cs X-Ray Examinations

I -;n<!<IMth:• "r ... \ •I • . · Gen~ul TtrhlliC'Iilll ol 1 ·1 ~ d thJl

b adl'i!! pita\, has een ed bil . successlull)' P.us d !l ~o' tion Exam_Inallo; ~ecnniciJll as a RegJs tcre d the United Stale~~~~~. foocicty of Radioloi hi! btiP

~fr. ~OS!II"OrtbY alllc!Pll1i ~ 1 lh~ Grnrr . ployeu a · d rntr hU

fnur i·c•r~.- an ·n~ensi'' ation alter an 1 Instruction.

v

Page 5: pONTIAC THE DAILY NEWS s2794 - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570619.pdf · However, continued hot and first big heat wave started

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1 ll\111 •\. ~-~~·~- \[,lllti!l'll\ nn her horse' "Imp." anc1 with her husbancl, Pr!nce l'hilip.· be­. ;.,, 1,1· 1,1: I:ltiC~hl'til II i1 shnll'n taklll~ thr ~ah1te during the ~larch Past nt Bucking-

!< .. 1 ''" 111'1 1l'lmn fro111 the "mopin~ ol the Colors" ceremony that marked her official ·.:. .• , ,.: 1i11' !!11m Cunrds parJJ~, June 18. The Queen's actual birth date is April21. She is tt'l'• ,,:,! -I.\. l'IHI!o)

!or the children-my own mother. I She has volunteered to do the

I

job because ahe kno_ws how much 1

1

11 means to me to go back to 'work · I . I The ~rld!tional money w~u!J

'mran a lnt to us a~ 1 fam:Jy in I more \1'1)'.~ th:~n one. For one I

I thing, Jonathan now works ov~r· , lime and ~ees I'Cr)' little or the I

r.·· \\Ill: rile l'~mily rounrll ron~hls ol 1 judge, 1 : cl.'lldrPn. If I worked, he would j ihrrt· rlr r~vmrn a new~ paper editor. 1 women'• editor : ~1ve that up and be able to devote

artlm I ;orh ~rtlrl~ Is 1 summary ol •n·arluil cue IIIIIDI'J•Imore time to thpm, · ltucrl rrpnrt' un vroblrm1 lhal ban been dealt trllb 11.1 r-. But It h not the monry ~lone

~;ru.:<> •n~ counsrlon. 'that counts. Tlic r~ct is thai I ·~m . . . I a very nrn•ou~ person ~nd am

•!"· ' ""'II· \1: . . <alor.1· I>n l 'o lint. hut I'm. o!trn· shnrt·tcmprred. with tile n•r!.Jioll' a hie to pro1·irlc [or th,e '. rhlldrrn. 1 hlltr ln be this w~~·. hill

· . ~ ':·.c hro,i hm11.'· r!e,·rnlly. 'layhr. I ll'nn t 1 c;m't help it. I fer\ th•t 1f 1 · ••· 'hi'P th~ mnno)' tn ~rnrl I he k1rl~ I 1/'nrkrrl ! wn~tlrt h~ ~o ilclis;htert to

.1 I hrnu~.li collr~:r. htlt thr way I !Pe 1 be ll'ith the rhllrlren at the rnrl nf ,· ·f•, "n.~ I \~hr lh!ll~ 11 I< much. morr Import· lhr rl.;~·. I 11'0\!ld alw~y~ he cheer­. ;"1' on.~ elli fflr lhrm to ~row Into decent ful anrJ ah!A to gil'e them

· .• ·I " "nrl , , hnn,~n lJrrn~.<-and they need full attention, ., r•l "" ccrrrr! i lh~ir mother for that.!£ they hal'e :' ·"·'r~ !" 11Nk , rnnu~h health ~nd char~cler, the)'

·: ·rr. 11o:·e ol1l · rr.n wnrk their w~y through col-. • • •

THE COl'.NCIL: . Religious and civic leader;, educators \mel social ' sclenllsh often point out that the worklnl{ mother II one or the hili '

' ' . , ~ -- _ I :ge. It won't hurt them, • "hn11! lhr

·~~ drlmquC'ncy • • • · .. , h~l'.r•·cr 1 ,

· . · 1:. t i .:'\ATALIE T.-Jonathan rloP~n t ~dntrlbullng hc!o•8 In the juven- ·, ( ''('.',["1(111 !11 I ....

J, lilil'" !nr m~ntion the !act that I wlll ha1·~ 1 lie delinquency problem. At ; · :rnm h.nmr.ltl,e hrst baby sitter in the world i recent Washington conference of

.. __ _ experts, however, It wa! pointed '

S·P1 PR\l(S !OI!D

'111\-liH 1 ~t.RDlOPS

S·2HU PR\IES MONARCH

\U(Im (Ql!YiRl\BliS

S•3Ro PRilES fORO

IUM\IMIR (OHV'ERlllllS

out that many eh!ldre'n or work· : lng mothers get better · ion than the children working mothers.

·It would be wrong, however for mothers like Natalie to take 'this a.~ , I he o~~o·ahead ~lgnal. Ju~t be­cause son\e stny-nt-home motlters neglrct their duty, !t can't be ·u­!lllned that children Will be better off If their mothera go out to work. Many well·brouglrt·np chi!· dren of working mothers. mlg!Jt be still better In many· ll'nys I! their moth~rs hat! stayed at home. Delin­quency or nonodellnqtH'ncy ~houlil not he the only ~tnndanl by which to judge the child.

The p~blem · b strictly an In· I rl ivldual one. If ~atalie I~ really I hltterly discontented staying at

1

home, aa her. !'nervourness" lndl·

I cateR, It -IK lmpo~sible that her children 'would he h~tter orr In anme ways ·under Grandmother's superv!~inn.

She ~houlrl consider, howel'er, tha,t an older person Is not phyKiC· All)' equipped !n..Jive the be.1t care

• to active youngsters. She ~himld also realize that her younge~t child wlll just be &lartlng school. Thla Is a period ol great stress and strain and a child may have a tre­mendo!!s need for the secur1ty or his mother's presence.

Since the adcjltlonal Income Is not essential In this ease, Natalle : should ponder Jon-~: and deeply on 1 the possible e!rccts or her work- 1

ing. She should remember that her mother may be "the best haby sit· ter in the world," but. she Is still a substitute for the real tliinll-~lothcr. -

ROAD CLEARANCE . UNCHA·NGED

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1 _....:.·_ • • (USAF Photo)

PEPPERREI;L AFB-\Vinning team mcm l1crs in the Pcpperrell Officers Wives Club Bowl­ing League with their trophies arc (Ito r): Cathy Taylor, Val Crzysiewicz, Florence Noyd, :\lickey ·Vnstine and Jerry Kmusc. •

C h S, t lng ln age from three months to Matthews, Eleanor Bonner, Sandra 0C fane feet five yc;:,rs. The program was un· Garf, Yvonne Ayre, Deborah

der the direction of the superin· Humby. '

Churc}l ~aby tendent, Mrs. G. W. Morris, and Following the program, Rev. w. special guests were the Baby Band L. Ll)ngille' spoke briefly to the

B P leaders nf the city churches, i\lrs. mothers and children.

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and arty11 ~~h~;s 1P~~~~;t~~lair:t~~\~.S~f a~~ Co1c1hr~~~ t~t~e~!t~a~;ni~~~t'an°J

In a hall gaily pecorated with Rev. an1l Mrs. W. L. LangiUe. a birthday cake made by an in· ROME, lfoly-That unusual orrongemenl of head scarf anc/ mulli·colored baloons, the spring I Taking part In the program were \crested W.~I.S. member was cut h . h d f 1 d f B · party of Cochrane Street United' twelve little five )'car olds name· to celebrate the occ~sion. Candle1l 0 straw at on fop of rl 0 us oo e or a moment. uf if Church Baby Band wa~ held, ly:-G'ary NDson, Deborah Da1·is, I were blown mit by little l:iyl1·1a I is Esther Williams, aquatic movie star, herself as sh! arrived Thursday, June 13th. Present were ~hristophcr Baird, El'clyn Le- 1 Cook. The serving of rclr.cshments i cl Ciompino Airport, Rome. Miss Williams is in Rom~ fl over one hundred c~tldrcn and Grow; Donna ~!organ, Heather I brought a very happy llme to a· t . th f'l "TI I d " (IN Photo), their mothers, the cr,ildrcn ran" Moms, ~lanlyn Tuck, Heather close. , s ar rn e I m 1e son er. - . .

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PJLI.'l'IAN"l"

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TOOTON'S ·Distributors for· KODAK in Newfoundland

' ' .

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Page 6: pONTIAC THE DAILY NEWS s2794 - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570619.pdf · However, continued hot and first big heat wave started

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·,; ·IJ Personal .Chit-Ch~t IDE II

,. For Wedn11day, June 19

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Present-Fo~ You and Yours ... Favorable radiations once again predominate. Spend !ime with people who. stimulate you m~ntally. Imagination and wit should be lively and it is easy 'to make ·a good impres­sion. Be careful, however, not to use your quick. longue to ridicule-even though it is un­intentional. . Another fine day lies ahead for· you tomorrow.

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'·VISITING CITY I ARRIVJ..:D SUNDAY . · · . Mrs. T. Berljow&.k)' arrived In Mr. J. B. McEvoy, O.B.E., Pat-

tbe city by T.C.A. on Monday .!rom rick Street, who was on a business , Mon~al to spend a holiday with trip to the Mainland, returned

her son-ln·law and. daughter Mr. home by T.C.A. on Sunday. and Mrs. Andrus Barban, Prescott ·Street. CONGRATULATIONS

Mr. Eric Abbott, B.Mus., ·Is re· ' NEll' LA \VYER . celvlng congratulations on the

· Miss Enid Land, daU1hter of success of his whole clas.!! of 'Dr. and ~Irs. J. Land, Water St. music .pupils who passed with good West, arrived here recently from marks in the recent Trinity Col-

. Halifax, where she graduated In lege of ~uslc examinatl?ns. May from the Dalhousie Vnlvcr-sity School of Law. Min Land h i NEWCOMERS .

··now articled to the law firm of Mr. and Mrs. Colin Jamieson, ''cook and Bartlett, St. John's. 48 Portugal Cove Road, are the • • 7 proud parents of a daughter born ''liETURNED TO CITY yesterday at the Grace Hospital.

~!iss Jmle Mifflin, supervisor Mu. Jamieson is the former Joan ~ ·ot Reiional Libraries, and newly Squires of St. John's. · 'elected president of the Maritime • Libraries Association, returned to ON BUSINESS

the city on Saturday alter attend- Mr. R. G. Knowles, national 'fne meetings of the Asiociat!on supervisor of the Farm and Flsh­

•'at Sydney, and visiting friends in erles Broadcast& of the Canadian 'Halifax. Broadcasting Corporation, is at I

·' ' \ present l'isitlng St. ,John's on I.P.tT YESTERDi\ Y business. ' ,

• · ··~lr. R. B. Currl', National Dl· I r~ctor of Family Allowances ami I ARRli'En HO.m: ·. Old Age ·security at Ottawa, left 1 ~lr. John Chafe arril·crl home h~· hrrr ycstmlay by T.C.A. for .\m· 1 T.C . .\. on Friday to spend a hoi!· hcrsl, l'\o1·a Scotia where he will ! day with his parents, Mr. and ;;ttcod the ,ral1u~tion exercises I ~Irs. Robert Chafe, 149 Queen's or the high school in ~~·hich he 1 Road. ~!r. Chafe i~ attending St.

· srrvrd as princtpal for scl'cn , ~lary's Redemptorlst College at

So Many Uses!

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PEPPEHHELL AfB-Srnior Girl Sconts gain c;·,~diis toward l their Libmrv Bndgr h); ltrlpinf! nrolnHl the Base Libmn.., Here (I to r) Lim\a Crnsltoff. Librarian Thcrc~a Kcrc\in aml Susan Tanner di~c11~S the work In br cm·crccl bv the Scnnts.

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~ Dr. J or Elan A~swers 1cars ileforc World War II. Mr.~ Brockl'ille, Ontario.

· Curn aal'e the opcnln~ address . CONSIDERABLE V,\RIATIOS lion. The choice of which to use ~ ycst~raay at noon at the Maritime! FROM HALifAX / FOLIND IN IIE.\RT RATE OF is made by the anesthesiologist

Conference of Social Work. Mr. John Parsons,' former dl· DIFFERENT . PERSONS or surgeon.

Smart Hobby!

rector of Family AllowRnces In Q-l have a friend who 'falls for SHOII'ER Newfoundland, arril·cd here on A person without ,medical know- ~verv reducing method she reads

On Tuc;rlav, June lltll, R bridal Friday from Halifax to attend the ):.ovely articles large and small ledge o!len finds Jt; difficult to in- abo~t. I am enclosing a label 'of Add bright color to clothing and· '1hower was held In honour of Miss Maritime C<mference on Social -quick to crac'hct and to join [1 terprct what they hal·,e been told. her latc't bottle of pills. Will household accessarie>! The n_ew­

Joan Adams at the home of Mrs. War~. Mr. Parsons, who Is now these simple hexRgons! Easy pick· Q-j!y he~rt beals 12 to 18 these pills reduce her and is there est huck designs are here~uJck,

Past , .. Television carried a Future .. .,Bcfor~ long w heavyweight championship bout be able to detect the ! early in its development. The meat of lil'e animals' match was between Joe Louis encc of lean and fai and Billy Conn on June 19, show on a meter !946, but there wrrc very few of. differing elew1~, 1 sels ava!Jab)e. ,ttvtty.

The Day Under Your Sign ' AWS [ .orn Mmh 21 to April 20\

Don't ~-.r(' )OUr j.!c:ntroLl• impu1~r• lilt ''l.:o" ~i~o:n;;a\ unit~• it mert1 •ith tile {u\\ ~],,ronl of }'OUf ~rital j~rll''ltf,

TAURUS (April 1 I to M•y 201 . \\'ork •·ill j.:O f>turr t\11:1 f«i011 actirity. Don t ma~..:r pbn' rnr toni).'lll t~JU'C )'CU n1:1.)' hfo diU]'IIOir;h:d if )OU do.

GEMINI fMoyll to Juno 211 · [lon't ~ 1.3.\IY in ju·l).:trl;.: otl,rr~. Ynu rnay no! l..now 1\1 the: h<!~ Jn•l 1hou\Jn't 1 ~n Jlidcrn~nt tYtn ;r )'0\1 tlo.

CANCER jJuno 11 to July11! lll'ln't J•l&n inl\IQrl;~nt n1.111trJ, l,ut ,f,n't !die a11.ty rhr t•me. l\rq, h·~r wrtil r,·rrr,\J)' Lharr, ;an•l )'Cir'll ~ Ul'.

LEO (July 2) to Au~. 121 ~I.;~~Lr ;~rl'{lintTNP! ahe:.l of timr in't~~orl of drOI'rin;.: in M r~.•!Ot;~~n or olhtr .,11~inr~~ ccnloHII "co~d."

VIRGO {Aug. 21 lo Sop!. lll luh·1~crom~111 r!ou.,'l drl'fMii o~ lur~; :ro11 l11\'t'' rn rut )rr.Jr ~h'Ju!dtr IO t~.r .. datl-anJ kt~l• it t!1r~~!

By RUTH MILLETT ·William Penney, Cornwall Avenue. director of Family Allowances ·for up work !or hot weather ahead: ,trokc' per mmute less than nor- an,· danger in taking them~-Mrs. j fascinating to do!

During the e1·ening :.!iss Adams No1•a Scotia 11'111 visit relatil'es at I Pattern 7200: Crochet directions mal. \\'hat is thi.l called? Is it H.· · Swedish 11'ea1·ing is today's most receh·cd man)' lol'ely ~ifts. Miss Flat Rock before . returnlnl! to !or hexagon 81> Inches point to seriot"? _ j!rs. n. . A-~{ost of the drug.-arll'ertiscrl p<>pular hobby! Pattc:n 72Q2 con· THERE'S NO NEED TO 1 daily pap~r i>l~n,~g ·.~ Pal~~· Thls.tlr opened the clfts and Halifax. He Is registered at the, point in ~trln.:. Make scarves-; A-There is considerable v~na- or II'Cd to a.id in reudi~g are aim- tains chart far four different huck RE~tAI!Ii ILL-EDUCATED ; mum. and lak:n~ ad,·an\ait

. ~Irs. Wilham Penm)'. read the ·~Newfoundland Hotel. heirloom cloths and spreads! , lion in the rate_ of the heartbeat cd at les.senmg the demc lor food. designs; easy dircclio.ns. . 1

-- 'your tm1n h;' t,, offr, :u . cards. ~li~s Adams wtll be mar- - Send THIRTY·FIVE CE:STS In ; from one person to another. In i I do not feel that l~ey shot~ld be Send Tlii_RTY-FIVE CENTS m Her huoband bas gone tip[asll or leclurr< PI•' '· ric. rird on July 16th to ~lr. James I CLASS PICNIC coins ror this pattern (stamps can·· this instance one would II'Rnt to i taken ex~ept under the ad \'Ice of cams for th1s pattern (stamps c~~- 11n the busmcss world. No11 she' g11 e ~our-dl n10rr lha~ \~.t ~rklie. St. John'~. The KmdrrgRrlen cla~s of Hol- not be acceotcd) to sT. JOliN'S know wl1rlhcr the sloll' heartb~al: a pbysician, who also watches the nat be accepted) lo ST. JOHNS Is fnghtened tnat she 11an't be a, :~~c <lo~drnt ~r'< o•1: n! lo·.r

~enjoy* the f

sparkling flavour

of Lush us

~

llo1yay School. which merited a DAILY .SEWS, Houseilold Arts was present nll tile lime, 1~hethrr: diet and poss 1b:c t~nfal'orablc re-; DAILY, :SEWS: How;ehold ~ r t s crcdtt to him soctally. 1 o! ~ollr~r I picnic bccau~e of atlenrlance of; Dept, eo FROST STREET, WEST il spcrrlcd up on exercise ami : action, from the drug. !here is ! Dept, s.o FROlli.T STREET I\ E.ST, She writes: 1 i\o "nc h'' '" t< . :their parent~. al the H~mc ~nd TORO:\'TO, OST, Print pl:1inly j 0thcr thin~> about it. Howrl'cr. 'some d~n~cr from takm~ any i ~RONTO, ONT, .. Pnnt plamly "~lv husband has just rccci,·rd • Jllsl brc•u-r h:' -c~c~h; ' ~School As!omtlon . du~tn~ ~he SAME, ADDRESS, PATTERS 1 if it is a con,tanll)· slow beat 1l 1 drug which IS p8wcrlul enough to,~ AM E. ADDRESS, PATTERN an important. promotion. In th~> I at a reel~"~ li.'1r 1\H~ 1

:)·~ar, were g!len their picnic )CS· NU~IBER. r· i5 C:lllcd bradycardia, ~ hal'e an effect on the human body. NU~IBER. ' nell' JOb he \lilt hai'C to entertain .. effort ~011 can hr IH

ltcrda)' a!tcrnoon in the lovely A b~nus for our N'a<icrs-twa S3mc athiclcs no~mally ha\'C a I. Q-ll'h1l cause.; a mctalh, taste A bonus for our rcadrn-: Tllo whtch is something 11c have ne~er I cduc:<trd "' ~o· ~<ar: 1 wnlight and pleasant ~urroundinGs FREE patterns. printed in our ~low heart r<ltc at. rest., There tn the moulll all the llmr: ~ly FREE _Patterns, pnnt~d Jn our. done \'Cry much of. , 1 at Westerland. new Alice Brooks . Nrrrllccrafl arr .some l1car1 rhsorrlcr,. par-· ton~tlc looks dark and swoolcn.- new Ahce Brooks :"leedlecra!l, ''I grew up on a farm anrt took,

i Book for 1917! Plu.i A wonderful ticularll' heart block, 11hkh arr ·A . .I. Book for 195i! Plus 1 wonderful' a job before I fin,shed high school.' r---------, Jt:.IIBLE SALE l'ariely o! d·c,igns to order-crac· , ;mociatcrl wi1h a >loll rate of A-There arr sei'Crol possibi~l- l'ariety of designs to order-<ro- The wives or the men my hu,.!

A jumble &ale will br. hclrl at het, knitling, embroidery, huck beat of tile heart. ; tics. ll'h1ch one i; responstbl~ m chet,. kmttlng, embrOidery, huck band works with are college ~ra· st. ~lary'! HRII. Southside, on wcal'inc, toys, nolls, others. Send • In allier worrl;, thi< m:~.l' well, your cose cannot be deterrnmed weal'lng, toys, dolls, others .. Send rtuatcs. They know how to enter-: Thursda~·. ,Tune 20th. at 7.30 p.m. i 25 cents for l·our ~apy of !his excit- I he nothin~ serious. Jlowel'cr, a 1 except by pe_rs~nal study .. You 25 .cents fo; your copy of th:s, e\ tiin. And they hal'e so much'

I sponsored by St. Mary's Altar I ing NEW needle book-now! i lew t~sls are usualil· .-rcrformcd' ~ay .have dtstmtlar metals m !tll· clt!ng NE\\ needle book - Noll· poise I !eel uncomfortable around I Gulltl. · . ! in such Instances as tillS to make mgs m your teeth. There may be [them.

I • sure. same in!cct.ian of .the mouth or ~ 1 "! would keep in the bac~-!

B Th 1 k

1 Q-I am 53 and for o1·er [II'O gums. 1l 1s T?DSslbie that some-~ ~~ ground if I could, but my husband,

eauty ·In 1ng ·years have not menstruated: How thing in your d1et. could be at fault ,.,.., d ' R ·p· keep! after me to entertain the 1

'rl'cr, recently, I v.:as surpmerl ~0 Th~s.e. a\'e only a rew of the pos- . .l. 0 ay s ect e ! people who have entertained us.; . ·notice some bleed1n.~. Co~ld lh1s Slhtlilies. . · 1

, I know he is right. but I'm scared I

B·,,lels It Over be a sign a! anything swaus£- Q-I hal'e heard that \'Jta~ln ~I ~...ce..~ I just plain scared." A 11cJII'r Ill lllll['l: Reader. . is effec~ive in bringing rehcf m BARBECUED BEEF KIDNEY I You needn'-t be. Plan a party the lami!1 play, an ac\il! ~-It could be ann somelhtng of I heart dts~ase a,nd liard~nm~. of, 1 be~f Ieidner (aoout 1'~ lbs). '[carefully .. With the hcl~ of a host ;rem. m•Jch more

1 Pretty ~·oung girls ere said, ·b)' I . -- this sort should always call for the arlcms. \\hat do )Oil thmk 2 omens !heed g'Jad cookbook and the a1d of a able lh~n onr 1n '.<htth

psychologists, to look In the mirror 1 SOME children would rather immediate medical investigation. of thii?-L. \\'. . 2 tbsi.' fat '!standard book of etiquette yo~ takes romplrlr rhar;e as man>· as 20 times a day. Other look at television th~n eat. Some ; Q-Will you please ~ay some- . A-The maJanty of he~rt specla J tbsp!, vinegar 'can do it easily. hu.,banrl ut; likr, zu!!i women look less and less, which adults would rather eat and sleep -thing ab~ut the difference between lists and. other ph~·sJcJans who. '·< Lip, chlli powder ! Take i\d\·anta~e "d ho,t cr ore .,,~.o

r : which Isn't as it should be. As than work. Others prefer worslllp 1 a spinal and a saddle block anes· have studtert .the sllhJC~~ have not [ 2 tbsps. Worcestefshire Keep the party .simple. Don't rc.;pln>tb,;::y !or mb.g we grow older, more and more to Qther types of pleasure. Still thesta-~. B. . accepted ~hts Vle\lpotnt; .Per·~ 1tsp. salt i go ill for anything too eclaborale. comfortable wl a: en repairs are needed, there are {Inc ?thers attend church because "it A-This Is a tcchnlc~l ma.lter so~ally, I 110~1d rather hale other 1 t,;, tsp. cayene pepper i Don't hesitate tn borrow idea, rloe•n't add to !he

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Only l-ushu! give1 you dec: p­down-dclicious true fruit flavours .... bccau1c only Lmhus has the magic flavour "bud". Treat your

I

lines, wrinkles and hollows to be IS the proper th1ng to cto" some which need not .usuall~ ronrcrn f01. ms of treutment tf I had hear! '" cup -catsup lor serl'ic" "tc r t' . hi; home · · h ' lh 1 f d' h " · f th t •· ' ·• rom par tes you , checked or covered up. o! these "proper" people do not the P_Jllent. Bot are me 00 .1 ° , tsease or aruenmg 0 e ar er· Wash kidney: remo1·e outer hJI'e been to in the past lie arlllii;:,· dr!carl.• ' For this purpose beauty lab- apply their religion to daily llving, blockmg •paln-usunlly for opern· · ies. . membrane. Split through _center; l On the night of the p1l;t)·. treat , oratories hal'e been working for a Interests and bab1ts. are deter- : remo.ve fat an? tu~s.. Cut ktd·, your g~ests with the same kind of A paper ~"blecl·•th :tllk!! 1 perfect makeup foundation that mined by our exper1encrs,. our , ney. Jn ~mall pteces. Cook cover· ; fnendlmess and warmth you ap- [:let gilt 11-rap?.n" for, a

will stay, fresh and lovely and, sa(tsfnctions and by the fnends ed tn 2 cups water about 2 hr;. or. prec1ale in others. . packa~r. Ynu 2, 0 il••rs deceiving for man>· houn. with whom we assoeinte. Some. · ~mtiltender. ·Drain. Saute onions: Ab9ve all, don't worn· about the appropriate dr•:;n br

people. nel'er learn l~t> habit lJf m ~a.t; add 1 cup water and re·' (act that some of your gue>ts went holidar ,r 3 ,.10

A French and Canadian cos· worshtp. others are 1ndifferent \o . mam1ng mgr~dtents. <Alvcr and to school longer than you did. t:sc ·a clr.1r 1ran;?;ml metic house nm1' has a liquid the tcnrhmg of any church. \\e. s:mmcr 30 mmutes. Add ktrlncy: . That isn't important-if "nu will hat bo.~ for ;tor,~c :ll makeup which ll'ill do just this. oucht to apprais~. our hab1ts and st~mer 20 ~mules longer. S~ve I just relax and be yourseil. rlarc mo-1 ire~uer.ll,· It contains 1 R blenrl of lecithin . eva~uate our ~pmtual values. · ll'llh fiuffy me or buttered naod- : And if you will make a habit on lor w::ll:n ra,r rw~

-family to flavourful Lush us Jellies soon!

and cephalin, the two clements "c should rtoublless chanl!e otlr ' les. i o[ readin" "OOd books an 1 c1 1 known to he-essential tn lil'lng hahits, anrl injec.t our reliJ:ious ~ ~ ( ~our ncr rr

cells, and tl1crefore acl~ to kcrp ldcal.1 into our dail,1· lil'inR. lhl' skin itself 1·!1al anrl moist Faith. hope and lnl'e arp needed under the flnP, almo~t lnvlslblP in r1·cry moment o! life.

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1t~t~rsymbo/ of quality

coot

film or pal'relaln-linlerl liquid foundation. 'fhe new French lor- 'fltp nrw no·iron bahy rlrr~sc~ mula feel~ as li~ht as powrler on arr made of a soft, un~cralch\' the face anr! i! ]ll!t a! eRs)' to cotton. T'l'.cy are washable hy apply. Once set, it Will stay even mRrhinc or by hand~ are very and smooth for hours and will prcty and can be worn either maintain its look or freshness. !or crawling or dressy wear. Even four or five touch-ups with s~mc have matching lined

, face powder used over It during. panties; others have combination ! the day will not affect its finish. I blouse-slip.

FASHIONS' I

tWleJL~ " ..

gWt~·, Ladies, ull through Summer in one nf

· theae breeey Sandals, Pick from pun.

Whitea, trimmed w!Utcs or •tyl~i in l'anama, Powder Blue and Pink. Choose

from a[>·ln with either 1 hlih or low

wedte heel. They're smooth-looklnl and'

amooth·flttinl lor walking ease. Come In

today!

S2.9B S3.5D S3. 75 S3.95

This Is National Safety Week In Canada. Enjoy swimming but stay 'living. '

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Summer gardening Is 01 joy but It carries the penalty cf rough. · er:·~d hands and blackened nails. This girl uses an easy·lo·make outdoor beauty percb to hold tube of band cream, lip balm and lipstick, Hand crea.m pre vents chapping.

I BS ALICIA HART A tube of chapped hand cream .. Gardcmng1 1s. one or the. great will protect your hands !rom the

JOYs of summc1. But the g1rl who ra1•agcs rtf sOli digGing and allow makes it her hobby must take yo~ lo have both fun and pretty sl!!ps to protect her hands or the hands. · · er1d of the summer will find them i

cracker, chapped and roughened. . Household Hints' .··. I The trick is to keep a tube of

hand cream handy so that you don't need to run into the house

', for it. It's also a good idea to I have lip balm. lipstick, mirrror

cleansing tissues, powder, and smell bandage~ handy, Then, ii guests arrive unexpedterlly In the miildle Of th·e afternoon, you needn't make a mad dash for the house to take cover.

One way to keep supplies handy is to have them ·1n a sturdy cigar box mounted on .a slick (an old

l broomstick will do nicely). To I' tit the stlck into the oox drill or

cut a hole the size of the pole ln-lo .a strip of wood . an~ nail this strtp onto the . bottom of the box. Paint boX and stick any color you like and move the unit about with you u you ,work. f .

\' '

Put a light starch in no-iron seersu.cker Clothes. . Th~y. loo~ neater.. · 1 •

To save,space.on summer stor­age of bulky woolen articlles such as .blankets, lay them in the bot­tom of a 1 full-length garment bag. The top part'of the bag' can be tfsed for skirts,· blouses, and jac· I kets ' · F~sten 'several ' ~nap cloliies- '

pins on· sides· of dish drainer for pegs on which to drain glasses. ' '

In final· rold of bed sheet, place pillowcases; in bath towels, .place face towels and washcloths, In tablecloth, matching napklils; a time saver and more compabt storage,

FOR YOUR

ALL

YEAR AROUND

COMORT

·lENNOX

CONDITIONS INDOOR AIR 5 WAYS!

• Even temperature-no hot spots, cold corners ' .

· • Regulated humidity-no harsh dryne~s

o Filter-deaning-dust-free, lint-free

o Continuous motion-no air staleness

o. Controlled motion-no drafts

;JOHN · Cl0USTON \ liMITED

172 DUCKWORTH ST.

,•

TJ OF T

l!olusu Swrrt Bl:

ptr pk 5pagh~lll

ptr pki E.ngll!h I lllk &: p L«al Fr1

prr do CiKklall

ptr hal !agar, 5 P!.II'J, Z8 F111lt Coc

ptr tla Peu, 20 Qaaker I

ptr pk Graves B

Z tins

Ptr bo Peanu1 B

Ptr bo c.c. Beef Apricot I, EXTRA I Ch!~o Ia Ptrk

Tu Rap Peanut 1

Bt;y

Page 7: pONTIAC THE DAILY NEWS s2794 - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570619.pdf · However, continued hot and first big heat wave started

i I , I

UNO

~T

CALLING

~~ll ISLAND To\KE NOTE

OF THESI PRICI!S

l•l. lin• 11.7~ R1111111<, 2'' lb~ .• r•c ........ 19r. II Oinn,r,

"' rl: .... 33r. !•::·•! r.'" ••it•. ~ plo~. 3lc. lli ~ rrrm. ppr lin 49t. i><al I '"h l~t<. ,., rinr . . . !IOe.

l•l1a11 '"l"t••· ~ or., ,., hnl e~c.

lt:~r .. i lh•. p•r h •. 8~c. ""' ;; no. p•r tin Uc.

'I I nr lt•1l. 2~ nr., ,., lin ...... 48c.

P!'l' tin Uc. Rlrr,

,., pi: ......... 2Zt. In'" Rr~n<. ~0 DL,

! tia• ........ Ue. rlluw TopplnJ,

'" bot . . ......... !Be. llrfllioJ, 16 or.,

,., biJt. . . . ........• 4k. I RuttPr, 8 oz.,

1rr but ............. !4c. . Btrl. per Ua S5e.

~M or., per lla t7c. ~PHHLS

ln<\lnl ('offrr,

"' ~1. .......... 3Sc. 8.111. 100'1, per pk1. 79c

Bumr r.obleh 4Sc.

Gl\1! GOLD STAR STAMPS.~

I 11iF. ~.\IART w.u. !\ 1' FOR CASH AT

Tucker, s

~upermarket

Canadian Legion ---------·----- -------------~~~~~-~~~~~~~ ~leeting

m~n~~,l~ ~~~~~Doc\~: ;:~ul;.~l People In The News land Branch <J( the Canadian L~· 1

ion will take place In the Legion ~:J;···;l,-~~!Y"i~~~r&Joc;,;:;~~~~i Club rooms on Sunday, June 23rd. at 2.30 p.m. All member• are re­quested to make an effort to at· tend as regulnr meetings will not

" be scheduled during summer. Busl­nm of the ineetlng will include plans for the Legion annex and final arrangements for War Me­morial !ervice, wh!ch wi\1 be held at the War Memorial 011 Sunday, June 30th, at 3.00 p.m.

BELL ISLAND - ~!r. Robert! fine In B City hoapltal. Bishop, representative of Hick­man Motor~· was here last Friday on business for his firm.

Mrs. Albert C. Sa'pp is spending a holiday with relatives and friend~ at Halifox, Nova Scotia .

~riss Ida Winter who !a work· ing in St. John's, spen! the week· end here visiting her mother, Mrs. Annie Normore.

Mr. Kenneth Churchill was here for the C.L.B. Parade, Sunday

Const. Wm. F..arle o! the New· afternoon, !oundland Constabulaty spent the _ week-end on the Island with his , ~fr. Howard Dyer WBI I re~nt parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cheslev . business visitor to Sl John'1, Enrle. · Mr. J. Gordon Bennett madt a

Mr. Jn'mes F. Kennedy travelled business trip to the Metropolis to St. John's last Friday afternoon. last Friday.

On Friday, June 21st, the Ladies Auxillary of Bell Island Branch will be starting the annual sale of "Forget Me Nots", as the auxiliary are more deslrious of covering the whole island. Mrs. Helen Coxwor­thy, president ofthe branch auxil· iary will be pleased to accepl the names of voluntary colll!cton;, pre- ~!r. and ~Irs. George c. Normorc ~!r. C. D. Cla~r representative ferably girls of 1~ years o( age or motored to Lower hland co1·e 1 of John's M~ndv11le vl~ited here older. I last Saturdaj where they spent the 1 fro':l the Mamland recently doing

, We .appeal to the public to l!ive week-end With Mr. and ~Irs. ~!un ·bus mess. ,

F. R.F. R. Emcr~on, Esq., Q.C., Chancellor o£ the Dmcese, who generously to this worthy cause as Collin!. I -abo attended the C.L.B. ceremonies Sunday afternoon. )'OU have done in the, past, 88 alii __ ' ~!r. D. ScouiPr, assistant chief · I Cunlls derlved from this sale must Councillor Stephen A. Xeary 1·is· engineer DOSCO, who was here]

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· • be donated ~xclusively to ~ss!st· lied the Caplltil oVflr the week-end. on ~ husines~ trip, h~s returned to

were here (or the Parsons-Eve!· I ond children. · . '· ~fr. G. F. Inkpen, manager of eigh Wedding returnerl to S\. Lest We Forget-Lest We For· the Hank of t-;ova Scotia, w~s a ~!r. Don Farrar apent the week· I Stork

"New' S Mr. and Mu. Samuel Peach who ance o( rtisabled veterans widows head off1ce m Montreal.

Mr. and Mrs. Patric.k Dnoliog John's Sunday afternoon while on get recent risitor to !he cit I'. · I cnrl on thP local mainland.

I are reJoicing In the b!rtn af a I the llland, l~cy wel'i! guests o( · __ · ~!r. Ed. Palmer was here from

~-·•••••~ baby boy. The bleased. event Mr. and ¥n. George Badcock. Mi!s Rosemary ,Tackman. ~tu-1 St .. fohn's recently doing bus!· occur!'i!d June lth. Co~grats, WI1 thdraWS dent nurse at st. Clare's ~!ercy' ness.

Hospital !pent the v.-eek-end here

TOWN SQ.

DL.L..I..aa. a~ :. . AIA411~ ~· ~ lfoM.L..,.J R . " I with hre mother, Mrs. Mary Jack· A I •

... HIK'IS a II '-"MUI•~ ctDU ~·ef!lr!Q~ _esi~ahon-4 man~ Eaa: Av~ ppreciahon 1 Her many friends will be sorrv 'N

BELL ISLAND - Councillor tn learn lhnt Miss Mnurl e ~!cws o.f Ote

Kills germs! Deodorizes!

Moh~ por <cluin 'I low! Protects Family's Health!

Stephen A. Neary who Intended the .Tacksnn ~!emnriRl teaching resignation lrom the Wabana Town 5talf ha5 hrrn nhli~rrl ln entrr Council has shell'ed his resi~na\lon the Grarr Hnspilal fnr tnrrlic?.l at­at the request o( Dr. Waiter Tcm·:lr~lion. We wish hrr a spcrriv rr-pleman, the town mayor. The' cn~ery. . · Mnyor 1ald that lt woulr: be a tragedy to lose a man likt ~!r. Neary. as he ha~ worked untIring. ly for the betterment o( the town, da)' and night aince he was elected· a councillor two years ago.

Mrs. \\'. r., Lr~CP was a twrnt 1 isltnr In' thr y,\~nrl. whilr hNr she was guest !'( ~!r. anrt 'Irs. W. Squire. .

The wirtow a nrl fa mil,, of lh~ laic P~lrick \\'. Ekanes ~f Rell Is: l~nrl, wi>h to offer thrir ~incer~ thanks on<l llJlJlt'eciatinn lo All who hrlperl in any way durin~ the illne.1s and death of thdr loring husbanrl anrl father. Esperially rio they wish· ti1 thank Doctor \\'. Templeman !or his unfailing at­tendance; also to the Rev. T. E. Smith for hi5 visit and words of

~!rs. Edward Bickford. Sr., re· comfort and cheer .. Also those

L • 8 lin 1 turned home !rom the Genera} (rom far and near who sent cards, egJ.On OW g Hospital last Wedne~dny. letters and messagesof condolence which was of very lengthy rpace.

We are sorry that the annual :'!!Is! Eli!.a Warren spent the Sincere thanks also to those who Bowling Dinner that was to be weekend 'with friends on the Is· sent wreaths to adorn the casket held on Monday, June ..17th, had land. • and to Mr. Bert Rideout for look-to be .postponed. It will now take, ing aft-er the (uneral arrange· P!He>e on Thursday, .Jun~ 20th, al 7; ~!r. 0erald Nnrmnrr was ~ re· ments. A special thank you to the o clock. Wlil the ladle~ who kind· I cent vlsrtnr to I he local m;li~lanrl .. 1 L .. o.A. of Bell Island, also to thr ~Y olferert to conk turkeys have 1 -- L O.A. nf Clarke'~ Bench. Special them ready to be up at. 5 o'clock.· ~!r. Harold Hann is coming along t11anks to one and all. I

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with a Bank of Nova. Scotia

t~CCOUNT simple • safe • convenient • inexpensive ' ' ' . '

What a Personal Cltequlng Account is . A Personal Chequing Account Is a new BNS senice that can save you money if you pay bills the con­•enlent way-by cheque. To open an account ,.oa deposit money In advance-then write 81 man,. cheques as you need, up to the amount you ba'l'e nn deposit. Low cost !-the prepaid 1ervlce ch111e Ia jult lOt a cheque. Th~rfZ arl no oth~r 11rvia char~cs whrn usin~ thi'Je chequ~•·

Shop, Order by Mail, Dl' Pay Bills With 1

,ersonal Chequill!i Account

Par for your major pur· rhasPI hy cheque, whrn you 1 •

ohop or order hy mall. Then ' therr'" no nerd ro earn· or risk •endinlt ca•h ... 'and you ••H time anti r..o.n. charJlu.

Pa)· Till!• hy Cheque. So "aftln11 for chan~e. When you ra~· h!l!a hy mall, your cancelled cheque Is kept safe at tho bank-alway• avail· able-In ca8e of need to ••n• u a receipt. lly rccordinltllll depo•lto and withdrawals you can Alway• tell at a 111ance juot how your accountftands. .

How ta Opei •

Personal Chequlna Account

Simply ll.O, phon• or wrltt ~·our n~areH R:'I:S bn1nch, •tate thr Amount you .,.l8h I o rlepo•l t, and whether vnu need • hook of II o~ll choqur•. (Tho prrpald ..... let chartae of tOt 1 chequ1. can he chArlttd tn your ~rcnu n t i. Persnnal f:hequ· rnt Accnunrs art ea81' tn opemte, for all depoilt•. .,.!thdrawals and current halanceo may he entered In the cheque book !Ue!f ... provldln~tan accul"'terecord at all times. If not con•en· lent to come penonally, you can deposit hy mall. JOINT ACCOUNTS WELCOMED.

The. BANK, of NOVA SCOTIA fer 125 YO«J o partner in lttlping COM<Ia II"'*

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Our staff at your neorest bronch will be glad to explain how a Personal Chequing Account will help you:!

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Page 8: pONTIAC THE DAILY NEWS s2794 - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570619.pdf · However, continued hot and first big heat wave started

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THE DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY '

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BRISTOL, Pennsylvania-Mrs. Darla Artembf!, 45:ye'ar-old widow and tlll'ee of her fi\'(~ chilclt·C'I1 ;, 1c ,hown. their Bristol, Pa. home as Mrs. Artemoff explained her: intention o£ returning to So1·ict Ru,,ia 1rith he: fa, She told newsmen she wants to go back "to fulfill my husband's and my own wishes.'' But her okk,t now Mrs. Maria Stellato, 21, of Levittown, Pa. said: "My mother had no choice." A Scn~:te lnl.cmal Secu Subcommittee began probing the mysterious return to Russia of two other refugees as se\'en new Ht:ci

ALGIERS, :\l~erin-French Police Rnd Security ~!en nrc looking through the reckn~e of the Alg.!ers Corniche Cas!:no wlwr~ n cases were disclosed. Subcommittee counsel Robert Morris said of the nine cases: "It h1ks a, tf 1\'C ;,1 e il'itn

planted terrorist bomb killed eight Europeans Sundav night. Thousands of young Frenchmen not~d. through Algiers, scttmg ff . . , h 1

h 1 10 1

ft 1\l' fire to Moslem shops that opened in defiance if a Capital-wide strike called to mourn the bomb ~Jctlm~. Four ~rabs were ing a new type of Soviet rede ectJOn campaign. The c i drcn s own are 0 ga, ,. c ' , ma, 1~ ;mrJ .\lex<~t1der, killed and at least 45 wounded before French troops restored order. The pi!~ of wreckage here, mcludmg the rums of the -(LN. Photo), piano, iJ what was left of the orchestra stand, where the bomb was planted.-(!. N. Photo) -·--- _

d ld k f • d thl I f !L F.} Fl A I } d d A the annual meeting of the Cana-1 o! view, her company 1.~ one of IT U' HI Socl.al Welfare In taxe!, Mr. An Tell's sa , ma es 0 B~. an mon 1 ncomes or et ags y c \DOW e ge ' s dian Feed Manulacturers Associn. the most.implirtant purc!mers of i 0 'se J ea(' us realize that we are not getting dependents after death, should be lion, . I prairie wheat in Canada. _ so•neth!ng for nothing. combined In the framework of 0 S J } ' D T G • B She was appointed manager of 1 . . ]~r,1 ft p J

(Continued from page 3) In Newfoundland 900 motl)ers social sm•lce. fi t, 0 ffi S a\- op faJfl uyer the stock depar~nt of the com- Mm Polud was born m Edmon. \. (I ll p for by the Provincial go1•ernmcnt, and widows receive social assist· NEW GENERATION \ ) ~

1 • I ton 1n 1931, second youngest . , . ,

luegly through indirect taxation. ance and 1300 mothers whose hus· A new generation of Canadians · -- J c d , pany wh~ she lias 19 and re-~ daughter of Po!i~h immigrants. CA:IIPilHL nr, El\, BC.r. This form of administration Mr. bands are !ncapnble of 11ork!ng is growing up, and if they are to The Newfoundland Board o[ fi ana a I cenUy became h:ad buyer; Her f<Jther worked in the Edmon.' A paper mill :n l~:s \'; Andrews nid, created In the: also receive direct assistance. Dcqu!re individuality of character,' Trade would like its members, es- 1 p ' In a year, ·~Ilss Polud 5 pur-' ton district as :i farm laborer anrl · !•land crnlr~ I' 0:1e riro: minds of a large number of peo- Ncwfoundlnod has a hi~h percent 1 11hich i.• essential for the develop ',ecially those whose business 111 SdASKA2.\:,0e~Nr-o(ldCPelxe-cltt'1.vaenelrnrrn. ~.hases tor ,her company total .mil-l later :~s a railroad section hand. r.:[•:~r:,rrl kr:,:: n'.l:r in ·, I lh f I I · n of the 1 f 1 h 1 f C d ! I d \\' t , a " .nns of do.lars. Top male bu)crs, 1 , 1 f \" h 'd h!'tcl pn oluct 10n ,~ l'·c Pac'"c P e e a <e mpre~SIO of persons permanently unab c to ment o ! 1c II' o e 0 ana a. prem ses are ocate on a er

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~lontreal,· 'is ackncnl'icdgcd in the C d d U · • er a 11er s e ~a1 , ,. . " .. . .. ~ource of the funds required to work, and for the group between same. more ,a.dequate mean~ ot Street to display flags and bunt· trade '.c '• nJnng the top grain bu_v· ;rre from ana a an the n~ted, hiked to ~lo~treal in the early: 1':·!. h . k I f t t 24th "' " >tates for the CFli!A meetm~. 1930 d th f 'I. h lived fl•r CO\'Pr sue !cmccs. the age.~ of 21 and 54 some pro· ma ·mg provision or un or un~ e ing on ~londay, June . . . . ers in Canada. _ ·d M' p 1 d . t b s an c am1 l as 1 C . ,.

There Is in Newfoundland also, vision is necessar)', and a S)'Stem and unexpected as well as the 1n· At the regular Council ~lecllng 'li'.c. Polud ;s "hl'cf bul·er for .' 31 Iss 0 u . IS 1 op uyer there ever since.· , .. rnwn Zr .. r:·ba.-n Caned, I ~ I f ·' 's • < In the mdustry m Canada. '!led. c ()':I"~ c;:.~.i.lr{~ ~lr. Andrews sa"· an a most com· o! dcpcildents al!owa:nccs was. in· rvit.ahlc must become part o held on Frida.Y last a communic~- R;lston Purina, one of the lar"· · · ...

plete lack of statistical data for d d 4 4 1 1 h f Jif d f th p " ~!' p I d I l t1 ~lis.s Poiud joined the Rablun 1 >tarter! prn:L•c•.:,·n ll•ln1 : tro uce , ,04 peop e rccrii'C! it ctr way o e.. . lion was receiVe rom e . res~- est manufacturing companies in : 1ss1

o ~ .agre.~d re uc an Y companv when she \\as li )~ars, kraft lo p··nlldr :~e r• many years. dcnenden.ts allowances in 19~3 in i Th~ IJo.ys ~nd g1rls 11:ho w1li be, dent of .the Newfou~dland H1ston- ·., "'Ol'."l ~r poultrv and livestock :o an n

1terv1e\1, :.~)mg s~e1 ;eared, old, after graduating from D'Arcy lton~·flh~P cnnlr:•! o[ .

During thr past eight years there this provtnce. ! II'OI'kms m fl\·e y~an llme shou.ld ·cal Society inform~n~ th.e Bo?rd feeds. She was in· Saskatoon fo: .1crd mat edcompde I ofrs1

m1gh1 m1s. 1 ~lcGee ~ollegia\e where she I The 010

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1.1 i1 more information Bl'ailabl• to In each of these groups the make direct eontr1butlon~ to this. I that it was the Society's mtcnt10n I --· -· 11n ers an an ee s e was . . . . ,.

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make comparison!, people must feel that they arc rr· Such a scheme should include all·to try and restore public interest lure and willir,g~tess to cooperal!: "blowing my own horn" topped her class l\lo )ears 10 suc-,phlte p ... p. In 1949 a lar!:c percentage of ceiv!ng something for nothing, and Canadians, Mr. Andrews said. in the celebration of St. John's with the Society in this effort anrl She makes a'boatload purchase ceSSlon. / "TI1r hlrorh r••rl ;ro

1,dr

1 the age group O\'e.r seventy had there I! a great danger that so- Ir Canada is to mean anything Day, or .Discovery Day, which members of the Board of Tra~!c of wh~at as part of her day's "~!y eompelltor~." she 'aid, f1rst ( ,,n,1mn '"lll~t r0r

not adequate prov!swn for old age clety might be undermined u!ti- 1 11. Canadians it must mean equal commemorates the landfall of are asked. to take note of the H1s-~: work-a purchase involving an with. a smile," say I'm a hard 1 pulp from llic Elk and 72-17 percent received uslst· mately where people receive with·.' treatment for ,n citizens, widows, I John Cabot In 1497, and asking torical Society's request to dis- wheat. · bargainer, down tn one·sixtcenth /mill which hc~:<n p ance l'.'h~n the B!!lstance ~as bas· out directly contributing to these 1

1 orphans, children and those un- the Boarg's cooperation. , play flags and bunting on the average <rf 125,000 bushels of, of a cent. But I don't think I'm Au~.hl," ,,,id Peter rd on the Means test. This u much' benefits. able to work If we are to become The Council expressed its pleas·' 24th. From a Western Canadian point: that difficult." pre>ident nf l':·:.•,,n higher than In any other province Employed people make regular a nation we must become members · ----- -·----.. - ·-------- -·~--------- -----· · In C'3nada, Mr. Andrew~ said. contributions to pension schemes, i one with another, Mr. Andrews '

At the end of Ma)', 19~7. 4,900 and in the federal scheme of pen· said, as he concluded,

FE HOll pel'5ons were receiving the old age lslon~ some provision Is mode for Mr. Andrews then read a tele­usl~tan~e or flfty.two percent of the fnm!ly of the pensioner In gram of greetings from Mr . .W. the age group between the ages 1 case of death. Unemployment in· ~lcCabe from K!nf!ston, Ontario. of 56 and ~9. Th!~ !~ the highest sur0nce makes regular oontr!bu- ~lr. ~lc<:abe served in St. John's rert'ent In Canada, which hu ap- tions and it I! becoming clearer with the John Howard Society sev­pro:<~!mately 21 peN:ent In this to tlie people that this social as- era! years ago, a1e group receil'!n-g assistance. slstance Is not provided without (To Be Continued)

It is frightening to think, Mr. some contribution from the wage / Andrews continued, that so many earner. . The new no·lron baby dresses of our older citizens have been The framework of ~oc!al wei·! are made of a soft, unscratchy unable to make reasonably ade· fer has been erected, Mr. Andrews ! cotton. . They are washable by quate provision for old age. ~aid, but the solid foundation of I m-achine or by hand, are very

With the lntroouct!on of Old individual contributions has not pr~y and can bt worn either · Age security benelits in 19~1 all been completed. · for crawllng or dressy wear. · Canadians are ell~lble for . pen· Sick lea1•e wlth pay, unemploy. Some have matching llned

iions at 70 without •. meaDs test. mcnt Insurance to those unemploy-l panties; others hav1 combination The direct contribution we make ed, adequate pensions at the age blousf'·slip,

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••. that's the manager's chair I

The Roy~! Bank Is looldng !or young high school IJ'Iduata with their .yes cia the m111ager's abalr 111d who · ,m lltudy to Win· advaru:ement. Llrtod below lll"l good reuoll.l why the "lloyal" oll'en rowil miD neeptlooal tal'ftl' opportunltl•s111d 1 IOIId future. DIIC\W thll advm!Hment with )'0111' parents , , , uk )'Dm local manager to tell you more about ~e opportunities . for young meo at the Royal Baok.

Solid facts that spell "opportu~lty" for you in the Royal Bank:

1. The "Royal" il North America's fourth largest b~~onk. More than 880 branches are in operation and new ones are being opened all the time. During the p!Ut four years we have opened 94 new brancbe!, each one creating new managerial positions , • , and resulting promotions for young Royal Bankers.

2. ,nfluence" pla}'!l no part In ad­vancement at the Royal Bank. Our sen!or officers from the Chairman and President down started as juniors in nnali branches and ad­vanced 011 merit a!one.

3. Home study banklng courses are available to allataH mem ben. Sue-

cessful candidates advance quickly. Practical experience plus the bank­ing course is equivalent to a unl· ·, versity course in Commerce.

4, For young l]}en interested ill gaining international banklng ex· perlence, the_ Royal Bunk has 77

· branches abroad ... in New York, London, Paris,. Central and South America) Cuba and the WestJnclies.

5, We have generous pension plan! that compare with the best, as well as groug. benlth and ·hospital insur­ance, at low cost to employees.

Get our booklet "Your Future in Banking" al your local branch 01'

wrlt6 Head Office for a copy.

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JHI ROYAL· BANK OF CANADA '

Canarla's Largest Sank ,. . . . . '

St.' John's ·Bra'nch (226 Water) ............... : ....... KEITH A,. CLARKE, Mar.age. Freshwater and LeMarchant Branch................... A. MOORE, Manager West End Branch ....... : .......... ' .......................... M. F. CHANNING,. Manager

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GOo~;t;YEAR

GOODYEAR NYLON CUSTOM SUPER-CUSHION Stronger on the. inside be­causej it's made with exclu­sive 3-T nylon cord. Safer on the ouhlde be­cause tough trend rubber wears longer, Twin Grip tread design grips better.

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MORE .PEOPLE RillE ON. GOODYEAR -.TIRES THAN . ON' .ANY . OTHER. KIND

Page 9: pONTIAC THE DAILY NEWS s2794 - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570619.pdf · However, continued hot and first big heat wave started

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The. Daily News ) 'I . .

sECTION II : .SECTION. II 'THE DAllY WEDNESDAY JUNE ·19, 1957

World Events In _Pictu·res . ,

·.·~::·: T' •. :.,,Lm-born Ccorgc Kozmln raises his clenched flst ln anger during an interview on arrival in : •':1 Cilicago with his wife Nedcjda. right. Shortly before they boarded a train for New York

.: .... ,;oppccl tbem from spiriting their U.S .. born 9-month-old soA back to Russia. The Deputies took .. :. :.:' mother's anm as she boarqed the New York-bound train. The couple planned to go to Russia' · :· .. l.r .'nn~ in 11 Chacago Orphanage. The Kazmins are ex-slave laborers from Russia who came lo : •. -.11--\l.:\. Photo).

r.-Thr "Hall'k." the Mnn-'s nPII'r~t smf~cr•tn-air gnir1r:d missilr is shnll'll blnstint:. nrr frnm its huncllrl'. '" 111 • I• ,.,.,, ,,,rn· rillwr c<lll' .. lotirn~;ll n'r lll"t:k:•r r: ~llo·.ii'C'.I nnd il'ill he IISrd Ill prntr•d· .\1oinit,-:111 cilic.o, Hlltl lrnnps in fro.,, : ... ;, .J,., ..J bombing and slrafiug alta~k~. The lV-foot mis~ile with a ra11ge saiu to be 5U milrs is guit.lcd by radar . ~. J.wlo) ·

.~ \' . . . t . ' ~~li·ew a[;Hhre's an aerial Ylew or the. British .Aircraft CArrier Ar~ RoyAl followe~ by they .s. Carrirr Sam~oga ~s tl~ey

to be ki International N~1·al Rmcw. Sh1ps •from seventeen, nations are takmg part nr the Naval cxercrse-the first . d m America in fifty yean.-,1. N. Photo) · . : _. , · - .

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SALEM CASTLE, Germany-Royally gathered in alem Castle for the wedding of Prince Tomislav, oF Yugosravra and Princess Margerite of Baden. Shown during the wedding fe5 ... :i.i~s from left lo right are: The Markgraf of Baden, fath&r of the bride; the bride, Princess Margerite; bridegroom, p, ince Tomislav; Markgrofin of Baden, mother of the bride, f'rin,·e Philip, husband of England'l Queen Elizabeth II, and Queen Fred-erika of Greece.-(I.N. Photo),

SOUTHERN SERBIA, Yugoslavia-The camera has caught L\\'o Yugoslavia farm \\'nmen \\'ith black sha\l:ls co\·· ~ring their heads, and <l Priest of the Greek Orthodox Church in a moment of deep mcdilat!Otl during solemn ceremonies in the 13th century church of the Greek Orthodox Cum·ent of Zica in Southern Serbia. In background, oroginal frescoes adorn the walls although while patches show where new plaster was added to prevent further crumbling.-(l.N. Ph,oto), ________ . _ _ __ _ LyJt.. 1 , -..

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PLnfOUTH, Mnss-Illumlnnted like an alabaster toy on ·a black\,mirror, the ~layflnwer H rides nt anchor on her first night. in historic Plymt:llth l·brbor. The c:Jloninl bark repeated the his to ric voyage nf .131 years ago. It sailed for l'lymouth, England, t1 Plvmouth, Mass.; 5000 miles across the Atlantic in 54 davs. !11 the foreground is the pillared Plymouth Shrine, surrounding the ro~k on which the· original.Pilgrims landed. After 12 days of cere monies, the :O.IayfJowcr will sail for New York where she will be on display for.thc Summcr.-(I. X Photo)

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10 THE DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JU .-.--------------·-------·---... ·-----· ... ·------.. , .... ______ .,..,, ......... , ... ___ , __ .. , ___ .. , __ ,., ___ , __ ... , __ ..,. ______ .... -------·--·--I -------I. ••

•• Paramount · Capitol Programmes On I 1ne Air.· Today '• ••

/

Steamship ·Waterfront --- . ...--.._ --.--

1

Now Play_ing To~d~y· ----.- --···------.. ·--.. ·--.. ·--... ·----·--·----·-·--·--··-· .. ·-·-----.. , ... _ ... , ............ _ ... , .. -..... _ .. ,,... ___ ..

·Movements - -. Directory •. :• .. CBN ··'

WEDNESDAY, June 1111

::7.30--CBC Newa I. 7 .M-Top of the !dorn1n1.

8.00--CBC News and Wea\her. 8.15--Mulical Clock. 9.bo-Momlnll Devotlon1. 9.15--Proll!'am Preview. ' 9 .2().....()rpJI Sty llnp. D.3()....Becordl at Random.

10.00-Cream of lhe Weat. 10.1G-Bit of the Dq. 10.1~1riJ Power. 10.25--CBC Nen 10.3G-!lorniq Mulleile.

· 10.45--Tbt Unm~pected. 1Ul0-BBC Variei.J, 11.3()--Showcue. I : .4b-Pandt of Stan. 12.00--Amlllmcera Cholet. 12.~Dilmer Bell Bmlt:don.

·12.3G-hrlll Broadeaat. ·a~llld oa, SerenadL

1.00--Do;rlt Bulletill. \ 1.30-Laun Limited. 1.30-CBC Newa and Weather. l.~KUJIW ProJrll!lmt. 2.00--Word.J with Music. 2.3G-!llllieal Rendezvoua. 2.45--Tbt Happy Gan,1. 3.1~Tbt W11 of the Lord. 3.30--CBC Newa. 3.33-Trana Canalk Matillet. •. 30--CBC Newa. . •. 35--Timel;r TwiN. '

· U~hildren'a Storr. 1!.15--J.Iuda cf the Wert. 5.30-Filher!es Broadcast. !!.4.5--Sonp for Summertimt. 1!.00--Intermeao. 1!.25--Proll'lm Preview. 8.3G-Supper Guest. 11.45--Don Meaer. 7.00--CBC Newa and Weatber. '7.15--Curta!D Call~o 7.30-TOPI Today. 7.45--Doyle Bulletin. 8.45--Rovlnl Reportu. 9.00--Introductlon to Wedneada;r

Nl1ht. t. HI-Special Stravlnslt:;r' Aft.

nlversary. 10.00--~larchlng Songs. 11.30--CBC Nalional News, New1

Roundup and Newa Tali.

CJON WEDSEHDAY, JWit 11

1.3()--Bob Lewll Show. 11.30--NCd. NeWI 1!.45--Nen llld '1\'eathar

cut. 7.00--Newa and Sports. B 00--Nfid. NeWI. 8.05--Provindal Weather. 8.15--SI!lppinll Report.

For•

CJON-TV ST. JOBN'S-tHANNEL fl .

0

WEDNEHDA\', JIUie It 5.00-0pen House. 11.30--Cblldren's Program, B.DO-Howdy Doody. UI-Newa llld Weather. U5-Sammer Thealn!.

Common Couples

. CJOX-TV ARGENTIA-CHANNEL 11

B.K-Mark Saber. 8.!0-Hit Parade. 9.00--Kraft, Thealre.

10.00--CBC Folio, 11.01--Nen 11.11--Late Show.

ACIOIII

lBu Uld-1-alld

Vir&inlt

DOWN 1-aabcnt

1 2 Seed van! 3GIY11

t Penrod all!! ' temporarlly '4 Soooer or-

SPtllr­e-alld

-11 RlllOII UHtn:7 Vlll

and­BolrY!I

141:mplo:r Cleopatra

1 Ont 2t Mea 43 Me\rlc 1

15 Clnln e 1 ctor 17 Girl'•

a So!tl7 (millie) 25 Slmd !map l1leaiiU'II .~r..l 8 UndtrWaltr H Dapolltl'l 45 Color ·"'!I

nlclm&mt IIAn-

va:ael 21 fTllblell 48 Ani vee! ' 10 Btwlldertd IG Flnllbea 47 Cllrland-

ltatamlll 11 roatatoo1 21 Hone color 23Eql 2t--'- cllnd7

11 Avmat lll.ai'Jil bodlea 48 Quarry 1 II Llundty af watu 50 OpenUc selo

nw:hlna S3 ForUftcaUon 1 51 ClnvJIII ahtlla' · 20 Shttpllllt JS Greek marketa 52 EatnUal 22 Moaea' 40 Hebrew belna

27 A:/allld- brother (Bib.) ucetlc s, A~rnt H Ant m r-W""W""r-1 32 WOI'IblPII I" II UTootb U Shcr1Jaektt !'l­IT=" to be la11r-+-+-+-l~r-t-t-l-ll-l II Snaw vehl:le ta ~~~~~~r1-i--f--f atnddltna

Romau 41 Worm 62 "!ll1Ga2 -"

"Underline 4CFellnt

delicacies . 1,. 40 Wl"l·lhtped ln.r+-+-+-U "Honest r -" Lln.c:oln -""-"'ii!-t--

14 Cheruhea i"' liMa! dr-87 Tear 18"- o! the

lathers" 18 Elevated • raUWI,)'I

10 VIewed e1 ottm "·

8.2!1-The Bob Lewis Show. ~Klddie1 Cofller, 8.30-Nfld. Nen 8.311-The Bob Lewh Show. U5-MornlnJ MPrrr-Go Roaad. 9.00--Provlnclal New1. D.OS-Duke Box Review. D.SG-Nen

9.31--Duke Box Review, 8.45--Murlel McKay.

10.00--Martln's Corner. 10.15--Ma J;'epper. 10.30--News. 10.31--Who Am I~ 10.40--Juke Box Review. 10.45--Eleven lor the Mone;r. 10.~1!--J'u.ll:e Box R~vlew. 11.01--The Story of Jane

Armitage. 11.81--Ca&ino.

112.01--Topa Today and Yeslerd~y

I' 1.00-Local and National J'iewa. 1.06--Weather Forecast 1.15--Ne\lrl. 1.35--Editorla! Comment. l.~porllt Review. 1.45--Art Baker'a Notebook. 2.00--NeWI.

TO-DAY 1.00--Nevu L!t Me L<lve You. 2.15--Thls Man's FamU,.. 130--Newa, Ma~nee.

. :1.00--Newa, Houaewlve1 Club. 6.00--Gen. ProvinclaJ Nen.

. 4.01--Caslnc.

·UQ....Newa. Ranch Part;r. li.O!l-News, The Record Shop . B.O~Newa and Weather. 8.05-Bullet!n Board. 1!.10--Natlonal New1. 6.15-Sportl Parade. 11.25-Provlneial New1. 6.30--The Money Tree. 7.01--Right to Happiness. 7.15--Programme Report. 8.00--News. 8.01-Spotlight on a Star 8.30-News. Double Featurt. D.~Newa.

10.00--News. 10,01--The Fat Man. 10.30--News. 10.31-Smllln' Ed. McConnell. 10.~Natlonal New1. 11.01--sporu. 11.10--Houseparty, Nel'{s. tOO-Queen and Si&n OU.

VOCM WEDNEHDAY, June· 19

THE NFLD. GREAT LAKES I ~ --S'l'EA!'tJSHIPS LTD. • • ON DRY D'OCK MARLON BRANDO, GLENN "REYO.\'D A

I The S.S. Allerine, the S.S. FORD IN ''TEAHOUSE OP · DOUBT" \I'!Tn MV Dundee loading at Hamil·

1

Burgco, &nd the M.V. Chrlstm&& THE AUGUST MOON" I DA!'iA A!'iDREI\'s ton June 20, Toronto June 21 and Seal. . The Picture ~i\h 'h Montreal June 24 for St. John's. AT DOCK . One of the greatest triumphs of l'ertis:d surprise e~di~"

MV Lunan loading at Ham1lton MV Phalsson, 1\!V Lila Bouth· ' the American stage has been A .Rr •. ,ullchle Doubt., ,. June· 2B, Toronto June 29 and 1 Jcr ;:.nd Henry W. Stone: ·I brought to the screen by M-G·~! RKO and Producer ·B;· Montreal July 2 for St Jo,hn's. The ~l.V. Elml!l' Jones !a still 1 as 1 captivating motion picture. It 1 to he someth1r.g new irnL

JliFLD CAN STEAMSHIPS under general repalra and reflt. is ''The Teahouse of the August I s.hockers opens to morro · · tal to eventually take up the Moon," the heartwarming and hil· Capitol Theatre. ~

Bedford II leaving Halifax Potuga! Cove tickle ferry aervice. ariously funny pl~y which had au· Shocks beg1n in th~ , June 22 due St John's June 24 The Random il discbargin& gen· diences cheering on Broadwav on quenc~. en eyewitness •••

I ' · ' 1 '' electn h · ~'t! sailing June 25. era cargo. the road and in some .W countries da .• c c 81r execution. It

Bedford II leaving Halllax- June AT. B.M.C.S. DOCK all ovl!l' the world during a record· > s question oJ wh·t · ' ll about b 1· hi • 2B, due St. John's July 1, sal!lng HMC Outremont wl remain un· breakinll run of more than three a 0 15 ng capiut

July 2. · . tll Sunday to take on board some years. 1 ment and thtreb)· avoid Bedford II leaving Halifax July of the Sea Cadets. The ingratiating story o! the ex· •, tence. convictions bas~d ~~

2, due St. John's July 4, sailing The Salvage tug C.G.A. Oppor- periences of a shy and uncertain I' stanlia! evidence. July B. tune from Argentia il waiting on Army captain, who is given the re. ' Dana. Andrews: portrayi!il

Belle Isle II le>ving Hali!IIX sailing ~rden, sponsibllity of rehabilitating a Ko- '~amtfrmnl novelist plar,, July 8, due St. J~hn's July 10, The dredge P.W.D. in charge rean village and is won over to the 0 . 50 1:e t 1 ~ problem in sailing July 12. of Capt. Russell is to have some re- native point of view Is at the ship With h1s future lath

· · · ' a newspaper pub\' h Bedford II leaving Halifax July PSI!'!. • Paramount Theatre. A~ a play it S'd Bl k Is It, 10 due St. John's Ju'" 12 sailing The M.V. Boltenla In charge o! won the Pulitzer Prize and gave 1. h1 ney ac mer h15 t~t

B kf Cl b N ' 'J ' c t R b •· · t h i IS cr role and 1 · 1. 11.30-- rea ast u , en July 13. liP . o er.., 11 o ave m nor re- It, ~tars a long string of award- . , OlE) J011 8.30--Hit of the Day. pairs. .· . . . . . ta1ne, Ar.drews co-star in 8 ""New•, Breakfa .. Club. FUR:"<ESS WARREN LINE Th Inve tig t II in h g f 1\ mnmg CitatJOns. ~ a film Jt is I enacts the liRncee & • i

... v- • •• · e s a or c ar e 0 destined to go down as the most . · . : •11 D.OO-Date with Deny1. Newfoundland due today, 1 Capt. Barbour. The Eastern Ex- deli htful corned in the blstor, I~ 10 lo\c tn real1ze that D.l5-Foxi!o•e Street. Leaving for Halifax and Boston I plorer, the Marinus and the M.V. of ~ovie·making Yand there shoui~ ?and-\o·hc IS de\ibmt!ly 10.~News. · 1 June 19, due HalifM June 21 and Parr all moored up Indefinitely. be plenty of p~izes in store for mg enmeshed In the mnttry 11.00--Burtnn'a of Bannu St. . Boston June 24. LeRvlng Boston The Jean and Barno is moored Marlon Branda Glenn Ford Jap- dcr of a stnp-tease , 11.15- -Blg Mopntain Show.· I June 25 and Halifax June 29, due up Indefinitely. '. , '. ~lant1ng false but ir.cri · 12.00--Ncws. St. John's July 1. Salling for Liver- AT STEERS LTD anese star Machika K)o, Eddie AI· e\'ldence is a p~rt of th!

• · bert and Paul Ford. to force • 12.05--Ramblln' wl!~ Record1. pool July 2. ~ The M.V. Bertha Joyce tn cha-rge . .. . ,., . arrest and, 12.30--News. Xol'a Scotia leaving' Liverpool of Clem Berkshire as mastl!l' In transfermg !,he Teahouse of strip-show nightclub 12.35--Ramblin' wltb Record1. June 26, due St. John's July 2. took freight for Spencer'• Cove, the August Moon . to the ~creen the novelJst is jailed. Trail 1.00--Myer--Chris--Ralpb. Leaving for Halifax and Boston Harbour Buffett Tack's Beach in the i~eep o( CmemaScope and death sentence corsiction l.l~oorucast.. July 3, due Halifax .Tuly 5 JWJd and the othe u~~al ports In Plac-' In magmf!cent color photograph~, At this point. the con"i"l,..

-1 . .10--}fews. July 9 and Halifax ."uly 13, due and the othl!l' usual pam in Pia· ProtducDer ~a1ckMCumf~llng~ and Dlf· v:rong nnd th~ hero 1.45--Simon Mystery. St. John's July 1~. Sailing for centia Bay, !lailed Friday. . rec or. anle ann I meu some o liOn; . ~.00--Ramblln' with Recordl. Liverpool July 16. AT CANADA PACKERS LTD. the picture in Japan to. create a \\hat follows m th! !.55--Newl. Ntwfoundland leaving Liverpool The Elsie and Gertrude will b~ true atmosphere in the.plctu~esq~e climax must b~ sm. lhl 3.00--Dollara on Puadl. I July 13, due St. .John's July 19. taking freight for nortbl!l'n ports. ~orean Vlllage of TobJkl, Wltb 1\5 endin.g, filmed he.hind lrd~ ,,Oil-News. Le~ving for Hall!ax and Boston The M.V. Silver Jubilee, Parsons mhabltanu port~a~·ed by nativt! by Director Fnti !.ant ~.05-Sam'~ Coral. July 20, due Halifu July 22 and is the ma~ter, took !reight for Japanese actors. an unexPEcted Pmotio~al 4.55--News. Boston July 25. Leaving Boston Carmanville, Freder!ckton, Twll· It is Tobiki to which the mild. 5.00--Cisco Kid. July 26 ?nd Halifax Jui~· 30, r~e! lin gate.. ~ewisporte, Springcta.le mannered captain Fishy (Glen Sizes Throw_rl 5.30--Melody Man. St. Johns August 1. Sailing again and Pilley I Island, read~ to iillll.' Ford) is sent by Colonel Purdy In 6.05-Melody Man. san;e day for Livrrp?ol. . The M.V. Clara Hallett In ch~rge (Paul Ford) of the Army Occupa·, 6.15-Sportscast. i\ ova Scalia leav1ng Liverpool of Capt. Feltham took freight tiona! Team to assist in the recov. : 6.20--Melody Man. .July .27, nue Sl. John's August 2. for, Indian Bay, Wareham, Gr~ens· ery and welfare of the impo 1·eri~h·: 6.45-News. Lr:v1ng for Halifax and Boston , pond, , Valley.fleld, .Badger:s Quay ed village, with the amiable rogue, : 7.00--Dork C.od. Au,ust 3, du~ Halifax A~gust 5 and '1\esleyv!lle, sailed Friday, Sakini (Marlon Branda) as his [ 7.15-~!usic from the Show.<. anci Boston August B. ~eavmg Bos· The M.V. Roy Alga B., In charge Okinawan interpreter and general '8.00--Top Tunes ol \he Day. ton August 9 and Hall lux August of Captain Cross loaded a gen· 1 hand ·m n I 0.45--Ncws. 13, due Sl. John's August 15. era\ and deck cargo for Port Un·j l a ·

10.00--1 \\'as a Communist for the, Sailing again same day for Liver· 1 ion, Valleyfisld, Lumsden and Fishy is supposed to run his job 1 FBI. pool. 1 ~!usgrave Harbour and ha~ on deck 1 by Washington's "Plan B," which

10.30-0rgan Encores. FURNESS RED CROSS . two motor ,·ehiclrs and three 1 calls for the building of a Penta· 10.45--:'>iews. Fort Avnlon lc<rl'ing New:. crates of live poultry besides other I gon·shaped •cboaihouse, lectures 11.00--Sportcast . y k Ju 26 St J h ~ B . goods, ~a1led June 12. on democracy, and a general spur 11.10- Forecast. i Jt~~e 28 , ~~\i!ax' Jul.y ;, ~~riving i The M.V. C. and A., Brown in to efficiency .and American get.up-g:!t~~~~i~~~.~.eatN! , St. John's Ju\1· 4. leRI'ing Julv 6 . charge of Capt. Blackwood landed and-go teehmques.. But the plan

:for Halifax o~lv for annual o~er· a cargo. ol lumber and is now t&k- tel~s F1sby noth1.ng about the 12.00--Nell'!. haul. • 1m.g ~re1ght for Carmam•Jile to Onental way of domg thmgs,. such I2.05-Ciub 590. I Fort Hamilton !ea,·ing ~ew York 1 Kmg s Co~e and the usual ports 11 the public meeting In wh1ch he 12·30-·ii'ews. June 14, H1>lifax June l!l. arriving of sal!, suing Saturday. Its showered with gift! from ~e

1.00--C!osednwn. , St J 1 , J 21 T J The M. V. Shirley Goodyear II, eager villagers, the best gift bemg ' 2' 5· f 0 1cn s unBe k' 5P8h1 .11ngd 1 uh~e which recenUy came off dry dock the lovely geisha girl, Lotus Blo!-

. • or orner roo , 1 a e p 1a ~ t k f i h ! B d • k h I d N y k anu oo reg t or a ger s som (~lachi o Kyo), w o proves 'an ' ew or · Quay, Valley field, Brookfield, the fir5l of his many compllca.

WF.DNEHDA Y, Jane _29 __ I CLARKE STEA~ISHIP CO. Wesleyl·i!le, Newtown, Lumsden tions. The other ladie~ of the com·

vous 6.00--Nationat Anlhem and ~tgn ' as far as Cape Freels, sailed June munity, led by the aggressive Mi!18

0 :'\o1·aport sailing June 19. 12. Higa Jigs, resent the unfuir com· 6 . 0 5-S~~dial. r.ul!port leaving Montreal June AT CROSBIE & CO. LTD. petition, but this Is aettled when 6.30--World New~ and Weather 2!, iue St. John's June 25• sailing Fisby agrees to have Lotus Blo!-8.00--Breakfast Club. June 27 (via B~y Robert.ll. Th.e M,V. Coli~ II, has had some scm give geisha lessons to the 8.30--Make up Your Mind. . Novaport leal'lng Montreal .July repairs Rnd a painting up. I Latli~ League for Democratic Ac- I

8.45-Rex Kou"". 2, due .St. John's July 6, sailing I' The Western Explorer is moor· ilion : ., Julv 9. · , ed up for the season u well as , '

1

1 ~:~~tof~ea:.p~i~~. Lal1 Night Gulfport leaving ~!ontreal July . the whalen f'inback and Olaf i Gradually, Fishy, encouraged by

1

. ll.OO-Turn Back the ·.:Jock. 12. clue St. John's July 16, sailing 1 Olsen. the resourceful Sakini and Rwayed

Ju : 18. ' : AT BOWRING BROS. LTD. by the charm of the Oriental way ii:~~~~~~:rr~~le~~i~:· Club. i :\IJI'apart leaving ~!rrt1trra1 .July The M.V. Cryst.t Stream in of life, resolves some of the other 12.10--News and D.B. 1g, clue St. John's July 23, sailing charge of Capl&in Huntc,r, took problems. The proposed achool·

______ Juh· 25. ! freight for Happy Adventure, house gives way to a beautiful tea------------------ Gulport k"l'in~ ~!ontrral .July! Eastport, Salvage, and Alexander house, wheN! the villager~ can ob-.

HEINZ FRUIT JUICES

30. due St. John's Aug. 2, sa1iing , Bay and ~ailed Wednesday. ~erve the beauty oT the ~unset~. I Aug. 5. I The M.V. Wesley and Ralph of When the sale of n311ev handicraf~ I

:\ovaport leaving ~lontrrr~ Aug. wh1ch C~pt. Steve GO?dyear IS the prove~ a failure, the villa~e econ-7 due St. John's Aug 12, sRling msster is taking fre1ght for ~ar· omy i~ stimulated by the manu!ac-j

.A1ro-NOVELTY I

TIMY OF !-HOWS EVENING IIIOWS: , '.111.-UO p.m.

lllATINE&--1 P:Ma

ADMISSION PRICES FOR THIS ENGAGEMENT, IVENJNG-.lDl:L 1'8-. •••... Uc. CBILDREN. , ••• , .Ue. UTINEU-ADULTI ...... JOe. CJIILDIEN ....... lk.

NEXT AnRACTION ~honrla Fleming-MacDonald Corey in "OOONGO' -Arlventur ..... Thrills-CinemaKOf'l.

NOW PLAYING

Also·-UP-TO.THf-MINUTE NEWS .EVI::NING SHOWI-1 P.M.-I PJI,

··MATINEE: I P.M.

ADMISSION PRICU FOR THIS ENGAGEMENT•

IVlNlNG-.&D\ILTI ....... ,ki' CBILDUN ........ 111. IATIND'. -ADVLTI :., .... .He. CIIIIJ)IJH ·" .... II&

' NEXT ATTRACTION

inboroh Kerr-Robert Mitchum in "Heaven Knows Mr. A!lison"-Action-Thrills-Cinemascop&.• , '

so handy I I so nourishing!

'

/~~ ~!· :.~ ~ .

thir~ty, you cau ~i\e ' "· . ·.' ., -~ him 1 delicious driut.

t~~- , , .. _, ~fp~l~a'j~~c~:li::a~; "'•' · prepared by Heinz!

You just open the tin and paur it into cup or . bottle. Yea, Heinz fruit juices are ao finely strained they go through a nipple without clogging. J'ittJmirriud! Heinl Apple Juice is fortified with Vit1111in C for extra nourishment, and Hein• Onnge juice i3 made from select oranges at the le&!IOn when their Vitamin C content il hightat. Both pro~ide your baby with an ex· cellent dielary 1ource of thil vitamin.

HEINz{}. BABY FOODS

, MOUTHA.NilOl(ti'IDS IHA!HID AND IU"IO! MIAU • US! CE!!ALS • mAIH!O AHO JUMIO! '00111 .

1UTHINQ BIS!;UITI

Aug. 14 1Bny Roberts). mannllr •. Gander Bay, Herrmg, ture of a potent anlive brandy I -Refrigeration. , ~eck, Twilllngate and Change Is· 1 much sought after by Okinawa·~ CO:'\'STAI\'TINE CAI\'AniAJii lands And sailed June 13. Army ~nd Navy installations. When Con!, cnmforl•hl! fOr

SER\'1CES ! AT AYRE 1: SONS Captain McL~an (Eddie Albert) a, for thP larger fl>UTI .

'! 1 ' psychiatnst; u sent out by a per· I \'er~a tJle n~ck!Jne to nar ~1.\' .. Al'onwood sail ·' ontren 1 The M.V. Maggie, Greene In; turbed Colonel Purdy to report on oU the !houlrier; wr,

.June 21, arriving St. John's June. charge of Capt. Joseph Delurey is[' the situation, he and Fishy blend lull skirt. Choo~e a. · 26· . . . from Branch and sailed Tuesday their enthusiasm for organic farm- sew thil rlms 1n a Jilif

"!.V Edenwood sall.mg Hnmllto~. for Bay Bulls to lead a cargo of ing to turn Tobiki into a garden new PRIXTED Paltm: Jul: 2• To.r~nto Jul} 4·, ~ 1 ont.rea :salt for Branch, St. Mary's Bay. spot. Printrrt Pattrrn 1.>2:!.

r' July 9, amvlng St. John 5 Jul) 14 ·1 The M.V. Lydia Maule in charge Sizes 3<3, 3B, 40. 42· 44· of Capt. Spurrell Is having a gen· But when things seems to be requires 5 . rard~ 3$-1!.~ cl

12.30--Hil!bll!y ~latinee. eral refittal and paintin~ up to nearing perfectlol", with the happy Printed dmclior.l oo,!l 1.00-Behincl the Story. take freight next week for the 'villagers celebrating the comple. tern part. F:a,lrr (II.H, 1.15-0ne ~!an's Family. usual northern ports. !ion of the exquisite, dreamlike rate. . 1.30--~!usivcai Express. The M.V. Marjorie . Inkpen in "~eahous.e of the August MoiJn" 1 Send FORT\' CF.YTS ;o 1.45-Amrr!can ~!usic lbll. , charge of Capt. George Blackwood With music, song and dancmg, doom 1 in coin~ ,,t 3n:pl cann<l 2.00--VOUS ~!u~ic Room. 1 is t~king freight for Goose eve, St. falls. An outraged \urdy descends I ceplecl 1 for th1; pat:ef~~ 3.00--Sports P;;ge. Anthony and r.riquet, ready to on the gath.ermg, F Jsby is placed pnnt plalllly. ~!Zt:: .~ · 3.15-~larch o! Events. sail under techmcal arrest, Lotus Bios· DRESS, sn U- ~D!BIR. 3.30--Basrball. · AT BAINE JOHNSTON som is brokenhearted and the Send ordH to A.'INE 5.30--Pulse. beautiful teahou5e \1 ordered to bf ~are of ST, JOHS'S iT 8.00--Sports Today. The Hazel Blackwood took torn down. Pattun l>rpl, ell FRO~ 8.15-The New Yorkers. freight for the usual northern · WE.~T TOKOSTO, 0~ · 8.30-21Sst. Precinct. ports, sailing Saturday, June 1~. But thia enchanting atory of the · __ ' . ..- · ·-9.00--Groucbo Marx. The M.V. Agnu J. Ryan in warmth and laughter of the human I 9.3D-Recollectlons at Thirt)'. charge of Capt. H. Johnson, took spirit cannot end In tragedy. When

10.00--Final Edition. freight for· Eutport, LaScle, all seems blackest 'the faith of the · 10.30--Fred Robbins Show. Springdale MJd Morteon'a Har· Toblki villagers h re~tored. And 11.00--Muaic 'Til Midnight. hour, ready to 1111. ao ja the Teahouse of the Augull

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Page 11: pONTIAC THE DAILY NEWS s2794 - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570619.pdf · However, continued hot and first big heat wave started

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'' y NEWS. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19. 1 957

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~~at_t~• tattoo Mr~ Malloney huon hla arml" -·· ~..- .. ,.,_...,, -··· ...

. ' I •

:, I , Guards, Meet . I FOOTBAlL: St. B?n s In Soc~er I • ,, • •

Tlris Evening . St. Pat s Wm 1st Game By Edging Feild '1-0

DOUG CL:\:\'CEY

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American League Chicago at Baltimore (N)-Don.

ovan (6 2) vs Ceccare!U (0·2), Detroit a~ New York-Maas (7-

3) vs Sturdivant (s.j). -Cleveland at Boston-Garcia 2-

3) vs Sullivan (3·5). Kans.as City• at Washington (Nl

-Portercarrero (3·1) l's Pa!cual ( 4-7).

National League I

New York' at MUwaukee (N)~ Gomez (9·3) vs Buhl ·cs-2). 1

.Brooklyn at Cincinnati (N) ~ ' Craig (:?.-1) or Drysdale (5-3) v~ ' Ha~ker (3·2L. . ~· · .

Philadelphia at Chic~ga (2) .:.:. ! C~rdwell (3·31 and Roberts (6-8) ·I vs Droll (~-6) and Drabowsky (3·-... 5). I I

Pittsburgh at·' St.· Louis 2, twl. night )-Arroyo (2·6) and Law (~l) vs L. Daniel (&-3)' and Jones (3·2).

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~ ~ : !; . I I ' .'' ' j i . I ' j .-L I

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I

Page 12: pONTIAC THE DAILY NEWS s2794 - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570619.pdf · However, continued hot and first big heat wave started

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MARCONI / CUSTOM CAR RADIOS

. TAI~ORED TO FIT IN THE DASH, 'AVAILABLE FOR MQST POPULAR MAKES AND MODELS.

. ''<

There Is rio ·nud to min your favourite progra"' whll• you're fishing, aut drlvlng, or on the road for any reason'. All the pleasures of radio can be yours wherever you roam in your car. These custom set& are the arlglnal designs engineered to fit right in the dash an_d add a permanent luxury fixture to the equipment of the modern qutomoblle. With the easy terms available, if you can afford to operate a cdr you can certainly afford cne of these radios.

'COMPLETE WITH NOISE ELIMINATORS ~NO AERIAL AND ' INSTALLED IN YOUR CAR

$79.50 I

ON HIRE PURCHASE

UNDER DASH TYPES AS LOW AS ................... $59.95

CONVERTIBLE CARRIAGES STEP OUT WITH BABY IN STYLE

!very mother will appreciate the won· • Shining chrome finish, derful ease of handling, the effortless, • Plastic hand grip. floating rlde Oi these fine Carriages. • Full width brake bar. Com p tete ly washable elastic fabrics _ • Transparent wind screen make them so easy to keep clean. You •• can take the carriage along ln your ONLY car, too, It's easily collapsible or can

$36~95 be converted in an Instant to a stroller whan the littlest blessing grows ,bigger. up Available In a choice of attractive pastel shades , , • a beauty at a bar-

ON HIRE PURCHASE gain price.

CHESTERFIELll. SETS

s169.so ON HIRE· PURCHAU

Another fine selection of modern Chesterfield Sets. Come in ond choose ·

from an arroy of luxurlou~ fobrlcs, all incorporoted Into furniture of sturdy· . ' . \ ' . et'lnstructlon that wlll glve you yeors of comfort and service.

The Gr.eafEastern Oil ' -

Compan_y, Limited

.~oaTJI u •None 'KQ 104 • KJ 15~1 .KQU

WUT .ADT • !( 1092 • 4 ~ •u , • .ueaa .873 ··A93 . • lOU! .AJ

.BOUTII (D)

.AQJI7(11 .2 • Qt •MU '

Ean-and Wist vulnerable IIPD4h WIN Ntrlll Ead 3 • Pill ~.. " " 4 • Doublt Pan Pall-Pall '

Openlnl lead-'1 5

A BLYTHEVILLE, Ark., player writesl "My wife says that my bla. of four spades Ia the

·wont bid a he . has ever aeen. I 1 know the result wu unfortunate. ; I went ~own 300, while If I had passed East's four heart bid ahe

I would hr.ve doubled It and aet i them 800.

"I had a pretty good puempt 'and no defense againRt hearts Hlld wanted to aa1·e the rubber.

'How bad waa my bid?" Kot u bad as your wife 'uyt.

In 30 years of competition I have . 1een many wnr~e hids and must l'nnles! thill I have even made

· 10me myself. At the lime time It wu pretty

bad 1ince it dellnitel.v took your ·partner right 0111 of the came. 1 When J'OU bicl three s~ades :your wife must have h·urd you. She also must have known wh;;t your bid meant. A long spadt

·suit and no dehnae ualn1t anY· 1

thing else. 1 I believe In preemptive bid• 'my sell and would have· opened

[.three spades just as you did but , when my partner pu5ed and 1 East went to four hea.rts I would have passed llka 1 shot. In fact

1 It !a a sound principle that a I man who pre em pta should nevu rebid if hla partner passes.

If your wife had some 1upport for spadea and little dehn1e against four hel'l!'tl ahe eould and probably · would have bid four

, spadea. After all, 1he must have i known your opponents were I I vulnera~le,

i I I Q-Hhe blddlnl has been: South West North Weat

'1 " Pau 2 N.T. Pus · 3 t Pm 4 t Pw1

You. South. hold: .A J 8 8 5 ¥A Z tK J 5-4 ... It 8

\\'h!t do you do? A-Bid lour hearta. ThiJ mu1t

bf read b)· partner u 1 cue hid, nat a he;~rt !Uit, and sh01n that vou are !nt~re•terl in a ~lam. . TOD.o\l''8 QUE~TlON

. Your partner eontim•~s by bid· ·dine fii"B nootl'ump. What de you : do? · ·

Annnr Tomorrnw

..... . . .,.

·"GIVING IT A TRY" To aay that aomethlnl can't be

· dona •• , is to admit defelt ••. :although advancea may bt alow i •.. go one, do not retreat ••. a failure doea not mean you'ra through ... &lve It another try • .• Auceesa is paved with rocky roP.l!s .•• and faith In great sup­ply •.. let failure be your teacher •.. In that WPY you will learn o .•

. to ride the waves of might-have­: been ... and make 1 strong return 1

, , , ( know It's easy to aet forth ..• the righteous things and true .•. but followlnl! the good advice .•• is very hard to do , . o sltll when y011 lose, you must set forth

.. , . upon the journey back ••. · !ortiflen with new-found hope .•• to strencthen yDur attaclc ..• ae ne1·er HYI it can't be done ••. and here's tht reason wh~ . o o you'll fain a apec!al pefee ef mind ... by 1ivinc. it a tr,. .

.. -

IJ/ ''''Lt Lu .......... ,,.,

A FALL RIVER,. MFI!Is., man wu ~lvrn a $46,(){10, flve-yur eontnel

, lor urbaa..: collection. lt. 1ounda ' Ilk• !ollu are pretty wut!lul.

• • • Why I~ it that picnicker~ think

that every Iiller bit helps? • • •

1 When you so 1ome ;irla nn · th~ hathin11 beach you'll under· I .

stand what they mean when they ny they haven't a thine to wur.

• • • A 1oft anawer turna away wrath, but a IIX: on the beater endJ the matter then and there.

' This new formula also brinl!B

with It 1 new makeup trrnd: it liVeR 1 flattering <jewy eflect to the lace that resembles a healthy r!ow-ol-youth ra I her· than 1 matte· hnlsh. And without ei·er lookinz ... ______ ._ _____________ ..;.;.~----------.! theatrical, It will screen out or

1 cover any skin imperfec\ions.

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I c:.N'T LEi 'Ill' LI'L CLLt:K AW:'f ME. LOsE A S4L! !

UMM .. :

ICIII~ ANI' I PI.AN "TO <:OIT;. 1/i,r.lUlliP A9 . 500N A5 YOIJ • ' ' I'ISCI.JAR:Gii ~if:,

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81 Rl

Page 13: pONTIAC THE DAILY NEWS s2794 - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570619.pdf · However, continued hot and first big heat wave started

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l.! 8PRISGDALE ST. yul Efficient Service

DIAL ZOS,

I

R.J. COLEMAN LID.-­DUSTBANE

Newfoundla'nd'a Clunelt · word. Obtainable at

I. J. COLEMAN LTD. 148 • 248 DUCKWORTH IT

DIAL U15

Confectionery REID'S -------,

CO:SFECTIONERY lgarettu, Fruit, Ice Cream

nnd Drinks. · We Give Good Senlc1,

..

Electrical Appliances

BAINE JOHNSTON----, COMPANY, LID.

Alency DeplrimfJI · IU Water 81 . Dial !10%

'

YOUR. FRIGIDAIRE DEALER

HEAP lie PARTNERS ---= (NFLD.l LTD.

Wlrinl llaterlala, Wl.rt ••d Cablu, MotOl'tl, Startera,

Lampl, Switches, L!Jhtln• F!xturea,· etc.

WAREHOUSE PRINCEI IT. DIAL 6085

owu .street. Dial 91056 I . I'---~.------

Gift Sh'ops LARACY'S -----,:-~

REMEM.BRANCE SHOP• Gift!, Gamel, Toy~

Novelties, Cout'1 Card• for Jll occuion1

DIAJ. U85

·Jewellers TIImiPSON'S ----,

JEWELLERY !0! WATER liT,

When 1efecting a Diamond Ring see' our private UillllJnd Booth.

DIAL &~OZ

' ' \

Picture Framipg ART SUPPLIES _ __,.--ART !!HOP .

lU JIOND liT. W•tu Colour IJld OII·Palnt; ln11 paiitted 111 requut· b7 Paul Peraon1

DIAL I~N

----- Photography .Grocers ------ Matches GARLAND'!! mmm -...., B. WAI..8H ------,

BEST IN LEADING GROCERY LINEI,

You Cholet of what 700 need DIAL 1110 .

-------BRYMA:f ----­

!!~FETY MAJ'CHES Dl•trlbuhd by

,. PLEASANT ft. DIAL 29&8

lV.dUlnl Pbotoa, Portralta

11s'd Commll'l!lal PhotoJI'Iphy

Recruiting ,Stoves _______ ._ ______ _ FLY WITH THE R.C.A.F.-

For full Information DIAL 7151

!OYAL CANADI~ AIR FORCE

:Recrultin1 Unit: 177 WATER ST.

FOR A IlEAL FUTURE

it. w . .BA.RNEj --.........,,... J.N liTOCJ.

BOSTON N.UJJ. OIL BU.INUI'

Immediate Deliv117 DIAL 8Z71J

See the , NAVAL . fRAS.K FOUNDRY LTD .._

RECRUITING 1 16 W ' OFFICER AT 2 ATEI IT,

123 WATER·ST. ! Manu!actu:rtr1 Ill DIAL 80381 MAID OF .6.V4LON

and

-------------------REGAL UNGU DIAL 3811 .'1111

Parts [Whole] Contractors , Electrical Service 'Ill WATER ST. WEST '

CHURCHILL'S ----

PlANK McNAMARA LTD. Queen St. Dill ~!U."

CAMERA SHOP ----, 1'1 LONG'S RILL Scales •.

Nflrt. Armatun'

Work• 38

Bambrick Street

Dial 7l01·2

Insurance )01!\SO~ :...· --.

~!lrl011r.d!and'1 Largelt r.drr.t lnsuranee Ollie•

Dill 1051

E'ilJ B:\KERY -..,..... TlfE FI~'F.ST BREAD,

CAKES and PASTRIES W1d1 In Newfoundland

Rill O'Chip1 Ill.\ L 2R6B

Parlours

T&i! '~"n'a•e of ou:r ~OR 'I' I \T, 'P f.CIAL ·

110 rmnanPnt for 55. 114 ~·,. r.n, .. r ~t. nl &I san

~da::~~! In 1'ER~!A:->E:ml.

180 P.\TRIC! 81'. DIAL 2302

ftT TRl'DY'B KUT 6 I.UJlL 101 your r.w permanent.

Ill, u·"t:or. and experiencl, ,tu, quali:y ingredienta.

IIIERR \'.\IEF.TING ROAD DIAL 6~3&

Shops

All !leel Blcyrln '· :., · l•mr lrlc)'rlu

Dl\1. 89iG

g Materials

11.\W ~T. •~d TOrS AIL RD.

l!lf all your !lulldlnl P.tqutremenu eall IOI6t _ Mm

Materials

Supplies

\V, BliRTON ------., BUILDERS OP

MODERN HOMES Morlernlzlns, Remodellln1,

. . Repair Work. 14 LeMar~hanl Roa ..

DIAL 6919

CITY ELECI'RICAL --. COMPANY, Lm.

' FOR THE BEST

ELECTRICAL WORK IN TOWN CALL 3781 "-----

HAROLD SNOW---­&SON, LID.

Indwtrlal Eleetrielllll 71 R'mllton Street.

OftiCI !276 lletl, U!T

Contractors Supplies UNITED NAO... AND--­

FOUNDRY Cu., Lm. · HAMILTON : AVENU11

Heating and VaDWaUon. ltruclural and Rt·inlorc.llll

. Steel. DIAL lOin

JONES ELECfRIC ----, 10 PRESCOTI' ft.

DlAL lUI

8peclallall In Moton, Geperatorl, &team Irani 1nd all Houuhold AppUanciL

lLECTRICAL-----, SERVICE RIDEOUT'S ELECTRICAL

BERPt'lCE . !leetrlcll Contnettr

608 Water Streel1 lt. lohn'a, Newfonnd1111lt

Phone 13&&

Engines I. u4 I. BARBOUR LTD,

I Dlltributon of: Kelvin Marin• Dlue!J

Kelvin Rleerdo Gu Englau. Full Lln1 o! Span PartJ. "71 • 616 WATEI IT.

DIAL &Ill

Florists , ~=:::.~::::::= HOWSE OP FLOWDI

Customs Brokers t~l f;C:J~~ P. F. COLLINS-~-...,

m N~W GOWER ST.

8PECIAL1STS IN ALL CUSTOMS WORII:

'In IIAMlLTOM AVJI:NUJI DIAL 801159

1M WATEI IT. DI~L 7410

SUPERMARKET . PORTUGAL COVE ........ .. You can buy your grocerlea just 11 cheap as in St. John'• and have them delivered to your door without charec•.

We. Siva D.P.S. S~mp1

. '

Garbage GARBAGE------.

DISPOSAL Do you have 1 garbage Dis­posal problem in your ba&& ment or garden? If you have, call S386·F and your worrle1 are oura.

Hardware Stores ~LLANAN & CO.--­

FOR ALL YOUR PAINTING AND BUll..DING N!!DS

CALL C:.U.U. 'iAN and CO, nUT

opp, C.N.R. DIAL 19M-

HARRIS & HISCOCK LTD. GENERAL RAIIDWAlll

Diltrlbul~rl !or Sunbeam Electrical Appllancea.

lport!n1 Goods and SporU­wur for all occas!ona.

1 DIAL 801& .

DIAL 'JHI • 'JNt Fruit Stores ----------Heating· Delicatessens EMP~ tr.Wub~~~ .. BELL'S PASTRY and-­DELICATESSEN

m DUCKWORTH ST. (I • DIAL 7197

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEU from 11.00 a.m. to IUO JJL

Town Cfll ..• !MPIRI nt1IT STOll

1" Patrldl: Btrltt, Dial 1!&1

L 171 Du~kworth St., Dill 1811 I LocatlCIIIII

Fire Insurance _D_ru_g_S_to_re_s __ CRosB'(E co., LTD. _"-I

. AIIDta fM' CONNORS DRUG STORE· LAMBERT'S COUGB IYIUJ'

un be obtained at

CONNOR! DRUG STORI 134 WATER ST.

DIAL IZOt

THEATRE PHARMACY I LOCATJONI1

'M. Clare Ave ..... Dill etiJ Loa1'1 HIU ad . Que~n'a Road· .• Dial 1417

T .A. Bull din I,. . Duckworth St. .. Dill 11M

UNDEIWRITERI AT LLOYDI. .

LOW JIATU I DIAL IDI1

. Fish. Stores CITY FISH SHQP ----.

N PUJOOn rr. MALJIU

. D: C. BISHOP'":"'/----,

111 NEW GOWlll IT.

DIAL ISU

Oomplete Plumblnl ~ Rea t1n1 Bervlc1

ERNEST CLOUSTON, -. --. LIMITED

McCLARY AUTOMATIC WARM AIR CONDITIONING

' 110 WATER !T. DI.U. '18S

C. A. HUBLEY, LTD.---., PLUMBING and BEATING .

CONTRACTORJ

aep. Genenl !lerlrfl

H lilll'a Rod Dill 1111

Meat Wholesale CAMPB!:LL'S MEAT MARKET

1\ep,..uoU.r IYGRADZ FOOD PRODUcn

INC. · COOKED IIEATI ' IXPORT P.\CJrelll L"m. POULTRY ·PRODUCTS DRACH'S KOSHER PJIODUcrl W!fi'TE! PACKING COMPANY PORK aod BEEf PRODUC'I'I 'PHOHI!:I 11!1 • t 1M IUTI!:• n.

Meat Wholesale H. C .. SPARKES ----

Wholuala Pre-Pall: Mull, Royal Hama and Bacona· Pork Cull and Carcau S.ungea 1nd Puddlnp

DIAL '151

Meat Markets PMSHmLDs----~___,

C.. P1l1'!8BWATU u4 PENNYWELL ROAD

DIAL14111 Oompl~te up-to-dati

Hut- Market

,,

Mill Supplies WM. NOSEWORTHY ---1 LIMITED

BELTING, I!OLTS and NUTS . TAP~ and DIES, Etc.

'18 WATER ST. DIAL 5121 1-...----

Oils, Lubricating J. II. ROBERTS Lm·.---.

Sole Agent, Ill Newfoundland for

OAM'ROL 0~ (CANADA) LTD,

lol.c! an over ~ewfOU!Ic!land DIAL me

Paints FRANKLYN PAINT STORE l

PAINT!! FOil EVElY PURPOSE.

Allviu for every paint job. Completa up-to-date rteck. ·, For fut 1ervle1 nll !0198. I 111 PENNYWELL lOAD

DIAL 181%L

PULL LIN!: or PHOTO SUPPLIES ALWAYS

IN STOCK.

Paper Products TIIE LAWRENCE ---.

NFLD. CO., LTD. New Loeat!on1

.. · Ill DUCKWORTH ST. Paper aad Paper Pl'O(jucu.

WHOLESALE ONLY VIAL 12JII • TS.'!I

Publishers VENTURE PU}JLICATIONI

Co!Illllerclal Publllhln1111d · Advartlli n J. • Ktculnu. Pamphl•ta,

Jroehurn, Comp1117 !l'lwiJ)aprn, Program•

DIAL a:n P.O. BOX !·NU

Radio· TV Repairs ELECfRONIC CENTRE~

'l'.V .• IADIO II.!CEIVIM IEPAIRED Ill IDERTS

All work GuanntHd far rut !!trviee.

CALL '7313 or M&ll 10 CAMPBELL AV&.

GREAT !ASTERN on. COMPANY, LTD.

UPAIR! TO RADIO!, T.V. AND ALL ELECTRICAL

APPLIANCES. DIAL 10111 &o ION

IADIO RL!VI!ION ----.

IERVICI (NFLD.) LTII

...... r.T., ~-- ... OD ........ ~· DIAL-

........ •' ••Uiara -·

JACK'S RADIO Sl!OP ----, LONG'! RILL

JllO'ERT .llEP AIRMEN Ill RADIO and T.V.

lpec!ali•t5 In Aut,, Rad!ot. DIAL 'fHI

\VEST END ------

1

TELEVISION TV-Radlo·Car Radio .llepa!n

' 70~ WATER STREET · CALL 8BR5

At Kfght, Day, Holld1y1 t:11 Sunday !or Fut .Servl~• and I

Guaranteed work eall 'T727A. I

FRED V. CHE~MAN LTD.­

TOLEDO rOOD AND SCALE MACHINES

Electric Meat Saw1 DIAL !5!1

Serlice Stations PALMER'S ---

SERVICE STATION TOPSAil. ROAD ·

• WASHING ~ GREASING TIRE REP AIRS

DIAL 1518

R~WAY-----------,

SERVICE STATION

Clnue and on Cballl• Auto Acce1sorlet.

OPEN 111 HOURS DAn.Y DIAL BIIGl

Service Stations

MARSHALL MOTORS~ FISK TIJ!I

CJuaranteed agalnat C11ta, Blowouts, j3ru!Je1,

Under Inflation. CaD MARSHALL MOTOR!

Water St.; Dial 80031

SHEPPARD S ------..., IIERVIC'! STATION

TIRE REPAIRING' WASHING

lA'I'TERY CHARGING GREASING DIAL 2108

GALWAY'S ffiVING ---. SERVICE STATION

C.r. lllubattl I Cove ~d. • GREASING, WASHING, ·SIMONIZING our

8pee!allty. DIAL lOON

Shoe Repairing

MODERN SHOE ! HOSPITAL

Now I• the time to h n• your SHOES REP AIRED

THE TtlODERN WAY Two Locationa: ON WATER !iT.

""P· Bo'll'rlng1 and I!!Mn. 1

Taxicabs. A-1 TAXI--__;~.....,..­

c.iLVEll A V., DIAL 11&0 • 1'111

Anywhere, Ally pl.att, Any time.

. It HOUR SEIVICI

ACE and SUPER T.U'I ----.

FOR THE MpST EFFICJPT • SERVICE IN TOWN C,4U.

ACE or I!UPrlt TAD DIAL me. nn

Tife Floors NO DOW!' _____ .

PAYMENT EASY TZRNI

CALL Jill CAJIM' CONSTRUC'I10!f

AND IIVPPLI!I

Tobaccos

Trucking

GEORG!: WASHlNCTON

Dlatrlbuteil bJ FRANK

McNAMA!ItA L'J'D,

!Mal ma-u

WHEN YOU WANT A TRUCK

I 'PHONE BAIDING'I TRUCKING SZRVICZ

llprlngdale St. 'Pbene Silt ) Furniture and Plan Mov!JJ a I I r:r·~~~~; 1110 Crm frlr' :

Upholstering STANDARD BEDDING--·

COMPAJII"Y, Lm.

IPECJALI!ITI ill UPROLtST!IUNCI

Tailor-made t5UJ1 Cnn DLlL 1«1

,Pianos and Organs Real Estate -------Dry Cleaning · luviee, Qu.Utr, Varllt7 Hearing Aids Used Cars ·

Snack Bars

DOWNS DRY-----. jCLEA~ING LID. '

I CoVPr!ng St. John'• with

Fut, EH!elept Servle•.

I 16 R:\Mh.TON AVE.

DIAL 1911

Electricians ~f. .. RINE, DIESEL and

ELECTRICAL ENG.

24 Hou:r Servlct !or Repain to Moton, Generatora aBd

Household Appllaneu. , DIAL 151119 . .

Furniture Movers HOUSEHOLD MOVERS­. & SHIPPERS LTD ..

====---BE_L_T_O_NE_, . A. L .. COLLIS -_-----, HEARING Plano and Or~an Showroom: GLASSES TOPSAIL ROAD

Dial mzA , CALL

S. W. SHORT l'aetm: \Vater St., Hr. Graee DIAL 2637 P.O. Bo1 3~8

. ' TORBAY ROAD Packing, Crating, Shlpplna

Agenll for Allied Van Line• •

T. c. HIBBs, Manaau 1· ·Home ·IndustrieS Rei.' 6'55; Ol!lce 90061·1 .

----------------LEDREW'S

EXPRESS LID. lit nllCII.WOiltl ft.

Lout ud lena d!JI•nco mcf\q, paekl 111, en tlo 1 ud ohl~ IJIIII, lol'ombfu ol c.W.A. ond !UI.'t.A.

' AIIDU lor Uftltod Vlll linn. D. R. LeDREW, 1\lanager

Office '2815, Warehou1e to5D

WHOSE BmTHDAY1--, Certalnly a htndmade article

troin NONIA If only the Best

., will do.

\

Photo Supplies ATLANTIC Fn:Ms AND! ELECTRONics Lm.

1

Anaco CaVJeru and Fllm1, Exposure Meters, Flu!\- G,un1,

Enlarier AccessorleL I}IAL 1071 -·

A. W. BROWN------,

lEAL ESTATE AGENT

J1 PATJUCI[ STREET

'PRONE !001

ED'S LUNCH -----DIAL m1

WELL COOKED FOODS FREE DELIVERY

COURTEOUS SERVIC!.

ADELAIDE MOTOR~--! LIMITED

FOR A CAR YOU CAJ( DEPEND ON CALL

ADELAIDE MOTORS LTD. DIAL 3015 .

Rec;uiting ----- _So_ft_D_ri_nk_s __ Wood-Coal. Delivery

'' All MY

RECBIDTING

!!TATION

'gz WATEI ST •

DIAL IO!!H

ALLIEU AGENCIES--­FRESBtz

With Free Tricolour Fluhllte CALL ~m

ALLIED AGENCIES !17 New Gower St.

MIKE'S COAL AND ---> WOOD DELIVF;RY

DIAL 11M

We Give the Futut liervie1 In St . .'John'•

Designed For- Our ReadefS' ·. Con.venience \ . ' ,,

. . . '

I· ---~---------·---- ----- _,J

1 \

,....

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I i

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. ' ' j . ' '.' .. ,. , ".I I

. '

Page 14: pONTIAC THE DAILY NEWS s2794 - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570619.pdf · However, continued hot and first big heat wave started

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•i i ',

'/ .. .. ~ 0

~ I 1 ' ; : ! j ·.~ . .! • :,·

AUCTION

C.,ritW 1H6 ~ Kodoll fo1ttt C­liltn\ott4 It- NIA S."lclo loc. • By M. E. CHASER.

STADIUM HOUSEHOLD -FURNITURE

ANDo EFFECTS (Including Upright Piano, Elec-

1

!ric Washer, Refrigerator, Oil Fur­nace, Chesterfield, Suite).

XXI . 1 for examination" PJ1;RO came back and slid on-1 "No," l said and realized that

to hls stool. He took a sip of his I I was breathing r-s hard as if I'd mJrtini. "Acattollco dell Stra-1 been running, "We don't need· , Practically New Butcher's

At the residence of

MRS. AR-CH . FORBES,

242 Hamilton Avenue nieri,'' he said. !the autopsy after all." Equipment at the He nodded. . "Walt a minute," the doctor Also BIRCH JUNKS en 1 lit • clgart!t., "Let me aee said Indignantly. "You promised and KINDLING DOMINION MEAT

Jour hands," I &ald. · lme 20,000 lire-" . 1 ' CALL !HARKET F "d J 21 1

He held them out, palms up. "You'll get your monel'" I Coady's Coa I St t 11 ay,_ une st.,! "Th 1 llttl It ·• · • : No. 177 New Gower ree e pa ms are a • . e so , 1 said. '"Come on, Piero let's get 1

1 remarked, "but your nerves·jtt covered up again." • [ D"•a I 4249 . on at 1 o.3o a.m. l~m steady enough. Are you We closed tHe lid and started .ROLLER wmnNESDAY, 1-3 Piece Chesterfield Suite officially off duly~" shoveling dirt. It didn't lake long I 6 SPENCER ST. n• ~ (Cut Plush), 1 Coffee Table, 1-3

"Yes." He was m)'stillcd, but ito fill up the grcve. 1 !!or the B:Jo.:ST In FUEL Way Brass Floor Lamp, 2 Brass he wasn't goinG to gl1·e me the When we arrived In front o! Jan1B, 1m SKATING June 19th .}" 111st., Curbs, 1 Card Table, 1 Upright satisfaction o! asking questions. the. docto.r's place, I counted out' 11 Piano in , perfect condition, 3

"Let's get soing." 20,090 lire and handed 'them to TO NIGHT Small Tables, 5 Flower Stands, 1 :·.'.cattolico dell .. st.ranierl," I him. I also gave him his bag of Newfoundland • at 11.30 a.m. Television Stand, 1-5 Piece Oak

I:)Jd cheerfully. We are about in~truments. 8 t 10 I 1 k Electric Refrigerator Display B,edroom Suite, 1 Baby's Rocker, to become grave robbers." Services 0 0 C OC Show Case, 1 Butcher's Toledo 1 Baby's High Chair, 1 Day Bed,

He stared at me with his mouth "You are a gentleman,- 's[g. Electric Saw with blades, 1 To· 2 Brass Double Bedsteads, Spring_ open. • nore," he said. "Are you sure PASSENGER NOTICES mav · 22.31 !edo Computjng Electric Scales and Mattress; 1 Extension Dining·

"Close· your mouth, son. There there Isn't some little thing I can (20 los. l, J.. Toledo Platform room Table, 3 Chairs, 1 Rocker, 1 •re flits around this time of do for you?" Perhaps a prescrlp· 1 RAIL FERRY CLARESVILLE TO Scales (400 lbs), 1 Toledo Sausage I commode Ch~·ir, I Ironing Board, i ) ur." tion or-" GAJ\IBO WILL ALSO TAKE • Electric Grinder, 1 ~lodcrn. Saus- 11 Step Ladder, 1 Duo Therm Oil:

•·who~" he managed. "Fer· "N .. 1 id 1 f 1 CARS TO AND FR0:\'1 Jn tile Supreme age Filler, 50 lb. capacity, 2 Heater, 1 Oil Range, Refrigerator, rara:" 0

' .sa curt y. "I 1 w:~nd] TERRA NOVA . Stainless Steel Seamless Mixing 1 tiectrk Washer, 1 Baby Car-"Pericoloso." I saiu. anything 1 11 call you~, nurse , Rail ferry oper8ting dally be- c £ N£ld Pans (50 lb. capacity), 1 Modern riage, 1 Child's Oak Dropside Bed-His mouth was open again. "It's' make an ap~lnt;ne~t. tween Clarenville and Gambo will I 011ft 0

0 Butcher's Block 3' x 10' with Dis- stead, 1 Book Case, Lot Books, 1

illegal," he said. I PIERO sent the little Fiat •,now handle autos to and from Ter- i play Hooks, 1 'rdeal Cook Stove, Wardrobe, 2 Bure~u~, 1 Over-"Som~bod)' told 'you," I srud. shooting down the street. : ra Nova provided that r~servations i 1056 ~o. 696 Cleavers, Hand Saws, W.E. Trays. ~a~t!e, 1 Chrom~ Dmmg Set, c_on-

"So is this GUn I'm wearing -I "Why no autopsy?" he asked. •are. made and conflrmatwn obtain· 1 Between :l'lurlel Ch3ncey, Anna etc. . s1stmg of 4 C?a1rs .and Ext~ns1on ~<·hich ''OU ga1•e to me. Before "There'll have to be one later,"' ed thret days In advance. I Chancey and Ethel C~ancev, : Inspection 9 ~.m. l\lornlng of· Sale I T.:,b!e,. 1 Baby s High Cha1:, 1 this case is over we'll probably II said, "but by then maybe the For all reservations on this reil; Plalnllrrs, and Albert 1\·icks, DC.' J I D O'D I II I Eiectnc Refrigerator,. 1 Sll~er-do I number of illegal things. I pollee will be glad to order it. ferry Apply your ~eare~t railw~y i lendant. ' 0 Ill I nsco ' I tone Table ~lode! RadiO, 3 Chairs, Of course, if you're a!rald , .. " I But 1 know how she wr.s killed." agent or at St. John 5 telephone No .. NOTI<:E OF Sli~RIFF S. S~LE 11 Clothes Stand, 1 Tea Waggo~,

He groaned. "Before this thing, "How?'' 32:i6, i , By VIrtue of a \~ nt o! Fien Fa-.. " · AUCTIONEER. I Lot Stair Carp.et, Lot Bras~ Sta1r. i~ over, vou'll either hal'e me I "A knife. She was stabbed , , .. 1 c.Ias Issued out of t~e Supreme • JlmeJ, .,18,19 Rods, 1 Electri~ Iron, 1 Lifetime . made chi.cf o! the alice or put in llhrough the ear." · CON!Ii,ECTION ST. JOliN S ! Court o! Ne11'!ouncli~nd m the above • Roaster, Lot P1ctures, Glas~ware,, pri!on for life. 1 ;housht It was I He wore. LE~~.ISPO~T~ S~RVICE \ c~use and to me dire~tcd I hereby

1 Crockery and Cutlery, Lot k1tchen !

11 r llalians who were ~upposcd, "The !amll)' doctor can't be Tr~In The Canbou lca1:1ng St. 1 ~11e notlcc that f will s~ll b~· pub.1

START NOW utensils, One Chma Cubinet, . 1 ~ to he mad.'' 1 blamed lor missing it," 1 said. 1 ~o~ ~ .. oo p.m.' Thursda) .• June

1 he ~uct~on at my office In, St. , Bathroom Scales, large. quanhty .

Hi~ car 11'1:-!' parked ncar I he "Any doctor woulrt miss it unless, .Oth: 111\1 ~ake connrctlon at I Johns: :n the Proi'Incc of :\ell'·' Clapboard and . Scantling and: hnlel. \\'e loaded the tool~ into i he was doing ·a thorough ·check. LCII !>porte ll[lh M.V. Trcp~SSC) : louncllancl, on Thursda); the 20th I TO BUILD sundry other articles too numcr· ,, 11 and ~ot .-tartcd. I told him I All the bleed in~: would be In-, lor regulnr ports to St . .Tohn s. 'cl.n)' nf June. A.D. 10 ~ 7 • ill 1.~ ous to mcnt1o!l. . ' where the doctor lii'Cd. I lerna! and there's nothing to see' CONNECTION GREEN BAY ~clock. In th~ /orcnoon, one .:1. Inspectwn fl a.m. mo.rmng ol i

The doctor was a little hish on unless you look direclly Into the SERVICE .lnrco~I Teiel I. IOn sc.t, to .~ati.,[) , YOUR , FUTURE sale. All. goods 1? be P~Id for and I l~c brandv I'd gil· en him but it I car." . T . "Th C 'h .. 1 ,. n St the cx1~ency of the 1n1d "nt. , taken dchvery oflmmedi::.tely alter:

. . . . • , rRin e ari ou cal In~ · Datccl nt St John's this 12th dny I I was JU~t bcgmnlnH to wear olf.i ''\Vh 1 d . h k .1, .. h John's ~.00 p.m. Thursday, June of June A 0 ·1957 : sa e. He was just loader! enough and i asked a rna c lou c ec I . e 20th, will make connection AI : . . JOliN c \Ill! I Three grent vears in the Canadian JosepJI FI' tz~bbon anxious lor more to •o throu"h r · ' · Lewlsporte 11'1tl1 ~IV Nonla on ' • ' ' '• • .:;:,J. ' .· . e • . · · · , High · Sherl!f of :Scwfoundland. Army can make yauJ a better man. i u "Ith the_ JOb. He bowed gravely "1 don't rer·il>' know,'' I ~aid. ! Green Bny Service. TER~IS or s \LE H · t d · b 'th 11 th Dial 2008 AlJITIONEER. when I Introduced him to Plero ' ' ' ere Is a 5 ea Y JO WI a c .

We arked beside the ceme: I "The Informer WR~ killed with a I FREIGHT NOTICES The highest bidder to be. the advantages. Je19,21 P I knife. I was 11onderlng If It . J _ purcha<er If " cli~pu•e an•c~ • -;;;;;;;.:;;;;;.:;;;;;.:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;,

trr1· 3WI:>)' from the gates We ld b h d d . ' .. ' VARIETY A"D ADVE~·TURE ,. · ·' h h 'f cou e 1 e same mur ere · FREIGHT SOUTR LABRADOR the article to be put up anain One 1" ·' ., NO COWN PAYMENT <lid th~ tools t ~1ou~ the en~e What kind o! a job was done on SERVICE fourth rr1 the purchase ~on~v to ; • EXCELLENT TRA1N!NG BY EASY TERMS ~~~k ~ e~lttl;·e ~o~ine: ~~~er. th~ that Informer?'' I Freight for rcgulnr PC¥"tl St. be paid immccliatcly and t~e- rc-: • EXPERIENCED INSTRUCTOR:' Now !a tt.~ Ume for' your doctor to make it. "Pro!esslonal," he said. "The John's to Goose Bay per S.S. Kyle mnin~er as soon as posse<sion of , GOOD PAY AND PROMOTION new '

The Arave wasn't hard to find. boys think the murderer stood accepted at the Co;\ltal Freight the ,P~~rty 1.< taken b): the ~ur· ·~i~:Ts AND A HEALTHY TIL.! or LINOLEUM 1'here was one section where behind him·, cupped a hand under Shed todav and tomorrow June rhn. cr . to. he taken b) the pur- .. I FLOORS. . they were putting all the new his chin, jerking the head up, 19th and ioth 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. chtser ll'llhm 48 hour.s after the • FREE MEDICAL A:-ID DENTALJI Alao MINO'R REPAIRS gra\'es. There was already a then passed the knife across the 1 ' ' 58 e. lnl8,19 CARE · , ('ALL headstone with Anna ~!!;ria's jugul&r vein." RESTRICTED CARGO • 30 DAYS HOLIDAYS \\ ITH I Cabot Construction name on it. There wa; just (To Be Continued) t~hlp:e~ rltea:ecii~~OG~s~l~~~ aln~ PAY A 'YEAR . i d s ,. Ltd enough starlight for us to aee o er es r c e 'a . o u a If you are 17 to ~0 and flt, make an upp 181 ' ~~o·hat we were doing 10 we ports on St. John s-Lewisporte S~r- Cia! 5658 Cuckworth St .

I [ GREAT EASTERN OIL 'll'ouldn't have to risk our flash· vice for forwardir)g via Lcw~s· the next three years the greatest Alter !J~ur• call Ba Seba II I d 'IV C r I Strong will years of your ii!c doing a worth· ,. •

lights until later. por e an " · · 0 ~ . MR. JAMES A CAMS, 7931 H

& IMPORT CO., LTD. I I

' we were both out of breath be accepted at Railway Fmght while job in the Canadian Army. when we finally reaehad the co!- Shed Thur$day, June 2llth, 9 a.m. These years will prepar~ you for a =~=~~~~~~~~=· fin. We carefully scraped the dirt to ~ p.m. fine future in either the Army or JS fhe

Radio, Telel'islon, Washers, II Refrigerators, Deep Freezers

o!f the top of it and raised the civilian life. Electrtlc Ranges,

' Floor Polishers, ' lirl. I thrust my hand down with Phone or visit your local Army Re- INSURANCE

a flashlight In it and, flicked on cruiting Station or mail the coupon (

Gramophones, Public Addres~: Systems,

Tape Recorders. the light. below.

She had been beautiful - was fven beauliful in death. She was nrrs5fd in a white salln gown ~nd for the first time I felt a t•1in;e o1·er what we wrrr. about ' 1" do. 1 l~t thr \lP~m of lillht a;hde b<lek Ul" to hH hce.

I

' REPAIRS ANn SERVICE

. . . Dl not lllr~ "'hY I mad~ thP

nnt mov~. ~!a)·hp It wu only a bnnrh. ms)'~ !OmPthlng drPp In m) 'ubl'an!oCiou,. But I jumpert

TONIGHT

HOLY CROSS ''ersm

FEILLDIANS

7.30 p.m.

rio~<·n into the ,:me 1nd bPnt Admission 50c. Children 5c. oTer the dnd ~irl. I bent down, rPachlnK into the coffin to turn

PL.UMBitiG· I HEATING

'

P. M. Donnelly IILUMBING 1nd HEIITING

CONTRACTOR Install~tlun and Rep!lrl

to all ty l'e' systems:

5 LINES i ' DIAL 3001 to 3005 I WATER ST. I I lan26,1y I

I --

VI' ANTED I" or Millrrtown Amalgamated i , School. lntermrdiale Room,

i 1 Teach~r. Fir~t Gr1ode Preferrrrl. ' . Al.•o 1 female Tr~cher, First : Grade Preferred ·lor Primarv

II

I II "

Army Recruiting Station 431 Water Street, St. John'~. Newfoundland, Trl. R·0294.

Please ~end me, without obligation, details on Army career opportunt. ties.

NA~IE ........................................ , .. ADDRESS ................................. .. CITY/TOWN ................................ .. PROV. . ................................... .. TELEPHONE .................................. ..

on.your house

the girl'~ heRd tn one side. I 1

~ked the flashlight closer and stared.

"For heal'en's iakc, ero uid, "i:et out of let the doctor get to set It o~er with."

Milo," PI· there and work and

OFFICES TO RENT

'Phone 5578F 48 FOREST ROAD

lan24,ly

Room. S:~larie~ Augmented by Board.

:Apply CHAIR!IIAN,

Amalgamated School Board,

Statutory Notice 1 as dated

I let out· my breath In a long slgb and stralghtene d up. "Help me out, Plero." '

He reached down his hand and I mana1ed to leap out of the if'al'e. Dr. Teatlnl was standlnK bealdt Piero, siDling owlish!~· in· to the Jll'&~e.

HEATED

Apply

41 New Gower St. "l understand," ·he u!d, "that

you want part 'of all the organs mar12•tu,fr,tf

. '

For. ~ast Taxi Service

HOTEL TAXI

Dial 2424 -~2410 QUEEN'S ROAD

Open 8 a.m. to. 2 o,m,

' 1\llllerto"n.

The Kmdergarten clnss of Hol­loway School, which merited a J

. picnic because of attendance of 1 their parents at the Home and , --------­School Association during ·the )'ear, were gh't!n their picnic yes­terday afternoon in the lovely sunlight and pleasant surroundings at Westerlanrl.

'

Statutory- Notice In the matter of the wlll anti e~tat . of Catherine Henley, late of St.

John's, Newfoundland, widow deceased. All persons claiming to be

In the matter of the e5late of Bridget Dooley, late of St.. John's In the Province of New­foundland. aplnster, deceased.

All persons claiming to ·be creditors o! or who have any claims or demand~ upon or ef!ecting lhe estale of Bridget Dooley ol St. John's aforesaid, spinster, deceas-· ed, are requested to senti partlcu,· lurs o! same in writing, duly at· '(estell to the untlersign~d solicitor lor the Administratrix of the estate of the said deceased on or before the 8th day of July, A.D. 1957, af­ter which date the said Admin· istratrix will proceed to distribute the said estate having regard only to .the claims of wllich she shall then have had notice. '

Dated at St. John's this 30th day of May, A.D. '1957. . FABIAN A. O't)EA,

. Solicitor for Admlnlruatrl1. ADDRESS:

Reid Building, 261 Duckworth Street, St. John's, Newfoundland.

jne5,12,19 26

as the dodo? Chanett are you need more e<~ra; pltle "co1·eraae" on your bO!Ile and furni•hin111 !han yolll pre.-. en! huuronce ploYideo, , Ruson? Rtplactm<nl cooiJ are -way up on homes and their <on• l<nll,

Cure? ut ualook o"r your poll; cies and brin&lhem in line with '""'"' ulueJ. · We'll Kladly do It any lime a taU -bur from'""' 011andpoicr, 1be beat lime is NOW,

Provincial General Agent TEMPLE BUILCING,

Cuckwortb Street, St. John's

W. f. Caldwell 'PHONE 2465

mon,wed,frl,tf

li

CENTRAL MORTGAGE AND HOUSING CORPORATION .

FEMA.LE BOOK· KEEPER To be responsible for accounting operations of th2 St office. Grade XI_ educat1on standards essential, with · training or expenence In accounting. Five day week Pension and Insurance Plan. Thr;e, ll'~e.ks vacatio~.

Apply to: A. \ 1\ IA:"i Central ~1ort~agr. and Housing Corporation

357 A Water Strret. • June 18,19,20

WA.NTED IMMEDIATELY EXPE.~IENCED bFF/CE ASS/STANT

with knowledge of Customs Work. Excellent w Conditions. Gooa Salary. Hospital Benefit1.

Apply in Writing to

"MANAGER,"

P. 0. Box 986.

0 p·p 0 R T U N IT Y THIS AREA

Canadian C•Jmpany operating on a n<.tion,;' "lc ha• :, mediate opei!in:;s for ambitious men or women to iucal h11oiness dealing with some o! Canatla'.1 iar;cJl ~tares: can oc handled in spare hours at •Lart if c honesty and dependability more important than past cnce. Our liberal financial assistance er.ahles rap:d 1ion, This i; a business on a high plane lor hi;h t'>e . or women of character only. ·

APPLICANTS MUST HAVE

APPROX. $1,600.00 (Which is secured), and good relerencr<. Thc•c will pay you exceptionally high monthly inco~1~ •!1'.,m,1 •dia!1:o nnd rapidly increase as business expands. Prefer a~piring earnings from S10,000 to 520.000 yearly. pJ:essure men wanted as NO SELLir\G rc~lliren. If qualify and have necessary cash, writr torl:ly ~11ing and particul;;rs for local inten•icw. \\'ritr J. \\'. CO~IPANY, Dept. B-100, 1449 St. Akxanrlrr, Mor,tml Quebec.

Furness, Withy & Company L LI\'Crpool St. John'• Boston Halifu SL

In to Rfl. & to to St,,John'a Boston naiifa St. Jobo'1

"l\"ew!oundlanll" JQ Junr ~~ ,lune 19 "Novo Scotia" June 26 July 3 .lui)· ~ Jul.1· lo "Newfoundland" July 13 July 20 July ~6 .luly 30 "Nova Scotia" .ruly 27 Aug. 3 Au~. ~ Ac~. 13 ":i'ewfoundland" Aug. 14 Aus. 21 Aug. 27 .\ug. 31 "Nova Scotia'' Aug. 28 Sep. 4 Scp. 10 Sep. H "l\'ewfoundland" Sep. 14 Sep. 21 Sep. :;; Ocr. l

Persons contemplating passage to Europe shd~ mlk! well in advance.

Air Passages arranged by B.O A.C. - K.L.M - Fan Airways -Scandinavian and co!lnecting /wlmu.

Consult ull regarding your tr~l'el prnhlrn:o.

FURNESS ·TRAVEL OFFICE NFWFOUNDLA~~ HOTEL

(Residence of the late J. S. Currie)

This house, located \

-desirable area, 1s m condition.

I

m a excellent

For further. particulars Dial 2178 may25,tf

I

· The original m~tual ln.;cnment £und

In Ca11.1da it

creditors of or who have any claims or demands upon or af­fectlns the . estate of Catherine Henley aforesaid, deceased, are re­quested to send partlc!ulars of the same In writing, duly_ attesred, to the underslgne!l. so!lcltors for the executors of the said estate on or before th& '29th day of June, 1957 after which date the said executors

STADIUM PUBLISHED BY AUTHORITY

rolnl steady hat advant~JII too,. Mom.! Like ,o

hlvlna 10mebody to fall bael( on wt1111 you · .. ·- can't do &ny bt1terl'' _, ._'il\o .. ·

. . ' . t{~,' !• · · · . • · • · • ' , · t.M. a,.. uuM. 011. • • . . .•. .., ., ... ........... I llllm~.J MACGI\lM!11'

. . .. IJMnlll

.......... au.. ·-..

SCHEDULE . . h' I hove been The followin'g list of persons whose licences to operate motor ve 1c es W Act.

wll~_proceed to distribute the said WEDNESDAY: JUNE 19th: estate . having regard only to the Roller Skatlng-i to 10 p.M. claims of which tQeY shall then

nded is published in accordance with theprovisions of the Highway Tro :c

ter 94 of the Revised Statutes, 1952 os amended. v.4TE ' ,.., • SECTIOS

NAME ADDRESS OF AC'I'

THR~~~~~~~:ou$~-~e.~~ ~.M.. Simms, Frank ................. corner Brook .·: ................ sect~?" 91 F I AY JUNE 21 Paul, Wr,lter ....... ~ .......... Badger ........................ .

R D , st: Smith, William .. , ............. ~ New Cove Rd. . ............ . Stadium Dance-9 to 12.30 A.~l. Duke, James ................... ~nthony Ave. .. .... : .. ........ .

featuring the Princes Orchestra. Nash, ~!arlin ........•......... Thorn burn Rd. , ............•... 'I SATURDAY: ~UNE 22th: O'Reilly, Jam_es ................ 73 Empire Ave ................ .

Maher, Thomas', ................ 125 Cashin Ave .... , .... , ..... . i Roller Skating-2 to 4 ar.d B to Bennett, Lawrence . , , , . , , , , .... 45 Long's Hili ... · ....... ,.,, .. . 110.30 P.M. : Roche, Edward .. , ............. 13 Wcstmou.nt ................ .

have h~d notice. .. Dated the. 27th day of May,

A.D. 1957. HIGGINS &: .IIIGGINS,

, SoliciU!rs for the Executo!'ll , ADDRESS;) .

1 ~ld. B.ulldlng, .·. \' ·," · ' Duckworth Street, , •

St. John's, 'Newfou~dland. my27,jn5,12,19

..

.....

ooc SER

B

(

Bargah

M~

EXTE • su

H

Page 15: pONTIAC THE DAILY NEWS s2794 - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570619.pdf · However, continued hot and first big heat wave started

y

1 ' 311 ~~ 13 ; ~ 31

' c 14

.E

l. '

)lace 1 ~ie 1

I B I

rcellent

I

~Iars

~!!! 0 tfic ;..ct,

uATlt

\

01:.:._y NEWS, WEDNESD~Y, JUNE_19, 1957 -----------:---------------..:._ _______ _:_ __________ _.:.. ____ Jl~5-

KINSMEN '

NEWSPAPER BINGO

11000.00 SlOOO.OO SERIES Al and 81

··:1 1erie1 will be played as one game. More rapid ;-..:li!hinll of numbers. $1,000.00 Prize for this game.

All Nylons have been claimed. · ,

TO-DAY1S NUMBERS

I N G 56

0 71

-CARDS ON SALE AT SOc EACH

HELP KIN HELP OTHERS

SOMI NUMBIRS 1rt b11ter th•n

· othert I For finer dry clunlng 0/Al 5755 COUSINS

(NFLD. LIMITED

1952 PLYMOUTH . ............ .. ... .. .. $450.00

MUNN MOTORS LTD. IN STOCK

~XTERIOR ~OND PLYWOOD FOR

I SUBF'.OORING I .:ONCRETE

I SHEATHING FORMS

Ll~rricor Bond Plywood h your an~w~r to lar~c arra cov~r· ••t I!• ••a'erproof qualities ha\'e bren proven and it 5ell~ 11 an r~!r~~·l'ly economical prier. See )'our nearest dealer ti><la.r or .. rttr chrect for further information. ·

HUGO LIMITEU lltOOFING 1nd Cl · ·~NEV SERVICI!I

R&SIDENTIAi. IDUSTRIAL, "WE STOP Tin. ORIP-WITH

01\'E TRIP"· 460 WATER ST. DIAL 7840

HALL TO LET Prince of Wales College Annex Hall (formerly the

Nova Club Hall) loeated at the corner of LeMar· Rd. and Barter's Hill, is now available for rental

Gcceplable Religious Denomincticl)s, for Sunday and hening services, and to responsible Organize· end individuals for Week Evening Parties and ngl. This Hall together with adjoining Class· rooms, h Rooms and Toilets, has recently been acquired \e United Church Collegt Board of Governors,

01 been thoroughly cleaned and reconditioned.

RENTAL TERMS MODERATE

Term Rental for Sunday' Services will receive consideration. Seating accommodation of

' about 230. Also •

2 ROOMS TO LET

~e lam b 'ld' e Ul 1ng, suitable for Small Parties or Meetings, far terms and· booking dates

Apply to·

H. N. BURT '.'

COlLEGE' PROPERTY MANAGER,

c 0 Prince of We/as College;. I

or 772 Bonavenlure Avenue.

.•

'

Knigh~ of Columbus I

Archbishop Howley l1

General Assembly , Fourth Degree ·:

. I

TONIGHT. ON C B C R.ADIO . THE NEWFOUNDLAND DEPARTME,NT OF EDUCATION

AND THE CBC Members are requested to meet at 83 Bond Street today, I

\ '

1 the purpose of attending the,

I Wednesday, at 10.15 a.m. for 1

, funeral of our late Brother, :Sir Kt. Alphonous P. Cahill. .

Present

William .Shakespeare's ''TWELFTH NIGHT''

I F. 5. CARTER, Scribe.

CLUB bPEN

5 P.M._TODAY TONIGHT

CHRIS. ANDREWS ORCHESTRA DIAL 90069

DANCING AND DIMNO taOHT\Y !N UNIQUI ~D INTiM.&n ATMOSPHRI INTRT~ MON. wm. Ill. U.T. O'lN ~P.M. IIOC~IlD Ill, Ttl. 10017

Velvet Horn

Club

Open To~day 9 a,m. to 11 p.m.

Food at il5 best

CBN, CBNX, CBY, CBT, CBG-June 19, 9.00-11.30 p.m. Produced in our St. John's studios by Paul O'Neil.

On the occasion of the completion of the installotion of our new Pipe Organ the Official Board of Cochrane Street United Church Cordially lnvitrs

Music lovers and the General Public to a-. Grand

Organ Recital I: By DR. DAVID K. PET€RS, LTCL, Organist and Choirmaste~

Together With

Choral Selections '

By the Choir, Cochrane Street United Church

8.15 p.m. Tonight June 19th. 1957 AT COCHRANE ,STREET UNITED CHURCH

PROGRAMME

OR GAl\'-Tn~cata ann Fugue in mlinor ................ ., .... Bach Flncks ~lay Graze in Tr<In~uil Safety

Air from Cant<:·Lo :-\o. 208 ........... R~ch-Cha';,cers Sonata in D ~linor Op. 42 .......... Alr):anrlre Gttilmont

Allegro FinolP -Allegro Asai Largo & ~laestoso Pastorale

CHOIR--Lyngham .......................... , .. , . , ... T. Jarm&n How Lovely are Th:· Dwellings ... , ........ , ..... Brahms Te Deum Laudamus in B Flat ........ C. Villiers Stanford

ORGAN-Wntcr Music .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. . .. ...... Handel 1. Allegro Vivace 3. ~linuet 2. Ai; 4. Allegro ~faestoso

CHOIR-Hallelujah "Chorus ... , ........... , ............... Handel

SHARE OUR PLEASURE-ALL ARE WELCOME.

: .

WANTED TO BUYi-----·-· , BUILDING I.OT FOR SALE- , i JHllLDING LOT FOR SAI.E-

A New or Used

Commercial

ELECTRIC RANGE

P.O. Box 14W

FLASH HO.USE PAINTING

HRve the outside of your house painted at the lowest contract price. Call us today, for first clus house p&lnt· ing. Storm windows also re· mo~·ed. For wall and cell· lnii washing, house cleaning, window cleaning, roof and chimney repairing, garden· lng a'nd garden cleaning, fencing and sodding ~&I\ the

RELIABLE CLEAl\"ERS

and l!alnten

Dial sm.n,

FOR S~ALE

Situatert nl Kilbride, 85 feel i Situnted at Kilhride, 8.1 feet fronlr.ge .and 125 feet rearagr. · frontage and 125 fl, rr~r<Ige. Thts. lot 1s ready for bu1ldtng. This lot is r.cady for builrling. for mformat1on 'Phone 4780-L. Fvr information Phone 4780L. Jm,tues,wed,t!tur. jne18,3i

REPAIRS to Radios, Toasters, flat irons, VEoCUum 'cleaners, floor polishers, or any electri· cal appllances. Lower prices. Faster senice and expert wnrkinanship. Antle's Electric Shop, 142 Water St. East. opp. Tioyal Stores. Phonf 2307-A.

IT'S EXCITISG tn ha1·e your perfume come direct to you from Paris~ 1 oz Eifel Tower 11-33 for $3.00. Duty free Postpairt. Why not surprise a friend with this gift from Paris? Order now from S. E. Stairs, Box 1237, Halifax, N .S. (member International trad· ers).

Help Wanted TRAVELLING SALESMAN by na· tlonally known metal specialties company to cover retail trade In Newfoundland with headquarters In St. John's. Territory already well established. Good salnry, commission and expenses, Give full details and complete bus!· ness experience In first letter. All re1\ies will be acknowledged, and sai~s manager will interview' 1

selected npplicants tn St. John's first haJC or July, Box 11, Daily News.

jne14,15,17,18,19,20

-·--·~-----

TO J,ET-Furnlshrd Red-Sitting i Room. Also Wanted ~!ale Boarderf. Apply 142 Water St. : East, .or Phone 2397A. jnel8,19

NEW METHOD RuG CLEAN· "ERS. Rugs and Carp~l!

made to lnnk !th new Von Schrader orur.e~s adds vear1 to llfe of rugs Cleanert in home or at our planL Phone 91033. N~w illr.thor! Rug Cleaners, Fres~water Road.

AUCTION

Today, June 19th~ Barber 11.30 a.m.

-----150 Head Choice

THI!! CENTRAL BARBER SHOll B h ' c I We are now opmting atx UtC efS att e chain. You can be assured of the best po!!.'!!ble service } D ' c plus the llnst possible walt· airy ow lng. 24 New Go,.;er Stre-et, 22 y p• opp. Adelaide MPtors. If you • • oung Igs prefer app 'IPtmrnt service

· Phone !5231-A. Ex M.S. "Ferg'~s"

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• I I AU' TlUIIC£1!~

Miscellaneous

GOOD FERTILIZED SODS Insurance

WEST END COAL SERVIC& (W. Sn~'\1) Coa~ ~1.00 bag; 3 bags flit $2 7~; 4 bags for $.1.50; ~ bogs lot $6.75. For· quick delive~y dial 9295{}-A 29 Pearce Avt•nue. jnnll.lm Bidgoods

20c:. per sq. ft.

Phone 5203 Wall Washing

WALL WASHING-W1II1 clun­ed b' nl'lf II18rhlne. Result• perfect: uve, palnt.-New· Method Rug and Wall Clean· ers, rt-e1hwat~1 Road, 'Phone 9103~. atl~.ll\1

1953 V~UXHALL. · $700.00

' \

INSURANCB-IIowrlng lratll­er Limited lnfUrane~ Oepan· mrnt-Fire, IIUtomohlle, Mar­Ine and all Cuualt~ . linn. Telephone ~l~b or 5167.

OIPENDABL& FIR! tNSUR· ANC!-Don't risk your valu­able~ to "&a\1!11 a few dollan. Our fair-rate, reliable polley 1lvet tmmedlatlt protection. 'Phone 6931 or write ;, J. Laee,. P.O. Bo:r ~06 · repl,tl

t:antaet sn.~ FOWL!R, R .. nauf building, for Fire Auto­mobile and Plate Gla!! lnlur· anee. Claim• prompt!:¥ 111tU· td. 'Phone 5531-P.O. Bo:r ~3. .

ROBIRT Dfi.Wii! I SON, Fire and. Au1Umoblle lnsll!ance. Be aafe. be sure, Insure. Tel~

. phone 2882. P.O. Box 85 Ro,al Bonk ChRI!lQera, SL Jo!!.n'a. ·

· :i!ISSOI'f \OUITARS - Horo•r . Button :Stop Accord eons and Harmonicas, Richmond Saxo­!lhllhes. Boosey C:larlnRta.-

. Chari!!S Hutton & Sons. PC), · !P!J3,tod 11

"INVEST IN REST.n Sl .. p comfortably. We specialize in repairing and recondition· lni all t·pes Spring~ and ~!attrea~a G l' a ran t e e d work. l\lattresses for back allmenl5 a specialty. 'Phone BH9 .. or 3361, Standard Bedding Company, Ltd , Flower Hi''· feb20,tf

Beautician MONA RYAN AcftutJ fl~lon, T.A.

Bul!ti!np, Ducki'Mth St rrct, !p~ciRiitln~ in Ali m~thorls permanent waving, tinting and cttllnR.. 0(lcn Tur~dny and

· Thur!day nl~hts, ~ix operators. Dial 5477 for appolntmcnL

·-------·---A MWSSAGI ID oil property '

Salt Codfish

Call 7583

CtOTW!S ma~e the ma·n If CHAFE makes the clothte

WM L CHAFE . "'-II 1 Baird Motors Ltd · . . ' •-" or I MERRYMEETING ROAD

PIANO, OIIO~N TUNING and . f'Jelllllring. Slnrle Tuning Six

Oo!lara. . Wm 1 HOPLEY, 10 Carnation Sl·' 'Phone 28J.Q·L.

owncl'& llvinl! beyond St John'i: ·Are ,you fully pro tee~ ed against losr by fire? What about Liability In1urance on )'our Truck and Car? Drive with the sun behind you, nnd then you have peart> of mind -W. F. Cnldwell, Fire and

, Casualty Insurance Ag~nt.

Temple Building, Duckwo~;th Street, St: John's, 'Phone 246a. apl29,mayl ,20,pne!O. " HOlD ·woRTH st. , · . · · l .· DIAl 80378·9 · · · ·

\ ' ~ . octl,lm. · I I •

'. -

• The Model Sweep • ·CLAIMED

' Ticket No. 1147 48 worth $5,000.00 Claimed by

;,_ •.

Mr. G. Skinner, Mr. Wm. Skinner, Brazii.Street, Mr. !, R. Nolan, St. Clare' Ave., Mr. M. Gladney and Mr. F. James, c/o Fort Pepperrell. . .

• Ticket No. 4319 worth $1,000.00 Claimed by Mr. Thomas Coleman, 127 Merrymeeting Rd.

CARD PARTY. TONIGHT

or:-· ST. PATRICK'S HALL AUDITORIUM

(Educational Purposes)

Usual Attractive Prizes. ,

Refreshments Will Be Served. Pleaae Bring

Your Own Ciards

Tenders For Painting Sr~lPd Tender! are requested hy the undersigned for the C"leaning ;,nd painting of The Principal's Residence anrl Tennis Pa\'ilion, 106. 108 Pennywell Road in the Ayre Athletic Grounrt~.

... Tenders for thi> Painting Job will be rec~ived up to Tue~day, Juh· 2nd next. The lowest of any tender not nece&liarily ac· cepted. For necessary 5pecifications apply. to

H. N. BURT, College Property Manager,

c/o Prince of Wales College, - or 112 Bonaventure Avenue.

junel8,21

ST. JOSEPH'S PARISH SCHOOL, HOYLESTOWN

SPORTS DAY SCHOOL GROUNDS

SATURDAY, JUNE 22, 1957 at 2.30 p.m. Competitive events for pupils.

Prizes: Sideshows including Cash Wheel, Goods Wheel,

F[sh Pond, etc. Refreshments. Admission 25c. Adults.

DANCING This_ Friday Night

ST. KEVIN'S HALL GOULDS

" WANTED BY LAW FI1RM

EFFICIENT SECRETARY

STENOGR.APHER · with good Shorthand nd Typing Speeds. Ex­

cellent Position for Person with Executive and

Looking for Responsibility. For appointment

please

TELEPHONE 7116 je17,1B.l9 \

Steers ~\~\;SOO'l\

INSURANCE AGENCIES

FOR ALL YOUR

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Page 16: pONTIAC THE DAILY NEWS s2794 - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570619.pdf · However, continued hot and first big heat wave started

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FLATTIES THAT ARE COOL AND LIGHT

We've a wide, wondcrul collection of SU:\1l\1EI: rLA'l'TIES fur TEENS. You can choose from ali 1m newest ~ummcr styles In light calf leather t~~nd airy nylon mesh. We have plain styles or ~lyles wlth addM bows and trims. Choose !rom rotor~ o! Wll!TE, Pl:-\K, PANArllA or PO\\'DEfi BLUE. Slm 4 to 9 .

'$2.98 $7.95

This Is National Safety Week 1 Learn the Rules of Wat&r Safety.

RED CAP TWIN s··ET ••

PIECES Ov~r~igh~ Case PuUman Case

.95 •

TWO OF' A

KIND ARE

TWICE AS

..

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• . 'l'wo perfect travelling companions. Each

case I II aturdlly built )rut light In weight. has Duullte vinyl covering ond matching vlny! bln'ding, nlckle·plated locks and plas­.tlc peat handle. Interior Ia cel~nesc rayon lln'ed, with. ahirred pocketll. Choose YOUR set tomorrow.

' '

A Tribute

WHITE SUMMER

BELTS Reg. 39c.

NOW 19c AT THE

. I

'

QUA:LITY FOOD ITEMS ETC. ETC.

Gilt Edge first grade Canadian Creamery Butler,

Perfection Evaporated Milk.

Block Diamond ~nd Block Watch Cheddar Cheese . .

Fresh Volley Grode 11A" large Size Eggs.

St. Martin1S Pure English Jams and Marmalade. ·

also

Brymay Safety Matches, 16 Gross Cases,

George Washington American Cut Plug· Pipe Tobacco.

Bell Island. K. of C. News . . '

Apron Alley

Hcive a Home that says

Good Morning, Neighbor Pluu contid.r w fUll that ... your friend. aod nolahbo,. 1f ... a~ help you in anv way wita your inturan" preblalll. jwr c.all .••

~\~.l ·~.~. ....---...,..;--"" r"'\__ "'two ~lie.»'~

. .t&o. \ ~ ~

Build, remodel, repair with MURRAY

INSULATING SIDINGS Choose !rom a pleculnQ variety of brick, otana and ahlnQle delriQIII. Count your lueloavinq

dollars when the anew !liBJ. Mo•l of nll, you'll appreq!ale tho cosy COMfORT of your ho:ne

when !I'• clad In th!J lbicl< in•ulating !idinq. v:s~t/lifl'.,...... · Keepa outaummer heat tool We'll be 11lad to

qlvo you complete partlculuu.

A. ~· MURRAY & Co.~ ltd . ST. JOHN'S

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