12
lf :l - \'C, 'D. ne Alley !r. Lorne the Stadium has alley with . •rs is to be d between ,rbour Grace Hoad. There ,.s and the hcse will date r._t,lni The contract to the finn : Sons at work will 1rtly. It is lry ready for RTS - and 1\lrs, ;town, recently Y1·onne •llaneoll5 marriage i ,.c lady he hotnr of lr . to h(lnour rthy with a :ht.< !>f the (erl urncd tn ,· after 1P ·ith hi; W. H. s Janes where g after with her Janrl .. whu had iH'I 0 •r returned will nnw Carbuncar A. · u:I.-r1vl Mn NS or NS or . Y BIRD'' h fur 1!. kl 1' wee · l tot' absolutcl) quesuon .. m K a furtliN ty NYI.or.: quesuor RsT .' .. ' ·' SEE THE NEW SMALL PONTIAC THE ACADIAN. THE .DAILY NE ., Terra Nova Motors Ltd. ----- (Price: 7 Cents) . ; ,. '' rus 1ze.n a . By PETER GROSE LEOPOLDVILLE (AP)-Thrrty-four of Antoine Gizenga's bodyguard surrendered hi Stanley- Sunday as Congo government troops moved to crush the pro-Communist leader's. insur- the United Nations reported. . HUARAZ, Peru-A rumbling aval(\nche 40 feet high and half-a-mile wide crashetl down . towering Mt. Huascaran late Jan. lOth crushing a half dozen and burying possibly 3,000 persons. Cross in this recent Pnnagra Airlines photo marks the ·spot where the old city of Huarez stood before it was rlestroyed The reports said a half-h,our battle at the bodyguarCis' camp ended in victory for govern· forces and Gizenga then offered to return to Leopoldville by ne>d Saturday. · by a lake that ov.:!rflowcd Hs bordcrs.-(Ulh Faced by military by an angry pari iament and in Leopoldville, and desert- by many of his followers, 1he former darling of the CommuniM bloc seemed to be playing time. Violence Flares ,Again In· Algiers , tro1JP! the I.u-J---------------------------------- . !racier\ ril'crside man· · loyalty to the central govern· !aid doll'n arms after ment since last October. They . IT,inute ulllmalttm from considered his promise to take \'iclo:· L1mdula. the Stan· up his seat in the government irr army commander char· a final act of desperation. by the to His own company of loyal aulhonty tn G1zcnga s guards-about 200 men-was his l':-.' reports. said, last armed support, once, Lun· " presented his surrcn· dula made clear that he no demand to five leaders of longer was obeying the man forces as a who claitned to be heir to the bailie in progress late Patrice Lumumbn, Lundula Stan!eyrillr'.; (amp Kctcle. is believed to have at least a tX sa1cl. There were no re- If bnttnlion of troops. , , of ea;ualhes. The government Saturday or· I'S Slii'I'OII.T 1 dered Lundula to take nil nee· acted w1th the full· essary measures to put down of the the insurrection-Including the has a hatltahon of arrest or Gizcnga himself If th1s in the Oriental Prov· was (I e e me d necessary, In· ca?ital an1! had planned to , formed sources said. Premier SW Tuni3iaus. Re-inforce· Cyrille Adoula denied, however, now seem l!nneccssary, that a specific order had been spokesman saul. . issued for Glzenga's arrest. a teletype consultatton Gizenga was unable to escape Secretary · General from his residence while the in York, UN battle was proceeding, govern· annotmced full backmg ment sources said. They rt· central ef· ported three attempts by the put Gtzenga's up leftist politician to . nee h·om force I[ Stanleyl'ille earlier had been sources foiled by Lundula, the gol'ernment askmg . . a UN. P,lane to pi_ck him up Slanle)lllle for. h1s .long-de· depend on the decision of Par· return tho this ecatpttfal. d lian\ent today or Tuesday on its ,. arr s or d' d go\'CI:nmcnt, with par· censure procee a n on rensure proceedings the remamdcr of Gl· started against him, it zen:a s forces submit to Lun· hard to prrrtict what kind dttl · thr controversial '!'he UN announced that three premir1· of the central of the Congolese officers re· will in Leopold· ported killed In battle with Gi· he arrh es. zenga's forces Saturday had been found alive, badly beaten 1 sources would not by their Gizcngist captors. This oat further changes · of 1 reduced to 14 the number re· from the man who has ported killed on both sides in hetween and the clash. Ernie ·Kovacs Dies In .Traffic Mishap By ANDREW BOROWIEC action in a vicious circle of ter·lwingers, who oppose President lion, and that from now on !Is ALGIERS (AP) - The right· rorism and counter·terrorism. Charles de Gaulle's plans for opponents will be punished by wing secret army organization Violence s pi 11 e d into tne liberating Algeria. death. In the past, most plastic threw its newly organized re· 1 streets of strife.torn Or an again. Authorities fear that the up bomb explosions were meant to' pression commandos into action A French gendarme going to of lighting between the rival serve as warnings. Sunday against Moslem nation· church was killed bv terrorist or g a n izations may alists. and a not h e r Eur'opean was spark uncontrollable bloodshed LOS ANGELES (API _ Cigar· much talk on TV." , Hurling hand grenades and knifed. Crowds European I in Algeria's main cities. Cops Turns chomping comedian Ernie Kov· o t h 'e r innovations included · firing machine.guns from cars, youths lunched two I.loslems · Early Sunday, in the west AI· acs, a gentle, quiet man whose The Naairobi Trio, a group European attacked a and several l\foslem I gerian seaport. of Bone, three humor amused and sometimes dressed as apes in Edwardian cafe m a suburb of. AI· a t?tal of European plashc bomb attacks puzzles millions, was killed Sat· I clothes who'd play straight· gwrs. Seven persons were ktlled five llvcs m Or11n, the 1 were . answered by a Moslem B I urday in a traffic accident. faced, a weird, haunting tune. and 16 others In an· two Europeans. Flve persons I machme-gun l!tlack on a u rg a rs Kovacs son of a Hungarian 1 While making his first movie other area o! Algtcrs, Euro· were wounded. that wounded four persons, In· would have been Operation Madball, he told pean tommy-gunners sprayed a ! UP ACTIONN . eluding , . 4 3 Jan 2 3 toughest studio boss in Hotly· crowd of Moslem dcmonstra·l 1 he secret army repressiOn i In Algters, 1t appeared the Kovacs was killed wood the late Harry Cohn to tors with bullets, wounding two apparatus was reported set up i wave of plastic bomb explosions BURLINGTON •. Vt. IAPl - when his station wagon skidded go to' hell ' ' persons. after the nationalist rebels an·J was over. The terrorist secrct 1 For the second in less th.an on wet pavement into 1 power BECAME' BUDDIES About 25,000 French trooops in\nounced in Morocco they were I army apparently feels it has en·, a month, the pale shortly before 2 am· on Kovacs recalled· "For ·some Algiers and vicinity were on the I going to step up their action I tered a decisive stage of its I toda.y WJIJ brmt Sania M 0 n 1 c: a Boulev;rd in Harry ;nd 1 became alert to brace for possible re· against the European right· struggle for Algeria's domina- court action agamst fellow o£· West Los Angeles. gre.at friends" alter that. Don't latest lnvol· Kovacs. had been to a ask me why. c f E c , • ves three policemen charged shower ID honor ol comcdtan Kovacs was generally known 0 m tt with burglarizing d 0 w n t 0 wn Milton Berle's wife, Kovacs as a quiet. fall!il.Y man off the 0 . . m I e·e I stores in uniform on night his wife, blonde actress Edte set, and, surpnsmgly for Holly· d ty Adams, had the party, wood, no ene!llics. I three are William J. Bleau the home cf dtrector Billy Wtl· He md.ulged hts A Of v . , Jr. 25· Richard D Bates 38 der In separate cars. zest for hfe and good hvmg by · t i ' ' · · Th ' who soared too fn!Jle eating gourmet foods,, drinking ·p p rove·s ·o u n ·a ry 1 .. about I I v e years ago was the best hquor, smokmg about I i t t d at home In television, $20 of !1 day and . . ' brought to five mov1es and theatre. .h1s lal'lsh $60,000 1 s . 1 . 0 the number of Burlington police- Bcl·Atr , t t men accused of burglarY. On DIDN'T NEED SCRIPT and hts Wife the Wa_Y erl I za I 0 n .Tan. 5, patrolman John R. Ad· One movie director said Er· ll!OVle used to hvc. Thmr ' I ams. 26 , and John J. Malloy, 29, nie didn't need a script-It was htlly d!'IVeway an asphalt pleaded guilty and were senten• best Just to give him a minute's turntable to spm around i red to prison for four to six warning and let him improvise, and head them . downhill. 1 r APl-A Church of I can co . operate, we are hound 1 ployed." ' years. On TV, his sometimes puzzled The. gadget· !tiled, 17 room ! committee . I to conclude that we find no 1. The committee S<Jid, howerer, Capt. George A. Me• sponsors let him do pretty much ater _Canyon home 1t behcves voluntary sten!1zattonl grounds on which to reply in 1t saw serious moral danger in Kenzie said no more arrests arc as he pleased. His final TV spe- Jammed .. wtth may he a legitimate method of 1 terms Vf an absolute negati"'· I any of propaganda in expected. He two other of· cial, characteristic of his belie£. lamps, first cd1.t1ons, carvtnl!s combatting o1·erpopulation in "The Chm'Ch of England dors fa\'or of particu· ficcrs face department punish· in sight gags, pantomime and' stal.uary. fhs den an such as lnt!ia. 1 no! claim to infallible .. and .it, larly. when hacked by mone· ment for to visual tricks, was a show with· mdoor. .and a 11mc eel· The committee's a 1m was to, mny et'l'. But 1t docs beheve m: tary mducements. cnmmal achl•thes a/. out words. It got raves from lar wtth arliflctal cobwebs on , give guidance· to Christian doc· i pl'Ogressi\'C revelation under the: At least four lmlian stales their fellow officers. the Cl'ilics. the bott.les-placerl there by a I tors and nurses who might he' guidance of the Holy Spirit. ' ha\'e launched sterilization prn· Said Kovacs: '"There's tM TV spccm! effects mman. 1 aslled to co.operate in !his cmn.l "And we helic,·e !hat light on 1 grams. One, Kerala. offers S2:i paign, At the same time it con-1 this question is slowly dawning,: to men and women who choose S. Viet Nam P.asses Guerrilias Sharpen 1stonc Milestone Claws side red whether sterilization lnnd we are p1·cpared 'tenta-1 to he sterilized. might be employed in western tatively to express the opinion I The Bishop of Exeter, Rt. countries to eliminate habitual that the1·e are circumstances in Rei'. Robert was offenders. Its conclusion on !which an operation for steriliza.l chairman of the Anglican com· this point was: . lion may be legitimately em· mitttee: "We find no place for com· compulsory s t e r i I ization im· posed either penally or for the protection of society or the gen· etic improvement of the human Canada Uncommitted· On Tariff-Cutting ·Plan Envisages Health Scheme race!' For Struggle ROBEERT l't!AUTHNER By PETER SMARK SAIGON IReutersl - The different from principle. PERSUASION POLICY . The repqrt said in India a res· 1 Reuters) - The Common Market Sun· passed an historic mile· in its adl'ance toward the of a united Europe. The market's' chief ministers negotiated almost non-stop for 200 gruelling hours In an at. tempt to meet a deadline set lor Sunday, "Year of the Tiger" is ap· proaehing fw S&uth Viet Nam and Communist guerrillas in the country appear to be sharpening their claws lor a desperate struggle, U.S. special forces personnel, ponsible government is pursu- now said to number 2,500, are ing a policy of persuasion for By ALAN DONNELLY cabinet members of the two leading Vietnamese patrols on voluntary sterilization. It ml· . OTTAWA (CP) - The· Cana· countries. ,I!Jeeme:nt ll'as reached on a farm policy for the members or "little Europe" \\'est Germany, Italy, The outcome of the negotia· lions. stl!! was uncertain Satur· day night with 'three o[ the m a j o r · problems outstanding and farm lobbies pressing hard for the protection. of their in· terests. combat as well as training mis· ded: dian government, though rciter· A c o n f e r e n c e communi- sions. American helicopter pi· "Asked by Christian doctors ating support for freer world·· que also indicated that lb2 trade lots are flying combat missions and nurses' for help in deciding trade, hasn't committed itself to hopes of the Canadian govern· almost every day., I for themselves how far they joining the proposed United ment still depend on The guerrillas have gained a great deal o( ground and have taken the Initiative from the government In most parts of tile . countrY ·during the "Year or the Buffalo" riow drawing to a Belgium and agreement paved the way the transition of the politi· economic uroup to its sec· lour·rear stage of integra- . ''trtual point of no re· tni'Oll'ing maJor tariff cuts the surrender or a mea· of nationnal sovereignty. of the Common considered the farm the supreme test the must pass if · the and political Integra. Was to succeed lest came sooner bi!cause France, a big exporter, made the .agr,,eme•nt a condition on lo the second stage, The three problems, ironed out in the final agreement, were the financing or the joint farm policy; the application of escape for each of the member states; and the pro· gressive harmonization ol farm prices. Teamsters ·To. Return To· Work close. As the "Year of tthc Tiger" approaches on· the lunar calcn· dar-observed by most Vietnam· esc, .who are Confucians - the government is preparing a mas· slve program to regain the in· ltiat!ve. With extensive United States assistance, military,· ceo· nomic and ·social measures are expected . to . be · implemented early next month - ·the ·lunar New Year, Whether the 'Year of . the Tiger" Will be good for the cov· ernmcnt or South Vietnamese President Ngo Dlnh ·Diem and · his U.S. advisers \viii depend WINDSOR, Ont. (CPl -·Em· on the lhoroushness of the new p!oyees . were expected . to program. l1f' I lh · returning to work Immediately Its aim Is to improve secur· Jt' ea er following ratification of a new ity, pollticn! education, pt·opn· Clo · agreement ending a 48 day gundn, hospital· nnd school sys· and milder, High strike by the Teamsters Union terns, marketing and . agricul· against car-hauling firms In On· tural assistance. r !arlo and Quebec. . . emperatures Windsor eml!loyes cast ·the . Evidence of the , deepening Min Ma: final votes Saturday to · clinch. U.S .. commitment to the· l!ffort - -- States attempt to get major re- Britain's efforts to protect Com· I ductions in world tariff barriers. monwealth trade interests in its That was made evident Satur- negotiations to join the Eu· day at the close of two days of ropean Common Market. j informal trade talks between Much of the talks in the 1 • closed sessions of the joint Can· Is c I ., d I 11 ren proposal aimed at large, mutual tariff cuts by the United States and the powerful, fast-growing D 0 I F Common Market. I e .n I r The communique said the ·canadian ministers expressed MONCTON ( CPl - Five chi!· "Canada's readiness to play a dren died Saturday morning 'in constructive role in the promo· a fire described the Moncton · tion of freer world trade." fire chief as "a useless loss of NOT DISCUSSED life." · However, Finance Minister I '!'he children were trapped in Fleming, asked at a press con· an upstairs bedroom in the two· ference whether Canada had un· storey frame house of Mr. and rlertaken to join the U.S. in Mrs. Fred Demp_sey, Fottr other pressing for maior world tariff children and two of the reductions, · replied that was Dempsey's 11 children were not "not a matter for discussion." at home. The parents were in Frederic· ton to attend the funeral of a relative when the fire broke out at about 3 a.m. Dead are Sheila, l.i, Joan 8, Donna 6, Claude 4, and four- . montb·old Heather. U.S. Treasury Secretary Don· glas Dillon told the press con· fcrcnce that his government wclcom'cd . the Canadian de· claration of support for freer trade as "a vel'Y Important statement." 1 1 Nluht On• ratification of· the three ·• year In South Viet· Nam can be seen Moronto .. ,. , , ; , 20 40 agreement by a !l'aJorlty of. 398 everywhere'. ., . WASHINGTON-With a copy of his state of the union Twenty · year old ,Gavin sui· b f I · 1 1 · · "d fercd face and hand liurns when Mr. Dillon said it · "means that we each, m our own way, will be working 'toward the MDiltreal· ........ 18 34 votes to 179 · · Tru.ckloads · or United States ll .... .. .. 3 35 About · 750 members or local troops anncd with and re· s all ax· " ...... 14 880 I or the Team· volvcrs unload at the city's' ho· Yl ney ' 31 slers Union were a fleeted In tels· each · nisht. Although these st ..... , .. 20 ,35 ' d . John·, ....... 17 · Mon.treal; Coteau Que., tro'ops are supposed to be usc · 19 Ont., Oshawa, Tor· only In· advisory and training .. 1 uaK\'IIIe and Windsor. · capacities, practice is. proving -. 'I r message: c um t 1c Pres1 cnt l{en· he assisted Floyd, 9 , and Joan's nedy dehvers 1t to a JOlllt semon of Congress Jan. 11. twin,. Eugene, to safety, Gavin He· unveiled a new of legislation for HJ62, 'and 13·ycar·old Douglas made calling for Federal spending to spur the · their out through a. · 'd' d · · · . · I storey wmdow, from winch they economy, Rl to e ueahon and ·provision for the .care had thrown the boys to of the' aged.- ( UPI Photo). . . ... . . I neighbors standing below, ' \r ,. ' . ' ' . . - .. . . same obJective." · rrifty.threc per cen.t of the water used industrially in Ark· nnsas r,ncs into the paper in· dustry. ' OTIAWA ICPJ-T. C. Doug. las, national leader of the New Democratic Party, says he en· visages · a n a t i o n a 1 health scheme financed by a new tax and patterned after the plan he introduced in Saskatchewan. He spoke of the plan first 1ft London, Ont., Friday night when he told a medical society meet- ing that a comprehensive na• tiona! health scheme should bt iniroduced and financed by a new tax. Mr. Douglas, attending a Jun· chcon in Ottawa in ·honor of for· mer CCF Leader M. J. Cold· wei, said in an interview Sat· urday that because of the di· vision of connstitutional jurisdic- tion between federal and provin· cia! governments, the government could only encour· age the provinces to go directly into the field .of health insur· ancc. THE COUNTRY PARSON '. ' \lit . . "A man. like an apple, 'c'asn stay rotten on the inside with· out ·evcnually llaving it. sh·ow on the outside." ·. •' .... ·-. •· ...... ' - .;.\, ",,-.r ,.' :.i ' ' i ' i·· ' i' ,, ' . . :I :I ; i .·.1 ' ! ·' ' : I ., I I ' : I '' 'I r :! I I '' 'I . I:' ... ' ' ., I 'I ' I ' I I 'II; . I . . . ; '' . '' ·: :'' ' i I I I I ' I

rus 1ze.n a - Memorial University DAIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19620115.… · chomping comedian Ernie Kov· o t h 'e r innovations included · firing

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Page 1: rus 1ze.n a - Memorial University DAIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19620115.… · chomping comedian Ernie Kov· o t h 'e r innovations included · firing

lf :l -

\'C,

'D.

ne Alley

!r. Lorne the Stadium has

alley with . •rs is to be d between ,rbour Grace Hoad. There ,.s and the hcse will date r._t,lni

The contract to the finn

: Sons at work will

1rtly. It is lry ready for

RTS -g~thercd and 1\lrs,

;town, recently Y1·onne

•llaneoll5 marriage

~.-cning-. fi ,.c lady

:he hotnr of rlr . to h(lnour nrthy with a 1:ht.< !>f the on!~ ~11rl

·1-:--~tr. (erl r~t urncd tn .;;,· after 1P ,i·ith hi; W. H.

t·rs Janes ds where ing after

with her '· Fr~d Janrl ..

. whu had iH'I0

ndt•r returned HI will nnw hr Carbuncar

~1 r:o A. · ~"""~~~ •n:u:I.-r1vl

~ ~nr! Mn

.ONS or

LONS or .

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SEE THE NEW SMALL PONTIAC

THE ACADIAN. THE .DAILY NE .,

Terra Nova Motors Ltd.

-----

(Price: 7 Cents)

. ; ,.

''

rus 1ze.n a

. By PETER GROSE LEOPOLDVILLE (AP)-Thrrty-four of Antoine Gizenga's bodyguard surrendered hi Stanley­Sunday as Congo government troops moved to crush the pro-Communist leader's. insur­

the United Nations reported.

. ~ HUARAZ, Peru-A rumbling aval(\nche 40 feet high and half-a-mile wide crashetl down . towering Mt. Huascaran late Jan. lOth crushing a half dozen villag.~s and burying possibly 3,000 persons. Cross in this recent Pnnagra Airlines photo marks the ·spot where the old city of Huarez stood before it was rlestroyed The reports said a half-h,our battle at the bodyguarCis' camp ended in victory for govern·

forces and Gizenga then offered to return to Leopoldville by ne>d Saturday. · by a lake that ov.:!rflowcd Hs bordcrs.-(Ulh P~JOto). • Faced by military defe~, by an angry pari iament and cabin~t in Leopoldville, and desert­

by many of his followers, 1he former darling of the CommuniM bloc seemed to be playing time. Violence Flares ,Again In· Algiers , tro1JP! ~aartling the I.u-J----------------------------------. !racier\ ril'crside man· · loyalty to the central govern· !aid doll'n the~r arms after ment since last October. They . IT,inute ulllmalttm from considered his promise to take \'iclo:· L1mdula. the Stan· up his seat in the government

irr army commander char· a final act of desperation. by the ~over~tment. to r~· His own company of loyal

aulhonty tn G1zcnga s guards-about 200 men-was his l':-.' reports. said, last armed support, once, Lun·

" presented his surrcn· dula made clear that he no demand to five leaders of longer was obeying the man p;o·Gizcng~ forces as a who claitned to be heir to the

bailie ''a~ in progress late Patrice Lumumbn, Lundula Stan!eyrillr'.; (amp Kctcle. is believed to have at least a tX sa1cl. There were no re- If bnttnlion of troops. , , of ea;ualhes. The government Saturday or·

I'S Slii'I'OII.T 1 dered Lundula to take nil nee· acted w1th the full· essary measures to put down

of the L'~ited :\'~lions, the insurrection-Including the has a hatltahon of ~.thlop· arrest or Gizcnga himself If th1s

trooP~ in the Oriental Prov· was (I e e me d necessary, In· ca?ital an1! had planned to , formed sources said. Premier

SW Tuni3iaus. Re-inforce· Cyrille Adoula denied, however, now seem l!nneccssary, that a specific order had been

spokesman saul. . issued for Glzenga's arrest. a teletype consultatton Gizenga was unable to escape

Secretary · General from his residence while the in ~ew York, UN hc~d- battle was proceeding, govern· annotmced full backmg ment sources said. They rt·

central ~ol'cr~mentt's ef· ported three attempts by the put tli>~~:n Gtzenga's up leftist politician to . nee h·om

force I[ ne~essar_y. Stanleyl'ille earlier had been sources s~1d Gtze~ga foiled by Lundula,

the gol'ernment askmg . . a UN. P,lane to pi_ck him up bew~~~~r a:~rnsrct~~e~;: ~ill Slanle)lllle for. h1s .long-de· depend on the decision of Par·

return tho this ecatpttfal. d lian\ent today or Tuesday on its ,. arr s or e· d' d

go\'CI:nmcnt, with par· censure procee m~, a n on rensure proceedings wheth~r the remamdcr of Gl·

started against him, it zen:a s forces submit to Lun· hard to prrrtict what kind dttl · ~elcome thr controversial '!'he UN announced that three

premir1· of the central of the Congolese officers re· will ~et in Leopold· ported killed In battle with Gi·

he arrh es. zenga's forces Saturday had 1';\CIJ.l.ATIOS~ been found alive, badly beaten 1 sources would not by their Gizcngist captors. This

oat further changes · of 1

reduced to 14 the number re· from the man who has ported killed on both sides in

hetween d~flance and the clash.

Ernie ·Kovacs Dies In .Traffic Mishap

By ANDREW BOROWIEC action in a vicious circle of ter·lwingers, who oppose President lion, and that from now on !Is ALGIERS (AP) - The right· rorism and counter·terrorism. Charles de Gaulle's plans for opponents will be punished by

wing secret army organization Violence s pi 11 e d into tne liberating Algeria. death. In the past, most plastic threw its newly organized re· 1 streets of strife.torn Or an again. Authorities fear that the up bomb explosions were meant to' pression commandos into action A French gendarme going to of lighting between the rival serve as warnings. Sunday against Moslem nation· church was killed bv ~loslems terrorist or g a n izations may alists. and a not h e r Eur'opean was spark uncontrollable bloodshed

LOS ANGELES (API _ Cigar· much talk on TV." , Hurling hand grenades and knifed. Crowds o£ European I in Algeria's main cities. Cops Turns chomping comedian Ernie Kov· o t h 'e r innovations included · firing machine.guns from cars, youths lunched two I.loslems · Early Sunday, in the west AI· acs, a gentle, quiet man whose The Naairobi Trio, a group European ter~rists attacked a and bur~ed. several l\foslem I gerian seaport. of Bone, three humor amused and sometimes dressed as apes in Edwardian lv~oslem cafe m a suburb of. AI· s~ores,. Rt~hng cos~ a t?tal of European plashc bomb attacks puzzles millions, was killed Sat· I clothes who'd play straight· gwrs. Seven persons were ktlled five llvcs m Or11n, t~cludmg the 1 were . answered by a Moslem B I urday in a traffic accident. faced, a weird, haunting tune. and 16 others woun~ed. In an· two Europeans. Flve persons I machme-gun l!tlack on a mar~et u rg a rs

Kovacs son of a Hungarian 1 While making his first movie other area o! Algtcrs, Euro· were wounded. that wounded four persons, In· ta'vern•O\~ner, would have been Operation Madball, he told th~ pean tommy-gunners sprayed a ! ST~I' UP ACTIONN . eluding t~vo m~slems. , . 43 Jan 23 toughest studio boss in Hotly· crowd of Moslem dcmonstra·l 1 he secret army repressiOn i In Algters, 1t appeared the Polic~ s~id Kovacs was killed wood the late Harry Cohn to tors with bullets, wounding two apparatus was reported set up i wave of plastic bomb explosions BURLINGTON •. Vt. IAPl -

when his station wagon skidded go to' hell ' ' persons. after the nationalist rebels an·J was over. The terrorist secrct1 For the second 11m~ in less th.an

on wet pavement into 1 power BECAME' BUDDIES About 25,000 French trooops in\nounced in Morocco they were I army apparently feels it has en·, a month, the Burlmgt~n pol~ce pale shortly before 2 am· on Kovacs recalled· "For ·some Algiers and vicinity were on the I going to step up their action I tered a decisive stage of its I dcpartme~t toda.y WJIJ brmt Sania M 0 n 1 c: a Boulev;rd in reaso~, Harry ;nd 1 became alert to brace for possible re· against the European right· struggle for Algeria's domina- court action agamst fellow o£· West Los Angeles. gre.at friends" alter that. Don't fl~~~· latest pr~seculion' lnvol·

Kovacs. had been to a b~by ask me why. • c f E c , • ves three policemen charged shower ID honor ol comcdtan Kovacs was generally known 0 m tt with burglarizing d 0 w n t 0 wn Milton Berle's wife, Kovacs a~d as a quiet. fall!il.Y man off the • 0 . . m I e·e I stores whil~ in uniform on night his wife, blonde actress Edte set, and, surpnsmgly for Holly· d ty Adams, had !~It the party, ~~ wood, ~ad' no ene!llics. I ~h~ three are William J. Bleau the home cf dtrector Billy Wtl· He md.ulged hts tre!ll~ndous A Of v ~ . , Jr. 25· Richard D Bates 38 der In separate cars. zest for hfe and good hvmg by • · t i ' ' · · Th ' Ko~acs, who soared too fn!Jle eating gourmet foods,, drinking ·p p rove·s ·o u n ·a ry 1 ~~~ ~~:rr~r:~i:~~:· j~r .. ~~nicip~ about I I v e years ago was the best hquor, smokmg about I i t t d equ~lly at home In television, $20 W?rt~ of ~igars. !1 day and . . ' 'co~~ciro :~:csts brought to five mov1es and theatre. refur~1shmg .h1s lal'lsh $60,000

1 s .

1. 0 the number of Burlington police-

Bcl·Atr ma~swn_. , t t men accused of burglarY. On DIDN'T NEED SCRIPT II~ and hts Wife llve~ the Wa_Y erl I za I 0 n .Tan. 5, patrolman John R. Ad·

One movie director said Er· ll!OVle s~ars used to hvc. Thmr ' I ams. 26, and John J. Malloy, 29, nie didn't need a script-It was htlly d!'IVeway ~as an asphalt pleaded guilty and were senten• best Just to give him a minute's turntable to spm car~ around i red to prison for four to six warning and let him improvise, and head them . downhill. 1 LONDO~ r APl-A Church of I can co . operate, we are hound 1 ployed." ' years.

On TV, his sometimes puzzled The. gadget· !tiled, 17 • room ! ~ngla.nd committee sny~ . to~ay I to conclude that we find no 1. The committee S<Jid, howerer, Pnli~e Capt. George A. Me• sponsors let him do pretty much ~old11 ater _Canyon home ~vas 1t behcves voluntary sten!1zattonl grounds on which to reply in 1t saw serious moral danger in Kenzie said no more arrests arc as he pleased. His final TV spe- Jammed .. wtth ~~mor, ant~que may he a legitimate method of

1

• terms Vf an absolute negati"'· I any campai~n of propaganda in expected. He s~id two other of· cial, characteristic of his belie£. lamps, first cd1.t1ons, carvtnl!s combatting o1·erpopulation in "The Chm'Ch of England dors fa\'or of s~rilization, particu· ficcrs face department punish· in sight gags, pantomime and' ~nd stal.uary. fhs den ~!ad an such countri~s as lnt!ia. 1 no! claim to b~ infallible .. and .it, larly. when hacked by mone· ment for ~ailinl! to \e~~rt lh~ visual tricks, was a show with· mdoor. water!~~~ .and a 11mc eel· The committee's a 1m was to, mny et'l'. But 1t docs beheve m: tary mducements. alle~cd cnmmal achl•thes a/. out words. It got raves from lar wtth arliflctal cobwebs on , give guidance· to Christian doc· i pl'Ogressi\'C revelation under the: At least four lmlian stales their fellow officers. the Cl'ilics. the bott.les-placerl there by a I tors and nurses who might he' guidance of the Holy Spirit. ' ha\'e launched sterilization prn·

Said Kovacs: '"There's tM TV spccm! effects mman. 1 aslled to co.operate in !his cmn.l "And we helic,·e !hat light on 1 grams. One, Kerala. offers S2:i paign, At the same time it con-1 this question is slowly dawning,: to men and women who choose

S. Viet Nam

.EC~ P.asses Guerrilias Sharpen 1stonc Milestone Claws

side red whether sterilization lnnd we are p1·cpared 'tenta-1 to he sterilized. might be employed in western tatively to express the opinion I The Bishop of Exeter, Rt. countries to eliminate habitual that the1·e are circumstances in Rei'. Robert ~lortimer, was ~ex offenders. Its conclusion on !which an operation for steriliza.l chairman of the Anglican com· this point was: . lion may be legitimately em· mitttee:

"We find no place for com· compulsory s t e r i I ization im· posed either penally or for the protection of society or the gen· etic improvement of the human Canada Uncommitted·

On Tariff-Cutting ·Plan

Envisages Health Scheme race!' For Struggle

ROBEERT l't!AUTHNER By PETER SMARK

SAIGON IReutersl - The different from principle. PERSUASION POLICY .

The repqrt said in India a res· 1 Reuters) - The

Common Market Sun· passed an historic mile· in its adl'ance toward the

of a united Europe.

The market's' chief ministers negotiated almost non-stop for 200 gruelling hours In an at. tempt to meet a deadline set lor Sunday,

"Year of the Tiger" is ap· proaehing fw S&uth Viet Nam and Communist guerrillas in the country appear to be sharpening their claws lor a desperate struggle,

U.S. special forces personnel, ponsible government is pursu-now said to number 2,500, are ing a policy of persuasion for By ALAN DONNELLY cabinet members of the two leading Vietnamese patrols on voluntary sterilization. It ml· . OTTAWA (CP) - The· Cana· countries.

,I!Jeeme:nt ll'as reached on a farm policy for the

members or "little Europe" \\'est Germany, Italy,

The outcome of the negotia· lions. stl!! was uncertain Satur· day night with 'three o[ the m a j o r · problems outstanding and farm lobbies pressing hard for the protection. of their in· terests.

combat as well as training mis· ded: dian government, though rciter· A c o n f e r e n c e communi­sions. American helicopter pi· "Asked by Christian doctors ating support for freer world·· que also indicated that lb2 trade lots are flying combat missions and nurses' for help in deciding trade, hasn't committed itself to hopes of the Canadian govern· almost every day., I for themselves how far they joining the proposed United ment still depend ~eavily on The guerrillas have gained a

great deal o( ground and have taken the Initiative from the government In most parts of tile . countrY ·during the "Year or the Buffalo" riow drawing to a

·'et~:erlon~ Belgium and

agreement paved the way the transition of the politi· • economic uroup to its sec· lour·rear stage of integra­. ''trtual point of no re· tni'Oll'ing maJor tariff cuts the surrender or a mea· of nationnal sovereignty.

of the Common considered the farm the supreme test the

must pass if · the and political Integra.

Was to succeed

lest came sooner tha~ bi!cause France, a big

exporter, made the .agr,,eme•nt a condition on

lo the second stage,

The three problems, ironed out in the final agreement, were the financing or the joint farm policy; the application of escape clause~ for each of the member states; and the pro· gressive harmonization ol farm prices.

Teamsters ·To. Return To· Work

close. As the "Year of tthc Tiger"

approaches on· the lunar calcn· dar-observed by most Vietnam· esc, .who are Confucians - the government is preparing a mas· slve program to regain the in· ltiat!ve. With extensive United States assistance, military,· ceo· nomic and ·social measures are expected . to . be · implemented early next month - ·the ·lunar New Year,

Whether the 'Year of . the Tiger" Will be good for the cov· ernmcnt or South Vietnamese President Ngo Dlnh ·Diem and · his U.S. advisers \viii depend

WINDSOR, Ont. (CPl -·Em· on the lhoroushness of the new p!oyees . were expected . to st~rt program.

l1f' I lh · returning to work Immediately Its aim Is to improve secur· Jt' ea er following ratification of a new ity, pollticn! education, pt·opn·

Clo · agreement ending a 48 • day gundn, hospital· nnd school sys· tOday"~. and milder, High strike by the Teamsters Union terns, marketing and . agricul·

against car-hauling firms In On· tural assistance. r !arlo and Quebec. . . emperatures Windsor eml!loyes cast ·the . Evidence of the , deepening

Min Ma: final votes Saturday to · clinch. U.S .. commitment to the· l!ffort

·-----~- - -- States attempt to get major re- Britain's efforts to protect Com·

I ductions in world tariff barriers. monwealth trade interests in its

That was made evident Satur- negotiations to join the Eu· day at the close of two days of ropean Common Market.

j informal trade talks between Much of the talks in the 1 • closed sessions of the joint Can· Is c I ., d ~~~tr~d u~~- p~~~i~~=~t ~:~;~~·~ I • 11 ren proposal aimed at large, mutual

tariff cuts by the United States • and the powerful, fast-growing

D 0 I F • Common Market. I e .n I r e· The communique said the ·canadian ministers expressed

MONCTON ( CPl - Five chi!· "Canada's readiness to play a dren died Saturday morning 'in constructive role in the promo· a fire described b~ the Moncton · tion of freer world trade." fire chief as "a useless loss of NOT DISCUSSED life." · However, Finance Minister

I '!'he children were trapped in Fleming, asked at a press con·

an upstairs bedroom in the two· ference whether Canada had un· storey frame house of Mr. and rlertaken to join the U.S. in Mrs. Fred Demp_sey, Fottr other pressing for maior world tariff children e~caped and two of the reductions, · replied that was Dempsey's 11 children were not "not a matter for discussion." at home.

The parents were in Frederic· ton to attend the funeral of a relative when the fire broke out at about 3 a.m.

Dead are Sheila, l.i, Joan 8, Donna 6, Claude 4, and four­

. montb·old Heather.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Don· glas Dillon told the press con· fcrcnce that his government wclcom'cd . the Canadian de· claration of support for freer trade as "a vel'Y Important statement."

1 1 Nluht On• ratification of· the three · • year In South Viet· Nam can be seen Moronto .. , . , , ; , 20 40 agreement by a !l'aJorlty of. 398 everywhere'. . , . WASHINGTON-With a copy of his state of the union Twenty · year • old ,Gavin sui·

b f I · 1 1 · · "d fercd face and hand liurns when Mr. Dillon said it · "means

that we each, m our own way, will be working 'toward the MDiltreal· ........ 18 34 votes to 179· · Tru.ckloads · or United States

ll 01~1cton .... .. .. 3 35 About · 750 members or local troops anncd with rifle~ and re· s all ax· "...... 14 880 I or the indcpcnd~nl Team· volvcrs unload at the city's' ho·

Yl ney ' 31 slers Union were a fleeted In tels· each · nisht. Although these st ..... , .. 20 • ,35 • ' d

. John·, ....... 17· Mon.treal; Coteau Lan~lng, Que., tro'ops are supposed to be usc · 19 ·IJ.,:::an~mocJuc. Ont., Oshawa, Tor· only In· advisory and training

~·-------.. 1 uaK\'IIIe and Windsor. · capacities, practice is. proving

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message: c or:~· um .o~ t 1c ~ctcrn, Pres1 cnt l{en· he assisted Floyd, 9, and Joan's nedy dehvers 1t to a JOlllt semon of Congress Jan. 11. twin,. Eugene, to safety, Gavin He· unveiled a new prog1~am of legislation for HJ62, 'and 13·ycar·old Douglas made calling for incrca~.:d Federal spending to spur the · their wa~ out through a. s~cond·

· 'd' d · · · . · I storey wmdow, from winch they economy, Rl to e ueahon and ·provision for the .care had thrown the youn~cr boys to of the' aged.- ( UPI Photo). . . ... . . I neighbors standing below, '

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same obJective." ·

rrifty.threc per cen.t of the water used industrially in Ark· nnsas r,ncs into the paper in· dustry. '

OTIAWA ICPJ-T. C. Doug. las, national leader of the New Democratic Party, says he en· visages · a n a t i o n a 1 health scheme financed by a new tax and patterned after the plan he introduced in Saskatchewan.

He spoke of the plan first 1ft London, Ont., Friday night when he told a medical society meet­ing that a comprehensive na• tiona! health scheme should bt iniroduced and financed by a new tax.

Mr. Douglas, attending a Jun· chcon in Ottawa in ·honor of for· mer CCF Leader M. J. Cold· wei, said in an interview Sat· urday that because of the di· vision of connstitutional jurisdic­tion between federal and provin· cia! governments, the fede~al government could only encour· age the provinces to go directly into the field .of health insur· ancc.

THE COUNTRY PARSON

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Page 2: rus 1ze.n a - Memorial University DAIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19620115.… · chomping comedian Ernie Kov· o t h 'e r innovations included · firing

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AINIIGON!l'S ST·ORY: I

·The Ma·n Wouldn't Sit Still-By BOYD LEWIS

WASHINGTON- (NEA)-· Britain's Queen sat 16 times

for Pietro Annigoni; the Floren tine master. Princess Margaret

· posed 33 Urnes for her portrait. President Kennedy did not

pose at all but permitted the artist to spend three days in his

. White House office sketching him in action. The result is per· haps the most controversial of n succession of disputed portraits :. by Annigoni-hls Impression in tempera of a deadly serious leader . .ln the swirl of crisis.

"1 'have never painted a por· , · trait in so unusual a way," An· I nigoni explained to the News­paper· Enterprise Association. 1

"I do not know what they will say of my Kennedy. I am told it will be controversial."

The artist shrugged. his mas·J sivc shoulders, resigned as one ~

· who has been through these i things before. They said of his i royal portraits: the Queen was more woman than royalty; his Prince Phillip looked "sinister": his Princess Margaret looked like the Mona Lisa.

(Annigonl's portrait was com· missioncd by Time magazine. which displays it on this I.

He posed for photographers. I escorted to· the President's I different you know. The nose. . was just a piece of furniture. I office where I set up my easel The telephone. If only this m~n

But I saw him as he really is. and sketch. Many men come in , would sit still for a few min· Not smlllug lor the camera. and sit' down around his desk. utes.'' That is not how I saw. him. They talk · about · the Co;1g••

"Then I went to my hotel They pay no attention to me. room and painted my lmpres· "The photographers come in siqn of this President as l)e . nnd take Mr. Kennedy"s PIC· did all tjlese things, This Is not ture. Smiling, They pay nCI· at·

, how I like to work. I am not tention to the painter in the certain now it comes out." corner.

i\nnigonl's Kennedy has a "I fill my sldtch pads with

Annigoni has gone back to Florence, where he has a "bot· tega" or school of apprentices who grind his colors, help wi~h backgrounds and learn his tech· niques without charge.

, And where the sitters moody, almost glum expression. my felt pen. The eycs-cacil is sit! He has caught the PI\Ysical characteristics of the President, especially the slanting eyelids. But the hunch of the shoulders is that of a man at work on his desk and his tie Is skewed un· der one tip of his collar.

Annigonl, who had .unhamper­ed run of Buckingham Palace · while doing British royalty, had difficulty at the White House

. gate. • • •

Post Office Handles A Record Ammount ·

Of Mail New record highs in mail,lems of the user of post office

"Each day," he related, "i' volumes, silrjlassing last year's ~ervices, as well as how the was the same thing. Always dif· almost four billion pieces, and de1•artment might adjust its ferent guards, Never letting me substantially increased postal operations to suit the couve·. pass without explanations. I revenues over the $193,593,016 nience of such patrons. would explain, "1 am Pietro An· mark for the previous year were One such change, lllr. Han.il· nlgoni. I nm in Italian painter. reported today by the Hon. ton noted, was a system whPre· I have an appointment to paint William H~milton, Postmaster by Canada's Postmen, who al· the President.' General, in a year·end state- ready knocked twice, would ar·

"The guard looks me over mgcnt. Mr Hamilton said that range for special service for ANNIGONI'S KENNEDY: !\Ia n In the swirl of crisis, This very carefully. (What he saw while final figures for 1961 had people who arc not at home

portrait was commissioned b)' • Time, which named Ken· was a bear of a man of 51, with not yet been compiled, every when 'the Letter Carrier arrives nedy Its "~Ian o£ the Year." bushy sideburns, a beret, a fur· indication was that both vol· with registered mail, C.O.D.

THE PASSING SCE !--.-By ERIC A. SEYMOUR--. THE CONSUMER IS A SUCKER

The other day we talked about the high of service in connection with checking a tur1n~eo we have something really new to add to the being pild upon the consumer.

Recently a prominent citizen had some try work executed in his home which required half a day's operation by the man concerned.

When the bill arrived there particular, have kept was an additional chade of and up. The price ol eighty-eight cents under the just now is where heading workmen's compensa· was a year or so ago lion and unemployment insur· ange juice just keeps : ance. price.

It is a poor approach to the Recently. a local winter's work program if the the Canad1an ASsociaticc householder is to be saddled Consumers was with employers' shares of work· I W ~ expect. great thin;1 men's compensation and uncm· i tillS group Ill behalf of ployment insurance. The house· era! shoppmg public ore: holder does not employ a car- next few years. pentcr· from a building f!rm, In many parts of , hook, line and sinker, just tJ CAC has become known change over a window or re· watchdog and 1•:h~nerer place a door. l~hercver prices ~~em .

The firrn has these men on lme or mfer10r goods . · their payroll and send them out contaminated meat an1 . to do the jobs requested. In the are sold to an uns'1 overall scheme of employment lie, CAC goes to hat the workers ln question would often rectifies the be covered by their employer situation. week's cover In collncction with

naming Kennedy "Man of the Year.'')

BE WISE l\IARTINIZE

. lined short overcoat and an umcs and revenues would ex· Items and Shortpaid letters. The Annigoni said Mr. Kennedy I him to set Up n sketching eascl easel under his arm.) Then he ceed last year's record-breaking new service, provided on an

asked him at their first meet·! in his office-and then proceed- cal!s someone on the telephone figures. In addition to setting optional basis and at additional ing "What do you want of I cd with business as usual. pnd says, "There is a Mr. Pilto new performance figures, Mr. cost of 25 cents to the patron,

not by the various customers Newfoundland ha; who may decide to get jobs problems, the least of done around the house rangin" not transportallon It in price from a few dollars t; times difficult and several hundred. ling supplies to

r!The most in Dry Cleaning . HUGHES-MAYNARD

. ·,· CLEANSERS LTD Phone 92186·i ·5241 .,,

me?" -::rhis very agreeable gentle· out here who says he has to Hamilton noted that 1961 had had been extremely well rc· "I want you to sit still for man did not sit at all," said paint the President.' The voice been an Important year in in· ceived. A housewarming gift of

a little while," the painter rc· Annigoni. I drew many sketch· Inside says, 'Oh, you mean Mr. traducing changes and im· $120,000 in the form of plied. ef while he moved about. He Pietro. Tell him to come in.' p'rovcments in the postal ser· free postage to patrons wishing

The. outcome, said Annigoni, · had meetings. He taked on the • • '' vice, and increased emphasis to inform correspondents . of

Goods and services seem to remote areas. Pri_ccs have taken on a new look late· vary because ot ly, It ma be mainland influ.l freight rates from cncc or j•~st some other loc~l source of supply,

. there should be a concoctiOn of the rules and regu . r· · " was that th.e President allowed telephone. He received visitors. "Pilto. Pietro. Anyway, I am was being placed on the prob their change of address was al·

·;,:..,;_·-==--------- .::.:..:...:_.:.__:_ ___ ~-----------------:---::,_;:;-, so extehded during the year. In :1 .. --~ an attempt to keep track of

wandering patrons, the Post

lations, supposedly iron clad, norn: tn P acm~. for but very ften fuiJ of holes despite the 58 linon . around o/ through which some I these days when . the smart people operate unhl opens, the tasty I1sh

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. ~IGHT ·YEAR TO

SWITCHTO. .DDDBE!

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Could be you weren't thinking about buying a Dodge. Think about it now. Because once in a while a new car comes along that's truly a winner. Dodge is that kind of automobile ••• a car that's built to give you a real lift out of owning it. Dodge has character. From its racy ·good looks to the way it obeys you on the road, this eager car does you

. proud. But that's something you have . to see and feel for yourself. Give Dodge a whirl ••• just to see what looks and luxury and liveliness this new kind of car has in store for you. That's

· why we say, go on down to your . ' .

Dodge Dealer (or if you can't do that, phone him, he'll be glad to bring a new Dodge to your door). Price Dodge. Listen to the kind of deal language the man who sells Dodge is talking right now. You'll find out right quick all that Dodge gives you that _ you'd be missing in any other car.

(

DODGE DART 440, 2·DOOR HARDTOP

·nod~e Dart .'

D~dge Dart 330 • Dodge Dart 44b • : .

THE ROYAL GARAGE LTDe ' . . :' 64·68· HAMILTON STREET

Office Department dropped the former two-cent postage rate on

· official Change of Address cards and encouraged the fl million Canadians who change address each year to take ad­vantage of the new free ser· vice.

A saving, realized through n decrease in basic air costs of mail transportation, was pass~d on to the public in the form of reductions in domestic air par· eel post rates. The reductions averaged apP.roximately seven· teen percent. This was the first general revision of air parcel post rates since the in· ccption of this service more than eight years ago.

Regulations regarding the handling of "shortpaid" over· seas air mail were amended to

brou~ht t book worth a ?ollar a b

0 • such a pncc should In central r-:ewfoundl~nd at been permitted.

present there . IS a. gr~wmg de· Governments do not · mand for an mqUJry t~to food step into busines; too · pr!ces. Out ther~ prices a~e and only when forced · sa1d to be much h1gher than tn make an issue of sort.e western and eastern Newfound which they hope to :· land. prices in certain ,<_. .• iu ,., "''

Any food buyer in St. John's province are too high o: during the past year must have lain commodities, then noted a few dents being added may be forced upon on various products without any higher authorit1· to tr> explanation. Fruit juices, in 1 bring about the "required.

Wor Winter Program

eliminate delays and avoid Statement by Dr. R. Gushue, as a nccessarr cril is "double" deficiency postage by President of Memorial Univer· and deeply rooted. A the overseas recipient. Under sity: attitude is the main the new set-up, the Post Office When a comparison is made and this is taki1~g place. advances the necessary postage, between American and Cana- is even less excuse for a despatches the item by air and dian industry, the inescapable I live attitude where · follows up with a special card fact emerges that the Canadian is concerned than for " to collect the money from the climate has historically been a activities-actually there · sender. lllr. Hamilton said the handicap to production and em- excuse-but it lin;crs it Department had received high ployment. The Canadian worker minds of many. !'rom praise from mailers who appre- in Canada is Jess favoured in establishments and elated the Post Office action to ibis respect than his cqunter in the production and ensure speedy air transport of part in most parts of the United ing industries, an•l in · their mail. States of America. . 1 vice industrie>, down to

A new method of distributing For resourceful people, h2n· head of a household. ·· 2 cent and ? cent postage stamps dicaps must be looked upon, ter employment, great or ~.ackaged Ill sealed . cellulose not as barriers, but . as some-~' in degree, can help to 110: bags was also mtroduced thing which can be overcome. the bogey whieh ha; ·

dunng the Year. Valued at one I The seasonal character of out· recurring uncertainty. dollar, the packaged stamps are door employment is an ex- d'islocation in Canada not only protected against m?is· ample. A decade or so ago out· long. Someday this ture. and heat but also provide door construction work in win· disappear allo"cthcr. but •· max1mum 'ta t · o f s~m. ry pro ectlon ter was almost non-existent in I take time and ner·scl'<!fic:l rom the prmtmg stage to _the Canada-today it is made pos· the right attitude.

pomt of sale at the posal WICk· sible by the exercise of deter· emplovment you girc, '· edt. They hav~ proved to be an mination and in"enuitv and I small • will hP:n ;weJ a dcd conven t o • • • ' , as the n dentce or pa rons will become commonplace. cumulative total of peop.l. rctainedu .~seth s am~s can k be Winter un·employment is a fully employed. Do r.ot with ease1 and e pac ~gc, cpt big problem across Canada, and the opportunity-do 1t

saety m po~ket the traditional acceptance of it IT NOW. You tuo will or purse, and at the same llme reduce the number of calls a patron normally makes for the purchase of stamps, The new packages have proved so popu­lar that the Post Office has been unable to keep up with public demand.

December, weather

unus ·month In the offing for early 1962

the Postmaster General stated·------------------: that new tagged postage stamns of the one cent to five cerlt denominations will g0 on sale 1n Winnipeg. They will be

· used to activate an automatic machine soon to be unveiled at the Winnipeg Post Office that will Provide the first electronic segregation and cancelling of letter mail in America.

Red Cross Work Disaster

For '61 Red Cross assistance was

given In 148 minor disasters during 1961. The Commissioner for the Newfoundland Division, Mr. F .. Ill. Ewing ,stated that expenditure on disaster relief for the past 12 months exceed­ed $19,200. in the Province. Fires account for 135 of the 148 disasters, there also being 3 floods, 6 shipwrecks and 4 mis· miscellaneous minor disasters. 956 persons-397 adults and 559 children-received food, cloth· ing, bedding and emergency

· shelter when nec~ssary Volun· teer Disaster Commi ttec and Red Cross Represento_t!ves throughout the Province lnves Ug~te the emergency needs of disaster vjctlms and supply the

Record low precipitation for December was the dominant feature of our weather. Accord· ing to the monthly report from

amount, 41.52 inches .. previous low 44 62 1950. .

SPECIFIC.\LL\ the Weather Office at Toi:bay, Specific figures are December 1961 was a rather for the month, a~d damp month, than a cold one. of these daily and

Although precipitation occur- tremcs. Highest · red on twenty-five days, it was 45.6 on Dec 1st. The mostly in small amounts. The ever recorded was 60.6 greatest twenty-four hour pre· and the lowest high WI! cipitation occurred on the 30th, 1947. The lowest when 9.84 inches were recorded. 8.9 on the 17th The

The only other day on which 9.6. The highest loW more than half an inch was re·. in 1960, and the lowell corded was on Christmas day, in 1942. and this was accompanied late The greatest rainfall in the evening by a thunder· hour period was .84 on storm. This was the first time as was mentioned in the twenty years of records greatest snowfall in at Tqrbay that a thunderstorm was 1.7 Inches on was recorded in December. The total mo·nth.l)'

FOR YEAR 212 inches, and· Total precipitation for the was 16.7 inches.

year was also a record low hours 'of sunshine for

necessary assistance. Costs of the various items were for food $791.46, emergency shelter $140.00, clothing $13,167.10, bed·

her was 44.5 Ths WU · · normal, which is set hours.

ding $4,417.75, miscellaneous GETS UN requirements $783.62. In addi~ UNITED lion to this, Red Cross took Jose Rolz -Bennnett , part in ma)or disaster work ls to become United 'during the summer forest fires. presentative in Red Cross volunteers and staff where he will deal In, fire areas prepared thou· dent Moise sands of meals for fire fighters tanga province. The and evacuees and assisted in cbie£ UN represe!ntatJV~

. many ways in conjunction with· abet h vII e, the Department of Welfare and O'Brien of Ireland, . Resources. , the end o£ November.

Sf; JOHN'~;

NIOI GAl' ubl

negotiations on held. They w

leadership of Sh1 representing Corr

talks apparent! unfavourable outc

machine worker that since the

contract to the Cor Company contrar

. . The annual

ens·to-day, b fish only i Angling in May 24th

salmon. Ir caught befo This seaso

cases, fi

Rector cl Church

S. J. Davies the city for'

this month ..

· Davies i• this week·

in Plyni expected t early in

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ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND ;The Daily News MONDAY, JANUARY·15, 1962 .. ..

~--------------------------~------------~--=---·----------·--------------~----------------~·~ EN · NION · MAY TAKE . ACTION, :·

:~! hranch -.:."Pri:nior. tormcd thin~ 1

"~f of the hlic Ol'er

e main .mg place. :cuse for a here indoor :han for 1a!ly there . lingers y. From

and in tion and

and in the '· down to Jsehold. any ~t. great or n help to tich has ertainty, fear 1 Canada for I' this bogey gcther, but it pcrseveranet

itude. The ~·ou gi\·c, help swell

tal of people •cl. Do not lt\·-do it u ·too will

usual r~th

' and' inches. unshlne for ·. 1.5 ThS .WJI tich is set

GAI~ST COMSTOCK .WORK·· uble in Grand Falls

has bern tcrmctl "Suit· N.D., the men would receive no. The Juint mill unions In \ctlon" will likely be ta~en more, or that is, not the amount Grnntlllalls have signified their · in Gund Falls agamst rccei'vcd by the mill workers. concurrnncc with Brown in that

c~mstock Com When the ner,otintions !Jrol;e Union's endeavoius, and will go ~lontreal. :\cgotiations down last Thursday, Union along with the Local 63. Since

b,· the forty men President Jllike Brown gave the this is so, the results o£ a ci11led in Grand Falls for the Cumpnny until noon on Satur· strike might be farther rcacl.ling

· compan~· have hrok· dny to reach a satisfactory solu· than for only paper machin~ d0wn, aold action may be lion. This ditl not come. Numuer 5.

· 1

hrin~ thr matter to Brown said O\'er the weekend The head oHice o! Local 03 ~0113,. that "Suitable action" will be bns glvrn IMr. Brown .full au rmijcnl of the Local taken against Comstock today. thority o,o decide this matter as

r;~, . sulphite and :llillwor~· i What the results will be in so he sees fit. The 1~ext ste~ will r~ion. )lik<' Hrnwn smd I far unknown. ' 1 he known early tins mornmg.

that his men were rt·l -

[!;;~hnt:\·:~:~hmi~;~:OI.ti~~~: I ·c N Trucks And wm employed hy th~ I . ·

firm to c\fi renovations I the AS.D. )!iii Number 5 · . '

\\'hen the em· p k F learned that thcirwag~s ·ac ages or

· , 0 much lower. they asked · with the Com· .

Mro~~~~~)n.y;cp:csent.ntive of South Coast? Company arnred m the •

l~OCAL

WEATHER PICTU.RE

A rapidly moving storm pass· ed southeast of Newfoundland on Saturday night and gave scv· era! hours of light snow over the Avalon Peninsula around midnight but dhl not effect the other Newfoundland regions.

Northern winds behind it however, have brought very coil! air down over the island and minimum temperatures on Sun· day morning ranged f.' m 10 degrees below zero ~t Buchans to 17 above, at Tor bay. Later on Sunday, the temperature raised somewhat and was around the low twenties most of the day.

Light winds last night and clear skies all Sunday caused the thermometer to drop again

from Grand Falls ne~otiations on the wa~e :O.Ir. Henlry and Capt. Wallis hrld .. The~· were und:r

1 of the Canadian National Rail·

. leadmhtP of Sherman llhl· ' wa)'S arc at present on a tour repmrntin~ Comsto;k. I of the South Coast and meeting

Burin Peninsula area the CNR to nearer zero, and the inland is also entertaining consider· communities received the cold· ation for bringing in freight est spells . Winds arc expected to swing

The talk; appm•ntly resulted I with business and municipal un!al'ourahlr outcomes for I officials in the various towns

machine workers. ;\Iiller and communities. They reveal· that since the men were ed that apart from the con·

contract to the Company and j1 sideration of pro·:iding n company contracted by A. freight trucking seyvice to the

---- ---------,---

Season Opens The annual trouting season in Newfoundland

opens to-da~·. but anglers are reminded that they ma1· fish onlY in unscheduled rivers.

·Angling. in scheduled rivers is not permitted until ?.la\' 24th-for tr~ut-and until June 5th­for salmon. In addition, rainbow trout may not be caught before June 1st.

This season it's expected that anglers will in many cases, fish from the bariks of rivers · si~ce many rirers are not as yet frozen over. Many sections of Newfoundland 'are experiencing an unusually mild winter.

The trouting se.:lson in this province extends from Jan. 15th to Sept. 15th. ·

Photost~t

'cle For Archives

The :-iewfoundland Board of has recently presented to

Xewfoundlnnd Archives a ic copy of an article

in "The New Illustrated Tribune",

1909. This article, writ· by C. C. Fearn, describes establishment of the New·

Board of Trade, and . out some of its early

'!his interesting item has added to the extensive · of records which the has entru.~ted to the cus

of the :\cwfoundiand Arch·

pro\'~ncial archivist ap· th1s further evidence

the hoard's interest in the or the archives.

To Swear -In Town Council

Mount Pearl's new Town Clerk, Peter Barnes, will be of· ficinlly sworn in toda~·.

Mr. Barnes, 28, has served with lllcNamara Industries Limited over the past several years as an assistant purchasing agent. He succeeds Brian Jones as Town Clerk for 1\lount Pearl. The latter recently resigned the position in favor of a new job as Public Works Superintendent for the community.

Mr. Barnes will be officially installed to oflice at this even· ing's regular weekly meeting of the 1\!o~nt Pearl Town CouncV.

Displease~

D . With Town . avtes . . ving for ~ s~~~~~~ bG

E stated that most of the citizens ngland of that Conception Bay com· munity are nol satisfied with

The Rect;-;;£ St. Thomas' Church in St. John's,

S. J. Davies, will be absent .the city for the remainder

th1s month.

Rtl', ~a1·ics is due to leave lhls Week to visit his ill

. m Plymouth,".England. 11 expected to return to St

early in February. ·

the community's ncwly;formed Town Council. · 1

The spokesman said a petition was recently circulated at the community to determine how many residents are not in favor of the council. He said over 90 percent of the community's population indicated that they want the present council out of office.·

to. the various ports. in con· into the southwest this morning ~amcrs, packages .wiuch would and sli•hti mildc air will in· 1m prove the sci'\'ICC . and also . " ~ . r. . eliminate certain pilfering and 1 vad~ the d1str1ct brmgmg mod· hreakage. They also advised eratmg temperatures to ~II tl at !''" ti · 1 . areas throughout today Sk1es

1. cons ucra on IS Jemg 1 · · · 1 o1·vc1 t t d th · . f arc expectct to remam ma:n y ,., 1 o ex. en c s~rnce o sunny today. the Placcnha Bav scrvtcc west· Th 1 1 t · 1 t · th ..,., • e ow as mg 1 111 e ,.1,)' ern run as fa~ as Grand Bank was 5 degrees. The high today as . was effective several years is forecast to he 25 degrees. ago. · ·

Saturday the officials were at Fortune and Grand Bank and discussed early utilization of the new freight sheds at hoth towns. Up until now the sheds have not been operative. The officials disclosed that fol· lowing 'their tour, services to the Burin Peninsula and ·south Coast areas should be greatly lmprovct!.

AND Hauling In Full·· Swing

Winter hauling operations of the A.N.D. Co., woods depart· mcnt, moved into full swing during the past week.

During the week ending .Jan. 11, 1961, 21,122 cords were hauled making a total of 147,· 871 cords hauled to date or 45% of the wood quota.

The total work force on haul· lng now stands at 1,127 men.

Trucking of pulpwood direct to' Grand Falls reached an all· time high on Jan, 11th wh~n 427 cords were delivered.

Recital This Evening

Well known St. John's artist Alicia Norris will present a piano and song recital in the city this evening.

The c'll!nt is to take place in the auditorium of Holy Heart of 1\Iary Regional High School, Bonaventure Avenue, beginning 8.45 p.m. Mrs. Norris will be accompaniccl by Professor Rain· er nees, also of St. John's.

An exhibition of paintings, for which lllrs. Norris is equal· lly known, will be staged be· tween intermissions.

,Police

12 Make

Arrests Twelve .arrests were made l.tv

city police over the week-end. Two men were arrestetl for

drunken driving, one for im· pnirctl driving, seven !or drunkenness, one for being ap· Ilarcntly insane, and one for assaulting a police officer in the discharge o£ his duties.

Bouquet For Mrs. Norris A bouquet of white and ycl·

low orchids. from ll!iss Patricia lllurphy of Florida arrived yes· tcrday morning by TCA as a gift to Mrs. Norris for her re· cital tonight at 8.30 p.m.

The orchids will be on dis· play in the foyer of the audi· torium of the Holy Heart of Mary Regional High School. Patrons will have the oppor· tunity of riewing them during the intermission,·

Statement On New

'

Ferry Soon Canada's Minister of Trans·

port, Leon Balcer, has disclosed that he hopes to make· a state· ment shortly with respect to .1 proposed new ferry to serve Newfoundland's east coast.

. This disclosure was contained in n letter which 111r. Balcer r~· cently forwarded to a New· foundlnnd member o( the Com· mons. The Transport Minister also pointed out that the ques tion of an cast coast ferry Is still being very carefully con· sidcrcd by his department.

Fire .Enquiry Resumes

The Jllagisterial enquiry into the multi-million dollar Botwood watctfront fire of 1961 resumes today in Grand Falls.

Some 10 witnesses gave evi· dence in the inquiry which opened in Botwood ·last Mon· day. An estimated 30 persons arc Jt:hcduled to be heard in ali,

The fire occurreci last Aug. usl. It claimed three lives, destroyed a paper shed owned by the Anglo-Newfoundland De· vclopm.cnt Company, burned two private homes and cxten· slvely damaged a Norwegian ship laden with paper.

.. :~.ESTRL\N OVERP~S~ a~ Bow1·ing Park, which .cross~s the.CNR track at a poin~ ·just opposite g lng Newfoundlander Monument"; is now complet,'ld ·with railing installed and open for pass-

Mercer. Phcitl;)). · · ·

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·'· MANY CITIZENS, young and old, arc now able to enjoy ontdoor skating and hockey and above we sen·: part of the crowd photograph.~d yesterday on Bowring Park's Boating Pool.-(Max Mercer Photo). ., ~

I(.'

Many EnJ·ov Clear 11~ 1 . .l .L-'"l. t an t1 c

And Cold Weather \conferenc~~ . ,

· A fine invigorating weekend prevailecl in St. John's and sur· rounding urea, and over most ol the A\'alon Peninsula.

the sun added a pleasant touch. various inte:vals on the high·! In Moncto· n'· On Saturday many citizens took way, and th1s created the need : .

Although the temperatures were some of the lowest so far experienced this season, the skies were perfectly clear, and

St. John's Consumer Price Index

The total index rose 0.1% from 116.4 to 116.5 between No· vcmher and December as a re· suit of increases in the shell· cr and clothing indexes. The food index declined fracticn· ally while the household oper· atil,ln, and other commudities and service indexes were both unchanged.

Sub-group indexes for Novem· her arc shown below:

Nov. Food .... .... .. .. 110.5 Shelter .... •.•. .... 114.5 Clothing ............ 110.5 Household

operation .... . 111.9 Other commodities

and Services .. 132.8 Total ................ 116.4

Dec. 110.4

. 115.2 11Q.7

111.9

132.8 tlG.4

Annual Guides Meeting

The Girl. Guide Association, cast coast area, will hold its annual meeting in St. John's today.

Highlight of the meeting, which is to take place in the Cathedral Parish Hall at 8.15 p.m., will be the election of a new slate of officers for the

· coming year. The election will be conducted by 1\lrs. W. P. Goodridge.

Among those attending the meeting will be girl guides from St. John's, Mount Pearl and the Goulds.

Prices The Department of Fisheries

Weekly price report issued on Wednesday past, lists five plants closed as usual. 'l'hcse nrc Engiee, Greenspond, Bona· vista, Catalina and Harbuur Grace, ·

In St. John's the inshore and offshore cod fishery is fetchiug 2.75 cents, [or both large and I small. This price applies hi Ramea and Grand Falls· for th~ I inshore, but offshore is higher at 3 in the latter place.

':!'he three other plants, Tre passey, Burin and Fortune, ar~ listed at 3 cents ·for offshore, inshore and both sizes.

Hundreds Skating

The cold weather over the weekend iced over the suburban ponds and gullies. Yesterday'; bright sunshine brought' man} citizens to the natural ice rink' and they spent a very e~joyablt morning or afternoon cnjoyin~ outdoor skating.

Not many ponds have been checked for icc thickness yet. Citizens would be advised to use only those areas containing lit· tl~ water, · '

advantage of the fine weather for very cautious dri\'ing. The \ . . _ :. ~ to take a trip to the out-of· speed limit of 60, could not, 1 Railway un10.n rcpresentahw,l doors. with these patches of icc, be : from ~s _far afield as St. John .s

Along the Trans-Canada High· safely observed. ].lost motorists a~d Rl~lere Du Loup, Que)!~~. way, some people were observed kept their vehicles to a safe 45 Wlll be .111 ~lo~c!on tomorrow:)o collecting firewood in the i or 50. meet w1th o~fiCials o( Canad1an especiallv designed areas Oth·· Nahonal Railways. ers had· stopped for a r~mblc 0:\ SUNDAY . Reason for the .get·togeth~~ in the woods and probably take Yesterday the weat~er was IS· the. annu~l meet.mg of CN~ a look at their fishing haunt, equally good, h1!t re~amed l'ery Atlantic reg10n. mamtenan~e of which will soon be in usc again.'! cold. The bracmg a1r and clear way co-opera~II'C . comm_1ttec. A few adventurous holidaycrs ' sk1cs called many. people out The orgamzatmn IS des1gned were even seen boilin~ up, with for skatmg, or dnvmg. :llany to hnng labor . and .n:anagc· a fire on the hard dry ground of the ponds and gullies off the ment together m a JOlllt at·

· Trans-Canada Highway were tack on the problems of pro-Throughout Saturday when frequented by skaters who per· 1 viding a better all·round ser·

many cars went m•er the high· haps prefer the outdoor ice vice to the company's customers. way, the driving conditions were sheet. Burtons Pond and the SUGGESTIO:SS reported fairly good. Patches Kelly's Brook gully were both During the conference repre· of ice, however, were found nt filled by skaters. The cold dip I sentatives of the Brotherhood

has made these shallow places of Maintenance of Way Employ· more secure than they have ees from CNS Atlantic Region

Kl.paWO Not been all season. I will air suggestions on impro\'e· ments put forward by their members. Not all the suggest·

Y t R d M h f D• ions deal with improvements in e ea y arc 0 lffie~ working conditions. The union representatives also bring ior· ward ideas for more efficient The ferry Kipawo is not" ex·

pectcd to be ready to go back into service until the latter part of February.

Royal Can. Legion, Gander

Steers' Ltd ... S100.00 use of equipment and improved

50.00 operation of CN services. St. John's Fire Dept ..

Rec. and Social Club The. ferry, which operates he· Ayre's Supermarket

tween Be11 Island and Portugal C · t'Ji · · Emerson. Stirling, Good· .ovc, 1s s 1 awa1hng the ar· ridge and Goodridge

nval of parts for her reduc· 1 E t T t C l' Th t .11 l'k as ern rus o .. 1011 gear. . e par s WI 1 ·c· Clayton Const. C~.

ly not arrn•c here for at least Horwood and Guihal two weeks, and it. will take 'I Ha id L k

1

1 t · "' r. , ro a e ~~ot 1cr wo w;ck

1·s

1t1o .carry out Mr. Cyril O'Reillv

e necessary ms a alton work. United Church Mission The Kipawo has been out of Band, Bauline

service for the past three Dr. and ~Irs. Joel Siner, months. 60 Battle St., Cam·

Several Collisions

Several collisions were rc· ported to. city police over the weelccnd.

bridge, Mass .. l\lr. J, B. Norris .. Charles Hutton and Sons Candlelite Restaurant . Hudson Bay Co. Ltd. Anonymous ... Davidson Lodge, No. 160,

L.O.B.A. . .. Mr. and ~Irs. Ladner

Hollett, Lewin's Cove 1\lrs. Margaret A. Know!·

ing ...... ..

Accident and fite prevention, 50.00 first aid and training are son.e 50.00 of the points on which CN of·

ficer; will speak Tuesday. 25.00 1 Among the union represcn· 25.00 tatives expected to ·attend are 25.00 :\lax :\lachey, Ril'iere Du Loun; 20.00 J. C. Carroll, Charlottetown; \\r. 25.00 T. Walsh, St. John's; D. W. i\Iac· 20.00 kenzie. and L. P. Ayles, both

10.76

10.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 10.00

of )!oncton. Also expected to be in at·

tendancc is Dr. George Y. Yor· ston, Amhcpst, representative of the industrial relations branch of the Nova Scotia de· partment of labor.

15.00 I DEATII

3 18 , BASTOW - Passed peace· · fully away at his home early

3.00 this morning, William A. Bas· · tow, aged 73 years. Leaving to mourn their sad loss arc his 2.1i0 . wife, Wimfred; one daughter

False Alarm A car parked on Waterford

Bridge Road between the hours of 12 midnight and 3 a.m. Sat· urday was sideswiped by a car which did not stop and dam· aged to the extent of $200.

In several minor car mis· haps only slight damage was sustained by the cars involved.

The only call received ye~· terday by city firemen was a false alarm that came in from the box at the intersection of Hamilton and Job Streets at 6.50 p.m.

Joan O!rs. Robert Barbour); two sisters, lllarj orie and Emm; also three brothers, Leslie and Herb in Vancouver and Hugh of the City, and two grandchil· dren. Funeral will take place from his late residence, 7 Golf Avenue, on Tuesday. January 16th, at 2.30 p.m.

MISSES' and LADIES'

CAR COATS Water repellent fabric warmly quilted lined. Colours Aqua, Navy, Red with small corduroy collar - Perfect for your skating pleasure.

Sizes Small, :Medium, Large. .

SPECIAL ....••......... ~. $3 • 7 5 • • ... ~. ... • < ' : • " • 1 .. - - • · •.. •! ' .

LITTLE BOYS' 'N' GIRLS'

Sporty Pla·id Hooded Jackets Sizes 3 - 6x, all rayon

. quilted ·lined,

$3.75

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THE. DAILY NEWS Newloundland~s Only Morning Paper

The DAILY NEWS Is umornlng paper established In 1804, and published at the News Building, 855·359 Duckworth Street, .st. John's, )'Jewfoundland, 1.·1 Robinson & Company, Limited.

ME~lBER OF THE CA~ ADIAN PRESS

The Canadian Press Is exclusively entitled to the u•~ for republication of

-··M··• all news despatches In this paper credit· ·•n .• ,,,,,.,.... ed to It or to the Associated Press or

Reuters and also .the local news publlsh· ed therein.

SUBSCRIPTION nA:x"ES

....................... $12.00 per annum

United Kingdom and all foreign countri~s .. $14.00 per annum

i\uthorlzcd as ·second class mall, 'Post Office Department, Ottawa.

All Press Services and feature article• In this paper al'e copyrighted and their reproduction Ia prohibited.

• ~lember Audit Bureau

of Clrcl!latlon.

MONDAY, JANUARY 15, l952

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

·. What Can We Do With· Farming ? The assessment of Newfound­

land's farming prospects that is con­tained in the Board of Trade's eco­nomic survey is optimistic. In fact, it is so much so that the author of the sur\•ey. has said that "New­foundland's greatest hopes for a large-scale programme of employ­ment expansion lie in the field of agriculture.'' To this statement, we must take the most profound· ex­ception.

l'his is not inconsistent with the fact:. that the News has for many years advocated the development of ngriculture. But one result of con­federation was to remove the pro­tection that commercial farming h~cj enjoyed. Yet another result was., the almost total destruction of' subsistence agriculture. These tl1ings led to a new approach.

Subsistence farming has virtually disappeared although those who still cultivate home vegetable gar­d~ns and keep some farm animals are -livin~ better and in greater security than many of their neigh­bci,~rs. Commercial farming has ex­panded. It has also become more efficient. Scientific cultivation, aided by farm machinery, has been a prime factor in increasing farm income. But the agricultural indus­try is still primitive in its organi­zation. It is little geared to modern requirements of storage, patient dis­tribution of products in conformity with market demand, and pack­aging. And high costs tend t6 put local produce out of competition with the vegetables imported from the mainland, . It has been suggested that the

reclamation of boglands can revolu­tionize the agricultural econ'omy. Even if that should be true, it still dges not mean that farming can become a field fm· the large-scale expansion of employment. Labour cg~ts must be kept down by the use of mechanical equipment. Tractors and their ancillary appliances are the answer to the high cost of labour and to say that agricultural de~ \•elopment on a commercial basis \Vill lead to a high rate of new employment is, to be candid, veri-table nonsense. ·

Bogland experiments have been ,;~luable. They suggested the pros­p~ct. of more and cheaper fodder crops. They can underwrite more t!leat production. But can they also underwrite costs so low that the do'\;1estic output of basic root crops a~d certain meats can be offered to

consumers below the prices of similar commodities imported from the mainland? That is open to question. We are close to full sup­ply of our own consumption of eggs and lamb. Our potato output has declined because, even if the quality of imports is below that of the best Newfoundland potatoes, the price differential between our own and P.E.I. produce favours the latter. We are almost self-supporting with cabbage and turnips. Where do we . go from there in a land of late spring and early fall frosts, a land in which hand-feeding of cattle is necessary for seven months of the year, a land in which for fifty years under three different constitutions, we have striven with the help of experts of many kinds to be more self-supporting in foodstuffs?

In 1910, the Morris Government went all out to develop an agricul­tural economy: After 1934, the Commission of Government tried to do the same thing on a more posi­tive basis But all through the per­iod from 1910 to 1949, the average seasonal worker in the outports has found it more to his advantage to take remunerative employment and buy out of his earnings the things he used to provide by his own effort. That has improved the posi­tion of the commercial farmer but has imposed on him also the neces­sity of trying to meet competition from provinces with far greater ''atural advantages. That does not mean that all this competition is unbeatable. But we have yet to agree on the things in which we can meet it best and concentrate upon these agre~d objectives. In any event, it is difficult to accept the thesis that agricultural pro­gress can lead to a very large ex­pansion of employment.

There are other aspects of farm­ing to be considered. Wild fruit and mink ranching should certainly be capable of producing larger earn­ings. But apart from the new values that may be derived from the re- · clamation of boglands and improved methods of . handling commercial crops, there is little in agricultural possibilities that has not been the subject of exhaustive study and experimentation to small avail. There will always be , basic farm industry. It 'can be improved. But to look to it as a major source of new employment is to express an optimism that cannot be justified by the known facts.

Inquiry .Into. Juvenile Delinquency i'he news that the G·overnment an effective means of combatting

or:;canada has set up a special com- delinquency. ml~tee to inquire into the nature . In the great mainland cities, the a~d extent of juvenile delinquency temptations ·are greater, the oppor­alid to , suggest useful remedies ~unities larger, and juvenile delin­shpuld be widely and warmly wei- . quency . can become the first step co,med as a positive and construct- · towat;ds a life of major crime. In iv~ effort t.o cope ·with a grave some parts of Canada, ·it is associat-: so~ial ill. · · · ed with the use of narcotics.

~

While Newfoundland has been · The committee which will' study fo~tunately free of serious crime, the problem has an immense task th,~, incidence of delinquency is on its hands although much valu­n~;vertheless· disturbing; • In 1960, able information must be already fo~~example, the R.C.IV(.P. secured ·available from 1 aw enforcement 5ff..!'~'convictions against. j~venil~s and· yout!J agencies. The committee· a~<JJ . .another 175 were convicted m . will seek briefs from organizations tJ\e St. John's Family Court. The and from private citizens in addi-r~ord shows that the problem is tion to the other means it will em· alplost totally restricted to urban ploy to break down the problem arr ... ~· . into . und~rstandable and simple

;Two interesting facts e~erge !en:ns. It 1~ :xpected to complete frjMi local experience. One lS .the lts work Wlthm a yea~. , v~ble of the probation. system There is little doubt that this ap-. wJ}ich is undermiri'ed by the small . proach to the problem of juvenile ~tf!A. of probation officers operat- . delinq'uency, i~ t}le brainchil? of Mr. nif')>n a fulltime basis. The ·other F.ulton, the Mm1ster of Just~ce, who

· ' is t}Jat there had been a d~cline in .has display~d a great deal of inter­j '' ile convictions in · ~1!11 Is1and est in the question for many years

d.,that.not .erie of those· c'onvict- and .has also revealed a special in­had ever been a member of \he terest in penal reform. The report abana Boys' Clu~. There· is little should· proyide a ·solid foundation

doubt that well run boys' clubs are· for remedial policies. ~ ' j ' I

I - ,.

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. MONDAY, JANUARY 15,

The Man Who Broke Into Jai I

-- Auld Lang Syne (From the files of the

Daily ~ ews J . Januaty, 15, 1932:

AT ni.C.L.l. The second meeting of the

65th ~t.C.L.l, session was a real treat. Two keen minds, those of R. F. Horwood and Dr. S. Whiteway lead the discussion on the topic, ''Science versus Religion." ~lr. Horwood stated that science has incrrased hu· man happiness. Dr. Whitcwa,v said it was a false messiah and religion was the source of happiness. '

TAXI RE!!UESTS At the weekly council meet·

ing last night, the taxi men of St. John's made sever:1l re· quests. Fir~! they asked that part-time taximen have fewer privileges, and they also wish that outport men be not allow· ed to drive for fares in the City. The Council requires a $12.00 tax for taximen this year.

SURPJUSE !,'ARTY A pleasant surprise party was

tended Miss Sophie Pottle on Tuesday ni·~ht at the home of !llr. and 'll!rs. P. Pottle on Gear

Street. llhss Pottle is visiting from Boston and is soon to re· turn. An address was made by ;1!rs. Pierpoint and presenta· lions were made by Miss M. Howell.

ROTARY GUEST The speaker at the Rotary

luncheon this week was Inspect· or General Charles Hutchings who told a most interesting story of the Cocos Island lreas· me. Chairman for the day was Ernest Watson, and guests in· eluded Sir Percy Thompson, A. ~r. Rallard, Stan Brown and L. A. Basha.

January 15, 19-17

I!ESCUED The I!ailway Coaster S.S.

Northcr11 Ranger on her way south from Port Union yester· day rescued John Ryan and Oli\'cr Blundon, two men from Baecalieu islam! who were out bird shooting when their en· gine failed and their craft was caught in slob icc.

* '4: •

GROUNDED For the second time In less

than ·two weeks, international

airliners en route from Europe have been grounded at Gander. Poor conditions have closed in at their American destination, and the central Newfoundland airport is thus crowded with over 300 passengers.

• • • FLY SICK 1\IAN

Pilot Eric 'Blackwood of the Newfoundland A era Sales who flew to Ramea late last week to bring Captain Vatcher of Bur· geo to St. John's for hospitali· zation. arrived with the patient yesterday.

DIES IN EGYPT Sir Wilfred Woods, K.C.:'If.G.,

once Commissioner· with the Newfoundland Commission of Government from 1937 to 1944, died in Cairo, Egypt, recently. He had gone there 'for a health rest.

UOCKEY BOOS A small supply of the 1946·

47 official rule book of the Ca· nadian Amateur Hockey Asso· ciation have just arrived in the city. Coaches of teams here may obtain a copy by contacting l\lr, Arthur Johnson, Secretary of the NAHA at Gaden's Limited.

- Strength For The. Day -VALU.E OF GOOD WORKS

The Epistle of James is one of the most interesting hooks in the New Tc3tamcnt. lt ·is placed immediately after the Epistle to the Hebrews, one of the most exalted pieces of lit· erature ever produced. It come; before the first Epistle of Pc· ter, written by the head of the apostolic group, Who James was we do not know, save that

-he designated himself "a ser· vant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ."

The book is a study in prac· tical Christianity. Because of

St. Paul's influence, ::real em· phasis had been laid upon the

·importance of faith in thP Christian experience. The rcsnlt was that some had probably ::one to the extreme of main· tainin" that if they had faith they had everything. Goorl works were of no value. The Epistle of James is written in protest against this vicwpoi nt. .James was a firm believer in the value and power of good works. He does not go so far as to say that heaven can be purchased by good works, bllt he makes it plain that if good worl:s do not accompany a life

- What Others Are DON'T UAVE TO KNOW

TilE LANGUAGE (The Financial Post)

A senior official of the Que· bee government says that on a recent visit to the Canadian ehbassy in Paris he was receiv­ed by a doorman who could not speak or understand one word of French. He is not indignant about it, only astonished. ·

Pinpricks like this, each triv· in! in itself, must irritate our Quebec compatriots. Added to· gcthcr, they could even account for a political movement. Hav· ing anyone in our Pari~ embas· sy unable to speak French is carelessness that ought to be avoided.

~· (; trjl

DISTAFF GAIN (London Free Press)

Shades of the. Great Spirit! The Six Nations Indians have named three women to the elec­tive .council which meets at Obsweken and governs the re· serve. Of course this is not like admission of women to the old

. hereditary band of chiefs, but it h~s been one place where ·the . distaff Influence formerly had . been barred, Or was it? Prob­ably ·the Indian women used their influence over the braves and actually they have only gained more direct control by this vote.

• • • .SPEND LESS (Brandon Sun)

After the ·government' has ex· perimcnted with every other

imeans of reducing expenses it might try spcndjng less. That has been known to work.

you into a revolving door and . comes out ahead of you.

LINK WITH THE PAST (Belleville Intelligencer)

Advertisement, in The Intelli· gencer, of the cancellation of Canadian National . passenger service between Belleville and Peierborough, Lindsay and Tor· onto will stir 'memories amongst some of our older citizens,

There was a time, long since past, when the railway provid· ed the fastest and most .convcni· ent method of journeying be­tween this city and Peterbor· borough and Lindsay.

It is, we suggest, to the credit of the community that no loud outcry has been raised against the abandonment of this ser· vice. If this statement .gives surprise, that such recognition of well·known facts should be lauded, it but provides addi!lon· al proof that Belleville, as a railroad town. is attuned to the changing needs and roles o£ this method of transporta· tion. There a·re other centres which have loudly bemoaned and vigorously, opposed the loss of services no' more frequently used, though it must be admit· ted that in many cases they have not been blessed with the excellent service on other routes which Belleville enjoys,

• * • • MR.' AND 1\lRS. TARZAN

(Peterborough 'Examiner) The school board in the L6s

Angeles suburb of D(lwney is seriously debating the morality of ;rarzan, the jungle·rearcd creallon of Edgar Rice ;Bur·

TilE GO·GE'rTER . roughs. It seems a librarian ·at (Niagara Falls Review) one of the schools under the

The real go.getter in business board's jurisdiction removed all is the ,kind of man who follows · Tarzan books from the shelves

of faith, then there is some· thing basically wrong with the person's faith. In other words, good works are not the roots of salvation but they are .de· cidedlv the fruits of salvation, anrl aiw claim of Christian faith and saivation which does not bear a crop of good and kindly works is, accordin:: to James­and certainly we of the twen­tieth century would agree with him-a thing of shame and falseness.

Faith and good works belong together, and In a truly sound Christian experience they are found together.

Saying-because, he said, there was nothing to ·show that Tarzan and his mate were legally mar· ricd. ·

It is ensv to understand such concern ~bout marriage in California. People there hold marriage in· great respect. In Hollywood, for instance, they venerate the institution EO much that they take part in it time and time again. The actors,. actresses, directors and produc­ers of the film capital have all been married so often that they now make up one big un· happy family and the bonds of consanguinity have to be disre· garded by those contemplating a fling at marriage.

We do foresee some unhappy consequences of labelling Tar· zan immoral, however. Califor· nia's illegitimate birth rate i~ nothing short of · remarkable and we fear that by surround· ing fictional unmarried unions with such iufamy, the board would be afflicting many un· married parents with pangs. of conscience. And once Tarzan has been found undesirable, there will be other books that must similarly be banned.

• • • A THIRD ESTATE

(Fredericton Gleamer) As the great centres of the

continent increasingly sttangle themselves in their own traffic . ·streams, a neiv class of citizen, the suburbanite, has emerged: a new "middle ·class" whose existence has made obsolete the old division of the population into rural and urban. Indeed, 'the suburbanites may in the not-too-distant -future become a

. majority of the population-and this before their existence Is of· ficially recognized In the cen· sus statistics.

. '. . .. ·-·---- .~,.-- ._,.._..,..,_.,., . ..,_

Labour's House Is Filled With Parad'V'..r:u-

wonder· War~r~be

By PETEH E_DSON

WASHINGTON (NEA)-Ferment in the · nized labor movement of the United States

presents a number of paradoxes.

As it goes, there is relative industrial peace

The strike situation is not bad. The num. ber of work stoppages-2,945 from January 1 through October 31-is·low for the last de. c.:ade. The number of workers on strike and the number of man-days idleness caused bv strikes in 1961 are expected to set other low·s for the last 10 years.

But the American Federation of La of Industrial Organizations convention showed a number of strains. within the labor movement itself.

This in spite of all the assurances by President George Meany that the AFL-CIO is strong and all is well. For the trouble runs deeper than any personal feuds between Meany and Walter Reuther or Jimmy Hoffa and lesser labor barons.

United States union membership has 50,000 in the last two years. Only 23 per cent labor force is organizecl-2 per cent less than in Total union membership is 18 million.

'

lv 15 million are in the 134 AFL-CIO mtF>rnati''"'' Three million are in the 50 independent unions.

This is explained in part by the fact that higher productivity has cut down the num. ber of workers in manufacturing. · "one ~klri .to mat White collar workers in government, service .... ""'""'' with the brie

dustries, finance, wholesale and retail trade trio is .the· ·or changes increased by 13 million since 1945, but only a liveil'

million have been organized. Pattern 494

I Th h h I h 9, 11, 13, li oug t e vo ume of construction as 2\s yards 35 increased greatly, the number of unionized yards:· flared building trades workers has remained un- FIFTY CENTS

(jl;(llmps cannot' be ac1 changed. pattern,' Please 1

In summary, organized labor has been more SIZE, NAME, NUMBER.

tent on holding its own for self-protection than order to ANN expanding. or ST. JOHN

"""'"~· Pattern Dept. With high unemployment, unions are wEsT, TORONT'

more interested in restricting their member­ship or shortening their work wek to spread available jobs among members than in add­ing members.

egetable· Eir.:or. Roast ·

Unions have become more interested in ra!ditl~!~~~s;~~, members from each other than in recruiting the organized. This has resulted in interunion . and more representation election contests than X; ': tiona! Labor Relations Board can handle. It is ,rff}it"l~u~ctlafr.~r~ots and I sponsible for such long-standing feuds as those them ~~~pl~ 1 tween the buildin gtrades and the industrial and wonde

There are considerable doubts that the It:~P~;~~·nd arbitration agreement made at the AFL<:IO fed. convention in Miami will end these jurisdic· tiona! disputes and bring internal labor peace.

The big labor organization has two other tou;:r::.'li·POUind pot roast. problems. tablespoon short

piece of beef su One is to end discrimination against ~ol· teaspooris salt

ored workers in its internationals, \l'hich . teaspoon Jlroun,

flared up nastily at 1\liami. P~~P hot water cups diced Ires

The other is to make peace with cup diced' po'tal' whose justifiable expulsion neverthelss cost cop sliced caw CIO two million mmbers. cup chopped· onl

cup chopped c1 Teamster president Jimmy Hoffa has · · cup cbopp.ed :

been more aggressive in signing up unorga· pot roast. h nized workers than most other labor lead- beer suet on a

' ers, and his union almost alone sho\\'s con· o1·en or ·a tinued growth. Sprinkle w

pepper. Ad The extent to which Senator McClellan's K·.,,11011,. over low h

~- or ·.until m1 mittee exposures of union racketeering may hare l'fc;tj:ook 1 hour or .. strained unorganized workers from joining union; · . · Add vcgcl immeasurable, but probably negligible. The effect · Slice me

the vcgetab the right-to-work laws is likewise difficult to over it.

What all this adds up to is interpreted by some students of the labor movement as a reflection on the union leaders' greater in· terest in playing politics, lobbying to secure passage of pro-labor legislation and even ad· vising the President how to handle foreign policy.

Labor leaders now regard themselves as men. The practice of old-fashioned nonpolitical unionism has practically ceased to exist.

The successful labor leader today is the one who can negotiate new contracts \\'ilh substantial wage and fringe benefits for a restricted membership paying higher and higher dues, not the one who promotes greatest union growth. Union funds go into building palatial headquarters in Washing· ton, not into organizing drives.

Employers and opponents of organized ·view this trend with satisfaction. It makes life for them.

Gems Of Thought Charity is injurious unless it helps the

to become independent of it.

-John D. Rockefeller,·

---::::'----

It is not enough to do good; one must do it right way.-John Morley.

It is not from nature, but from education habits, that. our wants are chiefly derived.

BRAISED F VEGETABLES J !Yield: & Ia 8

Pounds cooke 1

shoulder beef broth

l~c';~une:·lhlird eup chi

sliced o sliced ·eel

cups shredd leaspocns sa

teaspoon . gro~

exccss·fat fr Try out 'meat' from p1 ~dd 'jlo

. green peppi . cabbage, !

Co,•er .. llilx c

. S.u~i Serv~.:

. '.· .....

·A-~:;li Into a :well · Spoo~ftils . (

'!hen FLOA POUring,lt-.

. Do not sti . through tb,

· Remember So no litliei .. .' . "Mli(

~ .. . '

Page 5: rus 1ze.n a - Memorial University DAIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19620115.… · chomping comedian Ernie Kov· o t h 'e r innovations included · firing

. 15,

a\ peace.

1e num. l anuarv last de.

·ike and u~ec\ by 11?1" IO\\;S

~or~Congr~ !\ m ?liiatni e organizee

:1ces by ,FL-CIQ blc runs het ween :\· Hoffa

L:ct that nc num-

. t. sen·ice in. trade hare

: only three

c'l ion has :n!onized :ned un-

rrn more in· ,·t ion than in

::r•ns are :\~ember­:o spread :1 in add-

PC! 111 raiding .titing the un· :1:on warfare ,;t;; than Na· :lie. It is re-

as those be­L'\ rial union;.

that the .\FL-CIO

·. jurisdic­::d labor

,, other tough

_,~inst t:ol­which

·,he teamster~ ·' t:ost AFL-

Hoffa has : D unorga­" i)()r lead-1w\\'s con-

.Clellan's com· • maY ha\'e re­ining unions is :. The effect i'cult to

::1terpreted J\'ement as ;::reat~r in­,, to secure ~even ad-1\e foreign

f'!Yes as state3' •npolitical trade !st.

oday is the tracts with 1efits for a riigher and ) promotes nds go into

11 Washing-

>I'"anized IabOt s ·er nakes life east

aught lps the

. Rockefeller,

must do it in

::rived.

-Henry

Wonder Wardrobe

onr ,kirt to match, one to ·.rith the hrief jacket:.::

trio is the basis of a of ch~nge! fot· a jun.

mi!s with a lil'cly life. Printed Pattern 4947: Junior

Sim g, 11. 13, 15, 17, Size l'• yards 35-inch: slim

yard': flared 312 yards, FillY CEXTS I in coins)

cannot be accepted 1 for ' pattern. Please print plain·

SIZE. SA~IE, ADDRESS, !'iD1BER.

find order lo ANNE ADAMS, o! ST. JOIIS'S DAIL\' , Paltern Dept. 60 FRONT

\lEST, TOROSTO, ONT,

rRESU n:GET ABLE POT ROAST AU JUS

1¥1tld: 6 to R aen·lngs)

pot ronst tablupoon ~hortenlnc or a Pitre of bed suet teaspoon~ ~all

'• tmpoon !(round blnck pep. Ptr

1: rup hoi ""trr tups dil'fd fresh lomnloes top diced potatoes top sliced carroh cup chopped onion cup chopped celery cup chopped green pepper

· · P<lt roast in shortening lr bed suet. on ~II sides, In n D·Jtch o1·en or ~ hea1•y sauce· lin. Sprin~lc with salt and ~ack pcpprr. Add water and COOi Drcr low heat n2 to 2

or until meat is almost I hour or until meat is

.\dd 1·e~etablcs. Cover. . . Slice meat and serve

•tth the rcgctablcs and juice 1P'l0ned orcr it.

BRAISEO FRESH . \'E?ETABLES AND PORK 1\leld: 6 to 8 5en·lngs)

1" 1 pounds cooked Jean p 0 r k lbouldtr

1 ntp bee! broth Oi!Nhlrd cup chopped g r e e a

Pepper \1' • tup, sliced onion ;,.tups sliced celery 1~ cups shredded cabbage 1; lnspoons sail ' teaspoon ground black pep· Ptr

" t j ; ahlespnon, corn~larch 1t1h lomatnc,

1 taps fluffy ma•hed polaloes.

· ·execs! f~t from pork, Cut I 1 Tr~ nut a piece of fat

tri111 can mc~t into P>·lnch 'lill~ed ~~om pork in a 9-lnch ldd '1 d pork and brown. try ~~b pepper, onions, eel· ~ age, salt and black lninll{' Cover and cook · to

es. ~llx cornstarch with

. THE DAILY NFLD . .1982

RetardedRespondBestToDietRegimeAtEarly Age, Recital · T~·nigh·r

B\' IIAROLD TIIOMAS !lYMAN M.D.

. for retarded children, Now he Is 11 years old, ' ·

• • 1 They rarely caus~ any type of, spend so much money on can-1 But I should caution you tliat the 1 distress and very, very rarely J ccr research when the Russians 1

best results o[ dictnry' treat·· I need to be removed. ' and the Swiss already have a Q-1 have just read your article Is he too old to have the test?. ' ment nrc observed in children • / cure? .

on the chemical substance that Is It too late for him to bene· between the rige5 of fi months If you ask the nature of the ·sym-

w. ere rejected for market· I.' ing by the French ministry of ! public health in 1946 and, more I recently, by ·the American Can­cer Society, which said: "Ef· lcctivcncss not hacked· by any causes mental retardation in fit from the diet? and 3 years. . · ptoms they cause, you can be· '-H the "cure'' to which you

children and how diet can help. 1 A-He is certainly not too old to Q-1 have 2 cervical ribs (X-ray pretty sure they're giving you, refer is called Carcin or Nco· objective proof." I think my son has this. have the test, which nier.ely cxnminationl. What symptoms no trouble. Because, when th~! Carcin, you may be interested

He. has very lighl·colorecl hair involves noting a color change do these cause? Should 1 have . muscle that's attached to a cer.' to know· that these products, I and a very pale skin, just as when a few drops of a chcm· them removed'! , vi cal rib compresses the ncar·~ sometimes described as mix· 1 \nd that, my friend, is but" one you described. Also the l'ough. ical solution are added to his· . ' by artery ·Or nerve, it hurts. like' tures of "active anticancer· I· of ~he thousands of reasons my ness of the skin on his arms urine. And certainty, if phenyl· A-Cervical ribs arc ·frequently 40 devils. as "a serum !rom especially government and ·your .gov-nnd legs, He was so slow we ketones, he deserves a trial of encountered ns· chance findings · ous substances" and sometimes I ernment .spends so much mo-hnd to send him to a school the recommended diet, when chest films arc' taken, Q-Why doos our· government bred, selected white mice," ncy on cancer research.

· He~r~oom Quilt . ..:'7

St)cial-l)ers()Ilal - (:oltJmn

HAPPY BIRTHDAY 1 KIRK LADIES GUILD

ALICIA NORRIS ;, ~ t;

To-night, Mrs. Alicia F. Norri~; L. T.C.L., will give a song re­cital at the Auditorium, Holy Heart of Mary Regional High School, beginning at 8.45 o'clock. - -·-

~!any happy returns of the day ; The Kirl Ladies Guild will meet Mrs. Norris has been recognized to Ralph Reid who celebrates\ at 3 p.m. on Tuesday, ,January in St. John's art circles as a- . his birthday to-day, Januat'Y: 16th. As this is the annual gilled singer and painter, hav· 15th J meeting and election of o!ficcrs ing studied singing in England,

· • • • · a Inti attendance is requested, and painting in Rome. Her New members will be welcome. • paintings will he on cxhillitioo

To BONAVISTA • • • 1 during intermission. · ' ~lr. Heber .John Kcrl o[ Bona· . RETURNS IIOME

1 '. -':

,·ista. who was in the city for · . . . , ~Irs. Norris will be accompanied,.· n medical cl!cck·Up last week, • Mr. Bert Dawe nf the CBC Ra(ho · by Profe;;~or Rainer Rec:;, .. , ,. returned to his home Friday. Station, Gander, returned lo · · ·'

• • • his home Ol'er the weekend '' sr; .lAMES after a husiness trip to St. '·I'

I .John's. Homemakers :·:: , The Officii!! Boal'd of St. .James 1 • • •

' United Church will meet in t!JC 1

t3Tll ANNIVERSARY

This quilt can be made of the j same fabric throughout or with the flowers of scraps.

You'll enjoy making this quilt -so easy to piece. Different in its design, it will always be cher­ished, Pntlet·n 7052: charts; dir· ections, pattern of patches. · Send TIIIRTY-FIVE CENTS (in .coins) lot· this pattern (stamps cannot he accepted 1 to ST. JOHN'S DAILY NEWS, Household Arts Dc]JI. 60 FRONT

1 ST., WEST, TORONTO, ONT. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, PATTERN !IIU:'t!BER, I

Church auditorium this even· : . . . . . ing, :.londay, January 15th, at 1 Con~ratulations are extended to, PLAQUES FO!t KITCIIEN ... ;;,: 8 o'clock. Mr: and 1\lrs. Marston Carner··

on, 64 Cornwall Cres~e.nt,' ori · One way to add wnrmth to ~ni ··~~

FASHION the .occas1o~ of the!~ 13th. · kitchen decor is b\' handing ' ' . i wcddmg anntversary which t~ey ' wall plaqu~s made oi materials . • • "I celebrate to;d'r, /anuary lath. · that can be easily washed and.:.

The twist da~ce has .had its. ef· i HAPPY BIRTIIDAY need no polishing care. feet on sprmg fashwn des1gn. 1

Loops, tassels and fringes or· :.1any happy returns of the day to nament dresses all o\·er or are Phyllis Hussey, Park A\'enue, i limited to edgings. who celebrates her birthday to- :

day, Greetings come from bet· Two voices in fashion indicate ' family.

that the boufant hairdo is on its way out. Michael Kazan, a RETURNS HO:'IIE New York hairdresser, endors­ed the upsweep done with large !llrs. Jeanette Palmer 36 Park ' sausage curls all over the head Avenue, Mount Pearl,· returned except at the forehead. Here, to her home yesterday after an

GUARD AGAINST FIRE.·~: .. ·~

When you decorate your living room, be sure that you have n:o .-,· flimsy curtains near the fire-' · place, candelabra or open light bulbs,

ELEGANT TOUCH he pasted the hair down into enjoyable holiday with relatives a deep V or widow's peak'inj in Saint John, New Brunswick. ;Plisse window shades gently:• the centre of the brow. Models Many happy returns of the day 1' puckered and stitched. can,, at the Norman Norell spring 1 a~e also exte~detl to her on her be the springboard of a charm·. fashion show wore flat, bJrthday, whiC.h she celebrates I ing decor. Extra yardage can short hairdos, which looked a to-day .. Greetmgs come from· be made into matching curtains' great deal like those or the flap· her family. and· bedspreads that arc . dis· · • • • pers of the 1920s. The bang · tinguished enough to satisfy. over the brow formed a b i g J6TII ANNIVERSARY elegant taste at medium prices. question mark curl. · :1\lr. and :1\lrs. Raymond Tiller, 4

. I are celebrating MillsS-I, . . . . CUTTING 'El\'l UP TO SIZE ~ew beachwear boasts two lash· are receiving the congratula·

Ll'fe with father, the world over, has probably been growing more co. m- FUR FOR BUDGET ion trends-one. the demurely j lions or their· many friends to·

H.\NGJNG GARDE:" · . : <

Orten a wall can be turned into a h~nging garden sitnply by. suspending a series of polled plants from the ceil in~ in·· al' · tractil·e containers held · h.l' chains of different heights.

covered-up loo~. the other day on ·the occasion of their plex since sons started growing taller:. than dad ever dreamed of growJ~g. darmgly re1•cahng. T h e r e. I · 6th. wedding anniversary. J. C. Penney Company pattern and specification experts note that changmg I! you long for fur but can't a!- are bikinis, as usual, hut some

1

-·------

. 1 th' l l I t d t tl g th of young ford a fur-trimmec·l coat or a or the more revealing bathing , habits and less restnctive c o mg s Y es are re a e 0 Ie row - suits are one-piece design~ with I '~·: :,-: ,·,;., , ... •,

Sters. Scl·entists point to better nutrition and control of disease, conflic_ting little fur, put your fashion mo· cut-out details at the back, i' nev into a fur hat. You can

evidence notwithstanding. Still others maintain that .the increasing coolness. wear it many seasons, and it sides or front. The .coveh:ehd STAY RELAXED •I h f . l'k J C p · th look shows in 5Uits wtth 1g .

of the earth may be the answer. What ever t e reason, lrms I e • , en- will sparkle wtth any clo recklines and little sleel·es, or I . . . . ! When there are children hi the

· Oj · /r:ltX ',·. '·. •" ., "-':'~

CAFE, !IIO'f SORRY

ney's are making large clothing sizes available for our lengthening. popu- _c~at: ___ ~---·---- ·if not slee1·ed, with wide should- Don't worry abot~t. gethng hoes 1 household, it's wise to make lace' I er straps. I and wnnkles ·.I he r:nore . re· 1 s u r e you haYe a batht·oom -----------.. --.. --·-·-·--... ___ ... _ -·- --·--·--.. --·------. .... water to make one cup. In !axed yom· atthtude IS on the

1 door that can be opened from

1 can (17 ounce) dark sweet I 1 lhst•. lemon julcc 1 saucepan, mix sugar, Ealt, subject, the less· likely you'll! the outside. . ·

Daily Recip~ After a holiday dinner, you may

want a light, though still fes­tive dessert.

CIIEitRY JUBILEE BAVARIAN (Yield: six servings)

1 envelope· unlln\'ored !lclnlin ~~ cup sugar, divld~d \• lsp. walt 2 eggs, separated ll't CUPA milk ! 0 tsp, vnnllln I cup hea\'Y cream (whipped)

Mix together gelatin, \• cup of the sugar and salt in saucepan, Beat togethcl' egg yolks a n d milk: add to gelatin mixture. Place over low heat, stirring constantly, until gelatin is dissolved, about six minutes. Remove from heat; add van· Ilia.

Chill until mixture mounds slight· ly when dropped from a· spoon, Beat egg whites until stiff. but not dry. Gradually add t·e· maining ~~ cup sugm· and heut until very stiff. Fold into gel· attn mixture. Fold in whipped cream. Turn 'into a 55-cup mold or Individual m o 1 d s. Chill until firm. Unmold and s e r v 'e w i t h Cherry Juh· ilce Sauce. '

CIIER!tY .IUBILIH<; SAUCE (Yield: 2 cups)

·--·------ ·-··--·----remaining heef broth and hrend with vegetables and pork. Cut tomatoes into eighths and add. ~llx gently to avoid breaking tomales. Cover. Cook 5 min. utes. Serve wlth fluffy h o t

. mashed potatoes. ·

cherries 1 tsp, hralldy or non·nlcohollc 1 spices and cornstarch. Stir in The new resort fashions w i I h' be too hal'e an)' wrinkles to· · . 3 tbsps, sngnr . \ rum flnvoring 1 syrup. Cook, stirring constant· natural waistlines, gently liar· moan about. IIA;">;DY FIRST AID KIT )~ lst1• each salt, cinnamon and

1

lly, ovet• moderate heat until the ed or panel_ed skirts and the · nutmeg Dt•aln syrup from cherries into mixture boils. Add lemon juice soft look herald the arril•a! of KEY TO GLAMOUR Kitchen accidents happen fre·

1 lbsp. cornstarch measuring cup; add· enough cherries and flavoring. Cool. more such clothes for spring. quently, so keep a first aid klt-_::~_::.:.::.:::::::_.,.... ___ .:.__.::.::=:.:.:.:~..=::.:__=:_~.::.:.:::::..:._~:.::.::_...::._~-::.:_--_:_---------- The proper use of cologne and containing bandages, scissors,-

perfume is often overlooked as tape, sterile white cotton, pet·

·custom CUS'J'0711 FURNITURE BUDGET

KAY SHERWOOD More sophisticated tastes nm·

generally fatter home furnish inss budgets of young home 111akers are spurring manufac turers to greater efforts to cup lure to greater efforts to cap in the noi·SO·young bracket, benefit from these cl!orts too, if furniture replnce[\lents or additions arc on the docket.

Not so long ago the young home­maker either clung to · early . American maple ol' went avant garde with canvas slings and . wrought Iron. 'rhcn the simple Scandinavian styling clailhed our nttention and won hearty support because it Is so well · suited to modern homes and in­formal living pattern~. Now another tune Is being heard.

In recent intci·views with inter· ior designl!rs, store salesmen 1 and furniture showroom mon·

1 •

. agel'S, I wAs assured that to· : day's yoUilg. homemaker de· ! mands more elegance in · hct' living room, more mixing of desi~n periods, more blemlin~ of. old and new, I gathet· that by "elegance" is meant ; more decorated styles, plushy r comfort and rich, pattterned, and textured fabrics:

.f utnitur e. ~ .Budget Price an essential aid to beauty, but roleum ·jelly and a good dis·. a lovely fragrance can boost infectantt in the kitchen. · your personality from ordinary to intriguingly glamorous.

CURTAIN CARE ·. ' '' KEP MAKE UP EVEN '·

When your skin i~ blotchy. ap· plv more foundation makeup over the afected areas and

To avoid settin~: in wrin~les, he carclul not to bunch cnrtains during sudsing and rinsing, . :

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then cover the rest of your I SHADY TRICK face as ·vou normally would, : · blending ihe m'ake-up to form , Looking for a dramatic n~w ap~ one even color. proach to a wall of wmd91~s:.

Try shades, hung alternatelY PRACTIC:\L TOTE from top to bottom. New cords·

You wonder why no one ever for bottom-up installation op. thought of it before, the black erate smoothly at the s i d e s patent tote to carry a pair of of the window. Alternate shad.~ evening oor daytime shoes in colors for a truly dashing, con·' wet or stoormy weather. temporary look! · ·;

... -----·--·-- ---·-------- ··--~---"ASTRO~GUIDE.. "' By Ceean

Fer Monday, JAillllfYI5 '

l· ' Present-For You .. and Yours ••• The favorable q-clc continllCII and people tend tc be sympathetic, underStanding and helpful. Wind 11p important af­fairs early, however, as ac!Yase lunm enter ·the picture late in afternOOil. The shippmg indus­try is particularly favored !lOW.

The mystcriODS, 13pirituali>m, psychism, astrology, etc~) ap-

: pealS to people. ) .' · , !

· Past ... On January lS, 1831, Fufure ..• Present indatio11s '.'

Surprise Your Friends Serve · Ne~foundland Coffee :

I doubt that the trend has spiral· ed quite so magnificently 1 as one top salesmen believes as he made the poiot that young homemakers are truly ~uality conscious, ·

Italian provincial furnitl!re, custom-tailor.~d to a young homemaker1s wishes, teams well with family antiques in this setting. The room has beige walls and carpeting, rust-toned antique satin draperies that rer,')at the color of fabric on one chair. 'Furniture is cushioned in urethane foam. Back of the sofa is an antique bqrl walnut table. Louis Philippe tier tabl.~ has brass gal

· gallcri'es, and marble tops.

II "The Jfe3t Friend of Climes- are that &usi!less w!ll invest ·.4 , . : ton," the first practiral Amcri- per cent more in oew plant aud ·,!

'can-built locomotive, made il! equip111entin 19621banitdidin 1;_ · first I1lll over the Charleston 1961. Expanding business itt-. and Hamburg Railroad in South vestment is important for both '' · o 'I Carolina. pro~ty and growtb. "

The Day Under Your Sign

A. La JON· CANOE Into · · s~ooniufell £heated cup pour strong coffee add .1\~

s o . sugar or 3 lumps, add Ph oz. of

lhen ·. . JON CANOE .RUM . .. Jiouri~gL?tA:r 1ome lightly whipped. cream In - by Do gently. over ·the top of' a spoon. lhro~;~ :bur this magical dream, Just drink It lie e floa tlng cream, . · . So member JON CANOE Is the world famous RUM.

, bO o~hl edr rum· wlll do, It mu~t be JON CANOE I • a e by a modern secret process.

Ui . ' ot ln1erted by· Board of Llqucr Control)

"Instead of paying $600 for a sofa they know will ·[nll apart In three or four years," · he

. said, "they want to· pay $1,200 for one that will last awhile." Such arfluent ?'Dung homemak· era ·are; not acquaintances oi mine, It seemed too dull of me to mention that I had heard about a beautiful but pOilrly engineered $t·,ooo . so!n · that

. really dl~ fall .apart.

Back to more solid ground of $100 chairs_ and $2IJ0.$400 sofas

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(and that's/ stjll 'thin~ing . ·big higlt or low back, 'Uplwlstery to mel one new development · fabrics arc divided into three Is/ a custom service IU a new ·price groups and there is a series by a large manufactur· wide selection in· each. Wood er with national distribution. finishes also vary,

·In this series of sofas· and chairs, Mindful that too wide a selection live basic styles are presented, can sometimes be more con· Italian and ,French. provincial, fusing 'than helpful, the manu-modern,'- traditional and early' facturer supplies a guide or American, . ' recommended fabrics for each

style group, Appropriate wood After d_eciding on the basic style, finishes also are recommended.

the homemaker has a choice · · of sora· length:· 60, 72, 84 .or 96 Urethane foam if used extensivc­

inclics. In chai~s she chooses. ly· for cushioning. and padding

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for comfort, economy and the smooth, tri{ll lines it gives to I furniture, However, tradition· ' al or early American styles ' may be ordered with the . ure· . thane foam wrapped with ace· ' tate fiber to give cushions a : puffy appearance.

This is extensive custom service In a moderate price range and one factor that makes it pos· sible is the size of the company which has factories in several sections o! the country.

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ARIES (Bam Mor<:h 21 to April 191 LIBRA (Sept. 23 lo Clot~ ?21 , ':· l t\ You are inclint:d ta be too abr~pt. "'rith Doa't c:s:~r:S$ t:pJMJlftlbr Ofl\!tLOC~ 1! JQD {I(OJl]e and too h:uty for yonr own zood. 'N'OUid avt'11d a dLsaSTeeablc :f.ltt.latlon. .,

TAURUS (April 20 to May :lil) SCORPIO (od; 23 .1~ Nov. ~I)'; ' , Take pt"~uucn~ aclinK illnt$! ~ teD- TW'!\ down any proposH.io.l1 ~t: ~ i l siOII! is Ji!.:d)' to caU.!e :!101Tiath ur~ets. JlUttin; ~P mcney on a ram e. · 1

GE'-'tNt' [t.lay 21 to June 21) . S~GITTAltlUS [N.oY, 2l to l:!oc- 2H ;·; If "1 • • d · d ' bt Tb1ak bcfote spWci11g, You w1l1 awla

you ;.ec.ept <Jt.ilers .3. v1.u, on t ~ the trtmitr' o£ one ,.,u don't wUh to of'!' } r them for !aLlure. It's )'OUr r~siblbt)'t fend. .~

CANCER (June 22 to July 21) · . CAPRICORN IDee. 22 to Jon. z0!1 · ~~ Working too bird~. ~low Mv.-a .ind Jm Your !ingera will sean a.s though the;Tn .1·[ tmtte rtlt. Healtlll! Imrotb.nt. all thumbS DO matter what JOU att~ r-

LEO [lui~ 22 lo Aug, 11) - AQUARIUS (Jon. 11 lo Fob. it)'· " If )'OO're an.:om-rni<uffil. m>l.e llle best Jf ....., •• 1m ;yau datn1, ...,..,~ l of an. tmcomfMUble tituatiea. . · bat to lc:noYt' whO are )OW true f · I

VIRGO (Aug: 2l 1o Sopt. 221 PISCES (Fob. 20 to t.laroh 20) · !·1 If; Thitt i• not an C"l'dinary dart. And dcvcl· Ttnraticncc with othcn, apuialt7 Mp; · or~ uod kt bt·favor.ab~. . drcn, wm-b •rain~t J'l'b'. (i 19

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Page 6: rus 1ze.n a - Memorial University DAIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19620115.… · chomping comedian Ernie Kov· o t h 'e r innovations included · firing

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THE DAILY NFLD. MONDAY

.. Minor Leag· . ue Baseball . Senior Intercollegiate •

·. · . · PWC Stop Btshops 6-parting after asking for a two-

'cQadlan. Preas Staff Wrller Interest must centre on a ganized baseball's first Negro in of looking at players of rather year cdntract, something un-The signing this week of scrappy, colorful mnnager. the great Jackie Robinson, were less· talent. heard of In dealings with owner Vabsley Dowden ·tc.\"re Twl'ce

Ch8rlle Dressen as manager of Dressen, reported too have the most consistent draw at the TOUGH ON UMPIRES Walter O'Malley. ' J 'v · :(.~nto Maple ~eafs o! the In· signed lor $35,000 compared gate In the l n t c r. n a t I o n a 1 . When Cooke was asked about I He has also managed Cin- . ~8\ional League Is, as. much with the $40,000 he got at 'Mil· League. the signing of Dressen, he said I dnnotl Reds and Washington Defending scormg ~hamp of ~ .. :anything, a reflection llf the waukee lost year arid certainly Support began to fall off untll Charlie would be the most con- Senators as well as the Braves the Scmor lnt~rcollegtatc Hoc­current plight o£ minor league the highest paid manager ever several years ago baseball troversial manager Leafs ever and, between stealing oppo- key Lea~ue, D1ck Yatsley, ~as b)lseball. In the minors, can be expected folded In Montreal. In recent had. He was probably right al· nents• signs, baiting umpires been hav1~g Ius. troubles getting l ;,~A,slde !rom the fact that Dres· to make the best use of the rna· I years Toronto has had the though stubble-~~inned Burleigh and putting his mastery of started this year, but Saturday aeri, fired lost fall by lllllwaukee !erial he will have at Toronto. strongest fan support year in, Grimes of the 1930s· would run ! strategy to excellent use,· he afternoon the talented right­Braves, was the best available MOSTLY UNKNOWNS ~year out. But last season there him a close second. eai·ned a reputation as . one of winger broke out with two goals pilot in baseball, the choice ap· The fact is, however, that were often games attended by The point is that, while Cooke the best managers ill the game. to lead Prince of Wales to a pears to be a desperate bid hy with the cxcep~ion of Rocky Nel· little more than 1,00 customers. wants a winner, he's also hop· "He'll soy the right thing at 6·3 victory over'Bishops Collc/!c. Leal~ owner. J:~ck ~ent Cooke 1son, _lately. of Plttslmrgb Pi· A !t~nvy selec!ion of weeke~rl ~ng some folks will :turn out ·the ~rong ·time, t~e wrong at The two big goals by Dick J

to stimulate mterest m baseball' rates, and ·perhaps Steve Rid· telcV!ston s_howmgs of maJOr JUSt to see how. the ftery mnn-1 the nght, and, qmte freqnetly, boosted him into a tic for the In Toronto. · zik, formerly with Philadelphia league games hurt and this was ager o per a t e s, particularly the right at the right," Cooke runner-up position in the in-1

But lor n league that o~re t·PI_lils, Toronto Will• be going the case. _in mo~t other mi~or w_hen he takes off after an urn·! said the other dar "But wh~t- dividunl scoring with lincmate·l drew a flock of cuslomei'S w!th w1.th n !'oster of players ~el· league· cJta.~. Its much e~ster ptre. . I ever he ~ny~ he II be constS· Don Warr, both have six points. the play of such star matena1 1 alive httle known oulstde to stay home and watch Mtckey Dressen, 63, managed Brook· tently unprcdtctable, If anyone B. h · s' B b D de , nd ·as Red Schoendienst, Atle)' Don-I their hometowns. . . Mantle and Roger Maris on TV llyn Dodgers in 1951 · 52 - 53 antlj' can, he'll revive interest in P~C~P J' ·~ owl ~ ~h aid and Flash Gordon, it's n hit At one time, Montrenl Roy11ls, than too get out to the ball park won two pennants before de- baseball in Toronto." . s • I!"th rover _eat e

· scormg WI seven potn s. 1

Gander Hockey Fan Club Reaches 200

GA:"'DE!l-1'he a~tive Gan-. dcr. Hockey Fan Club started I ·a ~hart time ago h)' hockey en· thusiast~ at this Airport Town has reached a membership of 200 member~. The Club has

1COMMERCIAL

-Bowlin2 ..... ' .

1'111S WEEK'S GA!IIES

Section !A) Tn-JI,'ight:

Schedule G. S. Doyle vs Mitchell's

-8.15-Ciaytnn C. C. vs A. Harvey Import :\Its. vs Can. ~farconi

-9.30-

. The win by the Collegians

L tt rJ1 EI.,.J •t was a big one as it left them1 e· e r 1 0 u 1 0 r with a three point margin over I

· second place St. Bon's, who have MEEKER . , . . . , . , . . . . . . Better still the Provincial Gov- a game in ·ha_nd. Bishops a_rc ~n.

Dear Sir.-A rr.cent article ernment should provide some the cell~r wtth on!~ a lte. m • - ' . in a St. .John's paper demon· legislative bodv to. enquire into four outtngs for a smgle potnt. BOB DOWDEN i DICK YABSI.E\' strates the extent of the detcr- 1 and control ;port. Now that . Roy Chapman, Dave Sharpe, . J ,

ioration to which sport(?) in!Dicfenbakcr is going to give usjJlm Drover and Barry James goal lead agam.whcn he took a

1

. Dav~ Spurrell got or,1

st. John's has sunk. The arli·l a share of five million dollars hacked Yabsley's two goal per- pass from Des Cousens aod step; for Bishops at 9.4R,. cle refers to "the former pl~y- for athletics should be a good forma~ce for the Co~legi~ns ped around the l_one Btshops look <~e!cnccman. \ tc er-coach and ·manager of the I opportunity-unless Meeker is w1th smgle markers, wlule Bob I defenceman to htt the lower

1

pass ft om the pomt and Toronto ~laple Leafs ... and to r!Rcicle on. behalf of New· Dowden scored t~vice for Bishops left _side. the yuck !~to. theme;h .

pAILYNEWS,

,.

Gran Reacl

GJtAND FALL~ advanced to tl

AJI-Newfow ttrri[J .. ,. niglit whE

All-Stars 7-1

ctriUJ:••• games. The Jays openE

night with a outburst of AI

AI Bargery pac with two goal1

Blackmore, AI D Winton DJ

third period with G: The Jays compl

nntsnDll' the ,Iort!ls , minor pcnalt1

referees I.~o Ro1

mediate , efeatF

:·been 1·cr~· active and has pre­. sentcd fourtc~n ~ift certificates to local players in the value of -ten dollars each. The next presentation of certificates will take place at the Buchans·Gan· rler game on Jan. 15th. Mem-

. -7.00-Bt•ookfield vs Avalon Tele. H. & Hiscock vs Hubley's ·

-8.15-T. N. M\s. vs Bennett's Walsh's Bak. I'S C. Packers

-9.30-

Dom. lilach. vs ~lode! Shop E. utilities vs C. Garage

... putting an end to his battle lfoundland how the money is. to Colle_ge and Cynl Spurrell once. Bishops we~e a man short as .ll_m Dro1er s stxth goal with ·the Lc guc vcr h'. be spent. . Prmce of Wales took a 2-0 the !mal perwd began, but 1t!Year Pt_Jt the tcn;g on the A~IATEUR status". T;ls s art~~ ( Sgd.') PRO-AMATEUR. lead in the initial period and m?de a Iii :le difference as c~p·! for Pn,ncc of \\~Irs at •

Wednestlay: · d 1 t · 1 P 1 held a 3·1 advanta"e after two lam Bob Dowden was back wtth 1 Don \\ arr tntcrceptcrl a

is· the only team in the lnte

basketball although played only two the other four

four or five games

>bcrship for one year costs ' Sl.OO, and the aim is 500 mcm­hers before the season is over.

.A dance will be held at the ·conclusion of the hockey sea·

Perlin'' \'S Nfld, C. & 0. C. Cables vs C. Cordage

Wednesday: -7.00-

son for players and members of the Cluh. It is planned to present special gift certificates at the dance. The players who ha1·e been honored thus far arc as follows: R.C.A.F. Crawford; Fitzpatrick; Kyte; :\!elanson; Lon~pere.

AIRLINES - Hancock; N. Dykr; ~!ills; \\'. Dyke; D.O.T. Shallow; Bradburv; Kellv·

.Foote: R. Lush. Foliowing is·~ list of the members of the Gan· der Hockey Fan Club members: Dick Richards; Ed Dohnney; Bob Lush; Ke1" Gardiner: Don )!)Tick; Dick Smyth; Bill Jre· land: Eric Dnwc; Don Curra'n: Frank Tibbo Jim Garland; Cliff

. Powell; Bill Grouchy; 1\lax Thornhill; Da\'e Hanrahan; Rol Whittle; AI Currie; Mrs. Al Currie; AI Currie Jr.; Da\·e Scgec; Dave . Windsor; Don

. lllacKeigan; Ron Chafe; John

. Coffey: Bob Lawrence; Don Dove; Ben Ivany; Mike Hughes; John Duggan lllike Cochrane; ,Tack Nutter; Jack Miller; Roy Crann; Graham King· Jack Squires; Jack Cashin;' Gerry Ivany; Bob Hellier; Lester Stoyles; Jim Freake; Eloil Hum· by; Harold Bush; John Haire· Paul Withers Leo O'Qulnn; John Green; Graham Smith· .Jack Pinsent; Clem Elms; ,Ji~ Hog_an_; Hiram 1\eeping; Ralph C~msttan; Rupert Tibbs, George '~oodford; Lcs Wilcox; Ewart T1hbo; AI Lilly; Gord Elson; Gerald Vokey; Felix Ricketts; lletty Ireland lllarv Haire· Ilu·

. hy Rideout; Kay Kane; 'nose Ro~ers; A~ncs Nolan; Patsy ~!aloncy; Mary Baldwin; :\lary Kelly; Ann Kelly; Kathleen J(cl· ly; :\lary Oates; Joan O'Reillv· Fred· Wicks; Anthony Aylward: Harr)• Ogilvie; Don Gosse; Bob Gover; John Carter; Gar Shep­pard; Ann White; Jack Robert­son; John Pike Lewis Adams· Patrick Walsh; Bill Costello:

·. Ja~es Kennedy; All 'Baldwin; · W11f French; Hubert Rodway·

R_aymond White; Jack Butler; JJm Bart~ett; John Carpenter; Rex Coffm; Tom Hollohan.

. Josephine Smyth; Elsie Thorn: . hill; Frank Power; Ira· Troke; · Frank ~oole)'; Alex Bishop;

Ivan Styde Eric Clarke; Pat

BE WISE MARTINIZE

The most in Dry Cleanlitg HUGHES-MAYNARD

CLEANSERS LTD Phone 92186·7·52U

Nfld. Brew. vs Bowring's Nfld. T. & E. vs E. E. Bak.

-8.15-Harvey's vs Furness W. G. E. Oil vs O'Keefe's · ·

-9.30-Barnes' vs Imp. Oil Parker's vs Telegram Thursday:

-7.00-Ayre's Ltd. vs L. & Power Ayre's S/M vs Brookfield

-8.15-Bennett's vs L.N.Y. T. N. Mts. vs Hubley's

-9.30-Purity F. vs C. Packers

·H. & Hiscock vs Nfld. C. & 0

Section (B) To-Night:

-7.00-c. R. Bel! vs Mamy'a

Russell; Joe Jllaloney; Jim Loughlin; Joe O'Reilly; Ralph 11VIIs; Ernie Peyton; George Burry; Sidney Burry Mrs. Sid· ney Burry; Hap Chafe; Hayward Clarke; Phyllis Pollick; Gene· vieve I<elly; Albert Jenkins; Cy Rowsell; . Bill Cornick; Mac Clarke; Ray Rose; Sandy Mil· Jar; Alex lllillar; S. Stanford; Mrs. S. Stanford; Betty LeDrew: Joan Abbott; ?tllllic Sullivan; Bill Dunne; Bob Banfield; An· onymous; Lloyd Yetman; 1\lrs. Lloyd Yetman; AI£ Moakler; Harry Crewe, Matthew Fitzpat· rick; Rea Hellier; W .. George Smith; lll•lrgan Hinchey; Frank Lawlor; Millicent Peach; Ron Fitzpatrick; John McGrath· Mil· licent Squires; Stan Gill; Gerry Smith; Bill Learning; Pat Pic·. eo; Lloyd Tulk; J. Quinn; W. Martin R. Brown; W. Hoffe; P, Rogers Jack James· Murnel Robertson; ·David R~bertson; Dot Parrott; Jack Granville· Loraine Kelly; Boyd Powell: Roy Jenkins; -Cecil Thorne; Wil: ber Moss; Ralph Andrews; Jack Welsh; 1\lrs .• Jack Welsh; Bert Lambert; Jim Mills; Bill Baker· Howie llleeker; John Dunphy: Frank Broderick; Walter Le: Drew; Jim Lorenzen; · Don l!ounsell; W. Gillies; Walter Boland; J .. D.onald; Joe Boland· Ralph Hiscock M.- Carpenter; Roy Saunders; Fred, Biggs; Ger. ry Wakeham; Maurice Doyle· John Simpson; Rex Primmer! Harold Goulding; c. c. Dawe; Dorothy Hogan; Gar Wall· lllrs. Ernie Peyton; Eric Lan: n!ng; Fred Blackmore; Lloyd Tibbs; Walter Lush, Jr.; Hed­ley Gill, Lew Jones;

EXECUTIVE C~F: 'To take ch~ge · of hotel kit~hen and staff. Responsible for all food prcparation1 plani1ing; etc, Knowl· edge of European dishes would· be valu­able. ·salary $70-$90 per .week, .

'

{Other vacancies for Chefs ~cross' Gana~a)

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mm cc ama cur IS now rcc o . ~ 1 · · 1 1 ft 1 141 hops' pas at th · 1· -7.00- 1 · t th th t frames. In the fmal stanza thcv us seconc goa a er on y I s m me belts. University squad ~lcrit Ins. vs Daily News ;~,~~ ~~~~nsworl~ ~t c~i:mo~c~:~~ I mlach To outscored Bishops 3·2 for th~ seconds. stepping around the~ sent Drover in all alone '

D.·Bradstrcct vs C.P.T. and go to the Stadium to Ia 6·3 decision. lone rear guard to ta~c ~ pass .. the puck between Harren -8.15- If tl · 1 b · f 1 ~ Yt Roy Chapman gave PWC a 1·0 from Vtc Young and shde 11 past i Btshops pulled 1hctr . ·

J I or tetr c u s or, 111 ac agams · P\"C' t · d N ·1 \"' d '-h f1'nal mt'ttutc · f B.· o mston vs B.-Harvey some of our schooloboys who L ok At A k lend at 6.01 of the first period ., s ne mtn cr Cl •• m -• '"e , tn aror . Mc~lurdo's VS Standard Mfg.- are also members of those c mer s when he took a pass from de-, sor. !'extra' !ornard, hut the

the first game of th handed St. Pat's the

of the year. 01 they handed tl

-9.30- ' . · · . · fenceman Pete Crocker at the[ Dick Yabsley scored his sec·; backftred as Barry .Ta:nes Jl.'afel vs ·cNIB tc,~~s.k . 1 t I TORONTO (CPl __ Coach fnceoff circle to the ri-ght o! the ond goal at 6.08 on a power-' ed up a loose puck at Steers vs Bursey's T. 'l'he e~e~gu~'s n~on:t~tu~:~ e~~:J Punch lmlach of Toronto Maple net and fired a shot that boun- play to move Prince of Walcs

1

with six seconds . : Thursday: f' t · ,. h ' Leafs left Friday night to seek I ccd past Bishops' goalie Pete into a 4·2 lead. Dick took a. slapped 'the puck mto the

R.C.A.F. squad a behind the 20

ruu"'""'"' of their star Hoddinott.

-7.00- .111etsh ant am a clurdas one w 0 ' player reinforcements from no- Harvey · pass from defence man Ken .net. C G El UT'E Ill e wo ca en ar years pre- h t A , th L . p ft J' D I t' Referees· John Do 1 · . . ec. vs . . . ceding his resignation has not c es ~r mencans, e eafs' 1 Twenty seconds later Dave arsons a er tm rover_ Jar , . . · · Y e. G. Wmter vs Mitchell's 1 d 1 d . h Amencan Hockey League farm Sharpe took a pass from Bob started the play and skated: Vmicombe.

8 15 p nyc or coac 1e 111 any oc· club · ht · t . - · - key competition for a direct or · Kelly during a scramble in front :ng tn o score. • 1 Lineup>)

B.·A. 011 vs Chas. n. Bell indirect staked bet salary or Imlach wants a centre or left· of the Bishops net and poked The turning point of the game' G. S. Doyle v~ A. Harvey 1 remuneration.. }reeker has bwmger !or the Leaf?, pla~ued the puck over the line. i came at 6.36 when Bishops, still: Prince of Wale>-foeal.

· st. Pat's are the leagt with six points on and one loss. M their two wins an with a two and t·

are tied for are in !hire -930-- · ' Y tn]Urtes and wearmess m a ·B'•' • t · B b D •d 1 -1- 4" , 1 1 , r· ''"f"!l , r· ·'·II , · . done nothing for sport that has schedul hi , 1 .. 10p~ cap am o Ol\ en! ratmg ·-· were a\lar< er _a -O , u•· c. cc. \CJ,[.a ..

. Jobs I'S Can. Marcom not resulted in some financial 11• ,1 t e.11 ~ _ c h, bfh Sun~ay opened h1s brace at 6.28 of the i penalty shot when one of the1r Roberts, Crocker, forward; Clayton C. C. vs ~lode! Shop gain for himself since his ar- f~~~: ' ~;tion~~e ~~~~ey err_e~g~~ middle period to put \~tern o_n J pla;:ers was hauled <lown from' Yabsley, Dro\'t'r. l'nlbc:.~. ·

one win and a J, in the cell:

Standings· rival in st. John's. games· in five days_ the scoreshel when with Ins .

1

belunrl on a clear break. , . n;an •. James. Bradley. The St. John's Amateur Hoc· !minch planned to watch Ro- own tenm shorthanded he stole Bob Dowden was cltc 1 b~: !,ell). .

key League knows that Howie chester's game against Provi- the puck fr_om a PWC player l coach Doug Woolgar to t t!1e' Btshops Col!c:!c-Uo?.l.

(UP TO JANUARY 4'fH.) Section (A)

Meeker does not meet the re·, dence and "if r see someone and moved m alone to htt the [ sh?l and he skated_ m to r.<aw i vey; dcfenc~, P;,r,nns. quiremcnts of the Constitution. who impresses me, he'll be in ow~r nght corner. Wmdsor, but ha~ hts shot. ,,op-: Leaman, l!atlett; ·· The League itself paid him last the_ lineup against Detroit Red D!ck Yabsley ,o~t o~ a ehangelpcd as _the agtle nctnunderden. ~!Rrtm, Youn~. year and Is pnylng him again Wings Saturday night." of ll_nes, s:ored hts ,first _o£ two 1 stuck hts lt;g bac~ qutckly to. Retd, Ch<Jytor. t:r:; . P L

Bennett Brewery . 51 8 Parker & Monroe 54 17

Pts. 43 37 36 35 34 34 34 33 31 31 29 29 27 26 25

this year to coach the League's to gJVe Pnnce of \\ales Its two, block the shdmg d1sc. Bragg. entry in NAHA competition. I Dick Duff, _who _missed . a · O T-;T ---OT.TH -\ ~1"\y-- --- ------- T --~ - -\\ ;Il J T ' " ;

Brookfield 54 18 The presence of Howie Meek- 1 gan;e Sunday mght wtt.h a thigh • 1 • ·' •

er as a player in our local ama· I brmse: wa~ hurt ogam T?ur~­teur games tends to incite vio-l day _mght m Montreal and 1s _m lence. We find professional hospital her~ ~ n d e r ~pcctal tactics being used by amateur X-ray .exammahon . of ~~~ left players who are neither equip· foot. H1s. return Is mdeftmte.

Comm. Cables 57 22 Light & P,ower 51 17 Royal Stores 54 20 Colonial Cordage 57 23 Avalon Telephone 51 18 Canada Packers 48 17 E. F. Barnes 57 26 Nfld, T. & E. 51 22 Harvey & Co. 54 25 Evening Telegram 54 27 Imperial Oil 54 28 Ayre's Limited 48 23 Purity Factories 51 26 Harris & Hiscock 48 24 G. E. Oil 51 27 Furness Withy 54 31 O'Keefe's Grocery 51 29 Bowring Bros. 51 29 Nfld. Brewery 48 27 Nfld. Coal & Oil· 48 28 C. A. Hubley 45 26 East End Bakery 51 34 Terra Nova Motors 45 29 L F. Perlin 45 29 London, New York 40 35 Ayre's Supermarket 48 38 Walsh's Bakery :11 42

Section (B)

N.A.~'.E.L. Mammy's Bakery Import Motors Balne-Johnston Steers Limited Standard Mfg. Co, A. Harvey & Co. Bursey's Trucking · Job Brothers Can. Gen. Electric C.N.I.B. United Towns Merit Insurance Can. Marconi Dun . & Bradstreet · Gerald S. Doyle

p L 51 10 51 12 51 13 51 15 57 22 51 17 45 12 M 21 51 19 45 13 51 20 48 17 54 24 48 24 54 30 48 22

ped nor paid to take the risks Centre Red Kelly, ··who in· 1~volv~~ ~undreds of fans~ jured a knee two weeks ago, is \1 ho ':'" lit·· ga!"e of h~ckey no I skating again but is not expected l~ngc1. go to tne Stadmm. A to be ready until the middle o[ stckenmgly large number of I next week. Winger' Ed Shack tho~e who do attend do so main· will be out at least another two ly m the hope of a fight wi1111 weks with torn knee ligaments.

25 develop and all too often this 24 type o! fan is not disappointed., · 24 Officials controlling the games St B ' M t 23 are in many cases either incom- • on s ee 22 petent or simply 'afraid to mete 22 out the penalties prescribed in D' h T d 21 the Rules because the undiscip· C'IS ops 0 ay 20 lined game appears to apepal to I 19 ~he bfans. Our local officiating i B'

1 ,

17 ts a out the level of that seen ' Js top s have a chance to 16 in the televised · wrestlin-• move into a second place tie 16 matches. · .o ' with St. Bon's this afternoon 13 ':\he ~lunicipal Council should as the_Y meet in a senior inter· 10 accept some responsibility for coll~gtate hoc~ey game at the 9 the present condition of sport Stadmm startmg at 4.30.

particularly hockey, which i~ St. Bon's have playe~ th~ee dirr.ctly under its control and ?ames and can;e u~ wtth lies

Pts. which appears more than any m all_ th~ee wh1le B1~hops have 41 other to require cleaning up one tie lD three outings. PWC 39 · lead the three team lngue with 38 Gus Winter Ltd. 48 25-23 six points on two wins and two 36 J, B. 1\litchell 51 29 22 ties in four games. 35 Can. Pac. Tel. 57 35 22 34 Electric Utilities 57 36 21 33 Top-Tone Cleaners 54 34 20 . 33 Dom. Machinery 48 30 18 32 Browning:Harvey M 36 18 32 B.·A. Oil, 51 34 17 31 · Clnyton Con. Co. 48 33 15 31 Chas. R. Bell Ill 36 15 30 Colonial Garage . 57 42 15 24 T. McMurdo & Co. 41! 35 13 24 Model Shop 48 37 11 26 J. ADEY, Secty.

S~AA 'Hockey One· game is scheduled for

tonight in the St. Bon's AA hoc· key league. John Palfrey's Gold team will tangle with Jim Walsh's team starting at 7.10 sharp.

====o--:

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.· TRANS:~!4NADA A!R LIN_~S f}· ~IR p~NA~~-. . ._.

:.

.Memorial with a comfortat after finishing tl

The 13 points Hoddinott were eno win as the "Fiyboy! hit for 11 in thr while the MUN's

Griffin four as he potl

ten of them co second half. Geor, close behind Grif

points ten of them the second half. Bol

F.-liiddc~d six in the secont to his . four poit John Emberley a Husk hit for a fi

each half for four J;~iE:ce.

Win•lnn Weir was 1 with five pc coming in th1

on two field goa throw. The othel

t .. Jc Dart:

STANDINGS AT J1 t:'Jeam ·p w

........ 9 7 A, ........ 6 7

5 5 15 5 4 2 1 1

· .A ....... 9 0 MONDAY, Janua1

Early Game: St. Pa Legion 0, Hennel)ury (

1, 118, Chas. Ree Pat's. Jim HI

Legion. -Game: Star 3; Nugent doubl

double 20, Pel a.m. 1oo, N,

Star.!. Pete lila<

TUESDAY, Janu1 Early Game: Guar .

1. Kelloway dou

Tlua):'d, 11 Rlehard! dot

• 100. Holy ( Late Game: C.N.R.

Page 7: rus 1ze.n a - Memorial University DAIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19620115.… · chomping comedian Ernie Kov· o t h 'e r innovations included · firing

L.'5, DAlLY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. MONDAY, JANUARY 15, 1962 ' '1 -. . .

~ Grand Falls )-~; Reach Finals.

Junior NAHA ·\

St. John's In Finals Harris Sparkes

Leafs To Comeback

I

rg1n

1n:.:: on the Wal~> at -rreptcd a their line ill alone to ·n Harwy's rt their e in !Jvor of

but the •rry .1 ames :~rk at renter !' remaining r~ into the

111 Doyle,

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Bradlry.

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GRAND FALLS-(Staff)-The Grand. Falls \'S

1advanced to the W.:!st Coast finals of the Ja. ··or All-Newfoundland Hockey playoffs on Ju~\da~· night when they defeated the Gander , Blank Bell Island 7-0 JSa 1

;0r All-Stars 7-1 to sweep th.~ semies in two un . trah:ht games. . . ·•

1 The Jays opened the best of three ser1es on

F · !av night with a 10·0 shutout behind th.~ four · 111 ' fAlD . 1 outburst o · wyer.

goa AI Bargery paced the 7-1 d~cision Saturday . ht with two goals, while Jim Dawe, Ray Dawe,N ~1 Blackmore, AI Dwyer and John Bragg snipped . glcs. Winton Dylm spoiled the shutout in the ;;~rd period with Gander's only goal of the ~~ies:

The Jnys completely dominated the game and tsllot the lomrs 50-12 over ilie three periods.

Oll ' Jl'h • Sine minor penalties were en ed m t e contest by reierecs I.~o Ros and Georg Thorne.

e;asketball

·UN Win Second ' I

efeat RCAF. 69~ 12 orial i> the on!)• unde­team 111 the Intermcdi·

basketball although they playrd onl)' two games the other four teams

four or !i1·e gAmes under belt>. t:nirersity squad play. fir;t ~arne of the year

handed St. Pat's their only of thr year. Over the

they handed the win-R.C..U. squad a 69·12

behind the 20 point ::olu1:tion of their star center

· Hoddinott. 5L are the league l.cad-

lrith ;ix points on three . and one loss. Memorial

their two wins and Holy with a two and two won

STERLING IIODDINOTT

House, Hutton· Stars·

saves. · 1.

Referees: Syb Qui~k. Charlie ' Field. I

(Lineups) r, ..

By BILL nlacDOUGALL Bower's pads. TORONTO, CP-Centre Billy ~eaf dcfencema~ Tim Ho;-

Harris pressed into full-time tons slap shot hit Delvecchio action' as an emergency meas· and the De~roit centre rushed ure, scored two goals, includ· up the left ~Ide. H~ beat Bow~r ing the winner, as Toronto from close m at 9.53. Lunde s Maple Leafs defeated Red goal at 11:08 was a lucky one­Wings 4-3 Saturday night. and unluc~y for ~ower. Bower

· are tied for second. arc in third place

one win and a loss and are in the cellar with

)lemorial walked with a comfortable 32·1 arter finishing the first

The 13 points potted . Hoddinott were enough for

win as the "Flybo)'S" could , · hit lor II in the second

while the llUN's hit for

were Don Urguhurt, Joe· Char· bonneau and Tom Barnes with one field goal each while the one point in the first half came from Nelson Mullins.

BOX SCORES 1\lemorlai FG FT PF Pts. S. Hoddinott .... 9 2 0 20 C. Griffon ........ 7 2 0 16 G. Neal .......... 6 3 4 15 B. Healey ........ 4 2 1 10 C. Hush .......... 2 0 1 4

· Canadiens Win Twice; Two More Rangers Lose

The' Wings piled up a 3-0 stopped h1s close·m shot and lead' in the first period, the t~e puck dropped on to th~ goal Leafs tied it early in the third lme. Bower grabb_ed for 1t and period, and Harris fired home appeared ~o have ~t, but Lun~e the winner before 14 036 Nat· poked at 1t and Jt rolJed SIX ional Hockey League fans with inches behind the lin_e. a minute and 42 seconds re· Pulford narrowed 1t to 3·1 at maining in the game. 16:10 of the first, knocking in

Neither club moved up or leftwinger Bert Olmstead's re­down in the standings, Toronto bound from 10 feet out after remaining second and Detroit Sawchuk got out of position. fifth. Haris scored at 3:04 of the · Les Kozack, n Jeftwinger second period to make it 3-2,

brought up from Rochester stickhandling around .Detroit

Griffin found his as hr potted 16

ten of them coming in second half. George Neal dose behind Griffin with

points ten of them comln)l .. the second l1alf. Bob Healey

six in the second half to to his four point first John Embcrlcy and Clar· Husk hit for a Ileld goal

mh half for four points

\\' cir was tops for with five points, all coming in the second

on two field goals and a throw. The other scorers

J. Embericy .... 2 o 0 4 Totals ........ 30 9 6 69

R.C.A.F. FG FT PF Pts. W. Weir .......... 2 1 · 0 5 D. Urguhurt .... 1 0 2 2 T. Barnes ........ 1 0 5 2 J. Charbonneau 1 0 1 2 N. Mulllns ...... 0 1 0 1 W. Holmes ...... 0 0 4 0 H. Summers .... 0 0 0 0 J. Smith ........ 0 0 0 0

Totals .... . ... 5 2 12 12

DETROIT <AP) -.Norm UU- Ullmim's goal gave the 16·year Armstrong to pick up his 17th man scored with 90 seconds left NHL veteran 1,200 points in re- marker of the year. Armstrong Sunday night and lifted Detroit !!Ular ... season and playoff play. had shot, then chased his own Red Wings to a 2-1 comeback He was playing in his !,!26th rebound into lthe corner behind victory over the faltering New game in regular and post • sen· the cage before sliding it out York' Rangers In a National son play, an NHL record top· too the oonrushing Keon, Hockey League game that was ping by one tbe previous mark BOSTON ( CP l - Montreal scoreless for the first 42 min· or Ted Lindsay, Howe's one- centre Ralph Backstrom, wlio utes, time liincmate, owes much of his current suc·

The loss was the fifth straight Bathgate was sraken up late cess to the Bruins scored twice

Hockey

for the Rangers, surprise team .in the game in a collision w1th against his Bosion "cousins" of the NHL }lntll their light .!or Bill Gadsby but returned to ac- Sunday night In a 4-1 victory fourth place, the final playoff tion. that helped Montreat Canadiens

' position. · iod goals by Stan Mikita and maintain their slim edge over Detroit ~cored twice in the Pierre Polote pulled Chicago Toronto atop the National Hoc­

final seven minutes alter the Black Hawks into a 2·2 tie wlth key League standings. Atten· Rangers' Dean Prentice broke Toronto Maple Leafs in a wild, dance was 13,609,

' SCORES

1, 9.53; 2, Hi.14; 3, 11.08; 4, up the scoreloss duel at 2:16 of rugged National Hockey League Backstrom has 19 goals this 16.10; 5, a,.04; 6.48; 7, 18.18. tho last period. . . game Sunday night. season, nine of them at the ex-

Claude Laforge bed 1t for De- Both Chicago tallies came pense of the lnst·place Bruins. trait at 13:17 be_fore Ullman pro- while the · Leafs were short· Backstrom, 24-year-old Kirk-t J h ' · Cl b vlded the winner with a close-in handed, lnkd Lake, Ont., native, opened

0 n S U. shot at 18:30, The deadlock dropped the the scoring at 16:44 of the first t PULL GOALIE , second-place Leafs two points period when )le fired a 20-footer

The Rangers pulled goalie behind league-leading Montreal off a 2-on-1 rush with Bernie

D L Gump Worsley in the last 55 Canadiens, · Geoffrion. He added the clinch-arts . eague seconds but couldn't net the ty- In gaining their 13th deadlock ing fourth tally late in the mid· ing goal despite a ·six-player at- of the season, the Hawks moved die session when he drove Don tack. Detroit's Gordie Howe and three points ahead of fourth· Marshall's deflected pass be·

STAXDI!'\GS AT JAN, 12th. Sl'd "olJov 114, Can. Lenlon. Alex Delvecchio both missed place New York Rangers, hind rookie ,goalie Don Head. m • b the open net during the New LEAD LOOKERS GOOD Phil Goyette and Gilles Trem-

P W L Pts. Late game: Holy Cross 2, York assault. First • period goals by Bob blay also scored for the winners ···· ···· 9 7 2 7 St. Pat's 1. Despite hard checking referee Baun and Dave Keon provided who whipped )3oston 5·3 in Mont· ........ 6 7 2 7 Jack Taylor double 10, Jim Frank Udavarl didn't can one the Leafs with what looked like real Saturday, Joh!Jny Bueyk

· ·· .... ... 6 5 1 5 Tucker double 4, Frank Fur· penally during the game . - a an insurmountable lead until the registered for the home forces. ........ 9 5 4 5 long 100, Holy Cross. Bill Ivey rariety In ·any hockey league, 7:30 , mark of the last period UNBEATEN IN FIVE

CrO!S ...... 9 11 4 5 double 16, Charlie Reells 100, let alone the NHL. when, with Toronto's Ed Lltzen- The Canad!ens, now unbeaten .......... g 5 4 5 Tom Hennebury 103, ,St. Pat's, Both Worsley and Terry Saw- berger in the penally box, Mi· In five games with four wins C ......... 6 4 2 4 FRIDAY, January 12tb; . ch11k showed up well, making klta skated from behind the Tor- and a tie, led 2-1 after the first ........... g 2 7 2 Early game: Fclld 2, Star 1. · 20 st~ps each. The first period onto net and jammed the puck period and added their other

Bon's .. . . . 6 1 II 1 Reg Norris doubles 8 and was more or less even In shots behind Leafs' netmlnder Johnny two goals in the second. Legion .... 9 1 8 1 a, Ray Squires 112, Felld.1 Pete on goal but New York had a Bower. The goal was Mikita's Backstrom opened the scoring,

· .A. . . g 0 9 0 Deutsch double. 12, 100, Charlle 12·7 edge, in the middle frame. 13th of the year. Goyette beat Head with a high }IONDAY, January 8th. ' Nugent, 100, 100, 100, Ned In . the last period, however, , Pilote's tying marker came on backhandcr after circling . the

Early Game: St. Pat's 3; Can· O'Brien, 100, Star. . . . . when t\le gonUes were feeling a 40 • foot screened shot at net. . I Cl Legion o. Late game: Guards 3; REWA the stra1n, Worsley stopped 11 12:51 of the last period. Tor· The Bruins go~ the1r lone goal Hennebury doubles 9 o. Red Wing shots while Sawchuk onto'1 Tim Horton was serving . 118, Chas. Reells double Lou Kelloway double 1 Bob handled seven. a hooking penalty at the time. J J d s rt Pat's. Jim Hillier, 112, Churchl\1 dD'uble 8, __ Frank . A crowd of 9,973 watched .the The tally was the th!rd of the · S an po

Can. Legion. · Hynes double 2, Guards. match, year for the Hawks defence-1 Game: Star 3; F.C.S. 0. TOP TEN AVERAGES CLOSE·IN GOAL man.- . Nugent double :10, John Jim Hllller, Can. Legion 17,87 Prentice acored from c:ose In, ~nun's opening goal, only his BELL ISLAND, (Staff)-Thc .

double 20, Pete Deutsch Dou Galla&her St. 'Pal's 17.65 turning Andy Bathgate s per· third of the year, c~me on a Bell leland Junior and Senior 8, 122, 100, Ned O'Brien Ch g Iii h . · . CNRA 15 02 feet pasa from the corner past !on~ screened shot wh1ch caught Hockey League held an import·

.' Pete Mackey lOO, A at r 5 opCLB ···· · 15·01 Sawchuk .. Laforge beat Worsley the Hawk netmlnder unaware. ant meeting over the ·weekend · · a one,. ,.. "" ' · on a hard 16 • footer on a setup The lime was 1:03.

.R, Best, Fetid .... .... .... 13.82 by Ullman, , , Keon took 8 perfect pass at and electd a new slate of offi· P, De~tsch, Star "" "" .... 13·80 An assist for Gordie Howe on the goal mouth from George cers. E. Butler, CLB ........ 13.80 .....:..::::...::=:.::..:~...:·~~-----~---:----- John Neary was elected as

K U R. GuJliver, CNRA .... · .. :. 13.69 ' . d president, John Kavanagh to the t oway doubles 4 and F. Skiffington, REWA .. 13.45 p · w R seat of secretary ahd Ray Cole

Tltzard, 100, Guards. p, Warebain, CNRA · ... , 13.42 ·. ee· ee ·oun up as treasurer . double 5,' Jim, IIIGHEST THREE DARTS.. Following this meeting the

• 100. Holy Cross • ' t' h ld th · Late Ga , C N ; d E. Moak\er, Can, Lcglim 11111 new execu we e •ano er one me. · .R.A. 3, Fell · HJGHEST 'SINGLE LEG • With Brian Murphy scoring the first and 7.50 or lhe sec· with them deciding on a three

B ·o.· War•ham,. CNRA . .',. · 481 the '"ing "oalat the 0.52 mark. ond were both unmisted. team circuit, Rangers, West · enny Morgan doubl• 1, Max g "J • d b th l · i

g HIGimST THREE LEGS . ot the · aecond ·and setting up Bob Parsons aeore o M nes and St, Kev ns. Regia-double 4, 108, Dave F. Sklrflngtori, RSW k .... 1179 the winner two minutes later Lancaster goals. as they edged tratlon for the league wlll take

double 1, 100, Chas. MOST GAMES FINISHED Hood came up with a 2-1 vlc·. No~th Stars 2·1 In the final place on Wednesday night with ~&DINEl!DAC.N.R.A. Lou Killloway, Guards .... 11 tory over Vl!lll'\llrcl ln the first game : o~ the day. His first the schedule allio being drawn

January loth. HIGH scortE LAST WEEK gamtl' ot PeeWee hoekey l'layed came at the ten minute mark up: . Game: K, of C. 3; !J, Moakler, Can. Legion 942 at the.Stadium Saturday morn~ of the first but Bob Amminson In the British Consol Curling

o·~· · · ·. · ·::'. . loll. Henry Stapleton gave the tied l.t four· minutes later. Par. tournam.ent here on the Island del~, double 8,. Jim · , . SCREOULE FOR WEEK . ' losers the lead at tho 4.07 mark sons scored he winner at the defending champ Mike Stoyle~

af c. J.o~ les 16, 18, 1001 Mondiy, Jainiari'·l&: · · of. the flnt p,erlod. Murphy~~~~ 10.02. of the· second on ·a pass won his first two games over Late Gam ~nne 107, R!W.A. ' ''U~CNBA vi.'CLB;. . up Edmond Hand for .the wm· from ~ob ·AnUe. . the weekend by defeating Wally

1. e. C.L.B, 2, St. . 9,oo:-;:.st. 'Bon's·"i. K. of c. ner and Walt:Butt also. drew an ·The followi?ll is a schedule Neal and Lar Hurley, In the Lafosse d bl 1· T d Toetday, January 18: · ,lllllt oli Hand's goal, · , for this weeks games:. other .games, Tom Browne beat

doubt ou e • e. Ull'-(:an. teilon VI. H, Croll. . Dave Rowe led Troopers to . TUESDAY Lar Hurley and· tben lost to C.L.B p: B, ~d Buller · 9.00-FCS· VII ·Feild. . . · I' 4-1 vl.ctory in. the 1econd 4.15-Liberators VI. Spitfires Wally Neal. Jim Archibald beat

4, St .. Bon•te 0 Mara dou· Wednnday,· JallUary: n: '. : aame with two'.soala, Dave Tay; 4.55-Troopet:t vs. Black Watch Tom Browne In the ~lnal 'niiJBsnAY 1' . : . . 7.80-Sl.Pat'a vs: REWA.· , lodrom' Mike Moa~ler at 2.10 . , TIIURSDAY. game. l:ar!y Kline~ January ,11th •.... iJ,oo.-;..star'.va, CLB, ·. :: · · · of~· first, and Moak~e! f~orri 1.15-Cansos. vs. Jets ', CURLING'. STANGDPINWGS L

• F.C.S. 2, Can. 'thuracta.Y. J*nuar:r• 11:, · Gary Tobin, at 11:03. gave Troop~ 4.55-Gunners vs. Signallers ~.Mc:Nunara · .7.30-,-Guarda ·v1, st. :Boh'a · · .era ,a-2-D, lead,·.Dave .Kearse)',. 5.3G-Yo~k vs. Magnificent Wally 'l~rowne ........ 4 :i 1

d double 18, 9.00-,-;CNRA vi,"K, .of c. acor~d. the Ione:Sapper 'goa! ,at . SATURDAY · Jim Archibald ...... ;, 4 3 1 114 F~u~te 18, Wally Frlday,·January•19i · .. ": ,the 7.00 minute mark of the 8.01)-York vs. Vanguard Tom Browne ........ 3 · 2 1 1a,' u.' · Jim Green ')71::Can, Legion vs. Feild. first nn a pass from Ed Cfll·. 8.40-Gunn~ra v~. Infantry Mike Stoyle~ ........ 4 ·. 2 2

. Moakler 185, '9, . Ho~ . CrOll ·VI. ·REW f.~· ~lrl!; ·ao~e·1 .aoaJ1· at ·n.oo of 0.2~Hurrlcanes vs. ~orth Star Lar Hurley ............ e o 5

'\ .. . .·. . ·-. '· '. \ :' I

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.. ·· .:. __ ,_,._ ....... , ;.,. __ ._._·-.:·---~ __ ... !...-~~~~:a'?.r-~_...:.il~~~o·s.··-~·- -.~ -~,~·~·- ~-· ~ ... ·," ·;.· . ·- .. , .

Americans of the American dcfenceman Marcel Pronovost Hockey League to replar.e in· and flicking the puck in the net

with Just 15 seconds remaining jured Dick Duff, scored the before Sawchuk could move. in the opening period. Bucyk got tying goal. Bob Pulford got the Kozack tied it 3·3 at 6:46 of it with a backhander after tak- other Leaf goal. the third period on a high 25· ing passes from Eddie Westfall and Wayn Connelly GETS TWO ASSISTS foot shot on a pass play with

Gilles Trcemblay's iGth goal of 1 Carl Brewer, a defence~an George Ar~s~ron~ ~nd Dave the season gave the Hahs a 3.1 who put on so:ne great rushm,g Keon. Ham~ wmmng goal, margin at 1:59 of the second. shows, go_t, aSSists on Pulford s fr?m close m after another. He beat . Head to a loose puck and Hams goals. . stl~khandl!ng show, came at after a deflected shot had !ric· Bru_ce MacGregor, Ale~ Del· 18.18. kled to the side of the net and vecchto a?d Len Lund_e scored ------promptly banged it home. for Detrmt. ( I b• (I b

Head wound up with 25 saves Leafs lea':"ed Saturday that Q urn Jan U in the Boston nets while Jac- Duff, hurt Jn a game here ques Plante stopped 29 for Can- again Boston Wednesday night, DartS adiens. will be sidelined for a month.

He has a fractured left. ankle. TO-NiGHT'S GAMES

P t • It was the second time Har· rae ICeS. ris, a slick suckhandler who took injured Red Kelly's spot between wingers Frank Mahov·

7.3G-:Maroons vs Royals Wings vs Indians Leafs vs Jays .

8.30-Red Sox vs Giants Hawks vs Bruins Rangers vs Hurricanes

9.30-Rovers vs Canadiens ·

TONIGHT: 6.15·8.15-Feildians

WEDNESDAY: 6.15-7.3G-Junior All·Star

Pr~ctice,

Caribou Open Darts League There will be a meeting to·

night at the Club Rooms at 7.30 p.m. sharp. All delegates are requested to be present. Games wlll be r.Jayed as scheduled to· night:

7.45-S.T. Co. vs: Ayres 0.00-Mental Hospital vs.UNF

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lich and Bob Nevin, produced a big effort in a substitute role Dec 2 against Chicago Black Hawks he took over for Dave Kcon nnd fired three goals in a 6·4 Toronto victory.

Wings, taking advantage of a lagging Toronto performance, Io9kcd in the fir;t period to be sure victors. But Leafs started rolling fast in the second per­iod, maintaining the pace until the end of the game, and it was only the work of Detroit goaltender Terry Sawchuk that kept the score down.

STAflTS TilE SHOW · :\!acGregor set the Wings in

motion at 9:53 of the first per· iod. His 30-foot shot from a difficult angle bounced in off Toronto . goalte.nder Johnny

Bisons vs Dodgers ·

Basketball ~lemorial will put their two

game unbeaten string on the line tonight when they travel to Bishops gym for • a game against Fcildians starting at 7.30. . .

The Double Blues hal'r. a 1-1· loss record and a win tonight will move them into a second place tic with Holy Cross and Memorial while a win by l\IUN will move them into a first place tie with St. Pat's.

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IN A SPIN OYER MONEY? •.

Talk It over with a Niagara Loan Advisor. It'll hlsjob 'to help you! Niagara lo~ns are made up to $2,500- and ara usually eomplet~d in lei!S than a day. Remember you will always be welcome at Niagara.

NIAGARA FINANCE COMPANY LIMITED Largest AII·Canadlan Consumer Loan Company

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THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. MONDAY, JANUARY 15, ~962

. l \ OUR BOARD HOUSE ...

ConCeption Bay News ' , -. ,. it~ :

fi:r. Grace Kiwanis Club Historical ·Notes On~ THE STORY: Dennis Camp· be all that bad. Say hello to Mr.

bell, an Englishman on a Campbell. He's new in town. holiday In Spain, rents a villa Dennis, my friend Simon." called The Snail believing . "Delighted," Dennis said. He that The ~farquesa, a Spanish rose and shook hands formally.

. . ' . ; HR. GRACE-The Hr. Grace , ·

ki~anls resumed their meet- Th · G I d F" •1 \ngs on Monday evening, Janu· • e ar an ami y ary 8th, at Pike's' Hotel with l · · · ~csldent Bernard Foley In . ) _ the chair. , HARBOUR GRACE-The Col· at Triton, ami when rcprc· l The· meeting dealt chiefly lowing arllclcs arc taken fi:QEI scntatlve government was with plans for the coming historical notes of the Garland granted to Newfoundland, he months and these Include a family In Newfoundland and was elech:d as first mcmbct· for rralent Show, which' will likely given to the ))ally News by one Trinitl' District and became ~e held in February. who felt that they might be of first speaker of the first Legis : "On Monda)', January 15th; interest to some of our readers. laturc. Before the completion the officers for the New Year Wllliam charles st. John wh(i of the session, he left for En~­ll'lll be installed by -Lieutenant was the editor of the Harbour land and died nt Stowe Park, Governor, Jos. Pike of Car- Grace weekly Herald, was held Wisbornc, on June 12th, 1875, ~oncar. as an authority on Newfound· at the age or 85 years. · land history. 'C' d p t He was the grandson of o!rl , a r 3 r Y Magistrate Charles 'Garland,

·ser•"es Resumes who at his own expense defend· ( cd Carbonear Island against the

R.C.S.G.C. s~1lthic:·.

lady who lives nearby, will . \ "' .. '

build a road soon, Now )lc Simon-or Simple Simon as learns that no road Is to be he'd been' dubbed without built and there Is no access strain to anyone's wit or origin· to The Snail, ality-was wearing his custom·

• • •· ary costume whicH consisted of CHAPTER Ill thong sandals; a loose, ankle·

"I see. It 'is a joke. On mr. length, terry-cloth robe; and a Forgive me for not howling fral'cd bull-fighter's cape slung with mirth,'' Dennis said sour- Ol'~r his' left shoulder. Sim~·n ly. was small and _PlUIP,P· . with .a

"You're out 17,00J pcsmas as' wispy gray ha1r Circltng -his things stand. Will that ru:n pink slmll. . , your trip?" "Pc:·ha~s you Will_ he!~ .m.e,

"No. 1 cnn manage," Simon said to Dcnms, chng1~g "Then why not make thr I to his hand and stari!l~ at lt1m

best of a bad bargain? Gt•l .out with hope and exci\_cment. of the Snail and find some· "would you help m,e w1th m)' thing else You might salva~r dove count?" · , .

, ··HR. GRACE-The weekly French in 1762, and received ,·Auction Forty-Five ::ames under the thanks uf the British Goo,:· tlu! auspices of the new Elc- ernmcnt ror the same. Olil·er

•ltlcntary School Committee st. John, from Tipperary, who which were not held during the could trace his· descent from holida\' season, resumed em Oli1•er Cromwell had married Wednesday c\·cning at tqc au- the oldest daughter of Charles ditorium of the Central Hi~h Garland, the chief magistrate. School and will continue each The Garland family took ~

' ~orne o( !'OUr money on a ~ub- Dennis assumed a defcnsi','C HR. GRACE-Wccklv par 1tcl Who knows? But don't position, I noticed, the table Add I t t.

adcs resumed . for fl.C.?·~· sp,;il your 'Whole holiday nvcr hctlrccn himself and Simon, I . $ tO nS an Bcothic on FrHlay evc~mg, lhis miserable road." at.ld a foot braced to .P~opt:ll f d L" .)anuary 5th, p~radcs ronhnuc "Don't you sec, if 1 clear out h_u~sel~ back to a standm". po- 00 1nes to be held at Coughlan Hall. nmlcr these circumstancc3, the sillon 1C that seemed cxpcdiCnt.

~'cdncsclay commencing at tcadin:: part in the early his· 9:30 p.m. torv of Newfoundland and can

trip's spoiled in any case'! I've "You'd better explain, Sim· W"th'n a year of his derclop· , B~ck to School·· been m~d.~ a foo.l of, that's the ion," . I said., "Mr. Campbell's men~ 0~ "instant" mashed_ pot_a· :

. . llllh of tl. Dcnms stare_!~ bleak· I nc;,v ft1 to:vn. . . toes a 34-ycar-old scienltst m i IIR GflACE - Pup!ls of IJy at the sea. "Anywhere I'd I There ~~.to. be a ~lrarle •n ' the Canada Department of A~ri· I

<chools in this area went back ~0 in Mirimar I'd be known as I our \'tllagc, Simon satd ~cntly. 1 It • 1 1 proccsst"nd tal>ora- 1

• • u 1 1 1 1 1 cu ure s om . h ' I to thc1r desks on Monday .morn- the s11ly Englishman who ~ot 1 The coves 1ave con~c o I 1c ' tor, at Ottawa has adapted the 1 ing artcr their Jon:: Chmtmas into such hilarious difficulties 1 statu~ of Santa Eulalia to an-

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t fl'sl! clleesc ! NEWFOUNDLAND'S FRIENOL Y THEATR~ ;·.Due to un£al'orable weather be 'traced back as far as Whit· aonditions, the attendance was bourne's book of 1671 Surro­n'ot as good as usual this week. gate Charles Garland pitrchnscd P.rlies went to·Mr. and Mrs. H. his Harbour Grace property, 150 T. 'Parmiter. yards from the sea front on

which he had four houses, three :' ·; E t gardens· and one meadow from

· th · 1 I 't" mvcn wn o mea . . , , vacation to commence. d' e;r over the Snail. Jolly, ch?" nouncc 1. · D . 'd turnip and pumpkin. Dr. E. A. 1 second term. Reports tn 1ca c "People won'~ make that "I sec,' enn1s sat ncl'vous· M (E I) A ibcr"s hcnd or

that most class rooms. had full much of it." I said. "You're II)'. "Doves, eh?" ;h· P;ant ~~scar~h· Institute ' ' nllendances for the fmt tJmc too scnsitil'c." "I'm so glad you under· ~

1. h uc cosfttllv pro ,

... d b . . · · h d d umt w uc was s c , • -1

for well over a mon"''• an c· "I can't JUst run up a· wlute stand," Simon s1g e an 1

d th · I" c f pre-cooked NOW PLAYING :, - ngagemen Nicholas Fioll, a merchant of

HR. GRACE-1\!r. and Mrs J,crscy for Fifty Pounds In 1771. Patrick O'Brien announce the · The Garland family has long engagement of their youngest. been residents of · Harbour daughter, Agnes Cecilia to Law-/ Grace and are mentioned In the renee James, youngest son of census of 1675, taken by Ad· Mr. and lllrs. William 'Hunt. mira! Sir .lohh Berry. This ceo­The engagement was announe· ~us is notcworthv because the cd on Drlcember 24th. names or all people were listed

( and not merely enumerated,

B • th John Earle, who so gallantly ' . lr defondcd Little Bell Island w~s

HR. GRACE-A daughter was 1 married to a sister or Ma~i~· rtccntly born to Mr. and Mrs. Irate George Garland. The Gar· ~eichert, Mass.. U.S.A. Mrs. lands\vcrc relatives of th"c "firms Teichert is the former Helen, in Trinity and Poole carrying dau~hter of Mr. and Mrs. P. on on'e of·the largest busin-esses O'Brien, Harbour Grace. ' in Newfoundland. Charles· Davis li, Garland who suc.cecdcd his ~-· ew Year's father as lllagistratc or Concep-N lion Bay became' more famous

S • 1 K f C as •the ·defender of· Carbancar OCia • 0 • Island in 1762 as already·stah!d,

.- liR. GRACE-On New Year's In 1889, when · Sir Heney Eve, members of Dalton Coun· Blake was Governor of New­ell Knights of Columbus gather· foundland, Lady Blake got 'in ed at . the auditorium of St. touch with the Garland family Francis High School for a pleas· at Harbour Grace saying that ant social evening. Music for she was a relative and knew dancing was furnished by the their connections from family Silver Bells Orchestra and a traditions in Devonshire. dainty lunch was served by the Rev. Laurence Coughlan In Ladles Committee. 1765 took "charge of the first

.Civil Servants 1'Get Together"

·HR. GRACE-On T.uesday evening, January 9th, civil ser· vanta of the Federal Building at Harbour Grace with their wives held a dinner at Fbng's Restaurant at Carbonear. Fol­lowing dinner a gatne of cards was enjoyed. It is planned to ·make these socials an annual affair.

BRIGUS

church in Conception Bay, St Paul's Church of England, just erected.

Charles Garland, the magis­trate, presented the land on which the church 'was ·built as a free'" gift. It was a corner taken from the Garland proper­ty which bounded 'the church property on the north east and south and the bu lldlng faced what was known In 1800 as the Church Path, The magistrate gal'c this land for the rcllgious welfare of the people and ts· tabllshcd harbour landmar~s lor the welfare or the sailors. Henry Garland, deputy sheriff

measles and n!umps which were tween mv legs. Please t~ke mr take such a long t1me to sec ms an . .1

' t cause or, the, cpide'!lics or Cl~g, slink off with m~· tail be· closed his eyes. "S~me people ~ u~c t ~~od~n ~oesn't know I prevalent for some time hut to the ~larquesa. l'm prc:;um- and believe. Every morning t!!r where htt '~1 1 5 ~~d th t liccn­whlch now appear to be on the ing she's a reasonable sort o/ doves fly in from the moun- He_ ash een ~ t a f the ' wane: woman" tains to attend Santa E!Jialia. ces for t e manu ac ure o 1

· k '11 ' · h 1 t first discovery-now known as ll'hc next holida.1• brea WI "Yes \'Ott can presume tltaf" Thev Hutter about er s a uc · be at Enstcr followin:: term ex· I ~aid ' • hy the hundreds, a sign of till' potato crystals - have Dc~n aminations which will probahlv ,;Please, old man. You're mv coming miracle." taken out by half a d_ozen lead· ~ive indication as -to the stand· last hope." • "Yes, of course," Denr.is ing food processors m CaMda ing of the studC11ts regarding I didn't want to get 1·nvolvcd, said and flashed me a lo~k and abroad. The new products !

' · "J I d th mws· ' their year's work, · but his pleading eyes made me of appeal. are stm_I ar Y ma e, e · : uncomfortable. "The thing is, Simon smiled at him. "Yon lure bemg removed_ b~ steam- ' Dennis, I'm-" • 1 don't really believe me, do I heate~ drums, and stm1larly rc·

d I'm not sure how I intended you?" I constituted, by addmg mtlk _or Annual· Para e to finish that sentence but I "But yes, or course. J;lovcs water. The rood proccssm~: BAY nOBERTS- Member~

of Dashing Schomberg L.O.A No. 45 Coley's Point. held their annual ·parade on New Year's Day. With members· of visitin"g lodges, Dashing Schamber~ Band, Shearstown L.O.A. Band, the parade headed· by the· tra­ditional.'KingJVilliam moved off from the lodge room at ap­proximately i 1 a.m., paraded up Coley's Point, South, where old members were visited with music selections played to each,

ncl"er had the chance bccansc and a 11 that, it seems hke an laboratory has now develoPed Simple Simon appeared at that ~ir-tight case." the following instant-cool\d I

moment, sweepi~g. onto tlje te;· I ~ • • _ foods; mashed potato_c;'· fish- ; race from the hvmg room, lm , ''They fly m by the hundred, potato, beef-potato, polk-potato, . loose robe flapping alioitt his 1 every morning, braving t~e lamb-potato, clucken-potato , angles, and an expression or I noise and. confusion of the VI!· cheese-potato, turmp and pump- ; idiotic dismay shadowing his -!age, the clicking uf touris~s· kin. . . . . - 1

normally pe~ceful little "face. cameras, the roar of. traffic. ;t'hese ltghtwetght pr_e.cooked : "John, !'11_1 in terrible trou- 1 They fly, to Santa Eu~aha so ~c meals can be stockpiled. for i

ble,'' he said, his· voice rising may see and believe m the m1r· emergency use, or kept mdc-1 In a thin wail. "The dove count acle." Suddenly Simon's fare finitely in the kitchen cupboard. mav be lost forever." · crumpled in anguish. "But we They can be converted into a ' , ,;Now, now,'' I said. "It can't must count them. Thc;e must hot meal in a few minutes or,

- be a record. To convmce the if necessary eaten dry without faithless. But it's so difficult any other p;eparation. The new to find people who will sit 111 products arc, therefore, expect- I the square and count them. ed to be of advantage to the This morn!ng ~oggy O'N.eill ordinary consumer, to institu­and his fr1end Sigmund Fned· tions and to countries interested man promised they would re· in setting up food banks.

out Barneed road to Cotititry ~~ t" f road, then down Coley's Point ~; ec IOn 0 North Side to return to their Off" lodge wliere they dispersed for ICers dinner. BAY ROBERTS-The annual

·After dinner members reas- meeting and election of offi­scmbled ·at the lodge where cers of Dashing Schomberg L. Bro. John Norman, Grand Mas- O.A: No. 45 Coley's Point,' was ter of the Grand Orange Lodge held in the Lodge on Monday, of Newfoundland; Bro. W. R. January 5th. The following Dawe, Past Deputy Grand Or· officers were elected. ange Lodge of Newfoundland: W.M. Cyril Mercer; D.lll. Bro. Howard Osborne, Upper George Roach; Chaplain, Clar· Island Cove; Bro. Bernard R\ts- ence Greenland, P.M.; Record­sell, Bonavista~ Bro. "Jesse lng Secretary Samuel Dawe; D. Dawe, Port de Grnve; P.B. Bro. of C. Clayton Russell; Financial Allen Dawe, Coley's Point; Bro. Secretary Herbert· Russell; James Holmes, Shearstown; Treasurer John J. French, P.M.; Bro. George Wilson, Clarke's 1st Lecturer Chester Badcock; Beach, were assembled on the 2nd Lecturer Harris Gifford. dias, each gave ·a very inter- Jr.; Sr. Committeeman Clarence esting address. This was follow- Dal~; Tyler Murray Thompson; ed by A delicious supper and a Scnllnci Walter Mercer, Sr., band concert with a visit from- Committee Albert Greenland, Santa, P.~L; .Jacob French; Cecil

port for dove duty at 11 It has been established that o'clock. Do you know them, by there is virtually no loss of the the way?" nutritional value of the food in

"I believe I've met t~e~." the processsing-other than the "They ar~. all warm, spmtual normal toss through any form I

young men. . , of cooking. But he says that 1! 1

. "Yes-yes, Indeed. . ·is up to the commercial food , "B~t they'~e b?lh l1l thiS firm~ to evaluate the selling 1

mornmg. Ol~ve ~11, they to!~ quality of the products and they ; me. They can~- take the count. will decid~ . such matters as ,

I had seen S1g and Z~ggy the · - g ddilivcs and patkag- ' night before, awash With cog- ~plcm • a I

nac. "Would you help me, please,

Mr. Campbell?" Simon touched my arm. "I know John will. The two of you can preserve the record of the coming miracle." .

mg. Fish-the species used were

the saltwater hake, cod and pollock and the freshwater ' whitefish. Only fillets arc used. :

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) CAl\iliNF'LI\S ":~.JlJGl tliD~H!m ll\ltl DIH Glm '" SHIRLEl JON£! • fl.lHt SIHllil JOEY !II~Dr ~

MlUffiC! CHlVlli[R-!IN~ C,.O~~~ f. !RNI[ IOVICS • P[l[R UWfCr.D IIIC~,m tllli.N. RICHlf.D CIJHTE JIHH l!ICH • Jltll!MM~ 10!11 DI~H • Sl~Ml Dl\1S Jr. CI!IR ROM!RO OON!I 1[[0 ~Mill DDRllln ·lSI ZSI CAlOR DU!I[ UlNDlDS • !DWI!D t ~~Itt

Also- 1. f-TO-THE-Wl\l!TE 1\E\\"S-

TIMES OF SHOWS

ONE EVENING SHOW DAILY STARTING AT 7.45

MATINEE 1 P.M.

NEXT AnRACTION GARY COOPEH - DEBOHAH :KEHR in "THE NAKED EDGE" - SUSPE\SE -TIIHILLS - ACTION.

Miss Margie Seufert, Brisus, of Newfoundland for several of the Mill in Brigus ohtained years· died at Harbour Grace her Canadian citizenship on on .June 3rd, 1845, at the age Thursday, January 11th. With or 73 )'cars. Gaden c. Garland, Un"lted· Churc. h her was Mrs. Harry Sheppard for twenty years sheriff of the of Clark's Beach. Both ·young ·Northern District of Newfound­

. women came from Austria, Jlliss land died at Harbour Grace on ·Seufert from Vienna and Mrs. April 3rd, 1868, at the age of Sheppard from a small town 61 years. Another ~arland ear:

Greenland; Stanley Snow; Lewis Roach. Auditors Chester Par· ~ons; Lewis Roach.

(To Be Continued)

These are cooked and com­minuted-that is finely ground -in order to incorporate the pin bones into the puree which .

h , I i~ passed through a mes , mtx- 1

NOW PLAYING

1 ncar Attnang, Puchein. • ricd on an extensive business _., Miss Seufert is designer and production supervisor at the . greatly appreciated,

·Knitting Mlll, Brlgus. The Lions Club were kindly

proferred the new citizens a dinner at the Nfld. Hotel-a friendly gesture which was

A large air raid siren Is be· ing installed back of the U.C. Manse on. the· grounds of the old Academy.

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School Opens · BAY ROBERTS-The Un'itcd

Church· Sc)jool Coley's Point re· opened after Christmas holi· days, Monday, January 8th. It was ·a new and happy ex· perlenee for pupils and teach· ers. It marked the ending or an old era in the olu school and the beginlng of a new one In a

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new modern seven room school. The pupils paraded on Mon­

day morning from the old school to the new Tuesday morn­ing a formal opening took the form of a worship assembly, conducted by Rev. J. B. Rey­nolds.

The official opening will be held later in the spring,

the greatest gift of all

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ed with mashed potatoes and I , . dried in 20 seconds. The pin / bones cannot be removed from ~ the fillet, by practical m~ans, ; but their presence in commmut- 'I

ed form, adds to the calcium content of the mix. i

The Vitamin. Craze

OTTAWA <CPl-Vitamins are , being added to an increasing ' number of foods sold in Can- · , ada merely as a sales gimmick, says a federal health o!ficial.

"The only consolation in this situatioP is that people consum- i ing these vitamins are suffering no harm to their health," says Dr. A. C. Morrell, head or the health department's rood and drug directorate.

"Despite the restrictions that arc put on the labelling and i

claims for \'itamin products, there is an increasing number

I. or foods ~ppc~ring on the mar­ket with added vitamins in' which the \'ilamins serve no 1

other purpose than as a sales gimmick," · I

Dr. Morrell's remarks nre j

contained in an article in . the official Canada Year Book, pub­lished late in 1961, dealing with federal rood and drug legisla· tion in Canada,

He says regulations stipulate that products having more than a given level of vitamin con­·tent must be labelled "fur thcr­npcutie use only" and ·may not be advertised to the public. .

The directorate was also con· eerned with the safety of foods as affected by ·increasing 11se cir chemical additives. Principles on which it based its adminis· trative policy arc that use of .the additive must . contribute something of value to the con· sumer,: the amounts used must)

'"THE BEST BLOCKBUSTER OF THE ... RIPS THE

BOSLEY CROWTHER, NEI'I YOlK ,

Also·- "UP-TO-THE-.MINUTE NEWS"

TIMES OF SHOW~ ' ONE EVENING SHOW. DAILY

STARTING AT 7.30. MATINEE...:...l P.M.

ADMISSION PRICES FOR THIS ENGAGEMENT . ,

Eve~Iing-:-Aclults-$1.:,00 ......... .' ... Ch~ldren~ Mahnees-Adults-7oc. .. ... :, ....... Children .

· NEXT ATTRACTION be well below the level at' which even slightly .harmful ef· re~ts can he observed: there J?lUS~ be no deception or fraud j as a result of use of the sub-. stance. -

"WORLD BY NIGHT" ,;_ EXCiTEMENT DRAMA .:.._ ROMANCE - Also PALACE"..., ADVENTUEE - MUSIC -

;CITEMENT. . . I

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January

'll-lil~n Cn and Weat

Bill Allen ; IIJ-.-,.1\Io:mh, ~ Meditat

of Sport

•a-:.·Tr~tvPT Guide Allen ~

of Sport (Local) Tower, T

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Page 9: rus 1ze.n a - Memorial University DAIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19620115.… · chomping comedian Ernie Kov· o t h 'e r innovations included · firing

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~PRESENTS MRIE SAINT :R LAWFO~D IOHN.DEREK

~. .All:. 1CUS E NEWS"

' DAILY ).

R TJIIS

'ION.

pAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, JANUARY 15, ·1962

FOR FUEL ·& . STOVE Olt DELIVERIES

Dial 3001 to. 3005 CONCEPTION BAY SOUTH AREA - DL1L

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TOPSAIL EXCHANGE - 72101

THE GREAT EASTERN OIL ·CO. LTD.

Radio And TV Progr~mmes • JACOBY ON BRIDGE

:\CII'S ol the ~lorning :\CI\'s and Weather

\5-.'I\U>n:•• Clock iiJJ-·""'""'" Dcl'otiins

to the Waltz

!Jo-,\nnounccr• Choice Broadcast

Dar Serenade Bulletin

Xcws and Trans )Jatinec 1

(Weather Report) 8.03-Ncws (National) 8.08-Thc Bill Allen Show 8.15-Sports Capsule 8.25-Ncws 8.30~Hit Tunc of the Day 8.35-World of Sport . 8.40-Thc Bill Allen. Show 8.55-Ncws 8.30-Hit Tune of the Day 8.35-\\'orld of Stlort 8,40-Thc Bill Allen Show 8.55-Ncws 9.00-J\Iorning Meditation 9.03-Thc Bill Allen Show 9.30-News Headlines 9.3'1-Thc Bill Allen Show

10.00-News 10.05-Siork Club 10.06-'l'he George Cawdry

Show 10.30-News Headlines .10.31-Gcorgc Cawdry Show 10.55-News 11.00-Georgc Cnwdry Show 11.30-Ncws Headlines 11.31-Gcorge Cawdry Show 11:55-!\ews P.M. 12.00-Gcorgc Cawdry Show 12.35-Gcorgc Cawdry Show 12.45-Fishcrmcn's Forecast 12.55-Ncws 1.00-Gcorge Cawdry Show 1.15-World of Sport 1.30-News (Local Summary) 1.45-Gcorgc Cawdry Show 2.00-i'icws llcaulincs 2.01-Thc Sage Brush Sam

Show 2.30-News Headlines 2.31-Sage Brush Sam Show 2.55-News 3.00-Ilob Cole Show 3.30-Ncws Headlines 3.31-Bob Cole Show 3.55-News' 4.00-Bob Cole Show

~U-i;uppcr Guest i .4.~0-News llcadllncs :\cws and Weather 4.31-Bob Cole Show

.l<-1.1:nt ~hlsic 4.55-News Today 5.00~Supper Serenade

.u-11ov1o Bulletin 5.30-News llendlines :.JhParliiam1mtary Report 5.31-~t.apper Serenade 1111-.Kovinc Reporter 5.45-l'lshcrman's For·rc·ast

Program 5.55-News '»-wea·thor for Mariners 6.00-Bulletin, ~oard !~'""""""' Farm Forum 6.10-~lovte Crmdc

Orchestra 6.15-~ports He~nrt lll.l-·Hancoclk• Half Hour 6.25-Trnvel Gtl!de 100-llnil,-·•1 r<ih· of the A:r . 6.30-Early Evcnmg News

Xatiunal News and I Roundutl Repeat II.M. The Queen ' 7.00-Sage Brush Sam Show lnd Prime Minister 7.30-News Headlines

off-0 Canada 7.31-Sage Brush Sam The Queen 7.55-News

VOCM

O.OO""'Crcam of the Crop 8.30-N cws Headlines 8.31-Cream of the Crop 0.55-News 9.31-Crcam of the Crop 9.55-News

On ·~··'"'"' and W cather

· Allen Sho\\' , . ..._llonlin• Meditation '·~·World of Sport

10.00-Night Show 10.30-News Headlines 10.31-Night Show 11.00-Torbny Weather Report 11.02-Big Top Ten 11.30-News Headlines 11.31-Night Show 11.55-News

,..,_,Ira•:.\ Guide Allen Show

of Sport (Local)

·~·m:.~>· Tower, Torbay

A.M. 12.00-Night Show 12.30-News Headline~ 12.31-Night Show 12.55-News SummarY, Weather

Report and Time · 1.05-Sign Off

Anawer t~ Previous Puzzle

-42 Mouthward ~sAt this place ~4 Horso'a fait 46 E.ucntla being ~8 Foollsll feUIIW 110 Fruit drink

' I

CJON ~IONDAY, January 15th,

A.lll.

==· X> '

CONTRACT WORTII lUSK OF SET

6.30-'l'he Bob I:ewis Show I r----------, News, Sports and We:tth er Reports

9.05-~lusic for ll!illions

NORTH .t.QlOH3 ¥2

28

9.20-llit of the Day 9.30-Austin Willis :I

:I + JG2 o1o A 10 54

EAST .KJG .643

9.35-Weathcr Forecast , , WEST 9.40-Top Times Golden Hit.' i It AB52

10.00-News i na 1\linutu · ·I i • K 10 10.01-l\larlin's Corner ': + Q 9 3 + K 10 B 5

.Y,K83 10.15-What's Cookin I:. ... J n 7 z 10.30-National News s'OUTil (D) .9

¥AQJ987S tA74

10.35-Jcrry Wiggin's Housr wives Choice and News

11.00-Tiobin Hood Bulletin 11.15-The Right to Happinr.,; 1l.:JO-News 11.45-0rchid for Gisele 12.00-Bob Lewis Town and

Country, News and Weather

+Q6 North and South vulnerable

and 30 part score South West North East 1

':?. • Pass , 2 It Pass '3 • Pass Pass Pass

Opening lead-+ 2 1.05-Weather r'orccast : :z----.--.-.,. __ ,... -""·""-"'·""· -~ 1.15-Ncws 'I 1.35-Don .Jamieson's Editorial By OSWALD JACOIIY 1.40-Spo{ts , One of the basic principles 1.45-Art Baker's Notebook of expert dummy play is that 2.00-Ncws Highlights it is worth while to risl~ going 2.01-What's Cook in down an extra trick in order 2.03-.Jcrry Wiggin's Matinee to give yourself a chance to 3.00-!\ews Highlights make your contract. 3.01-.John Nolan's Western In the I,cnz system, the open·

,Jamboree ing bid of three of a suit was 4.00-News Highlights the strongest bid and the open· 4.05-.Tohn Nolan's Ranch ing bid of two merely a very

Party good hand. Hence, his opening 4.30-National News two heart bid. With no score, 4.33-.Tohn Nolan's Ranch I might well have passed that

Party bid, but ·we had 30 to our 5.00-Ncws Highlights credit and I responded two 5.01-Art Andrews' Dance spades whereupon he closed

Party the bidding at three hearts. 6.00-Ncws Headlines and Mrs. Culbertson opened the 8.30-National News deuce of 'clubs. Sidney played 0.00-News Highlights low and dummy and Ely won 9.01-Nfld. Soiree the trick with the king. 9.40-Salt Lake Choir This established Sidney's !145-News queen of clubs as a good trick,

10,00-Ncws Highaights but Sidney promptly threw it 10,01-N:Itional News away. 10.15-Pick of the Pops As it was when he got 10.15-Sports around to a further club play 10.55-Lel\ers and Me~s~gcs Sidney was able to finesse dum· 1 1.00-News Highlights my's ten nnd discard a losin;: 11.01-Paul llershon's ~lusic in diamond on the ace

the Night and News He still had to lo~c one tricl1 1.01-Sign Off. in each suit but the bid was

Weather 1mly three a~d he made it. A.o:J-National News Note that if Ely had held the 6.10-Sports Jack of clubs, 1\lr. Lcnz would 6.20-News. hal'e been down 6.30-Dave Jl!aunller's Club 93 ' 7.00-News Highlights 7.01-Dnl'e 1\launder's Club 93 7.30-News

· 8.00-Ncl~s In a Minute' 8.01-Cream of West Sing

Along 8.15-Best from the West

c,JON-fV. · 1\IONDAY, January 15tll,

1Q.45-Pastor~s Study . 10.50-Women's News 11.00-Carloons 11.05-Romper Room 12.00-J,oeal and National News

·Summary' 12.15-Sign Off 2.00-0n Susannah 2.30-Chez Helene 2.45-Nursery School Time ·3,00-The Verdict Is Yours 3.55-Cross Section 4.00-0pen llousc 4.30-Cannonball 5.00-Frlendly Giant 5.15~Sing Ring Around

. 5.30-Itazzle Dazzle 6.00-Caplain Jack with Pop.

eye Cartoon 6.20-Tiie World of Sport 6.30-News Cavalcade 6.50-Polnt of View

· '7.00-Bachelor Father 7.30-Grnnt! .Jury . .r 8.~0-John Nesbitt's Passing

Parade 8.15-Natlonal News. ' 8.30-Father Knows Best. D.OO-Don Messer's Show 9.30-Danny Thonlas. Show

10.00-Live a·Borrowed Life 10.30-Bob Cummings Show 11.00-Fcstlval 12.30-Local News, Sport~ and

'V.eati1er 12.45-Pastor's Study 12.50-Slgn Off

CARD SENS£ Q-The bidding has been:

West North East South 1 "' Double Pass 1 • Pass Pass • 2"' ?

You, South, hold: . ,f!Q654 ¥43.2 tAJ73 ol'o61i

What do yQU do? · A-Bid two diamond~. Your

hand Is worth a .second bid purely for competitive purposes.

TODA Y'S QUESTION West bids three clubs; your

partner three diamonds and East four clubs. What do you ' do now? ·

Answer Tomorrow

--------------~----• BARBS. I

By HAL COC.:URAN

When a newly married girl gets a roof over her head she wants to raise it once in· a while.

• • • Some people have no licens~

to hunt even though they have bought one,

• • •

A doctor says most people weigh more In the winter than in the summer. Could It be from heavy colds? ,

·• .. ·You're entitled to your own

opinions and sometim'es it's better to keep them,

the greatest . gift of cdl .'

.PnTRf'TT J ,A'S PCYP f .I'-·----;----· I :

'

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By NADINE

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Page 10: rus 1ze.n a - Memorial University DAIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19620115.… · chomping comedian Ernie Kov· o t h 'e r innovations included · firing

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World-Famous Mining Map

mining industry in one hour CANADIAN TEA PARTY in 1911 th~re were a number. AUTO PARTS (Whole)

I than the average Canadian (The Printed Word) of manufacturers and other ______ ..;., __ ..:, learns In a· lifetime. It Is time in .Canada for a businessmen who found it feas· • ~.. .. Nfld;

In addition to. showing all. oF party claiming tthat there ible and perhaps. in the public 1:11JJ 1\nnature Canada's principal 'Producmg should be ~o taxation without interest that they be . in the • = · \Vorks

OTTAWN-,All you have to areas the map shows most of representation. The Canadian House of Commons. 1&1 'llll Kf.!' 38 do to get a free copy of the 11th , the areas considered ·to be business community Is taxed to But no so today. The man 1!. Jl}fUlwi na

5m1

rberel1ck

edition of what is probably the potential producers. It also pin· an excessive amount and yet it who ls taxed the heaviest is - !!!!!!!;!~ most sought-after mining map points, by the use of variou; bas no spokesman or other rep· represented the least. ' 1nllf. . Dial 8-71D1·2 ID the world-a map known by colored dots, the locations of resetitation in Parliament. Even · ~ tte simple title of "Canada- nearly 300 major mining and the dear old Senate puts part!· TilE WHALE --------PriJiclpal Mineral Areas-900. processing operations, from san affairs ahead of economic (Woodstock Sentinel-Review) 4•-la'to drop a line to the De· uranium 'to gas and oil, from r.er·~. "A whale can travel ·faster partmept of Mines and Techni· silver and gojd to. coal and Iron There was a time. when a than a horse;" says a zoologist.

ELECTRICAL APPLICANCES

cal Surveys, Ottawa. . · . ore. . manufacturer could run for Maybe so, but unless the race· In fact the Department has . · Furthermore, each of these Parliament and he elected. The track is unusually wet ,our ad·

so arranged matters that a post· I dots is related by color to ex· last one was perhaps the late vice would be that you bet on

HEAP & PARTNERS (NFLD.) Ltd.

.card with "900-A" written on it, 1 planatory text running down Karl Homuth, who represented the horse. • along with your name and add· · the entire left side of the map one of the most progressive and ~;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;,

Wiring Materi~ls, Wire and Cables. Motors, Starters,

Lamps. Switches, I,Jghting Fixtures, 'tc.

ress of course, is all that's re· and- along the bottom. The m· prosperous communities in Can· qulred. If you live outside Can· dividual mines, smelters, re· ada, the Kitchener area. Back ada you are asked to enclose fineries, blast furnaces and so 25 cents. on, are not only shown on the detail.

This world-renowned. map ts map but keyed in to a list of Every year 2500 copies of tM product of a unique cooper· the names of the companies 900·A are turned over to the alive undertaking begun m operating them. · Department of External Affairs 1947 by the Department's for distribution abroad to Calf. Mineral Resources Division, the ·Aside from its Intrinsic worth, ada's Trade. Commissioners. Geological Survey of Canada both to the mining Industry and This year, for the first time, a Branch and the Surveys and to those Interested In It, 900-A special French-language edition M~pping Branch, the two for· has proved to be an excellent has been added to the regular mer handling the complation, goodwill. ambassador. It IS English edition of 14,000. the latter the' actual printing. bringing many thousands of It is in an effort to stir up

HUSSEY'S HARDWARE

179 .NEW GOWER. STREE'I DIAL 8·3655

SPECIALS LIGHT FIXTURES

ALL TYPES

FINEST PRICES PAINTS

BENJAMIN .1\IOORE uiATCllLESS

GENERAL HARDWARE

nov27,2mths

WAREHOUSE: PUINCE'S ST. DIAL 8·5088

FIRE INSURANCE

CROSBIE .& CO., Ltd. Agents for

UNDERWRITERS AT LLOYDS.

LOW RATES DIAL 8·5031

INSURANCE AGENTS AND BROKERS

JOB BROTHER~ & COMPANY, Ltd.

Sinc·e then, from all patis of people in faraway< places in greater interest on the part uf the world, mining. corporations, contact with Canada for the Canadians generally in what is engineers ,educational insti!u· first time, a contact that almost going on in the fabulous min· lions, newspaper offices, maga· invariably results in further ing world of their own cotmtry zlnes publishers, libraries, stu· correspondence and requests that the Department of Mutes dents and laymen by the thou· i for information on other, rciat· and Technical Sttrveys offers sands have written In asking l ed subject~, _all of which the one free copy of this Inter· that their names be put on the Department IS pleased to get nationally-famous map to any

Water Stred DIAL 8-2Gsa - 8·4123

mailing· list. and goes to great lengths to resident of Canada who asks for =,;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;: answer In the fullest possible it. r - REG. T. MORGAN

It Is extremely unlikely, a spokesman for the Department says, that any mineral map any· where packs so much specific Information into such a small space. The map measures only 2 feet 9 inches by 3 feet, yet- • printed In 10 colors-it gives almost at a glahce a vivid pic· . lure not ,only of Canada's prin· c[pal mineral areas and geolo· g!cal divisions, but shows what is' going on and where, from tl(e sub-Arctic to the Inter· niltional Boundary, from the Mlantic coast to the Pacific.

There will be a Special Meeting of Terra Nova Council, No. 1452, Knights of Columbus, on Tuesday, Jan, 16th, at 8:30p.m.

. By order G.K. .'With 900-A spread over his

desk a citizen of Pakistan can learn more . about Canada's

A. :MALONEY, Recorder.

' :~ ..

·rENDERS FO.R FUEL

For One Year Beginning Feb.-1st, 1962

TENDERS ARE CALLED For the Supply of

(1) Approximately 650,000 g'allons of Bunker c to be deliver· . • I

ed to three Catholic Institutions in ~he City of St. John's.

(2) Approximately 785,300 gallons of Furnace Fuel Oil to be

delivered to Catholic Churche~, Schools,· and Institutions

- in the. City of St. John's and nearby Parishes.

List of Buildings and approximate qutantities required for each

may be had on appilcation at the Palace, St. John's.

· Sealed Jenders must be address-ed to Right Reverend Harold

.A. Summers, P.A.", V.G., The Palace, St. John's,. and received . I .

at th_e Palace before Noon on Monday, January 22nd, 1962.

L~west or any Tender not necessarily accepted.

. '

YO;~IIO~:HO· ... . ~ . . .

... ~· · ,· arid a. botti~io£

. •

There is A "BEST'' in • ·.-... " . e~erything._ .' . ·

'

GREAT EASTERN lNSURANCE Ltd. · OIL & IMPORT

CO., LTD. Radio, Television, Washers. Refrigerators, Deep Freezers

Electric Ranges. Floor Polishers.

Gramophones Public Address Systems

Tape Recorders

REP AIRS AND SERVICE 5 LNES

DIAL 8·3001 to 8r3005

WATER STREET jan28,1y

·Good Morning, Neighbor Please conoldcr ua .fuat that ••• 'fOUr friendt imd nelahbon. If- con help you In . onv _, with vout lnounnu problead, ju.d: call' ••

REG. T. MORGAN INSURANCE

, T•mplc BuUdlng, Duckworrh SC.

COSTS STAY DOWN

I

WHEN ARMCO .BUILDINGS\ GO UP

We can erect yaur Armco Building fast · and save you money at the same time. F~ctory-produced parts cut job-site work, eliminate waste of mater als. Our U· perienced crews reduce construction time and expense. Write or call for com· plete lnformalton,

Temple Bldg., P.O. · OJ 168, 341 Duckworth St.

DIAL 80370 or 8·7756

DRUG STORES

M. CONNORS Ltd. Prescriptions Pickup and

delivery service. PHONE 8·2206

RADIO-TV REPAiRS

GREAT EASTERN OIL COMPANY, Ltd •. · REP AlllS TO RADIOS, TV

AND ALL ELECTRICAL APPLIAMCES.

niAL 8·300 to 8·3005

8-2011 - 5 LINES GANDER, G. GOSSE 84704

• CLARENVILLE

ALEX STRONG 8·3336 or 8·3331

GRAND FALLS, NFLD. BREWERY 8·25<17

Proclamation BY HIS HONOUR the Honour­

able Campbell Macpherson. AU~HORIZED Officer of the Most Excellent DEALER

. J. J. HUSSEY LIMITED

Order of the British Empire. Lieutenant-Governor of the Province of Newfoundland .

Campbell Macpherson Lieutenant-Governor.

179 New Gower Street, WHEREAS the General As· St. John's Dial 8-5795·8·3270 · sembly stands prorogued;

·se.· .

AND WHEREAS I think fit to summon the said General As·

·sembly to meet on Wednesday, the Twenty;Fourth day-of Janu· ary, 1962;

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD .. MONDAY, JANUARY 15,

Bell's Cafeteria LIMITED

Open 6 days a week: 9-6 1\IONDAY: 9-2.30. FRIDAY: 9-9.30.

\Vatch our window for the daily SPECIAL dinner.

·BELL'S also cater for:­Private Parties - Banquets - Club Meets - Weddings. etc.

For Reservations · DIAL 8-7094

dec4,1mth

.NEWfOUNDLAND. . · ·. :·_SER\ttcEs· ·' ~·'/ . . ,.. ', . .

PASSENGER NOTICES

PERSONS desiring assistance in bookkeeping, filing "In­come Tax", social security, and workman's Compansa· tion Returns, please dial 579·26723. jan1517,19

----··-COUNSELLORS wanted by a

cosmetic company .- Ideal situation .for smart women -Promotion· possibilities­Write to Regine De France, P.O. Box 89, Station C, Montreal, or phone: 9·4793. ,

TilE CENTRAL BARBER - \ SHOP-We arc now operat. ing 10 chairs, you can be assured of prompt, effie!· em, sanitary service No waiting problem, ·24 New Gower Street opposite Ade· !aide Motors, Ltd.

DINING -

Open Daily Cinema Scope 9 p.rn

Sunday. ·

Door Prize IV erl., Fri,

BIGGEST ~!El\'U ST. JOII:"-:'S

Unique nnd

Private Parties

Inquire about "Party

CALL

GLADY'S BEAUTY SIIOI'PE c9r. Bond and Prescott Sts. Phone 8-4951·8·7898. Speci-

CONNECTION WEST RUN· alizing in cold waving, hair BURGESS BRO~, PLACENTIA BAY styling, cutting and tinting,

Train "The Caribou'' leaving manicuring, facials etc., 14 8 3 St. John's 12:01 p.m. Monday, operators, no waiting. Dial January 15th will make con- oct20,1yr ' ,. nection via Placentia Junction ""'A_U_T_O-Jl_O._T_IV_E_S-al-es_m_a..cn.~ ~;;::;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:;:;;~ and Argentia with 1\I.V. "Petite perlenced, to cover cstah· r Forte" on West Run Placentia Jishell jobber accounts in Bay. Maritimes. Must he free to

CONNECTION BAY RUN travel, own late model car. PLACENTIA BAY Commission basis. Good

Train "The Caribou" leaving opportunity for right man. St. John's 12:01 p.m. Wednes- Box 711 c/o The Daily day, January 17th will make News. connection via Placentia June- jan12,13,15 -----------------lion and Argentia with M.V. DO YOU NEED your Spring. "Petite Forte" on Bay Run fllled mattress re-condition· Placentia Bay. ed or your All Wool mat

CONNECTION WEST RUN tress re.picked, and recov· • PLACENTIA BAY

1 ered,'your bedspring or day·

Train "The Caribou" leaving ; bed re-wired or your furni st. John's 12:01 p.m. Friday, I ture re-upholstered. If &0

J I Call us. Items calJed for anuary 19th will make connec· d d 1. d R . lion via Placentia Junction and an e 1vere · ates lowest Argentia with M.V. "Petite obtainable. Keats Mattress Forte" on West Run Placentia Factory, 16 Mount Roval

Avenue. Phone 92754,

SR. COLLEGE s.n.c. rs. n.c.

Children ........ 15 Adults .... ..

SKATl:IG Admission ...... 5Q

Tickets for Tuesday Senior Game - St Feildians- on sal~·o~ · seat certificates today, ·

Bay. 8·2656.

CONNECTION SOUTH COAST F======;;;;;;;;;;:;, ~~~~~~~ SERVICE VIA PORT 1 lfr

Aux BAsQuEs ~ j' Where To Train "The Caribou" leaving rLomiDn

st. John's 12:01 p.m. Thursday, ,~ !. Balsam H January 18th will make connec· ~---tion at Port aux Basques with RF.NOVATIONS M.V. "Bonavista" on South REPAIRS Coast Service.

CONNECTION SOUTH COAST I SERVICE VIA ARGENTIA ! Train "The Caribou'' leaving : St. John's 12:01 p.m. Friday, I January 19th will make connec.

tion via Placentia Junction and Argcntia with S.S. "Bar Haven" for South Coast Service.

FREIGHT NOTICES

PAINTING and

DECORATING FREE ESTIMATES

J. J. HUSSEY LiniJTED

179 New Gower St. DIAL 8-5795 - 8-3270

FREIGHT SOUTH COAST Experts in The Field. SERVICE nov27,2mths

Freight is accepted daily at ~=~~=~=~=~ the Railway Freight Shed for -ports on the South Coast Ser· vice, hut in order to guarantee LOADERS movement by this trip of the A. C. Tractomotive model TL20 • M.V. "Bor.avista", freight must I tractor loader 2 and lhyd. ;

I be at the Railway Freight Shed bucket 16.00 x 25 tires, power· 1

by 1:00 p.m. Tuesday, January ed by Buda Diesel Cab heater 16th, 1962. . defroster, serial No. 30B. Price

1

$14,000.00. _ I · Hough Payloader model HOD • 2 and 1h yd. bucket 14.00 x 24 tires, powered by Hercules DWID Diesel, Cab heater de· ·

1 Situated in the heart Cit I',

I Quiet, Comfortable phere.

Fur ReserTations information:

1\IRS. JOIIX F Resilient ~larJagelr!!l

m31,tf

froster ,serial No .. 230-1096. Dl r "L 1 Price $12,800.00. '.1..!1.

Sub' Trade Tenders

Tenders will be received from sub contractors and suppliers up to 5:00 p.m., N.S.T. Wednes· day, January 31, 1962 in con· nection with the Vocational Trade School, Corner Brook, Newfoundland, all according to plans and specifications which may be reviewed at the follow· ing: . Dobush, Stewart & Bourke, 5065 Western Avenue, Montreal 28, P.Q •

Hough Payloader model HF, 1 yd. bucket, powered by Hercules 1 QXD·2 Gasoline Engine, Cab : winterization kit, includes Wain Roy Backhoe Equipment, serial No. WRHFC 393. Price $5,496.00.

Pettibone Mulilkon Speedall Loader Model 250 2 and 1h yd. bucket, 16.00 x 25 tires, power­ed by Gl\l 4-71 Diesel Cab and winterization kit, seri;l No. 461. Price $9,960.00.

Ali machines overhauled and in excellent condition.

GILL & CO., LTD., Saint John, N.B.

Tel. OXford 2·1531. Newfoundland Board of Trade, jan12,13,15 157 Water Street, ----------St. John's, Newfoundland.

Halifax Construction Association, 10 Tobin Street, Halifax; Nova Scotia.

Builders Exchange, 15· Bayside Drive, East St. John, N.B.

Builders Exchange, 3532 Numar Street, Montreal 16, P.Q,

Toronto Builders Exchange, 1104 Bay Street, Toronto, Ontario,

-· Lundrlgan's Constru'ction Ltd., Riverside Drive, Comer Brook, Newfoundland.

A WELCOME WAGON

·HOSTESS

Prompt Delivery •' STOVE OIL • FURNACE OIL • HARD CO,\L • SOFT COAL • IRON

IIEATING

~·- 101~ of' ail: the .irGMS·. on. the Spanish Main, the. strongEist is <?LD . . . . , . . .. . . . I

; JOUN "SILVER," ·.THE· PRIDE OF TRINIDAD.

Modern Live

Electrically

I DO THEREFORE by this my Proclamation summon the said General Assembly to meet for the despatch ol business on Wednesday, the Twenty-Fourth day nf January, -1962, as afore· said, of which all persons con· Plans and specifications may ceri:ted are ·her'eby required to be obtained from the architects take due notice and govern -Dohush, Stewart & Bourke­themselves accordingly, based on the nominal cost of

' GIVEN under my Hand ami reproduction.

Will Knock at your Door with Gifts and Greetings from Friendly Business Neighbours and . Your '-;;~;;:;;:;;~;;;;~

! Sen! . at · Government Tenders shall be addressed to - • Jlouse at St •. John's, this Lundrlgan's ·construction Ltd.,

L •o•r11 . 1129t6h2.day of January, A.D. P. 0. Box 476, ·

p 'f• Corner Brook, Newfoundland. . • . . . . . , . , . . , ... ' .. . i.a "' • A ' .,.. · • · • .. • • • I BY COMMAND, The lowest or . any tender (Not Inserted by' Boanl- of Liquor Control)' . . . . I ln. and Around St Job~.. I MYLES MURRAY,: need not necessarily be accept-._ __ -:--r-~· -~~ .,· ....... _. _: _-_~_;;. ... · ..;,;..;...,.,· __ :_·....;.: . .;..' ..... .;.· ... .:,·-··;..' ....... ·;...·· .. _;:..;.~;..~ ~· _. J ... Cheap -Reliable Electricity 1\linis,ter of Provincial Affairs. ed. ·

-1

· · pjan13,15 . · . janll,l2,13,15 .

. .- . . . . ·.

; .· · The R~ accl~ed for:its Taste;and QualitY~

.': ·."OLD.JPHN SIL;vEl\. RUM" .has m~uiy rivlils,. but ~o equalr

. . ; . . .

f \ 'I

Civic and Social · Groups p; On the occasion of: . New comer to the City, 1'he most in

Phone "" 111 ~'7""' The Birth of a Baby. PHONE 4664, 90943

and 964273 HUGHES-MA . CLE.,.NSERS

KIN •

Bqy Newspa

SER TOOt

I 19 27 23 ·29 24 26 30 18 2o

21

'20 Consolatior

Help Kin

PRI;NCE c

Afplications ar o Cateress at opened early : Wales College. apply in wi'itin ing qualificatio ations should selection corr January 25th.

SE

COM MER . f(

Situated Wate ·Newfoundland · Brick and con< 135' X 34' G"' 2

· Brick and con <'- 27', Two Sh Concrete Offi< with reinforce' one Storey.

For full

·eROWNII .. WATEJ

. ST. JOHN' ian15,17,19

Smi~

.OFFICE E WATER.S1

OFF1CE

Mo· ' .

AGI

...

Page 11: rus 1ze.n a - Memorial University DAIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19620115.… · chomping comedian Ernie Kov· o t h 'e r innovations included · firing

ilv 5

•\'cd., Fri

~IENU JOII::o\'S

ml ·ti~s

.,

1 the heart of City.

mfortable ph ere.

'>CT\'ations formation:

iiS-6336 JOHN FACEY, nt 1\lanageres~

\

s:a:. JU.i:li~'d, i~i:L1.>. iviui~DA'i, J'Ai~UAi\1 15 ltiii2 , '

KINSMEN •

·club BINGO

Boys' Newspaper

B

SERIES NO. 56 TODAY'S NUMBERS

I N 44 36 34'

73 ,65 70 61 71 66

5 13 l 8

11

19 27 23 29 :24 26 30 18 20

33 39 38 32

59 47 49 51 54 53 50 56 55

.64

21

'20 Consolation Prizes for· the l~tter "X"

Help Kin - Help .Kiddies

PR:NCE OF WALES COLLEGE

Afplications are invited for the· position o Cateress at the new Cafeteda to be opened early in February at . Prince· of Wales College. Interested. parties should apply in writing to the undersigned, stat­ing qualifications and experience. Applic­ations should be in the hands of the selection committee not later · than

. January 25th. SHERBURNE McCURDY,

Principal.

. COMMER~IAL PROPERTY FOR SALE

Situated Water Street West, St. John's, Nell'foundland, consisting of:- . Brick and concrete bakery building, 66' x 135' x 34'6", 2 Storeys and basement. Brick and concrete warehouse, 64, x 76' x 27', Two Storeys and basement. . Concrete Office building, 39' x 76' x 9' with reinforced concrete vault, 14' x 8', one Store)'. ' ·

For full particulars contact:-

tROWNING .HARVEY LTD. WATER STREET WEST.

j ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND

ant5,17,19

Smith Corona

TYPEWR~ITERS & CASHI'ERS · OFFICE SUPPL'IES and EQUIPMENT

MACHINERY & EQUIPMENT CO., lTD. OFFICE EQUIPMENT DIVISION

191 WATER .STREET. · DIAL·8-5i05 ~lAIN OFFICE . 8-4052 ~ 8~4053

WE HAVE ·MoVED( •• ,

To: n9 DucKWORT.H sr. ~ · (Next door. to. the Sir )4~mphrey: Gilbert .

' . . . ·. . ' .

· .. Building) . ·. · '·

AGENCIES.· LIMITED" ''ALt KINDS of: INSURANCE~'·.- ..

llftl0,13 ' '

. ,, .

,). •. I

. ·'

I , , ...

NOTICE.-. C.L.B, OLD COMRADES

ASSOCIATION . '

The Annual Meeting of the C.L.B. Old Comrades Association, Lo'dge No. -1, will be held in the Club Rooms, Harvey Road,

. WEDNESDAY, January 17th, starting at .8.30 p.m, ·

All Old Comrades are asked to make a special effort to attend.

·By Order of the President, ::C. W. DOMINY, .

Ron. Secretary.

Ticket No. 25156 WINNER OF

· in

BAY BULLS ATHLETIC ASSOC.

' FALL SWEEPSTAKE

Drawn for on December 28th, 1961 . I

. kindly contact

Crane's Service Station BAY BULLS PHONE 7F3

If prize not claimed

A REDRAW •

will be held on Saturday, January 27, 1962 at 10.30 .p.m. in our Club Rooms, Bay Bulls.

Visitors will be welcome. jan15,22,27 ·

FOR ·SALE ROqHE ST.-Two Apartment

Call it what you will, but we think this i~ a good buy. Modern Bungalow, Three bedrooms, kitchen, living room, dining room and bathroom. Hardwood floors. Oil furnace. Self-contained· basement apartment. Large rear garden. Landscap~ ed. Carport, Call us immediately. for key to inspect this property - $23,000.

OXEN POND RD. DEVELOPMENT

Two New Modern Bungalows with four bedrooms, and several three bedroom Bungalows. All the special features to please and most discriminating home-rna- .

· ker. Furnace heated· dwelling. Hardwood floors; full basements; near busline, .Have one of our salesmen show you the lovely' homes we have available in this new area,

. Down payments as lo~ as $3,500.

STAN CONDON The Conservative Club

· Monday, 8.30 p.m.-Free Movie "The Bto • thers Rico" with Richard Conte, Dinah Foster, Katherine Grant

Tu~sday, 9100 .p,m ....... Auction and Bridge . Tourn~ment.: Monthly Prize. . · ·

Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.-Meeting of Darts . League; Singles, Doubles; Team play .

'<tell

FUEL! FUEL! FUEL! FUEL! . 1 VVhen you need otl

• · .. ~Here's. w~at to do: .DIAL

ION OIL 8~2822. . you need o~l-You need us I

Tlie. whole. to~ is talking about . · · · ·~e Se~ational · . I.

~· '

, c' . ,

.J.ON CANO'E RUMS . ' ' .

. Both light·_~d dark.. .· ; Because they U:e the best ln. the· whole'~ldo w~M '

I I .... 1 ·'. I, '· ' •

· ·. -No . heidaches-No· ·upiset stomach acl)e~and that · wondertul taste-:.."Smo~h · 111aD, mootb." U you . . have trilid, them,· tell' your frlonds.. U not-just ask. ··.Remember .JON .cANoE:· RUMS, Uslit 'and dark,

' f • • . • f

are ·auaranteed. So- always ask for them by name. . . ; . •· . .. . '· l . ' ..

' (Not ·ln•erted: bY. the Board of Liquor . Control) l· . . .. ' .· ,. ' ·.',,' . '_ .

'} .. ''

'\

, I ' ' \

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WANTED For e,mployment with the iron Ore Com­pany of Canada at Labrador City, Carol Project, Labrador. · ·

' ' '

Clerk Typists 'Jr. (Female): Applicants must have at least Grade_XI with approxi­mately forty words per minute typing speed, plus some experience in general office routine,

Stenographers: Applicants should have previous. experience and be proficient in both typing and shorthand.

Storemnn: Must have a minimum of two years' experience in the. receipt, storage, identification and issue of automotive and diesel parts, including Euclid, Caterpillar.

, Marion, Ford, G.M.C., etc. ·

Employee benefits include: liberal vaca­tim~ policy; group life, hospital and medical insurance; pension plan, etc. .

Interested persons should contact:

PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT, OFFICE No, 510,

IRON ORE COMPANY OF CANADA,

95 LeMARCHANT ROAD, ST, JOHN'S, NFLD. .

jan13,1ll

CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN IF CHAFE MAKES THE CLOTHES.

Wm. L. CHAFE TAILOR

4 HOLDSWORTH ST. ST. JOHN'S

WANTED For employment with the Iron Ore Com­nany of Canada ·at Labrador City, Carol Project, Labrador. · .

Pipefitters: Must have five years' experi­ence as plumber-pipefitter. Preferably qualified· as a pipefitter with a journey­man plumber's certificate. Must also have experience in refrigeration and oil bur.ner ..

Carpenters: Must have a minimum of five ·years' experience in the trade .working with contractors.

Automotive Mechanics: Must have a mini­mum of five years' experience as Auto- .· motive Mechanic, plus two years on heavy duty gas and diesel trucks and tractors,

Employee benefits include: liberal vaca­tion policy; group life, hospital and medical insurance; pension plan, etc.

Interested persons should contact:

PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT, OFFICE No. 510, IRON ORE COMPANY OF CANADA,

95. LeMARCHANT ROAD, ST. JOHN'S. NF1-D.

jan13,111

TAXI '

SIR?

CALL

BUGDEN"S TAXI·

·I

Note Change of Telephone Numbers: . I

·ou~L B-7100-B-&224

. ' ,

. },

. PRELIMINARY NOTICE

St. Bon's Boy Scouts Ladies' Auxiliary

I ) Card Party . ,. ··-

(Bridge and Auction) .:·cl ~t t~e Aula Maxima St. Bon's College ::~

Ttme: 8:30 p.m~ WEDNESDAY JAN. 31 ··~ Admission $1.00 Attractive Prizes .~~ Tea will be served. Please bring Cards '"' and Baskets. ·,-:

•:-..

I . I~~--

WANTED . '.'-' l: .[•t

SECOND CLASS STATIONARY . •.!·

ENGINEER i.l i.

'C!. Fe;· employment with the Iron Ore Company f!l :if.

Cc ~da at Labrador City, Carol Project, Labrador. •,:,

· Mu5t posses Second Class Stationary Engineer's 1'1 r~rtiflcate (Province of Newfoundland) or equival· .. :r cnt and have Grade XI education or better ~ .;:

• ri·

To opera~~:! and assist in the operation of two oil ··· fired and one electricallf heated high. temperature · .•• hot water ~en~rators and a~sociated equipment. . ·~·. Also to asstst m the unloadmg, storage and trans- ". · fer of light oil and bunker "C" fuel oil. • ,>;:

-'' Attractive salary, liberal vacation policy, pension ::; plan, group life, hospital and medical insurance. · :

. !. '·

For further particulars interested persons should :,~ apply to: • ·-

PERSONNEL DEPAR'rniENT, OFFICE No. 510,

IRON ORE COMPANY OF CANADA, 95 LeMARCHANT ROAD, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND.

jan13,15 .. .

IEPAIIS RLCUIZIJII

.. IICIIUPII a• 1111

-firestone

IIIII .. , '

Nfld. Armature Works Ltdl BAMBRICK ST. DIAL 8-7191 - 8-719!Z

·WANTED ASSISTANT RECREATION

SUPERVISOR

l ;

!

For employment with the Iron· Ore Company of • Canada at Labrador City, Carol Project, Labrador. ! Basic duties to include organizing men's and boys' athletics and club activities, working with and pro­ll!o.tlng' teen·ag~ progra!'IS; setting up and super· vtsmg commumty aquahc programs. A knowledge of teaching tennis, ·badminton, and coacbin" minor hockey desirable. May be re41uired to perform duties as day camp supervisor. ·

. '

Applicants should have Recreation Directors Certi­ficate or equivalent and either RCA or RCN Recreation training or experience as YMCA or Boys' Club Worker. . \

Employee benefits include: liberal vacation policy; ' group life, hospital and medical insurance; .pension plan, etc. ·

Interested persons should contact:

PERSONNEL DEPAR'rniENT, OFFICE No. 510, IRON ORE COJ\IPAN¥ OF CANADA,

. . 95 Le!IIARCIIANT ROAD ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND.

janl3,15 ·

EFFECTIVE

i

l' ' i I '

. JANUARY 14th '621

' '

OUR NEW _TELEPHONE I - , NUMBERS WILL BE !

I

\1/ ;/0J /1

l !

8·2ll 77 l

8·21 78~

8·2179

The bally NewJ. . ·. . . . I

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Page 12: rus 1ze.n a - Memorial University DAIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19620115.… · chomping comedian Ernie Kov· o t h 'e r innovations included · firing

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' "Simona" Pineapple-cubes, 24-20 oz.

"S.imona". Pine~pple-Slices, 24;20 oz ..

"Si.,ona" Pineapple J.uice-24-2o oz.

"Avon'~ Apple Juice-24-20 oz. ' ' . . '

"Avon" Apple Juice-12-48 oz.

"Hunt's" tomato Juice-24-2o oz.

"Heinz" Tomato Juice- 24-20 oz.·

. . . .

S.TEAMS I~ I'P MOVEMENTS • SHIPS LIMITED. "Refrigeration

Nl<'LD •. CANADA . s·rt:AM· I John's February 2nd.

M.V Fau\•ette sailing from l<'U.RNESS WITHY. and· CO., Halifax Ja.nuary 8th, due St., "Nova. Scotia" leav. ing Liver­John's~January lOth. · . pool Jan. 17, due St. John's,

~U~:· Bedford U sailing from: Dec, 23. Leaving. for Halifax Halifax January 12th, dttJ St. and Boston Jan. 24, due Hali­John.'s January 14th. fax Jan. 26 and Boston Jan. 31.

·' •s.s. GulfPort 'sa1Ung · from Leaving Boston Feb. 2 and Halifax January 13th due St. Halifax Feb. 6, due St. John's

I

Capitol Now Playing

CAN'l'INI<'LAS IN ''PEPE"

IN COLOR

John's· January 15th. Feb. B. Sailing again some day M.v:. Fauvette sailing from for Liverpool. Bursting with a new· ex~'ite-

Ralifax January 16th, due St. ment in screen entertainment, John~s January 18th, "Newfoundland" laavlng·Liv· George Sidney's production• of

lii.S. ·Bedford II· sailing from crpool Jan. 31, ·due St. John's the Cantinflas' starrer, "Pepe," Hali[ax January 2dth, due St. Feb. 6, Leaving for, Ha~ifax and new Columbia release co-starr· John's January 22nd. Boston Feb. 7, due ¥ahfax F.eb. ing Dan Dailey and Shirley

•s:S. Gulfport · sailing from 9 and Boston Feb. 14. Leavmg Jones and including a talent Halifax January 23rd, due St. Boston Feb. 16 a~d Halifax Fe?· loaded contingent of 35 guest John's January 25th. . I ?I, due ~t. John 5 Feb. 23. ~aJJ-· stars, now playing today at the

M.V. Fauvctte sailing from sng acasn same day :for· Liver· Capitol Theatre. An entertain­llalifu January 24th, due St. pool. . · ment feast for the entire fam­John's January 26th.. . I "Manchester. Faith". leaving ily, "Pepe" is crammed with

~~-S. B~dford 11 S31hng from Lil'erpool Feb. 14, due Sf. run, music, color, variety. ·and Hahf~x January 29th, due St John's Feb. 21. Leaving ·for pageantry, beautifully filmed in Johns January· 31st.. 1 Halifax and Boston· Feb. 22, CinemaScope .·and Eastman

~~.V. Fauvette sa11lng from due Halifax Feb. 24 and Bos· Color. Ha!1fax January 31st, due .lit. ton March 1. Leaving Boston

Butler build'ings

..

lOW-COST 8bOD LOOKS

·:..

Get. into 'lusincss fast. Butler Bullilings go up fast. · Save'time and· money, yet get quality COil· atruction., .can :or \vrite to-day.

.Ciltl

. 1;: .. . (ENGINEERING · :~pringdale S~eet

1\larch 3 and Halifax March 7, due St. John's Marc~ 7, due St. John's 1\larch 9. Sailing for Liverpool ll!areh 10.

ATLANTIC l\IARITntES LINE, ' LI!\IITED

M.V. Theron leaving New York January ·12th, Halifax, N.S., January 15th, arriving St. John's January 17th, leaving January 18th for 'New York. · M.V. Aalensud leaving New

York January 12th, arriving Corner Brook January 17th, ar· riving St. John's January lOt!:, leaving January 20th, arriving New York January 27th.

SCHEDULE TOUR LONDON (CPJ -· Princess

Alice, Countess of A:thlone, the 78·year·old widow ·of Canada's wartime governor - g e n e r a I leaves London Jan. 16 on a trip that will take her half • way around the world. Accompanied only by one maid, she first boards a bnnnna.boat for Ja. mal ca. . Her· final destination \ia Curacao and New Zealand, Is Australia, where she will stay with her· daughter,· Lady May Abet Smith,' wife of the governor of Queensland.

FAST DIRECT FREIGHT SAILINGS

Ftom .Halifax, N.S., to st. John's, Nflll •

Leaving Halifax . Due St. John'• : i•:

"GULFPORT"··; .... ,· ...... JAN. 13 ·· JAN. 15 TTUl~'M'l~·· ... : ................ JAN. 16 JAN. 18

"tt•>.n•,nnn II" ........ :....... JAN. 20 JAN. '22 "GULFPORT" ............ JAN. 23 JAN. 25

Heading the a1vesome parade o( talent in "Pepe" is, o{ co.ui:se, Cantinflas himself. A super· lative artist, Cantlnflas' comedy has a warmth and poigimcy about it that stabs at the heart. As "Pepe," he plays a simple· hearted peon ranchhand who, through his devotion to a horse he had raised from a colt; ad· ventures to. Hollywood, Las Vegas, Mexico City, Acapulco and Taxco.

He has amusing encounters with such great stars as Mau· rice . Chevalier, Bing · Crosby, lllichael Callan, Richard Conte, Bobby Darin, Sammy Davis, Jr., Jimmy Durante, Zsa Zsa Gabor, The Voice of Judy Garland, Greer Garson, Hedda .Hopper, Joey Bishop, Ernie· Kovacs, Peter Lawford; Janet .Leigh, Jack Lemmon, ·Jay "Dennis the Menace" North, Kim · Nov.ak, Andre Previn, Donna :Reed, Debbie' Reynolds, Edward .G. Robinson, Ce~ar Romero, Frank Sinatra and many; many more .

Can!inflas attaches himself to Dan Dailey, a motion picture di­rector who, to salvage his skid­ding career, ·has opportunisti­cally acquired the animal· the little comedian· loves .. Dailey hopes to persuade Robinson, who covets the horse, to back him In a Mexican location film. Cantinflas also meets and falls

·In love with beautiful Shirley Jones, an aspiring actress; 'she; In turn, .reserves her l:ive . for Dan Dailey. The complications are ironed out with entertain· lng finesse by director-prouucar Sidney. · ·

Bristol ' .

Council Too Costly.

OF THE I

NEW SHIPMENT BRISTOL, England <CP)

Opposition has been expressed to future trips abroad for Bris· tol's lord mayors following Ma· yor Charles Smith's · visit to

OOK: Toronto last year. ·

GLOWOF· CANDLELIGHT

Bristol ' co u n c i II or s ·are The story of Patricia Murphy, alarmed at the rising cost of Her Life, Her Food Secrets ·

I I AMERICAN

• civic hospitality and a proposed and Her Garden Magic. By visit by representatives from Patricia. Murphy . $4.75' Bristol, Rhode I s I a n d, has roused the ire of one alderman. LITTLE ME

"We. must clamp down on Patrick Dennis .... 6.50 TRIMMED NAVEL ·these visits, said Alderman THE CARTHAGINIAN Kenneth Brown. "If we look far ROSE . enough, there are Bristols in Australia." Ilka Chase .. .. . . . ... 4.50

The 'l'oronto trip, a ·return to TEEMS OF TIMES Smith's birthplace at the invita AND HA 1

tion ot Mayor Nathan Phillips, . PPY RETURNS i BEEF

r.csuitedd in an estimated £2,600 Dominic Behan .... 4.50 · increase in the lord mayor's CANADA AND THE expenditures over the previous SEARCH FOR PEACE BARRELS HALF BARRELS .year.

James Eayrs ........ 4.25 BLUE SKIES,

Paramount Today

BROWN STUDIES Silliam Sansom ... : 5.50

THE TOUGH­MINDED OPTIMIST·

Norrnan Vincent

GEORGE NEAL LIMITED "EXODUS" WITII A CAST OF THOUSANDS-INCLUD· JNG PAUL NEWMAN, EVA MARIE SAINT and RALPH RICIIARDSON

Peale ............ 4.75! THE QUEEN AND HER CHILDREN

'PHONES 2264 • 4440 • 3420

A t~.~.J;~~.c~F RI.6~ LAM. ALINE NEWS Production of the Otto Pre· minger film, "Exodus," started Wilham .Alhster .... 4.50 I on the streets of Haifa on a SPLASH ONE TIGER The following babies arrived of St. Clare's, recentlv under-Sunday ... but it was a work· R J Ch'Jd h 4 95 1 at the Grand Bank Cottage Hos· went surgery at that institu-ing day in Israel where Satur- · · 1 er ose · pita! recently. To Mr. and Mrs. tion, and is now recuperating day is the Sabbath. A little KIDNAP Clyde Henebury, Point ~lay, a at home with her parents, Mr.

Arrest Plotters

more than three months later, The storv of the daughter, Heather Marie; l\lr. and ~Irs. Vincent Fleming, Have ' d 'I J C · Pt 'I SEOUL <AP> - South on a barge anchored next to the L' db h C an n rs. ames ames, n ay, a good rest Jean, the nursing Ill ercr ase R d 11 111 d. ruling military J·unta ship Exodus in the middle of M ,. "'O · a son, en e ; · · r. an Mrs. staff needs you.

Geor·cr uraller· 1 L d p Friday the arrest of 11 Fama"usta harbor on Cyprus,· Me vv .;J eonar arsons, Pt. May. a b E S F d h R b accused of two Mr. Prcminger called "Cut! TH PAS ION 0 aug ter, e ecca; Mr. and New year's greetings are ex-T h 11 to assassinate junta

Print·" for the last time and GABRIELLE · o n Bonne . High Beach, a 1 tended to Mrs. Catherine Walsl1 and overthrow the military

photography on the picture was daughter, Carmelita Mary. con· at St. Patrick's Mercy Home ernment. completed. It is now playing Malcolm Stuart ~ gratulations are extended to the from all her friends at Point The announcement said today at the Paramount Thea- Boy Ian .. .. .. . .. . .. . . 4. 9v proud parents. May and Lamaline. two groups were not tre. It is a United Artists re-., DAUGHTER OF and were plotting to lease. SILENCE , Greetings are extended to The following teachers ar· Jan. 16 and in la\e

"Exodus" is the first major . ~ )Irs. Benjami? Haley who c~le· rived home on Dec. 23 to spend They were arrested a week American film to be produced MolTIS L. West .... 3.9v i brated her birthday on Chnst- the Festive Season with their The first group o[ lour · In Israel. Par.t of it also was THE \'VHITE RAJAH ·mas Eve. Greetings come from families, Misses Joan Collins sons was Jed bv Lee shot .on the IS~and of' Cyprus Nicholas ~[onsarrat 4.25 her six· daughters and one son,,. and Lena Lambe from Stephen- 45, former membel' of the and 1ts dramatic story, based Benjamin, and a host of friends. ville; Misses Laura Fleming ocratic party inspection on the Leon Uris best·selling GILES . -- and Rose Collins from ~lortier, mittee, the announcement novel, plays against the color- Sundav Express and ~!any happy returns are also P.B; Misses Laura and Lucy The party, led bl' ousted ful background or th t 0 l extended to Mr. Bernard Haley Collins from Rushroon, P.B.; mier John M. Chan~. was. count;ies with stheir v~~fd ;e. Dai Y Express . who celebrated his birthday re- )!essrs. Howard Drake and Rl· solved along with all olher minders of a~"ient and madern Cartoons ...... 1.00 cently, phael Benteau from St. Joseph's litical parties after the history. Dalton Trumbo wrote o· k & ( L d -- P.B.; ~lr. Thomas Fleming from COlip last May. the screenplay for the epic film IC S " O. t , On ~anuary 2, Eli1.aheth Pitt· Fox Cove, P.B.; Miss Viola Fitz- The announcement said · which was photographed in 1 I man, httle daughter of i\lr. and patrick from St. John's; Miss second group of men Technicolor and Super Pana· Jh 8 k II Mr.~. Maurice Pittman, celebrat- Frances Hennebury from Har-1 headed by Choo l!yun. 6i. · vision; with Academy Award e QP se ers ~d her seventh birthday by hdv· bour Breton. F.B.;. ~lr Gerard was chief of an organizatios winning Sam Leavitt behind the Spin ' !ng a party and by entertain- Maddigan from Rou.ndahout :unemployed during Chang's cameras. 8 4425 8 2 08 8 3191 i mg several of her youn" Lawn. ' vihan government. Choo

The plot covers the period - ' or - 0 or · ' I friends with the various game~ an underground m· depertct~ from llfay, 1947, through Decem· ··- and toys Santa brought her on William Haley, Edward Hen· fighter against Japanese ber of.the same year, a month Christmas Eve. nebury and Marguerite Stacey, Korea until the end of the after the United Nations Gen· returned to .Memorial Univer- ond Word War . era! Assembly adopted a reso· lllr. Wm. Tuff spent Christ- sity on Jan. 3rd. after spend- -----lution calling for the establish· mas Day with his family. Here· ing an enjoyable holiday with Drugs ment of a Jewish State in Pal· turned to the Sanatorium on De.· their families. · estine, cember 27. Glad to see you

Preminger's cameras convert· looking so well, Bill. Happy ed Isrnel, and particularly the New Year to you Kav and AUTHOR DIES s I . A 1

Galilee area, into a huge movie Mike Walsh. Hope 'to s~e you ALBUQUERQUE (APl-Ms·s. a e ga set, with famous landmarks all, home in the near future. Helen Reilly, 73, author of more playing a prominent part in the M Ed --. . than 35 mystery novels and VANCOUVER rep' _ action and adding to the au-. S'd r. gar Hslher,. North fmember of a ptominent New I said· Friday illicit drugs thenicity of the ,film. The 1 e, passed all'ay at his home York fnmily, died in hospitnll sale again on Vancou1·er brooding towers of the crusa· on Januar~· 5· aged _73 rear;;;. Thursday after an illness. She! But the price is SlO a der fortress at Acre, the busy Intcrm.ent m the Anghcan Cemc came to Albuquerque two years!-$3 if bought in harbor of Haifa, the pictures- Mat:CORMAC'S t~r~ wsth Re~·. W. S. Tibbo offi- ago from New York Cit~·. The I against' S5 before the que ruins at Caesarea where CJ~tmg,. Deepest sympathy 1s hero of most· of ~Irs. Reilly's, 32 persons on narcotic Roman emperors once held GEAR STRBET extended to the bereaved fam· mystery no1 cis was the fie., king conspiracy charge! court, the divided city of J er· RECEIVING O~'FICE, sly. tectil·c with the Manhattan dav and Wednesday, usalem and the bare-walled sim· · 1 ADELAIDE tiTREET . homicide squad. ~frs. Reill)' Police said a ne11' pl.icity of Kafr Kana, the Arab DIAL 8·5131 • 2 • 3 Best IYJshes ~re extes!dcd to

1 had been writing mystery nov.! of heroin arrived here

village where Christ performed BIRTH ~Irs. John ~!arlin, who 1s pres-~ els for about 45 years. I Eastern Canada. his first miracle 2,000 · years ently. a patsent at the General ago- they all became part of · CHAFE-Born at the Grace Hospstal, St. John's. Greetings this saga of the men and wom- Hospital January 12th, a daught· co~e from all her friends at en who fought and died for the er to Robert and Eleanor Chafe, , Pomt aux Gaul and Lameline. right to build a new country (nee Gaulton). to call their own. ---------

On Cyprus, the capital· city DEATIIS of ·Nicosia and the town of DRISCOLL - Passed peace-Famagusta with its old har)lor fully away at the Agnes fratt provided locations for "Exo· Home midnight January 14th, dus.'~ Cameras also' moved Elizabeth, widow of late James high into the Kyrenian moun- Dris~oll. Leaving to mourn two lain range to capture a· scene sisters; Margaret· and Jen, and against the romantic back· one brother, Peter, in Toronto; ground of time-worn St. Hi!- also brother, Jesse, in' Corner arion Castle. . Brook. The remains will be

The. main parts In "Exo~us'' conveyed· to her former home, are bemg. played by Paul New- .342. Hamilton Avenue, this man. (Arl. Ben ~anaan) 1 Eva afternoon. Funeral will take Marte Sa1~t (Kitty F~emo.nt), place from Hamilton Avenue

Misses Louise Fleming and Margaret l\laddigan, students at St. Clare's School of Nurs­ing, returned to that institu. lion on Jan·.· 2 after spendinP-a b.rief, but happy holiday with '· thesr parents and. friends.

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Dailey sings, dances and aCts Sutherland), Peter Lawford mon, lues. 'his way through one of•· his (C)ald~vell),. Lee J. Cobb (Bar· . WYSE - Passed away at

M. 1 greatest performances. ·Shirley aa • a! Mmeo (Dov Landau), St John's on Saturday January

Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Flemin" and their three children, Paui. Helena and Denise, Wallace Place, St. John's, . spent the Festive Season. here, also with Cyril's parents, lllr. and Mrs. Vincent Fleming. Glad to sre you here, folks, come again next Christmas.

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Jones is as· beautiful and· de- John Derek (Taha), Hugh Grif- 13th aft r · 1 ' ·n ligbtrul·ln her own tripte;threa! fith (Mandrian) Gregory Ratoff K ' e a . ong 1 ness,

(Lakavitch), Felix Aylmer (Dr. athleen Mary, w1fe of Edm~nd stint. ~nd Cantinflali ·is, of Liberman), DaVJ'd Opatosbu Wyse, aged 4~ years. Leaymg course, superb as "Pepe," · the to mourn b s d h b b d man who is· friendly W!'th··the (Akiva) and Jill Haworth · e 1 es er us an .. • (Karen). . one daughter, Cathy; father, world. . Newman and Miss Saint were John Kcarn~y;. ~ne brother,

Dorothy Kingsley and 'Claude Preminger's original choices for Bartholomew, ~sx sts~e~s, Mary. · Binyon- collaborated· on ··:the .their respective roles and ac· Eileen, Madeline, V1v1an and

" · Plltti" HSI · "Pepe'~ screenplay, ftom ·the cepted them without even se~- Margaret at !;t .. John's·· and II.,N. cOLI& .,..lollttPrtMntots.-, urol·lmk "••~ 11, John'o.'l'h• "" · screen story written by LeQnard lng the script, MisJ · Haworth, A~ice at Terrace, B.C. Funeral . ' · . · · · . . ; . . Splgleglass and 'Sonya: ·Lev'.l.en. blond, blue-eyed and 14th years Wll! take place [rom her late

old, was discovered by Prem- residence, 5~ _Hayward Avenue,

:~~~Urness, Withy,~ Co~p~~y, ,Ltd. Sft~~~~~:~g! 2?.~:~·~;:~~:=~ ·.r;;,,, L'Pool To. St. John's. To . B~ton.>Bfx. To· :st. John'a · girl who,plays Jordana, wlll be T· v

, ; · . • St. ·.John's· · WL & B'lon ·· To· WL St, .John's .To L'Pool ·Seen for the first time by Ameri· · ·'·"NOVA SCOTIA" · · Jan · 17 · T 24 ' · F b · 2 · F b 6 · F b 8 can. audiences. · •:•:•r"NEWFOUNDLAND" . · '. . ·~an. - e •· · e •' .. e • ·

, 1 , • Jan:a1· · ·Feb.- 7 , :.l!'eb. 16 Feb. 2f· Fcb.-23. When shooting got under way '" '!' '.MANCHESTER FAITH'! Feb. ;14 Feb. 22 :·" Mar.' 3 · Mar. 7 Mqr.' 10· in the streets of Haifa, thou• .;·,.;:/."NOV~ • .SC~IA" 'F.eb~ 21!'. . Mli~, 7; .~ Mar.1 16 .·Mar. 20 Mar·22· sandsofcuriousonlookersgath-

REPAIRS

!~:,•: Pers0111 contemplating passake 'to Europe should make bookings well lri adya. n.ce: ered to watch the production in ·REASONABLE RATE.S. · J . .'AIR PASSAGES ARRANGED BY: · . .;, .. · ; · · : · • · · · · the making 'and saw the clock GUARANTEED WORK

• • • . · ·• •• · . · • • · · • · · 1 · • •. · • : • • · ·being turned bQck to 1947. Once - · · · · · · ·.' ',';.:-: · ·. B.O.A.C;,, K.L.M., PAN.· AME:RIC~N · AIRWAYS, ·SCANDINAVIAN, T.W;.A aga.in, the atmosphere was tens. e PHONE . 9'412·3·

'".~~'],··:: . . · .. T.C.A.;.a'!d co!Jn~ctlng Airl,ine,.. . . .. ·•. ·.. . ·• , : .• ; . . . British and Palestine Police . . . ;•.;.:. . .• CONSUL:r US .REGARDING YOUR_ TRAYE):. PROBLEMS... . . patrols dominated the scene

;J,i( ,._ 'FurR~s{TraVel' ()ffice, · l~~f;Y~?~~~fi~~ .· •!::, IIIW~UNDLAND HDTEL ·.: :. . ,. · · ,. . i · .·: . , · PHON.E s:ma less like acting· than remember·

tl!·~i.'!·: ing ... r ':' )

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After ~ours 1'hpne 8-7~ 13

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Miss Bertha Cousins: Paint May, returned to her school at Stephenville on Jan. 5.

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ST. JOHN'S

·'

THE NEW SM

E ·AC ,;a Nova~

No. 13

IIONOLULU­~hima Maru N< the ship went 1

Ceas An

A.'IDREW BOROWI <APl - f

military auth were inform1

\lnn.~ou that a cea between Franc

rebels may · in the. near futm

result, a powerful I apparatus in AI.

cities was again o alert to "defend t

iii the face of of armed action

Europea!l Secret

of European 1 living in Algiers

warning cards army to stand

N. bab :';ATIONS r

acctlserl the Unil of bias 1

it would refuse 1

in debate on al!eg1 terrorism in Ang1

was m '(asco Vieir1 104-nation . two Co~

COUJltri ,,. proposed I direct the :

to consider ap1 Penalties again

and . Bulgaria

ha resolution whicl ave the assemb' Portugal for pur:

War against the reaffirm the

Garin's protes the resumed

went ah1 ·<nellUled debate on

Portuguese A r ric a • s we

,~rtuga) has rule, ""' Years .

No THREAT did not threal WOU]d quit tb

as did In a s

Jan. 3. He · would not be 1

resolutions the . direct against

the assembly AngoJ8 prepar'

made up of ~nd

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