16
es :s I. ·: s·r i:;. !1:.::. : td RES NTS rdles ord. GIES, ed OtCE · EEKS nd Jonuary 28, 29, 31; February 1, 2. THE DAILY NEWS PRESENTS BELLINI available at NEWFOUNDLAND, JANUARY 31·, 1957 (Price 5 cents) Ch'arles Hutton & Sons .. ________________________ _ - .' Vol. 64. No, 25 rt On Middle East ·> . t Shocks Britisl1 Supporters .... ..

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Page 1: THE DAILY NEWS - Memorial University of Newfoundlandcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570131.pdf · THE DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY . Heat~:l~:ntent I £~g /\ house

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JRES

.NTS ;irdles l-ord.

GIES, .. , teed

:HOtCE · WEEKS

~R II and

Jonuary 28, 29, ~0,

31; February 1, 2.

THE DAILY NEWS ~,44~ PRESENTS

BELLINI available at

ST~ JOHN~S, NEWFOUNDLAND, T~URSD~Y, JANUARY 31·, 1957 (Price 5 cents) Ch'arles Hutton & Sons -:::==~----------~----------------------------------------~----~----------------~~~~~~----~----------------~---: .. ~.----------~----------·----------~~~~_; ________________________ _ - .'

Vol. 64. No, 25

rt On Middle East

.~ ·> . t

Shocks Britisl1 Supporters

.... ..

Page 2: THE DAILY NEWS - Memorial University of Newfoundlandcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570131.pdf · THE DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY . Heat~:l~:ntent I £~g /\ house

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Annual Meeting Of · Girl Guides·

C.,RBONEAR - The annual Heather llloores. enjoyed camp at ,Jm,ectlllG ol the Girl Guide Associa· llllllertown with the Buchans and

held in the Town Hall on llllllertown Guides, While there ~'.Jikllu:ary, 2:1, with a fair attendance. she was able to pass most of her !fhc t\'ening meeting was opened Pioneert Badge, a hard: one to win

. Obituary Newsy .. Briefs

THE DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY .

Heat~:l~:ntent I £~g /\ house to house collection was : 8 IJ r.

i a~ad.e recently for the T.B. Asso·, en Uffl)ll•riJI 1 cJ~hon. The handsome sum of one fll

h.undred and· thirty six dollars and "GIVE WISELY• five cents ($136.05) was realized. So n . The collectors were Wilson Ped· If t;any PCOi'1C seem die, Eric Harnum, Harry Hippern, I lh; ley a:e Kind <nd

P b • J Howard Tavern or, Clarence Legge 1 t some. wul t~kt

ews Carbo near

: 'ihY the President, ~Irs. John Rorke, and highly treasured, The Com· CARBONEAR, Jan. 28-Follow· -~_'Sr~ with all the members repeat· u:ls_sloner and Lieut. M. Penney lng an Illness t~f several months ' • ~~- the Girl Guide pra)·er fn spent one day at the Macklnsons there passed peacefully away on CARBONEAR-Eleanor, daugh· Dr. Darrock o' Hollett spent the

wcek·end here as guests of the former's par~'nts, Mr. and Mrs. Graham 1\1. Moores.

reS ytena with lllr. C. Bull as chairman. j ;~·their sanrer~ · • Congratulations are· extended to

1. f d 1\n ~ome ca~,~

W M S ~!r, and .Mrs. Robert Rodgers on or lei e are alii';>.'. '~'11 ison. Re~aDrts were gll'en by the Camp for Guides. · Friday night, stuart c. Gillespie, ter of Mr. and !\Irs.' Robert Hunt, .;~ommluloner, Treasurer 1 n d Perhaps the biggest hlghllgbt nged slxty·nine years. celebrated her sixth birthday on

• • • the birth of a baby boy at ' the ! find it second _ Grace Hospital, St. John's, recent·! cthagcrltodlmpo~e ..

;;Bad::e Sccrclaf)·. was the Fly·Up on Oct. 2nd. of ~fonday and in a way that Is : .l Jhe .Commissioner's report show. fi\'e Brownies to the 2nd. Guide STUART C. GILLESPIE most pleasing to little girls, with -~--·

~ ly d t 'I d 'I Cl I' j' ey en a llllid CARBONEAR-The Executive of ' an ° a r. an ~ r~. mr Ie Lovi g h t · · the Carbo near Presbyterial W.:\{.S. i Leffe a baby ?0Y on Fraday, Jan. , sur; thel~sald ~~£Y met at. VIctoria aJnuary ~2nd I 11th, at Hearl s Contenl. . 1 d I b es met at Victoria' on Januar'' 22nd. lllr. Howard Tavernor left fori vlv 11°11nede t '" o1t ..

·,~~there had been a great change Co. who were as follows: .. Peg }'ur .. qulte 1 few years deceased a number o£ her friends around .. ;e~~r In Guiders. It was with much Ann Cameron, Eleanor Moore, followed the construction trade in to hel()

1 celebrate it. Best wishes

rn~rel thal lhe following resigna· Sandra Moores, Hilda Saunders the U.S.A. returning home in the for many more happy birthdays,

Mr. Frank Warren, travelling salesman, was in town on Mondal' in the interest of the several lines he carries ..

' • Du f' ld T B J \6 h · s I s ay anrl a•t members from Blackhead Car·! n Ie • • ay., on anuary I , ' b 11 • •· • honcar; Freshwater, Harbour ~vhere he will engage in the Inch·! a evi~~m ~;-ar~. · L' , ftijlns were accepted: :\Irs. Duncan and Elizabeth Young, • and Joan · Eleanor.

•. :~mero. n, acting Ta.wny Owl, Pilgrim who went up by rl;,ht of depression. days, since which time n k "' 1 e he had been doing similar work

. ! rownae Par ·: l\lrs .. • red Earle, her Golden Bar. Mrs, Guy Fowlow 1 th' p 1 St t Gill 1 :.;captain hi. Carboncar Guides Co.; . Division Commissioner pinned th~ n 15 rov nee. uar , esp e t '"· G H · L' was a very quiet man, a man of ;.,..~. corsc edge~, actmg acut: wings on each Brownie. 'l'hc Com· whom It can well be said "he mine!·

·1.Ht. Carboncar Guides Co.; ~Uss missioner attended the annual ed his own business. He was well . i•G.ertrude Saunders, acting Lieut. Conference held at Corner Brook liked and the large crowd of , • ::nd. Carbonear Guide Co.; A from Oct. 8·12. On Sept. 15th h f 1 ·! ·~l!«ial thank you was !lh·cn to also attended a meeting of the mourners· t at ill owed his · re· ·: ~:'>lrs. Fred Earle who had been with Commissioners of Conception Bay mains to their final resting place

1 h 1 c · · · on Sunday arternoon, despite al·

• Uon in 195::!, and to !\Irs. D. Cam· On No\', lsi. Mrs. S. W. Moores l ,t. t ~t. o. smcc lls re-orsamza·l North Dil'lslon in Hearts Content. most zero weather, was a tribute

I',· ei'o:l w'ho with :llrs. J. Pike had representalll'e to the Dlvlslo~ to his memory. He was a member . or the United Church and was a : 1'1'-orsanized the Brownie Pack in Council and the Commissioner· at· regula!' attendant until illness : 19S3. tended another meeting at Hearts . ; The present Guiders are as fol· Content, w he n Commissioner O\'ertook him. He was deeply de­; lows: Rorke was appointed acting Camp voted' to his wife and family and , . ht. Companr. Act. Capt. Miss Advisor. ~:~.grand-children literally adored

., . D~phne Reid; 1~1. Lieut. !net.) Thanks also to Mr. G. Ben ··~is> Joan Saunders; :!nd. Li~ut. Davis who very kindly treated all ;·~:art.), ~!iss Fern Reid: 2nd. Com-1 the Guides and Brownies to a free : r,uny, Captain, :\!iss Jennifer show at the Band Theatre. In con· 1 Rooney; l~t Lieut. :lliss Melba eluding her report the Commis­; Penney; :!nd. act. Lieut. ~Irs. Rob· sioner thanked the' Local Assocla·

. : trl Howrll. Brownlc Pack Act. tion for their co-operation and In·

.: Br01rn Owl, ~Irs. John T. Pike; tcrest. i; art. Tawn)' Owl, !lliss Doreen Par· The treasurer's report showed a It rott. satisfactory balance. The Badge 'r' According to the annual census Secretary stated the Brownies had 1

• the 1st. Co. had 31 Guides in 1956, obtained 6 Golden Bars,. nine 1 I' tbe ::!nd. Co. :!4 ~nd the Brownie sear service stars, one 2 year ser· 1 Par'!; had :!4 makm~: ~ ~:rand total vice stars, four 3 year service ~~ a! 79 Guides and Brownies and stars ancl r•,·e Golden Hands ancl : • ri::ht Guider~. the following badges-House' ord· . . IIIGHUGIITS 01.' THE '\'[,\R erl~·. Eleanor :11oore; Writers • Thr !llnthcr ancl Dau~hlrr ban· Badge, Jlllda Saunders. The 1st. . quct on Feb. :!~. ~pon~orcd b>• the Guide Co. had won !our Second . Local A~~~~ciati!ln, at which the class badges, Mildred Howell GuitltJ ~nd Brownies entertained Doreen Moores, Georgic Forward'

. _thrir mothrr~ anr\ 1 .. A. members. ,Jncl)uellne Burden. Child Nurse' "ith ~pccial ThinkinJ: Day pro- ; ~llldrcd Howell: Athlete's, Dorec~

· .J:ram~ ;ncl Campfire >in~ in~. '.\Joorcs, Rose Fol'lvard, llildred Thf' Guide~ and Brownies plan· I Howell; Knitter~. Mildred Howell.

nrd to ~aradc to the Sah·ntion The 2nd. Co. ~ccond class badges, Army l'atadcl on Badrn·Powell Y\·onne Oates, Bessie Parsons,

: Suncb.~· h~t bad weather for~cd the Bett~· Burden. Hostess B~dce, AI· or~anltall~.n! to ranee! tins par· lcnc Reinhart, Yvonee Oates, Bes· ade. Cookat da~· wa~ a su~cc~s. ~ie Parsons. Citizenship, Heather

I thanb to ~lr• .• 1. Str~t Pike, .con· :lloorcs, Arlene Reinhardt, Sybil ,·rnor. and all others who aSSisted Clarke. Child Nurse, Yvonne Oates

, with their car> and to thn5e wha , ~!innic Pilgrim Helen Burcess' , took co~kir5 to thdr homes to dis· : Bessie Parsons.' Laundress Minni~ : tribut~ to the Guides wh~n the i Pilgrim, Bessie Parsons, 'Heather ; rampa1~n opcn~d on Cookac. D~y. Moores, ~larllyn Gill, Helen Bur· • ln June the Local Assocaataon gess. Knitters, Yvonne Oates. ' s~nsored a sale of homccooking Needlewoman, Yl'onnc Oates; Bes­

; 'Bwllh t~e help ofhboth Guides and sic Parsons, Helen Burgess, ro11111es, and . t at too was sue- :\1aril~·n Glll. Minstrel, Marilyn

. cess!ul. The Guides did their usual Gill, Yvonne Oates. Homemakers, i:ood turn by selling Forget-me- Maril)'n Gill Yvonne Oates, Bes· ::\o~ and Poppies for the Canadian sie Parsons, Helen Burgess, Heath· :Legion. On Jul)• 1st, Guides and er !lloores. Cooks, Heather Moores ~~"11ics joined the Legion par· Following the adoption of th~

: :a de . and ~!tended :llemorial Da)' various reports the President, Mn. · -W'l'tce. One keen camper Guide John Rorke, Sr. thanked all who

helped In any way during her three year term of otrlce, and u she automatically retires after her

Surviving are his wife, three sons, John, Chester and WlJllam T. of this town, two daughters, Mrs. George Thoms, of this town, and Mrs. Ralph Snell, at Boston; and one sister, Mrs. A. M. Howell, of this town, also 10 crand-chl!dren, to all of whom the writer extends deepest sympathy,

· At· the funeral service In the home; Mrs. · Harry Saunders sang "Beyond The· Sunset" with Mrs. F. B. Powell, as accompanist and also led In the sinclng or the "Abide With Me" which was sung. Rev. W. B. Johnson, B.A., B.D., conducted the funeral rites,

Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Janes and young daughter were .,;isitors from St. John's over the week-end. They were guests of Mr. and lllrs. George W. Janes, Southside.

Pike; Auditors, l\frs. G. lot ~1oores and Mrs. D. Cameron. Dele· gates to Divisional Council, Mrs. John Rorke, Sr. Mrs. George For­ward.

The next meeting wlJI be held at 3 p.m. on the first Friday In March at the Town Hall.

WEEKLY MEETING The weekly meeting o! the 2nd.

Company of Girl Guidea In Car· bonear took place on January 22. The special highlight of this meet· lng was the enrolment of eight rc· crull!. Proficiency badges · were al!o presented to aome of . the guides.

The District Commissioner, .!\Irs. John Rorke, Jr., congratulated the recruits on. becoming guides and gave some words of praise to the guldea "?ho received badges.

• 1

: KIDNEY ACIDS success[ul term, she wished her ·The reerults were as follows-

··: Roll your Rest •• · M""f ....,to ....., IHm Ill rtl a aoM

.n,ld'' rtiL Tht7lum and t.l-blat111 it

., 'nom•'-•iltn it.,., be lhtir kidnoy1. ·j lltallhy blnt;ra 611tr poi10111 and tlCua l , ana Ina lht Wood. II tM,- !aU ar~d · ';: .,_;tita ally ia the IJIIta-diJturbod . : . nat oltm r.u.,... II rou don't r••l weU :: r! ...! - Dodd'• Kin1 PiiiL Dtdd'a ; . t.IJ lho Plnty1 1t that 1IU can red ~lttiWI.r. 136

: ~ Doclcts KidneY Pills

sUccessor everr 'success. Hilda Saunders, Joan· Pilgrim, The Commissioner then conduct· Joan Parsons, Judy Parsons, Patsy

eel the election· of oH!cers, nnd she Moores, Peggy Cameron, Eleanor also stated her term of otrlce. ex· :\loore and Saridra Moore!. pires in 1\lnrch, but for the time The following guides received heiDi: she would be Chairman of badges, Yvonne Oates, Homemaker, the meetings. The following will Needlewoman and Knitters badge. assist: 1st. VIce-President, lllrs. Bessie Parsone - Homemaker Duncan Cameron; 2nd. Vice·Presi· and Needlewoman. dent, Mrs. Graham M. 1\Ioores, Marilyn Gill-Homemaker and Secretary-Treasurer, Mrs. George :O.Iitistrel. ·. Forwn~: Badge Secretary, Mrs. Helen Burgess-Homemaker and J. Strnt Pike; Public Relations Of· Needlewoman. ficer, 1\lrs. George Forward; Copk· The, meetln1 elosed with the le Day Con\'enor, llh·s. J. Slrat ~lnging of Taps. . .

• Winners In the weekly Bingo Game of Jan. 20th. were llliss Mar)' Woodford, James Fitzpatrick, :\Irs. D. Murph)', Gerald White, Miss Annie Jones, G. White, Mrs . George Hoskins, :\Irs. John Finn, lllrs. Gerald White, Miss Gertrude Woodford.

. Berkley Swain, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Swain, of Perry's Cove, has been given his discharge from the Sanatorium and is back with his family. We wish him the best o[ health in the years that are to come.

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Butt, South· side, celebrated their wedding anniversary on Saturday, Jan. 26. Congratulations. .

lllrs. George S. Pike celebrated her sixtieth birthday on Tues· dal'• January 29th. and we extend to her best wishes for Many Happy Returns of the Day,

Mrs. Fred Butt arrived from the Grace Hospital during the week, with the newest member of the family, a thriving baby boy.

Sympathy to Mr. and Mrs. Theo· dore Churchill, on the death of their Infant son •

Miss Jen~i~'er Rooney l'lsited he~ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Rooney, at Lower Island Cove, over the week·end. .

Grace, Hant's Harbour and Vic· mg profession at that town. , 1 , f . •1· ·'·" Ioria L.O.A. ELECTS OFFICERS i P a~ air· · · ~I waH Th~ Presbyterial President, Mrs. On Tuesday, January 8th, Au::h·' wa~s ~~"\"· · :wmdorr

H. Strong presided, the 'meeting ram Lodge No. 6, L.O.A .. held their · · · ut . also m.lk< opened with devotional by the annual· meeting and election or · · my md 11,~>1HJ r a

At the annual meeting of the President. 'olliccrs and the following are the s~ek 11? credat lor n1y lr~ Official Board of the ,United Reports of the year~ wor]( were officers for the ensuing )'ear: l gll'c With contra!e heart · Church, Rev. w. B. Johnson tend· brought in, most were very en· Wor. ~laster-Brother E. Pugh. · lung as what 1 do If ered his resignation, the same to couraglng. The treasurers report Chaplain-Bro. Herbert Bryant.' unes who neerl a ~13rl. take effect June 30th. next,,· the showed our allocation had been Recording Secretary-Bro. Roy end of the Conference year. Re\', reached with a slight balance. Cumbr. . Cl '} Mr. ,Johnson has served the local 1\lany interesting topics in con· Finaill:ial Secretary-Bro. F1ank. lUJ'C 1 of congregation for three years and nection with the W.~I.S. work Rockwood. · his departure will be regretted by were discussed. Treasurer-Bro. Edward Under·· 0 h the whole congregation. His re- A cup of tea was served at the I hay. • rp anage slgnation will be discussed at the close which was indeed eniol·ed. Marshall-Bro. Chester George. · annual congregational meeting, We trust the year before us will First Lecturer- Bro.. ~lervyn TilE ---: · which Is to take place during the bring success•to our W.~[.S. work·: Parrott. The follo\\~;;od'\D 1Llst second week of February, crs. ; Deputy Lecturer- Bro. Fred Ch . 1 • _ T b onlaOti

Crnmm. . I rls m,., ree Fund lit

-- J I Inside Tyler-Bro. A. Hiscock. . full~ acknowledged. Messr~ G. B. Powell and Hud· • ; Outside Tyler-Bro. Fr~d Cumby. S-:~.0~-:Bennett Brtlli:l

son DaVIS were elected Chairman Red Cross Meetin 0'. The installation is to take place' pan~ Limited. and Secretary of the Carbo near ' 0! at the next meeting. , li20.00 each-T. A. H_oek~y Association at a recent __ 1 llembers of Aughrim Lodge .. Ltd., R. E. Innes. meetang. · Don Parsons and John CARBONEAR, Jan. 28-.1,. meet· 1 L.O.A. attended divine service at 515·00-Parker ~lonrot P~nney will coach the Town Tcame, ing of the Carbo near Red Cross ' the United Church on Sunciay 510·011 each-Fred \'. With John Goff, Manager, and was held in the Memori~l Library I January 13th, at 3 p.m. The •en·ic~ ·Ltd .. :11. .0 · Shears , George Lon~, Property Manager. this evening. The President, :\Jr .. was taken by the minister, Rel', · n:~dshall, H~n. J. \, Other executive members are Len John Rorke Jr. was in the chair No· • L •. ~ra ;\I. Roal, John :IIcNamara ~nd Roy Howell. A I and fifteen m~:Obers were in at·.. L~o.'~ .. 1. l.~·sr,tz.l.A'flON Of '~· A. :.Iiller, Bain~ dance. to ra.Ise funds for the As· I tendancc. 1 • OFFICERS co. Ltrl;, ~~~~· D. II. sociallon Will take place In the Quite a bit of business was dis \ !\t tl I' f H 1 d ward (. \I ood )lr· :llnsonic Hall on Wednesday, Jan •. posed of while son;e was laid o·,; 1 o' B \le lmleel Ing uti . otpl r :o tglc Cornell. . .. 3oth • , •.. ·' . 1e 1 reccn \ 1e ms a. s· Utl 1 11 .

· the table for consideration at some II I' rr f • 111-7 '·1· cac 1- as - future meeting. From information i ~~~ {~n ni~htac~~~r<hi~~ul Si~ea 2~a:. Ll ieut~,Gosl'elr~or, J. )1.

:llr. James Pike has retired from I given on the X-ray Clinic ,.it was· ri•· :-iarti~ condu~ted the <nme The ~~~~ ·' · 1 rhng, James a Jllr. Graham Ill. Moores And Miss the Postal Service, after thirty. shown that during the month of i ruil~wing arc the oHicer~: · ·' r~. Ja~es lt~we, sr., 11' •

llildred' Church were in town six years as Assistant Postmaster September last there were se\'enh· · ,.. . '[' 1• , _ s: . .'1' 1 •. Reid. ~lass )!lldred d . th k b i X k . . • ,ol. ·'as Jc. s Iocr .ucy Chal'le- Hdrw•· E urmg e wee on us ne!s for here. He was always an obliging ·rays Ia en by_ technicaan Edgar Smith. "·. . . · · ..

W. & J. Moores Ltd. and .courteous official and the Clarke and while. there are not D6p. ~listrcos _ Si,lcr ~lal' Har· Q.C., ~!Iss Elaza~cth 1\!r. Thomas Oates of the South· puhhc regret that he has reached as many as that Ill every mo~th, num · hour Grace, ~I.'·

side celebrated his birthday on the t~mc f?r retirement and we ther~ a~e stil! .quite a. lot and the .11·: Dep. ~listrw-Sbtcr Elsie Shears, .~ 1 r;. E: S.. , Thursd~y, Congratulations and I an wash htm .many· years to enjoy i public 1s a\'aahng of 1t more and: Cumb\', ~la~ad I\ an), ~Ia&> K. Ho•.r: be!t Wishes, Mr. Oates. I the same. Mr. Pike I!. a veteran! more. • Recording Sccti'.-Silter .\lice ~~·00·-jlrs . .1. Tayl~r.

-- of World War I and sllll carries J The matter of a Cnnl'enor for • c b. · ~-.00 caeh-11rs. C. B Mis! ~Iarilyn Moores, R.N. and the scars of battle. . Home Nursing was fui!Y .discussed , ~~~n;;t;cial ScclY.-·Si>t~r Emma H. A. Ba:.tow .

and the matter of appmntmg so~n;· , Er.,nnt. · one to take illrs. \\. H. B. Galls 1 T"ea,urcr-Si;;ler )!artha Sin· place was left over f~r another : \·nrrl. m~etlng, lllrs .. J. S: Pike ~vas ~P· i- Chaplain-Sister Sus!c GPor;~c . p~mted to 1\ork an .con)~nctwn Guurdinn-Bro. l'hbtea· Gem 3c. HOCKEY

9ARBONEAR, Jan. 28-Hockey fans halt plcr'lty of excitement dur­ing the week, with a variety of teams putting up their best.

St. James' School beat the Har· bnur· Grace United Church Schoo\ In a well fought game that showed the former. had power and com· blnatlon. . ,

St. James' Team: Fred Rossiter (Capt.), Fred Long (Goal), Guy Brien; Douglas Chubbs, Ah'ln Chubbs, Billy Earle, John Oates, George Hiscock, Jim Baker.

. Harbour Grace U.C. - Lore Quinn, Dave Pike, Lloyd Downing, Wallace Pike, G. Parsons, Gordon Pike, Lloyd Pike, Jnhn Downing, H. P.asha, W. Goodwin, A. Slm· moods,· E. Martin and R. ·Martin (Manager).

In the Canada Packen - Car· bonear Seniors Game, the local boys came out on the right end of a 14-7 seore.

Canada Packers team were: R.

w1th the Carbonear Kawanss Club Director of cercmonics-Si,tcr Greenln~, B. Tro!sky, B. Dalton, 1 on The Blood Bank. E:lsil! Underlwv. G: Hardmg, 0. '\ oodman, George It was also made known that the 1 1 Lr twea:-Si<teJ· Carri•· ~laf. P1ke (1\lanager). · Women'.s Work of the Red Cross . . s · c · · ·

would begin work on the material. '10.; d l.ccturcr-Si;-tcr Liliian

The "Evening Telegram" team just received on the 2nd. Thurs· ' ., -.n .. · and the Victoria team played a day of February. All the women:' cc .;'': . ..,. r .. • ., mo!t interesting game, with Vic· who 'have been sewing in . the 1 P:.~ .. ;;-~': · ./':,.11

• G~?,1 •• r ...

Ioria holding the edge on the visi- past are asked to attend this I01· ·.: • c:uaa c;·-·1 ~ :::' 1•

1~~:.l ,~~ker tors right throughout. meeting and new sewers will rc· 11 · . ·~~.:~ .••• ··: :. , ........ , r.a

The Telegram team was eompris- 1 ceive a warm welcome. ,~t lht "• 1.1• · ·. '" ed of John Fcaver (Capt.) Rob·/ .;ocial hou •·:as enJn)·ed 1:) <11

t s H b t c r ld ' Cl IJre,cnt. er ears, u cr oe 1c. , ar· 1 and the)' gave them good moral ' _____ .. ence Downton, Gordon Pike, Jerry! support. The Principal, ~lr. Clif· TORO:":TU 1 CP ·-It to!·: .... 1. Blyde, Clayton Downton and David I ford Andrews, also accompanied 1 ••• :·· •• R 11:: inches o! !'110\\' to >io" .

oTghcrs.Vl t 1 • i the _team, as did another supporter hour traffiz IJ a crawl in T ....... e c or as. Kev n Butt, Ar· ~lr Jacob Parsons . · ,. · 1

thur White, Aubrey Rose Roy . T.h 'I h . , . J' I. Tu~sday, but nt~JJr t·;:.,I~ "'" ay., • • • . e •• acp erson team 11ere. am wer cau··'d bl' a b"ai\'•1 l'!aler

Baldwm, Gerald Deermg, VIvian Brown Noel Go\'Cr Junior Thistle I .e ·1• • •' k ' .1 1' HI k J Cl k N ' ' ' ' llllln a 1 a .,r:; "11 s r:n "ar scoc , ames ar e, orman Billy coaker Ed Vatcher David , 'r • · •

Clarke, Boyd Penney, Allan Cur- ~1oore Billy' Boone David o5• pol'.•)r .n~. new, Andrew Cole, Piercey Clarke. mond.' Ralph Parso~s. Allan Snc.l· --------

grove (goalie), Douglas Yetman. llR1STOJ., En71an.t n:wt.~:·sl­(sub-goalie), Darroek Vincent, Her·' Britain'.; lzt~st len:: • ranee air· man Starkes, Newman Andrell's. lin~r. the Bri.;tal Britlnnia 312. Brett Pugh, (coach) Jo~d. Thistle' lelt Brist~l Tu~£dJ)' on her m<:J•.l£1\ and Lolyd Benson (team man· i tr::.nsalllntie provin'l f:ight \'ia the agcr). 1 Arctic. Aller an all·lllght >lOlJ nt

!llacpl1erson Academy team

\\'liTER R.\T!O~£D C.\R~JAXGAY, .\Itt i

u~,da:; in !hi, tQr:n tl \\' at~r ration in;; \1 a; il norlh of LethiJrid~c to sh~rt:J ~c that clcl'elJ!·!d J.;P wh~n tllr lu,•·n dam a ls::lt,

The Great aMiracle Ink" A man strolled into 1 bank, wrote a check for had it certified . hours later an '"'r<•nonllirot!l ed the same check far

Jt'ebruary Rer.der's tells you the true fnnt:~stic forgery plot, minded by a man ~till at w:10se in:rcnuily rou!d untold havoc. Get ruary Reader's '"•w• ···~ :17 articles of including the be>t magazine~. hooks. :a vc your tirr.e.

Noftall, D. Yetman, D. Yonden, A. Power, G. Christopher, N. Ryan, R.

came from St. John's and in a well (ought game went down to de· !eat to the Carlvmcar Air' Codets, the score ending Cadets 17, Mac­pherson Academy 8. The visitors brought along their cheer leaders

The opposing team was matlc j Prww:·,J;. s~otland sh~ ll'<~s t·J fi)' . up of the regulars from the Cadets., or•!r the __ PJ_I~_r_r~~-i~_n!_~~- c~·a~n~~::_d:_:J·:__ _________ . __

ALL . STOCI{S MUST BE ·soLD All Men's, and Ladies' Clothing Reduced ·ro ·cost

MEN'S WEAR Suits-Raglans-Top- Coats -Overcoats­Sport-Jackets-Pants­Shirts-· Sweaters:-- Belts Pyjamas-Etc.

331/3 to 50% off •

ALL FIXTURES

··Lots Of Items Below Cost

·-

For ·Quic~ .Clearance No Appro . No Charging

All. Sales Final & Co.-, Ltd. · 321 Water St.

/

Ladies' Coats­Raglans-Suits • Sweaters-Blouses­Slacks -Shirts Etc.

ALL TO CLEAR AT

Price - SHOWCASES; ETC., WILL BE SOLD AS STOCKS ·ARE SOLD OUT.

·'.

I .. •.

.. .• - . . . ~ .

ST.··

DIS LOR~SHIP Brinton, Memorial was master of ce and Reverend Gcn Genge holding the Jocaled in :the .

row11 rial

· ·: · Titti~sn.\y -Sunris • . S .. -e ••••

· · unset " . . . . . . . .

Page 3: THE DAILY NEWS - Memorial University of Newfoundlandcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570131.pdf · THE DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY . Heat~:l~:ntent I £~g /\ house

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t

D·. ·'·l . azy News '·

ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND ·1 I •

THURSDAY, JANU.ARY 31, '1957 ..

The Bishop Dedicates. . r ..

·New ··school ',

... ,-..

Brigus Replaces As. Terminus For

Porttig~l Cove·. Bell Island Ferryi.

I A.· T. T. HE. . ciTY_ HALL I Cove Harbour , froze.nl "---&,., __ --:........;___ _ __.:...· --J·I Slob Ice Near fShora·:

BJSI.ORDSIIIP THE BISHOP OF NEWFOUNDLA~D. Right Reverend J. A. ~·Ieaden vesterdav dedicated. the ::::.:0n )!emorial School. H. V.: R. Eal'le, Chairman of the Board·of Directors of ch'u'rch of E~gland Schools, 1 ;.; ma~tcr of ceremonies. His, Lot·clship was attci1dcd by the Chancellor of the Dioceses, F. R.Emerson, Q.C., d Rcrcrcnd Genge. Top photo shows the Bishop flanked by Mr. Earle and Mr. Emerson with Reverend <f.~;c iwlding the staff. giving the dedication. Lowel' photo shows this fine new seven-room school which is Jxo:cd 111 the Orphanage Grounds on Strawberry J\larsh Road.-(Daily News Photo). ,

Grand Bank

Blowtorch Thawi-ng Pipe Causes Fire

GRAND BANK -· A double dwelling owned by Charles Cum­ben and Wyatt Trimm was bad­ly damaged hrrc by fire Wednes· day afternoon. The lire original· ed when Trimm y•as ·attempting to thaw frozen l''atcr pipes and the blowtorch l!e wa~ using lgnlt· ed ·tnflammab!r material.

·o,,~II Ev1· denc· e In .Mur· ··d.er ~~r:~~~· ~~!lld~:~.~.e _•nd went out Murphy said he heard· no knock·

lng. He "didn't see anyone because

The house wa! a mas.i o! flames In a few minutes and the occupants bar~ly escaped In the attire which they wore. The Grand Bank fire ftJ'paratus and

.volunteer fire brigade fought the blaze for 1wo !:ours In freez· lng tempcraturts and adverse conditions am\ ~uccessfully con· fined the blaze to one house, al· though •~vera! !Jthcr nearby buildings were m danger. Both families lost practi(•ally all tllelr possessions. No insurance was carried. Local Red Cross commit· tee Is pro'o'idlng ' both families with emergenry clothing and temporary hou~lng. Both dw£1· lings Are almost cCJmpletely gut· led Inside. · c I d y d he went" to the front of the shop La. F S } 1

1

T I ). } .

. 0 ID p e t e ~ster•. . ay thoiagteotolas 1\p'aelrr· otfhesr~o.cs and lee if te or c 100 wo nc lCS ce • • Rear Admiral R. E. S. Bidwell. 1 The nal'y !.1 still as im!'ortant "1 heard the glass break In the Many children from the Rennie's 0 H b , C.B.E., E.D., Flag Officer Atlantic · as c1·cr as new methods ol war·

f:t th~:d d;; ol the trial of the !lTOUnd. "What kind of troU• Laurie reported that A man was kitchen and thought Bill broke it Mill, Portugal Cove Road area 11 af Ollf . Coast, is at present l'isiting the' f:a·c and new weapons demand ' Jo~n,on of Bell Island ble," Mr. Higgins asked, "and was down In the lane bleeding to himself, to tell the truth." He were left standing- in the cold . naval station here. He is no stran~·, greater nal'al protection. I lllth thr murder of \\'II· there said or did you see anything death so Reardon rang for the waited for Bill to come back, he yesterday morning for mo.re tlian Two inches ot Ice f~rmed er to St. John's having serred here j Recently Admiral Bidwell was

1: Bell t>land on Decem· to put ·the idea of court action ambulance. ."Mrs. Reardon, Sr., said, arid must have blacked out. half an hour while they waited In for over two years during tbe war, I in Northern Ireland for the com· ror;tmuec in the ~upreme" Into your head.'' "~o sir," the wit· was In the kitchen. crying and He left, when Bill did not come vain to get a bus to school. on the harbour yesterd•y and b~s made periodic trips crer i' missioning of H.M.C.S. Bonaven-!lhfrday before Hu Lord· ness said. Johnson was sot on the bench In back, and went out by way ofthe Two Main ·Line buses went out and lnt night end with the since lr. his capacity as chief of· turc, the R.C.N.'s new aircraft car-

Chid Justice, Sir Albert Mrs. Reardon told her son, the kitchen," the witness said. back steps. over the route, one around 8.30 below temper!lure ·scheduled ricer, rier which is equipped with the b!!ore a crowded ,court· James Reardon: "Frank had a Asked ·u he had any, discussion He noticed Pike lying on the a.m., and the other at 8.45 a.m., to last Into the morning The Rear Admiral met the press

1

latest devices. This new carrier · . racket and came In with hls hands with Johnson ·about what happen· ground and took him by the head but neither of these stopped to yesterday morning and answered will replace the Magnificent which

lu!l '>~itncs~ for the morn· full of blood," the witness said, ed, he replled, "No sir." He knew and told hlm, "They done a good pick up one passenger from the hours •nother Inch may have questions from newspaper men is going back to Britain after mak· John Braztl, the 16th wit· and told how James Reardon start· Pike as a .close friend, Brazil said,· job on you, somebody done you junction of Elizabeth Avenue to been added by_ noon. and radio reporters. He consider· ing a few delivery trips.

l_or the prosecution, who ed to call Johnson down atid John· and some times Pike drank more up." He was battered up, Murphy Circular Road, ed St. John's is just as important At .present the R.C.N . .t~••n"Mi l.il tlid~nrr on Tuesda)' af· son said "Pike broke a window than was good for him. People said. Children having to be in school The cold snip Ia the worst strategically as it was in the last Is about 20,000 men and the

llr. Janm D. Higgins, out In ~y face." were used to going to Pike's by .: He went to Reardon's and asked around 9 a.m. are late for classes on ·record 1ncl •II the IX· war, but another conflict may put strength consists of a cruiser. Cvu~sel t .. r the accused, "Whim Johnson told Reardon he way of the back steps to get a. "What about coming down and J[ they cannot get on a bus from pert• who keep record• h•ve a different aspect on the fighting. craft carrier and a fleet of 32· tum!r.~d lht• wiln~~s. had to defend himself, lleardon· drink. 'Johnson used to go there giving me a hand to bring Bill 8.30 a.m. to 8.45 and but for the now !lone back to tht e~rly The front line would then be far cort vessels. 'J'he Admiral ~~d th~t ht• tlitl not want -took Johnson to the sink and wnsh· and llfurpiiY went there often. . Pike in, somebody is after doing courtesy of many p1·ivate cars on out in the Atlantic because of the the navy woulil welcome blll:lt~<l up in tht light, and etl him, and (his Murph)'· came In Gus. 1\lurphy was then called to him up.''. . the. ro:td yesterday morning man>' 1900's ta c.!rnpare thl• lea· powerful submarines an enemy I Newfoundlanders because bt' ulra that anything serl~ short!)· a!ler, and .Juntes Laurie the stand. He lived with Bra~ll lie not1ced, he. saHI, that .Tolin· of the children would have .not

1

could send this way. ' made great sailors. 11\.rn l•brt• when he re· came in after 1\!urph)'," the wit· ami Johnson and went with them son had a little scar. on his right only been late but almost frost ====================:=-:====::::::,==.::,..=======~

to l0 an,t hrlp g~t Pike orr ness sahl. to. Reardon'~ on· December .7 at cheek and luoketl a little fl·eslt bitten hatl they depended on the

PUT YOUR. BEST

LOOK FORWARD Gain· the poise that comes when you know you look ~·our best.

A well cle·aned suit, ~well pressed will help you makt th~t good impression, import­ant to success. Always send us your ·garments for expert dry cleaning; sha"rp, long tasting press. Call us io-day for pickup.

QIAL 9-1115

WEA rHER fORECAST . S~:.nl· "nd . . .

• cold. High today 8 .. Temp a~ 3 a.m., 1 below:

li! I • ~IEWFOUNDLA~D . SKIES s~~RSD,\ y I January. 31 . : lflgb TIDES s~~ .. " " .. 7.29 a.m. -7.4.1 a~m. · ·

Low 1.44 a.m. 2.03 p.ni .. " ...... 5.00 p.m. 8.13 ).ni.

TEMPERATURE !,ol"llr.t. Min. Max. Min.· ~lax. · ""Olltrral · · · · · · · · IB 2.~ Halifax .. ."...... 5h; ·1.~ lloncto : · · · · ·.. 1 !3 S)·dne)' .. .. .. .. . 4h · 6

""n.11 n ........ 8b · · 1 · .. St.· John's· ...... :·41r- ·.:5: · . ' . . ... . . . . . ' . /

t.ao 'p.m. He went over. to Pike's ·looking, llke he hnd a wash. Capitol Coach Lines to get them he said, to see how he was be: · When Pike had a few drinks he to school. cnuse he was with hlm the ~lght got sarcastic. Otherwise, Murphy before and they had a couple of said, "He was a gentleman." Ask- A R bottles· of screech. It was. late in ed if ~Ike was quarrelsome, Mur- t Otary the night when he· left he s~ld phy sa1d no. "He ordered me out 1

and there was about ~.-4 ~f a bottl~ a couple of times-under me own The regular luncheon meeting i left. They drank most of It, an·d power•" 1 r of th St. Johns notary Club will

·gave a drink to two friends who .Mr. Higgins, cross examining be held at 1 p.m. totlay, when : called during the evening. Murphy, asked If he heard a voice Colonel Robert ·w. Gates, US ,

He went down and. ·tappM on say, "Come down, YO? cut me.'' AC Commanrl~r Air Training : Pike's window, he said, .and Pike becaus~ ~~r~. Hann sa1d t,hat she 1 Group will spe~J; on "Flying con· l

got out of bed and looked out to heard II, 'Mrs. Hann wasn t under d!Uons of the North" 1'

~ce who it was at the· door and the weather," Murphy' said. · •· . thc"n went back tn bed again "A Constable D. Rccvc5 of the tap on· the ll'indoi' was a cod~ be· RCI\IP was the .lath witness, and he said, but no evidence of a fight tween us." He. went back to Rear· he identified clothing worn' by in~~e t~~ks~.ohnson's first state· don's when he left Pike's at 1.30 Johnson and Pike on the day of mcnt without telling him that p.m. the !lght. He told how Johnson Pike was dead. Johnson seemed

He told of. drinking wine with went to the pollee station around h k d h h t "ld tl t H B 1

midnight and gave himself up and s oc e w en e was o 1a

Ryneds, , raz ld ahnd J

1ohnson · at how the police took a state~cnt Pike was dead, Corporal McMullan

ear on s, an t en caving. AI· f J h th t k ·said "To me he didn't seem ·to together they had five bottles of rom o nson, en . oo another bell~ve it." ' tonic wine and opened the sixth !rom .him around noon because . D Ch I H tt ld ' •. Jphnson was not quite normal the r. ar es u on, res ent b .lltllurphyl hsahidi he took the sixth night before· he had bceri drink· pathologist at the General Hos-

ot e w t In, w~cn he left to ing ' pita!, Mr. ,Jacll Side!, senior tech· do so~e work and while he was He Identified the statement nician at the General Hospital ~one e albso hahd Ilve bottles of made by Johnson at the police laboratory, and Dr. T. Anderson·

eer, and roug t one fRck with station. . · gave evidence about the autopsy him for -Reardon, at 7 ,o dock. 'fhc statement was ·put in evl· pcrformca at the General Hospital.

He looked at television for .a dencc Johnson said In his state· The cause o! death was given as wd hlle at Reardon's and then went ment that he went to Pike's around asphyxiation .by blood In the lungs ,own to see Pike, around 8 o'clock. the back and looked In the win· !~om'-multiple lnju~ies. caused by

BIII let me In this time. He told dow and called out and asked "is vLolcncc. . me to slt down. l sat • down. He ther~ either drink around ,. He The doCtors described the con­,askcd me to have a drink on him told how '"Pike broke the ;vindow dition of the victim and· the la· ahnd 1 said no, and he s~!d, whas In his face then called him to boratory test revealed , that the ~ t e good of ya anyway.. walt and went out on the steps alcoholic content of the blood was.: . Murphy said, he had nothing to ·and pushed ·and kicked, him. "l 0.380 and of" the urine o.450." T~c r

dr1lnk at Pikes and did not sec had tp cra~k him as· the man was accepted· level !or intoxication IS '

P ke. dri~k anything. He_ admitted after ·me." "Gus Murphy was lying 0.16. : · that he may have fallen asleep on the floor when 1 looked In the Dr. Anderson said In his evidence because he blacked out for ·quite window " · · that ·"The Injuries appeared to m'e· i a w~ile from the .time he spent There' was no search for John· to be sufficient. to cause . uncon· i th~re. son. before he appeared at the" sclousness in an ordina.ry man." I . 'Bil,l anlf:] were having ~ con· pollee station and said b"e wanted Dr. Josephson, Government Path· I versahon,• and . presumed. Bill to tell what happened at Pike's. ologlst 'gav~ evidence .on the. con• : thought he heard footsteps on the '- · tent of alcohol· in ·the· blood and 1

steps. l was. sitting opposite him Corporal McMullan or the RC~IP urine and its possible effect. 1

on . the chair. Bill Pike was. op· told the story of going and find· · This concluded" the . Crown's 1 .posite. me.· ~et\fc~n rl!le .anr! ..the ing. Pike's body and getting ··ll to witne~&es. . .. · , . .. . window. -BIJI .. turned towards ·the· t.he. p'olice sfation; There was evi- . The. case ·for the,. defence . will window, then l heard the crash dence of a drinking party at Pike's, coi1tinue. this ri10rnhig.'. , . .

FASH.ION

·FA~ RIC S for

•SUPCOVERS • UPHOLSTERY ·• DAAPERIES

ALL LESS FLORAL P.A TTERNS -:- REMNANTS

For Cushions, etc.

20% .FLORAL .tN'. SCENIC PRINTED, DRAPERY Reg. 90c .............................. NOW 72c yard

.Reg. 1.25 ....................... NOW

Reg. 1.75 ........................ NOW

laOO yard

1.40 yard

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THE DAILY NE\VS In The News Newfoundland's Only Morning Paper

tEMi.i •ulll:ll1UPTION RATES

'c:~nada .................. $10 00 per annum lJ!Iited Kingoom and aU

Foreign Countries ..... $14 00 per annum Authoriird as second class mul Post Office

Drpartment, 0\la\\a,

' The DAILY NEWS -Is a moml~l paper cstabllsi.\cd In 1894, and' publllhed t\1 lbt 1\ews Building, 355-359 Duclcwortfl ~1treet, ::.t. John's, Newfoundland, by RobinsiVl . • t.:cmpany, Limited.

MEMBER OF fBB CANADIAN PRESS . The Canadian Presa is .eltclualvely entlllr.d

..: the use far republication of all newa ;e5patches In thla paper credited to It or to I he Associated Pren or Reqtera and also th• ocal news published therein.

All Press service and feature artlclr• • Ill this paper are cop)·rh:ht and thelr'reproducU1111 Is prohlblt~d.

• I Member Audh Bureau Of

Circulations.

' '

ARE WE GETIING SOFTER?

.....

time in the open.afr. "And thus", says· the good :alshop, "wh1le our nc1ghbours have the sallow hue of confinement tingling their

, checks, and their children look comparatively pale and delicate, our youngsters arc blooming w1th the rosy hue of health, develop­ing their energies by air and exercise, and preparing themsel· ves for the battle of life here· alter, either as hardy ma~iners, or healthy matrons-the blbom- . mg mothers of n powerful race."

----------~~~-------------------THURSDAY, JANUARY 31, 1957

The vapour you have been seeing in recent mornings about the time that most of us,set· out for work Is largely the meeting o( hot words w1th the cold air that has been blasting us recently !nto a state compounded of chill discomfort, angry frustratlon and unbridled self·pity, l\lo5t of it ames from the difficulty ol getting one's car to go. In a hanhcr .ern, there 11ere no cars to worry us with thc1r wanler problem.~. We buttoned up our overcoats, pulled down the ear· !taps on our caps, and set off at a brisk pace to 11 alk to 11nrk in a nlc;tsant and bracmg almos· phe1c.

There arc nlhers who make light of ,1 fc11 degrees below zero and who pay tribute to the healthy ;md robust state of R

p011 crful people bul 11hal they 11 ould think of us today, huddled 10 0111 cars or fc,ll ful of muvin!l a loot n1· t11o a11ay ftom the of­flee radwlor, 11e c.mnot lmflllllle. You h.11 c lo keep the blond cJr­culatJng through l'Xetcisc to st~nd up to cold .uul tiMl ,Js wl~o~t the people of an c,trhnr lmte m Ncw­foundl,md rhu ~' a matter of cmu·,r.. The~ 11 nlkrd back anrl forth on 11 ork rla~ s nnd on a hi!· l!'l' holutay 1n wmlcr, so tong as it 11 as f,m nverhend. they w;;~lk­ed mound Klltl' V1ltv, nr skatd on Burton'soanil Lon·g PonrlS: or d1 agger! thClf bobsleds tn the lulls on lhc outslmts of the 10110. lf their cars began to tingle, they hnulily rubbed snow nn them ami 01 er frozen checks and noses. And they e\'en cn)o~ ed the palllful re· turn of circulation to frozen hands

Mr. Garson On Education, When 1 he Fedcral-1\Imister o( J hst1ce

speaks in the House o[ Cn!nmons, he usualh· talk~ better seme than he did when· he opposed a pt·ivate member's re:oolution for federal aid "Iot• the ex­pan!'IOn and equalization of educal!onal opportunit~· acro:-s Canada."

l\tr. Garson trotted out the outmoded and motheaten argument that federal grants for such purposes would under­mine provincial autonomy in the field of education.

'11\at, of course, is absolute nonsense. Federal grants to unh·ersities have not in any \\'a~· impaired pro\'inc\al control over in~:1tutes of higher learning. There is no rc<~-on \\·hy fmancial assistance for edu­e:~:ion at a lower le\·el should become a challenge to pmvincial rights.

:Mr. Garson seems to be much more concerned about legalistic quibbles than with the rights of Canadian children to a sensible measure of educational equality of opportunity. Thnt is a bigger issue than pro\'incinl autanom~·. However, it cnn be sol\'cd without a ch~llenge to that autonomy.

The right to a foundation education should be the heritage of e\·erv Canadian ch:lcl. Xor must an.'· child be deprived of th;n rlght b~· geography or relnth·e pon'1 t~·. If 11 is bc.vond the means o[ ·a par: Jettiill' prodncc to .SUj>pl~· the op­~~.~Ulllly fot· a foundation education, it ts ,,1e duty of the Federal Go,·cmmcnl to remcrl:· the slltl<llton. This is a subjc~t on 1\'hwh ;\h·. Gat·son should acquire H'cond thoughts.

Pay Of Licensed Teachers Among the recommendations made

' at the recent conference on the teacher shortage was one for the establishment

,. of a minimum salary of Sl200 a year for • 4 teachers with a D licence. 1·' There are those who oppose this on

the grounds that it is not desirable to do ' anything to retain in the profession of . teaching those whose qualifications are '1• so low that the~· cannot acquire a better :; standing than the D licence. '1 But that is hardly the point. l\Iany

licensed teachers have 'to pay board and their net earnmgs on the basis of the

••••• , ... ,., prelicnt salary scale are insufficient for their necd.s. :\fler all. the proposed mini­mum rep11~~ents \'ery little more than tl}e mnnmmn wage law now prescribes.

The fact ts. whether we like it or not, thnl h;lif the schools o( the province woulrl hi:! empty if licensed teachers were not cmplo~ cd.' And many ~·oung people with no better than the lowest qualifica­tions for a licence may be able to do very well in the small schools pt'O\•ided that the burden 'imposed upon them is not too heavy; '

In any event, so long as they must he cmplo~·ccl, the~· must also be fairly paid. And a salary of less than $1200 n ~·car is not fair pay fm· a teacher, no mallcr what the experience of academic standing may be. If a person is accept­able fot· school supply, that person.must assum'c the responsibilities that ~o with teaching and is entitled to a living wage.

The day must come when 'there will be no teachers who ha\'c not attained at least thch· first grade. But until then, schools must be supplied with teachers of lower academic standing and less experi­ence and they must·be fairly compensated. We hope that this will be a mattc't· that will be taken care of in the new Budget.·

Israel· On The· Spot It is easy enough to understand the

reluctance of Israel to obey the U.l'f'· order to evacuate. Egyptian territory without ad~uate guarantees against raids from Gaza and blockades in the Gulf of Aqaba. Her positiott'is difficult and it docs not appear likely, that the United Nations is. in a position to be helpful.

What Israel wants is the use of the United Nations Expeditionary Force to

police the 1Gaza b01·det· and the entrance

to the Gulf .<>f Aqaba. Mt-. Pearson, for Canada, has suggested that some such arrangement be made. Russia, on the othet• hand. has strenuously opposed the idea that U.N.E.F. should remain in Egypt once evacuation has been completed.

'If pressure from U.N. compels Israel to move out of the Egyptian territory she still occupies, the danger of war in the 1\liddle East will be no less than the threat that it will certainly come if Israel disobeys the U.N. order. For if Egypt immediately revives guerilla warfare across the Gm:a border and prevents Tsraeli shipping from using the Gulf of Aqaba, Israel will have lo retaliate or be clcstrQyed.

The ultimate responsibility may fall upon the United States which has virtual­ly undertaken to guarantee peace in the Middle East. .tin American assurance of security for Israel would end the present deadlock. But the implications of· such an assurance are like!~ to give Congress pause. Yet without it, the Israeli are caught in the middle of a situation in which the~· may be damned if the\' do and damned ii they don't, And ~\·hat emerges from this situation is the im­potence of the United Nations to enforce peace and maintain the rule of law m the (ace of opposition from the Communist and Arab bloc, That is nol a plea~Hnt fact to contemplille in this difficult moment in world affairs.

Indiscreet Talk 'I'here was no obligation on the Mavor

'of New York to extend his city's ~us­tomat·y boisterous 'welcome to Ki~g Saud of Saudi Arabia. But neither wns there any justification for his indiscreet and undiplomatic 'attack upon a guest of his country.

King Saud has come to the United States as the guest of its government. Ordinary politeness suggests that he be accepted on that basis. And when it is realized that he exercises a potent in­fluence in the Middle East, it is all the more important thnt people ' in high places should refrain from public criticism regardless,of their personal feelings.

It may talte a very long time before we shall get the perfect world that e\'ery­body wants. In the meanwhile, it has to be recognized that there are nations whose practices, policies and behaviour violate demoeratio principles,• And one of the first steps towards wol'ld securilv is the gradual establishment of good. relations. · .

Ma>•or Wagner's offensive indiscre­tions ate not likcly .to put King Saud in the right state of mind to offer his good offices for the underwriting of peace in the Middle East. To withhold an official welcome was his right. To follow it up with a public concJemnation of an im­portant guest of the n~tion suggests that h~ was playing poli~ics at the public ex­pense. It was not a contribution to the easing of \vorld tensiqn or the' success of Amcncan foreign policy.

' SHOPPING BY CAR

(Strat!ord Beacon·Heraidl

E~rry aulhnlllY 11 e have con· sult~d has lcstlliecl to 11 hat many of them r:11l the saluhlll)' ol the :\'cllloundlnnrl rhmatr. 'rhere 1s the Rc1·. Dr. )!o<es IlaneS. lor cxnmplc, ll!'lting seventy-hi c ) Clll'S ngo to tell liS that thiS saluhrity "1s 'ellflr.nCCJI by the robust l1callhy ilPtlenruncc nl tho people, Their clotlung In· wlntc1 rlncs not reqUJrc to he much 11 a1 mer than that worn m Brit· ain at the ~arne season o! the year. Open fireplace~ are sufh· cient to warm the houses, anrl free exerc1se in the open a1r is attainable at all seasons." And then, to support the notion that the 11mtcr is a m1ld period by comparison with the mamlnnd, Dr. Har1·ey quotes the result o{ observat10ns taken l1y Mr. E. ~!. J. Delany in St. ,John's from 1857 to 106-4 to show that in that periml the lowest temperature teconlcd 11 as on Fein uary 11, 1858, when it was two degrees above ,zero.

• Then there was Sir Richarll

Bonn,castle to assert in 1842 lhnt "we !lnd that the extremes of temperature in Nc11founlllnnd nre trilling comparerl with those ol Canada, •.. llc1 e the !011 est temperature 111 11inter scm·ccl~· exceeds zc1n, or eight or ten de· g1 ces below it, e.~cepting upon J'arc ot•c,l<Jons'' and he added that the labounng c),lsscs 1wnt about in winter in light clullung.

All thc<e old anlhonties make lir.ht ol a !ell degrees belo11 7CJ o. Wllncs~ B1•hop :l!ullock· "We ne1 er hal' I' the I hc11nometer d~wn !O 1CI 0, uniloss l!llCe 01' l\1 ICC Ill the ~ "fll', and then nnl~ (or n fe11 hour<, and !o1 a few rlr!!l C!'<, three, four or perhaps ten ... ," AIHI he pmnts out tlhll 11 h1lr. Can· arl1ans krpt to th~1r homrs m 11 inter, t\e1\loundland cluldt rn 11 rrc a> li~htll· clarl ,,s 111 <ummer nnrl S)lrnt a large pa 1 t of thr1r

dangled before 11arm stoves. --.-----------------------------

But we nrc doubtful about them hclllg lightly clad except to

USAF Starts the extent that ever~ one wore J t s J )ong Ullllerwear in wmter and 11 ensc earc } summer, stockmgs the ~car round , , • , 11crc woollen, and the cloth of H~. NUHIULASl' AIH CO~I­suits or dresses was much hca1'1er ;>.IA.J.'iD-An intcns~ nct'lal search stuff than we wear today. And ~or rovmg tee iolm.d '1'·3, located 11 lule homes 11 ere reasonably m the polar. ba~m. is bemg con· warm, there 1\JS not that uniform ~ucted by al!'cr,lfl of the United ~ 1 gh temperntnre that modern ::ila!~s A1r Farce, operalmg out lw.tting tunts allo11s us tn have of 1 hule Air Base, Greenland. to ,,1p our Jcsisl'!lnce to the cold Launched several weeks ago nultloors. 'l'hc• truth IS thall!HS un- lly the USAF's .Northeast A1r rxpccted enid snnp h,ls caught Command, the seal eh is center· us o([ gu,ml m all wa~s and for· ctl m the last l:nnwn a1ea nf the c~d us to accept the truth that 1sland, alluul :!Uo nHlcs north of 11e arc cast in a softer mould than Ellcsmc1'e ls!aud, off the north· th1• haHly Newloumllanders of a west tip of Greenland. fe11 gencr.tlions a~o. When found, '1'-• 11111 he oecu·

• " ~ · pwd by scwnlls:;: for 10 monllls :\0'1'1;. In case an) one may as pa1t ot lhc l:ltCJnalwnal lieu·

ha1 r inferred !rom ~ cstcrd.1y's physJca! Y cur ,lGYJ acll'illJcs nlllc·lr that Han·cy & Co. might wluch hcgm th1s spung. The U:S h.ll r he en mchutcrl .unong the AI' has as>~(mcd the tasK ot hllllrl· tmns wh1ch Jccen•cd assistance lllll the 1ce 1sbnc• stauon and in the rlrvclnpmrnt of the fresh suppo1 tmg l11e sc1cnllfw party

. f1sh husu1rs•, 1t should he made dunng the lsl,•nc!'~ nr.cup,mcy. cle,tr th<tl this tompan~ has ne1er · llampclcd ily ccntmual arct1c rrl·ril•erl a ~O\'N'nmml loan for da1 kness, the searehlnl' an·crafl this or nny other purpose. are usmg rad~r to locnte the is·

land. In n radar ~cuJIC piCture, T·3's d1stmr:t kidne~ shape Mancl5

Toscanini --A Dedicated BY BRUCE BIOSSAT

Arturo Toscanini was great not only because he 'cated '3 he1ghts in his chosen musical world. In his long llfehme he !'lt as a supreme example of the dedicate1l man.

11111lions who never henrd r. note of the mu<Jc hr bro~;o:: ~

hfe could and did learn f1 om hi3 fierce quest 1<11 pErfetllvl J

everything he touched DnHn by a hfe force that 1\nUiil nnl !Pt hun sparr hlm•flltt

anyone who worked ll'llh lum 'l'oscanim ~ecame a h1m~ •)c\il or all that is lincst in serious mu,lr.

Ills pms1ut o! the ultimate m musiCt·l exprc.-wn rndrd t:.t . when he d1ed. He studied the great mus1ca! ,ct'l rs a< 1r.ten·!h J

h1s fmal ~cal s as he had rlonc m Ins fier~ 'out11 lim rh thm a Jcs.c;on here for e1•ery man V.ho IIOU)d hfl up an Jdea! ar.d 01

t011ard 1!. Note the <mnlle<t m~a<ut·e nf his !ICI'otwn ''"' h1• drr1•J•1

come out nf retirement at iO to conduct lh~ mprrh \Ill ~1m

Lr<scr mrn nught' ha1c hecn cnnlr'll In offrr mrrr lnhn only long enough to J::•'l such an m t'he~olra C1lillh•hroi Trwc1~~

l~cl 1t cnergehcally for li ~ca1 '• fmal~ 1;,) m~ do11n hi< h!ltn f.! three years a~o.

Wher~ver thl$ elcctri~ little m;-,n pa•-rrl, hr rh~r~rrl th• l'"~ phere with excitement. Sm~rr; •<·n:t b·~tcr than tlt" btl ttl they coul£1. Orchc~tras out piAl erl th~ir hr<t for lum

What Others Are S • oul agamst th~ polar pack 1cc.

a Yl n g 'J'.:J, also kno\1 n at Fletcher's Icc island, 11 a~ f.rst d1sco\ cred m 1950 and •'· as ongma lly oc

In his crasclcss stn1ings, lie elcl',llerl mus1c anrl mu•tmn! tll! !nentably such a man ;pawnerl legends ;.lmo<t from tht

momrnt he p1cked up a baton m South Amer1ca 11 hrn he ~ll He was more than !mill ant. lie had n g1 ez,t mu11l.

performing the mo<t prodJglous memory feats, puslun~ at~;yJ ward deetlcr understanding.

niACmLLA~ A~U JULIAN A~IERY

(ottawa Journal} One of S1r Anthony Eden';

stoutest champions when be launched his Suez adventure and one of his sharpest critics when he halted it wns Captain Juhan Amery, son of that old rock of the British Tories, Lcopoltl Amery. Worth noting therefore that .Tnl· Jan Amery ls a son.Jn.Jaw of Ilar­oicl l\L1cmill.m, Sir Anthony Eden's auccc•~or. Sons·in·law don't ulwr.ys conunaml the minds of fathers·m·luw, Iml they can make a d1ffe1 cnce, t'olll'cially when the ~!m·in·l,l\1' is a Julian Amrry. Julian Anwry, slill m his thirties, is utll' ot the bright young men of the 'I ory party, bas crowded much mto Ius yer.rs. Out o£ Eton and Oxford he was a 1\',tr corre3pon£1cnt in Spain ~uring tile Spanish rel'olution, l~o~s ~en cd on special missions to Bulgaria, 'l'urke)', Romama wd the lllirldle East, was n seJ'ge.mt in the IlAF during the Battle of Britam, Inter saw actil e scrvlce with the M'I11Y In Eg~ pt and Pal­estine, was haison offleer for the rcsl3tnnce movement in Albania and Sir Winston Churchil!'s per· sonal representative with Chiang Kal·Shck In 1045. In addition, Julian Amery is a jourm;llst and author, wrote nne o( the volumes ol the Life of Joseph Chnmher· lnin. wrote n hook cnllrd "Sons of the E,tglc" anrl has contr1hul· crl conlrol·er•ial articles to the Nation:-.! Rcl'iew and the Nine. tcrnth Century. Clearly not tho ~ort of >nn·in·law 11 ho is lu~t asked occasionnlly to a famil~ dinner.

cupwd by the U!:>A~ from 1952 and Asia. A Bntish correspond· tu 19;;4. cnt who was m Red Chllla at the From June to September, 1955, time giles n discouraging report scientlsts from the Au· Force on this belief. In Red China Cambridge Hcscnrch Center ncii'Spapcrs the Umted States con· agam occup1cd the 1sland.

Most who knew him would sa..- Toscanini 11ould tl31c betn no matter what field of achie1·ement he chose. He 11ns a beliel'er in polrtical freedom, 1•.ho stouti)' rrfu•rrl In pia~ Dictator Mussollni's rascisl anthrm a!llt llmJicl· h;~1c no•h,r.z soever to do with German" and Austria 11 lulc thc1 h1ed H1tler's heel. • ·

tinucd to be an "1mperiahst ag· Named after l'SAF Colonel gr~ss?r·" The U.S. vote against Joseph c. Flctcller, who was Bntmn and France wa> repre· leader of the ongmal 1'·3 cxpcdt· In every facel of his life, he rlung to pr.nc plr ,,, sen ted ns 11 "cunnmg desi~n to twn, the Island wi•l form one of as he scarche!l out the clum c shadings of a :l!ozar: or furth~r her o!vn coloma\, mtcr- the bases of opu atwn for the sympbony. csts 1~ the M!tldle East. '!'h!! sc1entif1c work ()[ IGY. Scientists America wa• fortunate to have been the setting a~am•t Amerl~an gesture 10 the U.Nt. from several n~t10n~ are cnoper- so much of Toscamni's hfe unfolded He enrlo11 ed 11, ~.nd all 11as smccrcly weli·J:lCant. Bl! atmg In the polar basm phase, world richly. ll was folly to !Jchcl'e that 1t winch llll'htdcs another US.W 'VI would ch.mt,:e the att1tude of tho lerc1•er great mus1c 1,; player! herealter, monu1n~nts ll'll !1 l'ummlllllsl l\orld 01. ~vcn of the bUill pui,Jr stall'Jll on an Icc flue r,lise<t to this man. nculralisl cuuntries. 'l'lll'y uru 111 ~ 1. 1 ,h uf .1\lasl::~ , , IIIIi 'I'IIA'l' HliiH'ASTt:II-OU'l' not gomg to ch .. nge tlit•lr uplll· 1 ~ Is 111 1011 tunt lllii\Cil1Cllt, We sl'cm to l'Cl'ail >Oill~ lledy o!feted p!t•tildllll!• :h.t 11ofi'J !on of the Unite1l ::il,th•s hel'ause ollllllng UloU!ul the north Jwle to he~ til ell~ mild Wllllt•r, 11 l't•llllu to the >II Jug ul rouJw,, WI of one \ole 111 the U.N., 1111 m.tl: at nu ll\'I'HI!/l' l'oltt• 111 3 11111" ' 11111 the e.blel'Jl h.,lf ut the couulry cuju,t·d froiU 104H-lll tluuu.h I~!~ tL•l· how muc•ll r~1 ,.t .. css tt1a, t V!Jie a hull Jll'l' d3y It also rutult•d , 11 1 ' 1 1 1 \\ e , t re Jorecu"ter~ loukt•rl goud iu Deu•tuht•J In •11m1 r:Jt may cnst the Us '!'he Alab on 11s o1111 nxts n n J.ue '/ per· counlri~s lill'lllS!•l\'es, und!•r the cept1hie spill as 11 gruHis tlu ough the da~ time tempe! a lures lui 511 dcgre( s ur mo1c • d11t1 n II~!! constant prodding of Caao Hadio the polar sea h•c. llul 11hat has bappcne1l since shuultln't happt'll to a : p•cr-!

. have not changed their athlud~ 'J'he 1sland mca•nres four and -\leather or otherwtse. The alcllc blasts h .. H tl•"«·ndrd t:l to\lf,nl the Un1ted States either. a half hy nine miles and Is 1fiU ll'ith them a frosty coating of snow. J'rl'sident Nasser Wlll contmue to feet thick It is frequently suil·. For people who've grown accustomed to the nuld ,:uff. t~!l get as much and g1vc as hltle jecled (o tempr•raturcs as lu11 as lmrrl to lake. Many get so the only place the~ 11 anJ ,r,n.t ,J a as he c.m. To them. the United 70 rlegrcos below zero. Chr1stmas cards. States 1s still the ally o( Great The occupatwn of '1'·3 Is a Nobod,1 's hearing from the nuld winter prophrt\ 1.J;nt n"' r' Brilmn anrl France, ;,~ainst whom major pro.tect, rcqUll'lng all o( sumably tbcy're holed up m their igloo:; some11 herr If thF f •l(l~ they !Jolrl colom.tl grudges. )lost the plannmg ami operatwns nUl· for below normal temperatures for the next month hnlrl• Z'01 •!1 o( r.ll, the US 1s the prime sup- mally assucmted ll'ltll m·cuc ex· mar fta•Te to Install permanent heating port of lsrael, the state they have pcclitions. Faced 111lh a tight time -----· sought to destroy. That \'ole in schedule, the Ncrthenst Air Com· F" d N w the U.N. was no doubt well· manrl commanded by Lieuten· Ill s e\V ay to !ftCant. But the spl.tt it ~reated ant General Glenn o. Barcus, m the Wcst~rn a.lhance helped has organized an Arctic Aerial Conserve Water no one at all except the Soviet Task Force. Union. E Under the command of Col· M LBOURNE (Reuters) - A

one! Robert W Gates, an ex· young Australian scienllst has dls-U:,\IIJ:ns ~lUST I.I;.\J> I I h (Balllmore Sun) JlClleuced alcllc (lyer w w ast co1c1cd a mot od t'f consc1·1·mg ·The 1;1 cnmg Sun docs not un. year estabhsheu SIX Atr Fo1ce II ater Wh1ch could be ~ boon to

rlenmtc the theory that the scwntiflc ~talltlllS ?n. the Gl'ce~· Hemnants of the two pre;i~us Engllsh conshtuhon is better land lee Cap, tile 1'·3 task fmcc expedllwns sl1t. rcmam on '1'·3. than ou1· own. Yet it must be 11 iii handle the a•rhfl of uutlal Saggmg buildillJ;S and abandon· aclmowlccl~ed that the English Slll'I'CY partws, tlacto!·s f~r t,he ed eqmpmenl dot the island, !Jut sv;lem has ccrt.dn advantages. couslllletmn of 811 ICC 1111111 ny the , cund1t10n of the maleual 1s One is thr.t it mal;es 1t ncccs· on the lsland, and se\ elal hun· not known. l:'or tb1s I cason, ex· 5.try for leaders to lead and gets drcd tons of cqmpmcnt nccde~ ped1tion plans :ll£: based on the

TJ!f: VOTII TIJA'r 11111 NO rid o£ those who do not bow to .for housmg slatlon and sclenll· assumption that there w1ll be no GOOII this ncccsslt)'. ftc pctsonnel. usable eqUlplllcl1t en the island.

(Montreal Gazrtle) Seven men Wlll fbrm illl imtml An inlcreslmg "chicken or the Uuilerl Slates policy on th~ ~i\LUTI: FOR nov,u:rY survey party lo 110 landccl 011 the egg' problem runftonts the A1r

Midrllc East has hcen :;)mn~t l'Oll'l'S~!OU'fll, N H. (AP)-,.'ilx 1sland nhout 1 lllalch. The pa!ly Force in the rarl;; consttuctwn Automahon hils taken another step forward, cnmplctely reverser! in the last B~7 ict hmnt•Jls fmm lhc US. Wlll lncate camp and runway stages. Jn order to land heavy

A drive through grace h b d l II II '1'1 G t An· l'orcc hase here saluted Kin!: Sites, anJ! del•rmwr the tslnnd s alrcraft WJtn <tl"Pitcs, sn1all • ry as een opcne n lrcc ,mon 13• 1e rovernmcn Sa uri of Saud1 Arah1a allOa!fl the conrhtion. " ,.

Houston, Tcxa!1 and 1s reported doing a tlu·iv· 1~ prc;;sin~ now Cor a "doctrine" r c i tractors for runway constructiOn ln~ bualneu. It is said to be particularly popular which 11ould require the United ;ncr 1 ons/ 111

1tion .Monday after- Construction of lhc main sta· must be taken tu tile lSland, bul lth I · h · Sl 1 • r f t 1 oon,, llln£ lCI s. or, miles al sea. L1on, and extcn~wns lo the run- bcfot·e t•·actoi's c•n be la11dcd by w ate·l'lSlllg ousew!Ves, some of whom arrive a cs, m case n a u ur~ r.mcr· '1'11 )mer lu N y k l 1 • n

I th 1 I h t _, · 1 1 t B .1 . c .' ~ e 10 •.cw or· or ay, way to allow helVY transport a1r- lat·gc a1rctalt, a rut111ay 1nust n e ale morn ng ours, with robe• thrown !:Cl\CY, o uo JUS w IR r1 am Is hnng1 "" th k " t t v • ' "' c m,, on R s a e craft • o brmg m personnel and b" ''on•tructcd.

over tlieir nfnhtgowns, to' buy e""S and n1itk. an£1 France did in Octoher. At l'lSl( w the Ullltcd State~ ' " o h "" , • • equ1pment for the permanent '!'he A1r Force wJll soil e tlus

Here's how the '6Y, stem works. Tha customer, 1 that time, It will he rcct·llcrl, the 'fl r II U It cl St ( f d h I( i . I' •nr:ll·ST BA"" E."J',R. camp Wlll be tht' r.cxt step. 1e problem by one of seve1al mclh· o owinl arrows, drivei into a shopping lane n ~ 1 es oun ersc 11 " • "• - • 1 f h 1 1 f th

whe'ra a basktt•ls attached to the car door on the strange position of votin!( H!CI\SVILLE, N.Y. (Al'l - runway 1111 .urt er 5 mp 1 Y. ~ ods. D1sassemblerl traclots can 'II th • · u · 1 1 Frank Bravico and h 1 ~ wife Scl a· J~~ of supplymg camr and sctcn be earned m sk.·Cf\Uli>J1ed, G-l~

the driver's side. As the ear moves along the Wl 1 e Sovlet mon, n t tc phlna were expecting twins. In. t1f1c personnel dunng t11e 18 alrciaft, or th~:y may be para· lane, a store attendant walb alonellde between United Nations, In condemnation stead they got one baby boy wno months of occupancy. chuted to the Island in one piece. the cal-

1 and the arocery shelv!l. When the shoP- • ~gy~~ ~~t~:~cnti~e, a~tlo;re~ weighed 12 pnumls 11 v. ounces Occu~at!on oi the Ice island I! there Ia a light snow covc.r on

per po nts to the Item me wishes to buy, the attend· deal-wn! matle of the theory tlmt The ,child, born Friday at llliu by the lGY sctenllsts Is schedul- 'r·3, larger alrc:nft may be able ant taket It olf the aheiC and puts It In the bas- the United States, hy voting In Islnnd llospilnl in Bethpage, Is the ell for ;\ipy. Arrlval of the sclen· to make normal landings with

ttet. Only · one ·old·fashloned procedure Is re- , that manner, hnd demonstrated to largest in the hospital's experi- tific g1 oup will terminate the the tractors. tained In the new. scheme. The customer pays the world that she had "clean l'llce. task force's activltieF and respon-

( t tl I I d Alrcrcws of the airli{t task th~ cashier at the end of the lane. Apart from hands" n the mr.tter. It wns s1hility of sunply nK 1e s an thl!ot a. 'arocery·shoppinl trip by ear Ia one of ~aid that this wotlld enormously ll!nre than 100,000 ,dirr~rrnt will pass o1·cr the USAF's north· force are prl's•.mtl~ undergoing unalloyed pluaure. · bolster .the prestige and tile In· kind~ of sea shells are known ermost base at Thule, Green· training in ski Pquippcd alrcra!t

fiuence of the U.S. In Africa. and named. land. at Gooae Air Blle, Labrador.

I '

Also

In OXF~RD '

Page 5: THE DAILY NEWS - Memorial University of Newfoundlandcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570131.pdf · THE DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY . Heat~:l~:ntent I £~g /\ house

';J ill~l ' . 'I .. I ~· ..... ~- ... ~·· .......

DA~~~~~~~~~-~-~~~~.:......;__:,_,;_~--:-__.:___..:..,~~-----~~~-~2:!.·. ....... ..

ipal's _Report At ·St. Bride.' s · ":.N::·~~~;:u • I

L• · I d 1 · · · those who contributed acholarsbips

liege, Ill e a e, Gra·duatio.n. ~fs~£J~~;~~~~:~~r.~:1 ~~~tq~~ f,rtCf• Right Revtrtnd lion Week Reverend ·J. J. Murray Wrlllngs by and about 'Our' Holy erend J, J. Rawlins, P.A., V.G.,

\'fry Re\·erend and gave an Inspiring talk to the stu· Father were added to eommemor· P.P. · rathrrs. Reurend dents of Vocations. To Father Mur· ate his eightieth birthday, Increase Very Reverend C. S. Eagan, V.F.,

,nd sister~ Representa· ray we are Indebted for many acts In subscriptions to perlodi~r.~ls and P.P., Mr. Pat Browm'lgg, Mr, Ger· lhr Drrutmtnl or t:tlu· of kindness. The grotto of Our magazines brings th« presetlt num- ald Healey; Mrs. S. J,. O'Brlen, drar rartnll aud Lady .of Lourdes was erected on ber of subscriptions. to thirty. Mrs. Bride Reddy,

the ~Yount, and the statue of Our Catholic Press 1nonth was observ· 1nd ;tudcnts unite Lady Installed and blessed by ed with a symposium by th~ aenlor PRIZE LIST, 1956 .

. t ,11cndin~ to )'OU a Rcvcre.nd Father Eagan on June students and 1 poster contest in . ,Annual schoiars~lp of twenty· · , \., t~ l.itliedaie. 9, the Sis.tcrs and students form· the high school. The 1ystem of five dollars presented· by His.

'1•";~rnh h~noured that !ng in .procession to and from the library prefects work• to ad· Grace, tile Archbishop for first L:

1 h/1:1und time despite school grounds. vantage. The Junior aedlon .of place in Grade Eleven awarded to

i>l· ··1)· hw·~· ~chedule to TEACHERS' TRAINING the· llbrary was transferred to si Min Lily Sullivan, wlnnel" of the ~~-;1 ~ur Graduation Ex· Thirty-five' were registered as Augustine's and 3!1 volumes wer~ Electoral Scholarship for St. ~· First Year Students in Education added to the classroom libraries. John's South.

i-··r •i·•' the Right Rei'· at the Jl!emorlal University of We acknowledge with . gratitude Missal for first place in Beligion ~ .:~r.~n an:i other mem· Newfoundland. As Liltledale is an tha help received from the Gosling presented b)'- Rt. Rev. J. J. Raw. ;;t err~~· Tu. ~he Very affiliated Col1ege, the teaching library in all the grades, and the Una, P.A., V.G.; also· Gold Medal ~rn;itn•'r 0 Keefe we load was shared between the Sis· courtesy of the Library stall. for first place In English; Rosary

_. N~·ratulations on the lers and the professors at Me· Each classroom has Ita · own for first place In Chemistry, · ;;,:~r ",,,wrrcd 'on him · morlal University of Newfound· radio and benefits from the school Diplomas and prizes awarded to ~ .. ; .'rc. nar f~licitations, land. As Littiedaie h an affiiiat· broadcasts. We are indebted too Grade Twelve as follows: ;~~ t:.atan our former ed Collecc, the teaching load was to the Audio·Visual Divisi~n of Missal for first place in Religion, ' ~h~,r· ~pp~intmcnt as shared between the' Sisters and the Department of Education for presented by Rev. c. S. Eagan,

romridrd with his , t h c professors at Memorial. exceiicnt £ilms, filmstrips· and .V.F., P.P., awarded to Miss Rita Me· 1, pari,h priest of J' Twenty.scven students were suc· other teaching aids. earthy; Gold Medal presented by .

cessful In 1\tay and 5 have since Mrs. Bride Reddy for first place in n! our Superin·1 completed the requirements for. MUSIC Grade Twelve; Rosary· for first c;: our As~istant

1 First Grade. Three of these slu· Singing Is taught in ali Grades place in History: Pendant for first

.llr. ron ran. as: dents ate now In their Sophompre from Kindergarten upwards, two place in Chemistry. . ~thrr mrmhrr~ of the year at ~lemoriai: two, ~lary Fitz· periods a week being devoted to Gold Medal presented by Mr. ol Eduration affords .~crald and !llaric MacNeill having it In the Jutlior an~ Senior Grades. Pat Brownrilll awarded to Miss

r;t-1rtunil; nf rxprcssin~ hcen awarded Centenary Scholar· ·The Tonic Sol Fa is used. Seventy· Shirley Berkshire for first place

e;n crrr appreciation of ships, as was also Geraldine Kelly three pupils took private lessons In English; Rotary for first place 1c:; or r.,urtcsy and of of the 1955 class. Thirlr·two of In Instrumental. music, chiefly In French: Pendant for firlt place

..,•,r:.tr..lr" in lhr solution the students are teaching in our piano and Violin. Of the 2S eandl· In Mathematics. , Newfoundland ~choois. In October dates who sat !or the Trinity Col· Diplomas awarded to: - Miss

~:lr dt•ur.cuishPd guest~. : twn of the students tcnchcrs at· lege of Music examlnltloi!J in Mary Kathryn Carroll; M 1 s s arko:::r flr~n Hickman I tcndr.d the conference or the Na· grarles ranging from Higher Loeal Noella Kelly; Miss EIIEabeth r:~rr :n1 mt'rr< o£ the I tiona! Federation o[ Catholic Uni· to lnillal ail were successful. Toni Ann Collins; Miss Rosella Dever· rniwHt~ !a cull~· with I versity students, whl~h was held Healey placed· first In the Hiaher nux; Miss Bernice Haley, Mlsa

,, 1rr !:app.•· til br ~ss~eiat· at St. Francis Xal'ler Unl\'ersity. Local Practical uamlnatlons In Kathleen Mary Johnson (absent);

:!t •i;tmnc o! rdurat1onal They were guests of Mount St. Plano, end tied with Bernadette Miss Mary Power; Miss Lucy Hep. Wr !1\1" from thr. ~le· Bernnrd Colicg~. · Crotty o! Our Ldy, of Mercy who ditch (absent)' Miss Madeline

r:;~ t•'r.:d:l thr lair ~liss There were 15 Grade· Twelve had the same percentage In High- Keough (ab!ienb; Miss Patricia ~~:;e ~r.n:,; 11r a!lmirrd

1 students who followed {he syllabus er Local Singing, Marth; Miss Mary MCCarthy; Miss

-~·· hrr quahtirs and' or the Common Examining Board One Hundred & forty students Helen O'Brien (absent)· Ml.as "i brnd. I of the Atlantic Provinces and participated in the Mueic Festival; Josephine Yard (absent). '

rrr"rt c~,·rrs the J wrote its examinations. Ten or the number (lf entries baing 30. COMMERCIAL :?~l~.'ri. Thr total en· these Girls arc presently enrolled First awards were ll'anted to Missal presented by Rt. Rev. J. ,., 33~ ,,: whom 160 I in the Teachers• Training Class 3 Grades g and 10 Choral Speech J Rawlins p A V G. for first

:. ;1:::::: .. ~ ,choJUl crades 1 arc teaching, and 2 arc employed SCho1ir, aGnidlforha;lviollhn solo. The piace in R~Jigio~ a~a;ded to Miss ;:~ :r-::•:~ ;, r m hi~h ~chooi I as >tcnographers. en or r 5 C 0 r, 1 e Grade 4 Helen Turner• Gold Medal for :1;::r:!· T: .• man~. Eighty·\ Thirty students formed the classroom choir, and 1 piano duet first place in 'Book-Keeping; Gold

·1~.:.·~1· were hoard·\ Commercial• Class. Two discon· obtained second awards. Third Medal !or ·first place in Shorthand .:. r ::umlwr bcin1:1 tinned because of illness, and the awards were granted for 11 violin presented by S J O'Brien awarded :r.,·~··: • i rrmnininc 28 received dlplomns In solo, ,two piano solo~ and !or the to Miss Kathl~e~ Fitzgerald Gold , : ~ •·.,:··. '' c en· I >hurth:and nnd trpciiTiting !rom Grndcs 1 a lid 2 choraL speech M d I { fi t 1 • E gil h

:~ :· .. h t:dtgiun the 'the Grct:l! Shorthnnrl Company, choir. · a1~a:dcd0rto ~isr ~:wJ~a ~olli~r o: :·r '""·' ul.1m. lll'>idcnt New Yo1·k. The highest Gregg Membership in the school or· (absent)· R~;ary for fint place in -~· ~: !'.• I·Pi'"ttunity-an: awmls in lYPl'll'riling were rcceil'· chestrn remains at 18 since 3 new T ewrit'in awarded to Miss Mar· -::.:' 1 ·"' r..pp.r to ~ay ·eel by Edwina Collier and Kathleen members only compensated for the ti~ Whlleg (absent • Rosar !or .. , , .. ;,· ·<ttl-ut attend· I Fitz"et'lild The latter also rccei\' loss of our three best performers f' t I I B 1), A !thy t' ••··. · ·.. " ' ' • t ih t 1 1 1 t t w d IrS p ace n us ness r me 1c · \!; .. \l'o·l'ldr ronlc><ion eel a gold pin for shorthand Grade 0 c rna r mon a 5 1 e. e 0 d d , 1 J h' H · . ' I · · · ' not however deplore the fact .awar e to .. 1 ss osep me ogan.

:. r: ::a :Olf .. l Blessed Elei'Cil IS a prercqulSlte !or the ' ' Prize and Di lomas for Grade c:::, te~:- the ~realer Commercial Class which embraces that their duties as matrons pre· n s foi l~s·

::• .,~ .... : " .• r. ,, 1 11cll as. Shorthand, typewriting bookkeep· vent their continuing as members Eieve as lo • d · \h 1 Bl , 1 I' If' t' ' !Ill or the orchestra. Gold Medal preaente by Mr.

•, . c.scc , m~. o lc~ ron ,me, and, ng, to· PIIYSICAL TRAINING Gerald Healey to Miss Sheilah Sun cia~· ·get her With clnth' classes in Reil· . · B k • f' t 1 · u th t ; :.• ":"rr: I! om their 1 gion, anrl weekly classes In Phys\cal Tralnmg continue?. to . u: e ,or 1rs ~ace m .,.a ema-

t;;r, 'c:1: \lrle amon;: ~p~cch. ctiqncllc, physiral educa· ~ un~er the capable and Jnsp1rmg 1cs, ~osary for f1rst place In Social .,\ ,, .. , 1 :· li:r •lucirnts Ilion and dancing. The c·om· d1rcctton of Miss Isabel Galway Stu~1es ex aequo Miss Lily S~IH· b~r ·•;. •l·o r.orh day I nwci~i ~tudenls al~o attended \\'ho became Mrs. Noel Goodridge \'An, ¥edai and Cbain for fl:st

·;:.:n c·' 1.:r r:.mil) ro~arr. 1thr wcrkl~· clas~e~ in Religion towards the end of the school year. place 1n French, ex uquo Miss

;•:::· ·1:·!• rl• 11crr pri· ~irrn ll\' Reverend F. w. Brad· All Grade8 Rbove Grade One had Lily Sullivan •. ._, ~w 1 "' Hrrrrrnrl R.j.(ltaw, p',p, • r~gular weekly ·classes. Boarding Rosary for ftrst ~la~e in Art to

·.1 .\ I' r .. cnnrlurl 1 (iRADt: F.I.IWF.N school students had an additional Miss Bernadette Gr1ff1n. • 1 ,.,, I'>),. r.rtrrat ' Th~ r:rarlr t;lcl'en Cla~s was ~our per week for ballroom dane· Diplomas to:-:Miu Beryl Ber· •1 t "r clro•r nl which : Bi'"r ~ucressfnl in the Public Ex· mg •. Badml~ton, basketball, t.lble rig an; Miss Mary Gushuej Min

. r·~~n·•·":· nl Rrcrplion i aminations and Lily Suillvan was tennis, and aortbell were the ehlef Frances Bouzane (absent); Mias :! ~'·;1.1,. nl the Blcs~rrl 1 awarded the Electoral Scholarship games indulged in, but the lack of Eileen Brazil (absent); ~111 Ann

i~:::)·r:.l•t ~~~re aclmil·l for st. ,John's south. Lily is also a regular gymnasium waa a hand!· Mackey; Misa Helen O'Brten; :Miss •.:1 rrr:<l•c r·hip an!l :m

1to he congratulated on being one .cap .. Despite this, however, the Gladys Duff; Miss Anne Wade (ab-

;.;·i:;~t~ to the i of the four Newfoundland students Field Day in June sh~wcd how sent); Miss Marie Wade (absent); •:.::~ :; a 11t.1! force ln

1

whose articles were chosen lor much could be accompllshe~ even Mlsa Mary Young (absent}. :! t~c ,c~:or student~. publication In FIRST FLOWER· with limited resources .. Skatmg on GRADE TEN ::! 'r::1!:r :1 rel:ly meet· !~G. nn antholog~· or prose and the "Blue River," In Bowring Park Missal for first place in Religion

II::!:!"~ i·: ~ lias ~\aged ! \'crse by Canadian high school and occassionally at the Stadium, Grade Ten awa!·ded to Miss Toni :~ :t:r •· : ·,n tr:1chcrs · stucl~nts crlitcd bv Mr. Anthony was a popular form (lf exercise. Healey; Silver Medal for first :•: ''·:' ~.-honl r.lrr Fri;ch of Pickr,rilig College, New 10THER1 ACTI1 VIT11EhS W k p~ace in. So~ial Stud!es: Rosary for

~·.·.· :•· Da~· was ~larket. Ontario. Dur ng Nat ona Hea 1 ee !1rst place 1n Chemtstry. .~ \l..t ·. the c:·o\111· The Grade Ten class was close the Grade Eleven students were Gold Medal presented by Mr. 1!.

(•,, L<·) -~! "n address to 70':'. successful in the Public guests of the, Sisters and Nurses J. O'Brien awarded to Miss Mary ~ ;:!,.:, c; :he Reverend 1 examinations and 7fi'io of the at St. Clare 1 Mercy Hospital Rose Kearney for first place in '·''t~•: 1 Grade Nines passed. . where after having been taken on Grade Ten; ROilary for first place

r~:. :~rn receil'cd From Kindergarten to Gracle an entertpinlng and lnatruetlve In Mathematics: Silver Medal and !! .. ;, l'ommuninn. Eight progres~ was, on the whole, tou~ of the hospital, t,hey were Chain for first place In French;

. f•:r lle~~tion~ wrrc satl;faclory. At Christmas dnr· served a~ternoon tea. 'Iwo of the Volume for first place in Art. :-c ::., :.r·J IJmt· ~~ Lilllt·· in!! Education Week, and In their St. Clare 5 Nurse• vlilted Little· GRADE NINE · ~~:':. h•t,~ In \13;- tlw 1,·hilcirt•n's tJrogrcss hy sePing their dale and gave an lnterestinK talk Missal for first place In Religion

t . .J, ..... : u,,. ~··n·nmn~· 1 wurk In compnri~on with that o[ on the nursiug ~ro!easion. prennled to 1\llss Helena Canl· t:. •: .. : .. • I Hur l..nty in 1 othct·s. . Small intrumuul aale9 arranged well: Rosury ror flut place In

11 .. :. .• ~,.,... 1 ;, 1 pru· , I.IBU.\tiV · by the students therllielvu during Social Studies ;·.:, /.:1·· ! ,.a., uary !!~- ! ,o\houl 1~!1 vo!umcs wt•re U!lded ~~.~~~~~~~rti;e k~~~:.W':n~~~t ~~~j Gold Med~i pmented by. Rt. , · ·· · .... : the .lutulc• to the sdu101 hhl'ary !lurlnH the • , . Rei', J. J. Rawlins P A V G for ~ :: 7, 1 "',':~·: lluly l'at,lll'r, i ~cal' l'llit•fly In t!1e 1enh~ o! blu· ~~~~~~~~s1t1\~~rer::o~~~\~1~{:~ 11~1e:~ fin! place In Grade Ni~'e a~l'~'rded . · •• ..... !•cum~ \"I' a· gr:1phr a1ul rm•:ilaonul hll'l'ulure. ! 11 1 to 1\ll!A Bnt·bara Kell)'

- -· ----- · · ----··-·------ i t~l~it~l~~:fcl. J.envea" continues to Rosary for first plar'e in Enelith be potminr as 1 school paper and Sill'er Mednl and (')Jain !or ri:Jt

2.9'0"' Pr.

' . Also selection of

GENT'S SHOES h IJ:O,f lJJ•

' 11' ~~tF1E1R ~nd ~IOCASSIN STYLES ' 1~ It Y Imperfect)

CI.I:,\Rl!'\G XOW AT

$2.90. pair

has eniar!lcd its scope. place in French awardtd to MIS! PHYSICAl, SET UP El'tlyn Ho1·lon.

, Much money ws expended in rr.· n?m.V ror first pi~ce ln. 'lati;~· I pairs. The classrooms in St. ~r.hes awarded to M1ss Bnde \\ 1!· Augusllne's Hail were completely ham~. renovated, a fire escape was con· Sih:~r Medal and Chain for first structed and doors flltfd with place 10 Art awarded to Miss Pa· panic bolts to provide safety in tricia Thoma~. the event of fire, The music rooins TRINITY COU.EfiE OF MUSIC in St. Bride'• wert eompleleiy 1951 tran&!ormed and all additional Gold Medal presented by Mr. study room provided. Pat Brownrigg awarded to Miss

At L!ttledale, as f!lsewhere, the Toni Healey for Honours In Higher problem of providing aufficlent Local, Piano. · space has become aeute. Thirty· Sliver Medal presentet! by Mr. three applicants could not be ac· Gerald Healey awarded to Miss commodated this year. The open· Marla Williams for Higher Loeal lng of the Holy Heart of :Mary Re· Plano, pass with merit. gional High School, which repre· Sliver Medal· presented by 'Mr1. scnts a challenge to our best en· Mary Clomez Cueto, , a)Virded to deavours, will however, help to Miss Marie Whelan pass in Higher relieve the pressure; Local Piano. ·

ST. JOSEPH'~ .SCHOOL Silver llledal awarcled to Mi~~ St. Joseph's School which Is Is~bef Kieley for pass with merit

taught by the Litlledale Sisters, Intermediate Piano duet. . had nn enrolment o! 370 in Grades Silver Medal awarded to Mi~s One-Eight. There were nine Leona Waddieton for .Intermedi· tcachc:s including , the principal. ate plano duct, pm with merit. The gtris from Grade Four up- Silver Medal awarded to. Miss wards attended the Physical train· Janice Waddieton Intermediate in~ classes at Littlcdale and Sis· violin pass with merit ter M. Celine took the classes at Silver Medal award~cl to M.iss St .• Joseph's !or singing and train· Kay Whelan for pass in lntermedi· eel those who sang in the Corpus ale violin 1 •

~hristl Church. Choir. St. ,Joseph'& Rosary' awarded to Miss Helen JS a well • eqUJpped school. Adey, Junior Plano, Honours,

ln concluding this report, May Silver Medals and ,Chains award· I express to Your Grace the grati· ed tn:-Mias Bride Williams, Jun· tude of the Sisters and Students lor piano, pass with merit; Miss for your sollcltude for our 'Yelfare Marie Fleming, Junior piano, pus and for your continued IUpport with merit; Miu Patricia Holden,· and encouragement. To their Ex· Junior piano, pus wit!( merit. celienciea of Harbour Grace and Prize awarded to Master Mawin St. George's !rom whose dioecsea Coates, Preparatory plano, pass ma!IY of ()Ur atuc!~nts ~ome, theJ'I with merit. , is. also a debt of gratitude whieh Silver Medat1• and Chalna for we owe, too, to fhe Rlsht Rev,rend First Steps plano awarded to:....;. Monsignori and our Prlests, who Min Elaine Smith, Pan with have helped u& in 10 ~ny Wl11. merit; Min Gail Squires (tiolln),

Our prayers and 'best wl•hes ~o Pastrwlth merit: Miss 1'atay Moyst, with our Graduat~s.. May.· God Pass, with merit: Miss :Maureen bless you and help you to Imitate Gardiner •Pus with merit· Joii!J the ''irtues of our 8lessed Lady ' ' I '

who Ia at oaee "our life, our sweet· (Continued on p111 18) ..

. . .

For Cold Weather' Comfort Satin Quilts.

You will love these handsome reversible satin covered q~ilts. They are well filled wit~ soft new cotto~ and fl.nished with matching cord. A n~w

. _ shipment brings us pretty two-color effects of $ · rose/wine, blue/wine, rose/ gold and green/ gold. · A very comfortable fhrowover for cold nights.

PRICED AT ONLY ...... , ......................................... ..

Chenille Bedspreads

.75

Popular chenille bedspreads in all wanted shades,· some self-paHern· ed, others nicely patterned in contrasting colors .. Single and double­bed sizes, they are all quite moderately priced. Any of these will make a charming addition to any bedroom. PRICED AT... ................. .

7.95 .8.25 9.00.. 9.95 to· 17.50 ·~unnyspun' Blankets A s~ft, thickly napped blanket of

1 cotton and rayon with satin bound

i ends. Shown in shades of rose, blue, green ~nd lemon; nicely pat­terned. Siie 66 x 80.

~ .P.rice each ................ $4.95

~ ::~:~h="~~; ~~:~k=,~~n ~ blankets with wide satin bound i ends. They c,pme in lovely pastel shades of rose, lemon, blue .and green1.each blanket boxed singly. A blanket designed to give you warmth without weight. Size 72 X 84, Price oeach ................ $&. 7 5

Plaid Blankets E Soft, well napped cotton blankets ri in 'pink and blue check designs, ~ finished with well whipped ends. ~ Size 70 x 80. ~ Price per pair .......... .. $4.50

I. "Kingcot" Blankets I Well known "Kingcot'' quality ij cotton blankets,'. in white with ~ choice of pink, green or lemon ~ striped borders. Closely woven ~ and well napped they are Ideal ~ for cold weather comfort. Size 70 I X 90. .

~I Pric~ per pair ........ $6 SO . · • ht ... ' ~ (';

"' ¥. ~~

'f. 2,i

"lbex11 Blankets Well known for the extra service they give this "Ibex" quality blan­ket is an excellent choice. Shown .... 1J in white with choice of pink or

~ blue striped borders. Size 70 x 9\) ~ Price per pair ··: ....... $6~50 i .

J . Kingcot Blankets tjl White· with pink and blue striped

iR borders and neatly whipped erids.

They are closely woven and well · napped. A Canadian cottons It) product. Size 60 x 90. _ ~'Price per pair ........... $5.95 tl· "' ~ ,'7{ Colored Sheets· § Popular "C~nncn" quality colored ~~ sheets in green· and yellow .. Neatly ·~ hemrt;~ed, cellophane wrapped, .. ;: Size 72 -x 99-.~

~ Price per pair ............ $7 75 ~ . >;'! ' '

~ Size 81 x 99 in rC?se and green- . ~ Price per pair ............. $8.50

I I

--

Warm Sheets All white coHen blankets or warm' ~ sheets. Closely woven, well nap· :j ped, finished with neatly whipped '1 ends. Soft and cosy for cold ~ weather comfort. 1 ~ '

Size '10 x 90- ~ Price per pair ............ $6.95 tJ

s;, 80, 108- ~ Price per pair ...... ..... $9• 75 ~

'~ ;a 11Kingcot11 Blankets 1

Soft, fluffy cotton blankets with ~ fine .whipped ends. Shown in ; striped l:crders. Size 54 x 80. +;

white with choice of pink or blue ~ Price per pair . .......... $4.95 ~-

ffi . .;;:; f/Q II B~ L l:i ,uoencot .. a~~rr;.ets ~ ... . ' This is an excellent choice in a

double-bad size blanket. Clo5ely woven, well napped, finished with whipped ends. wh;:c with pink striped borders. Sizr) 70 x 90. Price per pair .... ....... $5.95

~ 'l t1

;{ -.

*L: ··J :;.:i

11Cannon11 Sheets lt Well known "Cannon" quality ji, white muslin sheets, that will give ~: excellent service, They have .,d ~tralght t:Ven ,hems, closely stitched ~-and con!ains no weighting. ;ci, Siu 63 x99. ~ Price per pair . . .. .. .. ..... . . $6.20 ;l Size 72 x 99. :1 Price per pair .................... $6.25 '~ Size 81 X 99. r Price per pair ..................... $7.40 .--

l"dian Blankets }hick, wall napped blankets in as· sorted colorful designs. Each bien· ket finished separately with neatly whipped ends. Size 60 x 72. Price each .................. $3.95

"Cannon" Cases .Fine white "Cannon" quality pillow cases, neatly hemmed and cello· phone wrapped. Size 36 x 42. We suggest you purchase several pairs for future use. Price per pcir.: .......... $1.60

;.-~ .. -.

Page 6: THE DAILY NEWS - Memorial University of Newfoundlandcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570131.pdf · THE DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY . Heat~:l~:ntent I £~g /\ house

.,

THE DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN .

PERSONAL CHIT~_C,HAT BIRTJIM \'S ENGAGEMENT

Birthday greetings· arc sent by I The engagement. w~s. recently his friend~ to little Philip Tugliese, announced of. Helen, daughter ol Jr .. who cclebl";\les his 5tlt birth· Mr .. and • illrs. Frank Isaacs. of :Ia~· toda~·. · Bunn, t.ench:r at lhc Harbour

/tYJR THE 'LADIES : • f I' •

The Family • EDITOR'S NO'fE: The Family Council consists 01 · I psychiatrist, three clergymen, a newspaper editor, a 1

, j and two writers. Each .utlcle is a summary or au actual t __________________ ...... _____ , ___ :,__: __________________ ..;... The Council reports on vroblems that have been dealt I~

sponsiblc a~:cneies and counselors. ~-~ Birthday ~:rrctings arc sent tn 1 Grace lllgl1 School, to Lewis, son

Grraldinc Fitz~eraltl nf 23 Good•! nf ~lr. nntl Mrs. William Dawc of ticw Strrct from Tecl, Da\'id, and Coley's Point, no•v radiu operator Vann1· O';l(cill of :m Cabot Street. 1 at Gander.

ro:'\;iit.\n:t.,\Tloss • · . I ouT m: HOSPITAL

Fashion-· Tips ~lr. anti ~~ r~. Llo~d Arrllilmltl I ~lr. lll'oo.,, 1.u .. c 11'110 was a

.,r Uarh••ur Grace arc receivim; ·patient at the Grncral Hospital for con;:r~tnl:ithll\~ [rom their manj' 1 the past m~nlh lclt l!ospllal yes· frkml~ on the birth of a son atlterdl~' anrl _ts now rcstding at his -·-· _ th r 11 't 1 1 !Isler's resilience, Mrs. Charles • . . .

r ,r;ocr 0~)11 l • lllndtlinott, 41 St. Clare Avenue. I Hlgl,hghls or _rc~ort _and sprhl!: • • • • , • 1 _ • rashions seen m California re-

F .\~1!1.\ ~hU!IilOS . RIRTIIU \Y PARTY l \'ealed the following intercstlnt: 1\rn,·rct \\ t'dnr~da~· from 1uronln ' . , facts ·

and the Unilcd States, ~Jr. Cecil .. L .u ::.11. .w.1 celebrated his • · \\'NI 's father and sisters Glatl\·s \lOth blrthdny on Tuesday with a I H II ·. lo•"CI''.cl as lc•"' a" :nd i.·iorencc al'u his th;ec clliJ.\ part)' at his home on Calver Ave. tl em nes, " b .... f h• • • . · • · . __ . 1rcc yeors ago y some o t e drcn, ~lannt, )Irs. Pat Schad from VISITI~/G CITY , I designers on patio and leisure-Ohio, Robert from Toronto and :\I ir 1 1 I' 11 · · di 1\ wear skirts have remalr.·•d abou• Basil from :\'cw \'ork. They came ' r. 1 adco m 1c y, mrantahgmBg 1 k. the same ~n street cloti;es witl;

· ·· 't t th · D d rector r.n propr etor o e r c , . , on a surpnsc 'lSI o sec e1r a y d 'I' 1 It B · 1 ill g th the ovcr·all hnes Ill elating the who is in ht~<pi1al ar s, r n Y ay, ts v s 11 e 1 th f th kl "· tl • · cit)' on business and is registered eng o e s rt. v•1 1e cur-fJlO)l GLO\'F.RTOWS at tile Brownsdulc Hotel. l•mt regency and. empire lines,

however,. an Inch or so has been :Mrs. Clarence Warren of Glol'cr· IO\m is \'!siting the city and is the guest· of her son-in· law and daugh· tcr. ~lr. and :\Irs. Emerson Black· wootl, Cornwall ,\ \'enuc.

GUEST SPEAKER , added In some CR!·~s to ,enhance Miss Marjol'le Mews will be the 1 the. Illusion or slendemess.

JlUest spraker at the meeting of - • Cathedral W.H.:'II.A. this afternoon. Cape_s were seen i~ almost cvrrr ·The meeting opens at 3 o'clock. . collechon, from hlp·length \~r­

sions to full length wraps; for both da~'llmc and evening wear. 'l'he blousc111 or bloused bodice was fea­tured ln dresses and jaclr·~ts, with extra back interest, sometimes found in low-placed pleating or floating panels.

i ' .\Rmn:n 110m~ FRO~! TEXAS · :,,., :\lr. Abram Kcllowa~·. Cornwall :\lr. ·Jim Vlnlcombc retur.ned to · · !• lki~hts. arrh·.cd in the cit~· last I the city hlst Mo.nday following a

week to ~pend a month with his three. month asstgnment at 'J'exas f;mih· while his ship, the ~I.V. with the U.S. Air Force. He re· Placcntii1. i; bcin,: refitted for the ·

1

tur·ncd \'ia Washington and Phila· ~al fi>hcry. . delphia to Torba)'.

A tendency by some C.~signers toward. ge-.111)' curbing or round.

• lng the ,silhouette at slioulde~ or hips was noted, Still others clung to tile figure-hugging feminine ant lir., of tight-filling bodice topping a softly full or fl~rcd skirt.

I Beauty Briefs I A small cheesecloth bag of hran

or oatmeal dropped Into the· bat­water is wonrl~rfully sooUJing to dry 'Dr tender skin, ·

New on the market Is a neat little package containing eight preparations that, properly used,

Clancy ·M·anning -~W~dding STEPIIEN A - ~ly wile is - - ·:··· · spoiled. . 'llt.tl-ll~s fear of '.'',

ELIZABETH A.-I try, but I Jc 1 IS \'cry •II find houscwm·k l111rd. :ma~es· an hon. ~~ clfon

. • • • 1 a mcc home ?.rd •• • 1 1 'ld -.rei STEl'llEN t\ --Ti.ree years ago , cIt properly

·J was married a~ainst my par· ! Ellzab~tl1 ""~"O•Iftd cnts' wishes t•J a girl who is 1 sllo_rtcom111~s ~-•d i~ ~cry spoiled. Eli;:;; beth was an i t~y~~g. to h1·c _'I~ only child an:! al\\ ays gut every- 1 s1h1hllcs. ~t ~~ . thing she w~nt;:d. She never : to try to lire l!f tr. hit worked for n11yt1Jing and she I ~-fVNv~i;~~ doesn't undcrstJIH! that you can't 1

im1·c t:lings ju~t tor the asking. · 'J'1 d 1 l\ly parents SJW all these things I ( J. 0 ay s

abcut ElizabctJ. ami told me sue :

1

!. would never waat to do house· :~.,..,.,.Niww.,.~ ..... work and that· sort of tiling. • . Sure cnoug1~ null we have a ! INDUSTRious T.mntr baby and EliZlbe(ll says caring I . FOR KCAK[S for the house and baby is' too 1 :~ cups_ brown su:ar much for ·her 'ami she s got to 1 '4 cup, butter have a maid. . J

2 eggs I don't know wha: ·to do about . ~ c~ps flo~r

It all. We, arc 1 en 11nhappy but 'I i- bp. hakmg po·.rder uur religibn: du•)S not permit di· I 3 ~~- ,crec~·~a tartar vorce. You. ~:•n't reason with; 1 u•P-: 1 ~ .• Elizabeth. r.Iy p~rcnts wash their 1 c dp • e~d es~ ra1;::s

d f . h \ ll . d pe en >talhzed : han ~ o tne w ,0 r ung an . i Cream butter and S?Y I ve ma~c Ill\ bed and no\\ ! eggs, whipped until I ve got to he Ill lt. i blem··~d with a fork

(: .. ... . . · sifted together 11ith

ELIZABETH :\.-H s true that : der and cream of my parents gnn~ 1111." a lot and ' natelv with the maybe spoiled ~ue, hut I kne.w 1 . or glnger. Do all couldn't expe~\ those tlungs: ,mixig with a fork. when I married Stc•ve. ?lly par· \ tip of spoo oto a . ents were alsrJ against the mar- , ig shc·~t. ll•kc i 1 riage, but l .wa~ ir love with : o1·e about 20 miutc!. Steve and fcl: sure we could make a go of it.

:\ow Steve kt·cps throwing up , •lear zero, prntcct hoJ;~ at me how spmlP!! 1 am; how I , placin;: b~th cardboard don't do the housL wor~ and what ! papers bctl•:·~cn them a rotten cook I am. ·Then he 1 dows or rcmoH them goes running t~ his parents to · window sills. eurnplaln about mr. It's gotten I ~!any ~la_nt< c••1not so I just hate them severe clnlltn~. If a '

I love my baf'v and I want to i fcred from >cl·rre 1

make a nice home. btlt I find the ! zing, keep it in a work \'cry hard. Wr. could afford ; cut orr droop:og , a maid once ur twit e a week, but I slight!)' tepid or roon Stel•c's parents teil him that he ' ~~·at·~r !'l _watering pla~!!. would be spoiling me if we gut : llmes 1t I! better n~t tl one. l\lany of my women fl'icnds i them at all on with only one bniJY ha1·e some- ; days. one come in I, help with the I . house~ork. \l';·,nt·~ so terrible; ('ltildren's about 1\? ' • will c-lear the skin •of bkmishes, • • •

I • N f dl d Ab black heads, pimples and · cnlarg. 1 PEPPEF.RELL AFB. St. Jo m s, 1 ew oun an ..,., ove. ed pores. on,c' Item ~a limy sack THE COUXCIL: It appears· left to rinlll. arc Pat Hvman, Jeanie O.rr, Lynda Starl{ey, of prepared· meal. from both thcsf accounts that .\nn Cl!!~Lc:alc~. l.\largr~t Nielsen, and Merr~· Engle-The Stephen is at kast as "spoiled"

" This Is the time o! year wh-en· as Elizabcth-p:-ob;;bly more so. Ba!'e High SdlOo!'s Cheerleaders. Now busy leading the the pink tones in makeup are the (Photo by TOOTOX'S) . Stephen mu~t wake up and. t·hccrs at the Base High School's basketball games, the most flattering to most women, , [realize this. Hi5 wife may have ·

1 • On Sa~\ll'cla·:. ,January 19th.: rfage by h~r fatlwr-:IIr. Ray-' ~obins.on, J. Bushee and "· been accustomed to getting the (I"Gli!JS red ~kirts and white sweaters will also add that A lovely, and rather expensive i the l~lal'l'lag~ tr,uk place at th~. mond :llannmg ar.!! she wm~l! a i It;ctcmk. , I material things she wanted with· rxtra color to future .school games. Their first year, they \'•2il-t~pe powder Is now coming ia 1 Basihca of, ~l. .fohn the 13aptlst, i flo?r len7th rown of rad1ant I • f~e receptiOn wa• held at the

1 out effort, but he appears to he ,

ba\'e had to mal;e up their own cheers from the start. They half·Sile packages-and at half of Mary Elizabeth ~Ianning of r White satm an.! seed pearls com· ! :\ewfouudland Hotel ballroom .. accustomed to nettmg emotional the price, Apart !rom the price l St. .John's to C)'l'il .John Clancy 1 plemelfted by .'ack~t. inserts and ! The bride's mnthc1' received the ' and mental s~pport from his

\\"Cl'C iorit:nat~ in ha\'ing as their faculty acJ\'isor, Mrs. ractor, the smaller box is best ror Forest Hill;, :-.l~w York. The i train of chant•.lly lac!c. Her head·~· guests and wore a lovely perri· 1 parents and ~· 10w~. no inc !ina· • ~nna Dell. high school math teacher and former cheer· when travelling, Nice too, jf you Nuptial :\lass wa~ celebr~ted by I dress was a iwn·t-shapcd match· winkle blue flo PI length lace : tion to do wit!tout these, el'en ie;ldcr far the Hahawa.\' (N.J.) high school.-(USAF- want ~ blend with what you al· Rev. Father :\lr:\eil.;-it was a i ing lace crcat:on, with tulle II· gown with hhte feather hat, ·now that he is a r~thcr himself.:

ready ha1•c, for allght<lr or darker double ring crrrmnny. · 'Jus! on elbow lrr.gth \"ell adorned I matching acco?Jsories, and cor· . He seem.; to resent the frd that ' :\L\C p;;uto I. tone. The bride w~s £iven in mar· with mC1ther•cfr-pearl sequins. sage of pink roses. The groom's i his parents "wash their bands ,

--------------------------------· She carried a •!asr~d~ bouquet of mother also ;~ceh·ed and wore I of the whole thing." He doesn't'

-- r.u··· ~ 0. --0--. D --- LUCK WITK FISH MEALS ~ .Tohanna Ilill rose~. an electric blue satin dress witll i realize this is ~xac·tly what they, 1.: 'fhe bride WJ., :ittf'ndcd hy Miss aqua accessories and corsage of • should do. · . Anna r.awton a~ 1\lald of Honour palest pink r~~r~. j Stephen docs r.ot appear to who was attlrcrl 1, a coral satin Toastmaster 1!11ring the rcccp· ha\'c yet mad~ ar. adult effort . waltz length I(J\1'11 with heart· lion was Dr. .Tohn Walsh of I to cope with l:is maniage. llc ·

Do you find it a littlr hard to make fish meals interesting? Well, just try this fish pi;, ma~e \\'ith sweet~r. fresher Good J..uck Marganne! Its delicious, when you make it with Good Luck in the filling and in the topping, too. You'll find

Good Luck really does make a difference • , • In flavour and in the lightness of your topping.

·And you'll also. find that Qood Luck actually costs less than anything you could use as a substitute.

~hapcd matehing fieaddress. The 1\Ianuels, and the toast to the j has no right to tin·ow up at his 1 brldesmaids-'\Trs 1\Tary Berard I uride was prJp3secl by the Bon. wife what he l:new before the 1

and l\Iiss Ruth Bisllnp wore slm· 1 P. J. Lewis. ' marriage-that she t.ad uu ex-llarly designer! ~town of fesli\'e l For travelling tt.e bride chose ' pericnre at hom£•making and green and m:tttlting headdress./' a blue Irene Knitwear two-piece 'l1 wmild be likely to find -things ,

1

·

All carried ca~t·acjc bouquets of ensemble- with grey muskrat difficult. lie ~ould have made feathered carnations. jacket and fcathei hat and wore lit easier by hE'l!;mg her, encum·-

1\!lsses Deh1rah and Cathy ·corsage of pink roses. 1 aging her anll laughing off her !

Penney looked rharming as flow- Attending the wedding from . mistakes. llis crltic;sm only seL'V· ' er girls In shn!lar gowns o! fes- the U.S. and Can~dian 1\lainland cd to discout·a~e her efforts.

7 .. ,, ~

--------, ' tlve green and rural respectively were: l\Irs. !'astra. mother of the' Stephen also had no right to and carried miniature nosegays. groom; l\lrs. Lilli;m Bailey, the run complaining to his parents Tomm)' is ~

Soloist durin.; tlir l\fass was groom's sister. and 1\fiss ~ellie J a~d to insist upc·r getting ad- fellow. He !ol'es to '. 1\Ir. Robert G. Knight· accompan- Forward, Godmoth£·1' of IJIC bride. 1 \'Icc from them. If he under· , for his nee•!> mY

.. '

GO~D lUCK FISH PIE FilliNG • ~ __ , ~1elt 3 tbsps. sweeter, fresher Good Luck Margarine in a saucepan. Remove from the heat and1blend in4 tbsps, flour, % tsp. salt, •1K tsp. . I pepper. Gradually stir in 2 cup~ ·milk. Cpok the sawe, Stirring constantly, 1mtil smoothly thickened, Remove from h(at und stir in I tbsp. cruted onion, 3 tbsps. chopped sweet pick)(, I ~i cups Jr~inetl cooked vegetaolc such is peas, beans, carrots, etc. anli I H cups flaked, cooked or canned tish: Tum into 11reased casscrol~, ph1~e in hot oven (400°) while making topping.

------~-----.1 '

__ . ____ .... _ ..

1 GOOD lU~K FISH PIE TOPPING • - ..... - , . Sift together into a mixing bowl n~ cups sifted pastry llrur (or llh I cups sifted ali-purpose flour), 2\~ tsp~. baking powder,· lfl _tsp. salt. Add 3 tbsps. chilled Good Luck Margarine, and cut·in finely. Good luck always blends bcautif~lly with· other ingredients, Mix in 2 ·( tbsps, chopped parsle)', Make a well in the Hour mixture and add ~j

. cup milk ail at once. Mi~ lightly with a fork. Drop dough by large I spoonfuls onto hot fish mixture, making 6 mounds. Return to the l1ot oven (400•) and bake until biscuits are-cooked-about JS mins. 1 I

-----------_ .. . ' -----.---,

' :GOOD lUCK RECIPE • - ·- """:" , No wonder Good Luck is the sweetest, freshest spread you can buy! '

1 The Good Luck "recipe" calLs for selected ingredients •.. blended' . with just as much care as you'd use in your own kitchen. And Good Luck is made daily, ri_ght here in Newfoundland ..• so it'~ ?ound to .I be as fres!J-.ns morning! That's why Good Luck is so dehc1ous as a spread on bread, toast ·and melted over hot vegetables:· Good Luck I is nourishingJ too •. .'Vitamins A and ri are added for extra nutrition: Good Luck belong: o~ YOUR table, every day. I

------------..1 •

-GOOD LUCK NEWFOIINIIJ.AND'S fAVORITE . MARGARINE ·.

/ ·)

led by Prof. Rainer Rees at the The bride and groom will be i took the respt:ll~ibllity for mak- 1 favorite work i; to organ. · lea\·ing :-icwfoundland In March I ing his own dccis:on;, he would ! walks of snow. J~in lj

The best-man duties were per- for Fluricla· wherr the groom lpt•ubably come l•J thf conclusion ! bered dots tog~ther. -formed by Lt•oitard llc1·ard and i will be statium•d With the u.s. i that then• is n<J gn•at harm in ! dot n~1mbe1· one and ushers fm· tlw utrasinn .were I A.F. Cake by Tes~il.'rs. Flowers 1 his wire's ge!tltJ~ a hand with I dot number t•igh:·:1n. ~~_!.:__~\~._San~lnm~t_i_:~: .. _H :. ~:_~!~~~~~~~--~~~~l'l~i.:s._ -·--- I ~~~~. l~o~scwu1:~.!1_ hP _ ca~ _a~ord. ~a\'_e_ a _pictun• o! thr_

Kilchenor, Ont., was the' first I choice, ll compl'iscd a two-piec~ 1

1 dresser unit that could he pushed together, and twin beds wilh a double headboard. The beds could I be swung out for easier making. i

· A long, sectional chesterfield __ suite topped the poll in this catc- II

Women Pref~r Simplicity In

·Furniture Simplicity of design, combined gory, reUccting also the simple

with functional characlcristics. arc I lines of Scandinavian influence, I the prcicrcnccs Canadian women 11ith loose cushions. Top choice ?a~·e in. modern furniture, a lad· I 11 as ~ suite manufactured by Sklar I ' 1<'5 chOice sun•cy at the 8th an·\ Furmlure Ltd. Oshawa, Ont. i nual Canadian Furniture Mart ha~ . . . . r~vr~lc~. .And milady's taste is

1 Su~phc1ty _was. the kcyno_te of : .

di5CI"Jnunahng, say most manufa.c· 1 th~ f1rst chn1ce •.n metal dmcttc , . lurers at the exposilion who have 1 sutt.es. A~ oval chnette !_able and

1

heel: designin~ their modern line cha1rs · wtlh coated fabnc ~ph oi-l to conform· to this theme. stery, manufactured by Liberty ,

More than 12,000 women l'isiting Ornam~ntal l~on Ltd., Toronto, th~ Mart on three public days se· Ont., 11 as the first preference. lcCted ~heir first ~hoice in sev~n Thjs group also reflected the ca~egortcs of furmturc sho~n 111 growing popularity o! neutral col­jhe 300,000 squar~ feet o! d1splay ors of light beige and light brown., area at the Canadian National Ex· hibition Automotive and Coliseum Still In the Scandinavian tradi-a'nd Industrial ·buildings, lion, a cocktail table was most

The choice in most categories, popular in the occasional table officials of the ~!art said, indi- category. This one,· manufactured cltes the strong influence of the by the Elmira Furniture Co. Ltd., Scandinavian theme with its un· of Elmira, Ont., includes a shelf clultered, clean, slim lines. Func· for magazines, a feature which tionalism is. prevalent although dra)l's wide acceptance today. cloJked .. in pure simplicity-there 1 • . • . is ·little waste in the designs of The . trad1honal, ho11 ever, . still

LADIES.'_ SAMPLE SHOES

tnose pieces that prove most pop- I hol~s 1ts own for the occasiOnal i ulnr, they added. .- · I c.halr. ~lo~t popular was an oc~a- 1 Sizes 4 anA 41,<, Pumps, Ox-

In metal furniture there is 8 · s1_onal cha1r 111 the Frencr !'rovm­swing from the gaudy, ornamental c1al design . uph~lstcred 111 d_a· style to -conservative simple lines mask, showmg fme. IWrkmar.shlp with ·neutral colors. ~f . upb_olstcry on I1ne woodwork.

Flr:t choice in the wood con- Th1s p;ece was !"annfactur~d by structed dining room and dinette ll!e\Coombe Furmture Co., Kmcar· I sui!cs, indicate~ a. preference for dme, Ont.

1

sca1cd down umts !deal for small- For their preference in desks I ·cr home!, First choice group was redar chests and bookcases etc.' I a sll':\11 llinette suite in the popu- the ladies selected . a ve~satil~ Jar S:andinavian lines, manulac- room divider that could serve a j lu~c!l t:r the Dominio~ Elcct,rohorilc •·ariety of purposes. This piece luuusll·lcs Ltd., of K1t~hcncr, Ont. was manufactured by ·the l~onde· 1

fords. L)a!ers Flatties.

CLEARING AT

$2.75

LADIES! PUMPS

IHIOI\1"~ SIZES DISCO~TI~t'ED

Suede. K:rl. nl! ad Leathers ~~,.d~~~~ Illusion and • SJ\1 Red. Br~wn · Black.

$2.75, ' $4.95

In· the be~room SUites, a con- rich Furniture Co. Ltd., .Milverton, j temporary sUite, manufactured by Ont C~nada Cabinets &, Furniture, 'o( · • , . L.-~~----------------

UP TO DATE J;J:~ · ~~GAZINES

• • • b\' Dr. Harold R~vlew points

acts like a Called "What

Men'' the article 1 going but is well

for the value of t h things Dr. Wolff the fa'ct that :hey basis.

I! not a new idea that make a man feel

· him incenth·e. in lif~: Is the scientific basu

of this. Dr. Wolf relationship beh_\·een a person's attitude

illness often goes of moods, thou

ilha'l'iOUir: and it would of • <l•nnlhll

can shorten

as u hopeless, may hope and of his healt

I RIGHT

IREAKFAS

IDEAS

Fresh

tree·ripe flavour

Tangy goodness ,,.,_._.,.,.._

1, Scat~ V'J cup milk

· Stir In

Ys cup granulllled , IYs loospoo111

v~ cup ahortonln. Cool Ia lukewarrn, 2• Meantime, measvre ·

Yz cup lukowor~~~ Sllrtn

2 loeapoona I \Igor

Sprinkle with conllftls of 2 •nvolopes

Flolnhmann'• Dry Yeast

ltt stand I 0 '"'""'" THEN Sl!r In lv\owarrn '"~

2weu......_li ltobl.apoon .......... ...

Page 7: THE DAILY NEWS - Memorial University of Newfoundlandcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570131.pdf · THE DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY . Heat~:l~:ntent I £~g /\ house

..

. ;

~

~DIES' JMPS

I -.; !'17.f..5 .,. T\l'tD

,, $3.75, t95

leVIS From The LibrarY The Strange Case -o,f Dr. John Bodkin Ada!Ps rr Til 11.\Tl: WITH 'he is capable o[ enduring lncred· A d th w lth w· .d . f E 'tb ' ut1 ~BI;.\7.1Sl:S I iblc burdens and taking cruel n e ea y I ows 0 as ourne

- . I punishment when he bus self· . 1 •

\ • ,n•' nr h~> an mlcresl· 1 esteem, hope, purpose, and belle! 1 • • _

~;: ~;n ihr llctober inue of in his fellows." . \ F H e · M' 1 K e d ~~E~!~~'~a~~:i~!o~~t;u~ EXPLORATI~N: ~N SEA, ICE, or IS. any ' In nesses ::;Jt ~1'1rtn1 tnl of F1sher1es m AND IN THE AIR . :ll 1 FRANKLIN ..... .. e e e

,. u. thll the Idea for Franklin, Happy Voyager by G.

I

:r •. :s \c"h•undland Cod F. Lamb Is about the man who , ·. ·: ' Nr.r;hrd by Captain W. is remembered today mainly for · (First nf Four Dispatches)' There was a clatter or line bone that hangs pots or pink ger;niums I Adams, a 57-year-old, Ulster-born

under who!e direction his magnificent and dlsasterous teacups being rapped down sharp· on its railway station, where shop· bachelor, was president of the ~t ,u. h~nd·knilted !11 last \'oyage that so nearly achlev· By TOM A. CULLEN !y on fine bone saucers. There was keepers on the busiest street put Eastbourne Y~!CA. He taught

!.""~:,r R~n•l nr describes the I ed the North· West passage. This EASTBOURNE, England ( NEA) a rush for the door. out enamel bowls · or water for Sunday school. And he was the '•'~r :t:r tr.w and the ex· book, the first full biography of The rich, •the elderly and the re· Eastbournc doesn't want to hear passing dogs. Chief Constable's personal phr·

rl it! ~Hiricnr~· dur· Franklin for many years, sets out tired dozed over their afternoon any. more about widows, merry or It looks down its aristocratic sician . • ummrr when Cap- ' lo put· his tragic death In lls tea In the· pelted palm lounge o!_ otherwise. nose at noisy Brighton, where the 1! • • •

. ;.n.i hi; crew clught I right perspccli\'c, that is, as the the Grand Hotel when the three- Widows ha\'e turned this earth· London cockneys come. to eat "The !mlling doctor," tha r;:ch ~r two .thou5and ! termination of a brilliant career piece string ensemble tactlessh· !y paradise of lhe- aged Into a whelks and winkles and jellied eel, I wealthy widows cnllcd him. And,

!'! c.d. l"omplamts lh~t ! u II naval officer,· explorer, and swung into "The Merry Widow version of l!ndcs. · · and to buy vulgar postcard~. ! indeed Dr. Adams' face appears ~i·ht tor detrimental to administrator. The story of his Waltz" Widows have focussed the harsh I There nrc no jellied eels sold · to he frozen into a perpetual grin,

:"!~.;· f~•hr1; hrou~ht a go\'· :last voyage to the Arctic and or 1 • spotlight of notoriet)' on this, the here. Eastbournc's motto is ~!eli· which, if examined closely, ap-~- ·,:.r~rr ••&imt its further lh~ cle\'en years or search which I Most ·Respectable Resort on Earth. ora Sequimur, "We Strh•e for Bel· pears something less than jolly . •• l'l''•'" Whiteley made a ! followed, is one of the great epics · B s · 0 Widows have also provided tcr Things." Dr. Adams is accused or mur-·:·..: !Mllr and on Augu!t . of British exploration, OX COfe 0 Britain with Its juciesl murder Nor· until last July was there dcring 81-year-old widow, Edith ·:,;£ hr rrcch~d a license; A th 1 1 ti . 1 f ~::se iti years. anything more sensational in the ~!orrcll. Police say that he poison·

:; .:·:. 11 • t•rrratit•n. 1 no cr n eres ng aceo~m 0 D Ad · way or crime than the theft or 1 cd her by prescribing an over· 'P'"' :. t' r.r the cod trap has exploration-this time h)' ¥ranch· r. ams . . . 'thll, mayor's bnr(ae o[ office (A I dose i![ drugs. s~:t t ... t '1

1 1 men of modern times-Is contain· 1 . " • • • j • • . ~.,.ral l 1 1e. Slme ed in n volume called 1\ntarctlc -- Enstbourne's m o s t prilminent ; r?war1l or $22~ 15 ~II II pos~cd out: ; But what would Agatha. Chnstlc

· -::r· ,;,r;. ~una~ ne d~· \'enture: Se\'en men among the I 1\Jurdu: Dr. Adams Is charged 1 physician and' a leading church 1 Side the loc.~i pohce station. f~I. fans ~ay .to a murde~ Without a :·1.: c.•r.•tru,ru~n, I he ca~~ ·Penguins. The purpose of this with only OM murder. that of Bl·. worker, pr. John Bodkin Adams, 1 the .rccovm;y of the rna~ or s i h~dy? Th1s Is the sad state or _nf· ;;::r 1~' .''w1•1 ~~~d bu.. expedition was to studv the em-1 year-old Widow Edith :ltorrell, who ! IS accuwl of murdering one 'badge). , 1 fmrs In Eastbourne. The pohee •~rn tn~) r_r 111 1~ c, ,~n.~ peror penguin. The bo~k Is writ· died In November, 19~0, and was 1i11'ealthy widow. The deaths o£ 14; Now Eastbournc !s all agog With 1 accuse Dr. Adams of murder but

~r,t •Uttrd 1 ·' ct. teu by the leader or· the cxpedl· cremated on Dr. Adams orders. other women patients, most of murder - and rumours of more 1 Mrs. Morren was cremated on Dr. ... ::n~. d one of 1 tion :\!arlo Marett, who with six This is Britain's celebrated "mur·l1 them widow's, arc being invesli· 1 murder. i Ada_ms' orders,. her ashes scatter· ;:a•~• 1 _artrrl~ a~£ undland· others decided to stu>· on after · der without a body." g::tcd by Scolland Yard. I Certainly no writer could have cd m the Enghsh Channel. :::rm. 1

'' • Cll 0 the main el'pcditlon returned to I Bodies Dug Up: The bo~ies o£ I Conan Doyle or Agatha Christie 'dreamed up a more unlikely kil1· 1l Bodies there are a-plenty. Pollee • • • I France. Soon the)' found them· two other wealthy women, patients could not have invented a mo1·e 1 er than short, bald, bcspcckled Dr., have been digging them up in

.• ~ 11 11 lrl ,,. ![[, ~eh·c.1 working under conditions o!" Dr. Adams, have been dug up 'I perfect setting for murder than Adams, with his celluloid collars,' Easlbourne cemeteries-the bodies l: 1:::>.f R\ir~ 3~~nt• ~ut ·which had suddenly changed from In Eastbourne cemeterlc1,by Scot· Eastbourne (pop. 57,000), on the 1 who has been the !01\'n's leading I of two other cl~erly ~omen, also ~a:;nl•! r "k P dic.•n. n 'the relath·e!y safe to something land Yard In an effort to deter· ! south coast R4 miles from London.' physician for 33 )'cars. Dr. A~ams' paltcnts, in order ~o :.-~ ,!~:· 1.'•l~e~ .~~hal 1~0~~ \'err different. Unforseen risks had mine the cause of their deaths. : East bourne' 1~ the kind or town And not only physician. Dr. dctcrmtne the cause of theu· ·'" ... ,t h 1 · lc 1. not I to be run and unexpected dang· Death Under Probe: A total of . . .~rn, ~ ~~~tfs \~·ell ~·orlh ers encountered: With bad luck seventeen deaths .occurring In . . .. ~"""""'"" . · . -

11t ;o.n. 111 of 1 he lm • the 1·cnture might r.nsily have end· Eastbourne in recent years, nine , ·;: :~.t 1;·a \~"n!££ has t~ . ed in dlsastH. A5 it is the reader 1 of the deceased being wealth)' :·~1 r.i: .1 ~hat :he\' have a 1 will not fail to grasp the m~gni·l widows, Is being Investigated b)· ... r •· • 'tude of the se\·cn men's nclucve- 1 Scotland Yard. All se\'enteen nf

.• ~~::•. " irtra that illlpr ment. · I the deceased named Dr. Adams ns ~ •. c. • .. r \ · a beneficiary in their wills, the :ai! l :r.zr. ~~cl. good anrl Secrets of. Space Flight by I doctor inheriting more than SAO. t~ iwr.til"t. tn hf~: wltat 18 1 L!ord )!allan is a picture-story of I 000 b\· their deaths. , ' ~ 1~1 !<'::r:J:!trr. bam .ror I he 1 the past struggle, present aehiev~·! Wilis Changed: Twelve of the r! ~~.i,, .Dr. \\oil dt~usses ! ment, and future probabilities of I deaths und~r probe occurred with·

:r:a::~:'~'? btt:l·ttn dbe3 ~e i man's great surge toward outer in a vear of the patients changing 1 j\l.~;~r.' allltude to 1~1CP. ! space. Rocketry and space flight I their' wills In Dr. Adams' fnvor.

::.~r" o!ttn ~oes 11 th :is covered in ~ wide \'Jrict>' of 1 Two wcalthv widows died within ~! rr:~od~. thought and :photographs-almost all or them i 10 days of n1aking new Wills.

·.

DR. JOHN BODKIN ADAMS, . as lketchea 'hr 111 MEA lltfl artist: The perpetual grin app ears 10methlng less tb111 jolly,

deaths. And this I! only the be· the past 20 years, spendl his 'll&ro. : ginning. · lime dissecting rat& (he ha1 Ill

• • • ready published three T01ume1 Fourteen more deaths, all Dr. a definite &tudy of rodents).

Adams' patients, are being in· !lien like this 1hu11 publlclt: vestignted by Scotland Yard with like poison. Poison~ The url1wort murder in mind. Seventeen pos· will out. For here, In one of lll• sible murders: No wonder East·! most aecluded mansions, liver bourne is jittery. No wonder "The Widow Edith Morrell, whom Dl :Merry· Widow Waltz'' Is banned. Adams is accused of murderinJ.

For the widows of Eastbourne Yes, Dr. AdalftJ waa are an open invitation to the con· known in tbe 1rfeadJ area. fidencc man, the trickster, the un· butlers opened readily to scrupulous in any guise. The smiling doctor. widows arc not only rich, but Dr. Adams was abn wellHI~OI1rJ 1 ':·: they are elderly and friendless. to the boarding-houses (l!lllsttlilurn Every fourth person in Eastbournc prefers "guest Is over 65, as compared to the na· derly spiJ;tsters ape11d tiona! average of one in nine. days on a nest-egg left by a dea

'l'he sudden death of an elderly and departed papa. widow occasions no surprise here. He was a constant visitor of tb

And they arc lonely. !\!any of !\Iiller sisters, Hilda and Eastbournc's widows have outlived spinsters in their eighties,

• 1n~ :t ·.muld seem that i exclusi\'c, drawn from the pri·l Cremations: Dr Adams Is also . of cataslrophe and . vale files ·of rp~earch centres , accused of procuri~g the cremation

e~rm ran shorten 3 ocr· I throughout Amcric~ or made by of four of his deceased patients by

· their families, or arc unwanted by in one of these red brick Victorlial

~!r. the author himsetr during his 18,· raise!)' representing that he hnd ·~:::r.;td rirru:n;tanc~s which 1000 mlle trip cnder military no financial Interest In their

their married children. They come Gothic monstrosities that are here with their memories and gables, turrets, cupolas and ginger their annuities, hoping to warm bread trim.

~:>til!d a' clan~erous, as 1 auspices to coll~ct material. Some deaths. Maximum sentence for 11 hr·ptit!•. rna~· drain 1 1 or the topics dtscu,sed are the these violations of the 1902 Cre· ~~~r an~ of hi, hrallh. but 'de\'elopment of spare ships, . new mation Act· would be eight years.

: achlc\'ements In si)ace medicine, Scotland Yard: In its biggest in·

their old hones in Eastbourne's The "inseparable sisters," th .. 1• , sun. (Eastbourne enjoyed 1,859.8 Misses Miller were called; the I ~ ! ·: 1

hours of sunshine last year). went everywhere hand-in-hand. I '1 • .; • I 1

One sees them hobbling along summertime they would takt 't j : . ·, ; the seafront with canes, muffled taxi down to the turquoise-dome· :•o':'. : -----------w 'schools for ,space pllots, and "fly. vestigation of the century, S~ot·

ing saucers. ' land Yard has combed through to the ears by great woolen bandstand on the front to li~t; tl 1! 1 : ::

scarves. to a reglmenlal band play aw \' · · :

BRIGHT

IREAKFAST

IDEAS

Fresh

Tangy

toodness

Yrm1· Symbol ni Quality

MOTELS the wills of over 300 wealthy per· , The Motel business has hit New· ~ons who ha\'e died In Eastbourne . foun~land and as time goes on lljln the past 10 years. It has al;o , will undoubtedly expand. For those I interviewed hundreds or persons · . Interested there Is an outsize . who have information about the 1

:book In I he Library called Motel! I deaths under probe, is prepared In 1 by G. Geoffrey Baker and Bruno call 67 witnesses at Dr. Adams'

Funaro containing hundreds ~r j trial. ( photos and plans. From 11 !

archit ·; will find complete in· •••••••••••• 1 form.. 1 on the essentinls of site, building~ and furnishings, and the

! motel operators will learn what management practices are most

' populat• with the public. In ~ddi· ·lion there arc photos and draw· ings of sign~ to attract Interest,

: parl;lng lots to increase con· \'enlencc, gardens away from the

·road toward a \'lew, restaurants, p!ar areas and swimming pools. There Is also information for in· vestors on probable costs and profits.

BAN DIRECT MAIL

1.-. ·-·--. - ··-·-·--·-----·-·- ...

WIDOW JIORRELL'S MANSION: A de~th certificate signc'l by Dr. A<lams-hut no body

Or sitting In the cavernous from Gilbert and Sullivan. >i ' 1 ,

lounges of Eastbourne's once· • • • -~~:j- · swank, but now seedy hotels, all Then Hilda died suddenly, lc~l\ :..: ' dressed up to go-where? There ing all her money to Clara. CIH • ·: is nothing beyond Eastbourne but followed her sister in death I j·; 1'

the Channel and the open sea. months later, leaving $15,000 t . ' Eastbourne is the end of the line. Dr. Adams.

Few wonld mourn the passing Eastbourne Is no longer quier .1

of these wealthy widows. There This sedate town has awaken e. ! :. would be no relatives or friends with R first-class murder and/o :~·, i to register complaints or to ~sk murders on its hands: ThroUi. p embarrassing question~ about the the hotel lobhie! on the Gran: 1 :·

manner or their deaths. Parade, through the front parlor Among this clientele Dr. Adams of the "guest homes," the drawin

practiced for over 30 years, dis· rooms or the Meads mansions run pensing clastic stockings and elas· an electric thrill of excitement. tic knee supporters - and little Widows now no longer w:~it t · white barbitone pills. die, but to read about drdh i;

• • • the latest editions 11! the Londo! The very we3lth)' l11•e In the newspapers.

~!eacls area, ncar the 600·foot "Beautiful, HPalthy Ea~tbourn chalk cli({s of Beachy Hearl, in

1 -the Sun Trap o[ the South,

homes that ha1·c nnmr,; like Downs , reads the tra\'cl po~trr on tht ~r; Croft )Inn ,''.lrri, )!cr!swood, Pere·: front. Some rurle person has wili grin 'and Rosrharn. ; pencil inserted. "Un" before th

Here, in a m~nsion ~urrounrled I word "Healthy.'' cro,snd out "Sur. by n spiked wall, li\'cs the mys· and substituted the word "Deal h

CAIRO (AP)-A postal admin· tcrious Sir John Ellerman, ship. for it. istratlon source said Tuesda~· ping magnate, and reputcdl:t. Brit· Easlboume, the Death Trap n Egypt has decided to ban direct . ain's wealthiest man. Sir Jonn has the South? Britain b waltina I· co-operation with "·~ncmy" coun- 11 borl. changed "sun" to "death." been photographed only once in know the answer; willa~ytole~~.postcar~s, mE~A~MD~~~URNE:fte~d~~cal~ll"T~~nT~ofllie~~~~~rt~~~S~o~m~c=~~~=~~=~~---~~------------------~-~~~

1 tries in postal ser\'lces. The ban· - lng pronouns.' til JOmehow 'whom' lJ full:r Hqui parcels and postal orders. The Th G u "Wlho" is Word 'fhe schools !ace • dllemma, he dated, I •hal! doubUe•a bl will source said mail from Egypt (u Wh n ey rew . P" " !aid, as more and more educated lhDse who eam forward .. ves

: England or France, for cxampl:>, e ' w· I st' L.f persons begin using "who" in sit· tigial remains. would be !•:Ill to a third c.oll1!1'y, It 1 tort 1 e uations where the rules of gram- "I suspect that I lllurll, .. fad

r-------...!.!~ ' su~h as Hal~·. and then to its de;,- I {'f Tl I.J ··n g ·ciw I mar call for "whom.. be fully liquidated 10111 bdDre m• tination. . 81· ERNEST CHISHOL~I ·council of Education for World :1!f 1 teen. le .num c~.t~. :96.,1 ED~!ONTON <CP)- A leadi,lg: "A for me" he c~cluded "Ull· old friend 'whom."'

&ov to please/ · ltay tomah ... and sure to Jileuc tbt /11uiul arpetitc! You'U illkuhcm ol1en ... tbue li&lat I!Uc: burn .. -irb a delicate oranae l.r'llr. Tor finur results when you ~~II ~omt, alwa~s depend on

llthmann's .\c1i1e Dry Yeast 1

Slft.f&golhor and t~r hr 2 cups once-sifted all·

pUijMSI fl1111 Ve !Mspaon tlfound mace

and btal untiltmoeth and olatllc, Wetk In an additional

2 cups Cabaut) one .. • lite all-purpos• flour

3, Tum out olooogh on lightly· '*wed loeard.ICnoad untllomaath anti elastic. Ptaco In greatod bowl, lrvt!r with melttd bullor or lllartarlno.Covtr.Lotrlooln warm ploi:o, fr•• from draft, unlit doubled In bulk, about I hour. 4. Punch c1owrt clouoh. Halvolho ~ougltr ,_ tach half Into on l·lnch roH. Cut tach roll lnlo 8 t~uol pleeo11 fetm Into smoolh bolls. Place tn troattd ..,fAn ,...,. lllloh wllh melted buttor or ooorgatlno. c-. Let rlso until doubled In butlr, about 1 hovr. Dip

16 cubet af •111• Clftl at a 11111\, lnlo

• little oran11lulce ancl pr111 a cube Into top of tach lwn, lako In a moderately hoi ...... 375", ....... 25 """"'"· Yltld-16 buns.

·NNJs no . rlftigeration"

; · 'fllO~ISON Cilizt•nship: lro~ y~nr to )Ca~· un.' ~~ • - Ali.Jerta education oHicia! says the s ' ------'---------------1 was ne\'cr myst•lf 2lad to r~· Explurnhon and travel were 3 thete 11111. be mmc th,:n half as word "whom" may be on the war

: tul'n to ~chool altet; the holidn~:l, certain dl'a\1'; under thi.s heatlin¥,' ID!Ill~' li~UIR. How ;an ~~~::~· b~ :·h:: out o[ the spoken ~o;nglish Jan- D r· . I l t ' t i l dh "arne ":\n Observatoru 111 Space, 'sot bed Into the counll) s ccnn ' ·•gn e ICIOU$

1 ru ctrcums ances - ne u l'' . • · ' . · , Tl · · t. . tl . 1 . • gu:. c,

aptlhHlc fur lesson5-uller case;, a LotHlo.n. County Counctl .l~cttu·~· o.my: . ~~: ~~~~nu~.' sa;y let sl .~:~ , Dr. W. 11. Swift, deputy minis- • , Times ha\'C changed too and it by the mter-stcllar authont), DL tlon pto\ltlc, a glcut opp~r 1;01. •, !cr of education toirl the Cnnll· I Pl"Y he. that muder~ ed~cational . J. G. Porter, vieing in popularity that may not rccul', to trm~ ~n:e i dian Club here Utat while he pt~ m~tholi~ muke learning palatable ~with "Ships or the Great ~xplor· num.bers ot k~fng. ~cnt ~n w~m-1 f·~rs to continue using "whom" ia e\'en to those who like me are 'ers" and a Royal Geograp~tcal So· en m the s I s m us r) nee s. I its pro]X)r grammatical place, the const~tttly d'lstracted by 1 tbous· eiety lt,!cture· dealing \\'llh\. lh~ The trouble is thnt few boys anti word is gradually losing !Is place and und one Interesting pheno- Commonwealth Antartle Ex()Cdl· girls really know what they wa~t in the spoken language. menn in the world of Imagination lion. to be when they grow up. Th~11: Us~. ~f "to who," "for who," and uutslde the classroom. , "Automation" wooed young lis· knowl.cdgc of th~ wo.rl~ and 1~8 a_nd wtth who. just ~ocsnt sou~d

Such distractions can act as a , t~ncrs to the Institution of Elcc· jobs IS nec~ssanly l11~1ted. Tins: r1~ht, Dt. S1nft sa1d, but th1~ mental tonic during the winter , !rica! Engineers and "Nuclear is where Bntain'.s Nattonal Youth '!light be onl.Y because most Eng. holiday;, and the boys and girls I Power" to I he Queen 1\!ary Col· i Emplo~·~Jcnt Semce steps in., A ltsh - spcaltMg people had been I in the United Kingdom swarming lege In London's East End. , report JUst issued on It! work brought up on the correct gram· back to school would heartilv en· : Cliild I ttl d ·'th d II . I ~~~n~g !he past tht·ec years should malical usage,

• • • 1

ren 1a e 111 a u s :n IIISptre parents and youngsters dorsc what \las aaul by the Brit· a Nttural Illstory Museum qmz, 1'k N 1 14so'ooo school J.OSING BA'M1.E ish man·of-letters Robert Louis the result of which 1 know not at a 1 e. car Y . ' d ,. d • · Ste\'enson: HThe world is so full the time o[ writing though my bet Ieaver~ were Sl ~en a 1 tee! uJt~g Dr. Swift summarized the po31· of a number of things., I am sure ! 1~ nn our enli;hte~cd junior;. The that 1llme ~nd 1•342•000 P ar.~ m i lion in this way: . we s~ouid 111 be as happy 11 ; ~nimal world captured mott atlen·i emp oy~cn .' . 1 1.' "W~o:• h~~ cxtenmely re-klngs, 1 .. • • tion-crerything from while ants The tepmt t5 extremely hopefu.l. 1 placed \I hom in common

LAVISIIING OF KNOWLEDGE /1 to the now fumous Komodo Dra·/ I~ says that '_'assuming _ther1e IS '! speech: " " . . • gun In Indonesia Lecturer on the 1 ltl11e ch~nse tn the nahona. ~m· 2. Sm~ .whom ha5 no mtnn·

Apart from ice pantomimes and D t th · R 1 G hi 1 ployJr.enl position in the next few I sic superiority o~er "who," it is circuses, and t,he Schonlboys' Ex· S~·:~~~n ~·as ~ f~leand ~~~[~PAt: years· •.. there should be no in·l hardly worth the effort for schools hibltio~ In Westminster, the chi!· b Y h hy 11 1 1 crease in unemployment among and other groups lo conti,lUe to dren h Ve h d th h t f g ten oroug w o recen y comp e · . .

a ~ c ance o or e d 3 000• 11 j young workers " wage a losmg battle trymg to themaelves ,lin the ~crt of general: ~ 1

, ' d~ e f our~ey ;~~~s~ If a layman 'may put in a word maintain the traditional dis tine· knowledge that II missed in the ornco an ~va or .e, r ~. 1 h h d d fo; lion In all sentence forms. average school eurrleulum: In Broadcasting l orporalion s rele~•· I wou d say t at. I e . em an 3 U r "whom" in the proper L d I th · ~Jon Service young workers wtth mtnds on the . se o . , 1

on on a one e ap1te of lectures • future should increase A whole oonse offers d1ff1culty for many and demonslratlnns Intended main· Attenborough ls . one of those ld f 1• d ' 1· nee is persons and is the cause of un-1 f I. h t £ ·t t 1 h 11 th 1 new wor o app tc sc e y or yr111ng peop e. as bea en 01 una e peop e w o rea ze e r 1 • 11 · the certainty perhaps embarrassment all reeords, Subjects have ranl!ed childhood dream's, With his asso- ophn ng f up, 1 espe~ta t ~ "tm which co'u!d be a1•oided if "who" from space travel to early Italian elite Chules Lagus, he evcntuall~ sp ere 0 nuc ear .c ec. rJcl ~- were accepted generally. art from autGmatlon to the feed· reached Komodo Island, Qff Bah, A great news th1s wmtcr 1s that 4 "P,..rhaps we should recog-!nl habit• of a•lma!s. · and thctc filmed the "dragon," the Scotland is to . have. the largest ni~ 'who' as being equally ae­

The lavl!hlng of knowledge on largest lizard In tne world. "From nuclear ~ower stat1on in !he c:eptable for both ~ubjcctivc and· this scale makes news - so much the age of ten," he told me, "I was world, Wtth Calder Hall, .whtch · objective forms, with an optic11nl so that the "Times" newspaper fuscin3l~d by the dragon after sec· Queen Eliza~eth II o.vened m Oc·l form 'whom' which mnv be u;cd was able to fill a column listing lng It In a child's picture book. I tobe,r., Brl~atn already ha; the I by th~se who prefer it' In objcc· Ill the pulnts ln the metro~lis vowed that I would track it to Its wor_.d s fus~ large-scale ~uclcar li\'•J situations, especially fololw· where,- like bees after honey, lair when I grew up." , stnhon, but tt looks as 1! the ehlldren could swarm to bear tX· "When I Grow Up," Incidentally, S! 35,000,000 plant .for the South BERYL BRA1\'Cl1ES OUT perls expounding on their pet is the title or a new sound radio o£ ~cotlt.nd Eleetri~ity Board will ,-LONDON (Reuters) /- Beryl subjects, · quiz game ln. Brllaln, In which castiy dwarf lhis pioneer effort. Gn~Y. 29·yepr-oid ballerina of the

In some cases the ynungsters children challenge a panel of Sadler's Wells Ballet, will leave themselves could join in, as al 11rown-ups to guess what careers BACKWARD the company in April to pursue a Central Hall, Westminster, where they want to take up, television and dancin~; careel' Mr. Norman Robertson, High Cnm· . NATIONAL YOUTH EMPLOY· • Tiwi tribesmen of ~lcl\•ille and abroad. il wa> announced Monrlay miuloncr for Canada, and · Mr. MENT SERVICE Bathurst Islands ,orr the northern •1i!lhl. ~!i~s Gr(')', the tallest hal· Winthrop Aldrich, American Am·! The. rtUC$tion is a ·vital one these co~~t o£ Austrnlia, haye no agri· '•'l'inn in tit~ c~mp1n'·· ton reel th~ bu5ador, were scheduled to open

1

. days .to children ail over the Un· i cultiii'P, no pottcrj' and no domc5· Unite'! Statr~ a~i Canada with four full days' lrelure! 1nd db· lt~d .Kingdom. ·In 11156, ~otne 613,· 'tic animab except the dog. Their 1 S·rller's Wens in 19~9. 19:i0 and cusslons under the auspices of the 000 youn~ people reached the age 1 weapons arc spears and st:cks. 119~5.

_,

Rea/liquid flavour because of the "but!''

L~CiOU$!~ derp-down fresh fruit .flai'Our

TREAT YOUR FAMILY TO THESE TASTE· TEMPTING SHIRR IFF DESSERTS, YOU'LL GET SMILES OF PLEASURE-AT· DESSERT TIME

>'our symbol of Qunlit·v

i '•

Page 8: THE DAILY NEWS - Memorial University of Newfoundlandcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570131.pdf · THE DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY . Heat~:l~:ntent I £~g /\ house

'·-;,-· . - '" ... "

:·i.~:IIICI ....... ~~~ ...... ~~~~ ........... ~,.._~,....,.... ......... .,.,.~ .. .,~ ..... ~ ....... ,.....,;~ ·~

~~-: -=>"~: ~,.c;;:,.P.o;:::,..oro~· ~~~~o....:>m"C>"n~te~s....:.<>O~n~~..c,.1ze~::.<:A~i..<:>r~Tt::.<:o><:::od~a-<.::r<;}'~~ 'tl' '~ .

' ' . ' CBN 3bt.

:. "1~:1-l)IJ:n On. CBC _News.

,..__ T••n ol the Morning. News and Weather.

8.1:.---Mu~ical Ciock. · !1.00-~!oming De\'otlons. · 11.1:.---Program Pre,·iew. 9.!0-0n Puadc.

' \ at Random. '~ • 0.00-Crcam ol the \\'est. · ~ f ; • 0.10-ll~t nl the Da)'. · ~0.15-lm Power.

: d ·. tO.!!.'i-CBC N cw• 'I

·! 1 'j.0.30--~Iornin:: :l!u~icale. 11 1 0.-1-:)--DBC Variety.

i' 1i · •.: 1.15--.\tlantic School Broadd!l. . ~' : ]l.:IG-Snd. School Broadcast. · ~ r ~. _.

11 HS-S;;crcd Heart l'rosram. '

< •• I I]! ·.~1. •·· t.' .; :!.00-.-\nnouncers Choice. -·.I ;i!' :j:.tS-Dinncr Bell Breakdown.

·.j '1 :!30-l-'arm Brtrzdcast. ~t .· 2.-45-llid Uay Serl'nadc.

·-~~ : l.OG-Doyle Bupllctln. : · '· u:.-L:Jura Limited. . •1 ,;1.30-CBC ~cw~ alld Weather. ~~ t 1.4:.---ltusical Programme.

' 11' · 2.00-\\'ords and Music. •• ,-; __ ~ i :.30-Atlantic Scl:ool. '-; -~ :2.45-The Happy Gan~:: :.' '~, :. 3.1:.---ltusical rru~ram. 1:. ~I'~ , ;3.30-Trans .canada ~latincc. 1 , · .4.30--CBC ="ell's. ; ~. - 4.35--Timc:y Tunes. • ~ · · 4.-15-Children's Stor~·. :~ ! . · 1.15-~!usic ul the \\'est.

• ; ( 1 · 5.30-Fishcrics Broadcast. I ~, 1;,- : 5.45-Kinder,:artcn of the Air. 1 . : i . . 6.00-lntrrmeuo. ! I r j ; 6.:!5--Pro;:rar.' l'rel·iew. ; 'l ~ 1 r b.30-Supptr Guest. I .- · 1 6.-l:.---~lusical Program. 1 _- :1 I i.OO-CBC :\ci\S and Weather • . I; ·1 j 7.15-Curtain Calls. 1 : I·' 1 7.3G-Tops Today.

(~.JON .. TV. Tonight 8.011"---Fireshle Theatre, 8.30-Cllmax, · 9.30-Jackie Rae. ,

.500-llowdy Doody~ 5.30-Kids Show. &.DO-Ranch Time. 6,30-Ne\\'S Ca\·aleade. 7.00-1 Search for Ad\'Cnlure, 7.311-Early Show.

10.00-Western Theatre. 11.00-News-Publlc Service. 11.10-Late Show.

f Answer to Prev1ous Puzzl•

This and That

ACROSS

I The- and tho. fiddle

4Thc- and !hQrt or it

~ -- and chain I~-- a11d ;;!I · 13 The \'Cry --!

54 :\b~mct ~rmi 55 Places 56 Deed~ 5i P1~pcn

DOWN l Twi:t Z Pol:cr slakli 3 Old or i\t•w t'"

!R. I.E '-"'~ ~

'~'"''~ !!'!

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;IFO:IE ~~ H.--. 4 Citrm fruits

1 .1 Scent ~3 Entitled ~8 Slanted type · I Pcnnsy \'anla 6 Centaur :4 -- Diane a 40 Eat~ :, 15 Pos~c~.:oi\'c , pronoun i Aeriform l1:rl 2~ -- and ~I NmMncrt '16 Old-fashioned 8 Am mal undel 4: Nrwt! • 9 An -- Z6 Seclllr! 43 Father I ones cner.1y 2i Bleaches H Hor~r·~ Jail 1 !8 -·- ol credit tn Snnilar lo ~8 \\'orr! of action ~6 Coin

1· 0 Sackcloth 11 :I lore or -- 29 ll'ar god of 4~ Shrltcr madt , ,,net - 1 1 i :llu!lcm G1 ecce ol cam·a~

I .I ~~~~~~·toel r;!lh·al 31 Fils hi ol ~~~ps 48 Stmplc 2 ~ Standard of 19 c..:rown ~3 Small hrrrm~ 50 Pic -- mrdl

nwasure Z4 t;nconscious·

ness ~G Fo•·mcr

Russian ruler 271.inclc Tom

and Little-~0 0Jli)()SCd ..

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3.00-Dril!ars on Parade. 4.011-News.

1 4.05-Sam1s Coral. 4.55-Ncws. ;i.OO-Cisco Kid. 5.30-~lciody Man. 6.0G-News and Weather. 6.15-Sportscast. 6.25-Lost and Found. 6.45-News. 7.00--Rainbow Riddle. 7.15-Dr. Paul. 7.30-Bnrgain Hour. 8.00-Pursuit. 8.30-Top Tunes of the Day. 9.3G-Oid Favourites. 9.45-News.

10.00-Muslc by Roth. 10.30-Rcvi\'a) Echoes. 10.45-News. 11.00-Sportscast. • 11.15-Boston Blackle. 11.45-Ciub 500. 1.00-Closedown.

--------.. ----vous · TIIURSDAY, January 31st,

6.00-S!gn On and Sundial. 6.30-World News. 7.30-World News. 8.00-Break!ast Club. B.3G-l\lake up Your !\lind. 8.45-Rcx Kuury. 9.00-It Happened Last Night.

10.00-Cof!cc Time. 11.00-Turn Back the Clock. 11.30-Pepperrcll Juke Club. 12.10-News and D.B. 12.30-Hillbilly lllatinee, l.OG-Bchind the Story. 1.15-;\lastcrs of lllclody. 1.30-:0.Iastcrs of Mclod)'. 1.41i-Bob Crosgy. 2.(iii--~Iatinee. 2.30-0ne ~I an's Fnmlly. 2.45-~Iarch of Events. 3.00-Bo:dng.

THE DAILY NEWS, THUR-SDAY I

·-· -- .. ~ ..... , ... _- __ ,_ ! _________ :;.......,. _________ .:,:

Star Paran1ount Hard ·choi ~------------------~.~--To-mOlTOW I Today

By NELSON NYE "TEA AND SY:\II'ATIIY" "FIXED BAYONETS'' . WITII DEBORAH KERR WITII :RiCHARD llASEIIART , , __ · · -- I XXXVI I agaw toward the rim ~ One of the year's outstanding l "Fixed Bayonet~!" Twentieth ' The sh_al~ ol an .a.rr~w sud~en· i ~eyo~d the . <ict!lor•lizeat

motion pictures '"Tea and Sym· Century-Fox's hcrmc story of a I ~Y matenahzc~, quncrmg/ l~cl.tcs, oade •. _a sohd. hne of pathy," lii·G-:ill's film version in ~car·g~tord action in Korea, fea!ur· 1:1 front. of h~s fa.ce, the lallmg: Ap~_chc, ndl'ancmg CincmaScope and color or the I mg Rwhard Bascharl, Gene Evans end of 1! huncd m a crack. be·, a k1_nd of halfmoon like great Broadway stage . success. and Michael O'Shea, at the Star I ween two bould~rs, ~hese rocks I ;::ethn~ set to, make a

The picture retains the .stellar Theatre. · w~re no protectiOn With s•vagcs and he l~oug:Jt: , team of the originJI cast, Deborah I Wrillen and directed by Samuel t bch:nJ., These were Chu!eil's. force m~·:mg m for the • Kerr and .John Kerr. With the I Fuller of. "Steel lli!tmet" fame, 1 u,unch come for' t~1o;~ Army. rtfle~: I . All. lmn~. cc~scd. In lh:t

sci·een l'crsion written by the g~cat cptsode of coptcmporary I No or.e had to. cx~.am to Jim Ins i ?atur~_i qmct _.lmt ll'althed play's author, Robert Anderson. history to tell the story .or a I prub~blc fate l[ Chulch got hold i ;•PPI o-~~n~g r!dcrs lan 0~~ He has done a masterful job· in platoon of 48 men left bchmd at of h1m. • .ntu a elClll Circle anu transferring this compassionate,_ a Korean monntai~ pas~ to. c_o~·er _ ,D1!st fr?m the raci~g pr-nic:; ~~~•-ruumll~11g the ;~cne or. dramatically cogent story. of a the retreat of their m~1.n ch.mton ,11;r.cd o\Cr lhc rocks 1"n a lcm~n 1 ;-~!'.~m -~u .. n~ thrtr por.ies 11 sevcntccn-year·old prep school (Joy from a. snowbound pos.ltlon m the lu~. Thcte 11 as no ~lace to ),O : .h;C• Ut.tnly n.otlon!~;;, caught up in an infatuation with mountmns. The narrative revolves ~ut !he. ~hack. and .lim. ran 1?r: , f~[:p. n:u~t hai'C lost hit the wife of his houscmasfcr to the around a young corporal, a man 1!. V1;1blllty ll'llh all this rltrt 111, lli'o~! •Muehl. It he h·j wider canvas afforded by the who considers himself unfit/ lo the air was practically zero cx-l new ril 1cs he mu;t hlt~t CincmaScop~ cameras.

1

lcad .Cigl~ting mcR;_bccausc he lacks ccpt where wi~ld tore brief chan· 1 >al;,tls of ca;·td~~c'. ·Without· sacrificing any of the: the 1~sllnct to k11l. One by one, nels through ll. Out of one of; l-lnal, g;::·;p1r.g Tapp-1

intimate touches; the ,:crccn oflci'S i the lieutenant and two sergeants these a hlnck horse reeled Iowan!. n:cnt, cral:.y IJ~:.~h~~­thc pi3)'\l'right a far wider range in 1 who command . U•.e aban?oned 11im, the bcnt·f~rward ~ide_r with ; ridgrs mn>t , h:.re presenting background and local· platoon l?se thc1r l.ll·c~. until the c~at tat!s llymg . s11rn::mg a, ~omcwherc_ c.sc an<l in color. Whereas· the play w~s con-I c?rporal 1s ~aced .mth the ncces·: ?·oorl-darkcnc~ quut at cac!1 1. I~ gel bch~nrl W3!l; h•d fined to two sets, the film version ?lty of provmg hlm.scl! as a sold·: J~mp. A _sw1rl ol . dust blol!c_d; and cut hunscl! oil from of "Tea and Sympathy" . ranges Iter and lcJdcr o( Ius men. I h1m ont .. Jan, bre~k1ug out of 1t, sou:·c~ o[ >upply . from the housemnstcr's home and As the sensitive, lrighlencd · with streamil;g eyes, saw the : The ~mmd oi an garden to sequences on a bench, I GI who searches for courage ?n I shack and the black being pu!lcrl : hor;c dragged him at a golf club an icc-cream par- tl:e bleak, cold Korean mounlam· up in front of it, saw the man : !te >aw an Apache . lor hangout dnd a \'aricty of

1 r::lc, Ful!er and l'roduc~r. Jutes I diving headlong lor the jerkcu·: white shirt wi:h its .

scenes im·oiving student activities 1 Buck, selected talented Rtchard 1 shut door. It was Strunk beating I tails flappin~ a~•:nst ba:e 11• including a rousing Pajama Fight ; Basch~rl, the hcra~dcd star of' against it, clawing frantically. I ll was 'faur.ce. il between the old and new boys. such l,m~ortant.. fl!".'s as the •

1. mouth twisted. Still running Jim The old man slopptd iO

But although its scope has been forthcommg Deets ton Bel or~ . saw the gambler stagger and 1 from !he shack and !at . enlarged, the story remains cs· Dawn" and "Fourtc~n Hours."! lurch away. When he saw Strunk I clignilied disdain of (}O;:ib!t scntially the same. It is that of the For the hard • bo1led W?rtd I a::ain the man was difficult to I until ll'ilh a great !hole sensitive, introspective stuuent, 'I War II ~ctrcad, Fuller acquired I recognize with the coat haif torn I sparks the burning roof en:! Tom Lee, whose refuSal to con· the scr\'1ccs of ru~¥cd G''ne I off him and all the hair gone The door was kicked ope~ form to the mold or the regular I Evans, the star o~ Steel Rei· from the red horror of his head. bad I)' singed men, ,.n,~Ke-l:lld~ guy makes him an "of-horse" and met•: who only a l'~ar ago was :He was staggering around in a

1

. cd and ~oughing, :;taggerro brings on the de~ision of hi~ lei·! p!~ymg. sm~ll'-supporllng roles fer' kind of grotesque circle in !ront the shac~ with their low students, Ius convenl!onal· $7~ .a 11cek. , o[ that shut door, futilely clutch·, armed. Crct"h and

1 • r:l! 7.45--l>oylc Bulletin. : '1 jl'r &.15--~lu~ic~l Panorama.

, ; .'. 1: 1},: .lt3G-Ila11:h1dc.

; : l,' : 1\.45-llonn~ nrp~rtcr.

, l ;, vs.~·. !I.CG-The Sk!' 1\ni;ht$. 1., 1 j. t . !1.3l\-Drama.

; 3.~ Rcaim 36 Wile 3~ :\u1ons 39 !;t•·~ls 10,\ clenched

41"- ,Jcr~·" 4: N~tur~l fat 45 5)·nthctie

30> ··. jl7 ., ~0

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3.30-VOUS Record Room. 4.00-World News. 4.05-VOUS Record Room. 4.30-Five Star Matinee. 4.35--Hawaii Calls. li.OO-World News. 5.15-Worid of Sports. 5.3~Updalc.

minded father and the contcmp· Mtchacl 0 Shea, long a come· in~ the bloody shaft that stuck! The old chief con51de:red tuous house-master, Bill neynolds. dy fa~oritc, r<!VCrls to a scriou; out o[ his belly, • ! He ~airl, pointir.~ ;.t · Only the latter's wile, Laura, un· role as the sober, baltlc·.l'earv, 'i The trampled ground, crazily, dead shnre, ":\o ,:aod. dcrslnnds the uncertainly and tor· non·_e?m :vho makes the supreme spinning, came up Ior .Jim like a i Apache." Then rhrust 1 mcnt of this youth, no longer a sacrtf!cc m ~n att~mpt to dallllcaping dog. He pushed out his! !i'lgr.r first at the , boy and not yet an adult ,and at· the Coljlmumst adlancc. . good hand to ward it off and: of Cretch 1\'ho l1.1o! led th~ tempts to help him with more Fuller and Buck fought their! \\'as astounded when the arm; on thr rlo\'ernmcnt wa·o·• ~han "tea .and s_ympalh)'." Goaded "K?rean War•: on. a. S143,000 ex-1 crumpler! under him. He felt no! at thr glowering llock;b,~;,· mto provmg h1s manhood, Tom lerlor set 1 built InSide a sound 1 impact but remembered to roll. i Americ;;ns. Thmk \l'hlte see.ks ,out I he compan_y of a cheap , sl~ge .. The)-' set off some 3:.000 I Little geysers of dust spurted up i bet!er han;;um."

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! • .; l · 0.00-l'itizcn~ Forum. i .:~, 1:·. · 0.~5--\'anrounr Chamb~r

I' I' Orchc;tra. :· ,i l.JO-rnr ~ation•l "c11~. Sews

• ·' j ~ Roundup and Talk. .. . I .

"t ~ .·: { ~.

1 ; ~

CJON THt;llSD.\ l', Januar~· 31st.

6 30- Bob Ltll'iS Shuw. 63a-!\nd. !\c\\·s. 6.35--Weather. '1.•5--Fi~hcrmcn's !\r.ws and For~ . .

~a~t.

1.00-NIId. Ne'u an.! Sporll. : 'i.OS-Lw1l \\'e~other. · "1~Canadt;:n News and Sportl

· :"1.3G-J:ounrJ the World NewL

fabric 49 llccluccd

rriccs s I Bt•I'CI'~,. 5~ \\',,IJ;cd ~J Ranlin~s

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.. D.05-Dukc Box Review. 9.:10-Ncws. ' 9.:ll-DuRe Box Rc\'icw. 9.45-)luriel McKay. 10.00-~lartin's Corner. lU.lfJ-Jukc Box Re1·icw. 10.30-)lid )lornin!l )Jcloriies. 10.45-E!ci'Cll for the :.tone)'. 10.55-Hit of the Day, ll.OG-Ncws. tl.Ol-John Turner's Family. 11.31-Caslno.

· '/.:IS-Weather Roundup. ,'l'.4~Ne,·s Summary. ;8 OO-Nnd !\ews

12.00-Ncws, Tops Today. 1.00-Local and Natlon&l Newa.

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': 1 l I

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.. I ' ·I . ·I

. 8.05-Pro\'incial Weather. ;u~!_ihliPiliiiC Report.

1.05--Weather Forecast. 1.10- 'J'ops Today. 1.15-News. cr.

8.15

RoUDd

RouDd.

1.35-Editorial Comment. 1.40-~portn Review. 1.45-Art Baker's Notebook. 2.00-Ncws. 2.01-Sccond Iiddle.

BISHOP FEILD HALL

2.30 Mat.

Nightly Saturday·

IT'S A SCREAM

''RUNNING WILD''

Reservations at Bowrings, After 6.30 p.m. - 'Phone 6221

2.25, 1.70, 1.15, 60c. · NEXT WEEK: "ANASTASIA:'

Ill .. OUNDlAND'I 'IJIHDLY ~HIAfU _____ , --

NOW PLAYING

Also-TRAVEL SUBJECT ..

TIMES OF SHOWSa EVENING SHOWS: 7 P.M. - 9 P.M.

MATINEE-2 P.M.

NEXT ATTRACTION UUIENCE OLJVIER ID "RICHARD 111"-SUSI'ENSE AND nNGUNO THRILLS TO EXCITE YOU !

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.:·-~ :vs 'it> ijl r'!' ;a ~I

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-2.15-0ut uf the Dark, 2.30-News, Ma~inec. 3.0G-News, Housewives Club. 4.00-Gen. Provincial NewL 4.01-Casino. 4.30-Ncws, Ranch Part7. 4.45--Saddle Serenade, 5.00.:..News, Bob Lockhart Show, 6.0G-Ncws and Weather. tf.U5-Bullctln Board. 1!.10-Natlonal Ncw1, 6.15-Sports Parade. 6.:!5-Provinclal News. 6.30-Showcr of Stars. 7.01-Thc Frank Parker Show. 7.15-Incrcdlble But True. 7 30-N ews. . 7.45-Right to Happiness. 8.01-Caslno. 8.31-Paradc of Hits. 9.01-Big Six Program. 9.31-Smilin's Ed. lllcConnell. 9.45--Dosco News. 9.31-Stroll!n' Tom.

10.00-Squad Room. 10.31-Dukc of Paducah. 11.00-National NewL 11.15-Sports Final. 11.30-Houseparty, News. 1.01-Qucen and Sign Off.

VOCM TIIURSDAY, Jbuary 31st.

6.26-0n the Air. 6.30--Breakfast Club . 9.00--Date with Denys. 9.15-Foxglove Slreet. 9.30-Date with Deny1,

10.00-News. 10.05-Date with Deny1, 10.30-Here Comes O'Malley. 10.55--News. 11.00-Burton's of Banner St. 11.15--Big J\lountain Show. 12.00-Ncws. 12.05-Ramblln' with Records. 12.30-News. 12.45--Fisherrnan'• Forecast. 1.15-Snortscast. 1.30-Ncws. 1.45-Simon 1\lystcry. 2.00-Rambiln' with Records. 2.55--Ncws.

6.00-Worlu Ne11's. 6.05-Latin Americana. 0.3G-Sporls Today. 6.45-Final Edition . 7.15-Pcppcrrell· Today . 7.20-~ly Son Jeep. 7.35--Jnck Carson. B.OG-What ~I)' Line? 8.30-Stars in Action. 9.00-CBS Radio Workshop. 9.:l0-Truth or Consequences. 9.50-Saga. .

10.011-News and Weather. 10.15--Peppcrrcll Sports Desk. 10.3G-Onc Night Stand. 11.00-::llusic Til Midnight. 12.0G-Sign Off ••

ll'allrc~s and, when lus subsequent· ~xpl?51 ~,ns tha_t. ranged "f,om, all around him. He felt the! Final, lllliTicdly l"lch:'l revulsion leads to an attempt at I squths contammg a h.ndfuil slithery stickiness which nro1·cd

1

shack pushed sullrlc suicide, Laura makes a decision or powder to "rockets". that held 1 he'd been hit ·and saw a1 mun- having trouble <\ilil ' which brings about a momentous ,two pounds 0~ dynamite .. Some 'strous shape that was' half hm·oc, "Tapp!'' he croaker! change in both Tom's future and I of the hlasls were so powr~ull p1unging at him. ~ Jlc was afraid o[ her own. that they c~ackccl and bul~cd II' . th . t f II I I , a!tcr makin" a crutch of

Vincente Minnclli and Pandro the set and In the end cau;•!:l de I sal\ CdlJOtl~ do btc_ call· I when 'l'<~pp" nar'cd Jim S Berman r~speclivc director and a total Of 11! minor casualties I f~c ·r~nc~. an ~lc hto rllng up from the hip • th; t·;o •ho' p~oduccr ~r "Tea and Sympath)'," among tlte acting personnel. II cd r~t c,H IStc~vedntng c no. o~gcr j lapping nJ flrcrl o·~ce.s

· · · b · bl · t His screenplay su~gcstcd b•· Ia 1 · e ne o get h1s nght · · were fortunate 111 cmg a e to gc . ' " ' hand on the butt of Dawks' · 1 1 then let go of the 11eapon. the drama's original stars for their last Wl~lcr's 'dr_amatlc retreat t>f but the hand would , . pis o A man could take JUit so motion picture adaptation. It is the- Umtcd N allOns forces acro>s <howcd a ghastly g/ t mt e. t~c and i[ these ~lad Sprin•s rlifficuit to think of an,·one other North Korea, one of the moot • . m an as c 11 d 't b . 11 do . than Deborah Kerr for the role of dramatic C\'ents In history, Ful· lance ~::.~e at h1m rle!lc~tcd i~s a n een ". aro;r. Laura Reynolds. It is a beautifully ler ordered th~ set built belore he ~~rust hNJ!h a foot and, l;'llh h1s J rcc~~ned 1~e ~'~u:d -~:~ shaded performance of . gl~wing began any wnting. Once the set fi~~~t and got Dawks ptstol and ~~c u:rscth~ ,~\it~ F;lhtr warmth tenderness and v1tahty was constructed he went over I he h. 1 ld d g d 1 John' Kerr as Tom Lee ihc area and wrote the story to fit the C uleh's face with its mouth 1olf an ~an; c 0

charaetcrizati~n which mad~ him surraundings, as if he was com- strclche~ wide focused briefly 5 ~. k 0,;·e~ 0 1~une~. an overnight star wins instant manding such a rear-:::uard platoon and vamshed. s ~~ s, e mu 1 ekre : · ' h hi If • • o pnsoncrs-you a e em

--------------- sympathy m the role of the.yout mse · Berkle,·." whose temperament makes lum un· SI'ECIAJ, ADDED 'ATIRACTION SomeUting made him twist his · "Yeah; sure," Taunee

Capitol a~lc to bccom~ a. me~bcr _of: the The Star "The Goirlen. Link" l1ead around, Through the swirl· "You go'oci friend to my trJbe, and Lclf ~rlckson, m the With Andre niarell ing dust he could see the skitter- Then he grinned at comple~eiy opposite. part . of the ing shapes of Chuleh's warriors I' g "I think white squaw

----------- aggrcss.l\'cly. mascuh~c . Btll Rcy· \'cf!ring · off and he blinked, not ~~ti~nt-all the lime

N Pl , nolds, ts solidly con~mcmg. . comprehending the par.ic that was J' foilowin~ the old OtV aymg There arc several fmc supporhng routing them. I lm, Q ·.1

f th th t A'fERICAN BISO" g ancc, saw um . per ormanccs, among em .. a " " He found himself listening for THE EXD "WIIILE THE CITY SLEEPS" WITII DANA ANDREWS RIIONDA FLEliiNG

of Dick York (also ol the ongtpal Allhou~h millions of bison once the sound of a bugle and gri· · stage cast) as Tom's disturbed ro?.mcd the plains of North Amcr- maced with disgust that he could roommate, Edward Andrews as ira, today there arc fewer than! be so foolish. The ca\'alrv J\nrr~n printers ca;t bror.:t Tom's father, Norma Crane as ~5,000 of these animals, most of I' couldn't ha\'e got here rcgardlcs~ in sand and printed book!;:

"While The City Sleeps," new Ellie, the brassy waitress, and tncm under go1·crnmcnt super· -and he'd told that lieutenant not tuw tir~~lics bc!on• screen drama at the Capitol The· Jones and Dick Tyler . as vision. I to let Berkley move. He reckoned rented separate type chara:::~ atrc, is occasion of a special typical school llullies. he must be delirious and, looking mC:al in the 1430s. cinema renunion for Ida Lupino One of the most talked-about ---·----- ______________ .. ·-·-------:-and Sally Forrest. plays In Broadway's history,, "Tea

It was Miss Lupino who start· and Sympath)'" emerges as an cd Sally on a successful Holly· equally eloquent and thought-pro· LONGEST OF KIND wood career by Introducing the voking motion picture. It repre· The international railway bridge 1

promising newcomer in a picture, sents movie-making at its best. between Sault Sic. Marie, ~Iich., "Not Wanted," which launched the . and Sault Sle. Marie, Ont.,' is the Luplno·Colller Young lndepcnd· 1 PRlBlLOF SEALS I longest basculc (jackknifQ) bridge ent proauctlon unit Filmmaker~. In breeding season each year, in the U.S. It measures 3,067 feet

Versatile Illiss Luplno dlrr. .ted approximately 1,500,000 fur seals in length. that well-remembered drama; jam the lonely dots of land in -------

Currently sharing co-star bill· fll'c treeless, fogbound islands of ing In "While The City Sleeps" the Bering Sea, the Pribilofs. the present film, produced by 1\Iore than 100,000 come ,ashore Bert Fricdlob, marks the feminine on a single mile of beach. nine players' • Initial appearar.ce · together In front of a movie cam· The Iron Crown of Lombardy era. • is so·called from an inner iron cir·

Dana Andrews, Rhonda Fltm· elct, which tradition says was lng, George Sanders, Howard beaten from a naii·of the Cross of

OLDEST PLANT Oldest known specimen of a

flowering plant has been found in the San Juan ~lountains of Color­ado. A pnlm-like growth that f!our­i>hcd 165,000,000 years ago,' lelt the Imprint of its Jc'aves on Color· ado's red rock. Fossil experts have discovered seven such Imprints, the largest being 18 inches long, Duff, Thomas, lllitchcll, Vincent Christ. ·

Price, John Barrymore, Jr., and -====;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiii;;;;;;~ James Craig ore likewise stat•red In the forthcoming film. Fr!tp

. . '.. :. . • • ' ' • ~ ,J> • -·

Lang directed,

TO-DAY T~e Man who Smashed

*----STAR ------·-·· .. ·--- -- _ .. ., ·------

TO-DAY

Special Added. Attraction

.TO-MORROW : II · · · Custer!

TI!IN·AGE BOY ... UNDERSTANDING WOMAN I

'~:m:~' ~~-­·~;~f. -' I I ' ''"""" Hlft )q' r, . ' Lt..Deoorah Kerr·John'Kerr

'''11 .. ' . ~ Ctii&M.t/ror:'::.~I~ROCOI.(>FII

'lht an~{ Sympatl~,.

Also-UP-TO-THE-MINUTE NEWS' TIMES OF SHOWSt

EVENING SHOWS: 7 P.M.-9 P.M. MATINEE 2 P.M.

ADMISSION PRICES. FOR THIS ENGAGEMENTa EVENING-ADULTS ........ 75e CIIILDREN ..... ,.35c

MATINEES-ADULTS , ..... 51Je · CIIILDREN ....... 25(

---------~· .. ··--·--·----LAST TIMES TO-DAY

\

THEATRE

Also-NOVELTY TIMES . OF SHOWS:

EVENING SHOWS: 7.15-9.15

'~IATINEES: 2.30 - SATURDAY 2 O'CLOCK

NEXT .ATTRACTION JEFF CIIANDLER-JACK PALANCE In "SIGN OF TilE PAGAN" WITII RITA GMI-SI'ECTACLE-TIIRILLS­SUSPENSE IN CINEniASCOPE.

................... lUrriiiE ·

ANDRE MORELL •THEA &RE&DRJ JACK WAniNG • PATRICK HOLT

Direclrd by CHARLES SAUNDERS A P~rlside Pro~uciiDII

Rrlrmd by 20th Cenlu!J-rox

iiMES OF SHOWSa EVENING-"FIXEIJ 'BAYONETS" 7 O'CLOCK-9.55

''TilE GOLDEN LINK"..;..8,35, IIIAT1NEE 2 P.~l. ..

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NEXT ATTRACTION , .. · '~tYS1'ERY LAKE"-SUSI'ENSF. ,\Nil TIIJIII.I.S-.\.

· ··o.K. :sEno··-commY ,\ND no~IA:'\CE. .

sECT/0

Imp

NATIONS. is shown with J revolution. a5

hearing o{ the c

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sECTION II The Daily- News ·SECTION II ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, , THURSDAY, JAN. 31, 1957

' I

Important News Events Captured By INS Cameramen

NEW YORK-With temperatures dipping to 15 above, firemen l1ad rough going in fi!fhling a spcclar:ular fh·e-· alarm blaze that raged through a five-storey Manhattan loft buildin!Z used for storage of waste paper and H<·'· This fire engine at the scene has a thick coaling of ice. '.rhomands of \\'orkcrs en route to their jobs witnessed· the blaze in which flames shot 30 feet from windows of the building at lOi Gren Slreel.-(l.N.P.)

~

· :\:':. TIO:\S. N.Y.-7\Irs. Anna Kethly, :tvlinister of Slate !n the deposed Imre Nagy Go\'ernment in Buda­.; ;·:.~·.':~. w: th J ozef KO\·ago. former Mayor of Budn]~cst, left, and :rviajor Gen. Bela Kiraly, a military leader

. :c·,.~:::::n!:. a:; they conferred before testifying before the United Nations ,;watch dog'' committee in the first ;:,a:l:i~ of the committee on Soviet oppressi.on in Hungary.-(I.N.P.)

NEW YORK-The Maharajah ,of Patiola (left), I\Ime. Pandit. and Krishna :\Iennon. Indian represcnlath·cs at the United Nations. are shown -In conference just before the U.S. Sc·urit~· CGt\lv.:il rc::umed debate on the K:1 'i1111ir dispute between India and Paki5tan. 1Iennon ser\·ed no~ice on the cc;!n<:il that he intends to speak all day in rcpiy to charges made by Pakistan that India intends to annex Kashmir in dcfiam:e of U1e U.N.-(l.N.P.)

J,1:.~~ia-sh:Her from a sudden ?ownpou.r is provided for Indian Prim7 !11il_l­. .arJa! ?\ehru, left, and Synan Pres1denl Al-Kuwatlv by unseen a1des m

S nt~. as the leaders walked across the rain-swept Pala~ Airport .. The gar-: nan Was in India on a state 'visit;...:..(l,N.P.)' . •

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WIESBADEN, Germany-This pretty maid is peeking through the door opening of a beach cabin that is carried

. in the bag she holds. It was demonstrated at a sports out· fitters' exhibition in Wicsbaden. The eabin is made of a plastic.: mate1•ial and t•an easily be folded into the bag. It weighs about two pounds.-(I.N.P.) .. . -

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LOS ANGELES, Calif.-Actress Gia Scala, (right), ~0, shakes hands with singer Dianne Dauncey, 23, as th~y met at the U.S. · J~aturalizai.ion office in Lo.s Angeles. Miss Scala, now under contrael to Uni\'ct~al-Intcrnalional Studios, i~ English bern of Irish-Italian descent. and is now app!yi1tg for U.S. citizenship. Mi,ss Dauneey, a Canadian was the1:e to pick up her final citizenship papers.-(I.N.P.). '

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Page 10: THE DAILY NEWS - Memorial University of Newfoundlandcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570131.pdf · THE DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY . Heat~:l~:ntent I £~g /\ house

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~:Stock Market

Nfld .• -Canada . Steamships Ltd. FREIGHT SAILINGS

M.S. "I!EDFOJIO_IJ" HALIFAX • ST. JOHN'S

Lenin~ Halin: .January 29th .............. Dnr Sl. .John's ;J~uuarr 31st February 6111 ............ Iluc St. ,Juhn's F'chrual'Y Blh Fcbr:uary 15th ........ ~ ... Due St •• John's February 17th February 23rrl. • .. • • • • .. .. Dut• St. J nhn's Jo'cltnliii'Y 2:ith March 4th .................. Due Sl. John's March 6th

~f.S. "BELLF: ISLI·: II"-HALifAX • 1''1'. JOliN'S

Lenia1 H11iax: .January 30th ............. ~nuc St. .John's l"ebrum·y· 1st February llth ............ Due St. ,John's February lOth February 16th ............ Due St. John's February 18th February 25th: ........... Due St. John's Fcbrua!'Y 27th

For lmme<liate cleannce per direct sailings. For r~tcs, space and other information apply:

HARVEY & CO., LTD., General Agents, Dia1,·2J5J R. N. COLE, Special Representative, St. John's, Diai 2207

or to niE ROBERT REFORD COMPANY, LTD., Agents

Montreal and Toronto IIE:\D OFFICE - HAJ,IFAX, N.S.

---·---)

Tolol oolu nn Tornnln Stock F:xrh•n••• J•n. lO: .1.1jZ.OIIO ohnos. .

I MO!'ITIIV.AJ, CLOSISil nomt~ B7 The Cuo~lan J'rrn

.\h;tihl ~2 nnw Smito h•butn~ · : 30',i Jlud !loy ~lin R••1k Mnnl • l~ll llnp Oil n•nk 1'(5 SO In! Nlrk I\11'1Ut c Nala 12'.~ In! Pop !loll 45 In! l'rl• . nrnzll A~i Mas•·llor Bhl2 l'rod 30\\ MrColl (! cement :ag N Sl. Cor C Bnk Com 54\i Noranda Cdn Brew 2:1 Price ' Cdn Brew pr %7 • Royal Bank Cdn Ctlall IS Jloyallle . c Cham 1\i Sl L C<lrp CPI\ )1 Shawln Cockobull 7 Steel Scr1J'ams 30 Un Stet! Rti<ilo 221i ' CANADIAN llou1 Tar 12 Con• l'op 37 t'Ollndatlon 22 Ford 103 l'rn•er 31 I l.akra 40

- ----CBnkC%C7 I+ ~IN NEW YIIICK CJ.II~INU STOCKS

R7 'Ibe C•n••l•n Jlreu · Belh Sttri 11311 Kcnncroll BDrl Warner 42'.> Monty W C •n<l II 66li Y Cent Cnno Edlsnn 4~'1 nadlo 1:orp El AUIO L 3%'.4 Sid 011 :\',1 Gen Eire ~3 ltUid Aircraft

~EFOOL.

Owing to the harbour beinll froz­en over the Jobs ferry boat in charge of tSeve Burt could not operate. crossing the harbour ser­\'ke yesterday from the Royal Stores wharf to Jobs fishing plant on the southside. The only opera­tions on the harb~r yesterday were the Imperial Company's freighter and the s earner Her· culu 1hifted from Harvey's Pier 2 to the dry dock which she en· tered.

'· .. CE~IENT PL.~~'T CORNWALL, On!.

(){ unkn(\\\\1 ori~in cause<! $100,000 dam!fl ~ ment mixing pbnt hm been supplying som~ the St. Lawrcnre ment project. The fire, parenU)' starttd in tht plant, destroyed tht plant and com·e~or

MOSELLE RIYF.R TRIER, Germany

!lloselle Rh·er projeet. ret'.ent Saar ~ctUem~~t. cially bon1 here 1"i~~ ment of Company. Germany. France bourg hailed the the rompam· which a11d wlcxm tlle •• an• hisroric day in tory."

a DDII11 UIC Billll)' &hoe boxet-­roiTUglted w-dboud eirtau.

iJ U111 1ttong·wupplng p1per nd tie )rilh llronll cord.

IJ Print name and addn:• clearly, completely and correctly 011 {l'OIIt or puee1 IN INK.

a Put )'OUf OWII name &Dd addretl in the front upper left comer, and inJide puce),

g Don't gum about weight -llare your Po't Ollie~ weigh parcel!,

• FOU.OW THF.SE 5 SUGGESTIO~S A.'iD HElP

~PEED 'ltJfiR.IIAill 11•1t0•11 I

Upp~r ~ull -GIRL GVIDES

I\IEEAING

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soUTH ,-

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SHORE NOTES KING GEORGE VI R.B.P, 1284 · INSTALLATION

HOLDS ELECTION OF King George .VI R.B.P. held Its

In the back country because to re.ach the wooded country you have to cross several bogs and ll)arshes and without the severe frost this could not be done. The cold weather Is very ·annoying to the many who have to walt for buses In the morning. Talking to many of the older. residents in this area . It appears that this is one of the coldest winters in many years and when you look out and see the vapour !lying over Con· ception Bay. It Is mighty mighty cold.

OFFICERS 1 Installation of o!flcers lor 1957 on King George VI R.B.P. of Up- Jan. 28th. The lncHH'n" ;""'·

per· Gullies held its artnual meet· many was conducted by Past Mas· ing and election of offlcers on Jan. tcr, · Jack Scott. Arter t •• ~ .,,. 21st. Sir Kt. Past Master, Phillip stallatlon ccrez:nony many Cine ad· Dawe occupied the Chair to con: dresses ·were given by. the dlf·

. duct the election of officers ferent o!£1eers pertaining, to the •..:•I _,,,~dation Group I lain Charlie Warford, re·elcclcd work they have dine in the past '' ,i t:irl Guide~ held j , and hoped they would continue to .r~ ~~ r!rrtll•n ~r of£iccrs \\ .P., ~ubrey Dawc, rc·elccted; do so in the future. The evening

SOCIAL AND .PERSONAL Eldted Scott .returned home this

week after spending . a week's vacation at Port de Grave. El· d~ed was the guest of his grand· mother, Mrs. Eldred Snow.

, .. r.~ P tricl rommis~ioncr I D.P., Lcslte Dawe, re-elected: Chap- concluded with a social hour with . i~~-m~~-,.,1<·• prc;iding. lain, Ch~rlle Warford, rc·elccted; ~ ,Hicl..,•t~ tea .~cr\'cd by the Jun·

f.;a.~ . : Rcc. Rcgtstrar, Jack Scott, re-elect· 1or members o[ the Preceptory.

19. Many of his friends gathered at his home to help him celebrate and a very enjoyable Cl"cnln.g was spent by all •. ' · · ·

BLACKOUT The )llaclwut in this area last

week was a successful test and not a llgbt could be seen anywhere. Nclthev were· there any lights visible on the north side of Con· ception Bay. Although the black· out was very effective· in this area, the same cannot be said of the moving automobiles. Drh•crs who either did not know the black· out was on or they just didn t give a hoot about it. ·

Manuels

..

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After the election of officers N · E. • F othc~ business was attended to in· ew ra or cludmg the presentation of two· new stoves, ·new dishes and ne\v N S F• h • chairs fQr the use of the clas& . I I IS eries l'ooms. ·

Plans were also made' for .a Card and Bingo gamll to be held Feb 14. with good prizes. It Is hop~d that all parents will .help and make a special effort to attend. The meet· ing was closed in the usual inan· ncr, after tire meeting a social hour was held. · ·

OBITUARY

.1\frs. George Hiscock

, l\IULGRAVE, N.S. (CP)-Wh~n the sleek 238·ton fishing· trawler Alladia Snowbird steamed !rom here on her· maiden voyage to the .Grand Ba11ks recently, resic!~nts forecast a new era- of prosperity for this small town on the Canso Strait.

Washroom !aciliti~s on, t Snowbird include a drying ~or oily clothes a~1d showers. addition to lifeboats, the has inflatable dinghies.

A. B. Wilbraham, 'British-born general manager of ,Acadia Fish· cries Ltd. here, say~ the trawler should land more than 7,000,000 pounds of fish in 1957. bo01;ti,1g Acadia Fisheries, · a subsldia the firms earnings by one-third of Deep Sea Fisherr.s e>£. and raising living standards for ~ow ~~a th:ee 1!53raw1le_r.d_Jt 200 employees. lera 10ns m " , an mg.

Built in Aberdeen, Scotland, the 1 _.ooo,ooo t 'l"'in: •rr the o£hccrs cd; Treasurer, Jack Vaters, re· ~;: ~~~~: rrrsidcnt. :\Irs. elected: Financial Treasurer, Che~· "~-~;tr•: \'icc·Pr~5idcnt, Icy ~lor~an, rc·clectcd; !st. Lee!·

WOOD CUTriNG Many of the residents in this

area arc takln'g advantage of. the \'cry cold and frosty weather' this past few days and •have taken to the woods to cut fire wood and other types of wood fr their use around their homes. Althugh this is the first winter In . a bout ten years that the men around here have been able to ilse their horses

1\fr. Gerald· Kelley was the guest ol his sister, Mrs. Ralph Scott, O\'cr the week end. Mr. Kelley's home is at Long Harbour and was visiting his wife who is a patiCnt at the Sanatorium.

SCHOOL MEETING HELD AT MANUELS

Passed peacefully away· in her 80th ~·car after a long illness. Mrs. Georgena Hiscock. Left to -mourn t~e!r sad loss are hllsliand, . lour daughters, Florence In St. John's; Ada,. Mn. Hubert Art on the mainland; May, Mrs. Charlie 'Shep­pard of St. John's; Marion, Mrs. Charlie Warlord, Upper Gullies; !6ur sons, Nelson, Corner Brook; Bertham, n the mainland; Walter at Chamberlains; Lawrence at home and ieveral grand-children.

&.1owhird. i~ l:dicved the. most ~car. .., modern C~nadian flshin!( trawler The Snowbird will fish ha'uuu"L"'" afloat, . ~kipJM!red by Ncw!ound- cod, sole, ocean perch, s.c :autl'l·<~

• ~ \ndrrw;: Secretary, urcr, James Dawc, elected: 2nd, 1.~:;.1 ~~~11: Trra;urcr, Mr;. II.ccturcr. Ralph Dawe, rc·clectcd;

•. :~";·.u:r>: iladgc Sccrc.tar~·. i lsi. Standard Bearer, Charlie An· 1-~, ,:::;r-1 .\n::rcw;; AudttoJ:s, j drcws, re-c!ected; 2nd. Standard t< il~r. l\cnncd~· and llrs. Bearer, I'h1lllp Dawe, re-elected;

'The annual· [\1cctlng of 1\lanucls Home and School Association wa~ held Jan. 17 and the election of officers resulted as follows: Pres!· dent, Mrs. Alma Evelly; Vlc~·Presi· dent, ~Irs. Beatrice Eason;. Secre· tary, Mrs. Hazel Pitcher; Treasur· er, Mrs. Hiltla Whitten. ·

land·bo~ Capt, f'larence Ta~·lor, and occasionally salmon. she carrtcs a 1. .·man crew.

· (r.;tr•. Thr umal testers 1st. Censor, Isaac Dawe, elected; BIRTHDAY PARTY

Lt\IIGE CAPACITY Her well-insulated fish-hold has

a capacity of more than 250,000 pounds . with shelvi•1J: arrang'(!· ments for storing topquality fish.

Oslo lays claim to being smallest city in the world ·

rr.c• J>~rt~c• were ap- 2nd. Censor, George Morgan, elect· · 1r,;; ~thrr hu;inc;s dis· ed; Inside Pursuianl, John An·

A birthday party was tendered Hayard Scott Jr., ho celebrated his 19th birthday on Saturday Jan.

by a subwa~·. It is the capital Norway •.

thony, elected.

Henri Ma.~.~rm, notccl painter

•rrhe 1957 Buick is the kind of ca~ a person of tasie would like to dril'e, Its simplicity of line is out· standing. 1 hal'e my eye on a Buick for my next car.~!

Celia FrariCn. Director, National Ballet "In ballet every mo1·ement: counts. The same is true · of the measured forms of the new Buick. Even when standing, it suggests the power and rhythm of a dancer in flight,'.!

Walll!r Yamoot1, · painw and designer "The new Buick is modern without looking ridiculo~s: To~ many designers confuse

. fashion with being freakish. In every· detail, the 1957

·· Buick is in the greatest ·tradition of fine car design,'.!

R. York Wilson; . famed murali~t "The new Buick stresses the best elements of conserva• tism. The fin is part of the function, a rare feature in modern car styling. The Buick's understatement i1 the logical next move in car design.!!

We asked the experts about Buick style ••• took our questions to Canada's most noted and inost widely-recogniz~d authorities on art and design. Their answers are displayed· here. Their conclusions are inescapable ••• and Buick 11ales· reflect public agreement!.

To sum up, Dr. Arthur Lismer- one of .Canada's most 1nfl~enLial

a1·tists and art 'educators, intcl'llationally respected for his opinion -has this to say, "The Buich is an automobile functioning smoothly in time arul sprn:e~ It is without tire accumulatioru and exaggerations tvli ich mean nothing to a car's functiorr and bea!Jty."

In short, the cl'itics do' ~gree,,. Buick is the h~st s~ylcd car of all!

Charles F • .COmfort, Albert Cloutier, artist-author, educator noted desigr:r-consnltant

•. , • r . ·"After a year's association · "Each element of the'new . ·with Europ~an. car design, Buick represents integrated

I have returned home to design with a purpose. Its Canada to find· all the clear vision windshield is a ~ answers· to contempor~ry · fine detail.- It suggests a ' engineering· and styling. in clean .ease of motion plus ~ th~ new 1957. Buii:k.~! · stability of structure.~! --~

Ra~il Duml, i11tertwtionally;· knon-n art critic "The classic balance of form and function is perfectly realized in the 1957 Buick. It lQoks like a car that means business. It! i!}tegrity appeals to all design leaden.~:

Bsgon.d all doubt

Blti THRIU'S

. TEllR.A· ·<l~O.¥A MOTORS, LIMITED ' >, ' ' ' I I

OJuirJp-· ~~I.

. . ' . REAR -NEWFOUNDLAr~D HOTEL . : . .

. ' \

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/

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THE DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. 31, 1957

R

furnish in

• COME

Page 13: THE DAILY NEWS - Memorial University of Newfoundlandcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570131.pdf · THE DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY . Heat~:l~:ntent I £~g /\ house

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H· ,r- .. ''{·:· ~f.~ :~. ird fu:- t:::a m ~ ~- ~t• rna::!~~­!r.a.:. ,._,j} :~ru:~ :rt ,:,or. ('JOS 1:--J::: ~r•:f~· n, :r.;Jc~ :• !)~\';:\ !.ft·

J, !~f' :r.J~· o.; :t t t j'f'C:• ;~ri~..:~i~~ 11' •;;;or, l..ri;o:f ~ ~hi'~ :"'~1 , ~ ·t rrt-

01~y NEWS, THURSDAY, JAN. 31, 1957 , I

'•.

The Best In View From·

ROGERS '·

MAJESTIC ...

R762Q 21"

This up-to-the-minute 21" table model features Rogers'

revolutionary new chassis and the new 90 degrH wide

angle aluminized picture tube. As well as .brjnging

you all the latest Rogers' Majestic feature, here Is an

aHractive modern cabinet that adds grace to the

furn1shings of any dining room.

Jacoby On .Bridge · ·-\ TRUMP . ECHO SETS BltJDER

~~·'--------..... ~ :NOITH ttl) . 1~ •u ·A·U. • KJQ3 ofo8632

W&8'1' EASl'

~~Ts4 ~Jto~ • Aft 6 s • • !lllo u .. KQJ 10 .. AVT

lOUTH,. .... AKU18.f •xqi ., .. 54

Eest and We•t vuln~rable , Nirlll las\ 8o11111. Wttl :P~u :PUs 4 • Fais PliU I'IIM .

Openlftlltad-4oiC

:BY OSWALD .TACO:BY Tile play at all tables of today'a

hand In a duplicate lame stirted the nme way. Clubs were opened and eontinu&d with South trumP. iill th& third !tad.

South promptly eubed hla ~ce and klni of trumps and led his

· diamond toward dum· klnr-jack enmblnatlon. Wheti ducked, thi kln1 wu pta,..

ed and the eontract made. When West rose with the ace tf dli· monds the hand wu dowil one, . In all instances exctpt one Wtat hid to .JIU~U abou.t thlj pla:r. When J. Ed<vird Morrow of Joplin, . M&., held thi Em cards he was able .to pl•y Ill• trumps In 1ucli man!lir that Mrs. MMTow alttlng West was able to tead him for a aute tl!lde trick. Hen~. Mn. Morrow bid M prob­l~m at All abtJUt.aolng up With h6r d!alnond aee. ·

Put youtsHf 1tl .Ted'a plaee and se& If you have * definite method to show the apade trlek.

lie almply dropped the quhn ol 1p&des under the act and then playM the ten spot under the klnt. This play of the queen flrat would hav.e !leen lilly if he did not hold the jack, Hence, Mrs. Morro" knew thlt her bus­band held the jaek, and her play of the diamond aei Wll autO. mat! e.

Royal Canadian Air Force

. · OT.l'AWA, Jan. 16--Wini Com·

-

R7621 17" '

,I

Picture· C.ontrol Is standard equipment . on all

Rogers Majestic ·TV receivers.

. "Vumatic" equalizes wea~ arid

strong channels and automatical•

ly adjusts the brightnen ancl '

contrast as you switch chan11els.

As well, thi's . exclusive feature . . I

holcls the picture steady and ., eliminates streaks, flutters ancl

flop·lvet due to elec:trlcal inter-. )

Ference •

. -----------. COME IN . AND SEE THEM TO·DAY

The Great Eastern Oil Comp8riy~ Li"mited, ..

' .\ '" .

I -

'· ' '.

. . .

• ~lrtder Hollie J. Gl&uere, OBE, CD, 45, llf Cobden, Ont., Camp Commandant it Air hrct Head· quutera, hu been &ppol11t!d Ol\let A6n\lnlrttlltlv• Offlctr tt .RCAF st~tlon St. Jolla., P.Q., it ltU II\~OUII~t4 by th• id.!J

W /C t';l.Juere'& tr&l'IUet to the :ACAJ''a Air Dlv,.lu 1tead'IUi.rt· era tt Mtta, tr•ae&, al'll\ollnc&d JwO me!lthJ a,O, Mt bte11 e•p· etUttt. . ·

»t• eaUate4 I.A tile KCA.!' lll llSl, ,_. eotl\n\Jstlene4 1.!\ May, lHO, and aervtll u exei:utlvi aatl&tal\t to U1e Deputy Chit! ttl the Air Staff until July, 11142, when he wu appointed Deputy Dirietor I)! Statf at Al'H Q,

Late In 1844 he v;ai tl'ln!fer· J'td t6 the RC~"l wartime Nc. 8 :BoMber Group Headquarter. In Yorkthlre, England, at i aenllir admifllitr&tlvt officer.

l\eJlatrlate4 til Canada 111 lDM, W /C Gl•u•r• wu aP»olnttd A4· mlnlll.raUve OH!eer at Nil, I !WAF SWlcn llOCk~llftt, now 'l'nna,ort. Group lleldquatteta, Ait Transport Cotlli'l\md wlt~ Headquirttrt at Llclilnl, p,K. Later that year he ••• l'611te4 to · Air Folie 'Headqilarlen aild lii:'V· eel it S.cretar.r to tht Inter· Stel'fice CD!rtlllned l'uiletlon• Committee duflna tbe perld 6f trl·~rvlce orga!ilzlltlon;

In May, 1H7, he wat named Catnp ComiDabdailt at Air Ma· terlel Command Ileadqliarters, OLtawa, and thot followlilll year was transferred back lll AfllQ !or staff ·officer duties. in ..Jill;t, 19111, W/C Glquere wa1 !limed Camp Commandant at AFHQ.

T.ltEASUKY'S COLUMN& '111.1 72 l6tlle colun\111 6f the

U.S. Trenury building taeh Measure a8 feet and 11tne I.Jiches In heltht, 1t ltet .lit alld thret­quarter inehts In einurifertilee and -.ei«}}A SS tont, All ttil'l eut trom linile bhteka &f l!'alllte. ·

. Until 11153; Port I!.ad!Wll 'II'U Cantdt'• tilly urtl\11111\ mill, but a 14rJe plant at !UverlMit n~w rwelil the tutput.

the Neighbors and Y.ut Welcome Wqgon

· · Hostess Will KnCKk on Your.Ooor with Gifts tlftd GrtetiPI;s · from F!lendly Justness

C:lvle and ·Sbcipl Welfare leqders

The 8irth . of a Baby, On the ,bctl:lsion of, · Arrivals of Newcomers to Cliy •. .. :. 'Phone 3031

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THE -"D.;..A_ILY_N_E_W~, THURSDAY, JAN. ------~~~··~--~~-------------~-----~~---~- -

Inter-Club Bowlittg League

Amerita'n Menu ' . ' s· . Published. By\ ·Published ·By· Au_thority Simp$ons ears Aurno~ .. y •..

PETIT!~ P.\R1'Y PIZZAS ARE ' PI . b... d Under and b~ \"ii'L."..i ur. the . . . : . Jo'INE COLD • WEATH. ER 1.-'Altlll' . um lng an I powers COn!CI'I'Cd t·y ~cctiun ua Under :nnd by mtuc ?' the I

! uf Tlle Hlgiaway''aatJ'ic Act and. 110Wers confcm•d hy .socta1n 63 . lly G<).YNOR ~t.\llllOX . Heating Division I pursuant tu a 1.11 ,(.gutiun u[ puw . o( ~he lli!;hway 1r·af~lC Act and

STADIUM SCHEDULE-

I This American ·I'Crsion or litllr. : ~t· by Inc i\hiJlSLCI of Public ' iJUI'S~Iant to ., rl<>!rgntaon of pol~· Tul'~day'~ and "'ctlncstlr·)"·~ pizzas Is just' what to scrl'e fort • I \Vol'ks under thhl ~t·ctiun and by ; er by the '\Jini~ter of. Pub he

Games 1 after • skaling, parties. Hearty, 170 WATER STREET Idle t:.t. Johns Mun:crpal council 1 works under thol.sn.·tion and br portion·size pies made with chop· under Scctiun :117A uf 'fne C.:ity

1 the st. .John's ~lt·nicipal Councal

J. Wadden ........... 9!11 petl fhicken and mushrooms, lhl) DON'T BE FURNACE SLAVES .,r: ~t .. John's A~t. the St. Jutms'; under Fcction' !l7t'. of The Ci~y T. Carroll .... .. . .' ... 863 I filling cc•.1 be made ahead or tim~. · u·affic comm:~swn has lleen : nC st. .Tohn's <\·::\, th<> St. Johns

. 8~- I At·thc last moment, pile the fil. pleased . to m~l\c the wlluwing! Tm([lc Commis<aon bas b:en .T. O'Brien .... .... ... aa ilng high on English mulfin hal- regulations. : ·~leased to m•kc the follow111g F. So11er ........ ,; ..... 836 ; \'CS, top with sliced Americ-an uatcd at ::it. John's this 7t

1, :.·;'lllali'lns. , . .

0

TOP SCORES

J. Wadden ........... IUS j' claccr•) and popi lnlto the tlnvetn rodr day ol Janunt·y 1U57. I Dalrd nt St. John c; llns ~2nd SOB 10 minutes. S mp e as 1a -nn Sgd, MAD.,I.h~!:: PINSENT, · ~lny of .Tam:m·~· 1057.

t•. T:t\'cnlnr .... .... ... ; WC\ldcrfui to cat: Secretary St. John's Traffic I Sgd, MADH•I·•:: i"•i,:!.iENT, i iHUSRDAY, Janu~ry 31st: 1101.\' rnoSS:-3 i Chicken Mu~hroom Plnas (12 Commlu!on. I Secretary St. Jonn's. "lrahic. r 4.00-PEE WEE HOCKEY:

•'12\ 330 991· scr,·lngs) , 1

1 Cornm1ssion. · Canso \'s, Jets

J, Wadden · .340

' 66~ 1 • • 1 1 1 ti d ; Commandos vs. Gunners D ~··tz"nr ld ''"D 155 :!IR 1 1. n t1csc rega.a ons wor s 1· R 1

.. 1

g 'fa'cnnt • < 1

"' ;1 ~"· ' _10 : Six Engli~h muffins, 2 c11ps t ac· h . . . U Y 1 . cpu sc vs ... a 111 , ,

F. llirkcy.. . .:!:!5 .l!Rl 213 '.7·r' etl, cockncl clli~kcn·. 3·ounce can ave (J\(! same n.~ •• r.ms as le t' D eg u u .... ~ons 'I 6 00--JUNIOR ALL STARS • I I I :!6!1 :!30 ( ' have in I'U!lUla!IOros made Ulldct• 1· I\. . 151 u ' PRACTICE, W. O'llril ~· . . u; • ' · cho 11ped b r o i 1 e d mushrooms, . A G. W?dc!rn .. ~4~ ~~4 ~8(: , 7?R I drained: Oil')· third cup chili ~aucc. The ~!lghw~y Traffic . ~t. . i 1. These ... ~;.;ul<•l•uns· may be' 7.00-SENIOR ALL ~STARS

. ..1~(b 1~80 1~86 3!131 1 i; ~\ires American c·hccse. 2. l:h~ kuu.ls ul tl'a.Lttc Sl!:liS; dted ns 'l"JJC JJ!'IIl:l'.ay and Load· I P~ACTICE. . .\1.1:.\:'\ll.\1.1 .. -:;-~1. ~· • , Split n11lflins, plncc on !frcnsrd set out m Hcgl,liiiJUll ~ arc pre· .• u" Uour Hcgulat1ono, 1957. . 9.00-GENERAL SKATING. T. t ;1rrnll. ... ~·:·! ~,II, ~~r. ~r.~. lmkl·.l~ ~:\ret .and tQn>t 1\;:htl)', IS THIS YOU? 1 scribed pursu:•.nt to Part Ill oll ~. 111 these n!t,ulations- FRIDAY, February 1 sl: • T. ~lurphy .. lh·l -~~~ 1~7 ~!.~ , Combine chicken Rnd mu~lwooms •. , '!'he hlgmvay '1 ratiic Ac~ and (a) "aullwri7.~J loading door" I'. 4.30-IIIGJI SCJIOOL ,IIOCKEY: 11. ~lurphy .... ;li!O ~• ~ 1,5 •.n~ · with chili ~<IIICC. , · · · · ~· _ · · except where otl",c·r\'.'l~c directed mem,1s a Jo~oing 11001• de· Curtis \'S. St. Pats •.

. 1. llnl~· . . . .IR~ ~P.~ ~~~ . 6~8, chccsr irl quarters and o1·~rlap r 'I' I'Chlclc shall ollc~ the mstlu~· lations :~s nn autlwnzcd 1 PRACTICE. 1;. T;1,\lnr .... ::o~ ~~.: ~01 <:24; Spread mlsharo~ nn muffins. Cut .···_ ..•. ·.· ···•·••· ,, ••

1 ••• .:~L;~ ,~).·~···,'l····._··.. by a constable. a dt'IVCt'. of. ~ i signaled ton tier tncsc r~gu.

1 ~:~~=fJ~l~~s fli:\~~~'ifs.

110~ LOU iiJ,lo 33~3 i twn pirccs on cacl1 muffin. B"kc . · • · · · · "' lions uf an aj.pllcalllc tntHtc lund ins doo1; ! s 3!1-SJ.-:NIOR JIOCKEY:

1'1:11.11\.\:'\~:-:1 " . • roc: 10 minutes, ~lakrs 12 ndh·•· · · ... >·.'fo":O:•; ; with the lH'U\'is•:HI~ ol that t·cgu· road drive path ur pas· 10,30-CO:\I~IERCIAL HOCI\EY: . ···-·-- j in lliC1rlca'<tlc nvcn, 350 degrr:~• F;, ·, .. · ' }/~"', · "" control de vic~ Ill accnrdance (b) "driveway· n:rans a private 1 ' J.o'cildians. vs. St. Bon's

n. \\'hr1rlrr · -~~~~~· ;~~ :~~ i~~t i dual pi7.1a$, i •······ ~-... · ... ·.·.· .. • .. ·.O.._•.'.·,_f·.J_···.... latlon and any dr;n•r of a vchicl~ 1 sngc' or like· space wide A\·alon T~l.cphope vs. ~funn n. )lurply. · · -~• - llitl .!., ! llrrr's another rtnil~k party tern who Calls to c:um;H:< with the dl·, ~noun 11 ltUL nul wider than 1\lotors. \\', ~Ia~· .. .. 2:.~ :!!i~ .

1~ 1 ~: -pickle rnhhit. This- dish will · i', ' ... • ,\::: rccllon or prohahnion given by 1• is n~ccs>ary for the pas- SATURDAY. February 2nd:

I.. ,\clam; · · · · .~~~ ~n·~ ~~h h~~ i make a hit with any hungry crowd . • ... any such· device i~ guilty ol an . sane of r nc large vehicle, .. 7.30 a.m.-PEE WEE IIOCKEY: r.. ~1or~nn. . . . ~-·11 ~ll;t -:1 6nR or "IIC ·t- I '·-"' oCfencc. : ·,,. "'llercby' .lh•.• Oll'llCr or DC· Signallers \'S,. Black Watch. 10ili !Ui8 HHO :1:!15 'I " , ,, VI ' g d lli\'1:1111.\1.1::-U : Party Plcldc Rabbit !Serve~ Rl · OR YOU 1 · ' TRAFFIC CONTROL SIGNALS: cut icr oC am· properly can ~~~~~r~s~~or~n uar s. • 1. v. 11rthhilt> l:i·l :!10 :!211 548 One tnblcs]Jonn bultcr o~ mar·: ENJOY A • AN~ SI~NS l hal'e vehicui"l access from, 10·12 a.m.- . n. nnrkc .... Hli :!~0 Iii 5:!7 ~m·inc, 112 cups .;:rated C;lcdd~y: Loa 1ng on~ the street tu a point or

1

. CIIILDREN'S SKATING .t. l'lnn•tnn .. le; liU 1~!1 51i chcc;c (abgut one·thirclponn!ll, '! Homart Heating 3. O·l Signs convry•ng an or·! points wi.!J;,- the property; . 2· 4 p.m.-GENERAl. SKATING

1~2 416 teaspoon prepared mustard, dash: 1 der prohibitin.~ th~ llal'king· uf: (c) "loading door" means a 6 p.m.-SENIOR ALL STARS T. \\'intrh:-.. .. ~11; 1 ,,90~ 1., •9 •. c.·~·cnr.•' •. 1 cup milk, 1 c;g, wc1u1 S t · ·\'chicles othct· than those .at the · dour. hatch or like open· . PRACTICE. R. Pion; n:r·n ~ fi ~ h ,,, i1 ,J " YS em 1 i d · 1 1 8 p m :IIE:IIORIAI

9~5 90 j 2639 . bcatc·.1: 1" · cUJI chopped, sll'cc .. : · t me engage 111 t~r oat mg or ing in a huilrling dedicated · ·-'uNIVERSI'fY NIGIIT, sun 'j mixed pickles: sliced turkey; G unloading of ?l11 :d~ may be erect· tu comnwrcial or indus·, ' · ·

~T. llllYS:-l 5uces buttered toast,· 6 sllcrs ed In sucl1 placc!".a~ the Comn~ls· trial usrs, not Jess than',----·--.. ·~-- .. ·-·- .. ·.-·-·- ;

~: c~~-~~1;1 in~ · ~3~ 187 li~ 595 · ll·~lt butter or mnrgnrmc m to;1 Inscribed thcr,•on t11e words No: and dcsi;;ncct and primar- tatutory t'lliiO ICe ! p 18r, !!H 3110 733 ' crisp-cooked bacon. · . . · sion appoints, I he signs hal'mg ~ iour and l.nc·half feel wide II S ..._, f'' I

R 1 tcr. 2; 8 224 688 1 of double boiler. :\dd ehccs~ ~nd Parking-Loading Zone and a~y: ily intended and used for __ j ~·. R~d~n~d : :26; 225 225 714 cook O\'er boilln.!1 water, shrrm!! additional w•,a·Js .. sy!nbols, f•s·, the c?nveyance or mer· 1 1

·n the matter of the last Will' J. ~oscworth\' 189 :119 !!37 745 occasionally, until mclt~d:, Adu ures or letter~ n·terrm~ Lo the 1 chandlsc 1nto and out of I· "E t t f John S Currie

· 1059 1256 116o 3-175 mustard, «;a)'Cnne and milk,, period wlthi~ which. or the. hours the b11ildtn~ or for the , ~:t~ 0

; ~~~ Jooh.n'• in the Prov: Po\TRifi.\SS:-0 Cook, strrrlng oecasico:~all) • un- m· days dua·m~ wutch the park· entry and exit of vehicles.

1 f Newfoundland Journ·

J. O'Brien .... 16il !!31 100 581 til ingredients arc. bl;nc·~d. Gra- lng of vehicles other than those to and Iron' the building, I ~~~ ~ d ' :\1. Sprarm .. !! !!3 192 192 6071 dually add egg, strrrmc constant· .used for the loading or unload· but docs not include a j 1 11 ' eceas~t '

1 l :\lurph,. "05 236 1-,o 611 ly lng of goods.~~ prQhlbited. door or ot_l>er opening for 1' All p. ersons ·claiming to he , ii. · HeJlc' .. : :~~6 ~i1 265 762 Cook tmlilthi~1<ened anrl smoo~~~ SLEEP LATER (2) 'fhc pa_rt ot Lm• hl~hway t~ the usc a1 pedestrian cus-

1

credlors of 11r wbo- have .any .I E. 1\c;:r~r,. . .220 301 214 735 stirring ocenslnnall~·. Fold !.

1 , W!lieh any sUI'!!, Mgn l,s ' apph· tomcrs; claims or demnnds upon or af· I

· l03t 1:!31 1031 :1201 pickles. Am~gc turkey on to.ast Get an hour or more extra slcep•1 cable shall llP. e.rarly ,ndlcatcd (d) "owner" inclDdcs the occU· fecting the estate of John S.

-- In shallow bakm~ dish, Top lllth and wake up in warm surroul\d· by painted yellow hues or words pier or ~perator of any Currie of St. John's aforesaid PATRICL\XS:~> I chB~~fl ~a~a~c4 inches !rom sourC<~ lngs. · Let a Thermostat start or markers .m the highway or property; ,Journalist, deceased are request·

.1. O'Brien .... 3~5 2H 266 855; o[ heat 3 to 5 minutes, or until your fire in the morning. the sidewflks or thr cu~~11~~0~;' (c) "park" ltl!!ans to lcnve ln cd to send partirulars ~f sam~ :\!. Sprarns •. !:31 :!l:! 163 6561 rhecsc sauce is li~hth· browned. Call lSS8, 35681 ati:Ht on:' l wura~.. 'b d 0~ a stationary position. /in writing· duly atteste , ~~· ·) .l. :\1urpby .... ::01 :!i3 ~07 681 1 Garnish with bacon, . figures or etters lllSCl'l c

1 3. Signs may be erected upon

1 c. Currie, c/11 DallY Kews 0 1ce, 1

H. llralc . . . . H~ 192 :!iO 606 1 3777 28 the sign whlcb mry dehsc1brllt~c t 1.e or in front uf fUd loading doors i 355·359 Duckwvrth Street, St. ; r K r l"!l "0" osn 640 i 2 2 ·area to which tne pro 1011 .1s as the St. John's 'fraCCic Commis· .1· John's one o! the Executors of! •· ca <!')" ·1 1~0 1 l2J 1 l65 3438 '· ' applicable b,V name or descnp· sion deems fit dcsrgnating those

1

. the last Will 11f the said deeeas· ; ct:t.T!':-0 H em akin 0' FOR A FREE ESTIMATE lion or by reference to another loading doors as authorized load· I eel an or befon thl' 22nd day of I ~\. Andrew> .. !!20 !!16 :!65 701 (}ID ' e sign erected un or nrar the same ing doors and the signs shallj February, 1957. after which date I F. Power.. . .19!1 23i :!53 680 highway. · . have Inscribed thereon the words the Executors will proceed !o i \\'. rnwcr .... 2:!1 248 225' 694! To clean spilled milk f1·om yo.ur Sign• To Prohrblt Entry Authorize.d Loading Door-No distribute the estat~ of the !8ld 1

.\. (;rouch~· .. :!'li 159 146 51:! I lil'in"·room rug, usc water With\• (3) Signs convc:'ang the order Parking, deceased having regard only to 1

J. Lane . . . .lll!l 250 187 615 I clctcl~"ent · adt'·~cl. Then_ follow THE BEST PLACE not to enter in\() a highway at a 4 .. No person except the own· .. the clal~s or which they shall. 1016 lllO 10i6 3211 ; with

0

cJcar-watcr sponsing. · TO . INSURE YOUR particular pol~t ol .Intersection cr of the prop~rty on which a : then have had notice. : -- I with another 111grway or another sign Is erected unl!.er Regulations I Dated at st. John's this 22nd

1

. Gl .\nns:-1 I e AUTOMOBILE part o{ tl:e sam~ h1ghway may be 3 or a person acting with tht;, 1 day of Januarv. A.D., 1957. Tl. 'ull:no~i"r ·.1m ~m ~5~ IH2 WINNIPEG (CP) - C i I~· · e HOME 1 erected In su~!"t ylaces as the authority of the owner shall clur-~ CURTIS AND CAWI!, ' !\. ~rynoln; · .23:! 2:!::! 252 iOi council decided llonda~·· night :Commission ~ppomts, the signs· ing business hours park a vehicle Solicitors for Executors. D. l"i>~rr .... ~~~~ :!62 :!:lO «6i~;: tu blll' la·.1d r.·~Xl to the 7\linto e HEALTH 1 harlng lnscnbcd thereon the In sucha mannnr a~ to hinder or ···an?4 31fcb7 14 n llcl\in:a) .. ~()j :!Oll 214 Armories Jo pi'CI'COI the, r.cd· REG. T. MORGAN I words No Entr~ or Co Not Enter, prc\·ent access by nhiclc_s to the i J ~ ' '·-------(; l'ullrr.. . . t <ti 3:!7 17:! 675 ; era, 1 "OI'crnmcnt !rom hu•ldl,ng I . property by way CJf the author·,

(10'"~:-!1 1010 1211 11:!1 3:i4:! .. I INSURANCE I d' d ----------, 11 large parad~ Oo"()l' am mam- • • 1 8 11 1 · izcd loa lllll oor tcnance buildin~. Tucsdar, tth•, I T~::k~or~h ds~.11• 1 GREAT EASTERN OIL 5. Wl1ere a drh·cway

1 forms .,0 Clean · Cars.·· ·~. rrtl<'Jl •. ~55 !!!!3

i. llur.t . . . .1~!1 10~ :\. Porter .. 160 116 :. Tapper.. . .!!33 2!!!! D. Brown.. .. 161 !!H

:!~8 7:!6 :!09 467 180 456 .

dll· lcarr·~cl the ~ol'ernmcn DIAL 80370 , 7756 & IMPORT CO,, LTD. i part of or is u;co for t 1e pur· .:J •alr'eacly 0\1\lS the land. I pose of access, to any property,

167 6"" -----------

!158 011 .160 5il I 1 118 1!16 475 9~3 28-12 N. Por!cr.. ..16

' B Dcl'lllC., , .264 112 193 569 ' I n: Brown' . . .145 181 163 ·489

l~·~~ ~o~\~:d~~~S~:.3l~ :!~8 252 818 ~,T. llurphy ... i~~~ ~~~ m !!;~ , ~0 ~f~.r T~~rrsENT D. Fitz;:crald ::! 01 2i7 !!13 691 _ Now Is tl',~ time for your

I,!: F. Hickey .•.. 215 243 2!!3 681 ST RON'S·-2 new / \\', O'Reill~· . ~66 ~H ~84 70~ I J. i•owe~ . : , .253 254 238 . 745 TILE or LIN OLEUM '· G. W;yjdrn .. -50 ~~3 .59 75~

11 Cbnstr.ntinc 191 144 314 649 '· FLOORS.

? i 1

1:!50 1255 1231 3736 (:', 'Dol'le .. ..202 248 230 680 A liD MINOR REPAIRS '' C.I-R.:-tl R Redmond .. 222 180 225 627 CALL

c. Domin<>y .. 2:!5 164 207 596, J. Noseworthy 230 171 177 ~587 Cabot Constructl•on L. Blundon .• 165 243 161 569 · 1107 997 1184 3288 G. Chancey .. 1!12 2!!3 226 711 ALL\NDALE:-1 · and Supplies Ltd, C. Andrews .. ~1 5 !~i ~99 5-H T. C~rroll.. ..167 283 203 653 Dial 5658 Duckworth St. L. Stc1·cm .... ~0~ ~ .. 3 ~40 693 T. :llurphy .... 182 255 202 639 Aft~r lwurs call

!l!l, 1080 1033 3110 H. 1\lurphy .... 207 180 232 627 MR. JAMES ,ADAMS, 7931H G Tavlor .... 178 233 236 .647 ~~----------• J • Dal~·.. .. .. 139 277 233 649 ' . . 873 1236 11106 3215

1 .. \URIER curn:-3

Radio, Television, Washers, ~no person except the owner of Refrigerators, Deep Freezers. . ! the property or ~ person acting

Electrtic Ranges, I 11,1'tl1. the authoritY of the owner

1

Floor Polishers. Gramophones, shall park a l'l'hielc In such a

Public Address Systems, manner as to hinder or prevent · Tape Recorders. ' access to the property by way REPAIRS ANll SERVICF; of the driveway

5 LINES CIAL 3001 to 3005

WATER ST. "Persons desir:n!( authoriza­

tion for Loading Dcors should jan26,1y apply in writing to. the Traffic

r~~;:~;;;;~;;:l Commission.' jan30,31

' .. -~'---------------­·-:,..'- -CLEARANCE FOR SALE

1954 Austin

ALWAYS ON DiSPLAY'

INDOORS Al"

Auto Service· TRACES TERMS

lanll,1m

W. BURTON & SON

BUILDERS OF MODERN HOMES • MODI:RNIZING • REMODJ:LING

. I REPAIR WORK KITCHEN CABINETS'

, "GARAGES GOOD WC:hi\1\IAXSIIIP

54 LeMARC HANT ROAD

Dial 6929

MURPHy EXCAVAT

CO., LTD I

BU• .. LDOZING GRADING SAND-STON!

\\' c Bualrl lluads. B1~cn·~nl!.

WATER ST. t. DiAl jan24,J:n

·-~ illftl5 CLOTHES make the man if

. makes the clothes

11111 WM. L. CHAFE, T 4 HOlD 'VORlH ST.

----- --·-... -·-- --·- - ....

REPAIRS VULCAIIZIN8 firestone

111ll

Nflu. Armature ~ .• nrks BAMBRICK ST •

The greatest nchiet·emel/l in Zenith's cmsacle to !oll'er the cost of hearing!

Now ... a genuine Z:nich r.r~lli; 1ransistor hearing aid 11i1h the ~o•u and performance of some ai!s u Je;tst 11rirt its size and many ~:i~r.1 for a a least 4 timn ias price! Yent~ qualicv of lh·e SO· X is Zenirh'! 6r.e;t! Enjoy'rhese "hear bencr'' feacum­new, exlra·scnsili\c Pcrm•phor .. rl, smnoth·now Volume Conarol,r.c,;t·

~==;;:.tiJII' limiling anodized Cm. Ormt~ ~ on a sioglniny dry cell ball:ryf~

only about 10; a wetk.

IO·Day Money·Back Guarcnt&• One· Year Warranty fin-Year

·-service Plan

You can pay more,

you can't buy a beHe! hearing aid than a ·Zenith at any price! :

OTHER MODELS FROM $50. up

FURNITURE APPLIANCE STOR~

WATER STREET

J. Laite .. ..211 !!00 193 604 L. Soper • • . .20i :!38 202 647 R. Laite , • • .!!28 !!07 184 619 R. Bursey.. ..213 237 255 705 F. Soper .... 236 226 259 721

31 u4 hmrw hbrw hmrwhw

C.Y.C.:-2 A. Jackman J. Chafe ...

. ' FOR All: ·

Y.OUR HEATINCJ

Excellent condition. · to bigge~, better premistes 1 I I I

1095 1108 1093 3296 •. 183 171 164. 518 .. 255 211 296 762 .. 143 177 200 520 . 233 155 180 568 '.169 287 251 707

163 483 .T. Ke~ncdy Rl\'ERD.-\LE:-0 A. LaFosse .. 143 T. Williams .. Ill T. Hunter ...• 100 J. Clou~ton .. 187 B. Plou~hman 2.14

1i7 165 140 240 173 895

464 C. Lu.h .. ~:~ 380 B. Colford ..

149 57ti CURTIS:-1 983 1001 1091 307

775 ,186 593 1 R. Lane , , , .273 826 2496 1 c. Noscwnrthy 195

!C. LeGrow .... 201 rErr•:nm:u. C.\.\:-3 1

1 A. Holloway .. 185

D. Ski!fingtun 18!1 ~3i 25fi 681 D. Oldfort! , .212 ~1. Do11ney .... 217 243 !!36 696 . 1006, T. Benson .••. 206 321 219 i46

227 198 698 182 186 563 163 223 587 135 212 . 532 212 247 671 919 1066 30~1

C. J\al'iln~th •• 215 2i9 243 737 PEPPERRELL CAA:-2

AND PLUMB·

MOO ERN "lNG; Contact

. 'HIGHER LEVELS ·.PLUMBING.& HEATING . 4S06H tdiYI 5603F (night! jan19,1m

\ A. Breen .. ..216 250 . 183 649 J. SkiUington 223 203. 212 638 · 1042 1330 1137 3509 ?II. Downey . ,263 .165, 27Q .. 704 -:--~---..,----:-­

AER0:-0 T. Benson. ..257 188 232 6'17 G. Facey .... 145 181 211 537 c. Kavanagh .. 170 243 207 · ~0

i :~~~y:: ::~~ ~i ~: :~: A. Breen.·: 'i~~~ 1~:~ 1i~~ 3~:~' WALLS FU.NERAL HOME E. Cainrs.. • .206 184 183 573 POSTAL:-1 . . . . F. Tncrnor .. 267 282 259 808 n. Whittle.· ... 142 225 159 . 526 • Furnished I

1003 1140 1097 3240 J. Gover'.. ..134 174 189 · 497 Ch~pel E. Kennedy . 252 275 176 703

LAURIER CLtln:-3 W. Power .... 198 ·198 239 '"635 . J. Laite .. ..!!29 !!55 287 771 L .. Meaney .. 193 260 152: 695 L. Soper •••. 297 !!31 271' 799 919 1132 · 915 2966 n. Laitc • • • .!!15 212 154 581 . -; · H. h·any .... 192 · 284 289 765 C.L.B.:-2

• Qualified Embalmers.

. i ' CHILDREN'S

AND.

MISSES'' ·ovER· SHOES.

..

. ' Pull-on boot with Imitation instep · st~ap. · Printed or philn nPt ll,n!ng. Shaped top. Bro,wn or Red. Sizes 6'k to 3. ·

For particulars see

David Butler 'Photographer, ·

• Daily News · jan23,lf

FOR YOUR

AMUSEMENT SHUFFLE ALLE~S SHUFFLI: BOARDS PIN R.t\LL GAMES

TARGET ,GUNS, Etc, For service Information,

call or write. ·GUS 1WINTER; ·LTD., 332 Water Street, St. John's,

DIAL '2148 jan24,1m

I

-------·~-~-~.=~~~~~·

BOWRINGS INSURAN DIVISION

·.has now· moved to this address

-2·54- ·wATER ··c·y _, . . . .

.• (Opposite Bowrings. Department Store and -towards . ,

:.· the Bank of Montreal) .

F. Soper •••. :!61 290 285 836 c. Dominey , .265 , 29.0 196 751 1194 1272 1286 3752 L. Blundon , .10d 207 176 · 551

CANADIAS LEGION:-0 'G. Chancey .• 216 201 ,212 629 · ·' Cadillac · $1.:94 PARKER &

.MONRO·E. LTD~~

Visit this convenient new premises for det~ils of excell&nl I Default). c. Andrews .. 215 209 •221 705-

1 FEII.UIANS:-2 L. Stevens .... ~279 207 209 695 o. Wheeler •. 163 164 171 498 1143 1174 1015 3331 B. Murphy •... 205 290 250 745 CURTIS:-1 . W. ~T3)' .. . :183 !!16 206· 605 R. tr•:~e· , .. 175 217 281 :673 I- Adams •. , .!!32 201 262 695 F. Wight . , .. 1811 · 176 . 194 ·~59 llllorgan ... ; !f,12 109 202 593 C.· LeGrow .. 152 148 · 158 '458

975 10iO 1091 3136 A. Holloway .. 17!1. 210 143 i 541 l.toSS:-1 . D. Oldford .... 262' 160 . 248. '. 670

, T. Pettcn .... !!33 193 189 615 · · . '937 920 1025 2901

. ''

Hearse

DltL 2321·

'393 DUCK. ' .

• WORTH ST..

I,,

'j

Insure Today ·

with R.C.A.

• • r' • \' •

• ·cov~rage of all type_s. at MOST COMPETITIVE RATES.

·.:~

funeral of o~r late place this

l.otider1cc, Groves available

,4piirtments contain rige and refrigerator

~ling supplie? by tencint; Immediate mon;h each •

·Newf Board

The Annual Meet .· place at 4 p.m.

· the Soard of

Apply

a

FISHERY

Sales lctrga organiz1otic•n a~b[tious, aa(U!!!>~l or better experience 11PPlicant will 1

tesidellt in St. Joh

WI

Page 15: THE DAILY NEWS - Memorial University of Newfoundlandcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570131.pdf · THE DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY . Heat~:l~:ntent I £~g /\ house

,, 51

7 I 01 .

:.TOR

AID

011!: I:".~Jti• :h l!l:l'1:'1L'Ct :'lm: 1.1.!1 at . m;.n! ~ltir., ~i..=~ 'l't1 :he :'li:h·1oh:'Jit\t! ,- fut<~."rS­~r~r.:1, o:mol, !loi~t­.:.. O;c:-ata .\ 'blneryfor

,ore, but

l better

~n a trice!

l. up

• • • •

lress I

• ds

1'-t fJ~erol o! our late Comrade, Leonard Elliott, will tit ?la:e th1s afternoon at 2.30 p.m. from his late :~~:t~ce, Groves Road. ·

"11 o\'ailable ex-Servicemen are requested. to ___ J_. "!!._· .. GO~DYEAR, Secretary

To Re.nt or Lease Two Apartments

49 CORNWALL AVENUE ~rtr.ents contain four and five rooms, with electric ~.;e and refrigerator in each Apartment. Hot. water ·. lrt.i"g supplied by owner. Electricity to be paid by ~~~. Immediate occupancy. Rental $125.00 per ,.,.,,h ecch.

DIAL 5656

Newfoundland Board of Trade

J'bl Annual Meeting of the Board will take piece at 4 p.m. on FRIDAY,. February 1st, in t!le Icard of Trade Rooms on Water Street,

The purpose of the meeting is to receive ltporls and Financial Statements and to elect

Officers for the coming year.

H. T. RENOUF, Manager

Seni~r Hockey

Friday, Feb. 1st Feildians

vs. St. Bon's

' CLUB OPEN

5 P.M.

TO-DAY

' .

I

BINGO GAIETY AMUSEMENT CENTRE

Tonight at 8.30 , .

·e BANK WORTH\ $400.00 MUST BE WON

TO-NIGHT.

ATTENTIO"I ,

CHEVROLET OWNERS WE STILL HAVE A FEW CUSTOM-BUILT

Push Button Auto Radios 1955-56 CHEVROLET

ONLv' 66.75 Here's your opp~rtunity to get a custom built

Radio at a very modest pric~.

DON'T DELAY TELEPHONE 5047 RIGHT AWAY

\ !~~ HI_CKMAN MOTORS LTD. i-

Wanted A Private Secretary Must have at least three years office

experience; has· a Stenographer.·

Apply

· A Special meeting of the · B.P.O. Elks will be held at l<:~dge quarters, Carposion , Road, Thursday, January 31st •

i at 8.15 p.m. All members ore requested to offend as busi­ness of a . very important · noture will be discussed.

Also FIRE WOOD For the BEST in FUEL

CALL

Coady's Coal Dial 4249 6 SPENCER ST.

janT8,lm

Position Wanted Ambitious Young Man with degrees ln Arts, Education

·and-low, and several years ·1

1

· e:tperience in teaching, writ­ing, general administrative

I and municipal work would \like a position with satisfying future immediately. Write in . confidence to BOX I, Strathmore Building, 63 Alive St., Moncton, N.B.

jnn30,3i

'·DANCING THIS . FRIDAY NIGHT .

ST. KEVIN'S HALL, GOULDS

THE BLUE NOTES ORCHESTRA

(Former members Queen's Men)

APP·RECIATION I THE SISTERS AND CHILDREN OF

BELVEDERE · Extend grateful thanks to

OPERATION 3ANTA CLAUS, PEPPERRELL AIR FORCE BASE,

FOR GENEROUS CHRISTMAS GIFTS

1950 PONTIAC 4-door Sedan. .

Heater and defroster; good tires;

g:lod battery; winterized.

REGULAR PRICE

$450.00 SAC~IFICE

SALE PRICE

$195·00

Nfld. Light & Power Co. Ltd. pLUMBING & HEATING D~YTIME 'PHON~ 5131

P. M. Donnelly I---~~:-~~ --~~~-R~-~~K o'~EIL 3880-F P.O. BOX' 976

··---liANCIMG. AND DININO MOHnT IN UNIQUI AND INYIMAn AYMOmtiiiE -AI..-t -· Will., fit, SA1, OPI!j S '.M. IIOOtmlll ID.,11L 110017 \ FOR SALE

lARGE . BUNGAlOW

PLUMBING and HEATING I • CONTRACTOR

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS FOR CHURCH OF

ENGLAND· SCHOOLS IN ST. JOHN'S

1954

PLYMOUTH

rd Top Coupe

. WAS $1675.00

NOW SEL.L.ING AS· IS

WANTED EXPERIENCED STENOGRAPHER

AND TYPIST

5 day week - Saturday Holiday.

Installatl:m and Repairs to all type~ systems.

'Phone 5578F WANTED. MANAGER

Containing kitchen, large pantry, living room, dining room, two bedrooms and bathroom. Full concrete basement. Land 50' x 1 BO'. Freehold. A bargain 48 FOREST ROAD for quick sale. Situated 70 Allandale Road. jan24,ly FOR

Bowling Alley's. i •• JOHN A. BYRNE ·'~-==~ -·~-.~~.~-~!--<PHON; ~~:~_~: 901~1_ I A,e.ply

P.Oi Box 505

IJ_an31,31_sT. JO-HN'S -I TOURIST HOME I PLANNING ON A VISIT TO ST. PIERRE ?

WATCH REPAIRS HIGH QUALITY

LOW PRICES FAST SERVICE

ERN$T B. BECKER

73 NEW GOWER ST Certlfltcl Mt&ttt Wttch•

mtktr and Jeweller.

If. so, write or wire 'now for hotel reservntion.

MRS. HENRI LeFEURE ST. PIERRE

Snow Clearing

! SMAL.L Snowplow for Hire. !I Ideal for walks, drlveways,

etll. Prices ven reasonable.

Insurance

i 1NSURANCE-Bowrlng Broth• l ar Limlted Insurance Depan· · : ment-Fire, 1\Utomoblle, Mar· '· tne and all Casualty. linea. 1 No transporl~tlon charges.

~lltfojMIIiiiioltiMI Apply C. H. l\1erccr, Black· marsh Road. Dial 3576-A. Jan12,2m.

Telephone :n31. : DEPENDA~LE FIRE INSUR· i ANCE-Don'l risk, your valu· -

ables to "save" a tew dollars.

'1 OFFICE SAFF. ln • FOR SALE-One Quaker medi·

STEERS. \·INSURANCE

AGENCIES I LIMIT I D ·

-- =-- .

B. WALSH GROCER

785 Watv st. ~est 6EST IN LEADING GROCERY LINES

Your chl':re of what vou' need.

Dial 6160 QUICK DELIVERY

SERVICE

i I

I I

WANTED AN ASSIST ANT SECRETARY

(Male· or Female)

DUTIES: To ·keep accounts, issue mon~hly s«:~lt~·~Y cheques, order supplies· anCI perform other clerical duties as determh1ed from time to time by the Board.

Applications should be addressed to • H. R. V. EARLE, P.O. Box 888, St. John's

janl,feb!!,5 ...--.. --···-··-- .. ··~···· ··- -------·· ····-··- -----·····~--

REQUIRED : IMMEDIATELY BY WHOLE~ALE FIRM

CUSTOM CLERK Good salary; five day week, Health and Insurance Benefits.

Apply by leHer to

P. 0. BOX. 905 ST. JO·HN'S Jan30.31 ...

Removal Notice Apply in writing, stating age

and qualifications •

·• . nev$er urn size oil he.atcr, In perfect use ............. Pr.ce 150.00 cnndltlon. Pr!ce $35. Apply

I AIR COMPRE"SOR , d . :\Trs. W. Ebslry, 169 Camp-., . 1n goo bell Ave. Dial 92519·A. condition ... Price $120.00 jan30,31

I Our fair-rate, reliable ·policy gives lmmediatP. · protection. 'Phone 6921 or write J. J.

' LaceY.. P.O. Box 506. reDl,lf

. ::ontact STAN FOWL.ER; R• nouf building, for Fire Auto­mobile and Plate Glass lnsur· ance. Claims promptly settl· ed. ''Phone 5531-P.O. Box li3.

I I

~~~~: P. F~ Collins Customs Broker I NOW LOCATED 155 NEW GOWER STREET

jan2~,lm

COMPTROLLER

FISHERY PRODUCTS LIMITED Jl~l.Ji .

. . ·--'-----· 1 -1951 MORRIS CAR, WEST END COAL SERVICE

P • $150 00 tW. Snow) Coa;, U.OO bag; 3 nee ............... • bags for $2.75: 4 bags for

11

Ple.ase ·DI·.al 225. SF·: ss.5o; 8 bags for s6.75. For quick. dellvc~y dial 92959·A, ! ----------- :!9 Pearce Av,mue. janll,lm.

--------------- Help Wante'd Female 1 -- II

S I · $100 MONTHL. y far wearing i Misce aneous

a es Posltlo. n .Open lovely dresses gl\·en you as · --------bonu•. Just show North tiiiSO~ ~UITARS - Herner '- · American Fashlal'l Frocks to Button Stop Accordeons and o.qrge orga ' t' h I • d f I d N I I H I Rl h d 5 ... t.. n1za 10n as sa one sales opening for an r en s. o canvass ng, n· . annan cas, c mon axo-..,olltous • vestment or experience ne- · phones, Boosey ClartnetJ.-Oi be • aggresstve man with high school education ees8llry. North American Charle nutton If Sons. P.O.

PIANO, ORGAN TUNING and . Repairing. Single Tuning Six Dollars. Wm. ·HOPLEY,: 10 Comatlon St. 'Phone 2819-L. octl,lm.

'•llt .Iter and who is willing to work hard. Sales Fashion F:ocks Ltd., 34~5 _re_b3_,end ____________ _

-~lence desirable but not essential, as successful Indu~trial Blvd. Dept. X-·r~utant will • I . I Sh ld b 27511, .Montreal. rtsident . recetve comp eta tratn ng. ou a

tn St. John's for at ·least 5 years. . · , •.

llll!;.:glll b'' WRITE P.O. BOX 809 ~e ... ~

. \

1 9 53 CHEVROLET

... '$11·50·00 .

Baird ·Motors ·Ltd! It ', ·,.

DIAL .803~8·9 MERRYMEETING ROAD ..

CASH PAID FOil COMICS, magazines, ]'Ucket · books, guitars, typew•lters, men's clothes and footwear. John n. Snow; 9 Nc\1; Gower St. dec31,1m

"INVEST · IN RfST"-Sieep . comfortably 1\'c specialize In repairing, and recondltlonlng all types sprln~s.and mnttrcs· ses. Guaranteed work. Mat­LL·esses. for .bac:k aliments a specialty. 'Phone 6449 or 336t. . Standard Br.dd!ng Co., Ltd;, Flower. Hill: ' janl2,1m.

I . CORNER OF WALDEGRAVE and NEW GOWER ,-------------------' ~OBERT DI\WE & SON, Firl · and. Automobile Insurance.

Be safe, be sure, Insure. Tele­phone 2882. P.O. Box 85.

1 Royal Bank Chambers. St. John's.

Wall Washing --WAL.L WASHING-Walls clean­

ed by new mochlne. Results ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij perfect;· save;; pal.nt.-;-New·

· Method Rug and Wall Clean· · ers, Freshwater Road, 'Phone · 91033. . ag25,lm NEW METHOD RUG CLEAN•

ERS. Rugs and C a r p e t s made to lront~ like new. Von Schrader pror.~'s adds years to life of ~ugi Cleaned ln

'liome or at uur plant. Phone 91033. Nllw MP.lhod Rug Cleaners, Frest·water Road.

"For Fast Taxi Service

HOTEL TAXI Dial 2424 .. 241()

QUEEN'S ROAD Open 8 a.m. to 2 a.m.

• Jan3,tf :::; REPAIRS-Low cost, depend·

able welding ltnd brazing; repairs to ~hromc furniture, · -.. Barber chairs, tables, etc. For more . r'HE CENTRAL. BARBER SHOF 1 Information phone 4495·A. I We are now operating six l jan18,1m , chairs.' You can be assured :

I' --- o( the best poss1ble service . nUTLER'S COAL. T.C.A. Road. plus the least pGSSible wait· I .

Cor·l .$1.00 per bag, For good ing. 24 New Gor. er Street, coal and prompt service at opp. Aoiclal•.l~ illc•tors. If you an~· hour, Dial 9163H or prcrcr app ··h•tmcnt ser\'lce · 91613F. jan17,2m, P110ne 5231-A. ·

'PHONES POST OFFICE BOX CllJnged lo

P.O. BOX 458 Same

7048-7049

TO .RENT HUB Building

Floor · feet.

RAWLINS' CROSS space approximately 5000 :;quare

Available a~out April 1, 1957.

Apply

F. M. O'LEARY LIMITED OR

HUB ·sALES LIMITED jan19,eod,tr

Page 16: THE DAILY NEWS - Memorial University of Newfoundlandcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19570131.pdf · THE DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY . Heat~:l~:ntent I £~g /\ house

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-I I I

""' I ••

; ; I :~ I. • .. : '1. I ~ ~ . I

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.~ : . i I

. ' i • . . . :

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R~::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::---~------------~--~--~----~--------~---~------------~T~H~E~D~A~IL~Y~N~E~~~~s~,~T~H~U~Rs~o~A~Y.~JA~N~.'31 . Principal's Report S~'Bride's College.

1

.

Littledale . · · ,

..

~ .

I

"MONARCH" PASTlY . FLOU~, .7 /7's . '

SPLIT PEAS7 Packages 24~1's. . .

-GREEN PE~S..:Packages 24-l.'s

PEA BEANS-Packages 2~-l.'s -.. . . -

, • I

TINNED SALMON-Local Pack, 24-l's:

TINNED HALIBUT -Locai PackageJ 24-l's

T. & M. WINTER LTD. GENERAL· MERCHANTS

DUCKWORi'H STREET ST. JOHN'S

. ' (Continued from page 5)

Sandra Percy, Pass with merit; Mis~ Catherine .Foran (violin), Pass with merit; !\!iss Pntrlcia Finch, Pass; Miss· Shirley Brennan, Pass; . Miss Gabriel Widuckel, Pass.

Initial Division Men and Power, Silver Medal and Chaln-!'.fiss I 917_1918 Violet Fowler, honours. Silver Pins to:-~llss Jean Stead iord Beaverbrook .... 5.00

Pass with merit; Miss Margaret Murphy, Pass with merit; Miss Pa· Democracy in l:rida J. Jo)·cc, Pass with merit. World Politics

Silver Medal presented by !\!iss · Barbara Galway for first pla'ce In Lester B. Pearson ........ 2.7 5 Dancing awarded to Miss Berna· I ror A King's Love . llctte Griffin. Q I . d I ·Silver Medal presented by Mrs. . ueen A ex an er

II Bride ncddy for £irst place in Phy· of Yugoslavia ............ . 3.50 , sica! Train~ng awarded to !\!iss. Gallipoli !

I Helen O'Bncn. . I Prize or Ten Dollars for the ideal Alan Mo.orehead .. ........ 5.00 school ~irl donated through the 01.1n't Go· Near the Water ~generosity or the late Re\', P. J. . • . .l. ! O~Brien, awarded by \'ole of the Wtllram Brrnkley ......... 3.Y5 I students, to Miss Ann .Ma_ckey. • Hcmeconiings _

JMount Casbel Th~~ pi=!r:~i·~~··w~~·~/·00 1

~A Re1nindei~

35 MM PHOTO FANS

,

SPEEDY-lOCAL-TOP ·ouALITY

EKTACHROME '

COLOR PROCESSING

AVAILABLE FROM I

' 0 h , Mrs. Robert Henrey ..... 3.751 rp anage ., Adonis, The Alphabet I

Thanks Friends Aldous Huxley ............. 3'75 i KODAK'S newest COLOR. FILM The Walter Hagen Story I

A mllliGn thanks from the Broth· Walter Hagen ............ 5.95 1 ' is available in 4 popular sizes: TOOTON'S crs and boys o£ Mount Cashel , • 1 135, 828, 620 and 120. If you Orphanage to our Newfoundl::.nd A Treasury of Ribaldry ' haven't already tried this new

~===-=-:=;,:;:;::;:::;;::;;::::;:;::;::=;:::;:;:::;:;::=;::;:;:~~:=:;:;:;::~;r-~;:::=~=;'7 and American friends for another Louis Untermeyer !J 95. 1 1 ; the number and Intimacy of Its wonderful Christmas. The follow· • . ········ · CoM Fi 1]1-do so to-day. You'll L d • h f I

Wom·en friendships, It's feeling of being ft ing is a list of all who helped to Information Please be· amazingly surprised at its ea ers '" t e ie d of

pa~t of the community, aU rest on make our Christmas •o very Almanac fast speed and color quality. Photography for over

i

Between Us the human touch. hnpp)': , Too many women today can flnrl $118.00-Dental S\)pplie~ Ltd. 1957 .......................... 2.501 51 years.

! ;. By RUTH MILLETT time for a beauty shop, appoint· 5100.00-Hon. Mr. Jusllce Car· The Hot:key Hand Bocl< 1 ·~=============================~ ment ever~ week, but no time to 'roll, Mount cr,;hel Old Boys' As· u d • I . 3 50.1 \'is it the s1ck. sociation. oy Percrva ·· ... ··· .. ·. · · · I l ,-------------

to invite to her home the new· They find time for atlf·improve· $50 00-1\!r. A. ~r. Toolan, w .. J :The Ocean At My o·or.r p c L d' ' comer she met and whose lonll· mcnt courses, but no time to lm· ~lurphy, Ltd., ~lr. J. P. Kiclcy,l R II . ' • • a Ies Communi'cal)lc I ford's, Hr. ~lain m,t. !1). nc;;s she sensed but never found pro\'e the lot of others. Knights of Columbus, Notre Dame I on Po ell ......... , ..... 2.50 , , Rubclla-Frcshwatrr, C.B

• .\m· wom~n. hoWC\"Cr . rushed the time to case isn't being a :rhey find time ·ror doing every- Council, Grand Falls, Park~r & I Dead Man's Folly I El t Off' 'Flntrocl:, C.B. 112

\· . : ·u~hi In allow 50me time In her whole woman. thmg !rrr their Clltildren'-mUch of :llonroc Ltd. . . • i ec leers Diseases ! Scarlet Fcm-D~~' L!k! !II ,, ... schr•~:llc for kindness. By h·adition, ·women arc the which their children . could • and · $30 00-~liss c. O'Regan. Agatha Chrrst1e ........... 2.2:1 . . 1

1 lmpctigo-~larysraie, Brir.1

It's sm:rl for a woman In he one:; who take lime for small kim!. sltouid be d6ing for thcmseh•c.1- 525.00-Hon. J v. ami Mrs. , :l.h.ss Kathleen Ayre was clcclcd The following communicabir. dis- St. John's ( 1 ) • ; .hie to mana~c a job and a home. ncssc~. who remember and do but no lime for anyone else's O'Dea Mis; M. Parker ~lr. .1 •. DiCkS & (O ltd lll"CSident of the St. John's Worn- cases have been report en to the · Inlcctious llcpa:iti• -

i : :'lt.\1\E ROmJ IS \'0\!R LIFE : "OR KlSDSESS TO OUTSIDERS '

•.'">;>lcndid of a woman lo do a something about t.hc troubles of child. T. Ci;cescman, Bennett' Brewery 1 ., • an'~ ~rosressiv~ Conservative As· Health Department for I he week; lain,, C.B, 1.11. ..

; ;rrat ural. for h~r famil)". ot!lcr~. who keep m touch wIt h Suchclose·to·home 11\'lng makes~ Lid,, F. M. O'Leary Ltd., Mrs. G.l soc1a!1on las.t mght at the annu~l, Mdin~ aJnuary 26, 1957: _ · Gastru bltcrJtl5 -

. entered !lit 1f :ohc d.oc•n t .rc;;cn·c or al a chstancc. It's bad {or a woman's personality 1 $20.00-'r. A. J.\lc:-;"ab & Co. Ltd.,, , 1 h~1me of lllrs. W. J. Browne, Ren· 1 L~ke (1 ). Grand Bank ( 1 ), r.Jo1·- : )Jemn~ocnccal \lrr1in,i11i·._ .t•

. But she .15 l.rad:ng a narrow ~Cl£·1 frscnds wh7thcr they live close by for selfishness and detachment.!~[ Kielle~·. Mr. F. A. O'Dea. I The Booksellers nwctmg Which took place at the I ~lcaslcs- St. John'5 ( 12), Deer ( 1 ), K.elligrews, c.n.

.1• little 111nc for dom~: thsn:;s for If. the woma~ of the family doc; and growth· and bad {or her fami·l Sergt. r·nd J.llrs. Earles Chilton. 1 PHONES 2008 -3191 - 4425 i me's lllill Ro~d. I crt own, B.B. (2), Port Blandford, 1 ncy Cove, B.~ .. i i ). lllen. not do these thsngs they arc usual· ty. 1 $15.00-~fr. Arthur Johnson,~ . • 1 The presJ~cnt, ~Irs. Grace 1 Bona vista S. 1 1), Torbay, S~. Pulmonary J.~t-.IJap?r 1

The woman \lho meant to ,·!sit lr left lindane, and the woman her. So no matter how busy you nrc, 1 ~(r .r. n. Parsons. . ! 7ll C L} ReVI 1• } Sparkes, prcs1dcd and reports of; John's E. 0 l. Fcrryland (1) Epl· Labrador < L), :-;orth \\e!t !ick fritnd but ne1·er got around self and her whole family feel the remember tu reserl'c

1 little time: 510.00-Mrs. B. Power, Dr. and , lflo • • • \ a the secretary treasurer for the! dcmic: Cape Bro~·Je and Aqua· . Lnhrador (I). , .

·J it. who meant to send Ol"er a difference. each week for kindness that goes ~Irs. L. Conroy, Gear!!e Neal Ltd., 1\ll , T , y~ar were presented. ·forte. • Renal .T.B.-Por. 111 Cb:J, at di5h to the neighbor who had A Human Touch Is Vital beyond the walls of your own I st. .Tohn's, Aricultural Society, P.l uteellng Olll «ht Mrs, w. J. Browne .and ~li~s K.l Chicl;cn Pox-Grand Bank (1), I Barbe DIS!. (1).

' death in the "fa mil)', who meant family's closeness to others, home. I J. Brownri~:g, Dr .• T. B. Murphy,! t Ayrc, who attended th~ Natlonal Port Saunders (7). V.D.G.-16. :llr. J. !II. Bradshaw, Baine Johns- The ~!.C.L.I., a debatin~ society Convention at Ottawa }n December Mumps-St. John's (1), Wood· V.D.S.-1. ton & Co. Ltd., ::llrs. A. Hutton, frundcd in St. John's in 1867, will to ei~ct ·the new national leader, ~fr. R. S. Furlong, Q.C., :llr. A meet tonight in the Prince of Wales the lion. John Dicfenbaker, gave V. Summers. College Annex, formerly known as an account of their activities at

$it.OO-Hia Honour thr. Lieuten· the Guards Club Rooms. . the Convention. ant Governor, 1\frs. E. M. Copcrth· This society was active up until !he Constitution for the Associ' waite, Miss K. Summers, ~!iss N. 1955 and the president, Mr.'·S. W. ahon was formally adopted by the

1 J. Power, ~lr. and 1\lrs. J. s. Short is anxious to revive inter, gathering and the retiring presi· Canning, Dr. A. W. Blaclder. :llrs. est in the old members of the dent gave her report. U. Goodridge, Dr •• r. 0. Frase~ group and recruit new members. Mrs. D. lllcCormack then took ~ Dr. G. B. and Mrs. Brownrigg, F: Though traditionally men have I he chair for the election of off!· : V. Chccsemr..n Ltd., The Cottage taken part in the debates and dis- ccrs and the following were elect· i Tea Gardens, Mr. R. A. Parsons, ~ussions, women lao ha\'e been cd: i Q.C., Mr. J. G. Higgins, Q.C., A w~!~omcd to the society and have 1\liss K. Ayre, president. 1 Friend, Dr. J •. G~rdon Lynch, Mr. nls? taken part In the debates, ~[rs. ~1. Stoan, vice president St. · Gordon F H111gms, Q.C., P. C. wluch for many years were the 1 John's East O'Drl:!coll Ltd., Mr. T. H. Hawkins, cr;ntre of. interest in St. John's. I ~Irs. ~lal~olm Hollett, vice-pres· ' Deputy 1\tnyor J. Higgins. \\ om.cn Wlll. be welcomed to ,the ident for St. John's Centre.

$3.00-A non Catholic Friend. meetu:g ton.lght. Mn. Carnell, vice president for $2.0~1asters Jimmy and John Th<! . Soc1~ty, know~ as the st. John's North.

Furlong. Methc,dlst L1terary Institute was :llrs. H. Payne, vice president Gifts of Candy, Fruit, Toys, 1 f~unrh!d by past stu?cnts. of the ; for st. John's south.

Clothing, Soft Drinks, Icc C_ream, 1\\ csleyan A~ndemy 10 1867 who Mrs. F, McCarthy, vice pres!- : etc.:-Hls Grace the Archbishop, met t.o cons1der tl!e for.mallon ~£ dent for st. John's West. • H. F. Fanning, Mrs. R. Whalen, a socwty where d1scuss1on ~~ ht- Mn. T. Whitten was elected Mr. nod Mrs. H. Dunne, Dr. J. B. crary, current and other top1cs of treasurer and Miss A. Buckley was and 1\frs. D::.rcy, J. W. McGrath, contemporary interest could he elected secretary, Mrs. J. D. Hig. Miss A. O'Brien, Chalker & Co. brought out. fro~ t~c atmo1p~cre gins, 'Is assistant secretary and Ltd., "Mr. Don Jamieson, Frank of the hm1ly. flres1de ~nd .g1ven Mrs. W. D. Gunn b the assistant "McNamara Ltd., The Standard frc~ and pubhc express1011 m or· treasurer. 1\lanufacturing Co. Ltd., Mr. George gan1zcd debate. . Gillies, Rev .Father Meaney, Wind· The Society provided a training I Convenor! of various commit·:

- sor, S. Milley Ltd., Htolley and ground for public speaking, and a

1

tees will be appointed by the Co. Ltd., Royal StorcJ Ltd., means of public expression. and Executive. Chlevcrs Foods Ltd., Brookfield open discussion for over three Ice Cream,. St. Bon's College, :r· quarters of a century, and m~n~· I H. Estabrooks Ltd.: Harris & HI~· we)! kno\\'n names o~ outstandsng i Violet is considered .a chic In· cock Ltd., A. ·~· ~obm, St. Raphael s citizens of, the past II ere on the : tcrior decorati>1g color at present. Ladies Assocmhon, Ayre & Sons membership role of the M.C.L.I. 1 Why not try it In combination with

GOOD NEWS FOR THE LADIES

LAOIES' FOUNDATION GARMENTS in following s~yles: Brassieres, Girdles

and Corsets; lace back with clasp fronl.

Also LADIES' WARM SNUGGlES/

VEST and PANTIES Above Garments Reduced

To Half Price. COME EARLY. AND GET .YOUR CHOICE AND SIZE. JUST TWO OR THREE WEEKS LEFT TO DO BUSINESS.

THE WEST END BAZAAR One Door East of the Newfoundland

Light & ·Power Co.

WATER STREET WEST Ltd., Steers Ltd,, Jos D. Ashley. ' pale yellow and blue for living J. B. 1\ntcbell & Son Ltd., Gra:le LahouJ· CotlllCI'l room or kdroom? V Pupils Convent School, Windsor, .~~~=~~~;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:~~~===~==;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;::;;~;;;;::;;;;;o City·. Electric. Co., R. S. Rogers, Gadcn's Ltd., charles Hut~on & Backs Strt'l•ers Sons, Max J. Lawlor, M1ss 1\f, " Wiley, Mr. T. J, Sutton, MeDon· I REMEMBER-r..ld's Fruit Store, C. H: Conroy. 1

1 st. John's District Trades and

Canada Packers Ltd., Mr. Md !\Irs. 1 Labour Council held a meeting

\\liiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliil~~f. J. Power, 1\tr .. Ray Kenney, Mr. 'last night and endorsed the stand ! j Leo Murphy, East End Bakr.ry, taken by the Brewery Workers. Mr. and 1\lrs. W. Tracy, !llr. lind The Council ·pledged Its full Mrs. J. J. Daly, l!on. G. J. PO\ver, support and also that of affiliated I Mrs. W. J. Momssey, Mr3. J. J. unions with the strikers. I

NO MATTER .HOW MUCH OR HOW LITTLE FOR

•·· · To tnake your Bathroom complete install a BEAUTY

line CABINET. .

SLIDING MIRRORS e POLISHED PLATE e FLOURESCENT LIGHTS e ·RECESSED

. . . . I

' ''

·I

Everard, J. rmd S. Ryan, Rev. Fr. Harding, P;P., !\Irs. R. Gladney, If no instructions came with the i Mr. and 1\frs. P. J. Dobbin, Jllr. plants you got for Christmas, best 1 nnd Mrs. R. Corbett, :llr. and i\Irs. plan i~ to call your locl!l florist E. Vandurcen, 1\Ir. and J\lrs. C. and ask him how to care for them. :\Iycrs, J\liss Ill. Skinner, J. W. \Vatcr!t1g routines vary with var·l' McGrath, Bennett's Wholesale, ious plants. Miss 111. and 1\Usa S. O'Nelll, Henry

1 Thomas and Son, E. Ennis, L::.dics BIPTHS Sodality Our Lady of Fatima, Fort Pepperrell, ll{rs. F. 1\Iurpliy, lltr. -A-'I-'I_\J_N-'S_O_N_' _-.-l:lo-1-.n-t_o_l\I-r-.an-d 1

E. L. Baillie, l\lr, Ignatius Rum· bold!, Jlllsses Furlong Smithville, Mrs. David Atkmson, Bay Rob-Mr. and Mrs. A. Joy, N. J, Murphy erts, at the Grace l\Iaternity & Sons, Brookfield Ice Cream Ltd., Hospital, Mond.1y, Januaq• 2Bth, Mrs. T. Smyth, Mr. Fa. Murphy, a son. Mr. and 1\lrs. T. Van Vondcrln, Gcr· OSHl\IAN-Rom to !lfr. and F>ld S. Dpyle Ltd., Dry Cleaning of Mrs. Joseph S. Oshman, 704 Forty Boys Scout Uniforms, thirty Norris Lane, Baltimore, Mary­Band Uniforms, Baseball Team land, a daughter,· Judith Helen, Uniforms, two hundred boys' suits, on January 11th. Mrs. Oshman value $380.00, was the former Lot~ Devereux of

' Entertainment: - llliss Norah 25 1\fonkstown Road, St. Jolm's. ! Power, Capitol and Paramount 1 Theatres, Mr. M. Fewer Nickel 'and York Ther.trcs, Atlantic. Fllms, The London Theatre. . ·

Christmas . party 'and gifts to every boy from the AF.B. 1~0pera· lion Santa Claus" Fort Peppcirell.

1 EI;lMONTON (CP)-Frank Car- j

1 michael of Aklavlk, elected reprc· •

, sentatlve on the Northwest Terrl- ·

I tortes CoWlcJI, said Monday new leglslatioo. allowing. Indians and Eskimos Jn the Territories to bU)' beer in beverage· rooms sllould help discourage boolleggcrs now 1

preying on the' nati\•~s of the north. Natives ,get liquor from bootleggers who charge as · much as $50 a bottle~ ,

LADIES1

MELTON CLOTH

SNOW PANTS

Assorted shades. Sizes 14 to 20.

Reg. $4.98 Now $3.59 per pr.

.,

---·

SEE #

CHESTER DAWE, Ltd.

SHAW ST.

DIAL 80l6l

TOPSAIL ROAD

'DIAL 80018

• 'DISTRIBUTORS FOR. WORLD FAJ\IOUS JOJINS·~IANVILLE ROOFING .!: ASBESTOS PRODUCTS.

• nTacMILI.AN &: BLOEDEL 'SALES LTD., Tll\IBER, MOULJ>ING. ANO DECORATIVE PLYWOODS. . · ,

• BUILDING MATERIALS JS OUR RUSIN.:SS AND NOT r\ SlllJ.:;,lNg ' OVER 70,000 rvor floor space: OPEN SATURDi\\"S AND MONDAYS. • LARGEST ASSORT~mNT OF BUILDING MATEniALS IN

NEWFOUNDI.i\ND. FREE MTI'LE PAnKING SPACE. I

/ . j

. ·NEW AND" USEI

" . to suit Ev•r:

. Terra No,a:.Motl

ian1 ·santJys .Qtta~

(CP}-Talks Th~ puncaol Sand~·s, , minister, and Cal

maY haVe a ~~~g -e1l canada's nuhtar:

In Europe. · said main l

•rnrm•'1"v"as future ~Ianni North Atlantic Alhn•1CC

Sandvs told a press r.Jhal Britain would .likE

military comm1tm4 r.urope:an conlinl!\lt-£01

air for• do anything t1

alliance. there·. were disc

subject but he deel anY details.

ha \'C 5aid Can ad; c.onsit~r a parlla

its forces in E1 bril!ade group

air rlivisiC\1-if Jts military str2n

added that nn mr rontemolstcd.

riiolllU(Ji NF.W WE,\P1

r:dtiCillln of Canadian would binge n­action by other

but perhaps mon or nell' weapons i

9icl Brith•h attach con;icleral to Canadian rai

proje::ts an• militar~· eQuipm

condilirm. rai>cd the pm•;il!ili

· ~uir:·~d mi»lc' n ~t Fort Churchill. : SJndn declined tn 1 on. 1rhethcr Brit:

Canada with its nnd·I0·31r missiles until obtain such weapons £1

(CPl grounded at Sai another here 1 a report that planted on C•lC •

airlir,~ spokesman in the search \\"as toll• an unidentified m:

TCA at ~lontrcai . of two Montre~l·h

would not reach its

and arnn· de nearby ca:mp G the Fredcricto than an hour

Officia Feder~ olidal

A !CP) _ Th.• and Thanl:s~:i,:

""'""a'·' fixed each proclamatic

Permanmt '"""111 ''" ·calendar.

Sccrctan· Pin t~c Ill Tluirsda~·: birthday to coi•l ,Day, the ~londa

2.j. and TI1ank~ second Mond;

. ·Year's· . and Ea

vary ·~·~""'"' Vic

bi