16
\. .... . '·' .... .... .. ' . : .. ' : :"' ..; : ' ·. · .... . '• . . ... " ... •. ; J! ' .. .• i ·.)1 'a"· .... _, ... " ' \ ' . •. 4. ' . . ' ' . 1 ; .. ' .. NOW PARKING IS NO PROBLEM /&'l.'lt. , . '3U!PIIna '.\JUJQ!1 iiQl "IS i THE DAILY NEWS Vol. 67. 151 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960 (Price. 7 Cents) e1zes astro I ant wne ---- ·--- ·------- I .. a-. ' Charles Hutton & Sons mer1can n Reserve Indians Refinery Protest Arrests Process Refuses To Soviet. Oil 1 \I'ALL\C"EBLIRG. On!. 'CPI- and indications were that an il- , Wnlpnle lslnnd 1\'ednes- legal had been made. i called !or n show or Cana· 1 He said there will be an in- ! dhin public indignation following: \'cstigation. Witnesses on the I the arrest Tuesday night of twn workboat said the arrest was 1 island residents f1·om a macle in Canadian waters. in lhe Sl, Clait: River. were The two arrested, Howard and• taken at h)· Kahosed are charged on · police. separate counts of breaking and A dctccti\ e said the · cnlel'ing at United Stales Great arre>t ·was carc'rl\ly planned in Lakes ports . ;m cl£ort to get the pair into The brothers were Jcg->hackled .\nll'rican w;tlcrs. following lhe arrest. "1-:xtraditinn \I'Ollid haw to go Rurlon .Jacobs, chief of the \\'a>hinr.lnn and Ottawa \l'alpo\e lnclians, said there may bclor" we "lll\d gel lhe men," be n forma\ protest. Pocket Cargo --! RAVANA-AP-Premler Fidel Castr11 ael!ed etta el the two American-owned ell refineries In Cuba Wednesday after tcllin.g a mass meeting he was ready te take n•r ih• property of all Americans In Cuba "down to the MDI ill their shoes." The seizure order against the Tenco Oil Company'& plant In Santiago de CUba followed tile refusal !.0:-iDON IRc:lter>'-A wile of three companies-two American and one Datch·Britlsh- 1\'ho weighed the contents of to process Russian oll brought from the Soviet Unlu her husband's pockets found with Cuban sugar. they added up to two pounds Agents of castro's Cuban Petroleum Institute took ner and 12 ounces, to a lcller in the medical magazine the Hnana headquarters of Teneo an hour later. Family Doctor. Castro accused Texaco of violating a 1938 law wltle11 The wife, lllr< . .Janette Wylie directs all In Cuba to refine "atate-o'!!'lltd'' el'l at -. ('AIUC\S, \'eurzuela-Firemen pour water on the of \"enczuclan Pr«'sidtnt Romulo Bc!nnrourt here June 24th, after It was srt afire when a bomb u<·hr in a parked auto (right I extlloded. The dynamlte-lntleu auto was 1mrked elong thr way as the l'rrsldential auto headed for nn Arm)' Day celebration. Threr pl'rson' in thr t·nr with Betancourt were killed, but the l'resldent escaped arrious In a T\' S)leech June 26th, Betancourt charged the bombing was an attrm1•t and said It was "the work of the bloody J)ominicau lie· pnlllic dirtalorship."-l'PI Photo. s;iid Detcc·lh'!' LnWI'en<·c Hoff.· ·man. "and it> a length) p1·o· or Glasgow, asked: "Is this a the orders of the government. Others on board the boat al lhe record ;" Th th · h ,-e said'-·-----·----- said tile contents in- e ree compames a I t:r-.s. ('pi .John J.uka.<h of 1\'alpolc J.;\anrl ll\\IP detachment. said , a !'Oil1plainl had brrn lrom the crew of the workboat I. lime-most or whom were from - they cannot process the Russian: the i>land-rclused to aid in the rluded ">rm·al hunches of oil because ha\'e Charged WJ•th arrest. Stories of the incident kevs. a lillie ;;mall , to thetr tradthonal suppuers, m wide-sprcild anger and nuls, holts, snail this case Venezuela. indignation in lhe resen·e. spirit le,·e\, numerous pens and Castro contends he can buy So-. M d ------ -- .. -·· ... ----- a luhe of mints nnd l'iet crude oil for $1 a barrel un- ur er seYeral diaries.'' der the Venezuelan price. , British, Cypriots, f{each J\greernent further down. I 'fhe companies have a $75,000.· , found numerous hits of paper. ooo investment in Cub_a plus _an; Jamaica \CPl ! n metal inch tape, lwo small estimated $60,000,000 m foretgn: Five Rastafarian• arrested Junt matchbox l'ars. toy model;, exchange the Castro go\'ernmeot: 27 alter a six-day manhunt were an atomic model, an electnc : owes them lor crude otl already; formallv c h a r ged Wednesday plug, a broken tie pin, a nasal imported and processed. ! with the murder of tw11 Ham[) spray ;mel a sample ran of "a> The U.S. embassy had no com· i shire soldiers June 15. poli>h." menton the seizure except to say I Red Chinese Kill Nepal 1 Officer In Border Clasl1. r: I " - · h ,,.,, 1 · 11 lh• c 1 -,. 1 ·J _,. 1 .,, 1 ·,.r hdore 111 c the situation wa.s being watched· They were also ehargcd with ' .rut'!'' 1 ·- nrltl> ' ' ' :"il'CLEAR St:B closely. · I he death of three other mcm· ;•nd C)'priut n e g ot an- republic is proclaimed. f th R ( f t f d llllllllct•rl 1\'dnes<lav thai DETAILS WITIIIIELil Eng. HOARSE WITII A:-IGER · 0 e sec oun •Rt•ulers• earlier this, the frontit'l' zone the 1'i· thcv hare reached "a broad A British source said the dis- lmtd 'Reuters'-/\ plumbing dis-i Hoarse with Castro told; huned in a &Ulgle grave 4 forct of 2.000 -Rrd Chinese yt•ar. 1 brian rebels were suppressrcl. mc; 1 su1·e of agrrcnwnl'' on ma- pule well hold up inde· rute is hold up on Brit-: his followers the United Slates 1 2 6. The !eel sponsors a bac.<· killed an :\epal- A governnwnt spokesman saitl j 111· issues up crl'alion of pcndence but would not affccl nin's nuclear suhmarmc Dread-· was decadent and called the new to-Mnca movement, artn)' o!ficer and ca pturcd 16 the situation was "gra\'cly deli- fThe thf :111 independent Cvprus republic. Wcdne>tlay's agreement. ·nought and the Pacific and Ori-' sugar act being dcli\Jerated by Four of the men. barefoot and in a sweep over : catc.'" ' 0 0 • us wa .c am , 0 . tm: Rul new dispt;\e blew up he- Comnan)· liner Oriana: it was. Congress, imm?ral. stupid and wearing shirts unbottoned to the the Sepal- Tibet border Sunday, RF.VOLT bcatt kllll lhctllh tG, !ween the Greek and Turkish- The cotK"rnrd the. announced 'l'c'dncsday mght. A cl'iminal. The blll_would the. waist arrived at the court un- 1! ,.:as disclosed Wednesdav. China has admitted that Its 1 PI'!Skoners b 'd 1 'lUg em i cv 1 ,riot l'ommunil ie, jnsl hcfon' :ding of bases ot Cyprus should ' s_pokesn_ 111 _n . f_or ... Ar"m· · authm:tty to ftx. the 1 , der heavy police and military Thl Sl'pa'rsc cabinet in. armv to pul !\own R' across e or er, sources: on \he m".ior issues f:· ilaln thern,' slron:(s ."h) •' r. l (,' SHI(t amJunt _of sugar Cuba •ell. .. estimated 2,000 pH· and the gov· · Tibe'tan re,:ou, according to a 1 sat · ; was disclosed. ol \IJ\'erc1gn zones' phnnbcrsllere .ned for 1 m lhe L.S. ·sons waited outside the court· ernmeat later tent a protest to ; Nepall!!'e announcement Tuesday. . 1 d' , _ . ·t ·I . The Turks announ<·cd their Ol'· which Rrilain will _r;.tain 1 lo out 1 \?rk 1 Ca•tro warned that for e\'erv house to witness· the arrival. l''llina against the "unprovoked" 1 China told :'llcpal !hal troops: . n tan 311 ' lem1inalion lo seek implemenla- independence and e1r1l admmts- m ' 11 e md cut h the United state.s . . .- II It · tbf 11'ld Mustang area · ld be moved into the de-: at my of neat 20 . 0 000 . ltbetan' lion of a 7-lo-3 ra· tralion Llca1 P 011 rr plant or the suhma.- pot . Y " h. i of the_ cha_rbcd \\lth a ac . 1 : . . , N 1 ·nomads was ltghlmg tls way·_ . __ _ ---· --· inc. from Cuba s suoar quota, 15 : the murders Js in hosptlal recov· -.·htcb JUts 1 nto Tibet. mlhlln:tzed zon.e bel\\ een ' epa 1 across Tibet and readv lor a do·! - ---- · government will take one of !he 1 ering from bullet wounds suf. The government demanded the:and Tibet to fight the revolt-· d' fight 'th the Ch' Fa.IIS •35 !\mericanowned su•ar millS f d d . t M d Stpalcse he rctnmrd. 1 an al>pm·ent attempt to close all or- tc WI mcsc 1 · · · ." 11 h' hI ere urmg eap ure • on ay. overlords. i here. The American mt s, w 1c ; It the Chinese action was escape routes !rom Tille!. , produce a third of Cuha's sugar. I The men. all American eiti· ,-iolation of international law . The edded that the . The Times of India snid the i are ralued at more than $101!.-. zens, pleaded and and a Chinese-Xepalese border , troops would be withdrawn from nomads hoped to entrench them· , ooo.ooo. were granted legal a 1 d b; the :selves western Tibet to fight __ ITo Go Into Orbl•t ' court. 'th Ch h d' "\\'e will take and take unltl G S e mese, w 0 were sen mg ! not even the nails of their The use was remanded until ranger U ggests :in reinforcements to inter-' are left," Castro said to the thun-. July &. The attorney general'• . , ce;he ::spapet· said several \'A:-IDI-::\'BERG AlH Fonn: Preliminary data_ the an- "'" .. i h B,\SE, Calif, ( AP •-The I 'nited nounccment said, indicated it re- ..._ Stales Air tricd-<md ap- entered the atmosphere and ,·cstmenls until nothing is left. 1 the mel!. Essence Of S Uid l l,beeunndrekd 1 . 11 Cedomimnusnki 1 ·.·rtms 1 a.slhi'Ces".dyhad penny by penny American in-:nf treason and felony mey., , parently failed-to fire lhc sat- burned up O\'er the South Pa· q : Reports reaching towns near rllile Djscoverer Xll into polat·l' cific. ,c"' : the Tibetan border in the last orbit Wednesday, SPECIAl. INSTRUMENTS Ad c few weeks have said that almost than two hour, after lhc I The satellite was packed with va nee ease 'the whole of Tibet was in rc\'olt big rocket was sent a loll from 1 special instruments to . OIT.-\W., (("PI - Gii'Js Jure rador whet•e bait facilities still: · this missile base. air force sci- lcll the experts what, m case of · their caleb with perfume so why are inadequate allhough greatly I entisls announced that the failure. went wrong. ahouldn't the fishermen, improved in ree<!nt years. Repeat : lite appat-cnlly didn't go into the! A successful recovery, deemed F .Ire Ta I ks End Charles R. Grnger, illr. Granger also urged that I intended orbit. · a must for the u.s. man-in-space r.rand. Falls-White Bay Lab- research be done on an artificial 1 program, has proved bafflingly rador Wednesday in the Com- i bait, remarking !hal is as much' Performance The air force said the rocket- elusire in the lengthy Discoverer mons. effort had been given to one for , with a capsule it hoped to I'C· series. Mr. urged commercial fishermen as has' rovct· as it re-entered cMlh's at- c. PARIS IReutersl _ Five days: dent de Gaulle's a ee- \linister !llacLean to get his re- been to at•Lificial lures for' : mosphcre Thursdny - apparently REJECT PERVERT RILL 1 OS n'GELES-C 1 T ·of talks between a delegation fire in Algeria. teardl working on a liq·, sport live bait could have NOTTINGHAM, F;ngl and 'didn't obtain sufficient ,·clocity.! LONDON meutersl _ The· • • :"·' aro e r from the Algerian insurgents and URGED BY DE GAULL:I uid that smells and tastes like, been dispensed with by now. f (API-Two nights ago a cat· EXI'ROPRI,\TE-IIOllSES-- I Hnuse of Commons, by a vote of golf as the second s_nur- officials ended Wednes· De Gaulle urged I eean·!re squid and could be used in phce • Speaking later, Lloyd R. ! driven by Archie May, 68, i 213 to Wednesday night re- trtal for the red-ha!red day with the French ready to in the Algerllll HYOlt ".choppd squid as a bait. 1 Crouse, P.C. I Queens · Lunen·l and a bus driven by Cecil Me· Ont. ICPi-The 1 a proposal that homo- mistress and Dr. Bernard accept a full insurgent cease-fire 1 in a speech June 14. I burg I said an artificial lure de-! Farlane, 27, collided at a : city will expropriate two north 1 sexual behavior between con- got June 27th w!th delegation if the A I g e r i an s The preparatory group'• iis- "Essenee of squid" he said,! \'eloped in Norway and known as. busy downtown intersection. : end houses blocking expansion of senting adults in private should selcchon of 60 prospective choose to send it. ,I cussions with Frenclt officials might sol\-es the fisherman's bait 1 the Norwegian jig Is already on I ! Dominion Foundries and Steel no longer be a criminal offence . jur1JI's. the As soon as the talks ended, ended with e two-hour meetlnr problems. especially in 1 the market. 1t had proved effec· Tuesday night the same car ' Limited. The two houses arc in Britain. Home Secrelarv Rich- ed retrtal 1s now underway 11 the edvance Algerian em·oys j at the chief go\-emment bulldln& lrtU of and Lab· i th·c In catching cod. with the same driver collided i owned by Mrs. Stella Morris. ard Butler agreed the present ! rould be ilopped by the U.S made plans to leave for Tunis in Melun, 30 milea from here. Bring Out Bodies with the same bus with the ' Do£asco officials the city law imposed hardship on con- Supreme Court, which is con to report to the Algerian pro-1 At the end or the meetlnc, ona I to expropriate the properties stitutional homosexuals, but said sldering the former model's 1 visional government. I of the main difficulties appeared same driver at the same in- ! nftcr they unable to reach he did not believe the full case petition to disqualify the pres ' The aim o! the advance dele·j to be insurgent demand fer tersection. a judge. __ . ! ABt.:RTILLER\', \\'ales 1,-\P'-1 was like going through a wax- 1 Weary rescue teams Wednesday works. Some had died in the po· brought out the last bodies of / sitions they were in at the time the 45 miners killed in a bla•t 1 of the explosion without a mark ..-bich ripped through the six on them. Others were on the coal mine Tuesday. ground as if sleeping. We fo•md C t U B Id P I 0 · including p r o visional premie_r j only such a meetil!l ar er rges 0 0 ICY . n I Abbas. to discuss Prest· would allow progreu. Fishing Rights M. Surprised At The surrounding Welsh valley 12 men in one group. They were quiet and sorrowful, aU dead." Territorial :\o one waited at the pithead ------ OTTAWA \CPl-A bold Cana·l Under the compromise the which supported the Canada-U.S. dian policy on territorial fishing present three-mile limit on' terri- proposal to enter into a multi- right, backed by unilateral ac· torial waters would have been in· lateral agreement on the 12-mile lion if necessary, was advocated creased to six miles. And a coun· zone. As the last two bodies were brought to the surface from the disaster site 1,000 feet below. Reseuers told grim stories of finding the bodies. One said: "It - -. - --------- ·---. -- THE COUNTRY PARSON "Progress II what yo11 ran lllllte tomorrow only if you get done today what you should hl\"e done YCilerday." Dies In Fire in the Commons Wednesday by try would have exclusive fishing "If we are going to have Newfoundland's Chester W. Car· rights for a further six miles out , every country fishing to within · ter. to sea, , three miles of our shores our EDMONTON, Alta. (API _ An As a. result the breakdown lO·YEAR PRIVILEGE · fishermen are not going to have Edmonton horse owner was killed of the mtemahonal Law of The However, other countries which lhe rights to which they feel and 23 race horses were de· Sea.,conference at Geneva, there had traditionally fished in this titled," he said. stroyed in a fire that swept Is nothing but chaos" on the outer zone would continue to en- UNDER REVIEW throueh five wooden stables at question of territoaial fishing ioy the privilege for 10 years. Replying, Fisheries Minister the exhibition grounds early Wed· zones, the Llbemt MP lor Burin- Mr. urged that efforts McLean said the whole issue is nesday. said during House study be made to reach a bilateral a matter of great concern con- Rex l'reland, .68, asleep in a of .ftsheries department spending ag_reement with the United States tinually under review. bunk near his horses, burned to eshmates. bnnging into effect the 12-mile Mr. Carier said there is need death. Mrs. Millie Pederson of "There Is no accrpted law of limit as regards the fishing terri· for at least three Canadian pa- Bowden, Alta., also en owner, the sea either as to the extent of tories of the two countries. trol boats to adequately police and a stablchand. Robert McMa. territorial water' or as to the ex· If such an agreement cannot be the waters orr Newfoundland. hon, suffered bums. tent of the coastal waters which concluded, Canada should take The fierce, one -hour blaze any country can claim as a pre· unilateral action, he said. broke out about 2 a.m. Chief serve and monopoly of its own If Iceland can take unilateral fishing Dee!." action, surely Canada can do like· A. J. G. Lauder said he had Mr. Carter described as a wise on the 12·mile limit said heard rumors that en explosion "tragedy", the failure of the Can· Frank Howard preceded the fire and these were ada • United States compromise J. W. Pickersgill IL - Bona· being lnvest!Jated proposal to gain aceeptence at vista Twillingate) appealed to The horses were among more Geneva spring conference. It the government to make a spe. than 400 at the track for a meet fatlcd by one vote to obtain Lhe effort in the next 12· months which opened June 18, required two:thlrds majority. 1 to try to get those countries Encroach m e n I s by foreign trawlers had become a heavy handicap to Newfoundland in- shore fishermen. This year the inshore catch had been poor and some fishermen felt it was be· cause their fishing grounds had thoroughiy dragged by for- eign vessels. The number of foreign vessels had so grown that at night they looked from shore like a floating Russian Walkout city, according to Newfoundland . . fishermen. LONDON !CPI - Pnme Mm- Mr. Carter said it is urgent ' ister Macmillan said Wednesday that steps be taken lo conserve I he hopes Russia wilJ reconsider the :"iewfoundland fishery. At I its withdrawal from the Geneva one time the resources of the disarmament talks. Grand Banks were held to be He said he was deeply disap. inexhaustible, "but I do not pointed as well as surprised by think that any thinking person the walkout Monday. can hold this view any longer." The negohahons, he added, He noted that conservation should resume as soon as pas- measures would require inter· sible. national agreement, "and I re· The collapse of the talks set alize -an international agreement off a flood of critical exchanges is hard to come by." However, between the East and the West. unless action were speeded up, Russia contributed notes to it come too late to "the governments of all coun- depletion o! the fishery. tries" explaining why the Com- munist side walked out o! the Supporting Mr. Carter's stand, discussions. Charles R, Granger (1,-Grand STAND "UNFAIR" Falls-White Bay-Labrador) said Macmillan in a Jet- he hopes the new department ter to Soviet Premier Khrush· patrol vessel for Newfoundland chev reviewed the Russian stand waters, to be in operation in 1962, at Geneva with such adjectives is so equipped as to drive off as "unfair" and "incomprehen- poachers in Canadian fishing wat- 1 sihlc.'' ers. j Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd told House of Com- mons that the Western allies are studying ways of getting the dis· armament talks under way ega in. One method, he said, is the convening of the United Nations disarmament commission, which has the full 62-nation member· ship of the world body. ••••••••• Weather Sunny, continuing warm. High to-day 80. Outlook for Friday: Sunny and cooler. TtMPERATURES Montreal . .. .. 61 Quebec ........ 52 Halifax .. ...... 52 Sydney .. ...... 51 St. John's .. .. .. 44 73 68 69 73 61 _.._ ... _______ .....

Vol. Charles Hutton Sons astro e1zes mer1cancollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19600630.… · RAVANA-AP-Premler Fidel Castr11 ael!ed etta el ... pnlllic dirtalorship."-l'PI

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NOW PARKING IS NO

PROBLEM

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THE DAILY NEWS Vol. 67. 151 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960 (Price. 7 Cents)

• e1zes astro

• I ant wne

---- ·--- ·------- I

~~ .. a-. '

4~ Charles Hutton & Sons

• mer1can n

Reserve Indians Refinery Protest Arrests Process

Refuses To Soviet. Oil

.:~

1 \I'ALL\C"EBLIRG. On!. 'CPI- and indications were that an il­, Wnlpnle lslnnd lndi~ns 1\'ednes- legal ~rrest had been made. i d~\' called !or n show or Cana· 1 He said there will be an in­! dhin public indignation following: \'cstigation. Witnesses on the I the arrest Tuesday night of twn workboat said the arrest was 1 island residents f1·om a workbo<~t macle in Canadian waters. in lhe Sl, Clait: River. 'J'h~y were The two arrested, Howard and• taken at ~unpoinl h)· ~lidJigan ~:dwanl Kahosed are charged on

· police. separate counts of breaking and A ~\iclti~<lll dctccti\ e said the · cnlel'ing at United Stales Great

arre>t ·was carc'rl\ly planned in Lakes ports . ;m cl£ort to get the pair into The brothers were Jcg->hackled .\nll'rican w;tlcrs. following lhe arrest.

"1-:xtraditinn \I'Ollid haw to go Rurlon .Jacobs, chief of the lh1·ou~h \\'a>hinr.lnn and Ottawa \l'alpo\e lnclians, said there may bclor" we "lll\d gel lhe men," be n forma\ protest.

Pocket Cargo

--! RAVANA-AP-Premler Fidel Castr11 ael!ed etta el the two American-owned ell refineries In Cuba Wednesday after tcllin.g a mass meeting he was ready te take n•r ih• property of all Americans In Cuba "down to the MDI ill their shoes."

The seizure order against the Tenco Oil Company'& S26,fl[)~,ooo plant In Santiago de CUba followed tile refusal

!.0:-iDON IRc:lter>'-A wile of three companies-two American and one Datch·Britlsh-1\'ho weighed the contents of to process Russian crud~ oll brought from the Soviet Unlu her husband's pockets found with Cuban sugar. they added up to two pounds Agents of castro's Cuban Petroleum Institute took ner and 12 ounces, accordin~ to a lcller in the medical magazine the Hnana headquarters of Teneo an hour later. Family Doctor. Castro accused Texaco of violating a 1938 law wltle11

The wife, lllr< . .Janette Wylie directs all refinerie~ In Cuba to refine "atate-o'!!'lltd'' el'l at

-. ('AIUC\S, \'eurzuela-Firemen pour water on the burnin~ ~uto of \"enczuclan Pr«'sidtnt Romulo Bc!nnrourt here June 24th, after It was srt afire when a bomb u<·hr in a parked auto (right I extlloded. The dynamlte-lntleu auto was 1mrked elong thr way as the l'rrsldential auto headed for nn Arm)' Day celebration. Threr pl'rson' in thr t·nr with Betancourt were killed, but the l'resldent escaped arrious inlur~·. In a T\' S)leech June 26th, Betancourt charged the bombing was an as~as~iuatinn attrm1•t and said It was "the work of the bloody J)ominicau lie· pnlllic dirtalorship."-l'PI Photo .

s;iid Detcc·lh'!' LnWI'en<·c Hoff.· ·man. "and it> a length) p1·o·

or Glasgow, asked: "Is this a the orders of the government. Others on board the boat al lhe record wci~hl ;" Th th · h ,-e said'-·-----·-----

~ile said tile contents in- e ree compames a I t:r-.s. ('pi .John J.uka.<h of 1\'alpolc

J.;\anrl ll\\IP detachment. said , a !'Oil1plainl had brrn rcgislc~cd lrom the crew of the workboat

I.

lime-most or whom were from - they cannot process the Russian: the i>land-rclused to aid in the rluded ">rm·al hunches of oil because th~y ha\'e ob!!gatio~~! Charged WJ•th arrest. Stories of the incident kevs. a lillie ;;mall rhan~e. , to thetr tradthonal suppuers, m crc~ted wide-sprcild anger and ~crews. nuls, holts, ~ snail this case Venezuela. indignation in lhe resen·e. spirit le,·e\, numerous pens and Castro contends he can buy So-. M d

------ -- .. -·· ... ----- pencil~. a luhe of mints nnd l'iet crude oil for $1 a barrel un- ur er seYeral diaries.'' der the Venezuelan price. ,

British, Cypriots, f{each J\greernent

"OelYin~ further down. I 'fhe companies have a $75,000.· , found numerous hits of paper. ooo investment in Cub_a plus _an; KI:\GSTO~. Jamaica \CPl ! n metal inch tape, lwo small estimated $60,000,000 m foretgn: Five Rastafarian• arrested Junt matchbox l'ars. toy model;, exchange the Castro go\'ernmeot: 27 alter a six-day manhunt were an atomic model, an electnc : owes them lor crude otl already; formallv c h a r ged Wednesday plug, a broken tie pin, a nasal imported and processed. ! with the murder of tw11 Ham[) spray ;mel a sample ran of "a> The U.S. embassy had no com· i shire soldiers June 15. poli>h." menton the seizure except to say I

Red Chinese Kill Nepal1

Officer In Border Clasl1. r: I " - · h ,,.,, 1·11 lh• c1-,.1·J _,.1.,,1·,.r hdore 111c the situation wa.s being watched· They were also ehargcd with ~:ll'OSI.\ ' .rut'!'' 1 ·- nrltl> ' ' ' STR1KJ~ :"il'CLEAR St:B closely. · I he death of three other mcm·

;•nd C)'priut n e g ot i~tnr, an- republic is proclaimed. f th R ( f t f d llllllllct•rl 1\'dnes<lav ni~hl thai DETAILS WITIIIIELil B.\1\RO\\'-l:"i-FlJR:-.J~:SS, Eng. HOARSE WITII A:-IGER · ber~ 0 e ~saar sec oun

KH~B~Dr. :'\co~l •Rt•ulers• <l~n·emrnt ~igned earlier this, the frontit'l' zone wh~n the 1'i· thcv hare reached "a broad A British source said the dis- lmtd 'Reuters'-/\ plumbing dis-i Hoarse with an~er, Castro told; huned in a &Ulgle grave Ju~t 4 forct of 2.000 -Rrd Chinese yt•ar. 1 brian rebels were suppressrcl. mc;1su1·e of agrrcnwnl'' on ma- pule mi~ht well hold up inde· rute is hold in~ up wo~·k on Brit-: his followers the United Slates 1 26. The !eel sponsors a bac.<· troo;~5 killed an un~rmed :\epal- A governnwnt spokesman saitl j 111· issues holdin~ up crl'alion of pcndence but would not affccl nin's nuclear suhmarmc Dread-· was decadent and called the new to-Mnca movement, •~ artn)' o!ficer and ca pturcd 16 the situation was "gra\'cly deli- fThe C~inf~c rol;b~d thf ~wad :111 independent Cvprus republic. Wcdne>tlay's agreement. ·nought and the Pacific and Ori-' sugar act being dcli\Jerated by Four of the men. barefoot and !'(':son~ in a ~urprise sweep over : catc.'" ' 0 Icc~. 0 • us wa .c am ,0. tm: Rul ~ new dispt;\e blew up he- c~!. Comnan)· liner Oriana: it was. Congress, imm?ral. stupid and wearing shirts unbottoned to the the Sepal- Tibet border Sunday, RF.VOLT All~IITTED belon~mg, :~•fd bcatt kllll lhctllh tG, !ween the Greek and Turkish- The n~,-ecmenl. cotK"rnrd the. announced 'l'c'dncsday mght. A cl'iminal. The blll_would gl~·c the. waist arrived at the court un-1! ,.:as disclosed Wednesdav. China has admitted that Its 1PI'!Skoners '"'thor~ b 'd1 'lUg em i cv1,riot l'ommunil ie, jnsl hcfon' r· :ding of bases ot Cyprus should ' s_pokesn_ 111_n . f_or \.'t~k~rs ... Ar"m· · ~resident authm:tty to ftx. the 1, der heavy police and military

Thl Sl'pa'rsc cabinet m~t in. armv i~ t~·ving to pul !\own R' Ja~ across e or er, sources: a~reement on \he m".ior issues f:· ilaln :nn--·l':llnet'"~nt thern,' slron:(s ."h) •' r. ~ l (,' SHI(t ~~~! amJunt _of sugar Cuba rna~ •ell. ~uard .. ~n estimated 2,000 pH· tmmt~C)' ~~ion and the gov· · Tibe'tan re,:ou, according to a 1 sat · ; was disclosed. <iclineat1~n ol \IJ\'erc1gn zones' phnnbcrsllere .ned for refu~m"

1m lhe L.S. ·sons waited outside the court·

ernmeat later tent a protest to ; Nepall!!'e announcement Tuesday. . 1 d' , _ . ·t ·I . The Turks announ<·cd their Ol'· which Rrilain will _r;.tain ~ft~r 1 lo r~rry out 1\?rk 01.'·\~a<\;hteld- 1 Ca•tro warned that for e\'erv house to witness· the arrival. l''llina against the "unprovoked" 1 China told :'llcpal !hal troops: . n tan ne\ls~apers Iepo~.c< 311 ' lem1inalion lo seek implemenla- independence and e1r1l admmts- 1 ~1! m c~nncc. 1011 '11 e n~~-- md cut h the United state.s . . • .-

II It · tbf 11'ld Mustang area · ld be moved into the de-: at my of neat I~ 20.0•000 . ltbetan' lion of a 7-lo-3 Gt·cek-Turki~h ra· tralion • Llca1 P011 rr plant or the suhma.- pot . Y " h. i On~ of the_ f1~e cha_rbcd \\lth a ac ~ .

1 : . "~1~ . , N 1 ·nomads was ltghlmg tls way·_ . __ _ ---· --· inc. from Cuba s suoar quota, 15 : the murders Js in hosptlal recov·

-.·htcb JUts 1nto Tibet. mlhlln:tzed zon.e bel\\ een ' epa 1 across Tibet and readv lor a do·! ----- · government will take one of !he 1 ering from bullet wounds suf. The government demanded the:and Tibet to fight the revolt-· d' fight 'th the Ch' S~atell.lte Fa.IIS •35 !\mericanowned su•ar millS f d d . t M d Stpalcse prl~oners he rctnmrd. 1 an al>pm·ent attempt to close all or- tc WI mcsc 1 · · · ."

11 h' hI ere urmg eap ure • on ay.

overlords. i here. The American mt s, w 1c ; It ~aid the Chinese action was escape routes !rom Tille!. , produce a third of Cuha's sugar. I The men. all American eiti· • ,-iolation of international law . The Chine~e edded that the . The Times of India snid the i are ralued at more than $101!.-. zens, pleaded destit~tion and and a Chinese-Xepalese border , troops would be withdrawn from nomads hoped to entrench them· , ooo.ooo. were granted legal a1d b; the

:selves ~n western Tibet to fight __ ITo Go Into Orbl•t ' court. 'th Ch h d' "\\'e will take and take unltl G S ~ e mese, w 0

were sen mg ! not even the nails of their soles~ The use was remanded until ranger U ggests :in ~ro;>t reinforcements to inter-' are left," Castro said to the thun-. July &. The attorney general'•

. , ce;he ::spapet· said several \'A:-IDI-::\'BERG AlH Fonn: Preliminary data_ the an- "'" ~r!~;a:P!~~~~~s.0~,\~~ :~~i~~~: .. i ~:~~~~~:~;, ~n;t:~~h~rg: h B,\SE, Calif, ( AP •-The I 'nited nounccment said, indicated it re- ~ ..._

Stales Air ~'orce tricd-<md ap- entered the atmosphere and ,·cstmenls until nothing is left. 1 brnu~ht ~galnst the mel!. Essence Of S Uid l

l,beeunndrekd1.11Cedomimnusnki1·.·rtms1a.slhi'Ces".dyhad penny by penny American in-:nf treason and felony mey.,

, parently failed-to fire lhc sat- burned up O\'er the South Pa· q : Reports reaching towns near rllile Djscoverer Xll into polat·l' cific. ,c"'

: the Tibetan border in the last orbit Wednesday, SPECIAl. INSTRUMENTS Ad c few weeks have said that almost ~lore than two hour, after lhc I The satellite was packed with va nee ease

'the whole of Tibet was in rc\'olt big rocket was sent a loll from

1

special instruments d~signed to . OIT.-\W., (("PI - Gii'Js Jure rador whet•e bait facilities still: · this missile base. air force sci- lcll the experts what, m case of ·

their caleb with perfume so why are inadequate allhough greatly I entisls announced that the s~tel- failure. went wrong.

ahouldn't the fishermen, su~-' improved in ree<!nt years. Repeat : lite appat-cnlly didn't go into the! A successful recovery, deemed F .Ire Ta I ks End t~ested Charles R. Grnger, L· illr. Granger also urged that I • intended orbit. · a must for the u.s. man-in-space r.rand. Falls-White Bay • Lab- research be done on an artificial 1 program, has proved bafflingly rador Wednesday in the Com- i bait, remarking !hal is as much' Performance The air force said the rocket- elusire in the lengthy Discoverer mons. effort had been given to one for , with a capsule it hoped to I'C· series.

Mr. Grang~r urged Fi>heri~s commercial fishermen as has' rovct· as it re-entered cMlh's at- c. ~- PARIS IReutersl _ Five days: dent de Gaulle's offer~ a ee-\linister !llacLean to get his re- been ~i\'en to at•Lificial lures for' : mosphcre Thursdny - apparently REJECT PERVERT RILL

1 OS n'GELES-C

1 T e· ·of talks between a delegation fire in Algeria.

teardl expert~ working on a liq·, sport fishin~. live bait could have NOTTINGHAM, F;ngl and 'didn't obtain sufficient ,·clocity.! LONDON meutersl _ The· • • :"·' • aro e r from the Algerian insurgents and URGED BY DE GAULL:I uid that smells and tastes like, been dispensed with by now. f (API-Two nights ago a cat· EXI'ROPRI,\TE-IIOllSES-- I Hnuse of Commons, by a vote of golf sJ~nles as the second s_nur- ~ ~'rench officials ended Wednes· De Gaulle urged I eean·!re squid and could be used in phce • Speaking later, Lloyd R. ! driven by Archie May, 68, i 213 to 9~. Wednesday night re- d~r trtal for the red-ha!red day with the French ready to in the 5'.~-year Algerllll HYOlt ".choppd squid as a bait.

1 Crouse, P.C. I Queens · Lunen·l and a bus driven by Cecil Me· HA~!ILT0:->1, Ont. ICPi-The 1 jcct~d a proposal that homo- mistress and Dr. Bernard Fu~ch accept a full insurgent cease-fire

1 in a speech June 14.

I burg I said an artificial lure de-! Farlane, 27, collided at a : city will expropriate two north 1 sexual behavior between con- got ~nderway June 27th w!th delegation if the A I g e r i an s ~ The preparatory group'• iis-"Essenee of squid" he said,! \'eloped in Norway and known as. busy downtown intersection. : end houses blocking expansion of senting adults in private should selcchon of 60 prospective choose to send it. ,I cussions with Frenclt officials

might sol\-es the fisherman's bait 1

the Norwegian jig Is already on I ! Dominion Foundries and Steel no longer be a criminal offence . jur1JI's. _Ait~ough the off·dela~ As soon as the talks ended, ended with e two-hour meetlnr problems. • especially in remot~ 1

the market. 1t had proved effec· Tuesday night the same car ' Limited. The two houses arc in Britain. Home Secrelarv Rich- ed retrtal 1s now underway 11 the edvance Algerian em·oys j at the chief go\-emment bulldln& lrtU of Se~~o-foundland and Lab· i th·c In catching cod. with the same driver collided i owned by Mrs. Stella Morris. ard Butler agreed the present ! rould be ilopped by the U.S made plans to leave for Tunis in Melun, 30 milea from here.

Bring Out Bodies with the same bus with the ' Do£asco officials a~ked the city law imposed hardship on con- Supreme Court, which is con to report to the Algerian pro-1 At the end or the meetlnc, ona

I to expropriate the properties stitutional homosexuals, but said sldering the former model's 1 visional government. I of the main difficulties appeared same driver at the same in- ! nftcr they w~re unable to reach he did not believe the full case petition to disqualify the pres ' The aim o! the advance dele·j to be ~n insurgent demand fer

tersection. a~~eement ~tth_ ~Irs. -~~~~~: _~or a ~a~.:_ ~a~ _h_l!e~ made._~~-t- judge. ~-~ ~~ot_o-__ __ . Fo~i~n 1;:~r t~r~~:p:~e A;;:ri~':!, ! ~~::.~~~h~~=::g::t.G~~~e ;'~ ABt.:RTILLER\', \\'ales 1,-\P'-1 was like going through a wax- 1

Weary rescue teams Wednesday works. Some had died in the po· brought out the last bodies of / sitions they were in at the time the 45 miners killed in a bla•t 1 of the explosion without a mark ..-bich ripped through the six on them. Others were on the Bt-11~ coal mine Tuesday. ground as if sleeping. We fo•md

C t U B I d P I• 0 · including p r o visional premie_r j only such a face-to·f~ce meetil!l ar er rges 0 0 ICY . n I Fe~hat Abbas. to discuss Prest· would allow ~ubstanhal progreu.

Fishing Rights p · M. Surprised At The surrounding Welsh valley 12 men in one group. They were n~ quiet and sorrowful, aU dead." Territorial

:\o one waited at the pithead ------OTTAWA \CPl-A bold Cana·l Under the compromise the which supported the Canada-U.S.

dian policy on territorial fishing present three-mile limit on' terri- proposal to enter into a multi­right, backed by unilateral ac· torial waters would have been in· lateral agreement on the 12-mile lion if necessary, was advocated creased to six miles. And a coun· zone.

As the last two bodies were brought to the surface from the disaster site 1,000 feet below.

Reseuers told grim stories of finding the bodies. One said: "It - -. - --------- ·---. --

THE COUNTRY PARSON

"Progress II what yo11 ran lllllte tomorrow only if you get done today what you should hl\"e done YCilerday."

Dies In Fire in the Commons Wednesday by try would have exclusive fishing "If we are going to have

Newfoundland's Chester W. Car· rights for a further six miles out , every country fishing to within · ter. to sea, , three miles of our shores our

EDMONTON, Alta. (API _ An As a. result ~f the breakdown lO·YEAR PRIVILEGE · fishermen are not going to have Edmonton horse owner was killed of the mtemahonal Law of The However, other countries which lhe rights to which they feel en~ and 23 race horses were de· Sea.,conference at Geneva, there had traditionally fished in this titled," he said. stroyed in a fire that swept Is nothing but chaos" on the outer zone would continue to en- UNDER REVIEW throueh five wooden stables at question of territoaial fishing ioy the privilege for 10 years. Replying, Fisheries Minister the exhibition grounds early Wed· zones, the Llbemt MP lor Burin- Mr. Cart~r urged that efforts McLean said the whole issue is nesday. Bur~eo said during House study be made to reach a bilateral a matter of great concern con-

Rex l'reland, .68, asleep in a of .ftsheries department spending ag_reement with the United States tinually under review. bunk near his horses, burned to eshmates. bnnging into effect the 12-mile Mr. Carier said there is need death. Mrs. Millie Pederson of "There Is no accrpted law of limit as regards the fishing terri· for at least three Canadian pa­Bowden, Alta., also en owner, the sea either as to the extent of tories of the two countries. trol boats to adequately police and a stablchand. Robert McMa. territorial water' or as to the ex· If such an agreement cannot be the waters orr Newfoundland. hon, suffered bums. tent of the coastal waters which concluded, Canada should take

The fierce, one • -hour blaze any country can claim as a pre· unilateral action, he said. broke out about 2 a.m. Fir~ Chief serve and monopoly of its own If Iceland can take unilateral

fishing Dee!." action, surely Canada can do like· A. J. G. Lauder said he had Mr. Carter described as a wise on the 12·mile limit said heard rumors that en explosion "tragedy", the failure of the Can· Frank Howard (CCF-Ske~nal. preceded the fire and these were ada • United States compromise J. W. Pickersgill IL - Bona· being lnvest!Jated

proposal to gain aceeptence at vista • Twillingate) appealed to The horses were among more th~ Geneva spring conference. It the government to make a spe.

than 400 at the track for a meet fatlcd by one vote to obtain Lhe ci~l effort in the next 12· months which opened June 18, required two:thlrds majority. 1 to try to get those countries

Encroach m e n I s by foreign trawlers had become a heavy handicap to Newfoundland in­shore fishermen. This year the inshore catch had been poor and some fishermen felt it was be· cause their fishing grounds had thoroughiy dragged by for­eign vessels.

The number of foreign vessels

had so grown that at night they looked from shore like a floating Russian Walkout city, according to Newfoundland . . fishermen. LONDON !CPI - Pnme Mm-

Mr. Carter said it is urgent ' ister Macmillan said Wednesday that steps be taken lo conserve I he hopes Russia wilJ reconsider the :"iewfoundland fishery. At I its withdrawal from the Geneva one time the resources of the disarmament talks. Grand Banks were held to be He said he was deeply disap. inexhaustible, "but I do not pointed as well as surprised by think that any thinking person the Comm~ni~t walkout Monday. can hold this view any longer." The negohahons, he added,

He noted that conservation should resume as soon as pas­measures would require inter· sible. national agreement, "and I re· The collapse of the talks set alize -an international agreement off a flood of critical exchanges is hard to come by." However, between the East and the West. unless action were speeded up, Russia contributed notes to it mi~ht come too late to a~-ert "the governments of all coun­depletion o! the fishery. tries" explaining why the Com-

munist side walked out o! the Supporting Mr. Carter's stand, discussions.

Charles R, Granger (1,-Grand STAND "UNFAIR" Falls-White Bay-Labrador) said Macmillan in a 1,000~word Jet­he hopes the new department ter to Soviet Premier Khrush· patrol vessel for Newfoundland chev reviewed the Russian stand waters, to be in operation in 1962, at Geneva with such adjectives is so equipped as to drive off as "unfair" and "incomprehen­poachers in Canadian fishing wat- 1 sihlc.'' ers. j Foreign Secretary Selwyn

Lloyd told t~ House of Com­mons that the Western allies are studying ways of getting the dis· armament talks under way ega in.

One method, he said, is the convening of the United Nations disarmament commission, which has the full 62-nation member· ship of the world body.

• ••••••••• Weather

Sunny, continuing warm. High to-day 80. Outlook for Friday: Sunny and cooler.

TtMPERATURES Montreal . .. .. • 61 Quebec ........ 52 Halifax .. ...... 52 Sydney .. ...... 51 St. John's .. .. .. 44

73 68 69 73 61 • _.._ ... _______ .....

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~---------------------------,.r---------------~-----------------------------------!TH~E~D~A~Il~Y~N~E~W3S,~S~T~.J~OH~N~~~,~~~L£D~.,~TH~U~~~D~A~Y~,J~U~N~E23~0,Jl~96~0

·T·V· RADI0[0(; AND And Unions Reach CBN

nJt1tSDAY. JIM Stth .

YOCM TRl 'l!~n .. w. June 30th.

t:> J..l-:'\~ws ltnd Weather 6.35-Brukfast wJth Bill (:.5.'\-~e"·~

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I

243 WATER STRUT ' DIAL 2102

Billy says the handwriting is on the wall Cor dinner dances. At- ; tendance has dropped as a result I o£ television because, he says, people would !'ather watch than listen and dance.

GOES FISHING QUEBEC <cP - Premier An­

tonio Barrette, an ardent angler, said Tuesday he is off on a fish­ing trip and will not be back at his government oHice till Mon­day. The premier made this known after the morning cabinet session during which ministers of the Union Nationale administra­tion thrashed out election results Wednesday which showed so Lib­emls and 44 Union Nationale members elected to the 95-seat Legislative Assembl?. One Inde­pen1c~t member was also

I rlectcd. I

----- ..... ------·-Paramount

Tomorrow "STORY ON PAGE ONE"

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ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND The Daily- 1VewD THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960

Ottawa's Position To Nfld. Unchanged, Of ·Finance

Is Interpretation Minister's Speech

Of D.

Federai-Nfld.

I ~eccnd City ' Hit Hard By

Polio· Virus So far this year the gr~atcst

num her of Newfoundland's polio count has come from the \\'est Coast of this province. To date there hal'e been 17 cases of the crippling disease report­ed. The last se\'en have come from the Corner Brook area.

A spokesman for the Depart ment of Health sai~ yesterday

Cnmprehensive Relations

Review By Hon. Fleming

H!ln Jl!lnald Fl~min~. Fed- · sion that they were disappoint· "In summary, therefore, the 1 rr~l ~~~n:•tcr of Finance. ad- cd in the speech. They praised eleven years whcih ha\'e passed 1

drr""<i tl1c ~pedal dinner of ~Jr. Fleming for his comprehen- sinrc Confederation have , thr :'\rwfClundland Board of sive report on Newfoundland brought advantages to both :

I that three patients from the Corner Brook Hospital will be

· brou~hl to St. John's today fllr treatment.

Since the polio situation start­ed this year there ha1·e been two deaths, one from St. An· lhony and the other in the Cor­ner Brook district.

TraM la~t ni~ht. He did not and the estimates and actual Newfoundland and l~e rest of , br:n; an•· rh~n~e of attitude figures relating to federal i Canad~. ~~e economt~ results · t• t~c Fedrral t;o,.er:Jmcnt to ' grants and other monies com-1 I have JUsttfted the umon. Nol· · T~r.n 2!1. r~pratin:: what was · in~ to Newfoundland since Con- 1 able progress has been achiel'ed ~:c m Onawa la't sumnll'r: federation, but thought he! by Newfoundland in the de­.. ,~~ ~P<'r•~l cir.·um,tan"c~ rr- mioht have hccn a little more: l'clopment or her re~ources and b:·;,: ~~ th,• finanrial pH>itiun cx;lirit on future fiscal ar- 1 the impro\'cmcnt of her sen·ices. <'f :hr Prnnn~e l1f :St•wf~und- ran~ements. ' """11. however, still remains to land af:rr t~·C 31st M ~l~r•·h. :\!r. Flemin~ was introduced be done.

, Department of Health effie· ! ials say it is hard to say whal 1 sort of an epi(lrmic there will · hP in 1 his province this ~-car. ' Thr worst months for polio are

~!IIi: wnu\•1 lw taken inh• con- bl' President F. W. Russell and ".:anada has found in the "ri~rallPr.-- This un<lrrtakin~. titc vote or thanks was tendered ' union a new source of export ~tr rJrmm:: ,atd. wJs fot·m- hy fir$\ vice-president Henry W.

1

income, a larger domestic mar­~11~ wnttrn into the term;; of Collingwood. 0\'er two hundred . ket and a new smm•e of Fed­thr !r::.l3twn. members filled the hotel ball-, era! rcl'enucs. As the Royal

Mtrr thr dinner a :\F.WS room to overflowing. 1 Commission on 1\'ewfoundlan<l's ~t 2 rtrr d,,,.,"'m:: tlw speech Roh ~!cLead played and san~ I finances stated: "This new ,.llh -r1rral mrmher> of the :'\ewfoundland songs. choru~es ~ sourre of opportunitirs has

..... dtiNII·.II .J. II. S~l.\l.l.WOUJ) :ahh·Pssing the House of AssemlllY'N 'tn•dal >ession held in the old (·hamber in the Colonial llnihlin;: Wednesday morning. The Spraker's throne and the )la(·e we. e bronghl from the new lin use of Assembly cham­her. ConJ',•(Irr~tion Huihting, for the eveut. The Qneetittg J(al'e newly-elected mrmhers an opportunity to stJrak lor tht fir.\t and last time in the old and hallowed rhamb~r where the lrgis!atnre harl sat for 100 years.

to ('orne .. lui)'-Ailaust and Sep trmbrr. It was during this per­iod that the Ppidemic struck :'\ewfonndlanrl and daimctl th• Ji\'rs of 12 persons hesirle~ the othrr 141 person.~ contractin& the rlisease .

Bf\ard !'{ Tra!l~ ~"· thr impres- pf whidt w~re ~ang hy the j!alh-1 helped to strrngthcn the ('ell· I cl· VI. I ~ . T 3 •n)·ured ·-·- .- .. -- t·rm~. • tral core or the national econ-. u·efVICe OO g Warrant Off1'cer ~lr. Firmin~ said in part: i om)·." 1

Forg~·t-Me .. Not "The mlume of new capit~l: Jlominlon:l'rol'hH'I.a! l'lsral. ! In Crash (I • inl'estmrnl in Ncwloundlanrl in REJ.ATIO:'\S B , T N f dl d

! recent )'cars has probably heen II "The fi~c~l relations, hclwc_rn. L s . 0' D 0 ew oun an 'ppeal ' hi~hcr. in proportion to total the Dommwn anct lro,·nw•al Thrr~ prr~on>. whos~ n~mr> f'.~ . prol'indal production, !han in 1 Gm·crnmcnl~ are a \'(tal rle· arge ays ea . wrrr not !lisclosrrl. were hrou~ht ''>

mo<t oth~r parts of Canada.)mcnt Ill nat tonal ccnnomll' pol· · 'to the 1;cnerat Hospital suffcr-l"r ~· .t.•hn·, Rranch of the La~l year the total new public J (Continued on pa~c 81 1 'ing from facial in.iurics as the'

L.1·~J~(:ll\ lr;ton arknnwlc~ges and priralc investment was well -------- -------- - - · .... ----· result of a three-car traffic ac-":·~ ~~:,r\,; the f••llowm~ dirC('t o\'cr $!00 million. Of this total, L h ( II lment [or the h1lildin!! n[ the ridcnt that Ol'currd at the inler-~ .• -... ·~·.c·:~, t•' the For~rt-me-:'\ol th I t t ' t d . ut erans p . t 0 i line. so the oni,l' clfectit·e aarec. . f I. •· ·· C argcs amoun COnSIS e .__,·£· ars . o·tn· ·s u· seCIHII\ 0 c:\irahrth ancl Rona-. • -~,- r t t' A d 1 ment is now in term ~1 of the .-.,, •'" o new cons rue ton. eca< e l'enture arenur~ at 9.30 last

~; (lo- H(~ Hnn tlw l.it•ut. a~o only 3,000 or 4.000 people Terms o( Union. ni"ht G•'•rrr.~r. I d . n ( ,. n To Install b d , ,\Jr. Sellar~ abo mrntioned. ~. . . · were cmp O)'e m co s rue to , L N d 111 1 1 f' ,1. 1 • . 1 1 he arcHir.nt took place when

S::' (Ill ral'h-O{fiCW• t'Jub a~ compared with 12.,000 (0 15.· a ra o·r s ee 'S . e orcs trPs. 11 IIC l IICStrO)CC ; a car going cast on Elizabeth •lr~w·; :'\r•t•; R.l'..\.F .• \s>ocia- 000 toda.''· It is estimated h.v

1

tnnbrr stands 111 Lahrador.lasi·Av 1 11 ._, d 'th .·

F• p . . . en• e co tue WI a car · '· · ;,,,r; ~!r Grll. C. Chalker; :\cw- the Dominion Bureau of Slalis- 1rst astor , summer and satd If lhls con- making a left turn iulo Bona-. fo;:cr.;;n~d Brewery Ltd.: Ben· tics that some $80 million will ~lr .• J11hn R. O'Dea, of tlw cr,_ tmues there won't be much tnn- . 1 . 'l'h. · t t k'

" 1 I B . 1' I I Nil! 'd . ,. her left H • lh ·t len me. ts car In urns rue r.r:: orcwl'r) • .t< ; arartan he invested in new construction . (II <'< • <. part)' sa1 111 liS ,\Jr. O'Dea in clo>in~ his . - e urge.. r cons rue. a rar slopped ,t the &top sign. , B~f" m; l·o \.11!. alone in 1960. This includes ex- Trinity Lutheran Church will ;pc•(•rh on the budgrt clcha\(' >pecrh referred to the Gu\·,· 1·11 • · ll?n of a W(nter road bet wee~ The dril·cr of the car that·

s:(l fo{l r~rh--Pnncr>~ Orches·, pcndilures on new housing, hold a special seJ·1·irc on Th•trs- th;1t the ~it.e ol !he Newfound- mcnt's investment of $14 ntd· D.1ttle Harbour and Cartwngh. t d · t El. h th A . rl · J 30 1 1 8 0 1 1 1 · - urne m o • (Za e venue,

tr.: ~lr>. ~\. \'icars. Jlllblic utilities. defence bases. ay c1·enm~ unc t 1. a . t l:!nd Ci1·il Service was tar too lion in the fishery. He said he an< c ;umcd that Sl(ll'e the pen-. h's 1·r a 1 h'lrl ·• t · 11 p · r w 1 1 · 1 1 h' d. . 1. d . (. w e m one c 1 , restuen s ~i~7.00-~~th. ( :'\'fld: Heavy roads, ports and federal and p.m., m te rmce o a cs arge. "\\'c do not need 5000 ,I cit ~ure thai no one regrets P c o ts tstrtcl re tc on wild of Freshwater Road, were·

Rc ~~ 1 Dance'· provinetal buildings and other Annex to install the Rcl'crcnd people to run the administration 1 this, since it had created em-. h!c lor the(r fresh meal they brou•hl 10 th G 1 H ·. ~c"' ""\'' \' t Cl h h · 1 1 d d · thi \V1'llt'am Kttrscltt'n<kt' as ti1B f1·r·t f N' r II 1" h 'd 1 ·hot(!\ t h t f 1· ~ e enera ospl s:: .., ,.,~ .• ar r erans u . sue Items. nc u e 111 s · ' ' o ew oun( an(, e sa1 . , p oyment, and urged the further , c no ave o pay or 1c-, Ia\ where thev were treated for

, :110 donallom 1. total are such projects as the pastor of I he newly organized · On Civtl Service salaries, the development of the fishery. ence to hunt. racial injurie~ that in all three s-67 56-St. John's Laurier expansion or your university congregation. .

1 U~P members said that they' L,\8Rt\DOR SOUTH · • 1 · h

l·n tht's ct'tl' and the modernJz. Gttcst preach•r for the spN•tal .. r · · 1 I rases reqmreu sel'era stttc es. C:~h. ' 1

range rom the nd~eu ousl)• : Sp(•aking after ~lr. O'Dea was Th 1 d 'I E p att'on of the port or St. John's, ! service will be the Rei'. Dr I d L w Iff H cy were atrr released and 5:! 0<1--~lr an _, n. . . f N y k · ow to the n iculously high. i the ;11ember for Labrador South ee u ere sent to their home. Another.

~:oa~!er. · as well as many privately-fi- · Karl Ilenr)' o 'ew or • the ·From $600 to over S20.UOO. per .\Jr. Geor~e Sellars w!1o con"en: DA \'ID N. RAINFORD · I 1 r 1 .. ' c·hild in the car es~aped unhurt. S5 ,,,'1-,\r .hmrs ~1. Brad- nanced projects such •~ the, secre ary or sllrl'cy anr re- )'car." A girl on a swilchhl1r.rd trntcd on the needs of his dis-· Th d · f h ·

1 ne1 .. 01·1 reft'nery to be but'lt not ! search for the Board of Am~ri- Lrr \\'ul£1, famous sportsman. e m·er 0 t e car gomg Warrant Officer Class I David ~~·"· 1 .• I 1. . f th l' . 1 starts at a SJOO a month while, trict. . cast on Elizabeth Avenue wa' To(ai ~ 0 rlatr-S602.M. far from this city. can 1\ tsston.s o . e n1_tcr many people working in institu- 1. He be!·ated the Federal Gov- IVTJtcr, and former Public Rela- X. Rainford of Calgary, Alta ..

I th Chu I tn Am r t r f arrested hy city police anrl h. f 1 k t th A • ,.,. · ---·- -- ---- ,u era~- .~c I c tea. 'lion~ get less, he dcclat·ed, and: ernmcnl for breaking another, (Ons man or. ~c~· oundlfnd, charped Wllh criminal ncgh. r (e c er. a e rmy s ,, 111111·

81 P F The sen tee 1\tll be conducted , went 011 to say that he was \'cry: term of the Terms of Unions,! landed at Qnuli ':Hit ycslrfday. genre. All three vehicles 8us- peg headquarters since 1951.

Ue rl•nt or by the Rev. Douglas Conrad of I glad to see that there will be, term 31 which deals with pub 'mornmg at 11.30 m hts prll•atc t . • 'd I . will be posted to Newfoundland llall.fax prest'dent of the No1•a ' ' ' · pi atnru consl rrah e damage. J I 1 t Ar th ·t· h . ' :a st•lary increase for tile lower 'lie ~crviccs, works nnd pro- : ane. u Y 5 · my au on Ies al'e Scotta S~nod. . , income groups. pert irs. ~lr. Sellars concern is ' ~lr. Wulff, who is probably I announced.

Vocational F~llowm_g the s~rvtce a re- The lifting of the food tax is' with communications in La bra- 'better known to Newfoundland-) B • h ' He joined the Anny In De-

Ed e ' ceptton Will be .gll'~n Pas~ or a very good thing. ~!r. O'Dea! dor, specifically the telephone crs for the sports films he's' rig t : cember 1939 and saw service ir. Ucatlon ~ a~d Illr~. ~~rJchmskt to ":luch . said, but what Minister "gives ·line between Blanch Sablon on~ made for th_e Tourist Bo.arti. is' ; Calgary, England, France, Bel-i a are nvt e · with one hand he takes back : the Quebcc-Nfld. border and ·on one of hts frequent V1s1ts to . JV 1 1 gium and Holland during the

with the other. Jnderd he takes 1 Red Bay. a distance of 50 miles. 1 Newfo~ndland with. regard to' LightS i war. During post war rean he

A ba~ic blue print for I'O· posite schoo\-()ne in which a FIRES it three-folrl." Every sent the: The line was laid prior to the: Wild hfe _and sporttng, and he 1 • has held chief clerk appoint-

catJOnal education in New- general or college preparatory )linister spends comes out or I federal government to a private 'Will rematn here for a week or The added penalty of being' ments with Army Headquarters !oundland school~ was present· course and at least one vo- the people's pockets said ~lr. 'company. This line is badly: two. . in the limeli~ht was noted at at Ottawa and Oakville, Ont.. ~d to drle~atrs or the New- cation course are offered. Such Citv firemen recelred onh· 'O'Dea indeed between the two 1 needed in Labrador South. :\lr.l the Board of Trad~ dinner las! and Fort Churchill, .Man. !oundland Teachers· Associ- a school, indicated the guest two calls ycsterdav. One at 1.2S 1 governments federal and Pro-: Sellars said, but he cannot find . night. on. D. Fleming, the I H~s fa~her, ~~~rB.'" R1a4lptbb 5Rain-llion at their annual dinner at speaker, offers its students both p.m. was from ~ house on. vincial an am?unt of $!10 million

1 an~o_ne willi_ng to take rcspon- Jnj'Ured In main speaker, had to face two or rest es a .. ., treet

tht Ptonecr Drive-In last e1·en, the I'Ocational and liberal ele- Queen's Road where a washer · ts collected 111 taxes, a ftgure 1 stbtltty for 11. not can he ftnd ; batteries of powerful TV lights Southwest in Calgary. m~ The ~uest speaker. Mr. menls that are such an essen· was on fire. The other, at 7.30 amounting to 30 percent of the 1 any agreement mane between

1• for the entire duration of his ---·----

tieorbe Roberts. a former presi- lial element in the complete p.m. was from Marl)''s Lunch, total income of Newfoundland- Nfld and the Conadian Go1·rrn- ACCI" dent ·speech. The temperature in :he dent of the Canadian Teachers', education or youth. But an in· where 1 fire had taken place ---------··-- - - .. _______ :ballroom was close to 88 and the Three Child real rtdtra1tnn. ~a,·e a comprehcn- I lelligent administration was under a cooler. There was no . G c I lights did not improl'e the situa-~~~·e stud)' of "\'ocalional Educa- I considered by the speaker to damage In either case. reen·e Thirty. one. year. old Frank lion. tJ(>n in the Secondary Schools''. he imperative in I composite omp etes· Knight of this city was flown to Hl't By Cars b~fore a large ~athering of in- · school for an effective balance ' Quebec from Labrador Tuesday There Is nn air ronditioning terested educationists and their to be maintained between I vo- police Blotter night for treatment of injuries in the hotel. rxcrpt for the win· iUests. . cational and 1 liberal arts pro- H 1 s h • suffered in a car accident. dows.

Introduced hy the president ::ramme. . Nine arrests were made by ; IS peeC ! Knight, an employee of tiie (If the :"\rll'foundland Teachers' 1\!r. Roberl~ also contended 1 city police late yesterday and 1 ~ Newhook and lllorgan l\linin" · c Al->nciallon. Re1·. Br. J. B. that a major problem facing . over night. Se1·en were for , Companv at Sudbury Lake su;. R MP Cpl

A se1·rn year old girl, residl'nl or O'Reill)· Al'enue, was struck hy a car on Cornwall Avenue at 11 a.m. yts terday. The child tUS· tained only minor bruisea. Dare~·. ~\r. Rob~rts pointedly ~ocational and technical schools 1 drunkenness, one for criminal , Opp -·r L d J J . 1 1 t h 1. : taineu f~actures of the hip and •

ht~hli~ht~d the ad1·antage in was the difficulty of attracting I negligence and one under war- G., os~ ton 1 1 e~ ;r arne~ · 1 aT~~m~I 1° r.eprledsedn t he par ~ · thigh. •ocattonaltrainin~ of the com-• (Continued on page 8) rantrorassault. th,.cebne_,comt pete d tsstpteec oniAe. ue 1\ou ollt eb new! ------- found Dead

_____ ·------------ ----------' e uuge yeser ay a ernoon. mencan party we ecause• • Before he fini~hed, ~lr. Greene like that animal it has no pride I 18th PoliO Case

A 13·year-old boy. riding a bicycle was hit by a ear on Jo~ St. at 12.~1 p.m. He su•tained nc injuries.

Lives Of Great Men Recalled drw the attention of the House of ancestory or hope of progeny. , William Wiseman, a 43-lo the growth in the Nlld. Civil ~!r. Greene said he hoped that I The 18th polio case this year year-old RCMP torporal, A 2)·ear-old girl from Cashir Service and quoted comparative the UNP would not take offence; in Newfoundland and the 12th. : wa• found dead In a tar A1·enua sustained a fracture(

In HI. storl· c Sessl· on Of The figures for the provinces of I at his story. I in the western part of the prov- ' ncar Twlllingate early Wed- skull when ahe was hit by a cat Nova Scotia and New Bruns- . . i ince was reported yesterday. : nesday. J!CMP said Wise- . near her home at 3.50 p.m. yes wick, whose number of civil. In closmg ~lr. Gre~ne claim· 1 The victim is a two-year-old · man had ~hot himself. · terday. The thild was brough

Legislature In Former Chamber I servants per capita is lower a!-! ed that he had not lned to em-· Corner Brook boy. There has • Further particulars were • to tile ~era! Hotpitll and de : though their population are I barrass the Government nor I been one death. not available. i tained. greater. had he lrted to ~~lay the debate ====-============================-----

was a shock of horror in the · A MULE by mean~ or a .fthhuster. He re-community," he ~aid. I Turning to fellow opposition peated hts earher cla_tm that the Premier l~nd 14 Other

Members Make Speeches Regarding the tradition of members in the UNP, lllr.l ~.overnment was trymg . a new I

wearing a hat in the House o! i Greene said he sometimes gets 1 kmd ~f closure by makt~g the A!lSembly the Premier said I the impression that a unique Opposthon spe_ak ear her tn the some reporters had been con- 1 situation exists in the House, debate. but satd. he would be I fused. Members could wear their I There is a party which critizes pr?~red to .a?mtt .that he was

A fnal sitting of the House of, high-minded man. hali all the time in sessions. I the Government and a third un u Y1 sustc•~u~ If the debate I As~embly in the old chamber in : He then referred to the late , taking them ofi only when they i party which crilizes the Of· ~ere d c ~se an e :-"as not fol­the Colonial Building was held Sir William Coaker as "the most I rose to speak. In this respect I ficial Opposition. He went on owe Y a succeSSion of Gov­Wednesday morning. The idea outstanding man who sat bere." he recalled Sir Michael Cashin I td say that the situation remind- ernment speakers. of the session was fostered by His fishery regulations were who always wore his hard hat ! ed ttim of a Southern Senator's Tht Telegram 111 an editorial , attacked by the strong Oppcsi· in the Assembly. ' re~ction to _the existence of a acted upon by the Premier. 'tion of the day for two years The Premier recalled some thtrd party tn the U.s. The Sen-

The st>ssion ~are the new! until Coaker made one of his other members of the past ator is said to have suggested members. elected for the first. rare speeches and won them halcyon eras-John Abbott, a that the new party take a :VIule hme last August. to speak for' over. 'great admirer of Gladstone, and for its national emhlem in the first and last lime in tile i Sir Michael Cashin. Sir John an omniverous reader. A Tar- keepin~ with the Amcric~n poli- ,

Driving Is Hard Work

old and hallowed chamber. . 1 Crosbie, also in the t:oaker era, gett and Dick Hibbs, Bob Win- tical tradition of choosing an Tht principal speaker was I were also mentioned by the sor, Captain Jones, Jack Scam·

Premier Smallwood who traced Premier. In continuing discus- mel, Sol Samson and Walter his connection with the old sing Conker, the Premier said Jennings, who wore his Salva· House of AMemhly back fifty it was well nigh impossible to tion Army jersey with the SA years. He was. in 1911, attend- defeat him In elections. The emblem on it at every session. ing nearby Bishop Feild Col- Premier said he had many The Premier referred to the le~e and slipped into the cham· walking sticks of the great men doyen of members, Hon. J. '1'. ber alter school to bear the of the past-Morris, Whiteway, Cheeseman, Minister of Fisher­debates. Later he was a member Bond ,and Coaker. He knew well ies, who was a member back in of the press galler)'. the five elected Prime Minis· 1919 for Burin. He also re·

The Premier recalled some of ters before CIJnfederalion- ferred to the late Sir Albert tht actions and foibles of many Bond. Morris, Squires, Monroe Walsh. first native-born licut­of the great pretniers and op- and Alderdice. He knew Sir enant governor; and the present position leaders and rank and Richard Squire.. intimately, sitting senior member for Har· file members of the past. Sir worked with him and wrote his hour Main, Hon. P. J. Lewis. Edward Morris, Sir Robert last manifesto. There were still eight mem­Bond-the latter the last of the The Premier recalled the bers of the original first gov­Edwardian type with gracious group known as left of centre ernment since Confederation In demeanous and the user of far before their time-George the house, the Premier said and cboice Ianguaee. Only the less Grimes, George Soper Hyram referred to the only ·private eultivattd me~el'l harassinR Young. They were young social- member, Mr. P. J. Canning, him would put Bond off his isis who met In Lyon Studio on Placentia West, who would be atride. the Premier aald. Water Street on Sundays and elected as long as he sought to

The Premier also recalled Dr. I read aloud the works or Wil· run. A. Barne.., the fiut Minister of llam Morris, Bernard Shaw and The Premier recalled that at Edilc:ation, whom be called a olher Fabian aoclallsts. _"There (Continued on page 8)

..

Elected To Board Of Directors

V. A. Ainsworth of the New­foundland Light and Power Co,. was elected to the Board of Di· rectors or the Canadian Elec­trical Association the annual meeting of the Association held on June Z7th, at Manoir Riche lieu, Murray Bay, Quebec.

· Dri1·ing these days is really i work after al\. but it can be !

fun if motorists will 'Slow 1

Down and Li1·e' especially so I during the long Dominion Day weekend holiday, July 1st, 2nd and 3rd. Dominion Day is a time for memories in the prov­ince of Newfoundland - but there's one memory we'd all like to avoid if' possible: That would be the memory of a needless inexcusable traffic ac­cident bringing death or serious injury to a loved one. The Safety Council of Newfound­land asks all motorists to ob­serve speed regulations, be !

courteous to others, allow Mr. Ainsworth was one of the plenty of space between cars,

past presidents of the Electrical obey- traffic signs and signals Association to be elected to the -and never pass on hill or Board or Directors. The other CUI'ves. If these simple pre· past president of the Board is cautions are obserl'ed the long ; N. S. Crerar or the Saguena)' , weekend holi!lay will' be a sale Power Company. I and pleasant one.

(

VACATION-TIME

DRESSES WE HAVE THE PRETTI EST LITTLE DRESSES IN TOWN FOR· THE PRETTIEST LITTLE GIRLS AROUND.

COME SEE FOR YOURSELFI

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------------------------------------------T~H~-~~ILY.~F..'.''_S, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960

THE DAILY NEWS tJewfoundland's Only Morning Pa~r

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and all forei~n countries $14.00 per annttm .ftuthorizcd a.• second class mai! Post mtice Department, Ottawa.

The DAILY NEWS Is a mDI'Dfn! paper established in 1894, and pub­lished at the News Building 355-359 Duckworth Street, St. John's, New· loundland, by Robinlcm & Company Limit"d.

MEMBER OF TilE CANADlA~ PRESS

The Canadian Prell 05 excluslvel) ~ntitled to the use for republication of all news despatches In thla paper crediied to It or to the ,\ssoclated t'ress or Reuters • and also the local oP.ws published therein.

A \1 Pres~ • ervica and teaturo article~ In this paper are copyrighted and their reproduction is prCihiblted.

• '

JUNE

Member Audit Bureat.

of C!rculatlon.

1960

Mr. Fleming Makes His Bow ftfnce :\ewfnumllaml hecame

Canadian pro,·inn'. tlw Board of Tradt• has pro\'ided a forum from which certain senior fedt'ral cah­inrt mini,trrs ha\'t· been ab!P to addrr~s tlwm~l'IH•s to till' people of \ rwf oumlland.

\I r. C. D. llnwe \\'<IS the first. He said wn· little of l'tlllst•qttl'llcr. \Jr. ~inrlair was nrxt ami his thrmr was tilt' lrt•mt>ndous bene­fit~ that confederation had t•mtfrr­rrd nu \t·\\·fnundland. \lr. Ful­ton·~ tlwmr was litth' different il more pleasanth· prrscnlt•d. Tllt' ~fini~trr ol Finance has submitted a more balanced \'iew of union as a two-wa\· street and quilt> evi­denth· did some careful homewor~ in preparation for this spcakinc: e>n!!agrmrnt. But he has added ntllhing IH''' P\rC'pt an unqttcstion­ahh frit>wlh- approaeh.

The fact is that those who had f'\'Cn modro;t expt'(•\ations have hern di~appointrd sinet' nothin~ has hren rhangrd and the most importaut !!eshtrr of all was omit­trd. That was the assurance that \lr. Diefrnhaker had undergone a rhan~t' of mi11d ~ince his statement tltl \larc·h :?..). 1959. that the pay­ment~ to hr made under the \lc\air award would hr "in final a1,d i;-re\'lltahle settlement of the pr<wi~hms of article 29 and the l·nntradua\ ohligations of the uninn c:onsununated in 1949."

\n promi'r or assurance of rc­,·iel' '1! and consideration for i\c\\'· f;,unrllaHth ~pedal prohlt•ms can c·nmp:'n~atr for that em! repmlia­til'ln of the Terms of rnion. Yet !he matter could he H'lT easilv re<nh-ed. It would require· only the admi~~inn that Term :?.9 still stands and that an,· re,·it>w of onr finan­cial nerds ·would he conducted within its orhit.

\1 r. Firmin)!; must he given credit for acknowledgmt>nt of the wT\· larg(• contribution that New­foundland has made and is making to tlw wealth and stature ol Can­ada. He is the first federal minis· ter to admit our pre-union dis· &bilities and the need to remed,,

athem. But for all the impressive list of figures that he presented there were serious omissions apart from the failure to rectifv the Prime ~linister's unhappv "final and irre­\'ocable" statemen-t.

One was that conditional grauls which require the poorest province to pay the same proportion of cost as the richest province are inequit­able.

Another was his failure, havin1~ admitted the inadequacies of New· foundland's transportation facili­ties. to make constructive pro­posals for their improvement or to offer ~reater aid in the completion of the Trans-Canada Hi~hway.

Yet a third was to overlook the serious condition of unemplov­ment in Newfoundland and to make no sng~estion at all about federal aid in supplving a cure.

We have the worst communica­tions of anv provincr, the most difficult social and financial prob­lems because of the dispersal of onr population alon~ a perimeter of 6,000 miles. the highest frei~ht rates and also the hi~hest cost of living. It is possible that these things may receive some attention during the promi~ed fiscal review but it is disappointing that ~lr. Fleming proposed no constructive solutions from the federal stand­point.

~lr. Fleming was informative on man\' matters of national fiscal policy. ' His speech was well­intentioned. comteons and frir.nd­h·. A ncl there will be satisf ae­tion with his desire to see as much as he can of the province during the next two days.

But the fact remains that his speech has altered nothing since the debate on the Newfoundland additional grants hill a year a~o. Tt is, we think, particularly regret­table that it has neither amended nor qualified the unilateral repudi­ation of the Terms of Union which was the essence of ~lr. Diefen­haker's statement of ~larch 25 of last year.

Standards Of Teaching In the course of his thoughtful

and constructive presidential ad­dress at the annual convention of the :\ewfoundland Teachers' Asso· dation, Rev. Brother J. B. Darcv discussed the importance of higher professional standards.

This is a matter with which the ~.T.:\. has been long concerned. But the great difficulty is that the luge annual increase in school en· rolment and the many teachen who ue taking time off to study at the university to improve their grades have created a serious prob· lem of teacher supply.

Another obstacle to the general improvement of standards is the fact that few well-qualified teach­ers ue willing to accept sole­charge or two-room schools in the isolated areas of the province.

These have often to be supplied by inexperienced and even imma-ture persons. .

One useful remedy would be a major increase in tlie number of supervisors. This has fallen far be­low the minimum need. In fact, it is probably half of what it shonk be in order that supervisicm in the more remote parts of the island may be maae truly effective. Special inducements should be of­fered to well-qualified persons to enter the field of supervision and an effort should be made to raisP the number of supervisors to not fewer than forty.

That seems to be the minimum number required tu allow supervi­sion to play its full part as a useful means of improving the staudards of teachin~ throughout the prov· ince.

Forget-Me-Not Appeal The Newfoundland branch of

the Canadian Legion has this week conducted the annual F01:get-Me· Not appeal in aid of its special we]. fare services.

Ailing veterans of both world wars and their dependents are the beneficiaries of this special fund The Legion regards them as a spedal ~e but the)' are also a special obligation of the ge'leral public.

The debt to those who served and fought in these two conflicts is an .enduring one. It can never be fully repaid. But it should be always aclmowledged and this weelC's appeal affords an easy way o~ acknowledging it.

The goal is a modest one and we trust that it will be much ex­ceeded as the result uf a geuerou~ Eublic response to one of the most deserving of all causes ..

IN THE NEWS By Wayfarer

BACKGROUND TO THE BUDGt-;'1'

There have been three major phases In the financial his!ory of Newfoundlantl since the beginning of rcpresenlatil'e government. In the first period between 1832 and 1934, spending was limited by two factors. These were the taxes that • could be collected from the people ol Newfoundland and the amounts that could be borrowed on the credit of the colony. By 1900, revenue had increased to about two millions a year and debt to about $20 million. In the aftermath of the first world war, a period extend. ing from 1919 to 1934, revenue averaged barely $9 million a year and debt rose to nearly $100 million. By the ~ummer of 1932, Interest on the debt was con· ~uming more than half the total revenue and sources of borrowing had dried up. Short-term loans were procured to pre­vent default on the debt but nevcrthe· less services had to be cut to correspond with the small amount of money left in the bands of government. This meant cutting by one·half the salaries of civil servants and teachers, and the awards to pensioners, and bringing to an abso­lute halt all ~pending on roads and other capital services. Left completely to our own resources, we found our whole social,.fabric in a slate of rapid disintegration.

The second period was the Commis· sion era which lasted from 1934 to 1949. In lhallime. three major change~ occurred. One was that the British go1·ernment, to a modest degree, sub· sidized a minimum hutl~et. That allow ed us first to restore the curtailed ser­vices and then to introduce some im porlant improvements in organization. quantity and quality in health, educa· lion and roads. Another wa~ the eco nomic rel'olution lbat occurred during the war-a period in which little was done to improve services but general prosperity produced soaring revenue~

which allowed a very substantial cash resen·c to b~ built up. And the third change was the reali7.alion at the end of the war that the social servircs were ~till in the embryo stages of develop­ment. In the post-war era the Commis· ~ion allocated about $10 million a vcar to the expansion of social capital· but was still able to retain its cash rcscrl'e whkh amounted to $40 million at the time of 11 nio n.

'l'lw third period of our lmancial his­tory saw us under the necessity of ad­justing ourselves to a completely new set of circumstances. Our so\'ereign responsibilities had entlcd. The Domin­ion of Canada look from us our two principal sources of revenue but as­sumed responsibility for such public services as customs, posts and telegraphs, marine works and railway transporta­tion. It extended to us also such feder­al social security plans as then existed and gave us modest compensation through the tax rental agreements for o~r lost revenue sources. · But an addi­tional factor was present and was in· rorporated into the Terms of Union.

This new factor spran~ from the haste in which union was brou~ht about. There was a glimmering of realilation that. by ·canadian criteria, our public ~ervices were substandard at the time of union. There was doubt also whether the financial terms were equal to mini­mum need. And out of thc~e imponder­ables grew Term Twenty-nine. Its pre­amble a¥erted the difficulty of pred:~t ing with accuracy thP financial consequ. cnces to Newfuundland of becoming a Canadian province and it spelled out the metltod by whieh error could be corrected. This was the crucial term. Without it, ronfctlcralion was impossible. \\'ith it, Newfoundland could face a more secure future.

t:nder sclf.gol'ernmcnt. we coul!l ,pend what we could ~ct from taxes and borrowing. Under Commission Gov crnment \l'e could spend what we

could obtain from t<~xcs and Vnil­ed Kingdom subsidies. But und••r Confederation, we were gil'rn a numbrr of years in which to try to raise the levels and standards of our public ser­vices with the assurance that-and this is important-having taxed ourseil•es to reasonable limits we could look to the government of Canada to make good the ~ap between what we could raise in re\'cnuc and what we needed for a mod· est standard of public scn·ices by Can. adian criteria. But nobody guessed in 1949 how far we were behind in these services, how much it would <·nst to im­prove and continue them. and how re­markably our population would increase ~·ear by year. The~e arc facts that con. 'titute a nrerssar)· background to a re 1·icw of the 1960-61 budget.

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What Others Are Saying FAlSE }'OR MPs Victoria Times

Clearly membership in Parliament has become a fulllime job for the average member. He musl spend so much of the year in Ottawa that he can hardly pursue another career in ousiness or the professions, not a successful career a• any rate. This fact will bave to be recognized sooner or laler. and thr sooner thr better. If we insist that members mrel almo~t continuously, with occasional recesses. as in Britain, then we must pay them a living wage.

----CONGO F.XODUS

(Winnipeg Tribune l The exodus, or perhaps more accurate­

!~·. the flight of Europeans from the Belgian Congo which has been taking place in re('ent weeks will increase from now until June 30, the day the territory l(ains independence. The whites are leaving the country in fear of their li1·c~.

They can hardly be blanwd. The na· til'e population lolals about 13 million -the non-African population onl~· about 115,000. The Europeans could be com· pletely submerged in a territory that seems to be beading into a period or violence and chaos.

The Belgian Congo has rich resources and the native population enjoys the highest standard of living In Africa. But because of past policies there is an al· most completed lack of responsible leadership among the Africans. The Belgian administration provided ele­mentary education and technical train· ing to the native population but gave no encouragement to higher education. It Is reported that up to last year there was not a single native doctor, lawyer or architect In the colony.

When the agitation for independence began, the Belgium Government took the stand that It was impossible to retain authority without using force and re· pression. It decided with shattering suddenness to grant independence, even though there was little sign that the Congolese could provide themselves with stable government.

The flight of Europeans from the Congo will doubtless have an effect in South Africa. It will probably harden the Verwoerd Government's determina· tion to maintain its policy of white su· premacy at all cost!.

ELECTION DRINKS (St. Thomas· Times Journal)

Thoae who· believe In drinking be· tween or after meals have managed to get their foot In the door so to speak, and the Election Committee of the House oi Commons, which heretofore hu guarded the Canadian voters against being bribed during election campaign haa capitulated. .

AdmittedlY It Ia only coffee that Is to be given the nod. But If the amber colored liquid In a tea cup can be served. who knows whether it Is not "Irish Coffee" (containing Irish whisky). Thf Committee has indicated that the ban on treating Is to be lifted. The com mlttet has asked Mr. Castonquay the chief electoral officer to redraft the aection, maklnc it possible to serve cof fee and similar llllht refreahments at

social gatherings held by political par· tics and at which candidates or cam paigning politicans arc present. The new provision will prohibit the candi dates from paying for the refreshments, and if they arc bought by his agents they will have to be reported as election expenses.

The prohibition against treating ha~ been in the Election A<·t for long years. put there und~uhtedly to curb the prae lice of earlier years when thr <"!llldidale' prol'idrd mu<"h ;lronger ltquids. But now that lhe totalit~· has been breal'i1cd and cnffee made legal, what about tea. milk. chocolate milk, milkshake~. the fizzing bottled beverages coveretl by the term soft drinks.

There will be certain people in Canada some of them in every prol'ince, who will view with alarm the lowering of the barriers-fearful that some ingenious in· dividual will invenl a he1·crage thai looks like coffee or lea, smells like they smell. tastes like they taste. hut has a kick in it that will make the boys and girls come back for more. E\'Pry pcr>on who rcquesls that their "roffee" be served neat, that is without cream or sugar will. be suspect.

SILENT AND GRACIOUS LIVING Vancouver Province

Mr. and Mrs. George Lusher of Laugh­ton, England, did not exchange a word with each otber from 1949 to 1956. The master of the house was expecting an apology for some hot words aimed at his head seven years ago when he came home late from golf. The Lusher home was one of the most peaceful in Britain.

This is not to say that a seven-years · silence should be commended as an infallible method of avoiding martial strife. It is, to say the least of it, a de­featist attitude.

But it is significant that when Mr. Lusher broke his silence and asked for a cup of tea in 1956, the long period of. peace was over. Mrs. Lusher at once went to a lawyer to apply for a divorce.

Tbe Judge's comment' is wortb study. He said the Lushers were, in their way, still fond of each other. It may have been that he was comparing them with many more talkative couples who had come before him. The divorce was re­fused.

Peace and :oilence has descended over the lilac-clad villa of the Lushers In Laughton. They may have found the ~ecret of gracious living together.

Perhaps some nations might with benefit try the Lusher method and retire into silence.

SLEEP NO MORE .•. Vancouver Sun

The horror of the machine age (air craft diviaion, jet class) caught up with Canadians.

That was when Transport Minister Hees gave the dusty answer to an 'M.P who complained that jet aircraft a' ~alton airport keep people awake. Na lurally the M.P. wanted it stopped.

Let them do without sleep, Hees sw 111 &ffect. This is the jet age.

Jet age, nuclear age, machine age It's all one. It wasn't only Macbeth that murdered sleep.

11 No, No, Stu-Like This! ....

Edson In Washington

STl'DY WAYS TO STRE!'\GTHE:'i l'.S. DIPLO)IATIC REI-ATIOSS

By PETER EDSON :'lEA Wa~hington Correspondent

WASH!NGTON-<NEA)- New look> at how to conduct foreign relahms a•·r being taken here as a result of diplo malic hi1st~ in the last month

This is already a maj~r issue in t~e

election campaign. Several c~mmitlces

of Congress are sludving it. An Amer• can Assembly of toreign policv exprrtf is s~hrduled at Arden House. H?rrima~o. :-; ew York, this fall to study what lhr role of the l'.S. secretary of stale shoul•l be.

Sec. Christian A. Herter. Jr., recently 1old Senator Henry ~1. Jackson's Suh committee on National Policy tha< while the American presirknt had prim­ary responsibility for the <'!lllnciation and conrluct of foreign policy, his in· ternational uurdens are indescribably heavy,

There is an implication here that per sonal diplomacy condu\'lcd hy lhe head of go\'ernmt•nl-whkh has been made '0 mut·!: or in the past )'Par-is not a!! il is crac:;erl up to hr.

To relin·e the Prewlrnt of part of his load. lhe .Jacl;~on rommitler has sug~estcd th<' <Teation of a new super­secretary of state who would have n­sponsibi!ity for both foreign and nn tiona! defense policies.

Herter turns this down as impractical. \\'hat he su~gests inslead is that more of the load be carried by amhassadors anrl that even the sccrelary of state should he excused from having to at­tend all the meetin)(s of foreign mim strr$.

t:p to a month ago lop personal rl1p lomacv was hailed as a ~real thing. President Eisenhower's good will vi>ilo to Europe. Asia and South Americo were considered diplomatic triumphs But that's all changed now.

The difficulty seems lo have arisen from confusing per~onal diplomacy­which is a temporary thing - with the day-to-day diplomatic, economic and cul­tural relations which must be carried or forever if there is to be peace in the world.

Withdrawal of personal invitations to visit Russia and Japn undoubtedly hurt the President's pride.

But Mr. Eisenhower, Nobusuke Kishi nd even Nikita Khrushchev will not re­main hearls of their go••ernmPnts for­ever. And relations between the Unit­ed States, Jaan and Russia mu£t go on. From this it might be c~ncluded that the more impersonal tbe rela!ions hPtwecn governments, the more lasting they '"ill be.

Russia's K'hrushchev has used per­sonal diplomacy-visits to foreign coun· tries-to stir up trouble, as in South Asia. Some of his recent good will tours have not been too successful, as in Indonesia and France.

He is now scheduled to visit Africa, Cuba and perhaps olh~r South Ameri can countries ir' he can wani(IP invila· lion. And no good can co:;;~ !rom that.

Visits of foreign heads of governmen: to the United States ha\'e generally been considered successful. But this country has run into many difficulties in the last few years by putting too much emphasis on personalities.

It disapproved of some of the thing: Egypt's President Nasser did - ant. tried to punisb bim by witbdrawin: qupporl for the Aswan Dam project­with rather sorry consequences.

The United States now disapproves o1 :uba's Premier Fidel Castro with goor' reason. And there are some in the U.S who would try to gel at him by changin~ 1 he sugar law in such ways that lhr real sufferers would be the Cuban peo pie.

The United States has also come to l

RICOCHET By BRUCE BIOSSAT

The 21-gun salute is the traditional greeting for a visiting head of stale . O!Jly the militant Red Chinese would imagine lhere was ad1·antage to be gained by firing 86,000 shells to signal such an arrival-and the firing of 88.· 000-plus shells to mark the departure. These record bombardments of Quemoy, offshore from mainland China. were consrionsly planned lo coincide with President Eisenhower's visit to ~a­

lionalist-held Formo~a. This is cynicism in the coldest blood.

1t is not warfare for strategic or tacti­cal effPct hut strictly for diplomatic propaganda purpose. It is a barbaric nose-thumbing which amply demon­slral~s the unfitness or Communist China for membership in the broad family of nations.

Once again. the Communists show lhemsel\'es thrir own worst enemies. They cannot resist these crude. animal­istic gestures which ddy l'l·en the rough conventions of war. They lii'P without the solid anchor of morality. They ar~

guided by the iron precepts of Com­muni~! te~ching. Again and again. the!e facts lead them to self-defeating action.

Already Peipin~ is in deelinin~ re· plue tlu·ou~hout much of the Asta it srel;s In conquer. Its rnlthles~ smash­ing of Tihet. its depredations on thP Indian border. its earlier assaults on the offshore islands. all hHe ser1·ed to awake neutral. wary Asians to their peril.

What fool in Peiping could rlream that the way to offset such diplomatic losses was to "greet'' the President of the l'nitcd Stairs wilh shells. shells which inel'itahl)' produred their quota of cas· uallirs on Quemoy:

The Asian~. like a ~onrl many people~ rlsr\\"herr. ma_,. hr ~ra\'el)' disturbed at the damage to American prestige in can­:·cllalion of :llr. Eisenhower's ,·isit lo Japan. But the bombardment of Quemoy is hardly the music that will lure them into the Communist fold.

As in Soviet Premier Khrushche\•'s fulminations at Paris, the Communist! once again have overplayPd their hand. Their mistakes are frequently our •ah·a· lion.

As with the mobs in Tokyo, the Reds in Peiping seek here by defiant gesture to insult and humiliate and thus destroy Eisenhower as a world figure bent on peare and good will.

They may ha,·e seriously hampered his ability to give these purposes real effect in policy. But their attacks serve also to engender immPnse sympathy and him down. they in fact help to sustain' him.

The new shcllings of Quemoy are eruel Communist purpose naktdly seen. Peip· ing will be hard put to demonstrate how the shock waves from its guns make the great "wve of the future" that must l'ngulf all Asians.

NEEDED: SOME NEW WORDS One of the economic terms which has

outworn its usefulness is the "blue col­lar worker" as oppose to the "white collar worker."

On second thought. neither of them a)lply any more.

grief by too much support for too long a time of personalities like Venezuela's P-- - Jiminez, Dominican Republic's Trujillo and other discredited dictators. Personal diplomacy works bad both vays.

These are some of the reasolll! why he need for overhauling the entire ;mchlncry of diplomacy - from em· 'assy cocktall party to aummit eonter­·nce-is becoming obvious.

As Herter told the Jackson commit·

'e: ''In this day when there are some 85

ilations which must deal with each other, we may have to dispense with some of the old ways of protocol which we no longer have time to afford.:'

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• 1H! DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960 5

SHOPPING HINTS FROM

ST. JOHN'S "HIGHER LEVELS"· ·sHOPPING COMMUNITY GET THE "BIG 3'' IN FOOD HERE

• QUALITY!

' LOW PRICES!

• SERVICE l ---------------

SNOWFLAKE SHORTENING

29'· pkg.

CORN ON COB ONLY ..... ---32c

lEAN RI"·JDLESS BACON

Best Quality 46c.lb.

BARBOUR'S PEANUT BUTTER

39c . GRADE A FOWL

. agc.lb.

BROKEN ORANGE PEKOE TEA

79c.lb.

JACKMA~d ()~~~\\~ GROCERS

COOKSTOWN ROAD DIAL 2353

"TRY THESE SPECIALS" LAWN FENCING, GREEN PLASTIC COVERED

18" and 36" width.

CHICKEN WIRE-1" and 2" mesh.

SCREEN WINDOWS ................ 98c. - $1.20

PLASTIC & RUBBER GARDEN HOSE $1.65- $6:45.

SPRINKLE WATER CANS

'Galv ............. $2.65

GALV. SCREEN WIRE-24" and 36" width.

ROACH LIME ................................ 7c. per lb.

Electric Lighting Fixtures . Always Available

I

I f I

FREE DELIVERY FRESH COD FILLETT CHICKEN LEGS

29c. lb. 59c. lb.

FRESH SALMON LEI\N SALT MEAT

69c. lb. 39c. lb.

GRADE A EVIS. PORK HOCKS

CHICKEN 39c. lb.

3-4 lb. 49c. lb. TURNIPS TOPS

CHICKEN WINGS SPARE RIBS

35c. lb. 39c. lb.

CHOICE· LOCAL STEER MEAT

LADIES' SUMMER CASUALS

: i~~~-ONS $1 9 8 : ~~~~~,\souRs • PAIR e SIZES 4 TO 9.

THESE ARE ALSO AVAILABLE AT OIJR WATER STREET STORES.

Photograph shows the modern, new Men's Department Ctt Parker & Monroe Limited, LaMarchcmt Read Brcmch, •Nh:ch is designed with extensive open displays for customer-s2lec~iC1n convenience. On display you'll find an outstanding s::lection of casual and dress-up footwear that is carefully cmft!!d throughout, of the finest leathers, in new and d!stinct!ve st}rles for Spring. Features are "K", RITCHIE, JOHN WHiTt, IJATA, SID CAP and the newest addition - famous SCOTT NkHA~E shoes. Visit this attractive, up-to-date Shoe [hpmtment a;:d

. be fitted to complete comfort, in your favourit-e style, by one of their courteous sales-staff. And rem&mber for the fin~st in ''family footwear" it's always Parker & Monroe Limiied.

EXQUISITE FOUNDATIONS

BIG SAVINGS NOW ON BRAS, GIRDLES AND ALL-IN­ONES TO FIT AND FLATTER EV.ERY FIGURE TYPE I

EXQUISITE FORM BRASSIERES IN B~,c.'.DCLOTHS AND RAYON SATIN Assortment of styles end sizes.

PRICE ........................ $1.50, $2.00, $2.50, $2.75, $2.95, $3.00 and $3.9.5

EXQUISITE FORM GIRDLES AND PANTIE GIRDLES EXQUISITE FORM GARTER BELTS IN RAYON TWO WAY STRETCH SATIN

Sizes Small, Medium and Large. 24, 26, 28, 30. PRICES .... $4.95, $5.00, $5.95, $6.50 and $6.95 PRICE ........................................................... $1.75

GOTHIC BRASSIERES IN BROADCLOTH AND RAYON SATIN Includes popular daisy fresh quality.

Assortment of styles and sizes. PRICES ................................ $1.00, $1.25, $1.75, $2.00, $2.50

ALSO WONDER BRA BRASSIERES WITH PETAL BUST.

SPECIAL . LADIES' WHITE CARDI9ANS 100ro SUPER TURBO ORLON. Reg. $5.95 NOW ............................................................ $3.95

REMEMBER IT PAYS TO SHOP AT CROSS'S

CROSS'S '

THE VALUE STORE. SINCE J 904

SHOP HERE and

SAVE

LONG'S HILL ...................... PHONE .4342 DUCKWORTH STREET ....... PHONE 3257

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• 6 THE DAILY NEWS, H. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960 ,__ _____________ _

Social-PerSf)Dal -Coluntn-

10 111:: WED FRIDAY guest o! )lr. and ~Irs. P. J. Can· Tht wedding will take place at ning. 3 Allan~ale Apts .• during

Pan l'nion. 00 Friday el'eni~g her l'isit to the Capital.

Jul,. lsi at 7 o'clock of Dallas ; RETURNED FRO~I Es:ellr Courage, to Thomas • ' ' Bo,.d Butler. The reception tu \ ACATION be ·held at tbe Lochlel'en Hot~:.' lllr. and ~Irs. Wm. Janes of Trinitt Popular Avenue have returned

• · : from their summer vacation.

How to Enjoy A Weekend With Guests

'Mrs. U:n BT TC.t,

:M:-s Florrie Garland, ~1;

:They spent a very enjoyable trip . touring l'arious points across the Island.

I I

Penn~""·ell Road. left by TC.-\ ~'e$!erday to ~.,end the summer r.t.'l Mr $i~ter, ~lr~. Robe1t S;:non> of Ph!'l'nix. C\.Y. She wilt aL<O 1 ~·It friends in ~linncsota l:'ld her aunt in Toronto.

LEM'ISG t'OR TORONTO Even to the hostess, hal'ing . ~!iss Bett~· and Anna Hatfield, guests for the weekend can be i

well known to local radio and , fun, says )I a d a me Jehanc TV audiences as part of the Hat· j Bcn~it. The ~amous ~nnadian : field sisters singing team, arc ~ookmg aut~onty explams how I !caring by TCA on Saturday for I m The .B.eno1t Book of Wee~end. Toronto, where they will in !u· I ~n~ert.amt_ng end C o .u k I n ~ , \'.\C.\ TIOSISG IS CITY

L:\C' Don )!~rcrr. who i~ sta­tioned at Gander. [!, now l'acat· ionm~ m St. John·~. He 1s ;tay· lnl •·1:b h1~ part'n:s ~lr. and ll~. :\!~rrt~. 11 Bond Stn•ct.

lure reside tcP.,ured m the current Issue of : · Canadian Homes magazine. I

FAREWELL PARTY _Her rules for an easy weekend 1

A farewell party was given to , With guests: 1 ~I r~. I.~o Helle on ~londa~· : I. Remember that people ch~ngc : ni~ht. by her relatives and , when they become ~nests. \1 ht·n :

I)ELEG.\TE TO ST,\ fl·icnds. ~Irs. Helle is the 1 away !rom h?me, they tend to: M~ .lame~ rower of St. former .loan Jeans of the city, I eat mot~), drmk more and sleep ,

!~-..·a~c·s Scho~l. ~~~ry;town and w11l be leal·lng St. John's more. I S::u:h is !l·,c rlr;cpte of Rc~ion· with iter husband Airman 1st 12. Plan your meals ahead-! a: B~a~th of C\ewfounrlland cla~s Helle and her bah•· daugh: ~boose them ~o hall your work II

. ' . Its done before the weekenrl. Tuchr~·s A;;ociauon for Burin ter to take up restdence m : 3_ Dangerous time in a weekend 1 Per.:r.f:tla al>~ l! the oif1cial Flowla. ~lr. a~d .Mrs. Helle )is the hour before dinner. Give 1 rcp~r~rn:atl\"f of thr ~lar;->town WJ~l 1:ac_a~1on f1rst m ~ew Jcr·

1 the guests something to do-J

Bra~rh 2: 1he Annual Com·en- !r). ltSittng Mr. Helle s rela· 1 something to drink or nibble on. t:~~ r! "T_~. ~lr!~ r_o_'~~- ~,-~_~_~-~~- And above 1111. the hosle>s ~hould

be re)a.-.1!d and gay to set the ' guests at rase. With ~ood ad· 1

1•-ance planning, she can be. . 4. Guests sleep more, so why ' can't you, too T e II your feminine guests you will s~rve them delicious brunch on Sntur·

T C • I 'I , day and Sunda)', so they can 00y UftlS 5 fiposter - sleep in. For males who like to

get up early, prepare a tray or

And G readv-to-eat breakfast things in . a reat One, at That the kitchen. And Jet them make ' their own coffee.

. • · . : 5. Don't offer three big meals a !I) ERSKISE JOIISSOS ·Lcwt' Stnnc and ~rnie Kovac~

1 day One big meal in lhe even·

Mary Smallwood Retires •

HOLLYWOOD. 1 :'\EA '-Thc help me plar_th~ pmon ward~n. ·in~ ·Is enough. But leave fruit, cal! ~hert h,ts the name of )I)' ps~·cluatmt m Beverly Htlls milk cake or cookies within

Tor.)· Curtts but agam J"m ask- 11"11 reco~mze part. of hims~lf as , easy' reach for the mirlni~ht re· 1~; the doctor of phtlosoph)'. frigerator raiders - and cups. An ·unusual woman is Mrs. tim~ hanging heavily on her gnt ~rr"l satiSfat'tion in ""kh· c!a_:.~-~:"" r•n "~ b~ ~ur~ these As w~ shared, another hand· glasses, spoons, knh·cs and nap- i\larr Smallwood, who ha~ ha<l. hands, she was ~crionsly con- . in~ liH·1r clr1 <'lopnll'nt under

111 ~. of \'Jt~mm~ rony we,nt on:. kins handy on a ll'a~·. duri;ln her 67 '.·ears, thrrc sep- siderin~ a joh ... any jnh, in l1rr l'arr. 8:;-~c:a!l~ 'mce hr·~ pla,_·in£ The 1rapp1st n1onk Lets k • ~ \ 1 k. "7 I " • . , · . 6. Prepare e wee ·enu menu arat~ careers. First as a school spite o( family oh.i<•ctions. 1 :- 111111~ on·m~ " , an< a

J:J: d:!!rrrr.t rolr~ m one film. ·re Oh 1cs 'll1ree p t ~I k 1 k 'I · 11 I • · .' · · ar s 1 IC C)' :completely ahead o! time-Hil! teacher with the Methodist Col· 1 l\lrs. Smallwood did not fhwnt s1wa .,.r. ,, rs. Smn woo< '"Tht Great lmpM!rr.. ~0f1n~~ and one part Arthur :shop Cor it according!;•. Keep the lege, then as a wile and mother, exactly choose her position, al- fel'i> thr tilllc has <'omc for lwr

l:"s thr >tory. ~·ou know. of · 1. _er. The school teacher was menu pinned hand)' on the. of three children, then as· though she was dcrp in thr a!'· to rl'IIrr. A hrokrn hip >uHer­tht fred Dc:r.ara fellow who ca,; -a btl of Ronald Reagan 1 kitchen wn11. . executive director of the·' tid tics of the Y\\'CA. but 111 rtl a year ancl a half ago. has !:as l'oecr. .1u.;t about rHryonc anTd a _lot of Jtmmy Stewart." 7. Plan some activities to do lo· YWCA, and she was successful 1948 the ~xcrutive director. l'urtailrd hrr aetiviti<'s ~otne­r~ce;-t Frar.k Sinatra's body. . on~ chuckled about the PO· ; gether, and others to do separale· in all. 1 Miss Pam Pin,;cnt, resigned to wlwt. makin~ it <liff1~ult for 'u:re he.~ s~rgeant. , . . 1 1~·. • Born Mary Joyce in historic g~t marri<•d. and ~Irs. Small· lwr to move frcrl)' dming the

Ar.d I"m not ~0 ~ure he isn't ~e s !llostl~ my artthmel!c

1

8. Guest rooms should hal'e ·ash· Carbonear, her family moved to , wood was promptly asked i! <l1ffi~ult \I"IHl<'r months. 5':: 3 :~a·; bod)·~ard. tBeac ketr· 1~, hP.S .. d28 back In trays, matches. cigarettes lop- 1• st. John's when she was three., she would ftll lhe position. llow<•IW. she was most sur·

1:::~ d IHrJst of Ton,· Curtis roo 'n e sat · • 1 1 a• To::: Curtt; dates ·back to ' ' · tiona),) a few magazmes anu, She was educated at the ~leth· · SurtJrbrd and pleased, ).frs. prise1l wh<'ll pt•op c Jcgan to "TilE GREAT niPOSTER" Is

1

books I 11 must, l a bouquet of odist College and took up teach· Smallwood. 1 who was mmlt:stly '"mal;c a fuss'' about her re­!-.:; ~n::.c;~!on. not tno Inn~ ago. being played for laughs. Since flowers, a good bed, anrl._emerg·, ing as a career. That career, not certam she was quallf1ed l signm)!. She feels she doc;;n't !!:at ~e >lorcs up m his mmd Fred Demara was unknown to 1 ency blankets for cool nt~hts. ended when she married Mr .. sat~ she would take over as deserve any thinks hcl'ause she': ~;;::~~;~~~~~n;~ ~~:~;;I;::aesr persons he fooled. Tony's on!)• 1 Other suggestions for w~ekend, Walter Smallwood. I actmg execui!Ye dmctor for gotten so much out of a happ)

props are a }'ipe and 1 pair of 1 success by Madame Bcnmt ID· i They had three children, ! one year ... she stayed for' twrh·_c years. c: :at 1 part)· or anywl:ert. and nJasses and of course all those elude: take your guests our· for 1 Fred, who resides in the city, )12 years and proved to e1·cry- This 1s the real ~Irs. ~[ary ti:~~~;.';~ 1 :;r!~:!nai~~/t~!~~~iuee different iittle man~erisms. lunch in town . on Saturday.; Joyce (now ll!rs. James Crosby) 1 one's salisfacti~~ ~he was in· Smallwood, a .m:dcsl, kmdly p1 r: r~lc ;n .. ~orne Lih It Hot" "But" he said. "we're trying Choose an lnterestmg rest~ura~t who Jives in Rothscy, N.B., and deed well quahftcd. . and undcrstandm~ person. She

h h la,.ed hi If to play each role with a differ· beforehand, make .rescn·attons If 1 Howard, who lives in London, 1 A woman who exudes kmd- could ha,·e accepted her . Jot 1 ~ "~;r, ~ I' · mse ' a ent tempo-a different way of necessary, and bemg the hostC3S 1 England. f ness and understanding from twcll"e. years ago and rellred ,-- ,__ • •·· -~ :speaking and different body! <or host order lunch for all. Or., Always interested in y activi·' the first moment you meet her. 1 mto w1dnwhood, but she moved

movements." I i~ lunching at home, mak~ It t1' ties. 1\lrs. smallwood was a ! she says. that if she's had any . with the times, and we h_avc , The film is one of three Tony hght lunch, bouffetstyle, m the: member of the board when in success m the Cteld of the all. m some measure, benefited · still owes UJ on his old contract k1tchen. The secret Is-make 1t 1945, the YWCA opened in its YWCA. 1ts because she enJoys hy 11. and he's working for a salary the one effortless meal of the I present quarters. Unknown to ; her work. which won't e1·en pay his In· weck~nd, save your strength fori herself, she was shaping her One of her grc_atest a,sels · The DAILY l\E\\'S joins come tax. the b1g meal later. . third career. has been her ab1hty to under- with her many friends, in wish·

So. maybe UI better check I To help make t~lngs east~r. I ln 1947 her/ husband died, stand the needs anrl problems in~ her happiness. and a well the fingerprints of this fellow 1 ~ays Madame Benoit, ~se qmck and during the next year with I of today·s yotm~ girls. and sh<• l'nrned rrst. She descn·es it. who says he's Tony Curtis play. tricks fo,r ~ummer cookmg_ Use' _ . _ ---------·- ···-·-ing Great Imposter Fred De·/ ready·mlx or fresh-frozen foods, mara. but add your per~onal season· Give Crocheted Pieces Care

11ASTRO -GU I DEn By Ceean -------------------------------· For Thursday, June 30

Present-For You end Yours . , , Sy,tcmalizins and orgamzmg actiritic' fa, owl. and con,truclil"e ahilit)' highlighlrd. You'll !inti pro pie ait<t;l•' e tn buc;,ine~~ and ~chc:rly ~~~-~~·~htful, force and \"il>hly are ~cccnlcd, nn'd radiation~ are excellent for those. ""ho~c "ark rcqui1·<', 'I rcpgth (or oal!loor o.:cto;:-. tion~.

Past ••. On Jun~ ~0. 1 R:q. ~.000 spcclators \\alche<l Emile Blondin, prole"ionat FH'nch 11Crohat, cro".~ Ni;!gara LdJ, on a lirhlwirc. The J· rcnc1t d.:rc­devil \\Ore pmk 1igh1' and a 'ranglc tunic of )CIIc" <:1•.

F~ .. :ie •.. "i':.:- -..v~t~tcr <'f to. tll~l: rmr ,, •ll 1 hi.: a ~·tl;. ing" jecn- ::r.J \\Ill h~ anlc 10 jump ri·.cro;;, k.:r lo h\'Ll'..Ch)ps 1md hop ar<H!Pd Rl -Ill ml\c,.an-hol'r. And he'll h.nc 'ipc.:i.•\ ~0~~;~,

!nr :.ccm!; througtl r.1m and lf~.

The Day Under Your Sign ARIES (Bo'" Mo"h 21 to Ap1il 191 ~II" \\; .1 1 I <II ],. o,hll~ 1 I i, lto ,t, " t

,.,1,:, ,, •·I 1"' · • '1'•11. \t"'"rr •h·• ,, •Ill ,< tf rn•.

TAURUS JApdllO to M•y 20] Y,, ... ,ll.t •HC'IOfd )lt\llllol I• 'II ,J,,.,,, ~

Ill 1" \I lo ... II T•t]',, •:t:• thr •l.4f•:

GEMINI JMav 11 to Jun• l.I,J .. 0, r "I 1'1 • Ill •\ 11.111"' l11 I,,' ~ I\ 111:• ]'I I\ Ill ... ,,,.,·I I loll l \I •Ill l\ ·1111"·

CANCER (Juno 22 to Jul·1 lll t•>r1J1Jff'l;d l1!HIIIr"• \1 •!lll•f' I'' •! IC•

l!l 'I' ~~~~~ f r• ,01 ,1! '111• 1 ~' I!Hn •

LEO (July 22 to A .. q. lll . . \\,,,,.,\ ''"' ,,,, .. ~· 111·1•'l ,, "t•J~r tn ~o:• t nnt ...,I :on 1'1'"11t• tu~\ r IT,

VIRGO (Auq. 22 to S•ol. lll Ynu ,, ,,. ~d ''"' " Jl ,, 1· • ,,r ·~··,t thr h11urt: b•L•h l"f )''" tm•j ll'l iOI'<''" :,,

LIBRA (c•pl ll to Qd. 111 II , , , ~ , , , .. : .. , :, 1: : , ~ ,I , ·,.:I. : • If ''II:',,,. ·:1~ I•P t ,. I i .. '1•''\(J

SCORPIO (Od. ll to f:o,, 211 1\~.·· \ ,.~ ' .... , .. ,·~· ''l!l~rl t< ·..:h :0' I iL,I~ t.lll•"! t•• t•'·•W }<\,~ \"'•

SAGITTARIUS !fie•. ll to Dee. 211 1 II· ., I" .I II ' 1• ,. ' ' t :t. I . \ T 'rt• ;:· ,,· • , .. .& ., •:·, .. nf !fl •: ,•1 ;ot 1"· :n~.

CAPRICOR~I \Dec. 2l to J'". tOl ;-- 11"< J.t' I ~ I ~ .. ~' ' <, ~ .;,.: ' ( ·~ ,.,,, ~.: ;~_ ~··;·'lilt Joll' • ·'" to· ... arrl

\ 1'< I I ).i• ••

AOIIARIUS !J'". 21 to feb. 191 I :, • · .·•·· .,,.1 •, · I .,mp'l#a\) I' "': \1 .. :• I \I' •,h I' '' (1 r '1.

PISCES I fob. 10 to ~A.·ch 201 l'•ol'' • ,', r~·. • ,, •·· •< '-" d ,t,(!.,,.. tr<t~~ ; • ..,,J ,,, ,,. , •• , ., • ·~ a·~'>~rh~rf

Between

Us ~J/omen

' Daily Recipe

By RUTH :1-i!LLE'M'

PEHISII·TIIE·TIIOl'GtiT I~ (;O,\L OF NO\'EL PHO~E

SEH\"ICE

\\"ell. 11 hat won't tliry think or IH.•xt:

The trlephnn~ company i< on l·:nglbh cil~· hils dcddcd to re­lic\·e the housewife of the nee· essity o! using her brain and ex­ercif'ing her ingenuity and im­.aginntion hy a series of ct1nned answers to her pressing proh· lcrn~.

\\'hal nicor ''"'. In end a rlav \hen dimH'r >r''' "d in the fresh ni:·-tiwl is fro<h eir cnmhined \111\t the trrnpl in: ;orom~ of food hcin~ f'Ookt•rl on wur outdoor grill. ·

One men" ,,.h1rh I ha1 • found to spilrk enno;;lrtPr~hlc int\!re:-.t is Golden 1;1:.zrd flam. Rice and Pc~s. Basil TomaloPs and Hot <'orn .\luffin--nll prrrared 011 ~·onr nut1lnnr ~rill and scrred 11·kre l hr hrcrzc< blow cool. Ob1·iously hm~ on ~ood eating and 1·call~· sl>n ·t nn p:·eparation. Thr entire meal c3n be ''"hipped to;:zcther 11 hal. an hn•.1r. u~in:; fnorl thai i .. ft' 1 i('~·('onkin~ or .lU't n r e~ s to lw he:ct~d. And of cour-r. ron II l'•C heal 1· du]\' :l\Umilll1m ioii for )"OUr . 0 11· n custom-made cookin~ and scl·,·. <Pr\'ing uten>lls. ':'\o clean-up after~~

GOLDE~ GLAZED IIA~I

2 ham steak•. pre-cooked type ,\II the housewife has to do ahoul '..inch thick

when .Junior asks :11om to tell him a bedtime story is d i al BI•:D and .Junior g~ts his bed­time ;;lorv.

II the ·housewife can't make

l :'\o. 21, can apricots 12 cup hnne~· (;round cinnamon \\"hole clo\ rs

To prepa1·e 'au~P. combine up her mind what to hare for syrup rlrain~d !rom apricQb. ~nd dinner she dials RE:C and gets hone. Brown ham <teaks on both the recipe ol the day. 5 i d s ol"er hot fire un ~rill.

If she is stuck for an idea of r'orm an aluminum foil pan by what to give Aunt Sadie for her turnmg np edges anct mit~:-ii~' birthday she doe>n't need to try corners of piece of he a\,- duty to imagine wlwt Aunt Sadi~ aluminum foil: piace it on the might like. She just dials GIF grill and tran<fer the ham to 1t. and gets e quick answer. I Poor Pour sauce o1·er ham. Add apri· .\unt Sadie probably will end cots. sprinkled with cinnamon up with a it's-nice-but-what-is- and studded 1rith cloves. HeJt it birthday remembrance. 1 for l'i minute>. turning once.

All the:;e sevices and several HlCE .-\.:'\0 PE.-\5· Prenare olhers are already being offered the housewife. and othNs proh­ahl,· 11 ill come along soon.

One that is being considced i> ~!OR - standing for morale, of

At today·s prices Tony hardly I ing to make them d1fferent. F.~· can afford to work for you ample: serve cool soup, top 11 :

. l\laybe Demarais impersonating 1 wit~ com~ercial. sour cream.' B\: KAY SliER WOOD ' Tom· just for this picture I sprmkled· wtth ch11'es. ' If you re fortunate enough to

Loving l course. Wlwn Papa goes off to work

,._. . .,.~"'"'"'"'""'"" · ,. : ·-;'!'! in a huff or forgets a wedding · anniwrsary or yells at the kid;;

rice accorrlm~ to pnekage direc· linn.<. I'' ::co in center of large <quare of hP31".1" duly aluminum ~oil. .\<ld a smJII can of green pea< plus lwo table;poons liquid from the can. Sea:<on ll'ith salt and twppr·r. 1 op \\'ith generous pal of bulte1· or mar~arine. To,5 togelher li~!lt!•: ldh fork. Fold cct~e< of ~lnniinum loll to form pnck~~r. llrat on grill for ].;

DIPOSTER-Call Tony Curtis that and he'll grin and he flat· tertd. Reason: His newe~l role 1s that of Fred Demara, imper­$0nator e:..traordinar)·. Curtis plays six different roles in the f1lm. "The Great Imposter.''.

1 whii~ Tony is impersonating I And l! you're having weekend fall heir to delicate. _cl'Ochetcd, : Sinatra's bodvguard. guests at the cottage, follow: pl~ce . mats t~nd do~hcs, take 1 The job ~ith Frank, I'm these rules; . . ' pnde 111 yo11r pos~ess1on.

sure pa,·s much more and 1 Remember, 5lmpllc1ty Is the 1 Grandmothers who proudly ' things ar'ound Frank, you know, law. You, and your guest~, I bestow h~nd:crochetcd mats on . never ~et dull like movie sets. must llve a~ ;;ou please. Don t 1 newly marned _gra~ddaughters

worry, they w11l not cnme expec-! have told me the1r g1fts are not I ling to be ser1•ed on hand and always appreciated.

1 foot. · Now, I'll grant that young ln feet, 5ome of the work homemakers rarely use anlima-:

must be shared with your guests. 1 cassars, crocheted or embroid· In this way, ·th ey can share your ercd. But their general enthu~-: cottage life. iasm for informal early AmerJ·.

If children are among the , can furnishings suggests more, guests, plan ahead how to feed

1

. suitable crocheted gifts. • i h e m and k e e p them busy. Sti!ll'· starched white cro· 1

h~nd~man and a bandsman mas- •t h · " d • t r h d ' queradml! as a doll. ~ladame B~no1 . w o 1s a ,.ran · cheted place rna s on e po 1s c I

- I mother, follows this rule: Child· table are charming. They are j Well, Tony said he mimicked ~ ren should be fed by themselve~. also more distinctive than . rna-

Frank Sinatra, Kirk Douglas, This will give e more relaxed chine-made copies or pnntcd,

. ·

·'i ,, , ~lama will rush to the p hone .. · dial MOR and a soothing male ' ' l'oice will whisper such ph1·ascs

, as: "You're quite, quite, beau· ~.i 1 tiful, you know."

_., • ' I Don't tell me that sweet talk i such as that wouldn't make Pa· pa se~m like an even bigger

1 heel and definitelv extend his stay in the dog house.

Lets hope that this new form o! telephonitis doesn't hit our

' counll-y . Surely, we housewives can

spin bedtime stories lor o u r , ·own children, plan om· O\l'n 1 meals, use om· own ingenuity in : selecting gifts for family a n d : friends-and el'en survive on oc-

minutes. · B.\SlL TO\!.\ TOES: Cut firm

ripe tomatoc< in half. Bru.<h with b u t I ~ r or mar~arine,

sprinkle with >alt anrl pepper nnd ehopprd frr<h or dried basil. Place on grill for 10 minutes.

HOT CO!l'l :\ll fFI:'\S: Loose­!~· It' r a p corn muffins in aluminum f01l and heal on back o! grill where lire i< not too hot.

ca;;ional s;I:~I 1nlh our husbands without being ;II"Cft-talkcd by snme strange!' to rebuild our sagging egos.

Don't you agre~?

Can· Grant, Burt Lancaster and lcclin!: to the grownup table. Let plastic. Jimmy Cagney along the way, the kids eat outdoors. make a Doilies with stand-up, Outen &lid e1·en his wife Janet Leigh , picnic out with sandwiches. Let I edges placed under frilly shaded BEAUTY AND THE BEACH (~hen he wore those curls). them use paper plate~. etc., ~o ·lamps may not "send" the youth·

NOW TO:Io'Y is playing this 1 dishwashin!( Is at a minimum. I ful housekeeper. But let her try fellow Fred Demara who Cooled : And whether at your cottage or that same doily under a low a Jot of people pretending to be at home, lilt your rooms with, bowl filled with a delicate bou· tll a surgeon in the Royal Can· ' flowers and greenery to arld that quet and see what a pretty frame 1dian ~a~·~·. 121 a prison war- touch of summer friendliness. it makes. drn. t31 a doctor of philosophy One reason I was slow about v;ho ran a co\le~;e. 14) a Trap. 1using mats ~:iven to me whrn I pisl monk who took the I'OW of I was first married was that I lilence, <51 a hi:;h ~chool trach· didn't know how lo wash anrl

I t-. -' ! ! I .

I .. ' .

. ' -~ .. ~-~~·::.

...~ .... • .. • <

er. t6) 1 police sergeant and stare; tl!em. ~·or I he hcnc!il o! 1 1 other~ who mi~ht necrl similar I and-crocl1clcd mats, chrrisiird ~ills lm111 annlhrl' gcnrratlon, "'nam· others." - • I advice this is' how an experl ttesrn·r. loring care. Jlollr<l, sin nd-up r.dgrs of tJ1r mnl ahove

So. Ton~· With all those little To make your terlh sparkle, . tru~ted ~e . n~c mold<'ll around tlssne paprr to hold lhrm iu plarc until the mannerisms of other people in 1 brush them occasslonally with m~ homemade stretcher simp1i· 1 shllly starched threads are crisply dry. his mind u Demara, who had 1 baking soda. Just molsten your 1. th r · h · d 1 laundered 1 I" 1 . . all those ideas about being toothbrush with water, then tes e m1s mb o ' son 1on o a glossy starch, miX·: lightly and pr~"· Be cal'C!ul other people in his mind, prob- scoop u the soda on the brush pla~e mats., _To make one ~ake mg unlll smooth a half-cup starch, not to catch pomt of iron in the

.ab)J v.ill be a gasser; If not and cle:n your teeth In the usual a p1ece·o! '•~mch plywood slight·, and one cup of cold :water. -~rld, crochet stitches. • Confusion1·ille. , ly larger than the mat. one quart of rapidly b01hng ------

Ton)· was pla)"ing the Trap- manner, Stretch a mat flat on the board water, stirring constantly. Cover pist monk in a scene when 1 T hi h d t ld b and draw an outline, indicatin~ hot sta~ch and cool just enough

: arrh·ed on the set and later he fJq 1"\n 1':) oo· g an oo·w e row, with X's, each loop of the mal. to handle. ·n-ore he was Tony. But he Ht:kl O......fA lines make the eyes look small.· Drive one-inch rust-proof nails Dip and squeeze damp cro· laughed that he wasn't sure ~ake carellwhen using that eye- about 1~ inch into board on each i cheted pieces into warm starch. I MAKf fRIENOS 1

about his director, Bob Mulll· row penc . X. As many as ei~ht to 10 place : Hoi! in a terry towel to remove : 1f you rlrop a piece of silver I.

pn. "l'tllnt" these splendid beasts A ma~nl!ylng mirror Is a ~l'l!at ~ats can he stretched at one 1 cx,cess. . . . · whilr dinin~ ont. don't pick it up. , ~1 think." Tony said, "that I in exciting, true-to-Nature colors help in solving makeup applic· ttme.. . . e hv .r~. keep stm cherl p1cces lr~m, Ask thr waiter to I'eplace it. !n

the director is Fred Demara." 1 !or. any room In y~ur home. ation problems. Drymg. o! mats ts S(Jee.d d . · slickmg to paper pat17rn outline a pri\'ate home, a;;k your hostess Tiger and lion wtth c u b s- Wh 1 Ill lt' d an electnc fan or by culling out , or strclcher. cover w1lh waxed il ~ou may have ,another.

THERE WAS GOOD e1·idence easy, fascinating to embroider en rave ng, 1 8 . goo tcntc~ of b~ard, to ~Uow for bet- 1 paper. . 1 ' . 1 about Ton)' bei~g Tony,_ how· In single and outline stitch. Pat· i ~e:a~h hh;~dk;d;~u a~:k~~P~~~ ter ctrculahon of a1r. , II the paper pattern 1s used;' , · e\"er. Those 12 J&rs of VItamin tern 7404: two 7 x 9·lncb trans· you It will save the trouble 0 If you don't want t6 make the , place on well-padded surface, • A word o! caution>-Cosmctics, ' 111d f~ sup~lements lined up fers; color ·charts; directions. cha~glng these necessary Items stretcher. draw an outline oil pin in place with rust-proof: especially for hair coloring or

. oa hiS_ dressmg room table Send THffiTY·FIVE CENTS from one purse to another and .mat on a piece of paper. blocking pins. )waving, may contain ingredients me.a;tt 1t co11ld be To11~·- I !In coin, for thls pattern 1 ellmlnate the risk of forgettlng B e fore Jaunrlerine remove If there are stand-up parts to 1 harmful to children if they swal·

\\e shared 1 handful and . rstamp:; cannot be accepted to' th sl~ins. White m•ls or yellowed a doily, lift, separate and shape low them, so keep them out of then Tony uid he was up to his ~ST. JOHN'S DAILY NEWS, ~~-· --··---·-----·-- mats m~y he bleachPd. \VMh, parts around balls o! crushed the reach o! youngsters. old tricks but even m~re so. 1 Household Arfa Dept, 60 FRONT terns. Plus. Ideas galore !01 by hand In warm suds without tissue paper when almost dry, I Be W'U pla)·ing these "six dif· ST., •WEST, TORONTO, ONT. home furnishings, fashions, gilts rubbing or wringing. R l n se remove tiss~e paper and mold It's a wise woman who knows fenat eharat:ters but at least Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, toys, bazaar sellers-exciting, several times, squeezing ·out ex· the piece around your fingers as. her beauty is made up of a dash 11 ethel' ltars were Involved. PATTERN NUMBER. unusual designs to crochet knit cess water. desired. I of what she inherits and all o!

.- ""nitre's a bit or Cary Grant JUST OUT I Our New 1960 sew, embroider, huck ~eave. Most crocheted mats look th~lr 1 If you iron lo achieve a smooth: those things she can dn and pro-llld lOme or Frank Sinatra ln. Alice Brnoks Necdleereft Book quilt. Be. first with the newest best if stifny starched.- Tn, shiny finish or lo !Ia IIen the mat, ducts she can usc to make her· tbe UVJ ~~~r~eon." he uld; contains THREE FREE Pat· -«end 25 cents now I starch, prepare an extra heavy' sponge starched surface very sel[ attractive.

...... -: ........ · ...... : ....... :: ....... .

.\t the beach this summer, when getting ready to put 'm the suntan oil, don't forget that your eyes need protection just as much as your skin. Eye lotion is now available in Canada in a new yellow plastic squeeze botlle that dispenses one drop at a time for easy use, It's easily portable and will neither break nor spill.

. . i

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•. .f . l ·.1 - . .. -..... ~-. : )

'_,.( - .: . . .

Daily Recipe Teen Ensemble PRINTED PA'ffiitM

Spur of the moment picnics come up often during the sum· . mer months. Be prepared with I 1 mPII rtady in the freezer.

Make ~~·era! batches of fried ; chie!len and summertime cran·/ bem- Reli.!;h when you're in a eooking mood. Store in slumin· um !oil and freezer containers. When ,,IU·re in a baking mood, make two chocolate cakes instead of one. Store the ~cond in your frtezer.

'1\'Mn the family .•ays "Lers ha1·e a pirnic." chicken, rran· bem· ~auce and cake are ready. Whai·s left to do Put paper 1

' • d · a 1 p.a.es. cup~ an spoons m ; picnic basket. Add a paper table i eo•~rin~ if picnic tables a r e · annable at ~·our destin~tion.) S:ore awa~· coffee and milk in ' Taruum bottlt>s. Add c e l e r y, : ra1i~hes and cucumbers to ice · cube~ in a cold container. Take ~ alnn~ frtsh fruit. Don't forget thP ult and f'!'PJX'r. , • • !!l~MERTJ;\tE C'R.o\SBERRY , 1 1

RELISJI ! • 1 - thin-skinned m(dium orange . , 1 iime t , 1 1~. can whole c~anhrrr~· sauce • •

RtmOI't' seeds from '' oran~e ' and lime. C'ut in quarters and : • put thr!'u~h food chopil('r I rind :' end ~1:. ~tix with cranberry ' uuce. nil! tr.orl'u~hlr. ~lakes 1 pint. Fretz~ in freezer con· tainers or make them with alu· minum !nil nf douhle thickness, ' f11ldin~ Into box ~hape. !!Pin· CR.-\SBERR\' REI.I!iH I

1 fl·lb. ran who:e cranbl>rry -

• •

Jauce 'or jelli\'d. crushed Sew-slmple, a teem!r can make ~ rup draintd crushed pine· thi~ pretty ensemble all by her-

apr1t , R or 9 oz. can self. Princess dress l.ts perfect . •:. tsp. cinnamon for sunning: bright eollarctte but- · 1o 15p. mar~ or nutmc11 ! tons on !or city Wll'llr. 'i tsp. po'A·dered mu,tnrd ) .Printed Pattern 4632: Teenage

~lix thorouRhly. Plnre in re· · Stzes 10, t2, 14, 16.. Slr.e 12 dress frigerator an hour or more !or requires 4\~ yards 39·inch; col· na,·ors to blend. ~lakes 2 cups. · larette, •• yard contrast,

1 Printed directions on each pat­, tern part. Easier, accurate. I Send FIFTY CENTS (In coins ! i stamps cannot be accepted for . ; this pattern. Please print plain- : lv SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,

Beadtd bags string along _for STl'LE NUMBER. ' Jummer. ~lanr arf adrmt.ly : Send order to ANNE ADAMS, bandstrung end . feature ~r.tl· ·care of ST. JOHN'S DAILY !Jant. lacquered (tntshes Jn II hlte NEWS, Pattern Dept, 60 FRONT patent-black. n~tural. bone, red ST. WEST TORONTO ONT nny and 1 ga1ety of color com· ' ' • • btnations.

Lana Turner Turns "Frosted Blond" For New Film Role

Between Us

Women By RUTB MILLETr

CLING TO GJRUSII QUAJ.JTIES, HOLD YOUR

HUSBAND'S LOVE

1

1

Mark Twai;;;:e paid h i s :. wiie one of the finest compli·

I n1ents a man ~an pav a woman. ; After her death he said of her:

"She was slender and benuti. ful and girlish-and she was both girl and woman. She re· mained both girl and woman to the last day of her life:·

It is the ability to be both girl 1 and woman at the same time ' that enables a wife to keep a · husband in love with h~r through the vears.

I And vet all too manv wive~ · lose th~ quality of girlishness as : soon ·as they settle down to being ' homemakers, mothers and pil· , Iars of the community, : What are the qualities a man 1 considers "girlish" and hopes • his wife will never Jose ' One is a sense of fun t h a t : brings forth laughter and gaiety · and 11 happy-hearted attitude

PLA l' GIRL - Arriving at Sew York's Idlewild Airport, actress Salome Jrns loses no time In calling friends to tell thrm she's hack !rom Holly­wootl. She completed starrlnc work in the film "Angel Bah,·" 1'1 r~htrn to the &IBJI in 'the off·Rrondway show , toward 11\·ing. It's what keeps .

: a woman from b~coming grim. · "The Balcony." Another "girlish" quality i~ ---

enthusiasm-the ability to get excited over small pleasures.

' This kind of youthful enthu~iasm not only brightens the world !or the woman who has it but her

, family as welt , Still another of thr girli~h qua lilies is the kind of !eminity that

· enjoys leaning just a little on a 'Tm probablv not going to man's strength and prel'enL~ 8 meet a finger· bow! often, "a woman from el'er feeling that · young reader humorously com­

, she has to pro1·e that she ts JUst · menls. "hut I'd like to know 1 as smart as an;· man.. .· . what to do when 1 do! Once I

, Another ~trltsh qua!tty IS the nsed one when it was placed be-1 desire to pleas~-ralher than to fore me-t h en discovered I ~ impress. ~lost women that we . shouldn't have until later. But ! say are charmmg have thts qual· how was 1 to know?" 1

ity i~ abundance. 1. Customarily, when are fing-: It ts a shame f?r. a woman to er howls brought to the table? :ever lose her gtrhshncss-el·en al At formal dinners after

if she !il'es to be a very old lady. dessert ' 1 For ~irlsihness gives a woman bi :\lost hotel dining rooms use l sparkle. a warmth and ptety this service, also

TM bi~~tr, bolder more glit· The (ha llenge 1 that make men comfortable and el At pril'nte dinners. thel·'re tenng pms art toda~·. I he. 1 happy in her presence. . mo.•t often brought on· the Jmarttr thty ~rf. Thfs~ lantt Qf Age i You can se~ women of ~0 "ho rle,erl plates with t h 1 pms art \\'Orn tn many dtfferent · • · still have a gtrltsh quaht;. And dessert sill'er wa~·s - rlip~d o1·er strands of : Women hM·e nothing to fear I I you can see wom,en o_r 30 •. w -~ o 2. What should you do when ~arl• or bead<. worn alone on from old age-if they ktep alive i hal'e completely JO•t 1t. C.trlt. h· the dessert plate is under-lht shnuld~r. at the waistline or to the very lost moment. This 1 ness isn't a matter of age-hut neath? ~>n a back decolletage. : i' the opinion of a noted psy. ~ n! attitude. a Wait for a Mnant to place

I chiatrlst, Dr. Ruth Franks, one the finger howl to one side There i~ no one \\'ay of dressin~ of a panel of authorities whose I 1 b l Lift it with )'our right hand,

!. ~ 'lot <ummer weather. Your. answers to women's fear or ag.l ·,Week S place it above and some-"2: 'robe de~nds on your way lng appear In an article In the what to the left of your of life and the place where you I June issue of Chatelaine maga- Sew-thrifty dessert plate lt•·t. But ideally. your summer zine. c) Lift with it anv dollv · or .,.-arctrobe should include one cot· • one the panel-brought togeth· PRINTED PA 'Ii'ERN smnll plate underneath ton suit. three or four dre.<~es : er b.v Chaterlaine editors Doris 3. Are the de~sert fork and .,.it!! ~ltel't<. two or three sleeve- · Anderson and Jessie London- spoon left on the dessert plate Its< dres~es !or 1·ery hot da)'s, ·were Dr. Mary Albertson and al ;llo. place the fork to the and one or two silk dresses for , Dr. .Jean Davy, both medical left, the spoon to the right, late af~moon or early erening. specialists: Dr. Franks, Dr. Lll· on the table

-- 1 liPn Gilhreth, re.o;earch engineer, L bl Alway5

Looking chic if you trawl 11 ·>till nrtire i" her profession at el Remove whichever you creal dul i~n·t ea~~·. But it eighty-two; Mrs. Jean Goo d. A 1\'EGATIVE APPHOACil TO A POSITI\'E PLUG don't use in eating dessert helps if ~·ou keep clothes simple,

1 sociologist. and Mrs. Helen Feel in R mood for a gurssing gnmc? Who'~ the wd!-lmnwn a dress in tht• ahol'e portrait in hbck? Her identity 4 How is a finger bowl used

lakt enou~h accessories to allow Brown, retired after twenty- has been somewhat veiled in the printing of an otherwise normal hlack null white Y.ortrait. But a nc"· ... motion pic ·a> Dampen a corner of your fr?q~nt chan~cs and are care·' sel'en years in the beauty salon ture named, "Portrait In Black," hns to reccil'e its proper share of new>papt•r pnhhclll' nnd ~he ho~·s 111 the dark napkin in it, wipe Your f:J! about haring shoes polished· businm. room" at Universal-International Studio herewith submit their :umunl publicitY cnntrilmtion lor 19fl0. To get hack fingers ~•·era! times a week. : , . • , · ll 1 l l f b) D'p the fingertips of each

For feet's ~ake. 8 woman \\ ays 111 wh1ch Chatelaines to the portrait in black subject: She was christened with fil'c name., when horn in Wn at'i.'. lc a 10. Discn\'l'rt'l or hand s~paratel)', dry them should ha•·e a~ man1· shoe breaks panel speak~rs suggested women films while sipping a soda at Hollywood and Highland (gc ting wnrmcr:'\, lll'r first motion pictnre pnhlidty still show- · on your napkin beneath the during the da1· as she ha co[( . can keep altve, in every sense of ing her in a sweater brought a total of 1,000 marriage proposnls :'>low you lu11·c it. Her prnfcs;ional name is Lana table le1·e1 breaks. one shoe ~peciaiist a~~ I the word, included sensible Turner but a birth certi£icate in Wnllnce, Idaho, lists her liS Juli;t Jean Mildred Fr:mccs Turner. ~!iss Turner is CO· • cl Dampen the fingertips of li.<es. She should learn to take health n~les, s:ood grooming, an staned with Anthony Quinn, Sandra Dec and John Sax em in "l'ortr<Jit ln Black."' \, one hand, rub them against an extra pair of shoes when she ' Interest m other people, a !est those of the other lea1-es the hou!!f in the morning.: for learning .new things, 1 satisfy. responsible for popularizing both movie-going public with the re-' coifhtt·e a frosty effect. It hns Dee unwittinglv inspired Lana's' js. ~lay finger bowls ever be ·' chen~e of shoes durin~ the day 1 lng. occupahon and Independent Lana Turner, who once was. lease of the lJnil'ersal·Inl~r- been called the most interc>ting frosted hlonde 'hair. ~!iss Turner : brought at other times7 mu ao "''oman's feet. lmprovcs J' atlttudes. the sweater and a hair style national suspense . m~lodrama, coiffu1·e inn01·alion since the felt she hcd to look different as ! al After broiled lobster is hn mood and e•·entually All•es And, said the panel's beauty known as "the Turner bob," is at, "Portrait In Black." , feminine fad of a few years ago Sandra's step-mother in ·Tortrait sen·ed he: lonRer wearin~ time in each: authority, an older woman who it again. , Devised by studio hair slyli;t, when women begM arldin~ In l3lack" because last year she b\ :\ever pair of shoes. ~othing drnins. is wcll-grommed can make most J This time It's a n unusual hair i Larry Get·main, the new Tnrner streaks in contrast to their usual ~ S d . th . J cl The1· mav be on the table 1... . . d h h . 1 . had playee~ an ra s mo er m thro.tt~hot-tt a meal ~ _liPJrtt an ener~~· more than. of toc!ay's younger women look

1. s ade called "frosted blonde," Jlint features a champagne blonde atr co or mg. ~

ach1ng or tired feet. like frumps. which Lana will introduce to the tipped with platinum, giving her Actually, IH·year·olrl Sandra "Imilation of Life." ,\~SWERS

Planning Comes Before Your Shopping

Tae _.er wardrobe lll&embled for Bettlanne Flsdl, Queen of the 19M New 1'erll City Sllm~aer Festival, Ia one Ullt any lirl would like to take alon11 on a .-u... We .. ow here 11me of the elotlaet, all of them budget-rlced. Culu4te il'elhae Cleft) Ia done In a vivid daeron-and-cotton print. Culotlel are nry wWe te ellalnate 1 aldrt. Perfect for summer lnfel Ia BetUIDIIe'a allm knit· . .

ted dress (center) In Orion yarn. It launders easily, dries rapidly and needs no blocking. And It stays true to Its size and shape. For vartying on summer vacation, what could be prettier than this (right) sheer nylon dal!ce dress~· A very full, elrcular skirt Is topped by Ivy-embroidered bodice. Belt and piping are In green satin. Dress looks fragile but Ia not.

------· ---- 1. a. h. c: 2. h. c: 3. a: 4. b: s. a. wool. If you arc taking along , TODAY'S ETIQUJZ ~~E~IO

. some pleated skirts in white, you I Sometimes, because of the kind

1

: also need pull-overs. i of dessert being sen·ed, t h e In oth~r words. e1·ery purchase I glass plate beneath the finger

i vou make should do1·etail with I . bowl is meant to be left on the ! ;,·hat you now have. This saves i dessert plate-but watching your I vou monev and time. Jl also I hostess is your only certain way I ~ives vou~ clothes a carefully i of knowing. 1 ~o-o;·di'itatcd look. I ------: I! 67 LO~·<DON <CPl-The El'en!ng

This ;-ear. you'll want to add "' 47 2-10 ~ Standard say~ Anton" Arm· some sunback dresses, some Brig. ' A . /J i . I strong-Jones will pro~ahly takt itle Bardo! ginghams. and some !,~,....,,.,., up a new career as a stage de· Orion knits to bring things up to . . signer. The newspaper says . the date. , Sun top, Shorts, Blouse, Skirt. Queen ~as approved t~e 1de2

Full skit·ts and culottes are 1 All included in. this Printed pat· that Pnncess ~largaret s -~~s­definitely summer 1960 but not' tern-all are stmplest of sewmg. band should ta~e up he P0~1 ?~ en route. While· you'r~ travel· I Mom, make 'em now. . · unco~n.ect£:\ With . t e o~a, in~ stick with the slim, dark 1 Printed Pattern 4767:: Chtl· ' Famt~~. but ~at hts ~OrJ?er r. sh~·ath -and preferably in a knit ren's Sizes 2, 4, 6, B. 10. Size 6 cupahon of P otor.rap Y Is ru ee that ~·on't roduce wrinkles. But sun top, '% yard 35-inch: shorts out by the _tr~dtho~ tha~ no ont

h p · that' differ '• yard· hlouse 1'8 yards· skirt should capttahze !tnancJally ot w en you arnve- s · . · . • . . · . 1 sti"e cnt' Take from vour suitcase a l's yards 35-mch fabnc. roya pre. ~ · deli.cate but durable nylon dance ; Printed direct!ons on each pat· . dress with full, floating skirt. ' tern part. Eas1er, accur_ate. . · I Send FIFTY CENTS 1 m cmns

\ There are some things to be: I stamps cannot be accepted for : 1 wary of when you shop. These [ this pattern. Please print plain· , include' the bikini or Hen the : ly SIZE, !\'AME, ADDRESS, two-pieCj> suit unless your figure: STYLE Nll:\1BER. I is perfect. Pass up the short-! S€nd order to ANNE ADAMS, . shorts If you don't have the. care of ST. JOHN'S DAILY 1

figure for them. i NEWS, Pattern Dept. 60 FRONT . ST., WEST, TORONTO, ONT,

Household Hint If your feet are less than

pretty, put your money into clos­ed plavshoes. Knowing your own

!limitations will make it possible 1 for you to look picture-pretty on I To insure his safety when rid· vacation. ing in the car, invest in an auto

QUEBEC (CP - Premier An­

belt for your baby which will permit him to stand, sit or lie down.

, tonio Barrette, an ardent angler, ----------­/ said Tuesday he is o[f on a fish· , ing trip and will not be back at i his government office till Mon-1 day. The premier made this 1 known after the morning cabinet session during which ministers of the Union Nationale administra­tion thrashed out election results Wednesday which showed 50 Lib­erals and 44 Union Nationale

A WELCOME WAGON

HOSTESS

BY GAILE DUGAS I should go Into that suitcase for~ checkbook or cash and a vague - vacation, better make a blue·: i~·~ of wh~t you'd like.

your s u m m e r wardrobe. If you've some perfectly g o o d shorts for which you need new tops, make a note of this. Decide

on colors and hot those down. members elected to the 95-seat

Will Knock at Your Doo1 with Gifts and Greetings

from Friendly Business Neighbours and Your

Civic and Social Group! On the occasion of:

If E W Y 0 R K - (N E A-If; print. Don't just head for the I · Your blueprint should be J'llll'rt w ODder In II just whtt i nearest store u me d with a based, first, on what's now In

What about sweaters You Legislative Assembly. One Inde-shou!d have black, navy a n d I pendent m e m b e r was also white cardigans in synthetics or elected.

I

New Comer ~o the City. The Birth of a Baby,

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tl THE DAILY N~WS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960 .;_________________________________________________ -

Ottawa's Position t(nntmued rram p~~e 31

''"'. The D!>m!mon Go1 rrnmrnl ~- dl't'ply rons,·tous of the proh­lrll'.J- of the pro1 nH·r~ anrlmuni­rJpal:llt'~- Wr ha1 r takrn a '' !"!1pathrt1r aiiJ!urlr towards lhf''C JI!'Oblrlll>.

· \\ r ha1 c tr•rd to rel!llnbulr to a >Pint llr harnwny and -cndcT>-tamhn; amon~ thr elc1 rn j:O\t'mmrnts !-:It'll at the cost t~! drprl\ m= llUrsrlHs of rc-~~urcr~ wh;ch thr ferlrral t.•·u>t1r,· nrrctrrl. wr hal'r ..,u;ht tn a-..•i<t thr prm·inrrs a~d throu:h th~m tl>r muni­(JJ'Illllt'S thrn\l~hout th1s co\111· 1~ Wc ha1 1.' ncira1 ourrrl to ""I'Ttl~ch tht prchl!.'lm whirh 'r.!"!111trdl)' r\l~t '" thr f•rtd I'! 1't~mlnt!lr.-Prm m.-:.11 rl'lal-1~'1< m tht trur ~p1r11 o! Con­f~drratlnn

· Folln" m~ thr Dnmmllln-P:'(II mc,al t'o>n!rn'nt·r ll! ::\o-1 rrr.N-r. 1P.'>7. Ill' qutckly Ill·

&,·;~ra.tc-d a :o:rrn:tl fiH'ill pro• • · .. 1(\n ('lllt 0t l1111ll!ll.nn r<'·

' ::":""rc' !fir t;·r .\t~J'Iilr PJ"(H.

r... l 1~.1.· ,. '~·' L·.• ... ,1ation tn

:: : .1: :~~r· \ll;;n::r ~'nn· t •• \r. ..... ~,·~c:.~ t;ran: .... \\ l11ch

I ··;.i: t~.r ~·~·''f'llr pf ll'il\•dlli .. '11!!. ; ~.-:-:.:il~:c:·• 1!l .1~111~1.tr~. J!l.)H

; . ,. ' ~(' r·,,..: ll'mprt·lll'li ... l\ (' a~d

i ~ -. ,;l ~ . .: 'l'\'J ... •Ir€" (If ft,ral a~~ -· ;".t'lf" t \ t'r \'\kfH!t•d to il\t' ·.··:·:·: r:-~~ :~~" ... m 1tw hi"·

t • ~ "' t :·1 :11!a I~·.r1Jilnwn1 ;tp· r c, .. (\· .. rrj,P<•<l 1o p:·o., Hit' 1 ::-.:;.· 0: s.: \ltl m1iLon m tww

, in thr ~am~ prri01l amounts to S140 million, or about 24 per cent.

llominlon-Prm·incial Flsral Relations Ml~r ~larch 31,

1962 "The financial rrlat ions bc­

t•l·ren the J-'ctlcral and Prol'in­<'lal r.o·. crnmenl~ arc now gov­erned hy lcgi~lation nnd n~rcc­mrnls extending to 1\lat•ch 31, l!l!i2. Already we arc planning [Ill' lht• JX'r:od to follow. A Plt'nni'Y Dominion - Prol'indal l'onferenl'c is to br held in 01-lall a nrxl month. II will he fol­Io" ed lw a sr~ond confrn•nce hl<•r 111 • lhr war in orclrr to rn;•hlc tl•e go;t•l'l\11\rnt to inlrn­dii\'C at the tOtil ~rS>inn of J>ar­li;:n•Pnt ll'holrl-el' lcr.islnlion mny he fnnnd necessary.

"I haw sou~ht to establish thr rl'lrl-nl\\'1' of federal fiscal polil'il'~ to thr nt•rds of this pro1 111~1· and the entire Atlantic region .\ s)·mpathrtit• conscious­lit'" of thc stwl'ial require· nll';1\s n! thr Atlantu· Provintl'S nn<lt•lilt'S thc Federal Govern· mrnt's apJll'llnt·h to Dominion· l'rnl''lll'l:tl rel•lions. This pol· "'" ll'ils slated in dear terms h): tlw l'rimr ~linistrr in 1957 · 1n tl•t'>l' wnnk In ~onnection with the Sal- ;e,:ion~: 10 00 a.m :ual 2.;~u

·-~r~ lwllt'l't' that thi; fcdcr- vation Army's forthcommg an- p.m. rcspecti1·cly . :\ tina! .\d liHlitator:-. hH' llll· eo11.

.. ilwn are \lr. Bob ~ll'!.en<i alum •·:mnot thrh·c in a t'limale nual Congress a music feslil'al united pro~ramme wtll he held 1 L'lll1'11.1nt E J:nlwl'l-: A.'l'.C.l of ~laring dispar~lics in lr1·els t•ompetilion is being arranged 111 the Buckmaster's I•'JCid Dnll "r Toronto: and :.Jr. L. Gould :tnd slanetards of srrrices and lor Saturday, July lith. 'l'he . Ball. also on Saturday, .July 9th. .n:;. tlt'l rlopmcnl as hclwccn the SCI'· mmpetilion, the third To be at 8 OU p.m .. with selected 'win-t•ral prorim·p<_'' hrld ·by the Salvation Army in ncrs' parliripaling. Somr six-

.: .. ,,r.;: ~r.tlot• ol!·t· a •·tn prm·Hbng thr Atlantic teen cxpcrll)' rngr:ll'erl si11Pr Pro\ 11\l'c; Adiu>tmcnt Grants Canada, wlll take place in the cup~ arc to he donal~rl tu the and IIH'l't•a,mg the prol'llll'ial

1 Temple on Springdale Slrecl successful contestants on thai

Seen 111 the• pholo ;m• rr-pn .. <'111:--.ttvrs of lllC' ·' n11n~<' .: gi'OU}l {lj tf'll ( 10 I ) (',IJ'S (lf\1!

und('r fCI't' 11.111!~ f·nl1l 1111.ion lt·nm 11w mP .. tl:tl tn-.;tt·nrtm·

.. \t•.;;r ~rr.(ld at tlw r.iit' of ~--: "" · • 1~ i'f'f :;nnum 11 h ln

~·' 1 .. c·· ~ o: I he 111ur .\tlomth· i • :'II'" :' tl lilly ;lf!'l\f'd Jl\

>h:ti'C ol tht• yit•ld !rom the ' and will be presented in two occa>inn. Jli'T'Onal lll<'Ollll' tax. tlw present . - --- - - -- - --- --------- - -

• .:t • ... , --: '''"''"~ tht·lll'l'i1 ,., 1-'l'tlc}·al t;o, ernnw~ll has t•arri~d , stances affecting hrr. she will' the nalurc and form of the fi. ! - · ·c '-·' .• ,,,, of 1111• alll:u:tl :lw JlTIIIt'll'lc of lis~al equa~tz- have full opportunity to put 1 nancial relations lwlwccn the 1-·;r,: -, :t· !":' :·;:ll:on :t~:·;a- atwn tnrtht•r than tl has eler them forward, and in this re-, prol'inces and the Dominion, • . c• ··: : .. '--":1 ~""'"'- \,--.r ht•t•n t'arrircllJrfon>. 1·icw of Dominion-Provincial re-' after March 31. 1fl62 I wish to, r.· -:·" '" ;.r,t :-.;,." f••mh:l;~nd ···\ .-car a"o l'arli;~mcnl was lations those special consider- · t•mphnsize that thc>c studies • - :· aro: S~ : m:illtln to !'nne<' l'alt:d 'upon to implement the ations put forward by ;>.;ew- ha1·e hcen comluclcd jointly

Blue Print il'ontinurd I ram p ··~·· 3J

' · "" · l·'·"·'t n•rtJlllllH'lHialion~ of th1• !loyal foumlland shal be taken into with the prol'inccs. 1mlct•d. it · \' :ho· '•'"'" :·nw th:~t th,• t'ollli111S>JOn d1•aling With the consideration." is the first time m tht' history

a.-:Hit'll\lt'ally hn~hl stndt•n:. mto HH:ationnl and tcchnH:,.: st·hools was the difftt ulty of at tr:wtmg ac(Hil'lllil';JIIr hri~ht ~tu dt•nb into 1 ora tiona! and tet'11 nieal eourses. \'oc~lional or lcehllll'''' l'OIIr>eS, St3il'd llll' _,pral;e~·. ,:wuld not be ''dump­ing gi'IHIIltb" for the h~ekwanl ~Indents wlto are not at·adel111l'

.\' •~:,, !'~"' .1 ·''' ,;,,,nt.· 11 <'l'l' Tt•rm> of l"ninn. During the "I repeal that assurunee to- of Dominion-Provincial rclat---•• ,:.1• cd : .. ,, ~,-,,r, a~u. 11 1' lu·a1·in~' hl'fon• tl1r l'ommi~· night. AI the forthcoming ions that the preparatory work

. - .,,,,,c-d iro•m Ill lo 1;1 1'<'1' "Ill\, t·uunsrl for this prol·ince Plenary Conference the Gal'· has been undertaken on a joint ·' :•r "'''' mr:;li >h:tr<• ••f thr .u~gr•lrcl that lhc Commission crnment or Newfoundland will basis. It is in this same 'pirit

I • c :'''''1 :h.- l'l'T><•nal m•·omr shuultl rN·ommr.nd periodic hal'e full opportunity to put of construclil'e to-ope:·ation · · ::· · .. :.wr k.l·l•ttwn •·na< 1- rc1 ll''' of the amounts payable forward her position and any

1 that we arc approaehing nt'Xt

~: o: I'·•· prr-•·nt ;,•,:oil. tl11< out of the Frtl1•ral trl'asury to and all special circumstanees month's conft•renrr." •• :·· c , • n: ,., ,., ,,,,. ha• hc-1'11 llw :\t•wfonntllantl t;ol'crnmrnt. n•lating to the financial posi­; .-. ~,; "" a :1r:n -:.t!llttol'.l h.1•:s Thr Horn! Commission. how- lion of this province after · · ·-· :!:.· tonrlu-wn of the r1er. heitlthat 11 had no power h

d ~!arc 31, 1962. r·, ,,~: T.1\ :;harm~ Arran~~·- tu make snt'11 a rel'ommen at- "Basic recognition of !\"ew- Lives Of

, nwtPrial The di~htwt obligat­ion Ill Ill!' sehool•'to the student

i ll'tlllld not bt• fultlllcd b) 11lo1k­ing n 1 ot·ationd sehool a re fu;!l' for tncdtol'l'tty. . · "'• .\• 1 on \br,-h ;11. l!lb2 tnn. foundland's rights was gil·cn b~·

T'-r.,• t.•o h,'n•' 1 11• ,·omhtnl'd ";\CI'I'rllu•lc,<. lhe Fr•lc_ral the Prime 1\linister in l'arha- (L'ontinuetl fram Jho!-\t' 3) · -,-.-en 1\:c- llllrm:.11t1onal J>a~·- l;lllrrnllll'lll in th~ Jrgislahon mt•nt a \'ear ago in Ulcse word~:, Conlcdet·ation he would he ask- A pom•rful_argunwnt for lO-

r •.:' a~rl :;.\ ah;Mmrnt- tn imrlrmrntin~ the Term 29 ~ ''Ther'e shouhl be nrtlher ed to form a government and ~-alt_ona ltrammg, :O.Ir Rohrrl> · rrm ""''''at I he t•wrrt-t• ot .\l,ard rnndctl h1· ParllamPnt douht nor misunderstanding kilO\\ in!: the lillie knowledge I md\t';\lcd. 1s I he nrcd lo arltusl

; -, l'omm:"n 1r.-a-.1ry h~ Sill last ~··ar gal'r a~ rxplicit 1m- about the equality of Newfound- , most members 11011 td have o[ tl1e nf!rrm~s of ~ehools to sen·1· •· ·on :n :!I~.~ .i!l. h~ an 1'>11· dL•rtakinJ: that in the eourse of land's status in the Canadian , parliamentary procedure, call- tl_w necds of mrhnduals and sl1-- · ~r. 5-!10 1mi1Jon m l!l.i9.~0. the eomprehensi1·e study or Do- partnership. That equality exists ed on his old lriends R. \\'. cwt~·- The fulfillment_ of ~ueh a· ' h.;.,.~ "" tlw latc>t f1~- minion-l'rovinctal relations now as 8 right of our newest prov- . Courage. They discussed the necd~-good houscw11·es, m-

•• - ·n an t"<tur.atctl S~7 uul- being tondueted in co-operation ince's membership in Confeder· , question and each bought a dt~stnal ,:ro_r_~rrs. :an~e~s, salcs­l r··. : .. r !hr rurrt•J:t f1><al ~car. with tht• PI'O\·inces "the special ation .• , , 1 am one \.'ho ·has • copy of Sir T. ).lay's book and ptoulc .. r111cc 11orkcrs. etc.-

: ar:,.:•· a• a n•,ult of the c1rcumstam•es relating to the always believed that the key- Bt•auchene-biJth c~pcrts tn \\'Ill enable the ~ehool to offsrt a·· ~ rhon:r• :iwre ha1e ht·,·n financial po~ition of the prov- stone of _our_ union is them_ ain-

1

• parliamentary . proce(lure-and t11c shudd<'ring disillusionment , ... ,.~~ :ncn·a·r- ~mc·e 19.17-58 ila·e of :\cwfoundlancl after the trnancc Ull'lolale of the nghts del'ourcd the Ct!nlcnls, lilerall~·- of many high school students' · ''r 1 Pronrilltclllal )layments thirty-fir~! cia)' or March, 1962. of the prol'inccs. and the inter- The Premier hel'e paid trihutt' 11hcn faced with the cold rral­t~ lh~ mdl\1dual pronnr1• 11 ith would he taken into t'onsidcr- prctation of these rights in to former Speaker, Hon. R. \\'. izalion that not elt'l'l' one is :·-· ., --:cr hrnrlli· ••·trtlln~ to at10n." 'l'hts lmdertaking wa~ terms of the achiel'ement ol the Sparkes, whom he said h<1rl 110 prnp••rly equipped by menlalit)' ..., :<•:rr .\1lan:1r l'rn\llll'I'S formall~- written into the terms fullest measure or equality of equal ouhide o[ Westminster. or lramin~ for fhc profcs"ons. --:- .r :ot•l <~nt·olltlltloll:>l pay- u! the lc~Jslation. opportunity for all Canadians I The Premier spoke o[ the de- Thr guest speaker conrlucled "' • · • ''' '-r'<l•'lliHlland for tlw "Thr Prime l\linislrr addetl wherel'er they ma)' clloosc to ceased memhl'rs >ill('e l'onfed- h)' offering h1s help to an)onc : · ·~ :~.'>7 ~s am<·•mtcrl 111 Sl!l this assurance rcspectm~ the 1' .. set' kin~ it in the field of I'O· - " ,. l""ll"l 11 h . f '' f dl d' l\'t•. · · Cl'ation-Hon F.!hr,,·, 111 the OJl· t'',llltlll,'li ••dtlt'alltlll. , '"" '"r '"" ·u try ll\l' renrw o ,,ew oun an s spec- •·t should hke to speak lmdl)' 110_,ition and .1. J. St>rall. lie ' f: • _;,:~,1 1n an l'•l11113tl'd S:lll 1al t'll't'Um>lane~s: f fl , pr •parali lll' fur the · r- .: •:: T:w J·.llna·nt• to Prnw~ , •- tl 1 1 ° lc c 1 · paused here lo mcnltnn li1.1l .Ill'.

" .. l'l me nHitW \IS c ear. n )'lcnan• Conf~rence aml thr •.. J (' 11 l Dr. Albn F1·eel:er. 1he ~lin­

bier of f.(hJt·alion. con1 l')'rd ~red 111gs to the ;>.;TA from 1 he go,·ernmenl and lhr Depart­ment oi Edu.-alion. The eonllllll· ance of sympathetic coop.-r­ation and collaboration hetwern the \'!'t\ and the ~lemorial

•· .. ,, ... , I , 1'<1 ,,- 'll Ill ln"7 th I . . •• I f II - d . L. . •Ol ( C:ll. a orllll'l' lllCill· r -.. •• '"' . Ill( ~0 . a TC\'IPII. rc~arc. l! re;,;ar • : spirit in which the Ft>del·al b .. f tl H ' fA ' bl• . :-.h ' 1 • ·r s.; mlil1t•n. ha1r 111- wil he ll'ld to a,surmg those • 1 - w u 0 lC 0\bc 0 sscm Y 111 r.-c.,.·d :n "" •·-;mlalt•d S8 mil- I'. ' . l .. . S t' '(,orernmenl approac tes II. e prc-L'onfcdcratwn dal·s and \ir

t·nnr llll1ns m~ercnt m ec ton attach the hi~hest importance J \I ('. f 1 • ·' [ ·, · ·, ... ···rl~liOhl Thrp:J~llll'l\ls 2nhemguph!•ldtotheend1hal 1'-,.· •h'l •'llb ·•· •leene, atiCr 0 tl\

. , to the e ISlU>Sions II 1C I II 1 C House o[ \sst•mbl)' in Jli'C-CUll· : .. ' -• ~,.,·,a. whwh 111 19:i7- '\rwfoundland shall enJOY a initialed at this conference. 'l'hc J'•d .. 1 ' 1. . 1 'I· J 'I ;:..:; ·-· rrr ~::!~ nnlluol: arr thl> r · n"blc 11 ~~- r qtlal'tl\' 1 ld 1 e eta 1011 1 a\,, anc ·' 1· · •' · ra>o " Cn ee o e . two confc•nnces 1e ast vcar G f 1 • [ 1 ".· r-:;m;,•rd at S4~ 1111iltnn. nf opportuinly alon~ with the with the i;rori;lcial Trcast;rers Oreene._ alltcrl·~ _'lei _Pr~sclllt 1'' N~ mrlll, In \'rw Brtlll- otlll'r prol·inres in this coun- and ~linisters of Finance were ~r~lf_?.sttwn ~ar ct. ane a Ll >· l'niH'I'~II) of i\cwfountllancl 1

"' ';., "h1r h1n 1957-~R \\t•rp try.'' in.-alua!Jie in preparin~ the s::.1 'lttiilon. ha1r Tht·n 111 an _ "I myself sought to emph_a~- ground for the negotiations The Prcnuer said tht• Huu"· c•::matrd S.16 m.llion for 1!11311- llC the matter on that occos1on upon which the eleven govern- of Assembly was the room 111 <il ln the a~~rr~atr. the total m these words; mcnls are about to enter next 1 which Newfoundland's h1stury

~>as the tht'Jill' of lhr lmcf re­marks made h~· the Prc,idrnl of the l'nil ersity. Dr. Halymond Gush uP.

of thr llll('(ondllional Po;·ments "In this bill we are spelling month. They produced a set or had been made for over one Thr distinguished guests at :n :hr four .\t!;~nllt' l'rnl'ollt'l''· out llw lliHh·rtaking that in instrut•lions to the Continuing I hun~lretl years, and after men- "'" t1 11111er in honour of the ~"'''· 1 r1m~ 1<1 S76 n11i1Jon in t1~1e ~ml_e 1 reflie\\1' of Do_minion- Committee of Officials on Do-- ·

1

twmng_ okthdt•r mtms~s. oAt bgrcal 711ih year annual com·ention 1!1~7-:.ll. 1> ~\pt·cted to reath ro1 IIICia 1sca and fmanc1al minion-Provincial fisc 1 1 t- men pte c on • u m rose were as follows: Dr. and )Irs. Sl~.; m11l1<>n fo~ l!IHO 61. The rclati.ons that is to take place : ions to pursue tl;eir siu~icsr~: a

1

Shea. Here was. a great Nrw- t:. A. FreckPr. :llr. anti ~Irs F . :nc ~ca~ amount~ to 548 11111- ... :-\ewfounclland m~~ not o~ly , wide range of subjects. found lander n_ommatcd to be Ilanley. :\[r. Frcnk Kenn<'dy. Lnn. 11r fi3 prr r·rnl. The• t·orre- put forward her p_ostllon wtth "Such studies are a basic re- governor o[ h1s country. hut _he- :llr. and Mrs. F. 1-:irh~·- nr. H.ll' H'l'ndm~ n;r m tlw uncon- all tl tl f c I '"USC [ " I t 1 1e o !cr provmces o an- quisite to 8 proper exalnl·n- , ~ .. _ ,o, . very unp e_ asan ag1 a- ,' mond t:usl111e. llr :md :ltr~. (; "':IMIP.I 1nntnh1111ons ~nd abate- a 1 h t h h t t d d t h e a 11 m cr rase, w ere at ion of the far-reaching prob- I a ton 1 no rece1ve t c post. Hickman. Dr. l'h) IIJs llnn1 "''· ~r··c ln '"' nlhPr <IX rronn.-r< lht•re are any special circum- !ems inl'oll'ecl in considering Later he became_ Go~t·t·nor of :llr. anti :\Irs. n. Dawr. -------- --------- .. ___ ------------ _ the Bahamas and ts sllll rcmcm-

DOORS

PLYWOOD

FLOORING -,,.

STAIR .TREADS -

manutadured and guaranteed by,

-1 NUFAply DOORS to entl•nee any home. AYiiltble In Birch, Mthogtny, Wtlnut, Oek, Elm end Ash.

v NUFAply PLYWOOD for •A your interior finishes. Av•il· tble in Birch, Mehogtny, Wtf. nut, Oak, Elm •nd Ash

v NUFAply FLOORING for econ­om!CIII, long listing FIOOI"'.. Splinter rnistent tnd h I g h polishing Birch and Oek.

·I NUFAply STAIR TREADS to give a modem look to yOVII sttirs. Lamintted Birch for longer tnd stronger wetr.

-...... ..

N E W F 0 U N D l A N D H A R 0 W 0~ 0 S 11M IT TOPSAI.L ROAD • ';·.,;, . S~; JOHN:S · .

,. '

1 be red down there for his great ----- -- - --

st~w,ardJship. . IIOLIS'I'0:-1 1.\1'1 _ Tu~bonl' • r.. . Green~. folio\\ ed the . rescued .)0 workmen Tursdal' as

Prcmter and sa1d h1s recollcc- 1 a spcclacula1. s h i p y a r d ·fire !Ions of the old House o[ As- ' threatened the United Stales fir>! , semb~y went back to 193_2, when nuclear serl'ice barge_ !'lames the not occurred. He sa1d there and smoke billowed furiously wa~ no doubt the room was his- from a 700 . foot dock and a torte, and the _men who had $2.000,000 drydock at the Todd served had gu1ded the destin- shipyards a half-hour before b,• Jes of Newfoundland. He inn brounht under control. 'fht· thought the special silting was stooo.oooo Atomic Sen· ant \1:. a sad occurrence and brought towed to ~afety. :1s was a tan he:

1 some nostalgia. He said he was , and a dredge under cun~trucl im• proud of the opportunity to : -- -- - --- ·

I speak yesterday. Greene. There were , 0111c uth1·•

Other speakers were ~lr. A. in llw galleries. S'f1-:I•I'ING IN'l'O PAST Furey. Hon. Dr. A. Freckcr, •

lllr. J. O'Dea, lllr. Ross Barbour, i It was like stepping Into 11. Hon. L. R. Curtis, ;\lr. A. ~!. p;~st as newsmen look lht·. Duffy, on. W. J. Keough, Mr. R. places in the old press gallt•l·. Guy, Mr. R. Greene, Hon. c. The chamber looked drab and BaHam, on. J. T. Cheeseman trifle sh~bby. The portraits , and .Mr. P. T. Canning. former spea'*rs were nms1.

from the walls. These now ad•, Although there was no order the new chamber. The acousli

paper for the special session, in the old chamber are bad h· the Speaker. Hon. J. R. Cuur- in the new building the sou1 age, conducted the session as system 1s magnificent. · though it were routine. There !

were two petitions, one by Mr. Although only absent from II. I. Mercer, Fogo, asking for the old House for JUst under a yea. erection of a cottage hospital in and rne~lmg for the past thrct Carmanville; and Mr. William months tn the new and modern Smallwood Green Bay asking chamber in onfederation Build- ' for a eaus~way and bridge from I ing, it seemed like newsmen ! Pilley's Island to Triton Island had turned back a page in his­The latter drew some comment tory as they sat in on Wednes­and ~upport from Hon. E. ·s. day's ~pecial session. The re­Spencer. He said the matter collechons of the Premier and came under the standard navig- other members conjured up the able waters and was a matter fabulous politiea[ eras of the for the Department of Trans- past. We have witnessed the port. passing of an historic mile­

stone. Now in a fresh new : Among the visitors to the building with the portraits of

house were Mr. W. H. Durrell, former great men only to re­Prcsident of Iron Ore Company mind members of the J?ast, a of Canada, here for routine new era has begun-the second I talks with Premier Smallwood, decade of Confederation. But

1 a~1d Mr. Best lhc czecutive as- the political memories 'lf the . mtant to Opposition Leader J. ·past will nol soon be forgotten. i

.. d' El"l' .~.:. 1 u:r .\il'~ ~las. l~o\;._

lt'~. Lu :\II' .\h!1c,,1 !J.1s gl\ l'll 1 t<'ll' 11 el;· ":· his 11111e and ct­i·,t·L m i•·,il'dt·l•nl.! tlw !1:!l'llt 1

:)~nh dur:11g !he past \\':•ek~

.\ho lwddn nn nn• lllC' Pro i1Cl'l1 Youn~ PPo:,IP·~ Se('J't'

'>'~·. ('.1~1la111 \~'nt. J. Drn1e" nd the l'uhl~:· !:r·l.ll:ons 011:

, • t I' C: 1· ::m L Ea,on.

At City Hall Tile greater piirl o[ yesler- l-to~ , ounc·1i.

.. 1, s meclmg ol the Sl. John\ ln "'" leller ,llr. B:dl:tm : ;iu­l 11y Council was taken up with ~>ter of Labour. r.·qucslcd Ill: l reports tabled br the City En- ,, genuine eHort be made by gmeer and the secretary of the the parltes i111 ol ved to ,, :, <'ommis,ion on 'fn11 n Planning.' the eliifcrence that eXl>l <::Ju

.llr. Sharpe reponed that at a' conchHie a col~ectii'C ::·~,·, mecllng on June 22 Council ;,ad wi;il the <~s.<islante ot the co;· reeel\•cd a leiter 1rom :11r. Ay- cihation ollicer. more Spun·eil requestmg pcr­m1ss1on to pla,,e a hu:ld1ng on

· 1- , 1. De1:u;.·t:JwJ.t ul '_ir~~.~~i~t-r. to I..Jn a lOl ar pcent to '' in:mna ;on wh1t>h he con~li.'Ul.td in the ~~ntd illlthl'.ih'ld t.:Jl).: ••• :I~~~ i..':;:·.,r I·~ll of IHJ:J. 1~lr. Spur· tll1~LC. ui.:i\ t t~'.J.L' ~·~J : I :

pt'\q;d·J~· .ll v;il;d::·.r : ... akc. 1 .... rt'11 s htls~ nwnl Jmlnt:d~lllJJ \ •• ~

cun-=tl"lded ~o 1h;-: it m·tU1JJCs [l.ll'l <li !110 lol' .::'1 1., 1101-pilr ,11d wi:i1 I he :-.t '~·! liJJc <;r Ill

\ 1 ,til lh!._· ·• .J;,Illl~ hmldi,-::." t•'l :·, • ~.t\'r.

\\hen tlv r1 PH \\ ·'" r: .<·n'\~n·. i 11~ J~u·,dtll'..; l.1 ! ~·. ,; or.:r•tct ··lal <ld \\o,,.: h.· ... : • 1 1J~u·.

;.}r. S 1n11·;. LJ .L~ no\\ r r •ftL'.'ltcd permt::- ... dJ.l lu cnn!JI,' l

i..•llbL\ .ttOll CJ: a ;l!lti.S • on liH·

.,uud.:llon '\JJ.<:h he i1.,~ h.t·i~

,J,'" pcrmt~:-:on to hu;ld .. ll v

'Jid huu:::e u11 tlw a('j~ •: •;,t lot. fhe adJi:{':.:"l11 lot lllt!,.:u,·! ~; o;1l. .:.1liO ~t:n..:.rc.• U•1·t .1ml 1:-o Ill''<,,·

1:1e llllll1!i11Jill l'l'q .:1 ''llh'lli" :•1:: :l(·l'I'IOi'(• IH't 111i··ICIIl :_.;}10!1ld HOI

H' ;!l".illtt d . In 11~> rq1url '•lr Sh 1 11•

pu ,1,, · ol i 111~ c:l;Jll' :~ to r 1. • 'l ... the ~:l 11L' l,'{r 1 ·,~ It:··~ ~ ~ ,·

~ l !';:.~·k(·r ., Pon1: i,ll 't'~~r·L: .• . -· 1 lo I,

. . 11: .,. , ,, , IJ1

l.i.•nlfl•IJtl ,\\CIHiC'.

I ' . . '

'l .a: 1' ,: :,:, ut tile JJ~\- , ,,

; .. d :1L .! •Ill '..,ul' _d tu t1ll: l' J,1J .. v.l en To,\.l Planlllll~ a .. , a,l.:i· d.--c·.i~s:~;:; them t;ll Com

dl.il lh< I)< •• •• ,·, \ ~0.

Ta· l. 1 Jl1'iP.~.·HJll on J'i, 'll:ilt:.; h;,s 1\'Jll'i!.•d 111 ap· j'd, o.llll b,l ,;, .I l (JJc:,•,JJl L!IL

wr ill.: l'll,'~\a wn oi ,J oUJ:Iiin~

on ,j 1 Bl:.tr:maron 1\oad to a ·.:ted th.lt 1l \\r~ ... his O'JII\JUll

.t.1. b 'It', Splllll'lit~ 1 .·.uut:P! to compll'te the hnu-_· oa e: ... J:..: ·~·t·lllil~t·it .. l1 ~li.c hecr~u~c a 1s

1 l~ loii!HL .• ion \\hill, lw ila. J';·,·~l·ntiy ::uLia!cd tn a l'C:>Jden· ·•11:--tcuctl'd. ~lw 1.._,;-;ult \\Ill lw :1ul two ar~·d. : • '~ f l1 !l· I ~h 1 J.\.

lilllllr-;1 1\<b no:ifierl llwl \lr. \;, B. ~ialmw ha~ bt.:.·n ap­' llllllt<r! h> tile IJnp;llillll'll( n, L:,J,our to act a~ u concllJ:J!Hm ulttrcr in the di:-putc betweeit :he Sl. .lohn's :lltlllll'IJl"l \l'ork­:rs l.ot·al l'nHJn .}()2 a11d th··

1.1 d . 2 Ree\'P:.:

ln unll'l' to permll the colll­.lll'l't't"~ ot"'''P·"'Y a. rc.quc.stcd b:. i.he <1P}HH iiL'lJl 1~ wuuJU Le nt tT .. ·aty to m.tl\.c au amcud­n.t'!d tt, ,;ll' ~{JJlllt::; 1\l·..;ula~wn~.

I;lllidlll~ pl.llb ~·-tt:n .i<'<i ::~!!.();:0 \\ ''t't' a1lill'O\ ~·d ar

rd.l,\ \ n.<'l'lltlg nt ltw

;1• ~}lal'P n•;tr ('Xknr.JOn .

.\ ~t·qut·•l by A. \\', Hodrtcr lo, l•.l' dl \l!(J}I!lh•llt Ol 20 aCft.'S

ol h~-> property situdtcd on :,de·- Ji111 wa- rejerled by tile ( t•onmt"lun on To11n Plan111ng and :llt'ir tit~ I' 1011 on the rna t­ic'l' was UtJht·itl h> the Council : ~.·5terda: mornmg.

1 hn\ 1 .t~ ( 'olllll'tl

1: I Tl?~ni I ::\U I:D

~\ I '•· C::) B:Hlio and ~:leetric l'o. :-i~ Ltd , w:ltPl' StrrL•t. neon :-Jign.

\'. \\'abh. 6n .l!ili!:tr) Ho;lli. :tll,•r,:ll<llh lor t11o apat·tments. The l'omm~<>ioH told the

Pnr!u;.., l l'on• Hoad. bung.J }II',\',

1< < ~:p1scopal l'orporCJIIon . \'allt•y Hoad. I'Xtt•ns:on foo ,c·hcol :tnd l'htlleh

r<HIIICll that lite area in wiueh .'-lr. lloddo'l' plilll> thiS dt•\clop­lill'llt I" a jJ\'Otllhi~t'd :~r~·a.

\\'m Cl.:rk<·. l.ld Lot ~" ~- iiJ'olrl 1\irl!.!. Portu:=::al (. tl\ t·

t \\ II·CIII Pol'itlgal t 'o\'e !~oad. hun~alo\\ Boat!, r~tens11m for

t'oum·Jl .qq>rnvcd a recpa• ... t by Et111,otd t;. 1\'arrcn to ha1·c t urb and gutter serl'iees ex­•Pmlcd to hJ.< properly on (;oo.-.c· -lt'IT)' Lane. Sllll't' She,, !:-trect illld (;oo<rhell y bne arc to be t'art·d lh» year il 11ould only be a n:~llcr o, rx:rnding the Clll'h and gutlt-r anolhrr 70 feet up (;no,dJciTY Lane from the rorner of Shr,, Sl,rrl.

\\'r. Xt'-'CII'orth~- Limited . PrnH'l'" S:n:l'L d1a1n lt11k fence. :'\OT HE('O-'DIE:'\OEII

Ba\'<tn:tn Bl'<.'\\{'f~ l.lmitcd. L. ~1. l'ox. 385 ll.1m111on Ale­nuc PXlcnston. operatr. t'OI11Pt·

:wncn· Storr. 1 contrary to Zon-111~ r~gulation-=J.

Le~lic Strrrl. ga~o'11H' ~torn~(· hwldin~ LIPJll'lllt'rl h~ Flft' ( 'ommi ., ... in11er).

llarold l'l:•rkt- Lid .. l.nt 74 A. Hobert H11; r'. Wickford LanP. extension In dwellin~. 1 prolu­hltrd Area) Estim<~lerl \'alur S250.60U.OO,

Tp;·ha~· r:o.!d, hun::!nlow. IL \'. t'ollltb. :JB-L\ llamillon

.\\{'lltlp Exll'thion. dwrlling.

ONE COAT WHITE

SAVE % THE PAINT and Y2 THE LABOR

it's easy when you use

SUPER-LASTIC 1-Coat WHIT!t

HOUSE PAINT

HOUSE PAINT

Make the exterior woodwork ar.d tri,.. of your home the whitest, the l,riQI. '~~t - year after year - with self-cleaning SUPER-lASTIC ONE-COAT WI-liTE . . . sheds dirt, to give more beauty, more lastin~ durability and weatherproof protettion. Perfect one-coat coverage over •reviously white painted surtaces. SUPER·LASTIC ONE-COAT WHITE cuh painting costs in half; saves toours of painting time too. CANADIAN T!R£1 SAVES YOU $1.50 OR MORE - ON !:VERY GALLON.

$1.89 Qt.

Reduce Paint Failures-SUPER·LASTIC PRESS TRIGGER ANO PAINT P.V.A.

(P:~I\ -V1nyt Acetate)

INTERIOR • EXTERIOR

HOUSE PAINT

Yes, you can actually apply PYA in wet weather, right over damp surfaces . • , "breathes" to reduce the problem of peeling, blistering. All-purpose for in· terior and exterior use- for wood, concrete, cement bloek, brick, etc. Wide range of b~ao· tiful colors and white.

1.85 6·55 Qt. G.tl.

T1ntlne T•bu ......... 14

SPRAY ENAMEL

,.. -- .. ,... for •• t • -- .... IDdoon ~ ~ -deeoratot ~"' ... fast., .....

t • proff!$<.\-e:u ..-IPRAY·GUPI HANDL!--C.,. ___ ... "pt'O-.tyle-• ..,.,. t• ~~ """

~iEADQUAtCn:.RS tUI( a·';:dNTERS' AND DECORATORS SUPPLIES

CADADIAD TIRE PHONE 90141 B.IZABETtl AVENUE

SUPERVISED FREE PARKING .·. '... . . . ' ~-·~"' .

• ' • I ' • ' ~~.-,1

..,., . ~: . i -.

' . - ·- .

' -.: - - •.

.. . . '' .

- . : ' ..

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

't.' __ ~-:

' ' . - -,

... ...__ .. l . . .- '

·,

.I .. --'~

. -•

. · .. i

' . 11

~-.,: •t . . . ·. ' ~ .. -~ .

SECTION II THE DAILY NEWS SECTION II THE DAILY NEWS, S·T. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960

----------~~~~====================================~~~--~~~~~-'1\emorial :To Summer Captain and Mrs.! School Closed School Concept•lon Bay News Ratcl.,ffe F t d 1 CARBONEAR.June27th.-. € e School is out for another year

\ and it is useless now to wish SJ'.\~1/\RO'S BAY _ Five i CARBONEAR, June 27th.- • the pupils success in their exam·

)unday =>rogrcmme

soung wumrn ~nd two young Capt and Mrs. Ratcliffe, Corps : inalions, for no wish of mine, !'r.\~1.\l'tn':' R:\\" -Th.· :->.·r· men. at least, from Spaniard's Officers of the local corps of however sincere, would erase

,;t~ r! r.cmc"'"ra1:r•· at thr B:l)' will t:1kc the Probationers' the Salvation Army, will he · what they have written or add ;,.._niud·, I>;~)· \\'~r ~h·nwri,J : Sumnwr Course in St. John's leaving shortly for the Can· ' one word to it. We can, how· 11:: 'N' hrlrl nn :'•mrl,y, .h•ly :1.1 ti1is ~ummcr. ami in September adian mainland, enroute to ever, wish them a pleasant va. 1 :! 30 jl m. ll'ill l'nl.:'r the classrooms in Pakistan, where they will carry , cation. one free from illness

· :'\cwfom:dlanll in St•ptember in on Salvation Army work. i and accidents. Even thou;:h Th1s .,.!" •:r • •il hr tmrlrr lh~ ~ diffrrrnt rolr from what they At the last meeting of the 1 the next tw~ months may call

""r1tr- •·! lhr ~":"1ia1 -.1\ lla)· hal'r hcrn used to. They are Home Lra~~ue, Mrs. Ratcliffe 1 for no special ~tudy of the lr: :1rh ~! :~r l';p·or\i;:n l.r~ion ~hirlcy FIHigr. Doreen Gosse, was presented with a cheque. in 'school problems, tt may be wtse '"'; w1~! f<'::,,.,. lilt' u;a~l pa:- 'I :rgan•l Barrett, .Joyce Vokey, appreciation of her good work : for the senior pupils, at least.

Flort'nl'C Chipman, John Smith during the time she has serl'ed I to give a bit of thought to the 'I • Ro1· ''o·<l' here. She was agreeably sur· :coming year and to determine

. ••··• 1',".\'l ··f-',:1.11 •. Ill • \.I :s .. ' or: .• ~::~:. :n1:, " " • 1 h 'II · 1 · prised and thanked her co· '. in their minds that they will do ··.'.! ~- an .. :rct ·r~r,• 1\l'::r thr Srwra ot t·r~ 11'1 enJOY liCIT .... h J' 1 d ft th t workers anrl well w1'shers. for ' their utmost to achieve per· \lr:r:~r:a: 1:w-.1:1d;. anti t' r lay· >ummcr o Hays an a cr a •·1~:t•r ~h·mori<tl Unil'ersity to their very lol'cly r:esture. Then I fection in the next school r.: <'! ,, rc;!:h!' ln l"l'm:.·m:u~!~l·r t 1 ,, : .•.. ~.c.•cr.,·<l " .ui:ahk hrc:iu thrir studies ou a higher on T JUrs< ay last the con;:re- ; year.

!''"'"'· s: 1'1 olhr1·s plan to foJ. galion held a special soda! : In most sehools here the final )p.1· 111 :hr tont:<tt•ps of !-'lor- c1Tning in honour of Capt. · session was devoted to the pres·

1! i~ h··i ,·.! th .• : 'l:.·.:~ :l·, tr,,:~· ~t·.~·:, :.:· ... !;,,· ..

,.,., rlll'l' :'\i~htingalr. and nur plan~ e.nd ~lrs. Ratcliffe and the Cap- ' entation of promotion ccrtifi· ;:i, 1., rnlrr " commt'l'cial school. lain was presented with another: cates. with a minister or somt

,,.;· !' t.' ·\f ,.·•d ; ,· ,l:' \' ~~: ht !'r•·~r. ~ :t• ;;. ·. ::r ::w · .,:· .!!· d :-.: ·"'' "\',;.: ,,_,•.:. ~.::1- ~· !nr :r(' ..... ,····r: ,, .:~ ;.. ........ 'li•P-·' d h: :r. :. \"' .\ r.. !-rl

Cadets to Cc:rr.p A!der~hot

:o:!'.\'\1\!;n·~ 1;:-.Y 1.1 '"'. 1~ .:-:- Hl·:\l:~'\,1~ of ~.)t):l ~j\.1

1;:.:-.-:-~ :-: • .:• (,1Ct•1 ('p:-:.;. Wl

it'.~\ t ~.·r (,l:1'i' .\!r~('r.·h·< ., ih'l\

tt, 'I;:. :·~: :1 ... :.~:o:ru<·:ur : •:· ~h.· s.c f·~ ·., c-rk< c 'ur~l'. t 'pi. t'.d

:hn!l~ m::dP thl'ir dt•(·i~don~. we 1 '; I'•' lhat r;H'h ll'ill 111' Sltl'Cl'.<s.' :tll

Personals l' \Hilll:\E:\R .. June 2ilh. -

':1·:· Fr~n1k SamHiers and • 1 a-:~l1h•r Fram·cs went to St. ·'"1•;!', yr·;· :•rcla)·. In meet Miss .I;; n ',.,. n owe of l~,·r~·ett, 111ass., · ;,., ll'ill ~pt•nrl the next two ''""t !" '" ~ursh of her grand­. 't'll1 :-.

1r.-.,, ... ::~: .. ,,·rr~~ ~n~d w<l ,t~C t,-·; ;'"'·'~\: !~l!H' \\'t't'\\:' Wl!h

\lr ~nd \Irs. Silas Pitl'her of ''''"Jill' spent the wc<•k·l'nd ;,._.,·e a~ g11L·~t.c: of ~lr. nnd J\lrs. :\1 tht· condnding cxl•rcises of Hoi~· Hedt•cmt'l' Sdu)(]l, Spnninrd's Bny, on Frida~·· June '7, ~lr. 0. R. T.awrrncc,

tr-r ).:~:::~.~- T .. hn~:: :1:·.> :o::;·Yt-11

., rr~ .. · "'l'::a•r :r;Hit~!·.,· r·uur.o:.t• v. ::: ~<' 1 rr t~1 :~~·~r~ anr~ (~orlllHl

!'...,<';'It'~=-~- '' bi··., l.!r·~d l'hll'lllaU '"'.··, ~~~l"·~r. t':Hnp :\i•kr:-hot l;.,·r· ~('I:- 1 ···.o Wf't'1.;.~· JUI11or C"f\;' --.(

,·,•d :'\tH'thcott. .\I.A., Supervisor of Schools, presented Shirley Fml~c anti Harry Coates witl1 Bursary Ccrtifk·att•s. \lis~ Futl!;e com!'~

·-·

"r; Gonion Sin)·anl an<l two ' from Pilley's hlnnd, X.D.B .. and \lr. Coates from Coley's Point, mul both chose this school in whid1 to study their ;·hilrlrrn arrived from New \'nrk tntlo-'. on a ,·isit to her . matriculation subjects, (Photo hy E. H. \'okcy) tlarrnts. :\Jr. and ~Irs. William I n~i•i. ·----------------· ____ .. ___ _ --- .--·--· --

Personals

It's light! 11.\ Y ROBERTS-~lis~ Vera

M. llercer, R.N .. recently re­turned to New York. U.S A .. after sending a pleasant holiday with her parents, ~lr. and Mrs. A. E. M~rcer, also relatives and friends, Her visit was very

It's . . ' • • ' 1

...... : ~ ~ . t ; "' .. ~ " ' I I

How do you r.ke your beer f Light' Satisfying' Then ask for Dominion -.the one beer that Is brewed for both tastes! That Is

. why so many people prefer Dominion Ale above all others;

BENNETT BREWING CO. LTD~

~;of~!

ST. JOHN'S: Phone 7345 or 6359 GANDER: K. J. Griffin ltd., Phone 894 GRAND FALLS: Bond Beverages Ltd., Phone 2146 BELL ISLAN~' Tom Murphy, Phone 2186

, much enjoyed. ~liss ;\lercer would like ti say a special "thank vou" to Jllrs. R. D. Pep· per for· many courtesies rlurin~

'her stay.

i ~lis~ F.laine Brown. U.C.

I' teacher at Bunyan's Cove. is spending her summer holi~!ay>

:with her mother, ;\Irs. \\ .. r i Hrown.

! ;\hs.; l~ubcUe (~\Urchill. An

lglir.m teacher at 1' cxtrap, is ;pendin? her s•Jmmei vac•ni_,lll ;,t IJnme.

The manv friends of Mi!>S Florence :OI~rcer will be happy to

I learn she has returned home for learn she has returned home

, from the Grace Hospital, where i she underwent surgery. Florence ; is !eclinJZ line. and will be out ! around ~horlly. I i I ;\le>srs. Robert Hardy and

I \'aughan Mercer spent the week· end on a !ishing trip to Trepas·

I sev.

Mrs. Warlord and two thl!rlren

I Rochelle and Terry of St. .John's are spending a holiday with her sister and brother-in-law RC\' .. 1. B. and ~Irs. Reynolds.

~lr. and Mrs .. lames F. Pike and >on Paul. Stephenville are presently visiting Mrs. Pike's lather. :.rr. Wilfred ;\lerccr and family.

~!is, F. Mathieson R.\' .. :\!iss ~~. Squir~s R.N., and ~. Blair,

I Recorder. Dept. Public Health, visited Bay Roberts Monday, to administer B.C.G. to school child· ren !rom the Amalgamated and Roman Catholic schools.

Congratulations to Dr. C. and Mrs. Avery who are rejoicing in the birth of a baby girl on Sun· di!y June 26th at the Grace Hos· pita!.

Birthdays BAY ROBERTS - Yvonne

Lawrence celebrated he!' birthday on June 27th with a party at her home for her little friends. All report having a wonderful time and join with mommy and daddy in wishing Yvonne many more happy birthdays.

Sandra Mercer celebrated her birthday with a party for her little friends on June 27th. A happy evening was spent. All her little friends repeat again "Happy Birthday, Sandra". Special greet· ings come from mommy, daddy and 1111 your brothers and sisters.

Shipping CARBONEAR - The M. V.

"Moneco" arrived from Battle Hr. with part cargo for the Earle Freighting Service Ltd., and the following vessel of the same company sailed: The "Delawana" for the West Coast, with Salt. The "Tweedsmuir" for Battle Hr., with fishery sup­plies. The "Curling" is now loading and will be sailing in a day or two for Battle Hr.

The modern longliner "Cape LeHunc" is in port.

The !ltV. "Thomas Hodder" is in port, with freight for local

firms.

ehcqur. in appreciation of his ; member of the Board of Edu­and ~Irs. Ratcliffe's work. The cation doing the honours. !'<!plain thanked the assembly ln all schools there were par­for their generous gift and as· tics during the last week, with >ured them he would think some taking place in wide open kindly of Carboncar and the , >pace>. others in the confines corps as long as memory lasted. · o! the classrooms, but all 'll'ere

A social hour followed and : 1 cr>' l'njoyable. all present expressed their good ; When school reopens there wishes for future blessings and ' will be some noticeable happiness to both the officers. ! changes. Senior pupils of the We would also like to extend ; U.C.A. will be attending the to them I'CTY best wishes for . new Regional High. In all \he future. On Sunday next ' ~chools there will he some Capt. and Mrs. Jlateli!fe will changes in the staff, with a he bir!din!: farewell to the peo- number of last year's teacher.~ 11le they have served so well mo,·ing elsrwhere or going to durin~ the past three years and unil·er>ity. So far as we can 11·e assure thrm the1' take with hear there will be no chan~:e them the good wish~s of all the in the Sall'ation Army 1taff Carbonear people. and only tll'o in that of St.

Library Notes James', Mis5 Doreen Parrott will be returning after an ab· sence of one year and Mis~ ·norence Mercer wil be a brand

BAy ROBERTS-Th B ,. : new teacher. :r~ey will ~eplace . . e a. • Ilhss Patsy W1lhs and M11s Lor·

Ro~erts RegiOnal Library Bo~rd 1 raine Legge who, together with at 1ts annual general meetmg i M rine Thoms were given gifts held recently. was pleased to 11 bathe Horne a'nd Schmtl Associ· w~lcome !llr. Dona~·an, t.he n~w a~on just prior to their leaving D1re_~tor of Pubhc Llbran~s , in appreciation of their work Sen 1ces and 1\llss Jesste :1-hf-/. th h ol and "'undav fl . Ch' f R . I L'b . 111 e IC 0 " • m, le eg~ona 1 rartan. , School. . ~t th1s meetmg, the L1brar· · We may zay that Jtnt all 1~n sreport. a very co~prehen· scho'ols hal'e yet been staffed s1ve ~ne, was rrad. M1s~ Par· and, as soon as we hear they sons !I) forms us lh2t mcula· , are. we will try and get a list hon has decreased somewhat: of the staff members. thi.1 past year, but this was· rlue to time lost as a result of 1

the polio epidemic. the confer- i ence and the en!orced closing of the library last Autumn

Personals whena work was beinl( done on! SPANIARD'S BAY _ Wr the ~rounds, The severe stor·n; d 1. ht d w'th 1•1· .. ;t

f ,· t 1• t d 1 were e 1g e I a '· o the past \1m er a -·O en ec i f 'I d 'lr Robert l'

d . I r H , rom ., r. an " s. .. to cut own c~rcu a l?n. ar ; Smith of Gander on Sund~y not so muc~ lime hcmg lost I ft noon and evenin~ . the cJrculahon would h.wr : a er &

been ab?"e. avera~E'. Thr· 1 !llr. and lllrs. William Butt schools w1thm the town. , as with l\larilyn, Donna and Billie ~vell as those Wlthm lhe l'lc'n· are on annual vacation which 1~y make good _u~e of the , they are spending here with hbrary . and supphes of books i 1\lrs. Butt's parents, Mr. and from t1me to hme . are taken 1 ;\Irs. Norman Chipman. out hoth for educatiOnal read· __ ing and for entertainment . ! llliss ,Jessie Vokey has r~·

The ho;•~ supply ll . the ll· i turned from Portland, !l!aine, l•rary was mcreased ~h1s year. : where she spent a year attend­some books comtng :ow. the; ing school. Public Libraries Homl a::d I vlhers from prn·ate donnn. )]I· · Teachers arriving home Ia>t ,<ames Badcock. a fermer ~~_s!- 1' week included Donald Peddle dent of this town, bu~ r.mv hv· from Paradise, Labrador, Doug ing in Boston, donated a nnm- Sheppard, William Noseworthy her of books. as also dirt )Jr. and Az. Smith from Herring Hopkins of the West~r~ Union Neck, Ray Noseworthy and Mar­Cable Company, and ~!r. J. H. ion Noseworthy from the west Dawe. coast, Phyllis Sheppard from

The Librarian's report made Trinit)'. Alice Jewer from Trin· honourable mention of the late ity East, James Gosse from Bay Mr. s. E. Mercer. It was he Bulls, Arthur Gosse from who painted the first sign and Hodge's Cove, Ruby Sheppa!d later on touched and brighten· from Foxtrap and Elizabeth ed it up. He also did other let- ! Jewer from Harbour Buffett. tering for the library, all free; of charge. He was a constant · Illiss Daphne Spurrell from and interested reader. · St. John's spent last weekend

Miss Parsons concluded her here with :Miss Gertie Smith. report by thanking the Gosling and Regional libraries at St. II~ iss ?lga. Smith is this week John's for their cooeration and i hohdaymg m the eity with also the Boy Roberts Board. · friends.

The Board has acquired a . small piece of extra land around 1 Mr. and Mrs. II. !ltran~e the library and a new fence is : rented Mrs. Mary Seymour s now being erected. In this con· ' house for the sum~er month~ nection mention must be made w~ile Mr .. Strange 1s engaged of the Town council which has w1th the L1ght and Power Com· been very generous· in helping pany · out with labour and material.

The Girl Guide! have plant· ed some golden tulip bulbs in the library grounds and with the help of Miss Parsons' "green thumb" as Miss Mil· !lin so aptly put it, will add greatly to the appearance of the grounds.

Disclosure He carried a chip on his

shoulder But no one could see why,

And yet it seemed to remain there

As day after day went by.

Until a keen observer Saw a different chip each day,

hen came to the logical con· elusion

And had these words to say:

"If a man has a chip on his shoulder

It can easily be understood Why every day there's a dif·

ferent chip-Hi,s head is made of wood.

Spaniard's Bay, une 28. 1960.

E.H.V.

Mr. and Mrs. John Godse II and family are in residence in the old home for their vacation period.

Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Samuel· son and family were here from the city for the weekend.

Mr. and Mrs. Nath 1\iercer celebrated their twentieth anni­versary on Monday, June 27th. and Mr. and Mrs. W. Hedderson their ninth on the same date. Congratulations.

Birthday greetings to Betty Drover on Wednesday, June 29, to Jeanette Marilyn Vikey on Thursday, June 30, to Arthur Hutchings on Saturday, July 2, to Bertha Bishop and Verna Bishop on Sunday, July 3, to David Neil on Monday, July 4 and to Max Bishop <DAILY NEWS carrier) on Tuesday, July 5.

HOLIDAY TOLL OTI'AWA ICP)-The Canadian

Highway Safety Council said Tuesday it "lnticipates with alarm" that 50 persons will be killed and more than 1,000 in! jured in traffic accidents durlni the July 1 holiday weekend. Con·

1 tributing to the forecast W115 the The M.V. "Baecaheu" arrived , five- year average of 4~ traffic

in port at 10.30 p.m. on Friday deaths in Dominion Day traffic last and after taking a large as well as a steady, gradual in·· cargo of freight for Labrador ' crease in highway fatalities, in­ports sailed at 5.30 p.m. on !' juries and accidents during th• Saturday. first six months of this ye~.

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10

Stock Market Toronto

TO-MORROW The Story T/Jat Spiced The Front Pages OF A Nation! "g. f: s The JER.~LD'S J ;.:.. to"~V . > •

~~ Ori". }..\-Paife :} _ /'\oi liP ·~ ' \ . -e . . . . J Ac:~~::.:::.:::.~ RITA ,..l ~ ANTHONY :f,F' GIG HAYWORTH FRANCIOSA YOUNG

Also - UP.fO.THE.MINUTE NEWS TIMES OF SHOWS:

EVENING SHOWS: 6.30 - 9.00. MATINEE: 2 P.M.

LAST TIMES TODAY "THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE"

SPECIAL FEATURETIE "MAY WEDDING"

NOW PLAYING

....._ JIM O'BRilR. • DIIIA MERRill· GENf EVAIIS • IIUflt

• ARlHUR O'CONNHL Also -NOVELTY

OF SHOWS: TIMES EVENING SHOWS: 6.30 - 9.00.

MATINEE: 2 P.M.

NEXT AnRACTION GREGORY' PECK- AVA GARDNER- ANTHONY PERKINS In "ON THE BEACH" THE BIGGEST STORY OF OUR TIME.

THE DAILY Ne,VS, S·T. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960

Report OUR BOARDING HOUSE with MAJOR HOOPLI!!! OUT OUR WAY By J. R. WILLIAMS

I I I ~·V. 1G 10 10 - !'. 13 12 12 +I

:15 2111. 2& w-1 39 371'o 38 - .... 5 I 5 -11. 2!J12!-2

$31 37 37\i + 1\ 33 33 33 -~ g • • + .... 6 5 :;

93 90 9Q -3 23 21 :13 +I 59 5I 5I -1 11 81 Bl +I

110 110 110 gv. tlo!l 9\lo

1.10 112.1 &Ill !Ill 103 103 -1 25 2!1 25 23 38 21

6¥o I Ill - V. 14\'o 11\1 lll'o

250 ISO 250 -1 !!loll !!loll 1!11 + .... 16 15 15 12 12 12 +I es fi~ M +1

4 4 4 $13 II 13 - V. 37 37 37 32 32 :n

3115 37o m 209 205 209

4 4 4

+S +5 +4

g I 9 +l 1111 171'. 11 ... II II II -1 21'1 21;· ~U..-11 I I I

1!0 59 oo +I

10 10 10 - .... -----------175 175 175 53 48 53 +I 20 20 20 Wetfon B 47 47 47 20 20 20

35 - 'f& 81ar1r. &•I~• llrll Low Clost Ch'rtf con." Text pr !$D t-13 t3 13 ' Abilbl 870 138% 37 m1t +HI Cons Gu liS S39 39 39

AIRuma 41~l 132 31" 311> · C Oilcloth 30 $131> 3311 ~1\it - 1;

115 um ,, Tat1l IIIH: 11406.000, ·

:1.' 26 2~ -3 8 7 j -1

I&V. 1m 16'~ + v. 93 93 93 +3 Montreal 2.1 25 2.1 + 3

280 271 280 lr The Canadian Prt!:• !I 82 !2 -3 Ablllb 46 4! 46 Aob .. tos 311 31\t 31, 1- 1\t BMUO C :oiftl

ann 790 795 -10 Bonk Monl 191ti: l!H1 1!~1.-J - lh Aank NS

!48 115 145 -1 Bnqut PC :!R 27 27 -1 Bathurd A 8(1 80 80 -1 Rathunl 8

1&11 180 160 Rtli 1815 Ul:t Hl5 +I 'brazil 21 21 21 +I Rid• PrO!I 14 H H C Cemtnl 6 li 6 -J C CPmtnt p r

425 420 120 -15 C Bnk Com 600 :;~1 ~9n --20 Cc1n Rrfi'w

9!1 98 99 -+ 1 . 1 Cdn Celan :112: 3'-2 3~ ~ -- h, C lnt Power

12:l1l 2:\:\A 23~.. r V4 I c lnt row pr 1:10 129 120 -i I r.ockshult 610 605 60.' -·10 , Sf'all:~nms

4 4 4 , Tl Bnd•t 3 3 3 : Dom Tar 131~ 13\12 t'Jt~ 1 Foundation

119 113 114 -1

38\·i Fr~tsr-r 22\'.t OT l.aku .S21,\ How :O:mlth 53 Hud nny ,\In .~7 Imp DRnk ll Imp Oil 43 lnl Nrl< 33~;. tnt Pap 44"'- Ma-.•·Ftr

430 N 51 Car 30 Noranda 2ti PaudMh

~6.iil Prlct 52'4 Roynl Rank 35~k Ro~:nlltt 20 St L Corp 131_. Shnwln 42~~ Sltel

16 US Steel :28 Walker 17/ CI\NADI.\S lJJ' Cons Pap

9'.-1 ~4

!1\2 9 ~11 \Ill 103 103 -1 11, ~ \\ u - 1 :z New York

Alum\n 1810 130'4 30 301\ - \1 i lnv Found z2 137\'.t 37\'.t Jll.o ·1 Alurn 2 pr 11~ S4S 45 45 t- \1' Madarrn 200 Sl!l!,ot M 83 _,

Ang T 290 p :10 1501,-\ 50\1 501,-; Moor~ 545 U6 -44~ 46 • Bl ,' Araus 7.~ S27~ 17h 271,\ -(I MR Dairlf! 24S 18~ 5',.\ 6t.~ t ~ ,-\taus 250 p 100 S46~ 463 11 46% : Prem Steel SOO $9 I 9 : Ar:::hestos lOti 522 1 ~ 22 1·~ 22'11 - % 1 Qur Ph wUl 885 $11~ 11 11 -1\-1 _;

25\4, Atlas Sll lld Z.~O $2J)I;} lO 20 Shop Save 2923 tB31! 7T,11 Bb2 a 1, :m nank ~tont 230 $53 3J 53 I Sobey Rtoru 180 SllUt 111.'4. 1111-t :lRI> Rnk :-;s rt 441lR Jill m 375 -20 T F In A 2l0 $37 36'> 36'~ I:JI.-1 . nnk NS 755 Slt'r-4 57 . 57 - ~ Tr Can CP too UO\A.r: 30~ 30h .17•,;; Bar.r1ue CN ~5 S52~ 52~'2 521.1 · Tnn!!> Mt :175 SRYt !1\AJ. 8V.a :'H I nanqup PC ?.10 135 :J5 35 j Union Ga41: 3~ $14 13\1! 131,-l ~Hot Oath Pow A UO 143 43 43 I U Amu"r B 1S6 Sll,h 11t; 111.': - 1JJ ~ ~II , Oath Pow H 89'1 S:lll.-~ :121" 33~"' + ~. U Prln Prop 8900 20S 100 205 ~'1 llt"ll Phone 15M SH~ 44 1 ~ S4~ WRttrman 1000 .f.~ 41~ 1425 -75

IJ Nrnn\1 6(16 1\30 425 430 -10 :IIINE8 Ji:\~ DA Oil 12H S23'4, ~5 1.\ :!5V, + lf4 ,\IIJcOpt 2000 7 T T 1~ : JlCE .; pr 1.10 sn 7$ 75 I Anll'On 1000 44 44 -44 -t

:\91 flCf: ~~4J)T 120 Sll~~l: p,~~\1 85',\ lt.nfhon1Aft 500 4~ 4~ 1.-\ fmLJ WRCE S'2PT L1 SjO 50 .'ift , Amo 1000 5 S ! 20 nc Fl\ft'~t 1011 ,11 1• 111 .. 11~ + 'AI: AtlaA T~ltf 4600 59 .58 59 -1 171·1 Bt: PnwE'r lfrr!l $JP11 3114 3Hl Dalcman 7'200 9 811!1 a!,l - lh :.:!7 llrOWl\ 2:1~ Sl31-l 1:"1.14 Jj 1"- ~2 nclle Chib 100 0 5 5 5 + 1 6!11,4 : nuild Prod lU S30 30 )jl - 1·~ nnnillt 1100 16 18 115 fi~~ C:~l Pnw 4511 !1934 Ul,l\ 19/- ~ !lurnt Hut 4000 13 121.-l 12~ -lt,.'~

3/i ('an Crm 19i $l1J 26 20 ; Calumf'l 2000 3 3 3 -1~ 1 can Crm p 3.1 S25!\i! :Z6~~ 2fin ,' c 11 mp Chtb r5o &~n 600 800

3M4 Can Iron 152 $1111.1 161l 161/l - \1' c De\' 10000 :!2j 22.5 22S -3

I Can Iron 4~·4p 50 Siti 76 76 + 1 1 Canah!rsl< z24 2 2 2

I Can MAlt 125 •~~ 5-t ~ +1 1 ~tizeram 22~00 68 63 56 CSI. tlj ~t! .:2 4.2 · C:utie-r Que 1000 10 111 lG c .\vialion liO $2\rl~ 2fl1.1 20\~ - 1·~ Cauar 200 lllb2 tnf. ta~ + t,.~

' C Hank Cum 1 H S52·1 l .i2 12 .i2~~ .._ ""- t'('nt Dr-1 1500 4j() IHO Un -30 94 90 94 --~ 117 61 6G -. .. tR 1712 lt + 1.2

I (' Hn·w H:IU s:n~e :r) 11 J3:1t. + ~~ Ch('maluy ;;9:lll 22!; 210 225 .<-10 st:W l"ORK t•t.OSIS<i ii'OTOfRS I c ('clan z!lj ~:;u 2H :?H ('ht'-;1'! 1:1000 9 i 81,--l

Ry Thr ,\,l'lnrllUI'd l'rr·u c Ct-1 Sl j.Spr j041 $:ll 31 :n : Chb Cop 1000 8~2 8~ 31,~ - \-2 1 14 14 14 nt•th Str-r-1 -H~·, Kt>nnf'cntt 7!;l.'J c (h('mical 90n $t; 6 ti -lO Clr.tthtnr1 :!1100 81~ 8\-'J: !If~ 1Y.!: i

Bon:: Wnrnf!'r 371 11 Mont!>' W 42-'~ c Husky :!\10 475 47:1 475 (: ~In npa~ j{)(; ;>t'l 51.2 5~~ - ' I l()f'l ~40 4-ltl .\40 -10 I r and n 61 :-;y C~nt 2~ 1 11 Cll. Hill $1:11.~ lJli.fo 13 1'-- ~, c Qu~ Yell z1011 :! 2 2 tOO 2j() no 230 I Con.o; Edi~on ti6 Radio Corp 6fl C Tnt Pr-w HMI S13 1 " ll 111 131 "- -F11 c \'auze lO~(I ~;) 92 9S +3

OlL~ , fo:t Autn EJ 418t4 Std 01 :"!J 4G.-,~ q Po~\' pr tiO $12 1 ;~ 4:l 1'.! -t2t,.l- '12 Crusade Prt ;,111 111 109 110 • 11 Rox •,.OOfl :!2 2.2 22 -2V~ I Oen Elf"c 921 2 t'td Alrcrart :u~ c Lnco l:tO S6 1.~ 61 ' fit,:., Jlrni~nn t:.u f<fi.l 3i"i 855 -3~ I " 7 7 , Gnnd~·('nr 391 .. \'anadium 211~,.. Cl'lt 521 ~2-1 23~4 2-'P\- ~il' Dome 200 $171,.-4, 17 17't ,\m l.t"due ,\OO ~ 7 I I Gt Nnr Ry 4~1h Wuln.~t~• 5r~, c Pt't PT lS:J $Gt~ !Jl4 gt..,- l4 Dum Lt·a~e 10~1~ no 131 HO +11} Anchnr

10011 4~ 42 42 +4 , lnt T and T ~3 , c \'irl<t•r!l 1. 25 $U H 14 -l~ 1-'ab 5{1\}fJ 9 9 9

RAs0•11m~.rx• ~~~ ~~~ ~Jn P3o -~ -----:- 1

1 cock.<ihutt too St6 16 16 , ~··atron z::~ $.12 32 32 I .,, I''' II•,· T < : Ci)~llln !J2j 35fl 351) :tiO -SO ' r:e~snp Oil 301) 2lf.j 2'.-; 21h ' llal S pr zl:\ ~t;-. ~ · ·;l • t · 5 3"' ""~ 5 ,.

""'O 8~ M 8·1 4- 1 oron 0 I Columbia c 100 ;~a oa .KI< -_ :\L Haitian 1300 3 3 3 I nanff o)\'• + 1.~ I • Con :\1 s J2j(l $18 177• 18 ·m Hllrrr.sl 100 450 45n 450 +50

T111ta ;)Of\ 4 1 zo! ---~ 1

11 corhY A 235 517 17 17 - 34 Hnllim;~r 72j S-22 3 • 22~·• 22'rl - ;J'

', l\riiAltl 1~10°0 2~= 2~. :1~ + 4 I !UO~T .\t'li\'E TOROSTn ~TOrKS crown 'l A z75 ~19 19 19 ldl 11J(l() 46 4h •6 -9 •1 Cc~:a~A 12~ 1 $15 }5 15 - 14j By Thr Canadian Prt•~~: 0 RrldJ:e lfi1)5 $HI li·.,_. 17"-i!- ;~z :\id Chib 900 18 18 18 +1

C 500 325 325 325 JNPI'!'iTRrAL~ n Fndry 110 $413-h 41 ~l:lit I .\ln.:!ador 1000 a 8 8 -2

I!O!tiJ FIFTY \'EAR$

\-1 ••

----

"Our mothm aren't really calling us! He ju~ says that when we set on his nerv.es!" ~ C;.h·a" on "- 411: 2 1 8 11 Ph 1 J;1?9 $~~ 1 4 .\41 ~~ 1-'l + ~ o GL a~s 110 SiJh 731.1 'nt.-1 ... Formaq 30()(] 6 6 1

I c I rt !llOO ~s "'" " - c t nc - •z". ,,. 2a•.,· 29 " t•.·· I' 1.,1 - , a\'(' 100 ton ~ 4 In,- S:vn \ 5E60 ~ " ..,. o Sle('f z151l Sl2 3 'i. 12 " .. '4 x Jark L zl2:l 1 1 1 ! c n tl Ldll

20(1 l~l 12 12 - S,-1: ' Crtnti\' Trll• .31S2 SlJl_., 13 13\~ + l4 I n StortiJ 2()0 SS2~ 52.\h 5-21~ -ll-i:z ;. Sanliu:o 65(l(l 2VJ :n.; 3~ Copw StHI 500 31 3T~ 37~1 + '4 P~on Rlt 3900 14~~ 13~1 H~· .... "'

: {. 011 L wts 2111 0

T" + t I Cal Pow ~839 $19~il 1931 19:t~ - 4 n Tar 9RO $13:\4 n~,., 13~-. • 1:4 ~ .\ Rar ~{ 1000 57 52 57 •5 CUru,a Wr 4200 17~ tm 17~ + 14. Phelps D ~00 ~ 4.61'!1 ~- + '4 ~ f:d~h~~~~ 1~;~~ '.!~ :;;~ •;d~ ,\lumlnl .. 3-&':1 $J0 1

'· .10 . · 30. · -.1,-4 ~ n Tnt 2i5 $9 9~1 ~ + 1·' 1 Oi1af.oiki · 4700 9 9 t -1 Crown Zell teoo 4Mi 44~ 45% + J,-11 Phlleo 15500 J0-1-" !.8~ 29~ • V• '' C F.:"t Gaa 2~l'lll lS'l t:iU I :'in OJI.S llonohut 200 SHi 1 4 ~! l4l,_, -l Opcmiska li'n 650 &50 li50 -20 Oi!!tre 2100 44.,.._ 441\ « Phi11p M 3600 69~ 68':.0 6!w.a +l~i I C •,un·a·,·or 3111 MO RiO RRII 'Pnnrll•r :\0000 ~9 4-6 4P +1 Ou Pont 20.1 S2Plz 2ll~ 211h- ~ Paud3sh 2t,;oo 19 17 18 +3 Domt goo 17~\ 11~ 17" + lfl Pltl Plate 2900 t:SY-4 6:11;: 623·4

~ •. ~- ~15<1 45(1 .un 44!1 --HI . rlill'f' 232ll0 46 40I1 -14 Fle<Pl Wood 57!i $ltV .. 11''~ lW.t + l'i, l'~rcuPine 3000 5~~ 5~ jlh Doualu 2500 2114 2A 21 + %I Proe Gam 100 1:S5Y.z 114~4 1l$l!a;- J.-iro ~r;'a~l~rf'lol ,o(,o IA700 17~.,,, 1!.,".1 :?to ! llynAmic 11~73~o' 84131~:,· 311i 4% +3 'Fam J,l<ty !i7~ $1!111 19\'l 19~\- '!Ja i Que Cobalt 1600 340 330 340 -:s Dow Chem 4000 89~ Ml:-\ INI\-2- J.i I RCA l&:;oo 67~ ~ 66 -1%

C ~II< ~ ae •1... 31(1 200 310 -5 Midcon 83011 Jl 30 301; -It; : Founrlaln 160 $9<1 m m : St ( aw Rvr m 555 555 5.\5 -5 Eut Kod 4800 127 126 126 + t,;. Rer Tob I! XI>£ 141% 701• 70\l - 41 • 120(] n '" I Rronntr ... " 11 ' Ford us t25 $65 6~ 65 : Que SmPlt z200 6 6 6 01.\ Pont non 209Vs 207 208 -2~ I Repub !U 2400 31.1 61:1.~ 62~; -

Tlct:·~~l ret ~200 53 iJ l3 )tiNES l•·rasor 25 $25'4 25V, 25'!• + ... I s Dufal!\1 3500 IR 18 18 Eo ton MIR 1!100 31% 34'1 34\i - ... ' Royal Dul 7700 3841 37% 37~i - "'

I I ·~~00 IJII 37 41 +1 !.a lin Am 222!00 9l 83 95 +II ' Fr P•l• pr 100 375 m 375 I Sleep R 250 800 790 800 -20 ' El AUto L 300 4814 48 4814 + It A .

Dynnm c 31_~, "RS 21\.\ 28~ -~ ~ c s Jnra 30!82 u 13 l!i "-2 I Untnt'IIU 150 $3-'i 3~ 35 1 Sullivan 2{)1) 146 146 146 Kl Pl\10 NG 8500 32~\ 32'-" :J1S~ + til mertcan FF~r~odt flf :no 375 J75 37S I Ch~ster !4100 33 32 321.': + V:a Or Wp!i: vt tno S9V, 91,1, ~14 .._ '1,.1 Tltan z.u 16 16 ~6 Flntne Xd 2500 JB 37¥1 37~:.. - ._.

~-.r Pla\ns 5M ft:..~ JI~O 8!10 -5 a 1 MurrAy 2l~ 60 56 57 -3 G L ('"per 8!1 t:JB 3il.'J 3~ + 1,~ U Olfl MOO tt ~ 91 -f Ford 10000 86 85~ 66'~ + ~ : ,;~m• nil A 1'7 720 720 90720 20+ • ' llome Oil A 100 725 725 723 \'AhRad , 2000 40 40 40 Fruth Tra 14200 22~ 21"" 21\k - 11J A.MP:IIICAN ctoer.IG STOCIIS ! 1 B 783 710 Mm fi - lVI I F d Home Ol B J(lO S7 7 7 -:\2_. Qup Chib WOO 17 17 17 - Gen om 3700 2 41'-1 .ULJ .._ ~ lly Tbe Atst~dllt4 Pres• ' H,_0~~~~ J ~ t5 ~3~ .uio 911;!1, -

15 utua un s II Smith 2~0 nni JB" )S\41- . tr.lnla ~ 7 T ' + ~ Gen Elte 14000 9314. f2 91\-i + 2.4 I A.mtriean 8toek Exehange-June u . :,oo l9:t l!l2 .... '-'i Uuc\ Da! d 1~~ ::~~ ~i~ ~r·f. =1~ Wtndell 9000 3 J J Gtn Foods 1VOO l2J'Jl: 122~ 123l. + 1'~ h:d - Zx-dtvfdi!!nd, xr - Ex-rJhtl',

, IJ p oto 4(100 I AU, 81\ - •.tl.''I'UAL F11!1DS 111and!B' ~ y 200 15~,L l71'a 57\~ -IV. Gtn MWs 5200 25~ 25\\ 251'1 IW - !:<·Warranto. L :),HI :,:2 ~% 52 -S " mp an"' 131m 31 31 Tntal ••Irs: Jn(att!'Jit '75~100, Mlltt Gl!!n Mot 23800 44~ 43V. UtA + li Nlel

i ~,...l. •'n!n 1(1\11) 21J 11h: :n;, +l By Tht~ Cnldl111 Prtu -''lt lmp Ott 897 •!I"' 11% ll~ + ~-i ud el111 19t.tM, Gen 'I1re 6100 59~ 571,-2 57%-141 !IHt ltltt liP Low Cle't Cb're ' . ;• "!"' 500 ~~ 9R 9! Bid Imp Tob 700 • .,. ~ Gllddtn 300 311% 31\1 351-1 - ~ ~naenn 1!00 7-16 7-16 7-16 I' ~tuyt• r 6200 145 142 142 -2 All cdn Com !.to 1·96 lnd Ac<tP 7&l $39 38\\ 3811. - • Gooctrte~ !800 esv. 83 Ill> -1~ Btn Phooe t100 431'1 4~ 4S'h + li "•~nl 830 31 30 301\t -II> All Cdn l>i\' 4.!9 :·: lnd A< ~soP 225 S88 88 88 +5"1 ::n CXN Monlrtal elo•l•r olleb 'GOO<!Yr 1200 3m 3111. 3911. +Ill. Brazil 1500 41> 4\io 4U.. + II.

: ~~~~ron 33. •o 21 20 21 +I ,\meriran Growth 7.9'2 . Inland c pr zSO $161'. I !loll l6\4o Abltlli 870 at11 37 l81io + 1'4 I Gr PliO 2700 s•• 2 2\' + u 81\ 0 II 2500 2m 25% 25% ' N Coni ' 7 ·, 7 beoubran 27 10 29 421 25"' ... M. 'I"• sm + ,... "' • .,. A~ OL ·•ooo ' ' tnt Nl<ktl ., "'"' • " Bank NS m 151\<i. 17 " - I' Grand U• 1400 -•L 27" 27" BUIT1 1!1, 5500 I~ II"• . 1~ ~ .,. Sorthral > •w, 441> 41"" + 41'1 Canadian lnve•tmtnl !.13 9 25 p 50 198 93 98 + 1'1 M •• .,. ,. " c M 100 5rl 16 m m

NCO wll .100 ai's 795 11110 -25 Canafund 33.69 3!:371 :~: ll~r.. 75 $3311. 33lil 33lil - 41 New York Gt A and p 5100 3811. 3~ m;, - \i aa ae 511. !\~ m + ~ Par Pele SRM 530 m 530 -20 Champion )tutu a! 5.23 5.75 In! Ul\1 pr 25 IIIli> 4\llit 41l!t g~:·~11 Rr 14~ 48~ 48~1> 48~11.+ tt ~:0:,~~·

1: 3!1: 341: 341: _ '4

P"r Pete "' ,: 2S 25 2:5 -1 Commonwea1th 1nt~r. 7.82 !.59 I lntrpr PL -4-00 $531.1 52"Ar 53 - % Hom!ltk 400 38~ !I 38 - ~• Con M an4 S 300 Ull,i.l 1111 181,,. - ~ f,~~!l pr 1300 47 ~7 ~7 +2 Cnrporole lnvo•lor. !.39 :·~I lroq Gls pr

1 z00SO$ 121381• l!\0 ~lit +. I'. NEW YORK CLOSING STOCIIS Rud Bar 900 I5V. o1311o 44ll Crtlot 190'1 ~lo :19 !9\'.t + ;<

l soo 6(1 60 60 -l Dh·ersifltd rnc. ltfH I 3.fl~ 3·2 .. I JAmaica 200 19. -9 ' . • By Tht As~:;onted Press tnt BU!I 2100 :523 :518 522 "-3l~ Crnwn CP tOO 9 9 9 J'lrtrnl -46 40\; 44 Uh·ldcnr1 Share-a 2.98 · " 1 Maciinnon - Ne-w York Stock Exchange-June 2t lnl Ha- 'lN\11 ... ,L 44"--' 44~ _ tL I Dtv Pal '7000 ,. ,._16 9·15 Jllftrt' ~J: 49 -41 49 +1 Domnon F.quty 14.30 lUll! MR and Pfl ~15 $1! 1411 15 -t xd - Ex-dividend, xr - Ex-riMs. Int Nl~k· 9600 56" M%' !58 + "

1 Dome E:~~:p fiOO 6,. 6" 61r4 --1-18 ::~n,;;~~ Oil · 100 16~ !6l 161 -5 Fnl Oil and Gao 3.17 ~·~ Moilmaa pr 50 185 85 ~ 'w - Ex·warrant•. Jnl Pap 3100 IOOV. 99l'• IOO + l'a , Duke Pow 100 jO"i 50'i 5<Wo "' 14

p,;,vo Gil · 47 40 174 169 169 .;.I Fonds Colleclif A 5.09 · :llan·Fer '4l $9 Bli R'~ \lo !lot lnl Ttl 12600 43~ 4311 43 _ 411 Ford Can 25 135 Ill 135 -7 R.l\"'tf 700 '97 9'7 P7 -3 Fondc: CollectiF B 5.3i ~.~ !.t.ol~on pr 50 $-to~ -40~ 40\-2 - ~ Sln~t &alu Bl1b Low Close Ct1'1e J'ohnl Min 3700 81~ ~ 811.-i + ~ . Ford Ltd 3100 1514 15 15 -+- 1A. 11 .. 1• Expl 1000 3\1 sU.. 3\ol Fonds Colltcllf C l.O 5. Mo~~an pr 25 187\\ 87\'.t 87\A.t + ,\CF Jnd 1100 47 m:, 46'4 + \~ K•nnt-t 2,00 1m 741• 7m + u Gldlld 16500 ISO !Li l"i + \lo

· 6"" 4-2:! G 1 3 36 3 67 c 1~ $13 13 13 I Alle•any 6, 00 grJ, "'"-L ........ .:.. '-" " "~' '::1 ..-.n .,.. R _,, _,, _,, tl.

I Royalltt ~ '~~"' 6i~v. i7v.- I'J G~~~~./1~come Accum. s:04 5 51 Nnl su or 100 112 12 12 +2,, I Alii; Ch s5oo m. m. 2m-~ ~~~i.. : ~ m: ~~ ... ·~ .:~lnJt'' : ;t.;,: ii·~ iili = \k Sapphlrt I l70 355 355 -15 Group Select! A 5.00 5:45 ~~~~~~~· B 245 138 361'o 37~ + '' Amtnda 4200 6011 59\io l9\it- li M~;.h Flil 5 00 54/ 51\'J 5(1\t _ t,; Imp Tob C 100 III'J 11\'.t 111> + Vo Sccur Fr.. 900 31> 81'. 8\'.t Growth Oil and Gu 5.90 6·20 I ORII,·ie 25 $43 43 43 - \i Am Can 9400 38;1 37'i 38 + Martn co 4tOO 1!11. 43~ 4511. + \lo Ma11t7 F 1400 914 91i 9\i - \lo

1 5spou,:.~.~ ~~ro~ II"' 11 11 Investor.< Growth Fund 5.69 1~·~;· on! steel 128 119 1!1> .;!~'~ 25 Am cyan 4900 581'l 571> 57!1 -% Merck 3100 Ill> 113 83 _ 21> Mtuabl 1100 75 73 74 + 1 Slan-eD lll33 36 35 35 lnvC510n Mutual 10.74 · P•c Ptlt 1100 800 800 ~· - Am Mira 50000 m;, 21\1, 21'~ + '1'1 Mlnn MM 10500 7!\lo 771o11 7711 + l'.t Molybdtn too 4!1-> 45% 45\lo + \i Tld."l !000 46 45 46 +4 Keystone 13.77 J~.90 Placer %75 113 13 l3 Am Smtlt 3000 52V• 5111• 51\lJ- ~ Mlnn Ont 1000 3114 ~ 30".! _ y, Nat Pete 300 1/ I~ I Triad 01 2m 220 21% 215 -IS t.everMe Fund 8.2! 6.112 1' Corp 3&l 144 44 44 Am Std 4100 m;, 13 13\lt Nlpoolnl 100 '!t '!t '!> U Canoo v1 800 86 86 86 -4 ~lutual AccumulatlnJ Fund 8.81 l.ll p~~~r nr 350 1391,1 391'> 391oll Am Tel 10200 II!W. m< &!Ill - ~ ~:~a;,.!';: :: !~'!t :m :: -:;:- ~ Pae Pelo 11100 I'> 8 1·16 l'io' U'n 0111 7400 93 90 93 +! Mutuol Income Fund UO 4·~ Prov Trnns 100 $14 14 14

1 Am Tob %600 56\'.t 55\'.t 56l> +I Nat Avlatft 300 Ill'.! !3\'.t 1310 _ \\ Psnltpoe 700 1\ II. ''' + 1·11 Wayne !500 6 8 5 North Amor. Fund ol Can. 8.16 8.! Prm· Tr pr 170 $44 44 44 + Anaronda 3900 481> 481> 48~ • Nat Caab 2!00 ~~ ll4\i ll4\lo _

1 Pow Corp !00 451'1 45 4m

Wespao 1000 121'1 ~'' 10142VJ _ 1 Radisson 4·08 ;·n Uu• N Gao 1871 18~ 7'11 il'.t -~ Armro su 3000 64"" 6l/ 13\l- '!t Nat Dlsl 3900 2m :18\10 2m + 16 'Prulan 1400 311t 3'!t 3 13·11 +1 00 4000 105 '" Save and lnv"t of Canada U8 · o., Gu ur !55 $57 55 I - Arm&tJ Cit 1600 4711. 4614 !ell. - II. Nat a- 900 • .,. 'S" •• + Shtr 'll'mo 100 !It Ill Ill .;.1

W Cdn 40 40 -5 SUpervotd AmP<. Fund 6·96 ?.03 R'ctmans 100 $15;\ 15'4 15'' - ~ B•beock 3400 32ll. 3214 32\'.t - 'r\ ... Hn ' .,. ~ !Ill P 0 400 :18 2l1oll 28~ WC oGw liDO

45 75 75 -5 Supervised Exec 55 36.82 Rnt hV Con 175 4!5 490 485 Boll Ohio 12200 381> 371oll ~16 + 1'o NV Cont fiOO 22% S%\10 22\~- 14 91 OI~'K 1800 1111\!o 10 60 - 14 ~ [r.~!1111 ~~ • ~\ol 25 25 -li'J 1

suporvlstd E ... 51 30.19 Rolland A 100 136 36 36 - V. Rolh st .. t 12000 451oll 44'1'1 ~~~~ - II. ~!, lifae 1i/:

44rt

43: 43~ : ~ Ttrhnct/ ~ 1 l'!t 8lo + v.

''an Cal fiOOO 3 3 : I Suptrvotd Exec 5 7 5.17 Royal Bank l98 $6~/ 66 66\1' 2., Boelnf Ar 6700 261> ts'llt 2SIO- li Ohl Oil 17

· Tmo L"' 1200 IIJI\ 10\t 10% + t,; ' RANK8 Suporvbed Ext< 5! M 6 5·!1 Royollle pr 100 $20 lO W + " Borden Co 700 49111 41'!1. 4 ... - loll 0 OO 321-> 32 321-> + 14 Tr Cont WT 1200 SMi 34~ 25 + 14

1,~, 153'4 52'1 53~ -1'1 Supervised Growth Fund 1.53 i'al: st 1. Cem A 100 SIIYo 111;1 ii~ + lil Ror« War 2'100 37\it 36% 37\ll + "'t Olllb Mar •1500 mil :!4% 25\1 + IJi Wr Hart 1100 1" 11·15 141 +J.I6 Mnat \o2s 1571,.\ S6~~ ~7 1.ir- supenh;,pd Income Fund 3.70 9·07 1 st L corp 775 Sl7h 7.-11 Budd Mr1 moo 1~ 17 tm + ~t _P_ar_k.:.e...:D:.:a:__4:.:400.::..__::..:,:4'11'.•:_:4::l'::·'__:m:,::.:_'•.:_+:_:I.::"':._ ___ _:=====~---I"S m Ill 52'.~ 53 + '1'1 TV Eltctrono 3·32 · Salada·S 250 Sm . 9'< 9'1 Burl Mll• 4000 19\i 19 19V• - \0 Comm 143 S5H4 57~.. ~7~ +~I United Accumu HnJl,mt 13.60 14.78 Shawln 4 pr 106 s~ouJ 40Yl 40'1~ nurrou~ehs 8600 37~ 35% 37~ + 'h IIIIDII!II•IWIIIB•amme.•••~lllll'l!ll:l,.::ll(<'!lll!!!:l:'ll-tmr 1 917 $~% 66 66'~ Simpsons 100 $27~6 27':<4 rn-~ -t% calumet 1100 24 2l't~ 24 + 1,1 GWA .SSE& •!•i 2 m;a M1£U Roya 315 152 5\li n + "' M I Soulham zBO $19\i 19 191• Can Dry 1000 201> 20\'o 20V. + ~

! TAO,:= !~RU~J:.IA~ );) - •,• ontrea ~t~f~~:;~.d IO:i~ \W~ ;,:. ~~~ :.1'¢. g~! J r 3:: ~~t. i~2 21~1~. -:;:-+ ~ I FURNESS WITHY & CO LTD fld ISO $6'4 ev. w.- I Stelnba A 225 118'.'4 18'\• lit· + ,. Sater Trae 7500 2711 27Vo 70 ~ ' ., •

Anllo·N 77l US!\ 35 3511. + ,. I MO!ITR,.;AL CLOSING STOCKS Suptesl pr z!D $9H'• 91\• 91,~ Ctlanest 29 251' 24\>X V.l>l'l + ;1 C Brew 100 17 7 7 By The Caaadlau PrUI Tr can Ppe 100 $16V. J6V, 16\• Ches Oho 2400 611'. 61 61 - '!I I D Mar••• 150 $12\1 Jll> 1216 Montreal Sloek Exchange-June 2t u Site! z!OO $61> 6% 6% Chryslor 11100 ll:Y• 45 4511 I Llnrpoo) Ill. John's doseo 150 38l 385 385 Compltlt labulotlou ol Wednesday Walk GZ z55 $361ht 36 36 ClUes Sve 4100 411'. 41 41 ... •- Hf •-lntand zn se~ 6~ 6~ tmnsacton!ll. Quototlonl n ~ents unles• . Weston A 25 S].p.t, JW.. 34V. + " I clevlte 2200 7()~4. 6~ 70 + ~~ .. "' I CX' Ptmblna 823 128\-\ tT t7 -1 marked s. z-Odd lot, xd-Ex·dlvidrnd. CAN.\DIAN coca Cola 2300 61% 60V. 61~ + 1h St. John's Bost.D ~=~~i1~1 740 m 17l m -5 xr-Ex·uhto, xw-Ex-warranto. Ani Cdn 100 $33 3! 18 cns 2800 42 41\l uv. - ~• 1 "Nova Scotia" ·

Jlosloa t~

Halifu

Halifax Sl. John'• to to

St. John's L'pool Jne 14 Jne 16 1210 $36Y• 3Hi 36\4 + ;1 I lltl AnR Nfld 100 16\i 6\; 6\1 Con Ed 3000 66 651'. 66 + 14 I

_W_•_1k_••___ h·alon JOO $7 7 7 containtr 1700 2m 24% 24111 - 'I• "Newfoundland" Jne 15 Jne 22

- Can Kocllak 700 90 IS 90 1+1 Cont Can 8600 38',• 37/ 37lit + % "Nova Scotia" J 29 Jl Jne 28 Jly 12

Jly 2 Jly 4

EASTERN TRUST GUARANTEED INVESTMENT

CERTIFICATES

on amounts of S 100.00 and upwards for 5 yellrt·

'...._._ ..

. rm amounts of $100.00 and upwar!is from 4 years to 1 year.

THE EASTERN TRUST' COMPANY

_ ......... , -·- --·1•, ...

,

l'ons J'oper 1363 IJB'i 37\1 3a!i H Con Olt 3500 47''1• 47 47',? + v. "F t A I " ne y 6 ____ or va on Jly 8 Jlyl9 Jly 16 Jly 18

f Crossword Music

' ACKOBS

I Long-time popular song

'S Peddle records 9Perlod ·

J Unasp!rated 4 Operatic solos 5 OUvler's tiUe 6Redactor 7 Apollo's

mother 12 Always 8 Stratum 13 Notlon 9 Settings back 14 Actress Arden 10 Egg-shaped 15 Elderliness 1 t Mind

17 Male 16 Indolent 18 Entertain 20 Brood over 19 Step up 22 Stringed 21 Fodder musical

container instruments 23 Decay 24 Region 24 Exist 25 Lease 27 Pronoun 26 Vaporous 29 Fl89k. ~ubstance 32 Take new 28 Cloyed

actors ~~ tnterstlee 36 Dinner course "7:;-t--t-t-'1 37 Switched ''

30 Toward the 45 Peruses sheltered side 4'i Battles

:11 Burden 47 Arrow polson 33 Provided with 48 Twist

weapons SO Clip 35 Gossip 51 Unbleachecl 40 Carriers 52 Started olr

(coli.) in golf 43 Himalayan ti5 Relormecl

country alcoholic.

38 Kind ot bomb h-+-+-t-1~1-+-+-+-1 39 Stalk. 41 Watch 42 Writing tool 44 ~en\ 48Lcut

domts!lcs led 49 Placed again 63 Lltcrot'Y

•crnps 64 Formal

garden 56 Legal matters 1:;;-t--t-t-57 Emanation. 58 Dreadful 59 Punctuollttft

mnrk (ab.} 80 Minus &I Potato

DOWN

1 Bini's home 2"Moon­

Jloli..,ol,l

"Newfoundland" 1Jiy 15 Jly 23 "Nova Scotia" JJy 29 Aug 11

Jly 29 Aug 2 Aug. 12 Aug 16

Au1 4 AU118

P~rsons contemplating pasSage to Europe

1.. thoUld make bookln~rs well in advance A .n PASSAGES AltRANGED BY· 8 0 A c K.L M r\MERICAN AIRWAYS, SCANDiNAVIAN~ T\v A. eo.nne~tlng Alrline.!l. • · · '

Consult us tegardln11 your tranl problema

FURNESS TRAVEL OFFICE NE1n'OUNDLAND ROT!L I 'PHON!:

PAN aDd

SAILINGS TO AND FROM NEW YORK, SAINT JOHN, HALIFAX

TO

ST. JOHN'S AND CORNER BROOK, NFLD.

S.S. GUERNSEY Lv. New York ........................................ June 24 lv. Saint John, N.B ................................. June 27 lv. Halifax ................................................ June Ar. St. John's ........................................ Ju~1 lv. St. John's ............................................ July

30 3 5

Will call at outports as inducement offers and conditions permit.

Accepting freight for Corner Brook at all Ports. For rates, etc. Telephone 2073-5890.

Furness, Withy & Company. Ltd.

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THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLO., THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960 11

\

Yetman Singles In Tenth:Holy Cross And Guards 1 Alecs Provide Goals As F 'ld Ed St B 1 4 3 Meet·Fo~r Stead Trophy.f ·1d D St B 1 41 e1 ge e on s • The Stead Trophy for the lirst round of Senior Foot· e1 rop e on s •

ball goes on the line at the Ayre Athletic Grounds to-night. Double Blues Take Baseball lead In Thriller .

Frildlans took over the Senior Baseball lead last nlaht but 11 took them ten lnnlnRs and a comeback win to do II. J'eihl edged St. Run's 4·3 as Don Yetman· singled home lb.rr~· !'Impson In the bottom of the tenth after the Double Blut had fought bark In tie the game at 3·3 In the bottom or the ninth 11·ith hl'o runs.

Ri'l Whtrler, thr. third pltrher for .-rlld, was credited 11ith the win wllilc John Power, who went tl1e dlstanre for lht l'llurf(olds. was rhar;:cd with the loss. St. Bon's got thtlr th1tt run~ In thr first four Innings while Feild tallied a•t lour runs in the last three lnnln~s. St. Bon·~ opened the scorin~ ... · -..

in thr ~amr by pu~hing acro~s the ei~hth inning scored t11e · t\\o nm> on two fn•e ·pa~:-es. fir>l t"eilclian run as pinth· , an t'rTCir and hark to bark sm~· ._hittrr Ed. Woolgar found a hole 1

!~< h~· Tun~· ~f::nning and Rill for a run scorin~ single with G:lbr;. two out.

T~1c FlhH'(:,,Jds scored their An rrror b~· Ton)' ~Ianning

Faulkner And Yetman Score Two; Comerford Holy Cross and Guards will meet to decide the winners of the awatd. 1 Feildians got a pair of goals from each of the Alees on Both teams took their sec· ---·---- ------------- 1 their squad and handed St. Bon's a 4·1 defeat in Senior t'oot·

lions without a def~at. Guards' U · f ball at the Ayre Athletic Grounds last night. The game • blanked St. Bon's 4-0 and de·, n I orm 1 • completed the regular 5chedule of the first round of Senior fcaled Feildians 5·1 while Holy I N b

I Cross stopped MC·Uinted 2·1,. Um € rS soccer. ! and dropped st. Pat's 4·1. : __ Gary Comerford ga\'e St. Bon's the lead in the fixture I La.1t year Holy Cross defeat·· Holy Cross and Gu~rds senior i early in the first half with Alee Faulkner and Alee Yetman · ~d Gaurds in the pla)'off to cop frJOtball teams will have nu~·l ban~ing h?me their two r~oafs each for the \'ictory. , the Stead Trophy and the first hers on their uniforms for the1r Playmg w1th the wmd at - ------ ··-i roun.d. . . · televised playoff game to-night. their backs St. Bon,'s look the· performance on the half line 1 W1th goalie Rex Sm1th out of The game will be carried by

1

game lead at two mmutes of the tor Feild with a oood two wal' :town, Guords coach WH Rose CJC·~~·TV starling at 6.45. 'opening frame. Frank O'Keefe 'display. n •

1 will have Bob Maunder 111 ~hr For the information of fans fed a good pass to Gary Comer· St. Bon's again lacked finish. , nets with Fred North returmng 1hc uniform numbers arc:- ·ford at the Fe1ld1an 18 yard hnc. Ther carried the ball to the , to fullback ·.vith Hobie Pike. · 1 ior the tally, : Feildian zone often but wet·c 1 Roh Radrock. Ed. Hodder anti Guard.~ Alec Faul~ner e1·ened it up unable to complete their pla~·s. ! Doug Chaulk Will form the R. "aunder. G 2 at ~·I fn·c mmules later .. Junwr Tom ~furphy stood out at cen· halflinc whilr Art P~nrce. Don F. ;.lorth, FB 3 Thistle cross the ball to the St. trehalf for St. Bon's with (;ary \\'insur, Charlie Sonoks. Stew· H. Pike. FR . .. .... .... 4 Bon's. goal mouth with Faulkner: Comerford also playing well on

Gets One

t.,m: run m tlw fonl'th in· ,;tartrd thr two run ninth in· r:n: a< lhr~· ~ol rid of fast· ning for the Donhle Blues. Bob 1:-~!!~r l'ou~ \'.'nol~ar h~· loading Plnu~hman's third hit of the

llON YETMAN ·art Watson and Gene Garland D. L'haulk. RJI ... .... .... 5 · hreakmg .mto the clear for the I the half and Boh ~!arshall as •. , "' will he the forwards. Alf B. Badcock. CH .... .... .... 6 marker. their top attacker. .\LIT f'.'.l'fli:\'T·": Crcwes and Art Winsor arc F.. Hodder, LH .... .... .... 7 . What proved to be the win· i Despite the three goal differ-t>r ha~r· w11h none tnll Left· ni~ht ad,·anced Grimes to thirtl l'irtory. The right·hander ga1·e

h:::Mr fla1 r Hall ramr to the 3 ntl both runners scampered up eight hils and struck out r~'"'·'~' ~~d ~t:r•·i,·ed tht' inn in.~ lwme when Bob Redmond failed three batters. He walked none.

spares. A. Pearce. OR .... .... 8 mng goal came at six minutes 'encc in the score the game pro-Rill Connolly will he in goal D. Winsor. IR .... .... g of the fmal half. St. Bon's were: duced some fine football. Both

h~ ;:':o•··~r.~ "nl~· a .< 1 n~lr tally. 10 find the handle on a ground Rob l'lou~hman was the top fm' .lim walsh'; Crusaders and r. Snook.<, c ........... 10 called for a hands inside the :teams played well in the centre· he '11 hai'P Sam Pretty anrl : s. Wat.<on. JL .. .. ...... 11 penalty area and Alec. Faul~· j field area with Feildians hold· r.·,,·l'0ld p;tc·::,•r Don Ry~n tdl h~·Tols Chapman. who went >:lllel' in the game wilh three

~r: thr F•''ld1~ns down in <ll!Jle all the wa)' to seronrl base. i1its in four tnes while team· l'r:mk O'Keefe as fulls. Rob G. r:arlan<l. OL .......... 12 ncr .gave Rluegold netr~under Cy: 111g the edge in goalmouth play. \\'nods, Jack Philpott and Han·: ',\lc(,etl!gan no play With a bUl·. The win for Feild was their r:r ,,~,:~r ,,. the ,;, nf lhr r, •. ,. lbu~ Squire.; skied to center mate flurry Simpson collected

~r' r·~ hnw< with the aid of fir !II for the first out and Bob ro sin~lcs. hn ~oul•1r pla~·,;. allmnn·~ only ro~e·~ smash toward the alley The contest saw t•ight error>

Ennis art the hal\·rs with Gerry Uol~· Cros~ letEtrive for a 2·1 game. . first in the opening round as Gullil•er. Ed Shaplcr. !VII: B. Connolly, G . . .... .... 2 don Drodgc placed his first they were dropped 5·1 bl'

111 o Fr•ldi?n ha•e·n•nn~·r> to ~et in ct•niN' field was snared by :1eing committed but f,!reat ~· ~ar a- <rt·ond h?>e. Redmond on a rlil•ing grab that fielding pla)'S Ol'ershadowcd the

Woods. Barry ~launder and Tot'" ' s. Pretty, FR 3 . of two corner kicks in the right Guards. St. Bon's lost 4-0 to th~ ~leGrath as forwards. Adri~n: F. O'Keefe. I•'B .... .... .... 4 spot for Alec Yetman at 18 min· Guards team. Both teams were ~folio)', nrian Philpott and ,Tim Roh Woods, RH 5 . ntes of the second frame. Yet·: out of the Stead Trophy run· T'•r r00f hnwcrer frll 111 dm· was turned into the third twin· miscues. Roh Cole made a dil'·

:r.: t~r r.:hth ard ninth in· killin~. for st. non's. in~ catch in the opcnin~ inning mnc• and re1l:!·:m' t;,,,f the Rill Wheeler. who took 01·er and Doug Comerford tlll'll!'d the ~cn~r and almo;t ~rahlwd tlw the mound duties for Feild in, trick against Yetman's ground ,.,,:or~ 1n lht• L.-1 nf thr ninth the ninth and kept St. Ron's hall in the initial frame. Rus· t•.rr~·cd f,,r a f~h:~lnu< di1·:n~ off the score sheet while pick· ~ell Grimes and Bob Redmond r~H" !-• '~'"~''""'11 nob Red· mg up his second win of the also came Ull with top notch reo c.~ ,, t'.h 1!:~ '':innm~ run on ;cason when Don Yetman's plays early m the t"Onte~t. w·or.~ hc.·~ 1H'in~ !'au~ht off ground ball single off Tony : , BOX SCOUES

Finney arc ~uhs. .T. Philpott. CH fi man hulled the ball into the. ning going into last night's con· Game time is set for 7 p.m. H. Ennis. LH ... .... .... 7 mesh for a 3·1 Feildian ad1·ant-' h•st.

r. :llcGrath. OR .... .... .... 8 age. : R~ferec: GPrry Smith. B. ~laundPr. IR .... .... ... 9 Four minutes later Drodge Linesmen: Cyril Gourner and

Guards Clash With St. Pafs

Rill Woods. (' ........... 10 look another corner kick and' Xel.s Ash. , E. Shapler. 'lL ... .... ... 11 once again he drove the ball to 1 J.JNEUPS ,

f~r I rl•'t:hlr p'a)'. ~Ianning's glove scored Harr)' Felldlans An R

1 G. r:ulli\·er, OL ............ 12 ~:t~~~nde:~~: ~1~11 T~:~a;~: S~ I neit':.:~li;:-<;~ G~~~~::(';;~~ ,,:,,~·'·' ,,,_;,;;,,,,;;,;,,,,~?;,,j

Jl Third place St. Pat's play Bon'~ . goal f?r the finishing Xoseworthy; Halve~. Charlie Foh Cok'~ douhl~ In open Simpson with the winning run. ! D. Yc.tman. rf 5 u

Simpson opened the tenth · R. Gnmcs. ss 4 I

II 1 0

0 cellar dwelling Guards in senior ; 4·1 fc!lthan VIctory. Adam.~. Stan Breen DOU" 4 :baseball at the .Ball Park to· Junior Soccer I Feild got ~ lop notch per· House: Forwards. Eldon' Drod";, earth~·; l!ah·es. Frank O'Gradv

.UEC YET:\1:\~

with his second single of the j n Ploughman, 3b 4 1 :1 ronte;;t and advanced to second T. Chapman. 1b 4 0 U

0 ni~ht. , formanrc from their complete· A Ire Yetman. Alec r·aulkn~r Tom :\lurphy. Gary Comerford; 0 A win fur the Guards squad Schedule . forward line with Alec Yetman Graham roung, Junior Thistle: forwards, Bob ~larshall, Damien

nn a sacrifice. After Wheeler . D. Squires. c 4 0 0 , fanned for the second out Yet· ' B. Cole, cf 4 1 1

0 will put them into a lie with a.nd Eldon Drodge as the sparks. ST. BOX'S: Goal. Cy ~lcGctti· Ryan, Maurice Kavanagh, :'liar· 1 St. Pal's while a Irish \'ictory l harlw \d· m 1 ~ · f' L' 11

. man connected on a one strike II. Simpson, If 4 I 2 h J I f II J • ·-· _____ ' a_ s u_rncu_•_n .. a_ m_e ·ga_n_;_,_u .<. Don C'rane. Ron .\fc· ,tin Cloone.~. Frank O'Keefe. 0 would e\'en their record on the The sc . u e or 1r . untor . . _ _ _. _ _ ' pitch for the winning run. D. Cook. 2b ~ 0 0 : Rill \\'heeler was the winning 1 D. Wool gar, P 1 0 : pitcher giving up a singe! hit ; D. Hall. P 1 !l ; and a walk while striking oull E. Woolgar, ph I 0

I one in the two· innings he i' B. Wheeler, P I 0 worked. Dave Hall fired five Totals 36 4

1 innings for the Feildian club 1 St. Bm~'s .\B R · yielding no hits. He walked . T. Gillies. rf 2 0 three and fanned se1•en. Starter i T. Manning. 2h 5 I Doug Woolgar was tagged for; B. Gilies. If 4 I the three St. Bon's runs on 1 R. Redmond. ss 5 0 three hils wllile walking six 1 ~. Sparrow, rf 4 0

0 'se:1son at two wins and two Foolhall League was released by 0 io>ses. .John Kennerly last night. The 0 Dal'e Ward. will likel)' get the 21 game round will he romplct· 0 starting nod [or Guards. Ward ed on August 8th with the semi· 0 has two losses so far the season finals anrl finals followin~. 5 while hurling twelve and two· The piRyoffs wil see the first F. third inning~. During that span and third, sHonrl and fourth 0 hr has ten runs scored against 1 place clnh~ in a two amr tnla 2 him on seventeen hits. He walk·. ~nal >erirs while the final~ will 0 erl four and struck out five. he a hrst of thrcr ~amr5. 1 ~lil;c )!arlin will probahly he "''oht ,, m will start sharp 0 II l . h t 1 ~I t' lo • " 1~ "a es ·

Tournament Not Failure; St. George Finishes 24th

Jly ERIC ST. GEORiiE batters. 1 K. Arns. lh . 4 o

_._,,......,,, 1 ~ I P. Bryant. c 4 0 i John Power went the distance~· D Comerford, 3b 2 t

I for St. Bon's and took his fir~t J. Power. p ..... 4 0 ..

0 0 I 0 B II 0 I I 0 1 0 0 0 I 4

0 lc 1'18 s ar er. · ar 111 s. at 6.00 with the Saturda)' fix-0 h1s only start to date when he ·tures hring sci In get undrrway i

0 :~s knt;'·k~d from tth~t ho; •.n at 10.30 a.m. Two halves of 0 .

1 c con tit'S agams · 011 s 2!\ minutes will be pla~·t·d. No

Exclush·e To The Daily ~ew; 11.\I.JFAX-1 finished 24th In the 61 entries In the So•·a

Scotia Open Golf Championship, In the fourth and final round yesterllay I had a 77 to run my total for the 72 holes to 310 which was 31 strokes behind the winner. But my

Holy Cross JOB PLOt:GRMAN

loss of the season against cne Totals . . 34 3 ast Sun ay. "' r ·ll"Jlt•lnrl for Thms· 3 G · . 7 ~ames a ~ sc , . ,

I amc lime IS p.m. day nights as Senior Football

·Hillis RBis Winner; Aces Edge C E I 12-11

I games will be telecast on

. 1

Thursdays.

Challenge .Tuly 4-CLR vs Holy Cross

Dave Gulliver. manager of 1 5-SI. Bon's \'S St. Pal's the ABC Taxi crew. told tr.e 6-Feildians \'S :IIC·Uniled Dally News last night that his 9-Guards vs CLB crew has issued a challenge to . I !-Holy Cross l's St. Bon's any other loxi in st .. John's for, 12-St. Pat's \'S :>IC·Unitcd . a race on Regatta Da)'. 1 13-Guards \'S Feildions

Hillis And Crewe Hit Homers Already the Colony Cas hove 16-:IIC-United vs St. Bon's 'been practicing and on I)' one 18-CI.R l's St. Pot's

DoaJ Hillis balled in hls llfth run or the game with a --.. ----------··· ·more crew is needed for the , 19-llolv Cross vs Guards 21}-SI. ·Bon's vs Feildians Arrifirt ny and .\res fdgfd CEI 12·11 In Senior Sortball

at the ''ictorla Park Diamond last night. The win moved Acts Into a second slot tie with Hawks In league standings.

Pee. Wee Baseball

• Taxi Race to reappear on the · , Regatta Day schedule. 23-Holv Cross vs :IIC·United

25-St. 'Pat's vs Guards

Ball· Scores 26-Holy Cros~ vs Feildians 27-St. Bon's vs CLB 31}-St. Pat's vs Holy Cross

Hillis clouted a grand slam homer In the fourth Inning ror .\rts while George Crewe had the otber homer or the t11nttst for the 11·lnnen. Meh·ln Hong went the distance to ~ke the 11·in for Ares while Gerry Spurrell was tagged ..-!th the loss. All of last year's Little International l.eague

~liami 9, Rochester 4 Toronto 6, Columbus 4 Ha1·ana 7, Buffalo 4 Richmond at Montreal

August

Ares tallied twice in the------------- League Baseball players and fir~t inmng on three walks and eight. H~ harl four strikeouts. I other kids interested in playing a sm~le while t'EI came up Doug Hillis wit!l rive rum this season is asked to attend I ,..lth flvp second innin~ runs hatted in and his homer an.l a · the meeting at Bannerman Park fM thp lrad. Th~ fil'c markers double in four lri!)s to t'I•J today at 3.00 p.m.

1-CLB I'S Feildians 2-MC·United vs Guard~ 3-St. Pat's \'S Feildians 6-St. Bon' ,.~ Guarrl~

8-MC·Uniled vs CLB 1 Postponed d~e to rain) ra:nt nn one hit an error and plate was the top hitter. Ra\' -----------·--·--... fl\P [ree pasHs. ' \\'ithers ~lso went two for four. • f

Aces ~ot close at 5·3 in the 011 the wmners. '1 M St-cond with a walk a double. No game is scheduled for to- a rl s and an error srndi.ng OF\·ille ; ni~ht with three games set for Hong home. In the fourth the 1 Friday. Home Runs Have CEI ~nt another pair of runs The schedule for the remain· for a ;.3 ad\'antage but two . der or the f1rst round: "''11ks and a single loaded the : Victoria Park base! with one out and Doug· (July lst) H1ilis camt' up with the second 1 2.31}-CEI v .. f"alcons grand slam of the seMon on a 1 4.00-Comets vs Hawks shnt into left field for a 7.7 , 6.45-Rams vs Jays ~arne.

1 (July 2nd)

Aces took a 11·7 lead in the; 6.45-Aces vs Rams bottom cr the sixth on two· (July 3rd.) doubles. a sin~le and George 2.31}-Jays vs Falcons Crewe's circuit blast to deep 4.01}-Hygrades vs Stalwarts center field. CEi can;P back in. (July 6th) the top of the sel'ent'!l with rour 6.45-CEI vs Hygrades runs to e'·en the score at 11·11. (July Bthl Thret walks. two doubles :md a : 6.45-Hyrades vs Hawks s1ngle got the CEI run~ 1 (Jub• 9th)

On·ille Hong opened the hot. ; 10.31}-CE: vs Rams tom of the se1·enth with a · 2.31}-Faleons vs Hawk~ double for the Aces. He stole I 4.01}-Aces vs Stalwarts th1rd and with one out crossed ~· 8.45-Jays vs Comets home plate with the winning run as Doug Hillis hit a deep Pepperrell sacrifice fly to CEI centerfield· (July 2nd l rr Gerry Chartor. 11.00-RedCliff vs- Stalwarts

Yankees Winning 10 • 0 By TilE C~NADJA~ PRESS 1 season and 50th or his major ; was postponed because of rain. Roger ~lans con t 1 n u e d to\ league life off loser Jim Bunning. BALTIMORE (API - Dick

make life miserable for his old in the first. One man was on ' Stigman held Baltimore to six Kansas City males by driving in base. singles Wednesday night and four runs with his 23rd and 24th Nixon hammered his third of knocked in two runs in Cleve· home runs Wednesday as he the year after Williams singled land's 5·3 victory over the Ori· paced New York Yankees to a in the sixth. • oles. 10·0 whitewash ~in. CURS' SPLIT The Indians r e pI a c e d the . In other Amer1can League ac. In the Chicago Cubs' fiJ·st Orioles in second place in the

hon, Boston Red Sox doubled the game, Dick Ellsworth, a 20-year· American League. Cle1•eland has score on Detroit, winning 4·2 at old lefty got the win, his fourth

1

a .578 percentage compared with Fenway Park. of lhe season, as he limited the Baltimore's .577 but the Orioles

In the National, the Chicago Brm·es to five hils. Ron Piche, have a half.ga~e advantage in Cubs won the first end of a day working in relief of starter Bob the won.fost column. dou?leheader with Milwaukee, Buhl during the final two innings The Joss cut Baltimore's mar· edgmg the Braves 3·2 on Bob got the loss, his third in four gin to a mere half game over Will's pinch single that scored decisions. The Cubs got only six the Indians, who are in third Ron Santo. They dropped the hits. place in the American League. nightcap 3·1. Hitting told the story or the The game was delayed by rain

. Regatta Crews entering in the Tournament wasn't a failure. Holy Cross Athletic Associa-

A 72, five·over·par by John Munro, a pro from :'\orth · tion plans to enter four crews Sydney, had him finishing with a 279 to take a slim one : in the Annual R~gatta this t k · summer.

s ro ~ v1ctory o1•er Peter Hope of Dartmouth. Hope, 'll'ho ~like Woods told the New~ won the Tournament last year, enderl with 2S.l as he had last night that the Association 75 yesterday. hopes to enter crews in the A good friend hhat I m~de · - ··- - Juvenile. Intermediate, Ama·

acquaintance while in th~ tourna. :H. l had 3/. I opened well on · teur and Club rates. menl, amateur Peter Doig. was • the hack nine with a par three .~11 interested oarsmen or the third with 282. I plan to have· on the tenth. rlcventh and HCAA are asked to meet ·at thr. a round at the Ashburn Course :twelfth hut went out of bonds Holy Cross Schools ;;'ter 10.00 here on Friday with Doig be·. on thr thirteenth for a two· a.m. ~laso on Sunday when Jim fore I leave for home on Sat. · over·par SIX. Carter. long lime coach of tilt urdav On the seventeenth hole I police crews. will address them.

Whlle I finished 24th. my 310 'had trouble getting off a rock. -·-·---- _ ·was only eight behind .Jimm)': bed and went two·O\'er·par with Saturday morning so I'll ha\'e Locke of Windsor with 302. i another six. A birdie on the time for a round 11ith Peter

·With Doig taking third, the' fifteenth hole look one off Doig on Friday. fourth spot went to George the four.ov~r·par strokes for my ! Of course I'm disappointed

I Gilmurray with 284. Rex Jou. 37 flmsh. l was par on the ·with my showing, but the tips : drey and Haddie Morash had f~urteenth. s•xteenth and the and pointers that 1'1·e picked 285 for the next place. eighteenth holes. up keep lht' trip from being a

Yesterday's 18 holes went in I leave for Brightwood, :\.S .. failure. This tournament and the same manner as the first 'to·day for a couple of rounds the exp,,riencr I pitked up, will

. three rounds. ~!y troubles were of golf at thr course there br· l heliel'e. cause a grncral im· once again on the front nine. fore romin~ back hrre to Hali· pro\'ement in my game. I know I had a 40 on a par 33. fax on Friday. ~~~· plane for the mnre importanl a;pcct~ of

On the back nine, which is par home is scheduled to leai'P early my ~amr that I ha1·e to practice. ------·- . . --

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In posting the win. Melvin Hong allowed sc1·en hits and 11'1lkl'd 11. lie fanned five. Gtm· Spurrell ~ave up ten hit~ &a the ArM ~·hil~ frP.8·D.UMII~

Practice THREE·HIT EFFORT second contest, with three solo for an hour and six minutes after

At New York, Maris got the homers, two by Joe Adcock and the third inning. I kind of pitchi~g that makes one by Hank Aaron making the Stigman evened his season winning easy-.hm Coates tossed route easy for winning pilcher record at 4-4 while Oriole starter a !hree·hilter at the tame Ath- Joey Jay. Jay went all the way Jerry Walker suffered his first lehes. to r~cord his second win against loss after two victories. Hoyt

DOUG HILLIS

Comer Feildian junior and senior

football clubs will drill at the Fei!dian Grounds tonight. All players are asked to attend at 7 o'clock.

The last open practice for the St. Pat's junior and senior teams will be held at the St. Pat's Field tonight. The drill Is set for 7 o'clock.

The junior and senior St, Bon's soccer clubs will drill at the ShaJIU'ock Field tonlgbt. The workout Is set for 7.15, and all playen are asked to attend. ,

For Coates, it was his ninth two losses. Wilhelm relieved him in the win. ST. LOUIS (AP - Ray sa. eighth inning.

Cletis Boyer o p e n e d the decki, 19 years old and Stan PHILADELPHIA ( AP 1-Three 'Yankee seventh with his lhi~d Musial, crowding 40.' Wednesday singles, a double and a sacrifice homer. The Yanks added four m night led the St. Louis Cardinals ny. good for four runs in the the eighth off relief man Ken to a 5·2 victory over the Cincin· fourth inning e n a b I e d Los Johnson who walkeri Mickey nali Reds. Angeles Dod!(ers to lake a.;.2 Manllr. and Maris and then hit Sndecki 'lert after yielding a nightcap v i c to r y Wednesday Yo~i Bcr1·a before Bill Skuwro leadoff homer to Wally Post in night over Philadelphia Phillies came through with a lwo.run the ninth. Relief ace !.indy Me· in a twi·night doubleheader. The double. Boyer's sacr.lfice scored Daniel hurled a 1·2·3 inning for Dodgers also won the opener 6·3 Berra and Coates' smgle scored his 14th save in 25 rescue calls. as rookie Frank Howard drove in Skowron. Sadecki allowed only four hits. three runs with his tenth homer

At Boston, two-run homers by Cincinnati yielded the National and two singles. Ted Williams and Russ Nixon Lagu~·s fourth spot to St. Louis. Larry Sherry posted his sixth staked ace Boston right bander Musial singled home the first victory of the campaign in relief Bill Monbouquetle to his win two St. Louis runs. Moved to the or Don Drysdale in the first over the Tigers. cleanup spot. Musial also doubled game.

Nixon hammere~ his third of his first time at. bat. The Dodgers saddled Dick Far· the yea~ after W11liams singled Last night's National League rcll, who replaced Robin Roberts. In lhe s1xth. game between the San Francisco with his second loss of the

Williams belled his 12th or the Giants and the Pittsburg Pirates I season.

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~ \

If you have been looking forward to the dlsccrurag­

ing prospech of an aching back and sore muscles

this summer • • • pushing around an old-fashioned

manual lawn mower • , • come and see the Maxwell.

Here is a power mower that handles like a dream

arid takes the labour out of lawn care ... leaves you

in shape to get pleasure from your leisure time.

s49.50 up TERMS AVAILABLE

THE GREAT EASTERN OIL COMPANY, LIMIT~D ~ \

ST. JOHN'S BELL ISLAND

• I

CORNER BROOK WINDSOR

! • Jacoby 1 On Bridge I

EXPERTS LOSE mEIR OWN WAY

WEST .765 ¥J8U U61 1.'1 g 84

:NORTH (D) IS .1 ¥AQ9 tKJBI "'AKQ106

J:AIT .AQJH3 ¥2 tQlOH .71

SOUTH .Kl09 ¥K1081S tA2 .J32

Erst and West vuiM~able North EMt South West 1 "' 1 • 2 ¥ Pass 2 • Pass 2 N.'I'. Pass 4 ¥ Pass a t I'll!s · 6 t Pass 8 ¥ PaM PaS& Pass

Optnlng lead-• 7

BY OSWALD JACOBY Writ·ten for

Newspaper Enlcl'prise Asftn. I The ordinary run or the mill

bridge player would have no . difficulty about going down at · six hearts. He would lose one · trick to the ace of spades and ·a second trick to West's jack of · hearll. He would complain a : little about his bad luck and I possibly 5omeone would point ·

I out that six clubs would have been a lead pipe cinch .

1 The particular South who wa.s

declarer happened to be a real· ly 'great player and after win­ning the second trick with his king of spades. South led a trump to dummy's ace and then

1 went Into a long huddle. South : I was sure that East held at least i , Rix ~padPs: it was not unlikely !

• to find him with a singleton , i heart. ~· 1 E\'enluall:v South decided to ' risk three diamond lrads just

1

· to see il East would follow to 1

: them, so South p\aye a low ! :diamond from dummy. I

In the meanwhile, East, 1\-ho I 1 was even a better player than 1 South, had time to do Jome I thinking of his own and he had figured out just what South was worrying about so East rose with the queen of diamonds .

South took his ace and aban­doned any thought of a further diamond lead or of a finesse against the jack of hcarlll. It

1 was too much to expect that I East would have two red single-toni. South led a tleart to

I dummy's queen and· went down I just like any ordinary player , I would have.

1 CARD Sense , Q-The bidding has been:

1

: South West North East , 1 ¥ 1 • 2 + Pass '

I

2 N.T. Pus 3 • Pass ? You, South, hold:

.K3 ¥AQ876 +K78 .Q85 What do you do? A-Bid three diamonds. You

have good diamond support but ouly oae spare alopper.

TODAY'S QUESTION Your partner goes on to four

diamonds. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow

: Nfld. Skies By BAILEY R. FRANK THURSDAY, Juna 30th. I

Sunset today 8:03 p.m.; Sun· 1

rise tomorrow 4:07 a.m.; 1\!oon- i set tonight 11:22 p.m. First Quarter July 2.

At moonset the Big Dipper will be sinking in the northwest and Cassiopeia will be rising in the northeast. Between them

' il Polaria, the North Star. TIDES

High 11:33 a.m. 11:40 p.m. Low 5:17 a.m. 5 5:55 p.m.

PINK PETALS-Barbara Nel· son'a lwo-plece suit Is covered with artUiclal Ptnk hyacinth petab-e:rcepl where she still. That cement pillar Is located Ill New York -City,

JHf STORY Of MARTHA WAYNE

AltE'I' OOP

r"APTAIN EA5l

ALL l116Wt; t».DDl'f, /JDliiEr IS A NQIROnG"A S\CK·SIC~·SICK OOCTO~'s' WIF~ 1'100 TlllllK~ C.C.1S STA~O FOe @UilTRY CLUB~ .-1»0

o,K,G, "M $0MET~\~l6 TO DO WITH ITJ\r-n!a!~rT. ~;n~A CAPoTAL6AI~~~

FRECKLES ANO HIS FRIEND!

PRISCILLA'S POP

lOOTS AND HER bUDDIES

MORTY MEEKLE

l.v W. JHRUGGS

Rv V. T. HAMLIN

ty MERREll &LOSSEP.

!y Al VERMEER

ly IOGAJ: MARTIN

8y DICK CAVRI

·~ .- . - li

. - :.-'

. .:: .. f .... . ~·

~.

• .. '

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. .

"' ... ;.;.-...:. "! ~-. t .. ,.. .. " .. ~

. - . c ' ·' I

... ~

ni! DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960

said wryly. catch him first." He looked at 1 "He shouldn't have run. I her with the look one poker , tried to talk blm out of it, but player elves another. "There's he elalmed he wouldn't atand 1 more news Billy fetched. Ry chance otherwise." Buckner must have hit town last

"A gun fl11bt wasn't ne~essar· night. Jake Hollis said that Ry ily murder In my day, girl." was sleeping in the haymow of

e 1960 lor,_ A. f.., Dollr~tool lor lltwyoptf W•t-"-1 "He got to the Strip fence hls hvery s;able. Wnat do you

THE 111'01\': For 1 set· ... tiM, ly lurkntr earns lilt UJ.-.·m of SPI"nre Rigby •bn U.e rormtr ron~ their

I st night and Lark was there make of that?" 1 "Yo_u '!'ig~! have said so at the a~d Sam Tull. Lark was using ~ Yesterday at this same hour begmmng!_ she s~apped. air of wire cutters. Duke threw the news would have set her ! :·AcL·or~m~ to Billy, town talk : un on him and told him to wonde~lng about Ry and herself

: th1s mormng hn., It thnt Spe~ce 1 ~t Lark ot mouthy and Duke and wnat had once been be­' lligb~· ro1ls l~al~hel now, be1~g , ~~~ ·bis te;per. Lark ~tarted for 1 tween them. ·Today the question atumpt 1o &t>t lt>Gill ~nne·

tiou te their plan Cor J.illing Dakt Jerdan. .-\t thP Jor· au nnch, Dorcas I..:me ha! alit yet told Dukr'~ rathpr Galin dial she obtainrd a 1111rri~te llcen« for her~df ••• Duke.

Lat·k s only km. And Hatchet 11 ,1 . . un and Duke fired then. I was: What of Ry and Du~e? out for blood. V1rg ~lcQuccn , ~~~ g La~k square between the . "1 don't know," she u1d. "It s~artcrl nflcr Duk~ at sun-up. 1 e\'e he thinks. And Lark went I depends on what fetched Ry r1d111~ nlonr. Now)n!t where d1d : d·0:• with his gun still in Ieath· back here."

:Duke _hr:~d·: 1 figure he told 'cr. ~he only wltnen wu Tull. ! "The, money, maybe. He '~·ou, l:lrl. . " Wh t kind of chance would that I wouldn t tell where he hld the 1 "The Garnet lhll~. she said. . . . a Duk 1 courtroom?" .

1

rest of what was in that carpet-' She might ha\'e been more ex· !liVe e n 1, . bag."

X plirit. hut she was still angry. ' "Best be ran. Gulley llld. "Nonsense!" she &aid. "You • • •

n d I 'A big hunk o{ country,," he i "To atew • wol!, they got to don't reall" believe that. Any· An~Pr art in Do1 ens .an~. , ----------------------- way, if he buried currency five

--------- years ago, it would likely be

CANt~ED FRUIT

PEARS PLUMS

PEACHES APRICOTS PINEAPLE

, STRAWBERRIES FRUIT COCKTAil

GRAPE FRUIT SECTIONS

GEORGE NEAL LIMITED ST. JOHN'S 'PHON~S: 2264 - 4440 - 3420

rr~m lre:.t,d. '!a~e a ro· e.~lt loaf ef rul !r1!h soda :~ud. Orl1c:ous e~rn· ur~'~'~ er celd. lry Goo~· e-c::,·s ~'"" wnoa·mul 1/La, teo.

DEl/C/01/SlY IRISH

Currant Bre1d

A frult·ftlled, erlsp-eru•tod brealcfMt do· li(hl, dinner troat, party favorite.

Pre·hnt o•en tft tM'J". p,lf:e 45 mfn1lt.IL 1 box Goodbod)''l lrllh I t \ r1111n1 or c\lf'l'l.nU

Sod• Drnd ~Hx : 1 .:ran. tuaar 2 ths. buU•r or •~ t. •. pound nutmt'l

JhDrt,.nlnl l~• cup1 w•ter

Empl)' Mix Into bowl, rotolnlng 10me for ttushnK fin,:::er~. Rub In butter. Mix nutmee and •u~ar. Add. Mix well. Add ralalna or eur· rant•. Mix well. Add water all ot once. UH knt!e to hh•nd quickly. Knead liflllly. Place c1ou~h on grr.ased 7" pie Un. Cut deep erosa on top. Rake ., dlrrcted. Cool IIIRlllly on tin, then remo\'e to cool on a wire tray, •

SAVE $1.00 on this $1.50 value. LADIES' • . . Three fine Irish Linen Handkerchiefs. Send only SOc. with a Box Top from Goodbody Irish Soda

!read Mix, with your name and address to FRANK McNAMARA QUEEN STREET, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND.

lTD.,

PHONES 5143. 5144 QUEEN STR~T

WE OFFER:

'Shattuck's' Trimmed Navel Beef lOO's and 200's

Just Arrived - No. 1 Beef

PRUNES • 40/50 - 60170 - 70/80

ALSO PACKAGES- 24-12 oz.

T. & M. WINTER LIMITED GENERAL MERCHANTS

.

ruined by now." "Regardless, was I Ry, I'd be

no friend to Boxed J. 'Was I Ry, I reckon I'd be pullln' for

I either Virg McQueen or Hatchet to catch up with Duke."

"You're not Ry," she said tartl~· and was instantly sorry.

He stood up. There had still been no mention of the marriage

I, licence, and she guessed Billy Larb hadn't heard about it.

"I reckon, girl, that you know . exactly where Duke has. head­. ed," he was &ayinll. "1 likewise .

1

reckon that you· don't aim to tell me, But you'll be seeine

1 him, maybe today. Just pass thia

' word for me. Tell him hia old I dad bas quit sittin' in his rock· 1 ing chair. Tell him anybody ; that &ets et Gulley Jordan's ! cub Will have to get past the old man first. He '11 know then who can count on straight across the board."

I He moved into the parlor. She

arose, tempted mightily to call after him. to bring him back

'and tell him everything, so that : whatever was done, they would be pulling together instead of

' against rach other the way they i were. But she couldn't. ' She picked the dishes from

I. the table, slacked them but didn't take time to wash them.

1 She wrote a note on a pad she

I kept in the kitchen. Then she

, went out into the yard. Around her lay the Hcattcred buildings

. of Boxed J. sturdy and wealher-1 ed, this man-ranch she had in· vaded. To the southwest the Garnet Hills lifted, Table Moun­tain shouldered above them all. The crew was out on the range, gone long before Billy Larb had come home with his news,

1 but Billy himself wu here, re­

. pairing a corral. He was wrestling a peeled

pole into place. He was oue of those men of indefinite age; he might ha\'e been 30-or 50. !

"Billy," she asked, "how was 1

the prayer meeting'!" "Well attended," he aaid.

"Your maw was there." "Billy," she said. 'there wa1

an old man through here with a wagon or seven days ago, He

· was painting Scripture verses un rocks. I saw you talkinK to him."

'Rev, Gideon Jones, miss." . She thought a moment. "Billy, , I want you to saddle up for me. I And I want you to saddle for , yourself. I've a couple of er-' rands for you to do." 1

He looked toward the house where Gully Jordan had gone. /

"Dad Jordon won't mind." She took the note she'd writ­len and handed it to him. "Get this to my sister Pru. She'll probably be at the store help-

' ing mother. Then see if you can ' find Iilia Rev. Jonea and hi$ boy. ' Te 11 them to meet me today at ' the Brewster place, You know

1.

where It iR?" He looked toward the Gar· 1

nets. "On the old road to the Bellafonte mine. There's a cave up above Brewsters'. Duke and Riley Buckner played there when they were kids. I recol­lect a time Gulley sent me after them. On the way back from tile cave, we got caught In a rainstorm and holed up at Brewsters'."

Her mouth went dry. ·The cave: How many other people knew about it?

! (To Be Continued) I I. SHlPY ARD FIRE

HOUSTON CAPJ - Tugboats • rescued 50 workmen Tuesday as : a spectacular s h i p y a r d fire 1 threatened the United States first \ nuclear M)rvice barge, Flames : and smoke billowed furiou~ly I from a 700 • foot dock and a

$2,000,000 drydock at the Todd shipyards a half·bour before be­in~: brought under control. The $l,ooe,ooo Atomic. Servant was towed to safety, as was. a tanker and a dredge under construction.

! QUEBEC, WPl-Premier Aln· • tonio Barrette T u e s d a y was given a vote of confidence as leader of the Union Natiooale party. A statement issued follow· ing a caucus of Union Nallonale members uid Mr. Barrette wu given- a warm reception when he entered the caucus room. Emi­lien Rochette, whip in chief of the party, said the Union Na­tionale Is a strong party and ·has

! 1 lot of fight and enthusiasm left.

LONDON (CPl-The Evening Standard says A n t o n y Arm· strong-Jones will probably take up a new career as a stage de­signer. The newspaper says the Queen has approved the idea that Princess Margaret's hu~ band should take up e position unconnected with t h e Royal Fam!ly, but that his former oc­cupation of photography Is ruled out by· the tradition that no·one· should capitalize financially on

.._---------------------------------"royal prestige. [,

THE STORY OF MARTHA WAYNE

ALLE'f OOP

,. ~PT AIN !A~'f

FRECKLES AND HIS flti!NDS

PRISCILLA'S POP

lOOTS AND HEt .WDD!fl

~Ql,t-~~ "'~C:.'C:.\..'i= '=>I"~ I Q\ ~~I'X!iZ.IJ ... ~~'A"t 'A'C~, ~o;:. "t~C'1C.S .... ,.'-U'u_,l

MORTY MEEKL!

BUGS BUNNY

s.~~~ ~~~ c:-. ';;IC,\<~-~'SI ~ \"'\'·\<:, '\0 'r\~'-l'C, ~ ~'11..\..'C."E.S C.\-1.\\.~\"

. I

Bv W. !H~UGGS ........... -·--------= :'tJ. liOf ,'<JiijG B~CK TO ~,.,., Ht.;~~·RS

"'II. I!CT 60:1.!6 TO BoA CO~~TR~ CLU3 lOU~o l11At~. l'M cEA'lt»6"F'OiiGOOOJ z:E;;;;;;=~fl

Rv V. T. HAMLIN

'll ~I!SLIE TURNfl

"" MERRELl SI.C~-

By AL VERMEER

iy EDGAR MARTIN

S'?'iO.S\\\C>.\..\.~ '"'"-No •.,rc.e>."'-l;."'( ~\.1.0? 'I~ 0.<;, ~-""~ ~""' ~'0\.1.<:::,\l.."t'~ '·

8y DICK CAVI:li

By LEON SCHLESINGER

l

-· ., ...

,,

• . '.

- . . . . \ • !

..,., .

. '

. . :. ~.

"o

; : .•. : . , ... : . -. !'....:. . . . ....... '! ... .:

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·-·~·. -' ~ ........ ..

....... ' ~.~ '.

:--------------------• .----------. ---------- FOR SALE-(1) One United

Where To Stay BAS.£8ALL fOOTBALL CARD 1 Nail Special coal Range, , price $20. Call 2Bl9A or

Balsam Hotel DOCtOr J. : _can~t_4_ coronation street.

1.\L''ES 110:\D TO-NIGHT TO-NIGHT . FOR ALL your Interior and

t!:;;~t~ in •he Heart of 7.00 p.m. 7.00 p.m. Crowley I ~;~~~i~~~g, p~i~~~~:, Fr:~~ SENIOR lllelendy. Phone 4767F.

pb:.tt. Comfortatle A::nos- SENIOR Stead Playoff will be out of . - F~~e estim_a_tes_. - ~j~~2=-tf-: t'OR SALE-One of the finest ' Restaurants between Detroit

and London, on main high­way No. 2 South Western Ontario, fast growing town.

F~~r h~I'\-ation) •lid In· ST. PAT'S YS GUARDS YS town from July 1st. fat:nltion.

Dial 6336 MIS. JOB~ F.\('El' 'IPSidrot ~lanagrrn.~

~~-!!

GREAT EASTERN

OIL & IMPORT

CO., LTD. Rad1o. Telrnston. · Washers. Re!n,era tors. Ottp f"reezen

Electnc Ra n~es. Floor PotiSbeN, Gramophones

Pllhllt AddreH Sy;tems. Tape Recorder!

&EUIRS AND SER\'ll"£ 5 LI!'OES

MAL 3001 to 3005

W.'\TER STREET ian!!6.h.

GUARDS HOLY CROSS to Middle of July.

NEWFOUNDLAND SERVICES

Full)" equipped, seats 50. Builrling and new Apart­ment included. Same owner Ol'er tPn years. Reason heart attack. Mr. :Michael Felter. Hox 326 Thomas­\'ille. Ontario. jne2B.~i

PASSENGER NOTICES

ST. JOIIN'S·LEWISPORTE SER\'ICE

Prompt Delivery On , -- ~--. ---~ -----~---------

FOR AI.L your interior, ex­terior painting, repair work and roofing. Prices re1son· able. Phone L. HowelL 739711 or 3752A,

;:;;;:;::::=::::====-' AUTO PARTS (Whole)!

:.t.V. Codroy for regular ports St. John's·Lewisporte Service will ~ail from the Dock Coastal Wharf ::\oon to-morrow, Friday.

WEST RUN PLACENTIA BAY Regular 8:31 a.m. train leav·

ing St. John's tomorrow, Friday will make connection at Ar· "entia with :llotor Vessel for . ' the \\'est Run Placenha Bay. l'OSNECTIOS SOUTH COAST

SERVICE I · Regular 8:31 a.m. train leaV· 'ing St. John's tomorrow, Friday . will make connection at Ar· . gentia with the M. V. Bonavista , for regular ports South Coast · Ser1•ice.

l:OS:'IOECTI0!\0 LEWISPORTE· CORSER BROOK SERVICE Train "The Caribou" leaving

St .• lohn's to-morrow, Friday will ; make connection at Corner ; Brook with S.S. Springdale for i regular ports Lewlsporte-Cor­' ner Brook Service.

II ST. JOHN'S-CORNER BROOK

SERVICE S.S., Northern Ranger for

're~ular ports St. John's-Corner · Brook Sen·ice will sail from the Dock Coastal Wharf Noon Sat-~

, urday, July 2nd. I i CONNECTION BAY RUN AND I 'WEST RUN PLACENTIA BAY

Re:;ular 8.31 a.m. train leav­ing St. John's Monday, July 4th, will make connection at Ar·

, gentia with Motor Vessels for , regular ports Bay Run and West : Run Placentia Bay. ' : I : CONSECTION GREEN BAY j ' SER\'ICE . Train "The Caribou" leaving ! St. John's Tuesday, July 5th., ; will make connection at Lewis-1 porte with the ~LV. Nonia for

1

, regular ports Green Bay ,Ser·r 1 vice.

• STOVE OIL • FURNACE OIL • HARD COAL • SOFT COAL • IRON FIREMAN

HEATING EQUIPMENT.

NOT INHITID .y TH! l~C. NORTH LABRADOR SERVICE i . )t.V. Trepassey for regular ----------ports North Labrador Service TENDERS

Change of Ownership

Notice

inc21.2wk

Wall Washing ' I wish to announce to the IVALL WASHING - Wall• public that effective .lui)· 1st,· clean,ed by n.ew machi.:Je.

1 1000 my consulting business will , Resu.ts perfect. saves pamt. cease to operate under my name,l -New 11ethod Rug and Wall !rom t~at date forward the bmi-1 ?J~~~~rs9JO:;~eshwater Road, ness Will be owned and opera!- 1 ----------

cd by ::11r. Cyril R. Forbes who: FUU~ITURI: REPAillii - Re· w.ill operate under the style. of, pail> to spring-fi11ed mat· Bishop and Forbes Consulting ', tresses. Ch~ terfield suites Engineers. . also rebuilt, Fifty years' The~e w11l be no break in , experie,1ce. Ke:.ts Mattres~

operatiOn because ol transfer of: Factory 16 Mount Royal Ave. ow~ership _and the. location of I Dial 92753 or 2656. busmess w11l rcmam the ~arne. 1 ucl8,(tf)

Nfld. Armature Worka

DRUG STORES

'M. CONNORS lTD., Prescriptions Pickup and dclil"cry scrl"icc, Phone 2206

ELECTRICAL

APPLIANCES

. 'lAlNE JOHNSTON

COMPANY, lTD. Agency Department

243 Water St. Dial 2102 YOUR FHlGIDAIHE

DEALER. Completed work up to the . ----------

1 above date will be hilled by me: NEW ME'tiiOD RUG cu:AN· 1 HEAP & PARTNERS ! and all bills owing will be paid I' ERS-Ru!(s and Carpet • (NFLD.) lTD • by me promptly on presentation made to look lil\c new. I Wiring Matemls, Wire and

i and all revenue earned and bills Von Schrader process adds Cables, Motors Starters contracted after that date will )'ears to life of rup Clean· , Lamps, Switches, Lighti;g be for the account of the new 1 ed in home or at our plant. 1 Fixtures, etc. firm. My as~ociation with the, 'Phone 91033, New ~let hod 1 1\' \REIIOUSI" PI 1~·

I , ·.: t "CE'S ST. ·

new firm will be wholly in an Rug Cleaners, Freshwater ' OJAL5085 advisory capacity as and when Road. • 1

I; re1u::~~~~s mr thanks and shall 1 _G_R-EY H-A-IR~-~~~ish~-;he-~- 1

__ F_I_R_E_I.;.N;.;S...;U;.;R;.;,A~N.;.C;.;E;__ 'be always grateful to my many I you use Angelique . Grey . ::ROSBIE & CO lTD

!friends and customers for their Hatr Restorer. Regam ap. ·• • support over the years and: pearance of natural beauty, 1 , , Age,nts, for recommend to them :.lr. Forbes; color. $1.95 at all dru~gists. f UNDER\\ Rl fERS AT

, LLOYD3. as a ·capable &nd experienced.--------·-,-·-~.,-- I LOW RATES Engineer, 'PAIJI;TI:\'G COSTRACTOR- I

FRED W. BISHOP. DIAL 5031

H. W. Hodder, Paintin~ l:oniractor,, Dial 46751-", make one call, we do it all, HARDWARE STORES

1 All kinds of painting done, ' Statutory Notice •.· exterior anrl interior. Tint- . HARRIS & HISCOCK, lTD.

- 'In the matter of the Wlll and

ing. enameling, varnishing, I General llardware parcring, paneling, grain- Distributors for Sunbeam ing. non-blistering paint, 1 · Electrical Appliances,

. will sail from the dock Coastal Wharf 5 p.m. Saturday, July 2nd. Seal_ed ten~e;s addre.ssed, to Estate of Catherine }', 1\lur-!

Canad1an • Br1hsh Engmeermg phy, late of Carbonear In the : FREIGHT ACCEPTANCES Consulta,nts, 191 Water .~treet. Province of Newfoundland.

hardwood doors sparklinl(. Spans goods and Sport! lettering, name plates, light wear for all occasions.

St. John s; and endorsed. Tend· Widow deceased t'REIGHT NORTH LABRADOR ers for lnstalllng Gravity Sewer ' '

1 SERVICE PORTS SMOKEY System, Springdale-South Brook All persollll elaiming to be ' TO NAIN Rural District Council, Spring- creditors of or who have any

Freight for Northern Labra· da!e, Newf~undlan~," will be re· clai~ns or demands upon or .ar­dor Ser\'ice ports Smokey to ce1ved until 12 o clock Noon, feeling the Estate of Catherme :-;"ain per :.tv Trepassey will THURSDAY, July Uth, 1960. F. Murphy, late of Carbo11ear he accepted at.the Dock Coastal Plans, specifications and aforesaid, Widow, deceased, are

1 Shed to-da)' Thursday 9 a.m. forms of tenders can be seen or: requested to send particulars of 1 to 5 n.m, ' ' be obtained, on deposit of the their claim in writing, duly al-l ~<'HEIGHT ST. JOHN'S. sum of $50.00 In the form of a tested, to the undersigned ,

glow signs and cut outs. DIAl 5016 ~·ree gilt with each job, jne23,2wk ERNEST ClOUSTON, lTD,

I Mct;:LAR\ AUTO)IATIC ' WAR~! AIR CONDITIONlNG !

210 WATER ST. DIAl. 4183

RADIO-TV REPAIRS 1---------------1 GREAT EASTERN Oil

1 J,E\VISPORTE SERVICE Certified Bank C11eque, to the Solicitor for the Executor named ' , i Freight for regular ports st. order of the Spri~gdale-Sou~h in the Will of the said deceased

j John's-Lewisporte Service for Brook Rural D1slrJCI Councll, on or before the 29th day of I forwarding via Lewisporte and Newf.oundland, at the above July, A.D. _1960, after . which 1 the M.V. Codroy will be accept- mentioned addre~s. dale the sa1~ Executor w1ll pro-

COMPANY, lTD. REPAIRS TO RADIOS, TV AND ALL ELECTRICAL

APPLIANCES FOR HOME DELIVERY 'ed at the Railway Freight Shed The deposit Will be released ceed to distribute the said

'to-day Thursday saturday and on return of the document! In Estate having regard only to the DIAL 2141 Mond~)' July 2nd and 4th good · condition within one claims of which he then shall

9 a.m. to 5 p.m. ' month from the closing date for have bad notice. Beverage Sales tenders. If the document! are Dated at Bay Roberts this not returned within that period, 29th day of June, A.D. 1960. Ltd the deposit will be forfeited. WILLIAM R, SMALLWOOD,

• The lowest or any tender will Solicitor for the Executor. (:-;ot insuted by Board of not necessarily be accepted. ADDRESS:

Liquor Control 1 GEORGE HUXTER. Cross Roads, Town Clerk, Springdale-South Bay Roberts, Nfld. Brook Rural District Council. jne30,jly9,16,23

Sl MPSONS-SEARS

.... ..

SA_YI MORE AT SIMPSONS·SEARS DURING ENTIRE MONTH LONG SALE ••• ·

NO· D.OWN PAYMENT! N ANY ITEM IN THE ENTIRE STORE

URING THIS FABULOUS MONEY SAVER MONTH You Can't Beat

DIAL 3001 to3005

GROCERS (Retail)

l. HEAlEY Cross Roads and Water Street

Dial 3026

INSURANCE AGENTS

AND BROKERS

JOB BROTHERS & CO. t.TD. Water Street

Dial 2658-4123

REG. T. MORGAN INSURANCE LIMITED

Temple Bldg., P.O. Box 168, 341 Duckworth St. Dial 80370 or n56

DRUG STORES

M. CONNORS LTD. 334 WATER ST.

Dial 2206

AYlWARD'S PHAR~IACY

Cnr. Monchy & Empire Ave. Dial 90070

'PARKDAlE PHARMACY

Elizabeth Ave. Dial 91120

FREIGHT SERVICE TRINITY SOUTH

From St. John's via \Vhl!bou~ne to Old Perliam, North Shore ConrPption to Carbonear.

HOMES FOR SALE

LOW DOWN PAYMENTS

5 Barter's Hill $1000 Down

Exrellrnt Boarding House, centrally located. seven bedroom three store\' dw.el· ling, two bathroom;, furn· ace heated. Good state of repaiJ'.

551 Southside Road

$2,500 Down Two storey four bedroom Home, in good state ol re· pair, linoleum flooring, kit<·hen range, freehold, fenced. Buy of a lifetime.

125 Patrick St. $3000 Down

S<'mi-deta~hed. two storev. 2 Apartment Home. Dow~­stairs has 3 bedrooms, liv·

· ing and dining rooms. Upst~irs, self-contained, 1 bedroom. living and dining rooms, kitchen. linoleum floor. furnace heated. Full concrete basenwnt, garage,

Kenmount Rd. $21500 Down

.:-.:cw, modern two bedroom Bungalow, linoleum floor­ing, wall to wall carpet in living room, fire place, store in ha,emcnt, furnace healed. Excellent business !oration. Freehold land.

I'HICr: ONLY $13.000.

Fir Green Ave. {Mount Pearl) $3000 Down

::1\odern 2 bedroom Bunga. low in good loeality, Home has linoleum flooring, free­hold land. Included in sale. is electric range.

2 Bulley Street $t500 Down OUTSTANDING BUY

2 bedroom 3 storey Dwel­ling, in good state of re· pair. Linoleum flooring. Buy of a lifetime, must be seen to be appreciated.

44 Long's Hill $1,500 Down

2 storey 2 bedroom Home. Here is )·our chance to bU)' a cheap home. Centrally located. Bargain price.

150 Gower St. $2,500 Down

This Home contains 8 large rooms. Ideal for lar~e famil~· or boardin!l house. Bargain price $7,500.

Harbour View Avenue

$2,200 Down ~!odern 3 bedroom Bun:;:a­low, hardwood and tile lloors, fire place, furnace heated. This home has drive in garage and artes­ian well. Priced for quick , sale, Bargain price.

SliVERS and KNOT HOLES

''Th's hnu'c wouldn't be so cold if you'd have it pro· perly insulated:"

• • • Prop cr J~Sl:LATION

Saves in mall)' ways-Sa\'CS monel', saves discomfort and in this case would have saved the furniture. Come in and let us show you that I:"SULA 1'ION doesn't cost-

i "it PAYS:

WATER STREET WEST PIIONE 3011

MEMORIAL •. CEREMONY

Disabled ex-servicemen who wish for transportation to and from the National

. War Memorial, SUNDAY,

i July 3rd, should make ap· 'plication to the Canadian . legion, Newfoundland Pro· vincial Command, Water

·Street. W. R. MARTIN,

Provincial Secretary. ---

FOR SALE One new 131 ~ feet Boat, planked with 38" marine plywood. Equipped with oar-locks and windshield.

. Suitable for 5 or 7 h.p. Outboard motor, with seal­ing for 4 persons.

Phone 92319 jne30.jl)'2

TO RENT No. 29 Sunrise Avenue,

Mount Pearl $80.00 per month.

Harbour View Avenue

$2,500 Down

• Contact Emerson, Stirling & Goodridge, 283 Duckworth

'Street, St. John's.

Lovrl)'. modern Bungalow, , Phone: 2059 3 bedrooms. living and din- I jne30.jly2 ing rooms, 3 bedroom basr· 1 t;...·;.., ..;-;..;., ___ ;;;..;,;;;..;,..;..,;;.;;;;;;, mcnt apartment, hardwood I

and tile and linoleum I floors. furnace heated. I

I Full price only S\5.000.

PENH ANGUISHENE $3000 Down

Beautiful 3 bedroom Bun­galow, oak llooring throughout. large combin· ed living and dining room, furnace heated, basement ' garage, Partly landscaped, must be seen to be appre· ci'ated. Full price only $13,500.

Bannerman St. $1,500 Down

Beautiful 2 bedroom, 2 storey home. linoleum floors. Excellent buy in good area. Price $3,200.

ERIC W. NOEL

EXTRA SPECIAI~16 ft. Paceship "Nol'a", with 1959 35 h.p, Joh:1son Motor, elec, start. Has Windshield con. trois and lots of ex:! as­only used one month Own­er requin·> different t1·pe boat; cost $1500-try s!i75.

USf·o -- GRUM.\~ ALUM canoe, stvrofoam !lotatir.n­half price ..... ~150 .

USEil-40 h.p, 195!) SCOTT, manunl. Exc. condition S525

UStm-12 ft. CIIIIISCRAF'I Fisherman. !ibre.~las on out­side with 1958 7.5 h.p. E1·in· rude motor like new 5340

USED-1959 3 h.p. EVIN· RUDE long shaft, almost new; cost $199 now ... $149

. ·PHONE 5011- 5012-50.13 Trucks also available fo1

long haUl scrvtce. Ra1c~ flpasnnable.

"For r .. rlhn '"~"''mation DIAL 936030

REAL ESTATE PHONE 4786 - 94072

LV7 GOWER ST. PHONE 4947

myl1,1mtt

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TH£ DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1960 15 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-----------------------------------------------------------------------~~

KINSMEN Boys Club

Newspaper BINGO

SERIES No. 32 TO-DAY'S NUMBERS

B I N G 0 2 30 .40 59 70

13 17 .45 5-i 64

9 26 42 56 66

.4 28 .31 48 63

5 20 34 74 11 27

1 16

71 7

FILL THE CARD FOR THE MAIN PRIZE • 20 CONSOLATION PRIZES FOR THE

LETTER X.

Help Kin - Help Klddies ----------

Expert Watch Repairs CRilli!\O~t:Tl:RS

U"TOMAnC

t:ALE!\DAI

c.u.o. JllDF.Il~

AVALON CREDIT JEWElLERS WATER AT AD.:LAIIlE PHONE 1819

FOR SALE BY TENDER The Lit"uidator of D. H. Gosse Limited is prepar·

ed to re~eive Tenders up to and including the 15th. day of July, 1960 for the purchase of Merchandise Inventory consisting of Add-ing Machines, Typewriters, Calculators, Duplicators and Copying Machines, Meat Slicing Machines and Grinders, Scoles, Ofifce Furniture, Station­ery and Sundry Office Supplies. Also Sundry Repair parts for typewriters and Adding Machines.

Further particulars may be obtained from the undersigned.

Tenders to be addressed to: ·

JOHN R. PARSONS, Liquidator, 9 Church Hill, St. John's.

The liquidator does not bind himself to acceP.t the highest or any Tender.

ju30.jly4,5,11

JOHN R. PARSONS, Liquidator.

-------------------------Regatta Special Drawing

WINNING NUMBERS

Fint Prize No .........................•................... 106 Second Prize No ......................................... 174 Third Prize No. . ........................................... 204 fourth Prize No ............................................. 136 fffth Prize No, ................................................ 112 Sixth Prize No ................................................. 116 S..V.nth Prize No ......................................... 155 Eight Prize No. . ........................................... 173

TO RENT AT MIDSTRIAM MANOR

37 TOPSAIL ROAD 2 fully furnished ultra-modern Apartments. The ftrst consisting of !arge bedroom, sitting room, Mthroom and kitchen. Rent $140.00. The second consisting of bed-sitting room, kitchen and bclth· room. Rent $80.00 per month. Both auUablt ~r eouple-bUiineu men or women-Heat and light prcmded. Also washer-dryer. at tenants disposal, prWat. entrance, on bus line. Phone 3383. \ ~

The Funeral of our late Comtode Harry E. Harvey, Sr., will take place this afternoon at 2.30 p.m., from his late residence. 6 Summer Street,

All available ex-Servicemen ore requested to attend.

J. W. GOODYEAR, Secrelary, St. John's Branch.

M·EMORIAL CEREMONY A limited number of tickets of admission to the Ceremony at the War Memorial on Sunday. July 3rd, are available to:-THE NEXT-OF-KIN OF DECEASED EX-s-ERVICEMEN .

Application should be made, without delay, to the Canadian Legion, Newfoundland Provincial Command, Water Street.

W. R. MARTIN. Provincial Secretary.

jne28,30

WREATHS Permission has been granted for the use of the_ Synod Hall and Guardian Printing Building, (King's Beach), for the delivery of Wreaths far Sunday's Memorial Service. Will all those desirous of having wreaths placed on the Sergeants' Memorial, please send them to the Synod Hall, and those for the National War Memorial to the Guardian Printing Building, on Saturday, July 2nd, 1960.

W. R. MARTIN. jne28,30 Provincial Secretary.

WANTED-STENO·GRAPHER for part time work (Morning!) for office in Churchill Park area. Previous experience preferred but not essential. Must be good typist, shorthand NOT required.

Apply by letter only to BOX 507 c/o THE DAILY NEWS.

WANTED FOR MILLERTOWN AMALGAMATED

SCHOOL

one male TEACHER Single status, for Intermediate room, for

Grades 4, 5, 6, 7. Salary augmented by Board.

Apply CHAIRMAN,

Amalgamated School Board, Miller1own. jne30.jly2,4

CII'IV 01' .'.!. JO ... 'l

NOTICE Berteau Avenue from Portugal Cove Road

ta New Cow Road will be clos&d until • further notice•

OFFICE OF THE CITY ENGINEER.

IEPAIIS RLCIIIDII ··~ ·firestone

IIIII

Nfld. Armature . Works Ltd. BAMBRICK Sl. DIAI.o 7191 • 7192

The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation

proudly presents

"BETTER THAN THE BEST"

a programme of tribute to the men of The Royal Newfoundland Regiment

who took part in the July drive.

at BEAUMONT HAMEL on July the first, 1916.

From 9.30 p.m. to 10.30 p.m.,

FRIDAY, 1st. July,

ON C.B.C. RADIO.

PRELIMINARY NOTICE

MOBILE GARDEN PARTY

SUNDAY, JULY 17th ------- --·-- ·- . . - - ·-- ---------- - ---

NOTICE All members of the Nfld. Overseas Fore; try

Unit who wish to participate in the July 3rd Parade ore requested to be present at the foot of Garrison Hill and Queen'; Road (opposite Sgls. War Memorial) on Sunday, July 3rd at 11.30 a.m .

The Unit will be under the Command of JOE WHITE, Veteran of World Wars 1 and 2.

Every member of the St. John's Branch and also those from outlying settlements ore urgently requested to be present.

J. PEDDLE, Secretary N.O.F.U.

jne30jly2 ~------ . ----------------- -----. ·----

WANTED BRANCH MANAGER TRAINEE

Minimum Grade XI, age 22 to 30.

TRANS-CANADA CREDIT CORPORATION LTD.

PHONE J. J. THORNE, 3038. jne30jly2 ---------- . -- ---- ---------·-. -----------

FOR SALE

4 BECK BUSES 33 Passengers. In good running order.

Licenced for 1960.

Apply to:

St. John's Transportation Commission

BUS TERMINAL

fR.ESHWATER ROAD ST. JOHN'S

jne30,jly2

MEMORIAL UNIVERSITY OF NEWFOUNDLAND

WANTED SECRETARY-STENOGRAPHER IN THE

DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS Work is to be done on a half-time basis, prefer­ably during afternoons, although, for the Summer months, work in the mornings would be accept· able. Salary commensurate with training and experience. Application is to be made by letter addressed to the Head af the Department of Physics, stating qualifications and giving references. jne25,28,30

Garden Party PORTUGAL COVE

SUNDAY, JULY 3rd Goods Wheel - Cash Wheel

Refreshmen·ts - Rifles - Darts- Balls. Target pistols - Turkey Suppers.

THE D'ANCE IN THE NIGHT AT MAJOR'S PATH HALL.

with Johnny Francis Orchestra.

Buses from 3 o'clock every hour, Lime Street via Rawlin's Cross, Portugal Cove and return. jne27.30jly2

DISCONTINUANCE OF ROUTE

Effective midnight July 15, 1960 the

PEPPERRELL BUS ROUTE will be discontinued.

St. John's Transportation Commission

jne30.jly44 --- -· .. ---------------

FLY TO SAINT· PIERRE-MIQUELON

A corner of FRANCE, 'It's a different world ! Only one hour away !

The side trip which will make your holiday this year more memorable than ever.

48 hrs. Excursion-Pac:kage deal fare $68 72 hrs. Excursion-Package deal fare $74

Which includes transportation, hotel, meals.

One way fare $30.

For information call: MRS. BLANCHE O'BRIEN,

at 90797L or 4461 A. • A Taxi-boat service can also be arranged.

FOR SALE TWO STOREY DWELLING,

8 RENNIE'S MILL ROAD. Apply

F. M. O'LEARY Ltd. WATER STREET DIAL 2119 ev.tu,th.tf

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

FOR SALE M • V EARL KEITH

Tonnage 65.86 Gross, 45.95 Net. Length 61.5 feet, width 18.5 feel, depth 8.2 feet.

Powered by 66 H.P. Caterpillar. Vessel equipped in compliance with D.O.T. Regu· lations and is at present moored Little Bay Islands, · Green Bay.

Fer further information contact

BRITISH NEWFOUNDLAND EXPLORATION LIMITED

SPRINGDALE, NEWFOUNDLAND. jne28,4i

---------- -------- -. --·-· ----·---

1 Advertise In lhe, New~,

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16

MILLEY'S Girl's Bathing

Boys' SUITS

Bathing SIZES 7 to 12

.98

ALL SIZES

$ .98 S. r~ILLEY LTD. . .> ..... __,.~ ... - ,, .. '

1 your borly put~ nut. When ~el· · 1 ting ready to put on the suntan :oil this summer, therefore, it's important to remember that your eyes need protection just as much as your skin.

Solving eye fatigue involves mostlv common sense. llct·e arc a fc~ basic rules: Fit·st of all, pt•otect your eyes against glare with a good pair of sun glasses, but be sure to take them off at

1 sundown. Give your eyes a rest

i sevet·ai times a day, taking time 1 PILGRIMS IN' PARADISE ~ out to dose them for one or lwn F k G Sl ,_1 84 SO 1 mmutes. ran . ougn er , . 1 Avoid t·eaf!ing in a murinr WATER OF LIFE • vehicle ot· in pour light. 'md Henry Morton ' cbn'l ever try to sew or read: . while watching television. When Robrnson ............ 5.95

. !yin~ in the sun, keep the lids 'MAMIZELLE BON

. well protected against excessive' VOYAGE 1

I sunburn and try not to rub the . 1

eves with your fingers. Gil Buhet ............ 4.00 : ·If. iu spite or it all, your e;·es THE LOVELY AMBITION :do g~t tired, remember thut the E" (L 4 I regulror use of an eye lotion r~n Mary ••en nase .. .50 ·

be or gt·ent help in providing rc· BLAZE OF SUNLIGHT 1 lief. 11 1 t·· 1 Faith Baldwin ...... 3.95 ~ There's a y e ow pas tc. BIRDS AN fiC:.HES · squeeze bottle in your favorite 1 D ~ store which dispenses one drop! Philip Joubert .... .. 5.00 of eye l_otion at. ·a time for easy ; DESERT SQUADRON use It s new tn Canada and h,1s . bee~ ~p~cially designed so it will: Brctor Houart ...... 3.50 neither break nor spill, It also THIS IS ROME

:fits the hanrl and can he e~sily Fulton J. Sheen 4 95 1 carricrl in your poeket, pur>e or .. .. · 1 ovcmight bag. MEDICif\IE IN

Tenders For Highway Construction

' 1. Scaled tenders arc inritNl I and will he rcccin•d up until I noon Thumlay, 14th of .July. lt96!1 for the l'Onstrnction of · 25.2 miles of hi~hll'a)' bctll'een . Gander Bay ancl the 'l'rans-l.':m·

I atla Highway in the l'icinil)' of Gander.

2. l'lans :nHl sp!•eiriealion>

I

THE MAKING Gordon Murrey .... 5.50

FOLK MEDICINE D. C. .larvis, M.D. 3.5C

Oid{s & Co., Ltd. The Booksellers

. Spin 4425 or 2008 or 3191

: !t&,'b&ll

FOR ALL YOUR PAINTING SUPPLIES.

Contact

JL~RD~NE'S PAINT & HARDWJI.RE ~

Dealers for ~

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 196~

LOWEST PRICE EVER!

BROWNIE Bmm.

MOVIE CAMERA Fixed focus f 2.7 lens, with enclosed tele­scopic viewfinder. So easy to use - just set o dial to match the day's light- ond SHOOT!

~~~

BROWNIE 8mm .

MOVIE PROJECTOR You gci extra bright screening with this easy­to-usc pr:Jjcctor. Simple threading - just slip the film in • , • and SHOW!

ONLY $9.00 DOWN

and ycu're mak­'"9 your own

KEEP A RECORD OF GOOD TIMES

IN COLOUR SLIDES.

.95

IT'S MADE BY KODAK

SO YOU KNOW IT'S GOOD.

'y' our Eves Need mer hut an orcrrlosr of thPm it. Ami If \'Oll let \'OUr eves •ct may he in>pP!'Ied "' the r;m 11'sult in lll'arlaclws and eye-, tirccl, you'll. soon feel tit:c1i ~1 11 Draughting office, Dep;trtmcnt aches unle>S proper precaution o1·er. ~lay be start to yonder il of Highways, !'onfetlcratwn i~ taken. ~·ou·re grtting old before l' 0 ur Building, St. .John'.<. ancl t•opies

MATCHLESS - 1·. SHtRWIN-1NiLLIAMS

B & H.

mcv•es. j '-·-

OOTON'S Protection Just .'\s Your Skin .lust .<witching from the dim-. time. may be obtained upon deposit

n0ss or a :<nmmer cottage to the Results of a recent stu'l'el' bl' of S25.00 which Stllll will be re-". ·. ·• •· --.'- ~··o< '''"'!line ami daz1.le of the su~mer Slt.n, for

1

the ~!urine Compat~y ~how· thai turned to the. ter~d~rer if the ~ · ·. r,, "~~~~ ma~· he a o•xample. can eastly stt·am your. the mere act of seemg consumes plans and spccthc<~ttons are rc·

~- · ~ ·. , ··u·;, f~n' th:, sum· r~·es without your even knowing up to one-fourth of all the enN."Y turned to the Dep;n tmcnt. ·~-·~----·---~ ~~----~---

1

3. Tenders must he made on

WITH THE COMING OF SPRING YOU WILL BE LOOKING FOR

BUILDING SUPPLIES OF All SORTS, INCLUDING,

CEMENT ROOFING WALLBOARDS DOORS

forms prol'idrd by the Depart­ment and must he submitted in scalccl enl'elopcs addressed to the DL•puty ~linistcr of High­ways. The words "Trmler for the construction of 25.2 miles of highway between Gander

· Bav and the Tt·ans·l'anada High· wai• in the 1·icinity of Gander" . arc to be written across the face of the envelope.

4. Tenders motst be at·com­panied by a certifi•~cl cheque in an amount of at least 100;;. of the amount of the tcnckr.

• 5. The Departnwnt noes not ' bincl itself to accept the lowest

• or any lender.

165 WATER ST. i PHONE 5567 ·,

Prompt _De!i·1er; f D!STRl'BUTORS FOR KODAK IN NEWFOUNDLAND s~rvrce. "

Jll"C.ltilfh [; ~------, ~il··~··'EiP.f~'i""'Mil!iib: ... '.-';~ "::.T-- ·-;:.~,: .. -,"'7';,~f'' ~· ~ ... ~. ---·-r--- ....., .. • ...

t•,~ .... •,kt~t";f,l',,l.;,;, ':.'•"'• ~ ~~,··~ ~•• ',J, .. \~t,,,' '' I' • 1

. !-~i~-;--F-as_t __ r r I I I I

l r .. ~xi Service l SPECIAL I I.

! HOTEl TAXI li l Ci~! 2424-2410 ~ : QUEEN'S ROAD : : Open from 6.30 to 2 a.m. ~ I.,.. ... ..,._---- ........ ..,.. _______ '·~

YOUNGSTOWN

VALUE SINKS SEE THEM TO-DAY

• Large roomy bowl • Spacious c!r~inboard

• Lar:;e ~torage com partment.

\2 lnehes wide.

LOW, LOW ' f. .\, K:\'JGIIT,

, Dep:u·tmrnt of D~~.~~~~v:~'!~listrr . INTERIOR FINISHES MacCORMAC'S Ilia\ .iiRI · 2 · 3

GE:\R STH~:ET

Rl·:CEI\'1:'\G OFFICE,

1 t\JlEI.A lllE ~TI\EET

Dial 48~6

PRICE

$79·95 up

Remember that our prices ore lowest and our service will give you soti!ioction.

Al\o, our ENGINE DEPARTMENT con look after your need1 for

NI-CO-RODE DRAINAGE PIPE POLYETHYLENE PIPE MACHINE FITTINGS

Also SAWMILL and INDUSTRIAL MACHINERY

A. H. MURRAY & Co., Ltd. ST. JOHN'S

ALL ITEMS PRICED TO CLEAR. The Big Sale Of The Season

Is Now In Full Swing 25% Off All Retail Sales·

AND AN EXTRA SPECIAL DISCOUNT TO THE WHOLESALE TRADE

NOAPPROBATION, NO PHONE OR MAIL ORDERS, NO R.EFUNDS- CASH AND

CARRY.

IIEWFOUNDLAND WHOLESALE RY GOODS L~MIT.ED

RETAIL DEPARTMENT- 319 WATER STREET TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE OPPORTUNITY DAYS.

--=-·~iii'"iii~'""'ii' -~iii

- ;2~~~s~-~-e:vfo:rlland.

c ~;

TO-DAY'S SPECIAL

SEE THE NEW 1960

Tl'iumph Herald

at

Mci<INLAY MOTORS LTD. LeMA.~CHANT ROAD

PHONE 4193- 4 - 5

IJE,\TIIS

DUNNE - l'ussed peacefully · away at St. Patrick's ~lercy

Home, John Jo>eph Dunne. aged 82 )'cars. Le:•1•ing to mourn six sons, four dau~hters, five hro­:hers, two sisters and a nurnh••r o! grandchildren. Funrral from his late residence, Squires' Ave .. on ~·riday morning to Corpus Christi Church for Hcquicm :\lass at 9.30. Inlt•rmcnl at Kilhridr Cemelrry. f No flowers hy rc· quest).

:\!ILU~Y-~~Pas:;ctl away at the · ticucral Hospital on Wcclncs-

--------- 1 day, June 2!l, alter a long ill· 1••-------. , ness, William l\lille;-, aged 78

LAND SURVEYS LAND APPRAISALS

DRAUGHTING WHITE PRINTING MIMEOGRAPHING PHOTO COPYING

TYPING

Gerry Halley ·Surveys ltd. TELEPHONE 90876

:years, leaving to mourn his wife, 2 daughters, Olrs. Jean Blandford, St. John's. ancl l\lt'S, Charlie Kelloway, Vancouver), also 3 sisters .. The funeral will take place at 2.30 p.m. on Frida)', July 1st from his late residence, 15 Dunford Street to ' the General Protestant Ccmc· , tery, Topsail Road. No flowers

1 by request.

' • --·--- i

I f'UNJIHAI. NOT!C~: '---~----------- - - .. -I

[ BOGUF~The funeral of the jlatc Harold Bogue, will take

I place 11.30 a.m. to-day, Thurs· I day, from Camcll's ~'uncral

--------- Home. 28 Cochrane Street to ;

ELECTRICITY is CHEAP in ·ST. JOHN'S.·

~· I9MP4fiiiV \INIIli

Mount Pleasant Cemetery. I

TV REPAIRS

REASONABLE RA rES

GUARANTEED WORK

PHONE 94123 Electronic

Centre Ltd.

I qp Reliable Electricity \ 90 CAMPBELL AVE.

In and Around St. John's After hours 'PHONE 7313

COME IN OR PHONE

C. A. HUBLEY LTD. '--------·KING'S ROAD - DIAL 3916

ATTENTION I-IOME BUILDERS CHESTER DAWE Ltd. NEWFOUNDLAND'S FOREMOST BUILDING SUPPLY-DEALER

SUGGEST:

Spruce wood is excellent for pulp wood but not so good for house framing and sheathing • • • because it is more inclined to twist, warp and split.

Therefore, for your LIFE-TIME INVESTMENT, don't use Spruce­DEMAND FIR !

For stroigh!P.r, dryer walls. partitions, sub-~looring and roof-covering .••

SQUARE EDGE FIR ••. should be used in preference to all other forms of sheathing.

Any experienced and reliable architect, conh actor or dealer will agree with this.

UPWARDS OF SIX MILLION FEET OF THE FINEST ASSORTMENT OF HIGH GRADE, WELL MACHINED FIR IS NOW AVAILABLE TO YOU

AT NO EXTRA COST.

This is our Business, not a sideline-when it's lumber, call our number,

Canada Bay Lumber Co., Ltd.

RODDICKTON CHESTER D"WE LTD.-DEALER.

TEL. 91171 -EASY FINANCING AVAILABLE - TEL. 80161

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