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l61 - ( 'DO I ut :an ay! th! out as u ·;s should 1n 2 yards •d. if )"011 or · with md clothes !O ·ead the in· ng so your otherwise ith a flare. o! the hem , turn using w the bob· 1em is flat slip stitch the skirt. ws in the s can be Rihbons so eas)' to L!.EC.F. a \'e !P.I eral best Iabrie . as expert· cause good · with loot madr two workman· 'ear rippfd skirts. ThfY ength waist Buy 6 inch· m this nteas- 54 inch.s r fabrics or and down", e read your and lol· )' good yours. SUPPOR _ Fornur man ask.!d n ThursdaY KennedY He told the peech pre- at the lin;tl ual no time tor barrass y do l the raclJ. 't " Unt )'•- ,, •• r •.• ras NOW PRICES CUT TO THE BONE ON ALL USED CARS & TRUCKS THE DAILY NE Terra Nova Motors Ltd. THE DAILY NEWS, ST. TOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, SEPTEr..fBER 18, 1961 (Price 7 Cents) atangans Overwhelm UN Irish Troops At Jadotville et Plane Hits wer Line And Explodes 1cans To ' National t a lew cloudy 6Q his allernoon, High . Temperatures · Min Night Day ........ 53· 65 ··••··• sa : ·ss . ....... 59 ' • 1 ' 63 :74 ...•• •• 57 : 76 ••••• A t Turkish law prohibits exccut: ing a man not in his right mind or toO ill to slana. ' ' ' / Irish Surrender To Vastly " . F .JUper1or LEOPOLDVILLE-Reuters - A United Nations force Irish troops was reported overwhelmed :_;:,,. d.ay nig•ht by l{atanga Province troops as fighting con- tmued to rage across the troubled Congo province. Reports that the 150-man Irish force had gone down to defeat came from both Jadotville the town north of Elisabeth ville where they formed' the garri- son, and from Dublin. · Berlin An Explosive At UN Issue PLANE CRASI£.LANDS . . SEOUL !APl - .A Communist civilian plane with a crew of two crash·larided Friday night on South Korea's Cheju Is· land, police reported Sunday. The pilot and co·pilot escaped serious injury and ,were taken ,into custody. The newspaper Hankook Ilbo said the plane ap- parently got lost in fog, GREAT CHANGE BERMUDA -.The l\1erctll'y capsule ·which roclwted around the world Sept.13 carrying a robot astronaut is loaded aboard a C-124 at an Air Forcc"Basc here Sept. 14th for a return flight to thc:U.S •. The capsule was launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla., and was rc·. covered from the Atlantic soine 161 "miles from Bermuda. In New Guinea's Wahgl Val·. ley, a maiden does no work and lives a merry life before mar· riage, but, afterward, she loses her freedom and becomes a drudge, gathering wood hoe· . ing · gardens, cooking meals and tending children and pigs. \. . ' , , : r : ' . ' ·. .... ., ' . ,·. ;t . ·;: ; ,, . ' •I ··-: . ;'i:.· t.· . ' ! . :: ,I ·I 'i I ' .. j, I. :; i .. I ,. ' I ,. ' ' ' ' . ! ,) 'I i. : I . -. . 1.:. : J :. • , I ::-Jj.'i' -1·' 1 I I : :II. ,I , /1-:. I II· '; 'lt i . i i i . . '! l i:. .: 'I, :. I :I .., I! I: . ' ' I. ,I :.)1 ' ' . !I I ·,. ;j .I :1 ., i I ( ·I .I ,''I, ... ' I :'
Transcript
Page 1: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...l61 - ( 'DO I ut :an ay! r~m th! out as u dcsir~. ·;s should 1n 2 yards •d. if )"011 or attra~. · with

l61 -(

'DO I

ut

:an ay!

r~m th! out as

u dcsir~. ·;s should 1n 2 yards

•d. if )"011

or attra~.

· with th~

md mak~ clothes !O

·ead the in· ng so your

otherwise

ith a flare. o! the hem , turn using w the bob· .1em is flat slip stitch the skirt. ws in the •s can be

Rihbons I so eas)' to

IL!.EC.F. 1a \'e !P.I eral best Iabrie ,,. as expert· cause good ·

.1 with loot

madr two •r workman· ''ear rippfd skirts. ThfY

·length waist Buy 6 inch·

m this nteas-54 inch.s

,er fabrics or , and down", 1re nece.~sarf.

read your 1ns and lol· ,,·a)' good 1e yours.

; SUPPOR _ Fornur

'ruman ask.!d •ion ThursdaY ~ent KennedY ,y. He told the , speech pre­' at the lin;tl mnual con~·en· ; no time tor •mbarrass ~ they do all the raclJ.

't " 1r Unt )'•-

,,

••

r .j~ •.•

ras NOW PRICES CUT

TO THE BONE ON ALL

USED CARS & TRUCKS THE DAILY NE Terra Nova Motors Ltd.

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. TOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, SEPTEr..fBER 18, 1961 (Price 7 Cents) ~-----------------------------

atangans Overwhelm UN Irish Troops At Jadotville et Plane Hits wer Line And

Explodes

1cans To '

National

t ~ith a lew cloudy 6Q his allernoon, High .

Temperatures · Min ~iax

Night Day ........ 53· 65 ··••··• sa : ·ss . ....... 59 ··~·ao

' ~ • 1 '

······~· 63 :74 ...•• ~ •• 57 : 76

••••• ,45~cl7.·

A t

Turkish law prohibits exccut: ing a man not in his right mind or toO ill to slana.

' ' '

~

/

Irish Surrender To Vastly

" . F .JUper1or o~rces LEOPOLDVILLE-Reuters - A United Nations

force o£ Irish troops was reported overwhelmed :_;:,,. d.ay nig•ht by l{atanga Province troops as fighting con­tmued to rage across the troubled Congo province.

Reports that the 150-man Irish force had gone down to defeat came from both Jadotville the town north of Elisabeth ville where they formed' the garri-son, and from Dublin. ·

Berlin An Explosive At UN Issue

PLANE CRASI£.LANDS . .

SEOUL !APl - .A Chine~e Communist civilian plane with a crew of two crash·larided Friday night on South Korea's Cheju Is· land, police reported Sunday. The pilot and co·pilot escaped serious injury and ,were taken ,into custody. The newspaper Hankook Ilbo said the plane ap­parently got lost in fog,

GREAT CHANGE

BERMUDA -.The l\1erctll'y capsule ·which roclwted around the world Sept.13 carrying a robot astronaut is loaded aboard a C-124 at an Air Forcc"Basc here Sept. 14th for a return flight to thc:U.S •. The capsule was launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla., and was rc·. covered from the Atlantic soine 161 "miles from Bermuda.

In New Guinea's Wahgl Val·. ley, a maiden does no work and lives a merry life before mar· riage, but, afterward, she loses her freedom and becomes a drudge, gathering wood hoe· . ing · gardens, cooking meals and tending children and pigs.

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Page 2: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...l61 - ( 'DO I ut :an ay! r~m th! out as u dcsir~. ·;s should 1n 2 yards •d. if )"011 or attra~. · with

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Interest In 'Red Cross· Blood 1

s~ccer Final Collection I BELL· ISLAND.·· (Staff) ~ · BELL· ISLA,ND · (Stalf)-Thc

Tl:l!re is a tremendous amoun d Cross molille blood collec· of interest In the final football tlon team will visit here Mon­ntect between C.L.B. and Fron; day, September 18 and Tues. tiers. The game is scheduled day, September 19. The unit for Saturday evening at 5.30. will be set up In St. James' The 'teams are tied up, with Hall Town Square Three hun· one win each and ·a tie,. in a dred donors are required for best of 3 games final series. this collection. Normally two The third game took place at visits· a year are made here tp the sports field Wednesday collect blood. Due to the Icc evening, resulting in a· 1-1 tic. blockade last Spring, the clinic Due to darkness setting in the was cancelled, It is therefore game had to be re-scheduled for important to double the quota Saturda>'· in this collection.

Celebrates

Rfsldents of this community, receiving treatment In any hos· pita! in Canada or the United States .receive their blood re·

B. rthday quirements free through this I service. BELL ISLAND (Staff)-Mr. The blood collccUon clinic

John M. LeDrew, the Front, is will be in St. James hall, Town receiving the congratulations of Square, :'tlonday, September 18, his wide cirCle of friends, on and Tuesday, September 191 dur· the occasion of his birthday. lng the hours 3.00 to 5.00 p.m. ::llr. LcDrew was 72 on Tuesday, and 7.00 to 9.00 p.m. Scptcmbea· 12th. Previous to re· tircment on pension he was em· plorcd wilh Dosco, Wabana :\lines, in the pay office depart. mcnt. ' -··--

An oceanarium is a huge steel and concrete tank built ncar the ocean ~o that plenty of sea water is at hand.

THE DAILY NE MONDAY SEPTEMBER

Allison STEAMS Thierault MOVEM

Beauty Queen _ E HARBOUR GRACE - Again NFLD. GREAT

Conception Bay· News Ernest Vokey Laid To Rest

a very large number of people STEMISHIP

S f b. II f • 1 S d f p ' • attended Thursday evening's *Gulfport arriving S 0 .t a Ina S tU ents Of rem1e1' Fair, many coming from Trinity Sept. 20, leaving Sll

Thl·s ·Week-end Memoraal 0 T . • Bay and places in Conception Sept, 21st. I pens rlnlty Bay. Highliner arril'ing St · · U • • C • f . The event of the evening was Sept. 24th; leaving S •

BELL ISLAND (Staff)-The . BELL ISLAND CS.taff)-lt IS n1yer51ty , 0ncept10n alf the choosing of the Beauty Sept, 26th. 1

f1meral of thtl late. Ernest l~kely t~at the Sen10r softba~l I Queen. 1\Ir. Lloyd Archibald was •Novaport leaving Vokey, 4B·~·ear-old restdent of fmnls Will get under way th1s -- - master or ceremonies and in Sept 23rd· arril''ln th V 11 \., b h · k d G d f t· ' HARBOUR GRACE - The 1 • ' ' g St e a ey, ,,a ann, w o was commg wee -en . rccn e ca HARBOUR GRACE Tl · . . . . traduced the judges who were Sept. 28th· lcavin S accidentally killed when caugbt ed Aces in the 'A' division of , , - 11 ~ Tnmty ConceptiOn .a~r!cu\tural Sally West, C.J.O.N., Eddie Sept. 29th.' g l by a rock Jail in .No. 3 mine the semi-finals for a playoff ~car mcral o{ ?ur young s~u and homecrafts eXhtbthon had Connolly V 0 C M nd B . S S Gow . I d' Monday morning, took place berth. Eagles ;rc lending Rang·! de~ I~ a~e entermg 1\lcmonal its largest a_ttendance on Wed·· Botham, 'Bl~e. Fla;.,ea repre~~: to S~pt. 2~~~ o~atn' Wednesday afternoon, It was ers 2 games to . in the 'B"1 UmH:slty and among these are 1 ncsday evemng, September 13th, tat' St J h , 22 d d ,1 ' rntltol

f h I · f 1 · h ~ f E· 1 Lorrame Ash and her brotber · when Premier J R Smallwood IVe · o n s. n an " ontreaJ s1 .. one o t c. argest unera s seen section. A not er wm or ag cs K . ·L T · k tt D' I . . · : There were nine contestants for St John's " . tl . 't . th Ill t t th f' I . g evm, orne nc e ' tane offiCially declared It open . . m us commum ~. more an w s ar c mas gom · A h'b ld R N 1 D 'd . · prettilv attired in formal even· •M V Dunue 100 vehicles were in the funcr- rc 1 a • amona oe • avl Present on the dais were the . · · d . ' · e 1 d . Davis returns for his second Premier and l\lrs Smallwood mg gowns an these were, m Toronto Sept.

a Fpara el. , . St Newsy' Briefs year and Miss Paula Harden. Hon. w. J. a~d ~Irs. Kehoe' order of entrance ~nto the plat· Sept. 30th and . unera scr.\Jces were m . 1 • • form, where the Judges were 2nd· arrivin• St

Cyprian Anglican Church and · CARBONEAR - 1\lany visi· , MaJor C. Sheppard, M.H.A., lllr. seated with the beauty queen · 8th-' leaving St J~h , · at the graveside the Rector, tors to the Fair arc from out- L, Strange, M.H.A., !llay~r and of last year· 1\liss Margaret Rose s s Hi~hlin · 1 n 5 Rev T E Smith officiated . · j 1 d 1\Irs. A. D. Moores Magistrate · · · b er oad1n:

· · · , • . · s1dc the town and the traff:c 1\!r. and Mrs. James Gar an nd Mr Tr' k tt d h h .

1

Taylor of Harbour Grace; !liar· onto Oct. 5th Hamil.' ::I!Burial was ~n ~!\~ Anglican was particularly beai'Y in this! and ~heir, daughter Phyllis who 1 ~an o/the 1f~i~ c~~m\u~: ~~~- garet Rose Murry, Carbonear; Bth; Jeavin• ~iontre·J ·~ Cemetery, Beac I · area. It says much for the vigil- ! had been on a motor trip fro.m I Lorenzo and lllrs. Pike. ' • · Eil~en Law_lor, Harbour Grace; arriving Sl ,fl•lm's '0~:

ancc ·of our R.C.lii.P. that there Harbour Grace to Nova Scot1a, I F 11 ... g b . f k b Alhson Th•erault, Harbour Jeavin" St John'· o 1 -..- . . · 'd h • · 't d '! G • o O\ym r1c rcmar s y ~ . :o,, c. Alexander Ham11ton, fmt was no outward mel cnt. where t ey v1s1 c ·' r. ar· 1 Fair mana cr Mr L· Wake\in Grace; Patsy Nagle, Harbour •Refri"cration U.S. secretary of the treasury, l\lounties were present at the land's sister Jessie, returned l\lr L Pi:e ~clc~m~d and in: Grace; Mary Sullil•an River· GULF AJiill · is said to b_c the "fat~,er of the/ opening and_ a keen watc~ was! ho~e. last ~eek after a very iroduc~d the guests. He said hear, Harbo_ur , Grace; R~th SHIPPI~G ro., U.S. financial system. kept all dtmng the evemng. cn]o~abic tr1p. that it was thought the co· Drover, Spamard s .Bay; Lou1se •Fergus lcal'c . i

operation with and the keen in· Noona~, Joan Powell .. Carbon· Sept. 22, ieal'c Pictc1

epresent-terest of the committee and car; Mtldred Cleary Riverhead, I Sept. 23, arrire St. JoJ:, people that the Fair had been ; Harbour ~race. . . '25, leave sam~ d•y . brought to success. I ~he chOice of 1\hss Alhson ''Refrigeration.

He then introduced Premier Thlerauht. aged 21 years, was NFLD. CASADA Smallwood who said he had just mndc and the new Beauty SliiPS lDIITED. returned from his first visit to Q~een was crowned and r~· M.S. "Bedford II" e· Corner Brook in a couple of celved her sash from last year 5 ' from Halifax d s · years and where he had noted Queen, ll~argaret Rose Taylor. today, ue t. with extreme pleasure the great , The pnzc of a complete o_ut· 1\f.V. "Faul'etle" ,

· 1 fit was donated b~· the Evenmg . p_rtgr~ss made ~n the second 1 Telegram and Mr. and :\Irs. ~thia~ ?ep~ember c1 y o our provmcc. . H 1 r f that paper were pre<. 1 • o n s eptember

He contmued by nammg ere e 0 , -. 1 M.S. "Bedford n· Grand FaJis, Gander, Lewis· ent. The new Beaut~ ~ueen was ! from Halifax ~eptembl: porte and Glovertown as com· the centre of attractiOn on her j d St J I ' munities which were steadily I float during the parade of Sat· ~~~~ V ... ~ mbs .,

. . · urday. A dance was held at St. I · · re e growmg mto towns of modern 1 Paul's Hall on Thursdav even· )!ontreal September progre~s and develop~ent. 1 ing when the new Queen was St. Jo.hn's September

Commg to ConceptiOn Bay, · t d 'th h r p ·z M V "Fauvette'' the Premier referred to th_em ~s presen e WI e rl c. Hali.fa~ September

the older nnd mor~ h1stor1c Persona Is st. John'• September towns. He na':led, Br1gus, Bay M.S. "Bedford II" Roberts, Spamard s Bay, Car. from Halif~x soptcmte: bonear and Harbour Grace as · d . --communities which were de·: . ~~- GRACE-:-AmonT~h thols~ I u;l VSt. '~Fohn stl ., , 1 · g nd taking on a new t I'ISihng the Fa1r on urs: a) [ •' . . aul'e e ~ e opm f l~f · cl'cninG were Mr. and Mrs. Her· Halifax September e~~r~our ~-race being the old· rlcr and Mr. an~ Mrs .. J. ~lc·l St; Jol!n'~ oc:obcr ,I;~. est town of conception Bay, Carthr. who_ arr1ved here lh~t FURNESS "ITII\ ad the Premier hoped that the afternoon IR Mr. Herders I , , LDIIT.~D young generation were being yacht. 1\lr. Herder was from the 'Newfoundland made aware of the value of its Evening Telegram and Mr. !\le-I John's for Halifax history in their schools. earthy is manager o~ the Stand·J ber 15th _and Bo;ton

Referring to the manv great ard Mnfg. Co., wh1ch h~s an LB. Leal'lllg Boston men who had claimed Harbour attractive booth at the Fair. and Halifax Sept. 23. Grace as their birthplace, he John's Sept. 25. Saili:: recalled one Oliver St. John of Mr. Harold Barrett. St. Jobn's, same day for Lil'erpocl earlr years, who had written visited the Fair on Thursday. "No1·a Scotia" teamj the first history of the island . , . pool Sept. 22, due S:. and had edited and published :l!ag1strate and Mrs. G. Tmk· i Sept. 29. Leal'tng fo1 one of its earliest newspapers ett left on Sunday to mo.tor as 1 and Boston Sept. 30, in this town H.is name is to be fa~ as Corn.er Brook. Magistrate j fax Oct. 2 .~nd Bo;lol found in notes of the early Tr1ckc;t IS • commencmg a i Leaving BGston Oct. 6 days of Harbour Gr~~e as one .months vac~ : fax OcL lO, due St. of its best known citizens. d t l12. Sa1hng agatn ;am£ . The Premier told of the ~frs. Gart~ Crowe an wo I Liverpool growth and rapid development ch1ldren amved from Harb?~r Newfoundland of the new areas of Labrador Breton on Wednesda)' to VISit pool OcL 11, due and hoped that another year her parents ~lr. and Mrs. C. C. Oct. 17. Leal'ing fur those pages would be brought Butt. Boston Oct 18, due to knowledge of the people of . :-- . 20 and Boston Oct. 23 Conception-Trinity · by exhi·l Among VISitors to 1!1e Fal~ on Boston OcL 2~ and bitions of their development at Wednes~ay was MISS ~lld~ Oct. 28, due St. John'; the fair. . . Humphnes, R.N., of the ep . Sailing again same

He hoped that th1s stadmm of Health and Welfare. LiverpooL

sT. JOHN'S,

rash­ictim fourth man has

of a highway on the West Co

5th. young, a P

wagon ~ into by a1

saturday at t Air Force

other occup wagon died when the tru•

control and collid in which they w

ather Is Ki

report reachin~ weekend told ~

'}fedncsu;i~· o( Geor1 nd, kille

Col'e. on thE Baie Verte p,

fell from a gtowed by a tr returned to WI

after a holi1 with his w

isheries urvey mplete1

Federal Fi here has 1

statistical su fishing

would be regarded as that of ATLANTIC Trinity Conception rather than A Shower LI.SE ISLAND that alone of Harbour Grace, S.S. Theron due Sl Edward B

lo:cinvcstingin a Vauxll ....... I "

tt's got the it's got the

ECONOMY PERFORMANCE you'll enjoy!

you'll be glad of! You put your foot down on

Vauxhall does more to get ~e power, with Vauxhall's lively most out of every last drop of 4-cylinder engine , , • it's got gas than you'd ever dream the responsive acceleration, was possible! This peppy, the effortless cruising ability happy car will cruise comfort- that you want in a car. And ably all day long at highway Vauxhall's smooth Synchro-speeds, and still be saving you Mesh transmission ensures money with ~:emarkably low slick, easy changes every time fuel consumption. You save -even in first gear! Eager on every mile you drive-in engi11e-smooth Synchro-a Vauxhall! Mesh-standout performance.

· You'll be pleasantly surprised at the many :fine values awaiting you at your Vauxhall dealer's l Right down the line, you'll discover that Vauxhall offers you the utmost in qual­ity driving at a modest cost-and the savings continue all the time you drive· (don't forget Vauxhall's high resale value, tool) Your Vauxhall dealer is waiting to show you all the many pleasant surprises in ·vauxhall-­and ·one of the most pleasant is the price! See him ' soon •.

.. .

It's got the it's got the

@@~[[email protected] QUALITY you'll appreciate! you'll admirel

Five adults can really stretch There's outstanding quality in out and relax, with plenty of every good-looking line of headroom and legroom in Vauxhall-from the perfectly Vauxhall-:-a car that's really color.matched interiors to the tops for travelling comfort. big wraparound front and rear Add superb level-ride suspen~ bumpers. There's quality in sian, thanks to big, buoyant construction, to give you a springs and double-action strong, stable body, with a shock-absorbers, and you've rattle-free and dust.free ride! got all the comfort you need ,And Vauxhall has many qual· for every type of driving! ity extras, at no extra cost!

Victor Estate Wagoli

never a better buy . .• never. a b~tter time to buy!

...

-NOVA.· ·MOTORS LTD. PHONE 5_134 :._ 5135 ST. JOHN'S•. ~D. ~. . ...

'- ' . ' '· I

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for it. he said, belongs to the today, leal'inl: dd greater part of Trinity ~ay CARBONEAR, Sept. 14-:llrs. for Corner Brook 11! 811 enly ill S and the wllole of Concep(Jon Fred Saunders (nee Shirley York. his way to

Decker), was given a miscel· in St. Joh1 Bay. d t th h of M. V. Borgund being eonve'

The Premier then declare Janeous shower a e orne reefer and general Ambulance S!. the Fair officially open and be· her mother·in-Jaw, Mrs. W. P. New York and fore leaving the building toured Saunders, last evening. Approx· her 15th for St. Bickford, a the several booths., imatelv thirty well-wishers were arril•ing Sept~mber Bell

present and the many lovely September 22nd for at a well 1

Briqus News BRIGUS-Back to school has

been met this pear with not too many rc~rets on the part of pupils anrl not many chan~es in staff. Tn the U.C. Academv, ~!iss Taylor of St. Leo?a:d's takes the place of Mrs. Wtlham Wilcox .. and the total enrol· mcnt is one hundred and ei~hty.four.

The Convent of Mercy bas bentween one hundred and eighty and one hundred and ninety pupils.

Autumn harvesting is due to begin soon, some special ex· hibits having already gone for· ward to the Harbour Grace Fair. This was a good season for small fruit, strawberries, currants, raspberries and goose­berries. Blueberries were very plentiful and can still be gath· ered in sheltered spots. All are smaller, due to lack of rain. This is true especially of ap· pies. True some would have grown larger if night-time har· vesting had been eliminatea.

The Brigus Mill is working at top speed and a salesman is now travelling the Mari­times; another will shortly start out with the new fall models to Quebec nd Ontario, and as soon as possible the possibili· ties of Alberta are to be can· vassed.

We regret to note that Mrs. James Curran has had to re· turn to hospital In St. J obn's for· an operation. We all wish her a speedy recovery.

The new doctor and his wife and baby Maureen have now taken up residence In their new home. They are more than welcome and as tangible evld· ence U1e communities around Brlgus and Cirae'ks Beach are invited to share In a welcome tea from three to five on Wed· nesday, September 20th, at the U.C. Academy~

Blues singing is said to have originated In Basin Sireet, New Orleans, La.

gifts show she is highly thought Brook. he was t of here. we might add that she lll'~!l oeueved that he made the acquaintance of many :;~~;.;;~J"t,~ by the fumes r

of tbem at the Carboneat Com- 6 TRE~IESnOl'S using on t munity Red Cross Memorial a heart scizur1 Hospital, where she has been If it were neces;ary is sun·

· f th past couple of a table Jar.•e enough t~ nursmg or e and one years. She was helped in ,the the people in the opening of the gifts by a ne1~h· time, it would hare bour who read the cards. Shlr· eoough to stretch leY e~pressed her sincere t~anks earth 21 times at for the gifts, and the remamd~r and would hal'e to of the evening was spent . m length by 26 miles I

cards and it concluded wath keep up with the supper being served by the pro- growth. moters.

Newsy Briefs -CARBONEAR-Mr. and Mrs.

Fred Hollett have returned to their home in Burin, after a holiday with Mr. and l\lrs. H. E. Skinner. -St. James' Branch of the C.E.W .A. will be holding its annual sale of work and hot roast beef supper on Wednes· day November 8th. There will be 'the usual stocks of plain and fancy goods, knitted goods, novelties, borne cookery, etc., and no doubt the suppers will be of the same high standard as served in the past. Remember the date-November 8th.

BEAUTY In the time of

Queen Elizabeth 1: a attaining a beauhlul ion was to take a and follow it up by face with plent)' of make it fair and ing to the r~nc""''''-ca.

NA]IE'S RQcky l\lountain

what now is Oregon . ally traveled into th! · teaus and rolling pine country and cut their lodges or they favored . named lodgepole pit! reason.

their sister, Mrs. her of Mrs. Howell, happy one.

Members of St. James' Branch of the C.E.W .A. will be attend· ing a joint service of the two district branches of the C.E.· A special ........... . w.A. at Bay Roberts on Thurs· bom;ar CommunitY day Sept. 21st. The branches are : Memorial Hospital St. Mary the Virgin and All · will be held on Saints, and it is expected. that i Sept. 18th, at 8.15 aU-who can will attend. Btshop I members are Seaborn will be the IIH!cial as a matter of preacher for the service a~d is to be discussed. members of the local organJZ· _ ation are urged to attend.

- Miss Audrey Ki~~ 'Mr. Edward Curtis of Sault . of Mr. and Jlln,bl

st~. Mi'e has returned to his : was announced t.1: · borne, er vacationing with hl! the BOl nleee, ; Roy Howell and. at family. His sister, Mrs. Robert lion of the 1, Reid who accompanied him iichooL Audrey on the inward trip Is still r student last year guest of the Howell famlly an1l : studying for he1r wllJ be returning to Sault Ste 1 the same schoo · Marie at the end of this week. continued success It Is quite some years alnce the that lie ahead and ·brother and sister were in New· and her parents foundland and rt·unlon with gr~tula~onl.

Mal

men drunkenm driving, t•

Insane, two for drur

drinking : Place, and conduct.

Nothing.·

In

Page 3: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...l61 - ( 'DO I ut :an ay! r~m th! out as u dcsir~. ·;s should 1n 2 yards •d. if )"011 or attra~. · with

tier 29th.

i Montrr~1 St. John·1 . John's Ott ,•r loatlin~ It · Hamilton iuntreal Oct lehn·~ Ott m'>, Oct. 17t~ ~lll,

) \;(\IJTo,.,._

G ro., . \·r ,.r Pictou e St. John·; ' da.y, on. SAD.\

LDIITED. oni 11" ~n

due St.

ctte" ~ailinz ~mber 15th ~plember ' :ford II"

September ·, September 1e'' sailin~ ':ember 21st, •ptember 25tl •ette" sailin: ember ~2nd. ~ptember 24th. Hord !!" . ' September ,- s S~ptrm~rr \"ettc" samn, :ember 29th, lrtober 1st \\'ITH \' and OllTF.n

I Boston Boston

Sept. ~3.

25. Sailin& Jr Lirel']l()ol. utr~" iearrn& ~:!. due St. ~ea\"lllg lor Sept. 30, due

·,nd Boston ston Ocl. 6 and due St. John'J

ere necessary to r:;e enough to r in the •·ould ha\·e to o stretch times at

d have to , !!6 miles I

with the

REAUTl' BIT e lime of Iizabeth I, •

a beautiful to t:oke a \'en· '"' it up b)' :h plentY of fair and ruddr. e Encyclopedia

me.

t the . AudreY t l.ut year ~~ for bet me JdlooL ued sucetll e aht.td a!ltl er pareDtl .. . atioDI. · · · '

ST. JOHN'S, N!WFOUNDLAND ,The Daily News MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1961'

rash 1dim • 1es

rth man h~s died as the .\ ~~~~ 3 highway traffic acci·

Carrying ·Out Huge· Airlift

Of Soldiers on the \\'rst Coast Septem·

5th. . Jo•eph \'oung, a passenger 111

· wagon which was into b)' an oil truck,

Saturday at the Ernest Air force Base hos·

othrr occupants of the wagon died almost in· when the truck went out

control and collided with th~ in which they were passen·

father· Of

RCAF TRENTON, · Ont. -R.C.A.F. Air Transport Com­mand Headquarters .here have announced that an airlift began Thursday past. to return the army firefighters to their units on the mainland from Gander, where they have been helping to fight the province's worst for: est fires in history.

Huge "Hercules" transports from 4a5 Transport Squadron, RCAF Station Namao, Alberta, will airlift the troops from Gander to Quebec and Frederic· ton where the soldiers will then return to their units in Camp Valcarier, P.Q,, and Camp Gagetown, N.B.

As many as 92 soldiers will be carried by the Hercules at

6 I K 'II d one time until a tot~ I of ap·

S I e proximately BOO have been air· lilted £rom Gander. One flight

~rr rr~l'hin~ here thr./ each da~· .will depart Gander A rep . 1 1 ld o! the deal h !or Fredcrtcton or Quebec· for

wcrkrn~! ;,rorge Kin~. 39, I ~ week or so. unti! all the .s~ld· Ul~d at Coach-11ers. and an~ equipment \\hlch

• • 11he northeast i~ to he returned, ha\'e been air

' (~lr .. on . ' ·lifted. . Barr \ rrtr rcmnsula. • I These soldiers ha\'e 'been In · !rlld ftm t r~m~re~od I Newfoundland for the past three ;towr ~ ~ ru~ · . e ~ I weeks aiding in the fight rrturnrd to 1~ ork m Bale / against forest fires. ·

alter a holrda~· at Bell . •·ith his wile and sb; 1 The R.C.A.F. airhfted ove~ a

· lhousand troops compleU: wrth trucks, jeeps, tents, field kitch· ens, picks and sho\'els from Fredericton N.B. and Quebec City airports. Ten Air· Trans· port Command aircraft,· com· prisins North Stars from 426 Squadron, Trenton, Ont., CUD

Flying' Boxcars fro~ 436 Squad· ron, Toronto, and•4 Operational Training Unit at Trenton; and Hercules turbo-prop transports· from 435 Squadron Edmonton, flew day and night to complete the mass airlift In less than 48 hours.

c. Howard Simpkin Dies

News came last weekend of the death ·of one of Canada's well known businessmen, C. Howard Simpkin,

1\lr. Simpkin was president of C. Howard Simpkin Electric Contrartors, with the main of· fice at Montreal, and a branch here in St .• John's. It was this company which did the elec· trlcal work for some of the new buildings erected here in the past few years including the Unil•ersity. ·

lllr. Simpkin died in his home In Montreal, after a short ill·

FIRE FLARED U~ AGAIN among the partially burned paper amid the wreckage or the A.N.D. Company paper shed at Botwood which was destroyed by fire sometime ago .. A 'lose was turned on the smouldering paper. The wreckage o£ the shed and pier may be seen whilst, in the background, a tug and barge are removing part o[ the wreckage as rebuilding goes on. At the time this picture was take.n last Friday afternoon, a ship was loading newsprint direct from railway _freight cars.-:-( Max Mercer Photo).

ness. He Is survived by his wife M Louise, and his son Charles. r The funeral will take place from 0 e the Rosedale Chapel in Mon·

Should KnowiTo Discuss Problems In Blind Institute

!real, today at 11 a.m., to the Church of St. Matthew and the Mount Royal Cemetery. Veteran Privileges

AND Wood. Worl{ Back\ To ·Normal

With the Corner Brook Le- cnpped and is in economic dif·J Miss Louise D. Co,wan, Na. Age Security, an~ the ~!other's On the home teaching side of gion Conference recently com·lficulty. There are few jobs fori tiona! Director of Welfare Ser· Allowance; she assists in the :.her work. )!iss Cowan assists pleted, the Dominion Secretary the man who has not got his I vices and Home Teaching with selection of social service staif,. the forty-five CNIB home teach· of the Royal Canadian Legion, I health, ~lr .. Thompson explain· the Canadian ~atio.nal Insti· an~ k~eps abreast of welfa~·e as·! cr.< w~o train the newly blind D, M. Thompson, proceeded on e~ and tt rs the work of the

1 lute for the Bhnd, ts schedul· soctatrons on the local, naltonal,l in adjustment to their hancli­

to St. John's with another Le· Legion's Service Bureau to as· ed to arrive in St. John's to- and international levels. Sh~ 1 cap, Braile, crafts and other gion objecti've in mind. This is I sist handicapped men. The dis· day to consult with officials of also handles enquiries from las peds or rehabilitation

The Federal Fisheries De· here has completed a

statistical sun•e)' on the fishing operations

smon. Activities in the Millertown to lakes and streams during the to make the benefits of the or· ability docs not necessarily the Newfoundland Division on other countries concerning ser· I . . . , report has been forward· Fisheries ~linister Angus

in Oltawa. l!r. ~!acLean requested the

alter rcceiring a brief Secretary P. J. (Pat) o! the Newfoundland

of Fishermen (Ind.) aid to offset a

confishery. Dmils of the sul'\·ey were

rerealed. I. S. )lcArlhur, ol lhe Fisheries

Support Board, is due this week from Ottawa to tirst hand account of the

in Newfoundland.

Suddenly BELL ISLA~;o ( Slaffl--5().

Edward Bickford was 1uddenly ill Saturday and

his way to the General in Sl John's to where

being conl'eyed b~· Ride. Ambulance Service,

l!r. Bickford, a resident of Bell Jsland, was

at a well on his prop· . he was taken ill. It

bt!rered that he was over· h1·the fumes o! explosives

using on the well and. • heart seizure

Dmased is sunll'ed by one and one son.

Make Arrests

.Thlrtr arrests were made by PQhre orer the weekend,

Stluteen men were arrest­t~r drunkenness, four for

dril'ing, two for being Insane, three for

two (or .drunken driving, drmkmg liquor in a

place, and one for dis· conduct.

Nothing ·sMALl

and Badger Dlvfsions of the past week. This makes • total ganization more obvious to have to be the result of any various problems associated \'ice to the blind of Canada. I . Bhml ~~~ce a chrldhood ac· A,N.D. Co. have returned to o! 50,288 cords hauled to dat~. those who are eligible. war, as long as the man is a with her department. . · . /ctdent, ~lrss Cowan holds a normal following the prolonged AT EXPLOITS Mr. Thompson came from his veteran. While in St. John's Miss ~~~ss ,Cowan also dea!s _wrth Bachelor of :\rt;. degree from lay-off due to the forest fire There are, at present, so·men ottawa Headquarters for two There is too, the problem Cowan will address the Tues· applrc~trons for_ ~he Natwnal 1 ~lc~lastcr Umvrr,rly o[ llarn· danger. On the Bishop's · Falls employed on the Exploits reasons to attend the confer· that many veterans, or those day meeting of the Kiwanis Vocattonal . Tramrn.g cou:sc lrJton. and her ~l<lotcr u1 Sucral and Terra Nova clivislons, be· River bridge at Grand Falls and ence a~d to make efforts to concerned with them, do not /Club. - · . . . lh:ough wh.tch Clli!B trams~ Work Degrcr from the Um1·cr· cause of the fires which ha\·e, work on this project has now have' the disability and veteran realize that new ceiling stand· I :\~iss Co":'an was appointed 1 b!rnd cxccutt.v~ P~rsonnel,_ .~~d / stt yof Toronlo. occurred there, activities are re· reached a point where· the allowances more completely ards have been set ·for nllow-

1

Natt?nal Drrector of. Welfare I dr.jtaphone t~ ~1sts, she a,.r.ts 1 -------sumlng more slowly, bridge Is being extended over understood by people of this ances. In some cases a _ group 1 Scrvrccs and !fome Teaching in I wr h the s~ce+!!l ~ccds_ of .the'. •

WORK FORCE the water .. Also, construction Province. He spoke of examples of people, veterans famtiy for ~anuary of thrs year, after serv-1 deaf-bh~d m conJunctiOn 1\It_h: F· nal of the New Woods Dept. offices where disabled men, veterans example, can now apply 'for an t~g for. twelve· years as Super.,the nattonal consulta~t for ~hrs. 1:

At present, a total force of at Grand Falls began on Wed· of the war have been f:Oing allowance where .\n previous vrsor for Home . Teaching for I group, Mrs. MarJ.or.te ~!cGuf.; 1.985 men are employed on all nesday, Sept. 13th, without ahowance or assist years they did not come within CNIB Ontario _Division, In her! frn;_ and. she admmrslei'S the'. Add rete~ b~ ~J' divisions. Of this total 1,607 r--========--. ance .for years, merely because the set ceiling. present role, ~hss cowan serves national a~pecls of the gmde ,w. fio.J • ~ t men are cutting, 99 m~n haul· they 'are not aware what the (Continued on page 16) ~even CNIB Dil·isions as con- dog servtee .through. 1\htchi . ing, 109 men driving and 170 Legion has to o!Cer. sultant on th~ .interpretation ot CNIB sends. sutta?le bltnd per· AP EC men engaged in other work. S· eek There is an allowance for the the Blindness Allowance, Old sons to Seemg E~e In~··. Mo_r·

CORDS CUT veteran up in yean who is Recreate - ----·-·-- ... nstown, N.J., for tramrng. m For the Week .ending Sept. physically or mentally. handi· 1E?~ cd•arc and use of ll Sec mg. I Arthur Johnson, tw~ year

> e og. president of the Atlanhc Prn1·· 14, 1961, 10,144 cords were cut M• • M ., F t inces Economic ouncil will make on all divisions making it total I·SSing DI"scuss Help . arconi s ea his final address as th~ organiZ· of 118,218 cords cut to date or a lion's executive director during 36% of the proposed cutting • The Society of Newfoundland I A F .•• ne AAFEC meetings this week a• quota. Cutting In the burnt Woman cor. FI"re Fund Radio Amateur announced Frl· i. . Charlottetown, P.E.J. over wood areas at Gambo Is r 1 day plans to recreate the his· to commence Immediately. tory-making feat of Guglielmo ; T · 11• APEC representatives meet

St. John',s Police yesterday Residents of New Perlican Marconi who received the first I' rave In G' this week to discuss a numb~r Summer hauling Is contlnu· d h LoA H 11 · · s· 1 H'll h ~ of t'rnportant topr'cs of interest I 8 d • 1 d were still lookill( for a miss· met yester ay at t e . . . a radro stgnal on tgna 1 ere

ng and 38 0 cor 5 wert nau e lng woman, a resident of Ken· In that community for a gcn· December 11, 1901. ' to the Maritime Provinces. In·

Regret .No Premiers Meeting

mount Road, Mrs. Jessie Wise- era! discussion on how they Support fo rthe project has i ' Day eluded will be reports of the

man. Forest Fire Compai•n. Radio Relay League and the foundland Labrador and it~ us~· could help in the Newfoundland come Iromh the American I hydro developments. in New-

The woman was reported to a I 1 t APEC Announcements requested all Radio Society of Great Britain. Traffic was 1fairl~· heavy yes· fu ness o . ha\'e been in poor health and, 1 d · residents of the town to meet The British Society plans to terday on cast coast roa s as 1 . .

it was said, lhe was In 1 de· at 2.30 and it was expected that set up a station at Poldhu, city residents took advantage .1 The mcetrng wrll .cxtcnJ pressed state of mind. a plan for increasing the fund Cornwall, to transmit the letter of a fine day to travel into the /through a three-day perrod.

She left her home early Fri· f 1 d d t "S' t N r dl d st t' I t would be ormu ate an pu o a ew oun an a 1on . coun ry, day morning and was not heard into practice 81 soon as pos· set up at Cabot Tower. ' s k 3 ( from up to noon Sunday. 'bl Premier Smallwood will offi. Many people were berry pick· trUC y -..

Anyone knowing Where th. c Sl e. · ins and blueberry crops in most Cd ciate at the St. Johns phase of The Atlantic Provinces Eco- woman may· be Is asked to con· The special fire fund was the project. No dates were an· MR. FRANK M. EWING areas are reported very good

nomtc·Councll has expressed Its taet either tha St. John's police started by Premier Smallwood nounced. this year .. regret that a planned Atlantic or the RCMP. some ·weeks ago, On Sunday lasl the rector of Provinces Premiers meeting had --. ~.------------------ • the Church of St. :Mary the

to be cancelled. . N. ew U. niversity Is What Fire Ra_ zes Hous.e ~~!tn~t~~.un;:~n~h~l.api~\~~ The meeting was due to start as Rector's Warden. Mr. Ewing

this week. However, because u • • . Sh ld B City firemen were called at succeeds the late Frederick G. Premier Stanfield and Premier A n·Iversity o.u e 5,07 p.m. yesterday to Ad· Vivian who was Rector's War· Smallwood were unable to at· miral's Cove, Southern Shore, den for eleven years. tend owing .to pressure or busl· where a two-storey frame ness, the meetings have been By ERIC A. SEYMOUR for education because of the house had caught fire. Tlte deferred. Although some professors better facilities. providing a house was practically demolish·

who taught at the old Unlver; better Incentive. There will be ed when firemen arrived on the Premier Smallwood is plan._ slty may miss what they say is more opportunities because of scene. The name of the occup·

nlng the giant celebrations for the "old atmosphere", when a greater variety of spcialized ants could not be obtained from the official opening of the new they start next week teaching in courses. More students of aver· the fire department last night. Memorial Uni\'erslty In Octo· the new University, the stu. age intelligence-not only the ber and also the reopening of dents with one or two years be· honour types-will be able to the New!oundlann Legislature hind !hem at the old are greet· get into the university and which will be In November. ing ; the new with unbounded show that they too are capable

enthusiasm. or coming through with flying The other day while visiting colours.

The trouting season ended of· ficially Sept. 15 but the hunting season is now open and many people are trying their luck in the woods with big game ani· mats lllch as moose and cari, bou.

EVERY DAY IS

13-year-old Lynn Youden ard 15-year-old Ruth Trenchard of Cairo Street was struck by a car on Queen's Road at 3.40 p.m. Saturday.

Both girls were conveyed to the General Hospital where they were treated for minor cuts and bruises.

T na Sec. re the Science and Engineering Martin and Knight were also

LAUGHS U . . Building we · chatted with two enthused over the vast campus the engineering students, with two -it is what they dreamed of in - Now ·1.30 . and one years· behind them at universities in some other

Other calls received by city firemen yesterday were a false alarm from Empire Avenue and Forest Road at 5.42 p.m. and a fence on fire at the rear o[ the Station Garage, Hutchings St., at 10.40 p.m.

DISCOUNT DAY GOOD QUALITY FlANNELETTE

In

'Wat.ch for it

every day

''Old Memorial.' David lllartin lands, Now they and countless . . of Channel, and Dougald Knight other youth in search of high· Cancer

Officials Six more tuna ·were- added of · St. Johns. They said it er learning will be allle to

Saturday and Sunday to the list would be· like pursuing their stroll around the many 'paths of tuna taken from the waters academic .studies In another with the green swards to keep of Conception Bay for 1961 and world, In other words, their them company as they probe the total now stands at 130. . comparison "The building. their textbooks. The book and Are

· · · · makes you feel like you have a · (C ti ed' 16) -. Sunday, aboard Miss Sham·· REAL university. The old one on nu on page Here·,

rock III, provincial tourist dl· · was a glorified high school.". . • 'Representatives of the Can· rector· AI Vardy. hooked . and· · M R boated a 650-pounder and.Jalmc.. ·Martin recalled that at many ore a1n adian Cancer Society, including Wyatt, .on ·the 'Moose Pie, sue·. classes he and companions had : the national director and the ceeded ··in bringing aboarq a· to b~rrow chairs from other . I national secretary-treasurer, are biuef4n wclghing .• 745· patinas. rooms, and the seats were not Over' F·lres I now. in Newfoundland and, .Anglers oit all other lioats had always too plentiful, so they · while here, they will visit a strike btit lost' them' and ·the· could.take.in the lecture. Now, . . number of communities across bl fl \ 1 tif 1 11 In the new buildings there are · The Newfoundland forest f1re the· Island, h g b 5 were P e~ u a ·over Innumerable · Jectur~ theatres situation was greatly improved The men, with representatives

t e .. aY. . . · · . · · .. and ·classrooms all ·fitted with yesterday as ,a .result· of. rain of the New..{oundland branch of Saturday on ·MI~s Shamrock modern .seats· and desks for a which fell In .,the .Bonavista the society,· are studying . the

lli Al Vardy brought. aboard a· prescrl~d.' number· of. stu· North and Dunns Rrver areas cancer education program here 690-pounder, . and a- bluefin dents.. Whether It be In the in the past few days. and obtaining a general 'pic·

~-----.J,,. we!qhlng ~85 pounds was hooked arts bu!ldlni, science and eng!; Firemen, however, were still ture of how weu·tnrormed the

F I and. boated 11Y Howle .Meeker, neeiing building or in the gym on the job and .'were working p~ople of Newfoundl_and are or. t fof!lJiiJ; ~star of. the T!!'ronlo.' for! physical . ~alnl~ arid 88• on some_ bot~pots. which couldi ·With. canc~r preventa~IVe know. -. . . Maple Leafs. N; W. · Boyd· . o[ soclated' study, ·each· building •gain become dangerous. ledge. · 'In · Th'e·· · · · 'Lachute, P.Q.,· oufln 'the Velvet has· Its adequ·ate compl_e!llent of Air surveys were .carried out .To da~e, a spokesm~n said,

. . . : · Horri,· inanagea· to ·seeure· a ·big' furniture. · ·. · · . · yesterday and Canadian Army the spec1al repr~sentah~es- have.

Y NEW. ·' ·' · ·" ·tuna· ·w.e!Rhlnl 656 :Popnds..and. There ··were . ·other ·.points and civilian firefighters are still been pleased ~tilt the Job they · · · S· · L~s. 'Mar~ln' on the FlyJhl Swan these two ·bright yo~ng men. watching all fire . areas . care· have seen bemg. done by the took one wel1hln1 «S pounds.' brought out...;.lt iJ a bill lloost fully. · . I local branch.

·~ .. , ' '

Size70x 80 - Assorted Checks -

· THIS· WEEK ONLY Regular $4.75

BON MARCHE. DISCOUNT PRICE . WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

f ~~: ·:·~~.~:: :.:·.t.·:~,·\7_::;··.·.·::.~·-,·t:~::.-;: -.-r,_:: .. ·.· ,, ..

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' . THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, SEPTE~BER 18,I96J

THE· DAILY NEWS Newfoundland's Only Morning Paper

YEARLY I:I\JB3t.RIPTION RAmS

Canad~ ..... ;,.:· ............... $12.00 per annum

IJnitcd Kingdom and all foreign countries' . Sl~.oo per annum

Authorized as second clan mall, Post Office Department, Ottuw~.

The DAILY NEWS II 1 momlnJ 1111111 established In 1894, and published at 'he News Bulldlna, 805-3~9 Duckworth Street, St. Jobn'e, Newfoundland. b7 Robinson .& CompanJ, Limited,

MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN. PRESS

The Can.adlan ·Prest II · e~tclueiVel' entitled to the use for republication ol til newa deapatehes In .this paper credit.· ed to II or t'l tbr Aslo~~o'tated Preu or Reuters and also the laca:l newt publish ed theretn.

All Prest Services and featurf artlctet In th11 paper are cop)'rtahted and tbetr reprurtuctlnn 11 prohlbltef!

• '

I

Member f.:dtt Burelll ol CtrculaLIIID.

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1961 '

Forestry Corps Needed One thing the forest fires of this theless an indispensable require­

past summer have revealed is the ment. need of a permanent forest ranger But il would be useless to put a corps in Newfoundland. group o{)f this kind together unleHs

Much help was provided in fight- the standards were maintained at ing the fires by men marie avail- an e~ceptionally high level. The able from ·the personnel of the pay and conditions of service must national parks throughout the Do- attract persons of high intelligence minion. · and good leadership qualities. · These are all experienced people An organization founded on these

who have been trained to take ex- principles could provide the kind pert care of the natural resources of insur~nce the province needs for which they are responsible. against the loss of forest and wild­They. are experienced woods rang- life resources through preventable ers and they have also a wide causes. knowledge ~f the protection of There is much to be done by a wildlife within the areas in which ' well-trained corps of skilled and they operate. competent forest rangers. The for-

But in no province is this kind ests m~st be protected ag~inst fire of multiple service needed more and dtsease. Reaf!ore~tatwn o~ a than it is in Newfoundland. w~ll-~lanned · basts 1s essenbal.

. W1ldllfe must be conserved and Forests and wildlife represent guarded against poaching. These

reso_urces of gr~at economic value. and other things are matters of Thetr presen•atwn is vital to the vital importanc~ to a province with ~eneral welfare. And if the estab- limited resources on which the h~hme1~t of a c~rps ~f f~r~st rang-. well-being of a very large part of ets ma) seem expenSI\'e, 1t ts never- the population depends.

APEC'S Annual Conference I

The annual conference of the At- foundland a certain measure of !antic Provinces Economic Council qualified scepticism about what opens today in Charlottetown. APEC can • do for this province

The organization had its birth at which has little to sell to the main­~ co~fere1~ce of the Atlantic prem- -Ian~ and suffers from certain dis­ters m 19:~4. Its avowed aims were advantages that are suffered to to study and assess the resources anything like the same degree in of the four provinces stimulate the Maritimes. united action for Atlantic economic ' But there are things that can be development, and co-ordinate the done provided they are considered efforts of all useful agencies to- and approached on .a combined wards the attainment of that high- economic and political level. Un­ly desirable aim. fortunately, however, the confer-

It has done a great deal of good ence of the four premiers seems work in pursuit of these objectives rarely to get down to a solid dis­and has some valuable achieve- cussion of a joint approach· to Ot­me~lts to its credit. The fact re- tawa on common problems. In fact mams, however, that there has yet th~r~ ~s reason to feel that party to be a full crystallization of policy affJlla.ll~ns set up differences which ,geared to a recognition of what tl1e. are dt.fflcult to overcome. That, if four provinces ha\'e in common and true, ts ._unfortunate. Only by full what they must seek in common. co-operation on a regional basis can

Th the Atlanti~ Provinces achieve ere has been always in New- their common aims.

The West . German Election It Is probable that our news

columns today will disclose that the 85 year old Chancellor of Germany Konrad Adenauer, has won nnothe~ election. ·

~his is the first time he has been senously challenged. Willy Brandt the dynamic mayor of West Berlin' has put new life into the Social Democratic Party but it has bee.n extremely doubtful from the start whether he could muster enough support to beat Herr Adennuer's Christian Democrats.

Brandt gained a good deal of ~r?~nd as a result of the Berlin crtsts. But he is ·better known in West Berlin than he is' in the rest of Germany where Adenauer is known and trusted as the solid rock on which the new prosperity of

. po~t-war West Germany has been butlt.

-What

His · main argument has been that the international dimensions of the crisis with which West Ger­~any is now confronted call for the km~ of le~dership and experience whtch he 1s best qualified to give. Herr Brandt, on the other hand, has been described as Inexperienced and rash,

. The great w~akness of the Chris~ ban Democrats is to be found in the Chancellor's great age, While he looks and acts much younger than his 85 years, a man of his age must be regarded always as living on b.orrowed time. That compels at­tent~on to be centred on his prob­a~le. suc.cessors and some good m~::n are In st~l~t but whether they have the quahttcs o[ Adenauer must re-main ,conjectural. until the time comes for ll:em to be tested.

'

to Magazines?

EDSON IN WASHINGTON

. · Administration Labor Problems

Handles With Care

By PETER EDSON

NEA Washington Correspondent

named ,fact·!lndlnl! boards where they were not ·wanted by both sides, as !or· mer President Truman did in the 1949

WASHINGTON - .CNEA) - Neither steel strike, the United Auto Workers nor the auto· Goldberg's missile sites labor commls· moblfe manufacturers appealed for Keu· slon has cracked down on overemploy. nedy administration help In the current ment, make·work practices, excessive new contract negotiations. overtime, . wildcat and jurisdictional.

This Is in .I he pattern of recent auto· strikes which affected defense produe· tlon.

wa~,:e talks-argue right up to the old But In numerous local strikes like that contract expiration dale, then settle. of the New York concrete workers, the Aside from the Chrysler strike over the decision has been made for the federal pension system in 1948. there hasn't been government to sty out. state and local un nulo strike since 1046, mediators have sctlled them. That's the

The Genera~ hope In Washington is way they want it. · I hat this years contr<~cts can be made The i"fc.lropolitan Opera strike was

without more than a token st~lke, and . also locnl, but it ·had some national and also without Intervention by the ad· international angles. The Whit H ministration. . e ousP Th

11 h

1 began tnget protests from rad1o aond TV

ere were rumors a over t e p ace fans that Labor Secretary Arthur Goldbeg A~d from American tourists abroad, would step Into the plctue when he went messages began to come in that if little to Dclrolt to. make a speech. But he countries like Poland could have opera blayed only overnight, didn't go near the In seven cities, the United stales should auto negotlallons and came right bar.k have It in one. The President expressed to Wush!ngton lo become involved In, of concern and Goldberg agreed to arbil· all lhtngs, the ~lclropolltan Opera strike. rate if he was acceptable to both sides.

This has rai~cd the question of just One of Kennedy's early acts in this what Kennedy adminislralion policy on field wns Ia name an advisory commi~·

· sll'it>cs Is going to be, Which situations · sion on labor-management relations. will It stay out o! and in which will iL inlr.\'Venc? Goldberg is chairman this year. Com·

merce Secretary Luther Hodges will h11 general. the K~nnedy administra· chair it in 1962.

Lion wants to b~ ~ctlve ln j.tromoting The commission has met four times, better labnr relations. Wilh a secretary whiqh ls considered a record for such of labor who was formerly . CIO and · groups, a~d it will meet again in Septem· Steelworkers legal counsel, there was bcr. It has a pretty sophisticated atti· s?me early concern that the administra· tude. Nobody has proposed repeal o! bon would be . loa pro·labor. But the Taft· Hartley or putting all unions under record of the fmt seven months shows the anti-trust laws. it has not plunged into every strike. The group has been broken down into

Fact-finding boards have p'cen named a number or subcommittees with out· lo get transportation workers back on the side technical experts to take up ques· job in strikes by AFL·CIO yardmasters, lions such as automation, full employ. New York ferry and tug workers, flight ment, Industrial peace,. economic growth engineers' lie-up of one airline. wage and price policies. '

$In the strike of five maritime unions Reports will be sent to the President wl.li~h id.led all U.S, shipping, the ad· this fall. Later, all will be made pub· m1mstrat10n had to {all back on a Taft· lie;. The hope is that they will provide Hartley injunction which expires· Sept. the basis for new labor relations polic· 2oth. ie5 and possibly legislative proposals lo . In no case has the administration be s~bmitlcd·to Congres! next year.

What Others FI,AG B\JT .NO niORE

Ottawa Journal A separatist group in Quebec is

workins on a !lag for an "independent . republlc." The secessionists might have a !lag before Canada does, but that will he all. These sroups are strong on !he trappin~s bu~. happily, :.veak on the reulit!'.

INVESTOR'S AID London Free Press

A plea has been made in government circle~ for Canada's industrial future, Now the llluntrc~l Stock Exchange is r.lvlng the public a hand; broker~ wlll allow you to buy up to $1,000 worth of stock and pay for them in eight equal Instalments.

MODERNISTIC Cargary · Herald

France i~ plagued with a wave of thefts of modern art. 'One painter bas supplied the police wilh a sketch of a auspccl, and they arc on the lookout for a blue man with all three eyes on the. same side of business .

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Are Saying STUNNING STATISTICS St. Caiharines Standard

The statistical office of the United Nations, having surveyed 107 countries, reveals that no fewer than 36 of them have a per 'capita national income of less than $100 a year. · (The U.S. is tops with $2,035, Canada next with $1,525).

Among the 36 are the two countries which between them hold one-third of the world's popu!atiorl-China with 640 million people and India with 392 mil· lion. ,

Most statistics are dull things. But there are those, like this one, which spe_ak volumes and tell a story which even the most unstalistically minded can understand.

INSOLENCE Ollawa Journal

A Canadian, Dr. Ian Stevenson, now a psychiatrist at the University of Vir· ginia, stales with the apparent air of some· impressive scientific discovery: "there is some evidence that part of the human organism survives physical death." He was not referring, the report said, to any organic part of the body but

SELF-DEFEATING "to what was. called the soul in the The Windsor Star 19th century."

Noise-beset citilens of evel')l civilized Where has Dr. Stevenson been in the country should welcome with discreetly 20th centul')l? Does he believe that no muffled cheers the demand by Britain's one now 1peaks of or believes In the Noise Abatement Society that the existence of a human soul, or of its lm· auditol')l range of transistor radios be mortality? reduced, . Much o! the old insolence is gone from

But its vel')l name and ideals, the so· science. Only rarely now does one hear clety tends 'to be self-defeating. It can· the old claims. Religion too has better not shout aloud lh worthwhile objec· marked out its own borders. The quarrel tlves much less ask that Its demand · between science and religion has pretty ·be noised abroad. Still It deserves as · much turned out to be no quarrel at all much quiet support as It can get. because truth cannot contradict truth.

But when statements such as Dr . AI\1ERICANS IN WEST

Winnipeg Tribune · Americans !lving In Calgary and

Southern Alberta represent the greatest concentration of United Slates citizens outside .the U.S.A., anywhere in the world.

There are-count 'em-at least 87,000 Americans among the approximate 500,000 persons who populate Southern Alberta, while Calgary's 235,000 res!· dents can number 35,000 Americans among them.

At a time when much is being said and written about disagreements and wrangles between Canada and the U.S. there Is no noticeb!e friction between . Canadians and Americans llvlnK aide by side here.

Stevenson's come along it suggests that scientislll could learn to be less patron· ldng toward worlds outside their com· petence.

;Jtrength ~cr 9cdaq ., MRl. L. DOUGLAI

NOT REALLY SO ' Many years ago a man wrote two

· ,It is interesting to learn that the gave Sherlock Holmes to the world. TOO LITTLE, TOO'LATE old Strand Magazine is to be re-born It was in the Strand that Wells re- Milwaukee Journal· •

volumes destined to become famous; they were called "The Conflict of Re· ligion and Science.'' Today most of us• are quite certain that there is no basic conflict between religion and 1cienee. Religion deals with the unseen, spiritual world. Science deal• with the hard, rna· terlal world.

in·Great Britain under the title. of vealed his · proplietic sCientific In what ti! eal!ed the meat sweeping the New Strand with a young and vision in short ·stories and seria1s reform since Portugal abolished slavery . talented African woman as its that foresaw many of the wonders · In lts African territories a century ago, editor. .. ·. ' · y,et to come.. the Lisbon government has granted

It is hardly possible, h~wever citizenship to .all natives of Portusal's .that she will be successful in meet~ The Strand was the best of a overseas provinces. · ing the standards of the Strand and'- good cqllection which included the The Portuguese will probably find qther magazines· of the days .when. Royal, the Windsor, and Pearson's, . that their reforms are too little and too this·.type of perlodicill was popular, ·all magazines which were dedicat• late-especially too late.- The winds of

.. The nam_ e of. the Strand invokes· e_d to the pr.esentation of first class· cha,nge blowlmi over Africa have not f tf i h h missed Fortuguese territory, llOStalgic ·memories among those, IC. on n t e S ort sto~ form, Guerlila fighters carrying on the qld enough. t9 recall it in its n~day • It was a; sad reflection on the strucsle In AnKola aaalnst Portugal are

· ~hen it prmted: the short stortes of: decline of public 'taste when one poorly armed and poorly led, But their . ·l:!th• G. Wells, Conan Doyle and ·after the other,'these good E~glish. determination to fight on Is 'Whetted by

o ~r ta~e~ted .. authqrs . of the . magazines fell by'. th~ wayside for their hatred and by their desire for \'eirtt~. . in th Str d tha ~ant ·of popula,r and advertising national freedom. Belatedly made re· .. . w_as e _an. . t .D. ovle support •. · . . forms, no matter how aenerous, are not

" · 1· · · llkelT to pacify such people.

Some' of the outst~ndin~~; scientists of the world are religious men and feel that their religious faith in no way con· flicts with their scientific beliefs. They accept the fact that faith and science operate in different spheres. These spheres are as different as day is from night or man Is from woman. Because things are different does not mean that tbey are In conflict. Religion deals with our inner spiritual life. Science deals with the external material world In which we live.

If. you have· come to feel that you can· · not .be re!igiou• because religion and ·science conflict with each other, get that idea out of your mind. • Religion and science simply deal with different aspect• of the same thinl, niUIIelY, life.

Successfu I Tests

Auld Lang ' '

Air Mail's Golden ] ubilee (From the files of the Daily :-; 1~1 , .

By ERNEST CHIS!IOUI THOMSON LONDON-That pigeon post was un·

reliable is suggested by the case of the homing pigeon belonging to Mr. John Allsop of Willington, in the English county of Derbyshire. It has just been re_slored to its owner after a flight last· ing, on and off, for 14 years. How lucky it was that no such delay marl;ed the inauguration of Britain's first aerial post using aircraft.

We are celebrating the goldeh jubilee of this interesting event in September. It was on September 9, 1911, that mail was carried hy air for the first time in the United Kingdom in a series of flighls between Hendon (London) and Windsor, some 25 miles distant. il!r. T. Kent Walton, who at th~ time was seere· tary of the Grahame·White Al'iation Company, organizers of lhe flights, has been telling us that more than 130 000 letters and postcards were carried in a week. In the first flight was a special bag containing letters addressed to Kine Georl!c V at. Windsor Castle.

WAITING FOR THE WIND

September 18, 1931: JOIN'SYNOD

The General Synod o! lhe Church of England today sent an tation to the Newfoundland Syno4 join in meeting. The Synod is by Archbishop Worrell of Hali!n will meet in 1934. '

• • • BOWLING LEAGUE

The annual meeting of the cia! Bowling League was held !Jst · in Holy Name Hall, with president C. A)·re in the chair. Delc~ates

twenty five team were present.

September 18, 19t6: CONVENTION

The special feature of )'Eiter~r National Conl'•ntlon session was 1

bale resulting !rom a resol•1thn br Ashbnurne in which lh~ Hon. sioner for Fin~nr.e w~s invited to

Those were the days, I rem~mber, when no aircraft dared to take o(f from Hendon unless smoke from surro1•nd!ng today's "Pri1•ate" sitting, chimney~ went up straight. At is hap· pened, the start o£ the first mail air· craft was delayed several hours until the wind drooped.

• • • FOR THE NEWS

Mr. Josenh Smlllwood. at National Convention suggested on half of the radio and pm; that cooi~~ of ques•ions b~ mad! able on the days the)' arP This could not b~ aeceded questions were t•h'•d.

• • •

To mark the anniversary, the Post Office will usc a special comm~mar·

alive postmark in stamp canre!lin~ machines for mail posted in Windsor · un September 9. British European Air· ways' are celebrating too, with a soerial helicopter flight that dav from Hendon to Windsor, carrying mail to ha stam"'cd wilh the special Windsor postmark. There will doubtless he a rush by th~ public. including l'isilors. to send cards and leiters to themsell'es or their friends by the souvenir flight. They can post their communications, speciallY ~a%~cd, either in London or Birmins· The word Of

What a contrast between those "chancy" air mails of 1911 and the ser· vice today, The latest development, just announced by the Post Office, is new night mail fli~hts between London, Scot· land and Northern Ireland. These mean that we in London, can put off wrilinll and posting letters for those distant' parts by, In some cases, as much as four-and-a-half hour later at night, and still have them on ·our friends' break·

If we believe that Jesus died and again, even so them also will

Jesus, will God bring with , Thessalonians 4: a,

• • • Those who are in Jesus are not

to go to sleep, He will wake morning.

fast tables next morning. Speed in the air has ils incon· seat booking on any flight

vcniences. Serving luncheons on British any office in the United uinl!do:n,1a matter of seconds. He will bt

European Airways' fast flights between book future !lights J'ust 11 quiciU. London and Paris has to be done so quickly that the stewards need the By the law of opposites, such technique of Britain's Roger Bannister, reminds me of barnacles. tbo!t the first man to run 3 mile in four fish which encrust the bulls o! minutes. slow their progress. The Royal

COMPUTER BOOKING just announced a great viclol'Y New B.E.A. are also hastening the barnacle tribe. After nearlY ,

pace on the grQund. They are spending study, the Navy research £4.5 million on an electronic seal· have produced an anti-fouling booking system which should be a Ire· corrosive technique which mendous convenience both to travellers possible for ships to remain at sri

and sia!f. When t}le system is working times as long as before. fully It will be able to cope in evel')l All kind of picturesque . ue single hour with 3,000 telephone callers, were made before the techmq 280 people at counters, and 1500 cable perfect. For instance, in Langston•

· bour; near Portsmouth naval messages. Four electronic romputers at the nerve centre in West London ter· en England's south eo11t, a mlnar will handle bookin~s on all flights lowered Into the water up to nine months ahead. 20,000 barnacles. EVen a few

What staggers the Imagination Is the can slow- up a ship, and1 ~he;l "memol')l" o! these fantastic machines. collect whenev•r 1 ve.sse IS

Using magnetic drums and magnetic or tied up to I q_uay. tape £lies, they will store all seat reser- . . And not only barnacles. Auth I vatlon records. A clerk at a push-button . lng •hlp arrlvlnl at Plymo desk will get the answers about any. ' year1 ago from Far Eaatern

Each makes itis contribution, This con· trlbutlon does not .conflict with the con· trlbutlon made by. the other cal'tgol')l unless you· allow it to do so.

Be broad-minded-that is, let your nllnd be broad enough to admit Ideas dealing with everY asp'ect of life, Science and religion are not in confllct. with -each other, and you render your· sel! and the '1\'crld a disservice if JOU allow them to become so in your dally thlnklns.

. I

found to have sea squirts hull, the first time the stl·ela it Is o!flcially called, bad British waters. Now we ba~e many of them! . They have no however, for Navy ships treated the new anti·fouling. and paint. ·

An aircraft carrier needs tons of the stuff ·below th~ abou't 775 ;allon1-but sailor• not 'too much to be rid of tholl bamaelenncl ••• ~~tulrll·

VICTORIA, T1

gymnasium of

Thousands o

wait out the sto

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MULCH AROUND TREES of-•51HWE

~ US~ GROUND

CO'II:RS

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YtCTORT:\. Texas-An infant (fore611'ound) sleeps among other refugees who have taken shelter in

crmno~ium of Victoria College September 11th to escape destructive winds and floods of hurricane . . '

GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY DINNER for employees for Canadla.n Liquid Air Company, Limited, whlcli:

was held at Barney's on September 15tit. Special visitors. were:-Mr. Bruce W. Brown, Manager, Per~

sonnel and Industrial Relations from Montreal; Mr. Gordon Naylor, Asst. Manager, Atlantic Re&ion Thou,.;~ nels of Texas gulf coast residents have taken· shelter in schools, churches and an Army post

. wait out tne storm. (UPI Telephoto)

Te11 Tips For Gardenin·g

-----------------By .\LL\:<; S\\'ESSON

bnng, a host of ac· to comJJete for your l'se these work·sal•ing

to ~et the mo>t from your and gile you more time

it. la11n mu11inc Is uec·

But ) ou ran speed up in ocn•ral wa)'s, Avoid

pl:a:tin;~ on or the lawn that reqtnre

trimming, beds and borders

lawns, £ra\s often be· a wecdmg problem

the plants. It also moves and dril'eways. lawns keeps them

Use bricks. cinder block'! • • I

or stmslar materials for

soaking ls better than light wetting that would encourage shallow·rootcd weeds.

Use mulch to save wccdlnJ work. Peat moss, ground corn cobs, straw and similar organic materials also conserve mois· lure and impro\'e soil tilth. Black plastic stops weeds, keeps plant cleaner and cut disease problems. .

Apply .anti·Wilt sprays to protect evergreens from sum. mer heat and drought injury. They are good on both narrow and broadleaf evergreens. Pho· tos)·nthesis goes on while the filmly transparent protection stops excessive dryin(l.

· visible borders. If Prtler to use aluminum d or plastic invisible edsing: Expand T r a e sure it is set firmly ln the (Statement by R. M. Fowler, to 11'0id damaging lawn president, Canadian· Pulp and

When )'ou cut over II. Paper Association) sticks to dull, dirty The pulp and paper:lndustry

spades. Dull pruning has urged on the Canadian gov· and saws make cutting ernment that trade with Brit·

and often dam~ge the ain In newsprint, pulp, and kin· wbsch means repairs arc dred products should be main· .

A lew minutes to clean talncd and efforts put forward sharpen tools during the to expand trade in pulp and

will me hours when paper commodities with the are needed. expanding European Common

an island oi soil or Market. . · around trees and shrubs. With the Unlled Kingdom . &rass ncar the base, alone, this trade now amounts . avoid bruising trunks annualy to neardly 900,000 tons

lr)1nz to mow close with a value exceeding · $100 alopes where gr~ss 11 million and it has been expand·

and mowing a problem, ing steadily with duty.free en: C:Ound coven. Paehysnn· try to 41at market. In Euro~e,

. 111, various ereepcrs and rapid economic growth will m· . P!ants make attractive crease demand'a substantially . dsaplay1 and require and provide larger markell for

tare Canadian forest . products but You · bu only provided that tradi I• not

choose : va~~~~~:i artificially restricted by tariffs its Joe 1 and quotas. Such tar!Us and

1 . at on, That quotas are now being .introduc· 11 ! hours of annual · and shearing ed in the present Common

of pest ' Market and their extension '" "" ds prevention Britain would reduce or im· "".un o( cure. Check U t d d th Pt11odically d 1 pede exla ng ra 8 an 8

' 'lleeil an ma n. growth of the BrltiJh market. Tb Y spray or dust Reco!inizlnl · the importance hat avoids damaged to Canada of · Britain's entry :~in& to make an into· the Common Market, the

itt -out attack on pulp and paper industry has 'II 1 out of hand. asked the Canadian govern ..

llater 1 ~rin11 wastes time ment to sedc to maintain free •ort 'Cb et 1 sprinkler do entry for. newT!prlnt,· pulps, and , a 1\Uar ooae one that cov. other paper products without

IInce e or rectangular obstacles · from a cumber.sonie ahape, ~011 lawns are Iii systqm of tariffs arid duty-free

Vt&etabJ or borders, bed~ qu!lta&.- It has· also uraed tbat In~~ 1Eardens, Irrigate Ottawa •eek .to ne11otiate free

1a bot L~e · aoaktn~: de. entry for newsprint ana pulps ' "'1 weather; Deep Into Ute whOle Common Marke.t.

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from Halifax.

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,;·.

· · ·· . eal big boot · . TT"gives you a r

This little 1\NG.I..&J."'. . . r{ormance in en~urance . . . 1' 'Q rally-rouslng pe d 'ts low pnce and

.· · Ang ta p h otld an 1 • Ang1ia's . t of luggage space tests 'roun~ t e ;s FinallY throw 1~,. t hap·

With 13 cubiC fee . Anglia has loW operatlng a: c~odY appearance that r~:m and . u call it a boot or a trunk~w we don't raked-back ~1: more passenger hea.du suddenlY

Whet~er yo. the little ~ar field. N a car's . pens" to gl'V window clear, and yo. the little the blggest~~r the. contro-versy ab~~all we do kee~s th~~trA. is the BIG little car;~ See your

:-;.~£-::t:J~ ~~:\:~fo;::,:· ~~: ~ ',:"f-1~~!;~~~~~:·!::::~::;!::;! ~~:; ;ou' ~t~~l~::,1~·ssf;~:~n e~a~ple;~g~:. t~~ 1:bout b~ot~~l~~n~e~e~n good prica too. baelC d~~snh tl are standard eqUlpmen d~d equip· gallon but e . "e~tras t a 1: uge as stan Tty a few more! Fue ·g~ ' Full no-draught ;e~

t ' Foam padded sea sh. ugh ventilat1on. men · · ht t ro •. . . dows for strs.lg an extra safety pre ;:ar mounted gas tank tas and sun -visors. North

. ·caution. Double ~sr~~ bolts. Add to these American type nu

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MUNN. MOTO,RS LTD. GEO. G. R. PARSONS LTD. Blackmarsh Road, St. John's, B~anches: Spaniard's Bay, Com~r Brook.

Sub-dealers1 Duffitt Motors Ltd,, Clarenville; Tille~'s Garage, Elliston.· ·, .• ) .

' . . .

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St. John's-Phone 91011, Grand Falls-9463, .Sub-dealers; M~n's Service Station, Spaniard's Bay; Fifield's Garage, Wesleyville; Smgl~-. ton's Garage, Clarenville; G. & A. Buffett, Grand Bank; Conway s · Garage, Collie~s. , ·.

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Social-Personal - (:olumn-

• I HAPPY BIRTHDAy HONEYMOONING • •· · ·~!any happy returns of the

day to Bill Sparkes, Jr., who c~lebrates his birthday today. . .

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18 ' I

you baYC tendency to gain -.vtighl, suggest aspects govern· . i11g health. Children may pre­sent, headac.'les today, but don't be too harsh. Aspect! indicate that, if you go out to shop, you may speod more than you can afford. Contact' f~iend you've neglected lor too long.

.·; · CONGRATULATIONS Congratulations are extended

to 1\tr. and 1\trs. Art Bur>Py, '.: . Topsail Road, who celebrate : · ·,. their 21st wedding annlversur.v

1 ., &. today. Greetings aml be.; I I . :).,.; wishes coll)e from their many

::~·~· !riends.

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Blrm-' · Ingham, · who were married at St. Patrick's Church on Satur· day, September 16h, are honey· mooning .at Karwood Cabins. Mr. Birmingham Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Birming· ham, Mackay Street, Mrs. Birm· Ingham is the former Jo Ann Larder, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Larder, Pennywell Road.

Gaile Dugas On Fashion: •.• It was 286 years ago (September 18, 167 5) that Phillip and his Indian slaughtered Capt. John

Future ••. A new telephone cable for 1963, will tx­link thr: U.S. and """'pe da..i ly. (fwo other systems ·.~f.:=-~. .

.~t:· ·tjt-:ST WISJIES LIONS DANCE 1 -~!::!:'Best wishes ar~ extended .to / On Wednesday past Lions Dis· J

1 · ··.~:-. :1-tr. and l\lrs. lila reus Worthman /tl'lct Go\'ernor Don lllercer and 1 Plaid Fashions Handled With Great Skill

1.auu:op and 76 young men al Brook, Deerfield, Mass.

use relC!I tn Scot:and '-d France v1a NewfounQar.J)

·_~:~~'lto celebrated their weddin~ ~Irs. ~lcrcer altended a dance f",:;··~,.,,.~····:·~t~~:::;~~"''r<l'~'(""'!!'!' ;, .~·~nnircrsary. • at Placentia given by the Lion~

· ~;,;c.·· ~ Club of Placentia. Also attend §~t>'ITERDAY'S 81RTJIDAYS ing from th~ St. John's Lion~ , ~~~·~'!llany happy returns of the Club .were !.ion Don Penney :O:.,·.:'.(iay to David Granter, Anne and ~Irs. Penney, Lion Pete

1 1 !;~·)\looney, Keith 1\lcGrath and Summers and Mrs. Summers, ·'lii:..Kirl McGrath, who celebrated Lion Gordon Harris and Mrs. -:~their birthdays on Sunday, Sep· Harris, Lion AI Felix and Mrs.'

· ·•· ·~t~mbcr 17th. Felix. Attending from the 1 . :.· : · Mount Pearl Park-Glendale. • · ;! · DJI;CHARGED Lions Club were Lion Jim Sop·

The many friends of Miss er and Mrs. Soper ,and Lion , :, : Marjorie Pretty of Dildo. will . Gerry Knight and Mrs. Knight.

be pleased to know she Is fe~l·j -In~ fine after her recent oper· ON HOLIDAY · ation at the Grace . Hospit~!. Mrs. L. S. Thompson arrlv· She was scheduled to lea1'e the ed by TCA Satu~day evening hospital over Jhe weekend. from Cambridge, Mass., to

. -: spend a vacati(\n here. She hi CELEBRATING the guesl of her aunt, Mrs. A.

C'on~ratulations are extended I Parsons, 90 Gower Street. · to :llr and 1\lrs. Lloyd Eddy _ who t~da)' are celebrating their '48TH ANNiVERSARY wedding annh·ersar)', Congratulations to Mr. and j - . ·I ~Irs. Fred ·Rideout of Mercer TIAPP\' BIRTJIDA '\ Street, Bell l~land, who celc·

)!all)' ha~ll)' r~turns of the /bra ted their 48th wedding annl· f}ay to ~8\'l.d Smtih, wh? cclc· versary on September 16th .. hrates h1~ btrthda)' toda) · Mon-~ Greetings come ·from their dar. September 18th. children and grandchildren liv·

·. oss- lng in the city and on Bell Is· RED fl\ · . :land. I HOSPITAL REPORT ; _ . GE~. H!lSPITAL - ll~lly los HOLIDAY I ··

Shinmck. Rtl'er or Ponds. domg 1 Dr. and Mrs. G. Gould leave well: June. ~a\\Tence,. St. rl~i~ St. John's today by TCA. for a ques. condtl!on sa!"e. ABa, holiday in Vancouver before re· )larks G~ole, Hermitage ), turning to Northern Ireland.

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The Day Under Your Sign ARIES 'lorn Mareh ll lo Apr;! 19] UBR_.. (Sept. ll lo 0<! ll] ,\ chili! 1ood mrm11ry cou111 htlt' you He p:tirnt. 1-'m:inr 0,,; •..t~ , ~id a youn~strr with .a tinul;r ~rob:em. n! t.lrc;ior v.ill g:11"1 r .. a.:i·~·~ll

TAURUS (April lO to May lO) . ' SCOR?Id iOd. ll toN,. 1 .\ mu~utt C'ttor roul~ brcn111c sl.annr, J'~cople W.!\(r undrr ff<":•ra '.• urtsctUn~t c.ardullr-I.J1d pb.ns. "' hr more l.:ltu.nt than ·

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Nothinj!:: .,., ill be .,ainrd by hlowint your

anrl st~rrin1 up a storm ar1Nnd ' '

SAGtnARIUS j'l, •. ll \' rnat•lit~ an·l in':r~·!1;; ''""'" -•c but only i( )"ou r•ut lh•!!l- ta

CAPRICORN IOee. ll to l'wmotr ~sonal rrl.Uiont v.hile fJCO(llt :\sk a bmr t;nfull_l·-!:ct 11

di,t·o~e~J to mc-rl you 'haU ...... ay. at ~rrc your due.

l~uly 22 to Aug. 71] AQUARIUS !Jon. ll to Fo~ lht uln titl.t. a~rrc::U Slll!"llt!l• Po;1't maf":nirv l~tf" , .. ,,~., • !t

yo11 don'c ''ruth" for crJrrs now, 11n t hal( 1$ ba·! u ~..,., 1~.,1

'.'IRGO fAu9. n to Sept: 221 PISCES !Feb, 20 to ~ .. ,\ ;!] ·. h'< ~llcr \0 ltat"t "the car }1om~ today rnn'r c-rre~t much o! ·J~!'I··c. n: .aM drpmd ea. public tunsrortalioa. UJ an rrrat1t slalc o1 fl'lr.1 tY.i?t

Food Editors Learn

Teen's Interest In , ·~ .._.~··· .......... ~···

feeling fme; Gerard Harnett, . Lord's Cove, condition un· changed; Mr. William Banfield, Garnl•h. over operation, feeling fine; Mrs. Elsie Hardiman, Gar· nlsh, up and around, doing very well. .

SANATORIUM -l\lrs. Frank Hardiman, Point Enragee, con· dition the same: Lloyd Peddle, Carbonear. condition the same.

Time to Take Stock of Yourself

Plaid, when it is handled skillfully, is stunning. Big and bold or small and neat, it has the air of chic. Daytime ensemble by Dior-New York (left) · is done in red and. black, has dropped waistline with belt placed below jacket. Light-weight green, black and royal blue plaid is used by Monte-Sano and

Pruzan for this suit with sandway neckline. Waistline is marked by fringed belt. Authentic red . and white Dress Stewart plaid appears in this great i coa~ (right)_ of brushed mohair. This is a La Vigna I design; fabncs shown here are all British woolens. i

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StTSSHII'\E CAMP REPORT The following Is a list o~

p~tients at the Sunshine Camp who are reported well and happ)'. This list Is submitted through the courtesy of the Junior Red Cross: Richard Neary Bell Island: David Semi· ~:ok, Hopedale, Labrador; Sylvia Kean, Wesle!l''ille; Gerald Barnes, Bell Island; Stella His· cock Reid,•i!le, Deer Lake; Gay 'Earl, St. Lumaire: Roger Pen· ney Burcoyne's Cove; Rundy White. Sleohcnville: Jean Wal~h

• ttapp~· Valley, Labrador; 1\larte ~·Stokes. Deadman'~ Ba~·; Donna ;:Harmun, Corner Brook: Samuel • Pink Burgeo; Anthony Rob· . erts.' Bri~us; Abraham Way,

, .~ ~;Flower's Co,·c: Shirley rent~n, ~ ;"oi,l~c natt's Arm: Linda Banms· :· ' · tt'r. Winrlsor; Sharon Saunders,

Windsor: Ronald J,an;:don, Bot· wood: Lillian March, Carhonear: C])·de Kendall. Morrisville. Bar d'Espoir: ~lildred Rose Kelh·

. . !:fCWs: Ann O'Neill. Harbour ·• .· ·. Grace; Llewellyn Nichol. Sta~ . ~. 'Uarbour: Patrick R;obert~. ~ad·

·. · .. ; ger: Randy Hawktns, Bngus : South, Southern Shore; Emily . ·: , ~ope, Botwood.

.•. ~:'gisT BIRTHDAY · · Congratulations are extended

to Mrs. John H. Penney, 3 Stoneyhouse Street, on t.he oc· casion of h~r Blst birthday which she celebrated yesterday September 17th. An afternoon tea was· gi1•en in honour of the occasion by her daughter, ~rs. George Clarke, Larch Place, which was attended by he: lm· mediate relatives. Best wishes for man)' more birthdays come from friends and relatives.

THEY'LL WEAR ALICIA HAR

This is an In-between time of LONG AND WELL year. Summer has gone; aut· umn Is here but the weather Isn't really snappish· yet, So It's a good time to talii stock both or yourself and your ward· robe and to decide something of. the way you. would like to look In the comln11 months.

BY GAILE DUGAS NEW YORK -·<NEAl - There . are CO\lntless women who dote

on plaids and many'·otbers who are terrified by them.

Those . who love plaids are well aware that a ·really handsome plaid fashion. is dependent on

· excellent fabric and deft hand-

ling. Given these attributes, a plaid coat, sut or dr~s can be a smashing success.

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· OWn planning. For plaid can 1 good plaid fashion can• he coun-1 rarely be considered the back- ted to be several years. And i bone of a wardrobe. It's the these days, th.at's a sort of ·I

. fashion that breathes a glow· bonus in itself. The women who wear plaid ing spark into a wardrobe 1

knowingly. always keep their that's already basic. Pick your plaid knowingly. accessories simple .. Plaid, in Acccssorized with glowing, but- Shop with care, examine. care- I itself, is 'sufficiently eyerest· tery s m o o t h calf bag and I fully, Make sure the plaid is ' lng. The accessorie-s should pumps, neat, leather gloves one scaled correctly to rour I provide a quiet background. and a simple hat, plaid· is a height and weight. You'll ·

The women who are wary of thing o/ joy. It is also a lash- wear it this autumn and win- . plaid are those· who have had Jon that endures from one sea- ter and next autumn, too, with ; This means checking over your

wardrobe (accessoritl, tool, and fllllng In what you 11eed. (Then you don't lind younelf e\'er In that awful 1iluation where you have an Invitation and nothing suitable to wear.l

bad luck with It, often in their I son to the next. The life of a pleasure and comfort. --------------------~-~~--~~~~~~~==~~~---

If your summer's tan has faded, leaving you an all-over 1ickly green, It's time to go lo work to finish up the fading. via some hot tub baths and the use of hall a cut lemon where It's most needed.

\'our hair Is probably dried out from the sun, Tackle It with a brush and hot olive oil treat· ments until You coax It back to liCe. Then, and only then, ha\'e it styled and cut. Have a soft· body 'permanent if you need it:

This Is also the right lime to choose new lipstick, powder and rouge shades to 10 with paler skin tones.

WAYS TO BEAUTY

-Some girls In their teen• seem born into beauty, They are not necessarily absorbed by It and therefore slavish about lt. But they'll tell you that they:

Like fresh fruits, vegetables and lean meat, .

Don't smoke because · nicotine eventually yellows the skin,

Exercise dally; Stay away !rom very high. heels

because they want. strong heal· I thy reel. .

These are the girls with that J young, glowing, vibrant look · that l.s · American at · Its very best.

They are slim, .trim and clear· eyed. · What make-up they wear is expertly applied.

Kay· Sherwood ·on Better Homemaking

Illusion Creates Spaciousness Fashion Tips

TEEN-AGERS enjoy cooking such family dishr5 a• bakrd ken Italiano, tasty candy custard cake and quick rnlls.

GAYNOR MADDOX I'EA~l'T HirE Wash·and-wear clothing dries in Over t.:;o newspaper food editors 1 !Makes 4 smingsl

better shape If all the buttons from all over the United Slates ~ 1 two·!hlrd cut>s torerooltl are secured, snaps and zippers and Canada, in Chicago for the' 1'1 cups waler closed, before laundering. 1961 Newspaper Food Editors

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•·; cup coarse!~· chopped -0- Conference, learned that of •the , ers rocklail pmu11

.. ·'The aJJ-in-one blouse and slip for 10 million teenage girls in the; "I cup 1 'i sliel:l L' 1 • 1J·~~·~• fall is dandy for the woman country, as many as n7 per-! mnrgari11r who has troub!e keeping ~er cent of them take some reopon· 1 lraspoon sail blouse tucked m at the WillS!. i sihility fot· family meal plan- · Combine all in~rrdronll i:

, --:0-. . i ning. : quart c<t»rrole )Iii n When you r.e s~1lchm.g !abncs of~ .James ~:. Marler, a ''icc presi-; · moisten ricr. row.

a S)'nlhehc fibre, II Is best _to I dent of Standard Brands, told 1 a modernlr "' rn •Jj/) usc thread o! a man-made fib., the editors: 'B'ecause of so • Fl. for "11 minurc5 r:e re. Olherv.:tse, ~cams may 1 much publicity on jtn·enile de-l fork hcforc ;eninz. pucker or: g11·e long before the linquency we forget that count' garment IS worn out. les young people are makir.r

-0- contributions to the daily life

Label boots and rainwear worn by young. students. Labelling reduced the chance of a mixup when school is out for the day.

-0-News from Paris is that you'll

look completely feminine if you-step out at night with pearl-studded brocade bootees choose to wear white fox with · styled beret made of cbinchil· Ia tippcrl to nne side, get a Davy Crockett lox bonnet with a tail as long as a stole.

S!'IJUT .. LiFTER A rlr.an, fre;h blouse t!o~s won· ,

ders for moralc-itJHI lo your 11

appearanc~. Keep hlou~e~ im· , maculate and well ironed. j

nounL~ nuv !

wholesome and constructi \'r of this country. In the field of food, the under-20 young per­son is a major factor.'

To lllustrate his company's con· ference theme, 'Young Amer­ica Coks," he said a typical! menu favored by teen-agers when they entertain their friends or prepare a family meal· might include oven.fried chicken crusted with oregano and Parmesan cheese, peanut rice, yeast·raised rolls, green salad and candy custard cakes.

.Jon't forget ·~~ iia~ suY.i unexpected infu;ion; d perfume can do •.1 hen your purse lo pull kerchief or when you a light summer lea\'e an aura of tiness.

Everyone shoulrl own a: two toothbru;hcs arA nate using them to enough time to possible, dry your es in the sun. It ~rill bacteria remnining in ties.

• • •

The editors attended an unusual luncheon in The Casino, one of Chicago's exclusive clubs. More than 30 high company's executi1•es were hosts, at least one at each table. The com- A woman c.1n rcmav! panics are com·inccd that a from ~ny po;,ibilil.': d free exchange of idea~ and br: hcin~ pcr;ona11Y. questions hetween food editors laughing shrillY. ' · and the executives responsible stantly, talkin~ for policy and productidn in in~: a maliciou~ food prilcessin~: nrganilations the hu;incss

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They can set their own hair In 10 .minutes on big rollers. but wouldn't think of leaving them In overnight, . Apd, unlike· their mothers;' they're not· afraid or

·Narrow dining area Ia marlr. In ~11prar mnrr ~raclou5· by lhe ad dillon of a 5rmre Orlrnlal court· ;vr&rd 1cene in a wallpaper mural mounted on the lonl(. wall. The patio ~cr.ne 15 Ranked hy two screena, al!o _~Y.aUpaper, Wicker chairs, wrought Iron and l()nss table lit smoothly into the sceoe. A ~oorl ,manicure and polish does 1

more than beautify; It helps preserve nails, too.

inel'ilably re.1ulls in more lac- terested onl\' in

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' ;I NIAGARA FINANCE >•

'•' ·: COMPANY LIMITE[!

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brushing out a set. They. lin ow ' lhe.halrbrush won't take· out KAY SIIERWOOO Mound them, WhRI I'd like is ats is one -called Nalsu Patio, the loose curl. Most of them Finding ·remedies· for. the tight an .effect that would make the I pictured with this articlcl, stuff a hairbrush ·into those fit or a small apartment, house walls seem to recede, giving and a companiorr "Natsu

·huge handbags they carry. or'room head the list of hous· the area a more 'spacious ap· Screen." They are, In short, extremely ing headaches for._rriany home· pearance. A wall-paper mur- The patio mural is drawn on

knowledgeable about good makers this fall. The solution al or scene drawn with depth three panels, each 28 inches looks. But they aren't time will depend, partly, on how perspective might be just the wide.· The height of each sec· wasters about it. seriously the situation lncon· ticket. lion is ll'h feet but the height

CARRY DENTAL FLOSS veniences or annoys us. There is no lack of handsome of the design itself only 6.'i Dental ·floss Is possibly a. girl's For some, moving to larger quar- murals which would l(ive the inches giving one leeway to

best friend when if comes to 11 ters or remodeling existing effect I want. The hitch is .adjust the mural to wall space. , matter of keeplrl , her own · ones. will be the only acceptab· that so many are too expcn· The mural, complete, retails for

teeth Intact,· . · · · le·solution, ·For many. of· us, sive for me. around !30, You ,may not be able to tote a less drasiic (and less expen~· T~tls complaint is not exclusive A complimenting Oriental screen

toothbrush wherever you go !vel alternatives may Include with me. · A member of the printed on single panels Is eac~ claY •• but you can tote. and a closer study plur app!lcalion Wallpaper Council told me that sold for around !8. A wall use dental floss, lt ·comes fn of the optlcaHilusion to make • lhtervlews with owners · of area of 11 feet, eight Inches,

. handy little purse· sizes.· . rooms· look larger than they · walljJRper stores turned up, could be treated to a serene ·are, If your gums are sensitive . to . time and again, . the point Oriental scene which is drawn

dental floss, brush your teeth The small, narrow entry, the that homemakers are in the In delicate colors, In perspec· with table salt' dan~·, This 'boxed-ln•dlning·room or break· , market and• the mood for mur- live, for around !46. will lou~he' n up· •ensll v gu ... s . f~st nook may seem to press , als they can a!lord for dining

• • " ·D • e "' · · In too tlghlly although their ro.oin. and entrance . halls, but Two other themes appear In : . dimensions mat be adequate · the demand·ls also :!or quality murals.· One is· a charming

~ ·Crispy :little , Ol)ion /b,lts ~!ve: .• i. , ~or tb~lr .. f"!lcti~n. . design at,a._pr!ce, · Colonial . Days, 1 a . two.section . · 'llit to chopped· egg salad sand· ·I'm thinking,, for example, of our· · , mural for narrow wall' spaces

.,wlches. Add a lltlle .. lnstant ·breakfast'· nook' whiCh is large The market Isn't cnrerstocked or to be framed with real mold·

.. J!I!~ced. ~~~~~-1,1 .t~ ~our. fa~orlt~· , enough_ t~ take .the necessary ~· wltb· high· quallty,.,moderate or ing or paper shutters to give

. egg mlxlure ·for delicate. flavor tlible.and !lve·chalrs• but U:IS·II· ··' low-·eost ·murals but: there are the e!lect of a ·vista through a . -,~wlth:'·no : ~~sily :. peelinl'.\\i)lil, ; snug fit ~nd dlnerr are much some and: more to come. A . window .. This one and another

ehopplnf. . 1 • .• • aware. o! : tht · walls closin1 . good: example of- the new mur· two-section mural ·of a 'calm

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S~JOOTll TIP Smooth hand cream· on before

donning gloves for dishwash­ing or household chores.

ECONOMICALLY EXTRAVAGANT

Use that expensive perfume. Hoarding it permits time for . evaporation, and no one bene· fits from the lovely fragrance .

garden scene are both less ex­pensive than the Natsu Patio.

The colorways of all three are quiet and planned to go with varied color schemes: orr-' white, tawny beige, delicate i apricot, celadon green and warm gray are the major tints one encounters.

Paper to match the background of any of the murals Is avail· able for covering other walls In the room. These ·are not prepasted murals and. papers but are strongly made so that · installation- could be a do-it· yourself proposition,

Ina! stories for· women readers. cold In olhcr The menu included cold brea~t the hard drirint or duckling with orange sauce. I or th«; smu~ .. and corn meal yeast rolls from . housewife. Try II the Quaker Oats test kitchen. ~lost little ~iris

clothes and take BAKED CHICKEN ITALIANO beauty aids. To ~~~~

(Makes ( servings) daughter from raid:tl ~ dressing table and to

1 3 to 4·ponnd brollefolryer, cut . this interest wilhin . up its, set up her own 1

1 ~ cup (1 stick) Fleischmanns com oil margarine

I cup grated Parmesao cheese 2 tablespoons chopped parsley 1 tablespoon ·oregano ~ teaspoons paprika I leaspoon salt 1:\ leaspoon pepper ~ cloves garlic, minced

·Jean chicken and set aside. Melt margarine. Combine ·remain· ing ingredients. Dip chicken p!ec~s in melted · margarine.

t~· corner in her room bathroom .

Then coat chicken pieces with • b tiful cheese mixture. Arrange in . eau shallow baking dish and drlz· zle with any remaining: melted margarine.· Bake in a moder· ate oven (350 degrees F) about 1 hour and 15 minutes.

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Dad looks over the Sl '!l'ho is learning how f rent. Her budget Ill well as school necess

KAY SHE'RW~

The opening of school . it children's nego!l their allowances. W of school supplies, cl transportation and ation of special fees Assaulting our belea1 gets, it's as good l any to discuss wht lor what.

Money management 1

stay solvent is an lesson lor a child tc it's a hard one to I

How large should a !owance be? What cover? How early 1

start? These far lions ha1•e no pat a

In one group or tn 8raders which I chE children received 1 ces, getting mone: neded it from the others receh•ed $5 month to spend as Neither formula 1

A!tlhou1gh not intendec and fast set of rul suggestions made b: the publication or th Bankers' Associatio against our own Ia tices. For examp) vise starting a chi! lowance as soon as one coin from anot

A modest regular should cover slipul and it should be "using" or spem An allowance, in II shouldn't cover nee

· less You deliberate' them.

make an aile pendent on good be counsel. Permit 1 for extras. How ht

Here' For

Page 7: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...l61 - ( 'DO I ut :an ay! r~m th! out as u dcsir~. ·;s should 1n 2 yards •d. if )"011 or attra~. · with

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:r tun: I ~rn·in;::s)

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•II c:rrrl•rnl' in rol~. ~!ix ·H1

(ol rr. Balr

llntJIC~

••• lllld own it .rushes and them to

.c to dO' n· your u'n. II will maining in tbt

• • •

~TO '"cP" ~ or Black aDd

:J Whitl· I We make~~ . I your weddiJll .. tht moJl. . and Urid •'

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD .. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1961 f

Purse-String Lesson~ Important As 3 ~'s

Dad 1~ok! o•·tr the sptndlng and sa\'lng plan or the Junior miss '"" is ltarnlng how to manage Income and outgo and stay EOI· ttnl. lltr hndgtt must col'cr luxuries like the tcl~phone as nil 11 1chool ntcessttles.

Ji.\\' SHERWOOD

1~1 openin~ of school.br~ngs with ,, childrrn's negollattons on iheir allowance~. With the cost I of school supplies, clothes, ~ood trans?Qrtation and a prohfcr· · anon of sprcial fees and d· .~ssaultin& our beleaguered t ~ g!tl. it's as ,ood a time , anY to discuss who will pa)' j'

lo: 11hat. l!oJel' mana~cmenl or how to

mone)' is up to him. Well and good, but I curb the amount of candy that may be bought and l'\'C docked allowances to help pay for past-due library books. I don't gil'e extra money but I let them earn it. ~ they grow older and take on more responsibility, their al· lowanccs should increase. At the beginning of school, we sup· ply the basic necessities (note­book, pencils, etc. l but the

· s~1: solrent is an important l!sion for a child to learn, but n·s a hard one to teach.

Ho·r Jar~e 'hould a child's a~· !o•ancc he~ \\'hat should tl co1er~ How early should )'Oil

"art: These familiar ques· tions hare no pat answers.

1:'. one ~roup of t)·pical sixth 1radm which I checked, some childr!n receil'cd no nllowan· w. getting money as they ~!ded it from their parents, others receil'ed $5 and $6 a month to spend as they chose. ~either formula suited our family.

.l~ti.oulh not intended as a hard a:d last set of rules, I read rlggeJiions made by experts in !l.f publication of the American Bankers· A~sociation to check •rainst our own family prac· tim. For example, they ad· tilt starting a child on an al· lo?;ance as soon as he can tell Mle coin from another.

A modest regular aiow a n c e should col'er stipulated items and it should be essentially "usinf or spending money. .l.n allowance, in their opinion, shouldn't corer necessities un. !ess )'ou dcliberatel)' allow for them.

~·e,·er make an allowance de· pendent on good behavior, they counsel. Permit no beggings I for extras. How he spends his

frills and fads must come from allowances.

I was surprised b)' the generous weekly minimlom allowances suggested by the bankers' group, and I hope the children don't J(et wind of them. They say gil'e 2j cents a week to children under six years old, 45 cents for the six-to·li·Ycar· old, 90 cents for the l2·1o14· year-old and at least $1.50 for the ovcr-Hi·)'cars group.

Part o£ the value o£ the allow­. ance is to encourage a child to save as well as spend. The youngsters who can save mon· ey looking ahead to future pur· chases won't find It so difficult to budget purchases w h e n ther become ten-agers.

By teen-age, a spendlnr,-nnd-sav· ing plan should be set up. In such a plan the young person divides expenses into major categories for school, clothing,

· personal core, recreation, don· allons, transportation and hob· bies. ·

Dad may help her figure her In· come from ailowanccs, part· time jobs and gifts. Some set amount should be ticketed for regular sm•ing. Bankers sug. gest that adults save 10·20 per cent of take-home pay. At this point, a savings account which pays interest on the money may be a good idea.

Here~s Bath Oil For Shower Fans

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Girl, tb . • . ltOJl D prefer Ehower to bath may now hove bath oil, loo: This Qo11 irht oil Is mean' to go from shoulders to loes right alter a

rr, II rellevea skin dryness.

lbt . ALICIA HART tw difference of opinion be· a:n those who favor baths b those who prefer showers ·lnf~ great as that gap bet wen iltl't ry lovers and those who ~ tith read a mystery, .

the catr case, proponents of l'lroro:ly Will explain to you tht!r Partl Why they support

kr.o-.9in cular opinion,

ly on the skin while your body Is still wet. It should be ap· plied with long, sweeping mo· Uons from shoulders to toes.

'i'ou ·can follow It, If you like, with a gentle deodorant talc

· with the same scent as the oil. Used regularlY, . the. oil wiU

clear up dry and fluky skin, the makers claim, restorina It to a smooth softness.

baa ~ Ibis, one beauty bouse Oil lib~~~ ~ut a Ught, sheer Since ,lli37, no one ·(man or ~ drrness f!~n~~5~0 ;~~~:· woman) may wear a hat on the ~refer a quick shower. Ooor ·while the U;S, House of dri'Wb ~and night, !For one Representatives Is In session, .

· l doe!i· Of the shower Ia that · . · · · late 111 t aUow .one. to. ·Juxiu-.' · Some lobsters have the '!Oftel!edhot water scen~d ·and heavy claw on the right side

1h1l oil !at~ a.rleb bath on. · · · and others have it o~· the left · "'~ended to go direct- side. · · ·

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.A Short Short Story .. . ··- I.

SUSPENSETTE ...

DEEPER TIIAN SIQN canned fruit and skim: milk.. · : . , By Les,er Arno I She smiled' at the Iamili.ar sur·. !:. ' .....

"You can be beautiful if you I roundings and she smtled a~ ! . ·.,,: THINK beautiful! Now - close the door-to-doorhsalesmen v:1hod ! :. '.':,!.: · your eYes and think beautiful called on her. S e even sm1 e . 1 thoughts?·~ . i ·

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--------~-------------------- Henrietta Bedlington obeyed. · ·

We The Women

DIALING DINNER WILL COME IIOME COOKING WON'T PASS

RUTH MILLETT , I've just been reading what · a

Saine New Fashions In Fox Fur She closed her eyes.

·The handsome face of Ro~-~ well Revere continued to fill . the television screen. "Are your eyes closed?" Revere 'ask· I ed.

Henrietta nodded. · 1

"Good," Revere continur • .l. ! "Now that you are in the 1 J1:~~~~

snap meal planning and cook· 1

• , .

lng are going to be In the , . year 2000, or maybe even be- 1. fore. '

seventh week of our television course on Beauty, you are ready to be beautiful. Think with me of a lovely glade. It is green on its grassy slopes. You are lying there looking up at the fleecy white clouds,. The birds arc trilling ·. beautiful melodies. The brook is babbl· nig a beautiful song .The leaves in the trees are sighing beauli· !ul sighs .as the gentle wind

According to the chairman of the board of a large canned and frozen food company, one sweet day in the not too distant future housewives wlll be "dial· ing dinner" by V. There won't even be an oven or a refrlger ator in the kitchen.

If you want "home • cooked" meals Instead of a dialed·din· ncr you'll simply buy a pack· age of cook-itself food, pull a string on the wrapper when dinner time comes around, and presto, the food will be cooked chemically and Instantly,

It's fascinating rending, but I'm not going to throw away my collection of favorite recipes. I remember way back when women were told that cooking would one day be unnecessary because, in the not too distant future, food would simply be compressed into little round pi11s.

Since pills never replaced the platter and the drugstore nev· er replaced the supermarket, I don't expect to live to see the day when I'll be dialing din­ner or e\'en cooking food chem· icnlly In the containers it Is sold in.

Not that I think either couldn't be done if scientists set their minds to It, But knowing that variety Is the spice of cooking, and that nothing tastes so good to the average person as home cooking, I just don't believe the scientists are ever going to do away with the kind of cooking that requires 11 dash of this, a teaspoon of that, a bit of last· ing by the cook to see what needs to be added.

Nothing Is simpler right now for the housewife to serve than TV dinners, but what family could be persuaded to eat them night after night?

So while the scientists may find waYs of eliminating the re· frigerator and the stove, house­wives ~ill never be persuaded to throw them out. For, what a good cook can do with a stove and a well-stocked Ice box, no scientist is going to be able to do in a package,

The Mature

Parent TEACH CHILD TO SOW SEED

OF FRIENDLINESS WISELY MRS, 1\lURIEL LAWRENCE

Beth's mother had given her and a friend, Joanie, a flowered dishcloth to cover the carton they had set up on the front lawn. She had also provided cold cocoa and cookies for the dolls' party. Beth was holding a cup of the cocoa to the stiffly smiling mouth of her favorite doll when Lila Adams, a third-grader who lived down the block, came by on her roller skates, Exhllar· ated with hospitality and pride in her new doll dishes, Beth invited her to join the party,

But Lila proved a difficult guest. As Beth happily drank her child's cup of cocoa and then kissed the doll for drinking it, Lila said scornfully, "This kid stuff makes me sick at my stummlckl Wanna come over to my house and look at TV?"

But Beth said "I'll haooe to ask my mother'' L i I a retorted, "Who Invited you? Are you coming, Joanie?"

' .:

Golden Amber fox is worked by top designers Into fur fashions of great beauty. Three-piece suit of pale beige jersey by Monte-Sano has coat with the fur worked horizontally. Indispensable capelet (right) is by Reynard, can be worn day or evening. ·

Ingenuity Provide·s Closets

rustles through them. You are ~l:enrletta fairly shined ~s her in the midst of beauty. You are · husband came in. breathing beauty. You are I saturating your body, your :when she talked to her mother mind, your very soul, with 1 in-Jaw over the telephone. beauty!" 1 Henrietta Bedlington. had ;:

' • • trulv beautiful day. Henrietta Bedlington salur-J H~r hair freshly combed, het

ated as the musical background 1 face freshly made up, she wa' of harp and flute came from smiling as she h~ard Johr. the loudspeaker. · drive into the garage.

She continued to rest bliss· ·Henrietta Bedlington fair!:, fully through a comm~rcial for shined from within as her bu.< floor wax, a time signal and a band came iuto the li1•ing room cartooil about soft drinks which Her smile was dazzling. followed ·each other in quick , • • • succession. Then she opened i ''For Pete's sake! Who are her eyes as Roswell Revere';: you supposed to be toni((ht~ voice spoke. i Lorett:t Young?'' John asked

"And now, dear viewers, 1 1 "I've had a hard day at th1 must leave you until our next office, Will you please 11·ipr meeting, In the meantime, that. ~illy smirk off your fail practice today's lesson. Prac· and Jtart supper?" tice while you do your house· (THE ENDl work, your sewing, your iron· ing, Keep in mind that beauty lotions and cosmetic prepara·i lions can only do so much for you. The real secret lies within your mind. Don't be misled by

. that false saying, 'Beauty is only skin deep.' Beauty is deep­er than skin. Jt is deeper than , muscle and bone and tissue. Beauty is something wilhm you. It is within every woman. You only have to find It in yourself. Today, you have be­gun·to find your hidden beauty. Continue to search for it. To· day, say to yourself, 'All day Jorig I 1hall think beautiful thoughts, I shall smile beauti­ful smiles.' And I promise you it will work. And now, I must leave you. This is your personal beauty consultant, . Roswell Revere, saying to you not 'Beauty is as Beauty does' -but rather, 'Beauty is as Beauty THINKS!'"

Roswell Revere's handsome face and famous smile faded from the television screen, but Henrietta Bedlington continued to sit and stare with unseeing eyes.

She was thinking a beautiful thought.

She was smiling a beautiful smile,

CAUTION! For School

Children· Parents, the schools in yom

community deserve a grea credit for the job they are do ing in instructing children il safe traffic habits. But thei school safety lessons can be come good safety habits mor• certainly if you continue then at home. Your Newfoundlan· Safety Council urges you t• support the teachers in thei efforts to help your child sta: alive.

AfRICAN ADYfNJURf

Floor to eeUlng draperies pulled acrou the windows ew Ibis efficiencY apartment !lelll hide no' a view but the storage place for miscellaneous objcch such a1 sp oris equipment, luggage and out­of-season clothing (rlghtl. Lively hunting scenes on 'he tolle add apark to simple room; window drapery panels are movable, center panel Is s!atlonerY,

As the day progressed in the Bedlington home, Henrietta persisted In her plan to be

gage and found an almost lack Not the perfect solution, per· beautiful. KAY SHERWOOD o£ ·required storage ll}lace for haps, but a workable one, says Beauty was in her heart and·

Critics are high in their praise of "Find the Boy" by the new Welsh author W. H. Canaway. It's about an English boy orphaned in Port Said. His only hope is to try and reach a relative in Durban-4,000 miles away.' The story. of his journey is exciting but tender, ironical but delightful.

The spirit that prompted the homemaker of yesteryear to sweep the dust under the rug is still with us although the practice has been outmoded by wall-to-wall carpet and modern vacuum cleaners.

As a young homemaker, and in spite of the disapproval of an elderly neighbor, I let the freshly washed dishes drain dry because I was too tired or too busy to wipe them. How I cheered when science came to the rescue with solemn as­surances that dishes drain· dried were more germ-free than those wiped with the or· dinary towel.

You can't always expect such a scientific rescue squad but you can fob off expediency as "using your ingenuity", Often for example, the young couple fresh from school, starts house·

their use, this homemaker. The drapes Skill with a sewing machine pro- usually are .JlUJled closed be- spread upon her face as she

vlded the answer for this home cau~e ~he wmd~ws look out on pushed the vacuum cleaner maker. The prospect o£ stitch- an md1fferen~ v1ew; the fabric, over the. carpets, as she dusted ing floor to ceiling drapes did a long wean~g cotton, could the furniture, as she brought not worry her and the eamou· b~ re~haped mto shorter cur· in the mail, as she ate her flage they would give was tams m a future home. lunch of cottage cheese, diet more than worth the trouble. ----------------------------

On the one wall with windows­two set over radiators - she measured the available waii space. Hooks hold hangers of clothing and some miscellany; the balance of the equipment is simply stacked as neatly as possible in the corners.

Fabric for the draperies was sel· ectcd for life, interest and its soft beige-brown coloration. It's toile print of a French hunting scene and the lively ' looking horsemen dashin~ about spark the otherwise very simple decorated room.

keeping with a load of non· Drapes were stitched in panels household equipment - skis, according to the advice of her golf clubs, tennis rack~ts, scu- local sewing center teacher. ba lungs and flippers and so The pane!' between the two

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:' ' I l • So upset· was Beth's mother:

when this betrayal was tear· fully reported that you would have thought nobody In the world had ever been disappoint· ed in a friend before.

on. windows is stationary. The ex· Ira-wide panels covering the

This is bulky stuff and valuable. windows and the corner walls The apartment house · base· are movable. Hardware to .

: ;!:. .,·:, .

\•

It happen~. of. course, all the time. Just as It Is better for children to catch measles and mumps when they are young, it is good for them to learn at an early age that friendliness Is not always returned.

When we parents experience In· tense outrage at some hurt done a child, our own indigna· tion requirt!s attention. Why are we suggesting that Beth is

. a special victim of oxtraordin· ary Injustice? Though we may certainly feel tenderness to­ward her hurt, the kind of ex· cited sympathy wo often bring contains a most unreasonable to these situations actually clalm of our own . upon the world - the secrt!t ·insistence that everybody loves us and will return the frlondllness we give them. . · ·

Do you· rememlier Jesus' parable · of the sower who was rebuked

for wasting his seed by sowing It in unproducUve places?

.I

ment doesn't always offer safe support the drapes is installed or dry storage for it, Add to at ceiling height about 12·14 these ilems, the luggage and inches from the wall. out-of-season clothes imd you wind up with a situation ripe for expedient or possibility in· genious, solution,

A true story of such a situal!on came to my attention not long ago, The young couple mov­ed into a one-room efficiency apartment with bag and bag.

Children can become very lm· poverished farmers indeed if they do not discover that their hopes can be invested In unrc· turnJng people.

YOU ARI DRIVING BUNDI

What harvests of consideration can we expect them to make if they don't learn to distinguish

,between good human soil and, tMd:'!f~~:\!;!i:aCcim:!fy~ t~e stony .ki~d? · · lit inBIIIIll are following too.

What are we up to with all this : eloeely.1J: tJIIIt car.liiiiSth fot . carry-on at aoy experience of

1

. mrr.1 10 miles per bOIIJ'. . betrayal and hurt? Don't we · A~~M~to 1,. eo. 5tlfffT ~ want to become wise Sowers? -· ---·------

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APPROVED BY .c.M.H.C

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Availtble ill .

BIRCH - MAH0GANY - WALNUT: .... ,., ELM . , • ASH \ .•. OAK .

. sH 0ur fine display of Flush er Slab Doors i that will grace any home. There are over 28 • smart designs to choose from. These doora

. are made of NUFAply in choice Birch, Mil~,. any, Walnut, Oak, Elm or Ash -for exteraat• .

·I 01' interior use.' They're guaranteed to meet. ~ ~maximum requirements. See them now al · . your nnrest Lumber Dealer. , '

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JACOBY ON BRIDGE I

~IONDAY, Scptcmhtl' 18th.

1l· 6.30-News and Weather

!!!1. 6.35-Bob Lewis Show

· 8.00-'f~::dY Weather ;e:t ·I ~:~L~~~::~er Forecast 8.03-News lNational.l 7.40-Bob Lewis Show 8.08-Brcakfast witll BJII 7.45-News 8.15-Sports Capsule 7.50-What's Cookln'

'_I_

C 8 N M ll.'OU.-\ '1:. l'irtllrmht•r !Rill.

8.25-Ncws 7.55-Bob Lewis Show

•.. ,;:; 0 .....

WINNING FINESSE BECO~IES LUXURY

8.30-llit Tunc of the Day 8.00-Ncws 'I A . .U. 8.35-· World of Sport 8.05-Sports

7.30-CBt. News. 8.41l-Breakfast with Bill R.lO-Bob Lewis Show

NORTH. <!IK93 • J 8 3

i.35-'l'op of the Mormng. 1 8.55-Ncws 8.15-Transportation Report 8.00-CBC l'\ews and Weather. 9.00-Morning Meditations 8.20-Bob Lewis Show .I WEST

+ AKQ4 oftJ9 4

EAST 8.15-)1usicat Clock. !1.03-Kitchcn Capers 8.25-Kiddies Korner

' !1.00-."•lormng Del'olions. 9.JO-News Headlines 8.30-News and Sports 9.15-lnl'itatiun to the Walt~ 1 10.00--News 8.35-Wcather Forecast

"'Q 10 8 7 2 'Q 10 7 • 10 8 3

llo AJ '9652 • J9 72 ... 6 53 (D)

li.3U-CBC :-;ell's 110.05-Stork .Club . 8.40-Bob Lewis ~how 9.3ti-Direct Reports 110.0G-V.O.C.!II. 590 Special 8.55-Just a Minute 9..!5-Rccords at Handom. 10.30-News Headlines 9.00-News

10.00-ArchNs 10.31-V.O.C.M. 590 Special 9.05-Music Cor Millions lll.l5-1ris Power 10.55-Ncws · 9.20-Star Time

' Hl ~5-Fur CcJ>umcrs 11.00-Jukc Box Jamboree 9.30--Austin Willis 1ll.:JO-Xfld. School llro~dcast · 11.30-Ncws Headlines 9.35-\Vcathcr Forecast 10..!5-.\lu:;ic in the ~lormns t1.31-Wcstcrn Hit Parade ; 9.40-Jcrry Wiggins Show ll.!lll-.\lonung Pops tl.5ii-Ncws 1 9.55-Jane Gray Show 1115-.\lusical Program 12.00-Ramlllin with Recordl 10.00-News Highlights li.:J0-.'\£1!1. School Hruadcaot • 12.30-News 10.Dl-Martin's Corner J J.-1:,-Hc~:ina .\lcBridc 1 12.35-Ramblin with Records 10.1~Houscwivcs Choice t~.UU-1313C 1\cws. i 12.45--Fishcrmans Forecast 10.30-National News t::.lU-Annuuncers Choice : 12.50-Ramblin with Records 10.33-What'i Cookin' !::.au-Farm Broadcast. I 12.55-News 10,35-Housewives Choice 1::.-15-.\lid !Jay Serenade. I 1.00-Ramlllin with Records 10.45-Homcmakcrs News LUO-Voylc llullctm I 1.15-World or Sport 10.50-Housewives Choice 1.15-Brian Browne Trin , 1.:10-News (Local) 11.00-News Highlight• 1.30-·Cll..: :\c11·s and Weather. I 1.45-News (National) 111.01-Housewil•cs Choice H5-Tonuny llmucr 1 2.00-Prizcs and Prc.blems on 11.10-Kitchen Klatter :::. t:,_ )iUslral Rl!lllflolvous. i Parade . 11.15-The Right to Happiness 2.2U- Domunon Obs. '1'1me 1 2.30-Ncws Headlines . 11.30-Ncws ·

Signal I ·• :11 p · d p bl ::::•O-)lliSI"al RnntlcLnms. !1 -· - mes an ro ems 11.3:5-Nfld. Quiz

" • • 2.55-Ncws 11.45-Town and Country ' ~45-BBC Variety. · 3.00-Makc Bcliel'c Ballroom 12.00-News Highlights

3.t5-Tnnuny Tweed 3.30-News Headlines 12.01-Town and Country 3.:\Ul-CBC 1\CII'<

I

tfo K 8 SOUTH "'654 ¥AK4 • 6 5 oftAQ 1072

Both vulnerable South West North I ofo Pass I + I N.T. Pass 3 N.T.

) Pa~s Pass ·opening lead-+ 7

Ead Pass Pass

1

1

By OSWALD JACOBY

Recently I had the doubtful 1 pleasure of watching a hard

luck Joe player defend a hand. He sat East and after. a short

period ol apparent concentra-1 •· .

lion pla)'ed the jack of spades on dummy's nine. He smiled I triumphantly when. the jack!

1 held and looked around fot· !

!new worlds to conquer. ·

He finally shifted to a heart 1 and South went about the busi·

v " 3.55-News 12 30-Ncws -I.:JO-Vaucoul'cr Tlu•atrc 4.00-Bobs Bandwagon 12:33_Town and Country I rubber. It wasn't ~ifficult. He I :..DU-)Iusic 111 the Air · 4.~0-Ncws Headlines 1.00-Newa 1 took the ~eart tr_1ck, entered

1 ' 5.::0-Fishcries Broadcast 4.31-Bobs BandwagoL l.Ol-Town and Country dummy w_1th a dmmon~, lost I i ness of wrapping up game and

5 45-~lusic from the Albums 4.55-Ncws l.05-Weather Forecast . the club Cmesse to Wests kmg 6.UO-CBC News I 5.00-Supper Serenade 1.15-News

1 a~d co1·ered quec~ of spades 1

· · fi.05-.Iohn Cameron Swayze 5.30-News Headlines 1.35-Don Jamieson's Editorial 1 w1th dumml''s kmg, Double 1 ti.lll-lntermezzo 5.31-Supper Serenade 1.40-!-1ports ! dummy, he could have played 6.:!5-Program Pre1·icw ) 5.50-Fishermans Forecast 1.4fi-Art Baker's 1\"otebook j low and made fo~1r odd, but 6.~0-Suppcr Guest 1 5.55-News 2.00-Ncws Highlights I four clubs; three ~mmonds and ll 45-Light MusiC. • 6.00-Bullclin Board ? Ol-What's Cookin' two hearts gal'e h1m the game. ~.llli-t'BC i'>cws and Weather ! 6.10-~lovie News 2:oJ-illatinee i "If o~ly I had a t.~ird spade,", 7.lJ-Prg~~- Pittman Sings 6.15-Sports Re?orl and 3.00-Ncws Highlights i compl.a.med E~st;, But then I I ·. ;;·.!-Top> Tnday. Travel Guide ~.01-Wcstern Jamboree ' am ncl er lucky. . 7 ·! ;-no,rle Bulletin 6.30-Early Evening Newa 4 OO-News I "If only you knew what you '_ R.lj-J'arliamcntary Report Roundup 4:01_Ranch Party I were doing," said West. "My R.l!J-Rol'ing Hrportcr 7.00-Shillelagh Showtime 4.30-National New• seven of spades was clearly

1 R:!5-)lti,;ical Program 7.30· -~ews Headlines 4.3J-Ranch Party t~e fourth best and yoo had a 1. 6.40-llonr of St. Francis 7.31-Shillelagb Show Time 5.00-News· Highhgbts c~nch to ~cat the hand. Go

1 • il ;•.•- \\'lather lor Manners 8.00-Ncws Headlines 5_01_Dance Party r1ght up w1th the ac.e of spades ' 9.1111-S\Iillllll'r Fallow 8.ot-Crcam.of the Crop 6.00-Ncws Highlights I and rct~un the Jack. That

ll.:Jll-Thc Composer 8.30-News Headlines 6_01_\Vhat's Cookin' would ?•ve me a chance to 111.30-:\orlnrnc 8 .. 31-Crcam of the Crop 6.02-Wcather Forecast , cover With the queen and even

. 1l0H-Takc it frnm here 9.00-Ncws. Headlines 6,05_Bulletin Board !though dummy ducked I could

. ll.aO-C~IK Natwual News, 9.01-Crcam of the Crop 6.10-National News establish my ,last two spades RnL ndup and Talk. 9.30-Ncws summary (Local) 6.15-Sports while,, still held the king of

, t2.0U-Sll;n O£f. 0 Canada. Tbe 9.45-Ncws Summary 6.25-News clubs. Queen. (National) . 6.30-Club 93 West was right. This is one

---~----------------VOCM . J\10:-iDAY, September 18th,

1 6.:!8-Sign On 6.30-News and Weather 6.35-1\lorning 1\!edltatton

·, . 6 38-BreakCast with Blll ' 6..!5-World of Sport

6.~5-News ' 7.00-BrcakCast with Bill

7.15-World of Spor. 7.30-Ncws and Travelculd• 7.-15-World of Sport · 7.55-News (Locaq

Bolivia ACROSS DOWN

10,00-V.O.C.l\1 Gold Record 8.00-News in a Minute lime that a winning finesse Room 8.01-Best from the West turned out to be a luxury.

10.30-News Headlines 8.30-National News 10.31-V.O.C.M. Gold Record 8.31-Best from the West

Room 9.00-News Highlights 10.45-Sports Roundup 9.03-Nfld. Soiree 10.55-News 9.40-Salt Lake Choir 11.00-Forecast !rom Torbay 10.00-News Highlights

Tower · 10.Dl-High Adventure 11.02-Thc Big Top Ten 10,30-National News 11.30-N ews Headlines · 10.45-Sports 11.31-Club 5.9.0. 10.55-Letters snd Messages 12.Ql-Midnight Sports Scores 11.00-News Highlights · 12.05-Club 590. 11.01-Music in the Night 12.55-News Summary, 12.00-News Highlights 1.05-S~gn Off. 12.0l.-l\lusic in the Night

T1me 1.00-Newa In· a Minute

. . ; ' . ' . ... '.

1.01-S{gn Off

CJtiN-TV '1\IONDAY, September 18th,

• 4.30-0h susannah 5.UU-Junlor Roundup Part 1 5,15-Junlor Roundup Part 2

· 6.0P,...Captaln Jack 6.30-The World of Sport 6.40-News and weather '7.1111-Dragnet 7.30-Early Show 8.011-Vldeo Quiz 8.15-Natlonal News. H.30.....Father Knows Best. 9.00-Slng Along Jubilee 9.30-Splke Jones

10.00-Whl!e We're Young 10.30-The Fllntstones ll.VV-Case for the Court 11.30-Camera Canada 12.3a-:sports Calendar 12.3s2News and Weather_ 12.45-Sign Off

CARD SENSE Q-The bidding has been:

North East South West 1 "' Pass 1 • Pass 2"' Pass 2 N.T. Pass 3"' Pass ?

You, South, hold: lttQ J 3 2 ¥K 8 7 6 +A 7 5 ofo3 2

What do you do? A-Pass. Your partner Is

showing manifest dislike for no· trump and you have bid your run strength already,

TODAY'S QUESTION Your partner raises your one

diamond response to two. What do you do now?

Answer Tomorrow

• BARBS • By HAL COCHRAN

Once there was a tourist who said he was going to start out at 5 a.m. lhe next morning, and dldl .

• • • Catching a big fish whila

snoozing is one . of the . best lands of slumber.

• • • VVe can depend on one peach

crop being a big success, On the beaches.

• • • More changes in car design

are made by drivers than by nianulaeturcrs.

Since 1837, no one (man or woman l mar wear a hat on the floor while the U.S. House of Representatives is in session.

Some lobsters have th~ heavy claw on the right side and others have it on the left side.

. . (·

~ W.~SH OtJ A Wi:.P '.?::'J~E t!ECA~f;E .t Lt:T WISHFUl.

Tollt.ll~ll.lG. SLIIJD ME TO COlD REASON! I ALL T~ FANTASTIC-

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WANTT06CS Mf.DOA

CARTWHEEL'? I OOAIOCENf

ONSANDA 9::> CENTCN!:O.

SHORT RIBS

BUGS RITI'TNY

WE•J.., RJR 10 GeNT? I ?TARTHE:ReAND

I HNI0H lHERE. FOR50CENT0 I -?TART HERe,

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ilf:S A i~t..~.\IISION CRI'fiC, '{jJU KNON.

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AT 11-lE M01'E:5.

ECTI(

EWS

Dal'id Bucha commanded

1 the coast. and gallant but unsu to fraternize v

Indians up in 1811. • action in

short ratio food with I

in St. John's associated wi

was for a 1

Buchan Esqr. of H.M.S. 'T

lrAo!lm;,• by his spou1 a daughter

Aug. 25th. 181 · instrumental second Court H

in 1811. In

,la~~~~ .. n~~s; ever I or other p in the lisher1•

for each pe~s< every merchar pay I pound

l'essel enterin! a~~,;l ••.. decked l'esst

to the dist ric shoremar

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From the C

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From Hal

"FAUVEITE' "BEDFORti II "FAtJVE . I

"B . 'l'TE EDFORD ·

FromM

Montreal Weekly Servlt

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sECTION II

EWS FROM TRINITY A Suggestion

The Daily News ST.

'

The Old Church Records at Trinity

TRINITY - The Anglican Church Records at Trinity arc the oldest in the Province. They i go back to the. year 1757 when ' the first entries of births, mar· ' riagcs, and deaths were rccot'd· cd. Nowhere else in the Island, and· for some ~·cars afterwards, were such records kept. Jt was not until the early !ROO's. that

SEPTEMBER 18, 1961

such a rc~istration was compe1·1Two Gander

able by law and generally I adopted througho~t. the count;y. Children Those records ongmatcd w1lh the Rev. ~enjamin Lindsay W~IO II m n roved was the mcumbent of the Mls· 11"' sion of Trinity from 1749 to l GANDER - Two children 1700. It might very well be s.aid / f;om Gander, bo,th accident vic· : that he was the father of Vila! hms. and now in Gander !

statistics in ·Newfoundland. as I Banting ~lemorial Hospital. have : are today registered according ' impro\'Cd slightly. The con· · to law. dition of 4 year old Wayne i

By kind permiSSion of the King, hit by a car outside his . Rector we have been given nc· home on Sept. 7th, is still un· I cess to those old records to ! conscious but slightly impro1·ed. : scan at will, which arc most"! Eight year old Linda East· ~ interrsting to those who have a 1 man, struck down Sept. lOth, : yen for historic lore, to say while riding on her bilcc out· ·

1 nothing of the kindly provision side her home on Edinburgh of a cozy easy chair which in· Ave., has been operated on and vitcs to rest and repose. and i her condition has improved. · where one can sleep and dream Both children will be confined at will too. to hospital for an indefinite 1

that the, they are not doing it anymore 1 Our suggestion Is to stop the We are prompted to refer to period: d.u~ I? the scrioqsness · .. 11 fl;hin~ >cason is 1 because they proceed on up, salmon from entering the tribu· those old books here because el of Lhe1r 1DJUr1es.

JESSY LANE

'•e 11 oulrl like to make ·the tributary to the pool be· I tary. This can easily be done a story attache~ elaborating o.n • DAILY NEWS carrier hoy for to the powers that l neath and below the Power by pulling five yards or chick· an entry therem. The storr .1s Moose Ktlls Gambo. Jcssv has been deliver·

applied; House. They can't get any en coop wire across its mouth. of course no part of the o~f~clalj ing papers at Gamhn for almost ;won with brtt.cr effect: farther becau~e the water 'fhc salmon wo~ld t~cn lie in rec?rds. The entry. offlctally Down . a year. and is well liked by his cor.ctrncd. It 1s about course-the tall strcm-ends the pool at the JUncl!on, where registered reads thus. ' . , customrrs. He is in Grade 9 at

. rim up which sal·ihere, and here they remain allllaw·~biding anglers would have 'Oct. 29th, 1788. Interred I GANDER-The moose kill·. the l'nitcd Church at Gamho ' Jim is thr situation: summer to the chagrin of ang· a sporting chance to get a sal· .• T9hn Augu.st, ~ native 1n· 1' ings in th.c Gander area are : and is 14 years old. '

buildin~ of the Pow· ·.lcrs. There would be nothing to mon or two. If this were adopt· d1an of th1s Island, and down cons1d~rahly from a com·, ., 11 Lock;ton a few i complain about if anglers were 11 ed it would make for better servant of Jeffrey and I parable date last season. Hunt· ! a:o. The housr il• built a 1allowed to..fis.h there, ?ut t~e)' conservation in tliat the salmon Stead.'' . • . , e:s in the northwc~t Gander Runway d1;unte up a trihuta_rr: ~re not.. ~ 1shmg therP. IS slrLct· 1 would proceed up the river in ~The Rector m h1s rcarlmg a

1. r1vcr rep~_rt moose 'ery scarc.e, • • I

r.o~! into thr matn m··'Jl' proh1b1ted by the Company1the normal way when condi· wh1le ago came upon a 1l'fer· and no ktl\5 were reported m F1n1shed j

I! a ;plenrlid pool at: operating the Power Plant. The lions allowed them, but as it Is ence of this Indian .Toh11· Aug.' the early days of the season. commonb· called. only chance to get a salmon is we have good reason to be· lust in Maclean's mag;•· ine. in I An account of moose killed by. GANDER- Gander's longest!

ro;;·llrGo!;s. where salmon: to cutch him before he gets to lieve that, like the story of the 1 an article written by a writer: forest fires has not yet been i runway (32/14) has been com· lain lor a while on1 the sanctuarr, and that would spider and the fly, salmon that of rcpul'e, and a leadmg local i completed, an? it ~ill be inter· j pletc.ty rcsurfac~d with a,spha~t·j

''Y up the rilw when I be no easy matter If, as we are .go up the tail stream never historian. 'fhe reference to John: esting to sec tf lh1s afft·~ts the 1 and. ts open a~am for ,raffle. 1 w:ditions permit. but· told, he 'tra•·cls by night. come down agnln. August is quoted from the l total kills h)' hunters thts sea· ; Wlulc th;- runway was closed for 1

manuscript of a diarist, which I son. Several moose have he en : rcsurfacmg, a new concrete I h b d d t h'ld frees the author of any respon·. seen in the Gamba area, but an apron was constl'llctcd at the I

us an an ~ 1 ren. sibility as to its accuracy or au·) accurate account of kills has not 1 end of runway 32, making the •1

.

'I d 111 1 thenticit)' The thoughtful Rec·/ been made up to now Jl'llnway 8.900 feet lonJ!. The · TRIN1TY-IIIr Rupert Mor· " r. an rs. Granter, ot St. t' 1. · d th d' · l' 1 ' new apron has been completed

Personals

SECJION II

:New Fire ! Troops Leaving [Hall Started ! GANDER =s;;me of the i GANDER - Gander Airport I twelve hundred troops consign· , will soon have a new fire hall, ed to l\"cwfoundland for fire· i incinerator, and emergency fighting duties have already rc·

power unit. The building, to be !turned to camp. R.C.A.F. C·ll9's started immediate!)', will )Je 1 will be a daily sight in Gander situated between the east side ' until all troops and equipment of the ramp and runway 09/27. i is returned. Only a new rash Approximately 5250,000.00 will\ of fires will stop the steady be spent on this project, and . move out of troops, but with the local employment should con· I fall weather, and rain we've Iinne on a good level through·! been having recently, it is out the winter. The building! hoped that we've seen the last will be completed in 1962, i of forest fires.

<~•·· ....... I . . .. , • ~~·~· ..... jLf~' !';'~·~·. ' 'Of'~ ~ '· ....... • • : ~ • ' • • .:.. ··~

NOW PLAYING ------·------~.-:-.- ....... -... ----

• . -- -A Pl!l~OUNI RElEI.SE

1 :'~~; THE'WOJtLD OJ

( SUZie In COLOR YVOflG Wul~~&~ oo©~~~oo • , ...... "."'"

. . . f h : John's after spend!' g h I' or c lppe e lans s s ory I . I. 1 m, propmtor o t e Trmay • n a o I· f J h A g t d · d 't t d G d but has not yet been opened

Dalid Rlll'han, R.N.,IC~bins, and Mrs. Morris, left day at their cabin at Lockston, ~he op~ge '~f\h~n e:;~nein \h~ Gan er ar ens for use. Gander's other two run.,1

rommandcd a war· jon Saturtlar for a holiday trip returned home on Sunday, register ·The origin of the story f II S ! ways 27/09 and 22/04 have

T/N.ES OF SHOWS

E\'ENING SHOWS: 6.:30 - 9.00. . ~!A Til':EE: 2 P.~l.

~" thr roa;t. and famous' across thfo countr~· to Port·aux· Th Rt R---:- : I accordi~g to the author of th~. u eason ! been clo.sed temporarily d~le to i211ant but unsuccessful I Basques. .11 ~ • k~v, Bishop S~abom :article is from the Archives of I GANDER-The latest from 1 work bcmg done on the mter· to lratrrnize with the I \~1. e m.a. ng an episcopal the fi~sl Earl of Liver ool in a ! the Hockey Association concern· • section of the two runways. An·

Indian> up the Ex·: :\lr. E. Tucker, Manager. of ~~,5~\ toh Trm~ly 0 ll o;t~~ec 15th. diary or manuscript ~ompiled I ing the proposed new stadium 1 other project of the Dept. of

NEXT ATTRACTION --------------~----------~--·~~ · . 111 1811. and his 1 the Ro~·al B~nk of Canada 1 e ere e. WI e !cate two in i792 Here is the uotation·l is tltnt it won't be ready for any i Transport· is to erect new ap·

action in putting hrre, and ~Irs. Tucker and child, new /~ldl~sl!~~s for the AI· "A m'nsler fishcrma~ and hi~ 1 ~ctil',ity this winter, and that the ·I proach li_ghts for runways 32 DOLORES HAH.T - GEOHGE I IA~d ILTO:\ on .•hort rattan~ and hn~c gone to Northern Bay on tar o t. au ',Church. :shareman surprised a Beothuck I old Gander Gardens will be in and 09, th.ts work should be c?m· -YVETTE ~li~HEUX in "\ \'J fERE THE

. the. lond wllh, t~c hun·' hohday, j mother on a beach as she car· use for the full winter. I pleted this fall or early sprmg. ! BO''S ARE" - EXCITE:\IE:\T - THHILLS . 10 SL .lohn ~·Ill 18!6, I · -- 'ried her four ~·ear old boy on ! .L •

as!octatrd 11 1t.h Trt~· ~Irs. G. Courage went t.o St. I her back. The both fired at l - COLOR. \\!, lor a ttmc_ hiS, J.~h~s. ?n S~turday, on· a short 'Par·amo·u· nt once, the double load of swan ...... Ill!!

~~ ,. w~crr he rcsl(~ed 1 VIsit. I shot hitting her "in the·:. loins. "" . ear:. The follow1ng : . . She collapsed and crawled into I --------------------

tn the Church j )hss F. Htsc.ock !crt for St. I the woods, holding one hand i .Tol~ns .on Saturday lor a short NOW Playing over the mortal wound, The two

Buchan E,~r: Com· . hohda~ · fishermen then made off with of H.JI.S. 11\omas th I 'ld Th ld th b b1· h'. . ll e c 11 • ey so e oy · 1' >pou~e · a· ~lr. and llrs. Earle Crane, WII.I,IMl JIOI.DEN IN and he was sent to England

1 dau~htrr Sophia · h lt d' h 1 · · ~ 0 • 1 .. : w o ave been spen mg t e "'filE WORLD OF w wrt! he was exh1b1ted at sev-

FOR LEE REMICK-

.'IABIES AND MOVIES . • • Ui. -~ 1 1· 18!3. summer at their residence here,

1

SUZIE WONG" 1 eral Fairs in Poole, and other 'II instrumental in build· ha1·e returned to St. Johns. -- I u:estern. towns, for an admis· By ERSKINE JOHNSON

!econrl rnurl Hou~e and "Tile World of s11z1·c Wong" · SIOll prtce of tuppence. He was, d · IBI ' 1 Hollywood Correspon ent tn I. In a ~m·ro· 1 ~lr. and Mrs. Waller While starring William Holden and named John August as August:

· hm o1·rr wl1ich he, returned home to St. John's on Nancy Kwan in the film ver· I was the month in which he was ! Newspaper Enterprise AsSIL · 1'"'" n~rrcd that, to Sunda~·. sion of the best·sellin~ novel 'captured .• Later he was sent: SAN FRANCISCO, (NEAl- 1 movie. So did the critics. But .

· rxpcn~c;. Cl'eQ· mcrch· i and Broadway stage htt opens back to Newfmmdland, a~d ~e· Lee Remick of the sky blue ; the last I heard the title had . or _other person en • ~lr .. Ft•aser, of St .. Johns, Is today at t h 1 Paramount came the master of a I1shmg eyes and obtrusively sexy movie ' been changed to 'The Woman : .nr~hc h~hrry to pay 5, l'ehevmg Mr: .Tucker at tl~e Theatre. boat at 'l'rinity. ~ut like. mo.st roles is just like most wives, : and the Wild River' and it was : : rr:n~ach p~r~on ~o em·; Bank ~ere llhlle the latter IS Filmed in tcchnicolor in Hong I ~e~t,huc.ks who lrted to hve In fellows. She adds figures in· ~ being sold as a sex film. A sex : :o al: I mmhant m ad·: on hohday. Kong, the story of a Chinese CIVt!tzatwn ~e caught, tubercu. correctly-five and two comes . film was the only thing It ! ~~,; p(lun.d for ~v~r~· i '--,- girl and her love for an Amcr· lasts. He dted at 38. up six for Lee-to slyly suit wasn't." . I

c1 entcrm~ T1m1t), :\lr. Ed11 m \\alters of the l • t' t 'tt !or the herself • Last sprmg's "Sanct11ary" 1·n · rlrchrl . 1 t b E , · T 1 St J h , 1 . 1can ar 1s was wr1 en . . 1 • .

to th .'r~~c 110 .e·' \cm.ng c. ~gram •. · 0 n 5 5 1 screen by Pulitzer Prize.winncr In short,, w~ might as well Unlike most wives however i which she played William c dt~tnct 5 sh1l· here m a vtslt to hLs father llr.l J h p tr'ck a th r of an ;ay that th1s 1s a cockle·brain· L d 't t h h.d th' ! Faulkner's sultry temptress , !rtr" •hn 7 h 'I ' J w It o n a 1 , u o d . . ee .a mt s o er s a y. ma e· · . 1

1r.d 6 p.cn;rma~ ~1 1 : i ames a ers. earlier Holden triumph, "Love e story, In. our opm!On, .but malical ways. She herself 1 Temple Drake, was no "Anat·l 1, 0rn · c. , on~ta cs: . . . ---:-- , Is a lllany Splendored Thing". we are subJect t~ correcho!l, brought the subject up during I omy of a Murder" at the box Clt Fr~~~ t~ ~c~ th1s car·: Vtslllng her ~arents. ~.lr. and • Directed by Richard Quine, the ~nd would ~~ very t~te.rested m an afternoon off from being 1 office either ,but this film Lee . · he Court Rcc·lllrs. John Colhmore, !~ Mrs. I Paramount Pictures release co· lls. authenllcl.ty. As 1t JS, t~ the chased up and down San Fran· also insisted on counting. 1

Gerald Ottenheimer, w1th her stars Sylvia Syms and 1\lichael um.nformed,, 1t makes for mlcr· cisco's hills by a psychopathic She explained that it taught / Wilding. eslln& readmg. killer. Catching her breath from her a lesso~ .. It was a candid,

Withy & Company,· Ltd. Holden makes his first screen The !act of the matter is it "Experiment •in Terror," her honest adm1ss1on, one seldom I appearance In more than a year appears that the author of 'the first movie since becoming a heard form young ~ctrcsses. in the attraction. Now residing above quotation has three dis. mother 11 weeks ago, she laugh· "I guess," sh.e satd, "most. of

llnston Hh:. To St. John'• with his family in Switzerland, tinct stories grafted into one ingly told us: us make the m1stake of .readmg To llfx. St. John's To L'Pool the Academy Award·winning and embellished with fiction' "All I do is have babies and a part and not a smpt, It

star spends much of his free According to the records and make movies-two children and happened to me. I read the Sept. 25 time roaming the world, with well·grounded tradition there six films now. It's really seven scnpt of 'Sanctuar.y' and. the

the Orient and Africa closest was an Indian who bcckme the I movies," she smiled unconcern· role for me was so dazzhng I Sept. 19 Sept. 23

t h' h t f · · . for"ot the story. Oct. 12 ° ts ear · master 0 a fls~l~g boat, but it "In the future I'll be reading

The selection of Nancy Kwan wus ~ot at Tnmty; it was. at SCRIPTS not roles." Oct. 6 Oct. 10

Oct. 24 Oct. 28 Oct. SO for the title role in "The ·.World Catahna. There was an Indian Or Suzie Wong" was the Cin· woman, with a child, shot at

contemplating adl'ance.

Passage ~o Europe should make book 'l'rl.nl'ty but the ch!'ld t derella story o! the year. • was no

ARRANGED BY: K.L.:II. PAN MIERICAN

Vlt\:'1 T.W.A. '"nne1ttino Airlines.

AIRWAYS

Ul regarding ~·nnr tra1·~! problem~.

Furness Travel Office 'Phone 5623

From ~lontreal, P.Q. to St John's, Nfld.

SEPT. 1'1 SEPT. 20 SEPT. 24 · SEPT. 27·1

II' Montreal . . . Due St. John'a tekly Service by M/V "GREBE" or other vessel.

...... ____ __, __ .

We build better with

LET US !"ROVE WE SAY. YOU MONEY

We'lllhow you BuUer buildings nearby­

lntzoduce.~ou to OY:'ners­·,hoW·JOU. factsand ·

ti11Jret. Call Ul today t ••••• ' . . . . '

ENGINEERING .

Springdale . Street,. ·

John August. The records say that John August was found in 1780 not far from Trinity in a starving condition, and was brought to Trinity and cared for, tau.ght and baptized by Rev. John Clinch, John alter

II himself, and August because of the month he was found. He

I was certainly no. child carried In the arms or on the back or 1

1 his. mother.

I ----GREAT CllANGE

. In New Guinea's Wahg1 Val· i Icy, a maiden docs no work and i livus a merry life before mar· 1 riage, but, arterward, she loses 1 her freedom and becomes a I drudge, gathering wood hoe·

ing gardens, cooking meals and tending children and pigs.

VIC:rm OF TERROR - Lee Remick flashes a pretty smile on location in· San Francisco for "Experiment in· Terror" in which she costars with Glenn ·Ford: Film provides · lee with · one of · the most

difficult roles of her career.

"These Thousand Hills" was the film Lee refused to count. like a wife happily neglecting to add a milliner's bill to the month's overshot family budget "It was just awful,'' she Ia· mented. ·

ON TilE OTHER IIAND, tee simply can't believe what hap· pened to "Wild River", in which she costarred with 1\Icini gomery Clift for Elias Kazan. "I thought'· it was a wonderful

1 ·WIIAT WE TIIOUGIIT was i ncar impossible Lee shrugged 1 off with quiet assurance. She

I anticipated no problems in sus­taining the emotions of terror

I for three hours as the "Experi· mcnt in Terror" heroine. ,

"The way the script adds i 1 up," she said (and on this ad·

I dition we accepted her ligures without question) "it's a va· riety of terror caused by var· ious kinds of fear-protective I fear (her sister is also threat·

, ened by the killer), panic fear

I and frustration fear hecausp I never sec the would·be killer';

I face."

1 LEE RE~IICK WAS "the girl · scared by the fires of her des· perate desires" in "Sanctuary". Today she's just plain desper· at~ in her latest film. "Desper· ate" also aplies to her career. she admitted.

"I'm decided to do a musi· cal-l studied dancing for. 10 years-or something light. I think I've had enough prob· !em films."

"Day of Wine and Roses" is coming up !or her next but that, she beamed, "is a doozey." She plays the wife of Jack Lemmon and their social drinking leads to alcoholism. "It's so insidious -both of us start out as healthy normal yodng. people with no problems ~ that I'm worried about audiences. They'll either come out and get stoned - · ot swear off drinking for the. rest of their lives."

. . .. \

NOW PLAYING

n•s JIMMIE RODGERS as the KENTUCKY MOUNTAIN

KID I

Special Added Attraction

~PTEMB •• ~ /ROM THC SIO!lY .. THf 0111&. IN.~~ ltfO •. ,KIIfl~

OOHE DRU: MARXSTE'IENS·IIIO! S1lliiS! iii'NI-iiliiilsol·ii:iim ...;.. it.-.. CIHEMASCOPE·IOlOIII OEtUIE TUih\llll~ 111111$ ~~ -~~

TIMES OF SHOWS: EVENING:-"THE LITTLE SHEPHERD OF KINGDO~.LCOME"- 6 O'CLOCK - 9.40.

"SEPTEMBER STORM" - 8.00. MATINEE: - 1 P.M.

NEXT AnRACTION ~LINT WALKER .:.. ROGER MOORE in ··coLD OF THE SEVEN SAINTS" :- AD­VENTURE.:.:. THRILLS -·suSPENSE- Also GEORGE ,MONTGOMERY in "THE" STEEL CLAW" - SUSPENSE- T 11 :RILLS-

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Public confidence in DAILY NEWSPAPERS has never been higher-people turn in ever increasing numbers to DAILY NEWSPAPERS-for news, for comment and for guidance in buying. Canadians NEED their DAILY NEWS­··PAPERS-they are the main source of news-the most used "market guide''· for households clear-across this country. ·

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CANADIAN DAllY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION • • I • ' o

.·,, .. 55 UNIVER.SITY AVENUE, TORONTO· 1, ONTARIO

Phone. 368~1813 R. A. BARFORD General Manager

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Wheeler, k was thew

to scatter six the loss.

Don Yetman ar for' the winnet

while Mike • four for the los•

IFcildlians, who were the limit in the se HolY Cross, were. a1

to have ~hesr st. Pat's as t

taken all three re~ games with the · behind Aus Tl onlY a playoff I

round trophy handling their

winner collected off Thompson in then exploded for .

hits in the sec01 hits gave them t1

the fourth while th in the eighth and · men to the plate frame as they ad five runs. Pat's mana!!ed 01

in the second; se1 innin)!s as Whee more than one :

Fcildian ht . opened the Double Blu~s, by.Doug Squ

Cook plus a hit b out, he came thrc

run double or pitch and c

as Tols Chapma a single by

error opened lh• Feilciians three n

as with one out reached first on

short·stop Derm was foJiowed by ~

single and Ros! Bill Marti~

in both ChaP,I

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If You do not · Centres withil be ser\'ed wit

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Niagara F St. Cather: Brantford London Kitchener·

·Guelph . · Galt · ·Wmiisor :

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DAILY NEWS, ST.- JOHN'S, NFLD .. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1961 11

Feildians Take Finals ?ve11er . . . ·Extra Innings Wins rtd,.~ ... ,going~nopush~~!~hing 17 ~Htt Attack Move Dodgers'Clos~r

el fina!ly made the Senior Baseball finals. ' · turday night the Double Blues opened the best Maris___;_58

e~:n series for the Senior Baseball title with a 13-3 s o\·er St. Pat's ............................................. ..

For the close to two thousand fans who witnessed penin~ fixture, it was the bats of .coach Charlie

0 bo'' that drew their attention as the Twin bounded out 17 hits in routing St. Pat's ace, Aus

The ·winnrr Cl'llected a single off Thomp>on in the first then r~plodcd for four runs

lilt htt! in thr second. Three h11S p1·r lhrm three runs

.. t~.t frurth "hilr they added in the r•~hth and then sent

· rr.rn to th~ plate in the frame al the)' added their fill run~.

~~! rat'• manacrd only sin~le in thr •rcond. ~r1·cnth and

" inninc~ a< \\'heeler didn't : · · rr.w than onr hit an in·

rrtlrlian hurler. Bill . opcnrd the scorin~ Douhlr Blue~. AS arter

h1· llouc ~quires and Cl'<'~ plu< a hit batter with

. out. hr came throut:h with run douhl~ on a three

pitch and el'entually as Tol! Chapman doubled · a lin~lc b)' Don Yet·

'An trror oprncd the door for reUdians three runo in the

as with one out Don Yet· first on an error

short·!IOP Derm Connolly ronow·t ~d hy Tols Chap·

sintlr and Ross Welllnt:s Bill ~!arlin's single

in ooth ChaP.man and

Scngrnnrs V.O. Ct'"\ADIAN WHISKY

• . rlfonoured tie IIJUf4! (){.fC1"

Senior Softball:

11\\1\tl.\\~ FORWA.RDING Lllttll't!J Specializing

In The Consolidating and Forwarding of Less'.Than t:arload Shipments from "l'

ONTARIO lind QUEBEC .

Distribution Centres In Newfoundland

ST. JOHN'S CORNER BROOK

221 New Gower Street Tel. 2634 and 5199

WHtern Terminal Bldg, Tel. NE 4-4972

Assembling and Shipping · Centre• TORO!-ITO 185 Ba)' St. TeL E~! 3·0203

MONTREAL HAMILTON LEVIS, Quebec (St. John's only) 500 Bridge St. Marine Term. 8 Bll St. Peter St. Tel. WE 7-4286 Tel. JA 7·p011 Tel, .LA. 3-171!5

g/ou do .~ot. ha\'e o~e of OUR TARIFFS, you may obtain one from our nearest office, be ntres "tthtn a radaus of 150. miles of our distribution or aS!embllng terminals can

Stt\'ed with a financial saving. Trallllfers quickly accomplished. ·

Example of Towns Served. By Above Dl~trlbullon Centres

VIa ST. JOHN'S VIA CORNER BROOK

Bay Roberta 'stephenville Crossinll Bonavisla Botwood Carboncar Grand Falla Harbour Grace Bishop Fall! Argcntia Garider

Example of Industrial Centres Send By Above Auemblln11 Centres

''Ia IIMIILTON VIa TORONTO VIa MONTREAL Via LEVIS Que. . . ' '

Nia~ara Falls Acton · Kingston Drummondville St. Catherines Georgetown Brockvllle · Sherbrooke t•nUord Brampton Prescott Victorlavllle . .. ndon Newmarket Smiths Fall• · Three River•

littchencr·Waterloo Barrie Ottawa . Richmond g~j1Ph Peterborough · Cornwall · . Plesslvllle. Wint Belleville. . ·.Farnham . · Montmagny

dsor · Oshawa I : · :St.. Hyacinthe · Quebec City

Thirty Offices Throughout Canada and .Tbe United. El~d~ni To Serve You

Your LOYAL SUPPORT, over fue years, has mad~· our tine service to Newfoundland Possible. May we continue to be privileged with your 'kind' patronage 1

The · . · · · same efficient service to both St. John's and Corner Brook during the Winter

· Season · ' ·

·-----------·m.••~,Ai).! .... WRESTLING

St./ John's Stadium Wed. Aug. 23rd 8.30 p.m •

245 lbs.

WATSON

THREE BIG BOUTS

MAIN EVENT 240 lbs.

From East York, Tor. From Rostov, Russia British Empire Champ. The Russian Bear W'riiPPER BILLY WATSON

vs. IVAN KALMIKOFF

Kalmikoff has not been ·defeated .In St. John's this year. He said he ca~ beat · W~tson just as he defeated Farmer Boy and Marella.

SECOND BIG BOUT CHALLENGE MATCH

One Fall - No Time Limit No Disqualifications

240 lbs. 235 lbs. From Rostov, Russia From Boston, Mass. NIKITA·KALMIKOFF JACKI·E NICHOLS

FIRST BOUT PJ,EAgE R!)tm; YOUR CARLOAD. ORDERS . JAYS-RCAF

. via the ''Bookln&· Division" . of the Jays came through the win· walked four ·and struck out six. afternoon as they defeated the ' · ' · · • · · ner of a real pitcher duel Sat· Krauser gave up one run on· JaYS 7·3 at ·the .Victoria Park

One Fall - 20 Minute Time Limit 196 lbs. 230 lbs. .·M 1 · .h d·. · . · · . . . · •; · '. .; ·h· · · . . urday afternoon at the Banner. three hits, fanned four and is- diamond. . ·' '. u.' lr. e. ·a'. . S.t·e.·a·m·. ·.s· .·• IP·.· s 'L.·m.·te.d man Park·'dlamond as John sued four bases on balls. Crash Krauser went the

· Bmbrlek threw a four. hitter to The lone run of the game . route to take the mound de· · · ·' · ' ' .. · · · · "' · ~ '.,.. •· · .. ' ' '·' :. ·~· '- ' · · . register the 1.0 win with Crash came In the· fifth .Jnning as clsion .over Gerry Owens as he

. 1a1,' '.Bay r.St.,: :'toronto · · Plione ' EM. 6·8817 · · Krauser .hurling a three hitter John Bambrick walked, moved scattered 13 safeties. Owens al· ·Ontario :Akl~tiOltor~N;wiourldl~nd~· canada ':·S~amablps Limited. ·' '· -~ · . · ·In Suffering the loss. . • · ' to second 011 a· sacriflce and lowed ten hits. • .

: · ·BOOKING· TO NEWFOUNllLAND' siNCE· 1928 . · . · Bambrick, who recorded. 1n scored on a single by Bill Bar· Krauser was charged with · · ' ·. THANK: ,YOU· 1 ·:' •• · · B·ll win 'in the opening game of ron. three bases on balls while fan·

-~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;iiiiiiiiii.;;' ;· ;· ;· ;;~;.iii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1J~ their best of five semis, did not RCAF bounced back to keep ning one while· Ow.ens issued allow a run. on !our hits, . he t~cir !inals hopes aHv eSunda~ 1 three .walks, and fanned none. ·

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.from St. John's From Arabia BOB BURNS . PRINCE O'MAR

Burns said. afte.r l~st week that he . could ' beat O'Mar and did not want any disqual· ificatioris this mek. · · ..

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E; A. PITntAN, Chlel of Police,

OPENISG STATE~IENT

!t i~ currently gratifying to note the ohvious acceleration of effort nn the ~art o[ local groups and nrganizalinns inlcreslcd in tra!£ic ~afety. That this "increased momentum" in the field ol traffic

safety Is sorely needed can be

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evidenced by the facl that last year's accident total in St John's was the highest In the city's hiR· tory, and also the fact that we

. a are presently on our way to estab· llshing still another record.

We have stated on former oc· caslons that this department docs not subscribe to the theorY that tra!fic accidents are inevitable. nor do we believe that an Increase in · the automobile population necessarily means an increase in the number of accidents. On the contrary, there is a · wealth of proof to the effect that traffic accidents can be reduced su!J. stantia11y in spite of annual in· creases in tne number of motor vehicles. However, an Ideal situ. ation such as the latter Is possible only when a community's accident prevention programme Is efricl· cntly executed entailing as this docs the maximum In co-operation and co·ordination on the part of all the agencies concerned.

Once such a programme begin~ to function proJ'lcrly no one group or or~anization can afford to re· Jnx its own c!forls to the slightest degree. since unquestionably the automobile has become an Integral part of' modern living and . the constant threat to 11£e and limb which it poses must not only be

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con!.llined but eliminated as much as humanly passlb!e.

From the beginning the war on traffic accidents has been fought on three main fronts: 1, the high­way; 2, the venlele, and 3, the drlvo2r. However, even though great strides have been made with respect to the highway and the vehicle, it Is a sad fact that im· provement.Jn the driver area has lagged far behind. In this con· nect!on It is now more or less uni· vcrsally agreed that the degree of success which continued lm· provcmcnts outside the driver

' area can hope to achieve. in the future will bear a direct relation· ship to the degr~e in which the driver co-operates. For example, the safest hignway ever devised plus the most efficient automobile ever assembled cannot compensate for 11 drunk driver.

It Is In the driver area then that improvement is needed most, and in this respect we · must realize that it isn't enough to present the driver with a lisf ilf "dn's" and "don't". We must make an attempt to broaden the average motorist's concept of driving, for, contrary to a com· mon belief, it is Inc average driver who is involved in the majority of our traffic accidents.

As in the past two years and 11 part of the Newfoundland Con· stabulary's contribution to the city's overall safety programme we have decided to sponsor anotner ·~st. · John's Traffic Courtesy Week", to be held during the week of September 17th-23rd, in the firm belief that an attitude of courtesy can provide a sound basis for better driving and there­fore merits some attention in the broad approach to our traffic problems.

We believe that the "driving" nf a courteous motorist i~ not guided solely by being legwlly correct at all times but also by a genuine desre to avoid becom· ing involver! In a "preventable" accident irrespective of •nother dril·er'a behaviour.

M in past courtesy campalsns, we hope to ·generate added In· terest by giving city motorisb three objectives, and again these are: 1. An accident-free day. 2. An injury-free week. 3. An accident total !or the week

not to exceed 12. We sincerely trust that motorists

from outside the city will aho . co-operate when visiting the Capital since, In order to attain all three objpectives, an all out effort will be required. Be that as it may, our ultimate objective Is to Impress upon motorists gen· erally the very real need for courtesy if their driving Is to acquire a more professional touch.

If motorists will begin lmmedl· ttely to make courtesy their "code of the ro"d" as It were, then maybe in 1962 St. John's will .take ih place alongside those prn· grcssive Mainland Cities which continue to show accident de· ereasel even as the traffic volum• grows larger • -

E. A. PITrMAN, · Chief el Polloe.

THE DAILY

,

Safety Is YoUr Responsibility

When In Doubt ''STOP''

CHILDREN

YOU, nobody hut YOU, controls YOUR car ! If you are involved in an accident ... if a child is injured

or killed .. YOU are responsible ! Remember, children

ore hasty, unable ·to exercise judgment; it is up to YOU

to watch out for them, to be extra-cautious, extra-alert ! Your judgment as an adult has qual·ified you for a driv­

er's licence ... so YOU must accept the responsibility '

for the safety of t)Ur children by taking more than usual

care, by being always on the alert ! You can NEVER re­place a life !

"For Your Children's Sake" This Message Was Sponsored By

T. McMURDO & CO., LTD.

210 WATER STREET

GR·EAT EASTERN OIL & IM~PORT CO·~,. LTD.

-331 WATER STl;\EET

ROYA~L . GARAGE LTQ. CARNELL S'i'REET

. .

: ·J .. ' ' • t . ~

J. C·LOUSTON LTD. 172 DUCKWORTH STREET

ADELAIDE MOTORS Cor. ADELAIDE and NEW GOWER ST.

GEAALD S. DOYLE LTD· • BLACKMARSH ROAD

HICKMAN MOTORS '

LTD.

·PARKE:R & MONROE

CITY. R~DI:O & MUSIC CO., LTD.

MERIT INSURANCE ANDERSON AVENUE

'LON.DO~N NEW. YORK

& PARIS

HA1RRIS & H·ISCOCK WATER STREET

R. C. ANfHONY INSURAN·CE 203 WATER STREET

PATRICK'S , ESSO ·sERVICE For Complete early Winterization of your ci!·

SEE US NOW. . . DIAL 91680

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BRAKEF The R.C.~I.I

~upports the Week. MY pE In this ventur with the Consl wa)'5 done In , deavour.

More slaugh !ng and prop1 caused by tra

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A~SHf:Ot COMM

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·.

Page 13: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...l61 - ( 'DO I ut :an ay! r~m th! out as u dcsir~. ·;s should 1n 2 yards •d. if )"011 or attra~. · with

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ERVIC£ . of your CJ1'• ·

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p}JLY. NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLQ.-, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1961 ·

rnn:r !iUPT. RRAKF.f'IELMIOORE

Thr R 01 .P. whnle·hearleclly 1uprnrl) thP Traffic Courtesy \\'prk )I)' pmonnel will join · In thi~ ''rnture and co·ordinate ~·ilh lhP Con~tabularty, as is ai· 11'3''' ~onr in any worthwhile en· dpi1·our.

~lou J\au~hter. human 1uffer· IJIJ ann pro-perty damage a~e uused by traffic accidents than

..

by convenlle~nal wan. Thw traf· fie and driver training are essential In this age when almost every family has a car.

The R.C.M.P. has found l hat discourtesy and bad driving habits learned In a city have reflected directly in motoring attitudes on the nation's highways-but at the . more dangerous speeds of 50 to 60 m.p.h. Instead of the city's 20 to 30 m.p.h. H~nce we are doubly Interested In the Courtesy

· driver.

But courtesy means more than just politeness. It means the driver having hi~ car in perfect condition, fo\lowlng all traffic signs and signals. and obeying all the rules and. safe driving prac· !Ices, so that other motorists can rely upon his doing the proper thing and not have to guess. what he has in mind. When waving a pedestr-ian or motorist through from rlgllt to left. he should make sure that' there Is a proper open· . ing In the opposite stream Gl

. traffic.

One hundred percent suer.~~~ can hP. achieved only by co· operation nf tOO'Jl. nf molnrls~ and pedeatrians. The R.C.M.P. i~ p\ed~:ed to help In this 'vita\ campaign.

CHIEF SUPT. E. BRAKtFJELD·MOORE, Commanding. "B" Dlvlalon

jN ewfoundland)

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• ONE SECOND HESITATION

COULD SAVE

A liFE

BE SURE YOUR .. •

CAR IS CHECKED

THEIR LIVES ARE IN YO·UR HANDS

FOR. SAFE SURE STOPS Tha first rule of safety' is SLOW DOWN AND LIVE !

Those few extra moments you spend driving slowly

may save a child's life, p·erhaps YOUR own ! Be sure your car is in top mechanical condition ! Poor brakes and slippery tires con, in an ·emergency, mean death instead of life ! Best of all, learn to understand

and obey all traffic laws ! They were written for good reason ••• in the interest ofYOUR safety and the safety of others !

. .

The Following Safety Minded Business~ Firms And Organizations

MOUNT P.EA.RL. ESSO SE·RVIC£ STATION

\

PARK AVENUE

A.SHFO·R·D'S ~HARMACY COMMONWEALTH AVENUE

CRoSBI·E & co., LTD •. · WOOLWORTH BUILDING . WATER ST.'

PHONJj: 5031 . .

PALMER'S LTD. STOP AT PALMER'S FOR GAS,

TOPSAIL ROAD PHONE 92992

. .

ROYAL GROCERY SUPERMARKETS LTD.

RYAN'S WHOLESALE GROCERY PHONE 6859

. THE ROYAL STORES LtD.

PHONE4111

c·.QUSIN~S DRY CLEANING

& LAUftiDRY CO., 63 ALEXANDER ST. PHONE 5155

PACK & NOEL LTD. . PLUMBING and HEATING CONTRA<:;TORS

42A ST. CLARE'S AVE. PHONE. 91154

L.OREW'S EXPRESS

LTD.· LIMITED

136 DUCKWORTH ST. PHONE 281~

W. J. MURPHY RAWLINS CROSS 556 WATER ST.

NFtD. · LIGHT & POW·ER

COMIPANY, LTD.

N·Ft·o. SAVINGS BANK

SERVICING NEWFOUNDLANDERS SINCE 1934

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CLAUDE ~. oA\VE. · · HOUSEHO~D . MOV£RS w . . INSURANCE . . .. :· ·. . . . . ... - &.' SHIPPERS' lTD. :

ATER STREET · ·. • PliON~ 5031 TORBAY ROAD PHONE 90081 ' . - . ; ' ' . ;

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ART NOS·EWORTHY ··LTD. ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS

I , . 818 SOUTHSWE ROAD W. PH: 7953

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THE DAILY. I

·NEWS

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• 14 THF. OAII NEWS. ST NHD. SEPTEMBER

Capitol Now Playing

Lexington to· live with wealthy Confederate widower Major Bu. c I d ford (Chil Wills) and to attend . one u e college. His entry into society exposes him to the love of an

CNR VOTE BILL ADAMS COUNCILLOR

N WANT.E~ TO RENT- U.1· . orma & Gladys 1

r~rmshed house.- or n:t. . . · . h • With own entrance, for mar­lS acceptmg. Freig t . at ried couple. Willing to pa) the North side, oppos1tr · good rent. Dial 44633. Canada Packers for Eng· ST-On Friday a-ft-er-n-oo_n .• arch Southern belle named Mar· Co·mmun·lcat.lon

---------- garct, (LInd a Hutchings), whose Influence blots out his early loyalty to the Turners· and 3 o· M .. LITTLE SHEPIIERD

l':::::::::::=::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::=! lee, Roddickton, Conchc. a sum gf money, in small, and i\-lain Brook, Goose cloth bag, on Water Street

Lounge 12 a.m.; Club 1 TV lllunge 4.30 p.m .. 1

BIG HAPPY HOLID.\i OF KINGDO~I COlliE WITH Jlnll\IY RODGERS their daughter. But when the a eetlng

war between the States casts its y _ , One o[ the best.loved classics sorrow!ul shadow across the

In American fiction comes to South, Chad's decision Is a start. MONCTON - Canadi'an Na· t · f h I h j I h f f represen ah ves o t e Eastern

Nfld. · Armature

Works brilliant and heartwarming re. I ng one: e 0 ns t e orcts 0 tlonal telecommunications ex- Regional Manager, Toronto, birth in "The Little Shepard of the North and finds himself sud. perts · from Winnipeg to St. were inside plant superintend ~~~~!~~ Kingdom Come," 20th Century· dely estranged, by principle and John's wound up a three·day ent A. C. Cline and inside plant ' Fox CiriemaScope DeLux Color choice, from those who have be· seminar on technological and assistant F. B. Tutt.

38 Bambrick

Street Dial 7191·2 vcrson of the epic drama of the friended him, and re·aligned engineering advances here on Inside plant assistant R. C .

South starring America's folk· with Melissa and the youth. Thursday. Carroll of Winnipeg was pres· singing idol Jimmie Rodgers in BATTLES. CONFED~RATES Main purpose of the session ent for Western Regional Mana· BUILDING MATERIALS his• first role, with Luna Patten, Leading a battle agamst the was to determine how they could ger, chie£ of sales and traffic ______ ..;..~,;,..;.;,;,; Chill Wills and Linda Hutch· Confederate forces· headed by best use such services as data was represented by William J. ings, opening tomorrow at the his friend Major Buford, C~ad tlansmission, facsimile, tele· Gillis, technical liaison repre· CHESTER DA WE Ltd Capitol Theatre. knows the agony of watchmg metering high speed teletype sentativc. SHAW ST. and TOPSAIL RD~

The "little shepherd" is his be~efactor die ~t the h.ands and tele~ to solve the cominuni· Attending for the engineer· For all your Building (Jim Rodgers) orphaned and of Um?n men. It 1s. a pamful cations problem of business ing department were transmis· Requirements call bound ol'er to work off his lesson 10 the amorality 0~ war, and lndu~try. . sion engineer H. R. Da1•is and 80161 - 91171 dead famil)''s debts in the home and ~had m~st pay the pnce of Attendmg the sess;ons as en'gineering technician M. Kipp, of a sadistic guardian (George growmg up 10 the South dur· both of Toronto. Newfoundland -----------Kennedy). Unable to bear the ing an era of uphea~el, but In faith that was invested in her district was represented by ELECTRICAL wretchedness of this household the end, he know.s, ~th Melissa career by her discoverer, Walt plant supervisor Alfred l\lul!oy APPLICANCES Chad flees with his dog, Luke, at his sid~, that he w;ll face the Disney, and her promise in of St. John's and T and R in· ____ ..;....;..;..;;.;;;.:.._ to the rural communlty o£ King. future. With 8 new and· richer earlier films"Home From the spect~rs V. Williams, St. HEAP & PARTNERS dom Coml! where a gentle matur;ty. , , Hill" and "Go Naked in the Johns, and D. C. Hookey, Cor· (NFLD) L d schoolmaster and his wife the In the role of 'Chad, • ehar· World." ncr Brook. • t • Turners, (Robert Dix and Shir· actcrlzation made famous years Veteran character player Representing the Maritime Wiring M t . I WI d 1~.\' O'Hara) g;'\•e h;'m •helter back by silent.screcn star .Rich· Chill Willis who makes any role District were J D Goss a5 I a en a 5' re an " d B th 1 Ji 1 Rod . - · · . ' ; · Cables, 1\lotors, Starters, with their own youngsters and ar ar e mess, mm e · ha undertakes a memorable s;stnnl supermtendent. W. K. Lamps swit h L' bf imhuc him with an ambition to gers reveals an extraordinary experience in theatre, is touch· Smith, installions inspector: P. ' · c es, ;g me

depth a a serious actor • new s Ll d T d R · p t r· J Fixtures, ~tc. acquire an education. The warm 5 ' !ng and stalwart as Maior Buf. · 0 ~' • an . ms ec 0 • • • WAREHOUSE: PRINCE'S ST and endearing nature of the aspect or. a career which has ord, the Southern aristocrat J,agamcre, plant mspectnr, bnlh DIAL 0 ' relationship between the Tur· swept thu young folk·crooner seemingly "betrayed" by !he nf Montreal. Toronto Di~trict, 5 88 ncr~ and their children. and the from o~sc~rlty to a top.spot In boy he has befriended. II. H. 1\lontgomcry plant super· ---------affection of ~·oung Melissa Tur. the nat.100 ~ roster o! •ong. Produced by Maury Dexter, \'isor, J. Kendall. T and R in- FIRE INSURANCE ncr (Luana Patten) gi\'e Chad mongermg ;dols. directed by Andrew D. McLag· ~pector: L. Russell, plant in· ____ .....;;.;.;.;..;..;,;.;;~ his fir5t insight into the real LOVELY LUANA PATTEN len, "The Little Shepherd of spector. CROSBIE & CO., Ltd. meaning of family security. Luna Patten, as "MellaS3," Kingdom Come'' is first-rank B th A . t tl d D Agents for

d h I 1 o r;s o e an emns- UNDER ., Chad's fortunes take an im· is refreshingly direct, warm, an w 0 e.some .entera nment thencs regarded torture as the '' RITERS AT

pressi\'e tum when he is sent to spontanous, justyflng allthe for the e~bre fam;ly. surest means of obtain evid· LLOYDS.

'•

. ..

BRASSWARE for yoor LIVING ROOM _ SPARK GUARDS

FffiESETS BRASS CURBS ARTIFICIAL MANTLES

NU-TONE EXHAUST

FANTS

Duro • Aluminum Ware

All must go POTS, PANS

KETTLES etc.

25% off

PREFINISHED.

WALLBOARDS

7 colours to choose

from.

- , LOW RATES SPECIAL ADDED ATI'RAC· enc~, acc?rding to the Enc)'clo· DIAL 5031

TION A TTHE CAPITOL ped;a Br;tannica. TOMORROW

Joanne Dru In "September Storm

A man who believes the time

Founding of the city of Sy· racuse, N.Y., is credited to the salt industry.

Is ripe for full dimensions! mo- Mayan Indians built the Py· tlon picture• also II convmced ramid of the Sun near Mexico that touring to new places and City mirroring the widespread inter· --· -------­est In water sports will help to speed the trend along. NEWFOUNDLAND.

SERVICES · Producer Edward L. Alper·

son , w h o 1 1 "SEPTEMBER STOR111"also opens tomorr~w at the Capitol Theatre, is the first. to introduce the dramatic new technique of stereo·Vision. PASSENGER NOTICES

And he is alse the first Holly· CONNECTION GREEN BAY wood producer to shoot a pic- SERVICE

HARDWARE STORES

TOOL RENTAL Electric Sabre Saws.

Portable Sanders and Skill Saws.

Reasonable Ratet BARRIS & HISCOCK LTD.

General Bardw:~re Sporting Goods.

ERNEST CL.OUSTON, LIMITED

McCLARY AUTOMATIC WARM AIR CONDITIONING

DIAL 4183 %16 WATER ST.

tun on location at Majorca, the Train . "The Caribou" Ieavins ----------two continents. . . St. John's 1:30 p.m. Tuesday,

The action drama stamng J~· September 19th., will make anne Dru and Mark Stevens IS connection at Lewisporte with a sto.rY of an undersea tre.asurc M.V. Nania on Green Ba)' hunt off the eaast of Spam. Service

Film and aquatic experts who ' already have seen the pictura CONNECTION CORNER describe ita underwater footage BROOK • LE\VISPORTE and sklndiving sequences as SERVICE "the most dramatic ever sbot." · Train "The Caribou" leaving

It Is also the first time that St. John's 1:30 p.m. Tuesda)', full· dimension (Stero-Vislon) September 19th., will make

GROCERS (Retail)

L. HEALEY Cross Roads and Water Street

DIAL 3026

INSURANCE AGENTS AND BROKERS

JOB BROTHERS & COMPANY~ Ltd.

West. Finder please dial Cove, St. Anthonv, and 912484.

regular ports no'rth tc tADYS• BEAUTY SHOPPE

CONTEST Win: 2 Weeks Holil•

·I NASSAU, BAHAMA.I Cook's Hr. Sailing Tucs· cor. Bond and Prescott sts.

day afternoon. Phone 4951 • 7898. Special­izing in cold waving, hair styling, cutting and tinting, manicuring, facials etc., 14 operators, no waiting, scpHilmth

E\'tf'J' tUitomtr ttrr~w., i SJleclal llanct f'atb

Can Accommodate

Two Lady Boarders

OR ROO~IERS

in the West End of the city.

Dial49594

Cars For Sale

WALL WASHING and CAR· PETS-Walls cleaned by

new machine, results perfect. paint. Rugs and carpets made to look like new. Von Schrader prQcess adds years of life to. rugs and chesterfields. Free

: f.h·e Brnfld('n~t · I ! CIRtfll8 fiiCIIflf 9 r .~t, ftr• : UIGGF.~l MF.!\'U 1~ St,

UNIQUE and

A Care~r MAY BF. 1:"

pick up and delil'cry. New If you are agl' Method Rug and Wall !school graduate Cleaners, Freshwater Road. St. John's for 5 , Phone 01033, interested in ·

::-::s:::-ep-:8:-:,1::-m_th ______ 1 portunitics, wc <hould CAN ACCOMMODATE Room· hear from you. Th1s i•

. Two privately driv&n, l01•i-mile- ers or boarders in comfort· ~ion with one of Canad~·, ~ge C~rs for sale: able rooms with good meals. mg companic>. All -t9:;fl Morris Isis Sedan, 6 cylinder Reasonable rates. For ac- treated in striet , 19"2 H11lck Sell n 111 m II Write "h'ill" full - · " 0 n • a 0 a c commodations Phone 72035. BOX ,.,;0 60·, . P• ' ·

drive. aug24 lmth I " . - ' o THE ' ~Ell'S

Reasonably priced for quick Pt\1 TIN --~ 16 18 20 ~nlc. Financing can he arranged. N ' G and DECORAT· ~~~-- .: ._: To arr~nge inspection · lNG for ali your exterior 1 · ·-

Call 93315

Apartment For Rent

Self-contained six room second floor Apartment, situate Forest Road, available for immediate rental. Equipped with furnace, electric stove and electric water heater. Rent $85.00 per month. For furlher particulars and to arrange inspection

and interior painting, 1

cleaning. Prices rcason~blc. Tuna F is Phone 73974 or 37522 L. Howell. aug24,~mth

WINDOW BOXES and Sashes Storm windows, made to order. Phone 48494.

TilE CENTRAL BARBER SHOP-We are now operat. ing 10 chairs, you can be assured of prompt, efiicJ· ent, sanitary service. No waiting problem, 24 New Gower Street oppot'tP. Ade­laide Motors, Ltd.

\\'EDCEPOI\T Gl'IDE

CALLLO:\G

2658

MOTOR CARS

xUXXXX1 Call80155 or 5553

WANTED

CASH PAID FOR: Comics, :Magazines, Pocket 'Novel& and Books. John D. Snow, 9 New Gower Street. j\y14,1mth

XX( X XXX I -~

to buv for cash good' used cars

KIRBY'S USED CARS BRADYS PATH off Torbay Road

Phone 94755

WANTED Used Smm

DO YOU NEED your Spring. filled mattress re·condition­ed or your All Wool mat tress re-picked, and reeov· ered, your bedspring or day· bed re-wired or your furni ture re·upholstered. If so Call us. Items called for and delivered. Rates lowest obtainable. Keats Mattress Factory, 16 ll!ount Roval A l'enue. Phone 92753, 26S6.

X)(X.XXXXXXl'l.:XUUJ .. 3. ):XX XXX xxxx xxxnut t.X OXXXXXXXO Ill ... i. 'XX XXXXXX ll

WHO ELSE A NEW CAR!

BUY IT 'Oif 'IT111

LOII'.COST III'F.·I~>l'lll

~XX XXX :o:XX ;o;XX l X X X 1 l

XX X X X X X XX XXlll

XXX XXX XXXX X l I

')CXXX X XXXI X XXX l.llt xxxx x :ax:u1• X X x X :l X XXXX .._ X l

.. 1 '

'i j . , 1 l ' \

Kit Bo·

I

New~P~ SEI TO·

B e

15 12 9

14 10 8

I '18 19 30 16 24 17 22 25

20 consolati1

Help Kit

Two-Ca Tenders ~

and Remova rear of 112]

Garage ec head doors. tember 25, ~

"G , arage , Garage rr

weeks from tender not 1 sep18,20

-Put new li

He

I II :· .; SPECIAL

1-lodernfold DOORS

While ' stocks last

Aluminum ·storm

has been· photographed under connection at Corner Brook water. with S.S. Springdale for regu.

Producer . Alperson says he lar ports to Lewisporte. Water Street

DIAL 2658 - 4121 ~ovie Projector

GREAT EASTERN OIL & IMPORT

CO., LTD. Radio, Television, Was hers Refrigerators, Deep Freezers

LOAN

THE BANK Of NOVA SCOTIA Electric ~

I· i ' ! ·.

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,; ' .. . " . I -. : . · t1; ·:1~ f .. .':. i .. ~\. ; ' ...

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chose· Majorca as the locale for hla picture because Stero.Vision CONNECTION BAY RUN requires magnificent back. PLACENTIA BAY- REG. T. MORGAN crounds to. do full justice to WEDNESDAY INSURANCE Ltd.

and

· Less 20% Screen DOORS this new photographic dimec· Regular 8:30 a.m. train leav· Temple Bldg., P.O. -ox 168,

slon th•t .. combines all dlmen- lng St. John's Wednesday, Sep· 341 Duckworth St.

CHESTER ·DAWE sion in sight and sound. !ember 20th., will make con· DIAL 80370 or '1758 · "Stero-VIsoin places the audi· nection at Argentia with ___ ;.,.;.;.;;.;.;.~...;.;.;;.;;..._ tnce in the vezy center of· the Motor Vessel on Bay Run DRUG STORES action and Ia all the more dra· Placentia. Bay,

LIM I·T ED. matie when coupled with the .CONNECTION SOUTH COAST M. CONNORS Ltd. panoramic breadth of Cinema· SERVICE VIA PORT Prescriptions Pickup and Scope and new depths of color BASQUES delivery service, Intensity," nld Alperson. Train "The caribou" leaving PHONE 2206

SHAW STREET PHONE 80161' ·!

CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN IF CHAFE MAKES THE CLOTHES.

The entire company of "SEP: St. John's 1:30 p.m. Thursday, TEMBER STORM," numbering September 21st., will make RADIO-TV REPAIRS more that 100 actors and tech· connection at Port aux Bas nlelans ·and scores of Island na· ques with s.s. Bar Haven on Wm. L. CHAFE lives, ~pent three months on South Coast Service. Majorca and in the breath-tak· lng . eaves surrounding the Is·

GREAT EASTERN OIL COMPANY,' Ltd.

TAILOR 4 HOLDSWORTH ST. ST.- JOHN'S land.

SPECIA HILLCRE.ST FARM

situc:tted Mount Scio Road, prope_rty eonsistir~g of. Bungalow

containing: 3 bedrooms, living room, dining room,.kitchen I .

and bathroom, hardwood and. Jina.leum floors. Concrete

foundation.

Three storey poultry house; 25' x 105', 2 storey brooder house 24' x 40', s~1 storey brooder houies, .. root cellar

12' x 12', warehouse 20' x SO', hatchery 30' x 60'. ·Furnace . . .. heated.

All these buildings hav;' concret~ foundation~. •• '. . •• • . • ~ , • ···-~ .......... ·•' ., '- .... • ....... _ •••• '•' ·-· • .. «•

Situated

on 11 ~ acres of Freehold· Land.· · ,.)

.ERIC ·. W •· . NOEL·· ' . ~ r • •

· · REAL , EST ATE '• .. .. . . . .. . . . ..

· ·PHONE· 94072 • .94073 .37' CAMPBELL AVENUE . . t ,· ..

('

'•

FREIGHT NOTICES FREIGHT SOUTH · COAS'f

SERVICE Freight Is accepted daily ;t

REP AIRS· TO RADIOS, TV AND ALL ELECTRICAL

DIAL 3901 to 3005 APPLIANCES

the Railway Freight Shed for ---------­ports on the South Coast Ser· vice, but in order to guarantee movement by this trip of tbe S.S. Baccalieu, !reigbt must be at the Railway Freight Shed not later than 1:00 ·p.m. Tues­day, September 19tb,

FREIGHT ST. JOHN'S. LEWISPORTE SERVIEC

Freight for St. John's • Lewis. porte Service per LI.V. Chiren· ville will be iccepted at the Dock Coastal Shed Tuesday, September 19th., from 9:00 a.m to 5:00 p.m.

FREIGHT ST. JOHN'S· CORNER BROOK SERVICE Freight for· St. John's·Corner

Brook Service per S.'S. North· ern Ranger will be accepted at the pock Coastal Shed Tuesday, September lOth.- from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and Wednesday, September 20th from 9:00 a.m . to Noon. ·

FREIGHT SOUTHERN LABRADOR SERVICE

Freight for Southern Labra· dor Service for regular ports to Goose Bay per S.S. Burgeo will be accepted at the Dock Coastal Shed . Tuesday and Wednesday, September 19th, and 20tb. from li: 00 a.m. to Noon. ·

:GUll - 5 . LINES

. '

GAHO£R G. GOSS[ 401 : . . . GRANO FAUS, .

· · · HflO •. 8R£W£RY 2541 _ ' tiOI ~ITID tY T1U lLt.

Please write stating price etc., to

BOX 603

c/o THE DAILY NEWS sep15,3i

· Electr'c Ranges, ' Floor Polis.1er,,

Gramophones Public Address SystlDII,

. Tape Recorders REPAIRS AND sm:v'ICE

5 LINES DIAL 3001 to 3005

WATER STREET jan26,ty

Where To Stay Balsam Hotel

BARNES ROAD Situated in the ueart of he City.

Quiet, Comfortable Atmos­phere.

For Rewrvationa and lnfonnation:

E. C. Gra LandSu

MR~::!N6!~!!, ·~ Resident Managerea

:m3:::::::1,tf=:::::::=:::::::==~i

l~e Modern

Live Electrically !

Ll~i la •• A,Y 'IMitlf

I Cheap Reliable Electricity I In and Around St. John's

A WELCOME WAGON

HOSTESS The Pyramid of the Sun has a larger base than Egypt's Will ck ·

Pyramid and covers more Kno , at your Door grou~d than any known pyJta- *ith Gifts and Greetings m~d m the world. from Friendly Bu>iness

. CLOSER Neighbours pnd Your So,uth America lies closer. to ::;ivic and Social Groups

the O!d Worlcl than does Noyth Jn the occasion ,.f: . . Amerr.ca. The · medium passmg [, ; . • through New York City cuts New C mer to the C1ty, South Ame~ica in such a way The Birth \.f a Baby. that approx1matcty 9o per cent no· N of the southern continent lies P E ~64273, 90943 closer to the Old World. . and -3582 . ,

General Change Telephone Numbers

Effective 12 nooll ber 2nd., tbe !or the General Road,' St. John's {30 lines).

Al\1BULANCE 80!11• LEONARD ~!ILLER,

Deputy Minister ol (Please cut out for sepl8,20,22

A Agnes Pral

There willl by the Lad

TUESI

fr

"AWo

, -

Sec on

For employm Canada at La Must possess Certificate (P ent and have ~o operate a1 fired and one hot water ge Also, to assisl fer of light o' Attractive sal Plan, croup 1

. For J OFFICI IRON 1

95 Lei\! ·ST. J(]

septB,l7 ,23

·:.~-....... . II• cam

• • ~ ' ' - r. ~ 'l '

. ·-

Page 15: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...l61 - ( 'DO I ut :an ay! r~m th! out as u dcsir~. ·;s should 1n 2 yards •d. if )"011 or attra~. · with

lS · I lll,

-IDA\' IT ~liday I. \AS

"""' '4n ..... turdar rll ~~~~,

. ~011\1

I'.'~Al! ' pa.rti!!

26

'<11\T E

·'1lion

WANTS CAR!

: •ITR l

r.-l'"rRtl

~ '1 "II X 1 l I l I I X I

'1., 't J I . J. u: I . l. \. J. :l X I . ).. , 11 , J. I I

~N

\NK OF SCOTIA

•L COYE AD >H:'\'S

903573 X H-115

1\'ER ,10wtns er \\"eek ce Charges Lsh Prices ss·~up

~)n

nge !phone mbers. 12 nociD 011 te}ephOlll

a1 HosPital. m's will bC

CE a01it

KINSMEN Boys' Club

Newspaper BINGO SERIES No. 51 TO-DAY'S NUMBERS

B I N G 0 e 18 44 47 69

15 19 42 56 72

12 30 40 54 67

9 16 35 59 64

14 24 41 53 65

10 17 36 52 61

s 1):) 60 68 _ ... 25 48

66 71 75 74

20 consolation prizes for the Letter "L"

Help Kin - Help Kiddies

Two-Car Garage For Sale Tenders are invited for the Purchase

and Removal of Double Garage situate at rear of 112 Military Road.

Garage equipped with two steel over­!Jead doors. Tenders close Monday, Sep­temher 25, and shquld be addressed to

"Garage", P.O. Box E-5406, St. John's Garage must be removed within two

weeks from date of sale. Highest or any tender not necessarily accepted. sepl8.20

NOTICE Put new life in your old equipment.

Have it repaired at

Electric Appliances Servicing 659 WATER STREET

AT HOME Agnes Pratt Home for Senior Citizens,

Topsail Road

There will be an afternoon tea, sponsored by the Ladies' Auxiliary on .

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19th.

from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. (At The Home)

"A Work Table will be featured" Admission 75c.

WANTED Second Class Stationary

Engineer For employment with the Iron Ore Company ol f.•nada at Labrador Clty, Carol Project, Labrador. ... us~ _possess Second Class Stationary Engineer'• Certificate (Province of Newfoundland) or equival· ent and have Grade XI education or better. ~o operate and a~slst In the operation of two oil ~ned and one electrically heated high temperature

ot water generators and associated equipment. flso, to assist in the unloading, storage and tranl· er ol \lght oil and bunker "C" fuel oll. A1ttrachve aalary, liberal vacation policy, penalon

Pan, rroup and hospital Insurance.

For farther parlleulars apply to: OFFICE No. lilt, IRON ORE COMPANY OF CANADA, 95 LeMARCHANT ROAD,

ltpl8,l~~ JOHN'S, NEWFOU~LAND •.

••• Jtr••-ont

,.... I

Nftd. Armature · Works .. Ltd. , 'MiRICK ST. , ' DI)J. 7191 . • 7192 I ' ' ' I . \

In Aid

f'EI'LDIAN GARDENS OLD COLONY CLUB

Princess Orchestra in Attendance FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29th, 1961.

Informal $3.00 Double Tickets obtained from the following:­Carl Brown, Tols Chapman, Bob Cole, Doug French, Fox Summers. .

ALSO PIONEER DRIVE-IN.

STRAYED From 807 Water Street- about two

week ago, a LARGE BEAGLE DOG (Male). Color black and white with brown ears. Finder please contact above address or

fHONE 59822 or 59823

Reward Offered

NFLD. fiORSEMAN'S ASSOCIATION

Quarterly Meeting CANADA EXPERIMENTAL FARM

Mount Pearl Road

MONDAY, September 18th, 8.15 p.m. As business concerning the proposed race track is to be discussed a full attendance is requested. New mem· bers will be welcome.

(Sgd.) S. F. KAVANAGH, · .. Secretary.

1epl!!,lB

WANTED HOUSE or APARTMENT

By September 20th.

In good residential ~istrict containing at least three bedrooms and all modern conveniences.

Please writet-

·The · Royal Stores 'Ltd. tep14,15,11

·---~~~-------------------~

' '

Bell Island Ferry Services

In order to facilitate dredging work con• nected with the improvements being made to the Bell Island Ferry Terminals it is necessary to temporarily operate ths M.V. "John Guy" on a reduced schedule for approximately five days starting Tues-day, September 19th. ,

The reduced s,chedule will be as follows:

Le~ving Bell Island 8.00 A.M. · 1.15 P.M.

Leaving- Portugal Cove

. 6.15 P.M.

8.45 A.M. 2.00 P.M. '7.00 P.M.

The schedule of the M.V. "Kipawo" which will not be effected is as follows:-:-

Leaving Portugal Cove

Leaving Bell Island

8.00 A.M. 9.30 A.M.

·n.oo A.M. l.JJ) P.M. 2.45 P.M. 4.15 P.M.

. 6.15 P.M.

· 8.45 A.M: 10.15 A.M. 11.45 A.M. ',2.00 P.M. . 3.30 P.M.

:S.OO P.M. 7.00 P.M.

It is expected that the dredging will be· . · completed by Saturday, September 23rd .and that the "John Guy" will resume

· service on Sunday, Septemher 24th.

Newfoondi.and Transportatictn Company_;.: . .Limjted. · . . . . _ . . .' .

&ep1518 _, I

WANTED First Class Stationary

Engineer For employment with the Iron Ore Company of Canada at Labrador City, Carol Project;Labrador. Must possess First Class Stationary Engineer'• Certificate (Province of l'fewfoundland) or equiv· alent and have Grade XI education or better. To supervise and, as required, operate two oil fired and one electrically heated high temperature hot water generators and associated equipment. Also, to supervise the unloading, storage and transfer of light oil and bunker "C'' fuel oil. Attractive salary, liberal vacation policy, pension plan, group and hospital insurance.

For farther particulars apply to: OFFICE No. Sl1l, IRON ORE COMPANY OF CANADA, 95 Lei\IARCHANT ROAD, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND.

tep18,17,23 ---------------------------------- :

Memorial University Of Newfoundland

REGISTRATION OF fiRST YEAR STUDENTS

·Commencing Saturday, September 16 at 9:30 a.m., X-rays will be taken in X-ray truck on University campus. This will continue throughout the whole registration period.

Monday morning, September 18th: Assemble in gymnasium of Physical Education Building, 11.30 a.m.

Monday afternoon, September 18th: Assemble as follows: Education students-3 p.m. in the gymnasium.

Engineering and forestry students-2:30 p.m. in tM lecture theatre, Science and Engineering Building. All others at 2:30 p.m. Theatre, main floor, Arts and Administration Build­ing.

Tuesday, from 9:30 a.m. onwards, pay admission fee of $100.00 at Bursar's Office, Room number 108, main floor, Arts and Administration Building. No student will be regist­ered without a receipt or chit from the Bursar.

Interview Deans, Professors and Uni· versify Officers, if necessary.

Wednesday, 9:00 a.m., Registration takes place in the Physical Education Building as follows: 1. All first-year students, except Edu· cation, ·beginning at 9.00 a.m.

· 2. First-year students in Education at approximately 10:30 a.m.

STUDENTS BEYOND THE FIRST. YEAR · Commencing Saturday, at 9:30 a.m., X-rays will be taken in X-ray truck on University campus. This will con· tinue throughout the whole registra· tion period. _

Monday: until Friday interviews with Deans, Department Heads and Uni· versity Officers.

Tuesday: September 19th., Payment of $100.00 at the Bursar's Officer, Room No. 1 08, main floors, Arts ancl Administration Building. No student will be registered unless he has a re­ceip~ or chit from t'he Bursar.·

Friday, September 22nd., Registration of students beyond the first year will take place, commencing at 9:00 a.m. and ending not later than 1.00 p.m~ in the Physical Education Building, i111 the following order: 9:00 a.m. Arts and Science students

10:00 a.m~ Engineering students 10:30 a.m. Education students ll :00 a.m. Partial ' and Specicd

students.

NOTE: All partial and special students must apply for admission . upon the · prescribed form and must. appear in person for Registration as' indicated •

· above. ' · · · . · · · - ··

aep15,16,18,19

H. T. RENOUF, Registrar.

-·-·-·-...U

r Fly To St. Pie.rre, Miquelon (Twin Engine Plane)

DAILY FLIGHTS ........ $30.00 one way 48-hour EXCURSION ........ ......... $68.00

Included Air Return, Room, Meals.

For reservations phone: i'riRS. GEO. O'BRIEN-44612 or 907975 or

BURGESS CABS 3212 (Near Nfld. Hotel)

SPECIAL WEEKEND TIME PAYMENT . 48-HOUR EXCURSION

$12.00 Down - $10.00 Monthly. ·· aug5,1mth

TEACHERS WANTED

ANGLICAN BOARD OF EDUCATION.· . ST. JOHN'S '

Requires

TWO TEACHERS for Elementarv Grades duties to begin (A) one October '2nd. (B) . one October 23rd. ONE TEACHER for Grade 4 duties to begin December 1st. ' . ON~ TEACHER for High School Grades, duties to begin Januarv 8, 1962.

TWO MUSIC TEACHERS. Application should be sent to:

SECRETARY, Anglican Board of. Education,

Bishops College, Pennywell Road. sepl3,16,18,20,23

NOTICE LAST SPECIAL ENTERTAINMENT FOR

THE.SEASON ·ST. JOHN'S MEMORIAL STADIUM:

SEPTEMBER 21st., 9.00 p.m. Sponsored by

ST. JOHN'S BRANCH ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION

CARDS .................... $2.50 LAST PRIZE WORTH ............ $1,500.00 i Proceeds in aid of community projects

sponsored by the Branch. sepl3,15,18,21

MOOSE HUNTERS WEEK-ENDERS

Make the

NATIONAL PARK CABINS YOUR HEADQUARTERS

FOR

RESERVATIONS

sep5,1mth PHONE 3528, GLOVERTOWN

MEM.ORIAL UNIVERSITY OF NEWF-OUN.DLAND

Applications are invited for the post o(:: Matron, in charge of all University Resi~:; dences. By early 1962 there will be a:: residence for male and one for female.:: students, and this number will be increas~:~i ed within the next several years. Appli{ cants must be well-educated, mature} persons of ability, who can devote ~heir:~ • whole time to tlie duties of the posf;: Institutional or other training will be an;: advantage. Living-in accommodation will:' be provided. · · :~

. Please apply in writin~ to the Presiden~l: st~ting age, qualifications and experience;:~ w1th ·the names of three references. S ·. will depend on qualifications and eX{llert,.~;: ence.

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Page 16: collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL...l61 - ( 'DO I ut :an ay! r~m th! out as u dcsir~. ·;s should 1n 2 yards •d. if )"011 or attra~. · with

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IN STOCK

TRIPLET CHEESE c·ocONUT-FINE-28's & 130~s THE MURRES

Leslie M. Tuck Cloth . ... .. .. .. $3.00 Paper .. .'. .... .. .. $2.50

I I "BLARNEY" CAKE I QUEEN OF THE .

1RIVER i 1 Roy Saunders ..... $4.25 :

I, I .

"WHISKY" CAKE I THE SANDS OF i DUNKIRK I

I •

I I ALSO NO.1 FEED OATS

- -~--- -- --,......,.~ ...... ,.~ . .,. ~ .... ._ ........

DUCKWORTH STREET DIAL 5101 ST. JOHN'S

1 Richard Collier .... $4.25 THE BRITISH

1 MR. A. c. MacDONALD DESTROYER ! The ooard of directors of the I T. D. Manning ... $8.50 ~ Kukatush Mining Corporation i THE DONKEYS (1960) Ltd., has announced the ; Al Cl ·k $5 a· 0 I appointment of Allan Cavanagh ! an a1 ... , ... ·

1

.

MacDonald as president and A CERT AlN chief executil'e officer oi the MONSIEUR BLOT . pnny. Prior to accepting p· D · · $3 I the new post ,Mr. MacDonald Ierre anmos .. · · .00 I resigned as executive vice-presi. HEAR !\IE, PILATE! dent of A. V. Roe Canada Ltd. Legette Blythe .... $5.50

! 1\~r. MacDonald. was f?rmerly a SATURN OVER II

d1rector and Vlce-cha•rman of . Dominion Steel & Coal Corpor·i THE WATER a lion Ltd., a director and chair· J. B. Priestly ....... $3.50 man of Can.adian Car Compa_nY !THE COUPLE WHO Ltd., Canad1an Steel Foundries : WANT A BABY Ltd., Canadian Steel Wheel Ltd.,

f Canadian Thermo Control Co., M. P. \Varner,

More Should N ld Spotla·ght Ltd., Canadian General Transit ... [ D $4 "'5 • 1 C Ltd I ddT t h' 1' ' ' .... .... .... ... 'I _LA~IALI~E - Rc1•. Father K For the past 400 years New· j n~~ app~int~e:t, ~~0~nt co~~ 1 THE QUEEN AND Lamaline News

L.on~.~. J. \\a Ish. formerly of , noW !ou.ndl~nd's off·~hol'e waters ; nm1e as director of Lyman HER CHILDREN ~~ua~,( }~land. a~d son of :llr.f (Continued from page 31 ~a\e ytclde~ a r~ch harvest of Tube & supply co., Ltd. and Lady Peacock $2 00 :-~~ d ~ ... [red \\ nlsh, s~e.n~ a 1 Worsening disability is an· fls~-the tsland 5 economic O'Connell Mont-Gabriel Lodge. .. ... · · 1 r' a.~ . ere rec~ntly, I'~Sitmg; othrl' thing. There arc people mamst~y. o· k & ( L d ·". rclat11 cs. an.d Cmnds. Father, with 30 to 35% disabilitv and But m the last decade, better I( S . 0 t ~I als~ 1s c~.Jo~·m~ a well earned I it is •perhaps worsening. • I£ it roads .•. automation, radio and ff• '' ' IJCa\lon II lth hiS ~arents at hasnt been checked for some teiCI'ISIOn hal'e been making T ra IC Courtesy Th 8 k II Dlll~ll'all. :\'m·a Scolla. During I time ,the situation continues changes in the Newfoundland e DO se ers I he past ~hre: rears he .. has unchanged. The person effect· scene. The ancient island is ~~en workm:: 111 the ~omnucan /1 cd continues. if at all. to get waking ~o . the possibilities of 1 Week Republic and. on Ius return the same allowance However commerclahsm. 1

~~~:~·c on S~pt. 3.0. l_te will be :the allowance can ·be revised: The Changing Island, a doelt·' , l.okmg up Ius dulles m the par-lib~· the Service Bureau plans. to mentary program in the Canada I Traffic Courtesy Week, span· I ~>h ol ~font<' Plata. He left here help keep the veteran even 1 Camera series, will show how I sorcd by the Newfoundland nr. Sept. S. f?r S~. J~lm's, where 1whrn his handicap is increasing modern innovations are affect· Constabulary, began on Satur· ! he Will ns1t h1s sister. Rei'. , upon him. ing Newfoundland's economy, I day n!ght at midnight. Police I St,>tr~ )Jar~· Consol~ta. R.SJI., 1 FITNESS PROGRAMS and how the island's old·timers last. mght. reported one traffic I' no 1s on. the tcachmg staff at 1 AI the Conference held in react to then}. acc_1dent smce the week began. ~!. Tcrl'sn s Conl'cnt School, 1 Corner Brook, there were two The program will be seen i Th1s was a two car collision \Iundy _Pond. I things announced for NeW· Monday, Sept, JB, at 10 p.m. ! that took place on Rawlins'

·. , .. _-.--. " !oundlnn~. the acceptance of EDT on the CBC.~V network. I Cross at 5.10 P·JI!· yesterday, 1 Bulhrl.t) ~•cctm~s are . ex· the ph)'Sical fitness program To learn somethmg about cur· There was only shght damage.

t~ndt•d IU Dnlnrcs Hale~·. little 1 for· schools, and the decision to ing cod, and why the trawler ~ m~hlrr of ~lr. and ~Irs. Jack pass the old Jllcmorial Univer·i ancl dragger have replaced the

Spin 4425 or 2008 or 3191 ----------

na'?· who c~lrhrated her 8th sity annex huilding over to the saJt.banker, host J. Frank I If it were ne~essary to have l'·rt(ta)·

1 o;\ Scptemlwr 10. Her Legion Commenting apon the' Willis talks to Spencer Lake, a a table large enough to seat all

n"'1 trr tr 1 3 • part_)' for . her, fitness program. )lr. Thompson Newfoundland fishing operator 1 the people in the world at one ~nd lh~ followm~: little fnenrls said that many places across who owns a trawler fleet and a i time, it Vioulcl have to be long ;•1r;·c. 11\ at\~ndanc~, Regina Canada have accepted it ,and fish-processing and packaging I enough to stretch around the M CORMAC'S

11 ~.~1 · ;, ~~~: ''w ~r~ c. s:ella ar~ ~sing it in their schools. In plant. Automati~n is tttlting earth 21 times at the equator 1 · ac

· \r, r1.1· a.r) ~I~ 51• F~ar ~<Ira varymg degrees some Prov· down manpower 111 most of the and would have to increase its 1 GEAR STREET ' nn · r1~.111 !! : non · cnu~g. inccs have endorsed the pro· fleets and plants, but each length hy 26 miles a dav to I ·:nncttr ~ \enHng . at"d ~:ulo· gram that Newfoundland schools spring the Portuguese ~till sail keep up with the popuiation ;:~~n~~ , , 0 om s1s cr. . dandy will use, but it is not a univer- their tall four·masters west· 1 11rowth.

! • • 11 ~'. lclurns. arc cxtcn e sal plan across Canada. ward to fish the banks. Willis from all her fncnds. The gift of· the U.S.O. or An· I interviews Portuguese consul __ N.OT_E_O_F_T_H-AN_K_S __

ncx building came as a ~reat I Jqhn Mo1·ais at St. John's, who Srecial ~rcclin~~ alw to Mrs. surprise to the Royal Canadian describes the wine-for·cod trade

1 lco;ic Harnett. who celebrated Legion in this Prol•ince. But that lnakes Portugal one of The famil~· of the late Mrs. I

RECEIVING Ol'FICE,

1 ADELAIDE STREET

Dial 5181 • I · 3

FUNERAl, NOTICE h~r birthday Sept. lB, and to nothing has yet been done ot• Newfoundland's best o,·erseas Ew~~~ Young wish to express 1

~!rs. Dou~las Brackett. who decided for its usc, since the ctt;lomer,s. the1r most grateful thanks to 1 ----------'. :~lebratcd her birthday on Scp· · greater number o£ the confer· 1\luch of th~ great ann,nl , all those who at the time o£ her ; DAY-The funeral of the late

1 -mbcr 20. ence delegates have only just catch i~ made by small boat~ in ! recent passing, and in the sev· I .Josephine Clara Day will take ~Irs. Brackett is the former returned, and 110 meeting has clail~· trips from more than 1,300 I era! months since, devoled their

1. place at 2.30 p.m. to.day, Mon­

:clcste Hale)·. and is present!~· bePn held hel'e in St. John'5• coastal l'i!lage~. Viewers will ! hearts and skills to her well· day, September 18th, from her here from Halifax, visiting her Mr. Thompson left here yes· oee a father and son carrying being purticularly Sisters Fab· I son's residence, 406 Hamilton

I father and family. Greetings terday to continue on his itin· on the centurics·old tradition of ian, Loretta, V1'ncent an·' I Avenue. Interment at Carbon· I. :ome from all her friends. u crary to spread awareness of fishing, and also a seal·hunt Ricardo of St. Clare's lllercy ear.

Rel·s. Sister Mary Aiden and the Legion benefits. 1 fiJmed during the past winter. Hospital; Mrs. Murphy; Miss Sir.tcr ~lary St. Jude, from St. .

1 In recc.nt years. N~wfoun~· Gough, Mrs, Pearcey, and all DEATHS

~ 1 • , H New Una·versl•ty landers have been turnmg the1r the regular and special nurses ~ arc s ,,lercy · ospital. St. I eyes towards other sources of of the third floor· Dr. J v .John's. l'isited the Central High (Continued from page 3) Income. Sheep raising and knit· Coyle, Dr. A. M. G~y, D~. c'rai. SWEENEY - Passed away School here on ~.londay after· the young man will be good ling mills, a footwear industry, Loveys Dr. Ian Rusted D; ?n Sat.urday, Sept. 16th, Cather· ,,oon. _ companions. Professors, also, and mink ranches transported Douglas Baird Dr Larry'S th. me, w1fe of Augustus Sweeney,

·n l'k 1 b r d · £rom Canada to be near a erland who t'rue '10 th . u · aged 75 years. Leaving to I )li~s ~lary :\lartin, who Is ·WI .•·c. Y e oun getltng a source of cheap food, are con· fess'•on' com'b.Jned II the•~ pro·rmourn two daughters. Mrs. R. A.

• ?m!'loycd at the Hospital for c.onslttuh.onal and .at the same , a e1r el H b d 1 h .. ,lleri'Oll.s and ~.!ental Dl'scases, tm_te addmg to their knowledge tributing to the island prov· forts with the aid f d . cnne ury an ) rs. 'I' om as h t d ince's economy. medical . s 0 mo ~rrl Barnes; two sons, William and

mi,·cd here recently to spend ":•t a • orne or ~omebo y's the· Just beginning, but promising to th RsclenDce to save her hfe; I Augustus; also ~5 grandchildren. : 1cr annu~t 1·acation with her SIS as a compamon. to become one of the province's o£ C e h ev. r. L. ~· D. Curtis The funeral w11l take place at ·: larents, ~lr. and ~Irs. Gco. l\lar· 1n the ne~ University we bl'""est asset t's the tourist in· (o och. rane St. Umted Church 2.30 p.m. today, lionda•·, from

IN STOCK SMITH'S GREEN PEAS PEA BEANS

LIMA BEANS SPLIT PEAS

TINNED FRUIT APRICOTS

PEACHES 'PEARS

PINEAPPLE

GEORGE NEAL LIMITED TELEPHONES .................................................. 2264 • 3420 • 4440

OUR BOARI)!NG HOliSt:

"(1.1

with MAJOP ~()c;m c

lJ) J· ,,

YOU WERE J!J5' CLEAI>.IEP UP, IS WHUT MADE 'ft)U

.JUS' THIJJK OF IT:

. in. · have the alhed components of "" r 1s co f r h ' g d h lth d d t h' dustry Ultra-modern accommo· . 'ls m or mg ospital her late residence, 3 Cowper- ---~::;~=~=============~~~:§~~~~ • 'llr, Douglas Brackett. who has 00 ca an goo e~c, 1 ~g. dation 'once a rarity. for visitors VISI da~d helpful prayers aJ. waite Court, to the Anglican

lecn ,·acationing here during While our present universtty most a1ly f h d c th d 1 ---.. ltn p•st llvo I"Ccks. returned body will get down to the stre. n· outside the main cities, is being d . t h or one un reu a ~ ra · Interment at the

' n • d I buill all over the province ays, 0 t e Rev. Dr. Lester L. Anghcan Cemetery, Forest Rd. D. R Corner Brook, and thrP.e at Cl~ • 0 his home, Halifax, on Sep· uous aca em c courses prcscnb· · Burry for h' f t li"' ;' cmhcr 2nd. ed for their advancement to· Tuna have sudpcnly shown and' ·ra .. 1s requent visits ' DROVER - Passed peace· ISease epor

' ward their various goals, they up in Newfoundland waters wen! , 1~e~st, to fRev. Roland fully away at her son's resi· Mumps: St. John·~ : . ·:l!i~~ Jcijn Fleming, nurse at inay also .ect the physical train· where they were not in great Cu . "•ms er 0 the Brigus· dence, Topsail Road on sun· Bay Roberts report~ iour. • >I Clare's Hosp1'tnl St J h • - p1ds Pastoral h t • Ch1'cken Pox·. thnre are o~!

· • , . o n s, inc to make their bodies sound nu!llbers _before," says super· ed f e, w 0 re urn· day, Sept. 17th, Satah Jane A d NFL ' r trril·cd here September 9, to and healthy. The swimming vising producer Thorn Benson, rom Grand Falls ?n C?n· Drover, aged 89 years. Left to . D two cases, one each <t Cala~L ;pend her \'acation with her pool ,as Mr. Martin said, will "and have1 become a major tour- fer~~ce Sunday, espec1ally Lo mourn are one daughter Bea· rou n • and Lewi'sporte. oarents, )Jr. and :llrs. Vincent be a great thing if not abus· ist attrac\ion. Included in this officiate at ~he funeral cere· trice (Mrs. John Byrne),' Row· . . \Septic M.en~ngiys~ ._th~

1 0l~ming. ed and with good instruction program arc some of the best many at Cup1ds; to the manage. ley, Mass.), two sons, Joseph : Gastroenteritis has for anoth·. Whooping Cough· This dis· arc ?ur cases 111

t. 0

"'· '

we ·do n'ot I'''"'· there .will be ~hots of a tuna catch that I ment and staff of Carnell's Fun. at Topsail Road and Herman at er week, brought in the highesl .•ase has struck ten' people in;~.~~· 10 New Harbour,

I. I I I I .

YOU ARE DRIVING BLIND I

y abuses on this score. have eve~ ~ccn. We show a erai Home, St. John's .and i St. Phillip's; also one sister, , number of persons afflicted, ae the Province during the week : ' · · . . . Freshm~a1 , .... .)Car may have young woman striking and land· Henry ·Roberts and Hector EsthC&' ·Mrs. Robert l\lurphy} I cording to the weeklY healtl ·nding September 9th. Three ' Infantile HcpattJtJ,: One a tendency to take the Univer· ing a 500;pounder. And there Broughton of Brigus, for their at Paradise; as well a sa num- list from the Chief Medica' ascs are reported in Clarcn· '·,eh in s.t. John';, sity buildings for granted. Jiles· arc.so~e ~onderful shots of the sympathet~c ca.re and attention ber of ~randchildren and great·! Health ~fficer, Dr. J. Davi.es. .me. two in St. John's, two in B .. B., Lew1sportc, and srs. Martin and Knight said squld·jlgg~.ng ground around at the. bum! rites; to the many grandchildren. ·The funeral.: The ~1scase has effected e1g~· . t. ~awrence, and one each in , B•ook. they and t.hei: veteran . fellow

1 f!olyrood.. . . w~o sent wreaths, floral Wtl! tak~ place ~rom her son's · ~eople I~ Corner Brook, one n. :ew1sporte; Carner. Brook and ! Scarlet Fever: Only one ca<

~tude~ts Will Impress upon the : The cltJes are changmg, too. tributes, cards and letters uf I rcstdence, Topsa1l Road, Tucs· ; St. Johns: New !!arbour, Cr~; .,um.i Cove, Bona~1sta Bay. ~ and that one is located at PEte: mcom1ng "sweats' that thl!y are Acres of new- hous~s. new sympathy; to Charlie and Ai· day, Sept. 19th, at 2.30 p m · ton, ( Burm Pemnsula), Lewis· Polio, one case 1s reported ' v·cw i th B twood areJ entering a University second to schools and ·colleges and new lison Strong of st. John's for

1

(Boston and Lynn papers ple~s~ i porte Bay Roberts·, St. George's. :or this week. in Badger. I 1 ' n e

0 ·

none and that respect and care ship~i~g an~. frc!ght·handli~g being at the funeral at Cupid:;, copy). . 1 and two .in Chapel's Cove, Har·l' OTHER DISEASES . i Slrept. Sore Throat: On! Cl~ mu~t b~ c~crciscd. The new 1 f~c!hhes all contrthute t.o .SI!(· as !eprescntatives of their I SIMPKIN _ There as e ! bour 1\latn, and. S~allop Cove. . Around the Island, there are' c~ch.at Seal ~ocks. ~t. Geol!'· UnJVcrstty IS m~re than a to!· mflcant changes o~ the ISland. family cirt~e; and finally the 1 away at his late resid P 5 tl St. Georges d1stmt. I f1ve cases of measles, two at! D1stmt, and m Le~nsport!. lcction of bulldmgs. We felt At the moment, hfc for many many good and kind eo le 01 i Se tern be 1 cnce on · · -- --

+ , alter several . visits that not a Newfoundlanders is grim in the Cupids-especially Mrss P 1 . : H P d ;. ~.th., 1961, C. .: , • , When you tum to

8 cent had been .wasted · by the wake of disastrous ,forest fires Dawe, organist 'and 11 r ~~~ : . owar Imp tn, after a short

·' Jllr at your aide or in u:= 'designers and contractors. While which have swept the provinces. ards choir Je~der w1:· ~!f 1: I ~!n~s.f zhe.de~~bbcloved hus. . :• ~eat far even oilo or two seconda. the general te.nor of academic "God knows how much of the United Chu h- c'. i n ° otuse ournc, fat h. · · .i U labs only a split second for teaching may not vhry too fre· Newfoundland's heri.tage has ing and tru rc to overflow er o_£ C~arles and .brother ol

~- . ;: ~ :r ~toSWC:.r:oetboerlf ~~-~gh... q~enUy, there are added faclli· gone,l!!P .lnt sm,~~e,J" sKald Rchsour· hearts of thos~Y w:Oa~~tedt'n tthhc•. RBoessseldea,l ISChnaopwl r4e9stlllngC att Dthc . · \ : ara'iBc. ~ - """' lies to complement the teacher's ces " tnls er ". . eoug re· ews f . , e c , o e es . I ., ability In imparting knowledge cently, "Some burned land P 0 mo~rnmg. Netges Road, (Montreal). The FISHERY SAlT

' I ' ., . '. ·t" I o

:: ;.Ailli.t. 1•· c.. 5Jffl7 c:r.... · for which the pupils enrolled. may grow trees. For the rest, funeral will take place from St. ;; =====::::::=:=:::;::::=: We do .not expect miracles from the soil has been burned away · ·' Matthew's Church, at 11 a.m.

.• i

those pioneering students this permanently, down to bare rock. . y·.·. . v to·day, Monday. Interment will year, or in other years, but we It took thousands of years of life be at the Mount Royal Ceme· feel proud that they have such to produce what has been de·. . R£PAihS tery. magnificent surroundings 10 stroyed in 10 weeks." . .. : . It i~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiii;r.. which to round out their edu· But, Newfoundlanders learn· · .cation. other facts of our every! ,ed c.enturies a~o how to deal REASONABLE RATES day existence may be. a· little wfth the cruelties of fate and ·1 · . · · . · · backward, but In unlve,rslty the • elements, and a~e making . GUARANT~ED WORK training now we have taken an plans to recoup ;the1r losses. • · astonishing· leap forward.· Premier Joseph SmiJllwood out·: PHONE 94123

lines some of fhese plans at the

IN MEMORIAM BUCK

We have ample stocks of

FISHERY SALl for immediate delivery h,-.St.·Anthony and·Lewisporte. , . . .

I I " ·, I . . . )n the time of . England's ·Queen Elizabeth I, a . recipe for . attaining a beautiful comp!e'x;: !on was.to'take a very itofbath, and follow It up by washing ihe· race with plenty . or wirie' to . make It fair aitd ruddy, accord· lng to the Encyclopedia Brltani·

end of tile program.· . 1

· · Electronic

In fond and loving . mem· ocy of a dear mother,

MARY (FITZGERALD) BUCK,. Further supplies due to arrive in·a few·days_.at St .. Anthony.

J. J. NEVILLE ca. · · · • · · · · ··

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' ~ . . . ..

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..

W .;: can depend on olle peach crop being a big success. On the, be~ches.

. .. .. :. Centre Ltd.: • • '·."14 ' :~. >. • } ' • ~ I

-More chan'ges in car design i 90 CAMPBELL AVE. · · are made by drivers than by manufacturers. \fler · hcu,... 'PHONE 7313

' I.

who dctmrted this life · Sept. 17th, 1949.

"May the Sacred Heart of Jesus have mercy on her soul." 1

-Inserted by her fan1ily.

A·. H. MURRAY. & ·Co.~, Ltd.·

.· . , . ~ '

..

an NOW. PI

10 THEE

SED CAR erra Nov•

No. 207

a tang Fro

ELISABETI chid in Katang ond UN troops e "incc. O'Brien' anga jet fighter and Katanga trt the Belgian fort

:;f uositlions held b Kitwe, NortherP

President announced th~

hal'e died since out in his bre

fil'e days ago, the U:ll

and added tha IDBSfacr·cd our young

those who sUIT raised high ..

IIJGII DA~IAG said damage cause1

c:-;·s attempt to ~!.sion of Katanga fr

amounted to $51 500 Irish and· Swe

of the UN air were reported

pressure Monda ltlij~ing Katangans .

headquarters in recei1•cd an urge1

reinforcements and ammuniti1

260 miles nortl

U:>l force was u jOO Katangan:

from an·

base has been u last Wednesd in answer t1

the Leopoldv attempted to t

ill s~ litior

it

• with clo ":lnds s.w;

tn aftemoc . 65. .' .

T~mperah


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