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.•t•t. was r 1Y· -. d. . . . · , . 1es I PRICES . . ' . . I ro THE BONE ON AfL. D CARS & Nova Motors: Ltd. ' l •• er 1n· .earc . '. or I . THE DAILY NE .. . . . .·. .·. . - ' . . · ! 'offiCEs liMITED .. .. .. I :..::.--------------TH_E_D_A_IL_Y_NEWS, ST. fOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, _A_UG_U_S_T_l_7,_1_96_l _______________ .... :.(P_r_ice_7_C_en_ts_) randt Calls For Politi cal Action, est Germans al To JFK West Berliners appealed , to President Kennedy Wednesday to take action against the Communists for up barricades. acr,oss the heart of this old . capital. ;ppeals were made both by Mayor Willy in a letter to Kennedy and by placards at a 200,000 West Berliners in front of city East German pxtcnded their to their citizens try· ;; 5 the \\'est German miles west of this : .. ·• · ·· guards reported. , · ... •:.' , are angered by ' :" · !!e \\'estern powers to · : ::an protest against or barbed wire, 1 · machine guns that t East German refu. i Ea;t Berlin commu· t crossing into West West Ber· 11·ithout special ···cu.faltr'r .. lea led out .' 1\'est Berliners · anger at the big WILLY BRANDT \\' u t e r n protest \nmment of the East ,, 1 brushed off by the nists and free electiol15 In East BERLIN-Backed by high pressure water trucks and armored cars, East German soldiers bar traffic through the Brandenberg Gate in the center of this divided city August 14th. The East Germans pre- vented more than 50,000 East Berliners from going io work in the Western sector and cut communica- tions between East and West Germany.· The East German interior minister said the Brandenberg Gate was being closed "temporarily" because of Western provocations·-(UPI Photo). :1!1\o'llliOdarlt. Col. Andrei Germany. , He told the Western 'AGREEMENT BROKEN' their com· Brandt said the Russians two weeks ago "can- were using Berlin in an effort to seriously." He so split tlie Western powers. Refer· their more re- ring to the East German · about the barrl· boss Walter Ulbricht, he sa1d, the Russians "loosened the leash a little on their dog Ulbricht and alloived him to send tanks Into lent a letter to Pres· Berlin, .the tracks of those t e Ill n g him tanks churned up the agree· "Berlin expects rnenls on the four-power status Mrds, It expects po- of Berlin." · " As he spoke Western diplo· House said the let- mats meeting In Washington DOt been received In were preparing a stronger pro- and there would be test on the governrijent level to Moscow. they were reported undecided about what to do next. crowd wal'ed ban· · such slogans as: · d f d than red," · to Berlin," "Enough I, !d's act," "quiet :ot of people are still "ittra)'at hy the West," protesh won't stop Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, after a talk of more than an hour with Soviet ambassador Andrei Smlmov In Bonn, an· in a joint statement that the West German govern· ment would take no steps which could '.'worsen the international situation." Million Fled ' Rule Since 1949 LO\'AL GOULD Monday, 158,47<1 checked in. The 1 API-One of history's accent was on youth, with half Uoduses has come to' between the ages of one and 25. at least temporarily, After the German Democratic Communist action In Republic <East Germanyl was the West founded In October, 1949, the · of 3,000,00o or more total was 18,563 In one month. a 12·year period . The. figure then slumped, but . the Communists untold climbed when the Communists manpower and helped organized their secret pollee six etonomy of West Ger· months later. one of the most thriv· By January, 1952, It dropped l'Orid. to a record low of 7,2'!l a monlh. Premiers Plan when the Com· It rose slowly when the Reds the main escape started pressuring people Into OTTAWA <CP) - The lmmi· Btrlln, the now has their pollee force; labor service gratlon department announced a trickle, Before that and pre·mllltary training corps. Wednesday It Is granting poll· Th bi 1953 Th 1 tical asylum to Dr. Mluhall An· '·- a uay were cross· e g year was e leaving their crease coincided with a drive to tonovich Klotchko, a prominent behind collectivize farms, and Ru·sslan scientist In the field' of or these refu· business. The Communists also general and inorganic chemls- registered since Sept. were putting pressure on the try. West Germany be· churches, at the time. Professor Klotchko was at- track of them. The In March that year, a record tending the lOth International ministry of · all· 58,605 refugees fled. as the reg- congress on theoretical and a p- est! mate! BOO .' !me forced large numbers of plied chemistry In . Montreal without bothe;. craftsmen into government run In August and had ex· . . Industries, . · his visit to inlud\! Ot· YOUTI[ From Uten until the East Ger· the immigration depart· 199,188 refugees mans revolted June 17, 1953, the ment ·said Wednesday In an· 1 f t tal t b 1 nounclng the 59-year-ol scient· 961, up to last re ugee 0 never wen e ow 1st's request to stay 'In this coun·. 35,000 a month. f h ----- try. eat er While in Ottawa he made con· Far . East·.· Me' na.ce tact with the RCMP . and asked Utat his. desire be made known to the government. LOS. ANGELES <AP) - The Dr. Klotchko has been ·a mem· . 't\ustrallan · ambasSador to . the ber · of several editorial boards United. States predicts that Red responsible for. the· publication A · · : · China : will have ·. a vast army of chenilstiy journals In Russia · ·· ···--· lin ·. with nuclear weapons within 25 Is the author· of ·several· G. ATUNDU, Kenya-Returning .in triumph from . Nlght Day. years. · · · · · papers ·in the field. .., · · · ;· · chemistry. nine years prison and exile, former Mau Mau ' ..... ;.. Ml '. 70 ; • sir Howard. Beale, addressing leader J .. omo Kenyatta arrives at hi.s new govern· "55 65 tl · T d .1 ld R d A winner of. the Stalin· Prize ....... : '· ' a mec ng · ues a,, sa e home' at Gatundu August 14.th. · K.en" ""... 61 . 74 ., CHina· would; have a ' . · arid the Order or Lenin, he was , ... ...... 57, , 67 .:. . or: 1 ,ooo;ooo;ooa and tho head··of a laboratory In the N.s. yatta, convicted· as· the moving behind Mau · · 54,;.·. 73:·· third larj!cst· .output in Kurnakovf of. ·Science Mau terrorism, cotild:beco].nethe first prime mini- .... 54 ·.·71 by ' ·• . from1947'to'iD5s:·-···:· .. ,,.,,. · ; . .." ..... . ·. 't' . , .... , ' . l' ' . { ' . . ', \ r . Tnese are ·the Officers of Supreme Grand Lodge, Society of United Fishermen, that were elected at the 88th annual com· munication held at Gambo, on tile 7th to lOth August. 'I Most Worthy Grand Master, Companion Edwin Ebsary, St. John's; Right Wor. Deputy Gr. Master, Comp. Robert Savery, Channel; Right Wor. Imm. Past Gr. Master, Comp. J. T. Cheese- man, Burin; ·Right Worthy Grand Chap I a in, Comp. Llewelyn ·White, Badger Quay; Right Wor. Grand Chief Offi· cer, Camp. N. W. Lidstone, Winterton; Right War. Grand Second Officer, Comp. Samuel Bishop, Kelligrews;· Right·Wor. Grand Secretary, Comp. W. Haynes, St. John's; Right Wor. Grand Purser, Comp. W. E. Murdock, St. John's; Worthy .Grand Quartermaster, Comp. J. Jones, Sydney, N.S.; Worthy Grand Lookout, Comp. Willis Pritchett; Gambo. ' · . Additional members of Grand Lodge Executive: Companion Reuben Castella, Pouch Cove; Companion H. F. Gillard,' St. John's; Companion R." G: · Hay. nes, St. John's; Companion W. Pihnorn, st. Jo!)n's; Companion L. Hodder, SC Jolin's. ,t .• Not Words I No Results From ' Big Four Talks 'National Disaster' BLANTYRE, Nyasaland <Reu- te.rsl-Dr. Hastings Banda fol- lowed up his party's sweeping victory Tuesday in Nyasaland's first general election with a warning Wednesday that whites unwilling to accept Negro rule "should pack up and go home." The American-trained physi- cian's Malawi Congress party took 99 per cent of the votes cast for the lower roll of the leg. islative council . in the British protectorate, winning all . 20 seats. Negroes were not allowed to vote for the eight-man upper roll but the . white and Asiatic voters elected Malawi candl· dales to three or' these seats. The fiv'e remaining · upper seats went to f\hodesian federa· lion Prime Minister Sir Roy Welensky's U n i t c d Federal party. Members of the federa. lion are Nyasaland, the protec· !orate of Northern Rhodesia and I self governing Southern Rho· de 1 ia. WON'T BE WELCOME Banda told 11 press conference· that whites who will not go along with Negro rule will find "there is no place for them in Nyas11land.': Banda campaigned on a plat· form of secession from the fed· eration . because of fears oi white domination by the Wei· ensky . administration. Less than 80,000 Nyasaland's 3,000,000 Negroes voted. The new Nyasaland constitu· tion provides for a lO-man exe· cutive .council and five chosen by the legislative council itself. But the governor has the power to name additional mem· bers if he thinks it necessary . to maintain the balance between races. . THE COUNTRY PARSON . , . .. · "There can 'l be very much .. . .. . wr,ong, with , a ..• man.: if · ·his ·. mmat10n ·pUll. Nyas.alanil out. ne1ghbors . on both sides love of the Rhodesian federation. him at the same time." c • .. " · .. . . : I '··! . '! . ' ... . i .. i ' ·, ' i I ' t . . . . . ., . r I 1: I, t I, ;. [: ' I "l i ' '
Transcript
Page 1: .TR~~KS ~ ! Nova Motors: Ltd. randt Calls For Politi cal ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196108… · b~· 200,000 West Berliners in front of city East German

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~OW PRICES . ~UT • . ' . . I ro THE BONE ON AfL.

D CARS & .TR~~KS Nova Motors: Ltd.

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.

THE DAILY NE

..

Jb~~oo~©~ . . 1::~. . .·. .·.

. - ' ~ .

. · ! 'offiCEs liMITED

.. ~· .. .. •~· I

:..::.--------------TH_E_D_A_IL_Y_NEWS, ST. fOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, _A_UG_U_S_T_l_7,_1_96_l _______________ ....:.(P_r_ice_7_C_en_ts_)

randt Calls For Politi cal Action, est Germans

al To JFK ~-·AP-Angry West Berliners appealed

, to President Kennedy Wednesday to take action against the Communists for

up barricades. acr,oss the heart of this old . capital.

;ppeals were made both by Mayor Willy in a letter to Kennedy and by placards at a

b~· 200,000 West Berliners in front of city

East German pxtcnded their

to their citizens try· ;;5 the \\'est German ··~ miles west of this : .. · • · ·· guards reported. , · ... •:.' , are angered by ' :" ·

!!e \\'estern powers to · : ::an protest against

or barbed wire, 1 · machine guns that t

East German refu. i Ea;t Berlin commu· t crossing into West sunda~·. West Ber·

11·ithout special • ···cu.faltr'r .. lea led out or~ .'

1\'est Berliners · anger at the big

WILLY BRANDT \\' u t e r n protest \nmment of the East ,,1 brushed off by the nists and free electiol15 In East

BERLIN-Backed by high pressure water trucks and armored cars, East German soldiers bar traffic through the Brandenberg Gate in the center of this divided city August 14th. The East Germans pre­vented more than 50,000 East Berliners from going io work in the Western sector and cut communica­tions between East and West Germany.· The East German interior minister said the Brandenberg Gate was being closed "temporarily" because of Western provocations·-(UPI Photo).

:1!1\o'llliOdarlt. Col. Andrei Germany. , He told the Western 'AGREEMENT BROKEN' ~:nn1an~lcrs their com· Brandt said the Russians two weeks ago "can- were using Berlin in an effort to

seriously." He so split tlie Western powers. Refer· their more re- ring to the East German pa~ty

· about the barrl· boss Walter Ulbricht, he sa1d, the Russians "loosened the leash a little on their dog Ulbricht and alloived him to send tanks Into

lent a letter to Pres· Berlin, • .the tracks of those t e Ill n g him tanks churned up the agree·

~\at "Berlin expects rnenls on the four-power status Mrds, It expects po- of Berlin."

· " As he spoke Western diplo· House said the let- mats meeting In Washington

DOt been received In were preparing a stronger pro-and there would be test on the governrijent level to

Moscow. Bu~ they were reported undecided about what to do next.

crowd wal'ed ban· · such slogans as: · d f ~ d than red," · to Berlin," "Enough

I, !d's act," "quiet :ot of people are still

"ittra)'at hy the West," protesh won't stop

Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, after a talk of more than an hour with Soviet ambassador Andrei Smlmov In Bonn, an· nounc~d in a joint statement that the West German govern· ment would take no steps which could '.'worsen the international situation."

Million Fled '

Rule Since 1949 LO\'AL GOULD Monday, 158,47<1 checked in. The 1API-One of history's accent was on youth, with half

Uoduses has come to' between the ages of one and 25. at least temporarily, After the German Democratic Communist action In Republic <East Germanyl was the West founded In October, 1949, the

· of 3,000,00o or more total was 18,563 In one month. a 12·year period . The. figure then slumped, but

. the Communists untold climbed when the Communists manpower and helped organized their secret pollee six etonomy of West Ger· months later. one of the most thriv· By January, 1952, It dropped l'Orid. to a record low of 7,2'!l a monlh.

Premiers Plan

when the Com· It rose slowly when the Reds the main escape started pressuring people Into OTTAWA <CP) - The lmmi·

Btrlln, the now has their pollee force; labor service gratlon department announced a trickle, Before that and pre·mllltary training corps. Wednesday It Is granting poll·

• Th bi 1953 Th 1 tical asylum to Dr. Mluhall An· '·- a uay were cross· e g year was • e n· ~~~~<der, leaving their crease coincided with a drive to tonovich Klotchko, a prominent ~~ behind collectivize farms, ln~ustry and Ru·sslan scientist In the field' of ~i(l),OOQ or these refu· business. The Communists also general and inorganic chemls­

registered since Sept. were putting pressure on the try. West Germany be· churches, at the time. Professor Klotchko was at­

track of them. The In March that year, a record tending the lOth International ministry of · all· 58,605 refugees fled. as the reg- congress on theoretical and a p-

est! mate! BOO .' !me forced large numbers of plied chemistry In . Montreal without bothe;. craftsmen into government • run In August and had ex·

. . Industries, . · L'""'u~u his visit to inlud\! Ot· YOUTI[ From Uten until the East Ger· the immigration depart·

199,188 refugees mans revolted June 17, 1953, the ment ·said Wednesday In an· 1 f t tal t b 1 nounclng the 59-year-ol scient· 961, up to last re ugee 0 never wen e ow 1st's request to stay 'In this coun·.

1~ 35,000 a month. f h ----- try. eat er While in Ottawa he made con·

Far. East·.· Me' na.ce tact with the RCMP . and asked Utat his. desire be made known to the government.

LOS. ANGELES <AP) - The Dr. Klotchko has been ·a mem· . 't\ustrallan · ambasSador to . the ber · of several editorial boards

United. States predicts that Red responsible for. the· publication A · · : · China : will have ·. a vast army of chenilstiy journals In Russia · ·· ···--· lin M~ ·. with nuclear weapons within 25 Is the author· of ·several· G. ATUNDU, Kenya-Returning .in triumph from .

Nlght Day. years. · · · · · papers ·in the field. .., · · · ;· · chemistry. nine years ~f prison and exile, former Mau Mau '

..... ; .. Ml '. 70 ; • sir Howard. Beale, addressing leader J .. omo Kenyatta arrives at hi.s new govern· "55 65 tl · T d .1 ld R d A winner of. the Stalin· Prize ....... : '· ' a mec ng · ues a,, sa e ment~built home' at Gatundu August 14.th. · K.en"

""... 61 . 74 ., CHina· would; have a ' . · arid the Order or Lenin, he was ,... ...... 57, , 67 .:. . or: 1,ooo;ooo;ooa and tho head··of a laboratory In the N.s. yatta, convicted· as· the moving sp~rit behind Mau · · 54,;.·. 73:·· third larj!cst· .output in Kurnakovf Ac~~emy;. of. ·Science Mau terrorism, cotild:beco].nethe first prime mini-.... ;~ 54 ·.·71 Uie'~~rtd by ' ·• . from1947'to'iD5s:·-···:· .. ,,.,,. stel"'ofKenya.~(UPI·Photo). · ; . .." .....

. ·. 't' . , .... ,

' . l' ' . {

' i· . . ', \ r .

Tnese are ·the Officers of Supreme Grand Lodge, Society of United Fishermen, that were elected at the 88th annual com· munication held at Gambo, on tile 7th to lOth August.

'I

Most Worthy Grand Master, Companion Edwin Ebsary, St. John's; Right Wor. Deputy Gr. Master, Comp. Robert Savery, Channel; Right Wor. Imm. Past Gr. Master, Comp. J. T. Cheese­man, Burin; ·Right Worthy Grand Chap I a in, Comp. Llewelyn ·White, Badger Quay; Right Wor. Grand Chief Offi· cer, Camp. N. W. Lidstone, Winterton; Right War. Grand Second Officer, Comp. Samuel Bishop, Kelligrews;· Right·Wor. Grand Secretary, Comp. W. Haynes, St. John's; Right Wor. Grand Purser, Comp. W. E. Murdock, St. John's; Worthy .Grand Quartermaster, Comp. J. Jones, Sydney, N.S.; Worthy Grand Lookout, Comp. Willis Pritchett; Gambo. ' ·

. Additional members of Grand Lodge Executive: Companion Reuben Castella, Pouch Cove; Companion H. F. Gillard,' St. John's; Companion R." G: · Hay. nes, St. John's; Companion W. Pihnorn, st. Jo!)n's; Companion L. Hodder, SC Jolin's.

,t .•

Not Words I No Results From '

Big Four Talks

'National Disaster'

BLANTYRE, Nyasaland <Reu­te.rsl-Dr. Hastings Banda fol­lowed up his party's sweeping victory Tuesday in Nyasaland's first general election with a warning Wednesday that whites unwilling to accept Negro rule "should pack up and go home."

The American-trained physi­cian's Malawi Congress party took 99 per cent of the votes cast for the lower roll of the leg. islative council . in the British protectorate, winning all . 20 seats.

Negroes were not allowed to vote for the eight-man upper roll but the . white and Asiatic voters elected Malawi candl· dales to three or' these seats.

The fiv'e remaining · upper seats went to f\hodesian federa· lion Prime Minister Sir Roy Welensky's U n i t c d Federal party. Members of the federa. lion are Nyasaland, the protec· !orate of Northern Rhodesia and I self • governing Southern Rho· de 1ia.

WON'T BE WELCOME Banda told 11 press conference·

that whites who will not go along with Negro rule will find "there is no place for them in Nyas11land.':

Banda campaigned on a plat· form of secession from the fed· eration . because of fears oi white domination by the Wei· ensky . administration.

Less than 80,000 Nyasaland's 3,000,000 Negroes voted.

The new Nyasaland constitu· tion provides for a lO-man exe· cutive .council and five chosen by the legislative council itself.

But the governor has the power to name additional mem· bers if he thinks it necessary . to maintain the balance between races.

. THE COUNTRY PARSON

. , . .. · "There can 'l be very much ..

. ~~-. al.~o .. ~~Pe.~tcd, ~~~-. d~.~~r: . wr,ong, with , a ..• man.: if · ·his ·. mmat10n I~ ·pUll. Nyas.alanil out. ne1ghbors . on both sides love of the Rhodesian federation. him at the same time." c • ..

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Page 2: .TR~~KS ~ ! Nova Motors: Ltd. randt Calls For Politi cal ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196108… · b~· 200,000 West Berliners in front of city East German

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TLIE DAILY NEWS. ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THUHSDAY AUGUST "

·Grand Fails News N,orth American Li,fe AnnouWT.--. .

GRAND FALLS, •Aug. 7th- PROMINENT CITIZENS DIE Again the Grand Falls golfers GRAND FALLS, Aug. lOth­are of£ to Corner Brook. This There passed away here on time it is the ladies' secqon of Sunday, 1\Ir. Clarence Dwyer of the Grand Falls golf course Junction Road in his 69th year.

Hon. Mylas Murray, the Min· Hamlyn, Victor Clouston, Eric agriculture and homecrafts who are gone to Corner Brook His wife, the former Marion ister of Provincial Affairs, has Knl&ht, Robert Cowan, Hector have acted as Honorary Mem: to play for the H. K. Good· Day, died in 1945. He leaves to released the following informa· Parsons, Patrick Walsh, R. Car• bers of the EKhlbltlon Commit· year Trophy, .mourn, 3 sons, Justin, station· tion regarding the personnel of nell, Francis Klelley. tee since the revival of the Ex· The team . penonnel are ed with th~ Army in Germany, the 1961 Provincial Agrlcul· hibition in 1957: Percy Legge M~sdatncs Elsie Bond, Jessie Ray and Clarence,' in Grand tiiral and Homecrafts Exhlbl· CHAIRMEN OF SUB· Cartyville; Thomas Brown Mus: Hicks, Mary Rockwood, Anna Falls; and nine daughters, Win-lion Committee:- COI\11\IITTEES gravetown, B.B.; George' Cor· Hayward, Moyra Sharpe, J~an nie (Mr~. Brian Luken) in Tor-. : OFFICERS Livestock, John Lester; Field mier, Doyles, Codroy Valley; D. Baker, Rhone Byrne, Carohne onto; Z1ta, Mrs. Paul Cote of :Presldent-J, S. Kelsey. and Garden Crops, John Me· J. Gillies, Highlands; Graham Ball, Ruth Allen and Ethel Montre~l, S,ht;ila (Mrs. :lticClut-::vice·Pruldent-John Lester. Donald; Sheep, Lloyd C. Pow· Sparkes, Shenrstown, C.B.; Hugh R,owsell. ah.o~) m '.\Jute Rock, B.C., Pa· :secretary-J. G. Channing, ell; Poultry, Eric Knight; Flow· W. S. Atkinson, Pasadena; H. . . tr1c1a (Mrs. Frank Pinsent),

n'eputy Minister of Provincial ers, Harry Hamlyn; Homecrafts, H. Archibald, Harbour Grace; The LIOns Club. hav.e under· Grand Fal~s. Maureen, Jl!ade· Affairs. · · · Miss Olga Anderson, Depart· Thomas Sparkes, Shearstown, taken another proJect m Grand line, Lorrnme, Stella and Bar· · · · llanPi!Br-W. J, Mendes, Ex· .ment of HeAlth; •·H Clubs, Dr. C.B.; Joseph. Randell, Port Rex· Fulls, namely a new playground barn Ann, all in Grand Falls. H. G. R MEWS J. H. FOLEY

hibltlon Officer, Department of Florence O'Neill, Department ton; George O'Qulnn, Millville, between M?nchy and Suvla The remains ?f the late :llr. ProvinciAl Affairs. · of Education. West Coast; Joseph Eveleigh, Roads. Durmg .the week·end Dwyer rested m the .Grand Mr. H. G. R. Mews has requested nee that Mr. Mews will cont' . :EXECUTIVE COI\11\UTrEE I ddlt' t th Comfort cove N DB • N M liOme o fthe ch1ldren greatly Falls Funeral Home unlll 9 00 th C 1. h' f tnue • • · n a 1on o ese mem· ' · · · ·• · · J d th 1 d T d · · e ompanv to re 1eve 1m rom act1'v·e 'th th C . · Mrs. J. s. Kelsey, Gerald C. . · • Budgell, Hammond's Farm, Cor· e~ oye e P ay.groun . The ~es ay mormng when Requiem J • • • Wl e ompany as a

Morgan Robert Chancey, Dr. C. hers /h~ servllces ofp the1 P~\ ner llrook; Colin Bull, Eastport L1ons are really to be con· H1gh :\I ass was celebrated by 1 Management prwr to h1s normal retlr producer. s. But\~n. Ernest Robin, Lloyd ~:v:~nm~nt v~eo~~tm:n~~ net. B.B.; K. M. Batten, Coley'~ gratulated in provldin.g this Rev. Father MacDonaltl. Inter· ement date. Mr. Mews has served as Mr· J. H. Fole.v has been s arkes Raymond F. Morris, E. P ' n Point; Joseph E. Moores, Lake- need for the chlldren m that ment took place at the R.C. h M . . , ~· •

11 H ld Bradley eluding P. J. Murray, Deputy view Hr Mal • A A K f vicinity, and it's the second cemetery. Branc l anaget m St. Johns for mo ed to succeed ,Mr. H. G. R. Me\\

Iii.~ ~~z;~ Lesli:,r~ohn MeDon: 1\llnlat~r of Agrlc~lture &, Co· Cole~'s Point; nRay~ond s~:od: playground they have ~been . To the sorrowing relatives re than 25 years. Earlier this year he the Company's Branch Manag .~ 1\lci, A. MacRoss, :liic~ael Hol· tfe~:tt;ve;fin~~t~/r~~ ~is~~~::: ley, King's Point, G.B;: Wal· the means of providing. smcerest sympathy is extended. received n silver tray from the Comp John's, Newfoundland. Mr. Fo~:~In den, Anthony Murph~. Harry have been available to the Ex· lace Scevlour, Browns Arm; R R S d M h ,1 K -- · any in recognition of 25 years of faith- is a native of St. John's. has b., . . _ Gordon Ryan, O'Reaan's; Cal· ev. . . an ra. S eppard " r. enneth . Gaulton of . . . . . . th L'f I een

· ec~tlve. Committee while many vin Yates, King'• l'oint· Char· of Holy Trinity Church, accom· Junction Road passed awily at ful productive serv1ce. I;>urmg h1s te 1ve m e 1 e nsurance Busines pnvate citizens ,to all of whom Jes Senior Winterland ' panjed by Jlfra. Sheppard'& his home on Tuesday evening rm of management the Branch earn- 25 years.

5

the Minister expresses the sin· ' · nephew Alfred Baldwin of following a heat attack he sui d d · 1 d' th G th k f th G t

· e many awar s me u mg e en- He has completed th cere an s o e overnmen , Gander, leave this week for a fered a week previously. , e are rendering y~Iuable assist· vacotipn on the Mainland and Mr. Gaulton was horn i eral Manager s trophy presented for Management Training Course ance to the Exh1b1tlon by serv· United States. Brookfield Bona vista Bay an~ production and efficiency. well qualified to assume his new lng as members of the Sub· t G' d F 11 ' Th C h Committees previously mention· M J !If c b (f came o ran a s as a young e ompany is appy to annou ies.

rs. . . om ormerly man. He worked as contractor ------------------------------ed. Naomi Evans of Grand Falls) with the A.N.D. co. for 30

To assist In' encourn«inc and with her two sons, Tommy and years. In the early 'days of 1940 ------------------------------developing Interest In the Ex· David, have been visiting her Mr. Gaulton took the first G RAN D BAN K .N hibition throughout the Prov· mother, Mrs. W. Evans of Mill draft of Foresters to Scotland. . · lnce and to ensure, as far as Road. They returned to their When the second world war

,": I ·L possible, that it is truly "All· home at Portland, Oregon. was over Mr. Gaulton returned Newfoundland," the following to Newfoundland and for five ------------------------------

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1 1 • ! :-} ~ J.: ; persons residing outside the St. Misses Kathleen Antle and years was a woods contractor GRAND BANK, Aug, 9-The practicall~· in Lawn harbour. rivers. Last week two John's ~rea, who are keenly In· Joan Cross of Windsor left by wllh Bowaters. He then spcpt weather continues to he fine ::lleanwhile, good results are now breakers were caught

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terested in different phases of car ycsterdaly for a wck's va· a year and a half in the woods and ~ry. In fact,, we have had being obtained on jiggers and Brook and were brought cation on the Avalon Peninsula. of Labrador and later returned pl·act1cally no ram at all dur· trawls, and with squid bait .Magistrate :>:osewothl' at , . I

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They also took along with home to stay. I mg the. pa~t mont~ or so and '!Uite plentiful at the present Both men were · them 'MisRes Kay Wlthen and Mr. Gnulton's remains are evcrythmg IS now hndcrdry and time there are good indications: fines were Jeried. Angela Antle, student nurses resting at his home and will be parched. . that the fall fishery will ·be Sometime ago we made from St. Clare's Mercy Hos· laid to rest in the u.c. Ccme· Hay crops this season have profitable. references to the wa1• in pita I, who had spent three tery at 2.30 p.m. following been. very poor due to the lack The draggers arc returning Department o£ High wars weeks' vacation with Mr. and a service in the Memorial of ram and thn grass has ~~rnt with fairly good trips although ployees indiscriminatei, Mrs. John Antle, Patrick street, United Shurch. up. for the .lack of suff1c1ent this is the time· of the year road signs How often· Windsor. Left to mourn their loss are mmsture. \h have never sr.en when there is slack fishing for 1 see such signs saying

his wife four d ught r R b the ~onds and streams so dry. these boats. Last week the I working." or ''Caulion ' a e .s. u Y and m fact some arc mere "Grand Bii)':'~"Grand Duke"! working," and othm.'

Amonil the crowd of baseball (:l!rs. Chns. Res.tskowskl), L~ng, trickles. Unless some rain and "Blue Mist II" all landed in areas where no !a~s attending the semi·finals Island, N.Y., R1ta . <Mrs. :: m. ~ comes shortly there is a like- here with trips between one been in progress. for th1s week·en~ at Corner Br?ok IAllanl •. ~andolph A1rbase, lex·, lihood that i!arden crops will hundred and fifty and one hun. days. This absurd were Advertiser Sports Editor as, :II aiSle O!rs. Lloyd :tlaggs), j also suffer for want of mois· dred and eighty thousand I affairs is not only Rog~r and Mrs. House and Grand Falls, and Jean at home;: turl' and the same could apply pounds of fish each. 1 any specific area. lor it· familY .and Mr. and Mrs. Gor· also one son, Ralph, of. Grand, to wild fruit whkh arc now Ol'l'r the wee ken the steamer I dent all over whererer d~n Nichols and family. Mrs. Falls. To all of whom smcerest; just turning in. This year has ·•:Jrn~hcster Venture" landed 1 arc road>. These signs N1chols is . Assistant Editor of sympathy Is extended. 1 been an exceptionu!ly good equipment and parts here at j tended to sene a good the Adverhser, Grand Falls. • , I one for bakeapples and thou· Donu\'ista Cold Storage Co.. but their ra!ue is

PERSONALS : sands of ~allons ha\'p been har· Ltd.. for the new fish meal' lost and ignored b)' Guests of 1\Ir. and Mrs. Les- ~lr. D. Yetman of Junction: vested and preserved. plant which the company is now torists who feel that

lie Irish or Memorial Avenue Road is presently at Sl. John's 1 This year's forest fire con· er~eting in conjunction with its a case of crying over the Sunday night wel'c at the Grace Hospital undergo·' flagrations can he regard eel as fresh fish processin~ plant times when nn danger Mr. and Mrs. W. Hamlyn of St. lng medical exami!lations. We: a disaster and the situation is here. 1t is expected that this E,•en to leal'e such signs John's. They were on their wish him home soon. I so serious that Government has Meal Plant will he going into sition on the high•·af way home to St. John's after · . i heen forced to enact rc~uJa. production sometime this Au· weekend when there is · spending a holiday on the West Mr. and Mrs. 7m Dwyer and lions which were never before tumn and will provide addi· ly no construction or Coast. son Br?ce and i\lrs. I. Dawe. of necessary. It is incleed a sad tiona! employment in its opera- ance activities ~oing on

:Memonal Avenue arc leavmg state o£ affairs that matters lion. surd. ancl could be ea!ilr Mrs. Harvey Taylor, a former tomorrow to spend a vacation. have arrived at such a staqr. The Federal Government inated if somehod!' was

resident of Grand Falls, and with 1\!rs. Charles Smith al: that their freedom of move· dredge P.W.D. 400. is now at orders to see that they employed with the National Un· Neuse, North Carolina. i ment has to he so restricted in Garnish dredging out the aP· picked up, emhployment Insurance Com· ~~ W C 1 d tl 1 the national interests. l\'o other proaches to the harbour there' lllr. Eric S. Jones. mission Grand Falls recently h:1J8· m.~l 00 • tn A me' course or action was open for but due to adverse winds this I for Burin Di.stri~t is nor

· arrived' from Vanco~ver B c c .111

rlen, G. emdorFia 11 l'ensuet, • Go,·ernmenl and wr support it work is being considerably rle· tour of the d1~tnct. He • · ·• Wt eave ran a s on a- • on hllnd 1 p nt Ill "I !a)•nd. At thn prnsnnt tl'me the 1 to he in the area for ..

and is apcnding a few days urday for a vacation on Bell ' e rec :rcc a IOU~ 1 c c c c with M.r. and Mrs. G. s. Taylor, Island .as gunsts of '.· !r. and .,I 11 c regret that 1t bas to be so. cnh·nnce to Garnish is quite I weeks a~~ hope;. to I'ISd

c " shoal and presents the passage commumt1~> wh1l!t he II Carmelite Road. Mrs. Wm. Butler. ~lr. Cool: The fiery forest fire finger of any vessels larger than a 1 Two r~s1dcnts of Lor~l

will join them on the following· is getting closer to our own · motor boat or trap skiff. The i were ha1le1l before weekend. '. area of the Province with n larger dredge and drill scow last week for causmg 1

Miss Betty Collins who was i ' new forest fire near Dunne's which were due to arrive here bance at a Garden Partr teaching on the staff of St. 1\!r. and :IIrs; ,George F~r· 1 Riv~r. :lfost o£ us ~n the Bu~in in early summer for work here previous Sundar. Odne Joseph's Academy Gander last ward and fam1l~, :\kmorwl Penmsula nrc kcepmg our fm· first. and then at Fortune, have two ;vas al~n charge year, is now in 'town vi~itin Avenue, left. on Tuesday to gcrs ~rosser! and hoping that not yet arril·ed on the scene saulh~g an R.OI.~. her parents :\!r d III J spend a vacallon at Eastport we w1ll be sparerl such !raged· and it is quite apparent that the discharge of hiS Collins, PdpJ~r · ~~ad. r~fte~ and St. John's. i~s that arc afflic:ing other it will be Autumn before this The case was heard

' h tl · . . l'lcwfounrllanders lh1s summer. d d lllag1'strate "nseworth• I :r t":ca on :lflss Colhns wlll Mr. a~d ~Irs. Earle . Rodgers The fishery situation con- re ging will even commence. ~ic!ions we~~ recordid ·

g Corner Brook to teach and fam1ly, of :1-!emonal Ave· linues along the same unusual Department of Fisheries offi· cases. Both men ll'ere at :\fount Bernard Academy nue, left on Saturday by car and unprerlictahlc pattern it cials have been on the· watch twenty.five dollars each. for the year. to spend their vacation touring, has followcrl all this year. Just in recent days for poaching and the man whn maullt!

Nova Scolla. I as fishrrmcn in the Lawk and illegal fishing on the ri1•ers on Jllountie was Je,·ied an Miss Roseann 1\Iolloy, Gil­

bert Street, motored to St. John's over the week·cnd to spend a two-week vacation in the Capital.

SALT RESTORES COLOR Before vacuuming, · pour salt over your rug to sweep out

soot and restore bright color.

-:m~~~~

Lord's Cm·e area wrre writing the Burin Peninsula. With the al fine of one "Amen" to lhis season's trap ril'ers so low its impossible for seventy·five dollars. voyage. nne trap c1·cw at Lawn either salmon or sea trout to paid their fines. last week had its biggest haul get into the streams and poach· of the season with the trap set ers have been active in some

.CAIRO-Russian-made United Arab Republic army tanks rumble through the streets here July 23rd, dur· ing parade celebratipg the ninth anniversary of the revolution that ousted Kin.(! Farouk II. Scores of armored cars of Egyptian make. were shown and for the firsttime supersonic "Mig" fighters and squadrons of Egyptian jet training planes were displayed.-(UPI)'Radiotelephoto), · · ,

sT. JOHN'!

ot 1

Two new fires I officials. Tl:

southwest of ( a water bomber · from th•

spread the water l

j\notlier, but sea in the vicinity of

that a crew . no more inform1

, It is not tlu

Ba~· fire rem and widesp1

to late reports the Forestry

it was learned front of the fire i

now south or South ' (armanville was aga· yesterday, and the ~ of thP. fire fi~hting :

located in that area.

helicopters. ' and crews from

AND Company an1 were milling at

their utmo~t a fire that has en~

quantities of land . estimate· from lh!

stated that o1·cr 600 square mi

has so far been swe names.

lhc Weslcyvillc·Valle there is an ever PI where smoke ca1

to rise continually. of those scttlcmenls

M!grai limits

Dates ·mo1mu1anu waterfow!

have no appreh the 1961 Migrator,

issued by the """""- Service. B:

limits are unci lhe Province this y1 Ontario and the

limits have because of the d

reduction in nes ti production in the

where 70 per American ducks n their young, Newfoundland pror limits are six for for geese, and ei: with no possession

Jl.IDrador the b&g lin ducks, five for ge

for snipe, with no limits.

(other than and Old·squaw (other than Brar

Snipe: Septeml 7 ill Labrad1

11 to October 31 of the Avalon p, North and East leading from H

Main District ~ay, Ferryland Di~l lllands adjacent

1 to October 3 of the Avalo

tnd the islands October 1 to

part of th lying South a

:wan

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ST. JOHN'S, NiWFOUNDLAND Dlzily ·News THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, '.1961 ; ... ~ . ' ·, <~:·

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wo New Fires ot Thought oBeSerious Two new fires have been reported to the

officials. The first one was located five southwest of Glenwood and .within a half

· a water bomber was despatched to the scene·. .. ,.or•neu from the Indian Bay site, and began

the water around. \nothl'r, but scant report, told of flames ris­·~ the \'icinity of Stephenville Crossing. It is 1 that a crew has been sent ·to that scene,

1110rc information was available late yes­It is not thoug,':lt to be of major propor-

~~~)· fire remains anrl widespread.

10 l~tc reports yes. t~r Fnrcstr~· De·

it 11·~s learned that · fn•nl of thr lire is sit·

.. ~outh or South Wc~t '"'"'''"m· L' was a~ain in _,,l~ern;ll' ~nd the ~!real·

fi~hting force in that area.

becoming 1111easy yesterday oince any warmer or windier change in the weather could prompt the !lames to rise rapidh•.

As mam· men as could · be spared wer~ sent to the scene, nnd they ar~ now working there, but the task or quenching glow· ing turf. i~ ·not an eas1• one.

' PIT~IAN'S POND : This fire. commonh· called

hcliropters. water th~ Pitman's Pond, now inv.olv· 1nd crews from Bo· ed the New; Melbourne vicinity.

Company and tae were milling around It is probably the second w~rst

one, and nbw covers the aY loing their utmost to de Verde P~ninsnla with g eat :I fire that has eMulfed clouds of smoke. The cilews 1Jantili

1·e; !ororm latnhd•, A hal'e been posted to this p)ace

1mma c • De· d · k' · 1 d · 1 rl that some- too. an are wor mg 1111pn • s~~oc ;quare mile I of fighting as ~ t~ey go. It i1 an 1 h n •wept bl'! extremely djffacult task. a~d one

~ 0 ar cc • • that ma" O,ftcn ·took futile to ~tmr!. : the tired 1vorkers. . ll'r•lc~·l'ilic·Vaileyfield i It is hope~. however, that this •·m 11 ~n r1·cr present 1 fire may soon be under con· ·;herr smoke can be ltrol. prol•ifjinl! no drastic :.• ri!r r~ntinuall~·. Peo- j change is experienced In the t\nsr ;clllcmcnts were weather.

Migratory Birds limits ~Unchanged

Dates Of Season

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Garden Watering Restricti·on

Residents or St. John's, and be enforced within those three those on the outskirts. who are months every year. serviced by the City water· mains, are now forbidden to water their lawns, shrubs, or other plants and gardens, dur­ing the months of July, August and September.

This wns made Into a by-law yesterday by the City Council at its regular weekly meeting. The law has been found necessary because the levels of lakes and ponds surrounding the City have been reduced consider· ably this summer.

Between the hours or six and nine In the evening, It will be permitted to have the gardens watered with either hoses ·or sprinklers. This time is suitable slnct the sun Is low, and there wlll be no danger or burn· ing the grass, These three hours daily have been set aside, but residents using hoses or sprinklers at any other time are liable to legal action being taken,

Abnormally dry days have de· creased' our water supply level Newly seeded lawns have to a ver)' low rating, but not as special provision, however. low as. has been experienced When seeds have just been other years. However, it is only planted, it wlli ~c permitted to wise to begin conserving our water them unlll such time as water supplies. they. are germinated.

The by-law docs not only This watering by-law is now apply for this summer. It will in effect.

.

Italian Packaging Co. Acquired By .Bowater's

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thist continent. The new Italian company,

which will now be known as Bowatcr Europea S.P.A., has 700!employees operating a-plant of about 400,000 sq. !t. in Rome, supjllyin~.one of the most rapid­ly developing markets in Eur· opel

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Spotted In N-ld.) :·.·

The steel framing Is almost The firm of R. O'Neill, in,completion. This is a two-[Quecn's Road, which Is now , completed for the new Convent business over 40 years, is also storey building-on the ground 1 network of steel scaffolding Building for the Sisters of the at present engaged in the con· flat, the auditorium, kitchen and I These projects gave emplo!' Presentation Ord~r.. Th!s f~rst

1

struction of a large reinforced I piayroo_ms. The second flat or 1 men! to over 100 c~rpenters an~ class modern bualdmg as still· concrete School and Church on • school as also entered at ground 11abourers, exclusive of othet ated off Bonaventure Avenue, Blackhead Road. The building' level and contains seven mod-i sub-ti·ades such as masons, and will be connected to. the I will rontain eleve.n ( 11) class·: er~ clasrooms and necc5sary! steel . 1~orkcrs, plast~rcrs ant Holy Heart of ~!ary Regwnall rooms, to-gether WIth the ncces-; off tees and cloakrooms. This. cleclrtcaans, and bcmg undet High School. The firm of R.. sary cloakrooms and offices. school building is of reinforced. construction during the pas: O'Neill. general contractor. is' concrete. . ; winter. ga1·e much needed em. erecting this four·storey brick! AI Renews a School Bui\rling · ploymcnt to tradesmen when

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structure. Messrs. Horwood and containing sc1·en classrooms and They arc also rn~<~gcrl in the construction was at a low level. I Guihan are the Architects. 1 full-size auditorium, is ne<~ring 'restoration of the B.l.S. Hall on· (Daily ~ews Photo)

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Anglers Boat 10 Tuna

CLEARING . ALL SWIM SUITS

SWIM TRUNKS TENNIS SHORTS

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. ·PLAY .$H.ORTS PEDAL PUSHERS . 'N'

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SLIM JI·Ms I

'AND ALL

SUMMER GOODS

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Page 4: .TR~~KS ~ ! Nova Motors: Ltd. randt Calls For Politi cal ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196108… · b~· 200,000 West Berliners in front of city East German

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.. .. THE· D.4IL·Y NEWS

Ooly Morning Paper _.!lllilr'";:l . The DAILY NEWS Is a morning paptl

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

Uifited Kingdom and all .(orelgn countries .. Sl·tOO per annum

;-:Authorized as second clan matt, :: Prut Office Department, Ottawn.

~stabllshed In tBd4, and publlshe.d at h~ News Building, a55·859 . Ouckwortb ~trcet, St. John's, Newfoundland. b7

· Robinson & Company, Limited.

ftlEMBER GF THE CANADIAN PRESS

Tho Canadlan Press is excluslveiJ ~ntitled to t.he use for· republication of ill news despatches In this paper credit· ~d to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also the local news publlsb· ed therein.

All Press Services and feature articles tn th1s paper ·are copyrighted and thetr reproduction is prohibited.

Me:nber A,·dtt Bureau . o1 Ctrculaurin.

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~- THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 196.1

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labour And Politics .. In: view of the direct participa­

. 1 tion; of the Canadian Labour Con­:. I ,· l gress in the organization of the :, I. ' I New Democratic Party, it is rather ·; : · 1 1 interesting to find reprinted in the

: Letter-Review of ]:t'ort Erie a com-

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: ; mentary on trade unions and poli­; ·: J l , tics'which appeared recenily in the . 1 ; ' New- Statesman, the London left-, · : . ~~ wit,g review. . , :; ~ . :Qeclaring that organized labour

· /~ : in Britain is growing weary of sub-/)' f ' sidi~ing the Labour Party, the New

•• • 1 , Statesman says that "unions exist I

. 1 :: 1 . primarily to defend the living

The Trade Union Congress in Britain is not itself a political body but individual unions can decide by ballot to set up a political fund, financed by a separate levy on members, wpich any member can refuse to pay without forfeiting any of his union rights or benefits. Most of the largest unions have such a fund which is used princip­ally to support the Labour Party. The same voluntary principle is to apply in respect of Canadian union support for the· New Democratic Party.

Letters To 'COMPLAINT OF UNEMPLOYED

' Editor Daily News, Dear Sir,-I wonder could I have a

letter placed in your paper to say a little about unemployment, and what is going on In St. John's.

The lirst thing, I am unemployed. I have been living in St. John's for about 2.2 years, and I have been working iii different jobs here. I worked with Argo Construction Company for about a year and a half, and Atlantic Homes for a year. Horwood Homes for a year, Concrete Products, with a plumber for three ·years, the Diamond Construction Compan~·. the Eastern Woodworks for two years, and there was nothing steady to these jobs. The last job that I had with · Campbell Construction Company for fift~en months, and working on the

· CNR new Express Office. I was laid off last fall.

I have ne1•cr got a job since. Out of all of those jobs, I never had to go. to one to get a note from some "Big Shot", I got it on ~Y own face. Why should a man have to go to a clergyman or priest or. some member of the government to get a note to take to some boss on a construction iob to gel hired? Ever since last fall when I was laid off. l have been out of my bed six in the morning, and I have been on the roacl every mornin~ at seven looking for a job. Now I didn't mind the winter so much because we all know that there isn't much doing in the winter time.

, ·I : , : : standards of their members: that 1

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: ; means putting industrial achieve-• . ·I ment before long-term political ob-

It might be thought that the ex­perience of the British trade unions with political action might discour­age these trade unionists who fav­our such action in Canada. Ii might also be felt that labour as an un­committed group might exercise more political influence than it would as a party which can hardly expect favours at the hands· of a government' it is trying to replace· However, there . is strong union support for the New Democratic Party and it will be interesting to follow its fortunes in the light of what has happened in Great Brit­ain.

Well, the first place I went was down on the Harbour Developmcn t. I asked the boss for a job, he said the ice is in and we cannot get all the machinery in. But he said two weeks time we will be taldng on men, so I went down two weeks later. Nothing doing yet! Now they were just beginning to tal<e on a few men so I went all around St. John's, every place that I knew there was work going on. All the same, nothing doing! Of course I knew what was going on all the time, fellows bringing in notes from some member or the House, a elerg~·man or priest, or else he knew someone on the job.

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: : '· , j · 1 jec~ves. They wish to remain free ; 1 I to do this whoever is Chancellor of

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' j' I 1 ~he :Exchequer. And their anxieties ' · •1' about their position under a Lab-· I I '•

' 1 our: Government bent on planning •· have been strengthened, paradoxi-1 cally, by their relative satisfaction wit~ what they have been able to ach~eve under ten years of Tory rule .... the election df a Labour Government no longer seems to maQ.y of them the only, or even the bcs~. way of serving the ordinary

: · ;. bre~d-ancl-butter interests of their 1 :1 , . ·members.''

I never sent anything. Every morning I was down on the harbour. and it wouldn't be ten o'clock in the morning. I would be there before eight o'clock Asking the boss for a job, "Nothing doing" he always had an excuse and still there were men going on all the time. I 1vcnl along to one fellow and asked how did he get on. ·~I've never seen you around here looking for a job hcrorc?''

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"No,'' he said, "boy. you've got to lmve a note from some member of your district. to get on here." And so I made twcnt~·-ninc trips down on tlrat water· front to get a job. I never got one first or last, and there were fellows going on all the lime that didn't know where the harbOur was. l was going up the street when a fellow said to me, "Where is the harbour?" He meant to say, "Where was he working."

: . ~ : : f !j . ••· I i ' '.' I \ Diefenbaker Supports NATO •• ' )1. '

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, ~n one of the most fol'ceful state­. m~ts he has ever made, Prime , Mitlister Diefenbaker has empha-

West Berlin would be to s~t in motion a process of· moral di~int~­gration in the free world that would inevitably lead to Commu­nist ascendancy.

sis~d the nature of the present in­. ·ten,tational crisis and pledged Can­.; e.da's support to the aims and pur­i po~_es of the free world as repre-

.,,..,.""·'; sen,ted by NATO. .

War may not be averted. But as Mr. Diefenbaker has reminded us, if Allied purposes had been as clearly defined in 1914 and in the period from 1935 to 1939 as they are today, the two world wars of this century might well have been avoided.

So you can see he never made many trips down there looking for a job. I had a mind (J t~•· "'m that the barbour was down to Quidi Vidi. I said to him, "Going to work, I suppose?'' "Yes," he said.

~is speech has indicated the 1 gravity of the present crisis aris-

. ing out of Russia's provocative po~icy over Berlin. It has also

. ·I shown that he has been in close .•itouch with the leaders of the west-,, . . ern alliance and that he approves , iu\ly the position they are t<tking.

:~ The policy is simple enough and · ~ clear enough in its essential points. :; It ,?s !o .seek to preserve peace by ~: negobabon from a position of I! strength. ~~ :rhe one thing that stands out, · th~ one thing above all else that

has been impressed upon the minds of,, the Russian leaders so far as straightforward and unequivocal statements can do so, is that the

is not prepared to abandon . Berlin to the most untender

· me'l'cies of communism. t! this is the NATO policy. It

could be no other for to desert the ..,.,,.,,..,,., of West Berlin would be to

; .. ,!iest:roy irreparably the trust of all believe 'in freedom and regard.

NATO as its champion· To abandon

Khrushchev knows the , truth as the Kaiser and Hitler did not know it It may not deter him from going too far to draw back but if he has the ·native intelligence with which he is credited, he will find a way of withdrawing from his present predicament without loss of face at home.

But come what may, and it is impossible to believe that anyone in possession of his senses would choose war under the conditions that another war must be fought, the West has reached the stage where it must take its stand. It. is taking its position with the full moral support of the people of all the countries of the NATO alliance. The West is united in its determina­tion to safeguard freedom in West Berlin. What happens next depends on the men' in the Kremlin,

There is· a Ia hour foreman down there from around the ba)l, I heard he had his two young fellows on. his brother, and all relations that he could gc! on, and God knows how many more . So that's what's going on, you won't find many St. John's men working down there. That was two weeks ago, and I never went on the harbour any more.

I think that was ortcn enough to ask a man for a job. Now I wasn't the only man that was down there every morn­ing, But the men that got up off their beds and went down there before eight o'clock in the morning, never got on. The man that never saw the job­that's the man that 'got on. Now that's not the only job that I was on. Lots or more.

: Training Public Servants

You go on a job looking for work, "Nothing doing boy." You know why because the foreman belongs to some part of the bay. On most of these jobs around St. John's, the foreman belonged around the outport one time. Perhaps he Is living here for n long time, and all the men In his place may know· that he Is on the job as a foreman. You will see them all coming in then, go over a11d -shake hands with him, and say "How are you getting on Mr. ............ ?" Next thing you will see them going to work. Th,ere have been inen trying everything to get on these jobs. I have been on jobs here In St. John's, men have brought in potatoes, cabbage and everything to the boss. That's .what's going on.

.. ,. . : ~. A remarkable gesture towards

' · : the improvement of the standards · of public service in the United

. Stfltes has recently been made by a fmall group of citizens who have giyen anonymously the large sum ofl$35 million to Princeton Univer­sity fo~ a school of advanced

.::s1~11d.ies in public service. . ~he president of the university

said. that it will establish pro­HI:;.'j)fe$icmal education for public ser­

at a level of excellence com­•to the country's best

'&cl{ools of medicine and law. objective will be to increase

flow of well-prepared persons positions of public responsibil­

and to set by example new pat-.f•!;te~I1ts of excellen~e throughout. the· r•;rJi:l~·~•u in education for the public

In both executive and adminis­trative positions in modern govern­ment, t~e dema.nd for a high de­gree of preparation is becoming increasingly npparent. What is to be done at Princeton might well be imitated to advantage in many other democratic countries. · At a lower' level than the Prince­ton aims, cducatiqn .for public ~er­viqe q1ight ·be advantageously con­sidered as• a special project of our

Any· man that lives here in St. John's has some job to get employed. All right those men are on the job all the summer and they are getting every days work. But as soon as November comes In, they may lose a couple of days a week. Now you know what they do, they cannot leave the job because If they

own university in Newfoundland, and neglect· that a Presidential There is need, for example, for · · h d bb d h well-tral'ned welfare offl'cers and commission as u e t em all

'children of misfortune'.'' f?~ ~n ade~U!lte· supply on a ~on- The work~rs average sixty-five tm~1?g b~s1s for o~h.er resp?ns1ble . cents an hour and less than a thous­poslttons m the C1vil Serv1de. A and dollars a year out of which special degree course might easily they have to pay rent for miserable attract a number of tal~n~ted ~pung quarters during their migration people ·to . s.eek a .prom1smg career which follows the calendar of the

' ill the public serv1ce, seasonal harvests. ------ . . . A Congressional sub-committee .. ' Jh pJ• ht Of M• t W k has taken an interest in them and . e:'•: ' ,~g. • , : , . ! . I, ~gran • . or ers ' iS preparing legislation ·that will

· · ·' ·· . , · . bring them a measure of sociaUus-plight of Anierica's.migran()ast Surida~s New York Times. . tice but it is appalling to realize

workers has received much. , :~hey, :·conip~i~e,· according ·to ·the that in the wealthy United States mlllicit:v in the past year and· is the · Times{'"two million men woinen this.· kind of serfdom and privation Ul:f:ltect of .~ sh.~rt pic¥>~~~~ ~,ssay, ~:.arid yo~ngsters, s9 lo~t i~ poverty . can be .~h~ lot of so inany people.- . ~~ .... -~... ~. Aj ~ , ••• , ................... ~ ',,·, •, - ~ :~. • ,, -~· • ' • ·~ ,', ,,,;, • ~.· • 1, 0 o• ·,· ·•·~•·t'"' ,'',,",h .. , I ; '•, t , ' • ' I, • • ,' • ~··

,, . ; .. I 1 t,

. I .,

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S. NFLD., THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1961

The Editor do their unemployment is out for six months. They go to the boss, "Boss, I've got to go home, the wife is sick." Or they say; "I've got to go in the woods to get a bit of wood for the winter." So that boss gives them a lay:off slip. They go home. They may get a bit of wood and they may not. They arc like the bear. The bear stays in its house for the winter and when the spring breaks up, he \viii come out and if he sees . his shadow, he will go back again. So that's like the men on those jobs.

When they see that they are losing lime, they want to be1home then for the winter. They will get anywhere from thirty dollars a week fo thirty six dol­lars a week for unemployment. As soon as the winter is over and the spring Is here again, you will see them coming in again. The man that . Jives In St. .Tohn's and is lucky enough to get a job on these construction works, got to slay on. Now I know exactly what I am talking about, because I was one of the fellows who was on a job here In St. .Tohn's, and I li1•ed on Blackmarsh Road, and I had lo leave at 6.30 a.m. to get to work at eight. Up to my middle In snow, and go out on a job to find no work that day.

There were weeks and weeks that I never made as much as I would have made on unmploymcnt. But I couldn't leave the job ... so I don't want to take up too much space In your paper ... I can write fifty pages, and I can write things that bosses on the jobs would not like to bear. Now I am a man with ten children under sixteen years of age, and not working. I will have eight going to school · when school opens. Could you tell me how I am ~oing to get these children in school? Someone will say you are getting the baby bonus, but that will only put a nair of boots on their feet once a month. There are light bitls, food, clothes and school bills. You take those ten children, myself and my wife is twelve. It takes a lot to keep them. I made about thirty trips to the new General Hospital that is started to be built, but they are not ready yet. The boss told me certainly he would get me a job when they get ready. Bcause I made so many trips.

If, I don't get a job this week coming, I am not looking any more. I bet any­thing that there isn't a man in St. .Tohn's that has tried as hard to get a job as I have. I know \hat ther~ isn't work for everyone, but I should think that a man with ten children should get a job before a young· fellow with no support. We know that everyone got to Jive, but work Is not handled right. There arc men working on jobs, too, and getting their money, and put it in the bank-they don't need it. There are those on jobs getting old age pen­sions. I think it is time for someone to look into these things, and give work out right. So that the man with a big family can get a chance and don't think that I am the only man with len children.

If I never get a job. I have to go to a clergy or priest or 111ember, to get a note to hring to the boss. Or else bring in a sack of potatoes, cabbage or beet ... if not I'll never get a job. I wouldn't mind if I was working with a man for a year or so, and he gave me a recommendation, that would he dif· fercnt, but to go to Mr. Smallwood and

. say "How about a note from you, to ~et a job". In the meantime that man might be trying to cut "Joey's" throat. He may have voted for Mr. Brown, and then the same thing to that man. "I'll vote for you Mr. Brown, how about a note to get a job?" That man may have voted for Jl!r. Smallwood. I should say go and get a job on your own face. Be men, I could do the same thing!

SIMEON DRISCOLL, 48 Blackler Avenue, St. John's.

BACK TO THE BEAVERS! Editor Daily News,

Dear Sir,-The West country mer· chants "had something" when they wanted to' give Newfoundland back to the beavers. It was the beaver hat style that made them prosperous from the Newfoundland trade and so initiated the industrial revolution in the Severn Val· ley and vicinity, primarily stimulated by international trade In St. John's, Har· hour Grace, ets. Settlers exterminated these fur·bearers and also the forests consquently on Avalon.

On the French Shore however, this did not occur and today we are enjoy. ing the "bounty of the beavers in last growing stands of timber and pulp wood. Forests cannot burn far where beavers maintain a high water table in the soil.

It would seem logic then to follow wise West Country reasoning and give. priority to our aquatic wood grower who knows more about preserving our forests than we do. In the vernacular we must "make like the beavers" e\'en to the extent of pseudo worship like the sacred cow of India! ·

An open season on beavers Is idiotic under our present climatic . circum· stances. Every one killed for fur or food is an invitation to the type of delinquent sabotage our vanishing for­ests have seen· the last few years. Forest fires like accidents, do not happen, but are made by frustrated youth unable to get skilled work but very skilled at getting even with the authorities whom theY· hold responsible for their predica­ment ..

Having lang advocated a Federal i forestry department It soems that they should . be called on to follow "my advice" on forestry preservation here. Every unemployed person possible should be put to use, therefore, build· lng dams on every lnsh:niflcant brook. Further,. high school children shouid be

.,

"'Sorry, but Comrade Confucius Now ·' Charity Doesn't Begin at Home.11

Auld Lang Syne (From the files of the Daily News)

August 17, 1931: POOR FISIIERY

The fishermen are all returning home owing to a scarcity of fish. The usual time of return is the end of September, but Capt. Hounsell reports that men and families are already leaving Wadhams and Peckford's Island.

.... . . DRUM SERVICE

Three hundred visitors yesterday at· tended the annual C.L.B. drum head service at the Shannon l\!unn 1\!emorial, in the orphanage. The battalion was ,in command of Major P. B. Rendell and the orphanage paraded under Capt. J. Andrews.

• • • CLERIC VISITOR

A visitor to the city last week was the Rev. J. D. Ryan of Brooklyn, N.Y. He was much impressed after visiting such sites as the Marine Drive and around Conception Bay and Cabot· Tower.

• • • OLD TIMERS

The Old Timers put it all over the B.I.S. on Saturday night in the special baseball game. The score at the end of the ninth wa·s 16 to 4. The B.I.S. had to play with the regulars, Dyer, Don· nelly and Ryan, who weer all working.

August 17, 1946: KINSiUEN CMIP

Yesterday afternoon the Kinsmen Summer ca·mp was officially opened with a gala field day. Among the special visitors at the Donovan's site we're the Go1·crnor and Lady MacDonald, Glenys and Kenneth MacDonald

• •• IN GRADE XII

Five Prince of Wales students were successful in passing their Grade Twelve examinations. The five winners of the class of six were, Harold Snow, Bruce Bowden. Roberta Cross, Donald Kean and Joan Oldford.

• • • WINS MEDAL

On Thursday the annual Medal Play Championship was won at Bally Haly when A. G. Herbert had two 77's to win the cup for his second time. A. R. Hearn followed up in the after 'lunch play-off .

IN THE RED (St. Catherine Standard)

The Soviets have claimed they are victims of "geographic Inequality" In the selection of U.N. staff members. It could also be pointed out that the Sov­iet Union has a financial Inequality In the U.N., having refused to pay its just assessments. The one should balance the other.

paid a nominal amount annually to look after reaf£orested areas which they should plant to contain firm in checker board fashion with deciduous trees like birches, ~aples, ·etc., in alternate 'acres with coniferous, like pines, spruce, fir tamarack and hemlock, as well as other fast growing species from other coun­tries.

No rivers should be used to drive wood as "roads to resources" initiated by 1\Ir. Diefenbakcr, can be now driven anywhere if provincial authorities and the paper companies would cooperate. This would increase trout 'and salmon as invaluable tourist attractions. The salmon are essential to our economy as they drive the bait as~ore when coming in to the rivers which contain beaver dams. The cod, etc., chase the herring and cap!in in and bigger species like the tpna, porpoise and even whales . follow the squid ashore. But it is the salmpn that begins the cycle. and the beavers Jllake the spawning pools for them. Let us begin at once with 1000 square ·miles already burnt before erosion completes the desolation. Wood­lands are wonderlands, · economically, as well as aesthetically. ·

E. D. C. HISCOCK.

Look By BRUCE BIOSSAT

City and regional planning are the first to acknowledge that long time major planning in this try was mostly a thing of paper ises, a fancy idea gi1·en w1de lip but seldom converted into fact.

But today the turning of urban area plans into action is beginning lo a reality in a good many parts of nation.

Cities like Chicago, Detroit St. Pittsburgh, Rochester, :\.Y., and Haven arc performing major 1urgery their often crumbling cores.

Where before World War 11 handful of U.S. centers had plans for this purpose, torlay n:ore a hundred have.

Planning technicians. once looked askance as "starry-eyed dreamer;'• not socialists, are in rrcr mountit1 mand. In 1944 the American of Planners had 233 members. has 2,800.

There are more than a dozen schools, and 31 colleges and a sharply increased number. toda)' degrees in the planning field.

Why the burst of acth·ity and !he postwar trend toward using plans : o£ tossing them onto du;ty shelm!

The main factor seems to be startled awareness of countless officials that their communities. and small, are in for sweeping which they must somehow gol'crn do not want to be engulfed.

Secondly, the very magnitude of problem has brought massil'e into being-urban renewal. area development , highway net11ork. and hospital construction.

If these projects are not to and overlap, theY must somehow b! ted together. No one wants to ;ee petition of such a case as the 1930s, when a public housing was begun and then torn down to way for a highway.

Quietly, the federal source of much of the "rlPI'elOPl

money" our communitie> get. is pressure for more ef£ecti1·e In such matters as urban area redevelopment, "workablert grams" must be presented befo funds are handed out. \\'e mar see more of this.

Private industries and builders. see increasing value in relating efforts to some sort of genei'3l

The planning l'eterans are They see the surface barelr. with urban sprawl in outlying racing unchecked.

But they agree a real p\annini · has at last been made. And who do not wish to be e community disorder must sbar pleasure at these marks of

CLEARING THE LA:ID Montreal Star

The minister of highways has all billboards remo1·e~ from th;h~ ers of all provincial hlghwa) 5• not endear him to some, but it great many more. It bas long matter of grievance that · this or that so often have the to shout their message el'en . i"

t' \'~ .. centre qf the most attrac IVe to the travelling public. cluster thickest in the close · towns and cities, but theY are thrust themselves on our 11 to almost anywhere. TheY are 1 nse down If necessary at the e~e owner or Jessee. ---------­LAST TI~IE

Calgary A)brlan Why Is It that people wh.o tbe

most time-saving devices hale time?'

'lntrodut . - .

~.Fii.ghts trans-Newfound! be introduced 1

...... .tern provincial

~:ii,IIishlP said that : ~ •• trodUCE!O its Deer

than a n: to and from

of tile . provincE all expectations. the airline are I

to coPe with passengers takint of the local SCI

:,.n11ests have been 'i.iorrling service, ant

decided to plans anc

flights im

new service w.ill I benefit to bnsmes it will now be po 'to Corner Broo

western N ewfoun and return the sarr

no time lost i working day.

. flight, which use EPA's fully P Douglas DC·3

will leave St. Joh 1m. each day excep and will fly non-s!

arriving at 9:5 will load ill

addition of th< morning flights b

and Deer Lal concluded, will

convenience an of service to the

EPA is prow offer increased fa meet the growi

oem!mas in this p1 and plans ar to provide m

and more cquipm1 tew operation.

EPA fares of ~ $36 return betw

Deer Lake wil new flights.

Conlir1ued from Pag the construction

proceedi Road. T

has alread~ , and is placir

rio decision wa this matter of up some time agE

EXTEND BENNE City Engineer 1

Mr. Ralph Lane • lime has had hi;

question bcfc The proposal

len foot extensi< the side of the

Proposed foundati not interfere w: course, and it h

and grar

of 6 Bon build a 1 Green, 1

a ·sig A

l.ti'•'::'_l~llSio:n: 11

Page 5: .TR~~KS ~ ! Nova Motors: Ltd. randt Calls For Politi cal ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196108… · b~· 200,000 West Berliners in front of city East German

I.

·al

nd

ing gc that in this

f paper ·ide lip ' !act.

of

cs. •l'ar II

had

, close theY are 1 our Y aie all to he exPense.

Jbrtan )le ·w~o :es haVe

. .. I·

Introduce Flights

trans-~ewfoundland te introduced next

Provincial Air·

AUGUST 17 1961

Board of Trade To Press· 4-H ·Club Week To Get

For 2 Day Regatta llflderway Mr. Roy Cheeseman, Acting whether It be called "Old Home

Pres~~ent of the Newfoundland Week,'' or by some other name, Provlncial-4--H- Club· Wee Boar_, of Trade stated recently should be held at the beginning gets underway ·on Saturday, that in response to the con· of the week to permit all con· when 28 young men and women

• structlve suggestions of a pro· cerned to have the benefit of a delegates gather in st. John's mlnent member, the proposal long weekend. for ceremonies marking the that In future a 2·day Festival ninth annual observance of the

. be organized around the annual Mr. Cheeseman went on to occasion. The young men and St. John's Regatta, had been point out several other advan· women represent the Trinity referred by the Council of the tages, not the least of which ~onavista South, Notre Dame

. Newfoundland Board of Trade was the fact that the annual Bay and st. George's Bay sec to the Executive of Its Retail Regatta· sometimes has to be tions of the province, i:iection. postponed for a' day-as was Delegates to the gathering

It is understood that a small the case this year-because of will be treated to a round of · committee is being formed and high winds or inclement wea· social activities on Saturday. · that plans will be made to co· ther. "The 2-day Festival" said They will be tendered a recep

0ocrates an even· ordinate the views and actions 1\lr. Cheeseman "would give us tlon at the Bowring Park Bun. · to Deer Lake of every conceivable interest all some leeway In this respect; galow, visit Bell Island, and at·

with en route und responsible organization make the affair a gala occasion; tend a luncheon at the New:

said that since its Deer Lake

ltiS than a month to and from the

0; the pro1•ince has ;!I esn~ctations. Fa· ,,, airline are taxed

.. ' .. to cope with the . ;,.,cnws taking ad· ;!· 1hc local service . ha1·~ been m3de

~cn·ice, and the Mridcd to step

plans and add Bights immedl·

and authority within the com· and encourage friends and re- foundland Hotel. munity. It is felt, too, that In latives to visit Newfoundhind at Guest speaker at the lun· addition to· the suggestion that this time; and Improve business eheon will be the Hon. W. J. a 2·day holiday be introduced and good will . generally Keough, Minister of Mines, at Regatta time, the festival, throughout the Province." Agriculture and Resources. Al· -.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiP, J so at tending the luncheon will ll' be Doctor G. A. Frecker, Minis

Sea Cadet News:

'Ready Aye Ready.' Forty-seven weary, tired Sea mira! Whyte, United States

ter of Education, Doctor Flor· ence O'N elll, Director of Com munity Leadership, and repre· sentatlves of the press, radio and television. The Robin Hood Flour Mills Limited will be host for the luncheon.

Cadets and Officers touched Navy, on August Bth. ;rrl'il'c will be of down at Torbay on Friday, Aug, All of these high-ranking offi·

:1:efil lo bnsinessmen, 11th, at 10.40 a.m., after twelve cers were impressed with our To Speak At

Closing Ceremonies

· n<ill now be possible days . of intensive training at Sea Cadet training and the .. 1~ Corner Brook or H:\tCS "Acadia", Sydney, N.S. clean and bright living quar· · :"icwfoundlnnd These included Rev. Father ters. · .. return the same day Shallow with 12 Cadets from Newfoundland corps from Deer

no time lost in the Beothic, Hr. Grace·, Sub. Lieut. Lake was with us under the da1· d

, . flight. ~,:hich initi· Hawco with 8 Cadets from comman of Lieut. Locke and __ Eagle, St. John's, and Lieut. 23 Cadets. .

;;e EPA's fully passen· Wells, Sub. Lieut. Grimes with This third period of training Premier J. R. Smallwood rJug\as DC·3 equip· 24 Cadets from Terra Nova, St. saw the Province of Newfound· fresh from the Conference o

\eal'e St. John's at John's. land well represented with a Provincial Premiers, is slate u:h day except Sun· The Cadets spent their time total o£ 70 Cadets from five to be special speaker at closin will Ill' non·stop to at Acadia learning. to sal! ding. corps and ten Officers from ceremonies for the two school . arril'ing at 9:50 a.m · ht th p v for summer students presentl will load its west hies, boat pulling, gunnery and e1g corps across e. ro · .

1 ot'ganlzed sports between corps. !nee. underway in St. John's. Th [lli:hmt edtolat~[ Prizes and trophies were the re· One. Fdrldayf, AuguTst .!BthN, the ceremonies will be held o

.. d h f 1 c d t ten a ets rom eua ova Saturday at the Holy Heart o back in the city war s to I e success u a e s, , These flt'ghts will and keen competition was shown who have been undergoing the Mary Regional High School o

between Newfoundland and the seven weeks' training, will be Bonaventure Avenue. ~ncs offering direct Cadets from other Provinces. returning on flight 700 at 10.00 About 850 students are a communica lion in t dl a th • ho ls 60 . Congratulations to A/C Har· a.m. en n. · e •WD sc o :

;;land. old G. Bishop of Terra Nova W~ understand from reports are attending the Probationer I other trans.island who won the Captain's Prize for rece1ved that these Cadets have Teachers School at Prince o t:d :\cwfoundiand·Lab the best all-round Cadet from made good progress on their Wales College, and 250 ar '~:ce will continue as Newfoundland. courses and have represented . attending the student teach~r 1~cition of the new During our stay at Acadia, Newfoundland in a good and acad,emlc school at St. M~c

Rear Admiral Dyer, RCN Flag seaman-like manner. h.aela. Otto Lawrence is. pr1 flights between Officer Atlantic Coast, inspect· During the visit of the Royal c1pal of the Probatlon~r

. c:~~~u~~~{ ~r~~e:n~~~ cd the· Cadets on Au~:ust 1st. Canadian Navy es~ort Squadron School, and R. B: Butler, prm Commodore Taylor, RCN Com- on September 2nd, a sea cruise clp_ al of St. Bomface Reg10n~

· llnrenience and fre· H h s h 1 B 11 I 1 d 1; ml'ice to the travel· manding Officer Atlantic Coast, is being arranged for the St. 1g c oo on e s an , I

EPA is proud to be paid a visit to Acadia on Wed· John'1 Corps. principal o~ the 5tudent teach . ·Increased fac'tl'ttt'es nesday August Oth and Ad· G. C. W. ers academtc school.

• • Education Minister Doctor ceet the growing air A. Frecker will be chalrma

in this province H·o.use-Breakers ·sew· a·re for the. closing ceremonies tnd plans are well . which will get underway a . to provide new scr· 11:00 a.m. Saturday,

more equipment for

~;E,~r~sb~::::no~~ Citizens Loading Guns Deer Lake wlll apply Breach Of flights.

• · from Page 3 l ~! construction of a tara~e proceeding on

Road. The resi· has already raised

and is placing the decision was made matter of permit

time ago, llENNERY

Engineer has met Ralph Lane, who for has had his hennery question before the The proposal Is to foot extension made side of the river

foundation wall ' interfere with the

and It has been and granted the

LIGHTING American Oil application to

at Marshall Mo

By ERIC A. SEY!\10UR zens are fed up and in a strong No matter how the Jaw dis· determination to try and atop Travel Ban

penses justice in the case of this type of crime are taking a breaking and entering-provid· strong stand. The Newfoundland Highwa ed the culprits are caught- That stand, we are given to Patrol continues prosecution o citizens have the right to pro· understand, Ia the purchase of persons Involved in breaches o teet their property with the aid a gun so they can blast the the ban on travel in the wood of a loaded gun. house-breakers If the latter are and the lighting of outdoo

Furthermore they can shoot caught red-handed. . , fires. Three men appeared l at and maim intruders while Whether the thteves are Ma&lstrate's Court yesterday o protecting their homes. Crooks roung or old will not cut any charges of breaking the ban and would-be crooks may think 1cc with a man or woman whose which was enacted because o the sentence is light If they are home Is being bUI'ilarlzed. The the p r o vi n cIa 1 emergenc caught, but the fear of getting thieves will be shot at as own· brought about by the presen a shotgun blast in the body may crs have the right to protect forest fire situation. make them think twice about their property. Two of the men were char this type of crime. Checking with the RCMP we ged with lighting a fire to coo

Because of the Increasing find It Is quite legal for house· their lunch on July 7. The wave of break·ins at private h.olders to possess small arms- pleaded Ignorance of the ban homes this summer, some cit!· r1fle or revolver. All they must The Magistrate found the

do Is register th~ weapona with guilty, and imposed a fine o the RCMP and there is no $215.00. In sentencing the me charge. It Is important that the the Magistrate .~tressed th permit be obtained. fact that the ban on tra vei i

tors' new outlet on the Ken. mount Road-Trans Canada highway. They enclosed plans for this work, but they were only lately received, and the City Engineer will take a little time to study this before de· clslon is made.

So citizens who are joining the woods and on the l!ghtln the growing number of house· of outdoor fires Is vitally co ownera who are forced to take cerned with the economy of th this drastic action, will bear In province.

and Metro Building Is $149,800.00

mind that they must have the . Another man was charge permit and then they can alt with lighting a camp stove back and walt for the house- prepare a meal. In his defenc breakers to come and ahoot at the man stated that' as far a them. . he was concernl!ll he did no . It is a sad commentary on our break the law. He understo modem way of life when bual· that the lighting of camp stove ness· people have to resort to. was permitted. The Magistr Installing burgllr alar1111 to postponed his decision in thi protect thetr property. Also case because he wishes to e

list of proposed the City was

the Council at meeting Wednes-

ue, wlll build a two' car· garage. that home·ownen no lonpr amine the type of stove the ac NOT RECOMMENDED feel safe and have the constant cused man was using at th

1\tr. Phillip G. Madden, 205 fear of their home being time the Incident took place, Hamilton. Avenue, has been re· broken Into while absent from !used permission to operate a the City for a few hours. confectionery sto'rc, as the Our moral standard-If there building would be used contrary are any left-have just about

carries a total of $94,000.00.

If wallpaper is •mudged, ru over the area lightly with a art-gum eraser. Hard rub bing can damage embossing

Plans were al·

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to zoning regulations. crumbled somewhere along. the . METRO AREA road. Obviously ther1 !I a

• A list totalling $515,800.00 was group of lawbreakers so large A bit of borax added to washln water will bring shine to mlr ron.

agreed for the metropolitan St. as to shock us If we knew the John's area. This includes exact numbe~ involved, .Crlm·

, work in many areas, among lnals do not tell the census· • them, the Bay Bulls Road, .tho takers their nefarious "occupa· Synthetic floor tiling now come • Torbay ,Road, Portugal Cove tlon. In reallstlc wood grain ef

Road and Kilbride Road. The Perhaps too many of us are feeta In rubber and solid vinyl t fol.lowlng reslde!ltS had, pro· disinterested ln relltion, edu· . ·

posals permitted: Heber Wheel· cation and community better- ----..,.....---'---· er: Paul Shortall;, George An· ment. We are not but ahould palp then tile force will hav

a !bony: George· Putt; Herb Mor· be scared by the groWth of laW· to be 'amplified. gan; Da~ld J. Miller; Stante: lessneaa and make. every effort The other night a widow an Ga~dens, B"\ce Pardy • H. Lit to atop ·It spreading. This il no daughter had retired in thei

• tie, V:lnston Sta~ley, Richar~ time for cilmplaceney, The pol· home. The daughter heard . Sedrle, :i Dun~y •1.Austl~ Ke~ Ice, the pulpit, the parent and noin coming' from the llvin

Wt Y~ 11 8 er an on an · the teacher have a heavy re· room. On hweatigatlng, we are

. S~~e 'question arose as to 'the sponslblllty in setting the feet· told, she surprised two men . refusal to allow the Ro~al Bank of· the :children on the right who had forcibly ent!!fed the

: of canada to· erect banking of· road. · • house thinking, no doubt, ,it was , 'flees on tbe Topiall'Road. ~hese ' •We may be too late to unoccupied. · The young lady

plans, according to , proposal• straighten out that u~own was terrllfcd and screamed. and made would be· contrary to, the quantity of law·breakera in our the would·be criminals ran. The building regUlations. . . . : . mid_at ~oday, but we should be mother autfeerd, a heart attack.

The proposal· of Nathaniel able to -~e~uce :the .• number of Thla .Ia the kind of Incident we Tucker,,of Bimnett's Road · to !,0U~wers and· cut, d.own ·the d~ not ~ant happening here and build an. extension to his chip erlmln.al · gradultes • · U we ~~at Is one rmon why we must. ·stall' has been referred to . the have. to get more pollee to h~lp atop break-Ins by catching thci Depulment of -Health, ,· ; · . n. t1ils criminal clean-up -cam· p'rpetritorl ·')'llhout delay. '· . (

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EASTERN PROVINCIAL . .

AIRWAYS NEW MORNING FLIGHT NON-STOP ST. JOHN'S TO DEER LAKE EFFECTIVE AUGUST 21st (In addition to existing

flight services)

FOR

r

FLIGHT INFORMATION CALL 9-3000 OR 3-0-6-2 Harvey's)

Travel 4gency ).

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Page 6: .TR~~KS ~ ! Nova Motors: Ltd. randt Calls For Politi cal ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196108… · b~· 200,000 West Berliners in front of city East German

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s·ocial•Personal . .

~ (~olumn·-jC ,;· p·: .. :~;YACATION IIERE MacDona d, enplaned for 01.-

·~ ··! ·~ ••The llllsses Monica and Kalh· tawa on Tuesday. After a short I ... ... i '·I

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-:f;' !• leen Fleming, formerly of Har· vacation Jeanette will · enter :,o, ;;·:··liour Grace; 'but now of New Elmwood Schol {or Girls, Rock· l York, left for their home by clirte Park, Ottawa to begin the i • ·T:C.A. on August 10, after .fall semester .

. 1: •: .. spending a very enjoyable holi· RETURN HOlliE : • day with their sister, 1\lrs. ·I. ' h 11 d lllr. Stephen Ebsary ,._,.J,· Pump rcy at Be Islan . family of East Auroa,

and New ·o T-hey also visited Harbour y k t d

•··Grace and other places of in. 0 ~ ' re urne yesterday to ·l•>terment. While in St. John's. t~clr home art~r a very enjoy •

they registered ~t the New· a. le vacation With lllr. and Mrs. '.. .. 1oundland Hotel. J. Adams, Falkland Street.

'' I · · FOURTII ANNIVERSARY ' TO CHICAGO

, ·, ·, ·Congratulations to .Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Pogue of Chi· ·, .. !\Irs. John Callahan. 61 Gower cago, returned yesterday to her ·· Street. on their fourth wedding home. !\Irs. Por~:ue was visiting •. anniversary. Ther were married 1\!r .and !\Irs.· J. Arlams, Falk·

nt Corpus Christi Church, Kill· land Street, This is Mrs. Pogue's .. bride, by Rei'. Fr. Fennessey fir~t visit t~ Newfoundland, ·. Oll·August 17, 1957. 1\lrs. Calla· which she en1oyed very much. .. )IBn was the ,former 11!a~ Per· ·TO ROCHESTER

1 •• c.hard. Southside Road \\est. 111 . 111 • A 1 1 , :.; " . _ ISS anon 1 ams, who •1 1 ;,~;IN HOSPITAL was visiting her sister. Jl!iss · ' •t. . The man.v frienrls of .Mr. Barbara Adams. Pennywell Rd.,

:: I 1 . Thomas McBay, the well known retu1rned to her home in :. : ' ' I . watchmaker will re~ret to hear Roc lester, N.Y. yesterday, ·: 1 ~ 1 that he nnw a patient at the ·. I , 1 • ' • •General Hospital. · · . I

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Homemakers · WOOD GRAIN TILING

Synthetic floor tiling now comes In realistic wood grain ef· fects in rubber and solid vinyl.

. CLEAN WALLPAPER If wallpaper is smudged, rub

over ,the area lightly with an art-gum eraser. Hard rub· bing can damage embossing.

SHINE THOSE MIRRORS A bit of borax added to washing

water will bring shine to mir­rors.

·4, Family-Size FLEISCHMANN'S

.•

Fleischmann's new Fast-Rising Yeast now comes· to you in-Family-Size packages, twice as convenient as before!. · · · ·

. To intro.duce yo~ .to the. ne~ ~ize,. FI~ischm_an~'s .o.fr~r y~u. ON·E ·:or th<?5e la~ge p~~~g~s f!t~EtYou pay'for three, you get FOUR:! . · ·

Wi~h Fl~isch~~.n~'s,\you can:cou~t.· on 'bette~ baking results 'than::.e~er · before· because.'jt~is .always' firie.'and'uniform. · · · ~ .:·.' .. ·

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You~r~ ~u~e. of.,y~m~ results. too, b~au~ every package· is ~~ted~<f~esh ~Y~~(~o;rr~~g~~:~ith:yo~~ ,b~ing wheri you us~.Fleischmann'i.new,

. Fast-Risirig-::y easf · '' ,.: .. ·' ··. . · · ·--·- .. : · ,. . • ., ' I . . •

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.·. fLEISCHM~NNl NEWJASTRISING fEA·ST I' o'c ~ • ·,, \-

1'l"":, • ,', ••• '. >-' ,1, '• • '40 .,.',", .·.',: ~ _.,.,. •

•:~.;·~;~:;:~.:~:> ·! .. t:v~::v·;~':~:~fas·te~~becau"·e' ... ,·t~s:-·1inarr .:. .·\ ... · ... : ·; ... < ..... ' • . 1 • . . • . < - • • • .J ,lllllil'.

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. . THE DAILY NEWS, -sr. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, AUGUST 17

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for the price of FLEISCHM~NN'S .IS FAS.TER BECAUSE IT'S FINER I

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· Or~Jn~ry. Yeast:. Fleischmann's' Yeast ' . . . .

: See how .. the grai~s in. ordinary yeast are .irregi.d~r? .. Com· · pare tlte '.small, :finer grains in Fleischmami's ! · Because : ·Fleischnlann's is· finer~· it's far faster-acting and noticeably

faster ·ris(ng than· any.other yeast you can buy. Arid·your ·. bakiitj{is ·~stier, ,more flavourful than ever before •.

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, , Aspecls in a.m. arc I roJndul:iVe to sain fame, hoiiQl and success in generaL Lata in the day; however, transits bring impuhive, lftegular· and sarcas• lie turns of tnind, Extreme or radical ideas are warned again5t. P.M. configurations also .,am against Indiscretion and thought• less action. Romantic ·affairs are shaky.

Women

••• New car exports rose Futura • • • Sleel from 117 000 in l959 to 145. replace all bull1"0

000 in 196o or a gain of nearly <iu.ard's 24 ':"h~;;liD1II.a: ' · use near 25 per cent, but remamed below 1 14o-year ... ~iilion.

lhe kn·year average of 1950-59, two towen will L llllports far exceeded exports, the N cw J:nsJand cOli

The Day Under Your Sign AAIES (Bom t.lorc~ 21 to Apn1-19) LIBR~ (Sop!. 2l People ue JIOt apt to bC sociAl today, lC thi~_g:~ga W!'!''''.!';;;;bt,.,..,... po1111 bceause of lallruealld udt.,.cat, rl••· You

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polly's i . •

·Qutz CR~tER

..,.pu~.o•••TO TUE TOP FABRICS

felt has fell the toP of a heap ol

fabrics. It's nat hom~ decor

56w a stitch. is necessary for either the short

floor-length dn can have str~

pinked edges and to brass curtain 1

cover the rod. d seat pads on wo

Jllcbairs could be sm< cover for a foo~

11t ri~ht onto the It's easier than r

scarred wood. Anc all know wh1 circular felt

do for an old round I poll)': 1 understPnd recently answered a · ebout using family for the living room '

that they are no1 when properlr I

MeN. E MeN.: In the 5 · 1 came from, "I did stop using f;

<that is, painti 1 h e living room.

who had none bad a hard time m

grade. Crowding th1 ream with family 1

is a differer.t stm We have light beige drap~s brocade sola i

room. I ha \'e a sola I may or m~ I have some be<

blown glass in • orange that I'd like

in the scheme. \1

for carpet, four r s, lamps and

Furniture is d a r k mahogan~

like the room to and invil

that pi placed access01

lot to make a room i though the color !

1oiSt so.

Food Fm Everyone

saus:fyirlll summer thin st

sirloin steak and 1

and butter brieflv. m a Bourguignonne

place on Swedist slices. Deliclou

BOURGUIGI CRISPS

14 ae"lngsl IOUDd sirloin steak

fresh black pepper •

IDd dark Swedil bread slices

tl]1 ob cup buller

for dipping all visible fat f

and cut Into striJ thick or Into Arrange on pial

for garnish. serving sprinkle b and pepper. Ha\

of Swedish cris the oil and butt•

In small chafing di O[f top if desire1 Spear meat and

fat for about 1 n then dip in sat on piece of cri1

For dipping, s 'llHlav~'""" sauce o

IIUace. Or try th 1.\usauce Bour~ulqno

CE BOURGUIGI'i (Yield: m cUp!

hlla!J onion, choppe llll.u enrrot, mlncet

oil fionr

(~ounces) m !lema and pieces

eup red wine Cor 11 :::1•toek or bou lllo Ita eapoon tomato 1

IPoon salt . leaf

rround black ·onion and cat

son, add flour i

flour and veget but now score

""'"""20'··" ingredients b minuteS t

ot, .

Page 7: .TR~~KS ~ ! Nova Motors: Ltd. randt Calls For Politi cal ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196108… · b~· 200,000 West Berliners in front of city East German

itomer.'' can't n item :ended 1Ca1!1• ,n, she oming hing

, Steel 1t twO of ligbtsbipl !lhorelintl. • • !fbt

tradillOII• ~ will boJOCI pand cga~t.

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DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1961

polly's ' . Qutz

CRAMER TO TilE TOP OF

FABRICS )'ears, felt has felt its

ihe top of a heap of de­fabrics. It's natural

home decorator W-'' a stitch. is necessary for felt either the short cafe

· noor-!cngth draper· can have straight

pinked edj!es and , are to brass curtain rmgs

the rod. seal pnds on wootlen

,3111 could be smarter \,,rrr !or a footstool.

1,, 1 ;~ht onto the stool .. ,,., ca>icr than re!in· <:J:rrd wood. And of • . 1 all know what a

circul3r felt skirt · br nn old round k1b!e.

' · t undcrstPnd that · · · ;~rswcred a ques· . .' u~in~ family ror· ·the lil'ing room walls.

' that they are now ac· ~·hrn proper!~· fram·

~tr'\. , lfr".: ln the South, . I "th " 1 c2.n~e rom, ev

· did >top using family lthnt is, paintin~sl,

· .• 1 !iring room. illew· ~ho had none some·

'zd a hard time making ~;le. Crowding the lh·· :,:n with family photo· .. l• a di!fcrer.t story. ,,..,. \\'c hal'e light bci ~e ··;oiin hci~c drnpcs and n

hrocade sofa in the room. I ha1·e a forest !ofa I may or may not 1 hal'e some beautiful

b~o,rn ~~~s~ in amher thnt I'd like to in·

· il the >chcme. W h a t lor carpet, four n e II'

; r l, lamps and lamp Furniture is tradi·

~ark mahogany. We ~ike the room to I o o k

a n d im·iting.-

t h a t pleasant · placed accessories do make a room inviting

!hough the color scheme

STEAK STRIPS ON !WEDISH BREAD GWSOR MADDOX

Swedish idea for casual summer supper

thin strips of steak and dip In

butter brieny. Next, Bourguignonne sauce,

on Swedish crisp Delicious and

BOURGUIGNONNE CRISPS

U smingsl sirloin steak.

black_ pepper·

ltd dark Swedish crisp lrnd slices

cit butter

for dipping all visible fat from the

cut into strips about thick or into small

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Lovely Jerri Stewart, 17, of Oceanside, Calif., checks out the engine of an inboard racer prior to a test run. Jerri "Miss Inboard Boat Racing of 1961," will reign over the 1961 National Inboard Racing Championships in San Diego's Mission B~y August 25· 26·27, I

A Short Short Story . .,.,. it ... ,. ''Jir!!t • .

SUSPENSETTE WALDO'S REVENGE

By Leslie Arno Tonight was the 40th anni·

versary o£ Waldo Weinmelster'' appointment as Room Service (food and beverages) clerk at the Brumlelgli Arms Apart· ment Hotel. · Waldo was not congratulated on his many years of service; not a sou l even acknowledged his presence. Like his shabby desk. his old-fashioned upright tele· phone, the unshaded· light bulb that glared above him, Waldo was a fixture to be taken for granted at the B r u m 1 e I g h Arms.

. '. tomers, irate ·tentants. 1

And here he was . , , "cclc· 1

'brating" 40th year on the job. i It wasn't until Mr. Thomas

George LaMont, III, appeared in person at the office of the manager that anyone at the Brumleigh Arms knew that ' anything was wrong, I

Mrs. LaMont quivered at the ! manager's cheery greeting. I Th~n. she took the dish she ·

held in her hand and threw its con tents in the manager's face.

Snails in aspic, indeed, Mr. Gladson. If this is a joke, I am moving out! You know the very sight of snails makes me deathly ill!" \

No one on the bus paid the slightest attention to Waldo Weinmeister as he sat, a list in his hand, laughing softly to himself,

"Mr. Wharton, 14a likes his steak very rare. Burn! if to a crisp!" he read from his notes. "Mrs. Johnson, 12b, hates mashed potatoes and gravy. Send 1\er double portion with extra gravy! Mr. Martin,. 2lc allergic to shrimps. Send up double shrimp cocktail, covered with napkin!"

Waldo Weinmeister con· tinued to read and continued to

HOMEGROWN HAT - June Goad's hat was declared by the judges "the most beauli· ful" at an all-floral hat show in Somerset, Bermuda. Con· tcstants had to fashion hats out of plans which grow in Bermuda. Bamboo leaves -and daisies were the crowning touch to the palmetto base.

chuckle. Then, in a crisp, authoritative

voice, he said to all en the bus who might listen, "Now they'll know who's Waldo Weinmeis· chuckle.

We The ·Women

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The Doctoi: Says

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TEACH MANNERS WHEN ' TREE !\IAN) IS A 'TWIG' WHEN ALLERGEN AND , .

It's hard for a wife to teach her TISSUE MEET, HISTAMIN)!: •: husband good manners-a job APPEARS : j1

·

a man's mother should have 1 BY H:o\~OLD TIIOMAS HYMAN 1 l I · done when he was growing up. Whnt 1s. 11 that happens to hyper· 1,, r ::

A wife writes: senslltve persons when the of-~· 1 1

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"For five years I have been lending allergen e~erts its ef· ;, ; . i married to a man_ who is feels on the parttcular shock ., \ ·!.·. I basically fine· and who has a tissue or organ? · · 1

' J good education. But liis man- HISTAMINE • TYPEALLERGI • .· .; I ncrs leave a lot lo be desired. ES. In most acute allergies, .•. ; 1

It is embarrassing for me to the explanation for the .unex· .~ , ·: tell him things he should have ~cted disturbance is easily '· ; • learned at home d1scovered. For when · aller· :

"Why don't moth~rs teach their gen and shock tissue meet, · sons good manners, so a wife they produce a powerful :sub· J doesn't have my problem? stance called histamine.. . .

"I'm referring to such things as I What happens thereafter IS .act· .. i pulling out a woman's chair at I ua.lly a . cas.e of actue h1st~- , the table, offering his wife part l mme po1s,orung. We know th1s · · ' of the paper if he is going to because we can reproduce read at the breakfast table most allergic manifestations havin~ good table manners' merely by applying or inject· seeing a lone woman guest t~ ing a chemically pure solution her car, writing notes of thanks of histamin~. . for gifts and so on-.iust t h e On the happier s1de, we also common courtesies that mean know we can prevent, or at so much in everyday living." least ease, . the .distress· ·caus-

'J can't answer the question ed by a histamme·type · aller· "Why don't mothers t e a c h gy when we apply, prescribe, '·

their .sons good manners?" or administer an antihistamine But I can urge all mothers or a ~roduct that acts like the whose sons are still young en· secrehon of a portion of the ough to be taught to get on the ~drena.l gland !adrenaline, ep· job. mcphrm l.

It's a lot easier for a mother tc TUBERCULIN· TYPE ALLER· teach a school-age boy t h e GIES. In the case of tuber· fundam~ntnls of good manners colin-type allergies, the ex· and to correct his lapses than planation sti11 eludes us. In .. it is for a wife to try t!f.do the contrast to hlstamlne-type re­job after the boy has grown to actions, these tubercuJin:type manhood: anergies take months er' even

It's not just a boy's future years to develop. · · wife who will sul£er embar- Thus, by the time we become rassment at her husband's tack aware of their presence, it of common courtesy. That 1 may be impossible lo ··deter­lack will handicap him a 11 1 ?Jine the identity of the offend­through life. j mg allergen. Or to fi![ure out

So the time to instill good man- the mechanism by which it ners is when a child is young. produced its distressing ef· And it is every bit as impor· feels. tant to teach a son good man· ners as it is a daughter, de- Now, before we go furlhe~. let's spite the fact that many moth· get . clear on the meamng of crs are much more likely to lh1s label. The tuberculin-type ignore poor manners in a b , allergv owes its n~me to the than in a girl. ~ fact that the reacbon resemb-

Any wife who has to teach her les that. p~oduced when test husband good manners has 3 tubercu:m IS plac~cl on, or In-right to wonder why his moth· jected mlo .. the skm of a per-cr neglected that part of her son who. e1ther has act11'e tu. job. bercutos1s or who bas had a j

tuberculou~ infection and made ! a successful recovery. ~

Daily Recipe· To return now to the diffe,rencea 1. b'etween histamine ~ lvtle and r tuberculin-IVlle ll11P.r!!ic re~c- ~· lions. Unlike the former, the :·

!~l.ler are rarelv itchv or red: : they can11ot b<! reoroduc~d bv : use of hi~tamine: thPv c~nnot , . be nrevented or relieve!! bv :

There's only about another week of strawberries left, so make the most of them while they're here. A good way to preserve their freshness is by making jam. Another, and more un· common way, is to make strawberry marmalade. Try it just for a change.

AntihistAmines ~nd thr.v do not : resnond to nrorlucts that nos- ; ~ess thP. pronertiPs of adrena- : . ' line and epinephrin.

STRAWBERRY MARMALADE 3 cups prepared fruit 4 cups sugar 1 2~ ouuce box powdered fruit

pectin

Parth• because of these factors, I we've been slow to get our ~ teeth into the problem~ raised ~ bv tuberculin· tvpe .aller<rles. ; Rece~tlv. however, thin~5 h~ve · heen lookint! bril!hter. We be- ' l!in now to conMct certain manirestations with eertain specific allergens.

First prepare the fruit. Remove skins in quarters from o n e medium-sized orange and one medium-sized lemon. L a y quarters flat; shave off and discard about half of white A ~necies of streptococci with· part. With a sharp knife, slice rheumatic fever, a varietv o! remaining rind very fine. Add kidnev trouble (21omerulone-'i cup water and one-sixteenth obritis, l certain skin afflic· teaspoon soda; bring to a boil lions Cerythemas and purpur· • ·

1 and simmer, covered, for 10 asl and perhaps rheumatoid: .' minutes, stirring occasionally. arthritis: sulfa drugs with· ' , Cut membrane of peeled fruit periarteritis nodosum: tobac·, · . 1 sections and slip pulp out of co with thrombo·an~iitis oblil·! . 1

each section. Add pulp and erans: pine tree pollen with; 1

juice to undrained cooked rind sarcoidosis: solar radiation! : .,

' .,

and simmer, covered, 15 min· Cpboto-sensitivityl in the "huh · utes longer. Crush thoroughly terfly disease" !lupus ery· . , about one quart fully ripe thematosusl and related dil· strawberries. Combine fruits turbances, and gold and arsell· ~ and measure three cups into a lc salts in dermatitis exfolia •. f : 1' large saucepan. tivia, in which the entire sldn J ' "

Then make the marmalade, surface is shed. · lr •: Measure sugar and set aside. . p. · Add powdered fruit pectin to heat. Skim off foam with ( >., · !ruit in saucepan and mix well. metal spoon. Then stir . an d I~' · •' Place ever high heat and stir skim by turns for five m1nute! ;; . until mixture comes to a hard to c o o 1 slightly, tD pre- i!i boil. At once stir . in sugar. vent noating fruIt. CLadlc :r: Bring to a full rolling boil and quickly into glasses. , ov~~ ::~ boil ·hard one minute, stirring · marmalade at .once With • ~~; · · constantly. Remove from 1 inch hot parafhn. · ·

Arrange on platter with lor garnish. Just be·

l!ll'ing sprinkle beef with ~~~~ pepper. Have ready

oi Swedish crisp bread.

The lobby had been redone, the apartments redecorated the kitchen modernized, a new can· opy hung under a new electric sign in front of the hotel-but Room Service and Waldo Weir!'· melster had been Ignored. -------------------------------------·----

oil and butter to~et­cha!ing dish, skim

off top if desired. meat and hold in

for about 1 minute to thtn dip In sauce and, on piece of crisp hrend

For dipping, serve any · sauce or bnrbe·

~ace. Or tr;v the follow­~~e Bour~uiqnonne:

BOURGUIGNONNE m cups)

onion, chopped tarrot, minced

olt flour

.~1-ouneu) mushrooms "'1111 and pieces

ltd wine (or water) llotk or bouillon

tomato puree aalt

tear lround black pepper . anton and carrot In oil

lOll, add flour and cook llour and vegetables are

but now scorched. Add lnsredlj!nts and slm· minutes uncovered.

ANN BARTOSH - ... <IUBI lo both . body

·not only In · your of your life. . So

that It's clever lo. Such · sessions

a chronic habit. Go lo lied by' 10

BOW JEST-British .actress NIcky Allen pretends she is Robin Hood as she bends the bow In a London publicity pitch for her TV show. Could her suit be made of polson Ivy?

day a. U, dur·. . . . . . . . . nof aletPYr' R.: ilr?lKoratea. your personality,

ot sleep, ; makes you· more alive and . of aleep. -, a. ware,. ·: .

., ..

' In a way it was really wal­do's fault. He had never raised his voice i n complaint, never dropped a note in the suggcs· ter had brought the food to the tion box, never deviated from apartments. the pattern he had set 40 years Waldo sighed. ago. He arrived promptly at He received no gratuities as 5pm., pulled the string that did the waiters, he got no lighted the overhanging bulb, Christmas presents as did the set out his pencils and his chef, he was not warmed by the Room Service order pads and smiles of patrons as was the di· prepared himself for the abuse, ning room headwaiter. N 0, complaints and dressings-downs ·none of these acts of human that were to follow. kindness came his way.

Such was the nature of Waldo Instead, for 40 years, his car Welnmelster's life's work. ant was bent and beaten by in·

Room Service In an exclusive dlgan t callers, impatient cus· apartment hotel peopleq by the well-to-do consists of takelng orders over the telephone, com·. munlcating them to the chef and then checking o u t the Room Service tables as the wal· ters wheeled them past the desk

. toward the service elevator.

HOW TO MAKE

DISINFECTANT ·.·WHITEWASH

It sounds like a matter-of-fact It's simple, Inexpensive and job but It wasn't. effective. And it disinfects

First, there were the substl· while It maintains cleanliness In . tutlons on the table d'hote din· farm buildings. Dissolve one· ner, despite the printing on the pound of Gllletts Lye in . 51h menu which plainly ead "No gallons. of water and then. add substitutions On Table D'Hote 2~ pounds of water-slaked lime. Dinners." 1 · Brush, or better still spray, to

Then there were the appetite' drive , the disinfectant inlo pecularltes of the various ten· cracks, and rough parts of the anti. Those who wanted their surface. Before spraying, strain steaks burned to a crisp; those ·the fluid through a fine screen who wanted their steaks barely to prevent particles from clog­to nod to the fire; those who ging the sprayer. After spray­wanted their In 11 k warmed; lng, flush aparatus thoroughly those who Insisted on no Ice In with clean water. For free their water glasses: the list was booklet of other uses for Gllletts Infinite. . . . . . Lye, writer to Standard Brands

Then there were the tele· Ltd., 1550 Sherbrooke St. · W., phone-complaints after the.wal· Montreal •.

I'

-

IN SCHOOL OR OUT I 0 e

NEATNESS IS ESSENTIAL GIRLS' IUGH SCHOOL

UNIFORMS CLEANED AND FRESSED

SPECIAL

COUNTER

PRICE onty s1.oo

BRING YOUR UNIFORMS TO ,

MacCORMAC'S GEAR ST OR 1 A,DELAIDE ST.

DIAL 5181 - 5182- 5183

FOR QUALITY DRY·. CLEANING . '

\ -· , . ·: . . .· .. -. :-. - . . . . . . I - . - . I

. l

'. '.

.,

Page 8: .TR~~KS ~ ! Nova Motors: Ltd. randt Calls For Politi cal ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196108… · b~· 200,000 West Berliners in front of city East German

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EAMS HIP ·MOVEMENTS NFLD. GREAT LAKES Halifax August 21st, due St.

. STEAMSHIP LTD. John's A11gust 23rd . . : 0 GQ!fport left Montreal. Ar· M.S. Grebe sailing from Mon. ilving St. John's Aug. 17, lcav· treal August 24th( due St.

· !hi St. John's Aug. 19. John's August 28th, ; •nu·ndee left Montreal. Ar·

\

THE DAILY NEWS. ST. JOHN'S. NFLD.,

Capitol Now Playing __ ..;.;.. __ .... ___ ,_ -

"THE LAST Tll\IE I SAW ARCHIE" WITII JACK WEBB

· • :}vinS· St. John's, Aug. 20, Jeav· FURNESS WITIIY nnd CO., ;1: IJ!S Montreal Aug. 22, Ll~liTED D '" . •N . I S.S. Beeehmore leavl'ng Lon· ·. etermincd to have the great·

•,lJ ·; ovaport caving lllontrenl h · ·' A 19 · · don, England, for Corner Brook •1

' est !aug comedy of the year, · " : ~t . ug, , amv111g St. John's A 1

i United Artists has backed 1 ·:; ·:· ::~;Aug, 24, leaving St .• John's, Aug, ugust 2511. 1 · R b . ; '. ·;) 25. 1\I.V, Borgund leaving New , . o crt Mitchum, .Jack Webb,

• I . "' •G If t I , l\1 York Allgust 23rd dl'rect to St. II . ~lartll3 Hyer and France Nuyen .i; . .u por eavmg ontreal · h ·' I ",·. .. A 30 1 · st J h John's, Newfoundland, load1·n~ 1 · Wit some of the best com· I · •1,: . ug. , arr vmg . o n's, ~ r · t 1 · · d .. ··.'I :_·_-.; A " 4( I . St J l ' A general and refrl'!!erated cargo ·, . cc wns m e cvlslon an motion 'I

I: ~u.,. eavmg . o m s, us. -- · t · h • . · 6. at Bush Terminals, l'icr 4, ' : p1c urcs, m "T c Last Time I . '1

1:, • •Refrigeration. Brooklyn, N.Y. Furness, Withy Saw Archie," which opens at ;

• 1 & Company, Ltd .. A~~r.ts, I the Capitol Theatre. ·l ~ ;: ., GULF. AND NORTHERN "Newfoundland" left Boston 1 The comics all don uniforms · 1 . .. ·.·l · SHIPPiNG co. LTD. August 15 and Halifax August 1 to kid the military in a story '

l , , , ••·er::us leaving Charlotte· 19, due St. John's August 21. ' based on a misfittcd outfit of ! ., . • • lt 1 town Aus. 18, leaving Pictou, Sailing again same day for THE CRUCIFIXION-"The most beautiful sequence to reach the screen"- World War II'S US Armv Air i · ·i; I : . Aug. 19, miving St. John's I Liverpool. that's the description of the crucifixion scene in the new film, "Barabba.s." Corps. Known as the civilian '

· , ; , 1 21

, , pool Atlg. 18, due St. John's Filming it against a total eclipse of the sun was the idea of producer Dina De 1 were an untapped pool of om· 1 ...

· il !'' · · Aug. 21, )cn•llng St. John's Aug./ "Nova Scotia" leaving Liver· Pilot Training Personnel, they 1

·I;:,· , ,· . •Fergus leaving Charlotte- Aug, 25. Leavins for Halifax

1

Laurentiis, who gambled $16,000 that such a phenomenon could be. photo- • aged, overweight, eager patriots· · ' .. '· ,, town Aug. 25, leaving Pictou. and Boston Aug. 26, due Hali· graphed. 'who were civilian pilots. In·. TRANSPARENT STEEL-It doesn't \;1ke a

'·•" , Aug. 26, arrivinl: St. John's fax Aug. 28 and Boston Aug, stead or flying planes, they en· · · 1 '. ;,·. · d"d d d d · K p man wilh X-ray VISIOn to sec t 1rou~h sl""l

! , \ •· Aug, 28, leaving St. John's, Aug. 31. Leaving Boston Sept. 1 and j 12 Sailing again same day for ~ ' up gropn c omg · . . . "' ) •: ·I •Fergus leaving Charlotte· Halifax Sept. 5, due St. John's

1 Li~crpool an~ other work details as huck. days. Th1s young lady, hkc marw o~her 1

! · 1. l town; Sept. 1. leaving Pictou I Sept. 7. Sailing again same ' T , pnvates until a small group . can do it with ease. The paper thin piece of I ' . ' Sept. 2, arriving St. ·John's da~· for Liverpool. ATLANTIC ~t·RITI~IES emperance 'found. an "out" that _made them i rolled to a mere (j/1000 or an inch. ath;eres 'It'

! . . N dl d I II .. II the biggest "gold bncks" or the . . . . 0

,

.• Sept. 4, Ieavins St. John's, Sept. ' ewfoun an " caving Lh·· LINE . "'ar, .1 parenc_'-' by be~n_!! etched wtth 441.:!~2 hole;:, Th.e · ' 4. erpool Sept. 6, due St. John's 0' J u -~~ 1 •Fergus leaving Charlotte· Sept. 12. Leaving for Halifax ~I.V. Borgund, Loading Chill, · Th Louis Nyc and Don Knotts . mch dwmeler pteces of steel are made h~· a St.

.; I'· ·,. town, Sept. 8, lea\'ing Pictou and Boston .3ept. 13, due Hall· reefer and general cargo at' oughts . gained fame through their reg.: :Minn., photoengraving firm for rolor telcrision

I. Sept. 9, arril'inl! St. John's, fax Sept. 15 and Boston Sept. New York and leaving August 1 ular appearances on the Steve i ---·--·- _ ,. : \ I Sept. 11, ·leaving St. John's, 18. Leaving Boston Sept. 19 23rd {or St. John(s dir~ct, ar· . Allen Show on television and!

1

:; /r Sept. 11. and Halifax Sept. 23, due St. riving August 29, leaving Aug· : later through other TV shows I , . 28. .John's Sept. 25. Sailing again ust 30th for Corner Brook. Since at this time we fillS· I future date develop the ration· • and films. Nye recently scored :

. ,1

• : •Refrigeration. same day for Liverpool. S.S. Theron lqading cargo at pend our series for. a summer ale of his points.. for until i a hit in United Arlists "Facts ! "Nova Scotia" leaving Liver- , New York and leaving Sept. break we cannot g1ve you all much more effective measures I of Life'' with Bob Hope and 1

1'\FLll. CANADA STEAM· pool Sept. 22, due St. .John's' 6th for Saint .John, N.B .. Bali· of Mr. William Plymat's arsu· are taken, slaughter on the, Lucille Ball. and Knotts. the : SHIPS LIMITED. Sept, 29. Leaving for Halifax fax, N.S., arriving St. John's ments ~upporting. hi_s f?rr~mla I highway will t:Oll~inue. In sum· ncr v o us phychology testing i

, . l\I.S. Fauvette sailing from and Boston Sept. 30, due Hall· Sept. 13th, leaving Sept. 14th for curhmg the d~mkr~g driver. 1 ~ary, t_hen, here IS our conclud-! corporal of "No Time for Ser- : ·1 Hali!ax August 18th, due St. fax· Oct. 2 and Boston Oct. 5. for Corner Brook. This vessel \ye here summanze ~1s conel~1·1 m¥ ~rhcle, as glean~d fro~ Mr.· gcants," is the deputy marshal ;

John's August 20th. Leal'lng Boston Oct. 6 and Hali· is Canadian Registry and will s10ns and list the pomts of h1s /Wilham N. Ply mats thes1s:. I on the "Andy Griffith Show." 1

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M.S. Bedford 11 sailin~ from fax Oct. 10, due St. John's Oct. load car~o at Canadian ports. program. Perhaps we can at a Our trouble has begun w1th Harvey Lembcck and Robert· · · .. · ·· ·· · ______ .. ___ ........ -- .. ----·--.. . ...... -------·--·-- ----------· _ ........ --·-···----·-· 1 the offense Itself. We have' Strauss began their ri~c to film :

,..::~ ....

40,000 READERS DAILYI 40,000

POTENTIAL BUYERS ' '

YOU GET

THE

BEST

COVERAG.E

OF NEWS IN THE

DAILY NEWS

40,000 PEOPLE CAN'T BE WRONG.

'

READ. IT EVERY . -DAY!· ..

\

• . .I

I. \. ' . ' f .· ''

• been proceeding in reverse in fame in "Stalag 17" and each ,

llthis area. \~e ~aye said in sub· has s!nce risen to e1:en greater ; stance that 1t IS Illegal to oper· prommcnee as c om e d i a n s. '

'ate a motor vehicle while "in· j Strauss has had top hillin" in : ! toxicated". And th.us we have \leading movies and stage ;ro-1 1 r.lunged ourselves mto a hope·' ductions. Lcmheck has become , I less argument as to what we . familar to TV viewers as Ser. i :mean. i gent Bilka's budd1• Corporal · 1 The drinking driver looks at Rocco Barbella, in Phil Silvers' I

! this offense and almost laughs "You'll Never Get Rich" series ·out loud. He feels he can safe· James Lydon, a veteran of over : ly drink and drive to a very 100 movies and 500 "live" TV lconsidcrahle extent. He thinks dramatic appearances at only llhat he will not get hopelessly 137 years of age, has been sue-: drunk and that unless he does) cess fully doing comedy since I no jury is going to convict him; his childhood days as "Henry iof the offense. We might as

1 Aldrich" of the movies and TV;

1 well say to him: ·•you must not 1

and with roles in such comedies : , en-gage in any nnreasonable; as "The Time of 'lour Life" . ldrinldng and driving." I and "Life With Father", Del-', i Then our troubles have been, Moore and Joe Flynn are two i !aggravated hy the penalty. I· more who have received their , ! ha1•e suggested that the se\'Cr· baptism of fire as comedians : : ity of the penalty is not really on TV. Del, through his' associ· : 'important. The certainty is im· at ion with Gerry Lewis, and ; portant. Often by increasing Joe through his association with : the severity of the penalty we . George Gobel. However, both ~ only insured that the penalty I have also had numerous credits · would not he imposed .. We set ·

1

for serious roles in major TV i up_ mand?tory suspcns1ons of: and feature films. They play : dnvcrs licenses for long per· i G.l. buddies in their present

1iods. We set up severe jail roles and some of their K.P ..

/terms and even set up a year -----in prison for a repeated of. fensc. And we are still doing these things.

We could at this point de· cide that the problem is really insoluble. The jurors and courts won't do a job anyway. But I tell you frankly that this problem is soluble, and if we are as smart as we must be we will simply "out·think" the drinking driver and revise our whole system to set up a really effective "malign authority," and we will make our drinking driver "see" bottom. Then we will solve his problem and at I the same time we will be solv-

1 I ing the problem of society. Here Are The Things We Need

1 (1) An offense or offenses in terms of "blood" alcohol."

(2) "Implied consent" to ehem· leal tests for proof or driv· er impairment due to alco· i l1ol. I

I (3) Integration of these offen· I ses with "point systems.'

I; (4) Unusual techniques of en· forccment . i (5) Insurance industry action.

IRISH ROSE-Flaming red· haired Nova Lee O'Shea looks as though she might be one of the flowers herself as she smiles through this bouquet in Salina, Kan. i We might be tempted by all !

I manner of foolish rational!za-1 i tion into avoiding t_he fa~mg i

I of the problem of takmg action. 1 ··..-. r-~'='""'~,,,...,.~,7r~.---..... We might be tempted to think I , of the "rights" of drivers, etc. I i I But can we ignore the rights

I of others on the highway? We . might' be tempted to think we must not get too tough or we might once in a while hurt someone a little too much­but can we ignore the injuries of little children who are run ·down~ No matter how we start :on such excursions, we will al· i ways meet ourselves coming

I back. We might as we!l ~uit re·

I sis ling and face up to 1t, and in the slang of the day-·•get Lhe show on the road''.

All of us must join an edu· cational effort to tell evcry011e the facts about impairment, its effect and in general the dan· gers 'of driving an automobile after having consumed alcohol. We can bring the subject to the attention of traffic safety au· thorities, educators, civic lead· ers

1 law enforcement agencies,

and most important of all, to the attention of the Legislators who represent . us. We must, as we go about these tasks, al­ways keep clear in our minds the fact that this is a problem· that is soluble, and that lives are being lost every day that solution is delayed. · All of us must again and again face the fact that we must solve this problem because we simply cannot afford to pay the ter· rlble price of. not solving it.

· BOO! - A Ia s k an combat troops are the first in thr world to wear the new Jill 7 protective mask. The lower , mask, unlike the old one. upper allows· a parka hood to fit closely around face for warmth. The new mask also offers protection against chcmical·biological · radiolo­gical agents.

"I didn't know I was loaded· doesn't work as an excuse foJ the drunken driver.

-------·-~··-··---· .... --· .. - ... -.-...... _ ...

NOW PLA.YING

ALSO - :'\0\'ELTY

TIMES OF SHOWS: E\'ENING. SHOWS: i O'CI.OCI\ ~ ~J.OO.

~IATINEE: 2 P.~l.

NEXT ATTRACTION "FLA;..IE OVEH fNDIA'' \\'IT I I L.\l"RE\ BACALL- KENNETH ;..roHE- HEHBERT

LG:\1 IN "FLA;..IE OVEH 1\Dl:\"­ADVENTURE - THRILLS - COLOR

TOMORROW

THE TRUTH ABOUT TEMPLE DRAKE ...

HER SIN­AND HER

REDEMPTION!

ALSO - UP TO THE ~UNUTE NEWS '

TIMES OF SHOWS

EVENING SHOWS: 7 O'CLOCK - B.OO. MATINEE: 2 P.;..I.

LAST TIMES TO-DAY "PORTRAIT OF A MOBSTER" _...

FOR THE FIRST.TIME AT SPECIA~ FAMILY PRICES "BEN HUR" OPENING

AUGUST 22nd .

1

·sf.C.TIC , ..

'':.;,,Bpar1tea by her : David and

'fe left last weel ~~' 1 ' the· province

and from there llaSS· -Claudine Fiand~r • . spending an enJoY 15with her grandpar

t Capt. and ~~~d Miss R. Fiam

-susie Geor!lc., St. .11 •uest of MagistratE ' Trickett. -Walter Bradley,

· was the weekend aunt and cousin, M and ~Irs. H. Murce ·-~nd ~Irs. Da \'is F

to Buchans on F spending a \'acatio

Grace. -and Mrs. Ernest B1 Buchans. spe

at the Ford ho1 Grace.

Stephen Hall h a: to St. John's, al

to ~lr. and !\Irs. I · Woodl'ille Road.

many friends of Warren Water

regret to lear hospital a

last week for and will wish

\'isitors to St. , were Mrs.

and ~Irs. William and son Ross, wl

riliting !\Irs. Ashb1 ].Irs. Charle~ 11 on Thursday n1

back to their h N.D.B .

Page 9: .TR~~KS ~ ! Nova Motors: Ltd. randt Calls For Politi cal ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196108… · b~· 200,000 West Berliners in front of city East German

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NEWS

:-9.00 ..

DAY

CTION II The Daily. News SECTION II

r Grace Is

.--GRACE-Mrs. Lo icd b)' her sons

oal'id and the left last week to th~ province to from there to

Fiander, St. . ,~e:1dill~ an enjoyable ';~th her grandnarents · capt. and 1\lrs.

lliss R. Flander.

ST. JOH~'S, NFLD.1 THURSDAY; AU~UST 17, ~961

Sudden Passing· Mr. ~. O'Keefe

HARBOUR GRACE-The sad and sudden passing of 1\lr. Daniel O'Keefe, which took place at his home at Harbour

Concepti.on Bay News ~~~C:st~t~e~~~:a;/~e!~:~~~ And The Rain Preparations Retarded blow to his wife and family, C f f ' ·ch'ld 1 · as well as to a large circle of ame Or 41r I reri S

Around -Bell·lsland

friends here and elsewhere. · - f d The late Mr. O'Keefe who had HARBOUR GRACE - The HARBOUR· GRACE - Mr. Un BELL ISLAND,. (Stafl)-Mr.

reached his scventy.flfth Year, answer to the prayers of many Lorne Wakelin, Stadium man' and Mrs. Mike Clarke, West was born at Harbour Grace and thousands of thoughtful peo· ager and director of the annual CARBONEAR, Aug, 10-The Mines, ·are back home, follow·

Attend Convention

BELL ISLAND, (Staff)-Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kienity of this . town will attend the United Worshippers District Assem bly of Jehovah's Witnesses at Comer Brook, from August 2.2 to August 27. Mr. Kienitz is the Witnesses minister here. The assembly will be held along the same lines as that held at Yankee Stadium last June

Football received his education at the pie came in the very heavy rain fair which is to take place at· first house-to-house collection ing a three-week vacation on Roman Catholic Academy. He of Sunday morning, How wei· the Conception Bay Recreation to be held here in aid of the the Canadian Mainland. The

t~ 11arh~ur Grace on spent several years in the come were the rain showers can Centre during the week of Retarded Children's Fund has Clarkes visited their son John BELL ISLAND, (Staff)-. i''\udcd ~lr. nnd Mrs. U.S.A where he held a re· only be understood by those September 11th to 16th, re· been completed. It was organ· and his wife, the former Joan Only one round is to be played ··:~~and ~on Fred and sponsible position up to the weary fire fighters and home ports that preparations are well ized by Mrs. J. s. Pike and can Kennedy, Town Square. John in the senior football league .• 1 u:yr1 all or Gander. time of his retirement when he owners who for days had battled ahead for this much antici· be classes as very successful, is serving in the Canadian series this season. The Lions

- returned to his nati1•e town to against the relentless fires pa~ed event. the amount raised being six Guardsmen and is stationed at Club here promoted· the re-[iJU P~,·nr arrh•ed relax in the enjoyment of fam· which threatened their prop- The prize .lists have been com· hundred and one dollars ($601.). Ottawa. organization of senior football

nn Saturday to Illy life. A daily walk about erty and devastated the country. pleted and have been mailed out lllrs. Pike had as collectors the • • • on a trial basis for this year. .:~c; h~rc an~ is the town gave him the opportunity side from which. in many cases, to all communities in Con· following ladies who. along Mr. and 1\lrs. William Kent, Five teams entered and the .··\·• ;l•:~r. Mrs. Wi\· to mPct and com•ers~ with old came the source of supply for ception and Trinity Bays. with Mrs. Pike, are to be ·con· Davidson Avenue, are spending I effort. has proven .success!~!. , :-;,,~d Street. friends on current topics and their needs. All booths have been disposed gratulated upon their efforts their annual vacation visiting I ~ronhers, Wtlh 6 pomts are ~n

;·'!<' P::rmit0r accom· ,;·~(i,·; Deanne Shep·

hom~ on Sunday f:Nn Cal~ary. Alta.,

h1d bc=n \'isitin~ aunt an~ uncle

. l!r;. Donald Nurd)'.

lo recall historic incidents of The perils and anxieties of of, and the following commit· in behalf of these less fortun· their daughter Rita, Jllrs. Blair ftrst pl~ce. The final game. 111 Harbour Grace subjects on the people of the communities tees are being directed as ate than themselves: Mesdames Kennedy, at Toronto. the swes, between Frontiers which he was well read and of Brownsdale, New Chelsea named, Livestock, Graham John Gillespie, Fred Powel\, • • • and C.L.B. the two outstanding w~ll informed. and others, cannot be described, Sparkes, Shcarstown: Poultry, Leonard Pike, Clayton Pottle, Patricia and Ann Lawton, teams in the league, will take

lllr. O'Keefe had been In ap· but the heroism and endurance Ralph Noel; Fisheries, Dave George Hedges, George Stenia· daughters of 1\lr. and l\lrs. Keith place during the coming week. parent good health up to Wed· of Its people and of all who Garland, Lower Island Cove; ford, George Hall, John T. Lawton are spending a few This game promises to pro· ncsday when he was stricken lent a hand will go down in the Handicrafts. l\lrs. W. B. Ken- Pike, Janet Howell, Frank Hus- weeks here with their grand· vide real competition. Local fans sud<lenly and in a few minutes history of this province as it nedy and Horticulture, Mrs. S. sey, Roy Moores, John Hogan, parents, Jllr. and 1\lrs. L. J. Law- will no doubt be present to see had passed from this life into records the devastation of the W. Moores. · Graham Moores; James Moore, ton, Town Square. the last game for the season.

i Grt•r~e. St. .John's. the Great Beyond. worst calamity of our time. Mr. Lo Pike Is chairman of Joseph Chubbs, Chester Murray, • • • · o{ ~lagistrate and Left to mourn are his wile, 1\llndful of the tragedy of the fair committee with Mayor Joseph George, Clifford, Gar- Catherine Whelan, R.N., Softball (the former llliss Bride Doyle). August 17th, 1944, when the Alec D. 1\loores as vice chair· land, Jake Cotter, John Oates, Town Square, is leaving in a - five sons, Ronald and Frank in town of Harbour Grace in a man and !llr. Ralph Hodgson George Murray, Ursula Penney, few days, to visit relatives In BELL ISLAND, (Staff)-The

1\'alter Bradley, St. the U.S.A., John at Whltbourne, few hours, suffered the loss of treasurer. Misses Georgie Ash, Louise Montreal. Green team defeated last Place ri! the wee\tcnd guest Edward at Gander and Charles homes, church and property, As has been usual in the past Davis, Margaret King, Ruby • • • Aces 6·5 in a close contest. to

ami cousin, Mrs. R. at Argentla and one daughter, by a devastating fire, the hearts two years, Friday has been Pelley and l\lrs. Baker. · Thomas Whelan Sr .. Wabana, make secure the team's first d llrs. H. Murce\1. lllarle (Mrs. lilac Lee) of Ar· 11f our citizens united in sin· designated as Children's Day is receiving medical treatment place standing in the senior

- !!entia. One surviving sister, cere sympathy to those of the and special attractions for the Ob't at the General Hospital. St. softball league series. with 42 d .1lrs. Da\'iS Fairlie I ~lis~ Annie O'Keefe resides at communities in Trinity South young folk are to be featured I ua ry John's. Mr. Whelan is reported points. When the regular series

to Buchans on. Frida~· I Harbour Grace. To the bereaved and Bonavlsta North, whose on that day. Saturday's parade to be impr01·ing. is completed, a playoff series :et.din~ a \'acatJOn at I family the sincere sympathy of anxiety went on from hour to of the Armed Forces, etc., CARBO NEAR, Aug. tO-Ex- . • • • 1 will he played for the champion· : Gme. their man~· friends is extended hour, day to day and week after promises to out;do all previous Naval Reservist Fred Clarke, Robert, son of Mr. and lllrs. ship.

- at this time. week. efforts in . this feature of the said to be the smallest man to Jack Nolan, is home from hos· · r.d lirs. Ernest Bartlett I The funeral which was largely When on Friday a call lor fair, which will take on more have served in the Royal Navy pi tal and feeling fine. Ca rbonea r

Examination Results

SPANIARD'S BAY - Holy . Redeemer Anglican School, Spaniard's Bay:

GRADE XI (Honours)-CJ.ar. ice Barrett, Janet Vokey, Ed· ward Neil.

GRADE XI (1\latriculatlon )­Frances Hutchings, Marion Hutchings, Vema Bishop.

GRADE XI (Pass)-Chlrley Gosse, Marjorie E. Mercer, Olga Smith, James Crane, Calvin Gosse, Josiah Gosse, Lee Gree· ley, l\iarion Snow, Gordon Vokey.

GRADE X-Enid !!arrett, Calvin Barrett, Elsie Clarke, James Gosse, Hunter Gosse, 1\lelvin l\fercer, Allan Neil, Joseph Noseworthy, Betty Reid, Gordon Smith, Clayton Vokey.

GRADE IX-Joyce Chipman, Rosella Drover, Claudine Hutch· ings, Shirley Neil, Annie Por·· ter, Rosalind Reid.( Sylvia Sheppard, Doreen Smith, Geo. Janes, 1\lax Bishop, Lloyd Chip· man, William Chipman, Wilfred Drover, Jimmy Dwyer, Ab· salom Gosse, Mervin Janes, David Neil. William Peddle. Abram Sheppard, Aubrey Smith, Keith Vokey, Robert Vokey.

Spaniad's Bay Personals

SPANIARD'S BAY-Mr .• Toe Gosse with daughters 1\!arilyn and Judy are here from Tor· onto on a holiday with )ir. and 1\lrs. Harry Gosse.

~lr. and 1\lrs. Ches. Vaughan and children (5) are spending this week with Mr. and )Irs. Robert N. Seymour.

· Btlchans. spent the ' attended. took place !rom his help in evacuating people {rom of the carnival style, and •"hich in World War II passed away 1 • • • • 11 the Ford home at late residence. Bennett's Lane some of these communities went will offer several enterbinment at Corner Brook on Wednesday Well knovin · Town Square Grace. on Friday morning with Re· out, there were many whose attractions of which th0 details August 2nd., aged sixty years. druggist. L. J. Lawton, left this

- quiem Mass at the. Cathedral homes were ready with hospi. will be given next wee;;, Deceased was very well known week. to attend the annual

l\fiss Greta Blackmore ol St. Newsy Briefs . .T~Im's spent Ia.st weekend here

I w1th her cousm ~ilss Carol

!·tphen Hal\ has re·!· of the Immaculate Conception.· tality. Fortunately the immedi· All in all, !here will be mu~h here, having lived here until he 1 meelin~ of the ~an.adian Phar· :~ St. John's, after a Interment was in the family ate need passed but should such to attract and please the pubhc joined the Royal Navy and for

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macculical Assoc1al10n. )lr !nd ~Irs. Roher! plot of the Roman Cathelic occur, there can be no doubt of in this year's carnival-fair and some time after his discharge. • • •

Road, Cemetery, the willingness of a people who the committees look forward to Moving to St. .John's he resided 1

Sgt. Rendell. chief of th_e

friends of ~Irs. Waler Street to learn that

hospital at· St. week for obscr·

1'-d will wish her a

1isitors to St. John's were :\1 rs. J. c;;.

d ~Irs. William Ash· son Ross, who had ~Irs. Ashbourne's Charle~ and Mr.

Town Council Repairs Roads

remember August 17th, 1944, to big attendances and many eX· with his brother, Mr. James R.C.~I.P. detachment here, 1s help wherever possible. hibits, in order to make Ibis Bull, and a few months ago he back after spending a month's

On hearing the story of two year's event the best and big. went to Corner Brook to see vacation touring Newfoundland. newsmen !rom Radio Station gest yet. his mother, who was ill and The sergeant was accompanied CJON, an appeal which was shortly after he was stricken by his wife and children. made through the efforts of p bl• with the illness that caused his • • • Rev. L. A. Ludlow and Mayor U IC death. Surviving are his mother Corporal John Re\iga, RCi:IIP I A. D. Moores received support Complal"nts Mrs. John Butt, of Corner i officer at Fer~yland, spent two from many and a truck load of Brook, three sisters, 1\lrs. Har·1 days here this week. Corp. men from North Eastern Fish· ris and Mrs. James Penney, at Religa was formerly attached to eries went to Winterton to lend HARBOUR GRACE - From Corner Brook, and ll_lrs. (Ca}lt.) I the RCMP d.eta~h"!ent here. assistance. time to time, we are asked to l\lonk, S. A., at Bunn, and one

The men of the Harbour write in the Harbour Grace brother, James, in St. John's, I . !llrs .. James .Wicks, Wesley. Grace volunteer fire brigade nOtes of matters which in most to whom we tend.er sincere

1. Vl~lc, 1s spendmg a {ew days ·

have played their part with instances do not meet with the sympathy. w1th her brother, lllr .. Jack Le· those of the brigades of Bay appro1•al of those who make the Funeral took place on Sunday

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Drew, 1\lcmorial Street. Roberts and Carbon ear. On request and occasionally (and afternoon from the Salvation • • • Tuesday, August 1st, relays of this we are always glad to be Army Citadel, where Capt. Amongst those to be married

CARBONEAR - 1\lr. Arthur Vokcv Coleman. a union representative • · _ of the Carpenter~ Union from I Mr. and ~Irs. AI Smith left Toronto, was m town .on on saturday for a holiday via Thursday (today) on umon

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~Irs. Ron Noseworthy is pres· ently visiting with her mother in English Harbour West. Fortune Bay.

! 1\lr. and :.rrs. Gary Cvincs I and son from Curlin~ ;•re here f on holiday as the · ~ue;t• of . :llrs. Caines' mother. 'Irs. :\'ath : :llercer.

()]l!n Smith of G~nder i~ ' spendin~ a holida~· he:·· with her aunt, il!rs. Arthur Gac:e.

HARBOUR GRACE - The Harbour Grace Town Council has been giving attention to the roads leading to Lady Lake. Long Hill has been graded and gravelled and in this connect· ion we. have been asked by one of our older citizens who Is ~nterested in the names of roads and streets within the town to state that !here Is no such road as "Long's Hill" and that road so often misnamed is definitely "LoJlg Hill."

·Bannerman Lake Road Is now being gravelled and graded and several of the unpa1•ed roads have been oiled.

firemen from Harbour Grace able to do) of matters which Cull conducted a funeral service here during I he month of Aug. went to Brownsdale and re· are approved of. that was atteniled \:iji many rcla· ust are: Mary Browne· and Bill I··•IBII mained there until Au.~ust 3rd. In order that these requests lives and frien'as; ·'A 'large con: McLean.; on Sah~rday, August --'---'--~-

Mr. anrl !\Irs. E'tgcnr (!nc~c accomn~nicd hv ~!r.' and Z'lrs. J. J. Young of St. ,John·,,. >:P on holida\' on the Can:·li~n mainland.-B. Kennedy left .sat·

Dtncer Colorado, he the supreme con·

the Knights of Co· held there.

Kennedy, R.N., the Corner

is spending her at the home of

~lr. and Mrs. W.

»icllael Stapleton and llichael and · Michele,

\'isiting Mr. M. P.

~ln. Roy Yetman of are spending their

touring Conception their aunt. and

and ~Irs. H. T. Par· Tuesday, Mr. Yetman of Mr. Rov Yetman,

· i of this town but years residing at

-!etty llae Simmons of Df the Nfld. Light and

!l St. John's. Is spend· annual l'acation with

~lr. and Mrs. G. W.

Altention may also be called to the fact that although . cer· lain roads are distinctly mark· ed as ONE WAY ROADS car drivers persist in ignoring these signs. This will go on until an accident occurs and In one in· stance where there Is a blind corner at the centre of a cer· lain road this may very well occur If drivers continue to ig. nore. signs deliberately or be· cause they fail to read them.

Kennel. Club HARBOUR GRACE-A meet·

ing of the Conception Bay Ken· nel Club was held during the first week of August, .at the residence of Mrs. R. Nutbeem, show secretary. · · The ·attendance· Included club members and a large number of friends Interested in hunt· ing, etc. · They were shown two excel· lent films depicting the use of pedigree do"s as retrievers on flcld,g marsh and lake. ·

when they were succcss!ul in 'may be aired and possibly be course of people followed the.). 19th, With a Nupllal 1\Tass cere­helping to save the Unl)ed read by those whom they con· flag covered remains to the 1_ mony· at St. 1\lichacl's Church. Church and homes from de· cern, we shall, from time to cemetery on the hill where ! the Front; also to be married struction by fire. Ume, use one or more of the Comrade Hoivard Snow. presi· : during the following week.

On August lOth, Harbour questions which are being dent of the Carbonear Branch :Nellie Kelly and Bill Kennedy, Grace firemen went to ~cw asked, of the Canadian Legion, con- 1 with a Nuptial Mass ceremony. Chelsea, where the power house The following is one which is dueled the Veterans' service I • • • was in danger, and again on being heard most frequently of and veterans of both wars drop- I Vince H):nes, a forr~er resi· ' Saturday, when .the ~ew C~el· ·late: , pcd their final tributes on the

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~e~t of th1s com~umty. now I.

sea fire was at 1ls hc1ght, ftre· "Why are baby carriages, go· casket. livmg at St. John s. spe_n~ . a f

men left here at 7 p.m. and re· carts and their attendants per· few days here reccnlly VISJtmg 1

mained until noon o~ Sun~ay milled to crowd the lower st~ps Exa·m Results 1 friends. • • • ' when the provldellhal rams leading to the Federal Build· I . i had cooled off the fires ·and ing?" lllr. and Mrs. Jnn Kearley of· were continuing to considerably This has become such a prac· ANLICAN CENTRAL HIGII 1 New York, are presently l'isit-deaden the burning embers. lice that those who have busi· SCIIOOL ing relatives and friends here.

The continuation of the rain ness in the Post Office and HARBOUR GRACE - The jlllrs. Kearley is the former on 1\londay gave more relief to other departments find it diffi. results of the June public exam· I Edith Larmswood. the Front. the firefighters and helped to cult each afternoon to get a !nations were received here on • • • ease the anxiety of all concern· passage-way to the steps leading 1 Thursday afternoon, a n d I 1\!r. and Mrs. John Ka:nnagh ed, but the ·battle Is not over, to the building. brought happiness to many and i arc back home, followmg a and the fight will continue until disappointment' to not a few.

1 mo~or tour of the Canadian i

the danger has passed and may Personals Congratulations are extended I mamland. , that time come quickly and ef· to the successful candidates ------------fectuaUy. - and best wishes for better re· ! •

Dies At Sydney N.S.

HARBOUR GRACE - Mr. suits the next time for the 1 Rodenck Pasha. John Payne, and Mrs. Nicholas Thomey who unsuccessful. . Lawson Rogers, Ch~rlcs SheP· motored from New York re· GRADE IX pard, James Sheppard, Walter cently to spend a month's va· (Not In Order of Merit) Verge, Edward Winsor. cation In Newfoundland, are at Donna A11ey, Ida Babb, Eva . GRAD~ X Harbour Grace. Mr. Thomey, Blundon, Rosalind Cumby, E~1c Chafe, \ tolet Crocker, who holds a responsible posi· Sandra French, Olive James, 1\larJe Denty, Lorna French, lion In New York is a son of Patricia Jordan, Thelma Noel, Robert French, ~lcnda ~odde~, Mrs. lit Thomey. Mary Noseworthy, Glenys Par· ~oy Janes, Kc1•1n 1\lartm, Ltl·

The Willi;~m Hc:ldrr5o11< ~II five. spent Sunday at Whit· bourne and )Jontia)' at Argcntia.

~lr. and )Irs. Sol Vol:cy rc· tnrncd from their trio to

i Hcspelcr. Ont.. on Saturda)'. I , )Jr. and :llrs. William Chip· : man arrived on Tuesday lnvin~ I ~pent a holidav visitin,'.! with i rclati\'es at Halifax and Bo3ton. ! I ;\Irs. Winston Sheppard and i son Noel lca\·es this week for I Twillingatc.

I Visiting ;l!r. and )Irs. C. B.

I Randell here last week were: ;llr. Charles Bragg and his

· father from Poucl1 Cove. ?llr. anrl Mrs. J. ~Jouland. Deer Lake, ~!iss J!arjorie 7\louland, Corner Brook; Mrs. Wilbert Wiseman and daughter from Catalina. ~lr. Robert n~:;mond from Kellil!rcws: Mrs. Garland Penney. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ross and two sons from St. John's; ?llr. Henry Ash and his

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-. u! ~Irs. Paul Healey,

are now visit· sister, 1\lrs.

Subsequent to the film .show· lng; discussion on the forth earning · championship show takes place on September 2Srd. at the · Conception Bay Recre· atlon Centre at Harbour Grace, took 'place. ·Best wishes ·were extended to Mrs. Sa\tman and Mrs.·. Nutbeem who have left for the Maritimes with their N ewfoundlnnd dog and mini· ature poodle. Both· will be ex· hiblted In the 1\larltlme circuit. Mrs. Nuibeem · and l\lrs. Salt· man iravelled by car from Har: bour'·Grace· to New Brunswick, ·stopping off ·at Gander, Grand Falls and Corner Brook to visit

HARBOUR GRACE - News was received here this week of the passing at North Sydney, N.S., of Mr. Brendan Hennessey formerly of this town and the youngest and only surviving son of the late Capt. John and 1\lrs. Hennessey. The deceased who was well and. favourably known here previous to his de· parture to live on the mainland many years ago; will be rem em· heied by friends of his early days.

·- miter, Elaine Parsons, Joan han Noel, Ruth ~ocl, Grace Rev. Father Edward Moriarty Parsons, Elizabeth Peddle, Mar- Payne, Wallace . Ptke, Brenda

arrived from the West Indies jorie Peddle, Sophie Sellars, Sheppard, Nelhe Sheppard, to St. John's on Sunday and Georgina Sheppard, Florence Carl Sheppard, Frances ,Shute. visited his relatives there be· Shute Elizabeth Stone Helen Roy Stone, Charles "ebber,

ONE FOR THE ROAD-This little bird surveys the water situation and contemplates a drink, even though it might mean getting his feathers wet. He sits on a Regent's Park Zoo top in London, England.

1 grandson Cyril Piercey from ! Port Rcxton, ~lr. and Mrs. Fred II Wells and son from St. John's,

l\lrs. S. Eady from Toronto,

I :llr. and Mrs. Randell (CNR). I'·

leave here on Wednesday for

I their own vacation, which they plan to spend on a leisurely

Young and .'year Paige, arrived

·: ... uuvu11e. Florida; last her moth~r; and

Ursula and Miss llrs. Young .was

~larjorie Thomas.·

Archibald' arrived from New York to

. and brother, Mr. Mr. Howard Arch!·

fi'ien'ds. · · · . lll_~re,!\nd, greater interest Is

being shown in the champion· · F • 'ship sliow ·and It ·Is expected OX Family· · .that this year's event will be a

· . · m.ost' ·interesting and well at· · - tended affair. ·

GRACE .:... Visit· on Saturday of St. John's,

information on Fox· whose

MisR Allee · Me· In a church

as taking pl.8ce In

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. E:J(am· ResultS

He leaves to mourn his pass· ing, two daughters and one son and a .sister, Mrs. Mabel Sin· nolt in Ottawa: Sympathy is eX· tended. .

R.c.s.c.c. Beothic

. HARBOUR GRACE-Twelv'e Cadets of R.C.S.C.C. Beothic acco'mpanled by Chaplain,. Rev. Father Sha\low, returned on Saturday after spending · two weeks at Camp Acadia,. N.S.

Rev. L. A. Ludlow leaves on Monday, August 13th, for two weeks at Camp Acadia. Rev. Mr. r.udlow Is also chaplain with R.C.S.C.C. Beothlc.

··HARBOUR GRACE - The Antdlcan · Cimtal. High School at Harbour Grace records eighty. five per cent passes In Grade XI Jun'e examinations and the successful can'didates whose When speaking to a friend or ac-

had noted the na~e names follow·are 'congratillate'd qualntanc.e do not refer to John· Fox, ·as on. their, success. (In' order of your wife as Mrs.· Brown. Usc

one or a group ':of merit), ·· . · · · ~ · name, or say "my wife." merchants sign~ · HONOURS: Ramona ·• Nofj, .. _ -:. ----:--

lor a new court qlo'rla Noel, Mary Stone, r.er· ·wedding Invitations:' should be Gacc ln.1'195. trllllf' 'She'lllRrd. David . Bath. . engraved-never printed. or thiR'ln : MATniCULATION: Lorraln~ · · _Quaricrly a~ Ash; · Shirley . Brnv, .. 1\lurlel Blundon, Hettie ·Stone, David

L. ·oavls I'. and· ~r·i1cli.:.F.dward ·. Skinner: : ~!cock, Roderick. Janes, Lloyd oln S'\~Ur!lay,:~eelc· i P4SS: ,Frances Janes, ,Tonn' Parsons, Charlcs.Peddlc, Harold · nlormatlon" :!rom ":'~zoriR: Stilnlrv .~toorca, ,Tobn Peddle, . Edward Spurrell, Rob· •. 1he ~~a:·: .-?-· ~.' , Plli~.C·Lilrne ~:;1'i'lckelt 1 .•~'Lindo .ert Stone. · · ..... ·.~~~ :.::.t:·.· ;• ·i

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fore comink to Harbour Grace Sellar~, Georgina Sheppard, Kevin Williams. 1 tonr ncross country. on Monday to spend a vacation Florence Shute, Elizabeth Stone, with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Helen Taylor, Gary Archibald, E. F. Moriarty, Cochrane Street. 1\loses Crane, Albert Horwood, While in Newfoundland, Rev. Kevin Janes, Aibert Parsons, Fr. Moriarty will celebrate his sliver anniversary of his ordin· C.N.R. atlon which took place with that of Rev. Fr. L'eo Burke at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception at Harbour Grace

. on August 4th, 1936 .

Mr. Brian Wakelin has re· turned from the University of New Brunswick where he took the summer course in physical education .

Miss Paula Hayden who · had been attending summer school at Queen's University, Kings. ton, Ont., has returned home.

1\Ir. Ronald O'Keefe and his. brother Mr; Frank O'Keefe, re· turned to their homes In the U.S.A. on Monday after ·attend· lng the funeral of their father, the late Mr. Daniel O'Keefe. For Ronald, this was his first visit for 37 years to his home town. . 'He is a . druggist .. and resides at Arlington, Mass. His brother Frank resides at Buf· falo,. N.Y .. where he holds a resppnslblc position. · ·

Mr. John O'Kee1e who had attended the funeral of his father, has returned to Whit~ bourne, where he is with the

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-Mr. and 1\trs. Earl Crocker.

and daughter, Gloria, are va· cationing at Port Blandford.

Mrs. Emma .Janes went to St.· John's on Tuesday to visit her son Eddie, who has been a patient at the General Hos· pita! since June. Eddie is mak· ing slow · progress and will likely be in hospital for some weeks yet.

The many Harbour Grace friends of Rev, G. S. Temple· ton who underwent surgery at the General Hospital !our weeks ago will be glad to learn that he has recovered sufficiently to leave that Institution and left !or his home in Botwood on 1\londay accompanied· by Mrs.· Templeton.

Rev. John's, tali on Grace.

-· Mother Loretta, St.

is visiting the Presen· Convent at Harbour

Mr. Max·Tapp who had visited Gander during his vacation re· · turned home on· Saturday and has resumed duties at the Post Oiflce here. . · ·

For years NEWFOUNDLAND HARDWOODS LIMITED, Asphalt and Creosote Division in. Claren­ville, has been producing the high­est quality Asphalt in Nor~ Am­erica ... Asphalt that .can be readv for immediate shipment. The Asphalt can be shipped hot in 78 coiled insulated tank cars to. any railway point in the province. Newfoundland Hardwoods Limited

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has supplied Asphalt to Cmistruc­tion Companies for projects as large as the runways at Gander and: Stephenville and for projects as .

·small as private driveways. Avail- · able too are liquid Asphalts for seal coating, priming and dust preve-n­tion ... Asphalt emulsions •.. all guaranteed by •••

111/0UIIJJAIJJ HARIIIJODI ... ASPHALT. AND

CREOSOTE DMSION ;J!lKei~MI·. NE~.

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Page 10: .TR~~KS ~ ! Nova Motors: Ltd. randt Calls For Politi cal ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196108… · b~· 200,000 West Berliners in front of city East German

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. THE DATLY NEWS. ST. JOHN'S, NFLD .. THURSDAY, AUGUST l7 . ~·

In Retrospect Maris, Blasts 47th aild 48th Ladi·£s ~ . . By :DAVID DAY . .

J";~ This ,mW".lliJ:lg, \We look back into the files of .The Bady News to· the sporfs p~ges en ltihe J!lhird week of A~ust in 1'9~5, a983, 1943 and 1952.

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As Yanks Open Three Game Lead

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:.,~ ' ' . . . : ~~VNIO&So SENIOBS TIE IN ~ GAME · Roger Marls hammered out League race over Detroit Tig­: ~st ~~ l9.!i-'ii'he game ibet\Wt~en the .J.ul'Jior his ~7th 111nd 48th •homers .of mhe · .ers. The Bengals were trounced d S · 1 1 d .... ~. d ~""'~- season Wednesday .to lead New ij.2 by Baltimore Orioles when

an emor eagues was P aye ye10""'r ay =~uoon :Xork Yankees to a .5·d -w.in .over Milt Pappas stopped them with before a small nwnber of spectators and resulted in Chicago White sox. two hits .. a draw, hotll teams scoring tw.o goals. · The win put ':tankees three Three n i g h t games were . Flynn scored first fur the Senior team and .then games ~P In the American scheduled in the American; .the Junior player Williams tied the game for his side on a pass from Dinn· · In the second half, Meaney "Hard Luck Harry" ,of the series was Al Claus­scored on .another pass from Dinn and that gave the :ton in his ·snipe lthe "Huskey". Boat trouble has been

;: Juniors a 2 goal to 1 margin after ten minutes had .close in his wake in every series and the handicap elapsed. Then Power tied the seore at 2 to 2 with less races w.ere no .exception. This time, AI really distin-.than two minutes remaining in the game. . guished himself. The "Huskey" had been awarded a Lineups: four minute handicap because of her weight in a

. . Senior League-Goal, R. Walsh; Backs, S. Mor- race scheduled !for two l~ps of a four, buoy .course . ,. .ris, W. Thistle; halves, J. Cai'ming, A. Foster, J. Mad- Two laps were finished with the "Huskey" sailing .. den; forwards, R. Nolan, R. Meaney, J. Young, R. the race of the season and leading the fleet actually

Quick, M. Flynn. .on .elapsed time· The Committee extended the course Junior League-Goal, F. Daly; backs, J. Cawley, to three laps and in the last half lap of the course

·p. Murphy; halves, M. Monahan, L. Smith, F. Byrne; with the "Huskey" still holding her fine lead, forwards, L. Dinn, T. Furlong, C. Power, J. Williams, "whang" w.ent a turnbucgle and overboard went her J. Thomson. mast.

• • 0 • • .. D 0 . : i t :SPORTSDAYATAYBEATHLETICGROUNDS FERD HAYWARD DROPS OUT . I

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:: . August 20, 1925-A sports day was held at the August 18, lll52-Ferd Hayward of St. John's, Ayre Athletic Grounds yesterday. Highlights of the Nfld., dropped out of the 38 mile Hastings-to­event included the day long cricket match between Brighton walk Saturday with hip trouble after hold­Guards and City, the competition bein~ won by the ing a consistent 12th position. Hayward represented

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Guards; a series of tennis matches between members Canada in the Olympic 50 kilometer competition at .of the Newfoundland and the Old Collegian Tennis Helsinki. A field of 63 took part.

'i ·clubs; and eleven track and field events in which D. * • o "

·Fraser, G. Long and R. Penny starred and Girl Guide ST. BON'S MOVE TO FINALS WITH GUARDS . :1 ~ .ft4

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'and Boy Scout relays were run-off. August 18 ,1952-St. Bon's defeated Holy Cross :. o o " • 7 to 3 in Senior Baseball yesterday and as a result

C.E.I., 1; C.L.B., 0 advanced to the second round finals with Guards. August 18, 1925-C.E.I. shutout the C.L.B. in a Paul Bryant had three of St. Bon's eight hits

rather interesting soccer match at St. George's Field while Jim Everard had thre of the seven Holy Cross last night by the score of 1 to nil. Johnson of C.E.I. hits· scored the only goal of the game after 20 minutes of Umpire and chief for the game was Captain Joe the second half had elapsed· Guattrochicchi.

. 0 0 • • • • • D

WRESTLING AT PRINCE'S RINK ST. JOHN'S WINS SENIOR BASEBALL · August 14, 1933-The two wrestling bouts at the CHAMPIONSHIP

Pr.fuce's Rink last night attracted a large audience During that third week of August, 1952, St. who certainly got their money;s worth. The first John's defeated Grand Falls 3 games to 1 to win the bo\tt between the Masked Marvel and The Terrible All-Newfoundland Senior Baseball Championship for Turk was won by the latter. Dick Perron won· two the. third straight year. That was the memorable falJs from Pat McKay in the second bout of the even- year the tireless moundsman Bill Kennedy won the Angi first game with a five hitter and at the same time

• o • • • collected three hits; Wilbur Sparkes allowed Grand GUARDS HAVE SOCCER WOES Falls four hits and got two himself as St. John's won

;;~; Back in 1933 the woes of the Guards soccer the game three, 5 runs to 2; and Bill Kennedy shut-ei~"ven were as prevalent as they are today. out the papertowners on 2 hits in the third City vic-

. August 15, 1933-At. St. George's Field last tory, 8 to 0. ni~ht the contestfng teams in the league football 0

• • •

sC}ledule were B.I.S. and Guards, the score being 5 to HOLY CROSS WIN SENIOR nil\in favour of B.I.S. The Irish led 2 goals to none at SOCCER CHAMPIONSHIP half time. W. Duggan was the referee. That same week, Holy Cross won the Senior

: • o • • Football Championship of St. John's with a 3 to 1 . .. ;:;;:: INVITATION TO LOCAL ATHLETES victory over St. Pat's. . ·.~;· August 14, 1933-An invitation has been receiv- Fr,ed Brien scored for · Holy Cross in the first

e~:!rom the Cape Breton "Post-Record" of Sydney, half. George Motty scored · the second Holy Cross N;S., to all local long distance runners to compete in goal early in the second half, and after a determined ~ Cape Breton Marathon on September 4th. attack that resulted in St. Pat's scoring on a play by :;:; • • • • English, Duffy Sorenson made the score 3 to 1 in the ;~z: STROLLERS GO TO BELL ISLAND dying moments. : .. ;' A common practice back in the thirties was for

different athletic associations from St. John's to visit oqtlying communities, engage in athletic contests wlih teams from there and then have a big social ni~ht. ·

:.:· August 16, 1933-Members of the Strollers Ath· laUe Association leave for Bell Island this afternoon. .Af 7:30 p·m. a football match will be played against a:·picked Bell Island team and afterwards a dance Wi.ll be held. .

• • • • BABE RUTH'S PACE TO SIXTY HOME RUNS

The records for the most home runs by a single player in the major baseball leagues, set by Babe Ruth in 1927, is being seriously challenged this year by two New York Yankee outfielders, Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris .

This morning, Sport In Retrospect presents the day to day home run pace by Ruth to the record of 60, from August 16th to the end of the 1927 sea-

• .fREE HOME DELI.VERY

ST, .JOHN'S: ' GRAND FALLS: Phone 1S4ll or 68511 Bond Beverages LM., Ph: 2148

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Junior Football

WILBUR OAKLEY

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\ANOTHER OUT-T~ls Chapm~ of the. Capitals is shown receiv~g 8 t

j from Barry Maunder to register the fir:;t out of the ninth inning : ·~ night's game. Dick Duder, Grand Falls center-fielder, is out on the c!OS

' (Max Mercer I

,

RAN EFE Brown

Grand Falls with of the All-Newfc

came up with a 5-: game .

Brown, the loser and- subdued t

Redmond, the he Don Ryan· starte

who finished tor the second str

Bill Trask a The fourth game the honours for

limit. again some 1,000 the bleachers to wit

looked like another p duel, this time with.

as Brown the opposr afler limited the Beoth

!hree hits through the innings the visitors eXJ

three runs in the 1

themselves off Ryan . Wheeler came on It Ryan and ga~e up

two runs, one an eac 1eventh and eighth fr• Caps finally got to B

ninth for three runs time it was too !at

who picked up win in the scmi·f

one loss, gave up runs on six hits, w;

and struckout six. l ~1s charged with the hit for three runs

He walked four am Wheeler. wh1

Ryan, gave up the runs on three hits, i ba!c on balls and n

men on strikes . winners collected

in their big sixth i ~·hich gave them a

lead. AI Dwyer 01 a single, went to s

an error and to thi1 Goulding's single .

scored as A I Ed with a line

to right center home as George J followed with a1

or Soft

Jays· B

by the. pitching 1

and Gerrv Ow have eontin~ed in third place in Senior Softball

lpot ·is not first, enough for a play•

. that's all th

night 'the Javs are in third

defeated the R1 continued to m1

. for the fourth pial lllore difficult Rams.

nanlbriorlr was ' --·•usrnan for the . ~he held the Rarr tis, one a lead·o ' Scott in the f

the other a f by John Voise· rame. . ·

11 t~c Winners it wa ack Quinlan wl to the victory.

J built third basel · iys, rapped ' •qt In his first tw1 d e and added a . oubie in · the six ,for five . ~ight

lriok.litt!e time . Peter n.

·Up twa ru and the.

Page 11: .TR~~KS ~ ! Nova Motors: Ltd. randt Calls For Politi cal ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196108… · b~· 200,000 West Berliners in front of city East German

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p.\ILY NEWS, ST. 'JOl-IN'S, NFLD.,· THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1961 ,._ ..

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Three Canad!·ens Junior Baseball:

RAND FALLS COMEBACK Sign , Contracts jEd. MONTREAL (CPl- Montreall

Canadiens of the National Byrd Keeps

Hockey League announced Wed- Pl f C nesday the signing of rookie for- ayo '[ I-I opes

v e ~-11: <:·-11IS 1 . . . -·

J~li ve . . . .

EFEAT CAPITALS 5-3 ward Bobby Rousseau and of; _ holdover forwards Billy Hicke ~ . an1 Ralph ,Backstrom. ! St. Pat's defending champs baseman Peter Byrne went to R. Conway

Rousseau w.ho s~orcd a goal : in the Junior Baseball League. I second on a stolen base and E. Gregory and two a~~lsts 1f 14 games I caine up with the big win that came horne on a throwin:J error B': Abbott w1ith d Canal len!slh as t ye~trl, lccpt them in the running for by Roger Maunder on Ed Byrd'~ B. Oliver

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Brown ivlagnificen t · On The Mouncl Grand Falls with their backs to the wall turned to their pitching ace, Joe Brown, in last night's third of the All-Newfoundland Senior Baseball Playoffs for the Dunstan MacCormac Memroial Trophy

· up with a 5-3 win over the St. John's Capitals to extend the best of five games series to the

p aye mos . o e season WI 1 th - . . 't h. " · 1 T B Hull • Ottawa Candiens of the e Junwr c1reui 01~our:; as .,rounr ;r·. . . . arron Eastern Professional H 0 c key they hand_ed front ruqm_ng Holy St. I at s made 11 2-0 m the E. Byrd League. He scored 34 aoals and Cross their s~cond straight set- lop of . the ~e~·enth as Bill Totals:

l 3 3

27 26 assists in the EPHL back 2-1 belund the th1·ee Jut Olil'~r. pmch-lullmg lor Abbott, IIOLY CROSS:

-----· pitching. of ace Ed Byrd. was safe on an error. He. went J. Rumsey 4 Byrd, who . blows hot and : to second on a sacrifice bunt R. Maunder 3

S cold, had it last night as he ' by Tom Barron and rame home P. Byrne 2 occer held the Crusaders to three hits: on a single by Ed. Byrd. P. Ryall 3 in the first six innings and i lluly Cross rallied in the bot- .• \1. O'Keefe 2

I The sudden death semi-linal then gave up an unearned run · tom of the seventh for their· J. Fitzgerald 3 game of the junior league will in the seventh without allowing! only run. Frank l~l'ans started iF. Evans 1 be played tonight at the King a hit. i things with a walk and went all. H. Power 1

1

Tonight's

0 . 1 0 2 3 1

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~am e. Broll'n. the loser of the opening game of the playoffs, was again in control of the defending

and subdued them until the final inning wh en the losers rallied for three runs but fell short as ·Redmond, the hero. of Tuesday night's game, struck out with the tying run at the plate.

Don Ryan· started for the Capitals and lastecl five and two-third innings before giving way to Bill ll'hO finished up. Ryan was charged with the loss. AI Edwards was the big gun for the win­

!Dr the second straight night as he collected two hits and drove in the first and insurance runs with

Gc01·ge V field, between the win· i The win for Byrd, his third the way to third on a passed . A. English l ners of last night's games, 1 against three losses moved St. ball. E1·ans finaily came in E. Tobin l

I Guards and. Feildians as United [ Pat's into temper~ry lie de-, with !he run as'\rony Spratt T. Spratt 3 g~t t,;~ llv~ mto the fmals. Game 'pending the outcome of to- grounded out shot lo first. Totals: J-4 hme IS 6.30. night's game between the, With both teams collecting .

0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 2

Bill Trask and Bruce Goulding also had · two hits. ~ ·. The fourth game of the Finals will be played to-night starting at 6 o'clock with a City win giving

~the honours for the fourth straight year, while a win for the Inland squad will force the series to

BOX SCORES Grand Falls: AB R H A. Edwards.. • • • . 5 2 2 A. Bargery.. .. .. 4 0 1 G. Anderson .. , .4 0 1 B. Trask • , ... • .4 0 1 G. Bishop., .. ..4 0 0 D. Duder .... ,.5 1 1 A. Dwyer ...... 3 1 1 B. Goulding .. ..5 1 2 J. Brown .. .. .. 4 0 0

Totals 35 5 10

.. 3 0

.. 2 0

.. 4 1 •. 5 0 .. 3 0 .. 1 0 .. 3 0 .. 1 0 .. 3 1 .·.2 o .. 1 0 .. 1 0 .. o 0 .. 0 0

36 3

0 0 1 2 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 6

Mino1· Baseball

j Guards and St. BO!V. Byrd only three safeties, Bill 'Malone ·

R• d } struck out seven batters and was the top batter for the win· . p • ( Iver a e walked four, while losing pit- ners as he had two singles in I racttce orner: cher Tony Spratt was charged three trips. Wi;ming pitcher Ed ~

Today's schedule: · with two runs on three hits. He By~d had the only other Pat- 1 United junior football team walked two and fanned s1x bat- , nc1ans h1t. Joh~ Rm~sey, Roger 1 will held an important practiee ters. , _ . _ ~laLtnder and ~_like 0 Keefe had ; tonight at ~!acpherson. grounds,

St. Pats p_JCked up thm f1rst l t~e Ulr~e sa!~t1es for the losers , starting at 7 o'clock sharp.

Derrn Penny vs Bill Shears. Terry Murphy vs John O'Dea. Jimmy Maher vs Peter Pader. All players are requested to

E be at the club house all day in 0 order that the matches may be 1 played as quickly as possible. 0

nm in ~he fifth frame a~d add·! w1th 0 Keef~ s double the only! •Junior Caps will workout this cd the1r other ta~ly m the : extra base hll of the game. I morning at the Ball Park; start· seventh. Holy Cross s only run 1 BOX. SCORES · ing at 7.30 sharp under coach Tot came in the_ s_eventh. . 1ST. P~T'S: AB R II E; B)Tne. /' _

0 top batter for the Lions. The Patr1c1ans run m the 1

. J. Collins 3 0 0 11 Holy Cross junior and senior fifth came as, with one out, D. Dowden 4 0 0 0: football teams will practice to· 1 Churchill Park schedule for Bob Abbott was safe on an 1 D. Corcoran 3 0 0 0' night at the Br. Egan Memorial 0 j today:

0 2.30-Lions vs Kiwanians. error but Holy Cross's first: B. lllalone 3 0 2 0 'Field, starting at 6.45 sharp. 1 0 2

0 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

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rell , Ebert Lane and Wayne Holden each with one for two with a single were the hitters for the Reddy's. Ike Smith had a single in two trips to the plate to be the top hitter for the losers.

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Softban

Blank Rams;

BABE RUTH In the only Babe Ruth game

the Dodgers himded the Giants a .3·1 set back which moved the n:odgers. into a first place tie with the Giants. Herb Jenkins pitched a masterful one hitter

· and set down 13 of the Giants batters ·on strikeouts. Harry Crawford threw a four hitter but wasl charged with the loss. Jlin Smi~h had the big blow fqr the winriers as he smashed out a line d6uble to be the top ba I· ter for jthe winners. Pilcher Harry t..'l'awford had the only hit off Herb Jenkins. B. Gun' viCTORIA PARK Ig In the opening game at Vic· lorla Park the Reddy's edged

' the Sunbeams 8·6. Ebert Lane by the pitching of John Deutsch In receiving his 11th threw a fine four hitter to re·

and Gerry Owens the loss as against seven victories, cord his seventh win against continued to roll allowed 11 runs on the same three defeats. Mike Stoyles was

third place in the St. number of hit~. He fanned four tagged with his first loss and League. batters but Issued ten bases on now Is one·and-one. Bren Dal·

is not first, but it's balls. · 'ton had the big blow for· the for a playoff posi· Tom Conway and Harry Lacey Reddys with a triple: Mlke.Mar·

that's all the . Jays had two hits apiece to back up Quinlan for the winners while

night the Jays showed John Volsey and Ron Scott col· are in third position lected the only two safeties off

the Rams 11·0 Bambrick. The Rams were to make 'the charged with two of the three

the fourth playoff spot errors made during the con· . lllore difficult for the test. ·

!lams. BOX SCORES ' · ~amt1rick was the mas·

"""01m•n for the Jays this held the Rams to just

' one a lead-off single in the fifth· inn· other ·a · one· OUt

John Volsey In the

. . AB R R.E 5 ·1· 0 1 5 ·1 3. 0 3 1'2'0 4 l 1 0 2 1. .1· 0

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Probable

• The Rockets handed the Car· dinals a 9-4 set back in the afternoon game. Bill Brophy won his fourth game in nine decisions. Joey Wadden was tagged with the loss. Bill Brophy had a double and a siil· gle in three trips to the plate to be the top batter for the winners. Joe Wadden went two for three with a double and a single and was the top hitter for the Cardinals.

Victoria Park schedule for. to· day:

11.00-Rockets vs Tigers. 3.00-Sunbeams vs Cardinals. . CHURCHILL PARK In the opening game at

Churchill Park the Sporters handed the Kiwanians a 10.6 set back. Jim Holland was the winning hurled as he pitched a fine four hitter, struckout six and walked two. John McGrath was tagged with the loss. Pitch· er Jim Holland had a field day at the plate as he belted a triple, double and a single in three trips.

The Ayredales edged the Lions 6·3 in the second game at Churchill Park. Gary Brown pitched a fine four hitter and set down 13 of the Lions on strike outs to record the win. Bob Kelloway was tagged with the loss. Dave Parsely and Bill Mecham had two singles each to be the top batters for the winners. Bob Keiloway blasted out two doubles and·. was the

Pitchers

. . .t t ~ : ~ . . .. JOHN LEWIS .· JED 'GAMBERG : 2: 0'· 0 0 . . ' . . ' - .• ·-

expllOII•I , 'Total!, ; . 1 .• • 1_23' o.-.2 2 .. ,. .• G~and Falls must.~om~ up witb.a·wiu in to· · · •TONIGHT'S ·GAME · o -night's fourth game of the.· All-NeWfoundland

1dn~~:~~~ .. 1 /'niwu':'Wil('be ·topklng Jq~ _! :~~~s:orJl~ey,willpack the~~~a~s-for:home. ~e another.win.to: move closer :10 . • man:.th.ru are counting· on to keep them ·here 11

. . ward the final playoff berth to· , . • . ":"-; .· . , . . . . • .. _ . . . 'whim they meet the•front · · nghthander•_pltcher John LeWis; ..

. riln1nlng_ BCAF. ~qUI~d Jnthe only · . : _: . : The' Capitals 'are·. expected to- return· With against!· action· at.the ·B~nner; ·._.their winning., pitdter.·of the· opening game,.Jed ·

... Pa.l'k· ·.dl_amon~.. Starllnlt · • Gamberg:' Tile big·lefthander. held'the Beothucks for .. the :. eon test l•r·. 6.301 .• 't· .. f .- , .. f. t'' . . hi fir t 'f · · .. - • · : -, · · · . - .- . o our sa e 1es 1n s s per ormance •

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Yukon Con 4100 45\!a 45 41 -2 ' 1 .·: : Uellek lOGO ~ 4 ~

. I " : : Beta G 1000 3\o': 3\o': 3~- 11 All no~ I ·t j · 1 : Disco• 77l 255 252 253 -z Almlne~

OILS 4000 33 32 32 -2 1120 Ill 112 ll5 +I l868T77 ' ·I I • 'o" IIUa 1'"10 22 22 22 +1 Am Leduc 100 m m 221 -• 2m m aoo BOO +1

:; I ! I : llall mo 41 39 41 Amurex 1. : ,,,arcu.a ""~~"' !Jj w SKI + 3 ' Dalley SA

liD 124 21 24 i I :un ~I S IUIO U5 2114 2l1\- 'lo Doll !llpr · :' <' I : ~lo1u1 lllO 100 100 100 Bala

1 : : ~lorrjoon 1!00 19 18 19 Brllalla 2005 s s-1\ uoo m w 22T -u 340 liB t711 18 +\~ , 1 ! : :lloaher 2600 202 196 201 -1 Cal Ed

1' I :on Nol!'l 2000 121> 1211 1211 +I Carner ina 400 176 17B 11& •

1 : 1 : Norl!l~ 1000 27 26 21 +I C Oil Lda

I. ·, 1• : "•"~;- c 011 L wla 1100 109 103 103 + 1 1000 211 2\1 2~ -1\i

I· I

. i

: j'· . : .· . : .. ~ ~ . .

. I". I I! I.

• I I '· , I

I 'i I I":

: ';I'. . ' .. ! : .. '

.· i ' : I ; •

1 :001 Q9 3200 33 31 33 CS 011 W

1 : oonlll!!m 1- . , ,, • .;.I~ CS Pete .onwca... 1m m •10 ~-' +5 C Chlelln

I• :op Cc!li' 1000 I! 15 15 -1 C Delhi 1 ;opranJI;:: 35%0 118 111 IIG -I Cdn Dev

.owlch -.. • 500 32 32 •: C Ex Gaa lauln.l:!.: ;oo ~~ •1~ ··; Cent Dol >elhl Jia• 2000 28 27 27 -1 'Cbarler OU lclnllc•:•: ~... ,,,., ·• , ,, , .,; C Pruan lenlsoli•:• llU 1000 D95 10~0 C. Mlc Moe llcknsli!•: mo 298 290 298 + 3 C Wut P lome ':• .. 125 U!~ IS 2S\o Dol'• Pal )onolda •: 500 413 ~\i 4\i - 1,0 Dome Pete

_!all lola\ mo 212 210 :UO --4 Dynamic .:ast SuU 2!00 170 110 170 +Z Farao ;tdrtc~ • 3000 12 11 12 + 1,0 Fr Pete p :1 Sol -. SlCO IIi 41\ ~~- 1i Or Plalno .''aloan~ ,. 1167! 162~ 61 621\ + ao llome A . 'lfnda_,- ·· 67! lBO 179 180 llama B -·''west T MlO 7 7 7 - \i II B OU G "oUmo · 2200 33 33 35 L\ Pete . laltwm 3000 6\i o w, +\!a Loa' Point lenox • 520 7~ m 7\i- 1; Mayfair · lnt ~luol 2000 ~l 63 U3 -4 ~lodal

· llaut Vll 71~ ~''\l " · .. , + ~~ Na\ Peta lF ~llnlnf 2100 II 17 II N Cent

. lranduc · at~l ~W >.J . 1 + \0 NCO pr , :uu Leaa 11100 11 . 1 1 Okalta

lunnlf 71H SJl 110 !rJO I'IC Pete , :-.uum . 1000 4\i 41> 41~ Pamall .. le .. dwaJ· 500 2m 2m '2m-~ Permo Pr

Ieath -· 2300 3\!a 3\i 31\ Peruv Oils liKh·DaU :100 210' 238 240 +S Pltllllra

, lolllnnr. 3620 12m 2TI\ "~ + ~ Placa Iowey•; ;- 110 220 220 no Ponder

. lud llat· a30 llm ~· oil 'P!OVO Gu • nsplraln·. 11100 31\1 31~ 31" + 1\i Ranier at Mill~· 2500 ' •I Sapphira

· nt Nlf. 4310 II!~ as" 16~ south U 1 rlah J:ii.O U:t h.J ,,,J -1 Spooner · ron D , 100 liS 16! 16! SlanweU : WaliJ,~ 3500 21 12 21 -1 'l'ldal

· acob'l'!• 775 as as ll Triad OU ~ ~aburka. 1000 1 a a - 1,0 U Canso vt ' :cnsmllll. 3000 '" 1 1 Un Oils !: torr Add 3"'~ $11 1"'1 •1 + % Un oef P et tlrk )(JD 5081 31 573 37 -1 Wayno ~ 1 topan·:·~ 2000 ts 15 J~ Weapac :1•1• ·~bke "· .~-r ms m 2!1,0 21 + " w Cdn OG - ...., 4500 7\!a 7~ 7\~ WCOQ w 11• Sheri, 1100 30.! 303 305 -s Wsburna ' An¥11 · 12!00 62 81 62 Wslates

. :j-atln Am liOO 11 47 11 W Decalla

. ,·.ellch . 2200 \U 1110 160 Ran Can

3300 tO I I UIJ 210 %80 280 --4

2!00 100 95 DS 3100 400 385 390 -10

!Ol25 405 400 lOS +I 3200 170 168 170 ~321 m l!l m -a 100 115 115 II!

5110 11 II 11 a 700 299 ~80 289 +4 100 m 220 n5

1000 61 61 II 3!0 923 UIO 915 +I

3000 4l 45 45 -1 102 120 m 111 300 39! 39! 393 +20 900 S1l IO~l lOll - V. 441 960 ·~~ 955 -10 21! !8l Ia! 865 NO Sl5 14% 1411

16000 5 4 41\ 1000 311'1 11 1m +Sii 1000 110 m 175 -1o 500 221 220 221 -4 200 245 215 21! -7

1200 20 20 20 z7S 15 2! 25

1011 . 33 33 33 3DJT "m u m~- ~

1500 41 40 41 1000 ftt 50 II

21710 202 1!0 1!9 -17 11100 42 40 . to 8100 37 3!\i. 36 -1 4000 61 80 fil 41!0 200 191 119 -l 4200 m 155 15! m2 252! 12 &9 &I 1000 o~ ·~ m +!i 1300 a~ ~~ II\ + !1 2000 53 33 33 1500 60 60 eo 1570 160 156 110

SIO 110 110 140 -1 5!110 131 130 ISO 1425 43 . 42 43 +1 7000 l\~ 7 7-11 !30 101\ 101'1 10\i

23413 115 108 liD +I 400 SO lO 50 +I

4300 51 49 .. -1 334 1110 135 160

5316 II B6 II IOD03SS

DANKS .I·,L Lac 1200 196 193 193 -7 · '.orado -- SJ50 182 157 160 +I

., .oradc • wta !000 12 80 Bl -1 : hcasu 2000 330 3!0 350 ·: ··~acdou. 1000 16 16 1!

Mont NS c Imp Royal Tor-Dam

2792 $70!1 6911 89~ - " 1637 1791> m~ 791\ + 1

Dk C 3441 S70 69~ 10V. + !1 Bl9 1791\ 70 7~·

·. dacLeo« 1225 '107 lOS IDS -1 · : \ladson 1200 230 223 225 -2 ·. llalarllo 500 11 71 71 -2 ·• llorlllmo 10200 !I 85 15 -3 · 1 llDrlin 5000 37 37 37 ·c: llatalch :ooo 8 6 8 1'1 oloybrun 4300 m 7 71\ · ' •lolotyra 363! hill 401l 4111 + " 1,\ llc~lor kiiiOO 7 7 7 . +2 11 LlcWal 3000 30 30 30 -1 ;~.llerrlll 1400 70 70 70 I •lldrlm 2000 '31 30\0 ll l donela 1000 70 au 70 +1 ' . ·oil Wrlrh\ DIDO 92 90 90 -2

IIUUI M 500 21 28 28 + 11'1 : ,. olurray 111 moo 71 70 73 -I .:, ill Expl 3000 8 6 ! + " · l 'itJID '"''l 1 J"' )" 1,. ·· >••• .Airer l!lOO 4 ,I 1 ., \ \let.v · Hotco lboW 84 ,,, t +S 1'' ~ Kelora 6000 7 7 7 i' >ewlund 100!0 m; Ul\ 1.1 + 1 • -~ Mn·· 1000 31 31 31 -2 . ·t 'lewnor . !'~A, ., t• iew 110113'11 :1000 • e • - ~ · ! ~ Se~itn" ) 1 :, .1 ,,

' ••·•:·•· ·Ma 2500 52 51 at l i '!or.Aem• 2liOO 17 IT 17 ,': ~oranda xd 14U IIlii 83 SJ - ~ i ~Or'101Y 22110 35 U 31 -1 • , ,'lorJo\4 1000 8 ! . 5 ,. l''larlarlle 2000 II 12 12 · -1 l' .'lormtlal 450 280 275 27! -a •:: .'lorpu UOO II 14 II -2 1', irlhrato mz 81 as A ' i · Gn!dcrt 500 U . 23 U +1

i Rank 1000 II 51 59 -2 · iorth •.Caa 3000 140 110 210

. · iorvaUa 2000 7\!a 7~ 7\t ··1 >'Brian 1:100 55 Sl 54 -s .. , >'Leal')' 2000 II 13~ lilt + It :· :>Peml1ke BOO 73S 710 . 710 -25

Butler buildings '

·•· ..

1828 16910 19~ am INDUSTRIALS

Alomtnl Ani Nfld c Brew Posco Inland Pemblno Slmoion• Stedman Walk oro Wostan D

10!5 U%10 32\i 3111 + \i 655 $9¥1 910 ·~ + "

2215 154 !J'Io 15\i - ... JOO $13\i 13\i 13!1 + ~ 150 13\i ~~ 5\i

1200 Sl\i I IIi-~ • 350 liD\\ !O'Io ~~- \\

22$ S4! 46 II 338 15411 54" 14" + " !DO 12011 2~ 20\i

Total Illes: 1.295,000.

New York I

. , NEW YORK CLOSING STOCKS B; The Canodlu Prno

Bolh Stool 42 Konnecolt 141\ llor1 Warner m• Monty w 3010 C and 0 &I NV C111l 17\i Cons Edison 78\i Radio Corp 5I El Auto !I !4\i Sid Oil Nl Ul4 Gen Elee 6&\i Uld Alr<:rall . Slit Goodyear 48'\t Vanadium 22\i Gt Nor Ry 41\i Wtlilllll 42\i 1111 T T 18\i

Montreal MOHTREAlo CLOSING STOCKS .

BJ The Coaadlaa Preu Abitibi 41" l'IIUlldaUOll 12" Aabeatoa Sl% Fraaor · 2T Bnque C Nat 61\i GT Lakoa 21 Dank Mont 89\i HUd Bl7 Min 51" Bank NS 71 Imp Oil 461\ Bnque PC ~~~ lnt Nick 86\i Datburst A 41" Int Pap 311'1 Dell ~31\ M&IS·Fer 12 Brazil . a N st. car IJ'Io Bide Prod 36~1 Ncranda 53 C Cemenl 26V. Pauduh - U\0 c Cement pr 21 Prlco . 50~ C Steamship 611\ Royal Bank' 7UV. C Bnk Com 70\'o Boy•llt• 9Vo Cdn Drew 53\!a 51. L Corp 231,0

.NEED A'NEW StOVE OR 'FRIDGEP

-BUY 'EM -'·WITH A LOW-COST'

. - LlfE;INSURED .

scmrwA.;· :,p ·'. ·m~

.. , LOAN.

. . .. ~· . TH~ ~A.NK OF ·

.street._) ··:._NOV~ SO.OTIA ' ·" i

,{ ·.

Cdn Colan :12 C lnl Power U C lnl Pwr pr 36 CPR ' 24~ Seaarama ll~l D Brld.olo Ill\ Dom Tar IIIlo

Shawtn Steel UN Steel 5 Walker CANADIAN

Cona Pap

----·. Toronto .

. .. '

MOlT ACTIVE TORONTO STOCKI D7 Tho Conadlan Prou

ljloek R1ln lllch Low C\001 Ch'so INDUSTR!At8

QN Gu Metra Star Brazil Dom 'far Sh•wln

J62JO sav. m 5 - \io $n& m• a D'li + ~• ~140 15\'o 490 495 - " 5666 S!OV.. 191> 19'\i- \I !llo8 um 2w, 24" + 11

Peruvian we oo Ll Pele Cdn Dev Lonr Paint

QJ).S 29710 202 1!0 23423 115 \08 16000 5 4 tom m 400

1000 J!l> 31 AIINES

159 -37 110 +2

IV.. 405 + ~ 3811 i 3\\

Tiara Murray Dlcroll Cenl l'al Newlund

moo son 7 ft\> +I 4220 !4 70 7~ -1 406~0 70 !9 70 +I 21:00 142 132 HU ..-1 IIXIOII 15\1 1114 I! + 1

Mutual Funds 'IUTUAL FUNDS

B1 The Canudlan Fre11

All Cdn Com All Cdn Dlv American Growth 'Deaubran

Did Aok UJ 9.17 8.37 6.92 0.33310 17

Conadlan lnveslmenl Car.olund ChamplonhMulual Commonwealth Inter. Commonweallh Lel'crare Corpratlon Inveaton European Growth lund Dlvnllled oerlea B Dividend Shaos Dominion EquitY Federated Growth lund Flnl Oil and Gas Funds CoileciU A Yonds Ca!lectjl C Group Inc,

32.63 3!.43 10.20 11.19 43.74 4!.93 6.09 6.69 9.07 9.94 8 19 B.9B

ID.18 11-12 7.11 7.19 4.4! 4.85 3.49 3.83

11.15 18.04 S.!6 5.64 4 39 4.8D 6.11 8.67 8.65 7.23 3.84 uo

Grouped lncomo Accum. Group Sloclll A Growth Oil ond Gu 1.0! !.4! lnveatou Growth lund 7 10 7.71 lnveoton Mutual 12.89 14.02 Keyatcna 16.10 17.42 Mutual Accumutatlnl lund 0.10 9.95 Mutual Income lund !.65 6.17 N, American lund al Can. 10.48 11 45 Radluon 4.73 5.20 Rerent Fund 5.16 S-64 Save and Invest at C•noda &.91 8.1! Supervised Amer. lund 8.36 8 U Supervised Exec 53 43-58 Supervised Exec 36 47.10 Supervloed Exec ~7 6.40 Spervlaed Exee 58 6.66 6.83 Sopervlaed Growth Fund 2.01 82.03, Suparvl••d Income Fund 4.4! 4.49 x-TV Eleclronlc I 31 10.16 Timed Invutmenl lund 6.15 6.86 United Accumulatlva 18.31 20.10 x-u.s. tuRds •

Montreal · MOSTRI':AL CtOSING ITOCKI

117 Tba Cnwdl•• Prell Montreal Stock Exehanre-AuJ, 11 Complola labulollcn ol Wodneoday

trannctiona Quotatlona In cents unleu marked 1. z-Odd lot, xd-:-EX·dlvldend, xr-!x.rl,hlo, xw - Ex-wa!rmta Nel chango Ia lorn previous day 1 eltao. ·

bNel Black lain Rllh.Low Claoo Cb'Jo

Abitibi 1011! um m< 4m + ,. Alamlnl 11110 133 m'o li Alum 2 p &:ZO $17 47 4T Ani T 4~Pr 70 $U 43 43 +1 Arau• 175 su" 1m 14- " Aabulpa . 775 SJm 3116 3nl -I Allaa Sin\ 350 S30ll 30 30% -1 Bank ns 101 179 79 79 +I Banq CN 80 N5 14~ 841> + \!a Banq PC 9 1411'.1 41~ 4\v.. - It Bath L A 0 t-lli'lo 4m 4811• - ~~ Bow 5 pr zl! sso · lltl &0 Bowat•• 400 18 a I Brazil 600 !00 490 !00 - II• BA Oil ~055 .I em32'1o 321io + % DC Pow 965 SJW. Jm 33\J- V• Drackvl pr z2l Iii'• W• 9\l Drown 318 m 14 14 + \i BUild Prod ziO 13614 3!14 38~ Cal Pow !Ill $251io 25~l 2510 Can Com . k395 S26V. 26 261'• + '4 Can Cern Pr. 108 $2! 28 28 - 1<. C Dom SUI 323 12m 21 21 - ~~ Cl Fndry 400 mv. 19¥1 19" - V. CSL I $59~ !91\ !0\'o C A viatiCa 10 122 22 22 +" Cd,mBrew 2350 SlHI 53\!a ~311 - \0 c Br Alum :155 1121> 121\ 121>- li cat A wt 011 375 375 m -2! c Brocu 25 120 20 20 Cdn Calan BOO S32 1m 32 • c Ctl 111 pr so m4 J5'4 Jill - '4 c Frbko A 3!0 SID!> 10~ ID-11- '>I c Imp Bk le ma S70V• 70 101-1 + ~~ C!L 400 $1514 1~\1 11~4 + V• C\ row ztll 112 12 12 C1 Pew pr s!O $31 31 3! .• Cdn Oil Ill S30lio JD-11 30%- ~ CPR 990 $241> 21 241> + \0 CPI'I Ptt pr 100 l\0¥. 10~1 10;1 C Jollcken zs 120 20 20 Comb Enl 1600 II! 13 1' +-~ Con MS 109712$1,1 25 :15 - \1 c Glau 300 123 23 23 +li CorbY A • Z2! $19\fo \Olio IIIIo Coronalll ~ Silo/• 19\llo;l Dill Seal uto 1m1 n11 41'4 +~ P Brldla 190 SID lll'o laVa- \1 D Pndry 25 161\4 61" am D Glaao 3 !0·174 74 14 +1 ll Glaso pr Mlil 11'14 11'4 14~1 ll Steel m $13 IJ 11 - \4 D Storti 3795 Sl7 17 17 Dam Tar lll3 SiiYo 1911 191io- \io Dom Text 12011 Ill% 14\1 1111- lo Pu P011t 250 f2& 21 28- \i Duput; Fr 1!: 100 l! I I Eddy P . K\077 1\U \l,t 1,4 l'am Pla1 870 11!\t 18~ IB\\ Fr Pata pr 110 m m m +I Frastr 723 1271's 27' 27 Fndtu 200 mv. 12" 12" + 'II l'rou1 A 200 12014 2MI 20'11 4-~ GL Paper U50 $21 20% 21 t Ban<l)l An<l)l ~ m 21 21 Handy A w\ ISO ~~~~ 11\i m~ Horna PI 3110 345 310 540 Bud Day Co 20U' In% 12¥1 12% llud Bay Mill 335 um -B4V. SIV. Imp lnv A 131 11111• 21 21¥• Imp Oil 1322 118~ 41 CBV.. + '4 Imp Tob 125 Sllll IS" ISV. + \fo Imp Tcb pr 150 16~ ~~ 11'1 + ~ llld Aecep 2101 164 &3\i 14 +I> I AD UllPr 50 SD7 ~7 t7 +11'1 1nt Nlcktl BOO S8SV. IIWI B\io- % lnt UIU 730 Ill~ 2% 43~ 4- % Inter PL 50 169\i! ~~~ - 1'.1 Jomalca PS 25 IJIV.. 341\ 3411 La ball 100 mv.. 4l 4511 + ~ L 51 L 25 1371> 37\> Jjl\- 1> !dau ~ pnxd 55 111161\ 10611 i06\!a Met Stom 320 am Bl'o 11> .. + " Mot Sloreo Pr 350 1211> 21~ 21\!a- 1< Molson A 1120 12811• 21 211< + 'Yo Molson B 90 $27'>1 27% 27% + \1 Molson pr z22 142 . 42 · 42 Mont 'l'ruat so 1721> 72\!a 7%\!a +2\i N St Clr 750 113\'• 13¥1 13V. Noran a xd 1235 UlU 53 53 -· 1,0 NS Ll' . 75 I IBM! 1m IBI1 011\vl• 375 Ill 55 115 Page Her1 12! nm " 2514 +% Pow Corps 150 1571< 57 &1\o.i + .% Price br 161 SlOI~ 50 50\~ + li QN Gat 20713 525 435 500 - ~ QN Gaa WI 1110 liD 140 140 '-40 QN Oaa Pr 133 113 :sa 43 +3 Quo Phana 100 Ul , 45 45 Steel Can !0 174 74 74 ..: " Stelnbl . A 1100 128~ :loll> 2m Tor Dom &:Z S61 19 · 11

CANADIAN - Llaled

AJax &soo · 2111 :za za ADJ Am M 4700 32S 303 . 32l +S Aal Nlld 1&55 11\io ~\i . I" + ~ AliDa 1000 & 55 5 + 1 AUaa Ttl 25100 gg . 9! 19 + .. AUIUOtUa Z416 30 :10 30 Avalca 22.1 1114 · sY, I'll- 14 Bokor · ' 6000 U\\ II\ IIi-·~ Batomaq : • .10 I! 5 1 · · Boaueo 2000 115 II • BS BoUachao 1000 :12 :u 22 +2 Blue Wlr .ZOO 14 14 ·a Donnyvl 100 IS 15 IS BrnUe . . 3000 7 7 7 -1 ·c CaDI pr ., 400 II '· 11'. 11 +11 C Dnd(o · 335 IU% tnt % + 'It co lqv . -200 ·uo · 10 40 C Kodiak · · 8!00 1110 uo 160 +1 C Pcwor ze 16 ·-• 8 Clnorama 2300 31 34 · 31 Cabrec · 11100 10 10 10 Chomal\oy ~090· 325 315. m -s Chlb Cop 3000 · 11 II 14 Copatrtn · 1000 · so 20 · JO

\ . ·-

,,.

... , 'IOU ARE NOW OSSERVif.l' A GREAT HAIJDLER OF MEIJ AND AIJ AMATEU~/ "11-1' BULL LETS 'f.:>U "TJ-IIIJK HE! So A SruPtl' 6EIJIUSo AIJ' IT'S 1<.10 FUIJ FOOLIIJ' HIM·-"TH' OTHER GUY't.L

BE IIJ HOSPITALS REGULAR/

OUR BOARDING HOUSI: WH'f, !oiO, 7HEY Dllnoi'T A'SK Me 'TO PO'THIS••'THEWOMeNAAS

POWIJn:lMI SHOPPINC5rANDI 'TH006HT 'VI' SUIZPRISI= "THEM!

:CVE tSOT A FeW MORE LOAP5 To WASH AfllP HAIJtS ·-HOW

"1""""'"1"' AaoUT 6MNtSME A uFT:r

David 1'r A zU 131" 11\i 39~ Denault 1300 IIIIi 141 141'1 + 11 Dollan 1825 10 II>· 10 +3 D !nl 615 12!% 25w3 25b4 B 4 D Explcroro 2500 40 3U . 31 -2 D Lean 1000 as ·82 ll +3 P Ollclolh z5 123 23 23 Eut Mal. BOO 210 210 210 W+IO Falcon 240 $12 11" 12 + 'lo Pleot Mlr &oo 12 12 12 -7 Fundy lOO 4 4 4 I Gold Aro 1500 11 58 31 llasllntr• 3700 99 9~ 95 -2 Inland c 200 110 1110 160 lnv Fnd zl n uo 40 40 JubUeo 908 350 330. J!O + 10 Lambt A lOO SIJV. 13¥1 131<, 7 Lith carp 2m 11 JB 16 Maosvat 44000 10 10 10 ~lclntyre 500 Sill\ 41 4lv.. + ~ Ml W Iron 2000 91 91 91 --4 Mer Chip 550 40 40 10 Min. Corp 400 Sl2V.. 12'\i 121\ Mo!yb 400 11 o llo · llh +1 Mt Pleannl 2100 48 •s 45 ~!umns 200 mSII "11 II N Forma 3300 l 5 5 Nfld Lllht !0 $65 64\!a s:; + \4 N Sanllego 3000 2M! )1\ 2~ + v.. NW Amlet" 5!1100 19 15 !SV.. -21> NA Rare l700 41 40 40 +I

~~L!~~d 1: :n~ 27~ 27~ +25 Opeml!ka 300 735 71973735 -2s Porcupine 4000 9 9 9 - 11 Pow CP 1 pr 200 $46 40 4lJ +I Prem 511 ZIO $9\1 9\i 9\1 Quo Coba\1 300 275 260 260 + 10 Que Smell 11100 11 11 11 Haaland 48!>0 36 35 38 . -1 St L Colum 17!0 770 765 770 + 10 Sauc011 Dev 2300 165 1110 165 +4 Shop Save 1610 S71io 71's 7"- 1< Sabey 340 $16~ 16~ 16~ + 1\ 5 Pulault . 1000 9 9 9 SC Pew 6 pr· 10 Sl25 125 m Spartan 3800 150 145 1~0 SOl ll' ol'<l 100 11~\io 15~ 15~ + \1 Tuln ~1. 8 8 1 Tlb Expl 1300 5 5 5 Tr c Corp 75 1!8\!a 58\i 581\ - \1 U A&bUICI 600 120 615 610 u Prln 1600 115 no m · -a .u 'roWlla El 100 1151~ 1111 1111 Venluroa 41V au 611\ 61 + V. VlrtJlnla 500 1 . e 1 + 1> Weedon 1000 2 ~ 2 Weudtl 1000 1\!a 1~ 1\i

.l!nlloled Advocate IOo 460 480 · 460 + 20

c Dolbv 200 585 385 313 300 400 4ll0 400

-:10 Cam\ SOIV 2000 30\0 2~7 30\io + '4 Con Edls 1000 77 76~4. 76tJ + "'' Cdn Dev

Cent Dol c Paper ccu Gaa Gateway Giant YK Kerr Add Lobo CA w M Leal MU! MO Paper Moor• Murray Sherrill Sloop R Trano Ml Un Goa

600 59> l9o m -5 33l 146 II 46% +lir

1050 I $19 18\io 1811-\io 4000222

500 ll2'1o 121/o 12V. - ~ 300 $101> !D'h lOV.. + 70

z2s mv.. 221> 221> 150 $15Yo 15l'o 15l'o- \1 800 135 35 35 -% 100 Nl 63 63 +I 2000 70 TO 70 -7 600 m 120 ~25 -3o

.1!50 785 77! 760 -20 570 Ill~ 13 13 2110 $19~ IS% 19%-%

New_ York · ·

Container 8100 26\l. 26\1 2611 + li Coni Can 2400 44 41\> 4311• + 'ri lont ou 3700 57 381> 56% eapw Sll 600 361\ 36\i 36\l -li Crano Co BOO 68\io ft'lo/o !8 - V. Cr zen 1800 57w6 57% 5711 + ... Deere 1100 511> 51Vo 51¥o- lio Dis1 Seat 900 401> 40'1i 40'1i- ~~ Dome 1 1300 24% 24\i 24% + V.. DOUIIII 10500 3811 38 38\1 - l'l Dow Cbem 11400 80 ?9!1 80 + I> Du Pen I 3800 232 230 232 + 1 Eaol Kod 8300 IOSV. 104 !OS +I · Eaton Mol 2200 36\i 38\io 38\i + % El Auto L 300 6l 6410 64'1io El PliO 144011 26% 26'\i 261> + lio Firestn 6600 48'11. 4nl 46\1• + ll Fol'<l 49800 112 IKI Ill> -'l Ford 49!00 12 90 911>- II Fruoh 'l'r& 12900 291\ 21Ri 29\0 + \4 Gon Dyn 22200 33% 321'1 33 - I> Gen Eloa 211100 881> &m 66~ + v.

NEW YORK CLOSING STOCK! Gen Fda 3800 II~ 90Vo 91\4 + 1,0 Dr Tbe A11ocloled Prua Gen Millo 1000 3!1\ 35\'o 3514- 11

New 'rcrk Stock ExchaniO-AUf, 18 GMC 24500 IT% 1711 47MI (xd - Ex-dlv!dud, xr - El.riJhta. Geu Tiro 6100 '84 811\ 38 32'1

xw-!x-worranla. Nel chonlt II lrom -Gllddon 11100 43 4210 43 Hi prevloua day'a close.) · Gocdtrch !300 74!fo 73lio 71 + Vo

Not Goodyr 6000 45% 4m 4511 + " !look Ia tea Blab. Low Close Cb'l• Gr Palll , IIIII 2% 2% 210- \~

ACF 1nd 2300 64 12'Yo 84 +I Grand UQ IBOO 3ll 38 38\> Addroos 8300 55~ Ill'! 9! - \1 Gl AP 3500 llli ~2" ~V.. + 1,0 AlleiODY 4500 10\i 10 10 Gt Nor It 3400 ll'lio 41\i 41j3 • 1 Ailla Cb 71100 21 23\> 21 + lt!fo GuU OU . 11600 38\io 1710 83711 + ~ Am Tcb 2700 93 92 12 - 1< Kamolk 500 48 4TW 47% Ancndl 8000 lS 531,0 54\1 + 1'lo Hud Bl!' 200 12\1 12% 12\i + % Armco SU 1300- 78~ 7B\1 7BV. lntarlaka 400 25\i 2m 2511- \io Annatr 300 P1i. 881> II% + \io Ia\ Buo :M 4000 497\!a 4U 4851\ IV.. noucock 1600 411\ 48 48 - % lui Harv 1300 &5\l. 53% l3% + \i Roll Ohio - 100 31 31 _. 31 + \1 lnt IVlliCU yo 5100 Blfi 8:1\lo 831\ Beth Sleet '0!00 12\i 4111 42 - \1 lnl Pap 11000 mo 35\1 35!1 + ,_, lloelng 11!00 .54% 53% 33'!1 + % lnl Tel 3800 Sl" 81% lB%- 11 Borden 2000 62\t 6% 62V. - \1 Johns M 4800 66¥1 lllf 66V. + 1io

'BorrWar · &00 42~ 42Yo 42 + lio Kreua 2100 31% 51\i 3lv..- \io Budd Co 1000 14~ lilt 1414 + \i Loew'• 2700 51% 51 311\- Yo Burl lad .' 29100 22\i ~1% 22" + 1,0 Marah Fld 100 39\'o 39" 39~ . Burrrhl 2100 30\i 30% 30 - ~ Marllu co 7900 3!~ 31\i 35'1t · Cllumel 700 1~ "" Ill> + ~ lolcKea 100 21 :n 21 - \4 ccarnR Dey. lOO 25¥1 2111 2llio + ~~ Merck 2100 19~ as~ Bill. +1,0

·1100 U% 23\!a 23% Mpll. H1111 1!011 117 14ll 147 +1 caae Jl 1400 9\l. 9% . 9;1 +~ Mlnn MM 1100 71~ 7710 71'1i + 1'\ C•le• Tr 3200 40% 3S\140\!o- % Mlnn Onl :1100 21V. 3l~l 34 + ~ Celaotao IKIOO 40\l 39\i 39bll 7 Monsanto 8100 5511 15\io 5!11 + % Chance V 71100 53~1 51 53 +2 Mont Wrd I !MOO 3114' 301\ JIIVo- Vo ~··~-l Ohio .. 3100 51\>· ll'lo 5110 +I Nat Avlat· 100 · 31\io 3011 3011- 1i Chrysler. xd 21100 SOl\ III'Yo !0\4 +II Nat Caah ·.- 1500 'tom IOOU 101~-" · ~vu 3100 .141> 53\io sm- \1 Nol Dl•t 11800 28\i ~m 21 + 11 r•,- I•• 20l 50\l 58',) saw!- I NV Cent llqi31MJ 17'1 11\io 171\ + \1 Coca Cola 1600 10'1 19\io 811,4- 11 NV NH uno 21\ ni m

Ohio Oil JOO ~~~~ 41¥• 44 + !> r·-n•e oulb Mar 6100 19\io \1-~l 19 llO'f Pal Parke Da 7800 33\> 331> Jm - II Penn RR IOSOO 14 13\!a 1311 + 1~ J 8 Phelps D uoo 611\ 611> am 1 Gldlld .

100 s Phl1c0 H200 2l~i 203 21~· + 11(, I •····' .~hi . o: ~I'• :n ;,:, Pit Plato 2200 67 65\io 65\l.- 11 II lb 1;;cQ J J-!i I Proc Gam 8 q3500 53\> 93 93 - ¥• Jlp sf: JOO l-11 RCA 4600 5W. 5811 59 + \1 on , 6oo II'• 11~ RfpUb Stl 3200 621> Gm 62\> +I< ll:!dey J~IID 290(1 JTo\1111 Royal wdul :6200 JHI 31 311\- \!a Moly 500 36'• !511 Sears R 37110 70li 70V• '701'• - \1 N t p 1 roo 11• 2 Shell ou mo 45 IIV. 41~ - ;1 N:l n:b 1oo 22 ll Sinclair 3100 4011 40\lo 401h + 11 NJ Zinc l"UC :1 Soccny 7900 mi 45ll 4&1> +Ill Nlnl•,'; 0 g via ! 01 1'1 South Pac 212011 271> 26% 271> +I rae Pdc 1100 1l'i ll'l Sperry R l8400 29 28\> 28%- '10 ::::.::::::::::::~' Sid Brand 1200 69lo 69\io 7llll + 'ri Std Cal 6500 51 501> 50% - \io Sid Jnd 4800 5:W. 52\> 52\>- Vo Sid NJ 19500 4411 1m 4411 + \io stud Pak 400000 9% Blo 91< + " Sun Oil 2110 ·5411 541\ 54\\ + Vt Texaco xd 7200 5511 !4\io lm +1 Te< sui 5100 21 2611 2m Thtokol 7600 42\i 40% 42\o +S Tldowlr 2000 2:: 21~1 2\li + \I Tlmken 500 511i 57% SSl\ + ~~ Twenl C 17110 31\l 36'>1 361>- 11 Un Carb 3100 131\l 136\> 137\io- \i Utd Alrc 5000 ~2\'o 51\!a &1!1- ~• Utd Corp , 1700 9 810 BY, US Gypo 2600 102~ IOOV. 102 +" US Rub xd 3600 62Yo 12 62"- li Walkers ql 0 52% 52 52% + % W Un Tel 1700 44" 1\\!a 44%- 10 Westbs E1 11900 43" tm 42" Woclwtb 1300 lS 741\ 74%- \i

AMBIUOAN CLO!ING 8TOCU BJ '1'111 ·AIIoolalad PnP

American Stock E:oebanf....,.Uf,- 11 xd - EJ:-dlvld .. d, :u · - Ex•rlllbll,

xw-Ex-warrants. Not cbaGio Ia from previOUI dlf'a eloae.)

. wnet Stock ..

Bell Pbone Brazil BA OU · Bunk Hill Burry Blo cs ,pel• · Can .Marc

lilu Blsb Low Cloaa Ch'se 200 12~ 02 nv. + v.

!100 11 4'\t 4\k - " aoo m4 s1 SJ~t 200 13 IS .13 -\4

' 100 25'i 2Mi :!3%'- \\ 4300 21 211·18 2 11.11-l·lf

400 . l\i 5'.io 5\lo

THE BoWA'l'ER CORPORATION NORTHAME

LIMITED

Montreal, QuobiCo Augull I, 1961.

Alta Tnk A 160 131\i Sill S2\io- 1\ CBS 3200 35lio 34!i. 3!'\1 + I< Nor Pac 2000 U 41~ U t 1\COn 14 S 100 21\i· 241\ .21\i + ~·

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WA'fCH FOR 1'1-IlS SIGN

DEAL! • - - 4-----

,y.y • R ~i . ~· '

Cc:tsumcrs in the Act

in the Mot ~MtlrntrJg Pops

in 'l'ouch to Home

~;!crE'U Hearl Pro~ News.

l-At~no1uncers Choic• Broadcast.

Day Serenade. Bulletin

Davis News and \\'<

Hunter Rendezt·ot

1-D<Imi~tion Obs. Tit

i-Pt:o~r·nm Preview l-5UJJper Guest.

Music. News and \\

l-R11ndom Cbapterl Today. Bulletin

Reporter and Reso1

151nf~l 81rial 7Snoo BGodl

· 9Medi 10"5\al llOrie1 lDTrac :liiLof~ 23 Girl' 25Redl 271rlsb 28RaU1 li3Relu ~- DlsD 8~Nri

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Page 13: .TR~~KS ~ ! Nova Motors: Ltd. randt Calls For Politi cal ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196108… · b~· 200,000 West Berliners in front of city East German

•I ini U!'l ~JJ·I6 3 !DO J\i

lO . ~~~ II" 100 ·177" 17!' 00 36~i ~,., 00 2!i ' >0 22 t:!OO 29 00 1\i I() !IIi

1oTCH FOR rillS SIGN

NFLD. THURSDAY AUGUST 111961

TEXACO PRODUCTS •

Are Availab:~.

J..~ AU

GREAT. EASTERN OIL DEALERS & SERV.ICE STATI·ONS

,.\ugust nth.

Xcws. ol the Morning. News and Weather.

Clock. Devotions.

ers.

••nnlll,rrr< Choice llroadcast.

. Day Serenade. Bulletin

Dal'is ;\ews and Weather.

Hunter RendeZI'QIIS.

Obs. Time

Rendezvous. \'ariety ..

Tweed Xews Canada Matinee

Theatre. the Air Broadcast

from the Albums

Preview Guest.

Music. :iews and Weather.

Chapters Today. Bulletin Reporter

and Resources

for Mariners Repeating

on the Ramble Showcase

News, and Talk. 0 Canada. The

s Infatuate I! 8lr!Jiayer 7 Sno01es 8 Goddess 9Medlal

I lG "Staff o! life" I 11 Oriental colDJ

lDTrackera 20 Lolllne•• 23 Girl's DIIIIO 25Redactor 271rlab fuel 28RaUonll 33 Reluctant ~; lllapateher MtlewYorkclly 88 LlniUllhe~

8.40- Breakfast with Bill 8.55-News 9.00-Morn!ng Meditations 9.03-Kitchcn Capers D.dO-News. Headlines

10.00--News 10.05-Stork Club 10.08-V.O.C.M. 590 Special 10.30-Ncws Headlines 10.31-V.O.C.M. 590 Special 10.55-News 11.00-Juke Box Jamboree 11.30-News Headlines 11.31-Western Hit Parade 11.55-News 12.00- Ram blin with Records 12.30-News 12.35-Ramblin with Records 12.45--Fishermans Forecast 12.u0-Ramblln with Records 12.55-News 1.00-Ramblin with Records 1.15-World of Sport 1.30-Ncws (Local) 1.45-News (National) 2.00-Prizes and Problems on

Parade 2.30-News Headlines 2.31-Prizes and Problems 2.55-News 3.00-JIIake Believe Ballroom 3.30-New~ Headlines 3.55-Ncws 4.00-Bobs Bandwagon 4.30-Ncws Headlines 4.31-Bobs Bandwagor. 4.55-News 5.00-Supper Serenade 5.30-News Headlines 5.31-8upper Serenade 5.50-Fishermans Forecast 5.55-Ncws • 6.00...Bullctln Board 6.10-Movle News 6.15-Sports Report and : Travel Guide

6.30-Early Evening News . llOU!ldUp

7.00-Shlllelagh Showtlme 7.30. -News Headlines 7.31-Shllle!agh Show Time 8.00-News Headlines 8.01-Crcam of the Crop 8,30-News Headlines 8.31-Cream of the Crop 9.00-Ncws Headlines 9.01-Cream of the Crop 9.30-News Summary (Local) 9.45-Ncws Summary

(National) 10.00-V.O.C.M Gold Record

Room 1Q,30-News Headlines 10.31-V.O.C.M. Gold ·Record

Room 10.45-Sports Roundup 10.55-News 1l.O~Forecast from Torbay

Tower · 11.02-The Big Top Ten 11.30-News Headlines 11.31...;:(;Jub 6.9.0. 12.00-News Headlines 12.Ql-Midnlght Sports Scorea 12.05-Ciub 590. 12.55-News Summary, 1.05-Sign Off.

Weather Report and Time

CJON· THURSDAY, August 11th.

6.30-News and Weather· 6.35-Bob Lewis' Show 6.40-Sports 7.35-Weather Forecast

., ' . -.·1 .... ·

7.40-Bob Lewb Show 7.45-News 7.50-What's Cookln' 7.55-Bob Lewis Show 8.00-Newa 8.05-Sporta 8.10-Bob Lewis Show 8.15-TransportaUon Report 8.20-Bob Lewis Show 8.25-Kiddles Korner 8.30-News and Sports 8.35-Weather Forecast

. 8.40-Jjob Lewis Show 8.55-Just a Minute 9.06-Ncws 9.05-Music for Millions 9.20-Star Time 9.30-AusUn Willis 9.35-Weather Forecast 9.40-Jerry Wiggins Show 9.55-Jane Gray Show

• JACOBY ON BRIDGE

= a:z;:::::::: ' L

SUIT PREFERENCE SIGNAL WORKS -

.:::a:

By OSWALD JACOBY No series of articles on de·

fensive signals would be com· p!ete without one about the suit preference signal.

West 'looks over his collec· lion of tripe and decides to open his singleton diamond as a desperation measure.

The lead works perfectly. East gathers in the trick with his ace and returns the suit for West to ruff. No wif West leads a heart· South will make the rest of the tricks, but tf he returns a club East will take his ace and ~ive West another diamond ruff.

The suit preference signal makes It possible for East to direct West's return. He leads his lowest diamond, the deuce,

10.00-News Hlghllehts 10.ol-Martln's Corner 10.15-Housewlves Choice 10.30-National News 10.33-What's Cookln' 10.35-Hclusewlves Choice 10.45-Homemakers News 10·.50-Housewives Choice 11.00-N cws Hlehllghts 11.01-Housewives Choice 11.10-Kitchen Klatter 11.15-The Right to Happiness 11.30-News

1 which tells his partner to rc. turn the lower suit-clubs.

11.35-Nfld. Quiz 11.43--Town and Country, 12.00-l'{ews Highlights 12.01-Town and Country 12.30-News 12.33-Town and Country 1.00-New• 1.01-Town and.Country 1.05-Weather Forecast 1.15-News 1.35-Don Jamieson's Editorial 1.4o_:..sports 1.45-Art Baker~s Notebook 2.00-Ncws Highlights 2.01-What's Cookin' 2.03-Matlnee 3.00-News Highlights 3.01-Western Jamboree 4.00-News 4.01-Ranch Party 4.30-Natlonal Newa · 4.33-Rancb Party 5.00-News Hlghllihts 5.01-Dance Party 6.00-Newa Hllhlllhts 6.01-What's Cookln' 6.02-Weather Forecast 6.05-Bulletin Board 6.10-Natlonal Newa 6.15-Sporll 6.25-News 6.30-Club 93 8.00-News In a Minute 8.01-Best from the West 8.30-Natlonal News 8.31-Best from the West 9.00-News Highllihtl 9.03-Nfld. Soiree · 9.40-Salt Lake Choir

10.00-News Highlights 10.01-High Adventure 10.30-Natlonal Newa 10.415-Sports 10.11:5-Letters and Mesaaces ll.OQ-Newa Highlights 11.01-Muslc in the Night 12.00-Newa Hilhllihta 12.01-Music in the Nl1ht 1.00-News in a Minute 1.01-BIIn Off

CJGN-TV THURSDAY, Augu1t nth.

5.041-:-Junlor Roundup; · 5.15-Junlor RoUIIdup, Pan 1

, 8.00-Captalll lacll 8.30-World of Sport. 8.40-Local News. 7.00-The Man caUed X,

· 7.30-Fun Fed. 8.00-~elleve It or Not 8,05--Dayton Allen 8.15-Natlonal New1. 8.30-Wyatt Earp, 9.00-Tlght Rope 9.311-Summer Circuit.

10.00-Checkmate 11.00-Parade . 11.30-WrestUnl. 12.30-sports Calanilar 12.35-News Headllnet an4

Weather IUS-Sign Off

•BARBS By HAL COCli1L\N

A boyd' crime school was di .. covered In the East. To some kids that cOuld • mean any .achool. •

• • • • : The man who · does juat enough to get buy doesn't. etll'll :enou&h 1o buy much.· ' .. : .....

.. .. '

NORTH (D)' .AQU ¥4 +KQJHS "'K 8

'WEST EAST

•sH ·•' ¥Jl093Z ¥K65

5

+3 +A102· .. JlO 85 "'ABU U

SOUTH .JtJ1088 ¥AQU +884. ... Q

Both TUinerabte North Ead South Wed 1 + 'Pasl 1 It> l'an II • · 1'111 • • l!aiS l'ass l'an . Openlnl Jeall-+ s If East had wanted a heart

return he would have played the ten of diamonds and the high card play would have asked for the higher ranking suit-hearts.

The signal works perfectly with this hand. It also works perfectly in Jll&ny other In­stances, but some players have become suit preference happy and work the signal to death. When they do this they lose their chance to use many natural strcngth·showing sJg. nals and wind up losing with it.

CARD SENSE Q-The bidding has been:

North East South West 1¥ I' ass 3+ Pass 3¥ Pau ol N.T. Pass 5¥ Pm 1

You, South hold: to2 ¥KQ10,4 +AQ817,11,5,4 "'A

What do you do? . A-tf you feel optimistic bid

seven hearts. At worst this will depend on a finesse. If you feet pessimistic just bid six hearts and If you feel scientific bid five no·trump.

TODAY'S QUESTION You bid five no·trump and

your partner bids six hearts to ahow two kings. What do you do now? ·

. Answer Monday

· MISS·UNIVEME.,... :Ma~lene · Schmidt, 24, Is i refugee from East Germany. The Soviets· claim that she won the Miss Universe '.title ,only to, spur a

· fiood · cif :East. Germ ana west. She doesn't 'agree;· she· 'says her wliUliDI wa• .above bqard •

,

!i

' !

PRISCILLA'S POP

FH.t.CKLES AND HIS FRIENDS ~---·-·· ~~

I I

BUGS :SU)\~NY

' '

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Page 14: .TR~~KS ~ ! Nova Motors: Ltd. randt Calls For Politi cal ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196108… · b~· 200,000 West Berliners in front of city East German

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' .. . .. • ( • ! • .!.~----~~--------------~--------------~ YOU WON'T MIND

GETTING! : ~·

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HERE'S A TICKET.

; '' .. ;' . t. • ;. I t I o ~ (' :

. - . . ·EVERY $1.00 you spend at .•• . . ' ' .

I ~ ,·. . ' . t w '

.•t, ' ~ .. ~' : l . . ... •, . I' • . I

'1: •

Oakley's·· .·Service Station makes you eligible$7 QO 00

for a PRIZE of • EVERY MONTH IN THEIR EXCITING BIG CONTEST

CONTEST NOW IN FULL SWING ••• closes . 15th of every month.

CONTEST PRIZE redeemable at the LONDON, NEW YORK and PARIS for FURNITURE, CLOTHING,

HOl\lE ACCESSORIES or whatever you want' · . to purchase.

Service Station Oa!(ley's FRESHWATER ROAD DIAL 93681, 96396

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'--------DRIVE IN NOW-------• ... ,, .... _________________ _J . :.I I ~

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1·,.~ . : .

I. ·I . ~. . . LOANS for INDUSTRY

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I EXPANDING or1

DEVELOPING',

YOUR BUSINESS.

?

You are invited to enquire about I.D.B. financing for businesses from a represen­tative of this Bank, Mr. D. G. Holland, who will be • available for discussion at 170 ·water Street, St. John's (offices of Eastern Canada Savings & Loan Com· pany) during the week beginning August

21st.

TELEPONE 7241 For An Appointment.

• I . : i• . .· . . ;:>• • I .: ' I' •. ,,. i . 1·1·

'. \ I• -':! '·i I.NDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT IANIC

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I,. I : . •; ' ' , ~ I . ' . ' l . ' ' .. ~ t ; ..

I I ' .. AUCTION . ' [ I'

~ ; ! ; l i • SUPERIOR HOUSEHOLD : ;' 1 1: 1 '. i ;FWtNITURE AND EFFECTS ' · i : ~~ ~T THE RESIDENCE OF I< if.~ • ; 1\IR. 0. L. VARDY,

I !: l.. : . ) 131 BONAVENTURE AVE., l>d :

:;.'I:.:.· .·: . .9_N •. THURSDAY, AUGUST 11th . , :: , · · ·, INST. AT 10.30 A.l'ol,·

' : ! r i . ; . ~Sving· Roo~· pee. section· .. : j: P-: .;. al chesterfield suite, 1·4 pee, : ! ·i·.; · ·1 ,et end tables and coffee tables 1 · : ;y (Black Carerra), 5 table lamps, ! . ; 'i': 1. nest walnut tables (3), 1 cb·

ony, Chinese cabinet, 1 set ' · · l brass fire Irons, 1 set dog irons ' '· .. ·.!'1:;: . 1 (brass and iron), sundry orna·

;· ': mcnts, 1 . wrought· iron maga· 'ii zlne rack, .1 easy chair, 1 fn· • ·:i dhin rug 9' X 12.', wall· piac· 1 io ques •

. ' .

. I 1 ~

. . ::. ~: I :.. .1 ~ Dining Room-1·9 pee .. oak 1 ·~: ., dining room suite (leather cov-

• ! ;.

; ; i 1 i: : ered chairs), 1 radio·phono· · • .,.. l.'i ; graph combination, sundry china

I i 1 'l : · i ; and glassware, 1 silver candle· , 'II:.: 1 ( bra and rose bowl, 1 service for -i j' · ·' eight, complete dinner set, 1

I'. ·l·.: ;: . electric percolator, 1 silver jug

I ~: . and ice bowl (Rogers), 1-5 pee. ; l ;j; '·' ,.., •. ,. , silver seniice t!llilan design), '; : · , . ~ lJable lamp, sundry s11ver ash

. i II ' I . tr 1 h b d (" , , . ( ' ays, c ecse oar Juoun· ',; 1. . , · .; · wn Vermont), sundry orna· ' · I·; manu, 1 . mahogany cutlery

r• ' •! , chest. 1-63 pee. sterling silver

1 ~ ; set, 1·5 pee. silver· service set,

1·' • 6 Buckhorn steak knives, 1 rna· ~ . hogany salad bowl, 1· 2. pee. red • ·.:: glass salad set; 1 fruit board, 1 · ;: ·· cheese dish, 1 crumb tray and

brush, silver plated, sundry all· : , , verware, etc.

•I ;

I .:

IIGIONAL OHICI

Tlze

Daily News NEWFOUNDLAND'S

MORNING ·NEWSPAPER

For just 7c. per day or 42c. for SIX Days

Per Week you can have Delivered to Your '

· Door or Place of Business, EARLY EACH .

MORNING-

The Latest: e World News.

• Local News.

• Social News.

• Sports News.

• Teen News

e Entertainment News.

• Shopping News, ~pecial Sales etc.

• Generar Information.

e Stock Market Reports.

· PHONE US AT 2177 • 78 • 79. WE WILL BE GLAD TO ARRANGE DELIVERY.

The

Daily N·ews . CIRCULATION ,DEpARTMENT.

LOST-One Lady's Bulova Watch, in the vicinity o[ the Royal' Stores. Reward of· fcrcd. Call 3586,

j AUTO . PARTS (Whole)

Nrld. I

Public Notice Pursuant to Section 9(2) of

The Nomenclature Board Act, the Act Number 13 of 1959, notice is hereby given that two months from the date hereof, His Honour the Lieutenant· Governor in Council proposes to give the name "Labrador City" to the Municipality in· corporated under the provisions of The Local Improvement District of Labrador City (No. 1) Order, 1961, the boundaries of 'which are described fn the Schedule hereto.

!\lYLES 1\IURRA Y, 1\llnlster of Provincial Affairs.

SCHEDULE

TO RENT-1\Iodern sclf·cOn· taincd Healed Apartment.

Phone 91391H .

TilE CENTRAL BARBER SHOP-We are now operat­ing 10 chairs, you can be assured of prompt, effict· em, sanitary service No waiting problem, 24 New Gower Street opposite Ade· Iaidc Motors, Ltd.

COUNTRY CABINS - Pre· fabricated; pine construc­ti.on. Can be erected in two hours ready to live in. Low down payments, balance as low as 54.00 per week. Free delivery· \Vithin 100 miles of the city. Jack Lewis, Ken­mount Road. Phone 92489.

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

FOR SALE-I only C~mbin· atlon Washer /Dryer in ex· cellent condition! No down payment. Call D. Stick at *4041. jly4,tf !

RANGETTES, Washing Ma· chines, Sewing 1\lachines, Electric Kettles, Irons, Polishers, etc., repaired at reasonable rates. Ron Chafe

. . . . , GANO[R'Yt .. . :.~,~-x::·-~-

~ / ' ·: GRA~D. • . 1 .nno.Js

ALL THAT piece or parcel of land situate and being at Little Wabush Lake, in the Electoral District of Labrador North, in the Province of New· foundland, Canada, abutted and bounded as follows, that· is to say, by a line commencing at a point in the northeast boun­dary line of the within describ· ed piece or parcel of, land said point being distant seven hundred and ninety-two deci· mal five (792.5) feet measur· ed on a course South three (3) degrees, fifty·nine (59) minutes East from a concrete monument known as South Pin being the southern extremity of a base·line measured by the Iron Ore Company of Canada; thence running North thirty· eight· (38) degrees, eight (8) minutes West, !our thousand five hundred and nincty.ninc

116 Bond Street, Tel: 4907:3. 1 r-----·----­$60 RETURN jly11,1mth

WALK and PATIO pre-cast slabs, 3" x 16" x 24" now available. for prices, etc., Phone 92489. jlyl7,lmth.

CASH PAID FOR: Comics, Magatines, Pocket Novels and Books. John D. Snow,

· 9 N cw Gower Street. jly14,11i11h

decimal nine eight (4,590.98) _D_o_y_o_u_. n_e_e_ri_y_o_u_r_S_p~rlng-

St. John's- St. Pierre --Visit "OLD FRANCE"

in the New World --Flights by twin en· gine aircraft at your convenience 4 pass. charter .. , ... $55.00 ea. --2 days-Hotel, ?\[eals

Armature Works

1

· 38 I Bambrick i

Street Dial '7191·2

BUILDING MATERIALS

CHESTER DA WE, Ltd. · SUA W ST. and TOPSAIL RIJ .

For all your Building Requirements call

80161 - 91171

-~E..,.LE..,.C-TR-IC_A_L- -

APPLICANCES

HEAP & PARTNERS ! (NFLD.) Ltd. ' Wiring Materi~ls, Wire and

Cables, Motors, Starters, Lamps. Switches, Lightin&

Fixtures, ~tc . WAREUOUSE: PRINCE'S ST. I DIAL 5088

FIRE INSURANCE

CROSBIE & CO., Ltd. Agents for

UNDERWRITERS AT LLOYDS.

LOW RATES DIAL 5031

HARDWARE STORES

TOOL RENTAL

Dining-Dancing . Movies Sundays Winner of the CRA. ~!cnu All'ard 19,~ 1961. U\1

Electric Sabre Saws. 1: \Vi\1 Knock at •.·our

Portable Sandel'3 and Skill Saws. j' with Gifts and

Reasonable Ratet from Fricndh• HARRIS & HISCOCK LTD. Nei!rhbours ~nd ,

General Hardware · · Sporting Good1. :::ivic and Social

i 1 Jn the occasion ~f· ; ERNEST CLOUSTON, New Comer to th.

LIIIUTED . e McCLARY AUTOMATIC The Btrth vf a

:wARM Am coNDITioNING 1~ PHONE !:164m DIAL 4183 • M '

216 WATER ST. and 3582 fcct to a point designated as filled mattress re.condition· Post· No. 3 of Block No. 2.2.·6; ed or your All Wool mat-thence turning and running tress re.picked, and re·

and Airfare ....... $72.00 GROCERS (Retail) For Reservations:- , _____ ..,..~_.___ .. _'-- FOR ALL

West crossing the waters of covered, your bedspring or Beverley Lake, two thousand daybed re·wired or your

CALL 3300 ! L. HEALEY • Phono,~;raph5 jly24,lmth I Cross Roads and Water Street • Records and parts

and eleven decimal six (2,011.6) furniture re-upholstered. If feet to a point designated as so call us. Items calltd for

If~~~~~"!""'~ -.,.., .. =""--': DIAL 3026 1 • Needles '45 I' ~ -- ---,;;.;;;~~.;.;;,.. ___ : • Speakers INSURANCe AGENTS • Pulley Wheels • Post No. 4 of Block No. 2.2·6; and delivered.' Rates lowest

thence South fifty-three (53) obtainable. Keats Mattress degrees, twenty-two (2.2.) min· Factory, 16 Mount Royal utes ~est, four thousand four. Avenue. Phone 92753, 2656. hundred and forty-two (4.442..0)

WANTED To RENT House or Fhit. Must have three bed· rooms. Apply to Box 401, C/o Daily News. au15,17

feet to a point des1gnatcd as Post No. 5 . of Block No. 22·6; thence West seven hundred and· twenty· (72.0.0) feet to a point designated as Post No. 6 of Block No. 2.2·6 and being Sta. No. 12. of the Townsite In the Supreme Court of New· traverse; thence turning and foundland: In. re The Royal running South two (2) degrees, Bank of Canada and others, forty.five ( 45 minutes East, PLAINTIFFS versus George W. crossing. the. waters of Tania trading as ''The Scale and Quartzite Lakes, a distance Shop'• DEFENDANT, BY VIR· of'three thousand one hundred TUE OF A WRIT of Vendi· and sixtY·eight decimal three tiona! Exponas Issued out of seven (3,168.37) feet to a the said Court the Sheriff has point. designated as Sta. No. directed that an Auction Sale be 13; thence· South fifteen (15) conducted by me as his agent, degrees fifty-five (55 minutes wit: Ea.t, two thousand four hun: drlld and three decimal eight (2,403.8) feet to a point des·

AUCTION lgnated as Sta. No. 14 on the SATURDAY MORNING AT north bank or shore of Harris 10:30 AT THE SCALE SHOP, Lake; thence turning and run· 26 PLYMOUTH ROAD, Stock ning by and along the sinuosi· In Trade consisting in part: 2.7 ties of the north bank or Lobster Packing Scales 2. lb. ca· shore of Harrie Lake, afore· pacity, Fairbanks 300 lb. Ratio naid, at Highwater, in a gcn· Counting Scale, National 10 lb. cral southeasterly direction to Ratio Counting Scale, Kelvina· a point designated ·as Sta. No. tor Refrigerator unit complete, 24 on the north bank or shore Fairbanks 300 lb. Physician's of Little Wabush Lake; thence Scale, Salter 2.2 Ib Spring Dial along the centre line of Little Seale, 10 Fairbanks Peddler's Wabusb Lake to a point in Beam Scales 30 lbs., 4 Baby the south shore of the Nar· Scales, Half hp K.leencut Meat rows separating Little W.abush Chopper, Field Ice Chest, 15 Lake and Wabush Lake and ton Frick Compressor, 2 Pot· designated as. Post ·No. 1 of Transformers, Fairbanks Block: 22.·10; thence turning 150 lb Bench Platform Dial and , running North one (1) Scale, Toledo 500 lb. Dial Port· degree, fifty.five (55) minutes able Platform Scale, 3 Westing-\ East,·ona thousand house electric Meters, 17. West· and ·sixty-nine · decimal zero inghouse Timer Relays, 5 Penn eight (1,669.08) feet crossing Motor controls, 2. Speed Reduc­the · aforesaid Narrows, to a ers, 8 enamel Light Reflectors, point . designated· as Post No. 24 Aluminum Light Reflectors, ! 2; thence West four hundred Thermo Carburetors, 7 Fan I and thirty.nine decimal five Motors 4, 6 and 9 watt, electric (439.5) feet ·to a· point desig· Humidifier, 8 Circuit Breakers, nated as Post No. 3; and thence· Monitrol ,Switch box, Minneapo­North thirty-eight (38) degrees, lis Control· box, 20 rubber Fan eight (8) minutes West, nine · · 4 gals. Etching Com· hundred (900.0) 'feet, more or 45 gals. Sulphuric .Acid, less, to the point of commence· lengths Telefix Hose with ment. All ·bearings· are astro- fittings, 7 Mefoid Controls, 5 nomic. , Freezer Timer Controls, jn29,jly6.13,20,27,aug3.1Q.17 . 2. Penn Pilot Unloaded Con· -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.. trois, 2 lengths rubber Floor r Cable Housing and the follow· OR CALL AT OUR

. RET AIL STORE, 665 WATER STREET

. Private· Collector

ing used items: 1% h.p. Slimp· son· Meat Chopper, 1 li.p. Ho· bart Meat Chopper, 2 one half h.p. Toledo Meat · Choppers, Slrtotn steak machine, 2 u.s. FOR FAST HOME

· ..• 'j

Slicers, Toledo 30 lb. Hanging DE IVE H N Dial scale, · i::batillion 30 lb. ~;;;;;;L;;;;; ... ;;·;;R;;Y;;P;;;;;;O;;;;E;;.;;. Hanging Dial' Spring · Scale, 1'

900 lb. predetermined Scales, . Beer Cooler, . Water Cooler, Sausage Staffer, Norge Refriliet'ator, Ca~h Register and niany other items too numer· ous· to list. · ·

INSPECTION: · 9,30: morning of. sale. All goods.:ici be paid for; ·and .. ·removed following

CARD

..

Dr •. D •. ·:SIM~MS

S&Ie; . ..-, .. · · . , ..

.. ·. Joh:~~M·~ Walsh. Ha~ ·Res~m~d· Practice . .' ' \ ' ·. . . ..:...:::...;;. ... · Auctioneer • ,' ' • I ' . '-'·· ..J-.

AND - BRO.KERS All c.o.D. r~f~~~s

JOB BROTHERS & COMPANY, Ltd .

Water Street DIAL 2658 - 4123

REG. T. MORGAN INSURANCE Ltd. Temple Bldg., P.O. -01 168,

341 Duckworth St, DIAL 80370 or 7756

· DRUG STORES

M. CONNORS Ltd. Prescriptions Pickup and

delivery service. PHONE 2206

PASSENGER CONNECTIOX SOUTII

SERVICE VIA PORT JIASQI:ES

Train "The Caribou" RADIO-TV REPAIRS st. John'• 1:30 p.m.

Thursday, August lilb. make connection at

GREAT EASTERN OIL with M.V. Bonal'ifta on COMPANY, Ltd. Coast Service. REP AIRS TO RADIOS, TV

. AND ALL ELECTRICAL DIAL 3D01 to 3005 .

APPLJ.Alll CES

CONNECTIO~ TARY SOUTJI

SERYICE

Train ''The Caribou'' St. John's 1.30 p.m. Thursday August 17th connection at Port aux with s.S. Baccalieu on mentary South Coast

CONNEC'f!OS BAY SER\'JCE

BISED RI!SI FRJJJ,\1'

COOK A k · . Regular 8.30 a.m.

C?O ts .r~qutred 'for the . St J hn's tomorroll' travellmg chmc, M.V. Lady mg · 0 wiU 111ake

· Anderson, operating out of Ar· ~ugust 18111• nlia ~1th gentia and in the Placentia Bay Vtron alt Argp~acentia Bll' area esse on )

saiary Is on the scale $2480 vice <Combined Run ' -1.00-$3190 per annum from CONNECTIOS soUlR ~hrch sal.ary $47.33 per monlh SfiR\'ICE \'lA rs deducllble for full mainten· ARGESTIA

1ancc.

, Applications with lull partie· Reguior 8.30 a.m. ulars as to age, experience, etc. ing St. John's should be addressed to the· August 18th, will . undersigned as soon as possible. lion at Argcntia 111lh

. LEONARD. 1\IILLER, M.D., Haven on south Coast Deputy Minister of. Health. CONNECTION ,.,

augl7,eod,2i NAIN SliR\'1•: 'bOU Train "The Carl

st. John's 1:30 p.m. Friday, August 1Sth,

""''""" ' connection at MV. Hopedale . on porte·Nain semce. •

KIN~ Boy~

Newspa1 SERlE

15 1 14 10 13

10-DA'

I 29 18 30 28 22 25 26 27

nty consolati

Help Kin ·

Expert w~

SERVIC

AVALON W A.TEB &T A

Bally

Cot

Medal PJ 1st. a

Will be helc 19th. Draw

· Club House 1

1Ugl4,17

FAST OIR

From HalU

:AUVETTE .. .. EDFORD II .. ..

BFAlJ1n:rTE .. . EDFORD II .. ..

From Mont

Montreal Week!,. ServicE

~.;., . . ST-. . .

Page 15: .TR~~KS ~ ! Nova Motors: Ltd. randt Calls For Politi cal ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196108… · b~· 200,000 West Berliners in front of city East German

LL

ss•

ER '\ SOUTH >'lA PORT ~SQUES ~ Caribou" 1:30 p.m.

>UGUSl 1 :tion at .onavista !.

riON· ERVICE iED RUNJ FRIDA\'

KINSMEN Boys Club

BING·o SERIES No. 50

TO-DAY'S NUMBERS

I N G 0 29 37 49 64 18 33 52 75 30 38 51 65 28 31 46 61

"" 43 53 67 --25 50 70 26 59

66 27

55

consolation prizes for the letter "T"

Kin - Help Kiddies .

Watch Repairs

AVALON CREDIT JEWELLERS WATER AT ADELAIDE PHONE '18Z9

Bally Haly Golf &

Country Club

Play Championship 1st. and 2nd. DIVISION

36 holes

Will be held on SATURDAY, August l~h. Draw will take ·place at the Club House at 9 a.m.

Due St • .Jolm'•

YOUNGMAN

Seeking Pennanent Pcsitinn IN ST. JOHN'S

Wide Experience in Construction Site Layout, Surveying and Drafting. Three year's University. Presently employed on large construction project.

Apply BOX 404 c/o The Daily News

aug17,18,21

BUYER - SELLER SWEEP

~·" .... WINNING NUMBER 86I6. .... . ... ~

·: Won by Mr. F. Graham Balfour j King's Bridge Road, St. John's.'

Seller: Mr. Geo. Learning, Elizabeth Avenue, St. John's,

Drawn and witnessed by:

Mr. Eric Antle and Mr. Clarence Winsor.

·ESTATE FOR SALE Property in Brooklyn, Bonavista Bay.

Seven Room Home, Barn, Boathouse, Carpenter Shop, Good Water Supply.

Approximately 9 acres, good woodlot and farmland.

Cove and beach fronting property, magnificent site for summer home. Pos­sibilities as business location or com­mercial development.

Interested persons may contact CAP­TAIN HANCOCK, Box 400 c/o The Daily News, St. John's or Telephone 6074. aug17,21

NOTICE CHANGE IN TElEPHONE Nt;;"~ABERS

NUMBERS NOW ARE

2181-2182-2183 Colonial Garage

& Distributors ltd. HAMILTON AVENUE l

aug15,16,17

FOR SALE MOTOR CRUISER "DONNA"

Length '28'- Cabin with 3 berths (with cushions)

95 H.P. Grey Marine Gas Engine. Painted and reconditioned. Located at Long-Pond, Manuals.

Apply

BONAVISTA COLD STORAGE COMPANY, LIMITED

P. 0. BOX E-5118 St. John's, Newfoundland

jl.y21,m,tb,tf

AUGUST 20 11-----------------AUGUST Z3 AUGUST 2'1

· AUGUST 3D

From Montreal, P.Q. to Sl John's, Nfld. Montreal Due St. Jolm'l

Weekly Service by M/V "GREBE" or other vessel.

••• ... ftre••.;.a·e . . ••••• . ..a

Anliature. · · 'W~rks. · .Ltd st· . . . . ":·"' ..

SKYWAYS BUS SERVICE DEPARTS - _ ARRIVES

GANDER .......... 9.00 a.m. GRAND FALLS 11.00 a.m; GRAND FALLS 10 45 am (to make connection witb · ' '

t'l'CA 70trl frol) m St. John'• GANDER .......... 12.45 p.m. o ... on. ea •

GANDER ..... 1.80 p.m. GRAND FALLS 8.15 p.m.

GRAND FALLS ti .. OO p.m. GANDER ............ 7.45 p.m;

NEW LOW RATES· Gander-Glenwood ..... .1.00 Gander.JuncUon ......... 2.00 Gander·Biahop'a Falla 2.110 Gander-Norris Arm .... 2.00

(Return ·3.50) Glnder-Grand Falla ... J.OO

(Return 11.00)

For further

information and rates:

Glenwood·Grand Falls 2.50 (3.50 return) ·

Glenwood·Bishop'a . ·Falls ........................ 1.'711

Grand Falla·Norria ' Arm .......................... 1.00

Grand Falls·Junctlo~ 2.00

Gra~d Falls-Glenwood 2.50 (3.50 return)

Grand-Falls-Gander• .... 3.00 (5.00 return)

CALL SKYWAYS BUS SERVICE 8-3000 GANDER

Advertise~ In The 'News' ,. '

~CONCRETE BUI·LDIN·G TO RENT

WEST END

Ay To St. Pierre, Miquefon {Twin Engine Plane)

DAILY FLIGHTS ......... '$30.00 one way 48-hour EXCURSION .................... $68.00:

lncluiled Air Return Room Meala : I 1 I 0

For reservations phone: l: MRS. G'EO. 01m1EN-44612 or !llm75 or -, ..

I ,. -·'!

I

Space Approximately 2000 Square Feet. Two s~.t~reys. Suitable for

Office-Shop-Warehouse DIAL 5171

BURGESS CABS :f212 (Near Nfld. Hotel) ~ . i . ' i

SPECIAL WEEKEND TIME PAYMENT' 48-HOUR EXCURSION

• j i

aug17,2i

CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN IF CHAFE MAKES THE CLOTHES.

Wm. L. CHAFE TAILOR

4 HOLDSWORTH ST. ST. JOHN'S

Leaving FRIDAY, Aug. ll, SAT\JitDAY, Aug, 12 $12.00 Down - $10.00 Monthly.

aug5,lmth

GREAT EASTERN OIL & IMPORT

co:, LTD. Radio, Television, Washers Refrigerator~. Deep Freezers,,

Eiectr'c Ranges, Floor Polis.•en.,

Gramotihones

Opportunities for Men and Women

LEARN WATCHMAKING .

YOU can learn this fasefll. : · ating trade through our unique, : easy to follow home study course. Modern in every r'e· spec!. You Jearn Swiss and American movements and you .

' . . ' ' ' .; :

Public Address Syst•.ms, Tape Recorders

Rll:.l' AIRS AND SET. VICE 5 LINES

are doing profitable repair jobs .. within the first few lessons. A .. · business of your own, an excel· . DIAL liOIIl to 11005 lent source of extra income, a

WATER STREET good retirement supplement. . The future belongs to the man

~~~=========~ 1 who prepares for it. Highly il· ~ lustrated lessons, tools supplied, ·

jan26,1y

FOR CHARTER i~struction by experts, easy tui· tlon payments. Watchmakers

Tu .... IA BOAT arc. in demand in a!l countries. I~ Wnte for free details. No obli·

galion. Commonwealth Corres· STRAYED FOR RESERVATION pondcnce Schools Ltd., Dept.

Contact

· Velvet Horn Ltd. From 38 Winter Avenue,

AN IRISH SETTER

(Female) . -.....:;;...;..____ HOLYROOD

lEDDY KILOWAn e Phone 29f2

Finder please · jly19,1m

Phone 4670 Reward offered.

ELECTRICITY is CHEAP in ST. JOHN'S

1 Where To Stay ~- Balsam Hotel

FOR SALE ~~!&.~ N ~~~~ Situate~A~:m~:o~:rt ot

:I Cheap ~eliable Electricity I be City. 34 f. oat Cruiser - Twin In and Around s. t. Johl'I'S Quiet, Comfortable Atmos·

fl ~~

marmes, ush cockpit, sleeps six, launched sum- -------- For R~ations and

AlllAZINGLY · information: mer 1959 C m 1 t . qUick relief for • • : 0 P ~ e d1scomfort of mouth. sores,

specifications. \<Vnte white canker spots, dental · · BOX. 403 plate sores, tender gums,

with Fletcher's Sore-Mouth

I h Medicine, $1.00 at all drug-

c o T e Daify News gists.

Dial6336 1\IRS. JOHN FACEY, Resident Managerellll

m3l,tf

NF., 2125 Avenue Road, Suite

205, Toronto 12, Ontario

Canada . augl5,3i

e AUTO Sl'PPI.IES e SPORTS EQt:IP. e TOOLS 8 APPLIANCES ·· e TOP QUALITY Easy Credit Terms.

Hcat~4tl·Arad-. OF.AL£111

PHONE 6127 .· 1 FLOWER HILL

~ -,,

. . . . . . . .. I ·. . . . . . I . . .. , ..

SORRY FOLKS! Electric Service Will Be Interrupted Saturday August 19th from 8.00 a.m. to 9.30 a.m. But only in the West End of the City in the following areas:

All Customers west of Road de Luxe and a portion of Waterford Bridge Road ahd Old Topsail Road east of Road de Luxe.

PLEASE MAKE NOTE OF TH~ TIME:

SATURDAY MORNING, AUGUST 19,

FROM 8.00 A.M. TO 9.30 A.M.

· During this outage our linesmen will be working to replace a Transmission Line Pole.

THANKYOUFORYOURPATIENCEAND UNDERSTANDING.

" ... . ' .

' . . .

REDDY KILOWAIT

~OMP

. ,.

... __ .. ~ ...

·'·. ·.

~. . .

. .. . , ..

'. :-" -~

. ··:

. -~

• .. •• _,4 • ..... ~ .... ~., . ~ ... · . ·_ ;.- .,

:. €: . ~ ...

. ·,.--

, I '· • • . • • '

• I

'I I

Page 16: .TR~~KS ~ ! Nova Motors: Ltd. randt Calls For Politi cal ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL196108… · b~· 200,000 West Berliners in front of city East German

i ..

I ; ~

· \:: .... l6 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. TOHN'S. NFLD .• THURSDAY AUGUST . 1;; •.. ;:·.. ·--"~-----...!~..:.--------------------~-------------~----------;.:,;:.:;..;;;..:..:.;.:;:.;;_:.;.:;;:.;.:,.;;;.:...::.~~;.;;.;~.;.;.----------..:..;.;;.;;.;;;,~~~!% . \ .,, . li ·'· . . . : "

~ ·:{ ~··:; ·: ·f :

' ·'

:I

' ' '· I • .,,

••• ,. ·( '!I ...

o j" I

·• . . . . , . .. 1 . I '

'I '

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I ·:I :, j . I 1

·.

l

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TRIPLET CHEESE "INGERSOLL" BABY ROLL CHEESE-Ws

"INGERSOLL'' BABY ROLL CHEESE-l's

"INGERSOLL" CHEESE SPREAD-Ws

"INGERSOLL" CHEESE SPREAD-1 's

"INGERSOLL" PICNIC CHEESE SPREAD-Ws

"INGERSOLL" PICNIC CHEESE SPREAD-l's

"INGERSOLL" CHEESE LOAF

2 and 5 lb. blocks

DUCKWORTH STREET DIAL ST. JOHN'S

SP.ECIAlS FOLIAGE PLANTS For Indoor Planters

10 Varieties All New Healthy Stock:

AFRICAN VIOLETS Doubles and Singles

$1.00 each

Come and see our Selection of Planters and Pots. All going at

Reduced Prices .

POTTING SOIL, PLANTABBS, Etc.

SEED CO., LTD., 410 WATER STREET, Phone 432g, St. John'•

fHE MURRES

Leslie M. Tuck

Cloth .. .. .... .. $3.00 [

I QU:;~e~~ ;~E .... $2.50 I

,RIVER I i Roy Saunders .... $4.25;

I THE SANDS OF I DUNKIRK

Richard Collier .... $4.25

THE BRITISH DESTHOYER

· T. D. Manning ... $8.50

THE DONKEYS

! Alan Clark .... ... $5.00

:A CERTAIN I :MONSIEUR BLOT

~=======~~I Pierre Daninos .... $3.00

Good Stands Of 'HEAR ME, PILATE!

Timber Gone 1 Legette Blythe ... $5.50

USE SPECTACULAR KODAK I

KODACOLOR

AND ENJOY BEAUTIFUL QUALITY CONTROLLED

Fl

COLOR PRINTS I

··i SATURN OVER I

THE WATER All Year 'Round from Newfoundland s Fastest

,------------------r GRAND BANK NEWS

R'Jd: R. Tr ucTkc;, 'tl\I.Pc. for ~~he J. B. Priestly ....... $3.50 I Processors 1 mg o rmt y oncep ton retur~cd to st. Joh~'s sunday • THE COUPLE WHO !llornmg _after spcndmg 2 days I WANT A BABY m the ftre stricken area of • Trinity South. M. P. Warner,

·~ _1 1\lr. Tucker staled that words l\·1 D $4 75 . -1 . 1 • • . , . cannot adequately describe the ' ' .. · .. .. .. .. .. · ' ·

.~ ' j (Continued from Page 2) I ed by Rev. Prtee o_r Ga~msh. l M_r. Wtlham Htckma~ . ~nd devastation left in the wake of THE QUEEN AND • ., = ! land Playoff competition. The bride was gtven tn mar- famtl.Y of Badger are vtsttmg the fire which will cause hard· ' :l · ~-: ; : Games played during the past

1 riage by her father. She was/ rela!tvcs here_. ship to generations yet unborn. HER CHILDREN

, , 1: · .week were here and al Lawn.· attended by !\Irs. Augustus M1ss Lorrame Moulton has 1 Many good stands of timber Lady Peacock ..... $2.00 I · 1 I i 1 'tn lwo games played at home I Eveleigh. ~Irs. Kenneth Stood· ' arrived from Halifax to visit · which meant so much to thr · 11 i! 1 the Lawn Shamrocks were de-l ley, and Miss Clarissa Firth.\ her family. ! residents of Conception Ba_y as I 0 'ck & ( ltd

1 :1 fcatccl twice, first b)• the Gee· I The duties of best man were/ 1\lr. and !\Irs. Raymond Stood· ' well as to the_ people of TrmtiY : I S 0., , ·. • ; ! I 1 hers to the tune of 5 to o, and, performed by 1\lr. Kenneth . Icy have left for Ottaw~ and · Bay, becau&e tt proved. a ~ourcc j

, 1, 1 then b~· st. Lawrence b)' a 5 to I stoodley, with lllessrs. Gus I ~oos~ Bay where they wtll re· of supply f_o~ the bu1l.dmg of 1 The BOOkSellerS · 'i j 1 margin. I E1•eleigh and Allan Stoodley as s1de m future. . I boa.ts, fenc1ng matenal !or : • • • , • • 1 : 1 · The big game of the series: brides boys. Little Bobby Stood· Jllr. George FranCIS of Tor·' the1r gardens and also ftre 'Spm 4425 or 2008 or 3191 DISTRIBUTORS Ii'o/ NEWFOLT)JDLA);D l·OH KOD.\K L I t . h . 'J I d I . ,, was the contest played here 1 Icy was Page Boy. o~ o, IS. cr~ on vacal!on Wit 1 voo · . 1 : • , • 1 T ~ ~ • • •

. 1. . 1 last Frida)' when the Gcebees: During the signing or the re· hts fam1ly. The ftre.extendcd from Turks: 1 KODAK KODACOLOR FIL;..I IS A\ AlLABLE IN TI IE I OLLO\\ l\C 1 •

1 · and Laurcnlians boo lied up in 11 sister, l\tr. Clarence Handrigan: 1\lr. and Mrs. Edward Francis Cove to Stbley's Col'e, and ~e· : ' 120-620-Bi -616-828-116 and 3.5 nun.

! ;, ·.': a contest for first place in the. gave a beautiful rendition of i and family of Toronto, have strayed much property whtch i __ _ ______ _ · · : · · •~tanding. The game drew a re.I"Bccause." been. spending a vacation with the people could til afford to '

II' I'. ' .cord gatherins.of fans ~nd hwa~! Following th~ marriaghe ~~err relattves here. ~~~tl:r~~~m~~an ;;g ~~Ud~~~ I Progress In II Paratno , , . . ;one of the ftncsl an _ar · mony a r~ceptwn was e n from Winterton, Rant's Hr.,

· !. 1•: • .,fought seen here for some t1me the Masomc Hal_!, where a !arge .. SI~IPPING_ .. New Chelsea and New Mel· To morrO ; · : , .-as both teams put on an excel· number of relal!l'es and frtends . M.V. Mertlyn_ Clatr . has ar· bourne left when their homes · W i I • i· .)e~ll display of football. of the popul~r young couple rtved from Haltfax With gen·l becam~ cndangerd. Many of ,1! Out~er Mong' olt. a ·.: · '. i .- fhe fu·st half was scoreless were present m honour of the era) cargo, · thee returned from settlements "S.\iliCTl.\lt\"' \I'ITH

· j :• 1 i ·:1Nith the Laurentians holding a I occasion. 1\!.V. "Reo II" landed a car· : where they had taken refuge LEE REUICK. i 1 .~ 1: · ·:;ma~l edge on th7 plar. Both A short honeymoon was sp~nt go of sal~ at Port Elizabeth f with kind people who were !, · . • ' ·~oaltes put on a fmc dtsplay of at Golden Sands, followmg after landmg coal here from 1 glad to provid shelter for f Clare ~lcDermott, Reuters · golia, cutting it o!_£ fro~ the s:a : ~~~E~.,;~~~~;~~;~.s/:a~ic. ~ (_. ; ~ - ·~bo,1"lte~din1 s _but l were Uldtbcat·i which 1\lr. and 1\trds. hStoodlety NoDr~haN Sgyrdn~yG.r d B .. "BI them. as the rainfall an Sunday ' cmTespondent in Peking, 1 a~d ot~cr count~t?s, ts readily; drink in~ rchrllion 01 -: . ·, l t·

1·,' · l c. l'.ar Y m I 1e sccon seS· left for Ottawa, an t ence o b e s an ay, uc had lessened the hazard. has been on a visit to outer chscermble to VISitors to Ulan 1 youth durin~ the 1920.5

. . , :, !" : . )ion St. Lawrence was given a 1 Goose Bay where they will re· Mist II", "Grand Duke," and In several communities the Mongolia. In this story the n.ator. . I brought to the screen 11'ith I ; ;

1. : )cnalty shot for a charging side in future. "Luckimee' landed here during fires burned practically to the Edmonton·born reporte1· de· ~here ~re nany Russwns an~ ism and susprn;e in

: ;~ \ i '. !oul. The shot was taken by The best wishes of their many the past week. back doors but with the co· • 395 RAI\11L1'UN 1\Vt;, scribes the republic's at- Chmese m the streets of th1s! ary" 2oth Centuri'·Fox , • , . ~e:::;:ic Far;·ell who made no friends here and elsewhere go S.S. "Manchester Venture" operation, endurance and de· PIIONE 95300 tempts to emerge from the ! growing capital, a~ well as in I Scop'e version 0'r I·!: 1 , ~1istake with a hard dri..-e to with them for their future sue· landed general cargo here over termination of willing fire· Cl!nturies-old life o! nomadic : small to~vns and v11lages ~long selling nol'e!s hy ·

1 ::! lhc curner. A minute later Gee· cess and happiness. the weekend. fighters from many communi· BIRTHS herdsmen and develop a • the Pekmg • Moscow rmlruau. Faulkner open in" · . , ~ecs got a penalty on a hands 1\I.S. "Blue Trader" loaded ties most of the homes were stable, m o d e r n indusrial !

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whic~ _crosses ~longoli_a. . 1 the Para.mount Theatre lj' :i .. :nfrin~~ment inside the penalty PERSONALS frozen fillets and sailed for the sa1•ed. LYNCH-~orn at St. Clare's and agricultural economy. O!!tcwls here _readily ~dmit Lee Remil'k. Ym ~lontand

·, : •.. · ... : !1'[': .~ . ; .; ~rea. Alfred While took the lllr. and Mrs. Eric Jones and United States. While the rain, w~ich fell Mercy Hos~t!al on August _15, I that most of their new mdus- Bradford Dillman in '

, . . ,_ i ~ .hot and drilled the ball into son Erie, are at present visiting 1\!.V. "Nina W. Corkum" early Sunday mor~mg has 11961• to C~ rtl . and Kathermc Dy CLARE ~tcDERNOTT 1 tries hm·e been built by Rus- leads. ; ! r-1 . ; . ·he twines for the equalizer. the Burin Peninsula. landed coal cargo from North greatly reduce.d the ftre hazard Lynch (nee Htckey) a son. ULAN BATOR. Outer ~Iongo· . sians, Chinese or East European Here is lhr clrep South t l .i •_: i i :·~he teams battled away on even I 1\lr. and 1\lrs. Guy F. Bel bin Sydney. M~. Tucker satd the settlements Jia -Reutersl-Outer Jllongolia. [ Communists: :\lore t~an 82 per Faulknrr deli~hts in

I t•·: : r! ··erms until with two minutes and family of Corner Brook, Wtll. not be free from. danger RI~EOUT-Born at the Grace whose people have Jived the no- c~nt o! !ore1gn tra?e m 1960 ~~as it: the "prop:r" romnnunlli! 1 1.-(' .: ,fl/f playing time left Alfred i are visiting relatives here, unhl ev~ry ~park of f1re has IHospttal on August 15~h, to 1 maclic lives of herdsmen for wtth t~c Sovtet Unwn and C~1~a. riddled with moral ! : q · l :(Nhite sent home town fans : 1\lr. and Mrs. Ron Whyte and Obituary been extmg~1shed. Percy an~ Gertrude Rideout. centuries, is tryi~g to !>uild a accordmg to the latest o!hctal "first familir<:' brhind 1· :-,:; 1 1~way happy with a blistering family of Corner Brook are . Many r;stdents breathed a (nee Goob1e), a daughter.

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mo~crn, stable, mdustrml and stahstme~lt . , . venrer of soel~l prcst1ge !_-; .·.:' ·!.(rounder from close in for the visiting relatives here. stgh of rehef and gave heartfelt DEATHS ~gncultura! economy _as par~ of: The third_ fl\e-~ear pl~n, lor dark and stnrthn~ ~hame

'''Vinning tally 111 d M H C Wal h Susannah Oldford, the well· thanks when they heard the tis campmgn to acbJCve wtder . 1961 to 196o, adopted this sum· This stnn·. combuung •il The A S 1 A team fro St r. an tl r.s •. t. g. st' J h ~ beloved of her husband Robert rain on Sunday morning and COURAGE P d , world recoanition. f mer by the ruling People's Re· of "Sanciuarr" anct · · · · · · · m · are presen Y vtst tn · 0 n s. St th Oldf d h d the weary fir fighters were - assc peace·' b d · ' I r <C n'sll Part· 1 • 'th . .

I" . -~ierre were visitors at St. Law· Mr. and 1\lrs. Charles Rue· ro y or ' w o pre e . . e , fully away at Pompano Beach ! ~he role playe . m th!s cam-' ~·o u_tonary omm~l .t . y,: for a !\'un··. rirals WI • ·' 'c th k d f . . . 1 . t ceased her twenty-six years ago, !(t\ en an opportumty to get a I . . • 1 patgn by the so1•1et Umon and · ts mmed at modermzmg agncul· 1 reel household of thp

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.;"\vnce _over e. wee en or a lokke ar,e vtsthng re atlves a died on June 24th, 1961, in her few hours of much needed rest. Florida, 3.30 a.m. We~nesd.ay,l China, the two big neighbors! lure and industry and increasing I of Mississippi tllnward , -.•l 0 game sertcs. On Sunday St. Johns. ninety.third year. Mr. Tucke~ said he ~a.s much ;A-ugust 16t~. after a ltn~en~g who completely surround :llon-1 foreign trade. I John). who;c cheri;hed · .. ~he tea~~ battlecj to a one goal 1\1~. Robert. Lawrenc~ of Gan· . Remaining to bless and revere , impressed w1th the wtlhng~ess til ness, Cynl L. ~ourage, m hts · I AIM FOR sociALIS~I ro erl'' mmirrl

_1 ra IV II h1lst on Monday the re· der ts spendmg a hohday with her memory are three sons Roy of the men from commumties 61st year. Leavmg to mourn . I Biambin Crichn - Piljee a , ~ P 1 · Dral·e 11 cc ::I ul~ was a 2 to 2 tic. his family here. in St. John's, Harold or 'Mon· from far ~nd ncar to help in hi~ beloved wife, Hilma (former payments T 0 I stocky, 47·year·old ex-herds~nn i m~~~s ~111 ast:mi;lii;i~ ! ! lhe French team and sup. Mr. and M~s. George A. treal and Clayton in Halifax,- every posstble war·. The clergy Htlma Johnson); four daugh- • I who is vice·chairman of the· to him one ni~ht 1.1 ortcrs returned home on, Welsh and ramtlY ha~e retu~n also two daughters, Hilda :May, the Red Cross offtc1als a~d the ters, Daphne (Mrs. John Gor- Prudential I state planning commission and! execution of a ! tuesday. ed _home after spendmg thetr widow of Matthew Flight and women of every comm1~mty af· 1don) of London, Eng., Doreen • · d !has been a member o! that body 1 servant for thl'

I • • hohdays at Musgrave Harbour. Carrie, wife of Dr. Bond Cross, ft;cted wer~ most anXIOUS to I Olrs. Jo~n . Rumsey), New Po.lcyhol ers :since 1957, told me during an Temple's hnhy. ln a 1 1\ED~ING BELLS l\lr._and 1\lrs. Jerry Drover of both of St. John's, Others to StVe a hclpmg h~nd. Haven, 1\hchtgan, Dawn. of interview: last-minute atlrmpt to sa,·e · i STOODLEY - EVE~EIGH St. John's were visitors In town hold her in dear remembrance ll!r. T~tckcr satd he was .es· Milwaukee, U.S.A., and Diane, Newfoundland policyholders "To cmry this out. agricul· life of the nc~r~;; (Qdettal. ' ; A v~ry pr~tty weddtng was last week. are seven grandchildren and pec1ally. Impressed by the asstst· of Pompano Beach, Florida; and beneficiaries of The Pru- lure will be del'eloped ext en· Governor's d:n1~htcr · ~olcmmzed m the United 1\lr. and Mrs. Chesley Tibbo twelve great grandchildren, and ance gtven ~y the employees four sons, Guy and Eric, Pom· dential Insurance· Company of . sil•ely so that alter completion her own ~uilly pa;l. her •hurch hera on Wednesday and family of Corner Brook, a brother, Chesley 1\!inty of of t~ Bavartan Brwery of St.lpano Beach, Florida, Cyril 0., America were paid $30,000 dur· · of the plan in 1965, the value hearllon~: affair with an

August 2nd., when are visiting relath•cs here. Cape Cod, and other' relatives Johns, who went to J!ant's Hr. Buchans, Nfld., and Ted, of ing the first six months of of agricultural production will world !ling-pin namrd youngest daughter of 1\Ir. Angus Brown of Bay and friends. ~nd helped man .the fire pumrs ~[ontreal, Quebec; also one bro· 1961, it was announced recently be 1.8 times as much as it was (Y1·es )Jontand, and lhe

and 1\lrs. C. 0. Evelci~:h, Roberts, is . visiting relatives The late Mrs. Oldford, daugh· 10 the commumty of Caphn ther Lloyd of Port Union by the company. in 1960. This will provide indus· reasons why the maddened •ce,,mP the bride of Raymond, here. ter of John and Elizabeth 1\linty Cov_e-near Rant's . Hr., and T.B.' and 'two sisters, Dalla~ This compares with $20 000 tries with much raw material. 1•ant felt thnt I he in!ant d

son of M_rs. Blanche 1\lr. and Mrs. Luke Rogers ?f Engli~h extraction, ~as born their efforts helphd 1~ no. small . (lllr~. E. c. Smith(, St. John's, paid d~ring the corresponding "Tot~! industr!al production in be better olf dead. t.:nfoldt · !toc1dley, both of thts town. The have been spending a ·vacation m -Twlllt~gate and tramed as a ~y ~0 prev~nth t e rrn~g of !Frances ()Irs. A. Von Festen· period in 1960; and includes 11965 Will be twtce the value of tense and nolcnt fla>li-ba;t .~~"•uno~; ceremony was perform· with relatives here. teacher m St .. :John's. . S~e t e omes o t e pope t ere. berg), Lake Promenade, To· all types of claim payments. 11960." . terpreted by a supP~~eca ..

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taught In Bloomfteld also m ronto Ont: also six grandchil· dividends annuities and other : The country, he sa1d, has story makes one o! . ~usgr.avetown, where her mar. dren.' Fun~ral to take place at insurance' benefits. Living ! made great progress. since 19~1. 1 able dramatic c~~;~:ces r1cd. bfe began .and ended. She ·~, 1 Florida today, Thursday. policyholders received approx· t when the Mongolians.. wtth the current f1l~ · -t continued to hve there for YOU All ·:..;~. · MOSDELL-Passed peacefully imately 56 per cent of this ; ~uch help from the Sol'tet Un· As the exctt~men many ,Years and ~pent her last away at her home, 174 Le·l amount. lton:s Red _Army, drove. out flapper who ne1cr ;nrnlte!ll'" deelinmg y~ars wtth her daugh. Marchant Road, on August 16th,, Total Prudential payments in I Whtte Russ1an and ~h1~ese o1:er her .. '·t~let:~ ter, Mrs. Fltght, where she died. Mary Clement (Dotty) widow I Canada and the United States , farces and declared the1r mde· wtth. the ~ ~n~. an Ther.e, Rev. and Dr. L .. A. D. of the late Richard l\tosdell, in for the first half of 1961 were pendence. Remtck tlehw. ';ustamu•>, Curbs and Rev. F. G. Wetr con· h BOth 1 . · t $740 642 000 setting a new rec The number and quality of able perlormanrr. _ dueled the funeral service. . er year, eavmg · 0 mo~rn, , ord. 'Th~ old record was $GBO. 3nimals kept . has increased her earlier P~'~"!n;c 3' 1d

A- motor ·hears ·bore· her be· one brother, Gordon Rabbttts. · · f' •really he satd Sheep cattle malic actress or profoun . . . e . . 4 L t L Crescc ta 539,000, set durmg the mt b • • • • • • • • loved remams to Musgrave· s?ns, ·. ance .a a. . n • half of 1960 1

horses, goats and camels now : senstltve gtfls. town Grand- nephews were the Cahforma, Cecil at Klttmat, and 1 E r th: · th p 'are cared for by trained l'eterin-1 y,·es ~lvntand. '~ pall bearers. Rev. Taylor, min· . Harold at home; 5 _daughters,: den:i~{·~r "in}~r:e~~\usi~ess ri~ nrians and reserve supplies o! ! the \'icc:riddcn CaJun istcr there, conducted t)le ser· ' Mary (Mrs. R R. Ptppy), Ol, Canada passed the $3 billiot• 'odder are kept. I of illicit liquor _a_1nsd:;ion:ll~ vice at the graveside. The hymn tawa, Margaret (1\lrs. T. Barnes) j k During the three - year plan is persuasive. u< . "He Iovcth long who liveth City, Dorothy, Sydney, Nova· mar · . which ended in 1960, all of !\Ion-~ dannerous. in lore mth well" was chosen as a very ap· Scotia, Patricia (1\!rs. M. G . FOR RENT.,- Kitchen, bedroom golia's formerly nomadic herds· yet ;cad~· to exploi' her propriate biographical.requiem. !!lose, Fremont, Neb., U.S.A., 1 and bathroom. East End Jo. : men were brought into agricul·, and her youthful . The Sunday School sang "By · · •' When you drive 11'11er ru. Minerva (Mrs. Dr. ~m. Warn· cality. Dial 48233. '!ural co·operatives with their This role is a far m Cool Siloam's Shady Rill", the ~~C:~'!o =~ toz, Princeton, N.J:; U.S.A. ----- own presidential, educational, impish casting as ~~iC t' young voices ringing out across 1y if 8 train approaches. Funeral at 2.30 p.m. 9n Friday animal husbandry and cultural aire in the recent ~e1 ,.5 the green hillside cemetery and Allolot. 1,.., eo. &Jit~y ~ from her late residence to St. serviei!S. Lrve" and will certain ol the blue wate.rs of the bay. AU: Michael's Church. Interment at 1 COVERS MOST STOCK the lllontand legend ba~he.d in perfect summer sun· _ Anglican· Cemetery, Forest Rd. I Seventy-eight per cent of the satility. . ·ho shme, a lovely setting for the · countrv's animals, which total Bradford Dtllllla11· 1\ committal or a good woman to home. Through !be years this TV · more ·than 23,000,000 compared the part of TemP ~ il her last earJhly resting place. writer and friends and relatives ·. RE. PAIRS with the population of fewer ridden young husbar ~t•

Mrs. Oldlord ·was interested testify to the kind hospitality than 1,000,000, now are owned actor of assorted ta e ;; in everything relating to her tendered them there. by co-operatives. The remainder ·Notable i~ the cas~alilf church, and community, For By precept and example, this 1re owned privately by mem· great broodmg pers~ Years she was organist and' mother sought to instill in her REASONABLE RATES '1ers of co-operatives. Odetta an actress 0 ·hO

. , ·choir leader. Often her beautl· children the christian virtues GUARANTEED WORK Chriebn·Piliee spoke of' heavy range and power. Y. gro ful voice enhanced the music. and to foster an interest in duslry, - though visitors find to the part of the ne · Over a long. period she served' books, music and the various. · · E 94123 it tie trace of it. There are, how deress a qualitY of as· teacher and superintendent arts. Today they are filling: PHON . . wer, many examples of light in· that will ~Jt soon be in' the Sunday School. Several i their chosen roles with mod· dustry to be seen .. Visitors to Prod:tcell by . of her day and Sunday School csty and integrity. The follow-, Electronic ; Ulan Bator· are shown, for ex and directed b~. T~n) ·pupils attended her funeral and· ing is her children's unsolici·' MacCC)RMAC'S ample. a neiv flour mill nearby son, "Sanctuary 15

patd ~rlbule to her memory, In·. tntcd tribute to this dearly: Centre lfd. GEAR STR~:ET coal mines and "industrial com entertainment thai~ \he. early days, young men ln loved mother: "We cannot think hines" whose factories produc' the full flavor _ol t e ~ucccssion beginning their work of one. flaw in her life as 90 CAMPBELL AVE. · RECEIVING. OI'FfCE. wool, leather, shoes and cloth· "roaring 20's" 1~ .3 .

m lhe . christian ministry Jived: mother and worker •. She was, 1, 1 ADELAIDE· STREE'I , big, as 1 well as meat·proces.sing America that Wt\l~ahls 011o. In. the Oldford home, truly a. jpst everything." . ~fter ~ou~ 'PHONE 7313 Dial 5181 · • Z • 1 ~ , and dairy plants, . . . has made superb l

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