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)AD . E •• TES LTD., · CLEARANCE CARS & TRUCKS tfJVIIN FULL SWING THE DAILY NEWS' .. Nov• Moton Ltd. Charles Hutton & Sons .. Vol. 66. No. 228 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1959 iPrlce: Cents) ans '' ression "' Faced With Problems I, Firing Squad For Foes \ llr RORERT RERRELJ.EZ claims are bombings and strafing t.rliU\'(' , for its cil'il sen•iee, estimated to Prt'J Wrllrr · cost In the current if -':"·:y fiscal year ending March 21. . , no "hen it SEEK SUPPORT 1 ·,o· "' and · The ci\'il service Is screaming . ·from coast to coast, its 130,000 · .' ••::t the big· members trying to drum up sup- ,, "' ,. money, port from the public. ' 1 Finance Minister Fleming Is :,:ct"' , stand his guns. his no·ralse · . '•·: ·urn> that 1 ammunition conslst1:1g or a fore· : 1 · •" .-- .000.000. I cast budget ol $393,000,0110, At the same time, he is undoubt· _ "' ,-.. , ·· ,. :•·n1pi'r of 1 edl)· sizbg up the ballot box hos· :._,. ,• "0n:d bf a, tility o' c(l·it sen·ice families . :: .., r.•'"Jnlic and against the feelings of \'Oiers who : .,. ... ,. D1denbaker would not benefit from a go1·ern· · • · •. ·:• :wo >olid ra· se. I .. .' ,., ,. • --·o1" o( llowel'er. little doubt · · · · :':rr.. thm a civil raise will be .·•. <.· · :n hP a before tlection ·1. at timt'. expected in 1962, S!' o: a;,•:nnr tho cnunent isn't too worried. .•.. ; -':n, from u:ttil 1!102-that )'rar a:din- at·c dP· , •. : • •r mantis from the provinrrs lo1· · .. r :01crn· · hcllrr deal with thr 1 .• . , ' . I Evacuation Defence II:\ \':\;'\;A-Street scCI1l.' show parl of thnusmuls nf pcnnus in one· hour sytnholic wnrk on Oct. 22m\ sntlpnrt Castro nnrl prutl•stiu;: c,·cnts in which two \\'t•rt> killc1l and more ;;u woundc<l by strny hnllrts wlll'll a mysll•ry plane hnscd in l 1 .S. dropped lraflet.1 ""cr Havana.- UPI Photo. ·:r -t .1nada ·, d1·iJ is horoeless because of the greai . 6 Die In Truck-Train Collision !Last Laugh n,'l::! 't:ii think area involved - up to 15 miles 1 _,_,__ ----- __ , _________ _ :::t;: at· : the centre. . . i By KEITH KINCAID 1 Claresholm, 15 miles south .. 2i. and train passenger She1·ry 1 Canadian Press staff Writer : RIHI Three .11:ere said to Bilton, 15, both .or \'01; Scotia's' Bo 5 aid Ho . ' '. r. I PARKLAND, Alta. (CP• -A' be in senous condtlion but at· Mrs. Bilton, the g1rl s · told a ; i high-balling two·car diesel pas· i tc:ulanls said all spent a •·cason· was one of the seriously s d . · "\' 'I f 1 Y · · senser train and a speeding gaso·j ably gond night. mJm·cd. : can orce peop e 10 get ! tltie .truck collided a tcvet 1 officials in Lethbridge The truck owned by Chcs· r.:ntn off d;spitc the; Shelters could 811 up to 99 : crossmu Saturday .. S x persons l there 33 persons on the let: 99 Bulk Otl. Company of . ·cent protection died In the rcsulhng mass or tram, includmg crew mem· brtdge, of wh•ch Boyd was part· '.N c3id that lil'e fallout outside l!le bombed · . · bet.,;. All-but .. f1ve .. of pas\ owner. . i !lt(l?:r of a big . aru. But inside that area thev . of the truck and II sengers were 111 WitncSlies who saw lhc accident 1 i>amb ' would have II t t 1 e 1 .alue. • , f1ve tram passengers, all beheved car and only tn t.•.at car th_is· s.outhern Alberta -----·-· --·-- -- :to be were charred be·! capcd death or mJury. one was lage, 6a mtles south of Calgal), yond recognition. injured in the first car. :first placed the death toll at 12. 0 e W t Sixteen other passengers. all in !mE!IITIFY SOME ! but for hours after the crash a:1 v r es the renr cat· ol t!le 70-mile-an· ' Up to afternoon. onl;· accurate count was Impossible. hour Canadian Pacific Railway . two the dead had been iden·: An said the of Arms Problem : Daylincr. were taken to dri,·er Arthur Boyd, i had been "crcmaterl." i r. \\'SilOS : lied commander in Europe. uy I .\P -\ o';: tussle is I"Yes." / ' 1 :r Henes be· c1·cn I hose in Bonn. and pol· t say "No-at least not until the · 1\ Ger·l' outcome of East • West I .,.,..,"'"' indus. talks becomes clear." DELAY DECISION Mr. K. Pressure Increases For Talks Wales - 1 A old rascal or 90 han the lMI Sunday at a who jailed hlm ci;ht years apparently for the rest of his natural li(e. :\obody ex p e c I e d lo survire a JO.year term. But with remission or for good behavior, he's a free again-and he's \WY muc!t alive. is a Wchh· man whose record ran:;; wilh the longest sncl't'.<:<lul in the annals of Rriti.<h lie first went to jail lor 14 day.<; in 1R34 when he "'M J;; lor two lumps of coal. He we:1t on to fh·e ma ior sen· te:1ces and a string of minor oncs-inten·upled only by srrv· ice in the Boer War and the Fin;t World \\'ar. llis cal'eer spanurd the of six so1·er· and seemed ncrcr end· Rnl hi' J;.,t cn11r1 appear· .. thf Ger· So far the diplomats are i 1 lou<! to make ling their wa)', Action lo enable !l!k!. :ur.! and mis- West to become a ma. .. 1 I . ancc, in tn;t. for hre:1kinl! By ADRIAN RALI, . 1 . The stml ar to .one .. , . : n store a \!eared to ha,·e fin· \ H.\n:>t\ 1.\Pr-The pro.go,··: by manned by "war crim· ernmc:lt and radio Sunday inals" in the United , Cubans to a rally todar 1 U.S. authorities here have said to protest "foreign ag::ression"- • they hare found no evidence of a cold reference to the United i any bombing or strafing althou;:h States. !light planes !lave been Premier Fidel Castro, hesl!t by. Havana with leaflet·droppmg m·s. the gra1·est crisis in his 10 months' sions. of t:ower. originally called the o\:'WTIIF.R DROP rally to protest "aerial attacks Two li::ht flew against national territory." o1·rr S:•· But as sound truc!;s blarr'l urcla.\' ni:ht. O:•e 11!nn!l Fen through <!reels and rarlio o\:IIIIIIP.d icnfll'ls on militJry bean· called on the people quarters in ea;tern outski11s to rally, the theme has switched of this capitnl. to a::gress'on." . Matos precipitated the crisis h 1 ' The Cuban Labor Confederation! as military commander pre!lared more than 1.000,000 i:J Cama;uey province, saying h• badges reading "against was not in accord wit!t what he aggression" to be distributed' called the growing Communist in· when demonstrators began as- · lluence in His staff sembliug.at the presidential pal· supported him . ace toda1'. . Ct\I.LEI> TRAITOR WORK Slft:TI>OW:": Castro denounced as a in the call lor at ·lea<! traitor. The maior and his offi· 1.00j.000 to turn out. the cers now are b La Caba en1t!encration :13s ordered a here a1raiting formal charges. r.ral 1•:ork for noon to Diaz who fled to exile in 11'11rkcr" a d.ance to wa" Q•lolrd by the Fed· rail•·. The >!mtdown applies nf illl'csti•ation a·s In and three admiltin2 one the leaf. pn11·i111'•''· let rairls on Ha\'ana. He has T'lr Cnlmn twnp:r ''will ask fur were . tltr .<qua<! a;::res· ·Inn infiucnliai in the Castro sor.<." declared the imc. a Castro has denied. La Calle. Tlti.< The has 'raisrrlthc pos>ihilit)' that mi;itary the t:nitcd States hold : tribunals may he bron:::ll hack in Oiz for deportation to Cuba ! the campaign Castro's I to lace rhar;;es of homicide and : enemies. · assassination in last : The is an "bombing" ol Ha· parent to what India Will Prated Frontier B.v PETER JACKSO:": I hink there would be war 11ith '\EW I :->ehru Saturday 1·o'ccd spoke twice Saturdar ;'1\ India's to guard public meetings on the latest an:! ils frontiers asainst Communist · most serious of a series of C'1ina. ·in two separate regions of 8:11 the Indian leader urgrrl mountain frontier witll "restraint and reSflOnsibilitr" in northeast frontier agency lnd the react10n to the reported kiliing or Ladakh area in Kashmir. li Indian border police hy Chi· 1 DOS'T FEAR THREATS nc;e troops 1\ashmir last Well·: Xehru declared that "our coun· ncsday. ; try is not one which wlll go down lie said frontier cla;hcs be. : hcfore anyone b the world be· tween India and China caused "a I cau;;e of threats or because of lot of anxiety.'' but added he dirl; any lear." and added: . jor weapons producer for the West has been suspended at II: O\'ertones · until spring. Then the pros· LO:-JDON !Reuters I - So,·tel by Tass 24 hours earlier. , 'No doubt prepnratwns fo1· such h'm P Premier Nikila has represented criticism J H a1·e esseutial. 1 ·"You l!n In hil 10 · increased pre.ssure for an i or French Presidelft de SOUNDED . 1 years." in t.o 11 e 11 , l!'l!!:;on.. j pects for ending the East West · l,duding Gen. arms race sh o u I d be better tbr .•upreme al· known. Anniversary West summit conference th1s call Wednesday for .delaymg But one must fmget that : "This I'm afrairl "oing 10 be year. le1·et sprmg. there are. .. '"· the . your last inninn,s ... 1 A statement Issued Saturday by De Gaulle sa1d this would en· are Morgan his the Russian news Tass able the meeting to be prepared ; .. t,nng. 0 a t a\\ 10 10 , old bones toward the cells and said people throughout the world without !1aste during a period: tiona! tenstons and. are muttered lord, can find no jusllflcatlon for post· when East-West tensions would 1 to use any opportumty pre I ent I'll beat you yet.'" · ponlng lhe talks. have a chance easing. Tass re· a East. In an old folks institution at I nes. · I lhis Welsh poflt Sundav Welsh P 1 I Ch H d The w1de masses of t!le teople 1 port Sunday, :llorgan' , 0 l 'ce n tnese an s and they can nd no I recalled lordship's words I REID I Spain met on the tiny Intern&· Jusliftcatton !or the with a chuckle. I. IReut ) II I "lsi d f .. ! of such an conference I Then !1 pronounced on the · · Sa ers ona an s o p .. easants" for :-lEW DELHI <Reutersl-com· · This means that one Indian is as the summtt meeltng between 1 t e · . cele- the friendship ceremony, The 1110· Chna Sunday informed missing of the 17 reported Friday East and \Vest" · U111'c: of a Island Is situated In I India that seven of the.l7 Indian by India to have been killed in · "I am going straight. :'lfy legs £::louis 'xl\'et mar· the RIVer Ia Bldassoa, marking border police reported kiJled In Wednesday's clash. DEATH PENALTY won't let me climb anymore. Th: the the .frontier between France and 1a frontier clash last week are: The ·casually list was released ACCRA, Ghana "And if yon see lltal old Pllnr;,l'in resa. SpaiD. . 1 ali1·e In Chinese hands. 1 while Indian army troops were attempt to overthrow ot: alter the ' judge, tell him I'm out. ali1·e hands !he treaty was . negotiated ,In A note received by the Indian tl'eported on !he mo1·e . to rein· I policies or the Ghana gol'ernment i a:1d kicking." . by Jules Cardmal Mazzarm, external affairs ministry showed orce nor I lront1er posls! by means will be pun· The judge in que!'tion - Sir Pntnee· :. g e : Don Lui that Chinese forces In the Kash· threatened by Chtne$e forces: ! ishable by death under a new : Edmund Davies, 53-was .<o in· ·: i 5: /; . ; · of SpKat.n. Lou•s. XIV's mlrl pro1•lnce or hold a Wednesday's cIa s h was the · treason bill published in the offi. ; formed but told a who 1 01 aunce! mamage to mg Phlhp IV's 1 total or 10 Indian.,, : most serious in a series cia! Gazelle Saturday. bill : asked him what he thought now andf 1 daughter set the seal on the 1 The note informed lndia that i Indian border and Chinese I l>dore parliament shortly. A I ahout - '"·· D agreement. 1 Chinese forces arrested three 1 troops in two separate of,. bill to sedition laws "You're 1·cry. persuasil'e hul members of an parly in India's mountainous froJtier-the was published last Saturday. ahsolntely no comment." Ousts :ruesday,. . Northeast Frontier Agency and 1 -- · -- The Ohincsc are another Ladakh.. . I I Sel·en Indian border pollee "from I An Indian communique Friday I N 0 p rog re' ss .n a clash Wednesday and have re·j said armed Chinese intruders. Minister. 1 of North Korean People's As· ,;,.onn Korea tn sembly tparliamentl Friday. No ol hi Cf. talks, has reasDn was given. . 1 Jllb as for. Nam II, who had a penchant for Russian-style uniforms, was re- · co,·ered the bodies or nine Indians using grenades and mortar lire. slain then, t!le :1ote said. 1 madP. a surprise attack In super· ONE l\IISSJNG . · lor force the Indian patrol. U. S. To Probe Steel Settlement President, David· J. Me- Dnnalcl, left, and R. Conrad Cooper, lhe steel industry's l·hicf ns they met with newsmen following their talks here Oct. lith. announced th:tt a new offer hv the ''Rig 12" dec\ companies is "totally Tcll'photo. ---- --·-- - ..... - Aid Proposals Meet No Approval Dr A LAN DONNELL\' such an 'increase be ln11a· lb.i O\'er garded by westemrs at the Pan. acuon was 1 talks that ended the . Chinese · Question Canadian Press Slaff Writer I tionary. Mr. Fleming has made . . OTTAWA <CPl-A spate of re· . a number or recent em· PITTSBURGH (APl -Negotla·l hme was the sessiO.n. cent proposals tltat the federal ! phasizing that government po!iey ng COmmittee : Korean War es a Moscow-arlen· p Also- ted Communist. N Peklnl said Pak Sunr Chul who served as Nam ll's deputy, has been appointed the new for· elgn minister. Nam n also held the Job of deputy premier In the Nor!!! Kor- ean JOYII'IIIIIent. He apparently retaloa that post. " Nam ll was born 45 years ago 1:1 Astatic Russia and Is believed to have spent soine time studying In the Soviet Union. ' IARE BOOK AUCHON LONDON !Reuters\ - A rare copy of the first edlilon of the 'Xew Testame:tt In Eskimo, pub- lislled In Copenha&en In Is among 187 books IJ1d manuscrlpta ol Sesndlnavlan origin to be auc· tlolltd off NDv. 11. BJ JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON. !AP, - The United Statea plana to start a probing · operation In about 10 days to see whether there Is any easl:1g of Chinese Communist hos· tillty toward t!Je West. It wiU take this action against a ,background of what Is seen here as apparent failure by So- viet Premier Khrushchev In his effort to en}lst the Chinese to his peace offensive. • • The whole range of U.S. problema has been under re· view here. StPte department officials ha\·e been consulting with Ambassador Jacob D. Beam. the leadbg U.S. contact man .with the Chinese government.. · tors· IJI the steel strike held an The negottaiJOns came 1 :1_ the government play an active role . is to fight inflation - includlnz a:mual meeting Sunday, The , of a new plea by President in helping meet the financial 'the so·called "creeping" kl,d. session tasted 90 minutes andi Eisenhower to get the 500,000 . ncds of provinces anrl mu:1ici· ended with no report of progress. strikers back on the job. Some . 1 . ho t · 'th J'ttl · !'<ot all or the demands Ot· BACK TO WARSAW However another meeting will be 1 275 000 workers in allied pa 1 •es 3 \ Ot 11 . 1 1 c en· 1 1·awa do somethinl(, howe. ver, Beam Is scheduled to return held ; have been. laid off and more m F.tawa. , 1 ... 1 • 1 would inl'olve a rise in the money I t k h I W T . dl tl h · 1 If 1 . 1 th r 111 ermorc. mancc . uus c1 sunJllY ate nex wee to is post n ar· !\ere is no 10 ca I at any ! ay·o. s sure o come 1 c 1 Flcmhlg !las indicated I hat the ; -------- saw and on Nov. 3 will meet for new contract propo.sals had been stnke contmucs. . . ; of loanable capital funds ; the first time In about two months made to end str1ke, now. In Its n Resumpt i o of nc::o11a110n: . which lies at I he root of the prob· 'IIIT'W"W"W"W'W'W'W'W'.,.Yf with the Chinese ambassador 1041h day. . came a lab01 lem can be ex ccted to continue there, Wang Peng-nan. · Following thts afternoon's ses· I D j u n c l• on d1rechve that 1 for time P I Ofllclals said Beam Is :lot slon at a Pit'-iburgh hotel the two would. the The widesp;ead economic ex· I going back to Warsaw with any top - R. Conrad , !o the•;, Jobs. for an BO·day cool· pa:1sion going on throughout the startling new proposals but that the mdustry and.pres- 1 mg off. . world, he said in a Montreal It Is hoped there may be some Davtd J. McDonai? or the The IDJUncllon. was speech last week, "sug!lests 6 sign Dl' a Chillt'se policy de1•elop- Steelworkers - a la.st Wednesday. m U.S. dts· long period of world capital short· ment in the new round or tnlks. jomt statement., ll was read by lr1ct court at, P1t1sburgh. age, from which Canada l'annot Primarily, the United States Cooper, who sa•d: DELAY LA\\ ex eel to be immune" wants China to renounce the use "We ha1•e further discussed our The U.S. third circuit coul't ol · ll · of force 'aga'inst but has pl'oblems. We· will me,et appeals at Philadelphia delayed A of P.roposals fm· not asked Chbese Reds to tomorrow morniqg." en(orcehlent of the return to· and mun. drop their claim to that Island. MORE NEGOTIATIONS . work clause , in the inju:1ction 1 •c•pal would an Another primary object is the After the separate meeltngs I!Je after the umon appealed. The of the suppi) · quick release or five Ame.ricans union arid industry J court expected to rule this week INFI.ATIONARY INCREA.SE still held in Chinese jails, teams will get together again. No on the appeal. But the -concern here IS that -- ... ' Weather. Cloudy with sunny periods b afternoon. High 55. ·TEMPERATURES Toronto .. .. .. . 39 ...... 28 Moncton .. .. .. 19 Halifax ........ 26 Sydney .. . .. . . 28 St. ..... 2i 55 51 45 46 46 38 -- __________ .... _ _____ lllllil . I I , . . . ' I ' •: ' I . ·: 'I• . 'I':· I ; ,: i . j: ! 1.1· .. I I I ' "I I •' I i: f It . 'I ... . I ! I 1.·:' i ::' I · t I . I I ! i l . ' t ; :I, : i . , ' I i i . i. . I II I '. . I I I i . ': I I . '. ' I . I I l I I I . ; ' .. : I . I • ! . ' ..
Transcript
Page 1: Vol. I t ans ressioncollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · , 'No doubt prepnratwns fo1· such is~r.rl h'm P Premier Nikila Khrtls~chev has represented undi~gulsed

)AD

,. ITE •• •

I ,,

~any)

,UITES

WE LTD., ~ brin~ ·

CLEARANCE CARS & TRUCKS

tfJVIIN FULL SWING THE DAILY NEWS' ~~d· ~

&~ .. Nov• Moton Ltd.

--------------------------------------------------~------------- Charles Hutton & Sons .. Vol. 66. No. 228 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1959 iPrlce: 7· Cents)

ans '' ression "' Faced With

Problems

I, Firing Squad For Foes \ llr RORERT RERRELJ.EZ claims are bombings and strafing

~~ t.rliU\'(' , for its cil'il sen•iee, estimated to • Prt'J ~tall Wrllrr · cost $2~2,000,000 In the current

if -':"·:y ~o1·ern·: fiscal year ending :~ext March 21. . , 1a~ no "hen it SEEK SUPPORT 1·,o· "' ~<•lc~. and · The ci\'il service Is screaming

. ,,~n· ,1dmi~istra· ·from coast to coast, its 130,000 · ~ ~' .' ••::t the big· members trying to drum up sup­,, "' ,. ~o money, port from the public.

• ~;<~: ' ::·~>. 1 Finance Minister Fleming Is :,:ct"' , :~·:011> palm~ stand in~ b~· his guns. his no·ralse · . '•·: ·urn> that 1 ammunition conslst1:1g or a fore· : • • 1 · •" .-- ~t .000.000. I cast budget d~licit ol $393,000,0110,

At the same time, he is undoubt· _ "' ,-.. , ·· ,. :•·n1pi'r of 1 edl)· sizbg up the ballot box hos· :._,. ,• "0n:d bf a, tility o' c(l·it sen·ice families

. :: .. , r.•'"Jnlic and against the feelings of \'Oiers who • : .,. ... ,. D1denbaker would not benefit from a go1·ern· · • · •. ·:• ~ :wo >olid m~nt ra· se. I

.. .' ,., ,. • --·o1" o( llowel'er. t~ere's little doubt · · · · :':rr.. thm a civil ~rn·ice raise will be

.·•. <.· · :n hP a t·o:nin~ :~lo~~ before tlection ·1. at :~~'' timt'. expected in 1962, S!' 111a~'l1c o: a;,•:nnr tho ~Ill cnunent isn't too worried.

.•.. ; -':n, from D~lcrrcd u:ttil 1!102-that )'rar a:din- at·c misc~llancous dP·

, •. : • •r !~udrst mantis from the provinrrs lo1· ~ · .. r :01crn· · hcllrr tax·sharin~ deal with thr 1

. • . , ' . :~ ~a:arir< I f~drral ~o,·ernmrnt.

Evacuation Defence

II:\ \':\;'\;A-Street scCI1l.' show in~ parl of thnusmuls nf pcnnus pnrticipntin~ in one· hour sytnholic wnrk slnppa~<· on Oct. 22m\ dcmonslrutiu~t sntlpnrt Castro ~tovcrnmrnt nnrl prutl•stiu;: c,·cnts in which two \\'t•rt> killc1l and more tha~ ;;u woundc<l by strny hnllrts wlll'll a mysll•ry plane alle~l·cll,· hnscd in l1.S. dropped anti~:oyernnwnt lraflet.1 ""cr Havana.-UPI Photo.

·:r -t .1nada ·, d1·iJ is horoeless because of the greai . 6 Die In Truck-Train Collision !Last Laugh

n,'l::! 't:ii think t~t area involved - up to 15 miles 1 _,_,__ ----- __ , _________ _

:::t;: aa~ ~·bomb at· : fr~?l the centre. . . i By KEITH KINCAID 1 i~ Claresholm, 15 miles south .. 2i. and train passenger She1·ry ~'f'~~Jo~ ;~~~o~~~ie~~ ~sur~~s~~~a~rs::f:~e11'~e~ 1~!1 ~~le 1 Canadian Press staff Writer : RIHI Calga~~·. Three .11:ere said to Bilton, 15, both .or l.ethbri<~g~; ~·t• \'01; Scotia's' Bo 5 aid Ho • . ' '. r. I PARKLAND, Alta. (CP• -A' be in senous condtlion but at· Mrs. ~largaret Bilton, the g1rl s

· :~:rlir.ator. told a ; wo~fd ~ot ·likel;e~:r ~~~~~~\:!~on i high-balling two·car diesel pas· i tc:ulanls said all spent a •·cason· !f~Olhel', was one of the seriously • s d . · "\' 'I f 1 Y · · senser train and a speeding gaso·j ably gond night. mJm·cd.

0['r~:r:cat~rti:; : Dut~~ can orce peop e 10 get ! tltie .truck collided ~t a tcvet 1 ~PR officials in Lethbridge The truck 'Ya~ owned by Chcs· r.:ntn off d;spitc the; Shelters could 811• up to 99 : crossmu Saturday .. S x persons l sa1~ there w~re 33 persons on the let: 99 Bulk Otl. Company of Let~· .

n~:.r:n, i~1ohed. ·cent protection ag~nst radio:~; died In the rcsulhng mass or tram, includmg t~ree. crew mem· brtdge, of wh•ch Boyd was part· '.N c3id that tr~·· lil'e fallout outside l!le bombed ~ flame~. · . · bet.,;. All-but .. f1ve .. of -~he pas\ owner. . i

!lt(l?:r ~::t of a big . aru. But inside that area thev . Bodte~ of the truck drtl'l'~ and II sengers were 111 th~ d~ra•lcd·rear WitncSlies who saw lhc accident 1 bi.t~:rn i>amb bla~t ' would have II t t 1 e 1.alue. • , f1ve tram passengers, all beheved car and only f~u~ tn t.•.at car e~· ~ear th_is· s.outhern Alberta ':i~·

-----·-· --·---- :to be wome~. were charred be·! capcd death or mJury. ~o one was lage, 6a mtles south of Calgal), yond recognition. injured in the first car. :first placed the death toll at 12. 0 e W t Sixteen other passengers. all in !mE!IITIFY SOME ! but for hours after the crash a:1 v r es the renr cat· ol t!le 70-mile-an· ' Up to Su~day afternoon. onl;· accurate count was Impossible. hour Canadian Pacific Railway . two o£ the dead had been iden·: An u~dertaker said the borlic~ of Arms Problem : Daylincr. were taken to hospi~l~ lif~:_d~··u:_k dri,·er Arthur Boyd, i t~le d~ad had been "crcmaterl."

i r. \\'SilOS : lied commander in Europe. uy I

.\P -\ o';: tussle is I"Yes." / !!!::~~. '1:r Henes be· Diplomat~. c1·cn I hose in Bonn.

=:~::t:~n· and pol· t say "No-at least not until the · ~·. ~~ 1\ ~·t Ger·l' outcome of East • West ~ummit I

• .,.,..,"'"' ~rms indus. talks becomes clear." DELAY DECISION

Mr. K. Pressure

Increases For Talks

SWA~SEA, Wales I.~Pl - 1A ~elf.confes~ed old rascal or 90 han the lMI lau~h Sunday at a j.1d~e who jailed hlm ci;ht years a~o. apparently for the rest of his natural li(e. :\obody ex p e c I e d :'llor~an :>Jor~an lo survire a JO.year term.

But with remission or s~nl· r.:~ce for good behavior, he's a free ma~ again-and he's \WY muc!t alive. Mor~;~n ~loran is a Wchh·

man whose record ran:;; wilh the longest and·l~n>t sncl't'.<:<lul in the annals of Rriti.<h rrim~. lie first went to jail lor 14 day.<; in 1R34 when he "'M J;; lor st~aling two lumps of coal.

He we:1t on to fh·e ma ior sen· te:1ces and a string of minor oncs-inten·upled only by srrv· ice in the Boer War and the Fin;t World \\'ar. llis cal'eer spanurd the rci~ns of six so1·er· ~i~ns and seemed ncrcr end· i:l~.

Rnl hi' J;.,t cn11r1 appear· .. ~ 5!1~11.·~ thf Ger· So far the diplomats are J~el· ~ i 1lou<! to make ling their wa)', Action lo enable !l!k!. :ur.! and mis- West ~rmany to become a ma.

.. 1 I ~ . ancc, in tn;t. for hre:1kinl! ht~ By ADRIAN RALI, . 1 . The ~tat~mrnt. stml ar to .one P~rte .. , . : n store a \!eared to ha,·e fin·

\ H.\n:>t\ 1.\Pr-The pro.go,··: by pla:~es manned by "war crim·

ernmc:lt pr~ss and radio Sunday • inals" ba~ed in the United Stat~s. , ~nmmed Cubans to a rally todar 1 U.S. authorities here have said

to protest "foreign ag::ression"- • they hare found no evidence of a cold reference to the United i any bombing or strafing althou;:h States. !light planes !lave been ~eckli~g

Premier Fidel Castro, hesl!t by. Havana with leaflet·droppmg m·s. the gra1·est crisis in his 10 months' sions. of t:ower. originally called the o\:'WTIIF.R DROP rally to protest "aerial attacks Two li::ht p~~r.es flew lel'l!~t against national territory." mi<<io~s o1·rr Hm~11;1 a.~Jin S:•·

But as sound truc!;s blarr'l urcla.\' ni:ht. O:•e 11!nn!l Fen through t~e <!reels and rarlio o\:IIIIIIP.d icnfll'ls on militJry bean· broadc~sts called on the people quarters in th~ ea;tern outski11s to rally, the theme has switched of this capitnl. to "forcig:~ a::gress'on." . Matos precipitated the crisis h1'

The Cuban Labor Confederation! re;i~ning as military commander pre!lared more than 1.000,000 i:J Cama;uey province, saying h• badges reading "against fore!;:~, was not in accord wit!t what he aggression" to be distributed' called the growing Communist in· when demonstrators began as- · lluence in ~orernment. His staff sembliug.at the presidential pal· supported him . ace toda1'. . Ct\I.LEI> TRAITOR WORK Slft:TI>OW:": Castro denounced Mat~ as a

.loinin~ in the call lor at ·lea<! traitor. The maior and his offi· 1.00j.000 C'uba~s to turn out. the cers now are b La Caba [ort~css en1t!encration :13s ordered a ~cn· here a1raiting formal charges. r.ral 1•:ork ~h11t~own for noon to Diaz l.a:~z, who fled to exile in ~i,·e 11'11rkcr" a d.ance to ~ttrnd ~liam'. wa" Q•lolrd by the Fed· th~ rail•·. The >!mtdown applies cr~t llurc~u nf illl'csti•ation a·s In .ll;tr~n~ and three n~i;hhr'n;; admiltin2 lc;•rlin~ one o£ the leaf. pn11·i111'•''· let rairls on Ha\'ana. He has

T'lr Cnlmn twnp:r ''will ask fur ehar~d l~P Communis!~ were . tltr lirin~ .<qua<! a~<ri:t<l a;::res· ·Inn infiucnliai in the Castro r~g. sor.<." declared the pro·~orcrn· imc. a char~e Castro has denied. m~nt ncw~parcr La Calle. Tlti.< The Cub~:t ~o1·ernmcnt has

'raisrrlthc pos>ihilit)' that mi;itary a.•k~<l the t:nitcd States ~ hold : tribunals may he bron:::ll hack in Oiz L~~z for deportation to Cuba ! the campaign a~ainst Castro's I to lace rhar;;es of homicide and : enemies. · all~mpted assassination in last : The a~~ression char~:r is an M· \\'cduesday·~ "bombing" ol Ha· parent allu~ion to what \:<~t ~" ra~n.

India Will Prated Frontier

B.v PETER JACKSO:": ~~·,t I hink there would be war 11ith '\EW o~;LHI I ReuterSI-Pril\1~ L~lina.

~.linistet· :->ehru Saturday 1·o'ccd :'\~hru spoke twice Saturdar ;'1\ India's determi:~ation to guard public meetings on the latest an:! ils frontiers asainst Communist · most serious of a series of clas:v,~ C'1ina. ·in two separate regions of l:ldb'~

8:11 the Indian leader urgrrl mountain frontier witll Tibet-ti•~ "restraint and reSflOnsibilitr" in northeast frontier agency lnd the react10n to the reported kiliing or Ladakh area in Kashmir. li Indian border police hy Chi· 1 DOS'T FEAR THREATS nc;e troops i~ 1\ashmir last Well·: Xehru declared that "our coun· ncsday. ; try is not one which wlll go down

lie said frontier cla;hcs be. : hcfore anyone b the world be· tween India and China caused "a I cau;;e of threats or because of lot of anxiety.'' but added he dirl; any lear." and added:

. jor weapons • producer for the ~~1~ 1 p~~lltlcal ~co- West has been suspended at lea~t II: r::.:.::a~y O\'ertones · until :~ext spring. Then the pros·

LO:-JDON !Reuters I - So,·tel •~sued by Tass 24 hours earlier. , 'No doubt prepnratwns fo1· such is~r.rl h'm P Premier Nikila Khrtls~chev has represented undi~gulsed criticism J H mceiin~ a1·e esseutial. 1 ·"You ~111 ,t l!n In hil 10 · increased pre.ssure for an Eas~· i or French Presidelft de ~aulle"s: W~RNING SOUNDED . 1 years." in t.o 11 e 11 t~ 1 e·' jud~e. ,

l!'l!!:;on.. j pects for ending the East • West · l,duding Gen. arms race sh o u I d be better tbr .•upreme al· known.

Anniversary

West summit conference th1s call Wednesday for .delaymg top·~· But one must n~t fmget that : "This I'm afrairl i~ "oing 10 be year. le1·et talk~ u:~til. sprmg. there are. po~1·ers .. '"· the wort~ . your last inninn,s ... ~ 1

A statement Issued Saturday by De Gaulle sa1d this would en· ~~at. are "'forkmgha,.a•~st ~hr ~,· ~IOI'l!an Morgan shilt~d his the Russian news age:~cy Tass able the meeting to be prepared ; .. t,nng. 0 • a t a\\ 10 10 ~·.~a· , old bones toward the cells and said people throughout the world without !1aste during a period: tiona! tenstons and. are slrl~lltg' muttered defia~ttv: "~lv lord, can find no jusllflcatlon for post· when East-West tensions would 1 to use any opportumty t~ pre I ent I'll beat you yet.'" · ponlng lhe talks. have a chance o£ easing. Tass re· a dre,~pp~ochement bet~~een East. In an old folks institution at I

a~ nes. · I lhis Welsh poflt Sundav Welsh

P 1 I Ch• H d The w1de masses of t!le teople 1 port Sunday, ;\lor~an • :llorgan' , 0 l'ce n tnese an s .wa?~ pe~ce and they can nd no I recalled hi~ lordship's words I

REID I Spain met on the tiny Intern&· Jusliftcatton !or the postpo:~ement with a chuckle. I.

F·•~re IReut ) II I "lsi d f .. ! of such an m~portan~ conference I Then !1 pronounced on the · · Sa ers ona an s o p .. easants" for :-lEW DELHI <Reutersl-com· · This means that one Indian is as the summtt meeltng between 1

t e · . :urda~· cele- the friendship ceremony, The 1110· m~nist Chna Sunday informed missing of the 17 reported Friday East and \Vest" · U111'c:

ll.'ltd~::erts~ry of a yard·l~ng Island Is situated In I India that seven of the.l7 Indian by India to have been killed in · "I am going straight. :'lfy legs £::louis 'xl\'et mar· the RIVer Ia Bldassoa, marking border police reported kiJled In Wednesday's clash. DEATH PENALTY won't let me climb anymore. ~. ~!aria Th: the the .frontier between France and 1a frontier clash last week are: The ·casually list was released ACCRA, Ghana tReuter~'-:\n~· "And if yon see lltal old

Pllnr;,l'in resa. SpaiD. . 1 ali1·e a~d In Chinese hands. 1 while Indian army troops were attempt to overthrow ot: alter the ' judge, tell him I'm out. ali1·e ,~a•g hands !he treaty was . negotiated ,In A note received by the Indian tl'eported on !he mo1·e . to rein· I policies or the Ghana gol'ernment i a:1d kicking."

. 11 :nih:inpla~~, 16~ by Jules Cardmal Mazzarm, external affairs ministry showed orce nor I her~ lront1er posls! by u~Jawful means will be pun· ~ The judge in que!'tion - Sir Pntnee· :. g e : ~~rench stales~an. an~ Don Lui that Chinese forces In the Kash· threatened by Chtne$e forces: ! ishable by death under a new : Edmund Davies, 53-was .<o in·

·: i 5 : ~ /; ~I . ; · 8~0 of SpKat.n. Lou•s. XIV's mlrl pro1•lnce or Kadak~ hold a Wednesday's cIa s h was the · treason bill published in the offi. ; formed but told a rcport~r who 1 01 Fra~ aunce! mamage to mg Phlhp IV's 1 total or 10 Indian.,, : most serious in a series between~ cia! Gazelle Saturday. T~e bill : asked him what he thought now

CaltiPI~e andf 1 daughter set the seal on the 1 The note informed lndia that i Indian border ~:uards and Chinese I ~0 l>dore parliament shortly. A I ahout ~for~;m ~!organ: - '"·· -~- D agreement. 1 Chinese forces arrested three 1 troops in two separate rc~ions of,. bill to stren~then sedition laws "You're 1·cry. persuasil'e hul

members of an India:~ parly in India's mountainous froJtier-the was published last Saturday. ahsolntely no comment."

Ousts Lada~h·last :ruesday,. . Northeast Frontier Agency and 1 -- · --

The Ohincsc are holdin~ another Ladakh.. . I • I Sel·en Indian border pollee "from I An Indian communique Friday I N 0 p rog re' ss . n a clash Wednesday and have re·j said armed Chinese intruders. Minister.

\J>·~~n ~am ~1. 1 of t~e North Korean People's As· ,;,.onn Korea tn sembly tparliamentl Friday. No

ol hi Cf. talks, has reasDn was given. . 1 Jllb as for. Nam II, who had a penchant for ~:m Russian-style uniforms, was re-

· co,·ered the bodies or nine Indians using grenades and mortar lire. slain then, t!le :1ote said. 1 madP. a surprise attack In super· ONE l\IISSJNG . · lor force o~ the Indian patrol.

U. S. To Probe Steel Settlement

\\.ASIII:'\GTO~-Sit•l•lworkers' President, David· J. Me­Dnnalcl, left, and R. Conrad Cooper, lhe steel industry's l·hicf nc~toliator. ns they met with newsmen following their talks here Oct. lith. !\lcDon~ld announced th:tt a new offer hv the ''Rig 12" dec\ companies is "totally unacccplahi~."-UPI Tcll'photo. ------·-- - ..... -

Aid Proposals Meet No Approval

Dr A LAN DONNELL\' such an 'increase toul~ be ln11a· lb.i 1 ~men.t O\'er garded by westemrs at the Pan. ~·oe acuon was 1 mu:~jom talks that ended the

. Chinese · Question Canadian Press Slaff Writer I tionary. Mr. Fleming has made

. . OTTAWA <CPl-A spate of re· . a number or recent sp~ches em· PITTSBURGH (APl -Negotla·l hme was se~ r~r the sessiO.n. cent proposals tltat the federal ! phasizing that government po!iey ng COmmittee : Korean War es a Moscow-arlen·

p Also- ted Communist. N Peklnl said Pak Sunr Chul

who served as Nam ll's deputy, has been appointed the new for· elgn minister.

Nam n also held the Job of deputy premier In the Nor!!! Kor­ean JOYII'IIIIIent. He apparently retaloa that post. "

Nam ll was born 45 years ago 1:1 Astatic Russia and Is believed to have spent soine time studying In the Soviet Union.

' IARE BOOK AUCHON

LONDON !Reuters\ - A rare copy of the first edlilon of the 'Xew Testame:tt In Eskimo, pub­lislled In Copenha&en In 17~4. Is among 187 books IJ1d manuscrlpta ol Sesndlnavlan origin to be auc· tlolltd off NDv. 11. •

BJ JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON. !AP, - The

United Statea plana to start a probing · operation In about 10 days to see whether there Is any easl:1g of Chinese Communist hos· tillty toward t!Je West.

It wiU take this action against a ,background of what Is seen here as apparent failure by So­viet Premier Khrushchev In his effort to en}lst the Chinese to his peace offensive. • •

The whole range of C~lnest U.S. problema has been under re· view here.

StPte department officials ha\·e been consulting with Ambassador Jacob D. Beam. the leadbg U.S. contact man .with the Chinese government.. ·

tors· IJI the steel strike held an The negottaiJOns came 1:1_ the government play an active role . is to fight inflation - includlnz a:mual meeting Sunday, The , w~ke of a new plea by President in helping meet the financial 'the so·called "creeping" kl,d. session tasted 90 minutes andi • Eisenhower to get the 500,000 . ncds of provinces anrl mu:1ici· ended with no report of progress. strikers back on the job. Some . r·1. ho t · 'th J'ttl · !'<ot all or the demands t~at Ot·

BACK TO WARSAW However another meeting will be 1 275 000 workers in allied indtt~-, pa 1 •es 3\ ~e Ot 11.1 1 c en· 1 1·awa do somethinl(, howe. ver,

Beam Is scheduled to return held tod~y. ; trl~s have been. laid off and more ro~~ra·l!thcmen m F.tawa. , 1 ... 1 • 1 would inl'olve a rise in the money I t k h I W T . dl tl h · 1 If 1 .1 th r 111 ermorc. mancc . uus c1 sunJllY ate nex wee to is post n ar· !\ere is no 10 ca o~ I at any ! ay·o. s ar~ sure o come 1 c 1 Flcmhlg !las indicated I hat the ; ·_:..~·.:....:._· --------saw and on Nov. 3 will meet for new contract propo.sals had been stnke contmucs. . . ; shorta~c of loanable capital funds ; the first time In about two months made to end t~e str1ke, now. In Its n Resumpt i o ~ of nc::o11a110n: . which lies at I he root of the prob· 'IIIT'W"W"W"W'W'W'W'W'.,.Yf with the Chinese ambassador 1041h day. . came u~de~ a fart:llar.lle~ lab01 lem can be ex ccted to continue there, Wang Peng-nan. · Following thts afternoon's ses· I D j u n c l• on d1rechve that 1 for ~ome time P I

Ofllclals said Beam Is :lot slon at a Pit'-iburgh hotel the two would. se~d the steelwork"r~}ack • The widesp;ead economic ex· I going back to Warsaw with any top negotiator~ - R. Conrad , !o the•;, Jobs. for an BO·day cool· pa:1sion going on throughout the startling new proposals but that ~ooper ro~ the mdustry and.pres- 1 mg off. ~erto~. . world, he said in a Montreal It Is hoped there may be some tde~t Davtd J. McDonai? or the The IDJUncllon. was obtam~d speech last week, "sug!lests 6 sign Dl' a Chillt'se policy de1•elop- U~1ted Steelworkers - ts~ued a la.st Wednesday. m th~ U.S. dts· long period of world capital short· ment in the new round or tnlks. jomt statement., ll was read by lr1ct court at, P1t1sburgh. age, from which Canada l'annot

Primarily, the United States Cooper, who sa•d: DELAY LA\\ ex eel to be immune" wants China to renounce the use "We ha1•e further discussed our The U.S. third circuit coul't ol · ll · of force 'aga'inst ~·ormo~a. but has pl'oblems. We· will me,et ~epa· appeals at Philadelphia delayed A ~mm?er of .•~~~ P.roposals fm· not asked t~e Chbese Reds to ·rat~ tomorrow morniqg." en(orcehlent of the return • to· !e~le1al.a•d L~ PIO\IIIcta~ and mun. drop their claim to that Island. MORE NEGOTIATIONS . work clause , in the inju:1ction 1 •c•pal ~manc10g would ~nvolve, an

Another primary object is the After the separate meeltngs I!Je after the umon appealed. The expa~swn of the mane~ suppi) · quick release or five Ame.ricans union arid industry negoti~ting J court i~ expected to rule this week INFI.ATIONARY INCREA.SE still held in Chinese jails, teams will get together again. No on the appeal. But the -concern here IS that

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Weather. Cloudy with sunny periods b afternoon. High 55.

·TEMPERATURES

Toronto .. .. .. . 39 ~lontreal ...... 28 Moncton .. .. .. 19 Halifax ........ 26 Sydney .. . .. . . 28 St. Joh~·s ..... 2i

55 51 45 46 46 38

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Page 2: Vol. I t ans ressioncollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · , 'No doubt prepnratwns fo1· such is~r.rl h'm P Premier Nikila Khrtls~chev has represented undi~gulsed

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HARBOUR GRACE NEWS Teachers·· Meet . .

· At Hr. Grace Armed Forces Day at Fair

Fair Booths local Exhibitors

Personals HR. GRACE, Oct. 23--Mr.

HR. GRACI, Oet. 22-At a · - -a~eeUnl held at the central HR. GRACE, Oct. 22-With the HR .. GRACE-Several booths High School at Hr. Grace on Trinity • Conception Fair past at this week'• fair are held by 'l'huraday evenlnJ, October 22nd, the half way mark, Armed lOllal t1thlbit1. One of tho~e at· the atafl of the Central ·High Forcea Day on Saturday II be- tractlnl a great deal of attention

Frank Furey ~f tlt• Audio Visual Dept of Education, who Is at Hr. Grace at their booth at the Fair, visited the schools on Thursday In tilt Interest of his dep11rtment.

sell 1 with atalfa from the lnl looked forward to with Ia that of North Eastern Fisher· Mr. and ~ra. Gordon Rab· fee:!.. from Jlryanta cove, Hr. eager anticlapatlon, all needed lea Ltd. Centred by a huge cod· bitts, Brl1us paid a brief G • south St Paul's Elemen· being fine weathar. fish wetahine s• lbs. and which visit to Hr. Grl!ce qn Thurs· krac:~hool Hr ·Grace were pre· The parade will commence at was cau11ht by a Conception Bay day. ee~ to dlscU$s. the work• of the a fixed point at the Eastern end fisherman this season, the wa,u: The marriage of Miss Au· acbool• In centralized pro· of Water Street and will proceed of the booth are dec~rattd w t drey Sheppard o' "p•nlard's

weal At the viewinll stand in attractive packets of tile manY ~ "' ,. trammt. . cent;al Water St. th~ Lieutenant and varied products ctf till• pro- ft~y to Frederick Williams of

In attendance also were ~lr. Go\'ernor will take the aalute gresslve firm. The•e lnclu4• cod Hl!rbour Gr11ee took place on Ror !)awe, asa!stant auperlnten· and the parade will continue to Iillet•, fresh and •mok•d caplln Friday nllht at Spaniard's dent of Education and }lr. Otto Noad Street and thro11gh that and herring, ampked salmon, cod Bay. Lawrence, Supervisor for the street to Harvey Street, turning tongues, Ush atlcka etc. ~ A very lar;-;tl'endaoce was ~rea. · east to Cathedral Street and The booth of Koch Shoes an" recorded at the Fair on Thurs·

Dlscunlon of the policy of the down to Water Street and the Gold Sail Leather Goods teatu~e dlly night there being lll'lle tehool tystem brollilht forth I starting point where the parade an attractive assPrtment of tltet~ numbers fr!lm outslc$e towns. 111urh Information of value and will conclude. · manufac_tured attoes, bill an The traffic was heavy but was Interest to ttte teachers. During the morninll the Des· other leather coads. ~ra. R. well controlled by the R.C. ;::;;;;;::;==:::::;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;

1 troycr Huron will arrive and Hunt Ia at hand to demon~trate M.P.

• i dock at the pier or N.E. Fisher· the excellent ll.llallty ef the The chief attraction was the In Canada lies Ltd. Personnell of the armed workmanahiP whtch k dol\t by chooainf nf s from twelve

, forces with 1ar1e group• from local worktrs. contestant• for the Beauty more people buy i the c.L.B. 1\lt. cashel, st. Pat's A. f,. Colli• and Son ahowa Queen. The thrett ohosen were

S t etc. will arrive about noo11 in samples of the line ef planc!J ·~tarsaret Rose Taylor, Hr. ~~gr~·ms jreadiness for the parade for· and organs eta. which are car· Grace, Marie Doyle, llell la· ~U. '-" matlon and ten banda will be r!ed by thl• well known IRd laod, and Mrs. Emma Noel,

present. The Queen of the Fair progressive firm. Carb9near. These wlt)1 the v.o will he In tne parade nated on F. w. McKay aRtl Son ex· three l!h&aen an Wednesday a decorated float. . hlblt a aplendld 111ortment of nl1ht vis., Shirley 'l'aylar,

• • Arrangemenu h 1 v e been washera, refrl1eratera and elec· Mau4 Smith and Anne ~~tt made by the contmlttee concern· trlcal 1ooda and M~ Jailn t '¥t W~l b~1f~~:~~.!~~ ?;:,";~ln~ti. than ~y

other quality

tvhislcy

cd to 1erve the visiting men Kay II at hand to "'emons ra 1 w 0 w th B · ut I sandwiches and soft drinks at the appliances which are earrled Conception nea 11 1 ea Y :the <'·an~ctlan Legion Club, the In their Water Street store. .::Q....;ue:..:.e....;n· __ -:--:---:--. Hr. (;race J.ihmy, the Academy Electrical appliances etc. are pair work OR furnlturt etc. • H;,ll anll Simmons Restaurent. also exhibited by Richard One of the most popular ! All hotel.~ anrl restam·anta are Frlchte wpo earrlea 1 lint of boetlt~ I• that ef Stan~ard Manu· 't·c~dl' to acn·e meals throughout these toodsln his MW store and facturlnll co. where each nlgbl 1 he ;lay anrl prnl'ision has been Is becomln1 well known •• an a qu·art ef Spectrpmatle paint

i made by the.!ariies of the Angll· electrician. has been 11lven away to several c~n coneresallon and the United Mr. and Mra. Richard Hatch customers. Mr. C. C. Butt, local Church to ··serve dlnnera from demonstrate In their nicely de· and Conception Bay represen· noon to 7 p.m. at their respec· corated booth. They are capable tatlve has been on hand each ttve halls. of doing an excellent job of re· night with Mr. Rideout of the

The Fair will' be open through· St. John's firm. out the afternoon and evening etc. A giant display of fireworks Further news Items will des·

(Not Inserted by the Board of j and will give visitors the last will conclude this big event on crlbe the several booths which Liquor Control) opportllnity to view the exhibits Saturday night. remain. ,

BIG SNOW TIRE

* *

~

Student Spi~ -PANMUNJON -The United N~tioll$ In South Korea Frid that more than 1 ~1

ive. spies are lral~in ~p10nage schoou ~a1 IS~ • North Korea. Wtlham S. Biddle Slid dent agenu are . to infiltrate into Biddle made hi! mee~ing of the jQint armtsttre commiui,

· by the ex rommand1

NE \\'DELHI _ The Dalai l.ama, 'llhlr spiritual and tem~ has agreed to gil·e fere a committee a1 Rational Commiuioa RIW investigatinl munist atrocities ia shcntam Trikamdu, the eommlttee, said

Shoots -· LAURENS, S. C. -

Police ~aid a woma11, her flnt child thret fil'1!d IS buUell inle a old adopted daughter eause the betievtd "was possessed witb Mr. ~largaret. Bo)1er, 21, takP.r. to hospital.

* AT !tRDINE~

. . .

NEW SNOW GRIP

670 X IS PRICE s24.95 .

'RECAPS 670XIS PRICE 5)5,95

(WILL. ACCEPT TRADE-INS)

t au ss z sa · &E.-I. L.£2

l j I

FREE • • • • ·_FREE • • • • •

NEW SNOW GRIP

750 X 14 PRICE s28.95 (TUBELESS)

RECAPS 750 X 14 PRICE s17.95 (WILL ACCEPT TRADE-INS)

ZXZJ -15 .52&£_ USA¥ ---

FREE .FRII,INST ALLA TION ON ALL TilES PURCHASED DURING THIS GREAT SNOW TIRE SALE. . '

..... \ .

.JUST t~IT OP STOP & SH~II SUIIIIMARI<IT DIAL 90109

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81 ·'

In ''N

Page 3: Vol. I t ans ressioncollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · , 'No doubt prepnratwns fo1· such is~r.rl h'm P Premier Nikila Khrtls~chev has represented undi~gulsed

-~Jos. xOI'eta Jttd :"iations 1\o~a Frida .• than l.o«l art tnininc ~thools in

h 1\o~a • B:drllr ~d tts are btia 11r mto Sou~ 14dr hts o! tht ioin1

co:nmissi~a '\ temmand.

oots ESS. 5. C.­ai• a womaa. ehild tllr.e bullfta into

:f'd daagli!Pr 11M hthtved tSSUStd llitll ·~:~t ~1fr, lS, he~Spia:

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8.95

7.95 DE-It-IS)

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Sf, JOt-IN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND The Daily News MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1959

Briefs In The "Ne\YS

,,

faiher Wantsd . ~·l)iarcr· ~rc lookmg 1.·~ 10 pia)· lhc. part or .. ~·· fathrr ol three

~1rl;. The Way. rr,·ratly produced

,,rnl "Diary or •rr tWII' rehears·

r.p-rolnn: come:!~ "As T!lr)'rr ll;tppy. They ~~ ~r.r arlM. hOWC\'Cr,

1:r plrl <'! John llent· b:hrr .. \nyone inter·

. ~ 1.-krd to ron tact the ,.,,dto a: ~;~-1, ...

Troffic Injuries - (atlldJtralf ic injurirs

~.3;! in 1952 o( tbt ~larit ilnrs and

wf•114Ja!no had 5.958 or tht l'anadlan

Victim Of Dnd Run Accident 1

rrcn1 M Salmon ' 1~;j'fr~r 1 of hat·ing he· ,

~ I'd knoc· ~rrl no"'R on . Jf:rrrr'"' nn \\'at~r:

Rl';,nur c.r.rP. ~lr .. II' c~·.w rrl ~~ I he Car-' 5";::;1 '"' thr St. John

. •utirnn: from in· !'' ;;'lllf • iwuldcr and ;:.;:riFt '' under in· ·

~,. :he ROl Police Grarr

Throw Sticks tettrdlY ahcrnoon on

stst lt'l'tral young throwing wooden

thr slreet Into Park. These sharp 1titk~ 11ere cross·

(!ont of mo1·ing cau.

............ TYNDALL AIR FORCE BASE, Panama City, Florid:~-Compc:ing in the U.S. Air Force's 7th Annual World· Wide Weapons Meet were these four supersonic jet interceptors and their missiles poised on the flight line at Tymlull Air Force· Base, Florida ... At the bottom is the ultrasonic F-1~ Stnrfighter which has set several new flying records. This bncl;bone of America's Air Defense carries the Sidewinder missile on its wingtips. To · the left is the F ·89J Scorpion, another supersonic interceptor of the Air Defense Command which fires the atomic-warhead Genie rocket. At the top of the photo is the F·lOil Super Sabre flown by the Arizona Air Nationnl Guard. At the right is the well·known F-102 Delta Dagger, The meet, dubbed William Tellll, concluded lnst Fridny.-Official U.S. Air Force Photo.

I N ' ' ews Staffers BacU •

, From Weapons Meet Two members of the DAILY included Greenwood, N.S.,

:-<EWS staff, Eric A. Seymour Mitchel AFB. New York; An· and Maria Leslie, returned drews AFB, 1\taryland; Stew· from Panama City, Florida, art AFB. Tennessee; Tyndall

1 Sunday night after witnessing AFB, Florida; Wrgiht·Patter;· the major portion or the son, Ohio; Griffiss AFB, World Wide Weapons :llcet Rome, New Y1>rk; Pease, AFB, held over Tyndall AFB, Flor· New Hampshire. Total flying ida. last week. time 34 hours and 10 minutes,

They were the only two Sixteen hours bad weather~ . ncw5 representatives attend· Extended references to !he. ing from Xewroundland and William Tell Missile Exhibit·

. werl! accompanied by Lieut. ion, the flights, the fine creYi I L. Hansen, PRO. Pepperrell and passengers and lnterview:i

AFB. Just over fh•e thousand will appear during the next mill!! had been Jogged by th'e two weeks. crew or the C·47 making the It can be said here !hat the flight when the aircralt ml!el was a success not only

1 touched down at Torbay and because it showed the &trength

. all kinds of weather was en· of the USA~' and the powerful countered including thunder, weapons now on wings but hail, rain, Co)! and gales. Cap· also the extensive develop; tain of the night was Lieut.· mentor jet propulsion and the Colonel Robert "P a p p y" extraordinary advances made l\fyers and bases where the in the electronics field so plane touched down on the closely al1ied In missile 4• outward and inward flight velopment.

RCMP Find Contraband . Liquor "On The Rocks" I

R.C.:'\t.P. officers made two ashore. Amon!(st t!it r«M:b substantial seizures of ~on· !hey discovered and eonft. traband Jlquor along the u.ted sixty callons of pure South Coast In recent wreks. alcohol and one hundrtd bot. Earlier this autumn the Irv-~ tll!s ot rum. They are 8earch•

lin:: Oil tanker Seekonk was ing for the owners of thit raided at Burgeo by the illicit cargo.

; :\Iarine Patrol officers and a large quantity of assorted ilq· All tht liquor Involved waa uors were seized and the ship brought from St. Pierre and was required to pay a sub- Miquelon. Both R.C.M.P. land stantial fine. 1 officers and Marine Patron

I Saturday officers of the units are Intensifying their i St. Lawrence detachment Ylgilant efforts along the

made a search along the !'ita· South Coast at this timt of 5hore in that area after being yeat· when smugglers are most informed that a quantity of active In landing contraband contraband had been brought from the French Islands.

IAstant the missile

lfn:, :h;:~gh the New Cargo Flight 1 4-Month Baby I Pop Concerts 1

s!·mphonr orchestra I • LateSt 1

Fisheries Meets In

Council Ottawa Unemployment

(~~:7~iio!s br~~~~;~l For Nfld. Labrador PGiio Victim 111

The following figures show <! dl d s d d 1 .~cpresent~lii'CS of the Fish·j the. U.S. . the number or unptaced appll·

tificate and have a knowledge of plumbing and general main· ~nance. Tbis Is a permanent position .

~~ .oun .•. n. tan a.r. :Maritime Central Airwa,·s 1St. John's, Gander, and Stephen· ~1 1ns Council or catt•da et 7 1 hat Can all tan ·essels cants as of 22 October, tor last . ·pop ( ll ' 1 One more dealh from polio, ~ .. L • • • " ~ 1 · . . . • . ' • tt • onc~rts "'1 . hal'e announced the commence-. ville to Goose Ba)', Labrador. l\'i:s t·rpot·tcd over the weekend. 1 ~~ 1th • cderal Ftshcnes :\h!t·

1 o~erattng tn the .f1shertes con· week and tor the same period

mz; Sunday arter· ment of a new all·cargo Hight' Good connections at this latter A four th 11 h'ld f tster ,J. Angus :llacLcan m . tnbute substanllally to the last )'l!ar. . 1:.:' tht umt~r. ito operate weekly on its New·! point will permit )I.C.A. to offer Trinitv Bm~n .. ·0 1b c J~ht ~0~1 , Ottawa on Ort. 23rd., to em·! economy of the country (a Unplactd Applicants

For further particular. on these jobs, lnteres~d persons should contact the National Employment Office, Une.m· ployment Insurance Comm!J· sion, Buckmaster's Field, St. John's.

!mashed Fence i !oundland-Labrador Servico.,24 hour service to Northern tl e r:e,·c a>11 w~~~ 1 rOI oF .~1 0 I phasize the )!rowing concern I large trawler, for instance, in· Male Fem1le 1 Jirlap Join~ 1nst on The new flight will commence. Points such as Saglek from New· 1

1 d' d r ~sit ~ ?11 n ay, I of the indu5try ol'er its in·! \'OII'es the expenditure to 22 Oct., 19511 ..• 2,818 649 and 'IHnl out of , on October 29th. and will be 1 foundland. . i am JC on a ur a)· . ability to meet the increasing f crew. plant workers. etc., or 15 Oct., 19511 ... 2,725 651

llltl tollided •·ith 1

1 flown on Thursdays of each I !ltaritlme Central has, 1 , The number or cases til i competition from hl!avily sub·· about S400,000 per year). 23 Oct., 1959 .. 4,891 825 11 front of I he prop- week !rom that time on. also, added Stephcm·lllc to 1 Newrot~ndla~d s~ands at .120. but I sidized foreign fleets fishin!%: 8. Each fish in!! ,·esse! Is a Present male registrations w trph M.C.A. presently sen·Jce lts VIscount service com· •

1

the e.ptdenuc Js deftnately on! orr. ll~rticularJy, the eastern i ra~tor in maintaini.ng the well· are 2,000 less thlln at the same 11 1;~: ~~~ Jl.~: l:~ St. John's, Gander, Goose mendng next week, and the ".ane, a spokesman f~r ~he; Canadtan coast. I ben.t.!%. or the .slupyards by time one year ago. The main lolh the pitkup •nd Bay, lnd Moncton with 1 will operate Into thai centt·e Depnt.tment or Health satd )es· C. J. Morrow, of Hali· pro1 t?mg en~plo~ ment through reason for this big difference

ftTt considerably 1 lhrlee.weekly Viscount on a weekly basis. !erda~. Only tltre.e new cases fax, speaking on behalf of rcpatrs .. ref1t and so forth, is that last year we had 1,184 Second Week Fall Festival

Promotion

passenser service that has were reported durtng the whole !he Industry representat. amounting in dollars over the miners registered for employ·

gained wide popularity 1\I.C.A. feels that the heavy of last week. tves, pointed out the basic lifetime or C1e vessel to a sum ment. The~e registrations re· situation and the factors comparable to the original suited from a temporary close·

since Itt Inception In July Increases it has experienced on which were operating to capital cost or the vessel. down or the Bell Island mines. of thi• year. Passenger fig· its Newfoundland Operations in 58 Year Q}d the detriment fo tha can· 9. The ves>els of the can· When comparing present It's In the air-the talk of the ures to date Indicate ·an the last few years have war· adlan Industry. ad ian fishing fleet are a pol· figures with those of last year, town. Everybody seems to be Increase of over 50'/r over ranted the new flight anrl hopes lilt'. J:\lorrow made the foOl· ent ractor In case of a nat· we also note that there are going to the Fall Festival, and the same period of 1958, !hat, by Increased frequency, w F d lowin!! points: 1 ional emergency, such as a now fewer skilled construe· enjoying It too. The attendance The new cargo service will the people of Canada's newest Qffiall QUfl 1. The Industry Is f11clng a: war, and In the search and tlon workers registered, 283 on Saturday night wu the !arc·

be carried out by a C-46 Cargo .. province will obtain better ser· serious situation b r o u g h t rescue service. as against 404. Construction est for the week and may have liner and will mo1·e goo~s from ! \'lee. D d J B d nbout by the increased cost or Tht Industry's recom· labourers this year show al· been a record. A very fine -- I ea n e fishing \'I'SSt>ls due to the re· mendations to the fisher· most 300 less and loggers :mo spirit prevailed and the feeling

qnlremenl5 for more modern. iu minister were specific· less. 1 till 1 t ~ generally expressed wa1 that wt

RETURN FRmr GERMANY - The Hanlon's of St. John's are ::all aboard" for their trip home. On tht~ "Empress of France" at Rotterd~m, Holland, returning to Canudn aher two yenrs with tlte 4th Cnn:ulinn In· fantry Drig:1de Group in. (:ermany ur111 from lt•£1:-Edwnrd 1, Mrs. ,\Jfredn Hnnlon, Suptler l'ntrick llnnlon, and son Brian 3. Sapper llnnlon is a member of the

l Royal Canadian Engineers. The "Empress of France" dtx:kcd ut Quebec City, Thursday, Oct. 22m!. ' National Defence Photo. . . .

. . . . . . . equipment. as well as bccau~c I ally directed towards gov• Vac<~nc es s I'X s ,or b k I :Ill's. :lllnmc Baggs, a 58 ~ear of highl'l' costs o( labour and ernment assistance in most types of skilled trades· will be ae • 1 olrl spmstl'r from Brond · Co\'e I materials. 1 some form which would men. Qualified mt>n In any Two door prius were elalm· was found dead 111 her bed at 1 2. The industry, rrnm a mar-l enable it to build up the trade who are unemployed ed on Saturday nlcht and 2 more Broad Co~·e on Frida)'. night.: keting standpoint, is depend·: fishing fleet so it co~ld and Interested in work should are still unclaimed. It was good One or :lltss Baggs nctghbours cnt on a continuous flow of effectively compete w•th apply h!'mediatcly. to aee people displaying the having not seen her for a few: raw products the year around,' the foreign fleets. Certlfled ~l-umbers are ur·, prize' tiley had won. The ladies i dnys went to the home of the~ which it Is not possible to ob· In addition, concern was· gently reqUired for employ· I re doing ~feat business and 1 deceased and found her dead. ! lain from the inshore fish· expressed 0 ,·er the present ment at Goose Bay. Pay is at 1• . h u 1 I Dr. Boughman was called nnd 1 cry. assistance being given, which the rate ol S2 per hour for a I that lS becallSe t ey are 0 er ng , immediately notified the RC:\t I 3, The Industry is facing, is based on costs or some 10 60·hour week, time and a hall top class home cookery and :Police at Harbour Grace. An 1 particularly an the east [ years ago, and which applies after 44 hours. This Is a short 1 hand·made weavablea at mll!t autopsy wus preformed on the 1 coast, Increased f~reign particularly to ~1e smaller term contra~t oC I months reasonable prices. The P'all Fes· victim In St. John's hut the i competition on the f.tshl~g type or ~raft .. Industry sug· duration. Uval eonlinues durinc this ~k Hl:Ml' do not eonsid~r any foul 1 grou~ds by a ~teadtly tn· gested Uus pohcy should be A maintenance foreman ts and 1 continuance of tht auc·

1~, 1 creasmg fore1gn effort reviewed, extended to othl'r required for employment at crss o! last week II confldentl1 P ~. made by larger and better areas and extended to vessels Twilllngate. Must possess 4th

A spokesman for the Rc:\l equipped vessels I h a n over 05 feet In length. class stationary engineer's rer- expected. ....-=== Pollee at arbour Grace told the those in the Canadian ~:.:_::._::::_~:_::~::::-===,;;~~======;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii DAlLY NEWS last. night that fleet. I they were walling for the report 4. The foreign vessels are

I of the autopsy from St. John's subsidized In varying degrees and that a death certificate by their respective countries, will be .Issued shortly. thus obtaining an additional

competlth·e ad1·antage.

First Aid For Class

Hr. Grace Sl, John Ambulance will

be starting a first aid ~enior course on Friday, October 30th at Harbour Grace. · The course will be for men and women over 16 years, and will commence at 8. p.m.

5. The Increased Intensity of fishing Is adding m~lPrtally to costs due to a steadily de­creasing V"olume of catch per boat.

6. The Cenedl~n fishing Industry Is also faced with severe foreign compell· tlon, from the producert of fish ceught off our shores, In its most Import• ant markets, particululy

Fire On· Harbour Tug

Those Interested are b~ng asked to contact Mr. Lome A fire that began In the fore· Wakelln at the Harbour Grace castle of the tug Roseville, own· Stadium. An appropriate mee-t ed by the Avalon Dredging Co., lng place wlll be chosen, as Southside, brought. Central fire soon as the number wishing trucks and the harbor fireboat to attend has been ascertained. to the scene shortly after 8

Did You o'clock last night.

The fire ·started when a mem· ber of the crew was preparina a meal on an oil·burning stove

R b ? in the forecastle. He lit a matc:b emem er • to light the oil and flames leap· , · ed up and caught fire to the

People in Newfoundland en· I bulkhead and made their way joyed an hour of extra sleep up through to the wheelhouse, a last night as the cloch WCI'C .little nstern of the forecaslle. put bilek one hour. A hill in· llespile the efforts of the fire· toducetl in the lust session of men the fo1·ecastle ami wheel; the legislature gave chil~ren house were· consillt!l':lhly dnm·

·and farmers an extra hour ul 1 aged by fire, smoke and w~ler. ! daylight: Before this year clocks i Prompt work by I he firelight· i went ahead on the last Sunday ! ers, however, prevented th~ , lin April and back an hour on I blaze from spreading to other l l.tbc last Sunday In September. parts of the tug. •

'

LITTLE GIRLS SIZES 2, 3, 3x.

PRETTY 3 PIECE SETS COAT, LEGGINGS, BONNET

Italian wool tweeds In a fleeked pattern. The Jacket is rayon quilted lined and has tl vilcose pile collar, matching bonnet Is also lined. The leggings have adjustable brace straps. A real warm outfit. ...

ORDINAR\l Y $\4,95 ..................... · 9 • 9 5

SKI-SLACKS FOR BOYS' 'N' GIRLS' 2 - 6

NAVY BLUE FRIEZE • ELASTICIZED CUFFS

WATER STREET

I

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Page 4: Vol. I t ans ressioncollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · , 'No doubt prepnratwns fo1· such is~r.rl h'm P Premier Nikila Khrtls~chev has represented undi~gulsed

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.. f:) itj. ·t ~ • '•' ... ~. ' .. ; . THE OAIL Y NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, OCTOBER 26 l . - ., . . ' '. .. I , ... :-

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1HE DAILY NEWS Newlau,dland's Only Morning Paptr

The DAD..Y NEWS is a momlna paper established in 1894, and pub­lisht~d at the News 'Building 355-3S9 Duckworth Street, St. John's, New· foundland, by Robinson ·& Company, Limited. .

MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS

In The News By WAYFARER

NEWFOUNDLAND TODAY (17)

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The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication· .,f all news despatches in this paper credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also the local.

We have reviewed In the last two articles the two greatest spending departments, education and health. Welfare is not far behind. It is costing today very nearly $15 . million although 'more than one-third of t~is is re· coverable through the sharing of costs with the federal government in' re· spect of relief and old _age assistance. In some respects, the welfare system is the most comprehensive of all public services. Social assistance is now the general term used to cover able-bodied relief, mothers' and dependents' allowances, and other forms of statutory assistance. Its total cost in the current budget is $8 million or more than one,half the total welfare budget. Old age assistance n,ow has a total cost of about $3!-1 million,

., i!':l

;;.f!' :*· :,_fi: : YEARLY SUBSCRJYflON RATES

news published therein. ·

1 f Canada ........ . ; ~ i ~~ :; . United Kingdom

$12.00 per ll!lnum All Press service and feature articles

In this paper are copyrighted and their reproduction Is prohibited.

'. '1_ .. ··. ·_, · and all foreign

1. ~ ; ·, ,' Authorized M second class mail ,d · I · 1'1 ~ cO\mtries Sl.J.OO pel' annnm • }..iember Audit Bureau

of Circulation. :I r •' Post Office Department, Ottawa. ..

;~; 11 ~-! . MONDAY. OCTOBER 26, 1959. ·'P' . ------

11,_; 1.:J .... ~- National Above Party Interests I 1 For manv months we ha\'e been transport and other needs to be ~: ;11~. ! . _ hearing about the relative gene1•• assessed on a priority system in re-;~; ; 1: ositv of Liberal and Conservative lation to their true importance in , { ·; · • . gov~rnments towards Newfound· both the :provincial and the na· :r,: { 1! ;~ land. This talk. whether it comes tiona! interest.

\•.';; .~!~ ·,,; from one side or the other. is mis· The money voted by parliament .~: ~:~ · leading and the \'er~· antithesis of each vear for federal sen·ices to ·~·: ~~ • ~ the theoretical basis of political the p;ovinces is too often distrib· 1 'It democracY in a federal s~·stem. uted 011 a political rather than a . : ~ }!' ;~: The Llberals can make an im· truh· national standard. It is first

,l,· pressh·e catalogue of benefit~ in gea;·ed to the provincial populations II· r .' ' which Newfoundland shared dur- lo mat'ntat'n that extraordinary kind

11,: 'j' ;i' · ing the first eight :·ears of .union. of equality that ensures that the · r 1 The Conservatives can pomt to richest provinces will get the same

'I ',1. ,1 the special Atlantic grants and the per caput share as the poorest. :';1jl;~.- implementatt'on of the harbour Thereafter, in the case of public .. I development in St. John's. Their works. it is usually distributed in .. ~ I• catalogue of special services may . h th . f th e mem

li .. :1t I' '---orne more ;...,pressive as time line wtt e Vlews o os •

~ "'" · bers of the Commons who can 1 i '!•. · goes on. e".'et·t the chief political influence.

.1, ' .. ·. ::.~_l: But nothing that we l1ave had ·' " That usually means special re·

from either party has been out· wards for those ridings that ha\·e 'I

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side the range of services that are supported the party in power. This proportionately available to all is not a new system. It is one that pro\inces, including special finan- has prevailed in Canada for many cial aid when that is needed on a regional or provincial basis. The years. only thing is that some things are But the fact that it is honoured not always readily provided re- by precedent does not make it. gardless of precedent, whether right or just. The money collected they be national parks or special in taxes from all the people of adjustment grants. Canada for federal purposes should

Howe,·er, nothing that repre- be spent to the greatest advantage sents a just need in any province of the nation. That is the ideal. should be subject to party con~d· Unfortunately, most ideals have to erations. The federal government be subordinated to the demands should seek the co-operation of the of party politics to the disad,•ant­proYinces ·in the compilation on a age of the national and provincial continuing basis of public works. interests.

Nova Scotian Coal Crisis About 2,500 miners in Cape

Breton face the loss of their jobs as a result of the economic necess· ity which is compelling Dosco to close down its highest-cost coal mines. The alternative, says the company, is to face the possibility of the ruin of the whole coal in· dustry in Nova Scotia.

The chief reason is the competit· ion in the Quebec market of electricity, oil and natural gas. The company appears to be able to compete on the basis of the pro­duction costs in its most effecient mine~ but average costs, due to the operation of uneconomic units, are too high.

The only alternative is federal subsidization and the amount that would be required seems almost pitifully small in relation to the number of people whose lives would be affected by the closing of the high·cost mines.

That does not mean that gov­ernment can indefinitely under­write the continuation of unecon· omic enterprises. But if a system of subsidization were· to be estab­lished for a few years to Jllow the gradual transfer of a large num­ber of miners to other employment, a grave crisis in the affairs of little Cape Breton Island would be avert~d.

Hero Of The Revolution Historians argue still over the

real nature of Georges Jaques Danton who was born two hund­red years ago today and ended his life on the guillotine only 34 years later. But in that short lifetime he had been the dynamic leader of revolution and the first hero of the French Republic. ..

Danton is popularly numbered among the terrorists who estab· lished the tradition of savagery that remains to this day so closely associated with the French Revol­ution. Bloody . times they were al· though they pale almost into insignificance by comparison with the enormous brutalities of the Hitler regime in Gennany and the Stalin rule in Russia.

Danton, although acquiescing in the Terror, was not himself the bloodthirsty monster that enemies

of the revolution have pictured him. He was a brilliant and highly practical politician and, by the standards of the revolution, a moderate. As the opposite to the high-flown intellectual idealism of Robespierre, he became a rival to be dethroned. He was executed following a mockery of a trial. Robespierre, of almost the same age as Danton, was himself sent to the guillotine four months later.

Carlyle wrote Danton's epitaph in exclamatory rhetoric. "So passes," he said of the execution, "like a gigantic mass, of valour, ostentation, fl:iry, affectiol'i and wild revolutionary manhood, this Danton, to his unknown home •••• he walked straight his . own wild road, whither it led him. He may live for some generations in the m~ory of men."

Chinese Aggression In India A new border clash between

Chinese and Indian troops has in· ereased in India the awareness of the>.Communist menace and caused even Mr. Nehru to remove the l'Oif.COlourtd lpeCtaclU throuJh

which he has been accwtomed in the past to observe the policies of .Red China. But the Chinese ag• gression has not only alerted Mr. Nehru ill respect· qf Indian secur· ity; it hu abo helped to brine

Bv the standards of the past, the allowance for able-bodied relief Is gener~us. The first adult in the family receives $20, the· second and each additionnl adult $10, ami $8 is provided for each child. Thus the food order for a home containing two adults and four childwn would be $62 a month. This may not be princely but it is more than 50% better than the allowance of 3 renrs ago and is double the allowance provided at the end of the war. It is understood that orders for clothing and food may also be sup· plied where the need has been established. In the case of a family of s!:oc, there is also the familv allowance to be computed as part of the fam1ly income. Thus the famdv on relief would receive $62 in food orders, about $26 in family allowanc~s. plus, if needed, a clothing and fuel grant. ·

This problem of relief presents very special difficulties. Tile fear has frequently been expressed in reports of the Welfare Departmnt that relief mav be abused. lt was said in 1956, for example, that ."there is a very grave da~ger that in om efforts to discharge our responsibilities to those who are in real distress we shall create an cn1·ironment in which dependence in the able-hodird can de1·elop and flourish with disastrous results not only to the individual but to society as a whole .... This situation must change if Newfoundland is to survive."

1'\o re1·iew of Newfoundland todav can afford to ignore the moral and economic llangcrs that are tu be found in abuses of relief. The qnanti~· of relief has been arbitrarily reduced by old age pensions and old age assist· ance and bv ·unemplovment insurance benefits. Bnt it is a fact that a mnn· her of per;ons are ai all times unemployed. There may be faults within the individnnls that cause this situation since the turn01·er of lahour in logging and other forms of seasonal employment usually give everyone an opportunity to gPt work for some part of the year. But it is the case, much as one mi~ht wish to ignore it, that a number of people will be found who regard relief as a right and see nothing wrong in dependence on go1·em· ment instead of their own efforts. This condition is difficult to remedy in a pnll'ince in which so many people are dispersed over a long perimeter and often in great isolation. Tile distribution of able-bodied relief becomes the line of least resistance but the fact remains that so long as many people accept it as a natural way of life, a canker exists In our society. It represents a challenge to all who have the interests of the province at heart. Some· bodv said to us the other dav that in the period of depression it was not tmu~ual for people in rural c~mmunities to distinguish those on relief from those who managed to exist by their own efforts by saying of the latter that thev were indept>ndent men. But in the welfare state, the value of in· depend~nce is rated less highly than it used to be.

In terms of public finance, no great impro1·ement in this situation can soon be expected. In other words, welfare will continue for some time, sometimes justifiably, sometimes not, to be a major charge on the budget nor is it possible at the moment to envisage an important education in its costs in the reasonablv near future. Decentralization of government through the establishment of 'county administration could help to overcome some nf the weaknesses in the present welfare situation.

~----

l What Others FULL CYCLE Ottatwa Journal

In Michigan now, they're making newsprint out of waste paper, which looks like another step In the direction either of conservation or perpetual motion.

......... TOO .MANY PROMISES .... .. ... Regina Leader-Post

Canadian electors, who have been ex· hiblting a proneness to back parties which promise the most In social and welfare services, should not fail to note the party to last Thursday's election which promised the most fared the worst. Despite Labor's pledges to re­duce taxes, Increase pension Incomes and extend other welfare services, lt lost elecctoral support. Whenever it Is said that British electors are more mature and realistic than Canadian voters, this Ia resented by many Canadians. But the attitude of British voters to Labor's promises may Indicate there at least is a grain of truth In this contention.

SAME OLD STORY Cape Breton Post

What the town needs Is a lunch roorn front door that closes automatically when the daya grow eold. Thla Is be­cause of the people who will. not take

Are TRADE RELATIONS

Lethbridge Herald

-

Nations worry about their trade re· lations. Individuals worry about rela· lions they wish· they could trade.

RECORD ON TRADE Montreal Star

The record of the Diefenbaker Gov· ernment has not been remarkable for its free trading policies. True, there was that Canadian trade mission to the United Kingdom, when all the talk was of diverting Canadian purchases from the United States to Britain. It Ia no longer considered good taste to men­tion that venture in Ottawa, for the fact is that nothing worthwhile came of U. Then there has been a move here and a move there, designed to protect the Canadian market against imports - of British woollens for Instance. There has also been the drastic action, not to be sure against a Commonwealth coun· try but against Japan, to reduce for· eign competition. There is Indeed practically nothing on the record to sus· gest that Mr. Fleming is in favor of much else than selling mnre abroad and buying more at home. It may be that the Commonwealth bloc will re­move Its Import controls. But it is pretty 'doubUullf Canadian exhortation;; will, In existing circumstances, be cor.­sidered very weighty.

the trouble to close the door. Their own MANAGEMENT COSTS wanu having been met, they are cap- Calgary Albertan able of opening the door in departure Industry In many eases has tried to but won't bother to shut It, letting the solve the shortage of good managers by eold air pour In to cool off other peo- • appointing a number of seecmd-rate men pie's tea. And oH they rush with what to handle jobs that one good one could one Imagines Is. a vacant look In their do. That It frequently can do noth· eyes. But they are not entirely bereft lng else doesn't vindicate high maORge of their will. One does not believe ment costs. Another group which has they leave the front doors of their homes caught on to this trend in. Industry i~ open In cbill·dimp weather when they organized labor. Forced to defend de depart, ·If It makes a difference whose maods for higher wages in the face ol ox Ia gored It also teems to make a claims that pay boosts result In higher difference whose fuel does the heating, prices, more than one union hu been

about a very great improvement in India'• relations with Pakistan. Most of the outstanding boroer disputes have been patched up and those that remain are under negotiation. If the Communist penetrations ,of the Indian border present an increasing danger, they have at least had a good effect in procuring this new unity between l'ndia ·and Paldatan. .

1 ...... •••••••• • •

delving Into the relation between high costa of management and price Increases. And in aome cues union facu and fig urea have been moat impressive. It i£ quite likely that the matter of high man agement cosu will figure more promin ently In economic discussions in thr future. A few busineasea these days- car run their affain without paying som• heed to public opinion and, if the unio · succeed In getting <hP!r 1 r • ·' · •I h' management' co>ts r , . · ·, .. _,: aome businesses anr.l i' , .. ill L Ia trouble.

'No Forward Speed--But les Terrific in........._

If Wishes Were Horses •••

By BRUCE BIOSSAT

J

Poitics is just like anything else. Fact, fiction, illusion. rationalization, wishful thinking and a Jot of other things often get almost hopelessly intertwined.

And politicians, inevitably, act upon what they believe is true, whether it really is or not. Furthermore, though they want to be realistic, some gi1·e more credence to the wish than to the fact.

We can see a prize example of this right now. In New York, in Wisconsin, in quite a few other places, talk is heard among certain Democrats of a Stevenson· Kennedy presidential ticket for 1960.

The boosters of a Stevenson-Kennedy ticket are well aware that Sen. John F. Kennedy is the leading candidate for the Democratic nomination. They know, too, that for a long time he has fared better than any other Democrat in pub­lie opinion tests against ali potential Republican nominees.

Thus. they appreciate thoroughly the big lift be would most likely give the party ticket next year. Their harsher critics might say they bady want this lift to bolster the chances of a Stevenson who twice went down to crushing defeat at the hands of President Eisenhower.

Some of the "practical" men are look· lng 3t It another way. They worry over tne iollpact on many voters of Kennedy's Catholicism. Putting him second on the ticket might be a way of seeming to face this issue without actually doing so.

Yet all these mental gyrations, all the boosts for a Stevenson-Kennedy slate, are really fruitless. They are founded on a wish, not a fact.

In · countless instances we have no hope of separating the real from the illusory. Luckily for Democrats strug. gling to make up their minds, they can be separated in this case.

The well-founded word is that Ken· nedy under no circumstances will take the vice-presidential nomination. He knows where be is in tbe race, and be's going for the top prize, nothing less.

The Stevenson-Kennedy boosters had better rub their blackboards clean and come up with a new slate that wHJ fit the fact, not the wish.

THE MEEK STRIKE BACK

The trouble with the small injustices of life is that most of the time it's diffi· cult or impossible to do anything about them. There is no Court of Small Gripes to which we can appeal.

Somebody parks at a crazy angle and uses up two parking spaces. You get cut off on the highway by some selfish character swinging around you, or dart· ing out from a side road. An aggres­sive type slices in ahead of people wait· ing in line for tickets. And so on.

Every now and then, howe1·er, we can read of the righting of one of these small wrongs.

Just the other day two men sitting in a movie house. were annoyed by a man in front of them who persisted in talking aloud and drowning out the pic· ture. They asked him to stop, but he "haltered right on.

So they acted. Together they lifted tim bodily out of his seat, spun him Jround, carted him out of the theater and deposited him on the sidewalk. He Jid not return. What be didn't know was that the two men he defied were ,udo experts.

A small striking of the balance. Gives . JU a very warm feeling.

HALLOWE'EN Calgary Herald

Do-goodei'J have no business trying to .!<e the fun out of Hallowe'en. No one •n approve of Hallowe'en pranla

. :• ich result in property damage or .. rm to anyone. But that does not mean .. at the youngsters should be denied

l!r.e night in the year when they can blow off a lltUe steam.

----~

Strength ForT

MAJOR ASD ~IISOR \'ICES One of the strictest OtSCiplim:J

among 18th-century 1ea cap1a:cs Bartholomew Roberts. He nmr liquor; gambling was forbiddtn ~ ships; women were nmr aboard; crew membus off watch go to bed early; and he enforted 1

period on the Sabbath. But Captain Roberts was a

captured more than 40~ l'essels dying in battle with a Brit~h and he was, on a nry large m:e. ber and murderer. Despite ha avoidance of drinking, gambling, forth, he was a very e1·i1 man.

We are often inclined to judge people-and sometim~s el"en in their minor l'irtUe$ or ,-,w. 11'1 serve a few ob1·ious and ptrlll)l important good or bad traits and a favnrable or unfal'orable opiniot cordingly. We sometimes ignore more central indications of Had Captain Roberts li1·ed to ashore and continue his asce:ir he would probably ha1·e been by manr people a5 a highly mont

A few superficial ~nod trai:s make up for an essentially ture. Other people may be taktn · a while by appearances, but uml:! for long. And we do not dmirt at all. True goodr.el's begim t. center with love of {jod and out man-there is no substitute f(l[

·-~- -- --

The Experts Bv ED:'\A DUKELY

Canadian Press Staff 1\'ritll It's true; housewiw< ,~o bur

a morale-lifter. Bu~ II'S not housewives who bU)' 1mpu!se ..

"Everyone buys rmotiona!lr. Dr. A. B. Blankenship. partt!l or onto marketing rc <earch fi!J!I. !ness and Industrial leaders go same kind of buying hinges. they may be more rF;tralned.

It's product's per'•'nality ~~at to Its purchase. The ·nanner 11

the product is disp lnyed in 1! ·g 6J: the manner of advrrtlstn

type of publication in which 11

vertlsement appears all influ!!ICI "personality" of the producl

WOMEN HAVE SAY If you want to fin.t out

Product ask housrwiH<. . , ure "Women are morr rrcep . ;

Blankenship says. "The)' ,.;tld· . -an n lly answer an~· quc;tton

j t. ,,

:\ten, he contend•. are ntOrl '>icious of interl·iewrr>. .1 ~ur emotions is finr. he ~a)'!~ u

~tart ~tit" product 1

1s goo~ to > :f it il0·1 we'll on y buy rt on~e · good," he states.

WomPn do mr.;t nf lhf . ~ when a product is bring testr

HARD ON FEET ; .

Among the nece•sJ ry ·1 · · tlt"r ptOP· are an mterest m 0 ' c{ f t \lanY sturdy legs and ec · . ~ill

women walk mile< :n:er11e pie for . su ·veys. 1 ~r._ stresses that the matmal used only for research for the

Interviewers dmt't fiudd1. too receptive on wet mud· Robert Mueller. who 15 '~ed the 500 800 lnterl'iewers u.

' 1 roa~t. company from coast. 0 obabl!' a nice warm day wrll pr in a nice warm rrrepLon.

Dr. Blankenship says ut nt' particularly like to m· 0

r.lucts. doinl

Some of the people . , · ltll'l'~rcJ 1 tews often ha1·e · . ·

t·nces. One lady ended :~nl~in! housewife repair s~mr P a water pipe burst.

., \

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Page 5: Vol. I t ans ressioncollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · , 'No doubt prepnratwns fo1· such is~r.rl h'm P Premier Nikila Khrtls~chev has represented undi~gulsed

~~ts ..-as 1. pinte. ••:~ 400 ,.t~~els

. ::!1 a BritlJ.b wry lar~t ~c;.le. a r Dfspltt blS ·.\.;1:1g. ~amblin'­try tnl man. :nc!inPd to judge ·:: -:11'~ t\·tn .:-:~~ or ,.,C't'$. We . ,.,as ar.d ptrbaps "~ !>ad tra1:J and ,r,farorablt opinion •omttim~ i~nore

.hntions of ·~115 li\"td to ·.:~ut his as«:ic ~:~ han bttn .~ a highly moral

1:-;al ~ood traits do 1 es:stntially 'Kicked ·?It mar bt taken ·ara:~ctS. but u~1:21:r ,.." do not dectift ~oodness betnns at e of God and our . ~ substitutt for

- ------

xperts 1:'\.-\ BLAKELY p~~s Staff ~ •t>Wh·e~ do bur ~- But it's not ~ 0 buy impulst. • t>u ,-~ emotionallY. mkrnship. partner :ing research firJII. J<trial leaders go bu,·ing binJZes. mo~t restrained. • peTS'InalitY thai

· · Tht 11\Jnntr ill r. 1s displa~·ed In 1

4 of ad\·ertlsing Ill ,:ration in v;hich ,ppears all of the p)'OducL

AEN HAVE sAY ~~ to rind out house\\·i\·es. . . , ·t more recepute. . ,a,·s. "ThtY 111'1141

· · an anY quesuon-

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~CLAN€>! · ~OOM-~OOM!;

\\

Cold Facts About, To~!~~~~~: Bur· I stein !las a special Interest In the • d D • • \1 :\Iiddle East political altuatlon. g an rlvmg His wife Is In the Israell Army.

. .

1

The Toronto groom met end married lhe 19 • year • old former

:!t Secre:ary. Donald . duce visual acuity 11 much as Miss Israel In less than three !Iitty Coum11 of New· 'wearing dark glasses at nlghl. I weeks while holidaying In Isree!.

·. j o 0 • He says It wasn't love at first · rlrinr was invoJv. "Under the Influence" means : sight though. 'I didn't fall In love

· b f ' 1wilb !ler u~tll I had seen her . . num. er o 1 that due to drinking alcohol a three times.' he exlalned.

tr.llic acctdents 1• person has lost (to any degree) The couple hopes to be reunited

, • • 1 some of tbe clearness of mind here In a few weeks when· th

1 and self-control that would oth· bride Is demobbed from a two-c~~ber of the adul~. erwlse possess. year compulsory army stint. The

•led had been : • • • groom returned to Canada follow· • , , ; You do not have to be ob· tng their recent two-day honey-

1 vlously Intoxicated to be "Un· moon. The bride, tM former Sara ~ccidents lnvolv·l der the Influence" and an un· Elymer, returned to her army

dnnr. safe driver. duties. ' · • : • • • "I !lope there Is' no trouble In accident; cases, the i Pure alcohol leaves no odor the Middle East In the next few dmer h~d been is :on the breath-it Is the flavors we!ks. She could be called to

and_ ls ncler en· 'In the beverage that cause the fight," Mr. Burstein said. His tlt~ dmer's oHicial' odor wire, he explai:ted. Is quite ca·

• • , 0 pable of handling a machine-gun ' • • or tossing hand grenades.

11 ! Coffee or other stimulants They met by chance In Tel i.:cr~al\ and present I will not orr set the effects of Aviv when Mr. Burstein vrent to tratse 'afNy edu·j alcohol. Only TilliE can ellm· week vacation. He Intended tG

n:· he enforcement, . inate alcohol from the blood tour European. capitals during the :mkmg dril·crs are stream. I Israel for two weeks of his t!lree-

on our streets • • • fl:lal week but gave up this plan , , Chemical tests provide the I, In favor of a two-day honeymoon d · , pollee with a scientific means . w!th his bride. rlnkers are a 11 an 1 1• to determine whether or not al· Some Tel Aviv t!lltl drivers In· • conmmon Y h I h d d d I ' II thtir critical ud .J co.~ as re uce a r vers traduced Mr. Burstein to Sara's

illpairtd with a fair~ I abtbty. best friend and the 1957 Miss Is· toncentration and rae! went along for a double date. . the obviously . Speed and driver fatigue form Flvf days later Mr. Burstein pro-

dnl'ers. , a vlciou, circle which all too oosed end 10 days later. on Oct.. ' ' • I frequently Is broken only with 13, they were wed In his hotel. ~- an)· extent re· 1 the occurence of a severe accl· "About 75 guests came but I , tty or any driver. denl-warns tile Safety Cou.ncil didn't even have a best' man be-

• • . of Newfoundland. cause J did not k:low anybody," of alcohol re· Aa the driver arows weary, be be said.

setrcontrol and becomea hicreasln&,ly Impatient The new groom figures he has to reach hla destination. So he a good wife. "She's A·t. her army Is tempted to Increase his speed papers say so."

101 a stimulant and at tlie very time when fatigue -----ltitdieal)y as de· reduces his alertnesa and re- Detat'n Plane • lards his reflexes.

1u ' • Break this vicious circle-by 11 lt~lrne_n.t and the stopping to rest when tired. CAIRO _ Reuters _ 'l'tle

1-ttlhcism occurs l And never drive at an Illegal or crew of an Eeyptlan airliner 5Yrnptoms or In· unsafe s p e e d. Remember: with 2a Rusalans aboard waa

, , 1 There's only one way you ·want arrested when the plane m~i• Ill • to reach your destination, and a forced Iandini at Baghdad be·

'dill'east three hours tilat la-SAFELYI cause of fog Thursday, the ~ho·!nate) on~ ounce A speed zone does not mean Eeyptlan press reported Friday.

I about 2 cock· , you must drive the maximum The report said the lraql author· • , , i permitted. It means . that you jltles later releas~d the crew

1 cannot exceed the maximum I when the pilot stressed that the l ~tbout 0.4r;. of .

1 when all factors are i.D )'our' plane had - had to change Its

00d) may re· favour. · route because of foJ. •

l •

~. ~T,"lf~··. .

looking for a better way to save?

ORD RT ENEW •

T /

CANADA SAVINGS BONDS are a most convenient and practical way to save - and they're a safe invest­ment with many advantages. H the need should arise, they can be cash­ed at any time, at any bank, for full face value plus earned interest. They're like· dollars with coupons attached.

This year they are betterthan ever - with a higher return than ever before- an averag~ annual yield of 4.98 per cent when held to maturity.

DAY Up to $20,000 of the new series

may be held in the name of any one person (adult or minor) or by an executor for the estate of a deceased person.

They're available in denomina· tions of $50 and up, for cash and on easy instalments. Order yours through the Payroll Savings Plan at work, or through your investment dealer, bank, trust or loan company, or stock broker.

BETTER THAN EVER I •

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Page 6: Vol. I t ans ressioncollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · , 'No doubt prepnratwns fo1· such is~r.rl h'm P Premier Nikila Khrtls~chev has represented undi~gulsed

~~: I

:J· . II

. 't: ;, :'I !" ,, ),1

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I ! t ~' •• i l· ·:, I· '.~ .. \

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·PERSONAL CHIT-CHAT

, · :NGAGEMENT ·Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Clouston, " Elizabeth Ave., St. Jobn~s,

· 1iJII to announce the e01a11e· :tent of their daughter Sally ~lin to Lieut. John C. Kuehn r., son of Mr. and Mrs. J . .Carl tuehn, Witchata Falls, Texas, J.S.A.

. -----

THE DAitY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLO., MONDAY,

MAINLY FOR WOMEN For Monday, Octobtr 26

Present-For You .nd Yours .... Ahhough you may be ~timulated to carry out ~me ~mbitious plans, aspects surges! that you should give first con· ~ideration to your physical well· being. Proceed cautiowly as O\'er-confidence could result in wasteful efCort. Give thought to new fields of endeavor, but de· • ·

Doctor Jordan Engagement Says ... ,

,.., .. '.

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./·· .I

Between Us Women

Daily Recipe

fer action. -

••• The Battle or Agin· F~ture ... One of th~ court took place in October of ~vals o~ co~munism "ill be 141 S. It ended with Britain's mcreasar.g s~rcity of Henry V ruling France. 'The de· due to the damming or feat or French arn:o~:d knights by Russia to p;oduce marked an en~ to medlcval war power. Dams ma~c mon:n 1,.~ 1 tactics. -. for the ~turgcon!

. '

The O~y Under Your Sign ARIES (Bor~ M11ch 21 to April 191 Tlc'!fC.'I f>~enty of r;:.!~ 10 f:tJ C~!')'Jf• 3grrl by ru!:lu of )'r.-t!T cH<II'ts.

TAURUS !April 20 to lolty 201 Do:'l't dttcio!in<: chi:dnft toe, ur:er!r « 1hrr will rtbtl.

GEMINI (Moy 21 lo J:oo :11 \'on W(.t1't b\ ~ l(t r:U• tf4') bt•l rot rt~·:::~ tood:ty. 11-:i~ts •ill fe:J )·u•r w:,y •

CANCER (Ju•o 22 lo July 21J 11(.:-,'t l:t :.htent•l'r':1r!l'"-n:~~ 1.:.=-:l.P'J ro;~. Re ~crsi:uent tn ,.c~.:r c!:.:rts.

lEO IJ•fy lZ t' A"~· 1') J<ceo <o:o:;·~;~ a:-d. f:w:·• lo 1 ~in;. t:1um br f~Ho•i~t; ir.:tf\'ct.o:-n r~:·:c:dl'•

VIRGO IAug. :2 to St,t. 22) A tlit-:~·t••-:11 ce~cerr.lr::- j'U':' :.•1-'f''!«"• me111 f'Otdid ~r:.,·e c-xtr:rr.~lr 1.-t-rdie.ill.

L,ISRA IStpt. ll I• Oct. 111 \.e-t ha·.·e :mr·~ i"l',::".·•• •.. "'·rrk wt aa II.\ a:-:~(~;J ·;.:;:""!

~~~RP~3.,\~:}l,;~ ll_:~.~!l r:":inimum of di;tr~(:l"l~;~- ... ,,, •.:~

!AGITTARIUS !Nov. llto ~· Cr :krl thi:-:..i"K" l::tJ e::o:. .t. 1

tk~t:\de • ~•·:t, h~ t-!•:t 11 •

C,ArotiCO~N IDe:. llto Tn.:a •• :t r.~ 1'!1~. R•,i,: t? ttdrr:-'1 .,,:1-\ e- ~~t!;!:o!.

AQUARIUS IJ••· ll to Fob rie,•:ert kr r::-.. ~~~~~!'nt ', ~:-~t ~·e:ur h~r.t -:-: ~f'

PISCES I Feb. lO to Mere\ K~er Mir.·l ·:-. i ,., • ..: '!-:-11 lit I (r-o:':l:;~ a: r• ~·!,<·~·~.

-- -- .... -------------

Fashions

newest the thin.,

shapely unbreakablr heel -

LIFE- TIME STEEL HEELS . . . ~

Now, you rAn wear the thin heels that Are the ~etg~~U fashton and nevt>r worry about their hrr~klllg. ~ ani ftnd . these unb~eakablc LIFF!·TIME HEELS, t;te! rf;l plastic constructiOn) on our fhrtic.st, mo>l n~.lrrtn• dt., P.Umps. You ran pick from Suede. Calf and !'ate~nrlll Illusion and pike style~. Come in to·day anrl II') rear!· on. They're the most wonderful fashion adranre 10 • Sizes 4 to 9 .

Seton Fa Exl

Page 7: Vol. I t ans ressioncollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · , 'No doubt prepnratwns fo1· such is~r.rl h'm P Premier Nikila Khrtls~chev has represented undi~gulsed

n .., C:l. 211

:· .• ~·::>?.....;!" l1 ........ li\ f.:_,·-:"!:: r 't,."• l

: ~;; llll.l: ~ hud O\ er tm ·.:nillllt ~ It &5 I m ;!OS5il:fe; 'lee:\(' th ~ a; e : .,OHib~t flaw ill ·~;>lanatio~ of ...,~~ . . <:!l~ hlm to w ·~ ~xplanauon. :>.~ssibilit'<' o!

· "'n·~ hr'st ;~~~ h~

on. !!e ~s

· c ~vtoopm: :ow-n a:ont ont rh!'ek

!'<'n on many fall

and ~~M .::-e-y!=. ma~t·r~ aDd a~ :he jc,.·eJ to= the blaek and

. ~ lroc as..<oeiattd ccOihes.

·~-

-: ::~ to paint a :-.~;n! or !3:1. "' .:arff and :-ou ... ~ OJ)t'tl

v our best ~s of reasonable e onnl!ol voWR

,;on on Odober : ond 29th.

fun,

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NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFL{)., MONDAY, QI;TQIER ,6, 1'59 • -7·:!' :· · .. ~· ·

~====: .... :; :.:;;:•=•=•==j=•=•= .. :.:, :,:,=-=• ::;;==; =·=·=i==·= .. ===~~-----------~-..:... _________ _,::..,._ _ _;_ __ ·: r (

arystown· News Conservatives Face Task Of Avoiding Inflation Whi-le Doubling Pro-sperity

:

~Annual · Fair And Exhibition ·

Another Important lan4mark ••• 1800 tons of structural steelwork 11'1 beinJ ftlbriC$ted and ere<:ted for the now Provincial Buildin&'

at St. Joha'a. Newfoundland, by Robb Engineering Works LimiU:d, .t\Jiherst, N.S. (a subaidiary of Dominion Bridp

Cmnpany Limited).

Steelworlc &y ROBB

THE

EASTERN TRUST COMPANY

NEWFOUNDLAND

IN IROJV ORE ... A FurURE :--·

. . ·- ~

Well eetablished and Jtable, the Iraa Ore ' . Company of Canada and itA A!!lloeiatea are at the same time pressing forward a ..igor­on& development programme o£ significance to the A tlantii: provinces. By participatiag in this growth, a young engineer may hope to use his imagination and resource£ ulneae while finding the professional eatis£actioa that ie possihle in a 'mature operatinn.

Among tl:c newe~t •lrl·elopments of the folTOup i~ ~~~ imt10rtanl minin!! and henefi· ci~tlinl( uncJNtakiHJ!1 C~I'I)IJ'rojrrt. north nf ~ .. pl·lle~, dc~tincclto process o million tons of ore a year.

En,::iucer~- mechauifat electrit'al. met• alluq:ir:~ I, civil anti ntininJ: :.._are in•·ited to fOnsider emplu~·nwnt with a firm which has ~~tahli~hed it~elf a~ Canada'e major pro-

• dtlfer of iron ore.

IRON ORE COMPANY OF CANADA

,,

QUEBEC NORTH SHORE & LABRADOR RAILWAY :·

' Furth•r in/nrmation may be ohtain,J {rom:

P~r••murl ODirP, Iron o,. Compunr of Cannd11, .11 Chuuhill S!Ju•e, St. Jnhn's; or b.•· writi111 to: Per'tonntl Department, /roll Ore Company o/ Canada, Stpt·lles, Que. ''

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Page 8: Vol. I t ans ressioncollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · , 'No doubt prepnratwns fo1· such is~r.rl h'm P Premier Nikila Khrtls~chev has represented undi~gulsed

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1959

. .' . 1.30-2.30 p.m., Mission Study Kenneth Prior, Director of the several weeks visiting with her Iter mother) also ~~~ · Themes - Materials and pro· Conference, Rev. C. 1\l, Stewart, sister Mrs. Charlie Phillip! at a~d Harvey Starkes Wb

L . t N gramme 1959:SO. Africa 1960·61. Rev. Dr. Burry, President of Halifax returned horne ~tw da)'S dted last week at a 5~11 r e ew. s Into all the World togetPl!r, Nfld. Conference and Rev. Sterl· ago. \H?spital. A full accounl ewlsp 0 . Rev. c. M. Steward, "Assoc~Jle :n:t Kitchen. Dr. Burry_ expres· The many friends of Dr. II. I Will appear in our r.txtol Secretary Board of Information sed pleasure at qeing thus en· :\1.% Dawe were pleased to see I Much excitement ~

. : and Stewardship." · tertained and said he was very him a~ain during the recent! on Sunday a£ternoon ~ : · · • · ' 2.30-4.00, "Mission is Every· happy to be present. Rev. Dr. K., Convenors Conference he I d 1tween 4 and. 5 o'clOtk btu

, " body's Business". Discussion of Priox addressed the gathering, her. Dr. Daw~ was guest of the 1 ~vas .5c~n flymg uv~r a , , WEATHER quately pay tribute to R. W.j pasted to each and everyone. He I by the Master who said, lnas· a "Case Study." and in his humerous manner' :\larchs. In d1ff1cully. rew m' : tiWISPORTE-The weather Manuel. whose death occurred at looked forward to his annual of much ns ye did, unto the I 4.00-4.15, Break brought laughter from those I Congratulations are extended: the pbnP. a T-33 J~;u;~ ;durilll die present month has his Corner Brook home on Fri· visits to old friends, old scenes, least of these my Brethren _ye 4.15-5.30, "Organizing the .

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. present. Rev. Peder McCaskiec II lllr. and Mrs. Don Quinn on the! was watcht•d hr so:ne r ·thUI far been Ideal for October, day morning Oct. 1st, at the age as did his friends here look for· did It unto me. Few knew hl~ Presbytery for missionary Edu· from St. Anthony also spoke and recent birth of a daughter at: she nose d1red lo tb cand flnaers are rrossed that of 89 years. Those who knew wnrd to seeing him, and as a better tban the wnter and his cation". :each thanked the Ladies for the 1th,e ·Grace Hospital, St. John's. I b~ W~>olfrc) 's Pond t

these weather conditions will him best loved him most, but former Mlnl~ter or this charge letters ~ere. always a source ?f convepcrs· will discuss bow to j splendid supper, after which the i .Mr. Quinn who is manager i m1les rh5lant. The Ai; C~~4 • coDdltue for at least another all loved and respected him. has expressed In a lele~ram r~· cheer !n Illness, courage 10 co.operate in presenting the I delegates went to the Audi·1 Bank of Nova Scotia h~re has 1 enroutc r.rom Goose Ba 1

. ltwo weeki. Some predict be· When with his dear ~lfe, lllr. celved by the fnmlly smce hts perp~ex1ty and looked forward Church's mission through the torium where a film on Africa been trans~crred to H?h~ax N.: bay oand II; home ba;/1:0

) ,cause of tbe lack of dog berries ~lan"uel decided to r~llre from death and we ~uot~: He . was to Wit~ great p~easure. . • Presbytery. was shown to all by Rev. c. M. S., and w11l leave. w1th111 lhr; loped fuel and · ·I ·the weather will be much war· the busy business life which never too busy 1£ h1s Mlmster Man~. m~~Y limes when writ 6.00, Dinner. Address-"The Stewart and on . Wednesday next few days. He 1s succeeded. !~·ouble.' a~r~ 11a- unable :o l' mer:than last year (which pre· was his for many years In this wanted to see him and talk over lng or vlslt.mg he would say, Challenge of Mission and the afternoon and evemng the Con· by Mr. Shep~ard who arrt1·cd, (,andcJ. fne 11111 ~

·•1" 11'.-: 1 :diction we hope Is correct). town, .his many many friends any problem. In a kind and un· "Keep Lew1sp?rte notes com· stewardship Response".J!ev. Dr. ference organized as a Sector last week. ' ; w~re ~l_:.ior Henry .a~ .I However It has been predicted felt (and rightly so) that this ass~rnlng way, he would ~eek. to lng, they a~~ hke 8 long. letter H. M. Dawe, neld Secretary of Wor~shop under the direction Amongst the new teachers to, who ba1lcd out b.1. · tbat the coming winter will be town had lost one who could adv~se, encourage and m.sp1re I from home. No more Will the the missionary and maintenance or Rev. Sterling Kitchen, As· arrive at the opcnin:z of the, and )Jayur .Jnhn Ord~ . :leven colder than last year. If never be replaced, but his con· and one always feel CCI'lam of de~r hand grasp the pen to:Dept. for the Nfld. and Mari ;sosiate Seely. of the Missionary school term is ~Jr. Leslie Harris latter Iandin~ ''ilh lh• ~ · tile latter Is true then It would tlnued Interest in to~n and his prayers. He seemed to ~os· i wnte words of cheer, nor. the l1 time conference. I and m~ntanance Dept. Secor is who was Principal or. school . ~Juclurs ;oml a•n:1ufar.;t

· • 1 be 1 aood Idea to leave as quick· I especially Church affans. kept sess the faculty o[ lndespt~adtn~, eyes .scan the paper for ne\\s of J 8.00, Presentation of Audio- a programme and 1 project here some ypars a;:o. Ills nwny ,lmmcdlalt·ly nu h;n•J ar.~ ., .lly u possible for Florida. Well the link of .friendship firmly the heart beat o~ the C~urch/tl~e httlc town,he s.o.loved, but vL~ual materials an~ methods. wh~reby a n~mber of congre· f~tends arc happy. to w~lcomc:mcn 11we ln·;t,,,J lor .~ )we willlcnow by ~lay 1960. whojconnccted. H1s soul wa~ ma~c and thus his adv1ce carrted ajh1s rnern?rY 1111I Inc on. Fori Reflections and closing. gallons orgamze to work to· him and :tlrs. Hams and fam1ly .cut:' h~· !Jr. ~1. lfc\'i(kcn ~: •can truly foretell the future.so happy when progress m/mcasure of authority. Unquote. m~mory Is one gift of God that I second Day, (Wednesday, Ocl·igether on a fund raising cam· to this town. 11luch thl') 11crr (~011,'

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· i weather. ' : Lewisporle United Church was No further words a~e necessary., even death cannot. destro~ and obcr t4lh.) · l paign, designed to assist not While attcndin;: • the recent A1r l,.o, ec '·a ~~ ~ 1 _1:.:; ' TRIBUTE

11 recorded, and his heart rejoiced lin a letter from h1s daugbt.cr, so w~ say Good Nl~;hl unttl the 1 9.00, Del'otions. • only the local Church. but -also Plannin-:; Confercnre r.·~1·. C. :tl. route lo Fur! l'rprcr:•''

I Words fail complete)\· to ade· In the progress of the town. she said her fathel) acted durtng mormng breaks and the sha~ow~ i 9.30 Separate meetings of. keeping in mind the World· Steward was guest uf Dr. and pilaf. !lund~1·d, ut c;·• 1 _ . _ .. ---·- • ·-Inuring his 44 years in Lewis· I the weeks priox to his death as flee, the words of :·Good Night 'Confc;ence Committees. ln!or·

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1Widc Missions of the Church :)Irs. Waller Pallock, !lCI', Slcrl· pedestrian; IH.etl tq~ .~. I I porte especially In the latter· If he were getting ready for a I are taken up by the echoes as mation and Stewardship, Ov.!r· and the necessity of our"Sharing 1 ing Kite !len guest of ~lr. anrJ.ncar ns p~:;,.h·~. end ;::·!

years. here he was a busy and I journey, looking ahead to It we call and do· one ?~oth~r, seas Missions, Missionary and in it. The Sector plan has met 1· ;\Irs. S. T. Fm·ward and ncv. Dr .. 1·cry ha~py t'te rr~n ·

' 1 successful man in business, but! rather lhan thinking of what he I through the darkness. 1 his his Maintenance. with phenominal success since 1

Kenneth Prior was guest at I he wilh 1111 ~e: io~u, i~iurv

Weekly Sailings . from

Gloucester, Mass. to

St. John's and

Newfoundland Outports Sailing

from Gloucester: FOR ST. JOHN'S

M.V. Blue Cloud Lewispofte, Botwood ' and Bonavista.

M. V. Blue Prince September 29th-30th

Blue Peter Steamships

Limited 'Phonec 3661 , 7 460

and 4124

the Church was the thing near., would lenve behind. song through endless ~ges. 12.15, Luncheon. it was fist introduced in Canada U.C. )lanse. ll was the fir~:' D~n~;· ll.th:l·. :,t<Je :t·· est his heart and his Bible Class This was his ambition alii ".~esu~ led me all the Way · 2.00, Rev. Sterling Kinchen .

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in 1955. This year there are up·, visit to ~cwfour.dland for Rei'. a1111 ~ll·s .. bmc, l!o:105' in the Sunday school meant· though life to lo~k forward, and \\ e m1ss y~u. · . conducts a Sector plan Presen· wards of 2000 Church~s of var·: ~Jr. Kilchen and Re1·. Dr. Pdor. · panicd by hi< m•.:hcr work, prayer and courSile for t~us hi~ succc.ss In business and

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. But If \ou II .sa)', He .hear.d you., tat ion. · i ious denominations participat·; and tile~· both enjoyed the visit,· Sund.ar for ~: .. Joh.~";. tbe young men he so lo1•ed. No h1s splrltualltfe. Few knew the \\hen ~our pra)cr \IRS but 1 In the ahsence of Rev. A .. in~;. in it. , and think Nflrl. hospilalit~· se· It Will he n·munitmd person left the Hotel which he extend of his kindness, for he 1 a cry. Holmes, Rev. B. B. Snow open· I The Conference closed at 10 cond to ilone. .accident in .ll:.r 1"11.

.owned. but realized that not 1 believed in doing things in a; And H~ saw yo~ throu~~ the 1 cd the conference and exprcs·! p.m. on Wednesday, with :.ome; ~Irs. Hector Trcake who has IJike he II';,; ri•lir.?. tip:e: only was It a place to fill the modest way, and had no urge I IIIShls darkened. sl•l· I sed pleasure at being present.~ of the delegates leavin~ immerl·, been confined lo her home for. the handle '"''. p~n<tr;'!!!

, body but the In teres! of spiritual/ for being In the lime light. His i If )'OU ha,·e gone a ~IItle way: but regret that because of ill·, iately for t~eir variou~ homes. 13 weeks as I he result of a se1·ere ·roof _or hi> 111o;u~:1 · · . welfare was emphaSIZed and lrn·1 deeds however, were recorded, ahead, Oh. fnend calli ness Rev. Mr. Holmes was ab·: others leavmg followmg day .. attack of slrcpt lhro;tt is now plastic ~ur:,.,-,- or.rr;tic·• I _ I back , sent. I Before )eal'ing for Gander. Re1·.: much improved. 'will undcr .. o fo•r;hcr ~-' ' 11'Will cheer m)' heart and she!~ 1 Rei'. D. Burry, President of 1 C. ~1. Steward \'isited the Lonn, illr. and )lr>. Lewis Hill were al I he Gcnrral llo;p:·.al

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Nfld Canada Steamsh'.pS Ltd j my feed along the ·ton~ l~fld. conference also spoke ~nul Bay camp, accompanied by. in town· last week from Glen· the prc,t•nt 11o•ek. Rt<t , • • . .track 1 expressed his pleasure at be1ng. :\lisses Tillman and ~Jr. Colgan. wood. Danny. for a .-prroly

1 Oh, fnrml call hnck. ~n~l I ell me able to attend this the first such I All spoke very highly of the. ~li>s l~ilrcn llohl>s dau~hlrr FREIGHT SAILINGS : . fo~ _I c:nn~t s.~c )O.~Ir face !conference 1o be held in New· i hos~ilality shown them in the of ~Jr. and .\Irs .. James Jlobh. P.\HI~ 'II<' lie:· •. _ r·, •.

·The) sa) ll ~lOllS 1111h tuumph.! foundland. Re1·. A. B. Legrow. Lew1sporle homes and e.wrcss· lrfl 1111 Sundav l:1st for St.· r:rculatitm l'J: •··.1•r:· . · :· and your feel ha\·e won lor Lewisporte charge also spoke.' ed thanks for same. The ~II who John's where sh~ will cn1rr thr lht• fir'l r··rr1''' .·'o:;:'. \ ~­

. .~~-~: _r~~e·,·. < 1, 5

·after whil'lt ~lr. E. Rideout, Rc· 1attcnded felt the <.:onfcrr.ncc Gcn~ral llo>pital stiwnl of he tHrrl it: ''·r ,, ... ;· llul 11 'n 1' 1:. hcl ~~en ~~- ~cord In~ Steward or Lcwtsporte 1\'~S a ~real .~ucccss. lllll'~tll~. Jo'fll' I he p:osl [1\'o )C~I'., fir.-t ": e r I; r,f f;l·,,·~:·::

anrl m~ spmt c~c~ ale .official Board. rear! ~n ~ddrcss, THA:'IiKSGJVJIIOG St:SIIAY 1 Eileen has work~d in Dr. \1'. ncii·P,tt'rr -~·.,a!:-.·:.::·.

HALIFAX-ST. JI)U!"'S Leal'ing · Halifax

)I.S. "FAU\'ETfE'' ..... : .......... Oct. 27 M.S. "BEDFORD II'' Oct. 27

~tONTREAL-ST. JOHN'S

Lcal'ln~ Montrral

~I.S. "RELU: ISLE 11" .... .... .... Orl. 28 ~I.S. "BELU: ISLE 11'' Nov. 11

. (Subject to ehange without notice)

Due St. Jnhn'f

Qrt. 2n Ocl. 2P

Due Sl .1Clhn'!

No\'. 2 Nov. 15

For Immediate clearance per•d1rect sailings. For rates space and othe1· Information apply:

MURRAY AGENCIES & TRANSPORT CO., LTD., DIAL 2031 •

R. N. COLE, Special Representative, St. John's DIAL 220'7 OR TO

THE ROBERT REFORD COMPI.NY, LTD., Agents MOIIITREAL and TORONTO

HEAD OFFICE - HALIFAX, N.S.

' 1 ' b · · d I Th U 't d Cl h !' 'r II k' mrnt ~: 1 """''''""., '··· . . . ., " 1, d ·of welcome. The usmess per1o I . e m e Hire ongre· · o oc s surg~ry. where hrr.. · · · , . R.ll ~ 1111 haiP ~ren hfl ~101 r1 .·H~n 'ithrn passed. .pllon oh.•cn·erl Oct. lith. ~s plcas~nt prrsonalilv. llil~ won . arP now so sa e 11'1 1 1m. i Tl k. · · s 1 r1 st f h · : JOINT CONVENOR'S ' Registration ~ho\\'Prl, an allen·. 1an !Y.:II'Illg · unl ay an. . : or rr the. lo1·~ and rc~pcct nf ! CONFEREIIOCE dance of 23 ministers. also ~Ia thews Church was he~Ull(u.ll)' ·all I he _patwnl~ who111 sh~ SCI'· , I Ti lJ C 'tte CnJII' 0 )Jis5cs Ruth Tillman and Belly decorated for the orcaston. 1 he, red rlunng thai penorl. Pnor to . d trl. aLov~ omt ml eT de : ~lc.Co.l•all Mrs A J Barrett large table was filled with l'ege·j her Jcadn~ for St. John'5 a lar~e, ' e a ew1spor e on ucs a~ ' 'o • • • • ' • 1 f · Th · · · ' ! and Wednesday Oct. 13th. 14th. frolll Grand Falls and 1\frs. H. tabes, n.nt ets. e service ~~ i number of young. people met at' A mnther wh~ h" . ~ F 11 .· " · the Pro"r•mme· \\"111sor from St. John's. Several rnornmg was conducted b~ ·her home on )lam St. where a. dr~ply ah,11 t tne , :.

0 Oil Ill., IS " p • ' th .,. . l R A B L ' I . bl . ' d h I . I First da Tuesdav, October others attended 1rom LeWIS· e " 1ms er el'. . .. egra", \'cry en)oya e evenmg wa~ ; rna e ~r r r_n>o'"'; n . lath ) y ( • porte On Tuesday evening all who preached a \'cry fme srr· . .spe~t. A purse o( money was 1 ~~arler ~ D1~o·.<t '•t' "'~>:·

9 0.0 rn R""l.slrat'lon by 'lr patro.nlzed fue ·Harvest Supper mon on Thanksgiving. At the I presented to Eileen who expres·: t'"ttolt n~~~~·rt~""'t'~h .. oln~~: . a. .. "' " , . . th h h , ' th k I I c c '" • ·• '""' w , . E. H. :\larch, Lewisporte. !'served by the East Woman's e.\'enmg servlc~ e c urc \\as lses a~ s ro ~I. Her man)·: and hodily murture ~;~:-

9.30, Devotions. Introductions, Association and on Wednesday· filled to .capacity. Rev. Dr. Ken· !"any fnends WISh he~ success; cient." She plan; to ~m Chairman's Remarks, etc. ! evening the West W.A. served n~lh Pnor conducted the s.cr· Ill her chosen profeSSion. ! t<:en·a~e dau~:hler •i:b

10 a.m., Address - ''World I a turkey supper in West Hall. \'ICC .and h~ld the rapt at.tentwn Deepest sympathy is extended . s_rng/e nrt:f,·cful ~~~,; .•. )!iss ion Survey" by Rei'. D.~ After the supper Rev. B. B. ?£ ~Is aud•_ence. T~e semor and ~Irs. Harry Starkes on the death! ~~u~ .. ~~l'c~":~ 1?;~i~;

What Shall! Te11 My Daughler ~

Kenneth Prior, Field Seely of: Snow a former )linister ~f. this JUniOr Chmr were m at.tendance: I o£ ~Irs. Julia Starkes (her Fos- · Ol'erseas Missions. I charge introduced the M1mster and rendered approprJal~ A~

-~~;.;;;~;~;;=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 12 15-Lune.llor11 from the Mainland. Rev. Dr. therns. On Tuesday e1·enmg m I -----·- ·-.~ ..... -.... -..... .:::.:.:.-.... -... -..... -.. ,-. -... -... ·.--.. -.... -... .:.-..• -_-· __ :,.......... . . ····~---~~~~., . .\,..;;w.:;- ~:n~\·i~~~~ei~~~n t~:n~~sta ,~~; i FURNESS WITHY & CO., L

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One Man's VIewpoint

News ia. the parent of opinion. Opinions formed by the m1llions of p4!ople· who read newspapers establish the direc· tion of aocial and econoMic development.

At. the standards of living impr&-e and new nations arise out of previously under-developed areas, the demand for newapapel'l!l grows. . •

Reconcllln1 long-term development pl~ns with future I ,

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. . needs for even more newsprint is a matter of judgment and experience.

We at Bowaters have that judgment and experience, gait~~d as long-established makers of paper in both North ·America and Europe. We are using it today to ensure that the demands of our customers around the world will be satisfied tomorrow.

BolNaters # IBB BOWATER CORP.ORATION OF NORTH AMERI'CA LIMITED ·MONTREAL

!Iilla at: Corner Brook, Newfoundland ;.Livarpool, Nova ScotiA; Calhoun, Tennessee; Catawba, South carolina.

A HEMBEB OF. THE BOWATEB ORGANIZATION .

< :;;,,! beef supper to a large numher\ t ·i:'. · of people who patronized same.: Lil'erpool St luh:·! llo>'ur.

_;·;;,,~'. The proceeds amounted to prac· i to to Hlx & · · _;';; tically S300.00. , St Jhno'! Bosi':D

to• Hall!;"

'· The \resl \\'oman~ AssoC'· · ialion will sen·e .li•ns dinner in ·x~wfoundiano!"

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t'l/"0 ' ·s \' a 'I 0 I " We~t &chool hall on Tuesda,· · · c more c ... 9 :-:or. i Oct. 30 :'\nr. 3 Xol

:\m·, 13 ;\nr. 1; '(' Dec. 4 Drr. 8 Oct·. 20th. • ·: :\'cll'[oundland" Nol'. :!II l\"o1·. :!8

FIRE AL\UI On Thursday e1·enin~ lhr. fire

siren ~ounded and immediately lhe fire bri~ade wa~ on lhc joh. However the fire which had started when a overheated sloi'C pipe caught at the home of ~Jr. Austin Snow was distinguished by some men working nearby. On Saturday evenin!l an out house owned by l\1r. Herb ~tar· tin burned and firemen were called to the scene and on Sun· day early in the afternoon some oil escaped from the furnace in the basement of lllr. Ross Noble's home caught and again the firemen were called out, but · fortunately all fires were of a minor type and the firemen haol very little to do on arrival, al· though their quick response to each call is commendable and the appreciation of all is exten· de d.

PERSONALS I Congratulations are extended 'i

Mr. and llrs. Ken Ross on the . birth of a son on Thursday last i at Banding Memorial Hospital. 1

~Irs. Ross is the former Viola 1 Anstey of this town. I

~lr. and ~Irs. Harris Oawe , and son David spent lhe !hanks· 1

giving week·cnd at St. John's , visiting their son \\'alter who · i~ allending Memorial Uni1·er· sity.

~lis~ .loan Snow who was teaching at Sumrncrfot·rl lor past 2 years and now attendin:: l\Jemorial University spent the Holiday week·end home.

The many friends of ~Irs. L. Batslone will he glad to hear. she is feeling some1\ilat improv-·' ed after a recent heart attack.;

.\irs. Eric Hackett and infant ; daughter arrived home from!' Botwood few days ago.

Mrs. Obadiah Coles who spent

Person~ contempiMin.t! Dass<•:!e to rur:ooe should make bookin.t!s well in ad1·~,r~.

AIR PASSAI,ES ARRAi\GED B\'· 8 0 ·\ r rUlER I CAN . A!RWA YS, SCANDl:\AVI;\:-' connectuu: Alrlmes.

Consult us regard in)! your t1 avrt Pn•b'eml

FURNESS TRAVEL OFFICE ,\j[\ffOl'NDLAND UOTF:t

FAST WEEI<L Y FREIGHT SERVJCF.

fRO II

::Ojlace to Sl.

S.S. NOVAPORT, GULFPORT and

Sailing from MONTREAL evEry w~~~~!ll'l

ARRIVING ST. JOHN'S EVERY MONDAY

R. SELLARS Sperlal Representaltve

TP.I, 5483 or 215J for •·relght

Reservations Contact HAK\'EY STEAnl·

SIIII'S LTD. Agents

FURNESS RED CROSS LIN~ FREIGHT SERVICE ONLY

. FROM, NEW YORK, SAINT JOHN, N.B., HALIFAX. N.S. TO: CORNER BROOK AND ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND

SS GUERNSEY .... ··········;· Sailing from: New York, Saint John, N.B., I• d St John' Ha •fax, N.S., on · 24!11

Voyage 1 Voyage 2 Nov. 171h

Cargo accepted for

Oct. ~7th Nov. 20th

Corner Brook

h Nov ' Oct. 30t · ·tB'h Nov. 42th Nov. •

discharge at all ports.

Vessels call at Newfoundland Outport! a~ lnduc!'mcnt Oflt'l'! For Frei~ht Rates and other informalioo conlacl

FURNESS WITHY & COMPANY UMITfD WATER ST., EAST, ST. JOHN'S TEL. 2073 (5 lines) and ss90

. ---· -··· .. -...... ·• ........... __ ,_,_ ·····-· -.... .. ., ,., ' II . ~ • • • .. . . .. . . . .. .. ~ .

men inSl'! [ast

Anoth• piE

"You 1

said. "This i! property." hand reach' bars to gr. him fast. Si

a dozen guns bim. "Gire U!

5aid. shook his I the Army

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mind the ~ said. "We'

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possessi States Arrr

here try to burn the to

had happe Improbable

could ha Ferry,'

been mak

Ferry h they were It was 1

would dare of course, h

and there between E North ano But Ka~

and extren tHeir anger

Kansas had< that ni,

your Chri the •asy, Patron in

Radio 27th,

/$5 • i $5( • • •••••

Page 9: Vol. I t ans ressioncollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · , 'No doubt prepnratwns fo1· such is~r.rl h'm P Premier Nikila Khrtls~chev has represented undi~gulsed

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EKLY ERVICE

. .. . . .. ·······;· d St. John'

an 2Ath NOV· Nov. 18th

parts.

Ofltts

LIMITED lines) and~

11 The Daily THE' DAILY NEWS, ST.

Ferry, 1859: Seed Of Civil War

'1'1118 WAS RA1lPB1lll FERRY U It appearei ll lhe tlnle of t.lle .Jolll BroWII n\4. The pv• lnllltDI lraorJ' 1111141111 1ft j.a to tile Jell I( alae ltUIGI4 klllce.

••••••••••••••• ••••• • /SSO.? $2~00.? / HOW MJJCH ! $500.? $1000.? f DO YOU NEED? I •• ' .. •••••• •••••••• •• •• •• •

--

You're always welcome at

~ NIAGARA.

LOANS

~ " lAIGIST ALl·CANIDIAN lOll COMPANY

PARLASD B111LLiNG Purkwortll St. Pllone 'JH1 Brancbes in Grand ~·alb and

Corotr Brook "

l

News ···~

Is someone In your familY just about to !(et out of hos· pita!? If you feel you need j nursing •care in the home. ask your doctor about the ser· vice provided by the Victor· ian Order of 1 Nurses. The V.O.N. has had long experl· ence in caring for conv111es· cent patients in the home and they charge· only fhat you can afford to pay .

t .

SECTION II

For motorist$ who normolly ue regular grade gasoline Esso now gi!Jfl

protection against stalls dUI fD carburetor icing*

at !!£ increase in price!

For several years Esso Extra has provided complete protection against the two cold

weather sWling hazards-carburetor icing and gas-line freezing.

Many Canadian motorists need protection only against carburetor iciflg. This has now

been provided for most cars in Esso!

*Annoying stalls ean result, In weather as high u 55'F. froM Ice ~rystals In the carburetor. Then stalls can be embarrlll• lng because they usually o"ut, before your engine warms up properly, at times when your car has to ot•nd Idling at stop·llghts and otop Slreels.

ALWAYS

LOOK TO IM .. I!ItiAL

FOR THE BEST

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Page 10: Vol. I t ans ressioncollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · , 'No doubt prepnratwns fo1· such is~r.rl h'm P Premier Nikila Khrtls~chev has represented undi~gulsed

-----··. -

FLEECE·LINED UNDERWEAR

a-21 ..

. ~·t More Plooco and Groat•• Winter Comfortl Com11•rlaon1 prove Ponmana leatl

You'H MIYt money by buying Ptnmans Underwear, It flit · · bellar .and wears longer, Gane(ously lined with Maft fleece

and closely knit for cold weather proletllon. P~~~mana·have · m~re fleece, give you nexl·lo·tha·skln aetlon·free comfort. For Man ond Boys. In Shirts, Drawers, Union Suits ond NuCut styles. ·

_IT .P.AY5 TO LOOK .FOR 1!'11 PINM.At-13 L.AIIL

• ·--··-

Childhood Wish ·Gene Conley Comes True Much Improved By DOUG HARKNESS By BOB HOOB!NC

Canadian Preas staff Writer IIOSTON-Al' - "It makes DORCHESTERN N. B. !CP)- me feel good all over," tall.

Bob Edg~tt vowed as 1 youth he beaming Gene Conley aald today would learn to fight. Now 29, the when he learned he bad been mpound penitentiary guard Is voted the National League the spearhead of amateur boxing comeback player of the year. In the Maritimes. The 6·foot·8 rlgbthanded pit·

Hla amateur boxing club has cher for Philadelphia Phillles staged nearly 500 bauta In the last who It a basketball · major alx year• and hls boxers have lost leaguer as well received 58 of only three by knockouts. the 168 votes cut In the Base·

Now Edgett's ambition Ia to ball Writer• A11oclation of have one of his proteges make America poll. tht 1960 Cenadlan Olympic box· "Wben your down and almost be team. eounted out with a tbamplon·

Ree&lllng biJ lut six years' ahip arm, bow low can you 11et?" work, Edgett says, "You don't Conley remarked about bia 1958 ·have to be a mllllonare to start aeason when ht wound. up with a boys' club." He admlta It would a ().6 record with the National help, however, when he re~lls League champion Milwaukee the houra !ae has spent soliciting Braves. "1 ~ew my arm was fundi for his fighters' trips. atill good and I could pitch but STAGES PJUSON BOUTS I still had to prove it-I gue11

Edgett has been a guard at the 1 have.'' Maritime PenHentlary here for Conley won 12 and loat 1even four years. He stages uhlbl!lon while be-ating every other elub boxing matches In the prison. in the league fro111 the lut plaee

11om en a ferm at Midget. 1 k f. 1 ld N.B., about 40 miles ll"om Monc· Ph is. A bro en anger n Ill • August prevented hlm frem lo:l, 11Gb first became Interested ltclostinl ala lllark. He llall I while listening to weekly fight 1.00 earned run avtrage. breadeasb.

Although never a professional. TIADID JN IPilNG few eppanents will llispute !lis Gene wu tradell te PI!Uadel· Skin. Edplt appeared 1:1 12S phla lut aprinl after ht helped beula, SG ef tbtm exhibitions with B1111toll CtlUea win the National professionals at hospltels or for Basketball .Usoeiation erown. dlaritable orgaulzatlons. He lost Conley's neareat rivas in the only 11 llf history bouts, many balloti111 wen two members of with U!p·ranklng C111adiB!l ema· the world cl!ampi&ll 1M Angeles teura. He was !mocked out only Dodgers. Outfielder Wally Moon twice and held the Quebec Golden· •nd Dulle Snider reeeivell 411 Gloves eh•mpionshlp twice as and 22 vote1, respectiely. weU u the ·Maritime Ught·!leavy. Other pla)'ara who drew sup­weight end heavyweight amateur port were Don Newcombe, Gus crowns. Bell and Vaday Plnaon of Cln· STOPPED BY JNJVRT clnnatol; Gil Hod111 of Los

After falling to make Canada's Anlelea; Harey Haddix of Pitta· 1948 Olympic boxln1 team, Ed· burgh; Gino Cimoll of St. Louis; 1ett planned to turn professlonnl Ed Matht'fl and Johnny Logan but a. kldMY Injury put him out of Milwaukee and San Fran· of the game. cisco's Sam Jonea. HI~ blgge~t ring accomplish·

ment Wils an amateur \'lclnry by Earl Walls el Toronto, former Canad I a 11 heavyhel,11ht Two Titles chAmpion. QUEBEC-CP - Two Canarl·

Ed)!elt joined the Royal CanR· ian. boxing tltlea will be da'sput·, dian Navy In 1948 and held sev· eral navy boxing tltlea until hoD· ed hera No•"· 2nd when Johllny orably dlsc!aarged 1:1 1951. Devlaon of New Glugow, N.S.,

He started hla bon' club In and Marcel Gendron of Quebec 195S at Sackvllle. He now has filht for tbe bantamweight clubs In Sackvllle, Amherst and cbamplonahlp and featbarwtllht &orchet~r. C I \1 b membership champion Dfve Jlllton 9f Qllt· varle•, but usually about 25 bon be~ mtttf Iuddy Daye of Hall·

are active members. '"'ciene Letourneau, Canadian Some of Edgett's proteges have Boxing Federation national

done well. Da\·e Htlton of Mo~ eommi&aioner. said botb bouts treal Is the reigning Canadian have been, llnctioned. Each f~alherweight· champion and Ted will co 12 r&undr. -Doncaster ol Sackvllle 1~ New The bantamwei1ht was held E n g I~ n d light • heavywei1ht by Pat Supple flf M&fttnal un·

• 1 ehamp1on. W he retired recently.

J

s

Page 11: Vol. I t ans ressioncollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · , 'No doubt prepnratwns fo1· such is~r.rl h'm P Premier Nikila Khrtls~chev has represented undi~gulsed

~ Partv 1.~ Bnict

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t-~EWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1959

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'j'l!i N.H. L.

Red Wings . Lose ·First Game; As .canadiens Take 2-1 Win

DETROIT-CP- Bernie Boom Boom Geoffrion rifled in a 60-foot SCI'ecn shot with a minute anu 111 seconds to play and gave Montreal Canadiens a 2·1 victory over Detroit Sunday night. The triumph enabled Montreal to slip into umlisputcd possession of first place ahead of De· troit. The loss wns Detroit's first of the young season. ·Geoffrion's goal came on a power play with Detroit's Red Kelly in the penalty box for

---···---·-·· . --Football '. '

Scores holding. By The Canadian Pma

It ended a night of frustration Big four for Geoffrion, who had missed I York Rangers, frustrated 00 Shack's was a picture goal· )footreal O; .iianullon 16. three golden opportunities, one home lee for seven straight scored on a nicely executed Toronto 4; Ottawa 18. just a moment before he got the games, flnaUy quit tb( Na· breakaway and goal mouth fake, Senior Jntercout~!lte tie-breaking goal. tlonal Hockey League eel· after Ken Schinkel had blocked Western 12; McGill 3.

The victory was achieved be· lar Sunday night wilh • a long Chicago shot and fed Queen's 6; Toronto 7. '· fore 14,844 Olympia Stadium smooth·working 3-1 victory Eddie a neat pass. Senior ORFU

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spectators, the largest regular over Chicago Black Howks SA'l'URDAY Sarnia at London postponed. season crowd here .since 15,130 at Madison Square Garden. Stingy goal-keeping at Tor· 1 Intermediate Jntercoilegiate .

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came to see a game on Dec. 30, Dean Prentice, Red Sullivan 1 onto and a temper tantrum at I Ottawa,29; Carleton 0. 1956. . . 1 and Eddie Shack scored for the I Montreal highlighted Saturday ~IFU

·'

\"· s. C-:\m1~··s Thomns Culver, 2.3, Is stopped dead in his trncks by Duke's Don Altmnn, 14, uftcr mnking

11ith p;"~ m·ril·cd from PB Joseph Cnldwell. Ac tlon took place early in the game in which Duke wns doh·

~~·~-rrl T(lr~_h_ot_o. __________________________ _

High School.

Crusaders Three Goals

The .v1ctory pu.t the defen~mg 1 Rangers, who hadn't won a 1 night action in tho National ! Edmonton :.!0; Saskatchewan champton Canad~ens two pomls 1 home game since they beat De· : Hockey League. . 19

·. . . ahead of the second-place Red I troit 4·2 last March 8. They ..

1

In the Toronto game the Calgary 8; Br1t1sh Columbia \\:lngs, who bad. roll.ed up _five' lost their las't four here. last )!aple Leafs goalie Johnny Bow· .10

· . . . w1ns and a he m SIX prel'tous , season as they blew a spot in: er and goalie Lome Gump Wors· Eastern Intercollegiate

I starts. . 1 the Stanley Cup playoffs, and i Icy of the New York Hangers: Queen's 6; Toron~o ;,

I . Canad1ens led most or the ; ha.d dropped their first three 'were the star performers as the i Western .12: .\leG Ill 3;

11ay. They broke a scoreless. this season. ! teams played to a 1.1 lie. Bow· lnte~m~d1ate lntercot.eglale · , deadlock at 18:59 of the open· I New York piled up the 3·0 er stopped 33 shots Worsley 25.' OAC 1 •: Waterloo 0. 1 ing. period on a bl~nder by. De· 1 lcad before Chicago managed to\ Rangers out-play~d Leafs but: .\tc.\ta.slcr .12; RMC 7. . . trmt defenceman J1m Mormon. I get enough of an attack together had to come from behind on a· DcjOlt 17, Los Angeles 7.

Do~nie, i\tarshall lntcrce.~ted! to beat New York goalie Gump \goal by Jimmy Bartlett midway, : :hicago Bears 17; S. 1:-"ran· .\{omson .s pass while the \\ mgs 1 Worsley. Bobby Hull, blonde \through the )hird period to ~lsco 20· were trymg to work a pow~r, young winger, got it at 7:15 of, get the tie. Gerry Ehman scor·: South play. He zeroed in on goa he I the final period after picking: ed for Toronto late in tne first. Georgia Tech. 21; Tulane lS. : Terry Sawchuk for an easy 10·

1 up 8 rebound of a shot by Eric I period. i Georgia 14; Kentucky 7.

footer. I :\csterenko. The defeat left the HORVATH Fll'iED : Florida State 22; Ricilmond 6~ Morrison escaped the role of Black Hawks still winless since ' Southwest

goat a.t 3.46 of the final period tbey opened the season with a At ~lontrcal, Bronco Horvath· Colorado 18; Arizona 0. ~· smash1~g in a ~5-foot screen 5·2 victory over the Rangers. of the Boston Bruins picked up 1 Texas 28; Rice 6. ·;

, shot, h1s !lrst goal as a Detroit They have only a tie to show for $75 in fines on misconduct and\ East i player. the seven games played since game misconduct penalties. The Marquette 0; Boston College i The Wings kllled off a late then. game misconduct penalties.' 16. penalty to Warren Godfrey fnr Prentice nailed the game's They were assessed by referee • NFL . . , . cross·cbecking before Ke.lly

1

first goal at 15:32 of the first Ed~ie Powers late in the second Green Bay 21; Baltimore .38: nil I ~rn \\';trrcn pal'ing the wuy St. Pnt's assured themselves of went into the hox for hnldmg

1 period after Chicago goalie 1 pwod after Horvath blew a I New York 21; Pittsburgh_l6.

Jlirll plarr tic in Senior lli~:h Schoo~Foothall yesterday afternoon 0 ini n Oil Rocket Rlchard. Glenn Hall had thwartP.d the I !use when given A ~lashing pen· Washington 7; Cleveland :3t

1hutout llol~· Cro~s :J.O at the Brother Egan Memorial Field. War· P 0 Geoffrion who had mimd ~ 'r.nn~t~ntlr·Prming Rangers on I a~ty. His teammates cora lied I Philadelphia 28; Chic a g·o

Pat's .Warren

Blank Scores

~lltln« Irish markers ns St. Pat's registered their fourth straight H ] R f full breakaway with 2 1~ minutes 1 one brilliant ~ave after another 1 h1m as he went after Powers. Cards 24. . OC \ey e et•eeS to play, got the winner 44 sec· I before 12.509 fans. I .Jean Beli1·eau led Canadiens . N. B. Intermediate ·.· • in the Lea~ue witrout ltal'in~ a goal scored agninsl them. S,t. Pat'a Sport~ Editor, Dall~· ;.<ew~. onds afi.H Kell:;'~ infraction. \ Sullivan's goal, at 10:19 of: with .two. goals. Marcel Bonin, -Saint John 0; Mount Alluori

dmntlinns in the League. ! J)cat• Slr,-Enl'loficcl are a Canarhens no~. have gone. 10, the second, w·as a carbon copy rHenr1 Richard ~nd Berme 1•3· . ll'amn. ~ boy who ' rew remark~ that r would like j!ames here w1thout to; mg .. of the !irsl·except that the ori·J Boom-Boom Geoffmn gol lhe I .Moncton 0, UNB 89: h:! !u<tPr m his home· mistakes as t1e drilled a low' shutout .victory hy St. Pat's. 1 to sec publisher! on the sports \Their last loss on Detroit ire 'gina I shot was a shortie by Andy others in the game witith nw I N. S. Intermetha~e

t 3ur!n. has been very hard shot to the left o[ soahe 1 Referee Joe Gulliver. i ra;::e when spac!' is available. 1· was way back on :\tarch 23,: llcbenton. Again Hall's pads I the Montreal ,·ictory never: Stadacona 10; St. F. X. 70. t?JS 1 Dawson and into the nets !or Ll!IIEUI'S ! What ha~ happened to sport 1958. ! guided the puck directly back 1 in doubt. : Dalhousie 46; Shearw~ter 16.

~ the .11 zoals re~IS•· , a 2·0 St. Pat's advantage. I ST. PAT'S: Goal, Alex Eng·: in gonrl old St. ,John's~ Base· RANGERS ~: n,\ WKS 1 'to a Ranger. Sully put it away i Horvath got the lone Boston' Ma~itlme lnterco,Ueflale ~t. P~: I Ill thm f?ur i Warren was back at 18.19 :)ish· fulls Kev Phelan Bill I ball. football and hockey In NEW YORK (APJ-New .from point-blank range. !Score. Acadia 7; St. ~fary 5 81. . c1!e \\ arrcn has p1ck·' with his and St. Pat's third 1 E1•0~ .. hal~·es Bill Picco' Gerry, particular ·have had tl'emend· · · u I! COLLEGE '"'n for an svcrag~ of 1 score or the encounter. Orville I O'Reilly, Ed 'Goobie; fo'rwards, 1 ous "officiating. tro~tbles·• and !Basketball . .

t·Ao toall pel~ gar.tke.! Hong started the play when he! Graham Kelly, Jim Barrett, Or·! Tthperslonally thlmk It has hbulrt Maurice East m" ~m~ e mar ·;carried the ball to the Hoi~~ 'II H L ,., "' · e engues mmeasurca Y· Texas Christian 13; Pill 3.

·• f ' h t· d ' I VI e ong, arry "arren, ~om 1'ake II e rumpus that was -' 115 .. a 1 ycstcr ar i t:ross 18 yard line and led war· Conway 1 K · ) Holy Cross 34; Columbia 0. I plif Ill t~e tinal rcn a pass. The shot from War· I HOLY CROSS· G I J h ' creat~d ~IY the hockey referees avana!! 1 y· • h ' G : Penn. 22; l'iavy 22.

!1: hi! "hal trir~." h' h d d · oa ' 0 n association last year when the u t i Army 25·, Colo. State u. 8 . . "- ri h b II rcn It t c post an reboun ed 'Dawson; fulls, Ed Brophy, Bob ruling or a specific referee I F . u s 0 n lg s ames ;

'",'' .. •hm"" If, t! al . into the Crusader goal for a· 3·0: Whelan; hiJives, Gcrrv Dawson I. wa~ questioned and the lea· .·eaves Of •L.. • 1!'. I . . ; ·i, Brown 6; Rhode !:;land 0. ~'' Zt•nP •ont I 1e · · ' · D t th 9 H d o •'i·ll~ ,~, 1 c~~e close .!lame. . ~Frank Fonistal, ).!ike Hcnrn; ; gue refused to stnnd by their . 1 ar mou i arvat· · ~~ · T · · (' 1

• Dawson's best play of the game forwards, Tom Grace, Jim Fitz·: own appointed official. Hard· Princeton 20; Cornell 0 . .. ;. ho'm' "~1t1e !~1cr_(t: came near the 20 minute mark: patrick, George Kl'r'·l•nd Pat· tv a wise course of action on r d 1 Curtis'· Yale 21; Colgate 0.

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. . . . n " , . • • Another rlouhleheader is eate ~lacp 1erson A 1 6 \\' 1 0 :ll ·' ·• · 'h ·when Om lie Hong got free in· i Densmore John Ennis I the part of the lengue, espect· , scheduled for the l\lemorial 21-16. 1 . m I erst. i. _es eyan • ' 1 po<!, "'1 1 e wrong side the Crusader 18 yard line ' · ally In \'iew of the (act that 1 gym tonight in the Jntermedi· The second game will have 1 fufts 28, Wllhal_ns

1 r.r.r 11 ':''· Pat ll~ns· and Dawson raced from his nets TODAY'S GA:UE the league has classed these I ate Basketball series. The Guards and ::\lacpherson·CUr·l Rutgers 23; Lehigh 0. , up 3 .r .. "c ball JUSt' to take the ball off Hong's foot H'ah S h

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11 . J people as qunllrlcd officials. I first gnme is slated to get I tis both looking for thier first Lafayette 12; Bucknell 6. al~r !O nr11e a hard with the acti t kl

1 1 lo c 00 00 a acllon There was quite an outcry under way at 7.00 p.m. while win or the series. Macpherson· Buff;t)o 2; Western Res. 2.

t tht SL Pan nets but · 1

bl k on a ng P ace 11 today will hal'e Holy Cross and 1 and I expect that out of this Jthe second encounter is sche· Curtis have drapped both I Maryland Stale 13; N. Car. lr.:m~dtr Alex En~!l~h pom · an range. St. Teresa's meeting in a junior particular episode the resJg. duled for 8.15 p.m. All play- starts to dale while Guards CollegeO. ll ~th a fine save to Holy. Cross had a good op· encounter at the Brother Egan nation of three top·notch ers are requested to be on have lost their lnne game. In Juniata 27; Western M'l'd 0. 1 COil. ~ort.umty to spo~l Alex Eng· Memorial Field with 4.30 p.m. referees for this season of I' time for their game as the the league opener Mac-Curtis Carnegie Tech 25; Wash.·J~t

lr.!JMIP~ lh~ h~ll JeeJl h~h 5 shu:out In the final. set as startin!l time .• Holy play wlll leave a gap that will league will start both fix· who were runners up in the 7. . . Cru~a~~r 'Jirl ne'r the: mmutcs 0 the gam~. Pat. Dens· l Cross with 2·1 and 4·0 wins be quite hard to fill. tures on time. last, series, last 21-16 to St. Vermont 7; Norwich o.

rr.ark "' thcv started 1 ~ore b:ast~d ab dme that hit 1 over St. Teresa's to date are l I f ne cannot picture In the opener Hol~· Cross P~t s ~nd were dropped ~3·19 l!ass. 0; Northcasteru o.

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pt•• nf the JJ1Cn·: Gre posh at nth rc houndfed to Tom i second in league standin~s and 1 elthel?r \~thers or Dovle re· rid in~ a two game winning b~ Ho.y Cross on Fnday mght.: Midwest

r · · ' ace u e s ot rom Grace: a l'ictor•· todal' \I'!. II p 11 th · · •treak w'll Ja·h ll'l.lh de Guard· suffet·ed 3ry try dA · rom a ~cnmmage!

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1 occurred. The . rho e f' past the. ~pen corner and; into a first slot deadiQck with: to "pressure nf huslnt.>ss'', fending dtampions. St. Pat's. feat at the hands of !llemo1·; 'I' h. . 1 1 d . I e 1xture f1n1•h•d In 1 3 0 St p t' · · "J'I c· s•lnt• 1 • e t 1 ·e ,·a Is on •'l'.ld'l' nl· oht. · : " IC lgan :st.ate -1;

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tn Tom Conway. · " ' · ' · a s on se1·en pomls each. ; These men were alwai'S busy I!' ru "1

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· vkturit>~ tu thrir ,.reel it. In The lt>agu~ also rcquE'sl> /l:orthw. 30

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(~~" (n~:-n"uth. t.arn·: lnitlul reason for llisl'OIItinu· IIH'il' tsl gam<' 1hr.1· IH'Id uff :1 th~l team !'oad1es and mau·, .llowhnx lol't'l'n 2J; Kent State ' ' B •w LiNG I ' . . . 1;111• {'UIIIt'h:ll'k hi' St. Ktlll'S ~~t'I'S lllakt' sure that al! t!ll· tl. 11 unnt:ork"d en; Lh 1 ~ • Wlfl Bl' L_V In~ l't!fl'l't't'in~ adll'ltii'S. 1 ·' · tu 1h·up lhe Uhll;t"lll~ ~!l:!ti tnllll'l' h'rs, hirth L·t'rtirh-311'> l'int'l, :!t; oiL ol l'~c. l~.

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I 0 It' \l"UI"IIItl 'lttt'll '<'' ~ IJ.Y e u r J t"l . • t' ' . St u ' I . . . l . I I . !'' I I I t' . I I to II\• . " • • I ·~·",;.~ •• ~ illl\'l'rS allll f~ns blike. • ' uull s Hlhl~l~. dl to~r; Ill 11~11· ul )<'I' ~t;u·.t. lu 'lll'll' 'll);t'J'il I 1,1' I'll H.l'. I ,.,.... I'UI<IIIc ,., lulrA i. l tltr ln'h ol J.o I :l> (," @ I . I:ICI~Iuu to \h~e 1111 p~rlll~llt'lll' lullt' ~;llllt' lu il:tlt' st. 1':•1' dr· hl-r :tu. IJr•~· ;!o; llr~JI<') 1~.

I 'h I I . 'I' a lie football this lnst Sf a· lt:>Jth•ur .. 011 Slltllrtl;Jy llflt:r· I -· - . ---- . -- .. - rut» ~I: Ucll'ull IJ.

I.

I!!~~ 1•·1. ~u~ht• _Ell:!· Nil •. 6--l.lt'T ANU ROLL 1011 th~ b~ll comes !rum the son, II had a teiTitk uan'll)o!t' nuun. 'l'l1t' laul:)' :.11 aruu1utl s B 1 ~\•••""'Ill I~; Uluo :i. ~. U!Jclt·J. n~tnundcr l.r~t and rull go t~eth~r inlactiun of the fin~ers and the i uf "u!liclutill!l troubks'• whil'h at11lde Jllay~·d In thr S.l:I.:\.A. t on S lu"• :s. :!!l; hau>•> :-.. u.

look111~ good on bowhng to put the zing on the j outward motion of !he com·' !·esulte? in bad feeling. and surt.b~ll ser1es. ou ~utunl~y • uherhn lti; Ken) on H.

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of shots that ball. pleted swing. A bre kl of tb In one mstance the wilhd1awal ntoln,mg bcfole leal'llll! St. ( w• c Cent. ~lich. 29· North Ill. 7. ... r ll was still 1·0 The action of the ball! ' a ng e of a team from actv[e com· Johns. . I am pus InS row"' . ·. . . ~-U lime whtstle. Both trolled by the fingers. Ass c~~; ~~s~o;~m ca:se ~~a\ls/all~d petition. Did thi~ help the K?vanagh played on st. I ~ 1 l%orthcrn Mich. :lO; \\ a)·ne st.

.. d 11x 'hots fired at pendulum swln enl!s near t ' rna mg . n a 8P 11• foolhall )eRgue? I~ the srnse Bon s teams 111 all brRtl!'hrs J . . . · -. _ lbt hrlt h~lf foul li lh fg 1

he but not roll straight forward, of fine play anrl the ciPan at· of sports. He was a membrr hRnk 0 C.•l'lldY and his 1 Ronnre Butl~r 11 as the bii: Oklahoma ', Kan~as 6. Dtn~morP ca' 1 1

t 1

~?it e m~ers mparl ~~a- 1 and Apenl! its power before mos11her.e that wa~ tl'pirHI of ·of the St. Bon's teams in I Campu~ !Pam defeated 0a1·e' hitter in th1s game fCir the; !ioutb ~~:1' fr ~~ c ose I ura 1 to I e ball Which reaching the pins. 0\11' ho''~ now gone 'with the junior and senior football Barrett's forum squ~d rn I winners as he smacked a ctr·J Duke 17; N.C. ::.tate 13. · h~~;;• ~e ~e ~tart ~ak_es II hook toward its oh- 'fhe ball is rel¥ased from four wind? \Vhy has "all" tile junior hork!'Y, junior bASe bali: titre!' straight games O\'er the; cult blast with two men on. Geor6Ia Tech. 21; !ulan! 13. from

11 · !i Pac~d a JJe~ve. Ito 20 inches across the foul line, hl~me bP.en placPd on of!lc· and lntervediate basketball. weekend to capture the St. i baoe for three runs. . . j Teunessee ZJ; Lhattanooga 0.

b~t th~ lr .1. at s 18 . 1e t~umb n~ust come out lrlcpending on the deli\'edy. i~ifi who control these con· Bon's softball ~onours. On 1 Brennan took the hill a:;a1n \'anderblll 33; \'trguua o. tl his o• hall lleflecled \first, wh1le the fmgers pull the _ tests? Remember, thel'e are C} • D ~aturdil~' mornmg , Campu~ in the second fixture and. Louisiana State 9; Florida 0: but n players with bal_l ~pward, counler-clockwise ... NEXT: Following through. not too man~· people who will OSJJlO' ate \1'~11 14·13 .and thi'Y followed n.otched his second WID of the i Wm. and Mary 14· Geo. Wa;h

Nco ~n on lhc play. Th1s Imparts the lift necessary spenrl their tlme·off to offici· l'"l tim up w1th 20·8 and 12·6 ftnals while DE>e Murph~·. who 17 ' U~ St. Pat's goal to make the ball revolve. A rnll· ate game~ and often thP.se F NAHA p} w1ns on Sunday to take the stal'led for Forum was rhar~·j · N lh c 1 Zl· W k f ~c· Larr)' \\'arrcn was ing ball will not deflect as easily Intercollegiate contests he ridiculed by plAy• or ay crown.. I ed with the I?SS, Gerry Marc_h 19 or aro IIIJ I a e or.

rusadtr fullback Ed as one thai spins. ers and fans alike. These men Leu Cou~hlan pitched the 1 was the batlln~ hPro of thrs 1 · . . -. . .

le4 th~ Irish awarded I It is not necessary to twist 0

S • T d arc laced there to oC!lciate, Nol·ember 1 is the rloslng victory for Campus on s~tur·l game for Campus w1th a !\lorn~ Brolin z,, Kentuck) S

1~1. Warren made no turn the fingers or wri t St f~ ellJOf 0 ay why don't we just let them l!ate for member centres to day morning with Frank homer that scored four run~.i9· . . . . _____ ..:._:.:.._.=.::..::::...::.:::::...:::._::.:.:::5 .:_· .::,:u:: ' do their duty. They have It notify the secrctar~··lrea~urer O'Grady's granl! slam homer 1\lembers of the champion·'\ MISSISSIPPI 28; Arkansas 0.

S hard enough to watch the of the Newfoundland Ama· be!ng the big hit. Jo~n Bam· ship squar~ are John ~awlor, Miss. Slate 28; Memphis State

OC St d• Bishops College and Pl'lnce plays on the net Jn an un· leur Hockey Association of bnck was tagged With the team captam; Frank 0 Grady, 23. cer an· Ings or Wale!i' will open the third bias manner, is it really for what sections of the provln· defeat. . ~auny Brennan, Jack Rear· So. Car. s. 20; Ft. Valley s. and final round of senior you and [ to question the de· cia! playoffs they will be en· In the f1rst encounter on d1gan •. Frank Kavanagh, Tom Ga. o. lntereolleglate football at the clsions? We could • for ln· terlng. This lnformation must Sunday Fanny Brennan went Mannmg, Gerry March, Ron· Citadel 18; Furman 14.

J p W L T GF GA Pts. Ayre Athletic Grounds this stance disapprove of some be forwarded to Walter Clarke to the mound for Campus and n,le Butler,. Paul Wal~h, Len Clark 28; Alabama State 28•

Plt'!

UNIOR· HIGH SCHOOL afternoon. The game will particular play but to ridicule at Grand Falls by that date. registered the win while Bam· Coughlan, Tom Manmng was Fisk B; Howard D.C. e. start at 4.30 p.m. the official to the point that This year there wlll only brick again took the loss. playing coach. Southwest

In the first round Bishops th efu e • t r feree y · 4 3 · 0 1 1

took a 1.0

win Ol'er p,,V.C. C)' r s 0 e an be junior and senior as the Texas 28; Rice 6 . . Cro;1

·· .... .... .... .... 3 2 7 morP due to our actions, I senior "A" and senior "B" R J T J}} MO~TREAL, CP-~IighiY Baylor 13; Tevas A·)f o. T~t~a· ................... .4 2 1 1 7 .3 5 and then racked up a 3·0 vic· think that Is going a little too s~·stem has been dropped. The ay 8 00 Lee, a six·year-old roan geld· South. Meth. 21· Texas Tech

! .................. .4 0 4 0 2 17 0 ~{itt. opl~ ~o~legseeco~~tcrsroutnhde. far. Should these Incidents !late for rl!gistration of players ing owned by w. MacDonald 13 •

S continue spirts will suffer. for th'!! \'arious teams Is Feb· and R. McLaine of Charlotte· ' E~•IOR HIG . . third round with seven points, the pla~·ers and clubs will suf. ruar 1 NEW YORK-AP - A com· town, ran sel'enth In a field Far West .

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1-, H SCH 00 L two more than secane! slot fer. and the fans themselves Y · missiou medical examination has of eight in the eighth race at Col. State Coil. 28; Col. lline5 '' St. Bon's; while Prince of will see changes in offlrlals backed up Sugar Ray Robin· Blue Bonnets Raseway Satur· 0. . c

1011 · ................. .4 4 0 , 0 11 0 8 Wales have yet to gain a point ull rh;ht, but It wil not help Softball Dance son's statement that he was too day. Colorado 18; Arizona o.

, · ·· ................ 3 1 2 0 4 . 6 2 or a goal. the interest of sport, but wiil ill to train for a fight at Madi· HI Acres Rudy, owned by Utah State 22; Mont. State 13. •1ftny .............. 3 0

8 0 1 10 weaken it. The annual presentation of son Square Garden Nov. 13. Dr. R. J. Walker of Smiths W~·oming 21; Utah 7.

0 M C t' 'A A trophies and dance for the The ·New York-recognized Falls, Ont., won the $2,000 Oregon State 24; California OR I NTERCO. L' LEG lATE a~· ur Is I • Sn to the players In par· St. John's senior softball lea· middleweight champion had pace ev.ent. City counsel was 20. ; i

tlcular, the boys who are In gue is scheduled for the Cry· been· acheduled to meet Wilfie second and Reba's Bay third. Washington State 27; Idaho 5. · ·j'·: Colle"e ' ' . All b the thick of the battle, re· sial Palace on Thursday night. Greaves of Detroit and Edm::.n· Eastern Wash. 13; Puset S'd . ','I:

:. ................ 3 2 0 . 1 6 1 5 mem ers of the Mac· member these officials are Tlrkets are on 'sale tor the ton in a non-title 10·rounder. 13 ol ,·

1;a·l·"' ................. 2 1 . 1 . 0 · 1 1 2 .pherson·Curtls·. Athletic As· only flesh and blood, and are affair but only a limited num· He withdrew from the bout on TORONTO, CP-Universlty · ·:;

., 3 (I 2 1 aoclatlon Interested In Inter· quite capable of making a her are available. They m~y Oct. 15, claiming a virus lnfec· of Toronto Blues 'W'On their . Whitworth 42; British Colum· ' .... .... ... 1 fl 0 mural basketball anrt bndmln· 1 t k It 1 f t " fl 1 t 11 · h1a 0 m s a e, s o eourRe no bl> obtained from team cap· lion prevented him from train· rst eastern n erco eg1att> ·

INTERCO. LLEG. lATE ton are to be at the Curlls lniL•ntional. Just kee11 ,In mind talns 01. fl'om Lloyd Kelly or ing. l'ugger championship In 10 Southern Cal. 30; Stanford 28. ~>\cad~ my gym tonight. 1'he that they give a lot more to John Hayward. years Saturday, taking a two· Washington 13; Oregon 12.-C.,JI~gc

4 first action In bath sports sport then they get out or 11. The commission said Friday game Jotal·point~ series from ---------

.... .... .... .... 3 0 1 5 0 7 . wlll ·start at 7.00 p.m. and Support them and let's keep sports that we all strive to its·. physicians had· examined McGill University Red men Ill\\'· · ................ 4' 2 · 1 1 3 1 5 members are . rcqueHted to thc~e men -of high calibre in achieve. Robinson last Monday and re· 8·6.

31•riC's by l'irtue of an B-3 vic· tory in Montreal last week·

ales .. ., ............ 4 0 4 0 . 0 7 0

wbr1.tlnhgthl!eYmm. shoes .and .. ~lot~es rer'ethree uniforms and hkel11 to Yours t~uly, commel)il~d that he be placed on McGill won Saturday's game

get e atmosphere bac Into AMSELl\1 CO~NORS. the "ill and una1•ailable llst.'' 3.0. But the Blues \\·on the end. · ··

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Page 12: Vol. I t ans ressioncollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · , 'No doubt prepnratwns fo1· such is~r.rl h'm P Premier Nikila Khrtls~chev has represented undi~gulsed

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1t THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NfLD., MONDAY, OCTOB!R 2

.::·-:=:::===========;~---~----...-.--- a,

MARCONI 1960

For over half' a century, the Mar·

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ftnest electronic equipment, suc­

cessfully striving each year to make

finer and better radios and mort

pcrwerful and dependable T.V re·

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......

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MARCONI 1960

STEREOPHONIC

lloll .......

FROM $219·00 UP

TERMS AVAILABLE

If you would like to enjoy the hi~h·

est s: :mdard in sight and sound in

home entertainment • • • perform•

once, appearance, dependability

and ·price, a visit to the Great East·

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MARCONI 1960

RADIOS

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TERMS AVAILABLE

In ord~r to be really appreciated,

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heard . : . so pay a visit to .the

Great Eastern. Oll showrooms to·

day • ·• . judge for yourself the

outstanding quality of Marconi Hi·

Fi, Stereo and T.V. for 1960.

MARCONI 1960 ,

-TELEVISION

MAICONI MODII IDPUI

17H '"'""'"""'$239·95 21" .................. $279·95 21" CONSOLE $285·00

. TERMS AVAILABLE

This year, ln the new 1960 models,

the Marconi Company has exceed·

ed all previous accomplishments

and has produced a television re·

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MARCONI 1960

RADIO-PHONO CONSOLE

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Assembled here for your Inspection

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. The Great Eiistern Oil Company, Limited

Jacoby On Bridge

BRIDGE LAMP LIGHTS UP

BY OSWALD JACOBY If South or East had seen all

the cardJ there· would be no story about this hand. South would almply have played the ace of spades at trick one, led a trump and made his contract.

However, South played low from dummy and East took his king. A apade . return would have ended proceedings but East could not belleve that de· clarer held four spades so East shifted to the seven of clubs.

This gave P. Z. SuUlvan of

NORTH (D) 12 .AJ97 ¥62 + ... 108 2 ~·KH

WEST EAST •2 •KtOU ¥A75 ¥43 +J963 • Q754 .AQ1082 .J97

SOUTH .Q853 .KQJ1098 +K •sa

East and West vulnerable Norlb Eut South We~t 1 + Pass 1 • .Pass

' 1 • Pass 4 ' Pass , Pas.• Pass

O~ng lead-• 2

Odessa, sitting West, a chance for a magnificent play. He de· clded that the seven of clubs could not be a singleton. Maybe be It was his partner's third best. In that case his partner would only hold three leaving

I South with two.

So, Instead of playing the ace 1 P. z. simply forced dummy's king with the ten spot.

A heart was led from dum· my next. P. Z. took his ace and led back the deuce of clubs. East won with the nine and now he saw the llgbt. He led a spade and P.Z. ruffed to set the hand.

CARD Sense Q-The bidding bas been:

Eaat South West North 1 • Double Paaa . 1 t Pass 1 • Pan 2 • Pasa 1

You, South, do? .A Q 7 6 'A K II ' 3 tQ :Z •a 5 What do you do? A-Pau. You have alrtedY

tbon a bla hand lly doubling and bldcllng a suit od your plrlner II juat lhowlnl a UUle heart auppor&,

TODAY'S QUESTION You hold the aame hand and

· ! double one club. West panes and your partner responds one no-trump. What do you do now?

Anlwer Tomorrow

BARBS BY HAL COCHRAN

Modern homes are aald to re· slst heat, cold and about every· thlnl except blgh utility bills.

• • • Fall is right for this time of

year aa far as the leavea are concerned.

• • •

It's much easier to alwaya have a aweet disposition when you have plenty of sugar.

• • • There's really more happl·

ness In having something to look forward to than In having everything you want.

Vatican City has an area of 108.7 acres. It Ia 1overeign and independent and Ita official lan· guases are Italian and Latin.

In Canadian football, a touch­down counts five points.

The world's peoples are dl· vlded Into four major nclal groups: Caucasoid, Monsolold, Nellfold and Australold.

. Blame Storm WASHINGTON - A'l - The

Civil Aeronautics Board said Friday a Capital Airlines turbo­prop plane which broke apart In fllsht over Maryland laat May, killing Gl persons; appar· ently fell victim to a vleloua thunderstorm. VIolent air tur­bulence which overtued the plane'• structure was listed as the specific ca111e. The C.A.B. aald It found no evidence the · crawt was damaged by ll&ht· nina.

PRISCILLA'S POP

t".APTAIN EA~'(

llari(ngii)D Jr beSPectacled tilllt salesm one of TV's periorrners " assume!

of "Pat dub comedia

Nov. 2. thil time Pa dose to mys 1 challenge

'llhtD he ass1 aceent and audiences •Guido Pan profe!slon

tolD& to bal nomas' ol

Oll·lCrteJ

to "shar• the Jat

TV shot ~neath yt

the reward to Pat t

u.s.Jmmlg be did w

Ute In Ita! Allen award

for him Is the show cue for

to take

Page 13: Vol. I t ans ressioncollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · , 'No doubt prepnratwns fo1· such is~r.rl h'm P Premier Nikila Khrtls~chev has represented undi~gulsed

--- .. ---··--NOW PLAYING

SPINCER

TRACY ROBERT

WAGNER JEAN

PETERS RICHARD

WID MARK

AI,. - "UP-TO-THE·MINUTE NEwS

TIMES OF SHOWS. p "SMILEY GETS A GUtf' 6.30 AN& ~. "BROKEN LANCEh - 8.1 0.

MATINEE: 1.30 P.M. • .

IARDOT in "AND GOD CREATED - WITH CURT JURGENS IN

AND CINEMASCOPE.

I •

TO-M.ORROW

Also - NOVELTY

TIMIS OF SHOWS

EVENING SHOWS. 1 O'CLOCK - 9.00 . MATINEE: 2. P.M. •

LAST. TIMES TODAY "WISTIOUND"

'

• ·.Radio

CJON .. CJOX 1Y MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1959.

11.00-Romper Room 2.00--Play of the Week 2.30-Funtime 2.45-Nursery School Time 3.00--My Little Margie 3.30--Amoa and Andy 4.00-0pen Bouse 4.30-P. M. Party 5.00--Let'• Look 5.15-Science All Around Us 5.30-Youth '60 6.00--Gene Autry 6.30-News Cavalc:ade 7.00-The Rifleman 'J.30-Sword of Freedom 8.00-Variety Profl'am 8.15-National Newa 8.30--Lawrence Welk Show. 9.00-Don Messer'• Jubilee 9.30-Danny Thomas Show

10.00-Rlverboat 11.00-Musie '410 12.00-The Town Above 12.30--News Headline• 12.31-Dateline Europe

I

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l.oe-lwt411l. 1.»-Ntn. 'J.GO-NnL 7..»--lfew. I.CIO-:Irtallfllt 816. UII·-Ga:rlta Jln1DI. t.OII-It Ha,_.. Jut ......

10.1111-ColfM TiJM. 11.011-'l'unl Jaet ....... 11.JO.-l'raCrlm Tnln. 11.80--:ar&ra If ...... 1Z.45-iport, PIJI. 1.~~0-.~adl Paar llttr. 1.36-lehill4 the ltoJJ. U5-Coupll Ned Deer. !.00-ltlft S.W~tMe lllew 2.»-Newa. 2.4&-Diet elm J.JO-PIJIOrlllla S.l3-'l'rNIIIr7 Gi .. 1.00-.CIIeekla' IL UO-NIWI. U&-Cheelda' Ia (C:.t'4). I.IIO-Iporta Tede1 l.lJ...Xutm tlllellfr 1.»-Wbat'l IIJ u.. 1.56--NIWI. l.oo-JolumJ J)olJar I.JO....I'rolltlw GtatliJIWI

111.M-1'1Dil ldltloll. 10.15-JobiiJ K•mmut 111.10-Jtomuee In Muaie 11.00-KIIIie T1l1 KldaiJht 12.00-Sip Off.

Rebels Killed

.

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ALGIEJS, Alleria - !leU· : ters-Thlrty li&Uonallat inaiiU· : enta were ldlled In a 48-hour : hWe whlch ended J'rida:r lJI · "" '1 "'1

the oran are• of weatem AI· · ceria, French milltlry sources reported. · There . wu 111 •• tloll of l'rencll CllllalUoa. •. , .

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Page 14: Vol. I t ans ressioncollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · , 'No doubt prepnratwns fo1· such is~r.rl h'm P Premier Nikila Khrtls~chev has represented undi~gulsed

0 '"

'British Fashions .,. JVDITJI AYER .

CIUdlaa Presa Staff Writer LONDON tCPl -British man·

ulacturers ere making a deter· mined bid for the lead in the

· women's ready ' to • wear fashlo:t field.

London shops now are showin; welt • cut clothes at pl'ices de· I scribed as being wit!lln reach of I the a1·crage working girl. 1

Suits, designed with the career I . girl in mind. are being produced · in jersey as well as the less ex·

pensi\'e synthetic fabrics, and I sell for as little as £4. The now : classic Cha:~el cardigan suit is 1 among the most popular of these. Cloth~ manufacturers here fol·

low the curre:~t trends closely, and within a week or so alter the first season·~ s!lowings, the \'ery latest In high fash:on Is 8\'al\able off the peg, WIS HfGH AWARDS R~ently the Comlte de Bon

Go~t Francais presented gold cups to the British fashion houses Rembrandt and Dereta for their :tontribution to "French good lastr." S~id ~1. ll~y1no1d llodt>J, PI'CSi·

drJ•t or th~ Comit~: I "The~t two cumranif~ ha1·e

orn c ~~ o ~ r n to rcceh·e lhe I atrard~ hccan~e ol lheiJ· ~upreme rtputation hoth with the Par's . r.11u1ure hou~cs anrl the French 1

textile indu~try. ~nrl because of· their premier position in the Brit· I l~h rcad)'-lo·wcar industry. ·• :

Bargains! Bargainsl ARMY smmER HIP-LENGTH PARKAS-Complete

;;i~~s~o~.d~ .. ~~~~li.•~~~- e~~~~~.e~~ .. ~~~~~~t~~~· ... ~~~~g TWO 01\'LY DICTAPHONES-New condition, one

complete with record eraser. Just the thing you are Tooking for to complete your office. Make liS a rcasonaole offer.

NEW AMERICAN AIRFORCE FLYING BOOTS with heavy sheep wool linings, large sizes onlv. Only .......... 00 0000 ............................ $6.95 Pair

5,000 GALLONS No. 10 WINTER MOTOR OIL · in 53 gallon steel drums, factory sealed. · We

in,·itc service station and garage owners to make us an offrr.

NEW PURE WOOL HAND-KNIT KHAKI SCARFS just .... .... .... .... .... .... .. .. .... .. .. .... .. .. oo• .39c each

BRAND NEW ARMY MOCCASINS with inner soles for that cold, cold winter ahead. A real buy at .. . ..oo .. • .... .... .... .... .. .. .... .. .. .... .. .. $3.50 Pair

ALSO IN STOCK rubber-bottom leather lognns .................. 00 ........................ $4.50-$5.95 Pair

FOUR AND FIVE-BUCKLE GAITERS, 12 inches bigh, 15 Inch all-weather army lumbcrmens' rub· bers. laced tops, waterproof tongues ............ $5.95

NEW PULL-ON LIGHTIVEIGHT GAITERS with full zipper ... .. . ... .. .. ................ $2.911 Pnir

NEW PULL·ON LIGHTWEIGHT . GAITERS with clasp fasteners ................................ $.'3.!!.5 Pair

ALL NEW AMERICAN ARMY ISSUE new choco· late-color amw wool sweaters .... . . . . . . $2.50

NEW KHAKI HEAVY WOOL SWEATERS, \'-neck 0 ••••• 0 .......................................... $:1.75

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Requirements cal! 80161-91171

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~AINE JOHNSTON COMPANY, LTD.

A~ency lleparlment %43 Water St. llla1'210Z

YOUR FRIGIDAIRE DEALER.

Notice of·· Public Sale

In the matter of a distraint by : C!yde Smith against Frank · Power. !

- I By virtue of a distraint marie i

hy me as Bailiff on 30th day of: Septcmher, A.D. 1959, I will sell! on )1onrlay. the 26th day of Oct .. ; l9fi{). at 12 o'clock noon, 1; Philips Television Set, 1 Space·; sal'cr Da\'Cnport. Both articles ; ~re in ~;ood condition. Sale to; be held on the premises known'

HEAP & PARTNERS ! as ~1orris Building, Queen st. i (NFLD.) LTD. I For information 'phrne th~ ·

Wiring Materials, Wire and i undersigned at 5646 or call at .

ATTENTION '

Parents And Friends OF

CURTIS ACADEMY We ore currently conducting our Annual

Magazine Salesmanship Campaign under the direction of the Curtis Publishing Company.

We sell-Soturday Evening Post Ladies' Home Journal Jack and Jill Life, Time Look Better Homes and Gardens Maclean's Chatelaine · Salurdoy Night

and a long list of other favourite magazines. A Salesman from Curtis Academy will visit

your home soon. Hold your Subscriptions, Re· newals and Christmas Gift List until he or she calls.

llelp Kids Ilelp Curtis "Their styles hare been Wol'n! nol nnl)' th1·ou~hout Great Brit·l Ah but h 42 ot:1er countries 1 in· 1

dudin; Canada\ where women/ understand the Importance and 1 meanin; ol sood taste:•

NEW NYLON SLEEPING BAGS with rubhcr ground sheet attached, 100-inch zipper. Regular Slll.OO. Sale price just .... .... .... .... .... ... $9.50

.~LL WOOL RED HOSPITAL BLANKETS, 84 inches long ............................................ $3.95 each

Cables, ~lotors Starters, I ShcriH's Office. Lamps, Switches, Lighting : Dated at St. John's this 22ndi 1~~~~=-'':""':=-:'"'=~~~~~~~~~=·

Fixtures, etc. . . day o( Octohcr. A.D., 1959. -

Pre1·ious recipients ol lbcse I awards include the Cit~· ol Dallas, Texas: the Paris Opera House. Elizabeth Arden and two Ameri· can department stores.

Be Modern

Live Electrically ! ~ .

LtiW:foWii ......... ,,. ... , .. i

I Che.:~p Reliable Electricity I In ond Around St. John's

WELCOME WAGON HOSTESS

EXTRA HEAVY COITON BLANKETS, brand new, 54 by 72, a real gi\'e-away at ............ $1.98 each

FOR THE SNACK·BAR OPERATOR we have one only deep fat fryer, large size, .220 volts. One only meat and bone cutter machine, complete with motor. Both at bargain prices.

BRAND NEW BRITISH ARMY WORK BOOTS, hard toe, with steel inserts sole and heel. All real leather. Sizes 4-12. While they last, just .oo ............................................. $i.95

WEEK-END SPECIAL-Brand new American Army surplus flying logans, black rubber, fibre glass insulated, for frosty .weather. Without a doubt one of the finest boots ever to be offered the public an):'vhere. May be used for work or

dress. Sizes 8-11. Only .. oo ........ 0000 .... $6.95 Pair

FOR THE CONSTRUCI'ION WORKER we offer one only extra-large; extra heavy duty, mach· inist's vise; <i only cable jacks, each 15,000 pound capacity; 4 only steel strapping metal reels, complete with portable carts., To the

. industrious garage operator we take pleasure in offcrin~ one only complete portable vul­canizing outfit, electrically operateCl, metal con·

. tainer. A real money.maker at a real price.

•Nobody But Nobody Sells Cheaper Than Us"

Army & Air Force Surplus Sales 149 Duckworth Street

liP I Ill IILCAIIZIII ---··

rl

Dial 2577

.. , ftrettont

IIIII

Nfld. Armature Works Ltd. '

BAMBRICK ST. DIAL 7191 • 7192

WAREHOUSE: PRINCE'S ST. H. BARFITT. DIAL5085 Bailiff.

FIRE INSURANCE

CROSBIE & CO., LTD. Agents for

UNDERWRITERS AT LLOYDS.

LOW RATES DIAL 5031

oct22,26

Newfoundland Services

PAS·SENGER NOTICES

---------I CONNECTIO~ BAY RUN AND HARDWARE STORES I WEST RUN PLACE~TIA BAy

Regular 8.10 a.m. train leav. HARRIS & HISCOCK, LTD. 1' ing St. John's :l!onday, Oct. 26th,

General Hardware will make connection at Argen· . Distributors for Sunbeam ! tia with :l!otor Vessels for the I

Electrical Appliances, 1. ~ay Run and West Run PlaceD· 1

1 Sports goods and SporiJ . t1. Bay. wear for all occasions. 1

DIAl 5016 I CONNECTION GREES BAY ~

---------' SERVICE I ERNEST CLOUSTON LTD : Train ''The Caribou" leaving •

McCLAR'l AUTO~Il.TIC' , St. John's .1.30 p.m. Mond.ay,l · WARM AIR CO:-lDJT.IONING Oct. 26th, \I'll! ~ake conne~h~n 1

I 210 WATER ST. 'at Lew1sportc With ~!.V. Noma . DIAL 4183 f~r ~egular ports Green Bay

I sen1ce.

I HEATING -------: FREIGHT ACCEPTANCES '

1 C. A. HUBLEY, l TO. PLUftlBING and IIEATISG . I'REIGIIT ST. JOliN'S COR~F.R ·

CONTRACTORS BROOK SERVICE , Rep. General Electric Frci~ht for res:ular porls St. '

36 King's Road Dial 2910 John's Corner Brook Senice per S.S. Northern Hanger will be

RADIO· TV REPAIRS ; arccptcrl at the Dock Coastal -----·---- :Shed ~tond~y. Oct. 2Gth. 9 a.m ,

GREAT EASTERN OIL to 5 p.m. .

COMPANY, LTD. - ! FRf~IGIIT sot:nt COAST • REPAI!lS TO RADIOS. TV SERVICE AND ALL ELEl:TRICAL Freight is acc~pted daily s1 .

APPLIANCES I · · 1 DIAL 3001 103005 . t1c Railway f rc1gh: Shed or· --------- . I'Cgular ports South Coast Ser· ·

USED CARS j l'ice but in order to guarantee • -------- 1 movement by this trip o£ the

· S.S. Bar Haven freight must be AEDLAlDE MOTORS LTD. at the Railway Freight Shed not

FOR A CAR YOU ('AN later than l.IJ(.o p.m. Tuesday. DEPEND ON CALL Oct. 27th.

ADEJ.AIDE ~IOTO'lS LTD. "A ComJilete Store At Your FRF.WHT ST. JOHN'S LEW·

DL\L 3015 lSl'i,RTE SERVICE

GROCERS (Retail) Freight for regular ports St.

HUTCHEN'S GROCERY

Will Knock at Your Door with Gifts ond Greeting,

from Friendly Buslneu Neighbours and Your

Civic ond Social The huge bulky knit aweaten MEAT MARKET

are back, stronger than ever, Help bring Church to 113 William Street

John's Lc 1isportc Service per M .V. Bonavista will be accept· cd at thP. Dock Coastal Shed . Tuesday and Wednesday, Oct. 27th and 28th, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

On the occasion oft New Comer to the City.

The Birth· of a Baby,• PHONE

94865, 6957 or 90943

Popular with the campus crowd, those in our Jma//er com- Dial 7450 and 6062 tan skirts for shopping, aports munities without one by H R CLARKE ~~~~~~~u~~r ~~~1 ~U:r :O~~ci patronizing the VOWR · ' ' Topsail Road the house, Huge pins, popular Radio · Auction on October Dial 92295 t!!Js year, ar.e used 0:1 the turned 27th, 28th oncl 29th. down turtle neck collars of some. L. HEALEY

Cross Roads and Water Street Dlat 3026

Waiting For. .our Phone Calls? INSURANCE AGENTS AND BROKERS

. '

CLASSIFIED . IS

EFFECTIVE

2177' -

Stop thinking-Start acting· Make your move

today It's truly amazing how such "Little" Ads

get sucl' "Big" results at such a moderate cost.

No other medium reaches so many people, so

quickly. If you have something to sell, or are • 0

looking to buy or have something you want to

Include In the community's biggest market place,

put It .In the DAILY NEWS Want Ads.

DIAL 2178 - 2179

. ·IXPERIEI\ICED . AD· TAkERS WILL '·ASSIST YOU IN' WRITING . .YOUR ~D. •

\

JOB BROTHERS &: CO. LTD, Water Street

Dial 2658-4123

MEEHAN & CO. T. A •. Bldg., Duckworth St.

Dial 7046·704'7

REG. T. MORGAN INSURANCE LDnTED

Temple Bldg,, P .0. Bo1 168, 341 Duckworth St .. Dial 80370 or 7756

DRUG STORES

M. CONNORS lTD. 334 WATER ST.

Dial 2206

AYLWARD'S .PHARMACY

Cor. ·Monchy & Empire Ave. Dial 90070

KENNEDY'S " DRUG STORE

204 Duckworth St. Dial 2381

1---------------DUNN'S PHARMACY

Cor. Mayor and Merrymeeting Rd.

Dial '7388

PARKDALE PHARMACY Elizabeth Ave.

Dial 91120

MURPHY'S DRUG STORE

119 ~lllltary Road Dial 6446

THOMPSON'S PHARMACY

· 45 Quldl Vldi Road Dial 5991

FLEMING'S 265 Pennywell Road

Dial 92937

GROCERS (RETAIL)

NORMAN DOWNEY 45 New Gnwer St .

Dial 5727

MOBILE GROCETERIA Store At Your Door

. Dial 9¥90

STAN CONDON COMMERCIAL SECTION

WE offer For Sale, the following list of Commercial Properties:

151-153-157 New Gower St., and 32 Waldegrave St. - Three Apartments and Suite of Offices. Offices complete· ly modernized, good income on the apartments. Corner site. See it today.

Drug Business-Gqing strong for years. Water St. West - Building suitable for

showroom. Water St.-Shop and Residence • LeMarchant Rd.-House and Shop. Furnace

heated. Freshwater Road.-Shop and Two Apart·

ments. Service Station-Central location. 40 Smith Ave.-Shop and two apartments Freshwater Rd.-Large Building. FOR RENT-Part of very modern building

on Water St. Blackmarsh Rd.-Large Modern Building. FOR RENT-Portion of the Two-way Stores Dick's Square-Snack Bar and Four Apart·

ments. 719 Water St.-Shop and Two Apartments

With large block of land. Good busi· ness stand. Reduced to just $12,000. Make an offer. ·

Water St.-New listings ~ • Two fine build· ings right in the heart of business.

Reduced to only $25,000 ••• The Fiesta Bar, corner of Bates Hill and tlenry St. Perfect location for restaurant, club, or offices.

Two well-established Businesses For Sale on Water St.

Gower St.-Store with Two Apartments. Duckworth St.-Cup 'n Saucer Snack Bar. Commercial Land - Blackmarsh Road. -

40' X 500', New Gower St.-Vacant Store with Apart·

ment. Two Blocks of Commercial Land fronting

on the railroad, 600' to 700'. Commercial Land on Waterford Bridge Rd.

Goulds Rd.-Three Shops in one-Good business.

Modern Three Storey Building, right In the heart of the city. Only eight years old. Furnace heated.

For further information regarding any of these business opportunities ••• drop in at o\lr office, or mak9 an appointment to ins.pect them.

DIAL 7848 • 7103 • 4813

FEILDIAN ATHLETIC

ASSOCI A THE ~EILDIAN

ATHLETIC ASS'N

will be holding ill annuol dinner the Newfoundland

THUR~OAY, Nov. . at 7.30 p.m.

T ~ekets $2.00 eadt. Available from Morgan's Office 01 any executive member.

I i I . I ' I : I I 1 • I : I I I

I BPam: H Reams: Qannels: Platts: f!tt~ various sius., So1Jvage & Sales c.., 11 Patrick Street· 1709. . mar 19. t;-m

For Taxi

Open from 8.30 to 1 puv:!S.lyr

GREAT ""'~11can OIL & IMPORT

CO., LTD. Radio, Television, Refrigerators, Deep

Electric Rani!!, Floor Poli.sb111,

Gramopbonu Public Address

Tape ""''"""' REI' AIRS ASD 5 LL'iES

DIAL SOOI 1o Jill

WATER STREET ian26.Jv.

1 9 5 s PLYMOU1

$650·00

Baird Motors MERRYMEETING

DIAl B031B·f

oct23,26

' /

~ ~

11

' 15 2 10 5 8

1.4

Kl B

SEI 1

12 ~ .. ~

13

Cudt 011 Bail•

Varlet Vidi; I Store,

Connors Thomas

St.; E1 Store, J

The; I

I

B. ST.

Page 15: Vol. I t ans ressioncollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · , 'No doubt prepnratwns fo1· such is~r.rl h'm P Premier Nikila Khrtls~chev has represented undi~gulsed

~ ' LDIA~ HLETIC I CIA

: R ~a~~~~; 1<-: Pbtf\; rioas ~

A. Sal~ c ... RkSt~

or Fast ti Sen· TEL T I ~, •. _,[. ..

,. .

1 9 s s LYMOUT

S650·00

rd Motors RYMEETING DIAL

o,AIY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., A\ONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1959

KINSMEN Boys Club

BINGO

SERIES No. 18 TODA Y'S NUMBERS:

I N G 0 28 36. 52 65 29 37 56 75 17 45 54 68 16 34 46 74 19 -41 60 71 22 42 58 61 18 -43 41 66 23 38 61

20 39 72 31 33

Card• 11n ~ale for new 1erles at the following : Bailt\""s ~ewsstand, Duckworth St.; Man· \"aritt~:. Quidi Vidi; T~ompson's Phat;macy,

· \"kli; ~ln. Bulger, lings Bridge; Cash 1 To· Storr. \\"atl'r St.; T. McMurdo Co., Water St.;

Cmm11u l.trl., Water St.; Peter O'Mara, Water . Thoma, Rickttts, Water St.; Holwell Pharmacv,

St: fJwards' Dmg Store, Water St.; HGgan's StMt. ~tw Cower St.; Stowe's Phnrmacy, ""Pat­

. · TI1tltre Pl~~~rmac''• St. Clare Ave.; Elizabeth C:111. Elizabeth & 'Portugal CO\'t'! Rd.; Reid's

Churrhill Park; Bindon's Pharmacy, •rt1rurr .\\e.; Caul's Grocer\', Pierce Avenue;

Drup; Store, CampbeO Ave.; Cornwall Hamilton .\,·e.; Parsons' Drug Store, Le·

Rnad; .\sh's Drug Store, Long'• Hill; Jllll·:\tan11n. RawHns' Cross; Murphy's Drug

'lilita~· Rd.; Fleming's D~K Store, PennY,· U; Theatre Pharmacy, Longs Hill; Aylward'•

.. Emrir~ A'·~.; Jame5 Power, Hayward itnnt<h"s Dmg Store, Duckworth St.; Mac­

s, Duckworth St.; Theatre Pharmacy, Duck· St.; Carihou Store, Duckworth St.; Elizabeth Churchill Park; Crocker's Drug Store, Fresh·

Rd.; Clarke's Supermarket, Topsail Rd.; Law· Dru1 Storr, Bell Island.

Kin - Help Klddles

Watch Repairs

AVALON CREDIT JEWELLERS I.\TI'II H ADELAIDE PHONE 7829

.. .¥ B. P. 0. ELKS n. JOHN'S LODOI NO. 245

1h.t. will bt a mHtlng of Lodge ancl It tht Clult Rooms, Carpasian Roacl

Y, OCT. 29th, at 8:15 p.m. Attncla: Reading of Reports ancl Eltc· tf Offictn. ly order of the Exalted ·Ruler

R. J. POWER, Secretary.

·-----------

TtNDE·R·S ~· JOHN'S HOUSING CORPORATION

0'• required by the Corporation for the of Bog in the area known as Stott's

between New Cove Road, Portugal Cove ~.,_0~d Berteau Avenue. 'llttij" ICOtions may be obtained from the

111 The St. John's Housing Corporation, enquiries regarding this work should be

will close at neen Thursday, October and should be addrtsstd ~ The Compo

a.. ~· John't, Housing CorporCitlon, "·193, Fort Townshe&Jd, St: John'• and ~ marked "Tender for Bag Removal''.

01poratian reserves the right te r•fuae Oily bids. '

COM,TlOLLIR.

"Your juggling act Ia good -but I sUI think It would bt better to fix the ROOF!"

• • • But don't YOU juggle with

fate if YOUR ROOF Ia go­Ing bad. Come In and talk to us about it today - berause the damage a leaky roof may cause might easily be more than the cost of a NEW ROOF. So don't lake ehancea.

JUMBLE SALE

APEX' ADDING

MACHIN£ CO.

uwoutd you keep eount for us?"

The Funeral of our late Comrade, Gerald Furlong, will toke place THIS MORNING at 10 o'clock from the residence of his father-in-law, No. 20 McKoy St. All available ex- ex-service men are requested to attend .

J. W. GOODYEAR, Secretory.

The St. Thomas' Women's . jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Association will be holding '

A Jumble Sale in Canon Woad HaW.

TUESDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 27th.

3 p.m. Admission 5 cents.

PRELIMINARY NOTICE

Annual Sale of

LADIES' COllEGE AID SOCIETY AND GUILD NOVEMBER 18 and 19 PARTICULARS LATER

GENERAL TRUCKING

Trinity South Freight 1 Service will acwpt :freight for ·aonavista : or Clarenville areas.

1 ! Also Burin Peninsula.

j DIAL 7908-H 1 octll,lwks

~~UCTION AT

Long Pond Manuels TODAY

October. .26th at 2 p.m.

25 _HEAD ·autCHERS'

+ Canadian Red Cross Society

Newfoundle.nd Division

HOME NURSING CLASSES .

The course consists CJf

WEEKLY LECTUReS and DEMONSTRATIONS

given by

Retlstered Nurses, following the Standard Text of Red Cross ClassH starting week of

NOVEMBER 9th

Enroll now by telephoning

CANADIAN· RED CROSS DIAL 7031

PLUMBERS & "PIPEFITTERS

UNION MEETING tf Local 7 40 will be held in Victoria Hall TO·NIGHT at I o'clock.

'

T. KENNEDY, RecoreJina S.Cretarj.

NOTICE Due to the death of Mr. Ernest Jan11,

the re1ular Weekly Carel Party at Virginia

Scheel House, schecluleel for this evening,

willlte CANCELLED for this weak.

RECITAL PRESENTED BY

Gower St. United ~

Church Choir· CATTLE IN THE

. Pins MIMORIAL HALL

10 CALVES This Wednesday Ort. 28th 'Sam J. · a.u p.m;

Searle Ad;;;ti~;·b~~-Th;·~N;;s \

I \ I

!AUCTION I ! Villa Nova

TODAY October 26th

1.30 p.m.

26 HEAD CHOICE

BUTCHERS' .CATTLE:

FOR SALE-Large dwelling with shop attached on Main Street, Bell Island. Good business location. Apply to Mrs. Moses Higgins. oct24,28

------WANT£D-Garage or drive.

way for winter months vic· inity St. Clare's Hospital or Casey Street. 'Phone 5107 or 3574·H. oct24,27

FOR SALE-One pony, weigh·

I. ing about 700 lb5. Also one 1952 Dodge truck 11.2 ton.

· Body, tires and motor In ! good condition. Price $90.00 : i Apply to J. Harding. Ken· • ·

mount Road, near Topsail · Road.

I mE CENTRAL BARBER · SHOP. We are now operat·

lng eight chairs. You can be &!sured of the best possible . 1ervlce plus the least pOJo ' 1ible waiting, 24 New Gower ll, opp. Adelaide Motora. -.

TO LET -Suite 4 office, In . Royal Bank Building, West End. Ideal for shipping firm or custonu broker. Dial 90312, John D. O'Drls· eoll, Real Estate AgenL jly8,(tf)

FOR SALE- One National Cash Register practically new, one Bira Model 33 Electric Meat Saw, and two Meat Blocks. These articles are all In perfect condition. Apply to Wm. Casey, Ltd., 205 New Gower Str~~t. ocll7 .tf

PAI~!TING, DECORATI~G::.:..-~ For all exterior, interior painting, cleaning. papt>r· I hanging Reawnable prices. 'Phone 7397-11, ?.lr. L. I Howell. ,

- - - .. i NEW ME'I'IIOD RUG CJ,F.A,'II·

ERS. Rug~ and Carpet made to look like new. Von Schrader process adds yearl to life of rugs. Cleaned in home or at our plant. 'Pbone 91033. New Method Rug Cleaners, Fresbwater Road.

FOR RENT-About ~Iovern· ber l&t, one six room Bun· galow with all modern con· veniences, partly furnished, situated on the Conception Bay Highway, twenty miles from the city. Apply Box 1,000 % Daily News. Oct.17,tf

--·--------Wall Washing

WALI, WASHING - W~lls cleaned by new machbe. Results perfect: saves paint. -New Method Rug and Wall Cleaners, Freshwater Road. 'Phone 91033.

-------···-----· •Ef' ESTATE- Valua:or of

cit:;. rarms and outport pro· T ·ties. Over 40 years' ex· p~rience. John 1). O'T>ris· coli. Auction~rr ancl R~al El;tate f.gent. Dial 90312. octfl,(tf)

Where To Stay Balsam Hotel

BARNES ROAD !!ttuatP.d In th~ Heart ot" the

City. Quiet. Comfortable Atmot-

Phrre. ' For Reservations and I..

lormatiOD

Dial 6336 MHS. JOHN FACEY

. R~Dl Man•r­mSJ.U

· NOW IN faOGRESS

Bigger and Better

The Fall Festival REGIONAL

'HIGH SCHOOL Bonaventure Ave.

WHEELS

CANTEEN SERVICE -1 ~ Home-made Cookery 0

Baked Delicacies

Knitted Goods

Handmade articles

Many Special

Attractions

. DOORS OPEN

7 O'ClOCK

DOOR PRIZES CLAIMED

13837 -John Dooley, Mundy Pond Road.

2223-Mr~. Margaret Myron, lime .St.

STILL UNCLAIMED

16626 - 15908 All Worth $50.00

COME EARLY - COME OFTEN

Children not admitted unless accom·

ponied by parents or guardians.

.WANTED EXPERIENCED VAN · SALESMAN

!5

to call on Grocery, Confectionery and Drug~·~:;:;. Only those with experience, drivers' licenc.e ancl references need apply. This is a newly formed sales organization of well established company.

Apply: P.O. BOX E-5036.

PRINCESS

BEAUTY PARLOUR FORMERLY 13 LeMARCHANT ~OAD

IS NOW MOVED TO

10 Mayor Avenue OPEN SIX DAYS A WEEK AND NIGHT$

BY APPOINTMENT DIAL 4310. ·.· ' .. . • .

. ·~ MARY MURRAY. PRDPRIETRESS

TENDERS· Will' be rP~cived hy the unrlersi~necl up to ~londaj~ l1ctoher 2flth next, fur the pur~h.1~e of the freehold land ;ilul dwclli11g anrl lwu Horey shed. pruperly of th~ late Thomas Dribcoll. ~iluate numb~r :H2 Hamiton Avenue. L~nrl fronting lOll feet on Hamilton ;\venu~ w:lh rear· age approxim~lcy 750 lc~t to Albany Place. The highest or any tencler nut n~Cc$sarity accepted. < >ctl5,6

A. DRISCOLL t29 HESSIE'S mLJ, ROAJ). l'HONF. 9021Z

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Page 16: Vol. I t ans ressioncollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · , 'No doubt prepnratwns fo1· such is~r.rl h'm P Premier Nikila Khrtls~chev has represented undi~gulsed

. I

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'""..., .. ; ... · -------------------------------------·----TH~ DAILY NEW~:;;:., .;.ST,;.;,·..;;..;..;.;.;.....;.:..._N_H_D;;.., _A_'!O_~_m_.:,_;y':-.;..;..;.;;;:~~~6. ~-

' - Indian AT1'HE SIGN

... . •.•

-

. •

.- . .. . ..

.: .

FOR.RENT Office And ·Warehouse

SPACE Hext Door Our· Premises

Duckworth Street •

Ground. Floor· Heated

T. & M. WINTER LIMITED DUCKWORTH STREET

Peacemaker I ! CALGARY lCPl - Chief Walk·! : ing BuHalo, an old mediator ~f .

I the Stony Indians, is going to try his hand at peacemaking among

I his w:1ite brothers. I He will be goi:1g on a tour : of Europe under the auspices of 1 the Moral Re·Armament move- SPEAKING OF CANADA · ment. v· t A' sey $5 00 I "I am a:1 old man. but 1 am mcen ' 05 .... • ; willing to make this .journey for · THE STORY OF CANADA i the benefit of mankmd so that • ! all natinns of the earth can see Donald Cre1ghton .. 3.50 ' it is possible to make peace. to ·!understand and co • operate with QUEBEC, 17 59, The 1 each other .. .'' teige and The Battle : The chief, ~is rug~ed face sut·- "" S ~ 95 \ mounted by a buffalo hcad·dress G. P. tacey ........ "'' : complete' with horns. has been a; CANADA I familicr figure for years at the • fHE ARTS IN · 1 an:1ual Calgary Stampede. Malcolm Ross ...... .. 1 0.00 . He was born :1ear Calgary and • t a young age ws adopted b~· MORLEY CALLAGHAN'S , missionary, Dr. ·J. MacCiean. STORIES • 4 9S

lie later became a scout for the .................. • ! Royal canadian Mounted Police, COLLECTED POEMS

then a teacher on the reserve. ' When Chief B811rspaw, long- f. J. Pratt ' time head of ete local Stonys, (Second Edition-} .... 5,00 ' died In 1920, Walking Buffalo took i over the tr8be and guided its KING GEORGE VI; ' members for 15 years before re- HIS LIFE and REIGN tiring in 19~5.

He still is the "elder states- John Bennett ...... . 10.00 ma:1" or the reservation.

Chief Walking Buffalo plans to, MYTHOLOGIES visit England. France. GermRny, i W. B. Yeats ........ 4.25 Holland, Sweden and Denmark on

I his first trip to Europe, A FE~~R IN THE BLOOD

IN STOCK ,B. C.

MciNTOSH RED

APPLES FANCY GRADE

'

BOXES 150s

GEORGE NEAL LIMITED ST. JOHN'S 'PHONES:

I : o tee o er I

. p I' Bl n Wrllrom Pearson .... 4.50

.. :· .. ·,, : • I• ~

. :· . . ~ . ' Jll ,. . J , .. . I

. ' . t· •

' . ~ t .. ! ·• i

t ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~ . . THE WATCH THAT :;:: Ctly Pohce report onl)' two· I arrests made late yestcrda~· and: ENDS THE NIGHT overnight. One man was arrest·; Hugh Maclennan 3.95 . I . I o·I ed Cor assault and tile other. mperia I for ordinary drunkncss. , THE PROVINCE OF

! . ~p~ing ~howers catJIS~ rr.ducc<dl: TH;h~~~R~c:Gin/ey .. 3.50. Earnings For '59 i VtSibtltly-hulh for ! rtvct' S an , TORO:'<TO, Or!, 22-Im·

l pedestrians. In a rlrivins: rain,' MY FRIENDS pcrial Oil's net eamings for pedestrians raise their rollars. THE MISS BOYDS the first nine months of 1959 ! and lower their umbrellas-to! '~re estimated at S37,680.000, :keep from gelling wet. But: Jane Duncan ........ 3.00 I l'quivalent to Sl.20 per share 'when crossing the street, they i o· k & ( Ltd :of outstanding stock. ,) R. :should nevertheless keep an. {( S Q, • :White, President. announced ! alert eye open for approaching • . 1 today. This is a 10 per cent I cars-to keep from getting hurl! II The Booksellers lncreas~. over the cor.respond· : The Safetv Council of New- tng pet tad of 11!58 II hen the II foundlond ~gain T!!minds "us Spin 442!i or 2008 or 3191 earnings amounted to $34,-1 pedestrians'' that it's easier for I 327.000 or $1.0~ .a share. . 1 us to sec an approaching car. Comp~ny eat.ntng~ reflected : th it i for the drii'Cr of thai I BIRTH sub~ta~ttal gams ~~ volume

an 5 . . . of busmess and eontmued the I car to see us. Tlu~, IS • ~ar~t- improrement shown in the : cularly true when tl s ram mg. I O'BRIEN-Born at St. Clare's second quarter. Compared

I ;,tercy Hospital on Sunday, Oct. with the first nine months of ~Vlth many ~10re ~cople i 25th., to Edward and Angela Hl58, net crude oil prod~c­

lhmg to older a~cs, thetc are 1 O'Brien (nee Doyle), a baby tion was up more than ntne !f~Ore and more chronlc~ll~ \boy. per cent. refinery rhns were 111 people who need nursm., I 10 per cent higher. and pro· car eln the home. The VIc-, duct sales showed an increase torlan Order of :->urscs in this I' DEATHS of more than eight per cent. community is trnincd to 1)ro· -·-" ---· vide care at home for those! JANES - Died suddenly at who are ehronirally ill. If 1 the General Hospital on Thurs­you need their services, call 'I uav oct. 22nd., Ernest Janes, Five-hour Day, JiEPPERRELL AFB-Colonel Rchaird E. 5087. ag~it 66 years. Leaving to

--· i mourn two sons, Austin and OSliA\\'A, Ont. rcp 1 _ Geu' Base Commande1·, presents the PAFB Ctrilian

Tv EPAIRS John. Funeral will ,take place 1 era! )totors of Canada put it's geslton Award plaque to Major Harold J.

R at 2.30 p.m. to-day, October i night and day workers on five- Ba~e Supply Officer, for the third consecutia 26th. from his late residence. i hour shifts Friday because of . ·

! J.ogy Bay Road. to the Anglican :steel shortage due to the Uniltd The plaque IS awarded quarterly to the umt

1 REASONABLE RATES 1 cemetery, Forest Ro3d. j Stales strike. The company also the most yaluab]e contributions to economy

I : d f 11 •

1

attributed. the ~hor~er s~ifts. to I •ff' .· encv at Pepperre\1. It renlaces the PAFB 1 KENT -, Pa~se peace 11 ~ general dtslocahon tn produchon ~ IC 1 " • • . •

I GUARANTEED WORK ! away at St. Clare s Mercy llospt-. schedules designed to distribute' gestion Award Trophy whtch has been \\On b~ I 'tal on Oct. 23rd., Ron~ld J.1work equally among all shifts. ...·upplv for permanent rentention. The Base I P H 0 N ~ 7 ·3 1 3 :Kent, a qed 67 years, lcavmg to! t.:nio~ and compa~y officials arc, '""' . " . h d d $1'15 !or ~~~ estiolll

I I mourn their sad loss wife. three I meeting twice dailv to prepare ~~ct1011, ha\'mg an e out • · gg i sons, James at home. Martin in i for a full-scalP. layoif of 6,000 em- month, is already proving to be a real challeng!

I. Electronic 1 vancouver, Ronald Jr. in Tor· i pl()yees ~ov. 4. other sections for the December honor~.

'outo and one daughter, Mary,! ------ · ------

1 Centre Ltd. : (:\{r;. G~or::e Whitten) and five: l,fi'litar,r Surl'tclt 1 : grandchtldrcn. also one brother,! n n . c axton

! i William in Stephenville and I QUEBEC !CPI - I\! ore than ==================== l 90 CAMPBElt AVE. \sister, Molly in Boston. Funeral 2,500 army personnel and depend-Af h 'PHONE 6401 A todaY~> Monday, Oct. 26th., from ents are involved this weekend in

· ter ours I ttis late residence, 31 Cooks- a phase or the rotalio:1 of Cana· Recovering

Seaway Traffic Up

. . the 60 second

POLAROID~ Land CAMERA New wltll riMitfcillll INW tllatll Imarlne the fun and excitement of llllnr ftnl1hed plcturea juat 60 aec~

· ondl lfttr JOU ~nap the lhutterl · .FROM And what beautiful . plcturn the brand new pGMhr~m~ati~ Polaroid Land FHmarlve you) Pictures with 9 2 · detail• amallnJlf a harp and dear- $ .· .95 pldllrtl that Jaat juat like 01111 1\Jie print I Yo11 caa now ahto~~t In len Baht tll!ll ~~~ quutlon about U, ;. llirt'a·UM, Cll,l~tera .for yo11l • · • .__· · _. _, ____ _.

MacCORMAC'S GEAfl ST.

Dial 5181 • 2 • 3

town Rd. to the R. C. Basilica dian troops in Europe. The liner -for Req!J.iem :\lass at 9.30 a.m .. Empress of France docked here i\ lCP B k Cl O'ITAWA ICPl -with inierment at Belvedere. Friday with 648 army personnel. OTTA~. l - roo e ax- .· betwetn "May the Sacred Heart of Jesus and dependents. Included were! ton, e~at~man old dth~ Ca~f~a can mkeo~~fario of the h h · s 1 " 337 children The liner Arkadia is : Counctl, 1s reporte omg we n an a .

ave mercy on ts ou . to arrive tonight with 733. T~e i Peter Bent Brigha'!' Hospital. i:l renee Seaway this year, liner Carinthia was to pick up 5831 Boston w~re he 1s recovenng 30, was 116 per cen_t

FUNERAL NOTICE Friday night end the Empress of from an ~p~ration. The for'!'er in the c?rrespon_dmg P Fra:1ce is to sail Sur.day with 638. defence mtntsler entered hospatal last years sh1?~111g ported

The funeral of the late Ger- --~~--~~-- Oct, 13. seaway authonl} re

I aid Patrick Fur ton", will take Vet October 27th, 28th day. Downbound lhonna:el ~ ~ b . p~~~~~~~"~

·place this morning from his ancl 29th be your us rest th movemenls t h r o u g b Iii f th · 1 ' 'd 20 h · d f L North Dakota and Sou .,

! a er-m- aw s rest ence, s oppmg oys or tne year Dakota both were admitted to small SKT. L3·mnce canl.l ; McKay St. to the R.C. Basilica or VOWR's Annual Radio the Union· on the same date: total of two • wa~ cargo

I for High Requiem 1\lass at 10.30. Interment at B~lvedere. Auction. November 2, 1889. menls was fti per ctnt

Pound

Blanketing .

$1.60 POUND

AI CADI

GlASS • PLATE GLASS e SLIDING GLASS

DOORS e MIRRORS, All Sizes e BEST QUALITY

CALL FOR FRfE ESTIMATE

Aluminum Storm Doors Why not save on your fuel bill by installing an Aluminum Storm Door and in;'proving your property?

'

Aluminum Self-Storing Doors 2.8 x 6.8 ....................... $40.00

Aluminum Self-Storing Doors 2.6 x 6.6 ...................... ..$40.00

Wood Sash and Screen Doors 2.8 x 6.8 ........................ $15.5°

Wood Sash and Screen Doors 2.6 x 6.6 ........................ $15.00

Our Building Supplies Department can also supply Cement, Form Ties, w,dges, Wallboards, Roofings, Hinges, Cabinet Hardware,

any anything you may require for your home.

A. H. MURRAY & Co., Ltd. A. G. BARNES Ltd. BLACKMARSH ROAD DIAL 936to

' .

te Tc


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