TH~E D·.AIL¥ ·NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 ·...

16
'S of !Jist. rl). ·.,·atrr, C.B, ·Drcr l.!ke !1), ,·srale, :.B. (1 l. 1). l.-llapp; 'lrth Wr!l 'OR ENTS Girdles 1 front. tiGIES, :s !uced CHOICE E WEEKS ZAAR 1dland LE ANP iant Sandys Ottawa Thursday Sandys, British ministrr. Canadian 1113 ,. hale long • range ' 01 com· in Europe. ;aiel main wa• (nturc planning for Atlantic ,\llin•1CC, tole! a press confer· in 1\'ollld lil•c to re- rummitments on rontinr•ll-lour divi- a tnrtical air cln thing to upset t!lrrc 11rrc discussions . ;jbj1ct hut he rk!cllnrd to 1n•· clrta:l;. ·harr .airl Canada would on<ic'··r n partial with· rf it< in Europe- ' ' group ann a air clil'i;ir•l-if Britain it< military 5trenglh. t!l.11 nn mmcdlatc ;, · 1: sEw 1\'1:.\ross lorcr! r;:rr 1 won\c\ oot onb· art:n,, hi' nfhcr NATO · ht:t prrhal', mnrr on in· r;r•• "NlJlillls inlo thr SCA.RE to resume (I) anrl Halifax. !U!hed l '' o mcm bers of Official Federal lolidays .• D·.AIL¥ ·NEWS . \ . \ • • . ' ,, 1r tner. .s .-lnto rowe c oo yar, .. With. Jet. •' Collision 1·s Cause Casualties Of/Traged}r ·Undetermined ... VAN ,,"WYS, 1 Cal\f, (AP) - A whimpering and some calm, it." giant milner fell like a bomb into picked themseh•cs up. Some didn't The jet crashocd in La Tuna cait a scboolyarcl full of playilig chil- get up. Tocachcrs rushed 'out with yon to the east. · . drcn Thursday after colliding with blankets . to cover the iniurccl. On the school ground, sheets of a jet fighter plane at 20,000 feet An armada of ambulances took name spurted. horizontally ail the over populous San Fe man do Val·! the children to hospitals all over $2,000,000 sky giant, being tested ley. · I the valley. lor delivery lo Continoev1tal \ir· .Hours after the tragedy-it oc· 1 WORDS ClliLL LUiTE:-JERS lines, plunger! in. currcd 1n perfectly clear weath_er Meanwhile, tower operators at SDme children scorehed. and was· witnessed by airports these final chillin1! Smoldering clothing· and shoes, all over the surrounding Los An- words from the stricken DC - 7 scorched volley balls and other gclcs bnsin-the casualty toll still transport: equipme11t littered the ground. A was uncertain. ")1y God! We're going 1<1 hit. . . metal goalpost was bent from a The four men aboard the trans- "We're goin!Z ln. • , blow. There were great bole• port were killed. One of thoc two "Tell my wife. , ." ' the engines dug· in. · .. in the jet was killed. At one Then One child said of tbe crash: "It was killed and an esti- Tl1e jet survivor, Radarman Cur- like an earthquake." mated 45 or more n·eroe in.iured. Us A. Adams, 28, of the F-89 ';cor- The dead: Both planes were on test pion, parachuted i•1to nearby Glen- Aboard the transport: William There were nbont i5 boys in: dale. He said nt a hospital where Carr, 36, pilot, nf nearby Pacific frolicking on the ath.l he treated lor burn• and Palisades: Arc.hie Twitchell, ·50, Ietic of nearby Pacoima Jun. 50, co-pilot of nearby Northridge; lor School , the mon. · "We han just eompletcn the sec- Waldo B. Adams, 42, night engl. stcr .a1rhner, tra1hng smoke and o! thrco:! passes we were mak- i anrl Roy Nakazama, .29 ra· flames, smashe•l down. mg to test our radar. 1 saw some· 1 dio operator. The latter tiro are .' TI1e ch.ildren 1vcre over thing loom up the left side. ; . from Los Angeles. . hke tcnpms. Aller ·the f1rst !hock 1 was a crash. Pilot Curtiss A Adams 28 on ram c. a rain.ol of "We lost our cockpit a production test· fli;:ht 01;t of his of every Fire c11mr. in. There wasn't fintc hometown of Palmdale, rode the lnnd. A church and .<chool acrms1 to th),,k of anything - Cl'>:!r)'lhin;: iet to his death. Its crash caused the damaged, I was lire and We 15 small brush !ilv.!s which were Another school three blncl;s away! lowarrl the ground. I I quickly put out. was So were houses Cor I bailed out. I can't figure how we John Brann about 12 a milrs around. C<Jllided with that airliner. ir that's hoy, was dead on arri;·al at Sun Dazed, children, .1ome what it \I'M, •• I just can't !igurc. Valley Emergency Hospital. · . ' " .. . 1: .

Transcript of TH~E D·.AIL¥ ·NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 ·...

Page 1: TH~E D·.AIL¥ ·NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · D'Araeon 3500. 3 32 32 .:.r De Cour 5l!OO '57 !6 H · -1 . De cour wll !110 171>

'S of

!Jist. rl). ·.,·atrr, C.B, ~).

·Drcr l.!ke !1), ,·srale, Bri~us

:i~­:.B. (1 l. ~!cningit

1 ). l.-llapp; 'lrth Wr!l

'OR

ENTS Girdles

1 front. I

tiGIES, :s !uced

CHOICE E WEEKS

ZAAR 1dland

LE

ANP

iant Sandys Ottawa tCP~-T~lks Thursday

pun~~·~ Sandys, British ministrr. ~nd Canadian

1113,. hale ~ long • range ' 01 Canacb'~ militar~· com·

in Europe. • ;aiel main ~ubjcct

wa• (nturc planning for Atlantic ,\llin•1CC,

tole! a press confer· in 1\'ollld lil•c to re­

rummitments on rontinr•ll-lour divi-

a tnrtical air lorl'~-but cln ~n) thing to upset

i'.llianc~.

11 i~ t!lrrc 11rrc discussions . ;jbj1ct hut he rk!cllnrd to

1n•· clrta:l;. ·harr .airl Canada would on<ic'··r n partial with·

rf it< fMr~, in Europe­' ' bri~al!r group ann a

air clil'i;ir•l-if Britain it< military 5trenglh. 1d~rrl t!l.11 nn mmcdlatc ;, ,o,tr<unl~t~rl. · 1: sEw 1\'1:.\ross

..~;cti·•n ~>f ('~n~rfian lorcr! r;:rr1 won\c\ hin~r oot onb· ,·~;!lr art:n,, hi' nfhcr NATO · ht:t prrhal', mnrr on in·

~r r;r•• "NlJlillls inlo thr

SCA.RE

pr,•pnr~d to resume (I) ~luncton anrl Halifax. !U!hed l '' o mcm bers of

Official Federal lolidays

.•

TH~E D·.AIL¥ ·NEWS . \ .

\

• • . ' ,,

1r tner. a· .s .-lnto rowe c oo yar, .. With. Jet. •' Collision

1·s Cause Casualties

Of/Traged}r ·Undetermined .· ...

VAN ,,"WYS,1 Cal\f, (AP) - A whimpering and some calm, it." giant milner fell like a bomb into picked themseh•cs up. Some didn't The jet crashocd in La Tuna cait a scboolyarcl full of playilig chil- get up. Tocachcrs rushed 'out with yon to the east. · . drcn Thursday after colliding with blankets . to cover the iniurccl. On the school ground, sheets of a jet fighter plane at 20,000 feet An armada of ambulances took name spurted. horizontally ail the over populous San Fe man do Val·! the children to hospitals all over $2,000,000 sky giant, being tested ley. · I the valley. lor delivery lo Continoev1tal \ir·

.Hours after the tragedy-it oc· 1 WORDS ClliLL LUiTE:-JERS lines, plunger! in. currcd 1n perfectly clear weath_er Meanwhile, tower operators at SDme children w~re scorehed. and was· witnessed by l'~sidents airports h~ard these final chillin1! Smoldering clothing· and shoes, all over the surrounding Los An- words from the stricken DC - 7 scorched volley balls and other gclcs bnsin-the casualty toll still transport: equipme11t littered the ground. A was uncertain. ")1y God! We're going 1<1 hit. . . metal goalpost was bent from a

The four men aboard the trans- "We're goin!Z ln. • , blow. There were great bole• port were killed. One of thoc two "Tell my wife. , ." ' wh~re the engines dug· in. · .. in the jet was killed. At l~ast one Then sllen~. One child said of tbe crash: "It ~tudcnt was killed and an esti- Tl1e jet survivor, Radarman Cur- w~~ like an earthquake." mated 45 or more n·eroe in.iured. Us A. Adams, 28, of the F-89 ';cor- The dead:

Both planes were on test ijight~. pion, parachuted i•1to nearby Glen- Aboard the transport: William There were nbont i5 boys in: dale. He said nt a hospital where Carr, 36, pilot, nf nearby Pacific

~:rm suit~ frolicking on the ath.l he 11·a~ treated lor burn• and Palisades: Arc.hie Twitchell, ·50, Ietic f~cld of nearby Pacoima Jun. brui~es: 50, co-pilot of nearby Northridge; lor H1~h. School , ~~·hen the mon. · "We han just eompletcn the sec- Waldo B. Adams, 42, night engl. stcr .a1rhner, tra1hng smoke and ~nd o! thrco:! passes we were mak- i •1!:i~r. anrl Roy Nakazama, .29 ra· .~purl:og flames, smashe•l down. mg to test our radar. 1 saw some· 1 dio operator. The latter tiro are .' TI1e ch.ildren 1vcre b9~1·Jcd over thing loom up ~n the left side. ; . from Los Angeles. .

hke tcnpms. Aller ·the f1rst !hock

1

Titer~ was a crash. Pilot Curtiss A Adams 28 on ram c. a rain.ol fra~ments-bits of "We lost our cockpit canop~·- a production test· fli;:ht 01;t of his n~ummum. wrecka~e. of every Fire c11mr. in. There wasn't fintc hometown of Palmdale, rode the lnnd. A church and .<chool acrms1 to th),,k of anything - Cl'>:!r)'lhin;: iet to his death. Its crash caused the ~tree! w~re bad!~· damaged, I was lire and We wcr~ spinnin~ 15 small brush !ilv.!s which were Another school three blncl;s away! lowarrl the ground. I ~uess I quickly put out. was pcppcr~d. So were houses Cor I bailed out. I can't figure how we John Brann about 12 a sch~ol­milrs around. C<Jllided with that airliner. ir that's hoy, was dead on arri;·al at Sun

Dazed, ~hockecl children, .1ome what it \I'M, •• I just can't !igurc. Valley Emergency Hospital. ·

. ' " ..

~· . 1: .

Page 2: TH~E D·.AIL¥ ·NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · D'Araeon 3500. 3 32 32 .:.r De Cour 5l!OO '57 !6 H · -1 . De cour wll !110 171>

t I

Stock · Mark.et 'IOKONTO CLOIIIIO BTOCKI ., no C:anoljaa ,,... ,.._le lie"' J:••••np-hn. II

,. CQ\!Oiatlolll Ill eeats ualeoa marltod 1. ··,.~t-Odd •lot · xd-El«llvlclendo xr-E·rllbta

'w-E·warranta.) !let

, !lllek ll&ltl Rl1h LZTWCioaot"tt · llttk loki Hllh Low Clooa c:ll'a•

'liNER ' Abloleaft' 8533 H '53 H +1 Acad Uraa 1:1000 15\115 15 • Adi'OUte 1100 ~~~ ~ ti:U -10 AIIOII'I 2'75 191~ Ill> Ill~ '•

·i.., Alrom deb 111 stm 1131\ 113U l• : :. AIIOII'I wto 7S 1101> 10 101> \j • · Acellle 1:MM 740 780 Tll :15

Am Lar~.,. ~500 ~ 17 2 3\0 Am Sepho SOD 17~ . \70 17 -5

• Anlle'Dn :313 171 m 171 3 • ._: Ape• Re• 7110 Ill> 10\1 011 • :• Arcaclla 7SIO Ill 110 183

•: AriOn :::0 131\ 13\1 1+31> • :• Al101 Yk 1000 12 • 'l~ 12 - •>

Atlln·R.u.l :!3MDII 19 43 49 41--o AubeUa 1<11011 1% ll II

-Aumocllo 5511 3:! 30 :10 -3 .• Auma•uo 8700 II 16 16 -1 • 1111'111\ " 3f " :It ' .Banuo 1100 'Ill 87 TO t4

Barr E•pl mo 61 68 n llaoe Mtlala !@ 7~ 72 ?S ~ 2 Rallko ta!O ;r. 30 30 -1 B.Duq 5100 lSI l! .ll -~ B•a•· Lod so 39 35 . 39 7 Reicher 1830 80 1:3 175 + 1 BoL~Im 2000 W 22.\ 22.\ -5 B.-·cen 1\o:!Sl 3 1 3 nJcroll wla 6!0 130 15 125 -s Bjdcop ~ 40 33 40 I BDIIVIIII 67 II> 91o I - \0 llonMae 5511 10\'o 10 101~ Boua<ad uo 18\~ ~16 16 -I s..... 9"..50 12 106 0!1 2 Bralol'lll 2'75 39l ~ ~95 Brttund :!2011 lT 55 !7 1 Bro~~t n .. r :::~oo M 91 91 1 BNMIIUI 114300 17 15 1611 1 Bruoa~<>n 7l:.t l4 3 4 Bullacl 2000 0+'• lOt> lOt> + 1\ Buff Allk SOil 67 6'1 67 -3 Bull Cdn I~ IS ll 13 11u11 RL so m m m Burchell 7200 3<1 ~2 33 -l Camp Cltlb 7460 stm IO~i II \i Cdn Astoria SOD 18 18 II Cdn Dyno 125 203 :oo · :!0 -7 Cdn Thor 260 01> 1 1 -1 Canam 150 47 4S 47 +I Can·Erlft 7!.174 90 82 B'1 ~ Can-)lrt 7113! 375 3U 3l0 -20 C·)lel \\11 ICJIIO ~'81 265 Z6l -15 Car!boo SOD SO !0 ! Ccnl Pal ~273 18~ lBI 183 -1 Cenl Port• 100 10 10 10 -Chlb Jar am llO 3~ 32.1 -~ t:hib.Kay 60 43 I~ 41 ; 2 Chlb M 900 37l 310 310 -30 Chlb Expl 960 ~~ S& ll 3 Chima ~100 1 9!1 ~• -3 chrom 21 ;:go 290 29D Conlal"' 3900 ~10 ~3 29 -1 Conlaurum l 38 · 3!1 31 c 1\ttlek•n• 1200 38 33 :1510 'i c Callinan "00 :I ~ 21 - 1; I 1:on C Cad 2~00 IR 16 IR c lltnison u~: Sl!" 1'7~4 111 - H 1 1": Den "IS ~.ljU ~15 1!\0 A90 - 2J

.C Dlaro\·trY »1 320 Jt~ !\Zn .,. ~ c •·en m Jl 147 147 -3 ('Dft Otllleo ton IO 1 I (: . Guayana .10 2 :!1 2 -c tlatlt~·•n 33130 13 IOJ 1o.1 -3 Con Honl' li'O :Ill m :tl~

·-Con !\1 and s &27 SZS'i. :'114 :z614 - t4 c Morrlaon non 31 3o 31 3 C Moobtr mo SO · 50 SO 2 Con •ru• 76<1 21 :1 21 C l':orthland 190 ~I 90 91 1 C JIP<I Pop 3000 ~0 lft II c JlcJcourl 68:otl 166 !56 tfi -z Con Sud 22.12 27 60 67 -1 C Tuncattn 31M 3 ~ coa•·flt 1600 555 Sl(l sso Cop Co"' 9300 I U 93 1

Coi>'Man &.ISS 11 lT IT -1 CoprlDd 88 ~ 443 4SO Couleo 7200 91 88 90 -1 coumor 1000 IS 15 1J t I Creataur ·IU 10 10 10 croJno,. 6000 ;2 ::o z Cuoco 1499 2ll'o 2l 2!1 D'Araeon 3500. 3 32 32 .:.r De Cour 5l!OO '57 !6 H · -1

. De cour wll !110 171> 17\0 171> '>1 D .. r Horn 1600 28 2'111 23 DE!dona 1075 141> HI> 14' Djodem 7!00 17 U 17 tl Donald& !00 211 2ll :18 -1 Duvan 2600 5ll 55 5ll Eut lllal 1600 126 12.1 12l

· Eaat Sull 600 · 490 45 475 -1 Eut Met 1 !200 40 38 36 -1 Eaat Min ·373 330 310 34 -1 ,Eldrlch 430 1341':1 33 33 El Pon·Roy 7700 42 41 ~~ El Sol 273400 75 5(1 RR -8 Eureka 800 72 72 72 -2 l!xpl All 1500 36 36 :n - ,., 1 Falcon S70 ~39 :t!\i am ':1 t'araday . :2111 161 13~ 182 2 + f"we•l Tun1 3500 28 25 21 6 l'cd Kirk 000 17 17 17 ·-I Froblober 3175 29 28 ;'Ill -5 Golwln ma 32h 30 3~\1 - \I Gnlk•no 9811 121, 12 1~ -2 Gern )linn !\1) SU::Jo~ l!Hr J:i13 t~enex 1100 23 !!3 23 Giant !\Jaa 200 :.:2 :! :!~~ -.3\~ Glenn Uun ·UU :;& SJ· :i3 -~ Oold Ea11e 3~00 at; 8'1 m Oold Man lO 170 17 17 -5 GF Uran 30 2l 22 ~'2 -1 o rcYhk s,s 43 39\J 10 -<lulf Lead 2000 llll II 11 · - s; Gunnar 1147 11911 19 1911 + ~· g~~n~·~ wll 4~~~ 'Jlll W' Jo~> !tar·~ In 61100 33 36 36 lleadway 7000 9~ 00 u IIDih l:J/1 610 I~ lu' i lteva 10 1 tO 1U I I ltO)'It llu ~3.\ 52.1 :02!1 -1! , llud Bay 4GO 581 83\i 84 Jl.l lnd l.ake 730 ~\~ :!l :!.5li - H I ln•plrallun :tJ3.1 78 76 76 -4 1

tnt Nickel 780 S1DJ·'i JOJ<i IOJ'i - 'i lnl Ron 4100 ll 31l 31l -3 lrloh Cop 3 165 16l Jill -2 J Waite ~o 23 23 + 21 -3 Jacobu• 11800 82 • 80 AI -1 ,foyo Expl GRUO RZ 73 7.\ -5 •lllcoa B:!IDI 37 33 :t;t -2 Joll•t 1900 Sl 5! 5l Jonunltb 10000 18 16 16\2 -yJwes 9-118 82 78 78 -2 Korr Add JO<I IS7 17 17 Kllcmbc 18lO !:JO , 2.10 ~ 1\!lcm "·to 1!00 8 a R Kl'rk ~lin 4 16 106 106 -4 K l'k To"n 37!0 18 1R 18 ° J.abrador G6~ S20 19~~ 20 - ... ~1\ l.:~ko Cln ,,,a t2l t2l m -t •, L Duloull 1930 165 ISO 160 -2 t.. HlU 1U 7 7 7 • 3 1. Shore 10 46l ~~'() ·16l 3S l.a l.uz 100 33\ 333 331 LamaQue ::61 212 :42 :1: l.ome•a lllCO 11 10 10 l.nrodo •ts .\(1 Y !3 86 -4 · l..OU\"l<'l 1M 16b lfi\:1 131'J 12: ISnltttot l212l 60 M SR -4 i ~1ar•"• 110 • 182 181 a - 1 ~lorf 1 I• J'MOO 7 l~ 17 4 2\i · ~loliocn 07l 183 183 183 -2 I Mru~:net 11130 f'll\ 9 ~~., t- ~~ 1 ~lalnrtlc .~00 II~ 142 H2 Manro•t U r.()()Q :2 20 22 I Maro1:o Je'll SO lh ~~ + I !\hm~on ~11\l 1-l ll 13 - 1 )lorlllm• 16610 176 t7o 110 -7 I ~lab)bruo ~OJ 7 63 7 ~lclntn• t..i $71\ 76 . 'IR ~lcl;en .~oo :::111 231> 23\1 - 11 . ~lc~lar :ooo · H 1~ II li j ~lc\l'al MO a7 37 37 1 ~1tnt 1~t'O 29 2S\~ ~'9 1

. Merrill 7110.10 2NI IT 1?8 33 Meta Unn 650• 20 2 2 - li

Report. Mldrlm 470 '13; I~ 135 +1 IIIUllkon 29SOO 219 235 243 -2 Min Corp 85 $19 18!1 IBll Mtn End &tO 31 34 31 - 1 MIJt.Qre · (lOO 19 11 · 19 MoiUI 8800 185 156 Ill + 1 MuiU·M . 1000 92 • 92 92 -8 Nama Cr 32.10 115 81 IH -4 · Nat EXPI 3000 41 ~ 46 -1 ow Allor 3 17 16 16 - ,. ow Ath • 2&75 s:1 ·52 52 Now Cal 7100 41 40 40 -1 N Dicken 1400 1U 143 lf2 -1 N Fortune 1100 10\'o 9 9 - V. N Goldvuo 410 ::0 18 1:0 Now Hooco 22l0 !.1 :H ::.1 -3 New J11on 4000 17 15\1 151~ .:. V. N Koloro 3700 1711 17 17 Ncwhmd IGlOO 41 , 40 .~o -2 N Man 105 12'i 11 2.1 -1 N ~lind• 15150 52 4B lZ +3 N IIIJ'lam• MO 4 14 14 ·-I Newno~ 1000 10 10 10 +I> N 5en•tor 23 9 9 9 Nick Rim :1::.1 41 410 41G I Nlplsalnl 20 210 280 + :!30 me 5700 !6 3 AlN I> l1·cr Nlpjulns 20 210 :!80 280 Nor•Acme ~100 :HI 3l 35 + V. Noranda 210l Slm 51 Sl +I Norcotd 1.100 1J 13 14 -1 Noronetal 700 555 550 0 Norpax 1700 137 131 !3'1 Nonynr ::!00 4 U 4~ + 4 Nor Inca 1450 8 7 7\l - I>

.N Rank 12.\30 116 113 113 NorlhiP A27 8:1.\0 610 ~0 -1 Nudul :!60 37 !!if 3fi O'Brien 330 o !IS 60 +2 o:ama .~o 20 18 19

gt:.~:'" · tr2: • ~l ll •. -~~ ~~ Orenada 30 23 23 23 Ormaby SO 4 4 40 l'ac OOEut 2 I I I - I> Pnromaq 13!0 121> 12 12\'o 11 U Aa~estoa Pardee 1141 7 7! 72 -l U E•t•ll• l'at•r 615 5 2 3 + J U Mont l'nrmost !lll 21 :1> 21 + I> Upp Can Pioneer 14:! U 14 -1 0081190Q \'andoo 1'1ck C1~' ~~00 130 12.5 12l -s \'enturf'!l JJionrcr 2000 142 14tH 14 - ~ Vi co

.Piorer l3S $3 lnl 13 \i Vlolam l'r llord 300 9 8\1 811 Waite Am Pl'eoton 1~'70 m 7lO 7.1.1 W•edon Pronto 15.17 72& 1100 T~ +Jl \Verner Prul\to wta 60 290 283 :183 -ll W Molar Purdex o U tl 1! Wlllroy Quo Chlb IOEOO 138 152 157 -I Wlndard Quo Lltb 90 B 17 17 w, llart Que Lllh :75 915 92.1 9~S Yellorex · Q Met'l , 60 220 2l:i 215 -5 Yk Br-ar Qu•moht 1751 $171> 171\ 17\i - II Zenmoc Rnre E 28 8S 81 AI -3 Curb Rnyprock 632.1 Ill ts 48 -2 Dulolo 310 3!0 385 J90 -ID 1

R•xspa, 220 fit Sn l9 -4 r;oape Cop ·to 34 31 34 - m I

Rlx Alhab 600 63 63 63 + ~ l'alo 40 47 465 17 j : RocbP 10000 19'> IR IR -1 Yukon Con 100 58 !8 58 +2 I Rock.vln 2185 34 32 32 OILR St ~llch•el 3000 3 30 31 Arme 11 !00 181> IB\1 18!1 san Ant · so 6 6 R AJO< 1roo 8.1 en 81 ;5 Sand R!v ~o 13 13 13 --1 ,\P Con• z:!.i 3.1 33 3S Shctp Cr M 97 9'7 ~7 -l 1 Am Ltdur f.~9fi 53 ~1 ~:! Sherrill 23'iD 140 730 735 .,.. :o ,\nchor 2.Sf..O 19 17 l7H ~. 1'l: 811 !\tllln 160 ft.S p~ ~l ... :~ 1\n~::ln·Am ::8J.l S\.6'~ lti '61~ · ,_., 51 StnncS .2750 61 ~ ~~~ -~ D11tr.y SA 300 $18=i 18'• S"i - :. ~ S~rot' 1 16() ";.$ 71l 7n DanU Sl~O ~'Bl 279 :!EJ R 1 Stdco•a t:l!li'O 4 33 3! -2 Rat• 600 IZ II 1i ' 1 I Stan·att ~.too U 11 J:H'J 2'rt Ural1a 2'Ht 75 7:1 il -10 l Sltell n 1971 $19 1!1~\ 1~,, 1" ~.,. Ge~l;,1tR :!:100 l:i3 "' • u; t I Slur,,.on no 44 42 4~ - C3l Ed 23l SZ7 14 27~4 :;q sud Cont 1000 11 1 t:'ah·~n Con .i'l 410 4711 4i • • ~ SUII!\'an noo 38 38 3! J! C Oil J.d.• 1640 ISO 13 m + 5 ~urf Inlet so ~11 ~!> 9\i ~H•: t• Oil I, 1\ts l7B ~8 2Sl ~15 l Stanrock · 208 -130 423 423 1 CS Oil Ills 310 7S 75 7 S•h·anlte ::700 133 130 m s

1 Cdn Ad Ojl 3313 3l ll ll

Tandem 1600 I~ 11 1 + Cdn AU Oil l~l filO fil 6'-1 ' 15 Touro•n•l 673 4 38 40 +2 . C nr Emp n2 62 6~ 62 -I Tork•ll ~SIS 85 IG3 16l C Coll!er!e• •Zl !7 1 7 Trnu1~ :o 3M 383 M.' -lS C Deea wts 51DB 1011 100 1C'3 Thom L 502 107 lOS IOJ -1 Cdn De\' 8721 111 . 71 71 -I Tiara 29'70 31 29 Jl -1 C llomestd 30 1!1<1 181 I" Trih•l 11n 3fi :HI 36 c nuaky F..lO SIS\< IS ll\i + 'i I u ~llnlnr mo 22 ~m 2 + 1 c !Iusky "'ts sn 915 825 o:5

160 630 630 . 630 I ~0 17 li 17 f- !~ IG IS\1 Ill> ll\1 60 7U 6~ 70

• liDO 17\\ 17 7 - "· l6l S38 :11\4 38 !4

70 21 21 :!I 3500 80 l1l tm -1 >1~ SJ:Ii 2 ~

000 45 4~ 4S 7511 2 7 :u; :7 .q .)5() tz 1:.= 1:.1 ... H:

7SO :18 2:l0 ~ -1 60 19 17 19 . +2 i ~ 112 liZ 112

oon t:! 12 12 + n: 1

1843 57 5' 53 -:! 3500 32 21 31 +I

-with more power-m,re 11IJI,Usc/es"-• • .m-r~ ea~n1ng capacity-

lor all your heavy hauling . .

Now the. wraps are otT these great new GMC super-trucks-destined to hike your profits in the heaviest kind of work. ·

There's new cost-shrinking power right down the line. A big 220 h.p. Sb: delivers tremendous torque. A choice of VS's at 206, 210 and 232 h.p. There's· a 236 h.p. Diesel plus 1. sensational new Turbopower Diesel with a 2·cycle turbo· charging design that takes as much as 11 horsepower· right out of the ·air­from otherwise

. wasted exhaust flow! And th'at's'not all.

A OEN!IIAl MOTORS VALUI

. New axle and spring options* equip 'these haulers to handle bigger jobs •• ; and-there are bigger, surer brakes, too.

Many models now olfer a front en· gine PTO drive opti,on*-eliminating all need for an auxiliary engine: In fact, these GMC'S are engineered­from rims· to roof-to snap through bigger, tougher jobs-with less profit· consuming time out.

It's easy to see why these great new GMC tandems are

called Money-Makers. And your GMC dealer has the storv o~ ·• every one of them,

•(}JIIiou/ "' utr• eell. ·

l'dn PL 3915 2115 281 215 + I' \VI!IIslon o~ ~'7S ~'7l 7:. -50 C .madusaa 6RO 80 BO 8 Cttll Exl 77U 4ZJ 405 421 -!110 C>nt Led lO~ 7l0 725 7~5 ; IS C'onm 3~710 19 l:i 17 t l' l!>rdn•un 1000 21 ZJI.I 24 K\' C Dro1on 2M5 66 65 63 -3 C' :\larbf:'n 9JJ 35 Jl 35 -5 t: ~l!c Moe 3379 490 47S 47l +5 t':l-11 Peak 3C:IO 10 10 1 C:ec Oil 410 485 oWl m • 3 1 tr.l Rto ~2'! !ill ' S:!:i 533 10 IJ·I'nhner :11787 1!3 187 192 7 !lu \'OX 370 231-it 2:t 23\'• - I'J J'.uao 100 ::jo 3~0 3.i0· j · n~n+ Pet h. 3~0 53 53 53 1

n~' Plains 11:3 SlH4 4ll.j, .JJI~ ... ·~ I flo• Sw G 3700 t-47 13:i H7 + I lij:.:h Crest l.SO :u 31 31 "-~ Ji J.1wood :!OD 3'.! 32: 32 -1 · H'llme Oil A 1668 S1P~ uul 1134 + ~~ , Hume Oil B 763 SH ll1it 1\f. -... ~. !\roy pOll 5Gj0 10 ns 96 11 T.ih Prtc 50 2.1 24Z ·215 -1 ~taJol tran 4(){)() 9 9 9 .\lari~old llOO 32 3n 32 - ~ :>lcdnl "m 365 m 3SS 5 ~.1c1· Pelt' A01 St4:1i 14 14 \1! :\1!dcon 16~0 ;:~ 6i 7:1 4 • ~1;11 Cltl' 3JOO 30 :9 30 1 Sat Pr.tt- 200 :ljO 33 l.' l! ~ n Dum tlfi 2::1 :m 2 !'-: Chnmb :!30 Z3j :33 2-Jt

THE DAILY

Heavy Trading On Toronto Marliet

1 Bank Of Cana~a Rate Drops

OTTAWA (CPJ-The Canada interest rat

• 3,95 per cent th!s e TORONTO (CP). - The stock, the previous \I"Ck ll'ttk

-market extended 1ts allY an~ to \ The rat 1• t: d. tw tr 'gbt • Tb d e 5 IXe at

o s a1 ~ess10ns • urs ay ; or one. per cent abo\' a~ld the heavJest tradmg or the \ averaN treasury bile tl!e week. · · tfiis week wa · 3 1 ta~ ' Although the indices of the thrct . · 5 .70. major sections of the ' mar~t : -.----she~wed only minor gai!o'ls-western 1 1 -oils le,d the ~ise With a ga!n llf : Mai·kets At H< pomts-gams held a good rna· ; .

jority over losses across the I .l Gl board. The advances also ffiO\'ed I t\ ance In a wid-:!r range titan the de·: • • clines. : ~larkets At A Gl

For the seco\ld straight session. j By TilE CA!'\AD!As11~ relining oils, pipelines and west· i Toronto-~larket higbe 1 ern oils assumed the lead in the · ier trading, r I rally. Iron ore stocks il·el'~ the nlontreal - :\larket features in the mining sectic,,, higi;<(!r, with coppers showing a few good !\"ew York-Stocks gains. selling,

Trans 1\lom~tain was the featnre stock on the board, climbing 5q' points to 110 in active- trading. · Other pipelims were strong, too, Pembina added two points at 531

Provo Ga• 9700 212 20J 210 +I and lnterpml'inclal was ahead n I By THE CANADIA.'I ~;g~~~1(1 65~7 w~K ~~~~· .IJg~> point at 52. : lpternationa! noyallte ~2'J8 sm 18 '" Imperial Oil gained 1~~ points i Limited, 35 cents

fa':;~~~ P~ sf~ ~~~1' 1~;~> 1ll"' to 54% amco1g refining oils. B·A · l'JCord Feb. 11. Scurry 3100 m 283 zas -7 was up '!4 at 45;4, ! Canada and Domin'·· Secur Free ' mo 410 39l 40 +l d h d I c Ltd "'• spooner 400 2.1 • 23 2.1 Hudson Bay spurte a ea ll I o. ., 30 ctnts ~larch~ Trons Can 7100 200 188 m -·1 point at the close an)! gained H4

1 Feb. 8.

~~f~J'~W 1~i~0 8~3 M';s 16; 1 ; 1 pt>ints on the day at 84 to l~ad' Interprovneial Pipe un ojts .c.u1oo 211 1112 203 26 senior base metals. No::anda ad· I %ents CE ~larch 1, Wayne 221&S 78 7S 78 I 1 h'l t th I Sc th d "" w, Dec wt• 2100 79 7S 77 2 ded a point at 5-1 w I e mos o er Y es an ""·• ~an N':!fn J~ ~1 ~~ i• ! 1l seniors were rractic.ully hi,<:her. 25 cents preferred 31!1

curb ~terrill Island featured coppers,.J March 1, Ncord Feb ll BANK~ I rising. 38 C02nts to $1.98. Chibouga. Bailev SelbuM on'

~13nt ;1~ llili ;i~ ;i1; : !i · mau :\lining, however, lost 30

1

, Limited, pfd. 31\'< cents romm 4~ S4"• w; , 54'1 - 'I 1 cents to S3.40. record Feb. 15. trnp :15 SlSt> St, '• ' • h t... • 'I ilJ Ror•l 776 m '7o~ ;ot, , 11 ~ Acomc was one of t c ""st 1ron·. ·• acm an ar.d Bloel~ Tor·Dom _2G9, m•& ~m 471i i ore stocks, jumpi11g 30 cents to class B 20 cent! extra

Atumtnlum ~~~r7~;n1"~~m 1141> , •• · ~i.40. Pronto gained 3:i cenls to I record Feb. 8. Anoto NM 100 9'> s 9'• 9'~ - 'i : Si.20· among uraniums. ------c Brew 831 s~m 21'1 24~• - ;, -·-------------·-- : u s D ll IJ Ste .. l 90" !;2J ,. :!I • :!!T' 1" Cd!l Rrew :!4~4 noy:\1 Dank it I 0 ar ~or Star ~l :.L • ., ~: • •• \I - ,• C'dn Cttan 1.~ no)'alltt 1~ ; • • Sim'lon!l r.o $2'0.• _o ... :;o • - ,., c· r1t~m 8,a ~t 1. c(lr Ji=,, Stedm•n 1!5 ,'II> 21\'J ;49\'a r.pn · 31'1 Sha..-ln '"' i ~IO:>."''REAI, (CP) _ "' Walktrl 331 , 69 69 " r.ocl,~hult ""J.:. Steel AA , •r.t

!iea:ram• 3;,~ i1n st••l '" · dollar Thur!day dond al n Brid•• ~·• W•1k•• ~9 C()ilnt of 4\lo per ~ent b Dom Tar 1:•> . CASAIIIAX f C d' fu J

~~ l'oncord HiOO ~G 30 JG ~ C'onl r,oo 61 6 6 T"t:tl u1es on Taranto Stock Exchanae. :-.i Davit"!' :;o !''2 :?.2b; 2.1•.~ - ~~ \ Jan. :u: 4.M7.ooo ~ha~~ ••

!'oundotion ~til Coo• Pa • ~7 0 ~na tan DC!, Up ~~~ Fru•r 3011 Ford .03 sterho1g $2.68 5·16, up \1

:SF.IT TORI\ CLOSIX fiTOCKS • JJort• \\:01\rntr -'2 • !\1rmh• W ~:? C and o f).j:s, ~"Y Cent •• 1~~ Con~ Edh:on 4l'.l Radio Co.- 33\? El Auto L 3~ Sid Oil NJ 51!• Gen Elec 53'i Utd Aircraft 83 I GoOdr••r , 7511 Vanadium tl l LONDON (AP)-Bo·~al!!

'. Gt :\'or fi)' 4-1 Westng•• 54''1' Corp Ltd closed 45" lnt T and T 31\0 • • '•

~ Superior lCO !?15 215 :!15 -4 :\IO:STREA.t, CLOSING STOCKS !':or1hcal ~ 1&5D 70 69 70 1 Br Tbe Canadltn rreu :'\COils 13111 ·"0 so 3 -K• 1 Abitibi 3Z Gt 1.akeo .83• "" :>co pr 2Z m 37 :t7 Dank Mont 521> Hud Dal' ~ltn 831> ,;orthld J&S!) fiO .~9 60 Bank !-:S JB Im C]il .'H Ojl Select 300CO 8 17 1 , 7 HOQUe C Nat 42 lnl Nick 1031: . nl:alta. 210 27.i :2i3 :;3 Bell 4:S\;: tnt Pa !ri l'ac l'•l• IZIS ~18 17 18 " s; Brazil Bli Tnt P•le ;16'1 , Permo pa· 9'2.330 :t:zo 293 320 .,. :Z7 Bld5t Prod. 30'1' Mass.Har fi~~ l'•ruv Olh 2<1011 l2 llo ISO C Cem•nt ~ _)lcColl ~!'·.' Petrol ,- 16100 113 :to 1 + C Ste:mtshj :11'' ~ori\nda J.

14

l'rolrel 011 ~o 463 430 m , 30 C Dok Com lilt Prlc• 51

Bowater Stoc~

TERRA NOV A .MOTORS, .LIMITED . · ..

I '

'. ' . . REAR NEWFOUNDtAr.ID HOTEL

I o '• o

ST. JOH

ran

BADGEH-•\ \'Ci'j Ull uccurrc ~~ lu•t e II

somclhin;; tl;at seen her'! lor a C:t

years 11· a noHcd \That is c1 catuc

hal'e nt•L IJccn tuwr. ·itsctit. Hall through t!u: su eel

One puul' :Jumiil• '' as its co!.sins. ,\: ncar · the rcsil

ulcDo:JaiJ h t'raucc

immcdh!!cly ca Jerry'~ attcnliu1

that a wild rabb garden.

grabbed . up : out of \hi' hl'USc the rabbit f'nr ;

nip and turk wn~ v Jerry bein<l a m: doors ~ntripatcd

move ann ~~ it under a siPO Jen

and hit it With t McDonald's hlad r: nighL

cause of t!7f.' wild advanl~ge M tl

to be t\ur to o£ snow ann sc this area is c:s

MEW~

Cloudy With sn

I S. FRIDAY, Fl

unrise su·nrls ..... e ..

Page 3: TH~E D·.AIL¥ ·NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · D'Araeon 3500. 3 32 32 .:.r De Cour 5l!OO '57 !6 H · -1 . De cour wll !110 171>

I '

L

Canada ~s l-The B ·rate dro ~ s week 1~ •k ra111 .. ed at abo1·e lh ~ bill l'a~ 3.70.

At

Dominion ts Marth 1,

Pipe h 1, Co., erred 't! Feb, m Oil t ;~ cents '·

Jollar (CP) - The r ~lo~ed at a oer ~ent in ltl!, Up 1·32, ·16, Up li,

~. I

/

' /.

ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND

ran

I

·I

Dllily. ·News FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, .19~7

onvicte ans aug ter. ----'---_______ ___;_lc_e_:__br-ea---'-k-er _______ Jury Bring.s Ba

COLOSEL ROBERT W. GATES, 6614th Air Transport Group Commander, tells Rotarian; about aircraft operations in the Arctic and the area's effect on men a:.1l mal'itincs. (Sec stor;.• with accompanying topi~al article on Page Seven),

I

Wild

Is Jammed!. Reduced Verdic . Icc conditions on the northern

shore of Newfoundland arc so heavy that the icebreaker Sorel, which !crt Port aux Basques with supplies for northern ports, had to turn back and when last re­port2d wns caught In heavy· icc ju~t of! Bonne Bay and was unable to proceed.

After 3 Hour$

The ship was ordered back to North Sydney on Monday to be of assistance there for ctearang· the po~t hut up to yesterday afternoon was stlli unable to get free.

Supplies ol fuel oll and water arc running short on the Sorel and the ship will tr~· to get into Corner Brook for supplies before proceeding to North S)'dncy,.

Frank Johnson of Bell Island was found guilty of manslaughter last night at 12.15 when the jury return· ed to give ·their verdict after.three hours' delibera­tion.

The courtroom, which was crowded all day, was still full at midnight as me.n and women ~'·aited io Iiear the verdict.

Johnson received the verdict without changing PEPPERRELL AFB.-Raymond Oake (center) Top- expression as h~ ~tood in the lll'isoner's box which sail Road, received a $70.00 suggestion award from was guarded on each cml by a red coated R.C.M:.P. Pepperrell's Air Base Group Commander, Col. R. B. constable. Charron, while Walter V. Holloway, 2B Prescott St., The prisoner \vas remanded until 10 a.m. on KIPAWO MAY BE :·eceives a Sl?·?O aw~rd. Bot? money making ideas Wednesday, February 6th., for sentence.

. 1mproved cfftcJency m tbe Atr Installations Depart- MORNING SESSION t 1 th · When the morning session of

ABLE To REACH , . men w 1ere ey are employed.-USAF-NEAC Photo . the fourth day opened yesterday 1 lhe accused was on the stand and · GRENFrLL MISSION told the story o! getting tonic COVE THIS P.M. .:;; : wine and how he drank part o! six

bolt les with four companions. He

P •d • v · l h~d nothing to drink apart from With their eye on the weather rovl I·Dg I cata·onal i the tonic wine, he thought. but forecast which promises a milder 1 couldn't ~ay lor sure.

temperature today with a shifting A!kcd how he fell at the time wind, the Newfoundland Trans· he replied, "Pretty rult." And· ask· portation Compan)' hopes to be ·r • • F E k• ed how the others seemed, he said, able to resume the Bell Island· I raInIng 0 r s I m 0 s "Think I hey were about the same. Portugal Cove ferry service ln the : Gus )Jurphy was pretty drunk." afternoon. ' . . · He left Reardon's sometime ihat

)Jr. Cam McLeltan told the Fave Eskm~o bo)'s are now at the tiale equipment will require the 1 night between 8 and 8.30, he said.

lL" .. .,llits Run aclger~ ·Only One-

Through Is Slain

DAILY NEWS last night that the Grcnf_eli ~!assion! St. Anthony constant attention or skilled rna- Asked where he was goin" he re· Kipawo will make a trip or· two studya.ng phnnbang, carpentry, chinisls and it is hoped the slu· plied, "I was going do1vn~' to Bill to Brigus in the morning and later, cle~tra'; and, other forms of manu~! dents now being trained at St. l'tke's. I used to drink with him in the day will try to get to Portu·i tramhle. 1 he . cxp_cnsc~ ol thas Anthony will make it possible lor all the time." He said that about t':t ;, . ' nal Col'c H the ice has broken up. course o( educatiOn as bcang taken II~ is work to be done by the Es· 15 men regularly 1•isited Pike's .:;a,- :~ j · . b Yesterday the Kipawo made 'I c~rc of£ by t~c Grenfell Associa· k1mos themselves. home and i\lr. Pike used to pro- : ; ;it: ' three trips from Brigus anrl back lao~ .or ~mcnca, and when the The staff of· the Grenfell work· l'ide the liquor. He had no money . ",' .'! , and the trips to Bell Island were lr~amn~ IS completed the students shops who are responsible for the for liquor of his own, the accused I'JtAXK JOIIl\'SON 1 • i 1·.' ' !.IDGI:II-.1 ,·,·~·~ unu~unl in·.-----------------------

!~~~~:~ht\:::•.·:~·a~~~~~~~~:~~~~~ ~Ice Delays Effort To fairly heal')' (reightwise. wall return I~ the Labrador Coast maintenances ol many mission said. ! .1 ~ . :

1

whcr~ the skalls they ha1·c acq~ir· buildings on U1e coast as well as Asked why he went to se~ Pike' U:<ing a pie! nrc of the house~ I · . :: ; 1 1

~d wall most uscfuliF ~e applied the actual construction of most of that night, he said, "1 wanted to: in the aa·ea the accused pointec '• 1,; 1 • ·:

m and aa·ound the ~UIIdangs on the them, ~specialty the hospitals at have a lew drinks, i£ he harl it, lout lo the court the way he tool:i l:' · ';: · r.oast concerned watiJ the health 11arrington and Nain. both of and talk to him, he wa~ 'alone." Jlrom Reardon's to Pike's bacll,j!; 1

: !'i ' year• "'uaulJc(t 111tu uua·, • . l AnllUall\'feeti'IlO' • t anaL 1; c1catucs ul Uus i lf.

; · ha',~,c::·:.· ~~~~ll~~~c~\~:~; Refloat Cabot Stra· ·It ·~~Nfid L d 0 and wclla~e of the Eskimo people. which were built according to. the "Were the few drinks the most door and told how he went to thtf,),: : ' 1 . The mamtcnance or _these lluild· i requirements ol the Federal GO\'· important thing in. your mind," the I door and knocked and then tookec ; j; : :.1 . : 1

• t:lrough 1!11; Slll'CIS or Ball· ~ an angs, such as the. hospatai recently ern men!, and these. men a_re suit· tounsel. asked. J:Ie replied, "l was through the window and ;aw Gu; ;i! · 11 1 I . ccmplcl~ at Nam, ~t a. cost of ab!e to follow the mslructmns rc· good fncnds w1th the man and I :\lurphy asleep on the floor. "l . ·: . 1 ; : I

. One puur :mna,ll• was not so · . 1 S A. h its CU'••im. ;\s it raced The Cabot Strait, whach ran and she was mol'~d 120 (cct. Slob ' urveyors ssoc ·. about $~00,000.00 wath 1ts up to quared because of their knowledge ;1·anted to hal'c a few drinks and took him to· be a>lcep." 1.: '·: • 1 I a

\ · of Labrador conditions. a talk with him." ) (Continued on page 14) ~ 1 • ' I · ncar the a·estdencc or aground on a sand bar at Big Bara. ace has formed raght in the bight •

)lc!Jo!laiJ his eagle hols o.n the .~arly ~o~nlng o! where tl,tc ship ts stranded and The Annual MccUne of the As· d•n1~hlr•1' Frances s)Joltcd Jan~aaay 17th an a _bhndmg snow with !he bay outside practically sociation of NeiY(oundland Land inuucdi~!cty called her I slot m, is still In no amm~clinlc .cJan- filled with, Icc the tug, which was surveyors was held on Tucsd~y, Jmy', allcnlion to the I ger ir~m hca1•y seas but sall·agc on hand to carry'out the work, had January 22rid, 1957. The Reports

that a .ri!d 1 abblt was in j opea·ahons to rc£1oat the ship hal'c to gi"e up temporarily. The ship ol the President, Secretary and ,arden ' b~en discontinued. Is still on the sand bar but ihc the Chairman ol the Examining

gr~blJcd up a broom;' 'fhe reports from Port a.ux Bas- operations on Wednesday and Board were presented and adopt· aut ol •iw hl·Usc and took : qu~s arc not ·too cncouragmg, the Thursday nights moved the ship ed. the rab; 't r'nr a while it mP.nagcment or t_iac Canadian Na· out and lined her up a little. A short historical address was

Ice: At Sydney, . .

CNR Boats Go To Louisburg

:lip and u:~, wll~ ~auld win Ilona I Railways said )'esterdny, 1· The highest tide, on which the gll·cn by Dean Carew ol the Mem· J • b ·, ., f h' During the past two night~ ef. refloating was planned to take orlal University and a dissertation Ice was reported yesterday In dtrrl e1;1•. u mdan bo t .c furls to refloat the ship were made plare ·was on Wednesday night on certain legal aspects o£ Survey· the Gulf of St. Lawrence from J'ust oars 1n .. l·ap:1tc unny s • '

more ann ;.s it ran out ing by Mr. D. W. K. Dawe, Q.C. side N,orth Sydney, near Low under a n..n JcaTy stepped T T T • T The election of ,officers for 1957 Point to Paul's Island, and extcnd-a~d hit il wil~ the broom. emporary WO nps 0 was held and resulted as follows: lng out Into the Gulf. llcDonald'• hill! rabbit soup Prcsident-T. H. Winter. The Canadian National Railway night. Director Bell Island VIce President - T. 0. Woods, ships Burgeo and Bonavista have cause of t~r wild creatures Corner Brook. been sent to Louisburg and there ad1·anHgc nf the town Is Secretary-James Canning. is a possibility of all the gulf ships

to h" ... 1,1, t~ lite llCUI'Y '·· Mr. Cecil ll, Hannah o£ Cana· \ h tl d Counclllors-J. H. Burridge, A. having to usc Louisburg instead of - ' ,. dl R d c H d ' e cppter m~ e two trips to . R G P t s F N th s d ·r . d't' · ol snow .~ 11 ~ scl'crc frost an c .ross ca quarters at Bell Island yesterday. On its llrst R Penney,. • . a crson, . ·. or y ncy 1 1cc con 1 aons get

lh' . I Toronto, arraved. in St. John's yes· i Willett, E. W. Cumby, Grand Falls. much worse. ·' ' 15 area IS rxpcrlcnctng 1' tcrday to replace Mr. David Deck· Clight l\lr. nd Mrs. H. P. Dickey On adjournment of the meeting, The S.S. Burgeo went to Louis-

er, Commissioner (or Newfound· were transported home. ·on ills a presentation of a silver caribou burg on Wednesday and sailed land, who has been appointed, second trip the aircraft was on a was made to W. F. Canning the !~om there to Port aux Basques

t Fl're temporarily, to the post as dircc. ~~~gy dmlss~~n ~~d Mba·ousdht ~1the retiring President. yesterday. tor o£ refugee camps In the Nether· ' aug cr 0 r. an • rs.

B l lands. • I C. Penney to hospital In St. John's. . Thr Bona vista, ~·laich l~lt Port e I Island .. :\lr. Decker's appointment was .The flights 1\:ere made _because TO APPEAR TOntO~RO\V aux B&£CJUCS yesterday, ~·111 prob- PEPPERRELL AFB-Presenting I suggestion awards totalling $72.00, Colonel ' · , announced last week end and he! the ferry ser\'lce was dasruptcd The Bell Island Page wall appear' :~hly have to go to Lomsburg to d I 1 - 1· fl 1 · 1 t) G aid Heale'"

.\fire on n~n bland 1-cstCL·day 'will leave here at the end or next' ~Y the lee at Portugal Col'e, mak-1in ttmm·row'.l DAILY NEWS. Cop)' laud her pas•en~ers and freight, J G. S. Bond, Base Comman er, congratu a es I e 0 ng 1 cr · . •' l'li;ht llruthcrs' restaurant week to take up his work In H~t-1 ms It necessary (or the Klpawo to [wa3 receil'ed yesterday via Brigus tne Railwa)' reported )'CSierday al· I }.2 Henry Street, and Michael J. Delahunty, 27 New Cove Road, as t~lclr sup-

Squ~rc. Some modern la~d for Canadian Red Cross. Dur-1 f!.o to Brlgus, I an~ I he ferry Klpawo. 1.crnPryn. . ervisors, Lt. Col. Raymond H. Baker, Base Comptroller, and Captam D. T • . . t,qutjlmrnt had been In· htg the past two months he has 1 R · d d Ch.ld 1 • d . • Blose indicate their approval.-(USAF· NEAC Photo). · m ·he pa;t 1·car or two been in charge of Canadian Red t A s t • =~~~;;;;;;~;;~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill . !~ss ll'il! he a SCI'erc one. Cross work for Hungarian re- e ar e ' I ren s I '. 0 c I e y

. !~:urancr ••·as carried on the fugees at thP Canadian Red Cross .

C•ot~ ,, .... ~. DOing Worthwhile . Beneficial .. Work

MEWS

·PUT YOUR. BEST

LOOK fGRWARD Gain the 'poise that comes when you know you look your best. ·

A well cleaned suit, well pressed will help you mak! that good impression, import· ant to success, Always send us your garments for expert' dry cleaning, sharp, lo.ng

· Jasting press. Call us to-day for pickup.

!)(PERT

DRY UEAntUG

DIAl 9~1115·

WEA rHER FORECAST Cloud)· 11 ilh sno.w flurries. High today 28.

1-IEWFOUNDLAND SKIES Sut~ID,\Y, •• EBRUARY 1 High TIDES

nr1•e 818 Sunri;e" ...... 7.28 a.m. • a.m. • · . .. .. .. 5.02. p.m. 8.46 p.m.

LoW 2.15 a.m. 2.31 p.m.

. TEMPERATURE T MID. oronto

llantrca .. .. .. .. . 20 Slint J~h .. .. .. . 10

lill·l'l.d n ·:... ell

Mar. :12 32 M

. 'MID. I •

Halifax . .. . .. .. • 6 Yarmouth ...... 6

, St. ~ohn's .. .. .. lb

/

Mar. 34 36 18

New School ·Opening At . Corner· , Brook The st~ady progress of the re· 1 to the gathering, .discussed the in· find special enjoyment for short

larded children's aid movement In adequacy. of present school quar· periods In water activity. this Province was emphasized on ters1 esp~cially at this time (rom · A number or Items of regular Wednesday night when Mr. John the stan.dpolnt or heating. There business were dealt with at the Pike, President of the St. John's are many ·other drawbacks to. the meetin~. including the reading or Branch, told memhcrs at lhelr building now .being used for both lhe Treasurer's Report. '!he Pres!· rrgular monthly meeting that a junior pupils and the older boys, dent toc·k the opportunily to an·

I Branch ol the Society has now including the lack of any recrca· nouncc the Va Ientine Afternoon

I been established al Corner Brook tiona! facilities, and lh~ members Tea and Pantry Stall, which t~r. and he understands R ~chool will o£ the executive are giving 'con· Parent Teachers Association are he opened there shortly. This will sideration to 'the acquisition of a hrilrlin~ in Gcoa·ge Street Lecture

I makr. a total or lour schools in building to house all the Socact)·'s Hall on February 13th. Tickets for operation ln NewfoulJdland and activitic~. A building more ~uited this event are available from any l'rllrescnts a noteworthy accom· to the work will hal'e to be ohlain· Society member, or any member plishmcnt. There i.~. however, much td soon and such mailers as ways, ol the Parent Teachcr.l group. to be done before anylhing like means and cost ol operation are Wednesday night's meeting was adcqu~te facilities can he made unrter review. brought to a close with. lhe usual availr;ble lQr the large number or i Arrangements are beinG made refreshments scn·ed by the Tues· chll~··~n who need specialized wlth the Kinsmen's Club to hal'e I day Workers. The next meeting of trainir~. a swimming class· for those chit· the Society wilt be held pn Febru·

As a result or representations drcn who . are able to participate. I ary 27th and will be announced by made to the Department of Health, Some mentally retarded children press and radio, as. usual. Cree dental care wlll, In future, he supplli!d to all retarded chll· dren attendlllfl schools. · TRAINING FOR TEACHERS Safety

To Asks Us Council

Be Alert And Careful The Society has made appllca·

lion for the admission· of two teachers at i · school In England where a course lor special training In connection with working with "Death · and destruction have mo;t of the cause Is just plain retarded • hildren Is given · under been walking our streets with re· carelessness, and the lack ol or· the auspices of the National Men· newed force during January. Fires Jinary sensible precautions that tal Hralth Assoclatiorr. The se!ec· have been menacing our homes should be laken. This is so evi· tlor. of the proper· persons to send and accidental death has been dent to ali of us by casual observ· to .England to take thls .course Is striking through the ice of our ance as we go about our dally liv· now !Jcmg made. The advantages streams and ponds The accident ing that it has no need of being of having specially trained ·person· toll has risen to new heights since borne out by statistics. Practically nel will be great and will, in· tfll}e, the start of the year," said Arthur all accldcnts·are avoidable by care make possible the care .and teach· Johnson, President of the Safety on somcone's part, and the Safety lng of 'more children ialong the Council, yesterday. . . Council is urging all citizens t'o be most approved lines. . "The ley streets and the cold alert and see if we cannot, partie·

QUARTERS INADEQUATE weather's forcing Df . stDve~ and ularly at this season, all do our Mrs. A. B. Perlin, Convenor of furnace! have bec.n a .contributing share in ·cut{ing down. our terrible

the Sch~ols Committee, in a report (actor in the acctdent· rate .. But toll or accidents."

FASHION

FABRICS for

•SUPCOYERS • UPHOLSTERY • DRAPERIES

ALL.

LESS 20%

FLORAL PATIERNS- REMNANTS For Cushions, etc.

FLORAL 'N' SCENIC PRINTED DRAPERY Reg. 90c .................................. NOW 72' yard

Reg. 1 .• 25 ·; ...................... NOW 1.00 yard . '

Reg, 1.75 ........................ NOW 1.40 yard

:a·i , ..

Page 4: TH~E D·.AIL¥ ·NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · D'Araeon 3500. 3 32 32 .:.r De Cour 5l!OO '57 !6 H · -1 . De cour wll !110 171>

i •i

: ..

~

. .. I

Y, FEBRUARY \

·-~-----"'--·---- -----~

THE DAILY ·NEWS In The News ''Spare a Little Somethin' to Aid Suppression?"

Newfoundland's Only Morning Paper

\::EA'ni.Y i>ull~iCIUPTION RATES

C:1.nada .................. $10.00 per annum United Klngctom, and all

Foreign Countries ..... $14.00 per annum Authorized as second class mail Post Office

Department, Ottawa,

The DAILY NEWS Is a mornlnl paper cstabllsh.:d In 1894, and published at th~ ~CII'fi Building, 355-35~ Duckworth l"ltreet; :.t. John's, Newfoundland, by • Robinson • t:cmpany: Limited.

jltE~IBER OF TBE CANADlAN PRESS The Canadian Press is exclus!l•ely cntltlnd

.:: the use for repiibllcaUon of all new• lespa tcbes In this paper crcdlt.ed to It or to l he Associated Press or Reuters and abo the nc~l news published therein.

All Press aervlce and feature arUcl~• In tills paper are copyright and their reproductloo Is prohibited.

• I I

Member Audit Bureau or Circulations.

By WAYFARER

TUT, TUT, MR. CARTER Jlal'ing had frequent eau~e to

My a few kind words about the opinion~ that ·Cites Cart~r has often exprcs!ed 11lth' notable forthrightness in the House o( Commons, we have been surprls· ~d h)' his opposition to fedcrnl ~id for elementary and high school education.

• • •

peel of Mr. Cat ter'! opposition to federal ~rants for provincial ed,tcation. It !cr.ms to be the only argument he has used to support Ius opposition .

• • •

----------------------------------------------------------------

He was commenting on a pri· vale member's resolution asking the Government to consider the need to take steps to expand and equalize educational opportunity by giving financial help to the provinces without Infringing on their autonomy In matters of education.

The fear of federal encroach· ment on prol'mcial autonomy is a bugbcur that is sr.t up as an emotional block against pro­gressive policies. 'l'hc essential fact to be considered Is that every Canadian child has the right to what has been called a foundation education. If a province, for want of means, is unable to supply that need, it becomes a federal obligation to provide the necessary aid. No Canadian cllizen should be denied his birthright by the fact that he was born and lives in one of the poorer prov· inccs.

• • • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1957 Mr. Corter admitted that the

burden wns. too heavy for the right up against it. The Toronto paper poorer provinces. On the other Supports President

' Jn a notable spirit of bipartisanship which is an · expre~sion of a remarkable confidence in President Eisenhower, the House of Representatives has \'Oted over· whelming!,\· to give him the power to send American armed forces Into the Middle East to counter open So\'ict aggre;sion.

111t is taken for granted that the Senate ::will concur. The Eisenhower Doctrine I for the llliddle East is, therefore, destined I. SOOn lo become a new fOI'Ce 'in t1tnt

11, troubled part of the ·world. ; In the case of Communist aggression in /,Korea. President Truman consulted with

I. Congressional leade11. but was compelled I to talte steps to help the South Koreans

I on his own initiati\·e although with the 1· reasonable as>:mrancc that Congress would

1 i!ppro,·c. But the need of procuring lcgi~lati\'e eonsent for the use of the arm­

,1 erl force;; h<ls been in prindple an im-11 ped1mcnt to the s\\'ift counterstrolte that

i:.; e~scnl~al lodal'. Not nil mcmberJ of I '

, 1, the C6ngrcss like the id'cn of puttin~ i1 :<1\'Ccping powers to commit American it force,; into lhc h:mcb of the Chief Ex· l>t~'cuti' c. 8111 H realistic apprabal of the

1 j1 !'·ol'!rl situation ha~; been t!lC detenmning 1· fildor.

; : The mtpl!t'tant l'Jllestion, one~ the ·Senate ha~ .tpnrm·ecl and the Prcbident 1 ha~ s1gned I he lJtll. i~ whether it will fullv 111wct lhc need. The United State~ mu~t ' fill the \"ilt'ttttlll created b~· the withdraw-

111 of Bril<lin and l•'i'Wlce from Suez. The :Arab states hare In be brou:::ht to a rcn­: sonablc fl.ti11C of mmcl. The,\' have to '· fm·gcl I heir hatred of )SI'ael in the face 1 of the gra\'e menace of Soviet infiltration land occupa lion. l'vluch depends al the 1 moment on the result of the talks between

, ; l\Ir. Eiscnho\\'er .and King Saud and the

!i influence the latter will be able to exert o\'er his Arab neighbours,

I '

' Prime Minister's Birthday j: This is a great day in the life of Louis. ::Stephen St. Laurent for the Prime Min­'1 ister of Cnnnda will become todav a hole :and sprightly seventy-five. And while

· the .attainment nf a health,\· nlcl age is not in these times to be con~idered a remark· able feat in ibelf, it is wo1'lhv of verv ~pecial notl• \\'hen the \\'1!(11'~1' of t hi·~, honourable b,ulge i.-; the adi\'e head of a go1·ernment about to lead his party into a new genc1al election.

M1·. St. L;nu·rml, the son o[ n F'rench d1<111 father and an Irish mothct· re-

' <~ eha!'Hl'ICI' whir:h is A happ~· blend-of hot h t lw~e J::l'CiH rar·es. · Hi~ pnliticnl

, . ..,,,.,,nr owe-; 1helf lo llllr. of illr. i\·lackernie :; h11pp1cst in:;pirnt1nn~. ln this suc­

·ce5sful l~u~bcc col')mrat ion law.ver, King s;~w the irleal SliC"cessor to Ernest Lnpomte

the French Cl'lnacli7!n capable of keep­ing the Libe1·als in power.

J\11'. St. Laurent wafi 59 when he for­sook the quiet pnths of the law to become t1 pulitici:111. He was :m in~tant succe~s. :tnd wa~ wide!~· <lc'claimccl when he fol­lowed i\la~.:kcn;-:ic King il~ Prime Min­ister in 0!ovcmber, 11l4fl, Toclav the Lib­

Is tcg,ll'd him·as the indi'PCI~'i<thlc mall he hm; himself shown no reluctance,

esp1tc his ~·r.m·;;, to continue in ol fa:e tlnd (ICCCpl the nnCI'IJIIS duties of n

l'enuou,.; cledion c·ampaign. I

We me con\'inr:ed, howu\'Cl', that

says: hand, he saw great dangers In "Th · fl t' d • th 1' 1 t federal ald. And so he came to

e m a JOnary anger, m e tg l the conclusion that there was no of these economic prospects, offers him no - positive answe~ to a prohlern excuse for 'the pre-election tax cuts which where the chotec was bctwe;n . . . . two ev1ls. The problem, he saHl,

fmunce mm1sters always like to make. had to be solved. somehow in He'll ha\'e to play It the hard way and spite of 11 ryat e\'cr dangers or hope for th<> reward of virtue." l'lSits were lRVoJved lmt apparent-

• , " . . !)· not through federal ald. It Is virtue. however. IS generally 1ts own possible he hns been quoted out

reward and that is hardly enough for a of context and thereby wrong. finance minister on the eve of an im- cd. Otherw.ise, we fear. much or

J • what he sa1d sounds like a Jot or portant general election. double-talk.

It may be true that ·a Government · • • • d But what disturbed m most

forced to impose severe ere it restraints what his fcnr that tile time would

• • • Ottawa is 1:11 .. ,, lairly liberal

nid to the univorsitlcs without attaching strings ot any ki•1t1. '!'hat is needed. The unil·cr•ilies arc having n tough struggle to provide the services dcmnnded of them by a growing nation in a highly technical age. But the lime may come when the quality of students seeking entry into the universities will fall of£ for want of a good grounding in their high schnot ;.cars. To pro· ducc first-elass material for the unh·Qrsltics, it is ncccss~ry to mnkc quite sure that every child gets a solid educational fouuda·

to prevent A runaway· inflation is in a enme when the political scene In difficult position in considering the dis- Canarla will he dominated by

tion. And iC there arc some pro· -------------------------.:._ ______ _ vlnccs which cannot supply this foundation on an adequate basis, federal assistance is not only justified but even indispensable.

Position of a pre-election surplus. somebody with fascist leanings. We quote: "If the present trends

On the other hand, politicians , ar~ are persisted In, who can say usually inclined to take the line of least what type nf personality will

dominate the political scel)e In resistance and it may ve1·y well be that canada in 40 or 50 )'cars time? the new Budget will endeavour to pass. out Wr. all know what happened in a few gifts to the taxpavers on a modest Italy and Gcrnmny when cduca·

.; tlon came under the direct con· basis. It is hardly likely, in any event, trol of such personalities as !Ill· that allowing the people to keep a little let· and ~lussolini .. Who sa)'S 1t more of their own monev will aggravate can't happen here?''. '!'hat ~lr.

" Cal'ler shonhl tlunk In such the l'lsk of in £Ia tion. terms Is astnnishln~.

• • •

• • • Here In N cwfoundland nil too

few of our chihlren are getting a good elementary education. Yet

Teen .. Agers' Driving School

to maintain the standards now HAMILTON (CP) - The Hamil­prcvalllng is going to call for ton Police Department has grad­far more money than we arc uatcd 159 teen-agers within three likely to have for education. We months after the establishment or shall need federal aid to keep its driver • trni>1ing school. The up the present inadequate stand· school marks a new approach to ard. 'we shall need larger fed· U1e problem of young drivers. eral aid to improve the quality Since it started in No1·embcr

If we were to take ,his fear.~ of Newfoundland education. And every Hamilton lG·rcar-old s-eek­sr~·iou~ly, It might he pointed why should we not seck federal ing a licence has been required to out that a fa;cist dictator at the aid when. a well·educated popu· graduate from the sehool before head of the Cnnndinn gn1•ern· lation is ns much a national as applyUJg for a dril·er's permit. men! would not be Inclined to it is a provincial necessity. Let Two night classes of 212 hours

Enter February Ne\'er we think hn\'e most of us felt rc5pcct provincial rights that us not be frightened b~· the hob· each, held in tile same week, com·

· I' d th' t 1 stood in his way. If he wanted goblin fear of encroachment on pri<c the traink1g course. 50 lllC me as we nt·e IS yeat· 0 we came to control national education for J>rovincial autonomy. The chil· "The course is tough," Sergeant the coming pf February. That is not, his own purposes. he \\ould drcn and their education Is the Kenneth Skocrrctt said. "But 1j9 however. for the cheer and comfort to be simp!,· ha1·e to dc>tror provin· f1rst concern. Apd 11c can onh• ktds of l7.l 11ho ha1·e enrolled ha1·e e.xpccted of a month ,,.J11·cll can be the clnl rights. '!'he B.N.A. Act get the cduculton we need graduated, and thc1r avcra'l!e

would not ~top him. And thai, through generous ledcral assist· mn1k on the tests has been 8i coldest and slol'lltiest of all the year. \\e think, disposes ~f this M· ancc. per ocnl. or those who failed, a February is welcome this year as a sign- --------=--------- goorl proportion had faulty l!la~·

ses or faulty e;-roight anrl were post marldng out· progress through an sent h()me with 811 inl'ilalion to nl'duous winter towRrds the balmier clars What Others Are Sayt·ng return wh~n their trouble 1\a; of spring. correclrcl" \

On Monrl~y ni~ht; the k~n~;t· We ha\'e no cnuse to expect an early ----------------------... tr::-boy; anrl l!lrls-arr. lrrturrrl

relief from the cold wave that has made ,\ rn'F.·\'EAn TF.RM rrlied nn dental collr..:es in other on car con•tructinn nnrl mah,t•n· this January a month long to be remcm- !St. Thomas Times·Journal\ pari; of Canadn and in the Umt- aneP and traffic b~law~. A quo;.

Ju5tice F. H. Barlow was right rd fitatcs to proYidc tr;,ining. lion P e r i o rl lo1ln11 s "h"n the bered and we may even have reason to m sentencing a drunk-driver m Since the ~nd of World war 11, youngster~ m~y put fon1 arrl a

OUR BIGGEST EXPLOSI01V BY BRUCE BIOSSAT

It 1s not nC"Ws anr more thnt America's population IS boo::J::1 and i; expected to go on soaring. But it is significant lint no:C::1 is happening to upset the expert~· staggering forecasts.

A couple of decades ago the specialists, scanning the r.u,:s from the vantage point o[ the depression, looked at decbnm2 b,n\ rates and predicted a leveling off toward a stable pnpulalion ~ America. They were sadly wrong, •

Spurred by World War fJ and it; bustling aftermath. b;rlh nr1 shot up to amazing heights, and death rates dropped. The nett!rftl was A sunburst of human gro111h that still is dazzhng lhe nal;o:1 plr.nners.

night now the forecasters ~ce no need lo >cnl• dn11n th: phophccy of 221 million people in this country h) 19i5 \tort ttu that they are s~yU!g that In 43 ~·ear3-when 2000 A.D. rolls aroJt:­we will hit the phenomenal total of 300 million.

Today the nation's population is gro11ing fa•trr lh~n that •! teem;ng lnriia. It h incredible lo think that 111 lr,< lh;,n 20 "•II tbere will be anothN' 50 milhon Americans crn\Himg th" cnni;r.•:t and that in 43 years lhr incrrment Will come to 130 null'""

Th~t i~· not too far from a doubling of the prr•rnl t iO millin;

PoltticJAns, hu~ines;m•n. r1v1c l~ad!'fs r.nrl foml rl<nn'!l •u are not addressing thcms~lw~ t, I h~ problems 1111< mrrc'" 11 br;j ing are likely to ht jndged as raihng in thPlr re~pon•1hthli~!

From now nn, Pl'er)onr aiPrt to tomorrow's oorr(< m trJ< t'•~ tr" h~s got to hP lookin~ through a wirle P.n~IP l•n• Thm n :l t1hce for sm;.U.~c3le plan•, for timid, ummalimah\• 3«ault ufj prnhl~ms.

fcal' that with a change o£ wind there is Toronto to five ~·cars pen;:.l !iervi· the serious shortnge of dentists "'irle ran~e or que;·'"' hom llr­facing us in Febl'Uary a period of blockade tude. Two people were killed as both in urban and rural areas ha;; tail~ abnut eal·cle.<s rlrivlng to why

tl Jt f t I folly But a Clftarly shown tl1nt th1's kind of police deplore "hot rods." A film, A I' 't d t k by ice. Yet with all 1'ts reputat1'on for 10 resu 0 13 • " 'I'h .,.. 1 1 1 f s r Dr • 1m1 e at ac con mean only one thing: utt~r ~odal 1ni b!'!~ fc\1, montl1s ago anothe1· Ontar'1o academic borrowmg would have e t·Um amen a s o • a e I\- d · h k th 1 h d roa s, more ho8pitnls, and so on. sever1ty, we ave known many a driver, not drnnk, was fined $15 to come to an end. The national ing, ta es e c nss on a azar • February in which, in a sudden thaw, it on a charge of reckless driving, average is one dentist for each nus cross-countrv trip.

ns the result or which three pe()o 2,800 of population-in illanitoba GRADUATION NIGHT was sometimes possible to feel the ~arly pic were killed. We were sur· the average is one dentist for .Wednesday night, g;nduation

We very likely need tn think hard and !Onl! about th• nllG'I of the co~munities we are building. As present!;.- ri••ion!d 11 they orgaruzed for such crowded lh·ing? What can '' ~ do to rrJh breath of a coming spring, priscd that the Ontario Attorney. 3,500 residents. Only four young m_ght for most of th-2 pup1ls~ sta:ts

'V h I h' h t t' General did not t-ppcnl that case 1\lanitobans wrote examlna· Wllh a lecture on the hlglm ay them sel'l'e humJ!n requirements more full\·? ~ e ave no sue 1 lg ex pee a IOns nnd demand a stiffer penalty, tlons set by the Nationr.l Den- t:affic net nnd Is follow.ed by a

at the moment. We are content to be tal Examining Boani last year. fllll_l showing the operahon o£ a

.. . And we need to give urgent thought to the problem! lhttlt

Wlth living as Individuals r.nd groups in so o1·erwhelnung & to~t!lt grateful that a dispensable January has TOO :'llUCU TOO QUICKLY? Only two of them set up prac- pollee court. passed into. history and that if February (Regina Leader-Post) ticc in Manitoba. In the mean- 'l'hc.1 come the tests: k

of people.

It is cl~ar from some o[ its ltimc tl1rec dentists thccl and The rcactln~ tester Is a .moe We still have. much to learn about living elbo" !o •lbow in 111 comes, spring cannot be too far behind. preliminary recnmnwn;lation~ that three lrfl the provmre. Up of ~ <l-:!ermg wheel facm~ " nation's public places. 'l'hat IS enough ic itself to rejoice in the the Gordunl'ommission attvmtllctl uashhoal'd that has arrows pmnt· f I I, 1 t In cnH•r tun llllll'h "roumt in tuo \ng ll!(hl and left an<l a red light. It 1£ an art 11e must .•urel•· 1nastcr 1'! oltr Cltt'r.• •rr n'l 1o bE"".I Ul't t lal 'e Jl'Uar." is Jlere. b • •r \'II' ""'\I A l t •" I b 1• • peel•) " ' ' • " " " sholl'l R tim~. In con~c<JIICIH'C, '' ' " • .,,.,, • n a~<f era or "1'1 r:l ·~ " ju •( f 1

Strength For The Day ~------------~----~--------

~y EAnL L. DOUGLASS

I:"':"'ER .\Sil OUTER II,\R~I01\'Y

Tl1~1r h~te to bP. l;;ws on the !llatutc boob tn rc~ulate our heha\'Jor but man usually rebels when the!e laws become too specific or l no scl'ere. \\'e ll\'e 1n olll age which particularly dislikes the restraint ol laws. Probably all generations o! humans have wanted to do what thty wanted to do when they wanted to do II. But our generation , Is particularly given to lawlessness.

Stl';-.n~c aR It may seem, there is a good sldo lo all this as wcll.~s a had side. Something with· in us tell.• us that 1.111.~ written on the pa~cs of a honk arc not sufficient. L.1w by itscl! 1s nolh· in~. The siluRllon is only satisfr,clory when lhe law is l'i~ht, and man's response to the law prompt and willing.

1'his mc.1ns that law~. In he cffccth•c must not nniy be Wl'illcn on the pa~c.1 n[ books, 'but also in our hcart.~-on the fleshy t;;bles of' our hearts, • as the Bible puts it. In Hebrews 10, we read that God declares that He will put Hls laws in men'' hearts anrl upon lhclr minds will He write them.

(l.eltrl' iu l.omluu rif,~erver) eolnPlrte tht• maehlne. ng t•s 0 filial mg cnmpelilor~ for space and for llun~· some of It~ sugg~~t;nns m·~ the 1

I Sn·,- Ynlll' ll'Cellt photo- \\'hen llll arrow fl:bh•••. tit' fnn ~ uf Nll(ll'l'li~JUI stud~·, hns~d 1\',.\.s', Tm: H')JHI,L',It graph uf lht• St•1·en liJster., l'l1lls "olm<•i" mu<t t111,t lilt• llh"~l 1a •· 111 snnw instanrc•s 1111 t•ntirt•lr 1 1111 the Sussex t·o;,st, t,,ken t11e app1oprial" chrel'IJOn: f ~<h· e1-ronrnus premise;;. It~ recom·' 1 k One of the lll~n) IHsnn• taught by tit~ lflllllW i,, 11 lrloli 1• lhl

th~ l!ussian fiohlit•r, l'intage 19!i7, is not the frigiHenm~ :\'ltomll'l of war Piclurert by the So1iet Union and fcated to L~i•l hJ p!oJ) oC many land3.

from l'uckmel'c llal'en, 1 cmlluls iug or thP reo! light calls [or 1r.i ·­mcndatiop that no large scale k 1 .irrigation (Jrojects he undertaken, me of a snap<hot I took lust !nil". 'l'hr lime hr Ia es to n•ac allegedly because they would only summer from ncar the snme i~ mea<111rd. ~lost arr ~urt~s,ful

r.pot. . The seal in the fore· at. the Sl'cond or third attemnt. mid lo farm surpluses and ha\·e a · b · ground in Ill)' picture i~ quilc The orlhorater, a hght ox m dcprr~sing effect 011 farm price! tame and l~ used to hr1ng fed b1· whirJi miniature road signs and and Incomes, fall.~ in this cate· hnnd. It was washed up on symboh are dbplayed, accounts ~:ory, shore duriug ;; gale some two lor some t•ejcctions becau,.,. of rie­

• The l.iungarians learned not to be ~fraid of the intlilldu•l R<t

' ,\fll •·mt ~tARITI~IES (Montreal Gazette)

The Maritimrs de;ene what· e\'cr ma)' be done, through the Gordon Report or In any other way, to build up their economic life. For whatever may be done will not merely be of assistance to a portion o! the countt;) that has not quite shared the general dc1 clopmcnt. It will, which Is tar mm c important, he an effort In prevent .10~· rrosinn nf that rc"ion which hr·> nulured so much th,1t l1as enriched the I'Ct)' spirit o[ Canada. '!'he rctut ns for any invc.;tmcnt that may be made In the )faritimcs will be all the more lo be Villucd because they mr.y he in those thin~s lbat no chart can delineate and no statistics total.

smn f1ghhng man, for they f01ind him often a cnnhi•NI mrrrmrc; disorganized fighter. Endless times the1· bested hun ·n rom b.!~ a:! as 1957 g&the.rs momentum they are stiil doing it. ' :vears ago and \I'll fed and rccll\'C eye~ight or faulty glas<e<.

ent·cd for ' h)' the coastguards. The main h.urdlc is ~ to~~h 'Wltcn the hcller weather came truc.Qr·false wnttcn quc>hoonan·c. and the sea~ lmd recovered the Graduates get· certificate' min­eoastguards took it in a small ute; niter finishin~ the written boat wtli out to sea nnd turned te;t. With the certificate is a note It loo;e, thinking it would rc- approving the su~cessful student turn whence it came. When for the .n~rmal h1ghwan depart­their boat grounded . on the ment dnvmg test. The unsucccs;- We can understand how the rebels held out. '!'he,· lo'l tt•! beach the se::.l was there to ful must. go through the ~chool lea~ of the contrived image of the Soviet soldier. Th~' know ~1m U greet them. It refused to leave tests agam. . . he IS, and he no longer mkaes them tremble, · nnd can be seen along this part Girls, who average five m each ·--------nf the coast at nny time. My ~lass of 30, have proved outstanrl· R! T F hushnnd fi~hrs in the next cove, In~ students, ~ergean.t Ske~rett ver agus eb, 16, arrive at. Lisbon for the l)!f:d Hope Gap, and lie r.nd our small sal~l. At least five hal~ atttalnmtlccrlr B ~~om there, accompanied by tlle state reception Feb 18 lhl' rl fox terrier nrc often joined liy pel feet sc~rcs nf 100 pomts ntish am~a:~sador in Lisbon, Sir sail up the estuary' i the ·R.Ifl the seal, whn is an mtcreslc<l lhr markm)l sys!cm. Charles ~~~~lmg (so~ of. the In !c Ta::us in the ro\'al 1 arhl Br,t;::J spectator Our dog shows a The scr!(eant 1< proud or the F, H. Shrlmg of \ lClOrJa, B C.) rscorlcd lw thi.rc fl; ih•h dr·:·o· ~cry 'hr.aithy rc;pcct for 'the f,iC( that in three mo.1ths,nnl~ nne antl'tlle Portu~uc~e ch.JCf or PI'~· Cl'S and a ·l'ortu~uc-r fn;al? seal and keeps her distance, but grad~wte. hn.~ hcen cau~ht m a :~:olthDr.QA~cteto ·~Uardr~lro de SFrtel· 'fhe Queen \1 ill rlrllt m ··~: in fact the sc;.l is quite harm- traffic VJOlallon-anrl that a ffll· , s, e uc n Ill .nve to c u- \1 ith the president lo thr Q.:t· l~ss, and I and my sm. all hoys nor on<!. b~J, a seaport 21 mlk's south .01 Palace where she an,! thr I}'

Lisbon to meet the Duke of Edn1- 11 ill •t . 1 • " til 11,1: 1.1

rly differences ancl conflict will be [or­, gotten Loda.v and that the Canadian pcu­ple will unite to pa,v their tribute to a distinguished statcsmau and national leader aud to wish him \'er,v matty happy returns or the duy,'

. When this happens, then peace • anrl obcd1cncc ensue.

AT Til}; 1::-.'n OF A TEI.f:. PIIONE

" fSaint .Jnhn Tcle.lll'apb.,Tnm·na))

stroked il-r.1thcr warily, I } burffh\ , a~ r unn. r ,_:1 adml't o the ~ I t k th' p t n • • Queluz Palace, Ci"ltl milt· 0• '' - n uay 00 lS or UO'a 'fhe duke \1111 armc on the 'L!<bon j h ~n1'1" m.ma'·l

~nap. tl royal yacht Bntannia from Gihral- f.th 'p Is a rf \'1. ·• •11• ,.1!'' T"an llcrll"n p F t . . o c n acr o ~I''·" • ·" , • " "' , , ar at the rnri of h1s Jon .. tnp to th form . 1 nf tl1r r-,,·:'

Reward Of Virtue

'l'hc only 1,1\Y lhr.t really upcrate3 is lhc Jaw that we have mside our' hcarta and thl! law must correspond In laws which have 'come out of the ~xpcnence of the race. Correspondence Is ,the word.

DANCERS AND A FOOL

(West German Con•cspondence) A ~'inancial Post a~sessment of · ·

• . , • When in Auaust, 1!156, the wroll which mince econonuc prospects m Canada mdtcl\tes · 1948 had separated choir and transept from Ute a smaller increase in real output compur- nave In Cologne'• great cathedral, was pnlll\d ed with 195!i, a rising demand that may down, the restoration of the Interior hd been exceed available supply and· a continua- essentially completed. The windows In the choir tion of a hfgh rate o,f consumer spending. -s~owlng German emperors-which date gack to

the first half o( the 14th century and were a is brings the Post to the conclusion donation of, rich patrician fr.mlllea, bad been

the Finance Mini!ter, Mr. Harris, is aaved from dutructloe. ... ·

1~1e expt·cssion "lr.lkcrl to death" is common, but munlly used carr.· Jcs~))·. However in Dayton, a woman called the police in alarm because she couldn't get any fur. thcr response from the friend she hM been talk in~ to for some time on tpc tclepbone. The police in­vr.shgr.tcd and found that the wo. man on the other end or the line Car from being dead; bnd slmplv fallen asleep during her friend's long.wlndcd mo~tolo!!ue. Appar­ently the doy'li gossip wasn't up to Its usual standnrd.

NEW DEN'fAL SCIIOOI, (Winnipeg Tribune)

It i3 now tr.ken for grantcrt thRt th~ Manitoba government will es­tablish a Henlo~~l school. E\'er since Manitoba became a province it ha.s

Lillin~:tnn. rcpares ' ot• A! t )' ·) h ~ d th e Ct pa acr •J IS ra ta, \1 Jere r. open~ c kin · ~ ri h1· he!~~

lz 1.·~ OJ~ mpic ?ames althc end of Nov- for!~~~: sldu·rouu ~ II01rltd r•~· I'ACU'IC 'FR~:t:ZE 1\NUS

VANCOUVER (CP}-The lem pc.rature in Vancouver mmcd above freezing pomt to 39 de!(reoes 1\londay for the first lime in a week, ending the coidc~t ~pell o[ weather in south11cst Brihsh Co. Iumbia in five rears.

MORE SUEZ COSTS LONDON (AP) - 'l'he govern.

m('(lt 'l'hursday asked Parhamenl 'for an additional £39,000,000 to oover the costs of the Suez opera­tion. Earlier estimate~ were that the Sue~ military operations 11onld cost Britain £35,000,000 to £50,-001),000,

Queen E. iaueth ember, New Zealand, anri many land ,.ar CO< :m outlying parts o! the Commoo- ·

LISBON (Rcuters)-Portu!(al is 111ealth. 'I'RAUNS1'Eil( 11:;;-Grr::l:! preparing a ·warm welcome for CASTLF. HO)IF. (R 1 A lrl j·J>)·r .. QueM Elizabeth. and the Duke nf No official announcement has en crs)- 1l·)car·o ' 1

Ed. b l h th · h '-•-en n1ade here conccrn1'n" tvhcrc who harncsHd hb childrc., tJ1

'J m urg 1 w en ey atTlvc el'\'l " Q d " plow, Tuesday "as .entcnr: .~ Feb, 18 for the first state visit hy the ueen an the duke Will spend 14 month, impn<onmcnl rnr \t a reignmg British sovereign sine~ the next two rln)·s, but informNl · r. King Edward VII came to Lisbon sources in London say they will treatin~: his wife anrl Ob'l L~ at the invitation of King Carlos in stay at a castle owned by the ~ren. The court said the man.

D k of p 1 1 f p t mg on relief, had been a ,1 1 1903. u e a moe a, ormer or U· strous father wbo Jnm!e I~ t'J The visit, retul\1ing t11e ·state guese ambassador in London. VeJitablc hell for his 111/e an•

visit by the Portuguese pl'esident, Tills Is sHunted 11 miles from children." Gen ~'ranclsco Craveiro Lopes, Ill Sctubal, f!ear tltc beautiful Serra Lon~on in Oc"'bcr, 1955, will last cia Arrabida CArrnbiua ll!ountain). Milwaukee _ un'lil Feb. 21. ''l'he slopes of this, mountain, clad ~lathew< B .. 5, lhird

Avoiding a sea trip through pos. with laurel, myt1le and palm trl'!'5 iut mo;~ h rale run•-t!JI}-brr~ si~ly ro~gh \l'in~er ~cas, tho! ~uec.n with pmes anrl cypressN, slrelch. his 2.'itb hir~~Ja. than an)' pt~tr will amve by mat the :-o!oi!Jo 11r down to the ~ea. in maJ·o 1 g cl history. bue' on the southern bank of the When the Queen and the duke ,r ea u

\ (

the transform~r Monday mornu

pipes at. the ~a1 !ome w1re.~ 111

ts Har -

February 2511 February 20th )larch 1st., H

IUUI. OF ST ST. PAUL'S H

Tuesday of last 1886), a large

and boys. togcth and slides and do1 hi\ ing been gh c other11ise) at the

H1ll, anrl proc !ide a£ Lady L

of con~·eying t

HINTS FOR U, REFRIGERA

Mtthod of Storit illlii(-LI!RV! in COV

in c

Page 5: TH~E D·.AIL¥ ·NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · D'Araeon 3500. 3 32 32 .:.r De Cour 5l!OO '57 !6 H · -1 . De cour wll !110 171>

,

.h;,n 2n yrm thi~ continent tllinn. liO million.

indil'idualllur· •rd, inrHicitnt, in combat, an~

rmployrd up hrai'Y cnmpl~

eight of metal rl'cr. in !afll

They lost tbeir t'Y know him II

for the of{icl~l 18, the$ Will of the Ri''!'

\'acht Britannia Ill·iti~h clr.1tr~Y·

IC.<C fri~atf. dril'e in stat• to the Qurh'' and the dukt

the 1·isit. '!J'e ht mil~,; out!tril

miniature ~~,,,.,,,Hr< and Jikl

the Frcnr~ ~~~ brautiful

nd wooded park·

NEWS. FRIDAY FEBRUARY 1 1957

hour Grace News . .

me Frost Causes High school

F · · ' Club Elects us· ·· reeze Ups .I9srofficers -GRACE-The con·

. remcly Crost)' weal· the pro1•ince Is

tlfrrts on the water thi' town, and many

bm been, and like· to ha1·e much In·

frozen water tht wrathcr not be-

la•t wcck·cnd, numer· had frozen pipes,

1:1;1 brin~,. Pike's Hotel, ~r1a scott~. Bannerman · p111r, Hall. The electric

~~ thr Cnited Town~ called into requisition

ca!r! and the ~)·stem re·

· 1:,1 mn•!ot·m~t· was being )londay morntn!: tn !hall'

b.1uring' residence of Mrs. i... A. Whitman became Ignited. An alarm quickly brought the firemen to the scene, and,what might have become a. serlouJ blaze was quickly extln· gulshed. Little damage r~sulted, although there was much !neon· venlence.

The reason Cor the very low water pressure which is undoubl· cdly responsible for , the unusual amount oC freeze-ups Is a matter o( SIU'mi~c. Some give on~ opinion, others, dtffcrin!l ones. There Is lillie tot•gument regarding the pos­sible condition oC water pipes which were laid In the town accord· In!: to old records in June, 1863. It is quite probable that the water c!ompany will be (aced with a major job during the summer If the S)'S: tern Is to gl\'e satisfactory service to the Harbour Grace taxpayers.

HARBOUR GRACE-The annual meeting o! the High School Club, which toDk place at the Parish Room .on Thursday evening, Janu· ary 24th, was presided over by Mrs. Goodland.

Reports of the secretary and treasurer were read and showed that- this' club had completed a highly successful year, and the president thanked oftlcers, mem· hers, teachers and friends of th-e club, for the Joyal support which had made this success possible.

l!rs. Ludlow took the chair lor the election of of!icen for 1957, ami the following were re-elected:

President-.Mrs. Goodlind. Vice-President-Mrs. E. L. Okt. Sccretar)'-Mrs. L, C. 0~\·is. · Treasurcr-1\lrs. c. c. Butt. Commlltee: Mrs. L. V. Chah,

Mrs. H. R. Sheppard, Mrs. Martin pipe! ~~ the nank o( No,·a •omr wirr! in the neigh·

f Y Sheppard.

ts 0 Past · ears Supper was served b:r teveral ' · of the members and the meeting

. closed In the usual manner at 10.30

Harbour GraCe ~~rf~eld Rose 'quanti!)' oi building ~tone for the --PtST 11:\IIV 1\'JNTERS

. GIIACE--From old foundation o( the new Sunday Succu~hs To School for St. Paul's.

The stone was quarried during J ~~ hm taken the temper· "hard winters," and It ir.lercstin~ to compare

the earl)' part of the wtnter but, DJ• uries owing to the extreme mlldne511 oC the season, It could not be taken HARBOUR GRACE - General across the lake belore. On that sympathy is being extended to the day, the Ice being considered sale parents and family of little seven ior the passage of horses, the op- year old GarCield Rose who sue· portunlty was eagerly availed of by cumbed to Injuries reee\ved, when the people to place the entire lot he was knocked down by a motor o( stone on the south side uf the car, driven b)' a resident of Bay lake, where It could be taker. out Roberta.

·. prmnt da)' low temper·

· !St3. th~ winter o( the rr.~". ~lm registered lor uurn day!, 9 to 10 below

IB5i. Extremely cold HI in ,1hout the middle

i~!:un)' and continued until . 2ith.

1Bi6. an unusunll~· thermometer for da)·~

~n nr ahuut 7ero. Feb· . \6 below 011 51. John's. frbruar)· 16th, glass at

Si~nat llill, recorded

· 1'1bruary ~5th. 13 below. f'rbruar)' 20th, 20 below.

. )lmh l•t.. 19 hclow.

at leisure, At 6 p.m. the last load The little lad bad been attend· of stone (about 130 tons) was ing a birthday party at the home saCcly lodged without accident to o( a Irlend and was beln!l driven man or beast on a com·enlent place lo his home. At six o'clock on Sat· at the end of the road leading to urday evening, u he left the ear the Jake. On Wcdnesda)·, advanlaAe to cross the street to ltls home on wa~ taken of the favourable ·slate· Hnrvey Street, he was kncx:ked to ol the roads and the people again the ground. Dr. Cron waa sum· tt:l'llul out, unci about 70 tons were monett and found the child's In· placed on the site chosen Cor the Juries so se\·ere that he was rushed building· at the bend ol Lc~larchant to the Gecnral Hospital - immedl· :ltrcet, a grant for· which having ately by Pasha Taxi. The R.C.M.P • hren vbtaincd from the government here contacted the St. John's de-

ll.H'I, Of' Sl'OSE FOR some time since. tacliment and the taxi was escorted sr. p,\Fl.'S 11:\1.1.

1 All 1•·ho took part In the haul are from Topsail Into the city.

ol lR;I wcrk. (Feb-, dC.'iCII'ing o( the greatest praise However, lillie could be done for 1. , l~q;e number o! 1 for th~ir valuable aid. A large num· the Injured child, and he passed •

l.tm. to~rlhcr with hor· ber ul men hal'e been at work on· awdy on Sunday, Left to mourn ;lidi~ and tloa~ mrt, '(not· the cxc;ll'ation Cor the foundation ~sides his parents, Mr. and 1\lrs.

hrrn ~il'rn h~· posters '1';,\1~, which will shortly be com: Martin Rose are one brother, five · •t thr. foot n! Kit· m~:tccd. It is expected that a larJ!e ~tep-brCI!hen, and a atep sister, to

1 H:ll. anrl procerdrd to the 1 crew will l'oluntecr to cut the whom the sympathy of aU IJ tx· o:rl! ~r Loti I \.~ke lor the I frame of I he building." (Harbour tended In their tragic btrea\"6ment. . rl!onrr)iil~ thr.nce a lm;e Grace Standard, ~ebru3ry, 1886).

Obituary Bin$ fOil FI'E Of' Rf.FRIGER . .-1 TOll

~~~~~d ~1 S1orin11 Food in co1·errd bottles.

:;:~:--M''" in co\'ered con·

all paper and di!h.

and dry; keep in a

these are wrnp· nw•.nroont or waxed paper

· a co1·cr~d jar, they will for a whole day.

Ca11 of l:c,ripcrator · onrt .1 we··~: first :e­th lr·ut!. \\'i]lt' unt tht Inti lht· in<i1l~ ut th~ cul;i.

·'·'1 i 11',·;,\: >ulutiton o[ hic;,r• 1'1 ~:u:,. aut! warm wule~, I lta•Jouuulul sutlu to I

. ·' X•·1H "'" <oap ur dl'­dt·;n lhl' n·lrigrt·alor.

: , ,loild m11>l hr wiped up

--·--·· 11'/TI/ 'fill: 1.'001\S

Srllrl:rrc/oodle ~Jp shorlcnin~

I Clp !~oar 11;1 :usp. lemon rxtract. tl;rl flour :usp. h•k!ng !lOwder · .salt ' soda

sour milk , Iugar ~1.P· cinnamon

hr.e crackm (ground) logether shortening, sugar

lemon extract. Sift to· . baking powder, salt · . silted Ingredients With milk Into the

Fireman's Card Party and Dance

HARBOUR GRACE-An annual e\'enl which can he counted on to receive the well deserved support ol the Harbour Gra~e public Is the card party and dane~ sponsored by the Harbour Grace Volunteer Fire Brigade. On Friday night, this' social took place at the Academy Hall, and proved ·to be an out· standing success. . l'revlous to Friday, most house­holders were cnllcd upon by mem· bers of the Brigade, and their aupo port solicited, l\lany, unable to at· tend the e1·ent, thus gave their •~ontrihulions which, added to the •ale o[ tlcketK »nd · the door re· l'l•i(ll ~ tutallt•tl a v.:r)· worthwhile sum, of which 111~ iwlt 11roceeds will aid larg~J~· to dp[l·~y the cost of new ami necessary e!JIIi!lntent rcct•uth· Hcqulrcd IM lire·fightinll lllll'JlO;rs.

Ilnth g~mcs of aucl ion fol't)' five• and of bridge were unusually well pJtroni1eli, and prizes for these went to tl•e following: bt·ldge, l\lis5 l'airicia Cron and Mr. S. Pearce; auction. Miss Jean Pynn and Mr. Frank .Jane~.

Foll~wing the serving o( supper b)' wil·es und friends o! the mem· bers, dancing commenced to the music ol the Fire Flies Orenestra under the d!rtctlon of Mrs. Lo. Pike. Many came from nelghboiii'· lng placPs for the dance and the lar~e numbers of local patrt~ns made this the most largely attend· ed dance for a very lonG time. The elimination dance prizes went to Mr. and Mrs. v. Mercer of Bay Roberts, and the door prize, No. 326 WAI claimed by Mr. W. Par­miter.

MRS. WALTER SELLAltS HARBOUR GRACE-The news

of thf! sudden paulnl of Beasle, wife of Mr. Walter Sellm of Bell Island was received at Harbour Graee on Tuesday mornln!l .with general regret. .

The deceued lady was bom at Harbour Grate and waa the only daughter of the late Mr. and Mra. James 'Augustus As11 of this town.

Following her marriage, the late Mrs. Sellars took up residence at Bell Island where she became· a well-known and acUv• member of the community. Taken auddenl)' nt on Monday night, she paned awl)' at an early hour on Tuesday morn· ing, January 29.

Left to mourn at Bell Jslan4 are lwr husband and two dauahters, Ruth, Mu. John !o'arrar and Jean al Ilarllaur ~race two brolhera, [,Ieweliyn and Graham Ash anr· l'ive, and to them and other mem· Lers of tlte !umlly, the deepe1t a~mp~thy of their majJy friends is extentled In lhtlr andden berul'e­m~nt.

R.C.S.C.C. Beothic HARBOUR GRACE - Regular

meetings of R.C.s.c.c. Beothle are In full swing on each Fri~ay even· lng at the quarter. deck of Coughlan Hall, and the usual routine Is' gone through. On Friday evening last, following band practice eonducwt by Sub. Lieut. W. Webber,. Dr. Saltman gave Instruction In first aid.

Most of the evening's routine was taken by reporter Pat Pi&ett, and several photoanphs were 1aken of the eadeta at their various aetlvltlea.

Pour into 8~8

•;th mixture nf 2 tabsp~ p I I Church Senices ·. ~nknamnn and cra~k~; . e0p C fi SUNDAY, FEBRUARY .......

1 e 30 to 3~ minute~ in , "n• "-~'rn. Th·e· News ST. PAUL's Rrctor, Rev. L. A. J. Ludlow or.,I.WiJ·: r· \1\F 11 a.m., Sung Eucharist; 2.30

·~~~:• ·' ' · .- p.m., Sunday School and lllble t'ip r<i'in• HAitBOUR GRACE-Mr. ~·nd Clm: 11.:10 p.m., ·Evensong. r;p •h~r1rn;"~ Mr~. Henley Munn, St .. ,John'R, HARBOUR GRACB SOUTH IJp la••r 1\'rre wcek·cnd vi~itor~ tn Har· ST. PeJoer'~ t;; ' hour Grace. . 8 1 I .30 a.m., Ho y Commun on.

1~ur milk Mr. F. P. Sheppard paid a brief ____ l!o. tlltia vi~ it to St. John's last week. UNITED CHURCH, t~ill\our Dr. and Mrs. R. W. Goodwin R A N H Jm d

ev. • • o e• .~alt visited St. John's on Wednes ay. 11 a.m., Divine Worship; 2.30

,. Miss Margaret Taylor recently s d Sch 1 " Dl cM\1: lf'''I'III)D p.m., un ay oo ; , p,IJI,, · rind ·

1'" · spent a week-end visiting relatives vine Worship.

rai•i am · pulp o! at St. Jolin's. . . Brl!tol'• Hope Jborten.lnns and mix. Beat Ex-conslable and.Mrs. Bath were 3 p.m. Divine worship,' • leda into g, sugar and rtcent visitors to St. John's. where ---' -------­nour, ults~u;hmllk, then they attended the capping eere· week-end vlsltlna her paren~s, Mr.

mixt 0 Ae shorten· mony of the! rdaughter ~Ida, at and Mu. Gus Gosse, at Spaniard'• xtu ure. dd half of Grace HoRpltnl. · Bay. · . - 1 ' a:e and beat to- Miss Jlelen Sheppard, St. John's, Mr. Lloyd Archibald paid a brief

llo<le;,le ke. 30 lo 35 min· spent the weekend visiting her visit to St. John's on Monday, 1'11!1inr ad01 P~: sister, Mrs. V. Webber. - , Rev. Father Hynes who had "~Urt0 'nih d h cups pow· .J\fes~rs. Gordon and Harold been at Grand Falls, rrturned to ~llure an~r hall nf ·orange· King, St. John's, were week-end Harbour Grace· on Saturday nigli't. 1 ''ll!n ~nougb oran11e I vl~ltors In th'rlr- mother, Mrs. P.' · ~ h~lf~o Sprbad" on eake King, Water Street.· · · (More Rarbnur Grace New• .DA

. m I e oven, Mrl. Harold Davil spent ~· Paae 18) ·

;

, .

AYRE'S FI.NAL WINTER:

THE. REMAINDER OF·

OUR LADIES'

FALL AND WINTER

WITH THE EXCEPTION OF

HOUSE DRESSES and MATERNITY DRESSES

'

.PRICE \ .

FOR EXAMPLE ' .

Reg. I 8.95 ....... ~ .. NOW 4·48 Reg. 19.9S ...... NOW 9~98

Reg. 10.95 ........... NOW .5·48 Reg. 24.95 ...... NOW 1·2·48 I

~eg. 12.9S .......... NOW. 6·48 Reg •. 29.95 ...... NOW 14·98 . Reg. 14.95 .......... NOW 7·48 Reg. 34.95 ...... NOW 17.48 Reg. 16.95 ..... .' .. .'.N,OW 8.48 Reg. 39.95 ...... NOW 19·98

., . Reg. 43.95 ...................................................... NOW 2-1·98

',

LADIES'

13 ONLY REG. VA LUES TO 39.95

SALE PRICES WERE 14.95 and 21.95

. NOW .98 '

17 ONLY· REG. VALUES TO 52.95

SALE PRICES WERE 29.95 and 39.95 . .

NOW .25 ~:13 ONLY

REG. VALUES TO 95.00 SALE PRICES WERE

49.95 an.d 65.00

NOW. .00

$7. JOHN-.., . NflWOUNIN.Aitta

• • c..

NO APPROBATION 1.1 I NO EXCHANGE . . ·ALL _SALES . FINAL I I I

i.· ; . I:'

v· i··:

1.: ·' ;!.;,. I•··' I'

I ; ~: t '·. .;

; I .

Page 6: TH~E D·.AIL¥ ·NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · D'Araeon 3500. 3 32 32 .:.r De Cour 5l!OO '57 !6 H · -1 . De cour wll !110 171>

USAFts:

· By Capt. Theodore R. Sturm . . ~ ,;", . . .

r..-· Tucked away In a corner office of NEAC headquarters Is a small but importQnt group of modest men whose primary business is the

~~relic . · · ~ · .. ., .. ,,, "'" ,·:· Calling themtelves "Arctic specialists," they chop al'lnY at the cold

north for the Northeast Air Command. , • The never-ending drive to expand the Arctic air capability of the ·

Is a major eflort Involving many agencies of the armed forces and : , research organizations. Funneling through NEAC, their scicn• ltiflc activities Include exploration, research and development . . ~ . . . .

:t;··. ' .. . r, ·.·~.

I ' .

i !) BUILDING IGLOO o(snow bio~ks, memoer's of the NEAC ,1• group known as "Arctic Specialists" used .. this structure ! l: for storage, while they lived in tents. · . ·

LIVING QUARTERS.for scientific party which spent five days on Lake Hazen. The two-tent camp was located on a small island in the middle of the lake where temperatures

ranged qownward to 50 ~egrees below zero.

Islands, "Jack" Crowell checks availahle maps to make· last·

. minute· exploration ·,plans.

STONE CAIRN ·is liuilt by scien· tists on Ice Free- Land Project on a spot· in' far northern Greenland

... '

UNL(Ml)ING·SUPPLIES f~om NEAC SA-16 in Brunland Fjord, the members moved their supplies to 'Shore by rubber

raft.

. . . . )

never before visited by man.

Body Cancer Cases Down

MONTREAL (CP)-A 'ltlontr.eal st~eon said Wednesday Canada is the only ·country In flle world reporting a decllnln-g death rat·~ In certain. types of body cancer.

Dr. Harry S, Morton, .associate surgeon at Royal Victoria Hospl. tal and associate professor of Me. Gill University, added, however, that there is no decline anywhere ln the death rate trom lung can. cer h1 males or in blood cancer of either sex.

His remarks were made. in an address to a f·~rl•ice club.

"A new era ·in the canc.er fil!ht Is beginning," Dr. · Morton de· clarcd, "We have had some ama7.· ing results through chemothcrap)' ''' the f!·~ld . on cancer . o( the breast and cancer· in the prostate and .It Is most encouraging." -

Spies-In: Sweden: STOCKHOLM (AP) - A Turk

and two Swedish engineers w~re accused \Vcdnesday • of spying against Sweden. Official · sources said their information ·Indicated the Turk had bea1 ·col'·~cting mu. ltary ·information for Russia,

The T~rk is; B~dros. Zar[aryan, az, under arrest since September, for· S'PYlng on "Swedish defence establishments and· Swedish for. tificaU01.1S" from '1954 to June 30, 1956,

(

r

.. ,

Get smooth 6-cylinder power . with this -thrifty 'MW ZEPHY~

. .. ,; ;: :·:.·:; ' . ·· . .'. ! ·: :: .. · . . : ··:

·Here's the smartiy styled, money-saving new. Zephyr that gives you flashing, responsive performance in traffic ••• smooth, quiet tr~velling at sustained hlghway speeds!

Smoother running! Smoother riding I EXTRA DEEP SUSPENSION NEW POWER-PACKED ENGINE

And how much more you'll'see with the wide, full-view windshield and rear window! This longer ~nd lower new Zephyr gives six people. a comfortable ride. And there's ample carrying space in the 20-cubic-foqt trunk.

~ Many·other new ~eatures-in styling, suspension, ventilation and driving ease-make this the greatest Zephyr ever. See it-and the new Consul and Zodiac-.

. now at YOUr Ford-Monarch dealer's! .

The new Zephyr's short-stroke 6-cylinder engine gives powerful performance-at all . speeds-"''ith reduced engine wear and greater ga~ economy.

···:''

Exclusive new "deep-coil" front suspension soaks up bumps ••• helps the Zephyr bold the road snugly and safely ~spcciall,v on curves.

. S~E ~~D l?~IVE THE ALL-NEW MARK H MODELS

CONSUL ZEPHYR·& ,... . ZODIAC ' . • s OL D A'N D . SE R v IC E D c 0 A ST- T 0 • c 0 A s T B Y .f 0 R D'- M 0 N A R C H DEAL E R S . .

GEOR(jE G. R. PARSONS, Ltd. I ' • '

ELIZABETH AVENUE .; GEORGE G; R. PARSONS LTD., GRAND FALLS .•

' . . ..

\ \

was of May, dau

Mrs. Abram )l Bench, to Clayl

o[ Spaniard's Bay. 5t2ft at the Grace

Elwood .\lacDonal underwent · an\ at the Grace (riends will b

t~at she is now con

T. A. VARIETY CON Parent Teachers }

United Church Grace will be : concert in the

WISTERTON Cah·in Green .• bu!

Winterton, is al pr the city on busines

HOSPITAL }Jr . .\. J. Jl·any, ~I

Director or Posta was rccentlr hit ar

by a motor· car w to worlt, has c

Hospital for o lun,·'s mam· !ricn to hear of· his ac him a gp~edy rec1

SPEND WINTER Captain Alfred

·. arril'ed in !­spend the wi

at the

BOTWOOD· . .G. Langdon of In the city We

CLEAR~

AND

MISSE _OVER· Sl

Page 7: TH~E D·.AIL¥ ·NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · D'Araeon 3500. 3 32 32 .:.r De Cour 5l!OO '57 !6 H · -1 . De cour wll !110 171>

-

!l

···~

t!l•c\ low :,. airl'l'aft rtcult tasks. 1 '~'t:Y i.1 a d II' the

.'·ll air • 1·cry need.

ts ago lite operation on

. La~ which is or the most np,cd On a 111.\C or icC, 111 c miles in ~' a brwc sea "<I on pa~c 16)

new "front 1 soaks up • helps r hold the y anri ~dally

I'

~5. ·~ •.

<

'

~j;;

.. · .. :: ~r·. ·:::::.:;: ... '7-;t,l

td.

\

RSONAL CHIT-fHAT ·F)rJ ... · 'R. . . T,-. UE· .. . · DINNER FOR LIBERAL LADIES · -

)Irs Charles M. Neaves A dinner party will be held In · . · • ~dba'l ~ecently announeed the Newfoundland Hntel Monday

!1- 0 mrnt of their eldest night, February 4, to 'honour the · · LADIES

rtlll~hoda Ann, to Pilot Of· ladles of the Women's Liberal As· Strlckland.Clark, on!~· soclatlon of St. John's who work·

)Irs str!ckland·Ciark and ed so energetically during the prOo ~Jr.' H. Strickland·Ciark of vlnclal election campaign last · ~Uddlcsex, England. year, Hon. J, Wi Plckersglll, Min·

will take place In later of Cltilenship and lmmlgra-on Saturda~·. Much 2. · tlon, and member for the riding

- of Bonavlsta·TwllllnBate, wlll be

was recently

the. principal speaker. H~~rwlll be Introduced by. Premier Sinallwocid, A sln1·son11 will follow the dinner part)', •

HAPPY BIRTHDAY Little Tem· Short, 7 Hauerty

Street, Is celebrating his first birthday today, February 1. ·Birthday greetings to Gerald

Skinner, Cashin Avenue, who Js 8 years old today. ;

Birthday greetings are sent by his friends to Phlllp Pugliese, Jr., of 4 Rodney Street, who celebrated his lith birthday on Thursday.

Birthday greetings from his friends go to Richard Schmidt of 22 Whiteway Street, who Is cele· bratlng his 9th birthday today.

of ~Ia)', daughter of BETA SIG;\tA PHI • ' ~!r1. ,\hram Moore of I After the hustle and bustle of

Br.1·ch. tn Clayton Ken."• the busy festive season, Gamma ~! Sp~niard's Bay. May Is\ Ch3pter, Beta Sigma Phi, returned

· !ialf at thr Grace Hospital. I to regular rou!ine with Its two - meetings for Jan11ary being heir!

y UAXCE , on the 14th and 28th. 'Fhe cultural r:e mular wrckl1· dance wm

1

: program on .rnnuary 14 was taken i1•d lt the \'1\'CA rooms on . by lllary Hatneld, the topic being • · r.ilhl. Fcbt·unr~· 2, at 9j "Absolute Music." The ·develop·

}tu1ic h)' popular record· I ment of music from the early days of blowing through bare reeds to I the present modern symphonic In·

. strumentation. was explained and tt.nJO'i )lac Donald, Fomt :accompanied by the playing of undrrwcnt an\ operation :such masterpieces as Beethoven's at th~ (;race Hospital. :Filth Symphon~· and Dvorak's New trirnrl; will be ::lad to' World Symphon~·. A l'ote of thanks

~he i! now convalescing. 1

was given by Rita Winsor. Louise ·-·- • i Rose, In her program, . "The

f.\RRns•:AR :Dance," gll·en on January 28, he· l'rtd TJdor ol Carhonear sides eKplainlng the necessary

an operation at the qualifications ol a goqd dancer, ~I recently. Her many ga1·e helpful Do's and Don'ts to

will be ~lad to know she is prospectl\'e uanccrs. Louise con· 11111. eluded her program by demonstrat·

lng the five ballet positions, A ~~.lll•t.~u·.:~. , 1·oto of thanks was given . by

,.·

In r

·Middle· Y e,ars, , Be ' . . . . Attr.act ive

, I l I i I '

I i I I

:! I

I ' i

I I I . I I I

r

It's tempting to settle down Jo "cnnlfort" In the mature year~. But when comfort means sloppines~, the results arr downrl!lht discouraging both to oneself and one's family, We demonstrate here 'll'llh ramera'8 account' or jn5t what happened to one mature woman who'd fallen Into bael habits. Poorly fitted, badly cared.ror clothes, broken shoes, no' make·up and an unkempt hairdo (le.ftl

matle her appear fnr older than her years. Neglect or her skin (upper center) had produced dr'· sklu and patchel. Reallullon ol what was happening produced these results: a trim, sllm·looklng woman (right) In welJ.fltted rtotbcs with a skin that blooms <lower center). It wasn't donr Ol'trnlgbt and It was done with effort. But the point is that It was worth it.

I

THE DAILY NEWS, FRIDAy, FEBRUARY 1, 1957

·:.....--Th-ink.--..1 Woman Off · · . ing !Many Talenis It 1

·over \ EDMONToN ccP)~Dlone 1 tra is a woman of many taum~-1 ' cellist, singer,· b()()keeper, ! wile and architect "by marria&e.

, • • 1 \ Sh~ is the wile of Richard J '\c do not hke to. be !old t.1at N•!Utra 0( Los Angeles, . ·

our a c he s and pams arc only I tlonaJly.known architect who is imagined, We rebel nt t~e Idea Alberta to attend the Alberta that most o! our hllman 1lls arr. ~oeiation of Architects eo~t~eJ~tio•nH};i

. p_sych~~omatJc. We know t h a t here and • weeklon1: ~tudy our atlments are real and that sic,1 In Banff. ~hey ~hould be treated with real Mrs. Neutra, 57, who Is acl:o.mt.ll'l~l medlcmes. . panylng her husband, says . ~~ course, we ar? wllhng to ad· an archll·~ct only through 34 ye••nt·t•

mtt U1at ·the suffermgs of other nf marri~ge, for· her caretr people arc.probably dut to ~molio· lounded as a concert cellist nal maladJUstments. They "think s'nger • ~emsclves into their dlf.llculties". 1To her husband, she is VIe know that we are different. arranger housewife •nd It is true that we are dlfi.e~ent kE·~per, '"My husln.ad lXl~lS~(ler•1; •I

tiecnuse no two peopl~ are ahke. teaching me bookkeeping his No two people suffer m th~ same greatest achievement," she manner. ~egardle~s of ~he real!· In an interview,. Mrs, N~nl?.ll'l!'t ty of our a1lment:s, there IS a heal· said shoe believed whP.n she tng power which comes from the ried at 18 in Berlin that her nm>~. •.• nearness of God. • band had "more to ~er

When we pray unselftshly a n u world" than she, 10 she sub­talk to th.e Cr~ator He heals many merged her career 11 . a eoncer1 of our tmagmed' and real llls. performer He helps us mak~ adjustments to Howeve~, she doem't let her tal· . thnt the body, mmd and soul co- ents waste, She · play1 at mal'l!l ' ot;~inate, Wh~n the human and concerts and publie ena•<ementl . sptrltual functtons are n o .r m a 1, and makes recordings of foil

Even those a!lm(lnts Which are songs and ballads ~ung to her oWJ · there are less tlls and less pain. cello or piano ·accompaniment. , not cured a:~ more caslly taken

1

. WIDELY .TRAVELLED ' when our spmts ar~ at peace with She bas played In Sweden, 3a. . God, The body, m~nd and soul do pan, Turkey, India ~nd Paklstall. • not ache as much \I hen God Is pre. places she has travelled to !Jt~ . sent with people. We must learn h h b nd .• to t u , er us a . •

pray more cons an Y - no. Mr. and Mrs. Neutn went Ill merely on. occasions. 1 United states 30 years ago 1h• ----------1 the Viennl!se archilect began de,

1~-oww.-w~--. .... ~. si::ning small, in~xpen•lve house! I"J1 d , R . . until his new conee-pt ~ ne!tilee 1 0 ·ay s ectpe . lure won national and lft!e~llo

tiona! fame. ~~---.,.; Today, Mr. Neutra hat projecu

..., ___ .. ,__,_ • in Pakistan, where he Is buildini BROWNIES ' the United States embassy at Kar.

3 one·ouncll square~ chocolate a chi; a town plannlnt project iJ 'f• cup shortcni,1g Caracu, V;new<!b.; a eampUI ~~ cup sifted !lQur for St. John s College,, AnnapeH5: ~~ teaspoon baking soda Maryland. \C. teupoon salt His wife says lt~r husband re 2 eggs gards architecture as "preventive 1 cup sugar medicine." He believes that In te. 1 teaspoon vi~g'ar day's turmoil, the need i~ for nist eng&gcmrnl of Ella, daugh.

1

1 Phyllis Blaekmore. Miss Marjorie ltr. and ~~r~. Lel'i Canning Ball, program director, was In· at·

Ba)', to Roy Porter of tendance, .

1 teaspoon vanilla ftdness and serenity In the home · · • 1 lh cup chopped nuts {optional) that It Is a "shell" through wblel

BY ALICIA HART · eoncel\1, there Is no longer a need fessional haircut-one tha 's sim. beauty house makes pressed PMV· , Melt chocolate and shortening li!e should floe with rracoe anc , h~~ recently been. an·

Canning Is on ·the ~~ the Gr~ce Hospital.

Have you ever stood in line in for the ef~rt It takes to be well· ple and easy to care for yourself. dcr in a dclight!uUy pretty mir- together, Sift flour, baking soda . CARD PARTY a supermarket and taken a good gro()med? I Be SUI".l to wear rubber gloves for rorcd case, This powder gives and salt together, Beat eggs and peace, . 1:.'; .. ' I

The Caribou Chapter of lODE look around you? . True, comlortabll;! attire Is es· the tasks that plunge your hands your fac:-e a sm()()th, creamy look sugar together untll thick and Mrs. Neutra wu born In Zur i : . :; : 1

.l \'.\RlET\' CONCERT Pmnl Teachers Association Cnitcd Church School at Grm will be sponsoring cnnrerl in the Coughlan

held their annual cnrd party in Doesn't It seem too bad that so sential for shopping. But can't It into hot, soapy water. In a jiffy, lemon colored. Sttr In chocolate ieh, Switzerland, where he'l·. :·' the Cathedral Parish Hall Wednes- many bou&ewives-women In thiJ be attrnctlve, too? It can only be I! you rush out to shop, hoping Many of the world's loveliest mixture, sifted dry ingredients, father, a pianist and professlona ,,,•,;' ; ! day night. It was largely attended, prhhe of life-have ·forgotten how laziness that brings about ari "I'm you wm't meet anyone you know women arc In their middle y~ars, vinegar and vanilla, engiaeer, had her learn to pta] I. P;: i: . Mrs. Garry Russell, Regent, wei· Important It Is to remain \'lent and only gok1g to the store' attitude, because you look a mess, It's a Maturity brings with It a gracious Turn into a greased nlne.inch the cello bec:ause he needed a etll.;;.: !·: comed the patrons and wished attractive? What kind of reason· And this carelessness can form ~ sign. that you're getting careless. beauty unattainable to the young. square pan, Sprinkle nuts, if used list to play In a trio. ' h• .. 1 • '

them n pleasant evening. The sup· ing causes some of us to feel that hnblt devastating to beauty and Don't dnsh out minus make-up So take advantage o! this wooder· over top and press lightly !fl. ----------- 1:i;i:, ;;I I : 1. \'tl-•·•1i'• ,.,,•, Dal', Februar~·

1r1x:nencing at 8.15 p.m. . per tables were gaily decorated Wb}n Ute thirties· are behind us. charm, · You won't lo~·~ enough time ap-~ ful time of life. Make It work for to batter. Bake In a 375-degree t ding to frle d tr 11 • i 1 1

with the lODE colours-red, white and homemaking our foremJst Caring for a fnmily Is a 24·hour plying it to warrant the tired, you and not against you. You'll oven about 25 minutes. When 1f:in~enat 1 distanc: !s ~Y 'k!e~: ·:· . : i 1::

ami blue- flowers and candle~. - , job, to be sm•~. but you're part of hang • dog ]()()k you'll face the I feel~and look happ!~r, and your cool, cut into individual pieces. fresh and moist looger than most ~: ·,: , I . WJSTJ:IITOS

:::. Cahin Grffn,. business man Winterton, b at present visit·

t!e city on business.

Supper was served by the mem· , the family, t()(), Don't neglrrl world with, A little lipstick can family will be proud to show you Editor's note: These brownies other brownies, thanks to the bak : 1. , bers .. Special praise is due llrs. F h• ' your appearance. Your childre.1 be put c., In a minute, and one 1 off to their friends. · are grand for the lWJch box, or ing soda and vinegar. ,: ! ~~ Mme~ ~pni~~~~ ~~d ·as Ion· desff~ mo~ ilian a ~~home --------~~~-~--~--~-----~~~=~~=~=~=~~==~=~==~--~ . of the card party, who. plannecHhc ., . . . · ·: · Md warm clothes, You owe them .. "'"' e1·cnt .and. ;also .. presented. the tho~ t•lght to be proud of their pret· ·

. :prizes .. P.rlze winners were l!r~.. . . r··. . ty mother. . B'a1-e thl.S .Je.ll'cl'ous COFFEE T A~R CIA Tl"'rrf llr .. \. J. Iran), :\l.B.E., Dis-,.T. D. Allen, ~ir. J. H. Harvey, ~it·. lp. 5·. As we 'mature, we lose some or ;.l\J l.(J l ~l.Jj ~ e . Dtre~tt:r or P<>stal Scn·ices, Willi11m ,lanes: Elizabeth Walsh, • . . :the natural moisture in our skin. 111 rmntl;· hit and knocked I ~Irs. Kcnncd~·. ~!r. II. ~J. ~laddirk. . • Yet a lew minutes spent to clc~n b! a motor 1·ar while on his ~lr. 11. Hawitins, ~!r. A. Badcwitz, . . . . anrl crc~m the l~c') each ni~ht he-

. to 11ork. h~• rntcred the ~Irs. H. ~lilchcll. ' For spnng, w~mcn ar~ a?mcll: fore \\'C bathe, will llclp reston• llo!pihl ror obscrl'ation. . to own .a sll~ .slll,t, the. St!k ts one. that moi5turc. Leal'c the crcnm

man;- trirncls wlll re· · of the b~al'tcr h11Cn·hkc wcal'es.l on while ;·on rdax i•J th~ tub and of hi~ accident 1nd · · \ · · , Bla~k leads as h~s.t for all oc- • lntet· remo1·e it with tissne. Jea1••

h:m a 1p~cd;- recol'ery. The Mature : castons, but nary Js the run~rr •. 1

in;:. on a thin film to work for you up, i whtle ~·pu sleep.

!mo WI:-in:R . ' . l'aplain Alfred Elliott nf · · According to the hlg :li!W York' Figures, too, lend to thicken and

arrired in lh~ city rr· Parent fashion' shows, concluding tocluy .' bu.l!!C .';·hen w; pass t~e 30 n:af~· srend I hr. winter and. Is . ; the wide skirt stays. Dlor makes' Sill!, ,It 5 cas~ t.o make ccrt.a~n •t

at the Brownsdale BY ~t!'ts. :IIURIEI, LAWJtENI'E'i them ,.,~ry wide, but his slims arc I rloc~n t happen tf we e~t sensJbl;·, ·-- • 1·cr~· sUm. · I nvm.rllng generous helpmg.< of the

--BOT\\'uon

. G. l.!ngrton of Botwood ar· . ir. the rity Wednesday on

PERSUADE SULKING CHILD ' · lumous rles!•~rts we prepare for TO PUT PROTE T IN w R e<>ntrol of hill). We dare · Jwt the fa mil)', ·Household chores can

. · · s · 1 0 DS compromise with him lest he get also he helpful Jn figure eootrol ir Rs · , · v-~-- ·h· · b 1 the top band-and misuse\ us, we use them as exerciw~. And

u s 11 as e~c ted Vi fl.l he urst This self.dlstrust [s what makes housework will sc"m more like fun Into the kitchen, "Can I go over · 1 . · · lk If It h d bl - · to Walt!s for supper?" b~ asked It lmpo~s ble to treat too ·,su er as a· o~ e p\lrnose, his mother. "His TV can get a as Russ s mother treated htm. . Take the It me to have a pro. ehannel that shows cowboy mov. les every nigh\! And his Mom said why don't I come for supper too, She said to tell you she was having chocolate pte-"

His mother, pr·~paring a Pic of her own, s~ld shorUy, . "No. I told ~·ou that Daddy was brl,1glng Grandma 'home for dinner tonight,

.. -·.- · ........... :-. •,. He'll expect you to be here-und , so will she."

e ----......;-.:........., CHILDREN'S

AND

MISSES' OVER SHOES

Russ said nothing but went' sullen and !et. moment, he turncrl a~1d kit ellen.

his fuec Afl·~r a left the :

Ills motbct• waited to follow him I until she'd got her pic in the o1·en. · Then ~he went Into the living ., ro()m· where Russ was siumpeti In a chair listlessly turn[,,g pages of a comic book. ' I

She said, "If you want terribly to. t•:e a cowboy movie tonight, say so. Tl1en I could help ~·ou. I ·could tell Daddy and Grandma , ~·ou have to leare. after supper. • They won't mind so long as you eat with them. You could phone Walt right now that -you're . com. lng over alter supplr. .)'ou might evt,, ask him to save you a piece of chCicolate pie, But If you ean•t tell me you want to see· a mov!P very much, how ca., I •know you'd like me to help y'ou?"

She got up from her chair "Think It over, •• she said-and left him,

It took him about four mlnut•;• to decide that he wanted to see tb~ cowboy movie enough to put his wish Into words Instead of in· to sulklo.1gs silence.

1 '(. c. onclollflea paotry llou; or 1Vo c, onct•tlfJod •II·

purpoullour

2 llpt. Mogle Baking, Powder

Y• ttp. baking soda

2 lips. Instant Chait & Sanborn Colleo

. v, ltp. ,·.,.

~ Cream

~ c, thorlenlnt

Graduolly blend I•

I c, Rghtly•pocktd brown sugar ,

, 'lo c. gronuloJed ougor

. Add, port at o limo,

2 wol~boottn eg;s

beating well offer each addition.

Comb In~ 1' •· milk Yo ltp. v~nlllo

Add dry lngrodlenlt lo rreerud ml•turo olternalely wllh mllk, COtlO•

blnlng alter each addition, Tum Into 2 greased B·lnch round cakt pans, lined ln boHom wllh ;roatod waxed popor, Boko In 111ador• ately. hot oven, 375°, 25 to 30 minutes. Pul loyll'lt al cold cake log other wirh lhlck raspberry fom betweon and cover wilh a collio·

· flavored frolllng,

Yev can dtpenJ.., MAGIC 111 proledr~ll yeur fine Ingredients ; ; ; 1tv• you !lghltr, flner·ltllllrrell rewltt. Buy MAGIC

nul tlot• you shop.

f

INDIVIDUAL Dl NNER ROLLS ~-on boot With imitation PI tp 11·3~. Printed or ~In nrt lln~ng, Shaped •u ·t Br~w~ or Red. Sizes "' 0 3.

Sulking Is protest by . silence, Our responsll:Jillty to the sulkln~ child Is to persuaoo him to put his protest Into words, His prob. !em· Is his Jack of confidence in Ute effec.tiveness of protesting words. Once he exper~mces our respect fo7 his protesting words and good results from speaking them, he begins to reJect sulking as nn answer tti his dlflleult!·~s.

I I Lose None.· of .Their - /

Delicious Flavor $1.94

PARKER & -.

I~O~ROE LTD. ~411tbJ

It's thnt simple, What complicates it Is our !ear

n! his open protest. We don't. want to listen to It Jest we have to back dow., from our inflexible "No''- and . arbitrate . with the

1 child's wish. W•: want him muz. zled and sUent because' this ~ what niakes us feel sale and lri

' I \

THIS IS A NEW PRODUCT

FRESH DAILY FROM · .. NEWfOUNDLAND'S · LARGEST AND

. MOST . MODERN BAKERY

'·· '.

' ·~ .

• • Fresh· Tastiness- and

can 2 minutes heated'-ready serve • ln to be

" ·; '

" ' I

I ; '

'· .

Page 8: TH~E D·.AIL¥ ·NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · D'Araeon 3500. 3 32 32 .:.r De Cour 5l!OO '57 !6 H · -1 . De cour wll !110 171>

.,

r " I

' i ~ !

;: . ... ...... ·.· .... .· .

. .I

.... '

·,

.•.

ay ews

. ! . .

rhe hockey team ofHoly .Recleemer Anglican School, Spaniard's Bay. Front row (1. to r.) Billy Titford, George· -Murrin Dav)d Strickland Don Smith, Clifford Smith, Eddie Smith, Billy Strickland. Standing: Joe Hutchings, Jim

1 :Gosse, Ted Jones, Harry Chipman, l\1ark Sheppard, Clayton Smith, Az Smith, Graham V,okeY., Ben Titford. ·rn an ·I~· exhibition game played at C.arbonear with a team from the United Church School on Friday of last week the score i 1 ;. :\vas 7-3· in favour of the above group. 1_~:,·. . .

II:· P!Jpils Re~t~r l·j;: FQr Exa~allons ' f · SPANIARD'S BAY Jan, 28th-. , i' .. Fort)'•nine pupils attending Holy

:, Redeemer Anglican School hal'c .: .. 'I'C!listcred lor the June Public j. ;Examln'allons. 01 lime aline will

:·I. ·~·rite grade eleven, fifteen grade ' ! :en, and twcnty.fii'C grade nine; ' I 1 this is a ·Mibstantial lncreasr Ol'cr ~ ·: Wa$t year'~ rc;:lstrallon, Grade · 1 elcl'cn, eight; grade ten, ten; I· J!rade nine, SCI'~ntcen. · In addl·

i •l :tl!\1 to these there il one who ha~ · : . IPrt school for emplo~·nicnt and

. 11 \\·ho plans to do pri1·atc study and 1, :write the jlrade clcl'en• examina. · · ·Uon.~ in .June. There are also a

. \."~o_uple or student. i•l ~:radc nine · · i ··.·~t. St, Anne's Roman Catholic

lj\ )~hool. \\'e wish teachers and , !!.'pupils s_u_e"_~_ss_. ___ _

., Church Services ANGLICAN

' ltedor Re1•. Canon T, E, Loder Fourth Sunday after the Epiphany

, Holy· Redeemer Church · '· 8.30 a;m.-Hol~· Communlcr.1

11.00 a.m. -Choral Eucharist 1 and Sermon · 2.15 p.m. -Sunday School

1 . 7.00 p.m. -Evensong and Ser. 1 mon . .

The second platoon of 2565 Army Cad~t Corps, Spanl~rd's Bay, ls ·shown as receive drill urider the supervision of Mr. Lewi~ E. Gosse, Assistant Instructor.

i All Saints' Church,· Tilton . , ~. 3.00 p.m.-Eve-.1song and · Ser. ;;"'on . ..-:-..

!.' :: RO~IAN CATHOJ.JC 1:,. ' St. Anne's Churelt

. :liT. ANNE'S CHURCH; SPA. :NAIRD\S BAY < O:lebrant Rev. Fr. Ilincs · ·10.30 a.m.-Mass

UNITED CHURCII Millist,er Rev, J. S. H. ~loran,

,• I

Note of Thanks Vestryman Made sPA~tARo·s'BAY Jan 2s.~Thc A Life Member

Camliy of the late Mrs, Mary Jane · Barrett desil"J to thank all their SPAl'HARD'S BAY Jan. 28-1\t rriends Who helped In any wa~· the annual,mecting of the parlsho· during the illness ol and alter the n•m of Holy Redeemer Churem death of a'lo\'ill!: wile and mother. held on Saturday evening last lllr. The thoughl!ulncss ol their fr~nds William Nell was ~made a•l helped in no fimall way to P.llel'iate I honourary ll!c member of the vcs­the EOrrow or the family, and for try, At the suggestion DI the ree­this they are grateful. · tor, Rev. Canon T. E. Lorloer, the

I.

parlshoncrs voted unanimously to bestow tliis honour on Mr. Neil m recognition of the many years in W1tich he has rendered loyal ser· vice to the parish church. Mr. NeiL is now seventy·cight · years old and never m'lsscs a church service, and he comes ia1 'aU weath-ors, JUs example is worthy oC emulation.

A full account o( the church's ac.\ivlties for the year will appear in our next week's budget ol "Spaniard's Bay News."

\

(

I . THE DAILY NEWS,

Shown above are the Instructors and members of 2565 Spaniard's Bay Cadet (Army) Corps. Chief u1s1.n"1,,,,

Mr. W. Hedderson, B.A., 'Prindp~l of the Anglican Sc~ool, and he is assisted by Mr. Roy Mercer and l\lr. . Gosse. Officers are Captain Austin Sheppard, CSM Eric Pye, 1st. 'Lieut. Mark Sheppard, 1st. Lieut. Joe Sgt. Ted Jones and Sgt. Douglas Nose\vorthy. '

Loading and unloading a light machine gun is d~monstrated by lst. Lieut . .l'I'Iark Sheppard of the Snaniard'> Corps as the cadets of the first platoon watch inte'ntly and listen carefully. The Cadet Corps was e~tablbheul

}Pring by· Mr. C. Hatcher with members of the local School Board acting as the sponsoring commi!lee:

'

Birthdays SPANIARD'S BAY .Tan. 28'-Con.

gratulations are extended to lllrs. William Flynn whose birthday wa~ on Wednesday, January 30. Best wishes come from ber sons ·and daughters.

Cel-ebrating .their birthda:·s on Thursday, January 31, are Mr. G . Fred Smith, 1\lr, William Hutch· ings · and Billy Tilford. Hawy bltthday to you all. ·

Wayne Gosse will be five years old on Thursday, January 31. Greetings come· from Mommy, Daddy and sister Linda. A spccail one from Jean·~ltc.

three on Friday and greetings! 0! course if the Gui.des (of 1~hich come from :Mommy, Daddy and Mrs. Sheppard is the District the family, · Commissioner) a11d Brownies ad·

Personals · ded tt.•airs ours would be lost 111

Celebrating .her birthday on the din. Nevertheless, Happy

1

. SPA.NIARD'S B;\\' Jan. Candlemas Day Is l\lrs. Rob~rt N. Birthday ~!adam. ·_ ;.Ia Barrett left here la;t Seymour and her two daughters, ' lor the C:•.ladi~n mainl'.nl Gloria and Yvoone, are anxious to The pupils of grade three at; he ·will seck employment. say "Happy Birthday' .,to their Holy Rcdeem·~r School have asked: · --. M()m, · us to. please . put their teacher's I' ~Irs. J~hn llutchmg;

birthday i11 "the paper" on 'L'ues· was tc•ldere:l a stork Lois Pye will be six years old day, February 5th. Their teacher

1

her home cin Tuc·:lar on Monday,. February 4, and the is Miss Marina Bishop, and ""~ last \l'~e!l ·by a next day, Tuesday, her Grandpa hope they will forgive us ·if the I of her frwnds. ~tr;. · will cel·~brate his birthda. Best greeting comes a little early., wrn th1 bir.~' .~r-z? . .Jtr;. ' wishes come from lhe family, An Happy hirthda)', ~!iss, from alii' \\'h3len won hr;t nmc rr;, extra birthday wish for Uncle Ned thirty-odd of them. rotd ~Irs. ~lo,cs r. '''~ .''·:"d comes from Harv. -- · . . with the boob)'. A flrh~::a:

. · . . . i p~r was served ,r:~r t:•J Next Sunday Mrs. Winston Shep. '1~1c Vokcys want to remm<L~h'>; gifts were pt·c,cntcJ.

pard will obscfl'e her birthday and Emily ~lerccr that lh·~Y hal'c not: added to the best wisl:cs of her forgotten what Tuesday, February! (Spanl~rd's !lay ~c111 two sons, Austin and Noel, are j 5\h, means to her, and wish her j 131 sixty more ti)e Junior Choir. the very best. on l'a~r

ALL STOCI(S MUST BE· SOLD All .. Men's and· Ladies' Clothing Re~uced To Cost

..

MEN'S WEAR , Suits-Raglans·. ·Top-· Coats :_Overcoats.·

• I' . ~ • •

_ Sport-·Jacke.ts ~··~an·ts-:Shirts~ swe~iters ~Belts . :: . . .... . : ~ '

-P·yj_IJI __ s .~.Et~ .. ; I .

;·33113 to· 50% rin I ' ,· • •. • •

. '

' . AtL ·FIXTUREs· - '

Lots Of Items Below C.ost ··For. Qui~k Clearance

No ·Appro No Charging . . . ' . . .

All · Sa·les· ·Final · & Co., Ltd~.

321 Water St.

Ladies' Coats­.Raglans~ Suits -Sweaters~ Blouses· Slacks-Shirts· Etc.

ALL TO· CLEAR Al

Price . '

- SHOWCASES, ETC., WILL BE SOLD AS STOCKS ARE SOtD OUT.

,.

. helicopter t a dress hebe test pilot ~o mounted in t

uses a mixture o[

Best fers l

.·In on 40-lb, ruu.v age c For 1

Page 9: TH~E D·.AIL¥ ·NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · D'Araeon 3500. 3 32 32 .:.r De Cour 5l!OO '57 !6 H · -1 . De cour wll !110 171>

I

' ,>

onals

lutchin~; C st~rk­

t.c·da\' I COUnle 0{ "r;. :\'Jrm r'z~. ~lr;. ·l PTilC ltr (;1;'? wrlkd A !lrli·!~u·

i ~rt~r f··! en ted.

~ I

.. . ·.a·

I '

sECTIO~. II' .. 'fh.e Daily News ' '

"

SECTION II' . '

st. JOHN'S~, NEW~OU~DLAND; FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 195,7

. "\, . ' . ·.·. ··.

Important NeWs I , . . ' . .

Events .Captu.red By INS Came·ram~n

Pa.-"Stable Mabel" a one-man rocket­helicopter that can be flown "no hands" goes a dress hehenrsal under the expert guidance of test pilot Norman Lloyd. Powered by rocket mounted i11 the tips of the rotor blades,· the 'cop­a mixture of hydrogen peroxide as fuel. .

CHiCAGO J11....:...Hatless and wearing an army fatigue jacket, Edward (Bennie) Bedwell points to the ditch on a lonely Chi~ago suburb roadway where the nude bodi~s or the Grimes sisters, Patricia, 13, a.~d Barb~ra, 15, \:•ere found last Tuesday. Bedwell, a suspect in the murder of the .. teeriagers. last .month, l:d police to th1s. spo~ m .a re-enactment of the final hours of the girls. He is being held m connection w1tl1 the cnme, as a compamon, 1denh· fied as "Frank" ·is being sought. At left of photo (glasses, dark coat) is Sheriff Joseph Lohman.

ROME. Ilaly-The Aga Khan shakes his cane angrily at · photographers who snapped his picture as he left the Rome opera with his Swiss secretary, Ruth Osbahr, after atten.d- · ing a performance of Mozart's •;The Rape ~'rom The Ser- .

' \

''JMCO--P1.·inc:e Rainier (.center) sits solemnly beside his mother-11{-law Mrs. John Kelly, wl1ile his first-born Princess Caroline Louise Marguerite is registered. The Royal mother, Princess Grace, is not shown. The born last Wednesday, assures the independence of the tiny principality of Monaco from .France for another , .-(I.N.P.) • .

sJao· . Best Bargain In Newfoundland •• , of· rcrs 8 cubic feet of food·storage capacity 4n0 o1bnly 24" of floor space. Hasfull·wldth1 · · Freezer and Cold Storage Tray ana full·wldth Humldrawer. Also ·added· &tor· ~Fe capacity In door for eg~s and bottle!.

or a better buy , , • buy NOW I ·

., . '.

o·use •

$10·00 .. TRADE-IN

FOR YOUR OLD

WASHTUB

s139. B'.!P5f>

aglio". Miss Osbahr, standing behind the Aga's wheelcar, ~-1 : I, 1

is wearing a mink coat and diamond-p'endant earrings.__ 1 ;: ·} i .

' ·t •.

MISSILE TEST CENTER, 'Fia.-Norlh American Aviation Company's unmanned test \'chicle for tbe U.S. Air Force SM-64 Navaho interconfincnl3l strategic guided missile w capon system program is shown taking off into the bright blue yonder at the missile test center i~ Florida. It is the X-10 which has been flown at high supersonic speeds in a ser}es of tests as part of the overall Navaho program.- (I.N.P.)

-CD7

$20.00 ·TRADE-IN_ FOR YOUR OLD

ClOTHESLINE

s2·29.

UP TO $50·00 TRADE-IN

FOR YOUR ~ OLD

RANGE

s269. AJD

' ' ' . - ,. STEERs LTo:.fURNJTURE AND APPLIANCE STORt WATER STREET

'DIAl 80021 ·. ST; ·JOHN'S

EASY.

MONTHLY ..

PAYMENTS

-~ . -'

t ~ I •• ~II : :' ! ' .: _,.I

I '' :!,t j

:.r. !t • •. •: ,/ ' I l.lt I• I jli ... ·:I l .. ' :~ ; . I' , ' :1 1 ! 1 ], I

l. i ~. . ; : I ~.1 . i.! , I'. . . , , t; ~~-. j . !. : •r' . ,,t ' :! ' II . ' . ·:·

' .. , .

Page 10: TH~E D·.AIL¥ ·NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · D'Araeon 3500. 3 32 32 .:.r De Cour 5l!OO '57 !6 H · -1 . De cour wll !110 171>

t I,, :; I.,' t; l . :I I 1 ;·,I. I ' ., : ~ '1 i

'i l .I 1,-0 i 0;. jj .'' : ' . ; I

i.

• 10 THE DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1 . . I

·c.~OnThe .DOCIOH lor

.. I.IJE J~....- £0'-'E lr EUZAirrtf SEIFERT

-..~!.~.;"' lcJON-TV '1.30-Slgn On, CBC Nen 7.35-Top or the Mornlna:. 8.00-CBC News and Weatbll'.

,To~ight ll.O~Burton's of Banner SL 11.15-Big Mountain Sliow. , 12.00-News. 12.05-Ramblln' with Records. 12.30-,-N ews. · 12.45-Fisherman's Forecast.

"TEA :\ND SYMPATHY" WITH DEBORAH KERR

~,f56.,~Wtrt .. -I Cass turned to look directly · at "FIXED BAYO!'\ETS• • There really was such a town! him. He was a big man, Dr. WITH RICHARD

8.15-Muslcal Clock. D.OO.:..Mornlng Devotions. 9.1~Program Preview. 11.20-Piano Playtime. 9.30-Records at Random.

10.00-Cream of the West. lo.lO-Hlt or the Day. 10,10-Hit of the Day, 10.15-lrls Power. 10.25-CBC News. 10.30-Mornlni Musicale. 10.45-BBC Variety. 11.15-Natlonal School Broadcast. 12.45-Mld Day Serenade. · 1.00-Doyle Bulletin. 1.15-Laura Limited. 1.30-CBC News and' Weather.

' 1.411-lllusical Programme. :!.00-Wordd and lllusic. 2.1~Thne out for M~lody. 2.30-Atlantlc School Broadmt. 2.43--The Happy Gana:.

. 3.15-For the Plano. 3.36-Trans Canada Matinee. 4.36-CBC News. 4.35-Timely Tunes. 4.45-Children's Story, U5-Fisheries :Sroadcast. 5.45-Kindergarten of the Air. 6.00-Intermezzo. 6.30-Supper Guest 11.45-Muslcal Program. 1 7.00-CBC Ne1i's and Weather.

FRIDAY, February 1st. .500-Howdy Doody, 5,36-Western.

8,00-0n Trial. 8.30-Plourfee Family . 9.00-TBA,

6.110-Rancb Time. 8.30-Newt Cavalea~e. 7.00-All Star Theatre, 7.30-The Early Show.

9.3Q.--Country Hoedown. 10.00-A. E. Hickman Show. ll.OO...;.News-Public Service. i1.10-Late Show.

·~------------------, II· Neva.da Nugget I, l • 1 ACROSS ~~ Drtlare

I _ City II 59 Long St'al Nevada's 00\\'S rapltal t Shug~le

, II ts ' 2 In a line mcknamed the 3 Gtl up "-- Slate" 1 Dlstre~s tlt;nal

I~ B1rd ~City in 14 Small sparr New York

. I~ Thes~ wer~ 6 Cuddle 23 Leavr common In 7 Made famous 24 Slide Nevada's by Miss 25 Girl's namr

1 early history Lam our 26 Aslat1c sea

16 Climbing S'Angry 20 CitY m palm 9 Permit Nevada

17 Felnale sheep 10 Ballo! 30 BurmClie wood 18 Near 11 Enthusinsllc sprites • 10 On lime (a b.) ardor 3 t Pieces out

! 20 Conclusion 12 Tear 37 Dormant 21 Not lined 21 Muse nt JB Part of "be" 04 Wound mark astronomy 30 Sticky. ; 7 Unit of energy 22 Sy1~bol lor substances 28 Sea engle IridiUm 42 Enter

~a Scandlnavll!l 44 Park m

Cleveland, Ohio '

45 Anctent Grrel cHy

46 Go by' 49 Viands ~o 1'o be (Fr.) 5I Essential . being 53 Follower 55 Pewter co!n

or Thalland

1.15-Sportscast. 1.30-N e\VS,

! 1.45-Simon Mystery. ' 2.00-,-Rambiin' with Records

2.55-News. , 3.00-Dollars on Parade,'

· 4.01)-News. 4.05-Sam's Coral. 4.55-News.

· 5.00-Cisco Kid. 5.30-lllelody Man. · 6.00-News and. Weather. 6.15-·Sportscast. ·

1 6.25-Lost and Found. '6,45-News. •

I 7.00-Rainbo\V Riddle. 7.15-Dr .. Paul. \ 7.30-Bargain Hour. 8.00-Hocke)'.

I 0.30-,-Sammy . Kaye. 10.45-News. 11.15-Philo VanC1!.

· 11.45-Ciub '590 .. 1.00-Closedown.

vous FRIDAY, February lsi.

C~ss' had heard about it, by Alexander Ward. Tall. Broad· , . -One of the . year's' outstanding mouth and by letter, for as long shouldered. Black, thick hair, Fixed Bayonets:" .

motion ·pictures "Tea and Sym· as three years-and now-on · a dark eyes, and a wonderful smile. 1 Century-Fox's. her_oic !lor · pathy," M-G-:M's film .version in September morning, she and Alex Not handsome in the pretty ·sense, 1 ~ear-:~a~d action 1n KoreJ

CinemaScopc and color of the were driving steadily toward it. but extremely attractive. . mg 1~ ard Basehart, Gen; great Broadway stage. success. They had 'spent the night in St. Cass had first met him three and M chael O'Shea, 1t ti

The picture retains the stellar Louis, risen early, and now, to years ago when he was doing his Theat_re. 1

team of the original cast, Deborah quote Alex, were "dropping down residency at a New York hos- ·Written and directed bt Kerr and John Kerr, with the the •road'' to the Cove. 1 pita!, and when she was getting I Fuller of. "Steel llelmei• screen version . written by the Alex said the river was the 'used to her job as pril'ate secre- , g~eat eptsode oJ play's author, Robert· Anderson. basii!' thing, nnd the creek which tary to_ one of the executives in a I hl1story to tell the He has done a masterful job in ran into it. There had been wood big trust company. She had liked P l~oon of 48 men left transferring this compassionate, at the Cove, formed by the june- Alex from the first, but she was i a Korean mountain Pass dramatically' cogent story of a lion of the two streams, trees to doing quite well for herself, and 1 the retreat of their mala ., seventeen.-ycar-old prep school boy ; cut and pile on the bank for the would not marry him then. When 1 from a. snowbound PO!itlon · caught up in an infatuation with 1 river streamers. At nightfall they he had gone off to serve his twu ,mountams. The narrath·e

. the wife of his housemaster lo the i used to. nose into the muddy years in the' Navy, separation had ; around a . ~·oung i wider canvas afforded . by the j creek bank, load up with fuel ! helped his cause. Still, after hi~ 1 who ~ons!ders himsel! ·j CinemnScope · cameras. · 1 by· torchlight, then go on their 1. return, it had taken some per- i lead _flg~tmg men _beeau11

. Without sacrificing any of the I way at dawn. ·· . suasion on his 11art to conl'incc 'the ·~=!mel to kill. One ; inlimale touches, the screen ·olfers A camp of woodcutters had ' her that she wanted to gil'e up

1 the hcutenant and two

I the playwright a far wider range in•\ become a smail settlement; as. her career !o marry and come: who command . lh~ presenting background and local I the trees were cut, the work, i with him to Missouri, to Blue :platoon l?se the1r litet color. Whereas the pia~· was con- ! and the homes, ~ad edged up the • Jay Cove. : c~rporal IS ~aced With the !!ned to two sets, the lilm version ; steep hilis. Then the medicinal! "Yes," he was answering her i ~1ty of prol·mg him1el1 11 1 of "Tea-and Sympatl1y" ranges l springs had • been disco\'ered.l now, "1 think my motlwr would '1er and leader o!_ hi! men . from the housemaster's home and

1

. Some built permanent summer 1 want me to make this sort of 1 As the scn11hre, garden to sequences on a beach: homes; Matt's great-grandfather 1 sacrifice." ! Gl who searches lor at a golf club, an Ice-cream par· had been one of these. His I Cass wanted to ask what she . t~e bleak. cold lor hangout and a l'ariety of grandfather, also a doctor, began was like, his mother. Insteatl, ! Side, Fuller and scenes involving student activities to care professionally for some i she said something about being j Buck selected talented : including a rousing l'ajama Fight of the summer visitors. Store~ afraid his mother ha'd not wanted i Baseh~rt. the henlded r~·

6,00-Slgn On and Sundial. between the old and new boys. were op_ened, a post office in- him to bring home a wife . . • : sucb 1m~ortant films 11 ' 6.30-World News. - stalled, people began building "Oh, she couldn't. be sur-, forthcommg "Decision 7.30-World News. But although its scope h~s been year-round homes. As the wood- prised,'' he said with the grave · Da~·n" and "Fourteen 8.00-Brealdast Club. enla:ged, the .!;tory remams es- land withdrew still farther from absurdity which :;o enchanted : For the hard • boiie! 8,30-,-Make lip Your Mind. senlla.lly th~ same. It _Is that of the , the Cove, and the need for wood · Cass. "And don't ever try to, War II ~ctread, Fulle: 7.15-Curtaln Calls.

7.30-Tops Today. 7.45-Doyle Bulletin. 8.15-Musical Program. 8.45-Kitchen Corner; 9.00-Piano 4 Hands. 9.30-Cathedral Del'otions.

132 f'emtnlne

appellation 33 Boundary

I' 13 ii I~ .• 11 18 ? 10 [II 8.4~-Rex Koury. . sensitive, mtrosp,echve student, !lessened, farms were laid out, I persuade her,'' he continued 1 the serl'lces of ru&!!~ 9,Q0-,-1t Happe'ned Last Night. Tom Lee, whose refusal ·to cnn·1.and orchards planted. I earnestly, "that I had to talk like

1 E1·ans, the star of "S~1g

IL

b Nevada hlgheJ:t mountain

's Ill II>

10.00-Coffee Time. form to the _mold ?,f the r~~ular Dr. Knapp, Sr., buill an cspe-l'a Dutch uncle to get you to· mel': who onl~· ~ year 11.00-,-Turn Back the Clock. guy makes lum an_ . of-horse. and cia!ly fine home, stayed there one · marry me, over your better juctg.l pl~ymg small suppGrtir.g

. r~-li~

10.00-:\larine lnl'estigator. , 34 Persia

kc : 35 roller stn ! 36 Hawaiian

lfl ;;}{i~ '

11.30-Pepperrell Juke Club. brings on the de~lsmn of hi~ Jel- 1 winter and the next. Patients" men!." . j $7:> a week. 12.10-,-News and D.B. lo:v students, his convenhonal· :came and stayed. And. sent for Cass felt, from a word ht>re. an , :Michae~ O'Shea. lor.g 1

' 12.30-,-Hillbllly ~latinee. mmded fnther and t~c contemp- ·their friends. It was all a grad· anecdote there, that she had a : dy favonte, r<·'. ert; to 1 Ill ~ III,

10.30-Eventide. 11.00-Serenade for Strings. 11.30-National News,

CJON FRIDAY, Februar~· lsi.

precipice 37 Race cour

circuit se

sea 40 Antarctic 41 Unbrcaka ble

obstacle 44 Fiber kno 47 Pronoun 4S Thus 49 River In

ts

II

tz'l. lS liP ~0 p

ilL I''' J'l , I"' 0

"

1.00-,-Behind the Story. tuous house-mn~ter,. Bill Reynold~. 1 ual thing, building up like the pretty good picture of ,\]ex's role as the sober, . 1.15-~lasters of l\Ielod)·. Only 'the latter s WI!~, Laura, un- : deposit of river silt. mother. Cordelia Ward was un- non-com who makes th 1.30-,-)lusical Express. derstands the uneertamty and tor-

1 "But the , hospital •.. " she doubtediy a noble woman who sacrifice in ~n allempt ,

1.45-~oh Crosgy. m~nt of this youth, no longer a 1 mused, "the whole medical pic- had raised her family under dif- the Commumst ad~ar.c1. · 2.00-lllatinee. 1\ boy and not yet ~n adu!t ,and at-: ture in Blue Jay Cove .•. " · . ficulties. Alex's father had died Fuller and Buck 2.30-0ne Jllan's Famii~·. tempt~ to help ~1m Wl!,h more I "We speak of it as the Cove." wHen he was a young boy. The "K?rean War''. on. a_ 2.45-March -of Events. 1 !han tea and s!mpathy. Goaded 1 he told. "II'• quicker. And you mother had ruled her family-, tenor set bmit ln!IC! 1

3.00-Do You Know. IIllo proving his manhood, T~m: do know about the hospital; it's as a desperately fighting woman ·stage .. They set oil !O:e

u ~

!@IB ~ lll ll I·

ll)

::;; ~ ~ .

I' :0 11,30-Bob Lewis Show. 8.30-Nfld. News. 11.35-Wutber. 1!.45-Flshermen's NAws and Fort

Scotlan:t ~2 "Lily Mal

Astolat" M Character . lstlCli ~&Hearken ~7 Compoun

elheh

d of r'l 151.

1'15 ,'lit

~ I'· 3.30-VOUS Record Room. 's~eks out the company of a cheap ; called House Springs. Patients is apt to do-rigidly. She still ~xpl?sl~~s tha: . rang!l

4.00-,-World News. ! waitre~s and, when his subsequent are referred there for special felt that need to control, to guide. sqUibs conta1h1r.g I I 4.05-VOUS Record Room. ; rey~lston leads to an attem~t. at ! care; the spring water stili fea- Her family consisted of an 18- of powder to "rockets" i 4.30-Five Star !\latlqee. ! sUI~lde, ~aura makes a deC!Sion 1 Lures, but the inclination now is year-old daughter; Alex, who two pounds of d~·namit!.

4.35-Hawali Calls, , wh1ch brmgs about ~ momentous · more to thcrap y and re-educn· was 29, and now, Cass Denton of the blasts were Sl

. ~ p .~

il'l ~a&t.

7.00-Nfld. New1 and Sport.. .7.03-Local Weather. ,,15-Canadian News and Spllrb 7.30-Round the World Ne ... '/.35-We.ather Roundup. 7.45-News Summary. 8.110-Nild. Newa. 8.05-Provineial Weather.

-I"'

d 1111

9.45-Murlel McKay.

II I·

. 8.26-Shtpplne Report. · d.25-Khl!lies Corner.

· 10.00-Martin's Corner. !10.15-Jukc Box Rc\'lcw . 1 1!1.30-~lld :\lornlng ~lelodir5.

8.30-Nfld. News. 8.35-Complete Weatner 1

10.45-Elel'ell for the ~Ioney. Roun' 10.55-Hit of the Day,

11.00-,-News. . UP. 8.45-~lornlna Mftrry-Go Round. 11.01-John Turner's Family.

· 9.00-Nfld. Newa 11.05-Duke Box Review. 11.30-Newa.

U.31-Casino. 12.00-,-News, Tops Today. 1.00-,-Local and Nation&! Newa. 1.05-Weathcr Forecast. 1.31-Duke Box Review.

BISHOP FEILD HALL

8,15 , 2.30 Mat. Nightly Saturday

IT'S A SCREAM

"RUNNING· WILD'~

Reservations at Bo-.yrings. After 6.30 p.m. - 'Phone 6221

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

TODAY 0 •

TIIN•AOI •ov ... UNDI:RSTANDINO'WOMAN I

Also-UP-TO·THE·MINUTE NEWS "riMES OF SHQvv::,:

EVENING SHOWS: 7 11.~1.~9 P.M. MATINEE 2 I'.M,

. ADMISS~ON PRICES FOR THIS ENGAGEMENT1 EVENING-ADULTS , , , • , •. 75e (;fiiLDitE!Ij_, •••••. 35(

0 •

JIATINEEB-ADULTS ...... 5be CWLDRE~ ....... ~c

COMING SOON I

JE~F MORROW-REX REASON In "THE CREATURE WALIS AMONG US"-SUSPENSE-THRILLS-EXCITE·

··MENT; ....

151 5.00-World News. ! change. in both Toms future and. lion. We care for chronic cases, Ward. Twbnty • fh·e, red-haired that they c~acked ar.d 1 5,15-World of Sports. . her olin. some convalescent - and of; and a person of more dct~rmina- the set ;nd Ill th~ !r.d

5.30-U.N. Review, : Vincente Jllinneili and l'andrn, course some problem ones." And, tion tha~ Mrs. Ward would, per- a total of 1? mmor 6,00-,-World Nell's. · 5 Berman respective director and for a time at least Alex was to, haps, enJoy. amo~g the acting pmoat!l

~~ 8

6.05-Rampart Street. 1 p~oducer ~f. "Tea and Sympathy," be,on t~e staff of t.his place. . "f • . • •. . H1s .· scr~enpla~· ~ug;er.!! t.lli-Tops Today, 6.30-,-Sports Today, , were fortunate in being able to get I It IS an _umq~~ hospital, I HE was _pulhng mto o~e- of _last 111~ters .dr_am;lic 1.15-News. 6.45-Final Edition. the drama's original stars for their . Alex was saymg, m that we those scenic turn • outs m the 1 the Um~cd :-iallon.

· 1.35-Editorfal Comment. 7.15-Pepperrell Today. i motion picture adaptation. It is I strive to make the needs of the~ road which are helpful in many ·North . Korea, one. o! 1.40-:sportn Review. 7:20-~ll' Son Jeep. I difficult to think of anyone other I individual patient our first con-1 ways. "Going to .show you the I drama he events m . 1.45-Art Baker's Notebook. ' 7.35-Rocky Fortune. ! than Deborah Kerr for the ·role of I sideratioil. We do this In the

1Jay-outs," he snid gruffly. · ! lcr ordered th~ _;et built .

2.00-News. 8.00-,-X lllinus One. I Laura Reynolds. It Is a beautifully matter of food and baths and I The town lay below them like~ beg .. any wntmg. Once ll 2.Dl-Second 'i'lddle. 8.30-,-Twenty-first Precinct. 1 ;haded performance of glowin~ 1 hours. We give instant response 1 a toy village, even to the minia-1 was constructed he went Cit

2.15-0ut of the Dark. 8,55-Footnotes to Sports. 'warmth, tenderness and vitality. i to what the patient considers an ! lure train which was snaking area and. wrote th~ story to 2.30-News, Matinee. 9.00-Could this be You? 1 . 1 emergency; we keep our census: along the· river bank. Alex's J surro~ndmgs, as 1! he 3.00-,-News, Housewives Club. . 11.30-,--C, P. McGregor. 1 John Kerr, as Tom Lee, the: small so that we can consider pointing finger indicated the mandmg such a rear-guard 4.0l)-Gen. Provincial Newa. -~10.15-Pcpper. rell Sports Desk. 1 rharactcrizntion which_ mad_e him , even· patient and accomplish places of interest. Broadway, 1 himself. 4.01-Caslno. 10.30-,-Portralts In Music. . an overni~ht star,- wms mstant 1 o~r pr!mar~ purpose of robbing which followed t~e river; It wnsl SPECIAl, ADDED 4.30-News, .Ranch Par(J. 11.00-,-Muslc Til Midnight. sr~npathy m the role of lhe_youth h1m of _anxiety.'' on the levee, sa1d Alex. There, The Star "The Goidta 4.45-Saddle Serenade. 12.00--Sign Off. whose temperament makes h1m un- "Is -yours the only •. '!" he said, were most of the shops, W'tb A d llutU

able to become a member of the "No there's a town hospital, the banks, the business offices 1 n re · ~:~~!~!' ::db ~~~~~::~ Show tribe, and Lei( ·Erickson, in the too. Small, but adequate to a At right angles to Broadway, , He pointed out a dense ll.U5-Bulletln Board. - completely opposite. part . o! the

1

small town only a hundred miles , .. neatly bisecting the "map" was 1 trees at the far P.dge ol tit 11.16-Natlonal News. aggressively masculme _Bill . Rey- from the city.'' , :l!ain Street, which · sloped· up-1-that, he said indic1lr! 6.15-Sports Parade. CapitO} nolds, is solidly convincmg. Cpss sat thoughtful. ward-"Steep as a ladder.'' said course of Blue Jay Cl'!rl 6.25-Provlncial Newa. Th ..., , 1 fi t' : "If you can live and work in i Alex-to the domed courthouse. yond the courthou!c," he fi,31J-Shower of Stars. .._._ _._. : perfo~~aa;:e~~~~~on~e :~:~orth~~: a P,iace so diff_erent fr?,m what: Branching off_ from _Main Street, linued, ."c.an ~~ou make ~uti 7.ol-Frank Parker Shw. I of Dick York (also of the original you ve been domg , • . she be- i ruffled and frilled w1th tail trees, or. s~mi·Circl;. A b11 7.15-Incrcdible But True.. To morrow tage ast) as Tom's disturbed gan. I were other streets. Avenues. One I bulidlng \l'tth a grm 7.30-:-News. • ;oomm~te, Edward Andrews as "Anything, .':':auld b;. different icould sec hous_e _tops, the ·roofs J That's the hos~ltai! Ortr 7.45-Right to Happiness. Tom's rather Norma Crane as from the Na\~. . , o! larger bUildmgs that were to the north of 1t are th1 8.Dl-Caslno. "RICHARD III" . Ellie the 'brassy waitress and 1 "You had such a good resi· : schools. A half-dozen churches! (Continued on page 8.01-Night Beat, WITH LAURENCE OLIVIER : Dea; Jones and Dick Tyle~ as I dency offered you," lhe mur-11 -========-=--- ---=-=-========;;;;; 8.30-,-Hockey, II' j murcd

10.45-Dosco News. : t)·pical school bu les. "I k~ow But I owed some time ; 11.00-Natlonal NewL "RICHARD ~II" one of the fin·! One of the most talked-about i at least to' my home town, and to· 11.15-Sports Final, /est pictures e\ er made comes to plays in Broadway's history, "Tea mr mother. Compared to what she 1

1

11.30-Houseparty, News. warm the hearts of all those p~o- and Sympathy" emerges as an gave up for me ••• " 1

1.01-Queen and Sign Off, ple who are eagerly awaiting Its equally eloquent and thought-pro- "Does she know you're making ' 1 ------------ arrival. Based upon Shakespeare's vokin~;: motion picture. 11 reprc· this sacrifice, Alex?"

V 0 C M. story, lt ·will a~pcal to all cinema· sents movie-making at its best. 1 HE didn't answer at once, and : goers with It's virile action, dra- 1

FRIDAY, February ht malic ·story and exciting climax, ---------· tor Laurence Olivier who produc- : ll.28-0n the Air. - 1 ed and dirccied has done a grand ' 6.:10-Urcnkfast Club. I joh of work. ·

ll.OO-Date with Denys. Brilliantly acted by a glitter-9.15-l•'o~glove Street, : lng array of arti~ts ,including .

! 9.!10-Date with Denys. ! Lnurcnre Oli1·ier, llalph llichar1l· i 10.00-Ncws. ' :son, John Gielgud and Clain• : , 10.0/i-Date with Denys. j Bloom, filmed in Vista Vision and ;·10.30-llere Comes O'Malley. ~lnrious 1'cchnl-color, "RICHARD 110.55-News. iII[" is a "must" for everyone.

,-======

. NOW PLAYING The Man who Smashed

THEATRE

A/so-NOVELTY TIMES OF SHOWSr

, . ' EVENING SHPWS':' 7.15-9.15

Custer!

I MATINEES: 2.SD - SATURDAY Z O'CLOCK

.. \

NEXT AT"'fRACTION . '.

JAMES .STEWART. In '~HE MAN FROM. LARAliiiE­ACTION - THRILLS .....:. CINEM.\SCOPE, •

'• 0

TO-MORROW

LAURENCE OLIVIER '

!CLAIRE BLOO~ JOHN GtELGnD·MLI>H aKamsok • ALEC CLUNESoCEDRtC HIRDWICK£.Lit1RENCE NAISftnr

· SU~UYBI~EII· toUKM.IN W~D •JIAIY KERilll'E PAMEU BROWN • Hru:'i HI\'EoJOIL'II.ArRl£ • ESMOh~ IN!Git'l

~ "RICHARD Ill duzles the tJt, ·

the ear an~ the mind .... ,\'rue film achievement" Altx B .. rril,

- Globt & M"il.

Also-UP-TO-THE-MINUTE NEWS

EVENING SHOWS: 6.15 • 9.00 MATINEES L30· ..

ADMISSION PRICES FOR THIS. ENGAGEMENT EVENING-ADULTS ••••... 75e CWLDREN ••••••• 35c

1\IATINEEB-ADULTS .. ; ... 50c CWLDREN ....... 25c

----------·

LAST- TIMES TO~DAY I ,

. "WHILE THE CITY SLEEPS" · . I

*-STAR NOW PLAYING

·Special Added Attraction

·•· ......... . lohtrkl

mRE MORELL • tHEA tRECDRY JACK WmiNG • PATRICK HOLT O~ttllll br CIIARUS SAUNDERS

A Perkside Produtlion blmed by 201ft CIIIIIIIJ.flll

TIMES OF SHOWSt EVENING-"FIXED BAYQNETS" 7 O'CLOci-9.55

''THE GOLDEN LINK''-8.35, MATINEE Z P.M.

. NEXT ATTRACTIO~ Til~~ "YIYSTERY LAKE"-WITH MORE TERRIFYil"iG Df" FICTION- Also "O.K. NERO".- LAUGHS- co~E SPECTACLE.

Buildi

HARV

USE SEAl EASY-TC

co~

E~ DORVI .sliding man tc Is avai Rardw

.. literah

Page 11: TH~E D·.AIL¥ ·NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · D'Araeon 3500. 3 32 32 .:.r De Cour 5l!OO '57 !6 H · -1 . De cour wll !110 171>

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1957

Building Ideas; Plans and From

HARVEY LUMBER & HARDWARE LTD.

.· ,· .. ,..; l

USE BEAUTIFUL,

EASY-TO-CLEAN

For walls, counter tops and splashbacks FOR MORE INFORMATION, SEE SAMPLES AND LITERATURE FREE UPON REQUEST .• FROM HARVEY'S

CONVERT YOUR BATHTUB TO A MODERH SHOWER

Erery Home needs a Shower and a Bath. You can have BOTH with a n9RVUE bathtub enclosure. Tliis design, the "Rivcria" model, has a front of shding panels. Doors roll overhead on easy glide roller bearings, Easy for one man to install and It comes complete 'Nith two, one piece towel bars. DORVUE ~ available at a price every family can afford. Drop In at Harvey Lumber and' l.tardwarc Ltd., cor. Prescott and Duckworth Streets, or write or 'Phone for FREE 1 crature.

. ' .. ,

,,,

....

MODERN s.TYLING adds swank to America's favorite-the two·storey. TWO-WAY FIREPLACE cheers living room and study

~----------------~~~----------------

Open-Plan Family Room

In Big Home at Low Cost . By DAVID G. BAREUTIIER . · ,

A TWO·STORY colonial style house has something you won't get in any other style o£ dwell!ng~more livable room space for the lowest building cost. Besides, this old favorite in American archiecture-one that has remained popular through centuries-can be just as modern as any other type of house. Design HW-29 for The House points up these advantages,

I..Mt.IG l 0~ This Is 11 smartly modcrnilcd · garden tools. The garage is over­

version of a 'time·tested style that size to accommodate modern cars gives you a house big enough for a as well as its two storage closets

·growing !ami!)' without Involving and a workbench. excessive land purchase and main· This is a versatile house. It can tcnance, imprudent construction he built in any part of the country costs and extragant heating, with or without'~ basement. No

n ...... Bi· Z(.r. 1, .. , •

.JI.. ..... . UILL .

-Open planning, a family room glass doors to garden porches, an adjoining tW!l-Car garage-all fca· tures that popularized ranch house.~ -are found In this plan, plus many more, Here Is a center hall en· tfimcc-a feature that originated in colonial homes. The center hall has kept such homes popular through many generations because it pre· vents rooms from becoming pass· age ways,

structural change would be needed to make this a six bedroom house. The study could be closed of[ from the lh·in~ room ami the {ircplacc converted to· one·room usc.

• •

. HW-29

And r.ere arc fh·e bedrooms ami three bathrooms-a living capacity that would be a big order for a ranch house. Yet this house covers only 1,089 square teet, without its garage which figures separately. This Is close to the area of the average FHA small house. If thc~c second floor bedrooms were built on the grmmd, ,the area of this house would be doubled - 2,198 square feet without garage-and you can see how much more foundation and roofing would be required.

A ~IA.TOR FEA'l'URE of this plan is the tremendous social "L" formed by study, living·dining area and family room. 'l'his can he used in the modern manner as fiowin~ space, or it can be sub·divided by folding partitions or decorative shojis. A three foot stuh·wall plant·

OPEN PLA~NJNG .and family room put this pla11 at the head ol the parade.

• • • DIGNITY and stability mark the

exterior st~·ling. Architects Pet· ersen & Ebbert suggest brick fae· lng for the front up to the second story and beveled siding above. Roof lines are low and modern­the pitch being just enougq to per­mit the use of' economical asphalt shingles. · ·

cr is the architects' suggestion for a room dh•idcr between stltdy and !iring room.

French doors lead from the living room to an open garden porch as well as to a covered porch ?cbind the garage,

The first floor la1·atory with a · shower stall is stratcgicall~· placed

for usc as a powder room m· in . connection with the guest room. .~1 Plumbing economy is achieved by ~I having the upstairs bathrooms , directly above the laratory and kitchen. '

This kitchen is planned to pre­vent housekeeping fatigue. The housewife can sec anyone approach· ing either the front door or garage entrance and she is just a few steps away. She can supe·rvise youngsters playing in the family room. She has space for all modern·equipment, including a huilt·in oven and ad·

!':>to Rl.\. IO·O·l lo;a·

0 g d u

r~ ''' [ltmffi 1

/A I'Jt..n RIA IIi·)· • ro·.a·

YOU CAN BUILD WITHOUT CELLAR

THE ARCHITECTS OF HW 29 estimate that this house could be bullt In the inetropol· itan Detroit area for approx· imately 522,500 with a full basement.

However, you, can build this house without basement. The garage could be slightly en· largcd to provide additional storage and laundry space and a modern horizontal type heat· ing plant could be placed in a smalt crawl space adjacent to· the fireplace chimney. Space marked for ,cellar stairs would become a pantry or extra closet.

You can get rough local building estmiates by showing a studv plan for this house to a builder of homes of ~imilar size.

A covered front porch provides a sheltered passage between front door and garage, the latter also having an entrance into the family room and kitchen as well as to the back porch to make it easy to store

· j oinlng range. Stairs to the base· ment, if you plan one, arc at hand, or their space can be used for a pantry. FOUR BEDRGmiS, cross ventilation and upstairs privacy.

"A 35-CENT. STUDY PLAN MAY SAVE YOU 35 YEARS OF REGRET"

THE HOUSE of the WEEK

Send this coupon for your STUDY PLAN THE DAILY NEWS

A Quality Plan

Sdeeted· I ' by '.._AP Ntwlftaturt~~

FLOORING:

YOU CAN GE'f a study plan f11r The House of The \\'eel; by filling in your'namc ancf addrcs~ on the coupon on this page anrl sending it'with 35 cents to this ncwspjper.

Th1s study plan shows each floor o£ the house together with each of the four elevations, £rant, rear and sides of the house. It is scaled at ~-·inch pel font. It includes a guide on "How to Get Your House Built".

OAK and BIRCH (All . Grades)

DOORS: . INSipE and COMBINATION. (Storm and Screen)

LUMBER: ROUGH arid DRESSED-All ·grades and sizes.

EVERYTHING IN LUMBER

at HARVEY'S

You can take this stud\' plan to your builder and get· rough !stimatcs on the cost of con· ;[ruction in this area, as well as an idea of the relation of the cost to )'our budget.

With this infromation ''OU will know whether you will w'ant to proceed with construction by ordering working blueprints direct fi'Olll the <~rchilcct and asking lor hids lor the work,

J;uiluin~ Editor.

Enclosed i! 35 cents. Please srnd me a copy of the

. studr rlan o£ The House of The Week, Design HW·29,

t\A~IE ................................................ . (Please Print)

STREET, .... ,, ........ ,,,,,,,., .... , ... ,, ..... , ....... .

Cl'l')'. I ••••• t t •••••••• I. I.... PROV •••••• I •••• I ••••••

A House Shoir.ld Be 'Warm, Sung, Cozy

It IS when you use

FOR INTERIOR FINISH and EX1'ERIOR SHEATHING* •c.M.H.C. Approved

Big Sheets - up to 81 x 141

ASK HARVEY'S FOR FREE LITERATURE AND FOLDERS

LUMBER YARD

Water St. East Dial 6911

OFFICE & STORE

Duckworth St.

Dial 5577 and 3329

11

I. I 'I I ;·:/· 11 •, I

'I I;! 'I.

I I •

Page 12: TH~E D·.AIL¥ ·NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · D'Araeon 3500. 3 32 32 .:.r De Cour 5l!OO '57 !6 H · -1 . De cour wll !110 171>

THE

eild ·akes

Upset ·PW C; St. Bon's-Jieild Civil 8"'""ice Boston Shu.tout Chi.Cag0.

3'-2 'v· : Play Tonight Health . Ictory Senior bockfty continues to- Montreal Edge D t ,' night at the St. John'a·Memorlal w• 5 2 . . ' e rot

W • G • · St B ' Ed · G • stadium with thE' first place St. IllS · I m l.VCS • Olt,S ge O!ng Bon's meeting tbe Felldlans. - B9STON (AP) - ~oston rookie goalie Glenn Hall o£ th w· 'J t L t R d The St. Bon's havl' so far play- goalie Don Simmons gained a tmg on the team bene

10it, 1~ dl

1 0 US Oltn · ed two games along with the ln Civil Serl'ic~ hockey last shutollt In his third National lr.g yanked in favor ~~ 1

1t!r 4 Bishop Feild, playing their second game for the sea- Felldlans. The St. Bon's have nlg11t the Natlo?Jal Healtn turn· H.ockey League .game Thursday forward reached out and an !t':t chalked up twc wins. The flut ea aside fhe t:N'!' by a score of ntght as the Brmns defea,ted Chi· the puck with his stick b~efl~1t ·with a complete squad, upset the Prince of Wales over the Guards In tbe League 5·~. ~ego 2-0 on goals by Johnny Pelr· stead of Canadiens rna~ ""rt ' ,. 111'"u~ 1 afternoon and ·sent St. Bon's into top place at opener and on Monday 11ight 'l'he Health squad held a three son and Jerry Toppazzini. . gain it and fired the Pu~~ed end of two rounds of play, over the last place Holy Cross. There's a move on foot here In financial seback for the soke of goal margin g,Hng into the third While the contest was a great I open rret for the finat t II

Double Blues, playing hoc· The Feild have a one and one the Capitol to form onother all· promoting the right type of hoc· frame. Goals by O'Neil and TaY· moment for Simmons, his goal· otiJCr Montreal a /. both ways, edged out the Col· G d T .k

8 If record. They lo!t their first game Newfoundland hockey series. Don't lor in the last pcnod spoiled the ~ending op~osite, AI Rollins,. kept scored by Tom Johns~~ah l~~

'·l"'l•n• yesterday by a close score uar s a e "':1! to the Unicorns and won over think that this Is being formed ln ~!fau:::. cementing lnter,town Health shutout. It from. bemg a runaway Wllh a Moore, ~Iaurice Rich' D:tq Sparked by the Clrst line o£ the St. Pat's. competition with the present • • • The Nation~! Health held a semational 42 saves. · Cllude l'rovo&t. ard ·~ Squires Peter Cl rke and w· 0 G d Tonight's Jame gets underway NAHA operations. This newly pro- II 2·0 lead at the end o1 the first 'fhe victory, coupled with Mont- Billy Dea Gordie Ro'

No:seworu'n·, the Do~ble Blues . ID ver an er at 8.30 and the following are the posed league ls now only In Its kc~ lc~a~~~~~:hi~ll\~nhs~~~o~l~~: period or play ln the second real's 5-3 decision over Detroit, Norm Ullman counted lo ~. ·~ a first period tie In the sec· J E J •b• • lineups: · Infant stages but In a 11,hort time pions o£ the High School League period they addt•d a single tally put the third-place Bruins eight Wi!!!lS. Canadiens held r ~ht t~

stanza and held on to a one n X 11 Ibon FEILDJANS-Goat, Bob Evans; we hope to be able to make the In each town participating will add while still ho.dlng . the Cl'l'f points back o{ the league-leading midway through the fin~! II!~ lead late in the thlr<l perlo:t defence, Gilrdon Breen, carl announcement that the league wlll greatly to the outcome o£ the scoreless and !n the last rr'ame Red Wings, and kept them seven only to have the Red w· P!r:~ was a big snme and a big up- The Guards junior hockP.y team Brown, Max Burt, Joe Cook; go Into operation. various High School Lcngucs the Health and CNT both scored bnck of Canadicns. italizc quickly when tw~ngs 11

1 A win for the Collegians yes- look a 84 victor~ over the Gander forwards, Max Atwl\t, Art Pier- · • • • throughout the Island. It will be twice. ~eirson stole the puck !rom re~lers :-vere penalized. The

110!1

would ha,·c meant a tie Junior All-Stars laF.l night In the cey, John Leschuck, Eric Squires, As far 11 I can gather from something [or all teams in the Oke opened t.hc scoring in the I Chtcago defencema~ Gus ~Iortson j qutckly .scored and then add\\~ place at the end of the first leg of their inland New· Bud Duffett, Howle Young, picking up odds and 'eD!h here leagues to strive for. Let's hope game as he w~nt unassisted at as the "econd pertocl began and' other two minute! later to !dt~

round between the Prince foundl~:oncl tour. The Guards held Adraln' Miller, Dick ·Parsons, and there a move is under way that the formation o! this series the eight minttte mork o[ th~ 'f~red a lO·io~ter I?W and to the i score when ~lontrul wa 1 11t~ W~lcs .and St. Bon's, The Feild· the ~dge of play throughout the con Lloyd Cooke an~ G. Phillips. here tor the St. John's Sta11ium receives -the full support. of all first period. The Health sbotlnto jl'lght n! Rolhns 11.'1th a mrre ll1 glwrthanded.

1111

win gti'Cs St. Bon's a two point test and they out~corcd the .Gan· ST. BON'S _ Goal, 1\lerv. to sponsor an All·Newroundland wl1o arc concerned in its rorma· a 2·0 lead four minutes later I seconds gone. His tally pro\'ed 1 ~loore scored what prored

soln;: Into the last dcritcs In all three periods, Greene: defence, Hul!h F'Brdy, 111gb School llockey champion· lion. when l\Iurphy and Buller com· Cflo,ugh. . 1

the winning goal ~t H:lG .t~~ o£ the schedule ~nd chang· The Guards ~quad, which en· ;..'oct Hlltton, len Coughland ship series. No full details of the • • • binc<l with Mu~plly denting the 1~ppa~ml ln~de sure at 9:50 1 )!3rc.el Pt·onorost of the 1:-~ picture. \\'ilh an assort· pinned here ycsterda1• afternoon Dune Sharpe: forwards, Ted series could be gathered yester- I.ast week I said · that the twines. j o! tr.c llurd per1od when he look. was tn the penalty box. tp

of wins anti losses the three for the Airport town· held a 1.() Gillies, 1\IIke Woodford, Nc1el 1\ay but as far as I can learn it senior intercollegiate hockey In the secoJlj period only one a. pnss from Fiem ~lackr.lf ~~·hoI Tl.t~rc was seldom a letup i: tms can possibJ~· end the rcgu. lent! nt the end nf the fh·st per· Sparrow, Jack R~·an, Fa Murphy, is the Intention of those bcblnol series will have a wire finish.. goal was rcgist~I'Pd. This came! I~ as str~tched llat on the ~ce; 1 ~crrtflc P.ace by both teams srhrdulc In n three way tic. loci. In th~ 5econd frame they Damlen Ryan, Boh Redmond, the move to have a six team All· This was borne out yesterday at the twelve :uim.te mark when 1 ~aked .~15

way arou~d to Rolitns , In the fmal period the II'"' the ~ct•onrt game for the ! added tlncc more whiLe the Gnn· Tom Manning. Newfoundland lllgh-!iehool cham· afternoon when a strengthened Butler and Wluttcn moved in ltmmeata:e l.c!t and ftred the puck 1 checking was ll'aning and lb

with l,>o~~ S_ttllit'l'S, tkor¥'~ j !lcr SIJ\Hid got two past non Sklr\'· ship series played here In St. Bishop Feilli SIIURd upset the over the CN'i' lme 1vith Butle. across him mto the nets. 1 wan~s were pouring in ~ t c~s and lrat;: Fo~tcr .hack m i m~. In the fast twent)' minute~ C lin N John'• maybe. some time In p1·1nce of Wales squad which registering to givE Health a 3.~ MO!;fTREAL 5, DETROI1 3 : :;oahcs. n lh>rn~. It wa~ !he In~ dtffrrcncn ,of horkry the Gual'ds doubled the Ur ()' OteS March, earlier In the season were favor·' lead. , ~10~ rREAL (CP) - Montreal\· · n;,t.\r STA.':OIXGS :;quit·~.' ,,.~~ ~~~ on !ll'(l nr the i'Gnndrr nntpnt a~ they fired !lome b J • • • • ltrs to take the 1957 honours. l:'our goals w r . t d . La.natllens outfought DetrOit n.•d By.The Canadian Pr!!l I, : 1 lrr<>l';:r Pre.'~ !:CI· four mr.rker.; while holding the .. The ~be teams mentioned to me , The Bishop Feild have shown :1 e r regis ere m \\'Jngs !o tak~ a spectacular bat·

1

W !, T F · ; ; the other. !Gandrr l!l twn. BRITISH CONSOLS RESULTS are the champions of the St. I \'a~t lmpro\'ement since the re· th.e last twe~ty mmutcs of play tie 5-3 Thursday night and rut De· I Detroit . . .27 12 8 139 A h

: ! ;tne oct•rc 1':'; ctcadlorkNI. a! lhr I Roh Chaulk was the ~corln~ acr A. C. Rockwell B, R. Templeton J11hn'5 High School J,eaRUe, the turn or noug Squires, Craig Fos· Wlth the CNf .Ineakll:g the shut· troll's margin at the top of lhr 1 ~lontreal .. 27 14 ; 150

1 ~,1 U {

1:'1 ''1

tilt' lo'>l }lei'I!HI 1\'ttn earh :for the <~unrds a~ he prr£ormrd 10. champions of the St. ,John'.l Senior ter and Geo. Press. At the pres· oul at ~!!e. algllt 11,unute mark N~tioJOal Hockey oLagile to a sin· i Bo,ton .. '.23 16 0 1'6:.!a t-":"'1 h~l'lll~ """ ~lloll. In the ~eC•jthc lt~t lrirk,'firin~ In three goals. E. 1 •. Hickman \'1, H. Angel Intercollegiate J.eague, Bell Island ent time the St. non's Jmve R ~.he~ o~letlO~Nl!d Conway! CO~l·lglc point. !Toronto ... lfl23 Q 1i31;~~ l. •

1

ri. 1-t~m~ Ill~ Douhlr 111nr~ 11101'·, 'fhr! <Jand~r team, nccomp::.nied (canrell!dl. High School ehamps, the c\1amps two point edl(e going into the me .. wll 1

ell P~~~~ n~ ~n i The game 11nund up on l ~pee. I New York .. Hi 2~ 8 ~~·~ lil II !. tnto a l•nr =o.al lra.cl an.d 111 I he ,lb~· coacl1 Hnlph Co)·ler and D~tor GREAT LAKES RESULTS from Grand Falls and Corner las! round but the series Is far th~ fllst goal for CN

1· f~\o I tacular r.ote all its own when I Chicago ... 10 31 8 1oa

0

t fr II ~ 1 ~ t v~ 1 • h h 1 1 mumtes Iate1· Healtb moved m· 151:&

,,., nn1r. w~ m~~ e .... H IClh• a ! llaiTY Rnherts ~long with man- Kennedy by de£ault from Foster: Brook a ong wtth t r. Illg Sc 100 from over yel. Anything can ---.

II,: trn m~ln~lr mntk. lltth a.n ~n·lnger Atldns, 11·a~ ~chcdulcd to J, K. Clouston 7, J. Herrick 7. champs from Conception Bay. happen In the next three games to a "-

1lead when Whitten scor-

.: B!lcr m<~rkrr anrt It real!~ \Ia~ 'lrr.vr hv this mornin!l'S express SCHEDULE OF GREAT LAKES • * • and watching lhe Feild play yes· erl after taking a pass from l\lur·l M u N N • ht At St d" ! ,, '~.msur;llll'r 11131'krt• a~ th~ l'ol· for Gr:nid Falls. The express was FOR FRIDAY, FEB. 1 A! I said pre\·lously, this move terday Intercollegiate Inns can phy and then Mm·phy seven' tg a I Urn : J,wns ramc ~1ark two .mmulcs due to pn~s through Gander around _ 7 p.m.- h being kepl well under wrap~ expert that to happen. The Feild minutes later made it a 4·2 game • • • : 1 cr to mal;c 1t 3·2 hut time ran • 1 1 . d' Ka\•anagh Moore and being so It b difficult to ha ·tak th 1 fi t t t f when he scored unassisted How 1

; ; : 1 and Field still held on with R three o.~ oct. Tomght the Guar s s en e r f!i as e o · • 1 11

:'e goal m3r2in. !cat,n

11111 meet the Grand Falls McCarter Thbtle give anything definite 11n it. It y}ctnry so watch out for more ever ~he two goal margin was 1 Satur.day night. al the. St. John's\ card. The F3culty lineup i

1 ,.30

h Badcock wa~ the top ~corer JUill.or~. and on SDlurday morning Malnwarlnl Hickman Is said tl1at tbe League will OP· upsets. As It stands at present shorthved as Taylor and Fraser i lllemonnl Stau<ltllm will be Me· dented. with some outstatd::j : the ~umc as he ~cored both ~h~~ 111!1 return to Gander '\'here Kent Bearns crate here In the St. John's the league could ha\'e a three of the Health combined with moria! University night as the 1 cx·hockey plawrs. In g011 t-J ! 1

ince o! \\'ales goals with Dal'e 111 all probability they will m~et -8.30 p.n~.- Stadium over some weekend In coruer tie at the' end or the regn· Taylor doing tht> scoring to have University has planned a big night 1 be Pro!. Ivan~· while ho!tj . ·,ml gelling an assist on the sec- t!tc Gander n team In an exhsbl- N. Rockwell Maddlck ::~~~~ 0~hea !~~~~o~a:r:;cm~ Jar series. Every game should be t11e game end 52. b<lth for the stud~nts and . the II down defence ll051tions will~

: ,i,:l marl:er. For the Feild Clarke, lton game before returning to the Hiscock Moyse 1 interesting and will be worth There were three penalties facul.ly, . . such stars as Prof. Gouti'; . ell\• Clift McCarthy trophy up for tha championsh P watching. called In the garr.e by referees Umvemty D1recto,r Doug Eaton

1

Prof. Noel, Dr. Dal'id Baird ,;1

'uires and Pre~s were the marks· • · . team there will also be a Con· • • • c 1 1 told the New 1 t ght th t th "' ; 'n with both Squires and Clarke The folowmg was the Guards Butler Che!ver1 har ie R 1od~,; and Bill Plke . • s as Ill . a ere Dean Stan C3re11. . lineup Ia t ight Ski l g 10 p m solation trophy to be won by the . ' . . . with the CNT collecting two of ' will be lots of el«\ttement and The first string will ! · tins assi!ts on each other's . s n : - rv n • . . ,.... · ·- Tau\or ·winner of l,he losers. There s httle poss~blhty of any them thrills at the Stadium on Satur- su"h stt'ckha d' p 1 ·ill. . Sweellr.nd, Munroe, Woolgar, Sttrhng ' • • • . horse racing at Qmdi Vidi this • d 'nbt ·b th t d I bod " n .ers as ro, ' • ll•an~·. Bob and Doug Chaulk, Templeton Coupland . · n •1 • ay m,

11 en e s u ell Y Dr. Young, Dr. Jackson. on

: :t 11.3 ~ a \'~fl' clenn ~a me with

1

Englnnd llowscll North Edward Davies Wylie This ~cries, tf It ever .,cis under I w nter. The frost the JlliSt couple and the Faculty take part m Um· 5 d t . ,.1 b ;t . . . . ' ' • . . way, Will be one of the best hoc· o[ weeks and n report that there ]\,f Fl versitv niuht econ 5

rmg 1111

e such ;,~Y two penalt~cs hctnd d~~he<l Thts~le, Youden, Pearce and An· Stoneman ' Crosbte, key series formed in Newfound- I wa.q fourteen inches on Quid! Vldi lnargene yers 'The. bin "sb~w will start at ei ht notch s~aters a~ Dr.

1 .-· Eac~ team lias nabbed lltth a 1 drclls. . :;:;g~D!~N~~ffL2 Jnnd In the past decade. It is last week has brought up the pos· · o'clock ~ild if all plans no gas' Prof. Wilmott '

111d Athletic

:!~~fn~ ~~~~~·he third period cnch! ~{ the rink, and sllpp~ut ncar (Firrt named 'are ,,;ips) hoped to have the St. .John's. ~t~d· stlbility hof khorslc rac)ng th)~ win· WI'll By 16-4 scheduled the show should b; over I rcT~~r 3:lugte~atnn:.n h . 1

11..

1. \ ,.

1h h t

1 I the goal crease where Peter Clarke

10 lum play hosts to the four I'ISitmg er. I c ec cd ast mght wsth l\lr. around ten o'clock e s m

111 al! :~1m '1s c en 11 5 0 5 on goa • was on the spot to slam It ln. - a.ln.- • teams this year. The whole setup Willis Reid, a l'etcran horse own· 1 Highlighting the ' night's enter- i Earle betw~en the J:ipes. On

ll~t~c:a~~ l~;a~~s~~~~t~i~~\ rth:~:/;~ Both Hann and Cook, the net- !It, GG S~r~~ng l~· '!~elver~ I think is only in its Infant stages er ond lover, who has ~~on ma~y Over Carhonear lainment will be -a challcng·~d defence wtll l~e C~r?l HuC;:I , and in the second period the mindcrs, had a busy time of lt ~r~:· Wo;el~n R• ~~~s r1n~e and a lot o£ work !!as to be done turf races at . Bella Vtsta Fa1r· hockey game between the Girls' Pats~ Earle, .Ttl! \\ lutnee c!

, , ~hop Feild had the ed~e 7-6. In during the remaining minutes of G. Well• M. Car:en yet to ~et lhe details Ironed .out. ?rou~ds. 1\fr. \Rc1d told me that It In an exhibition hockey game . Varsity team and the Faculty. ~ermce Carel~. The lor.:~! ; ~~~ lost frame the Double Blues play as Cook pushed aside shots Pcrmlss1on has to be ohtamed IS htghlr improbable ,that horse at the stadium last night the This will be follow another el\hi· lines will const~t of !Uch tr.cl!

I •.''Jbled the Collegians efrorts

12•6

fmm Peters, Badcock and Law- J Herrick C Hall from the various schools i~volved races w11l be held thts yeor for Margent Flyers took an lopsided. bition ·which has not been seen stk.Jthan~lers ann ~peed ~~~~!:t ! a total of

26-:!0. renee while Hann handled R !ew A H

1 Jt. F h and the go ahead signal w1ll have the simple reason that lhcre nrc victory over the Carbonear All· locally before. The girls' basket- as Georgie Elton, Chru \\ce.u.

I; 3oth netmindm, cllrr Ilann he· close ones from Gover Clarke, G··B en efi L. ~~ned to be received from the Stadium. no standard bred h.orses around to stars by a score of 16.4 - ball team, which copped the hon· Maxine Guzzwell, ~!lria-J

!en the pipe~ for the Collegians Squires and Miller. ' A• Rrr;: ds F Ho~a r • • • compete. The prevt.ous horse ,ow.n· Led by four goal outputs'by ours during their mainland tour, Cooke, Sandra Woorl1. ,loan~!"' I I Dou~: Cool: In goal for the Holding a one goa\ lead going • c r :1 m • e To me, this Is something that ers such as ~lr: Reul, Jack 0 Dm· Bert Power Gordon Christopher I will give an exhibition of basket- phy, Je)lnifer Heath. )hr!tl. 'tld plaved great gan;es as they Into the final frame the Double 1t Gu·'"lle - p .. -H l' Cart~r 'If St. John's spearheads they will coli,! Fred Wyhe and others have and Don Y~tman the ~'lyers had ball oo ice. Following this an Kitchen and ,Joan Gu)'. :

1 •1

• ' • • Blue• wer pttl th d f · • · "'1 • • ~ feel proud or. This rna•· rost no torses at present. About the / 'tinrl h k .. m b t · A •pec·1al hl)m m•rl·• '-" :. e1 nff ;omc ~oal·labcllctl shot! " e on e e enme ~Irs G!annou Mrs Marshall ' 1 1 · h 1 . no trouble in liowning the Car- exc1 " oc ey .,a c c \leen " ~ • '· "'''' nn was esp~cinlly effectil'e. I~ du~ing the opening minutes as the H. Keily c.' Merner money to OJ:ICrate but the O\'crall on~,' ho~se ~le[t l~d t. at r a.~~. ac· bonear squad In th~ return eX· I St. Jo.hn's east ~irls and the girls I ha~ b€e~ put '!P fnr tl1! 'ir~l~

f, la~t peri or! when on se\'crall PrJ~ce of "ales swarmed trouud Mrs Tessl@r :Mrs Hood benefits and ~oodwlll rlrrlverl / ~o.r ~rg A h r. Ret ts ~ne oil ~ect hihition. The Carbon ear squad from th~ west ~\'Ill be pla~·l'd. Thts tr.o~hy will b~ lor filf!'t ,·asion~ hP had to handle clo•e the II' zone bul. Press and Gover • . • from such a· series Is worth)' nf ~ r. s . H?rs~ .ract~g Jol ers took the Fl ·ers last week on th 'The ntghl 1\'tll ~ hroughl In a competthon.

tiiCC• dril'rs from Clarke and were playing a strong defensive Sir L. Olttarbr!dge c. Uor11'00d takinR II liltle financial ~etback. I may hal'e to Sit thiS wmter out Cat·bon ar t b. . 4 7 . e close with ~ Memorial horkey In l.he PXhibitinn ht><·~·; 11:1

. I• tire~. Both rxcellcd In kickiric game anrl the)' ga\'e Cook Jots of ~ n If the schooh and lhe commnn· I ~nd look mournf,u~ a~ !he glazt~ e ' ce ~ a 1 . score. t'l~m meeting tht Ch'il Service ~il mtweea the Mem~rial UniHn1 F ·. the rubber on E:oal !crlmages prot~ction. The Double· BlueK af· MrK. Horwood 1\lrs. Mews ltles concrrnPd are behind I he I tee surface on Qmdt V!rll Lake. 1t s Along '>11th th~ four goals each stars. The Civil Sel'l'ice All Star~ ancl the Cil•il s~rric~ All.Stan fl ·j' ich WPr~ mnnt·. ter !CI'eral mlnntes tnanaged to ,J Parsons e. H. Conroy movP. I hope that we hP-re In St. I too.had that the old sport .can't be scored by Paller, Christopher in their fir~t rxhibition game following will repwent ~ltr:CI'J~ l:rhe firU goal of lh~ came r.am'- sha~e o!! the Collegians and play Mu.' Burgm Mrs. Lush Jnhn'K can afford In lake a little rel'l\'ed here in the Capital. ard I Yet~a: do~he~ .Maff.ene played on Tuesd~r night WIJ\'\1)\'qr Goal, Bob Ploughman; cd!:tt.

1 •the 4.30 mark of the !lpenln~: agam bc~an to ~ce·saw back and W WI W B H k ~ ng es..Jeg~s eri'G Y e~y Jng, the Bell Island JUnior all-stars by Cy Green, Clyde Gl'!tn!, ~

; ··inrt ll'hrn rtcfrnceman Geor)le forth. It. was at the 10.25 mark of · ~sor W. atson (lfll.cf.llt OC ey oug. 011 an, erry lJUn ers a 5·3 score. Cooke; forward~, Bill Drom.M

"' ·''''·' ""! I'H broke up a Collegian attnck the prrtotl I bat· Feild Inns Feared Klllrs. 1" ~tson Mrs. McLellan and dKing. For the Carbonear The opening J:ame o! the night, Rtdmond, Padd1ek, Rol;nd O;ilt.

. : Ir ccntrr. fol'crd his ~~·ay the winnin~: goal o{ the game AS • car e Mra. Reid H o· Ca 89ua ' ,Jim Penne~· '1\'as top .scor- the FacllltY versu~ the Girls Carmichael. Voke)·, r~m. 1:1 ~~ ':on;h lhe Cnlle~inns t!efcnre Doug Squires after takinG a pass Mr! .. Casey' Mrs. Clark orne~s ump ugars er with two markers while E~n shollld prove te> be a· big drawing Ryan and Roy Parsons.

1 1 :1i brat l!ann with a hard clo~e· ft·om Clarke brat Hann from a Cole and Jack Southwell reg!!·

I I! drivr, The Collegians came. close range [or a 3-1 score. Little J. K, Clousto11 L. Taylor tered one each. . • · J. !':k with the Nlllal!zcr ten sec-' 0\'c.r two minutes later ~he Col· 1\lrs. Sparkel Mrs. Clouston The Flyers hel~ a 6·2 !!COre Pee wee HoctiJey

I :1-Js after the !aero££ when :rat llle~tans came up with the•r second Mrs. Wakelin Mra. J. Parsons Doug· Ilou.s. e ScoJ'.ed Two Goals at the end or the first frame and R • ~ ; •llfett wrnt in on Cook alone and goal of the )lame a5 Bob Badcock A. Hood Mrll. Bell at the end or tile ~econd period 2 Shutouts eglstere .

1

:, shot slid under the outstretch· broke ln alone on Cook and gave ~7 p.m.- Hornets registered their second and Gerald Holden put Hornets they held a 13 4 lead. In the last 1 form nf Conk. Play see·sawed him no chonce o! a save. With only T. Hallett 1. Crawford win In six starts yesterday at St. out front 4·1 at 13.00 to end the period . they blanked Carbon ear

.. :k and forth throughout the one goal separating them, both Bon's Forum as they dumped the second period. and added three more tallles. Action in the Pee wee Hockey· mandoes downed the Gunntrl U j I iiod but both teams were back· teams ga\'e all they had. The Doll· G. BeariiA McCarter cellar dwelling Cougars 6-1. Doug. Holden scored again at 7 min· League at the Stadium yesterday Henry Hamlyn, Angus Ma!.'~!ll•l

i)cklng well and dcfcncemcn blc Blues. were moving more on 1\lrs. Hiscock Mn. Cheivers House was the big gun for the utes of the third assisted by House afternoon saw the Jets move into Roy Rideout and Gerald \\dlil· i•:re breaking up the plays. the offensive, and several times H. Grayston c. Howae Hornets as he banged In l pair and Earl Marsh, and House round- M l M s· a first place tie with Lancaster in were the marksmen for the. c:, .,.:t was In lht' ,,ecnntl ~Ianza that ! the Collcg!:ms nearly paid o{[' Mr5. Dunne Mrl. Carter or goals and picked' up two •assists e !l!oUt the scoring in the periotl ant e. ay I Ign the Airforce Diviison as they shlll I mandoes, each gelling Jttf.!l II~ Dnuble Bines ~hnt into the I with their. attacks. A minute be· to lead his team to victory. All o[ and the game at 10.00 with the out the Cansos 2.{). Commandoes while teammate Jimmr Adtt!

at thl' 1 ~, 50 mark wfwn dur·l fore the buner ~ounded to end E. 11iscock S. cmt the Hornet~· goals were scored ln final score rending Hornets 6 and Today WI'th YatlkS took over !Ole possession. of ~ec· drew an assist. an attack in th•~ l'rinct• ·of 1 the l(:une Clark•! broke In over the E~ Butler W. Weir the lust two periods. the Cougnrs 1. .. zone !.iquit't•s took ccmtroi : l'rinct~ nf Wale., hluclinr. all alone Mrs. Clift :t.llsa JrVhileley Coug~rs 'tnok an early lead as "Next gnme Is schetlulcd lor ond place in the Army Divtston as In the final gamt ~hkh JU lw put•k in the Cnllr::inn~ end I but llann made the right move and Mn. Willi Mra. Goodwin at 2.10 of the first period they tonight at 6.00 p.m. when the 1\'EW YORK CAP) - The New they dumped the Gunn~rs 4~1 at~tl in the Navy Dil'isiun ',the RtVlil

EXPORT''X FILTER TIP CIGARETTES

furred Clarke of! Lhe net, The went out front I.() on, a goal by Barons will take 011 the capitols. York Yank1!c' warmed Wednesday Re_Pulse moved to wtthi~ tllo 1 won thdr third g"me in Ia Collegians tried nne more attack Mrs. Allan Mrs. P.ratt ~like Ka1•anugh, assisted by Jlllke S:t'rl!RDAY'S SCIJED!JI,fo: up for their contract negolia· pomls of th~ ~lrst place Bnton.ln starts as they et!ged the M111i' but the buzzer sounded to end the W, McGeUigan Mra. lltbbs Klng.llornets fought back but were u.oo n.m.-Bisons practice. tions with Mickey Mantle today the Navy Dtv.ts.lon as they no~etl cent +1. Dannv Corror~n 'tfll ~~ game with the score reading 3-2 Mrs, Howse A. Dunne .uonl>le to break through the strong 10.00 a.m.-Hangers vs. Wings. by signing a pair o! Mickey's out the Magmftcent

4·1. tup scorer for 'Repuhe ban!itl,~

for the Doublc'Biues. W. Moffett V. Clouston Cougars defence. Jiorncts were 11,00 a.m.-Bisons vs. Stamped· teammates-shortstop Gil 1\lcDou- Roy Sellars and John Byrne w~re two markers. David Kelly and s.~ LINE·UPS -9 p.m.- minus their top defence In the gald and firsi baseman Joe Col- the marksmen for tbe Jets wsth Cook each picked up singlrl ft:t

P. W. C, ...... Cliff Hann, Geoff :Mrs. O'Leary'• rink va. W. Tiller's first period as House was delayed ers. !ins-to bring the total o! antis- Brian King and Derrick Harnett teammate Robert Kelly dreW 1

Peters. Barry Crane, Robert Bad· rink. in making the. starting gun. 12·00 noon-Black Hawks vn. ficd Yankees Jo 13. getting assists 11 the Jets downed pair o£ assists. Brian Tobin cOil': cock, Pat Hollett. Ed Smith, Dave Hornets came back strong in the Maple Leafs. Lee MacPhail, assislant to Gen- the Cansos 2.0 ln the first game of ed the lone Magnificent goal f'~ Lawrence, Bill White, Ches Nose- R. Goudey , H. Angel second period and were boosted by And here is a note for players o£ era! Manager George Weiss, said the Pee Wee League yesterday the assist going to Da~t !i'etd1~ worthy, Dave Ward, Alf Pike, Tom Mrs. Moyse R. ~Ioyse House who set up the tying goal the Black Hawks team: Team he expected to confer with Mantle afternoon. Jets now have sht Next games Are sch~dulri ~ Hnllrtt, Barry Itollctt, Dave Bar· ~Irs. Mym R. Bartlett with a beautiful pass right in front coach Bill Callahan would like to today. ' points while Cansos remain In the Saturday morning ~~ follo~t: ... rctt ( suh-~oal). I. Carnell M. Carnell of tbe goal that Dave Butler t!p- have all players on hand at the "While ll'e have no ddinite ap- cellar with two points. 7.30-Signallers. \'~. Black l'il~<>

B. F. e. - Doug Cook, Harry Entry lists art now on board ped In at 3.25 o! the second. Then Forum by 11.30 a.m. pointmcnt," MacPhail s~id, "it is In the 1eeond game, which was 8.10-Victory vs. \'~n~uard. Go1·er, George Press, Peter Clark, for Simon Le1·iu Trophy and for House 1corcd unassisted ~t 4.50 Al!o than!\~ to Browning Har· entirely po!sible that we will re· in the Army Division, the Com· 8.55-Hood 1·s. York. Bill Winsor, Doug liCJU!res, Bob the Inter-Town competition. 11£ the second to give the Hornets vey's Ltd., from the Bantam Lea- new our 1alary negotiations 11·ith: · --No!eworthy, Len Miller, Blll Hart, SATURDAY a 2·1 lead. Bruce O'Neill counted gue for a large clock to be used ~lickey. LIFE INSURAN.CE Lindy Ploughman, Ne\'ille Mill~. 4-ll-'Be\1 l.&land vs. St. John's at 7.2U assisted .bY Jim Barrett, !or .. timing league games_. Mantle, ~''ho received an esti-Art Summers, Walt Learning, AI· (!our rinks) crawford Trophy. mated $30,000 last year, reportad· lan Crltch (sub.goa)), saturday evening the House Sh d · d ly has been offered $45,000, about

Committee has planned I &oclal a· ow Boxi·ng On Roa $15,000 less than the figure he i~ evening. Members and guests are demanding, It I! oolieved he will

Junior All-Stars cordially Invited. selile for a co~promlse $50,000. No rxecutlve meeting Saturday NEW YORK-(NEA:)-On the In 1924. He was a scr,awny guy

PI E I b 1 g same day, that a patient In a Brit· wit hno front teeth who looked Wayne Morse, Independent, of ay i X li itions even n • Ish Insane asylum won a fortune In anything but 'a fighter. Oregon, made the longest contin-

h ~ a football pool, ·pollee grabbed Installed at an upstate training ltous speech In the history of the

The !it. ,John's Junior All-Stars ed ht the League to give t e Jun· Tommy McDonald, the 'Oklahoma camp, Ash promptly hit the road United States Senate. 1

will be .~ccn In nct1on next week at lor all·slau aonte compelitlon h~l!hack, at !he Phlladelphia air- one mornin!(-at the same time a __ ......,;• ___ _ the fit .• John's Memorial stQdium praclice before they enter the port in a ca.1e o(·mi~taken identity. lunatic escaped from a local hos- · . . in two r.~hihition games. . .lmlior IBffii·fina-15 early next The)' suspected that ~lcDonnld, 11itnl. Ash ran, shadow boxing a~ The AmPrJcan Brauty Ro~e fmt

'l'hc Lca~uc hns arranged for tile month. in town tn sign a rnn.tract with he 1~enl, down a main hil:hway nt .was ~rown in France.

1 All·Stnrs tn meet two of the senior the professional foot hall Eagle~, about the lime a hnusewile wa,1 i squad~. On Wednesday night Tch rowan i~. a EUl'O~ean species wa~ a fnr~rr. !i.;tenin~ tn radio reports while "~rilhhc•l Frankie Ash. He ~tarted • Go1·<1on Edward':; junio1·s will face- of the mounlatn ash. All of which caused Ray A reel, lookin~ out the window. · to ~vrr.am with that cockney ac· ! off ;,;ainst lhe Guard~ Eeniors . · '· the [i~ht trainer, to remember "1 just saw a m~n runnin~ pa~t cent. Then thry lookP.rl at his road-! and on Sat~rday ~i~ht they meel c. K. o~den, o! Ma dalene Col- F rankle Ash. . . . here making cm.y motion~ wilh work ~:rt-up-a turtle-neck ~we~ler I the St. Sons scJuors. leie cambridge Untv' 't E Ash wa~ an En~hsh hghter who his arm;, you better ltunyl" she j and tho;e mis!ing teeth. It took us

These· games are heinJ: arrang-, land: de\'eloped Basic e~~~j.·!h ng. came to .tltis co)lntry to. take. on told police. a couple ol hours to ~:et him out 1 · Pancho Vt!la !or the Il~'ll'elght I! tie "The copst" ·. A reel recall~. o! the cooler."

..

BRAN.CH MANAGER required for Newfoundland by fast growing com•

petitive Canadian Compa_ny offeri~g full line of lib,

group life and casualty, and group annuity plans.

This is a reel opportunity for en experienced oggret

· sive life underwriter· wilh organizing abihty.

Guaranteed salary plus over~ride,

Your reply will be treated in strict confidence.

BOX 45 e/o Daily New!

~OR NOW

BUY A NEW

• $2,_794~00

pa1 Inter-Schoo·

.nl • .o..r Series BAY .Tan. :

of the school princip~ was held on Tuesd: to draw up a sch•

schools participating i cehool series. Twenty Wtll be played as fol

rd's Bay vs. Sh

vs. Ha

n. Ha

Upper I

Ang'

Upp

l!ay vs.

G.rac:e An;l

Ba~· Robert~ n. UpJ Co\'e Coley's Point \'~. H Angl, Harmur Grace l'.(

for thP )i;amP~ laU!r whtn fin have been mat!

of the Bav I we undentat

will be played . exhibition game bet11 !rom the U.C. Sch

and the A at Carbonear was Carbonear rink on

last, and ended of 7-3 in fav.our of Spa

the first game tJ Bay squad had but it seemed

period It had th Carbonear agg.., goal was scored

on a pass !root Han and shortly thereaftE combination on the

aided :Mark Sbep r net for

Co~hnnA• rf

Noam <D> .Q973 ¥A 1097 .Q "-AJ98

Page 13: TH~E D·.AIL¥ ·NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · D'Araeon 3500. 3 32 32 .:.r De Cour 5l!OO '57 !6 H · -1 . De cour wll !110 171>

, '

tago; ~trait ~he \\'lnas !nch afttr' ~ of and

ick. B~e•cort'W··~

nana~~~ to Puck into

~I tally, coals

l~son, Richard

~ two ~d. The :hen added later to lit raJ was

,t proved to at lUG 1[ the bo~.

I a letup In •lh tcarn1 d the ?g a~d the mg tn on

.":niXGS :ian Pm1 T F A 8 139 102 62 7 ):;() 103 61 8126118~ A 113 125 41 8 II~ 149 40 B lOB 154 21

ell, r·orls, ~at h. ' Gu~·. • marh l:rop!JJ 1nr thP winam. ~ for ptrptla!

•n hnck•' 11 !'Ill 1orial Unh·ersif1 cicp All-Stan the ·pstnt Mtru!lrial: ~hman:

Gr<:!tnt, 'Jill ~. Rol~nd '"!• Gone, nons.

tered the Gunnm 4-l!. Lugus Matthefl, Gerald WiiUa!lll en for the com­getting alnglu, Jimmy Adami

NEWS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1957

.This Page Is Presented . '

with the Compliments Of ,

Jhe Great Eastern Oil.· Company Limited ..

Inter-School Series

\'.<. Harbour

\'F. Harbour

\'!. UpPfr bland

. '.ngl. n.

Upper Is·

P.~y \'S. Uptlfr

Pnint ,.,, Harbour

Gm,. U.C, vs.

lor t.h~ um~' 1l'l\l 1:.-. lattr wli~n final ar· hm hi-en made 'llith

of the Bay Roberts n·~ 1!1\der~tand, the playfd.

game betwf".'n a mm th, U.C, School Rt

1nrl th~ An~lican 1t Carbontar was played fi!Wnear rink on Friday

Jut, and ended with a 1.:! In fal'our of Spaniard's

lir lir!t game that the Bay !quad had played

MUil!l, but it !eemed that In !:It ~riod it had the edge

Carbcooar aggrega Uon. coal Wa! scored b~· Cliff

• tll a PI!! from Harrr ChiP· l!lshortly thereafter a bh ~mbination on the part of · aided ~brk Sheppar1l to

r net lor the !l'l'C· r1•tallalecl

On Bridge

N011.11i !DI .Q97l t A 10 ~ 1 tQ o&A,IH

EAST

II

The Blackout, Ignored Or Forgotten?

SPANIARDS BAY .hn, 28-The blackout exercise of Jut Wednes· dfty f'Voolng was not very' notice. able in Spaniard's Bay, While fome p~nple who remembered the directions of the Civil Defense au. thorlties turned. off all lights for U1e specified ten minutes and others ro-operal'!d b~· not showing any outdoor lights, most people forgot 11J about It or merely !g. nored It, We have no street lights, but the usual number of outdoor Jlghts did not seem to ~ appreclabl)' decreased, To an ob­scrverthe time between 8 and 8:10 p.m. 1\'a! no different from any otho~r. Perhaps the next blackout test would be more .ef. !!'Ctive if all p<lwer would be cut of! at It~ ~ource: bi that way no· body would be seriously affected and all would be remin<lo~d that safety precautions, necessary or Dtherwlse, arc being practiced. As It Is most of us do not see tile necoessity of a blackout because we do not understand the wisdom of it.

before the end of the first period which en~d Spaniard's Bay 2, Carbonenr I,

The second pel'iod wa~ more Jn. terestin;: anrl showed that the teams were !'l'enly match:d. The llnh· puck to slip hy tht Ca~ear goalie wa.~ one (rom the sl1ck of ~lark Sheppard. ·

When th~ third )'eril'<l ~tarkd \\'ith Spaniard's Bay lo!adlng' ~Y lhl't'r g~~al!, Carbon~ar ~a"ld tis opponent'~ net and madw the sr11rt rnd thr~'-~ til twn, Mark Sheppar.-1 sn0\1 ehanged that read. inJ: and th.. gan was 'llidened morf! when Ted .Tones added yet another. One other senre. was made hy Carbon~nr but when :\lark She)lllard added two other goal~ (he Rcored five all told) the margin was too wide to make much dlffere~~ce, and so the game ended 7-3 In favour o! Spaniard's Bay, ·

School lloclrey seems to be. the only brand a\'allable to us this season as It 15 practically Impos­sible to organize a senior team when the would-be players haye to go elsewhere for oeplo~·ment. Granted we rna~· 'see some visit­Ing team's, but Interest Is not as genuine as when the players are known personnlly, Nevertheless lovers of sport who patronize the beit gnme U1at there is con be a~· sured thut the~· will recei\'e full \'alue for their money.

expect to beut It by normal means so he worke1l out . a confidence game that gave declarer a chance to go wrong.

'!'he larceny wa~ not too com· pllcated. All be did, was to open the jack o! hearts from his queen-jack combination.

Dummy's ace took the trick and Eut slgnaled with the six 1pot. He really wanted hearts played again. ,

Soutb went right arttr the trump 5Uit. Lou took his ace a11d played the eight of hearts. Dumm~··a nine eovered and . South trumped Ea~t's king. Soutll drew Lou's last trump and took stock of the 1ituatlon. The club flnem was on but South could not ate where the queen was •. However, South thought he knew definitely where the heart queen could be found. Accordingly, h_e played the king and then ' the ace of clubs to 1te If he could drop the doubleton queen.

Wilen this failed he played dummy'5 ten or hcarl.l• East fol· Jowrd and South dl!cardcd his losln~ club. Larceny Lou won with the queen and thal w:.~ all.

Lnu h•lrl ton much South ~houtd· nnt have fallen lh, ~r~d~ •lam to 1 fnr the ~winclle. He had played

ay. Report From The Altar Guild

SPANIARD'S BAY Jan, 28-The annual meeUn" klr the receiving

ew·s PersQnals

Mr. Duncal\ Chipman was here from St. John's over tho!!' weekend · and was the guest of his son and daughter-in·law, Mr. an~ Mra, J. Lloyd Chipman. r

of reports and the election of of· Mr. Da\'id Sheppard who works ficers was held at the rector; on u·ith the Bank of Nova Scotia in Tuesday afternoon, January !2nd. St, John's spent last weekend here Twenty-four members, plus two ·with his parents, Mr. and Mr~. new ones, braved the elemenh to Levi Sheppard. David really got be present and this Is an Indica· the surprise or his life on Satur­Uon of their Interest In the work day evening when 1 number of his of the Guild. friends gave him a suf1lrlse party,

Mrs, Loder presided and open· the occasion belnl his birthday ed the mE>!Ung with prayer. In __ · reviewing the work of the Altar · Mr. · and Mrs. Arthur Seymour Guild for 19~ Mrs; Loder expre~~- •who II\! Jiving II\ St. John's with ed her thanks to all membm who their daughter,' Mrs, Gerald had co-operated with her and hop- Samuelson, tor the '\\'inter months ed that 1957 would be as success- came home 011 Thursday of lnst ful. She had high praise for the week and returned again on Mon. active members who call month· day morning, Mr. Seymour con­ly to receive donations from c~· Unucs to work with the DEpart. trlbutlng members. The GUild ment of Transport and Is keeping paid for two blue cassock~ which \'ery well. His friends \Viii be are used by the members of happy to know this as only a few the Junior Choir when they mist months ag0 Mr. Seymour under­In taking the offering •t chureh went major surgery at the services. Two new sets of Altar General Hospital. Curtains and accessories have been purchased by the Guild; 0\\e set or wllite and another red . Bolh ;branches o! the C.E.W.A. ha\'e agreed to pay for a purple set and so the Guild will cndea· vour 1<1 purchase Rnd ha\'e read~· the fourth ~et, green. soon after the Easter Festival. 'I'b:!se Items are extremely costly, and ll'!a~­much as the Altar Guild depends cntirelv on stra lght l(iving, usual·

OI.D SHELL KILLS FOUJt BILBAO, Spain CAP) - Four

workers were killed and another t\1'0 severel~· lnjjjul':!d In the expJo. !ion D! a cannc., shell from the Spanish cl\•iJ "'ar, The worker~ were employed In the nforesla· lion of a hill fil•e mil·~s from here which was . the 1cene of bloody batUcs in 19Si.

lv In ·~mall amounts, for ll~ In· CAlRO r Al'l - The ne"ll'spaper come, 'tt ean be se-en that it tak~s AI 'llhsu reports fil'ft rleh told lime u well aa money to com· mltles tlllc~ mined by. ancient plete the 1\'0rk It Is lnt;nded to do Egyptians ha\'e been di!cevered -beautifying and takll'lg care &! In Egypt's eastern desert near tile Rltar and lftnetuary of the the roast r-f the lied Sea. The church. newspaper says pieces of Jlus

Mr.~. Norinan ebipman 'll'hll has found In one of til.!! mines had IJ!· alr~ady given a 1\nen eloth for !he parenll)' ~en Jdt t.y aneient Credence Table hu flffered to gtve E~·ptial'l ·miners. another. (The new .~Credence -:-----------­Table b a memorial Ul lllrs. sity, and this was purchuerl ~­Chipman's daught(!r, Joyce). The cause sQ~stantial nelp wu rea~l· lovely crochet work on the linen ly received from both branche, of cloths wa~ done :by Mrs. A, It the C.E.W.A. Gosse and Mrs, R, Gosse, "Our presld-~nt, Mrs. U:lder, has

The secretary of tM Guild, Mn. been a gracious hostess at every A. R, Gosse, In her f'eN!rt said, meeting by servln.c a!ternoon teas "Our year which J:oeran olt 't.farcll thus glvl11l! a ftellng M good fel· 13, 1956, has been very success- IJJwship. I am sure' that aU el us ful. The members have been 1ppro~cl•tt what she has done and most eo-operative In !ookiiiC after Is doing.'' and In keeping cleaa, tbe altar The election of officers resqlted and sanctuary of the church. The In the re-election of all four of. collector~ of the varloua zones fleers: have also done good "WOrk. President-Mrs. T. E. Loder

"A beautiful set of white and VIce-President-Mrs. W. Shep-gold curtains to be used for FesU· pard vals, and a new altar cloth were Secretary-Mrs. A. It, Gosse put In 11se at Easter. The Guild Treasurer-Mrs. J., R. Shtppard has also helpell In paying for a FollDWing tile business Of the tea urn which was purtlmed by meeting aftemoon tea wa5 served the C.E.W.A, A vacuum cleaner by Mi!sdames W, Sheppard, L. !or ust In the chancel wu a necoes- Sheppard and r •. lllercer,

------~-----------------retly expeeta the worst this yur

Real Clown For The 'Dodgers

NEW YORK (AP) - Brooklyn Dod&<ers are going to have a real, honest-to-goodness elown at E·b· bets Field-as J£ the Bwns needed

Signing fl. Emmett Kelly, who lormerly was on the roster of the RinHling Brother, club, was 1 stroke of gealus, He not only per ronlfics !Jle general Idea of the Brooklyn bum, but his droopy, mournful demeanor will mirror the feelings ot the fans Mien the club drops 1 doubleheader,

If he becomes properly imbued with ·the Brooklyn spirit there wlll be times when he wOn't need any makeup· to play his role.

Among the duties ol this king of pantomimists will be the re!Lving of tension of the Ebbet's Field crowd.

Whether Walter O'MaUey sec--,- . w1th Larceny .Lou bei.f1re and ~hould ha.ve suspected nch a fake lead u jaek from queen• Jack.

I'

·we wouldn't know, Kelly may have beM hired with the ldo!a ol taking the minds of the fan~ off • team Which couldn't win tor losing. AN OLD IDEA

Anyway, the· Brooklyn president might be s\Jed. for infringement of copyright by Bill Voock, whose ex­periments in adding a lltUe levity 1<1 ,tile sport &f basebaiJ brought boti1 criticism and eustomers at the Cleveland and ~t. T.oois parks.

Vetck's Idea ef IMd, cleaa fun incluchd fireworks displays, fuh· ion shows, ml~et batters anrt 11\!r otker stunt 1\il.ich mirht come te mind.

U Kelly hac!' been at lllttrty d the time of Bill's 111aior leaeue •rations he woold have ~en a eineh ~ land at l'Jitveland's Mu­nlelpal stadium, prd&ably by hell­eopter.

And !l the~ Kelly Cltf!lrlrnent works out ~Wll Ol.hlley might ex­pand his circus opera.tlotis, rivini employmen\ to tightwlre walkers, lion Ia mers, 'trained seals and other performer~.

Anywfty, as a fcllnw remarked, O'Malley undoubtedly made· th~ circus catch ri! the year.

,.

'.• I

THE HEART OF JU~IEl JONES

Page 14: TH~E D·.AIL¥ ·NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · D'Araeon 3500. 3 32 32 .:.r De Cour 5l!OO '57 !6 H · -1 . De cour wll !110 171>

THE DAILY 'NEWS, FRIDAY; FEBRUARY

DR. D. BAIRD TO PROBE B Roberts News Young canada Simpsons Sears FRANCOIS' HOT S~RiNGS ay . Hockey Week Plumbing and

'Dr. David B~lrd, Govermpent likelihood of there belns a volcano KI"wam"s Club H k s I d I MELVILLE ,Sask, (CP)-Pian; Heating Division CONNECTION BAY RUN Geologist, will leave here by hell· . in the area, and when the report OC ey 1 are well under y f C d ' PlACE Tl/l B copter today, or AS soon.as weath· was sent directly from Francois to . . ... c e u e I biggest hockey ~~~ser~~nc!n~v:ck 170 WATER STREET• N AY. er permits, lor Franco!~ to Invest!· the Dally News on Saturday eve· I } · Off" __ it1 history, Feb 4·12 , : Regular 9 a !11. train leaving gate reports of- hot springs and ning that water onh· was present nsta s ICers BAY ROBERTS-At the annual . Gordon Juckc;, the' man behind' DON T BE FURNACE SLAVES St. John's MJnda;v. February 4th, :MI .,.., oomiog I <Om tho hill• " I ho •Ito, Di. Bit" ""~olool ' ~ttog or I ho "'"'"" B; y ' lh• P'•m ott., of t>o . C "'"" olll "'"" "' "' "" ot Mgonllo . s:~::' ,:''i i'"~"lly '·' tbo . tt. d•~••••~ by oyt.g 1 .. 1 BAy ROBEiiTSAt II l Km1h ll~ko; A"ocioll" hold " I A " ' to ' ' Hook.,· A"odolloo'• with >t.V. """ '" 'tho Boy R" ~s oas • \an underground stream is usually tl '• • - te rcgu ar Coley's ,Point the following "Young Canada Hockey Week," Placentia Bay.

Last weekend the story was cir·, ~t 50 degrees. in summer and win· ~{c T~~sg; .th~a~~want~5f~ubp hclt~- sch~dulc of gam'cs were rclen•cd:- ~an "it is cvi?ent that the mPn SOUTH COASl. SERVICE culated that l'olcanic matter was 1 tcr, and l~atct coming !rom l_mder· d~nt LloyJ' Powci{Y w i • ;es Brlgus vs. Carboncar. m charge of mt110r hockc~· in ccn· . . I coming !rom the hill behind sr~und m zero weather would gucsl Add! B c comt .as Br.y Roberts vs. Shcarstown. tres. across the land arc solidly s.s. Bar Hav~n operating rc~u· 1. Francois, and a check with a rcli· steam just as water taken from a pol~t~d O!';o~lz own,f nc~l "i .Cal·boncar vs. Coley's Point behmd the obsocn·ance." Jar ports South Coast Sen·icc i able source in the ar~a said that warm house to the cold zero Cl 1 a er 0 wan s Brigus vs. Shearstown · The week, to promote minor ·n 'I f th

1 ·

'"" '"'' ot """ .,; """ wollh" ~ot•ldo wut '"'"· ·~ " ~~'''""'"'· ·~· "> C"b"o" "· Boy .,..;,., hookoy, '' b•iog """""' by '"' " ~' •~ o nook c""' ' wore'"'''' '"" tho btU '"' '" Pooplo ,'" tho "'' ooot.dod tho ;::;:to~y f11"~' L\"1'"'"\ 'i."i' ~oley'.' Poiol ,_ """';"'"· 9AHA, I" bn~oh" '"' ollillot" ::~ri Nooo .,,. .. .,, F<bruocy ~ Jcc

1 was forming in zero t~m era Hon. J, r. Cheeseman, member 1 r a cr cmp eman ° e 1 Brigus vs, Coley's Point m the 10 provmc~s.

lures, P · for Burgeo La Poll~ dr!ilrlct, and Is and. an~ I Pat Pickett, Telegram Brigns vs Bay Roberts' Juckcs, ~·~cond · vicc-preside•ll of

Dr. Baird said at' the time of the a!~;: !~ah:hc ~latter be ini'CSti· ~~~~~~c~~a t~~· c:~~~ ~W~n!~dfo; Ca~boncar' vs. ~hearst~11:n, th~ CAHA and chairman or its fir~t report that there. was little q~testcd to go. u~a:~~thhea~r~:~n rc· 1956, hlgllghtlng their fund·rals· 111;-~~ri~~~-nds Will be played in -~~n~t~ft~~c~r~~~~~tt~~~Jr~J:~o~ IS THIS YOU?

Newfoundland Services

. PASSENGER NOTICES

CONNECTION SOUTH COAST t

SERVICE

STADI

Senior· H

Friday, Feb, Feildians

vs. St. Ben's

U d T • } lng activities to aid the play· The playoffs will consist of tl brochures and appealed for bac-1>· mur er ria M c L l Is ~:~~e~~h ptojfcct, t~~i purchatshc 0~ ,a two . top t~r·ID3. playing three 0~~ ing to. press, radio and tcl~?vision. • • • • a r or pu c usq, e \0 • of fn•c games for Ill · h 1 He IS a weeki\' newspaper pub-

"' (~onll~u~u from p~gc 3) R 1

untcer fire brigade, the sponsor- ship, Games' to be e ~ amp on· Jisher a11d at his offices at the . lura dnnk th~rc, B1ll, and he \CaCIIVated I ~n.~ of the Santa Claus parade, regulation icc surface pl ~~d f' 0~ Melville Advance has recch·~?u

In: th~ window right out in me . ··lnPCfS for needy families, sale game in this s . ' e 1 Irs letters a~ messages telling what

Train "The Caribou'' leaYing ; St. .John's 5 !".m. Tuesday, Feb· r

ruary 5th, will mak~ connection I with. S.S. Bar Havc.'l for regular ! ports South /Ooa~t Service. i

CONNECT10"' WEST RUN i ~~~~~!!IIIII PL.ACEJI:TIA BAY . ~-.=

face," the accused said as he told 1 The members aud friends of the 'oi T.B. s~nls, partlelpntlon in the Monda'' Januar;rle~Btlwas ·tp a~~d 1•arious centres arc doing to ob· ol .t:le rep I~· to his cnquir)' at 1 ~I.C.L.I at a meeting in the Prince :;\larch ol Dimes and Cancer _con· Roberis' between Shea;sto~· ay ser\'c the week, Pike s door, ; or Welcs College Ann~x last eve· ,trot Campaigns, and traffic s1gns. Bay Roberts v~. and Government and civic oflicials

."1 was the best kinds of friends I nln~ decid~d ·to resume their d~· 1 He ~~pressed thanks to the ladles 3·3 tic, giving e::~ ~~~dcd 1111~ a are backing the idea, Juckes said, 1'.'11 h the man and nel'cr thou•ht bating s~ss10ns In the very neal' of tlie Home' and School Assocl~r m one POint. displayin• a letter from Prime it could happen in a hund~rd I future. .. . Ilion who catered for their '51 Minister

0

SI. Laurent that said: ~cars," he sairl. "I gut me facc..l Since the operation of the In· 1 dinner meetings. He also told Birthdays "I was pleased to l·~an1 ... of cut." 1 stitutc was suspended last ,:car 1thc mcmb~rs that their year's sue- the promotional actil'itics being

Regular 9 ~ m. train Jcavin~ 1 St. John's w.~dnesday. february' 6th, will make connection at Ar· I gcntia with M.V. Burin ior the I West Run Plarcntia Ba)'. :

FREIGHT SOL'TH COAST

SEPVlCE .\~ked what effect this had on 1 there had been a good dcai of I cess was the result. of the efforts . -- • planned by the CAHA in conncc- OR YC 1,'?

nlm the accused replied, ".Tarm~nt· i comment from older members and I of the pa.;t el:eculll•es who "laid BAY RO~ERTS-Birthdal' greet· tion with Young Canada Hockey ENJOY A c~l n~c, sir." He said to Pike, "You 1

others in the communlt~·· It was .~he groundwork" thus providing ings to Eric Mercer, Bay Roberts 1 Week. , .Canadians are justlj' ·rhdn t ha1·e to do thai, ~·ou cut; fairly gcncralll' felt that ·th~ 1 gl·cater opp,vtunlty to build as Er .• st who celebrated his birthda)' 1 proud ol the records of their pro- · Homart Heating Freight is acr:eptcd daily at the mr;''. ! ~I.C.~.I. during its cighty·odd years I fr~c men", with the result of the on January 2ith. Happy birthda . ! f·zssic•lal sport. But more impor- Dock Coastal s:1e!l for all ports : . -' P1ke came out ol the house 1 of.emtc~cc had contributed some· a~lard nf the Lle.ut~nant Governor Eric from all your friend;. ~ \tan~ for our youth than thr. Sys· tem South Coast S~:-l'ice. but in order: ~nd I w~s on the top or second : tlnng wh1ch was of such l'aiuc to

1

- rtbbon ior the highest rr.oting dur· -- aclnel'ement of individual and to guarantee mu1·rmcnt by this i ""'· Plko oomo "' ., tho pl•l· ! st. J o ho'• tho I· If , hoold : not 00 '"' I h•' thl.t ""'"· Bot ~•• GI'"Y'• '"'"" of M, .,, ' "' m """'" i, th, itmlopmmt I< I P s.s. B" H • • ~ '"'''" m "' : form and made a kick at me and 1 allowed to "fold" If this could pos· of all Pr~slden.t, Powell said it Mrs. Jla)'ward Greenland ccichrat-\ or the bod)' and the character of be al the Dock C<.a>lal Shed not·: struck me in the chest, and y! sibly be a\'oldcd. · · • ga1•c "a great measure o! regard cd her sixth birthdr.y 0'n Frida. each participant in this vigorous later than 5 !l ril. tcmorrow Sat·: l"dol <I ght d "" ot ti>O bottom I Tho m"tlog 1"1 oi Shl "" Oo" I" ""o'-'". '"' 10' ol hm. F •' ''"'"Y 251 h, with 0 P'rtY ot ·~ ' ! "'"'" <pO<L "dO)'· I ""'

0

"'"

1

"'"" d step." the accused said. i ?d b)' the Exccutll'~ to asccrt~ln lowing lhts orriccrs for 1956, re· home for all her little chums the!~ 1 ''I wish· every success to the : W elf arc requir•·; d

"Pike was at the top of the, 1f there was now enou~h interest tired, and Addison Bown, before glowing faces told b~yond 'word minor hockey committee of the ',.,.,,.,. Ltil ; bcr of boa.·di:l~ l·.n~r.c; ''''' "' ,., "" "'"''" 1 told I'' "'''''"· • rut" of"'"'""· lo5toltlog tb• ""' ollio"' look how tho'"'''" ooj"·od 5,.,1,j1 CAliA to ~o promolioo of •• tlol ........ &111.11.~ 1

'"" "''" "'' ,., • ..,' him, 'you cut me'.'' II; came down I Those attending could not be en II· I t~c opportunlt~· of· making R '!horl birthda)' greetings conic [~om h I national Young Canada Hockey-· ~ - ' Special ho:whn; ho~~ nl'cr the ~tcp~ and he ask~d me cd a large ~umber . but· all were ,'·:!dress, brought good wishes from Momm~·. D;;ddy and brothers Jt':t I Week, To the thousands of young l.i!'IO. NAL. i will be . pnid lnr home!

to oomo 'p, I woo ld "'I 1" ko ony ' '"""'"Ito '" tho I• '"'-"'" 1 "'· T•mplo" • "'' th • B•ll 1> '"' D ob, . I ''""" """ ''" •d•, I ""'" j "'"' tl<o "'" ,.,., • ch~nc~s on going up· because the I o.r a -resolution to test out the ac· land Club. He referred to the _ .,!he hope that. th·~Y will keep on · further inlui'l'tali~n mln came ncar br~aking me up I live interest by arranging a pro· cxcel~ent. showing, of the Bay lll.any happy returns to Consta . pl~y.ing . the game !n the true i persons shout~ :'JII·l~ .

. , wh~n he put me 01

·cr the steps," gram of debates this s~ason. Robetls Club, olfercd appreciation Da1•1d French of the Ncwfo dl hi~ sp1r1t of sportsmanshiP, We rccog- SLEEP LATER . i 1~·. in writing tw

1

: the ~ccuscd continued. 1 . . . o! President _Powell's work, and Constabulary, stationed "a~ a~t nizc in rna~~ or,,the qualities or· ----------- '

1 :•P1ke walked down, to about the 'I& .. asked the el:ecutlve. to applause Jolm's, who celebrated his birth: the goo,r c111zen. · Gel an hour a•· mo1c extra sleep; WALLS i The Director of Child

i!r: tho.ughc he was.goln' to jump me·. B B I f. ' i He th~n conduct~d ·the•lnsl:lll· greeting~ from his famll· p and!E • I T w· ings, Let a Thermostat start' I ~~r~o~~~l.iam, ; ! tlmrl. sl~p from the bottom. y II the rest o! the members. . ·: dr-y on January 27th. S ecial . and wake up In warm surround· ' FUNERAL HOME ; Department of Public

j•l ann I grabbed !urn around the two. eauty ne 5 l.ation of the following offlc~rs:- many !rtends at Bay Rob~rt XCI CISC 0 Ill your fire In thr morning. •"'"·~. Furnished 1:. arms. I thought he was coming' President-Fr;.nk Mercer. , s. . Calf 3588 3568 I R. L. hNDREWS,

down to trim me. He grabbed me' -- . ·' I. , Flr3t_ Vice-President - Allan p , } ' A Flat Stomach , ' ' Chapel • fcbl,4 Deputy about the same way • .I asked him I Platinum grey is one· of the im· Dawe. . . . CrSODa S 3777 2282 · ·--·· -·--- ·

I . to let me go-he wouldn't let me i portarit spring colors for blondes' R Second VIce-President -. nave , 10, so I Ol'crbalanced myself and I rerlheads, brunettes or grey ho•ad; us sell. · · ' B · -- .. Saggin~ slom~ch · muscles net FOR A FREE ESTIMATE ! threw· him oved. n1c head - he But· for proper adjustme11t, check ~ecle:ant·-5Ho.ward.Moores. D ~( RrOsBERTS -;- ~llss Ann 1 on!)' spo1l your f1gure, they're un. ' --.----· 1 landed ~n his back." · your. makeup, · Eye makeup for ss 5 an · eerelary-Irving Mer. w ur e 0 t. Johns, spent the : necessary:, Don't rely on a girdle 1

1. "Ge got in baototi all types is a pearly ·grey e., cer. • · eek-e~~ as the gncsl of her sister to do what you yourself can ae-

.''We got into a hit ol a tans!~ shadow, a grc -black masca~~ Tr'ea~urer<-Wilbur Spar~es. ~Irs. \\ llfred Mercer, Bay Robert; complish by simple exercise, If 'gm t_hc steps, w~ were both 1 and a gre cyl! .P·encil, . ·It's· the

1 I?'mediate Past Pres1dent- .,.ast. you want firm, young ,tomach

swcarmg. lie got up again, then rouge, powder and Ups tick ton~s • Lloyd. Powell serves· as ex-officio muscles and therefore a smooth,

BUlL.DERS OF MODERN HOMES • MODI:lRN'IZING I·give him a couple of smacks by I that really do tlie "h.ook up," lfo~ one Y~r as well as being a Douglas Bradbu,ry visited his flat tummy, make a habit of·

the garage doors. He went down 1 -· - . . · . member of the board of dlrecton. mother, Mrs. E. J. Bradbury over touching your toes 20 times eac)l on the ground - I craclted him I So!X! ·hands tlwt noihing seems I' ~lher dlr.ectors are Wallace Hill· the week·end. mol'lli,,g, That's all there is to it. t~rce or four t!IIIC> in the· face , lo rcully ·help will often respond ~tid, dGus ~cefe, Ches Bndcock, . . · ·. - At first, your leg muscles will hurt With me right. fist." . 1 to the cheap often overlooked pet- 0 an Bagos, Reuben Snow, Matt Miss ~Ianna Thoms, Anglican j and you'll ache gem1·ally but

• REMODEL.ING ·~REPAIR WORK

KITCHEN CABINETS GARAGES

I I I

Asked how the l'ictlm was when roleum ·jelly, 'Mass·age it· il'ell ·1,1• LeGrow, Bill. Hedderson, . . .. . School teacher at ~lercer's Cove that's good. It means vou're gel· be left, Johnson said that Pike to the skin -especially the cuticles Addison then charged Past Pres\· spent the Wcek·~nd at her hom~ I that's good, . It means youre was alive "like. he w<~s swcarin' and knuckles at.ebdtime then· slip dtn~ Lloyd to gil•e his best io the r.t Carbon ear. getting results, Keep your legs or grumblin' or somethip'. · I left on ·a loo~e pair of cotion· gloves e u as ex-officio for l)nother year, straight and dont cheat bv bend· to go up to R~ardon's. Pike was and. go Jo bcq. Only ·a ·few' treat. and ,the directors to direct the .1f:etrusscy spent· the weck·cnd ing your k11eo~s slightly. ·u you on the ground by the steps. Asked . ments and your ha•,1ds will 'took pallet o[ the club, approving new ~ ;. parents, Mr. and ~Irs. can't el'en reach your toes at first,

GOOD WCBI\i\IA~SHIP ·54 L.eMARC HANT ROAD:

_Dial 6929

why he left .the accused: said, "to· better, ccrlainly fed better,· ·.' mem ers and to approve the budget eorgc ~>ussey, 1 keep tr~·ing, Eventually you'll

J:Ct somebody to h~lp bring .. him in. : . -. -. . : · . . al)d pay the bills, treasurer Wil· - make the grade. And later, when I knowcd· I hurt the man. We had · 'rhc same treatment give~ dur. bur Sparkes to hold all fund3 and Mr. Max, Churchill accompanied the going is easy and you're· bored a pretty good fight lh~rc, ·and if .lng th~ day, b~fore jc}bs ca!llng for disburse s~me on order of the p~ld .1 businc.;s l'isit to St. John's with the whole idea, don't st~. FOR SALE !1e ne~ded a doctor I was goin' 10' rubber gloves Is ·a very good Jd••a lbollrd o! d1re~tors, Secrcl:lry How- b) his two sons, Robert and Er' U•1less, of course, you want an get him." · 1 , ' ·

1 . · -. . · • ' ard Moor~s to record membership on Tuesday, · IC "outstanding" tummy. 1954 Austin

· He told how Brazil, Hynes and · So b the glove· ·habit •. Wear 1 fee and dues, he also told Vice­Reardon refus~rl to go and help ·gloves ·when doing ali ·.household I President Dave Russell as he was • and· repealed . the ~tory he told chores, rubber for the wet ones ~nkdersludy for the, pre&ident to !liartha Reardon. He denied tell· cotlc;l for the dry or."s 'I a e ·particular attention of his lng Mrs. Reardon that he klll~d . . -- • ' · · charge, to make the club more Bill Pike. "She took me ·wrong," . litany people find that by\ wash- precious. r.ond serviceable to the he -said. : . . • . . . . .. ... · .. lng th~lr nostrils each day with a ~ommumty, and asked all to bl'

, Asked If he suf!ered any. injur· saline solution, ·helps 'prevent ·,a • faithful to the trust" posed in les In· the fight the accused said cold, Buy a nasal duck ·In any them, for the success o! the club he· had his knuckle cut open . and drug store,· they're ooder a quar. lay In the effor)s of all collective· a cut on his face, and Jim Rear· ter, A lA teaspoon of • salt and ly. • don cleaned him up. Then ·he went tho~ same of baking soda toacup President Frank then expressed to Fitzgerald's to watch television. of boiling water, Is about right for thanks to the Installing 'officer

"Did you go back to 'look at most when It comes to the solu. and thr.onked the members for the Pike," l\lr. Carter, Crown prosecu- tlon: trust placed in him. He said tor asked, and Johnson replied, with the Co-operation of the past "No sir. I figured :llurphy was NO FLUORIDATION · presidents they would make as goln' to look after him." DETROIT (AP) .- The Detroit good a record ns last year. He

AskPd why he went to the pollee City Council Thursday voted .s to then announced three members after .he left Fitzgerald's the ac- 4 against a proposal to place on pr.st presidents Bert Hillyard and cused said, "I knowed .J had a the April 1 ballot the question of Irving llfercer, and executive mcm­flght. with the man and knowed adding fluoride to the city's water ber Wallace Hill)'ard had earned I hurt htm, but didn't think I hurt supply, The vote klllo~d the pro. attendance tabs for 'three years him serious. I wn~n't working and posal for the time beJ.<tg, Some perfect attendance, · didn't want to get in any t~oublr." medical authorities hold fluorida; Secretrrry Howard Moores offer-

The statement Johnson gave to lion of a water supply aids In cut· ed congratulations to Addison the RCMP on the early morning ling down tooth decay, Bown on his new appointment as of Decemher was In evidence and organizer for Kiwanis clubs in asked If he agreed with It, said • · · . Newfoundland, and asked that the

. "If he ~:ot it there I mu~l have .ADDRESSES ~URY assistant secrl!tr.ory be o!ficlally told him.'' . . · . ,At 3.45 P·~· Mr. H1ggins began recognized at the .next meeting.

He heard that Pike was dead ht, address to_ the jury and during Meeting closed with the National he said around 2 o'clock In th~ t •e next ·hour pointed· out th'e Anthem. pollee cell,· and Corporal' McMul· ~~!hllght1s of the ._evidence ; and ...,------

. Jan told him Asked how· he felt · .s~ctons of the criminal :code H k. A ' . about it, he ~cplled, "I dldn!t ex· dcah.ng with homicide. He . told _ OC ey 88 ll peel It and I fell bad about it the1Jury that a I'Crdicl of murder · when h'c told me" . . . cou d not be given on the evidence Elects Off" .

Asked by Mr. 'carter I! he· had. and c~thcr a- ."erdict of. ~ansl~ugh·. • lCCrS

Note Of Thanks Jf you want a· smooth, young • looking neck into the middle

BAY ROBERTS-Mr, Thomas re~rs, don't go around looking for Bradbury of Bay Roberts wishes , wrl11kles. One sure way to lind to sincere))• tbllnk all those who them IS to dig your n·~ck down in· helped in any way In 5al'ing ht's to your collar wh~n you're read­whi h d t ing, Hold your book {in a good by ~lr. ;:, ri~Y~~~~.e garage owned light) where you can see it easily

without slumping. Hold it well up

Rav Roberts Church Services

ANGLICAN (Rev. Isaac Butler, B.A., 1.1'h)

ST. MATTHEWS ' 8·30 a.m. Holy Communion· ;:.oo r..m. Matins; 7.00 p.m.' Even:

ovng.

so your head is up, too. . When you wa~, look about you. Look at seenery a11d faces, not at t~ craeks In the sidewalk, You'll have· a far more interesting walk and you'll also be rewarded by a smooth neck. In addition, use a special throat cl'eam at night, one which Is richer thai'! tlte usual face cream,

A shelf in the kitchen Is a handy place to keep a !ew beauty aids for a quick touch-up. You should have hand lotion and you should Use it aft'!r each dJshwash­in~t session, You should keep a mirror on or above the shelf so that when the doorbell rings, you can check on your appearance. Keep a brush and comb th-2re, too, for a quick hairsmoothing, Add a lipstick, powder and puff and vou will never be caught a't ~·our own door looki11g like somethinl( out of

ST. MARK'S 3,00 p.m. ·E~en'song,

UNITED, CHURCH (Rev. J. s. H. Moran ,B.A.)

11.00 a.m. :Spaniard's Bay 2.00 p.m. Coley's Point, ' 3.15 p.m Shearstown. 7.00 p,m, Central. Note, the male choir will be

l~ attendance at the Evening Ser· VIce,

ROMAN CATHOLIC (Rev. Fr. Bogan, P.P.)

9.00 a..m. Morning Mass,

SALVATION ARMY

. ~ comedy. · "~tatever else you rna:· want to add to the shelf i~ a matl'.!r or personal chyice but the things just named Rre basic needs for a neat appearance.

Excellent condition.

For particulars see

David Butler Photographer, Daily News

jan23,tf

For Fast Taxi Service

HOTEL TAXI Dial 2424. 2410

QUEEN'S ROAD Open 8 a.m. to 2 a.m.

jan3,tf ·

NO D_OWN PAYMENT EASY TERMS ·1

Now Is tt.o) time for your new

TIL.E or L.INOL.EUM FLOORS; .

Al1o MINOR REPAIRS CALL· anY Intention of kUling Pike, ~~~itl~t~o\ guilty could be the .only BAY ROBERTS-The annu&l

Johnson said, '"No, ~lr, .I didn't · H ' · · ' : meeting of· the Bay Roberts Hucke . ha:Ve ·an~· lntenlio~ of beating the for ic:e~1~ no :polfjles, "h~ ~aid, Association was held ,at' the Amai. man.t,~P,n had to·do lt,·.he.was vas obi! on.o evence, ,for·he gamated School on Tuesday, Janu­golng to trim me or l,had·to.trlm. ~hi~h ·m~:~tto A~1 .th~t notfi!ng ary 22nd, ·Minutes of meetlqg held him.'' : .. : . benefit t poSSI y·- e :of any last. year. wr.s read on which. a

(Capt. R. W. and Mrs. Pond) 10.00 a.m. Holiness Meeting·

2.00 p.m. Sunday School; 6.15 p.m: SICKLE AND CORN Cabot Construction

·NEW D.ELHI (AP)-lt's nDt the and Suppli~s Ltd. Young People's Service; 7.00 P·tn· Evangelistic Service. • , sickle and hammer ·on ·the Indian D

baJ\ot-it's the 'sickle. and ears of Ia! 5658 Duckworth St.

·The' cross examination otthe· ~c·: left" out .0 ' the ac~used wo':!d.' be discussion period was opened, fol· cused' continued. up to·; the: D!IO~i . M · ~in 1 . • . . ' · . lowing this discussion minutes were recesi · and when. the .. after~~on 'p.m.r. andggMns ~ne~11ded at! 4.40 adopt~d as read. Wltb Mr. Wilbur session opened l\lr. Cart.er ,_con· rose~ to .. r •. ·. a~er, ·crown Sparkes acting as chalrma11 the tinned his examination. ·He .. a~k~d, ~e· Ju~y ~'i !~~an his adddress, ·to following 'officers were then ~lee!·

~uesday evening Young Soldiers meeting at 8 p.m.

Offi 1 1 After hcours call co~. c a s said Tuesday In- M_R. JAMES ADAMS, 7931 H

Thursday evening Home Leagnc meeting at 8 p.m.

dla s Cqmmunist party Is retain· ing_ tht; sickle and corn design, ._ ...... ________ ..-..;.1 wh1ch 11 used in' the last goocral

·Shower election In 1952, as its official bat. ~-------·-----• lot symbol· In the new elections 11

~.'Why 'did,~!' you il). ~IV!IY f:,om ed at 5.40 .• ~ ~·~· ~n .. ~o~clud· ed for: the: ln;ul.ng year~ . . : !he pteps?. and Johnson: sai!l, . He ,·The' ·co·u~t · , 'bl d : ,· : President-Wilbur SpEorkcs, . re-·was arguing, he told .me .to. come whe HI rehs~em e .at, 7.30_ elected. . . : up. I.told him to come down:"·· tlce ~beg!nL~~d~ . 1~Jhe Ch\lef.'Jus· Vlcc.Presidenl- Gordim,Snow, BAY ROBERTS-, A group of her

Mr. Carter asked, "II Pike had . , 5· a ress . o · th~ cl~cted. · .. · ~ , • frl d srine'·bito'li\s house?".' , ' . JIUY' and . continued .for. an hou~ ; Treasurer-Wallace Cave re· en s gathered at the home of. CAN •SAVE POST · .. "l would' have went DD then" a~d fifty l!liDules .to· explain .t!JC' ·elected. · r : • • ' Mrs. William T. Smith on Monday 'BOSTON "' • !· · • • • · ' det~lls of the· se t1 f th • Cri · · ·· · · · · 1 January · 28th, to tender · her ~ . · (Ar ).:...John Fox, pub-

th,e ~·e~us.ed.sald, "I was t~rme*d., ln~l Cod• relatrc otns bo ' I' eld' '·~· ~ecret~y-~dward. Pardy, elect- stork shower. ·. The evening Will' .llsihderl of. thd e defunct Boston Post, 1 .wa1 dirty because. he cut .. me .. • · ,Y · Qg 0 · om~ e~ • ed. . ·. : . . . sa n fe era! ourt Th d h f.a~:lie:ll\ade.me mail,"' : .. · 'f,ti·turi~h~~~~:homlelde Is !Dllrder. 'I~ was voted by'.all present' to' spent in' playing cards and other 'c bt! $15c urs ay e ·c. w .. qr.rter a~ked(:Did yo,UJf.liOW ten~ c~n be llroyed _there ~VaS in· ask the ,members ·of last' )•ear's games, followed by a delicious :n~~Vs;ap~ n 'b' ~·~ to get. the ""' '" ''"' .doiOI'' .. •"'•1h> bidtiht::! '::ht~'"'t ~· mlllcl, oommllloo t,.,.; oplo tW, '"'· ::r.,~ l:• •l~id "'' U.O,.ghly !J•dgo G;~,,,".c .. ~~,_,':,':,';'~:r; PCtU>cd S3ld, "Yes~ but I was' t~r: derith regardles' of: mt"'g' ~ .cause. ·Manager."7Lant:don C~lt.ch, p)ecl· Jllrs. Smith was the recipl'ent"of 'tthltei Pe ~~~·a~ nBeedt fo,r. ~ -paper' like

nlnnted" , .' ' . 5' ue •. conse· cd, . ' '. . • OS 111 OS d F • • . qutnces • '. ·• .. • · .,. · '· · · · · many· lovclv and u f 1 'ft r : • 9.n· an gave ox

· ' .. , . ':. :·. Co~~h.,-Gordo?. S~~w, 'wh'l~h she 'thanked 5~0~ f~:e;ds ~~ ~~~~o;;~~k~ to post. a .·guaraniy of

• . 4 "' • '· ' : . ..

' . \ : I

starting. feb, 24, . · _, .

FOR ALL YOUR

HEATiNG AND

PL.UMB· MODERN

lNG Contact

HIGHER LEVELS flUMBtNG .& HEATING 4506H tdavJ 56Q3F (nlghtl · jan19,lm ·

. '

I I·

• Qualified Embalmers

Cadillac Hearse

DIAL 2321

393 DUCK·

·WORTH ST.

GRE,AT EASTERN

& IMP 0 RT co., lladi;,, Telc,·i;ion. Refrigerators. Deep

Elcctrtic nan~e;, ftOOI' J'oli;hir;. Gran:uphnu~:>,

Public Addr~;s Sy;t!:::!. Tape Recorder:.

REl'.-\IRS .\~11 SER\1([ . 5 I.l:'IES

DIAL :10~1 ta 3~ WATER ST •.

j;n26,ly ·

ATTENTIO~!

CHEVROLET OWNERS WE STILL HAVE A FfW CUSTOM-BUilT

Push Button Auto Radios 1955-56 CHEVROLET

ONLY 66.75 Here's· your opportunity to get· a custom bu~ Radio at a very modest price.

DON'T DELAY TELEPHONE 5047 RIGHT AWA1

THE HICKMAN MOTORS L jan31,2i

AUTO INSURANCE NEW RATES NOW IN EFFECT

CALl 7035 for the most dependab!r AUTO INSURANCE availob1e

40 years of service and satisfaction to the insuri~ public of Newfoundland.

J. K. LACEY, Roes. Manager , 211 WATER Sf.

CLOTHES make the man if cJW!

ilf WM. L.m~iiift 4 HOLD'WORTH ST.

Bl GAIETY J

Tonig 30th GAN

1.1111\ ..... $1.50

ELECTRI

WIR

e EVEI

• F. Colli1 NOW LOCATE[ CORNER OF W

Ne1 Boar1 Annual M

at 4 p.m Board of 1

The purpo rts and Fir

ClHio•arc. for the

1955

Air « frostl!m tires; 2

(Under the 1

THE C

AT THE 1 FRIDAY, 1

DO\

EXPEl

5 d~y

ApF

\.

Page 15: TH~E D·.AIL¥ ·NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · D'Araeon 3500. 3 32 32 .:.r De Cour 5l!OO '57 !6 H · -1 . De cour wll !110 171>

,.

, Feb •. 1 ldians vs. Bon's

ll'lu:ci:l of : \"('! ol limited n1:;; hml,cs for : wu Yt:ars of J:IL'rilll; home 1 lnr !tomes llii•~d SIOI1.riOM

:·••tal i~n ld :•t•i·l~·

r: lc··

EASTERN :RT CO., •JCI'i~iOil, ••rs, Deep ·tt'lic !lange;, •r Polishers. amuphunes, \ddr~ss

~ERS

ET I

~

ICE eFFECT

;t dependable !..NCE available . to the insuring

In WATER·ST.

man if CHAF! clothes

FE, Tailor

BINGO GAinY AMUSEMENT CENTRE

'

Tonight at 8.30 30th GAME WORTH $1,000.00

(~RDS: $1.50 Cancer Control Tax: Sc.

ART NOSEWORTHY LTD. ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS

WIRING, RE·WIRING

t EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL

DIAL 7953

Removal Notice ~.F. Collins Customs Broker NOW LOCATED 155 NEW GOWER STREET CORNER OF WALDEGRAVE and NEW GOWER

'PHONES POST OFFICE BOX Ch,,nged to

P.O. BOX 458

Newfoundland Board of Trade

"

~~ Annual Meeting of the ~oard will take 1late at 4 p.m •. on FRIDAY, February 1st; · in · ~~ Board of Trade Rooms on Water Street.

The purpose of the meeting is to receive leporls and Financial Statements and to elect ·

fer the coming year.

H. T. RENOUF, Manager

1955 DODGE 4 DOOR

Air conditioned heater ancl de­froster; attradive seat covers; snow tires; 2 tone paint job, winterized.

REGULAR PRICE

DAYTIME PHONE 5131

AflER HOURS 'PHONE LESTER SNELGROVE, 90524F

To Rent A BASE APPROVED

· .Apartment · Preferably. furnished.

Apply

CLUB OPEN

. ,5 P.M. TO-DAY. '

Chris Andrews' Quartette. ..

DIAL 90069

:., DANCING AND DININO NIGim.Y IN UHIOIIE AND IMIMATI ATMO_,IIUE -AlHMINT MON., -· nl, lAT. OI1N I P.M. IIODIIMU) RD., 111. 10017

1o do genetal house work.

G-ood wages. Every night

free.

'Phone 90054 fcb1,24

SEE US. FIRST FOR YOUR 6VERYDA Y REQUIREMENTS

TEAPOTS. . . 50c-60c-65c-75c-80c-90c and up

CUPS and SAUCERS 22c-25c-28c-30c-33c-35c arid up

. PlATES. .. 15c..:...17c-20c-25c-30c-33c-40c and up

TEA SETS 18 Pieces

2.95-3.00-3.20-3.45-3.60 and up

S~ 0. STEELE & SONS LIMITED

DIAL 6392 WATER STREET EAST

73 NEW GOWER ST. Cutlfled Master Watch•

maker and Jeweller.

STADIUM SCHEDULE

Wall . Washing ------....,.--- , PL.UMBING & HEATING .,:; ~~!,l!i~!iiliiiiiimmniiiiiiij

1 WALL WASHING-Walls clun· 1 p M D II {~ WE DELIVER cd by new m&chlne. Results. ' onne y · .. perfect; save~ paint.-New· 1

1 • . #

Method Rug and Wall Clean· PLUMBING ~nd HEATING 'r:1

ers, Freshwater Road, 'Phone : CONTRACTOR I. ; 91033' ag2S,lm I Installation and Repairs 1 l!.1

--------- i NEW METHOD .RUG CLEAN· 1 to all IY!'f~ systems. 1:; ERS. Rugs and carpets: 'Phone SS7SF :j:,~··

FOR SALE made to l"nk likr new. Von :1 ·Schrader proct!ss adds years 48 FOREST ROAD f .. ' · · to !l£e of rugA Cleaned in ,_,

30 Adelaide St. luime or at ·our plant. Phone lan!!4,l;y [' 1 '91033. Nnw iilr.lhod Rug ll'!l

WAREHOUSE 3600 square, Cleaners, Freshwater_ Road. -·· Oft• · T- IV I i REPAIRS-L.ow' cost, depend· . Ices 0

I feet floor space ancl four- · · able welding hnd brazing; I 1 . • • I repairs to :hromc furniture, ! · 1

;room APARTMENT, hot:.· ·chairs, tablcs1 t:tc. For more· R t

Also FIRE WOOD · For the BEST in FUEL '

CALL

Coady's Coal Dial 4249 6 SPENCER ST.

, Information phone 4495·A. en water heated. Immediate jan18,1m · ·

. · RlJTLER'S COAL. T.C.A. Road, H d I. '

1 janlB,lm

SACRIFICE PRICE

possession. Cor.l $1.00 per bag, For good eate , . coal and prompt service at A 1 · an)' hour, Dial 9163H or ' • PP Y

. 11ta1aF. jant7,2m. I 41 New Gower St.

i [ehl,2

Telephone 90687 1,' --. -S~ow. Clearing · del'24,lues,frls,tf ·--- -=~~==. SMAL.L. Snowplow for Hlrt. a-

THE BEST PLACE TO INSURE YOUR

.e AUTOMOBILE e HOME

THERE WILL BE A MEETING Of ALL

Holy Cross Ex-pupils · and Friends

•• IN CONNECWON WITH

REV. BR. EGAN MEMORIAL FIELD,

AT HOLY CROSS· AUDITORIUM TO-NIGHT, FRIDAY, 8 O'CLOCK

DINNER to honour the

WOMEN'S LIBERAL ASSOCIATION OF ST. JOHN'S will be held in the

NEWFOUNDLAND HOTEL

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 4th, at 7 p.m. Guest Speakers:

HON. J. R. SMALLWOOD, Premier ol Newfoundland HON. J. W. PICKERSGILL, Minister of Citizenship and

Immigration. A Committee of the above Associaiton will be at

Liberal Headquarters, 158 Water Street, on Satur· day, February 2nd. Volunteers workers are osked to call for their Invitations .

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

Canadian Order of Foresters

Notice To Members Bro. T. P. HEALEY has resigned as District Manager as from January 31st, 1957.

All premiums and fees will be ac~epted at the Royal Bonk of Canada, West End Branch, or at the Club Rooms, on Monday, Wednesday and Friday nights.

Bro. T. P. Healey will still continue to act on the Executive.

W. E. WILLIAMS, Financial Sccr!!lfu·y

1950

PLYMOUTH 4 Door Sedan

WAS $700.00

s485.

LET EXPERIENCED

PHOTO· FINISHERS,

DEVELOP AND PRINT YOUR FILMS. ·-------1 'rdeal for wnlks, driveways,

etc .. Prices Vt!J'Y reasonable. ~o transport~tion charges. Apply C. H. Mercer, Black· marsh Road. Dlal 3576-A.

30 Clean Cars e HEALTH IUndtr the Dlstlngulshecl Patronage of His Grace

the Archbishop}

THE CATHOLIC YOUTH CLUB

9-MEMBERS AND MEMBERS I

DANCE F AT THE CLUB ROOMS, HARVEY ROAD :11 RIDAY, FEBRUARY Jst, at 9 p.m. . :

DOUG MAWER~ ORCHESTRA · :· Admission $1.00

WANTED '

EXPERIENCED STENOGRAPHER

AND TYPIST

5 day week - Saturday Holiday. I . .

Apply In writh1g, stating age

and qualifications.

COMPTROLLER · · •· ..... "'· ..

PRODUCTS· 'LIMITED .. ·~., . : ....

'I

I

ED'S LUNCH ALWAYS ON DISPL.AY

ED. K E A R S E Y jan12,2m

DIAL 5370 ' · DIAL 5370. WEST END COAL SERVICE l (W, Snow} Coa~, H.Oo bag; 3 1

INDOORS Al

REG. T. MORGAN INSU~ANCE

Temple Building, Duckworth St.

DIAL 80370 • 7756

TOOTON~s DEVELOPING and PRINTING PICTURES

FOR OVER 50 YEARS

Good Food

' Fast Service

bags for $2 75; 4 bags for 1 $3.50; 8 bags t'or $6.75. For i quick. de!lve~y dlal !12959·A, · I 29 Pearce Avr!nue. janll,lm. I

Auto Service TRADES

lanll,lm

TERMS MURPHY EXCAVATING. i

Miscellaneous

FREE HOME DELIVERY .;IBSON ~UITARS - Horner .Button Stop Accordeom and

• HOMEMAD! HAMBURGER \ Harmonicas, Richmond Saxo-• HOT DOGS . phones, Boosey . Clarinets.-• FISH and CHIPS ! . Charles ~utton & .sons, P.O. • soUTHERN·FRIED CHlCK'EN 1 ~re..:;b3::..·end:....::.. _____ _

wllh CHIPS . · . · PIANO, ORGAN TUNING and • HOT or COl.D SANDWICHES Repairing, Single Tuning Six • s·OFT DRINKS Dollars. Wm. HOPLEY, 10 • MILK SHAKEf Cornatlon St. 'Phorie ~819·L. • c·oFFEE, TEA, COCOA oct1.1m. • CIGARETTES, CANDY -,1-N-VE,.:...S_T_' _I_N_R_E'""s':':'T'::-, -:S::-1,-t-p

£cb1,4

Doi ·1 5370 comfortably We specialize in , II ' repairing !lOLl xecondltloning

B. WALSH 1

• GROCER

all types sprlril;s and mattres-ses. .Guaranteed work. Mat· tresses for batk aliments a specialty. 'Phone 6449 or 3361. Standard BPdrl~ng Co., Ltd., Flower Hill. jan12,1Jil.

f'HE CENTR.&.L BARBER SHOP

FOR YOUR AMUSEMENT.

SHUFFL.E ALL.EYS SHUFFL.I: BOARDS

. PIN R.ti.LL GAMES TARGET·GUNS, Etc.

For service Information, · · call o~ write. .

GUS WINTER, -LTD. 332 Water. Street, St. John's

DIAL 2148· jan24,1m·

"'~ '-'1~'

CO:, LTD. BULLDOZING· GRADING SAND- STONE

We Builrl Roads, Streets, Basements.

WATER ST. E. DIAL. 2831 jan24,1m

1 9 52 HILL M A·N

~450·00 71$ Water St;, Wesf

. ,·aEST· IN LEADING .· GROCERY ,J-INES Your chl':rc 'of what

vou need.

Barber . · I We are· ·now o]:eratlng six , r. .,_..I · , chairs. Y.ou <'91! b~. assured 1 · o~nsure .&uuay l . . of .. the best poSSible. servl~e I .· •, • - I sa· ·lrd Motors Ltd ·. ~ial 61,69

. QUICK DILIVERV i .· . • SIRVICI

jan24,1m

nlus the least possible walt· 1 , with' R.C.A . . '·!nit. 24 New· Gower Street:

opp., Atielalde M!•lors. tr you ~.• . .; R, C, ANTHONY INSURANCE QIAL 80378-9 ~e:~~ 5~~r.:ttll)ent service li•••••••••• . MERRY MEETING ROAD

:Steers \)\~\;8001\

INSURANCE AGENCIES·

Page 16: TH~E D·.AIL¥ ·NEWScollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL... · 2014-08-04 · D'Araeon 3500. 3 32 32 .:.r De Cour 5l!OO '57 !6 H · -1 . De cour wll !110 171>

.1 r '

'I

l { ~ .·,

'· '

, I.

'.

·Waterfront . . .

.

. Just A rxived l '· FRESH · SHIPMENT

' OF

CAMEL CIGARETTES

FROM THE U.S.

J. B. HA.ND & Co., Ltd. DISTRIBUTORS

382 yYAfER .. ST. · 'PHONE 5350 P.O. BOX 974

\ .

C9l. R. W. Gates Addresses Rotary

(Continued from page 71

we ·established six stations anu supported them entirely ljy air cratt for over sl~ months In tern· peratures oftcll 7U degrees be· low. zero." •

Col. Gates also m~ntloned the problem of weuthl•r in the Arc·j . uc. ,He stated t\mt this. could be Men and Power overcome by dcr,slty of . navlga· · 1

tiona! aids but these arc only 1917-1918 · now beginning to be employed lord B·aaverbrook ,.;.5,00 in the necessary density. · I ,

l'o contrast Arctic and 'tern· , Democracy rn 1

perate zone fl~lllb, Col. Gates i World Politics told how a!rc•·aH 1r. the United • . States were anclllll'cd wh~n 40 I Lester B. Pearson: ........ 2.75 mph winds w~rc forecast. In this I For A King's Love ar·ea, they ai'C mc1 ely turned In· Q AI · d to tJ1e wind and !.'raked In much ueen exan er higher winds. . \ of Yugoslavia ........... 3,50

Turning to hdicr.ptcr opera· • Gallipoli -lions, the spcdkt!l' mentioned that 1

· • I h d 5 00 upon countless Arctic llillJlls A an Moore ea .......... . pilots have· hL·~n forced to land Ovn't Go Near the Water ~~~u~~r~~~:~!r 0~t~.~~~\\l:·w::Ca~P~~~ W il/iam B~ink/ey · .. ; ........ 9. 9 5 · II· S · h~ M t their sleeping hugo and survival Homecomings

ll teamS tp OVemen S equipment, and ser up camp for c. P. Snow .................. 3.00 tnemscll·es ann t~t'lr passengers . • • ·

I' P'tlftNESS WARREN LINE Feb. 5, st. John, N.D., Feb. 7, Hnli·l until the. weather permitted Th1s Femmme Wo~ld . Dt~ recto. ry Newfoundland due St. John's Feb. fax Feb. 11, due St. John'~ Feb. them to resume tl:rlr flights. He Mrs. Robert Henrey ...... 3.75 I

i 1. Leaving for HallfaK nnd Boston 13, salllrig Feb. 15 for Corner then ·d!sp!ayc. I l'arlous Items of Ad • Th AI h bet -----~------~·Feb, 2t due Halifax Feb. 4 and Brook, Philadelphia and New I Arctic sui'Vinl equipment used oms, e P a

Boston ~·cb. 7. Leaving Boston York. on these occao!r,ns. Aldous Huxley .............. 3.75 Feb. a and HaiUnx Feb, 12, due NFLD. CAN. STEAMSHII'S Tum!ng tu th~ Distant Early Th W It r Ha Story St. Jo~n's Feb. 14. Salling for Bedford il due St. John's today WarniiiG line vctoss file top of e .. a e . gen Liverpool Feb. 15. · salllng Feb. 4. the continent, tic told how the 'Waller Hagen .............. 5.95

,Nova Scotia leaving Liverpool Belle lslc II leaving Halifax .to- DEW stations .vm kept supplied A Treasury of Ribaldry

. ON DRY DOCK .

• THP: DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY,. FEBRUARY 1

. '

••

~LACK DIAMOND and BLACK YfATCH CHEESE, V2 lb. Wedges

Grade "A" Large Size EGGS and.Grade "A" Medium Size EGGS '

GILT EDGE'First Grade Canadian CREAMER'! BUTTER. . . ' PERFECTION Salted and Salt Free First'Grade Can. CREAMERY

·. Also

From New York shipment GEORGE WASHINGTON

Great American ·Cut· (Pipe) ,TOBACCO.

1rHONES 5143 • 5144 AGENTS

I

The S.S, Honduras and the J.S.A. lUi C50,1222, The!o two

on dock yesterday morning · on for an Indefinite per·

. until a survey Is held, · Feb. 13, due St. John's Feb. 19. day, due St. John's. Feb. 3, sa!lmg by aircraft and that at no point .• Leaving for Halifax and Boston Feb. 5. along the cila!pwas a pilot more Lours Untermeyer .. : ..... 5.95 1-------------------------~--------Feb. 20, due Haiiiax Feb. 22 and Bedford II leaving Halifax Feb. than 15 l)linuttiS nom frJcndly Information Please

AT DOCK The s.s. North Britain, Captain

I.'.~IJ,om;as is the master, has finished ··~··""'" tbe cargo of Grand Falls

and is doing some repairing. th~ repairs arc finished the

'~te;onu~r wlll sail for Vera Crut In

Boston Feb. 25. Leavi:lg Boston 8, due St. John's .·Feb, 11, sall!ng aid In case or an t:mergency. He I . Feb, 26 and Halifax Mar. 2, due Feb. 12. nls.o talked Oil the planned rc· A manac Dangerous' Trend As For Wrestler St. John's ~l~r. 4, liai!lng for Belle Isle Ille,nving Halilal' feb. occupation ol.'J'·a. Fletcher (icc) .,1957 ........................... 2.50 . . Llberpool Mar. 5. 9, due St. Johns Feb. 11, salling Island, nont!ng around In the lh. H k H d B I '' • ,,· In u. K. Perfect Name

Newfoundland leaving Liverpool Feb. 12. Arct!c Ocean. It \1·111· be used as e oc ey an °0 ( 3 Papers Die Mar. 1, due St. John's Mar. 8. Bedford 'II lcaying Halllax .F.eh. an observation station by· a Lloyd Percival .............. 3.50 I ff I Lea\•lng for Halifax and Boston 16, due St. Johns Feb. 18, sarhng I'OUP u( lnternJt!onal Geophysl·. Th 0 A M. D I I At as Bu a 0 Mar. 9, due Halifax Mar. 11 and Feb. 19. . ~PI Yea!' sc!crl!lst!J. . I e cean t y o"r By KEN ;~mTUERJ\L I Yorkshire dwindle fr?m . eight to' e Boston lllar. 14. Leaving Boston Belle Isle II leaving Hahfax Turning to the future, Col. Ron Pollett . .. ........... 2.50 · Canadian Press Starr Writer two and the "steep me m cosb" 1 Mar. 15 and Halifax Ma:·, 19, due Feb. 16, due St. John's Feb. 18, Gates pred!ctc;l .that w!tllin the D d M 1 F II : LONDO~ (CP)-Tht:! dcn_risc. of' ~a us~ the death _of evening pat•m, St. John's Mar. 21. Sailing for sa!lin~ Feb. 20. I ... ft vill play ea an 5 0 Y ' three darlv ncwspapen 1n the m five Yorkshire · centres-She!· CHAPEl. IIJLL, . Lr\'crpool Mar. 22. Bedford 11 leaving Halifax Feb. ne~r .~utu!·e tl·c':, rt~nt role In Agatha Christie ........... 2.251 United Kingdom in ~s many field, Bradford, Hull, Sc.arborough Sam .Barnes h~s a

No1•a Scalia leaving Liverpool 23. due St. John's Feb. 25, ~a!l!ng 'I an mel casmg l llll 0

1 d gr e months has sent an icy shiver A11d Halifax. Carolina wrcstlrng team, ~Jar. 20, due· St. John's ~lar. 26. Feb. 26. . opening up 1?., a grca c£ab~nd~r . o· k & c Ltd along London's Fleet Street, 'fhe Demise of The "Gazette and The a good deal about a

,\, F.. HICK:'\1,\_N'S CO. LTD • .'Lc~l'inll for Halifax and Boston CLARKE STEAftiSHIP ... o. . the \'nst tcrrLor~ tori!. t 'th I( S 0., • Times saYs such casualties mark Observer caused particular regret freshman named Atlas The ~I.V. Dingo m charge or i ~tar. 27, due llal!fax )lar. 29 anrl "North Pioneer leaving St. John,: and the arcn~ t a e 0 e

1

. "a dangerous social trend" in Brltain's· newspaper world (or of Garner, N.C. :aptain Russell which recent!)' I Boston Apr. 1. Leaving Boston N.B., Feb. 2; leaving Halifax Feb. ':-\o1·th; also th.ut th~ current e~· The BOOkSellerS In mid-J~nuary the :Glas·•ow both were considered outstanding "The per1ect name Cor 1

:1t,me olf drr dock Is ha1·ing som.c 1 Apr. 2 and Halifax Apr. 6, due St. ii, due St. John's Feb. 6, sailing•! plorallon. and lllvestlgatlon or ~[ 1 • Evening News an~ounccd it ~vas examples of responsible provincial ler," points out C?ach Barm. 11unor repairs, and the ~t.V. Sybil J John's Apr. a. Sailing for Liver· Feb, 9. · • I routes 11'111 pay cHn greater ·, 'PHONES 2008 _ 3191 • 4425 c.casing publicatic111 alter almost journalism, creating effective pub- Atlas Bu£faloe rs !uch u

, .colt which was moored up lor pool Apr. 9. · •North Pioneer lcavln~ St. John, vidcnds at that time. 'j no years Two other dailies the lie opinic.11lon important local is· tag that the prnfcmonal ilJmc time at A1-rc and Sons shifted •·unNt:SS RED CROSS N.B., Feb. 15, due St. John's Feb.' In thanking the speaker, illr. ' . Birmin"ham Gazetl() and the Yor!<. sues. would hardly helierc it ~<I;

·1'i:P to lhc abo\'~ wharf to moor up Jo'ort Hamilton leaving New 19, •sailing Feb. 20. I Shea stressed tlil.' close coopera· 1\/[0rlli'ng DeVOll• OilS shire Observer published their The Glasgow Evening New~ was grappler's square moniker. 1 .ilf·lhe season. \'ork Jan. 31, Halifax Feb, 4, due "North Pioneer leaving St. John, 1 Lion between tl•e HCAF and US 111 ·last editions in 'November. one or a group or four Glasgow

, :~~ · -- st. John's Feb. o, sailing Feb. B N.B., Feb. 26, due St. John's M~r. AF in tq!s nrra 3~ an example V F b I The Gazette rounded more than morning, evening and sunday pap. CONSER\'\TIOSIST Qlnsl , ,I AT STEERS LTD. lor Halifax only. 1, sailing !liar. 2. o[ idea~ international relations. J1i Or e ruary . 200 years ag~, was merged with crs acquired from the .Kcmsl:y ' ., ' ; :! The lti.V, Damerang of which Fort Avalon leaving New York •Refrigeration. Rotarmn Dolll~la:; Hunt lntro· . · · the Birmingham Post The· Obser· group by 'fhe Dally llhrrt:.r m. PI~ EON, ~!ich. 1 -I.P~-' :<r. Chesley Riche· Is the master -------------- duc!!d the Club's gu~:sts: James 1. Rcpresenta!ive of Y.W.C.A. ver, founded in 1834,· cJo~cd out. !crests £25.0,000. for the g~od1yill. E<:!r~r~g Io: ~o~~~~han 2'

I: locallr. ·fishing outside the nar· H r.· G race· ' . N ews ~longeon, 1\lontreal; H. R. Sto· 2: Rev. S, J. Davies. right, but Its 1itlc is being in cor- and cop?rrght of The Eve-mng' ~s: Neeerln~s ~ a'~~ounced ,>II'S getting good catches and ker, Halifax; J. Harvey Perrr, 4. Rev. J. A. Mc,Kim. porated ia t~ Bradford Telegraph I New.1. · til'eme>ll clfectil'c

1 ~lsposinit of same locally. Toronto and !rom St. Johns, ~. Lt. Wm. Ratclrrrc. and Argus, another 'Yorkshire I UT~IOST. UIPORTANCE friends· • "The first 0 1i Gordon Stirling and Aldan 1\;Ia: 6. Canon A. n. S. Stirling, paper. , _The T1~cs says .the trend· to· will b~· the last of Au~u;t ~ .· ·AT T. BALLETS LTD. Ioney. Pepperrcl! guests were. 7, Rev, c. Stanford. In each case, offictals of the paP· I \lards. ~cller.and.fewer choices ~or. conservation department."

; ·The M.V. Eugene Roy which has U · • d ·ch } BJ k · t F • } Lt. Col. Ray H. Baker, Hammond, a. Rev, G. "Elliott. ers concerned blamed rising costs the clt.rzen ... m hrs search for In· · I 'len nioore6 ilp {or some time and . mte nrc l ac 0~ air y Ind.; Capt. Clayton J, Nelson, !1, Rcy. J. Winsor. -particularly II e \~ s p r in t and I format!on IS a ~.alter of the Ul· Income of the Pope is 1 :hlch was advertised to be sold S f } Jr., VSA, l\In.nomJnce, Mich.; 11. Br1g, w. Oakley. wages-for the closmgs. 'fhe Glas-1 m?,st 1mport~nce. from l'oluntarr contrib:rlicr.!

now it Is understood been pur· w om a· n'.s Assoc. . . uccess u !\I/ Sgt. Raymo.ld Qu!Jicn, SteU· 12 •. Rev, n. 0. Davies. gow Evening News ma;ugemeilt, !n t~~ Umt~d States there a.rc (ailhfuJ,' known as "Peter'! by the Bay Bulls Dredging benv!llc, Ohio; and A2C Wm. 13. Major F. Preece. in a slaicment to the staff, said l,lliil miles w!th. onl.v one darly

3., and ts 'now having a general Fanning Oswl'go, N.Y. Also 14. Rev. D. S. Paterson. Ute paper bad been "running at a paper. 1111 Bntam three groups ,flttal. The-inotor vessel Is moor· Annual Meet.ing HARBOUR GRACE-The black· welcomc'd was visiting Rotarian 15. Rei'. A .. s. Butt. very substantial loss and losing now have mor~ th~n so per cent :( up alongside of the M.V. N. out which took place on Wcdnes. Wallace l\lcKav Corner Brook. 16. Re\', J._F. Ayris. money steadily fll" more thaa five ot .. th~ total da1ly crrculah.o~. .

. td C. Ralph and the lii.V. Lindy day evening of last week was-fair!)· . , . 18. Brig, s. G. Genncry. years." Either way the posrtron !s

'arbour. · · · HARBOUR GRACE-The first successful in this town. A great 19. Rev. D. N. McCombie. FEWEST TillS CENTURY harmlul, Not. until a new trend or meL•t!ng o( the United Church \VO· many residents turning off lights. A Doctor For 20. Rev. J. Goodland. 'l'he demise of the thrc~ neWS• ? new techmq:re. makes the start-

AT. A. H. MURRAY & CO. I LTD. ' The Catamaran Boat of which .:.tptaln Butt Is the master may

•·, rentually sail for Bermuda. ~!

;;AT CANADA PACKERS I,TD. 1:The M.V. T~cpassey In command

I):. Captain Cheslel' Winsor finish· i U the Lewlsporte service for the ! i:·ason Is having a general ref!ttal. 1i·f.TBE ROYAL STORES WHARF

man's Association for 1957 was.held It ~vas noted that cars passing 21. Rev. R. s. Slieppard. papers brir.1gs to eight the number mg and susta1mng of _r.-?11: news. in the classroom of the U. C. School through on Harvey Street showed Blue-Jay· Cove 22. Rev. H. M. Dawe. of ~K. dail~s to suspend publica- papers, and a general mcrease m on Tuesday evening, January 21st. no sign of stopping but proceeded 23. Capt. L. Eason. lion since the end of the Second the nu.mber of newspapers In the 1'he meeting opened with devotions on their way· as usual. A number 25. Rev F. D. Cotton. World War. About so newspa1=ers C?tfltrre~ oi the free world ~o.;. co~clucted b)' Mrs. A. N. Holmes, o£ citizens, whether from forget· (Cont'lnued from page lO) ~· llliss 1\1, Emminghous. have gone out of circulation b srble., will ,,.,~ be on the nght, a;sisted by ~Irs. N. \V, Lebans, The fulness or for other reasons had all those buildings along the 27. Rev. D. Kendall. Britain durl111g the last 40 year~. road. a~•~ciation hymn was lntroduc;erl lights showing so that the black, hall·circle belong to the hospital. 2U •. Capt. F. Jennings, During the same period, news. aud was sung at the close of this out could not; from the ordinary And down there, that white blob paper r.asualties in the United Ptill of the meeting, ' , obser~cr's viewpoint, be consider· you. sec-that's home." Al;out 90 per cent of today's States ·Jiave numb~red more than

Rev, A. N. Holmes took the chair ed more than 75% a success. Cass sat staring at the t'lblob~' prescriptions are for medicines that 1,000 and there arc !ewer dnily for the election of officers which "Over here," Alex con nue ' 1 d d newspapers in both Britain and

"lh• pink spot-that's the home did not ex st two eca es ago. N A • d h resulted as follows: " orth merrc to a' t a111 at an"

NO HAIRCUT, FI:IIED STOCK'fON, Calif. (AP)-Archio~

Manley, a Negro church deacon, had a $200 damage award Thurs. day because a barber refused :o.

1' • (Formerly Jo6sl ·(:The M.V. Bessie Marie In charge

· Capt.ln Sid Gbsse which came Twllllngate is moored up

'·'•I'""" to go on dry dock after Honduras comes off which

Or Our On]" ~llionaire, Adrian 1 a ) , President-Mrs. E. 1\!artln. ' time in this century, Vice·Pres!dent-Mrs. John Me· Carto-Bn'ta DcGreere. Quee as Aunt Hes· BIRTH . Weekly newspa~rs have been

Kav Ler's hat, but stinking rich. even har·(ler hit. Since 1045 no

cut 1his ·hair. Barber Robert- Mur- fhtt rillo testified Wednesday b~ re-

Neighuors one. Your Welcome Wagon

·Hostess be In about two weeks time. the vessel comes off dry dock

will prepare to get ready to :::·o;seculte the seal fishery at the

'' • t t Ilk th• place" WADE-Bom a: St. Clare's Secretary-lllrs. A. N. Holmes. · h TA M 'I wan you 0 e " ' fewer than 80 weeklies have 5US· Treasurer-Mrs. N. w. Lebans. Branc N eet he said tightly - so tightly that )Icrcy Hospital, to lllr. and lllrs. pended publication or b~en merged Arter welcoming the newly elect· cass glanced up at him. "But in Brendan Wade, I? King's Road, a wilh 'other papers.

ed officers, Revi :\lr, Holmes gave HARBOUR GRACE-Teachers case Y0 \l don't, why,· remember daughter. Besides rising costs, provincbl a brief talk on the Importance or of the Harbour Grace schools went that our stay here may· be only a DEATHS dailies in Britain face still com-the Woman's Association to the to Bay Roberts on lllonday evening temporary thing.'' petition from the national dailies life of the church and referred to Jarruarv 21st, for the purpose of • • ' BILLARD..:.Di~d suddenly Jan· publ'rshed 1 T ·ndon

' 1 CASS tbounbt about that more n ""' · the relationship of the small local ntlendlng a meeting of Carto-Br ta than about the town which they uary 30th, as rr.sult of car ace!· Sir Linton Andrews of. the group to the larger body of women Branch and the N.T.A. which was were entering, and she was stlll dent Gunner Edward James Bll· Yorkshire Post, says closings or throughout the Dominion. held at the Amalgamated School thinking about it when he pulled lard, R.A., at Nortol!t, England; morning papers such as the Birm.

Mrs. MArtin thanked the mem· there, up in tr~e shadows before a big leaving· .to moUin their "Sad loss ingham Gazette and the Yorkshire hers for the honour of being their All schools from Carbonear to whl'tc bouse. A huge white are his . wife, twu sons, motlrer, Observer is "partly due to U!ndon prcsl~ent and said that the associ· Br!gus were represented and· lni· 11 tl Mrs. James Billor(l, three broth· competition." alion had embarked on the new portent business discussed, Test house, it was, rising a fu 1 ~ee 1 d Ed OUSTANDING PAPERS

fused because he had not be~,, trained to cut the hair style of a Negro.

DANE ~NS CONTESt SYDNEY, Australia (AP)-John

Utzon, 38-year~ld Danish archi· t•2ct, was annou111ced Tuesday as winner of a $11,200 prize for ~U~· mitting the best i:lesign for Syd. ney's national opera house. The· building, of ultra-modern desigo, Will cootaln two halls, one seat· ing alxrut 3,500 and the other 1,· 200 ~rsons.

r h stories, topped with a massiVe · ers, Norman, llhnue an gar, . h programme as compared by the papers, prepared for pupil! 0 t c roo£ of red tile girdled with • also t:wo sisters, Gertrude (:Mrs. . During .his life Ire has seen I e Dominion Council llf the United ju"ior grades were distributed for porches and b~lconies. There s. 'flustle) and Jean (Mrs. B. JOttrnallshc life hoe has seet1 the Street letter boxes have 'been

Will Knock on Your Door with Gifts and Greeting!

from Friendly Busineu Civic and Social Welfare Leaders

The Birth of a Baby, On the occasion o/,

Arrivals of Newcomers to

City. 'Phone 3031

·. + LIST OF SALINGS 'fishing trawler Blue Foam fishing trawler Blue Foam

Captain Frampton Is the discharging the car·

fish which she brought Grand Banks sailed again yesterday !or the Grand

fishery •. '-H.lii.S. No\'a Scotia sailed

Liverpool at 4 p.m. yesterday

Church. coming examinations. Plans for a \Vere no 'grounds, but the house Squires). Interment at Norfolk, number of morning papers in in use since 1858. Plans for future activities occu· banquet which it Is proposed to • 1 d ' 1 ~iiiiiiiiiiii·ii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,

1 d th I d f th I • hold In June next were also dealt itself was stupendous Cas s Eng an . p e e rcma n cr o e even ng s snatched at details, the Romeo DOOLING - Died suddenly, 1 31. . business: with. ' and . Juliet balcony over the .Tnnuary 31st, .1957, Peter-Joseph

front door - a cl!ttel'ing, leaded, Dooling, aged '13 years; left to , LIST TO ARRIVE · plate glass door! Around to the mourn one daug:u cr, J\!argarel s.s. ·Storfjeld arrived yes· Card Party Sen·~s , Group. . Ma-il side there was a carriage bouse, <Mrs. Joseph 'l'orney), Maryland,

.1 a cargo of coal now used as a garage, but sliil U.S:A.,· two son~. Peter and John dls•chilrge:d and after the coal · B J N. S with living quarters ab~ve it. of St. J olm's. Funeral from his

.IIJ~~tmaJ:I!ea Is scheduled to load H IRBOUR 'GiiACE-;.A th I OX n • • ·She whirled O'! Alex, both dis· late residence 11 Erir St. Requi·. Falls paper at ' • · no cr n 1 mayed and fascinated: he had em lHass at St. P~trick's Church

dOck paper· shed. th~ sc,ries of Tucsdn~ mght auction NORTH GREENVILLE, N.S. not told her, she accused, that It at 9.30 a.m: Saturday morning JOBi)IIOS,· SOUTHSIDE· . fo. ty·.ive card partle_s took place (CP )-A group mailbox has solved would be-a ·mansion! February 2. fishing trawler Blue Spray !a~t week at the C.E.I. Roo~, prize : some but not all of the. mail dc1 "It's a boarding bouse," he ------------in ·port on: Friday from the wmncr~ being Miss Jean P)nn and· livery problems for residents In blurted, stepping out of the. ~ar, NOTE OF THANKS !Iapka fishery with a cargo. li~Jtram Downing. this multl·nain·~d Northern No1•a and coming aro~nd to her srd~.

fish, to be discharged.' ·: : ON THE SOUTIISIDE Scotia community, "01•er at the srde porch there s '''""'"·· , •• fishing :trawled. Blue Haze The 1\I.V. Eldon-Jones Is. from When the local postma,ter re· a sign- a big tine; It's called The

lro~ the Grand. Bank~ fish· the Portugal cove Bell 'Island signed and the post office was Haven. lily mother takes care of , wl~ a:-·cargo: of !re·sh; fish to tickle service for repairs. closed last fall a crisis arose, The out • patients for the Springs dbcharged, after which the. :The s .. s; Algerlne Is at· Bowring provincial government ~et It by Hospital." ·

71111'1"" trawler will also sail again Bros. ·on :·the lower southside moor· installing the group box. recently, He was 1 being unnecessarily Grand'.Banks fishery, ed up Indefinitely But'confuslon sUll exists,' North blunt. .'·

, · · · ' Greenville Is known as Jersey, "I thought,". she said, "that Atkinson and Sodom,' as well as your mother needed you •• ·" Sodom Bridge . by railway men; "Financially? Oh, no • • ." The names are backed Up by sign. . He smlled thinly and opened

~verpoel Sl; John'•· Boston · Halifax st .. Jobu's posts 'at diff•Jrent approaches. to the door, holding out his hand ~o

Patrick F. Ryan of Freshwater, P.B., . wishes to thnnk his mariy friends .and relatives . and all those who sent condolences and Mass cords to li!m, at sad loss of his beloved. wife. Rita. A special note of t'hanlts is extended to the ·staff of Plal'enlia Hospital and to the con tractlng firm of· Drake, Merrlt nnd Ayers, who so·

h!m ·assistance.

. . . . the commut:~!ty, , her. ' · · • i to Hf:r. I ·.lo to 1o Apparently residents aren't sur- "What did the Knapps do for 1 . , . 'Boston . nallfax st. Johri's Liverpool prlsed at aU when they receive you?" she asked. . 1. • Velvetines

· mail with four different commun' "It's · what they did for Aunt i · ~ • f"l!b:- 2 Feb. 8 Feb. 12 · Feb .. HS lty names in one batch. Cordy,t• he said. Then he stopped~ 1

1"1:1!wfc!Un•dlaJnrl. '.'teb. 13 Feb. 20 ·Feb, 26 Mar '2 Mar, II Soinctlmes~. however the:;: wish and actually groaned. "Oh, Lordi" I ,., M~r. r· Mar. 9. Mar. 15 . r.lar .19 Mar. 221 their veteran postn{aster. was what everyone In town carts her,

M11r. 20 Mar. 27 · Apr. , 2 Apt 6 · Apr.· 9 : &gain on the 'job, It takes an ex· darling. She - and the Haven-A.pr .. II ' Apr;' 13 Apr; 19 ... nt 23 Apr. 26 perlenced man tO sort mall. ' are instlutlons." '

.~otla'• Apr.:24 Ma)'. 1. May 7 May 11 May 14 1 (To Be Continued) \::·Per.10lll contemplating pa&Sage to Europe shotild inake ·booking! . ANNOUNCES ITINERARY

.advance. ·. · DUBLIN (AP) -The lord mayor · - · of Dubl)n, Robert Briscoe~ Tues.

~~f!~!~a~rr~~~n~~ged bJ B.O A'.C. ·..:.·;·K.I;o.M -.Pan ·American day announced his itinerary for an.d ccmneetlng · Alr!ine.s. ' · · hJs month.long visit to Canada anti ·your travel problems. . th•J U>1lted St"les in the spr!n.g,

· ';' · : FUR .. _.N,. ESS· 'TRAV_ EL. OFFICE First slop will be New Yorl:, · March l.'i. He will visit Toronto

PIIONE ·5623' March 20,

. : . -, . ..

,,. ..

'· 1 .

WARSA\V (AP) - A plague-or man·killl!ig ·foxes Tuesday spread terror. through the forest ·viiJilge of Weslern. Polal)d's Opoje Pro1··: !noo. Farmhand Karol Kolek, onr· of more than a. ~oze,, pe'ople d: tacked,' died In . hospital after be· .. ing ·badly mauled; ·. · ';I

I ..

Now

1/2 Price

At the

·I

CANNED •

·VEGETABLES \

TOMATOES

·.CORN ON COB

PEAS

CORN

BEANS

MXD. VEGETABLES '· .

POTATOES r.

CANNED FRUITS

.PINEAPPLE

STRAWBERRil.J

PEARS

·PEACHES·

APRICOTS

FRUIT COCKTAIL

' CHEESE' ONIONS

G.EORGE NEAL liMITEI . .

TELEPHONE. 2264 ~· 420.~:4440· . .

,· ,.

'.

. NEW AND u: to suit Ev

BROCTO:"i,. !\"cw York. response to the plea 1

drcn th;:,n any couple Gclier holds Jancen, ~ Keith, 10, S!mron, 11, Other children nnl Pl'l

ana~ id-1

WJ OF E~

mol'e an ame1 such action ncces

's a c t ion, said, wculci ·be interpretation

by their 1·ar

Ap For Sue Cleara